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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally $entlnel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Tuesday, December 12, 2000

BY DAN

PoLCYN
OI'P SPORTS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT - Both
teams entered the night looking
for their first win, but it was Point
Pleasant that came away with the
61-43 victory over River Valley
Monday night.
The win marked the tirst
SEOAL win for Point in the last
two seasons.
Point built a 17- 12 lead in the
first eight minutes. River Valley
w.as powered by Cynthia Ward
and single b»kets by Brittany
McDade, Nicole Watkin s and
Christen Baird, but Bridget Nibert, the lady Knights sop homore
center, put in t:ight dunng the
first period, allowing Pomt to
build a lead.

-Angels
from Page 81

Pointstrrtched the lead to 1.1 tn
the second period and a pa•r of
s1x-poim periods by senior guard
Cassoe Newdl and J umor SIXthman Jenniti:r Adlun;, who naded
two of her three treys m the ,,.,_
ond penod.
The Raiders well! to the locker room at halftuue tmhng. 3-l23. The Poim lead stretched to I 'i
m the third quarter. Nibert &lt;eored
another &gt;ix in the period.
River Valley narmwed the lead
to 10 in the pcriO&lt;.ls' fin•! two
minutes on 3 JU111pl'r hy KJn
Beth Taylor, but a Nibnt layup
and a Newell thrce-pouu play
\\ith 15 seconds rt:'m.uumg h:.ft
the score at -!7-32 .
The ladv Kmglm hn I~ of 11
free throws .1gai nst R.iwr Valley.

mcluding 5 of 6 by Newdl in the
t(mrth quarter.
Newell led the lady Knight
with 21 points.
Her challenge was answered by
Ward, who scored 17.
Niben scored 17 pmnts and
had 11 rebounds.
Kristin Drain added five points
and Adkins tallied nine.
Chelsea DeGarmo collected
five boards to lead the Raiders.
Ward recorded five a.sists.
Nico le Watkins added seven
points fi&gt;r River Valley. Taylor
sco red six.
River Valley (0-5, SEOAL 0-2)
plays Logan on Thursday.
Point (1-2, SEOAL 1-1) will

sp;m.

LyoJl ,1ddeJ two points .md four

Tht: Blu\..· Ang~..·b
6 frL'1.' rhrow'&gt;

and ca ntc up wl[h

two sre.tis.

n.•bou11~S..

tin.1l SO

~cc­

Amanda Downs led 1 og.111 (1 3. SEOAL 0-2) with I(, points on
7 of I') shooting from the fidd.
TurklT Jini!'lhcd \\'llh 12 poims
on ~ of 1J shooting., J.m c:y
R1 chonh .1dded !(I point,_

B ~JLhm~.·r

hitting I

of 1 with 14 'll'lullJ.., to pl.1y. ~

Mc.:n:dtth AJJ1ng:tun o:hlp Jh-·d

Gallia Aca demy (3- 1, SEUAL
2-0) connected on 9 of t 0 foul
shots in the final 1:-!S of th,·
fourth quarter to sc..~al its wm.
Johnson knocked down .111 SIX
shots she atten•pted durin g that

Eastem
from Page 81
the second bv a score of 12--l
the Eagles wer~ close behind th~
Vikings, but still without hitting
any field goals in the second
quarter, the Eagles had to depend
on foul shots to give them points.
The Eagles scored three points
off two Danielle Spencer foul
shots, and Mansfield .1dding one.
Trailing at hal fume 32-7. th e
Eagles remained without a field
goal as they shot 0 for ·25 m the
first half.
At the starr of the third period,
the Eagles ca me out and showed

Southem
from Page 81
the half.
Sourhern went to a zone in the
th~rd quarte r. and Bl ess111g qui ckly erupted With several pc:netr.ltmg juntpn"' dut \.lun c hed thL·
White Falcon lttack to .1 much
safer 15 po11H ach·Jnt,\gt'. Tht•

111 mnc pmm ....md L' lghr rd1ounJs
f(&gt;r C.11lia Ac,,J,·mY. S.u·.1 h R'"'"ll
.1dd~d fiYe po~nt.., .1n d :-1x
rebounds .
Brittan y FrJnklin lud th ree
pmm~

Maru:tt.1 on Thurs-

5 of

111 tilL'

the: lint..' .md

to

co nn:rt~·d

onds. with Johmon gomg: 4 t(&gt;r 4
:'It

r~bounds

play host
d.t\'.

Erin

Thompson had
.md :t re-am- high

potnt~

nmc..·
SC'\ 'l'll

rc·bound; for the L1dy Chids.

.md fin.· rd10lllllf.., .111d E\'3

som e litC., pbyin g solid . dt.'fcns·~..·
and generating ~o me tu rnove r~
with their full cou1t pn.'ssurl·.
Yet , the Eaglc·s snit JUst cou ld
not score from ,1nywhcn.' o n the
floor cxcep\.thc fo ul line.
Th.1 t soon ~tged when 1.3.11 ley hit a 3-pointer .1t the }:.W
mark to make the ,,·ore .36-10.
After Bailey \ 3-poliHt.•r, the._•
Eagles scor.·d \\'ith buckets bY
Janet Calaway and Spencer. At the
end of the third quartn the
Eagles trailed, 40-.J (&gt;.
Senior Amber B:.kcr came out
in the fourth hit a 3-point field
goal! and J J llmper to contribu te
five fourth quarter points. as \\'dl
as addmg fourth fourth quJrtcr
steah.

period ended -!4-28 in favor of
· the Falcons.
Southern never n:covt'red 111
falling to th e 54-37 dcfe;It as
\lZ1ham;:i scort'(,i ten pu 1 nr·~ without the benefit of :1 tlc:ld go.1l 111

the ti na! frame .
Southem grabbed 21 reboumb
lc:d by Am y Le~.· With five: .~nd

K,1t1 C: unu11im \\"Hh t~HJr. Southern had sc:n·n

.1S~1st~

However, this w.1s still not
enough to bring the Eagles back
into the game.
Baker finished with 10 I teals
and four rebounds. She alw contributed seven points on offense
along wHh two assists.
Leading the Eagb in sconnt;
besides Bakn was Mansfield who
also added seven.
The Eastern reserve team lost
2~-23. Sa,;dy Powell led the
reserves in scoring with seven
pumts.

Eastem resumes TVC Hocking
Division play Thursday when
they play· host to Fed e ral Hocking at 6 p.m.

turnovers and 23 fouls .
Wahama had eight steals, 20
tu r novers and 18 fouls .
Southern won · tht.• n.·st·rvc
gmw IIJ-15 led by Stephanie

Miducl with ten points. Wahama
\\'a; led by N1cole Ohlinge r with
"' IX pO!nt"'.
Southern
to Wahama
I IHmd .1y.

(C ummlll"- :\)

o;;1x o::.tl'.th (ll'c' .1, R nuo::. h :2). 1:--:

~
Soulhern

-

37
Wahama
12 16 16 10 54
Soulllem (•·2) - Kab Curnmii'A 5 1 J.5 16,
Tammy Fryar• Q-1 8, RIIChol Cl1opmon 1 (H) 2,
Bngelta Barnes 3 o-o 6. Fdon RDUilh o o.
Tara Pickens 0 0-Q 0, Amy loe 1 3·5 5. Tolals.
14 1 ~11 37.
Wahama (3-0) - Julia HU!man 2 1 Q-2 7,
Kara Sayre 4 3-8 11 . Nalalia Roush I Q.O 2.
C J. Blessing 8 1Q.16 26, Kathy Shillz 0 Q.O 0,
Mld'\elle Shlttz 2-4-6 8 Totals: 17 1 17-32 54.

o-o

·v lniOn COunty 113, Eaollm 2V
Eastom
o4
3 9 13 29
Vkl10n County
12 20 8 23 - 62
t=astem (3-1)"- Juli Bailey o 1 2·2, Armer
Baker 2 1 ().() 7. Oanlelle Spencer 1 2·4 4, Sara
Mans1iold 2 3-5 7. Stacie Waloon 0
3 Mll1·
ney Karr 0 1-3 1, JAnet cataway 1 ~, 2 Totals:
7211-19.
Vinton Coun1y (3·4) - H&lt;;ly P-oM&gt;o • Q.
a B. Kayta Jewen 4 1 0-1 11 , Shauna Smith 1 o-

•5

2 6, Kristl Hayes 2 0-0 4, Melania Jones 3 0-Q
6, Cindy CO• 2 2·2 6 Tolals. 211 2 4·10.
Rebounds-Eastern 28 (Karr, Spencer 5) .
VInton Co. 43 (pfidemore 81. A.ssists-Eastem
6 {Baker 2). Vinton Co~ 15 (Hayes 51. StealsEastern 18 (Baker 10). Vinton Co 7 (Jewett.
Cox 2) Turnovers - Eastern 17. Vinton Co. 19.

Gallla Academy &amp;5, Logan Sol
Galha Academy
16 15 17 17 65
Logan
15 15 13 11 54
Gallm Academy (3· 1, SEOAL 2-0} - Jessi·
ca Bodimer 7 1 1-3 18, Brianna Johnson 8 1 g.
9 28, Eva Lyon 1 0·0 2, Tiffany DiCkson 0 o-o 0.
Courtney Spt"iegel 0 0·0 0. Sarah Russell 1 3·4
5. Brittany Franklin 11·2 3, Mered1ttiAdcllnQton
4 1-3 9 Totals· 22.2 15-21 65
Logan (1·3, SEOAL 0-2)- N1kk1 Tucker 2 2
2-6 12, Bnttany Myers 1 2·2 4, Adrienne
McCabe 0 3-4 3, Amanda Downs 7 2-3 16, Erin
Thompson 2 1 2·4 9. Jenica Hartman 0 o-o O,
Janey Atchards 5 Q-2 10 Totals: 17 3 11-21 54
Rebounds - GAHS 40 (Bodimer. Addington
8). logan 28 (Thompson 7). Assosls-GAHS 6
(Johnson 5) , Logan 2. Steals-GAHS 7 (Bodimer: Johnson. Addington 2). Logan 6 (Tucker
3) Turnovers - GAHS 20. Logan 15.
·
Point Pleasant 61, River Valley • 3
Rwer Vatley
12 11 9 1t - 43
Pomt Pleasant
17 17 13 14 61
River Valley (0-5, SEOA.L 0-2) - Kari B.
Taylor 2 2·56. Julia Mollohan 0 .1 0..0 3. Cynthia
Ward 3 2 5-7 17, Christen Baird 1 0
2.
· Nicole Walkins o 1 4-4 7 , Jamie Nickels 0 1 00 3. Chelsea DeGarmo 1 0 o-0 2. Bnttany
McDade 2 0 1-2 3, Bridgelte Harder 0 0 0·2 0.
Totals 8 5 12-20 43.
' Point Pleasant (1-2. SEOAL 1· 1) - Bridget
Nibert 8 0 1-3 17, Knslin Drain 2 0 1·2 5, Jen·
nifer AdkinS 0 3 o-o 9, CaSSie Newell5 0 11-15
21 , M1ranaa Du~s 0 0 0-1
A.shle~ ThOmas 1
0 1·1 3. Jennie Wilson 1 0 0·0 2. Alicia Marcum
1 0 0·0 2, Reg1na Bmg 1 o o-o 2. Totals: 19 3
14·22 61
_Rebounds - Ai\ler Valley 19 (OeQarmo 5).
Pomt 31 {Nibert 11). Turnovers- River Valley
11 . Point ~6

o-o

o.

Ohio Valley Christian 55, South Gallla 40
Soulh Gallia
7 9 11 13 - 40
Oh1o Valley
17 13 16
9 55
South Gallia (1·4) - Tosha Pelfrey 0 4-6 4.
Stacy White 3 0-2 7, Kristin Gibson 0 1·2 1,
Holly Haner 3 0-0 6, Aot:&gt;yn Harrison 1 2·9 16,
Ashley Cardwell 0 1·2 1, Sarah Wright 1 0·2 2,
Stephanie Evanich 0 1·2 1, Tracy Cheney 1 00 2. Totals: 15 9-25 40.
Ohio Valley Christian (3 -0) - Kelsey SailS·
bury 1 0-0 2. Tessa Haggerty 9 o-0 22. MiUra
Esmae•ti 2 0-0 4, Alyssa Zinlle 6 1·2 14, Sarah
Jenkins 0 0-2 0, Chelsea Gooch 3 7-9 13
Totals . 20 8- 13 55.
3-Point Goals-South Gallia o, ovc 5 (Haggerty 4, Zir111e 1}. Rebounds-South Gallta 40
(Harrison 13), OVC 25 (Gooch 10}. AssistsSouth Gallia 4 (Harrison 2). ovc 10 (Gooch 4)
Steals-South Gallia 8 (White 3). OVC 11
· (Gooch 7) ,Tumovers-South GaHia 20, OVC
11

Ohio High School Glrla Basketball
Monday's Reaulta
A.kr. East 60. Akr. Central· Hower 40
Akr Ellet 44, Akr. North 36
Akr Firestone 61 . Akr Kenmore 36
Akr. Garlield 55. Akr. Buchtel 53
Athens 56, JacKson 48
Batav.a 53, Bethel-Tate 36
Carlisle 56, Yellow Springs 27

'

Cin. ~ CNotion 61, Now lolloml 16
COis hodopoildOiiC071 , Grovepon40
Cols. M1llin 60, -.ngton Kilx&gt;umo •2
Gols. Tree ot ue 35, Manon ca!Mk 21
CooloRry 78, Ravenna &amp;&lt;
O.y. Ctlllninade-Monne 65. Day. Dunbar
Day Colonel While 54, Faltbom .u
Day. Stivers 71 . Spnng Valley 33
De&amp;aware Christian " · Cots Grace Haven

32
Delphos St. John's 63, St. Marys 61
Felicily·Franklin 57, Williamst&gt;urg 36
Franklin 29, Oxford Taiawanaa· 27
Gallipolis 65, Logan 54
Greentield McClain 66, W. Uflion 51
Hamitlon Badin 54, MM:Idlelown Fenwk:k 26
Hill-. 76. Clormonl Noolhoaslern 50
68. Girard 21 ·
Kettering Aller 50, FairmOnt 35

a.•

2 2. Belh Allen 0 0-2 0. Jessica 'Mli1lach • Q.O
8. Haley Sowers 5 G-1 11, Jessica Cauclil 2 2·

Cin. Counoy O.y 61, c ... - - 40
Cin ~ Academy 97. LOddand

Lowellvillo 53. McDonald .7
Manrua Crestwood 51 , Wlr"KI\am 36

Marietta 54, Vincent Warren -48
Midcllelown Christian 39. RigdeviHe Christ..,211
Mississinawa Valley 38. Miami East 30
Mogadol"e Fiafd 68, Streetsboro 50
Nelsonville· York 65, Trirnbkt 34
Now Richmond 50. GeorgeiOwn 43
Newal'lt Catholic 64, Johnstown 59
Oak Hitl 53, Minford 47
Oberlin 68. lake Ridge 25
Ohio Valley Christian 55, Crown City S. Gal·
Na 40
Orwell Grand Valley 40, Ashtabula Harbor

28
Painesville Riverside 49, Painesville Harvey

30
Peninsula Woodridge 56, Waterloo 45
Poinl Pleasant (W.Va) 61 . Cheshire Rr~&lt;·er
Valley 43
Poland 44, SlrufPers 39
Portsmouth 66, South Point 37
Portsmouth East 46, Frankltn Furnace
Green 43
Powell Village Academy 50. Cols Torah
Academy 38, OT
Ravenna Southeast 80, Garret1sv111e 37
seaman N. Adams 77. Beaver Eastern 32
SouthwestEH"n Westlake 57 . CMmsted Falls
49
Spring Kenton Ridge 108. Spring South 92
Spring Northeastern 58, Spring Catholic
Central 49
Vanda~a Butler 65. Miamisburg 55
Vinton County 62. Reedsville Eastern 29
W. Carrolnon 35. Day. Northridge 32
W. Jefferson 71, Mechanicsburg 33
• Wahama (W.Va.) 54, Racine Southern 37
Waverly 65, Lucasville Valley 61
Wetston 48. Hemlock Mi!teT 45
\&lt;Vheelersburg 65, McDermott NOr1hwest60,

OT
Willow Wood Sims Valley 50. Portsmouth
Notre Dartte 40

I

[,. ~~BALL
•

Naik&gt;nsl Football League
AFC

e..,
WL
Miami ...... ......... ........... 10 4
N.Y. Jets ..
....... 9 5
Indianapolis .. .. . ...... 8 6
Buffalo .....
. .. .'....... 7 7
New England .. ............. ..4 1o
Central
X·Tennessee ............... 11 3
x·Baltimore ...
....... 10 4
Jackson~lle

...... ..

....·7 7

........ 7 7
........ 3 11
Cleveland ......... .. ........ 312
Wast
x-Oakland ............ .... 11 3
x-Oenver ............ ........ 10 4
Kansas City ............ ...... 6 8
Seattle ......................... 5 9
San Diego ..
.... 113
Pittsburgh .........
Cincinnati ......

NFC

Eaat
WL
N.Y. Giants ...
.... 10 4
:~~·Philadelphia .... ..... . 10 5
Washington .
. .... 7 7
Dallas .
.... 5 9
Arizona ........... ..... 311
Central
x-Minnesota ... .
11 3
Tampa Bay ..... .
.... 9 5
8 6
Detroit ...
Green Bay .
. .. 7 7

TPta.PF
0 .714 283
0 .643 294
0 571 378
0 500 263
o .-286 239

PA

182
217
303
314
301

0 786291 191
o 714 286 138
0 500 328 282
0 500 263 231
0 214 161 329
0 200 161 395

o .786
0 .714
0 .429
0 .357
0 .071

403
440
322
270
226

263
340
318
339
376

TP
PF PA
0 .7 1 283 208
0 .667 5 238

0 500 2
42
o .357 281 3
0 214 200 410
0 786 359 307
0 643 336 217

0 .571277 277
0 500 303 281

c - ..

-

••o o 286 100

318

- Orloans
u 5 o e.43 310
St. LOUiS . .
9 5 0 MH79
Carolwla
6 8 0 429 271
San Franasco .
5 9 0 357 362
Allanla
.
..
·311 0 214 216
x-clinchad playoft tpOI
Sunday'• Gamn
Green Bay 211. De1roo1 13
Chocago 24, England 17
Baltimore 24. San Diego 3
Tampa Bay 16, Miami 13
Kansas Ci1y 15, Caroltna 14
NY. Gianls 30, Piltsburgt 10
Jacksonville 44, Arizona 10
TervlUSSee 35, Cincinnati 3
PhiladelphiB 35, CleVeland 24
Denver 31, Seattle 24
Dallas 32, Washington 13
St. Louis 40, Minnesota 29
New Ofleans 3~ , San Fraoosco 27
Qakland 31, N v Jets 1
Open Atlanla
Monel~ '• Gllme
lndianapoNs 44, Buffalo 20
S.turdlly'l G•mu
wastungton at Pittsburgh , 12 30 p m
Oakland at Seattle. 4 05 p m
Sun'day, Dec. 17
Detroit at N. V. Jets. 1 p m
Denver at Kansas City, 1 p m
San D1ego at Carolina, 1 p m
Atlanta at New Orleans, 1 p m
New England at Buffalo, 1 p m
Jacksonville at C•ncinnati, 1 p m
Tennessee at Cleveland. 1 p m
Green Bay at Minnesota. 1 p m
Chicago at San FranoscO . 4 05 p m
lndianapoUs at M1ami. 4 t5 p m
Baltimore at Arizona , 4·15 p m
N Y Gtants at Dallas. 8·35 p m
Open. Philadelphia ,J
Monday. Dee. 18
St. Louis at Tampa Bay. 9 p m

212
•12
236
384
317

Society news and notes, AS
Southern beats Meigs, 11

thursday: Clolldy
Hlp: 40s: l.ow: lOs

Point Pleasant knocks off River Valley TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Details, A3

HOCKEY
NHL BOARD OF GOVERNORS-Unanimously approved 1he sale ol the Phoenix Coyotes lrom Richard Burke to a group headed by
eal estate developer Ste\le Ellman and includ mg Wayne GretzKy
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Recalled AW
Petr Tenkrat I rom Cinc1nnat1 of the AHL
BOSTON BAUINS'-. Aecallcel D Den1s Tun
olee11from Pensacola ol the ECHL Ass1gned D
Zdenek Kultak and G Andrew Raycrolt to Prov·
ielence ol the AHL

Ifyou think you're having a heart attack •• •
.

• Call for an ambulance immediately.
• Tell th~ EMTs to take you to
The Heart Center of St.Joseph's Hospital.
.'

Meigs County's

ft' CO Unt s

Hus.h and running mate Dick
Cheney
arc
"very
plea,e&lt;l
gratified,"
and
former Secretary
of State James A:
llakcr sa id Tues. day night , an

DELIVERY
BEGINS - Mary
Hobstetter an,&lt;;J
David Dowler so/1\
through the gifts
provided for 455
Meigs County chi I- ·
dren and senior
citizens through
the Department
of Job and Family
Services and the
Angel Tree program. (Brian J.
Reed photo)

.unders tat~ment

Merry (:hristmas delivered to hundreds of needy
DJFS coordinates annual
(Angel Tree' project
BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Mll)l)l EPORT The admini stra tive
otlice' of th,· Meigs County Departm,·nt of
Job a11d Fam ily Services look more like
Sama's Workshop. with gifts for needy fam11ies
st.Kkcd o n desks. chairs and every inc h of
avaibb!,· tloor space.
·
The ,1gc·ncy has, once again, taken on th e
daunn11g t,J&gt;k of providing gifts, through

donors~ for ne~.·Jy children a nd ·~l:n iors in

According to M dry Hobstt'ttcr, coordi1.1ator
ofth,• DJFS' Angel Tree project, 22 elderly residents and 430 children are being provided
with gifts.
Many of those re.. id ent"i wou lJ likely not
receive any holiday gifts at .11!, wen; it not for
the h_ard work of the DJFS ltatr, and, especJally, the generous souls who bouf(ht, wrapped,
and delivered the gift, tD the ag;c ncy's Middleport offices.
Now that the ekes in th e com 1m1nity have
done their shopping and wrapping. it's up to
Hobstettt•r and her elves to ..,"Ort ;1nd ddive r

Bv BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Mil )I)LEI'ORT - The Board nfPub-

FROM STAFF REPORTS

RA C INE Fred Wolfe,
appointed by Rac ine Village
CouJ)cil to complete the term
nf the late Bob Fisher, w:~s
sworn in by. M.rynr ;..,colt Hill ,Jt

last

.___~

___ _____________
..:..__

of St.Joseph~ Hospital
.. _..

' I

. -- ---:-------___;..:.___J

are.
. In the past, families have been referre d to
the program by casl.!workcrs at the agency.
Howeve r. this year, applications were taken,
which allowed the gift buyers to know a bit
more about 'the person they were shopping

Please see Needy, Page Al

11i ~

inauguration in
Janu ary
would
give Republicans
greater control
over the government than at any

time

sinct·

of the

party. "Clearly the race for the
presidency h as come to an end.
Ceorge Bu sh is going to be the
llt'Xt president of the Unitc•J
States." added Sen. Bob Torri celli, D-N.J
The vic.:c pn:sidcnt\. can1prtig1J
manager. William Daley. issued a
_state ment sayi ng Gore and run -

~ta tewidc reco utJ t of rhous;lnd .,

of questionable baJJots. A na rrower 5-4 majority found there
was no comtitutionally acceptable procedure by which a n ew

n.'count cot1ld take place. befi.1rl'
the midni~ht deadline for selection of prc,idcntial electors.
"Because it is evident that any
recou nt seeking to meet tht.:.·

ning mar t' Jose ph Lieberman
n.:vicwing the ruling and

Wl'n:

"will .a ddres.~

the court's dec1sion
"ill full detail at a time· to be
determined" on Wednesday. l3tit
even so, as the night \von::. 011 ,

b

Please see Gore, Page Al

Middleport residents face water, sewer increases

I

&lt;;:!/The Heart Center

the

CO I1U11Uility.

the gifts to the familie; in 11eed.
The delivery proceSI will cominue thmugh
next week, \t\;irh van s J,~:.~Ued with wrapped
gifts leaving the parking lot throughout the
business day - to Pomeroy, Rutland, f.ong;
Bottom, Raclne, and to t'vcry other nook and
cranny of th e county where needy tamil1es

gin. Even so,

Dwight l:;isen7
howe r sat in rhe White House.
Th e GOP retained control of
the House in the November
elections. Th e Senate is split Sll50, but Cheney's election as vic,·
president will give the GOP at
lL·a~t nominal contml there, a~
well.
In their extraordinary 1atL'
night ruling on Tuesday, th e
court agreed 7-2 to rt•ver'\t' th l.'
Florjda "upremt' Court's week end decision that ordl'fcd a

tuous wr:cks since Election lJay1
Gore clo~eted himself with
advisers, but fellow Democrat&lt;
were on tdevio.;ion a1mno;;t a~
o;oon a,., thL· court ruled, ur~ing
the vice president to bow o ur.
The vice presiden t "sh ould act
now and concede:· snid Ed H:enLkiL gl·ncral chairman

A tot&lt;tl increao;e of 5 percent ovt·r five
year~ in water rates and a total incre;1sc of
3&lt;.J.5 percent over five years in SC\·Vl'l" rt1tcs,
based on ~:xisting min imum rates, is. at the
heart of the tWA's proposal.
The llPA 11 fnllowing a rcconnm·ndation from th.e village's engineering tirm,
Floyd Browne Associates.
In terms of dollars and cen t~&gt;, th ose
increa~es, bast'd on the currt·nt minimum
rates, would amount to ;1 total increasl' of
4ll &lt;Tnt~ t{w water se rvice and.S3.70 tOr

wc~.·k\ meeting.

In tenus o.f dollars and ants,
those i11crcases, based on tire
curYt'lll lllillilllll/11 rates, 11'011/d
mnouut to a total increase c{ 40
a11ts for water srrl'ice and $3. 7.0
for sewer- botlr OI'CY a
.fliJe-year period.

o.;e\vcr -- both &lt;1vcr a five-year period .
"The (propo!-!eJ) increase i~ ba,:;cd upon
rilL' comH.Iera tJnn as set forth in the cu r-

Racine swears in councilman

•

the Florida Supreme
Court's weekend
decision that ordered a
statewide recount of
thousands of
questionable ballots.

pnrtmn-; ~iven the five tumul-

R ate increa!-!c.., \Vould require approval

oose
•
er 1ence.

telling the vice president he had
little choice but to drop his bid.
"That's where every discussiOn "
hea ded," said one.
Whatever Gore decided after
a night's sleep, it appeared t!Mt
llush had won the victory in th e
courts that he·
so
In theif' extraordinary proclaimed
often he had won
late night ruling on . at the ballot box
- and by a sii11iTuesday, the court
agreed 7-2 to reverse larly small mar-

of hi storic pro-

of council.

Our cath team has a combined 39 years
' of cath experience.

1n

Florida's contested el ection.

struc tun:.

St. Joe's has performed more than 6 000
heart catheterizations.

·

so n.1e top advisers privately wert·

WASHINGTON (AP)
Texas Gov. George W Bush is on
track ro become the . nation's
43rd president a nd Al Gore is
wrestling with the withdrawal
some Democrats are urging him
to· make in the shadow of a
Supreme Court decision that
ruled out more

Duttield , president uf !he Ui'A,
Middleport Village Council on
evening to present a ckcaikd
for a five-year in(:remen tal
inaeaSL' 111 both watt·r and sewer rate~.
deqgneJ to help tlnatll:e intprovements ,to
tht' vilbge's wat1.: r and sewer.tge mtfa-

•

, ·...·.:"""' 50. ·~!~ts

•

M yron
met with
Mouday
proposal

.

Hometown Newspaper

Supreme
Court shuts
down recount

ami sewer Lltcs to help finance improvements to the water .md sewer system.

•

December 13, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number IJ9

lic AfFairs ha~ propost'd increases in water

•

Wednesday

•

TRANSAcnONS
BASEBALL
American League
ANAHEIM ANGELS - Agreed to terms w11h
RHP pat Rapp and OF K1mera Bartee on oneyear contracls Des19nated OF Scott Morgan
for ass1gnmen1
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Traded C Jayson
Werth to the Toronto Blue Jays lor LHP John
Bale
CHIC AGO WHITE SOX- TradOO RHP Mark
Roberts lo the Florida Marlins to conlplete an
earlier !fade.
DETROIT TIGERS- Traded C Brad Ausmus . RHP Doug Brocail and RHP Nelson Cruz
to the Houston Astros for OF Roger Cedeno. C
Mitch Meluskey and AHP Chrts Holt Named
Bruce Fields manager at Toledo of the ln\erna·
tiona( League. Kevin Bradsflaw manager at
Lakeland of the Flor1da State League Brent
Gales manager at West M1chlgan ol the Midwest League , and Gary Green manager at
Oneonta of the New York-Penn League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Agreed to terms
with AHP Doug Henry on a two-year contract ·
MINNESOTA TWINS -Wa1ved RHP Jason
Ryan lor the purpose ol Ql'llng htm h1s uncondt·
licmal release
TEXAS RANGERS -Agreed tq terms with
SS Alex Rodriguez on a 10-year contract.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Agreed to terms
~ith INF Jeff Frye on a one-yoar contract.
National League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Agreed to
terms with RHP Darren Dreifort on a f1ve-year
contract.
NEW YORK METS-Agreed to terms with
AHP Kevin App1er on a lour-year contract. AHP
Steve Trachsel on a two· year contrac\ and OF
Tsuyoshi ShinJO on a one-year contract
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Named Brandy
Davis professional scout Traded RHP Donne
Wall to the New York Mets for OF Bubba Trammell.
BASKETBALL
NBA-Named Steve Hellmuth semor v1ce
president of operations·and tect~nOiogy.
ORLANDO MAGIC- Acli11ated F Grant Hilt
from the InJured 11st

.

Clerk Karen Lyous W&lt;IS
aurlrorized to trallsfer
.flmds i11to the rtjiise
CICCOtmt for till' required
extra /,1/Jor.
•

Nn actio n \Va'i takl'll .lt the
Wolfe's term w ill expire on
·.
mcL'tin~
and rc~iJents were
De c. "\ I , 2110 1.
Rl·fu-;e co llectioll· w.1~ di~ ­ cncouragl'd to n: cycle m ore
cusst&gt;d and it w,p, noted tlnt the through tht· (o unty Litter
villagL' does not n ow h ave Control r urb "' Jd e recycling
progr::~111.
worker~ from th~· Mci gr.; CounC:!.·rk K.Jrel\ Lyons wa s
ty D epartme n t of J ob and Fam:tuthor
izc d t o tr.tll'•fer t"und"i
ily Scrv ii,."L'S. Thi' 11\l',llt~ th e v illage muq hire workers to he lp tnto 1ht: refu .,t: ,l rl'ount for the
requ it~·d extra labor .
wtth the co ll ection.
'
Counc tl
.1ho
.ntthutiz..:J
The ba~ic re side nti al r&lt;Jte of
Lyun'i to ,lttt·nd tr.1ining for thL'
SH pe r lllOilth ir.; the lnwe\t in
r omputaizcd .lCC &lt;HliHJng net tl1e an:&lt;1, 1t .wao;, rep orted. JJH.i
work \pon"HTd hy the -s l.ltt'
memher"' disnt~St'd ,Hiding a $1
.llldito r.
p~r mouth ptT cur.;tomn fuel
Please see Racine, Page Al
liurch~1rgc or rai~i11g' th l' ratt'~ .

'

rent rate study compiled by Flnyclllruwne
Associates in preparation for the proposed
o;~wcr improvement project,'' the BPA's
written proposol sai'J.
"The increase is necessary to brin g
Middleport into total compli ance ;111cl eli-

giblhty for the necc..;sa ry loan" rmd gnmts
required to initiate and L'o mplcte a projl'ct
referred to as the 'ch·y weather ove rflow
projec t.' or otherwise scwcr·improvcnlL'llt
project." the proposJI odds.
That prujc·ct comi~ts of the rcpl:lcemcnr
and upgrading of sewage liti: stations,
replaccllK'Ilt of scwcr:tgt' lim·s. ~1ddit;on of
nrw lift stations, the eliminatJOll of L~1dc­
"'irable St.'"\vcr gas situati om. ,md di minatin~ nuttlow of raw scwa~c into thl' Ohio
River.
The projectt·d cost of the projt:ct is
$1,111 J. l1 7.
''Financing of this pr~ject n:qu1n:·o; th&lt;~t

Sentinel

BY TONY

M.

LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Obituarie~

S11orts
Weather

B2-4

B5

M
A3
Bt,j,6

A3

Lotteries

MI.J.)DLEPOilT - A pmen tatim? on progr;llllli Jimt•d .J.t promoti ng d c.111 li vi ng :md good
hcJlth was heard during The
M e ig~ County Chamber ·of
CmTllllLTce\ gen eral membership
meeting held. Tuesday at Overbrook Nursin g: Center.
The chamber listened to Bill
Quickel, insurJncc agent at Insur-

ance Pills in Pomeroy, discuo::.s
plam for t-he aiTIVJI ofJohn Jxoh, ·

OHIO
Pick 3: 0 - 0 -(1; Pick 4:

munity j,., t~hlL·

0~ 7~()~.1

WVA~
Daily 3: ~- X-l• Daily 4: 7- K-11-2

t'Vtdence that the comto repay the debt in curred,"

the proposal says.
Accordinf( to lJutlield, the $5 water
.
" sure!
" now ch
d
1111prowm~,;nt
lJrge:
arge
mon thly to each water customer in the
village qualitieo.; the village for gram funding tor the project. but that additional
resources are neces~ary to show abthry to
maintain rl!l' o;y..,tem and ret ire dt~br.

"A rate incre:1se is Ih.' CessarfbdOre atly
furrlwr progress ca n bt.: m ade," he "'"iJ.
,

Page Al
... .Please see Sewer,
.
~· ·

-'

12

coming ·to Meigs·in spring

l Sections - 12 Pages
A5

~ how

income. to

Motivational team

Today's

Calendar
Classifieds
Contics
Editorials

water r3tt·~ in a community be at lea~t 2.:1
percent of the low to medium household

and the Power Team. the ..;elf-pro-

-;pe.lk ~,;rs, .Jrtcmpt

tmby\
hop~.·

ymtth

ro rc,Kh out ro
\nrb ll lt'S'i.lgl'" of

and ... i\v;ltio11.

iel!ll

dru~ . J hu~('. :-. uic itk and

&lt;trc jmt ,, fn, of t ht· I'i"' lKS tlut
th(' team ,tddrL''\t'"' wilik ht'lpin~;
to prmnotl' tin: id ca11 of Jcadcn1ic
l.'Xcl'lkn ce and c k :m living.

\t'X

dwrrhc,.,

throu~lwut

claimnl '\vorld's grt\ltcst e-xhibition of pov~-'er, o.;trl'tlgth, "Pl't'd.
111~piration .md lllOlivoltio n '' to' the
Meih"' Cnunly ,ll l'&lt;l.
U\illg lllllSCJ..: poWt'f Jnd bbrthl' 'i l'

Please see MeiJts, Page Al

,.

llltl'iiC

llHH I\'.Hion;rl

Sponsored by

tlh· .1rca.

Thl' ch.1tnbl'r .1ho Ji,tL'llL'd co
Joy lkntky, tltnc,s l·oorditutor .H
th t· M~.·1g.., ~t·tnnr C·enter. d1"1n1~~
tll!W L'.Xl'rt' ht' pro!;r.lll J'-. t hat ;tre
C\lrrt·nth. ,1\",HI.lhlc .11 tl1v f.1nhtv.
.

lllg

days till Christmas

Th&lt;· l'o\\'e r le.JIIl will be perform111p: .H t ill' Mcig~ Hi gh
School n11 March 2H- Apnl I.
20111, .md IS bein~ fund,·d
througl 1 \'&lt;lriuu"' bu . . in~.·o.; o::,~,.·,., .llh.i
~

t

t.

I

.

�The Dally Sentinel • Page A}

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pege A 2 • The Dilly Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS .

'

II

Kest wll seek mayor's job
TOLEDO (AP) - Lucas County T"'asurer Ray K.,;t announc~d
Tuesday he will run for Toledo mayor next ye&gt;r.
Kest, a Democrat who in November was elected to his fifth term as
county treasurer, h~ been in office since 1985.
He has raised more than $200,000 for the campaign, according to
John Irish, cluef deputy t"'asurer.
Mayor Carty Finkbeiner spent about $250,000 on his first mayoral
campaign m 1993.
The city's c harter prohibits Finkbeiner from running for a third
c;,rm in 2001.
Kest, 50, is the first candidate officially to enter the race.
He was in a car accident last month and suffered a skull fracture. His
wife. Sherr,; was seriously injured. Kest said his mjuries would nut
slow his campaign for mayor.

Murder-suidde suspected
C INC INNATI (AP) -A Cincinnati couple was found dead in the
bJSt"mcnt of their home in ;1 crin1e police are investigating as ;111 .tppar~nt

murder-suicide.
Po lice fmmd the body of a H-year-old woman with multiple stab
\\'Duncls Mondty and ti.mnd he-r 51-yeJr-old husb.tnd hang,·d. lnwsriC
~ators think tht' )1usband killt'd his esrrangt"d wife, rht'n cmn minl'd
su i cid~.

Nault'S of {he p.ur wen~ bl•ing with.hdd pending notific.uion of rd:nin..·s.
Family HH.·mh. ;rs told poli r~ th~ co uple h.lli bl·cn cx:pt.-ricn cing:
m~:JicJ1 pmblems ti1r the p:tst f~?\V wt·~ks and they went w thL' rt'SIdence Monday ,·wning. diS..-o,·ercd the bodies md called police.
The woman lllO\"t.'d imo tht• nt.&gt;ighborhood about eight years ::~.go
.md h~:r son lived with the couple- unnl he mm·t·d to his own :lpart11\ent a few months ago. said neighbor Rhureli.1 Grisby.
· GrisbY s.11d the woman was originally from Jamaica and apparently
llll't her future husbJnd during nne of her ;tnnual visits there. They
married aboLlt a year-and-a-half ago.

Mom convidecl in slaying
CLEVELAND (AP) - A woman who admitted beating her 4year-old daughter With a purse strap and shoe could be sentenced to
life in prison after being conviCted of murder and felonious assault.
A jury COIJ\oicred Lashon Sawyer on Tuesday of killing her daughter
Sydney, who died April 28 from internal inJuries after being hum the
abdomen.
- lr rook the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas jury about seven
hours of ddibcratiom to find Sawyer gwlrv. Sawyer fa ces a mandatory 15 year sentence and up to life in prison. She is to be sentenced on
JaiL 'J.
In October, .t JUry deadlocked on the murder and felonious assault
charges against Sawyer.
.. S;nvyer,16. said through her attorney, Rufus Suns, that her boyfriend
killed Sydney and the prosecution knowingly let her rake the fall.
"This is all ridiculous .... Tllis verdict is ridiculous," Sims said.
Smyer's hvc-in boYfriend, Patrick Frazier, has pleaded guilty to
in\"Oiun tary manslaughter for failing to get the gul medical attention.
fnitially. Frazier, 21, was also charged with murder in -the case but he
cu i a deal with prosecutors in exchange for testifYing against Sa\vyer.
He faces one to five years m prison and is scheduled to be sentenced
Wednesdav.
Prosecu;ors said they were glad to get the murder co~on.
"Thi s little gul had a mother wtthout a heart, without a soul," said
A&gt;mtant Cuya hoga County Prosecutor Richard Bombik.

Officer found guiHy of felonies
:C]LF.VE LAND (AI') - A Cleveland police officer faces up to 16
ye•rs HI prison •fta being convicted of thn;e felonies for his p;Irt in a
c.1Q1pgnll111d C.lJ5ttlrbancl'.

t-11 Ashtabul.t County Common Ple.ts jury Tuesday co11vicred ·a
CJ:rveblld parrulma11 Stephen Jones, 33, of fdo11ious assault, assault on
'.1 I?,Olice officer and resisting arrest.
:Prosecutor Thomas Sartim said J&lt;&gt;lles could get six to 16 years in
p(ison but said he would not seck the maximum.
Judge G.try Yost allowed Jones to remain free on bond until his sentellcing which is likely to be early next year.
'ince convirred felons can nor c;trry guns, Jones can no longer work
J~ ~ sworn law enforcement officer in ()hio.
~nes, a six- year member of the Cleveland police force, was arrested
by an Ash ta bllla County shentl"'s deputy on Apnl 15 after a disturb~nce at a.rural ca mpground in Andover Township.
Local depllties and pohce testified Jones taunted them and tried to .
miimidate them with the fact that he was a Cleveland policeman .
J.t&gt;nes testified that he· was only trying to quiet an argument between
a f;ther and son at the campground .
f)efense attorney Mark McClain argued that Jones was completely
innocent.
" I thmk the re was sufficient evidence In the record to show that Mr.
]lnies did not co mmit the crimes for \vhich he was convicted," s::~.id
McCiai1i. " We will appeal."

Taxpayers foot bill for fees
'l::lEVELAND (AP) - An oversight by Attorney General Betty
l'vt.mtgomery's office could leave taxpayers paying th e legal .bills for
. 1\Vo stiip clubs, a newspaper reported.
Federal law allows the losing side of a la\vsuit to be required to pay
the• winning side's court costs. A j udge typically can reduce a bill or
throw it out iffees are disputed and found to be excessive.
J" h ~th CircUit U.S. Court of Appeals gave Montgomery's office 30 .
dzys to contest the legal fees for Tiffany's Cabarets in Brunswick and
qevdand, bur her staff didn 't challenge them until 38 days later, th e
l'b1n Dealer reported Wednesd1y.
:The Ohio Department of Public Safe ty has_ been ordered "to pay
.1bqut $33,000 in lawyers fees.
Spokesm.1n Joe Case said Montgomery's office bdieve~ it ca n still
cQ.nt~st the fee-s in an appeal on the ments of the c.1se.
j:.arlwr thi s yea r, the cabarets' b\\ycrs \VOn .1 courr b.1nlc to protect
nlJ:de .md topless dancing. •
io state officials' battle co limir such d.mcing. t~dn.tl courts han~
deQared the ruk'5 uncoll!'itltlltlon:tl mfnngeJ~lt'nt!'i on frct•dom of

expression.
I

.

Cleveland to pay S1.25 million

•
CLEVELA Nil (A P) - The· , itv h.11 wttkd ·' "·nm;,1irl tbth l.t\\ ~u it .1nd .tgrL·eJ to p.1 y S1.23 mi llion to the C'l111ily of .1 m.1n who d!L'd
pphcc cmtody 111 I {J&lt;J~.
J\1lLiucl PlJ' kt t l\.~J. d1ni .tftc l hl·
~ 11 thdt on l )c.·c 1H. I fJCJ~

wh1k
1

111

;.luluc.·l f.mkl · r~htn:~.
1 IL

\'

\,,,., .11

Ill', p. lltl lt.'r .H the
lit"

·11

I ,. l~ll.\

c \\ ,,

I

rt•.,tcd ti1r quc.·'lfltlll lttg .lbtlllt
U llll' .

1n,; thl·

:11\rllh" lllo..111liiL'tTI11!1 \\Ill· l 1 J~·k.tl\

~~l

lc.'HIL'\ ( ;,h..,r)I \.Lklllc.'d

ll\tflt\

I rh

L!v\ l&lt;.lc·ll 111 pHl"f.' -

1"1 :1"]11:'

&gt;I I

J) t'(l pk

'I !\· 11, ·L111 l'n 1.111
I ll; l,~,·th Hdrq 1:! l 1 1)'~lJI\
r

dlt'g" ( til!llty Cqi'UJII.'t
,, I\ drunk
th~.· tllllL' ol ht\ dc.Hh .111d h.1d lr.I~L'" of thl· h.lilu~.Jnngl'lll&lt;. Llrug I,C :P

(....:tt'
H

J tH I

1tiiJ~dotn~. Nc.·nhvt th~

Ill ht&lt; bl110d

Wldneaday, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

'

}l.._)l.._:t\1 .

Couple charg~ with possession of stolen car_
RAY (AP) - An unrelat~.d co urt case
and out-of-place license plat~ led authorities to a body they believe is that of a missing Kenyon College student.
The remains were found at a trailer
owned by a man who worked with 20year-old Emily Murray.
Preliminary autopsy reports show the
woman in the trailer was killed by a a single gunshot wound to the head. A positive
identifiCation from dental records is
expected by Wedn es day but Vinton County

•

Ballgame changed

erty for having Murray's car on their prop-

Coroner Carl Greever said the clothes and
a dove tattoo on the body match Murray';
description.
"All the mdications are that this is her,"
Greever said Tuesday.
Murray was last seen Nov. 3 after working her last scheduled shift at the Pirate's
Cove pizza restaurant in Gambier, which is
walking di.stance from the Kenyon campus.
The kitchen manager, 24-year-old Gre~
gory McKnight, and his wife, Kathryn, 35,
are c harged with receiving of stolen prop-

l'lw Snurhnn - Feder.tl Hocking boys varsity basketball game
scheduled for Friday night in
Stewart has been moved to
Southern's Charles W. Hayman
gymnas!um in Racine. Southern
will go to Federal Hocking in
January on the date originally
scheduled for home .

erty in Ray, 80 miles south uf their main
home in Gambier.
They were both arraigned Tuesday in
Vinton County and ar~ being hdd on $1
million bond. Neither has been charged in
connection with the body found in thei-r
trailer. Knox County Sher.iff David Barber

.

said th~y are the only suspects in Murray's

.
disappearance.

Meeting date set

.

MIDDLEPORT - The next
regular meeting ~f Middleport
Village Council will be Dec. 21
at 7:30p.m., due _to Christmas.

Interior secretary won't visit College student accused
proposed refuge site after all of setting fatal·fire
I'

COLUMBUS (AP) - lnierior
Secretary Bruce Babbitt has cancekd plam co VISit Madison and
Union coumh.' S this wcl·k to
speak on beh.tlf of the Little
D arby Nation.1l Wildli fe Refuge.
" Little Darby j ust didn't fit
uno [he schedule," Inter ior
DepJrtm e nt spoh.· smJu Tim
Ahern said Tuesday. "It ha sn't
been resc heduled . Were kin.-! ofrunning out of time . I doubt th.tt
wc.·'rc going to be there."
Supporters ,md opponents of
the refuge sold a visit by Babbitt
wasn't likel y to make a difference
in whether a refuge is created,
smce a new federal administration
is to take office in five weeks.
"As far as him being in a posiuon to do anything, it's a little
late," said Tom Larson , the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service's Mid-

Breakfast with
Santa

.

DAYTON (AP) -A Univer- said t!Jl Morgan lived in the
sity of Dayton student charged house with Cohen.
with setting a fire that killed his . ''This is ce rtainly soml·oue
houscm:atc wa s due in co urt who se t a house on fin· becau se.
Wednesday to face charges of of his condu ct .md :1s a rcmlt of
involuntar y IllilllSlaughte r and this arson, J y&lt;mng lll.lll lost his
life," He ck sai d .
arson.
He said Colwn was the only
Paul Vincent Morgan , 20, of
Rochester, N .Y. , was taken to D ill' sleep ing on [he second
the Montgomery County ja il · floor, where the fire was CO II Tuesday evening after wrning cemrated. ()thers wCrc on the
firs\ Ooor when the tire started
hintself in to city police.
The charges are related to the early Sunday.
Heck said Morgan lighted
death Sunday of Austin Cohen
jn a house fire. Others in the ·"an object th at ignited the
house rented from the universi- entire hou se." He would not
ty escaped bur were unable to identifY the object.
The fire alarm had been disget back inside to rescue Cohen,
21, of Loveland.
connected previously by someHis brother, Dustin Cohen, is one and was reconnected by
a lin ebacker for the St. Louis university officials. Sometime
before the fire, it was disconRams.
Prosecutor Mathias Heck Jr. nected again , Heck said.

west regional . planning chief.
"Whatever's done will probably
be done after he 's out of office."
'' Politically speaking, I don 't
ktlOW how mu cli time he would
have had to nuke decisions either
way," said Madi son County Comnussion~r lhvid Dhuml.; ,Vho
opposes the refugL". " We viewed a
vtsit Js .an opportunity to explain
the Situation and hopefully inOuence him to the point that we
could prove that there wasn 't a
need for a n:fugc.''
The Fish and Wildlife Service,
which the Interior Department
overse~s. wants to cre-ate a refuge
by purchasing 23,000 acres
around Little Darby Creek and
buying development rights to
26,000 oth~r acres in the creek's
watershed during 1he next 30
years.

POMEROY - Breakf.1sr with
Santa \Vill be ' ar Meigs Musl"um
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m . Reservations should be made by calling
the museti\1\ , 992-3t! 10. Cost is

Core
',

EMS answers 35 calls
POMEROY- Units of the
Meigs Emerg e n cy Service
answered 35 calls for ass is tance over Friday, Saturday,
Sunday and Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Friday, 3:32 p. m , Oh io
143 , Earlene Kennedy, Holzer
Medical Center;
10:56 . p.m.,
R1v e rside
Apartments, Paul Stei nmctz,
HMC ;
S aturda y, ~ :OS p.m .. llrodnck Hollow, Addie Reit min:-, refused tn:a t menr:
7:45p.m .. Wek htown Hill,
B~atri c e Willi antsnn , HMC :
Sund.1y, 2:42 a.m., Willo\\"
Lt1nc , Pansy Jont:s, Ple;ts.ant
Valley Hospital;
(&gt;:54 a.m., Bradbury Road,
motor vehicle accide nt. Ctthv
and Wayne Pauley, refu,.d
treatment;
8:43 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
vehicle
accident,
Brooks
Sayre, June Sayre, HMC ,
Mel issa Holman, Denise Holman , Johnathun McCarty,
Joyc,e Sisson, refused treatment;
1 :5'i_ p .m. , Lin co ln Street,
Rob e rt Eblin, HMC;
Monday, 6:40 a. m ., Overbrook. Nursing Ce nter , Ada
Starcher. PVH;
6:25 p . m , Pinegrove Road ,
Roy Parker, St. Jo sep h's
M e morial Ho spi t al.
MIDDLEPORT
Saturda y, 9:28 p.m ., State
Route 1 24, motor ve h icle
a cc ident , Brandon
Hood,
HMC;
Mond ay, 7:02 p.m., Flood
Road , Erica Bla c kwell, Tere ."
Barron, HM C;
11 :05 p.m., North Second
Street, Junior
Bla ckwe ll ,
HMC.
POMEROY
Fnday, 7:10 p.m .. O hi o
124 , C h a rl e; Deem, PVH ;
9:28 p.m., Union Avenue,
Sara h M c Dowell , tre.lted;
11..)5 p .m ., Willow C re e k
Ro ad, Anth ony Rowe, HM C;
S:~turday. 12 :-t h am., Con-

dor Street, Terry Mullins,
HM C;
&lt;J:2r, p.m., Ohio 124. motor
ve hi c le.·
::tccJde n r,
S.tndr.J
Sc hri c·ber, f-IM C;
Mond.n·. 7:1l2 p.m .. Flood
Road. Mi sty Withrow, 1-!M C
RACINE
S.Jtuni.Iy. K·J2 .1.111 . Mtk
Hill. Sh1rlcy ll.nk" . tre.Ltnl.
\tJ1Jd.1y. -t ·J7 p 111.. lho ,Jd \\",\\" Awntre. lnC7 l lrll. !'VII :
(J: I(J

p , lll., W111CI\\'

l_ .l lll',

I'VL-1.
R EEDSV ILLE
\und.1y. &lt;J: 17 .1 111 . '-;tl c~ ~..-~~
RD ,JJ. 1!1{)[{)1 \Thllil· .J\..(1dl'nt. Dc.,bhll' &lt;~dntorc. C.1111
P.lll'-&gt;Y Jnlll'\ ,

den-Clark Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
Fnd ay, 4:08 p.m ., Cotterill
Ro ad, Josh Howard , tre ated;
Saturd ay, 10:29 a. m ., Meigs
Mine 2, Michael Curnette,
HMC;
9: 13p.m., Ohio 124 , motor
vehicle
accident,
C rystal
Hood , HMC;
Sunday,
1 "1: 19
a. m .,
Nicho lson Run . Josh Partlow,

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.
106 North Second Ave .
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

(740) 992-2635

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treated,

Monda y. 12 : :iJ p 111., New
Lim a Road . Virf;inia McCiel1,.\d , PVH;
~:01
p.m., Powell Street,
Patsy
Perkins ,
O'Bl&lt;n&lt;ss
Mem~Jrial Hospital ;
11 :04 p.m . , Ohio 1~3 ,
Sonya L,, e, HMC.
SYRACUSE
Sunday, 9:37 a.m., Ohio -7,
motor v~:hicle ;-~ccid~nt, Agnr:s
Princo. CCM.f-1.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 1 p.m . , Christy
Road, Wilma Eynon, PVH ;
7:40p.m., Ohio 681, Joe
Short , OBMH;
Sund·ay, 9 : 11 a. m ., Success
Road , motor vehicle accidenr, Tony Jones , treated;
Monday, 7:04p.m .. Ohio 7,
Valerie M cC linto c k, tre ated .

from Page AI

Dec. 12 date will be unconstitut,ional .. . we rev~rse the judgnlent
of the Supreme Court of Florida
ordering the recount to proceed."
The electoral votes will be cast
formally on Dec. 18, and counted
in a joint session of Congress on
Jan. 6.
In the majority were ChiefJustice William H. Rehnquist and
Justices Sandra Day O'Connor,
Antonin Scalia, Anthony M.
Kenned,y and Clarence Thomas .
' Dissenting were Justices John
Paul Stevens, David H. Souter,
Ruth Bader Gmsburg and
Stephen G. Breyer. In a forceful
dissent, Stevens wrote: "Although
.w e may never know with complete certainty the identity of the
winner of this year's presidential
~lection, the identity of the loser is
Rerfectly clear. It is the nation's
~onfidence in the judge as an
if11partial guardian of the law."
· Souter and B"'Yer ag,.,ed there
were constitutional problem~ with
·the "'count _o rdered by the Flo,rida court, but did not rule out the
possibility of the state court being
able to fix them if allowed to do
so and rhus did not join the 5-4
majority.
Even before the ruling,
Cheney, a veteran of the House as
well as a former defense secretary,
arranged to spend part of his day
Wednesday in the Capitol, meeting with Republicans.
And in Tallahassee, where the
GOP-controlled Legislature was
n1oving tO cndorst: its own slate of
ekcrors for Bush, the court's rul-

ing gavt&gt;: pause.
" It appears we have finality,"

fnttw111r-111~~·

n• D....HIColorTY
·~.tg~CIIIIIiol~..,

• MII/W i l l - wilt.'~' o1 ~....uo ~

. •lllkl '" ''"""!l.~"""""
• U ,,_,..,. l'clc~ wr!lo U Clod &amp; fZ ~
• tm......., ~ coro~n~~ ... ., 019w a-...~ 01'111

_..,.

The Daily Sentinel

•H_.,.•,

•Tri(j,y.ooll(tNI~

Ohio45769
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
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NOTICE : Llc •n•• mu•t b• obtained no later than J•nuary 31, 2001 to avoid paying penalty. After thla dat•.
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I

To be dosed
POMEROY - TheTB Clinic
office will be closed Friday from
11 a.m . to 4 p.o}t. for an employoe
.Christmas celebration. Normal
busii1ess operations will resume
Monday at 8 a. m .
said Karen Chandler, a spokeswoman for Senate President John
M cKay. Chandler said her boss
would decide Wednesday morning whether the Senate would
cancel its plam to vote. The House
gave its approval to the measure
on Tuesday on a near party-line
vote.
The ruling was the latest turning point in the nation's unbearably close election, a saga of
counts, recounts, lawsuits by the
dozens and two trips to the highest court in the land. For five
tumultuous weeks, it has held
Gore and Bush in limbo and the
nation in thrall, and seared new
terms into the n.ltion's consciOusness - · "dimpled chad" most
prominent among them.
That was one description for
partially punched ballots, thousands of which were at the center
of the contested election in Florida.
Without the state's 25 electoral
votes, neither Bush ,nor Gore had
the votes in the, Electoral College
needed to become president. With.
them, victory was • certainty.
In Belfast, Northern Ireland,
President Clinton said he wanted
to read the opinions before commenting on the · Supreme Court
decision. " I may want to make a
statcn1ent later," he said.
The Bush campaign moved
gi}tgerly in the hours after the ruling. as if to avoid crowding Gore
in his hour of defeat. "This has
been a lon g and arduous process
for everyone involved on both
s1des,"· Baker told reporters in
Florida, where he had commanded a postelection Republi ca n
campaign
through
several
recounts and a fistful of lawsuits.

1 00 E. Second Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL • Meigs County Auditor

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Oaily .................................. ......... ...... SO Cems
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clolldy. Lows 30 to 35.

New5 Departments
The main number Is 992·2155. Department
extensions are:
Genenl Mamtliler ........................... F.xt. 1101
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th~

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mor~ willin g to give of thcm~dvc~ to lllJkc this pl\)j~rt suc-

ressfll l.'' H obstetter s;nd. ""T he
members of the nrganizacions not
only ~pc.·nd thl'ir 0\\'11 money ro
buy tht: g 1fts, but ~ct a!--idc their
ow n pcr-.on;1.l timt.' to shop for the
pciiCct. gift for rlw Angel they an.:
-.pnmnrmg.
.. Thl'Y put o,:pc-n,tl L•ft(,rt into
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992·2156

Weather forecast:

a.m.

"Eac~

Enid Rochelle Cole

Meigs

Tonight ... Pockets of freezing
rain lingering this evening, otherwise rain diminishing to drizzle
after midnight . Temperatures
steady or slowly rising into the
upper 30s. Southeast wind 5 to 10
mph shifting to southwest.
Chance of precip1tation 80 per-

fo r.

•

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Raci.ne

The chance for precipitation
will continue in the tri-county
area as a low pressure system
moves across""'the area, but should
taper off by Thursday morning,
forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
saicl there will be a chance of
SilO\\' that will mix with freezing
rain and rain.
Highs will be nea r 40 Thursd ay.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:07
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:46

13 Weeks............. .
:.............. S27JO
26 Wecks ............................................. $53."82
52 Weeks ..................... ~ .................. S\05.56
Rates Oullikl~ M~IKs County
13 Wecks .................................. ,..., ...... $29.25
26 Weeks ....................... ........... ,, ......... $56.68
52 Weeks ......................................... $109.72

...

MIDDLEPORT - Enid Rochelle Cole, 57, of70 North Second
MASON, W.Va. -Virginia K. "Mamie'' Noble, 78, Mason, died
Avenue, Middleport, died Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2000 at her residence.
Monday, Dec. 11, 2000 at her daughter's residence .
She wa s born January 14, \943, and was the daughter of the late
She was the daughter of the late Henry B. Nease and Kathryn N .
Pearl and Ruby Caldwell Cole.
Fruth Nease, and was a homemaker.
,
·
She was employed at the Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville as a
She was a member of the Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 157, and
nurse's aide, and was a member of the Racine United Methodist
the Women of the Moose, Chapter 594 in Point ·Pleasant, W.Va .
Church.
She was also preceded in qeath by a brother and a sister.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Pamela and Jack
Surviving are her husband, Homer M. Noble; a son and daughterin-law, Larry H. and Jody Noble of Mason; a daughter and son-in -law, Richard of Long Bottom ; one brother and sister-in-law, Otis aod
Diana and Paul Hoffman of Letart, W.Va .; a brother and sister-in-law, Ann alee Cole; one sister and brother-in-law, Angie and Sonny Miller
William H . "Bill" and Ramona Nease of Buckhannon, W.Va.; three sis- of Chester, Virgini a; one sister, Marjorie Mercer of ·L!ttle Hoc king;
ters-in-law, Ann E . Walsh of Mason, Francis Long of Lakin, W.Va., and three grandchildren, Woody, Jamie, and Janice Richards, all of Long
Bet!}&lt; Noble of South Charleston, W.Va.; four grandchildren and a Bottom; five great-grandchildren, Niki and Jake Brannon of
Reedsville, andJordin, Brody andJaylen Richard , all of Long Bottom;
great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be Thursday at 11 a·. m. at Sunrise Memorial one aunt, Helen Geoglein of Pomeroy; special friends, Russe ll
Gardens. Letart. Officiating will be the Rev. Behnie Stevens. There will Chevront, Minnie and Paul Johnson , Virginia Rowe , Helen Gardner,
\'!1.1itman Stevens and D onna Jea n Whaley Sellers; and several niece;
be no visitation .
and nt"phews .
B eSi de s h er parents, she was prec eded in death by six brothe(s,
will be taken after Jan . 1 to get Homer, Dwight, Floyd, Bernard, D orsel and Orville.
the JU nk
motor
vehicles
Funeral services will be held Friday. D ecemb er 15 ,2000 at 1 p.m ar
White
Funeral Home in Coolville. O ffiCiatin g will be th.e R.ev. Bri an
movt;!'d, but rt:sidt.•nts were
from Page AI
encouraged to take voluntary Harknt"ss.
Burial will be held in th e Success Cemetery in R eedsvd lc.
&lt;Jction.
The plan .is for the village to
Friends may t:a ll at the funl"r&lt;tl homl' o n Thursday, DccCmbcr l-i,
Hill advised that after the 10lease a computer and software
2000 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m .
norice is re c"'!'ived , every 30
from the state auditor's office.
Cost to the vi llage , it was days that ·the \lehicle re mams
noted, would be about the cost on the property is another
Mei gs County.
of forms · now used and the offense.
Steve Story, chamber preSidcnr.
At
an
earlit-r
council
meetclerk's time for making entries
said the Ohio EPA has extend ed
in the three sets. of books.
ing , cou n6 lmemb ers Joe Ev:tns
t:he comment penml for the purfrom Page AI
Street Commissioner John afld Greg Taylor were selected
po se of Athe ns- D;:Jn:vin permits
Holman was authorized to pur- to represent counci l on the VolB entley has be en hired as a fit- that. would allow the Ohi o
chase lifting straps needed to unteer Firemen's Dependency n~ss coordinator for the new pro- De-partment of Transportation to
lift some overturned stones at
grams, and will be instruGting relocate about 13.6 miles of U.S.
Bo ard.
the Greenwood Cemetery.
sc
n10rs m proper exernse tech- 33 between Athens and D arwm
Two member s of the fi~· c
He was also authorized to
nique s, as well as how to reach in Athens and M eigs counties. .
department are to be named.
purchase a sign for the public
individual exercise goals.
Story requested that interesre,d :
services building from Jason Then the four will select a vilFund-raising Chairman Jen- individuals send their comments
lage resident.
Shai.n .
nifer McBride informed memMayor' and council extended bers that the business-after-hours to the Ohio EPA, Attention: PerThere was a discussion on the
mits Processing Unit, P.O. Box
roof repair of the shelter ho.use thanks to the residents for the meeting will be Saturday at the
1049, Columbus, Oh10 43216af the Ole Ferry Landing Park, passage of the recent replace- Pomeroy Gun Club.
1049, ot by conta cting Kevi"
with the clerk being authorized ment levy for current expenses.
Admission to the event, which
ro write a letter to the contrac- They also extended thanks to starts at 7 p.m., will be a new roy Jo hnson at 614-728-0045.
In other matters , Party Pickens ,··
tor about completion of th e
R.ACO for the three Christmas th at IS unwrapp ed and valued at Sue Mason, Bobbi Karr, Jacki e
job.
decorations that were pur- around $10.
It was noted that the shelter ·
The toys wiU eventually be . Welker, and Eugene Triplett were ·
chased.
house was constructed several
given, to the Department of Job elected as th e new 200 l members
Hill
reported
that
he
IS trying
years ago by the Southern High
and Family Services to be distrib- of the chamber board of directo
get
a
representative
from
the
School FFA chapter, with funds
uted to disadvantaged families 111 tors.
state office to come to a local
fcom a Philip Morris grant.
A recent survey showed meeting so that the flood plain
increases b efore they go inio
approximately 27 junk motor regulations can be explained.
effect.
vehicles parked in the village.
He said two people are wantSection of Ohio Revised ing to move double-wides into
That action would require three
from Page AI
Code defines junk motor vehi- the village and another person
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readings of proposed legislatiQII
cle as three years or older,
wants to build a house in the
The proposal . Duffield intro- during council's «gular meeting.
apparently inoperable, missing
flood plain area. Council mem- duced Monday evening is "for
parts, damaged, and a fair marbers desire this increased tax review and consideration only,"
ket value of 51,500 or less.
Council decided to send let- base, but need to know the and coun cil must npprnvc any rate
ters, along with a copy of the legal liability caused by the
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appropriate law, informing the flood plain regulations.
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residents so they have an
Council adJonrned until Jan.
SUN 12/10/00THUR 12/1 4/00
opportunity to correct the situ- 8, subject for a need of a special
lOX OFFICI WIU OPIN AT
ation before any enforcement meeting.
6:!0 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
action is taken .
Attending were Robert Bee12:30 PM FOR SAT &amp;SUN MATINEIS
It was pointed our that in the
gle, Joe Evans, Bobbie Roy,
sec tion of ORC that a person,
Greg Taylor, Fred Wolfe and
having right uf possession of
the proporty on which a junk Larry Wolfe, council members,
motor whicle meeting the def- Hill, Lyons, Fire Chief David
inition IS located, will be given Ncigler, Marshal Dion Jones
a 10-day
.. notice by certified and Street Commissioner John
mail to: cover the junk motor Holman.
vehicle by placing it in a garage
or other suitable structure, or
removing it from the property.
Hill advised possible action

VALLEY WEATHER

cltu posta&amp;e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Assochucd Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auoct&amp;Uon.
POSTMASI'ER: Send address corrections to

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2001
DOG LICENSE
IS
JANUARY 31. Fees are Four Dollars ($4.00) for each dog, male
or female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
license by mail, complete and return application to: Nancy
Parker Campbell, Meigs County Auditor, 100 E. Second Street,
·Pomeroy, OH 45769. Enclose a self-addresses, stamped
envelope with a check for the price of the license.

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MIDDLEPORT -The Meigs
County Adult Basic ond Literacy
Education learning centers in
Middleport and Tuppers Plains
will close for the holidays at the
end of the day Friday.
Both centers will reopen on
Jan. 2 for regular schedules. More
information is available by calling
the Middleport Center at 9925808 or the Tuppers Plains Center at 667-0441.

Published e.very afternoon, Monday through
· Frid1y, Ill Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishlni Comp1ny. Second

NOTICE TO .· I&gt;OG· OWNERS

I OWNER OF DOG
ADDRESS
I TELEPHONE
SEX
I AGE
I Yr. Mo. M F
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Leaming centers
to dose

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VIrginia K. 'Mamie' Noble

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

The Da ily Senti nel , 111 Court S1 .• Pomeroy,

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SJ ti.'r .1dults ..111d $2 ti.,r l"htldrcn
umk•r l 2.

•
nes

cent.
Thursday....Cloudy

with a
chance of dnzzle . Highs near 40.
Thur sday
night ... Mostly

ci on," sh e added.
In addition to buying gifts.
spo n sors also m ade nton etary
donatiom to the project"s gift
fund sn that gtfts can be bou ght
for o ther childreli .lt C hri stma stime, and at "othl·r times when
nl'cdcd. during the year. HobstcttL'r S,Jid.
"Wt• c.m .til be gr,m..ful fur thl·
good p4..'nplc ttl our county who
truly about thml' kss fortunate ," ·
1-lobsretter s3ld. "Althou gh the
sponsor llL'Vcr.. kn mn w h n
rl'Cl'I\' L'd thl' lr gift it 'll'l'lllS tO be
en o ugh to know th.tt they have
l'Xcmplifi~.·d tl\c tn1c m~..·an111g nt
Christm.H;.''

Recliners
Starting at
0
5

339°

~£!!-.xstee.

ANDERSON'S
Furniture • Appliances • Carpet
106 East Main Street
Ohio
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�The Dally Sentinel • Page A}

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pege A 2 • The Dilly Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS .

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Kest wll seek mayor's job
TOLEDO (AP) - Lucas County T"'asurer Ray K.,;t announc~d
Tuesday he will run for Toledo mayor next ye&gt;r.
Kest, a Democrat who in November was elected to his fifth term as
county treasurer, h~ been in office since 1985.
He has raised more than $200,000 for the campaign, according to
John Irish, cluef deputy t"'asurer.
Mayor Carty Finkbeiner spent about $250,000 on his first mayoral
campaign m 1993.
The city's c harter prohibits Finkbeiner from running for a third
c;,rm in 2001.
Kest, 50, is the first candidate officially to enter the race.
He was in a car accident last month and suffered a skull fracture. His
wife. Sherr,; was seriously injured. Kest said his mjuries would nut
slow his campaign for mayor.

Murder-suidde suspected
C INC INNATI (AP) -A Cincinnati couple was found dead in the
bJSt"mcnt of their home in ;1 crin1e police are investigating as ;111 .tppar~nt

murder-suicide.
Po lice fmmd the body of a H-year-old woman with multiple stab
\\'Duncls Mondty and ti.mnd he-r 51-yeJr-old husb.tnd hang,·d. lnwsriC
~ators think tht' )1usband killt'd his esrrangt"d wife, rht'n cmn minl'd
su i cid~.

Nault'S of {he p.ur wen~ bl•ing with.hdd pending notific.uion of rd:nin..·s.
Family HH.·mh. ;rs told poli r~ th~ co uple h.lli bl·cn cx:pt.-ricn cing:
m~:JicJ1 pmblems ti1r the p:tst f~?\V wt·~ks and they went w thL' rt'SIdence Monday ,·wning. diS..-o,·ercd the bodies md called police.
The woman lllO\"t.'d imo tht• nt.&gt;ighborhood about eight years ::~.go
.md h~:r son lived with the couple- unnl he mm·t·d to his own :lpart11\ent a few months ago. said neighbor Rhureli.1 Grisby.
· GrisbY s.11d the woman was originally from Jamaica and apparently
llll't her future husbJnd during nne of her ;tnnual visits there. They
married aboLlt a year-and-a-half ago.

Mom convidecl in slaying
CLEVELAND (AP) - A woman who admitted beating her 4year-old daughter With a purse strap and shoe could be sentenced to
life in prison after being conviCted of murder and felonious assault.
A jury COIJ\oicred Lashon Sawyer on Tuesday of killing her daughter
Sydney, who died April 28 from internal inJuries after being hum the
abdomen.
- lr rook the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas jury about seven
hours of ddibcratiom to find Sawyer gwlrv. Sawyer fa ces a mandatory 15 year sentence and up to life in prison. She is to be sentenced on
JaiL 'J.
In October, .t JUry deadlocked on the murder and felonious assault
charges against Sawyer.
.. S;nvyer,16. said through her attorney, Rufus Suns, that her boyfriend
killed Sydney and the prosecution knowingly let her rake the fall.
"This is all ridiculous .... Tllis verdict is ridiculous," Sims said.
Smyer's hvc-in boYfriend, Patrick Frazier, has pleaded guilty to
in\"Oiun tary manslaughter for failing to get the gul medical attention.
fnitially. Frazier, 21, was also charged with murder in -the case but he
cu i a deal with prosecutors in exchange for testifYing against Sa\vyer.
He faces one to five years m prison and is scheduled to be sentenced
Wednesdav.
Prosecu;ors said they were glad to get the murder co~on.
"Thi s little gul had a mother wtthout a heart, without a soul," said
A&gt;mtant Cuya hoga County Prosecutor Richard Bombik.

Officer found guiHy of felonies
:C]LF.VE LAND (AI') - A Cleveland police officer faces up to 16
ye•rs HI prison •fta being convicted of thn;e felonies for his p;Irt in a
c.1Q1pgnll111d C.lJ5ttlrbancl'.

t-11 Ashtabul.t County Common Ple.ts jury Tuesday co11vicred ·a
CJ:rveblld parrulma11 Stephen Jones, 33, of fdo11ious assault, assault on
'.1 I?,Olice officer and resisting arrest.
:Prosecutor Thomas Sartim said J&lt;&gt;lles could get six to 16 years in
p(ison but said he would not seck the maximum.
Judge G.try Yost allowed Jones to remain free on bond until his sentellcing which is likely to be early next year.
'ince convirred felons can nor c;trry guns, Jones can no longer work
J~ ~ sworn law enforcement officer in ()hio.
~nes, a six- year member of the Cleveland police force, was arrested
by an Ash ta bllla County shentl"'s deputy on Apnl 15 after a disturb~nce at a.rural ca mpground in Andover Township.
Local depllties and pohce testified Jones taunted them and tried to .
miimidate them with the fact that he was a Cleveland policeman .
J.t&gt;nes testified that he· was only trying to quiet an argument between
a f;ther and son at the campground .
f)efense attorney Mark McClain argued that Jones was completely
innocent.
" I thmk the re was sufficient evidence In the record to show that Mr.
]lnies did not co mmit the crimes for \vhich he was convicted," s::~.id
McCiai1i. " We will appeal."

Taxpayers foot bill for fees
'l::lEVELAND (AP) - An oversight by Attorney General Betty
l'vt.mtgomery's office could leave taxpayers paying th e legal .bills for
. 1\Vo stiip clubs, a newspaper reported.
Federal law allows the losing side of a la\vsuit to be required to pay
the• winning side's court costs. A j udge typically can reduce a bill or
throw it out iffees are disputed and found to be excessive.
J" h ~th CircUit U.S. Court of Appeals gave Montgomery's office 30 .
dzys to contest the legal fees for Tiffany's Cabarets in Brunswick and
qevdand, bur her staff didn 't challenge them until 38 days later, th e
l'b1n Dealer reported Wednesd1y.
:The Ohio Department of Public Safe ty has_ been ordered "to pay
.1bqut $33,000 in lawyers fees.
Spokesm.1n Joe Case said Montgomery's office bdieve~ it ca n still
cQ.nt~st the fee-s in an appeal on the ments of the c.1se.
j:.arlwr thi s yea r, the cabarets' b\\ycrs \VOn .1 courr b.1nlc to protect
nlJ:de .md topless dancing. •
io state officials' battle co limir such d.mcing. t~dn.tl courts han~
deQared the ruk'5 uncoll!'itltlltlon:tl mfnngeJ~lt'nt!'i on frct•dom of

expression.
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Cleveland to pay S1.25 million

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CLEVELA Nil (A P) - The· , itv h.11 wttkd ·' "·nm;,1irl tbth l.t\\ ~u it .1nd .tgrL·eJ to p.1 y S1.23 mi llion to the C'l111ily of .1 m.1n who d!L'd
pphcc cmtody 111 I {J&lt;J~.
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dlt'g" ( til!llty Cqi'UJII.'t
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Wldneaday, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Couple charg~ with possession of stolen car_
RAY (AP) - An unrelat~.d co urt case
and out-of-place license plat~ led authorities to a body they believe is that of a missing Kenyon College student.
The remains were found at a trailer
owned by a man who worked with 20year-old Emily Murray.
Preliminary autopsy reports show the
woman in the trailer was killed by a a single gunshot wound to the head. A positive
identifiCation from dental records is
expected by Wedn es day but Vinton County

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Ballgame changed

erty for having Murray's car on their prop-

Coroner Carl Greever said the clothes and
a dove tattoo on the body match Murray';
description.
"All the mdications are that this is her,"
Greever said Tuesday.
Murray was last seen Nov. 3 after working her last scheduled shift at the Pirate's
Cove pizza restaurant in Gambier, which is
walking di.stance from the Kenyon campus.
The kitchen manager, 24-year-old Gre~
gory McKnight, and his wife, Kathryn, 35,
are c harged with receiving of stolen prop-

l'lw Snurhnn - Feder.tl Hocking boys varsity basketball game
scheduled for Friday night in
Stewart has been moved to
Southern's Charles W. Hayman
gymnas!um in Racine. Southern
will go to Federal Hocking in
January on the date originally
scheduled for home .

erty in Ray, 80 miles south uf their main
home in Gambier.
They were both arraigned Tuesday in
Vinton County and ar~ being hdd on $1
million bond. Neither has been charged in
connection with the body found in thei-r
trailer. Knox County Sher.iff David Barber

.

said th~y are the only suspects in Murray's

.
disappearance.

Meeting date set

.

MIDDLEPORT - The next
regular meeting ~f Middleport
Village Council will be Dec. 21
at 7:30p.m., due _to Christmas.

Interior secretary won't visit College student accused
proposed refuge site after all of setting fatal·fire
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COLUMBUS (AP) - lnierior
Secretary Bruce Babbitt has cancekd plam co VISit Madison and
Union coumh.' S this wcl·k to
speak on beh.tlf of the Little
D arby Nation.1l Wildli fe Refuge.
" Little Darby j ust didn't fit
uno [he schedule," Inter ior
DepJrtm e nt spoh.· smJu Tim
Ahern said Tuesday. "It ha sn't
been resc heduled . Were kin.-! ofrunning out of time . I doubt th.tt
wc.·'rc going to be there."
Supporters ,md opponents of
the refuge sold a visit by Babbitt
wasn't likel y to make a difference
in whether a refuge is created,
smce a new federal administration
is to take office in five weeks.
"As far as him being in a posiuon to do anything, it's a little
late," said Tom Larson , the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service's Mid-

Breakfast with
Santa

.

DAYTON (AP) -A Univer- said t!Jl Morgan lived in the
sity of Dayton student charged house with Cohen.
with setting a fire that killed his . ''This is ce rtainly soml·oue
houscm:atc wa s due in co urt who se t a house on fin· becau se.
Wednesday to face charges of of his condu ct .md :1s a rcmlt of
involuntar y IllilllSlaughte r and this arson, J y&lt;mng lll.lll lost his
life," He ck sai d .
arson.
He said Colwn was the only
Paul Vincent Morgan , 20, of
Rochester, N .Y. , was taken to D ill' sleep ing on [he second
the Montgomery County ja il · floor, where the fire was CO II Tuesday evening after wrning cemrated. ()thers wCrc on the
firs\ Ooor when the tire started
hintself in to city police.
The charges are related to the early Sunday.
Heck said Morgan lighted
death Sunday of Austin Cohen
jn a house fire. Others in the ·"an object th at ignited the
house rented from the universi- entire hou se." He would not
ty escaped bur were unable to identifY the object.
The fire alarm had been disget back inside to rescue Cohen,
21, of Loveland.
connected previously by someHis brother, Dustin Cohen, is one and was reconnected by
a lin ebacker for the St. Louis university officials. Sometime
before the fire, it was disconRams.
Prosecutor Mathias Heck Jr. nected again , Heck said.

west regional . planning chief.
"Whatever's done will probably
be done after he 's out of office."
'' Politically speaking, I don 't
ktlOW how mu cli time he would
have had to nuke decisions either
way," said Madi son County Comnussion~r lhvid Dhuml.; ,Vho
opposes the refugL". " We viewed a
vtsit Js .an opportunity to explain
the Situation and hopefully inOuence him to the point that we
could prove that there wasn 't a
need for a n:fugc.''
The Fish and Wildlife Service,
which the Interior Department
overse~s. wants to cre-ate a refuge
by purchasing 23,000 acres
around Little Darby Creek and
buying development rights to
26,000 oth~r acres in the creek's
watershed during 1he next 30
years.

POMEROY - Breakf.1sr with
Santa \Vill be ' ar Meigs Musl"um
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m . Reservations should be made by calling
the museti\1\ , 992-3t! 10. Cost is

Core
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EMS answers 35 calls
POMEROY- Units of the
Meigs Emerg e n cy Service
answered 35 calls for ass is tance over Friday, Saturday,
Sunday and Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Friday, 3:32 p. m , Oh io
143 , Earlene Kennedy, Holzer
Medical Center;
10:56 . p.m.,
R1v e rside
Apartments, Paul Stei nmctz,
HMC ;
S aturda y, ~ :OS p.m .. llrodnck Hollow, Addie Reit min:-, refused tn:a t menr:
7:45p.m .. Wek htown Hill,
B~atri c e Willi antsnn , HMC :
Sund.1y, 2:42 a.m., Willo\\"
Lt1nc , Pansy Jont:s, Ple;ts.ant
Valley Hospital;
(&gt;:54 a.m., Bradbury Road,
motor vehicle accide nt. Ctthv
and Wayne Pauley, refu,.d
treatment;
8:43 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
vehicle
accident,
Brooks
Sayre, June Sayre, HMC ,
Mel issa Holman, Denise Holman , Johnathun McCarty,
Joyc,e Sisson, refused treatment;
1 :5'i_ p .m. , Lin co ln Street,
Rob e rt Eblin, HMC;
Monday, 6:40 a. m ., Overbrook. Nursing Ce nter , Ada
Starcher. PVH;
6:25 p . m , Pinegrove Road ,
Roy Parker, St. Jo sep h's
M e morial Ho spi t al.
MIDDLEPORT
Saturda y, 9:28 p.m ., State
Route 1 24, motor ve h icle
a cc ident , Brandon
Hood,
HMC;
Mond ay, 7:02 p.m., Flood
Road , Erica Bla c kwell, Tere ."
Barron, HM C;
11 :05 p.m., North Second
Street, Junior
Bla ckwe ll ,
HMC.
POMEROY
Fnday, 7:10 p.m .. O hi o
124 , C h a rl e; Deem, PVH ;
9:28 p.m., Union Avenue,
Sara h M c Dowell , tre.lted;
11..)5 p .m ., Willow C re e k
Ro ad, Anth ony Rowe, HM C;
S:~turday. 12 :-t h am., Con-

dor Street, Terry Mullins,
HM C;
&lt;J:2r, p.m., Ohio 124. motor
ve hi c le.·
::tccJde n r,
S.tndr.J
Sc hri c·ber, f-IM C;
Mond.n·. 7:1l2 p.m .. Flood
Road. Mi sty Withrow, 1-!M C
RACINE
S.Jtuni.Iy. K·J2 .1.111 . Mtk
Hill. Sh1rlcy ll.nk" . tre.Ltnl.
\tJ1Jd.1y. -t ·J7 p 111.. lho ,Jd \\",\\" Awntre. lnC7 l lrll. !'VII :
(J: I(J

p , lll., W111CI\\'

l_ .l lll',

I'VL-1.
R EEDSV ILLE
\und.1y. &lt;J: 17 .1 111 . '-;tl c~ ~..-~~
RD ,JJ. 1!1{)[{)1 \Thllil· .J\..(1dl'nt. Dc.,bhll' &lt;~dntorc. C.1111
P.lll'-&gt;Y Jnlll'\ ,

den-Clark Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
Fnd ay, 4:08 p.m ., Cotterill
Ro ad, Josh Howard , tre ated;
Saturd ay, 10:29 a. m ., Meigs
Mine 2, Michael Curnette,
HMC;
9: 13p.m., Ohio 124 , motor
vehicle
accident,
C rystal
Hood , HMC;
Sunday,
1 "1: 19
a. m .,
Nicho lson Run . Josh Partlow,

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.
106 North Second Ave .
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

(740) 992-2635

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treated,

Monda y. 12 : :iJ p 111., New
Lim a Road . Virf;inia McCiel1,.\d , PVH;
~:01
p.m., Powell Street,
Patsy
Perkins ,
O'Bl&lt;n&lt;ss
Mem~Jrial Hospital ;
11 :04 p.m . , Ohio 1~3 ,
Sonya L,, e, HMC.
SYRACUSE
Sunday, 9:37 a.m., Ohio -7,
motor v~:hicle ;-~ccid~nt, Agnr:s
Princo. CCM.f-1.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 1 p.m . , Christy
Road, Wilma Eynon, PVH ;
7:40p.m., Ohio 681, Joe
Short , OBMH;
Sund·ay, 9 : 11 a. m ., Success
Road , motor vehicle accidenr, Tony Jones , treated;
Monday, 7:04p.m .. Ohio 7,
Valerie M cC linto c k, tre ated .

from Page AI

Dec. 12 date will be unconstitut,ional .. . we rev~rse the judgnlent
of the Supreme Court of Florida
ordering the recount to proceed."
The electoral votes will be cast
formally on Dec. 18, and counted
in a joint session of Congress on
Jan. 6.
In the majority were ChiefJustice William H. Rehnquist and
Justices Sandra Day O'Connor,
Antonin Scalia, Anthony M.
Kenned,y and Clarence Thomas .
' Dissenting were Justices John
Paul Stevens, David H. Souter,
Ruth Bader Gmsburg and
Stephen G. Breyer. In a forceful
dissent, Stevens wrote: "Although
.w e may never know with complete certainty the identity of the
winner of this year's presidential
~lection, the identity of the loser is
Rerfectly clear. It is the nation's
~onfidence in the judge as an
if11partial guardian of the law."
· Souter and B"'Yer ag,.,ed there
were constitutional problem~ with
·the "'count _o rdered by the Flo,rida court, but did not rule out the
possibility of the state court being
able to fix them if allowed to do
so and rhus did not join the 5-4
majority.
Even before the ruling,
Cheney, a veteran of the House as
well as a former defense secretary,
arranged to spend part of his day
Wednesday in the Capitol, meeting with Republicans.
And in Tallahassee, where the
GOP-controlled Legislature was
n1oving tO cndorst: its own slate of
ekcrors for Bush, the court's rul-

ing gavt&gt;: pause.
" It appears we have finality,"

fnttw111r-111~~·

n• D....HIColorTY
·~.tg~CIIIIIiol~..,

• MII/W i l l - wilt.'~' o1 ~....uo ~

. •lllkl '" ''"""!l.~"""""
• U ,,_,..,. l'clc~ wr!lo U Clod &amp; fZ ~
• tm......., ~ coro~n~~ ... ., 019w a-...~ 01'111

_..,.

The Daily Sentinel

•H_.,.•,

•Tri(j,y.ooll(tNI~

Ohio45769
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Fees
Paid

NOTICE : Llc •n•• mu•t b• obtained no later than J•nuary 31, 2001 to avoid paying penalty. After thla dat•.
p•nalty will b• $4 .00 for alngla t•g and $20 .00 for Kannelllcenaa .

I

To be dosed
POMEROY - TheTB Clinic
office will be closed Friday from
11 a.m . to 4 p.o}t. for an employoe
.Christmas celebration. Normal
busii1ess operations will resume
Monday at 8 a. m .
said Karen Chandler, a spokeswoman for Senate President John
M cKay. Chandler said her boss
would decide Wednesday morning whether the Senate would
cancel its plam to vote. The House
gave its approval to the measure
on Tuesday on a near party-line
vote.
The ruling was the latest turning point in the nation's unbearably close election, a saga of
counts, recounts, lawsuits by the
dozens and two trips to the highest court in the land. For five
tumultuous weeks, it has held
Gore and Bush in limbo and the
nation in thrall, and seared new
terms into the n.ltion's consciOusness - · "dimpled chad" most
prominent among them.
That was one description for
partially punched ballots, thousands of which were at the center
of the contested election in Florida.
Without the state's 25 electoral
votes, neither Bush ,nor Gore had
the votes in the, Electoral College
needed to become president. With.
them, victory was • certainty.
In Belfast, Northern Ireland,
President Clinton said he wanted
to read the opinions before commenting on the · Supreme Court
decision. " I may want to make a
statcn1ent later," he said.
The Bush campaign moved
gi}tgerly in the hours after the ruling. as if to avoid crowding Gore
in his hour of defeat. "This has
been a lon g and arduous process
for everyone involved on both
s1des,"· Baker told reporters in
Florida, where he had commanded a postelection Republi ca n
campaign
through
several
recounts and a fistful of lawsuits.

1 00 E. Second Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL • Meigs County Auditor

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MORE LOCAL NEWS,
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clolldy. Lows 30 to 35.

New5 Departments
The main number Is 992·2155. Department
extensions are:
Genenl Mamtliler ........................... F.xt. 1101
News ................................................ Ext. 1102
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Needy
from Page AI
year,

th~

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Sponso rs Sl'c.m

mor~ willin g to give of thcm~dvc~ to lllJkc this pl\)j~rt suc-

ressfll l.'' H obstetter s;nd. ""T he
members of the nrganizacions not
only ~pc.·nd thl'ir 0\\'11 money ro
buy tht: g 1fts, but ~ct a!--idc their
ow n pcr-.on;1.l timt.' to shop for the
pciiCct. gift for rlw Angel they an.:
-.pnmnrmg.
.. Thl'Y put o,:pc-n,tl L•ft(,rt into
wr.tppmg the gift~ and .b ringing
tlicm to our oflict:s for d1stnbu-

Subscribe today.
992·2156

Weather forecast:

a.m.

"Eac~

Enid Rochelle Cole

Meigs

Tonight ... Pockets of freezing
rain lingering this evening, otherwise rain diminishing to drizzle
after midnight . Temperatures
steady or slowly rising into the
upper 30s. Southeast wind 5 to 10
mph shifting to southwest.
Chance of precip1tation 80 per-

fo r.

•

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Raci.ne

The chance for precipitation
will continue in the tri-county
area as a low pressure system
moves across""'the area, but should
taper off by Thursday morning,
forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
saicl there will be a chance of
SilO\\' that will mix with freezing
rain and rain.
Highs will be nea r 40 Thursd ay.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:07
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:46

13 Weeks............. .
:.............. S27JO
26 Wecks ............................................. $53."82
52 Weeks ..................... ~ .................. S\05.56
Rates Oullikl~ M~IKs County
13 Wecks .................................. ,..., ...... $29.25
26 Weeks ....................... ........... ,, ......... $56.68
52 Weeks ......................................... $109.72

...

MIDDLEPORT - Enid Rochelle Cole, 57, of70 North Second
MASON, W.Va. -Virginia K. "Mamie'' Noble, 78, Mason, died
Avenue, Middleport, died Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2000 at her residence.
Monday, Dec. 11, 2000 at her daughter's residence .
She wa s born January 14, \943, and was the daughter of the late
She was the daughter of the late Henry B. Nease and Kathryn N .
Pearl and Ruby Caldwell Cole.
Fruth Nease, and was a homemaker.
,
·
She was employed at the Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville as a
She was a member of the Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 157, and
nurse's aide, and was a member of the Racine United Methodist
the Women of the Moose, Chapter 594 in Point ·Pleasant, W.Va .
Church.
She was also preceded in qeath by a brother and a sister.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Pamela and Jack
Surviving are her husband, Homer M. Noble; a son and daughterin-law, Larry H. and Jody Noble of Mason; a daughter and son-in -law, Richard of Long Bottom ; one brother and sister-in-law, Otis aod
Diana and Paul Hoffman of Letart, W.Va .; a brother and sister-in-law, Ann alee Cole; one sister and brother-in-law, Angie and Sonny Miller
William H . "Bill" and Ramona Nease of Buckhannon, W.Va.; three sis- of Chester, Virgini a; one sister, Marjorie Mercer of ·L!ttle Hoc king;
ters-in-law, Ann E . Walsh of Mason, Francis Long of Lakin, W.Va., and three grandchildren, Woody, Jamie, and Janice Richards, all of Long
Bet!}&lt; Noble of South Charleston, W.Va.; four grandchildren and a Bottom; five great-grandchildren, Niki and Jake Brannon of
Reedsville, andJordin, Brody andJaylen Richard , all of Long Bottom;
great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be Thursday at 11 a·. m. at Sunrise Memorial one aunt, Helen Geoglein of Pomeroy; special friends, Russe ll
Gardens. Letart. Officiating will be the Rev. Behnie Stevens. There will Chevront, Minnie and Paul Johnson , Virginia Rowe , Helen Gardner,
\'!1.1itman Stevens and D onna Jea n Whaley Sellers; and several niece;
be no visitation .
and nt"phews .
B eSi de s h er parents, she was prec eded in death by six brothe(s,
will be taken after Jan . 1 to get Homer, Dwight, Floyd, Bernard, D orsel and Orville.
the JU nk
motor
vehicles
Funeral services will be held Friday. D ecemb er 15 ,2000 at 1 p.m ar
White
Funeral Home in Coolville. O ffiCiatin g will be th.e R.ev. Bri an
movt;!'d, but rt:sidt.•nts were
from Page AI
encouraged to take voluntary Harknt"ss.
Burial will be held in th e Success Cemetery in R eedsvd lc.
&lt;Jction.
The plan .is for the village to
Friends may t:a ll at the funl"r&lt;tl homl' o n Thursday, DccCmbcr l-i,
Hill advised that after the 10lease a computer and software
2000 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m .
norice is re c"'!'ived , every 30
from the state auditor's office.
Cost to the vi llage , it was days that ·the \lehicle re mams
noted, would be about the cost on the property is another
Mei gs County.
of forms · now used and the offense.
Steve Story, chamber preSidcnr.
At
an
earlit-r
council
meetclerk's time for making entries
said the Ohio EPA has extend ed
in the three sets. of books.
ing , cou n6 lmemb ers Joe Ev:tns
t:he comment penml for the purfrom Page AI
Street Commissioner John afld Greg Taylor were selected
po se of Athe ns- D;:Jn:vin permits
Holman was authorized to pur- to represent counci l on the VolB entley has be en hired as a fit- that. would allow the Ohi o
chase lifting straps needed to unteer Firemen's Dependency n~ss coordinator for the new pro- De-partment of Transportation to
lift some overturned stones at
grams, and will be instruGting relocate about 13.6 miles of U.S.
Bo ard.
the Greenwood Cemetery.
sc
n10rs m proper exernse tech- 33 between Athens and D arwm
Two member s of the fi~· c
He was also authorized to
nique s, as well as how to reach in Athens and M eigs counties. .
department are to be named.
purchase a sign for the public
individual exercise goals.
Story requested that interesre,d :
services building from Jason Then the four will select a vilFund-raising Chairman Jen- individuals send their comments
lage resident.
Shai.n .
nifer McBride informed memMayor' and council extended bers that the business-after-hours to the Ohio EPA, Attention: PerThere was a discussion on the
mits Processing Unit, P.O. Box
roof repair of the shelter ho.use thanks to the residents for the meeting will be Saturday at the
1049, Columbus, Oh10 43216af the Ole Ferry Landing Park, passage of the recent replace- Pomeroy Gun Club.
1049, ot by conta cting Kevi"
with the clerk being authorized ment levy for current expenses.
Admission to the event, which
ro write a letter to the contrac- They also extended thanks to starts at 7 p.m., will be a new roy Jo hnson at 614-728-0045.
In other matters , Party Pickens ,··
tor about completion of th e
R.ACO for the three Christmas th at IS unwrapp ed and valued at Sue Mason, Bobbi Karr, Jacki e
job.
decorations that were pur- around $10.
It was noted that the shelter ·
The toys wiU eventually be . Welker, and Eugene Triplett were ·
chased.
house was constructed several
given, to the Department of Job elected as th e new 200 l members
Hill
reported
that
he
IS trying
years ago by the Southern High
and Family Services to be distrib- of the chamber board of directo
get
a
representative
from
the
School FFA chapter, with funds
uted to disadvantaged families 111 tors.
state office to come to a local
fcom a Philip Morris grant.
A recent survey showed meeting so that the flood plain
increases b efore they go inio
approximately 27 junk motor regulations can be explained.
effect.
vehicles parked in the village.
He said two people are wantSection of Ohio Revised ing to move double-wides into
That action would require three
from Page AI
Code defines junk motor vehi- the village and another person
'
readings of proposed legislatiQII
cle as three years or older,
wants to build a house in the
The proposal . Duffield intro- during council's «gular meeting.
apparently inoperable, missing
flood plain area. Council mem- duced Monday evening is "for
parts, damaged, and a fair marbers desire this increased tax review and consideration only,"
ket value of 51,500 or less.
Council decided to send let- base, but need to know the and coun cil must npprnvc any rate
ters, along with a copy of the legal liability caused by the
\ l' ll l!JI, VAlli YWI! MA
...,
appropriate law, informing the flood plain regulations.
&lt;
4524
'
'
""
.
...
'
44
r,
residents so they have an
Council adJonrned until Jan.
SUN 12/10/00THUR 12/1 4/00
opportunity to correct the situ- 8, subject for a need of a special
lOX OFFICI WIU OPIN AT
ation before any enforcement meeting.
6:!0 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
action is taken .
Attending were Robert Bee12:30 PM FOR SAT &amp;SUN MATINEIS
It was pointed our that in the
gle, Joe Evans, Bobbie Roy,
sec tion of ORC that a person,
Greg Taylor, Fred Wolfe and
having right uf possession of
the proporty on which a junk Larry Wolfe, council members,
motor whicle meeting the def- Hill, Lyons, Fire Chief David
inition IS located, will be given Ncigler, Marshal Dion Jones
a 10-day
.. notice by certified and Street Commissioner John
mail to: cover the junk motor Holman.
vehicle by placing it in a garage
or other suitable structure, or
removing it from the property.
Hill advised possible action

VALLEY WEATHER

cltu posta&amp;e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Assochucd Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auoct&amp;Uon.
POSTMASI'ER: Send address corrections to

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2001
DOG LICENSE
IS
JANUARY 31. Fees are Four Dollars ($4.00) for each dog, male
or female. Kennel Fees are Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
license by mail, complete and return application to: Nancy
Parker Campbell, Meigs County Auditor, 100 E. Second Street,
·Pomeroy, OH 45769. Enclose a self-addresses, stamped
envelope with a check for the price of the license.

••
•

MIDDLEPORT -The Meigs
County Adult Basic ond Literacy
Education learning centers in
Middleport and Tuppers Plains
will close for the holidays at the
end of the day Friday.
Both centers will reopen on
Jan. 2 for regular schedules. More
information is available by calling
the Middleport Center at 9925808 or the Tuppers Plains Center at 667-0441.

Published e.very afternoon, Monday through
· Frid1y, Ill Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishlni Comp1ny. Second

NOTICE TO .· I&gt;OG· OWNERS

I OWNER OF DOG
ADDRESS
I TELEPHONE
SEX
I AGE
I Yr. Mo. M F
I
I
I
I
I
I
'
I
1

Leaming centers
to dose

••

VIrginia K. 'Mamie' Noble

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

The Da ily Senti nel , 111 Court S1 .• Pomeroy,

'

SJ ti.'r .1dults ..111d $2 ti.,r l"htldrcn
umk•r l 2.

•
nes

cent.
Thursday....Cloudy

with a
chance of dnzzle . Highs near 40.
Thur sday
night ... Mostly

ci on," sh e added.
In addition to buying gifts.
spo n sors also m ade nton etary
donatiom to the project"s gift
fund sn that gtfts can be bou ght
for o ther childreli .lt C hri stma stime, and at "othl·r times when
nl'cdcd. during the year. HobstcttL'r S,Jid.
"Wt• c.m .til be gr,m..ful fur thl·
good p4..'nplc ttl our county who
truly about thml' kss fortunate ," ·
1-lobsretter s3ld. "Althou gh the
sponsor llL'Vcr.. kn mn w h n
rl'Cl'I\' L'd thl' lr gift it 'll'l'lllS tO be
en o ugh to know th.tt they have
l'Xcmplifi~.·d tl\c tn1c m~..·an111g nt
Christm.H;.''

Recliners
Starting at
0
5

339°

~£!!-.xstee.

ANDERSON'S
Furniture • Appliances • Carpet
106 East Main Street
Ohio
\

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' tl , II I

�..

e_D_ai~ly_~_n_tin_e_l_______________()~~~~~~C)II

PageA4

Th
__

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
7~992·2156 • FIX: 992·2157

lll~

w. .

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey

R. Shawn Lawla

Publisher

Managing Editor
•. ~

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Chari- Hoeflich
G_,.IManager
LiltiM'I ta 1M Mikw tJn

wlta.e~.

•
.DEAR ABBY: My \l-ife, our 7-yearI •
Silvia has been offered higher adminisofd daughter, Silvia, and I arrived in Los
trative positions, she's decided to
Al!geles in June 1965~ .(\t the time, Silremain in the classroom with her "little
".
via had less than three months of first
ones.
grade and didn't speak a word Gf EngBless you, Mrs. Mertha. You are livlish. We enrolled her in elementary
ing proof that bureaucratic laws are not
school in Alhambra, Calif., where she
substitute for love and affection. "?S placed in a class taught by an older,
RUJ)OLPH SPADANO, HACiENDA
conservative teacb,er who had little •
1-lEIGHTS, CALIF.
ADVICE
p~tience. The teacher V)Ould yell at. Sil- '
DEAR RUDOLPH: Thank you for
vfa for not understanding English.
sharing the touching story about a •ig)
: As you can imagine, taking Silvia to the classroom. She spoke English to her nificant chapter in your daughter's life.
school each day became a Greek , in
ntost ]oving way1 in a sweet. soft . It teaches two lessons- that a dedicattr\lgedy. She would
from the time voice. Within a week, our daughter was ed tea cher can make a profound differslle got into the car and continued as actually happy to be going to school. In ence in a child's life, and that it's not
slle walked through the school's gates. a month, she was speaking with her only what you say, but also how you say
She also cried at home.
new friends in English'
it that conveys a me-.ssagt:.
: Fortunately, our daughter was transDEAR ABBY: Please remind your
Miss Luke eventually married and
fe.'tred into another class that was taught became Mrs. Merth:i. If she reads this, readers that there will soon be a presiby a younger teacher, Miss Luke. Miss we \vant her to know that Silvia, who dential election, and "We, the People,"
Lf,ke didn 't understand a word of Span- showed talent for both writing and art, can either let our voices be heard or
ish, but she. would wait at the gate for decided to follow in her footsteps and re-1nain silent.
olu arrival in the morning, take Silvia's become a teacher like her. Although
Politicians have power, but we, the
h~nd a~id walk with her 'all the w~y to
people, have power, too. We have the

.

Abigail
Y~n Buren a

1

~

-t

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

TU, dtoMJ.f N .l.u lAM 100 ~-AU,,.,.,_ •tUJ}m

,.,;,,.ed

JD Hililtr aM.., H ritnH Pd i~teu.M otlthu Mil 1tlfllwtt' 1t11111M-. No
ltlt•rr wiU
N pdliJitiNl. 1..tt1m sllodl H 111 rOf1lfl ,.,., ~ lssws, iwlfHno•iitWs.
Tit• ~tu Ufii'WtsH. U. t1tt cMI.waklow.,. rlu rofl.JII'II.u u aflllt Oltio \'tllh1 P~tbll11tint

Co.., ~ HMrl.

lliWU

tlfltfrwiu ltOltd.

OUR VIEW

•

Jer~

Resolving to make our roads
a sqfor place in 2001
'Tis the season to make resolutions, so in that spirit, allow us to be .
among the first to offer an aspiration: ~
.
"We, the motorists of the tri-county region, will strive to share
the road, be mindful of our fellow motorists and, most importantly,
place ample value on our lives and the lives of others while driving."
This is a resolution we at Ohio Valley Publishing Co. would love
to see honored to its fullest intent. We don't like running stories in
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, The Daily Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register about people losing their lives in automobile tragedies.
Unfortunately, we cover far too many lraffic fatalities; perhaps
more per capita than other regions our size.
Why is that?
Are too many local motorists in a hurry? Are too many local
motorists careless? Ar, our roads in such dangerous shape? Are our
vehicles in such ill-repair? Are the lessons learned in clriver education programs so quickly forgotten? Are we in need of more patrols
. on the road?
We can't answer these and other questions right now, but until we
can the senseless deaths will contin11e.
To help tri-county motorists keep the above resolution, we vow
to study the statistics, traffic patterns, behavioral patterns and whatever else it takes to stem the tide of traffic fatalities in the new year.
The stories detailing tri~county driving conditions will appear as an
occasional series called " Danger Ahead."
Here's what we need from you:
• If an OVP staffer asks you about your driving habits, be truthful. Few, if any, of us are perfect drivers.
• If you have a concern about a dangerous intersection or traffic
condition , ler us know about it. Through the power of the pen,
maybe we can get the problem fixed.
• Do your best to avoid becoming a statistic; drive safely.
Don't be part of thei&gt;roblem; be part of the solution. ·
Together, we can make tri-county roads a safer place. This is. one
resolution we can keep.
4

'·

•••

Send you r traffic; trouble spots to: Danger Ahead, Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Dec. 13, the 34Rth day of 2000. The re are 18
days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 13, 1577, Sir Fran cis Drake .of England set out with five
ships on a nearly three-ydr journey that would take him around the
world.
. On this date:
, In 1642, Dutch navigator Abel Tasman arrived in pre.sent-day
New .Zealand.
In 1769, Dartmouth College, in New Hampshire, received its
charter.
In 1862, Union forces suffered a major defeat to the Confederates at the Battle of Fredericksburg, in Virginia.
. In 191S, President Woodrow Wilson arrived in France, becoming
tqe first chief executive to visit Europe while 111 office.
· In 1928, George Ge"hwin's musical work "An American in
Paris" .had its premiere, at Carnegie Hall in New York.
In 1944, during World War II , the U.S. cruiser "Nashville" was
badly damaged in a Japanese "kamikaze" suicide attack that claimed
138 lives.
In 1978. the Philadelphia Mi~t began stamping the Susan B.
Ahthony dollar, which went into circulation the following July.
In 1980, Christian Democrat Jose Napoleon Duarte was named
the president of El Salvador's new government.
In 1981, authorities in Poland imposed martial law in a crackdown on the Solidarity labor movement. (Martial law formally
ended in 1983.) ,
In I 994, an American Eagle commuter plane carrying 20 people
cr:tshcd short of Raleigh-Durham International Airport in North
Carolina, killing 15.
.
"'Ten years ago: A final evacuation night from Iraq arrived in Germany, carrying the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait and h1s sta!f, who had
endured a 110- day Iraqi siege of their embassy.
Five years a!!:o: As President Clinton flew to Paris to attend the
signin!!: of the Bmnian peace accord, Congre~s gave him partial
backing for his Bosnia policy. China's most influential democra~y
activist , Wei Jingsheng, who already had spent 1n years in prison, was
sentenced to 14 more years. (However, Wei was later granted medical parole by Be1jing, and allowed to travel to the United States.)
One year ago: In a spirited presidential campaign debate, :rexas
Gov. George·W. IJush and Sen . John McCaJn, R.-Ariz., fou,.;ht over
ta.x policy and farm subsidies, while McC.1in 11·;" pt"lll•d to defe nd
his centerpi ttc e campaign finance proposah . In hi'i fint m ,IJOI u.:~ t on
the road to peace With Syria, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak
won parliamentary backing for opening negotiation s with Damascus.

t!'e

cry

Danger
\

•,

edici'ne

•

'

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

tion's successful efrort "to increase the number
of African-Americans who cast their votes at
the polls."
And Mfume,Jackson and other black leaders credit black voters with · providing the
winning 'margins for several freshly minted
U.S. senators, induding Democrats Debbie
Stabenow in Michigan, John Corzine in N"'l' ,
Jersey, the late Mel Carnahan in Missouri.
(where a judge actually held the polls ope~­
NEA COLUMNIST
two hours late in heavily black precincts) ang_
Bill Nelson in Florida.
·-·
· If African-Americans were targeted for dis- ·
R.epublican Party.
enfranchisement, as Jackson alleges, then the;
Indeed, since it appears Gore failed to win, nefarious campaign clearly misfired. For :
since Democrats failed to recapture either Republicans surrendered a handful of Senatf
chamber of Congress, Jackson suddenly finds seats on Election Day.
·...
himself with absolutely no political leverage,
Now is the time when America neeilf
either at the White House or on CapitaiJiill. politih'!l figures who seek to unite rather than·;
So, at least until . the mid- term congressional divide; political figures who are principlea'
elections two years from now, he sta nds in enough to subordinate partisan political inter~ '
exile, a sad and impotent political figure.
est for the national interest; political figures"
The noHo-Messianic Jackson has decic\e d who really and truly subscribe to the biblical
that he will do everythmg he call to delegit- dictum "love thy neighbor," even if that ,
imize and destabilize th e Bush presidency. He neighbor happens to be a member of the
is manipulating the black Democratic faithful, other party.
.
·
in particular, to assist him in his unholy war
Jesse Jackson is unequal to this calling.. He
against Republicans.
prefers to stir dissension in the streets ofTallaIndeed, Jackson accuses Bush's party of hassee. He is satisfied to spend the next four
purposefully and systematically denying the years at war with the Bush White House.
voting rights of black Americans, :is if George
If Jackson were more politically savvy, if
W is the 2000 incarnation of Bull Connor or not enlightened, he would be reaching out to
Lester Maddox.
the apparent winner. He would be trying to
"African-Americans were targeted to be cultivate a respectful, if not altogether anuca~ :
disenfranchised," Jackson claimed, in a politi- ble, relationship with Bush so that at least th,·.
ca l sermon at a Jacksonville church. ·
door to the Oval Office would be open to
Yt•t, until the imbroglio in Florida, black him over the' next four yea" (even if he and
leaders were congratulating themselves for a the Republican did not always agree).
record turnout by black vote" on Electio n
That's what Elmer Gantry would do.
Day.
Uoseph Perkins is a columnist fo r The San Diego
NAACP president Kwei&gt;i Mfume, for U11i&lt;m· Tribtme .wd cat~ be reached at:,
instance, boasted of the civil rights organiza- Joseph. Perkins Union Trib.com.)

Joseph
PerKins

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

' '

RED GREENS' VIEW

.

Attention shoppers: retailers think you're stupid
BY

RED GREEN

was pretty much it for the application of the
I heard a warning the other day about Dell Curve. I've aged a lot since then. I've
those water-pick things that you use to blast been able to apply the Bell Curve to almost
water between your teeth . It said not to use every aspect of my life.
the device on your eye1. I had several reactions
In my job I've learned not to be so bad that
to that statement.
I'm at the bott01l1 and get fired, or to be so
The first one was, OK, don't squirt a nee- good I'm at the top and get blamed. In my
dle of pressurized water into my eye area, That personal appearance, I've learned to strive for
makes sense. My second reaction was, holy a mid-point between John Forsythe and Bobcow, they think I'm a moron. They think that cat Goldthwaite. The same with my weight,
if they don't warn me, I'm going to fire this . fitness level and general behavioral patterns.
thing up and try to hose down my retinas . Never good enough for the Nob,·l Prize.
That insulted me.
Never bad enough for long-term in carceraMy third and final reaction was acceptance. tion.
Acceptance rhat ·protecting people from
I believe th at true happiness lies at the centhemsdves is never a bad thing and not usual~ ter of the Bell Curve. If you look around your
ly unnecessary. Seatbelts and air bags and social circle and decide that you're at the botwarning buzzers and smoke detectors and tom end of the !3d! Curve, then you'd better
railings and padded rooms are all there for a start bringing people into ~he group who are
reason.
actually worse than you to jmprove yQPr own
Besides, having someone assumC .you're a ppsition. That's what they do in most of the
moron is not a new experience for most mar- majot corporations and political parties.
ried men.
Pandora's toolbox
The bell curve and you
Once in awhile you have to call a repairI'm not exa~tly sure where I first found out man to come and fix something in your
about the Bell Curve. It was either high home, In most cases you don't know the guy
school Ph)"ics or Math. It had to do with and probably just picked his number out of
averaging exam results ~o th~t :1 sm,1ll nwnbcr the phon l' hook. The pro bl em, of c mtr\t', io;
nfpl'Ork ,\{ thl' bnttOI\1 f t ikd,~l \llLli l T! Uill bcr th,lt _yo u n t,ty bl· l k ,tl ing wnh .lll 111L o111pL' {l' llt
o f peopk at the top ,;ot rc.d ly hi !(h '"·"~ '· a'ld who \\rill crca tl' more prohkms th &lt;m he \t&gt;rthe bulk of us fell in between, in the big bulge rccts.
part of the Bell Curve.
Now you · don't want to be -rude aQd .ask
In the naivete of my youth, I thought that him omright if he has any idea what he's

.

.

Dec. 13,1001

power to vote, to communicate our
Or, as a gal who knows rhe score,
approval or our opposition to candiElect to vote for Albert Gore'
dates and to those who dictate their
Seriously, folks, those "X's" define
party plarforms.
·
what each of us stands for. This is an
We, the people, have the responsibil- important election, make no mistake
ity to decide how to ensure that those about it. Its outcome will determine
we vote into office look after our best the way laws in this COW1try arc mterinterests, our children 's and grandchil- preted for decades. Now is NOT the
dten's futures. Which candidate has a • time to sit on the Sldelmes. Thousands
more workable approach to solving the of people have fou ght a~d d1ed for our
world's problems hate, injustice, right to vote in a free democracy. It'&gt;
indifference and ignorance?
.
time for every eligibk ·\'Oter to stand up
. On Electl.on Day, Nov. 7, ?_Odo. '"e,
"
and be counted, be ca use in this decthe people, will determine exactly the
PI
rion , every vorc count s.
kind of leadership we deserve. ease,
What teens need to knoll· abo ut
Abby, urge your readers to make certain
" ,
I
we elect the best there is to offer.- sex. drugs, AIDS , and getting along wit 1
VICKY, A VOTER IN VIRGINIA
peers and p.m·nts is in ·'What Ewry
DEAR. VICKY: Gladly!
Teen Should Know.'' To order. send J
The question now that really vexes,
business-size, selt~ addrL'ss ed cnwlo pe ,
Is where the heck to pbce our"X's.'' plus check or mone y order lor Sl y'j
Should I give myself a push
(S(SO in Canada) to : Dc.1r Abbv. T,·en
And place an "X" where it "Y' Booklet. PO. .Box 447. Mount Morm.
Bush'
ll 61115~-0~47 . (l'&lt;h ta,;e "included .)

North carolina agriculture
czar retiring after 36 years
John C. Wolf, D.O.

Jesse Jackson is the black Elmer Gantry.
He appears the holy man, invoking biblical
scripture. He stirs the unwashed with his oratory. But like the Sinclair Lewis character,
Jackson is a poseur. He uses religion for purposes of self-aggrandizement, to advance a
secular agenda that has nothing io do with
godliness.
Jackson's counterfeit ministry was on full .
display this week, in Tallaha&lt;See, Fla., where he
appeared before faithful Democrats, displeased
about the results of the presidential election.
Drawing ~ reference to the biblical Exodus,
Jackson likened the assembled to the ancient
Hebrews, held ih bondage in Pharaoh's Egypt.
The Democratic dispossessed blacks,
feminists, gays, trial lawyers, Hollywood
moguls - have been led to the banb of the
R.ed Sea, said Jackson. Tf]ey are surrounded.
Mountains to their left (that would be
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Secretary of State
Kath erine Harris, according to Jackson),
mountains to their right (Florida House
Speaker Tom Feeney and Senate President
John McKay), and Pharaoh's army (George W
Bush and Dick Cheney) charging toward
them from the rear.
Bur keep the faith, said Jackson. Because
God - that's right, Almighty God,.according
to Jackson- is on the side of the Democrats.
They are God's people. And God has anointed AI Gore - call him Moses - to deliver
them from four years of Bush and Cheney in
the White House.
Jackson sank to a new level of political ,
demagoguery. (His remarks in Tallahassee
might be caLled "hate preach.")
It is understandable that he " unhappy
about the outcome of the presidential election, having sold his political soul to the par.ty
o~Gore. But nuw he is cngag~d m a political
jihad against Gov. George Dush and the

Page AS

Tt;qeher~ 'loving lesson turns girl~fear to fun

The Daily Sentinel
~IIJ1948 ·

the Bend

!fhe Daily Se11:tinel

Wed••diJ. Dece•bar 1J, :zDO(I

t it '

''
'"

"'

doing. So here's a way· to make a very quick ,
judgment on the quality of the impendin~ .
work. Hang around and look at the contents ..
of his toolbox. If it contains any of the following, you may have a problem:
• Lots of bandages and pain killers.
• A handgun.
•
• F. Lee Bailey's business card'.
'
• Only three tools, all hammers.
• A one-way plane ticket to . Panama.
The balance of nature
I'm a great bdiever in maintaining a bal-"
ance in the types .of friends you cultivate. 1£
you're a middle-aged married guy, it's impor-''
tant to hang out with an old marri !!d guy .,;cf'
a young engaged guy. That way yo u're ready,,·
to deal with every personal scenario.
,, ,
When you're feeling confused and trou,, .,
bled, you can talk to the old guy and find out.,
that he's just as confused and troubled "' you
are, but it obviously won't kill you. And when •
you're feeling successful and omnipotent, you.·
can go play squash with the young guy.
Quote of the Day: "You can't trust dogs to ,
' '
watch your food.''- R.ed Green

..'

(/l.cd Crem i; 1/rc s1r1r r&gt;f "11re Red G rcew ·
S/hlll', " a trlcl'i!. ion series scC'/1 i11 rh e·r '.S. (ll/ PBS··
mtd in Canada 011 1/re CBC Network, atrd the

aut/tor of"The Red Green 'Book" and "Red Green '
. Talks Cars: A Lot., Story.")

''

,.
"
,,.

ChifWolf~

Christmas
prescription

., For the last several years at holi~ay time I have written a coluntn
c,gntaining 'one of my favorite
rfcipes instead of dealing with a
reader's question about health. It
is a nice change of pace for me,
and it obviously interests a num1'!_er of readers of the Family Medi~ine column. I get more comments about the annual cooking
sc,ript than ·1 do about any other
ili'dividual topic. -Perhaps, that is
1::\ecause we all . eat, while only
sOme of us have concerns about
any given health problem.
: This year I am offering you a
s(\&gt;eet Italian holiday bread- or
dke - called panettone.

.,

rise until double in volume ·_ I to
2 hours. Punch down the dough
and shape into 2 round loaves
each about 7 inches in diamet~r.
Place these on a baking sheet and
let rise until double in height. As
an interesting ~ternative, I bake
mine in a clean well-greased (I
use Pam) coffee can. This recipe
makes one small can (11 ounce
size) and one large can ~33 ounce
size).
Once the bread has risen to
the top of the can or has doubled
in size, bake in a preheated 350degree oven. After 25 minutes,
cover tops of loaves with foil to
reduce the amount of brownitlg.
.Continue to bake for 35 minutes
for the small coffee can or the
free- form loaf, or 40 minutes for
,the large can. A ,sure way to be
certain the bread is properly done
is by using a thermometer. The
finished bread should be between
185 to 190 degrees in the center
of the loaf. Let the bread cool for
5 minutes before removing from
the can.
Once the bread has cooled to
the point that it is merely warm,
lightly brush the top 'with melted
butter. Finish by sprinkling the
top with powdered sugar.
One additional word of advice
about this recipe is that most
raisins are treated with sulfite to
inhibit the growtl} o( yeast. This is
very good fo.r ,raisins, but there
may be sufficient sulfite to inter. fere with the action of the yeast
in this bread. Occasionally I've
had bread that failed to rise prop - ·
erly. You can avoid this potential
problem by ;_,sing rai~ins that are
marked "baking raisins.''

2 pkgs . yeast
· 1 cUp warn1 water
1/2 cup sugar
' 1/2 cup butter
3 eggs
· I teaspoon salt
' I teaspoon grated lemon peel
· I teaspoon Fiori Di Sicilia· ( 1
tsp. vanilla and 1/2 tsp. lemon oil
can be substituted for this)
, 5 to 5 I /2 cups bread flour ' 1/2 cup baking raisins
·1/2 cup chopped citron
Add I I 4 cup sugar to the
warm watt!r and n1ix in yeast. Let
this mixture proof (i.e,, rest) until
vigorously bubbling. In another
bowl beat together the butter and
remaining sugar until light in
color. Then, beat in the 3 eggs.
Add the lemon peel, Fiori Di
Sicilia (or vanilla and lemon oil),
yeast water and 2 1/2 cups of
"Family Medicine" is a weekly colflour. Beat until smooth. Add the
rmut
. 7(, submir quesrious, write to
ratsins , citron and 2 cups of flour.
Knead by hand or by machine j o/111 C Wolf, D. 0., Ohio U11ivcrsity
until the dough is smooth and Colle)!C &lt;if Olleopathic Metfici11c,
dastic. Plac e in a greased bowl, Grosuctwr Hall, Athcrts, Olii"
turning bread over once to also 45 701. Past col111mts arc at&gt;ailaule
coat 'the top. Cover this and let 1t o11lille at www.jJJradio.OIJ!~fiu.

R.ALEIGH, N.C. (AP)-Jim
Graham has taken a bite out of
tobacco leaves, wiped his brow
with the leaf and inj'ected into
conversations the state's rank in
production of everything from
pickles, pigs and poultry to
flowers and mountain trout.
For 36 years as state agriculture secretary, Graham has done
whatever he could to promote
North Carolina crops. He car. ries a card with the latest ranking of farm products, which had
cash receipts of $7.2 billion last
year.
Graham, who is retiring
when his term ends in January,
always asked for a vote and
ended every speech with: " I love
my job." A few adoring audiences of farmers would say it
with him.
That love earned the 79year-old Graham the nickname
"Sodfather'' and a reputation as
a campaigner who c0 uldn't be
beaten. The few who tried to
challenge him were trounced at
the polls as Graham became the
longest-serving elected agnculture commissioner ln the country.
"He's the best politician I
know," said Gov. Jim Hum, who
is himself leaving office with a
mere 16 years under his belt.
"He's like a wonderful salesman
who repNs~nts f)is company so
well' mat everybody wapts to
buy our products."
Once, Graham handed a surprised visitor to his office a
frozen duck, kept with other
products in a fret!zer in an antl!-

roOJ11 so he could dole them
out. His generous spirit shone
through when he tried to pay
for the groceries of a man fumbling for his wallet in a checkout line.
Earlier this year, Grahan1
. begged Chinese inspectors to
approve flue -cu red tobacco for
export to their country as he
tried to help farmers ·open a
new market. After the me.eting,
he wrapped his long arms
around one Chinese official and
posed for a photo, proclaiming
his grinning guest as "nty man ."
Always colorful, Graham
once kissed a mule's rear end in
payment of a lost political bet.

Graham, whose daughter carried on the political tradiuon by
\V(nning a. state House · seat this
year, is one of two long-serving
elected department heads retiring this year in North Carolina.
The other is state Treasurer Harlan Boyles, a friend and ally of
Graham.
"Mr. Graham and I are going
into business together,'' joked
Boyles, who has been treasurer
24 years. "We're going to set out
shade trees.''
Graham said · last year he
would retire to spend more time
with his wife, Helen. She died a
month 'later from complications
of Alzheimer's disease, and several candidates made plans to
run for his post ..
In January, Graham will leave
his office, once crammed with
ceremonial shovels and ha~ , to
Meg Scott ~hipps, a Democrat
elected in November. He said
he'll miss his pocket of paradise
where he had a view of Capitol
Square.
Retirement won't mean sitting in a rocker someplace, Graham vowed. He said he nught
learn to use a computer for
more than just e-mail.
''I'm going to try to master
it," Graham said. uYou're never
too old. Just don't overlook .the
fact that you can't eat those
(compUter)' chips for •breakf.1st,
lunch a11d dinner." ·
He said he worries that people don't respect fanners and
think food comes from the store
instead of the fields .
Grahani is a farmer hit:nself
He owns a 240-acre cattle farm
in R.owan County and said he
plans to sell some of his 75 head
of cattle. "The day I sell, the
prices will probably drop,' ' he
worried out loud ,
During his time in office,
Graham has seen the state's agriculture industry change from
tobacco-dominated to heavily
involv¢d in pork and poultry,
and the growing sweet potato
and cotto n markets.
He preached diversity from
the begin nin g, all the while
praising tobacco farmers · an d
defendin g them from attacks by
anti-smoking forces.

'

.

.

'COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY
.POMEROY - Meigs .Local
Board of Education, 7 p.m.
,Wednesday in the board office.

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Commissioners, 8 a.m. We.dnesday, courthouse office.
POMEROY - Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday, home
of Sarah Owen, Ida Diehl to review
"Before Women Had Wings: by
Connie Fowler.

Chester Courthouse Chnstmas
exhibrts remain in place.
MIDDLEPORT - Joann Robin~
son will present an organ concert
as a part of the !amity mght celt!'
bralion of Christmas, Heath Unileq
Methodist Church, Middleport, 7
p.m. Sunday night
•

'
MONDAY
LETART - Leklrl Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office office.
..

SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club, 1 p.m Wednesday, homer:--.:ot Joy Bentley, Churc.h Street,
Syracuse, annual Christmas party.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta i
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi ,
Sorority, Christmas dinner, 6 :30 i
p.m. home of Charlotte Elberfeld.
Take items tor Serenrty House.

RACINE - Special meeting of
Lodge 164, Free
and Accepted Masons. Brealdast
served at 8 am . lodge opens at 9 !
for work in EA degree and presen- ·
tation of 50 year and 60 year pins.
Pomero~-Raclne

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30 p.m with dinner at 6:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
CHESTER - Chester Townshi~.
Trustees meeting, Friday, 7 p.m. a1
the town hall.

POMEROY - Meigs Count)
Atthrltlt Suppott Group , Frld.ay, 1C
to 11 :30 a.m. Meigs Senior Center.
Holiday potluck to be held. Take fin·
.ger foods to share.

Get Dad what
he really
wants!
We have
power tools

and hand
tools.
Only II

IShtoprling days Iefl!

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

SUN PAY
1·304·773·5583
CHESTER - Open · house,
Sunday, 11 a .m. to· 4 p.m. at the ~k--::-:=-;:-...,.:;o-T;~-;;:~'(f,~

AEP's GAVIN PLANT To HoLD
COMMUNITY fORUM
ON DECEMBER 18, 2000
American Electric Power is inviting residents living
in the vicinity of its Gavin Plant to attend a community
information forum on Monday, December 18, at River Valley
High School. The forum will be held in the high school's
gymnasium and will begin at 6:30p.m.
AEP is constructing a selective catalytic reduction {SCR)
system at Gavin Plant in order to comply with a mandate
from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reduce
its emissions of nitrogen oxide. The purpose of the forum
will be to provide updated information on AEP's plans to

MTV's 'Fashionably Loud' links style and different genres of music
NEW YORK (AP) - Are you a f"n of
rock, pop or hip-hop?
"R.ock" favors Union Jack flags and leather
chokers, "pop" likes to sparkle , ~nd "hip-hop"
is all about jewelry.
,
' Confused' Yes, they are all types of music.
but tht=y also an! [;tshion genres. Popular music
and it5 stars are lcavmg an iudelibk mark on
the stVks 'th:u shu·w up on thr..:· designer runw:lys ;nd 111 y()Ur wardrobe.
,· MTV's new special. "FJ.shmnably Loud
21~00," brill!,'&lt; the two worlds togl'lhcr as
111'odcls in clothes by Marc Jacobs, Be"l'Y
Johmon, Sc.lll Johll , Phat Farm. nollhnuw
.and others strut the nmw.1y .1~ No Doubt.
Moby. My.• :llld My&gt;tik.il perform.
Pop ~c.uVtt.lm.itl C grJCt.'S tht.• c;~t\\';llk lwrsdf in ,1 light-purpk kother J·•cket .111d
sequined p.1nts by Rebt'cc a Taylor.
Thcrt.' ;In' cxpcnSlYL' dcsignt.·r outfir"' p.11rcd
with .ICLC\~nrit.''i th.H m a y alrt: ~1dy be buried 111
Y'~ur closet (or your mothn's clos~.·t) and .l.n.•
bcmg used in a frt.·~h. new \\'ay. Thnc also :ll"t.:'

everyday clothe; worn with high-style stil ettos and very::rhis-season boots.
The featured looks target mostly teen-agers
and twentysomethings.
.
Carson Daly of "Total R.equest Live" and
actrt'~S Tara Reid ar~ the hosts of the show.
The 'real-life couple were chosen for "FashIOnably LoLid" because Daly is an "cwry guy"
with pk•nty o~ far;;hion q u c~tion ~. anJ Rt.·iJ Ius

d.e finition of rock, Sims says, because she plays
with color - her hair recently went from
pink to platinum. The rock loo k for 2001 also
w1ll feature plenty of pbids, draped belts and
low-slung pants, prcdtcts Si!lls.
The pop look is "very girly, very fenunine ,"

the answt·rs. explains produ(cr Alex Coletti.

c.ncgory,

But It's up to Molly Sims. the host of
MTV's "Hous~.· of Srylc" licrH~s. to .Hivisc
\'iL'\V'-'rs how thq: C.lll pull tor;cth~.·r simil.u
outfits .md conll' out ltH1king li b: rock sun..
And '' rock'' 1s SiJ_ll"&gt;. f.woritc look - H lc;~.;;t
.H th~

moment.

"Rock lS a lot of le;nher. And flab'S British and Amnicm·. I just bought this gi&lt;t'at
bu~ticr \\'ith thL' Union j.Kk tl.lg." s.tys Sun'...
11. ·,vhu shmVL'Ll up lor tht• "F,Jshion .thl)
Loud" t.1ping in .1 dark JcnJlll . .t lni o~t- W~,.· ..,t ­
&lt;'rn slmt wit!\ tight bl:ick pant&gt;.
Cwen StL'Emi of No 11 onbt tit&lt;&gt; thL· f,,..,]mHl

Sims explains. "Guys ~tr~.·n't neede-d here," she
says ..llthollgh Sims not ..·s thar 'N Sync wear'i
lll.ll1)'

of the swd,kd doth,·s that toll i11to tlm
.

Tht:.~ mlni~kirts,

t~1bric s

fined siliHll lt:ttL'S .llld ~h'-'LT
tlut gr.1..:c tJ, ... tl'L'n-ag'-' forms of lhit-

lh.'Y Spc.1rs. Christi11 .1 A~uikr;\ :md their f.1m
;Ill l·omributl· to the: pop Hyk , Suns s .1y~ Sn
do rhillL'~t(Hh.' t.lttOO~. ~l''-lllill S .Uld the otT- the shoulder top s .md lnng t,: ,nrtng~ 111~p1rcd by
·"Charlie\ An"d&gt;."
Si111s' "F,1~hHHJ .1bh· Loud" ..:orrcspondL'lH
outfit bknd~ ro..:k .\JH.i pllp. The _l'L·tt:r Som ~
dL·~igncd L'll~ ..·mbk t~·.ltllrL·~ ,1 wide k.1thn s.1sh
mTr long. t.1ilon·d gr.1y pant~ . The \'L' ry \ndL'
ho.lt- IH.'Ck tllp h.1~ op ...·11 tl.1p -;kt\'L'~ .

construct and operate the SCR' system at Gavin Plant , and
to gain the community's input on those plans.
AEP has conducted.additional detailed stud ies on several
alternatives regarding the SCR installation in the weeks
since the first community forum was held . Plant and
company officials will make presentations on various
aspects of the SCR project.
Area residents will have an opportunity to ask questions
and express their opinions about the SCR project.

~AMERICAN®

Jilil111tTRIC
POWIR
www.aep.com

.,

�..

e_D_ai~ly_~_n_tin_e_l_______________()~~~~~~C)II

PageA4

Th
__

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
7~992·2156 • FIX: 992·2157

lll~

w. .

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey

R. Shawn Lawla

Publisher

Managing Editor
•. ~

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Chari- Hoeflich
G_,.IManager
LiltiM'I ta 1M Mikw tJn

wlta.e~.

•
.DEAR ABBY: My \l-ife, our 7-yearI •
Silvia has been offered higher adminisofd daughter, Silvia, and I arrived in Los
trative positions, she's decided to
Al!geles in June 1965~ .(\t the time, Silremain in the classroom with her "little
".
via had less than three months of first
ones.
grade and didn't speak a word Gf EngBless you, Mrs. Mertha. You are livlish. We enrolled her in elementary
ing proof that bureaucratic laws are not
school in Alhambra, Calif., where she
substitute for love and affection. "?S placed in a class taught by an older,
RUJ)OLPH SPADANO, HACiENDA
conservative teacb,er who had little •
1-lEIGHTS, CALIF.
ADVICE
p~tience. The teacher V)Ould yell at. Sil- '
DEAR RUDOLPH: Thank you for
vfa for not understanding English.
sharing the touching story about a •ig)
: As you can imagine, taking Silvia to the classroom. She spoke English to her nificant chapter in your daughter's life.
school each day became a Greek , in
ntost ]oving way1 in a sweet. soft . It teaches two lessons- that a dedicattr\lgedy. She would
from the time voice. Within a week, our daughter was ed tea cher can make a profound differslle got into the car and continued as actually happy to be going to school. In ence in a child's life, and that it's not
slle walked through the school's gates. a month, she was speaking with her only what you say, but also how you say
She also cried at home.
new friends in English'
it that conveys a me-.ssagt:.
: Fortunately, our daughter was transDEAR ABBY: Please remind your
Miss Luke eventually married and
fe.'tred into another class that was taught became Mrs. Merth:i. If she reads this, readers that there will soon be a presiby a younger teacher, Miss Luke. Miss we \vant her to know that Silvia, who dential election, and "We, the People,"
Lf,ke didn 't understand a word of Span- showed talent for both writing and art, can either let our voices be heard or
ish, but she. would wait at the gate for decided to follow in her footsteps and re-1nain silent.
olu arrival in the morning, take Silvia's become a teacher like her. Although
Politicians have power, but we, the
h~nd a~id walk with her 'all the w~y to
people, have power, too. We have the

.

Abigail
Y~n Buren a

1

~

-t

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

TU, dtoMJ.f N .l.u lAM 100 ~-AU,,.,.,_ •tUJ}m

,.,;,,.ed

JD Hililtr aM.., H ritnH Pd i~teu.M otlthu Mil 1tlfllwtt' 1t11111M-. No
ltlt•rr wiU
N pdliJitiNl. 1..tt1m sllodl H 111 rOf1lfl ,.,., ~ lssws, iwlfHno•iitWs.
Tit• ~tu Ufii'WtsH. U. t1tt cMI.waklow.,. rlu rofl.JII'II.u u aflllt Oltio \'tllh1 P~tbll11tint

Co.., ~ HMrl.

lliWU

tlfltfrwiu ltOltd.

OUR VIEW

•

Jer~

Resolving to make our roads
a sqfor place in 2001
'Tis the season to make resolutions, so in that spirit, allow us to be .
among the first to offer an aspiration: ~
.
"We, the motorists of the tri-county region, will strive to share
the road, be mindful of our fellow motorists and, most importantly,
place ample value on our lives and the lives of others while driving."
This is a resolution we at Ohio Valley Publishing Co. would love
to see honored to its fullest intent. We don't like running stories in
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, The Daily Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register about people losing their lives in automobile tragedies.
Unfortunately, we cover far too many lraffic fatalities; perhaps
more per capita than other regions our size.
Why is that?
Are too many local motorists in a hurry? Are too many local
motorists careless? Ar, our roads in such dangerous shape? Are our
vehicles in such ill-repair? Are the lessons learned in clriver education programs so quickly forgotten? Are we in need of more patrols
. on the road?
We can't answer these and other questions right now, but until we
can the senseless deaths will contin11e.
To help tri-county motorists keep the above resolution, we vow
to study the statistics, traffic patterns, behavioral patterns and whatever else it takes to stem the tide of traffic fatalities in the new year.
The stories detailing tri~county driving conditions will appear as an
occasional series called " Danger Ahead."
Here's what we need from you:
• If an OVP staffer asks you about your driving habits, be truthful. Few, if any, of us are perfect drivers.
• If you have a concern about a dangerous intersection or traffic
condition , ler us know about it. Through the power of the pen,
maybe we can get the problem fixed.
• Do your best to avoid becoming a statistic; drive safely.
Don't be part of thei&gt;roblem; be part of the solution. ·
Together, we can make tri-county roads a safer place. This is. one
resolution we can keep.
4

'·

•••

Send you r traffic; trouble spots to: Danger Ahead, Ohio Valley
Publishing Co., 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Dec. 13, the 34Rth day of 2000. The re are 18
days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 13, 1577, Sir Fran cis Drake .of England set out with five
ships on a nearly three-ydr journey that would take him around the
world.
. On this date:
, In 1642, Dutch navigator Abel Tasman arrived in pre.sent-day
New .Zealand.
In 1769, Dartmouth College, in New Hampshire, received its
charter.
In 1862, Union forces suffered a major defeat to the Confederates at the Battle of Fredericksburg, in Virginia.
. In 191S, President Woodrow Wilson arrived in France, becoming
tqe first chief executive to visit Europe while 111 office.
· In 1928, George Ge"hwin's musical work "An American in
Paris" .had its premiere, at Carnegie Hall in New York.
In 1944, during World War II , the U.S. cruiser "Nashville" was
badly damaged in a Japanese "kamikaze" suicide attack that claimed
138 lives.
In 1978. the Philadelphia Mi~t began stamping the Susan B.
Ahthony dollar, which went into circulation the following July.
In 1980, Christian Democrat Jose Napoleon Duarte was named
the president of El Salvador's new government.
In 1981, authorities in Poland imposed martial law in a crackdown on the Solidarity labor movement. (Martial law formally
ended in 1983.) ,
In I 994, an American Eagle commuter plane carrying 20 people
cr:tshcd short of Raleigh-Durham International Airport in North
Carolina, killing 15.
.
"'Ten years ago: A final evacuation night from Iraq arrived in Germany, carrying the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait and h1s sta!f, who had
endured a 110- day Iraqi siege of their embassy.
Five years a!!:o: As President Clinton flew to Paris to attend the
signin!!: of the Bmnian peace accord, Congre~s gave him partial
backing for his Bosnia policy. China's most influential democra~y
activist , Wei Jingsheng, who already had spent 1n years in prison, was
sentenced to 14 more years. (However, Wei was later granted medical parole by Be1jing, and allowed to travel to the United States.)
One year ago: In a spirited presidential campaign debate, :rexas
Gov. George·W. IJush and Sen . John McCaJn, R.-Ariz., fou,.;ht over
ta.x policy and farm subsidies, while McC.1in 11·;" pt"lll•d to defe nd
his centerpi ttc e campaign finance proposah . In hi'i fint m ,IJOI u.:~ t on
the road to peace With Syria, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak
won parliamentary backing for opening negotiation s with Damascus.

t!'e

cry

Danger
\

•,

edici'ne

•

'

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

tion's successful efrort "to increase the number
of African-Americans who cast their votes at
the polls."
And Mfume,Jackson and other black leaders credit black voters with · providing the
winning 'margins for several freshly minted
U.S. senators, induding Democrats Debbie
Stabenow in Michigan, John Corzine in N"'l' ,
Jersey, the late Mel Carnahan in Missouri.
(where a judge actually held the polls ope~­
NEA COLUMNIST
two hours late in heavily black precincts) ang_
Bill Nelson in Florida.
·-·
· If African-Americans were targeted for dis- ·
R.epublican Party.
enfranchisement, as Jackson alleges, then the;
Indeed, since it appears Gore failed to win, nefarious campaign clearly misfired. For :
since Democrats failed to recapture either Republicans surrendered a handful of Senatf
chamber of Congress, Jackson suddenly finds seats on Election Day.
·...
himself with absolutely no political leverage,
Now is the time when America neeilf
either at the White House or on CapitaiJiill. politih'!l figures who seek to unite rather than·;
So, at least until . the mid- term congressional divide; political figures who are principlea'
elections two years from now, he sta nds in enough to subordinate partisan political inter~ '
exile, a sad and impotent political figure.
est for the national interest; political figures"
The noHo-Messianic Jackson has decic\e d who really and truly subscribe to the biblical
that he will do everythmg he call to delegit- dictum "love thy neighbor," even if that ,
imize and destabilize th e Bush presidency. He neighbor happens to be a member of the
is manipulating the black Democratic faithful, other party.
.
·
in particular, to assist him in his unholy war
Jesse Jackson is unequal to this calling.. He
against Republicans.
prefers to stir dissension in the streets ofTallaIndeed, Jackson accuses Bush's party of hassee. He is satisfied to spend the next four
purposefully and systematically denying the years at war with the Bush White House.
voting rights of black Americans, :is if George
If Jackson were more politically savvy, if
W is the 2000 incarnation of Bull Connor or not enlightened, he would be reaching out to
Lester Maddox.
the apparent winner. He would be trying to
"African-Americans were targeted to be cultivate a respectful, if not altogether anuca~ :
disenfranchised," Jackson claimed, in a politi- ble, relationship with Bush so that at least th,·.
ca l sermon at a Jacksonville church. ·
door to the Oval Office would be open to
Yt•t, until the imbroglio in Florida, black him over the' next four yea" (even if he and
leaders were congratulating themselves for a the Republican did not always agree).
record turnout by black vote" on Electio n
That's what Elmer Gantry would do.
Day.
Uoseph Perkins is a columnist fo r The San Diego
NAACP president Kwei&gt;i Mfume, for U11i&lt;m· Tribtme .wd cat~ be reached at:,
instance, boasted of the civil rights organiza- Joseph. Perkins Union Trib.com.)

Joseph
PerKins

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

' '

RED GREENS' VIEW

.

Attention shoppers: retailers think you're stupid
BY

RED GREEN

was pretty much it for the application of the
I heard a warning the other day about Dell Curve. I've aged a lot since then. I've
those water-pick things that you use to blast been able to apply the Bell Curve to almost
water between your teeth . It said not to use every aspect of my life.
the device on your eye1. I had several reactions
In my job I've learned not to be so bad that
to that statement.
I'm at the bott01l1 and get fired, or to be so
The first one was, OK, don't squirt a nee- good I'm at the top and get blamed. In my
dle of pressurized water into my eye area, That personal appearance, I've learned to strive for
makes sense. My second reaction was, holy a mid-point between John Forsythe and Bobcow, they think I'm a moron. They think that cat Goldthwaite. The same with my weight,
if they don't warn me, I'm going to fire this . fitness level and general behavioral patterns.
thing up and try to hose down my retinas . Never good enough for the Nob,·l Prize.
That insulted me.
Never bad enough for long-term in carceraMy third and final reaction was acceptance. tion.
Acceptance rhat ·protecting people from
I believe th at true happiness lies at the centhemsdves is never a bad thing and not usual~ ter of the Bell Curve. If you look around your
ly unnecessary. Seatbelts and air bags and social circle and decide that you're at the botwarning buzzers and smoke detectors and tom end of the !3d! Curve, then you'd better
railings and padded rooms are all there for a start bringing people into ~he group who are
reason.
actually worse than you to jmprove yQPr own
Besides, having someone assumC .you're a ppsition. That's what they do in most of the
moron is not a new experience for most mar- majot corporations and political parties.
ried men.
Pandora's toolbox
The bell curve and you
Once in awhile you have to call a repairI'm not exa~tly sure where I first found out man to come and fix something in your
about the Bell Curve. It was either high home, In most cases you don't know the guy
school Ph)"ics or Math. It had to do with and probably just picked his number out of
averaging exam results ~o th~t :1 sm,1ll nwnbcr the phon l' hook. The pro bl em, of c mtr\t', io;
nfpl'Ork ,\{ thl' bnttOI\1 f t ikd,~l \llLli l T! Uill bcr th,lt _yo u n t,ty bl· l k ,tl ing wnh .lll 111L o111pL' {l' llt
o f peopk at the top ,;ot rc.d ly hi !(h '"·"~ '· a'ld who \\rill crca tl' more prohkms th &lt;m he \t&gt;rthe bulk of us fell in between, in the big bulge rccts.
part of the Bell Curve.
Now you · don't want to be -rude aQd .ask
In the naivete of my youth, I thought that him omright if he has any idea what he's

.

.

Dec. 13,1001

power to vote, to communicate our
Or, as a gal who knows rhe score,
approval or our opposition to candiElect to vote for Albert Gore'
dates and to those who dictate their
Seriously, folks, those "X's" define
party plarforms.
·
what each of us stands for. This is an
We, the people, have the responsibil- important election, make no mistake
ity to decide how to ensure that those about it. Its outcome will determine
we vote into office look after our best the way laws in this COW1try arc mterinterests, our children 's and grandchil- preted for decades. Now is NOT the
dten's futures. Which candidate has a • time to sit on the Sldelmes. Thousands
more workable approach to solving the of people have fou ght a~d d1ed for our
world's problems hate, injustice, right to vote in a free democracy. It'&gt;
indifference and ignorance?
.
time for every eligibk ·\'Oter to stand up
. On Electl.on Day, Nov. 7, ?_Odo. '"e,
"
and be counted, be ca use in this decthe people, will determine exactly the
PI
rion , every vorc count s.
kind of leadership we deserve. ease,
What teens need to knoll· abo ut
Abby, urge your readers to make certain
" ,
I
we elect the best there is to offer.- sex. drugs, AIDS , and getting along wit 1
VICKY, A VOTER IN VIRGINIA
peers and p.m·nts is in ·'What Ewry
DEAR. VICKY: Gladly!
Teen Should Know.'' To order. send J
The question now that really vexes,
business-size, selt~ addrL'ss ed cnwlo pe ,
Is where the heck to pbce our"X's.'' plus check or mone y order lor Sl y'j
Should I give myself a push
(S(SO in Canada) to : Dc.1r Abbv. T,·en
And place an "X" where it "Y' Booklet. PO. .Box 447. Mount Morm.
Bush'
ll 61115~-0~47 . (l'&lt;h ta,;e "included .)

North carolina agriculture
czar retiring after 36 years
John C. Wolf, D.O.

Jesse Jackson is the black Elmer Gantry.
He appears the holy man, invoking biblical
scripture. He stirs the unwashed with his oratory. But like the Sinclair Lewis character,
Jackson is a poseur. He uses religion for purposes of self-aggrandizement, to advance a
secular agenda that has nothing io do with
godliness.
Jackson's counterfeit ministry was on full .
display this week, in Tallaha&lt;See, Fla., where he
appeared before faithful Democrats, displeased
about the results of the presidential election.
Drawing ~ reference to the biblical Exodus,
Jackson likened the assembled to the ancient
Hebrews, held ih bondage in Pharaoh's Egypt.
The Democratic dispossessed blacks,
feminists, gays, trial lawyers, Hollywood
moguls - have been led to the banb of the
R.ed Sea, said Jackson. Tf]ey are surrounded.
Mountains to their left (that would be
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Secretary of State
Kath erine Harris, according to Jackson),
mountains to their right (Florida House
Speaker Tom Feeney and Senate President
John McKay), and Pharaoh's army (George W
Bush and Dick Cheney) charging toward
them from the rear.
Bur keep the faith, said Jackson. Because
God - that's right, Almighty God,.according
to Jackson- is on the side of the Democrats.
They are God's people. And God has anointed AI Gore - call him Moses - to deliver
them from four years of Bush and Cheney in
the White House.
Jackson sank to a new level of political ,
demagoguery. (His remarks in Tallahassee
might be caLled "hate preach.")
It is understandable that he " unhappy
about the outcome of the presidential election, having sold his political soul to the par.ty
o~Gore. But nuw he is cngag~d m a political
jihad against Gov. George Dush and the

Page AS

Tt;qeher~ 'loving lesson turns girl~fear to fun

The Daily Sentinel
~IIJ1948 ·

the Bend

!fhe Daily Se11:tinel

Wed••diJ. Dece•bar 1J, :zDO(I

t it '

''
'"

"'

doing. So here's a way· to make a very quick ,
judgment on the quality of the impendin~ .
work. Hang around and look at the contents ..
of his toolbox. If it contains any of the following, you may have a problem:
• Lots of bandages and pain killers.
• A handgun.
•
• F. Lee Bailey's business card'.
'
• Only three tools, all hammers.
• A one-way plane ticket to . Panama.
The balance of nature
I'm a great bdiever in maintaining a bal-"
ance in the types .of friends you cultivate. 1£
you're a middle-aged married guy, it's impor-''
tant to hang out with an old marri !!d guy .,;cf'
a young engaged guy. That way yo u're ready,,·
to deal with every personal scenario.
,, ,
When you're feeling confused and trou,, .,
bled, you can talk to the old guy and find out.,
that he's just as confused and troubled "' you
are, but it obviously won't kill you. And when •
you're feeling successful and omnipotent, you.·
can go play squash with the young guy.
Quote of the Day: "You can't trust dogs to ,
' '
watch your food.''- R.ed Green

..'

(/l.cd Crem i; 1/rc s1r1r r&gt;f "11re Red G rcew ·
S/hlll', " a trlcl'i!. ion series scC'/1 i11 rh e·r '.S. (ll/ PBS··
mtd in Canada 011 1/re CBC Network, atrd the

aut/tor of"The Red Green 'Book" and "Red Green '
. Talks Cars: A Lot., Story.")

''

,.
"
,,.

ChifWolf~

Christmas
prescription

., For the last several years at holi~ay time I have written a coluntn
c,gntaining 'one of my favorite
rfcipes instead of dealing with a
reader's question about health. It
is a nice change of pace for me,
and it obviously interests a num1'!_er of readers of the Family Medi~ine column. I get more comments about the annual cooking
sc,ript than ·1 do about any other
ili'dividual topic. -Perhaps, that is
1::\ecause we all . eat, while only
sOme of us have concerns about
any given health problem.
: This year I am offering you a
s(\&gt;eet Italian holiday bread- or
dke - called panettone.

.,

rise until double in volume ·_ I to
2 hours. Punch down the dough
and shape into 2 round loaves
each about 7 inches in diamet~r.
Place these on a baking sheet and
let rise until double in height. As
an interesting ~ternative, I bake
mine in a clean well-greased (I
use Pam) coffee can. This recipe
makes one small can (11 ounce
size) and one large can ~33 ounce
size).
Once the bread has risen to
the top of the can or has doubled
in size, bake in a preheated 350degree oven. After 25 minutes,
cover tops of loaves with foil to
reduce the amount of brownitlg.
.Continue to bake for 35 minutes
for the small coffee can or the
free- form loaf, or 40 minutes for
,the large can. A ,sure way to be
certain the bread is properly done
is by using a thermometer. The
finished bread should be between
185 to 190 degrees in the center
of the loaf. Let the bread cool for
5 minutes before removing from
the can.
Once the bread has cooled to
the point that it is merely warm,
lightly brush the top 'with melted
butter. Finish by sprinkling the
top with powdered sugar.
One additional word of advice
about this recipe is that most
raisins are treated with sulfite to
inhibit the growtl} o( yeast. This is
very good fo.r ,raisins, but there
may be sufficient sulfite to inter. fere with the action of the yeast
in this bread. Occasionally I've
had bread that failed to rise prop - ·
erly. You can avoid this potential
problem by ;_,sing rai~ins that are
marked "baking raisins.''

2 pkgs . yeast
· 1 cUp warn1 water
1/2 cup sugar
' 1/2 cup butter
3 eggs
· I teaspoon salt
' I teaspoon grated lemon peel
· I teaspoon Fiori Di Sicilia· ( 1
tsp. vanilla and 1/2 tsp. lemon oil
can be substituted for this)
, 5 to 5 I /2 cups bread flour ' 1/2 cup baking raisins
·1/2 cup chopped citron
Add I I 4 cup sugar to the
warm watt!r and n1ix in yeast. Let
this mixture proof (i.e,, rest) until
vigorously bubbling. In another
bowl beat together the butter and
remaining sugar until light in
color. Then, beat in the 3 eggs.
Add the lemon peel, Fiori Di
Sicilia (or vanilla and lemon oil),
yeast water and 2 1/2 cups of
"Family Medicine" is a weekly colflour. Beat until smooth. Add the
rmut
. 7(, submir quesrious, write to
ratsins , citron and 2 cups of flour.
Knead by hand or by machine j o/111 C Wolf, D. 0., Ohio U11ivcrsity
until the dough is smooth and Colle)!C &lt;if Olleopathic Metfici11c,
dastic. Plac e in a greased bowl, Grosuctwr Hall, Athcrts, Olii"
turning bread over once to also 45 701. Past col111mts arc at&gt;ailaule
coat 'the top. Cover this and let 1t o11lille at www.jJJradio.OIJ!~fiu.

R.ALEIGH, N.C. (AP)-Jim
Graham has taken a bite out of
tobacco leaves, wiped his brow
with the leaf and inj'ected into
conversations the state's rank in
production of everything from
pickles, pigs and poultry to
flowers and mountain trout.
For 36 years as state agriculture secretary, Graham has done
whatever he could to promote
North Carolina crops. He car. ries a card with the latest ranking of farm products, which had
cash receipts of $7.2 billion last
year.
Graham, who is retiring
when his term ends in January,
always asked for a vote and
ended every speech with: " I love
my job." A few adoring audiences of farmers would say it
with him.
That love earned the 79year-old Graham the nickname
"Sodfather'' and a reputation as
a campaigner who c0 uldn't be
beaten. The few who tried to
challenge him were trounced at
the polls as Graham became the
longest-serving elected agnculture commissioner ln the country.
"He's the best politician I
know," said Gov. Jim Hum, who
is himself leaving office with a
mere 16 years under his belt.
"He's like a wonderful salesman
who repNs~nts f)is company so
well' mat everybody wapts to
buy our products."
Once, Graham handed a surprised visitor to his office a
frozen duck, kept with other
products in a fret!zer in an antl!-

roOJ11 so he could dole them
out. His generous spirit shone
through when he tried to pay
for the groceries of a man fumbling for his wallet in a checkout line.
Earlier this year, Grahan1
. begged Chinese inspectors to
approve flue -cu red tobacco for
export to their country as he
tried to help farmers ·open a
new market. After the me.eting,
he wrapped his long arms
around one Chinese official and
posed for a photo, proclaiming
his grinning guest as "nty man ."
Always colorful, Graham
once kissed a mule's rear end in
payment of a lost political bet.

Graham, whose daughter carried on the political tradiuon by
\V(nning a. state House · seat this
year, is one of two long-serving
elected department heads retiring this year in North Carolina.
The other is state Treasurer Harlan Boyles, a friend and ally of
Graham.
"Mr. Graham and I are going
into business together,'' joked
Boyles, who has been treasurer
24 years. "We're going to set out
shade trees.''
Graham said · last year he
would retire to spend more time
with his wife, Helen. She died a
month 'later from complications
of Alzheimer's disease, and several candidates made plans to
run for his post ..
In January, Graham will leave
his office, once crammed with
ceremonial shovels and ha~ , to
Meg Scott ~hipps, a Democrat
elected in November. He said
he'll miss his pocket of paradise
where he had a view of Capitol
Square.
Retirement won't mean sitting in a rocker someplace, Graham vowed. He said he nught
learn to use a computer for
more than just e-mail.
''I'm going to try to master
it," Graham said. uYou're never
too old. Just don't overlook .the
fact that you can't eat those
(compUter)' chips for •breakf.1st,
lunch a11d dinner." ·
He said he worries that people don't respect fanners and
think food comes from the store
instead of the fields .
Grahani is a farmer hit:nself
He owns a 240-acre cattle farm
in R.owan County and said he
plans to sell some of his 75 head
of cattle. "The day I sell, the
prices will probably drop,' ' he
worried out loud ,
During his time in office,
Graham has seen the state's agriculture industry change from
tobacco-dominated to heavily
involv¢d in pork and poultry,
and the growing sweet potato
and cotto n markets.
He preached diversity from
the begin nin g, all the while
praising tobacco farmers · an d
defendin g them from attacks by
anti-smoking forces.

'

.

.

'COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY
.POMEROY - Meigs .Local
Board of Education, 7 p.m.
,Wednesday in the board office.

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Commissioners, 8 a.m. We.dnesday, courthouse office.
POMEROY - Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday, home
of Sarah Owen, Ida Diehl to review
"Before Women Had Wings: by
Connie Fowler.

Chester Courthouse Chnstmas
exhibrts remain in place.
MIDDLEPORT - Joann Robin~
son will present an organ concert
as a part of the !amity mght celt!'
bralion of Christmas, Heath Unileq
Methodist Church, Middleport, 7
p.m. Sunday night
•

'
MONDAY
LETART - Leklrl Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office office.
..

SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club, 1 p.m Wednesday, homer:--.:ot Joy Bentley, Churc.h Street,
Syracuse, annual Christmas party.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta i
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi ,
Sorority, Christmas dinner, 6 :30 i
p.m. home of Charlotte Elberfeld.
Take items tor Serenrty House.

RACINE - Special meeting of
Lodge 164, Free
and Accepted Masons. Brealdast
served at 8 am . lodge opens at 9 !
for work in EA degree and presen- ·
tation of 50 year and 60 year pins.
Pomero~-Raclne

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30 p.m with dinner at 6:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
CHESTER - Chester Townshi~.
Trustees meeting, Friday, 7 p.m. a1
the town hall.

POMEROY - Meigs Count)
Atthrltlt Suppott Group , Frld.ay, 1C
to 11 :30 a.m. Meigs Senior Center.
Holiday potluck to be held. Take fin·
.ger foods to share.

Get Dad what
he really
wants!
We have
power tools

and hand
tools.
Only II

IShtoprling days Iefl!

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

SUN PAY
1·304·773·5583
CHESTER - Open · house,
Sunday, 11 a .m. to· 4 p.m. at the ~k--::-:=-;:-...,.:;o-T;~-;;:~'(f,~

AEP's GAVIN PLANT To HoLD
COMMUNITY fORUM
ON DECEMBER 18, 2000
American Electric Power is inviting residents living
in the vicinity of its Gavin Plant to attend a community
information forum on Monday, December 18, at River Valley
High School. The forum will be held in the high school's
gymnasium and will begin at 6:30p.m.
AEP is constructing a selective catalytic reduction {SCR)
system at Gavin Plant in order to comply with a mandate
from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reduce
its emissions of nitrogen oxide. The purpose of the forum
will be to provide updated information on AEP's plans to

MTV's 'Fashionably Loud' links style and different genres of music
NEW YORK (AP) - Are you a f"n of
rock, pop or hip-hop?
"R.ock" favors Union Jack flags and leather
chokers, "pop" likes to sparkle , ~nd "hip-hop"
is all about jewelry.
,
' Confused' Yes, they are all types of music.
but tht=y also an! [;tshion genres. Popular music
and it5 stars are lcavmg an iudelibk mark on
the stVks 'th:u shu·w up on thr..:· designer runw:lys ;nd 111 y()Ur wardrobe.
,· MTV's new special. "FJ.shmnably Loud
21~00," brill!,'&lt; the two worlds togl'lhcr as
111'odcls in clothes by Marc Jacobs, Be"l'Y
Johmon, Sc.lll Johll , Phat Farm. nollhnuw
.and others strut the nmw.1y .1~ No Doubt.
Moby. My.• :llld My&gt;tik.il perform.
Pop ~c.uVtt.lm.itl C grJCt.'S tht.• c;~t\\';llk lwrsdf in ,1 light-purpk kother J·•cket .111d
sequined p.1nts by Rebt'cc a Taylor.
Thcrt.' ;In' cxpcnSlYL' dcsignt.·r outfir"' p.11rcd
with .ICLC\~nrit.''i th.H m a y alrt: ~1dy be buried 111
Y'~ur closet (or your mothn's clos~.·t) and .l.n.•
bcmg used in a frt.·~h. new \\'ay. Thnc also :ll"t.:'

everyday clothe; worn with high-style stil ettos and very::rhis-season boots.
The featured looks target mostly teen-agers
and twentysomethings.
.
Carson Daly of "Total R.equest Live" and
actrt'~S Tara Reid ar~ the hosts of the show.
The 'real-life couple were chosen for "FashIOnably LoLid" because Daly is an "cwry guy"
with pk•nty o~ far;;hion q u c~tion ~. anJ Rt.·iJ Ius

d.e finition of rock, Sims says, because she plays
with color - her hair recently went from
pink to platinum. The rock loo k for 2001 also
w1ll feature plenty of pbids, draped belts and
low-slung pants, prcdtcts Si!lls.
The pop look is "very girly, very fenunine ,"

the answt·rs. explains produ(cr Alex Coletti.

c.ncgory,

But It's up to Molly Sims. the host of
MTV's "Hous~.· of Srylc" licrH~s. to .Hivisc
\'iL'\V'-'rs how thq: C.lll pull tor;cth~.·r simil.u
outfits .md conll' out ltH1king li b: rock sun..
And '' rock'' 1s SiJ_ll"&gt;. f.woritc look - H lc;~.;;t
.H th~

moment.

"Rock lS a lot of le;nher. And flab'S British and Amnicm·. I just bought this gi&lt;t'at
bu~ticr \\'ith thL' Union j.Kk tl.lg." s.tys Sun'...
11. ·,vhu shmVL'Ll up lor tht• "F,Jshion .thl)
Loud" t.1ping in .1 dark JcnJlll . .t lni o~t- W~,.· ..,t ­
&lt;'rn slmt wit!\ tight bl:ick pant&gt;.
Cwen StL'Emi of No 11 onbt tit&lt;&gt; thL· f,,..,]mHl

Sims explains. "Guys ~tr~.·n't neede-d here," she
says ..llthollgh Sims not ..·s thar 'N Sync wear'i
lll.ll1)'

of the swd,kd doth,·s that toll i11to tlm
.

Tht:.~ mlni~kirts,

t~1bric s

fined siliHll lt:ttL'S .llld ~h'-'LT
tlut gr.1..:c tJ, ... tl'L'n-ag'-' forms of lhit-

lh.'Y Spc.1rs. Christi11 .1 A~uikr;\ :md their f.1m
;Ill l·omributl· to the: pop Hyk , Suns s .1y~ Sn
do rhillL'~t(Hh.' t.lttOO~. ~l''-lllill S .Uld the otT- the shoulder top s .md lnng t,: ,nrtng~ 111~p1rcd by
·"Charlie\ An"d&gt;."
Si111s' "F,1~hHHJ .1bh· Loud" ..:orrcspondL'lH
outfit bknd~ ro..:k .\JH.i pllp. The _l'L·tt:r Som ~
dL·~igncd L'll~ ..·mbk t~·.ltllrL·~ ,1 wide k.1thn s.1sh
mTr long. t.1ilon·d gr.1y pant~ . The \'L' ry \ndL'
ho.lt- IH.'Ck tllp h.1~ op ...·11 tl.1p -;kt\'L'~ .

construct and operate the SCR' system at Gavin Plant , and
to gain the community's input on those plans.
AEP has conducted.additional detailed stud ies on several
alternatives regarding the SCR installation in the weeks
since the first community forum was held . Plant and
company officials will make presentations on various
aspects of the SCR project.
Area residents will have an opportunity to ask questions
and express their opinions about the SCR project.

~AMERICAN®

Jilil111tTRIC
POWIR
www.aep.com

.,

�'•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedoeaclay, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

·The Daily Sentinel

AP All-America football teams, Page BJ
Today 's Scoreboard, Page B6

·Page Bl

Register to Will
FREE Eve11l11g out
~ tile Movies

.

WecllleSAy. Dec:elllber 1:S.l000

2 Ticlce.ts~ POJICOrll, l( Ptpsll
•-=::._._ 30 111clcy COIIJIIes· Yo11r cllolce II( - Hollywootrs Best fl

WEDNESDAY'S

Spring Vtdley Clnemtd

HIGHLIGHTS

..__...,

.

Pllrcllase 11ecess11r

on

't'--"

The Widest Selection of New and Used Vehieles!

Prep Hoops

THE ROAD'

Boys
TVC

Ohio DIVIsion

•''

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e

ien
•

1:'"
Cl

en
en
en

-

tl\S NORtdgoT•=

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNsoN
•

446-0842

with approved credit!

'oliday Blowout Sale

Entire Inventory· New and Used· Priced to SeD! .

oC

Cl

Cl

:a

!...z
i

·I

95 Grand Prix
Super Clean

$6990

Cl

98 VW Passat

IDDD IWID 1M Sl
Mciroon, PW, Tilt. Cruise, CD player,

1:'"
1M

43000 Miles
A-1 Condition

;

$15,700

z
n

en

en•

=

1:'"

en
en
en

oC

=
Cl
:a

Pontiac Sunfii'E
Beautiful Car
A Must See At

SHARP!
COMPARE ANYWHERE

$1
20

@

70

PONTIA

Front &amp; rear IVC, CD Player,
WAS $21 ,900 NOW $19.900

~~~~97 Chevy 5-10

Be$f-

Sunroof,

Heated

Leather Seats, remote CD Changer
MSRP
34,035
Discount -7,500

PS. CD player, keyless entry,
wheels, Americas best selling lui
car, low miles WAS $19,900

...

Pre-Holiday Clearance Sale
All units have been reduced for this
special sale- Uncle
's loss is your gain

Auto, air, cassette, cruise, tilt

Sale s17,995

2000 OLDS INmiGUE.

1 9"o APR on all new 1/2 ton
extended cabs for 36 months
2001 Models only

0.9% APR for 60 months.
See sales stall for details
Hurry they won 't last long

=
=
en

ota

Savings

99 Ford Taurus
liD 98 Concorde 1Owner
96 Intrepid SHARP
z 99 Montana 25K
98 Wrangler 4x4 9K
99S-101 Owner
99 Montero XLS 26K
98 Caravan 1 Owner
98 Cavalier 42K
95 Chevy C-1500
971ntrepid 59K NICE
en 00 Neon 4DR Auto
00 Ram 2500 4~4 SLT
oC
Loaded; 4.1 0Axle
Cl
:a 99 Durango 4x41oaded
C'l
96 Cherokee Classic
z
4x4 White, Auto
89 Chevy 8250 Van
98 Chevy Tracker 2Dr
Auto, Air, Soft top
94 Chrysler LHS CD
Leather, Moon Roof 1
98 Jeep Grd. Cherokee ·
Laredo,4x4, Loaded
Cl

' !...

=

e

...

Price

$12,900
$16,200
$8,750
$17,395
$15,200
$93,50
$18,450
$13,175
$9,100
$10,995
$11,595
$12,750

$10,880
$14,650
$6925
$15,500
$12,975
$7950
$15,900
$10,700
$7,950
$8,700
$9,999
$10,900

$25;950
$24,895

;
Locally owned• New car trade

WAS $11 ,995 Salt

4x4, Pewter, one owner, VB, Extra

eharp, only 48,000 mil"
WAS $18,895 SOlo

$9,090

1998 CHEU CIIUIIllfR

$17,700

4 Dr, One owner- Clean Inside &amp; out

WAS S999S SOlo

~-::z-

$7,995
$8,950

m

NOW $7,600
Rear wheel drive - V6 eccmomv·
I Shovvs TLC .
$2,995 NOW $2,388

Stock fT-2386A Black, locally owned
See It now. Only 6,500 miles

Prlclld to 1111 now

SOlo $3,800

WAS

1999 CHEUY mllliBU

Fully equipped- one careful ownerSee .
It

Extra claan 4 dr Sedan

I---,W,.,AS $8,995 SOlo~~~-~

.

Only 500 mllea

MSAP 515,025 Solo $11,800

Make Chrlatmat Happy for Someonu

Eoctra spec:lol $5,700

i

!.z..

$8,400

WAS $8,995 Solo $6,050
4 Or· Luzury Sedan

WAS $10,995 Sale $7,500

1999 CHtU LUmlnll4 DR
GM Program Car
Every

I--;;;

Dark Blu.- Clean

WAS $7,995 SOlo $5,700

·-~=
Many quality pre-owned vehicles to choose fro'm
Now is the time to buy!

Only

4 Or· Lora or miles left In lhls one

:---1
n ,000 mllet
local c:ar

WAS $3,995 Solo

$2,800

day price $11 ,990

WAS S3.495 Sale

~---~

$1 ,800

= ;;---

Rebuilt titl e Look at th is one

ALL

TVC

Thursday's Games
Belpre at Alexander
Federal Hock ing at Eastern
Meigs at Vinton County
Miller at Trimble
Wellston at Nelsonville- York
Southern at Wate rford

Southern-Fed
Hock game
rescheduled
RACINE

ed es

en

=
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...

DAVE HARRIS
OVP CO RRESPON DENT

The SnLLtiwrnI · L'tk r:-~1 Hm h.mg buys v~u,iry bJ~­
kctb.l ll g.llllL" ,c!Jcdul . :d f~)r Fr id :ry
ni~.dn i1 1 Stew,u't h:1s bee n IIHJvc d
to R:k inc
.
South1..Tll will go to fede ral
Hocking Jamury ~3 . T h t' rL'\LTve
g. ul lL' will bq~in .1t () p:m .

Ga lipolis

R OC K
SPRI NGS
So uthern scored t he fi rst nin e
po ints of the third period to
break open a close game and
we nt on t o defeat Meigs 5 141.'
The Tornadoes hd d a slim
21-19 lead at the half. but in
the third period the purple
and go ld picke,i up the defensi v&lt;;.~· pressure to force several
Marauder turn overs and hold
Meigs withou t a shot the first
fi1u r miJmtes of the perio d.
Sou thern j utn ped o ut o n
top 6-2, but Meigs ca me
storm ing b.1ck and too k a 7-6
lead wlten D errick Johnson
nailed a 3r poi nt er with 3:1 14
left in th e period.
A byup by Jo hnson gave
Meigs a 9-6 lead with 2: I 0 left
in the perio d. bur Jonathan

Bv ANDREW

CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
G ALLIPO LI S~ Ga llia A cad~­

my nea rl y pulled off what would
have bee n co nsidered on e cjf the::
biggest upsets of the early season
Tuesday, but fdl to Loga n 54-51!.
Th e Ulu e Devils (0-3, SEOAL
0- 1) stymied the C hieftains with
a 2-3 zone and patient offeme t\1r
th e bette r part of four quarte"·
but co uld n1t knock down cru cial
free throws in the fou rth quarter
as Loga n held on fo r the wi n.
Gallia Academy hit 6 of 12 foul
shots in the fin al peri od.
" I didn't think we co uld play
th em man-to- man,'' GAH S head
coac h Jim Osborne said. " I'd say it
• (the zo ne) probably surpri sed
th em a little bit. l'eo rle who saw
us play the 2-3 o n Monday (in
prac tice) woul d've said it's ,,
turkey shoot. We didn't play ii
very well.
" But w hen the game starts and
the light goes on , people play differently," Osborn e added. "And

Evan s n ai lt" J a three po inter

for Southern with fo ur seco nds left to tie the game at I)all at the end of the period. ·
Meigs too k a I 5-'J lead in
the second peri od on fo ur
straight point&gt; by J. l~ Staats
and a buc ket by Adam
Bullin gto n . But So u thern
came stoni1in g back and took
a I H- 17 lea d at the 3:06 mark
of the h.1lf when Nathan Martin nailed th e second of two
m aight three pointers .
J ohn son nailed a sh o rt
Jump er with 2: 50 left to give
Meigs a 19- 18 lead , bu t

Please see Rivals. Page 83

qur move m ents were mu ch m o re
precise and much more active."

MENT.OR MEETS PUPIL .....; Meigs coach Carl Wolfe (left) and Southern coach Jay Rees share a moment
following last night 's Tornado victory at Racine . (Dave Harris photo)

it against them."
C hristi an had so x poi nts in the openin g
OVC offici als presented Atkins with a penoJ and nin e poims in the fi nal qu an r r.
GALLIP O LIS ~ Ohio·Valley C hristian plaqu e lo ll owing the game, to co mmemo"Defensively, we played a reall y super
gavc'head coach G reg Atki ns two giftsTues- rate rhe milestone.
gam e," Atk ins sa id . "Urad JUSt hawked their
Four OVC players reac hed doubl e di gits, point guard and cau sed all kinds Df disru pday.
Fi rst i nd foremost, the led by Adam Holcomb with 19 po ints. Gabe . tions in their offense th c whole game. I was
Defenders recorded -their Jenk ins added 16 points and Drad Bowman real pleased with the dercnsive efforr .''
first victory of the season , pun1pd in 15 points.
Uowman, ll olco mb and Jay Jenkins had
a 74-55 win ove r archr iMike Jenks had 12 points fu r the Defend - two steals e,rch . T he Defe nders ca me up
va l Cross Lanes C htist- ers, who earn ed thei r fi rst \:vin aftt-r losses to with II altogether.
I J ll .
Federal Hocking an{l Teays Valley C hristi an.
C:abe Jenkins and Bowman al so Jed the
Second ly. th e vic to ry
"We haven't felt like we played our bes t su . Dt:fe llde r~ on the boa rd~. Jenkin s gr:1 bbed
w"' N o. I !ill to r Atkins in far in the first two ga1ncs.'' Atkins said. "Of eight rebo und s. while ll ow man hauled in
his career at Ohio Vall ey course, the first two tean1 s w e played, as of seven .
C hristian.
last wee kend , had a combin ed record of7Bowman al so lud fo ur ;J '\s i ~ts as th e
Atkins
" I think th,ot there l . So, we haven 't pla}'ed two slouches start - Defende rs o ffcns~.: Sl'L' Il ll'd to co m ~ aro und
were other people who ing ou t, but \Ve still have n't played ou r best." after strugglin g thro ugh th l' fir "it t wo ga m e'i .
we re more t.'Ol K erned abo ut it (th ~ \ rl(lrh
Ohio Vall ey C hristi an ( 1-2) force d nine
Holcomb and Jay Jeq kins had three· assists
wi n) than I w.ts;' Atki ns sai d. " I was happy turnovers by C ross L~m eo.; C hrist.ian in th e eac h . J r nk i n ~ also "cored L' Jght pomt".
we got win No. I th is year. Uut the fitct th at seco nd half and bottled up th e Wa rriors in
Nathon Wi lli,rms .r nd I hie Taylor h.1d two
Cross Lan e'\ ha'i het'n a tho rn in o ur sid e feu· the tirst and fo urt h q ua rte r~ . Cross Lan es
Please see OVC, Page Bl
so ma ny yc•:rrs, it was a little bit sweet getting
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

AT I I I. I\:S~

Trck,'ts t(Jr tlw

.tn: on ,,d~· .1t hotll ~:lSt l'rll :md
Suuthl'rll I hgh School-; 111 the
11 1.1in utlirL'.

Additoolr,rl ly. Southern mil sell
ttcker~

on their humc boys g.JJllr.:

on Frid.1y.
rhe ~;chon I or
$7 at the garc ,md they Jft" good
f{,r Jthe full \ch~.·dok of gan1es in
the d,J\\iC frlllll I0 a.m. to tJ :4.=,
T 1ch·ts ,1re $5

.lt

p. Ill'
~outherol

plays Fisher C:uholrc
.It 12:..f~ p.m. , \vlnk Eastern
nil"L't'i !kll.tin.' ,It 2 p.111 .
I

zone) In the thml and fimrth

qu arters," Osborne said . " Th ey
got a couple of runs and made
so me in side-o uts, but we didn ·t
have a choice. We can't guard
eve ryone.
" But to h;tve a chan ce with a
mim1":' to go in a ga me aga mst a
team like this, whether it's on th e
road o r home, I can 't h L' I) lOre
proud of the d f&lt; &gt;rt of eve ryhody
w e playe d," he added. " I thnk we
proved to ourselves thar we em

r--,==--..,.

now co mpt.·te. But it's going to

take that eflo rt every ni ght."
.
Logan heqJ coach Gary Swin ehart said ht was concern ed wit h
hmv hili club rt•acrt•d to rhe zone
early in ch ..- gam i;:. but was pl t'J'ied

Please see Devils, Page 83

Raiders hold off Big Blacks~ 52-49

Wahama
whips

River Vcilley ran its unbeaten streak
to three games with the close win

Hamlin

~ond.

BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Bv BurcH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

H AM LI N. W.V:1. ~ Eddie
McKilllll')' popped in ,1 ctu'll
1.'l P&lt;!i nh. \\ l1il e l~y:UJ R o ush
.rd ded :1 11 !- point d)(,rt to le ad
Wah.1ma rn J 7 1.-(l-4 victory :1t

Ci-11-.\ HIR E ~ A ft&gt;ellth qu.trt~.: r ral ly Pnint l'h.:,l',lllt fell
ju~r . short TtiL'"&lt;..Lly. bur 1-t J\ 'L'rVd ky held on lin .1 32 - ..t~J \· irr01~r
to n:nuin undck.ltcd .
Up by 11 pmnt\ .n one p(JliH
in the lt&gt;elrth, the· ICl\(flT, (.&gt;- 11,
SEl lAL 1-11) b&lt;lt rlw shot' when
th~.·y lll'L'lkd thcnl tn hold ntr
the ll i~-: llhcl so
lr \\-,].., llw \C.t\on ()~1cnn fi&gt;r

H &lt;n nli u Tul''l dav.

'

McKinowy scOJ·,·d 14 of his
t,r:lllH: - high rnt~J I in the St''-!ond

Wendy's Classic
tix on sale

Logan seni ors Johnny Conrad
and Matt Taulbee connected on
critical 3-pointers for the .Chieftams in the fourth ·qu arter. C onrad drilled a long trey 11 seconds
into th e perio d , and Taulbee
·drained a an oth er long JUmper
foll owing a 30-second timeout
that gave Logan a 51-4 7 cushion
with 2:05 to p lay.
Galli a Academy se nior Dustin
Deckard hi t three nf four f,JUJ
shots to cut the ga p t.o 51 -50 with
I: 19 left , bu t Jim Benn ett went ·
o ne for two and R yan Swinehart
hit both ends of a one-and·one to
seal the game fo r the Chieft ains.
"They (Lob-..n ) solved it (the

ave gives Atkins 1Oath career win

~

Wendy\ I loop~; C:L1~qc at 'Ohio
U 11 ivcr'&gt;it y\ ( 'nnvo~.· .Hiun Ccntn

Locally owned- Conversion van

Gallipolis, OH
Phone 800·446·0842

e-mail superdodge@voyager.net

-

en
en

;
Beautiful teal fin ish- one owner,
V6, PW, etc.
Was $8,995 NOW $7,470

ALL

Area non-league

b
en

en

WAS $9,995 Sala

SEO

River Valley
t.Q 3-0
Logan
2.Q 2·0
Athens
1·0 2-1
Warren
1-0 1·0
Marietta
0·1 1·2
Jackson·
0-2 1-3
Point Pleasant
0·1 0'·1
Gallia Academy
(J.t
0·3
Tuesday's Games
Logan 54, Gallia Academy 50
River Valley 52, Point Pleasant 49
Warren 71 , Marietta 48
Athen s 85, Jackson 37
Friday's Games
Athen s at Gallia Academy
R1ver Valley at Logan
Warren at Jackson ·
Point Pleasant at Marietta

en•

1:'"
1M

252 Upper River Rd.

Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, AI Durst, Neal Peifer,
Jamie Adamson, Joe Tillis, Larry Pierce, John Saunders

=
•

n

23, 000 to 33,000 low m11es,
wh ee l drive- good eq uipmen t
1Your Choice@ $15,780

SEOAL

Area non-league
South Gal lia at Wah ama

=
z

1997 fORD

ALL

1M

=

Fully equipped

TVC

Waterford
2·0 2-0
Trimble
2.()
2-f
Federal Hocking
H
3·1·
Southern
t -1 3-1
Eastern
0·2 1-2
Miller
0·2 0-5
Tuesday's Games
Southern 51 , Me igs 41
Wellston 59, Miller 49
Nelsonville·York 74 , Trimble 66
Friday's Games
Alexander at Vinton County
Belpre at Wellston
Miller at Eastern
Federal Hocking at' Southern
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Trimble at Waterford

·-z

oC

4 Or Sedan, Extra Nice

0-2
0·2

SEOAL
&lt;lallia Academy at Athens
Logan at River Valley
Marietta at Point Pleasant
Jackson at Warren

p

$6,850

NORTHUP DODGE, INC.

Cl

Cl

$11,700
$2,900

$16,500

oC

liD

1992 TOYOTA PREVIA VAN
WHEEL DRIVE· Front &amp;
IVC CD player. Runs great!

Stepelde- Extra Clean

$18,500

e
z

$23,950
$23,000

$7,777

en
en
en

Cl

$7

H
H

Girls

en

1998 CHEUY EXT CftB

3-0
2-1
3·1
3-2
1-3
0-4

1:'"
Cl

in

$1 700

2·0
2·0

Belpre
Alexander
Wellston
Nelsonville· York
Vinton County
Meigs

en•

...

1997 CHEVY HSTRO

ALL

Wahama
1-0
Hannan
0-0
Ohio Valley Christian
1·2
South Gallia
_
0·3
Tuesday's Games
Ohio Valley Christian 74 , Cross
t,anes Christian.,S5
Wahama 71, Ham li n 64
Hannan at Duval
Fairland 61 , South Gallia 40
Friday's Games
Hannan at Van
Cro ss Lanes Chr istian at South Galli a
OVC Tournament

~
z

$14,990

Low Rider

$13,335
$3,750

1:'"
1M

WASS1Utlllalo

·Price

en
en

=
i
~--~~~SOle '12,895

Santa

1:'"
Cl

en

All WhHI Drlvo, Fully oqulppod, LT
Modal, Burgundy
.

North Pole

-

en

InTRIGUE

b

Cl

Power windows , power locks, tilt,
cruise
------""'-'-':.:....~'--'-'-j Everyday priced@ $18,995

Extra Sharp- Low mllet ·

en

oC

$1

WAS $18,995 SOlo

sold new - Local senior's trade!
with blue cloth- Loaded
$14,900 NOW $12,770

en
en

!...z

Eoctra Nlco- Family Slzod

90 Pontiac Grand Am .......... $1850
94 F·150 4x4 VS XLT .......;... $6800
97 Neon (Red) 4Dr ..............$6495

en

i

11246&amp;- New Chevrolet Full
Size Plck·Up
4 WD
MSRP $22,785
Auto trans
Sale 20,960
Air
Rebate 1500
Cruise &amp; tilt
Sele
V·8 equipment Prloe

I

$6800

=
•
Cl

$26,535
Only 12,000 low miles, auto, IVC,
CD .Player, tilt, almost new I
Was $12,900 NOW $11,570

i

GALLIPOLIS, vn1.1 en•
1-800-521 -0084 1:'"

2000 LESABRE CUSTOM

Talk About Cheap
Santa Is.HERE!!!

ez

Pontiacs

2000 PONTIAC SUNFIRE

$8950

C'l

IDDD BDrmmLLI 1111·

•

TVC

Hocking Division

1M

Gallipolis' ·Hometown Dealer

1616 EASTERN AVE •
(740) 446·3672

Southem .topples Meigs
Bv

UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S
LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!
.
.

~~~~

Logan

hal( i11 .tdditiun to grabbin~ a
tc;llll-hi~h nine rebou nds.
Rnu\ll t"tl lllll'd

1 l of 14

Poi m Pk .l\&lt;lll r.
" 1n rh.H li.n1rrh. (]LI.lrt.l'r, n lud
to be ,l good t(Hi r lllimttL'\, li\'L'
'mimnt•.., qrcrch th,H \\'l' \\ 'L' tlf
\\it h out~conng." ~.lid Rin' rV.d -

from' the frl'l' throw o;rripc for
tlw llcnJ Area F,Jkons, while

~.IJ -.rnbutlllg
l'VC'llil lg.

\1 '\

,1\,li l lit"i

011

the

W;rh.ulla ( l - 11) IDst the ser·
VI ce-. of i t'&gt;

l ~y

lnllL' return ing

in j,1~on Simpkin~ cJrly
in the CO!ltl'S[ JuL' to a back

1njury, hut . J''~'''"'Y Hudnall
c.mre olr the bench to pick up
rl"· otl&lt;·nsiw sLtck. Hudnall
12 pmnt.., \vlth Brandnu

k.H.i to ti\'l..".

H.mkimon .1ddin~ ei~ht point~

A Stephen I L111Jlc\· J-pmnrer

t()r the F,1 kon-..
Wah.una .Jlllll)H'd ont tu .1

J(, - 7 flr'it pl'lind kttd cllld '
looked b.Kk 111 r.tcing to

llL'\·~r

Please •ee Wahama, Page 83

lic.1d l"l,.),lL" h . Ct' IIC L.tyto n .

"TI,ey chipped .m·ay .md
chipped m ·ay."
With k-.. . rh.m .1 m1nutl' to
pby. :r p.rir o(J.rrcd llenney tiw
rhro\\''i ,111d .1 t(nd ~ohor by Eric
NoLin L'Xtcndcd th~..· R .1idL·r..,

-;t.lrt~..T

~tt;ored

,

\\ 1th lllllL' ''-'(Olllh n.:m .1 ining in
rq~uLHIOil brou~ht thl' Bi~
&gt;
•
'
BLHl:-. h.lLh- to withm t\HJ, hut .1

BOARD WARRIOR ~ River Valley senior Jeremy Peck (50) goes. high
for a rebound against Point Pleasant. (Bryan Long photo)

kn· t1w throw by Bi.Jkc M.trn1111 pr11 1h,· ~.1111c .rw:l\' tor

"W,· n'.dly turned up tlw
intL'Il'ilf)' in the tOurrh qu.utcr.·'
'aid !)oint Pll' a:-.,mt l1e.ld l n.lt·h
Rid1ic Blain. "' \X/ht.::n \\'l' g;ot •
down by 11, ir w:l\ k111d of ,1 gur .
check ,\lld th~.y l"l''ipon~.kd
Wh(•n you pby'. hard. thing-.
l~ .lppcn in your t:I\'{JJ:·
With Ri\'lT V.rlky k.1diu~ 4 ,\.12 with lc"' rh.111 'il'\ lllllllltl''
rcm.1ming 111 the g,ll1ll", till' B1g
lll.ocks lll'~.1n rhe1r r.tlly, \\'toirlo
w.t' i~nit,·d by .1 J. l'. Simpkiojs .'\point go,tl

"Wh,tt hun
our~cko." ~;a i d

11~

(tonigh t) \V.1~o

Bl.lin. "1 felt

\\'l'

ki11d ul· lll'.lt our\L:Ives \\'!th
'iO~llt' 'idly tUJ"l10VLT\ ,111J '\Oilll'
l'l'.11ly unt(wced errors. 1" 111 1\'.tlly
prnud of them. till' w.ty thl'y
Cl lllL' b.H.: k.
"V..le hi t ~omne big free throw'

.md th'l·y lll,hh: ,l g.mll' out of IL..
hL' .Hidl'd." lo Illc rh,u"s imporr.mt. ncn though \H' lo\t ."
Cood ti"l'l' throw ,hooting hy
the llo~ Blocks . .rnd sewn
tOurth-tlu,lrt~.·r pomt~ by JoL'Y f
Loollll\ h~._·lpL·d Point Pkaos.mt

Please see Raiders, Page Bl

�'•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedoeaclay, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

·The Daily Sentinel

AP All-America football teams, Page BJ
Today 's Scoreboard, Page B6

·Page Bl

Register to Will
FREE Eve11l11g out
~ tile Movies

.

WecllleSAy. Dec:elllber 1:S.l000

2 Ticlce.ts~ POJICOrll, l( Ptpsll
•-=::._._ 30 111clcy COIIJIIes· Yo11r cllolce II( - Hollywootrs Best fl

WEDNESDAY'S

Spring Vtdley Clnemtd

HIGHLIGHTS

..__...,

.

Pllrcllase 11ecess11r

on

't'--"

The Widest Selection of New and Used Vehieles!

Prep Hoops

THE ROAD'

Boys
TVC

Ohio DIVIsion

•''

Cl

z

e

ien
•

1:'"
Cl

en
en
en

-

tl\S NORtdgoT•=

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNsoN
•

446-0842

with approved credit!

'oliday Blowout Sale

Entire Inventory· New and Used· Priced to SeD! .

oC

Cl

Cl

:a

!...z
i

·I

95 Grand Prix
Super Clean

$6990

Cl

98 VW Passat

IDDD IWID 1M Sl
Mciroon, PW, Tilt. Cruise, CD player,

1:'"
1M

43000 Miles
A-1 Condition

;

$15,700

z
n

en

en•

=

1:'"

en
en
en

oC

=
Cl
:a

Pontiac Sunfii'E
Beautiful Car
A Must See At

SHARP!
COMPARE ANYWHERE

$1
20

@

70

PONTIA

Front &amp; rear IVC, CD Player,
WAS $21 ,900 NOW $19.900

~~~~97 Chevy 5-10

Be$f-

Sunroof,

Heated

Leather Seats, remote CD Changer
MSRP
34,035
Discount -7,500

PS. CD player, keyless entry,
wheels, Americas best selling lui
car, low miles WAS $19,900

...

Pre-Holiday Clearance Sale
All units have been reduced for this
special sale- Uncle
's loss is your gain

Auto, air, cassette, cruise, tilt

Sale s17,995

2000 OLDS INmiGUE.

1 9"o APR on all new 1/2 ton
extended cabs for 36 months
2001 Models only

0.9% APR for 60 months.
See sales stall for details
Hurry they won 't last long

=
=
en

ota

Savings

99 Ford Taurus
liD 98 Concorde 1Owner
96 Intrepid SHARP
z 99 Montana 25K
98 Wrangler 4x4 9K
99S-101 Owner
99 Montero XLS 26K
98 Caravan 1 Owner
98 Cavalier 42K
95 Chevy C-1500
971ntrepid 59K NICE
en 00 Neon 4DR Auto
00 Ram 2500 4~4 SLT
oC
Loaded; 4.1 0Axle
Cl
:a 99 Durango 4x41oaded
C'l
96 Cherokee Classic
z
4x4 White, Auto
89 Chevy 8250 Van
98 Chevy Tracker 2Dr
Auto, Air, Soft top
94 Chrysler LHS CD
Leather, Moon Roof 1
98 Jeep Grd. Cherokee ·
Laredo,4x4, Loaded
Cl

' !...

=

e

...

Price

$12,900
$16,200
$8,750
$17,395
$15,200
$93,50
$18,450
$13,175
$9,100
$10,995
$11,595
$12,750

$10,880
$14,650
$6925
$15,500
$12,975
$7950
$15,900
$10,700
$7,950
$8,700
$9,999
$10,900

$25;950
$24,895

;
Locally owned• New car trade

WAS $11 ,995 Salt

4x4, Pewter, one owner, VB, Extra

eharp, only 48,000 mil"
WAS $18,895 SOlo

$9,090

1998 CHEU CIIUIIllfR

$17,700

4 Dr, One owner- Clean Inside &amp; out

WAS S999S SOlo

~-::z-

$7,995
$8,950

m

NOW $7,600
Rear wheel drive - V6 eccmomv·
I Shovvs TLC .
$2,995 NOW $2,388

Stock fT-2386A Black, locally owned
See It now. Only 6,500 miles

Prlclld to 1111 now

SOlo $3,800

WAS

1999 CHEUY mllliBU

Fully equipped- one careful ownerSee .
It

Extra claan 4 dr Sedan

I---,W,.,AS $8,995 SOlo~~~-~

.

Only 500 mllea

MSAP 515,025 Solo $11,800

Make Chrlatmat Happy for Someonu

Eoctra spec:lol $5,700

i

!.z..

$8,400

WAS $8,995 Solo $6,050
4 Or· Luzury Sedan

WAS $10,995 Sale $7,500

1999 CHtU LUmlnll4 DR
GM Program Car
Every

I--;;;

Dark Blu.- Clean

WAS $7,995 SOlo $5,700

·-~=
Many quality pre-owned vehicles to choose fro'm
Now is the time to buy!

Only

4 Or· Lora or miles left In lhls one

:---1
n ,000 mllet
local c:ar

WAS $3,995 Solo

$2,800

day price $11 ,990

WAS S3.495 Sale

~---~

$1 ,800

= ;;---

Rebuilt titl e Look at th is one

ALL

TVC

Thursday's Games
Belpre at Alexander
Federal Hock ing at Eastern
Meigs at Vinton County
Miller at Trimble
Wellston at Nelsonville- York
Southern at Wate rford

Southern-Fed
Hock game
rescheduled
RACINE

ed es

en

=
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Cl

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...

DAVE HARRIS
OVP CO RRESPON DENT

The SnLLtiwrnI · L'tk r:-~1 Hm h.mg buys v~u,iry bJ~­
kctb.l ll g.llllL" ,c!Jcdul . :d f~)r Fr id :ry
ni~.dn i1 1 Stew,u't h:1s bee n IIHJvc d
to R:k inc
.
South1..Tll will go to fede ral
Hocking Jamury ~3 . T h t' rL'\LTve
g. ul lL' will bq~in .1t () p:m .

Ga lipolis

R OC K
SPRI NGS
So uthern scored t he fi rst nin e
po ints of the third period to
break open a close game and
we nt on t o defeat Meigs 5 141.'
The Tornadoes hd d a slim
21-19 lead at the half. but in
the third period the purple
and go ld picke,i up the defensi v&lt;;.~· pressure to force several
Marauder turn overs and hold
Meigs withou t a shot the first
fi1u r miJmtes of the perio d.
Sou thern j utn ped o ut o n
top 6-2, but Meigs ca me
storm ing b.1ck and too k a 7-6
lead wlten D errick Johnson
nailed a 3r poi nt er with 3:1 14
left in th e period.
A byup by Jo hnson gave
Meigs a 9-6 lead with 2: I 0 left
in the perio d. bur Jonathan

Bv ANDREW

CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
G ALLIPO LI S~ Ga llia A cad~­

my nea rl y pulled off what would
have bee n co nsidered on e cjf the::
biggest upsets of the early season
Tuesday, but fdl to Loga n 54-51!.
Th e Ulu e Devils (0-3, SEOAL
0- 1) stymied the C hieftains with
a 2-3 zone and patient offeme t\1r
th e bette r part of four quarte"·
but co uld n1t knock down cru cial
free throws in the fou rth quarter
as Loga n held on fo r the wi n.
Gallia Academy hit 6 of 12 foul
shots in the fin al peri od.
" I didn't think we co uld play
th em man-to- man,'' GAH S head
coac h Jim Osborne said. " I'd say it
• (the zo ne) probably surpri sed
th em a little bit. l'eo rle who saw
us play the 2-3 o n Monday (in
prac tice) woul d've said it's ,,
turkey shoot. We didn't play ii
very well.
" But w hen the game starts and
the light goes on , people play differently," Osborn e added. "And

Evan s n ai lt" J a three po inter

for Southern with fo ur seco nds left to tie the game at I)all at the end of the period. ·
Meigs too k a I 5-'J lead in
the second peri od on fo ur
straight point&gt; by J. l~ Staats
and a buc ket by Adam
Bullin gto n . But So u thern
came stoni1in g back and took
a I H- 17 lea d at the 3:06 mark
of the h.1lf when Nathan Martin nailed th e second of two
m aight three pointers .
J ohn son nailed a sh o rt
Jump er with 2: 50 left to give
Meigs a 19- 18 lead , bu t

Please see Rivals. Page 83

qur move m ents were mu ch m o re
precise and much more active."

MENT.OR MEETS PUPIL .....; Meigs coach Carl Wolfe (left) and Southern coach Jay Rees share a moment
following last night 's Tornado victory at Racine . (Dave Harris photo)

it against them."
C hristi an had so x poi nts in the openin g
OVC offici als presented Atkins with a penoJ and nin e poims in the fi nal qu an r r.
GALLIP O LIS ~ Ohio·Valley C hristian plaqu e lo ll owing the game, to co mmemo"Defensively, we played a reall y super
gavc'head coach G reg Atki ns two giftsTues- rate rhe milestone.
gam e," Atk ins sa id . "Urad JUSt hawked their
Four OVC players reac hed doubl e di gits, point guard and cau sed all kinds Df disru pday.
Fi rst i nd foremost, the led by Adam Holcomb with 19 po ints. Gabe . tions in their offense th c whole game. I was
Defenders recorded -their Jenk ins added 16 points and Drad Bowman real pleased with the dercnsive efforr .''
first victory of the season , pun1pd in 15 points.
Uowman, ll olco mb and Jay Jenkins had
a 74-55 win ove r archr iMike Jenks had 12 points fu r the Defend - two steals e,rch . T he Defe nders ca me up
va l Cross Lanes C htist- ers, who earn ed thei r fi rst \:vin aftt-r losses to with II altogether.
I J ll .
Federal Hocking an{l Teays Valley C hristi an.
C:abe Jenkins and Bowman al so Jed the
Second ly. th e vic to ry
"We haven't felt like we played our bes t su . Dt:fe llde r~ on the boa rd~. Jenkin s gr:1 bbed
w"' N o. I !ill to r Atkins in far in the first two ga1ncs.'' Atkins said. "Of eight rebo und s. while ll ow man hauled in
his career at Ohio Vall ey course, the first two tean1 s w e played, as of seven .
C hristian.
last wee kend , had a combin ed record of7Bowman al so lud fo ur ;J '\s i ~ts as th e
Atkins
" I think th,ot there l . So, we haven 't pla}'ed two slouches start - Defende rs o ffcns~.: Sl'L' Il ll'd to co m ~ aro und
were other people who ing ou t, but \Ve still have n't played ou r best." after strugglin g thro ugh th l' fir "it t wo ga m e'i .
we re more t.'Ol K erned abo ut it (th ~ \ rl(lrh
Ohio Vall ey C hristi an ( 1-2) force d nine
Holcomb and Jay Jeq kins had three· assists
wi n) than I w.ts;' Atki ns sai d. " I was happy turnovers by C ross L~m eo.; C hrist.ian in th e eac h . J r nk i n ~ also "cored L' Jght pomt".
we got win No. I th is year. Uut the fitct th at seco nd half and bottled up th e Wa rriors in
Nathon Wi lli,rms .r nd I hie Taylor h.1d two
Cross Lan e'\ ha'i het'n a tho rn in o ur sid e feu· the tirst and fo urt h q ua rte r~ . Cross Lan es
Please see OVC, Page Bl
so ma ny yc•:rrs, it was a little bit sweet getting
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

AT I I I. I\:S~

Trck,'ts t(Jr tlw

.tn: on ,,d~· .1t hotll ~:lSt l'rll :md
Suuthl'rll I hgh School-; 111 the
11 1.1in utlirL'.

Additoolr,rl ly. Southern mil sell
ttcker~

on their humc boys g.JJllr.:

on Frid.1y.
rhe ~;chon I or
$7 at the garc ,md they Jft" good
f{,r Jthe full \ch~.·dok of gan1es in
the d,J\\iC frlllll I0 a.m. to tJ :4.=,
T 1ch·ts ,1re $5

.lt

p. Ill'
~outherol

plays Fisher C:uholrc
.It 12:..f~ p.m. , \vlnk Eastern
nil"L't'i !kll.tin.' ,It 2 p.111 .
I

zone) In the thml and fimrth

qu arters," Osborne said . " Th ey
got a couple of runs and made
so me in side-o uts, but we didn ·t
have a choice. We can't guard
eve ryone.
" But to h;tve a chan ce with a
mim1":' to go in a ga me aga mst a
team like this, whether it's on th e
road o r home, I can 't h L' I) lOre
proud of the d f&lt; &gt;rt of eve ryhody
w e playe d," he added. " I thnk we
proved to ourselves thar we em

r--,==--..,.

now co mpt.·te. But it's going to

take that eflo rt every ni ght."
.
Logan heqJ coach Gary Swin ehart said ht was concern ed wit h
hmv hili club rt•acrt•d to rhe zone
early in ch ..- gam i;:. but was pl t'J'ied

Please see Devils, Page 83

Raiders hold off Big Blacks~ 52-49

Wahama
whips

River Vcilley ran its unbeaten streak
to three games with the close win

Hamlin

~ond.

BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Bv BurcH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

H AM LI N. W.V:1. ~ Eddie
McKilllll')' popped in ,1 ctu'll
1.'l P&lt;!i nh. \\ l1il e l~y:UJ R o ush
.rd ded :1 11 !- point d)(,rt to le ad
Wah.1ma rn J 7 1.-(l-4 victory :1t

Ci-11-.\ HIR E ~ A ft&gt;ellth qu.trt~.: r ral ly Pnint l'h.:,l',lllt fell
ju~r . short TtiL'"&lt;..Lly. bur 1-t J\ 'L'rVd ky held on lin .1 32 - ..t~J \· irr01~r
to n:nuin undck.ltcd .
Up by 11 pmnt\ .n one p(JliH
in the lt&gt;elrth, the· ICl\(flT, (.&gt;- 11,
SEl lAL 1-11) b&lt;lt rlw shot' when
th~.·y lll'L'lkd thcnl tn hold ntr
the ll i~-: llhcl so
lr \\-,].., llw \C.t\on ()~1cnn fi&gt;r

H &lt;n nli u Tul''l dav.

'

McKinowy scOJ·,·d 14 of his
t,r:lllH: - high rnt~J I in the St''-!ond

Wendy's Classic
tix on sale

Logan seni ors Johnny Conrad
and Matt Taulbee connected on
critical 3-pointers for the .Chieftams in the fourth ·qu arter. C onrad drilled a long trey 11 seconds
into th e perio d , and Taulbee
·drained a an oth er long JUmper
foll owing a 30-second timeout
that gave Logan a 51-4 7 cushion
with 2:05 to p lay.
Galli a Academy se nior Dustin
Deckard hi t three nf four f,JUJ
shots to cut the ga p t.o 51 -50 with
I: 19 left , bu t Jim Benn ett went ·
o ne for two and R yan Swinehart
hit both ends of a one-and·one to
seal the game fo r the Chieft ains.
"They (Lob-..n ) solved it (the

ave gives Atkins 1Oath career win

~

Wendy\ I loop~; C:L1~qc at 'Ohio
U 11 ivcr'&gt;it y\ ( 'nnvo~.· .Hiun Ccntn

Locally owned- Conversion van

Gallipolis, OH
Phone 800·446·0842

e-mail superdodge@voyager.net

-

en
en

;
Beautiful teal fin ish- one owner,
V6, PW, etc.
Was $8,995 NOW $7,470

ALL

Area non-league

b
en

en

WAS $9,995 Sala

SEO

River Valley
t.Q 3-0
Logan
2.Q 2·0
Athens
1·0 2-1
Warren
1-0 1·0
Marietta
0·1 1·2
Jackson·
0-2 1-3
Point Pleasant
0·1 0'·1
Gallia Academy
(J.t
0·3
Tuesday's Games
Logan 54, Gallia Academy 50
River Valley 52, Point Pleasant 49
Warren 71 , Marietta 48
Athen s 85, Jackson 37
Friday's Games
Athen s at Gallia Academy
R1ver Valley at Logan
Warren at Jackson ·
Point Pleasant at Marietta

en•

1:'"
1M

252 Upper River Rd.

Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, AI Durst, Neal Peifer,
Jamie Adamson, Joe Tillis, Larry Pierce, John Saunders

=
•

n

23, 000 to 33,000 low m11es,
wh ee l drive- good eq uipmen t
1Your Choice@ $15,780

SEOAL

Area non-league
South Gal lia at Wah ama

=
z

1997 fORD

ALL

1M

=

Fully equipped

TVC

Waterford
2·0 2-0
Trimble
2.()
2-f
Federal Hocking
H
3·1·
Southern
t -1 3-1
Eastern
0·2 1-2
Miller
0·2 0-5
Tuesday's Games
Southern 51 , Me igs 41
Wellston 59, Miller 49
Nelsonville·York 74 , Trimble 66
Friday's Games
Alexander at Vinton County
Belpre at Wellston
Miller at Eastern
Federal Hocking at' Southern
Nelsonville-York at Meigs
Trimble at Waterford

·-z

oC

4 Or Sedan, Extra Nice

0-2
0·2

SEOAL
&lt;lallia Academy at Athens
Logan at River Valley
Marietta at Point Pleasant
Jackson at Warren

p

$6,850

NORTHUP DODGE, INC.

Cl

Cl

$11,700
$2,900

$16,500

oC

liD

1992 TOYOTA PREVIA VAN
WHEEL DRIVE· Front &amp;
IVC CD player. Runs great!

Stepelde- Extra Clean

$18,500

e
z

$23,950
$23,000

$7,777

en
en
en

Cl

$7

H
H

Girls

en

1998 CHEUY EXT CftB

3-0
2-1
3·1
3-2
1-3
0-4

1:'"
Cl

in

$1 700

2·0
2·0

Belpre
Alexander
Wellston
Nelsonville· York
Vinton County
Meigs

en•

...

1997 CHEVY HSTRO

ALL

Wahama
1-0
Hannan
0-0
Ohio Valley Christian
1·2
South Gallia
_
0·3
Tuesday's Games
Ohio Valley Christian 74 , Cross
t,anes Christian.,S5
Wahama 71, Ham li n 64
Hannan at Duval
Fairland 61 , South Gallia 40
Friday's Games
Hannan at Van
Cro ss Lanes Chr istian at South Galli a
OVC Tournament

~
z

$14,990

Low Rider

$13,335
$3,750

1:'"
1M

WASS1Utlllalo

·Price

en
en

=
i
~--~~~SOle '12,895

Santa

1:'"
Cl

en

All WhHI Drlvo, Fully oqulppod, LT
Modal, Burgundy
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North Pole

-

en

InTRIGUE

b

Cl

Power windows , power locks, tilt,
cruise
------""'-'-':.:....~'--'-'-j Everyday priced@ $18,995

Extra Sharp- Low mllet ·

en

oC

$1

WAS $18,995 SOlo

sold new - Local senior's trade!
with blue cloth- Loaded
$14,900 NOW $12,770

en
en

!...z

Eoctra Nlco- Family Slzod

90 Pontiac Grand Am .......... $1850
94 F·150 4x4 VS XLT .......;... $6800
97 Neon (Red) 4Dr ..............$6495

en

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11246&amp;- New Chevrolet Full
Size Plck·Up
4 WD
MSRP $22,785
Auto trans
Sale 20,960
Air
Rebate 1500
Cruise &amp; tilt
Sele
V·8 equipment Prloe

I

$6800

=
•
Cl

$26,535
Only 12,000 low miles, auto, IVC,
CD .Player, tilt, almost new I
Was $12,900 NOW $11,570

i

GALLIPOLIS, vn1.1 en•
1-800-521 -0084 1:'"

2000 LESABRE CUSTOM

Talk About Cheap
Santa Is.HERE!!!

ez

Pontiacs

2000 PONTIAC SUNFIRE

$8950

C'l

IDDD BDrmmLLI 1111·

•

TVC

Hocking Division

1M

Gallipolis' ·Hometown Dealer

1616 EASTERN AVE •
(740) 446·3672

Southem .topples Meigs
Bv

UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S
LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! UNCLE SAM'S LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!
.
.

~~~~

Logan

hal( i11 .tdditiun to grabbin~ a
tc;llll-hi~h nine rebou nds.
Rnu\ll t"tl lllll'd

1 l of 14

Poi m Pk .l\&lt;lll r.
" 1n rh.H li.n1rrh. (]LI.lrt.l'r, n lud
to be ,l good t(Hi r lllimttL'\, li\'L'
'mimnt•.., qrcrch th,H \\'l' \\ 'L' tlf
\\it h out~conng." ~.lid Rin' rV.d -

from' the frl'l' throw o;rripc for
tlw llcnJ Area F,Jkons, while

~.IJ -.rnbutlllg
l'VC'llil lg.

\1 '\

,1\,li l lit"i

011

the

W;rh.ulla ( l - 11) IDst the ser·
VI ce-. of i t'&gt;

l ~y

lnllL' return ing

in j,1~on Simpkin~ cJrly
in the CO!ltl'S[ JuL' to a back

1njury, hut . J''~'''"'Y Hudnall
c.mre olr the bench to pick up
rl"· otl&lt;·nsiw sLtck. Hudnall
12 pmnt.., \vlth Brandnu

k.H.i to ti\'l..".

H.mkimon .1ddin~ ei~ht point~

A Stephen I L111Jlc\· J-pmnrer

t()r the F,1 kon-..
Wah.una .Jlllll)H'd ont tu .1

J(, - 7 flr'it pl'lind kttd cllld '
looked b.Kk 111 r.tcing to

llL'\·~r

Please •ee Wahama, Page 83

lic.1d l"l,.),lL" h . Ct' IIC L.tyto n .

"TI,ey chipped .m·ay .md
chipped m ·ay."
With k-.. . rh.m .1 m1nutl' to
pby. :r p.rir o(J.rrcd llenney tiw
rhro\\''i ,111d .1 t(nd ~ohor by Eric
NoLin L'Xtcndcd th~..· R .1idL·r..,

-;t.lrt~..T

~tt;ored

,

\\ 1th lllllL' ''-'(Olllh n.:m .1 ining in
rq~uLHIOil brou~ht thl' Bi~
&gt;
•
'
BLHl:-. h.lLh- to withm t\HJ, hut .1

BOARD WARRIOR ~ River Valley senior Jeremy Peck (50) goes. high
for a rebound against Point Pleasant. (Bryan Long photo)

kn· t1w throw by Bi.Jkc M.trn1111 pr11 1h,· ~.1111c .rw:l\' tor

"W,· n'.dly turned up tlw
intL'Il'ilf)' in the tOurrh qu.utcr.·'
'aid !)oint Pll' a:-.,mt l1e.ld l n.lt·h
Rid1ic Blain. "' \X/ht.::n \\'l' g;ot •
down by 11, ir w:l\ k111d of ,1 gur .
check ,\lld th~.y l"l''ipon~.kd
Wh(•n you pby'. hard. thing-.
l~ .lppcn in your t:I\'{JJ:·
With Ri\'lT V.rlky k.1diu~ 4 ,\.12 with lc"' rh.111 'il'\ lllllllltl''
rcm.1ming 111 the g,ll1ll", till' B1g
lll.ocks lll'~.1n rhe1r r.tlly, \\'toirlo
w.t' i~nit,·d by .1 J. l'. Simpkiojs .'\point go,tl

"Wh,tt hun
our~cko." ~;a i d

11~

(tonigh t) \V.1~o

Bl.lin. "1 felt

\\'l'

ki11d ul· lll'.lt our\L:Ives \\'!th
'iO~llt' 'idly tUJ"l10VLT\ ,111J '\Oilll'
l'l'.11ly unt(wced errors. 1" 111 1\'.tlly
prnud of them. till' w.ty thl'y
Cl lllL' b.H.: k.
"V..le hi t ~omne big free throw'

.md th'l·y lll,hh: ,l g.mll' out of IL..
hL' .Hidl'd." lo Illc rh,u"s imporr.mt. ncn though \H' lo\t ."
Cood ti"l'l' throw ,hooting hy
the llo~ Blocks . .rnd sewn
tOurth-tlu,lrt~.·r pomt~ by JoL'Y f
Loollll\ h~._·lpL·d Point Pkaos.mt

Please see Raiders, Page Bl

�P~~ge

B 2 • The Dally S.ntlnel

Wedneact.y, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AP names All-America teams
Help Wanted

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520

1o ass1st
Southern turned the ball over
seven n 1 cs and had 11 steals led
by Evans had four a d Kiser
three
StaatskdMe1gs '1th l4po1ts

er

control ott n th flu r He s
nak g good dens ons
Nolan fimsh d v th 21 po nts
t&lt; I ad the R tders
W&lt; played r ally good n the
th rd q art
sa d Nolan W;.
10ved the ball There were open
shots lor everybody My teall);
mates JUSt gave ne the ball ..._
Nolan ts happy to st 11 be,
unbeaten
To be 3 0 Its a really good
feehng nght now md Nolan
Gettmg off to a 3 0 start the
confidence ts up added Layton
Our first league game goes mtb
theW column We were wantlng
to make sure we gar that
I thought (Pomt Pleasat t)
played very well tomght They ve
got some youth on the penmeter
that played rcall) well w th this
bbng then first ga ne of the sea
son I th nk Po nt Pleasant ts
gomg to cause some people son e
trouble thiS year We feel fortu
nate to get out With the wm
The Ra1ders got 13 po nts otT
the r bench T esday
I cant say c ough about our
bench play to 1 gl t sa d Layton
You ve got to have good bench
play
R ver Valley v II be at Logan
Fnd"
rn a other SEOAI
n a tel up
I le I o 1 t PI asant s
:H Mat tt
lSlt) JCtiOf
E rl e
d
18 po 1 t
D1koto
[)
t I
b zzcr by
d tl e
I R J
rvall cy a 1J J?
1g 1 &lt;o d t t rd g ar

for us
Mea twhtle Loot 1 s led the Btg
Blacks w th 14 pmnts vhtle N1c
Dalton scored P
For Rver Valley It \\as Er c
Nolan who had the hot hand
The semor guard played a b g
role first late tn the opemng half
With Pomt Pleasant up 22 21
at the 59 second mark of the sec
ond quarter the Ratders turneli
the ode before gomg mto the
locker rooms
After a basket by Brandon
Mitchem the Ratders got the ball
back and ate up the clock Wtth
five seconds left D J Frazee
scored on a JUmper to g1ve River
Valley a 25 2, lead
Nolan thet stole the B1g Blacks
nbound pass and made a layup at
the buzzer to ncrease the Ra1ders
lead to five po nts
(Nolan) comes to play every
mght satd Layton He s go ng to
g ve yo everyth ng he s got out
there You talk to yot r kids about
lea\ mg everyth ng out on the
floor well he s deftmtely one vho
does
It was Nola 1 agam 11 the thtrd
quarttt
After Po 1t Pleasant (0 I
SEOAL 0 l ) went ot a 6 0 run
to open he seco d half the
Ra de s p ck d t p th pace due
1 p tt u Nola s t 1 th rd q ar

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lntoroocllon or us 33 • 9.15
Jult South 01 Logon
M ,130-100
SAT Iii 00~ 00 C a1ed SUN

0 0

from Page 81

""Kiser had the1r o

Devils

find in our
CLASSIFIEDS.

Mo e

Sa
You B s ness Today
P me Shopp ng Cen e Spa e
A a abe A A o dab e Ra e
SD ng V ey Pa a Ca 40446

Raiders

ond half Southern head cqach
Jay Ree&lt; satd We were more
panent shQt better &gt;hots and
played better defen~ We were
able to get the lead and they
couldn t get a shot m the th1rd
penod
I don t enJoy playtng aga1mt
Coach (Wolfe) Ree&amp; added Its
okay to scnmmage h1m but tt IS
tough to play agamst him I was
looking back when he coached
hu final game at Southern nght
here m thiS gym
Kiser led all scorers wtth 16
pomts Evans added 10 and Mar
tm had mne Southerh htt 17 of
52 shots from the floor Including
7 of 20 from 3-pomt range The
Tornadoes were 10 for 15 at the
foul bne
Southen had 21 rebounds led
by Kiser With mne F1sher added

Johnson added l 0
!
The Marauders ha 16 of ~t
field goal attempts mcluding 2
3 from long range Me1gs went i&lt;&gt;
th&lt; line 16 nmes and htt seven •
Metgs
pulled
down
!.lrebounds w1th Bullmgton gr~
bmg 13 and Staats 10 Stders had'
three of the Marauders sever.
steals and Staats and John W1lson
had an amst each Me1gs turned
the ball over 28 ttmes
We d1dn t do anythmg w1th
any consutency Wolfe satd of the
Marauders Turnovers were a big
problem and w&lt; d1dn t play w1th
any emouon on the floor
In the Jl.ltllor vamty game Jar
dan H1ll fired m ?9 pomts and
Just n Connolly added 12 to lead
Southern to a 'i6 48 \\ u Bubby
Ha) and Dav1d Hall led MeigS
wtth 10 pmnts c ch
South en (3 l TV C 2 l) wtll
play host to F der I Hock• g on
Fnd y nstead f &lt; n the road as
ong 1ally sched led
Meg (0 4 TVC 0 3) "11 plaj
host to Nelsot vtlk York o J Frrd l)
• :

get back m the game
We knew Loonus was a 1 ce
player from last year md Layton
Phystcally he s a mce post player
proved to be a b1g factor added quahty mmutes from JUruor J R
for them They ve also got the
Hall Sm1th got htS hands on at Parsons and semor Nathan Con
(Nathan) 0 Dell kid whose 6 6
least 10 Bobcat passes wh1ch led nolly Parsons hauled m e1ght to go along w11h h1m We expect
to numerous steals and several rebounds before gemng mto foul ed that to probably be the1r
81
trouble early w1th Conno1ly
easy layups
strong pmnts and 1t was The post
Wahama shot 51 percent from totahng four boards and two game pretty much JUSt balanced
36 15 halfttme advantage The
Mason County cagers behmd the the floor wtth 19 2 pomt goals steals m a reserve role
ltself out
The Wahama JUmor varsity got
and five treys
sconng of McKinney an~ Roush
LoomtS and 0 Dell had to
Hamlin scored 36 pmnts m the 10 pomts from Gabe Lambert m work on the ms1de agamst River
led by a 21 p01nt margm w1th
final quarter and firushed w1th a the opemng quarter on 1ts way to Valley post player Jeremy Peck
JUSt under three nunutes remam
mg before the Bobcats connected 39 percent shootmg average for a 55 40 conquest of the Bob kit
We tned to get on (Peck)
on a barrage of 3 po nt bombs to the game The Bobcats enJoyed a tens
ms1de satd Blam I d seen them
Lambert fimshed w1th a game
make the final tally appear much 39 30 edge on the boards
play and I knew he was gmng to
We wanted to keep the clock h1gh 16 pomts With Aaron Davts gtve us trouble What we were
closer than 1t actuall) was
We real!) played well satd runmng as much as poSSible m and Stephen Roach sconng 10 trymg to do was try to double
veteran Falcon head coach LewiS the final e1ght nunutes With such pomts ap1ece m !eadmg the WHS down on htm and make him kick
a b1g lead Hall md We d1dn t offens1ve cause
Hall followmg the season open
tt out Most of the time he was
Chff Stowers had 13 pomts
mg wm McKinney got physrcal contest the1r shots and as a result
kicking 1t to (Nolan) and he was
on the boards and put back a they were able to put up some b1g while Josh Bell and Josh Tnplett steppmg up and making some b1g
offensive numbers dunng the scored mne each for Hamlm
number of second and third scor
shots They responded ofl'enstvely
Wahama wtll play host to Wood
mg opportumt1es while Roush final stanza
to what we did defenstvely They
Walt Me Grady totaled 21 County Chnstlan Saturday after
connected on 9 of 11 from the
played very well They ve got a
pomts to pace the Bobcats wtth noon w1th the Wahama gtrls var
chanty stnpe m the final quarter
mce team
John Smtth desp11e sconng Bradley Adkms and Rodney s ty gemng thtngs started at 2
I was pleased w th Nathan
only two po1nts m the contest Salmons ch1ppmg m wtth 11 pm
0 Dell Biam contmucd
I
Boys vamty act on w1ll follow
, really dtSrupted thetr offenstve pomts ap1ece for Hamlm
thought he stepped up ms de and
Wahama also rece1ved so ne around 4 p m
Wtth hts defenstve play vh ch
played a lot narc aggress1ve tl en
l e had n our t vo sen 1 111;1gt!s
Peck fin shed With l l pmnts
Jeremy d d a really nee JOb
110 Help Wanted
s td L tytot
I k l l v we d l1 t
get h1 n a lot of to ches 11 tl
HOLIDAY
t 1
s co d I alf 1d h s po 1 t pt od c
E c sho V&lt;d b s I adcr 1 r
CASH!
t o 1 ma) be fell off bee u
of
gl t
d L to
H took
With the holiday
that bt t Jeremy had 1 c ga 1
season upon us
everyone needa extra
( \t 7 sh ot
' I tel JU lf ~
cash We have many
H
tsta J
opanlnga In our local
Ill
calling facility No
r I t 3
experience necessary
Page 81
I 1J fi 1
tl
Earn up to $15/hr FIT
PIT &amp; temporary
d X
v th the o &lt; nll o tc n
positions available
C&lt; ach 0 bo
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now You let us know
td
] s ' p nt
B et
ch
I 1 t JOb sad Loga 1 head
what you need
A
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sxrb td
Gary S \llehart The) tl r v I
Days/nights available
I
a
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Moo
zo e out at us a d ~e I d t ot
Management
Hll ial
0
o ] 1o po ts p c
to I ad p 1 nts ac h
attack t \Cr) well
opportunities and
tl c Blue D I Mo r h d l 0 po nts
We \iet t wtth so 1 c z r o
Medlcai/Dental/401 K
C lhll
dD -sll ]~
p
t
t
half 1d
t1 ct 1 bee us v~ :ver cone r 1 I
available for full time
cbo t d a h C II II Is I d
abot t the r qUickness
v h I) kard ad leI 1g1t to k p th
CALL
three
ass ts a d t o bi o k J
I 1ft
43
(And re) Ge1ger a 1d (To ) ) 131 De 1b u
shots
TODA't START
Moore S vt 1eha rt satd The) 40
Gallta Acad n; co ltlJ ues ts
D cbrd h t o of fJeld goal
TOMORROW!
co 1trolled the tempo the first half
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cerned about The second half we foul h c He cleared 1 ga nc h gh co 1 es callt g C. an c t 11 s 6
A um num BoiC On Back Lock
pm
1 ne rebou 1d
we 11 out and tned to play nan
abl Good Se vee TuckS 400
Real
Eatate
General
Logo 1 (2 0 SEOAL 2 ) e ter
Moore h 1 ( f 11 shots fro n
Ca 9 tvt Evtn ng&amp; 740 245
and get It a I ttlc more up tempo
5 08
B~o~dg•t P lotd Tr•namlulont
I thought our k1ds responde l the field 11 d "" J f&lt; r ( at the tal s 1 defeat l Rl\er VI e) P~
A Typll Acc111 To Ovt
pAISE
AEDYQEDII
Ill In c M&lt; n ~rtblcd m&lt; 0 SEOAL 1-0) irdl) at~ p n
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CUll 700 2411177 Ct 138
LAURI!L WOOD SUBDIVISION
Logan won tl c J Ill o r v rsttr
't siX
Juhnny Conrad led all s« rers rebounds and d1shed
me
game 0.0 42 Mm I a1 n Ill:{ 1 ~
A Reetrloted Subdivision with paved atr1111
With 18 poult! 11 ofwlncb ome hllsts He ba l throe stc tis
the ( h altai 1s w tb 1( p 11m 1 d
and utllitlll
Sf IIVICE S
1
thot
ght
I)
IStll
a
I
runy
11 the second hal f ( &lt; und
ee F 110 4x4 7 ncn Bock " 31
Only 7 Building Sltea Remaining
Mtrhacl Wn~ht ddni I'\
knocked down 7 of I' ~ dd ~&lt;ml pi tycd hkr th y h l cxpcrtel cc
tncn T " 1 Spud A c co
17 000 1740)441 0021
Your
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18,810
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credtt
810
Home
attcmpt! ncludmg 4 of 7 J,
Addnlonal
discount•
available
to
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who
purchaae
GAHS l~y n Hu I n lded 1
he played With
r hbk enthu
lmprovemenll
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an
All
American
Home
from
Family
Homee
s
ts
11
a"'
got
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ball
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tl
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bas
Twtn brother Joey Cm nl
IAIIMINT
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td
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0 24h s

Southern regatned the lead
when Garrett Kiser muled anoth
er three pomrer wtth 2. 44 left to
gtve the Tornadoes a 21 19 lead
the half
Southern scored the first mne
pomts of the thtrd penod Mar
tm s 3 pomter gave Southern a
30 19 lead With 4 25 left Two
stmght buckets by St.ats pulled
Me1gs to Wlthtn 30-23 at the 2 53
mark
'J'ravtS S1ders n1ade one of two
free throws after a steal With seven
seconds left to pull Me1gs to
wlthm 36 ?8 at the end of three
penods
Me1gs was able to pull to w th
11 43 37 w1th 1\\0 n mutes left
when TraVIS Kmght natled a ti ree
pomter from the r ght wmg bm
that wos as clos&lt; as Me1gs wm ld
get and Southern we1 tot to post
the &gt;I 411Vln
We settled dow 1 m the sec

GO
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naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
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any p eference

ltmltatlon o

were Bryant and Cmcmnatt kick
er Jonathan Ruffin
Bmn Natkin ofTexas El Paso
was the t1ght end
Center Dommtc Ra10la of
Nebraska anchors an offens1ve
!me that also features Steve
Hutchmson
of
Mtchtgan
Leonard Davu of Texas Chm
Brown of Georgta Tech and Chad
Ward ofWashington
Jommg Lombardi Award wmner Reynolds along the defenuve
hne were Oudand Trophy Winner
John Henderson of Tennessee
Andre Carter of Cal1forma and
Casey Hampton of Texas - the
only repeater from last year
Reynolds led the Senunoles WJth
12 sacks Henderson topped the
SEC '"th 12 sacks Carter had a
school record 13 112 sacks and
Hat 1pton was the B1g 12 s def&lt;n
s1vc player of the year w1th 74
tackles 18 for losses
Along wtth Morgan 111d Cal
mus the other I nebackers w&lt;re
Ketth Adams of Clemson and
Carlos Polk of Nebraska Cahnus
6 3 '34 pot nds led the Sooners
w11h 122 tackle Ada~ 1S fimshed
w1th 138 tackles and Polk was
the Huskers leadmg tackler wtth
89 stops and rett rned htS one
mterceptton for a TD

Rivals

from Page

Schu I Supe Va ue 2Bx70 -4BR
Den w F ep ece La ge K chen
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740 446 9340
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4467

?

Western Athlenc Conference ude
and a berth m the Mobile Allba
ma Bowl The 5 11 208 pound
Anderson ran for 1 914 yards as
the W1ldcats (8 3) took a share of
the B1g Ten ntle and earned a mp
to the Alamo Bowl
Mmms who stepped m for
two-time All-Amencan Peter
Warnck made hfe eas1er for
Wemke by catchmg 63 passes for
I 340 yards and 11 TDs - an
average of 21 3 yards The other
w1de receiver was Pittsburgh s
Antomo Bryant the Biletmkoff
Award wmner
Moss was chosen as the all pur
pose player The &gt; 10 180-pound
semor caught 45 passes for 748
yards and five TDs and ranked
fourth na11onaily m punt returns
v th an 18 2 yard tverage
Morgan th&lt; first player to Wll
the Butkus
Bedna11k and
Nagurski awards 11 the same sea
son topped the Btg East "1th 138
tackles mciud11g 15 for losses
Lmebacker Rocky Calmus \\as
the lone first tea n represl!nto1t1Vt:
for No 1 Oklahoma (12 0)
The ACC and B g 1' led the
way wtth fiw players aptece on
the team wh1ch conmted of 17
semors seven JUnior and two
sophomores The sophomores

•

Wahama

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NEW YORK (AP) -When 1t
comes to All Amencans Mianu
and Flonda State are co-champ1
OhS
The Flonda schools each had
three players selected Wednesday
for the Assocmed Press All
Amertca team a 26 player squad
featurmg Flor1da States HelSman
Trophy wmner Chns Wemke
and M1anu s award wmnmg !me
backer Dan Morgan
Wuie rece1ver Marvm M1nms
and
defenSlve
end
Jamal
Reynolds were the other Senu
noles chosen W1de rec&lt;tver punt
returner Santana Moss and safety
Edward Reed Jomed Morgan
Wcmkc Flonda States ,8 year
old quarterback led the nat1og
With 4 16 7 y rds pam 1g and
threw 33 touchdown passes w1th
JUSt II mterccpt ons
Oklahoma s Josh Het pel &gt;a de
~econd team wah Pt rdue s Drew
Brees the th1rd te m qt arterback
TC Us LaDa ma 1 Tom! 1son
and Northwestern s Damu:n
Anderson the .at o 15 top two
rushers \\ere the runnmg backs
The 5 foot 11 ?17 pound
Tomhnson ran for ? 158 yards the fourth h1ghe st srngle season
total m I A h1story - m leadmg
the Horned Frogs (1 0 1) to the

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The Dally S.ntinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 13, 2000

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B 2 • The Dally S.ntlnel

Wedneact.y, December 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AP names All-America teams
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520

1o ass1st
Southern turned the ball over
seven n 1 cs and had 11 steals led
by Evans had four a d Kiser
three
StaatskdMe1gs '1th l4po1ts

er

control ott n th flu r He s
nak g good dens ons
Nolan fimsh d v th 21 po nts
t&lt; I ad the R tders
W&lt; played r ally good n the
th rd q art
sa d Nolan W;.
10ved the ball There were open
shots lor everybody My teall);
mates JUSt gave ne the ball ..._
Nolan ts happy to st 11 be,
unbeaten
To be 3 0 Its a really good
feehng nght now md Nolan
Gettmg off to a 3 0 start the
confidence ts up added Layton
Our first league game goes mtb
theW column We were wantlng
to make sure we gar that
I thought (Pomt Pleasat t)
played very well tomght They ve
got some youth on the penmeter
that played rcall) well w th this
bbng then first ga ne of the sea
son I th nk Po nt Pleasant ts
gomg to cause some people son e
trouble thiS year We feel fortu
nate to get out With the wm
The Ra1ders got 13 po nts otT
the r bench T esday
I cant say c ough about our
bench play to 1 gl t sa d Layton
You ve got to have good bench
play
R ver Valley v II be at Logan
Fnd"
rn a other SEOAI
n a tel up
I le I o 1 t PI asant s
:H Mat tt
lSlt) JCtiOf
E rl e
d
18 po 1 t
D1koto
[)
t I
b zzcr by
d tl e
I R J
rvall cy a 1J J?
1g 1 &lt;o d t t rd g ar

for us
Mea twhtle Loot 1 s led the Btg
Blacks w th 14 pmnts vhtle N1c
Dalton scored P
For Rver Valley It \\as Er c
Nolan who had the hot hand
The semor guard played a b g
role first late tn the opemng half
With Pomt Pleasant up 22 21
at the 59 second mark of the sec
ond quarter the Ratders turneli
the ode before gomg mto the
locker rooms
After a basket by Brandon
Mitchem the Ratders got the ball
back and ate up the clock Wtth
five seconds left D J Frazee
scored on a JUmper to g1ve River
Valley a 25 2, lead
Nolan thet stole the B1g Blacks
nbound pass and made a layup at
the buzzer to ncrease the Ra1ders
lead to five po nts
(Nolan) comes to play every
mght satd Layton He s go ng to
g ve yo everyth ng he s got out
there You talk to yot r kids about
lea\ mg everyth ng out on the
floor well he s deftmtely one vho
does
It was Nola 1 agam 11 the thtrd
quarttt
After Po 1t Pleasant (0 I
SEOAL 0 l ) went ot a 6 0 run
to open he seco d half the
Ra de s p ck d t p th pace due
1 p tt u Nola s t 1 th rd q ar

from

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lntoroocllon or us 33 • 9.15
Jult South 01 Logon
M ,130-100
SAT Iii 00~ 00 C a1ed SUN

0 0

from Page 81

""Kiser had the1r o

Devils

find in our
CLASSIFIEDS.

Mo e

Sa
You B s ness Today
P me Shopp ng Cen e Spa e
A a abe A A o dab e Ra e
SD ng V ey Pa a Ca 40446

Raiders

ond half Southern head cqach
Jay Ree&lt; satd We were more
panent shQt better &gt;hots and
played better defen~ We were
able to get the lead and they
couldn t get a shot m the th1rd
penod
I don t enJoy playtng aga1mt
Coach (Wolfe) Ree&amp; added Its
okay to scnmmage h1m but tt IS
tough to play agamst him I was
looking back when he coached
hu final game at Southern nght
here m thiS gym
Kiser led all scorers wtth 16
pomts Evans added 10 and Mar
tm had mne Southerh htt 17 of
52 shots from the floor Including
7 of 20 from 3-pomt range The
Tornadoes were 10 for 15 at the
foul bne
Southen had 21 rebounds led
by Kiser With mne F1sher added

Johnson added l 0
!
The Marauders ha 16 of ~t
field goal attempts mcluding 2
3 from long range Me1gs went i&lt;&gt;
th&lt; line 16 nmes and htt seven •
Metgs
pulled
down
!.lrebounds w1th Bullmgton gr~
bmg 13 and Staats 10 Stders had'
three of the Marauders sever.
steals and Staats and John W1lson
had an amst each Me1gs turned
the ball over 28 ttmes
We d1dn t do anythmg w1th
any consutency Wolfe satd of the
Marauders Turnovers were a big
problem and w&lt; d1dn t play w1th
any emouon on the floor
In the Jl.ltllor vamty game Jar
dan H1ll fired m ?9 pomts and
Just n Connolly added 12 to lead
Southern to a 'i6 48 \\ u Bubby
Ha) and Dav1d Hall led MeigS
wtth 10 pmnts c ch
South en (3 l TV C 2 l) wtll
play host to F der I Hock• g on
Fnd y nstead f &lt; n the road as
ong 1ally sched led
Meg (0 4 TVC 0 3) "11 plaj
host to Nelsot vtlk York o J Frrd l)
• :

get back m the game
We knew Loonus was a 1 ce
player from last year md Layton
Phystcally he s a mce post player
proved to be a b1g factor added quahty mmutes from JUruor J R
for them They ve also got the
Hall Sm1th got htS hands on at Parsons and semor Nathan Con
(Nathan) 0 Dell kid whose 6 6
least 10 Bobcat passes wh1ch led nolly Parsons hauled m e1ght to go along w11h h1m We expect
to numerous steals and several rebounds before gemng mto foul ed that to probably be the1r
81
trouble early w1th Conno1ly
easy layups
strong pmnts and 1t was The post
Wahama shot 51 percent from totahng four boards and two game pretty much JUSt balanced
36 15 halfttme advantage The
Mason County cagers behmd the the floor wtth 19 2 pomt goals steals m a reserve role
ltself out
The Wahama JUmor varsity got
and five treys
sconng of McKinney an~ Roush
LoomtS and 0 Dell had to
Hamlin scored 36 pmnts m the 10 pomts from Gabe Lambert m work on the ms1de agamst River
led by a 21 p01nt margm w1th
final quarter and firushed w1th a the opemng quarter on 1ts way to Valley post player Jeremy Peck
JUSt under three nunutes remam
mg before the Bobcats connected 39 percent shootmg average for a 55 40 conquest of the Bob kit
We tned to get on (Peck)
on a barrage of 3 po nt bombs to the game The Bobcats enJoyed a tens
ms1de satd Blam I d seen them
Lambert fimshed w1th a game
make the final tally appear much 39 30 edge on the boards
play and I knew he was gmng to
We wanted to keep the clock h1gh 16 pomts With Aaron Davts gtve us trouble What we were
closer than 1t actuall) was
We real!) played well satd runmng as much as poSSible m and Stephen Roach sconng 10 trymg to do was try to double
veteran Falcon head coach LewiS the final e1ght nunutes With such pomts ap1ece m !eadmg the WHS down on htm and make him kick
a b1g lead Hall md We d1dn t offens1ve cause
Hall followmg the season open
tt out Most of the time he was
Chff Stowers had 13 pomts
mg wm McKinney got physrcal contest the1r shots and as a result
kicking 1t to (Nolan) and he was
on the boards and put back a they were able to put up some b1g while Josh Bell and Josh Tnplett steppmg up and making some b1g
offensive numbers dunng the scored mne each for Hamlm
number of second and third scor
shots They responded ofl'enstvely
Wahama wtll play host to Wood
mg opportumt1es while Roush final stanza
to what we did defenstvely They
Walt Me Grady totaled 21 County Chnstlan Saturday after
connected on 9 of 11 from the
played very well They ve got a
pomts to pace the Bobcats wtth noon w1th the Wahama gtrls var
chanty stnpe m the final quarter
mce team
John Smtth desp11e sconng Bradley Adkms and Rodney s ty gemng thtngs started at 2
I was pleased w th Nathan
only two po1nts m the contest Salmons ch1ppmg m wtth 11 pm
0 Dell Biam contmucd
I
Boys vamty act on w1ll follow
, really dtSrupted thetr offenstve pomts ap1ece for Hamlm
thought he stepped up ms de and
Wahama also rece1ved so ne around 4 p m
Wtth hts defenstve play vh ch
played a lot narc aggress1ve tl en
l e had n our t vo sen 1 111;1gt!s
Peck fin shed With l l pmnts
Jeremy d d a really nee JOb
110 Help Wanted
s td L tytot
I k l l v we d l1 t
get h1 n a lot of to ches 11 tl
HOLIDAY
t 1
s co d I alf 1d h s po 1 t pt od c
E c sho V&lt;d b s I adcr 1 r
CASH!
t o 1 ma) be fell off bee u
of
gl t
d L to
H took
With the holiday
that bt t Jeremy had 1 c ga 1
season upon us
everyone needa extra
( \t 7 sh ot
' I tel JU lf ~
cash We have many
H
tsta J
opanlnga In our local
Ill
calling facility No
r I t 3
experience necessary
Page 81
I 1J fi 1
tl
Earn up to $15/hr FIT
PIT &amp; temporary
d X
v th the o &lt; nll o tc n
positions available
C&lt; ach 0 bo
dt 1 a X d
now You let us know
td
] s ' p nt
B et
ch
I 1 t JOb sad Loga 1 head
what you need
A
I G g
sxrb td
Gary S \llehart The) tl r v I
Days/nights available
I
a
II I fo
D ck l
Moo
zo e out at us a d ~e I d t ot
Management
Hll ial
0
o ] 1o po ts p c
to I ad p 1 nts ac h
attack t \Cr) well
opportunities and
tl c Blue D I Mo r h d l 0 po nts
We \iet t wtth so 1 c z r o
Medlcai/Dental/401 K
C lhll
dD -sll ]~
p
t
t
half 1d
t1 ct 1 bee us v~ :ver cone r 1 I
available for full time
cbo t d a h C II II Is I d
abot t the r qUickness
v h I) kard ad leI 1g1t to k p th
CALL
three
ass ts a d t o bi o k J
I 1ft
43
(And re) Ge1ger a 1d (To ) ) 131 De 1b u
shots
TODA't START
Moore S vt 1eha rt satd The) 40
Gallta Acad n; co ltlJ ues ts
D cbrd h t o of fJeld goal
TOMORROW!
co 1trolled the tempo the first half
760 Auto Parts &amp;
Now 1 rhe 1 me fo g r r r-eor
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attempts d v s o for 1( at the hm 1cstand Fr da) 'hen At I en
and that s what we were on
Accessories
buys n theclassi(~eds
1·800·929·5753
1986
Ton N ssan Tu ck
cerned about The second half we foul h c He cleared 1 ga nc h gh co 1 es callt g C. an c t 11 s 6
A um num BoiC On Back Lock
pm
1 ne rebou 1d
we 11 out and tned to play nan
abl Good Se vee TuckS 400
Real
Eatate
General
Logo 1 (2 0 SEOAL 2 ) e ter
Moore h 1 ( f 11 shots fro n
Ca 9 tvt Evtn ng&amp; 740 245
and get It a I ttlc more up tempo
5 08
B~o~dg•t P lotd Tr•namlulont
I thought our k1ds responde l the field 11 d "" J f&lt; r ( at the tal s 1 defeat l Rl\er VI e) P~
A Typll Acc111 To Ovt
pAISE
AEDYQEDII
Ill In c M&lt; n ~rtblcd m&lt; 0 SEOAL 1-0) irdl) at~ p n
o coo T 1n1m 11 on1 T 1n1 1
wcli
CUll 700 2411177 Ct 138
LAURI!L WOOD SUBDIVISION
Logan won tl c J Ill o r v rsttr
't siX
Juhnny Conrad led all s« rers rebounds and d1shed
me
game 0.0 42 Mm I a1 n Ill:{ 1 ~
A Reetrloted Subdivision with paved atr1111
With 18 poult! 11 ofwlncb ome hllsts He ba l throe stc tis
the ( h altai 1s w tb 1( p 11m 1 d
and utllitlll
Sf IIVICE S
1
thot
ght
I)
IStll
a
I
runy
11 the second hal f ( &lt; und
ee F 110 4x4 7 ncn Bock " 31
Only 7 Building Sltea Remaining
Mtrhacl Wn~ht ddni I'\
knocked down 7 of I' ~ dd ~&lt;ml pi tycd hkr th y h l cxpcrtel cc
tncn T " 1 Spud A c co
17 000 1740)441 0021
Your
Cholet
S
18,810
Antb &gt;ny Dey s &lt; re i 4 t I 1d
Osbon
c
s
1
d
ro
J)
•u•
s
credtt
810
Home
attcmpt! ncludmg 4 of 7 J,
Addnlonal
discount•
available
to
those
who
purchaae
GAHS l~y n Hu I n lded 1
he played With
r hbk enthu
lmprovemenll
pomters
an
All
American
Home
from
Family
Homee
s
ts
11
a"'
got
the
ball
to
tl
c
bas
Twtn brother Joey Cm nl
IAIIMINT
VIlli our 11111 oltioe on the oorntr of US 33 end
WATIAPAOOPINQ
Unoond ona t mt Qui tnltt
Route 7 In Pomeroy or
LOCI I I 10011 U nlll'\td E I
call 740-H2·2478 for det1lle or 11nd an email to
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from PaJe 81
tl thH
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tth
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td
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ard
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5505 WEEKLY GRARANTEED
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FROM HOME PART
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OU RED
800 46 57 6 E•
0 24h s

Southern regatned the lead
when Garrett Kiser muled anoth
er three pomrer wtth 2. 44 left to
gtve the Tornadoes a 21 19 lead
the half
Southern scored the first mne
pomts of the thtrd penod Mar
tm s 3 pomter gave Southern a
30 19 lead With 4 25 left Two
stmght buckets by St.ats pulled
Me1gs to Wlthtn 30-23 at the 2 53
mark
'J'ravtS S1ders n1ade one of two
free throws after a steal With seven
seconds left to pull Me1gs to
wlthm 36 ?8 at the end of three
penods
Me1gs was able to pull to w th
11 43 37 w1th 1\\0 n mutes left
when TraVIS Kmght natled a ti ree
pomter from the r ght wmg bm
that wos as clos&lt; as Me1gs wm ld
get and Southern we1 tot to post
the &gt;I 411Vln
We settled dow 1 m the sec

GO
OG WILD"

opportunity bass

70

fftNIIPIIp81

I

naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www Ol\'b com/bennet

any p eference

ltmltatlon o

were Bryant and Cmcmnatt kick
er Jonathan Ruffin
Bmn Natkin ofTexas El Paso
was the t1ght end
Center Dommtc Ra10la of
Nebraska anchors an offens1ve
!me that also features Steve
Hutchmson
of
Mtchtgan
Leonard Davu of Texas Chm
Brown of Georgta Tech and Chad
Ward ofWashington
Jommg Lombardi Award wmner Reynolds along the defenuve
hne were Oudand Trophy Winner
John Henderson of Tennessee
Andre Carter of Cal1forma and
Casey Hampton of Texas - the
only repeater from last year
Reynolds led the Senunoles WJth
12 sacks Henderson topped the
SEC '"th 12 sacks Carter had a
school record 13 112 sacks and
Hat 1pton was the B1g 12 s def&lt;n
s1vc player of the year w1th 74
tackles 18 for losses
Along wtth Morgan 111d Cal
mus the other I nebackers w&lt;re
Ketth Adams of Clemson and
Carlos Polk of Nebraska Cahnus
6 3 '34 pot nds led the Sooners
w11h 122 tackle Ada~ 1S fimshed
w1th 138 tackles and Polk was
the Huskers leadmg tackler wtth
89 stops and rett rned htS one
mterceptton for a TD

Rivals

from Page

Schu I Supe Va ue 2Bx70 -4BR
Den w F ep ece La ge K chen
Spec a P tee $49 995 F ench C ty
Homes
Ga po s
Oh o
740 446 9340
23
4467

?

Western Athlenc Conference ude
and a berth m the Mobile Allba
ma Bowl The 5 11 208 pound
Anderson ran for 1 914 yards as
the W1ldcats (8 3) took a share of
the B1g Ten ntle and earned a mp
to the Alamo Bowl
Mmms who stepped m for
two-time All-Amencan Peter
Warnck made hfe eas1er for
Wemke by catchmg 63 passes for
I 340 yards and 11 TDs - an
average of 21 3 yards The other
w1de receiver was Pittsburgh s
Antomo Bryant the Biletmkoff
Award wmner
Moss was chosen as the all pur
pose player The &gt; 10 180-pound
semor caught 45 passes for 748
yards and five TDs and ranked
fourth na11onaily m punt returns
v th an 18 2 yard tverage
Morgan th&lt; first player to Wll
the Butkus
Bedna11k and
Nagurski awards 11 the same sea
son topped the Btg East "1th 138
tackles mciud11g 15 for losses
Lmebacker Rocky Calmus \\as
the lone first tea n represl!nto1t1Vt:
for No 1 Oklahoma (12 0)
The ACC and B g 1' led the
way wtth fiw players aptece on
the team wh1ch conmted of 17
semors seven JUnior and two
sophomores The sophomores

•

Wahama

P-11-0.TO.G-R A P H-Y
Ma n St PM og apny
511 Man Sl
Now open fo bus ness
Weddngs
Senors
FamyPolas
Call for an appo n men
304 675 7279

l c N7!50005

900 226 2775 E;~~; 2 7
$299mn Mus be 8
Se

AMAZ NG METABILISM Beak
Tough lose 0 200 lbs Easy
Ou cl&lt; Fas 0 ama c Resu s
OO"'o Na u al Doc o Recom
mended
F ee
Samp as
740)44
982

Schu

o

Web He p
Los n Cybe Space?
Con used Abou The n e ne
Ge Hep Now

P4! s 7 40-

959 0006

L.owes

740 592 842
y co h ng and househo d
e.ms $ 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 CJO.S 30
Qua

I'M)

NEED CASH Have an annu ty o
s uclu ed se emen ? We pu
chase lhem and pay as De
penclab 11 0 des n lha bus ness
Ca I Se ement Cap a
800

Up o $500 INSTANTLY ttl ad
vance frH wlltl new loan card

New To YouTh I'! Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens

Three bedroom mob le home one

bedroom apartment
992 5858

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREO T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CAED T BANKAUPTCV
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 90 180 DAYS
888
8 1 0902

TURNED
8

530

303

SOCIAL SECURITY SSI?
NQ Fee Un ess We w n
888 582 3345

SeN U 6 9 645-8434

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NEW YORK (AP) -When 1t
comes to All Amencans Mianu
and Flonda State are co-champ1
OhS
The Flonda schools each had
three players selected Wednesday
for the Assocmed Press All
Amertca team a 26 player squad
featurmg Flor1da States HelSman
Trophy wmner Chns Wemke
and M1anu s award wmnmg !me
backer Dan Morgan
Wuie rece1ver Marvm M1nms
and
defenSlve
end
Jamal
Reynolds were the other Senu
noles chosen W1de rec&lt;tver punt
returner Santana Moss and safety
Edward Reed Jomed Morgan
Wcmkc Flonda States ,8 year
old quarterback led the nat1og
With 4 16 7 y rds pam 1g and
threw 33 touchdown passes w1th
JUSt II mterccpt ons
Oklahoma s Josh Het pel &gt;a de
~econd team wah Pt rdue s Drew
Brees the th1rd te m qt arterback
TC Us LaDa ma 1 Tom! 1son
and Northwestern s Damu:n
Anderson the .at o 15 top two
rushers \\ere the runnmg backs
The 5 foot 11 ?17 pound
Tomhnson ran for ? 158 yards the fourth h1ghe st srngle season
total m I A h1story - m leadmg
the Horned Frogs (1 0 1) to the

CASH LOANS $2QOO $5000
Con so da on to $200 000 Bad
C ed
No C edt OK C ed 1
Ca ds Mo gages E c G oba
F nanc a Se 11 cas To F ee o
In o mat on 888 604 444 Ell:t

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
App ca on w se v ce Reduce
paymen S 0 65
CASH IN
CENT VE
OFFER
www deb a:s :o g Ca
800 328
85 o eKt 29

The Dally S.ntinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 13, 2000

HOMES

(740) 385-4367

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL SPORTS MORE LOCAL FOLKS
The Dati&gt; Sent111el
Subscnbe toda\ • 992 2156

�•

D SPOT

The

All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location
PARTS MANAGER

\

:I

Salary based on experience.
Send Resume to
The Daily Sentinel,
P.O. Box 729-97
Ponnerc1v. Ohio 45769.

• Verticala • Wood • Mini• • Etc

144 Thlnl Ave. GaiWs 446·4995
Tol frH 1-aaa-745-8847
P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
From Everyone at
AT 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Try Our
18" X-Large 3 Item for
$12.99
Or Try A
16" Large Deluxe 8 item for
only $13.99
OPEN 4 pm DAILY
CLOSED MONDAYS
992-9200
Lar e Delive Area·!!
Schrade Knives
15% off
O'DELL LUMBER
634 E. Main St. Pomeroy
992-5500
::~&lt;.~,.~Kids

Christmas Party at
Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Members &amp; Family
at 12:00 pm on
12/17/10
Santa arrives at
2:00pm.
Free door prizes, food
and DJ

• I

UP TO 70o/o OFF

Public Notice

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

IISSILL IUILHU
INC••

,_,~

. New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

HIQh&amp;Dry
Self-Storage
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

OF

GALLIPOl-IS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy?·Credit Problems?

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742·8888
1·888-521·0916
•

··Advertise ·
in this

spac,e for

s1so per ..

·montti. ·-

DEER
Processine
.._Fot_

llldoi~ N •

Cloopii i A-•,_A_
...... - · - ForJollty

Maplewood Lake

(740) 949·2134

Public Notice

nred of storing at the SOllie four
walls, find everything you need
In the Cloulfleda.

Call 740·992·2155 to place
your classified ad.

•·••~CIIIfws
Vllyl- &amp; ,.,...
• Pille &amp; Perdl Decb
Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

Pomeroy1 Ohio
22 yn. weal

Trimming aad Removal
30 l'ears ..Experlenee ·
Fully Insured
Senior Dlseount
FREJ~i ESTIMATES

740-985-3677 '
CWCH
POTATO

BRADFORD'S TREE FARM
Own•r· John Ketchka
..
•

J'vPPo~T

' 992·3505 .

Wagon Rldll on Weekends
Rt. II to Darwin, East on Rt. 881,
ChertY Rldl&amp;e Rd. , Follow sil&amp;fts.
Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 24· Dec. 24

t~

'•
\

C.

'JlhWICK'S
HfiOLI"G and
EXCfiVfiTIHG

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

flouling •limestone •
Grovel • Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-:3470

e

ATTENTION PARENTS e

Now laking applications for Baby Silting sar\rl~a
Plenty of play room, a lot of activity to
make the day more enjoyable.
Children of all oges welcome before ond after
school care. New Born ore our pleasure with
close supervision for your peace of mind.
I

Call740-992-5827 or 740-992·6566

HE BORN LOSER
'•

. ,,'..

'.

CHRISlMAftitds
with rootbaH
Delivery ,Avadable
Call992·7215
BARR'S NURSERY

..

UNIQUE
OLDIES

'
'
'
1--,

Advertise
In this . '"'
'
space for . ''
~
$50 per ~
month. ••
n

.. ·,'

Advertise
in this
space for
·$50 per
month.

••

740-992·2269

Antiques &amp;Collectaples

40) 742·2076

4f-

•

'
• Firewood • Ught
hauling • Trte &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

20% offthru
Christmas

SR325, Langsville, OH

••
•t

Bill Slack

241 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio
Monday t~ru Saturday
10amto5pm

Oilefs Deer ~~op

G(«)v,.

,,' .

Any Scotch or white Pine *1!5.00

'

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

Public Notice

IMPROVEMENT

•NtwGnlts
- .......
•••••••••
•·E*trlcll
&amp; PI &amp;t•a

7/22ffFN

992-5479

illSME

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
· FREE ESTIMATES

CARPENTER SERVICE

740·992·1671

'

Sheriff'• Salt of Rl81 Eatate
Common Pleu Court
Mtlgl County, Ohio
42975 LIMiater Road
Albany, Ohio 45710
Can No. DO-CV-ll48
Broadview Mortgage
Company, Plaintiff va. John
W. Ltmaeter, et al.
Dtftndanta.
In purauance of en Order
of Salt from 181d Court to
me directed, I will ofler lor
1111 at public auction, on

-

CID'I'IR

•. , I

MYERS TREE SERVI~-

Advertise
in this
space for '
$50 per
month.

NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, December
16, 2000, at 10:00 t.m., 1
public nit will be held et
211 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Tht
Farmer'• Bank and Savlnga
Company extended parking
lot (bealde Powtll'a Super
Vllu), to ..11 tor cath the
follcrivlng collateral:
1997 'GMC SONOMA
EXTENDED CAB
1GTCS19XXV8513942,
AUTO, AIR, CRUISE, PB,
PS, RUNNING BOARDS,
RAIN GUARDS
The Farmert Btnk end
Stvlnga
Comptny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, rtltiYII
the right to bid at thla nit,
and to withdraw the tbove
colltteral prior to 1111.
Further, The Fermer• Benk
· and !lavlnga Company
ri..IYII the right to II(IOt
and or all blda eubmltted.
The tbove dtlcrlbed
collatertl will bt told "11
II•Wherl II", with no
11Cpr1111d or Implied
warranty given. Pl1111 call
tor en tppolntment to view
or lnepect the collateral
prior to day of aalt.
For further Information,
contact Sheila Buchanan at
H2·2138.
(12) 13, 14, 15

lt'.lt'.l48

. . ..

(740) 985-3948

PUBUC NOTICE

IIUMLUMID
. ,; '

Jrlan Morrlson/Rodnt, Ohio

Public Notice

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, Investment reoonll, photo
albums, cameras, household Inventory and
sentimental Items will be safe.
For more Information call

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Cellular
Jeff Warner .Ins.
I

33?95 Hiland Rd.

COMMERCIAL and RfSIDOOW..
FREii ESTIMATES'

SI!CURITY'
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

·,

I----::==~~~-__,.,· _,

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
'i
SHADE RIVER AQ. SERVICE
-'
"Ahead In aervlce"
·11.6% Protein Livestock/cattle Feed $5.75/50
·21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/50
·,'
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.75/50
''
$1.00 off Coupon ·makes next purchase $4.25/50
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985·3831

Bulldozing
Backhoe se~·tces.
House site work,
Driveway Er lana
clearing,
· Septic systems
Installed.

,......

•

P.EANUTS
'
'fES, SIR ..THERE SEEMS TO
MISTAKE.. WE CAME FOR A ..
LICEN5E. AND TI-IEV 'VE 61ViN .
IX. TEMPORARi' DRIVER'S PEitH

-u..

' Thursday, Dec . 14, 20()(
· : Any knowlcd11c nr Ill VI
tiye information youtcnlh r
y¢ar ahead will ~crv yuu
.,.
There's a good chuncc It wl
'
d(lce rewarding fricntbhl 1
w'ell as profitable cndcuvm·
,. ., -r ,. ..,~---~ :
,
·v
... , . =;
: SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 2
21rTrying untested uJ,·u~
tum OUt 10 he Ull CXCI
.. could
futility.
It's better to udheru. '
'
JO
ical, tried-and-true m •tiiCl , .
pliocedures in ulllhut you H
'" do. Astra-Graph ycur nhct .
.,
ou
dictions make 11rcut C'h1 .,
I '
•
stocking stuffers for ull •
'
the Zodiac. Muil $2 for
A~tro-Graph, c/o thi~ nm
"
P.O. Box 1758, Murruy I
.....
tiqn, New York, NY 10
'"
sure to state the Zudln~· ~~ ,
d6sire.
:cAPRICORN (I c 2
·• I 9) If your exrcctullnn~ v, •
al!stic today regurdlnll y11111 r
... , pe:nsation for u contrlhui:L
make, you'll lx• lllVIIIIIf' 1 I
... pointment. Be rcuil,lll
' • AQUARIUS (Jun 'O h·h
Be very careful you ll•• ·i' l I
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J · ·• like you're try111~ lit liN · •
" ' 1 others in order 111 'I' I v~· u

•

1ness

mont

..

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25 ..
1'11

one

�,.
Wednesday, · December 13, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5'-

Pomeroy, Mldd1epor1, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

The CRAFtY, 'BUND SPOT
(I"ICtOry Outlet)

All vertical blind• are made to order at
our location

'•

UPTO 70% OFF

PARTS MANAGER
Salary based on experience. •
Send Resume to
The Daily Sentinel,
P.O. Box 729·97
Ohio 45769.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
From Everyone at ·
RT 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Try Our
18" X-Large 3 Item for
$12.99
Or Try A
16" Large Deluxe 8 item for
. only $13.99
. OPEN 4 pm DAILY
CLOSED MONDAYS
992-9200

~~~~~~=~A~r~ea~·l~l~·

· ·Verticals • Wood • Mini• • Etc

GaWs 446-4995
Tal Frtt 1-aaa-745-8847

144 n.1r4 Ave.

. New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement WlndOWI

Hll&amp;h a .Dry

COMMEIOAl and l!SIIIOOW.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Residential, Commerelll
.Free Estimates
• Fully'lnsured
Jrlan Monlson/Radat, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

"

Public Notice

Advertise
in this
space for ·
$50 per
month 1

end

• A2

I sentlrr~ental items will be sefe.
For more information call

______...

740-992-5232

.......

• 7 6 3

+A7632
• 7 3 ~

UUMLUMID

ft. 11'1'. 148

f;ut

CIIIIUIHI'II"'D•

Q 10 7 6 4
QJ
• 10 8

GALLIPOLIS

....

,~

"W.elp" .
.

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon-Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

...

:

Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

FREt; ESTIMATES

TUM BACK HERE AN'
FISS MY TUPPER II

00 'fears Experience · ·
FWiy Insured
Senior. Dlsc.-unt

PoTATO .

BRADFORD'S TREE FARM
(i)wn•r- John,Ketchka ·,
::-- . . 992-3505

J"uPPtJflT

.__

GfZOVp

Any Scotch or white Pine •1!5.00
Wagon Rlde1 on Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 881, to
· Chetry Rldae Rd. , Follow signs. · ·

~

'·

BORN LOSER

Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 24- Dec. 24

'.

•

Bill Slack ·
• Firewood • Ught
hauling • T111 &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

740-992-2269
CHIIISTMIS"iRHs

wllh roetllall
Delivery Available

Maplewood Lake

(740) 949-2734

NOTICE Ia hereby given
thet on Saturday, December
16, 2000, at 10:00 a.m., a
public aale will bo hold at
211 Weat Second Street,
Ohio,
The
Pomeroy,
Fermer'• Bank and Savlnga ·
Company extended parking
lot (beeldo Powell'a Super
Velu), to aell lor caeh the
following collateral:
.1997
GMC SONOMA
EXTENDED CAB
1GTCS19XXV85.13942,
AUTO, AIR, CRUISE, PB,
PS, RUNNING BOARDS,
~IN GUARDS
. The Farmer~ Bank end
Sovlnge
Compeny,

Call 992-7285
BARR'S NURSIRY

I:

• D"'D, 'I'OU WON'T
GET t'\E I\ \)OC. FOR
'-~Ri5TMI'S t!oECAU5E
i'Oll THINK I'l-1

241 Salem St.
.Rutland, Ohio
Monday thru Saturday
10amto5pm

20% offthru
Christmas
Antiques &amp; Collectables

tlUP4toiSIILi .-:'-

Advertise
in this
space for :.
$50 per
month. '

___

...._

}=NOU(;f1,
~IGHT~

•

P.EANUTS

.'

__,~.

,

.. ,

. -·
.·
r------:=~::~~~~~~~------~·
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
'1

Pomeroy, Ohio, reaervea

Shorlff'e Sole of Reel Eetate
Common Pl111 Court
Melge County, Ohio
· 42975 LeMallor Road
Albeny, Ohio 45710
Cau No. OQ-CV-o40
Broadview Mortgage
Company, Plaintiff v1. John
W. L1'"11ter, at 11.
Defendenll.
In pureuonce of an Order
of Sale from uld CouM to
me directed, I will offer lor
aole ot public auction, on

'lf:,WICK'S ...
HfiULI"CJ Clnd
EXCfiVfiTII'tO
flauling •limeslone •
Gravel• Sand • To~oil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-34 70

E
NT

nred of staring ., tha sa... four
walls, flnd averythlng you naad
ln the Claulflads.
Call 740·992·2155 to place

your cla11lfled ad.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o·
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

• ATTENTION PARENTS •

Instal/ea.

~

•

..
.,.

Now taking oppllcaHons lor Baby SIHing Service.
Plenty of play room, a lot of activity to
make the doy more enjoyable.
Children of oil oges welcome before and after
school care. New Born .ore our pleasure with
. close supervision for your peace of mind.

Call740~992·5827 or 740·992-6566

.~i

_-{-

--~-~-::: &lt; . -._,.,,~:~r~~:.·M;P$!:~\,~'"''

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West

16

Pass
Pass

340biiCI
35 Divest of guns

8 capuchin

I

4 Roman 502
5 Med. specialist

9 Cook slowly
11 Hotse
directives
12 - ·it up (had a
, noisy party,

monkey
7 --creek (In

lhentlore - - ·

trouble)

8

Nl~

North

1+
SNT

Eut

Pass
All pus

00 I

T~INK

PASS A D~IVER'S TEST?

........ ~ /

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......

•

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___,;_ _ __J ...

I

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

'Birthday

when it comes to sources you
Thursday, Dec. 14,2000
al interest. They'll perceive it depend on to generate income.
, Any knowledge or investiga- immediately and do everything The old well is still producing,
tive information you gather in the they can 10 trip you up.
while belling on the unknown is
y~ar ahead will serve you well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If .quite iffy.
lllere's a good chance it will pro- you put yourself in a negative
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be cerd(lce rewarding friendships, as mode today, you will end up oper- tain the cohort you selecl in a partwell as profitable endeavors.
ating in a manner that will create · nership arrangement today is as
: SAGITIARlUS (Nov. 23-Dec. a self-fulfilling prophecy. Don't amicable,' as you are and is will21) Trying untested ideas today worry aboul what may never hap- ing 10 pup his or her own weight,
could tum out to be an exercise in p'en.
otherwise this person could be a
futility. It's better to adhere to logARIES (March 21-April 19) hindrance.
icul, tried-and-true methods and Because your need for approval
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22)
pr-ocedures in all that you strive to , might be grea1er than usual, you 0Jhers may · wanl to help you
do. Astro-Graph year ahead pre- could be very susceplible to flat- manage a critical as signment
dictions make great Christmas tery today by someone who may today, but whi le doing so may
stocking stuffers for all signs of , try to manipulate you for a selfish unwittingly strew more obstacles
lhe Zodiac . Mail $2 for each to purpose. Be careful.
in your path. Try to go it alone and ·
Mtro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) · handle things yourself.
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- Success IS possrble today, but you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)
tiqn, New York, NY 10158. Be must be prepared to put forth the Someone who 'likes you but is a
s\11'e to state .the Zodiac signs you proper effort and courage needed. I rifle envious of you may nol be
desire.
Thus, first and foremost, assess able to help himself or herself
:cAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan. the difficulties involved realisti- loday in trying to make you look
• I'l) If your expectations are unre- cally.
bad in front of others. Pon 't proallstic today regarding your comGEMINI (May 21-June 20) If vide any further ammunition.
pe;nsation for a contribution you you feel you might be unable to . SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
make, you'll be inviting disap- comply with a promise or com- Be very ~areful how you conduct
pointment. Be realistic .
mitment, don't make it in the first yourself in front of others today,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) place. Sincerity is essential in all because your image lends to be a
· Be very careful you ~on ' l look relationships.
trifle fragile today. Anything you ,
like you're lrying to manipulate
CANCER (June 21-July 22) do out of line will be blown out
others in order 10 serve a person- Slick to the tried-and-true today of proportion.

'

•

•

volume
'31 Least fresh .. ·

33 "Golit" (2
wds.)
38 Russian

_
:'I

space
station . ,40 Mr.Zimballst..-:'
41 Church seats'.,_
42 Draft org.
43 "Nah"
.. .

::=.

44 Steok order •:
48 Hockey's
:Eeposlto
::.
47 "Dynamic" _
Btarl

-

48 VP'o ouperlot;'
50 Greek 1-r , _
52 Joyful cry '-·
53 Depot (abbr.):-·; .

.-..

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

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present Each lener Nl the cipher stands tor another.

Today 's clue: R eqvsls z

'KFZUZ'Y

BTGBOY

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BI IHCK

YLXZ . ' -

BE

HS

F B E Z T

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(MilZMF

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V. HWZKFLSJ

es

LSKZTTZMKCBT

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by Luis Campos

Celebnty C1pher cryptograms are created Irom quotations by famous people, past and

GLSSLSJ

VUZVLXZSK)
.

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PREVI?US SOLUTI&lt;?N: "The one thing that doesn't abide by majority rule is a :.::
~

Harper Lee

persons consc1ence . -

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141to4 loy ClAY a. POllAN ___;:.._,;__ __
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the

four ocrombled
below to form four simple .wards.

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"The pas I 'is a valuable guide. . . . .
post, " granny lectured. "but rer--ri"'7.'-:--:--:-~-.,·· memper, it can be a dangerous -

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chuckle quoted

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by filling· in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

LETTERS
I

I I I I I I I I I .- ...

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Wretch - Filth - Swept- Dragon -FEW WANTS

I always wanted to be rich . Granny told me that being rich doesn't mean having many things, it also means
having FEW WANTS

I WEDNESDAY
'Your

•

18 Mao - -tung 20 Appraise
....
21 Conducive to- ·
peace
;:
22 Boundaries ~
23 TV actress ., ..
Loretta.. 24 Diminish
25 Princely
_
Italian family _
27 Building
diagram

29 Heavy

What ranges?

J.lE COULD

13 Ap•. 15 org.

28 Assumed
manner

'

1

Septic systems

'

SIR ..THERE SEEMS TO BE A
.. WE CAME FOR A 006
JCICt:N;;&gt;t:,. AND HlE{VE 6NEN ~1M
.X TEMPORAR'(·DRIVE.R'S PERMIT..

SHADE RIVER AQ. SERVICE
-'
"Ahead In nrvlce"
-11.6% Protein Llvestock/canle Feed $5.75/50
·2 1% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/50
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.75/50
$1.00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
''
'
Crumbles $5.99/50
'
T.M. Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AQ. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-885-3831

Backhoe sert~,rces. !
House site worlcJ
Driveway £r lana
clearing,

MILL'S
SELF STORACE

1 Do the crawl
2 Mlnimum3 Ferber or
O'Brien

Yesterday, 'we.·leamed that a
one-no-hump opening or rebid
may have an inclusive three-point
range. However, a twp-notrump
opening or rebid should have
only a two-point inclusive range.
This means that if you open
one no-trump with the modem 15,
17 points, a two-no-trump· jump
rebid shows 18-19 points, and a
two-no-trump opening shows 2021 (or, theoretically sounder in my
view, 21-22, and with 20 you
either upgrade to 21 ~{ do'Yngrade
to 19). If you open one no-trump
with the older 16-18 points, a twono-trump jump rebid shows 1920, and a two-no-trump opening
· shows 21-22. (This is 'a plus for
16-18, but that point-count occuri
less frequently than 15-17, and
one no-trump is lhe second-best
op~ning bid in bridge.)
With those aces and kings,
South's hand is worth about 19
points -- hence the two :nl),7t~mp ~
rebid.
.:• .
West leads the spade six.. You ,
have eight top tricks: three spades
(given . the lead into your kingja~k), two hearts, one diamond
and two dubs.,..Sq, yo~.,n~,ed ju~t'
one more trick•from somewhere.
You could hope for a 3-3 club
break, which will happen 35.53
percent of the lime. Better,
though, is to play for a. 3.2 diamond split, •which occurs 67.8
. percent · of the time. However,
ummy is short of enlries. The
ight play is to win trick one and
duck a diamond. Win the next
spade lead and duck a.second diamond. Win the next (spade) play
by East, lead your last diamond to
dummy's ace, and cash the two
remaining winners in the suit, giving you I0 tricks in all.
The best opening bid in bridge?
Seven no-trump, of course!

Trimming aad Remo't'al

UNIQUE
OLDIES

Public Notice

DOWN

enciOIId
croquene
23 Make I YOW
26 Spire ornament
27 Mrs. Nixon
3G Squandore
32 Actor Estevez

Opening lead: • 6

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Y"• l&lt;tcal

PUBUC NOTICE

Advertise
in this
space for
·$50 per
month.

Soutb
2NT

COUGH

Public Notice

the rlghi to bid 11 11111 1111,
and to withdrew the lbOYI
collaterel prior to 1111.
Further, The Farmer• lhnk
end 81vlng1 Compiny
roeorv.. the right to reliCt
end or 111 bide eubmltted.
The ebove d11orlbed
colloterol will be eold "••
II•Where II", With no
expr1111d or Implied
worrenty given. Pl111e con
lor en oppolntmont to vlow
or lnepect tho collateral
prior to day of oale.
For further Information,
contact Sheila Buchanan at
1112-2138.
(12) 13, 14, 15

-ion

54 ltlootcer1rlln
· 55 "SNL" aklt e.g.
56 "Sphere" start
57 Rings of light

Vulnerable: Nort.h-Soutb
Dealer: Sou.tb

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

llli'·c.o ..._ , _
._
..... _,"""
Colopoloo-·
,_.._

992-5479

Grrtten

FREE' ESTIMATES

DEER
Processina

Celluiar
.
Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
.

II I

0

oymbolo

39 Tout

• 9 54
6 A K 8 4

-

"""'lou• Puzzlo

51 Drv-'o

38 Golt peg
37 "I think,

•AK5

to

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Advertise -.·
in this
spac_
e for
s150 per ·.,_.
'mo·nth.

A&amp;D Auto Upholst,ry· Plus, Inc.

=

T/WIFN

4 -9800

2-5179

:

M

•• 8 5
• 10 .9"8 4 2
+ K QJ
6QJ

Soutb
• K J 3

.' ':

·•;:a:.
u.r:&amp;::IIJ

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

74G-992-16r1

C&amp;ll Us First Or We 8oth Lose~
Ask For Mr. Ford
{."
Over 30 Year Experience

1-8

•New
~
•lloctrlarl
'

•New Home•

Special Finance Department
Bankrupt~? Credit Problems?
..
.
'

10 9 6 5 ·

ROBERT BISSELL CARPENTER SERVICE ;;
CONSTRUCftOII ......illeoi&amp;R•••• I I "

URN
PIKE
OF o

'.AUlQ

2000, 12:00 P.M.
(12.12, 13, 14 3TC .

photo

~--------~ ~--~YOU~N~G'~S--~1

E

eccepled until December 15,

••

papers, Investment reoonll.
l1I~~~~!~"· cameras.
11ousehold inventory

Pomeroy, Ohio

FREii ESTIMATES'

740·992·7599

water

12l.afiJI14'511 nre to
1516- culpl
17 WWIIarea
19 Hacks
20 Postry·

7HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
I Pnltect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card

An,_

42 Loci&lt; lor otuH
on the web
•s Before,
to. •
bird
48 lhbylood
49 Muelcal

1 Stockhotm

unctwiehl•

33'?95 Hilan-d Rd.

• Roofing

--

ACROSS

10 Walking In

Self-Stor~e

• AQOm Additions

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

...

Kids Christmas Party at
Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Members &amp; Family
at 12:00 pm on
12/17/10
Santa arrives at
2:00pm.
Free door prizes, food
and DJ

PUBUCNOTICE
Tho VIllage ol Pomeroy 11
accepting eppllcetlone tor
tho poolll«!n of Chill Of
Pollee.
All lntereeled
oppllcenll ohould oubmlt
their reaume end statement
of quallllcotlono to the
Vlllege Ofllcoa In Pomeroy.
Tho ap,llcant ehell be
rt~qulred to Pill 1 phyaiCII
oxamlnellon, given by a
llcenaed phyolclon ohowlng
that he or oho m. .tl the
phyolcel requirement•
nocea11ry to perform lhl
dutlea of Chief of Pollee.
Application• ahell bt

,_~~

----------------~~--~:
400vershedOW
'
• Oell

P/ B~ONTRACTORS , INC.

Schrade Knives
15% off
O'DELL LUMBER
634 E. Main St. Pomeroy
992-5500

Public Notice

IISSIU IUIUIU
INC••

,

:1

•·.

..·

.'

-

.

.
• CmsSing (CC) News (CC)
' Crossing (CC) News

. ...

.'

.

. .'..
'

.

..•...

'

-..••
••

·.•
,.
.
~

.·:
.....
.:.

:.

'ol

.-

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 13, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Akr MancheSter 70, Kidron Cent. Chnsb1n

PREP HOOPS

Perrysburg 66. Ros.tard 55
P&lt;et&lt;enngton 69 Watterson 42
Proctorv1kt Fau1and 61 , Crown Cny S Gatha

53
Al~ance Marl&lt;nglon

66 Mogadore Foeld 50

Anna 67. Ft Loram10 51

Trf.County Soya Box. .
Rl- Volley 52. Point Ploooant 49

40

Arcanum 5&gt; 1, Eaton 50

RaCine Southern 51 . Pomeroy Meigs 4 t
Athens 85 Jackson 37
Potnt Pleasant
8 14 10 17 49
Ravenna SE 82, Betoot
Blanell 64
A.usttntown-F•tch 74, N1les McKmley 55
Rayland Buckeye Local 71 , MarMs Ferry 52
R•ver valley
" 8 19 12
13 52
Avon Lake 61, Avon 47
Poont PieasaJll (D-1}- Kevm Ze11&lt;te 1 o-1 2.
Reynoldsburg 95. Chithcolhe 74
Batavia 48, H•llsboro 37
NIC Oallon 5 2-2 12. Casey Villars 1 2-5 4,
Atdgeway Ridgemont 91 , N Lewisburg
Bea\lercreek 82. Fairborn 53
Tnad58
Stephen Hanc:fiey 3 0-0 7 T J Deshuk 2 t -1 5.
Beltatre 67. Sarahsvtlle Shenandoah 56
J P Sunpkns 1 D-0 3. Nathan ODell 0 2-2 2,
Rrpley A•pley-Ur.on-Lewls-Hunhngton 61 ,
Belmont Umon Local 48; Shadyside 35
Joey LoomiS 5 4 5 14 Totals 18 11-16 49
w Unton 44
Ber11n Hiland 34, Coshocton 31
Russra
R•ver Valley {3-0) - CraiQ Payne 0 t-2 1'
Fa1rlawn 60
Beverly Fort Frye 55. Caldwell 43
Enc Nolan 8 4-6 23 Brandon M1tchem 1 0-0 2,
S ~ler 83, Waverly 73
Bkx&gt;m-Carr01181 Asrwttle Teay~ Valaey 68
Jared O&amp;Mey 1 2-2 4 Blake Marcum 0 1·2 1.
Salem 71 , Hubbard 64
Bowerston Conolton Valley 71 , Toronto 67
0 J Frazee 3
6. Scott Payne 0 2- 4 2. T1m
SciOtO MeDer moll NW 70. Portsmouth W 57
Brecksv•lle 47. Brunswick 46
RIChardson" 0 2-2 2 Jeremy Peck 5 1-6 It
Spring Cath Cent 82, Spring NE 42
Butler 78, Sidney 58
Totals 18 13·24 52
Spnng South 60, Huber Hts Wayne 53
Cambndge 51 , St. Clairsville 42
3-po•nt FG - Pomt Pleasanl 1 (Handley).
S1eubertvllle Cent Cath 45. Wells\ltlla 40.
Can S 85. lOUISVIUe St Thomas Aqumas
R1ver Valley J (NcMan 3)
OT
46
Strasburg·Frankhn 55. Tuscarawas Cent
Carrollton 61 , UhriChSville Claymont 59
Logan 54, Gallla Academy 50
Galh 46
Centerburg 75, Ut~ea 63
Logan
17
7 19
11 54
Strongsville 76,·Berea 63
Cheshtre A1ver Valley 52, P01nt Pleasant (W
Galha A.cademy
15 13 12 · tO 50
Struthers 51 . Youngs. Mooney 47
Va) 49
Logan {2·0, SE:.OAL 2-0~ - Ryan Swtnehilrt
Sugarcreek. Garaway 62, Newcome1stown
Cm Anderson 81 . Mason 64
1 2-3 4 Andrew Barrell 1 0-0 3. Ryan Kmel•nger
•
52
Cm Elder 67. Roger Bacon 54
0 0-0 0 Derek Harden 0 0-0 0 Johnny Conrad
Sytvan~a Northvlf!\v 70, Holland Spnng 41
Cm Glen Este 47, C1n Turp•n 41
7 0-0 18, Jtm Bennett 1 3 4 5. Joey Conrad 6 3Syl\18nla Southvtew 50. Bowhng Green 46
Ctn Hamson 66. C•n Northwest 34
3 15. Malt Taulbee 3 0-0 7 Jam1e HanK•son 0
Thomas Worthmgton 66. Hilliard Darby 46
Cm H1Us Chnsban Academy 41 , C•n Seven
0·0 0 Dav•d Montgomery 1 ().0 2 Ma!l Mong 0
Tipp C1ty Tippecanoe 70, Day Northndge 63
, HtiiS 32
Tota ls 14 6 8-10 S4
Tot Emmanuel Baphst 67, Evergreen 66.
C•n Lockland 54 . C1n landmark Christtan
Gatha Academy (0-3. SEOAL 0-1) .~ Andre
OT
45
Ge•ger 2 ().0 J Trav•s. McKrnntss 0 0-0 0 Nrck.
Tree of L•fe 99, Llt&gt;erty Christlan 38
Cm LovetancJ 59. Om Ross 44
Dressel 2 0-0 .I Dustm Deckard 5 5-10 15
Unton C1ty Mtss•ssmawa Valley 64 , Un1on
C1n Mt Healttly 57. Ctn Tall 56
Tony Moore 6 J-6 15 T J H1ll o 2-3 2 Cody
C&lt;ly lind l 49
Ctn Purce ll Mauan 67. Covmgton CatholiC
Caldwell 1 2-2 4 Dav•d Ftnrley 2 2-2 6 Allen
Upper Sandusky 67, Belle\lue 57, OT
54
Sk•nner 0 0-0 0 Totals 18 0 14-23 50
Urbana 53. St Pans Graham 38
Ctn St Xav1er 63. Cin MCNIChOlas 39
3-polnt FG Logan 6 {Johnny Conrad 4
Vmcent Warren 71 . Manetta 48
Cle Collmwood 82 Cle Rhodes 59
Taulbee B'~wen 1' GAHS o Raoounos Wash•ngton C H 79. w Jefferson 35
Cle East Tech 76. Ele JFK 51
Logen 30 (Bennel1 Taulbee 6). GAHS .29
Wellington 78, Evangel Chnst1an 51
Cle Glenville 64, Cle East 55
[Deckard 9) ASSISts-Logan t3 (taulbee 5)
Wellston 59. Hemlock Mtller 49
Cle John Marshall 74, Cle South 61
GAHS 12 (Moore 6J Steals-Logan 9 (Sw•neWhttehati-Yearlmg 6( Franklin He1ghts 46
Cots Beechcrolt 61. Cols Mtffltn 54
hart Johnny Conrad 3) GAHS 9 (Htll 4 1
Williamsburg 50, Georgetown 49, OT
Cots Brookhaven 15)3 . Cots. Linden 52
Turnovers-Logan 17 GAHS 15
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 67. New
Cols East 80, Cols Northland 57
Boston 41
Cols Ham•llon Townsh1p 54 Ctrclev•lle 50
Southern 51 , Meigs 41
Wintersville Indian Creek 63, Richmond Edi Cots Independence 98. Cols Bnggs 66
Southern
9 12 15 15 51
son 44
Metgs
9 10 9
13
41
Cots Manon-Frankltn 68 , Gals Eastmoor 54
Woodslield Monroe Cent 61 , New MalaGals Ready 55 Cots St Charles 49
Sou thern 13·1) .- Nathan Manr11 3 0-2 9
moras Frontier 55
Cots Walnut R1dge 86 . Cots South 65
Brandon Htll 0 1·2 1 Chad Hubbard 2 0-0 4
Wooster Triway 64 , W Salem NOr1hWe!;&gt;tern
Jeremy F•sher 3 1-2 7 Dallas H1ll 0 2-2 2 Mall
Cols Whetstone 80. Cols Centenn•al 50
44
Columb1ana 63, Leeton1a 46
Ne•glel 0 2-2 2 Man Ash 0 0-0 0. Garret K•ser
Wonhington Chrrst1an 62. East Kno)( 40
5 4-5 16 Jonathan Fvans 4 0-0 10 Matt Sham .._ Columb1ana Crestv.ew 46. Sebnng 43
Xen1a 67, Spring. N. 54
0·0
lotals 1110-15 51
~·
CuyahOga Falls 45. Solon 38
Yellow Springs 70, Troy Chnstlan 51
Mergs (0- 4) ~ J P Staats 5 4-4 14, Adam
Cuyahoga Fans CVCA 61 , Rootstown 57
Youngs Boardman 57, L1berty 27
Dalton 49. Can Hentage Chusltan 33
Bullington 3 1·2 7 Matt Williamson 0 0-0 0.
Zanesville MayS\IIIIe 67, McConnetsvtl le
Trav•s Stders.3 0-0 6 Jason Kn1ght 1 0-0 3.
Day. Chammade·Juhenne 69. Day Bell·
Morgan 57
brook 64 .
John WilSon 0 0·1 0 Buzzy Fackler 0 0-1 0
Zanesvrlle Rosecrans 55. W Musklngum 48.
Day Dunbar B2, Trotwood-Madison 69
Dernck Johnson 4 2·6 11 Totals 16 7-14 41
OT
Day Edg8wood 44, Mid Madisoo 41
3-potf)t FG-Southern 7 (Mar1m 3, K1ser,
Ohio High School Glde Basketball
Day Nonhmonl 79, Day. Meactowdale 48
E\lans 2). Me•gs 2 (Kntght. Johrison 1)
Tuesday 's Results
Day Patterson 74, Day. Jefferson 58
RebOunds-Southern 21 (Ktser 9) , Matgs 33
Akr. Elms 40. Shaker Hts. laurel 35
Dela.-,are 60, .Marysv•lle 52
(Bullingt on 13 Staats tO) Assists-Southern 1 ,
Akr, Hoban 65, Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 44
Delaware Buckeye Valley 61 , Bellefontaine
Metgs 2 Steals-Southern 11 (Evans 4 . Ktser
Aurora 54, Newbury 39
Benjamin Logan 46
3) Metgs 7 (St ders 3) Turnovers - Southern 7.
Be)(ley 51, Bloom-Carroll 38
Me1gs 28
E. Palestine 72, Lisbon 60
Bucyrus lN'ynlord 60. Cardtngton-lrncaln 42
Fatrfield Union 75, Canal Wmchester 64
Chillicothe Uniolo 64, Chillicothe Hunt1ngton
Franklin Furnace Green 68. Portsmouth
Ohio Valley 73, Cross Lanes 55
Ross 36
Clay 52
CrossLanes
6 19 21
9 .:.. 55
Chtllicothe Zane Trace 81, Ba1nbndge Pamt
Fredencktown 71 , Johnstown 59
Oh10 Valley
9 25 22 17 73
Valley 51
Fremont St Joseph 59, Oregon Cardinal
Cross Lanes - M1ke Cumberledge 3 0-0 6.
Gin. Colerain 64, Cm. Pnnceton 59
Stntctl 50
Ben Edwards 1 2-5 4. Arcky Boggess 4 2·2 11 .
Cin. Madeira 48, Finneytown 23
Fucns Mtzrachl 52, Ramar Chr 31
Andrew Wilt 4 2·6 10 Adam George 2 0·0 5.
Cin Manemonl 49, Cin lndiart Htll 48
J ust1n Petrochko 1 0-0 2. James Wrl1 1 1·2 3.
Galloway Wes!land 68, Hllliara Davidson 51
Cm MCNICholas 50, Ctn. Mercy 48 '
James Rollins 3 0·1 6. Jeremy Cumberledge 2
Gibsonburg 57. Tot Christian 50
Cin. Notre Dame 49, Ctn. Ursuline 47
1-3 5. Jared Batley 0 0-0 D. Adam Walker 0 0-0
Granvtlle 55, Sugar Gro~e Berne Un1an 47
Cin Oak Hills 45, Cin Western Hills 25
Ham11ton Twp . 54, Ctrclevrlle 50
·.
0. BrandOn Moles 1 0-0 3 Totals 22 6-19 55
Ctn Seton 58. Boone County 46
Otl•o Valley { 1·2) - Jay Jenkms 2 3-4 8 ,
Hannibal R•ver 61 , Bridgepon 43
Ctn Summ1t Country Day 44, St. Bernard 17
Houston 55 , JackSon Center 31
Adam Holcorntl5 8·10 19 Gabe Jenktns 7 2·4
Cin. wyoming 82, Ctn. Deer Pari&lt; 24
16 Dale Taylor 1 0-0 2. John Polcyn 0 0·0 0
Hudson 79. Macedon•a NOfdonta 50
Cle Collinwood 70, Cle. Rhodes 14
Mike Jenks 3 6·7 12, Brad Bowman 3 B-11 14
Hunting Valley Un1versity 83, Gar1teld Hts.
Cle. Edst Tech 70. Cle_JFK 42
Tnmty 47
Nathan Wtlhams 0 2-2 2, Ami! Agrawal 0 0-0 0
Cle. Glenville 47, Cte. East 41
Totals 21 29-38 73
Ironton 70. South Po.nt 53
Cle. John Marshall 55, Cle South 49
3· pom t FG-Cross Lanes 3 (Boggess.
Johnslown Northridge 61. Dan\ltlle 32
Clyde 71, Lorain Southv1ew 61
-Kalida 40, Pandora-Gilboa 36
Geo1ge, Moles 1). Oh•o Valley 2 (J Jenk•ns.
Cols. Brookhaven 80, Cots. Linden 49 ·
Holcomb 1) Rebounds -Cro ss Lanes 26
Kettering Alter 48. Hamilton Badin 37
Cols. Eastmoor 48, Cols. Manon-Frankl•n 45
(E dwards 8. Roll1ns 6) . Oh10 Valley 28 (G JenkKettenng Fairmont 36, Centerville 33
Cols Independence 79, Cols Briggs 8
ms 8 Bowman 7) Ass•s ts -C ross Lanes 12
LakewoOd 60, Westlake 45
Cols MiNim 71. Cols. Beechcroft 30
(Boggess 4). Oh•o Valley 12 (Bowman 4, HolLancaster Fisher Cath 47. Liberty Union 35
Cots. Northland 58, Gals East 30
co mb, J Jenktns 3) Steals -C ross Lanes 5
Lebanon 55, Wilmington 53
Cols. Walnut Ridge 57, Cols South 40
Lima Cent. Cath. 44, Allen E 35
(Edwards 2) Ohto Va lley • (Holcomb, J Jenk·.
Cots Whetstone 76, Gals Centenn•al 30
1ns 2) Turnovers-Cross Lanes 12,0/ltoValley
L1ma Chrisllan Academy 66, Fmdtay HerCopley 66, Lod• Cloverleaf 27
17
ttage Chnst1an 58
Crestllrie 52, Sycamore Mohawk 46
little Mtamt 46, Norwood 39.
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 62, Stow 41
Fairland 61 , South Gallla 40
Logan. 54, Galilpolis 50
.
Delaware 66, Marys1nlle 30
Farrland
18 1.2 19
12 40
Lucasville Valley 73. Oak H1ll 43
Evergreen 8'5, Tot Emmanuel Baptt SI 49
A1ver Valley
9
1 15
9 52
Mad1son Chnst1an 37. Torah Academy 26
Fmdlay 65. Ellda 56
Fa1rtand - Josh Dunfee 5 1-2 12 Darren
Maranatha Chr~s t•an 39, Grove City ChnstF1ndlay Liberty-Benton 53 Ada 36
Colburn 4 0 1-3 S Drew Brooks 0.0 1·2 1 Brad
•an 31
Ft. Jennings 43, Le1pS1c 29
Tahaferro 1 0-0 J J W Jones 9 0 0·0 18 Kyle
Mass•llon Tuslaw 77. Atllman 5;3
Ft Recovery 75. Jay County (lnd ) 56
Ledmon 1 0 0-0 2 Jeff Galley 1 0 0-0 2, K C
MasSillon Wash•ngton !l2, Dover 41
Gahanna 50 Htll1ard Oavtdson 4?
Jones • 0 0-0 .? Glen Chapman 6 0 0·3 12
Maumee 48, Anthony Wayne 40
Ga tes Mills Gttmour 53, Cuyahoga His 41
TOtJfS 26 2 3·10 til
Mtam1 Valley 72. Xenta Chnsl•an 36
Hav1land Wayne Trace 48, Woodland (fnd )
SoUth Ga111a (0-3) ~ Steve Reece 2 2-3 7,
Milfo rd Center Fatrbanks 78 . lndtan Lake 66
41
Kyle MoonP.y 7 -l -6 21 8rtan Barnes 2 0 0- 1 2
M11tersburg W Holmes 53 Orrv11te 51
Hilliard Darby 47. Thomas Worthmgton 36
Josh Dul1"0 0 1-2 1 M1ck1e MassrP. 2 0·3 5
Mtlterspor1 58 L1ck1ng He•ghts 50 .
Independence 41 . Col umbra Stat10n Co lum
Shane Stephen~on 1 0 0·0 2 Totals 9 5 7· 15
Mt Orab Western Brown 76 New R1chmond
bta 35
10
71
Ktngs Mtlls Ktngs 61 Anderso n 36
. 3-po·nt FG Fatiland 2 (Dunfee Taliaferro
Mt Vernon 55. Pataskala Walk1ns Memonal
LaKeside Danbury 51 , Old Fort 3D
1) South Galha 5 (Mooney 3 Reece Mass•e
40
Med•na Highland 63, Green 30
1I
N Jackson Jackson-Milton 42 Vtenna Malh M•ddletown Mad1son 47 Tn·County North
ews 29
21
Wahamil 71 , Hilmlin 64
N Rtdgevtlle 47 Medma 4'2
M1tan Ed•son 51 . Atttca Seneca E 49
Wahar'la
16 20 14
21 71
N A•dge'ville Lake Rtdge 59 Etyna FBCS 24
Morral Ridgedale 63, Gallon Nortlunor 21
Hamhn
7
8 13 36 64
N Roy allan 44. Middleburg Heights MidparK
Mt Vernon 35, Pataskala Watk1ns Mem onal
32
.
Wahama 11 0) - McKmney 10 2·2 23
27
Roushd 11 1.120 Huonat133·712 Hank•nson
Nelsonville-York 74. Glouster Tr~mble 66
New R1eget 62, Castaha Margare!la 50
3 2-6 8 Parc;nns 2 0-0 4 Sm1th 1 0-0 2 Con·
New Albany 66. Heatn 52
Oak Harbor 49. Rossford 29
nolly 1 0·0 2 S•mpkms 0 0·0 0 Olsze wSI'il 0 0·
New Concord John Glenn 59. Crooksville 28
Otsego 54 . N Balttmore 46
0 0 BarnttZ 0 0-2 0 Total s 2&lt;1 18·31 11
New Ph•ladelph1a 62. Can Ttmken 59 20T
Rocky Atve' Lutheran West 53. BeachwoOd
Hamlin- McGt ady 8 4·10 21. B Adkms 4
Northstde Chr 70, llckmg County Chr
35
3-6 11 Salmans 3 3·6 11 J Adk1ns 2 1-2 7,
Academy 58
Rocky A1ver Magn1hcat 65. Cle VASJ 44
Myers 2 0-2 4 frtplett 2 0 0 4 G•llesp•e 1 0·0 3
Oh10 Deal 84 Mount Vernon Academy 68
S Chat leston SE 48 , Sprmg Shawnee 29
KEaton 0 2-'3 2 G Acl~.ins 0 1-2 1 Totals 22
Oxford Tafawanda 50, Mtamtsburg 46
Sandusky Perkins 46, Norwalk St Paul 40
14 -31 04
3-po•nt f-G Wahama 5 {Hudnal l 3 McKtn·
ney Roush 1 ), Hamltn 6 (Salmons. J Adk•(ls 2.
McGrady. Gtllesp•e 1J

w_

as.

o-o

o-o o

o

o

Ohio High School Boys Basketball
Tuesday 's Results
Akr Buchtel 98 Akt Ncrth 38
Akr Central-1-lower 92 Akr Kenmore 7d
Akr Coventry 65 Cana Fulton NW 48
Akr East 69 Akr Gar1•eld 67
Akr Fuestone 52 Ak1 Ellet 44

Sandusky St. Mary's~ . ~ 45
Spencerv&lt;lte 56, Temple Chrlotion 30
T1pp City Tlll!)8COrioe
Brool&lt;vollo 40

san Francisco ·-· . -·-- __ s 9 a 357 :1112 384
A..... ..................... 3 11 0 .214 2J6 3T7

«.

- - playoll spot

Upper Mif'91on 4 7, Dublin SCioto 30
W Atexandria Twin Val~ S 60, Prlbttt
Shawnee 57
W Chester Lakota Weoi 40, Harrison 27
Wh&lt;I-I·YII~ing 51, Franl&lt;kn Heights 34
Willard 54, Ashland 33

su~··­
G-.&amp;r 26,
Oe4roit13

....... Collogo _
..
Tueodoy'oScorw
EAST
Boston u. 79, Maine 67
Connecticut82. Massachusetts 67
Dartmouth 70. Haveilord 50
Duquesne 94, Ohio 89
Fairfield 91, St. Francis, NY 83
Georgetown 78. Coastal Carolina 60
Howard 67, AmCncan U. 65
SOUTH
Delaware Sl 84, Towson 66
Mercer 66, W Carolina 63
New Orleans 66, Nicholls St. 64
RIChmond 74, Marist 67
South Alabama 69. West Flortda 48
UCF 68 , M•ddle Tennessee 64
MIDWEST
Kansas 75 . DePaul 69
M1nnesota 69. louisiana Tech 53
SOUTHWEST
Ark ·L1It1e Rock at Ark -Pine Bluff, ppd.
FAR WEST
A1r Force 63, Cent. Connecticut St 56
Oregon 110. Ill .Chicago 87
Wash•ngton St 67. _Montana 54

«.

National Football League

e-

PA
182
277

303
314
301
·191
13B
282
231
329
395
263

340
318
339
376

P.A
208
238
242
313
410
307
217
277
281
318
272
412
236

•. Eastern conrerence
Atlantic Dlvlalon

W L Pet
Philadelphia ..
.. 16 5 762
New Yol1&lt; ..
14
8 636
Mtami ......... ,....... .
.. 11 11 .500
Boston ...... .r;~ .. .
.... 9 11 .450
Orla ndo ...... .
-···-. 9 13 409
New Jersey .\.
..... 8 14 .364
Washington
.4 17 190
Centl'lll Division
Clevelal)d ....
...... 13
7 .650
Chartotta --·-·- _ ...
__ 13 9 .591
Toronto .......................... 11 10 .524
Indiana .
............ 10 11 .476
Motwaukee .. ____ . . ... 10 11 .476
Detroit
................ 9 12 .429
AUanta ·-·....... ___ .. _. 5 16 238
Chicago .......................... 2 19 .005
Weatern Conf.-.nce
Mldwaat Dlvlalon

GO
2 112
5 112
6 112
7 1/2
8 1/2
12

1

2 112
3 112
3
4
8
11

1/2
1/2
112
112

WLPciGB
Utah
..... 16 5 .762
San Antonio
.......... 13 7 .650 2 112
Dallas ······-·····-·· ... _ -· -· .14 9 .609
3
Minnesota
..... 13 9 . 59~ 3 112
Houston .......
. ....•.... 12 9 571
4
Denver -··-··-····-·- ....... 10 13 .435
7
Vancouver ....... .................. 7 14 .333
9

Pacific Division

Sacramento ..
..... 14 5 .737
Phoenix .
. .............. 14 6 .700
112
LA Lakers __ .........
.. 15 8 652
1
Portland ·-···- ................. 15 8 .652
1
seattle . - -·
11 12 .478
5
LA Clippers ............. ,... 7 16 .304
9
Golden State........
. ....... 6 16 .273 9 1f2
• Tueaday'a G•mee
Toronto 104, Indiana 90
Cleveland 92, Dallas 87
New Jersey 116, Minnesota 94
Atlanta 107, Sacramento 99
Miami 96, Denver 85
Seattle 97. Orlando 92
Milwaukee 109, L.A. Lakers 105
Portland 101, Golden Stale 93
Wadneldey'e Games
Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m
Dallas at Indiana. 7 p.m
Philadelphia at Washington, 7 p .m .
Atlanta at Detroit. 7 :30p.m..
Sacramento at Charlotte. 7:30 p m.
San Antonio at Phoenix, 8 p m
Milwaukee at Utah. 9 p m
Seattle at Vancouver. 10 p.m
Miami at LA Clippers, 10 .30 p m
L.A Lakers at Port land. 10:30 p.m .
Thursday 's Games
New York at Toronto. 8 p.m
Denver at Sar:1 Antonio, a·JO p.m .
Houston at Golden Stale, 10 30 p.m

'PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L 'r OL P1a. GF GA
New Jersey .... 14 10 5 0 33 97 72

!. TRANSAciiONS

On The 6th
DaY Of Christmas MY

"I

\L",\\011

Melp County's

79
94
93
64
82
82
89

76
59
86
59
65

96
and

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I·

POMEROY A holiday
program to be presented on
the stage 1n downtown
Pomeroy on Dec. 22 was discussed when the Pomeroy
Merchants Association met
Wednesday at Farmers Bank_
The 6:30 p.m. program wi ll
include a show by the Big
Bend Cloggers, directed by
Vivian and Donnie May, and a .
performance by Uwight Icenhower, Elvis impersonator. The
merchants will serve refreshments.
Plans were also annou n ced
for a garden tour to bt• held in
late May or early June_ Terri
J:laynes proposed the tour as
anoth er way to raise money to
finance Pomeroy's downtown
beautification.
~ The discussion fo llowed a
·t,&gt;pon on the recent ho liday
home tour enjoyed by more
than 150 area residents . Haynes
.said that comm.ents she
received following the tour
were comp lim entary
ami
encouraged her to think of
other tours which residents
might enjoy. .
'
She asked that anyone interested in being included in the
garden tour contact her at her
Always and Forever Shop . on
East Main Street. It was -suggested that participation might
be beuer if buses or vans were
used to trampon people-.
Haynes also -d iscussed the
need for getting studcm volunteers from the three high
schools to he lp with the pbnting and maintenance of the
downtown flower beds next
smnmer.
Members discussed the
annual holiday open house
observed by businesses on the
Sunday after Thanksgiving and
the Christmas parade.
It was generally agreed that
something h as to be done tO
encourage those wh o come to
tOwn to see the parade, to stay
in tm-vn and visit the bu~incl\s­
es_
Annie Chapman, president,
suggested workin,; do1~r with
the tourism office as a way of
promoting more int~r&lt;·st and
better attendance to events in
town.
Members exp,ressed appreciation to Geqrge and Nellie
Wright, village workers, Wcs
Thoene and other\ who
helped cleanup and decorate
the downtown.

BY BRIAN

POME!tOY- With the deadline t(,r paying
bills approa c hing. the Meig&lt; County commissioner&lt;:; approved a numher of ti.md~ transf(·rs,

appropriJtions i-J.dju.;;tmt"nts and other actions

Eichinger family contin_
ues baking tradition
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

J

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P

OMEROY - For the past 44
years, generations of Eichinger
women have gathered in the
kitchen of Polly Eichinger to ·
make f.1ncy Christmas cookies.
·
The traditional cookie-making session
took place Sund:&gt;y at the longtime Mulberry HDights home of Mrs. Eichi nger,
now 86, and her late husband;AIIen.
Five g~nerations were rcprt:sented in
the process, which went from cut~ing o ut
the cookies made from dough earlier prepared by Mrs. Eichinger, to baking and decorating more than 300 cookies_
Just after nomi , family members from
Belpre, Gallipolis and all around Meigs
County began gathering at the Eichinger
house tor the cooking making session
whjch lasted until dusk: Tables were set
up in the kitchen and everyone seemed
ro have a specific ro le.
MAKING COOKIES- Polly Eichinger, 84, rolled out the dough as her great-grandThe younger chi ldren assisted Mrs. children, Quinton and Riley Neibert, waited to cut out the cookies. This is the 44th
year that the family has gotten together to bake holiday cobkies.
Ple11se see Cookies, Page A3

BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL .NEWS STAFF

POME!tOY - Welcome to
the busiest mai ling week of the
year.
Santa&lt; with Chri1t111as gifts
to mail should allow extra time
for those packages to rea c h
their destinations, accordi ng to
the U.S. Postal Service.
According to- the post offi ce,

about 21! bi ll ion - that's "billion'' with a "U"- letter s and
packages
wi ll
be
mailed
nationwide between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day, up
3 percent from last year's ho liday season_
That translates to about \50
million cards and letters a day,
compared to I \10 million on an
average day.

hoo'-tt·r·~

]'.1\"llll'llt ot

-;;,r,t H 1 tn I 1111.1r .c )don\.
I h~· Pl'JJ.dt\·. whtt"h Inr\udcd
.1

p\t~(,l'.hlll}

\l \11.'-Y'-' II

t.k~pttL·

l llllt,'

l 'NI \'",

fi 2001 ltanger

From Turnpike!.

b.\]]

.lttL·illJH

to

1111111!111/l' 11\ p1nbkm• ll\" llllpn~111[!: II\ \l\\11 ".111Ltllll\..,

I hl·

ruk·d

rh.tr·LT~ I \'

'gu\"l'.l

~'.11l' Ill 1•&gt;Ull.l.lllh'111

,C.I'&gt;•

II

,lJhl

C.ttltt•t

11111~ bnd\·

,.L.',II'

tht\
,t\\P

ltttHlt p.nt 1\.l1

\\tJj Jt.n·l

Oth' 1\HII\' ,lJWLll""illp

I 11.1\"l..'i!W\t

t11 rL\hlll'

1 he J,&gt;tal &gt;t'ri'ICt'
L'XJ't'ctcd (/w( .Holtd•l)'
would he the J'&lt;'&lt;lk m.Jiliu,~
d&lt;l)' 0( Tilt• ( .'lll·i.~II'II&lt;IS

2( H II.

Please see Budget, Page A3

$l\H llll.

To prep;)n; for the lnl\i l'st
ni.ailing Sl',l~on
l'VL'r, po st
o(ficcs n.ttlonwidc h,wc h1n:d
40,000 tcmpor.1 ry lca,onal

t•mplo yec,, extending lohl)\·
bus1ness
hour:-., .uHI , tddttl~
t'Xtra tr;msportJtion .uH.I m.til
processing ,p,tce to h.tndk
hc;~ vy mail voltJilll''i.
The po ~ t -.d q·rvtct' l'.\p.cnt•d
.that Monday would be· t he
peak mailing d.1y
the Chr i,t-

,;t'

!ll .H

'il',l~011,

SAFE TREE - Pomeroy police office( Joe
Wednesday to examine the extension cord
tree that sits inside ttie Pomeroy Municipal
decorative lights and dry natural trees can
death_ (Tony M. Leach photo)

Kirby Sr. takes a moment
connected to a Christmas
Building. An abundance of
lead to fires and possible

POMEROY - A brightly decorated Christmas tree and the
smell of ti-csh pine needles can easily t&gt;ke one's mind away fium
potential dangers that exist during
the holiday season_
According to an Ohio Depart. ment of Cornmtn.:c news release,
all Ohio families need to pay p.1rticular attention to fire safc•ty rules
this holi&lt;i1y season w hen dccorating their homes.
During the 1999 holiday season. more th:m I,t)O() re"idcntial
fires occurred throughout Ohio.
"Ohioans must recognize the
.1ddi\ional risks fi-om fire clurin,;
the holiday season and take the
11ecessJty step1 to reduce· these
risks," sa id - State Fire Marshal
Robert ltielage. "This is th e best
way that all of us can hove .1 &lt;&gt;fe

A.ccMdtii,S: to

1111

Ohio

IJcp•lfflllllll ,,( ( 'allltllt'rrc
IICII'S ,.,.,, .. lSI',

,If/ Ollill

_/.111fifH'S lll'l'd /(1 /1&lt;1)'
Jltll'fit'llf,lf· .tltt'll/iou It&gt; jln·

-&lt;•!ft'l)'

111ft'&gt;

this h o[id,J)'

dn,1r,llins;
tlrci hc&gt;mcs .

'''•lsllll 1d!t'll

and enjoyable· holi day se.\scln."
According to Ricb!\e. three tJctors po:ott' .111 11Krt"3:-ot:d fire thn. ·.tt
during th~ holidays: dccoratlw
lighting, live Chri,tm.I' trct'" ,1nd
LllJ;lllt·ndecl children.
Decorative lightin~. dl'\pitt.' ir~ ·
co lort\11 .md innocent .lppt.\l LllH."l',
can be· VCJ"Y d.mgeTOUI 1f lett
neglccte·d_
'
Rtel.tgc 'illi;:W;l':"tt:-. th;n .1 brgc

.111d

L'Xpl"l

tl'd

tu

C:lll rl'l more dun 2H(J nlllli on

lkc.tu"l' Chri'&gt;tlll,l\ Cdl-; o n .1
Mo11J,Jy th1' yl'.lr, a '&gt;t'ro nd.ti·y
pt',\J.,; d.ty I~ I..'Xpl'Ctt'd fo r ] )l'C.
1X. Tomorro\v j, t'xpedcd ro
b~ rhe lw-,Il'~t delivery dc1 y.
.dong \Ylth I lee. 20.
CthtnlllLT'&gt; .1rc nrgc d ro m ,Lil
,1,
l'.lrly .1 ...
pt )v.. ihk ..~\Tr.l~.w
d L-i l~ · cry '&gt;t,lnd.lrd' \·,1ry' ,u:r orJ ~
111g to lut.ltloiJ,

bur

gL'11L'ral1y

Please see Busy, Page A3

pie ces of mail.

Fi_re marshal urges caution

l'l"••;~tllll t.•Jt hlln \L',ll&lt;

1

g ,ltl)f t~H :

Busiest ~ailing we~k of the year makes delivery on time a challenge

UNLV fires Bayno

!lllludnl

needed to cl01c the books for 201111 during their
reg:ubr meeting on Wt'Jncsd;.ly.
The comnm1ioners 111et Thursday imtcad of
Monday due· ru meetin~n; held ear!Jer this week
in Co lumbus.
The dt•adline tor submitt ing bill s for payment
by co unt y departments i1 Friday, and the commi ssioners recessed their tlll't..'ting until Friday
morning so that last-minute s ubtms~ions can b~
approved for payment_
The boJrd also authorized Auclito( Nancy
Parkn Campbell to m•kc the necessa ry appropriations adju1t111e11ts needed after Friday tq
. .omure that bdls can be paid.
The board approved supplemental appropriation request' t(,r the co unry treasurer in the
amounts of $3.560.\1-\, $36_ $305.1!1 , $62.6H,
$943.Hil and I .21\.H; county ,mditor, $7(,1);
EMS, $6,61111: prosecutor, $2,67tl and $11J,liiHJ;
Recycli11g a11d I itter Prevcn t1on, $4,0011; clerk
of co urt&lt;, $511,111111; and coumy co urt, $3,100.
At Campbell\ req uc'&gt;l , .Hlditi011.1l appropriat1ons were .1p pruved as to llmv &gt;: Crippled Children. $30: Utilities, $4,8011; Rent, $500: Contract
Service&gt; t(Jr Coroner, $500; MedicJre. $.1.HIIII;
PEr!..S, $17,700; Clroup Health Insurance.
$211,001!; shniff's payroll. $1 C.. 0111).
New appropriations tot.1ling $o'.!.-ISII were
approved in various line itl'lll't t()r the the rounry Re· cycling .ond Litter Prevention program.
Fund1 were est:1hiJshed '" t(, \lows for the
Conimunity \)evclopment Block (;rallt program t'nr Fiscal Year 2111!11 projt'\"ts: S.olem Fire
Facility, $2'l,lllll1, LLJ&gt;han Fire· Equipment,
$2'.!,111!11; Scipll&gt; Fire Equipment, $12.111111: Mid dleport Street lmprovenH·nts, $2 1!.111111: Chc&lt;ter
Stret·t lmprowments. $\5.0(1(1: Council on
Aging, Public Ser vict·. S:\5 ,1 1110: G en eral Adnun istration. $ \11 .1lOll: .1nd F.m H """"g. $\II. I II Ill_
Thl' rommi"1nncr-; t.1bkd .1 rcq ut·~t frou1 the
ML·ig"i County Hum.mc S()lll'ty, rur .I (."01ll111H111t'llt of$5.(JI)(l t"or the U &gt;unty \ crudty itWL''iti-

PRETTY PASTRIES- All of the Eichinger women get in on the act of making Christmas cookies. Some cut out the cookies,
other do the baking, and these women d id the decorati ng using colored icing , sprinkles and cand ies_ At the decorating table
· here are from the left, standing, Judy Eichinger, B.J. Eich inger, Bonn ie Kelly and June Eichinger, ·a nd seated, Denise Mora,
Becky Frank, Amanda Massie, Paula Eichinger, Darla Staats and Tammy Neibert. (Charlene Hoefl ich photos)

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

t!J.Jt

J. REED

SENTINEL .NEWS STAFF

BY TONY M. lEACH

\'toJIIH.IIl"

Cenb

Meigs
officials
OK budget
transfers

'-~O IIrt

lrll

so

Merchants
discuss
Dec. 22
program

I k \lll't.."L't'•b (;,uy Pmkd. who
took the t1•,1cl11ng Job .lt Mlli -

pllth.lttt.Hl

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 51, Number 140

[\\"() """',\\.,( )Jl\

h.J\kcth,dl

December 14, lOOO

•

Please see Town, Page A3

I he 4)-\·t.:.IJ-o ld Alll"'tutz, .1
lonJI~r oliL'mi\·c h~1.1 nl .1( Toledo.
,,.,J, ,1\\I~t.liH he,l\.1 ro.Kh rht• p.t&lt;;t

I /\\ V I (;As !A I')
U01 1V
tu.H It BJII H.t\.tl•, ,,.,J" tlrl'd .1t"rc r
dJl' N&lt; ~\A ~':.Ju·d rill' llltt\'tT\Jt\'\

81

51

83

BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON REO SOX-Agreed 10 lerms with
OF Manny Ramirez on an efght·year contract.
BASKETBALL
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS - Placed G
Brevin Knrght on the injl.J(ed list. Acttvated G
M1chael Hawkins from injured ltst
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Activated C
Adona! Foyle from the InJured ltst Placed F
Chris Mills on the injured list
FOOTBALL
DETROIT LIONS -Signed S Ryan Stewart
· Released TE AI Pupunu.
GREEN BAY PACKERS-S1gned OT Austin
Robbins WaNed DL Dav1d R1chle
NEW YORK GIANTS-Signed WR Ournlon
SpotwoOd to the practice squad Waived WR
Anthony Tucker.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Released WRPR Nate Jacquet.
HOCKEY
NHL -S uspended New York Rangers C Petr
Nedved three games lor a stick-swinging .inci·
dent in a Dec 10 game agamst the Boston Bruins
ATLANTA THRASHERS-Placed F Shean
Donovan on intured reserve . Recalled F Brad
Tapper I rom Or1ando of the tHL
BOSTON BRUINS- Recalled D Pavel
Kotarrk and G Andrew Raycrolt from Provi·
dance of the AHL
LOS ANGELES KINGS - Ass•gned F Jason
Blake to Lowell ol the AHL and G Steve Passmore to Ch1cago of ttta IHL
]'JEW YORK ISLANDERS-Recalled G R1ck
D1Ptetro from Ch1cago of the IHL Asstgned D
Anders Myryotd ·to Spnngl1eld of the AHL
PHILADELP HIA FLYERS - Recallad LW
Todd Fedoruk from Philadelphia at the &lt;\HI
PIT TS BURGH PENGUINS - Asstgned F
Denn1s Bonvte and D Andrew Ference lo
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton oft he AHI
COLLEGE
FOR T HAYS ST - Named Tun o·can nor
lootball coa.;:h
NEW· MEXICO-S1gned Rocky Long, lootball co ach, to a th1ee-year contract e)(fens•on
.OHIO-Named Bnan Knorr football coach
TOLEDO-Named Tom Amstutz lootbaU
coach
UNLV - Ftred 8•11 Bayno, mens basketball
coach

TOLEDO, Uh 1• 1 (AI') - Tom
Am1tutz. \\'ho ha1 1pe nt
yt·a.rs
,15 ,lll .1~-;J.,t.lllt footb.tll co,tc h ;lt
Toledo. \\',\,_, hired .1 .. hL·.1 d· nuch
- of.t Rot·ket' t.L';lJ n rh:-.t \\"L'nt !I l- l
th1~

Ohio State wins fourth straight,

64 81
78 1!3
104 100
67 85

St. Louis
20 4 3 0 43 95
OeorooL --··- _ _ 17 11 1 2 37 94
Nashville .. --·-···· .. 11 13 6 1 29 69
Chicago ..... -- ·-. tO 16 2 2 24 76
Columbus ····-·--·-·--9 18 2 1 21 59
Northwest Division
ColOrado ·-- ,. .. 2i 5 4 o 46 94
Vancouver .......... 16 9 4 2 38 107
Edmonton
... 15 12 4 0 34 89
Calgary _. , __ .... 8 13 6 4 26 68
Minnesota
.8 16 4 2 22 59
Pacific Division
SanJose
17 6 tl 0 38 82
15 9 6 0 3B 102
Los Angeles
Dallas
15 8 4 1 35 75
Phoeni)(
13 8 8 0 34 74
Anahetm . . . 10 15 4 3 27 75
Two pomts for a wm . one potnt lor a 11e
overtime lass
Tuesday's Gltmes
Buffalo 3, Boston 0
Wasnmgton 3. N V Islanders 2
Philadelphia 2 , Nashvtlle 2, t1e
San Jose 3, N.Y Rangers 2
Wednesday's Games
Calgary at Montreal, 7 30 p.m
Ch1cago at Atlanta . 7 30 p m
Florida at DetrOit, 7:30pm .
Toronto at Pit1sburgh. 7 30 p m
Carolina at M1nnesota 8 p.m
Phila!1elphia at Colorado, 8 p.m
Edmonton at Dallas. B 30 p.m
Columbus at Anaheim , 10 30 p m
Thursday's Games
Calgary al Ottawa. 7 p m
Minnesota at Washington, 7 p m
Edmonton at Nashville, 8 p m
Tampa Bay at PhOentx, 9 p m
N Y Rangers at los Angeles, 10 p m
· Columbus at.San Jose. 10:30 p m.

True Love Gave To Me .••

Toledo hires Amstutz

0
2

32
3t
30
22

Details, A3

Thursd~y

Central Olvlalon
W• L TOL P11 GF GA

National Buketblll AeiOdatlon
"

I

a

Wntem Conr.,.nc.

. .PROHOOPS

I ·PRO F001BALL .I
AFC
East
W L TPia. PF
MiAmi
... 10 4 0 .714 283
N.Y. Jets .
.... 9 5 0 .643 294
Indianapolis .................. 6 0 .57 1 378
Buffalo .
...... 7 7 0 500 263
New England .
...... .4 tO 0 ,286 239
Centl'lll
x-Tennessee .. . ......... 11 3 a .786 291
x-Baltimore ..
.. 10 4 0 .714 286
Jacksonville
..... .7 7 0 .500 328
Ptllsburgh ..............7 7 0 .500 263
Cincinnati . .
.... 3 11 D .214 161
Cleveland .
. .312 0 .200 161
West
)(·OaKland
11 3 0 786 403
x-Denver
.. 10 4 0 .714 440
Kansas City
..... 6 8 0 .429 322
Sea~le
5 9 D 357 270
San D1ego
....... 113 0 .071 226
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
w L T Pet PF
N 'Y G1ants
10 4 D 714 283
x·Phtladelphla
. 10 5 0 .667 335
Wash•ngt,on
.7 7 0 .500 258
Dallas
. 59 0 357 281
Anzona
311 0 214 200
Central
x-M1nnesota
11 3 D.786 359
Tampa Bay
.. 9 5 D 643 336
De tro1t
8 6 0 571 277
Green Bay
7 7 0 500 303
Ch•cago
410 D 286 1.93
West
New Orleans
9 5 0 643 310
Sl LOUIS
9 5 D 643 479
Ca rolina
6 8 0 429 271

Philadelphia 35, Cleveland 24
Denver 31. seattle 24
Oalas 32, Washing10n 13
St Louis 40. Minnesota 29
New 0rteano 31, sen Francisco 2~
Oaklond 31, N.Y. Jels 1
Open: Alanla
llot)doy'o Gamo
Indianapolis 44, Buffalo 20
- Sllunloy'oWllhlng1on at Piltsbo.ryh, 12:30 p.m.
Oaklond at Soaltle, 4 ·as p.m.
SUndoy, Dic.17
Delroit at N Y. Jets. 1 p .m .
DenVelat Kansas'City, 1 p.m.
San
at Carotina, 1 p.m.
AtlaMI at New Or1eans. 1 p.m.
New England al Buffalo, 1 p _m _
Jacksonville at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Tennessee at CIB\Ieland, 1 p.m
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Chicago at San Franasco. 4·os p m
Indianapolis at Miami, 4:15p.m
Baltimore at Arizona, 4:15p.m
N.Y. Giants at Dallas. 8 ·35 p m
Open: Philadelphia
Monday, Dac. 18
St. LOuis at Tampa Bay, 9 p m.

Dte9o

Women's College Basketball
Tuesday's Games
EAST
Army 64, Pnnceton 46
Boston College 84, Dartmouth 56
Fordham 65, Mansi 64
Rhode Island 70. Harvard 58
St John's 61 . UMaG 45
Temp le 70. Fairleigh Dickinson 56
V•llanova 61 , Penn 52
SOUTH
Bethune-Cookman 63, UCF 61 , OT
Coli or Charleston 70. Coastal Caro lina 57
LSU 75, Mercer 47
Louisiana Tech 100. Centenary 34
Maryland 73, Coppin St. 42
UAB 84 , Jacksonville St. 57
MIDWEST
C1 nC1nnati 75. Xavier 58
DePaul 91, Northwestem 66
' Ohio St 95, Bowling Green 49
SOUTHWEST
No mator team scares reported !rom the
SOUTHWEST
FAR WEST
San Drego 73. UC Irvine 54
San Jose St. 53. Montana St. 50

5
0
4

13 12
15 16
8 15

Ollawa .. _ . . 17 8 4 0 38 91 87
Toronto .. • ·- __ 16 7 4 2 38 96 64
Bu"ato
·- 16 9 2 1 35 80 70
Boslon .... ---·-··- .. 10 15 3 3 26 76 107
Montreal
-·- 9 18 3 0 21 73 90
Southuar Dtv111on
Washington
111161297076
AHanta
10 12 6 1 27 80 94
Carolina ....
11 12 3 1 26 65 79
Tampa Bay
.9 14 3 2 23 79 100
Fiori&lt;la •...
5 13 5 5 20 59 82

Tennessee 35, Cincinnati 3

I COWGEHOOPS _I ·

3

PhiladelpiJ..
NY. Rangers
N Y Islanders

Society news and notes, As

Norlbooot Divlllon

Clicago 24, New Englond 11
Blttimore 24, san Otego 3
Tampa Bay 18, Mlaml13
Kansas Cily 15, carolina 14
~Y. Giants 30, f'it1sburW110
Arizono 10
.Jod&lt;fonville

Wrlliamoport Wes~all 47, RIChmond "O.Io
Southeastern 41
WOOster Triway 74, Sullivan B&amp;ack RIVer 54

P&lt;ttsburgh.. .. _ 14 11

· Frtdav: aoudy
Hlp: JOs; low: lOS

Today's

Sentinel
1 Sections - 16 Pages ·
Calendar
Classitieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituarie§
S12orts
Weather

AS
B4-6

l:l7

A4
__AJ
81~3.5.8

AJ

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: ~-l-2 ; Pick 4: r,. 2-1L4
Super lotto: h- 1+-2.'-2K l~- \9
Kicker: .\ -•J-1)__;. +-H

W.VA.
Daily 3: J- '-7 Daily 4:

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days till Christmas
Sponeored by

,~llr·

3rd St., Racine (740) 949·2210
Syracuse

(740) 992-6333

Please see Dangers, Page Al

·1

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