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Page

B~

•

• The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 18, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
PROFOOJBAI,I,
NationaJ Football Leagu.

AFC
Miam1
lnd1anapohs
NY Jets
Buffalo
New EngtanQ

x- Tennessee
x-Batt1more
Piltsburgh
Jacksonllrlle
Crncrnnat1
Cle11eland
x·Oaktand
· x·Den11er
Kansas Crty
Seattle
San Oi€90

y-N Y G1an1~
x·PI"11tadelphra
Washrngton
Da llas
Arr.::ona
x Mrnnes ota
Tampa Bay
Detrort
Green Bay
CIHc&lt;tgo

East
WLTpts, PFPA
10 5 0 667 296 202
9 6 0 600398 316
. 9 6 0 600301 287
7 8 0 467 273 327
510 0 333252 311
Central
t2 3 0 800 315 191
11 4 0 733299 145
8 7 0 533 287 234
467 342 299
7 a
411 0 267178 343
313 0 1a8 161 419
West
1t 4 0 73:l 427 290
10 5 0 667 447 360
7 8 0 467 342 325
6 8 0 o10Q 297 363
1 14 0 067 lo18 406

o

NFC

East
W L T Pet PF
11 4 0 73.3300
tO 5 0 667 335
7 8 0 467 20 I
5 10 0 333 29o1
312
200 201.
Cent ral
11 4 0 733 387

a

PA
221
238

266
330
J t.J

340

9 5 0 643336 217
9 6 0 600 297 284
533 336 309

l:l i 0
• .1 1 1 0
Wes1
10 s ~"'
9 5 0
~

Ohio High School Boys a.. k.tball
Saturday 's Scor••
Akt SVSM 45, Aedrord !M1ch) 40
Ameha 76 Fehcrty 49
Anna 64, Covtngton 59
Ashtabula 70, Chardon 53
Bay Vtllage Bay 65 , Rocky Rrver 51
Betll.ltlle Clearlo()( 54. Col Craw1oro 43
Blackhawk (Pa ) 63. Akr Hoban 59
Bloom-carroll 74, Untoto 70, OT
Bowling Green 59, Oetrance 55
Bryan 65, Sherwood Farrv1ew 52
Cadiz Hamson Cent 59, Utmchsvllte Clay·
mont 55
Can Cent Cath a I . Wooster 51
Card.ngtorl- lrncotn 55, Mt Grlead 54
Casstown Mramt E 71 Ptqua 36
Cedarv1lle 57. Cltnton·Massle 55, OT
Chesapeake 82 , Mrnlord 64
Chesterland W Geauga 69 , Gates Mrlls
H&lt;1wken 41
Crn Frnneytown 73. Crn Maderra 49
Crn Marremonl 33, Crn lndran Hrll 26
Crn McNrcholas 69, Covrngton Cath. 62
Crn Read tng 69. Bethel-Tale 58
Cte E 51. New Phrladelph1a 42
Cte JFK 70 Tol Start 55
COts Bexley 57, Grandvrew 45.
Cots Ready 55, Cots, Academy 42
Cots Tree or Lrle 64. Newar1r.; Ca!h . 53
Cots wenrngton 73, Maumee Valley 60
Cols West a7 . Upper Arlrng!on 76
Columbra 69. lnctepenoence 64
Cotumbra Central (Tenn 7 1), Trpp Ctly
Bet11el 62
Cortland Maplewood 34 Vrenna Mathews

29

Day Chrrstran 76. Oa~. Carroil60
Defrance Ayersvrlte 75 , Columbus Grove 54
Defrance Tino'a 65, Hamler Patrrck Henry

267 193 3::15

New Ortedn~
Ot;• ·113
St Lou•s
ci4J 179
• B 0 407 301
Carolrna
San Fran.::t~O
o •) 1 o1:l,,l 379
Alldnta
312 D :'•}0 2? .1
)(·Citncn~d fJI&lt;'IyOfl SPOt
y·cllncrwrt drvrs1on
Saturda~ ·s Games
P ttsturgh 211 Wastorngton 3
Seallle 27 Oakland 24
Sunday 's Gam9s
Detrort 10 NY Jets'
Kansas Crt} 20 Oen~~r 7
Carolina 30 San Crego 22
New Orleans 23 At1a·1ta 7
New E11gtand 13 BuHalo 1C O"T
Crncrnnatr 17 Jacks:Jnvrlli;! '.;
Tennessee 24 Clevel,md 0
Green Bay 33. Mrnne sota 28
San FrancrsCo 17 Chtcago 0
tnd anapohs 20 Mtdmt 13
Battrmore 13, Anzona 7
NY Grants 17 Dallas 13
Open Phtladelphra
Monr1ay 's Game
St LOUIS at Tampa Bay. 9 p m

279

112
258
38 4

"

JOO

C PREP HOOP_S ~
Tri·County Boys Boxes
Eastern 51, Bellaire SO
Bellarre
!5 13
7
15 50
Eastern
11 10 15
15 51
;Bellarre
Ben Doyle 0 2·2 2, Mall
Materkosk1 6 35 1!1. Derek Myers 4 1·1 10.
Matt Sherwood 2 3 3 7 Aaron Agnew 5 2·5 12.
Totals
Eastern
Chns lyons 6 2·5 17 , Joe Brown
4 1·3 9 Garrett Karr 1 1·2 3. Brad Brannon 1
0·0 3. Brent Buckle~· 1 5· 7 7. Matt Srmpson 3 4·
7 10. Chad Nelson 0 2·2 2 Totals
3·pornt FG Bella1re 3 \Ma terkoskr 2. Myers
1). Eastern 4 (lyon~ 3, Bra nnon 1).
Rebounds~Bet farre 24 (Aaron Agnew 8) East·
ern 21 (Simpson 10) Asststs-Bellarre 14
(Marcus Vrncent 5) Eastern 10 (Srmps on 4).
Steals-Be llatre 4 ( M&lt;~tt Sherwood 2) Eastem
10 (lyons 5). Turnovers-B ella1re 15. Eastem

s

Frsller Catholic 59 . Southern 35
Southern
11
6
B · 10 ~ 35
12 15 15
17
59
Fisher Cattrohc
Southe~n- Natnan Martrn 2 0·0 5, Brandon
Hrll 1 0·1 &lt;! 01ad Hubbard 3 0.:) 8 Jeremy
Frsher 1 0 0 2 Dallas Hrl! • 0·0 2 Ma tt Asr. 3 0
0 6 G,Hfett Krser;: 1·3 5 Jonatr1.1n Evans 2 0
0 5 Tnti!IS 15 1·-l 35
Frshcr c'athohc
Adam Arnett 0 2·2 2 ,
Adam Mrller t 2·2 4 B J The1sen 1 0·0 3 ·
Anthony Grcssir.k 2 0·0 4 Adam Lr~p 0 1·2 1
John Huck 1 0·0 2 Cosey 8ec•wrtr"J 3 0·~ 6
Ar,dy Bee-:. t 0·0 2 Adam Black .\ 2·2 13
Citase \olr ller 10 2 J 22 Totals 23 9·12 59

•

Delaware 56 Manon Hardrng 48
Delaware Hayes 56. Mar1011 Hardrng 40
E Can 64. Hanoverton Untied 61
E Cle. Shaw 76, Lrma Sr 75
Eaton 54 W. Alexandna Twrn ValleyS 49
EtmwOOd 76, Genoa 68
Etyrta 53. Amhe rst-Steele 51
Etyna. Open Door 49, Temple Chr. 45
Euctrd 83, BenediCtine 70
Fostona 77. Oregon Clay 71
Fredencktown 76, Ma nstreld Chrrstran 71
Fremont Ross 56, Sandusky 35
Ft Recovery 54 Lrma Temple Chrrstran 42.
Galion 60 , Bellevue 46
Gnade nhutten lnQran Valley 50. Wat ertord

42
Goshen 68 , Clermont NE 64
Green rietd McCtarn 65, Belpre 40
Haviland Wayne Trace 74. Coldwater 57
Heb ron Lakewood 79, Ulrca 47
Hemlock Miller 74, Sugar Grove Berne
Unton 55
Hightancls 55 Farrf retd 42
Hilliard Davrdson 53, Cols Centennrat 50
H illtop 65, Delta 48
Huber Hts Wayne 74. Coldwater 57
Huron 65 , Castalia Margaretta 56
Hya ttSIIIIIB (MD) DeMafha 62, Can McKrn ley

4S

20T
N Can Hoover 58, Can GlenOak 56
N Central 62, Ed9&amp;rton 59

New Concord John Glenn 64

Albany

Alexander 41

64

New Washtng\on Buckeye Cent 70 Carey
Newark 58, Groveport 37
Newark L•ckmg Valley 52, Granville 48
Newbury 71, Aurora 60

Clo C.C. 37. Chardon NOCL 33

Nor1hwood 40, Danbury 36
Oak Harbor 73, Clyde 62

Olmsted Faits 79, Westtall:e 76
Orange 76 Cardtnat 48
Ottawa Hilts 67 , Whiteford IMICh ) 40
Ottawa -Glandorf 54, Ltma Cent. Cath 48

N. 48

Ravenna Southeast 65, Atwater Waterloo 42
Ae adsvtlle Eastern 51 , Bellaim so
R1chmond His. 70, Brooklyn 60
Richwood N U111on 59. Span a H1ghtand 57
Rocky Rrver lutheran' W 63. Beac/lwood 37
S
Charleston
SE 52.
Jamestown
Greenevrew 45
Sandusky Perl(ms 65. Pon Clinton 56
Sandusky St Mary·s 85 . Mansfield St Peter

73
Shadysrde 67. Lrsbon Beaver 62 OT
Shelby 73, TIHrn Columbran 52
Spencervt!le 76, Dola Hardrn Northern 63
Sp11ng Cath . Cent 10 1, Spring NW 60
Sprrngboro 82, Dunbar 75
Steubenvrlle 56. Buckeye Local 51
Stryker 68. HIGksvrlle 46
Sycamore Mohawk 64, Crestlrne 59
Tot Cent Cath .t 7 Elida 43
Tot Libbey a3 . Brennaman (Ontarro. Cana·
oa)46
Tot St Johns 64. Lakewood St Edward 60
Tontogany Otsego 83 Kansas Lakota 56
Troy 67 D&lt;~y Cotonet While 57
Unron local 63 Old Washrngton Buckeye
Trarl 46
Uniontown Lak e 47 . B~rhn Hrland 44
Upper ScJDto Valley 64 , Arcadra 43
Van Wen 69. Pauldrng 46
Versarlles 64 Trt· Village 54
W JeHerson 46, WUiiamspon Westfall 30
W. Mrlton Milton -Union 46, Ne w Pans
N~tronal Trart 44
Walsh Jesuit 52, Wheeling Cent Cath . 51
Warren Hardrng 60 , Struthers 44
Warrensvrlle Hts. 62 , Racine Case (W1sc.)

59
Waynesv~le 64. E. Clinton 46

Wernon (W Va ) Madonna a7 , Betlarre St.
John's 59
·
WrckltHe 88, Krrtland 68
Wrllard 66 , Bucyru s 38
Wrllramsbur g 55, Blanchester 41
Woodsfield Monroe Cent 77 , Bowerston
Conotton Valley 68
Wooster Trrway 64, Detrorl (Mrch ) Walsh
·
Jesuit 45
Xenia Christran 56, Grace Haven 55
Zanesville 68 , Cols E. 55

Ohlo High School Girls Basketball
Saturday's Scores
' Ametra 58. Crn. Turprn 45
AndOver Pymatuning Valley 56 , AshtabtJia

35

46

Mercersburg (Pa ) 81 Huntrng Valley Um·
versrty 80
Mramr Valley 66. New Lebanon b llcre 64. OT
Mrdr11etown 78. Crn Prrnceron 68
Mrlan EdiSOn 71 Collrns Western Re serve

61
Mrltbury Lake 59, Wood more 56
Mrnerat Rtdge 63. Berlin Center Wester'l
Reserve 51
Mo gad ore 53 Woodrrdge 5 1
Mnn tp el rer 77 Pettrsvtlte 64
Morral Rtdgeclale 79. Bucyrus Wynlord 75

37
Anna 73, Sprrng Calh. Cent. 65
Amhony Wayne 80 , Tal. Scott 66
Archbold 73, Edgerton 64
Avon 62 , Firelands 30
Balttmore lrberty Union 56, Summrt Station
Lrckrng Heights 25
Ba~ 57, Amherst 42
Beavercreek 68, Xenra 42
Bedford C hane! 65, Parma Padua 60
Bellaire 52, Caldwell 39
Bellcfonta;ne Benjamrn Logan 58. Aicllwood
N Unron 55
Beloit W Branch 40, Carrollton 23
Berea 61 N Aidgevrlle 37
Betllel Chr 30, Mentor Chr 25
Beverly Ft Frye 54, Old Washrngton Buck·
eye Trail 35
Brecksvrlle 70. N Roya lton 42
Brookvrlle 60. Northmont 53
Cambrrdge 53. Byesvrlle Meadowbrook 49
Can . Cent. Cath 36, Youngs Moone ~ 28
Can S 58, Akr Sprmg 32
Carey 6 1. Mona I Ridgeda le 46
Castat ra Margaretla 62. Sandr tsky Perkrns

46

.

Centervrrle 59 Spnng N 33
Crn Harnson 62. Cr n Anderson 50
, Crn Hrlls Chr Acad . 50. N College Hrlt 39

•

Cols . Mifflin 57 . Upper Arlington 36
Cols . SOuth 57, Col s. Work! Harvest 50
Conneaut 57. Ashtabula Edgewood 36
Crooksvrlte 56, Thomville Sheridan 36
Oanvtlle 61 , Fredencktown 41
Da~. Chnstran 49, Day. Meadowdale 37
Da~. Jerterson 100, &gt;&lt;enta Chr. 29
Da~. Oakwood 56, Bethel 29
E Cle Shaw 73, Gartield Hts . 48
Felrcrty 54 , Gin . St. Bemard 20
Findlay 61 , Tol. Whitmer 51' ,
Frankrort Adena 72. Beaver Eastem 33
Franklin 40, Pre~te Shawnee 30
Fremont~Ross 57, Santtusk~ 24
Ft. Jenntngs 57 , Kalida 35
Gahanna 4 7, MI. Vernon 45, OT
Geneva 65. Ashtabula Harbor 31
Genoa 62 . New Rie'gel 58
G(1adenhutten Indian Valley 43, Claymont

Perry 79, Orwell Grand Valley 57
P~ekenngton 67 , Cots Independence 58
Preble Shawnee 60, Lewtsburg Tn·County

Lancaster Frsher Cath . 59, Rac rne Soutllern

Marion Pleasant 69, Galron Nonhmor 41
Massillon Perry 47 . Ma ssrtton Ja ckson 37
Massillon Tu slaw 63, Creston Norwayne 50
McConnelsvrlle Morgan 74. Nelsonvrlle·York

35

Pemberville Eastwood 58, Gtbsonburg 51

53

"

Cia Coltinwood 61 , Tot Wa11e 34
Clyde 79. M1lan Edison 46
Cots . AcademY 44 . Grandview 27
.
Cots . Hamrilon Twp. 39, Canal Winchester

,..

Kenton 71 , Manon Rrve r Valley 54
Kenenng Alter 65 Day Chamrnade.Julrenne

Lebanon 74, Fran~tin 42
Lerpslc 51 . Mrller Crty 4a. OT
Lrma Perry 65, Cary-Rawson 63
Lo rain Admiral Krng 64 Lora rn Southview 53
Lorarn Ctearvrew 70, Lorarn Ca th . 58
Lords town 74. Thompson Ledgemont 67
Loudonville 73. Greenwich S Cent. A1
Madison Platns 63, Jonathan Alder 58
Magnolra Sandy Valley 64, Sm1thvrlle 56
Manchester 75. Glouster Tnmble 73. OT
Marron Cath 91 . Cots. Worlr1 Harvest62
Marron Elgin 59. Delaware Buckeye Valley

Crn Madeira 60, Cln. Country D1y 33
Cin. Marlemon! 56, Clermont NE 30
Crn McAuley 35, HamUton Badin 34
Crn Pnnceton 68, Middle1own 35
Crn Purcell Marian 36, Batavia 33, 20T
Crn. Roger Bacon SO, lakOII E 39
Crn SCPA 54, Lloyd 416
Ctn . Sycamore 57 , Salon 54
Crn . Winton Woods 52, Cin. Northwest ..2
Cln Wyoming 63, Waynesville 19

Mt Vernon 79 Mansfield Madisoo ?0

29

•
Goshen 60, Crn, Norwood 23
GranVIlle 54, Millersport 29
Green 47. ClOverleaf 20 '
Greenville 66. Eaton 44
Grove C rty 71 , Hilliard Davrdson 53
Hamtlton 33. Tatawanda 30
Haviland Wayne Tra~e 44 , Fayetteville 32
Heath 72 . Be rne Onion 36
Hebron Lakewood 62. Newark Ucktng Valle~

55
Holgate 83 Hamler Patnck Henry 77, OT
Huron 65. Pon Clinton 48
Indian Lake 61 , Ridgemont so
Jackson SB. Albany Alecander 55
Jackson Center 52 . Sidney lehman 44
JttHerson 74. Painesvllre Harve~ 23
Johns town Northridge 40. Johnstown-Monroe 36
Jonathan Alder 44, Madison Plains 27
Kansas La kola 70, Tontogany Otsego 37
Kenton Ridge 88 Tecumseh 70
Kings Mills Krngs 55, Wilmington 20
LaGrange Keystone 59, Brookside 43
La ncaster 74. Dublin Coflman 51
Lebanon 42 Hamilton Ross 22
Lima Bath 58, Coldwater 29
Lrma Cent. Cath . 60, Columbus Grove 50
Lrm'a Perry 70, Bet1sville 34
Lrma Sr. 68 , Day. Belmonl12
Lrttle Mrami 57 , Loveland 37
Logan Elm 48, Bloom-Carroll 38
Lorarn Admiral King 66, Lora1n Southview 59
Lorain Ctearvrew 46, Wellington 20
louisvrlle 49, Alliance Martrngton 33
Louls11rlle St. Thomas Aquinas 76, Akr.
Coventry 71, OT
,
Mansfreld St. Peter 5 1, Galion Northmor 38
Marion Cath. 44 , Delaware Christian 42
Mason 30 , Crn. Glen Este 22
Massillon Washington 59, Dover 38
Maumee Valley 72, Cols,. Wellington 60
Mayt1elr1 40 , Solon 39
Medrna Highlanr1 71 , Copley 51
Mentor 56, C te, Hts. 46
Mentor Lake Calt1 . 55, Elyna Cath. 26
Metamora Evergreen 74, Otlawa Hills 67
M1dctteburg His. Midpark 46, Brunswick 39,
OT
.
MrCidletown Chr. 44, Middletown Madison 43
Miller Crty 64 , Sherwood Fairview 50
Millersburg W. Holmes 59, Medrna Buckeye

23

49

Minerva 52 , Canal Fulton NW 38
Minster 44, Ft Loramie 26
Monroeville 61, Mapleton 32
Montpelrer 48, Ayersville 47
N Lewisburg Trrad 73, Mechanicsburg 24
N OlmstM 51 , Fauvrew41
Napoleon 59, Bowtrng Green 38
New Albany 53 , lancaster Fisher Catt1 . 40
New Bremen 62, Botkrns 46
New Le )(ington 39, Dresden Tri·Valley 37
New London 60, Greenwrch South Cen tral
New Philadelphta 50, Coshocton 21
Norwalk St. Paul 59. Plymoutll 23
Oak Glen (W . Va .) 61 , Martrns Ferry 56
Oak Harbor 57. Sandusky St Mary 's 39
Oberlin 57, Midview 48
Olmsled Falls 70 , Rocky River 40

Oregon Clrdlnll Strftch 52 , Fostoria St.

Wendelin •2
Oregon Clay 62 , Fostoria 40

.eo,

W00044

Philo 68, New Concord John Glenn 48
Pickenngton 53. Gatloway Wesnand 45
Ravenna Southeast66, Atwater Watertoo 63
Richmond Dale SE 12, latham Westem 38
Salem 37, Struthers 36
Shaker Hts. 75. Euctid 56
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 36, Elyna
Open Door 21
Spring. Kenton Ridge 99, New Car1isle
Tecumseh 70
Spnng. S. 55, Fairbofn 47
Springboro 63, Cln . Taylor 36
St. Paris Graham 67 , Fairlawn 58
Strasburg-Franklin 48, Tuscarawas Cent .
Cath. 43
Strongsville 60, Medina 47·
Sugarcreek Garaway 67, Malvern 16
"ftlllmadge 74 , Norton 43
Tiffrn Calvert 38 , Lorain Catl'l. 28
Tol. Emmanuel Baptist 51, Ufna Temple
Christian 34
Trotwood Madison 110, Sidney 29
Troy 59, Miami E. 25
Troy Chr 67. Cin. Chnstian 20
Utica 57. Howard E Knox 25
Versailles 82 , Arcanum 22
W. Jefferson 53, Washington C.H 36
W Uberty-Salem 58 , Mrlford Center Fair·
banks 49
W. Muskmgum 65. McConnelsville MonJan

56

.,

25

Wadsw0r1h 58, Revere 27
Warren Howland 75, Campbell Memorral 23
Warrensv1tte 60 , Bedlord 55
Warsaw River Vrew 51, Zanesvrlle Maysville
Waynesfield-Goshen 52 , DeGraff Arversrde
Werr1on (W. Va .) Werr 53, Richmond Edrson

Westlake 51 , Avon lake 42
Williamstown 65 , Belpre 58
Woodward 69 , Perrysburg 51
Wor1hinglon Chrrs!ian 65 , Centerburg 48
Zanesville Aaser:rans 76 , Stewar1 Federal
Hocking 51

I.~WGEHOOPS I
The Women '• AP Top 25
The top 25 teams in The Associated Press'
women's college basketball poll, With f~rst·pl;:o ce
110tes in parenll'teses, records tllrough Dec 17,
total pornts based on 25 points for a fitsl·place
vote through one point lor a 25th·place vole
and las! week's rank!rtg :

W·L

Details, A3

ComaN

pta,

Pva.

1. Connecticut (40) ..
7·0 1,000
1
2. Tennessee ..
. . 9-Q
959
2
.8·0
920
3
3. Notre Dame
4 . Georgia ...
. .7·2
865
4
5 . Iowa Sl..
. .... .B·O 816
5
.7
6. Duke .... ....... ........, ....... 10 ·1 79a
7. Rutgers ....................... 6· 1 737
B
8. Purdue ............................ 8·3
615
6
598
9
9. Aubum ............................. 10·0
10. Lou1slana Tech .................. 8·3
568
10
11 . TexasTech ........................ 6·1
541
11
12. lSU .......
. .................... 6·3
44 I
20
12. Penn St ............. , ........... 6·3 441
12
.. 5·2 427
15
14 Stanford
15 Texas.......
. 10·1
419
16
16. Flonda ..................... 8·0 418
18
17. N.C Stale ...........
. 7·1
416
13
18. sw Missouri Sl.
6·2
330
21
19. MissiSSiPPI St... .... ...... 6-2
253
22
20 Oklahoma....
. 5·3
191
17
21 . Xavier.... ......
. .. 7· 1
143
19
22. Vanderbilt..
. ... 7-2
140
24
23. Oregon .
.4-3
137
14
24 . Wisconsin
.. 5·3
124
23
25. Utah .
. 9·0
115
Others receivmg votes· llirg1nia 100, North
Carolrna 99, Clemson 77, Alabama 44. Boston
College 43, Colorado St. 30, lndlana27, An·
zona 26, Oregon St. 24, Ohro St 20. Baylor 17,
Buffalo 11 , Crncrnnalr 11 , Kansas St 10, Nonh
Te)(aS 9, Old Domrnton 8, Te)(as A&amp;M 8, M1ssis·
sippi 7 , Creighton 5, DePaul5. 111111ors 3, South·
em Cal 3, UAB I

Women 's College Basketball Scores
EAST
Butta to 55 , St John's 48
Canrsrus 97. Colgate 84

Flortdl St 73, St. Frands, NV 65
George Washrngtcn 100, Mount St Mary's.
Phfladelptlla 61, St. Thomas AQUinaS 57

Rhode Island 74 , Kent St. 6B
Yeshiva 66 , Purchase St. 44

SOUTH
Au bum 106, Pueno Rico·Mayaguez 25
Barry 83, M!SSOUii·Aol!a 48
Furma n 60, Coastal Carolina 57
Georgia Tech "19, Dartmouth 62
Kenwcky 60, Fra. lntemaiiOnal SA
Lei"'IOr·Rhyne 73, Clevton St. 42
Mlcktle Tennessee 75 , Lipscomb 52
Miss1sstppi 55 , N Arizona 47
MoreheM St. 90, Gardner-WebO 84
Rhodes 60, Austn 57
Tennessee 63. Stanford 58
Vanderbilt 107, N C -Asheville 51
Wake Forest 64 , New Orleans 52
MIDWEST
Butter 63, W. IllinOIS 60
Dayton 61 . Michrgan St. 57
Edlnbo rO 68, Ashland 64
Indiana St. 89, Au strn Peay 95, OT
indianapolis 66, Sagrnaw Valle~ St. 47
Iowa St. 87 , San Francisco 60
Kansas St 64. Vermont60. OT
Miami (Ohio) 89, St Francis, Pa 76
Michigan Tech 9a, BemldJr St 37
Mis souri 83, llhnors St. 63
Nebraska Weslyn 78, Whrtwo rth 70
Southwest St ., Mrnn 67. Mount Many 49
Truman St 80. Nebraska -Omaha 6B
Wrs .·Mrlwauke e 90. Cent Mrch~gan 48
SOUTHWEST
Cameron 74 , S. Arkansas 67
Central Arkansas 66, Te)(as Wornon's 48
TCU 67 . Stephen F Austrn 55
FAR WEST
Arizona 90. Loursvttle 60
Colo ·Colo Springs 76 , Aegrs 57
Colorado Chrrstran 7 1, S. Colorado 68
Flonda 79 New Mexrco 58
Fort Hays St 87 , N M Highlands 70
Hope 64 , Patte n 37
Pepperdrne 94 . CS Nort hridg e 68
Qurncy 66 Amcrtcan International 62
Tulsa 67 , CotorMo St . 64
UC Sa nta Barbara 72, Nort hwestern 59
Washington 73 , St. Mary·s, Cal 61
Washington St 74 . Gonzaga 56
Bearcatlnvltational
Third Place
E. Kentucky 92. Radlord 79
Thlrd Place
Clncrnnati 66. N.C.-Wilmrngton 63
Coke Classic;
First Round
South.Aiabama 57 , East Carolrna 56
Soutllern U 74 , Selmon! 60
Lady Blazer Invitational
Tttlrd Place
Florida A&amp;M 79, MVSU 65
Mississippi Slate ClassiC
Third Place
Loursiana ·lafayel!e 76 , Stony Brook 67
Third Place
MISSISSippi St. BO, Howa rd 64
ORU Fun in !he Sun Classic
First Round
Duke 69. Arkansas St 45
UAB Tournament
First Round
UAB 75, Troy Sl. 54
Meo's College Basketball Scores

EAST
Boston College 74 , Ma ssachusetts 65
Holy Cross a7 , Vermont 73
Ma(ne 71, Nor1olk St. 62
SOUTH
Florida St. 75 , Ja cksonvrlle 61
Nonh Carolina 95, Buffalo 74
Va. Commonwealth 76. Pitt~burgh 73, OT

MIDWEST
DePaul 80. St Joseph 's 76
lllrnors St 95, Texas·San Anton ro 87
Iowa St 75, Drak e 55
Notre Dame 82 , Tennessee Tecl1 68
S llhn01s 94, Murray St 79
Soulh Florrda 67 Ill ·Ctlrcago 51
SOUTHWEST
SMU 94, Houston 69
FAR WEST
Ca t Poly--SLO 95. UC Atversrt1e 72
Montana 86 Whrtman 55

Daily Sentinel

On The 9th
DaY Of Christmas MY
.True Love Gave To Me•.•
r-----------------,
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wheel alignment
:
tires
:
will meet or beat any competitor's :
! $2495 $4995 l 1: Weadvertised
price on the same tire. 1
L-----------------~

fi Z001 Explorer Sport

From Turnpike!

$4995

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maintenance
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package
1
1. sarvtce t~tuda• up toe qu1r11
ot t.tolorctaft all new MOlorcraft 011 I
I li~ef. Rotate lnd lnapect 411rel. Per1prm rnulll-polntlnapecllon.
1111 111
J pre..Uretn
lns~ brakelllllrea·
IY&amp;tem,Viauaty
Chea&lt;In~
and axMauat
nutat;tyt1em,
c~ and
•dJuat 111
Check

6F Goodrrch. Mountrng 9nd balancing

may be extra.

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1$1995
Motorcraft
I
1
Fast Lube
1
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• Service includes up to 5 quarts of
I Motorcraft oil and new Motorcraft oil filter ·I

1minutes

tn1pect hatt1hatt or equipped) Chttdl and ll.tbrtcatesleertng

I accldontal llnkag""" pane . where appt~ble, Oleset '&gt;~llhrelea
...,.__________
I ma,

I We feature all major brands; Goodyear, Firestone, I
1 General, Michelin, Bridgestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, I

1Perform •Mult1·-Po1·nt Vehi.Cie ·lnspectl·on ·J
I Check and fill necessary
fluids • All in 29J
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Il ltghll,
operatlon ot hOrn, exterlof lampa, turn egnlte, and hazard warning
chech belta and 1'101111; Check windshield wrper operation,
1 beexlfl

r-telp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

volume 51, Number 143

Council
names
Proffitt as
police chief

so

Commissioners,
·new ·sheriff plan
budget attack

.
P

BY TONY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY ·BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -Mark Proffitt was appointed as new
police chief and Joe Kirby Sr.,
as assistant police chief during
Pomeroy Village Council's regular mt\eti11g on Monday night.
Police ·Chief Jeffrey Miller
was present Monday evening as
council read aloud his resignation from the position that he
has held for th e last three years.
' In hi1; ' resignation, Miller
thanked the residents of
Pomeroy for their support and
assistance during his time in
office.
After meeting in executive
sess10n, counci) appointed
Proffitt as Pon1eroy's new
police chief. Once Proffitt was
named JS the new chief. a position of a%istant police chief was
created by council and Kirby
was selected to fill it.
According to council, Proffitt and Kirby will begin fulfilling the obligations of their
respective po~mtons . effective .
inm1cdiately
Both officers pledged to do
a good job assisti ng the community and thanked council
for the appointments.
After 1,n eeting in a second
executive session, council
"regretfully" accepted the resignation of Councilman Dave
Ballard.
Ballard was thanked for his
service to the village and was
commended for his work
whik in office.
Council approved a request
by Assistant Fire Chief Kevin
VanMatre to restock supplies at
the firehouse on Butternut
Avenue. Included on the list of
items were new face shields,
suspenders, gloves. a glassmaster
rescue tool, boots. and materials
to refurbish old, worn helmets.
The cost of the new supplies
will total around $2,300$2,500. •
In other matters, Melissa
Whaley was accepted as a new
part"time .dispatcher for the
Pomeroy Police Department.
She will begin her duties starting nt:xt week.
Council also discussed various street repairs and burned• out structures located ihroughOllt the village and decided to
delibemte on the matter at a
later date. preferably the next
meeting.
Due to council's next scheduled meeting will fall on New
Year's Day, councilwill hold ltS
.next meeting on Jan. 3.

Cents

OMEROY
Meigs County comnussioncrs and Sheriff-elect
Ralph
Trussell will meet
later this week to tackle the
sheriff's department budget for
2001.
Trussell· met with the board
during its regular meeting Monday for preliminary discussion of
issues likely to affect the department next year.
The sheriff's office has
encountered finanCial difficulties each year for the past several years, largely due to the cost
of housing. feeding and caring
for prisoners in jails outside of
Meigs County. '
The local jail can· house only
six prisoners for' safety reasons,
and most long-term prisoners
are transported to other counties, most to Noble County,
where the co unty has contract-,

ed for a number of beds at
reduced cost.
Trussell said he understands
that $56,000 in bills from the
department will remain unpaid
at the end of this year. and will
likely be paid from his 2001
budget.
"I don 't know what the
answer to this problem is,"
Trussell said. "I know what you
are facing, but l"m to be responsible for the safety and wellbeing of the people in Meigs
County. •and it will take money
to take care of that."
Trussell noted that the
department will face additional
costs in 2001 with the February
death-penalty murder trial of
Tony Gillilan. and said that he
plans to 'eek grant funds for
"whatever I can," in order to
offset some expenses.
"That's not going to help us
mu ch this year," Trussell said .
"We can't expect any grant

Please see Plan, Pille AJ

Deadline for
histories exte.nded
FROM STAFF REPORTS

SPECIAL DONATION -

Members of the Southern United Methodist Church in Syracuse begin unloading
a tractor trailer Monday that is filled with donated gifts for many area disadvantaged families . The project
is being held in conjunction with the Meigs County Cooperative Parish and the Meigs County Ministerial
Association. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Local churches lend a hand
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SYRACUSE Christmas
spirit continues to thrive in Meigs
County as members of the Syracuse Methodist Church welcomed the arrival of a semi-truck
laden with gifts that will be distributed amongst many disadvan•
taged families throughout the
area.
Members of the chur~h. as well
as other churches located within
the county, began unloading the
tractor trailer Monday morning,
removing items such as clothes,
washers, stoves, bicycles, and
assorted wrapped and unwrapped
presents for storage, and eventually, distribution to underprivileged
farilllie~ before C hristmas morn-

Tltt' A.ppalacltia Projat is
!lt'iu.~ ltcld in fMtjtlnl"fit&gt;lt
ll'itlt rite Jlt'lg.&lt; County
-caopt·r.tlit&gt;c J&gt;.nislt and
tile

lHI'ig .. ( ·mltlf)'

'Win i.&lt;tcrwl A &lt;saciati 011,
mg.
. The Appalachia Project is
being held in conjunction with
the Meigs County Cooperative
Parish and the Meigs County
Ministerial ASsociation.
According to Andria Culley,
Upper Sandusky resident and
coordinator of the event, the id ea
for. the project came about as she
was watching a Billy Graham scrvlce on television.

11

Mr. Graham's ministry was in

the process of collecting donated
items for disadvantaged families
in economically depressed countries throughout the world," said
Culley. "So. I began wondenng If
they were doing something like
this for Appalachian families in
the United States as well."
However, after co nt~1 c tmg Graham's ministry, Cu ll ey was
inform ed that the church did not
currently have s ue~ a program i11
existence.
" I really felt that something
sho uld be done. I stood up in my
church one Sunday and asked if
anyone was interested in dona tin g
items," added Culley.

Please see L!lnd, Pa1e AJ

encouraged to update th eir stoPOMEROY - lt"s not too ries and subm.it tht'm for the new
late for families to submit their hook;' she added.
histories for Meigs County His"Births,. deaths and marnages
tory, Volume Ill, to be published have taken place smce the earlier
· in September 2001 .
volumes and these are
The deadline for
needed to comp lete
Tilt• """tiline this histof)'·," Parker
submitting the histories was extended j(n .Ill bIll iII iII,~
said.
based on the volume
"Delight on the face
the historic.&lt;
of calls and requests
gasps of excitement
and
11'115 t'xteitde.J
from local residents,
when a fifth-grade stubased o 11 tiH•
according to· Mardent finds hiS fanuly
garet Parker, director t10l11me of.ca/1.&lt; story m one of the earof the Meigs Counlier volumes. while
and request.&lt;
ty Museum.
doing
genealogy
.fi"om local
" Meigs County
through the Yesteryear
!T.&lt;idmts.
residents
are
program, points out the
encouraged to write
·importan ce Gf being
their family · story
included
m
these
ami submit it before this final books," she added.
deadline." Parker said. "Mei!l'
"People often thmk that their
County History Vol. land II have story isn't imponant, but every
proven to be treasures for all who Meigs countian ·s story is impor. mclud cd their stories and those tant to someone," Parker said .
who purchased the books."
According to Parker, copies of
"History liVe s on the written th e first volume, now 1ong out of
word, ;md thus, inclusion in a his- priut, bring as much as mw.:h as
tory such as this t'llSUft:'~ that $!00 at auction. The second volthosr: who come after us w111 unH: is avai1able at the museum
have an opportunity to fin d th eir for $50. and gifi certificates for
ancestors," Parker said.
th~ new volume .are available at
"Families who wrote thm sto- th e museum, at a cost of $49.50.
ri es for the earlier volumes art" and $54.5(1 if mailed .

1

1 2-wheel
4-wheel
1
I Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional parts I
I and labor may be required on some vehicles . J
I
I

December 11,2000

Md. 57

Get the latest in sports news from the

1

I

TUesday

•

86. St Bonaventure 74

Detaware 80, Amencan U 51

Pandora·Gtboa 49, Leipsic: 44
Pnna Nonnandy 47, Maple His. 33
Parma Vattey Forge
Lakewood 39
Patterson 60, Cln Taft 50
Pemberville Eastwood 65, Bloomdale Elm·

47

Society news and notes, AS
Eastern girls top Southern, Bl

Weclnesd-r
Hlp: 301; Low: lOS

•

extra .

or less •

lesel vehicles

may be

••i'-~-----------------

~iiiiil

I &lt;

.

1

.J

Today"s

Sentinel
Paps

2 Sections - ll

A5
B2-4
B5
A4
A3

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics

Editorials
Obituaries

BL3,6

Sports
Weather

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 1-0-2; Pick 4: 5-9-3-7
Buckeye 5: }..4-.(&gt;-12-22

QualityCue

w.yA.
Daily 3: 7-8-3 Daily 4: 4-9-6-3
I

11)'OII".IffWt

•

..

Equipment don•ted

Gavin Plant opts for
ammonia alternative
the selective ca talytic reduction
(SCR) process.
CHESHIRE - "Again. we
The plant willu1Stead utilize
can feel our co mmunity is urea, a . d'ry, granular or pelletsafe," Cheshire Mayor Tom form nitrogen fertilizer, as its
Ree"""' said Monday after amm o nia supply. Ammonia is
Ameri can
Ele·ctric
Power key to SCR, the process GJvin
announced it would use an will launch in May 2001 to
alternative form of ammoma in meer mandated dean air stanreducing nitrogen oxide emis- dards.
"I think you nl n say this is
sions at the James M. Gavin·
an
early C hri stm as prt'sent,"
Power Pl ant.
R eese ·commented during a Gallia County Comnmsioi1cr
publi c forum at River Valley Skip M eadows sa id .
Opting for urea cJm e :ifter
High School, where Gavin
Cheshire
residents Jnd publi c
G eneral Manager Duane Phl cgar told a crowd of about 100 officials protested the planned
peo ple that anhydrous, or pure storage of six 60,000-gallon
ammonia would not be used in
Please see Cavin, Pa1e Al

•

BY KEVIN KELLY
OVP NEY/S EDITOR

days till Christmas
Sponsored by

Two new pieces of exercise equipment will be available to sen1ors who
use the fitness facilities at the Me1gs County Multipurpose Senior Center
in Pomeroy. Kay Salter of Racine donated. a Cardia-glider and an ab
machine, and Virginia Hoyt of Pomeroy donated a Fitness Flyer. They are
pictured with the center"s fitness coordinator. Joy Bentley. The fitness program is funded by the Ohio Hospital Association Foundation for Hea~hier
Communities through Holzer Medical. Center. (Bnan J. Reed photo)

•

'•

461 S Thlld Ave. Middleport
N0-992-2196

�•

•
Pige A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Teen dted in baby's death
. YOUNGSTOWN (AP) -A teen-age g&gt;rl1s accused of throwlUg a 3-month-old crying baby out of a second-floor window on~
a tlnveway, then' plungmg a SIX-inch kmfe into his chest.
• Pnhce s;~y that aft&lt;r the girl was taken to JUVenile Jail on a delinqllency murder charge, all she wanted to know from her mother
was if she could ware h her favonre television show.
Cluef of Detectives Robert Kane said rhe girl threw little Alex
Zalov1c our of an upsrurs window at her home Monday morning,
stabbed him to death when she saw he was still movmg and rhe.n
got on a bus and went to school.
The baby was staying at the home along with his 18-year-old
mother.
· Detectives arrested rhe teen-ager at Chaney H1gh School and
took her to the police station where Kane says she adnntted killmg
the baby.

Report finds better academics
'COLUMBUS (AI') - Many Ohio school chstncts arc lmpnl\'lng .K.Id~micaJly this year over 1998-99. ~lCL'ording to pn:lmun:try
l"l'port r.1rd d.lta rdeased Mond.ly by rhc st.uc Educ:1t1on DL•p.1rr- .
lllt:llt .

A toul of II~ of the (,07 distncts .Ht' on ",H:.ukinu.: \\,ttch" lomp J rL'l..t with 131 bst YL'.lf Another J5 fl'llUlll on ",1CH.Icmt i.: L'IHl'rg~.·nl ,._.. dlL' lowL''\£ c.Hcg:ury. comp.trcd wirh (J() m 199S-09
Th~.· lughc~t r.mklng. "dll-cn\·l·:· commut'' .to lw l'iustn• ( )nly ]S
lit,tno.. t~ lun.· L\lrllL'd th.H r.mkiug this ye.u. t\HI ft•w~o:t than l.t~t ~-l".lr.
ThL· '\L'COtH.I-lughest r.H1k.ing, "commuom impro\'L'Ilh:nt," l'i thl·
l.nge.,t. '''ICh ·B~ d1,rnct&gt;; ll1L'L'Ung th.u st.UH.i.lrd, up from .177 l.t't
~

j..\ ll.

.

I .lrgt.' urb.tn dt~tnct~ rt·m:-~in .tt rht bottom ufthL· r.mkjngs. Ckn·l.md .l!H.i Dayton llll't thrl'L' of the '27 st.md.trds. Ybungsto\\'n met
four .tnd Akron. Canton, Columbus, Cmnnn.ltt and Tok.Jo tilet
tln·.
R~:.·port cJrd .scotes ate b.tscd nn proficu:ncy test scmes ..Htend.HKL'
.111d gr:tdu.ltJon ratt"S
.
.
Whtle- lll('Cting three of tht.· ?.7 performance st.mdards isn't .my··
tlung to wnre home about, Clewland schools ch1ef Barbae.\ Byrdl3ennL'tt satd. "we have to celebrate these small vtctones.''
It's the first time the Clewl.md dt&gt;tnct has scored htgher than a
.lcro Ill tht' annual rankings

Missing funds retu~ed
ALLIANCE (AP) - A former Alliance Commumry Hospital
emp loyee. fired after he was accused of stealing more than S I 00,000
'!' hospital funds, and a business haw agreed to pay back the missmg money.
James Tramer and ht s attorney agreed to a document acknowledgmg wrongdoing,and sent a check of $54,763 to the hospital.
Source Products Ltd., ofYoungstown, agreed to pay the balance
o( S109.527. In turn, the hospttal promised to ask prosecutors not
to .pursue a criminal investigation.
Karen Vrabec, daecror of'public relations for the hospttal, satd
Mond:t) that Tramer had been working as the dtrectot of purchasmg ;md created false invoices which were s~nt to Source Products,
a supplier of hospttal products m Youngstown.
"We \\'ere paymg mvoices for products we didn't receive:· she
~.-ud.

Yrabcc sa1d the hospital had been working with Source Products
~!nee 1997 but grew suspictous about the invOices Tramer had hand1l'd
Alliance Law Director Andrew Zumbar said Monday that desptte
his 1mttal objecttons, the hospital board agr&lt;ed to drop cnminal
r h 1rg-t&gt;s m favor of Tramer ;md Source Products paying back the
~to'!t:tl money.
The hospital didn't \\'ant ro press cha1·ges , hl' said.
~t.ln ]m1.1s. l'XL'cunv~ 1.hrl'cror of the hnspa.tl. s~ud the bo:1rd of
t l ll ~tl.' l:.'~· lll.lill COIK,L' l"ll W,lS gL·tting the bosplt.t} \ 111lllll'Y bal'k Ill the
lJI.Ill' kL'St po,.sibk m.l1111L'r

Custody appealed in Ky. court
CIRARD (AI')- A Kentucky collp le 1m·olwd m .1 kngthy custody dt~putL' wJth .m Ohio coup lt· \Yams the Supreme Courr of
K~ntucky to m·ct tutn .1 tuling that let tht· boy l"l.'llLllll 111 Ohto
Rcguu Moore Jnd J:rry Dormng. ch~.· lm th parents of Justin
Moore. born feb 2H. I '1~7. tiled thc'lr .tppeal Mond.,y.Thcy Jrc Jsklllg the c..ourt w rc\'tl'\\ the Kemucky Coun of AppL·als' Sc-ptL·mbcr
decision

,

Ju stin "'·" placed in the home i&gt;f RlCh.nd .\1\d Cheryl Ascnte nf
( ;ir.ml. (lim&gt;. on Feb. 17, 1998, after lm bmh parents g.tve ..him up
ti: lr .Hlopttnn

The· Kentucky couple sa td 111 a March 26, 1998, hemng they had
~. : h.1ngcd thc1r mmds, ;'IUd OhiO .l!ld KcniuLkV court~ h:rve been

lw~ri~1g &lt;lrgumcnts

the ctsc.
.
Jhe Asentcs had previously atloptcd Jumn's older brother, Joey.
.liter Moore and Dormng gJve him up for .tdoptton 1n 1995 That
.1dnpnon IS not bctng contested.
:'The\' (rhc Asentes) \\'ere expectmg this appea l," satd famtly
tr iend J.•m·r Duncy.
In its September 2-1 demton, the Kentucky Court of Appeals
s.ll~ the forms Signed by Moore and Dormng clea rl y stated they
wc:e rclinqmshmg their parental rights when agreemg to gtve up
Jusnn to~ adoption. That deCISIOn overruled a Kentucky C:trcuit
Court demion that the b1rth parents did not understand the adop111

tlll!l fi1r111S

..,

'

Gospel radio announcer dies
UUNTINGTON, WVa . (AP) - Lynn Davis. one of the oldest
~nspcl music radio announ&lt;.crs 111 the natton , died Monday fewer
tlun 1fJ nunutes before he \V,lS to bro:1dcast anorha hour-long
" ( ~ mtmry Hymn Time" progr.tm on WEMM-FM.
D,t\T., \\J~ H6.
D .l\'1 \ ,

\vho

WJs

mJrt u:d to thl' Lac country-g:ospl'l smg:c.:r Molly

O'D.ty. lud J.USt celebrated h" lmthday nn the atr Fnday
·
W~MJ\!1 personnl'l tJlkcd to D.l\'t~ t\VJce Monday mornlllg .1nd
t r.: pnitl.'d th.tt hl' St.'l'llll'd fin L'. Then his brother-in-l.t\\', D.1rlvn
S.lutom. t.dh·d to D:tvt~ .1huut 11 ;o p.m to make "ttrL' hL· \\',\ S
j\\

.lkt:

b.1d .1bout "'itttng do\\'11 .l!H.l gc~m~ to ,k·tp.'' ~.ltd L l i t \'
lu t ,J'\ , \VE 1V1M·~ progr.1111 dtn.·ctor "ThL'\' c.:.tlkd L"n..· n· d.l\' tll nukL·
~ tr~· h~,· \\ l\ up .md ,;\\ ,th•."
.
'
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l~ut \\ h...-n W£MN1 ph1ggL·d ltt t \' J),,,.t,· honiL' \tudto .tr I p 111 . .til
th~,'\ h L·.t nl \\'.1~ .,t ktlt L' .'\ lll'tghb,ll t(ll t nd l ) .n 1.., ' ittmg o tt cl tl· \t, tn g
\\".1..,

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Tuesday, Oecember 19, 2000

CLEVELAND (AP) Fighting back
tears, Raycme Snnrh lookt-d at the pictures
oi her acid-eaten t1esh and described the
horror of an attack July 7, 1999.
The pam was instant. The damage was
lastmg.
A man wa)ked into Pearl's Hatr Connernon m East Cleveland, where Smith worked
JS a hairdresser. and threw sulfuric actd on
her face as retnbution for Smith resnfying to
·' federal grand jury ab'but a Cleveland drug
deakr:
"I dtdn 't say anything. I, was too busy

screanung," Smith sa1d Monday in court. It
was her fitsr pubhc statement about the
attack.
" It htt me m the face, chest Jnd arms," she
said

Thret' men haVL' been, convicted for thetr
roles m rhe. attack. Snmh remfied Monday
ag,.mt Laktesha Ph1lhps, \vho is on trial in
Cityahoga County Common Pleas Court
and iS accused of helpmg plan and carry out
the attack.
Jcrmainc Levy, the drug dealer who
ordered the attack on Smith, wtll serve 20

years m pnson. His couSin Mano, who
threw the actd, wtll serve 1 J years. A getaway
driver, Buster Young 111, has yet to be sentenced ,
Snuth broke down only twice during her
testimony before Judge Bridget M. McCafferry, who ts hearing the case wirhom a jury.
She began to cry while looking at the pictures and again when Asststant Councy Prose'tutor Rtck Bell asked her about her 10year-old daughter, who is with her in the
federal witness protection program.

Police complete search Children look back on
for remajns near trailer parents' di~appearance
(AI') Autholttic,
nn·L·,tig.atng the dc.tth of .1 colkg:t· HLJt.k!H I"L'Il10\'L"d SOtlk' ItClllS
Mnnd.ty front ;t o.;tnrage shed .111d
completed .1 sc.trch fin- hum.m
I"L'lll,lins ne:tr a tr:t ilcr whl.'l'l' tht·
\\'oman's body w;1s tC.mnd, .HI thorRA'(

HieS S,ltd

Renuin!'i '' ..:rL' found in ;1 root
ct..'ll.lr .md :l ctstern Thursd.ty ne.tr
thl' tratler :md mvesngacors dug
up thrr:e or four other sites Fnd:ty

mgJ1t at the wooded, hilly area
surrounding the .trailer in so uthern Oluo but dtd nor find anythmg, Vmton County Shenff
J)'onald Peters said:
Authonttes have not said
whether the remains. which
reportedly mclude a leg bone,
part of a skull , a tooth and two
fingers, are fron1 the same body.
They also do not know
whether they are connected to
the ,death .Of Enuly ·Murray, 20, a
student at· Kenyon College 111
Gambier, about 80 miles north of
Ray. He-r body was found
wrapped In a rug Dec. 9 by a
depury who went to th e tratler to
serve Gregory McKmght, 24, a
summons

111

au unrela ted case.

McKntght, and his wtfe.
Kathryn. 35, arc both in custody
but are not ch~q~ed 111 Murray's
de.\th. The M c Kn1ghts arc
cha rged \Vith rcce1viilg stolen
property Murray's Subaru

l)utbark. whllh wa'\ p.1rkL·d

(l\Jt-

~1\.k thL'lr tr.ukr.

WARREN (A I' ) M.11:kk•y childn.:n arrin·d

The
homL"

tl-om

Poli ct..' Sl',uchcd t(u· .1bout .111
hour Mond,1y through plasnc
b.tg~ of dothmg in .1 .. torJgt· ~hL·d

in Cl11lhcothc lc.tscd by the·
MeKmghts.
"We rem ovl'd .1 coupk• of dorUllll'llt~ ,md ,l pJtr of shoe!-! ,md
sent thc:m to thL" Burl':lll ofCnmmal ldcntitl cmon and Investigation," ~;ud Ros~ Cnunry Shenff
Ronald Ntchols.
Nichols would not say how
the iten,ls rcLttc:d to the iJwt:stiganon.
Gregory McKmght and Murray worked at .1 pizza restaurant in
Gambier. Murray wJS bst seen
Nov. .1 after worktng her last
scheduled sh tft at the Pirate's
Cove
M~Knight met h is wife at the
Circleville Youth Ce nter, where
he was locked up at age I 5 for
robbtng and killing a Columbus
man She was a corrections officer

there.
McKmght was released from
th e ccmor 111 1997 at age 21, sa id
Kevin Mtllcr, spokesman for the
Ohm Departmem ofYouth Services. The same year. Kathryn
M cKnight, received J wntten
repnmand for havmg unauthonzcd con11numcatwn wah an
unidenttfied youth at th e center
and hts f.111uly

school ont: ,J.tf.c:rtHH•n
,tbottt five yc.us .1go to find chc
door un)och·J, the cotTn· pot
on and thc1r . parent" gmlL' -

fo rc\'C r.
John and Shdk\' M.trklc•\'
wc:rL' ncn~r heard from .tfi:er the)·
disappeared on Dec 15. I'!95.
La'\t ')'L'ar, they were declarCd
lq;.tlly dead.
Three of the couple's five
c hildren have now returned to
live m the home the L111nly once
sllJI·ed in Bristol Tmvnsh1p,
about I 0 nules north of this
eastern Ohio ciry. The children
wiSh they could find out what
happened to· their parents, but
they abo 'grudgingly recognize
that the events of the last five
years have given them a maturiry beyond their )l&lt;ars.
"I know I'm still a kid, but I
see thmgs differently," Stacey
Markley, 19, told the Tribu11e
Chromcle "We were made to
grow up fast"
Days before the Markleys disappeared, John's twm sister died
of cancer. . The calling hours
were the evenmg o( Dec. 15 ,
1995, and 1t was the birthday of
the Markleys' only son, John ny.
He was turmng 8.
The couple's o\dcst daughter,
Ruthic, was 1), followed by
Stacey, 1.J, Bonnie 13, and Crys-

t.ll. 12
There: w.ts no st-gn of .1 srrugg~c 'Yh . .·n th e: younglitl'n got
homl' from &lt;;l hool th.tt d.1y, bur
the gu11 l .J.bnkt \\,lS unlocked
.md .IJ.H. thL· girls s.1id. Thctr p.a~o:nt". lockbox s.tft: \\'.lS opL'Il .md
surmg on the ..,mk Ill the mastl-r
batJU~)Olll.
'
Tl1.:1t dad's watch was 111 the
, kitchen, .md a half cup of coffee
was on the btchen coun ter next
to then mom's cigarettes.
It \VJS later le.uncd th&lt;lt at
10:36 a.m Jo hn .111d Shelley
Markley, accompomcd by a ,[ender man, drove theu red, C hevy
pickup truck through the dnvethrough wmdow at Cortland
Bank's
North
Bloomfield
branch They cashed a personal
check for S1.000.
Th ey were Withdrawing
money deposited ~ver:ks ea rli er
whe,n the couple had rc-ce tved a
$1 ,'iOO loan to buy new tires for
John's semi-truck. sa1d Trumbull
Counry Shenff's IJetcctive Jane
T1mko.
After livmg with relatives, the
th ree oldest gtrls Ruthie,
•
Stacey and Bonme - arc now
back ltvmg ll1 thetr parents'
house, along wtth Ruth1c\. husband, TraviS Orr. Johnny, who
wrned 13 on Friday, lives with
h1s patern al grandmother, and
17-year-old Cryst;J hves with
her aunt and uncle

Judge denies
Wellrung ·
attorneys
access to files
CINCINNATI

(A I')

-

A

JUdge ha~ ruled th:tt .HtlHney~ for
·'

1\\.\1\

ch.trged wlth the 1%.1

murdn of hts g1rlti·lL"tH.l c.umot
h,lVl.' .ll'CL'SS to o\d poliCL' :l!ld
umrt file~ lll the c:1.se.

32" OAK
•v&amp;..&amp;. TOP DESK

Attorneys
fot
M1ch.tel
Wehrung. 'iJ, had argued tlut the
files &lt;1nd rc{. orJs are cruClal to
prov1ng then ch c nr 's tnnocenCt'
H&lt;11mlton Cotlnty Common
Pbs Judge 1'.\tllck Dlllkelacker
ruled Monday. ho\\'evcr. tlut
posenttors l'tth cr don't h:wc.&gt; the
old tile~ or :lrL' nm llbltg.H ...'d ro
lund them uVLT.
The battle over cv1dencc in the
1963 murder ca;c ts expected to

COOLVILLE - Dorothy Bowman, 86, Coolville, died Tuesday,
Dec. I 9, 2000 at her residence.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home in
Coolville.

Uoyd Markley
· POMEROY - Lloyd Markley, Coolville, died Tuesday, Dec. I 9,
2000 at Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville.
Arrangements w1ll be announced by White Funeral Home,
Coolville.

Gavin
fromPigeA3
tanks to hold anhydrous ammonia on site..
Ammonia would have to be
brought in by rail, and residents
feared a leak from the tanks
would endanger the village and
three nearby schools.
Because urea comes in solid
form and is described as "relatively harmless" by Kevin Dennis of the Mason County
(WVa.) Local Emergency Planning Committee, potential for a
health hazard has been eliminated, as is the need for a communiry emergency response plan.
."Our main concern since day
one has been for Gavin to use
the best, safest possible technology," Reese said. "They did
choose the best, safest possible
technology and they deserve a
big round of applause from the
people of Cheshire.
"We have all come out winners here tonighr,': he added.
When Gavin began engineering studies on an SCR retrofit in
1998, anhydrous ammonia was
the only option available, Phlegar said.
It was until last June when
urea was introduced at a smaller
power plant in Massachusetts,
and later at a California station,
he added.
By early fall, urea and aqueous, or water-diluted ammonia,
was still considered experimental, Phlegar said.
Bur AEP begon studying both
alternatives after residents, local
officials, and state and federal
'lawmakers urged the Columbusbased utiliry to look at them in
place of anhydrous ammonia.
"We recognize that nearly
three months have elapsed since
we held our first communiry
forum," Phlegar said. "To put it
conducting
these
simply,
detailed studies and evaluating
all of the possible alternatives
took longer than we originally
anticipated .
"A urea-based SCR system
has been installed only very
recently in two power plants in
the entire country, and those
units &gt;re much smaller th&lt;l111 the
Gavin units," he added. "It rook
a great deal of study before we
were able to conclude that we
can take this technology .attd
scale it up successfully to a plant
of Gavin's size."
SCR uses a chemical reaction

Subscribe roday.
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from PageA1
funds for at least six to eight
months after the application."
Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton and Mick Davenport, and
Commissioner-elect Jim Sheets
will begin to consider the mandated costs for 2001 as early as
Wednesday. They asked Trussell to
meet with them then to begin
tackling the sheriff's department's
anticipated costs.
Trussell said that a half-percent
sales tax, which the comnussioners are authorized to' enact, earmarked for law enforcement,
would relieve the general fund of
at least half of the burden for the
sheriff's budget, but Thornton
said that he would not support a
sales tax unless voters approved it.
The commissioners met with
Gary Sealey and Donna Russell
of the Enterprise Development
Corporation
affiliated with
ACENet in Athens, and authorized' the economic development
agency to apply for and admini•ter funds from the Communiry
Development Block Grant/Economic Development program, for
a revolving business loan program.
The agency plans to seek
$33 7,500 in grant funds, whjch
will then be loaned ro an as-yet
unnamed greenhouse owner.
That business owner will also
seek an additional $427,000 from
a local bank ro make for a
$750,000 total project.
The funds must be used for
busmess development resulting in
job creation- one job for every
S15,000 borrowed from the
CDBG program - with at least
5 I percent of new employees in
the low to medium income clas-

CHESTER - There will be a
free Christmas dinner served on
Saturday from noon until 2 p.m.
at Harvest Outreach Church on
Reibel Road in Chester.

Plan workshop

Stfication. When repaid, the funds
will be placed in a revolving loan
fund for other business creation
and expansion projects.
If the job creation criteria are
not met, the county will be
·responsible to the Ohio Department of Development for any
unpaid balance, Russell warned.
But he said the default rate on
such loans, because of private
funding and owner equ;ty
required, is generally . relatively
low.
Lee Layne of Racine discussed
problems with a hot-water heater
in his home, which had been
replaced and guaranteed through
the
Community
Housing
Improvement Program's housing
rehabilitation program. The commissioners approved replacement
of the heater.
The commissioners approved a
number of appropriations adjustmenu, transfers of funds and
advance-back transfers in a continui.ng attempt to finish out the
fiscal year.
The commissioners approved
payment of$38,211.47 from their
budget, representing the counry
general fund's share of users' fees
for the county's now-defunct
self-insurance health plan, and
then approved a SSO,OOO advance
back to the general fund to repay
an earlier advance in the claims
fund.
'
The board also approved
adjustments in the Clerk of
Courts Title Administration
Fund, in the amount of $8,500
and $50,000 to the general fund;
$4,000 for the Department of job
and Family Services; and $55,278
for the public assistance mandated
counry share fund.
Present, in addiuon to Thornton, Davenport and Commissioner-elect Jim Sheets, was Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Akzo - 47~'.
AmTech/SBC - 53), •
Ashland Inc. - 34
AT&amp;T -20),
Bank One -35
Bob Evans - 20~.
BorgWarner - 34),
Champ1on - 2l.
Charm1ng Shops - s'~~~
City Holding - 6
Federal Mogul - 2).
Firsrar- 23),

Gannett- 59''"

AD Shell -

General Electric- 51
Harley Davidson - 37),
Kmart - 5'1.
Kroger - 261,
Lands End - 25l.
Ltd.- 15l.
Oak Hill Financial- 141.

Sears- 33~.
Shonay's -'I.

OVB-25~

BBT - 35).
Peoples - 14),

Prem1er- 5~.
Rockwell - 40).

Rocky Boots - 4}"

POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department offices will
close on Friday, Dec. 25 and Ott.
26 for the holiday. Normal business hours will resume on Dec. 27
at 8 a.m.
Childhood immunization clinic
will be conducted as announced
on Dec. 26 from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m.

Free dinner

LOCAL . ST'OCKS
AEP -43'"
· Arch Coai-10

POMEROY - An action for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
Counry Common Pleas Court by
Marinda Kay young Gardner,
Middleport, against David Keith
Gardner, Middleport.

56'),.

sol..

Wai-Man Wendy's - 261.
Wonhington - 7lo
Dally stock reports are tt\e
4 R.m, closing quotes of
1he prev1ous day's trans·
actions. proVldad by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis .

POMEROY - The Small
Business Development Center of
Southeast Ohio and the Meigs
Counry Chamber of Commerce
will sponsor a Starting a Business
Workshop on Dec. 28 from 3-5
p.m.
The workshop wtll be held at
the Meigs Counry Public Library
in Pomeroy.
The workshop is designed to
answer questions and make starting a business easier. Topics will
include assessing goals and
strengths, registering a business
name, licensing, tax requirements,
rypes of ownership, planning the
business, sources of financing,
SBDC and other resources, and
other topics.
The workshop is free.
The SBDC provides free business assistance to new and existing businesses in athens, Hocking,
Meigs and Perry counties,
through partial funding from rhe
U.S. Small Business Administration and the Ohio Department of
Development.

Lend
from PapAl
"The response was overwhelming;' she added.
Culley, who's main goal was to
just fill her mini-van with the
donated items, was approached by
John Barrett, a professional truck
driver and full-time good Samariran who possessed both the time
and equipment to help expand
the parameters of rhe project.
'~ohn asked me if I was serious
about the project, and if so, that
he had a tractor trailer waiting to
be filled up with Items for disrri-

$29 25
$56 68
$109 72

COLUMBUS (AP) - A request
ordering Ohio to produce a master
plan for a court-ordered fix of its
school-fundmg system is premature,
the state said Monday in a court filing.
A coalition of schools suing over
the fi.mding system is ignoring work
the state has done to comply with
the court order, Attorney General
Betty Montgomery satd in a filing
with the Ohio Supreme Court.
The Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding asked

•

POMEROY - Chnstrnas Eve
services will be held at Enterprise
United Methodist Church at 7
p.m. The Rev. Keith Rader, pastor, invites the public.
'

Ciame canceled
RACINE - Tonight's basketball game between Southern and
Waterford has been canceled due
to inclement weather.
bution," said Culley.
"Once I agreed, the project
took full flight," he added.
Members from John Stewart
United
Methodist Church,
Memorial Methodist Church and
Crawford United Church, all
located around Upper Sandusky,
began collecting donated items in
a matter of days.
The church members' efforts
culminated in a packed semitrailer that was bound for Meig.&lt;
Counry, said Culley.
The gtfts wdl be both stored
and distributed at the Southern
United Methodist Church in
Syracuse.

the court earlier this month to force
the state to say how it was going to
fix school-funding in Ohio.
It also asked the court to appoint
a special master to oversee the state's .
efforts and to order the state to submit monthly progress reports on its
response. The court has previously
declined to appoint a special master
and has not satd when it will rule
on the latest request.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
OL Df10U T £J~ W LSI

7

l ~s.:l JIICKSOH PIKL

SUN 12/15/00 THUR 12/2 1/00

BOX Offla WILl OPEN AT
6:30PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM fOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINI!S

' Doon ()pe11At6dtl PM MOIL lbrilfri ·

* * ?':: w dWJJcA * *
111111111111-'='16:50. 8:45
M 11111N U
9:50

OR. SEUSS' HOW THE
STOLE CHRISTMAS (PG)

I

/

Service planned·

446 • 4524

~ u~ 11 doL llllh.' tlh

'

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered six calls for assistance on
Monday. Untts responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:25 a.m., Greenup Lane, assi~t­
ed by Tuppers Plains, Richart!
Fid:, treated;
9:20 a.m., Collins Road, Joyce
Sauters, Holzer Medical Center;
12:45 p.m ., Ohio 124, Marie
Devietro, HMC;
11:53 p.m., Vine Street, Mary
Beth Mitchell, HMC.
POMEROY
9:53 a.m., Lincoln Street, Gloria Craig, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2:52p.m., North Fourth Street,
Kenneth Mohler, HMC.

Plan for funding fix is premature

with scattered snow showers. Low
The tn- county area will in the upper teens. West wmd 10
remain locked in a mass of fngid to IS mph. Chance of snow 40
atr as the start of wmter percent.
Wednesday... &lt;;:on ri nued cold
approaches, forecasters said.
Arctic aiJ blew into the regton with some sunshine. High in the
lower 30s .
. behind a cold front today.
night ... Partly
Wednesday
•
Temperatures plunged into the
teens and, with wind gusts of up cloudy_ Low in the mid IWs.
Extended forecast :
to 20 mph, subzero wmd-chills
Thursday and Fnday... Considwere common.
Lows tonight will !Je in the erable cloudiness with a chance of
tmd-teens, the National Weather snow showers. Low in the mid
20s and htgh in the mid 30s.
Service said.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A
On Wednesday, the h1ghs will
be mostly in the 30s. Much of the chance of snow showers during
same IS forecast for Thursday, the · the day. Low around 20 and high
in the mid 30s.
,first d:ty of winter.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Low
Sunset tonight will be at 5:09
20 and high in the nml
around
and sunnsc on Wednesday 1s at
30s.
7:50 a nL
Christmas .. Partly cloudy. Low
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Cloudy and cold around 20. High 35 to 40 .

•

EMS runs

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ever~

Plan

Office to dose

·Frigid air will linger in area

(USPS 213-960)

Published

COOLVILLE- Lester D. "Buck" Keaton, 74, of Coolville, died on '
Friday, December 15,2000 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
He was born in Newron,WestVirginia,son of the lateAlfttd Keaton
and Mary Naylor Keaton.
He was a farmer and retired after 48 years of service with Local No.
565, Plumbers and Pipefitten in Parkersburg, West Virginia, where he
was a welder.
He was a member of Moriah Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM in Spencer,
West Virginia, and was a member of the Calvary Community Church
in Belpre. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II.
Survtving are his wife, Frances Kelley Keaton, whom he married on
August 23, 1946; a son, Robert L. Keaton of Coolville; three grandsons, Robert L. Keaton II of Raletgh, North Carolina, and Matthew
and Kevin Keaton of Coolville; three sisters, Evelyn Andrews of
Deland, Florida, Glenna Buckhanna of Barlow, and Ruby Kings berry
of FaDs Church, Virginia.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by six brothers,
two sisters, and a son, David Keaton .
.
Services will be held at I p.m. today, Tuesday, December 19,2000 at
Calvary Communiry Church in Belpre, with the Rev. Clay Sloan officiating. Burial will follow in Sunset Memory Gardens in Parkersburg.
Visitation was held in the Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home on Green
Street, Parkersbur15, from 2-8 p.m. on . Monday, December 18, 2000,
and at the church an hour prior to services.
-

Divorce flied

VALLEY WEATHER

The Daily' Sentinel

- s.lH.l
H1~ LJ.\\'yl'r~
~.:r"'"·d by poit CL'

to break down nitrogen oxide in
exhaust gases during the coalburning process. Urea will be
converted. to ammonia prior to
.mjection into exhaust gases.
AEP and other power generators m the south and midwest
U.S. have been directed to
reduce emission levels by May
2003. AEP opted to retrofit
Gavin its largest plant in
Ohio and second-largest coalburning facility in the AEP system- by next year.
Phlegar said the switch to
urea has made meeting the
deadline to launch SCR "ughr,"
but he believes the timetable can
be met.
"We no longer have the
assur~nce we . had before, . but
we're working hard to make it
happen on time," he said. "We're
working with a vendor to expedite getting the equipment here
and makmg it operational."
Because Gavin and AEP value
relationships with the community, Phlegar said both will
address other issues with
Cheshire, such as the "stack
rain" particles that have fallen on
the village for the past several
years, and more openness with
the communiry.
"I think all of you would
agree that over this period of
time, with the opportunity to
talk with the mayor, council and
other repres~ntatives, we are trying to develop that dialogue,"
Phlegar said.
Regular meetings to chart the
SCR installation's progress will
begin in January, increase in frequency as completion nears, a
public tour when the job is
complete and if needed, another
public forum can be scheduled,
Phlegar said.
Because Gavin is among the
first power plants to install SCR,
officials and environmentalists
encouraged the utility to establish a precedent for other utilities and comm~iries in handling similar situations.
As a "superb corporate citizen,'' AEP has set that example,
U.S. Rep. Ted Stnckland, DLucasville, told the crowd.
"I believe a lot of communities around the nation will ben efit from what has been done
here," Strickland said. "Other
members of the corporate community will be compelled to follow suit.
,
· "What you have done IS a
good thing for the industry and
a good thin g for the country,"
the congressman added.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

to death l\15 1S-ycar-o ld gll·lfriend, Patncia Rebholz, as she
walked home from J teen d ~mcc.
W~:hrung, who was rhen 1?· w.1s a
sm.pcct Jt the tune but wa~ never
charged wtth a crime. authorltJe'\

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Dorotl1y Bowman

the Lommg months
as artorneys on both sides prepare
fur a tnal somcttmt next year.
Wehru ng 1s ~accused of beating
continue

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

Attack vidim testifies ·in trial

to know wll\·." &lt;,,nd Inn

·· r )'1111

Tuesday, Oecember 19, 2000

..

�•

•
Pige A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Teen dted in baby's death
. YOUNGSTOWN (AP) -A teen-age g&gt;rl1s accused of throwlUg a 3-month-old crying baby out of a second-floor window on~
a tlnveway, then' plungmg a SIX-inch kmfe into his chest.
• Pnhce s;~y that aft&lt;r the girl was taken to JUVenile Jail on a delinqllency murder charge, all she wanted to know from her mother
was if she could ware h her favonre television show.
Cluef of Detectives Robert Kane said rhe girl threw little Alex
Zalov1c our of an upsrurs window at her home Monday morning,
stabbed him to death when she saw he was still movmg and rhe.n
got on a bus and went to school.
The baby was staying at the home along with his 18-year-old
mother.
· Detectives arrested rhe teen-ager at Chaney H1gh School and
took her to the police station where Kane says she adnntted killmg
the baby.

Report finds better academics
'COLUMBUS (AI') - Many Ohio school chstncts arc lmpnl\'lng .K.Id~micaJly this year over 1998-99. ~lCL'ording to pn:lmun:try
l"l'port r.1rd d.lta rdeased Mond.ly by rhc st.uc Educ:1t1on DL•p.1rr- .
lllt:llt .

A toul of II~ of the (,07 distncts .Ht' on ",H:.ukinu.: \\,ttch" lomp J rL'l..t with 131 bst YL'.lf Another J5 fl'llUlll on ",1CH.Icmt i.: L'IHl'rg~.·nl ,._.. dlL' lowL''\£ c.Hcg:ury. comp.trcd wirh (J() m 199S-09
Th~.· lughc~t r.mklng. "dll-cn\·l·:· commut'' .to lw l'iustn• ( )nly ]S
lit,tno.. t~ lun.· L\lrllL'd th.H r.mkiug this ye.u. t\HI ft•w~o:t than l.t~t ~-l".lr.
ThL· '\L'COtH.I-lughest r.H1k.ing, "commuom impro\'L'Ilh:nt," l'i thl·
l.nge.,t. '''ICh ·B~ d1,rnct&gt;; ll1L'L'Ung th.u st.UH.i.lrd, up from .177 l.t't
~

j..\ ll.

.

I .lrgt.' urb.tn dt~tnct~ rt·m:-~in .tt rht bottom ufthL· r.mkjngs. Ckn·l.md .l!H.i Dayton llll't thrl'L' of the '27 st.md.trds. Ybungsto\\'n met
four .tnd Akron. Canton, Columbus, Cmnnn.ltt and Tok.Jo tilet
tln·.
R~:.·port cJrd .scotes ate b.tscd nn proficu:ncy test scmes ..Htend.HKL'
.111d gr:tdu.ltJon ratt"S
.
.
Whtle- lll('Cting three of tht.· ?.7 performance st.mdards isn't .my··
tlung to wnre home about, Clewland schools ch1ef Barbae.\ Byrdl3ennL'tt satd. "we have to celebrate these small vtctones.''
It's the first time the Clewl.md dt&gt;tnct has scored htgher than a
.lcro Ill tht' annual rankings

Missing funds retu~ed
ALLIANCE (AP) - A former Alliance Commumry Hospital
emp loyee. fired after he was accused of stealing more than S I 00,000
'!' hospital funds, and a business haw agreed to pay back the missmg money.
James Tramer and ht s attorney agreed to a document acknowledgmg wrongdoing,and sent a check of $54,763 to the hospital.
Source Products Ltd., ofYoungstown, agreed to pay the balance
o( S109.527. In turn, the hospttal promised to ask prosecutors not
to .pursue a criminal investigation.
Karen Vrabec, daecror of'public relations for the hospttal, satd
Mond:t) that Tramer had been working as the dtrectot of purchasmg ;md created false invoices which were s~nt to Source Products,
a supplier of hospttal products m Youngstown.
"We \\'ere paymg mvoices for products we didn't receive:· she
~.-ud.

Yrabcc sa1d the hospital had been working with Source Products
~!nee 1997 but grew suspictous about the invOices Tramer had hand1l'd
Alliance Law Director Andrew Zumbar said Monday that desptte
his 1mttal objecttons, the hospital board agr&lt;ed to drop cnminal
r h 1rg-t&gt;s m favor of Tramer ;md Source Products paying back the
~to'!t:tl money.
The hospital didn't \\'ant ro press cha1·ges , hl' said.
~t.ln ]m1.1s. l'XL'cunv~ 1.hrl'cror of the hnspa.tl. s~ud the bo:1rd of
t l ll ~tl.' l:.'~· lll.lill COIK,L' l"ll W,lS gL·tting the bosplt.t} \ 111lllll'Y bal'k Ill the
lJI.Ill' kL'St po,.sibk m.l1111L'r

Custody appealed in Ky. court
CIRARD (AI')- A Kentucky collp le 1m·olwd m .1 kngthy custody dt~putL' wJth .m Ohio coup lt· \Yams the Supreme Courr of
K~ntucky to m·ct tutn .1 tuling that let tht· boy l"l.'llLllll 111 Ohto
Rcguu Moore Jnd J:rry Dormng. ch~.· lm th parents of Justin
Moore. born feb 2H. I '1~7. tiled thc'lr .tppeal Mond.,y.Thcy Jrc Jsklllg the c..ourt w rc\'tl'\\ the Kemucky Coun of AppL·als' Sc-ptL·mbcr
decision

,

Ju stin "'·" placed in the home i&gt;f RlCh.nd .\1\d Cheryl Ascnte nf
( ;ir.ml. (lim&gt;. on Feb. 17, 1998, after lm bmh parents g.tve ..him up
ti: lr .Hlopttnn

The· Kentucky couple sa td 111 a March 26, 1998, hemng they had
~. : h.1ngcd thc1r mmds, ;'IUd OhiO .l!ld KcniuLkV court~ h:rve been

lw~ri~1g &lt;lrgumcnts

the ctsc.
.
Jhe Asentcs had previously atloptcd Jumn's older brother, Joey.
.liter Moore and Dormng gJve him up for .tdoptton 1n 1995 That
.1dnpnon IS not bctng contested.
:'The\' (rhc Asentes) \\'ere expectmg this appea l," satd famtly
tr iend J.•m·r Duncy.
In its September 2-1 demton, the Kentucky Court of Appeals
s.ll~ the forms Signed by Moore and Dormng clea rl y stated they
wc:e rclinqmshmg their parental rights when agreemg to gtve up
Jusnn to~ adoption. That deCISIOn overruled a Kentucky C:trcuit
Court demion that the b1rth parents did not understand the adop111

tlll!l fi1r111S

..,

'

Gospel radio announcer dies
UUNTINGTON, WVa . (AP) - Lynn Davis. one of the oldest
~nspcl music radio announ&lt;.crs 111 the natton , died Monday fewer
tlun 1fJ nunutes before he \V,lS to bro:1dcast anorha hour-long
" ( ~ mtmry Hymn Time" progr.tm on WEMM-FM.
D,t\T., \\J~ H6.
D .l\'1 \ ,

\vho

WJs

mJrt u:d to thl' Lac country-g:ospl'l smg:c.:r Molly

O'D.ty. lud J.USt celebrated h" lmthday nn the atr Fnday
·
W~MJ\!1 personnl'l tJlkcd to D.l\'t~ t\VJce Monday mornlllg .1nd
t r.: pnitl.'d th.tt hl' St.'l'llll'd fin L'. Then his brother-in-l.t\\', D.1rlvn
S.lutom. t.dh·d to D:tvt~ .1huut 11 ;o p.m to make "ttrL' hL· \\',\ S
j\\

.lkt:

b.1d .1bout "'itttng do\\'11 .l!H.l gc~m~ to ,k·tp.'' ~.ltd L l i t \'
lu t ,J'\ , \VE 1V1M·~ progr.1111 dtn.·ctor "ThL'\' c.:.tlkd L"n..· n· d.l\' tll nukL·
~ tr~· h~,· \\ l\ up .md ,;\\ ,th•."
.
'
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l~ut \\ h...-n W£MN1 ph1ggL·d ltt t \' J),,,.t,· honiL' \tudto .tr I p 111 . .til
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\\".1..,

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Tuesday, Oecember 19, 2000

CLEVELAND (AP) Fighting back
tears, Raycme Snnrh lookt-d at the pictures
oi her acid-eaten t1esh and described the
horror of an attack July 7, 1999.
The pam was instant. The damage was
lastmg.
A man wa)ked into Pearl's Hatr Connernon m East Cleveland, where Smith worked
JS a hairdresser. and threw sulfuric actd on
her face as retnbution for Smith resnfying to
·' federal grand jury ab'but a Cleveland drug
deakr:
"I dtdn 't say anything. I, was too busy

screanung," Smith sa1d Monday in court. It
was her fitsr pubhc statement about the
attack.
" It htt me m the face, chest Jnd arms," she
said

Thret' men haVL' been, convicted for thetr
roles m rhe. attack. Snmh remfied Monday
ag,.mt Laktesha Ph1lhps, \vho is on trial in
Cityahoga County Common Pleas Court
and iS accused of helpmg plan and carry out
the attack.
Jcrmainc Levy, the drug dealer who
ordered the attack on Smith, wtll serve 20

years m pnson. His couSin Mano, who
threw the actd, wtll serve 1 J years. A getaway
driver, Buster Young 111, has yet to be sentenced ,
Snuth broke down only twice during her
testimony before Judge Bridget M. McCafferry, who ts hearing the case wirhom a jury.
She began to cry while looking at the pictures and again when Asststant Councy Prose'tutor Rtck Bell asked her about her 10year-old daughter, who is with her in the
federal witness protection program.

Police complete search Children look back on
for remajns near trailer parents' di~appearance
(AI') Autholttic,
nn·L·,tig.atng the dc.tth of .1 colkg:t· HLJt.k!H I"L'Il10\'L"d SOtlk' ItClllS
Mnnd.ty front ;t o.;tnrage shed .111d
completed .1 sc.trch fin- hum.m
I"L'lll,lins ne:tr a tr:t ilcr whl.'l'l' tht·
\\'oman's body w;1s tC.mnd, .HI thorRA'(

HieS S,ltd

Renuin!'i '' ..:rL' found in ;1 root
ct..'ll.lr .md :l ctstern Thursd.ty ne.tr
thl' tratler :md mvesngacors dug
up thrr:e or four other sites Fnd:ty

mgJ1t at the wooded, hilly area
surrounding the .trailer in so uthern Oluo but dtd nor find anythmg, Vmton County Shenff
J)'onald Peters said:
Authonttes have not said
whether the remains. which
reportedly mclude a leg bone,
part of a skull , a tooth and two
fingers, are fron1 the same body.
They also do not know
whether they are connected to
the ,death .Of Enuly ·Murray, 20, a
student at· Kenyon College 111
Gambier, about 80 miles north of
Ray. He-r body was found
wrapped In a rug Dec. 9 by a
depury who went to th e tratler to
serve Gregory McKmght, 24, a
summons

111

au unrela ted case.

McKntght, and his wtfe.
Kathryn. 35, arc both in custody
but are not ch~q~ed 111 Murray's
de.\th. The M c Kn1ghts arc
cha rged \Vith rcce1viilg stolen
property Murray's Subaru

l)utbark. whllh wa'\ p.1rkL·d

(l\Jt-

~1\.k thL'lr tr.ukr.

WARREN (A I' ) M.11:kk•y childn.:n arrin·d

The
homL"

tl-om

Poli ct..' Sl',uchcd t(u· .1bout .111
hour Mond,1y through plasnc
b.tg~ of dothmg in .1 .. torJgt· ~hL·d

in Cl11lhcothc lc.tscd by the·
MeKmghts.
"We rem ovl'd .1 coupk• of dorUllll'llt~ ,md ,l pJtr of shoe!-! ,md
sent thc:m to thL" Burl':lll ofCnmmal ldcntitl cmon and Investigation," ~;ud Ros~ Cnunry Shenff
Ronald Ntchols.
Nichols would not say how
the iten,ls rcLttc:d to the iJwt:stiganon.
Gregory McKmght and Murray worked at .1 pizza restaurant in
Gambier. Murray wJS bst seen
Nov. .1 after worktng her last
scheduled sh tft at the Pirate's
Cove
M~Knight met h is wife at the
Circleville Youth Ce nter, where
he was locked up at age I 5 for
robbtng and killing a Columbus
man She was a corrections officer

there.
McKmght was released from
th e ccmor 111 1997 at age 21, sa id
Kevin Mtllcr, spokesman for the
Ohm Departmem ofYouth Services. The same year. Kathryn
M cKnight, received J wntten
repnmand for havmg unauthonzcd con11numcatwn wah an
unidenttfied youth at th e center
and hts f.111uly

school ont: ,J.tf.c:rtHH•n
,tbottt five yc.us .1go to find chc
door un)och·J, the cotTn· pot
on and thc1r . parent" gmlL' -

fo rc\'C r.
John and Shdk\' M.trklc•\'
wc:rL' ncn~r heard from .tfi:er the)·
disappeared on Dec 15. I'!95.
La'\t ')'L'ar, they were declarCd
lq;.tlly dead.
Three of the couple's five
c hildren have now returned to
live m the home the L111nly once
sllJI·ed in Bristol Tmvnsh1p,
about I 0 nules north of this
eastern Ohio ciry. The children
wiSh they could find out what
happened to· their parents, but
they abo 'grudgingly recognize
that the events of the last five
years have given them a maturiry beyond their )l&lt;ars.
"I know I'm still a kid, but I
see thmgs differently," Stacey
Markley, 19, told the Tribu11e
Chromcle "We were made to
grow up fast"
Days before the Markleys disappeared, John's twm sister died
of cancer. . The calling hours
were the evenmg o( Dec. 15 ,
1995, and 1t was the birthday of
the Markleys' only son, John ny.
He was turmng 8.
The couple's o\dcst daughter,
Ruthic, was 1), followed by
Stacey, 1.J, Bonnie 13, and Crys-

t.ll. 12
There: w.ts no st-gn of .1 srrugg~c 'Yh . .·n th e: younglitl'n got
homl' from &lt;;l hool th.tt d.1y, bur
the gu11 l .J.bnkt \\,lS unlocked
.md .IJ.H. thL· girls s.1id. Thctr p.a~o:nt". lockbox s.tft: \\'.lS opL'Il .md
surmg on the ..,mk Ill the mastl-r
batJU~)Olll.
'
Tl1.:1t dad's watch was 111 the
, kitchen, .md a half cup of coffee
was on the btchen coun ter next
to then mom's cigarettes.
It \VJS later le.uncd th&lt;lt at
10:36 a.m Jo hn .111d Shelley
Markley, accompomcd by a ,[ender man, drove theu red, C hevy
pickup truck through the dnvethrough wmdow at Cortland
Bank's
North
Bloomfield
branch They cashed a personal
check for S1.000.
Th ey were Withdrawing
money deposited ~ver:ks ea rli er
whe,n the couple had rc-ce tved a
$1 ,'iOO loan to buy new tires for
John's semi-truck. sa1d Trumbull
Counry Shenff's IJetcctive Jane
T1mko.
After livmg with relatives, the
th ree oldest gtrls Ruthie,
•
Stacey and Bonme - arc now
back ltvmg ll1 thetr parents'
house, along wtth Ruth1c\. husband, TraviS Orr. Johnny, who
wrned 13 on Friday, lives with
h1s patern al grandmother, and
17-year-old Cryst;J hves with
her aunt and uncle

Judge denies
Wellrung ·
attorneys
access to files
CINCINNATI

(A I')

-

A

JUdge ha~ ruled th:tt .HtlHney~ for
·'

1\\.\1\

ch.trged wlth the 1%.1

murdn of hts g1rlti·lL"tH.l c.umot
h,lVl.' .ll'CL'SS to o\d poliCL' :l!ld
umrt file~ lll the c:1.se.

32" OAK
•v&amp;..&amp;. TOP DESK

Attorneys
fot
M1ch.tel
Wehrung. 'iJ, had argued tlut the
files &lt;1nd rc{. orJs are cruClal to
prov1ng then ch c nr 's tnnocenCt'
H&lt;11mlton Cotlnty Common
Pbs Judge 1'.\tllck Dlllkelacker
ruled Monday. ho\\'evcr. tlut
posenttors l'tth cr don't h:wc.&gt; the
old tile~ or :lrL' nm llbltg.H ...'d ro
lund them uVLT.
The battle over cv1dencc in the
1963 murder ca;c ts expected to

COOLVILLE - Dorothy Bowman, 86, Coolville, died Tuesday,
Dec. I 9, 2000 at her residence.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home in
Coolville.

Uoyd Markley
· POMEROY - Lloyd Markley, Coolville, died Tuesday, Dec. I 9,
2000 at Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville.
Arrangements w1ll be announced by White Funeral Home,
Coolville.

Gavin
fromPigeA3
tanks to hold anhydrous ammonia on site..
Ammonia would have to be
brought in by rail, and residents
feared a leak from the tanks
would endanger the village and
three nearby schools.
Because urea comes in solid
form and is described as "relatively harmless" by Kevin Dennis of the Mason County
(WVa.) Local Emergency Planning Committee, potential for a
health hazard has been eliminated, as is the need for a communiry emergency response plan.
."Our main concern since day
one has been for Gavin to use
the best, safest possible technology," Reese said. "They did
choose the best, safest possible
technology and they deserve a
big round of applause from the
people of Cheshire.
"We have all come out winners here tonighr,': he added.
When Gavin began engineering studies on an SCR retrofit in
1998, anhydrous ammonia was
the only option available, Phlegar said.
It was until last June when
urea was introduced at a smaller
power plant in Massachusetts,
and later at a California station,
he added.
By early fall, urea and aqueous, or water-diluted ammonia,
was still considered experimental, Phlegar said.
Bur AEP begon studying both
alternatives after residents, local
officials, and state and federal
'lawmakers urged the Columbusbased utiliry to look at them in
place of anhydrous ammonia.
"We recognize that nearly
three months have elapsed since
we held our first communiry
forum," Phlegar said. "To put it
conducting
these
simply,
detailed studies and evaluating
all of the possible alternatives
took longer than we originally
anticipated .
"A urea-based SCR system
has been installed only very
recently in two power plants in
the entire country, and those
units &gt;re much smaller th&lt;l111 the
Gavin units," he added. "It rook
a great deal of study before we
were able to conclude that we
can take this technology .attd
scale it up successfully to a plant
of Gavin's size."
SCR uses a chemical reaction

Subscribe roday.
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111

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who d1d not tlk c h ,trg"'"· ~. Wl·

PelT\', on~.·

ofWc:hrung'~ l.1\\ ~'l.:·r~ .
Pn)\L'ClltOI\ \,1\d lllO~t
dmumcttf~ Wehrun ~

The main number Is 992-2156.
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'

or

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nut l'Xi't .n1d the\ .m.' nm p.tn of
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uhlt g.J tcd ro pro\'td ...·
r-Ill' ddi..·tt ..,L' .tJ,o \\'.J.IH.., do . . utll l' llh · rh .tt \ll~g ..· ~ t w·l· lnun g \\ .1'
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from PageA1
funds for at least six to eight
months after the application."
Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton and Mick Davenport, and
Commissioner-elect Jim Sheets
will begin to consider the mandated costs for 2001 as early as
Wednesday. They asked Trussell to
meet with them then to begin
tackling the sheriff's department's
anticipated costs.
Trussell said that a half-percent
sales tax, which the comnussioners are authorized to' enact, earmarked for law enforcement,
would relieve the general fund of
at least half of the burden for the
sheriff's budget, but Thornton
said that he would not support a
sales tax unless voters approved it.
The commissioners met with
Gary Sealey and Donna Russell
of the Enterprise Development
Corporation
affiliated with
ACENet in Athens, and authorized' the economic development
agency to apply for and admini•ter funds from the Communiry
Development Block Grant/Economic Development program, for
a revolving business loan program.
The agency plans to seek
$33 7,500 in grant funds, whjch
will then be loaned ro an as-yet
unnamed greenhouse owner.
That business owner will also
seek an additional $427,000 from
a local bank ro make for a
$750,000 total project.
The funds must be used for
busmess development resulting in
job creation- one job for every
S15,000 borrowed from the
CDBG program - with at least
5 I percent of new employees in
the low to medium income clas-

CHESTER - There will be a
free Christmas dinner served on
Saturday from noon until 2 p.m.
at Harvest Outreach Church on
Reibel Road in Chester.

Plan workshop

Stfication. When repaid, the funds
will be placed in a revolving loan
fund for other business creation
and expansion projects.
If the job creation criteria are
not met, the county will be
·responsible to the Ohio Department of Development for any
unpaid balance, Russell warned.
But he said the default rate on
such loans, because of private
funding and owner equ;ty
required, is generally . relatively
low.
Lee Layne of Racine discussed
problems with a hot-water heater
in his home, which had been
replaced and guaranteed through
the
Community
Housing
Improvement Program's housing
rehabilitation program. The commissioners approved replacement
of the heater.
The commissioners approved a
number of appropriations adjustmenu, transfers of funds and
advance-back transfers in a continui.ng attempt to finish out the
fiscal year.
The commissioners approved
payment of$38,211.47 from their
budget, representing the counry
general fund's share of users' fees
for the county's now-defunct
self-insurance health plan, and
then approved a SSO,OOO advance
back to the general fund to repay
an earlier advance in the claims
fund.
'
The board also approved
adjustments in the Clerk of
Courts Title Administration
Fund, in the amount of $8,500
and $50,000 to the general fund;
$4,000 for the Department of job
and Family Services; and $55,278
for the public assistance mandated
counry share fund.
Present, in addiuon to Thornton, Davenport and Commissioner-elect Jim Sheets, was Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

Akzo - 47~'.
AmTech/SBC - 53), •
Ashland Inc. - 34
AT&amp;T -20),
Bank One -35
Bob Evans - 20~.
BorgWarner - 34),
Champ1on - 2l.
Charm1ng Shops - s'~~~
City Holding - 6
Federal Mogul - 2).
Firsrar- 23),

Gannett- 59''"

AD Shell -

General Electric- 51
Harley Davidson - 37),
Kmart - 5'1.
Kroger - 261,
Lands End - 25l.
Ltd.- 15l.
Oak Hill Financial- 141.

Sears- 33~.
Shonay's -'I.

OVB-25~

BBT - 35).
Peoples - 14),

Prem1er- 5~.
Rockwell - 40).

Rocky Boots - 4}"

POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department offices will
close on Friday, Dec. 25 and Ott.
26 for the holiday. Normal business hours will resume on Dec. 27
at 8 a.m.
Childhood immunization clinic
will be conducted as announced
on Dec. 26 from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m.

Free dinner

LOCAL . ST'OCKS
AEP -43'"
· Arch Coai-10

POMEROY - An action for
divorce has been filed in Meigs
Counry Common Pleas Court by
Marinda Kay young Gardner,
Middleport, against David Keith
Gardner, Middleport.

56'),.

sol..

Wai-Man Wendy's - 261.
Wonhington - 7lo
Dally stock reports are tt\e
4 R.m, closing quotes of
1he prev1ous day's trans·
actions. proVldad by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis .

POMEROY - The Small
Business Development Center of
Southeast Ohio and the Meigs
Counry Chamber of Commerce
will sponsor a Starting a Business
Workshop on Dec. 28 from 3-5
p.m.
The workshop wtll be held at
the Meigs Counry Public Library
in Pomeroy.
The workshop is designed to
answer questions and make starting a business easier. Topics will
include assessing goals and
strengths, registering a business
name, licensing, tax requirements,
rypes of ownership, planning the
business, sources of financing,
SBDC and other resources, and
other topics.
The workshop is free.
The SBDC provides free business assistance to new and existing businesses in athens, Hocking,
Meigs and Perry counties,
through partial funding from rhe
U.S. Small Business Administration and the Ohio Department of
Development.

Lend
from PapAl
"The response was overwhelming;' she added.
Culley, who's main goal was to
just fill her mini-van with the
donated items, was approached by
John Barrett, a professional truck
driver and full-time good Samariran who possessed both the time
and equipment to help expand
the parameters of rhe project.
'~ohn asked me if I was serious
about the project, and if so, that
he had a tractor trailer waiting to
be filled up with Items for disrri-

$29 25
$56 68
$109 72

COLUMBUS (AP) - A request
ordering Ohio to produce a master
plan for a court-ordered fix of its
school-fundmg system is premature,
the state said Monday in a court filing.
A coalition of schools suing over
the fi.mding system is ignoring work
the state has done to comply with
the court order, Attorney General
Betty Montgomery satd in a filing
with the Ohio Supreme Court.
The Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding asked

•

POMEROY - Chnstrnas Eve
services will be held at Enterprise
United Methodist Church at 7
p.m. The Rev. Keith Rader, pastor, invites the public.
'

Ciame canceled
RACINE - Tonight's basketball game between Southern and
Waterford has been canceled due
to inclement weather.
bution," said Culley.
"Once I agreed, the project
took full flight," he added.
Members from John Stewart
United
Methodist Church,
Memorial Methodist Church and
Crawford United Church, all
located around Upper Sandusky,
began collecting donated items in
a matter of days.
The church members' efforts
culminated in a packed semitrailer that was bound for Meig.&lt;
Counry, said Culley.
The gtfts wdl be both stored
and distributed at the Southern
United Methodist Church in
Syracuse.

the court earlier this month to force
the state to say how it was going to
fix school-funding in Ohio.
It also asked the court to appoint
a special master to oversee the state's .
efforts and to order the state to submit monthly progress reports on its
response. The court has previously
declined to appoint a special master
and has not satd when it will rule
on the latest request.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
OL Df10U T £J~ W LSI

7

l ~s.:l JIICKSOH PIKL

SUN 12/15/00 THUR 12/2 1/00

BOX Offla WILl OPEN AT
6:30PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM fOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINI!S

' Doon ()pe11At6dtl PM MOIL lbrilfri ·

* * ?':: w dWJJcA * *
111111111111-'='16:50. 8:45
M 11111N U
9:50

OR. SEUSS' HOW THE
STOLE CHRISTMAS (PG)

I

/

Service planned·

446 • 4524

~ u~ 11 doL llllh.' tlh

'

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered six calls for assistance on
Monday. Untts responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:25 a.m., Greenup Lane, assi~t­
ed by Tuppers Plains, Richart!
Fid:, treated;
9:20 a.m., Collins Road, Joyce
Sauters, Holzer Medical Center;
12:45 p.m ., Ohio 124, Marie
Devietro, HMC;
11:53 p.m., Vine Street, Mary
Beth Mitchell, HMC.
POMEROY
9:53 a.m., Lincoln Street, Gloria Craig, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2:52p.m., North Fourth Street,
Kenneth Mohler, HMC.

Plan for funding fix is premature

with scattered snow showers. Low
The tn- county area will in the upper teens. West wmd 10
remain locked in a mass of fngid to IS mph. Chance of snow 40
atr as the start of wmter percent.
Wednesday... &lt;;:on ri nued cold
approaches, forecasters said.
Arctic aiJ blew into the regton with some sunshine. High in the
lower 30s .
. behind a cold front today.
night ... Partly
Wednesday
•
Temperatures plunged into the
teens and, with wind gusts of up cloudy_ Low in the mid IWs.
Extended forecast :
to 20 mph, subzero wmd-chills
Thursday and Fnday... Considwere common.
Lows tonight will !Je in the erable cloudiness with a chance of
tmd-teens, the National Weather snow showers. Low in the mid
20s and htgh in the mid 30s.
Service said.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy. A
On Wednesday, the h1ghs will
be mostly in the 30s. Much of the chance of snow showers during
same IS forecast for Thursday, the · the day. Low around 20 and high
in the mid 30s.
,first d:ty of winter.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Low
Sunset tonight will be at 5:09
20 and high in the nml
around
and sunnsc on Wednesday 1s at
30s.
7:50 a nL
Christmas .. Partly cloudy. Low
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Cloudy and cold around 20. High 35 to 40 .

•

EMS runs

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ever~

Plan

Office to dose

·Frigid air will linger in area

(USPS 213-960)

Published

COOLVILLE- Lester D. "Buck" Keaton, 74, of Coolville, died on '
Friday, December 15,2000 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
He was born in Newron,WestVirginia,son of the lateAlfttd Keaton
and Mary Naylor Keaton.
He was a farmer and retired after 48 years of service with Local No.
565, Plumbers and Pipefitten in Parkersburg, West Virginia, where he
was a welder.
He was a member of Moriah Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM in Spencer,
West Virginia, and was a member of the Calvary Community Church
in Belpre. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II.
Survtving are his wife, Frances Kelley Keaton, whom he married on
August 23, 1946; a son, Robert L. Keaton of Coolville; three grandsons, Robert L. Keaton II of Raletgh, North Carolina, and Matthew
and Kevin Keaton of Coolville; three sisters, Evelyn Andrews of
Deland, Florida, Glenna Buckhanna of Barlow, and Ruby Kings berry
of FaDs Church, Virginia.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by six brothers,
two sisters, and a son, David Keaton .
.
Services will be held at I p.m. today, Tuesday, December 19,2000 at
Calvary Communiry Church in Belpre, with the Rev. Clay Sloan officiating. Burial will follow in Sunset Memory Gardens in Parkersburg.
Visitation was held in the Lambert-Tatman Funeral Home on Green
Street, Parkersbur15, from 2-8 p.m. on . Monday, December 18, 2000,
and at the church an hour prior to services.
-

Divorce flied

VALLEY WEATHER

The Daily' Sentinel

- s.lH.l
H1~ LJ.\\'yl'r~
~.:r"'"·d by poit CL'

to break down nitrogen oxide in
exhaust gases during the coalburning process. Urea will be
converted. to ammonia prior to
.mjection into exhaust gases.
AEP and other power generators m the south and midwest
U.S. have been directed to
reduce emission levels by May
2003. AEP opted to retrofit
Gavin its largest plant in
Ohio and second-largest coalburning facility in the AEP system- by next year.
Phlegar said the switch to
urea has made meeting the
deadline to launch SCR "ughr,"
but he believes the timetable can
be met.
"We no longer have the
assur~nce we . had before, . but
we're working hard to make it
happen on time," he said. "We're
working with a vendor to expedite getting the equipment here
and makmg it operational."
Because Gavin and AEP value
relationships with the community, Phlegar said both will
address other issues with
Cheshire, such as the "stack
rain" particles that have fallen on
the village for the past several
years, and more openness with
the communiry.
"I think all of you would
agree that over this period of
time, with the opportunity to
talk with the mayor, council and
other repres~ntatives, we are trying to develop that dialogue,"
Phlegar said.
Regular meetings to chart the
SCR installation's progress will
begin in January, increase in frequency as completion nears, a
public tour when the job is
complete and if needed, another
public forum can be scheduled,
Phlegar said.
Because Gavin is among the
first power plants to install SCR,
officials and environmentalists
encouraged the utility to establish a precedent for other utilities and comm~iries in handling similar situations.
As a "superb corporate citizen,'' AEP has set that example,
U.S. Rep. Ted Stnckland, DLucasville, told the crowd.
"I believe a lot of communities around the nation will ben efit from what has been done
here," Strickland said. "Other
members of the corporate community will be compelled to follow suit.
,
· "What you have done IS a
good thing for the industry and
a good thin g for the country,"
the congressman added.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

to death l\15 1S-ycar-o ld gll·lfriend, Patncia Rebholz, as she
walked home from J teen d ~mcc.
W~:hrung, who was rhen 1?· w.1s a
sm.pcct Jt the tune but wa~ never
charged wtth a crime. authorltJe'\

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Dorotl1y Bowman

the Lommg months
as artorneys on both sides prepare
fur a tnal somcttmt next year.
Wehru ng 1s ~accused of beating
continue

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

Attack vidim testifies ·in trial

to know wll\·." &lt;,,nd Inn

·· r )'1111

Tuesday, Oecember 19, 2000

..

�..
.
'the

Page A•

Sentinel

Tuesdiy. December 11.1000

•

The Daily Sentinel

-HUI.M~

DEAl~ ABBY: I was a single mother
throughout my only child's early years. I
had no financ1al or moral support from
the child's father. luckily, I had a good
job that enabled me to take good ca re of
my daughter. I did nor believe in giving
my child a stepfather, so I remained single. My daughter had a good religious
education, loving home, a dedtcated and
adoring mother, vacations, the best
schools, health care, etc. We enjoyed a
wonderful and loving relationship.
However, as mon as my daughter
became a teen ~ a~t"r, she decided to stop
calling me "Mother." She iflsisred on

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

. R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

'

rn Uu ~fH' an •·rll'tJmt. They sltoulillw ku tlt.M JOO words.-AU kn~rr tur tMbj«r
roftlhiltr ad .wwiH U,rtftt and iffchulc addrrJS uJ •~r~,Mrnw murrbrr. No •msir11nl Wurn "'ill
N f"lbJUINtL Unrn should h# in food I4Stft, ruldnnillf isJNtf, 1101 jWrJOrttJlitiu
TIN opirtioiU t~sud ill tht rolntff lklow (Jft tiU' et,tUIUMI of 1111 Oltiu v.&amp;, Publislli"'
c•. 's HlilmWI botud, 1111fns Ufh•n••'sr fl(}(ed.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Has

facts acquired after 1933 and produced before 1945.
·this is far more sweepi ng than the policy some of the major
m~eums had adhered to during the last few years. That policy cove~d only paintings, sculpture and other works thor had gaps in their
pryvenance.The new policy would cover all work.;, of the N;.:~7i peri ~

o'*, even if ownership histories appeJr se~mle11.
-With rhis new information at th eir disposal, the families of Jews
an4 others subject to the regin1t~\ confiscation of fine out 1~1ight he
abl~

to identify lost inheritance.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASS OCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesd.ty, Dec. 19, the 154th day of 211fll). rhen· are 12
daY,S kli 1n the year.
Today's Highlight in Hi1tory:
.,
On Dec I~ . 1998, President c.Jinton was impeached by rht•
R~publi can-com ro lkd Home fa perjury and obstruction of justice,
b&lt;!~oming only the sceond chie: cxcc,utivc to be ordered to stand
trial in the Sen,Ht:, \.Vht:re, like AnJrew Jo hn -.on ht:f(,n· him, hl' was
aclj).litted.
On this dare:
!n 1732, Ocnjamin Franklin began publish1ng "Poor R1chard 's
Almanac."
'Jn I 776, Thoma~ Pamc published his first " American Crisi1" essay.
'Jn 1777 , Gen. George Wa~hington led his army of about 11 ,000
men to Valley ·Forge, Pa., to camp forth~ winter.
' ln 1843. "A Christmas Carbl," by Charles Dickens, was first published in England.
Cn l'J07, 239 workers died in a coal mine explosion in Jacobs
Creek, Pa.
In 1932, the British Broadcasting Corp. began transmitting overseas with its "Empire Service" to Australia.
In 1950, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander of
the military forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
In 1972 , Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific, winding up the
Apollo program of manned lunar landin gs.
In !974, Nelson A. Rockefeller was sworn in as the 41st vice
president of the United States.
In 1984, Britain and China signed an accord returning Hong
Ko11g to Chinese sovereignty on July 1, 1997.
Ten, years ago: Iraq urged its people to stockpile oil to avoid
sho,rtages shou ld war break out, and Saddam Hussein declared he
was "ready to crush any attack."
'Five years ago: The Federal Reserve cut a key interest rate, turning fears to cheers on Wall Street a day after the biggest one-day
stock plunge in four years.Yigal Amir, the confessed assassin of Israeli ·
Prim~ MinisterYitzhak Rabin, went on trial.A gunman opened fire
inside a llronx, N.Y .. shoc store, killing five people.
One yt.'!ar ago: Space shuttle Discovery and seven astronauts

roared into the night toward the crippled Hubble Space Telescope.
Macau 1pcnt its last day under Portuguese control before being
handed back to China, endmg 442 year&lt; of colonial rule . Cleveland
Browns offens1ve tackle Orlando Brown ~va&gt; ejccteJ for push in~~: referee JeffTriplettc to the ground during a game aga1nst .lacklnnvdlc
after accident&lt;llly bt·ing hit in rhe eye with fnplette\ wt'JghtL·d
penalty flag. Actor Desmond Llewelyn, who'd st.lrrcd as the ec-centric gadget expert Q in a string of James llond films, was killed in a
car crash in E,tS t Su&lt;&gt;ex, England; he was K5.

Van Buren

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

out strmdards.

When an activist consava1iw High Court
[fttmps a11 actlvist liberal ;;tate conn, it may be
legal, but 1t\ not Ill the o.;pirit uf the Con~tlru­
tlon.
The Constituriotl vests th e power to pick
the ~ra tes' electors in their elected legcslatures,
which delegate that power to the people. In
the event of a contested election, the responsibility falls to the elected Co ngress.
Rule by judge is a good deal less messy
than rule by politician. The Florida legislature's late, half-baked intervention into the
presidetltial contest looked arbitrary and parti'lan.
If Collgn:ss had takt'n up the, case in January, no one knows how tht: election might
. have turned out. Variou s scenario~ made it

possible for either Vice President AI Gore or
Texas Gov. George W !lush to emerge the
winner. It \.vas all very murky, in part because
of potential pres~un:.· on Member~ who~e dis~

rrin; were carried by a candidate of the
oppmite party.
Public opinion polls show that voters, tired
of the post-e lewon chaos, trusted the

•

Humphreys.

...
M

.••

(Rule by.judge' means the system is kaput
Through all the great crises of the past century - the Depression, the civil rights struggle, Watergate and ~·
1peachment - Americans could comfort
emselves by saying,
"The system works."Th year it didn't.
The 43rd president was picked not by the
voters or their elected representatives, as the
Constitution prescribes, but by non-elected
members of the Supreme Court - and by a
split vote of S-4, at that.
This activism by the High Court's conservative majority is defensible only because it
saved the nation from runaway activism by
four liberal justices on the Florida Supreme
Court.
That court's majority twi Ce seemed to have
simply asked itself, "What will it take to get AI
Core elected'" and then found words in the
• law - or the Florida Constitution - to
accomplish the result through a recount with-

••

POMEROY
Peyton
Marie Humphreys obserwd her
first birthday o n Dec. 2 wJth a
party at the hmue of her , parand
Heather
ents. . Jay

•

•'

A Sesame Street theme was
carried out for the party.
Attending wer~ mate-pul grandparents Myron and Remalee
Franckowiak, paternal grandparRandy
and
Judy
ents
Humphreys, and great-grandparents Francis Shaeffer and
Mildred Humphreys.
Other friends and family
attending were Michael Franckowiak and Sara Allisofl , J T.
Peyton Marie Humphreys
Humphreys and Valerie Karr,
Sandy, Lee and Suzanna Hetld erson , Victoria Walker, Tina, J.D.,
Anna, Allison , and Aaron Story, Abby Blake, Danielle and 13ailey
Caruthers, Angie and Sydney Cleland, Wally, Lori . and Allison H atfield, Jami e Bailey, Heather and Devo tl Hawley. Sending
gifts.
were Tara Gheen.Jim, Melinda and H eather McCiain,Jeremy Tu cker, Cary, Kim, Cole and Kassidy Bctz~ng, Brooke and Brett Ely

..

whatsoever.
~
The editor of the left -wing magazine The -~'
Nation described th e court's
action as "a ~..M
'
coup."
..,.
These are extrem e commeuts, but there JS
widespread feeling among Democrats that •
they were robbed of an electoral victory they
cou ld have established had• the Supreme
Court o nly let them.
. It's up to both Bush and Gore, by word and
deed, to repair the political damage this election has done and make sure that the governc ·
n1ent can function. It's up to Members of ·
Congress, too.
The Supreme Court has a deeper problem. '
Dissenting Justices Stephen 13rcyer. and Ruth '
Bader Ginsburg, in bitter opinions, have
placed a deep stain on the court\ reputation
- saying the loser in this yc,rr's election is
"the nation 's- confirlencc "jn tl'tc juJge as an
impartial guardia11 of the rule of L1w."
llisseming Justice John l'.tul Stevens said

.

.~

&gt;ll

Morton
K,ondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
Supreme Court to decide the election rather
than any other relevant body.
According to a CNN/USA Today/Gallup
poll, 61 percent of adults favored the High
Court, 17 percent favored Congress, 9 percent
preferred the Florida Supreme Court atld 7
percent the Florida legislature.
Those resu lts demonstrate profound
rt'spect for the U.S. Supreme Court, but a
woeful lack of education among; the public
ahout how democracy i~ supposed to \Vork.

The lligh Court is so removed from the
public that it won't even allow its proceedings
to be seen on television. Its members are

answerable to history - and, to some extent,
have their reputations set by gossip among
legal cognoscenti- but are not answerable to
the public.
Moreover, the esteem in whkh the court is
held depends upon its tradition of restraint -especjally its reluctance · to plunge imo the
poliiical thicket.
This year th e court became totally enta ngled in the brambles - mo'sr notably Dec. 9,
when five justices voted to halt the hand
re count in Flnrid~1 that rnight have reversed

13ush's shaky majority.
Core backer' 1uch as Sen. Tom Harkin, Dlowa, and the Rc·v. Jesse Jac bon became nearly hysteri ca l in compariflg the actiotl with the
1857 Drcd Scor case, in which the court
deprived African-Americans of any rights

O'Bieness staff and volunteers
make donations to help needy
ATHENS -

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital staff and volunt eers
recently took part in several activities to assist southeastern O bio
residents in need this holiday season.
In conjunction wirh the Salvation Army's Christmas Stocking
Program. hospital family members filled more than 75 ·stockings
with goodies and gifts. The filled stockings will be given to area

the court\ d eci.~iun .. can nnly lc11d nl'de n ce

to the most cynical appraisal or' th e work of
judges throughout the land.''
One sure conseque'nce

or the

lOUrt''i

action

is to make it difficult for !lush to 'ecure Senate confirmation of any High Court nominations he makes.
ARother n·,'ay be that the rublic\ distntst of
tht! judiciary . will be concentr~Jted nn the
Supreme Court, concealin g; the increasing
crisis of state courts - embodied in Florida
where money atl\l influence fro m trial'
lawyers dominate judicial sel&lt;;rtion and retention.
Judges havl.' rome to dominate Am~rican
policy partly hc'C.\LIIe lcgtsl.rltll'l'l t:riled to
tackle the m~or problt'ms of LhL· tl&gt;lii Jtry notably abortion ant! civil rights - i11 a time-

ly

children in need this holiday season,

According to Robin· Carsey, case m.r nager/social worker at the
Salv;ltion Army in Athens, the Salvation Army provides empty, 22inch-Jong stockings to indi,•iduals and organizations that are willing
to stuff them \\·ith small toys. small artu.:lc s of clothing, candy. games.

books,jc'\Wiry and other sma ll gifts.
So fa r [his holiday se ason , area imliYidu:1l s and organization!'i' have
lilled approxinl.ltdy j00 stockings. Carsey s.tid con tri butions from
indivtduals ,llld org;tmzariom ~uch :Js CYBi e n e~s arc \'!tOll tu the succes~ of the Sah-ation Army's holiday g iving programs.

"To the Salvation Anll'' and mysd f [the donations] me.tn a lot
bl'causc many kid~ in tht' community may n ot receive anything this
h oliday Sl'JSon without help from individu.1ls and organizations ,"
said Carsey.
·
The &lt;tockt nt;' will be distributed to children in need in Athem.
Mci~ a.nd Vinton co unties. Fam ili es in need signed up a[ the Salv:nion Army 111 October fi1r the stocking program and other char"itablc a'isista ncc. The Christmas Stockm g Program is one of sevc ral
charitable progr.um the· Salvation Army is sponsoring this hohday
Sl'ason. Ailyt)ne who is i11tnes ted in learning more about th e pro ~
g r;1ms is asked to call Robin Carsey at the Salvation Army at 5937llH2. Donotions t(rr the holiday programs will be acce pted through
Monday, Dec. I H.
This holiday season. O'Bkness I Iospital f.1mily members also
donatt·d to the Tri Co unty Mental Health and Counseling Service's
Child Assault l'reventton Progr.Jm, B.mk One's Coats For Kids project :md the Southeastern Ohio Food Ccntn.

t~shion. Ultim.nd y, it\ up to ( \mgrcss to

solve AnrericJ·~ national problc!ll-.
US system ba ck in balance.

.I I

HI put the

(!\·lorton Kulf(lmckc is exct"llfi/lc nlirt'r of Roll :\
Call, th e IICII •spap••r of' C&lt;1pirol /-/ill.)
.

RYAN'S VIEW

Standards tell us we are not all created equal
BY

JOAN RYAN

Fredrika Keefer is an 8-ycar-old girl who
likes to dance, just like her mother and grandmother before her. She relishes playing the
lead role of Clara in the Pacific Dance Theater's "Petite N utcracker." So pethaps she is
not as shy as many fourth-graders. But I wonder how she feels about her body being a
topic of public discussion.
Fredrika and her mother filed suit bec~use,
as her' mother puts it, she "did not have the
nght body type to be accepted" by the San
Francisco Ballet School. "My daughter is very
sophisticated, so she understands why we're
doing tlris,''.Krissy Keefer said." And the other
kids think she's a celebrity."
There is no question Keefer raises a pow..:
erful ·point in her complaiflt. The values
placed on, an unnaturally thin body for female
performers drives some dancers to potentially
'fatal eating disorders. Dut that isn't exactly the
i»ue here. This is: Ooes the San Francisco Ballet School have the right to give preference to
leaner body types in selecting 300 students
from this year's 1,400 applicants'
Yes, for the same reason UC Berkeley can
reject o;tudent'l ba,ed on mental prowess and a
fa.,hion modeling 'ichool ( 111 n.Jt.TI -..ttidenh
h.l'. cd 011 comc lm e~s. 1st' I\ ill\lltutlon ha~

standards that weed out th~sc who are less
likely to succeed. I know this flies in the face
of American ideals. But tho reality is that all

I .

men and women arc not created equal.
Like it or not, the ethereal, elongated body
that can float on air is part of the look and feel
of classical b allet. You and I might think ballet
would be just as pleasing with larger bodies.
But most of those who practice the art disagree, which is their right. This doesn't mean
that women with different body types ca nnot
become professional dancers. They just have
to find a different type of dance --jazz, tap,
modern - just as athletes have to find sports
that fit ce rtain body types. A tall, hlocky man,
for example, co uld not be a jockey, but he
co uld play baseball.
Having written extensively about the damaging pressures on young fe':,\ale gymnasts and
figure skaters, 1 understand Keefer's con cerns
about body type. But for me, the more disturbing issue in this story isn't about weight
but age.
·
The San Francisco Ballet School is very
clear and open about the fact it is strictly a
training ground for professiofla] dancers. "We
are not a recreation department," said a ballet
spokesw~man.

In other words, children at age 8 are already
training f(&gt;r .1dult careers. By age 12 or 1.\ the
ch ildn:n .tn• fLllll\11~

much t .I LIL till') L'lthLT
hq~in hoTllt''IChoolitJg or ,lttclld ,1 ~l hool tlt.H
acrummodates t he training 3C heduk. Th~

ly decide what to wea r to school JJJ tltc· morning. And the child knows the parents are pay- ~
ing lots of money for this great opportunity. ~
The ballet schoo l usually has a psychologist
to coun,se) the students. but at the moment
there is not one .on staff. And the parents are
givetl no training by the schoo l on the pitfalls
their daughtt·Ts might t•ncountcr a" th~y clirnb :
the ballet ladder: weight issues, physico! ail- '
ments, social isolation, psyc hologic.1l pressure, ~
Just as in elite gymnastic&lt;; and figure skat- '~"

no safety net for them, no arm of govt"rnnumt

that makes sme that the adults in their lives
watch out for their best interests.
Keefer soid she would drop her lawsuit jf ,
the school accepted her daughter. The San~"1 ;
Francisco Ballet School offers the best train- .
ing in the Bay Area, she said. Fredrika, however, has said she is quite happy dancing where
she !S. Still, the mother gets to decide what's
best for her daughter's dancing career. ·
The child is ckarly too young to make
such a decision. Yet , in the skewed logic of
elite athletics and dancing. 1he is not too
young to pay the&gt; price [or it

CHRISTMAS STOCKINGS- O'Bieness Memorial Hosp ital employ·
ee, Kristi Bonkowski, right, presents one of the stuffed stocking to
Salvation Army Case Manager /Social Worker Robin Carsey, left.
while O'Bieness employees Brian Dowler, left, Mary Snow, and
Gary Cooper look on. The O'Bieness Memorial Hospital fam ily
members filled more than 75 Salvation Army stockings to be g1ven
to needy children 1n Athens, M€igs and Vinton Count1es.

'iO

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

f• ll rfl, · ..., ,i ll /-"r1 111Cf.~w
Clm)wclc:. Se/1(1 H~lllllletHo~ 11! Jm 111 r,m• of tf1is
child ha5 thrown all her eggs into this one !it- newspaper
or
send
!Ia
c;-llwi( at
t!~ basket at an age when m'ost kids can bare- joa mya11sfi!ate.com.)
(/1111/1

i&lt;yd/1 /~

rl ,·. 1/r/H/1/;,.f

Subscribe rodav. 992-2156

.
I

museum manager, an office coordinator

womt·n 1n thL·ir :w~. ThL')' WL'I\: l.tmcnt-

client, cu-worker, vendor or cleaning

ing tl-w

bdy. I smile .md

f.Kt

tlut tlll'Y sn11k· tno much

Jill

pleas.mt. I s&lt;1y please.

thank (;.ou, and apologize for my nustak~!&lt;!.

One cmployt=r sa1d, "It's eas1er to
tram a smiler to me Excel than to teach
a compU[er-hterate sourpuss to smile. In
the final analysis, it comes down · to

choosing whom I want to spend my day
with." -- SONYA IN SEATTLE
DEAR SONYA: 1 agree. A smile is
defiflitely an asset not only in the bustness world , but in social situations as well.

The young ladtes you overhcdtd have a
lor to learn about interpen.on aJ relation~

ships if they think smiles are to be used
sparingly. Smiles make people f,•eJ ~ood
and open many doors .
To order "Hqw to WrHL' l etters fc:n
All Occasions." !lo.:.' nd a bu~m~.·ss~stzed,

sclf-a ddre.sed ,·m·clope. pJu, che ck or
money order for S3. 1J:i (S~ .oll in C.rn.tda)
to : De.rr Abby, Letter 13rHrkkt. P.O. Uox
H7. Mount Morn &lt;. IL Cdllo~- 0~ ~ 7.
( Posta~e is incluckd .)

TIME OUT FOR TIP.S
Planning a scife
celebration for ~ids
Bv BECKv"BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT, FAMILY AND
CONSUMER SC IENCE S/ COMMU~ITY DEVELOPMENT

What will you b...· doing tltis New Yl':lr's En~?
Arc you going m bL• cdebracing or will you still be
looiOng fi)r ·:1 baby~itter to watch your children
whtle you go nut~
.
To avoid the disappointment of missing New
Year's Eve cdcbrJtions beclUse there JS no ont: to

st.1y with your children , book your regular sitter
· early A month in advance is not too soon for suc h
a special night. lt may be difficult for cl1c cluldren
if you have to break in a new sitter at the last
1110111\.!llt.

Determine if your regular sitter is able to han-

Ti1 ai•oid tf1e disapJwiutmetlt 4
111issia,~ Nell' Yt:ar:&lt; Et•e ,:e/elmrtimu

l1ccause tltere is no one to sta}'ll'itlt
J'&lt;lllr children, (wok yo~tr re_RIIIar
silter earl)'. A lli()fttlt in miPance, 1s
not too sooufor melt

a spe_cial rdgltt .
dle the extra long evening. Is tht're too much

respotlsibiliry for the age and experience of your
babysitter'
Agree on the rate ahead of time. Because it may
be a very late night, time-and-a-half is not out of
the ordinary A tip may be appropriate, as well.
let the babysitter know how late you plan to
be. Explain to the sitter what additional rc&gt;ponsibilitics will be asmciated with cl1e late hours.
Plan a celebr:ation for your children and the sit-

ter ,It :m e.n-ly time- tiuybl· I() }J.IIJ. H ,t\·c ,til nf

the fLXIIlg5 t(,r a ··rro.~dinunJl'" New Yl'.tr·~ Eve ~
whitl' gr3pe juin'. noi~l· m.tkcf'l . b:lilllons. hats,

rented \i,deos and snacks. Don't kt the party
bccoml' wilJ. though. wh1k' ymt Jn: not home .
Caution the sitter and cl1e cluldn' n that lireworl&lt;.&lt;
and loud noises ma)' occur at tmdnight.
. lf you arc f,'Oing to be i.Jter tlun ""b"nallv ·:
planned, let the baby&lt;ittcr know. H'w pbor~e"
numbers where you and a rmsrcd llt'lghbor or rt:'lative can be reached in
cer~1in

your home

lS

GISC

of ;~n emergency. Be~

cluld-pnl&lt;lf, '&gt;aft• and rhat the"

doors are locked a'i you le:~ve t{1r chc evcnm!:( · '
Make sure there 1 ~ a dcsit,'llated dnYer to take the' :
smer home.
''

With a little prepar.ttion, you,your chtldren ,;,1 '•.
their babysitter ca n enioy
a w&lt;mderfi.tl New Ye&lt;tr's
:J
'
•1,
Eve party.
, 1
H:we fim!
.. ·, ,·
. '

MINERSV ILLE Before
daylight on Dec. 2, with snow
blow~ng, two youth groups from
two chu rchL' S in the We~tVirginia

Annual Co nference of the Umtcd
Meth odist C hurch rose from their
beds to embark on a missions trip
to paint tht• sanctuary at Min-

ersv ille
United
MethodiSt
Church.
A youth leader .rnd his wife,
Matthew and lois S.wvage, left
their home in Ronceverte, WVa.
in Greenbri;tr Count)', picked up
six youth at tho..· 1\:tl'n.town Unit-

c•d· Mc•thlldist .Church in Momoe
County, WVa., and·rhen met ninr.:.•

yo uth from
the
H1ghl.l\vn
UM.C ..rnJ their leader anJ pastor. K&lt;1r.1 Rowe &lt;1 nd Dr. John it.
SJttv.tgL' - ..1 Syl"olCll "t:' 11-:ltl\"l' who
Udl\'l:red Ius tint· nH::ss.1gc ,lt the

Mine1'ss·ille church in

197~.

TUESDAY
- Meigs County
Health Department immonization
clinic, 1 to· p.m. at off1ce. Flu shots
' avai lable. Parent or lega l guardian
must accompany child with shot
record .

POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Church, Advent Reconciliation Service, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Visiting
confessors available.

...

With paint brushes in hands,
the youth began their work, and
by evening, the church was pamted, cleaned atld prepared firr.) the
next day's \vorship service.
Part icipating in the project,
from Pett"rstown , WVa., we re:

Tiff.1ny Steffey, Amanda Martin,
leslie Shrewsbury, Rachel Wentz,
Joe D1llon and And1·ew Spaur, all
students at the James Monroe
High School and Pe terstown
Middle School.
Youth from Hi,;hlawn participattng Wl'f~.o': Ch~H;c: TrJcy, Kate Van

Horn. Jacob Davis. S:nna nth.r
D.rYis. Sh.tuna T hac ker, Ashley
C~ibbs ..Hi Ll C.trla S.nl\·a,;e. all students :rt Cabell Midland High
School. Huniu1,;ron H igh Sd10ol.
H ,t r bour~vil le M idJl c S'chonl and

llevcrly Hills Middk Se houl.
Their lc:1ders .lrL' te.1Ch~o:rs .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
POM~ROY

,.

..

Youth visit for missions work

POMEROY .,..- State Rep . John
Carey, A-Wellston , open door ses-

ing, these childre11 are i.n legal limho.They are ·
neither hobbyists nor professiomls. There is

because of cultur:al and social conditwning. They seemed to feel they must be
"tougher" to succeed in the business
world.
Abby, I have had a varied career as a

for a law firm and a property manager for
a 33-story building. I was a competent,
intelligent student in school, but by no
means at the top of my class. I have a fine
arts degree and reasonable computer
nature of your relation~hip. Perhaps it's skills.
time for you to suggest to her that y~u
A short time ago, I walked out of a
both sit down and have a h,·.trt-to-hcart new job because I didn't like the way my
co n\'ers:ltlon about those pcrspc c tiv~.:s . ~ emp loyer screamed at pe1&gt;ple. Within
Under no cucumst.:tnn•s shoLild you (hree days , I had three job offers. (I hadtJkt• .1 chilJ into )'Ollr hollll' fc.1r thl' rean't evt•n begun to look for new em ploy~
~ons you havc st.lted. It \vould be grossly
'm ent.) The reason' I smik
unfair to the cl;ild.
When sonh.'on~..: w;1lks into my ofllcc.
DEAR ABBY: I rc•cently owrhc'.ml .1 I smile ,m d grc~t till' person plc;1Santly.
c onvcn ,l tJOII
lJl•t\vccn
twn
young
Whether th .tt somconl· is my boss, a

ADVICE

Birthday observed

~

mUseum in the UniteJ States. agreed recently to rco;r:arch anJ li~t.on
their Web sites to purchase history or prov~nJtlCC of all art and &lt;ll'ti-

Abigail

SOCIETY NEWS
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

The News-Journal, Daytona Beach, Fla., on President Clinton s actions toward tl~e death penalty: When Presidem Climon commissioned a hasty review o( geographic and racial disparities in
applying the death penalty, did he want the truth? ...
Clinton has taken the proper fitjt step, by stopping an execution
scheduled for Tuesday. But before he leaves office, he should go further and enact a federal death-penalty moratorium. If he doesn 't, the
federal justice system will lme a critical opportunity to address its
own fundamental inequities- especially if George W Bush ends up
in the White House. Bush's main concern over the death penalty
seems to be " How fast can we fry 'em?" ...
... Race and regionality mll p lay much too significant a part in
. determining who faces the death penalty. Combined with another
recently released study that shows an unacceptably high rate of
judge and attorney error in death cases, it provides a chilling indictment of the system.
.
More than any other recent president, Clinton has been wracked
by ambiguity, frequently and publicly torn between what is popular
am! what is right. But he can stop the clock on federal executions,
at Jeast, while a more intensive review is completed. As Clinton
hiJ!!self pointed out Thursday, there is no reason for haste- and no
mhm for error.
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, on Amerimn nulleimts' 11ew policy.; American museums are going as far as they can to strip away the
'n&lt;,ltion that some of the art in their collections might haw come
'
their way courtesy of the Fuhrer's bloody piracy.
Officials from the American Association of Museutm aml the
ASfuciation of Art Museum lJ1rector&lt;. which cover1 nearly every art

should I go ahead and bnng th1s young
child into my home, maybe making her
unhappy and leaving myself vulnerable
for another d1sappmntmcnr in life' -DISAPPOINTED
MOTHER
IN
FLORIDA
DEAR DISAPPOINTED MOTHER: 1 don't know what happt•ned
between you atld your daughter, but it
seems you and she have very different
perspectives on her chtldhood and the

At 49 years old and married (no children), she has lived out~of-town for
many yt~ars and her ar.,ntude 1s cold and
distant. Her fri~nds are the center of her
life. How do you cxpbin such treatment'
addrcssi.n g me by my first name because ·
I now have th~ opportunity to
I was her "fncnd.",for years, we have had become a foster mother to a chdd. I
muncrous discussions on that subject ~~ would insist that this child cal l me
llll' explaining my unhappiness: she "Mother." Unfortunately, I fe.tr that my
msisting on Li~ing my first l1;1111l' and dcsir~ ro be c.1lk•d "Mother '' 1s lu~cd only
tgnoring my hurt f("dings. I never w.uu- nn the lont;ing to be called that bY my
~d 'to bl' ref....,·n..·d tt..) as l~lllc of h er tn.my own (hild . Unda such cirrllln:o.t;lnCl'~.
fi·il'JH.ls. I wamcd to bl· c.1lkd ··Mother."

,;

Un~n

Did Clinton really want
tmth fiom review?

Dec. 19•

Mother called by any other name doesn't sound as sweet

E'l"rA (i)MIO,. v..-.tt tfM·Tf&amp;f.lllltllllt"'illlbW'Itlt;--.,;..-

'Lsttl6tlski In 1!}41

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Page A$.

The Daily Sentinel

siotl, Meigs County Co~rthou se, 9 to
10 a.m.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of
days.

NASCAR COLLECTIBLES
Die cast Action, Team Caliber, Revell, Winner's Circle,
Racing Champions &amp; Broaksfleld.
We Carry 1/64scale plus I /24 and I /18
- Dale Earnhardt, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Tony
Stewart, Mark Martin,.Adam Petty, Kenny Irwin &amp; Others!!

''

STARTING LINE-UPS FOR BASEBALL,
BASKETBALL AND FOOTBALL
Nolan Ryan, Mark McGuire, Ken G·r lffey Jr. (With Reds and
Mariners), Chipper Iones, Andrew Iones, Alex Rodriguez,
Ricky Williams, Orlando Pace, Charlie Batch, Donavon
McNabb, Eminett Smith, Dan Marino, Terrell Davis, Eddie
George, Michael Jordan - Maximum Air, Michael Jordon
by Mattei In Red &amp; White, Christian Laettner, Gront Hill,
Allan Iverson, Magic lohnsoo, Kobe Bryant, Keith Van
Horn, Tim Duncan and Dennis Rodman wllh Red, Green
and Orange hair and others.

CLASSIC DOUBLES FOOTBALL
Dan Marino &amp; Joe Montano, Bart Storr &amp; Brett Farve, Joe
Montano &amp; Dwight Clark, Peyton Manning &amp; Archie
Manning or,~d Many Others.

CAN BE SEEN AT

RUTLAND BOTTLED GAS
MAIN STREET • RUTLAND

740-742-2211
.'

�..
.
'the

Page A•

Sentinel

Tuesdiy. December 11.1000

•

The Daily Sentinel

-HUI.M~

DEAl~ ABBY: I was a single mother
throughout my only child's early years. I
had no financ1al or moral support from
the child's father. luckily, I had a good
job that enabled me to take good ca re of
my daughter. I did nor believe in giving
my child a stepfather, so I remained single. My daughter had a good religious
education, loving home, a dedtcated and
adoring mother, vacations, the best
schools, health care, etc. We enjoyed a
wonderful and loving relationship.
However, as mon as my daughter
became a teen ~ a~t"r, she decided to stop
calling me "Mother." She iflsisred on

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

. R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

'

rn Uu ~fH' an •·rll'tJmt. They sltoulillw ku tlt.M JOO words.-AU kn~rr tur tMbj«r
roftlhiltr ad .wwiH U,rtftt and iffchulc addrrJS uJ •~r~,Mrnw murrbrr. No •msir11nl Wurn "'ill
N f"lbJUINtL Unrn should h# in food I4Stft, ruldnnillf isJNtf, 1101 jWrJOrttJlitiu
TIN opirtioiU t~sud ill tht rolntff lklow (Jft tiU' et,tUIUMI of 1111 Oltiu v.&amp;, Publislli"'
c•. 's HlilmWI botud, 1111fns Ufh•n••'sr fl(}(ed.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Has

facts acquired after 1933 and produced before 1945.
·this is far more sweepi ng than the policy some of the major
m~eums had adhered to during the last few years. That policy cove~d only paintings, sculpture and other works thor had gaps in their
pryvenance.The new policy would cover all work.;, of the N;.:~7i peri ~

o'*, even if ownership histories appeJr se~mle11.
-With rhis new information at th eir disposal, the families of Jews
an4 others subject to the regin1t~\ confiscation of fine out 1~1ight he
abl~

to identify lost inheritance.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASS OCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesd.ty, Dec. 19, the 154th day of 211fll). rhen· are 12
daY,S kli 1n the year.
Today's Highlight in Hi1tory:
.,
On Dec I~ . 1998, President c.Jinton was impeached by rht•
R~publi can-com ro lkd Home fa perjury and obstruction of justice,
b&lt;!~oming only the sceond chie: cxcc,utivc to be ordered to stand
trial in the Sen,Ht:, \.Vht:re, like AnJrew Jo hn -.on ht:f(,n· him, hl' was
aclj).litted.
On this dare:
!n 1732, Ocnjamin Franklin began publish1ng "Poor R1chard 's
Almanac."
'Jn I 776, Thoma~ Pamc published his first " American Crisi1" essay.
'Jn 1777 , Gen. George Wa~hington led his army of about 11 ,000
men to Valley ·Forge, Pa., to camp forth~ winter.
' ln 1843. "A Christmas Carbl," by Charles Dickens, was first published in England.
Cn l'J07, 239 workers died in a coal mine explosion in Jacobs
Creek, Pa.
In 1932, the British Broadcasting Corp. began transmitting overseas with its "Empire Service" to Australia.
In 1950, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander of
the military forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
In 1972 , Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific, winding up the
Apollo program of manned lunar landin gs.
In !974, Nelson A. Rockefeller was sworn in as the 41st vice
president of the United States.
In 1984, Britain and China signed an accord returning Hong
Ko11g to Chinese sovereignty on July 1, 1997.
Ten, years ago: Iraq urged its people to stockpile oil to avoid
sho,rtages shou ld war break out, and Saddam Hussein declared he
was "ready to crush any attack."
'Five years ago: The Federal Reserve cut a key interest rate, turning fears to cheers on Wall Street a day after the biggest one-day
stock plunge in four years.Yigal Amir, the confessed assassin of Israeli ·
Prim~ MinisterYitzhak Rabin, went on trial.A gunman opened fire
inside a llronx, N.Y .. shoc store, killing five people.
One yt.'!ar ago: Space shuttle Discovery and seven astronauts

roared into the night toward the crippled Hubble Space Telescope.
Macau 1pcnt its last day under Portuguese control before being
handed back to China, endmg 442 year&lt; of colonial rule . Cleveland
Browns offens1ve tackle Orlando Brown ~va&gt; ejccteJ for push in~~: referee JeffTriplettc to the ground during a game aga1nst .lacklnnvdlc
after accident&lt;llly bt·ing hit in rhe eye with fnplette\ wt'JghtL·d
penalty flag. Actor Desmond Llewelyn, who'd st.lrrcd as the ec-centric gadget expert Q in a string of James llond films, was killed in a
car crash in E,tS t Su&lt;&gt;ex, England; he was K5.

Van Buren

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

out strmdards.

When an activist consava1iw High Court
[fttmps a11 actlvist liberal ;;tate conn, it may be
legal, but 1t\ not Ill the o.;pirit uf the Con~tlru­
tlon.
The Constituriotl vests th e power to pick
the ~ra tes' electors in their elected legcslatures,
which delegate that power to the people. In
the event of a contested election, the responsibility falls to the elected Co ngress.
Rule by judge is a good deal less messy
than rule by politician. The Florida legislature's late, half-baked intervention into the
presidetltial contest looked arbitrary and parti'lan.
If Collgn:ss had takt'n up the, case in January, no one knows how tht: election might
. have turned out. Variou s scenario~ made it

possible for either Vice President AI Gore or
Texas Gov. George W !lush to emerge the
winner. It \.vas all very murky, in part because
of potential pres~un:.· on Member~ who~e dis~

rrin; were carried by a candidate of the
oppmite party.
Public opinion polls show that voters, tired
of the post-e lewon chaos, trusted the

•

Humphreys.

...
M

.••

(Rule by.judge' means the system is kaput
Through all the great crises of the past century - the Depression, the civil rights struggle, Watergate and ~·
1peachment - Americans could comfort
emselves by saying,
"The system works."Th year it didn't.
The 43rd president was picked not by the
voters or their elected representatives, as the
Constitution prescribes, but by non-elected
members of the Supreme Court - and by a
split vote of S-4, at that.
This activism by the High Court's conservative majority is defensible only because it
saved the nation from runaway activism by
four liberal justices on the Florida Supreme
Court.
That court's majority twi Ce seemed to have
simply asked itself, "What will it take to get AI
Core elected'" and then found words in the
• law - or the Florida Constitution - to
accomplish the result through a recount with-

••

POMEROY
Peyton
Marie Humphreys obserwd her
first birthday o n Dec. 2 wJth a
party at the hmue of her , parand
Heather
ents. . Jay

•

•'

A Sesame Street theme was
carried out for the party.
Attending wer~ mate-pul grandparents Myron and Remalee
Franckowiak, paternal grandparRandy
and
Judy
ents
Humphreys, and great-grandparents Francis Shaeffer and
Mildred Humphreys.
Other friends and family
attending were Michael Franckowiak and Sara Allisofl , J T.
Peyton Marie Humphreys
Humphreys and Valerie Karr,
Sandy, Lee and Suzanna Hetld erson , Victoria Walker, Tina, J.D.,
Anna, Allison , and Aaron Story, Abby Blake, Danielle and 13ailey
Caruthers, Angie and Sydney Cleland, Wally, Lori . and Allison H atfield, Jami e Bailey, Heather and Devo tl Hawley. Sending
gifts.
were Tara Gheen.Jim, Melinda and H eather McCiain,Jeremy Tu cker, Cary, Kim, Cole and Kassidy Bctz~ng, Brooke and Brett Ely

..

whatsoever.
~
The editor of the left -wing magazine The -~'
Nation described th e court's
action as "a ~..M
'
coup."
..,.
These are extrem e commeuts, but there JS
widespread feeling among Democrats that •
they were robbed of an electoral victory they
cou ld have established had• the Supreme
Court o nly let them.
. It's up to both Bush and Gore, by word and
deed, to repair the political damage this election has done and make sure that the governc ·
n1ent can function. It's up to Members of ·
Congress, too.
The Supreme Court has a deeper problem. '
Dissenting Justices Stephen 13rcyer. and Ruth '
Bader Ginsburg, in bitter opinions, have
placed a deep stain on the court\ reputation
- saying the loser in this yc,rr's election is
"the nation 's- confirlencc "jn tl'tc juJge as an
impartial guardia11 of the rule of L1w."
llisseming Justice John l'.tul Stevens said

.

.~

&gt;ll

Morton
K,ondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
Supreme Court to decide the election rather
than any other relevant body.
According to a CNN/USA Today/Gallup
poll, 61 percent of adults favored the High
Court, 17 percent favored Congress, 9 percent
preferred the Florida Supreme Court atld 7
percent the Florida legislature.
Those resu lts demonstrate profound
rt'spect for the U.S. Supreme Court, but a
woeful lack of education among; the public
ahout how democracy i~ supposed to \Vork.

The lligh Court is so removed from the
public that it won't even allow its proceedings
to be seen on television. Its members are

answerable to history - and, to some extent,
have their reputations set by gossip among
legal cognoscenti- but are not answerable to
the public.
Moreover, the esteem in whkh the court is
held depends upon its tradition of restraint -especjally its reluctance · to plunge imo the
poliiical thicket.
This year th e court became totally enta ngled in the brambles - mo'sr notably Dec. 9,
when five justices voted to halt the hand
re count in Flnrid~1 that rnight have reversed

13ush's shaky majority.
Core backer' 1uch as Sen. Tom Harkin, Dlowa, and the Rc·v. Jesse Jac bon became nearly hysteri ca l in compariflg the actiotl with the
1857 Drcd Scor case, in which the court
deprived African-Americans of any rights

O'Bieness staff and volunteers
make donations to help needy
ATHENS -

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital staff and volunt eers
recently took part in several activities to assist southeastern O bio
residents in need this holiday season.
In conjunction wirh the Salvation Army's Christmas Stocking
Program. hospital family members filled more than 75 ·stockings
with goodies and gifts. The filled stockings will be given to area

the court\ d eci.~iun .. can nnly lc11d nl'de n ce

to the most cynical appraisal or' th e work of
judges throughout the land.''
One sure conseque'nce

or the

lOUrt''i

action

is to make it difficult for !lush to 'ecure Senate confirmation of any High Court nominations he makes.
ARother n·,'ay be that the rublic\ distntst of
tht! judiciary . will be concentr~Jted nn the
Supreme Court, concealin g; the increasing
crisis of state courts - embodied in Florida
where money atl\l influence fro m trial'
lawyers dominate judicial sel&lt;;rtion and retention.
Judges havl.' rome to dominate Am~rican
policy partly hc'C.\LIIe lcgtsl.rltll'l'l t:riled to
tackle the m~or problt'ms of LhL· tl&gt;lii Jtry notably abortion ant! civil rights - i11 a time-

ly

children in need this holiday season,

According to Robin· Carsey, case m.r nager/social worker at the
Salv;ltion Army in Athens, the Salvation Army provides empty, 22inch-Jong stockings to indi,•iduals and organizations that are willing
to stuff them \\·ith small toys. small artu.:lc s of clothing, candy. games.

books,jc'\Wiry and other sma ll gifts.
So fa r [his holiday se ason , area imliYidu:1l s and organization!'i' have
lilled approxinl.ltdy j00 stockings. Carsey s.tid con tri butions from
indivtduals ,llld org;tmzariom ~uch :Js CYBi e n e~s arc \'!tOll tu the succes~ of the Sah-ation Army's holiday g iving programs.

"To the Salvation Anll'' and mysd f [the donations] me.tn a lot
bl'causc many kid~ in tht' community may n ot receive anything this
h oliday Sl'JSon without help from individu.1ls and organizations ,"
said Carsey.
·
The &lt;tockt nt;' will be distributed to children in need in Athem.
Mci~ a.nd Vinton co unties. Fam ili es in need signed up a[ the Salv:nion Army 111 October fi1r the stocking program and other char"itablc a'isista ncc. The Christmas Stockm g Program is one of sevc ral
charitable progr.um the· Salvation Army is sponsoring this hohday
Sl'ason. Ailyt)ne who is i11tnes ted in learning more about th e pro ~
g r;1ms is asked to call Robin Carsey at the Salvation Army at 5937llH2. Donotions t(rr the holiday programs will be acce pted through
Monday, Dec. I H.
This holiday season. O'Bkness I Iospital f.1mily members also
donatt·d to the Tri Co unty Mental Health and Counseling Service's
Child Assault l'reventton Progr.Jm, B.mk One's Coats For Kids project :md the Southeastern Ohio Food Ccntn.

t~shion. Ultim.nd y, it\ up to ( \mgrcss to

solve AnrericJ·~ national problc!ll-.
US system ba ck in balance.

.I I

HI put the

(!\·lorton Kulf(lmckc is exct"llfi/lc nlirt'r of Roll :\
Call, th e IICII •spap••r of' C&lt;1pirol /-/ill.)
.

RYAN'S VIEW

Standards tell us we are not all created equal
BY

JOAN RYAN

Fredrika Keefer is an 8-ycar-old girl who
likes to dance, just like her mother and grandmother before her. She relishes playing the
lead role of Clara in the Pacific Dance Theater's "Petite N utcracker." So pethaps she is
not as shy as many fourth-graders. But I wonder how she feels about her body being a
topic of public discussion.
Fredrika and her mother filed suit bec~use,
as her' mother puts it, she "did not have the
nght body type to be accepted" by the San
Francisco Ballet School. "My daughter is very
sophisticated, so she understands why we're
doing tlris,''.Krissy Keefer said." And the other
kids think she's a celebrity."
There is no question Keefer raises a pow..:
erful ·point in her complaiflt. The values
placed on, an unnaturally thin body for female
performers drives some dancers to potentially
'fatal eating disorders. Dut that isn't exactly the
i»ue here. This is: Ooes the San Francisco Ballet School have the right to give preference to
leaner body types in selecting 300 students
from this year's 1,400 applicants'
Yes, for the same reason UC Berkeley can
reject o;tudent'l ba,ed on mental prowess and a
fa.,hion modeling 'ichool ( 111 n.Jt.TI -..ttidenh
h.l'. cd 011 comc lm e~s. 1st' I\ ill\lltutlon ha~

standards that weed out th~sc who are less
likely to succeed. I know this flies in the face
of American ideals. But tho reality is that all

I .

men and women arc not created equal.
Like it or not, the ethereal, elongated body
that can float on air is part of the look and feel
of classical b allet. You and I might think ballet
would be just as pleasing with larger bodies.
But most of those who practice the art disagree, which is their right. This doesn't mean
that women with different body types ca nnot
become professional dancers. They just have
to find a different type of dance --jazz, tap,
modern - just as athletes have to find sports
that fit ce rtain body types. A tall, hlocky man,
for example, co uld not be a jockey, but he
co uld play baseball.
Having written extensively about the damaging pressures on young fe':,\ale gymnasts and
figure skaters, 1 understand Keefer's con cerns
about body type. But for me, the more disturbing issue in this story isn't about weight
but age.
·
The San Francisco Ballet School is very
clear and open about the fact it is strictly a
training ground for professiofla] dancers. "We
are not a recreation department," said a ballet
spokesw~man.

In other words, children at age 8 are already
training f(&gt;r .1dult careers. By age 12 or 1.\ the
ch ildn:n .tn• fLllll\11~

much t .I LIL till') L'lthLT
hq~in hoTllt''IChoolitJg or ,lttclld ,1 ~l hool tlt.H
acrummodates t he training 3C heduk. Th~

ly decide what to wea r to school JJJ tltc· morning. And the child knows the parents are pay- ~
ing lots of money for this great opportunity. ~
The ballet schoo l usually has a psychologist
to coun,se) the students. but at the moment
there is not one .on staff. And the parents are
givetl no training by the schoo l on the pitfalls
their daughtt·Ts might t•ncountcr a" th~y clirnb :
the ballet ladder: weight issues, physico! ail- '
ments, social isolation, psyc hologic.1l pressure, ~
Just as in elite gymnastic&lt;; and figure skat- '~"

no safety net for them, no arm of govt"rnnumt

that makes sme that the adults in their lives
watch out for their best interests.
Keefer soid she would drop her lawsuit jf ,
the school accepted her daughter. The San~"1 ;
Francisco Ballet School offers the best train- .
ing in the Bay Area, she said. Fredrika, however, has said she is quite happy dancing where
she !S. Still, the mother gets to decide what's
best for her daughter's dancing career. ·
The child is ckarly too young to make
such a decision. Yet , in the skewed logic of
elite athletics and dancing. 1he is not too
young to pay the&gt; price [or it

CHRISTMAS STOCKINGS- O'Bieness Memorial Hosp ital employ·
ee, Kristi Bonkowski, right, presents one of the stuffed stocking to
Salvation Army Case Manager /Social Worker Robin Carsey, left.
while O'Bieness employees Brian Dowler, left, Mary Snow, and
Gary Cooper look on. The O'Bieness Memorial Hospital fam ily
members filled more than 75 Salvation Army stockings to be g1ven
to needy children 1n Athens, M€igs and Vinton Count1es.

'iO

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

f• ll rfl, · ..., ,i ll /-"r1 111Cf.~w
Clm)wclc:. Se/1(1 H~lllllletHo~ 11! Jm 111 r,m• of tf1is
child ha5 thrown all her eggs into this one !it- newspaper
or
send
!Ia
c;-llwi( at
t!~ basket at an age when m'ost kids can bare- joa mya11sfi!ate.com.)
(/1111/1

i&lt;yd/1 /~

rl ,·. 1/r/H/1/;,.f

Subscribe rodav. 992-2156

.
I

museum manager, an office coordinator

womt·n 1n thL·ir :w~. ThL')' WL'I\: l.tmcnt-

client, cu-worker, vendor or cleaning

ing tl-w

bdy. I smile .md

f.Kt

tlut tlll'Y sn11k· tno much

Jill

pleas.mt. I s&lt;1y please.

thank (;.ou, and apologize for my nustak~!&lt;!.

One cmployt=r sa1d, "It's eas1er to
tram a smiler to me Excel than to teach
a compU[er-hterate sourpuss to smile. In
the final analysis, it comes down · to

choosing whom I want to spend my day
with." -- SONYA IN SEATTLE
DEAR SONYA: 1 agree. A smile is
defiflitely an asset not only in the bustness world , but in social situations as well.

The young ladtes you overhcdtd have a
lor to learn about interpen.on aJ relation~

ships if they think smiles are to be used
sparingly. Smiles make people f,•eJ ~ood
and open many doors .
To order "Hqw to WrHL' l etters fc:n
All Occasions." !lo.:.' nd a bu~m~.·ss~stzed,

sclf-a ddre.sed ,·m·clope. pJu, che ck or
money order for S3. 1J:i (S~ .oll in C.rn.tda)
to : De.rr Abby, Letter 13rHrkkt. P.O. Uox
H7. Mount Morn &lt;. IL Cdllo~- 0~ ~ 7.
( Posta~e is incluckd .)

TIME OUT FOR TIP.S
Planning a scife
celebration for ~ids
Bv BECKv"BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT, FAMILY AND
CONSUMER SC IENCE S/ COMMU~ITY DEVELOPMENT

What will you b...· doing tltis New Yl':lr's En~?
Arc you going m bL• cdebracing or will you still be
looiOng fi)r ·:1 baby~itter to watch your children
whtle you go nut~
.
To avoid the disappointment of missing New
Year's Eve cdcbrJtions beclUse there JS no ont: to

st.1y with your children , book your regular sitter
· early A month in advance is not too soon for suc h
a special night. lt may be difficult for cl1c cluldren
if you have to break in a new sitter at the last
1110111\.!llt.

Determine if your regular sitter is able to han-

Ti1 ai•oid tf1e disapJwiutmetlt 4
111issia,~ Nell' Yt:ar:&lt; Et•e ,:e/elmrtimu

l1ccause tltere is no one to sta}'ll'itlt
J'&lt;lllr children, (wok yo~tr re_RIIIar
silter earl)'. A lli()fttlt in miPance, 1s
not too sooufor melt

a spe_cial rdgltt .
dle the extra long evening. Is tht're too much

respotlsibiliry for the age and experience of your
babysitter'
Agree on the rate ahead of time. Because it may
be a very late night, time-and-a-half is not out of
the ordinary A tip may be appropriate, as well.
let the babysitter know how late you plan to
be. Explain to the sitter what additional rc&gt;ponsibilitics will be asmciated with cl1e late hours.
Plan a celebr:ation for your children and the sit-

ter ,It :m e.n-ly time- tiuybl· I() }J.IIJ. H ,t\·c ,til nf

the fLXIIlg5 t(,r a ··rro.~dinunJl'" New Yl'.tr·~ Eve ~
whitl' gr3pe juin'. noi~l· m.tkcf'l . b:lilllons. hats,

rented \i,deos and snacks. Don't kt the party
bccoml' wilJ. though. wh1k' ymt Jn: not home .
Caution the sitter and cl1e cluldn' n that lireworl&lt;.&lt;
and loud noises ma)' occur at tmdnight.
. lf you arc f,'Oing to be i.Jter tlun ""b"nallv ·:
planned, let the baby&lt;ittcr know. H'w pbor~e"
numbers where you and a rmsrcd llt'lghbor or rt:'lative can be reached in
cer~1in

your home

lS

GISC

of ;~n emergency. Be~

cluld-pnl&lt;lf, '&gt;aft• and rhat the"

doors are locked a'i you le:~ve t{1r chc evcnm!:( · '
Make sure there 1 ~ a dcsit,'llated dnYer to take the' :
smer home.
''

With a little prepar.ttion, you,your chtldren ,;,1 '•.
their babysitter ca n enioy
a w&lt;mderfi.tl New Ye&lt;tr's
:J
'
•1,
Eve party.
, 1
H:we fim!
.. ·, ,·
. '

MINERSV ILLE Before
daylight on Dec. 2, with snow
blow~ng, two youth groups from
two chu rchL' S in the We~tVirginia

Annual Co nference of the Umtcd
Meth odist C hurch rose from their
beds to embark on a missions trip
to paint tht• sanctuary at Min-

ersv ille
United
MethodiSt
Church.
A youth leader .rnd his wife,
Matthew and lois S.wvage, left
their home in Ronceverte, WVa.
in Greenbri;tr Count)', picked up
six youth at tho..· 1\:tl'n.town Unit-

c•d· Mc•thlldist .Church in Momoe
County, WVa., and·rhen met ninr.:.•

yo uth from
the
H1ghl.l\vn
UM.C ..rnJ their leader anJ pastor. K&lt;1r.1 Rowe &lt;1 nd Dr. John it.
SJttv.tgL' - ..1 Syl"olCll "t:' 11-:ltl\"l' who
Udl\'l:red Ius tint· nH::ss.1gc ,lt the

Mine1'ss·ille church in

197~.

TUESDAY
- Meigs County
Health Department immonization
clinic, 1 to· p.m. at off1ce. Flu shots
' avai lable. Parent or lega l guardian
must accompany child with shot
record .

POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Church, Advent Reconciliation Service, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Visiting
confessors available.

...

With paint brushes in hands,
the youth began their work, and
by evening, the church was pamted, cleaned atld prepared firr.) the
next day's \vorship service.
Part icipating in the project,
from Pett"rstown , WVa., we re:

Tiff.1ny Steffey, Amanda Martin,
leslie Shrewsbury, Rachel Wentz,
Joe D1llon and And1·ew Spaur, all
students at the James Monroe
High School and Pe terstown
Middle School.
Youth from Hi,;hlawn participattng Wl'f~.o': Ch~H;c: TrJcy, Kate Van

Horn. Jacob Davis. S:nna nth.r
D.rYis. Sh.tuna T hac ker, Ashley
C~ibbs ..Hi Ll C.trla S.nl\·a,;e. all students :rt Cabell Midland High
School. Huniu1,;ron H igh Sd10ol.
H ,t r bour~vil le M idJl c S'chonl and

llevcrly Hills Middk Se houl.
Their lc:1ders .lrL' te.1Ch~o:rs .

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
POM~ROY

,.

..

Youth visit for missions work

POMEROY .,..- State Rep . John
Carey, A-Wellston , open door ses-

ing, these childre11 are i.n legal limho.They are ·
neither hobbyists nor professiomls. There is

because of cultur:al and social conditwning. They seemed to feel they must be
"tougher" to succeed in the business
world.
Abby, I have had a varied career as a

for a law firm and a property manager for
a 33-story building. I was a competent,
intelligent student in school, but by no
means at the top of my class. I have a fine
arts degree and reasonable computer
nature of your relation~hip. Perhaps it's skills.
time for you to suggest to her that y~u
A short time ago, I walked out of a
both sit down and have a h,·.trt-to-hcart new job because I didn't like the way my
co n\'ers:ltlon about those pcrspc c tiv~.:s . ~ emp loyer screamed at pe1&gt;ple. Within
Under no cucumst.:tnn•s shoLild you (hree days , I had three job offers. (I hadtJkt• .1 chilJ into )'Ollr hollll' fc.1r thl' rean't evt•n begun to look for new em ploy~
~ons you havc st.lted. It \vould be grossly
'm ent.) The reason' I smik
unfair to the cl;ild.
When sonh.'on~..: w;1lks into my ofllcc.
DEAR ABBY: I rc•cently owrhc'.ml .1 I smile ,m d grc~t till' person plc;1Santly.
c onvcn ,l tJOII
lJl•t\vccn
twn
young
Whether th .tt somconl· is my boss, a

ADVICE

Birthday observed

~

mUseum in the UniteJ States. agreed recently to rco;r:arch anJ li~t.on
their Web sites to purchase history or prov~nJtlCC of all art and &lt;ll'ti-

Abigail

SOCIETY NEWS
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

The News-Journal, Daytona Beach, Fla., on President Clinton s actions toward tl~e death penalty: When Presidem Climon commissioned a hasty review o( geographic and racial disparities in
applying the death penalty, did he want the truth? ...
Clinton has taken the proper fitjt step, by stopping an execution
scheduled for Tuesday. But before he leaves office, he should go further and enact a federal death-penalty moratorium. If he doesn 't, the
federal justice system will lme a critical opportunity to address its
own fundamental inequities- especially if George W Bush ends up
in the White House. Bush's main concern over the death penalty
seems to be " How fast can we fry 'em?" ...
... Race and regionality mll p lay much too significant a part in
. determining who faces the death penalty. Combined with another
recently released study that shows an unacceptably high rate of
judge and attorney error in death cases, it provides a chilling indictment of the system.
.
More than any other recent president, Clinton has been wracked
by ambiguity, frequently and publicly torn between what is popular
am! what is right. But he can stop the clock on federal executions,
at Jeast, while a more intensive review is completed. As Clinton
hiJ!!self pointed out Thursday, there is no reason for haste- and no
mhm for error.
• The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, on Amerimn nulleimts' 11ew policy.; American museums are going as far as they can to strip away the
'n&lt;,ltion that some of the art in their collections might haw come
'
their way courtesy of the Fuhrer's bloody piracy.
Officials from the American Association of Museutm aml the
ASfuciation of Art Museum lJ1rector&lt;. which cover1 nearly every art

should I go ahead and bnng th1s young
child into my home, maybe making her
unhappy and leaving myself vulnerable
for another d1sappmntmcnr in life' -DISAPPOINTED
MOTHER
IN
FLORIDA
DEAR DISAPPOINTED MOTHER: 1 don't know what happt•ned
between you atld your daughter, but it
seems you and she have very different
perspectives on her chtldhood and the

At 49 years old and married (no children), she has lived out~of-town for
many yt~ars and her ar.,ntude 1s cold and
distant. Her fri~nds are the center of her
life. How do you cxpbin such treatment'
addrcssi.n g me by my first name because ·
I now have th~ opportunity to
I was her "fncnd.",for years, we have had become a foster mother to a chdd. I
muncrous discussions on that subject ~~ would insist that this child cal l me
llll' explaining my unhappiness: she "Mother." Unfortunately, I fe.tr that my
msisting on Li~ing my first l1;1111l' and dcsir~ ro be c.1lk•d "Mother '' 1s lu~cd only
tgnoring my hurt f("dings. I never w.uu- nn the lont;ing to be called that bY my
~d 'to bl' ref....,·n..·d tt..) as l~lllc of h er tn.my own (hild . Unda such cirrllln:o.t;lnCl'~.
fi·il'JH.ls. I wamcd to bl· c.1lkd ··Mother."

,;

Un~n

Did Clinton really want
tmth fiom review?

Dec. 19•

Mother called by any other name doesn't sound as sweet

E'l"rA (i)MIO,. v..-.tt tfM·Tf&amp;f.lllltllllt"'illlbW'Itlt;--.,;..-

'Lsttl6tlski In 1!}41

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Page A$.

The Daily Sentinel

siotl, Meigs County Co~rthou se, 9 to
10 a.m.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to be
printed a specific number of
days.

NASCAR COLLECTIBLES
Die cast Action, Team Caliber, Revell, Winner's Circle,
Racing Champions &amp; Broaksfleld.
We Carry 1/64scale plus I /24 and I /18
- Dale Earnhardt, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Tony
Stewart, Mark Martin,.Adam Petty, Kenny Irwin &amp; Others!!

''

STARTING LINE-UPS FOR BASEBALL,
BASKETBALL AND FOOTBALL
Nolan Ryan, Mark McGuire, Ken G·r lffey Jr. (With Reds and
Mariners), Chipper Iones, Andrew Iones, Alex Rodriguez,
Ricky Williams, Orlando Pace, Charlie Batch, Donavon
McNabb, Eminett Smith, Dan Marino, Terrell Davis, Eddie
George, Michael Jordan - Maximum Air, Michael Jordon
by Mattei In Red &amp; White, Christian Laettner, Gront Hill,
Allan Iverson, Magic lohnsoo, Kobe Bryant, Keith Van
Horn, Tim Duncan and Dennis Rodman wllh Red, Green
and Orange hair and others.

CLASSIC DOUBLES FOOTBALL
Dan Marino &amp; Joe Montano, Bart Storr &amp; Brett Farve, Joe
Montano &amp; Dwight Clark, Peyton Manning &amp; Archie
Manning or,~d Many Others.

CAN BE SEEN AT

RUTLAND BOTTLED GAS
MAIN STREET • RUTLAND

740-742-2211
.'

�-·
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Recess appoinb11ent filed
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - P"'sident Clinton announced the
"'cess appointment Monday of Suun Ness to the Federal Conllllumcauons Commission, after the Senate failed to act on her nomination to remain another term at the agency.
Ness was sworn in as FCC commissioner in 1994 and is the most
senior of the five commissioners. The president nominated her in
July 1999 to serve another term, but the Senate Conllllerce Committee, which oversees the FCC, has not voted on the nomination.
The Constitution gives the president power to make temporary
appointments during :. congressional recess. The appointment stands
until the end of the firsr session of the next Congress, in this case
until about this time in 200 I .
Ness is among three members appointed by Democrats. The
remaining rwo commissioners fill GOP seats. That is expected to
shift when the new administration is sworn in, during which
Republicans ·will take a majority in the five-member commission.

BeiiSouth plans equal benefits
ATLANTA (A~) - BellSouth Corp. has joined the ranks of
companies offering benefits to same-sex domestic partners of
employees.
The decision affects only management employees, who make up
about 26,000 of BellSoinh's 93,000 wotkers, BellSouth spokeswoman N echole Merritt said.
She said providing the benefits makes the company more attractive to potential employees.
"We have been looking at the business environment, and as we
become more competitive, we wanted to make sure we do everything we could to attract and "'tain a talented and diverse work
force," she said.
Typically, only 1 or 2 percent of employees sign up for domestic
partner benefits when they are offered, said Kim Mills, education
director at the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay and'lesbian
political organization.
About 3,600 mostly large companies offer the benefi.ts, she said.
BellSouth is the last of the former Baby Bells to ofler the benefits.

Nichols loses new trial bid
DENVER (AP)- Convicted Oklahoma Ciry bombing conspirator Terry Nichols lost his bid for a new trial after a federal appeals
court ruled the FBI did nor withhold crucial evidence.
The court also rejected Nichols' request to look at more of the
43,000 "lead sheets" developed by the government during the
investigation, saying Nichols failed to prove they _would help his
case.
· "Lead sheets" are used to record information taken during informal interviews or from callers.
The three-judge panel at the 1Oth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
said it was troubled by government decisions not to turn over some
evidence contained in the FBI lead sheets. However, the judges
agreed with the government and a district court judge that the
information would not have changed the outcome of Nichols' trial.
Nichols, convicted of involuntary manslaughter and conspiracy
charges, is serving a life ·sentence in federal prison. Separately, Timothy McVeigh was convicted of murder -and weapons counts and
sentenced to death .
The April 1995 bombing of the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma Ciry killed 168 _people and injured hundreds
more.
Nichols' ~ttorneys argued that it is not for the government to
decide the credibility or usefulness of the lead sheets, and the judges
agreed.
"Questions of credibility are properly for the jury, not for the
prosecution," the j udges said.
However, they agreed with the government's argument that none
of the evidence, most of which dealt with the elusive "John Doe 2"
some witnesses said they saw with McVeigh, proved that Nichols
was not involved in the bombing.

Cigarette prices rising
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Philip Morris Cos. Inc. and
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings have raised the wholesale price of
a pack of cigarettes by 14 cents a pack.
Philip Morris spokesman Michael Pfeil said the company
increased wholesale prices $7 per 1,000 ciga(ettes, or $1.40 per carton, effective Monday.
R.J. Reynolds spokeswoman Jan Smith said tl,e company nonfied
wholesale customers Friday that Reynolds would raise the price 14 cents on each premium-brand pack and 7 1/2 cents on private-label
cigarettes.
Neither Pfeil nor Smith would say how the increase might affect
retail prices.
"I can't say specifically because retailers put· their own price on
things," Smith said. "We have announced the price increase to our
customers." ·

Gore on nomination list
BOSTON (AP) -Vice President AI Gore is one of about SOO
people nominated for the presidency of Harvard University, according to the chairman of the university's presidential search committee.
"He'll go into o·ur pool and be considered seriously," Robert G.
Stone Jr., a senior fellow of the Harvard Corporatioi, which will
make the final choice, told The Boston Globe.
'Stone. however, made it clear Gore is unlikely to be selected.
"He doesn't have the academic and intellectual standing," Stone
said in an intervi ew published Tuesday.
Stone confirmed that four people have nominated Gore to succeed Neil L. Rudenstein, who plans to step down next summer.
Joseph S. Nye, dean of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, said the university was more likely to hire a nonpartisan
figure .
"He's an extremely bright man who has a Harvard degree, and
you can't get much better experience," Nye said. "But he hasn't
been in the academic world."
Gore graduated from Harvard in 1969.
Spokesmen for Gore could not be reached for comment, The
Globe reported.

Dad charged in infant death
PITTSBURGH (AP) -A man was charged with homicide for
allegeclly killing his 2-month-old daughter by shaking her more
than 20 times because he was annoyed at ·her crying.
Destiny Wytm died Monday after being hospitalized Saturday
with a bleeding and swollen brain.
.Chad Willis Wynn , 21, was jailed Monday 9n charges of criminal
homiCide, aggravated assault and child endangerment. A preliminary
hearing was scheduled for Dec. 28.
Allegheny County Coroner Cyril Wecht said It would take I (J to
14 days to conduct tests on Destiny's bram to determine the extent
of the dam•ge .

'

Tuesday, December 19, 2000

Israelis and J»alestinians .reopen negotiations
Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami. The Palestinian
delegation includes senior negotiators Saeb
Erekat and Yasser Abed Rabbo.
The likely location is Bolling Air Force
Base in sourheast,Washington. But traditionally secret even about logistics, the State
Department declined to say.
"The parties are "'-engaging, and they've
asked us to be involved, and that's good,"
Clinton said Monday at the White House.
"But we're going to be on their timetable, so
I can't say for sure'' whe~er there would be
progress or if he would make a trip to the
region to try to clinch a deal.
''I'm willing, as always, to do whatever I

WASHINGTON (AP) Israelis and
Palestinians are reopening peace negotiations
with the calendar bearing down on President
Clinton, who is offering to help them reach a
settlement, possibly with a trip to the region
in his last weeks in office.
The rwo sides will set.the pace for the talks,
which begin with separate meetings for Israeli
and Palestinian delegations with U.S. mediators Dennis B. Ross and Aaron D. Miller.
Three-way talks appear likely later on, but
whether Clinton or Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright will participate is undecided.
The Israeli delegation is headed by Foreign

can, and I will do whatever I can. llut the
timetable will be up to them," Clinton said.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Justice Minister Yossi
Beilin, an ardent supporter of conceSSions to
the Palestinians, said he did not want to raise
hopes a deal was at hand. "But in my opinion,
the"' is a good chance to reach a comprehensive final status agreement, a framework deal,
in the next few weeks," he s_aid .
On the Palestinian side, Cabinet Minister
Nabil Shaath said he expected Israel to offer
.more than it did at the Camp David talks in
July hosted by Clinton. "I'm sure, I have no
doubt," Shaath said.

Bridgestone/Firestone links Fed expected to shift its
tire failures to design, plant focus away from inflation
WASHINGTON (AP)
Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. has
told government officials investigating 148 U.S. traffic deaths
linked to its tires that the problem
stems from a fanlry design and
unique manufacturing process at
its Decatur, Ill., plant, The Associ:
aced Press has learned.
More than four months after
beginning a recall of 6.5 million
tires, the Nashville, Tenn.-bascd
manufacturer is set to release its
preliminary findings as early as
Tuesday, two sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Specifically, company officials
told congressional investigators
and the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration that the
Decatur plant uses a different
process to mix rubber that has
resulted in the tread peeling off
the tire, causing the accidents, the
sources said.
One of the sources works on
Capitol Hill; the other is an official familiar with the report. Both
spoke late Monday.
The tire maker also told investigators there was a problem with
the wedge area of the tire,located
near the shoulder where the tread
meers the tire wall. Arid it continued to blame Ford Motor Co. for
recommending a lower inflation
pressure.
Bridgestone/Firestone officials
were not available for comment

Georgia again
jolted by snow
(AP) - . This is the sunny
South?
Another 3 inches of snow
blanketed northern Georgi'a
early Tuesday ,on the heels of a
wintry weekend of snow, ice and
bone-chilling ·temperatures ·in
much of the South and Midwest.
Temperatures in northern
Georgia were forecast to peak in
the 20s on Tuesday, with lows
near I 0 degrees - and wind
chills as low as zero. The snowfall was the region's second in
three days.
"We generally don't get snow
this early but we've been enjoying it," said Lewis Lane, who
works at Sky Valley Ski Re sort
in northeast Georgia.
More cold and snow were
also forecast Tuesday in neighboring Tennessee, where at least
28 of the state's 95 counties
closed schools Monday. Se~eral
schools announced that they
planned to stay closed Tuesday.
Elsewhere · in the South,
Arkansas Gov. Mike Hu ckabee
declared disaster areas in 41
counties nearly a week after
what state officials said was the
Worst ice storm in state history.
Some 40,000 homes were still
without power Monday.
"I 've j ust been quilting by the
light of the window during the
day and go to bed when it gets
dark," said Kitty Watson, 73,
whQse home has been without
ele ctrici ty since last week. "A nd
my goodness, I must've gained
10 pounds in the past week
cause you know, you bake when
you're bored ."
'In Alabama, freezing rain,
snpw and a second day of cold
closed dozens of schools Monday an,d sent homeless to shelters
across the state. The state was still
recovering from weekend tornadoes that killed 12 pco'p le.

Monday night, but the sources
said the company was preparing
to make the initial findings p,ublic
as early as Tuesday.
The company's recall, which
began in Augtist, is one of the
largest in U.S. history. The tire
problems have been subject to
high -profile congressional· hearings and investigation and
prompted Congress to pass an
overhaul of U.S. tire safety regulations.
As reports of traffic deaths
mounted over the summer, the
company was unable to explain
why so many tires came apart on
the road.
The report backs up the company's contention that the problen1 is concentrated in Decatur,
and it will provide ammunition
against some safety officials' suggestions for a broader recall.
The current recall is concentrated on - .- though not limited
to - tires made in Decatur.
In its report, Firestone blames
the failures on a complex combination of factors, including temperature and type of climate
they're used in, loading of the
vehicles, speed, place of manufacture, shoulder design and tread
design.
And Fi"'stone still insists that
the lower inflation pressure recommended by Ford Motor Co.
played a role in the tire failures.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Against this backdrop, many
Federal Reserve, in. the face of private economists believe the
slowing economic growth, is Fed's chief policy setting group,
prepared to shift its main focus the Federal Open Market Comaway from fighting inflation to mittee, will change the wording
guarding against a sluggish econ- of its policy statement as a precursor to outright rate curs startomy.
The Federal Reserve, worried ing possibly as soon as January.
that the red-hot economy was The last time the Fed cut rates
growing too fast and could spark was in I 998 in response to the
an upward spiral in prices, boost- global economic slowdown triged short-term interest rates six gered by A&gt;ia's financial crisis.
The committee, composed of
times between _June 1999 and
May of this year.
Fed board members and regional
Economists ·said the rare bank presidents, was scheduled to
increases have worked to slow meet privately Tuesday to discuss
the economy, which g'rew at an interest rate policy. An afternoon
annual rate of 2.4 percent in the announcement was expected.
Analysts predicted the Fed
third quarter, the weakest pace in
four years. The slowdown is will change its current stance that
helping to keep inflation under is tilted toward higher interest
control.
rates because inflation poses the
Consumer prices rose at an greatest risk to the economy.
Some analysts believe policy· annual rate of 3.5 percent in the
first II months of the year,- com-· makers will shift to a neutral
pared with a 2.7 percent increase position, which would assume
for all of 1999. But the pickup the risks of inflation are no
comes from surging energy · greater than the risks · of the
prices, which most economists economy's
stalling.
Others
believe will ease in coming thought the Fed could move to a
months.
stance weighted toward the
Fed
Chairman
Alan threat of a recession .
Greenspan, telegraphing a major
Either shift, econQmists uid,
shift in Fed thinking in a speech puts the Fed in a position to
rwo weeks ago, said he believed lower the federal funds rate if the
the ecot!'otn.y had slowed "appre- economy shows serious signs of
ciably" and signaled that h'e stood weakness. The funds rate, the
ready to cut interest rates should interest banks charge each other,
the economy show signs of slip- now stands at a nine-year high '?f
ping into a recession.
6.5 percent.

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DtctMan 29'CII, D41LY Stwnwtt.
h's TIMt To SAY HAPPY HIW VIAR!

Page 81
TllesUy, D•u•b• 11,1DGO.

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DEADLINE: Wednesday, December ·27

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---------·-----·-----------·-----·-·-·-·-·---·-·--

Jackson
rolls past ·
Point ·

HIGHLIGHTS
·Prep Hoops

BY SCOTT WOLF£
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Glrlo
TVC
Ohio Dlvlolon
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville· York
Wellston

lVC

AU

5-0

6-2
5-1
3-4
4·5
2-5
2·6

4-1

3-2
2·3
1-4
0·5

Hocking Dlvlolon
lVC

ALL

Eastern
5-o ·s-1
Federal Hocking
3·2 3-3
Waterford
3-2 3-3
Soulhem
2·3 4-4
Trimble
2·3 2-6
Miller
0-5 0·7
Monday'o Games
Eastern 54, Southern 52
Alexander 68, Meigs 63
Belpre 58, Nelsonville-York 44
Federal Hocking 63, Trimble 44
Vinton County 50, Wellston 44
Waterford 71, Miller 21
Wednesday's Games
'Eastern at Nelsonville-York .
Waterford at Fort frye

SEOAL
SEO - ALL

Jackson
3-1 6-1.
Athens
3· t
5· 1
Marietta
3·1 5· 1
Galli a Academy
2-2 3-3
Warren
2·2 3·2
Logan
.
1·3 2-4
Point Pleasant
1-3 1-4
River Valley
1·3 1-6
Monday's Games
River Valley 54, Gallia Academy 43
Jackson 76, Point Pleasant 52
Warren 68, Athens 53
·
Today's Games
Marietta at Berea (Ky.) Holiday Classic
Wednesday's Garnes
Marietta at Berea (Ky.) Holiday Classic
Roane County at Point Pleasant

RACINE, Ohio -A pair of
Sara Mansfield free throws
with :15 seconds remaining
sealed the victory for the Eastern Eagles, who posted a 5452 hard-fought trimhph over
the rival Southern Tornadoes
Monday night in an \mportant
Tri-Valley Confereoce Hocking Division girls basketball
contest.
Eastern is now in sole,
undisputed possession of first
place in the league's Hocking
division at S-0, 5-1 overall.
Southern drops to 2-3, 4-4
overall after dropping their
fourth straight game.
"They (Southern) shot the
daylights out of the ball," uid
Eastern coach Paul Brannon.
"They really proved they
could play tonight. We knew
from the start we would have a
game on our hands."
"The key to our success was
being patient, getting good
shot selection, and getting it
inside to our · strengths," said
Brannon. "It was a another
great team effort. Our girls
know that no one on this team
has to do it all themselves. Our
inside game was strong and
Amber Baker· ran the point
very welL She hit . a couple
· early threes and that forced
Southern to come out and
respect our outside game."

Please see TVC, Pace BJ

BY DAN Pol.cYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

IN CHARGE- Eastern's Amber Baker (23) brings the ball up the court in Monday's 54-52 win .over
Southern. (Scott Wolfe photo)

Araa non-laague
ALL

Raiders upset Angels in SEOAL thrill~r

Wahama
5·0
Ohio Valley Christian
3·0
South Gallia
1·5
Hannan
0·3
Monday's G•me
Duval 79, Hannan 56
Today's Games
Buffalo at Wahama
Hannan at Grace Christian
Wednesday's Game '
Hamlin at Wahama .

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
GALLIPOLJS ~ There's no better way to

Boys
TVC
Today's Games
Alexander at Belpre
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Vinton County at Meigs
Trimble at Miller
Nelsonville- York at Wellston
Waterford at Southern
Friday's Games
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Belpre at Warren
· Wheelersburg at Meigs
Southern at Wahama
Southeastern- at Vinton County
Waterford at Shenandoah
Today's Games
Gallia Academy at River Valley (at
URG)
Jackson at Point _Pieasant
Warren at Athens
Logan at Marietta
Thursday's Game
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley tourney
Friday's Games
Gallia Academy at Fairland
Rock Hill at River Valley
Marietta at Chillcothe
Belpre at Warren
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley tourney ·

.

MtMatU, oa co•wouns WUII4ti4D

111

Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

Area non-league
. Today's Games
,
South Gallia at Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan at Buffalo
Friday's Gamas
Southern at Wahama
South G!lllia at Raceland
'

Let's Hear It Far 2DD 1!

YOUI

The Daily Sentinel

SEOAL

rientl~

ne~

Inside:

Redwomen fall
to W. Montana
HILO, Hawaii - Misry Covington scored 26 points to lead
Western Montana to a 68-64
overtime wln over Rio Grande
f'1onday night in the Coconut
Coast Classic in Hila, Hawaii.
Bobbi Suhr added 20 points
and 11 rebounds for Western
Montana.
Kadey Mohh;r led the Redwomen with 19 points and IS
rebounds. Mindy Pope added 13
points and seven rebounds. Emily
Cooper had 11 points and five
assists.
,
Renee Turley came off the
bench to score eight poin,ts for
the Redwomen . Sarah Ward
added seven points, four assists
and three rebounds.

snap a long losing streak than to beat your
archrival on their home floor.
At least that's what
River Valley head coach
Tom Weaver and his ballclub thought after the
Raiders ended a sixgame skid with a 54-43
victory over Gallia Academy Monday.
River Valley
( 1-6,
SEOAL 1-3), which
trailed just once in the
Watkin&amp;
entire game, turned in
17 points
what Weaver described as
its best performance of the season.
"I told them, 'let's give ourselves a Christmas gift,"' Weaver said. "Any win is good,·
but some teams that yoll beat, the win is a

Tampa
topples the

little more special. Obviously, Gallipolis is a
natural .rival. Doth teams want to win as
much as the other. It just worked out for us
tonight.''
Weaver said his club entered play Monday
with a newfound confidence following a
controversial 64-63 over,time loss to Logan
last Thursday; a game that he though-t his
club should have won .
"The girls gained a lot of confidence in
themselves from Thursday night 's game,"
Weaver said. "That's a game th~t we found a
way to lose. Tonight, I told them as the
fourth quarter started, 'let's wln this quarter.'
I reminded them about Thursday. I told
them, 'let's find a way to win.' They played
four good quarters tonight.''
The Raiders jumped on the Blue Angels
from the outset. Senior Cynthia Ward set
the tone just 16 seconds into the game by
hitting a 3-pointer that further bolstered

River Valley's confidence. Ward scored seven
points in the first quarter as the Raiders
took a 16-7 lead.
With R.iver Valley leading 11 -4 in' the
opening period , Gallia Academy's Brianna
Johnson knocked down a 3-pointer with
1:3S to play that cut the gap to 11-7, but
Julia Mollohan drilled a trey 12 seconds
later to give the Raiders a 14-7 cushion.
Ni cole Watkins then hit a jumper with 24
seconds left to push the Raider lead to nine
points.
Gallia Academy (3-3, SEOAL 2-2) slowly
chipped away at the R.iver Valley lead in the
second quarter, ev~ntually whittling it down
to just four pomts at halftime. Meredith
Addington led a 6-3 run to close th e half
that reduced River Valley's advantage to 2420.
Addington had three points, while John-

please see Raiders, Page BJ

Alexander defeats Meigs 68-63
Marauders lose despite another 30+
game .from Vining

Rams
TAMPA, Fla. (APf- The
St. Louis Rams could not
defend Warri ck Dunn, Shaun
King and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and now might not
get a chance to defend their
Super Bowl title.
·
Dunn scored his third
touchdown with 48 seconds
remaining and the Buccaneers
clinched a playoff spot,
outscoring the Rams · 38-35
Monday night and leaving St.
Louis needing help to make
the postseason.
Marshall Faulk scored four
•
touchdowns for the Rams, but
it was not enough in a rematch
of last seamn 's NFC championship game won by St. Louis.
To reach the playoffs, the
Rams (9-6) need to beat New
Orleans next Sunday and hope
Chicago pulls an upset at
Detroit.
The win by Tampa Bay (I OS) also clinched the NFC West
for New Orleans. The Buccaneers can still win the NFC
Central with a victory at
Green Bay on Sunday and a

Please see Tainpa.Pace 86 .

JACKSON, Ohio - JacJ?on
guard Beth f--!owe scored a gome
high 22 points to lead the \ron
Ladies past Point Pleasant 76-S2
Monday
Howe scored 10 of those points
in a second quarter run which saw
Jackso n outscore the Lady Knights
34-6. She tallied two of the five Jackson treys in that period in
which the Lady Knights went fium
leading 14-12 to trailing 46-20 at
tl1e half
Point built a firo;t quarter lead on
the strength of inside play by center Bridget Nibert and the outside
shooting of Miranda Durst, both of
whom recorded six points apiece
in the opening fi-ame. Trailing 12' 8, Durst' hit a pair of jump shots
and Cassie Newell scored on a driving lay up to close out the period
with a six-point run and the lead.
In the second,Jackson shot 5-of8 fium three- point land. Other
than the treys, the Jackson field
goals in the period were all pointblank jumpers set up by defi: passes
from Howe and company or lay
ups following stolen passes. The
Lady Knights went through a pair
of thre.e-minute scoring droughts
in the second period.
Also fueling the Jackson run
were Hannah Evans, who hit a pair
nf treys in the second period, and
Carrie Cox, who tallied three short
JUmpers.
The Jackson faithful received a
bit of a scare midway through the
fourth quarter when Howe
appeared to injure her wrist. Jackson was leading 68-42 when the
injury occurred. No information
on the i'\iury was available afi:er the
game.
Nibert recorded her third consecutive double-double and her
second straight 20+ point game,
tallying 20. All nine of her field
goals were scored in the paine:
Three other Jackson players
(Hannah Evans, Brooke Walters
and Carrie Cox) scored 10 each to
round out the JacK.&gt;on effort. •
Cassie Newell and Miranda
Durst both scored eight for the
Lady Knights. Reserve guard
Amber Keefer scored seven.
Point (1-4, 1-3 SEOAL) steps
away fium league action to play
host to Roane County on
Wednesday night.
In the reserve game, Jackson
won 48-IS. Alicen Casto led Point
with five pomts.

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

COMIN'
-Meigs' Kayte Davis drives to the hoop in Monday's game &lt;Jgainpt Alexander. (Dave Harris photo)

ROCKSPRINGS-Jmie · Karr
and Shelly Bush combined for
48 points, to le ad Alexander a
68-63 win ove r Meib&gt;S before a
large crowd at Larry R . Mornso n Gymnasium.
The win ended a 31 game
home winning ~treak for the
Marauders, and overshadowed
another outstanding performance by M:lraudcr senior
Amber Vining.Vining poured in
3 1 points, it was her fourth
game. this season that the senior
has scored 30 points or better.
The Spartans jumped out on
wp 5-0, befu;e the? Marauders
got on the boards on 'Vining
three . Meigs took their only lead
of the nig ht when Vining
grabbed ;U1 defcmiw rebound
and went coast-coast for the layin for a 8-7 Meigs lead at the
2:2 1 mark .
Dut the Spart.ms went on a 82 run and took a' 15- 111 lead on
t.l pair of Josie Carr free throws
with five seconds kft.
In the 'econd period the

Spartans built up their largest
lead at 29-20 after a bench technical on Meigs with 4:02 left .
But the maroon and gold was
able w pull to within 33-28 at
the half when Vining hit one of
two from the line with 39 seconus left.
The Maraud ers battled back
and tied the game at ' 38-all
when Jaynee Davis scored
underneath and was fouled .
Davis hit the free throw with
4:44 left.
' But Shelly Bush answered
with a jumper for the Spartans
w put Alexander up by rwo. The
· Spartans built up a six point lead
when Bush scored back-to-back
buckets the la st coming with 48
seconds left for a 48-42 lead.
Vini11g scorL"d fi1r Meigs with 16
seconds left to pull Meigs to
with iii 41!-44 at the end of three·
periods.
The Spartans built up a SS-49
lead when Bush nailed a three
pointer with S:42 left. Vining
scored two straight 'buckets, the

Please see Melcs. Pap B:S

�-·
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Recess appoinb11ent filed
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - P"'sident Clinton announced the
"'cess appointment Monday of Suun Ness to the Federal Conllllumcauons Commission, after the Senate failed to act on her nomination to remain another term at the agency.
Ness was sworn in as FCC commissioner in 1994 and is the most
senior of the five commissioners. The president nominated her in
July 1999 to serve another term, but the Senate Conllllerce Committee, which oversees the FCC, has not voted on the nomination.
The Constitution gives the president power to make temporary
appointments during :. congressional recess. The appointment stands
until the end of the firsr session of the next Congress, in this case
until about this time in 200 I .
Ness is among three members appointed by Democrats. The
remaining rwo commissioners fill GOP seats. That is expected to
shift when the new administration is sworn in, during which
Republicans ·will take a majority in the five-member commission.

BeiiSouth plans equal benefits
ATLANTA (A~) - BellSouth Corp. has joined the ranks of
companies offering benefits to same-sex domestic partners of
employees.
The decision affects only management employees, who make up
about 26,000 of BellSoinh's 93,000 wotkers, BellSouth spokeswoman N echole Merritt said.
She said providing the benefits makes the company more attractive to potential employees.
"We have been looking at the business environment, and as we
become more competitive, we wanted to make sure we do everything we could to attract and "'tain a talented and diverse work
force," she said.
Typically, only 1 or 2 percent of employees sign up for domestic
partner benefits when they are offered, said Kim Mills, education
director at the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay and'lesbian
political organization.
About 3,600 mostly large companies offer the benefi.ts, she said.
BellSouth is the last of the former Baby Bells to ofler the benefits.

Nichols loses new trial bid
DENVER (AP)- Convicted Oklahoma Ciry bombing conspirator Terry Nichols lost his bid for a new trial after a federal appeals
court ruled the FBI did nor withhold crucial evidence.
The court also rejected Nichols' request to look at more of the
43,000 "lead sheets" developed by the government during the
investigation, saying Nichols failed to prove they _would help his
case.
· "Lead sheets" are used to record information taken during informal interviews or from callers.
The three-judge panel at the 1Oth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
said it was troubled by government decisions not to turn over some
evidence contained in the FBI lead sheets. However, the judges
agreed with the government and a district court judge that the
information would not have changed the outcome of Nichols' trial.
Nichols, convicted of involuntary manslaughter and conspiracy
charges, is serving a life ·sentence in federal prison. Separately, Timothy McVeigh was convicted of murder -and weapons counts and
sentenced to death .
The April 1995 bombing of the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma Ciry killed 168 _people and injured hundreds
more.
Nichols' ~ttorneys argued that it is not for the government to
decide the credibility or usefulness of the lead sheets, and the judges
agreed.
"Questions of credibility are properly for the jury, not for the
prosecution," the j udges said.
However, they agreed with the government's argument that none
of the evidence, most of which dealt with the elusive "John Doe 2"
some witnesses said they saw with McVeigh, proved that Nichols
was not involved in the bombing.

Cigarette prices rising
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Philip Morris Cos. Inc. and
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings have raised the wholesale price of
a pack of cigarettes by 14 cents a pack.
Philip Morris spokesman Michael Pfeil said the company
increased wholesale prices $7 per 1,000 ciga(ettes, or $1.40 per carton, effective Monday.
R.J. Reynolds spokeswoman Jan Smith said tl,e company nonfied
wholesale customers Friday that Reynolds would raise the price 14 cents on each premium-brand pack and 7 1/2 cents on private-label
cigarettes.
Neither Pfeil nor Smith would say how the increase might affect
retail prices.
"I can't say specifically because retailers put· their own price on
things," Smith said. "We have announced the price increase to our
customers." ·

Gore on nomination list
BOSTON (AP) -Vice President AI Gore is one of about SOO
people nominated for the presidency of Harvard University, according to the chairman of the university's presidential search committee.
"He'll go into o·ur pool and be considered seriously," Robert G.
Stone Jr., a senior fellow of the Harvard Corporatioi, which will
make the final choice, told The Boston Globe.
'Stone. however, made it clear Gore is unlikely to be selected.
"He doesn't have the academic and intellectual standing," Stone
said in an intervi ew published Tuesday.
Stone confirmed that four people have nominated Gore to succeed Neil L. Rudenstein, who plans to step down next summer.
Joseph S. Nye, dean of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, said the university was more likely to hire a nonpartisan
figure .
"He's an extremely bright man who has a Harvard degree, and
you can't get much better experience," Nye said. "But he hasn't
been in the academic world."
Gore graduated from Harvard in 1969.
Spokesmen for Gore could not be reached for comment, The
Globe reported.

Dad charged in infant death
PITTSBURGH (AP) -A man was charged with homicide for
allegeclly killing his 2-month-old daughter by shaking her more
than 20 times because he was annoyed at ·her crying.
Destiny Wytm died Monday after being hospitalized Saturday
with a bleeding and swollen brain.
.Chad Willis Wynn , 21, was jailed Monday 9n charges of criminal
homiCide, aggravated assault and child endangerment. A preliminary
hearing was scheduled for Dec. 28.
Allegheny County Coroner Cyril Wecht said It would take I (J to
14 days to conduct tests on Destiny's bram to determine the extent
of the dam•ge .

'

Tuesday, December 19, 2000

Israelis and J»alestinians .reopen negotiations
Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami. The Palestinian
delegation includes senior negotiators Saeb
Erekat and Yasser Abed Rabbo.
The likely location is Bolling Air Force
Base in sourheast,Washington. But traditionally secret even about logistics, the State
Department declined to say.
"The parties are "'-engaging, and they've
asked us to be involved, and that's good,"
Clinton said Monday at the White House.
"But we're going to be on their timetable, so
I can't say for sure'' whe~er there would be
progress or if he would make a trip to the
region to try to clinch a deal.
''I'm willing, as always, to do whatever I

WASHINGTON (AP) Israelis and
Palestinians are reopening peace negotiations
with the calendar bearing down on President
Clinton, who is offering to help them reach a
settlement, possibly with a trip to the region
in his last weeks in office.
The rwo sides will set.the pace for the talks,
which begin with separate meetings for Israeli
and Palestinian delegations with U.S. mediators Dennis B. Ross and Aaron D. Miller.
Three-way talks appear likely later on, but
whether Clinton or Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright will participate is undecided.
The Israeli delegation is headed by Foreign

can, and I will do whatever I can. llut the
timetable will be up to them," Clinton said.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Justice Minister Yossi
Beilin, an ardent supporter of conceSSions to
the Palestinians, said he did not want to raise
hopes a deal was at hand. "But in my opinion,
the"' is a good chance to reach a comprehensive final status agreement, a framework deal,
in the next few weeks," he s_aid .
On the Palestinian side, Cabinet Minister
Nabil Shaath said he expected Israel to offer
.more than it did at the Camp David talks in
July hosted by Clinton. "I'm sure, I have no
doubt," Shaath said.

Bridgestone/Firestone links Fed expected to shift its
tire failures to design, plant focus away from inflation
WASHINGTON (AP)
Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. has
told government officials investigating 148 U.S. traffic deaths
linked to its tires that the problem
stems from a fanlry design and
unique manufacturing process at
its Decatur, Ill., plant, The Associ:
aced Press has learned.
More than four months after
beginning a recall of 6.5 million
tires, the Nashville, Tenn.-bascd
manufacturer is set to release its
preliminary findings as early as
Tuesday, two sources said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Specifically, company officials
told congressional investigators
and the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration that the
Decatur plant uses a different
process to mix rubber that has
resulted in the tread peeling off
the tire, causing the accidents, the
sources said.
One of the sources works on
Capitol Hill; the other is an official familiar with the report. Both
spoke late Monday.
The tire maker also told investigators there was a problem with
the wedge area of the tire,located
near the shoulder where the tread
meers the tire wall. Arid it continued to blame Ford Motor Co. for
recommending a lower inflation
pressure.
Bridgestone/Firestone officials
were not available for comment

Georgia again
jolted by snow
(AP) - . This is the sunny
South?
Another 3 inches of snow
blanketed northern Georgi'a
early Tuesday ,on the heels of a
wintry weekend of snow, ice and
bone-chilling ·temperatures ·in
much of the South and Midwest.
Temperatures in northern
Georgia were forecast to peak in
the 20s on Tuesday, with lows
near I 0 degrees - and wind
chills as low as zero. The snowfall was the region's second in
three days.
"We generally don't get snow
this early but we've been enjoying it," said Lewis Lane, who
works at Sky Valley Ski Re sort
in northeast Georgia.
More cold and snow were
also forecast Tuesday in neighboring Tennessee, where at least
28 of the state's 95 counties
closed schools Monday. Se~eral
schools announced that they
planned to stay closed Tuesday.
Elsewhere · in the South,
Arkansas Gov. Mike Hu ckabee
declared disaster areas in 41
counties nearly a week after
what state officials said was the
Worst ice storm in state history.
Some 40,000 homes were still
without power Monday.
"I 've j ust been quilting by the
light of the window during the
day and go to bed when it gets
dark," said Kitty Watson, 73,
whQse home has been without
ele ctrici ty since last week. "A nd
my goodness, I must've gained
10 pounds in the past week
cause you know, you bake when
you're bored ."
'In Alabama, freezing rain,
snpw and a second day of cold
closed dozens of schools Monday an,d sent homeless to shelters
across the state. The state was still
recovering from weekend tornadoes that killed 12 pco'p le.

Monday night, but the sources
said the company was preparing
to make the initial findings p,ublic
as early as Tuesday.
The company's recall, which
began in Augtist, is one of the
largest in U.S. history. The tire
problems have been subject to
high -profile congressional· hearings and investigation and
prompted Congress to pass an
overhaul of U.S. tire safety regulations.
As reports of traffic deaths
mounted over the summer, the
company was unable to explain
why so many tires came apart on
the road.
The report backs up the company's contention that the problen1 is concentrated in Decatur,
and it will provide ammunition
against some safety officials' suggestions for a broader recall.
The current recall is concentrated on - .- though not limited
to - tires made in Decatur.
In its report, Firestone blames
the failures on a complex combination of factors, including temperature and type of climate
they're used in, loading of the
vehicles, speed, place of manufacture, shoulder design and tread
design.
And Fi"'stone still insists that
the lower inflation pressure recommended by Ford Motor Co.
played a role in the tire failures.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Against this backdrop, many
Federal Reserve, in. the face of private economists believe the
slowing economic growth, is Fed's chief policy setting group,
prepared to shift its main focus the Federal Open Market Comaway from fighting inflation to mittee, will change the wording
guarding against a sluggish econ- of its policy statement as a precursor to outright rate curs startomy.
The Federal Reserve, worried ing possibly as soon as January.
that the red-hot economy was The last time the Fed cut rates
growing too fast and could spark was in I 998 in response to the
an upward spiral in prices, boost- global economic slowdown triged short-term interest rates six gered by A&gt;ia's financial crisis.
The committee, composed of
times between _June 1999 and
May of this year.
Fed board members and regional
Economists ·said the rare bank presidents, was scheduled to
increases have worked to slow meet privately Tuesday to discuss
the economy, which g'rew at an interest rate policy. An afternoon
annual rate of 2.4 percent in the announcement was expected.
Analysts predicted the Fed
third quarter, the weakest pace in
four years. The slowdown is will change its current stance that
helping to keep inflation under is tilted toward higher interest
control.
rates because inflation poses the
Consumer prices rose at an greatest risk to the economy.
Some analysts believe policy· annual rate of 3.5 percent in the
first II months of the year,- com-· makers will shift to a neutral
pared with a 2.7 percent increase position, which would assume
for all of 1999. But the pickup the risks of inflation are no
comes from surging energy · greater than the risks · of the
prices, which most economists economy's
stalling.
Others
believe will ease in coming thought the Fed could move to a
months.
stance weighted toward the
Fed
Chairman
Alan threat of a recession .
Greenspan, telegraphing a major
Either shift, econQmists uid,
shift in Fed thinking in a speech puts the Fed in a position to
rwo weeks ago, said he believed lower the federal funds rate if the
the ecot!'otn.y had slowed "appre- economy shows serious signs of
ciably" and signaled that h'e stood weakness. The funds rate, the
ready to cut interest rates should interest banks charge each other,
the economy show signs of slip- now stands at a nine-year high '?f
ping into a recession.
6.5 percent.

•

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---------·-----·-----------·-----·-·-·-·-·---·-·--

Jackson
rolls past ·
Point ·

HIGHLIGHTS
·Prep Hoops

BY SCOTT WOLF£
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Glrlo
TVC
Ohio Dlvlolon
Alexander
Meigs
Belpre
Vinton County
Nelsonville· York
Wellston

lVC

AU

5-0

6-2
5-1
3-4
4·5
2-5
2·6

4-1

3-2
2·3
1-4
0·5

Hocking Dlvlolon
lVC

ALL

Eastern
5-o ·s-1
Federal Hocking
3·2 3-3
Waterford
3-2 3-3
Soulhem
2·3 4-4
Trimble
2·3 2-6
Miller
0-5 0·7
Monday'o Games
Eastern 54, Southern 52
Alexander 68, Meigs 63
Belpre 58, Nelsonville-York 44
Federal Hocking 63, Trimble 44
Vinton County 50, Wellston 44
Waterford 71, Miller 21
Wednesday's Games
'Eastern at Nelsonville-York .
Waterford at Fort frye

SEOAL
SEO - ALL

Jackson
3-1 6-1.
Athens
3· t
5· 1
Marietta
3·1 5· 1
Galli a Academy
2-2 3-3
Warren
2·2 3·2
Logan
.
1·3 2-4
Point Pleasant
1-3 1-4
River Valley
1·3 1-6
Monday's Games
River Valley 54, Gallia Academy 43
Jackson 76, Point Pleasant 52
Warren 68, Athens 53
·
Today's Games
Marietta at Berea (Ky.) Holiday Classic
Wednesday's Garnes
Marietta at Berea (Ky.) Holiday Classic
Roane County at Point Pleasant

RACINE, Ohio -A pair of
Sara Mansfield free throws
with :15 seconds remaining
sealed the victory for the Eastern Eagles, who posted a 5452 hard-fought trimhph over
the rival Southern Tornadoes
Monday night in an \mportant
Tri-Valley Confereoce Hocking Division girls basketball
contest.
Eastern is now in sole,
undisputed possession of first
place in the league's Hocking
division at S-0, 5-1 overall.
Southern drops to 2-3, 4-4
overall after dropping their
fourth straight game.
"They (Southern) shot the
daylights out of the ball," uid
Eastern coach Paul Brannon.
"They really proved they
could play tonight. We knew
from the start we would have a
game on our hands."
"The key to our success was
being patient, getting good
shot selection, and getting it
inside to our · strengths," said
Brannon. "It was a another
great team effort. Our girls
know that no one on this team
has to do it all themselves. Our
inside game was strong and
Amber Baker· ran the point
very welL She hit . a couple
· early threes and that forced
Southern to come out and
respect our outside game."

Please see TVC, Pace BJ

BY DAN Pol.cYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

IN CHARGE- Eastern's Amber Baker (23) brings the ball up the court in Monday's 54-52 win .over
Southern. (Scott Wolfe photo)

Araa non-laague
ALL

Raiders upset Angels in SEOAL thrill~r

Wahama
5·0
Ohio Valley Christian
3·0
South Gallia
1·5
Hannan
0·3
Monday's G•me
Duval 79, Hannan 56
Today's Games
Buffalo at Wahama
Hannan at Grace Christian
Wednesday's Game '
Hamlin at Wahama .

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
GALLIPOLJS ~ There's no better way to

Boys
TVC
Today's Games
Alexander at Belpre
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Vinton County at Meigs
Trimble at Miller
Nelsonville- York at Wellston
Waterford at Southern
Friday's Games
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Belpre at Warren
· Wheelersburg at Meigs
Southern at Wahama
Southeastern- at Vinton County
Waterford at Shenandoah
Today's Games
Gallia Academy at River Valley (at
URG)
Jackson at Point _Pieasant
Warren at Athens
Logan at Marietta
Thursday's Game
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley tourney
Friday's Games
Gallia Academy at Fairland
Rock Hill at River Valley
Marietta at Chillcothe
Belpre at Warren
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley tourney ·

.

MtMatU, oa co•wouns WUII4ti4D

111

Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

Area non-league
. Today's Games
,
South Gallia at Ohio Valley Christian
Hannan at Buffalo
Friday's Gamas
Southern at Wahama
South G!lllia at Raceland
'

Let's Hear It Far 2DD 1!

YOUI

The Daily Sentinel

SEOAL

rientl~

ne~

Inside:

Redwomen fall
to W. Montana
HILO, Hawaii - Misry Covington scored 26 points to lead
Western Montana to a 68-64
overtime wln over Rio Grande
f'1onday night in the Coconut
Coast Classic in Hila, Hawaii.
Bobbi Suhr added 20 points
and 11 rebounds for Western
Montana.
Kadey Mohh;r led the Redwomen with 19 points and IS
rebounds. Mindy Pope added 13
points and seven rebounds. Emily
Cooper had 11 points and five
assists.
,
Renee Turley came off the
bench to score eight poin,ts for
the Redwomen . Sarah Ward
added seven points, four assists
and three rebounds.

snap a long losing streak than to beat your
archrival on their home floor.
At least that's what
River Valley head coach
Tom Weaver and his ballclub thought after the
Raiders ended a sixgame skid with a 54-43
victory over Gallia Academy Monday.
River Valley
( 1-6,
SEOAL 1-3), which
trailed just once in the
Watkin&amp;
entire game, turned in
17 points
what Weaver described as
its best performance of the season.
"I told them, 'let's give ourselves a Christmas gift,"' Weaver said. "Any win is good,·
but some teams that yoll beat, the win is a

Tampa
topples the

little more special. Obviously, Gallipolis is a
natural .rival. Doth teams want to win as
much as the other. It just worked out for us
tonight.''
Weaver said his club entered play Monday
with a newfound confidence following a
controversial 64-63 over,time loss to Logan
last Thursday; a game that he though-t his
club should have won .
"The girls gained a lot of confidence in
themselves from Thursday night 's game,"
Weaver said. "That's a game th~t we found a
way to lose. Tonight, I told them as the
fourth quarter started, 'let's wln this quarter.'
I reminded them about Thursday. I told
them, 'let's find a way to win.' They played
four good quarters tonight.''
The Raiders jumped on the Blue Angels
from the outset. Senior Cynthia Ward set
the tone just 16 seconds into the game by
hitting a 3-pointer that further bolstered

River Valley's confidence. Ward scored seven
points in the first quarter as the Raiders
took a 16-7 lead.
With R.iver Valley leading 11 -4 in' the
opening period , Gallia Academy's Brianna
Johnson knocked down a 3-pointer with
1:3S to play that cut the gap to 11-7, but
Julia Mollohan drilled a trey 12 seconds
later to give the Raiders a 14-7 cushion.
Ni cole Watkins then hit a jumper with 24
seconds left to push the Raider lead to nine
points.
Gallia Academy (3-3, SEOAL 2-2) slowly
chipped away at the R.iver Valley lead in the
second quarter, ev~ntually whittling it down
to just four pomts at halftime. Meredith
Addington led a 6-3 run to close th e half
that reduced River Valley's advantage to 2420.
Addington had three points, while John-

please see Raiders, Page BJ

Alexander defeats Meigs 68-63
Marauders lose despite another 30+
game .from Vining

Rams
TAMPA, Fla. (APf- The
St. Louis Rams could not
defend Warri ck Dunn, Shaun
King and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and now might not
get a chance to defend their
Super Bowl title.
·
Dunn scored his third
touchdown with 48 seconds
remaining and the Buccaneers
clinched a playoff spot,
outscoring the Rams · 38-35
Monday night and leaving St.
Louis needing help to make
the postseason.
Marshall Faulk scored four
•
touchdowns for the Rams, but
it was not enough in a rematch
of last seamn 's NFC championship game won by St. Louis.
To reach the playoffs, the
Rams (9-6) need to beat New
Orleans next Sunday and hope
Chicago pulls an upset at
Detroit.
The win by Tampa Bay (I OS) also clinched the NFC West
for New Orleans. The Buccaneers can still win the NFC
Central with a victory at
Green Bay on Sunday and a

Please see Tainpa.Pace 86 .

JACKSON, Ohio - JacJ?on
guard Beth f--!owe scored a gome
high 22 points to lead the \ron
Ladies past Point Pleasant 76-S2
Monday
Howe scored 10 of those points
in a second quarter run which saw
Jackso n outscore the Lady Knights
34-6. She tallied two of the five Jackson treys in that period in
which the Lady Knights went fium
leading 14-12 to trailing 46-20 at
tl1e half
Point built a firo;t quarter lead on
the strength of inside play by center Bridget Nibert and the outside
shooting of Miranda Durst, both of
whom recorded six points apiece
in the opening fi-ame. Trailing 12' 8, Durst' hit a pair of jump shots
and Cassie Newell scored on a driving lay up to close out the period
with a six-point run and the lead.
In the second,Jackson shot 5-of8 fium three- point land. Other
than the treys, the Jackson field
goals in the period were all pointblank jumpers set up by defi: passes
from Howe and company or lay
ups following stolen passes. The
Lady Knights went through a pair
of thre.e-minute scoring droughts
in the second period.
Also fueling the Jackson run
were Hannah Evans, who hit a pair
nf treys in the second period, and
Carrie Cox, who tallied three short
JUmpers.
The Jackson faithful received a
bit of a scare midway through the
fourth quarter when Howe
appeared to injure her wrist. Jackson was leading 68-42 when the
injury occurred. No information
on the i'\iury was available afi:er the
game.
Nibert recorded her third consecutive double-double and her
second straight 20+ point game,
tallying 20. All nine of her field
goals were scored in the paine:
Three other Jackson players
(Hannah Evans, Brooke Walters
and Carrie Cox) scored 10 each to
round out the JacK.&gt;on effort. •
Cassie Newell and Miranda
Durst both scored eight for the
Lady Knights. Reserve guard
Amber Keefer scored seven.
Point (1-4, 1-3 SEOAL) steps
away fium league action to play
host to Roane County on
Wednesday night.
In the reserve game, Jackson
won 48-IS. Alicen Casto led Point
with five pomts.

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

COMIN'
-Meigs' Kayte Davis drives to the hoop in Monday's game &lt;Jgainpt Alexander. (Dave Harris photo)

ROCKSPRINGS-Jmie · Karr
and Shelly Bush combined for
48 points, to le ad Alexander a
68-63 win ove r Meib&gt;S before a
large crowd at Larry R . Mornso n Gymnasium.
The win ended a 31 game
home winning ~treak for the
Marauders, and overshadowed
another outstanding performance by M:lraudcr senior
Amber Vining.Vining poured in
3 1 points, it was her fourth
game. this season that the senior
has scored 30 points or better.
The Spartans jumped out on
wp 5-0, befu;e the? Marauders
got on the boards on 'Vining
three . Meigs took their only lead
of the nig ht when Vining
grabbed ;U1 defcmiw rebound
and went coast-coast for the layin for a 8-7 Meigs lead at the
2:2 1 mark .
Dut the Spart.ms went on a 82 run and took a' 15- 111 lead on
t.l pair of Josie Carr free throws
with five seconds kft.
In the 'econd period the

Spartans built up their largest
lead at 29-20 after a bench technical on Meigs with 4:02 left .
But the maroon and gold was
able w pull to within 33-28 at
the half when Vining hit one of
two from the line with 39 seconus left.
The Maraud ers battled back
and tied the game at ' 38-all
when Jaynee Davis scored
underneath and was fouled .
Davis hit the free throw with
4:44 left.
' But Shelly Bush answered
with a jumper for the Spartans
w put Alexander up by rwo. The
· Spartans built up a six point lead
when Bush scored back-to-back
buckets the la st coming with 48
seconds left for a 48-42 lead.
Vini11g scorL"d fi1r Meigs with 16
seconds left to pull Meigs to
with iii 41!-44 at the end of three·
periods.
The Spartans built up a SS-49
lead when Bush nailed a three
pointer with S:42 left. Vining
scored two straight 'buckets, the

Please see Melcs. Pap B:S

�Tuesday, December 19, 2000

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

.

•

Meigs
,..,... Pltp 11

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and Flea Market

Apartments
lor Rent

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 bf 2 ba on cho ce 1o 304 736

AMAZING METABILISM B eak

7295

Ti ough!ll

550

Subscnbe today
992 2156

Bulldtng
Supplies
..

1008icoottac buvers com
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREO T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 90 180 DAYS 1 888

811 0902
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
App ca on w se v ce Reduce
peymen1s o 6So/,
CASH N
CENTIVE
OFFER
www deb ccs o g Ca
800 328
8510 ex 29
PH 0-TQ.G.R-A P H-Y
Ma n St Pholog aplly

511ManSt
Now open tor bu&amp;IMSS
Wedd ngs

Schu I New Gene a on 281180
4BR G ea Room Den The mo
pane W nctows 5 2 P
Roo
2116 Wa Is Save $6000 Spec al
P ce 01 $53 995 F ench C ty
Homes
Ga po s
Oh o
(740)446 9340 0
BOO 231
4467

F ench Town Apa ments Now
Accep ng App ICa ons Fo
BR
FMHA Subs d zed Apa lments
Fo E de Jy And Hand capped
Equa
Hous ng Oppo tun ty

740)446-4639

en

P H--0 1=0 G A A PH Y
FAMILYTOGETHER OVER THE
HOI. DAYS 1
A WONDERFUL T ME TO BE
PHOTOGRAPHEOTOGETHEA
AT
MAN STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
5 1 MAIN ST PT PLEASANT
30H751279
'ltltJ M'6fl10,_, Are Ov 8u•lfltm

Gacous vng 1 and 2 bed oom
tmenls a V age Mana and
Rve sde Apa ments n Mdde
PO F om $273 $336 Ca 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo

apa

Schu P umwood 281168 3BR 2
Bath 2x6 Wa s The mopane
W ndows Den w Gas F ep ace
Mo n ng Room Off K chen Was
$6 400 Reduced To $52 995
F ench C y Homes Ga po s
Oh o 740 446 9340 0
BOO
23 4467

AkC

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even w 111
ess than pe ect c ed
800
477 9016 Code CES www orne

Reg ste ed Back
Lab
Pupp es Ready Decembe 23 d
F st ShO s And Wo med $250...
Each 740)446-4759

""--

Compe lve Wages GOOd BeneIS App~ AI SarlOs HI Coa
Company 38701 sa e Route 160
Hamden Oh o 0 Ca 740)38442 To Aeque5 An Appl catiOn
Fo m To Be Ma ed Resumes
Can BeMa ed D ectl~ To PO
Box 650 Hamden Oh o 45634

Qua y house c ean nos The
Ses Bonded P ofess ona Re
abe ca even ngs 740 256
3 o
888 78 24 2 ema
doubled@ au akanet com

AMER CAS
Su g ca
See
NEW 7 p y wa e ess se s
FETIME GUARANTEED No
rna ly $ 800 Sac c ng $399
FREE 5 ockpo oR e eel c sk
e) Checks COO VI MC AMX
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Fo fast reeutta call to fr1t

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6 Weeks Old
Vet
Checked 1s ShOts &amp; Wo med
(740)38~6 9 0 740)446 0390

Marl&lt; Yarnell

250-995-2644

un t~es
Open Your Own Casket Sto e
New F~OERAL RUL NCl
Now Makes Possible
Sma llnvealment Htgh Y ~d
No F ancnise Fees Call Today

110

Help Wanted

e na ana company needs su

GROW NG BUS NESS NEEDS
HELP wo k om home Ma a
de E Comme f8 $522 week
Pa T me $ 000 $4000 week FT
800 92 8539
www d eam
2bf ee com

pe so s ano ass sans Tan
g F ee book et Ca 800 892

S505 WEEKLY GRARANTEEO
WORK NG FDA THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PEA ENCE AE
au RED 8oo 748 57 6 EM

COMPUrER M'ERNET PERSONS

Ewn S2M1SIY fTom )'OUr PCI

-... """-.-- u illi'WII
-~

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; RebUI In Sock
Ca Ron E ans 800 537 9528

NTERNAT ONAL
COMPANY
NEEDS HELP w h Ma o de E
comma ce $500 $7000 mo PT
FT om home Fu
a n ng Fee
book e
920 924 6400
www Ach eveO earns com

to advert se any preference

K ddie Academy Learnmg Centers

advertisements to eal estate
which Is in vlo atlon of tne
law Our eaders are l'leret&gt;v
nformed tha all Owe ngs
advert sad in th s newspaper
are ava lab e on an ttQua
opportunity bas s

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don I Have land We Do Hu y
On y TO Los Le 304 736 7295

RENTALS

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Ba h Fu y Ca
pe ed Ad
Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease P us Secu ty Depos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 348
Even ng5 740 367 0502 740
446 010

.J Tram ng &amp; Finane al An • ance
.J
.J

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge nven o y D scoun P ces
On V ny S~ ng Doo s l/11 nd
ows A.ncho s Wa e Hea e s
P umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/benne

S [&lt;' St « on and Cumtu um
60K Liqwcl &amp; 250K Net Worth

1-800-554-3343
Call for a Free Franchise K1t

F ee boa ness ncorporatlon
IF1reocho,ck softwa e Acoept checks by tax

Tw n R ve Towe s now accept ng
app tea ons fo BA

o

HUD subs d zed apt o e de 'I
and d sabled EOH 304)675
6679

a ma I 800 306 0873 FaM

ID••mand 703 904 7770

doet4 3 Send

o Gov' PubliC&amp; ons Dept CR
025 Connectieut Ave N W Su te 10 2
0 C 20036 No Fee Aequ ed

REAL ESTATE

Business
Opportunity

p

St. ., on the

MERCHANDISE
510
$FINANCIAL FREEDOM$
FROM HOME
Ea n Si OK mo NO JOKE
00 Suppa
an ng o MLM
1 845-469a3963

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Household
Goods

"

Read the

,,

Classilled Ads

App ances.
Re cond
Washe s D ye s Aa ges Ae
g a o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May ag Ap
p ancas F ench C y May ag
740 446 7795

INOT CEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecommends ha yo do bus
ness w h peop e you know aM
NOT to send mo ey h ough he
ma un you have nves ga ed
heo eng

cunlnn ed,.•. ••

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NUMBER 673
WHEREAS the VIllage of
Pomeroy Is a duly
Incorporated Village under
the lawa of the State of
Ohio and
WHEREAS the VIllage of

Involving VIllage finances
and
WHEREAS the VIllage of
Pomeroy through said

Tappan H E c ency 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Haa Pump &amp; A Cond o ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Ye:a Wa an y
Be ne s Hea g &amp; Coo ng
800 872 596 www o b com ben

A L CASH CANOY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800 day? 30 mach nes
and candy $9 995
800 998
VEND
FL
A N2000 ~33
SC Aeg664
ALREADY HA LEO AS THE
MOST
EXPLOS VE
HOME
BUS NESS OPPORTUN TY N
H STORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EARLY NCOME PA 0
WEEK Y 888 858 9336
OEEREFXR@W NCO NET

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 Whee 8 cy e 740 256- 293
New&amp; Used Fun u e
New 2 P ece L ng oom Su es
$399 Buy Se T ade

994 41180 Oakwood Mob e
Home On Ac e Lo Sep IC Sys
em &amp; Au a Wa e (740 367

620 Wanted to Buy
630

Livestock
720 Trucks lor Sale
989 Fu

74 4

S ze 4WO V8 Au

oma c Z7
S3000 740 245
5087 Col 740 339 2135

98 Ha ey 883 Hugge Back
6988 M es E11ce en Cond on
S8ooo 1740 589 eo73

760

Budget Prloed Tnnamlu ont
A Typu Access To Ov~t
0 000 T anam ss O"ll Tans 8
Caoes 740 246 6877 Co 339
3711

ARE YOl.'CCINNECTED'
OWN A COMPUTER? Pul
o
wo k $25 o $75 pe hou wo k ng
om home Aequas FREE de a s
www 9 success com

SERVICES
810

Gene a
Home Ma n
tenence Pan ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob e hOme epa and mo a Fo
I ee es ma e ca Che 740 992
6323

to
No s landma k 28lC60 Den w
F ep ace The mopane W na
ows Ell a K chan Cab ne s
Sa e P ce $48 995 Fe ch c y
Homes
Ga PO I
Oh o
740)446 9340 0
800 23
4467

230

Profenlonal
Services

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
of ce s
ecessa y Up o $500
ns an y Ca o ee 877 EAR
LYP,ft,Y
s ADVANCE FREE
l c '175005

TRANSPORTATION
3 STEEL BU LD NGS YA END
24Jt36 was $8 900 se $3 900
40x54 was S 3 860 se $5 860
50• 25 was $28 700
se
S 5 900 Can de ve Tom 800
392 7803

P ce Aeducaa $4200 To $3500
Mus Se
211~0 2 Bea oom
Needs To Be Mo ed 740 388
8002
Schu 32 W de 32x60 JBR Pus
Re ea 0 Mas e Bed oom Ae
duced $46 995 A F ench c y
Homes
Ga po s
Oh o
740 446 9340 0
800 23
4467

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ
Uncond ona fe me gua an ee
Lac a e e ences u n shed E s
ab &amp;hed 975 Ca 24 H &amp; (740
aoo 287 0576 Aog
446 0870
eaWaepootng

C&amp;C

ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
Up To
125 00 175 00/h PT FT
Ma Ode
888 248 05 5

Auto Parts &amp;
Accaaaorlea

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes wood
0 e om $2B9 o $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mo es Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Ho s g Oppo un y

t

SHS I
f 1l

Ita
duly by
elected
VIllage
Pomeroy
and through
~~~~~~~~~~:::t=~~~~~~~;;;~
Council wishes to be
740 Motorcycles
prudent on all fiscal matters

999 S tO 4&gt;4 I 4 000 M ao
V 8 Loaded I
49S 991 S 0
Automat c 575 ooo M aa SS 295
916 S 0 I 695 0 he Tucko
And Ca s TO Choose F om L
cenaed Moto Veh c e Dta e
S nco 995 COOK t-4DTDRS
(740 446~103

Pas a Jobs $48 323 00 y Now
h ng No expe e ce pad an
ng g ea bene s ca 7 days
800 429 3660 e)( J 365

a 10thcr double double \\lth a
game h1gh '3 poultS and 14
rebo mds
Dameile Spencer also had a
great game n pacmg the
Eagles arly &gt;ett11g 14 pou ts
overall and five rebounds
Senwr guard A nber Baker
tossed 111 ten pomrs but her
nam presence was felt mostly
n a pass ng/floor game that
netted her c&gt;ght asmts Bakers
groat post fe ds were a huge
part f Eastern s success
Souther 1 vas led b) another
bala 1 ed attack led by sopl o
11orc Rachel Chap mn vh
I d Souther 1 m t vo categor es
Vltl
[4 p liS Jid SX
1 bot nds
Br gctte Ba 1es
dde l 1 '\ &gt;I K t e C
t vel'
A1) [ e
0 e al
I
g::l 1
v ') 1 tl
l adcla&gt;gs th
I i •~ l
or

CHILD CARE FRANCHISE

I mite lon or d scrim nation
based on ace colo re ig on
sex fam Ia suuus or nat onal
or1g n or any ntent on to
make any sucn p ererence
mltatlon or dlscrtm nation

ARE YOU CONNECTED? NTEA
NET USERS WANTED $25 $75
HR PT FT www BeBossF ee com

OWN A COMPUTER? Pu
wo &gt; $500 $7500 mo
www home'lllo k n e ne com

performance that snared her

AI real estate adverts ng In
1h s rlewspape s subject to
the Fodo a Fair Hous ng Act
ot tee$ which makes " Uegal

AN ABSD UTE HUGE GOLD
M NE $4K $8K PER MONTH &amp;
NO SELL NG
W LL NOT ET
YOU FA L CALL NOW
SiB
465 0458

n e ne Users Wan eo

CLAIMS PROCESSOR
$2(}$40/11 polenlia
P ooeBAlng cia ms Is eaeyl
T am ng p 0111ded MUST own PC
CALL NOW 1 888 707 6735 ext 879

elected members are aware

Make Money
He p ng Peop e Race ve Gove n
man Ae unr:ts 'F ee De a s 24
h
eco ded message
800
449 4625 Ex 5700

$350 $150/WEEK
BIB 233 18

potential
compUter/modem

www casketro~ale com

7485 R chesYouOesel'\!8 com

$45 000 YR po en a 0 s need
pe op e o p ocess cams Mus
own compu e modem We a n
Ca
888 567 4886 ex 695

Proc:ess Clatms from hnrr1e

800 791-4169

Government
jobs
S
$33 00 pe hOu po en a Pa d
tan ng fu benef s Fo mo e n
ro ma on cal
888 674 9 50
8)( 3234

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Southern n 11t01 Ala1 ( t1 p
t , lt: Hrl'll
We had t&lt; r sp r
the ll ts le 11 ! Easter rc &gt;lly
pe 1ed It tp ns de l n pr 1d
f ott g1rls th ugh It 'as J
ga1 H.:
and c\i r)OIH::
stepped t 1p If we I ad am
vcakn4,;sscs ton ght 1t vas &gt; 1r
foul shoott g
I g1ve Eastern ail the credtt
1n the vorid it \\as a ga ne ot
sp~ed
vcrs1:1s
power
a 1d
tomght the speed won out
added Cmp
Eastern s Scac1e Watson led
the Eagles w1th a prolific post

10KADAY

310 Homes for Sale

210

GOVT POSTAL JOBS UP o
$38 741 YR NOW H RING FOR
)( MAS AND 200 PERMANENT
STATUS FREE CALL FOR AP
PL CAT ON EXAM NATION N
FORMAT ON FEDERAL H RE
FULL BENEFITS 1 800 416
07 2 42 000 RET A NG AS OF
JANUARY
2001 ALL L NES
OPEN 24 HOURS WWW GOV
ER~MENTPOSTALJOBS ORG

from Page 81

1~1111-2330

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Uness WeW n
, 888 582 3345

FINANCIAL
'

TVC

From $3 QOO.$t60 0001

Senors
Fam fy Portraits
Call or an appo nlment
304 675 7279

newspape wll no
knowing y accept

EXPERIENCED HEAVY EQUIP
MENT MECHANICI WELDER

last con111g off a T1ffany Quails steal to pull
Me1gs to wtthm 56 53 But once agam Bush who
seemed to answered every Me1gs shot wub one of
her own na1led another three potnter for a 59 53
lead w th 3 '7 I ft
Me1gs was able cut the lead back to three (66
63) when Pr1ce came up wtth a steal and lay 111
With ?3 seconds left But that was as close as the
Marauders woij]d get as Carr scored wtth 1' sec
onds left to end the scormg
Carr led the Spartans with 28 pomts Shelly
Bush added 20 mcludmg 10 down the stretch 1
the fourth pcnod Alexander h1t 24 of 51 from the
floor mciudmg two of 12 three pomters for 47 X
The lady Spartans went to the I ne ?6 t n es a 1d
hit 18 for 69)1, Carr had 12 ofthm 29 rebounds
a1 d ( arr a 1d Hanuil had three steals each of the&gt;r
t ms c ght Jet 111 Bush also had fi\ e of her team

Lose 0 200 Lbs Easy
Ou ck Fast 0 amat c Resu ts
1 00"4 Natu a Doc o Recom
mended
Fee
Samp es
(740)44 1982

Bad C ed t? $449 00 Down And
Move n New Homes A \1 ng
Da ~ 740)446-3384

Th~

l&lt;nowledge n E ec ~ea And A
Cond on ng P ete ad Serv ce
Ti uckfToos A soP e e able

70

440

Now On Sae
Non Van ed Gas Hea e s
3Paque Natua o LPGas
I 4995
Ca ngWh ePan $995Ga
(304)675-4084

Two Ceme e y Lots Fo Sale

Los n Cyber Space?
Con used Abou The lnte ne 7
Ge Help Now
900 226 2715 Ex 2 1
S:i! 99/m n Mus be 18
Serv U 6 9)645 8434

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash for ema n ng payments on
P ope rt Sold Mo tgages! Annu
t as Seltlemenlsl lmmed ate
Quo est Nobody bea s ou p IC
es Nal ona Con ract Buye s
800) 490 0731 8K 10 www na

320 Mobtle Homes
for Sale

PI nt Plul Herdwere

Oua y c oth ng and househo d
ems $1 00 bag sa e eve 'I
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day
900530

Web Hep

Professional
Servlcas

1 800·929-5753

(

For Me1gs Vmmg had 31 to lead the way Jayn•c
Davts added mne and Quails and Shannon l'n~
added etght each Metgs hit 22 of 60 from die"
floor mcludmg four of 16 three pomters for 37r,;:
Me1gs went to the !me 21 t1mes and htt 15 foi
71 Y, Me~gs had 17 rebounds led by Jaynee DaviS
with e1ght they had 17 turnover&lt; 11 steals led by
Pnce wtth four and e ght ass sts with !'nee chalkmg up four
Alexander IS a good club Marauder coach
Ron logan satd They have four starters back we
got beat up and down the floor and got beat on
the 2 3 We needed some people to step up and
they dtdn t
Metgs ran the record to 6 0 overall and 5 0 111,
the TVC w&gt;th a 38 36 JUnior vars ty wm Titzah •
Dodson led a balanced Me1gs attack W&gt;th mne
El1zabeth laPorte led Alexander With 19
Alexander ts now 6 2 overall and 5 0 tn the
TVC they will travel to Southern on Wednesday
Metgs drops to ' 1 overall and 4 1 11 the TVC
Mc1gs w1ll host F d rat Hock &gt;g o 1 Wednesday

compd t e Eost n So 1ther 1
g 11 t.::S
Am) lee &lt; f S thor
nd
( r c.: n a 1 'l W 1 t
t ltcrp:Ht
Dtudlc Sp, t 1 era l d bt ck
c,:[~ «.\Cl th
Xt [
1 fl ltl'S
f tl e f 11 e t h l An be 1
Baker dnll l t the p0111cr to
g
EHS a th e p nt lead
h 12
N t t be den ed
Br gett B r s d lied a three
tt the e1 d of the fran to tie
the gan eat h 15
B Tl e opened L p tl e SCCO I d
ca1 to wtth a trey llld sen or
Fallon Romh !';tVe Southern
the b&gt;ggest lead for e ther tea 1
31 °0 15
East rn then \\ent
on a~ R 0 run co npl n e Its of
a Baktr three a Baker dnve a
Spencer JU npcr from the
pa nt and a Watso free throw
That ga e Easter 1 a 23 20
d' antage
South en ca 1 e back to t1e
the game and from that po1nt
on no 01 e led by more than
two pomts Chapman Cum
110s Bar 1 s and Fryar earned
tl e ve gin for Soutl ern 111 the
third frame
vhlie Watson
do 11 nated the Eastern third
v th te 1 po 1 ts
Spe 1cer
Mansfield a 1d Baker also
dd d buckets
Late 1n the tlmd SHS ve 1t
t p ot a oast to coast dn\ c bv
Cu t&gt;llt 1S at 19 37
but
Spc1 cor added a tt rn tround
JU 1 pn
I Bake clue ded tl e
eedle to Wacs 1 for
ba &gt;g
b 'g pi ) th t g 1 gne Ea t
c &gt; th lcJd As t 1 '
01 e d 1
th
f
SHS t&gt;Jk
I
d
r I
h &gt;IS vlth
g th foil
r
~I ~ I tth
t

I

l

l

t

l ~

~

1.:

~1

7 o I

2000

Kathy

Clerk/freaaurer

Hysell

Jdhn w Blaannar Moycr
John F Muoaor Pruldent
(12) 12 19 2TC

up three g&lt;~~1 cs on Southern

now and t vo up on Federal
Hockmg n the league Aga n
tl1s was anotht:r great team
effort and a go d Vlll o 1 the
road
Easter hit ?0 41 for ~8 ~

p

[(l:

lt

Sot tl e 1 l1 t 1 '\ folo r
all I ttt &gt;g 0 I of ~8 t o s '
1I t
;; 4 of 9 at
of 3 ICC)
tl I 1 e

s

ga

rh
t II
I l E
Tl
N I

s\

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1

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t

11

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I

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I

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II

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t

-TRIVIA

after a lawful conviction

ahall relmburae the Vlllaga
at a rate of Seventy Dollars
($70 DO) lor each day of
Incarceration
Said reimbursement ahall
be made altar a finding by
the maglatrata that aald
person Ia financially able to
pay and reasonably has the
meana to do ao and thot
aa d Delandanl Ia not
Indigent
Thla ordinance provided
II receives the ma]orlly vote
tor paaaega ahall become
effective at the oarlleat
moment permitted by law
Duly paaaad lhla 4th day
ot Dec 2000
John W Blaattnar Mayor
Kathy Hysell Village Clark
John F MUIIIr
Prn dant of Council

v" d 11g a p1 tty go d J&lt; b
k p 11; a E tt &gt; t ba) E"t.
e t
had cash d 1 n onl!
t
golsC
~o~1alvn
t ge
In the Ia t r
t tt
t]d
lift)' x s
&gt;1s
Estern s
b kt:es L 1 n ch c.: stt:r that
the c
J g als " Wat~on
a d Sf &gt;C 1
orcJ at \Ill
Th ga 11
as t ed or ~o 45
H ~7 01 d It 4) 49 bcfor~
Ea rern took the I ad for good
51 ~9 n a W t o p&lt; st score
v1th 4 ) sec nds re na111ng
S uther 1 h t a three pm1t
r perhaps p1e nat rdy settmg
the stage for th galle to bt:
dectded at the I ne Mansfield
dra1ned both e ds of a one
and one '&gt;'Hh b seconds ('3
~9) then Sot thern s Lee iut
one; \ tth 1 1e s conds rema1n
ng So thern fotlcd mmed
acely send1 g Badev to tic I ne
vhere she h1t 0 1 e (o4 o1) and
Cun m ns h1t a bucket at the
buzzer for the 54 ' ' finale
ThiS may haH been the
nose 111portant ga ne of the
year sa td Brannon lt puts us

s

Public Notlca
lawful arrest or aa a ponally

that tho cost of housing
offendera has boon a
significant burden on tho
VIllage and
WHEREAS tho Village of
Pomeroy through oald
electod officials believes
thatlhlo oxpense should ba
borno by any prloonor with
the financial meano to pay (12112 t92TC
lor hlo or her own
Public Notice
Incarceration
NOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDINANCE NUMBER
ORDAINED THAT THE
871
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
WHEREAS lht Ohio
OF POMEROY STATE OF Rovlood Codo outhorlzoo
OHIO THAT:
tho Vlllogo Council to ool
Anyone
thot
Ia load lim to on any
lnoarceratod under tht dulgnattd atrello 1nd
WHEREAS tho VIllage
Council reoognlzoe tht
11 o Help Wanted
noed to rntrlot wtlghl
llmlto on oortoln Vlllaga
Stroot a
HOLIDAY
NOW THER!POA! B! IT
ORDAINED BY
THE
CASH!
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
With the holiday
OF POMEROY STATE OF
OHIO THAT:
aeaaon upon ua
A 18 000 pound (8 ton)
everyone needa extra
wolghl limit Ia hortby
cash We have many
doclorod to bo In tHact on
openings in our local
oil Strooto In lht VIIIIQI of
Pomeroy axclpl lor State
calling facility No
Hlghwayo
and Mulberry
experience necessary Avenue Thero
1holl bo no
Earn up to $15/hr F/1
exception• to thlt wtlght
limit oxoopt lor ttmporary
P(T &amp; temporary
wr
tton pormltolon granted
poaltlona available
by and obtolned lrom thl
now You let us know
Pomeroy Polloi Dopartmont
what you naed
All ordlnancn In conflict
herewith bo andth 11m1 ore
Daya/nlghts available
reoclndod ln1olar u tuch
Management
conlllctoxlltl
opportunities and
Thlo Ordinance ahall
bocomt tllectlvt at the
Madlcai/Dantal/401 K
oarlloot momtnl permitted
available lor lull time
bylaw
CALL
Duly Pa11od December 4

TODA'l START
TOMORROW!

flVC 3SSIS[5

t

Da• id Alan Gr1er became a
star fast Shortly afler graduat
ng he landed a lead role on

It

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6 (
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c 1 ccted on 5 of9 slots fr 1 th fi ld Sh ha 1
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sl
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11
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Molloh
11 adde 1 e ght p 1 t a d Ma c Dad ha I
Joh lSOn add d two free th o vs and Sarah Rus
x pomts a 1d se\ e 1 rc h u J Cl r st
B rd
sell h t 1 of 1 fot I shots do &gt;11 the stretch for
h pped n tl ree po s
GAHS
r hot s td
Rl\erVall y \\ s pu 1 p I th )
Molloha 1 kept the Ra1ders afloat v th !1\
I
th 1 k they
AHS
he
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1
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lk
1
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(
p01 Its n the second quart r ncl d g a rn Cia I
r butts a 1J
cat e to our I o sc r ad) t k ck
3 po lltCI at tl e 0 19 11ark that ga\e th R 1de
th y d1d a liCe JOb of 1
a 24 16 lead
Adk lS sa1d she tl &gt;ugl t I er cl b \ l r d) to
The Angds rall1ed to tie the score t 3 11
tur
1 the corner after takmg t1 I ad n the t t rd
mdwa) through the thtrd quarter vtt h Add11g
quarter b t vas dl&lt;:fP' &gt;ted vhen th A ge\s
ton hmtng the ty111g basket tt the 1 49 mark
Bmtany McDade gave the Rllders 1~ 31 le ttl c llldn t Jimsh the deal
We got the lead back J &gt;d vc \\ere al exc t d
w th two buckets over a 90 sc&lt;o 1d span
oftc se lis pr eJis
Add ngt&lt; n mt the g f 11 half with a JUmper a d then all 'fa s 1dde~
agat 1 Adk1&gt; sntd We I 1 t ot 1 ak th &gt;r
wtth 47 seconds left
(,all Acad"ny ope ted the fourt 1 Jl !fter v th lcfcns '&gt;rk t 1 gl t W 11 de bad 01 c dcu
s1 1 s a 1d to &gt;k so ne bad shot
a ( 2 IU1 to take It fir&lt;t !cod of the ga
Rus
J h l&lt;l 1 a I A ld ~t&lt; n dt fi I ctl \lth 11
sell pIt the Angels ahead 1) 37 with o 11 t pla)
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�Tuesday, December 19, 2000

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

.

•

Meigs
,..,... Pltp 11

MORE LOCAL SPORTS.

YOUR LOCAL TEAMS.
AIIP..-onal,
Announcemtlnt,
L.aat &amp; Found
Yard S1l11 and Wanted
ToOOAdl
Muel Bo Paid In Advllnco

Help Wanted

a•--

IRIBijNE QfAQUNE
2 00 p '1' the dly before
tho 1d la.to run S..nd1y &amp;

Mond1y odiUon 2:00 p m
Friday
SENTINEL OEiAQUNE

1 00 p m tho dly before

tho ad Ia to run.
Sunday &amp; Mond1y odltlon
1 00 p m Frid1y
REGISTER OfAQUNE,
2 daya before tho od lo to
run by 4 30 p m Soturdly
&amp; Monday odltlon 4 30

Thurad1y
Deodllnos subject to
chango duo to hQIIdoyo"

,

Rodtsp ngs Rehabitita on Cenle

w be starbng a class n January
10 t an nd v dua s who what to
become a stat• eated nu s ng
assis ani We a e seell ng c::and
dates who a e ca ng compas
slona ' and want to be a me~
of a g ea earn In e esled canol
dale5 shou d app y o Rock
sp ngs Rehab t tat on Center
36759 ~oekspr ngs Ad Pomeroy
OhiO 45769 attn Judy Ha LPN
P ogram Ins uclo o Sandy Bo
wen LPN 0 eclo of Slaff OeYe
opment Equal Oppo tun y Em

FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up o $18 65 hou Hi ng fo
2001
ee ca I lo apphca on/8)1
am nat on nfo mat on Fader a
H e Fu I Bene ts I 800 598
4504 e• ens on 1516 Bam 6pm

CSII

CLAIMS PROCESSOR $20 $401
h po ent a P ocess ng cia m' s
easy T a n n~ p ov ded MUST
own PC CALL NOW
888 S23
44 7e&gt;&lt; 864

ployo
URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors earn $35 to $45 tor 2 Of 3
hou s weekly Ca I Se a Tee 740
592 6651

nte ne Pe son Need
mA $125/ht Full
lffi8 Bonuses Paid Vacaborls
www weahhw hease com
1 888 28 -450

Compute

ad S7Sih Pa I

W&amp;W Construct on Needs La
bo e s Pay Based On E•P•

"""" Cal (740)318-9984
WILDLIFE JOBS $8 $ 9 HR
Fedt a benef ts Pa k Range s
Secur 1~ aM Ma n1enance No
e~~;pe lance o some Fo nlo cal
BQ0-39 5856 X0007 sam 9pm
Loca no1 guar

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

FREE DAT NG

STAAT

DATING

Ha e un mee ng e g ble s ngles

n you a ea Ca
ma on

o mo e no

800 ROMANCE ex

140

9735

Business

Training
0 ve s $32 000 $38 000

30 Announcements

st

Galltpollo co-r

yea No e11pe ence necessa y
15 dayCDLtanng Tu on em
bu se ment
qua fed eenel ts
40 K Ca
877 155 8424 Ex
pe enced d ve s ca t 800 260
0294 AC 0219

Collogo

(Ca eers C ose To Home)
Ca Todlly 740 446 4367
t BOO 214 0452
Reg 190 OS 2748

170 Miscellaneous
Baby Bed

Lealhe

So a New

S nge Sew ng Mach ne Aock ng
Ho se Desk and Hutch {304
675 2801

New To YouTh ft Shoppe
9 West St mson Athens
740-592 642

Me gs Memo e Ga dens Ca
(304)773 S892

180

40

Giveaway

Wanted To Do

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YR
Mad ca lnsu a nee B I ng Ass s
a nee Needed lmmed a e y Use
you Home compute ge FREE
n e net FFIEE lONG 0 S
BOO
TANCE Webs e E Ma
29 4683 Dep • 09

80

Yard Sale
Auction
and Flea Market

Apartments
lor Rent

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 bf 2 ba on cho ce 1o 304 736

AMAZING METABILISM B eak

7295

Ti ough!ll

550

Subscnbe today
992 2156

Bulldtng
Supplies
..

1008icoottac buvers com
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREO T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 90 180 DAYS 1 888

811 0902
FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
App ca on w se v ce Reduce
peymen1s o 6So/,
CASH N
CENTIVE
OFFER
www deb ccs o g Ca
800 328
8510 ex 29
PH 0-TQ.G.R-A P H-Y
Ma n St Pholog aplly

511ManSt
Now open tor bu&amp;IMSS
Wedd ngs

Schu I New Gene a on 281180
4BR G ea Room Den The mo
pane W nctows 5 2 P
Roo
2116 Wa Is Save $6000 Spec al
P ce 01 $53 995 F ench C ty
Homes
Ga po s
Oh o
(740)446 9340 0
BOO 231
4467

F ench Town Apa ments Now
Accep ng App ICa ons Fo
BR
FMHA Subs d zed Apa lments
Fo E de Jy And Hand capped
Equa
Hous ng Oppo tun ty

740)446-4639

en

P H--0 1=0 G A A PH Y
FAMILYTOGETHER OVER THE
HOI. DAYS 1
A WONDERFUL T ME TO BE
PHOTOGRAPHEOTOGETHEA
AT
MAN STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
5 1 MAIN ST PT PLEASANT
30H751279
'ltltJ M'6fl10,_, Are Ov 8u•lfltm

Gacous vng 1 and 2 bed oom
tmenls a V age Mana and
Rve sde Apa ments n Mdde
PO F om $273 $336 Ca 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo

apa

Schu P umwood 281168 3BR 2
Bath 2x6 Wa s The mopane
W ndows Den w Gas F ep ace
Mo n ng Room Off K chen Was
$6 400 Reduced To $52 995
F ench C y Homes Ga po s
Oh o 740 446 9340 0
BOO
23 4467

AkC

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even w 111
ess than pe ect c ed
800
477 9016 Code CES www orne

Reg ste ed Back
Lab
Pupp es Ready Decembe 23 d
F st ShO s And Wo med $250...
Each 740)446-4759

""--

Compe lve Wages GOOd BeneIS App~ AI SarlOs HI Coa
Company 38701 sa e Route 160
Hamden Oh o 0 Ca 740)38442 To Aeque5 An Appl catiOn
Fo m To Be Ma ed Resumes
Can BeMa ed D ectl~ To PO
Box 650 Hamden Oh o 45634

Qua y house c ean nos The
Ses Bonded P ofess ona Re
abe ca even ngs 740 256
3 o
888 78 24 2 ema
doubled@ au akanet com

AMER CAS
Su g ca
See
NEW 7 p y wa e ess se s
FETIME GUARANTEED No
rna ly $ 800 Sac c ng $399
FREE 5 ockpo oR e eel c sk
e) Checks COO VI MC AMX
DISCOVER B ochu es
800
928 7253

LOANSOAC
Fo fast reeutta call to fr1t

N&lt;C

Reg ste ad Golden Retre \18r
Pups
6 Weeks Old
Vet
Checked 1s ShOts &amp; Wo med
(740)38~6 9 0 740)446 0390

Marl&lt; Yarnell

250-995-2644

un t~es
Open Your Own Casket Sto e
New F~OERAL RUL NCl
Now Makes Possible
Sma llnvealment Htgh Y ~d
No F ancnise Fees Call Today

110

Help Wanted

e na ana company needs su

GROW NG BUS NESS NEEDS
HELP wo k om home Ma a
de E Comme f8 $522 week
Pa T me $ 000 $4000 week FT
800 92 8539
www d eam
2bf ee com

pe so s ano ass sans Tan
g F ee book et Ca 800 892

S505 WEEKLY GRARANTEEO
WORK NG FDA THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PEA ENCE AE
au RED 8oo 748 57 6 EM

COMPUrER M'ERNET PERSONS

Ewn S2M1SIY fTom )'OUr PCI

-... """-.-- u illi'WII
-~

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; RebUI In Sock
Ca Ron E ans 800 537 9528

NTERNAT ONAL
COMPANY
NEEDS HELP w h Ma o de E
comma ce $500 $7000 mo PT
FT om home Fu
a n ng Fee
book e
920 924 6400
www Ach eveO earns com

to advert se any preference

K ddie Academy Learnmg Centers

advertisements to eal estate
which Is in vlo atlon of tne
law Our eaders are l'leret&gt;v
nformed tha all Owe ngs
advert sad in th s newspaper
are ava lab e on an ttQua
opportunity bas s

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don I Have land We Do Hu y
On y TO Los Le 304 736 7295

RENTALS

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s
Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Ba h Fu y Ca
pe ed Ad
Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Pa o S a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease P us Secu ty Depos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 348
Even ng5 740 367 0502 740
446 010

.J Tram ng &amp; Finane al An • ance
.J
.J

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge nven o y D scoun P ces
On V ny S~ ng Doo s l/11 nd
ows A.ncho s Wa e Hea e s
P umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/benne

S [&lt;' St « on and Cumtu um
60K Liqwcl &amp; 250K Net Worth

1-800-554-3343
Call for a Free Franchise K1t

F ee boa ness ncorporatlon
IF1reocho,ck softwa e Acoept checks by tax

Tw n R ve Towe s now accept ng
app tea ons fo BA

o

HUD subs d zed apt o e de 'I
and d sabled EOH 304)675
6679

a ma I 800 306 0873 FaM

ID••mand 703 904 7770

doet4 3 Send

o Gov' PubliC&amp; ons Dept CR
025 Connectieut Ave N W Su te 10 2
0 C 20036 No Fee Aequ ed

REAL ESTATE

Business
Opportunity

p

St. ., on the

MERCHANDISE
510
$FINANCIAL FREEDOM$
FROM HOME
Ea n Si OK mo NO JOKE
00 Suppa
an ng o MLM
1 845-469a3963

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Household
Goods

"

Read the

,,

Classilled Ads

App ances.
Re cond
Washe s D ye s Aa ges Ae
g a o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May ag Ap
p ancas F ench C y May ag
740 446 7795

INOT CEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecommends ha yo do bus
ness w h peop e you know aM
NOT to send mo ey h ough he
ma un you have nves ga ed
heo eng

cunlnn ed,.•. ••

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NUMBER 673
WHEREAS the VIllage of
Pomeroy Is a duly
Incorporated Village under
the lawa of the State of
Ohio and
WHEREAS the VIllage of

Involving VIllage finances
and
WHEREAS the VIllage of
Pomeroy through said

Tappan H E c ency 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Haa Pump &amp; A Cond o ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Ye:a Wa an y
Be ne s Hea g &amp; Coo ng
800 872 596 www o b com ben

A L CASH CANOY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800 day? 30 mach nes
and candy $9 995
800 998
VEND
FL
A N2000 ~33
SC Aeg664
ALREADY HA LEO AS THE
MOST
EXPLOS VE
HOME
BUS NESS OPPORTUN TY N
H STORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EARLY NCOME PA 0
WEEK Y 888 858 9336
OEEREFXR@W NCO NET

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 Whee 8 cy e 740 256- 293
New&amp; Used Fun u e
New 2 P ece L ng oom Su es
$399 Buy Se T ade

994 41180 Oakwood Mob e
Home On Ac e Lo Sep IC Sys
em &amp; Au a Wa e (740 367

620 Wanted to Buy
630

Livestock
720 Trucks lor Sale
989 Fu

74 4

S ze 4WO V8 Au

oma c Z7
S3000 740 245
5087 Col 740 339 2135

98 Ha ey 883 Hugge Back
6988 M es E11ce en Cond on
S8ooo 1740 589 eo73

760

Budget Prloed Tnnamlu ont
A Typu Access To Ov~t
0 000 T anam ss O"ll Tans 8
Caoes 740 246 6877 Co 339
3711

ARE YOl.'CCINNECTED'
OWN A COMPUTER? Pul
o
wo k $25 o $75 pe hou wo k ng
om home Aequas FREE de a s
www 9 success com

SERVICES
810

Gene a
Home Ma n
tenence Pan ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob e hOme epa and mo a Fo
I ee es ma e ca Che 740 992
6323

to
No s landma k 28lC60 Den w
F ep ace The mopane W na
ows Ell a K chan Cab ne s
Sa e P ce $48 995 Fe ch c y
Homes
Ga PO I
Oh o
740)446 9340 0
800 23
4467

230

Profenlonal
Services

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
of ce s
ecessa y Up o $500
ns an y Ca o ee 877 EAR
LYP,ft,Y
s ADVANCE FREE
l c '175005

TRANSPORTATION
3 STEEL BU LD NGS YA END
24Jt36 was $8 900 se $3 900
40x54 was S 3 860 se $5 860
50• 25 was $28 700
se
S 5 900 Can de ve Tom 800
392 7803

P ce Aeducaa $4200 To $3500
Mus Se
211~0 2 Bea oom
Needs To Be Mo ed 740 388
8002
Schu 32 W de 32x60 JBR Pus
Re ea 0 Mas e Bed oom Ae
duced $46 995 A F ench c y
Homes
Ga po s
Oh o
740 446 9340 0
800 23
4467

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NQ
Uncond ona fe me gua an ee
Lac a e e ences u n shed E s
ab &amp;hed 975 Ca 24 H &amp; (740
aoo 287 0576 Aog
446 0870
eaWaepootng

C&amp;C

ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
Up To
125 00 175 00/h PT FT
Ma Ode
888 248 05 5

Auto Parts &amp;
Accaaaorlea

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes wood
0 e om $2B9 o $370 Wa k o
shop &amp; mo es Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Ho s g Oppo un y

t

SHS I
f 1l

Ita
duly by
elected
VIllage
Pomeroy
and through
~~~~~~~~~~:::t=~~~~~~~;;;~
Council wishes to be
740 Motorcycles
prudent on all fiscal matters

999 S tO 4&gt;4 I 4 000 M ao
V 8 Loaded I
49S 991 S 0
Automat c 575 ooo M aa SS 295
916 S 0 I 695 0 he Tucko
And Ca s TO Choose F om L
cenaed Moto Veh c e Dta e
S nco 995 COOK t-4DTDRS
(740 446~103

Pas a Jobs $48 323 00 y Now
h ng No expe e ce pad an
ng g ea bene s ca 7 days
800 429 3660 e)( J 365

a 10thcr double double \\lth a
game h1gh '3 poultS and 14
rebo mds
Dameile Spencer also had a
great game n pacmg the
Eagles arly &gt;ett11g 14 pou ts
overall and five rebounds
Senwr guard A nber Baker
tossed 111 ten pomrs but her
nam presence was felt mostly
n a pass ng/floor game that
netted her c&gt;ght asmts Bakers
groat post fe ds were a huge
part f Eastern s success
Souther 1 vas led b) another
bala 1 ed attack led by sopl o
11orc Rachel Chap mn vh
I d Souther 1 m t vo categor es
Vltl
[4 p liS Jid SX
1 bot nds
Br gctte Ba 1es
dde l 1 '\ &gt;I K t e C
t vel'
A1) [ e
0 e al
I
g::l 1
v ') 1 tl
l adcla&gt;gs th
I i •~ l
or

CHILD CARE FRANCHISE

I mite lon or d scrim nation
based on ace colo re ig on
sex fam Ia suuus or nat onal
or1g n or any ntent on to
make any sucn p ererence
mltatlon or dlscrtm nation

ARE YOU CONNECTED? NTEA
NET USERS WANTED $25 $75
HR PT FT www BeBossF ee com

OWN A COMPUTER? Pu
wo &gt; $500 $7500 mo
www home'lllo k n e ne com

performance that snared her

AI real estate adverts ng In
1h s rlewspape s subject to
the Fodo a Fair Hous ng Act
ot tee$ which makes " Uegal

AN ABSD UTE HUGE GOLD
M NE $4K $8K PER MONTH &amp;
NO SELL NG
W LL NOT ET
YOU FA L CALL NOW
SiB
465 0458

n e ne Users Wan eo

CLAIMS PROCESSOR
$2(}$40/11 polenlia
P ooeBAlng cia ms Is eaeyl
T am ng p 0111ded MUST own PC
CALL NOW 1 888 707 6735 ext 879

elected members are aware

Make Money
He p ng Peop e Race ve Gove n
man Ae unr:ts 'F ee De a s 24
h
eco ded message
800
449 4625 Ex 5700

$350 $150/WEEK
BIB 233 18

potential
compUter/modem

www casketro~ale com

7485 R chesYouOesel'\!8 com

$45 000 YR po en a 0 s need
pe op e o p ocess cams Mus
own compu e modem We a n
Ca
888 567 4886 ex 695

Proc:ess Clatms from hnrr1e

800 791-4169

Government
jobs
S
$33 00 pe hOu po en a Pa d
tan ng fu benef s Fo mo e n
ro ma on cal
888 674 9 50
8)( 3234

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Southern n 11t01 Ala1 ( t1 p
t , lt: Hrl'll
We had t&lt; r sp r
the ll ts le 11 ! Easter rc &gt;lly
pe 1ed It tp ns de l n pr 1d
f ott g1rls th ugh It 'as J
ga1 H.:
and c\i r)OIH::
stepped t 1p If we I ad am
vcakn4,;sscs ton ght 1t vas &gt; 1r
foul shoott g
I g1ve Eastern ail the credtt
1n the vorid it \\as a ga ne ot
sp~ed
vcrs1:1s
power
a 1d
tomght the speed won out
added Cmp
Eastern s Scac1e Watson led
the Eagles w1th a prolific post

10KADAY

310 Homes for Sale

210

GOVT POSTAL JOBS UP o
$38 741 YR NOW H RING FOR
)( MAS AND 200 PERMANENT
STATUS FREE CALL FOR AP
PL CAT ON EXAM NATION N
FORMAT ON FEDERAL H RE
FULL BENEFITS 1 800 416
07 2 42 000 RET A NG AS OF
JANUARY
2001 ALL L NES
OPEN 24 HOURS WWW GOV
ER~MENTPOSTALJOBS ORG

from Page 81

1~1111-2330

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Uness WeW n
, 888 582 3345

FINANCIAL
'

TVC

From $3 QOO.$t60 0001

Senors
Fam fy Portraits
Call or an appo nlment
304 675 7279

newspape wll no
knowing y accept

EXPERIENCED HEAVY EQUIP
MENT MECHANICI WELDER

last con111g off a T1ffany Quails steal to pull
Me1gs to wtthm 56 53 But once agam Bush who
seemed to answered every Me1gs shot wub one of
her own na1led another three potnter for a 59 53
lead w th 3 '7 I ft
Me1gs was able cut the lead back to three (66
63) when Pr1ce came up wtth a steal and lay 111
With ?3 seconds left But that was as close as the
Marauders woij]d get as Carr scored wtth 1' sec
onds left to end the scormg
Carr led the Spartans with 28 pomts Shelly
Bush added 20 mcludmg 10 down the stretch 1
the fourth pcnod Alexander h1t 24 of 51 from the
floor mciudmg two of 12 three pomters for 47 X
The lady Spartans went to the I ne ?6 t n es a 1d
hit 18 for 69)1, Carr had 12 ofthm 29 rebounds
a1 d ( arr a 1d Hanuil had three steals each of the&gt;r
t ms c ght Jet 111 Bush also had fi\ e of her team

Lose 0 200 Lbs Easy
Ou ck Fast 0 amat c Resu ts
1 00"4 Natu a Doc o Recom
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Th~

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(

For Me1gs Vmmg had 31 to lead the way Jayn•c
Davts added mne and Quails and Shannon l'n~
added etght each Metgs hit 22 of 60 from die"
floor mcludmg four of 16 three pomters for 37r,;:
Me1gs went to the !me 21 t1mes and htt 15 foi
71 Y, Me~gs had 17 rebounds led by Jaynee DaviS
with e1ght they had 17 turnover&lt; 11 steals led by
Pnce wtth four and e ght ass sts with !'nee chalkmg up four
Alexander IS a good club Marauder coach
Ron logan satd They have four starters back we
got beat up and down the floor and got beat on
the 2 3 We needed some people to step up and
they dtdn t
Metgs ran the record to 6 0 overall and 5 0 111,
the TVC w&gt;th a 38 36 JUnior vars ty wm Titzah •
Dodson led a balanced Me1gs attack W&gt;th mne
El1zabeth laPorte led Alexander With 19
Alexander ts now 6 2 overall and 5 0 tn the
TVC they will travel to Southern on Wednesday
Metgs drops to ' 1 overall and 4 1 11 the TVC
Mc1gs w1ll host F d rat Hock &gt;g o 1 Wednesday

compd t e Eost n So 1ther 1
g 11 t.::S
Am) lee &lt; f S thor
nd
( r c.: n a 1 'l W 1 t
t ltcrp:Ht
Dtudlc Sp, t 1 era l d bt ck
c,:[~ «.\Cl th
Xt [
1 fl ltl'S
f tl e f 11 e t h l An be 1
Baker dnll l t the p0111cr to
g
EHS a th e p nt lead
h 12
N t t be den ed
Br gett B r s d lied a three
tt the e1 d of the fran to tie
the gan eat h 15
B Tl e opened L p tl e SCCO I d
ca1 to wtth a trey llld sen or
Fallon Romh !';tVe Southern
the b&gt;ggest lead for e ther tea 1
31 °0 15
East rn then \\ent
on a~ R 0 run co npl n e Its of
a Baktr three a Baker dnve a
Spencer JU npcr from the
pa nt and a Watso free throw
That ga e Easter 1 a 23 20
d' antage
South en ca 1 e back to t1e
the game and from that po1nt
on no 01 e led by more than
two pomts Chapman Cum
110s Bar 1 s and Fryar earned
tl e ve gin for Soutl ern 111 the
third frame
vhlie Watson
do 11 nated the Eastern third
v th te 1 po 1 ts
Spe 1cer
Mansfield a 1d Baker also
dd d buckets
Late 1n the tlmd SHS ve 1t
t p ot a oast to coast dn\ c bv
Cu t&gt;llt 1S at 19 37
but
Spc1 cor added a tt rn tround
JU 1 pn
I Bake clue ded tl e
eedle to Wacs 1 for
ba &gt;g
b 'g pi ) th t g 1 gne Ea t
c &gt; th lcJd As t 1 '
01 e d 1
th
f
SHS t&gt;Jk
I
d
r I
h &gt;IS vlth
g th foil
r
~I ~ I tth
t

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1.:

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7 o I

2000

Kathy

Clerk/freaaurer

Hysell

Jdhn w Blaannar Moycr
John F Muoaor Pruldent
(12) 12 19 2TC

up three g&lt;~~1 cs on Southern

now and t vo up on Federal
Hockmg n the league Aga n
tl1s was anotht:r great team
effort and a go d Vlll o 1 the
road
Easter hit ?0 41 for ~8 ~

p

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Sot tl e 1 l1 t 1 '\ folo r
all I ttt &gt;g 0 I of ~8 t o s '
1I t
;; 4 of 9 at
of 3 ICC)
tl I 1 e

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-TRIVIA

after a lawful conviction

ahall relmburae the Vlllaga
at a rate of Seventy Dollars
($70 DO) lor each day of
Incarceration
Said reimbursement ahall
be made altar a finding by
the maglatrata that aald
person Ia financially able to
pay and reasonably has the
meana to do ao and thot
aa d Delandanl Ia not
Indigent
Thla ordinance provided
II receives the ma]orlly vote
tor paaaega ahall become
effective at the oarlleat
moment permitted by law
Duly paaaad lhla 4th day
ot Dec 2000
John W Blaattnar Mayor
Kathy Hysell Village Clark
John F MUIIIr
Prn dant of Council

v" d 11g a p1 tty go d J&lt; b
k p 11; a E tt &gt; t ba) E"t.
e t
had cash d 1 n onl!
t
golsC
~o~1alvn
t ge
In the Ia t r
t tt
t]d
lift)' x s
&gt;1s
Estern s
b kt:es L 1 n ch c.: stt:r that
the c
J g als " Wat~on
a d Sf &gt;C 1
orcJ at \Ill
Th ga 11
as t ed or ~o 45
H ~7 01 d It 4) 49 bcfor~
Ea rern took the I ad for good
51 ~9 n a W t o p&lt; st score
v1th 4 ) sec nds re na111ng
S uther 1 h t a three pm1t
r perhaps p1e nat rdy settmg
the stage for th galle to bt:
dectded at the I ne Mansfield
dra1ned both e ds of a one
and one '&gt;'Hh b seconds ('3
~9) then Sot thern s Lee iut
one; \ tth 1 1e s conds rema1n
ng So thern fotlcd mmed
acely send1 g Badev to tic I ne
vhere she h1t 0 1 e (o4 o1) and
Cun m ns h1t a bucket at the
buzzer for the 54 ' ' finale
ThiS may haH been the
nose 111portant ga ne of the
year sa td Brannon lt puts us

s

Public Notlca
lawful arrest or aa a ponally

that tho cost of housing
offendera has boon a
significant burden on tho
VIllage and
WHEREAS tho Village of
Pomeroy through oald
electod officials believes
thatlhlo oxpense should ba
borno by any prloonor with
the financial meano to pay (12112 t92TC
lor hlo or her own
Public Notice
Incarceration
NOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDINANCE NUMBER
ORDAINED THAT THE
871
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
WHEREAS lht Ohio
OF POMEROY STATE OF Rovlood Codo outhorlzoo
OHIO THAT:
tho Vlllogo Council to ool
Anyone
thot
Ia load lim to on any
lnoarceratod under tht dulgnattd atrello 1nd
WHEREAS tho VIllage
Council reoognlzoe tht
11 o Help Wanted
noed to rntrlot wtlghl
llmlto on oortoln Vlllaga
Stroot a
HOLIDAY
NOW THER!POA! B! IT
ORDAINED BY
THE
CASH!
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
With the holiday
OF POMEROY STATE OF
OHIO THAT:
aeaaon upon ua
A 18 000 pound (8 ton)
everyone needa extra
wolghl limit Ia hortby
cash We have many
doclorod to bo In tHact on
openings in our local
oil Strooto In lht VIIIIQI of
Pomeroy axclpl lor State
calling facility No
Hlghwayo
and Mulberry
experience necessary Avenue Thero
1holl bo no
Earn up to $15/hr F/1
exception• to thlt wtlght
limit oxoopt lor ttmporary
P(T &amp; temporary
wr
tton pormltolon granted
poaltlona available
by and obtolned lrom thl
now You let us know
Pomeroy Polloi Dopartmont
what you naed
All ordlnancn In conflict
herewith bo andth 11m1 ore
Daya/nlghts available
reoclndod ln1olar u tuch
Management
conlllctoxlltl
opportunities and
Thlo Ordinance ahall
bocomt tllectlvt at the
Madlcai/Dantal/401 K
oarlloot momtnl permitted
available lor lull time
bylaw
CALL
Duly Pa11od December 4

TODA'l START
TOMORROW!

flVC 3SSIS[5

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Da• id Alan Gr1er became a
star fast Shortly afler graduat
ng he landed a lead role on

It

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6 (
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gl t l tl at p
tl
SHS J f

Broadway n The F r. t and was

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•

nommated for a To y

c 1 ccted on 5 of9 slots fr 1 th fi ld Sh ha 1
~ r JSS&gt;Sts 31 d tl r
cb u l
De Gar no also lu npe c i t) to l trot bl f I
sl
d v1tl c1ght po t
ga
I gl 1 I
11
r b
d She had fm a s ts a l t o src Is
Molloh
11 adde 1 e ght p 1 t a d Ma c Dad ha I
Joh lSOn add d two free th o vs and Sarah Rus
x pomts a 1d se\ e 1 rc h u J Cl r st
B rd
sell h t 1 of 1 fot I shots do &gt;11 the stretch for
h pped n tl ree po s
GAHS
r hot s td
Rl\erVall y \\ s pu 1 p I th )
Molloha 1 kept the Ra1ders afloat v th !1\
I
th 1 k they
AHS
he
a
I
coa
K
1
A
lk
1
s
(
p01 Its n the second quart r ncl d g a rn Cia I
r butts a 1J
cat e to our I o sc r ad) t k ck
3 po lltCI at tl e 0 19 11ark that ga\e th R 1de
th y d1d a liCe JOb of 1
a 24 16 lead
Adk lS sa1d she tl &gt;ugl t I er cl b \ l r d) to
The Angds rall1ed to tie the score t 3 11
tur
1 the corner after takmg t1 I ad n the t t rd
mdwa) through the thtrd quarter vtt h Add11g
quarter b t vas dl&lt;:fP' &gt;ted vhen th A ge\s
ton hmtng the ty111g basket tt the 1 49 mark
Bmtany McDade gave the Rllders 1~ 31 le ttl c llldn t Jimsh the deal
We got the lead back J &gt;d vc \\ere al exc t d
w th two buckets over a 90 sc&lt;o 1d span
oftc se lis pr eJis
Add ngt&lt; n mt the g f 11 half with a JUmper a d then all 'fa s 1dde~
agat 1 Adk1&gt; sntd We I 1 t ot 1 ak th &gt;r
wtth 47 seconds left
(,all Acad"ny ope ted the fourt 1 Jl !fter v th lcfcns '&gt;rk t 1 gl t W 11 de bad 01 c dcu
s1 1 s a 1d to &gt;k so ne bad shot
a ( 2 IU1 to take It fir&lt;t !cod of the ga
Rus
J h l&lt;l 1 a I A ld ~t&lt; n dt fi I ctl \lth 11
sell pIt the Angels ahead 1) 37 with o 11 t pla)
s2 I r
n the gan e b t R ver Vt!ley eg01 e I "1 t I &lt; f p&lt; 1 t&gt; t &gt; lc d ( alba A I 1 &gt;y J I m 1
I
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A II gto l1t 0 ' f ll h t t
lid I 1
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�•

Tuesday, December 19, 2000
Page B4 • The

Dally Sentinel

19, 2000 ,

Tuesday,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5'

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•
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
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446·499 5
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Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•

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I P1rnt•tr.1 your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
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• Q J 10 7 6

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BAUMLUMBER

ST.RT.248

• K 9 2

• .9 7 5 3
• J 8

CHESTER

• A 9 6

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 17.00
BE IT RESOLVED by
Council ot the VIllage of
P6meroy, Meigs County oil •
member•
thereto
concurring:
THAT tho Clerk!Trouurar
of the Village of Pomeroy,
tr1n1far 1nd adjust tho
following Iunde:
GENERAL fUND
" Pollee S.lor141e &amp; Beneftta:
A11A211
&amp;
A11A212
StD,ooo.oo to A11A24D
A11 A250 260.00 TO
A11A24D• .
A11C240 5,455 .88 TO
A11A250
Clerke Beneflte:
A 170212 564 .84 to .
A17A24D
Prtaonera:

At7X23D 2,000.00 to
At7A240.
Adjuelment of $30,000.00
Tr1n1fer
rol01
by
$15,000.00
A 17 A240
rille
by
10,000.00
At7GI34 ralu by 2,000.00
A 158240 rolu by 3,000.00
SPECIAL FUND
Sti'MI Sal1rl11:
B18B211 ralu by 2,000.00
Cemetery Solortes:
B32A211 a 212 626.72 to
B32A24D.
Fire Suppllea:
B83A240
rolu
by
60,000.00.
Parmlulve Tax:
Bt 08J280 relu by
1,000.00
Law Enforcement Truet:
B9F24D rolse by 4,500.00
ENTERPRISE FUND
Wiler Solortoa &amp; Elenaflll
E15A211 &amp; 212 20,000.00
to E15A24D
E15G24D 5,000.00 to
E15A24D
'•
E15A240 1111ae by 28,000.00
E15J260 rolaa by 14,000.00
P a - Decamber 4, 2000
Kathy
Hysell,
Clertc/TI'IIOOurer
John W. Bloettnor, Moyor
John F. Mu111r, Pr11ldant
(12) 12, 18, 2TC

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NUMBER 672
WHEREAS, tho Ohio
Revlatd
Coda
uts
atrlngent
rogulollona
regarding the excavation
n••r burled utllltlea,
Including flbar optic cahla,
telephone, gas, water,
electric power, and eewer
tines;
WHEREAS, thoro lo a
erge number of ouch utility
linea already In place
throughout the VIllage,
NOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDAINED
BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
STATE OF OHIO THAT:
1. No poraon ahalllnttall
or replace any tiber optic
cable, 1tlephone cable,
telavlalon cable 1 electric
power line, gaa line, water
line and storm or 1anltary
aewer,
underground
1nywhoro within tho Vllloga
of Pomeroy, Including the
right of ways tor atreata
end alleya within tho Village
of Pomeroy, without tlrot
obtolnlng o building parmlt
for 1uch construction from
tho VIllage of Pomeroy.
2.
The
VIllage
Admlnlotrator shall require
1 detailed tot of drawings
from tho applicant tor ouch
building permit to be
retained In tho llloa of the
VIllage.
3.
Tho
VIllage
Administrator thall require
thll all burled wires or
ceblea ba encased In
appropriate conduits and
meat applicable codea, and
that all utility lnatallatlona
m11t depth requirement•
and other ,criteria to be
datermlnad by tho VIllage
Admlnlatrator.
4. Whoever Vlolatao this
ordinance ohall be guilty of
1
minor misdemeanor
punishable by a tine of up
to $100.00 per day tor each
dey of violation.
5.
Nothing In this
ordinance shall relieve ony
requirement to notify the
proper authorltloo before
digging.
This ordinance, provided
· It recelvoa the majority vote
tor pasooge, shall become
eltacllvo ot tho earllst
moment permitted by law. .
Duly palled this 4th day
of December, 2000.
Mayor, John W. Blaattnar
VIllage Clerk,
Kothy Hysell
President of Council,
John F. Muaaer
AMENDMENT
I It Ia the Intent of
' Ordinance 1672 to sot
strlgont
regulations
regarding excavations near
burled utilities, In relation
to work that Ia to bt dono
by utility companies and/or

Public Notice
contractors.

URN
Pl.
OF

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES

It Is not tho Intent to
place
undue
or

BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free. Eatlmates
Fully Insured

unneceaaaiy ,.atrlctlona on
prlvote dwelling• or
houeeholdl by requiring 1
set of detelled drewlnge
ond building permil u
mentioned In prevloua
perogl'lphe.

Public Notice
WHEREAS, tho Ohio
Revloa6 Code authorizes
the VIUage Council to oat
cerllln · 1111 for tho
operation of Batch Grove
Cometary: ond
WHEREAS, the Villoge
Council recognizee tho
n - to od)utt certlln. faeo
for the operation of BHCh
Grove Cemetery,
NOW THEREFORE BE
IT ORDAINED
BY THE
COUNCIL
0 F THE
VILLAGE Of POMEROY,
STATE OF OHIO THAT
THE FOLLOWING FEE
SCHEDULE IS HEREBY
ESTABUSHED:
1. $270.00 tor tho flrot
grave sp•ce, Including
mandatory 4 (four) corner
markera, ordered and
Instilled by the Village;
2. $150.00 for lht IICOnd
grave apace and any
thereaftar;
3. $300.00 tor opening
ond cloolng grevt •
weekdays;
4. $350.00 tor opening
ond cloolng grave •
waekonda ond holldaya;
s. $85.00 for cromotlon
grave;
6. $150.00 for Infant

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V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

I TOLD HIM
NOT TO PICK ON
LmLE &amp;ALS II

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. l.oct1l

SEE WHAT
I MEAN?

MYERS TREE

._..;;;;_""1

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.

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ANY I&gt;NA

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·•

Owner-·John Ketchka
992·3505

.Any Scotch or white Pine $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends ·
.

Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, to
Cherry Ridge Rd. , Follow sign.s.

!:=~====~==========~

\oJf\J\1 DO Yq.J &lt;"£1'"'!
F~ \fiE MN\ WfiD
t\1\S (1/tX't'Tf\\t-I.G 7

-

.

150 East

thereto ~· ··~c:·lar'~lwtr''rrotllulrtl
'THAT tho v••• ~.
of tho Vltlogo of Pomeroy
transfer the aum of
$65,000.00 (Sixty-tlvo
thouaand dollaro) from tho
general fund to the street
fund for the operation of
current expan1e1.
Thla resolution Ia deem
an emergency due to lack of
funds for current expenses.
Passed December 4, 2000
Kathy Hysell,
Clerk/Treasurer
John W. Blaennar, Mayor
John F. Muosar, President
(121 12, 19, 2TC

241 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio
•'
Monday thru Saturday · r,
10 am to·s pm

..

Now Renting
A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

Limestone •
Grovel• Sond e Topsoil•
Fill Dirl• Mulch •
Bulldozer Servites • ·

(740) 992-3470

"

.,.
UNIQUE
OLDIES

Larry Sch(:y

· -"A Better

A .) PERFuMe:
&amp;.) UNDERWEAR, 01&lt;
C.) A :O.POI!-i$ BRA'·
I MEAN, THIS IS
E118A~RA~StNCio!!

CHRISTMAS TREES
with rootball r
Dtllvery Available
CaU 992·7285
BARR'S NURSERY

r-------.
Advertl'se
•
th Is
•
In
space for

.dL. .lbt'i1f_.'T1t1-.vJi".
'+7+1'P_

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"Ahead In service"
-11.6% Protein Livestock/cattle Feed $5.7 5/1 00
-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
TM. Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE AlYEA AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769
740-985·3831

Oiler's Deer Shop
(740) 742·2076

'

Antiques &amp; Collectables

6/29/rno.

SR325, langsville, OH

••

20% off lhru
Chrislrnas

State Street · Phone (140) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45?0 1

ttAOLIHG

C~o:u~:n:c~l11~~o.'1~all
~t10h~retn~VIIIage
of
members

740-992·2269

·Sa les Representative

DEPDYS AG
PARTS

RESOLUTION 18.00
Bli IT RESOLVED by the

• Firewood • Ught
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
lrlmmlng &amp; removal

Steve Riffle

RESOLUTION 16.00
BE IT RESOLVED by
Council of tho VIllage of
Pomiroy, Meigs County, all
members
thoroto
concurring:
l ~:;:;;;;;;;;;::;:::;;=.
THAT the Clork/Troaaurer 1
of the VIllage of Pomeroy,
adlus• th• appropriation•
tor tho year 2000 In tho
following funds.
General Fund raloo by
AU M Ice T
&amp;
#30,000.00; Special lunda:
a • ractor
Stale Highway lower by
Equipment Parts
450.00; Cametery lower by
Factory Authonz' ed
220.00; Fin lower by
6,550.00; Utility lower by
Case-IH Parts
530.00; Pormlulva Tax ralu
by 1,075.00; Building ralao
Dealers.
by soo.oo; Law ~ntorcemont
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Truot ralae by 4,500.00;
Coo/v/1/o, OH 4572J
Pollee Pension lower by
150.00; Entorprl11 Fund;
741J.887.Q383
Sewer lower by 12,250.00;
Sewer Capitol Proj. lower by
202,650.00; Water ralat by
40,000.00.
Paned December 4, 2000
Kathy Hysell,
Clark/Treasurer
John W Blaettnar, Moyor
EXC:~VfiTIHG
John f. Muaaar, Pr11aldont
(121 12, 19, 2TC
Hauling •

P'u bllc Notice

Bill Slack

Stop In And See

(121 12, 19, 2tc

Publlc Notice

For,,_

(740) 949-2734

•

Backhoe
House site work,
Driveway E.r latta
clearing,
Septic systems
. instal/ea.

.....

...

• ATTENTION PARENTS •
Now taking applications for Boby Sitting Service.
Plenty of play room, o lot of activity to
moke the doy more enjoyable.
Children of oil oges welcome before and alter
school core. New Born ore our pleasure with
close supervision for your peace of mind.

Call740 7992·5827·or 740·992·6566

..

•

or one
~:~;Gras\ ow as
•
one
'

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.\

8 Suffer
remorse
9 Urns ' relatives

10 Speck
11 ---page

Pass

2¥

I•

Pass

2•

Pass

3NT

elderlr,
· ,
23 "1984 ·author.
24 Annually • ·

.··

.

I ·

'
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..
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&amp;

..
.

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'

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...,

Wednesday. Dec. 20,,2000
You have excellent prospects in
the year ahead for making the
inost of your opportunities, especially in career areas. Yet it still
behooves you to check out details
bcforegetting involved.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don't let doubls or negative
thinking cause you to worry about
that which may never happen. In
order to be successful in life, you
must adopt a positive attitude.
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astra-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the rei a·
tionship work . Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
lion, New York, NY 10156.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Expensive items may have a
special appeiil to you today, so
should you go shopping, be careful not to purchase any costly
merchanqise that may prove to be
of little worth.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb. 19)
Behaving in a manner thai does·
n't show your best side could
prove to be very costly careerwise

\

Ieday . If you hope 10 impress
someone,just be your own pleasant self.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Indiscreet conversations could
IUrn your secrels into coJTimon
knowledge. Guard against temptations Ieday to discuss confiden lial matters with anyone who is
not involved.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Jealous motives mustn 'I be per·
milled to contrql your behavior
today. If someone has accomplished something you wish you
had, treat this person with respect,
not envy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
It's impossible to appease all
sides, so don't even try today. A
failure to take a position on an
issue will not only confuse your
companions but will annoy them, ·
as well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
It's always vital to seek proper
instructions from the experts
before attempting to use unfamil·
iar power tools. Unless you know
what you're doing, don't take any
chances today.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

26 Ship deck
27 Subtle

I

c.

emanation

29 Singer
Adams
...
30 Religious •
denornlnaiiQn
31 Important •
periods
•/
37 Greek letter,
38 Engraves

.. ~

40 Swiftly
41 "Step- -I~,
42 Nerve
network
43 Construction
beam
.·~

451n that case

46 Midwestern •
college
"f .

47 Wallet fillers
49 '' Mod" Bhd

50 Illuminated :.
52 Actor
Brynner
'J•

CELEBRJTY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each lener in lhe cipher stands lor another.

'

··

Today's cluo: Z oquals C

'OYONJ

BNORZP

S.T VR

IYORLO

YMZSTN

PLOT .

PIYO

FINC

SVIMR

PIH
VO

I R.
ROY ON

HSNOOS . ' -

GINGINI
SLZPfiR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Pitch,rg is eighly percent of lhe game, the other hall ·
is hitting and fielding."- Mickey Rivers
··

'::~:~;~' CO©\\~lA~ £tfs·
CLAY I . POllAN - - - - - 0 four
Raorronoa loiters of the
ICromblad words beWOlD
Iiiii

Nllo~ ~y

low to form four simple -ds.

L 0 li T E T

I

1

Ir I I
ENOUG

I I I" I I

...

.,.

...,

0

C0 VUH

'J
.-.
.. ,

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•
'

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..

My colleague was struggling
with our new computer system .
.---------.Shrugging she said , "Why won't
1-"T""T-=.I,..M-.-R_A..,..X-r-~~this system let me -·· · '·.·it?"
6
Complete tho chuckle quoted
....J.L......J.L......J.-..1.-l.
.
......J
by filling In the misQng wurds
I.
you develop from step No. 3 below.

•

"

I 1 I I' I e

To get a current weather
report, check the

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Feline· Cough· Toddy ·Shield· UNDECIDED

Sentinel

My drive to and from work is stressfuL Since cars
have turn signals, I thinl&lt;. il is wise to have one that indicates UNDECIDED.
.

ITUESDAY
Should you be farced to associate
today with someone "you know
from experience is deceitful, keep
your guard up al al l times.· People
rarely change .their colors. ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Any
oversights on your part today.
such·as forgelting to do somelhing
you promised , will be conslrued
as thoughtlessness by others. Be
mindful of your commitmen ls.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22)
Unless you have something con structive or complimentary 10 say
to co-workers today , you'd be
wise not to offer any comments
about their work. Your remarks
will be resented .
.·
LIBRA (Sept. 123-0ct. 23)'Get
value received from what you
spend today by being cognizant of
what you're gelling back in
return. Enjoy yourself, but don't
waste your hard-came~ money on
frivolous pursuits .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Whatever you begin Ieday but
leave unfinished isn't likely 10 get
completed for a long time. Orga·
nize your time, and don't take on
more than you can manage com·
fortably .

~~

25 Newts

Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

fourth-highest. Placing his partner
with a suit headed by the 10-9,
West, Michal Kwiecien, played
his three! Declarer, Giorgio
Duboin, gratefully took nine
quick tricks: one spade, five
hearts, two diamonds· and one
club .

12 Advise, old&lt;
style
19 Superlative
ending
21 Adjusting (a
planoI
22 Somewhat

DECEMBER19I

W'Birthday

month •

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

jl

~'Your

$50 per
HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

34 JopenHI
gatewey
35 Novelist Jong
36 Bridges
37 Small balls of

1 Columbus·
ship
2 --the
ground tlo!&gt;r
3 Unit of
Illumination
4 Foot
5 Prospector's
lind
6 Candy maker
7 Doctrine

East

...

"'I

I I&gt;UJ"'-'&lt;~ flfi..VE fl.t\1-.RP II~ PICKIi'IG
()J\ 1\ Gl FTFO~,
VEEMFESTE~ ..

Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 24· Dec. 24

Maplewood Lake

992 5479

33 Fisherman's
boot

ammunition

Most people like to see experts
make bizarre mistakes that they
know they wouldn't have found.
Well, here is one from last summer's
World Open Team
Olympiad final between Italy and
Poland, which Italy won by 20
after being 10 points behind with
six deals remaining. Do you see
how three no-trump can possibly
make after a club lead?
South's Polish Club opening is
usually made with a minimum
balanced hand, yet might, as here,
hide a strong collection. North's
one diamond is nonnally a nega·
live. One heart forced partner to
rebid one spade, then two hearts
was natural with 17-19 points .
The rest was naturaL
West, Alfredo Versace, cashed
k C.OOP ~i:.\ 1''1'
a club wiDner, played a club to his
~'(~TEll\ 7
partner's ace, and won trick three
with his second high club. You or
I would have cashed the 13th
club. condemning the c.ontract.
Yet Versace, perhaps thinking that
. declarer would place the last club
in the East hand and take a losing
spade finesse. exiled at trick four
with a heart! South, Cezary Bal icki , won in hand •aild played a
diamond to dummy 's nine,estab,....,.':-:cc--.---:I=:-.o=-cGO,.---, li sliing nine trick s. He knew West
w~~~Ri~E
had the last club, because if West
!IF.A AT
had begun wilh K-Q-3, he would
WE
have cashed his second honor at
Iri ck two, not underled, blockin·g
I he suit.
At the other table, North was
the declarer. Easl, Jacek Pszczo- .
Ia, altacked with 1he club nine
because Poles lead second· or

BRADFORD'S TREE FARM

1101ugo Ytdo •m~co~ '" Jolly

,

DOWN

Opening lead: • Q

u ..........

740·985-3677

-Avda~·l'nopoMA,_

a

25 Shoulder
ornament
28 Actress
Della32 Located

51 Short daoh
54 Style of type
55 Playwright
O'Neill
56 Shaped like a
cigar
57 TillS

Bv PHILLIP ALDER

FREE ESTIMATES

DEER
Processine

ceII uIar

1¥
2NT

.

~LLtR
Sl.

North
I t

Puzzle

48 Stir clutter

Bizarre mistakes

'r-------....;.______

...,_.

Prr~iou1

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

• Eledrl!OI &amp; Plumbing

7(22/(FN

1-800-2 -5179or446-9800

''

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

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

740·992·1671

Call Us Fin~t Or We Both Lose!
Ask F'or Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

JB2!l2 Sta te Route 68·1
Po rn rr oy. Oh1o

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,

ordered and Installed by tho
Vllloge;
8.
$25.00 annual
m•lnt•n•nc•
per
grave, payable by May tat
each year;
9. $30.00 deed transfer;
10. $150.00 additional

1

.II

C,I, I "

I' •

HUtlan,a. Ohio

grave;
1. $125.00 tranafer of lot
plue corner markera,

i

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

R&amp;S

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

ORDINANCE NUMBER 874

exhumation.
above
normal
for
It notchargas
mondotory
A vault
ot Beech Grove Cemetery.
Tho Village naqulros at least
throe daya notice to dig 1
grave,
except
In
amargenclaa.
Thlo Ordinance ahall
become effective at the
earlleet moment permitted
by law.
Duly paaaed thla 4th day
of December, 2000.
Mayor, John W. Blaettnar
Village Clerk, Kathy
Hysell
President of Council,
John f. Muster

OALLIPOLIS

Jrlan Mo1rfson/R1dnt, Oltlo
(740) 985-3948

(121 12,19, 21

ROBERT. BISSELL
..
CONSTRUCTION

•A

Answer to

abbr.

place
15 Ranch lo!&gt;ps
1S Like Russian
dolls
17 So&lt;:lol In~
18 Casual shirt
20 Dutch city

Peace" author

... 10 5 2
East
• 8 5 4 3
" 10 8 4
• Q 7-3
Soulh

CONCRETE

t Japan
7 Earthquake
13 Belong

21 .. War and

t K 962

"'K Q 8 3

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

39 Grisly
41 fldo's acrap
« SMpshot, for
short
45 Boxlng·vk:tory

14 Romanlll"s

l

33795 Ililand Rd.

ACROSS

ll. l os Angeles Lakers a1 M1am1He&amp;l (live)

.,

. ,.

�•

Tuesday, December 19, 2000
Page B4 • The

Dally Sentinel

19, 2000 ,

Tuesday,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5'

ALLEYOOP
•
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

All vertical blinda are made to order at
our location

UP TO 70% OFF

Advertise your
message

• Vertical8 • Wood • Minis • Etc

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10 .00 column inch Sundays

144 Third Ava.
GaDIJIOhs
446·499 5
Toll Free 1-888-745-1847

IISSELL IUIL.IIS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL.and RfSIDEHTI~

~~~
High 81. Dry
Self-Storage

FREi ESTIMATES'

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•

SECURITY
PRODUCTS
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
I P1rnt•tr.1 your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
I cc1llections, legal papers, investment records, photo
::~~~~ntalcameras, household inventory and
items will be safe.
For more information call

Nprth
12-lg.oo
• Q J 10 7 6

• 2
West

BAUMLUMBER

ST.RT.248

• K 9 2

• .9 7 5 3
• J 8

CHESTER

• A 9 6

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 17.00
BE IT RESOLVED by
Council ot the VIllage of
P6meroy, Meigs County oil •
member•
thereto
concurring:
THAT tho Clerk!Trouurar
of the Village of Pomeroy,
tr1n1far 1nd adjust tho
following Iunde:
GENERAL fUND
" Pollee S.lor141e &amp; Beneftta:
A11A211
&amp;
A11A212
StD,ooo.oo to A11A24D
A11 A250 260.00 TO
A11A24D• .
A11C240 5,455 .88 TO
A11A250
Clerke Beneflte:
A 170212 564 .84 to .
A17A24D
Prtaonera:

At7X23D 2,000.00 to
At7A240.
Adjuelment of $30,000.00
Tr1n1fer
rol01
by
$15,000.00
A 17 A240
rille
by
10,000.00
At7GI34 ralu by 2,000.00
A 158240 rolu by 3,000.00
SPECIAL FUND
Sti'MI Sal1rl11:
B18B211 ralu by 2,000.00
Cemetery Solortes:
B32A211 a 212 626.72 to
B32A24D.
Fire Suppllea:
B83A240
rolu
by
60,000.00.
Parmlulve Tax:
Bt 08J280 relu by
1,000.00
Law Enforcement Truet:
B9F24D rolse by 4,500.00
ENTERPRISE FUND
Wiler Solortoa &amp; Elenaflll
E15A211 &amp; 212 20,000.00
to E15A24D
E15G24D 5,000.00 to
E15A24D
'•
E15A240 1111ae by 28,000.00
E15J260 rolaa by 14,000.00
P a - Decamber 4, 2000
Kathy
Hysell,
Clertc/TI'IIOOurer
John W. Bloettnor, Moyor
John F. Mu111r, Pr11ldant
(12) 12, 18, 2TC

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NUMBER 672
WHEREAS, tho Ohio
Revlatd
Coda
uts
atrlngent
rogulollona
regarding the excavation
n••r burled utllltlea,
Including flbar optic cahla,
telephone, gas, water,
electric power, and eewer
tines;
WHEREAS, thoro lo a
erge number of ouch utility
linea already In place
throughout the VIllage,
NOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDAINED
BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
STATE OF OHIO THAT:
1. No poraon ahalllnttall
or replace any tiber optic
cable, 1tlephone cable,
telavlalon cable 1 electric
power line, gaa line, water
line and storm or 1anltary
aewer,
underground
1nywhoro within tho Vllloga
of Pomeroy, Including the
right of ways tor atreata
end alleya within tho Village
of Pomeroy, without tlrot
obtolnlng o building parmlt
for 1uch construction from
tho VIllage of Pomeroy.
2.
The
VIllage
Admlnlotrator shall require
1 detailed tot of drawings
from tho applicant tor ouch
building permit to be
retained In tho llloa of the
VIllage.
3.
Tho
VIllage
Administrator thall require
thll all burled wires or
ceblea ba encased In
appropriate conduits and
meat applicable codea, and
that all utility lnatallatlona
m11t depth requirement•
and other ,criteria to be
datermlnad by tho VIllage
Admlnlatrator.
4. Whoever Vlolatao this
ordinance ohall be guilty of
1
minor misdemeanor
punishable by a tine of up
to $100.00 per day tor each
dey of violation.
5.
Nothing In this
ordinance shall relieve ony
requirement to notify the
proper authorltloo before
digging.
This ordinance, provided
· It recelvoa the majority vote
tor pasooge, shall become
eltacllvo ot tho earllst
moment permitted by law. .
Duly palled this 4th day
of December, 2000.
Mayor, John W. Blaattnar
VIllage Clerk,
Kothy Hysell
President of Council,
John F. Muaaer
AMENDMENT
I It Ia the Intent of
' Ordinance 1672 to sot
strlgont
regulations
regarding excavations near
burled utilities, In relation
to work that Ia to bt dono
by utility companies and/or

Public Notice
contractors.

URN
Pl.
OF

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES

It Is not tho Intent to
place
undue
or

BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free. Eatlmates
Fully Insured

unneceaaaiy ,.atrlctlona on
prlvote dwelling• or
houeeholdl by requiring 1
set of detelled drewlnge
ond building permil u
mentioned In prevloua
perogl'lphe.

Public Notice
WHEREAS, tho Ohio
Revloa6 Code authorizes
the VIUage Council to oat
cerllln · 1111 for tho
operation of Batch Grove
Cometary: ond
WHEREAS, the Villoge
Council recognizee tho
n - to od)utt certlln. faeo
for the operation of BHCh
Grove Cemetery,
NOW THEREFORE BE
IT ORDAINED
BY THE
COUNCIL
0 F THE
VILLAGE Of POMEROY,
STATE OF OHIO THAT
THE FOLLOWING FEE
SCHEDULE IS HEREBY
ESTABUSHED:
1. $270.00 tor tho flrot
grave sp•ce, Including
mandatory 4 (four) corner
markera, ordered and
Instilled by the Village;
2. $150.00 for lht IICOnd
grave apace and any
thereaftar;
3. $300.00 tor opening
ond cloolng grevt •
weekdays;
4. $350.00 tor opening
ond cloolng grave •
waekonda ond holldaya;
s. $85.00 for cromotlon
grave;
6. $150.00 for Infant

Quality
Re place m e nt Auto
B o dy Part s
I l:' llh • 1\ ttrlll'&lt;

\lu .,l , I
\II'\ ( &lt; '
p.11 h

' "I

l'.utth \' .ttl.do h
1'

1'1.,, o·m nd Iouth

"W.dp"

f &lt;~l I .II~ .ll l i l l l l l l

k'

740-742-9501
740-742 -2750
1 -877-202-3262

convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

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

lZl

•AKQJG
A 10 5 4
... J 7 ·4
t

• R- additions &amp; R~modelllg
• Ntw Garages
• Rooflna &amp; Gultsrs
• Vlllyl $!ding &amp; Painting

• Pallo &amp; Pardt Dtcks

FREE ESTIMATES

• South · West
I.
Pass

BARNF.Y

Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

I TOLD HIM
NOT TO PICK ON
LmLE &amp;ALS II

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. l.oct1l

SEE WHAT
I MEAN?

MYERS TREE

._..;;;;_""1

Advertise
in th.is
space for
s1so per
month.

.

Jeff Warner Ins

c.,.

·

Slln • Cut • W. .

Trimming and Removal
30 Years Experience
Fully Insured
Senior Discount

.I I&gt;ON'T N~tl&gt;

/

ANY I&gt;NA

tviP~N(,£:{

·•

Owner-·John Ketchka
992·3505

.Any Scotch or white Pine $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends ·
.

Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681, to
Cherry Ridge Rd. , Follow sign.s.

!:=~====~==========~

\oJf\J\1 DO Yq.J &lt;"£1'"'!
F~ \fiE MN\ WfiD
t\1\S (1/tX't'Tf\\t-I.G 7

-

.

150 East

thereto ~· ··~c:·lar'~lwtr''rrotllulrtl
'THAT tho v••• ~.
of tho Vltlogo of Pomeroy
transfer the aum of
$65,000.00 (Sixty-tlvo
thouaand dollaro) from tho
general fund to the street
fund for the operation of
current expan1e1.
Thla resolution Ia deem
an emergency due to lack of
funds for current expenses.
Passed December 4, 2000
Kathy Hysell,
Clerk/Treasurer
John W. Blaennar, Mayor
John F. Muosar, President
(121 12, 19, 2TC

241 Salem St.
Rutland, Ohio
•'
Monday thru Saturday · r,
10 am to·s pm

..

Now Renting
A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

Limestone •
Grovel• Sond e Topsoil•
Fill Dirl• Mulch •
Bulldozer Servites • ·

(740) 992-3470

"

.,.
UNIQUE
OLDIES

Larry Sch(:y

· -"A Better

A .) PERFuMe:
&amp;.) UNDERWEAR, 01&lt;
C.) A :O.POI!-i$ BRA'·
I MEAN, THIS IS
E118A~RA~StNCio!!

CHRISTMAS TREES
with rootball r
Dtllvery Available
CaU 992·7285
BARR'S NURSERY

r-------.
Advertl'se
•
th Is
•
In
space for

.dL. .lbt'i1f_.'T1t1-.vJi".
'+7+1'P_

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In service"
-11.6% Protein Livestock/cattle Feed $5.7 5/1 00
-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
TM. Salt Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE AlYEA AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769
740-985·3831

Oiler's Deer Shop
(740) 742·2076

'

Antiques &amp; Collectables

6/29/rno.

SR325, langsville, OH

••

20% off lhru
Chrislrnas

State Street · Phone (140) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45?0 1

ttAOLIHG

C~o:u~:n:c~l11~~o.'1~all
~t10h~retn~VIIIage
of
members

740-992·2269

·Sa les Representative

DEPDYS AG
PARTS

RESOLUTION 18.00
Bli IT RESOLVED by the

• Firewood • Ught
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
lrlmmlng &amp; removal

Steve Riffle

RESOLUTION 16.00
BE IT RESOLVED by
Council of tho VIllage of
Pomiroy, Meigs County, all
members
thoroto
concurring:
l ~:;:;;;;;;;;;::;:::;;=.
THAT the Clork/Troaaurer 1
of the VIllage of Pomeroy,
adlus• th• appropriation•
tor tho year 2000 In tho
following funds.
General Fund raloo by
AU M Ice T
&amp;
#30,000.00; Special lunda:
a • ractor
Stale Highway lower by
Equipment Parts
450.00; Cametery lower by
Factory Authonz' ed
220.00; Fin lower by
6,550.00; Utility lower by
Case-IH Parts
530.00; Pormlulva Tax ralu
by 1,075.00; Building ralao
Dealers.
by soo.oo; Law ~ntorcemont
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Truot ralae by 4,500.00;
Coo/v/1/o, OH 4572J
Pollee Pension lower by
150.00; Entorprl11 Fund;
741J.887.Q383
Sewer lower by 12,250.00;
Sewer Capitol Proj. lower by
202,650.00; Water ralat by
40,000.00.
Paned December 4, 2000
Kathy Hysell,
Clark/Treasurer
John W Blaettnar, Moyor
EXC:~VfiTIHG
John f. Muaaar, Pr11aldont
(121 12, 19, 2TC
Hauling •

P'u bllc Notice

Bill Slack

Stop In And See

(121 12, 19, 2tc

Publlc Notice

For,,_

(740) 949-2734

•

Backhoe
House site work,
Driveway E.r latta
clearing,
Septic systems
. instal/ea.

.....

...

• ATTENTION PARENTS •
Now taking applications for Boby Sitting Service.
Plenty of play room, o lot of activity to
moke the doy more enjoyable.
Children of oil oges welcome before and alter
school core. New Born ore our pleasure with
close supervision for your peace of mind.

Call740 7992·5827·or 740·992·6566

..

•

or one
~:~;Gras\ ow as
•
one
'

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.\

8 Suffer
remorse
9 Urns ' relatives

10 Speck
11 ---page

Pass

2¥

I•

Pass

2•

Pass

3NT

elderlr,
· ,
23 "1984 ·author.
24 Annually • ·

.··

.

I ·

'
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&amp;

..
.

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'

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...,

Wednesday. Dec. 20,,2000
You have excellent prospects in
the year ahead for making the
inost of your opportunities, especially in career areas. Yet it still
behooves you to check out details
bcforegetting involved.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don't let doubls or negative
thinking cause you to worry about
that which may never happen. In
order to be successful in life, you
must adopt a positive attitude.
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astra-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the rei a·
tionship work . Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
lion, New York, NY 10156.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Expensive items may have a
special appeiil to you today, so
should you go shopping, be careful not to purchase any costly
merchanqise that may prove to be
of little worth.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb. 19)
Behaving in a manner thai does·
n't show your best side could
prove to be very costly careerwise

\

Ieday . If you hope 10 impress
someone,just be your own pleasant self.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Indiscreet conversations could
IUrn your secrels into coJTimon
knowledge. Guard against temptations Ieday to discuss confiden lial matters with anyone who is
not involved.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Jealous motives mustn 'I be per·
milled to contrql your behavior
today. If someone has accomplished something you wish you
had, treat this person with respect,
not envy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
It's impossible to appease all
sides, so don't even try today. A
failure to take a position on an
issue will not only confuse your
companions but will annoy them, ·
as well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
It's always vital to seek proper
instructions from the experts
before attempting to use unfamil·
iar power tools. Unless you know
what you're doing, don't take any
chances today.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

26 Ship deck
27 Subtle

I

c.

emanation

29 Singer
Adams
...
30 Religious •
denornlnaiiQn
31 Important •
periods
•/
37 Greek letter,
38 Engraves

.. ~

40 Swiftly
41 "Step- -I~,
42 Nerve
network
43 Construction
beam
.·~

451n that case

46 Midwestern •
college
"f .

47 Wallet fillers
49 '' Mod" Bhd

50 Illuminated :.
52 Actor
Brynner
'J•

CELEBRJTY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each lener in lhe cipher stands lor another.

'

··

Today's cluo: Z oquals C

'OYONJ

BNORZP

S.T VR

IYORLO

YMZSTN

PLOT .

PIYO

FINC

SVIMR

PIH
VO

I R.
ROY ON

HSNOOS . ' -

GINGINI
SLZPfiR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Pitch,rg is eighly percent of lhe game, the other hall ·
is hitting and fielding."- Mickey Rivers
··

'::~:~;~' CO©\\~lA~ £tfs·
CLAY I . POllAN - - - - - 0 four
Raorronoa loiters of the
ICromblad words beWOlD
Iiiii

Nllo~ ~y

low to form four simple -ds.

L 0 li T E T

I

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Ir I I
ENOUG

I I I" I I

...

.,.

...,

0

C0 VUH

'J
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.. ,

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..

My colleague was struggling
with our new computer system .
.---------.Shrugging she said , "Why won't
1-"T""T-=.I,..M-.-R_A..,..X-r-~~this system let me -·· · '·.·it?"
6
Complete tho chuckle quoted
....J.L......J.L......J.-..1.-l.
.
......J
by filling In the misQng wurds
I.
you develop from step No. 3 below.

•

"

I 1 I I' I e

To get a current weather
report, check the

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Feline· Cough· Toddy ·Shield· UNDECIDED

Sentinel

My drive to and from work is stressfuL Since cars
have turn signals, I thinl&lt;. il is wise to have one that indicates UNDECIDED.
.

ITUESDAY
Should you be farced to associate
today with someone "you know
from experience is deceitful, keep
your guard up al al l times.· People
rarely change .their colors. ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Any
oversights on your part today.
such·as forgelting to do somelhing
you promised , will be conslrued
as thoughtlessness by others. Be
mindful of your commitmen ls.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22)
Unless you have something con structive or complimentary 10 say
to co-workers today , you'd be
wise not to offer any comments
about their work. Your remarks
will be resented .
.·
LIBRA (Sept. 123-0ct. 23)'Get
value received from what you
spend today by being cognizant of
what you're gelling back in
return. Enjoy yourself, but don't
waste your hard-came~ money on
frivolous pursuits .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Whatever you begin Ieday but
leave unfinished isn't likely 10 get
completed for a long time. Orga·
nize your time, and don't take on
more than you can manage com·
fortably .

~~

25 Newts

Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

fourth-highest. Placing his partner
with a suit headed by the 10-9,
West, Michal Kwiecien, played
his three! Declarer, Giorgio
Duboin, gratefully took nine
quick tricks: one spade, five
hearts, two diamonds· and one
club .

12 Advise, old&lt;
style
19 Superlative
ending
21 Adjusting (a
planoI
22 Somewhat

DECEMBER19I

W'Birthday

month •

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

jl

~'Your

$50 per
HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

34 JopenHI
gatewey
35 Novelist Jong
36 Bridges
37 Small balls of

1 Columbus·
ship
2 --the
ground tlo!&gt;r
3 Unit of
Illumination
4 Foot
5 Prospector's
lind
6 Candy maker
7 Doctrine

East

...

"'I

I I&gt;UJ"'-'&lt;~ flfi..VE fl.t\1-.RP II~ PICKIi'IG
()J\ 1\ Gl FTFO~,
VEEMFESTE~ ..

Daily 10 am til Dark
Nov. 24· Dec. 24

Maplewood Lake

992 5479

33 Fisherman's
boot

ammunition

Most people like to see experts
make bizarre mistakes that they
know they wouldn't have found.
Well, here is one from last summer's
World Open Team
Olympiad final between Italy and
Poland, which Italy won by 20
after being 10 points behind with
six deals remaining. Do you see
how three no-trump can possibly
make after a club lead?
South's Polish Club opening is
usually made with a minimum
balanced hand, yet might, as here,
hide a strong collection. North's
one diamond is nonnally a nega·
live. One heart forced partner to
rebid one spade, then two hearts
was natural with 17-19 points .
The rest was naturaL
West, Alfredo Versace, cashed
k C.OOP ~i:.\ 1''1'
a club wiDner, played a club to his
~'(~TEll\ 7
partner's ace, and won trick three
with his second high club. You or
I would have cashed the 13th
club. condemning the c.ontract.
Yet Versace, perhaps thinking that
. declarer would place the last club
in the East hand and take a losing
spade finesse. exiled at trick four
with a heart! South, Cezary Bal icki , won in hand •aild played a
diamond to dummy 's nine,estab,....,.':-:cc--.---:I=:-.o=-cGO,.---, li sliing nine trick s. He knew West
w~~~Ri~E
had the last club, because if West
!IF.A AT
had begun wilh K-Q-3, he would
WE
have cashed his second honor at
Iri ck two, not underled, blockin·g
I he suit.
At the other table, North was
the declarer. Easl, Jacek Pszczo- .
Ia, altacked with 1he club nine
because Poles lead second· or

BRADFORD'S TREE FARM

1101ugo Ytdo •m~co~ '" Jolly

,

DOWN

Opening lead: • Q

u ..........

740·985-3677

-Avda~·l'nopoMA,_

a

25 Shoulder
ornament
28 Actress
Della32 Located

51 Short daoh
54 Style of type
55 Playwright
O'Neill
56 Shaped like a
cigar
57 TillS

Bv PHILLIP ALDER

FREE ESTIMATES

DEER
Processine

ceII uIar

1¥
2NT

.

~LLtR
Sl.

North
I t

Puzzle

48 Stir clutter

Bizarre mistakes

'r-------....;.______

...,_.

Prr~iou1

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

• Eledrl!OI &amp; Plumbing

7(22/(FN

1-800-2 -5179or446-9800

''

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

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

740·992·1671

Call Us Fin~t Or We Both Lose!
Ask F'or Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

JB2!l2 Sta te Route 68·1
Po rn rr oy. Oh1o

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,

ordered and Installed by tho
Vllloge;
8.
$25.00 annual
m•lnt•n•nc•
per
grave, payable by May tat
each year;
9. $30.00 deed transfer;
10. $150.00 additional

1

.II

C,I, I "

I' •

HUtlan,a. Ohio

grave;
1. $125.00 tranafer of lot
plue corner markera,

i

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

R&amp;S

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

ORDINANCE NUMBER 874

exhumation.
above
normal
for
It notchargas
mondotory
A vault
ot Beech Grove Cemetery.
Tho Village naqulros at least
throe daya notice to dig 1
grave,
except
In
amargenclaa.
Thlo Ordinance ahall
become effective at the
earlleet moment permitted
by law.
Duly paaaed thla 4th day
of December, 2000.
Mayor, John W. Blaettnar
Village Clerk, Kathy
Hysell
President of Council,
John f. Muster

OALLIPOLIS

Jrlan Mo1rfson/R1dnt, Oltlo
(740) 985-3948

(121 12,19, 21

ROBERT. BISSELL
..
CONSTRUCTION

•A

Answer to

abbr.

place
15 Ranch lo!&gt;ps
1S Like Russian
dolls
17 So&lt;:lol In~
18 Casual shirt
20 Dutch city

Peace" author

... 10 5 2
East
• 8 5 4 3
" 10 8 4
• Q 7-3
Soulh

CONCRETE

t Japan
7 Earthquake
13 Belong

21 .. War and

t K 962

"'K Q 8 3

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

39 Grisly
41 fldo's acrap
« SMpshot, for
short
45 Boxlng·vk:tory

14 Romanlll"s

l

33795 Ililand Rd.

ACROSS

ll. l os Angeles Lakers a1 M1am1He&amp;l (live)

.,

. ,.

�Page 8 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TUesday, December 19, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
VMI 75, R~Macon 62
Virginio Tecll81 , ETSU 75, OT
W Kentucky 103, SaVII'V\81'1 $1 60
Wake Forest 92. Radforo 52
Woo11luoy 72 , UCF 61
Woltord 95, B~an 81
MIDWEST
Butter 77, Tenn -MarUn 48
Detroit 7'. Cent Michigan 60

Berlin Cenrer Western ReseNe S6, warren
Lordstown 31
Beverty Fof1 Frye Sot, McComellslt'tl\e Mot·

gan50

Tri.CountyIna~
Alollndo&lt; ... Mllttl3
Ale:candef
15 18 15 20
68
Meigs
10 l9 15 19
63
Alexarc:ler (6-2. lVC 5-0)- Janna Williams
0 0.0 0. Shelly Bush 8 2·2 20. Jenelle Sams Q
3-6 3, Jennt Bush 2 3-5 7, JoSI8 Carr 10 a-to

28. Rebecca Penntgton 0 0-0 0, Dana Hallllll 3
0.1 6, Lt5a Kubachka ' 2-2 4. Totals 24 'tB-26
68
MetgS (5-1 . TVC 4· 1) - Shannon Price 3 o0 8, Amber Vintng 9 11 -1 4 31 , Ashley Thomas

o 0-0 o. Jaynee Da111s 3 3-4 9, Tiffany Oualls 4
0-t 8, Ltndsay Bolin 0 0-0 0, Mindy Chancey 2

1·2 3, Alicia Werry 1 0.0 2, Kayte Davis 0 0.0 0.
Totals 22 ,5·21 63
3-pomt

FG-Aie~;ander

2 (Bush 2).

Me~gs

4

(Pnce 2, Vintng 2) Rebounds-Alexander 29
(Carr 12) , Me~s 17 (Jaynee Davis 8). AsSists-

Aiellander 5 (Bush 5), Me•gs 8 (Price 4).
Steals-Alexander B (Carr, Hamill 3) , Me!QS 11

tPnce 4)

Tumovers_: Aiexa~r

nla. Meigs 17.

River V•ll•y 54, Gallia Acldemy 43
A!VerValley
16
a 11
19 54
Ga lha Academy
7 13 13
10 43
Arver Valley (1-6, SEOAL 1-3) - Kari Beth
Ta~r 0 0-0 0 . Julia Mollohan 3 0-0 8 . Cynthia
Ward 5 1-2 12, Christen Ba1rd 1 1·3 3. Nicole
Wa1k1ns 5 6-8 17. Chelsea DeGarmo 3 2-2 8.
Lindsay Nrda 0 0·2 0. Bnttany McDade 3 0-0 6.
Tolals 20 10·17 54 .
Gallla Academy (3-3, SEOAL 2-2) - Jessica Bodrmer 0 0·0 0. Bdanna Johnson 2 8-10
13 , Stephanr Johnson .O 0·0 0 Eva Lyon 2 2·2
6. TiMany D1ckson o o-o o. counney Spriegel o
0·00 Sarah Russell 5 1·2 11 . Brlnanv Franklrn
0 0-0 o. Mered•ttl AckMgton 6 1-4 13 Totals 15

1'2&gt;18 43
J-po1nt FG-AVHS 4 (Mollohan 2 Ward,
Watk1ns 1). GAHS 1 (Johnson 1). AeboundsAVHS 31 (DeGarmo 11 , McDade 7), GAHS 29
(Addington 10. Russell 7) Assrsts-AVHS 16
(Ward , DeGarmo 4 ). GAHS 4 Steals-AVHS 4
(DeGarmo 2) . GAHS 5 {Addmgton 2).
Tumovers-RVHS 16. GAHS 12 .

Jackson 76, Point Pleasant 52
14
6 12 20 _. 52
Poml
Jackson
12 34 17
13 76
Porn! ( 1-4, SEOAL 1·3)- Jennifer Adkins 0
0-0 0, Cassre Neweh 4 0-0 B. Miranr:ta Durst 4
0·0 8, Bnd9t!l Nibert 9 2-2 20. Knstrn Drain 1
0 2, Ashley Thomas 1 0· 1 2, Amber Keeter 2 2·
2 7. Allsha Marcum 0 1-2 1, Regina Bing 2 D-0
4. Tolals 23 5-7 52.
Jackson {6·1 . SEOAL 3·1)- Beth Howe 9
1-2 22, Hannah Evans 3 2-2 10, Brenda Caldwell 2 4·4 8, Broo«.e Walters 5 0-Q 10, BHiie
Partin 0 1·2 1, Joanre While 1 0-0 3, Jenny
Bragg 2 2·2 6 , Megan Ewllne 2 2·2 6, Carrie
Cox 4 2·2 10. Totals 27 14-16 76
3-poinl FG- Po1nt 1 (Keeler), Jackson 6
(Howe 3. j:vans 2, White)

o-

Eastern 54, Southern 52
Eastern
15 10 16 13 54
Southam
16 11 14
11 52
Eastern (5-1. TVC 5-0)- Whitney Karr 0 02 0. Danrelle Spencer 7 0-0 14, Juli Bailey 1 00 2, Sara Mansfield 1 2-4 4, Amber Baker 4 00 10, Janet Calaway 1 0-0 2, Slacy Watson 9 5B 2.3. Totals 22 8·14 54.
Southam [4·4, TVC 2·3)- Kati Cummins 6
0-0 12, Fallon Roush 2 0-0 4. Tammy F~ar 1 O·
0 2, Rachel Chapman 7 0·0 14, Tara Pickens 0
0·1 0, Bridgette Sames 5 1·4 13, Amy Lee 2 34·
7. Totals 23 4-9 52
3-poi nt FG-Easlem 2 (Baker 2). Southern
2 (Barnes 2)
Ale under 61, Meigs 63
Alexander
15 18 15 20 68
Meigs
10 19 15 19 63
Alexander (6·2, TVC 5-0)--- Janna Williams
0 0·0 0, Sh~ Bush 8 2·2 20, Janelle Sams 3·
6 3. Josie Carr 10 8-10 28 , Rebecca Pennington 0 0·0 0, Dana Hamill 3 0-1 6. lisa Kubachka 1 2-4 Totals 24 18-26 6B
· Meigs (5·1. TVO 4- 1) - Shannon Prk:e 3 o,0 8, Ambe r' Vining 9 11-14 31, Ashley Thomas
0 0-0 0, Jaynae Davis 3 3-4 9, Tiffany Que !IS 4
0·1
lindsay Bolin 0 0·0 0, Mindy Chancey 2
1·2 5, Alrc1a Werry 1 0·0 2, Kayte Davts 0 0-0 0.
Totals 22 15-2 1 63
3-point FG-Aiexander 2 ~ Bu sh 2). Mergs 4
(Pr1ce 2. Vimng 2)

a.

Ohio High School Girls Basketball'
Monday1s Results
Akron Manchester 78, Zoarvtlle Tuscarawas
Valley1 4
Albany Alexander 68. Pomeroy Metgs 63
Archbold 64 Delrance Ayersvtlle 59
Beallsville 69, Bridgeport 45
Bea~Jerc reek 59. Mason 54
Bellarre 51. John 58, Toronto 44
Bellvtlle Clear Fork 51, Wooster Trrway 46
Selmon! 36. Yellow Springs 31
Bel mont Umon local 64. Cad1l Harrison
Cent 28
Belpre 58. NelsonVtlle-YCirk 44
Benjamrn logari 41 , Bellefontaine 40

BucMeye LocalS I, Stuubeovtlle ...
Cakiwell 56, Woodstield Monroe Central 32
Canfield 62, YoufYJ. AushntO'Nn -Fttch 37
Canton GlenOak 38, Canlon S 32
Canton T1mken 62, Young. W tlson 29
Carttsle 60, Tri.(;ounty N. 28
CedarvtHe 63, Lees Creek E. Clinton 52, OT
Chesrre A rver Valley 54, Gallipolts 43
Cln. Anderson 64, New RIChmond 35
Cin. Landmaril. 58, Cin. St. Bernard :&gt;4
Ctn. McAuley 55, H~mes 44
Cin. Mt Healthy 49, Cin. Deer Pat1&lt; 34
Cin. N. College Htll
Cm. Seven Hills 35
Cin. Summti 51, Ham11ton New Miami 25
Cin. Taft 51 , Cln. School for rhe CreatNe and
Performing Arts 50
Co rttand Lake...tew 52, Newton Falls 37
Defiance 53, Defiance Tlnora 34
DreSden T n-Valley 55, Zanesv~le W. Muskingum 47
E. Canton 76. Massilton Tuslaw 75
Fairborn 55, New Carlisle Tecumseh 51
Franklin Fumace Green 39, Coal Grove 31
Gnadenhutten lnctian valley 39. Newcomerslown 24
Greenfield McCI~ IJ'I 65, Georgetown 43
Hamler Patnck Henry 75. Bascom HopewellLoudon 50
Hanovenon
United
56 , C~umbrana
Crestview 53
Htllst:&gt;oro 65, Wilrrt1ngton 44
,Houston 1. NeWlon 39
Hubbard 58 , Brookfield 46
Ironton 68, Chesapeake 43
Jackson 76. Point Pleasant (W.Va .) 52
Jackson Center 65, OeGrafl Riverside 21
Jamestown Greenevrew 57, Waynesvrlle 38
K1nsman Badger 49, LeaYill sburg laBrae 39
Lisbon Anderson 64, Columbiana 33
Lisbon Beaver local 42: E Palesttne 36
Lora in Southview 53. Tol St. Ursula 52
Magnolia Sandy Valley 59. Navarre Farrtess

s

54
McC omb 72, N. Ballimore 42
McDonalel4l , Bnstol39
Mercy 54 . Cin Hughes 27
Metamora Evergreen 77, Tol. Christian 35
Middletown Fenwick 45. W. Carrollton 27
Milton-Union 50. Preble Shawnee 36
Mineral Rrdge 46, Soulhington 38
N Lima SoUih Range 55 , leetonra 52
New KnoxYille 71. Van Wert Uncolnview 53
New Madison Tri· Village 77. New Pa ns
NahOnal Trail 48
Philo 60, Zanes\lllle 58
4
Rayland Buckeye l ocal 51 , Steubenyille Big
Aed44
Reedsville Easiem 54, Racine Southam 52
S. Charleston Southeasleril61 , Blanchester .
11

Sardinia Eastern Brown 78, Ripley 23
Shadyside 72. Sarahsville Shenandoah 42
Spring Cath. Cent. 50, Enon Greenan 47
Spring_ CatholiC 50, Greenan 47
St. Clairs\lille 51. Hannibal River 46
Stewart Federal Hocking 63, Glouster Tnm·
ble 44
Tot Onawa Hills 63. Emmanuel Baptist 47
Tot Start 63. Swanton 38
Tolsta (W.Va.) 54, South Point 36
Vincent Warren 68, Athens 53
Vinton CouOty 50. Wellston 44 ·
Warren Champion 70, Girard 48
Waterford 71 , Hemlock Miller 21
Weir (W.Va.) 57. Steubenville Cath. Cent 34
Xenia 71 , Day. Christian 34
Young . Boardman 55, Young. Ursuline 39

Missouri 68, Indiana 63
Purdue' 98, Santa Clara 52

Detroit 10, N.Y. Jets 7
Kansas Cily 20, Denver 7
Carolina 30. San Diego 22
New Or1eans 23. Atlanta 7
New England 13, Buffalo 10. OT
Cincimati 17, JacksonVilte 14
Tennessee 24, Cleveland
Green Bay 33. t.Ainnesota 28
San Francisco 17, Chicago
lndlaf\8p()(is 20. Miami 13
Batttmore 13, Arizona 7
N.Y. Giants 17, Oatlas 13
Openo Phlladelpl&gt;o

80
UTEP 99, Florida A&amp;M 57

FAR WEST
C&lt;Horado St. 80, Denver 53
Long Buren St 57, Loyola Marymount 54
New Meidco St. 104. W. New Mexico 55
Oregon 72, N. Arizona 70, OT
UNLV 101 . Alaska-AnchOrage 71

I COWGE HOOPS I
Men'S' College Bukelbell
Monday's Results
EAST
East Carolina 73. Mount S1. Mary's. Md . 66
La Salle 74 , Drexel 56
Penn St. 100, Wagner 91

SOUTH
Alabama A&amp;M 63, JacksOn St. 51
Alcorn St 93, Te~~:as Southern 74
Appatachtan St 85. Mars Hill 52
Brrmrngham-Southern 95, Florida Atlantrc
CS Northrrdge 84. James Madrson 70
E. Kootucky 72 . High Pornt 68
LOUISVille 86, Loyola, Ill. 70
Memphrs 98 , Chrrstian Brothers 54
Mramr 83. E. llhnors 73
Middle Tennessee 78, Campbell 73
MissiSSIPPI 92. Troy St . 65
M1SS1ssrpp1 St. 78, SE Lours1ana 58
Nr cholts St 79 , Louisiana-Monroe 66
Southern U . 100. Prairie View 87
Carolina Sr. 44
The C1tadel 62 ,

s.,

_,.

EAST
Hoi.,- CroS$ 76, Northeastem 59
La Salle 77, Fairleigh D1ckmson 56

SOUTH
Alabama St 80, GraMbling St 79
Clemson 80, Virgmia Tecl'l 59
Georgia 110, Danmouth 73
Georgia Soulhern 94, Augusla St 45
H!Qh Pomt 61 , Pr incelon 59
JacksonS! 62, Alabama A&amp;M 60
LSU 79, Pra1rre View 32
. N.C Charione 77. Oavrdsan 67
Nicholls St. 78. Belhune-Cook.man 75
Ohio 71, Elon 64
Old Oomrnion 86 . UCLA 62
Va . Commonwealth 83. Dtexel 70
W. Kentucky 84 , South FIOnda 81 , OT
Winthrop 87, Co !I of Charles1on 64

e.-on.

vis
Activated C·F Olumide Oyecleil lrom
th&amp; InjUred list.

Bay 38, Sl. Louis 35

FOOTBALL

N1t1onal Footballle1gue
AAtZONA

HOCKEY

Conf~trence

W L Pet.

GB

Philadelphia
.. 18
6 .750
NewYor1oi ........ ,...
... 15 10 .600 3112
Miamr ...... ,.........
.. ... 13 12 .520 5 1/2
8
Orlando
..... 10 14· 417
SOUTHWEST
.. .... 9 15 .375
9
Boston . ... .........
Baylor 77, -Loyola Marymount 66
New Jerse.,- .......
. ..... 9 15 .375
9
Oklahoma 75, North Te)laS 61
Washinglon .............. ..... 5 ~9 .208
13 ·
Texas A&amp;M 65, Texas-Pan Amencan 48
Central Division
Weber Sl. 56. Texas A&amp;M..Corpus Christi 50 • Cle\leland .
... 15 7 .682
FAR WEST
Charlotte .................. , .... 16
9 .640
112
Cal Poly-SLO ,9, Portland-'S! 44
Milwaukee ..
. ... 12 12 .500
4
Denver 73, Arizona Sr. 52
Toronto
... 12 12 .500
4
S. Utah 80, Montana Tech 41
. ................ 11 13 .'158
Indiana ....
5
San Diego St. 84, Cal St.-Fullerton 47
Detroit
.... 10 14 .417
6
Utah 53. Oregon St. 49
Atlanta ...
.. ..... 6 18 .250
10
Whittier 62. Pacific 46
~hicago
....... 3 21 .125
13
TOURNAMENTS
Western Conference
Coke Classic
Mldweat Division

Championship

WLPctGB

South Alabama 70, Southern U. 46

Third Place
Belmont 55, East Carolina 54

PRO FOOiiALL
National Football Leag1,1e
East
W l TPts. PF PA
.. .. io 5 o .667 296 202

Miami........
IndianapoliS .................. 9 6
N.Y. Jets ................. ..... 9 6
Buffalo ....
.. ..... 7 8
New England........ . ..... 5 10
Central
x·Tennessee ................. 12 3
x-Baltimore ... ........... 11 4
Pittsburgh ..
. ............. 8 7
JacksonYille
............... 7 8
Cincinnati ..................... 411
Cl~ ve l and .
.. ........... 313
West
x-Oakland ................... 11 4
.. ... 10 5
x·Denver_ .
Kansas Crty
........ 7 8
Seattle .
. ...... 6 9
.. ...... 114
San Diego .....

0 .600 398
0 .600 3m
·o .467 273
0.333 252
'
0. 800315
0 .733 299
0 ,533 287
0 .467 342
0.267 178
0.18816 1

316
287
327
311

'0 .733 427
0 .667 447
0 .467 342
0 .400 297
0 .067248

290
360
325
363
406

WL T ' Pct PF
. 11 4 0 733 300
". 10 5 0 .667 335
..... 7 8 0 .467 261
..... 5 10 0 .333 294
............. 3 12 0 .200 207
Central
.11 4 0 .733 '387
10 5 0 667 374
..9 6 0 .600 287
8 7 0 533 336
. "' .4 11 0 .267 193
West

PA
221
238
266

191
145
234
299
343
419

NFC
y·N V_ G1ants
x-Philadelph1a
Washington
Dallas .....
Arizona
11-Mmnesota ...
~- TemP,a Bay
Detrort .........
Green Bay
Chicago .......

330
423

340
252

284
309
335

.

Matt Stevens . Pla ced WR Andre Reed and TE
James Jenkins on Injured reserve. Signed WR
Oerrius Thompson and FB Brya n Johnson lrom
the practice squad.

Atlantic Dlvl•lon

MIDWEST

Dave

NEtl YORK JET5-Stgneel PK Brett Conway. Placed lB Bryan Cox on injured reserve .
WASHINGTON REOSKIN5-Released S

National B11ketball Anoclatlon

Auburn 74 , Nebraska 55
Noire Dame 64 , W. Michigan 54
Santa Clara 62, N . Illinois 50
UC Irvine 72, Chicago St. 46

CARDINALS- Signed

McGinnll. coach, to a lour-year contract.

PRO HOCKEY
Eattem

BASKETBALL

Nlllonll B - 1 1 Auocllllon
SEAmE SUPERSONICS-Waived C Per·

Arizona at Washington, 1 p.m.
Chkago at Detroit, 1 p.m
N.Y. Jets at Ba lttmore. 1 p.m.
Mrami at New England, 1 p m.
St. Louis at New Orleans. 1 p.m .
Tampa Bay at Green Bay, 1 p .m.
Cincinnati af Philadelphia . 1 p.m.
Prt!Sburgh at San Qlego, 4 OS p.m.
Minnesota at Indianapolis, 4·15 p.m.
Car~ 1 na at Oakland. 4:15p.m .
Open : Cleveland
Mond1y, Dec. 25
Dallas at Tennessee . 9 p .m

Monday's Results

Eut

68

-

SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Agreed 10 1erms
Jay W1task:k on a one-year Contract.

with RHP

Sunday. Dec. 24
Kansas City at Atlanta. 1 p.m.

Women'a Calteg• Basketball

RHP Rekt Cornelius for assign -

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Named Brian
Aupp manager of New Jersey of the New York Penn League.

JacksorMIIe at N.V. Giants. 12:30 p.m.
San Francisco at Denver, 4:15p.m
Buffalo at Seattle, 8.20 p.m.

Stanford Invitational
Firtt Round
Stanford 94. Sacred Heart 52

flORIDA MARUN5-Agroed lo leiTTlS wilh
C Chlttet Johnson on a fiVe-year contract

tract~..

Saturdly. Dec. 23

TOURNAMENTS

-~

Ct-ICAGO CU6S-Agl'eed to terms wrth

RtP JUon Bere on a two-year contract .

lOS ANGELES DODGER5-Signed LHP
Ecde Priest, LHP Todd Rluo, RHP MaK Regal ado. RHP Ctm Smilh, INF Jetr Branson, INF
Kellll Johnson, OF Jolt Bany, OF Brent COOk·
son and OF Chris Prieto to minor league con -

a.
o

Tampa

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- AQfeed to tei'I'T'IS

Delignltad
.,-.

Sundly'oGomH ,

AFC

ian 49
Wood County (W.Va .) Chnstlan 63, Teays
Valley Christran 52

wtth C &amp;andy Alomar Jr on a twa-year contract

Seattle 27, Oakland 2'

Ohio High School Boys Baaketball
Monday's Retulta
Evangel Christian 53. Licking County Chnst-

Carnfina

HafT'4)ton

SOUTHWEST

«.

Jess• Gan:lo.

5elurday's Gamu
P1Hsburgh 24, Washington 3

Arkansas St. 87. MorTis Brown 75
Northwestern St. 85 , Oral ROOens 78
Sam Houston St. 96, McNeese St. 9.2. OT
TCU 76, Princeton 45
Texas A&amp;M-Corpus Chrisll 86 , Texas Tech

from Page81

y-NewOfleons ...... 10 5 0 .087333 279
St. Louis .. ~- .... ..
i 6 0 600 514 450

.............7 8 0 487 301 258
San Frarclsco . . .. ..... 6 9 0 400 37e 3&amp;4
Arfanta
3 12 0 200 223 400
x-clinched playoH spol
y-clinched diVISion

68, Wichita Sl. 51
lrdano St 80, Elon 54

Tampa

Utah .
................... 17 7 .708
Dallas ...... ..... ,.............. 17 10 .630 I
Minnesola
.....l. .... 15 9 .625
San Antonio
....... .. 14
9 .609 2
.......... 13 10 .565 3
Houston ..
Denver ....
........... 12 t3 .4SO 5
.......... 7 17 .292
Vancouver ..
PacUic DMeion
Sacramento
.......... ... 16
6 .727
Pont and ,
.......... 17 8 .680
L.A. Lakers ..
. ......... 17
9 .654
Phoenix ... ................ ...... 15
8 .652 1
Seattle ........................... 13 12 .520 4
LA. Clippers ..
.. ... 8 18 .308
Golden State ...................... 6 18 .250
Monday's Gam••
Dallas 106, Boston 98
Tuesday'• Games
Utah at Toronto, 7 p.m.
New Vorl&lt; at Atlanta . 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Miami, 8 p .m.
Indiana at Chicago, 8:30 p.m .
San Antonio at HOuston, 8:30p.m.
DeHoil at Phoenl~~:, 9 p.m.
Washington at Sacramento, 10.30 p .m.
Minneso1a at Golden State, 10:30 p m.
Wednt:Jday's Games
New Jersev at S6ston. 7 p.m
Toronto at Indiana. 7 p.m.
Miami at Charlolte. 7-30 p .m.
Utah at Philadelphia, 8 p .m.
Portland at Dallas. 8 p.m
CleYeland al San Anton10 , 8:30 p m
Oeuort at Denver. 9 p.m.
Sacramento al Seattle. 10 p.m.
Washington a1 Vancouver. 10 p.m
Minnesota at LA. Clippers , 10.30 p .m.

1/2
2
1/2

112
1/2
10

112
1
112
112
10
11

Nltlonal Hockey Ltlgue
·
NHL-Suspended Boston Bruins C Joe
Thomton two games lor cross-checking Caroli·
na Humcanes D Dave Karpa in lhe head Clurrng
a Dec. 16 game
ATLANTA THRA SHERS-Placed LW Tomt
KaU1o on rnjured reserve Aecaller:l LW Yves
Saraull !ram Ortando of the IHL.
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Recalled 0
Nlcl._s Wallin from Cmcrnnatr ot the IHL
Announced a working agreefr1enl wrth Lowell of
the AHL, beginning at the star1 of the 2001·02
season.
.
COLORADO AVALANCHE - Signed LW Jordan Krestanovich .
DALLAS STARS- Placed 0 Gera ld Diduck
and RW Grant Marshall on Injured reserve.
Recalled D Richard Jackman from Utah and
AW Sla~e Sloan from Houston ol the IHL
EDMONTON OILERS--Recalled C B rian
Swanson from Hamillon of the AHL
FLORIDA PANTHERS--Recalled G Rober·
to Luongo and AW Ivan Nolloseltsev from
Louisville of the AHL. Sent G Sean Gauthier lo
Louisville
LOS ANGELES· KINGS--Recalled F Scon
Thomas from Manitoba of the IHL.

MONTREAL

CANAOIENS-Traded

C

Sergei Zholtok to the Edmonton Orters for C
Chad Kllger.

NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Recalled C
Jesse Belanger from Chicago of the IHL
NEW YORK RANG ERS-Assigned C
Manny Malhotra to Hartford of the AHL.
RecaUed 0 Tomas t&lt;loucek from Har11ord.
ST. LOUIS BLUES- Acquired C Eric Bogu·
niecki frorn Louisville 91the AHL anctlW Andrej
Podkon icky from Worcester of the AHL.

COLLEGE
HAMUNE- Named Donavan Larson foot·
baH coach .
IOWA STATE-Signed Dan M&lt;:Camey, foot·
ball coach, to a four-year contract.
STEVENS TECH- Named John Crane
baseball coach.

Track the progress
· .of your favorite
'k . ·'
team through .the

; Sentinel,
·
•
•

" Sporta pagesl -

Mmne&gt;ota loss at Indianapolis.
After Torry H o lt's 72-y•rd
touchdown catch fmm Kurt
Warner gavo the Rams a 35-31
lead with just over five minutes to
play, the Buccaneers rallied
behind one of the craziest plays of
the NFL season.
From their own 35, l{jng threw
a swing lateral to Dunn around
the right s1de. But Dunn w:1&lt;
trapped far behind the line 2nd,
with nowhere to go, suddenly
pitched the ball back to Kmg.
King escaped 2nd str~aked
down the right sideline for a 15yard gain, and IS more yards were
tacked on for a late hit ca lled on
lin ebacker Mike Jones .
Later, on a fourth-.md-4 in
R .&lt; lm\' territory, King \Crambled

for a first down. King then threw
a n-yard p.~&gt;s tt) Reidel Allth&lt;)ll)',
''" hich set up Dunn's 1-y,Ird TO
fUlL

W:-~_n1L'r

tri l'd to brmg: b.Kk tht:'
Rams, but thn:w his third int~r-,
cepnon o f the..• );JI1li..'. John Lynch's
pickotr g.l\'L' the..· l:lu ccanccr\ sweet
rc..•\·cngc..· from bsr season's 11-6
1o\\ in the NFC title g.tmc.
Kc·ysh.Iwn Johnson caught two
tou c hJo\\'11 passes and Dunn
rushed for more tlian I 00 yards
for the third time in four \Vceks.
Faulk scored four touchdow ns
for the second straight week and
third time this season, breaking
the NFL re co rd he shared with
Jim Brown.
Warner completed 20 of 32
passes for 316 yards and two'TDs.
King, who led the 13-play, SOyard drive to win the game, complctq:l 18 of 38 passes for 256
yarcls. Hi s TD throws of 8 a nd 17
yarcls to Johnson, who had seven
catc hcs for 116 yJTds, were Tampa
Bay's first touchdown passes m
five games.
Dunn finished with 145 yards
on 22 ca rnt·s . He sco red on a 2yard rUii in the first quarter and
his 52-yard burst on the final play
uf the third quarte r gave the Bucs
a 3 1-21 lead that their proud
defense co uldn't hold.
Faulk ~con~d· on first- half runs
of 2 and 16 yards for the Rams.
He caught a 27-yard touchdown
pass in the third quarter.

e st
prep sports coverage.
A

TRANSAcnONS
BASEBALL
American League
•
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Ac qu1red
36
S1eve Sisco from lh e Allahta Braves lor INF

The Daily-&amp;nlinel.

On The 9th
DaY Of Christmas MY

On The 1Oth
DaY Of Christmas MY

-True Love Gave To Me•••

True Love Gave To Me.••

A 2001 Explorer Sport

fl 2001 Ford Taurus

2000 Coloring Book Edition
The Daily Sentinel
December 19, 2000

.' .' .

'

I

'

!

'

I

'

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