<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7308" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7308?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-17T13:08:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17717">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/762efd02dac639866ae6f988c4daf5fe.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e58da08a9b45d701d9cf46d507f85c55</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23868">
                  <text>-. -·- --·- ···-- .

_...... ...

.~ 4

. ... · - - - · - · · · · · - · . _ ........ _.,..._

.. ..-·-·

"

•

'
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll•, Ohio • Point Pl••nt, WV

' es

•

-

......

•

•

'

~

'

IN • ..... D1

down from 3 cents last year, and
the support price has been set at
51.826, which tepresents a 2.1
increase over last year.
With many producers exploring other crops or olf-farm jobs,
this news is met with a lukewarm
reaction. However discouraged
we are w.ith the tobacco industry,
a little increase is still better than
a,big dectease.
•
Ag newt
·forage Review rescheduled
for this Wednesday fi:om 4- 8:30
p.m. at South District Extension
office in Jackson.
his th •
al
T . is e annu program that
was initiated by our own EdVollborn, and is usually held in early
December; however, was recently
postponed due to weather.
Ptesentations will include a
review of the fora~e research and
manage'llent pracbces conducted
· at the re~arch stan on. The cu~­
.rent coordinator, Dave Samples, IS
taking reservations at the Jackson
County ?ffice, 740~286-5044.
The cost IS $5 and a light supper
will be served.
aennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia

Kneen
ft0111PllpDI

targets.
For further rcgim·ation infor- ·
mation, call our office at 9926696.

•

Sunday, February 4, 2001

V"

Southern High School news, AS
Eastern upsets Chesapeake, Bl

Marketing quota vote set

GALLIPOLIS -Burley Tobac- copy of your sale bill along with
(Hal Knttn is Mtigs Cowlll)l~ co producen will vote Feb. 12-16 your card.
•
hers
and
employees,
and
how
to
Extension agent for agriculturt •nd to determine if they favor the con• Finally, the formula must be
For additional requirements,
evaluate your operation as to natural rt.sourcts, Ohio Sratt Uni- tinuation of marketing quow:
¥ijusted for the pool stocks.
please feel free to contact the Galwhether you are meeting your wrsity.)
The last referendum was held in lia-Lawrence Farm Service Agency
There is an estimated 125 million
J!OWids of tobacco in the pool,
February 1998 in which voten office at 111 Jackson Pila:, Gallipowhich by additional calculation
appl'OIIed nwlcet:ing quow of the lis, Ohio or call 1-800-391-6638
translates into a negative adjust1998, 1999,and 2000 crop yean. If or 446-8687.
ment of 3 7 million pounds.
two-thirds of those voting vote yes,
• • This is much improved by over
then•the quota syJtem will continUnited Producers livestock
•
last ~ar's negative reserV-e stock
ue through the 2003 crop year.
teport
If more than one-third of those
adjustment of 161 million
GALLIPOLIS - United Propounds. Without recent pool
voting vote no, the quota syJtem ducen· Inc. market teport fi:om
stock sales and 1999 loan forgivewill not be used beginning with Gallipolis for sales conducted on
'ness, the 2001 reserve stock
the 2001 crop year.
WedneSday.
adjustment would have been
Feeder Cattl~-Lower
BY .lata m L
teaching 4-H youth gardening,
According to regulations, all proapproaching 200 million pounds.
200.300# St. 5100-5102 Hf.
GALLIPOLIS -Do_ Yjlu have a helping with municipal garden ducen are to teceive their 2001
In tegards to the formula, the
S94-S97,
325-450# St. $90-5106
strong interest in gardening and upkeep, answering gardening quet-· _quota 110tices prior to voting in the
~7 million pounds is a negative,
enjoy helping othen?Then you are tion, from the public, judging teferendum. With all the late sales Hf. S87-$100 475-625# St. S85l~aving producen with the previinvited to learn mote about Ohio flower and vegetable projects at the and disaster leasing, we know that S94 Hf. S81-S91 65Q-800# St.
•I
ously mentioned 332 millionState Univenity Extension Master fair, and other varied items.
some of these notices will be S74-S83 Hf. 570-576.
·pound basic quota.
Cows-Steady
.
Gardener Program.
Training class size is limited. wrong, so please do not make any
. The secretary of agriculture has
WeD Muscled/Fleshed S41-S52;
'
OSU Extension in Gallia Coun- Those accepted into the tnining arrangements using these pounds.
the opportunity to raise or lower
Mediwiv'Lean
536-$42; .
ty is accepting applications for class
.
Leasing for 2001 crop year will
the change by 3 percentage
must pay a materials fee of
b ·
·1
·
·
Thin/Light S32-$35; Bull! 548Master Gardener training, which
A · 1 Ohi M
G
not egm unn somenme m
,.points; however, she chose to
~ . compete
o aster ar- M h th ti
1
L •.
begins March 7 and continues d
Manual . .
.d d
..
arc ; ere ore, we p an to nave $54.
leave it .at 34.4 percent. The effec15
every Wednesday through April 11.
e?"r
proVI e to eac~ all corrected notices sent by this
Back To The Farm:
tive quota determined by adding
Cow/Calf Pairs $525-S1,150:
The training hours are to be held ~ehm
. nal
. will date.
the basic quota to the to the 2000
Bred
Cows S475-S680; Baby
from
9
a.m.
to
3:30
p.m.
'
b
h
ld
o~bo
C
Hme~~
.
Please
return
your
marketing
under-marketinll' is estimated at County~ Extemion agent for agricu/e . e at . e . · · c ellZJe cards as soon .as possible. We will Calves $20-$225; Goats $20-$105..
lnctease your knowledge and
352 million pounds. In addition, turt and natural rtsoun:es, Ohio State
understanding of such varied hor- Agncultunl meenng on Monday not be able to teconcile your marUpcoming specials:
the no-net cost rests at 1 cent, Univmity.)
ticultunl topics as the best cultural at 7 ~-m. in the large meeting room • keting until we have your marketHerd bull leasing program availpractices .for growing flowers and . to discuss the program on more ing cani returned. For all sales able. High quality Angus bull!. ;
Call the office at 446-9696.
hauled in a truck, in hay, so it is a vegetables, house plant care, plant · deThpth. ....
G--~
. ,
made after Jan. 31, we will need a
.· b n1 di " h
d "F
disease and insect p~st identificae .....ter illlle!\er parnaJO u oa ng, s e sai . rom tion and control, and' much more. pant will a1so be m
·
dan
atten ce to
ul
el
h
Marc
J y, we s 1 primarily Instructors ate Extension profes- answer . any speci6.c. questions tha
' t , •· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
the yard·toitems."
For three yean, Isbell has dis- sionals and other experiS.
individuals may have. To apply, you ,.
To become an OSU Extension can contact the local extension
downtown barber shop," Isbell played The Dish Barn on the
Worldwide
Web.
Visitors
to
dishMaster
Gardener, you must attend " office at 446-7007. Hope to see all '
said. "When I was in Alabama I ·
went to Barber College and have barn@dishbarn.com can tour the all training sessions, pass any exam- individuals who ate interested ~t
exterior and interior of the Fen- inations that ate provided, and vol- the meeting, until then, think
been a barber for 20 yem."
Only cutting men's hair, Isbell ton Art Glass Showcase Dealer. unteer 50· hours of horticultural sprmg.
(Jennifer L Byrms is Gallia Counsaid she averages cutting 20 heads Many of the glass items ate dis- services to the community through
played
on
family
antiques
from
.
Extension
educational
program'&gt;'~
Extension agent for agria;ltural
of hair per month. She has even
and natural rt.IOUIW, Ohio State UniCjlt customers' hair while their her grandmother's home, which ming.
is
now
hers.
Such
service
could
include
vmity.)
I&lt;
wives have browsed through the
gift shop.
"I think my grandmother
: Looking out over the yard of would be pleased;' she said.
toncrete figures and fountains in
"Since we are a type of tourist
•
front of the business, Isbell said business, I am working to expand
For Initial evaluat'lons or follow-up visits, we offer
.this time of year is her slow time, the website," ls~ell said.
.
hours at 1423 3rd Avenue In the Huntington
sp she tends to k~ep less inventoWhat makes this small, familySpine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
_
· '
zy outside. Come spring though, owned business successful?
Joint .
the yard will be filled with con"What sets us apart is personalOur
next
clinic
date
Is
Implant
MIDLAND, Mich. (AP) -The areas such as ~live manage, etete items and rurming foun- ized, individual service," Isbell
Surgeons, InC.
Friday, February 23.
'
tains.
said. "We have a lot of repeat cus- pmident of the Michigan Eco- ment, lirll!nce, human resources,
. Isbell said one of the best sellers tomen and pick up new ones all nomic Development Corp. antici- information systems, legal, public
Call (614) 221-6m
pates final approval of the merger
the business has in conetete lawn the time."
·
for an appolnt'm ent.
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
alfain, pwcl!asing and environmenitems is the .goose that can be
"We really apprcci~te our local between 'Dow Chemical and
tal
ilml,!!'l"'Y'
clmaed fw eadln•on. ;
customcn;• Isbell said. "There is Union Cubide will come soon.
•
the·
nearDong
.
Rothwell
said
"Whoever came up with that never a dull moment around
found the goose that laid the hete. Some of our cpstomers ate ness of the merger helped the timgolden egg;• Isbell said, laughing.. second and third generation who ing ofits announcement of state tax
"We sell at least two to thtee knew my father and grandmoth- bteaks for the company.
"It should be within a matter of
clozen of those a s~ason - and er. I really enjoy having a close
days, if not a week or two," Roththey weigh about 70 pounds repour with the customers."
each:'
"I· feel blessed to live in Mason well said. "We have simply been
Taking pride in the fact the County - it is a wonderful place waiting for Dow to giV~: us the
business is "family" operated, to live and raise a family because green light that they were close
Isbell said when inventory is · of the quality of people in the enough with the FTC for us to
picked up and brought to the community," Isbell said. "I like it make this announcement:'
· Dow officials, however, on
business, it takes she, her husband right hete and don't plan on
"
Wednesday
said Rothw.:U's stateand thtee daughters to unload a going anywhere."
,
!tUck.
,I
The Dish Barn is open Monday ' ments were optimistic. The compa' The concrete items are hauled through Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 ny then sent a news release reg:ud-:
· out of Zanesville and Chillicothe, p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 ing dividends for both companies,
Qhio while others ate delivered p.m. during the winter. In the with conditions "in the event the
from Por!Smouth.
summer, hours ate 9 a.m. to 6 merger doses on or before Feb.14:'
"The concrete p1eces
·
are p.m. Monday through Sunday.
· Union Carbide's nonnal date of
record for stockholden. ·
•
Michigan Gov. John Engler has
announced that state olfered Dow a
taic etedit worth about S24.2 mil••
lion over 20 yean plus a ·State education tax break in exchange for
•
•
BY DIAN VUJOVICH
'.
ment Group, is headed by his 350 new jobs.
'
NEWSPIIIPfR ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION
brother, Reg. ,
The jobs could come tiom many
Sometimes when you're
•'
Gipson's role in the Digital Dow and Carbide locations, one of
investigating a fund, the portfolio
•
which
may
be
Carbide's
South
••
·managers can prove as intetesting Future Fund is to be its short...
ae the fund itself is.
term tactical manager using a Charleston,W.Va.,Technical Center.
• • Take the Alpha Analytics Dig- quantitative model to help deterThe jobs that would be added in
'
Midland would be salaried adn1inisiul Future Fund (877-257- mine which companies the fund
trative and management jobs in
~
4240), for instance. This technol- ought to invest iis assets into.
•
r.
•
ogy fund has been around only
•
slltce Dec. 22, 1999, but it has
• I
~1
ll)anaged to beat its benchmark
; - the NASDAQ composite - ·
...••
· ip calendar year 2000, and this
•
1
~ar, too, so far. Last year the
fund was down nearly 14 peil . cent, while the NASDAQ was ·
:
· o'ff over 39 percent; this year the
, f4nd was up almost 20 percent
"""
; al,ld, as of Jan.19, its benchmark
t:
• has been ahead about 12 percent.
' John Gipson and Michael
Cohen co-manage the Digital
F_utute Fund, and each brings his
own brand of expertise to it.
; Before getting into the
...
, money-managing business, GipK!n was a scientist for NASA.
"My claim to fame there was
:
,s howing that El Nino caused the
l
Earth to slow down by a very
small amount;' says the 45-year7
old, who earned his Ph.D. from
: ~e in theoretical physics.
•
1 Gipson said that a number of
•
: · sdentisll have made the move
•
. •. &amp;om science lo investing as
: ' quanti,tative techniques have
•
~
become more important in the
: 7 j~trnent arena. The firm he
Ask your physician ab ut medication concerns
: joined, Alpha Analytic• InvestIT'S BUSINESS AS tJSIIAl AT All OTHER Ames STORES
•
~

:I

•

a1

Master Gardener
meeting Monday

!"'ells County's

DAYTON
(AP)
Ohio has about two"more
months to remedy problems identified a year ago
by a federal audit of the
program funding services
to 2,800 disabled people
living in group homes or
face the possibility of a
fre eze on federal fundii'U!
for th e program.
The Residential Facilities Waiver Program in
Ohio allows people with
m ental retardation or a
developmental disability
such as cerebral palsy to
live in a group home of
four to eight people
instead of an institution.
The
Health
Care
Financing . Administration
has given the state and
county boards of Mental
Retardation and D evelopmental Disabilities until
March 27 to correct the
proble ms found in its
audit or risk at least temporarily losing federal
funds .
"'If we're not where '
HCFA waim us to be, we
run that risk. That's not a
risk Ohio wants to face,"
said Robert . Jennings,
MRDD spokesman.
The audit found that
the Ohio program was not
protectin·g residents from
potential abuse and poor
health care.
...An overall program of
effective quality assurance
does not exist," HCFA
.r egional
administrator '
Cheryl A. Harris said in
an April, 2000 letter outlining the findings.
The
audit
found,
among other things, that
people receiving services
lack freedom of choice of
providers, even after abuse
or neglect; that serious or
unusual incidents are not
effectively reported, investigated or corrected; and
that there is not an effective system preventing,
identifYing, and remedying incidents of abuse and
neglect .
' Kenneth
Ritchey,
director of the Ohio
Department · of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities direc~
tor, has pledged that the
system will be improved,.
Federal inspectors ·will
return to Ohio in March

The
Joint Implant
Center ·

Specialized Care for Total nee
and Hip Replacement

'

healrp

.

.

•

J:&gt;icking stocks based on model

..•

,.

·Holzer Health Hotline

...'•
..,.

....
.

Plean ... Fundi, AJ

....

We're Looking Out for YOU!

f•

STRUCTURE FIRE - Five fire departments responded to a
structure fire Sunday on Mulberry' Avenue following a call
from a neighbor who reported the blaze. Th e four-story
home was completely destroyed by both fi re and water damage. The incident is still under investigation. (Dave Harris
photo)

Fire destroys
Pomeroy
apartment
building·
FELT FANCIES - Hundreds of valentine felt fancies are being made at the Senior Citizens Center to be sent out as tray favors on Valentine's Day to those receiving home-delivered meals .
They also will be delivered to other homebound and nursing home residents. Here, Betty Maurer works on one of the heart-shaped favors. (Charlene Hoefl1ch photo)

VALENTINE'S DAY

Holiday for all ages
For the past UJeek, smiors have
been wtting hearts f)llt of red felt,
OMEROY Valentine's
enhancing thern UJith print designs,
Day is all about expressing
and attachirzg ribbons for hanging.
sentiment. But for some
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P
·.

there will be no one to say "I At Salisbury and Middleport Elementary
love you, I miss you, I'm thinking schools, ·students under the direction of art
about you." · ,
··
teacher Kelly Satterfield, are making valen-

And no valentines with hearts and flowers
will arrive.
Knowing some of Meigs County's older
residents, particularly those who are homebound or in nursing homes, fall into that catego~y. Patty Pickens, activities director at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center, came up with
ideas to "reach out and touch" those seniors.
Several projects are under way.
For the past week, seniors have been cut· ting hearts out of red felt, enhancing them
with print designs, and attaching ribbons for
hanging.

-

....

.......

...

",. '

'e
..

•
•

•
'

..

3
"
:•••E
.. ,

.

..

CHESHIR.E - Gallia/Meigs Community
Action Agency was recognized is a Best Practice
among Ohio's Co11)111Uni~:j-Action Agencies at
the 2001 OACAA Winte't.,Legislative Conference in Columbus.
-The Gailla/Melgs
received e Best PraoThe local agency was recognized for the miner
tlce among OhiO's Communl1y Action Agencies. from, the Ohio retraining program at the Southern Ohio Coal
Community Action Agency Assoclatldn, for ita miner retraining Co.'s Meigs Division. The program is a joint
· program at SOutllem Ohio Coal Co. Pictured with the award are, ·
effort of the Gallia/ Meigs CAA and Tri-County
· from left, Larry Ewing of the IJnlversit}i of Rip Grande, U.S. Rep.
Community Action Agency of Hocking, Athens
Ted Strickland, Lynn Crow represen~ng U.S. Senat9r Mike
and
Perry Counties.
'
DeWine; Lance Sogan of SOCCO, Bob Garbo, executive director
The competition, sponsored by the John
of Tri-County CAA, which also participates In the program, Cecil
Glenn
Institute for Public Service and Policy
Dillon of the United Mine WOikers, Trish McCullough of the Ga~
· lie/Meigs CAA. Josh Lancaster of Hocking College, Glenn Enslen and the Ohio Association of Community Action
of Tti-County CAA, and Albert Loveday and Bill Oiler, both repre- Agencies, was judged for innovation, documented outcomes, collaboration and ability to teplisenting the UMWA. (Submitted photo)
.

'

'

'

ment in the structure, was

pletely destroyed Sund ay not at home Jurin g the
following
a fir e that blaze.
Shank said Carter told
required the ass istance of
fi ve lo cal fire departments.
firefighters he had no insurPomeroy
ancc on the
Fi re
C hi ef
home.
Chris Shank
The structure
was
said
the
Pome roy Fire
WaS
co mpletely
destroyed by
Department ,
was
diSboth fire and
pat ched
to
water damthe home of
age, and the ·
Gerard Carter
ca use of th e
flre has yet to
around 6:15
dete rbe
p.m .
afte r
f
receiving
a
e tre
mined, Sha.n k
said
.
call fro m a
to lie deterneighbor,
"The inciwho said the
dent is still
under invcsti-=
structure was
on fire.
gati on,"
he
After arrivsaid .
ing on the
"Crews will return to the
scene, more than 48 fire - scene today to check out
fighters froti1 l&gt;o meroy, the stru cture once again ."
Middl eport, Rutland, Syra Th.ere were no injuri es
cuse and Mason. W.Va., disreported,
but Pomeroy fire - .
cove,red th e home, which is
divided into two apart- fighter Elijah Roush was
taken to H olzer Medica l
ments, engulfed in flames .
Firefighters were on the Center in Gallipolis after
suffer ing from exhaustio n
scene for four hours .
Cartet, who was home at while fighting th e blaze.

mined, Shank
said.

· . AEP's Southem Ohio Coal Co.
has ann·ounced its intet1tiom to.
close the rnittes in late December.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

•••"'

;

sH

SOCCO workers receive
'training prior to layoffs

.........

f

tines and at Southern and Meigs High
Schools, the Family Consumer Science class. es are baking valentine cookies.
With ea~h of the 260 home-delivered
meals which will go out from ·the Senior
Center on Valentine's Day, one or two of the
heart-shaped and decorated cookies will be
included, along with a valentine card accented with "bits of ribbon , bits of lace, hearts
and flowers all in place." and one of the
bright red felt fancies.
They also
be delivered to patients at
Plean
Holiday, A:J

will

Mulberry Avenu e was co m-

The structure
f
complete y
destroyed by
both fire and
d
water amage,
and the cause of
th fi has ye

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH ·

.....

.•

the time , escaped the fire
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
without injury.
POMEROY - A fourVin ce Laudermilt. who
story apartment building on . rented the second apa rt-·
BY TONY M. LEACH

cANs retraining program receives award

...

. This is why the Holzer Health Hotline
is staffed with a specially trained
Holzer Medical Center Registered Nurse
6 am untU 2 am, days a week

so Cents

may get
halted

Timing of Unio~ Carbide .
merger chHn Mich. official

-

Hometown Newspaper

funds

s•o

.

entine

Disability

1Bam

•.

February 5, 1001

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 175

IYRIJii

hmAIJe.DI

Monday

cate.
Th e judging panel consisted of C harles '
Adams, interim director of the School of Public
Policy and Management at the Ohio State Univer.;ity. Professor Anand Desai, quantitative and
research methods at the School of PP&amp;M at
OSU, and Leanna Pugliolli, adjunct professor at
Capital University's Executive MBA Program.
AEP's Southern Ohio Coal Co. has
announced its intentions to close the mines in
late December. The retraining program offers
retraining and career development before anticipated layoffi occur.
The goal of the progr.un is to begin skills
training and career dewlopnwnt prior to the lay-

PI•••••" CAA.Al

••

Today's

Sentinel
:z
Sections.- 11 ~

'Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
82-4

85
A4
A3
8!.3-4,6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 9-7-5; Pick 4: 3-1-4-5
Super LDito: 2-15-22-23-4449

Kicker: (}0-6-~5
W.VA.
Daily 3: B-5-4 Daily4: &amp;1 -7-9

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A2 • The Dilly Sentinel

AKRON (AP) -The number ofleaf-eating gypsy moth
caterpillars, which have destroyed thousands of puk acres,
expected to drop this yeu, according to an agriculture
expert.
.
The caterpillars in May and e~ly June eat leaves from
hardwood trees, especially oaks, before becoming moths. The
resulting defoliation can reduce growth in healthy trees and
kill unhealthy trees. But healthy trees may die after several
consect~tive years of defoliation.
Last year, about 24,000 acres were defoliated, according to
the Ohio Department,of Agriculture.
Not as many caterpillar. are expected to be around this
year because many were destroyed last spring by a naturally
occurring fungus. That resulted in fewer eggs to hatch, said
Dan Herms of the Ohio Agricultural Reseatch and Development Center outside Wooster.
"From all indications, it won't be as severe in northeast
Ohio this year as it was last year," he said of the upcoming
caterpillar invasion.
Ohio will continue to see trees being defoliated by the
caterpilla rs, and spraying an insecticide to reduce gypsy moth
number. will continue.
The state last year sprayed 71,000 acn!s offederal, state arid
private land in 14 counties. .
·

u

C INCINNATI (AP) -A state appeals court has upheld
•n award of $4.5 million to a Cincinnati couple whose lottery oudet was seized to make way for riverfront improvements.
A three-judge panel of the Fir.t District Court of Appeals
on Friday upheld the January 2000 award by a. Hamilton
County jury to Christopher and Cheryl Banks.
City officials used eminent domain to take the Banks'
property at the foot of the Clay Wade Bailey Bridge.
Although it was Ohio's leading lottery ticket sales outlet,
doing S40,000 per month in sales, the city paid the couple
$665,000 for the site.
The couple sued, saying the property was worth far more.
Last year,~ jury agreed and awarded them $4,469,760.
City officials said they had not determined whether to
· appeal the ruling further.

Charles pes S2 million
WILBERFORCE (AP) - Singer Ray Charles has donated $2 million to Wilberfotce University - the largest gift
ever to the private historically black school that traces its
roots to 1856.
The univer.ity thanked Charles in a special convocation on
Friday. Charles and his foundation made the donation last
year after the university made him an honorary doctor of
humane letter..
"It was what I had to do, and the reason I had to do it u
too many people have been good to me;' Clwles said.
·The donation established the Ray Charles Chair in Music
and Arts and the Ray Charles Scholarship Endowment in
Music and Arts. Each ~ beginning this spring, Wllberfotce
officials will select eight students to receive the renewable
scholmhips.
"You are helping the young people of this university pursue their dreams, aspirations and goals. For that, we are truly
grateful," said Brandi Barnes, student representative on the
univer.ity's board of trustees.

•

•

. . Plan could pt dftll discount
·AKRON (AP) - Seniors could get up to 30 petcent off
.the price of prescription drugs if the Legislature approves a
plan Gov. Bob Taft pitched during his State of the State
address.
.
The plan already has been introduce.d by Rep.John Hagan,
R-ADiance, as House Bill 4, and is scheduled for hearings
before the House Health and Family Services Committee on
Feb. 14.
. Hagan said nuny details will be resolved in comnlittee but
that the idea u to get insurance companies to bid on the pro- ·
gram.
The winning bidder would add the 2 million Golden
Buckeye cardholders to its customer base, which Hagan says
could help it negotiate lower prices for medications. The
insurer then would offer discounts to the cardholders.
"We know this proposal isn't the be-all and end-all;' Hagan
said. "But anYFhlog we can do to help, [ ·think, will be appre·
ciated and will be a valuable thing to do:•
Kirk Davis, Akron planning director for the Area Agency
on Aging, pnised the plan.
"You're constantly looking for innovative ways for seniors
to get medication;' he said. "Thirty petcent u a start and,
actually, a really good start. That's the way you have to look
at it."'
The Department of Aging, which ove...ees the Golden
Buckeye program, probably would oversee the prescription
drug program. Steve Proctor, a spo~n for the pepartment, said the goal u to add the benefit while keeping the
·Golden Buckeye card free to all Ohioans age 60 and older.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Gov. Bob Taft's
proposed state budget for the next two
years would eliminate funding for the
Civilian Conservation Corps, Ohio's
version of a Depression-era government
program that aims to straighten out wayward youth and move them from welfare
to work.
The program's $7 million annual budget would be cut by 60 percent next
year and eliminated in 2003.
Faced with a mandate from the governor to free more taX dollars for public
schools, the Department of Natural
Resources opted to scuttle the corps

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State University has
announced plans to repair or
replace 51 campus buildings,
most of which were built in
the 1960s and 1970s.
University trustees were
told that work on the buiJdipgs would cost about S240
million, including $103 million' to fix urgent maintenance problems.
Many roads and bridges
leading to the univer.ity will
be under construction at the
same time as the building
projects.
••
"There's going to be a lot
of activity. And a lot of activity on a college campus
where you already have a lot
of activity is going to be disc()ncerting to students and
staff'," said jim Steven~. the
university's associate vice
president for physical facilities.
The peak congestion is
expected to occur from 2002
to 2004.
"It's not that the number
of projects is so high, it's that
they are clustered in our academic area;• university architect Jill Morelli said.
· The two hridges that will
be worked on are main arteries to campus, spanning Lane
Avenue and Woody Hayes
Drive.

Meiners was especiatJy
happy to have met his wife,
Lisa, said his best friend, Craig
Bndley. He felt he could share
his dreams and successes wjth
her, Bradley said.
,
Meiner.' parents flew Sunday to North Carolina.
.
"It's so tragic;' said Debby
Deasy, whose husband, Dick,
coached Meiners' Avon Lake
High School basketball team.
"He was just starting to do
what he really wanted to do.
And he'd worked so hard to
get there."

CLEVELAND (AP) j JSOn Meiners was just starting
to live the life he had dreamed
about: he was learning to fly
the Marine Corps' Harrier jet
and his wife was pregnant.
On Saturday, Meiners, 27,
of Avon Lake, and another
aviator were killed when the
Harrie.r they were landing
crashed at Cherry Point
Marine Corps Air Station in
, Cherry Point, N.C. The name
of the other pilot was not
expected to be released until
Monday.

Major new building projects include a heart hospital;
student housing; a gymnasium to be built in stages to
replace Larkins Hall; and life
scie nces and architecture
buildings .
A new parking garage will
be built and two other parking garages will be updated.
Other classroom buildin1gs
will be renovated, as will the
main libnry.
Work also is planned for
the centerpiece of the campus, the Oval. The S2 million
Oval restoration project
inciudes installing new irrigation and sidewalks .and
rebuilding Mirror Lake's
walls.
Money for the projects
comes from state tax dollars,
bonds and donations.
Ohio State estimated the
state's share to be $75 million
to $100 million every two
year. for major projects, plus
another S15 million for
smaller ones.
The university pays S10
million from its budget for
repairs and renovatiop every
two years. The money is allocated every other yeu
bequse it follows the state's
two-year budget.
Bonds and donations are
the other sources of money
for repair work.

Report: State to give $11 0 ·
million to aid steel industr}t
An announcement was
pl.annedfor a news conference
Monday at the Cleveland
Regional
· Development
Office.
Taft spokesman Kevin
Kellems could not be reached
for comment Sunday night. A
message was left f9r him on
his pager.
•
Since November, three
steelmakers with Ohio operations ha've 6lbd for bankruptcy
protection -Wheeling-Pittsbwgh Steel Corp., LTV Corp.
andCSCLtd.

.CLEVELAND (AP) Gov. Bob Taft was preparing
to reveal details Monday of his
financial plan to aid the ailing
. steel industry.The plan calls for
a $110 million aid package,
The Plain Dealer reported.
Citing a soUtce close to the
governor, the ' newspaper
reported Sunday . that the
package will include grants,
loans and other assistance for
steelmakers to help ·them train
workers, pay for pollu~on­
connol equipment and renovate steel mills.

gains or 1ooee, from the ..,. of property, lllld busr- uw Of
~ oent you

,_ve coming.

hrblock.com or 1.SOO.HRBLOCK. ·

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

,,,

'..

,.

Jeremy Fink

Stanley CoHey

•

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Stanley "Tony" "Wahoo" Colley, ~
71, New Haven, W.Va., died at his home on Sunday. Feb. 4,
2001. He was a veteran of both the U.S. Army and U.S. Air
Fotce and a member of the Point Pleasant Loyal Order of the
Moose.
He was the son of the late Jack and Nina (Stanley) CoUey
and was also preceded in death by his wife, Anna Louise Colley, a son, J.C. Colley. a sister, Arawana Anthony, and a brother,
Jack Colley Jr.
·•
.
Surviving are a very special companion of 27 years, Nancy
Powell of New Haven; a son, Rusty Colley, a daughter, Toni
Colley Mangus, and a sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Dick
Walter., all of Columbus; .five grandsons: Cory Colley, Landon
Colley, Joshua Logan, Brandon Powell and Jason Powell; four
granddaughter.: Cheyenne Colley, Shawnee Jones, Katy Powell, and Lacey Powell; and several nieces and nephews.
The Rev. Joe Nunnuly will conduct graveside services at
New Lone Oak Cemetery in Point Pleasant on Wednesday,
Feb. 7, 2001 at 2 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Marvin R. "Huddy" StewFriends may call at New Haven Funeral Home on Tuesday
,art, 74, Point Pleasant, died on Saturday, Feb: 3, 2001, at from 6 until 9 p.m.
·. Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
·., · He was born on Aug. 20, 1926 in Mason County, son of
· the late James and Elizabeth Stewart. He worked in flood wall
." maintenance for the city of Point Pleasant and was a veteran
MIDDLEPORT - Colleen "Connie" Hoffman, 70, Mid"of the U .S. Army during World War II. He was a member of dleport,' died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2001, at Fairfield Medical
American Legion Post 23, Point Pleasant.
Center in Lancaster.
, . He is survived by his sister and brother-in-law, Judy and
She was born on Jan . 23, 1931, in Richwood, W.Va., daughI) ale Roush of Henderson; four brothers and three sisters- ter of the late Bernie and Rhoda Lowery Walkup. She was for. ·1n-law: Roy Stewart, Guy and Hilda Stewut, ·a nd Harold and merly employed as a cook in a restaurant.
.:Elizabeth Stewart, all of Point Pleasant, and Johnie and Doris
Surviving are two sons, Kenneth Hoflinan of Chambersburg,
: Stewart of Gallipolis, Ohio; and several nieces and nephews. Pa., and Ronnie Hoffinan of jacksonville; three daughters:
· In addition to his parents, he was preceded i11· death by his Debra (Rick) Hatfield of Pomeroy, Patty l:lunter of Cheshire,
· brothers: Jim, Herman and Charles Stewart, and his sisters, and Frances (Ronald) Hawkins of Middleport; 12 grandchilRene Randolph, Inez Randolph, Margaret MeSsick and · dren; nine great grandchildren; and a special friend, Connie
· · Audrey Westmoreland.
.
Gunio.
Services will be Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home in
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
_Point Pleasant with the Rev. Carl Swisher and Rev. Merle husband, Perry Hoffinan; her son, Frank Hoflinan; two brothWoods officiating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial ers, foster and Willard Walkup; and her son-in-law, Eugene
Gardens.
Hunter.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 6 to
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2001 at
8 p.m.
·
Fisher-Acree Funetal Home in Middleport, with Pastor Dan
·; Full military graveside services will be conducted by Freeman officiating. Burial will follow at Riverview Cemetery.
American Legion Post 23, Point Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from noon
until
the time of service at 2 p.m.
., " '

Marvin R. Stewart

Colleen Hoff1111an

.

'lftlstees to
meet
.

/\.

·· NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Jeremy David Fink, 28, New
. ·Haven, died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2001, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
', He was born on Feb. 3, 1973 in Gallipolis; son of Roger
and Georgann Fink of New Haven . He was an auditor for.
· Washington Inventory Services in Columbus. He was a
. !_llember of St . Joseph Catholic Church in Mason.
.·• :. Surviving, in addition to his parents, are three brothers:
; Stephen T. Fink of Gallipolis, Ohio, and Timothy W. Fink and
, ~hristopher M . Fink, both of Dublin, Ohio.
, Services will be Wednesday a\ St. Joseph Catholic Chutch
with the Rev. Fr. Regis Schlick officiating. Burial will follow
at St. Joseph Catholic Cemetery in Mason.
· Friends may call at the Fogelsong Funeral Home in Mason
on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
. A rosary service will be held on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:3? p.m. Wednesday at the
Pageville town hall.

To present
program
POMEROY - Junior and
Rita White will present a
musical program of the golden oldies Thur.day at 5:30
p.m . following the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center dinner. There is no admission
charge and the public is invited.

VFWtomeet
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at the
post. home at Tuppers Plains
Thursday at 7 p.m. Dinner
will be served at 6:30 p.m.
The 15th anniver.ary of the
post will be celebrated Sunday at 1 p.m. All VFW member., auxiliary members and
their families are invited.

·Widows to meet
MIDDLEPORT ·The
Widows Fellowship will· meet
Friday at noon at Millie's
Restaunnt in Bradbury.

EMS logs calls
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service

.

..

Funds .

answered 13 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 3:20 a.m., North
Fir.t Street, Darlene Johnson,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Sunday. 6:45 a.m., Main
Street, Cathlin Tillis, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
1 :43 p.m. , Cotten· R.oad,
Clerus Dalton, OMH;
.. 4:24 p.m ., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Margaret
'lVyatt, Holzer Medi cal Centei;
8:27 p.m ., Flatwoods , Preston Cook, treated;
Mulberry
9:39
p.m.,
Heights, Elijah Roush, HMC.
RUTLAND
12:02 p.m ., Powell Street,
.
!vella Driggs, HMC;
Sunday, 3:31 a.m., Leading
Creek Road, Richard and
Carol Ramsburgh, treated.
POMEROY
Sunday, West Main Street,
assisted by Centtal Dispatch,
jennifer Chaple, treated;
Mulberry
6:15
p.m.,
Heights, assisted by Middleport, Rutland, Syra ~use, and
Mason, W.Va., structure fire,
Gerard Carter residence, no
injuries.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 9:1 I a.m., Eastern
Junior High, Homer Smith,
HMC;
11:19 a.m. , assisted by
Reedsville, State Route I 24,
motor vehicle accident, Cora
Wolfe, Dave Bigley, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital;
10:21 p.m., State Route 7,
Ronald Shields, HM C;

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

employees, as well as their
spouses, with career choices
and options:'
•'·
The Community Calendar Ia tration deadline for the Sweet·
U.S. Rep.'Il:d Strickland, DfromPageA1
publllhed
I I I fret llrYICI to hearts Dinner hosted by South
' · ,· from Pap A1
Lucasville, presented the award. non-profit groupa wlahlng to Bethel New Testament Church
·
offi, said Trish McCullough, and in accepting it, McCul- announce mettlnga and
to be held Saturday at 6 p.m., is
, ·!0 review the state~ p~gress.
executive director of the Gal- lough and Bob Garbo, execu- clal eventa. The cilendar 11 Wednesday. The dinner will be
Through Med1Ca1d, the
tive director of· Tri-County not dlllgned to promote held at Tuppe(s Plains Elemen·
. {ederal government reimlla/Meigs CAA.
11111 or fund r111er1 of any tary School. The church youth
. , purses 59 percent of the cost
With the assistance of the CAA recognized the organiza•· ltema are printed only group will cater the dinner.
apac• permltl and cannot There Is no charge, but an offer·.
, :_9.f home and cornmlll1ityUniversity of Rio Gnnde, tions which have · committed
guaranteed to b1 printed 1 .lng will be taken on behalf ofthe
to
and
supported
the
retraining
"based services. Ohio picks
Hocking College and Triapeclllc
number of daya.
youth group. Dinner, special
"pp the rest of the total cost
County Vocational School, the efforts, including SOCCO, the '
music
and drama will be pre·
'of about $180 million.
miners can attend classes United Mine Workers, educaMONDAY
sented. Reservations are made ·
REEDSVILLE - Olive town· by calling 667·6740 or 378·
Ohio u one of five states
before and after shifts at the tional institutions, Strickland
ship
trustees, regular meeting, 9801.
and
U.S.
Senator
Mike
iudited so far under a presimine, while they are still
Monday,
8:30 p.m. al the town·
·•
employed a the mines.
DeWine.
POMEROY - Immunization
"We could not have imag- ship office on Joppa Road.
, •.
"OP. rtu ities for career
clinic, Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. at
•;:·..~-------------------~""-'d!;!9ielllpment d assistance can ined the help and support that
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse the Meigs county Health
lessen the im ct of the job loss we have received from our Board of Public Alfalra;-7 p.m . . Department, 112 E. Memorial
before they are distribu
Drive, Pomeroy. Flu shots also
and caieer change," McCul- partners:• McCullough said. "It Monday; village hall.
The seniors will sele
lough said. "The program would not have become a realROCKSPRINGS _ Meigs available. Take child's shot
:: .
prettiest and the students
records. Children to be accom·
serves the coal company ity without them."
Band Boosters, 8:30 p.m., panled
by
parent/legal
A1
making them will be recog"
---------~---------.
Meigs
High
School
band
room.
guardian.
;:
. nizcd.
All parents Invited.
Veterans Memorial_ ':fospital
1he importance ofValenWEDNESDAY
TUESDAY
•. extended care facihty and tine's Day is it provides a
POMEROY
- Meigs County
TUPPERS PL6.1NS - Base·
: the Behavioral Unit there, wonderful opportunity to
Agricultural
Society,
Wednes·
ball and softball organizational
day.
7:30.
p.m.
Committee
meet·
; ; and if any remain they will express feelings of affection,
meellng, 8:30 Tuesday, Tuppers
Ings
to
be
held
at
6:30
p.m.
Plains Firehouse. Parents,
: be taken to local nursing to show love and apprecia- ·
coaches
and public Invited.
; :homes.
.
tion for family, to renew and
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
; The cookies made by the cultivate friendships, and to .
Lnerary
Club; 2 p.m . Wednes·
ALFRED - Orange Township
warm into the 40s. Skies will
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
day,
Pomeroy
Library. Bernice
•: Meigs and Southern students connect with some less for- . ;A low pressure system mov- remain cloudy in the south.
Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
Carpenter
to
review "Harm
home of clerk, Osle Follrod.
• will be entered in a contest lunate - like homebound ing in from the west will
forecast
Done• by Ruth Rendell .
••;•at
the Center on the day senior citizens.
bring clouds to the region
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor
Today: Mosdy cloudy. High
· THURSDAY
the
Lord, Tuesday, 9 a.m.,
and drop snow north of the 42,low 29.
''
.
POMEROYPreceptor Beta
women's Bible study, Abundant
tri~county area, forecasters
Tuesday: Mosdy cloudy. Grace Church, South Third Ave. Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
said. The system also will raise
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. a
All women welcome.
High 50, low 36.
temperatures a bit.
t the Lutheran Church Thurs·
Wednesday: Putly cloudy.
The National Weather SerTUPPERS PLAINS- Regis- . day. Valentine program .
vice said the snow in the High 50, low 35.
Ohio Yllll)' Pullllol*lg Co.
Publlohed _., otlortlOOfl, .MOnday
Thursday: Partly cloudy.
qorth will change to rain on
through Frldoy, t11 Court St.,
Thesday as temperatures High 57,low 42.
Comctlon Polley
Pomlfoy,
Ohio.
Socond-clua
pold at Pomeroy.
·
011' main concern In all atorlea Is
to be accurate. Hyou know of an
bor: Ttot PrMa ond
error In a 1101)1. call1he .-sroom tnt Ohio
_ . , 8ond ldd- - ·
at (740) 982-2156.
tianllll Thll Dolly Bontlntl, t11 Court.

:

CAA

dential initiative to identify
abusive conditions at Medicaid-funded facilities for peopie with mental or physical
disabilitief.
HCFA has frozen waiver
fl d' . Ill'10 01. d C 1'
un .mg m
• s ·~
a Iforma after rCVlews m those
· states..
Oh1o has received three
90-day extensions because
the state was satisfied with its
interim steps toward correcting the problems.

from Pap

•P•·

-

t•

--Your Way--

for rancer

lllx• may be rieky. .

The Dally Sen11nel • Page A3

:·• H0 t•d
I ay

Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

·smokers
COLUMBUS (AP)
Knowing their risk for cancer,
more smoker. are asking docton for CT scans and in
response a Columbus hospital
is offering the tests at a discount. ·
o!b · .
Because most insurance
companies refuse to cover the
cost of lung-cancer screening,
the Mount Carmel hospital
group is offering the scans,
which use multiple X-ray
images of the lungs to detect
rumors, at a reduced cost.
"I'm sure it will prove to be
a lifesaver;' said Dr. Ivan
Zucker, lead medical director
for nuclear medicine services
at Mount Carmel.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.·

screens

Let our proiMaloilala illliWir your qU41111ona .but eopen111,

.

alternative to jail for young offenders,
Speck told The Columbus Dispatch
"As the program changed over the
years, we've had more kids with drugs in
their backgrounds and other issues," he
said. "There have been some great successes, but it also has been an administrative headache."
State Rep. james Aslanides, a Coshocton Republican who is chairman of the
House Agricultute Committee, said the
corps does work that otherwise wouldn't be done, or would cost taxpayer.
more if contracted out to private companies.

Hospital

.... Hyou own 1 bl!lln.tll, doing your

your home. And help u-t you

instead · of paring spending on state
parks, game wardens or forestry programs .
"It came down to a decision about
where we could serve the public the
most," said Sam Speck, the department's
director. "Young people with modest
skills can get jobs that pay more than
they could get in the CCC."
The program has provided job training and basic life skills to 18,000 men
and women during the past 24 years •.
The agency was created to manage
Ohio's natural resoutces, not to provide
a refuge for unemployed youth or an

University plans to repair, Ohioan killed In crash
loved flying Harrier Jet
replace 51 buildings

No
risky business.
Governor
........................................................................······· ..........
may protect
own
wetlands
C OLUMBUS (AP)
Gov. Bob Taft's administration
is considerin~ protection for\
\vetlands threatened by a U.S.
· Supreme Court decision that
struck down federal regulation of landlocked swamps
and mudflats.
The governor's office and
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency are discussing
whether to impose emer- .
gency rules requiring .develope~ and f.u mer. to obtain
p~ rnms before · destroying
wetlands affected by the i::ourt
decision, The Columbus Dispatch reported Saturday.

:. · Monday, February 5, 2001

Monday, Februery 5, 2001

Taft budget could spell en~_to 2+year-old program

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

•

'

With A Sentinel Love Message!

VALLEY ·WEATHER

System brings clouds to area

Examples of Sizes and Prices
liNCH AD ..... $7.00
11/l INCH .AD .. $8.50

,,

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

•

HappyValentiM'a Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sliter, ond

0

t&gt;

•

The Daily Sentinel

lrolttr.••

1hankl,.,.. 1111119auch
a IJI"'CCI famltyl

3 INCH AD ... $18.50

Reader Services

ll.oYe You Very Muehl

(APPROXIMATELY liO WORDS)

2 INCH AD ... $12.50
(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

HallPV Valehlfue's Day

str;sand 1fD1811t
'CUpid's arrow Is

true,

this
to you.
I'm sony about the
.. other nlah_t
When we hid that

In brl

TO MY HONEY

0

The main number Ia 992·2156.
Department extentlons 111e:
GIMntl manager
Ext. 12

Writing tills love

men11e SNel me lhe ·
opportunity to tell you .

!eli ... flsht.
A Sentinel love n 1 up
WG a

News Departmentl

Just how much I love
you and enJc?f beln8

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY.6,

sood Idea.

To show you Just how
much I ble you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
Ufi
TOGETHER!

~\VOf

your hutbarid: 1knoW
I sometimes don't
show lt but I rally do.
. Happy Vllentlnes Day!

N-

Ext.13

or

1:xt. 14

Other services

20cn.

•

•

.•

(1!_21_,

.
= ---tlon.

LOCAL STOCKS

St. Pomway, Ohio 41571111.

Ext. 3

Clrcullllloo

Ext. 4

Claellfted Adl

Ext. 5

Akzo-48\

---·No
--·-·

·Ltd. -1~.
.
BankOne-39
Oak Hill Financial Bob Evan~-18.,_
BorgW111ntr- 43),
15'·
OVB-25
Champion - 2!.
Charming Shope - 8'1. BBT-36\
Peoplea-17
City HOlding - 8'1.
Premier - 7'1.
F-Ill Mogul- 3~

a.lly
. .
50&amp;lbiOtlborl not doolrtng to PlY 1ht
can1or moy romft 1n ........,. dnct 10
Tltt Dolly lltn1tnel. Cradlt w11 bt gtvon

Arn~ac-

,To send e-mail

4.n

44),
Kmart-~.

AahiiM Inc. - 38
AT&amp;T _,;23),

Kroger.- 24'1.
Landa End - 29lt

Flrllar-23'1.

Rockwall- 47
Rocky Boots - 5l'.

Gannett - 83'1.

AD Shell - 60),
Sears-38
Shoney'a - 1

Wai·Mart - 54,,
Wendy'a- 23l.

Worthington - 10
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of 111t previous
doy'o transactions, provldtKI by Smhh Part·
nera at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

dallysenllnel@yahOo.com

~-···-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·~·-·-·-·-···-·-·-·-·
·
Write your MCIIIIIC Below:
·
I
'

Arch Coal- 17l.

lly oanter a r - . . OMWHit ·
~
OM mon1t1
...70 '
OMyeor
$11M

oublerlptlon
by
moll ponnltted In .,..
where homo

AdvW'IIIIng

General Electric - 46~
Harley Davidson

AEP~-13'1.

Subecrtptlon rates

I

I .

•

Mail Your Love Meuaae llld Totll Amount Due To:

.

Cour~aAL

••
I .

HARBLOCK

818 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH. 45788

Monday thru Friday
9:00AM thru 8:00 PM

740-892-8874

Saturday
9:QO AM thru 5:00 PM

The Dally Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Obio 45769

NIIDe:
• • Addreu:
Size ofV.lentine· •
Totll Amount EnolOHd:

e...::u ,--,-v·a·

•I

·
·

·

·

~~·

·

-~-··.a-·-

'

•

.,.if_¥ .•••, • ., ....

•

-12 or 15ft wide
• 6 Colora
• Olefin· Nylon Blend

.... s 6!!

-20Colora
-100% Nylon• Scotchguard

$

6!!

-18 Colors
-100% Nylon .
-12ft. Width

• ,1 2 &amp; 15Ft. Width

·Scotchguard

Sf .~99
~Sq.

UQuallt~ Carpets atAifonlable Pri&lt;t'&lt;l. r....,~~~Oil...;,.;~

Free No Obllptloa Quota
Fumllure &amp; Applllnces Moved Free
Free removal of old carpet

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A2 • The Dilly Sentinel

AKRON (AP) -The number ofleaf-eating gypsy moth
caterpillars, which have destroyed thousands of puk acres,
expected to drop this yeu, according to an agriculture
expert.
.
The caterpillars in May and e~ly June eat leaves from
hardwood trees, especially oaks, before becoming moths. The
resulting defoliation can reduce growth in healthy trees and
kill unhealthy trees. But healthy trees may die after several
consect~tive years of defoliation.
Last year, about 24,000 acres were defoliated, according to
the Ohio Department,of Agriculture.
Not as many caterpillar. are expected to be around this
year because many were destroyed last spring by a naturally
occurring fungus. That resulted in fewer eggs to hatch, said
Dan Herms of the Ohio Agricultural Reseatch and Development Center outside Wooster.
"From all indications, it won't be as severe in northeast
Ohio this year as it was last year," he said of the upcoming
caterpillar invasion.
Ohio will continue to see trees being defoliated by the
caterpilla rs, and spraying an insecticide to reduce gypsy moth
number. will continue.
The state last year sprayed 71,000 acn!s offederal, state arid
private land in 14 counties. .
·

u

C INCINNATI (AP) -A state appeals court has upheld
•n award of $4.5 million to a Cincinnati couple whose lottery oudet was seized to make way for riverfront improvements.
A three-judge panel of the Fir.t District Court of Appeals
on Friday upheld the January 2000 award by a. Hamilton
County jury to Christopher and Cheryl Banks.
City officials used eminent domain to take the Banks'
property at the foot of the Clay Wade Bailey Bridge.
Although it was Ohio's leading lottery ticket sales outlet,
doing S40,000 per month in sales, the city paid the couple
$665,000 for the site.
The couple sued, saying the property was worth far more.
Last year,~ jury agreed and awarded them $4,469,760.
City officials said they had not determined whether to
· appeal the ruling further.

Charles pes S2 million
WILBERFORCE (AP) - Singer Ray Charles has donated $2 million to Wilberfotce University - the largest gift
ever to the private historically black school that traces its
roots to 1856.
The univer.ity thanked Charles in a special convocation on
Friday. Charles and his foundation made the donation last
year after the university made him an honorary doctor of
humane letter..
"It was what I had to do, and the reason I had to do it u
too many people have been good to me;' Clwles said.
·The donation established the Ray Charles Chair in Music
and Arts and the Ray Charles Scholarship Endowment in
Music and Arts. Each ~ beginning this spring, Wllberfotce
officials will select eight students to receive the renewable
scholmhips.
"You are helping the young people of this university pursue their dreams, aspirations and goals. For that, we are truly
grateful," said Brandi Barnes, student representative on the
univer.ity's board of trustees.

•

•

. . Plan could pt dftll discount
·AKRON (AP) - Seniors could get up to 30 petcent off
.the price of prescription drugs if the Legislature approves a
plan Gov. Bob Taft pitched during his State of the State
address.
.
The plan already has been introduce.d by Rep.John Hagan,
R-ADiance, as House Bill 4, and is scheduled for hearings
before the House Health and Family Services Committee on
Feb. 14.
. Hagan said nuny details will be resolved in comnlittee but
that the idea u to get insurance companies to bid on the pro- ·
gram.
The winning bidder would add the 2 million Golden
Buckeye cardholders to its customer base, which Hagan says
could help it negotiate lower prices for medications. The
insurer then would offer discounts to the cardholders.
"We know this proposal isn't the be-all and end-all;' Hagan
said. "But anYFhlog we can do to help, [ ·think, will be appre·
ciated and will be a valuable thing to do:•
Kirk Davis, Akron planning director for the Area Agency
on Aging, pnised the plan.
"You're constantly looking for innovative ways for seniors
to get medication;' he said. "Thirty petcent u a start and,
actually, a really good start. That's the way you have to look
at it."'
The Department of Aging, which ove...ees the Golden
Buckeye program, probably would oversee the prescription
drug program. Steve Proctor, a spo~n for the pepartment, said the goal u to add the benefit while keeping the
·Golden Buckeye card free to all Ohioans age 60 and older.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Gov. Bob Taft's
proposed state budget for the next two
years would eliminate funding for the
Civilian Conservation Corps, Ohio's
version of a Depression-era government
program that aims to straighten out wayward youth and move them from welfare
to work.
The program's $7 million annual budget would be cut by 60 percent next
year and eliminated in 2003.
Faced with a mandate from the governor to free more taX dollars for public
schools, the Department of Natural
Resources opted to scuttle the corps

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State University has
announced plans to repair or
replace 51 campus buildings,
most of which were built in
the 1960s and 1970s.
University trustees were
told that work on the buiJdipgs would cost about S240
million, including $103 million' to fix urgent maintenance problems.
Many roads and bridges
leading to the univer.ity will
be under construction at the
same time as the building
projects.
••
"There's going to be a lot
of activity. And a lot of activity on a college campus
where you already have a lot
of activity is going to be disc()ncerting to students and
staff'," said jim Steven~. the
university's associate vice
president for physical facilities.
The peak congestion is
expected to occur from 2002
to 2004.
"It's not that the number
of projects is so high, it's that
they are clustered in our academic area;• university architect Jill Morelli said.
· The two hridges that will
be worked on are main arteries to campus, spanning Lane
Avenue and Woody Hayes
Drive.

Meiners was especiatJy
happy to have met his wife,
Lisa, said his best friend, Craig
Bndley. He felt he could share
his dreams and successes wjth
her, Bradley said.
,
Meiner.' parents flew Sunday to North Carolina.
.
"It's so tragic;' said Debby
Deasy, whose husband, Dick,
coached Meiners' Avon Lake
High School basketball team.
"He was just starting to do
what he really wanted to do.
And he'd worked so hard to
get there."

CLEVELAND (AP) j JSOn Meiners was just starting
to live the life he had dreamed
about: he was learning to fly
the Marine Corps' Harrier jet
and his wife was pregnant.
On Saturday, Meiners, 27,
of Avon Lake, and another
aviator were killed when the
Harrie.r they were landing
crashed at Cherry Point
Marine Corps Air Station in
, Cherry Point, N.C. The name
of the other pilot was not
expected to be released until
Monday.

Major new building projects include a heart hospital;
student housing; a gymnasium to be built in stages to
replace Larkins Hall; and life
scie nces and architecture
buildings .
A new parking garage will
be built and two other parking garages will be updated.
Other classroom buildin1gs
will be renovated, as will the
main libnry.
Work also is planned for
the centerpiece of the campus, the Oval. The S2 million
Oval restoration project
inciudes installing new irrigation and sidewalks .and
rebuilding Mirror Lake's
walls.
Money for the projects
comes from state tax dollars,
bonds and donations.
Ohio State estimated the
state's share to be $75 million
to $100 million every two
year. for major projects, plus
another S15 million for
smaller ones.
The university pays S10
million from its budget for
repairs and renovatiop every
two years. The money is allocated every other yeu
bequse it follows the state's
two-year budget.
Bonds and donations are
the other sources of money
for repair work.

Report: State to give $11 0 ·
million to aid steel industr}t
An announcement was
pl.annedfor a news conference
Monday at the Cleveland
Regional
· Development
Office.
Taft spokesman Kevin
Kellems could not be reached
for comment Sunday night. A
message was left f9r him on
his pager.
•
Since November, three
steelmakers with Ohio operations ha've 6lbd for bankruptcy
protection -Wheeling-Pittsbwgh Steel Corp., LTV Corp.
andCSCLtd.

.CLEVELAND (AP) Gov. Bob Taft was preparing
to reveal details Monday of his
financial plan to aid the ailing
. steel industry.The plan calls for
a $110 million aid package,
The Plain Dealer reported.
Citing a soUtce close to the
governor, the ' newspaper
reported Sunday . that the
package will include grants,
loans and other assistance for
steelmakers to help ·them train
workers, pay for pollu~on­
connol equipment and renovate steel mills.

gains or 1ooee, from the ..,. of property, lllld busr- uw Of
~ oent you

,_ve coming.

hrblock.com or 1.SOO.HRBLOCK. ·

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

,,,

'..

,.

Jeremy Fink

Stanley CoHey

•

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Stanley "Tony" "Wahoo" Colley, ~
71, New Haven, W.Va., died at his home on Sunday. Feb. 4,
2001. He was a veteran of both the U.S. Army and U.S. Air
Fotce and a member of the Point Pleasant Loyal Order of the
Moose.
He was the son of the late Jack and Nina (Stanley) CoUey
and was also preceded in death by his wife, Anna Louise Colley, a son, J.C. Colley. a sister, Arawana Anthony, and a brother,
Jack Colley Jr.
·•
.
Surviving are a very special companion of 27 years, Nancy
Powell of New Haven; a son, Rusty Colley, a daughter, Toni
Colley Mangus, and a sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Dick
Walter., all of Columbus; .five grandsons: Cory Colley, Landon
Colley, Joshua Logan, Brandon Powell and Jason Powell; four
granddaughter.: Cheyenne Colley, Shawnee Jones, Katy Powell, and Lacey Powell; and several nieces and nephews.
The Rev. Joe Nunnuly will conduct graveside services at
New Lone Oak Cemetery in Point Pleasant on Wednesday,
Feb. 7, 2001 at 2 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Marvin R. "Huddy" StewFriends may call at New Haven Funeral Home on Tuesday
,art, 74, Point Pleasant, died on Saturday, Feb: 3, 2001, at from 6 until 9 p.m.
·. Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
·., · He was born on Aug. 20, 1926 in Mason County, son of
· the late James and Elizabeth Stewart. He worked in flood wall
." maintenance for the city of Point Pleasant and was a veteran
MIDDLEPORT - Colleen "Connie" Hoffman, 70, Mid"of the U .S. Army during World War II. He was a member of dleport,' died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2001, at Fairfield Medical
American Legion Post 23, Point Pleasant.
Center in Lancaster.
, . He is survived by his sister and brother-in-law, Judy and
She was born on Jan . 23, 1931, in Richwood, W.Va., daughI) ale Roush of Henderson; four brothers and three sisters- ter of the late Bernie and Rhoda Lowery Walkup. She was for. ·1n-law: Roy Stewart, Guy and Hilda Stewut, ·a nd Harold and merly employed as a cook in a restaurant.
.:Elizabeth Stewart, all of Point Pleasant, and Johnie and Doris
Surviving are two sons, Kenneth Hoflinan of Chambersburg,
: Stewart of Gallipolis, Ohio; and several nieces and nephews. Pa., and Ronnie Hoffinan of jacksonville; three daughters:
· In addition to his parents, he was preceded i11· death by his Debra (Rick) Hatfield of Pomeroy, Patty l:lunter of Cheshire,
· brothers: Jim, Herman and Charles Stewart, and his sisters, and Frances (Ronald) Hawkins of Middleport; 12 grandchilRene Randolph, Inez Randolph, Margaret MeSsick and · dren; nine great grandchildren; and a special friend, Connie
· · Audrey Westmoreland.
.
Gunio.
Services will be Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home in
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
_Point Pleasant with the Rev. Carl Swisher and Rev. Merle husband, Perry Hoffinan; her son, Frank Hoflinan; two brothWoods officiating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial ers, foster and Willard Walkup; and her son-in-law, Eugene
Gardens.
Hunter.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 6 to
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2001 at
8 p.m.
·
Fisher-Acree Funetal Home in Middleport, with Pastor Dan
·; Full military graveside services will be conducted by Freeman officiating. Burial will follow at Riverview Cemetery.
American Legion Post 23, Point Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from noon
until
the time of service at 2 p.m.
., " '

Marvin R. Stewart

Colleen Hoff1111an

.

'lftlstees to
meet
.

/\.

·· NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Jeremy David Fink, 28, New
. ·Haven, died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2001, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
', He was born on Feb. 3, 1973 in Gallipolis; son of Roger
and Georgann Fink of New Haven . He was an auditor for.
· Washington Inventory Services in Columbus. He was a
. !_llember of St . Joseph Catholic Church in Mason.
.·• :. Surviving, in addition to his parents, are three brothers:
; Stephen T. Fink of Gallipolis, Ohio, and Timothy W. Fink and
, ~hristopher M . Fink, both of Dublin, Ohio.
, Services will be Wednesday a\ St. Joseph Catholic Chutch
with the Rev. Fr. Regis Schlick officiating. Burial will follow
at St. Joseph Catholic Cemetery in Mason.
· Friends may call at the Fogelsong Funeral Home in Mason
on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
. A rosary service will be held on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:3? p.m. Wednesday at the
Pageville town hall.

To present
program
POMEROY - Junior and
Rita White will present a
musical program of the golden oldies Thur.day at 5:30
p.m . following the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center dinner. There is no admission
charge and the public is invited.

VFWtomeet
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at the
post. home at Tuppers Plains
Thursday at 7 p.m. Dinner
will be served at 6:30 p.m.
The 15th anniver.ary of the
post will be celebrated Sunday at 1 p.m. All VFW member., auxiliary members and
their families are invited.

·Widows to meet
MIDDLEPORT ·The
Widows Fellowship will· meet
Friday at noon at Millie's
Restaunnt in Bradbury.

EMS logs calls
POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service

.

..

Funds .

answered 13 calls for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 3:20 a.m., North
Fir.t Street, Darlene Johnson,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Sunday. 6:45 a.m., Main
Street, Cathlin Tillis, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
1 :43 p.m. , Cotten· R.oad,
Clerus Dalton, OMH;
.. 4:24 p.m ., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Margaret
'lVyatt, Holzer Medi cal Centei;
8:27 p.m ., Flatwoods , Preston Cook, treated;
Mulberry
9:39
p.m.,
Heights, Elijah Roush, HMC.
RUTLAND
12:02 p.m ., Powell Street,
.
!vella Driggs, HMC;
Sunday, 3:31 a.m., Leading
Creek Road, Richard and
Carol Ramsburgh, treated.
POMEROY
Sunday, West Main Street,
assisted by Centtal Dispatch,
jennifer Chaple, treated;
Mulberry
6:15
p.m.,
Heights, assisted by Middleport, Rutland, Syra ~use, and
Mason, W.Va., structure fire,
Gerard Carter residence, no
injuries.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 9:1 I a.m., Eastern
Junior High, Homer Smith,
HMC;
11:19 a.m. , assisted by
Reedsville, State Route I 24,
motor vehicle accident, Cora
Wolfe, Dave Bigley, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital;
10:21 p.m., State Route 7,
Ronald Shields, HM C;

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

employees, as well as their
spouses, with career choices
and options:'
•'·
The Community Calendar Ia tration deadline for the Sweet·
U.S. Rep.'Il:d Strickland, DfromPageA1
publllhed
I I I fret llrYICI to hearts Dinner hosted by South
' · ,· from Pap A1
Lucasville, presented the award. non-profit groupa wlahlng to Bethel New Testament Church
·
offi, said Trish McCullough, and in accepting it, McCul- announce mettlnga and
to be held Saturday at 6 p.m., is
, ·!0 review the state~ p~gress.
executive director of the Gal- lough and Bob Garbo, execu- clal eventa. The cilendar 11 Wednesday. The dinner will be
Through Med1Ca1d, the
tive director of· Tri-County not dlllgned to promote held at Tuppe(s Plains Elemen·
. {ederal government reimlla/Meigs CAA.
11111 or fund r111er1 of any tary School. The church youth
. , purses 59 percent of the cost
With the assistance of the CAA recognized the organiza•· ltema are printed only group will cater the dinner.
apac• permltl and cannot There Is no charge, but an offer·.
, :_9.f home and cornmlll1ityUniversity of Rio Gnnde, tions which have · committed
guaranteed to b1 printed 1 .lng will be taken on behalf ofthe
to
and
supported
the
retraining
"based services. Ohio picks
Hocking College and Triapeclllc
number of daya.
youth group. Dinner, special
"pp the rest of the total cost
County Vocational School, the efforts, including SOCCO, the '
music
and drama will be pre·
'of about $180 million.
miners can attend classes United Mine Workers, educaMONDAY
sented. Reservations are made ·
REEDSVILLE - Olive town· by calling 667·6740 or 378·
Ohio u one of five states
before and after shifts at the tional institutions, Strickland
ship
trustees, regular meeting, 9801.
and
U.S.
Senator
Mike
iudited so far under a presimine, while they are still
Monday,
8:30 p.m. al the town·
·•
employed a the mines.
DeWine.
POMEROY - Immunization
"We could not have imag- ship office on Joppa Road.
, •.
"OP. rtu ities for career
clinic, Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. at
•;:·..~-------------------~""-'d!;!9ielllpment d assistance can ined the help and support that
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse the Meigs county Health
lessen the im ct of the job loss we have received from our Board of Public Alfalra;-7 p.m . . Department, 112 E. Memorial
before they are distribu
Drive, Pomeroy. Flu shots also
and caieer change," McCul- partners:• McCullough said. "It Monday; village hall.
The seniors will sele
lough said. "The program would not have become a realROCKSPRINGS _ Meigs available. Take child's shot
:: .
prettiest and the students
records. Children to be accom·
serves the coal company ity without them."
Band Boosters, 8:30 p.m., panled
by
parent/legal
A1
making them will be recog"
---------~---------.
Meigs
High
School
band
room.
guardian.
;:
. nizcd.
All parents Invited.
Veterans Memorial_ ':fospital
1he importance ofValenWEDNESDAY
TUESDAY
•. extended care facihty and tine's Day is it provides a
POMEROY
- Meigs County
TUPPERS PL6.1NS - Base·
: the Behavioral Unit there, wonderful opportunity to
Agricultural
Society,
Wednes·
ball and softball organizational
day.
7:30.
p.m.
Committee
meet·
; ; and if any remain they will express feelings of affection,
meellng, 8:30 Tuesday, Tuppers
Ings
to
be
held
at
6:30
p.m.
Plains Firehouse. Parents,
: be taken to local nursing to show love and apprecia- ·
coaches
and public Invited.
; :homes.
.
tion for family, to renew and
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
; The cookies made by the cultivate friendships, and to .
Lnerary
Club; 2 p.m . Wednes·
ALFRED - Orange Township
warm into the 40s. Skies will
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
day,
Pomeroy
Library. Bernice
•: Meigs and Southern students connect with some less for- . ;A low pressure system mov- remain cloudy in the south.
Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
Carpenter
to
review "Harm
home of clerk, Osle Follrod.
• will be entered in a contest lunate - like homebound ing in from the west will
forecast
Done• by Ruth Rendell .
••;•at
the Center on the day senior citizens.
bring clouds to the region
MIDDLEPORT- Ladies lor
Today: Mosdy cloudy. High
· THURSDAY
the
Lord, Tuesday, 9 a.m.,
and drop snow north of the 42,low 29.
''
.
POMEROYPreceptor Beta
women's Bible study, Abundant
tri~county area, forecasters
Tuesday: Mosdy cloudy. Grace Church, South Third Ave. Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
said. The system also will raise
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. a
All women welcome.
High 50, low 36.
temperatures a bit.
t the Lutheran Church Thurs·
Wednesday: Putly cloudy.
The National Weather SerTUPPERS PLAINS- Regis- . day. Valentine program .
vice said the snow in the High 50, low 35.
Ohio Yllll)' Pullllol*lg Co.
Publlohed _., otlortlOOfl, .MOnday
Thursday: Partly cloudy.
qorth will change to rain on
through Frldoy, t11 Court St.,
Thesday as temperatures High 57,low 42.
Comctlon Polley
Pomlfoy,
Ohio.
Socond-clua
pold at Pomeroy.
·
011' main concern In all atorlea Is
to be accurate. Hyou know of an
bor: Ttot PrMa ond
error In a 1101)1. call1he .-sroom tnt Ohio
_ . , 8ond ldd- - ·
at (740) 982-2156.
tianllll Thll Dolly Bontlntl, t11 Court.

:

CAA

dential initiative to identify
abusive conditions at Medicaid-funded facilities for peopie with mental or physical
disabilitief.
HCFA has frozen waiver
fl d' . Ill'10 01. d C 1'
un .mg m
• s ·~
a Iforma after rCVlews m those
· states..
Oh1o has received three
90-day extensions because
the state was satisfied with its
interim steps toward correcting the problems.

from Pap

•P•·

-

t•

--Your Way--

for rancer

lllx• may be rieky. .

The Dally Sen11nel • Page A3

:·• H0 t•d
I ay

Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

·smokers
COLUMBUS (AP)
Knowing their risk for cancer,
more smoker. are asking docton for CT scans and in
response a Columbus hospital
is offering the tests at a discount. ·
o!b · .
Because most insurance
companies refuse to cover the
cost of lung-cancer screening,
the Mount Carmel hospital
group is offering the scans,
which use multiple X-ray
images of the lungs to detect
rumors, at a reduced cost.
"I'm sure it will prove to be
a lifesaver;' said Dr. Ivan
Zucker, lead medical director
for nuclear medicine services
at Mount Carmel.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.·

screens

Let our proiMaloilala illliWir your qU41111ona .but eopen111,

.

alternative to jail for young offenders,
Speck told The Columbus Dispatch
"As the program changed over the
years, we've had more kids with drugs in
their backgrounds and other issues," he
said. "There have been some great successes, but it also has been an administrative headache."
State Rep. james Aslanides, a Coshocton Republican who is chairman of the
House Agricultute Committee, said the
corps does work that otherwise wouldn't be done, or would cost taxpayer.
more if contracted out to private companies.

Hospital

.... Hyou own 1 bl!lln.tll, doing your

your home. And help u-t you

instead · of paring spending on state
parks, game wardens or forestry programs .
"It came down to a decision about
where we could serve the public the
most," said Sam Speck, the department's
director. "Young people with modest
skills can get jobs that pay more than
they could get in the CCC."
The program has provided job training and basic life skills to 18,000 men
and women during the past 24 years •.
The agency was created to manage
Ohio's natural resoutces, not to provide
a refuge for unemployed youth or an

University plans to repair, Ohioan killed In crash
loved flying Harrier Jet
replace 51 buildings

No
risky business.
Governor
........................................................................······· ..........
may protect
own
wetlands
C OLUMBUS (AP)
Gov. Bob Taft's administration
is considerin~ protection for\
\vetlands threatened by a U.S.
· Supreme Court decision that
struck down federal regulation of landlocked swamps
and mudflats.
The governor's office and
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency are discussing
whether to impose emer- .
gency rules requiring .develope~ and f.u mer. to obtain
p~ rnms before · destroying
wetlands affected by the i::ourt
decision, The Columbus Dispatch reported Saturday.

:. · Monday, February 5, 2001

Monday, Februery 5, 2001

Taft budget could spell en~_to 2+year-old program

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

•

'

With A Sentinel Love Message!

VALLEY ·WEATHER

System brings clouds to area

Examples of Sizes and Prices
liNCH AD ..... $7.00
11/l INCH .AD .. $8.50

,,

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

•

HappyValentiM'a Day
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dad, Sliter, ond

0

t&gt;

•

The Daily Sentinel

lrolttr.••

1hankl,.,.. 1111119auch
a IJI"'CCI famltyl

3 INCH AD ... $18.50

Reader Services

ll.oYe You Very Muehl

(APPROXIMATELY liO WORDS)

2 INCH AD ... $12.50
(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDS)

HallPV Valehlfue's Day

str;sand 1fD1811t
'CUpid's arrow Is

true,

this
to you.
I'm sony about the
.. other nlah_t
When we hid that

In brl

TO MY HONEY

0

The main number Ia 992·2156.
Department extentlons 111e:
GIMntl manager
Ext. 12

Writing tills love

men11e SNel me lhe ·
opportunity to tell you .

!eli ... flsht.
A Sentinel love n 1 up
WG a

News Departmentl

Just how much I love
you and enJc?f beln8

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY.6,

sood Idea.

To show you Just how
much I ble you, Marla.

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
Ufi
TOGETHER!

~\VOf

your hutbarid: 1knoW
I sometimes don't
show lt but I rally do.
. Happy Vllentlnes Day!

N-

Ext.13

or

1:xt. 14

Other services

20cn.

•

•

.•

(1!_21_,

.
= ---tlon.

LOCAL STOCKS

St. Pomway, Ohio 41571111.

Ext. 3

Clrcullllloo

Ext. 4

Claellfted Adl

Ext. 5

Akzo-48\

---·No
--·-·

·Ltd. -1~.
.
BankOne-39
Oak Hill Financial Bob Evan~-18.,_
BorgW111ntr- 43),
15'·
OVB-25
Champion - 2!.
Charming Shope - 8'1. BBT-36\
Peoplea-17
City HOlding - 8'1.
Premier - 7'1.
F-Ill Mogul- 3~

a.lly
. .
50&amp;lbiOtlborl not doolrtng to PlY 1ht
can1or moy romft 1n ........,. dnct 10
Tltt Dolly lltn1tnel. Cradlt w11 bt gtvon

Arn~ac-

,To send e-mail

4.n

44),
Kmart-~.

AahiiM Inc. - 38
AT&amp;T _,;23),

Kroger.- 24'1.
Landa End - 29lt

Flrllar-23'1.

Rockwall- 47
Rocky Boots - 5l'.

Gannett - 83'1.

AD Shell - 60),
Sears-38
Shoney'a - 1

Wai·Mart - 54,,
Wendy'a- 23l.

Worthington - 10
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of 111t previous
doy'o transactions, provldtKI by Smhh Part·
nera at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

dallysenllnel@yahOo.com

~-···-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·~·-·-·-·-···-·-·-·-·
·
Write your MCIIIIIC Below:
·
I
'

Arch Coal- 17l.

lly oanter a r - . . OMWHit ·
~
OM mon1t1
...70 '
OMyeor
$11M

oublerlptlon
by
moll ponnltted In .,..
where homo

AdvW'IIIIng

General Electric - 46~
Harley Davidson

AEP~-13'1.

Subecrtptlon rates

I

I .

•

Mail Your Love Meuaae llld Totll Amount Due To:

.

Cour~aAL

••
I .

HARBLOCK

818 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH. 45788

Monday thru Friday
9:00AM thru 8:00 PM

740-892-8874

Saturday
9:QO AM thru 5:00 PM

The Dally Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Obio 45769

NIIDe:
• • Addreu:
Size ofV.lentine· •
Totll Amount EnolOHd:

e...::u ,--,-v·a·

•I

·
·

·

·

~~·

·

-~-··.a-·-

'

•

.,.if_¥ .•••, • ., ....

•

-12 or 15ft wide
• 6 Colora
• Olefin· Nylon Blend

.... s 6!!

-20Colora
-100% Nylon• Scotchguard

$

6!!

-18 Colors
-100% Nylon .
-12ft. Width

• ,1 2 &amp; 15Ft. Width

·Scotchguard

Sf .~99
~Sq.

UQuallt~ Carpets atAifonlable Pri&lt;t'&lt;l. r....,~~~Oil...;,.;~

Free No Obllptloa Quota
Fumllure &amp; Applllnces Moved Free
Free removal of old carpet

�.. _.

-- .

• •

.Page A4

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

-·

•

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156. fllll: 982·2157

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn L-1•
Diane Kay Hill
Controller·

Utun tv tM Nilw"" w'ko,.,. Tltt1 tltoulll IH Jm tJuut 3011 t!HH'fb. All kttnr
.,. lflll,itet w ftlilinwiUNI "'ult IH siJMd tllld l~tdiMlt Mlllnu tnul kk/IIWIM ulillbu.
No •n~ifiiH Wtt1n wiU H ruWithH. UINrs sluHlld H i1t .-od tuk, .alnt.U.,

not ,.non&amp;lilitt.

tl••

TomadoNews

.

· Tlr• OfinWnt upttutfl in
eofUMrf Hlow tfn 1M con•m111 tJ/IM OhW v.liiJ
P•blillli111 Co. '1 Miloritd boMI, unlm otfluwb• IWitd.

Nuisance
·Clinton should have been
·indicted for Jalse statements'.
•· The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, on Bill Clinton: From a purely legal point of view, we would have preferred
seeing BiU Clinton indicted md mad~ to stand trial for the
"false statements" he acknowledged in the deal with Independent Counsel Robert Ray.
Clinton ascended to the White House on the wings of a lie;
it would've been completely fitting for him to exit power to
the scales ofJUstice, to be measured against the law for some of
the many lies that foUowed. Instead, the country got "closure,"
and Clinton got away, mostly unscathed. .
·
Sure, he had to sign a piece of paper admitting this and that
- but in a .m anner that would still let his lawyers and friends
say he. didn't lie. He had his Arkansas law license suspended five ·
years, but that's no big deal because he'd sooner flap his arms
and fly before he hung out i shingle ·in a place caUed Hope.
... Ray spared the new Bush administration the spectacle of
an overshadowing Clinton trial.
'I,'hat could be a mixed blessing with the new former presi~ent hovering nearby, running his rehabilitation campaign and
generally making a nuisance of himself. .
• Chicago Tribune, on tax reliiffor the working poor. This
year, state and federal lawmakers will begin talking about reau·
thorizing the historic welfare reform legislati);m,passed in .1996.
Their decisions will be many. Atnong them: the fate of food
staQ1ps and child care program•, whether to alter benefit time
limits and what to do about cash grants.
... With generous child-care subsidies for workibg families
and its Work Pays program allowing welfare recipients' t~ keep
$2 in aid for every S3 they earn up to the poverty level, Illinois
,has emerged as one of the nation's unheralded leaders in welfare reform.
. Lawmakers need to go one step further. ...
The problem is, the state tax credit doesn't go nearly far
epough. It is set at only 5 percent of the federal credit for
working poor families The state credit's benefit to the average
family - $60 off their taX bill - is almost negligible.
. The state credit needs to be raised io 20 percent of the fed!!Ial credit. And it needs to be permanent, not just a three-year
deal.
For anyone who views this credit as yet another welfare
handout, think again. It goes to working poor families, people
who pay a significant portion of their incomes in sales and
other taxes.
·
' Nearly every politician in last November's dection .listed
e'ducation and taX relief as top priorities. Fine. Here's a chance
to get two for the price of one.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Documentary helps us rediscover American music
•

Fred Friendly, along with Edward R.

Burns. He is able to tell the story of jazz
Murrow, created at CBS-TV the most ·
by focusing primarily - though by ' no
committed and resourceful group of
means exclusively - on the key musireporters and documentary malcers in the
cians who shaped the music. Among them
history of American television. Fred used
were the larger-than-life figures of Annto insist that a basic function of television
strong. Ellington, Count Basie, Lester
is to educate.
Young, Charlie Parker and Dizzy GilleWhen CBS began to fail in that regard,
spie.
Friendly resigned as president of CBS
I w.s interviewed for the series and am
News to teach at Columbia University's
on camera briefly. From the knowledgeGraduate School ofJournalism. For years,
able questions of the interviewer, I quickCOLUMNIST . ly knew how much research went into .
he presented on public television a !eries
of clashing panelists on "The Constituthis undertaking. My only complaint
tion: A Delicate Balance."
about
the series is that Burns rushed
disadvantaged. Most students, while
That venture taught ~ny Americans versed in rap and current rock, know lit- . through the last 30 years much too quickabout why they are Arne cans. And it wa&lt; de or nothing of Louis Armstrong, Duke ly.
also entertaining, as Sup me Court jus- Ellington, Charlie· Parker, John Coltrane
The 10 episodes are available ori PBS
tices, prosecutors, defense attorneys and and other seminal contributors to the life Home Video, and there is a valuable ' illus·
journalists illuininated our liberties force that is jazz.
tntted book, 'jazz: A History of America's
thmugh vigorous debate. Why isn't it stiU
Music,"
by Ken Burns and Geoffrey C.
One mistake in the lesson plans distribon television regularly?
uted to schools is the suggestion to "make Ward (Knopf, 2000). Ward also collaborat~
In the Fred Friendly tradition, Ken jazz the focus of Black History Month ed with Burns on "The Civil War" and
Burns has educated and entertained mil- across the curriculum in your schools." "Baseball" television series: I also strongly
lions of people with his documentaries on The music and biographies of the creators recommend the five-CO set "Ken Burns'
the Civil War, baseb'!ll, and, most recently, of jazz, and the social and historical con- 'Jazz"' (Columbia/Legacy), which is a
a 10-part series called ':Jazz,"' aU on public texts of their lives, shoUld be a basic part remarkably ,wide-ranging ·coU~ction ·rl:&gt;f
television.
·
of American history.l).s should that other vital p~rformances by the musici~n~ feaThis is the first time a comprehensive distinctive American contribution to the tured in the television series, and by other
view of America's gift to the world has world, country music. Jazz and country musicians.
been presented on television. The series, in music are inextricably interrelated. Willie
Meanwhile, as I have reported in The
which Burns reUs the story of jazz as it Nelson, Merle Haggard and Bob Wills' WaU Street Journal, aU the fifth-graders in
evolved throughout our country's history, Western swing band, for example, also the public schools of Sarasota, for the first
is 'riveting.
time in the nation, are learning a ·version
have deep roots in jazz.
':Jazz" ~ be repeated on television
The Ken Burns series has been sharply of American history that includes the hisfiom time t~ time, and is likely to be dis- criticized by some.of the more insular jazz tory ofjazz. Much of the credit for bringtributed in Europe. This music has critics and by a few musicians for what .ing this about belongs to 83-year-old
became a common language everywhere. was left out. I, too, have a list of jazz play- floridian Lucy White, who grew up Jis. ·
One of the "hottest" jazz recordings I've ers - including the always overlooked tening to jazz in Harlem and helped bring
· women instrumentalists who have been a it into the schools so that it wiU be handheard was by a band in Siberia. .
'
What is most important, however, is vital part of the music - that l would ed down tci the next generation.
that the Ken Burns orgariization. with the have included. But to show an encyclope·
"I didn't want it to be part oilly dfblack
support of General Motors, is providing a die array would diminish the potential history;' she told me. "It should not' be
curriculum based on the series to schools audience to the already converted.
separated fiom the rest of the Americ~n
throughout the country - lesson plans,
When jazz musicians compliment one story."
videos and CDs - so that American of their coUeagues, they say that he or she
(NQt Hentoff is Q 11atio11ally retlowned
youngsters wiU no longer be culturally knows how to "tell a story." So does Ken authority on the First Amendment.)

Nat
Hentoff

Community College
BY AMY WILSON

I

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

·TODAY IN HISTORY
-

'

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of 2001. There are 329
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 5, 1937, President Franldin Roosevelt proposed
increasing the number of Supreme Court justices; critics charged
Roosevelt was attempting to "pack" the court.
· On this date:
In 1631, the founder of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, and his
wif~ arrived in Boston from England.
·
.· In 1783, Sweden recognized the independence of the United
states.
·
· In 1881, Phoenix, Ariz., was incorporated. .
In 1887,Verdi's opera "Otello" premiered at La Scala.
In 1917, Congress passed, over President Wilson's veto, an
immigration act severely curtailing the influx of Asians.
In 1917, Mexico's constitution was adopted.
In 1958, Gamel Abdel Nasser was formally nominated to
become the first president of the new United Arab Republic.
In 1%2, French President Charles De Gaulle caUed for Alge·
ria's independence.
)n 1981, a military jury in North Carolina convicted Pfc.
Robert Garwood of coUaborating with the enemy while a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
·
. Jn 1994, white separatist ,Byron De La Beckwith was convicte&lt;l in Jackson, Miss., of murdering civil rights leader Medgar
E~ters in 1%3, and was immediately sentenced to life in prison.
(il!eckwith died this past Jan. 21 at age 80.)
· ~en years. ago: President George Bush announced ~e was sending Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Gen.' Colin L. Powell,
chairman of the Joint ChieiS of Sta!f. to the Gulf war wne to
as.less h&lt;J¥1 the U.S.-led offelllive was progressing.
Five years ago:John C. Salvi Ill went on trial in Dedham, Mass.,
in the shooting deaths of two receptionists at abortion clinia.
(S!Iivi was convicted and sentenced to two life terms. He. was
found dead in his cell in November 1996, an apparent suicide.)
; One year ago: Right-wing leader Joerg Haider told a deeply
d,ivided Austria not to worry about international sanctions, saying
t~e new governing coalition that included hiJ Freedom Party
would soon prove its democratic credentials to the world. ·
foday's Birthdays: Comedian-actor Red Buttons is 82.
·

Bush~

noble cause is fraught with problems
I

.

WASHINGTON - Religious faith
helped George W. Bush turn his life
.around. During a debate last year, he cited
Jesw Christ as his favorite philosopher.
Now he wants to inject religious belief
into the delivery of social services. President Bush's sincerity appears real, together with the p'assion he bri~ to the issue.
He wants others in need to experi~nce
the same kind of enduring conversion he
· COLUMNISTS
did when he stopped dril)king at age 40.
This is a noble cause, but one that is
fraught with problems.
,
,
People don't like to support religious , money for bibles and religious proselytizinstitutions they don't believe in. Picking ing.
.·
winners and losers among the groups
Bush confided as much when he met
applying for federal funds wiU inevitably with leaders of Catholic charities.
create charges of ~voritism . and/or bias. Unaware , that his remarks were being
Does anybo~ senously believe that the · broadcast ovet an open mike to reporters,
·Church of Scientology or a Muslim sect Bush told the Catholic leaders that his
wiU gain favor in the Bush administration faith-based initiative Was tied into '.' a Jargno matter how effective their soup er cultural issue" in the battle over aborkitchens or job training pro$f3Ir1S? Bush tion.
counters such criticism by insisting that
Directing federal funds into faitli-based
, decisions wiU be made purely on perfor- programs is not a tadi~ally new idea. The
mance. He would have us believe his 1996 welfare refOrm bill passed by a
business-school degree will be para- Republican Consress and signed by Presmount, not his leanings toward Christian- ident Clinton opened the door. Under a
ity.
"charitable chpice" provision, religious
Money is fungible. That's what the Bush ,groups that help ease welfare recipients
adfirinistration argued when President into the work fo~;~:e can compete along
Bush signed a .ban on . family planning with secular organizatiom fur government
funds to international groups that also doUars. The concept works reasonably
counsel abortion. Providing these funds well but there is the occasional horror
freed up dollars to spend on abortion, the sto.; of clients being coen:ed into bible
admiEstration· reasoned: Applying the studies, or a job withheld unless the persame argument to Bu.m's faith-based ini- son is of a particular religious .faith.
native, fu
ederal dollars intCI
W1th the economy teetermg on the
churches
es frees up more edge of a recession, Bwh may see an

JaCk

Anderson
&amp;

Douglas
ColuJ.

•

.

expanded social network as a safety net for
people whose weltare benefits are running
out. The five-year time limit established by
law is coming due, and jobs may not be so
plentiful, especially for the hardest of the
hard-core welfare recipients. Pumping
federal doUars into proven programs at the
grassroots level could cushion the shock of
an economic downturn .
. During the campaign, Bush attacl;led a
p,rice tag of eight billion to his faith-based
initiative, but the proposal he ·introduced
as president made no mention of additiona! funding. If aU he's talking about 'is
opening the bidding process to more contenders, he wiU encounter resistance from
many Democrats who suspect the introduction of private religious groups ihto
the social service mix may be just another clever Republican ploy to de-fund
government.
· Whatever the motivation, religion's new
prominence has advoeates on both sides
of the political aisle. Formc;r vice-presidential contender Sen. Joseph Lieberman,
D-Conn.,joined Bush in calling for more
g&lt;Jvernment support of faith-based charities. AI Gore introduced a similar initiative
during !he 2000 campaign. But sharing
the sam~ g&lt;Jal does not ~ean that gening
there wi_U be easy. The mm!9Jng of federal
, funds With church goals will prompt lawsui~. The future ofBush's program wiU be
deeded by the same Supreme Court that
made him president, an outcome that may
acc!&gt;unt for hiS confidence,
· · (Political correspondent Eleanor Clift con-

·

tributed to this repor!.Jack Anderson and Douglas Cohn are columnists for United Feature

'

RACINE When I
joined Quiz Bowl, I thought
that it would be a new
endeavor for me to experience. I had been on Quiz
Bowl in junior high school,
except for last year, when I
was a freshman.
There is Quiz Bowl practice every Wednesday and
Thursday after school. It is
not necessary to attend each
NEW MEDIA CENTER - Stuc;lents at Southern High School in Racine recently began
practice, but he or she may
to use the school's new media center after construction on the new addition was
· do so if they desire. I usually ' finally completed. The center 'lncludes new computers, new study areas, and eventu-ally, will employ the lnternet.':(submltted .Photos)
go to both because I have ·
nothing to do after school.
Each match is held in ·
Athens.We recendy won one
match, bllt lost three. The
n1atches are not just about
winning. They are about
~eeting studentS from other
' BY CAROLYN BENTZ
schools.
RACINE - Afte~ the long w:rit, the new
· After each match, memmedia center, here at Southern High
bers get something to eat
School, is finally completed.
and .thep head home. Many
F&lt;;lr students, researching wiU be a breeze
of my teammates are more
due to the ample numbj:r of new useful
apt to talk on the way back
research material added to the center.
home instead of going to the
, Among these are three brand new comput·
matches because they have
ers, several new books, in addition to the
just gotten out of school and
books from the •ole\ center, and tons of
are very tired.
encyclopedias.
Overall, the Quiz Bowl
Along with the new research equipment,
can be fun if the right people
many Other new exp~ details were added
·a re on the team:. Our team
tO the center. Some of these include new
consistS of 20 members and
tables and chairs that are ·able to seat thirty·
is coached by Mrs. El-Dabatwo people, and new book cases.
j a and Ms. Sisson·, two
The center is also ver}' roomy, well lit, and
Southern · High
School
has lots of windows for a warm comfortable
teachers.
feeling.

Media center
is complete

nps on how to beat those winter blues
Senior Brenna Sl11on said 1he
likes to curl up in btd and
read a boolt on a 1nowy day.

er m our shop and working on
equipment." He also likes to go
RACINE - During the winter
hunting in the mornings.
months, it il easy for people .t o feel
"I watch movies, write and spend
a little low, or even depre11ed. So, I
' time with my family. I also try and ·
asked some o£ the students at South: stay warm," said Maggie · Smith,
em High School about this and here time with his girlfriend.
Senior Brenna Sisson said that she senior.
is how they n1anage to put some ·
li~es
to curl up in bed and read a
Freshman Adam Johnson admits
pleasure back into a wintry day.
that he likes to play on the comput·
Sophomore Rachel Chapman book on a snowy day.
"I enjoy going. to my friends' er, watch television and go sleigh
said that she "enjoys talking to
houses
and going sleigh riding. I also riding when he is snowed in all day.
friends, ·going to basketball games
So, if you need some .good ideas
and playing basketball." She also like getting on my computer and
talking with friends," said Kim on how to spend your winte~. you
enjoys "playing on the computer."
McDaniel,
junior.
can easily follow these students's
Senior Jeff Circle stated that he
Sophomore Travis Hart said that advice or think of some fun ways to
likes to play with his Leges, computer and video games and spending he "enjoys firing up the wood burp- beat the winter blues yourself.

IY MARIAM lltDAMIA

MondiiJ. Febnaary 5, 2001

Washington State

BY TAMMY THEISS

NATIONAL VIEWS

: Page AS

FFA members tour

Quiz Bowl
offers new
field of
endeavor

. '

Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

" ' " ' '1

Hi

Mondllf, Febnulry 5,1001

RACINE - Eight members
of the Racine Southern FFA
joined with Mrs. Bailey's Susiness class in touring Washington
· State Community College,
which was made possible with
the help of the Washington.Morgan-Meigs Tech Prep Con·
sortium.
·
Every student who attended
had a chance to speak with students ofWashington State about
college life, costs, scholarships,
goals and opportunities.
After discussion, studen,ts
fiom Southern were treated to
lunch.
Mter lunch, the agriculture
students were split from the
business students and instruction
was given on how to apply for
· stu'd ent aid and scholarships,
how to select classes and how to
obtain books fiom the book
store th~t are needed for classes.
The agricultural students
were then taken to a classroom

for instruction on environmental science. The instructor chose
an aquarium with salt-water fish
to go over a lesson on what type
of /ish, rocks, algae and other
living thingS were in the tank .
A discussion about temperature, oxygen level and pH that is
necessary to· keep the proper
environment was also presented.
Southern FFA members
attending the event were Amy
Wilson, Kacy Ervin, Angel Bird,
T.J. M9ore, Joe Adkins, Robert
Forester, Tyler Johnson, and 1~&gt;sh
Baker.
.
At the present time, Southern
has six FFA ·members who are
trying to pursue the State FFA
Degree, which is awarded to the
top 2 percent of the state.
Technology is now paJOt of
these students lives since ·the
state degree can now only be
accessed on a computer. This
also applies to any proficiency
award applications that ' apy
member ' may pursue.

Heart to·heart
this,Valentine's Day.
BY RAcHEL MARsitAu

students here at Southern High
RACINE - Have you been School, it means a lot more. · ·
When asked about plans for
struck by ·Cupid's love arrow
Valentine's Day, ~arolyn Bentz
this Valentine's Day?
says,."!
plan to spend time with
Love and courtship are often
associated with this holiday. my boyfriend, Jeff."
Jeff Circle responde
Cupid is also often associated
endue to his character in Roman ing, "I plan on spending
mythology who always struck tine's . Day with my girlfri
people with his arrows to make Carolyn."
Others don't have plans yet.
them fall in love.
"Every Valentine's Day, I'm
The truth is, Valentine's Day
did riot originate becawe of by myself and it never fails," said
love. The love part probably Kim McDaniel, with a smile on
derived from · Lupercalis, a her face.
'Iravanna Moore believes t~t
Roman feast.
Valentine's Day is set aside on "Valentine's Day is a time to
the 14th day of February every' spend with those you love. As
year. It began as a tribute to two for me, I'll be with my
Christian martyrs, who are both boyfriend, Jeremy, on this very
special day."
known as St. Valentine.
Most students feel that
Now, when thought of, the
colors of red, pink and white "Valentine's Day is a romantic
hearts come to mind. Roses, time for couples to spend
chocolate, teddy bears and din· together."
On this Valentine's Day, make
ner are often given as gifts.
To little kids, Valentine's Day it spedal by spending time with
is a time
while loved ones whether its friends or
making
to family.
Just enjoy the holiday and
put a v'I)Emti1~e
relax this
out val,!ntines

HERE

Valentine's Day questions
'

BY PAIGE Mulllll

including the seniors, I also
RACINE -Where would asked them another question. ·
you take your date fur ValenWhat do you look for in a
tine's Day?
·
. penon -looks or pmonality?
Shauna Manuel, one of the
Most of the itudents that I
two seniors that I interviewed, ~~erviewed round this quesanswered the question by stat- tion rather difficult to answer.
ing .the Olive Garden rqtauSeven out of eight students
rant.
interviewed answered ·personMost of the answers given by
other students weie either din- ality.
The most important thing
ner at a restaurant or the
this Valentine's Day is to decide
movies.
where
you w.mt to 8" and
While interviewing two
people fiom every class, how you look at people.

We want your photos!.
The Sentinel welcomes )'Our phottJtraphs. .Hare are a few
&amp;uldellnes for submissions: .
·
• Color pholographs are accepted, P!QYided they are In focus
and hiMI&amp;ood contraat. Nepi!Yis also are accepted; however,
ple1111lnclude a print along wtt11 the nep!MI.
• Bl~owaphs are accepted, provided they are In
focua and hiM! good contrast. Neptlves also are accepted; llOWtwtr, ple11111netude a print alorc wtt11 the negative.
• S1lndlnklze slides are accepted, P!QYided they areln focus
and hM IIOOd contrast.
.
• Submltled photoa llllOUid be no smaller than standard wa~
let aile and no lar&amp;er than 8 x 10.
• when submlttln&amp; digital photos, be sure the lmaaes are
' saved u hWHMoiutlon, h~ual~ JPEG ftles.

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio

45760
40) 992-6472

HOME
NATIONAL
.BANK
Racine 949·.221 0
Syracuse 992·6333

DOWNING
MULLEN MUSSER
6EAR COMPANY . INSURANCE
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
251 N. Second A••·
992-3381
Middleport, OH

408 General

Hartl

Parkway .

0HIO Rlv~

2-40

Crow's.Fami·ly
Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

ll8 Mila St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-1bru Window
PHONE m-S43l

�.. _.

-- .

• •

.Page A4

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Daily Sentinel

-·

•

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156. fllll: 982·2157

. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn L-1•
Diane Kay Hill
Controller·

Utun tv tM Nilw"" w'ko,.,. Tltt1 tltoulll IH Jm tJuut 3011 t!HH'fb. All kttnr
.,. lflll,itet w ftlilinwiUNI "'ult IH siJMd tllld l~tdiMlt Mlllnu tnul kk/IIWIM ulillbu.
No •n~ifiiH Wtt1n wiU H ruWithH. UINrs sluHlld H i1t .-od tuk, .alnt.U.,

not ,.non&amp;lilitt.

tl••

TomadoNews

.

· Tlr• OfinWnt upttutfl in
eofUMrf Hlow tfn 1M con•m111 tJ/IM OhW v.liiJ
P•blillli111 Co. '1 Miloritd boMI, unlm otfluwb• IWitd.

Nuisance
·Clinton should have been
·indicted for Jalse statements'.
•· The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, on Bill Clinton: From a purely legal point of view, we would have preferred
seeing BiU Clinton indicted md mad~ to stand trial for the
"false statements" he acknowledged in the deal with Independent Counsel Robert Ray.
Clinton ascended to the White House on the wings of a lie;
it would've been completely fitting for him to exit power to
the scales ofJUstice, to be measured against the law for some of
the many lies that foUowed. Instead, the country got "closure,"
and Clinton got away, mostly unscathed. .
·
Sure, he had to sign a piece of paper admitting this and that
- but in a .m anner that would still let his lawyers and friends
say he. didn't lie. He had his Arkansas law license suspended five ·
years, but that's no big deal because he'd sooner flap his arms
and fly before he hung out i shingle ·in a place caUed Hope.
... Ray spared the new Bush administration the spectacle of
an overshadowing Clinton trial.
'I,'hat could be a mixed blessing with the new former presi~ent hovering nearby, running his rehabilitation campaign and
generally making a nuisance of himself. .
• Chicago Tribune, on tax reliiffor the working poor. This
year, state and federal lawmakers will begin talking about reau·
thorizing the historic welfare reform legislati);m,passed in .1996.
Their decisions will be many. Atnong them: the fate of food
staQ1ps and child care program•, whether to alter benefit time
limits and what to do about cash grants.
... With generous child-care subsidies for workibg families
and its Work Pays program allowing welfare recipients' t~ keep
$2 in aid for every S3 they earn up to the poverty level, Illinois
,has emerged as one of the nation's unheralded leaders in welfare reform.
. Lawmakers need to go one step further. ...
The problem is, the state tax credit doesn't go nearly far
epough. It is set at only 5 percent of the federal credit for
working poor families The state credit's benefit to the average
family - $60 off their taX bill - is almost negligible.
. The state credit needs to be raised io 20 percent of the fed!!Ial credit. And it needs to be permanent, not just a three-year
deal.
For anyone who views this credit as yet another welfare
handout, think again. It goes to working poor families, people
who pay a significant portion of their incomes in sales and
other taxes.
·
' Nearly every politician in last November's dection .listed
e'ducation and taX relief as top priorities. Fine. Here's a chance
to get two for the price of one.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Documentary helps us rediscover American music
•

Fred Friendly, along with Edward R.

Burns. He is able to tell the story of jazz
Murrow, created at CBS-TV the most ·
by focusing primarily - though by ' no
committed and resourceful group of
means exclusively - on the key musireporters and documentary malcers in the
cians who shaped the music. Among them
history of American television. Fred used
were the larger-than-life figures of Annto insist that a basic function of television
strong. Ellington, Count Basie, Lester
is to educate.
Young, Charlie Parker and Dizzy GilleWhen CBS began to fail in that regard,
spie.
Friendly resigned as president of CBS
I w.s interviewed for the series and am
News to teach at Columbia University's
on camera briefly. From the knowledgeGraduate School ofJournalism. For years,
able questions of the interviewer, I quickCOLUMNIST . ly knew how much research went into .
he presented on public television a !eries
of clashing panelists on "The Constituthis undertaking. My only complaint
tion: A Delicate Balance."
about
the series is that Burns rushed
disadvantaged. Most students, while
That venture taught ~ny Americans versed in rap and current rock, know lit- . through the last 30 years much too quickabout why they are Arne cans. And it wa&lt; de or nothing of Louis Armstrong, Duke ly.
also entertaining, as Sup me Court jus- Ellington, Charlie· Parker, John Coltrane
The 10 episodes are available ori PBS
tices, prosecutors, defense attorneys and and other seminal contributors to the life Home Video, and there is a valuable ' illus·
journalists illuininated our liberties force that is jazz.
tntted book, 'jazz: A History of America's
thmugh vigorous debate. Why isn't it stiU
Music,"
by Ken Burns and Geoffrey C.
One mistake in the lesson plans distribon television regularly?
uted to schools is the suggestion to "make Ward (Knopf, 2000). Ward also collaborat~
In the Fred Friendly tradition, Ken jazz the focus of Black History Month ed with Burns on "The Civil War" and
Burns has educated and entertained mil- across the curriculum in your schools." "Baseball" television series: I also strongly
lions of people with his documentaries on The music and biographies of the creators recommend the five-CO set "Ken Burns'
the Civil War, baseb'!ll, and, most recently, of jazz, and the social and historical con- 'Jazz"' (Columbia/Legacy), which is a
a 10-part series called ':Jazz,"' aU on public texts of their lives, shoUld be a basic part remarkably ,wide-ranging ·coU~ction ·rl:&gt;f
television.
·
of American history.l).s should that other vital p~rformances by the musici~n~ feaThis is the first time a comprehensive distinctive American contribution to the tured in the television series, and by other
view of America's gift to the world has world, country music. Jazz and country musicians.
been presented on television. The series, in music are inextricably interrelated. Willie
Meanwhile, as I have reported in The
which Burns reUs the story of jazz as it Nelson, Merle Haggard and Bob Wills' WaU Street Journal, aU the fifth-graders in
evolved throughout our country's history, Western swing band, for example, also the public schools of Sarasota, for the first
is 'riveting.
time in the nation, are learning a ·version
have deep roots in jazz.
':Jazz" ~ be repeated on television
The Ken Burns series has been sharply of American history that includes the hisfiom time t~ time, and is likely to be dis- criticized by some.of the more insular jazz tory ofjazz. Much of the credit for bringtributed in Europe. This music has critics and by a few musicians for what .ing this about belongs to 83-year-old
became a common language everywhere. was left out. I, too, have a list of jazz play- floridian Lucy White, who grew up Jis. ·
One of the "hottest" jazz recordings I've ers - including the always overlooked tening to jazz in Harlem and helped bring
· women instrumentalists who have been a it into the schools so that it wiU be handheard was by a band in Siberia. .
'
What is most important, however, is vital part of the music - that l would ed down tci the next generation.
that the Ken Burns orgariization. with the have included. But to show an encyclope·
"I didn't want it to be part oilly dfblack
support of General Motors, is providing a die array would diminish the potential history;' she told me. "It should not' be
curriculum based on the series to schools audience to the already converted.
separated fiom the rest of the Americ~n
throughout the country - lesson plans,
When jazz musicians compliment one story."
videos and CDs - so that American of their coUeagues, they say that he or she
(NQt Hentoff is Q 11atio11ally retlowned
youngsters wiU no longer be culturally knows how to "tell a story." So does Ken authority on the First Amendment.)

Nat
Hentoff

Community College
BY AMY WILSON

I

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

·TODAY IN HISTORY
-

'

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of 2001. There are 329
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 5, 1937, President Franldin Roosevelt proposed
increasing the number of Supreme Court justices; critics charged
Roosevelt was attempting to "pack" the court.
· On this date:
In 1631, the founder of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, and his
wif~ arrived in Boston from England.
·
.· In 1783, Sweden recognized the independence of the United
states.
·
· In 1881, Phoenix, Ariz., was incorporated. .
In 1887,Verdi's opera "Otello" premiered at La Scala.
In 1917, Congress passed, over President Wilson's veto, an
immigration act severely curtailing the influx of Asians.
In 1917, Mexico's constitution was adopted.
In 1958, Gamel Abdel Nasser was formally nominated to
become the first president of the new United Arab Republic.
In 1%2, French President Charles De Gaulle caUed for Alge·
ria's independence.
)n 1981, a military jury in North Carolina convicted Pfc.
Robert Garwood of coUaborating with the enemy while a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
·
. Jn 1994, white separatist ,Byron De La Beckwith was convicte&lt;l in Jackson, Miss., of murdering civil rights leader Medgar
E~ters in 1%3, and was immediately sentenced to life in prison.
(il!eckwith died this past Jan. 21 at age 80.)
· ~en years. ago: President George Bush announced ~e was sending Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Gen.' Colin L. Powell,
chairman of the Joint ChieiS of Sta!f. to the Gulf war wne to
as.less h&lt;J¥1 the U.S.-led offelllive was progressing.
Five years ago:John C. Salvi Ill went on trial in Dedham, Mass.,
in the shooting deaths of two receptionists at abortion clinia.
(S!Iivi was convicted and sentenced to two life terms. He. was
found dead in his cell in November 1996, an apparent suicide.)
; One year ago: Right-wing leader Joerg Haider told a deeply
d,ivided Austria not to worry about international sanctions, saying
t~e new governing coalition that included hiJ Freedom Party
would soon prove its democratic credentials to the world. ·
foday's Birthdays: Comedian-actor Red Buttons is 82.
·

Bush~

noble cause is fraught with problems
I

.

WASHINGTON - Religious faith
helped George W. Bush turn his life
.around. During a debate last year, he cited
Jesw Christ as his favorite philosopher.
Now he wants to inject religious belief
into the delivery of social services. President Bush's sincerity appears real, together with the p'assion he bri~ to the issue.
He wants others in need to experi~nce
the same kind of enduring conversion he
· COLUMNISTS
did when he stopped dril)king at age 40.
This is a noble cause, but one that is
fraught with problems.
,
,
People don't like to support religious , money for bibles and religious proselytizinstitutions they don't believe in. Picking ing.
.·
winners and losers among the groups
Bush confided as much when he met
applying for federal funds wiU inevitably with leaders of Catholic charities.
create charges of ~voritism . and/or bias. Unaware , that his remarks were being
Does anybo~ senously believe that the · broadcast ovet an open mike to reporters,
·Church of Scientology or a Muslim sect Bush told the Catholic leaders that his
wiU gain favor in the Bush administration faith-based initiative Was tied into '.' a Jargno matter how effective their soup er cultural issue" in the battle over aborkitchens or job training pro$f3Ir1S? Bush tion.
counters such criticism by insisting that
Directing federal funds into faitli-based
, decisions wiU be made purely on perfor- programs is not a tadi~ally new idea. The
mance. He would have us believe his 1996 welfare refOrm bill passed by a
business-school degree will be para- Republican Consress and signed by Presmount, not his leanings toward Christian- ident Clinton opened the door. Under a
ity.
"charitable chpice" provision, religious
Money is fungible. That's what the Bush ,groups that help ease welfare recipients
adfirinistration argued when President into the work fo~;~:e can compete along
Bush signed a .ban on . family planning with secular organizatiom fur government
funds to international groups that also doUars. The concept works reasonably
counsel abortion. Providing these funds well but there is the occasional horror
freed up dollars to spend on abortion, the sto.; of clients being coen:ed into bible
admiEstration· reasoned: Applying the studies, or a job withheld unless the persame argument to Bu.m's faith-based ini- son is of a particular religious .faith.
native, fu
ederal dollars intCI
W1th the economy teetermg on the
churches
es frees up more edge of a recession, Bwh may see an

JaCk

Anderson
&amp;

Douglas
ColuJ.

•

.

expanded social network as a safety net for
people whose weltare benefits are running
out. The five-year time limit established by
law is coming due, and jobs may not be so
plentiful, especially for the hardest of the
hard-core welfare recipients. Pumping
federal doUars into proven programs at the
grassroots level could cushion the shock of
an economic downturn .
. During the campaign, Bush attacl;led a
p,rice tag of eight billion to his faith-based
initiative, but the proposal he ·introduced
as president made no mention of additiona! funding. If aU he's talking about 'is
opening the bidding process to more contenders, he wiU encounter resistance from
many Democrats who suspect the introduction of private religious groups ihto
the social service mix may be just another clever Republican ploy to de-fund
government.
· Whatever the motivation, religion's new
prominence has advoeates on both sides
of the political aisle. Formc;r vice-presidential contender Sen. Joseph Lieberman,
D-Conn.,joined Bush in calling for more
g&lt;Jvernment support of faith-based charities. AI Gore introduced a similar initiative
during !he 2000 campaign. But sharing
the sam~ g&lt;Jal does not ~ean that gening
there wi_U be easy. The mm!9Jng of federal
, funds With church goals will prompt lawsui~. The future ofBush's program wiU be
deeded by the same Supreme Court that
made him president, an outcome that may
acc!&gt;unt for hiS confidence,
· · (Political correspondent Eleanor Clift con-

·

tributed to this repor!.Jack Anderson and Douglas Cohn are columnists for United Feature

'

RACINE When I
joined Quiz Bowl, I thought
that it would be a new
endeavor for me to experience. I had been on Quiz
Bowl in junior high school,
except for last year, when I
was a freshman.
There is Quiz Bowl practice every Wednesday and
Thursday after school. It is
not necessary to attend each
NEW MEDIA CENTER - Stuc;lents at Southern High School in Racine recently began
practice, but he or she may
to use the school's new media center after construction on the new addition was
· do so if they desire. I usually ' finally completed. The center 'lncludes new computers, new study areas, and eventu-ally, will employ the lnternet.':(submltted .Photos)
go to both because I have ·
nothing to do after school.
Each match is held in ·
Athens.We recendy won one
match, bllt lost three. The
n1atches are not just about
winning. They are about
~eeting studentS from other
' BY CAROLYN BENTZ
schools.
RACINE - Afte~ the long w:rit, the new
· After each match, memmedia center, here at Southern High
bers get something to eat
School, is finally completed.
and .thep head home. Many
F&lt;;lr students, researching wiU be a breeze
of my teammates are more
due to the ample numbj:r of new useful
apt to talk on the way back
research material added to the center.
home instead of going to the
, Among these are three brand new comput·
matches because they have
ers, several new books, in addition to the
just gotten out of school and
books from the •ole\ center, and tons of
are very tired.
encyclopedias.
Overall, the Quiz Bowl
Along with the new research equipment,
can be fun if the right people
many Other new exp~ details were added
·a re on the team:. Our team
tO the center. Some of these include new
consistS of 20 members and
tables and chairs that are ·able to seat thirty·
is coached by Mrs. El-Dabatwo people, and new book cases.
j a and Ms. Sisson·, two
The center is also ver}' roomy, well lit, and
Southern · High
School
has lots of windows for a warm comfortable
teachers.
feeling.

Media center
is complete

nps on how to beat those winter blues
Senior Brenna Sl11on said 1he
likes to curl up in btd and
read a boolt on a 1nowy day.

er m our shop and working on
equipment." He also likes to go
RACINE - During the winter
hunting in the mornings.
months, it il easy for people .t o feel
"I watch movies, write and spend
a little low, or even depre11ed. So, I
' time with my family. I also try and ·
asked some o£ the students at South: stay warm," said Maggie · Smith,
em High School about this and here time with his girlfriend.
Senior Brenna Sisson said that she senior.
is how they n1anage to put some ·
li~es
to curl up in bed and read a
Freshman Adam Johnson admits
pleasure back into a wintry day.
that he likes to play on the comput·
Sophomore Rachel Chapman book on a snowy day.
"I enjoy going. to my friends' er, watch television and go sleigh
said that she "enjoys talking to
houses
and going sleigh riding. I also riding when he is snowed in all day.
friends, ·going to basketball games
So, if you need some .good ideas
and playing basketball." She also like getting on my computer and
talking with friends," said Kim on how to spend your winte~. you
enjoys "playing on the computer."
McDaniel,
junior.
can easily follow these students's
Senior Jeff Circle stated that he
Sophomore Travis Hart said that advice or think of some fun ways to
likes to play with his Leges, computer and video games and spending he "enjoys firing up the wood burp- beat the winter blues yourself.

IY MARIAM lltDAMIA

MondiiJ. Febnaary 5, 2001

Washington State

BY TAMMY THEISS

NATIONAL VIEWS

: Page AS

FFA members tour

Quiz Bowl
offers new
field of
endeavor

. '

Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

" ' " ' '1

Hi

Mondllf, Febnulry 5,1001

RACINE - Eight members
of the Racine Southern FFA
joined with Mrs. Bailey's Susiness class in touring Washington
· State Community College,
which was made possible with
the help of the Washington.Morgan-Meigs Tech Prep Con·
sortium.
·
Every student who attended
had a chance to speak with students ofWashington State about
college life, costs, scholarships,
goals and opportunities.
After discussion, studen,ts
fiom Southern were treated to
lunch.
Mter lunch, the agriculture
students were split from the
business students and instruction
was given on how to apply for
· stu'd ent aid and scholarships,
how to select classes and how to
obtain books fiom the book
store th~t are needed for classes.
The agricultural students
were then taken to a classroom

for instruction on environmental science. The instructor chose
an aquarium with salt-water fish
to go over a lesson on what type
of /ish, rocks, algae and other
living thingS were in the tank .
A discussion about temperature, oxygen level and pH that is
necessary to· keep the proper
environment was also presented.
Southern FFA members
attending the event were Amy
Wilson, Kacy Ervin, Angel Bird,
T.J. M9ore, Joe Adkins, Robert
Forester, Tyler Johnson, and 1~&gt;sh
Baker.
.
At the present time, Southern
has six FFA ·members who are
trying to pursue the State FFA
Degree, which is awarded to the
top 2 percent of the state.
Technology is now paJOt of
these students lives since ·the
state degree can now only be
accessed on a computer. This
also applies to any proficiency
award applications that ' apy
member ' may pursue.

Heart to·heart
this,Valentine's Day.
BY RAcHEL MARsitAu

students here at Southern High
RACINE - Have you been School, it means a lot more. · ·
When asked about plans for
struck by ·Cupid's love arrow
Valentine's Day, ~arolyn Bentz
this Valentine's Day?
says,."!
plan to spend time with
Love and courtship are often
associated with this holiday. my boyfriend, Jeff."
Jeff Circle responde
Cupid is also often associated
endue to his character in Roman ing, "I plan on spending
mythology who always struck tine's . Day with my girlfri
people with his arrows to make Carolyn."
Others don't have plans yet.
them fall in love.
"Every Valentine's Day, I'm
The truth is, Valentine's Day
did riot originate becawe of by myself and it never fails," said
love. The love part probably Kim McDaniel, with a smile on
derived from · Lupercalis, a her face.
'Iravanna Moore believes t~t
Roman feast.
Valentine's Day is set aside on "Valentine's Day is a time to
the 14th day of February every' spend with those you love. As
year. It began as a tribute to two for me, I'll be with my
Christian martyrs, who are both boyfriend, Jeremy, on this very
special day."
known as St. Valentine.
Most students feel that
Now, when thought of, the
colors of red, pink and white "Valentine's Day is a romantic
hearts come to mind. Roses, time for couples to spend
chocolate, teddy bears and din· together."
On this Valentine's Day, make
ner are often given as gifts.
To little kids, Valentine's Day it spedal by spending time with
is a time
while loved ones whether its friends or
making
to family.
Just enjoy the holiday and
put a v'I)Emti1~e
relax this
out val,!ntines

HERE

Valentine's Day questions
'

BY PAIGE Mulllll

including the seniors, I also
RACINE -Where would asked them another question. ·
you take your date fur ValenWhat do you look for in a
tine's Day?
·
. penon -looks or pmonality?
Shauna Manuel, one of the
Most of the itudents that I
two seniors that I interviewed, ~~erviewed round this quesanswered the question by stat- tion rather difficult to answer.
ing .the Olive Garden rqtauSeven out of eight students
rant.
interviewed answered ·personMost of the answers given by
other students weie either din- ality.
The most important thing
ner at a restaurant or the
this Valentine's Day is to decide
movies.
where
you w.mt to 8" and
While interviewing two
people fiom every class, how you look at people.

We want your photos!.
The Sentinel welcomes )'Our phottJtraphs. .Hare are a few
&amp;uldellnes for submissions: .
·
• Color pholographs are accepted, P!QYided they are In focus
and hiMI&amp;ood contraat. Nepi!Yis also are accepted; however,
ple1111lnclude a print along wtt11 the nep!MI.
• Bl~owaphs are accepted, provided they are In
focua and hiM! good contrast. Neptlves also are accepted; llOWtwtr, ple11111netude a print alorc wtt11 the negative.
• S1lndlnklze slides are accepted, P!QYided they areln focus
and hM IIOOd contrast.
.
• Submltled photoa llllOUid be no smaller than standard wa~
let aile and no lar&amp;er than 8 x 10.
• when submlttln&amp; digital photos, be sure the lmaaes are
' saved u hWHMoiutlon, h~ual~ JPEG ftles.

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio

45760
40) 992-6472

HOME
NATIONAL
.BANK
Racine 949·.221 0
Syracuse 992·6333

DOWNING
MULLEN MUSSER
6EAR COMPANY . INSURANCE
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
251 N. Second A••·
992-3381
Middleport, OH

408 General

Hartl

Parkway .

0HIO Rlv~

2-40

Crow's.Fami·ly
Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

ll8 Mila St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-1bru Window
PHONE m-S43l

�•
Monday, February s, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Logan tops River Valley, Page B3
Recf'wornen stop Seton Hill, Page BJ
Buckeyes edge Minnesota, Page B6
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

Monday, February 5, 2001

MONDAY'S

Evening Dinners
The weekly evening dinners
will ~ontinue on Tuesday &amp;
Thursday with serving from
4:45p.m. to 5:30p.m.
"Let's go to the Netherlands"
with Hal Keen: Hal will be here
at 4:15 with a slide show on

Aalsmeer's Flower Garden on
February 15.
Come join us for great
company and good food. The
suggested donation for the
evening dinner is $4.00. This is
a great bargain!

THURSDAY

TUESDAY

I

8
Barbecua Spare Ribs
Hot Baked Potato
Sweet Senior Slaw
Buttered Roll ·
Old Fashion Cherry Pie

Chili Con Came
Grilled Cheesy
Crackers
Emerald Isle Pudding

Sweet n Sour Chicken over
Steamed Rica
Crisp Salad
Flaky Croissant
Fruit Jamborse

Italian Lasagna
Seven Layer Salad
Tasty Texas Toast
Frosted Cherry Chip Cake

Scalloped Chicken

Wh~e

llinnlr

Pinnpple

or Brown Bread

Bllcult

7
Speghattiw Meat SIUCII
BUitellld IWtian Vegllllblea
Geltle Blllld
Appiellluc:e

Vegetable Beef Soup
Peanut Butter Sandwich

Crilp Baked Chicken
Biked Sweet Potatoes
Seuoned Lima Beans
White or Brown Bread

Cradlers
Tropical Frurt Salad

Banana

13

12
Baked POit. Chap
Augratin Potataea
Pe11 v.ith Mu1hroom1
Wllita or Brown Blllld
Blushing Pea11

Baked SINk
Potato111 fll Cupid
Leve Appln(TOIIIIIIoe1)
White or Brown Blllld
Sweetheart Cake

C11111med Potatoes
Spinach
While or Brown Bread

Purple Glllpn

21

20

22
Amllh Vinegar Chicken
Mlahad Potatoes
Skllat GrMn Beans
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Freth Apple

Liver and Onlana
Malhtod PatCINmedCo!n
Wh~• or BIO)Wl Blllld

Taallld Sllld
Orange Juice
Whll or Brown Blllld
B1111111 Gilham Pudding

Orlngtl .. Qropo!NII-

' 23
~loppy Joe Sandwich
Cheese Potatoes
. Mixed Vegetables
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Pineapple Rings

28

27

Soup BMnt &amp; Ham

VeiiP-11811
Speghatll wl TonlatO Sauce
Psa &amp; Cheue Sllld
Whtte or Brown BrNcl ·
Tangerine

Southem
to face Miller
Tuesday

11
Johnny Marzetti
Pertection Salad.
Apple Juice
Whrte or Brown Bread
Angellood Cake

Hem LOll

Baked Chicken
Mnhad Potatau &amp; qr~vy
Mixed Veglllbtn
8flcult
FrozenAmbrai.i.

Ham and Scalloped Potalcea

BBQ Chicken
Parsley Potatoes
Succotath
WhKe or Brown Breed
Cinnamon Applesauce

1&amp;

1

HIGHLIGHTS

9

8

Tangelo

20

Swedish Meatbslla
Herb Scalloped Potatoes
Bright Mixed Vegetable&amp;
Golden Roll
Delicious Banana Split

•

NeW England Baited

Pickled Beets
Rocky Ra.d Pudding

Lincoln Logs (Steak)
Gettysburg Potatoes
Fim Prelldent Coins
White or Brown Bread
waahlngton'l Chentea

Succulent Cuba Steak
Creamy Mashed Potatoes·
withGrsvy
Oranges Glazed Carrots
Golden Roll
Valentines Dessert

;u

•

11

13
Cupid's Ham Slices
Cheesy Augrautin Potatoes
Fresh Brussell Sprouts
Old Fashioned Biscu~
Sweetheart Dessert

FEBRUARY 2001

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU
The Senior Nt,ttrltlon Program meal t. 111Wd at 12:00 daily,

Tomato l/ln8lgndte

Comlnld
Fruit Juice
Rallin Pudding

RACINE - Southern wiU
play host to Miller Tuesday at
6p.m.
The Tornadoes (11-6) drew
the No. 5 seed in the upcoming Division IV sectional
tournament, which includes
Eastern, Beaver Eastern, Trimble and Symmes Valley.
'
Southern plays Symmes Valley Feb. 23 at 6:15 p.m.
Tickets ate on sale ar the
Southern High School office
and will also be sold at Thesday's and Friday's home
games.

Schedule

Creamed Baked Chicken
Parsley Seasoned Potitoes
Steamed Broccoli
Flaky Croissant
Fabulous Strawberry
Cheesecake

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until 4;30 p.m. Regularly
scheduled activities held
throughout the week include
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on
Wednesday from 10:00 a:m.
until noon.
All older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you can enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items
are individually 1)riced. The
suggested ·donation for the noon
,seJnig·r; ar~ takin$ advantage of the Fitness
at the Meigs Multipur~ose Se~ior
meal is $ 1.25.
Center.. A new treadmill was recently purchas~d 'through a grant funded by the Oh10 Hosp1tal
Association Foundation for Healthier Communities through Holzer Medical Center. The
Fitness Room is available for older adults age 50 and over. Call Joy Bentley at 992-2 161 for
information on how to get started exercising.

What .is
RSVP?
The Retired Senior Volunteer
· Program (RSVP) invites adults
age 55 and over to use their life
experience and skills to answer
the call of their neighbors in
need.
Do you have what it takes?
The painting classes have been very well attended at. the
• Are you 55 years of age?
Center.
Pictured is. Michelle Garretson, instructor,
• Can you volunteer at least a
demonstrating painting techniques of two of her students,
few hours per week?
from left to right, Carole Roush and Ruth Curfman.
• Enjoy working with others to
solve community problems?
Today's older adults are busy,
productiv~ people.
After
The Arthritis Support Group meeting date is February 22. Dr. retirement, many RSVP
meets on the third Friday of each Scott Smith is scheduled to volunteers use their experience
month from 10:00 a.m. until speak at the February meeting to assist at health clinics, tutor
children, teach Appalachian
II :3 0 a.m. The meeting is on "Caring for your Heart."
crafts
to children, or volunteer at
scheduled for February 16 in the The Support Group is open to
conference room at the Meigs all caregivers or to anyone who a variety of one·time
wants to learn more about community events.
Multipurpose Senior, Center.
If you are interested in
The Arthritis Support Group is disease processes and/or
an RSVP volunteer,
becoming
For more
made possible through funds caregiving.
contact
Diana
Coates, Director,
from the Ohio Department of information, contact Lorena
at 992-2161. ·
Leilheit, RNC, at 992-2161.
Health and Ohio University.
The Caring and Sharing The Stroke Support Group
Support Group will meet the will meet February J4 at I :00
fourth Thursday of each month p.m. in the conference room at'
Lia Tipton,
at the Meigs Multipurpose the Center.
Senior Center at I :00 p.m. The Occupational Therapist, Holzer
Rehabilitation Center, is the
group
coordinator.
992-3785
BEGINNER'S YOGA CLASS .
All ages are welcome to join
the beginner's yoga class at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. Classes will be held on
Tuesdays, beginning February 6
·serving Southern Ohio for over
through April 10 from 6:00 p.m.until 7:00 p.m. The cost is
Lift Chairs
$2.00 per class. Call Joy
Wheelchairs
Bentley at 992-2 1~Ito register.
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Join us on February 13
Walking Aids
for the Valentine Party.
&amp; Chux
Diapers
There will be a cookie
Ostomy
Supplies
contest with a prize
Diabetic Supplies
awarded for the best
Feecj.ins Pumps
tasting cookie. Bring in
· lots of cookies because
the leftovers f'rom the
_judging will be given to
shut-ins. Make sure to
bring your recipe along
with , your cookies.
1480 JACKSON PIKE
Judging will begin at
GAl.UP.OUS, OH
I :00 a.m.
H Juu Minute• from Holoer"

--Support Groups--

-------HEAP------ Tax Assistance
HEAP (Home
Energy
Assistance Program) is a
federally funded program to
assist eligible low-income .
Ohioans with their winter bills.
Your HEAP benefit consists of a
credit on your ac~ount each
year. You will receive a voucher
if you are a customer of a rural
cooperative, municipal utility, if
you use bulk fuel, or have a
master metered accounL
Applications may be picked
up at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Home visits to
assist any disabled or
homebound person can be
arranged. If you have qu~tions
or need assistance, call Darly
·Hawley at 740-992-2i6f.
·
Emergency HEAP (E·HEAP)
assists households whose
primary source and or necessary
secondary energy source
(usually electricity) have been
disconnected, are threatened
with discotliMiction, or who have
less than a t~-day supply· of
bulk fuel. ,Households are

eligible · to receive HEAP
emergency funds to restpre or
continue their utility service.
Applications for Emergency
HEAP can be made at the Meigs
County CAA HEAP Office at
186 Mulberry Avenue in
Pomeroy, or by contacting the
CAA Central Office in Cheshire.

Beautiful Nails
Pam Napper, a nail 'technician
from Added Touch in '
Middleport, will be at the Center
on February 6 from 9:30 a.m. •
11:30 a.m. She will gi:ve
manicures to make your nails
beautiful for your special
someone on Valentine's Day.
Come and see what a difference
it will make\

Free income tax assistance is
be.ing offered to low-income
senior citizens (age 60 and
over), each Tuesday and
Thursday from 9:00 a.m. -II :00
a.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center.
·
Persons using the tax service
must bring copies offederal and
state tax returns from last year,
tax forms for the current year
and any other relevant materials
showing income for the year.
Taxes will be prepared by
Hermon Carson and Leafy
Chasteen and will be taken by
appointment only.
'If you have questions, or
would like to make an
appointment, call Darla Hawley
at 992-2161.

PACE Classes

PACE exercise classes will
continue at the Center each
Tuesday and Thursday. These
classes are done from your chair
and inclu,de range of motion
The monthly birthday party exercises. 'We begin at' 10:30
a.m. so plan to attend and get
will be held on February 22:
limbered up.

Birthday Party

WE HONOR

WAUKESHA;Wis. (AP)Former Green Bay Packers
tight end Mark Chmura was
acquitted Saturday of se1Ctlally
assaulting a former baby sitter
at a drunken party.
The jury of seven men and
five women deliberated for 2
hours, 15. minutes before'
finding Chmura innocent on
charges of third-degree sexual
assault and child enticement. .
The charges carried a maximum penalty of 40 years in
prison and $20,000 in fines.

Love ~ wins at

Pebble Beach
I

yeArs.,

Everything
for the
Patient
at Home

MIStectomy Supplies
Cervical Plllowa
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;t
Suppllu
Back Supports
Knee, ,Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
S1Jpport Hosiery
Firat Aid Suppl'lea
Drenlnga

T_
H E MEDICAL SHOPPE
lull I

1

•we Care For You Like Family•
Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
CPAP!BIPAP

• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• Patient Ll1ls
• Uft Chairs

• Power Wheel Chair
• Scooter
·
• Bedside r.nrnmntl••~
• Bath/Safety Items

Locally Operau.d By: Mary inn Bowman, Lewil Bow~n,
Dan BotuiiiGn, Keith Blan'keruhip

F.... D&amp;llvvy and Training •.We am' All :Wurance
• Sal., 4 Rental• • Satne Day Service • 24 Hour
_ Ern.rgency S.VIce
Pine St.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -· A Chevrolet C-5
Corvette erased a 26-lap
deficit and won the Rolex
24-hours
sports
car
endurance race, as the favored
Dyson R acing entry ran into
engine problems for the second straight year.
The winning car, shared by
Americans Chris Kneifel and
Johnny O'Connell, Canad!an
Ron Fellows and Frenchman
Franck Freon~ gave Corvette
its biggest sports car win ever.

Fax Meigs
County s~rts
newstothe '

· Dally Sentinel It

'111,

I

912·2157.
,,

•.
'

'

Chevy wins
Rolex race

1&lt; 1

I ; :o11 I I ,

...

PEBBLE flEACH, Calif.
(AP) - A seven-stroke deficit
was wiped out in seven holes,
but that's where the similarities ended in the Pebble
Beach National Pro-Am . This
time, the stunning comeback
happened early, and . it
belonged to Davis Love III.
Love erased that margin by
playing his first sevc;n holes in
8-under. He finished with a
9-under 63, and buried his Ofor·62 w inless drought on the
PGATour.
Love,
who
earned
$720,000, finished at 272 for a
one-stroke victory over Vijay
Singh, and three shots ahead
of Phil. Mickelson. Most of
the attention was on Tiger
Woods, who made up seven
strokes over his last seven
holes last year for an amazing
victory. Woods was only a
spectator on another gorgeous day on the Monterey
Peninsula, sho().ting a 72 to tie
for 13th eight strokes
behi.nd.
Love's 63 was the lowest
finish by a winner in the 60~
. year history of the National
Pro- Am, topping the 64
Woods had last year.

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
zo

'&lt;!.(

"

'

'

.

•

fj,

Marauders earn second
victory over River Valley, 56-51
Bv DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCKSPRlNGS -J.P. Staats led a trio of
Marauders in double figures with 16 points,
and Meigs survived the outside shool;ing of
Eric Nolan to defeat River Valley 56-51 Saturday.
The victory was the second in a row for
Meigs after starting the season with 14
straight losses. But Nolan brought the
Raiders back from a double digit deficit with
21 second-half points, 15 of those coming
from beyond the arch.
Meigs jumped out to an 8-2 lead behind

Staats who had six of the Marauders first
eight points. The Raiders came back and
went on a 6-2 run to cut the Meigs lead to
10-8 when Scott Payne scored with 53 seconds left.
But buck~ts by Derrick Johnson and Nick
Bolin gave the Marauders a 14-8 lead after
the first eight minutes.
In the second period, the Marauders built
up a 10-'point advantage (26-16) on a bucket
by Buzzy Fackler at the 3:27 mark. A basket
by D.J Frazee with 24 seconds left pulled the
HIGH-RISER- J.P. Staats puts up a jumper over several River
Valley players in ~he Maraud!lrs win. (Dave Harris photo)

Please see Meigs, 84

es u

e

"

.
Simpson &amp;
Brown lead
Eastern to win

Southern
top les

.

Chmura
. acquitted

Activity
1

Page 81

Wa ama
Bv Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

JON

RACINE -The "Hattie of
the Bend" breathed new life
Saturday as Southern rallied
for a 6 7-5 1 victory over

WtLL

OVP CORRESPONDENT

EAST MEIGS - Garrett Karr came through on
a puU up jumper with just
seconds remaining to give
Eastern a 64-6~ upset victory over Chesapeake Saturday.
Seniors ijoe Brown and
Matt Simpson . combined
for 39 points in the upset
of the No. 3-ranked school
in the AP Division Ill poll. 4'
Brown began the night
with a 3-point play, com- ,
in'g frOm a field
. foul
TCe!
marched back down the
court and Zeb Best hit a
jumper from the foul line, ',
making the ·score 3-2 East-

Wahama. The game was rem-

iniscent of last year when the
two teams squared off and
Southern fe ll behind 26
points early, then posted a
comeback win .

',.,

shot.

Southern (11-6) became
the fifth seed in yesterday's
tournam~nt draw · behind
number one Eastern, Beaver
Eastern, Trimble and Symmes
Valley. The Tornadoes will
play Symmes Valley at Alexander ·on Friday, Feb. 23 at 6: I5
· p.m . Tickets are on sale at the
. high school .office and will be
sold at Tuesday and Friday's
home games.
Southern semor C had
Hubbard spearheaded the
comeback with a 10-poim
cfforr, three steals and sox
rebounds. He garnered 11
second half points . .
Hubba rd was flanked by

I

'

'
'•

ern.

However, buckets by
Karr and Nelson gave the
Eagles a . 7-2 lead at the
5:30 mark. The Eagles
appeared to be giving the
Panthers trouble when ·
Chesapeake called a time
out, for they couldn't find
an open man to inbound
the ball to.
The Panthers revamped
their offense and took a
10-7 lead when Best connected on a three-point
play from underneath.
Brown took control the
next Eagle possession and

Plain -

hJies, BJ ·

senior G arret Kiser, w ho netted 13 points, three assists and
seven rebounds. Senior M att

Warner posted ei~ht points all
of which were scored in th e
third period. Jonathan Evans
added eight and Dallas Hill
five. Jeremy Fisher grabbed a
team - hi gh n ine rebounds and

five steals.
Wahama (3- 12) was led by
Jeremy Hu,lnall who notched
15 poims, Nathan Connol ly
and Eddie McKinney each
added eight, 13randon Hankinson six, Ryan Roush four
an d J.R. Parsons fo ur.
Southern took the early

EAGLE ON THE MOVE - Eastern's Matt Simpson scored 19 points as the Eagles upset
Chesapeake 64-63 Saturday. (Jon Will photo)

Gannon leads AFC to Pro .Bowl win
HONOLULU (AP) - For most of
Rich Gannon's career, playing in the
Pf&lt;1 Bowl was something fo.r other
players. Having reached that level, · the
Oakland R aiders quarterback wasn't
about to pass up an opportunity to
· stand out.
Still recovering from the separated
left shoulder he sustained Jan. 14 in BaltiJ11.ore's 16-3 victory over the Raiders
in the AFC championship game, Gannon played anyway Sunday, albeit
briefly. He wound up the player of the
game.
"It's 6K and getring better," Gannb11

said a(ter compl eting 12 of 14 passes for
160 yards and two touchdowns in the
opening 11 minutes, igniting the AFC
to a 38-17 victory over the NFC. " It's
still not 100 percent healthy, but I was
able to get out of there today without
getting slammed. So that's imporrant.
"I've loved it here so much, we're
heading to Maui next week."
The 35-year-old Gannon was playing
in his second Pro Bowl since signing a
four-year, $16 million contract with the
Raiders in 1999. Before that, he spent
most of his first 11 NFL seasons as a
reserve with Minnesota, Washington

kad , hut was pinned against

the wall most of the first half
by the White Falcons. Hubbard led the early scorjng
with nine first quarter points
a.s South ern held leads of 9-4
and 15-6 heforc a pair of
Eddie McKinney three point-

and Kansas City.
He certai nly made his coach proud.
"The guy had a serious injury, he
rehabilitated it extremely 11ard;' said
Raiders coach Jon Gruden, who led rhe
AFC to its fou rth victory in the last five
Pro Bowls, trimming the NFC's lead to
16-15 since th e game went to its present format in 1971. " He wanted to be
here, and he wanted to play.
"For him .co win 13 games as a starter
and be tlie starting quarterback in the
Pro Bowl and then win the player of

ers ended the frame at a much

closer at 15- 12.
Wahama shut down Hubbard in the second period,
holding the hat- h&lt;!nded talent
· to zero points. Coach Lewis
H all's rlub ove~came thei r

slow star t and slowly wrested

Please see Southern, 84

Please see NFL, 14

,.

Rio Grande escapes cedarville with victory
BY ·MARK WIWAMS
URG SID

CEDARVILLE The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketbaU team was
able to escape the Yellow Jacket nest of Cedarville University with an 84- 76 win ort
Saturday evening.
Rio Grande (18-8, 9-4
AMC) continues to keep the
pressure on the American
J14ideast Conference's top
teams by winning its fifth

game in a row. The R edmen
used a balanced attack to subdue th e never-say-die Yellow
Jackets. Junior pivotman Joe
Delaney 'was a perfect 9 for 9
from the floor en route to a
'19-point
performance.
Delaney,, also grabbed seven
reboun~ and dished out two
assists. Nathan Copas added
16 points (14 in the second
half) . Mike Marshall scored 14
and dished out a career-high
seven &lt;tSSists, while Jerry Bar-

low and Chris Ballenger
added 10 points each. Joe
. Martin topped the rebounding chart with 10.
Cedarville (7-18, 2-11
AMC) was led by C urt
Fleck's IS points (1 3 in the
second half) and Josh Gast
with 14.
Barry Chamberlain added
13 points and Greg Guiler
and David Krage! each
chipped in 10. Gast was
Cedarville's top rebo und er

••

with eight.
Cedarville led early and
Rio battled back to take a 4 135 at halftime.
In the second half, the Redmen built the lead to 14 (6248) points witH 11 : 15 remaining. With Rio Grande leading 71-60 with 6:05 left in
th e game CedarviUe went on
a 6-0 run capped by a three pointer from joel Shepherd to
make the score 71 - 66.
The Yellow Jackets would
\

move to within fo ur points

(80-76) but wou ld get no
closer than that. Copas and
Marshall bagged free throws
in the finalminures to pm th e
game' on ice for the Redmen .
Rio dominated the glass
(45- 2()) but forced on ly 12
CU tumovers while cornmittin'g 15 miscues on the night.
Rio Grande now prepares
for a rematch with Shawnee
State Tuesday Night at the
Newt Oliver Arena.

�•
Monday, February s, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Logan tops River Valley, Page B3
Recf'wornen stop Seton Hill, Page BJ
Buckeyes edge Minnesota, Page B6
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County

Monday, February 5, 2001

MONDAY'S

Evening Dinners
The weekly evening dinners
will ~ontinue on Tuesday &amp;
Thursday with serving from
4:45p.m. to 5:30p.m.
"Let's go to the Netherlands"
with Hal Keen: Hal will be here
at 4:15 with a slide show on

Aalsmeer's Flower Garden on
February 15.
Come join us for great
company and good food. The
suggested donation for the
evening dinner is $4.00. This is
a great bargain!

THURSDAY

TUESDAY

I

8
Barbecua Spare Ribs
Hot Baked Potato
Sweet Senior Slaw
Buttered Roll ·
Old Fashion Cherry Pie

Chili Con Came
Grilled Cheesy
Crackers
Emerald Isle Pudding

Sweet n Sour Chicken over
Steamed Rica
Crisp Salad
Flaky Croissant
Fruit Jamborse

Italian Lasagna
Seven Layer Salad
Tasty Texas Toast
Frosted Cherry Chip Cake

Scalloped Chicken

Wh~e

llinnlr

Pinnpple

or Brown Bread

Bllcult

7
Speghattiw Meat SIUCII
BUitellld IWtian Vegllllblea
Geltle Blllld
Appiellluc:e

Vegetable Beef Soup
Peanut Butter Sandwich

Crilp Baked Chicken
Biked Sweet Potatoes
Seuoned Lima Beans
White or Brown Bread

Cradlers
Tropical Frurt Salad

Banana

13

12
Baked POit. Chap
Augratin Potataea
Pe11 v.ith Mu1hroom1
Wllita or Brown Blllld
Blushing Pea11

Baked SINk
Potato111 fll Cupid
Leve Appln(TOIIIIIIoe1)
White or Brown Blllld
Sweetheart Cake

C11111med Potatoes
Spinach
While or Brown Bread

Purple Glllpn

21

20

22
Amllh Vinegar Chicken
Mlahad Potatoes
Skllat GrMn Beans
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Freth Apple

Liver and Onlana
Malhtod PatCINmedCo!n
Wh~• or BIO)Wl Blllld

Taallld Sllld
Orange Juice
Whll or Brown Blllld
B1111111 Gilham Pudding

Orlngtl .. Qropo!NII-

' 23
~loppy Joe Sandwich
Cheese Potatoes
. Mixed Vegetables
Wh~e or Brown Bread
Pineapple Rings

28

27

Soup BMnt &amp; Ham

VeiiP-11811
Speghatll wl TonlatO Sauce
Psa &amp; Cheue Sllld
Whtte or Brown BrNcl ·
Tangerine

Southem
to face Miller
Tuesday

11
Johnny Marzetti
Pertection Salad.
Apple Juice
Whrte or Brown Bread
Angellood Cake

Hem LOll

Baked Chicken
Mnhad Potatau &amp; qr~vy
Mixed Veglllbtn
8flcult
FrozenAmbrai.i.

Ham and Scalloped Potalcea

BBQ Chicken
Parsley Potatoes
Succotath
WhKe or Brown Breed
Cinnamon Applesauce

1&amp;

1

HIGHLIGHTS

9

8

Tangelo

20

Swedish Meatbslla
Herb Scalloped Potatoes
Bright Mixed Vegetable&amp;
Golden Roll
Delicious Banana Split

•

NeW England Baited

Pickled Beets
Rocky Ra.d Pudding

Lincoln Logs (Steak)
Gettysburg Potatoes
Fim Prelldent Coins
White or Brown Bread
waahlngton'l Chentea

Succulent Cuba Steak
Creamy Mashed Potatoes·
withGrsvy
Oranges Glazed Carrots
Golden Roll
Valentines Dessert

;u

•

11

13
Cupid's Ham Slices
Cheesy Augrautin Potatoes
Fresh Brussell Sprouts
Old Fashioned Biscu~
Sweetheart Dessert

FEBRUARY 2001

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU
The Senior Nt,ttrltlon Program meal t. 111Wd at 12:00 daily,

Tomato l/ln8lgndte

Comlnld
Fruit Juice
Rallin Pudding

RACINE - Southern wiU
play host to Miller Tuesday at
6p.m.
The Tornadoes (11-6) drew
the No. 5 seed in the upcoming Division IV sectional
tournament, which includes
Eastern, Beaver Eastern, Trimble and Symmes Valley.
'
Southern plays Symmes Valley Feb. 23 at 6:15 p.m.
Tickets ate on sale ar the
Southern High School office
and will also be sold at Thesday's and Friday's home
games.

Schedule

Creamed Baked Chicken
Parsley Seasoned Potitoes
Steamed Broccoli
Flaky Croissant
Fabulous Strawberry
Cheesecake

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until 4;30 p.m. Regularly
scheduled activities held
throughout the week include
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knitting Circle meets on
Wednesday from 10:00 a:m.
until noon.
All older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you can enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items
are individually 1)riced. The
suggested ·donation for the noon
,seJnig·r; ar~ takin$ advantage of the Fitness
at the Meigs Multipur~ose Se~ior
meal is $ 1.25.
Center.. A new treadmill was recently purchas~d 'through a grant funded by the Oh10 Hosp1tal
Association Foundation for Healthier Communities through Holzer Medical Center. The
Fitness Room is available for older adults age 50 and over. Call Joy Bentley at 992-2 161 for
information on how to get started exercising.

What .is
RSVP?
The Retired Senior Volunteer
· Program (RSVP) invites adults
age 55 and over to use their life
experience and skills to answer
the call of their neighbors in
need.
Do you have what it takes?
The painting classes have been very well attended at. the
• Are you 55 years of age?
Center.
Pictured is. Michelle Garretson, instructor,
• Can you volunteer at least a
demonstrating painting techniques of two of her students,
few hours per week?
from left to right, Carole Roush and Ruth Curfman.
• Enjoy working with others to
solve community problems?
Today's older adults are busy,
productiv~ people.
After
The Arthritis Support Group meeting date is February 22. Dr. retirement, many RSVP
meets on the third Friday of each Scott Smith is scheduled to volunteers use their experience
month from 10:00 a.m. until speak at the February meeting to assist at health clinics, tutor
children, teach Appalachian
II :3 0 a.m. The meeting is on "Caring for your Heart."
crafts
to children, or volunteer at
scheduled for February 16 in the The Support Group is open to
conference room at the Meigs all caregivers or to anyone who a variety of one·time
wants to learn more about community events.
Multipurpose Senior, Center.
If you are interested in
The Arthritis Support Group is disease processes and/or
an RSVP volunteer,
becoming
For more
made possible through funds caregiving.
contact
Diana
Coates, Director,
from the Ohio Department of information, contact Lorena
at 992-2161. ·
Leilheit, RNC, at 992-2161.
Health and Ohio University.
The Caring and Sharing The Stroke Support Group
Support Group will meet the will meet February J4 at I :00
fourth Thursday of each month p.m. in the conference room at'
Lia Tipton,
at the Meigs Multipurpose the Center.
Senior Center at I :00 p.m. The Occupational Therapist, Holzer
Rehabilitation Center, is the
group
coordinator.
992-3785
BEGINNER'S YOGA CLASS .
All ages are welcome to join
the beginner's yoga class at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center. Classes will be held on
Tuesdays, beginning February 6
·serving Southern Ohio for over
through April 10 from 6:00 p.m.until 7:00 p.m. The cost is
Lift Chairs
$2.00 per class. Call Joy
Wheelchairs
Bentley at 992-2 1~Ito register.
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Join us on February 13
Walking Aids
for the Valentine Party.
&amp; Chux
Diapers
There will be a cookie
Ostomy
Supplies
contest with a prize
Diabetic Supplies
awarded for the best
Feecj.ins Pumps
tasting cookie. Bring in
· lots of cookies because
the leftovers f'rom the
_judging will be given to
shut-ins. Make sure to
bring your recipe along
with , your cookies.
1480 JACKSON PIKE
Judging will begin at
GAl.UP.OUS, OH
I :00 a.m.
H Juu Minute• from Holoer"

--Support Groups--

-------HEAP------ Tax Assistance
HEAP (Home
Energy
Assistance Program) is a
federally funded program to
assist eligible low-income .
Ohioans with their winter bills.
Your HEAP benefit consists of a
credit on your ac~ount each
year. You will receive a voucher
if you are a customer of a rural
cooperative, municipal utility, if
you use bulk fuel, or have a
master metered accounL
Applications may be picked
up at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Home visits to
assist any disabled or
homebound person can be
arranged. If you have qu~tions
or need assistance, call Darly
·Hawley at 740-992-2i6f.
·
Emergency HEAP (E·HEAP)
assists households whose
primary source and or necessary
secondary energy source
(usually electricity) have been
disconnected, are threatened
with discotliMiction, or who have
less than a t~-day supply· of
bulk fuel. ,Households are

eligible · to receive HEAP
emergency funds to restpre or
continue their utility service.
Applications for Emergency
HEAP can be made at the Meigs
County CAA HEAP Office at
186 Mulberry Avenue in
Pomeroy, or by contacting the
CAA Central Office in Cheshire.

Beautiful Nails
Pam Napper, a nail 'technician
from Added Touch in '
Middleport, will be at the Center
on February 6 from 9:30 a.m. •
11:30 a.m. She will gi:ve
manicures to make your nails
beautiful for your special
someone on Valentine's Day.
Come and see what a difference
it will make\

Free income tax assistance is
be.ing offered to low-income
senior citizens (age 60 and
over), each Tuesday and
Thursday from 9:00 a.m. -II :00
a.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center.
·
Persons using the tax service
must bring copies offederal and
state tax returns from last year,
tax forms for the current year
and any other relevant materials
showing income for the year.
Taxes will be prepared by
Hermon Carson and Leafy
Chasteen and will be taken by
appointment only.
'If you have questions, or
would like to make an
appointment, call Darla Hawley
at 992-2161.

PACE Classes

PACE exercise classes will
continue at the Center each
Tuesday and Thursday. These
classes are done from your chair
and inclu,de range of motion
The monthly birthday party exercises. 'We begin at' 10:30
a.m. so plan to attend and get
will be held on February 22:
limbered up.

Birthday Party

WE HONOR

WAUKESHA;Wis. (AP)Former Green Bay Packers
tight end Mark Chmura was
acquitted Saturday of se1Ctlally
assaulting a former baby sitter
at a drunken party.
The jury of seven men and
five women deliberated for 2
hours, 15. minutes before'
finding Chmura innocent on
charges of third-degree sexual
assault and child enticement. .
The charges carried a maximum penalty of 40 years in
prison and $20,000 in fines.

Love ~ wins at

Pebble Beach
I

yeArs.,

Everything
for the
Patient
at Home

MIStectomy Supplies
Cervical Plllowa
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;t
Suppllu
Back Supports
Knee, ,Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
S1Jpport Hosiery
Firat Aid Suppl'lea
Drenlnga

T_
H E MEDICAL SHOPPE
lull I

1

•we Care For You Like Family•
Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
CPAP!BIPAP

• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• Patient Ll1ls
• Uft Chairs

• Power Wheel Chair
• Scooter
·
• Bedside r.nrnmntl••~
• Bath/Safety Items

Locally Operau.d By: Mary inn Bowman, Lewil Bow~n,
Dan BotuiiiGn, Keith Blan'keruhip

F.... D&amp;llvvy and Training •.We am' All :Wurance
• Sal., 4 Rental• • Satne Day Service • 24 Hour
_ Ern.rgency S.VIce
Pine St.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -· A Chevrolet C-5
Corvette erased a 26-lap
deficit and won the Rolex
24-hours
sports
car
endurance race, as the favored
Dyson R acing entry ran into
engine problems for the second straight year.
The winning car, shared by
Americans Chris Kneifel and
Johnny O'Connell, Canad!an
Ron Fellows and Frenchman
Franck Freon~ gave Corvette
its biggest sports car win ever.

Fax Meigs
County s~rts
newstothe '

· Dally Sentinel It

'111,

I

912·2157.
,,

•.
'

'

Chevy wins
Rolex race

1&lt; 1

I ; :o11 I I ,

...

PEBBLE flEACH, Calif.
(AP) - A seven-stroke deficit
was wiped out in seven holes,
but that's where the similarities ended in the Pebble
Beach National Pro-Am . This
time, the stunning comeback
happened early, and . it
belonged to Davis Love III.
Love erased that margin by
playing his first sevc;n holes in
8-under. He finished with a
9-under 63, and buried his Ofor·62 w inless drought on the
PGATour.
Love,
who
earned
$720,000, finished at 272 for a
one-stroke victory over Vijay
Singh, and three shots ahead
of Phil. Mickelson. Most of
the attention was on Tiger
Woods, who made up seven
strokes over his last seven
holes last year for an amazing
victory. Woods was only a
spectator on another gorgeous day on the Monterey
Peninsula, sho().ting a 72 to tie
for 13th eight strokes
behi.nd.
Love's 63 was the lowest
finish by a winner in the 60~
. year history of the National
Pro- Am, topping the 64
Woods had last year.

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
zo

'&lt;!.(

"

'

'

.

•

fj,

Marauders earn second
victory over River Valley, 56-51
Bv DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCKSPRlNGS -J.P. Staats led a trio of
Marauders in double figures with 16 points,
and Meigs survived the outside shool;ing of
Eric Nolan to defeat River Valley 56-51 Saturday.
The victory was the second in a row for
Meigs after starting the season with 14
straight losses. But Nolan brought the
Raiders back from a double digit deficit with
21 second-half points, 15 of those coming
from beyond the arch.
Meigs jumped out to an 8-2 lead behind

Staats who had six of the Marauders first
eight points. The Raiders came back and
went on a 6-2 run to cut the Meigs lead to
10-8 when Scott Payne scored with 53 seconds left.
But buck~ts by Derrick Johnson and Nick
Bolin gave the Marauders a 14-8 lead after
the first eight minutes.
In the second period, the Marauders built
up a 10-'point advantage (26-16) on a bucket
by Buzzy Fackler at the 3:27 mark. A basket
by D.J Frazee with 24 seconds left pulled the
HIGH-RISER- J.P. Staats puts up a jumper over several River
Valley players in ~he Maraud!lrs win. (Dave Harris photo)

Please see Meigs, 84

es u

e

"

.
Simpson &amp;
Brown lead
Eastern to win

Southern
top les

.

Chmura
. acquitted

Activity
1

Page 81

Wa ama
Bv Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

JON

RACINE -The "Hattie of
the Bend" breathed new life
Saturday as Southern rallied
for a 6 7-5 1 victory over

WtLL

OVP CORRESPONDENT

EAST MEIGS - Garrett Karr came through on
a puU up jumper with just
seconds remaining to give
Eastern a 64-6~ upset victory over Chesapeake Saturday.
Seniors ijoe Brown and
Matt Simpson . combined
for 39 points in the upset
of the No. 3-ranked school
in the AP Division Ill poll. 4'
Brown began the night
with a 3-point play, com- ,
in'g frOm a field
. foul
TCe!
marched back down the
court and Zeb Best hit a
jumper from the foul line, ',
making the ·score 3-2 East-

Wahama. The game was rem-

iniscent of last year when the
two teams squared off and
Southern fe ll behind 26
points early, then posted a
comeback win .

',.,

shot.

Southern (11-6) became
the fifth seed in yesterday's
tournam~nt draw · behind
number one Eastern, Beaver
Eastern, Trimble and Symmes
Valley. The Tornadoes will
play Symmes Valley at Alexander ·on Friday, Feb. 23 at 6: I5
· p.m . Tickets are on sale at the
. high school .office and will be
sold at Tuesday and Friday's
home games.
Southern semor C had
Hubbard spearheaded the
comeback with a 10-poim
cfforr, three steals and sox
rebounds. He garnered 11
second half points . .
Hubba rd was flanked by

I

'

'
'•

ern.

However, buckets by
Karr and Nelson gave the
Eagles a . 7-2 lead at the
5:30 mark. The Eagles
appeared to be giving the
Panthers trouble when ·
Chesapeake called a time
out, for they couldn't find
an open man to inbound
the ball to.
The Panthers revamped
their offense and took a
10-7 lead when Best connected on a three-point
play from underneath.
Brown took control the
next Eagle possession and

Plain -

hJies, BJ ·

senior G arret Kiser, w ho netted 13 points, three assists and
seven rebounds. Senior M att

Warner posted ei~ht points all
of which were scored in th e
third period. Jonathan Evans
added eight and Dallas Hill
five. Jeremy Fisher grabbed a
team - hi gh n ine rebounds and

five steals.
Wahama (3- 12) was led by
Jeremy Hu,lnall who notched
15 poims, Nathan Connol ly
and Eddie McKinney each
added eight, 13randon Hankinson six, Ryan Roush four
an d J.R. Parsons fo ur.
Southern took the early

EAGLE ON THE MOVE - Eastern's Matt Simpson scored 19 points as the Eagles upset
Chesapeake 64-63 Saturday. (Jon Will photo)

Gannon leads AFC to Pro .Bowl win
HONOLULU (AP) - For most of
Rich Gannon's career, playing in the
Pf&lt;1 Bowl was something fo.r other
players. Having reached that level, · the
Oakland R aiders quarterback wasn't
about to pass up an opportunity to
· stand out.
Still recovering from the separated
left shoulder he sustained Jan. 14 in BaltiJ11.ore's 16-3 victory over the Raiders
in the AFC championship game, Gannon played anyway Sunday, albeit
briefly. He wound up the player of the
game.
"It's 6K and getring better," Gannb11

said a(ter compl eting 12 of 14 passes for
160 yards and two touchdowns in the
opening 11 minutes, igniting the AFC
to a 38-17 victory over the NFC. " It's
still not 100 percent healthy, but I was
able to get out of there today without
getting slammed. So that's imporrant.
"I've loved it here so much, we're
heading to Maui next week."
The 35-year-old Gannon was playing
in his second Pro Bowl since signing a
four-year, $16 million contract with the
Raiders in 1999. Before that, he spent
most of his first 11 NFL seasons as a
reserve with Minnesota, Washington

kad , hut was pinned against

the wall most of the first half
by the White Falcons. Hubbard led the early scorjng
with nine first quarter points
a.s South ern held leads of 9-4
and 15-6 heforc a pair of
Eddie McKinney three point-

and Kansas City.
He certai nly made his coach proud.
"The guy had a serious injury, he
rehabilitated it extremely 11ard;' said
Raiders coach Jon Gruden, who led rhe
AFC to its fou rth victory in the last five
Pro Bowls, trimming the NFC's lead to
16-15 since th e game went to its present format in 1971. " He wanted to be
here, and he wanted to play.
"For him .co win 13 games as a starter
and be tlie starting quarterback in the
Pro Bowl and then win the player of

ers ended the frame at a much

closer at 15- 12.
Wahama shut down Hubbard in the second period,
holding the hat- h&lt;!nded talent
· to zero points. Coach Lewis
H all's rlub ove~came thei r

slow star t and slowly wrested

Please see Southern, 84

Please see NFL, 14

,.

Rio Grande escapes cedarville with victory
BY ·MARK WIWAMS
URG SID

CEDARVILLE The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen basketbaU team was
able to escape the Yellow Jacket nest of Cedarville University with an 84- 76 win ort
Saturday evening.
Rio Grande (18-8, 9-4
AMC) continues to keep the
pressure on the American
J14ideast Conference's top
teams by winning its fifth

game in a row. The R edmen
used a balanced attack to subdue th e never-say-die Yellow
Jackets. Junior pivotman Joe
Delaney 'was a perfect 9 for 9
from the floor en route to a
'19-point
performance.
Delaney,, also grabbed seven
reboun~ and dished out two
assists. Nathan Copas added
16 points (14 in the second
half) . Mike Marshall scored 14
and dished out a career-high
seven &lt;tSSists, while Jerry Bar-

low and Chris Ballenger
added 10 points each. Joe
. Martin topped the rebounding chart with 10.
Cedarville (7-18, 2-11
AMC) was led by C urt
Fleck's IS points (1 3 in the
second half) and Josh Gast
with 14.
Barry Chamberlain added
13 points and Greg Guiler
and David Krage! each
chipped in 10. Gast was
Cedarville's top rebo und er

••

with eight.
Cedarville led early and
Rio battled back to take a 4 135 at halftime.
In the second half, the Redmen built the lead to 14 (6248) points witH 11 : 15 remaining. With Rio Grande leading 71-60 with 6:05 left in
th e game CedarviUe went on
a 6-0 run capped by a three pointer from joel Shepherd to
make the score 71 - 66.
The Yellow Jackets would
\

move to within fo ur points

(80-76) but wou ld get no
closer than that. Copas and
Marshall bagged free throws
in the finalminures to pm th e
game' on ice for the Redmen .
Rio dominated the glass
(45- 2()) but forced on ly 12
CU tumovers while cornmittin'g 15 miscues on the night.
Rio Grande now prepares
for a rematch with Shawnee
State Tuesday Night at the
Newt Oliver Arena.

�(

'

.Monday, February 5, 2oo1
•
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Page B2 • The Dally

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The

Dally Sentinel • Page B3

n hammers River Redwomen hold off
in SEGAL play Seton I, 94·86

Alll'traOnlll,
Announcement, OlvMWay,
Loti 1 Found, Yardlllft,
,and INantad To Do Ad•
Muat Be Paid In Advance.
TRIBUNE RfiAQUNE:
2:00 p.m. tiM day belo,.
the ad Ia to run. Sunday &amp;
Monday adHion 2:00 p.m.
Frldty

11

o

lielp WanteCI

Ftmlly

Addiction

110

Commun-

Ity Treatment StrviOet· An
Outpatient
Alcohol
And
Drug
Counseling
Agency
Is Aecepling Reaumes For

The FoHowlng
Positions

Thereplet·
Supervisory
Pos ition. Responsible , For
Diagnosing
Scrttnlngsf
Evaluations , Revrew 01 Cli-

SENTINEL: QfADUNE·

ent

1:00 p.m. I,.. day belo,.
• the ad Ia to run.
Bundey I Monday adlllon
1 :00 p.m. Friday

Charts,

ration,

Case

Ouatny

Consul·

Assurance

Client
ence

Cueload .

Eaperl·

In Chemical

Oepend-

tnc~. LPCC Or LISW
qulrad.
Co4ocllltotor-Oomostic

2 daya bllorelhl ad 1110
run by 4:30p.m. Blturday
• Monday adltlon- 4:30

r.

Dependency,

Anger

ogema,.,

Man-

A
A

Bachetor. 0egf0e
Stciltory/ R-Uonllt·
General
Sacretary
ties . Requlraments ·

Personals

I Los t 40 lbs In Just 2
Months, Lose 5 To 100 _..
Lbs .. Ga1n Energy, Results
Guaranteed!
Earn
$500·
Time
From
S1000
Part

'lbur Home, (800)582-9757

80

Auction
and Flea Market
Saturdty

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Licensed

t66,0hlo &amp; Wtst Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
Riverside
Aucllon
Barn,
sara Every Saturday Night
at 6p m , Auctlonear Ray·
mond
Johnson
(740)2!8-

Wanted to Buy
Top

Dollar:

M.T.S.

Coin

Second

Avenue,

11 0

u.s.

Shop,

151

Gallipolis,

.

Help Wanted

45831
Or
Fu
(740)448-8014. EOE,

To

M/FIH.

Or

The • Nursery.

Styllat.

Shur

Pltll·

ure, Buay Downtown Salon .
Contact Sandi Oernbrough .
(7401~•&amp;

•••2

lmmtdlalt

For

Victim AdVocoto To Work
With Women And Children
In A Realdentlal Setting.
Full·tlmt
Position
With
Some Evening Houra. Tna

ldtol

Candldato

Will

Havo

A Minimum Of An Aaao·
With
clatea
Degree
Coura11 In A Soclsl Strv·
let Field And Havt Experl·
ance Working With PtQplt
In Crisis
lntareated Ap·

pllcanu

May
To :

Ptraonnel,

P.O. Box
Ohio 45631

4S4,

Gallipolis,

Searching

Main

From

Home, $500- $1500 Mo.
Part Time, $2000· $7500 +
Paid vaca·

tions. l888)852-7501
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Sell.
• Shirley Spears. 304-675-1429.

EOE.
CNH, HHA, Cartilled Homemakers
Needed To Provide In Home
Services For The Elderly &amp; Dill·
bled In The Mason. New Haven,
West Columbia Area. Call 1·888·

p

art·tlma
Medical
Recap·
tlonlll Wanted . Can · You
Send A Smile Over The
Phone? Must B1 Depend·
able,
Calm
Under
Pres·
lure. Medical OUiee Ex·
perlence
Or
Secretary
Training,
20·2!
Hours/

QRIVING CAREERS START
HEREI Wo Need Over 300 Entry
Level Drivers This Month . No Ex·
perlence ReQuired. WE Repre·
unt Over 40 Tru~klng Campa·
nles You Chooaa Which One.
Tuition Assistance Available For

lntxptrltncod COL DELIVERS
1-800·38H405
hl)erlenced
Bookketptr
Wanted·
Minimum
01
2
Years
Olflct
Exptrltnct
And
Accredited
Account·

lng Certlllcatt, APIAR, Pay·
roll, Job Coaling, Quick·
Software,

Full Tlmt,

Ctll
(740)448-4&amp;14
10om. M·F.

Aller

WI HAYIIXPANDIOI
lnfOCIIIon II pltt!IICIIO
announc:t tllalwo -

,

P.O.Box
222.
Ohio
4!831·

Wanfed
Home &amp; Garden Party Dealgne,. Hand Ma&lt;lt Pot·
lOry, Unlquo '"""'aaor!Oa,
Candle&amp;, Garden Ware,

Otalgn• Quality Pk:turea
No Otllvely, No lnvon!ory,
No Ouota' Stt 'lbur Own
Hours, High CCmmiSaion,

Atk Alloul \Wr Potentially
Free S!erter Kit· Pius
Added Bonus. Call For Ca·
tails. (740)1M-S997
(740)3n-9397.
WEARE HIRING
lnfoCialon 11 Currenuy
Adding To OUr Rtaldonllal
Stoff. \W Could Help Ua
RecruH
VOiuntMrt on Bthl" Of
Ncn- Prollt OrQinl,.tlonl.
No llelllntl
No '""""'lalngl
IW Can Eam Up Torn
!lOur. And Wlaldy llonuo·

•••

!ldclld 1 new ool-l!t
our locat~n 1ft Gtllipoll'

Wt Alto Ofllr:
oPulllent!ta

Wt now olfar additional carttr opporlunltlttlor tnlr•
gotic, POiillvl. goa&gt;mlndtcl
a~lc.tntaln our Non-prolll
Dl\llllon.
'lbu can tarn up to rtI
hour ond WHkly bonuiM.
WI 1110 offlr - 1 bin·
llfltlll\0 ~·1&lt;1-

OWlfllly ,lyChtflk
ol'lld V101t10n

011~.

Ctll

_,

ual:.v~ An In·

1-NNifoiMIIIft. 1111

,,roll_

r

Co~

C.H TOdayl741l-446"1367,
1-800-214.Q452,
Reg •90-D!H274B

180 Wanted To Do
Anentlon Rental &amp; home Owners,
All Phases 01 Home Repair, No
Job Too Big Or Small (304)675·

7738
Can't get out? Need an errand
run for groceries etc . Call
(304)675·5726 for Point Pleasant,
Gallipolis Area.

An lnltr.;tw:
l·lle-475-71123 !x1. fiOI

4

This RMSpaper will no1
kriOWingl)' eccepl
advertiiiOITN!rD fur real oslate
whlcf1111n - - of 1118
law. O u r - areheraby
Informed lf1al alldwelllnga

304-&amp;75-1957
Mature Couple Interested In Car·
lng For Non Bed Fast Elderly

1980 14x70 Hlllcreat TrOller. Gas

Treo Prortu/ona/1"

•rh•

Buck·

et
Truck
Service· · Top·
Trim·
Removal·
Stump

Grinding.

Froo

Eatlmaloa,

Insured.

workers

Comp. Bidwell, Ohio. Call &amp;
Sovo.
1-800-838-9568
(740)388-9648
Owner:
Rick MOunt.
Quality houte cleanlnga, The

Boat Bonded. Profoaalonal. Roll·
able, call avonlnga (740)256f131 or 1·888·781-2412, omall:
ctoubled Oeurekaneteom

· Bualneaa
Opportunity

lNG CO. recommends that
you cfo bustness with t~eo­
plt you know, and NOT . to
send money through the
mall until you have Invest!·

gated the olftnng.

TYPe

Family

Restaurant, Well Es·

!abilshad And Operating For
Nearly ~0 Yurs. Includes Real
Estate And All Equipment. Home·

stead Bend , Broker (304)8822405
OWN A COMPUTER?

Rato

Plaza,

230

livery, and letup paid by Factory

Spring

Ca;ll

Val-

740·446·

Profesalonal
Sei'VIcea

Nationwide In·
Reduction!

3409

1092

Sunset Drive. Newly Re·
molded, Carport, Full Base·
ment , Excellent Condlllon ,
(740~118

Half
Acre,
3
Bedroom
House, 1 Bedroom Apart·
ment Beneath . Two
Polt
Barns.
Close
To
Town .
(740~782

Ashton, WV. Situated On 2 Acr·

01 Land, 3 Bedroom With 2

Full Baths . 28x32 Garage (de·
tached) Completely Finished In·
side, Outbuilding, Price Rt&lt;luced,
$89.~00

Phone (304)576-4050

For Appointment.
Real

formation .
2393

Call

Free

In·

(740)558-

2393

Buach

Gardena
worlct,

And

Olo·

Corner

Lot

132&lt;78 Foaf. Chain Link
Fonco, Wattr Wtll, Septic
Tank
a Aluminum Ou!
Building&amp;,
PriOI 138,000·
PIClturu

2 Bedroom, Water &amp; Traah
Paid
On
Bulavlllt
Pika.
Furnished, alectrlo, mobile
Home, One bedrOom, new
c1rpet, no pets, trash
water Included, rererancu
&amp; depoalt, call (740)992-

5751

And

lnforma ·

tlon Call Ownora A.E. And
Dilly KnOIII Sr. In Evtn·
lng
Galllpolla
(740)4412tt 7
Florida
Numbor
(183)W.QN3

320 Mobile liomea
torllle
"Nioo• IIIII lkYIIno I lodroom

14K70 Mobile Home. llldroom.
a lalh, Heat Pump Wltft Air,
h7eo, lvon"QQ. (304~:11:13

Near Holzer,
Gas
heating,

Lease,

Deposit

691·6777.

1 Bedroom, Garage Apart•
ment, Located On Route
7N, ~ .Large KUChtn, LA; Bll·
Front
Porch.
cooy,

800·691-&amp;777.

(740)446-1018

New double -wide 3 br. 2 ba .

$998 DO down only $295 per

mon call now 1·800-691·6777
Fleetwood

Pleasant Area. (304)875-7568

14x70

Fleetwoocf,

2

16x80 ,

$19,999.00, 3 Bedroom, 2
Bath, 1-an-nH110.
Ullllly Blfls Getting Most 01
Paycheck!

(740)448-3093
Ntw Home Today

Call,

For

2 Bedroom Apartmtnt For Rent,
$250 + Utlllllts In The Point

Your

340 Bual11888 and
Buildings
Church Building with Parsonage
for sale, located In Point Pleasant,
Good Neighborhood , asking

$95,900, 1304)675·1618

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BRUNER LAND
(740)44H492
Snow Bpecltl,... HHrl Of
Wayne Notional fO Acres
$13,000, Jac!ison Co. 5

2BA, References I Depos·
Jt. In Point Pleasant Area,

Call Alter · 5pm,
0011

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room
Apartments,
Clean,
Nt1
Pets, No Smoking, Refer·
ancas &amp; Deposit Required.
Utilities
Furnished
Gallla
Manor
Apartments,
Now
Accepting
Appllca·
lions For 1 BR, HUD, Sub·
sldized Apartment• For El ·

derly
And
Handicapped,
Equal Housing Opportunity.
(740)446-4639
35 West ,2 Bedroom Town·
Apartments ,
In·
!louse
etudes
Water
Sewage.
Trastl , l325tMo.. 740·448·

Acres With Barns $31,000.
- Rio Grande, Scenic+ PrJ·
vall. 8 Acres With Pond
$25,000 or 9 Acres

S399

TWin RIVIIT~ers haw accepting
appllcat~ for 1 BR
HUO aut&gt;aldlzed apt for elderly

and dllalllad. EOH. (304)875.
8879.

Mali• Co.· Tupper Plains·

SR881, House On 3 Acres,

490

·Acres $10,0001 Carr Rd, 6
Acres $13,000, 16 Acres

For Leaae

1600 Sq. Feet, Beautifully
Restored 2nd Floor, 3 Bed·
room
Apartment,
1
11
28atha,
Living/
Dining
Room, Rear Deck . HVAC.
Gallipolis
All
Downtown
Modern
Amenltlu.
$8001
mo. Security And Key De·
poaltl. No Pels Rtfarenc-

5 Acres $25.900 Danville,

5 Wooded Acrea 514,000.
Rutland, 9 AciBI $85001
Co. Water On AH.

Call Now For Mapsl Owner
Financing With Slight
Prq)Orty Mlrl&lt;up. Lind
Avelllblo In 42 OniO COUn-

u

Rtqulrod.

.wae Or (740)ue 3131

tltl.

Looking To Bur A Ntw
Home? Don't Hevt Lind?
WI Doll I Hurry Only I 0
LOll ltft, 304•738-72111.

380 , Reallatata
'
Wentld
NOid IICiud•
ItdHaveHomeLotn,In Counlrr
On t •I
At•

Ill Ill/\ t ' .

"ant

ltdroom Home,
Galllpolle, ~arlly

IMMtCUata

(740)2-574

Evenings:
740·448-

(740)44e-

lnd
Floor,
Spacloua,
3
Unlurnl&amp;hld
Bedroom,
In
VICtorian
Apartmanl
HOult
On
City
Pork ,
HVAC. 011 81r01t , Parking ,
t•l&amp;/mo. Plua Utllltln ' ••·
ourlly And Key Dapoalt
Aaqulrad. No Pile. •••••·
onooa Aaqulrtd. (74014414411

(740)441-o152 Roadyl
Bassett Hound, Male,
Months
Old,
House

Broke,
1688

$200,

(740)258-

AKC Baston Terrier Pup·
plea Shots, Wormed, snow
Do-Quality. Now Taking

posits
To
(740)388-9325
AKC

Hold .

Golden

S2SO:

Rttrltvtr

Females

Only,

$225, (740)25&amp;-1686
AKC Rtgllttrtd
pies,
$150
. (740)2se-&amp;463

Lab

Pup- ,
Each . •

AKq Roglatered Labrador Pup·

euv. Stll, Trade.

New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holiday Inn ,

Kanauga.

Wt Stll
Monument• Ancf VIHs.
Furniture

Grave

For

Delong's

Groom

Grooming All
741)-441 ·1602

Breeds, •
•

•

Ready

Valtntlnt'l

$50 Each. Call Anytime.
Looko Llko Boxer- Blue
Eyes. (740)3BIH272

540 Mllcellaneoua
Merchandlae.
Lined
Pair

5

Drapes
Shears

Bllgo.

Practlctlly

Good

Price,

Seat

NIW
$2000,
$800,
or

Jacuzzi.

$5000, ' Will Taka
Big
Scrto~
TV
(740)387-7480
(740)387-7272.
AMAZING

HOlJRS 1·11 M·P'
441·0107

Break TrOUiiJillll LOll 10•
200 Lba . Easy, Quick, Feat

Dramatic

A11u11a,

Natural,
mended.

Doctor
Free

(740)441-1 &amp;e2

For
,Aiao
Square

c.~~•

(740)388-8627
8264

Hay.
Balas.

(740)388-

2llblll .... l&amp;f

_,_

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Repairs.
Problems?
Need
Tuned? Call The Plano Or.

........... CilllaC.. . . . .

570

AERATION MOTORS
Stock. Call Ron Evana. 1•
800·537-9528.

Professional
OJ
Karaoke
System, Great Sound, With

CO's, Ready For Show. Call
(7401387-o240
Klndlewood Wood or Coal
stove. Free Stand·
lng or Insert. 2! Inches Tall

b~o~rnlng

FARr~

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

x 38 lnchea Wl&lt;te. 23
Inches
Deep.
$200,
(740)248-9091
Ltlt Chair, LIKi Now (304)576·
2103

Tractor
Loader

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

~sed

Electric

A~d

Furnaces
For
Sate
For Size&amp;· Installation

NEW

AND

USED

STEEL

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channal,
Flat Bar,
Steel
Grating For Oralns, Drive·
war•
&amp;
Walkway&amp;. L&amp;L

Scrap
7300

Melals

With
Front
30·45

(740)446-

630

Livestock

Laying

Hans

Starled,
Also

$2.50

That
Juat
A Piece,

(740)256-

Ducks

9214

640

Tappan

Hay &amp; Grain

•

900 LB Round Bales, Good
Mixed , Hay, Stored lnslcfe,

Wllf Load, $15 oo
(740)379-2788

Each,

Ground Ear Corn, Call After 4pm.

(304)875-2443

HI

Efllclency

Large

90%

800-872·!1967
www.orW.conVbtnnett

•

FurnJCII. II You Don't Call
Us
We
Both
Lolli

&amp;

1-800·

Solid 19B5 Dodge Ram
Pickup,
$725/080,
Uaod
Pellet Stove, 1200, Clean
Firewood,

S25/Load,

$15,
Delivery
(740144&amp;-1052
Straw·

B~gfll

Hay

You

............ Will 11

Thursdcw,

--.... •r••....,.ton)
and
,_....,c

Feb. 8,2001

L•l••·

....,. of
er.allpiNnt•

•r•

CeMpllon

o,f

Irwin

7:00p.m.

•

.....
.lucty

Don't Miss This

Lo1•••

Truckload Sale

111d

.......
............ ...,.
....,.

'

of

l ~··
Morlan .........

AMVETS

lloloh

...

POST23
Kanauva, Ohio

710 Autoa for Sale
t 990
40oor,
Actual

Buick

LoSabro

AUCTIONEER:
FINIS "IKE'' ISSAC

•

One Owner, 48,000
Miles·
Mlchellrta

Plus, All
Equipment.

Ntadld
Stt AI

Swttptr,
Hoover
Almoel
NIW, I!Oi Klfollnt Hill•

NICt C•.

Or

Call
$3100

1910 &lt;lrond Am, 2 Door. 4
Cylinder, &amp; Sptod, • Good
Condlllon,
$1000
010.
(740)44f-fDB3
1112 Old&amp;,
Woll
talnod, New Parlo,
010, (140)188-1414

Main•
UUO

1117 LU!Illnl IIUI; 11t4
lulok Cenlurt UIU; 1111
ltrttfl OT, Ike Now, 11 K
12715: 1111 l•fO 14115 .
Cart
An~
Tl•oko
,rom
$1111 To . lltll. COOK

1101'0111 (7&gt;10~101
II Orand ,rl•. ~unt

710 Autos for Sale
Ll\ltly's

Qco~.

17 Cadllilo I Door, 11~000
Mlloa, Looded . $1100 1110

Auto

Salll~

1888

Otdo Cutllll Cloro $1200 ;
1985 Buick Skyhawk $500,
1885 Ford Ranger $800:
1Glt ChiVY Beretta $800;
' I G83
Chevy
Celebrity
$800 ; 1988 01~1 Cutlss•
Clera $1000, 1989 Cnevy
Covalltr $700 , f985 Mor·
oury Lynx s.w. $450 , 1990
Chovy corsloa $900 : 1989
Chevy S· 10 4WO $800;

lllnese &amp; death.
Special thanks to
the Pomeroy EMS,
Hoapilll Stall
&amp; Paul's Individual
doctors, Holzer
Senior care Center,
Funeral Home In
Galllpclla, All\/.

Jamee Btmac:kl o1
CMet Epi!IC:Opal
Church In Pl.
PleUIIIII. Your
kindness Is

appreciated.

Grace Elch, Paul
Elch, John Ek:h,
Sulllll Elch
Bill

71

o

Autos for 81le

'14 Mercury , Cougar. 4 6
Llttr Englnt , Power, KtY·

1111 Entry, 71 ,000 Mlloa .
$6500 .
(740!992-2770 Or
(740)G91-2014 -

720 Tru~ks for Sale
Camper

19!5 Ford F-250
Special. 390 4 Brl, 4" Speed
4:10 Aur End. Surface
080.
1991
Ford
Taurus
S.W. Ruat.
11000
11000.
Call
Monday (740)446-3541
Through Friday sam· 5Pm 1887 Bflek Bitzer, S~por Sharp,
-!-!17!4011'ill!lll::l!lil'Niii31-:--:-~~-=:::"1 4X4, $1000 811 Of WhHis. $4000,
G7 Bllltr. Automatic, CD (304)875-4812 Ca! Mer S.iiOPII!
Player.

Look&amp; God, V•l, AuiOIIIII•
lo , lpolltra, IUOC , 010.
(740):111 1111

(740)44f-f~

11\/tryone lor their
klndneea, prayers,
llitndlhlp. lood &amp;
ftoweta durlng his

pmned it down With a pressure packed 7-5 dcm1o n ovor
Clancey (Warren- Local) for
another dtviswn crown and 50 perfect slate
Two PPHS to ughtcs battled
to the champto nshtp finales
before falling m rugged deciSIOns for second place honors.
Both Jason M cCoy (1 J 9) and
Nick Duncan (125) fin iShed
w1th good 4-1 records
A little earher, a patr of
PPHS grapplers w on key
finales for th1rd-place awards
that put the locals in stnking
range for the team tttl e.J cre my
Nott (135) pmned Mullms
(Meigs) and Ma tt Warne r
(152) demioned T1pple (F- C)
to avenge their losses
Nick Russell (130) topped
Willis (Phtlo) for hiS 3-1 11mk
and important fi fth place
pomts, wh1le Max Paugc (189)
went 2- 3 for eight place

Matt S1mpson took the
leadership role for the Eagles
and worked h1s mag1c underneath to score five straight
Page II
pomts, including a threecompleted a three-point pomt play. Nelson added fuel
play of h1s own, making the to the already rekindled fire ,
by completmg a three-point
score 10 all.
The Panthers were able to play from the foullme as well
The Eagles now tra1led by
regain the lead, and at the end
of a close first quarter, Chesa- only one, but Bobby Barbour
hit yet another 3-pomt goal,
peake was on top, 15-12.
Eastern Jumped ol!l in the pushing the Panthers ahead
second to retake the lead wttb by four Sharpshooter Chris
two free throws from Brown, Lyons electrified the full
as well as a Chns Lyons steal house at Eastern by answering
and lay up. The Eagles found With a 3-pomter of bts own.
themselves m foul trouble Barbour returned the favor
early, as Nelson was called on With a JUmper in the pamt,
his thtrd personal foul at the and a field goal by Best gave
the Panthers a five-point lead,
6:12 mark.
Chesapeake had their trou- 47-52. Super Simpson drew a
bles as well. Brown took a foul at the buzzer, and htt two
ch~ge from Josh' Waugh, giv- . foul shots, cutting the Panther
ing Waugh his third personal lead to three.
The final quarter completfoul as well. Neither team was
able to gain much of lead ed the climax of an already
throughout a neck and neck exhilarating plot. Eastern
first half. However, Chesa- retained possession of the ball
peake looked to be pulling to start the quarter, and Matt
out ,,in front at the end of the Simpson took 1t upon h1mself
first half as Bobby Barbour hit to get his team back mto the
two "3-pomters including one ballgame. Stmpson hit a 3at the buzzer, giving the Pan- pointer at the beginning of
thers a 33-27 lead at halftime.. the quarter, tying the game up
The Panthers retamed their at 52 all.
Aaron Gossett hit a shot
six-point lead until the 6:50
mark. Star center Matt Simp- 1nside .the paint, but Nelson
son scored five stra1ght points answered for the Eagles to
to bring the Eagles within again tie up the game. Iron
one. The Panthers clawed man Karr came through for
back, and buckets by Anthony the Eagles from the foul line,
Delimpo, Waugh. and Bar- by hmmg two foul shots; Karr
bour 'gave Chesapeake the1r gave the Eagles the lead at
largest' lead of the evening at 5:57, 56-54. Following the
foul shots, the Panthers called
45-36.

a umeout to discuss how they
were going to combat the
Eagle assault.
Anthony Delimpo took
charge of the Panther pack,
and scored four stra1ght
points, givmg Chesa peake a
58-56 lead. It was now ·Eastern's turn to ca.ll :'!. tim eout to
dtscuss strategy. Joe Brown
came through in a clutch situation when the Eagles needed It the most. Brown hit a
turn around JUmper to tie the
game 58 all With four minutes
to play. A strong defensive
stand forced the Panthers to
call a timeout at the 3. Q1
mark."
Chesapeake's new offenSive
plan was put into actton and
proved effective when Barbour connected from downtown giving the Panthers a
three-point lead. Brown came
to his teams rescue as he hit
the same shot be had been
hitting all night.
Bt:Own htt a turn-around
JUmper instde the pamt, and
drew a foul on the ne.xt posseSSion to keep the Eagles
withm one. The Panthers had
possession of the ball with 44
seconds to play and a onepam! lead. The Eagles 'put up
a strong defens1ve stand and
forced Chesapeake to take ;i
timeout. The Panthers were
able to inbound the baU, but a
traveling violation gave the
Eagles the ball back With 30
seconds to play. The Eastern
bench got th~ crowd on thetr
feet tor the Eagles, as they set
up a last second shot play. The

soltd defense by C hesapeake
made tt look like they ~uy
pull ofT a Wlll. W1th only ~ec ­
onds remammg,"Jnd thl'1r·last
shot offense no t \\Oibn g,· the
Eagles need ed some qu 1ck
thinkmg
Karr proved to bt· th e hero
of the ni ght as he too k control of the ball, drow 111 and
put th e Eagles up by one
pom t wnh fivL" s~umds
remauung. The Panthers last
shot wa s j ust a ha1 r too late,
and the Eagl es WL're vJCto nous. The Easte r n crowd WL'nt

w1ld. as dtd the player&gt;. all
overwh elmed wtt h JOY
Brown and Sm1pso n lc·d the
Eagles, sco nn g 20 and 19
points, re specttve ly Ka rr followed up wtth e1ght, as d1d
Chad Nelson wi th seven
pomts.
Barbour led the Panth ers
with· 18 pomts, 12 of th me
conung from 3-pom tt:rs
Delimpo added 16 and Ae&lt;t
racked up 12 pom ts as wel l. I
" Tonight we put forth a
total team effort We showed
everyone how we ca11 play
when we all play toge ther and
play w1thin our g.un e,' mdl
Eastern head coach H owte
Caldwell.
"Thts ranks amo ng the
b1ggest VICtones m th e hm ory of this schoo l. It was also
one of the best ball ga mes
played tn thts gy mn as ium
Both teams played thctr h~ rts
out tonight, and sho uld be
~ pplauded,'' sat d Caldwdl.
Eastern travels to S. .mrher n

Friday.

Powor
John·

aon's Mobile Home Perk·
Lot 11 S On Euttrn Avt·

nut In Golllpolla
(740)441-1021

or, 125: lloll·l·away 8td,
$38: Foom Rubber Pad,
110: Lift Choir, 1280: Bat
- · 110 ~740)441-Q708.
Towboat Starchllght uo:
TOWbOII
AUar 4 FoOl.
110: I Iron Trotdll lilt
Iewing
Maohlno,
140
looh; I 101 large llun
LiQ!Itl UO: (304)17&amp;-4311

AUCTION

......... rt,

Available,

Wire Til SUaw Year

Haul. (740)3e7-neo

"'r

ol

'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis· "
count Available Harllege Farm, 1.•

(304)675-5724

NowmMr

II, 1000, M Holur
MHiaalc..ter. Ho
WOIItltd 7 peundl, I

1ArrJ and Olo•l•

Balas

TRANSPORlATION

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Hoot
Pumps, L P. &amp; Natural Gas
(7401448-8308
29Hl098.

Roll

RYan
w.. .,.,.

(304)67!·

Hay For Stit can (304)675·7217

f"~family
',;ul Elah
would like to thank

Wolfe

GoJd Mixed Hay Starting
At $1 50 A Bait. Delano
Jackson
farm.
I 743(740)446-1! 04

Trevor

•

on At 2 N 3Q4.675-9

Gas Furnaces, 011 Furnac·
es, 12 Sear Heat Pump &amp;
Air
Condlllontng
Systems
Free 8 Year WerJBnty Ben·
nette Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·

I

!192-21158

Hay for aale square bales 1 mile

AESIDENnALHOME
DWN!RS

,.1

End
HP.

(740)379-2218

Huge
Inventory,
Dlacount
Prlcaa, On VInyl Skirting,
Doors,
Windows,
Anchors,
Water Heaters, Plumbing &amp;
Electrical
Parts.
Furnacea
&amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·
44"·941 e
www.orvb com/
bennett

Now &amp;

620 Wanted to Buy

Me1gs was 14th.
Actually, tt came down to
three final matches mvolvmg
PPHS and F1sher. Two wins b.Y
either team m head-to-head
matches would be huge, three
would seal it. Big Blacks got
the two, pushing Fisher to
th1rd, and two other local matmen won to propel PPHS to
the top.
Eight · of the 12 local
wrestlers earned placement
points, and two won individual crowns . Add to that two
runners-up, two third places,
one fifth, and one eighth combmed to produce the winning
margin.
Jesse Nott (130) recorded
the first crunch win m a 13-5
win in a 13-5 decision over
Good (F-C) to annex h1s
i:hampionsbtp with a fme 5-0
record.
Then, D.J. Dewees (145)

ATHENS - PPHS grappiers stepped up when most
needed m the final round to
overcome all other teams at
the Athens Pool Tourney Saturday.
Three starters were absent
from the competttlon, but
others stepped in admirably to
Put the Big Blacks tn range.
Then, four pressure win in the
last go-round carved out the
winning margin in an exciting
tourney.
PPHS won the crown with
126.5 points, while LoganElm slipped into second at
119, just ahead of F1sher
Cathohc (Lancaster, Oh10,
and Wamn . (116).
117.5)
Phllo (110) was fifth .
Other SEOAL teams there
found Athens in sixth, Logan
m ninth, Jackson 11th, and

from

Civic Dntlopmtnt Groupn.lllltnnlum TllntrVIcol

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

buzze r to tie the &lt;core at 41 41 at halfttme.
The Redwome n bm lt a
double di g1t m th e second half
and were able to put the game
on tce down the stretch . T he
depleted Sp m t ended the
game with only five players on
the floo r, as three SH C players
had foul ed out of the con test.
Rio Gran de won the battle
of the boards (56-44) and the
turnover battl e. · H.Jo had 22
turn ove rs w hil e Seton Htll
co ughed up the ball 25 tuues.
R10 Grande shot 41 perce nt
.
(35 of 8 1) from th e float
The Redwo men now prepare for NAIA D1vi&lt;io n II
N o 1 Shawnee St.\tc Tuesday
mght. Gan1 1.! ume 1s St.'t 6 p.n1.

Point wins Athens tourney

Eagles

1-800-929-5753

740-448-4525

JET

and 14 rebounds.
VanHoose had 22 points
and 10 rebounds for the
Thuqdering Herd, w1th CorJackson and Latece
Williams each scoring 11

,
Earn u~ to $1 5/hour. .
l'uH time pd'illldhi"lifNI.'bentm 's*~ which
lndudla Madlclllillenlll/401 KJPd VICitlofll,
CALL TODAV...START TOMORROW!

PLEAS! CAIJ~ TOIIA.Y I

10:52 left to give the Bobcats
the lead for good and touch
off an 8-0 run .
Hunter scored 10 pomts,
Flomo had four and Sanderson a 3-pointer as the Bobcats
outscored the Herd 17-2 over
a 5-minute span.
Marshall trailed 58-55 with
8 minutes remaining before
Sanderson scored six pomts in
a row. The lead never dropped
below six points again.
Flomo scored 16 points and

I'

Full and parl-llmt potlllont nalleble.
Complotetralnlng provided with ftexlblo hours.

,..........,

Salt,AII

RIO GRANDE - Despite
a 39-pomt, 15-rebound effort
from Kameico Robison the
University of R.1o Grande
Redwomen scored a huge 9486 victory over a solid Seton
Hill College team qn Saturday
afternoon at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grand e (18-9, 9- 5
AMC) is making 1ts late-season run for the post-season
once again . The Red women
had five players in double fig"
ures led by semor Mindy Pope
w1th 20 points. The Galhp ohs
native also npped down 13
Enuly Cooper
rebounds.
added 19 pomts, 10 asmts and
four steals, Renee Turley

OVP CORRESPONDENT

1·~~~'!e: finished with 15

o Help Wanted

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

2lloll .... ·s.l

Fl.- for 9alo (304I87H71 e
Firewood

11

lfrllpr S,.W.IIf
llxlllllnlrl

100%
RecomSamplet.

Hardwood,
Round And

jumper with 14:11left to put
the Thundenng Herd ahead
49-39.
Hunter then scored six
point~ in a 9-0 run to get
Ohio (12-7, 7-3) back in the
game.
After JR. VanHoose hit a
jumper to push the lead back
to three points, Hunter had a
bucket and Patrick Flomo
made two free throws with

DOGSJW.T!R

METABILIBM

scored 18, Annie Tucker
chtpped m 15 pomt! and
Kame Kendall· scored 11 off
the bench.
Rob1son , an Amen can
Mideast Conference player of
the year candidate, smgle
handedly kept the Sptrit (136, 9-4 AM C) m the game. In
addition to her pomt and
rebound numbers, she blocked
four shots. Stacey Jastrzembski added 17 pomts, five asststs
and five steals to the Seton
Hill attack and Mindy
M cClelland chtpped m II
po mts.
Se to n H1U jumped o ut to an
11-6 lead and the two reams
went back-and-fo rth m th e
fi rst half of play. Cooper h1t a
runm,n g op.e bander at th e

UAG SID

BY fRANK CAPEHART

Bobcats top Marshall in MAC play
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Jon Sanderson scored 19 of hiS
24 pomts in the second half
and Brandon Hunter led the
way during a 17-2 second-half
spurt as Ohio beat Marshall
77-71 on Saturday.
·Marshall (13-6, 7-4 MidAinerican Conference) led by
13 points in tlie first half.
Travis Young, who scored 12
points for Marshall, hit a

Adopt A

Or

BY MARK WIWAMI

•

Shop, _

Dog

In the second quarter, River . Logan took a 33-14 lead at
Valley attempted to fight back. the half and never looked
A pair of Nicole Watkins back.
b:ukets and a couple of free
After the game, River Valley
throws bn;1ught the Raiders head coach Tom Weaver had
back to withm II at the 4:46 no comment as he left the
mark of the second quarter, Katie Smith Gymnasmm after
the difficult loss.
18-7 ~
Despite the loss, River Valley
Wdtktns led the Raiders
with 15 points.
was impressive under the
After a Downs basket, Cyn- boards with a team total 44
thta Ward helped get River rebounds.
Valley back to wtthin 11 with
DeGarmo led the Raiders
two out of four free throws to with 19 bCiards, while Bndget
. make it a 20-9 game with 4:08 Harder pulled down e1ght
left until halftime.
rebounds. DeGarmo also had
Ward finished with seven four steals
points, while Chelsea DeGarR1ver Valley travels to Fmmo had eight points for the land today before the R aiders
Raiders. The Raiders. who close out the1r regular season
only five players to score, did- Thursday as they play host to
n't make a 3-pointer on the Jackson .
afternoon .
The Raiders will meet
At that point, the Chieftains Meigs in sectional. play Feb
·
outscoted River Valley 13-3 14.
over the next three minutes of
play.

Cay, 3/4 BOlltr 1 114 Husky,

Sale

(740)448-8275
(740)448-1001 Anytime

OVP SPORTS STAFF

LOGAN - A tough start
Saturday afternoon on the
road was too much for the
River Valley girls basketball
team to overcome.
After being down 18-1 at
the end of the first quarter, die
Raiders lost to Logan, 52- 33.
The game opened with the
Chieftains going on a 15-0
run.
With 34 second on the
clock in the opening penod,
Julia Mollohan got the
Raiders on the scoreboard
with a free throw. A 3-pomt
goal by Logan's Enn Thompson with 19 seconds left put
the Chieftams up by 17.
Thompson scored 12 pomts
for Logan, whtle Amand a
Downs led the Chieftams wuh
20 points. Thompson and
Downs each had a couple of
3-pointers.

Shot&amp; &amp; Wormed. (304)575-5713

Pups

Wlttrllne IPIOIII : $/4 100
"I llt.U
fOO: I' tOO
U7.00 "'' 100; All
Ifill
Oompraollon
Pit•
110
ti!\Dlln IIOOk
Qoocle _ _ , "ON
INTI"•
_ _ _...,;;;,;;;;;;;;_.
PAIIII IVANI
Jaokaon, Ohio,
I•
100-511-1111
IUnk
ltd&amp;,
labJ
leG,
Drtlllr,
LOYI
••••
a wolghl blnon 1100, ........ blltt,
Ohair, ~olrl(leralor, Ouean $10,
tl,. lled 1100, Twin Sullo
lo•
lprlniJI
Mottruo. ,!!, lUll
dOS
Mull uo, dog ctgo,
(140,...,...741
UQ. (304)1711-8110
r.11111 llt.lllll'.l

Black.
$350,

pies. S Black, 3 Yellow. All Males.

River Bend Place Ni Accop!lng

Acres $13,500 Or 20 Aer·
es. $19,500. ClsyTown·
ship, 13 Acres $18,500 Or
17 Acres $20,000 VInton,

Acrea $27,500 0r11

Ohio

·Available,
(740)446-6308,
1-800-291-0098

740·446·3481,
740·387· 0502,
010f

$23,000 Cheshire, 8

T·

Porter,

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom St,Jites,

Patio, 1 Start $365/Mo
No
Pets, lease Plus Security
Deposit
ReQuired,
Days:

W1th Pond $25,000 Or 5

,Ufftllntd ,

Road,

0008.

f/2 Balh, Fully Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,

(740)992-

Fawn
&amp;
There.

Females.
Mother

Puppies.

Gas
Call

Tara
Townhouse
Apart·
menta , Very Spacious. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1

Home On 5 Aerts fle·
ducedlll $64,000. 5 Acres

New 3
01011 To

Appllcatlona-

and Disabled, EOE. (304)882·
3121

Scioto co. 20 Acras
$19,000.
llllllo Co.· Kerr Rd , 3-2

410 Hou... for

Ta~l~g

Stove,
$125,

$199 . Sofa On
Carpet In
Stock 200 Clark Chapel

(740)446'-1519

Applications for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment lor Elderly

Acres $12,500, Galla Co
37+ Acres $37,000, Pike
Co 11 Acres$10,0000r

Aorta Notdlng ~ow
poltt. ('140)441-1311

APARTAT
BUDGET
AT
JACKSON
52
Westwood
$289 to $370.
to shop &amp;. movies
740·446-2568. Equal

Day,

Anytlmt

Repaired, New &amp; Flabullt In

Call
HOUSing Opponunlty.

Now

Valentine

AKC

Mollohan
Carpets &amp; Fur·
n1ture,· New 2 piece Living·
room Suite , $299 . Recliner

(740)446-

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
PRICES
ESTATES,
Orive lrom
Walk

4
Australian
Shepherd
Pupa , Red &amp; Whitt Merlll,
S•x Week Old, Ready For

5

(740)388-8128 Afler 5pm

1

Required (740)441-1519

New 16 II wide $499 •..per moo.
only $270 per mon . call no"' 1·

78

Magic Chel Electric
Excellent Condition,

(740)388--1 fOO

Utllltl11.

$23,000 Or Hay Barns On

Selling Our Small Modern
Masnry Winter Home Near
Lakeland, Florida, Between

Call

New 14 ft wide $499. down only
$199 per mon. call now 1·800·

Free Gas Heat $36,500131

Real Log Homes, Free In·
formation . Call
(740)558-

Neigh·

Pets for Sale

740·448 ·

White. (740)446-9088

Used

Good

borhood,
$275/mo.
Afltr ~m. (7401:1!l&amp;-1788

10 Acres $12,0001

Log Homes.

Bed-room,

W/0 Hookup, 5279.00 PIUI

1-800·89HI7n

REAL ESTATE

Brick • Home,

2

1 • Bedroom
Economical

Must StHI16&gt;180
Make 2·Payments &amp; Move InI

$30,000 With $5,000 Down,
$250 Per Month At 8%
Calf (740)446-9566

BR

~··

Relerences

qulred.'(740)388--9f82

440 · Apartments
for Rent

In Bar·
304·738·

Wuher, Oryer Or Refrlg·
erator.
Interesting
VIew
Near Many Jobs.
Lot 9
Johnson Mobllehome Park

To A!lpreclatt (304)875-5332 Or
(304)675·2999

Utllltlll.

Otpoalt &amp;

Only At Oakwood

A/C, Wheelchair Ramp, No

nels, Extra Nice Bath. new Roof,
New Heat Pump, New Carpet
Throughout, Large back Oeck.
Conveniently Located On A One
Acre awel Lol Along Route 2,
Gallipolis Farry, W. V Must Sae

2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile
Homes For Rent In Porter

Pay

Call

(304)875-1422
515 Main Slreel, Point Pleasant

(304)67!5-15477

Aroa. You

Appllancea ,

Street,

M81n Street Furnltn

In Mason, No Pats, (304)773·

WV '

AP-

Washers,
dry refrigerators ,
ranges.

Vme

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent
14fx70 Wilh 24 Foot Expando
$325/month + Deposit &amp; Refer·
ence In The Camp Conley Area

740 -245·

6 Chinese Puga, 1 Male, !

USED

(740)388.0173

Limited Or No Credit? Gov·
ernmant
Bank ' Finance

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL BECURfTY 1881?
No Fte u-. We Wlnl
1--582·3345

Brick, lllrago And Ltundry Room
BuiJt ln. Big Kitchen , Ntw Cabl·

Renters

(304)738-()409

Year Old Hl'x80' Trai ler, 6"
Insulation,
Gas
Furnace,

3 Bectroom Ranch Style, Partial

Program ,

560

OH Call

GOOD
PLIANCES

Kenmore
And
Estates
Washers j $65 Each , May·
tag waaher
$60 , Nohge
Wesllnghouae ,
Maytag
Dryers
$50
Each .
All

NMded, 304-736-7295.

Grandt,
5121 .

plpia,
tto .
Rio.

~7

5 Room House , 52 Oliva
Sl .
Gallipolis,
$250/mo

Pilot

Block , bricK , sewer
wlndowa ,
llntela,
Claude
Winters,

Jeclcoon Avenue, 1304)675-7388.

7398, 1-888·818.0128.

8882

Your

For Sale · Rteondltlonad wash·
ers, dryers and rtfr)gerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

a

1-800-691-&amp;7n

New

310 Home• for Sale

For

Only $28,1100.001
21X52 FrH Otll\41)' I Stt
1-888·928-88&amp;e
Factory Gccf 32x8D 1$1 o.ooo Oil·
count only Stooo.oo Down, Dt·

$16.999.00 3 Bedroom·
Bath. 1·877-77H170

0101

ney

Oou~t Wldol

S75/11r. PVFt 1·888·671·
9890 xBSO www adebt·

fordable

t1

Dryer

New

Suut
Your
Business
To·
day.. Prima Shopping Cen·
ter Space Available At Af·

3

Waahtr/

$14,900 For Mort lnlor·
matlon
(740)379-2133
(7401379-11238

Pu1 II To Work Eam $2S-

treevou com

ley

Bath.

boursvllle,

INOTICEI
VALLEY
PUBLISH·

OHIO

g1
Sun&amp;hlne
Slnglewldo.
1Bx80, 3 Bedroom. 2 Full

Final Days,
ventory

FINANCIAL

210

14000 (304)875-8253

New
Maytag
Appliances,
French Clly Maytag. 740·
448·7795

No ~ts 1740)44&amp;-0974

(304)736·7295

(740)388-8002

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Dryers.
Rangea,
Washers.
Refrlorators,
Up
To
90
Oays Guaranteed! We Sell

Skagos

Pilot Program Renters Needed

197!5 12~~:50, $2000 , Excel·
lent For Camping Or Ae·
modeling
On
Wheals ,
Aeacfy
To
Move .
Call

Bv BUTCH COOPIR

Goods

4 Room House, $250/ mo
Plus Under Dollar Depos it.

Gallipoli s Ferry Area (304)6751105

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Houeehold

ers.

$475 Month 3 Bedroom House,

HetV Ston Needs Some Work.

Service

Rio

Kitchens. , 4 BA . $600/mo.'
Plus
Deposit.
(740)4484734 Or (740)44f - 1337

adYertlled in this newspaper

Situation. For More lnform1don.
Coli (304)87S·BI91
Tree

In

9 Room House, 3 Baths, 2

Couple In Aaolottd Living '!Ypo

Mount'a

House

(740)446-3945

888·928·3428

Georges Portable Sawmill, cton't
haul your logs to the mm just call

Bedroom

Grande, (740)245-5858

(304)87~738

t IXSO Mobllo Homo, Now
Kllohon.
Now
lothroom,
Ntw Plooro, 1111 Covered
flarah. Ctfttral Air, 11,000
(740)441-t:lll

Otllnl

cy, (3D4)67S-5540 or (304)875·
4024

14x70 Southern Oream. free De·
livery free Setup only $9995 1·

lnfoCIIIoft Ma,....,.iot

Ctl Ul 'Todly l'or

2·3 BA house on Lincoln Ave •
Homestead Realty, Ask lor Nan·

Christi an Couple Will Do
Hou,M Clean1ng Call Any·
tlmtli Up To 11 :30pm Lea11e
A Message II Not Home .

·~•-l'lln
Almc...,.

o-a,

(304)67!HI806 Ask For Otzra.

ore available on an equal

2 lith 114,004 010 (104)17&amp;·
1068

c-~~o~~
HltiiMrll'-~

2 Story Hou&amp;e, 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
Located Middle Of Town.

Ill! realntate adv8rllalng fn
""' _
.. IUbiiCt 10
1118 Federal Fair HouoJna N:t
of 1988 wf1lch makes~ Illegal
10 lldVenlll •any p~rence.

llmllatlon or dlscrlmtnatlon

Wook, Compttlltvt $, ,EEO,.
&amp; Letter To: Ra· Nice Home On Mason 80 Rd .,
captlonlat,
Gallipolis,
0222

t · 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From S199/Mo., ,..,_
Down For Lis tings &amp; Pay·
ment
Oeta1 11,
800·319·
3323 EKt 1709

based on race, oofor, religion,
sex familial atatu1 or national
origin, or any lnl8nll0il10
make any such preference,
Bmnatkln or dscrimlnallon.•

logo
(CarHrs Close To Home)

February

_______/ 1 Ruumt

Oomlno'&amp; 01 P&lt;»nt Pleasant Now
hiring Sate Delivery Drlvera. Muat
Be 18 Years Old Excellent Work
Environment. Stol) By In Ptraon
For Application. 420 VIand Street,
Point Pleasant

booka

Buslneaa
Training
llllllpolla Career

Middleport,

By

LOCAL RADIO STATION
PROMOTIONS
oDAV A EVENIN!l
IIII'TI AVAILABLE
•PULL l PAIIT•TIME
OPINING
•NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEDWE TRAIN
OOPPORT\JNilY FOR
ADVANCEMENT
&lt;COLLEGE STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply In person at:
303 Main Slree1
Polnl Plealanl, WV I
Mondly februlry &amp;',
2001
T--,Fobruaryl,
2001
WadneldaJ februlry 7,
2001
3:00pm until 8:00pon
ONLY
Aok for Ma. W*ls

Oreamscometrue2 com

Career
Opportunities
For
LPN 'S. Top 01 The Scale
Wages
$1 t 00 Start Pay
With Shift Differential, Ex·
parlance Pay, Bonus Pro·
gram
&amp; Extram'ely
Good
Health
Benaf1ts
Joint
100
Comm .
Accredited
Bed
Facility. Come
Join
Our Team . Stop By For Ap·
plication
And
Scheduled
hills
Interview
Scenic
Nursing Center, 311 Buck·
ridge
Rd, Bidwell, ,Ohio.
"The
Alzheimer's E~tperts•

Street,

45780

ephone operator work tor·

Mail Order 888-828-2603

~.....:.;.:..

Parson

Ita Youlh
Would ba

NOWH1RING
1170.00 PER WEEKI Prr
(GUARANTEED SAV.ATI
Men and Women to do tel·

AtteniiOn· Work From Home. Up
To S25· S75/hr PT!FT Internet/

453-4992

A

Flyers And Do Mau Moll·

Al l People looking tar 2nd
Income, Earn Up to 3,000
monthly. Work 7·15
hrs
per week. 1-1188-707-5154

Mo . Full Time,

For

To Manage An Olllca, Or·
ganlzt
And
Communicate
fnformatlon~
Oeatgn
Youth

WorkFromHomeOot com

Work

Of
Part·llme
Administrative

To Help With
MiniStry. Dutloa

Start·uP ·

Stnd

Reaumes

Ohio
10th

$2.000- $5,000/mo.

AttentJon

140

Fully
Opening

Free

Ftt. Call (740)446-3358

Church 011 ChriSt 5th And

Earn Onlne Income

I

Ohio

lngs. Must Bad Proficient
In General Office Work In·
· eluding Typing,
Answering
Phonts, Otaktop Publlah·
And
lng,
Printing,,
Spraadshaata.
Send
Ra·
sume's
To
Mlcfdltport

AbSOiuiOiy Free InfO

l

Streat,GallipDIII,

90

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

I

45

Aulstant· Tht Middleport
Church
Of
Chrlll
Ia

740-448-2842.

I

February

FACTS.

6989

Absolule

'l.

By

To.

In
Starch
Secretary/

Silver, • Gold Coins, Proof·
sets,
Olamonda,
~old
Flings,
U.S. Currancy,-

'-

Reaume

2001

Hair

Brl&lt;lge (74D)-226e

•

Poaseaa

(304)875·1820 By Februar11.
2001 Job Storti Ftbrutry 15

lic &amp; Dealers. Ont Pltot.
Dozens
&amp;
Case
Lots.
Auctioneer
Gary
Bowen
Proctorville,
Ol'llo
Flea
Market, Just Acroaa Hunt·
WV
31st
Street
lngton,

I

And

Good To~ne Skills.

Pleasant

States Selling To Tht Pub-

-I

Secretarial
Skills.

Cltmentt Nurtory Appl1 At Polnl

Spm, Truckloads Of New &amp;
Used Hems From Several

_,

• (11

Full·Time Temp. Employment At

Yard Sale

Every

Dependable

Ol lv6

(740}441-o423 Evenings.

Ont

eo

MUSI
Send

F'ound Small Black Female
Puppy Near 5th Avenue &amp;
Spruc e Street. Please Call

And

Experience
In
And Computer

s.

Lost and Found ·

AUCTION

School
Diploma
Year

Ou·
High

SALES·
WANTED:

Avon .

At·

Domestic Violence, Etc.
Plus.
Minimum
Of

ANNOUNCEMENTS

70.

Sel l

510

410 Houses for Rent

Saleaptople , Former, Party
Plan , or Olreet Sa le for new
line of produ c.ts to the
W V., Ot1 area ll Call for In·
tel'lltw (304)87~1 G1

Violence Intervention Prom Groupa.
parlance
In
Chemical

ThuNday.
"O.diiMI IUbjiCI to
elM
duetohol

60

MANAGERS/
PEOPLE

And

RfiiQIStEA QFAQUNE:

005

Help Wanted

4x4.

Gold

Grtal Condition,
(740)387-o240

Color,

$14,000

85
Bulc~
Century.
-.uto
Good
Condition , $800; 88
Honda
Accord,
S Spuct

Good
Condition.
(740)256-9009

••

1GI8 ChoVV s:10, 5 S,..., 4 CyIinder, Nlco Cloan Truck , Prlotd.
12300. (304)8711-3124

92 J:;~~y,y 4WD,
S1SOO: tomatlc nssooo .
4107

720 Trucka for Sale -

730 Van1 &amp; 4·WDI

tSSB Jimmy SLS, 49,000
Mllu, $17,500 (740)4488857

Chevy, Noods Work, $2800 Nl·
gollablt. (304)875-1449 •

88 Chevy. 1f2 Ton 4x4 Autom11ttc

90

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDI
1990 Chevy 1/2 Ton .
V•8, 5 Speed, A/C,
Crullt, Ntw Pain!,
Bluo,
$4900
(740)251-1011

4x4,
Till,
Light
090

1G98 Toyota Tacoma,
f11 ,900 (740)2415-92G7

4x4 ,'

f988 Oodgo Durango, Chill

Pt~Ptr Red . ,4)14, Loaded,
Cauatte And CO, Luther
Interior, Third Row Sut,
R11r Air Condition ing, V8,
3, 8
M1gnum
Enolnt.

47,000
MilO&amp; ,
(740)44e-6833

$21,500 .

Dodge

Caravan,

New

Slrul&amp; &amp; Tlru , S 1100 OBO.
Runs
Good .
(740)2588002

740

Motorcycle•

1982

Honda

8SO

Night·

,aw j!., Showroom Condition,
12,000 Mllll, New Tires,

oeo

112oo

(7401448-

'3.14 f

,

25 Horse Mercury, OutbDard Mo·
tor, Llkt New, Ran Thru Times,

810

1304)675-8844 (304)875·3451

760

Budglt Priced Tranamlt·
slona All Types, Acceas
To Over 10 ,000 Transml&amp;·
Transfer
Casu ,
alona , ·

Ctll'

Home
Improvements

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done. tru Utlmatll. lifetime
guarantee. 14yrs on job axperl·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

740-245-5877,
3765

SERVICES

339·

once (304)895-3887.

Superior
Plumbing
And
Home
Maintenance .
We
Co All ~epalrs
On Homes
Inside And Out, Carpentry,
Floors,
Kitchens,
Baths .

(740)441-o113

1998 l'londa 300 Four' Tra)ll E•·

cellon! Shapo $2800 1304)075·
7559
99

750 Boats &amp;· Motors
for Sale

Polorla

500

Scrambler,

Alot Of Extru, 14800, 88
Honda
300
EX ,
Racing

Plutlc And Plpo,
oeo (7401441-1341

)

$2500

'

BASEMENT
WATE,RPROOFINQ
uncondl1 1onal l•tetlme guar·
antee
Loca l
reterences
furn ished
Eatabll shed

1975 Call
446· 0870,

24 Hrs (740)
1-800-287 ·0576

Rogers Waterproofing.

840

Electrical and
Refrlgerat19n

AesldenUal or commercial wl rmg,
new service or re pairs Master LIcensed electrician Ri denour
Electr ical, WV000 306, 30 4·6 75·

1786

I

I

�(

'

.Monday, February 5, 2oo1
•
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Page B2 • The Dally

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The

Dally Sentinel • Page B3

n hammers River Redwomen hold off
in SEGAL play Seton I, 94·86

Alll'traOnlll,
Announcement, OlvMWay,
Loti 1 Found, Yardlllft,
,and INantad To Do Ad•
Muat Be Paid In Advance.
TRIBUNE RfiAQUNE:
2:00 p.m. tiM day belo,.
the ad Ia to run. Sunday &amp;
Monday adHion 2:00 p.m.
Frldty

11

o

lielp WanteCI

Ftmlly

Addiction

110

Commun-

Ity Treatment StrviOet· An
Outpatient
Alcohol
And
Drug
Counseling
Agency
Is Aecepling Reaumes For

The FoHowlng
Positions

Thereplet·
Supervisory
Pos ition. Responsible , For
Diagnosing
Scrttnlngsf
Evaluations , Revrew 01 Cli-

SENTINEL: QfADUNE·

ent

1:00 p.m. I,.. day belo,.
• the ad Ia to run.
Bundey I Monday adlllon
1 :00 p.m. Friday

Charts,

ration,

Case

Ouatny

Consul·

Assurance

Client
ence

Cueload .

Eaperl·

In Chemical

Oepend-

tnc~. LPCC Or LISW
qulrad.
Co4ocllltotor-Oomostic

2 daya bllorelhl ad 1110
run by 4:30p.m. Blturday
• Monday adltlon- 4:30

r.

Dependency,

Anger

ogema,.,

Man-

A
A

Bachetor. 0egf0e
Stciltory/ R-Uonllt·
General
Sacretary
ties . Requlraments ·

Personals

I Los t 40 lbs In Just 2
Months, Lose 5 To 100 _..
Lbs .. Ga1n Energy, Results
Guaranteed!
Earn
$500·
Time
From
S1000
Part

'lbur Home, (800)582-9757

80

Auction
and Flea Market
Saturdty

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Licensed

t66,0hlo &amp; Wtst Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
Riverside
Aucllon
Barn,
sara Every Saturday Night
at 6p m , Auctlonear Ray·
mond
Johnson
(740)2!8-

Wanted to Buy
Top

Dollar:

M.T.S.

Coin

Second

Avenue,

11 0

u.s.

Shop,

151

Gallipolis,

.

Help Wanted

45831
Or
Fu
(740)448-8014. EOE,

To

M/FIH.

Or

The • Nursery.

Styllat.

Shur

Pltll·

ure, Buay Downtown Salon .
Contact Sandi Oernbrough .
(7401~•&amp;

•••2

lmmtdlalt

For

Victim AdVocoto To Work
With Women And Children
In A Realdentlal Setting.
Full·tlmt
Position
With
Some Evening Houra. Tna

ldtol

Candldato

Will

Havo

A Minimum Of An Aaao·
With
clatea
Degree
Coura11 In A Soclsl Strv·
let Field And Havt Experl·
ance Working With PtQplt
In Crisis
lntareated Ap·

pllcanu

May
To :

Ptraonnel,

P.O. Box
Ohio 45631

4S4,

Gallipolis,

Searching

Main

From

Home, $500- $1500 Mo.
Part Time, $2000· $7500 +
Paid vaca·

tions. l888)852-7501
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Sell.
• Shirley Spears. 304-675-1429.

EOE.
CNH, HHA, Cartilled Homemakers
Needed To Provide In Home
Services For The Elderly &amp; Dill·
bled In The Mason. New Haven,
West Columbia Area. Call 1·888·

p

art·tlma
Medical
Recap·
tlonlll Wanted . Can · You
Send A Smile Over The
Phone? Must B1 Depend·
able,
Calm
Under
Pres·
lure. Medical OUiee Ex·
perlence
Or
Secretary
Training,
20·2!
Hours/

QRIVING CAREERS START
HEREI Wo Need Over 300 Entry
Level Drivers This Month . No Ex·
perlence ReQuired. WE Repre·
unt Over 40 Tru~klng Campa·
nles You Chooaa Which One.
Tuition Assistance Available For

lntxptrltncod COL DELIVERS
1-800·38H405
hl)erlenced
Bookketptr
Wanted·
Minimum
01
2
Years
Olflct
Exptrltnct
And
Accredited
Account·

lng Certlllcatt, APIAR, Pay·
roll, Job Coaling, Quick·
Software,

Full Tlmt,

Ctll
(740)448-4&amp;14
10om. M·F.

Aller

WI HAYIIXPANDIOI
lnfOCIIIon II pltt!IICIIO
announc:t tllalwo -

,

P.O.Box
222.
Ohio
4!831·

Wanfed
Home &amp; Garden Party Dealgne,. Hand Ma&lt;lt Pot·
lOry, Unlquo '"""'aaor!Oa,
Candle&amp;, Garden Ware,

Otalgn• Quality Pk:turea
No Otllvely, No lnvon!ory,
No Ouota' Stt 'lbur Own
Hours, High CCmmiSaion,

Atk Alloul \Wr Potentially
Free S!erter Kit· Pius
Added Bonus. Call For Ca·
tails. (740)1M-S997
(740)3n-9397.
WEARE HIRING
lnfoCialon 11 Currenuy
Adding To OUr Rtaldonllal
Stoff. \W Could Help Ua
RecruH
VOiuntMrt on Bthl" Of
Ncn- Prollt OrQinl,.tlonl.
No llelllntl
No '""""'lalngl
IW Can Eam Up Torn
!lOur. And Wlaldy llonuo·

•••

!ldclld 1 new ool-l!t
our locat~n 1ft Gtllipoll'

Wt Alto Ofllr:
oPulllent!ta

Wt now olfar additional carttr opporlunltlttlor tnlr•
gotic, POiillvl. goa&gt;mlndtcl
a~lc.tntaln our Non-prolll
Dl\llllon.
'lbu can tarn up to rtI
hour ond WHkly bonuiM.
WI 1110 offlr - 1 bin·
llfltlll\0 ~·1&lt;1-

OWlfllly ,lyChtflk
ol'lld V101t10n

011~.

Ctll

_,

ual:.v~ An In·

1-NNifoiMIIIft. 1111

,,roll_

r

Co~

C.H TOdayl741l-446"1367,
1-800-214.Q452,
Reg •90-D!H274B

180 Wanted To Do
Anentlon Rental &amp; home Owners,
All Phases 01 Home Repair, No
Job Too Big Or Small (304)675·

7738
Can't get out? Need an errand
run for groceries etc . Call
(304)675·5726 for Point Pleasant,
Gallipolis Area.

An lnltr.;tw:
l·lle-475-71123 !x1. fiOI

4

This RMSpaper will no1
kriOWingl)' eccepl
advertiiiOITN!rD fur real oslate
whlcf1111n - - of 1118
law. O u r - areheraby
Informed lf1al alldwelllnga

304-&amp;75-1957
Mature Couple Interested In Car·
lng For Non Bed Fast Elderly

1980 14x70 Hlllcreat TrOller. Gas

Treo Prortu/ona/1"

•rh•

Buck·

et
Truck
Service· · Top·
Trim·
Removal·
Stump

Grinding.

Froo

Eatlmaloa,

Insured.

workers

Comp. Bidwell, Ohio. Call &amp;
Sovo.
1-800-838-9568
(740)388-9648
Owner:
Rick MOunt.
Quality houte cleanlnga, The

Boat Bonded. Profoaalonal. Roll·
able, call avonlnga (740)256f131 or 1·888·781-2412, omall:
ctoubled Oeurekaneteom

· Bualneaa
Opportunity

lNG CO. recommends that
you cfo bustness with t~eo­
plt you know, and NOT . to
send money through the
mall until you have Invest!·

gated the olftnng.

TYPe

Family

Restaurant, Well Es·

!abilshad And Operating For
Nearly ~0 Yurs. Includes Real
Estate And All Equipment. Home·

stead Bend , Broker (304)8822405
OWN A COMPUTER?

Rato

Plaza,

230

livery, and letup paid by Factory

Spring

Ca;ll

Val-

740·446·

Profesalonal
Sei'VIcea

Nationwide In·
Reduction!

3409

1092

Sunset Drive. Newly Re·
molded, Carport, Full Base·
ment , Excellent Condlllon ,
(740~118

Half
Acre,
3
Bedroom
House, 1 Bedroom Apart·
ment Beneath . Two
Polt
Barns.
Close
To
Town .
(740~782

Ashton, WV. Situated On 2 Acr·

01 Land, 3 Bedroom With 2

Full Baths . 28x32 Garage (de·
tached) Completely Finished In·
side, Outbuilding, Price Rt&lt;luced,
$89.~00

Phone (304)576-4050

For Appointment.
Real

formation .
2393

Call

Free

In·

(740)558-

2393

Buach

Gardena
worlct,

And

Olo·

Corner

Lot

132&lt;78 Foaf. Chain Link
Fonco, Wattr Wtll, Septic
Tank
a Aluminum Ou!
Building&amp;,
PriOI 138,000·
PIClturu

2 Bedroom, Water &amp; Traah
Paid
On
Bulavlllt
Pika.
Furnished, alectrlo, mobile
Home, One bedrOom, new
c1rpet, no pets, trash
water Included, rererancu
&amp; depoalt, call (740)992-

5751

And

lnforma ·

tlon Call Ownora A.E. And
Dilly KnOIII Sr. In Evtn·
lng
Galllpolla
(740)4412tt 7
Florida
Numbor
(183)W.QN3

320 Mobile liomea
torllle
"Nioo• IIIII lkYIIno I lodroom

14K70 Mobile Home. llldroom.
a lalh, Heat Pump Wltft Air,
h7eo, lvon"QQ. (304~:11:13

Near Holzer,
Gas
heating,

Lease,

Deposit

691·6777.

1 Bedroom, Garage Apart•
ment, Located On Route
7N, ~ .Large KUChtn, LA; Bll·
Front
Porch.
cooy,

800·691-&amp;777.

(740)446-1018

New double -wide 3 br. 2 ba .

$998 DO down only $295 per

mon call now 1·800-691·6777
Fleetwood

Pleasant Area. (304)875-7568

14x70

Fleetwoocf,

2

16x80 ,

$19,999.00, 3 Bedroom, 2
Bath, 1-an-nH110.
Ullllly Blfls Getting Most 01
Paycheck!

(740)448-3093
Ntw Home Today

Call,

For

2 Bedroom Apartmtnt For Rent,
$250 + Utlllllts In The Point

Your

340 Bual11888 and
Buildings
Church Building with Parsonage
for sale, located In Point Pleasant,
Good Neighborhood , asking

$95,900, 1304)675·1618

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BRUNER LAND
(740)44H492
Snow Bpecltl,... HHrl Of
Wayne Notional fO Acres
$13,000, Jac!ison Co. 5

2BA, References I Depos·
Jt. In Point Pleasant Area,

Call Alter · 5pm,
0011

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room
Apartments,
Clean,
Nt1
Pets, No Smoking, Refer·
ancas &amp; Deposit Required.
Utilities
Furnished
Gallla
Manor
Apartments,
Now
Accepting
Appllca·
lions For 1 BR, HUD, Sub·
sldized Apartment• For El ·

derly
And
Handicapped,
Equal Housing Opportunity.
(740)446-4639
35 West ,2 Bedroom Town·
Apartments ,
In·
!louse
etudes
Water
Sewage.
Trastl , l325tMo.. 740·448·

Acres With Barns $31,000.
- Rio Grande, Scenic+ PrJ·
vall. 8 Acres With Pond
$25,000 or 9 Acres

S399

TWin RIVIIT~ers haw accepting
appllcat~ for 1 BR
HUO aut&gt;aldlzed apt for elderly

and dllalllad. EOH. (304)875.
8879.

Mali• Co.· Tupper Plains·

SR881, House On 3 Acres,

490

·Acres $10,0001 Carr Rd, 6
Acres $13,000, 16 Acres

For Leaae

1600 Sq. Feet, Beautifully
Restored 2nd Floor, 3 Bed·
room
Apartment,
1
11
28atha,
Living/
Dining
Room, Rear Deck . HVAC.
Gallipolis
All
Downtown
Modern
Amenltlu.
$8001
mo. Security And Key De·
poaltl. No Pels Rtfarenc-

5 Acres $25.900 Danville,

5 Wooded Acrea 514,000.
Rutland, 9 AciBI $85001
Co. Water On AH.

Call Now For Mapsl Owner
Financing With Slight
Prq)Orty Mlrl&lt;up. Lind
Avelllblo In 42 OniO COUn-

u

Rtqulrod.

.wae Or (740)ue 3131

tltl.

Looking To Bur A Ntw
Home? Don't Hevt Lind?
WI Doll I Hurry Only I 0
LOll ltft, 304•738-72111.

380 , Reallatata
'
Wentld
NOid IICiud•
ItdHaveHomeLotn,In Counlrr
On t •I
At•

Ill Ill/\ t ' .

"ant

ltdroom Home,
Galllpolle, ~arlly

IMMtCUata

(740)2-574

Evenings:
740·448-

(740)44e-

lnd
Floor,
Spacloua,
3
Unlurnl&amp;hld
Bedroom,
In
VICtorian
Apartmanl
HOult
On
City
Pork ,
HVAC. 011 81r01t , Parking ,
t•l&amp;/mo. Plua Utllltln ' ••·
ourlly And Key Dapoalt
Aaqulrad. No Pile. •••••·
onooa Aaqulrtd. (74014414411

(740)441-o152 Roadyl
Bassett Hound, Male,
Months
Old,
House

Broke,
1688

$200,

(740)258-

AKC Baston Terrier Pup·
plea Shots, Wormed, snow
Do-Quality. Now Taking

posits
To
(740)388-9325
AKC

Hold .

Golden

S2SO:

Rttrltvtr

Females

Only,

$225, (740)25&amp;-1686
AKC Rtgllttrtd
pies,
$150
. (740)2se-&amp;463

Lab

Pup- ,
Each . •

AKq Roglatered Labrador Pup·

euv. Stll, Trade.

New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holiday Inn ,

Kanauga.

Wt Stll
Monument• Ancf VIHs.
Furniture

Grave

For

Delong's

Groom

Grooming All
741)-441 ·1602

Breeds, •
•

•

Ready

Valtntlnt'l

$50 Each. Call Anytime.
Looko Llko Boxer- Blue
Eyes. (740)3BIH272

540 Mllcellaneoua
Merchandlae.
Lined
Pair

5

Drapes
Shears

Bllgo.

Practlctlly

Good

Price,

Seat

NIW
$2000,
$800,
or

Jacuzzi.

$5000, ' Will Taka
Big
Scrto~
TV
(740)387-7480
(740)387-7272.
AMAZING

HOlJRS 1·11 M·P'
441·0107

Break TrOUiiJillll LOll 10•
200 Lba . Easy, Quick, Feat

Dramatic

A11u11a,

Natural,
mended.

Doctor
Free

(740)441-1 &amp;e2

For
,Aiao
Square

c.~~•

(740)388-8627
8264

Hay.
Balas.

(740)388-

2llblll .... l&amp;f

_,_

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
Repairs.
Problems?
Need
Tuned? Call The Plano Or.

........... CilllaC.. . . . .

570

AERATION MOTORS
Stock. Call Ron Evana. 1•
800·537-9528.

Professional
OJ
Karaoke
System, Great Sound, With

CO's, Ready For Show. Call
(7401387-o240
Klndlewood Wood or Coal
stove. Free Stand·
lng or Insert. 2! Inches Tall

b~o~rnlng

FARr~

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

x 38 lnchea Wl&lt;te. 23
Inches
Deep.
$200,
(740)248-9091
Ltlt Chair, LIKi Now (304)576·
2103

Tractor
Loader

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

~sed

Electric

A~d

Furnaces
For
Sate
For Size&amp;· Installation

NEW

AND

USED

STEEL

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channal,
Flat Bar,
Steel
Grating For Oralns, Drive·
war•
&amp;
Walkway&amp;. L&amp;L

Scrap
7300

Melals

With
Front
30·45

(740)446-

630

Livestock

Laying

Hans

Starled,
Also

$2.50

That
Juat
A Piece,

(740)256-

Ducks

9214

640

Tappan

Hay &amp; Grain

•

900 LB Round Bales, Good
Mixed , Hay, Stored lnslcfe,

Wllf Load, $15 oo
(740)379-2788

Each,

Ground Ear Corn, Call After 4pm.

(304)875-2443

HI

Efllclency

Large

90%

800-872·!1967
www.orW.conVbtnnett

•

FurnJCII. II You Don't Call
Us
We
Both
Lolli

&amp;

1-800·

Solid 19B5 Dodge Ram
Pickup,
$725/080,
Uaod
Pellet Stove, 1200, Clean
Firewood,

S25/Load,

$15,
Delivery
(740144&amp;-1052
Straw·

B~gfll

Hay

You

............ Will 11

Thursdcw,

--.... •r••....,.ton)
and
,_....,c

Feb. 8,2001

L•l••·

....,. of
er.allpiNnt•

•r•

CeMpllon

o,f

Irwin

7:00p.m.

•

.....
.lucty

Don't Miss This

Lo1•••

Truckload Sale

111d

.......
............ ...,.
....,.

'

of

l ~··
Morlan .........

AMVETS

lloloh

...

POST23
Kanauva, Ohio

710 Autoa for Sale
t 990
40oor,
Actual

Buick

LoSabro

AUCTIONEER:
FINIS "IKE'' ISSAC

•

One Owner, 48,000
Miles·
Mlchellrta

Plus, All
Equipment.

Ntadld
Stt AI

Swttptr,
Hoover
Almoel
NIW, I!Oi Klfollnt Hill•

NICt C•.

Or

Call
$3100

1910 &lt;lrond Am, 2 Door. 4
Cylinder, &amp; Sptod, • Good
Condlllon,
$1000
010.
(740)44f-fDB3
1112 Old&amp;,
Woll
talnod, New Parlo,
010, (140)188-1414

Main•
UUO

1117 LU!Illnl IIUI; 11t4
lulok Cenlurt UIU; 1111
ltrttfl OT, Ike Now, 11 K
12715: 1111 l•fO 14115 .
Cart
An~
Tl•oko
,rom
$1111 To . lltll. COOK

1101'0111 (7&gt;10~101
II Orand ,rl•. ~unt

710 Autos for Sale
Ll\ltly's

Qco~.

17 Cadllilo I Door, 11~000
Mlloa, Looded . $1100 1110

Auto

Salll~

1888

Otdo Cutllll Cloro $1200 ;
1985 Buick Skyhawk $500,
1885 Ford Ranger $800:
1Glt ChiVY Beretta $800;
' I G83
Chevy
Celebrity
$800 ; 1988 01~1 Cutlss•
Clera $1000, 1989 Cnevy
Covalltr $700 , f985 Mor·
oury Lynx s.w. $450 , 1990
Chovy corsloa $900 : 1989
Chevy S· 10 4WO $800;

lllnese &amp; death.
Special thanks to
the Pomeroy EMS,
Hoapilll Stall
&amp; Paul's Individual
doctors, Holzer
Senior care Center,
Funeral Home In
Galllpclla, All\/.

Jamee Btmac:kl o1
CMet Epi!IC:Opal
Church In Pl.
PleUIIIII. Your
kindness Is

appreciated.

Grace Elch, Paul
Elch, John Ek:h,
Sulllll Elch
Bill

71

o

Autos for 81le

'14 Mercury , Cougar. 4 6
Llttr Englnt , Power, KtY·

1111 Entry, 71 ,000 Mlloa .
$6500 .
(740!992-2770 Or
(740)G91-2014 -

720 Tru~ks for Sale
Camper

19!5 Ford F-250
Special. 390 4 Brl, 4" Speed
4:10 Aur End. Surface
080.
1991
Ford
Taurus
S.W. Ruat.
11000
11000.
Call
Monday (740)446-3541
Through Friday sam· 5Pm 1887 Bflek Bitzer, S~por Sharp,
-!-!17!4011'ill!lll::l!lil'Niii31-:--:-~~-=:::"1 4X4, $1000 811 Of WhHis. $4000,
G7 Bllltr. Automatic, CD (304)875-4812 Ca! Mer S.iiOPII!
Player.

Look&amp; God, V•l, AuiOIIIII•
lo , lpolltra, IUOC , 010.
(740):111 1111

(740)44f-f~

11\/tryone lor their
klndneea, prayers,
llitndlhlp. lood &amp;
ftoweta durlng his

pmned it down With a pressure packed 7-5 dcm1o n ovor
Clancey (Warren- Local) for
another dtviswn crown and 50 perfect slate
Two PPHS to ughtcs battled
to the champto nshtp finales
before falling m rugged deciSIOns for second place honors.
Both Jason M cCoy (1 J 9) and
Nick Duncan (125) fin iShed
w1th good 4-1 records
A little earher, a patr of
PPHS grapplers w on key
finales for th1rd-place awards
that put the locals in stnking
range for the team tttl e.J cre my
Nott (135) pmned Mullms
(Meigs) and Ma tt Warne r
(152) demioned T1pple (F- C)
to avenge their losses
Nick Russell (130) topped
Willis (Phtlo) for hiS 3-1 11mk
and important fi fth place
pomts, wh1le Max Paugc (189)
went 2- 3 for eight place

Matt S1mpson took the
leadership role for the Eagles
and worked h1s mag1c underneath to score five straight
Page II
pomts, including a threecompleted a three-point pomt play. Nelson added fuel
play of h1s own, making the to the already rekindled fire ,
by completmg a three-point
score 10 all.
The Panthers were able to play from the foullme as well
The Eagles now tra1led by
regain the lead, and at the end
of a close first quarter, Chesa- only one, but Bobby Barbour
hit yet another 3-pomt goal,
peake was on top, 15-12.
Eastern Jumped ol!l in the pushing the Panthers ahead
second to retake the lead wttb by four Sharpshooter Chris
two free throws from Brown, Lyons electrified the full
as well as a Chns Lyons steal house at Eastern by answering
and lay up. The Eagles found With a 3-pomter of bts own.
themselves m foul trouble Barbour returned the favor
early, as Nelson was called on With a JUmper in the pamt,
his thtrd personal foul at the and a field goal by Best gave
the Panthers a five-point lead,
6:12 mark.
Chesapeake had their trou- 47-52. Super Simpson drew a
bles as well. Brown took a foul at the buzzer, and htt two
ch~ge from Josh' Waugh, giv- . foul shots, cutting the Panther
ing Waugh his third personal lead to three.
The final quarter completfoul as well. Neither team was
able to gain much of lead ed the climax of an already
throughout a neck and neck exhilarating plot. Eastern
first half. However, Chesa- retained possession of the ball
peake looked to be pulling to start the quarter, and Matt
out ,,in front at the end of the Simpson took 1t upon h1mself
first half as Bobby Barbour hit to get his team back mto the
two "3-pomters including one ballgame. Stmpson hit a 3at the buzzer, giving the Pan- pointer at the beginning of
thers a 33-27 lead at halftime.. the quarter, tying the game up
The Panthers retamed their at 52 all.
Aaron Gossett hit a shot
six-point lead until the 6:50
mark. Star center Matt Simp- 1nside .the paint, but Nelson
son scored five stra1ght points answered for the Eagles to
to bring the Eagles within again tie up the game. Iron
one. The Panthers clawed man Karr came through for
back, and buckets by Anthony the Eagles from the foul line,
Delimpo, Waugh. and Bar- by hmmg two foul shots; Karr
bour 'gave Chesapeake the1r gave the Eagles the lead at
largest' lead of the evening at 5:57, 56-54. Following the
foul shots, the Panthers called
45-36.

a umeout to discuss how they
were going to combat the
Eagle assault.
Anthony Delimpo took
charge of the Panther pack,
and scored four stra1ght
points, givmg Chesa peake a
58-56 lead. It was now ·Eastern's turn to ca.ll :'!. tim eout to
dtscuss strategy. Joe Brown
came through in a clutch situation when the Eagles needed It the most. Brown hit a
turn around JUmper to tie the
game 58 all With four minutes
to play. A strong defensive
stand forced the Panthers to
call a timeout at the 3. Q1
mark."
Chesapeake's new offenSive
plan was put into actton and
proved effective when Barbour connected from downtown giving the Panthers a
three-point lead. Brown came
to his teams rescue as he hit
the same shot be had been
hitting all night.
Bt:Own htt a turn-around
JUmper instde the pamt, and
drew a foul on the ne.xt posseSSion to keep the Eagles
withm one. The Panthers had
possession of the ball with 44
seconds to play and a onepam! lead. The Eagles 'put up
a strong defens1ve stand and
forced Chesapeake to take ;i
timeout. The Panthers were
able to inbound the baU, but a
traveling violation gave the
Eagles the ball back With 30
seconds to play. The Eastern
bench got th~ crowd on thetr
feet tor the Eagles, as they set
up a last second shot play. The

soltd defense by C hesapeake
made tt look like they ~uy
pull ofT a Wlll. W1th only ~ec ­
onds remammg,"Jnd thl'1r·last
shot offense no t \\Oibn g,· the
Eagles need ed some qu 1ck
thinkmg
Karr proved to bt· th e hero
of the ni ght as he too k control of the ball, drow 111 and
put th e Eagles up by one
pom t wnh fivL" s~umds
remauung. The Panthers last
shot wa s j ust a ha1 r too late,
and the Eagl es WL're vJCto nous. The Easte r n crowd WL'nt

w1ld. as dtd the player&gt;. all
overwh elmed wtt h JOY
Brown and Sm1pso n lc·d the
Eagles, sco nn g 20 and 19
points, re specttve ly Ka rr followed up wtth e1ght, as d1d
Chad Nelson wi th seven
pomts.
Barbour led the Panth ers
with· 18 pomts, 12 of th me
conung from 3-pom tt:rs
Delimpo added 16 and Ae&lt;t
racked up 12 pom ts as wel l. I
" Tonight we put forth a
total team effort We showed
everyone how we ca11 play
when we all play toge ther and
play w1thin our g.un e,' mdl
Eastern head coach H owte
Caldwell.
"Thts ranks amo ng the
b1ggest VICtones m th e hm ory of this schoo l. It was also
one of the best ball ga mes
played tn thts gy mn as ium
Both teams played thctr h~ rts
out tonight, and sho uld be
~ pplauded,'' sat d Caldwdl.
Eastern travels to S. .mrher n

Friday.

Powor
John·

aon's Mobile Home Perk·
Lot 11 S On Euttrn Avt·

nut In Golllpolla
(740)441-1021

or, 125: lloll·l·away 8td,
$38: Foom Rubber Pad,
110: Lift Choir, 1280: Bat
- · 110 ~740)441-Q708.
Towboat Starchllght uo:
TOWbOII
AUar 4 FoOl.
110: I Iron Trotdll lilt
Iewing
Maohlno,
140
looh; I 101 large llun
LiQ!Itl UO: (304)17&amp;-4311

AUCTION

......... rt,

Available,

Wire Til SUaw Year

Haul. (740)3e7-neo

"'r

ol

'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis· "
count Available Harllege Farm, 1.•

(304)675-5724

NowmMr

II, 1000, M Holur
MHiaalc..ter. Ho
WOIItltd 7 peundl, I

1ArrJ and Olo•l•

Balas

TRANSPORlATION

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Hoot
Pumps, L P. &amp; Natural Gas
(7401448-8308
29Hl098.

Roll

RYan
w.. .,.,.

(304)67!·

Hay For Stit can (304)675·7217

f"~family
',;ul Elah
would like to thank

Wolfe

GoJd Mixed Hay Starting
At $1 50 A Bait. Delano
Jackson
farm.
I 743(740)446-1! 04

Trevor

•

on At 2 N 3Q4.675-9

Gas Furnaces, 011 Furnac·
es, 12 Sear Heat Pump &amp;
Air
Condlllontng
Systems
Free 8 Year WerJBnty Ben·
nette Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·

I

!192-21158

Hay for aale square bales 1 mile

AESIDENnALHOME
DWN!RS

,.1

End
HP.

(740)379-2218

Huge
Inventory,
Dlacount
Prlcaa, On VInyl Skirting,
Doors,
Windows,
Anchors,
Water Heaters, Plumbing &amp;
Electrical
Parts.
Furnacea
&amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·
44"·941 e
www.orvb com/
bennett

Now &amp;

620 Wanted to Buy

Me1gs was 14th.
Actually, tt came down to
three final matches mvolvmg
PPHS and F1sher. Two wins b.Y
either team m head-to-head
matches would be huge, three
would seal it. Big Blacks got
the two, pushing Fisher to
th1rd, and two other local matmen won to propel PPHS to
the top.
Eight · of the 12 local
wrestlers earned placement
points, and two won individual crowns . Add to that two
runners-up, two third places,
one fifth, and one eighth combmed to produce the winning
margin.
Jesse Nott (130) recorded
the first crunch win m a 13-5
win in a 13-5 decision over
Good (F-C) to annex h1s
i:hampionsbtp with a fme 5-0
record.
Then, D.J. Dewees (145)

ATHENS - PPHS grappiers stepped up when most
needed m the final round to
overcome all other teams at
the Athens Pool Tourney Saturday.
Three starters were absent
from the competttlon, but
others stepped in admirably to
Put the Big Blacks tn range.
Then, four pressure win in the
last go-round carved out the
winning margin in an exciting
tourney.
PPHS won the crown with
126.5 points, while LoganElm slipped into second at
119, just ahead of F1sher
Cathohc (Lancaster, Oh10,
and Wamn . (116).
117.5)
Phllo (110) was fifth .
Other SEOAL teams there
found Athens in sixth, Logan
m ninth, Jackson 11th, and

from

Civic Dntlopmtnt Groupn.lllltnnlum TllntrVIcol

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

buzze r to tie the &lt;core at 41 41 at halfttme.
The Redwome n bm lt a
double di g1t m th e second half
and were able to put the game
on tce down the stretch . T he
depleted Sp m t ended the
game with only five players on
the floo r, as three SH C players
had foul ed out of the con test.
Rio Gran de won the battle
of the boards (56-44) and the
turnover battl e. · H.Jo had 22
turn ove rs w hil e Seton Htll
co ughed up the ball 25 tuues.
R10 Grande shot 41 perce nt
.
(35 of 8 1) from th e float
The Redwo men now prepare for NAIA D1vi&lt;io n II
N o 1 Shawnee St.\tc Tuesday
mght. Gan1 1.! ume 1s St.'t 6 p.n1.

Point wins Athens tourney

Eagles

1-800-929-5753

740-448-4525

JET

and 14 rebounds.
VanHoose had 22 points
and 10 rebounds for the
Thuqdering Herd, w1th CorJackson and Latece
Williams each scoring 11

,
Earn u~ to $1 5/hour. .
l'uH time pd'illldhi"lifNI.'bentm 's*~ which
lndudla Madlclllillenlll/401 KJPd VICitlofll,
CALL TODAV...START TOMORROW!

PLEAS! CAIJ~ TOIIA.Y I

10:52 left to give the Bobcats
the lead for good and touch
off an 8-0 run .
Hunter scored 10 pomts,
Flomo had four and Sanderson a 3-pointer as the Bobcats
outscored the Herd 17-2 over
a 5-minute span.
Marshall trailed 58-55 with
8 minutes remaining before
Sanderson scored six pomts in
a row. The lead never dropped
below six points again.
Flomo scored 16 points and

I'

Full and parl-llmt potlllont nalleble.
Complotetralnlng provided with ftexlblo hours.

,..........,

Salt,AII

RIO GRANDE - Despite
a 39-pomt, 15-rebound effort
from Kameico Robison the
University of R.1o Grande
Redwomen scored a huge 9486 victory over a solid Seton
Hill College team qn Saturday
afternoon at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grand e (18-9, 9- 5
AMC) is making 1ts late-season run for the post-season
once again . The Red women
had five players in double fig"
ures led by semor Mindy Pope
w1th 20 points. The Galhp ohs
native also npped down 13
Enuly Cooper
rebounds.
added 19 pomts, 10 asmts and
four steals, Renee Turley

OVP CORRESPONDENT

1·~~~'!e: finished with 15

o Help Wanted

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

2lloll .... ·s.l

Fl.- for 9alo (304I87H71 e
Firewood

11

lfrllpr S,.W.IIf
llxlllllnlrl

100%
RecomSamplet.

Hardwood,
Round And

jumper with 14:11left to put
the Thundenng Herd ahead
49-39.
Hunter then scored six
point~ in a 9-0 run to get
Ohio (12-7, 7-3) back in the
game.
After JR. VanHoose hit a
jumper to push the lead back
to three points, Hunter had a
bucket and Patrick Flomo
made two free throws with

DOGSJW.T!R

METABILIBM

scored 18, Annie Tucker
chtpped m 15 pomt! and
Kame Kendall· scored 11 off
the bench.
Rob1son , an Amen can
Mideast Conference player of
the year candidate, smgle
handedly kept the Sptrit (136, 9-4 AM C) m the game. In
addition to her pomt and
rebound numbers, she blocked
four shots. Stacey Jastrzembski added 17 pomts, five asststs
and five steals to the Seton
Hill attack and Mindy
M cClelland chtpped m II
po mts.
Se to n H1U jumped o ut to an
11-6 lead and the two reams
went back-and-fo rth m th e
fi rst half of play. Cooper h1t a
runm,n g op.e bander at th e

UAG SID

BY fRANK CAPEHART

Bobcats top Marshall in MAC play
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Jon Sanderson scored 19 of hiS
24 pomts in the second half
and Brandon Hunter led the
way during a 17-2 second-half
spurt as Ohio beat Marshall
77-71 on Saturday.
·Marshall (13-6, 7-4 MidAinerican Conference) led by
13 points in tlie first half.
Travis Young, who scored 12
points for Marshall, hit a

Adopt A

Or

BY MARK WIWAMI

•

Shop, _

Dog

In the second quarter, River . Logan took a 33-14 lead at
Valley attempted to fight back. the half and never looked
A pair of Nicole Watkins back.
b:ukets and a couple of free
After the game, River Valley
throws bn;1ught the Raiders head coach Tom Weaver had
back to withm II at the 4:46 no comment as he left the
mark of the second quarter, Katie Smith Gymnasmm after
the difficult loss.
18-7 ~
Despite the loss, River Valley
Wdtktns led the Raiders
with 15 points.
was impressive under the
After a Downs basket, Cyn- boards with a team total 44
thta Ward helped get River rebounds.
Valley back to wtthin 11 with
DeGarmo led the Raiders
two out of four free throws to with 19 bCiards, while Bndget
. make it a 20-9 game with 4:08 Harder pulled down e1ght
left until halftime.
rebounds. DeGarmo also had
Ward finished with seven four steals
points, while Chelsea DeGarR1ver Valley travels to Fmmo had eight points for the land today before the R aiders
Raiders. The Raiders. who close out the1r regular season
only five players to score, did- Thursday as they play host to
n't make a 3-pointer on the Jackson .
afternoon .
The Raiders will meet
At that point, the Chieftains Meigs in sectional. play Feb
·
outscoted River Valley 13-3 14.
over the next three minutes of
play.

Cay, 3/4 BOlltr 1 114 Husky,

Sale

(740)448-8275
(740)448-1001 Anytime

OVP SPORTS STAFF

LOGAN - A tough start
Saturday afternoon on the
road was too much for the
River Valley girls basketball
team to overcome.
After being down 18-1 at
the end of the first quarter, die
Raiders lost to Logan, 52- 33.
The game opened with the
Chieftains going on a 15-0
run.
With 34 second on the
clock in the opening penod,
Julia Mollohan got the
Raiders on the scoreboard
with a free throw. A 3-pomt
goal by Logan's Enn Thompson with 19 seconds left put
the Chieftams up by 17.
Thompson scored 12 pomts
for Logan, whtle Amand a
Downs led the Chieftams wuh
20 points. Thompson and
Downs each had a couple of
3-pointers.

Shot&amp; &amp; Wormed. (304)575-5713

Pups

Wlttrllne IPIOIII : $/4 100
"I llt.U
fOO: I' tOO
U7.00 "'' 100; All
Ifill
Oompraollon
Pit•
110
ti!\Dlln IIOOk
Qoocle _ _ , "ON
INTI"•
_ _ _...,;;;,;;;;;;;;_.
PAIIII IVANI
Jaokaon, Ohio,
I•
100-511-1111
IUnk
ltd&amp;,
labJ
leG,
Drtlllr,
LOYI
••••
a wolghl blnon 1100, ........ blltt,
Ohair, ~olrl(leralor, Ouean $10,
tl,. lled 1100, Twin Sullo
lo•
lprlniJI
Mottruo. ,!!, lUll
dOS
Mull uo, dog ctgo,
(140,...,...741
UQ. (304)1711-8110
r.11111 llt.lllll'.l

Black.
$350,

pies. S Black, 3 Yellow. All Males.

River Bend Place Ni Accop!lng

Acres $13,500 Or 20 Aer·
es. $19,500. ClsyTown·
ship, 13 Acres $18,500 Or
17 Acres $20,000 VInton,

Acrea $27,500 0r11

Ohio

·Available,
(740)446-6308,
1-800-291-0098

740·446·3481,
740·387· 0502,
010f

$23,000 Cheshire, 8

T·

Porter,

New &amp; Used Furniture
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom St,Jites,

Patio, 1 Start $365/Mo
No
Pets, lease Plus Security
Deposit
ReQuired,
Days:

W1th Pond $25,000 Or 5

,Ufftllntd ,

Road,

0008.

f/2 Balh, Fully Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,

(740)992-

Fawn
&amp;
There.

Females.
Mother

Puppies.

Gas
Call

Tara
Townhouse
Apart·
menta , Very Spacious. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1

Home On 5 Aerts fle·
ducedlll $64,000. 5 Acres

New 3
01011 To

Appllcatlona-

and Disabled, EOE. (304)882·
3121

Scioto co. 20 Acras
$19,000.
llllllo Co.· Kerr Rd , 3-2

410 Hou... for

Ta~l~g

Stove,
$125,

$199 . Sofa On
Carpet In
Stock 200 Clark Chapel

(740)446'-1519

Applications for 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment lor Elderly

Acres $12,500, Galla Co
37+ Acres $37,000, Pike
Co 11 Acres$10,0000r

Aorta Notdlng ~ow
poltt. ('140)441-1311

APARTAT
BUDGET
AT
JACKSON
52
Westwood
$289 to $370.
to shop &amp;. movies
740·446-2568. Equal

Day,

Anytlmt

Repaired, New &amp; Flabullt In

Call
HOUSing Opponunlty.

Now

Valentine

AKC

Mollohan
Carpets &amp; Fur·
n1ture,· New 2 piece Living·
room Suite , $299 . Recliner

(740)446-

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
PRICES
ESTATES,
Orive lrom
Walk

4
Australian
Shepherd
Pupa , Red &amp; Whitt Merlll,
S•x Week Old, Ready For

5

(740)388-8128 Afler 5pm

1

Required (740)441-1519

New 16 II wide $499 •..per moo.
only $270 per mon . call no"' 1·

78

Magic Chel Electric
Excellent Condition,

(740)388--1 fOO

Utllltl11.

$23,000 Or Hay Barns On

Selling Our Small Modern
Masnry Winter Home Near
Lakeland, Florida, Between

Call

New 14 ft wide $499. down only
$199 per mon. call now 1·800·

Free Gas Heat $36,500131

Real Log Homes, Free In·
formation . Call
(740)558-

Neigh·

Pets for Sale

740·448 ·

White. (740)446-9088

Used

Good

borhood,
$275/mo.
Afltr ~m. (7401:1!l&amp;-1788

10 Acres $12,0001

Log Homes.

Bed-room,

W/0 Hookup, 5279.00 PIUI

1-800·89HI7n

REAL ESTATE

Brick • Home,

2

1 • Bedroom
Economical

Must StHI16&gt;180
Make 2·Payments &amp; Move InI

$30,000 With $5,000 Down,
$250 Per Month At 8%
Calf (740)446-9566

BR

~··

Relerences

qulred.'(740)388--9f82

440 · Apartments
for Rent

In Bar·
304·738·

Wuher, Oryer Or Refrlg·
erator.
Interesting
VIew
Near Many Jobs.
Lot 9
Johnson Mobllehome Park

To A!lpreclatt (304)875-5332 Or
(304)675·2999

Utllltlll.

Otpoalt &amp;

Only At Oakwood

A/C, Wheelchair Ramp, No

nels, Extra Nice Bath. new Roof,
New Heat Pump, New Carpet
Throughout, Large back Oeck.
Conveniently Located On A One
Acre awel Lol Along Route 2,
Gallipolis Farry, W. V Must Sae

2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile
Homes For Rent In Porter

Pay

Call

(304)875-1422
515 Main Slreel, Point Pleasant

(304)67!5-15477

Aroa. You

Appllancea ,

Street,

M81n Street Furnltn

In Mason, No Pats, (304)773·

WV '

AP-

Washers,
dry refrigerators ,
ranges.

Vme

420 Mobile Home•
for Rent
14fx70 Wilh 24 Foot Expando
$325/month + Deposit &amp; Refer·
ence In The Camp Conley Area

740 -245·

6 Chinese Puga, 1 Male, !

USED

(740)388.0173

Limited Or No Credit? Gov·
ernmant
Bank ' Finance

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL BECURfTY 1881?
No Fte u-. We Wlnl
1--582·3345

Brick, lllrago And Ltundry Room
BuiJt ln. Big Kitchen , Ntw Cabl·

Renters

(304)738-()409

Year Old Hl'x80' Trai ler, 6"
Insulation,
Gas
Furnace,

3 Bectroom Ranch Style, Partial

Program ,

560

OH Call

GOOD
PLIANCES

Kenmore
And
Estates
Washers j $65 Each , May·
tag waaher
$60 , Nohge
Wesllnghouae ,
Maytag
Dryers
$50
Each .
All

NMded, 304-736-7295.

Grandt,
5121 .

plpia,
tto .
Rio.

~7

5 Room House , 52 Oliva
Sl .
Gallipolis,
$250/mo

Pilot

Block , bricK , sewer
wlndowa ,
llntela,
Claude
Winters,

Jeclcoon Avenue, 1304)675-7388.

7398, 1-888·818.0128.

8882

Your

For Sale · Rteondltlonad wash·
ers, dryers and rtfr)gerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

a

1-800-691-&amp;7n

New

310 Home• for Sale

For

Only $28,1100.001
21X52 FrH Otll\41)' I Stt
1-888·928-88&amp;e
Factory Gccf 32x8D 1$1 o.ooo Oil·
count only Stooo.oo Down, Dt·

$16.999.00 3 Bedroom·
Bath. 1·877-77H170

0101

ney

Oou~t Wldol

S75/11r. PVFt 1·888·671·
9890 xBSO www adebt·

fordable

t1

Dryer

New

Suut
Your
Business
To·
day.. Prima Shopping Cen·
ter Space Available At Af·

3

Waahtr/

$14,900 For Mort lnlor·
matlon
(740)379-2133
(7401379-11238

Pu1 II To Work Eam $2S-

treevou com

ley

Bath.

boursvllle,

INOTICEI
VALLEY
PUBLISH·

OHIO

g1
Sun&amp;hlne
Slnglewldo.
1Bx80, 3 Bedroom. 2 Full

Final Days,
ventory

FINANCIAL

210

14000 (304)875-8253

New
Maytag
Appliances,
French Clly Maytag. 740·
448·7795

No ~ts 1740)44&amp;-0974

(304)736·7295

(740)388-8002

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Dryers.
Rangea,
Washers.
Refrlorators,
Up
To
90
Oays Guaranteed! We Sell

Skagos

Pilot Program Renters Needed

197!5 12~~:50, $2000 , Excel·
lent For Camping Or Ae·
modeling
On
Wheals ,
Aeacfy
To
Move .
Call

Bv BUTCH COOPIR

Goods

4 Room House, $250/ mo
Plus Under Dollar Depos it.

Gallipoli s Ferry Area (304)6751105

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Houeehold

ers.

$475 Month 3 Bedroom House,

HetV Ston Needs Some Work.

Service

Rio

Kitchens. , 4 BA . $600/mo.'
Plus
Deposit.
(740)4484734 Or (740)44f - 1337

adYertlled in this newspaper

Situation. For More lnform1don.
Coli (304)87S·BI91
Tree

In

9 Room House, 3 Baths, 2

Couple In Aaolottd Living '!Ypo

Mount'a

House

(740)446-3945

888·928·3428

Georges Portable Sawmill, cton't
haul your logs to the mm just call

Bedroom

Grande, (740)245-5858

(304)87~738

t IXSO Mobllo Homo, Now
Kllohon.
Now
lothroom,
Ntw Plooro, 1111 Covered
flarah. Ctfttral Air, 11,000
(740)441-t:lll

Otllnl

cy, (3D4)67S-5540 or (304)875·
4024

14x70 Southern Oream. free De·
livery free Setup only $9995 1·

lnfoCIIIoft Ma,....,.iot

Ctl Ul 'Todly l'or

2·3 BA house on Lincoln Ave •
Homestead Realty, Ask lor Nan·

Christi an Couple Will Do
Hou,M Clean1ng Call Any·
tlmtli Up To 11 :30pm Lea11e
A Message II Not Home .

·~•-l'lln
Almc...,.

o-a,

(304)67!HI806 Ask For Otzra.

ore available on an equal

2 lith 114,004 010 (104)17&amp;·
1068

c-~~o~~
HltiiMrll'-~

2 Story Hou&amp;e, 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
Located Middle Of Town.

Ill! realntate adv8rllalng fn
""' _
.. IUbiiCt 10
1118 Federal Fair HouoJna N:t
of 1988 wf1lch makes~ Illegal
10 lldVenlll •any p~rence.

llmllatlon or dlscrlmtnatlon

Wook, Compttlltvt $, ,EEO,.
&amp; Letter To: Ra· Nice Home On Mason 80 Rd .,
captlonlat,
Gallipolis,
0222

t · 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From S199/Mo., ,..,_
Down For Lis tings &amp; Pay·
ment
Oeta1 11,
800·319·
3323 EKt 1709

based on race, oofor, religion,
sex familial atatu1 or national
origin, or any lnl8nll0il10
make any such preference,
Bmnatkln or dscrimlnallon.•

logo
(CarHrs Close To Home)

February

_______/ 1 Ruumt

Oomlno'&amp; 01 P&lt;»nt Pleasant Now
hiring Sate Delivery Drlvera. Muat
Be 18 Years Old Excellent Work
Environment. Stol) By In Ptraon
For Application. 420 VIand Street,
Point Pleasant

booka

Buslneaa
Training
llllllpolla Career

Middleport,

By

LOCAL RADIO STATION
PROMOTIONS
oDAV A EVENIN!l
IIII'TI AVAILABLE
•PULL l PAIIT•TIME
OPINING
•NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEDWE TRAIN
OOPPORT\JNilY FOR
ADVANCEMENT
&lt;COLLEGE STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply In person at:
303 Main Slree1
Polnl Plealanl, WV I
Mondly februlry &amp;',
2001
T--,Fobruaryl,
2001
WadneldaJ februlry 7,
2001
3:00pm until 8:00pon
ONLY
Aok for Ma. W*ls

Oreamscometrue2 com

Career
Opportunities
For
LPN 'S. Top 01 The Scale
Wages
$1 t 00 Start Pay
With Shift Differential, Ex·
parlance Pay, Bonus Pro·
gram
&amp; Extram'ely
Good
Health
Benaf1ts
Joint
100
Comm .
Accredited
Bed
Facility. Come
Join
Our Team . Stop By For Ap·
plication
And
Scheduled
hills
Interview
Scenic
Nursing Center, 311 Buck·
ridge
Rd, Bidwell, ,Ohio.
"The
Alzheimer's E~tperts•

Street,

45780

ephone operator work tor·

Mail Order 888-828-2603

~.....:.;.:..

Parson

Ita Youlh
Would ba

NOWH1RING
1170.00 PER WEEKI Prr
(GUARANTEED SAV.ATI
Men and Women to do tel·

AtteniiOn· Work From Home. Up
To S25· S75/hr PT!FT Internet/

453-4992

A

Flyers And Do Mau Moll·

Al l People looking tar 2nd
Income, Earn Up to 3,000
monthly. Work 7·15
hrs
per week. 1-1188-707-5154

Mo . Full Time,

For

To Manage An Olllca, Or·
ganlzt
And
Communicate
fnformatlon~
Oeatgn
Youth

WorkFromHomeOot com

Work

Of
Part·llme
Administrative

To Help With
MiniStry. Dutloa

Start·uP ·

Stnd

Reaumes

Ohio
10th

$2.000- $5,000/mo.

AttentJon

140

Fully
Opening

Free

Ftt. Call (740)446-3358

Church 011 ChriSt 5th And

Earn Onlne Income

I

Ohio

lngs. Must Bad Proficient
In General Office Work In·
· eluding Typing,
Answering
Phonts, Otaktop Publlah·
And
lng,
Printing,,
Spraadshaata.
Send
Ra·
sume's
To
Mlcfdltport

AbSOiuiOiy Free InfO

l

Streat,GallipDIII,

90

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

I

45

Aulstant· Tht Middleport
Church
Of
Chrlll
Ia

740-448-2842.

I

February

FACTS.

6989

Absolule

'l.

By

To.

In
Starch
Secretary/

Silver, • Gold Coins, Proof·
sets,
Olamonda,
~old
Flings,
U.S. Currancy,-

'-

Reaume

2001

Hair

Brl&lt;lge (74D)-226e

•

Poaseaa

(304)875·1820 By Februar11.
2001 Job Storti Ftbrutry 15

lic &amp; Dealers. Ont Pltot.
Dozens
&amp;
Case
Lots.
Auctioneer
Gary
Bowen
Proctorville,
Ol'llo
Flea
Market, Just Acroaa Hunt·
WV
31st
Street
lngton,

I

And

Good To~ne Skills.

Pleasant

States Selling To Tht Pub-

-I

Secretarial
Skills.

Cltmentt Nurtory Appl1 At Polnl

Spm, Truckloads Of New &amp;
Used Hems From Several

_,

• (11

Full·Time Temp. Employment At

Yard Sale

Every

Dependable

Ol lv6

(740}441-o423 Evenings.

Ont

eo

MUSI
Send

F'ound Small Black Female
Puppy Near 5th Avenue &amp;
Spruc e Street. Please Call

And

Experience
In
And Computer

s.

Lost and Found ·

AUCTION

School
Diploma
Year

Ou·
High

SALES·
WANTED:

Avon .

At·

Domestic Violence, Etc.
Plus.
Minimum
Of

ANNOUNCEMENTS

70.

Sel l

510

410 Houses for Rent

Saleaptople , Former, Party
Plan , or Olreet Sa le for new
line of produ c.ts to the
W V., Ot1 area ll Call for In·
tel'lltw (304)87~1 G1

Violence Intervention Prom Groupa.
parlance
In
Chemical

ThuNday.
"O.diiMI IUbjiCI to
elM
duetohol

60

MANAGERS/
PEOPLE

And

RfiiQIStEA QFAQUNE:

005

Help Wanted

4x4.

Gold

Grtal Condition,
(740)387-o240

Color,

$14,000

85
Bulc~
Century.
-.uto
Good
Condition , $800; 88
Honda
Accord,
S Spuct

Good
Condition.
(740)256-9009

••

1GI8 ChoVV s:10, 5 S,..., 4 CyIinder, Nlco Cloan Truck , Prlotd.
12300. (304)8711-3124

92 J:;~~y,y 4WD,
S1SOO: tomatlc nssooo .
4107

720 Trucka for Sale -

730 Van1 &amp; 4·WDI

tSSB Jimmy SLS, 49,000
Mllu, $17,500 (740)4488857

Chevy, Noods Work, $2800 Nl·
gollablt. (304)875-1449 •

88 Chevy. 1f2 Ton 4x4 Autom11ttc

90

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDI
1990 Chevy 1/2 Ton .
V•8, 5 Speed, A/C,
Crullt, Ntw Pain!,
Bluo,
$4900
(740)251-1011

4x4,
Till,
Light
090

1G98 Toyota Tacoma,
f11 ,900 (740)2415-92G7

4x4 ,'

f988 Oodgo Durango, Chill

Pt~Ptr Red . ,4)14, Loaded,
Cauatte And CO, Luther
Interior, Third Row Sut,
R11r Air Condition ing, V8,
3, 8
M1gnum
Enolnt.

47,000
MilO&amp; ,
(740)44e-6833

$21,500 .

Dodge

Caravan,

New

Slrul&amp; &amp; Tlru , S 1100 OBO.
Runs
Good .
(740)2588002

740

Motorcycle•

1982

Honda

8SO

Night·

,aw j!., Showroom Condition,
12,000 Mllll, New Tires,

oeo

112oo

(7401448-

'3.14 f

,

25 Horse Mercury, OutbDard Mo·
tor, Llkt New, Ran Thru Times,

810

1304)675-8844 (304)875·3451

760

Budglt Priced Tranamlt·
slona All Types, Acceas
To Over 10 ,000 Transml&amp;·
Transfer
Casu ,
alona , ·

Ctll'

Home
Improvements

Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done. tru Utlmatll. lifetime
guarantee. 14yrs on job axperl·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

740-245-5877,
3765

SERVICES

339·

once (304)895-3887.

Superior
Plumbing
And
Home
Maintenance .
We
Co All ~epalrs
On Homes
Inside And Out, Carpentry,
Floors,
Kitchens,
Baths .

(740)441-o113

1998 l'londa 300 Four' Tra)ll E•·

cellon! Shapo $2800 1304)075·
7559
99

750 Boats &amp;· Motors
for Sale

Polorla

500

Scrambler,

Alot Of Extru, 14800, 88
Honda
300
EX ,
Racing

Plutlc And Plpo,
oeo (7401441-1341

)

$2500

'

BASEMENT
WATE,RPROOFINQ
uncondl1 1onal l•tetlme guar·
antee
Loca l
reterences
furn ished
Eatabll shed

1975 Call
446· 0870,

24 Hrs (740)
1-800-287 ·0576

Rogers Waterproofing.

840

Electrical and
Refrlgerat19n

AesldenUal or commercial wl rmg,
new service or re pairs Master LIcensed electrician Ri denour
Electr ical, WV000 306, 30 4·6 75·

1786

I

I

�•

I .

PN• B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, February 5, 2001
Public NOIIce

COUIIT

COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE IIIATTIR Of'

THI 1!8TATI Of'

I'IIED C.IIIAVIR,
SR.. DECI!AHD
CASE NO. 31471

DOCKET
PAOE

Advertise your
message

PUBLICATION 01'
NOTICE
"TO ALL
PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
ESTATE OF FRED C.
BEAVER,
SR.,
DECEASED, Lata of

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

121 E. Main Street,
Pomrroy, OH. 457111,
Melga
County
Probate Court, C111
•

••
&lt;

NFL
.

.·

: Afterward, the player who led the
Raiders to their best season in 10 years
credited his AFC teammates.
"These guys are incredible, you fed
like you're driving a Ferrari," Gannon
s;~id. "I feel like a kid in a candy store

•

·.
•,

tP&lt;!ay, it's just amazing."
: . 9annon threw an 8-yard touchdown
pas,s to Tony Gonzalez and a 16-yarder
to : Marvin Harrison before being'
replaced by Peyton Manning, who also
chrew two scoring passes - a 2cyarder
t'o Jimmy Srriith in the second quarter
and a 24-yarder to Indianapolis teammate Marvin Harrison.in the third periqd.
: Gannon's two TD passes and a 29yard field goal by Matt Stover gave the
l&lt;FC a 17-0 lead a little over a minute
into the second quarter. The NFC wasn't closer than 14 points after that
At that stage, the AFC had 14 first
downs and 231 yards of offense to no
first downs and 6 yards for the NfC. ·
"Coach Gruden told me all week, 'I
expect a big game out of you and I'm
going to throw it to you,' "said Gonzalez, who had six receptions for 108 yards

·Meigs
flomPage81 .

I

I,taiders to within 28-20 at the half.
Meigs held a 32-22lead with 6:10 left
iri the third period after a steal and layin by Bolin. But things changed in a
hurry. Frazee was awarded a bucket at
die 4:20 mark when Meigs was . called
for goal tending. ·
·Nolan nailed three trifectas in a span
c:ifless than a minutes, with an Adan\
Bullington bucket for Meigs sandwiched in between to cut the Marauder~lead to 34-33.
The Marauders went on a 7-0 . ru~
caJ?ped off with a Bolin bucket off a
John Witherell assist for a 41-33 lead.
Nolan then nailed another three pointer to cut the Marauders lead to 41-36 at
th• 1:12 mark.
· Johnson canned a short jumper off his
own miss. for the Marauders · at the 50
s&lt;;cond mark to give the maroon and
goJd a 43-36 lead heading into the finai
period.
·
Nolan scored to cut the Meigs leal! to
43-38 to start the fourth period. But
Meigs pulled away to take a 48-40 lead
on a Johnson foul shot at the 5:23 mark.
But the \taiders battled back and cut

Southem
fawn Page 81

I •

away the momentum from the hosts.
Brandon Hankinson hit two consecutive baseline jumpers to give Wahama
the lead, then Jonathan .Evans hit a big
bucket to tie. John Smith and Alan Barniti each drilled 3-pointers to regain the
White Falcon lead as Southern managed
only two more field goals the rest of the
half, the score 30-27.
Waharna led by as much as five points
in the second half as Southern continued to lumber as it had in Friday night's
game. Jeremy Hudnall drilled two early
3-pointers for WHS.
Just past the nlidpoillt of the third
period, Southern's Matt Warner drilled a
cnicial 3-pointer to tie the score at 3636. That was followed seconds later by a
Kiser steal and lay-in, and yet another
steal by HubQ;ord. Hubbard zipped a pass
to Kiser for the score and Wahama called
time out in an effort to halt the 7-0 nm.
Southern led 40-36.
. ~ahama never recovered offensively
ana went scoreless the rest of the fume
as Southern added eight more points to

PHILLIP

A~wlllllahalcl

l'eiiNirJ •• 2001 ..
11:00 o'o1ook a.m.
Peraona

knowing

'"'
- - why
the
applloatlon
ahould
not be granted
ehould appear and
Inform the Court.
The Court le looat.d
11 on the Second
Floor of tha Melaa
County Courthoull
on Becond,.Street In
p_,, Olllo."

Judith E. Slaaon

1

ThE CRAFTY, BUND SPOT

BISSELL

• (Factoty Outltl)
All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location

New Homet • Viryl

IEIGSICO IOIIDIY

UPTO 70% OFF

FAJW, IU!I!!OS, NACH91. TACOI

• Verticals • Wood • Mini&amp; • Etc

?CHIIIJWJIIIIJ.fQLIIflll~ Of ONE

TWO FOR mSDAY

I'

WINGS DAY

1441'1*d ""· . GIAaiJ 446-4995
Tol frtt 1·.....745·8147 .

,25¢ WINGS .

FISH FRIDAY

(2) 8, 12, 18

All D• "All VC41 CAN EAI"

~Rich

URNP;!!~Dili~ARTMIENirl l_.!11~2iww;:-~.~IMIHIO;~FIIH~l~C;IIK;O~h~lo~J
Mike

FORT KNOX

A&amp;D

eff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Ujtholstery· Plus, Inc.

Mon·frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888 .
1·888-521.()916
DRIVE ANYWHERE
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In IIIVIca"
-11.6% Protein Uvastock/cattle Feed $6.50/100
-21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/50

-:::::::::=~~~~~~
Westernmakes
pride horse
feed $5.85/50
_
. $1.00·12%
off Coupon
next purct1ase
:$4.S:i/50 I
WANTED
MOUOHAN CARPET
Old
flllllol,
okii'IICio
QueUty tatpet It low
Pr1ces
• Free estlma1es with
appointments at your
convenience
• Financing avllllabla,
90 days same as

tullel, &amp; par11

Call Chuck

Layer Ctumbles $5.99/50 .
T.M Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

35537 St. At. 7 Nor1ll

w..
.a

IIRUI
I NT

h

Racine, Dfllo

74().94g;.2217
, Slztl 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hour•

HERE COMES TH'
PARSON, PAW

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Sunset Home
Construct 1011
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
~ole Buildinss,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall·&amp;
More

OUIC:K II HID.E TH' C:HAWKLET
CAKE tl

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

We Can Malee Your
Dream A Reali,ty!
740-742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

TONIGt4T'5
TOPIG

tf

ltfolf)

rt4e

II \1(1 \\ 11.1.
'-I OR \CI:
'-T. I&lt; I. 7
Ill ' Ill -...JIJ

wANT YOU TO
Tt'lf'IIC OF .IT AS
A !..ATE F6t.

e6TAre
TA.X ·
YOO UXlK~ruL., .lOC j"'
. ~~YOU ::&gt;iC.K. '1

l)lJ2-1717

NO, tHE WI t-IE FLU/~!.it&gt;

[ ~~eo,.... ""r·,.,

Of BU8BLY!

~·

••
UM ... HOW

Dry

1'\ANY
ZERO$
IN !&gt;.

Self-Storage

Ll

Pomeroy, 0/00

740-992.5232

-HiuHng •Limeatonl

• Saii!I•Tojllllll
of!H Dirt •lluloh

Sash 0-1 01 Unn.d
Inches
$119.001nstalled

J&amp;L
1551Und

Middleport

992-2772
~

~

I&amp;I

All ~ome lmprDVtlments

Advertise your~:· •
bu 55
on thiS page ·for
one mon

---lit
.!.~

174111e.Hu
tta'l 1444tl1
.... Gulllty For Tile Lownt Pllce, '
GIIA!Wfi&amp;DI

ROIEIT BISSELL Advertise

'.

CONSTRUCTION

.a.,...

•Complall
Rlmodtflng
Stop &amp; Cornp11re
FREE E811MATI8

99~-2156
740-912-1871 .
~-------------w----------------~--~~
\ ----~~

In this
apace for

$50 per
month.

20 Mao -

-tung
21 E-.w

unlta

NIN

~

I •

,_

I NT

All PAl

happon

7 Antonln

dlatant
11 Senlora

lfllllll
t Unft o1

23 Comld1an S7 ,..,.....
....
PhNipr
ductlvl or1l !DC-

24E28 ONeil
ll1lrrl
27 Orawl

21~=-

30 Wl'lllha·

.

Dvoralc, e.g. 34 - Hill, f4.C. ·
1 Old card
35
~

14 "-!ulrlcl
II LIM

·

v-....
llkl- .
qu,.,.,..

311 -IC!ialy
311.
3t Hrwk

- Nlatlve

11 FrN

DOWN

1 Cuban

12 Form of

40 llllllc

42 Hul!llll-

lnp44 Glde or
lhootlng
Prevtn
11 French
41"Cyan"
IOUI
ftnlah
22 Unfor1111n 50 Abon
24 .....,
(poat.l
28 Trlatorm 52 -CI!IIpl
28Acliae
53ActiWI
· Wlnalot
O.wbrr ,

IJCporl

2W11Wn

After the Buderim
3~:
31 """""'
classes, Jennifer AllMarcol
frey, Margo! Girle and
4 CEO'adlg.
rllbr.
33 Map abbr. 5 Twice, In
I drove back to Brismualc
34 8l1com wl1h
bane, and I promptly
Sam- I Vllta
jumped into a · cab to
attend a shiraz wine
tasting.ll was an in!eresling mixture of 16
wines that highlighled
the varietal's variety!
This depends primarily on area. For example, in the Lower
Hunter Valley, north
of Sydney, you get
light and elegant
wines, sometimes with
a peppery flavor;
whereas
in
the
McLaren Vale, southeast of Adelaide, the
wines are more fullbodied.
The nexl morning.
September 14, Meta
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Goodman and I drove
by Lull Campo•
south to Surfer :s ParColobllty Clphor
crerlldtrano quoWionl by fai!IOUI
adise, which has some
poop1o, po11 ..,.,
Each leftorln .,. elpller 011n&lt;1o ror rnalhor·
Toct.y'l clu&lt;t: llqUIIII S
.
similarities with Miami Beach. I taughl an
'WH'N
X
IO .HZJY
VII
WJN
afternoon class on the
I0 commandments of
0 X .l H Y WH
WDF X R
0 X I H.'
discarding.
NCBOYNUOJYHO
PJFFA
· Against three notrump, West lel¥1s the
IXRRIIR,
BR
WHXKAUHJTWY
spade seven: six,jack,
king. Declarer plays a
LIIVJRT
IWXFCJSR
PIH
club to dummy's ace
and a club back. Wha1
ISDJN.
should East discard?
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "I dOn'l like tht tact that I MWI to gt1 ddlr 10 lut,
It looks tempting to
bull like the teet thlll'm agklg so well." - 0\IIUn Hoffman
t,hrow the 'lieart queen
onto the table, but thai
isn't right.
Apply the Rule of - - - - - - l~ho~. ~r ClAY I. P O l l A N - - - - - Eleven to the opening
Roorrongo lottou of tho
lead: II - 7 4. So, 0 four ocramblod word1 bethere are 'four spades low oo iorm four olonplo word1.
above the seven in the
GONUIT
dummy, the East hand
1
and the declarer's
hand combined. And
East has seen all four:
DU EL E
dummy's nine, his
jack and queen, and
declarer's king. Therefore, West's suit is
ready to run. Yet Wesl
RUEPE
IN:,'
"One should never be discourdoesn't know where
aged," granny told my sister. "Your
the spade queen is . - - - - - - - - - - . confidence will get stronger each
Iocated. If South startG0 ARUC
time you fail and then- •• - -."
ed with king-queen- 1--,;::-;:;,r-:--;l"'lg..::.,-l.;;.....r.,.-1 Q Complooe oho chucklo quoood ,
third of spades, Wesl
_
•
•
•
_ .
by tilling in the mtaing words '
would have to try to ~....___...._..._......_..__, you develop from soep No. 3 below. ·
get East on lead for a
s)iade through declarer's remaining Q-x.
Also, from the Stayman sequence, West is
known to have staned
SCRAM.I.E'lS ANSWERS
with five or six spades.
· Embody- Force- Witch- Uneasy- MUCH WORSE
Easi should· clarify
My neighbor is a pessimist. She always manages·to
the situation hy dismake
an impossible situation seem MUCH WQRSE.
carding the spade
queen .

£trs·

TJ.IE'r'
SERVE SMALL

6UT TME PRINT ON
TJ.IE MENUS IS L:AK,f:&gt;t:.J

POR'TIONS..

I MONDAY.

,FEBRUARY 51

'1"111.··

I

'Your ..
CJIIrthday

I

llwllllllllllt~ .... ..,..,..

•New Hornet

11"-

I 1I I I

33795 Hiland Rd.

Homt Creek Ent.,lnc
992·7943

Waldadframel&amp;

•KIITI

T=~:~~~, S@~clllA-"

ue 7444 or

DoubleHun9
Replacement
Windows

...

IT 1-.1"~ OUR ANNI~Y
u6T t-llf.~T ~D I'E(,(,'(

1-877-830-8182 or
Ylalt ua aJ 202 Clark

9:00-5:00

-~~
41
Cholca
lndlrp- 51 Thl'lllln to

dlrrrrt
17 Fill

PaM

Juice
drink
47 Mo illng

=:-n-.,.

THE BORN LOSER ·

I 0 ' ~II "llll

TWAT SME REALL'r' LIKES •.

S. 11:00 to 3:00

-lvar.) 411

15 L.ubrlcM8
11 Rlcll

• It$ t

W_.
1'111

,_,

u&amp;':c

45771 '.

GRAMMA ~S SIIE'S FOUND
·A NEW LITTLE RESTAURANT

Moncley thru Friday

41 Elqlerl...,..

E".L 41=•
.....

• I

BY PHILLIP ALDER

211110 Buh8n ROid

You•

......
ln\lhpll

t4 _,,..,

• QJ I
•QJ1117
• J ••••

Back south

Stttllt

MasterCard.
Give uw 1 cell ,at

-

Op.nln&amp; lead: • 1

Hill's Self

AICI~ 40~
~43t..yerol

AI I J

-

37 Aa1u11

7 -ol
13-

Vulnerlble: Eul-WIK
Dealer. Soulh

(NO SUNDAY C~LLS)

High 81.

....

•••
1 K Q5

3Q4482-2220

l:;hapel Road,
Porter, Ohio.

Q ll I

740-992-7p99

Advertise
In this apace
for$25 per
month

t A1 t

.a

•Aifl11

CDMMEICW and !ESIOOOIIl
FREE ESTIMATES

cash

740

.......

Slcllot• New Ga...• Repl...melat
Wladows•Room
Additions • Rooftng

• We except Visa or

'

complete the 15-point run. Warner and
Kiser added two more three pointers in
the string as Southern led comfortably
at 48-36. Southern outscored Wahama
21-6 in the· stretch.
Southern spread the floor in the
finale, but remained on the attack as
Evans pnd Hubbard went back door ol£
Kiser and Fisher feeds. Southern went
up by 19 points, but Wahama cut .the
score to 57-44 ~nd had the ball before
the Tornadoes finally put the game away
with a 19-15 finish. ·
Southern coach Jay Rees praised his
team for finding the spirit to break its
slump and especially heaped honors oil
his clubis defensive effort in the second
half With just o~r three minutes in the
garoe Wahama's potent offense had been
held to just 14 points the entire second
half.
Southern grabbed 35 rebounds (Fisher 9; Kiser 7, Hubbard 6), had nine assists
(Kiser 3), 20 turnovers, 13 steals (Fisher
5, Hubbard 3), and 12 fouls.
Wahama had 22 rebounds (Connolly
6, Parsons 7), 13 turnovers, 11 ' steals
(Snlith 3, ftoush 3), and 22 fouls.
. Southern hosts Miller in a make-up
game Tuesday in Racine.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAI:FOLKS.

.cellular

••X:liJ
••

BUILDI!RIINC.

Clarll

the lead to 50-48 when Nolan hit two
of three foul shots with 1:50 left. But
Meigs outscored River Valley 6-3 the
final 1:50 to post the five point win.
Staats led the Marauders with 16
points, he ~as joined in double figures
· by Johnson with 14 and Bolin with 10.
Meigs pulled down 37 rebounds,
Staats led the way with 10, Bolin added
eight. Meigs had six steals led by Fackler
and Bolin with two each, and 14
turnovers. Staats and Fackler each had
three of the Marauders nine assists.
"This was a good win for us,''
Marauder coach Carl Wolfe said. "The
kids played hard when they had to, we
are getting better, I thought we would
pbying with more intensity, we have
had a good week of practice, bul we
~vere flat at times."
Nolan was the only Raider in double
figures with 23, Frazee and Payne added
eight each.
"Meigs played well;' Raider coach
Gene Layton said. "It was tough playing
back-to-hack, we extended a lot of
energy in the game against Marietta last
night (Friday), But I can't say enough
about these kids and their heart."
.
Meigs (2-14) will play at Waterford on
Tuesday.
River Valley (7-11) plays at Jackson
Friday.

ACR088

ALDER

flied aeklng to
adllllnlater
and
dl8lrlbute N&amp;.r 1 1 •

- all in the first half
was putting
that ball in the perfect spot for all of us."
The NFC got a 48-yatd field goal
Bankruptcy? Credlf Problems?
froin Martin Graniatica in the ·second
"We Call Help"!!
Howardl.
quarter, and touchdown passes of 17
Call Us flrat Or We Both Lose!
PUft
Wrltesel
yards from Donovan McNabb to Terrell
11:'\0r
Ha'ndl~
All Maket 'I'nlc:tor &amp;
Roofing • Home
Owens and 20 yards from DaiJOte
1"1
,.,
Equipment Partr
Malntenance. Culpepper to Torry Holt in the third L....!~!!!:!1~!!Z!~O!!r~44!!_!6~-!9!80!!0.J Factor)'·Authorized
period.
Guttara- Down
Cue-IH Partr
It was 31-17 when Jason taylor batSpout
YOUNG'S
ted down Culpepper's pass to Owens on General Controdl119
FI'H.EIIIIIIIfH
fourth-and-1 from the NFC 44-yard
CARPENTER
Homes,
949-1405
line early in the fourth quarter. Edgerrin
Renovollons, Rat
SERVICE
James· ran 20 yards for a touchdown
• RoomAdclnlonl&amp;
591·5011
roof speclaUsls
R-oling
211
three plays later to clinch the AFC vic•
Now
OOrlflll
ExcawH119
tory.
• l!lootrtaol &amp; Plumbing
'Sepllc systems,
"They got up on us because they
· ...-gaouan
Siding a Pointing
were very sharp," NFC coach Dennis
water, QOSIInes •• Vlnyt
Pallo lnd Porcll Drckl
Green said. "Gannon really worked the
SI!CURITY PRODUCTS
HOME CREEK
Free
Elllmatas
tight end. It took a while for us to get
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
V. C. YOUNG Ill
ENT.,INC.
Protecl
your guns, family hal~oomtl, coin and
into rhythm on defense, and we had
992-6215
card
collections,
legal papers, investment
some drops on offense. We're lcind of
992·7943
::::::0"'· ONo
recorda, pho!o albums, camar81, houaehold
young, they had the experience."
lnvent01y, .00 sanllmental Merna so they will
Twenty-six of the NFC's 43 players
all be eale.
·
For
Mora
Information,
Call
were making their first Pro Bowl
appearance, while 16 AFC players were
BAUM LUMBER
. competing fo,r the first time. .
ST. AT. 248
CHESTER
Manning completed 16 of 22 passes
985-3301
for 150 yards, and Elvis Grbac was 4-of6 for 59 yards, giving the AFC a Pro
Bowl record-tying 32 completions in 42
Auto
attempts for 369 yards.
Rutland, Ohio
"It's always fun when you win. Last
Truck sealS, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
·year, we didn't win," said Manning,
convertible &amp;. vinyl tops, Four wheeler seals,
referring to the NFC's 51-31 victory.
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Subscribe today e

NEA Crouword Puzzle

No. 11471. An
8fllllto.llon "- liMn

As·k

the game, I think really answers his
. critics."

I

ALLEYOOP

Public NOIIce

IIHHII

from Page 81

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

Phone 992·21 55:

~onday,Feb . 5,2001

A personal ambition might be
realized in the year ahead involving your work or career. Concentrate on what is important and get·
ling the job done, and lhe rest will
fall in line.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -F~b. 19)
A project on which you're working that has been going pretty well
for you can be expanded into
soiJlethi ng even better today.
Begin by elevating your sights a
bit. Major changes are ahead for
Aquarius in the' coming year.
Send for your Astro-Graph predi9tlons by malllna $2 and SASE
to Astro-Oraph, clo this newspaper, P,O. Box ms. ~urmy Hill
Stallon, New York, NY 10156. Be
sure to stale your Zodiac sian,
PISCES (Feb. 20-~arch 20) It
behoove• you today to be e1pe•
clally friendly to thole you
encounter. because any soc:lal
con1act1 you ettabllsh at ~s time
could tum out to be quite lucky
for you ,
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19)
Conditions at home are reason,
ably stable today, so you con pro·

ceed with self-assurance •nd confidence if you're trying 10 put
something ' 1oge1her concerning
lhe family.
·
TAURUS' (April 20-May 20)
Because your powers of concentration are exceptionally good
today, you will be quite adept at
assignments that require the use of
your mental altributes. Tackle
lhese kinds of chores.
GE~INI (~U)' 21-June 20) II
isn't likely you'll do anything
foolish in the finance department
today, mainly because you're
inclined to deal wi1h life on practical tenns.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Oo ahead and focus your auention
and energies on personal inlereSI!
today. You should be able to do
·whatever you want to do without
too much outalde Interference.
LEO (July 23-Aua, 22) Let
your heart rule your held todlly
when II comes to maklna decl·
slonr concemlna 1 loved one,
Thlnp will work out better for
everyone If you act from a com·
puslonate perapectlve.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)

..
.I'

~ake an effort today to establish
a more solid relationship with a
person you like but wit~ w~om
you haven't as yet been t.oo
involved. The time is ripe . .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2})' If
you put forth the necessary application today, an objective of consideoable importance can now be
achieved . The conditions will
match the efforts you expend.. .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22)
Speak your mind freely whc'n
asked for your opinions today.
Your logicnl evaluations arc seasoned with the right amounl of
sensitivity needed for Bivin&amp;
excellent advice.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) You 'llin~tlnctlvety know hc\w .
to use alllhc resoun."es at your'disposlli today, Thus, any endca~or
In which you aellnvol ved sho4id
work out to your satisfaction\
CAPRICORN (Pel:, 22-Jnn.
19) II shouldn't be too dlmcull fo1·
you lo a~tl he l)'llC of roopernt Jon
you need from &lt;~hers lodny lo
advance a per1onallnlerert. Seck
out those who can· help.

�•

I .

PN• B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, February 5, 2001
Public NOIIce

COUIIT

COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE IIIATTIR Of'

THI 1!8TATI Of'

I'IIED C.IIIAVIR,
SR.. DECI!AHD
CASE NO. 31471

DOCKET
PAOE

Advertise your
message

PUBLICATION 01'
NOTICE
"TO ALL
PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
ESTATE OF FRED C.
BEAVER,
SR.,
DECEASED, Lata of

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

121 E. Main Street,
Pomrroy, OH. 457111,
Melga
County
Probate Court, C111
•

••
&lt;

NFL
.

.·

: Afterward, the player who led the
Raiders to their best season in 10 years
credited his AFC teammates.
"These guys are incredible, you fed
like you're driving a Ferrari," Gannon
s;~id. "I feel like a kid in a candy store

•

·.
•,

tP&lt;!ay, it's just amazing."
: . 9annon threw an 8-yard touchdown
pas,s to Tony Gonzalez and a 16-yarder
to : Marvin Harrison before being'
replaced by Peyton Manning, who also
chrew two scoring passes - a 2cyarder
t'o Jimmy Srriith in the second quarter
and a 24-yarder to Indianapolis teammate Marvin Harrison.in the third periqd.
: Gannon's two TD passes and a 29yard field goal by Matt Stover gave the
l&lt;FC a 17-0 lead a little over a minute
into the second quarter. The NFC wasn't closer than 14 points after that
At that stage, the AFC had 14 first
downs and 231 yards of offense to no
first downs and 6 yards for the NfC. ·
"Coach Gruden told me all week, 'I
expect a big game out of you and I'm
going to throw it to you,' "said Gonzalez, who had six receptions for 108 yards

·Meigs
flomPage81 .

I

I,taiders to within 28-20 at the half.
Meigs held a 32-22lead with 6:10 left
iri the third period after a steal and layin by Bolin. But things changed in a
hurry. Frazee was awarded a bucket at
die 4:20 mark when Meigs was . called
for goal tending. ·
·Nolan nailed three trifectas in a span
c:ifless than a minutes, with an Adan\
Bullington bucket for Meigs sandwiched in between to cut the Marauder~lead to 34-33.
The Marauders went on a 7-0 . ru~
caJ?ped off with a Bolin bucket off a
John Witherell assist for a 41-33 lead.
Nolan then nailed another three pointer to cut the Marauders lead to 41-36 at
th• 1:12 mark.
· Johnson canned a short jumper off his
own miss. for the Marauders · at the 50
s&lt;;cond mark to give the maroon and
goJd a 43-36 lead heading into the finai
period.
·
Nolan scored to cut the Meigs leal! to
43-38 to start the fourth period. But
Meigs pulled away to take a 48-40 lead
on a Johnson foul shot at the 5:23 mark.
But the \taiders battled back and cut

Southem
fawn Page 81

I •

away the momentum from the hosts.
Brandon Hankinson hit two consecutive baseline jumpers to give Wahama
the lead, then Jonathan .Evans hit a big
bucket to tie. John Smith and Alan Barniti each drilled 3-pointers to regain the
White Falcon lead as Southern managed
only two more field goals the rest of the
half, the score 30-27.
Waharna led by as much as five points
in the second half as Southern continued to lumber as it had in Friday night's
game. Jeremy Hudnall drilled two early
3-pointers for WHS.
Just past the nlidpoillt of the third
period, Southern's Matt Warner drilled a
cnicial 3-pointer to tie the score at 3636. That was followed seconds later by a
Kiser steal and lay-in, and yet another
steal by HubQ;ord. Hubbard zipped a pass
to Kiser for the score and Wahama called
time out in an effort to halt the 7-0 nm.
Southern led 40-36.
. ~ahama never recovered offensively
ana went scoreless the rest of the fume
as Southern added eight more points to

PHILLIP

A~wlllllahalcl

l'eiiNirJ •• 2001 ..
11:00 o'o1ook a.m.
Peraona

knowing

'"'
- - why
the
applloatlon
ahould
not be granted
ehould appear and
Inform the Court.
The Court le looat.d
11 on the Second
Floor of tha Melaa
County Courthoull
on Becond,.Street In
p_,, Olllo."

Judith E. Slaaon

1

ThE CRAFTY, BUND SPOT

BISSELL

• (Factoty Outltl)
All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location

New Homet • Viryl

IEIGSICO IOIIDIY

UPTO 70% OFF

FAJW, IU!I!!OS, NACH91. TACOI

• Verticals • Wood • Mini&amp; • Etc

?CHIIIJWJIIIIJ.fQLIIflll~ Of ONE

TWO FOR mSDAY

I'

WINGS DAY

1441'1*d ""· . GIAaiJ 446-4995
Tol frtt 1·.....745·8147 .

,25¢ WINGS .

FISH FRIDAY

(2) 8, 12, 18

All D• "All VC41 CAN EAI"

~Rich

URNP;!!~Dili~ARTMIENirl l_.!11~2iww;:-~.~IMIHIO;~FIIH~l~C;IIK;O~h~lo~J
Mike

FORT KNOX

A&amp;D

eff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Ujtholstery· Plus, Inc.

Mon·frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888 .
1·888-521.()916
DRIVE ANYWHERE
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In IIIVIca"
-11.6% Protein Uvastock/cattle Feed $6.50/100
-21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/50

-:::::::::=~~~~~~
Westernmakes
pride horse
feed $5.85/50
_
. $1.00·12%
off Coupon
next purct1ase
:$4.S:i/50 I
WANTED
MOUOHAN CARPET
Old
flllllol,
okii'IICio
QueUty tatpet It low
Pr1ces
• Free estlma1es with
appointments at your
convenience
• Financing avllllabla,
90 days same as

tullel, &amp; par11

Call Chuck

Layer Ctumbles $5.99/50 .
T.M Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

35537 St. At. 7 Nor1ll

w..
.a

IIRUI
I NT

h

Racine, Dfllo

74().94g;.2217
, Slztl 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hour•

HERE COMES TH'
PARSON, PAW

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Sunset Home
Construct 1011
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
~ole Buildinss,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall·&amp;
More

OUIC:K II HID.E TH' C:HAWKLET
CAKE tl

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

We Can Malee Your
Dream A Reali,ty!
740-742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

TONIGt4T'5
TOPIG

tf

ltfolf)

rt4e

II \1(1 \\ 11.1.
'-I OR \CI:
'-T. I&lt; I. 7
Ill ' Ill -...JIJ

wANT YOU TO
Tt'lf'IIC OF .IT AS
A !..ATE F6t.

e6TAre
TA.X ·
YOO UXlK~ruL., .lOC j"'
. ~~YOU ::&gt;iC.K. '1

l)lJ2-1717

NO, tHE WI t-IE FLU/~!.it&gt;

[ ~~eo,.... ""r·,.,

Of BU8BLY!

~·

••
UM ... HOW

Dry

1'\ANY
ZERO$
IN !&gt;.

Self-Storage

Ll

Pomeroy, 0/00

740-992.5232

-HiuHng •Limeatonl

• Saii!I•Tojllllll
of!H Dirt •lluloh

Sash 0-1 01 Unn.d
Inches
$119.001nstalled

J&amp;L
1551Und

Middleport

992-2772
~

~

I&amp;I

All ~ome lmprDVtlments

Advertise your~:· •
bu 55
on thiS page ·for
one mon

---lit
.!.~

174111e.Hu
tta'l 1444tl1
.... Gulllty For Tile Lownt Pllce, '
GIIA!Wfi&amp;DI

ROIEIT BISSELL Advertise

'.

CONSTRUCTION

.a.,...

•Complall
Rlmodtflng
Stop &amp; Cornp11re
FREE E811MATI8

99~-2156
740-912-1871 .
~-------------w----------------~--~~
\ ----~~

In this
apace for

$50 per
month.

20 Mao -

-tung
21 E-.w

unlta

NIN

~

I •

,_

I NT

All PAl

happon

7 Antonln

dlatant
11 Senlora

lfllllll
t Unft o1

23 Comld1an S7 ,..,.....
....
PhNipr
ductlvl or1l !DC-

24E28 ONeil
ll1lrrl
27 Orawl

21~=-

30 Wl'lllha·

.

Dvoralc, e.g. 34 - Hill, f4.C. ·
1 Old card
35
~

14 "-!ulrlcl
II LIM

·

v-....
llkl- .
qu,.,.,..

311 -IC!ialy
311.
3t Hrwk

- Nlatlve

11 FrN

DOWN

1 Cuban

12 Form of

40 llllllc

42 Hul!llll-

lnp44 Glde or
lhootlng
Prevtn
11 French
41"Cyan"
IOUI
ftnlah
22 Unfor1111n 50 Abon
24 .....,
(poat.l
28 Trlatorm 52 -CI!IIpl
28Acliae
53ActiWI
· Wlnalot
O.wbrr ,

IJCporl

2W11Wn

After the Buderim
3~:
31 """""'
classes, Jennifer AllMarcol
frey, Margo! Girle and
4 CEO'adlg.
rllbr.
33 Map abbr. 5 Twice, In
I drove back to Brismualc
34 8l1com wl1h
bane, and I promptly
Sam- I Vllta
jumped into a · cab to
attend a shiraz wine
tasting.ll was an in!eresling mixture of 16
wines that highlighled
the varietal's variety!
This depends primarily on area. For example, in the Lower
Hunter Valley, north
of Sydney, you get
light and elegant
wines, sometimes with
a peppery flavor;
whereas
in
the
McLaren Vale, southeast of Adelaide, the
wines are more fullbodied.
The nexl morning.
September 14, Meta
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Goodman and I drove
by Lull Campo•
south to Surfer :s ParColobllty Clphor
crerlldtrano quoWionl by fai!IOUI
adise, which has some
poop1o, po11 ..,.,
Each leftorln .,. elpller 011n&lt;1o ror rnalhor·
Toct.y'l clu&lt;t: llqUIIII S
.
similarities with Miami Beach. I taughl an
'WH'N
X
IO .HZJY
VII
WJN
afternoon class on the
I0 commandments of
0 X .l H Y WH
WDF X R
0 X I H.'
discarding.
NCBOYNUOJYHO
PJFFA
· Against three notrump, West lel¥1s the
IXRRIIR,
BR
WHXKAUHJTWY
spade seven: six,jack,
king. Declarer plays a
LIIVJRT
IWXFCJSR
PIH
club to dummy's ace
and a club back. Wha1
ISDJN.
should East discard?
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "I dOn'l like tht tact that I MWI to gt1 ddlr 10 lut,
It looks tempting to
bull like the teet thlll'm agklg so well." - 0\IIUn Hoffman
t,hrow the 'lieart queen
onto the table, but thai
isn't right.
Apply the Rule of - - - - - - l~ho~. ~r ClAY I. P O l l A N - - - - - Eleven to the opening
Roorrongo lottou of tho
lead: II - 7 4. So, 0 four ocramblod word1 bethere are 'four spades low oo iorm four olonplo word1.
above the seven in the
GONUIT
dummy, the East hand
1
and the declarer's
hand combined. And
East has seen all four:
DU EL E
dummy's nine, his
jack and queen, and
declarer's king. Therefore, West's suit is
ready to run. Yet Wesl
RUEPE
IN:,'
"One should never be discourdoesn't know where
aged," granny told my sister. "Your
the spade queen is . - - - - - - - - - - . confidence will get stronger each
Iocated. If South startG0 ARUC
time you fail and then- •• - -."
ed with king-queen- 1--,;::-;:;,r-:--;l"'lg..::.,-l.;;.....r.,.-1 Q Complooe oho chucklo quoood ,
third of spades, Wesl
_
•
•
•
_ .
by tilling in the mtaing words '
would have to try to ~....___...._..._......_..__, you develop from soep No. 3 below. ·
get East on lead for a
s)iade through declarer's remaining Q-x.
Also, from the Stayman sequence, West is
known to have staned
SCRAM.I.E'lS ANSWERS
with five or six spades.
· Embody- Force- Witch- Uneasy- MUCH WORSE
Easi should· clarify
My neighbor is a pessimist. She always manages·to
the situation hy dismake
an impossible situation seem MUCH WQRSE.
carding the spade
queen .

£trs·

TJ.IE'r'
SERVE SMALL

6UT TME PRINT ON
TJ.IE MENUS IS L:AK,f:&gt;t:.J

POR'TIONS..

I MONDAY.

,FEBRUARY 51

'1"111.··

I

'Your ..
CJIIrthday

I

llwllllllllllt~ .... ..,..,..

•New Hornet

11"-

I 1I I I

33795 Hiland Rd.

Homt Creek Ent.,lnc
992·7943

Waldadframel&amp;

•KIITI

T=~:~~~, S@~clllA-"

ue 7444 or

DoubleHun9
Replacement
Windows

...

IT 1-.1"~ OUR ANNI~Y
u6T t-llf.~T ~D I'E(,(,'(

1-877-830-8182 or
Ylalt ua aJ 202 Clark

9:00-5:00

-~~
41
Cholca
lndlrp- 51 Thl'lllln to

dlrrrrt
17 Fill

PaM

Juice
drink
47 Mo illng

=:-n-.,.

THE BORN LOSER ·

I 0 ' ~II "llll

TWAT SME REALL'r' LIKES •.

S. 11:00 to 3:00

-lvar.) 411

15 L.ubrlcM8
11 Rlcll

• It$ t

W_.
1'111

,_,

u&amp;':c

45771 '.

GRAMMA ~S SIIE'S FOUND
·A NEW LITTLE RESTAURANT

Moncley thru Friday

41 Elqlerl...,..

E".L 41=•
.....

• I

BY PHILLIP ALDER

211110 Buh8n ROid

You•

......
ln\lhpll

t4 _,,..,

• QJ I
•QJ1117
• J ••••

Back south

Stttllt

MasterCard.
Give uw 1 cell ,at

-

Op.nln&amp; lead: • 1

Hill's Self

AICI~ 40~
~43t..yerol

AI I J

-

37 Aa1u11

7 -ol
13-

Vulnerlble: Eul-WIK
Dealer. Soulh

(NO SUNDAY C~LLS)

High 81.

....

•••
1 K Q5

3Q4482-2220

l:;hapel Road,
Porter, Ohio.

Q ll I

740-992-7p99

Advertise
In this apace
for$25 per
month

t A1 t

.a

•Aifl11

CDMMEICW and !ESIOOOIIl
FREE ESTIMATES

cash

740

.......

Slcllot• New Ga...• Repl...melat
Wladows•Room
Additions • Rooftng

• We except Visa or

'

complete the 15-point run. Warner and
Kiser added two more three pointers in
the string as Southern led comfortably
at 48-36. Southern outscored Wahama
21-6 in the· stretch.
Southern spread the floor in the
finale, but remained on the attack as
Evans pnd Hubbard went back door ol£
Kiser and Fisher feeds. Southern went
up by 19 points, but Wahama cut .the
score to 57-44 ~nd had the ball before
the Tornadoes finally put the game away
with a 19-15 finish. ·
Southern coach Jay Rees praised his
team for finding the spirit to break its
slump and especially heaped honors oil
his clubis defensive effort in the second
half With just o~r three minutes in the
garoe Wahama's potent offense had been
held to just 14 points the entire second
half.
Southern grabbed 35 rebounds (Fisher 9; Kiser 7, Hubbard 6), had nine assists
(Kiser 3), 20 turnovers, 13 steals (Fisher
5, Hubbard 3), and 12 fouls.
Wahama had 22 rebounds (Connolly
6, Parsons 7), 13 turnovers, 11 ' steals
(Snlith 3, ftoush 3), and 22 fouls.
. Southern hosts Miller in a make-up
game Tuesday in Racine.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAI:FOLKS.

.cellular

••X:liJ
••

BUILDI!RIINC.

Clarll

the lead to 50-48 when Nolan hit two
of three foul shots with 1:50 left. But
Meigs outscored River Valley 6-3 the
final 1:50 to post the five point win.
Staats led the Marauders with 16
points, he ~as joined in double figures
· by Johnson with 14 and Bolin with 10.
Meigs pulled down 37 rebounds,
Staats led the way with 10, Bolin added
eight. Meigs had six steals led by Fackler
and Bolin with two each, and 14
turnovers. Staats and Fackler each had
three of the Marauders nine assists.
"This was a good win for us,''
Marauder coach Carl Wolfe said. "The
kids played hard when they had to, we
are getting better, I thought we would
pbying with more intensity, we have
had a good week of practice, bul we
~vere flat at times."
Nolan was the only Raider in double
figures with 23, Frazee and Payne added
eight each.
"Meigs played well;' Raider coach
Gene Layton said. "It was tough playing
back-to-hack, we extended a lot of
energy in the game against Marietta last
night (Friday), But I can't say enough
about these kids and their heart."
.
Meigs (2-14) will play at Waterford on
Tuesday.
River Valley (7-11) plays at Jackson
Friday.

ACR088

ALDER

flied aeklng to
adllllnlater
and
dl8lrlbute N&amp;.r 1 1 •

- all in the first half
was putting
that ball in the perfect spot for all of us."
The NFC got a 48-yatd field goal
Bankruptcy? Credlf Problems?
froin Martin Graniatica in the ·second
"We Call Help"!!
Howardl.
quarter, and touchdown passes of 17
Call Us flrat Or We Both Lose!
PUft
Wrltesel
yards from Donovan McNabb to Terrell
11:'\0r
Ha'ndl~
All Maket 'I'nlc:tor &amp;
Roofing • Home
Owens and 20 yards from DaiJOte
1"1
,.,
Equipment Partr
Malntenance. Culpepper to Torry Holt in the third L....!~!!!:!1~!!Z!~O!!r~44!!_!6~-!9!80!!0.J Factor)'·Authorized
period.
Guttara- Down
Cue-IH Partr
It was 31-17 when Jason taylor batSpout
YOUNG'S
ted down Culpepper's pass to Owens on General Controdl119
FI'H.EIIIIIIIfH
fourth-and-1 from the NFC 44-yard
CARPENTER
Homes,
949-1405
line early in the fourth quarter. Edgerrin
Renovollons, Rat
SERVICE
James· ran 20 yards for a touchdown
• RoomAdclnlonl&amp;
591·5011
roof speclaUsls
R-oling
211
three plays later to clinch the AFC vic•
Now
OOrlflll
ExcawH119
tory.
• l!lootrtaol &amp; Plumbing
'Sepllc systems,
"They got up on us because they
· ...-gaouan
Siding a Pointing
were very sharp," NFC coach Dennis
water, QOSIInes •• Vlnyt
Pallo lnd Porcll Drckl
Green said. "Gannon really worked the
SI!CURITY PRODUCTS
HOME CREEK
Free
Elllmatas
tight end. It took a while for us to get
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
V. C. YOUNG Ill
ENT.,INC.
Protecl
your guns, family hal~oomtl, coin and
into rhythm on defense, and we had
992-6215
card
collections,
legal papers, investment
some drops on offense. We're lcind of
992·7943
::::::0"'· ONo
recorda, pho!o albums, camar81, houaehold
young, they had the experience."
lnvent01y, .00 sanllmental Merna so they will
Twenty-six of the NFC's 43 players
all be eale.
·
For
Mora
Information,
Call
were making their first Pro Bowl
appearance, while 16 AFC players were
BAUM LUMBER
. competing fo,r the first time. .
ST. AT. 248
CHESTER
Manning completed 16 of 22 passes
985-3301
for 150 yards, and Elvis Grbac was 4-of6 for 59 yards, giving the AFC a Pro
Bowl record-tying 32 completions in 42
Auto
attempts for 369 yards.
Rutland, Ohio
"It's always fun when you win. Last
Truck sealS, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
·year, we didn't win," said Manning,
convertible &amp;. vinyl tops, Four wheeler seals,
referring to the NFC's 51-31 victory.
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Subscribe today e

NEA Crouword Puzzle

No. 11471. An
8fllllto.llon "- liMn

As·k

the game, I think really answers his
. critics."

I

ALLEYOOP

Public NOIIce

IIHHII

from Page 81

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

Phone 992·21 55:

~onday,Feb . 5,2001

A personal ambition might be
realized in the year ahead involving your work or career. Concentrate on what is important and get·
ling the job done, and lhe rest will
fall in line.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -F~b. 19)
A project on which you're working that has been going pretty well
for you can be expanded into
soiJlethi ng even better today.
Begin by elevating your sights a
bit. Major changes are ahead for
Aquarius in the' coming year.
Send for your Astro-Graph predi9tlons by malllna $2 and SASE
to Astro-Oraph, clo this newspaper, P,O. Box ms. ~urmy Hill
Stallon, New York, NY 10156. Be
sure to stale your Zodiac sian,
PISCES (Feb. 20-~arch 20) It
behoove• you today to be e1pe•
clally friendly to thole you
encounter. because any soc:lal
con1act1 you ettabllsh at ~s time
could tum out to be quite lucky
for you ,
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19)
Conditions at home are reason,
ably stable today, so you con pro·

ceed with self-assurance •nd confidence if you're trying 10 put
something ' 1oge1her concerning
lhe family.
·
TAURUS' (April 20-May 20)
Because your powers of concentration are exceptionally good
today, you will be quite adept at
assignments that require the use of
your mental altributes. Tackle
lhese kinds of chores.
GE~INI (~U)' 21-June 20) II
isn't likely you'll do anything
foolish in the finance department
today, mainly because you're
inclined to deal wi1h life on practical tenns.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Oo ahead and focus your auention
and energies on personal inlereSI!
today. You should be able to do
·whatever you want to do without
too much outalde Interference.
LEO (July 23-Aua, 22) Let
your heart rule your held todlly
when II comes to maklna decl·
slonr concemlna 1 loved one,
Thlnp will work out better for
everyone If you act from a com·
puslonate perapectlve.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)

..
.I'

~ake an effort today to establish
a more solid relationship with a
person you like but wit~ w~om
you haven't as yet been t.oo
involved. The time is ripe . .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2})' If
you put forth the necessary application today, an objective of consideoable importance can now be
achieved . The conditions will
match the efforts you expend.. .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22)
Speak your mind freely whc'n
asked for your opinions today.
Your logicnl evaluations arc seasoned with the right amounl of
sensitivity needed for Bivin&amp;
excellent advice.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) You 'llin~tlnctlvety know hc\w .
to use alllhc resoun."es at your'disposlli today, Thus, any endca~or
In which you aellnvol ved sho4id
work out to your satisfaction\
CAPRICORN (Pel:, 22-Jnn.
19) II shouldn't be too dlmcull fo1·
you lo a~tl he l)'llC of roopernt Jon
you need from &lt;~hers lodny lo
advance a per1onallnlerert. Seck
out those who can· help.

�•

Wednesday
Hlp: 50S; Low: :JOI

Monday, February 5, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

,.

Today's·Scoreboard
...

•

Buckeyes bump off
'i,;~-;;..... · ;:::;::,;=:... Golden Gophers

Ontario 78, RMonllle 36
lorain Adrrirat King 75, Tol. 'Mlilmor
72,
i3a1es
~~~~~ Hlwkon ...
•9
Eastern
12 15 22 15 Oregon Clay 62, An1h0ny Wayrre 55
Lorain n , Oberlin 72
Chesapeake - Bobby Bartoour 7 o-o
Ornrllla 92, Cle. 1Aarshol149
Lo&lt;;
,
tln
Ca1h.
50, Garlleld HIS. Tnnlr; •2
1e. Aaron Gossen 3 1-1 e, Jolh Waugh 2
Ot1awa·GIIndorf 67, Napoleon 41
L~ln MkMow 59, WaUinglon 46
2•26, Bed&lt;ett Gue 1 1·2 3, Zeb Bes1 5 2-2
Ox1o&lt;d Tallwll&lt;lda 70, Union County
Lll~s1own 36, Thompson Lodgamonl
12, Anthony Delimpo 8 1l-O 16
Toltls: (lrd.) 59
19
26 6-7 63
Paulding 45, Dellance 42
Lucas 4•, MI. Blanchard Riverdale 40
Eastern - Josh Kthl 2 1-1 5, Garratt
Peebtes 96, Milford Christian 48
Mansfield Christian 58, Can. Heritage
Karr 3 2·3 8, Chris Lyons 2 0.0 5, Joe
Peroy
61
,
Kirtiand
46
Christian
33
Br.own S. 6-10 20, Matt Simpson 7 -4-4 19,
Pe"l/sburg
7e,
Tot
.
Bowahar
55
Mljnslloid
Madison 40, loudonville 39
Cl'lad Netson 3 1-17 Totals: 23 16-2064.

Clltsapoako 15

•

~

1e 19 11 -

63
64

3-point goals-Chesapeake 5 (BarbOUr
4, Gossett), Eastern 2 (Lyona, Simpson).
RebOunds -Chesapeake 16 (Oelimpo 5),
Eastern 17(Simpson 6). Steals- Chesapeake 6 (Oelimpo 2). Eastern 6 {Brown 3).
Assists-Chesapeake 21(Besl6), Eastern
8 (Karr 3) . Turno11ers -Chesapeake 8,
Eastern 13.
JV -Chesapeake 55, Eastern 48.
Chesapeake-Nick Karle 22. EasternNathan Grubb 17. .

.
•

,

•

Southern 67, Wahama 51
Wahama
12 18 6 15 - 51
Southern
15 12 21 19 - 67
Wahama (3-12) - John Smith 1 O.Q 3,
Ryan Roush 1 1-2 4, Jeremy Hudnall 6 0·
0 15, J.R Parsons 2 0·0 4, Brandon Han·
kinson 3 0·0 6, Nathan Connolly 4 0·0 8,
Eddie McKinney 3 0·0 8, Alan Barnilz 1 0·
0 3. Totals 21 1-2 51.
Southern {11 ·6 ) - Nathan Martin 1 Q.O
2, Brandon Hill 0 3-4 3, Chad Hubbard 59·
10 20. Matt Neigler 1 1-2 3, Matt Wamer 2
2-2 8, Jeremy Fisher 0 t -2 1, Dallas Hill 2
o-o 5. Matt Ash 2 0-0 4, Garret Kiser 5 12 13, Jonathan Evans 4 0·0 B. Totals 22
17-22 67
3-point goals - Wahama 8, Southern 6.
JV-Southern 55. Wahama 45.
Southern - Jordan Hill 20, Justin Con·
nolly 17 .
Wahama -Gabe Lambert 10.

'.

MeiQI 56, River .V.IIGy 51
River Valley
8 12 16 15 - 51
Meigs
14 14 .15 13 - 56
River Valley (7 · 11) - Craig Payne 2 00 4, Eric Nolan 8 2·3 23, Jon Mollohan 0 0o D. Brandon Mitchem 0 0·0 0, Blake Mar.cum 1 0-2 2. D J . Frazee 4 Q.O 8, Scott
Payne 3 2·2 8, Clark Walker 0 0·0 O,Tim
Richardson 0 0-0 0, Jeremy Pedl 3 0·0 6.
Totals 21 4-7 51

Meigs (2·14) - J. P. Staa1s e 1l-O 16,

Adam Bullington 3 0-0 6, Matt Witllamson 0

'

Q.O 0, Jason Knight 0 0·0 O, Travis Siders
1 0· 1 2. Nick Bolin 5 o-1 10, Buzzy Fackler
2 2-2 6, Derrick Johnson 8 2-4 14, John
Wilhere111 0·3 2, Matt Lewis 0 0-0 0. Totals

'
..

26·0·11 14=56

3-point gpa'ls- River Valley 5 (Nolan 5),
Meigs o.
JV-River Valley 52, Meigs 51 .
RV - Jesse Ward 12, Nick Craycraft 12.
Meigs-Ryan Hannan 12.

Ohio Hl;h School Boyl Ba1k11blll

.

saturday'• Aalulta
Akr. Centrai-Hower 67, Hudson 61
Akr. Spring. 50, Akr. Coventry 43
Akr. SVSM 81 , Cle. Benedictine 56
Amherst 62. Bay 48
'
Ashland 62, Can. McKinley 51
Alhen s 62, Nelsonville-York 58
Aurora 54, Cardinal 50
Avon Lake 53 , Westlake 51
Beaver Eastern 82, Lucas.,.illa Valley 63
BelCIBy 75, Urtana 70 .
Botkins 62, Minster 52
Bryan 56, Sherwood Fairview 47
Can. cent. Cath. 56, Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit 54
Casstown Miami East 84, Day. Stlv81"8

.

46

0rlllg0

PlcMerlngton 66, Upper Arlington 64, OT
Piqua 49, Greenville 47
Poland Seminary 56, Be~. Branch

ley 51
Racine Southam 87, Wahama (W. Va.)
51
·
Reedsville Eastern 64, Cl'lesapeake 6:3
Rtchwood N. Union 57 , Cols. Tree ol
Life 52
Ripley Ripley-Union-Lewis-Huntington
73 , Lynchburg Clay 60
Rittman 62, Dation 50
S. Webster 63, Waverly 54
Sarahsville Shenandoah 60, ' W.
LafayeHe RidgewOOd 49
Shadyside AD. Lisbon Beaver local 44
Spring. Calh. Cent. 62, Sidney Lehman

55

'

'

•

MariOn Pleasant 42, Gallon Northmor
37
Massillon Jackson 69, Louisvitle SL
ThOmas Aquinas 46
McConnelsville Morgan 57, Thornville
Sheridan 47
McGuftey Upper Scioto Vallev 47, Van·
lue 36
Middlirown 47, Lemon-Monroe 38
Milan Edison 55, Huron 54
Milrord Center Fairbanks 76, Meehan·
icsburg 40
MiRersport 46, Hemlock. Miller 24
Mogadore Field 74 , Cuyahoga Falls

CVCA 59

.

Monroeville 60, Ashland Crestview 45
Montpelier 59, Slryker 45
N. Lewisburg Triad 54, Lewistown lncli·
an Lake 45
N. Olmsted 37, Rocky River 35
51
Napoleon 71 , Holland Spring. 36
·sugarcreek Garaway 57. Magnolia
New Carlisle Tecumseh 62 , Enon
Sandy Valley 36
Greenan 41
Tatawanda 70, Union Cqunty, Ind. 59
New London 57, Collins Western
ThOmas Wor1hlngton S4. Logan 41
Reserve 37
Tipp City Bethel 81, Trpp City Tippeca..
New Madison Tri.Vi11age 54, Greenville
53
nco 53
New Richmond 51, Ripley 36
Tol. Ubbay 76, E. Cle, Shaw 53
Newark Ucking Valley 74, Howard E.
Tot. Vv'hitmer 56, Tol. Cent Cattl. 54
Kno1&lt; 40
'
Utica 55, Granvil~. 47
Nmwalk St. Paul 81, Mapleton 20
van wen 64. Aocklord Parkway 52
Norwood 53, lebanon 45
Vandalia Butler 60, Troy 53
Olmsted Falls 67, Fairview Park
Versailles 83 , Ansonia .44
W. AleJCandria Twin Valley . S. 70, Fairview 22
Ontario 52, Sycamore Mohawk 50
Brookville 48
Ottovitle 62, Minster 60
W. Muskingum 64, Crooks\lilla 39
Oxford Talawanda 50, W. Carrollton 34
Wuhington C.H. 72, Hebron Lakewood
Parkersburg (W. Va.) S. 40, Vincent
60 •
Warren 34
Wauseon 45, Hicksville 42
Parma Hts. Holy Name 62, Elyria Cath.
Waynesville 65, Germantown Valley
32
View 47
Parma Padua64, Cle. Cent. Cath. 39
Wheelersburg 75, Jackson 50
Parma Valley Forge 49, Mentor 46"
Wickliffe 68, Burton Borl&lt;shlre 52
Paulding 49, Con11nen1al 46
Willard 81, Sandusky 83
Pemberville Eastwood 69, Tontogany
Wooster 64, Alliance so
Youngs. Christian 81, Heartland Chriat· Otsego 32
Perkins 4e, O&amp;k Harbor 43
len37
Philo 49, Dresden Tn-Valley ~6
Youngs. Ursuline 65, Warren JFK 61
Plckenng1on 60, Lima Sr. 30
· Zanesville Rosecrans 85, Can. Heritage
Pif&amp;b\Jrg Franklin-Monroe 61, Dav.
Christian 34
Meadowdaie 54
.
Preble Shawnee 44, DaY. Edgewood
Ohio High School Gl~l Bllkllb111
45
Sl1unlly'l RIMIIII
Rocky River lutheran West 53, Gates
Ada 56, Miller City 55
Mills Gilmour 49
Akr. Coventry 74, Kenl Roosevelt 52
S. Euclid Regina 60, Cots. Hartley 49
Akr. Elms 45, Hudson WRA 28
Salem 51, Niles McKinley 39
Amelia 49, Cin. Anderson 41

Sandusky 47, Oregon Clay 43

Apple Creek Wsynodale 58, Kidron
Cent. Chr. 33

Athens 73, Albany Alexander 67
Avon 42. LOrain Clearview 19 ,
Beavercreek 59, Kettering Fairmont 40
Bedford n, Parma 38

SarOJaky Perkins 48, Oak Harbor 43

Sidney Lellman 60, Spring. Ca1holic 44
Southington 54, Cle . Hts. Lutheran

E:as130
·
Sparta Highland 64, Rlphwood North.

Bod1ord Chanol68, ·chardon NDCL40
Bellelon1tlne 58. Spring. NW 45

Union 54
Spencerville 80, Lima Temple Christian

Beloit W. Branch 42, Minerva 33
Beree 64, Medina 29

34

Beve~y

Ft Frye 58, zanei'IIUe RoSE!·

aans 35

Spring. Ken1on Ridge 126, Spring.
Shawnee 50
Spring. S. 67, Spring. N. 29
.

Brod&lt;svlllo 52, Mlddlebwg His. Mid·

park33
.
Bristolville BristOl sa. Falrpon Harbor
Harding 42
Brooklyn 65, Cuyahdga Hts. 56
Brookville 67, W. AleJCandrla Twin Val·
loy s. 43
Brunswick 59, N. Royalton 36
Buckeye Local 48, Harrison Central41
Bucyrus 38, Norwalk 28
Byesville Meadowbrook 41 . New
Philadelphia 32
CalvarY Chr. 48, Cin. Taylor 47
Cambridge 51, Dover 30
Can. S . 46, Louisville 39

Strasburg-Franklin 50, Tuscarawas
Cent. Cath. 40
Strongsville 52, N. Ridgeville 38
Sugarcreek Garaway 40, Newcomerstown 34
Sullivan Black River 50, Rittman 43
Sylvania Southview 47, Wauseon 34

Canal Fulton NW 49, Akr. Spring. 43

Canlleld 44, StMhers 36
Cardington-lincoln 33, MI. Gilead 23
Carrollton 42, Alliance Marlington 32
Castalia Margaretta 46, Sandusky St.
Mary's 43
Cedarville 61, Blanchester 40
Centerville 69, Huber Hts. wayne 60
Chagrin Falls Kenston 73, Aurora 66
Cln. lndlan Hill 58, Cin. PurceU Marian

Tot. L~ 76, E. Cia. Shaw 63
Tot Maumee Valley 58, Northwood 42
Trenton Edgewood 45, Preble
Shawnee 44
·
Tri·VIIIage 54, Greenville $3
Troy Christian 61 , Yellow Springs 16
Union City Mississiriawa Valley ·eo.
Randolph (Ind.) Southern 45
~ Uniontown Lake 39, Can. Tlmkell 34
~per S~~~1 52, Shelby 43

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
RECYCLE BUILDING

······lR

~~~~~~r~~::~;:~:;1
1

22

Cln. SCPA 80, SHver Grove (Ky.) 63
Cin. Selon 76, Cols. Ready 62
Cin. Turpin 66, Cln. Winton Woods 61,
20T
Cincinnati Chr. 57, Middletown Chr. 37

Circleville Logan Elm 6e, Witllamsrpo1
Westfall22
Ciarksvllle Clinton-Measle 50, Lees
Cr k E. Clinton 35

frClo. VASJ 71 , Euclid 47

Cols. Academy 64. Newark Calh. 54
Cots. DeS&amp;Ies 63, Maysville 55
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 66, Washington

C.H. Miami Trace 58
Cots. lndei)Onclance 68, Cola. Northland 411

Columbia 45. Beachwnnd ~7
Cortland Maplewood 61, Ashtabula
SIS. John &amp; Paul16

:.=~~-~~~~~~~fnl

47

waverly 52, RIChmond Dale SE 39WBynesfield·Goshen 40,

Rldgemon1 36
44

\NeiHngton 50, Lancaster Fisher

.
Wft11akl60, Bay 461
Wheeling (W. Va.) Plrk 50, Zln&lt;!IVMial
52
'
Whltehi11-Vea~lng 45, BIO&lt;Jm-&lt;:arr.olll
40 .
Willard 47, Bellevue 45

.

Danville 43, W. Lafayette Ridgewood

28

Day. Canotl 411, Middletown Fenwick
Day. Charmnade-Jutlenno 50, Ket1er-

Hudson 62, Rocky Rl'ler MagnHICI1 57
lndapondanco 62, Rk:hmond H11. 44
Jackson Center 70, Sldnoy Fahlawn

50

40
51

Kansaa Lakota 64, Elmore WOOdmort

Kto&amp;1on 73, Aurora 68
Kings Milia Kings 55, l.Ovlllnd 31 ·
LaGrange Keystone 61, Obarlln Fire·

33
New Lebanon Dl•le 79, Union Clly Mls· IandiLlncasler
liS, Cola. Waltlraon 48
sissinawa Valley 67 ·
Lewio
Cen1er
Ollnltngy 43, Hillard
New London 71 , Firelands 68
DlrllY
38
.
New Paris National Trall 70, Tri-VIUage
UbertY Cenler 75, Tal. Stan 44
51
Lima Ba1h 48, Kalida 35
Newark Licklng .Valey 74, w. Jafferson
Lima Cern. Ca1h. 118, Lim«. Shlwnoe
47

P

John Mu'""'

analysis of the existing well pump
characteristics and modifications,
coordination with utility companies,
file plans for EPA permits, prepare a

Students at
Meigs Middle
School In Middleport display
a quilt donated
by Joanne
Vaughan of
Pomeroy to help
raise funds for
a student trip to
New York City in
April. Amy Perrin, language
arts and readIng teacher at
the school, said
more than 40
eighth grilders
will be making ·
the trip to the
Big Apple this
spring as a
reward for their
de~ica~lon .to
"high standards
In academics,
behavior and
attendance."
The quilt will be
used to raise
money toward
expenses of the
four-day trip.
(TOI)Y M. Leach
photo)

r------~~-~-----~
1 wheel alignment 1

!'2.495

. $4Q95

1·
tires
·:
1 We will meet or beat any competitor's 1
1 1 advertised price on the some tire. 1

l

1 2·J;etl
4-w,..l
I Chedc 11'111 ldjult CIIIJ!bor and too.~ paflll
1 1t111 llbof may be requlrad on 1101111 'iehlclll.· 1

L--~---~--------~
r-------wrn.;,--1
_maintenance
I

r----------~----~

w.-•:-:Goo&lt;t.-.Fireetone, 1
I -.lllcMin,
~ .. Con11nen1al, UNIROYAl, I
BF Goodt1ch. lloUn1lng ond blllnclng maylle exira.

t

L---------------~

$1991

Fast Lube

• S•rvlC!I Includes up to 5 quarts
Motorcralt oil and new Motorcralt oil filter
Perform Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
Check and fill neceseery fluids • All In
minutes or lass • Diesel vehicles may

eiCira.

cost estimate, work specifications, bidding documents, con tract docum ents,
and assist in holding public hearings a&lt;
necessary.
M&amp;E will also provide the service
of applying for vari ou5 gran t and loan
funding so urces and provide an
inspector to oversee construction and
ensure conformity with plans and
specifications.
"This contract authorization is the
first step in obtaining a new water
treatment plant for the village," said
Councilman John Musser.

"Once the proposed treatment
plant is in place and operational, the
quality of Pomeroy's water will
improve dramatically," added Musser.
"Th e new system will remove all of
the iron and manganese from our
lin es, thus creatin g a mu ch cleaner and
.softer water q:mtem ."
The new facility would clean
around 800,000 gallons of water per
day and would likely cost around Sl
nlillio n, said Musser.

Please see Water. A3

Chamber
executive
committee
elects officers
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY- New officers for the Meigs
County Chamber of Comm erce Executive
Conunittee were elected at a recent meeting of
the the chamber's board of directors.
They are the R ev. Craig C rossman, president;
. Mike Kloes, vice p,csidcnt; Patty Pickens, secretary; and Sue M aison, treasurer.
Crossman is pastor for Trinity Church of
Pomeroy arid moved to the area from Benzie
Com}t)-, Mich., wh ere he was interim pastor of
' ' the First Congregational Church of Onekama,
and communications manager/economic
development man ager of Benzie County
Chamber of Commerce.
His goal is to make Meigs County a place
w'here people want to come and 'live, and not
have to move away to find employment.
Kloes, a lifelong resident of Meigs County, is
employed at C oggeshall Simmons Insurance
Agency in Coolville.
·
Kloes works extensively with area youth and
high school athl eti c teams. He has been a member of the chamber for the past !Wo years, during which he served as treasurer, vice president
and member of several organizational sub-committees.
Pickens is employed with the Meigs County
.Council on Aging as activities director.
She is president of XI Gamma Epsilon Chap"I want the ,;,embers of Congress'
ter, Beta Sigm~ Phi Sorority, belongs to Friends
of
the Meigs County library, and serves as vice
and the American people to
president of the Tourism Board and campaign
hear loud and clear: This is the
chairman for United Fund of Meigs County.
righ t-s~zed plan, it is the right
Sue Maison is deputy registrar at the Departapproach, and I'm going to defend
ment of Motor Vehicles License Bureau.
She is the D emocrati c Party chairman, has·
it mightily."
served on the advisory board for the Multipurpose Senior Center, on the board of direcGeorge w: Buoh
tors of the Meigs County Community
Improvement Corporation and Meigs County
D·S.D., said, citing Reagan-era tax cuts that
United Fund board of directors, executive
helped produce record federal deficits . "If we
board of Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
do, shame on all of us."
Regional Development an d the l:uppers Plains
Bush's plan would collapse the hve current
Regional Sewer District. She belongs to XI
income-tax rates into four, and lower them.
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
They currendy range between' IS percent
and .3 9.6 percent; the new rates would be
Sorority.
between 10 percent and 33 percent.
· · ·Maison has sorved o'n the chamber board of

plan to expand tax cut package
"I want the members of Congress and the
American people to hear
· loud and clear: This is the
right-sized plan, it is the
right approach, and I'm
going to defend it
mightily," he said at a
White House appearance.
Democrats called
Blllh
Bush's plan too expensive, too. tilted toward the
rich and too risky. They said it would deplete
projected federal budget surpluses without
leaving adequate . funds for a proposed
Medicare prescription drug benefit, defense
increases and other proposals.
"Let us not repeat the mistakes of the
past," Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle,

Please see Bush, Al

'

Today's
Reports: ~Businessman who won
pardon still under investigation Sentinel
.

Please see Chamber, Al

Donation

'

. NEW YORK (AP) -A wealthy business· · gation .o f Braswell's California dietary sup·
man convicted of crimes in the 1980s was plement empire. It was· unclear whether
under investigation for possible new felonies Clinton was aware of the current criminal
even as then-President Clintdn pardoned investigation, or'if the pardon would exempt
him last month, acci&gt;rding to published Braswell from the legal inqUiry.
reports.
·
After the pardon was announced Jan. 20,
Herbal , remedy. marketer Almon Glenn federal officials worried Clinton had parBraswell, 57, was one of 140 people Clinton doned Braswell for any criminal chari!fS that
pardoned jus1 before leaving office. -r;he par- could ,arise from the current investigation,
don covered Braswell's 1983 conviction for both newspapers reported. The Post said the
li:aud and otlier crimes; restoring his civil Justice Department has since assured Los
rights.
Angeles prosecutors the pardon covered only
But as the pardon was being granted, fed- the 1983 case, and the prosecutors said they
era! prosecutors were investigating Braswell will pursue the current money-laundering
on allegations of tall: evasion and , money and tax matters.
laundering involving offshore corporations
But the Times said the pardon raised con·
~nd accouhts, Th~ New York Times and The cerns among some law enforcement officials
be'"use it grants a full pardon without spec·
Washington Post reported Thesday,
No ch~s have been filed in the investi- ifying tl;te crimes.

,

·-

" Once the proposed
treatment plant is in place
and operational, the quality
of Pomeroy's water will
improve dramatically. "

Quilt donated

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional
Republicans and lobbyists say they like President Bush's proposed tax cut, but they won't
back down fi:om plans to add their own priorities, even though Bush is promising to
defend his proposal "mightily."
Beginning a week of selling his tax plan,
Bush was visiting a Washington-area small
business Tuesday to spotlight his argument
that his proposal would spark greater eco-nomi&lt;; growth.
Bush planned to send Congress an outline
of his package on Thursday,' and it was
expected to mirror the $1.~ trillion, 10-year
tax reduction program he offered during his
campaign for the White House. On Monday,
Bush defended it against . Democrats who
would shrink the measure and Republicans.
who would like to expand or otherwise alter
it.

Cuyahoga Falls WalSh JNUI147, Men·

26

the village with professional design
and engineering services for the proOMEROY- A con- posed treatment plant.
The services provided by the comtract providing for the
pany will include a survey of the
preliminary design and existing property and wells anhe well
engineering services field in Syracuse and a sub-surface soil
for a new water treatment plant investigation to assist in determining
was approved at Pomeroy Vil- the location of the plant and to obtain
soil bearing characteristics for buildlage Council's regular meeting ing foundations .
Monday.
M&amp;E will provide design engineerCouncil authorized a contract with ing services, including ail analysis of
M&amp;E Companies Monday to assist the best alternative for the project,
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

1

lor Laka Cath. 44
Dalton 65, Zoarvllla TU8C8rawas Vatley

34

BY TONY M. lEACH

GOP, lobbyists

warrensvil4e
49,
Warren
Harding
Warsaw River View 49, New

50 Cents

Design contrad for water treatment plant gets nod

versaHies
. W. 39,
W. Chester1s.lakot~'

Glenn 47
wadsworth 75, Revere 37

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vol ume 51, Number 176

I

w. Llberly·Salem 68, DeGraff Rlv&lt;&gt;r·l

February 6, 2001

entine

Melp County's .

. NE37

W. Musklngum 68, New Concord

Cln. Norwood 53, Lebanon 45

Hunling Valley University SchoOl 70, lngAt1er29
Day. Christian 65, Day. Pattaraon 53
Ole. East Tech 67
Day.
Nor1hrldgo 4o4, Tri-County N. 41
Huron 75, Mansfield Madison 68
Delphos Jellorson 78, Cory-Rawoon
Jeromesvme HillSdale 74, SmithVIlle 60
Kettering Alter 40, Day. Chamlnada- 30
E:. LlvefPOOI 52, Weiii!YIIIe 32 '
Julienne 39
E1yna 53, Cle. HIS. 39
~ako1a E. 61 , EdgewOOd 36
Elyna FBCS 50, Lake'Ridge 25
lebanon 76, Cin. Wyoming 48
Fal~leld 45, Cln. Princo1on 42
Lewisburg Tri-County N. 59, Eaton 45
Findlay 69, Foetorla 36
· Lima Cent. Cath. 60, Elida 42
Fremont Aoss 48, Lorain Southview 45
Lima PerrY 58, Ft. Jennings 44
Ft. Jennings 64, Uma Parry 24
Lima Shawnee 77, Coldwater 67
Ftloromle 57, Bolklno 34
Lima Sr. 67, Tol. Rogera 55
Cla~nna 3e, lJwer Mlngton 35
Logan Elm 81 , Wlllamsport Wesdall40
Glosonburg 68,. Bloomdale Elmwood
·Lucas 69, CrestUne 48
57
MansUeld Sr. 54. Can. Tlmken 47
Gnadenhutten J Indian Vlltey 55,
MansUeld St. Peter's 71 , Tiffin Calvert
Coahoc1on43
46
Goshen 81, Wilmlng1on 43 '
Mansfield Temple Christian 51, Kidron
Grandview 3g, Washlng1on C.H. 32
Cent. Christian 43
Granville
51 , utica 36
Maranatha Chris11an 48, Liberty Chr1st·
Groen 43, Lodl Cloverteal 21
ian 28
·
Green11eld McClain 56, AmandaMarla Stein Marion. Local 78, Ft.
Ciearcreek
29
Loramie 57
HamHton Badin 60, Cln. Seven Hilla 37
Marion Catholic 64, Grandview 53
, Harrison 50, Mason 41
Marion Elgin 51 , Spana Highland 36
Hebron Lakewood 58, Plain Cl1y
Massi118n Jackson 70, Can. GlenOak
Jonathan Aldet" 53
47
Hlllop81, Della 32
Massillon Perry 59, CuyahOga Falls 46
Howland 4e, Poland 33
Massillon Tuslaw 76, Canal FlJikln NW
Middletown Madison 56, Middletown
Christian 34
Milan Edison 77, Greenwich S. Cent. 59
Milford 57 , Ametla 48
'
Moffa! Ridgedale 58, Mt. Gilead 37
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 65, Buckeye
Central33
New Bteman 53, Jackson Center 38

Tallmadge 64, Norton 26

Tot Christian 52, Old For1 27

from a 13-point deficit with Arena.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Buckeyes led by 8·0 in
Ohio State's 73-66 victory 2:58 remaining.
"Whoop-de-doo, we can the games opening minutes,
Saturday over Minnesota liad
come
back and lose." said for- 40- 23 at halftime and 53-32
an eery similarity to the Buck·
eyes' win over the Gophers in ward John-Blair Bickerstaff, with 12:37 remaining. The
who blamed himselffor failing Gophers used a three-quarter
Columbus, Ohio.
The
Buckeyes
nearly to lead the Gophers. "We're court press to cut the lead to
squandered a 21-point lead, not about losing. We want to 66-60 with 3:18 left.
Ohio State then went to
yet they kept the Gophers win games. It's a tired excuse
from getting any closer than to say we're happy we came Johnson, who scored on a
dunk and made 3 of 4 fre e
five points in the second half. back.
"You play bad, that's one throws on the Buckeyes' next
They led by 23 points in their·
But you play without three possessions to in c r~ ase
thing.
75-72 victory over Minnesota
any effort, without any energy, their lead to 71 -60.
on Jan. 23.
The Gophers also pulled
without
any heart, . that's
"Carbon copies," Ohio
State coach Jim O'Brien said. another thing .. That was the within 71-66 in .th e game's
Huge difference, Minnesota first time I can say collectively closins seconds.
Dusty Rychart led Mincoach Dan Monson coun· that it looked like we weren't
nesota with 21 points and 12
tered.The Gophers have fallen trying to win ."
Monson also was embar- rebounds.
behind in many firs( halv~s,
but never before because they rassed. His mentor, former
Gonzaga coach Dan Fitzgerweren't playing hard.
"! don't have an explana- ald, and father, Don, were
tion for that;' Monson said. among the 13,581 at Williams
"The kids are frustrated by it.
I'm frustrated by it."
The Buckeyes (14-8, 5-5
Big Ten) won ,their first road
game by repeatedly beating .
the Gophers' press in the first
half - nine times for layups;
LOCATION: At Township Building on Depot Streei In Rutland.
five of them dunks. They only
FOR: Sorted Recyclables ... Each .compartmant plainly marked.
beat the press once for a basket
in the second half, but they
Items Accepted:
• No. 1 Plastic (Liter Bottles)
made 21 of 26 free throws.
• Newspapers/Advt.
• No. 2 Plastic (Milk/Water Jugs)
• Magazines • catalogs
"At this stage, for a1l of us,
• No. 2 Plastic (Color • Clorox, Tide)
·cardboard
it's just about surviving,"
• Cans - StHVAium.
O'Brien said. "The most
• Glees (Containers Only)
important thing is to win the
Clear • Green • Brown
game. You have to win the
MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING
game.
.
&amp; LITTER PREVENTION
"These games take their
toll. They wear you down."
PHONE 992-6360
The Gophers; playing their
second game without injured,
forward Michael Bauer, had
no answer for Ken Johnson. ·
The Buckeyes' big man made
14 of 15 free throws and
scored a career-high 28 points.
"That's the thing coach has
been emphasizing - finding
me;· Johnson said. "They did a ·
terrific job of finding me."
The Gophers (15-7, 3-6)
have staged fi!rious rallies in
each of their past five games,
induding four straight losses,
but it's a habit they wish they
would break. They were successful· in only a 78-74 over- ·
time victory over Indiana on
Jan. 20, when they came back

side 53

46

52

•
•

Marlori Elgin 56, Delaware Buckeye

~-~
Marion Harding 46, Orrville 31

Spring . Kenton Ridge 45, Jamestown
Greenevtew 41
St. Clairsville 68, Cadiz Harrison Cent.
54
Sl. Henry 63, Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe

Chillicothe Unloto 66, Amanda·
Clearcreek 63
Chillicothe Zane Trace 72, Seaman N.
Adams 54
Cin. Elder 82. Cle. St. IgnatiuS 67
Cin. Harrison 66, Little Miami 4,
Cin. lockland 58, Cin. Su~_nmtt Country
Day 41
Cln. Moeller 76, Cin. Sycamore 43
Ctn. Purcell Marian 6B, Cin. Seven Hills
50
Cia . VASJ 65, Akr. HOban 64
c_ots. Academy 60. Centerturg 56
Cols Brookhaven 64 , Wo'rthington
Christian sa
.
Cots. Eastmoor 54, Day. Bellbrook 51
Cols. Independence 67, Newark 53
Cots Linden 55, Cols. Big Walnut 60
Cols. S. 94, Cots. Wor1d Harvest 44
Convoy Crestview 77, Fl. Reoovery 62
Covington 61, Newton 45
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 58, Navarre Fairless47
Danville 55, Delaware Christian 41
• Day. ChrisUan 59, Dav. Patterson 73
Day. Dunbar 66, Spring. S. 61
Day. Northmont 61 , Sidney 59
Delaware Buckeye Valley 64, Marlon
Aiver Valley 44
Delphos St. John's 74, Van Wert Uncal·
nvlew 66, OT
Elyria 71 , Lorain Southview 66, 20T
Elyria FBCS 59, Fuchs Mlzrachi 50
Enon Greenon 88, Belletonlalne Ben·
jamin Logan 66
Fairborn 75,,Day. Oakwood 58
Falr1ield 61 , Cln . Princeton 42
Findlay 2. Cle. S. O, fortelt
Findlay Liberty-Benton 58, Ada 35
Fostoria 98. Tiflin Columbian 84
Frankfort Adena 59, COal Grove Dawson-Bryant 54
Georgetown 57, WilllomsbUrg 49
Greenfield McClain 51, Portsmouth 42
Hamilton 55, Cln. St. Xavier 50
Hamler Patrick Henry 45, Bloomdale'
Elmwood 43
Haviland Wayne Trace 73, Archbold 49
Holgate 63, Liberty Center 44
Hudson WAA 58, Ontario (Can.) Ridley

I

Marlon Cath. 50, Delaware Christian

38

39 Pomeroy Meigs 56, Chestllre River Val·

Chagrin Falls 50, Gtand Valley 46
Chesterland west Oeauga 74. Newbury

67

l

Details, A3

.Tuesday

Com·munity news and notes, AS
Meigs, Eastern victorious, B 1

.

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics ·
Editorials
Objtyaries
Sports ·
Weather

AS
82-4

85
A4
A3
81.3-4,6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-&lt;l-7; Pick 4: 7-2·7·5
Bud..,., 5: 9o 1t-24-27-32

W.VA.
Daily 3: 6-8·1 Daily 4: !1-4-4-0
C 2001 OhiQ VaUey l'uhlishiut:: Cu.

Last fall, Dwight Icenhower, Meigs County's popular EMs imperso11o
ator, held a benefit performance at Meigs High School for the American Cancer SOciety. Monday, he presented a check for the $500
raised to Ferman Moore, chairman of this year's Cancer SOciety
Relay for Ufe. Others pictured, left to right, are Matt Justice. whO
works with Icenhower, Joan Crisp, luminary chairman, and Jennifer
Hamon, Income development director for the South Central area of
the American Cancer SOciety. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="449">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9891">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23870">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23869">
              <text>February 5, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1256">
      <name>colley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="941">
      <name>fink</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="550">
      <name>walkup</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
