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                  <text>•

Monday, January 22, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page Be • The Dally Sentlnll

Details, A3

s Scoreboard
__

TOP 25 COLLEGE HOOPS

Big three remains unchanged
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stanford, Duke and Michigan State were tho top
three teams in Tho Associated Press coUt·ge basketbaU poll Monday, the third stmght week they
have held those places.
Fresno State was No. 22 in tlk latest 1utional
media voting, the BuUdogs' first appearance in the
Top 25 since early in the 1997-98 s~ason, while
Texas returned at No. 20 after a one-week
absence.
Stanford (17-0) \\ras again the runaway choice at
No. I, getting (&gt;8 first-place votes and I ,748
poitltS .The Cardinal won their games agaimt California and New Mexico last week by a total oi57
points.
Duke (17-1). whid1 beat Boswn Colkge by 22
and Georgia Tech by 21, r&lt;(eived two first-phce
votes and 1,677 points. Michigan State (15-1) .
which be;Jt Ohio State 71 - 5ro in ih only ~.nne l.tst
.
week. had I ,u07 poi ms.

l

This is the scvcmh $tr.tight wcl·k those ~r honl s
w~re in th~ top thn:c. For two \\\.' l'ks. it w.as Duke.

Michigan Stat&lt;' and Stanfim! .md then it w.1s
Mic higan State-. Stanford and Duke flu· two nwrl'
weeks befon._· thC' Cardin.1l took l)Vcr th1.· top spot.
Kansas and North Carolin.1 ~.Kh moved up nne:

place from last week to be fourth a11d tiirh. TL"n nesscc, whlth was th1.· higl11.·sr r;mktd t1.';1m to lost..•
last week - R-t-74 to K,·ntucky - fdl li·o1n
fourth to sixth. llli11ois and Maryland ,-ach mowd
up four spaces to seventh and eighth; whik· W.1kc
Forest and Gcorgt"town wt·re ninth and lOth.

switching places from la st week.
Syracuse, which lost to Seton Hall on Su11day, f&lt;·ll
three spots to lead the Second Ten and w;~s followed by Arizona, Virginia, Flot"ida. Wiscmisin,

Seton Hall. Iowa State, Alabama, Mmissippi and
Texas.
The la"'t five ranke-d tC';llllS were Iowa , Fn:sno
Stare, Boston CoJlcge, Con nt·tticut and Snutht•rn

California.
Fresno Smi· (lu-2) enters the Top 25 on a 12gamc winning streak. The Bulldogs, who have
started the Western Athletic Cnnfl!rcncc season 50 , lost to St. Bonaventure in the second ga 11\l' of
the season and then fell in double overtime to San

,
Franc1sco.
The: last time Fre-sno State was ranked WlS in
19'17- 98 when it was in the pr&lt;season poll and the
tir~t fimr of the rt..·gular st..•ason.: getting :IS hi~h :IS
No. 12 .
Texas (15-J) was ranh·d fur two \Weks - 24th
:\U1.l 23rd - bl!fon.· falhng: out following a lo~s at
N~.·brask:l. Th~.· Lon~horns have: won thn:c str:nght
since. b e :~tin~ Connecticut. Tex:1s A&amp;·M :~nd !laylur.
..
M issouri ( 1 2-~) fdl out of th1.· T:lnkint,rs from No.
: w .tfter bt..·ing ranked ti.Jr just nne wt..•t..·k .· The:
Tigl'rs lo~t road g;mtt..'S tim \n·ek to K .m~.h St.ltl.'
.11H.l Vi rg-i 11 i.t.
Okbhom:1 ( U--1) is out of the ·n,p 25 ten· dw tirst
timl! thi s SI.\\SOn . Tht..• Sooners. who got .1s lugh .1s
l-Ith . fell out from 22nd .:Jftcr lming to T&lt;'X:JSTech,
thl'lr third 1uss in fi.n1r g;li11C:s.
Tht..' week's biggest j ump was Iowa Stat~t's dimb
fi·om 2.3rd to No. 17 fol1owing wins. nvl.'r Colnr;H.hl and N cbrnsk:t. The biggest fall was Connecticut's drop from 15th
to No. 2-1. The Huskies lost to Texas and Miami
last '""''k, extending their losing streak to three
games , all on the road.

No11ono1 a ..kOiben

eo.••ac•

Eastern Confet'tnet
Atlantic Dlvltton

WLPcL

08

Philadelphia .................... 30 10 .750
New Vork ......................... 25

14 ,641 · 4 112

Miami ............:..... :.. ......... 25
OrlandO ..............•............ 18
Boston ............................ 15
NewJersey ...................... t4
Washington ... .. ...............~ ..&amp;

18
21
25
27

.581

6 112

Now Jo11ey •.•.•••.. 2s
Phi~ .......22
, PlftlllUrgh ........... 22
1 N.Y. Rangora ....... 19
1N.V. IIIonders ...... 12

.462 11 112
.375
15
.34116112

:M .190

23

Central DMiion
Milwaukee ..................... .,25 . 15 .625
cnanone ......................... 23 19 .548

3
Tororuo ···'························22 19 .537' 3 112
Indiana ............................ 20 21 .•88 5 112

Cleveland ................... ..... 18 20 .474
8
Oetron ............................. 15 26 .366 10 112
Allanta ......•..•........•.•... .... 14 · 25 . ~59 10 112
Ch~ago ................. ........... 6 34 .150
19
Weet..-n COnference

Mldwe11 Olvltlon
Utah .........·....................... 25 14 .a.u
Dallas .............................. 27

te .628

San Antonio ..................... 23 15 .605 1 112
Denver .. .-................ :....... 24 17 .585
Minnesota ......•............... 24" 18

.!571

2

12

59 162 111

8
3

2 52 151 149
1 42 149 168
2 31109 153

13
15
Buffalo ................24 18
Boolon ................ 18 18
Montrul ............. 15 25

8 1 59 152
7 4 55 1"
5 1 54 121
e 5 47 118
5 3 38 119
j
loulhMat Dlvtllon
Wuhillglon ........20 18 8 1 49 124
Carolina •....•....... 20 17 8 2 48 118
A1lrlnll ................15 22 9 1 40129
T-Boy .......... 13 27 5 2 33115
Floi1&lt;11 •••••.••.•.••..•.. 9 25 8 6 32 100

WMtlrn conference
central Dl\lltlon

-4 1 87
4 4 62
7 2 47
4 2 46
4 3 37
Noflhwolt Dlvlolon
ColoradO ..........•. 32 8 8 1 73
Vancouver ..........24 16 • 4 56
Edmonton .......... 23 20 6 1 53
Calgary .............. 16 18 9 • 45
Minnesota ..........16 22 8 2 42
)
Pacific IMvf•lon
~ • ................• 27 14 4 I 59
San Jose ............. 26 13 7 0 59
Phoenl• ..............21 13 11 1 54
Loa Angeles .•..•... 22 17 7 1 52
Anaheim ......•...... 15 25 8 4 40

Sl. Loula .............. 31
Oouo• ................ 27
Nloh~llo ............ 19
Chicago .............. 20
Columbus ........... 15

2 112

112

L.A. Lakers ...................... 26 13 .667 2 112

5

10
15
22
21
26

157
1"
113
126
108

114
119
105
141
138
121
122
158
161
146

96
129
127
129
147

157 108
153 141
134 135
na · 134
101 119
132
131
117
162
120

103
106
105
144
155

Thl• WMk't Top 25 Fertd
By Th A..oclelld Prtll
1. SIOnforrl (17.0) boot Collfornlo 8'-51:
boot New M""tco 715-44.
2. Duke (17· 1) beal No. 25 Boslon College
97-75; beat Georgia Tech 98-77.
3. Michigan State (15·1) beat OhiO State 71·

se.

4. Tennessee (17·2) lost to Kentucky 84-7-4;
beat Mississippi State 84·79.
5. Kansas.(15·1) beat Nebraska &amp;4-62; beat
Texas A&amp;NI100·70.
6. North Carolina (15-2} beat Clemson 9265; beat FIOflda State 80-70.
7. FkHida {H-4) k&gt;stto Georgia 75·72; lOSt to
Vandertl11 63·61 .
8. Syracuse ( 15-2) lost to No. t a Seton HaH
77-65.
9. Georgetown (16·1 ) beat No. 18 Seton Hall
99·91 : Iosito Pittsburgh 70·66. ·
10. Wake Forest (14·3) klst to No. 12 Mary·
land 81 -71; beat Clemson 71-63 .
11 , Illinois {15-4 ) beat Northwestern 63 -49:
beat Penn State 92·60.
12. Maryland (14·4) beat No. 10 Wake For·
est81·71 : beat North Carolina State 75·61 .
13. Vlrginla {13 ·3) beat Florida State 69·71 ;
beat No. 20 Missouri 85·72.
14. Iowa (14-4) lost to No. 19 Wisconsin 67·
54 : lost to Michigan 70·69.

15. Alabama (14·3) beat No. 21 MiSSISSippi

82-63: lost to Arkansas 87·58.

15. Connecticut (13·5} lost to TelCas 60·56:
lost to Miami 77-74 .
· 17. Arizona {12-5) beet No. 24 Southern Cat·
Uornla 71·58; beat UCLA 88·63.
18. Seton Hall (12·5) lost to No. 9 George·
TWo points lor a win, one point ror a tie and town 99·91 ; beat No. 8 Syracuse 77-65.
overtime loss.
· 19. Wisconsin P1·4) heat No. 1~ Iowa 67·
54
.
Setwday'e Games
20. Mlsflourt (12 -5) lost to Kansas State 80·
New Jersey 3, Atlanta 2
59; lost to No. 13 -VIrginla 85 ·72.
Loa Angeles 6, Carolina 3 '
21 . Mississippi {15·3) lost to No. 15 Alabama
Colorado 2, San Jos• 1
\ 82-63: beat Kentucky 65·55.
0111.,. 3, Tampa
0
22. Oklahoma (13·4) lost to Texas Tech 60·
N.Y. Rangers 2, Montreal 2;'11e
' 59; beat Kansas State 64·63, OT.
Toronto 2, Buffalo 0
·
23. Iowa State (15-3) beat Colorado 84-68;
Philadelphia 5, Flonda 3
beat· Nebraska 60-59.
51. LouiS 3. Vancouver 0
24. Southam California {1 3·4) lost to No. 17
Edmonlon 2, Detrol1 1
Arizona State 77·58.
Sunday'OCIImel
lost to No. 2 Duke
New Jersey 4, Minnesota 2
N.Y. lolandero 4, AUanto 4, tie

Seanle .................. ...... . 21 21 .soo
9
L.A. CUppers .................... 13 29 .310
17
Golden State .................... 12 27 .308 H1112

Slturday't Chmn
Sacramento 111 , Portland 101
New Jersey ti3, Cn!cago 103

Dallas 97, Denver 79

o

T0&lt;0111o ............... 22

.714

Pnoenix ...................... .. .23 15 .605

8

9 .1 54 135 132

on- ............... 26

P.emc Dlvlllon
Sacramento .................... 27 10 .730

12
15
18
24
28

5
-Divlolon

Houston .......... :............... 20 20 .500 5 H2
Vancouver ....................... 11 29 .275 14 112
Portlafl!:l .......................... 30

Hometown Newspaper

1-.rn
AlllnUcDIYiolon
W L TOLPta. GF GA

l-llitan

·

OrlandO 112, San Antonk&gt; 109, OT

Sundlly'l Oamtt

Bay

Indiana 87, New Yodc 74 ·
Washington 9-4, Atlanta 90
Toronto 110, Philadelphia 106, OT
Utah 109, Phoenht 98
Mlnnesotd 96, Vancouver 94
Mlaml103, LA, lakars 92

Mltwaukee 102, Detroit 98
Sacramento at Seattle, 9 p.m.
Boston at Golden Stahl, 9p.m.
Mondoy'o Game
Portland at Cleveland. 7:30 p.m.

Nuhvllle 3, St Louis 1
coru-. 3, Tempo sov 1
CoiJjory 4, Dolroll2
Pillsburgh ~. Chicago 0
ColoradO 4, Anaheim 2
Oolllo al Phoenix, 8:30 p.m.

Polcyn
Pap

Grades
Bl

PGA
Page

I'

"

Ld1111a11

and E1s, and looked

guesses tlut two doll'll player~

oogle in all four rounds. even ·like he might ne\·er be threat- have asked him for tips.
"I watch him putt quite a
more surprising bccaus...· that ened after sa,·ing par with a umatches his total from last foot putt on the first hole an-d bit." lehman said. · "It looks
then making :111 unlikely birdie like he releases the putter head
year.
The · final eagle came on tht \vith his '10-foot chip on ,the so well. He never blocks a putt
final hole, a -l-wood from 270 seco nd.
or forces a putt , he just go·es
yards that bounced short of
But Lehman's short birdil' ahead and rolls it . It flows
the green, curled ,up the side .putt on No. 6 , and a rare right through. Tiger does it.
of a bunker and rolled to a three - pu tt from Faxon from 40 Faxon does. Nicklaus did it."
stop some 10 feet from the feet above the ridge, trimmed
Faxon also picked up a piece
of redemption.
the lead to one.
hole.
The putt gave him a 20"He had an answer for
Five years ago, he lost the
under 260 , the same score everything," Lehman said.
Hawaiian Open to Jim Furyk
John Huston had three years
Faxon holed a 7-foot birdie on the fourth playoff hole, and
ago when Waialae played a. a putt on the next hole, and was stung by a writer's comthen really stuck a dagger 111 ments that he-didn't care. ·
par 72.
Lehman played the back Lehman on No. 8.
Faxon showed how much he
nine in even par and finished
Lehman hit' his approach to cared - this is the same guy
four strokes back after a 66. within 2 feet for a sure birdie who failed to qualify for the
while Ernie Els stumbled on that would again pull him British Open, then flew home
the front nine - he missed a within one stroke. But Faxon to defend his title in the B.C.
1-foot bogey putt - and had a made a 30-foot putt up the Open, which he won.
6~ to finish third at 26 7.
slope to maintain his cushion,
And there was no need for a
''T.he greens are really and he was never seriously playoff. With Faxon in the lead
good," Lehman said. "When threatened again.
.- and putting the way he does,
you've got a good putter who
"You kind of have to expect that was never a question.
~·

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'

MIDDLEPORT - A proposed cut in
refuse service rates for Middleport Village
Council and effects of the proposed cut
were discussed by council Monday
evening.
Linda Broderick, .water department
clerk, met with council to discuss the
tenuous condition of the refuse budget.
At its last meeting, coun cil app,roved a

'

vices .

Rumpke will rec eive an estimated
$78,000 for residential service in Middleport this year.
A number of years ago, th e viUage
1 informally agreed to a rebate for customers if the village- contracted service
was successful in keeping rates lower for
residents (Pomeroy residents pay an estimated $12 per month, for example) and
eliminating problems with privately pro-

cured services.
While counca has considered a 50cent reduction in charges to custom ers,
Broderick said last night the refuse operation clears only $3,378 per month
before any expenses - billing cards.
postage, payroll- are dedu cted, and tha t
th e rebate would resu lt in an es timated
$8, I 00 deficit by year's end. Last year, the
village saw a net "profit" of $1 ,400 for

refme 'icrvict·s.
Brod~r ic k

noted the difT~rcn ce in

Ru mpkc'1 charge and what the village
hills custom er&lt; also pays for the $3,000 in
tipping fees for tho viii.Jgc's an nual spring
clean-up, and downtown litter se rvices.

Co un cil hdd the seco nd read ing "of an
ordintmt.:e w hich would increase wages

Please see Issue, Page Al

Bush trying
to attrad :~
~

WASHINGTON (AP) Welfare-to-work
programs
that increase parents' income as
well as hours on the job help
children do better in school,
according to a study that otTers
some of the first evidence
about the implications of welfare changes on children.
When parents go to work
but fail to make extra money,
their kids do no better though no worse - than they
would have otherwise.
On one level, the report
confirms what is almost a truism: Having more money is
usuaUy better than having less.
But as policy makers .work tq
. . improve the lives of the poor
and to help kids do better in
school, the study offers the first
concrete data to suggest that
spending tax dollars to increase
family incpme translates into
school improvement.
"Welfare was originally
about children, but in recerit
years we've really become
more and more concerned
about cutting the caseload and
moving people otT the ·rous;'
said Gordon Berlin of Manpower Research Demonstrntion Corp., which conducted
the S\Udy being released Tuesday. "We don't ·have any evidence that simply going to
work benefits children."
The report- paid for by
private foundations - . raises
important questions for Congress as it begins to consider
changes to the welfare overhaul law approve.d in 1996,
which must be renewed by
next year. .
Specifically, it suggests lawmakers might look for new
ways to increase income for
people moving. off the roUs,
said Ron Haskins, who was a
lead House GOP staffer
involved in writing the 19%

·'

~I

for poli ce department patrolmen by

Democrats~=:
to program ~
•

WASHINGTON (AP) -

"

•

•

President llush, tryin~

to attract Democrats to his education program
without abandoning school vouchers, is proposing
m:w money · for the nati on's public systems whlle
oflCring to give lagging schools more chances to

shape up before they would lose fed eral funds. to
prlVatt.· institutions.
The presidem, who made education a cornerstone of his c::J.mpalgn for the White House, is not
b &lt;:~cking off vouchers, the most divisive part of hi li
education agenda , when he UtlVei ls th e planTue~y
in a R?se Garden ceremony.

" He will fight for that provision," Bush
&gt;pokesman Ari Fleischer told
Under the
reporters Monday. "What's
the altern.1tive? To aliO\v our
president's
children to continue to go to proposals, the
schools thJt faikd th em year
scllools will
after year :lfi:er year?"
have three
Under the presidents proposals, the schools ·will have years to get up
three years tu get up to stanto standards,
dards, so that the children are
so that the
able to achieve. ··
children are
A second Bush oftlcial,

SHOW APPRECIATION- Middleport Mayor Sandy lannarelll presented Mike Foreman of Rejoicing life Church with a plaque
In appreci~lon for the church's recent service to thB village. (Brian J. Reed photo)

speaking on co.ndition o f

Congregation puts faith to work

Report. Pllp AJ

'

~o Ct&gt;nh

Report ties
welfare
to school
success

I

'

contract with Rumpke of WeUston for
refuse service for all residential customers.
Rumpke, under the new contract,
charges the village $6.50 per household
for senior citizens and $7 for other customers. The village, in return, has chargedresidents $8.50 and S9, to cover the costs
of billing and other administrative ser-

BY BRIAN

J.

RIID

SENTiNE~ NEWS STAFf

M

IDDLEPO.RT
The congregation at
Rejoicing
Life
Church takes seriously the Bible's command to "love
your neighbor."
For this church, that command
means to "love your neighborhood," as
well. The church was ·q.onored by
·Mayor Sandy lannareUi dn Monday
evening; for the church's reo·e nt service
to the community, and in {&gt;articular to
village projects and the em~yees who
carry out those projects.
'
'
Church .members assisted the village
last year in collecting data.fo11#1e MidcUeport Census, and have b*' regular
prayer warriors for the villajjt, its offi-

MERCERVILLE - Fire destroyed a I 06-yearold church Monday after a furnace "blew up" while
church members were working on it.
Bethlehem Church members Eugene Johnson
and Larry Patterson were "working on the (oil) furnace, and the furnace blew up on us. It didn't ignite
right," Johnson said. The men tried to extinguish the
fire, but .when their efForts failed, they called 91 .1.
The fire started around 12:15 p.m. and within
minutes the old wood building along Rocky Fork
Road was fully engulfed in flames.
"Shi: went pretty quick," said Johnson, a S~mp
Creek Road resident. "We fought the fire, as long as
we could."
No one was injured in the blaze.
Guyan Township firefighters were first on the
scene and were assisted by units from Harrison
Township and Gallipolis City Volunteer Fire
Department. Gallia County EMS also responded to
the' call.
The state fire marshal was on ihe sce11e Monday

-----------------~
r----------------1$1995
Motor~raft
l1
I
Fast Lube

Winter ·
malntenence

J. REED

OVP MANAGING EDITOR

Call Ip Schtdylt An Interview;

' ,,

Bv BRIAN

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

BY R. SHAWN I.Ewll

L

L-----------------~
--------·-·---.,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Numb•·• 166

Middleport Council discusses rate cut issue

l

I -IF·
- ·lolounllog
4djjoobl0,
Continental.
Cloorlrlch.
and bolanclng
mayUNIAOYAL,
bo txtro • I

EXCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
GAEAT BENEFITS (INCLUDING DEMO PROGRAM)
WOAK AT THE 1¥1 DEALEFIBHIP

~-

s 1.

Iannarelli presented Foreman
with a plaque for the church
!anctuary, and asked for
their continued s11pport of
village efforts.
cials, and its employees.
A framed print presented to the village by the church, depicting the first
prayer in Congress, is a visible
reminder of the church's community
mindedness. It now hangs in the council chambers.
"God clea~ly says to 'love our neighbor; "Rejoicing Life's Mike Foreman
said last night. "We love God, and we
love Middleport, and we are willing to
do whatever needs to be done to help
our community and our neighbors."

106-:year-old ·church de~troyed by fire

r---------------~-,

$4995 ! ·I
4-whHI
1

I 2-wheel
I Check a)td adjuel camber and toe'. Addltlonlll parta I
I and labor may be required on IOmt velllciN. I

...••'

Volum••

PleiN IH

.

, '

. January 13, 1001

.,."-

T-y·oothe Ohio State tradition and that's it for a while.
Charlone al Wuhlnglon, 7 p.m.
Rodriguez, on the other hand, wiU have no trouAtlanta at Boston, 7 p.m.
WHbnd &amp;porta Tranucuane
Toronto at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
ble getting exciting talent to come to Morgantown.
~
BAIEIALL
.
f:&gt;hoenix It Mivlesota, 8 p.m.
-.,.·ooarnoo
American
~H1u•
New
Yol1c.
at
Milwaukee,
8
p.m.
Talented
runners,
receivers,
and
quarterbacks
will
Flodda
ot
Booton,
7
p.m.
from
Bl
CLEVELAND INDIAN
grood to torme
Philadelphia at Dallal, 8 p.m.
Loa Angello a1 Phlladalph!a. 1 p.m.
gladly come to play for WVU and be showcased in
with
RHP"
Jony
S!irllln
and
LHP Scotl
L.A. Laker! e1 Seollfo. 8 p.m.
N.Y. Rlngerl Ill Carolina, 7 p.m.
Aldlnekr an minor
ue contractl.
Portland at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Dallal, 1:30 p.m.
aineers·, who haven•t' been excitement centr:ll on the new aerial circus. Even the legendary J.R.
BAS
ALL
Vancouver at San Antonio, 8:30 p .m~
San Jooo al EdmOnton, 8 p.m . •
National Baakelblll AeiiOclatiOn
House speculated about enrolling in Morgantown
Golden State at Utah, 9 p.m.
.ofFense lately.
Tuold'IY'• Go- ·
SACRAMENTO KING5--Acllvaled F
Houston at Denver, 9 p.m.
Columbus at BuffalO, 7 p.m.·
At Ohio State, the firing ofJohn Cooper brought with the new show.
lawrence Fundartrurke trom the Injured llat.
New Jen~ey at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
51. Louis Ill Monlreal, 7:30 p.m.
Placed F Jabarl Smith on Injured llsl.
Two programs heading in two different directions.
about the hiring of Jim Tressel, a name which is all
Ottawa at N.Y. Islanders, 7:30 p.m.
FOOTBALL
Wuhlng1on at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
At least Bobby Pruett felt the pull of home and
too familiar to Marshall fans. While he eJ&lt;ioyed great
National
FootHII L.Hgut
Atllnlo o1 NaahvHII, 8 p.m.
H&lt;i&gt;uSTON TEXANs-Signed Oom Capers,
Phoonlx at calgary, 8 p.m.
success as the man who molded 1-AA title teams at turned down all of that Houston money last year to
co&amp;Ch, to a slx·year contract.
Youngstown State, he's certainly not the kind of stay i!l the Mountain State as Marshall won its third.
big-name coach who brings in a flashy new system Marshall City Bowl. They even forced the MAC to
designed to put points on the board.The pedestrian rewrite its championship rules to say something like
second before adding, "Maybe he has to."
Buckeye ofFense will continue to be just that. Of "If MarshaU has less than 20 wins, we don't want
That kind of hand-holding is made difficult by
them
to
play
·
in
that
game,
even
though
90
percent
course, maybe that's the kind of image traditionOhio State's size.The university has nearly 50,000
laden Columbus wants: old school, Big Ten meat- of the time, they'll win it."
students,
4,000 faculty and 900 student-athletes on
Go Herd!
grinder·footbaU.
fromPaae
t '
35 varsi·ty teams. Youngstown State, on· the .other
Finally, Jim Grobe left Ohio for Wake Forest, sayCan Tressel bring in better offensive talent than
Cooper and his stafF were perceived as soft on aca- hand, is a smaller school which typically means a
Cooper -did recently? Ohio State hasn't had an ing that the only job he would never leave, if he
exciting offensive recruiting year since David acquired it, would be the Marshall job. He and his demics, letting players skip class without punish- coach can work more closely with academic departments.
Boston and Micha.el Wiley came to town in 1996 longume buddy Bobby Pruett will have to argue ment.
"Is it more hit-and-mi~s when you have 4,000
But starting quarterback Steve Bi:Ilisari said
along with Joe Germain&lt;'. That safety they're playing that one out.
faculty
members? Probably," said Mabel Freeman ,
a't QB isn't .the answer. Tressel wiJI have·to recruit off
coaches shouldn't have to baby-sit players, who
Ohio State's assistant vice president of firstcyear
'
should go to class without being told. ·
experience
and interim director of undergraduate
"I think some of the criticism that coach &lt;:;ooper
is putting well , he's going to that ," lehman said.
got wa,s a little bit unfair as f.u as academics. I mean, studies.
mah them."
·
That's why Faxon is expect"There arc some professors wlw think studenthe can't grab someone and hold them by the hand
Lehman knew all too well.
ing such a big year. He has led
'
and take hi111 to class," Bdlisari said, pausing for a athletes arc 18-year-old adults, but I honestly think
Faxon began the f1nal round the PGA Tour. in putting thr&lt;'&lt;'
from
Bl
~'
wid1 a three-s troke lc•ad •&gt;ver uf the last five years .. and

• gr.c~ns. H1..•

Tuesday

Community news and notes, AS
Meigs dominates Southern, B1

Wednesday

Hlp: :SOs; LOw: 20s

Thtflre started aro11nd 11:15 p.m.
and within minutes the old wood
building along Rocky Fork Road was
fully engulfed in flames.
afternoon, and an investigation into the blaze IS
under way.
Johnson is a devotional leader at the nondenominational church and has been a member for about
II years. The church h'IS been without a minister for
two years following the death of the Rev. RusseU ·
Taylor.
The c~ngregation has been meeting faithfuUy
"every Sunday and every Wednesday," johnson said.
As for the coming weeks, "we'll probably go to visiting churches .- after we get out of the shm:k."
Johnson can be reached at 256-6978 for those
wishing to help Bethlehem Church and its members.
Rocky Fork Road is off Ohio 218 about two
mile&amp; past South Gallia Higb School.

That commitment to do what need s
. to be done in the neighborhood began
last year, when the congregation volunteered to assist the village, and was
quickly recruited to perform the follow-up work for the local census, and
remains strong today.
·:It's a way for us to reach out and
help out neighbors," Foreman said.
lannarelli presented Foreman with a
plaque for the chutch sanctuary, and
asked for their continued support of
village efforts.
'They keep us in their prayers, and
they do whatever needs to be done,
and we appreciate that," lannarelli said.
The church, made up ·of about 80
members, also Operates Mid-Valley
Christian School and a food pantry. It
celebrates its 21st anniversary this year.

able to

anonymity, said Monday thot
achieve.
· the president had decid~d to
propose additional funding
- beyond even what he proposed during his campaign - and other options · fcJr underpcrforming
schools during the three years they would have to
improve. After three failing year.&lt;, parents of students
at these schopls would be allowed to use taxpayer
money for private school tuition, tutoring or the
costs of transporting their children to a publiC
school outside· their local area.
Bush, who called education "the most fundamental of American issues,'' is making edu cation his
first major policy initiative, sending Congress a
multibillion-dollar plan to shape up f.1iling schools,
increase the student-testing regimen, hand district~
more control over federal drllars and make sure all
children cmi read by age nine.
Sen.Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn ., the unsuccessful vi ce presidential candidate, praised l:lush for
making education his top priority but said it is too
early to give up on public schools. HL" and other
Dem ocrats are offering thdr own plan .

Please see Bush, Page Al

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C 2001 Ohio v~ne-y Publishing Co.

Workers from Greenland Construction &lt;Jf Marietta have returned to
Pomeroy and resumed construction on the village's new water line.
The new 12·inch line runs along Main Street from Plum Street to Butternut Avenue and will replace the existing eight·inch cast·iron line
that is estimated to be about 80-85 years old. Construction on the
project was put on hold before Thanksgiving and Christmas and is
now expected to be fini shed around March 31. (Tony M. Leach photo)

�•
P • A 2 • The o.Jiy Santlnel

-funds for hutln1

I

I

WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio's two senators on Monday
· urged that federal funding be
, jpcreas~d to hdp senior citizens
' and the poor pay higher natural
gas heating bills.
Republicans Mike DeWine
lind George Voinovich asked
'Senate M ajority Leader Trent
Lott fo r h elp gettin g more
emergency funding, since the
S300 million_ in emergency
assistance load already been dis. tributed and demand remained
high for help this year.
They also asked President
Bush to increase .funding to S2
billion nex t year for the Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program. For tht: curre-nt
year, S1 .4 billion was prov ided,
plus $300 ·million in emergency
funds.
DeWine said Ohio officials
haw re ceiw d about 1J ,OOO
more applications fur help than
· they did at this poinr bst year.

Company offers
cancer service
· ORANGE (AP) - A northeast Ohio coinpany has opened
·shop, storing cancerous growths
to await the development of
·penonal vaccines.
The cost: about $420 per year.
Cryoma Labs, which opened
for business Monday in this
Cleveland suburb, freezes and
stores rumor cells. The theory is
that the cells could someday be
used to create personalized can~er vaccines.
. .Storing ' malignant cells is a
rorm of insura(\Ce, said Glenn D.
Levy, president and chief executive of Cryoma, which bills itself
as a "tun1or cell banking company "
'"They may only have one
brief opportunity to do some.thing that may be very beneficial, for them;' he said. "Any
cancer can certainly recur or
~pread. We think this is appropriate for all cancer patients."
· The idea is still early to assess,
one ·e xpert said.
"From a medical' point of
-:iew, it's still very early in the
research," said Dr. Stan ·Gerson,
~hief of hematology and oncology at U niwrsiry Hospitals of
Cleveland . "That's why the
promise is much gr&lt;atcr than
~.he proof ~t this point."
: Dr. Gc&lt;1ffrey Mendelsohn,
~ryoma's medical director and a
eatholngist ;\t Dc ~concs s Hospi~,J in Cleveland, said that saving
on ~ ·s own unique cancer cells
may offer the bc'st chance to
develop a vac cine that will pre- .
vent the cancer from rl!'turnin g.
•

: Driver denied
· prescription

•'

I

KENT (AP)- The man who
caused a 'fatal crash that killed
liimself, another driver and her ·
~-year-old son had just been
ci_enied a prescription by a docC~&gt;r, police said.
, Police Chief James Peach said
officers learned that Richard L.
Linger, 36, of Ravenna, went
thursday to a doctor's office to
get a prescription refilled, but
tlle doctor refused.
As Linger ·]eft, he backed his
Ford pickup into a parked car
apd drove off without reporting
it, Peach said. Peach didn't know
· ~hat rype of drug Linger was
s~eking.
! A memb~r of Linger's family
(~ld

the Akron Beacon Journal
jhat Linger had rece ntly been
)liagnosed with high blood pressure and had been taking drugs
picscribcd for medical condic
ttons.
: Linger w.1s killed when his
Pickup truck crossed the center
liQe : and ~truck a car. killing
Deb!&gt;rah K. Nolte, 45 , of
Wadsworth, and her son,
ltriklen . AutojJsy tests on Ling&lt;'r
~ven't been CO\Ilplcted.

.•

· Fonner workers

workers' attorney uid.
The agreement, reached in
U.S. District court in Dayton,
received preliminary approval
from Judge Walter H . Rice. He
set a March 9 deadline for
objections to the proposed setdement. A hearing is planned
for March 19.
-· Many workers were · not
rehired when the former
nuclear weapons plant was r.organized under Babcock &amp;
Wilcox 'of Ohio in September
1997. Thirty-five former workers sued the company, claiming
they were wrongfully dismissed.
Under the agreem ent, the former workers may be eligible to
receive benefits under the company's retirement ·plan , lumpsum payments from th e pen sion
plan and be eligible to p:micipate - at .their own expense in the company 's health ·plan
between ages 55 and 65 .
That is according to Ann Lugbill , Jttorney for the workers.
The settlement cou]d extend ru
as many as 102 form~r wo rk!.! rs,
Lugbill said.
Babcock &amp; Wilcox officials
could not be reached for comment Monday night. The company's Barberton offices were
closed, a securiry guard said.

Police officer dies
oftancer
STOW (AP) - In her struggle with termil)al cancer, Stow
police officer Tobie Jeannette
Reed not only accepted her fate
in a public way but made plans
for her death.
Reed, 32, died Sunday oight
in the coinpany of friends and
family.
"There's grief of lo;ing her,
but there's relief that her suffering is over," said Mrs. Reed's
husband of 11 months, Matt
Reed . "We appreciate all the
help and support the community's provided and. has continued
to provide."
Mrs. Reed, who supervised
the nine Drug Abuse Resistance ·
Education officers in Stow, in
October discovered !he breast
cancer she had been fighting
since · spring had spread to her
liver. Doctors gave her six
months to live.
She openly disclosed her fate.
She also began preparil1g for
her death by picking out her
grave and t0111bstone and mak- ·
ing funeral arrangements. She
also prepared letters, cards and
presents for her 5-year-old
daughter, julia. to •·eceiw on
future birthdays.
The Stow community vaised
more than $30,000 to send the
family to Disney World and create a trust fund for Julia .
Community members . also
put together scrapbooks for Julia
of her mother's life. Julia will
receive her mother's scr:apbook
when she turns 18.

Man pleads
guilty to slaying
COLUMBUS (AP) -A man
who admitted to several Ohio
slayings while serving time in a
Louisiana prison has pleaded
guilty t\) his second aggravated
murder charge in about a year.
Steven Kasler, 33 , also admitted Monday to the 1997 rape of
a 15-year-old Columbus girl
and a 1996 receiving stolen
property charge.
Judge Richard Sheward of
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court sentenced Kasler to
48 years to life in prison. ·

Ct..' IH,m\'j,.'

\l'ttlc m ~tnt

With

tht_•

cbmpany hired to sinH dow n
pj&gt;~Jt operations for th&lt; U.S.
Department of Energy, the

I

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

Public schools look for money in budget
COLUMBUS (AP) - The shape of Gov. ·high school students.
"We don't have good-paying unskilled jobs
Bob Taft's two-year education budget, which
will be outlined in his State of the State speech anymore. We need more of our high school
on Wednesday, has been all but determined liy graduates going on to college. We need more of
Ohio Supreme Court rulings that the funding our work&lt;rs going back to learn new dcills," he
formula for primary and secomiary schools is said after a speech at East High School.
But there is little doubt that primary and secunconstirutional.
That leaves Ohio's state-supported colleges ondary schools will get the most attention.
battling for the money they say they need to • Taft and legislative leacjen say that largely
keep the state competitive at the higher educa- because of the Supreme Court's order to fix the
tion leveL
·
school-funding system, their priority in the
The colleges are not alone in their argument budget and elsewhere will be primary- sec•
that their work is crucial. Taft himself stressed .ondary education.
They have given higher education no such
the need for college in speeches this month to

commitment, although they have complained
that Ohio is falling behind in training worken
for a technology-based economy.
Ohio's I 5 state-supported four-year universities respond that the budget restricts them
from raising tuition to a level that would allow
them to keep pace with ever-changing technology and they are .losing ground to institutions in other states.
While stressing that education must be a
kindergarten-through-college experience, each
side is likely to grab as much of the money as it
can.The pot will be limited because taX collections have been falling short of projections.'

Huntington area airport High school posts
homework on the Web
losing passengers · .
HUNTINGTON (AI') About 60 percent o f the travd~rs
who could use TriCState Airp ort
in stcJd
usc
airpo rts
111
Charleston , Columbus, Ohio and
dsewh~:re, a consultant hired by
the Tri-State Airporr Authority
says.
The numbers show Tri-State is
Losing about 160 passengers each
day to neighboring airports.
"That's an alarming number,"
said Beth Anderson, staff consul- ·
tant for Kiehl Hendrick.s on
Group of Minneapolis.
Anderson gave her report to
the Tri-State Airport Authority
last week. The airport authority
hired her firm ro determine the

AKRON (AP) - Students at have their own Web pages and
St. Vin cent-St . Mary High post similar infonuation , but
School no longer can claim St:Vincent-St. Mary is believed
they forgot what their home- to be the only high school in
work 3:ssignment was or when Ohio tmng the Internet
a paper was due.
schoolwide to communicate
It's all on the Web.
with students.
Every teacher in the school
"It is mandatory for our
began on Monday placing his
or her hontework assignments teachers to use this,'' said Patti
and week-to-week class syl- · Valle, the school's technology
tutor and member of the tech!abuses on the Internet.
Some individual teachers nology committee.

amount of business Tri- State • is
losing to otht:r airports .
Anderson said her firm analyzed tickets sold by local travel
Jgents in October, on e of the two
heaviest months of th~ y~ ;u for
air ticket sales.
The study found Tri-State Airport gets 39 .2 ,percent of the
business in the Huntington area,
she said. Yeager Airport in
Charleston gets about 23.9 percent and Port Columbus International Airport - gets about 16.3
percent, she said.
Next in order were Cincinnati , Lexington,
Ky., and
Louisville, Ky., with none getting
more than 10 percent.
·

Mother of victim sues village

COLUMBUS (AP) - Businesswoman Wanda Corner said
she drew on her own experience
growing up in a single-parent
family in inner-dry Columbus
when she decided to laun&lt;;h a
charter school.
Corner's Columbus Youch
Entrepreneurship Academy is
scheduled to open in 2002 with
year-round classes, an entrepreneurship-oriented c'urriculum
and internships at a variety of
businesses.
The state on Monday tentatively approved Corner's proposal
and 38 other charter school applications. That increased th~ number of the publicly operated, privately run alternative schools to
the maximum of 125 allowed
und~r the 1997 law that p~rmit-. ·
ted such schook
;~We llt!ed to creat~ a new generation of leaders,'' Corner said.
"Without youthful leaders, the
ecom;&gt;mic prosperity of Columbus will die. We need to nurture
and grow new leadership."
The schools approved Monday
won\ Jl&lt;Cessarily open next year.
The al'proval means they can
proceed in the application
process.
Of the 125 schools approved
by the Department of Education,
54 are open and another 32 have
receiv,e d final approval but aren't
open yet.
Because several other public
entities have also approved charter schools, Ohio has a total of 70
charter schools that are currently
open, with a . total enrollment of
about 16,800.
The state estimates it will provide about $95 million to those
schools in state funding this

have Carrie's body, and we lost·
that;' Debbie Culberson said
Monday. "I know Carrie's body
and soul are separate. But it was
that body that I held in my arms.
I need to know what happened."
Carrie Culberson's. boyfriend,
Vincent Doan, was convicted in
Clinton County Common Pleas
Court in ·1997 for her murder.
Doan, who is serving a life sentence without paJOie in the state
prison in Lucasville, was expected
to testify in the civil trial.
Prosecutors said Doan killed
Carrie Culberson to prevent her
from testifying about an assault
charge she had filed against him.
Doan denies having anything to .
do with her disappearance.

CINCINNATI (AP) A
murder victim's mother is suing
the . village of Blanchester, claiming that the village's initial hantiling of the search for her daughter's body deprived the family of
its right to the victim's remains.
The body of Carrie Culberson; 22, was never found. She disapp~ared in Blanchester, 40 miles
northeast of Cincinnati, in August
\996.
Culberson's mother, Debbie
Culberson, flied a civil-rights
lawsilit against the Clinton
Coupty village and . is seeking
unspecified damages. The trial
began Monday in U.S. District
Court in Cincinnati.
:'W~ had the: ollportunity to

State aeproves 39 ·
new.charter schools
cide with the national growth of
charter schools," said'J.C. Benton,
Department
of
Education
spokesman.
Seq. Jim Jordan, an Urbana
Republican, said he and other
lawmakers who support · school
choice want · the cap lifted to
allow ·morll· charter · schools.
"Where's there's choice·, there's
better education," Jordan said.

Donald Hupp

Henrietta E. Avery ·

R!'CI~E -Donald Hupp, 65, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2001,
at h1s reSidence.
Fune~al arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Ful'eral
Home m Racme.

Helen Rhodes
MARIETTA - Helen Rhodes, 85, Marietta, formerly of Meigs
County, d1ed Saturday, Jan. 20,2001, at Aristocrat Ber&lt;~&gt;,Nursing Home
m Bera.
. She was the daughter of the late John L. Bentz and Bertha E. Wickhne and was a .schoolteacher and bookkeeper.
She was a graduate of Ohio Univenity in Athens and was a member of the Christ United Methodist Church Order of Eastern Star
Marietta Chapter No. 59, Retired Teachers ~f Ohio and Washingto~
County, and National Retired Teachers.
" 1
She was also a life member of the Daughters of the American ~ev­
.;&gt;lutlon and Daughters of Union Veterans.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by her hu;band,
Russell S. Rhodes.
&lt;
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Dale L. and Sh-aron
Rhodes of Great Falls, Mont.; a daughter and son-in-law, Dauna L. and
Dale Hutter efStronesville; a brother, William W. Bentz of Coshocton;
four grandchildren; one great-grandchild.
•
Funeral services will be today at 11 a.m. a.t Hadley Funeral Home,
Reno Chapel , in Marietta. Officiating will be Rev. David Parry.
Burial will follow in East Lawn Mausoleum in Marietta.
Friends .may visit one hour prior to services.
Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of the donor's
choice.

studied, there was a carrot as well
· as a stick. One program gave participants extra money if they
worked full time. Others let welPage
fare recipients keep some of their
law.
welfare benefits even after they
"Now we ought to have a began working. Under the old
debate over what is the best way welfare rules, recipients lost S1 for
to · maintain this level of total every $1 they earned on a job.
income," said Haskins, now at
In each of these four programs,
Brookings Institution.
school achievement improved for
The report examined earlier elementary. school children, a
research on 11 different programs striking finding that· makes
that began ·in the early 1990s. researchers
confideni
the
. Using a variety of rules and improvement is real.
In . some · cases, achievement
incentives, all of them increased
the number of hours that parents was measured through . testing.
·
· Researchers found children on
worked.
In some cases, programs simply average moved from the 25th
required welfare recipients to get percentile meaning that 75
jobs, punishing them if they did- percent of children did better n't. These programs got people to to the 30th percentile..
In .other programs, child
work, but as a group, they didn't
was
measured
make more money than they achievement
wouUI have without the new through interviews with teachers
and parents. Those results found
rules.
,; But 1n four of the pft!grams similar improvements.

Report
from

AI

V.A LLEY WEATHE.R
BY THE ASSOCIATED PREss·

Happy Valentine'• Day

Don't get too used to today's
mild temperatures; it will be turning' colder again foe a· few days,
forecasters said.
Golder · air and - some snow
showers or flurries will move into
the region behind a frontal system
on Wednesday, holding highs in
the low 30s, the National Weath. er Service said.
On Thursday, the mercury
won't climb out of the 20s.

HGPJ'Y Vat•ntlne'• Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, and .
Brother•••
Thanks for btlilo such

RaHI(IfeiiH
Vlaletl are Blue
Thll-afl.ow
laeipKiallyforyaul

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
straight and true,
In bringing this thought

AE!'·- 41\
Arch Coal _. 14
Akzo-49

l'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that

terrible fight.

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED.ay,.·
NO'ON .r ~:.
''tUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,

A Sentinel love message

was a goad lctea.

To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

Just how much I love

Oak Hill Flnanclal-14~
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BBT-36'•
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Rockwall - 45'Rocky Boot&amp; - 5),

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50 cant•
Subscflbers not dealrlng to pay the earner may remit in advance direct to The Dally

Sentinel. Credit will be given carrier each
week. NO subscription by mall permiUed in
areas where home carrier service 11 avalt·
able.

rMII
suhKrlatlon
lnlldo Mlijj,-~oity
13 Weeks
28 Weeks
52 Weeks

Ruth A. Wolfe
RACINE - Ruth A. Wolfe, 84, Sixth Street, Rad ne, passed away at
midnight on Sunday, jao1. 21,2001 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis .
She was born on Dec. 12, 1916 in Racine, daughter of the late Ben
and Clara Roush Salser. She was a homemaker and a member of
Racine United Methodist Church, where she taught Sunday school
for more than 40 years. She was also a member of the United
Methodist Women .
She married Hilton N. Wolfe Sr. in 1932 in Racine, and he preceded her in death on March 31, 1998.
Three ·sons survive: Hilton Wolfe Jr., and · his wife, Marilyn, Larry
Wolfe and his son, Delores, and Duane Wolfe, all of Racine. Also. surviving are eight grandchildren: Scott Wolfe, Brian (Sherri) Wolfe, Kent
Wolfe, Lauren Riffie, Lori Oim) Harmon, Torrey Wolfe, Jarod Wolfe
and Kyle Wolfe; 14 great-grandchildren; a sister, Grace Agre, Morris
Plains, N.J.; a sister-in-law, Dorothy Salser, Charleston, W.Va.; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
In additi!ln to he.r parents and husband, she was preceded in death
by two brothers, Robert Salser and Paul Salser.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Cremeens
Fune.ral Home in Racine with the Revs. Brian Harkness and Tom Gill
officiating. Burial will follow at Carmel Cemetery.
FriendS may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Grandsons will serve as casket bearers.

Issue
fromPIIpA1
an hour, across the board, and
I
would mcrease the salary of the
Chief of Police by $2,080 a year.
Councilman Robert Pooler
voted against the proposal.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said the
village's Good START survey
fornlS were delivered Saturday,
and pickup locations have been
established · at Vaughan's Superlllarket, Peoples Banking and
Trust Co.'s Middleport branch,
the Middleport Post Office, the
Ohio River Bear Co., and at the
village ·water department.
lannarelli urged residents to
complete the survey form and
return them by Jan. 27.
Council President Stephen
Houchins distributed lists outlining committee assignments for
council members for 2001 .
Council also approved payment

Fund-raiser
planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - A benefit event for Dawson Newell will be
held feb. 3 at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary SchooL Afternoon
entertainment, an evening dance
with a D.J. and a live auction are
planned. Hot dogs, soup, and baked
goods will be offered.
·

~planned
POMEROY -

$27.30
$53.82
$1115.68

R1111 OU1Jide Mtlga County
13 Woolcl
$29.2~
26 weolcl
$58.118
52 Woolcs
$109.72

"Today in America the average
black or Hispanic 12th-grader has
achieved a level · which equals the
average white eighth-grader.That is
unacceptable;' Lieberman said on
ABC's "Good Morning America."
The Democratic approach, he
said, is to "pour more money into
poorer schools, give the teachers
and principals more flexibility on
how they are going to use that
money and ... if they are not working, close the schools down and
radically restructure them, give parents an opportunity to · send their
kids to a higher-performing public
school"
' Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, RTexas, told ABC that Bush wants to
make all options available. "I think
having the ability to go to a betterperforming public school is a great
option. B\lt in some urban and
some rural areas, there may 11ot b~
that option, there may not be a better public school:' she said..
Tues4~y's ceremony, follO\ving
morning m~etings with top lawn1.1kers,mark.'\ Bush's second weekday on the job. On Momby, he
started his presidency by imposing
strict "'mictions on U.S. funds to
in\ernational
family-planning
groups involved in abortion pleasing his conservative supporters
but
ang~ri11g
abortion-rights
groups.

Area teens are

invited to participate in "Friday's
Fun , Food and Fellowship" project
at God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Nutritional meals ate ;lVailable free of charge while teens are at
the center.
Teens c.an play non-v10lent video
games, C01.nputer programs and
board 6'311l es at no cost in the center's g.uue room, located on M ain
Stre'et in Pomeroy. Pool tables are ·
also available for teens to use. God's
NET opens at 6 p.m. and closes at
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday
nights.

of bills in the amount of
$18,337.46, with 73 entries for
both the general fund at)d the
Board of Public Affairs.
Present, in addition to Iannarelli, Pooler and Houchins, were
council members Rae Gwiazdowsky, Roger Manley, Bob
Robinson and Kathy Scott, and
Clerk Bryan Swann.

Beginners' yoga
dass
POMEROY - A beginnen'
yoga class will be held Tuesdays, 6 to
7 p.m. Feb. 6 through April 10, at
the Meigs Senior Citizens' Center.
Cost il $2 a class, and all ages are
welcome. Call992-2161 to register.

EMS log calls
POMEROY -

~

Units nf the

Meigs
Em erg~ncy
SeT-viCe
answered six caHs for ao;si.,t.mce On
Monday. U nit&lt; responded a&gt; fo llows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH '
8: 37 a. m., H olzer Med1c:il Ceiiter
Clinic, C harles White, Jr., llolzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
4 :47

;1. 111. ,

l~on J cnlV I M a~ Cm

Bridge,jumpcr, no i llJllriL·~.
REEDSVILLE
8:52 p.m., Eden R1dgc. Wdister
R eed, Camden-Cbrk Mcm&lt;irial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
9:05 a.m. , RiwrsiJl' Apt,., Mary
J. Lyons, HM C;
.
12:14 p.m., s~ltl' 1\.oute . 124,
Laura Hupp, Jackson Ge nera l Hospital.
SYRACUSE
12:02 p.m. , WiU ow C reek, Karen
Phalin, Pleasant Valle-y Hospital ..

Bridge jumper
questioned

POMEROY - An attempt by a
local man to j ump off · the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mo,id.1y
morning was investigated by ·the .
Meigs County Sheriff's Office.
Officers fiom the Sheriff's offict,
Pomeroy Police Deparonent "anti
POMEROY A marriage Mason, W.Va. Police Department
license has been issued in Meigs arrived on the scene to find J.R.
County Probate Court to, Jason Blackwell threatening to leap 'fiom
Michael Pierce, 25, and Marlene the bridge into the Ohio River. ·
Mildred Moodispaugh, 20, both of
Blackwell was talked out ·of
Racine.
jumping by . the officers and ·was
taken back to police headquarters
for evaluation .
No one w.~s injured during the
incident.
··

Issued license ·

Divorces,

.dissolutions filed

LANE

FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
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Ha~ay Davldacn -

MIDDLEPORT- Henrietta EwingA~ry. 86, widow of Russel G.
Avery. died on Monday, Jan. 22, 2001, in Charlottesville, Va.
She was born in Middleport on March 30, 1914, and was the daughter of the late Herbert Ewing and Frances Russell Ewing.
She was a graduate of Middleport High School and attended Miami
and Ohio universities. She went to Washington D.C. in 1940, and was
retired in January 1973 after 31 years of service with the federal government in the departments of Commerce 2nd State.
She had been a lifelong member of the Episcopal Church. After her
move to Charlottesville,Va. in 1980, she transferred her membership to
Christ Episcopal Church, where she was active in the St. Margaret's
Guild, the church's Outreach Program and ministry to the elderly and
shut-ins.
·
.
·
She is survived by her daughters, Mary Ann Edwards of Richmond ,
Nancy L. Avery of Nellysford, and Mrs. David L (Susan) Purcell of
Earlysville; two grandchildren, Katie and Kelly Purcell .
A funer:al service will be held at 11 a.m . Thursday, Jan. 25, 2001 , at
Christ Episcopal Church.
Private interment will follow at Culpeper National Cemetery. .
Memorial contributions may be sent to the Christ Episcopal Church
General Fund, 103 W.Jeffersoll Street, Charlottesville,Va. 22902.
Hill at.l d Wood is in charge of arrangemems .
·

POMEROY - Anyone recendy
picking up a petition for a village
office from the Meigs Counry
Board of Elections should call the
office as soon as possible, at 9922697.

Bush

General Electric - 45lo

Kmart-6
Kroger- 25

AmTech/SBC - 48't.
Aahland Inc.- 3Sl;
AT&amp;T-23'1.
a.nk one - 37~
Bob Evans - 1a,.
BorgWemtr- 39~
Champion - 2'1.

MY HONEY

onqve to you.

Another warming trend is likely by the end of the week, with
highs on Sunday close to 40
degrees.
Forecast
Today: Partly cloudy. f.!igh 39,
low 26.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. High
1
38,low 19.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. High
30, low 19.
Friday: Partly cloudy High 3~.
low 29..

LOCAL STOCKS

a oreal fomllyl
I Love You Very Muehl

POMEROY - D1vorce actions
been flied in M eigs Cou nry
Common Pleas Court to C~;~­
Jean Siek, R eedsv1lle, ag'.linst
Edward M . Siek, Jr., Pomeroy; and
by Jennie Th eresa Con,klp1,
Reedsville, against R onald Natha n
Newbanks, Little Hockmg.
A djvorce has bee n grJmed to .Bul
E . Buchan an from Carol A.
Buchanan.
A dissolution of marriage has
been gnnted to Martha Renee
Otto and Micah John Otto.
ha~

Another cold snap on way

'•i-each apeement

Porlller
! DAYTON (AP) \l''orkc rs &lt;lt the Mound nuclc.lr
we :1 pun~ pLmt h.J\\.' n:.H.·h..:J .1

The Dally Sentinel • Page A. 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tueaday, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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�•
P • A 2 • The o.Jiy Santlnel

-funds for hutln1

I

I

WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio's two senators on Monday
· urged that federal funding be
, jpcreas~d to hdp senior citizens
' and the poor pay higher natural
gas heating bills.
Republicans Mike DeWine
lind George Voinovich asked
'Senate M ajority Leader Trent
Lott fo r h elp gettin g more
emergency funding, since the
S300 million_ in emergency
assistance load already been dis. tributed and demand remained
high for help this year.
They also asked President
Bush to increase .funding to S2
billion nex t year for the Low
Income Home Energy Assistance Program. For tht: curre-nt
year, S1 .4 billion was prov ided,
plus $300 ·million in emergency
funds.
DeWine said Ohio officials
haw re ceiw d about 1J ,OOO
more applications fur help than
· they did at this poinr bst year.

Company offers
cancer service
· ORANGE (AP) - A northeast Ohio coinpany has opened
·shop, storing cancerous growths
to await the development of
·penonal vaccines.
The cost: about $420 per year.
Cryoma Labs, which opened
for business Monday in this
Cleveland suburb, freezes and
stores rumor cells. The theory is
that the cells could someday be
used to create personalized can~er vaccines.
. .Storing ' malignant cells is a
rorm of insura(\Ce, said Glenn D.
Levy, president and chief executive of Cryoma, which bills itself
as a "tun1or cell banking company "
'"They may only have one
brief opportunity to do some.thing that may be very beneficial, for them;' he said. "Any
cancer can certainly recur or
~pread. We think this is appropriate for all cancer patients."
· The idea is still early to assess,
one ·e xpert said.
"From a medical' point of
-:iew, it's still very early in the
research," said Dr. Stan ·Gerson,
~hief of hematology and oncology at U niwrsiry Hospitals of
Cleveland . "That's why the
promise is much gr&lt;atcr than
~.he proof ~t this point."
: Dr. Gc&lt;1ffrey Mendelsohn,
~ryoma's medical director and a
eatholngist ;\t Dc ~concs s Hospi~,J in Cleveland, said that saving
on ~ ·s own unique cancer cells
may offer the bc'st chance to
develop a vac cine that will pre- .
vent the cancer from rl!'turnin g.
•

: Driver denied
· prescription

•'

I

KENT (AP)- The man who
caused a 'fatal crash that killed
liimself, another driver and her ·
~-year-old son had just been
ci_enied a prescription by a docC~&gt;r, police said.
, Police Chief James Peach said
officers learned that Richard L.
Linger, 36, of Ravenna, went
thursday to a doctor's office to
get a prescription refilled, but
tlle doctor refused.
As Linger ·]eft, he backed his
Ford pickup into a parked car
apd drove off without reporting
it, Peach said. Peach didn't know
· ~hat rype of drug Linger was
s~eking.
! A memb~r of Linger's family
(~ld

the Akron Beacon Journal
jhat Linger had rece ntly been
)liagnosed with high blood pressure and had been taking drugs
picscribcd for medical condic
ttons.
: Linger w.1s killed when his
Pickup truck crossed the center
liQe : and ~truck a car. killing
Deb!&gt;rah K. Nolte, 45 , of
Wadsworth, and her son,
ltriklen . AutojJsy tests on Ling&lt;'r
~ven't been CO\Ilplcted.

.•

· Fonner workers

workers' attorney uid.
The agreement, reached in
U.S. District court in Dayton,
received preliminary approval
from Judge Walter H . Rice. He
set a March 9 deadline for
objections to the proposed setdement. A hearing is planned
for March 19.
-· Many workers were · not
rehired when the former
nuclear weapons plant was r.organized under Babcock &amp;
Wilcox 'of Ohio in September
1997. Thirty-five former workers sued the company, claiming
they were wrongfully dismissed.
Under the agreem ent, the former workers may be eligible to
receive benefits under the company's retirement ·plan , lumpsum payments from th e pen sion
plan and be eligible to p:micipate - at .their own expense in the company 's health ·plan
between ages 55 and 65 .
That is according to Ann Lugbill , Jttorney for the workers.
The settlement cou]d extend ru
as many as 102 form~r wo rk!.! rs,
Lugbill said.
Babcock &amp; Wilcox officials
could not be reached for comment Monday night. The company's Barberton offices were
closed, a securiry guard said.

Police officer dies
oftancer
STOW (AP) - In her struggle with termil)al cancer, Stow
police officer Tobie Jeannette
Reed not only accepted her fate
in a public way but made plans
for her death.
Reed, 32, died Sunday oight
in the coinpany of friends and
family.
"There's grief of lo;ing her,
but there's relief that her suffering is over," said Mrs. Reed's
husband of 11 months, Matt
Reed . "We appreciate all the
help and support the community's provided and. has continued
to provide."
Mrs. Reed, who supervised
the nine Drug Abuse Resistance ·
Education officers in Stow, in
October discovered !he breast
cancer she had been fighting
since · spring had spread to her
liver. Doctors gave her six
months to live.
She openly disclosed her fate.
She also began preparil1g for
her death by picking out her
grave and t0111bstone and mak- ·
ing funeral arrangements. She
also prepared letters, cards and
presents for her 5-year-old
daughter, julia. to •·eceiw on
future birthdays.
The Stow community vaised
more than $30,000 to send the
family to Disney World and create a trust fund for Julia .
Community members . also
put together scrapbooks for Julia
of her mother's life. Julia will
receive her mother's scr:apbook
when she turns 18.

Man pleads
guilty to slaying
COLUMBUS (AP) -A man
who admitted to several Ohio
slayings while serving time in a
Louisiana prison has pleaded
guilty t\) his second aggravated
murder charge in about a year.
Steven Kasler, 33 , also admitted Monday to the 1997 rape of
a 15-year-old Columbus girl
and a 1996 receiving stolen
property charge.
Judge Richard Sheward of
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court sentenced Kasler to
48 years to life in prison. ·

Ct..' IH,m\'j,.'

\l'ttlc m ~tnt

With

tht_•

cbmpany hired to sinH dow n
pj&gt;~Jt operations for th&lt; U.S.
Department of Energy, the

I

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

Public schools look for money in budget
COLUMBUS (AP) - The shape of Gov. ·high school students.
"We don't have good-paying unskilled jobs
Bob Taft's two-year education budget, which
will be outlined in his State of the State speech anymore. We need more of our high school
on Wednesday, has been all but determined liy graduates going on to college. We need more of
Ohio Supreme Court rulings that the funding our work&lt;rs going back to learn new dcills," he
formula for primary and secomiary schools is said after a speech at East High School.
But there is little doubt that primary and secunconstirutional.
That leaves Ohio's state-supported colleges ondary schools will get the most attention.
battling for the money they say they need to • Taft and legislative leacjen say that largely
keep the state competitive at the higher educa- because of the Supreme Court's order to fix the
tion leveL
·
school-funding system, their priority in the
The colleges are not alone in their argument budget and elsewhere will be primary- sec•
that their work is crucial. Taft himself stressed .ondary education.
They have given higher education no such
the need for college in speeches this month to

commitment, although they have complained
that Ohio is falling behind in training worken
for a technology-based economy.
Ohio's I 5 state-supported four-year universities respond that the budget restricts them
from raising tuition to a level that would allow
them to keep pace with ever-changing technology and they are .losing ground to institutions in other states.
While stressing that education must be a
kindergarten-through-college experience, each
side is likely to grab as much of the money as it
can.The pot will be limited because taX collections have been falling short of projections.'

Huntington area airport High school posts
homework on the Web
losing passengers · .
HUNTINGTON (AI') About 60 percent o f the travd~rs
who could use TriCState Airp ort
in stcJd
usc
airpo rts
111
Charleston , Columbus, Ohio and
dsewh~:re, a consultant hired by
the Tri-State Airporr Authority
says.
The numbers show Tri-State is
Losing about 160 passengers each
day to neighboring airports.
"That's an alarming number,"
said Beth Anderson, staff consul- ·
tant for Kiehl Hendrick.s on
Group of Minneapolis.
Anderson gave her report to
the Tri-State Airport Authority
last week. The airport authority
hired her firm ro determine the

AKRON (AP) - Students at have their own Web pages and
St. Vin cent-St . Mary High post similar infonuation , but
School no longer can claim St:Vincent-St. Mary is believed
they forgot what their home- to be the only high school in
work 3:ssignment was or when Ohio tmng the Internet
a paper was due.
schoolwide to communicate
It's all on the Web.
with students.
Every teacher in the school
"It is mandatory for our
began on Monday placing his
or her hontework assignments teachers to use this,'' said Patti
and week-to-week class syl- · Valle, the school's technology
tutor and member of the tech!abuses on the Internet.
Some individual teachers nology committee.

amount of business Tri- State • is
losing to otht:r airports .
Anderson said her firm analyzed tickets sold by local travel
Jgents in October, on e of the two
heaviest months of th~ y~ ;u for
air ticket sales.
The study found Tri-State Airport gets 39 .2 ,percent of the
business in the Huntington area,
she said. Yeager Airport in
Charleston gets about 23.9 percent and Port Columbus International Airport - gets about 16.3
percent, she said.
Next in order were Cincinnati , Lexington,
Ky., and
Louisville, Ky., with none getting
more than 10 percent.
·

Mother of victim sues village

COLUMBUS (AP) - Businesswoman Wanda Corner said
she drew on her own experience
growing up in a single-parent
family in inner-dry Columbus
when she decided to laun&lt;;h a
charter school.
Corner's Columbus Youch
Entrepreneurship Academy is
scheduled to open in 2002 with
year-round classes, an entrepreneurship-oriented c'urriculum
and internships at a variety of
businesses.
The state on Monday tentatively approved Corner's proposal
and 38 other charter school applications. That increased th~ number of the publicly operated, privately run alternative schools to
the maximum of 125 allowed
und~r the 1997 law that p~rmit-. ·
ted such schook
;~We llt!ed to creat~ a new generation of leaders,'' Corner said.
"Without youthful leaders, the
ecom;&gt;mic prosperity of Columbus will die. We need to nurture
and grow new leadership."
The schools approved Monday
won\ Jl&lt;Cessarily open next year.
The al'proval means they can
proceed in the application
process.
Of the 125 schools approved
by the Department of Education,
54 are open and another 32 have
receiv,e d final approval but aren't
open yet.
Because several other public
entities have also approved charter schools, Ohio has a total of 70
charter schools that are currently
open, with a . total enrollment of
about 16,800.
The state estimates it will provide about $95 million to those
schools in state funding this

have Carrie's body, and we lost·
that;' Debbie Culberson said
Monday. "I know Carrie's body
and soul are separate. But it was
that body that I held in my arms.
I need to know what happened."
Carrie Culberson's. boyfriend,
Vincent Doan, was convicted in
Clinton County Common Pleas
Court in ·1997 for her murder.
Doan, who is serving a life sentence without paJOie in the state
prison in Lucasville, was expected
to testify in the civil trial.
Prosecutors said Doan killed
Carrie Culberson to prevent her
from testifying about an assault
charge she had filed against him.
Doan denies having anything to .
do with her disappearance.

CINCINNATI (AP) A
murder victim's mother is suing
the . village of Blanchester, claiming that the village's initial hantiling of the search for her daughter's body deprived the family of
its right to the victim's remains.
The body of Carrie Culberson; 22, was never found. She disapp~ared in Blanchester, 40 miles
northeast of Cincinnati, in August
\996.
Culberson's mother, Debbie
Culberson, flied a civil-rights
lawsilit against the Clinton
Coupty village and . is seeking
unspecified damages. The trial
began Monday in U.S. District
Court in Cincinnati.
:'W~ had the: ollportunity to

State aeproves 39 ·
new.charter schools
cide with the national growth of
charter schools," said'J.C. Benton,
Department
of
Education
spokesman.
Seq. Jim Jordan, an Urbana
Republican, said he and other
lawmakers who support · school
choice want · the cap lifted to
allow ·morll· charter · schools.
"Where's there's choice·, there's
better education," Jordan said.

Donald Hupp

Henrietta E. Avery ·

R!'CI~E -Donald Hupp, 65, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2001,
at h1s reSidence.
Fune~al arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Ful'eral
Home m Racme.

Helen Rhodes
MARIETTA - Helen Rhodes, 85, Marietta, formerly of Meigs
County, d1ed Saturday, Jan. 20,2001, at Aristocrat Ber&lt;~&gt;,Nursing Home
m Bera.
. She was the daughter of the late John L. Bentz and Bertha E. Wickhne and was a .schoolteacher and bookkeeper.
She was a graduate of Ohio Univenity in Athens and was a member of the Christ United Methodist Church Order of Eastern Star
Marietta Chapter No. 59, Retired Teachers ~f Ohio and Washingto~
County, and National Retired Teachers.
" 1
She was also a life member of the Daughters of the American ~ev­
.;&gt;lutlon and Daughters of Union Veterans.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by her hu;band,
Russell S. Rhodes.
&lt;
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Dale L. and Sh-aron
Rhodes of Great Falls, Mont.; a daughter and son-in-law, Dauna L. and
Dale Hutter efStronesville; a brother, William W. Bentz of Coshocton;
four grandchildren; one great-grandchild.
•
Funeral services will be today at 11 a.m. a.t Hadley Funeral Home,
Reno Chapel , in Marietta. Officiating will be Rev. David Parry.
Burial will follow in East Lawn Mausoleum in Marietta.
Friends .may visit one hour prior to services.
Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of the donor's
choice.

studied, there was a carrot as well
· as a stick. One program gave participants extra money if they
worked full time. Others let welPage
fare recipients keep some of their
law.
welfare benefits even after they
"Now we ought to have a began working. Under the old
debate over what is the best way welfare rules, recipients lost S1 for
to · maintain this level of total every $1 they earned on a job.
income," said Haskins, now at
In each of these four programs,
Brookings Institution.
school achievement improved for
The report examined earlier elementary. school children, a
research on 11 different programs striking finding that· makes
that began ·in the early 1990s. researchers
confideni
the
. Using a variety of rules and improvement is real.
In . some · cases, achievement
incentives, all of them increased
the number of hours that parents was measured through . testing.
·
· Researchers found children on
worked.
In some cases, programs simply average moved from the 25th
required welfare recipients to get percentile meaning that 75
jobs, punishing them if they did- percent of children did better n't. These programs got people to to the 30th percentile..
In .other programs, child
work, but as a group, they didn't
was
measured
make more money than they achievement
wouUI have without the new through interviews with teachers
and parents. Those results found
rules.
,; But 1n four of the pft!grams similar improvements.

Report
from

AI

V.A LLEY WEATHE.R
BY THE ASSOCIATED PREss·

Happy Valentine'• Day

Don't get too used to today's
mild temperatures; it will be turning' colder again foe a· few days,
forecasters said.
Golder · air and - some snow
showers or flurries will move into
the region behind a frontal system
on Wednesday, holding highs in
the low 30s, the National Weath. er Service said.
On Thursday, the mercury
won't climb out of the 20s.

HGPJ'Y Vat•ntlne'• Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sister, and .
Brother•••
Thanks for btlilo such

RaHI(IfeiiH
Vlaletl are Blue
Thll-afl.ow
laeipKiallyforyaul

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
straight and true,
In bringing this thought

AE!'·- 41\
Arch Coal _. 14
Akzo-49

l'm sorry about the
other night.
When we had that

terrible fight.

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED.ay,.·
NO'ON .r ~:.
''tUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,

A Sentinel love message

was a goad lctea.

To show you just how
much I love you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

Just how much I love

Oak Hill Flnanclal-14~
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actlons, provided by Smllh

Rockwall - 45'Rocky Boot&amp; - 5),

Gallipolis.

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2001.

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52 Weeks

Ruth A. Wolfe
RACINE - Ruth A. Wolfe, 84, Sixth Street, Rad ne, passed away at
midnight on Sunday, jao1. 21,2001 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis .
She was born on Dec. 12, 1916 in Racine, daughter of the late Ben
and Clara Roush Salser. She was a homemaker and a member of
Racine United Methodist Church, where she taught Sunday school
for more than 40 years. She was also a member of the United
Methodist Women .
She married Hilton N. Wolfe Sr. in 1932 in Racine, and he preceded her in death on March 31, 1998.
Three ·sons survive: Hilton Wolfe Jr., and · his wife, Marilyn, Larry
Wolfe and his son, Delores, and Duane Wolfe, all of Racine. Also. surviving are eight grandchildren: Scott Wolfe, Brian (Sherri) Wolfe, Kent
Wolfe, Lauren Riffie, Lori Oim) Harmon, Torrey Wolfe, Jarod Wolfe
and Kyle Wolfe; 14 great-grandchildren; a sister, Grace Agre, Morris
Plains, N.J.; a sister-in-law, Dorothy Salser, Charleston, W.Va.; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
In additi!ln to he.r parents and husband, she was preceded in death
by two brothers, Robert Salser and Paul Salser.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Cremeens
Fune.ral Home in Racine with the Revs. Brian Harkness and Tom Gill
officiating. Burial will follow at Carmel Cemetery.
FriendS may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Grandsons will serve as casket bearers.

Issue
fromPIIpA1
an hour, across the board, and
I
would mcrease the salary of the
Chief of Police by $2,080 a year.
Councilman Robert Pooler
voted against the proposal.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said the
village's Good START survey
fornlS were delivered Saturday,
and pickup locations have been
established · at Vaughan's Superlllarket, Peoples Banking and
Trust Co.'s Middleport branch,
the Middleport Post Office, the
Ohio River Bear Co., and at the
village ·water department.
lannarelli urged residents to
complete the survey form and
return them by Jan. 27.
Council President Stephen
Houchins distributed lists outlining committee assignments for
council members for 2001 .
Council also approved payment

Fund-raiser
planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - A benefit event for Dawson Newell will be
held feb. 3 at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary SchooL Afternoon
entertainment, an evening dance
with a D.J. and a live auction are
planned. Hot dogs, soup, and baked
goods will be offered.
·

~planned
POMEROY -

$27.30
$53.82
$1115.68

R1111 OU1Jide Mtlga County
13 Woolcl
$29.2~
26 weolcl
$58.118
52 Woolcs
$109.72

"Today in America the average
black or Hispanic 12th-grader has
achieved a level · which equals the
average white eighth-grader.That is
unacceptable;' Lieberman said on
ABC's "Good Morning America."
The Democratic approach, he
said, is to "pour more money into
poorer schools, give the teachers
and principals more flexibility on
how they are going to use that
money and ... if they are not working, close the schools down and
radically restructure them, give parents an opportunity to · send their
kids to a higher-performing public
school"
' Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, RTexas, told ABC that Bush wants to
make all options available. "I think
having the ability to go to a betterperforming public school is a great
option. B\lt in some urban and
some rural areas, there may 11ot b~
that option, there may not be a better public school:' she said..
Tues4~y's ceremony, follO\ving
morning m~etings with top lawn1.1kers,mark.'\ Bush's second weekday on the job. On Momby, he
started his presidency by imposing
strict "'mictions on U.S. funds to
in\ernational
family-planning
groups involved in abortion pleasing his conservative supporters
but
ang~ri11g
abortion-rights
groups.

Area teens are

invited to participate in "Friday's
Fun , Food and Fellowship" project
at God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Nutritional meals ate ;lVailable free of charge while teens are at
the center.
Teens c.an play non-v10lent video
games, C01.nputer programs and
board 6'311l es at no cost in the center's g.uue room, located on M ain
Stre'et in Pomeroy. Pool tables are ·
also available for teens to use. God's
NET opens at 6 p.m. and closes at
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday
nights.

of bills in the amount of
$18,337.46, with 73 entries for
both the general fund at)d the
Board of Public Affairs.
Present, in addition to Iannarelli, Pooler and Houchins, were
council members Rae Gwiazdowsky, Roger Manley, Bob
Robinson and Kathy Scott, and
Clerk Bryan Swann.

Beginners' yoga
dass
POMEROY - A beginnen'
yoga class will be held Tuesdays, 6 to
7 p.m. Feb. 6 through April 10, at
the Meigs Senior Citizens' Center.
Cost il $2 a class, and all ages are
welcome. Call992-2161 to register.

EMS log calls
POMEROY -

~

Units nf the

Meigs
Em erg~ncy
SeT-viCe
answered six caHs for ao;si.,t.mce On
Monday. U nit&lt; responded a&gt; fo llows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH '
8: 37 a. m., H olzer Med1c:il Ceiiter
Clinic, C harles White, Jr., llolzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
4 :47

;1. 111. ,

l~on J cnlV I M a~ Cm

Bridge,jumpcr, no i llJllriL·~.
REEDSVILLE
8:52 p.m., Eden R1dgc. Wdister
R eed, Camden-Cbrk Mcm&lt;irial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
9:05 a.m. , RiwrsiJl' Apt,., Mary
J. Lyons, HM C;
.
12:14 p.m., s~ltl' 1\.oute . 124,
Laura Hupp, Jackson Ge nera l Hospital.
SYRACUSE
12:02 p.m. , WiU ow C reek, Karen
Phalin, Pleasant Valle-y Hospital ..

Bridge jumper
questioned

POMEROY - An attempt by a
local man to j ump off · the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mo,id.1y
morning was investigated by ·the .
Meigs County Sheriff's Office.
Officers fiom the Sheriff's offict,
Pomeroy Police Deparonent "anti
POMEROY A marriage Mason, W.Va. Police Department
license has been issued in Meigs arrived on the scene to find J.R.
County Probate Court to, Jason Blackwell threatening to leap 'fiom
Michael Pierce, 25, and Marlene the bridge into the Ohio River. ·
Mildred Moodispaugh, 20, both of
Blackwell was talked out ·of
Racine.
jumping by . the officers and ·was
taken back to police headquarters
for evaluation .
No one w.~s injured during the
incident.
··

Issued license ·

Divorces,

.dissolutions filed

LANE

FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
REPEATOF A
SELLOUT!

BUY ONE FOR

•499

laamPIIpA1

'

you and enJoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes don't
show It but I really do.

I

Soara-38
Shonay's -l.

Ltd. -1711

City Hakftl\g - 5~
Federal Mogul- 4l.
Flratar- 22~

message gives me the
opportunity to tell you

RD Shell- 56'l.

Lands End - 28

CharmlriQ Shops - 6l.

Writing this love

Gannett - 61 ).
Ha~ay Davldacn -

MIDDLEPORT- Henrietta EwingA~ry. 86, widow of Russel G.
Avery. died on Monday, Jan. 22, 2001, in Charlottesville, Va.
She was born in Middleport on March 30, 1914, and was the daughter of the late Herbert Ewing and Frances Russell Ewing.
She was a graduate of Middleport High School and attended Miami
and Ohio universities. She went to Washington D.C. in 1940, and was
retired in January 1973 after 31 years of service with the federal government in the departments of Commerce 2nd State.
She had been a lifelong member of the Episcopal Church. After her
move to Charlottesville,Va. in 1980, she transferred her membership to
Christ Episcopal Church, where she was active in the St. Margaret's
Guild, the church's Outreach Program and ministry to the elderly and
shut-ins.
·
.
·
She is survived by her daughters, Mary Ann Edwards of Richmond ,
Nancy L. Avery of Nellysford, and Mrs. David L (Susan) Purcell of
Earlysville; two grandchildren, Katie and Kelly Purcell .
A funer:al service will be held at 11 a.m . Thursday, Jan. 25, 2001 , at
Christ Episcopal Church.
Private interment will follow at Culpeper National Cemetery. .
Memorial contributions may be sent to the Christ Episcopal Church
General Fund, 103 W.Jeffersoll Street, Charlottesville,Va. 22902.
Hill at.l d Wood is in charge of arrangemems .
·

POMEROY - Anyone recendy
picking up a petition for a village
office from the Meigs Counry
Board of Elections should call the
office as soon as possible, at 9922697.

Bush

General Electric - 45lo

Kmart-6
Kroger- 25

AmTech/SBC - 48't.
Aahland Inc.- 3Sl;
AT&amp;T-23'1.
a.nk one - 37~
Bob Evans - 1a,.
BorgWemtr- 39~
Champion - 2'1.

MY HONEY

onqve to you.

Another warming trend is likely by the end of the week, with
highs on Sunday close to 40
degrees.
Forecast
Today: Partly cloudy. f.!igh 39,
low 26.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. High
1
38,low 19.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. High
30, low 19.
Friday: Partly cloudy High 3~.
low 29..

LOCAL STOCKS

a oreal fomllyl
I Love You Very Muehl

POMEROY - D1vorce actions
been flied in M eigs Cou nry
Common Pleas Court to C~;~­
Jean Siek, R eedsv1lle, ag'.linst
Edward M . Siek, Jr., Pomeroy; and
by Jennie Th eresa Con,klp1,
Reedsville, against R onald Natha n
Newbanks, Little Hockmg.
A djvorce has bee n grJmed to .Bul
E . Buchan an from Carol A.
Buchanan.
A dissolution of marriage has
been gnnted to Martha Renee
Otto and Micah John Otto.
ha~

Another cold snap on way

'•i-each apeement

Porlller
! DAYTON (AP) \l''orkc rs &lt;lt the Mound nuclc.lr
we :1 pun~ pLmt h.J\\.' n:.H.·h..:J .1

The Dally Sentinel • Page A. 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tueaday, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
: · Senaton seek

TUMdliy, January 23, 2001

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�•

PageA4

-

I

The Daily Sentinel

Dads behavior undercuts familys attempt to heal
DEAR ABBY: My mother committed suicide a year ago. Last year was difficult for our entire family. I was extremely angry with her for the first couple of
montl)s, especially since it was my ISyear-old son who found her. My son and
I are both in counseling. He is heali11g
faster than I am.
The problem I am facing now is with
my father. I. love my father and have tried
to help him through this awful ordeal.
However, he has never been emotionally
available to me or my siblings. The truth
is, my mother and father had a terrible
relationship throughout their 35-year
marriage. My father \vaS especially hurtful toward ·my mother.
Four months after Mother died, my
father asked a woman to move into the
house. She has taken down all the family
pic~ures and replaced them with her
own. It's as if my mother never existed.
Father is now talking about marrying
her. It's breaking my heart to see him act

~-1941

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-912·2156 • FIX: 912·2157
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ChllriH W. Govey
Publisher

Chlrlene Hoeflich
: , Genlrll M11111g«

R. Shewn Lewl•
Man~glng Eciltor

· Larry Boyw

Advertlelng Director

Dlene K1y Hill
Controller

I.AflltiiD W MIMw.,. w*Diu. Til, rlw111i1 Nl4n llwl JfJO word~. AU lmm ur rd}«l
.,.. 10MIIbtfa4 .IUUf N•irMW WID flddn11ud kl4p#toM numkr. No 111111f!UflldNrr wiU
.. , ....w I..MM,.
1101 ,.nouJJtllr.
Tlw~J~Wmu u"*uH ill llr• eo/u•11 j,Jow.,.. U.. CO#fr•nru of th• Oltio V.U.1 PllblUirbtJ
C&amp; 'r ~ INMnl, 1111Mn DllwrwU.IWIH.

u...u" "'rood,.,., ....,,, """'·

NATIONAL VIEWS ·

Van Buren
ADVICE
like nothing has happened. He hasn't
even found the time to put a stone on
Mother's grave. The last straw was when
Father bought a motorcycle. He's never
ridden or owned one before. He bou~:ht
it because this new woman in his life
likes to ride.
Abby, I feel like I've lost my mother
AND father. At first he kept telling us,
"We've got t9 stick together," hut he's
never around, and his grandchildren are
heartbroken.
·i
I haven 't visited IllY father since she

.

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

"

...

joining Bush in searching out common ground

My fellow Americans, as Jefferson said 200,
President-elect George W. Bush didn't ask me
yean ago, "Every .difference of opinion is not a;
to write a draft for his inaugu.-.1 address, but I've
difference of principle:' In devotion to basic,
done it anyway.
I hope he'll say something like the following
American principles, as he put it, "We are all;
Republicans; we are all Federalists."
,
and put himself on track toward' a legacy as the
And so it is today: In dedication to our coun,
Great Reconciler:
· try's prosperity and freedom, the guarantee of.
My fellow Americans, by the grace of God,
the wisdom of the Founders and the labor and
•;,
justice and the spread of c;&gt;pportunity, in' respect.
for the rule oflaw, we are all Republicarn; we,
courage of our forebearers, we have inherited
the greatest, freest and richest nation in the his- ·
are all Democrats. We differ as to means. We.
largely
do not differ :L&lt; to ends. And we do not
tory of humankind. Thanks to the energy,
'
NEA
COLUMNisr
enterprise and mota! fiber of our people,
differ at all ill our love for Affierica.
:
have recently enjoyed an unprecedented period
On some matters we will no doubt continue
ofprosperity and improvement in many areas of deem it my obligation to do .everything possi- to differ, but I pledge to narrow differencesour social life: Our streets are safer, our people hie to heal the divisions left over qom the elec- . wherever possible. l pledge to establish a regular
are healthier, and fewer Americans depend on tion.
proceSs of bipartisan consultation in advance of
welfare for their livelihood.
But I cannot do ihis alone. The- ele~tion. has , ' policy, decisio~. &lt;?n}~Y ma~e~
can find
My ,predecessor, President Clinton, · and encouraged some to deepen our .divisions; to . cpmmop. ground1f we sc:lllCh for 16;but we canrecent Congresses deserve thanks for their con- . make i!ridge-building more difficult. And this not search separately. We ~~st s~~~,t~er.
tributions to these improvements. .We owe continues as an unwelcome trend. For nearly
We can find ·common ground ·....,. lrldeed; I
thanks to their predecessoJ;S, too, and especially three decades a tendency has embedded itself in believe we already are on common ground - ·
President Reagan and my father, for America's Washington t~ practice politics ~· War by other · in desiring ·that · of our chjldre~ te~eive. a:
preceminence in the world .
means- to treat adversaries as enemies, to ren- . world-class.educatiOn.We are all Republicans 10
But challenges have emerged to our general · der them hateful in the
~r pther Ameri- ~xpecting our schools to meet the highe,;t PO::
well-being. Our continued prosperity is not cans. I hereby pledge my utinos~ effort to end stble s~da_rds· We are ~ Democrats. m our
assured. Improvement in the lot of most of the this ugly tradition and make the next four years deternunatJ.on to provtde ~em W1th the.
people only highlights the plight of those left ·an era of reconciliation, here in ;Washington and resources to attain those standari:ls.
behind. America's security must constantly be throughout the nation.
" '
. We can find c~mmon ground in guarantee-:
protected. And the climate in which politics is
In pledging this, I would remind all Ameri- 1ng a secure .retJ.~ment for our parents, .ourconducted in this Capitol is an embarrassment cans that, however divided we seem now, the sei'(CS and our children. We ~ all Republicans
to the decent values of the people·we are sworn differences in our nation have been far deeper and we are all Democrats in our determination
to serve. There is work to be done to ensure that .in times past.'l\vo hundred years ago, one of our to end racial discrimination and to enhance the
we deliver to our children a 'nation that is hap- gre~test presidents, Thomas :Jefferson, took life 'chances of every person .. w~ are on COII,l-·
pier•.stronger and less blighted by injustice''than office after a deadlock in the flectoral College mon !!!OUnd 10 our deternunanon to reform
the one we inherit.
'
and 36 rounds of balloting m., the l:iouse of the election ~hinery of_this ,nation so that n~
The past election has highlighted the differ- Representatives .. In 1801 it was an unsettled one ever agam feelS that his or her vote was not
ences we face as we seek to address the nation's question whether democr:atic 8ovemment was fairly counted. We are agreed that continue&lt;:(
problems. Americans are equally divided strong enough to survive,
,
prosperity demands some combination of
between Democrats and Republicans. I ~
That question has been ansWered by Ameri- reduced taxes, a reduced national debt and new.
beeome president by the narrowest of constitu- can history: Ouly demoCracy is strong enougll investment in our country's future. :We
tional margins.My opponent, formerVice Pres- to survive. Again, 140 yean ago. the inaugura- overcome differences as to the means. . · ,
ident Gore, a good and decent man, won a tioq of Abraham Lincoln .brought on the Civil
My feU ow Americans,. we ~ inherited a,
majorito of the popular vote. I am aware that Wir. It took that war to abOlish slavetyt the noble country. Let us be worthy of it.
·
many Amedcans feel angry not only at the out· ..greatest stain onAmericailliistocy, and to secure
(Morton Kondf'!Uke is executi~ editor of R.QI~
come but at the process that brought it about. I the principle that all men ~· created equal.
Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Koqdracke

we

moved in. Tell me, Abby, wh&gt;t should I been absolutely overwhelming.
Operation Dear Abby continues to be
do?- FEEL LIKE AN ORPHAN
DEAR
FEEL
LIKE
AN a very real success. I have personally witORPHAN: Investigate the price range nessed the positive effects it has had on
of several lovely markers for your moth- the troops supporting the various peaceer's grave. Meet with your father and ask keeping missions throughout the former
him which one he will pay for, then republic of Yugoslavia. Operation Dear
arrange for the installation. It will give Abby campaigns really do lift the spirits
of milita,ry men and women far from
you and your son some closure.
Next, ask for the family pictures that home.
Many thanks for your gracious and
were removed. It's important ttlat they
remain with you and your son. Perhaps, continued support. You truly are a great
ALLEN B. PEGG,
in time, you, your father and his girl- American. friend will enjoy a more positive rela- DIRECTOR OF POSTAL OPERAtionship. Continue your counseling until TIONS, U.S. ARMY; HEIDELBERG,
you are better able to come to terms GERMANY
DEAR AU.EN: Thank you . for the
with your mother's death and your
kind
words. I'm sure my readers will be
father's behavior.
DEAR ABBY: I am taking this pleased to know their efforts on behalf of
opportunity to extend to you and your our servicemen and women have been
devoted readership sincere appreciation successful.
DEAR ABBY: The letter about profor the support you haw given U.S. milte
cting
oneself from colds by frequent
itary service members deployed worldwide. The outpouring of support has hand-washing hit home. Sixty-six yem

personal expenses are ways in
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
which this can be done.
Ff&lt;MILY 4ND CONSUMER
Children have to make deciSCIENCES/COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
sions
about their money and then
Parents should begin teaching
their children about money at an live with the consequences. Par- ·
early a~:e. Parents should set a ents should not criticize or quesgood example by keeping accu- tion the way a child spends his
rate financial records· and having money. He may make mistakes,
appropriate money discussions but that is how he will learn to
make better choices.
periodically with their children.
Parents should, however, praise
Finding out how to live withand
encourage their children to
in their means is an important
lesson for children to learn. They save for long term goals (such as
need to discover that money is · college) and short-term goals
limited - that there is not enough (such as an upcoming special
to buy everything they want. event), to give to charity, and to
Allowances or earning money by compare products before. making
doing household chores can help a purchase.
How much should allowances
a child assume financial responsibilities. Saving money for later, be? They should be appropriate to
saving for a particular toy or · the chilp's age and maturity. The
game, learning to share with oth- amount should cover their needs,
en and having · money for their plus some persona'! spending

money. As the child grows older,
the amount can increase to reflect
his changing needs. Parents may
)Vant to pay the child in coins or
dollar bills so the money could
easily be divided 'into the different savings and spending categories.
From time to time, a child may
run out of money before her next
allowance. If this happen,s, parents
have several ,options. The child
could do without until the following payment. As a result she
may learn to plan her spending
better.
Parents may decide to loan her
money, pos,~ibly with interest, and
set up· a repayment schedule. This
will allow her to see how the real
world functions. Or if something
unexpected has come up, parents
may decide to give additional

money to help with costs. Parents
·need to use good judgment in
determining which action would
be most beneficial to the child.
As a youth becomes older, he
may want to earn money outside .
of the home. A job can help give
him independence, as well as
teach him the responsibilities of
hard work, cooperation, and
money and time management. A
job allows the child to see how
much time, energy and effort is
needed to earn money: Parents
should make sure that the job
does not take up too much of the
teen's time. A balance of school,
studying, family, friends, rest,
recreation and.job is essential.
As · the youth becomes more
experienced with money, she may
&gt;want to open a checking account.
Parents can teach the teen how to

w;

"!I

•

TODAY
IN HISTORY
..
..
.

BV THE ASSOCI4TED PRESS

&lt;('oday is Tuesday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day of 2001. There are 342 days
len in the year.
.:roday's Highlight in History:
'1
Pn Jan. 23, 1968, North Korea seized the U.S. Navy ship Pueblo, ·
clj;irging its crew with being on a spying mission. (The crew was
released 11 months later.)
• On this date:
.
In 1789, Georgetown University was established in present-day
Washington, D.C.
.
In 1845, Congress decided all national elections would be held on
the first Thesday after the first Monday in November.
.
ln 1849, :English-born Elizabeth Blackwell became the first
wopun in America to receive a Doctor of Medicine degree, fiom
th'e Medical Institution of Geneva, N.Y.
' In 1920, the Dutch government refused demands from ·the victor!QUS Allies to hand ovet the ex-kaiser of Germany.
· •In 1932, N""' York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt announced his
candidacy for.the Democratic presidential nomination. ·
. ,
~n 1950, the Israeli Knesset approved a resolution proclaiming
Jer\lsalem the capital oflsrael.
·
' ltt 1964, the 24th amendment to the Constitution, eliminating the
po~ tax in federal elections, was ratified.
· In 1973, President Richard Nixon announced an accord had been
reiC:hed to end the Vietnam War.
In 1985, debate in Britain's House of Loi-ds was carried on live
te~sion for the first time.
·
• Ill 1989, surrealist ardst Salvador Dali died in his native Spain at
age*84.
.
• 'Tho years ago: After some. 12,000 sorties in the ·Gulf War, Gen.
Colin Powell, chairmall of the Joint ChiefS of Staff, said allied forces
hail achieved air superiority, and would focus air fire on Iraqi ground
forces around Kuwait.
. ·.l!ive years ago: Delivering his State of the Union address to a skepticlal Republican Congress, President Clinton traced the themes of
his: re-election campaign and confronted GOP lav.'maker.s on the
budget, demanding they "never- ever" shut down the government
'
al@n.
pne year ago: The dark satire "American Beauty" won the Golden Globe for best 'film dram~ . while "The Sopranos" won best televi~pn drama. The Tennessee Titans advanced to the Super Bowl by
b~ng the Jacksonville Jaguars 33-14 in the AFC Chal!lpionship
~e. The St. Louis Rams defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 116·~~ win the NFC Championship. NFL star Derrick Thomas was
in.illred when the sport utility vehicle he was driving overturned on
artjcy road in Missouri; Thomas died Feb. 8. (The crash also claimed
thG life o£Thomas' friend, Michael Tellis.)
'Jl:!d;ry's Birthdays! Historian Joseph Nathan Kane is 102. Actress
Jeal,fne Moreau is 73. Actress Cb.ita Rivera is 68. Actor-director Lou
A1l~j:&gt;nio is 67. Cou~ttry singer Johnny Russell is 61. Actor Gil Gerard is 58. Actor Rutger Hauer is 57. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jerry
Lai.vson (The Persuasions) is 57. Sen. Thomas R . Carper, D-Del, is
54. Singer Anita Pointer is 53. Actor Richard Dean Anderson n 51.
R(!ck musician .Bill Cunningham is 51. Rock singer-musician
Patrick Simmons (The Doobie Brothers) is 51. Rock musician
Danny Federici (Bruce Spring;teen and the E Street Band) is 51. ·
Ro£k singer Robin Zander (Cheap Trick) is 48. Princess Caroline
ofMonaco is 44. Singer Anita Baker is 43. Reggae musician Earl
Falconer (UB40) is 42 .

eyes

can

.. '
•I.

RYAN'S VIEW

Making time to say grace.is a worthwhile q[ort
BY Jo.AN RYAN
.
. At. I think back on it, rsaying grace also
The forks in the grip of my husband and seemed to signal a delineation between antics
.son were moving like missiles toward the pan- permissible in other rooms and what was perfried chicken when I asked them to wait.
missible in the dini.ng room. We were quieter
"I'd like to say grace," I said.
a.t the table, less ~bby, slightly more dignified
"What?" my son asked in that lovely pre- than we were elsewhere in the house. Saying
teen tone, as if I· had just proposed we grind grace Was like the bell for Pavlov's dog;, trigout faces into the angd-hair pasta.
~ering our minds toward less medi~ behav- •.
Saying grace has not been a practice around 10r.
my dinner table, at least not since I was a · I wonder, tllo, if reciting the words in unichild. My brothers and sisten and I recited a son night after night reinforced our sense of
prayer every night that; as I say it aloud now, family. The prayer was like a password or
still has no pu!lctuation: "Bless us 0 Lord for motto, something that was peculiarly oun.
these thy gifts which. we, are about to ,receive
A friend had given me a book of poems and
fiom thy bounty through Christ our Lord prayen that she used each night to say grace
amen."
with her family: I wanted to create a similar
Ti).e prayer came from my mother, who
ritual for my son, who now was appealing to
made to recite it every (lay at lunchtime at the his father to make me stop. I p~tended not to
insistence of the nuns at St. Nicholas ofrolen- hear (the best self-defense tactic of motherfine Church in the Bronx. By the time it had ·hood) and launched into gra&lt;;e.
'
1
been handed down to her six children, the
"Make of younelf a light,". I said, reading
meaning had been worn as thin as an old fiom the book, which ,noted that these were
summer dress..We rc;cited it mindlessly, as we Buddha's laSt words, "Amen."
did our ABCs and jump-rope sing-song;.
This wasn't going over the way I had
Yet saying grace drew a line across time and. hoped. Later, a friend told me I should not
space. It· marked the end of the day's hustle have been so 1up-fiont with my family. She
and the beginning of the evening's relative . began saying grace without her children
quiet. It was, in a subtle, ritualistic kind of way, knowing that was what she was doing. She
like washing off the mud from Out There and called it "Appreciations and Compliments."
wrapping ounelves in the clean familiarity of Every night before dinner, family memben
our table, our dishes, each· other.
share a gesture or experience they appreciated

Was

or acknowledge someone they wanted to'
compliment.
It accomplishes much of what saying grace'
should, thing; that are easily mocked and
therefore ' rarely dfscussed. Saying grace, ·it
seems, allows us to pause long enough to'
thirik about the food on our plate , the roof
over ou't' 1\e'ads, fh! pebple with us at the table.
It remin«4 us that missing a meeting or a car
payment isn't the "''!d of the world. It connects our daily lives with something deeper..
Maybe it even helps us to capture some wisp
of what is divine around. us and in us.
nor sure why so many families, like
mine, don't say grace regularly, or why so
many fatnilies stopped. Maybe it is just too
corny. Maybe we're reluctant to be too God-'
ish, for fear that people will ~mistake us for
someone who keeps crystals under her pillow
or is about to picket a women's' clinic.
My too-cool son will toll his eyes, but I'll.
outlast him. I have a prayer fiom St. Thomas
Aquinas picked out for tonight, chosen espe-'
dally for him.
"Give us, 0 Lord, grateful t&gt;earts, which do
not waste time complaining."

I'm

a1111n RJ111n is a col11mnist for the San Francisco
Chronicle.' Send comments to her in care of this
newspaper or . send
her . e-mail at
joanryansfgate.com.)

·'

Sorority hears about stress
POMEROY - Donette Dugan, BSN,RN, adtninistrator of the
Behavioral Health Unit at Veterans Memorial Hospital, was speaker at
a recent meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Be? Sigma . Phi
Sorority, held at the Lutheran Church.
.
·
·
.
·
Emphasis of her talk was on stress and depressiQn and the difference.
A desert course was served by Charlo~te Elberfeld and Ruth Riffle
. · following the business meeting.

Middleport Uterary aub meets
POMEROY -A review of "Victoria's Daughters'' by Jerrold M .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
,,
TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Polluck dinner.
RUTLAND - Ltadlng Creek Conser·
vancy District, organizational meeting
Tutaday 5 p.m followed by regula• board
mooting.
POMEROY - Winding Trail Garden
Club. Tueoday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Aile• Thompeon.
MIDDLEPORT - Concert of Prayer,
Tuesday. 7 p.m. Heath UMod Mathodlot
Church. Theme Power Teem and Christ·
lan United Week. Sponsored by tilt Mlcldleport Mlnlstonal Anoclatlon.
MIDDLEPORT - Ladles of the Lord
WorMn'a Bible Study 9 to 10 a.m. II

ago, we had the first personal hygiene
course given in high school. The
teacher's advice: "Never touch any door
handle with your bare hands, especially
·
bathroom doon."
My sons and grandsons laugh every
time I open a door in a public place with
. a tissue, a glove or my jacket. I keep
reminding them about the person who
sneezes with his hand cupped over his
nose.- DR. BOB IN BEACHWOOD,
OHIO
DEAR DR. BOB: I'm not laughing.
I'm reminded of Howard HugHes.
Maybe he wasn't so eccentric after aU.
What teens need to know about sex,
drugs, AIDS, and getting along with
peers and parents is 1n "What EwryTeen
Should Know." To order, send a businesssized. self-addressed envelope, plus check
or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to : Dear Abby, Teen Booklet,
1~0. Box 447 , Mount Morri&gt;, ll 610540447. (Postage is included.)

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Bv BECKY BAER

'!/'Juvenile offenders

•

Abigail

•

Law helps protect youngest

•The Akron (Ohio) Beaconjou'r nai:A 10-year-old does
not belong in jail. A 10-year-old who commits murder or a
. serious felony is a child who needs special help, not a candidate to be thrown into confinement together with a. bunch of
older offenders.
It is commendable that Ohio Gov. Bob Taft has taken the
trouble to emphasize, through an executive order, that the goal
oi a provision in the . new state juvenile justice law, Senate Bill
1?9. must be to provide these troubled children with the treattfll!nt they require.
It is bad enough that Ohio law permits 14-year-olds to be
tried as adults. That Ohio has reduced from 12 years to 10
y'ars the age at which children can be taken into state custody
is; as the governor declared, more than a little troubling.
· 'Gov Taft's ·executive order further stresses the need to prote~ the youngest among young offenders.
• .•_The Ironton (Ohio) Tribune: With the steel industry in
turmoil, a shot in the arm would be a good remedy.
· '&amp; domestic steel producers continue to struggle and cease
.Qperations, it is essential that the feder.aJ. government and lawtrt:ikers take a closer look at wlut em..be done to keep these
companies afloat. Otherwi~. I!OOnittllllllJl!B llllj(l&gt;!llD diousands of
jo.l:is will be lost.
·

Jan.l3,

'I'Ueldlly, ..nuary 2S, 20U

The Daily Sentinel
.'

Page AS

Abundant Grace Church. AK denomlna· , Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soronty, Thurs·
!Ions lnvHed. For more Information call day 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran Chu1ch.
992·1640 or 992·8687.
Chili supper.

WEDNESDAY
..'· , RACINE"~ Racine American Legion
MIDDLEPORT - Tht Middleport Lit· Auxiliary, Unit 602, meel at 7 p.m Thurs·
erary Club, 2 p.m Wec;tneoday at tho day at the hall.
home of Betsy Paroona, Mlddlepon. ·
'
.
Sarah Owen to rovlow "Crooker, A
POMEROY ~ Caring and Shanng
Woman's Journey' by Unda DeRoaler.
group. Thursday, t p.m. Dr. James L.
' Schmoll. O.D. will speak on mecular
poMEROY - Meigs County Health · degtntra~on.
Department childhood ImmUnization clln·
lc, TueodaY, 1 to 7· p.m. at the office,
REEDSVILLE - Rlverviaw Garden
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Take child's Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
shot recorda. Children ll'llllt be accompa· Orace Weber. Tal&lt;e Items for auction.
nlod by parenl/legal guardian. Flu shots
TOPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers Ploins
alto available.
VFW Post 9053, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
VFW hell. Spacial drawing .
THURBOAY
POMEROY - Proceplor !Iota !Iota

'

•

POMEROY - Organlzallonal meeting, Town and Country Expo, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Meigs Fairgrounds, grange
annex.

take ·precautions to avoid losing balance can greatly increase the
chec ks, how to write a check, and cost of ari item. Parc:llts need to
how to balance a checkbook. Par- instill the import:mce of wise
ents can instruct the child on the usage of a credr t card.
Parents play an important part .
importance of keeping accurate
· in· teaching children how to
and detailed records.
If a credit card is in a teenager's spend and save money judiciousfuture, parents should explain the ly. They should model th e finanresponsibilities associated with cial behavior they want their chilone. They should discuss interest dren to have.
.'
rates, showing how an unpaid
'

.

�•

PageA4

-

I

The Daily Sentinel

Dads behavior undercuts familys attempt to heal
DEAR ABBY: My mother committed suicide a year ago. Last year was difficult for our entire family. I was extremely angry with her for the first couple of
montl)s, especially since it was my ISyear-old son who found her. My son and
I are both in counseling. He is heali11g
faster than I am.
The problem I am facing now is with
my father. I. love my father and have tried
to help him through this awful ordeal.
However, he has never been emotionally
available to me or my siblings. The truth
is, my mother and father had a terrible
relationship throughout their 35-year
marriage. My father \vaS especially hurtful toward ·my mother.
Four months after Mother died, my
father asked a woman to move into the
house. She has taken down all the family
pic~ures and replaced them with her
own. It's as if my mother never existed.
Father is now talking about marrying
her. It's breaking my heart to see him act

~-1941

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-912·2156 • FIX: 912·2157
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ChllriH W. Govey
Publisher

Chlrlene Hoeflich
: , Genlrll M11111g«

R. Shewn Lewl•
Man~glng Eciltor

· Larry Boyw

Advertlelng Director

Dlene K1y Hill
Controller

I.AflltiiD W MIMw.,. w*Diu. Til, rlw111i1 Nl4n llwl JfJO word~. AU lmm ur rd}«l
.,.. 10MIIbtfa4 .IUUf N•irMW WID flddn11ud kl4p#toM numkr. No 111111f!UflldNrr wiU
.. , ....w I..MM,.
1101 ,.nouJJtllr.
Tlw~J~Wmu u"*uH ill llr• eo/u•11 j,Jow.,.. U.. CO#fr•nru of th• Oltio V.U.1 PllblUirbtJ
C&amp; 'r ~ INMnl, 1111Mn DllwrwU.IWIH.

u...u" "'rood,.,., ....,,, """'·

NATIONAL VIEWS ·

Van Buren
ADVICE
like nothing has happened. He hasn't
even found the time to put a stone on
Mother's grave. The last straw was when
Father bought a motorcycle. He's never
ridden or owned one before. He bou~:ht
it because this new woman in his life
likes to ride.
Abby, I feel like I've lost my mother
AND father. At first he kept telling us,
"We've got t9 stick together," hut he's
never around, and his grandchildren are
heartbroken.
·i
I haven 't visited IllY father since she

.

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

"

...

joining Bush in searching out common ground

My fellow Americans, as Jefferson said 200,
President-elect George W. Bush didn't ask me
yean ago, "Every .difference of opinion is not a;
to write a draft for his inaugu.-.1 address, but I've
difference of principle:' In devotion to basic,
done it anyway.
I hope he'll say something like the following
American principles, as he put it, "We are all;
Republicans; we are all Federalists."
,
and put himself on track toward' a legacy as the
And so it is today: In dedication to our coun,
Great Reconciler:
· try's prosperity and freedom, the guarantee of.
My fellow Americans, by the grace of God,
the wisdom of the Founders and the labor and
•;,
justice and the spread of c;&gt;pportunity, in' respect.
for the rule oflaw, we are all Republicarn; we,
courage of our forebearers, we have inherited
the greatest, freest and richest nation in the his- ·
are all Democrats. We differ as to means. We.
largely
do not differ :L&lt; to ends. And we do not
tory of humankind. Thanks to the energy,
'
NEA
COLUMNisr
enterprise and mota! fiber of our people,
differ at all ill our love for Affierica.
:
have recently enjoyed an unprecedented period
On some matters we will no doubt continue
ofprosperity and improvement in many areas of deem it my obligation to do .everything possi- to differ, but I pledge to narrow differencesour social life: Our streets are safer, our people hie to heal the divisions left over qom the elec- . wherever possible. l pledge to establish a regular
are healthier, and fewer Americans depend on tion.
proceSs of bipartisan consultation in advance of
welfare for their livelihood.
But I cannot do ihis alone. The- ele~tion. has , ' policy, decisio~. &lt;?n}~Y ma~e~
can find
My ,predecessor, President Clinton, · and encouraged some to deepen our .divisions; to . cpmmop. ground1f we sc:lllCh for 16;but we canrecent Congresses deserve thanks for their con- . make i!ridge-building more difficult. And this not search separately. We ~~st s~~~,t~er.
tributions to these improvements. .We owe continues as an unwelcome trend. For nearly
We can find ·common ground ·....,. lrldeed; I
thanks to their predecessoJ;S, too, and especially three decades a tendency has embedded itself in believe we already are on common ground - ·
President Reagan and my father, for America's Washington t~ practice politics ~· War by other · in desiring ·that · of our chjldre~ te~eive. a:
preceminence in the world .
means- to treat adversaries as enemies, to ren- . world-class.educatiOn.We are all Republicans 10
But challenges have emerged to our general · der them hateful in the
~r pther Ameri- ~xpecting our schools to meet the highe,;t PO::
well-being. Our continued prosperity is not cans. I hereby pledge my utinos~ effort to end stble s~da_rds· We are ~ Democrats. m our
assured. Improvement in the lot of most of the this ugly tradition and make the next four years deternunatJ.on to provtde ~em W1th the.
people only highlights the plight of those left ·an era of reconciliation, here in ;Washington and resources to attain those standari:ls.
behind. America's security must constantly be throughout the nation.
" '
. We can find c~mmon ground in guarantee-:
protected. And the climate in which politics is
In pledging this, I would remind all Ameri- 1ng a secure .retJ.~ment for our parents, .ourconducted in this Capitol is an embarrassment cans that, however divided we seem now, the sei'(CS and our children. We ~ all Republicans
to the decent values of the people·we are sworn differences in our nation have been far deeper and we are all Democrats in our determination
to serve. There is work to be done to ensure that .in times past.'l\vo hundred years ago, one of our to end racial discrimination and to enhance the
we deliver to our children a 'nation that is hap- gre~test presidents, Thomas :Jefferson, took life 'chances of every person .. w~ are on COII,l-·
pier•.stronger and less blighted by injustice''than office after a deadlock in the flectoral College mon !!!OUnd 10 our deternunanon to reform
the one we inherit.
'
and 36 rounds of balloting m., the l:iouse of the election ~hinery of_this ,nation so that n~
The past election has highlighted the differ- Representatives .. In 1801 it was an unsettled one ever agam feelS that his or her vote was not
ences we face as we seek to address the nation's question whether democr:atic 8ovemment was fairly counted. We are agreed that continue&lt;:(
problems. Americans are equally divided strong enough to survive,
,
prosperity demands some combination of
between Democrats and Republicans. I ~
That question has been ansWered by Ameri- reduced taxes, a reduced national debt and new.
beeome president by the narrowest of constitu- can history: Ouly demoCracy is strong enougll investment in our country's future. :We
tional margins.My opponent, formerVice Pres- to survive. Again, 140 yean ago. the inaugura- overcome differences as to the means. . · ,
ident Gore, a good and decent man, won a tioq of Abraham Lincoln .brought on the Civil
My feU ow Americans,. we ~ inherited a,
majorito of the popular vote. I am aware that Wir. It took that war to abOlish slavetyt the noble country. Let us be worthy of it.
·
many Amedcans feel angry not only at the out· ..greatest stain onAmericailliistocy, and to secure
(Morton Kondf'!Uke is executi~ editor of R.QI~
come but at the process that brought it about. I the principle that all men ~· created equal.
Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Koqdracke

we

moved in. Tell me, Abby, wh&gt;t should I been absolutely overwhelming.
Operation Dear Abby continues to be
do?- FEEL LIKE AN ORPHAN
DEAR
FEEL
LIKE
AN a very real success. I have personally witORPHAN: Investigate the price range nessed the positive effects it has had on
of several lovely markers for your moth- the troops supporting the various peaceer's grave. Meet with your father and ask keeping missions throughout the former
him which one he will pay for, then republic of Yugoslavia. Operation Dear
arrange for the installation. It will give Abby campaigns really do lift the spirits
of milita,ry men and women far from
you and your son some closure.
Next, ask for the family pictures that home.
Many thanks for your gracious and
were removed. It's important ttlat they
remain with you and your son. Perhaps, continued support. You truly are a great
ALLEN B. PEGG,
in time, you, your father and his girl- American. friend will enjoy a more positive rela- DIRECTOR OF POSTAL OPERAtionship. Continue your counseling until TIONS, U.S. ARMY; HEIDELBERG,
you are better able to come to terms GERMANY
DEAR AU.EN: Thank you . for the
with your mother's death and your
kind
words. I'm sure my readers will be
father's behavior.
DEAR ABBY: I am taking this pleased to know their efforts on behalf of
opportunity to extend to you and your our servicemen and women have been
devoted readership sincere appreciation successful.
DEAR ABBY: The letter about profor the support you haw given U.S. milte
cting
oneself from colds by frequent
itary service members deployed worldwide. The outpouring of support has hand-washing hit home. Sixty-six yem

personal expenses are ways in
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
which this can be done.
Ff&lt;MILY 4ND CONSUMER
Children have to make deciSCIENCES/COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
sions
about their money and then
Parents should begin teaching
their children about money at an live with the consequences. Par- ·
early a~:e. Parents should set a ents should not criticize or quesgood example by keeping accu- tion the way a child spends his
rate financial records· and having money. He may make mistakes,
appropriate money discussions but that is how he will learn to
make better choices.
periodically with their children.
Parents should, however, praise
Finding out how to live withand
encourage their children to
in their means is an important
lesson for children to learn. They save for long term goals (such as
need to discover that money is · college) and short-term goals
limited - that there is not enough (such as an upcoming special
to buy everything they want. event), to give to charity, and to
Allowances or earning money by compare products before. making
doing household chores can help a purchase.
How much should allowances
a child assume financial responsibilities. Saving money for later, be? They should be appropriate to
saving for a particular toy or · the chilp's age and maturity. The
game, learning to share with oth- amount should cover their needs,
en and having · money for their plus some persona'! spending

money. As the child grows older,
the amount can increase to reflect
his changing needs. Parents may
)Vant to pay the child in coins or
dollar bills so the money could
easily be divided 'into the different savings and spending categories.
From time to time, a child may
run out of money before her next
allowance. If this happen,s, parents
have several ,options. The child
could do without until the following payment. As a result she
may learn to plan her spending
better.
Parents may decide to loan her
money, pos,~ibly with interest, and
set up· a repayment schedule. This
will allow her to see how the real
world functions. Or if something
unexpected has come up, parents
may decide to give additional

money to help with costs. Parents
·need to use good judgment in
determining which action would
be most beneficial to the child.
As a youth becomes older, he
may want to earn money outside .
of the home. A job can help give
him independence, as well as
teach him the responsibilities of
hard work, cooperation, and
money and time management. A
job allows the child to see how
much time, energy and effort is
needed to earn money: Parents
should make sure that the job
does not take up too much of the
teen's time. A balance of school,
studying, family, friends, rest,
recreation and.job is essential.
As · the youth becomes more
experienced with money, she may
&gt;want to open a checking account.
Parents can teach the teen how to

w;

"!I

•

TODAY
IN HISTORY
..
..
.

BV THE ASSOCI4TED PRESS

&lt;('oday is Tuesday, Jan. 23, the 23rd day of 2001. There are 342 days
len in the year.
.:roday's Highlight in History:
'1
Pn Jan. 23, 1968, North Korea seized the U.S. Navy ship Pueblo, ·
clj;irging its crew with being on a spying mission. (The crew was
released 11 months later.)
• On this date:
.
In 1789, Georgetown University was established in present-day
Washington, D.C.
.
In 1845, Congress decided all national elections would be held on
the first Thesday after the first Monday in November.
.
ln 1849, :English-born Elizabeth Blackwell became the first
wopun in America to receive a Doctor of Medicine degree, fiom
th'e Medical Institution of Geneva, N.Y.
' In 1920, the Dutch government refused demands from ·the victor!QUS Allies to hand ovet the ex-kaiser of Germany.
· •In 1932, N""' York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt announced his
candidacy for.the Democratic presidential nomination. ·
. ,
~n 1950, the Israeli Knesset approved a resolution proclaiming
Jer\lsalem the capital oflsrael.
·
' ltt 1964, the 24th amendment to the Constitution, eliminating the
po~ tax in federal elections, was ratified.
· In 1973, President Richard Nixon announced an accord had been
reiC:hed to end the Vietnam War.
In 1985, debate in Britain's House of Loi-ds was carried on live
te~sion for the first time.
·
• Ill 1989, surrealist ardst Salvador Dali died in his native Spain at
age*84.
.
• 'Tho years ago: After some. 12,000 sorties in the ·Gulf War, Gen.
Colin Powell, chairmall of the Joint ChiefS of Staff, said allied forces
hail achieved air superiority, and would focus air fire on Iraqi ground
forces around Kuwait.
. ·.l!ive years ago: Delivering his State of the Union address to a skepticlal Republican Congress, President Clinton traced the themes of
his: re-election campaign and confronted GOP lav.'maker.s on the
budget, demanding they "never- ever" shut down the government
'
al@n.
pne year ago: The dark satire "American Beauty" won the Golden Globe for best 'film dram~ . while "The Sopranos" won best televi~pn drama. The Tennessee Titans advanced to the Super Bowl by
b~ng the Jacksonville Jaguars 33-14 in the AFC Chal!lpionship
~e. The St. Louis Rams defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 116·~~ win the NFC Championship. NFL star Derrick Thomas was
in.illred when the sport utility vehicle he was driving overturned on
artjcy road in Missouri; Thomas died Feb. 8. (The crash also claimed
thG life o£Thomas' friend, Michael Tellis.)
'Jl:!d;ry's Birthdays! Historian Joseph Nathan Kane is 102. Actress
Jeal,fne Moreau is 73. Actress Cb.ita Rivera is 68. Actor-director Lou
A1l~j:&gt;nio is 67. Cou~ttry singer Johnny Russell is 61. Actor Gil Gerard is 58. Actor Rutger Hauer is 57. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jerry
Lai.vson (The Persuasions) is 57. Sen. Thomas R . Carper, D-Del, is
54. Singer Anita Pointer is 53. Actor Richard Dean Anderson n 51.
R(!ck musician .Bill Cunningham is 51. Rock singer-musician
Patrick Simmons (The Doobie Brothers) is 51. Rock musician
Danny Federici (Bruce Spring;teen and the E Street Band) is 51. ·
Ro£k singer Robin Zander (Cheap Trick) is 48. Princess Caroline
ofMonaco is 44. Singer Anita Baker is 43. Reggae musician Earl
Falconer (UB40) is 42 .

eyes

can

.. '
•I.

RYAN'S VIEW

Making time to say grace.is a worthwhile q[ort
BY Jo.AN RYAN
.
. At. I think back on it, rsaying grace also
The forks in the grip of my husband and seemed to signal a delineation between antics
.son were moving like missiles toward the pan- permissible in other rooms and what was perfried chicken when I asked them to wait.
missible in the dini.ng room. We were quieter
"I'd like to say grace," I said.
a.t the table, less ~bby, slightly more dignified
"What?" my son asked in that lovely pre- than we were elsewhere in the house. Saying
teen tone, as if I· had just proposed we grind grace Was like the bell for Pavlov's dog;, trigout faces into the angd-hair pasta.
~ering our minds toward less medi~ behav- •.
Saying grace has not been a practice around 10r.
my dinner table, at least not since I was a · I wonder, tllo, if reciting the words in unichild. My brothers and sisten and I recited a son night after night reinforced our sense of
prayer every night that; as I say it aloud now, family. The prayer was like a password or
still has no pu!lctuation: "Bless us 0 Lord for motto, something that was peculiarly oun.
these thy gifts which. we, are about to ,receive
A friend had given me a book of poems and
fiom thy bounty through Christ our Lord prayen that she used each night to say grace
amen."
with her family: I wanted to create a similar
Ti).e prayer came from my mother, who
ritual for my son, who now was appealing to
made to recite it every (lay at lunchtime at the his father to make me stop. I p~tended not to
insistence of the nuns at St. Nicholas ofrolen- hear (the best self-defense tactic of motherfine Church in the Bronx. By the time it had ·hood) and launched into gra&lt;;e.
'
1
been handed down to her six children, the
"Make of younelf a light,". I said, reading
meaning had been worn as thin as an old fiom the book, which ,noted that these were
summer dress..We rc;cited it mindlessly, as we Buddha's laSt words, "Amen."
did our ABCs and jump-rope sing-song;.
This wasn't going over the way I had
Yet saying grace drew a line across time and. hoped. Later, a friend told me I should not
space. It· marked the end of the day's hustle have been so 1up-fiont with my family. She
and the beginning of the evening's relative . began saying grace without her children
quiet. It was, in a subtle, ritualistic kind of way, knowing that was what she was doing. She
like washing off the mud from Out There and called it "Appreciations and Compliments."
wrapping ounelves in the clean familiarity of Every night before dinner, family memben
our table, our dishes, each· other.
share a gesture or experience they appreciated

Was

or acknowledge someone they wanted to'
compliment.
It accomplishes much of what saying grace'
should, thing; that are easily mocked and
therefore ' rarely dfscussed. Saying grace, ·it
seems, allows us to pause long enough to'
thirik about the food on our plate , the roof
over ou't' 1\e'ads, fh! pebple with us at the table.
It remin«4 us that missing a meeting or a car
payment isn't the "''!d of the world. It connects our daily lives with something deeper..
Maybe it even helps us to capture some wisp
of what is divine around. us and in us.
nor sure why so many families, like
mine, don't say grace regularly, or why so
many fatnilies stopped. Maybe it is just too
corny. Maybe we're reluctant to be too God-'
ish, for fear that people will ~mistake us for
someone who keeps crystals under her pillow
or is about to picket a women's' clinic.
My too-cool son will toll his eyes, but I'll.
outlast him. I have a prayer fiom St. Thomas
Aquinas picked out for tonight, chosen espe-'
dally for him.
"Give us, 0 Lord, grateful t&gt;earts, which do
not waste time complaining."

I'm

a1111n RJ111n is a col11mnist for the San Francisco
Chronicle.' Send comments to her in care of this
newspaper or . send
her . e-mail at
joanryansfgate.com.)

·'

Sorority hears about stress
POMEROY - Donette Dugan, BSN,RN, adtninistrator of the
Behavioral Health Unit at Veterans Memorial Hospital, was speaker at
a recent meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Be? Sigma . Phi
Sorority, held at the Lutheran Church.
.
·
·
.
·
Emphasis of her talk was on stress and depressiQn and the difference.
A desert course was served by Charlo~te Elberfeld and Ruth Riffle
. · following the business meeting.

Middleport Uterary aub meets
POMEROY -A review of "Victoria's Daughters'' by Jerrold M .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
,,
TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Polluck dinner.
RUTLAND - Ltadlng Creek Conser·
vancy District, organizational meeting
Tutaday 5 p.m followed by regula• board
mooting.
POMEROY - Winding Trail Garden
Club. Tueoday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Aile• Thompeon.
MIDDLEPORT - Concert of Prayer,
Tuesday. 7 p.m. Heath UMod Mathodlot
Church. Theme Power Teem and Christ·
lan United Week. Sponsored by tilt Mlcldleport Mlnlstonal Anoclatlon.
MIDDLEPORT - Ladles of the Lord
WorMn'a Bible Study 9 to 10 a.m. II

ago, we had the first personal hygiene
course given in high school. The
teacher's advice: "Never touch any door
handle with your bare hands, especially
·
bathroom doon."
My sons and grandsons laugh every
time I open a door in a public place with
. a tissue, a glove or my jacket. I keep
reminding them about the person who
sneezes with his hand cupped over his
nose.- DR. BOB IN BEACHWOOD,
OHIO
DEAR DR. BOB: I'm not laughing.
I'm reminded of Howard HugHes.
Maybe he wasn't so eccentric after aU.
What teens need to know about sex,
drugs, AIDS, and getting along with
peers and parents is 1n "What EwryTeen
Should Know." To order, send a businesssized. self-addressed envelope, plus check
or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in
Canada) to : Dear Abby, Teen Booklet,
1~0. Box 447 , Mount Morri&gt;, ll 610540447. (Postage is included.)

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Bv BECKY BAER

'!/'Juvenile offenders

•

Abigail

•

Law helps protect youngest

•The Akron (Ohio) Beaconjou'r nai:A 10-year-old does
not belong in jail. A 10-year-old who commits murder or a
. serious felony is a child who needs special help, not a candidate to be thrown into confinement together with a. bunch of
older offenders.
It is commendable that Ohio Gov. Bob Taft has taken the
trouble to emphasize, through an executive order, that the goal
oi a provision in the . new state juvenile justice law, Senate Bill
1?9. must be to provide these troubled children with the treattfll!nt they require.
It is bad enough that Ohio law permits 14-year-olds to be
tried as adults. That Ohio has reduced from 12 years to 10
y'ars the age at which children can be taken into state custody
is; as the governor declared, more than a little troubling.
· 'Gov Taft's ·executive order further stresses the need to prote~ the youngest among young offenders.
• .•_The Ironton (Ohio) Tribune: With the steel industry in
turmoil, a shot in the arm would be a good remedy.
· '&amp; domestic steel producers continue to struggle and cease
.Qperations, it is essential that the feder.aJ. government and lawtrt:ikers take a closer look at wlut em..be done to keep these
companies afloat. Otherwi~. I!OOnittllllllJl!B llllj(l&gt;!llD diousands of
jo.l:is will be lost.
·

Jan.l3,

'I'Ueldlly, ..nuary 2S, 20U

The Daily Sentinel
.'

Page AS

Abundant Grace Church. AK denomlna· , Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soronty, Thurs·
!Ions lnvHed. For more Information call day 6:30 p.m. at the Lutheran Chu1ch.
992·1640 or 992·8687.
Chili supper.

WEDNESDAY
..'· , RACINE"~ Racine American Legion
MIDDLEPORT - Tht Middleport Lit· Auxiliary, Unit 602, meel at 7 p.m Thurs·
erary Club, 2 p.m Wec;tneoday at tho day at the hall.
home of Betsy Paroona, Mlddlepon. ·
'
.
Sarah Owen to rovlow "Crooker, A
POMEROY ~ Caring and Shanng
Woman's Journey' by Unda DeRoaler.
group. Thursday, t p.m. Dr. James L.
' Schmoll. O.D. will speak on mecular
poMEROY - Meigs County Health · degtntra~on.
Department childhood ImmUnization clln·
lc, TueodaY, 1 to 7· p.m. at the office,
REEDSVILLE - Rlverviaw Garden
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Take child's Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
shot recorda. Children ll'llllt be accompa· Orace Weber. Tal&lt;e Items for auction.
nlod by parenl/legal guardian. Flu shots
TOPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers Ploins
alto available.
VFW Post 9053, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
VFW hell. Spacial drawing .
THURBOAY
POMEROY - Proceplor !Iota !Iota

'

•

POMEROY - Organlzallonal meeting, Town and Country Expo, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Meigs Fairgrounds, grange
annex.

take ·precautions to avoid losing balance can greatly increase the
chec ks, how to write a check, and cost of ari item. Parc:llts need to
how to balance a checkbook. Par- instill the import:mce of wise
ents can instruct the child on the usage of a credr t card.
Parents play an important part .
importance of keeping accurate
· in· teaching children how to
and detailed records.
If a credit card is in a teenager's spend and save money judiciousfuture, parents should explain the ly. They should model th e finanresponsibilities associated with cial behavior they want their chilone. They should discuss interest dren to have.
.'
rates, showing how an unpaid
'

.

�•

\

P-ve A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, January 23, 2001

Inside:
Today~

Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.

t::ONrBIBlJTORS
SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS AT
THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

I

Alzheimer's Disease/Related Disorders (family
caregiver training and support groups)
Community Support Program (ideotil'ying
problems and obtaiolog' asslstaoce)
Center Dining (nutrillous meals)
Educational Programs

Fitness Center

.Qealth Clinics
Information and Referral
Protective/Legal Assistance
Recreatiooai/Social Activllles
Retired and Senior Volunteer Program
Support Assistance (for example, ftlllog out
insurance/medical forms and answering
benefit questjons)
Transportation and Escort

W ellness and Health Prevention Programs

Arlec:Abcm
Shirley Appleby
Charlotte Armes
William Aull
Jack&amp;. Carolyn Bac~ner
Elmer Bailey
. HOmer A Alpha Bailey
Edison &amp; Bernice Baker

Mauie Ball
Harlan Ballard
Carl &amp; Hazel Barnhill
Maxine Barn'hill
Sybil Barr
Muy Barringer
Hazel Bartnn
Robert4 Donnie Banon
John Buler
l.AJuise Bearhs
Lorclla Beegle
Homer &amp; Shirley Belt
John Bigalow
Benha Bing
Cora Bir~h
Leuta Birch
Mary Bise
Esther Black
Uoyd &amp; Anna Blackwood
Charles Blakeslee
William Booth
Jennie Bowla
Margaret Bowles
Frances Boyce
Frances Boyer
Noll Bradshaw
BUJ Brewer
Emma Broderick
Gladys Brotheit
Vera Buchanan
Rita Buckley
Dina &amp; Mary Bunch

Ruby Burnside
Ullian Burt
Mildred Caldwell
Suah Caldwell
Ruth Canter
Elizabeth Carman ·
Freda Carpenter
Jerry Carpenter
Beny Carsey
Ethd CarSOn
Marie Carson
Johncna Chapman
Marcella Chapman

I

Ouidl Chase
Martha Childs

William Childs
EJ!a Mac Chrislian
Manley Christy
Doua Circle
Bvtlyn aark ,
Mary Occk
Slln &amp;. JoAnn Coatu
Coole Coleman
Beulah Collier
Dorothy Collins
'Pandor~ Collins
Ruben It Thelma Colli lUI
Bonnie Conde •
Joan Corder
Rote Corliu
Raymond Cun~:rlll
Betty CouaJ1cnour
Ida Cowdery
Constanco Craig
Jotej)h &amp; Lilah Creamean.'
Oetaklint M. Crou
Charles Richard Crow
Leo A Mary Davidson
Dorothy Davis
Sllllbeth Davis

'

Willie Dllvi&amp;

Bruce ~eter
Jote ' k Marie Delgado
Lydia Inlong .
Ulliin Dc:moskey
(Mol Dennis
Marcia Denison
Earl &amp; &amp;uy Denny

Heitt~ Diddie ·

V..leric Didenko

AI~ Dill

Minnie Dixon
Dave Donahue
Dom1by Downie
Eliubeth Duffy
Susie Duricuu ·
Robcl1 de. Maxine Dutil

I,

··~-

I.:M:or:y:~::•ro:•:Y

SERVICES &amp;
PROGRAMS FOR
SENIORS

IN THE HOME
Chore Service (elelllling-laundry)
Homemaker/Health Servleea
Home Delivered Mealo
Home Malntenmce (minor home repaln)
In-Home Aloeument

CHURCH DONATIONS

Health Assessment

Emma Adams

Blflllend CJotpn
BW CraDO
Cheotor Ualted Melhodlat Youth Croap
Chrt.ot AeaHmy Bell Choir . Conllle 'll'alerman, Vlollnla
D011a Job.oo
Dixie Sayre
Dou Yo""B 4 Joek C,upenoUI'
Elvio (Dwtpt Icenhower)
frank 4 Ida Martin
Ceorp Hall
Golden Bolla of the Triaity Church
Hal Kaeea .t Abbie Strauoa Junior a Rita 'll'hl1e
Kathy Droper
Marilyn 'll'deox
Muino a Karen Grlllllh
Melp Cowdy Meotor P
Metra P...,non a The lllelp Middle School 4 6th
CrodeCholn
Middleport Church of Chrlat-Ciallcfren'o Choir
Middleport ClaW"eh oC Chrlat-Sealor Yo•th Croup
Paulolle Horriaon, Tom Dooley, Clnda Stareher .t Mary'
Kaopp
·
·
Jloaeh Fandly SlntJen
RCilJOr 4 Mary Gilmore
R...,r 'II'IDJamo a The Blfl Bend Commualoy Baud
Rutlaud Elemeotary Choir- Sharon Howley a Don""
Jenldno
s - fanou a Eulem Elementary School Choir
Swlqlo' Senlon
Tommy Taylor
1lmellae Barbenhop Qaar1e1

Carleton Chur&lt;h
Coolville ADegheny Melloodlst Church
East Letart United Methodist Women
Enterprise United Methodist Church
F1nt Baptist Chur&lt;h of Racine- Ladles Missionary
Fellowship
·
·
First Baptist Chur&lt;h· Bertha M. Say"' Miulonary
Society
Hemlock Grove Christian Church- Falthllll followen
Class
Hillside Baptist Church
MI. Moriah Church of God .. Ladles Auxiliary
Pomeroy Church of Christ· Adult Clau
Pomeroy Seven Day Adventl.Jt Church
Pomeroy United Methodist Chur&lt;h
Racine Baptist Hy Shy Ny Sunday School Clap ·
Radne Baptist Sunday School Cluat4
Radne United Methodist Men's Breaklut
Racine United Methodist Women
Rutl1nd Church of tbe Nazarene
Sacred Heart Cburcb
Trinity Church
Tappen Plafno Church of Christ

APPRECIATION TO ACCREDITATION
COMMfiTEE MEMBERS,

BeekyBoer
Uoycl Blackwood
Claarleo Blok..lee
Evelyn Clark
Jo011 Corder
Mlek Davenport
Tom Dooley
Mamie Fry
Muloe Cuklll

Calherbae Shenefield
Hilda StotiO
Helen Swarhl

Mike Swlaher
Peny Vamocloe
Jndy Wllllamo
Allee Wolte
Patrick Wood

Sarah ClbLo
Chorlene Hoeflleh
Poul K1oeo
JohnLealeo
SueMalooo
Joan May
JameoMo.....W.,
Leah Ord

SUPPORT YOUR
SENIOR CENTER
BUYA
2001 MEMBERSHIP
Your paid membership to lbe Meigs Couoty
Couacll on A&amp;log, lac.. is a measure of
support for the Multipurpose Senior Center
and for the maoy services It provides. Each
p1ld membership received verifies to
ngiooal, state and national funding ageocles
that the Senior Cenler is providiog needed
prvgrams to older adults..

SEOAL
Girt a
Mariana
Jackson
Warren ·
Logan
Gallla Academy
.. Athens
River Valley
Point Pleasant

SPECIAL THANKS

o.,___,

E.,......

.,...

n..,...

~~•

J•-

The~~

o.,....,.....

A:I:••:·~~cr=M~a=y~....Jl~....~;J~::~~~~~~ ~,A~:;~..............~•.•~
....
M.u.rioi
....Hom.
....H.••ol•~ o..~
....·.•.......
..

The Dollly Sentinel
United Fund ror Meigs County
Walmart·Mason

8-1 13-2
6-2 10-4
5-4 7·6
5-4 7-7
5-5 8-7
5-5 7-6
2·7 4-10
1-9 3-12

'

Jan.25
Gallia Academy at River Valley
Jackson at Point Pleasant
Marietta at Logan
Warren at Athens
A- non-leagua'
Glria
ALL

Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia
Hannan

11-3
6·3
2-10
0-5

Monday'• garMe
Ohio Valley Christian at South Gallia,
ppd

r ,

•ft

PluM- Melp,:Pqe 8:5

day night's game aga inst Po rt-

la nd but lost Harpn ng, wh o ·
averaged 11.4 points and 4. 8
reboun ds in 28 g:aJ'nes this season .

Coles was placed on the ·
mjured list on Nov. 22 with an.
mflamed left kn ee aft er playing
in j ust nine gaml•s. The 10-year
vete ran , w h o

" We'll work lum in slowly,''
said Ca vs coach Randy
Wittman. "He 'll be a big boost
for us not only on the floor but
off in terms of leadership ."
Coles aver:tged R p.oints and
3.8 assists in 2 1 minutes before
gettin g hurt .

Harpring's additi on gives the
Cavs three pl aye rs on the
injured list. They are also without rooki e center C hris Mihm

and forward Lamond Murray is
wearing a m ask ro protect a
broken bon e in his face.

O n Monday night, Clevehmd was also missin g. forvvard

Etdrick 13ohannon , wh o had
e m ergency sUrgery on a to oth .

MARAUDERS ROU-- Meigs' Shannon Price (12) and Southern's Fallon Roush (10) reach for the bas·
ketball during the Marauders 77-29 win over the Tornadoes Monday. (Dave Harris photo)

ALL

7-0 11-1 ·
3-3 6·6
3-2 5-7
·3-3 5-7
2-4 6-5
· 0-8 0-12

Hocklrog Dlvlalon
TVC

'~LL

5-1
3-3
3-3

7-4
8·3
8-4

3-3

4·6

2-4
2-4

7-5

SPORTSCASTER -- Rick Pltino will be
a play-by-play announcer and game
·analyst for CBS Sports. (~)

6·7

Todey'agarnea
Vinton County at Alexander
Wellston at Belpre
Eastern at Miller
Southern at Federal Hocking
Meigs at Nelsonville'York
Water1ord at Trimble
Boya
lEO

e-o

8-1

5-3
4-4
3-5
3·5

ALL

Bv Burcti COOPIR

B-4

9-2
7-4
8-8
7-6

6-6

Today'a IJI!Me
Gallla Academy at Athena
Logan at River Valley
Marietta at Point Pleasant
JacKson at Warren .

ALL

8-2

5-4
2-9
1:9

track of any ones points. After
the ballgame, you look in the
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acad- book and see Brie has 26 points
emy has gotten itself back on and your like whoa."
,
track in the SEOAL.
Nine of her 26 came in the
Brianna johnson scored 26 fourth quarter when the Blue
points as the Blue Angels defeat- Angels had to hold off a late
ed Athens, 64-60 in girls high Bulldogs rally.
school basketball Monday.
"Brie's really good at distribut"Our girls are playing with a ing the ball. She's very patient
lot of confidence right now;' s;lid and she's played face to face
Gallia Academy l).ead coach Kim defense," said Adkins. "She just
Adkins. "Our girls are v~ry kind of goes and does her thing,
focused in practices prior to the and when she gets some points,
game, and our girls are actually fine . When she can't get points, .
following our game plan, carrr.- she willing gives the ball up fur
ing it out through the·ballgame:•· someone else. She did a tremenJohnson's po~nts were distrib- dous job for us tonight."
In the first half, both teams
uted evenly throughout thr
exchanged the lead several times.
game.
"Brie gets 26 points tonight•
Coming off a 16-all tie to end
and (those points) were really;, the first quarter, neither team
·
quite for us," said Adkins. "We could gain momentum.
don't sit on the bench and keep
With two minutes remaining
0VP SPORTS STAFF.

2-8 2"10
0·9 2-10

Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
SOIJ1h Gallla
Wahama

NEW YORK (AP) - Rick Pitino is
headed back to work in college basketball
- not on the sideline, though.
The well-traveled Pitino, who resigned
two weeks ago as coach and president .of
the Boston Celtics, is joining CBS Sports as
a game analyst and studio commentator for
tbe NCAA tournament.
The television work appears to be a
time-filler until the offieason, when Pitino
is expected to land a coaching job, probably
in college.
Pitir10, coach of Kentucky's 1996 NCAA
championship team, will partner a play-by.
play ·announcer in the booth for the first
two rounds of the tournament, then mov~

from medi oc rity to the NCAA tournainto the studio for the rest.
"Rick will be a great addition to our m e nt.
NCAA tournament lineup. His analysis
He spent two seasons with the N ew York
with be both informative and entertaining, Knicks, taking th em to th e playoffi in
based on his successful collegi•te career and 1987-88 for the fi rst time in four ye ars and
his previous work in television," C l:IS · winning the Atlamic Division in 1988-89.
Sports president Sean McManus said MonThen he took over a Kentucky team that
day.
had been on probati on and led it to the
When he was a college coach, Pitino Final Four three times in eight seaso ns,
appeared as a guest commentator for C BS includm g th e 1996 ti tk
during the NCAAs.
Pitino jmn ed th e Ccltics in 1 9~ 7 , charged
Pitino, who could not be reached for with reviving the once- proud fran chise, but
comment Monday, played at Massachu setts, compiled only a 102- i46 record in J 1/2
worked as an assistant coach at Hawaii and seasons. Wh en he left th e team Jan . 8, he
Syracuse, then coached Boston University forfeited abmit $20 milli o n left on his I0and Providence, two programs he took yea r; $50 million c.:untract.

.Gallia Academy girls pick up
big SEOl'L win over Athens

SEOAL
Warren
t.:ogan
Marietta
Gallia Academy
River Valley
Athens
Point flleasanl
Jackson

The club was waiting to see if
forward Cedric Henderson
could play. J-l e has been both•
ered by th e flu.
Center Zydrunas llgauskas is
sidelin ed with a broken bone
in his left foot and is consulting
with specialists around the
country to see If he needs
surgery.

Pitino lands broadcasting job ·with CBS

Ohio DIYialon

Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Miller

1

·
Today'a IJII!Me
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross l-anes
Christian
·
Calhoun County at Wahama
Hannan at Hamlin
South Gallla at Symmea Valley

.

in the second quarter, though,.
Athens ·guard Li;t Howerth
picked up her fourth personal
foul and had to come out of the
game early.
" (Howerth's) a leader for
them," said Adkins. "When she's
on the court, they look at her to
take control, run the offense. The
girl who took her place did a
nice job, but there's just no leadership out there."
Howert\1, who had 13 points
in the first half, finished with 22
points, including a pair of 3point goals.
.
"Whether she's on the court
doing something big, or just on
the court, they look for her to
feed off of her to get energy and
· to make their team click," said
Adkins.

PliaH HI G•lll•. Pall ID

AIR ANGEL - Gallia Academy's Jessica Bodi
(10) goes ·for a
layup during the Blue Angels 64-60 win over Athens Monday. (Doug
Shipley photo)

•

•

·•

.j )

with

son a'3 a free agenr. had arthroscopi c surge ry on Uec. 12.

TVC
. Boy•

TVC

signed

Cleveland durin g the off-sea-

Jan.25
South Gallla at Cross Lanes ChristIan

Belpre
Alexander
Nelsonville-York
VInton County
Wellston
Meigs

Cavs
Harpring
pla:ced
oniR
CLEVELAND (AI') - Forward Matt Harpring, recently
sideli ned tor surgery on his left
ank le, was .. placed on the
injured list Monday by the
Cleveland Cavaliers who can't
see m to go one day without
losi ng anothe r player.
The Cavs did awvatc point
gua rd Uimho Coles to r M on-

.
Todey'agame
Wahama at Grace Christian

liiitiiiiiiAi.P~P~RE~C~U~TI~O~N~T~O~:--..

nm

ALL

Monday'• IJimell
Gallia Academy 64, Athens 60
Mariana 60, Point Pleasant 46
River Valley at Logan ppd
Warren at Jackson, ppd

ORGANIZATIONS AND BUSINESSES

•

,,

Jan.25
Alexander at Belpre
Eastern at Federal Hocking
VInton County at Meigs
Trimble at Miller
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
Waterford at Southern

Pbone------------------~------

SCREENINGS, SPEAKERS &amp; PRESENTERS

ALL

SED

RACINE - Meigs placed
four girls in double figures, led
by Amber Vining's 20 to lead the
' over
Marauders to a 77-29 wm
Southern in girls · ba~ketball
action Monday evening at
Charles Hayman Gymnasium.
Meigs jumped out to ~ quick
5-0 lead on a three power by
Shannon Price and a bucket by
Amber· Vining just 34 secon~s
into th'e coh...r
test.
The ''tornadoes cut the
lead to 7-4 on
by
baskets
Amy Lee and
Kati Cummins... But
Meigs quickly
opened up a
Vlnln&amp;
15-4 tlead on
a Shannon
Prlco1 basket
off a Vining
feed.
Meigs
opened up a
22-8 lead on
another Price
trifecta, but a
by
bucket
Brigette
Price
Barnes with
two seconds
left pulled Southern to within
22-10 afier one.
·
Vining, got the Marauders
started with a trifecta to start the
third period. Meigs outscored
the Tornadoes 21-7 in the period to pull away to a 43-17 lead
at intermission.
Price and Vining h)t three's to
· start the third period, wrapped
around a free throw ·by Jaynee
Davis to give the Marauders a
50-17 adyanta!le. Meij!,' had a
19-8 ~cormg m th~;Jh!rd penod and took a 62~2~, leap after
three.
It was more of the same in the
fourth
period ;as
Meigs·
outscored the purple and gold
15-4 to post the 77-29 ..jn ..

·"

Monday'• game~~
Alexander 70, Federal Hocking 31
Belpre 65, Trimble 47
Meigs 77, Southern 29
Vinton County 66, Miller 21

Address----------

ms3

•

TVC

You may stop in at the Senior Center or
mall your membership to: .Meigs Couoty
MuiUpurpose Senior Center, P.O. Box 722,
112 Ealt Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. If possible, please Include a stamped,
self-addressed envelope. Thank you for your
support.

Otfiee

AU

8-0 12-2
8-1 11-4
6-3 7-7
4-4 8-8
1-7 5-9
0-8 3-11

·eastern
8-0 11;3
Federal Hocking
5·4 5-B
Southern
4-5 8-8
Waterford
4"3 5-7
Trimble ·
2-6 2·11
Miller
0-9 0·15
(•Clinches TVC Hockln'g Division
championship)

Tbe cost or membership for 2001 Is $5.00
per Individual.. What Is your $5.00 used for?
The dollars r•lsed through the Meigs
Multipurpose Seolor Ceoter Membership
campaign will be used to pay for the cost of
printing anci malllog the oewsletter six times
per year aad as local match dollars for lobome services.
·

I

TVC

Hocking Dlvlalon

Name

~::~!'!"~ofEagleall2l71

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Glrla
Ohio Dlvlalon
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt;
Wellston

Meigs rolls over Southem
BY DAVE HARRIS •

TVC

Grcnalbomu
Avil McOellan
Dorothy Roberts
Hlrricu Thomp100
1999 Members of 4H Fashion Board
Meigs County Employee Retirees, Pomeroy Legion Post 1139
Virginia McClelland
Marie Robena
Pauline Till II
Dorothy CcCioud
MRP
Inc. (PERl)
Freda Edwards
NOft£1 Roberts
Roger &amp; Betty Toney
Pomeroy- Middleport Rotary
Kenneth McConnobic
Allan &amp;. Nora Elbcrfc:ld
Shirley
RobCrta
Norma
Tona
,
A,CCIBSS
IJCid
Start
Meigs
County
TOurism
Robert&amp;. Cl'l.lrloue Elberfeld
Preteplor Beta Beta Sorority
Paul &amp;. Neva McElroy
Jalonda Roo!
Edna Triplett
Always
and
Forever
Meigs
Retired
Teacher
Association
Dorothy McGraw
Jane Pick
Ol!ality Print Shop
'Huokl Rooah
Elmer Tutti
Judy Mel-lime
.1~meric;an Cancer Society
Milliilepon Department Store
Bob &amp;. Gladys Fife
Dorothy Roush
Phyllis Thmer
R.:Cine Grange H2062
James&amp;: Palricia McHaffie
Clarence Fife
Elsie Rouah
Opall)rcc
American
Electric
PowerMiddleport
Flower
Shop
Racine Home National Bank
H821CI McKelvey
Marvin Fife ,
Helen Rousb ·
Robert Vance ,
General J11111es M. Oavin Plant·
Middleport Merchants Assoc.
Wa)'nc Milhoan
Wanda f'lndlin(!:
Reed's Country Store
Mannina&amp; Ramona Rol.llh Hazel VanCooney
Sic&amp;linde Miller
Cora Folmer ,
American Heart Association
'Mineral Lodge112421.0.0. F.
Mary K. Rouah
1Cd VanCooney
Riverbend 'raoning and Party Supplies
Charlcll Milliron
+lazel &amp;:. William Fox
Walter Rouatl
James It Martha Vennarl American Lcgion-Postll39
O'Dell
Lumber
Rocksprings Rehab
Elizabeth Mihon
Betty Frazier
Matilda A Wilbur Rowley Raymond \VII
American
Legion
Feeney
Bennett
Post
11128
Service
&amp;
Supply
.
Paul Moore .
Ula Fre~kcr
Shade River Ag Service
Undo R"""'ll
Mobol Woddell
Guy &amp; Donna Monis
Mary Freeland '
American Red CroiiS ·
Ohio Arts Council ·
Magadalenc Rusacll
Dale Walburn
Steve
Story
Howard Mullen '
Ruby Frick
Pearl RUIICII
Alice Wamal~:y
Appalachian
Community
VISiting
Nu110s
Aosoc.
Ohio
Department
of
Health
Fruce:~
Murdock
Swisher
&amp; Lohse Drug Store
Ida Gardner
Helen Sanders
Janet Want
Area
Agency
on
Aging,
PSA
7,
8
&amp;:
9
Ohio
River
Bear
Company
Paul Neue
Maxine Gaskill
r;harlcs&amp; Muie Satiel:ll · Kl.thloc:n Ward
TNT Pitstop, Chester
·Johnny Nelton
Charles&amp;. Juanita Gerard
Art Hill's Greenhouses
Ohio Univers.ily
Jack Satterfield, Jr.
Dorothy Warner
United Way of the River Cities
Erwin&amp;. Muprct Oloeckner Naomi Neville
Olivo Satterfield
Zelda Weber
Boy
Scout
Troop
299
Ohio
Valley
Bank
Marpret
Neville
Veterans
for Foreign Wars
Palma Goodwin
Daisy Sauncletl
Betty Webster ·
Laura Nice
Brogan
Warner
Ins.
Co.
Olive
Orange
Memorial
Post
N9053
&amp;Idle Gordon
Weaving Stitches
Joyc:e Sauters
John &amp; Barbara Wec:Q
RosyNtday
Martha Orccnawax
llelly Sayre
CartC
&amp;: J Furniture·
Pam
Blackston's
GreeQhoWei!Works
·
Marie Nonis
Christine Grues.er
Daiay S.yrc
Jewel ~lch
Continuity
of
Care
Paul
Takach
and
the
Republican
Carol &amp; Mary NoUinJbam
Eileen Halley
Wendy's
David Sayre
Audn Well
Dairy Queen Brazier
PIUiy
Raymond&amp;. Susan Oliver
Charldcnc Hanning
Faye lkhullz
, Jcny A SUNn Well
Wicker Buggy
Pcul Oabome
Virginia Han10n
Family Dollar
,
Pamidll
Francea Shaffer
Vema! &amp; Louise Well
Xi Gamma Epsilon Sorority
Ron
'&amp;
Ella
Osborne
Jack·Harle51
Ooldle Shiffer
Rk:boro A Clvla Well
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Compaay
Ptoples Bank
WandaOJdcy
Unda Harper
Jane Simplon
l!lthcr Wetl
Irene Pukcr
Eugene &amp; Jan.:t Harris
Francis Florist
·-··· ~h·Myrtle St.on
Beny Wcyer~mlller
Nancy Parker
Pegsy Harris
Oeorp ll Phyllis Skinner Winnie Willie
Nellie Pukt.r
laura Harrison
Beatrice Smidt
Arizona Wipl
Laura Parka
Ted &amp; KCihcl HatfJCid
Elate Smith .
Lt;mainc Wipl
Clinton A Elizabeth Pmley
Gallipolis Elk's Lodge •t07
Amanda Hawk
ACCESS Hcadstart
lama &amp; Faye Smith
Rllpb Wipl
Ua Tipton, Occupational
Delbert Paucraon
Charles &amp; Geraldine HIWk
R111h Smidt
Helen WllllatM
Hartwell
House
Alice
Wolfe
Therapist, Holzer .Rehab Cen.
Evalena Pluley
le!ntr Hawk
Sharon Smith
John Williams
Anne
Limbert
Hearts
Aglow
Candles
and
Gifts
Unda
Kina
Addle
!'did
Virginia Heilman
Bernadine Snyder
Pearl Wllllamt
Becky I!Hr
Austin PhiUipa
Margaret
Parker, Meigs County
Holzer
Home
Care
of
Veterans
Memorial
Frances Hendrhl
Bctl)' Spencer
Eleanor Wlllianllon
Earl PbiiiiJII
Betty Fulb:
Jackit: Hildebrand
Museum
Billy Joe .t: Mary K. Spencer Bcmlce WI lion
Hospital
Helen Hill
Dora Pierce
Brent Zii-kle &amp; Sugar Run Flour
Pllyllia Spencer
Robcn &amp;. Norma Wlloon Holzer Medic:al Center
Maynard's Quilts &amp; Fabrics
Robert &amp; Ella M. Hill
Allee Plantz
'
Mill
Ida Spradlin
Doris Will
Meigs Nat'l Honor Society
Oracc
Price
Robert &amp; Martha Hill
Holzer Rehab
Bo)'d .t Ira Spurlock
Mary Winsett
Conplllllan Ted Strickland
Michele Garreston ·
HCibon t&lt; Mory Pugh
t.tarpret Hill-Baker
Lillian SU.Inaket
Evelyn Wotrord
Hupp's
Landscaping
Dave
Weeks
Geraldine
Pulkn
Mike Goeglcin
Mary Hi~y
Della Slukey
Sylvia Wolfe
Jay
Mar
Quality
Stone
Oara and Of:rald Pullins
Don
&amp;
.Linda
Hubbaro
Glenn&amp;. Delores Hoffman
Milch
Meadows• Greenhouse
F.-. Story
Dorothy 'olroociird
Dorothy Reibel
.
Freda Holsinpr
King Hardware
Eutem Blem. Students A Becky
Roullc Story
RQdney Wri&amp;tlt
Nancy
Ste~Rs, Holzer Medical
Kenneth Rhoda
Judy Holler
Abbie Stratton
Lucille Ycauacr
Bdwuda
Maynard's
Quilt
and
Fabrics
Cen~r
laura Rioc
Lena Howard
Allee Struble
Do11.t Audrey Youna
Eutem Nillonal Honor Society &amp; Nellie Colton
McDonalds
Pauline Ridenour
Virginia Hoyt
Joe Swtln
Frank Youna .
Sheryl Roush
Mildccd Riley
Nichola Maretti, Ohio .
Sarah Hull
Meigs County Chamber of Commeroc
Bernice Swartz
Charln ZciJier
Jmephine
Ritchie
Eucem
'National Honor'Ans
Frances Hunnel
Bicentennial .
l..tlcy Taylor
Mlld...O Zel&amp;ler
Genrude Riter
David &amp; Olorla Hutton
Society .t llm Roberts ·
Eleanor Thomas
Oeorac Zel&amp;ler
Parkersburg Sentinel
Everett Hutton
Eutem Speech .t Drama Cia._
Pioneer 4H Club and J\dvisors
Betty Hawley
Ed
Dune (Santa)
Tom .t Debbie Drake
Virginia Hoyt
Ed Hupp'a Unclscaping Service
Pomeroy Elcm Studenls
Harold k Deloris Hysell
OJM Board of Alc:ollol, Drug
Pomeroy, Middleport and Racine
Ola Hyxll
A.Dpla Baker, Sor:l.alSII!Inlee Admilaion LpreMa-.d•e, PDint
Jim Rote" A A...e..._
Addiction .t .MenlO! Helith
Libtaries
·
Kate Jarrell
........, C.re U.v• .
John Len~ee, Mm. County p,_...,or
Dorothy Jenklnt
.up EdWard. A 0oana Ha&amp;Relcl, Heana.Jtclew
loy H...a..
Services
Representative John Carey
C\lrtis JenklniOR
A.ppalaeht.n AN Prop.,.
~ S&amp;oelter
Hal Kneen
Robert Tauen, Rio Orondo
C.rroll &amp;: Mildred Johnlon
Bell)ky BMr, Meip Cowtly, Ohio Unlvenll)' Ext.enaton
Kelly Temple1on, BeN:aVMMJ~I Cowd. Bober H.plee
Jennifer McBride &amp;: Sbade River
College, Meip Branch
eva JoiiMOn
Betty F,.._.r, A.uomey Genenl'a Oftke
Ll't')' Robbu.en, Soud.•tern Ohio Lepl S.rvicet
Aa
Scrvic:e
Sarah
McOrew, RN, OU
June Jotm10n
Bob SlrlhWie
~ Challln, Laptho~~~e Feundadaa for Bu..a...
Louisa lohneon ·
K~· Jim O'Brien
Shelly Johnson
Bonnie MeFa...,.., .,
wdlnll!M Depart, Hal~e• H01ptlal
._ ~.
wnde
1
John 11oaford
Mary t. JohMQn
Briam,ra 4bbou, Ute Une of Ohio
Lla 1lpton, OceupUional 'llH!nplll
Southern FFA 8t Aaron Sayre
Roy ·ol Ma!JirCt Johnson
C.rlelon SehDol (MRIDD)
IJnda Kina. Melp Coan&amp;J' OWo Unlwenlty Exhlnalon
Joy Podaett, Oovemru's Office of Southern Nat'l Honor Society &amp;
William Johnson
C..ral TtuUWJhll
.
Unda Rltllll.kl, Ohio ~·oi'IMy Cenenl'a Oftlq
Appalaehia
·
William Beegle
Bupnc IL Wanda lohiiJIOn
Chrt.tfna White, J..,He.n.. • Dlutne. Rehala. Cenaer
IJu. M. Koeh, MS.CCA., l•lfearlat
Juctae
Robert
Huck
and
Sial!
·
Baum • BaUm Lumber
NcllieJonct
Col•dlla Cu a( Ohio
MIU'jorM ..........
,
Judy Wells
Sharon Juslla
Co-w .... Ted Sarlddand .
MaJer CardeDe,... Kay J'tell A: S.. Viea
Senator Mike Shoemaker
Franca Keaton
C..rine Lund
Maxt.e Grov•
ICenncth Wigins .t Melp County Senator Mike Dewine
Marett Keller
Dana Johnaon
Melp County Hnlllt Depu~Me~n.
Recyclin&amp;fUtter Control
The ·Advertiser
Wanda Kellct
Damn Ha1ea, IExereiM Phyeiolopa
Mlea ·~ Holter Rehab
lafyChiiiUn
.
The Athens Messenger
Beatrice Kennedy
DA.V, Oen•er Curlie and Ehue• Pleken.
MlehMI llullla
Lew I• Kennedy
Oa•e Marchu, Blaek Llinl Repre.entallve
Naner &amp;.ner
James Kiser
Donel&amp;e Dupn, VMH Behavior.l Health Urdt
Ohio C,
Council
lmllgl:nc Knapp
Donna Grove.. Ohio Arl Cou.ncll
Ohio Unh·enlty COM Arllwll• P~Uil
Elrl Knight
Dr. Jaeklon BaliMt Optameart.l
Ohio Univenlly ~ af O.leopall.ielfMiolM
Cbaaaei 27 TV
Mac Kobicotz
0... J..,._ Schmoll, O,..._triel
OSHIP (Ohio
el t..a.nee)
Soullby &amp; Meigs County Sherilf's Omce
Evelyn Lanning
Dr. J. . . WithereD
O,erlwoell C....
Patsy Laudermill
Dr. KeUy Routh
r ... Napper, .Wdecl Toueh .
John Leota &amp; Statf
Lois Lawrence
0... MU.a. K•mar, fleuent Valle)'
Pamela Brown, CallnnW. c.. ol OWo
·Melp County Commlllionen &amp; Local/State Elected
Archie Lee
Dr. Rohtt Kuh,.up, VMH R•nl H... th CUnle
Pat Sllllth A: Carol.U_... .... C.. Canear laldaidve
.omclals
Rlla Lewit
Dr. !eDit Smith
t
Pa.da .Arnu.tr0ut, C
r .,...._don
Meip
County
Depa-t
of Job and FamUy Services
Mulnc Little
Dl..bt:lh Sehud, lnv...._.l Rg;,:·Edwanl J.....
. . _ , _ Co=p· n
.
1
Meip
County
EMS
Dwishl Logan
c.o,.. • c.,.a,.,.
RebHea Ne..._, BUr s,.w- DtNCitor
Dorothy Lema:
Go.l'• Nea.. Kellh R ..
Rlioa4a Dailey, V...,._ll
.W' Haapltal
Meigs County Health Department
1./eodle long .
Hot KnHn, Help eo..ty Ohio Unl•erolly
!tld:or• Ur.llao of Ohio
Melp County Hilbway Depart.,ent .
Shirley Lona
Health Reeo.-eey Senle•, lae.
·
S.Oy Berpa, Od. Depa.t ol AP.
Melp County Htstortcal Society
Mary Loudner
l!eohhy Slepo WoU- C.neer
Wy Bryon, Ohio ~~ ol .-.... '
Meip County TB Oinlc
ruma Louks
Hlld. Saat~a, Set'flllky y.,._
Seou MeLrJPt, VIlli hharionl Health Uala
Melp
Conaty Trustees/Clerks
An&amp;cla Lul;u
HoeJUn, Collep Mental Health St..-....
Sherrr Cax.·lle:l'l1• 11...,. '11Nr .,..., PVH
Caml Luufotd
HoiMr Cllnle~- ..... lnneh
8hlrler H..ao..
Nancy Parker Campbell &amp; Statf
l.ooU. Moiden1
Holoor
So.,._ s.,w., Uoloer ,.yoicol Therpy
Pttulette lllrrilon &amp; Clitda Sllrcht!r
Sandr• Malott
Hober M.dte.&amp; C..ter
S.... Gettda, a .... Aa.etadall
Soc:lal Seaorlty Admlntolnotlon- Atben1 Omce
Mary Marcinko
~lleoU.o! C..ler W.._ r..,....
TraeJ O'O.U, ,Me.. C.U..tr He.&amp;th
Al1hur &amp;. Adria Eblin
Lawrence Eblin

llrucc &amp; JOAn Moy
.........

HIGHLIGHTS

Gina Pineo

DONATIONS

--

TuEsDAY'S

•••••••••••••••••••••••

PauiR_.
JenniCerSlaeelo

Page 81
Tuesday, January 23, 1001

ENTERTAINMENT

Pereonal Care
Reoplte Care (aulatanee for famllieo
who are earln! for an elderly famlly
member In their home)

Evening Meals

Scoreboard, Page B3.
I

Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor
/
(740) 992-2161 FAX (740) 992-7886
112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E-Mail Address: mccoa@eurekanet.com
TIIANKS TO 2000
Thank you for your support

f

The Daily Sentinel

\'

'

�•

\

P-ve A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, January 23, 2001

Inside:
Today~

Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.

t::ONrBIBlJTORS
SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS AT
THE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

I

Alzheimer's Disease/Related Disorders (family
caregiver training and support groups)
Community Support Program (ideotil'ying
problems and obtaiolog' asslstaoce)
Center Dining (nutrillous meals)
Educational Programs

Fitness Center

.Qealth Clinics
Information and Referral
Protective/Legal Assistance
Recreatiooai/Social Activllles
Retired and Senior Volunteer Program
Support Assistance (for example, ftlllog out
insurance/medical forms and answering
benefit questjons)
Transportation and Escort

W ellness and Health Prevention Programs

Arlec:Abcm
Shirley Appleby
Charlotte Armes
William Aull
Jack&amp;. Carolyn Bac~ner
Elmer Bailey
. HOmer A Alpha Bailey
Edison &amp; Bernice Baker

Mauie Ball
Harlan Ballard
Carl &amp; Hazel Barnhill
Maxine Barn'hill
Sybil Barr
Muy Barringer
Hazel Bartnn
Robert4 Donnie Banon
John Buler
l.AJuise Bearhs
Lorclla Beegle
Homer &amp; Shirley Belt
John Bigalow
Benha Bing
Cora Bir~h
Leuta Birch
Mary Bise
Esther Black
Uoyd &amp; Anna Blackwood
Charles Blakeslee
William Booth
Jennie Bowla
Margaret Bowles
Frances Boyce
Frances Boyer
Noll Bradshaw
BUJ Brewer
Emma Broderick
Gladys Brotheit
Vera Buchanan
Rita Buckley
Dina &amp; Mary Bunch

Ruby Burnside
Ullian Burt
Mildred Caldwell
Suah Caldwell
Ruth Canter
Elizabeth Carman ·
Freda Carpenter
Jerry Carpenter
Beny Carsey
Ethd CarSOn
Marie Carson
Johncna Chapman
Marcella Chapman

I

Ouidl Chase
Martha Childs

William Childs
EJ!a Mac Chrislian
Manley Christy
Doua Circle
Bvtlyn aark ,
Mary Occk
Slln &amp;. JoAnn Coatu
Coole Coleman
Beulah Collier
Dorothy Collins
'Pandor~ Collins
Ruben It Thelma Colli lUI
Bonnie Conde •
Joan Corder
Rote Corliu
Raymond Cun~:rlll
Betty CouaJ1cnour
Ida Cowdery
Constanco Craig
Jotej)h &amp; Lilah Creamean.'
Oetaklint M. Crou
Charles Richard Crow
Leo A Mary Davidson
Dorothy Davis
Sllllbeth Davis

'

Willie Dllvi&amp;

Bruce ~eter
Jote ' k Marie Delgado
Lydia Inlong .
Ulliin Dc:moskey
(Mol Dennis
Marcia Denison
Earl &amp; &amp;uy Denny

Heitt~ Diddie ·

V..leric Didenko

AI~ Dill

Minnie Dixon
Dave Donahue
Dom1by Downie
Eliubeth Duffy
Susie Duricuu ·
Robcl1 de. Maxine Dutil

I,

··~-

I.:M:or:y:~::•ro:•:Y

SERVICES &amp;
PROGRAMS FOR
SENIORS

IN THE HOME
Chore Service (elelllling-laundry)
Homemaker/Health Servleea
Home Delivered Mealo
Home Malntenmce (minor home repaln)
In-Home Aloeument

CHURCH DONATIONS

Health Assessment

Emma Adams

Blflllend CJotpn
BW CraDO
Cheotor Ualted Melhodlat Youth Croap
Chrt.ot AeaHmy Bell Choir . Conllle 'll'alerman, Vlollnla
D011a Job.oo
Dixie Sayre
Dou Yo""B 4 Joek C,upenoUI'
Elvio (Dwtpt Icenhower)
frank 4 Ida Martin
Ceorp Hall
Golden Bolla of the Triaity Church
Hal Kaeea .t Abbie Strauoa Junior a Rita 'll'hl1e
Kathy Droper
Marilyn 'll'deox
Muino a Karen Grlllllh
Melp Cowdy Meotor P
Metra P...,non a The lllelp Middle School 4 6th
CrodeCholn
Middleport Church of Chrlat-Ciallcfren'o Choir
Middleport ClaW"eh oC Chrlat-Sealor Yo•th Croup
Paulolle Horriaon, Tom Dooley, Clnda Stareher .t Mary'
Kaopp
·
·
Jloaeh Fandly SlntJen
RCilJOr 4 Mary Gilmore
R...,r 'II'IDJamo a The Blfl Bend Commualoy Baud
Rutlaud Elemeotary Choir- Sharon Howley a Don""
Jenldno
s - fanou a Eulem Elementary School Choir
Swlqlo' Senlon
Tommy Taylor
1lmellae Barbenhop Qaar1e1

Carleton Chur&lt;h
Coolville ADegheny Melloodlst Church
East Letart United Methodist Women
Enterprise United Methodist Church
F1nt Baptist Chur&lt;h of Racine- Ladles Missionary
Fellowship
·
·
First Baptist Chur&lt;h· Bertha M. Say"' Miulonary
Society
Hemlock Grove Christian Church- Falthllll followen
Class
Hillside Baptist Church
MI. Moriah Church of God .. Ladles Auxiliary
Pomeroy Church of Christ· Adult Clau
Pomeroy Seven Day Adventl.Jt Church
Pomeroy United Methodist Chur&lt;h
Racine Baptist Hy Shy Ny Sunday School Clap ·
Radne Baptist Sunday School Cluat4
Radne United Methodist Men's Breaklut
Racine United Methodist Women
Rutl1nd Church of tbe Nazarene
Sacred Heart Cburcb
Trinity Church
Tappen Plafno Church of Christ

APPRECIATION TO ACCREDITATION
COMMfiTEE MEMBERS,

BeekyBoer
Uoycl Blackwood
Claarleo Blok..lee
Evelyn Clark
Jo011 Corder
Mlek Davenport
Tom Dooley
Mamie Fry
Muloe Cuklll

Calherbae Shenefield
Hilda StotiO
Helen Swarhl

Mike Swlaher
Peny Vamocloe
Jndy Wllllamo
Allee Wolte
Patrick Wood

Sarah ClbLo
Chorlene Hoeflleh
Poul K1oeo
JohnLealeo
SueMalooo
Joan May
JameoMo.....W.,
Leah Ord

SUPPORT YOUR
SENIOR CENTER
BUYA
2001 MEMBERSHIP
Your paid membership to lbe Meigs Couoty
Couacll on A&amp;log, lac.. is a measure of
support for the Multipurpose Senior Center
and for the maoy services It provides. Each
p1ld membership received verifies to
ngiooal, state and national funding ageocles
that the Senior Cenler is providiog needed
prvgrams to older adults..

SEOAL
Girt a
Mariana
Jackson
Warren ·
Logan
Gallla Academy
.. Athens
River Valley
Point Pleasant

SPECIAL THANKS

o.,___,

E.,......

.,...

n..,...

~~•

J•-

The~~

o.,....,.....

A:I:••:·~~cr=M~a=y~....Jl~....~;J~::~~~~~~ ~,A~:;~..............~•.•~
....
M.u.rioi
....Hom.
....H.••ol•~ o..~
....·.•.......
..

The Dollly Sentinel
United Fund ror Meigs County
Walmart·Mason

8-1 13-2
6-2 10-4
5-4 7·6
5-4 7-7
5-5 8-7
5-5 7-6
2·7 4-10
1-9 3-12

'

Jan.25
Gallia Academy at River Valley
Jackson at Point Pleasant
Marietta at Logan
Warren at Athens
A- non-leagua'
Glria
ALL

Wahama
Ohio Valley Christian
South Gallia
Hannan

11-3
6·3
2-10
0-5

Monday'• garMe
Ohio Valley Christian at South Gallia,
ppd

r ,

•ft

PluM- Melp,:Pqe 8:5

day night's game aga inst Po rt-

la nd but lost Harpn ng, wh o ·
averaged 11.4 points and 4. 8
reboun ds in 28 g:aJ'nes this season .

Coles was placed on the ·
mjured list on Nov. 22 with an.
mflamed left kn ee aft er playing
in j ust nine gaml•s. The 10-year
vete ran , w h o

" We'll work lum in slowly,''
said Ca vs coach Randy
Wittman. "He 'll be a big boost
for us not only on the floor but
off in terms of leadership ."
Coles aver:tged R p.oints and
3.8 assists in 2 1 minutes before
gettin g hurt .

Harpring's additi on gives the
Cavs three pl aye rs on the
injured list. They are also without rooki e center C hris Mihm

and forward Lamond Murray is
wearing a m ask ro protect a
broken bon e in his face.

O n Monday night, Clevehmd was also missin g. forvvard

Etdrick 13ohannon , wh o had
e m ergency sUrgery on a to oth .

MARAUDERS ROU-- Meigs' Shannon Price (12) and Southern's Fallon Roush (10) reach for the bas·
ketball during the Marauders 77-29 win over the Tornadoes Monday. (Dave Harris photo)

ALL

7-0 11-1 ·
3-3 6·6
3-2 5-7
·3-3 5-7
2-4 6-5
· 0-8 0-12

Hocklrog Dlvlalon
TVC

'~LL

5-1
3-3
3-3

7-4
8·3
8-4

3-3

4·6

2-4
2-4

7-5

SPORTSCASTER -- Rick Pltino will be
a play-by-play announcer and game
·analyst for CBS Sports. (~)

6·7

Todey'agarnea
Vinton County at Alexander
Wellston at Belpre
Eastern at Miller
Southern at Federal Hocking
Meigs at Nelsonville'York
Water1ord at Trimble
Boya
lEO

e-o

8-1

5-3
4-4
3-5
3·5

ALL

Bv Burcti COOPIR

B-4

9-2
7-4
8-8
7-6

6-6

Today'a IJI!Me
Gallla Academy at Athena
Logan at River Valley
Marietta at Point Pleasant
JacKson at Warren .

ALL

8-2

5-4
2-9
1:9

track of any ones points. After
the ballgame, you look in the
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acad- book and see Brie has 26 points
emy has gotten itself back on and your like whoa."
,
track in the SEOAL.
Nine of her 26 came in the
Brianna johnson scored 26 fourth quarter when the Blue
points as the Blue Angels defeat- Angels had to hold off a late
ed Athens, 64-60 in girls high Bulldogs rally.
school basketball Monday.
"Brie's really good at distribut"Our girls are playing with a ing the ball. She's very patient
lot of confidence right now;' s;lid and she's played face to face
Gallia Academy l).ead coach Kim defense," said Adkins. "She just
Adkins. "Our girls are v~ry kind of goes and does her thing,
focused in practices prior to the and when she gets some points,
game, and our girls are actually fine . When she can't get points, .
following our game plan, carrr.- she willing gives the ball up fur
ing it out through the·ballgame:•· someone else. She did a tremenJohnson's po~nts were distrib- dous job for us tonight."
In the first half, both teams
uted evenly throughout thr
exchanged the lead several times.
game.
"Brie gets 26 points tonight•
Coming off a 16-all tie to end
and (those points) were really;, the first quarter, neither team
·
quite for us," said Adkins. "We could gain momentum.
don't sit on the bench and keep
With two minutes remaining
0VP SPORTS STAFF.

2-8 2"10
0·9 2-10

Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan
SOIJ1h Gallla
Wahama

NEW YORK (AP) - Rick Pitino is
headed back to work in college basketball
- not on the sideline, though.
The well-traveled Pitino, who resigned
two weeks ago as coach and president .of
the Boston Celtics, is joining CBS Sports as
a game analyst and studio commentator for
tbe NCAA tournament.
The television work appears to be a
time-filler until the offieason, when Pitino
is expected to land a coaching job, probably
in college.
Pitir10, coach of Kentucky's 1996 NCAA
championship team, will partner a play-by.
play ·announcer in the booth for the first
two rounds of the tournament, then mov~

from medi oc rity to the NCAA tournainto the studio for the rest.
"Rick will be a great addition to our m e nt.
NCAA tournament lineup. His analysis
He spent two seasons with the N ew York
with be both informative and entertaining, Knicks, taking th em to th e playoffi in
based on his successful collegi•te career and 1987-88 for the fi rst time in four ye ars and
his previous work in television," C l:IS · winning the Atlamic Division in 1988-89.
Sports president Sean McManus said MonThen he took over a Kentucky team that
day.
had been on probati on and led it to the
When he was a college coach, Pitino Final Four three times in eight seaso ns,
appeared as a guest commentator for C BS includm g th e 1996 ti tk
during the NCAAs.
Pitino jmn ed th e Ccltics in 1 9~ 7 , charged
Pitino, who could not be reached for with reviving the once- proud fran chise, but
comment Monday, played at Massachu setts, compiled only a 102- i46 record in J 1/2
worked as an assistant coach at Hawaii and seasons. Wh en he left th e team Jan . 8, he
Syracuse, then coached Boston University forfeited abmit $20 milli o n left on his I0and Providence, two programs he took yea r; $50 million c.:untract.

.Gallia Academy girls pick up
big SEOl'L win over Athens

SEOAL
Warren
t.:ogan
Marietta
Gallia Academy
River Valley
Athens
Point flleasanl
Jackson

The club was waiting to see if
forward Cedric Henderson
could play. J-l e has been both•
ered by th e flu.
Center Zydrunas llgauskas is
sidelin ed with a broken bone
in his left foot and is consulting
with specialists around the
country to see If he needs
surgery.

Pitino lands broadcasting job ·with CBS

Ohio DIYialon

Trimble
Eastern
Southern
Waterford
Federal Hocking
Miller

1

·
Today'a IJII!Me
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross l-anes
Christian
·
Calhoun County at Wahama
Hannan at Hamlin
South Gallla at Symmea Valley

.

in the second quarter, though,.
Athens ·guard Li;t Howerth
picked up her fourth personal
foul and had to come out of the
game early.
" (Howerth's) a leader for
them," said Adkins. "When she's
on the court, they look at her to
take control, run the offense. The
girl who took her place did a
nice job, but there's just no leadership out there."
Howert\1, who had 13 points
in the first half, finished with 22
points, including a pair of 3point goals.
.
"Whether she's on the court
doing something big, or just on
the court, they look for her to
feed off of her to get energy and
· to make their team click," said
Adkins.

PliaH HI G•lll•. Pall ID

AIR ANGEL - Gallia Academy's Jessica Bodi
(10) goes ·for a
layup during the Blue Angels 64-60 win over Athens Monday. (Doug
Shipley photo)

•

•

·•

.j )

with

son a'3 a free agenr. had arthroscopi c surge ry on Uec. 12.

TVC
. Boy•

TVC

signed

Cleveland durin g the off-sea-

Jan.25
South Gallla at Cross Lanes ChristIan

Belpre
Alexander
Nelsonville-York
VInton County
Wellston
Meigs

Cavs
Harpring
pla:ced
oniR
CLEVELAND (AI') - Forward Matt Harpring, recently
sideli ned tor surgery on his left
ank le, was .. placed on the
injured list Monday by the
Cleveland Cavaliers who can't
see m to go one day without
losi ng anothe r player.
The Cavs did awvatc point
gua rd Uimho Coles to r M on-

.
Todey'agame
Wahama at Grace Christian

liiitiiiiiiAi.P~P~RE~C~U~TI~O~N~T~O~:--..

nm

ALL

Monday'• IJimell
Gallia Academy 64, Athens 60
Mariana 60, Point Pleasant 46
River Valley at Logan ppd
Warren at Jackson, ppd

ORGANIZATIONS AND BUSINESSES

•

,,

Jan.25
Alexander at Belpre
Eastern at Federal Hocking
VInton County at Meigs
Trimble at Miller
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
Waterford at Southern

Pbone------------------~------

SCREENINGS, SPEAKERS &amp; PRESENTERS

ALL

SED

RACINE - Meigs placed
four girls in double figures, led
by Amber Vining's 20 to lead the
' over
Marauders to a 77-29 wm
Southern in girls · ba~ketball
action Monday evening at
Charles Hayman Gymnasium.
Meigs jumped out to ~ quick
5-0 lead on a three power by
Shannon Price and a bucket by
Amber· Vining just 34 secon~s
into th'e coh...r
test.
The ''tornadoes cut the
lead to 7-4 on
by
baskets
Amy Lee and
Kati Cummins... But
Meigs quickly
opened up a
Vlnln&amp;
15-4 tlead on
a Shannon
Prlco1 basket
off a Vining
feed.
Meigs
opened up a
22-8 lead on
another Price
trifecta, but a
by
bucket
Brigette
Price
Barnes with
two seconds
left pulled Southern to within
22-10 afier one.
·
Vining, got the Marauders
started with a trifecta to start the
third period. Meigs outscored
the Tornadoes 21-7 in the period to pull away to a 43-17 lead
at intermission.
Price and Vining h)t three's to
· start the third period, wrapped
around a free throw ·by Jaynee
Davis to give the Marauders a
50-17 adyanta!le. Meij!,' had a
19-8 ~cormg m th~;Jh!rd penod and took a 62~2~, leap after
three.
It was more of the same in the
fourth
period ;as
Meigs·
outscored the purple and gold
15-4 to post the 77-29 ..jn ..

·"

Monday'• game~~
Alexander 70, Federal Hocking 31
Belpre 65, Trimble 47
Meigs 77, Southern 29
Vinton County 66, Miller 21

Address----------

ms3

•

TVC

You may stop in at the Senior Center or
mall your membership to: .Meigs Couoty
MuiUpurpose Senior Center, P.O. Box 722,
112 Ealt Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. If possible, please Include a stamped,
self-addressed envelope. Thank you for your
support.

Otfiee

AU

8-0 12-2
8-1 11-4
6-3 7-7
4-4 8-8
1-7 5-9
0-8 3-11

·eastern
8-0 11;3
Federal Hocking
5·4 5-B
Southern
4-5 8-8
Waterford
4"3 5-7
Trimble ·
2-6 2·11
Miller
0-9 0·15
(•Clinches TVC Hockln'g Division
championship)

Tbe cost or membership for 2001 Is $5.00
per Individual.. What Is your $5.00 used for?
The dollars r•lsed through the Meigs
Multipurpose Seolor Ceoter Membership
campaign will be used to pay for the cost of
printing anci malllog the oewsletter six times
per year aad as local match dollars for lobome services.
·

I

TVC

Hocking Dlvlalon

Name

~::~!'!"~ofEagleall2l71

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Glrla
Ohio Dlvlalon
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt;
Wellston

Meigs rolls over Southem
BY DAVE HARRIS •

TVC

Grcnalbomu
Avil McOellan
Dorothy Roberts
Hlrricu Thomp100
1999 Members of 4H Fashion Board
Meigs County Employee Retirees, Pomeroy Legion Post 1139
Virginia McClelland
Marie Robena
Pauline Till II
Dorothy CcCioud
MRP
Inc. (PERl)
Freda Edwards
NOft£1 Roberts
Roger &amp; Betty Toney
Pomeroy- Middleport Rotary
Kenneth McConnobic
Allan &amp;. Nora Elbcrfc:ld
Shirley
RobCrta
Norma
Tona
,
A,CCIBSS
IJCid
Start
Meigs
County
TOurism
Robert&amp;. Cl'l.lrloue Elberfeld
Preteplor Beta Beta Sorority
Paul &amp;. Neva McElroy
Jalonda Roo!
Edna Triplett
Always
and
Forever
Meigs
Retired
Teacher
Association
Dorothy McGraw
Jane Pick
Ol!ality Print Shop
'Huokl Rooah
Elmer Tutti
Judy Mel-lime
.1~meric;an Cancer Society
Milliilepon Department Store
Bob &amp;. Gladys Fife
Dorothy Roush
Phyllis Thmer
R.:Cine Grange H2062
James&amp;: Palricia McHaffie
Clarence Fife
Elsie Rouah
Opall)rcc
American
Electric
PowerMiddleport
Flower
Shop
Racine Home National Bank
H821CI McKelvey
Marvin Fife ,
Helen Rousb ·
Robert Vance ,
General J11111es M. Oavin Plant·
Middleport Merchants Assoc.
Wa)'nc Milhoan
Wanda f'lndlin(!:
Reed's Country Store
Mannina&amp; Ramona Rol.llh Hazel VanCooney
Sic&amp;linde Miller
Cora Folmer ,
American Heart Association
'Mineral Lodge112421.0.0. F.
Mary K. Rouah
1Cd VanCooney
Riverbend 'raoning and Party Supplies
Charlcll Milliron
+lazel &amp;:. William Fox
Walter Rouatl
James It Martha Vennarl American Lcgion-Postll39
O'Dell
Lumber
Rocksprings Rehab
Elizabeth Mihon
Betty Frazier
Matilda A Wilbur Rowley Raymond \VII
American
Legion
Feeney
Bennett
Post
11128
Service
&amp;
Supply
.
Paul Moore .
Ula Fre~kcr
Shade River Ag Service
Undo R"""'ll
Mobol Woddell
Guy &amp; Donna Monis
Mary Freeland '
American Red CroiiS ·
Ohio Arts Council ·
Magadalenc Rusacll
Dale Walburn
Steve
Story
Howard Mullen '
Ruby Frick
Pearl RUIICII
Alice Wamal~:y
Appalachian
Community
VISiting
Nu110s
Aosoc.
Ohio
Department
of
Health
Fruce:~
Murdock
Swisher
&amp; Lohse Drug Store
Ida Gardner
Helen Sanders
Janet Want
Area
Agency
on
Aging,
PSA
7,
8
&amp;:
9
Ohio
River
Bear
Company
Paul Neue
Maxine Gaskill
r;harlcs&amp; Muie Satiel:ll · Kl.thloc:n Ward
TNT Pitstop, Chester
·Johnny Nelton
Charles&amp;. Juanita Gerard
Art Hill's Greenhouses
Ohio Univers.ily
Jack Satterfield, Jr.
Dorothy Warner
United Way of the River Cities
Erwin&amp;. Muprct Oloeckner Naomi Neville
Olivo Satterfield
Zelda Weber
Boy
Scout
Troop
299
Ohio
Valley
Bank
Marpret
Neville
Veterans
for Foreign Wars
Palma Goodwin
Daisy Sauncletl
Betty Webster ·
Laura Nice
Brogan
Warner
Ins.
Co.
Olive
Orange
Memorial
Post
N9053
&amp;Idle Gordon
Weaving Stitches
Joyc:e Sauters
John &amp; Barbara Wec:Q
RosyNtday
Martha Orccnawax
llelly Sayre
CartC
&amp;: J Furniture·
Pam
Blackston's
GreeQhoWei!Works
·
Marie Nonis
Christine Grues.er
Daiay S.yrc
Jewel ~lch
Continuity
of
Care
Paul
Takach
and
the
Republican
Carol &amp; Mary NoUinJbam
Eileen Halley
Wendy's
David Sayre
Audn Well
Dairy Queen Brazier
PIUiy
Raymond&amp;. Susan Oliver
Charldcnc Hanning
Faye lkhullz
, Jcny A SUNn Well
Wicker Buggy
Pcul Oabome
Virginia Han10n
Family Dollar
,
Pamidll
Francea Shaffer
Vema! &amp; Louise Well
Xi Gamma Epsilon Sorority
Ron
'&amp;
Ella
Osborne
Jack·Harle51
Ooldle Shiffer
Rk:boro A Clvla Well
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Compaay
Ptoples Bank
WandaOJdcy
Unda Harper
Jane Simplon
l!lthcr Wetl
Irene Pukcr
Eugene &amp; Jan.:t Harris
Francis Florist
·-··· ~h·Myrtle St.on
Beny Wcyer~mlller
Nancy Parker
Pegsy Harris
Oeorp ll Phyllis Skinner Winnie Willie
Nellie Pukt.r
laura Harrison
Beatrice Smidt
Arizona Wipl
Laura Parka
Ted &amp; KCihcl HatfJCid
Elate Smith .
Lt;mainc Wipl
Clinton A Elizabeth Pmley
Gallipolis Elk's Lodge •t07
Amanda Hawk
ACCESS Hcadstart
lama &amp; Faye Smith
Rllpb Wipl
Ua Tipton, Occupational
Delbert Paucraon
Charles &amp; Geraldine HIWk
R111h Smidt
Helen WllllatM
Hartwell
House
Alice
Wolfe
Therapist, Holzer .Rehab Cen.
Evalena Pluley
le!ntr Hawk
Sharon Smith
John Williams
Anne
Limbert
Hearts
Aglow
Candles
and
Gifts
Unda
Kina
Addle
!'did
Virginia Heilman
Bernadine Snyder
Pearl Wllllamt
Becky I!Hr
Austin PhiUipa
Margaret
Parker, Meigs County
Holzer
Home
Care
of
Veterans
Memorial
Frances Hendrhl
Bctl)' Spencer
Eleanor Wlllianllon
Earl PbiiiiJII
Betty Fulb:
Jackit: Hildebrand
Museum
Billy Joe .t: Mary K. Spencer Bcmlce WI lion
Hospital
Helen Hill
Dora Pierce
Brent Zii-kle &amp; Sugar Run Flour
Pllyllia Spencer
Robcn &amp;. Norma Wlloon Holzer Medic:al Center
Maynard's Quilts &amp; Fabrics
Robert &amp; Ella M. Hill
Allee Plantz
'
Mill
Ida Spradlin
Doris Will
Meigs Nat'l Honor Society
Oracc
Price
Robert &amp; Martha Hill
Holzer Rehab
Bo)'d .t Ira Spurlock
Mary Winsett
Conplllllan Ted Strickland
Michele Garreston ·
HCibon t&lt; Mory Pugh
t.tarpret Hill-Baker
Lillian SU.Inaket
Evelyn Wotrord
Hupp's
Landscaping
Dave
Weeks
Geraldine
Pulkn
Mike Goeglcin
Mary Hi~y
Della Slukey
Sylvia Wolfe
Jay
Mar
Quality
Stone
Oara and Of:rald Pullins
Don
&amp;
.Linda
Hubbaro
Glenn&amp;. Delores Hoffman
Milch
Meadows• Greenhouse
F.-. Story
Dorothy 'olroociird
Dorothy Reibel
.
Freda Holsinpr
King Hardware
Eutem Blem. Students A Becky
Roullc Story
RQdney Wri&amp;tlt
Nancy
Ste~Rs, Holzer Medical
Kenneth Rhoda
Judy Holler
Abbie Stratton
Lucille Ycauacr
Bdwuda
Maynard's
Quilt
and
Fabrics
Cen~r
laura Rioc
Lena Howard
Allee Struble
Do11.t Audrey Youna
Eutem Nillonal Honor Society &amp; Nellie Colton
McDonalds
Pauline Ridenour
Virginia Hoyt
Joe Swtln
Frank Youna .
Sheryl Roush
Mildccd Riley
Nichola Maretti, Ohio .
Sarah Hull
Meigs County Chamber of Commeroc
Bernice Swartz
Charln ZciJier
Jmephine
Ritchie
Eucem
'National Honor'Ans
Frances Hunnel
Bicentennial .
l..tlcy Taylor
Mlld...O Zel&amp;ler
Genrude Riter
David &amp; Olorla Hutton
Society .t llm Roberts ·
Eleanor Thomas
Oeorac Zel&amp;ler
Parkersburg Sentinel
Everett Hutton
Eutem Speech .t Drama Cia._
Pioneer 4H Club and J\dvisors
Betty Hawley
Ed
Dune (Santa)
Tom .t Debbie Drake
Virginia Hoyt
Ed Hupp'a Unclscaping Service
Pomeroy Elcm Studenls
Harold k Deloris Hysell
OJM Board of Alc:ollol, Drug
Pomeroy, Middleport and Racine
Ola Hyxll
A.Dpla Baker, Sor:l.alSII!Inlee Admilaion LpreMa-.d•e, PDint
Jim Rote" A A...e..._
Addiction .t .MenlO! Helith
Libtaries
·
Kate Jarrell
........, C.re U.v• .
John Len~ee, Mm. County p,_...,or
Dorothy Jenklnt
.up EdWard. A 0oana Ha&amp;Relcl, Heana.Jtclew
loy H...a..
Services
Representative John Carey
C\lrtis JenklniOR
A.ppalaeht.n AN Prop.,.
~ S&amp;oelter
Hal Kneen
Robert Tauen, Rio Orondo
C.rroll &amp;: Mildred Johnlon
Bell)ky BMr, Meip Cowtly, Ohio Unlvenll)' Ext.enaton
Kelly Temple1on, BeN:aVMMJ~I Cowd. Bober H.plee
Jennifer McBride &amp;: Sbade River
College, Meip Branch
eva JoiiMOn
Betty F,.._.r, A.uomey Genenl'a Oftke
Ll't')' Robbu.en, Soud.•tern Ohio Lepl S.rvicet
Aa
Scrvic:e
Sarah
McOrew, RN, OU
June Jotm10n
Bob SlrlhWie
~ Challln, Laptho~~~e Feundadaa for Bu..a...
Louisa lohneon ·
K~· Jim O'Brien
Shelly Johnson
Bonnie MeFa...,.., .,
wdlnll!M Depart, Hal~e• H01ptlal
._ ~.
wnde
1
John 11oaford
Mary t. JohMQn
Briam,ra 4bbou, Ute Une of Ohio
Lla 1lpton, OceupUional 'llH!nplll
Southern FFA 8t Aaron Sayre
Roy ·ol Ma!JirCt Johnson
C.rlelon SehDol (MRIDD)
IJnda Kina. Melp Coan&amp;J' OWo Unlwenlty Exhlnalon
Joy Podaett, Oovemru's Office of Southern Nat'l Honor Society &amp;
William Johnson
C..ral TtuUWJhll
.
Unda Rltllll.kl, Ohio ~·oi'IMy Cenenl'a Oftlq
Appalaehia
·
William Beegle
Bupnc IL Wanda lohiiJIOn
Chrt.tfna White, J..,He.n.. • Dlutne. Rehala. Cenaer
IJu. M. Koeh, MS.CCA., l•lfearlat
Juctae
Robert
Huck
and
Sial!
·
Baum • BaUm Lumber
NcllieJonct
Col•dlla Cu a( Ohio
MIU'jorM ..........
,
Judy Wells
Sharon Juslla
Co-w .... Ted Sarlddand .
MaJer CardeDe,... Kay J'tell A: S.. Viea
Senator Mike Shoemaker
Franca Keaton
C..rine Lund
Maxt.e Grov•
ICenncth Wigins .t Melp County Senator Mike Dewine
Marett Keller
Dana Johnaon
Melp County Hnlllt Depu~Me~n.
Recyclin&amp;fUtter Control
The ·Advertiser
Wanda Kellct
Damn Ha1ea, IExereiM Phyeiolopa
Mlea ·~ Holter Rehab
lafyChiiiUn
.
The Athens Messenger
Beatrice Kennedy
DA.V, Oen•er Curlie and Ehue• Pleken.
MlehMI llullla
Lew I• Kennedy
Oa•e Marchu, Blaek Llinl Repre.entallve
Naner &amp;.ner
James Kiser
Donel&amp;e Dupn, VMH Behavior.l Health Urdt
Ohio C,
Council
lmllgl:nc Knapp
Donna Grove.. Ohio Arl Cou.ncll
Ohio Unh·enlty COM Arllwll• P~Uil
Elrl Knight
Dr. Jaeklon BaliMt Optameart.l
Ohio Univenlly ~ af O.leopall.ielfMiolM
Cbaaaei 27 TV
Mac Kobicotz
0... J..,._ Schmoll, O,..._triel
OSHIP (Ohio
el t..a.nee)
Soullby &amp; Meigs County Sherilf's Omce
Evelyn Lanning
Dr. J. . . WithereD
O,erlwoell C....
Patsy Laudermill
Dr. KeUy Routh
r ... Napper, .Wdecl Toueh .
John Leota &amp; Statf
Lois Lawrence
0... MU.a. K•mar, fleuent Valle)'
Pamela Brown, CallnnW. c.. ol OWo
·Melp County Commlllionen &amp; Local/State Elected
Archie Lee
Dr. Rohtt Kuh,.up, VMH R•nl H... th CUnle
Pat Sllllth A: Carol.U_... .... C.. Canear laldaidve
.omclals
Rlla Lewit
Dr. !eDit Smith
t
Pa.da .Arnu.tr0ut, C
r .,...._don
Meip
County
Depa-t
of Job and FamUy Services
Mulnc Little
Dl..bt:lh Sehud, lnv...._.l Rg;,:·Edwanl J.....
. . _ , _ Co=p· n
.
1
Meip
County
EMS
Dwishl Logan
c.o,.. • c.,.a,.,.
RebHea Ne..._, BUr s,.w- DtNCitor
Dorothy Lema:
Go.l'• Nea.. Kellh R ..
Rlioa4a Dailey, V...,._ll
.W' Haapltal
Meigs County Health Department
1./eodle long .
Hot KnHn, Help eo..ty Ohio Unl•erolly
!tld:or• Ur.llao of Ohio
Melp County Hilbway Depart.,ent .
Shirley Lona
Health Reeo.-eey Senle•, lae.
·
S.Oy Berpa, Od. Depa.t ol AP.
Melp County Htstortcal Society
Mary Loudner
l!eohhy Slepo WoU- C.neer
Wy Bryon, Ohio ~~ ol .-.... '
Meip County TB Oinlc
ruma Louks
Hlld. Saat~a, Set'flllky y.,._
Seou MeLrJPt, VIlli hharionl Health Uala
Melp
Conaty Trustees/Clerks
An&amp;cla Lul;u
HoeJUn, Collep Mental Health St..-....
Sherrr Cax.·lle:l'l1• 11...,. '11Nr .,..., PVH
Caml Luufotd
HoiMr Cllnle~- ..... lnneh
8hlrler H..ao..
Nancy Parker Campbell &amp; Statf
l.ooU. Moiden1
Holoor
So.,._ s.,w., Uoloer ,.yoicol Therpy
Pttulette lllrrilon &amp; Clitda Sllrcht!r
Sandr• Malott
Hober M.dte.&amp; C..ter
S.... Gettda, a .... Aa.etadall
Soc:lal Seaorlty Admlntolnotlon- Atben1 Omce
Mary Marcinko
~lleoU.o! C..ler W.._ r..,....
TraeJ O'O.U, ,Me.. C.U..tr He.&amp;th
Al1hur &amp;. Adria Eblin
Lawrence Eblin

llrucc &amp; JOAn Moy
.........

HIGHLIGHTS

Gina Pineo

DONATIONS

--

TuEsDAY'S

•••••••••••••••••••••••

PauiR_.
JenniCerSlaeelo

Page 81
Tuesday, January 23, 1001

ENTERTAINMENT

Pereonal Care
Reoplte Care (aulatanee for famllieo
who are earln! for an elderly famlly
member In their home)

Evening Meals

Scoreboard, Page B3.
I

Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor
/
(740) 992-2161 FAX (740) 992-7886
112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E-Mail Address: mccoa@eurekanet.com
TIIANKS TO 2000
Thank you for your support

f

The Daily Sentinel

\'

'

�t»omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuudayl Jan1111ry 23, 2001

Tue1d1y, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

- . . • 2 • The Dally Sentinel

•

,
•
••'
230
Loet I P'OUIId Yord Solei
ll1d
To Do Ad'
Mutt
Pold In Advonee
TRIBUNC Of A DUNE
2 00 p m the diiY before
od lo to run SundJIY I
- . y odlllon 2 00 p m
Frldoy

w.-

e.

SENTINEL DEAQUNE.

I :00 p m the doy before
tho od loto run
Sundoy I Mondoy odlllon
1 00 p m Friday

Wanted
Home &amp; Ga den Party Otolgno s
Hand Made Ponory Unlquo Ac

eessOJies Cand es Garden
wa e Designer Qua 1y Pic txes
C•AEER OPPORTUN TY Ea n

exee tnt neomt Easy cia mt
p ocess ng Fu l a n ng Home

PC requ ed Call Phys can 6
Heal hca e Oeve opments toll
I H 800
S933 e~ 2070

m

BPJGimB D§AQUNI.
2 doyo befOre the od to to

WI

needed Many
ava lable bene s such as com
2 PT or 1FT LPN

run by 4 30 p m Soturdoy
I ,Monday odlllon- 4 30

pet tlvt wagea vacat on pay I ee
meal&amp; ass atanct with tu liOn rt
irnbu aemenl ass stance w houa
ng pa tal payment of health n
aurance and othe ava lab e n
su ances nte es ad app can a
may apply da y Mon Sun 9 4pm
Ravenswood Ca e Carner 1113
Wash no on S eet Ravenswood
wv 26 64 Come 11e us You
De glad you did

Thuraday
"O.adllnH aubject to

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Peraonals

I Loat •o bs n Just 2 Mon hs
Lon !i To 00 + Lba Ga n Ene
gy Raau ts Gua anteedl Ea n

$500$1000 Pat T me F am You
~omo (800)S8297S7

OR VERS Cannon Exp e$$ 99%
d ve no toucn fre ght Sta t al
34e
+ exp 33c m 4 y
32e m 3 y 31e mt/2 y aoe
mJ yr 29e miJ 8 moa 1yr 28e

mvsv

memos o
mo exp

111 tanttor
S350 wk Pay ralll every

e months eonuua rldl p o
0 am Paid 't'ICatlona Ina ava I
www cannonaxp 111 com Ca ro
dela &amp; 800 84S 9390

Ta 1C Llva With BeauUlu G r 1 I
A
t
To Hea F om You Ill
Call Now II 1 900 226 2384 Exl
7777 $3 99 Pt M nutt Must Be
18 Yea11 Strv U (818)&amp;45 8434

wa no

30 Announcement•
JEHOVAH 8

WITNIBBEB

F ends fam 'I Find ou facts ttla

soc e y doean wan you o know
Free &amp; confident at J W FACTS
Box 454 Metal ne Fa s

WA

Two mixed b aed houl'!d dogs

need fa m ( 1) loOks ke Redbone
coonhound one b ack &amp; while
m• cal74074204 2

Loat Dog snon Ha r 8 own An-Ul4rt To Thf Nam• Browntt E
de y Mans Pt Ht M sses H m

Ve y Much I Seen Pease Ca
740)256'-1987

80

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YR
Med ca nsu ance B I ng Needed
lmmed ate y Home compu e
needed get FREE nle net 1
1100-291-'683 Otp11 109

Yard Sale
Auction
and Flea Merkel

Rick Pea san Aua an Compan~
lull lime auct on~t camp eta
auct Cln
serv ce
licensed
168 Oh o &amp; Woa1 VIrgin 1 304
773-5785 Or 3CJ.I.n3-5+17
R \It aide Auction Barn Sa e
Eve 'I Satu day N ght at 6p m
Auc onaer Raymond John1on
(740~N9

v

E•RN $1200-$8100 monoh pa
tu lime Wo k t om homt EK
pandlng company nttdl htlpl
F •• ntorma on 414 290 6900
www hofnloobus ness
temacom

•v•

EASY WORK G oa payl Ea n
$500 plus a week auembllng
p oduc 1 a h(lme No tKPI ence
nectlsa y Call toll ee 800
267 3944 x138

[MPLOYMENT
SI::HVICES

11 0

WEARE HIRING! I
Earn Up To $7/Hr And Wooldy
8onutMI
•Ful Benents
•Wooldy PayehOCic

Help Wanted

12 000 WEEKLVI Mailing

•oo

brochurul Sa slac on Gua
an ead Pos age &amp; Suppl es p o
v dedi Aush Selt Addreued
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370
438510 mmedaay

$45 000 YR po en al 0 s need
peop t to proceu cia rna Must
own compute modem We a n
Ca 1 888 S87 4888 ex 895
ho5 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPE~IENCE RE
OUIAED 1 800 748 S71 B Ext
x101(24hl1)
S529 WEEKLY ma I ng el ers
I om home Full o part me No
expe ence necnaary eaey Any
hours Ca US Ogu 1617
S20 807t 24 hou rooord ng
1121 W!!KLYI Maka Monty
Help ng Peop e Rece ve Govern
ment ~~ und• F n Deta 1 (2•
h teo dad menage) 1 800
409-4625 Ext 5700
U17 IS WEEKLY P OCIII ng
HIJD FHA Mor gage Rtlundt No
Exper ence R1qufred For FREE
nrormal on call 1 aoo 501 6832
... 300

•Pakl Vaca ion
•Retl emtnt Plan
•Proloulona A moophoro
lntoeltton Manegement
Ca&lt;pOnotton
II Currtntty Aeld ng To Ou Staff!
Como WOrk W th The BEST
Ca I Today For An lnt.vlew
1-...15-7223 Ext 1121

Full Time Tempo a y Emp oyment
At Clemen a Nu eery Apply At
Pont P taunt Or The Nu 11 y
(304)87S t820 By FoD uary 1
2001 Jot&gt; Sllltl Fobtuary 5

Bualneaa
Training

Golllpolla co- co logO
(CerHro C~ To Home)
Ca TO&lt;Ioyl740-448-4367
1 1100-214-0452
Aog 190 OS 1274B

School•
Instruction

CREO T PAO!lLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS liCENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
B"D CREDIT B"NKRUPTCY
L"WSUITS JUDGMENTS A""
RATING 90 180 D•YS 1 888
8tHl902

no

WWN

FREE DEBT CONSOLID~TION
App cat Cln w ,.,v ce Aectuce
paymen s 10 8S% IC.SH IN
CENTIVE
OFFEAI
www dtb cca o g Ca 1 800 328
85 om 29
FREE grant money &amp; !edt al
rundlng1 Bualnen eclucat on
home purchue epa 1 dtbla
lrave tetl ch w tttl artata
plua mo e Guarantttd 1 886
.5 9 2775 or v-ww g an11 do1
com com
P-H-Q-T-o-G-R A P-11-V
HIGH SCHOOL II!NIORI
SENIOR POIITRAITI COST
TOO MUCH.?
WE Alii THE ALTERNATIVE I
MAIN S~EET PHOTOGRAPHY
S MAIN ST PT PLE.SANT
87! 7279

ao..

..Ou Mimorl" •• our Butl'ltll

OFFICE PDSmON
Join Ou Grow ng Company We
Havt " Fu Tlmt Opening On
OUr Office Slaff The success u
Cand~a I Mutt ~Good Be
sic Compule S~ I' E~17t Mee
lng And Taking W1h Tho Putll c
And Hevt Good Moth Sk 18 Tl\ 1
s A Fu ITime Potltlon And 011
111 AI Company Banellltnctuctng ln&amp;Urii1Ct Patel Vacatk&gt;n
And COn'9any 40 1K P an For In
terv ew Conalde a lon Send you
Aesumt W h Col/8 Lo11orTo
Human Ae10urces AttentiOn 0
ane HI Ohk&gt; Valtoy Putlllth ng
co ITI\o DanyTrt&gt;une) 825Th d
Alltnuo G~ !pOls Oh o 45831

Muge Inventory 0 scounl P Ices
On V nyi Skirt ng, Doo s Wind
OWS Ancha 8 Wa er Hea 1 1
Plumb ng &amp; Electr cal Par a Fu
nacea &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mob o Homo Supply 740 446
941 6 www orvb comlblnntt1
88AceFamfo SaeByOwne
w•h 1SOO Sq Foel 3 Bedroom 1
2 Bath Home W th Beau ful
Oak Tr m High Ce I ngs And A
Large t&lt; tchen Has a Large Ga
ragt And Sa n w th 40+ r 1able
Aerts Exctlltn Local on Nea
R o G andt Aoktng $12UOO
(740)381H)2S8 Evonlngo

340 Buelnea• and
Building•
Church Bu ldlng w th Pa aonagt
to ult loca ld n Po nt Pleasant
Good Ne ghbo hQod aaklng
$95 900 (304)87S 1618

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
LOOk ng To Buy A Ntw Homo?
Oon 1 Have Land? Wt Oolll Hurry
On~ 10 Lots Loft 304 736-7295

New &amp; Used Elect ic And Gaa
Fu naces Fo Sale Cal Fo S z
ea
ln8tallat on
Ava lab 1
(140)4-46-S308 1 800-29HI098
Ta a Townhouu -"Pa tmen a
ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms :i!
FoosCA
12BanFuyCa
paled Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $385 Mo No PI S
Lease Plus Secu ty Oepos A8
qu rod Daya 740 446 3481
Evon ngs 740 387 0!02 740
446 010
lWin R ve Towe 1 now aeoep ng
app cat ona o 1 BA
HUD ouDsld~od ap 1o e de y
and d oaDiod EOH (304575S879

490

For L11aae

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! No h
lng down Estab 8tled Yo k Minta
route w h 22 local ona EZ 6 B
hours weakly no 11 ng Nat
S!I2K yearly M nimum nveatment
$-1000 1 886-250-2810
ALL CASH C"NDY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800/day? 30 mach nes
and candy S9 995 1 800 998
VEND
FL
AIN2000 033
sc Aag684
ARE YOU CONNECTED? NTER
NET USERS WANTED $25 $71l/
HA PT/FT wwwBoeoo&amp;FrHcom

Real Eatate
Wanhld

our-.,.

~ ••Y.hh

on an equal
opportunity bull

510
1 SR $22! Montnty 2 BA $325
Monthly 1010 &amp; to 6 3rd Ava
nut Depoo Aequl td (740)441
0219
2 Bedroom HoU&amp;l 1 Balh Ro~~
1 ato And Ston Included Lo

cated In Ga po 1 $300 mo

S300 Otpoal (740)256-6681

4BR 3 1 2 Baoh 2 900 SqF1 In
Gall polls 2Acrea C A New
K IChtn (Sm th Cab nell) Hard
wood F oo s Ga age Basement
S149 soo Cal (740)44H706

Household
Goode

HOMES FROM S198 30/ mo 1
3BA repoll ro ec osu 11 fH 4%
dCiwn Fo list nga payment de
toto 18007193001 x 18S
1 5 Olory 3 BR 2 Bath hOml Loll
Fu I Basement 2 car oaregt
dOCk sa n wllh work&amp;hop 2 riding
1 ngs UII WI I IPPfOX 4 ICI'tl
Lovely Count y Ne ghbo ttood
Must Stt 1740):l5tl-1271

S2 95 Po 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Pe 00 All B aoo Com
p ess on F tt ngs n Stoctc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson 011~ 1 801l-S37 9S28

Appliances
Recond 1oned
Wasnera 0 yera Rangea Ret
g ato 1 Up To 9'0 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May ag Ap
p aneta F ench c ty Maytag
740 441779S

560

Pets for Sele

-"kC B ack Lab Pupa 3 Female&amp;
9 Weeks 0 d Had Shots And
Wo med S250 (740)448-&lt;'7!9

5 Roor11 Hou&amp;l 52 Olivo S Gall
poilt S2501mo (740)448-3945

AKC Cocker Span e puppy tor
$ale mao Duff &amp; whl11 740 992
7371

Houtt and trailer fo rent 7&lt;40
742-2e61
•

New &amp; UMd Fumitu e
New 2 P ect Ltv ngroom Su e&amp;
$399 Buy Sell ltade

New 3 Bedroom Home Close To
Golllpo o Portly Furn ohod lm
moda. Opening (740)21SH~74

New And Used Fu n u e Sto e
Below Ho day Inn Kanegua we
Sell Grave Monumtn a And Vas

.

One btd oom houae In Racine
S32S per month ptua S300 depos
I 740-992 5039

Ttlrtt bedroom all e ect lc ranch
hOmt w th attached ga age
fenced back ve d Ia ge lot at
t.ltaclow Land Es""'"' P P aaoant 1800 month lue rete encea
and dopoiH 304 8 4 2480

Delong s G oom Shop Groom ng
A Dog Breeds 740-441 1602
Ro twa er Pupa 0 weeks 111
Shoo &amp; Wo mod
S100
(740)386-839t

Mualcal
Instruments

1998 Redman t6x80 Brand Ntw
Cond on Sh ngled Aoot Vinyl
Sdng 3BR 2Bah HoaoPump
$24 000 (304)675-S867
7295
START YOUR OWN lUSt
NEBS LOCALLV
P oDiem
c td t? No p ob emil ncom1 un
moed 1.-217-

230

TRAVEL I MAKf; $1$$$
S30K "'"'-+ De IYtr new cars
\lana and A V a localy o
na11ohwlda 18 Yrs o p)dor
AI irHI wak:omed
CIH fret 177 520 007 x 740
URGENTLY NEEDED puma
donorl urn l3S 10 $4S 1or 2 or 3
hou 1 wetkfy Cal Sera Tee 740
!5112-1851

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IBIS!?
No FH Unltu Wt W n
1 888 S82 334S

•

1 and :2 bedfoom apamnen a tu
n shed and urtturn thtd 11cur ty
depoa equlred no Pt 1 740
992 2218

Bedroom N81r Holre Econom
oal Gas heat ng W 0 Hookup
$279 00 Pluo U1 101 Lilli &amp;
Otpool1 Roqured (740)408-29!7

v

APARTMINTI AT
IUDGIT PRICII AT JACK
ION IIT~TII !2 Wutwood
Ortva I om' S28t to l370 Walk to
shop &amp; movlta C1 740 441
21181 Equil Houolng Opoorlunlty

640

ToySt 85 Seson83 ZOT
UNC G eensboro 80 Wollord 56
Va Commonwea h 70 N C W m ng on 55
W Ca o na 88 aeorg a Southe n 65
MIDWEST
M am Ohio) 17 '1'/ M ch gan 50
Wls G een Bay 69 Butte 68
IOUTliWEST

Meigs

Gl~o

P 11 on at C ay Blfttllt

Avo Ohk&gt; a1 JOI)n Marthall

from... Page 81

,..,.....~

Monday a MaJor Collllgll 8aaltttl&gt;lll

soEAST

Boolon u 89 Hartford 45
Bucknel 81 Amer1Cin U 51
COlumbia 78 '- lllny N Y 66

Pnce led all scorers wtth ?Q
pomts Pncc and Jaynee Davts
added 15 each and Mmdy
Chancey 12 to pace Meogs Me1gs
h1t 19 of 71 from the floor
mcluding four of 17 three pomt
ers for 27 percent Me1gs went to
the hne SIX t1mes and h1t five for
83 percent

Gallia
fromPap81
Also for the Bulldogs (7 6
SEOAL 5 5) Maty Yamty scored
15 pomts mclud.ing two 3 pomt
ers and Chelsea Monroe scored

KIT '1!1' CARLYLE e by Larry Wrlabt
A, • .,.H.tt. C.t4N Y•V MAY
I) A 1'I N l&gt;c A
I) "'" f". " 1o t&gt;N

mne

' ~:;;---------,-----..~

For the Angels (8 7 SEOAL 5
5) Jemca Bodtmer scored 13
pomts
Mered1th Addmgton
scored II pmnts and Sarah Rus
sell added n ne
Addmgton made a basket woth
two seconds left m the first half to
send both teams onto halfume
ued at 25 all
We felt gomg Into halftime
that the ballgamc was 111 ot r

WWWOOhiiCI

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay Round Balls $11 00 Square
Beleo T mo1hy S2 eo Co n $5 75
1 % G ound Foad S6 ~0
130•1937 3•35 Oaye (304)SB2
S747 Eve"ngs.
Large Ao Bolos ol Hay $15 Oa
llvtry Avellallltl (740)448-t052

FARM SUPI'LIE ~

Squt I T mothy MIKed Hay &amp;
Large Round Ba 11 Delivery
Avallab e Her lage Fa ma
(304)675 5724

1997 Chevy Cavalle 2 Door 5
Speed Air CD P aver EKce ent
Cond 11on $8200 (304)675 3903
1998 Chevy Lumina Ol!ldtd
$9200 OBO caU 740-949-2203

610 Farm Equipment
135 Mass e Ferguaon 0 1111
Somt Equipment
(740)387 74t4

T acto

Apartment•
for Rent

IIAUTI~UL

New 16 1t w de 1488 per man
on $270 pt mon ca now 1
800 891 8777

Hampshire 76 Berke ey Springs 87
Marsh Fork !8 Valley Fayette !55
Meadow Bridge 71 Graater Beck ey Ch Ia
I an 53
M d and Tral 71 Webste County 57
Northem Garrett Md 88 Paw Pew 60
Oak H I 82 Jamea Monroe 39
Shady Sp~ng t 3 Mf"'• Chna11en 6!
'Teays VaMty Christ an 69 Duval 52
Poetponemen..

"LL
STEEL
BUILDING
CLE"R"NCE 24x2B was S7290
nil $3375 30x~e wa• $10 380
•• ssaso 50x100 was $32 540
H $ 8 87' New! Mus "MI Tom
1-7803
AMAZING METAetL SM Beak
TroLigh I LOll 10 200 Lba Easy
Quick Fu 0 a.ma c Atau 8
100% Na ure Oocto Aeccm
m•ndtd
Free
Samp 11
(140)441 1882

Skid s eer &amp; A. tachment Otmo
Dayl Be Suro To Como To Steer
ng In The Right Oirtcllon .,.nu
a y 31 A. 10 ooam At car
m chHra Farm &amp; Lewn COmpany
Rops On Hand Spoc 1 Ftnonclng
Ava ab t M d Way Between Ga
PO a And R o Grand• On Jeck
10n P kt You local John OMrt
Doattr (700)448-2412 Or 1 800
594 1111

630

Llveatock

I Voar Old Bey Soddlt Moro Kid
b oko 5600 4 Month 0 d walk
lng Co
ssoo Roa Rldt
1304)!118 2138 Ce~ -7pm
Cookwa t Wt Stopped Dong
Olnnt Par 111 )1ave Beau ful
Naw 7 Pc 8111 Lilli Htovy Su
GCll Sta nttll Stte 00% Wa
ttrltlll Waa 11100 Now $ 4311
L fttlme War antyt
soo 43 4
44128

Lama 1• SE Lou a ana 46
Nicholls St 74 sam Houlton St 70
Pra rie View 78 Ark P ne Bluff 61
Texas Ar1klgton 70 S ephen F Aullln 69
UTEP S3 SMU 89
FAR WEST
C~o rado S 73 U1ah 65
Kansas 85 COO ado 75
Pacific 62 Idaho 81
UNLV 80 New Mexico 72
Wyoming 65 BYU 78

BASe&amp;ALL

Amtrteen LHQUII
CH CAGO WHITE SOX-Named Wa y
Backman and John Orton playa dave opmen
peraonne Named Mark Haley h Wng coach o
W nt on Sa em al he Ca o na league
Named Oary Boson m no eague outlle d
natructo
CLEVELAND IND ANB-S gned OF Te
e I Lowery to a m no eague cont act
BASKETBALL
Nlllonal 811kttball AIIOCIItton
CLEVELAND CAVAL EAS-P aced F G
Man Harprtng on nju ad st Ac va ed G
B mbo Co es rom he n urad 11
PORTLAND TAAILBLAZEA8-Piaced G

Gary G ani on nju ed Is Ac va ed G Erick
Bark ay rom he nju ad st
FOOTBALL
Nat onll Pootba Ltegue
ATLANTA FALCONs-Named Don Back
mon delens ve coo d na o Announced he

es gnation of otf&amp;nSive ne coach Art She
Announced the es gna 10n o de ensNe line
coach B HKotla o ake he same pos on with
S1 Lotis
CHICAGO BEAA5-Named John Shoops
offens ve coord nato and M ke Swea man
&amp;~ earn&amp; coach
KANSAS CITY CHIEFs-Named AI Saun
de 1 oHens ve coordina or and sss san head
coacl1
NEW ORLEANS SA NTS-P omoled W n
ston Moss to hnebacke s coach
PH LAOELPH A EAGLES Named Steve
Spegnuo o de ens ve backs coacn Sean
McDennott de ensNe ass san qua y con rdl
and B Shuey ass sa n o he head coactl
WASHINGTON RED SKINS Named M Ita
Stock spec a earns coach Bnan Scholten
he me oHens ve ass s an and Dave Radd ng
1 eng h and cond on ng coach
HOCKEV
National Hockey League
ANAHE M M GHTY DUCKS Reca ed 9
Antt Juss N em and C Bob Wren om C ndl'\
na o heAHL
COLUM13US BLUE ACKET S Ass gnetl
C Chris NIB sen to Sy acuse o he AHL
CALLAS STARS- Reca ed W JamMI
W ght rom Utah o he Hl
M NNESOTA W D- Ass gnea RW Ctl s•
an Matte o C eve and o he HL
NEW YclRK RANG ERS- Raca ad F B ac
Smyth from Hartford o e AHL
•
WASH NGTON CAP TA S Reca el1 el
A exe Tezlkov and D Rob Ze e om Pori and
o the AHL

Mcogs
pdled
down
31
reba n h led by T1ffany Q1 ails
had five and Shannon Soulsby
Kayte DaVIS Cha 1ccy and Ashley
Thomas each added four Metgs
only had 1111&lt; tun overs and 2?
aSSists led by Von ng with n ne
V mmg also had four of her teams
13 steals
Rachel Chap na 1 led Southern
w th eight pomts the Tornadoes
were 13 of 41 from the floor for
32}1' Southern went to the ltne
SIX t ones and hit three for 50 Y,
Southern had ? I rebounds led by

Cl ap a

hands saod Adk 1 s We talked
about a couple of thmgs we
needed to do agatnst their zone
defense
Gallia Academy came out and
JUmped on the Bulldogs early
gomg on a I 0 0 run to open the
second half
The Blue Angels led 42 29
woth 3 45 remammg m the third
quarter
We told the g1rls that we ve
got to cone out 11 the thad
quarter and put pressure on them
and hopefully keep HDwerth out
of the ballgame said Adkins We
knew we could press We found tf
we can score smue pomts off the
press that ot would g1ve 1 s
mo e 1t11 1 to fi 1 sl the tl;o rd
quarter a1 d go 1 Ito the fourth

In the fourtl Atheo s vas able
to bnng the Gall a Ac ade v lead
to four before tl c An gels kept
theu con posure to ge t tl e v cto
ry
We thought our defense vas
fine (m the fourth quarter) s~ q
Adkins We d dn t l ot ce f th erewas any break do v
a r
defense They J st p t up so 11e
shots and fom n r ly to r thCl
they went 111
Gall a Acad en y v II be t River
Valley Thursday
a lo g va te.,1
rematch for th Blu Ao gd
The Ratdcrs
vhose ga 'lC
Monday at Loga1 " ' 1 rpo1 ed
dcfcmd the A g is &gt;4 43 l)ec
I B at Galhpolo
Athens pi ) s I
Log
Th sday

720 Trucka for Sell

740

J B

1984 Ford 314 Ton F a1bed 4M4 4
Speed 300 8 Cylinder Runs
Good $2SOO (140)319-9276

B ua 2000 Yamaha Wove ne
3SO 4 Wheal D lvo $3800
(304)5715-3088

1988 s o Truck AUtomatic runs
Good &amp; Good Condlllon $2000
(304)675 2183

760

T

1995 Oodgo
uck Ex ended
Cab ~utomat c 4x4 Loaded
Super Nice C~N (740)2-227
1998 Dodge Olkota Spo I low
M es Excellent Condit on Fac
o
Wa ran~y
S13 800
(740)448-&lt;'957

v

S uti cr 1 vi c 1
d the
ball over ?6 t1
led by Cu no 1 gs
woth two each d c gl
by Cu1 1mngs ' rl th
Meogs IS no\\ I I 4 u 1 tl e sea
son the M&gt;raud rs v 11 hostV11
to 1 County on Tl ur d ) So uth
ern drops to 8 8 o n th s ason:
the Tornadoes v1ll host Wat rfotd
Thursday
There vas 1 o
o
mty
gam

Auto Parte &amp;
Acceasorlee

Budget Prlctd Tranaml1alona
A I Typtl ACCIII To Ove
10 Ooo T an1m 11 ons T ana t
Casas 740 24S 5~77 Ce 339
378S

790

Camper• &amp;
Motor Home•

840

H1y &amp; Gr11n

22S 4XS Round Balla 01 Hoy, p
Each 0
A
Fo
StSOO
(740)387-41S8

!
Eom S2&amp;f1My 1om

v&lt;UPCI-.,~ ..... u ili't9

978 Ford 4x4 Runs Good S950

1978 Ford PU P fSO 4k4 96 000
M ea Ac ua M tl $17SO
(740)«8-4053

TRAN,,PORTATION

71 o Autol for Sale

1988 Chevy Blazer 4x4 Ntw Ra
bu t Napa Eni nt Good Condi
t on, Alk ng "00 (304)291
3240

10 OOWN CAABI AI ow aa S2il
mo Po ce Impounds lnd repoa
aontono 2• moa et99% For
latlngl Cl 800 719 3001 txt
A010
lO DOWN CAASI POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; AEPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S J!EP S l SPORT
UTILITV LOW AS U9 MO S
IIU% FDA L STINGS C"LL
1 ~t-0050 .1 0 911~

-n

88 vouo convorllblo 2 tops 2
&amp;lll whit 1 rOitlllr 11 or NCCC
Group 11 o Ill $7000 call740
91211117
Hpm

12 Pontiac Grand Am SE two
door 5 1pt1d a am 1m Cll
11 tt new t tl runs good goad
condition 740 192 9041 o 140
9122&amp;86
IN Ford TaunJI 4 door aedan

11 000 mlltl automat~ f'W POL
u t whMI crutao ale amllm Clll
stilt 3
warranty IKCIIItnt

r-•

cond lion oaklnt $1700 payoll
741l-811!1179

97 Pont ac G end P lx GTP
21 000 Mllll Garogo Kapl Ex
ct ani cond on $15 000
(740)2-339 (740):l!IU006

oso

CARS S29/MONTH Pollet m
pounds &amp; opoal Honda Cht~
Jaop &amp; Spor Utility 24 mo 1
etU'I\ Fo llollng ca 1800
941 8777 oxt C 98"
CARS FAOM 129/MO Impound&amp;'
IPOI Ftt SO Down 24 mot
etUII. For 11 ng1 1 100 3t9
3323 X21511

720 Trucka for Sele
II Ford F2SO 8 cylinder au
10me to 740-948 21ot8

1861 Ford Tor no GT380 Auto
E•ctlltnt Shapa U500 11el
Oodgt 0 50 4x4 Good Shape
11000 (740)448-3t12

18?1 Ford F 150 Supa Cob
P okup 2 What! Or vt 302 V I
1740)4AW030

1117 Covallor 131 000 Mllll
UOO 080 1817 Dido Achltva
51 000 !.AIItl fUOO (740)«1-

1812 Fo d Dump Truck Ttlo
10011 c Ho 11 Dilllt I Htlvy "-D
~ ong Tra lor $1500 Fo loth
11104)4175-- Or (304)'181-1513

H2'
1181 Oodgt Dynasty 1180 Call
(740)«8-4222

1111 S 10 ••4 S21U 1UO
GMC 4x4 l5485 1911 Chtvrollt
Exllndld Cab 4•4 1021! 1918
S tO SUII 1118 8 10 I42U
01ho Trucka F om S1111 ~nd
Up Co 1 ~rom StUI To l54U
COOK MOTOU (740)441·

olo'

1818 Bronco I 4x4 b 1ck with
gray nttr o IXct lent eond t on
fnaldt 1nd out nttda nothinG
1ua1 drlvtn $.4ICO PliO 740 9R2
2932

11'87 Ford Convtn on van W th
TV/ VCR Loadod LINt Now
17 000 Mlloa $19 000 (304)112
2937

SERV ICES

810

Home
Improvement•

IAIEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
uncondlllona ftt me guarantH
L.OCI tlftrt11Ctl fu nJtP,td E1
labllhed 1875 can 2• H11 (740)
•48 0170 IOQ-287 0578 Aog
ori Waterproottng
C&amp;C

Gont at

Homa Ma n
v nyl ad ng
c1rpentry doo 1 windows baths
mob 11 home epa and mort For
trtt eat m1 1 ca Chtt 740 992
8323
ttntnce Pain ng

v

L. v ngaton 1 Baatmtnt Watlr
Proorlng all baaement rtpl ra
done frll 11t matll 1ftllmt
guar~n a• 1~yra on job IIIPt I
onco (304)69S 3887

81 112 Ton 4x4 Auoomatlc Chevy
Nlldl Wo k $3200 Ca AI a
7:oopm (304)67!-1449

L v ngaton 1 Blltmenl Wa tr
Proofing all baaement repairs
done tru lit matu 1Itt me
gua entet uyra on job txptri
onco (304)195-3867

2000 Toyo a Tacoma ~tack 4•4
cltan nr llkl ng G~ll TO!'IOIIU
cover btd nt a lfW r ma e
100 ooo m • wo ran y ~ epaed
air aml!m caUtHt Takt 0¥1
poy-11 740-185 3818

95 Oodga Ran D u~l •x4 S
Splld 80 000 M tn 1 Owner
Groy $10 !00 (140)448-t062
88 Fo d Aangor XLT Supa cab
4x• Off Road Packlgt Loodad
1S 700 M too Good Cond 1on
(740111111 13311(740)2IHOOI

tnaldt And Oul Ca ·pant y
Plumb ng Wahl L nta T! enCh
(740)401-4113

ng

Electrlc;al and
Refrigeration

Motorcycll•

lluZIIk Quad ~unr}lr 1100co
hctlant Shape 13750. lhp Go
Cart fu I Roll Cage 1350
(740)408-3812

,._

..

From 53000 St50000
LOANS 0 A C
For faat 8suhs call tol f ee
1-1100-4111-2330

Hot Homo BINd Buolnlll

Low lnvo-nt High._,
No Con'411MIIon P - To rHorloa
Turn l&lt;ty www mn.x org
Mol ng Our Still Broci'IJroa
Frtt SIIPIJIIII Pottage!
Starllmmedtaltlyl
Genuine ()pportunltyt
Froo tnlolmatton
Cell Toll FrM
1-668-81 S.1113S

For

Non RXI Clinically proven
Sate/Effectlvel

100% Guaranteed
Free Shipping!
www uropr n com
1 888 718 6606

SLIP If o P umb ng And Home

Ml ntenancl Wt Do All RtPI ra

f!ICI It 8-10 IIIJtr • ~Automat
lo. Nr Tilt. CnoiM New Ex
aallont Body 14500 t\1&gt;~)175
51187
1

740

CLAIMI PROC!IIOR
$2Q,f40/h potonlla
Prooallilg olllmllleuy
Trolnlng provided MUST own PO
CALL NOWI1 8811-707 813S oxt 679

1111

ra

lbtl »build oblf noll
wlloft
roo- with ih&lt; ciGut(ltdl

I fooar

ea ch

Motorcycle•

oeo 1740!258-1~

t 8$1 0 da Cutllll Oa a a 4 cy
I ~dtr two door aood cond 1on
11500 1187 ChiVY 8 10 8 Ill
8! 4114 loaded $1700 7•0 912
1181
..-tor

•
••

aam

730 Vapa ,. 4·WDs

2 BR n Point P~Jaeant Rtt.renc11 Aoqulred (740)448-2200

Profeaslonal
Servlcee

IS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
e11n fo tma n ng payments on
P ope 1y So d Mortpagu Annul
11 Set ltmenta lmmed ate
Ouottlll Nobody bta a ou pr c
tl Na ona Coni act Buye a
(8001 490 073 •• 0 www na
lonalcon ractbuye 8 com

•

440

1 BR "PI tman1 1385/mo $100
011)01 I A Utlllt II P1 d No
Pt &amp;
(740)448 3437
Or
(740)408- 83?

Up o $ 000/day BEFORE
BREAKFAST!
www can ch
CO!P com 0t ca 204 9S3-0 12 I

62

23

Telete~VIcea

M xed Hay Sque e So lee S1 50
Eacll (740)446-4624

0 IChW 1Ch 4x4 4 Foot S1k:k Trill
or $3900 (304)87S ~494 Or
(304)4S8 1!93

3 br 2 ba: on choice lot 304 738

v

•ov•

Fal h Christian 83 Roseda e Chr1al an VI

•

Group/millennium

Hammond 82 orgal'l Lea a
opeake S2SOO (pnco advt" ltd
nco r8ct y In lit ad) 740 982
8443 or 740-3677170

Used Leas

1994 4x80 Oakwood Mobil•
Home On t Acre Lol Stp ~ Syo
em &amp; Ru at Wa1o (740)387
74t4

llondoyaCIIrlo
Belloyovlle 33 Wllllemaon 29
Blohop Oonohuo 49 Bridgoport Ohio &lt;10
Burell ot8 Gilbolt 28
East Htrdy 63 Shonandollh Valay Chrta1
ten Va 57
Ed son Oh o ot8 Brooke 01
Faytttl'lilll 74 ~ny Aolalgh 53
G tlnbr10 Woot 50 Oak HW «
Hamplhlro 10 Ptto111&gt;urg &lt;10
Hooman 52 Po_,on Coumy 51 10n
Htltlert Hoover 65 Poea 39
Kay&amp;l 43 t.toorollald 37
Lawrence COUnty Ky S9 Wayne 45
Ma111naburg 19 Hedgoav to 58
Mon1Cl m 33 Martll Fork 26
Mounl Hope 53 Gauley Bndtlo 31
Ook Glon 83 Ma111na Forry. Ohio 55
P lncolon 88 Nicholas County 5S
Shady&amp;ide Oh o 58, Whee ng Centra 51
Summa a County 71 Woodrow W lion 56
Wei 71 Wnaly 57
Wyom ng East 75 Bluerltkl62

-•.

1-800·929-5753

Blue Heeler F~ Blooded Ftmall
Spaded Ve y Gen to (304)875
3927

&amp; llvi:S Hh~K

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent

••
•
•••

Civic Development

On John Deere Bale a And
Mower Cond Uone s w th JD
Cred t Approve Ca Or Stop In
At Ca michae 1 Farm &amp; Lawn
(740)448 2• 2 Or 1 800 5841111

Doo Ptop 1 Good Atmoaphe e
Gro~1 Poop a w
T aln Call
(304)768 7828 •ny lma 0
(304)273 OS20 AI or 7pm Aok
ForBelh

Our office Ia currently
seeking f/1 p/1, and
temporary workers to
fill three shlftB dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;
management
opportunHies make this
an exciting cholca lor
etudents housewives
seniors or anyone
looking for extra
money; Pick up the
phone now to set up
your personal
Interview
We are Wilting to hire
YOU I
CALL TOOA"t

Watt ne Special 314 200 PSI

570

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
Low or SO down Tax epoa &amp;
bank uptclea HUO VA FHA
low or no money down OK creel
111 For llo ngo call 1 800 ~01
1777 ·~ 9813

wva _ _ _

CIASSIFIEDS!

Halp Wanted

Need Work to Pay
olf HoUde¥ &amp;I.U.?

2 BFI Home $275/mo + Oepo8
And U1 0.8 No PolO (740)4•6
4313

9 Room House For Aonl 3 Bath&amp;
2 Kitchens 4 BR $100/mo Plus
Dopos t (7•0)448 4734 0
(740)«1 1337

3 BR Br ck Homo 1092 Sunatt
0 ve New y Remolded Carport
Full Battment Excel ant Condl
tion (740)448-4116

tono 61 t.torllt 89
Long 111and u 87 Roten Monte 79
Manhottan 85 Fa rl e d 71
Nonhealtem 79 Vermon 68
51 Froncll NY 98 51 F anc l Pa 75
91 John a 87 Miami 63
UMSC 80 Sacred Heart 63
Wljlne 81 Moun S Mary'e Md 88
SOUTH
Alabama A&amp;M 63 Sou hem U 52
Alabama St 84 Alco n St 52
Centenary 85 Be mont 80
Chattanooga 55 Furman 49
Coaata Carolna 71 H gh Pont 67
CoN of Charte8ton 74 Tne C tade 67
Oelawere St 74 Florida A&amp;M 57
Elon 68 Char1es10n Southam 65 Of
GIOt'Qe Mason 1~ Eas Carol na 62
Howard S8 Coppin $1 57
Jackaonvll e 12 Merce 69
MVSU 87 Texaa Southe n 62
Md Eu em Sho e 83 Morgan St 72
N Carol na AlT 75 Nono k Sl 12
Northwes em S1 76 SW Texas 70
s Ca ol na St 72 Hamp on 68
SE M IIOUrl 82 Mo r1a Brown 63
Samfor&lt;176 Campbet 6
Texas AIM Corpus CMII 67 W n nrop 64
Texas San An on o 76 Lou s ana-Mon oe

Blallop OooohUO (WIIIl •8

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE
110

MERCHANDI SE

knowingly aa:opl

-Itlnvlolatlonoltho
taw
tooteby
lnformlld INt an dwell'""

e

-

llrtdgopon44
Moigl n Alclnt Soulhtm 21

HENTAI ';

origin or ony - t o
make llf'/lucf't Pl'*'ilitct
lmtt.tlon or dllcrimlnidon •

--loii'NI-tnthlt--

Olllo High lchool Gitto eao-n
-f•R•una
Akron Contrat-Ho- 48 Akron Eat1 38
•knon Gorfllkl et Bucntat30
Allxandtr 70 Fedtro Hocking 3
Mlng1on 74 N Beltlmoro 43
AuaUntown-FHcll 58 Young. Hubbard 52
Boalavlle eo Woodallald Monroe Ctr11 38
Belpre 65 Trlmblt47
Ber1 n H land 57 Moun Vernon 47
BrQ&lt;&gt;Idle d •e Young Liberty 38
Ce na 71 Rockfo d Parkway 49
Cots Ohio Schoo kl the Deal !55 Grove
C ty Christian 28
Ooylestown Chippewa 58 Akron Manchl!l&amp;
tar 47
9: L verpoo 68 Aa)'land BUckeye L.cx:a 42
E yria Open Doo SO Canton He ltage
Chns 43 OT
Evange Chris lan 48 Menst ad Temp e
Ch 20
Ft Jenn nos 69 Co umbu• a ove se
Gall pols 84 Alhone eo
G rord 55 Loallltt&amp;burg LaBrao 45
Greent e a MCClain 83 W"ttm a own 38
Hancwerton United •1
Pa eat ne 40
K naman BadQt 53 Newton FaNs 36
Leeton a 58. Co umblana C eatvlew 52
L ma Cen1 Ca1h 71 Wapakor101852
L lbOn 73 Stbnng S3
L. abon Beaver Local 59 nd an Crttk 29
Lowellv e 71 N Jackson JackSCII"t M 01'1
49
Magno! a Sandy Vall 45 Newcomarttown
44 OT
Maranatha Christian 73 Grace Haven 48
Manetta eo P1 P ea ..nt (W Va ) 48
Marton Cath 42 Lima Temple Chriat 47
Maumee 59 Tol Chris 50
MCComD 84 Fostoria St Wandelln 35
McOona d 45 Vlan,. t.lo1howo 31

In Memory

Sawm 11 $3 79S Now Supar Lu111DI mate 2000 a gtr capacltll&amp;
mo a opt on a manutactu • or
sawm 1 edgers and I kidder'
NORWOOD lNOUSTRIES 252
Sonw I 0 ve Butralo NY 14:i!:i!5
FREE ntormat on 1 800 578
13e3 EXT 200-U

Shet Fantaay Exo c Show ba

SUBSTITUTE TEACHER AIDE
~011 CHILOCARE CENTER
Muat have an nterl!lst and deue
to work w h young ch ldrtn Rep
to Mag c "(tart Oaycart Ctnte
210 High So Po n Pttasanl wv
2S!SO

Pont
48
Manena
10 22 22
6 60
Point- Bridget Nibert 8 3 4 19 Krist n Ora n
oo.o o Jennie W 1son o-o 2 Ambt Kee e 4
2-4 10 M anda Ourat 3 a o 6 Jennifer Adk na
o o-2 o Aeg na Bing 2 3 5 Asnley Thomas o
2 2 2 Ale a Marcum 00-Q 0 Km 0 ve 0 0-D
0 SarahKnnard 0222 Totas 1810 746
Marietta - Jen Gw n 1 2 2 17 Somma

Kophort 2 1 2 5 Ami 3 ()oO s KUla
_ , ()oO 12 Clll1tM Thompoon 5 ()oO 13,
Couotney Wllllmo o 1 21 Kltrrlt Lauoro 0.0 o
Kalo Wltlricl1 0 2 2 2 Coullney Brllux 1 QoO
2 .lenn~tl(ugan 0 0.2 0 .o.nn.ndo Jenklna 0 2
2 2 Totoli 2H 1260
3-Polnt Gou - Point 0
Southom 4
(Thompson 3 Gwln) ~ - Point 28
{Niben tO) Mortttto 28(Kepnon 6) AaolatoPoint 8 Mar1o1tl (Gwtn 11) Stoa11- Poln1 3
Manetta 16 Tumcw. . - Point 22 r.tonlttl15
JV SCORE Monlttl4S Point 17
PP Kim Ollvtr 10

a.

Ends Januar~ 281 0% Finane ng

SPORTS MINDED
tndl\llduot Need For Local
To•ltor)l To COl On Coechtl
SchOOio And Youth Groups
$43 500.'ir (8 3)n9-7115

MlfiiHI 10 Point PIHUnt 41
16
7 1 16 -

SAVEl IAYEI Hut
L. P: Natura Qaa Fur
naces I You Con I Cal Ua We
Both Lose! (740)446 8308 &amp;
1 801l-291.Q098
PumJ;~I

NHda Ba tenders Oance a And
Government Jobe $1 00
533 00 per hou Paid uatn ngtlu 1
benelts For ~ nlormat on ea 1
888 67491SO IX 3234

Tappan H Ellie one' 901'. Ga&amp;
Fu naces 0 Fu nac11 12 See
Heat Pump l A r Cond lion ng
Syateml F te 8 Year Wa ran y
Bennetta Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben
nett

Gtllll A-my a• AthtnUO
Alhtns
16
9 t3 22 60
GaiDa Academy 16
9 21 18 6C
Atne-. (H SEOAL 5 5) - Co II Gnppa 0
0 0 0 Chrtsty COibone 1 0 0 2 LIZ Howorth 10
0.0 22 Mtry Ya"ty 5 3 3 15 Tn&amp;hl Tyo 2-4
" Che'sea Monroe 3 3-4 9 Jenna Kott ¥1 o o
0 0 Llnd&amp;ey Marx 2 2 2 6 Man&amp;l Mowery 1 o02 TOiaS 2310 360
Gall a Academy 18-7 SEOAL 5 5) -Joss
ca Bod me e 1
J Br1anna Johnson 9 7-8
26 Eva Lyon o 1 2 ca a Ounke 2 o-o 4
Sarah Rulltl411 1 9 B ttany F ankl nao-o o
Mtrtdlth Add ng on 5 1 1 1 Totals 26 1 13
84
3 Point Goa s- 'A hens 4 {Howarth 2 Yen
ty 21 Gal a Academy 1 (B Johnson)
JV SCORE Athans 47 GaUa Academy 28
A Mlcha e Tyo 12 Kim Johnson 12
GA WhtneyW ams 7

-1om llalttatuo or not1on11

SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES HUD
VA FHA LOW OA NO MONEY
DOWN OK CRED Tl FOA LIST
INGS CALL 800 338-Q020 lXI

!NOTICE I
OH 0 V"LLEY PUBL SHING CO
recommends tha you do bus
ness w th peop 1 you know and
NOT to sand money h ough he
ma untl you have n&lt;Jes gated
1ho ollonng

NEW BA.ND N"ME COMPUT
ERS Almoat tvt vont approved
w h SO down! Low monthly pay
menlO t 800 817 3478 txt. 330

BAYEI

310 Homee for Sele

Bualne11
Opportunity

New And Ulld S ttl Steel
Beams Pipe Reba Fo Cone e a
A S zes &amp; ltng ha L&amp;L Sc ap
Mo alo
(740)448 7300 0
(740)«8-3388

RESIDENTIAL HOM! OWNERS

HtMI Loon NOid -udld Home
In Country On 1 a ~~ Naed ng
Ftw Rtpa" (740)448-2317

. , _ on riCO """" rotlglon

REAL fSTAH

~10

Posta jabs $48 323 00 yr Now
h no no 8111)8 ence paid 1a n
ng Q eat benelta can 7 days
800 429 3880 lXI J 385

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

380

FINANCIAL

P"RENTS CREAM Stay home
Earo money Set you own hours
Tanng
provdad
Vat
www homewlthklda com

3-Poln1 Goals - Malgo 6 (Prico 3 Vln ng 2
OuaUs) SOu he n o

Thlt IWWIPIPIM' wtll nal

Need a dependable s ner? Moth
., of four now naa Ollenings M-F
all aoea welcome Call Amy at
741).992 7138

22 2t 9 t5 71
Bouthom
10 7 a
4 29
Meigs - Shlnoon Prk:a 6 o-o 15 Ambtr
Vining a o-o 20 Jaynee Devil 5 5-6 15 Alhley
T11omaa 2 QoO 6 Kayto Davia 1 o.o 2 Tl"any
Quells 1 QoO 3 L ndsay Sol n o 0.0 o MWldy
Chancey 6 0.0 12 Alicia Worry I QoO 2 COrrie
Hoover 0 O&lt;l 0 Shannon SOUIIby 1).() 2
To101a 33 5~ 11
Southom - Kati Cummtngo 20.0 4 Falon
Roue!l t QoO 2 Tommy Frya 1 0 o 2 Rachel
Chipman 3 2 2 8 Tara Pk:kona o o.o o Bridgette Bamta 3 0.0 8 Amy Lee :i! 1 " S Denn~~
Puwno o QoO o Katl Styro o o-o o s ephln o
Mlcllltl t QoO 2 Je&amp;alca H I 0 O"l 0 To1a o 13
Matgo

3~29

'"7

981 t

OWNER OPERATORS NEEDED
ASAP Reg onal &amp; OTA In e mo
del f eight Exce ant comp8nsa
t on package &amp; g eat sav nos on
res Ce 1100-972,()525

Cola a Mobile Homes US 50
East Athens 011

Wooded Lo1&amp; 3 MIJfJ Ou1 SOnd
hiiRd 12 &amp;8 2Aca 01
Only 8 remain ng clblil and t eo
tr e uncle ground public water
lylttm Clll 1 800
1832 OX1
1357 0 1 828~28 4~

"'11111whlch k lllogol
t o - lilY .....101
lmltotlon or dloctlm notion

540 Ml-llaneoua
Merc:hllndlee

JET
"EAATION MOTORS
Ropa re&lt;l New &amp; Rebu It n Stock
Ca Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

Lot model ctea ance ct1o ce of
heat pump or cantrall wth any
home check us out were cteal ng

Stont'/btock Eata ea R11tr cted

thO Ftllllll Fllr Houolng k:t

Honest and dependab e week v
houstc ean ng eaaonabfl a es
I ee eallmales have rete encea
One open ng 304 875-2892

Apartments
for Rent

cyberteckon na corn

Biby&amp; t In My Home Cay&amp;
(740)448-2839 A ao Be o o And
Alta Schoo In Waah ngton E e
mentary District

a

440

Informal on Tech
nology So u1 ona P ov d ng Net
wo king Webdes gn Techn ca
Support Thto ng And Prog am
m ~u1.... (304)875-1330

"'I'NI-~ In
.,. nntpaper II UJIId to

Carpet Upholtttry Ctaanlng
Gua anteed Wo k W ttl Fabu out
Reaultt Fo a F 11 Eat ma e
Cal (304)675-4Q,40 TOday

Mobile Homes
for Sele

C~berTeck

180 Wanted To Do

0 R o ver Run Oed ea ed Must
ha\le COL Good 0 11 ng Aeco d
DOT Qua ltd Last 6 Months
Ve lab e 0 v ng Contact She
man A (740)388 1802 0 Leave
t.teseago

no

•

140

$FREE CASH NOW$ 1 om
weafthy am lltl un6Qad ng milliOns
ol dolla 1 to ht p min m ze he
taxes W a mmed a e"' W nd
1a o 30 0 WILSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
N•sooo

GED
Ge you HS oqu vattncy d ploma
wth ou easy homt atudy cou ae '
1 800-SB&amp;-2183 10&lt;1 310

Suppo I \18 Counae o
Manager Needed n Maaon
County A 8a Wo k ng With 'The
Homtltll Full T me Poa on
Menta H1811h E"ptr enct P e
tarred BA In Human St v ct
F tid Send A"ume Covtr letter
And Atftrtncea To SCAC 0 rae
to Of tiumln Reaou cta 540 5th
Avenue Hunt ngton wv 25701
EOE Pol 11oft Opon Unl~ F ltd

•
•

Commun t)' We Cu tntty Have
Par me And PAN Pos lions
Ava lable FollPN s Stop By Today Fo An "PP lea km EOE

BLACKSTONE
P•AALEGAL
STUD ES Home study app oved
ano dab e comp ehtna ve egal
t a nlng a nee 1890 FREE Ca a
og 800 828 9228 wrlta ~0 Box
701449 Ca as TX 7!370 NA o
http www b ackatonetaw com

Meat Cutter loca G oce y Es
lab ahmenl Selk ng An Expe I
anced Meat Cut e To F A Fu
Time Poaltlon We Offe A Com
plete Benet t Package nc ud ng
401K Rtl tmtn Pan And Major
Mad cal Cove age Exc• tnt
wo king Cond on&amp; In A Pleas
ant Atmoaphe e Jon our Team
Today Send Resume 1 To CLA
519 c/o Gall po 1 Oa11y T lbune
82&amp; Th d Avenue Ga polls
Ohk&gt;4583

Giveaway

Wynge10 Aulated Living
You Ctn Make A DIFFERENCE
A e You A LIC8nsed P actlea
Nurse Who s LOOk ng Fo A
ChaHeng ng And Rewarding Po"
lion? Then We A e Looking Fo
You At Wyngalo od Living

150

MAKE S 000 A WEEK TO
STAAT PA 0 DAILY NO EX
PER ENCE NECESSARY! WELL
TRAIN NO HYPE NO PRES
SUAEI
NO OBLIGAT ON
WELL PROVE T !NOT MLM) 1
eoo 53H814

New To \'ou Th Ill Shoppo
9 Weat St mson Athens
741l-S92 842
Qua ty c oth ng and 11ousahold
~ems $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thursday Monday th u Saturday
9 00.5 30

70

LPN TOP OF THE
MARKET WAGES I
Look At AH Tho Woyt You Con
lncruu Vour hy Wtlh Every
Poyahtaldll
At Seen c H lis Our Fantas c
Bene 11 Pacqga For &amp; LPN 1
lncluctoo " $.21l/ Hour Sh ff D
lorontlaJ Fo Steond Sh ff A $ 501
Hou Sllill 01Htrtn1ll For M d
night Htllth l Ll1e lnsuronco
(30• Houri/ Wk ) 40 K Pad V•
cattona 8 Plkl Holldayo/ Yea
CredH Urlon F~X llltl Spend ng
Acc:ounl{30• Hour&amp;' Wk ) S401
Hou Perfec Attendance Bonua
$2S Vo un eo Sh H P~k Up So
nus Add. tonal Pay For Experl
ence And More Many Opportu
ntlloo For Advancemen1 ONE
POSITION OPEN 3pm 11pm
FH n LPN Ba&amp;l Rato I&amp; $9 001
Hou S op In "nd ••k Our
Friend~ R101p1ton 11 Danna For
An App caiOn And To Schtdu e
A P o easlona lnte v ew Scenk:
HIts 311 Buck dge Rood Bklwtll
Oh~ (Boh nd Scoric Valley C no
ma) AnEOE
M T " S C P Apply n Po &amp;On
Wotkdays 8 30 5pm 936 S ate
Route 160

99 53 www macgregarmlnlt
Ultt IIIli

40

LOSE WEIGHT now! All na ural
Comp ate nu
ona p og am
100% money back guaran ee
Ca Roo~ 888 87&amp;-3783

No Dt IItty NO nvtniOry NO
Quo as Set You Own Houri
H gh Comrm&amp;sion Ask About
'YolK PotentiaUy F ae Slarter KU
Plus A&lt;*HKI Bonus Ca I Fo De
Ia ' (740)886 9997 (740)377
9397

Profesalonal
Servlcee

3~0

-

TOday's Scoreboard

•

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page B-3'

Advertlelng
Ia not riiiDOI,IItlll

PI•.. •••"•

our llloof*lon at
number llaled bel•ow •w1111

�t»omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuudayl Jan1111ry 23, 2001

Tue1d1y, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

- . . • 2 • The Dally Sentinel

•

,
•
••'
230
Loet I P'OUIId Yord Solei
ll1d
To Do Ad'
Mutt
Pold In Advonee
TRIBUNC Of A DUNE
2 00 p m the diiY before
od lo to run SundJIY I
- . y odlllon 2 00 p m
Frldoy

w.-

e.

SENTINEL DEAQUNE.

I :00 p m the doy before
tho od loto run
Sundoy I Mondoy odlllon
1 00 p m Friday

Wanted
Home &amp; Ga den Party Otolgno s
Hand Made Ponory Unlquo Ac

eessOJies Cand es Garden
wa e Designer Qua 1y Pic txes
C•AEER OPPORTUN TY Ea n

exee tnt neomt Easy cia mt
p ocess ng Fu l a n ng Home

PC requ ed Call Phys can 6
Heal hca e Oeve opments toll
I H 800
S933 e~ 2070

m

BPJGimB D§AQUNI.
2 doyo befOre the od to to

WI

needed Many
ava lable bene s such as com
2 PT or 1FT LPN

run by 4 30 p m Soturdoy
I ,Monday odlllon- 4 30

pet tlvt wagea vacat on pay I ee
meal&amp; ass atanct with tu liOn rt
irnbu aemenl ass stance w houa
ng pa tal payment of health n
aurance and othe ava lab e n
su ances nte es ad app can a
may apply da y Mon Sun 9 4pm
Ravenswood Ca e Carner 1113
Wash no on S eet Ravenswood
wv 26 64 Come 11e us You
De glad you did

Thuraday
"O.adllnH aubject to

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Peraonals

I Loat •o bs n Just 2 Mon hs
Lon !i To 00 + Lba Ga n Ene
gy Raau ts Gua anteedl Ea n

$500$1000 Pat T me F am You
~omo (800)S8297S7

OR VERS Cannon Exp e$$ 99%
d ve no toucn fre ght Sta t al
34e
+ exp 33c m 4 y
32e m 3 y 31e mt/2 y aoe
mJ yr 29e miJ 8 moa 1yr 28e

mvsv

memos o
mo exp

111 tanttor
S350 wk Pay ralll every

e months eonuua rldl p o
0 am Paid 't'ICatlona Ina ava I
www cannonaxp 111 com Ca ro
dela &amp; 800 84S 9390

Ta 1C Llva With BeauUlu G r 1 I
A
t
To Hea F om You Ill
Call Now II 1 900 226 2384 Exl
7777 $3 99 Pt M nutt Must Be
18 Yea11 Strv U (818)&amp;45 8434

wa no

30 Announcement•
JEHOVAH 8

WITNIBBEB

F ends fam 'I Find ou facts ttla

soc e y doean wan you o know
Free &amp; confident at J W FACTS
Box 454 Metal ne Fa s

WA

Two mixed b aed houl'!d dogs

need fa m ( 1) loOks ke Redbone
coonhound one b ack &amp; while
m• cal74074204 2

Loat Dog snon Ha r 8 own An-Ul4rt To Thf Nam• Browntt E
de y Mans Pt Ht M sses H m

Ve y Much I Seen Pease Ca
740)256'-1987

80

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YR
Med ca nsu ance B I ng Needed
lmmed ate y Home compu e
needed get FREE nle net 1
1100-291-'683 Otp11 109

Yard Sale
Auction
and Flea Merkel

Rick Pea san Aua an Compan~
lull lime auct on~t camp eta
auct Cln
serv ce
licensed
168 Oh o &amp; Woa1 VIrgin 1 304
773-5785 Or 3CJ.I.n3-5+17
R \It aide Auction Barn Sa e
Eve 'I Satu day N ght at 6p m
Auc onaer Raymond John1on
(740~N9

v

E•RN $1200-$8100 monoh pa
tu lime Wo k t om homt EK
pandlng company nttdl htlpl
F •• ntorma on 414 290 6900
www hofnloobus ness
temacom

•v•

EASY WORK G oa payl Ea n
$500 plus a week auembllng
p oduc 1 a h(lme No tKPI ence
nectlsa y Call toll ee 800
267 3944 x138

[MPLOYMENT
SI::HVICES

11 0

WEARE HIRING! I
Earn Up To $7/Hr And Wooldy
8onutMI
•Ful Benents
•Wooldy PayehOCic

Help Wanted

12 000 WEEKLVI Mailing

•oo

brochurul Sa slac on Gua
an ead Pos age &amp; Suppl es p o
v dedi Aush Selt Addreued
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370
438510 mmedaay

$45 000 YR po en al 0 s need
peop t to proceu cia rna Must
own compute modem We a n
Ca 1 888 S87 4888 ex 895
ho5 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPE~IENCE RE
OUIAED 1 800 748 S71 B Ext
x101(24hl1)
S529 WEEKLY ma I ng el ers
I om home Full o part me No
expe ence necnaary eaey Any
hours Ca US Ogu 1617
S20 807t 24 hou rooord ng
1121 W!!KLYI Maka Monty
Help ng Peop e Rece ve Govern
ment ~~ und• F n Deta 1 (2•
h teo dad menage) 1 800
409-4625 Ext 5700
U17 IS WEEKLY P OCIII ng
HIJD FHA Mor gage Rtlundt No
Exper ence R1qufred For FREE
nrormal on call 1 aoo 501 6832
... 300

•Pakl Vaca ion
•Retl emtnt Plan
•Proloulona A moophoro
lntoeltton Manegement
Ca&lt;pOnotton
II Currtntty Aeld ng To Ou Staff!
Como WOrk W th The BEST
Ca I Today For An lnt.vlew
1-...15-7223 Ext 1121

Full Time Tempo a y Emp oyment
At Clemen a Nu eery Apply At
Pont P taunt Or The Nu 11 y
(304)87S t820 By FoD uary 1
2001 Jot&gt; Sllltl Fobtuary 5

Bualneaa
Training

Golllpolla co- co logO
(CerHro C~ To Home)
Ca TO&lt;Ioyl740-448-4367
1 1100-214-0452
Aog 190 OS 1274B

School•
Instruction

CREO T PAO!lLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS liCENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
B"D CREDIT B"NKRUPTCY
L"WSUITS JUDGMENTS A""
RATING 90 180 D•YS 1 888
8tHl902

no

WWN

FREE DEBT CONSOLID~TION
App cat Cln w ,.,v ce Aectuce
paymen s 10 8S% IC.SH IN
CENTIVE
OFFEAI
www dtb cca o g Ca 1 800 328
85 om 29
FREE grant money &amp; !edt al
rundlng1 Bualnen eclucat on
home purchue epa 1 dtbla
lrave tetl ch w tttl artata
plua mo e Guarantttd 1 886
.5 9 2775 or v-ww g an11 do1
com com
P-H-Q-T-o-G-R A P-11-V
HIGH SCHOOL II!NIORI
SENIOR POIITRAITI COST
TOO MUCH.?
WE Alii THE ALTERNATIVE I
MAIN S~EET PHOTOGRAPHY
S MAIN ST PT PLE.SANT
87! 7279

ao..

..Ou Mimorl" •• our Butl'ltll

OFFICE PDSmON
Join Ou Grow ng Company We
Havt " Fu Tlmt Opening On
OUr Office Slaff The success u
Cand~a I Mutt ~Good Be
sic Compule S~ I' E~17t Mee
lng And Taking W1h Tho Putll c
And Hevt Good Moth Sk 18 Tl\ 1
s A Fu ITime Potltlon And 011
111 AI Company Banellltnctuctng ln&amp;Urii1Ct Patel Vacatk&gt;n
And COn'9any 40 1K P an For In
terv ew Conalde a lon Send you
Aesumt W h Col/8 Lo11orTo
Human Ae10urces AttentiOn 0
ane HI Ohk&gt; Valtoy Putlllth ng
co ITI\o DanyTrt&gt;une) 825Th d
Alltnuo G~ !pOls Oh o 45831

Muge Inventory 0 scounl P Ices
On V nyi Skirt ng, Doo s Wind
OWS Ancha 8 Wa er Hea 1 1
Plumb ng &amp; Electr cal Par a Fu
nacea &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mob o Homo Supply 740 446
941 6 www orvb comlblnntt1
88AceFamfo SaeByOwne
w•h 1SOO Sq Foel 3 Bedroom 1
2 Bath Home W th Beau ful
Oak Tr m High Ce I ngs And A
Large t&lt; tchen Has a Large Ga
ragt And Sa n w th 40+ r 1able
Aerts Exctlltn Local on Nea
R o G andt Aoktng $12UOO
(740)381H)2S8 Evonlngo

340 Buelnea• and
Building•
Church Bu ldlng w th Pa aonagt
to ult loca ld n Po nt Pleasant
Good Ne ghbo hQod aaklng
$95 900 (304)87S 1618

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
LOOk ng To Buy A Ntw Homo?
Oon 1 Have Land? Wt Oolll Hurry
On~ 10 Lots Loft 304 736-7295

New &amp; Used Elect ic And Gaa
Fu naces Fo Sale Cal Fo S z
ea
ln8tallat on
Ava lab 1
(140)4-46-S308 1 800-29HI098
Ta a Townhouu -"Pa tmen a
ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms :i!
FoosCA
12BanFuyCa
paled Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $385 Mo No PI S
Lease Plus Secu ty Oepos A8
qu rod Daya 740 446 3481
Evon ngs 740 387 0!02 740
446 010
lWin R ve Towe 1 now aeoep ng
app cat ona o 1 BA
HUD ouDsld~od ap 1o e de y
and d oaDiod EOH (304575S879

490

For L11aae

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! No h
lng down Estab 8tled Yo k Minta
route w h 22 local ona EZ 6 B
hours weakly no 11 ng Nat
S!I2K yearly M nimum nveatment
$-1000 1 886-250-2810
ALL CASH C"NDY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800/day? 30 mach nes
and candy S9 995 1 800 998
VEND
FL
AIN2000 033
sc Aag684
ARE YOU CONNECTED? NTER
NET USERS WANTED $25 $71l/
HA PT/FT wwwBoeoo&amp;FrHcom

Real Eatate
Wanhld

our-.,.

~ ••Y.hh

on an equal
opportunity bull

510
1 SR $22! Montnty 2 BA $325
Monthly 1010 &amp; to 6 3rd Ava
nut Depoo Aequl td (740)441
0219
2 Bedroom HoU&amp;l 1 Balh Ro~~
1 ato And Ston Included Lo

cated In Ga po 1 $300 mo

S300 Otpoal (740)256-6681

4BR 3 1 2 Baoh 2 900 SqF1 In
Gall polls 2Acrea C A New
K IChtn (Sm th Cab nell) Hard
wood F oo s Ga age Basement
S149 soo Cal (740)44H706

Household
Goode

HOMES FROM S198 30/ mo 1
3BA repoll ro ec osu 11 fH 4%
dCiwn Fo list nga payment de
toto 18007193001 x 18S
1 5 Olory 3 BR 2 Bath hOml Loll
Fu I Basement 2 car oaregt
dOCk sa n wllh work&amp;hop 2 riding
1 ngs UII WI I IPPfOX 4 ICI'tl
Lovely Count y Ne ghbo ttood
Must Stt 1740):l5tl-1271

S2 95 Po 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Pe 00 All B aoo Com
p ess on F tt ngs n Stoctc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson 011~ 1 801l-S37 9S28

Appliances
Recond 1oned
Wasnera 0 yera Rangea Ret
g ato 1 Up To 9'0 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May ag Ap
p aneta F ench c ty Maytag
740 441779S

560

Pets for Sele

-"kC B ack Lab Pupa 3 Female&amp;
9 Weeks 0 d Had Shots And
Wo med S250 (740)448-&lt;'7!9

5 Roor11 Hou&amp;l 52 Olivo S Gall
poilt S2501mo (740)448-3945

AKC Cocker Span e puppy tor
$ale mao Duff &amp; whl11 740 992
7371

Houtt and trailer fo rent 7&lt;40
742-2e61
•

New &amp; UMd Fumitu e
New 2 P ect Ltv ngroom Su e&amp;
$399 Buy Sell ltade

New 3 Bedroom Home Close To
Golllpo o Portly Furn ohod lm
moda. Opening (740)21SH~74

New And Used Fu n u e Sto e
Below Ho day Inn Kanegua we
Sell Grave Monumtn a And Vas

.

One btd oom houae In Racine
S32S per month ptua S300 depos
I 740-992 5039

Ttlrtt bedroom all e ect lc ranch
hOmt w th attached ga age
fenced back ve d Ia ge lot at
t.ltaclow Land Es""'"' P P aaoant 1800 month lue rete encea
and dopoiH 304 8 4 2480

Delong s G oom Shop Groom ng
A Dog Breeds 740-441 1602
Ro twa er Pupa 0 weeks 111
Shoo &amp; Wo mod
S100
(740)386-839t

Mualcal
Instruments

1998 Redman t6x80 Brand Ntw
Cond on Sh ngled Aoot Vinyl
Sdng 3BR 2Bah HoaoPump
$24 000 (304)675-S867
7295
START YOUR OWN lUSt
NEBS LOCALLV
P oDiem
c td t? No p ob emil ncom1 un
moed 1.-217-

230

TRAVEL I MAKf; $1$$$
S30K "'"'-+ De IYtr new cars
\lana and A V a localy o
na11ohwlda 18 Yrs o p)dor
AI irHI wak:omed
CIH fret 177 520 007 x 740
URGENTLY NEEDED puma
donorl urn l3S 10 $4S 1or 2 or 3
hou 1 wetkfy Cal Sera Tee 740
!5112-1851

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IBIS!?
No FH Unltu Wt W n
1 888 S82 334S

•

1 and :2 bedfoom apamnen a tu
n shed and urtturn thtd 11cur ty
depoa equlred no Pt 1 740
992 2218

Bedroom N81r Holre Econom
oal Gas heat ng W 0 Hookup
$279 00 Pluo U1 101 Lilli &amp;
Otpool1 Roqured (740)408-29!7

v

APARTMINTI AT
IUDGIT PRICII AT JACK
ION IIT~TII !2 Wutwood
Ortva I om' S28t to l370 Walk to
shop &amp; movlta C1 740 441
21181 Equil Houolng Opoorlunlty

640

ToySt 85 Seson83 ZOT
UNC G eensboro 80 Wollord 56
Va Commonwea h 70 N C W m ng on 55
W Ca o na 88 aeorg a Southe n 65
MIDWEST
M am Ohio) 17 '1'/ M ch gan 50
Wls G een Bay 69 Butte 68
IOUTliWEST

Meigs

Gl~o

P 11 on at C ay Blfttllt

Avo Ohk&gt; a1 JOI)n Marthall

from... Page 81

,..,.....~

Monday a MaJor Collllgll 8aaltttl&gt;lll

soEAST

Boolon u 89 Hartford 45
Bucknel 81 Amer1Cin U 51
COlumbia 78 '- lllny N Y 66

Pnce led all scorers wtth ?Q
pomts Pncc and Jaynee Davts
added 15 each and Mmdy
Chancey 12 to pace Meogs Me1gs
h1t 19 of 71 from the floor
mcluding four of 17 three pomt
ers for 27 percent Me1gs went to
the hne SIX t1mes and h1t five for
83 percent

Gallia
fromPap81
Also for the Bulldogs (7 6
SEOAL 5 5) Maty Yamty scored
15 pomts mclud.ing two 3 pomt
ers and Chelsea Monroe scored

KIT '1!1' CARLYLE e by Larry Wrlabt
A, • .,.H.tt. C.t4N Y•V MAY
I) A 1'I N l&gt;c A
I) "'" f". " 1o t&gt;N

mne

' ~:;;---------,-----..~

For the Angels (8 7 SEOAL 5
5) Jemca Bodtmer scored 13
pomts
Mered1th Addmgton
scored II pmnts and Sarah Rus
sell added n ne
Addmgton made a basket woth
two seconds left m the first half to
send both teams onto halfume
ued at 25 all
We felt gomg Into halftime
that the ballgamc was 111 ot r

WWWOOhiiCI

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay Round Balls $11 00 Square
Beleo T mo1hy S2 eo Co n $5 75
1 % G ound Foad S6 ~0
130•1937 3•35 Oaye (304)SB2
S747 Eve"ngs.
Large Ao Bolos ol Hay $15 Oa
llvtry Avellallltl (740)448-t052

FARM SUPI'LIE ~

Squt I T mothy MIKed Hay &amp;
Large Round Ba 11 Delivery
Avallab e Her lage Fa ma
(304)675 5724

1997 Chevy Cavalle 2 Door 5
Speed Air CD P aver EKce ent
Cond 11on $8200 (304)675 3903
1998 Chevy Lumina Ol!ldtd
$9200 OBO caU 740-949-2203

610 Farm Equipment
135 Mass e Ferguaon 0 1111
Somt Equipment
(740)387 74t4

T acto

Apartment•
for Rent

IIAUTI~UL

New 16 1t w de 1488 per man
on $270 pt mon ca now 1
800 891 8777

Hampshire 76 Berke ey Springs 87
Marsh Fork !8 Valley Fayette !55
Meadow Bridge 71 Graater Beck ey Ch Ia
I an 53
M d and Tral 71 Webste County 57
Northem Garrett Md 88 Paw Pew 60
Oak H I 82 Jamea Monroe 39
Shady Sp~ng t 3 Mf"'• Chna11en 6!
'Teays VaMty Christ an 69 Duval 52
Poetponemen..

"LL
STEEL
BUILDING
CLE"R"NCE 24x2B was S7290
nil $3375 30x~e wa• $10 380
•• ssaso 50x100 was $32 540
H $ 8 87' New! Mus "MI Tom
1-7803
AMAZING METAetL SM Beak
TroLigh I LOll 10 200 Lba Easy
Quick Fu 0 a.ma c Atau 8
100% Na ure Oocto Aeccm
m•ndtd
Free
Samp 11
(140)441 1882

Skid s eer &amp; A. tachment Otmo
Dayl Be Suro To Como To Steer
ng In The Right Oirtcllon .,.nu
a y 31 A. 10 ooam At car
m chHra Farm &amp; Lewn COmpany
Rops On Hand Spoc 1 Ftnonclng
Ava ab t M d Way Between Ga
PO a And R o Grand• On Jeck
10n P kt You local John OMrt
Doattr (700)448-2412 Or 1 800
594 1111

630

Llveatock

I Voar Old Bey Soddlt Moro Kid
b oko 5600 4 Month 0 d walk
lng Co
ssoo Roa Rldt
1304)!118 2138 Ce~ -7pm
Cookwa t Wt Stopped Dong
Olnnt Par 111 )1ave Beau ful
Naw 7 Pc 8111 Lilli Htovy Su
GCll Sta nttll Stte 00% Wa
ttrltlll Waa 11100 Now $ 4311
L fttlme War antyt
soo 43 4
44128

Lama 1• SE Lou a ana 46
Nicholls St 74 sam Houlton St 70
Pra rie View 78 Ark P ne Bluff 61
Texas Ar1klgton 70 S ephen F Aullln 69
UTEP S3 SMU 89
FAR WEST
C~o rado S 73 U1ah 65
Kansas 85 COO ado 75
Pacific 62 Idaho 81
UNLV 80 New Mexico 72
Wyoming 65 BYU 78

BASe&amp;ALL

Amtrteen LHQUII
CH CAGO WHITE SOX-Named Wa y
Backman and John Orton playa dave opmen
peraonne Named Mark Haley h Wng coach o
W nt on Sa em al he Ca o na league
Named Oary Boson m no eague outlle d
natructo
CLEVELAND IND ANB-S gned OF Te
e I Lowery to a m no eague cont act
BASKETBALL
Nlllonal 811kttball AIIOCIItton
CLEVELAND CAVAL EAS-P aced F G
Man Harprtng on nju ad st Ac va ed G
B mbo Co es rom he n urad 11
PORTLAND TAAILBLAZEA8-Piaced G

Gary G ani on nju ed Is Ac va ed G Erick
Bark ay rom he nju ad st
FOOTBALL
Nat onll Pootba Ltegue
ATLANTA FALCONs-Named Don Back
mon delens ve coo d na o Announced he

es gnation of otf&amp;nSive ne coach Art She
Announced the es gna 10n o de ensNe line
coach B HKotla o ake he same pos on with
S1 Lotis
CHICAGO BEAA5-Named John Shoops
offens ve coord nato and M ke Swea man
&amp;~ earn&amp; coach
KANSAS CITY CHIEFs-Named AI Saun
de 1 oHens ve coordina or and sss san head
coacl1
NEW ORLEANS SA NTS-P omoled W n
ston Moss to hnebacke s coach
PH LAOELPH A EAGLES Named Steve
Spegnuo o de ens ve backs coacn Sean
McDennott de ensNe ass san qua y con rdl
and B Shuey ass sa n o he head coactl
WASHINGTON RED SKINS Named M Ita
Stock spec a earns coach Bnan Scholten
he me oHens ve ass s an and Dave Radd ng
1 eng h and cond on ng coach
HOCKEV
National Hockey League
ANAHE M M GHTY DUCKS Reca ed 9
Antt Juss N em and C Bob Wren om C ndl'\
na o heAHL
COLUM13US BLUE ACKET S Ass gnetl
C Chris NIB sen to Sy acuse o he AHL
CALLAS STARS- Reca ed W JamMI
W ght rom Utah o he Hl
M NNESOTA W D- Ass gnea RW Ctl s•
an Matte o C eve and o he HL
NEW YclRK RANG ERS- Raca ad F B ac
Smyth from Hartford o e AHL
•
WASH NGTON CAP TA S Reca el1 el
A exe Tezlkov and D Rob Ze e om Pori and
o the AHL

Mcogs
pdled
down
31
reba n h led by T1ffany Q1 ails
had five and Shannon Soulsby
Kayte DaVIS Cha 1ccy and Ashley
Thomas each added four Metgs
only had 1111&lt; tun overs and 2?
aSSists led by Von ng with n ne
V mmg also had four of her teams
13 steals
Rachel Chap na 1 led Southern
w th eight pomts the Tornadoes
were 13 of 41 from the floor for
32}1' Southern went to the ltne
SIX t ones and hit three for 50 Y,
Southern had ? I rebounds led by

Cl ap a

hands saod Adk 1 s We talked
about a couple of thmgs we
needed to do agatnst their zone
defense
Gallia Academy came out and
JUmped on the Bulldogs early
gomg on a I 0 0 run to open the
second half
The Blue Angels led 42 29
woth 3 45 remammg m the third
quarter
We told the g1rls that we ve
got to cone out 11 the thad
quarter and put pressure on them
and hopefully keep HDwerth out
of the ballgame said Adkins We
knew we could press We found tf
we can score smue pomts off the
press that ot would g1ve 1 s
mo e 1t11 1 to fi 1 sl the tl;o rd
quarter a1 d go 1 Ito the fourth

In the fourtl Atheo s vas able
to bnng the Gall a Ac ade v lead
to four before tl c An gels kept
theu con posure to ge t tl e v cto
ry
We thought our defense vas
fine (m the fourth quarter) s~ q
Adkins We d dn t l ot ce f th erewas any break do v
a r
defense They J st p t up so 11e
shots and fom n r ly to r thCl
they went 111
Gall a Acad en y v II be t River
Valley Thursday
a lo g va te.,1
rematch for th Blu Ao gd
The Ratdcrs
vhose ga 'lC
Monday at Loga1 " ' 1 rpo1 ed
dcfcmd the A g is &gt;4 43 l)ec
I B at Galhpolo
Athens pi ) s I
Log
Th sday

720 Trucka for Sell

740

J B

1984 Ford 314 Ton F a1bed 4M4 4
Speed 300 8 Cylinder Runs
Good $2SOO (140)319-9276

B ua 2000 Yamaha Wove ne
3SO 4 Wheal D lvo $3800
(304)5715-3088

1988 s o Truck AUtomatic runs
Good &amp; Good Condlllon $2000
(304)675 2183

760

T

1995 Oodgo
uck Ex ended
Cab ~utomat c 4x4 Loaded
Super Nice C~N (740)2-227
1998 Dodge Olkota Spo I low
M es Excellent Condit on Fac
o
Wa ran~y
S13 800
(740)448-&lt;'957

v

S uti cr 1 vi c 1
d the
ball over ?6 t1
led by Cu no 1 gs
woth two each d c gl
by Cu1 1mngs ' rl th
Meogs IS no\\ I I 4 u 1 tl e sea
son the M&gt;raud rs v 11 hostV11
to 1 County on Tl ur d ) So uth
ern drops to 8 8 o n th s ason:
the Tornadoes v1ll host Wat rfotd
Thursday
There vas 1 o
o
mty
gam

Auto Parte &amp;
Acceasorlee

Budget Prlctd Tranaml1alona
A I Typtl ACCIII To Ove
10 Ooo T an1m 11 ons T ana t
Casas 740 24S 5~77 Ce 339
378S

790

Camper• &amp;
Motor Home•

840

H1y &amp; Gr11n

22S 4XS Round Balla 01 Hoy, p
Each 0
A
Fo
StSOO
(740)387-41S8

!
Eom S2&amp;f1My 1om

v&lt;UPCI-.,~ ..... u ili't9

978 Ford 4x4 Runs Good S950

1978 Ford PU P fSO 4k4 96 000
M ea Ac ua M tl $17SO
(740)«8-4053

TRAN,,PORTATION

71 o Autol for Sale

1988 Chevy Blazer 4x4 Ntw Ra
bu t Napa Eni nt Good Condi
t on, Alk ng "00 (304)291
3240

10 OOWN CAABI AI ow aa S2il
mo Po ce Impounds lnd repoa
aontono 2• moa et99% For
latlngl Cl 800 719 3001 txt
A010
lO DOWN CAASI POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; AEPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S J!EP S l SPORT
UTILITV LOW AS U9 MO S
IIU% FDA L STINGS C"LL
1 ~t-0050 .1 0 911~

-n

88 vouo convorllblo 2 tops 2
&amp;lll whit 1 rOitlllr 11 or NCCC
Group 11 o Ill $7000 call740
91211117
Hpm

12 Pontiac Grand Am SE two
door 5 1pt1d a am 1m Cll
11 tt new t tl runs good goad
condition 740 192 9041 o 140
9122&amp;86
IN Ford TaunJI 4 door aedan

11 000 mlltl automat~ f'W POL
u t whMI crutao ale amllm Clll
stilt 3
warranty IKCIIItnt

r-•

cond lion oaklnt $1700 payoll
741l-811!1179

97 Pont ac G end P lx GTP
21 000 Mllll Garogo Kapl Ex
ct ani cond on $15 000
(740)2-339 (740):l!IU006

oso

CARS S29/MONTH Pollet m
pounds &amp; opoal Honda Cht~
Jaop &amp; Spor Utility 24 mo 1
etU'I\ Fo llollng ca 1800
941 8777 oxt C 98"
CARS FAOM 129/MO Impound&amp;'
IPOI Ftt SO Down 24 mot
etUII. For 11 ng1 1 100 3t9
3323 X21511

720 Trucka for Sele
II Ford F2SO 8 cylinder au
10me to 740-948 21ot8

1861 Ford Tor no GT380 Auto
E•ctlltnt Shapa U500 11el
Oodgt 0 50 4x4 Good Shape
11000 (740)448-3t12

18?1 Ford F 150 Supa Cob
P okup 2 What! Or vt 302 V I
1740)4AW030

1117 Covallor 131 000 Mllll
UOO 080 1817 Dido Achltva
51 000 !.AIItl fUOO (740)«1-

1812 Fo d Dump Truck Ttlo
10011 c Ho 11 Dilllt I Htlvy "-D
~ ong Tra lor $1500 Fo loth
11104)4175-- Or (304)'181-1513

H2'
1181 Oodgt Dynasty 1180 Call
(740)«8-4222

1111 S 10 ••4 S21U 1UO
GMC 4x4 l5485 1911 Chtvrollt
Exllndld Cab 4•4 1021! 1918
S tO SUII 1118 8 10 I42U
01ho Trucka F om S1111 ~nd
Up Co 1 ~rom StUI To l54U
COOK MOTOU (740)441·

olo'

1818 Bronco I 4x4 b 1ck with
gray nttr o IXct lent eond t on
fnaldt 1nd out nttda nothinG
1ua1 drlvtn $.4ICO PliO 740 9R2
2932

11'87 Ford Convtn on van W th
TV/ VCR Loadod LINt Now
17 000 Mlloa $19 000 (304)112
2937

SERV ICES

810

Home
Improvement•

IAIEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
uncondlllona ftt me guarantH
L.OCI tlftrt11Ctl fu nJtP,td E1
labllhed 1875 can 2• H11 (740)
•48 0170 IOQ-287 0578 Aog
ori Waterproottng
C&amp;C

Gont at

Homa Ma n
v nyl ad ng
c1rpentry doo 1 windows baths
mob 11 home epa and mort For
trtt eat m1 1 ca Chtt 740 992
8323
ttntnce Pain ng

v

L. v ngaton 1 Baatmtnt Watlr
Proorlng all baaement rtpl ra
done frll 11t matll 1ftllmt
guar~n a• 1~yra on job IIIPt I
onco (304)69S 3887

81 112 Ton 4x4 Auoomatlc Chevy
Nlldl Wo k $3200 Ca AI a
7:oopm (304)67!-1449

L v ngaton 1 Blltmenl Wa tr
Proofing all baaement repairs
done tru lit matu 1Itt me
gua entet uyra on job txptri
onco (304)195-3867

2000 Toyo a Tacoma ~tack 4•4
cltan nr llkl ng G~ll TO!'IOIIU
cover btd nt a lfW r ma e
100 ooo m • wo ran y ~ epaed
air aml!m caUtHt Takt 0¥1
poy-11 740-185 3818

95 Oodga Ran D u~l •x4 S
Splld 80 000 M tn 1 Owner
Groy $10 !00 (140)448-t062
88 Fo d Aangor XLT Supa cab
4x• Off Road Packlgt Loodad
1S 700 M too Good Cond 1on
(740111111 13311(740)2IHOOI

tnaldt And Oul Ca ·pant y
Plumb ng Wahl L nta T! enCh
(740)401-4113

ng

Electrlc;al and
Refrigeration

Motorcycll•

lluZIIk Quad ~unr}lr 1100co
hctlant Shape 13750. lhp Go
Cart fu I Roll Cage 1350
(740)408-3812

,._

..

From 53000 St50000
LOANS 0 A C
For faat 8suhs call tol f ee
1-1100-4111-2330

Hot Homo BINd Buolnlll

Low lnvo-nt High._,
No Con'411MIIon P - To rHorloa
Turn l&lt;ty www mn.x org
Mol ng Our Still Broci'IJroa
Frtt SIIPIJIIII Pottage!
Starllmmedtaltlyl
Genuine ()pportunltyt
Froo tnlolmatton
Cell Toll FrM
1-668-81 S.1113S

For

Non RXI Clinically proven
Sate/Effectlvel

100% Guaranteed
Free Shipping!
www uropr n com
1 888 718 6606

SLIP If o P umb ng And Home

Ml ntenancl Wt Do All RtPI ra

f!ICI It 8-10 IIIJtr • ~Automat
lo. Nr Tilt. CnoiM New Ex
aallont Body 14500 t\1&gt;~)175
51187
1

740

CLAIMI PROC!IIOR
$2Q,f40/h potonlla
Prooallilg olllmllleuy
Trolnlng provided MUST own PO
CALL NOWI1 8811-707 813S oxt 679

1111

ra

lbtl »build oblf noll
wlloft
roo- with ih&lt; ciGut(ltdl

I fooar

ea ch

Motorcycle•

oeo 1740!258-1~

t 8$1 0 da Cutllll Oa a a 4 cy
I ~dtr two door aood cond 1on
11500 1187 ChiVY 8 10 8 Ill
8! 4114 loaded $1700 7•0 912
1181
..-tor

•
••

aam

730 Vapa ,. 4·WDs

2 BR n Point P~Jaeant Rtt.renc11 Aoqulred (740)448-2200

Profeaslonal
Servlcee

IS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
e11n fo tma n ng payments on
P ope 1y So d Mortpagu Annul
11 Set ltmenta lmmed ate
Ouottlll Nobody bta a ou pr c
tl Na ona Coni act Buye a
(8001 490 073 •• 0 www na
lonalcon ractbuye 8 com

•

440

1 BR "PI tman1 1385/mo $100
011)01 I A Utlllt II P1 d No
Pt &amp;
(740)448 3437
Or
(740)408- 83?

Up o $ 000/day BEFORE
BREAKFAST!
www can ch
CO!P com 0t ca 204 9S3-0 12 I

62

23

Telete~VIcea

M xed Hay Sque e So lee S1 50
Eacll (740)446-4624

0 IChW 1Ch 4x4 4 Foot S1k:k Trill
or $3900 (304)87S ~494 Or
(304)4S8 1!93

3 br 2 ba: on choice lot 304 738

v

•ov•

Fal h Christian 83 Roseda e Chr1al an VI

•

Group/millennium

Hammond 82 orgal'l Lea a
opeake S2SOO (pnco advt" ltd
nco r8ct y In lit ad) 740 982
8443 or 740-3677170

Used Leas

1994 4x80 Oakwood Mobil•
Home On t Acre Lol Stp ~ Syo
em &amp; Ru at Wa1o (740)387
74t4

llondoyaCIIrlo
Belloyovlle 33 Wllllemaon 29
Blohop Oonohuo 49 Bridgoport Ohio &lt;10
Burell ot8 Gilbolt 28
East Htrdy 63 Shonandollh Valay Chrta1
ten Va 57
Ed son Oh o ot8 Brooke 01
Faytttl'lilll 74 ~ny Aolalgh 53
G tlnbr10 Woot 50 Oak HW «
Hamplhlro 10 Ptto111&gt;urg &lt;10
Hooman 52 Po_,on Coumy 51 10n
Htltlert Hoover 65 Poea 39
Kay&amp;l 43 t.toorollald 37
Lawrence COUnty Ky S9 Wayne 45
Ma111naburg 19 Hedgoav to 58
Mon1Cl m 33 Martll Fork 26
Mounl Hope 53 Gauley Bndtlo 31
Ook Glon 83 Ma111na Forry. Ohio 55
P lncolon 88 Nicholas County 5S
Shady&amp;ide Oh o 58, Whee ng Centra 51
Summa a County 71 Woodrow W lion 56
Wei 71 Wnaly 57
Wyom ng East 75 Bluerltkl62

-•.

1-800·929-5753

Blue Heeler F~ Blooded Ftmall
Spaded Ve y Gen to (304)875
3927

&amp; llvi:S Hh~K

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent

••
•
•••

Civic Development

On John Deere Bale a And
Mower Cond Uone s w th JD
Cred t Approve Ca Or Stop In
At Ca michae 1 Farm &amp; Lawn
(740)448 2• 2 Or 1 800 5841111

Doo Ptop 1 Good Atmoaphe e
Gro~1 Poop a w
T aln Call
(304)768 7828 •ny lma 0
(304)273 OS20 AI or 7pm Aok
ForBelh

Our office Ia currently
seeking f/1 p/1, and
temporary workers to
fill three shlftB dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;
management
opportunHies make this
an exciting cholca lor
etudents housewives
seniors or anyone
looking for extra
money; Pick up the
phone now to set up
your personal
Interview
We are Wilting to hire
YOU I
CALL TOOA"t

Watt ne Special 314 200 PSI

570

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
Low or SO down Tax epoa &amp;
bank uptclea HUO VA FHA
low or no money down OK creel
111 For llo ngo call 1 800 ~01
1777 ·~ 9813

wva _ _ _

CIASSIFIEDS!

Halp Wanted

Need Work to Pay
olf HoUde¥ &amp;I.U.?

2 BFI Home $275/mo + Oepo8
And U1 0.8 No PolO (740)4•6
4313

9 Room House For Aonl 3 Bath&amp;
2 Kitchens 4 BR $100/mo Plus
Dopos t (7•0)448 4734 0
(740)«1 1337

3 BR Br ck Homo 1092 Sunatt
0 ve New y Remolded Carport
Full Battment Excel ant Condl
tion (740)448-4116

tono 61 t.torllt 89
Long 111and u 87 Roten Monte 79
Manhottan 85 Fa rl e d 71
Nonhealtem 79 Vermon 68
51 Froncll NY 98 51 F anc l Pa 75
91 John a 87 Miami 63
UMSC 80 Sacred Heart 63
Wljlne 81 Moun S Mary'e Md 88
SOUTH
Alabama A&amp;M 63 Sou hem U 52
Alabama St 84 Alco n St 52
Centenary 85 Be mont 80
Chattanooga 55 Furman 49
Coaata Carolna 71 H gh Pont 67
CoN of Charte8ton 74 Tne C tade 67
Oelawere St 74 Florida A&amp;M 57
Elon 68 Char1es10n Southam 65 Of
GIOt'Qe Mason 1~ Eas Carol na 62
Howard S8 Coppin $1 57
Jackaonvll e 12 Merce 69
MVSU 87 Texaa Southe n 62
Md Eu em Sho e 83 Morgan St 72
N Carol na AlT 75 Nono k Sl 12
Northwes em S1 76 SW Texas 70
s Ca ol na St 72 Hamp on 68
SE M IIOUrl 82 Mo r1a Brown 63
Samfor&lt;176 Campbet 6
Texas AIM Corpus CMII 67 W n nrop 64
Texas San An on o 76 Lou s ana-Mon oe

Blallop OooohUO (WIIIl •8

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE
110

MERCHANDI SE

knowingly aa:opl

-Itlnvlolatlonoltho
taw
tooteby
lnformlld INt an dwell'""

e

-

llrtdgopon44
Moigl n Alclnt Soulhtm 21

HENTAI ';

origin or ony - t o
make llf'/lucf't Pl'*'ilitct
lmtt.tlon or dllcrimlnidon •

--loii'NI-tnthlt--

Olllo High lchool Gitto eao-n
-f•R•una
Akron Contrat-Ho- 48 Akron Eat1 38
•knon Gorfllkl et Bucntat30
Allxandtr 70 Fedtro Hocking 3
Mlng1on 74 N Beltlmoro 43
AuaUntown-FHcll 58 Young. Hubbard 52
Boalavlle eo Woodallald Monroe Ctr11 38
Belpre 65 Trlmblt47
Ber1 n H land 57 Moun Vernon 47
BrQ&lt;&gt;Idle d •e Young Liberty 38
Ce na 71 Rockfo d Parkway 49
Cots Ohio Schoo kl the Deal !55 Grove
C ty Christian 28
Ooylestown Chippewa 58 Akron Manchl!l&amp;
tar 47
9: L verpoo 68 Aa)'land BUckeye L.cx:a 42
E yria Open Doo SO Canton He ltage
Chns 43 OT
Evange Chris lan 48 Menst ad Temp e
Ch 20
Ft Jenn nos 69 Co umbu• a ove se
Gall pols 84 Alhone eo
G rord 55 Loallltt&amp;burg LaBrao 45
Greent e a MCClain 83 W"ttm a own 38
Hancwerton United •1
Pa eat ne 40
K naman BadQt 53 Newton FaNs 36
Leeton a 58. Co umblana C eatvlew 52
L ma Cen1 Ca1h 71 Wapakor101852
L lbOn 73 Stbnng S3
L. abon Beaver Local 59 nd an Crttk 29
Lowellv e 71 N Jackson JackSCII"t M 01'1
49
Magno! a Sandy Vall 45 Newcomarttown
44 OT
Maranatha Christian 73 Grace Haven 48
Manetta eo P1 P ea ..nt (W Va ) 48
Marton Cath 42 Lima Temple Chriat 47
Maumee 59 Tol Chris 50
MCComD 84 Fostoria St Wandelln 35
McOona d 45 Vlan,. t.lo1howo 31

In Memory

Sawm 11 $3 79S Now Supar Lu111DI mate 2000 a gtr capacltll&amp;
mo a opt on a manutactu • or
sawm 1 edgers and I kidder'
NORWOOD lNOUSTRIES 252
Sonw I 0 ve Butralo NY 14:i!:i!5
FREE ntormat on 1 800 578
13e3 EXT 200-U

Shet Fantaay Exo c Show ba

SUBSTITUTE TEACHER AIDE
~011 CHILOCARE CENTER
Muat have an nterl!lst and deue
to work w h young ch ldrtn Rep
to Mag c "(tart Oaycart Ctnte
210 High So Po n Pttasanl wv
2S!SO

Pont
48
Manena
10 22 22
6 60
Point- Bridget Nibert 8 3 4 19 Krist n Ora n
oo.o o Jennie W 1son o-o 2 Ambt Kee e 4
2-4 10 M anda Ourat 3 a o 6 Jennifer Adk na
o o-2 o Aeg na Bing 2 3 5 Asnley Thomas o
2 2 2 Ale a Marcum 00-Q 0 Km 0 ve 0 0-D
0 SarahKnnard 0222 Totas 1810 746
Marietta - Jen Gw n 1 2 2 17 Somma

Kophort 2 1 2 5 Ami 3 ()oO s KUla
_ , ()oO 12 Clll1tM Thompoon 5 ()oO 13,
Couotney Wllllmo o 1 21 Kltrrlt Lauoro 0.0 o
Kalo Wltlricl1 0 2 2 2 Coullney Brllux 1 QoO
2 .lenn~tl(ugan 0 0.2 0 .o.nn.ndo Jenklna 0 2
2 2 Totoli 2H 1260
3-Polnt Gou - Point 0
Southom 4
(Thompson 3 Gwln) ~ - Point 28
{Niben tO) Mortttto 28(Kepnon 6) AaolatoPoint 8 Mar1o1tl (Gwtn 11) Stoa11- Poln1 3
Manetta 16 Tumcw. . - Point 22 r.tonlttl15
JV SCORE Monlttl4S Point 17
PP Kim Ollvtr 10

a.

Ends Januar~ 281 0% Finane ng

SPORTS MINDED
tndl\llduot Need For Local
To•ltor)l To COl On Coechtl
SchOOio And Youth Groups
$43 500.'ir (8 3)n9-7115

MlfiiHI 10 Point PIHUnt 41
16
7 1 16 -

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533 00 per hou Paid uatn ngtlu 1
benelts For ~ nlormat on ea 1
888 67491SO IX 3234

Tappan H Ellie one' 901'. Ga&amp;
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Bennetta Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
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Gtllll A-my a• AthtnUO
Alhtns
16
9 t3 22 60
GaiDa Academy 16
9 21 18 6C
Atne-. (H SEOAL 5 5) - Co II Gnppa 0
0 0 0 Chrtsty COibone 1 0 0 2 LIZ Howorth 10
0.0 22 Mtry Ya"ty 5 3 3 15 Tn&amp;hl Tyo 2-4
" Che'sea Monroe 3 3-4 9 Jenna Kott ¥1 o o
0 0 Llnd&amp;ey Marx 2 2 2 6 Man&amp;l Mowery 1 o02 TOiaS 2310 360
Gall a Academy 18-7 SEOAL 5 5) -Joss
ca Bod me e 1
J Br1anna Johnson 9 7-8
26 Eva Lyon o 1 2 ca a Ounke 2 o-o 4
Sarah Rulltl411 1 9 B ttany F ankl nao-o o
Mtrtdlth Add ng on 5 1 1 1 Totals 26 1 13
84
3 Point Goa s- 'A hens 4 {Howarth 2 Yen
ty 21 Gal a Academy 1 (B Johnson)
JV SCORE Athans 47 GaUa Academy 28
A Mlcha e Tyo 12 Kim Johnson 12
GA WhtneyW ams 7

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Meigs - Shlnoon Prk:a 6 o-o 15 Ambtr
Vining a o-o 20 Jaynee Devil 5 5-6 15 Alhley
T11omaa 2 QoO 6 Kayto Davia 1 o.o 2 Tl"any
Quells 1 QoO 3 L ndsay Sol n o 0.0 o MWldy
Chancey 6 0.0 12 Alicia Worry I QoO 2 COrrie
Hoover 0 O&lt;l 0 Shannon SOUIIby 1).() 2
To101a 33 5~ 11
Southom - Kati Cummtngo 20.0 4 Falon
Roue!l t QoO 2 Tommy Frya 1 0 o 2 Rachel
Chipman 3 2 2 8 Tara Pk:kona o o.o o Bridgette Bamta 3 0.0 8 Amy Lee :i! 1 " S Denn~~
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hiiRd 12 &amp;8 2Aca 01
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lylttm Clll 1 800
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TOday's Scoreboard

•

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page B-3'

Advertlelng
Ia not riiiDOI,IItlll

PI•.. •••"•

our llloof*lon at
number llaled bel•ow •w1111

�.

•

Tueaday, January 23, 2001

Tuesday, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B s·
!

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI:

ACROSS

PHILLIP

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT
(Factory OuU.t)
Beginner's Yogo Class
Tuetj;layl6:()().7:00 p.m.
February 6 to April I 0 At
Meigs Senior Citizens' Building
Cost: $2.00 per class
Call
to register

Public Notice

·

Public Notice

SHER!ri"S IALI!,
R!AI. !STATE
CASE NUMIIER 00 CV 028

(502) ond Five Hundred
Thrtt (503), II Wll
trenolorred to tho grentor

CONSECO BANK, INC.
P.. lntlll

Prior
lnetrument
re1eronc11: Volume 80,
Plge411 .
Property oddr111: 208

Defendlnll

Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy,

·v•
MARTHA BOYNTON, et 11.
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

herein.

OH 457118.
Apprlloed at: $5,000.00
Term• of 1111: Caah

Jemeo M. souteby .•
In purouonce of on Order Sherlll, Melgo County
ol8.11e to me directed from
Hid Court In the above MilliN J. Whelen
Sompoon
&amp;
entitled octlon, I wlllexpou ·. Lerner,
to 1111 11 public euctlon on Aothlull
the front elope of the Melgo 120 E. Fourth Street, 8th
County Court Hou11 on Floor
1'1111doy, Februory 20, 2001 Clnclnnell, O~lo 45202
et 10:00 e.m. of Nld dey, (513) 241-3100
the following deecrlbld root OH Sup Ct 10088318

-

'

All vertical blind&amp; are made to order at
our location

ALDER

IIISILl IUILIIIS
IIC••

11M- ~e ct"'9

. New Homee • Vinyl
Siding • New Gareget

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• R~ Wll1clciM
• Room Addltlone

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• Roofing

UP TO 70% OFF

COMMEKW.n R!SIDEIITW.

• Vertical&amp; • Wood • Minia • Etc

FREii ESTIMATES '

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

144 Third Ave. GallDohs 446·4995
Tol FrH 1-81S·745-8147

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

'I'AJITA I.
;.:..;;.

740-949-2217

TWO FOR TWOSDAY

SIZit 5' X 10'

Hours

WICKED

7:00AM-8:00PM

FISH FRIDAY

Btn.IATED IN THE
. (1) 23, 3D
COUNTY
0 F MEIGS IN . (2) 6
V.C. YOUNG Ill
THE STATE OF OHIO AND ' 31
992·6215 ..
IN THE VILLAGE OF
Pomeroyt!!hlo
POMEROY AND BOUNDED
Public Notice
I
221"·
al
AND DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
A STAKE AT THE CORNEA
REAL ESTATE
OF BRICK ANO LAWLEY
CASE NUMBER OD-CV·104
•
STREETS;
THENCE
RUNNING SOUTH 80 DEG.
Long Beach Mortgage
Rutland, Ohio
47 MIN. W. 112 I'EI!T TO A
Compony, Pllln111f
,STAKE; THENCE SOUTH 8
'Ihlck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tan&gt;LI
DEG. 13 MIN. E. 40 FEET
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler sealll,
TO A STAKE; THENCE
NORTH 80 DEB. 47 MIN. E.
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.
Je1111 Wlloon, et 11.,
112 FEET TO A STAKE;
DefendMon· Frl8:30. 5:00
. THENCE NORTH 8 DEG. 13
MIN. W 40 FEET To THE . Court of Common Pleao,
Over 40 yra experience
Mtl C
Ohl
PLACE OF BEGINNING.
SAID LOT INCLUDES THE
go ounty,
0
HOUSE AND BARN BEING
In pureuonce ol an Order
A LOT 40 FEET WIDE BY of Sale In the IIbov• entitled
112 FEET DEEP.
THE action, I will oller lor 1111 et
ABOVE DESCRIBED
public auction In the above
PROPERTY IS PART OF
county on February 27,
LOT NO·. 483 OF THE 2001 .11 10:00 a.m. at the
CONSOUDATI 0 N
0 F door olthl courthouae, the
POMEROY; AS REPORTED following dllcrlbed real
IN PLAT BOOK 2, PAGE 17
AND 18 IN THE RECORDS
SITUATED I N
T HE
01' MEIGS COUNTY
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
RECORDER'S OFFICE AND COUNTY OF MEIGS AND
CONTAINS 0.103 ACRES, STATE OF OHIO, TO WIT:
MORE OR LESS.
'ALL THAT CI!ATAIN TRACT,
Currant Ownera Noma: OR PAACE). OF LAND
Martha Boynton
SITUATE, LYING AND
Property Addreoe: 200 BEING IN THE VILLAGE OF
Lilley StrHI, Pomeroy, OH POMEROY, BEING KNOWN
487118
AND DESIGNATED ON A
· Permonant Porcel 118· MAP OF UNCOLN HEIGHTS
00848.000
MADE BY BREECE &amp;
APPRAISED AT: $14,000.00 CARPER, Rl!BISTERl!D
TEAMS OF SALE: Caah,
ENGINE E AS, •·, . . - , - - - - Connot be aold lor 1111 CIVIL
HUNTINGTON,
WEST. 11
thin 2/31'111 ol thl apprallecl VIRGINIA,
DATED
Stop In Arid See
VIIIM.
'
'
OCTOBER 17, 1842, A
COPY
Of'
WHICH
MAP
WAS
Steve
Riffle
'
JAMES SOLSBY, Shertll
FILLED IN THE OFFICE OF
M~a County', Ohio
Sales Representative
THE RECORDER OF MEIGS
COUNTY,
0 HI0 ,
DENNIS REIMER CO, LPA
DECEMBER 17, 1842; AND
:. Larry S.chey
By: Dannla Raimer (Reg. RECORDED IN PLATBOOK
111031t 118)
13, AT PAQES 42 AND 43,
Adam L. Groll (Reg. AS LOT NO. 110, AND BEING
'
11100811382) '
'
MORE
PARTICULARLY
AttorntP lor Pletn1111
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS,
P.O. Box 888, 11808 Ravenna TO WIT: BEGINNING AT A 150 East Slllle Street' Phone (140) 5!)3-66
lid.
POINT tN THE WEST LINI IIAtlten!l, . Ohio 45 yr01
nwtnlburg, OH 44087
OF UNCOLN ROAD AT THE
(330) 426-4201
CORNEA BETWEEN LOT!I 1o:__ _ _;,..:;:~~:!....::!!!
48 AND 80 AS SHOWN ON I
Jlnuary 11, 23, 3D /01
SAID MAP; THENCE WITH

A&amp; DAuto

·-

1
'
I

'

OF
GALLIPOLIS

~LLLEL

Celluiar
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

- - . - - - - - - THE SAID LINE OF
Public Notice
UNCOLN ROADs. 21 DEB.
-...:...:=::.:..=::::::.._
31' E., 51.2 FEE'r, THENCE
WITH THE UNE BETWEEN
SHERifF'S SALE
LOTS 50 AND 51, S. 12
DIG. 24' W., 200 FEET;
REAL !STATE
THENCE N. 27 DEB. 31' W.,
THE POINT Of' BEGINNING;
CASE NUMBER OOCV038 RISERVING HOWEVER
THE COAL AND AU.
LaSalle Netlonal lank, H . OTHIIR MINIAALS IN AND
Tru-, Under thl Pooling UNDIRLYINQ THE ABOVE
and Blrvlclng AgrHrnlnl DESCAIII!D PROPERTY,
TOBITHEA - WITH THE
deled 11 ol June 1, 1-,
RIQNT TO MINE. THI! SAME
""" 111112·2
WITHOUT INCUMBRANCE
TO THI 8URPACI!, AND .
PLAINTIFF
va.
IUIJl!CT
TO
AN
l!ASEMINT FOR SEWAGE
Roy ltovlr, II al
PILTl!R
DITCH
OR
.•
LEACHING DITCH, AS SET
I'ORTH AND DI!BCRISED IN
DEI'I!HOANTI
THAT
INITAUMl!NT
IIAIIINQ DATI!
0F
'"~' COURT Of' COMMON
NOVIMIER 28, 1M3, AND
PLBAII
RECORDED IN THl! lAID
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AICOADEA'S OFFICE
In purouanct ol an Ordlr DECEMBER 31, 11143, IN
ol Slit to me dlreoted from DI!I!D lOOK 111, PAGE
Hid Court In thl abova 178.
Bald pramllla alao
entitled auction, I will
llCPOII 10 tilt et publiC known 11 1821 Llntoln
Mlotlon et the Courthouae
Pomeroy, Ohio
on March 2, 2001 a1 .10:00
PPN: 11-001110
1.m. ol aold day the
following dteorlb~ r111
Apprlllecl et: $11,000 and
oannol beaold lor leHihln
The following r111 twO·thlrdt (2/3) of that
property tltuatad In thl amount.
County ol Malga, Stele ol
Ohio and In lhl VIllage of Jolin D: Clunk 110005371
Pomeroy and being more · Attorney lor Plelntlll
particularly bounded and 78 MH!ord Drtva
dMwlbld IIIC!IIo"e:
Hudaon, Ohio 44238
111!"11 Dnt Hundred (100) (330) 342-8203
Aoro Lot · Number Thr11 1123; 30, 2/8, 21101
Hllndrad Thr11 (303),
Slllabury Townthlp, Town 2
North, Ranga 13 Wlel,
Pomeroy VIllage aa
riiDrdld In Volume 2, page
17, of Melge County Plat
R•oorda.
Iaing Lot Number 'IYI
Hundred Two (502) In tht
VIllage of Pomeroy, Melga
County, and alto herewith
conveyed, oil rlghte wllh
riiPICI to lhl Ull of
tldewelk batw11n Iota
!lUmbert I'IW Hundred Two

Special Rnarice
Bankruptcy? Credit

51~

W.:C'' ·

-.:

South
Pass
I•

&amp;liLo~l/.

·

Firewood
35215 Ball Run ROid
Pomeroy, ·Ohio 457111

2•
4•

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FREE ESTIMATES!

"

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'

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----~ :

r---------------------~~------------------------------~· .:''

-

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.,
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,us1ness

4
5
8
7

lorta

Cering
a ...,.,.Wlktn
Some luela
Bay

• A95

40 Student

3D Shoolacallp

a

8

Stlllon In 1111
"Opol" flnllh
P1p1
Chii'IIC!Irlottc·
quality of

IOUnd

Wood oorret

Olin or Horne

12 - - evenkHI
19 Anglo-Saxon

10 Actor Jennlnge
IIIIer
21 Biblical
42 Lagal-lld org. 11 Wrlllr, Wallar
- '- Mere
plant
4S Cozy room

~

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

• '·

28 - -do-well
28 Sound of a
bell
28 Replete
30 Plaintiff
31 NIIIYI Of
Lltvle

37 Unlor~~~~n
38 Uncloll
(poet.)

.

41 Bury
•
42 LNI-cuttlng
enl
' :
43 Actor
Bud 44 Booty
45 HIWIIIIn
food lloh
47 ·- - lor All ·
SNaona" · ~
48 Scana ola · •
rriii'IICII
411 Short ertlale •
50 - on (apoll)•
52 "Grom" 11111
54 Bullllght
cry

BY PHILLIP ALDER
Thesday, Aug. 29, I drove l)orth
from Dunedin to Timaru with -you guessed it •• Lindsey
Lawrence and Alastair. Gunn ..En
route, we stopped tci see the
Moerara Boulders, which are ·
spherical concretions formed
inside the earth. Eventually the . hr+-+--1- +--1-soil erodes and lhe bo1,1lders fall
onto the beach,, where they are
pummeled by the waves.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
We also passed a -- not the -·
·
by Lula Campos
St. Andrews Golf Club, where the
Celebrity
Cipher
ayptograme1re
created from quotattone by ramout people, Pill and
green fee is NZ$10 (about US$4)."''~
preaent. Each letttr In the clphtr standi for another.
That evening, I played with Jon
Todly's clu.: ~ equols M
Bowler in a duplicate . In this deal
'EPH
JVXWHDAH
XA
UJRA
IU
at our table, North opened with
one Preci sion club, showing at
LZMXVZA
EPXVMA,
NZEXHVERB
least 16 high,card points. I don't
' know why South ran to four
MD 1.0
OXEA
EI
OZXEXVM
UID
IJ D
spades; she had shown her hand
and should have trusted partner.
After finessing dummy 's club
queen successfully, declarer
unblocked the spade ace: eight,
three, jack. She crossed to hand
with a heart and led the spade
'~~:t~~, S@l'.~lA-l&amp;t.trs·
queen, an inadvi sable move as the
1~1104 ~r CLAY •. POlLAN __;:_ _ _ __
jack had dropped. After Bowler's
club exit to dummy's ace, Somh
Olour
Roorrongo lolloll of lh•
scrombled words becashed dummy 's diamond ace,
low 10 form lour slmplo wordo.
ruffed a diamond in hand, and
took the spade I 0, but she col!ldRAXNYL
n't avoid losing two spades, one
heart and one club: one down .
Timaru's best player, Brian
Ussher, was propelled into six
spades by his partner. He won
R' E
trick one with dummy's club
queen, cashed the spade ace and
diamond ace, ruffed a diamond in
"I must be getting old ," one
hand, and exited with a low spade.
.
.
.
.
.
~
woman
commented to her fun -'
Back came a club to dummy's
I~~;;:~:::=.:::., cheon guesl.
"I remember when
ace. Another diamond ruff
brought down the king, the Q-.1 0
--rMr-Or-I--rNr.;.H...v~~~ ~~r :o_u.n:~~ ~~~.blessings and nol
of spa~es drew lrumps, and a
I
G) Compleoe tht chucklo quoled .
heart to dummy's king permitted
by filling In tho miJiinv woodo
L.--1..--.J.I...-J..--.J.L..-J.• .....J you develop
from llop No. 3 below.
access to those established diamonds. A one percent small slam
f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
bid and made for-· surprise, surprise ·- a cold top.
. ~ UNSCRAMBlE FOR

r, I

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'I

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I I I" I.• I
ANSWER

Sentinel

.,

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ITUESDAY

.

SCftAM.I.nS ANSWERS
Famous· Mumps· Agate · Narrow : PROGRAM
While watching TV my husband mumbled , "I remem·

per when bloopers happened only occasionally and
weren't a whole tv PROGRAM "

JANUARY23l

~ ~·

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AIM..._ Traetor a

... •... j

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Equipment Puti ·
Factory Autl,w;du d

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(2 Wda.)

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To get a current weather
report, check the

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"othello"

24 UnN of
lrwn.. n
mately

Weat Nortb
Pass 1 •
Pass 2 +
Pass 3 NT
Pass

22 Antenna
23 VIllain In

25 1 Approx~

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27
32
33
34
35

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Advertise ' in .
this .space for
$100 per

molding

3 Noreepoem

Ll El: AI VI' 1:.~

'

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Fdl Dlr! • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
992·3470

1 Toreo oreoa
2 Curved

23~~ ••

.,..1

.,.,:

Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Yllft lia at
202 Clark Chepal Road,
Porter, Ohio,
M!Hiday thru l'rtday

Hauling • U1111Sio1111 •
Gtavel• Sand • Topsoil •

DOWN

.
1.T/'111

.• 5\l)rl\P

1-177.a3N182 or

EXCfiVfiTIMQ

58 Give·tNII to

. '

.,

::::

Advertise in
this space for
~1 00 per ';~ month.

•Free ellllmatta wHh
appolntmenlll itt your
convenience
• Financing available, 90
""'UUyt1 'same as cash
•· 1.\iVe ,xc;ept Vlu or
MuterCard.
Qlve Ul I 0111 at
740-441 7444 or

lOOI

18 Phllll&gt;tllne city
17 Looli lor
18 New aoclaiNe
20 Economlat
G...,apon
21 Mythical

Farther

More ·

Prices

se =:r"'

Opening lead: • 3

Kitchens, Drywall II.

~utv ClqJet It Low

dii'-Y .,..,..

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

New Homee, Room
Addltiona, Garacee,
Pole autldlnCs,

MOLLOHAN CARPET

55~

38 Golden sherry

• J 9

SUN SET HOME
CO NSTR UCTIO N

.(740) 742-8888 .
1-888-521-0916

......,

7 Olllo city

• Q 10 7 6 5 3
• J

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In urvlce"
·11.6% Protein Uvestock/caitle Feed $5.75/1 00
·21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75150 •
·12% western pride horse lesd $5.75~
. $1 .00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Sail Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. At. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 457111
740-885-3831

Au DAY 'AU. YOU CAN hi'

Fl II 1
Gatton

FrBe Estimates

Dump Truck OoUvery Me&gt;gs I
and Gallla Countjes Call
LeaveM-ga
992-6142 or

7/WffN

.25¢WINGS

•llaw=r.
••llocto...
•::u,.

• 98 42

• QJ 8

FOR SALE

740-992·1671

· · - oMIIois &amp; .........

:~u.Jl:t"'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Stop &amp;Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

2 CHIIIIIURIIIRI FOI THI I'IICE OF ONE

to 10' x30'

East ·

South

• Garagea .
• Completa
Remodeling

·~~·~O~ND~AY
TACOS

45771

•A
• K 10 8 3
oAQ9873
•AQ

BIOMLOMBIR
If, 17. 148
CRII I ER

•New Homes

29870 Baahen Road
RBclnt, Ohio

YOUNG'S
· CARPENTER SERVICE
Baclclroe
House.sfte ~ric,
Driveway £r land
· clearing,
Septic systems
lnstlflled.

7HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY'
Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, Investment records,
albums, cameras, household Inventory . and
se,nftrr1ental ltems will be safe.
·
For more lnformllllon call

I

992-6524

SELF STORAIE

1 Awful

-

Pmrlouo Puzzle

15 Uke enlmola In 57 IIMch

• K 6t
• 10 8 7

HILL'S

47 Tert
51 Drove
(I Vlhlela)
83 Part o1 ILT

13 TrocNcall14 OlcHimt

33795 Hilarul Rd.

-to

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

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'
Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2001
!You could get an edge in the
YCfl' ahead when someone gives
'yoy privileged infonnation. Don't
·igqore the gift. ·
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A ~ituation that has been in place .
wb}ch had been inhibiting your
peiformance may change today in
a manner that will give you more
aulhority over your own affairs .
Aquarius, treat yourself to a birth·
day gift: Send for your Astro·
Graph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box I 758, Murray Hill Sta·
. tioa; New York, NY 10156. Be
.sure to state your Zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q·March 20)
Today may be the day to finally
act upon a secretambition you've
been harooring. However, it may
still be wise to be very selective
in whom you entrust your desires.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
Today initiates a cycle for sever·
al opportunities to establish new
'friendships. You may begin to
consolidate several strong links
with people who are progressive

thinkers .
than avemge today.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Fresh ambitions may tie awak· Someone you've known purely
ened in you today due to both on a platonic basis may take on a
chance and circumstances. Thelr1 new significance today. Chance
collective stimuli will have you could throw you together, giving
reaching for loftier goals. .
you a second look at each other.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) It can lead to a solid friendship.
Study new data today that could · SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
broaden your knowledge of sub· new beginning can occur today
jec.ts pertinent to your career or because you may now be able to
field of endeavor. What you l~ani walk away from im arrangement
will be invaluable.
·
that has been causing you frus·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) !rations lately. The di ssolution
Ways t,o open a new channel or will be amicable.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
earning might become apparent
today in an area you may never 21) Dor't wait any longer to
have ventured into before. You're launch those plans you've been
on che right ti'llck, so see where it fonnulating. Conditions are espe·
cially favorable today when it
takes you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There comes to fresh innovations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
are indications that improved con·
ditions can occur today involving 19) If you begin to systematize
a valued relationship that's been your financial affairs properly, it
faltering. Your counterpart may be could ma~e or save you a bundle
the one bearing the olive branch. of .money. Make an effort to put
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your affairs in order today.
This is an excellent day to launch
WhoopI Goldberg (What
a new project you've been tinMak1s a Family) once had a ca·
kering with at work. The chances
reer u a makeup anlst. She .apfor achieving success are better
plied cosmetics to corpses in a
monuary.

(PA){CCI
I (PA) (CCI

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Tueaday, January 23, 2001

Tuesday, January 23, 2001

Pomeroy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B s·
!

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI:

ACROSS

PHILLIP

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT
(Factory OuU.t)
Beginner's Yogo Class
Tuetj;layl6:()().7:00 p.m.
February 6 to April I 0 At
Meigs Senior Citizens' Building
Cost: $2.00 per class
Call
to register

Public Notice

·

Public Notice

SHER!ri"S IALI!,
R!AI. !STATE
CASE NUMIIER 00 CV 028

(502) ond Five Hundred
Thrtt (503), II Wll
trenolorred to tho grentor

CONSECO BANK, INC.
P.. lntlll

Prior
lnetrument
re1eronc11: Volume 80,
Plge411 .
Property oddr111: 208

Defendlnll

Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy,

·v•
MARTHA BOYNTON, et 11.
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

herein.

OH 457118.
Apprlloed at: $5,000.00
Term• of 1111: Caah

Jemeo M. souteby .•
In purouonce of on Order Sherlll, Melgo County
ol8.11e to me directed from
Hid Court In the above MilliN J. Whelen
Sompoon
&amp;
entitled octlon, I wlllexpou ·. Lerner,
to 1111 11 public euctlon on Aothlull
the front elope of the Melgo 120 E. Fourth Street, 8th
County Court Hou11 on Floor
1'1111doy, Februory 20, 2001 Clnclnnell, O~lo 45202
et 10:00 e.m. of Nld dey, (513) 241-3100
the following deecrlbld root OH Sup Ct 10088318

-

'

All vertical blind&amp; are made to order at
our location

ALDER

IIISILl IUILIIIS
IIC••

11M- ~e ct"'9

. New Homee • Vinyl
Siding • New Gareget

Hil&amp;h &amp; Dry

• R~ Wll1clciM
• Room Addltlone

Sell-Storage

• Roofing

UP TO 70% OFF

COMMEKW.n R!SIDEIITW.

• Vertical&amp; • Wood • Minia • Etc

FREii ESTIMATES '

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

144 Third Ave. GallDohs 446·4995
Tol FrH 1-81S·745-8147

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

'I'AJITA I.
;.:..;;.

740-949-2217

TWO FOR TWOSDAY

SIZit 5' X 10'

Hours

WICKED

7:00AM-8:00PM

FISH FRIDAY

Btn.IATED IN THE
. (1) 23, 3D
COUNTY
0 F MEIGS IN . (2) 6
V.C. YOUNG Ill
THE STATE OF OHIO AND ' 31
992·6215 ..
IN THE VILLAGE OF
Pomeroyt!!hlo
POMEROY AND BOUNDED
Public Notice
I
221"·
al
AND DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
A STAKE AT THE CORNEA
REAL ESTATE
OF BRICK ANO LAWLEY
CASE NUMBER OD-CV·104
•
STREETS;
THENCE
RUNNING SOUTH 80 DEG.
Long Beach Mortgage
Rutland, Ohio
47 MIN. W. 112 I'EI!T TO A
Compony, Pllln111f
,STAKE; THENCE SOUTH 8
'Ihlck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tan&gt;LI
DEG. 13 MIN. E. 40 FEET
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler sealll,
TO A STAKE; THENCE
NORTH 80 DEB. 47 MIN. E.
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.
Je1111 Wlloon, et 11.,
112 FEET TO A STAKE;
DefendMon· Frl8:30. 5:00
. THENCE NORTH 8 DEG. 13
MIN. W 40 FEET To THE . Court of Common Pleao,
Over 40 yra experience
Mtl C
Ohl
PLACE OF BEGINNING.
SAID LOT INCLUDES THE
go ounty,
0
HOUSE AND BARN BEING
In pureuonce ol an Order
A LOT 40 FEET WIDE BY of Sale In the IIbov• entitled
112 FEET DEEP.
THE action, I will oller lor 1111 et
ABOVE DESCRIBED
public auction In the above
PROPERTY IS PART OF
county on February 27,
LOT NO·. 483 OF THE 2001 .11 10:00 a.m. at the
CONSOUDATI 0 N
0 F door olthl courthouae, the
POMEROY; AS REPORTED following dllcrlbed real
IN PLAT BOOK 2, PAGE 17
AND 18 IN THE RECORDS
SITUATED I N
T HE
01' MEIGS COUNTY
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
RECORDER'S OFFICE AND COUNTY OF MEIGS AND
CONTAINS 0.103 ACRES, STATE OF OHIO, TO WIT:
MORE OR LESS.
'ALL THAT CI!ATAIN TRACT,
Currant Ownera Noma: OR PAACE). OF LAND
Martha Boynton
SITUATE, LYING AND
Property Addreoe: 200 BEING IN THE VILLAGE OF
Lilley StrHI, Pomeroy, OH POMEROY, BEING KNOWN
487118
AND DESIGNATED ON A
· Permonant Porcel 118· MAP OF UNCOLN HEIGHTS
00848.000
MADE BY BREECE &amp;
APPRAISED AT: $14,000.00 CARPER, Rl!BISTERl!D
TEAMS OF SALE: Caah,
ENGINE E AS, •·, . . - , - - - - Connot be aold lor 1111 CIVIL
HUNTINGTON,
WEST. 11
thin 2/31'111 ol thl apprallecl VIRGINIA,
DATED
Stop In Arid See
VIIIM.
'
'
OCTOBER 17, 1842, A
COPY
Of'
WHICH
MAP
WAS
Steve
Riffle
'
JAMES SOLSBY, Shertll
FILLED IN THE OFFICE OF
M~a County', Ohio
Sales Representative
THE RECORDER OF MEIGS
COUNTY,
0 HI0 ,
DENNIS REIMER CO, LPA
DECEMBER 17, 1842; AND
:. Larry S.chey
By: Dannla Raimer (Reg. RECORDED IN PLATBOOK
111031t 118)
13, AT PAQES 42 AND 43,
Adam L. Groll (Reg. AS LOT NO. 110, AND BEING
'
11100811382) '
'
MORE
PARTICULARLY
AttorntP lor Pletn1111
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS,
P.O. Box 888, 11808 Ravenna TO WIT: BEGINNING AT A 150 East Slllle Street' Phone (140) 5!)3-66
lid.
POINT tN THE WEST LINI IIAtlten!l, . Ohio 45 yr01
nwtnlburg, OH 44087
OF UNCOLN ROAD AT THE
(330) 426-4201
CORNEA BETWEEN LOT!I 1o:__ _ _;,..:;:~~:!....::!!!
48 AND 80 AS SHOWN ON I
Jlnuary 11, 23, 3D /01
SAID MAP; THENCE WITH

A&amp; DAuto

·-

1
'
I

'

OF
GALLIPOLIS

~LLLEL

Celluiar
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

- - . - - - - - - THE SAID LINE OF
Public Notice
UNCOLN ROADs. 21 DEB.
-...:...:=::.:..=::::::.._
31' E., 51.2 FEE'r, THENCE
WITH THE UNE BETWEEN
SHERifF'S SALE
LOTS 50 AND 51, S. 12
DIG. 24' W., 200 FEET;
REAL !STATE
THENCE N. 27 DEB. 31' W.,
THE POINT Of' BEGINNING;
CASE NUMBER OOCV038 RISERVING HOWEVER
THE COAL AND AU.
LaSalle Netlonal lank, H . OTHIIR MINIAALS IN AND
Tru-, Under thl Pooling UNDIRLYINQ THE ABOVE
and Blrvlclng AgrHrnlnl DESCAIII!D PROPERTY,
TOBITHEA - WITH THE
deled 11 ol June 1, 1-,
RIQNT TO MINE. THI! SAME
""" 111112·2
WITHOUT INCUMBRANCE
TO THI 8URPACI!, AND .
PLAINTIFF
va.
IUIJl!CT
TO
AN
l!ASEMINT FOR SEWAGE
Roy ltovlr, II al
PILTl!R
DITCH
OR
.•
LEACHING DITCH, AS SET
I'ORTH AND DI!BCRISED IN
DEI'I!HOANTI
THAT
INITAUMl!NT
IIAIIINQ DATI!
0F
'"~' COURT Of' COMMON
NOVIMIER 28, 1M3, AND
PLBAII
RECORDED IN THl! lAID
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AICOADEA'S OFFICE
In purouanct ol an Ordlr DECEMBER 31, 11143, IN
ol Slit to me dlreoted from DI!I!D lOOK 111, PAGE
Hid Court In thl abova 178.
Bald pramllla alao
entitled auction, I will
llCPOII 10 tilt et publiC known 11 1821 Llntoln
Mlotlon et the Courthouae
Pomeroy, Ohio
on March 2, 2001 a1 .10:00
PPN: 11-001110
1.m. ol aold day the
following dteorlb~ r111
Apprlllecl et: $11,000 and
oannol beaold lor leHihln
The following r111 twO·thlrdt (2/3) of that
property tltuatad In thl amount.
County ol Malga, Stele ol
Ohio and In lhl VIllage of Jolin D: Clunk 110005371
Pomeroy and being more · Attorney lor Plelntlll
particularly bounded and 78 MH!ord Drtva
dMwlbld IIIC!IIo"e:
Hudaon, Ohio 44238
111!"11 Dnt Hundred (100) (330) 342-8203
Aoro Lot · Number Thr11 1123; 30, 2/8, 21101
Hllndrad Thr11 (303),
Slllabury Townthlp, Town 2
North, Ranga 13 Wlel,
Pomeroy VIllage aa
riiDrdld In Volume 2, page
17, of Melge County Plat
R•oorda.
Iaing Lot Number 'IYI
Hundred Two (502) In tht
VIllage of Pomeroy, Melga
County, and alto herewith
conveyed, oil rlghte wllh
riiPICI to lhl Ull of
tldewelk batw11n Iota
!lUmbert I'IW Hundred Two

Special Rnarice
Bankruptcy? Credit

51~

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South
Pass
I•

&amp;liLo~l/.

·

Firewood
35215 Ball Run ROid
Pomeroy, ·Ohio 457111

2•
4•

HEAP Vouchorw lliOiplld

WOW/MY

.,; fiNUifS

FeeL rtrre~r
ALirfAPY!

/
/

Decks,

I* Can Make lbur

Dteam A Reality!

740-742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

"

'

(740) 367-0266
1·800-950-3359
20 Yrs.

'

'
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Some luela
Bay

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40 Student

3D Shoolacallp

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Stlllon In 1111
"Opol" flnllh
P1p1
Chii'IIC!Irlottc·
quality of

IOUnd

Wood oorret

Olin or Horne

12 - - evenkHI
19 Anglo-Saxon

10 Actor Jennlnge
IIIIer
21 Biblical
42 Lagal-lld org. 11 Wrlllr, Wallar
- '- Mere
plant
4S Cozy room

~

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

• '·

28 - -do-well
28 Sound of a
bell
28 Replete
30 Plaintiff
31 NIIIYI Of
Lltvle

37 Unlor~~~~n
38 Uncloll
(poet.)

.

41 Bury
•
42 LNI-cuttlng
enl
' :
43 Actor
Bud 44 Booty
45 HIWIIIIn
food lloh
47 ·- - lor All ·
SNaona" · ~
48 Scana ola · •
rriii'IICII
411 Short ertlale •
50 - on (apoll)•
52 "Grom" 11111
54 Bullllght
cry

BY PHILLIP ALDER
Thesday, Aug. 29, I drove l)orth
from Dunedin to Timaru with -you guessed it •• Lindsey
Lawrence and Alastair. Gunn ..En
route, we stopped tci see the
Moerara Boulders, which are ·
spherical concretions formed
inside the earth. Eventually the . hr+-+--1- +--1-soil erodes and lhe bo1,1lders fall
onto the beach,, where they are
pummeled by the waves.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
We also passed a -- not the -·
·
by Lula Campos
St. Andrews Golf Club, where the
Celebrity
Cipher
ayptograme1re
created from quotattone by ramout people, Pill and
green fee is NZ$10 (about US$4)."''~
preaent. Each letttr In the clphtr standi for another.
That evening, I played with Jon
Todly's clu.: ~ equols M
Bowler in a duplicate . In this deal
'EPH
JVXWHDAH
XA
UJRA
IU
at our table, North opened with
one Preci sion club, showing at
LZMXVZA
EPXVMA,
NZEXHVERB
least 16 high,card points. I don't
' know why South ran to four
MD 1.0
OXEA
EI
OZXEXVM
UID
IJ D
spades; she had shown her hand
and should have trusted partner.
After finessing dummy 's club
queen successfully, declarer
unblocked the spade ace: eight,
three, jack. She crossed to hand
with a heart and led the spade
'~~:t~~, S@l'.~lA-l&amp;t.trs·
queen, an inadvi sable move as the
1~1104 ~r CLAY •. POlLAN __;:_ _ _ __
jack had dropped. After Bowler's
club exit to dummy's ace, Somh
Olour
Roorrongo lolloll of lh•
scrombled words becashed dummy 's diamond ace,
low 10 form lour slmplo wordo.
ruffed a diamond in hand, and
took the spade I 0, but she col!ldRAXNYL
n't avoid losing two spades, one
heart and one club: one down .
Timaru's best player, Brian
Ussher, was propelled into six
spades by his partner. He won
R' E
trick one with dummy's club
queen, cashed the spade ace and
diamond ace, ruffed a diamond in
"I must be getting old ," one
hand, and exited with a low spade.
.
.
.
.
.
~
woman
commented to her fun -'
Back came a club to dummy's
I~~;;:~:::=.:::., cheon guesl.
"I remember when
ace. Another diamond ruff
brought down the king, the Q-.1 0
--rMr-Or-I--rNr.;.H...v~~~ ~~r :o_u.n:~~ ~~~.blessings and nol
of spa~es drew lrumps, and a
I
G) Compleoe tht chucklo quoled .
heart to dummy's king permitted
by filling In tho miJiinv woodo
L.--1..--.J.I...-J..--.J.L..-J.• .....J you develop
from llop No. 3 below.
access to those established diamonds. A one percent small slam
f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
bid and made for-· surprise, surprise ·- a cold top.
. ~ UNSCRAMBlE FOR

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SCftAM.I.nS ANSWERS
Famous· Mumps· Agate · Narrow : PROGRAM
While watching TV my husband mumbled , "I remem·

per when bloopers happened only occasionally and
weren't a whole tv PROGRAM "

JANUARY23l

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$100 per

molding

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992·3470

1 Toreo oreoa
2 Curved

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Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

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202 Clark Chepal Road,
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M!Hiday thru l'rtday

Hauling • U1111Sio1111 •
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•· 1.\iVe ,xc;ept Vlu or
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Opening lead: • 3

Kitchens, Drywall II.

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WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In urvlce"
·11.6% Protein Uvestock/caitle Feed $5.75/1 00
·21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75150 •
·12% western pride horse lesd $5.75~
. $1 .00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Sail Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. At. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 457111
740-885-3831

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Gatton

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CONSTRUCTION

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FREE ESTIMATES

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TACOS

45771

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If, 17. 148
CRII I ER

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29870 Baahen Road
RBclnt, Ohio

YOUNG'S
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Baclclroe
House.sfte ~ric,
Driveway £r land
· clearing,
Septic systems
lnstlflled.

7HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY'
Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, Investment records,
albums, cameras, household Inventory . and
se,nftrr1ental ltems will be safe.
·
For more lnformllllon call

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992-6524

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1 Awful

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15 Uke enlmola In 57 IIMch

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• 10 8 7

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47 Tert
51 Drove
(I Vlhlela)
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Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2001
!You could get an edge in the
YCfl' ahead when someone gives
'yoy privileged infonnation. Don't
·igqore the gift. ·
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A ~ituation that has been in place .
wb}ch had been inhibiting your
peiformance may change today in
a manner that will give you more
aulhority over your own affairs .
Aquarius, treat yourself to a birth·
day gift: Send for your Astro·
Graph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box I 758, Murray Hill Sta·
. tioa; New York, NY 10156. Be
.sure to state your Zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 2Q·March 20)
Today may be the day to finally
act upon a secretambition you've
been harooring. However, it may
still be wise to be very selective
in whom you entrust your desires.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
Today initiates a cycle for sever·
al opportunities to establish new
'friendships. You may begin to
consolidate several strong links
with people who are progressive

thinkers .
than avemge today.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Fresh ambitions may tie awak· Someone you've known purely
ened in you today due to both on a platonic basis may take on a
chance and circumstances. Thelr1 new significance today. Chance
collective stimuli will have you could throw you together, giving
reaching for loftier goals. .
you a second look at each other.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) It can lead to a solid friendship.
Study new data today that could · SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
broaden your knowledge of sub· new beginning can occur today
jec.ts pertinent to your career or because you may now be able to
field of endeavor. What you l~ani walk away from im arrangement
will be invaluable.
·
that has been causing you frus·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) !rations lately. The di ssolution
Ways t,o open a new channel or will be amicable.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
earning might become apparent
today in an area you may never 21) Dor't wait any longer to
have ventured into before. You're launch those plans you've been
on che right ti'llck, so see where it fonnulating. Conditions are espe·
cially favorable today when it
takes you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There comes to fresh innovations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
are indications that improved con·
ditions can occur today involving 19) If you begin to systematize
a valued relationship that's been your financial affairs properly, it
faltering. Your counterpart may be could ma~e or save you a bundle
the one bearing the olive branch. of .money. Make an effort to put
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your affairs in order today.
This is an excellent day to launch
WhoopI Goldberg (What
a new project you've been tinMak1s a Family) once had a ca·
kering with at work. The chances
reer u a makeup anlst. She .apfor achieving success are better
plied cosmetics to corpses in a
monuary.

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Pege B tl • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuetday, January 23, 2001

'

Community news and notes, As
Southern, Eastern pick up victories, 11

lhund.y
Hlp: J01; Low: 101

Details, A3

Melp county's

Wednesday
January 24. 2001

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 . Nurnber 167

50 Cenh

EDUCATION

lannarelli
to lead
mayors'
group
12:00 p.m.

Partnership for
Progress includes
11 counties

2001 SUPER BOWL
SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY
I predict the wining team and flrial score

AllenbiN muet be
.ubmltted before

noon .,

J81'1W1ry 21, 2001 ~
Employ••• of 1111~ Winning Team, _____________

""::~~~~'!, Final Score ____ to _ __
b\4fln"'*• ere nOt

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEl. NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT -As president of .the Mayors' Partnership for Progress, Middleport
Mayor Sandy lannarelli wiD
work with mayors in a number of counties in the region
to share ideas about community improvement.
Iannarelli was recently elect•
ed to head the organization.
Members of the Parmership
for PrQgress represent cities
, and ~iUages in an It-county ·
region of sou-thern Ohio,
including Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Scioto, Vinton
and Washington counties.
Some 25 villages and cities
participate regularly in the
group's discussion meetings,
with Chillicotlie and Marietta
being the largest cities in the
rnembenhi~.
.
The· gt'O\lp ."":~ fo.rn,ted. jn . •
!'a:ll 1995, a network of
municipal efficials who keep
each other informed on issues
such as funding sources, economic development, and
tourism, and meet regularly.
with state aad federal agencies
to discuss topics affecting the
region that the mayors serve,
The Institute for Local Government and Regional Development provides administrative support to the group, and
ILGARD's Marsha Lewis said
"networking" is an important ·
part of the organization.
"The mail goa,\ of the partnership is to m~ntain communication and information
sharing among aU o_f the
municipalities in the region. from the largest cities to the
smallest viUages," Lewis said.
lannarelli was elected as
Middleport's mayor in 1999.
Prior to her being named
mayor, she was a member of
Middleport Village Council.
lannarclli said the group was
founded by former Athens
Mayor Sara Hendricker, who
saw the need for idea-sharing
among area mayors.
"We share ideas because we ·
find that we share many of the
same problems and concerns:'

eligible. Enter~ Name'----------''------

oftin u you llke,31 Address~-----------

No Purchiii ·
(NoNeCIIIIry.
PhotocopiN) !J'.rl Phone._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..:..._ __

Hartwell
House

Open Superbowl
Sunday 1·4
• Gifts
•Antiques
• Folk Art

\

MOI·THUIII-5
FRI. 9·8: SIT 9-4

Qufllity
Furliture. Fisher/Acree

Pt.

42123 SR7, 111250
IOOE. .Main lUDDen Plains, 01
45781
Historie
1·740-1181-7188
Downtown
.0hio 1-80D-20N005

Funeral
Home

VALLEY
ER

n I APPLIIIICE

Bruce Fleher • Director
Jamee R. Acree Jr.,·
Director
Middleport 992·5141
Pomeroy 992·5444

US SERVICE

3rd Street, Racine

SSS:1Park Street
Middleport, OH

CHESTER

985-3307

11

&amp;G

IN GEL'S

Meigs County's
Oldest
ELECTRONICS
Radio Shack Dealer'
Newspll:per

• JSird Feeders
• Wild Bird Chow
• Sun Flower Seeds
-Thistle
·• Bird Block•
·Wild Ute Blocks ·
.I
399 W. Main
Pon1erc1y, Ohio

ltlwi......

111 Court Street ·106 N. Second Ave 1616 Eastern Avenue

169 N. 2nd Ave
Pomeroy, Ohio
Middleport, OH

992-7028

Jerrv
Bibbee

Ford
461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

992~2156

. · !i92-2635
Mon, Tues, Wed, Frl 9-5
Thurs 9-12; Sat 9-2:30

(740) 446-3672
Call Toll Free

1·800-521·0084

992-6333
Downing - Childs
Mullen - Musser ·

St.

"Serving Meigs
County Since 1868"

KR:.

Your
Local
STIHL•
Dealer

Dignity and
Service Alwaye
Offering Pre-Need ·

Ben Ewing - Director

Syracuse

ST/ItFJ !Ill

established 1913

992·2196 . 108 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy .
1·877·322-6720
www.jerryblbbee.com

Ml.'f.~l~port, Ohio

wil!g Funeral
Home

Counseling and
Arrangement

949·2210

W1u11

au

WheeLHorse
TRACTORS and

RIDING
LAWNMOWERS

SALES•SE~CE~~

R

Jt ·Family

985-3308

BY THE

Kentucky
' Fried Chicken

N. 2nd Ave
Middleport

992•5627
•..''
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I

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.
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I

BY TONY M. Well
SWINEL NEWS ST~

OMEROY .__ Goodwill .
and humanity shines
. through once again as
the Meigs Co.operative
. Parish enjoys another
successful year helping the area's less
fortunate in their time of need.
Since its opening in 1971, the Meigs
Cooperative Parish has provided assis-.
tance to thousands . of underprivileged
and emergency-stricken families living
in Meigs County.
Through programs aimed at providing food, clothing, biD payment, gifts

·. · Sf~ce: lts opJninlin 1971,

•

the Meig., Cooperative Parish
has provided assistance to
thousatJds of ~tnderprivlleged
and emergency-stricken
families livit1g in Meigs
County
during the holidays, and most importantly, comfort, the organization has
become the epitome of kindness and
generosity to many individuals who
find themselves down on their luck.
"We've reaDy had a very successful
year," said Keith Rader, director of the

'
c6operative parish.' l9cated on Cqridor
Street in Pomeroy. "The parish has
worked very hard to provide assistance
to a number of disadvantaged families
throughout our area."
Of special note would be the facility's
food bank, which provides free food
assistance for all applicable participants.
· "Last year, our food bank helped feed
over 500 local families, including 685
children and 853 adults;· Rader said.
"We spent around $40,000 on food
items during Christmas, which.is usually a peak time for us."
The parish's food bank offers five,free

,........ Schooll, ..... AJ .

· · PIHMIIIPiirtlh,PIIpA:J

'

Washington woman heads Area Agency on Aging 8
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - A new director for the
Area Agency on Aging for Area 8 has been
named.
She is Joetta Lane ofWashington County,
and ·she has 13 years of experience in
gerontology and delivering a variety of services to the elderly. said C. Boyer Simcox,
executive director of the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development
District.
.
.
Lan:e's experience includes working with
· geriatric psychiatric patients,• &lt;as well as
direccor c;tfsocial servi.c!:l in a riursing facil-

~SSOCI4TED

PRESS

The big blue tarp hangs from the
front ~Linda Houck's apartment in
the western Ohio city of Greenville to
block the wind, but Ho11ck might use
it to -cover her eyes the next time she
opens her monthly heating· bill .
Last winter, the single mother of two
paid abbut $125 a month to stay warm~
This month, her bill was $3~2. The
dramaiic increase meant no new snow
boots for her 9-year-old daughter and
a struggle just to keep the heat turned
on.
"It's pretty much pay the rent attd
heating bill, and then whatever's left
over we use for food,'' said Houck, who
b~ings home about $800 a month as a
rest~urant worker and part-time baby
sitter.
Natur:al-gas prices have skyrocketed

Featuring

Chester Ohio

~ &lt;f·,,

Tile programming she developed while serving as program director
became a model for other utJits to follow.
ity.
In addition, haVing been the program
director of an Alzheimer's unit, Lane is
described as having an unders~nding of the
issues of Alzheimer's victims atld their fam~
ilies.
The programming she developed while
serving as program director became a
model for other units to foUow. Prior to
joining the Buckeye. Hills team, Lane served

as agency administrator for a I 0- county
Hospice program that provided services to
patients in their homes and in nursing facilities.
These experiences offer insight into the
full continuum of care for older adults and
their families as well as an understanding of
the need to plan for and coordinate services, according to Simcox.
"Being a Washington County resident

and having lived in rural areas aU of her life,
. Joetta is familiar with the special needs of
the ~lderly in rural areas," Simcox said. "Her
strong' leadership abilities, management
experience and extensive knowledge base
of the service needs of the elderly, will combine to guide the Area Agency on Aging to
promote an improved quality of life for
older adults and their families in Southeastern Ohio through planning, advocacy, education and coordination of services."
. AAAS serves Meigs County, along with
Athens, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.

'
Lasi winter, th~ - Jlngle mother of two paid about $125 a month
to stay warm. This month, her bill was $392. Tht dramatic
increase meant no new snow boots for lur 9-year-old daughter
and a struggle just to keep the heat turned on.
~

·Restaurant

.228 MalnSt
Pomeroy, Ohio
Window

Rarisb . ~1,1joys another successful y,ear .

COLUMBUS (AP) - Changing how Ohio
funds schools and measures schoolchildren's
academic performance dominated the agenda
for Gov. Bob Taft's third State of the State ·
speech Wednesday.
.
The noon speech midway through Taft's first
term was pivotal because a 'court mandate is
forcing more spending on education just as the .
slowing economy forces the governor to sell
across-the-board cuts in the rest of the budget.
Taft proposed a five-point plan to improve
academic standards and assessment, early childhood education, school facilities, teacher training and student-funding levels.
The governor proposed spending an additional $808 million over two years to:
• Raise the base amount of per pupil spending above the current. S4 .200 a year.
• Increase state support for other basic costs
such as transportation.
. • Expand funding for Ohio special education
students.
• Offer state funding for ail-day kindergarten
to more than 50 school districts serving 12,000
children.
"Enabling every child to succeed is my No.
I priority," Taft said. "It drives our agenda and
fuels my enthusiasm."
Taft also proposed using surplus welfare
funds from the state's pool of federal Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families money to help
poor and low-income Ohioans facing highheating bills. A shortage of natural gas combined with incrlas~d demand and an unusually
cold weather have caused a spike in heating
bills.
Ohio has until June 15 to respond to an Ohio
Supreme . Court ruling that the state's schoolfunding system is unconstitutional because its
reliance on local property taxes leaves poor districts at a disadvantage.
·
The speech also gave the governor an
opportunity to announce that his $50 million
OhioReads program has recruited more than
20,000 volunteers - surpassing the goal Taft
set when he took office in January 1999.
Besides education, other issues for Taft to
discuss were:
I
• Ways the state can help LTV Steel Co.,

Heating bills putting strarigl~ on some families

1.C-row's

'

992-2121

PliiM I i i Mayor, Pap AJ

.

.

FOOD BANK- Keith Rader, director of the Meigs Cooperative Parish In Pomeroy, stands Inside the organization's food bank
where food Items are collected and distributed to both underprivileged and emergency-stricken families throughout Meigs
County. The parish recemly celebrated another successful year of helping the area's less fortunate. (Tony M. Leach photo)

as

&amp;SUPPlY Insurance

The
Daily
Sentinel

Taft speech
focuses on
schools

.,

since summer because of tight supplies,
high demand and a colder winter. :
Nationwide, the av~rage residential
natural-gas user will pay 70 l'ercent
more for heat this winter than last,
according to the U.S. Bbergy Information Administration. Homeowners
heating with oil will pay about 40 percent more.
The sticker shock is being felt
around Ohio.
Zenovia Whatley, of Cleveland, has
seen her monthly heating bill jump
from less than $250 to U?S. ·
The 61-year-old Vloman, who lives

,,

in a three-bedroom frame house witb
her five grandchildren, has covered the
wind&lt;;~ws with, plastic and placed rugs
and blankets at the bottom of her
closed doors to try to conserve heat.
Whatley said she has gotten behind
in paying her other bills because of the
high cost of heat.
"It's-taken away so much from other
things," she said. "We have to cut down
pn food . I'm hoping for warmer

weather soon."
In Wilberforce near Dayto-n, Stacey
Groves' h,eating bill went from $89 to
$190 in one month. That meant no

,.,

potato chips or cereal for her two chi!. dren, no ticket to the movie "Cast
Away" for her, and keeping the thermostat set on 62 degrees.
Diana Brothers, of Maineville in
southwest Ohio, lives in a 100"year-old
farmhouse and depends on a monthly
Social Security check of $722 as ,her
only source of income. The 65- yearold woman recently paid $350 to fill
her furnace with heating oil.
Turning the heat down is not a·n
option for Brothers, a cancer survivor
who has suffered several strokes and .
remains on blood-thinner medication.
"If I keep it below 70 degrees, I just
get too cold," Brothers said. ''With all
of my health problems, I don't need to
be worrying about heat ."

..

'lbda(s

Sentinel
2 S1ttla111- 12 ......
Cal~adar

CIIIIW~III

A5

DH

Cgmi~:a

D~

Edi1.uial1
Obimui11

.M

5norta
Wt1the1:

A3

Dl.M
AJ

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 34-7; Pick 4:4-1-9-3
Bu&lt;:loo)oe 5: 7-13-16-27-37

W:VA,
Dally 3: 4-1-4 Dally ., 4-S-8-3
C 200 I Ohiu V•ll!f Vubli5hing Co.

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