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PomerOy, 'Middleport, Ohio

Pao1 8 8 • The Pelty Slntlnel

Two morJ import players
likely in majors this year
.NEW YORK (AP) - The Los Angeles
Dpdgen and St. Louis Cardinals would be
pleased if their new J~panese
players come close to matching lchiro Suzuki's success in
the. major leagues.
Two more Japan~se players followed the path
of Suzuki, last year's American League MVP.
~nd are headed to the majors.
The Dodgen won the rights to Kazuhisa
Ishii, outbidding four other mojor league teams
with an offer of $11,264,055 that was accepted Wednesday by the Yakult SwaUows, the
pi~cher's team in Japan's Central League.
.free agent outfielder So Taguchi agreed to a
three-year contract with the St. Lo)lis Cardinals worth about $3 million.
"He's no lchiro- he's not that type of player," Cardinals general 'manager Walt Jocketty
said. "But he is a very good player."
Among other free agents, the New York Yankees finolly announced their $7 million, twoyear contract with left-bander David Wells; a
deal agreed to on Christmas. Reliever Mark
Wohlers left the Yankees, agreeing to a $4 million, two-year deal with the Cleveland Indians.
Among players eligible for salary arbitration,
closer Billy Wagner agreed to a $27 million,
three-year contract with Houston, and infielder Craig Counsell agreed to a $7.25 million,
three-year contract with Arizona.
Ishii, a 28-year-old left- bander, has until Feb.
8 to agree to a contract with the Dodgers.
~ "Obviously, we're very excited to get him,"
Los Angeles manager Jim Tracy said. · "He
comes to the United States in my mind with a
very high billing. He's a guy with four quality
pitches who knows how to pitch."
.
The amount of Los Angeles' winning bid
was confirmed by ~ baseball official who spoke
on tlie condition he not be identified. The
New York Mets, Texas, Anaheim and Philadelphia also made bids. The Mets' offer was about
$10. I million.
Ishii was 12-6 with a 3.39 ERA ond 173
strikeouts in 17 5 innings for Yakult last season,
and went 78-45 with ·a 3.38 ERA and 1,266
strikeouts in 1,173 innings over 242 games. in
10 years with the Swallows.
lshii would join fellow Japanese pitcher
Hideo Noma, signed as a free agent by the
Dodgers last month, in a rotation that includes
Kevin Bro\vn, Andy Ashby and Omar DaaL
Eric Gagne and Terry Mulholland are other
potential starters.
Los · Ange,les outfielder Shawn Green
saw Ishii after the 2000 season when a
group of major league all-stars toured
Japan.
"He shut us down, a team full of guys
like· (Barry) Bonds, (Carlos) Delga?o,"
Green said. "Everyone was really ·
impressed with him. He was the most
impressive
pitcher we saw
there , for
.,
'
sure.
.
. .
Taguch1, 32, JOinS Seattle's Suzuki and

·M LB

Thuntdi~Jan.10,2002

ready lead' Indians
CLEVELAND (AP) Thvis Fryman says that his
surgically repai[ed shoulder is
getting better
and that the
Cleveland
Indians
will
recover nicely from their offseason reconstruction.
Fryman clenched his teeth
and played despite having a
partially torn ligament in his
right elbow and
injured
shoulder in"2001. He had his
shoulder repaired-last month.
The injuries resulted in a
disastrous season fur the veter' played
an third baseman. He
in 98 games and batted .268
with three home nins last year
after posting the best numbers
of his career in the 2000 season.
l·
"There weren't t()(J many
days when I had a whole lot
of fun out there," Frymm said
Tuesday at Jacobs Field. "It
'was a difficult year. OWiously.
I don't want .to repeat it. I'm
looking forward to having a
good year."
Even though the Indians
will look much different next

MLB

"1

THE PLAYER
TO ... - Dodgers ·GM
Danny Evans, center, talks tQ the press about
the Dodgers' winning· the rights to Japanese
pitcher Kazuhlsa Ishii during the team's first
winter workout Wednesday. (AP)
San Francisco outfielder Tsuyoshi Shinjo
as the third Japanese non-pitcher i'n the .
major ·leagues .
Wells' backed out of a verbal agreement with
Arizona on a Sl million, one-year contract so
he could rejoin New York. He was to appear at
a Yankee Stadium news conference Thursday.
Wells helped pitch New York to the World
Series championship in 1998, then was traded
to Toronto the following spring training in a
package deal for Roger Clemens.
The 38-year-old Wells was 5-7 with a 4.47
ERA in 16 starts for the Chicago White Sox
last year, missing the second half of the season
becaus~ of back surgery.
Wohlers, once one of baseball's premier
closers before losing control of his pitches, figures to be a setup man for Cleveland behind
Bob Wickman. Wohlers was acquired by the
Yankees from Cincinnati during last season
and went 1-0 with a -4.54 ERA in 31 games
with New York.
·
"He reinforces our bullpen, which we think
is the strength of our club;' Indians general
manager Mark Shapiro said. "We've had considerable interest in Mark for a while."
Wagner gets $8 million in each of the, next
three seasons. Houston has a $9 million .club
option for 2005 with a $3 million buyout.
Wagner, 30, had 39- saves last season as the
Astros won the NL CentraL
"With the young guys we have ... we have an
opportunity each and every year to get to the
playoffs," he said.
·
Counsell's deal with the Diamondbacks
includes club options for 2005 and 2006.
Those options plus· performance bonuses
"ould make the contract worth up to $18.5
million over five years.
Counsell hit .275 last .season with 38 RB!s
and was MVP of the NL championship series,
batting .381 (8-for-21) against Adanta.

Child immunization plan instituted, AS

•

'"There were like 10 guyi
Began last spring. wh~ he
taking
grounders at rhird." he
reported tQ camp with soreness. He spent the first two said.
•
months on the disabled lQt
The Indians have been
before being activated in June. undergoing an overllml this
But he never was complete- winter.
ly healthy a,nd his play sufFryman said that he WB
fered.
surprised Cleveland traded
"It's frustrating not being All-Star second baseman
able .to do what you always Roberto Alomar, and · that
have," he said.
Indians fans need to be patient
Deprived •of power apd while the club transforms.
afraid to swing too hard, Fry'"( thought we were going
man didn't hit his fint homer to keep the infield in~ct;'
of2001 until his 166th at-bat. Fryman said. "Sure, the loss of
In the field, the 2000 Gold Robbie hurts. So does losing
Glove winner for his position Juan Gonzalez and Kenny
had to fight through incense Lofton."
pain every time' he made a
Fryman, who. is signed
I fint came back, I through next season with a
didn't think 1 was going to be club option for 2003, said he
able to make . it through the likes the .idea of Cleveland
rest of the year:· he said. "But changing its playing style from
it held up. It wasn't pretiy, ·but a power team to a dub built
it was functioml."
on pitching, speed and
Fryman, 32, said it was frus- defensj:.
trating not to be able to play
"We're going to have to do
up to his standards. He joked the little things," he said. "We
that there were timesit looked. can't wait around for guys to
as though the Indians ' were hit three-run homers. We're
conducting open auditions at going to have to make things
third.
happen."

Melp County's

.What's Inside

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY -The M~i~;s

James Scott Rees Sr., 81
Orlando J. Andreoni, 75
Details, A3

. AU Locations of

The Farmers Bani&lt;
and Savings
Company

will be closed
Friday, January 11th
from Noon - 2 pm
for the funeral of past
Employee and Director
Thereon A. Johnson

council members

County Commissioners will
proceed with courthouse renovation plans, now that funding has been received from the
state.
•
The
commissioners
announced the approval of
$70,500 in funds from the
Ohio Department ofDevelopment's Urban and Rural Initiative, during their regular
meeting Thursday.
The
commiSsionets
announced tentative plans for
the courthouse improvemeqts

last summer, but were unabl e
to begin work because ·of
delays in receiving the funds, I
which were obtained through
assistance from State Rep. John
Carey, R-Wellston.
.
The commissioners plan to
sandblast and paint the courthouse exterior, install new
lighting and signage and make
improvements to the courthouse interior.
N ew electrical wiring is also
in the plan.
The commissioners believe
additional funding might be
available from the Ohio legislature's capital appropriition,

which will be approved later
this year.
Clerk of Court:&lt; Marlen~
Harrison met with the board
to · discuss possible expansion ·
a~d renovation of her office
using some of the renovation
fmfds. Harrison, whose office
now occupies a portion of the
courthouse's third- floor corridor, has proposed the construction of a new office area,
but the commissioners have
not made a commitment for
the project.
Racine Mayor Scott Hill
.Please see Melp, A3

HIGHWAYS

Weather

2002 GRAND PRIX GT

All Wheei 'Drlve

3.8 Uter, V6

Details, A2

: Sept. 11 hits

: job market

FROM STAFF REPORTS

·LOS ANGELES (AP) The Sept. II terrorist attacks
will cost the country more
than 1.6 million jobs by the
end of the year, according to
astudy released today. '
: The Milken Institute, a
Santa Monica-based economic think tank that conducted the study of 315
cities; said · tlie'"'Iossei . ,.wil'P~l
"' spre~d . across industries,
from restaurants to financial
'
serv1ces
to aerospace.
Already, 248,000 jobs have
been lost because of the
attacks, the institute said
This year, NewYo.X City is
expected to lose nearly
150,000 jobs, follo\ved by Los ·
Angeles with 69,00o jpbs,
·and Chica·go with at least
68,000, the report said.
Las Vegas will prove the
single most vulnerable metropolitan area in percentage terms with nearly 5
percent fewer jobs this
year.

$20~395

Buckeye 5: 1-10-19-20·30

2002 Grand Am SE
Sedan

2002 LeSabre CUstom

$15,450

$21,495

W.VA..
l)'lly 3: 4·5-3
Dilly 4: 2·3-9·8
c:..li 15: 14-15·17-18-:Z0.21

comic's
Dear Abby

2002 Bonneville SE
Automatic Transmission, r ••••.,.
Control, CD Player, Spoiler

990

2002 Sunflre 2 Dr.
Power Glass Sunroof, 4 Speed Automatk,
CD Player/Equlllzer, Cruise Control,
Remote Keyless Entry, Power Windows,
Power Door locks, 15" Chrome Wheel CDvm

Editorials
Movies '
Obituaries

sports

Weather

MOVING DIRT- Work crews continue to remove large amounts of dirt and rock as construe·
tlon on the first phase of the Ravenswood Connector project begins to move ahead of sched·
ule. When completed, the connector will be a two-lane, limited access highway on a four-lane
right of w,ay, connecting U.S. 33 with the Ritchie Bridge and Interstate 77 in Ravenswood, W.Va.
(Tony M. Leach)

'

Road work continues
BY TONY M.· I.EACH

segn1ent:&lt; of highway geared
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF ·
toward connecting · U.S. 33
GREAT BEND - Over with the Ritchie Bridge and.
two million yards of dirt and Interstate 77 at Ravenswood is
rock have been removed as ' ,startmg
·
to move ah ead o f
work crews with heavy sc h ed u1e .. an d t h at goo d
.
machinery continue construeh h
weat er as played a maJOr
'lion efforts on Phase ·One of
developehe Ravenswoo d " C onnector role in the proiect's
J
.
ment.
project.
,
"B
f h f:
bl
Don Tillis, Ohio Depatt,o, ·
ecause 0 t e avora e
" f:C11
d ·
h
, .
· ment
of Transportati~ au a~ WJnter weat er we v,e
(ODOT) project manager for expenenced, Phase One has
Phase One, said Thursday that been able to progress at a rapid
progress on the first of three pace," said Tillis. "Estimates

POMEROY - Three county offices and Democratic
and Republican. Central Committee candidates will appear
on th e May primary ballot, and petitions for those r~ces are
now available for candidates.
The positions of Meigs County commissioner, term
commen cing Jan. I , 2003, county auditor, term commencing March 11 , 2003, and probate court judge, term commencing Feb. 9, 2003, will be filled this year.
Democrat Mi'ck ' Davenport, Republican Nancy Parker
Campbell and Judge Rober{ E. Buck now hold those positions.
Democrats and Republicans· will also elect Central
Committee members ·in each of the comity's ' voting
precincts in their May 7 partisan primaries.
According to Rita Smith, director of the Meigs County
Board of Elections, petitions are now available for candidates interested in seeking these offices.
The filing deadline for partisan candidates is ·Feb. 21, and
an $80 filing fee and 50 valid signatures are required. Independent candidates have until May 6 to file, and are
required to submit an S80 filing fee and 71 valid signatures.
Candidates for Central Committee are not subject~to a
filing fee , and are required to submit only five valid signa-

I

tures.

Membership Drive

indicate that ·we are ·'cutting'
around 22,000 yards of dirt
each day and have 692,000 ·
yards left, which is good con&gt;s1'dering we had 3.1 miUion
yards of dirt to move at th e
beginning of the proiect."
J
Tillis also said a majority of
the larger pipe work is nearing
completion. and that crews
'th B aver Construction
WI
e
Company are beginning to
focus on the placement of

•

Please ... Ro.ds. A3

·Tampke anilounces his·cand~dac.y

index
: 2 Sedl--12 ......
Calendar
AS
82-4
.
Classi~eds

'

POMEROY - Council members were sworn in and
several police officers were promoted during the recent
meeting of PomeroY Village CounciL
·
Clerk Kathy Hysell said incumbent council members
George Wright, Larry Wehrung and Jackie Welker, as well as
newcomer William "Todd" Norton, were officially sworn
in to office during a special meeting held at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building.
Norton was elected, and Wright, Welker and Wehrung reelected, during last November's general election. Norton
will fill the empty council seat formerly held by John Musser.
In other matters, three Pomeroy police officers were promoted following council's acceptance of officer Joe Kirby
Sr.'s resignation.
Sgt. Floyd Hickman was promoted to lieutenant; Patrolman Joe Kirby Jr., to sergeant; and.Patrolman Ronnie Spaun
to corporal .
Council also:
• elected Victor Young ·as council president;
• approved the purchase of an industrial typewriter, two
used radios and a new scanner for the police department;
• agreed to purchase two new breathing apparatuses for
the Pomeroy Fire Department at a cost ofS2,715 each.

Petitions available for
May primary races

Hlfh:.a.,~:201

'

2002 BuiCK RENDEZVOUS

in

FROM STAFF REPORTS

''

OHIO
Pick 3: Q-3-3
Pick 4: 5-3-8-6
Pick 3 day: 6-2-4
Pick 4 day: 5-7·1-o

At.Pleasant Valley Hospital,
little
. things matter.

Pome~ swean

COUNTY COMMISSION

State fuilds help
coutthouse fix-up

~~hen

because Fryman
of trades says
and . - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
· season
free agency,
1
they're still the American
League Central Division's
best team.
"We're the team to beat,"
he said. "I think we're going
to be fine. We're still goin~ to
have a pretty good team.' f{'
Fryman, who unde~nt
surgery on his right shoulder
on Nov. 28, said he has beg\ln
throwing and expects to be
ready for the start of trainqtg
'•'.;&gt;
camp next month. ' •,..
While favoring his ~
elbow last season, Fryman
said he damaged his chronically bad shoulder. He had a
torn ligament in his rotatQr
cuff repaired and some torh
tissue trimmed.
·
Fryman said he first injured
the shoulder while trying to
break up a double play in
1996 while he was playing
for the Detroit Tigers. It
wonened last season when'
he changed his throwing
motion to take stress off the
elbow.
Fryman's elbow pro~lems

Hometown Newsp11per

8S

AS

A4
, A3

A3
81, 3, 4

A3

c 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Tampke
was
in
Pomeroy on
Thursday
night
to
announce
his candidacy for the
92nd Dis"

SENTINEL NEW STAFF "

POMEROY
"The
Republicans want to save the
rich from . taxes, Democrats
want to give folk the opportunity to help themselves, and I
want to return good old fashioned Democratic values to'
the General Assembly," said
Dale R. Tampke.

trict seat in

Tampke

the

Ohio

House and to speak at a meeting of the Meigs County ·
Democratic Party.
Employed at Ohio University, Tampke is in his third .
term on Athens City Council, is active in numerous community, church and school
o, rganizations an d IS· on t he

Woody Stines, left, vice president of Farmers Bank
and a member-of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Board of Directors, presents the cham·
ber's Courtney Butcher with the bank's. membership
investment for 2002, becoming the first member to
do so. The cham)&gt;er's membership drive Is now
under way. Dues begin at $35 for indi~lduals and
$75 for businesses, based on the number of
employees. (Brian J. Reed)

Please see Tampke, A3

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Al••-'n• ,.......-.AGIII

304-675-4340

·--- --

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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
s.turcMy, Jlln.12

lu-1cr

•••••

•••
••
ol Colulllbuo 121"141• I

•

••••
•

~

.W.VA.

KY.

,Inc.

Cloudy weekend ahead
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tonight... Partly cloudy: Lows in the upper 20s. Northwest
·
winds 5 to 10 mph becoming southwest.
Saturday.:.Mostly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s. Southwest
winds I 0 to 20 mph.
Saturday night. .. Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Lows in the upper 20s. Chance of snow 40 percent.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 30s.
Sunday night. .. Mosdy cloudy with a chance of snow. Lows
in the mid 20s. Chance .of snow 30 percent.
Monday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow. Highs in the
mid 30s.
.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s and highs in
the mid 30s.
Wednesday... A chance of snow showers. Lows in the mid 20s
and highs in the mid 30s.
Thursday...Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s and highs in
the lower 30s. '

Slaying suspect
charged

WASHINGTON (AP)
tncttng process is behind
Ohio's congressional Democ~ schedule, Republican state
rats have added their opposi- lawmakers are planning for
cion to a plan proposed in the two primary elections, one as
Statehouse that would result scheduled on May 1 and
in a separate congressional another on Aug. 6 for conprimary election this year.
gressio~ candidates.
In a letter sent. to Gov. Bob
"To have an extra p~imary
Taft on Thursday, six of the in Ohio when voters aren't
Ohio
delegation's
eight used to an extra primary
Democrats requested a meet- invites confusion," said Steve
ing to 'discuss redistricting as Fought, legislative director for
Rep. Marcy Kaptur ofToledo.
soon as possible.
Re.p. Ted Strickland of '-'Then there's the issue of the
Lucasville said having two pri- districts themselves and what.
. maries would make it appear they look like."
· to voters that the redistricting
The state willlo!e one conprocess had been "totally . gressional seat - expected to
manipulated for partisan be Democratic - when new
advantage."
district lines are drawn
"There has either got -to be because its population did not
some bipartisan accord or it is grow as much as that of other
likely that we will have a late states between 1990 and 2000.
primary or a second primary:'
Other signers to the letter
he said. "We'd like to discuss included Reps. Tony· Hall of
with the governor ·our con, Dayton, Sherrod Brown of
cern about that in terms of Lorain and Tom Sawyer of
cost and in terms of the Akron.
potential for voter confusion."
Brown and Sawyer are
The filing deadline for con- among two of several northgressional candidates is Feb. east Ohio members whose
21. However, since the redis- districts may be merged.

stood naked in a shower during their four-day stay at
Camp Mueller in August.
He faced eight counts of
misdemeanor assault, but prosecutors dropped six of those
charges. Robinson then pleaded no contest to two reduced
charges of misdemeanor child
endangering.

ZANESVILLE (AP) -The
father of the man accused of
killing a Muskingum County
sheriff's deputy says his son
was extremely depressed and
had a•death wish.
Henry Hager III, 52, of
Prairie Township in western
franklin County, said his son,
Henry A. Hager, 27, of Grove
City, more than once expressed
CANTON (AP) - A man
a desire to be killed by police.
The younger Hager could accused of falsely telling coreceive the death sentence if workers that his •sister died in
convicted of-aggravated mur- the World lhde Center attack
der in, the killing of a Jaw has been inclicted on a felony
enforcement officer, • Musk- theft·charge.
.
ingum Counry Proserutor D. . Hoover Co. employees r.used
Michael Haddox said, ..
thousands of dollars for Ronald
Hager isaccused of shooting ' Davi~ aft~r he to!d ~em he had
J
to ratse hts Sisters child.
'
deputy R v"bert ..r.
.anner r., 39 '
D . 49 fC
. .
f
of zanesville, while the officer . . avts, , o . anton, IS ou~ o
was on patrol Thesday night in Jail and working on repaymg
the eastern Ohio-county.

Congressional Democrats
want to meet with Taft

.

Friday,Jan.11,2ooz

••:••'J n. 2112

.death penalty

Medical

w.

51 o
Union Street
Athens, Ohio -

Associates (740) · 594-797~

the warrant and confiscated a

Police: Fatal car
speeding

·,

Obituaries
CAMARILLO, Calif. -Janles Scott"Scottie" Rea, Sr., 81,
Camarillo, Calif., formerly of Racine, passed away early
Wednesday,, ·Jan. 9, 2002, in the Pleuant Vall,ey . Hnmital in

s

EMSIQia~Ds
POMEROY -- Units of
the Meip Emergency Service
answered II calls for assistance on Thursday. Units
responded.» Ca110W1~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:26 a.m., Genaway Ridge,
Virginia Hanson, Holzer
· Medical Center;
12:01 p.m., Chesmut Street,
: Vincent Dabo, HMC; ""
7:54 p.m., Third Street,
assisted by Racine, Carl Salser,
treated;
9:05 p.m., Spring Avenue,
Melinda Justice, treated.
POMEROY
11:00 a.m., Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Freeman Enoch, Camderi-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
.R ACINE
·
7:30 a.m., County Road
35, assisted by Syracuse, trailer
fire, Harold Congo residence,
.
no tnJur~es.

Meigs

•

11 :51 p.m., Bailes Road,
Gail Bryant, HMC.
SYRACUSE
12:55 p.m., Spring Avenue,
Lisa Taylor, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

· Issued license

Foreclosures
. filed

from

Orlando J. •Joe" Andreoni

Volleyball, Basketb~l. Football, Wrestling,
Cheerleaders, Band Members, or any other winter
sport with a special ad In the Tuesday. January
29th Edttlon of the Daily Sentinel._,.,. _

LOCAL STOCKS

AEP- 44.26
Arch Coal- 22,07
Akzo- 43.70
AmTech/SBC- 38.50
Alhland Inc.- 48.41 •

. AT&amp;T -18.90
Bank One- 38.19
BLI- 10.02
Bob Evans- 27.10
BorgWarner- 52.09
Champion - 3
CharrringShopS-6.14
c11y Holding - 13.30
Col - 19.48

Premier - 8.60
'Rockwell- 18. 70. .
Rocky Boots- 8.71
Gannett:._ 67.70
General Eleetrtc- 38.61 ·Ro Shell- 48.51
SalliS - 51.73
GKNLY- 4.62
Ha11ey.Davidacn-53.01 Shoney'a .,... .34

Federal Mogul- 1.05

USB- 21

Kmart-4.20
Kroger- 20.50
Lands End- 50.55
Ltd.- 16.38
NSC - 19.57

Roads
fnNnP&amp;pAl

Wai·Mart- 57

catch basins and the laying of
all d .
.
Dally stock reports are sm er . rama11e ptpe.
tho 4 p.m. closing
According to ODOT, Phase
Oak .. F........ -18.20 quotes of the previous · One will encompass a sevenova - 23.65
day's lranssctlons, promil
h f "S
1\vo"
vlded by Smith Partners
e stretc o
uper
BBT - 35.39
at Adveat Inc. ot Gal· highway beginning from the
DG ..,..16.44
Peoples -18.50
DuPont -43.06
PepsicO - 48.15
llpolla.
bridge to an area near Ohio 124
. . . . - - - - - - - - - ' - . . . . ; . , . - - - - - - - - , and Portland Road and Elige
Hill Road near !Ucine. Plans for
the first section also call for the
construction of two bridges and
four intersections.
(US!'S 2~s-eeo)
Ohio 'Iaiiey Publl8hlng Co.
The cost of the Phase One
Published 8'tlet')' anemoon. Monday
through Friday, It 1 Court St.,
segment will total $22.3 million.
Correction Polley
Pomeroy, · Ohio.
Second-CIUI
"Even though we're moving
Our main concem In all stories is postaga pold II Ppmeroy.
to be accurate. If you know of an Member. Ttta Auocialed Press and

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slightly. ahead of schedule, the
completion date for Phase One
hz been moved fiomJune 2003
tQ August 2003 in case of any
delays due to weather;' saidTillis. .
· Meanwhile, work continues .
on ·the second phase of the pro~e~ which invol~ four miles of
highway that begins at Ohio 7
near Five Points 'lmd ends .20
miles east of Sutton Townsl\ip
Road, and Phase Three, a 4.5
mile gap betweeri Morning Star
and Portland Road that will ulti•
mately connect all three sections.
The a:s the entire 16-mile
. COIIOI!CtD' ~which is projected to be comp~ in June 2004,
has been estimated at S75 million.

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I

"large quantiry" of crack
cocaine, with an estimated.
--r
street value of $.2,500, more Camarillo.
.
than 3,300 in cash, several
Born Jan. 12, 1920, in Mayslick, Ky., h~ was the son of the
POMEROY -A marriage
fi
d
late Herman Rees and Anna P. Cliff Rees. Mr. Rees spent the
rearms
an
"other
properties
winter
months
in
California
with
his
devoted
·
dau~ter,
Jane
license
has • been issued in
suspected 0 f bein
d ·
.,..
Meigs County Probate Court
g use m Hayes, since 1994. He suffered a disabling stroke i-n 1998 and
drug trafficking," Browning
d h h b d
to Allen Brent Swindell. 52,
'd
·
sr.ent th~ ~ yean in the home of Jane an ~r us an ,
sat .
D
and Terry Lynn Williams, 41 ,
The crack was found
on.
·
·
both of Shade.
d
b
k
d
.
Mr.
Rees
was
preceded
in death by his wife of 55 years,
1
a rea Y· ro en own 1010 AJI..vne Follmer Rees on Dec. 13, 1992. They were married on
rocks bagged and ready "or
- r·
" · December 16, 1937, in Maysville, Ky. Mr. Rees was a veteran
sal B'
'
'd
of the U.S. Navy and se~d
[e, rowmng·sas
n· t beli ' th
• ·• in the South Pacific during World
nves ga ors
eve e sus- War II. He retired from the Kaiser Aluminum Corporation at
pects may be p t 0 f a uln'
tat dr traffi· arki
· m d- Ravenswood in 1982 after 28 years of serV-ice. He was a mems e ug
c ng rmg, an _per of the United Steelworkers of America.
POMEROY
ForecloBrowning said an investigation
,
r
r -"
dh
sure
actions
have
been
filed in
into its activities "will conrln•
Scottie s greatest loves in !he were his tau.-,y an is motorMeigs County Common
ue until all members of this cycles. He was a man of few words, but his family and friends
Pleas Court by Beneficial .
ring are arrested."
knew him to be a man of genuine kindness and unconditionMortgage; Inc., Elmhurst, IlL,
Cha
. t th "
al love. He never spoke a harsh word' of anyone and when in
rges agalnsdin eh~our ~us- his presence, one could always feel col'lsistent mutual love. He
against Terry N. Waugh ,
male, claimed to be aJ'uvenile. peers were pen g t ts morn
. ,' .
.
- will ·always be truly missed by his family.
·
Pomeroy, and others, alleging
The sheriff's office was check- . mghasthmve1ngaton, coffinsulted
.In addition to his parents, he was preceded in · death by · a
default on a mortgage agreehtg the males' identities with Wlt
e prosecutors o ce.
. brothe c c R
.
ment in the amount of
authorities in West Virginia
Office~ were assist~ at the _ Mr. ~e;s ~ s~:~ived by his daughters, Saradelle Mack of RUTLA.Nl&gt;
S83,634; and by Citifinancial,
and Michigan today.
scene by the .shenff s ~-9 Grove City, Jane Anne Hayes and her husband, Donald, of
3:26 a.m., Noble Summit, Inc., Hanover, Md., against
Sheriff's Lt. Joe Browning umt,Jese, and Vmgo, Galltpo- C
ill h'
· J
s R J d h' ·r v· · ·
'd h h
h d b
h 1· c· p0 1.
d
Gall'
amar o; IS sons, ames cott ees, r., an ts wue, trgtma, structure fire, Ralph Painter Rhonda .- G. McGrath, Long
sat t e orne a een t e Mts ,· ltyp
ftceh Sog. H'ghta- ofRacine,John Winchester Rees and his wife, Queta, oflmpe- residence, no injuries;
Bottom, and others, alleging
target of a two-month investie1gs ost o t e tate 1
·
i.
f
9:06
a.m.,
Broadway, default on a mortgage in the
.
- rial, California, Gayle Alan Rees and his wi,e, Donna, o New
gation, based on intelligence way Patro~ provtded traffic Alban}l and Douglas Clift Rees and his wife, Phillis, of Racine. Dorothy Evans, HM~;
amouni of$33,174.26.
Gra;dchildren surviving are Jonathan Rees,Jay Rees, Trevor
gathered by investigators and control while dthe search war10:35 a.m., Gibson Road,
The case of Ric!Cy L.
information provided by the rant was_ serve . .
.
Mack, Jason Mack, Andrew Mack. Bradley Rees, Matthew John Dollison, refused treat- Deeter against Ted Dyer, and
lnvestt~to~s said this drug Rees,AIIan Rees, Michael Rees, Lindsey,Jljees, and Anna Rees; ment;
sheriff's tip line.
others, has been dismissed.
Deputies, the county's drug s~IZure ht~hhghts the ~ntry of three step grandchildren also survive, Torlia Reiber, April Lloyd
task force and members of the high-end tllegal drugs mto the and Eric Nazarewycz; eight great grandchildren, Macy Rees,
sheriff's SWAT team senied area
go. The General Assembly
·
Allie Rees, Cyle Rees, David Rees, Mitchell Rees, Casey Rees,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , ; - Alec Mack, and Olivia Mack.
needs to quit rearranging
Also surviving is a sister, Charlotte Walthall and her husband,
the deck chairs on this
School at 7 p.m. on Jan. 22.
Titanic
problem 'a nd
Citizens of Racine and Sut- John, of Ashland, Kentucky; and a brother, Col. John C. Rees
PapAl
throw the property tax
ton Township are · asked to and his wife, Bess, of San Angelo, Texas.
Funeral
services
will
be
at
2
p.m.
on
Sunday,
Jan.
13,
2002,
in
Athens
County·
executive
overboard.
attend the meeting to ·review
frwnPapAl
"As for health care, it's
and comment on the applica- the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine. Officiating will be committee of the Democratic
Party.
a
national problem and
Rey.
Brian
Harkness.
·
·
·
and Clerk David Spencer met tion. '
Interment will follow' in the Letart Falls_Cemetery.
'I'he lifelong Democrat, we're caught in a power
Commissioner Miok Davwith the commissioners and
HMOs,
Grants Administrator Jean enport, who presided at the . Friends may visit on Saturday from 2 p.m. to 4 ·p.m. and 6 his wife Molly, and their play between
funeral
home.
·
daughter
have
lived
in
insurance
companies
and
p.m.
to
8
p.m.
at
the
of
Trussell about a grant applica- meeting in the absence
Memorial contributions can be made in_memory ofJames S. Athens for the past eight the medical establishment
tion prepared by Racine Vil- President Jeff Thornton, said
Rees
to the Pleasant Valley Hospital New ER Building Fund, years. He is a native of with people having to
lage, Racine Vol)lnteer Fire Thornton was expected to
Texas.
make a choice between
'Department and the Portland leave the ICU unit ' at St. 2309 Antonio Avenue, Camarillo, California 93010. ·
.Tampke
holds
a
bacheputting food on the table
Community Center Commit- Mary's Hospital in Huntinglor of science degree in or medicine in the cabitee, through the Community ton, W.Va., sometime on
agriculture econ_omjcs, a net."
Development Block Grant Thursday.
Thornton has undergone
MIDDLEPORT- Orlando J. "Joe" Andreoni, 75, Middle- master'' of agriculture in
He proposed using the
Community Distress program.
According to Trussell, the two surgeries in two .weeks, port, died on Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2002, at the Dayton Veterans land economics and real state's purchasing power
estate from the Texas to get volume discounts
Portland portion of the pz:o- and was transferred to St. Administration Medical Center in Dayton.
He was born on on June 23,1926, in Columbus, son of the A&amp;M University and a c;m prescription drugs.
ject, for construction of a heli- Mary's from · Pleasant Valley
"I want to represent
port, does not qualify because Hospital in Point Pleasant, late Pasquale and Amalia DiGennaro Andreoni. He was retired Ph ,D in education from
1
W.Va.,
last
·weekend&gt;
·
fi-om
National
Electric
Coil
in
Columbus,
Ohio;
He
was
a
the
University
_
of
Illinois.
you
in the _ General
,, it is not iii a qualifying invest- ·
The commissioners' meet- Navy veteran of World War 11. He was a member of PeeneyHe
cited economic Assembly because we
ment area.
security as the theme of have work to do to make
The village will ~ek grant ing next week will b.e held on Bennett Post 128,American Legion, in Middleport.
. He is survived by a daughter and son-i!)-law, Rhonda G. and his campaign. He a~cused sure all of our people, all
funds through the program for Monday at 10 a.m. ,. ,
Their annual o;:J!ljUtional Charles Tabor of Rutland; a grandson, Jacob "tYler Mozingo of the Republican General of our families have the
work on the village's water ·
will- be follOwed by Rutland; a brother and sister-in-law, Benny and Ruth Andreoni Assembly
of
having same economic security
meeting
tank ·and water treatment system, and. the fire department their regular business g1eetiqg. of Columbus; sisters and brothers-in-law, Mary and Nick Cat- shown little progress over that is enjoyed in much
The commissioners_,',also:
alogna of Columbus and Amelia and Bill Bleas of Columbus; the past de cad~ in the . of o~r state," Tampke
for a new firetruck, and Hill
asked the commissioners to .• • Approved traoA'ers of step-sons Rod (Diane) Walker of Rutland Paul (Rita) Walker way of economtc devel- sat d . . For too long, we
ofDexte~. Danny (Kay) Walker of Columbus; Terry (Tammy) . opment, fair funding for have be_en left out of the
pledge funds from the 2002 funds for the sheriff; ft
Walker
of Columbus; Greg (Debbie) Walker of Point Pleasant, -·schoo_Js and access to prospertty. If thiS were a
•
Approved
a
resolution
for
CDBG Formula program for
horse race, y~u could say
the Department of J_ob and W.Va.; inany nieces, nephews and cousins, and many many etyfcttve he~lth care.
use as leverage.
friends
from
St.
Clair
Avenue
area.
·
Economtc
"
developthat we contmuall_y fim sh
Family
Services,
amenlling
its
The watet; tank is now over
Prevention, Retention and
Besides his parents he was preceded by his loving wife, ment hmges on whether out of the money.
. .
50 years old, Hill said.
Plan
to
include
MonnaJune
Smith
Andreoni,
a
brotherBiaggioAndreoni,and
or
not
Me_1gs
Counttans
..
Ta_mp.~e
satd
hiS
Contingency
"We're going to have to
Vtston ts. to - to htrly
repair or water system, there's a S17,500, six-month youth sisters, Jennie Offenburger, Addie OUBrien, Lena Bisutti and ~ave the sktlls to _compete
·
tn
the
21st
Century
fund
pubhc ~c hools, to
not doubt about it," Hill said. diversion program through L
C
d
ucy onra ·
" h
'd "Th
d
I0
h
I
· h·
Services wi!!-9e held at 2 p.m. on Sunday,Jan. 13,2002, at the economy,
e sai ·
.e
eve P t e ta ent Wit 10
A second public hearit;~g on the Juvenile Court.
Also present was Commis- Fisher-~ Funerql Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be only way ~choo~s tn our commumttes to nurthe grant proposal will be held
"ollow 1·n Mt'les Ceme- Metgs
local bustsioner
Jim Sheets.
''
;at · Southern · Elementary
th e R ev. · es H ayman an d b un'a! w'll
1 "
.
f County
. wtllI' be
. ture and grow
d
··
tery. Military graveside services will be conducted by the fatrly .unded ts to_ e tmt- ness, to re uce prescr tp nate the tnequtty tn tlon drug costs and . to
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,American Legion, Middleport.
· ds may cau· on saturday, Jan. 12 , 2002 ·from 6 p·m · to 9 school
fundtng.
The tncrease
access 'to vttal ,
Fnen
·
h 1h
·
·
property
tax
has
got
to
eat
resources
.
p.m. at the fu ne ral h orne.
GALLIP OLIS Gallia
-- C:Ounty Sheriff's Office seized
an estimated S2,500 worth of
crack cocaine and made four
arrests when depun,·es served a
searc~ warnint early today at a
Gallipolis Township residence.
Lodged in the Gallia County Jail were Taman D. Beman,
38, occupant of the home on
Windsor Drive in Plants Subdivision . off Bulaville Pike
where the warrant was served,
and two adult males tentatively identified as Marvin. R .
Mays of West Virginia and
William White of Detroit,
Mich.
A fourth suspect arrested, a

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KaY. Klu,y

C1VP NEWS EDITOR

LIMA (AP) - 'IWo men
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
accused of opening 6ie in an man whose car jumped a curb
apartment, killing two girls and and ran through children playwounding six others, were ing in a yard, killing two, was
indicted on aggravated murder driving 50 mph · on the 25
• charges and could face the mph residential street, a police
death penalty.
detective testified Thursday.
An, Allen County grand jury
Based on tire marks, Dwion
on Thursday indicted Jeronique _ Wasson's car ..traveled more
Cunrlingham, 29, and ·Cleve- than 200 feet after he hit the
land Jackson, 23, on several brakes, Detective James Rease
charges, jndt.!ding two counts said in Franklin County Com·each of aggravated mutder with moo Pleas Court.
death penalty specifications.
Wasson, 19, is charged with
Both men also were charged aggravated vehicular homiwith six counts of attempted cide. Geoffiey. Neal, 15, and
aggravated murder and one · Ce-Andre Moss-Stanford, 9,
"
.... b"-• All di d f b k
....
da
count O•· IIIIBfiiYil~ _ro ~··1•
·. e o
ro en nee... a ' y
chargn carry gun apecific:atiom. after the Aug. 28 crash.

Urgent Care!!

_;;;;;_;;;;...;;.,;;.;;;..1

.BY

Coach pluds
no contest
CUYAHOGA FALLS (AP)
. -.A coach pleaded no contest
to two counts of child endangering, angering parents of the
24 Cleveland boys he was
accused of beating at a summer
football camp,
"Justice was not done for
these kids;· said Linda Griffin,
mother _of 10-year-old Arvon,
who returned from camp with
welts on his thighs and buttocks.
· ·
Coach Earley Y. Robinson,
30, of Elyria, had been accused
of whipping the 8- to 10-yearold boys with a belt while they

.PorMrOy, Middleport. Ohio

Four arrested.in
dftlg raid·

They are expected to be
the m~ney he took while at the
North Canton · manufacturer, arraigned next week in Allen
County Common Pleas Court.
said his lawyer, Jeffiey Haupt.

1Woface·

'

&gt;

CINCINNATI (AP) - A judge sued in July 2000. Three gun-rights suit by filing it when cases were liltely to
ruled Thursday that Ohio's decades-old groups joined the suit.
be asaigned to him.
"There's absolutely no truth to it ban on concealed weapons was unconRuehlman's ruling said the state constitutional. The state immediately -stitution grants people the right to sour grapes by the loser in this case:• said
appealed, arguing that the law ,is reason- defend themselves against violent attack William Gustavson, lawyer fo~ the pnable and has been upheld by a, higher and provides "tile funclameptal constil!!.- .n~ invfl.tigator and fol!r others who
rou~
·
tiona! right to bear a firearm for their filed the suit.
"There is no fundamental and defense and security."
.
The five, also in~ludiilg a fitness trainabsolute constitutional right to carry a
"There is no doubt that the very er, hairdresser and two men in the food
concealed weaP.on," the appeal said.
thought a potenti'al victim might possess ~livery business, said the consti~tion
Attorneys for Ohio, the city and _ a firearm deters that element of our does not specify that weapons cant be
Hamilton County also contended that society that cares nothing about laws or concealed.
'
The lawsuit argued that the state law
Common
Pleas
Judge
Robert human life but rather understands only
Ruehlman wasn't impartial, because he one thing - brute 'force," Ruehlman allows police to arrest those carrying
· concealed weapons before they can
has publicly questioned the concealed- wrote.
weapons law and his wife and child
Ohio's barr is reasonable and the Ohio argue their legitimate self-defense rea. were threatened by a guriman who tried Supreme Court upheld it in the 1920s, . sons in court .
_to abduct them in 1989,
government lawyers argued in their . Government attorneys countered that
Ruehlman 's ruling forbids local poli&lt;e appeal. Ruehlman cannot issue ruli.ngs the right to bear arms does not prevent
from enforcing the ban, which covers contradicting a higher court, they the . stat!' from regulating how people
carrying concealed weapons or having added.
may carry guns.
loaded weapons in a vehicle.
The attorneys had asked last week that
Forty-two states allow carrying ~on. The state later Thursday won a delay Ruehlman remove himself from the cealed weapons with a license or perin his order. A hearing on the stay is case because of the threat on his family. mit. Vermont allows concealed-carry
His wife, Tia Ruehlman, has said she without a license or permit.
scheduled Jan. 22 in the 1st Ohio District Court of Appeals.
does not believe being armed would
Gov. Bob Taft wants law enforcement
Ohio allows only law enforcement have helped her in the assault. She said endorsement before signing a similar
·
officials or officers of the state and fed- people should be able to carry con- bill, spokesman Joe Andrews said.
eral government to carry concealed cealed weapons but had not discussed
Ohio Rep. John Willamowski said his
committee could send a bill ·1egali2ing ·
weapons.
the case with her husband.
The appeal also said the plaintiffs concealed weapons to the House at the
five people who argued they needed
weapons for self-defense on the job ensured Ruehlman would handle the end of the month.

I•

- -

•

Ftl~•y.

0

Judge: Weapons law unconstitutional

Ohio weather

I .... -..,~

.PageAl

,,

ALL AGES ALL TIMES $4 .00

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�f--=l=l..::;;le-=-...,;'=·l;. .l. ;:!; .; n; ;. ;.:; . ;d=-_. .;._ - -:'_. . ;Fi;.;,;,;rld; ;. ,~·..;. ; ,;n,;. ; ~; ;.:"g~ .; . ~· ; .; 0 2.; .;

The Daily Sentinel

·older stude~t achieves degree o success

The Daily·Sentinel:· . ,,
··.

.'

....w

111 Couftlt..~Ohlo
740 112&gt;21111• Pu:
1187

DEAR ABBY: About I 0 years
ago, a letter appeared in your column from a woman who was debating whether to return to .college. She
~d if she attended .part time, it
would take eight years to · get a
degree, and she'd be 45 years old.
You told her in eight years she
would be 45 years old anyway, and
not to let that dissuade her. You"r
response struck a chord with me.
Shortly after reading that column, ·
I decided to go back to school. I had
attended college twice in my early
20s, but lacking direction,'! dropped
out twice. I always knew I was smart,
but I was ashamed to say I had only
a high school education .
So, at 38, I visited my local com- .
munity college and talked to a counselor. I •was terrified. I had no idea
how ·to enroll in classes or what

Ohio V•lley l:»ubllehlng CO.
R. Shlwn Lewla
M•neglng Editor

Ct111Mnt Hoeflich

Dlllll ~Hill

Oeneral Man.ger

Controller

n,

Uttot to 11w ffliiM liN wk6MI.
~ k "'' ,._ - ..... AI,.,
, ....., "",,,. IUUI~Mh~M eMtw.i- .,., ,,., ........
No utw,.H ldnn will H ,.U..It&amp; lllmr •""!" h lit , _ ,.._ ..........
n s11,rs, '"" /lft'laM/JIIft.
• "1 '
Ut,r . , . , , «qntMI Ill fM toluul6clc:tw liN du UIPMfU oftiN lJIIN \ttlq
I',.(J ii~ lf;lfl c.. 'r ftlllot'W /HMrt Mlfhll 411/utvlu lftlll4.

Ult', fd./ftf 141 .

NATIONAL VI-EW
i

Remember back when hope came from a radio speake~

lok,· a ton of sugar or a herd of cattle. In fact, the sexual
"'l'l"itation of children for profit is the most obscene opp.osite '
o l ll &lt;:c trade.

f\ lore than 3,000 deleg-•tes from 138 countries were in Japan
lo&gt;1 1he Second World Congress against Commercial Sexual
., , ,, plni tation of Children, which is sponsored by UNICEF and
&lt;•rlln ·a rgonizations, Their objective: to review whether counloo c·' have made progress in stenuning such commerce since the
11111 conference in 1996.
llcre's an educated guess: not much.
" l'mgress" cannot possibly describe the estimated 250 mil'" "' ,· hildren who are forced to be in the global, multibilliondullar industry of smuggling and sexually exploiting .children.

.

/

·

· . ··

. T Q DAY I N .H IS T Q RY
. . .,

·

BY THE ASSOCIAT£0 PRESs ·

·

.
.

m

'lioday is Frid1y,Jan. 11, the eleventh day of:?&lt;J02.There
JS4
. . ·.
. ·...
·
: "lud&lt;~y's Highlight in History:
·
. ·,
. ·
: 1 &gt;n.Jan. 11, 19)5, aviator Amelia Eaihart began a trip·ti:om Hon;oltol" to Oakland, Calif., that made her the first woman to fiy 5olo
~.1 1 ro"s the Pacific Ocean.
·
·
.
, ( &gt;" this date:
'" r757, the first secretary of the
Treasury, Alexander
ll.n n iltoll, was born in the West Indies.

~ lay1 k ft m the year. ·

u.s.

:::

~~~~~.t~f~~~~~~~~~al:;h':fi:~·prime minister of

• '-'"·"k was born in Glasgow, Scotland.

I" I Ht; 1, Alabama seceded from the Union. •
''' 1\1 I :1, the first sedan-type automobile, a Hudson, went on disr•L oy :It the 13th Automopile Show in New York.
.
I" ~ 942, )~pan declared war against the Netherlands, the same
',t,,y 1h,1t Jap1J1ese forces invaded the Dutch East Indies. , . ,
In·, I'J43, the United States and Britain signed treaties relinqui,,lting e'ttaterritorial rights in China.
.
lo • 1964, U.S. Surgeon General Luther Terry issued the first gov,,,.,,oncnt report saying smoking may be hazardous to one's health.
I 11 1973, owners of American League baseball teams voted to
.1d•o~t the designated-hitter rule on a trial basis.
," I\177, Fpnce set off an international uproar by releasing Abu
IJaoud, a PLO official behind the massacre of Israeli athletes at the
I'172 Munich Olympics.
l eu years ago: The president of Algeria · (Chadli Bendjedid)
rcsiv,ncd, two weeks after Muslim fundamentalists had defeated his
ouli11 r.; party in le~i.~lative elections.
I· 1vc years ago: President Clinton summoned top administration
o l'l icials to a cjaylong planning session for his second term. An
c tnhquake of magnitude 7.3 shook Mexico City and the southn o• part of Mexico, but no deaths were reported.
,
O ne year ago: The Army acknowledged that U.S. soldi_ers killed
·"' "u nknown number" of South Korean refugees early in the
1(, •n:an War at No Gun R.i. President-elect Bush chose Elaine
( ·r,,,, to be secretary of labor after Linda Chavez withdrew. The
l"cdrral Communications Coinmission approved the merger of
/11 11nica Online and Time Warner.
" ll,day~~ Birthdays: Producer Grant Tinker is 76. Producer David
L. Wolper i~ "74. Actor Rod Taylor is 72. The prime minister of.
( , in.tda,Jcan Chretien, is 68.Actor Mitchell Ryan ("Dharma and
c;,.q:") is 68. Rock musician Clarence Clemons is 60. Country ·
,;,~·· r Naomi Judd is 56 . .Golfer Ben Crenshaw is 50. Singer
I( ,&gt;hcrt Earl Keen is 46. Musician Vicki Peterson (The Bangles) ts
·I I Actress Kim Coles is 40. Actor Jason Connery is 39. Rock
"""ician Tom Dumont' (No Doubt) is 34 . Rhythm-and-blues
' "'fl''r Maxee Maxwell (Brownstone) is 33, Singer Mary j.l:llige !s
I I. Musician Tom Rowlands (The Chemical Brothers) is· 3!.
11&lt; 1n:ss Amanda Peet is 30.
·
· rhough~ forToday:"The essence of taste is luitabiljty.Divest the:
wtJrd ofits prim and priggish implications, and see how it express- 1
,.,, the mysterioils demand of the eye and mind for symmetry, har' "ony and order."- Edith Wharton, American author (1662- .
I Y.l7).'
,

I

'"

·Maybe it's too early to tell, but it
of blue on which to hang real hop":,
seems to me that the television coverAs he did, he began to he.r fru111
age of the war against terrorism has
mothers and fathers with sous in tb ~
not produced ·aoy correspondents with
service, thanking him for his opti ,
the star quality of Edward R . Murrow,
mism . He also received mail from men
H.V. Kaltenborn, Eric Sevareid, Rayin uniform thanking him for hdpin1:
mond Gram· Swing, Elmer _ Davis,
keep morale · up for the folks b.•ck
Lowell Thomas or .. Gabriel Heatter,
home.
who were among the riewsmen who
What Heatter's listeners didn't know
kept our ears . glyed to .. the radio set
was that in his off-the-air life, he w:t!
evGeraybrn,.ieglhHt de.autrtienrgwW.asormldy. ~aavrolrit·t·e· H.e· •
COLUMNIST
prey to many phobias th~t kept him""
·
·
· ·
"
·
·
the brink of on'e- nervous brea kdow 11
was the .father of th.e hum;m-int~rest
after another all his life.
'
s~orr, whiC:Ii is. now a, staple Of televi- . accent 'was on the better hope for "Out of my struggle with the se
stons war coverage; Born In New York tomorrow"- .he writes in his book. demons;" he says in his autobiograpiJY.
City in 1890,1-ieatter died in Miami in ''Even if ;omorrow turned out to be "I developed an awesome respect fof
1972 ~t the ag~ of 82.
worse than today, when ~bat day was. such words as Jove, mercy, compass ion
In hu .autobtography, Heatter. recalls done, there was still hope that the next · and charity."
· c
a mght m 1939 when the Nazts were - day would be better."'
.
, ''I( a story had be used abollt "
attacking Poland. In the ' background,
Heatter w?uld op~J;! many ?f hu huilt.ln being in trouble and publid z;;;
as · the Polish radio was broadcasting broadcasts With the !me for whtch he · .,
'
. "'
the bombardment,· lis.t enen could hear b ecame' r1amous: "Ah
th
•
·
d
·
mg
the
name
would
hurt
memb&lt;·t,
&lt;It;
· , ere s goo · ·. · f: .
h
t#o
the music ,of Chopi'n bein, g played.
· t ·· h.t" . · ' . ·
the am1ly, I would not use t c i-.au~
news on1g .
·
.
IC' Il , .
Heatt~tr saw that .·as ' a ·. symbol of
He first used the line dllring a ·peri- • ,Someone ~9uld . s,~y to •llf'· .:n&lt;l~-.~
: man~i":d's ':lnc~hquet~ble spirit in the od in the war when everything was the news. You ca.n t ~al k about llTC,~
· . face of
the enemy could do. g·omg
.
ba dl y .or
&lt;
. b th E ro e · d and jiees all the ume. But l m"'"'f\'""'
, the worst
.
us m
o
u p an
&lt;.
, ·., · .
••
. He . would' ~Y to bring that spirit into:
.·
10r 25
· years. .
::
, b.
d,
T.h er. e we_re stones
. . a f the Pactfic. Then
U.S .. fortes sank a · ..,. d
h b. d
. d. h
.,.
hts . roa. casts.
·
I
h fi
.
.a ay t e roa cast ·me 1a as ""'
Japanese destroy.e(. t was t e tt$t pos•
.
.
valor •and ·satrifi~e on the battlefields, . .
d.
t ~ th All" · that such respect for people. It satur.1tcs •CC
.
f · ... .
.
f h " mve eve1opmen tOr e · 1es.
.
.
.
f
.
""
1
.':'stor)es o .somc:one .gomg out o
ts night, Heatter opened his broadcast w1th stones a . cluld abuse, scan,"=
'way to. fight forJustice for another.
With the .line thilt became his sign~- and m~rders.Thts, even more. than th!:
"simple . in these stories ture;''Ah, there's ·goad ews tonight.'' news melf, ts largely
It'=
brought, · reli~£.-,from the · burdem of
The r'es' pon•e wa
· 5 t"mmediare. Some- our down
.. cast mood,
war,"·· wrote . Heatter. "People would ·
,
G b 1H
h
ld h 1
31111 ''" ,.
·tell me they went to bed feeling better thing about the words "good news"
f ~ ne
eatter, t e wor
after my' broadcasts." ,
caught on with the public in those 0 t ee now.
:
But Heatter is remembered most for dark days. On each ·broadcast there-. ·(George R, Plagenz ls 'a colrm11risf ji•=
the way· he_. delivered the news. "The after, Heatter would try to find a patch Newspaper Enterprise Associatiou.)
:
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•

George
Plagenz

/\ 11vone horrified by this need not look beyond U.S. shores
' " &lt;c·~ child exploitation. A recent, three"year study by Univer, , ~ ,f Pennsylvania researchers Richard). Estes and Neil A.
w,' "'"r timnd that 244,000 to 325,000 American children and
, ""Lil .ITl' each year victims of sexual exploitation. ...
·
I hl" l'cnn study portrays a monumentally insufficient
:·''1'""'' by government agencies and private organization!. ·
I ·'"' tlut can be used to attack the problem must be enforced.
•'II"· customers, not the children, should be prosecuted. More
' .Ill ' ,otion :md awareness programs .are needed, along 'with '
,.IJ,. , 11 to tind these children and place them in ·social-service
;,,,.,,, r, nm that can give them alternatives .ro abUS(l .at home or
:, ,r, ll ~t" o n the streets.
'
·. '
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' . '
II •;w about no abuse at all? Now, th~c, w&lt;)Uld b~:piogress, ·. '
· · ··

Rocus ·;}0 rproaram
.
6
On children~
vaccinations

SAINTS AND SINNERS

• T he Philadelphia Inquirer, on explllited a11d sexually
"''" '' d c!.ilrlrell: Millions of children yearly are sold and bartered

.

, "Some,thi~g .

respmts~blc

WEST S

·v IE W

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Health Department
continues to focus on il'lcreasing the number of children
who are vaccinated at an early
age by providing free immunizations to children every
Tuesday.
According to Norma Torres,
health commissioner, children
need 80 percent of their vaccinations in the first two years of
life to protect them against disease, disability, and even death.
There have been many
innQvations in immunizations
since the first vaccination was
administered by Dr. Edward

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Deu

Abby

print that letter or one similar, I and appeared several times on the
receive letters such as yours. The "Ed Sullivan Show." One night he
rewards you are enjoying have come w~ standing in the. wioglc waiting tu
because oi your own efforts, :ind I'm go on. Sammy Davis Jr. was going on
sure your letter will serve as a "rally- aheaa of him.
ing cry," as weD as an inspiration, to
Sammy wore a large ring . .Just
many othen.
·
before he made his entrance, he
Congratulations on your academkissed hil ring se~eral times - each
ic and business successes ~ They are
time saying, "You're a star. You're a.
well earned.
·
star."- MRS. VAUGHN MEADDEAR ABBY: I had to respond
to the letter from "Proud to Be Me ER
. • DEAR
MRS. MEADER:
in California," who had been teased
from early childhood. "Pro~d" Sometimes even people who seem
developed. an eating disorder and to have everything need to give
became convinced she was flawed . A themselv~ a pep talk. Like your husfriend told her to reaffirm her good- band, Sammy Davis Jr. was a brilliant
ness and belief in herself by saying talent. If that was the secret of his
out loud that she was a beautiful and success, it certainly worked.
special human being.
Pauline' Phillips a11d her datlghter
This reminded me of a story my Jeanne Phillips share _
lire pseudonym
husband told. He was a performer A bigall liln Burett .

.

Jenner 200 years ago, and
more continue to be made.
· explained Torres, who attributed the innovations to the
reduction in the number of
vaccine-preventable diseases,
disabilities, and death.
Torres reported that during
2002, Meigs County children 24
months of age had received 81
percent of their required Diph· theria-Tetanus-Pertussis, Polio,
and Measles-Mumps-Rubella
(German Measles) vaccines.
The rate has increased from
the 2001 rate of 68 percent,
but, as pointed out by the ·
' health commissioner, the rate
of immunization of Meigs
County children still falls
below ~he national objective of
a 90 percent immunization rate
for children in this age group:
By age 2 years, she said, chi!dren also need to have received

GmiNG A .SHOT - Lindsay
Matson, left, of · Pomeroy,
holds
her
13-month-old
daughter, Kathryn, while
Nancy Broderick, RN, administers childhood immunizations. (Contributed photo)
three haernophilus influ-enza
type b, three hepatitis B, and
one chickenpox vaccinations.
"Nationwide, vaccination is
at 'an all time high and diseases
are at an all time low.
"Vaccine preventable diseases have been !l'duced by

more than 99 percent since
the introduction of vaccines.
Infant immunization is a simple and inexpensive way . to
protect children from 10
potentially deadly infectious
diseases," said Torres.
Diseases vaccines prevent
include measles, mumps, polio,
rubeDa (German Measles), pertussis
(whopping cough),
tetanus Qockjaw), diphtheria,
haemophilus influenza type b,
hepatitis B and chickenpox.
fur every deDar spent on
immunizations, as much as $29
can be saved in direct or indirect medical costs, Torres concluded.
Parents who have questions
concerning their children's
immunization can call Nancy
Broderick, RN, the immuniza.tion nurse at·the Meigs County
Health 'Department, 992-6626.

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Calendar Is publlshad as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to
announce meetings 11nd special avena. The calendar Is not
daalgned to promote sales or
fund·relsers of any type. Items
are printed only as space per·
mils and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed a specific number of days.

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This Real McCoy should have considered courtesy

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om-of~nrdc~

Just ~ qu~tions about the American
displaying odd behavior,
Airlines pilot who booted a secret service
paperwork and a disturbing temper. /\lilt
agent fioin his flight on ChrisbniiS day:
·he was packing heat. A captain wuuli
What is his flight Jchedule? And, can we
have be ruinously negligent or out of hilio
please, all of us, always fiy with him?
mind to take such a passenger, Arab slwilC
Three days after Richard Reid tried to
or Mayflower Madam, on faith. .
:
blmir up American Airlines Flight 63, a
The question that Shater and counsc.: .
man identifYing hirmelf as a !ecret ·service
now cling to seems absurdly beside th:
agent boarded American Airlines Flight
point: Was Sharer "racially profiled"? Th~
363. He was the real McCoy, a 7-year vetanswer is, let's hope so. While the Ill.all
eran of the 'force nam~dWalied Shater, but
COWMNIST
volatile demeanor would have gotten
his permit to fiy armed was a little fishy.
Swiss cuckoo-clock-maker tossed . ollt't
Even before his paperwork sent up red
the tarmac, his ethnidty, along 'with hie
flags, though, the man attracted notice fur ·All's weD that ends well? Hah. first sex, age and solo traveling ~tus, fits th&lt;e
exiting' the plane after boarding (odd) and President Bush aiUlounces he'D be "mad~ · "profile" of the person most likely to pos&lt;;:
.leaving his carry-on luggage at his seat (a der· than heck" (groan) if his agent was . a thre~t to airborne pas~enger plam:- - : ·
no-no). He also left a book that a flight bounced because o(his "ethnicity:' Ne~,
1f that d,oes m~ke the pres•,knJ
attendant noticed was inscribed in Arabic- . the agent hires legal counsel to charge · madder thank heck. Rcme!ubcr thof:
style writing (positively' neryous-making exactly that:' He was refused a seat on a secunty checker at Boston's Logan Au·~
in these days of Arabic-style terrorism).
commercial jet, his lawyers maintain, 'port ~ho, with a cheerful "H:.ve :l nkol'
The captain, in his subsequent report, becau.~e of his Arab ancestry. "Pure and fitght, waved fhle Arab rnen ontu Umtc.;
would describe Sharer as "nervous and . simple, this is a case of discrimination;• Airlines Flight 175 on . Sept. 11 ? Tho!: ,
anxious;• an emotional stat~. which, in the said attorney John ReltTian. Without rul- woman reportedly _remams haunt~d hJ
course of the airline's indep·e ndent ing ·aut a lawsuit, the agent is demanding the f~ce of one htJack~r whose uddJ
attempt to verify his identity, would an apology ftum the airline and "civil- l:iehav10r troubled her at the tlllll'. Woulf
·evolve to "very hostile," then "loud and rights" training for its crews.
that she had thought to do son.~Nhmg -::
abusive." An airline manager, a pcket agent
Let us pllusc f&lt;&gt;r a moment of mirthle!! yes, even a httle, qluck mental profilong •
a11d a local policeman ·were able to· cor~, laughter before unmasking this phony flap - that 1mght haye ~nsured those do&lt;;&gt; tHe~
tobora~ th&lt; 11)ain points of 1he ·captain's fur the travesty that it is. Qf all people, a ·. P~~engers a mcer fh~ht. . ,
:
account,. 'Jhis manager; who had also been presidential bodyguard should understand
T~reats of la;"!Ults wtll ~ot deter
in contaci with the captain, also spoke the ·.pilot's crucial charge: to ensure the from~ustly applymg the secunty pn.&gt;gr.tlll
with Sharer, and reported that the secret safety of his passengers and crew, not to estabhshed w prot~ct....•~ustomers wh,
serviceman admitted t&lt;i filing improper mention people on the ground - or in entrust us With thc1r lives, Amcnc;~nll~r-£
paperwork a11d l&lt;ilSing his temper with.the unfortified towers of steel and gl"'s.
hnes has stated. Brav~. lnstead of askuoll _t&lt;&gt;C
captain: The manager abo itat~d that
It seein.'. 1narc than passing strange to an apology, Shater nught con&lt;1d~r ut?.kmJI
Shater "threatened that he would .have my have to recall .that tv.; o American Airlines orle. Alld mstead of demandmg c1v~
the maitager's job." Whatever the final planes were among the tour aircraft com- rights." training :o~ :~irlin~ ~rews: he mighC
straw wa,, after something close to a 90- mandecrcd 011 Sept. 11 by 19 Arab Mus- l~ok mto ~ ltttlc u~l l-av.~at10l 1:. t•.wmtg lo!
minute delay, Anterican Airlines declined lints and turned into weapons ·of mass lumsel f - cmpha&lt;~s Qn · ClV 11 - 10 k.m~
·io carry Sharer on· .Christmas Day. The destruction. A Muslin1 man tried to do what 1t takes to be a good pa1smger. ..
agent joined the presidential entourage the same thing to another American fiight
(Diaua IM&lt;st " ~ colw'!"isl &lt;11111 &lt;"&lt;lif&lt;•r!.:
the fullowing day via another American seVeral days befOre Shater came aboard . wnter .for I11e Waslungtorr f11~1es, She Co lli 1:
tlight.
.
• ·
,
·
contacted vw dovestUJ&lt;~Shlllglct~llllles.tunJ.) , ·

Diana
West

:V7"

"I

• ,.axes, '.ags, Trtle Fl88 elltra. Reblte included In sale price of new vehtle listed whOre applicable. " On approved credit. On salected
, , models. Not responsible lor!ypogmphlcalerrors.'
Prices Good January 9th through January 131h.
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able. Call 949-4000 to register.
POMEROY
Fraternal
Order of Eagles Aerie 2171 ,
district meeting, 5 p.m. All FOE
and Auxiliary members are
urged lo attend.
lebanon
PORTLAND Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
township building.

TODAY
~ POMEROY Burlingham
POMEROY - Widows Fellow· Modern Woodmen, 4 p.m. at
ship Craw's Steak House for lunch. the hall for a soup supper and
election of officers. Camp will
LONG BQTTOM - Hymn sing furnish three kinds of soup and
at Faithtul Gospel Church, 7 p.m. beverage, those attending are
Delivered will sing.
to take something else to seo:ve.
POMEROY -:- Annual Meigs
County Township Association
MONDAY
meeting, 6:30 p.m. Meigs MulPOMEROY- Regular meettipurpose Senior Center. Din· ing of I he . Meig·s County
ner provided.
Republican Party, 7;30 p:m. at
the Meigs· County Courthouse .
SATURDAY
RACINE - Racine Grange
POMEROY - Meigs Band
genealogy,wo[kshop, 1 p.m. at Boosters, 6 :30 p.m., high
Racine. Openings. still avail· school band room.

.. ,
1

CHIVROLIT

,I
h

It took seven years, but I graduated fiom a university with a B.S. with
holjJ)rs and a 3. 96 GP.A. I was 44
years old and the first in my family
to graduate from college. My entire
family came to the ceremony. It was
one of the proudest moments in my
li~
. '
"Since graduation, I have received
ADVICE
two· promotions at work and am
currently working on my master's
classes to take.
degree. I will be 50 by the time l finGoing back to school was the best ish.
thi'ng I ever did. It opened my injnd
Abby, I want to thank you for
to new ideas and improved my self- printing that letter. During the years
confidence and self-esteem. I found I was working full time and attendthat being an older adult in a class .of ing school, I never forgot your reply
younger people was not so bad. l had to thai woman. It was my "rallying
a wealth of personal experience to cry" and kept me motivated. draw upon, and although I had to ELLEN CONLEY, OAK HILLS,
budget my time and study hard, I CALIF.
had no problem getting good grades.
DEAR ELLEN: Every time I

Health Department institutes·immunization plan

fllegal trade in children cries
out Jot ·eriforcement

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Buick@

(2) Otdemoblte.

It's all gocia

IIIII IIIIIIIIIM"

�Ill

- Y 7 P·IL

---""""

~ oll.-a.tll Af
I
't?Zzzt ... w.nt Rd...

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c-r

~ " , _ Qr1ol
Ap&lt;&gt;lll&gt;li&lt; FWI

t::aooaftll
161Mulbctry
A&gt;c.,~
-,..
991-3898
Puu:w: Rev. Walta' E. Heint
SaL Coo. 4:4S.5: Up.m.: "'-" 5:30 p:m.
Sun.. Con. -t:4S-9: IS a.a,

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llol illl'' '

+

Pastor: Re\'. Amos Tillis 4
Sunday Wanhi~IO:OO a.m.
' Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Pastor: AI Hamon
Youth Minister: Bill frWer
Sunday School+ 9:30 a.m.
WonhiP,. 8:15 , 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedpe§day Services- 7 p.m.

Ho.- Baptil:l Cbu~h {Southfm)
S70 Gram St. Middlepon
Sunday ~~eoo-;,1 · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a. m. and 6 p.m.
Wcdnesdlly Sc:rvice 1 p.m.

O.a~

+

Kene Church of Christ
Worship -.9:30a.m'
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
P'ollltor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

R•tland nnt Baptist Cbunb
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Zion Churdt ot Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.l43)
Pastor: Roger Warson
Sunda)· School - 9:30a.m.
Wdrship • 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ServiCes · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Fl,nt hptlst Chun::h
Pastor: Mark Moill)\to·
6th and Palmer S1.. ~iddlepon
Sunday School - 9: 15 a.m.
Worshlp - IO:J 5a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednc:!lday Servi~:e · 7:00p.m.
Radne First Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:40a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne..~y Services-7:00p.m.

Bradbury Church ot Cbrilt
Paslor: Jim Eaton
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Sll11er Run Baptist
Pll.!ltor: John Swanson
Sunday School- IOu.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wc~neM!aY Scr\'iCeN· 7:00p.m.

Rutland Chun'h of Chrut

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wurnhip - 10:30 a.;,., 7 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptta
Pastor : D~sid Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45 a'.tn.
Evening · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s ·6:30p.m.

Bradrord Church or Chris I
Comer uf Sl. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini ster: Doug Shamblin
You lh Minister: Bill Amberger ·
Sunday S~·hool - 9:30a.m.
·
Worship - 8:00 n.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~rviccs - 7:00p.m.

IJethlrhem Baptist Church
Ore11t Bend, Route 124, Raci ne, OH
'Pastor : Daniel Mccea
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Sund.y Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneflday Bible Sludy • 6:00 p,_m.

Putor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10:1.5 a.m.

~thany

Evangeli!it Mik.e Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Okt Bd~W1 Free W111 Bvptbi Chu~h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday S.:hool - 10 11.m.
E\lcning - 7:00p.m.
Thur!ida)' Services . 7:00

Tloe Cbun:h of J Ciuiai&lt;ILIU...Ilay Saloll .
SLRt.I60,446.62470r446-7486
Sunday Schoo) 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 111 :05·12:00
noon
. .Sacrament
' '·
Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemikins meeting, Ist. Thurs. • 7 p.m.

.

LangSYIIIe Christian Chul'l'h
Pastor: Rohtn. Mua~f
Sunday Sehoul·- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

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Hllllld~ Bapillt Church

St. Rt 143 juat off RL 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

ne Bcllevcn' Fellow8hlp Mlnlltry

C•rmti:-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Raeine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4~ a.m.
Bible Study W~. 7:00p.m.

lllrrllonWUe Community Cburdt
Pastor: Theron Dwham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Dexter Chun:h of Chrftt
Pastor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday !1Chool 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunda~ wol'lhip. 10:30 a.m.

Filth Baptise Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- I I a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services--7 p.m.

Our S.n.r LutiHI'IIn Churth
Walnut and Henry Stt., Raventwood.

W.Va. ·

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore&amp;:. Second SL, Pomeroy

l n ill·tl \ l l' tlwtli ' t
Hartford Church or Cbrtst In
Cbrilllll• Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jlm·Hughes
Sunday Sehoul • II aJ!I.
Wonhlp - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:JO p.m.

Aotlqully Baptlat
Sunday SChool • 9:3(1 a.m.
Worahip - 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday EveninJ • 6:00p.m.
P.utor: Mart McComu

Grolwn Unital Methodlat
Wor~hip - 9:30a.m. (1st&amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. ()nl &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednetday Service - 7:30p.m.

ML Moriah Church or God

Mile Hill Rd., Raci~
Putor. Jame• Satterfield
Sundlty School - 9:45 o.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wedncllday Services - 7 p.m.

Salem St
Pa.uor: Rev. Paull'lylor .
Sunday Sc:hool- 10 a.m.
EveninJ - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea - 7 p.m.
Second Boptlol Cbu,..
· 'Ravenswood, WV
Pulor: David W. McClain

RACINE PLANING MILL

K&amp; C JEWELERS

lnu .1untral

264 Soollo s...,u.., • 11 1 p111, OM 45761
1

Mill Work

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Cabinet Making ·
Syracuse

74G-H2-5141

..... floW. Dhclw

590 EAsl . . Slrwl•,...,. 01145769

740.992·5444

-.. •• AlrH, Jr•• Dlrldlr

992-3785

m:eaforb
l\ea(•€~tate
211 E. Second Pomeroy
740.992-3325
Marketing
Since 1971 ·

Property

am

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

~
~~5~;~" ~

2

Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
·in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew .~.o :1
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors' ·

Prescriptions
992-2955

Pomeroy

s.ltm CommunJty Church
Road, West Columbia, W.Va..
Pu10r: Clyde FerreU
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday evenlna service 6 pm
· Wrdnc&amp;da.y mervicc 1 pm.

Ue~tna

I't' lllt'l' o" t .11
............. .U..bly

EvcniiiJ -7 p.m.
Wednesday Servica - 1 p.m.

'*-

'

Putor: ReY. Emmett Rawaon
Sunday E!vcn.ina 7 p.m.

D)'Mrille Commoad&lt;J Cloun&gt;h
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10;30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Mono Cbapol cu..Jo
Sunday IIChool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wednelda~ SeFVIcc- 7 p.m.
Fill.. Gciopd Clolldo
Lon1 Bouom
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:4$ a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

ML Olive Com~i.lllty Cburdl
'ras1or: Lawrence Bush

Sunday SChool-9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Ser~icc - 7 p.m.

·

Unlt&lt;d Faltlt Chur&lt;b
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Paaa
Puror: ReY. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
S"""'y School · 9:30 1.m.
Wotahip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Senoice- 7 p.m.
FuU Goopel Lilbtbo-

ll04l Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
, Pastor. Roy Hunter
Sunday SMoot- 10 a.m.
Evenin1 7:30p.m.
Thelday A Thunday· 7:30p.m.

Reed..llle Fellowablp
Church of the Nwu1:nc .
Pastor~ Tere111 Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. ,

!!!!!~!! 7 p.m.

· eltabli&amp;hed.

: ucle Chareb .
11tte:rltUn RlNilf ...

..

.

l' rt ·, ln lt'l'i :ll l
'

Putor: RCIV. KrilaOI Robinaon
Suoday Scbool-10 1.m.
Wol'lblp ~ II a.m.

-

OlfRL 124
'
Putor: Edlcl Hut
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Middleport C.•n:b t1 tbc N. .rme
PuW: Allen Midcap
Sundn~ School - 9:30a.m.
Wor!ihip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servlcea-... 7 p.m.
PallOr: Allen Mkkap

Won1hip · 9 a.m.
- IOa.m.

God'aTompleofPnlae
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio .
Pasror: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nires7:00 pm
New church No Sunday service

51. Rt 124, Racine

11ue1 Commuiii&lt;J Cllua

\a/an·nt·

Ch-r

Servicem: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Putor: W:.Uiam """"""'·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

1411 Bridaeman St., S~use
Rev. Mike Thompoon,l'ut«
Sunday S.:bool· 10 Lm.
E.ventna- 6 p.m.
Wcdnelday Service - _7 p.m.

.

'Putor: Jane Beattie

a.- ., ... u ...,

Rt338, Antiquity
Putor: lc:uc Morris

sy--

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- 9:30 i .m.
Wonh" 1030

Mdp Cooperative Part.•
Northeast Clusler
AICn::d
Pastor: lane Beattie
Sunday SchOOl · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Rudaad Churtb of God
Putor: Ron Heath
Sunday Wonhip - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p. m.

-

To,.. Chun&gt;h

Cllftoa Taberude Cburdt

Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Hocld•.,ort Cburu.
Grand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Won~hip- II a.m.
Wedne8day Services - 8 p.m.

ML Olin U:dtctl Methodllt
Off 124 behind Wilkeaville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Splris
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Servkes ·. 7 p.m.

( 'lrurrlr ot ( ;ud

Rotlond Fne Will Boptllt

Paaror: Brian Harkneu
Sunday School I0 a.m.
Wonlllp- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Botllol Churoh
Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhlp- 10 a.m.
WCidflt'!Klay ~rvice1 - 10 a.m.

Sund.y School · 9:4S a.m.
.. Worship - J I a.m.

PasiOr : Arius Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WOI'Ihip ~ II a.m.

MI. MorWIBaptlsl
Fuwth &amp;: Main St., Middleport
PallOr: Re~. Oilbcl1 C~a:. Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- I 0:4$ a.m.

"

Coolrille Ulllt&lt;d Methodlat Porllb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp;. Firth St
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip " 9 a.m.
Tuelda~ Servicem - 7 p.m.

Pastor: DaYid Russell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

Cbur&lt;h ol Christ
lnle1"8eCtiOn 7 and 124 W
Evangeliat: Dennis Saracnl
Sunday Bible Study - 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 11.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wed~sday Bible Stud~ - 7 p.m.

Fore.~ Run Bllpdat

'
,Palth Vtlley N

Paatot: Brian Hulmen
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WonhJp • J.l a.m.
Wcdneaday 7 p.m.

· Wmhip- 9:00a.m.
SundlySc:hool-lO:OOa.m.

Wonhip- 10:00 am
WcdncMiay Servicea • 7 p.m.

PallOr: S110 Anderion
S.unday School to a.m~
Evenina:- 7:30p.m .·~
Wednesday Sen-ice • 7:30p.m.

•

EutLelart ,•

•

St. Jolin LMMnn Cloud!
Pine Oro\'e

Putor. Emc:riiUI Lawrence Foreman

Mlddtepor1 c...."""' Choldo
573 Pearl SL, Middleport

Morni ... Star
Pastor. OcwiYric SluiJt,r
S.nday Scjlool' II a.m.
Wonhi~- 10 a.m.

-'

I n1lll'ran

"

52.5 N. 2nd St Middleport
·Pastor. James E. Kc:e5C'C
Wonhip- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margarel J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

+

K.....vllle Chur&lt;~ &lt;I Chrkt
Pulor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Sunda~ Unified Service
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

.

ay.ldllf Life Cllurdl
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor. Mike Foreman

~

S.Yior

P11stor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 u.m.
Won~hip - 9 a. m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Hkkory HUls Church of Chrkt

Sunday Service• - 10:00 a.m. It 7!00 p.m.
Thuradly - 7:00p.m.

Full Goapel

FaltiiPol GoopOJ CIIUJdt
Long Bonom
Putor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Snow.llle
Sunday School - I 0 u.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.

l.atttT- Ila\ Saint..

Sundly School • 9:30 I.Ql.
Wonhip 10:30a1m., 7:30p.m.
.w~sdly Serviccl - 7:30p.m.

New Ute Victory Center
3773 Oeorsea O..k Road, GaUipoli~ OH
Paicor: Bill Staten
Sunday SerVice•- 10 a.m.&amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;: Youth 1 p.m.

A-Gracoli.F.I.
923 S. Third St., MiddlepoR
Pastor Tereu. Davia
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednelday aervice, 7 p.m.

s.aCtatu

+

Pomeroy Pike:, Co. Rd.
Pulor. Rev. Blackwood

Cll- W.Va.
Sundly School. - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 7 p.m.

Appt Life Ctnler
"Fuli-GO&amp;pcl Chun:h"
Paaton John.4 Patty Wade
, 603 Second Ave. Mason
773-SQI7
Service rime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneailay 7 pm

Kutlud
Sundily &amp;:hool - 9:30 a. in.
· Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

L.urel 0111'-Free Melhedlst Churcb
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wu~hip 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

:-'* Slrett Cllurcb

47439 Reibel Rd., Cheater
PasiOn: Rev. Mary aDd Harold Coot
Sunday Service•: 10 a.m. &amp;:. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Kod!Sprlap
Pastor. Keith Rli;lcr
Sunday School - 9: I$ a.m.
Wor&amp;bip - 10 a.~.
Youlh Fellowship, Sunday • 6 p.m.

HyHII Run HoUneu Churcll
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Thursduy Bible Study and Youlh - 7 p.m,

Colnl'l' llble Cloordl

Stl ..
c..-ml&lt;J CloPutor: Wayne R. Jewell

u.n.atOuu-t.MJ-

Paatoc: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:j() a.m.
Sunday School· 10:3~ a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Hollneu Chun:b
7S Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pascor: Rev. DollJ Cox
Sunday Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

&lt;ICiorlat

Ash St., Mtddlcport- Pucar: Glenn Rowe
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service -6:00p.m.
Wodnelday Service-7:00p.m.

........,

Pbw Grove Bible Ho1JIItl8 Chun:h
J n mile uff Rt. 32!1 .
Pasror. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tbpptrs Plain Church or Chrill
Instrumental .
Worship Service; - 9 a.m.
Communion - I0 a.m. ·
Sunday School - 10:15 a.m.
Yc_KJth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wedne.'lday 7 pm

·

Peorl,Cioapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship + 10 a.m.

Roee of Sharon Hollne. Cllurch
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pa~1or: Rev. Dew'ey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer metring- 7 p.m..

l lll rl' h t·'

...w.

Mloemlll&lt;
Putor: Bob Robinson
Sunday Sehool - 9 1.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McK~ie
Sunday "school9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servict - 7:00p.m.

BurwaJktw RJd~ Church of Chrill
Pastor:Terry Saewan
Sunday School -9:30 a_m,
Wonhip • 10:30 a. m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Finl Southern Bapd5t
418.7i Pomeroy Pike
Pwllor: E. Lamar 0' Bryam
Sunday School - 9:]0 a.m.
Wo11ihip : 8: 15a.m.• 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.

Pasuw: Rob Browet
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wnnhip- II :00 a.m.

w..,..

Ji'oltloF. .W1Iolp~forCIII'Iol
Puwr: ReY. Franklin Dickens
Servtce: friday. 7 p.m.

PortiiiKI-Racine Rd.
Pwor: Michael Dubl
Sunday Scbool. - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
W..m.day S.Mcet -.7:00p.m.

Heatll (Middlepcu1)

Colm)' Pl1grbn Chapel

Pom~:roy

Ftrst Be prist ·
East Mvin St.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

HollaeM Churrh

hn &lt;
c-....,.

.... ""'""'9rloo

Clllllda
Wonhip- a.m.
Sunday ~hool- 9:4' a.m.
·MJj

1

I Nl Prab)1eJtu

Sunday Sc:hool - !ila.m.
W!&gt;nblp. 10 a.m.

ll .l\

' " II II I
I

\ ti ll 11 11 ' 1

I I

•

Mulberry Hta. Rd.. Pomeroy
l'lltor: Roy l.awln"'y
Sat\ll'daY Servk:ca:

Sabbllh Scbool· 2 p.m.
Wonblp • 3 p.m.

ML H.,_ Uollld ...
I• Chriot Churdl
Te11u Community otr CR 82
1'1110r. Robert Sanclor&gt;
Sunday ,S.hool • 9&gt;30 a.m.
Wonblp ~ .11):30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
W.....lday Servlc" • 7:30p.m.
lldeo Uolt&lt;d B....,.. Ia Chrlot
2 lfl mllea nonh or Roedavlllo
0&lt;1Statelloutel24
Putor: Rev. Robert Mirkley ,
Sunday Sc:hool- II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. A 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30 p.m.

Soutllllttbel Noll'....,;.,..,,

mv.l'• Family Restaurant
"FNturlng Ktntuclry Fried
Chicken"

W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432

County~ Olde.t

Fl&lt;lrilt

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh
"Ut Ul •tid JIOI,lt tf'loqptt wtth . .1a1.,.•

7411-Ha-2144 740 182-e2118

MY arace Is

flOWER SHOP
106 Bti1TERNVT AVE.
PoMEROY, OH 992·6454
'FI

1 11
• •
owera or a occasrons

for thee: for my
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness. ·
11 Cor. 1~:9

White funeral ft;::om;:e;;-t--,.,=4f:';,.~4te.,.~.~t-~~=-•--1hE;;WmzmN~G~Ft1NEm.;;;;;;RAL"AT-+-:Ing-e-:1::-'s--:C::-arp--et_,-::~::---::•-:-no-:-•r::-r,"":"r,•~~Offl~c-e~ServlcE~.:..:.&amp;~Su~ppl=y-l
Since 1858
"l••ua,t ';il~e
,HOKE
169 N 2nd ~ve.
.1'1rt!, '!:frtp
137,. N 2nd Ave
•
9 fifth Street
174 Layne Street
Dlgn/tyendServiCliAiwe~
Middleport, OH
1
'""'"'""
• ""' '
'
Coolullle. Ohio
New Haven, wv 25265
Eatabllahed 1913.
992·702"'8
. .~~~.·::., &lt;..c;;&lt;&gt;
....,.
Middleport, OH
•.James H. Anderson
992·2121
D
_,.,.
-c-

740·661·3110

•·

Fax:

""'-~~.":'--

FriAy. Jan1111ry 11. loo:l

SuodaySdlool - 9:lOa.a.
Wmhlp-7p.m.

Wcdnelday Bible SIUdy ·7:00p.m.

Momlnt Wonhip - 10:4$ a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Worship . 9 a.m.

31057 Slate Route 32S. Langsvllc
PallOr: Gary Jacbon
Sundiy sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - IO:JO a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday pniyer service - 7 p.m.

·t Jilnt a..rn ottlle N=;.!W?

()I

Page 81.

BIId Koolo, ... Co. Rd. 31

Folmowllble aourdo
l..ewt. W.V.. RL I
Pulor: Brian Mly
Sulklay School - 9!30 a.m.
Wonhlp · 7:00p.m.

Puur. Willilllf JUitis
Sunday SchoOI-IO:O(h.m.

'

•

·-Golpai-

Coolvilt ROid
-:Pallor. Rev. Phillip RideMur
Saoday Scbool • 9:30 LIO.
Worship· J0:30a.m.
Wedlletday Service· 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Fora~R...
Pastor: BOO Robinson
SWlday School- IOa.m.

Main Stnct. Rutl&amp;nd

Middll'port Cbun'h of Christ
5th and Main

&amp;llisari wants private cell, Page BJ
Cincy Moeller in trouble, fage B4

-. .....__
\nloe'l Cloofol.

-

Wonllip - 10:30&amp;.m., 6:30p.m.
W-YScMc&lt;t·7p.m.

FlltPucor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

• COIIUil_.fJ Cbu.rdl

~

...... C'Mrda.t•N
Pulnr. ~· s-JW. Bllye

Port'

The Daily Sentinel

- y - · 9:l0Lm.

-.

-Y~'1p....

Eoilet'prlao
Putor: Keith Rader
Sundaty Sdtool- 10 a.m.
Worlhip- 9 a.m.

.Inside:

Wonllip$cnloei0:30Lm.
No Sunday or w · r 1ty Nilbt Slnica

Wonbip • J1 a.m., 6 p.m.

c-..~

Wedncadlly Service&amp; - 1:30 p.m.

~Rd.

+

'~ - - 9&gt;30 .....

~

•

'

Kinpllooyllood

1ay~-7p•

~~""""
Pillar. Rev......... ar.

All&gt;ury (Syqc..,)
Puror: Bob Robinooa
Sunday Scbool- 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip. lJ a.m.

Sunday School anil
Holy~ li :OOa.m,

Sunday School • II a.m.
WOIV!ip JQii.m., 6 p.m.
Wedoelday Services 7 p.m.

'.

Wonbip 10:23 .....
Si:liiliy SCtiOOr91J' LIU,

~

U)a.Btfllef'
...
PMior. JM LlwiDdet
- y Sdlool . 9:lq LID.
Wonllip ·.10:30 ..... ..s 6 p.m.

w- •

"'-loy8avioa-7:~p.a.

326 E. Main Sa., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Kadwin Foster

w..- Cluorcll&lt;l Cloriot
33226 CbiJdren's

"-"'1

•

Puaor: JMC. Baillie
_ , Sdlool - 9 LIB.
Wonhip- 10 LID.

G,_ Eplocopol Cburdo

Minister: Anlhofly Morri1
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WorJ!lip- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedne.'iday Services - 7 p.m.

Mason, W.V1.
Pu&amp;oc Neil Tennan1
. Sundly Senticts- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Yfctary Baptist lndeptndenl

--yol--7;00p.m.-

Cloar&lt;~

P.O. Box 467. Duddin&amp; Lane'

Q

- · - · 7p.m.

Sooooda.Lym.-,.
""""' Rev. CniJ Croaomaa

_,
o( C1uial
212W. MainSL

l..llloft7 _ , ol God

_ , _ _ 10:30Lm.

,_,a...to

c.... ClarlldM a..n:t.

Sunday School· IO:JO a.m.
Wor.sbip - .9.: 30 a.m_
Bible ~udy · 1 p.m.."
Community af~

~.7:30p. m.

-'

Wonlip • 9'.JO LIL

nwon-.......

Puror:Riduonlllcooe

~Y:._I~ a.m.~ 1:~ P·'!·_

.

.,.,.,..., • 10:30 .....
, :

Suo. Wonlip ·IO:IOUL,6p.a
WU ud 11 Setvke • 7 p..a.

s.tly Sdlool - 9:~ a.m..
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.

SWIIIoy Sc:11oo1 . 10...,..
Wqnblp . lla.m..

&lt; lilll&lt;llol &lt; liri'l

---·-·'lUl· ---

$dooal• 9LOL

=

SJ-~otllel'

~­

j&gt;j C'1lli(&gt;moa

-

wn *r Servioa ., p.a.

s-day Scboal - ~lOa.m.

r' &gt;

OJ. White Rd. oil St. R1. 160

Sun. Mua • 9:)() Lm.

I

Stfticts.d:JOp.m..

~fiiCN:tiPr

ooney IoWa • 8:30a.m.

I'

NcwUmaR*.

I)

-y-lld&gt;olf-

frldry,Sli-RiiiF
'""' 11, . . ,

Wonbip. 10:4, ..... 7 p.m.

...

Wonbip . 9:30 .....
SQool . 10:30 Lm.

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A(loooolk Wonhip
&amp;73 S. )nl Ave., Mldolkpon
KeviD K.ankie, Pallor
Su.day, 10 a.m.lnd 6;00 p.m.
'W ' by, 7:'30p.m.: Youth fn. 7:30p.m.

~

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992-6376

FRIDAY'S

lady Eagles,skin Trimble in TVC, 56-26

:HIGHLIGHTS
•

BY JoN WIU

put those concerns
behind them in a 5626 skimiing of the
Trimble Tomcats.
Led by seniors Stacie Watsoo, Whitney
Karr, and Sara Mansfield, the Eagles continued on the road to
victory last night.
Watson
Watson posted big
numbers for yet
another double-double performance.
Netting IS points and grabbing I 0
rebounds, she ' Jed the Eagles in both
scoring and rebounding.

SENTINEl CORRESPONDENT

•' .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tlie Lady
Eagles of Eastern are again on the
winning track .
After a two-game skid, the Eagles
are shooting for at least a share of the
Hocking Division Crown. However,
time will tell if the Eagles can stand up
to the might wind stirring in the
southern eod ,of the county. · The
rescheduled game with rival Racine
Southern is set for Saturday at 1:00 at
Eastern High School.
The Eagles wer~ more concerned at
beating Trimble on Thursday, but soon

Pnp Baketblllt

Thuradly'e Gemn
Girt a
Belpre 85, Nelsonville· Vorl( 56
River Valley 31, Jackson 30
~lla Acdemy 56, Warren 49
Mariatla 45, Athens 42
Vinton County 65, Alexander 40
P91nt Pleasant 46, Logan 42
Eastem 56, Trimble 26
Federal Hocking 64, Southam
63,0T
Waterford 60, Miller 21
Wellston 58, Meigs 56

The Eagles showed some strength
from theit you,th, and sophomores
· Katie Robertson and Alyssa Holter
tallied 10 and eight points respectively.
•
.
"It took us the entire first half to
finally start playing like we can. I liked
the second half a lot better than the
first, .. C011jl11ent~d coach Paul Brannon. "Katie and Alyssa played excelient games tonight.
"Alyssa is coming along, and is starting to make some unbelievable passes
that remind me of Amber Baker. And
Katie is developing into our second
weapon underneath, she is well on her

way to averaging 10 points a game,"
praised Brannon.
Coach Brannon's troops notched 27
in the first half, but qnly J~d by 10 at
half- time. The second half,' the solid
Eagle' defense held the Tomcats to a
meager nine total points, while the
Eagles' scoring added an additional 29
points.
The game began with a quick two
points from Stacie Watson off the
Whitney Karr tip. Trimble quickly
answered, and tied the game at twoall. Trimble soon took the lead 3-2 off

' NCAA Men'a B•ketblll1

Thuradly'e Glmn
"
Boston U. 62, Binghamton 50
Cent. Connecticut n. Wagner 71
eonnecticul 95, Virginia Te&lt;:h 60
Manhattan 88, Fairfleld 72
MonmoultT 75, Mount St. Mary's 63
N!)rtheastem 91, Stony Brook 65
Quinnipiac 86. Sacred Heart 78
R.Morris 93, St. Francis, NY 80
Siena 82, Loyola, Md. 78, 30T
St. Bonaventure 88, La Salle 6.2
St. Francis n, Long Island U. 64
UMBC 87, F. Dickinson 72
Belmont74, Jacksonville St. 72
Centenary 74, Gardner-Webb 58
Duke 104, Georgia Tech 79
Florida Atlantic 94, Mercer 73
Georgia St. 89, Stetson 73
Jacksonville 67, Campbell 53
La.-Monroe 64, SE Louisiana 54
N!Mexlco St. 94, MTSU 88, 30T
Northt•e&amp;tem St. 73, Nicholls St. 66
Tenn.·Martin 71, Austin Peay 65
Tenn. Tech 78, Murray St. 59
Troy St. 85, UCF 74
W. Ky 63, La.·Lafayette 62
Bradley 64, SW Missouri St. 60
Cleveland St. 71; YSU 58
Detroit 63, Butler 54
Drake 83, Illinois St. 73
E; Illinois 72, Morehead St. 71
111.-Chlc. 75, Wis.-Green Bay 66
Loy. OWlago 91, Wis.-Mi.Waukee 87'
N. Iowa 71 , Indiana St. 70
SE Miasouri 95, E. Kentucky 75
UMKC 72, Oakland, Mich. 63
W. Illinois 82, Chicago St. n
Wichita St. 88, S. Illinois 79
All(. ·Little Rock 78, Ark. St. 58 .
Boise St. 62, Ri~ 59
Aa. lnt'oal79, North Texas 78, OT
Lamar 57 1 Stephen F.Austin 56
0. Roberls 85, lnd.·Pur.·lndpls. 76
Tx-Arlington 75, Sam Houston 72
Tx-PMAinerican 58, Air Fate 52. OT
'l'x·San Antohfo 81 ; McNeese 73
Tulsa 66, UTEP 61
ArlzonB' 92, Waahlngton St 85
Hawaii 81, Louisiana Te&lt;:h 61
Idaho 69, Long Beach St. 67
Ore11on 76, CeiHomia 72
Pac1flc 70, Cal Poly·SLO 54
S. Utah 78, Valparaiso 62
SMU 68, San Jose St. 68
Southam Cal 81 , UCLA n
Stanford 67, Oregon St. 50
UC Irvine 67, Utah St. 66
UCSB 57, CS Northridge 54
Washington 81, Arizona St. 68
NBA
.
.
Thureday'e Gimes
Portland 92, Miami 85
New Jersey 108, Clippers 89
Utah 83, Houston 79
Denver 96, Cleveland 91
Memphis 102, Phoenix 96
ballas 111. New York 89 · .

Duke buztes ·
Yellow Jackets
': -DURHAM, N.C. (AP)
Duke was at a physical and
~motional · high after its first
loss of the season. Georgia
Tech just happened to be in
the way Thursday night.
·.The second-ranked Blue
Devils bounced back from
their first loss of the season,
g~tting 23 point5 apiece from ·
Carlos Boozer and Mike'
· ~unleavy and fotcing 18 first1\alf turnovers in a 104-79
?fctory over the Yellow Jacket5
(9-7, 0-3 ACC) on Thursday
night.
Tiuke (13-1, 2-1 Adantic
Coast Conference) beat
G,eorgia r~~r the 11th
straight time:
.
Tony Akins and Ed Nelson
led the Yellow Jackets with 14
points each.

Southem
falls in
•
.'

.overtime,
64-63
BY Scorr WOlfE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

SEE YOU SOON - Buccaneers quarterback Brad Johnson drops back to pass. Six days after playing a
meaningless game to close out the regular season, the Buccaneers and Philadelphia Eagles meet again
Saturday. (AP file) ·

First round playQff games will
look awfully familiar to fans ·
'
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK (AP) -The
NBA's new national TV packages will net it' more moru:y
per season than its expiring
deals. There won't be a doubling of the rights fees this
time, though.
The contracts with ABC,
ESPN and AOL Time Warner
will be worth a total of about
S700 million a year, tw~
industry sources told The
Associated Press on Thursday.

. In order of appearance:

We've seen this before - a week ago.
Tampa Bay vs. Phffadelphia; the New York Jets at
Oakland. The difference ·is the stakes are higher this
time - at least for the Eagles and ~ucs .
The NFL playoffs, delayed a week by the Sept. I 1
terrorist attacks, begin Saturday with those two rerun
games.
,
The Bucs are at the Eagles i,n a game that starts at
4:30 p.m. EST. It's a reprise not only of a first-round
game last season but of a meaningless game in Tampa
last Sunday. Then, in a prime-time game, the Jets are
at Oakland, where they beat the Raiders 24-22 last
Sunday to secure a playoff spot and keep Oakland
from getting the first week off.
On Sunday, it's San Francisco at Green Bay and
Baltimore at Miaori.
The wjnners go on to play at the top two seeds in
eacll coofereoce - St. Louis and Chicago in the
NFC, Pittsburgh ~nd New England in the AFC.

Tampa Bay (9-7) at Philadelphia (11-5)
Subplots:
•Tampa Bay has never won in temperatures under
40, and that's likely to be th!' thermometer reading
on Saturday.
. •Tony Dungy..The Bucs' coach has had his., team
in the playoffs i.n four of the last six seasons. He is the ,
·only Tampa Bay coach with a winning record (5645) and the only one over.. SOO. 1\ut he may have to
win this game to keep his job as Bill Parcells/ Steve
Spurrier sightings abound .in Tampa.
1
Last week, the Eagles went to Tampa and rallied to
win t 7-13 behind A.J. Feel'ey and Da'!'eane Douglas
in a game ·that had no· effect on .Pairings. A.J. and
Dameane won't be prominent this week.
"It's a strange situation, but we're past that," S3.i d ·

STEWART - it ~ a barnburner right
down to the wire, but when the dust had settled
. the Federal Hocking Lancers had defeated the
Southern Tornadoes 64-63 in overtime during
a tbrilling girls v:m;ity basketball game Thursday.
Kelsey Lackey had a career game with 21
points and eleven rebounds, an inspirational
game that deflated the Tornadoes. Sheila
Gilchrist added 13 points and a game-high 14
rebouncls, Tracey Sidwell added 12 points, and
Faith Gilders I t.
.
Southern also placed four girls in double figures. Katie Sayre led with 18 ,points; Deana
Pullins added 17, Rachel Chapman 12, Amy
· Lee I 0, and three each fium Brigette Barnes
and Ashley Dunn.
Southern:, press was effective early and forced
many tumovers, but the Federal defense forced
Southern into five early miscues as well. Two
minutes into the game, Rachel Chapman left
the game with a sprained ankle, then moments
later Brigette Barnes suffered the same fate. ·
The Sol.\thern bench held its own and Katie
Sayre hit a . string of short jumpers to keep
Southern within striking distance. Tracey Sid"
well hit a three and Kelsey Lackey hit a couple
big inside buckets to give Federal a t 7-14 lead.
· Southern started to click in the second
round, Chapman returned to the lineup and the
offense. started to fire. Southern outscored Federal t 9-13 in the stint to t:ike a 33-30 lead into
the half
Southern started out hot in the third quarter
and starred to pull away. The Tornadoes led at
one point by ten points, but that lead soon
fuded. Deana Pullins came off the bench and
sparked the Tornado offense with 7 points in
the frame and als9 did a good defense job as
well.
Southern led 48-40 with 1:41 left in the
frame, but then went Helter Skelter. Southern
forced a driving shot in the lime with Gilchrist
getting the rebound and Lackey scoring on the
other end, 48-4~outhern then set up for a last
shot and ran the clock down to twelve seconds
to set up the play, but the Tornadoes shot prematurely and again Federal rebounded, went
the distance and scored at the buzzer for a 4844 tally.
Fedeial tied the score quickly at 52-52 and
fiom that point on it was no more than a 3point game either way. Federal went up three
points. but a Lee drive and Dunn free tljrow

Pluse IH PlayoHs, 83

•

Plea~;e IH

•

Southern, 83

'

,Wellston downs lady Marauders, 58-56

NBC lOses NBA

.. TV rlpts

•

BY JtM ,SOULS BY
SENTINEl CORRESPONDENT

!

WELLSTON - The Meigs Lady
Marauders and the Wellston Lady
Rockets hooked up for the second
thne this season at Wellston Thursday
· ·
··
night.
The game turned out. to be similar
to the first meeting of the two teams
in December. In the first meeting, ·it
was Meigs who built a big lead ·and
• , hung on for a tWo point . win. This
time the roles were reversed and it was
the Lady Rockets ·who built a 17.
point first half lead and then held off
a Marauder rally to post the 58-56
I

I

wm.
lay-up and two Mindy Chancey free
The loss IS the throws wrapp ed around an · Alex
third in a row for the Massey hoop brought the score to !!Marauders who now • 7 Wellst,on with 3:1 3 left in the ·first
have · a 6-5 season quarter. Chancey connected on tWO
1
record.
more foul shots late in the period as
Wellston jumped 'Wellston held a 16-9 lead after eight
to the early lead on a orinutes of play.
!'fi\jlry Patrick buck A Thomas three-pointer and a
et' Meigs gained the Massey free throw gave the. Rockets
J. Davll
lead as they hit the an 11-point lead. Alicia Werry pulled
scoreboard on Sh•n- Meigs back to within seven as she
non Soulsby's three-point goal fium conn~c&lt;;ted on two free throws and a
the left comer. Wellstof! . PP~h"eg ,\h~ bucket inside with 4:52 to go in the
lead to 9-3 after Abby Thomas con- first half. After a Samantha Pierce basverted a three point play. A Soulsby ket at the 4:00 minute mark Wellston

put together a I 0-0 run featuring
back to back threes fiom Kimmy Cremeans and Dusty Cremeans, Meigs
h'owever never folded as the Marauders fought back with a 9-2 run over
the last t :48 of the half. Sophomore
Jaynee Davis who did a tremendous
job oo the boards for Meigs hit two
free throws to igniie the Meigs run.
Pierce followed with a trifecta; Soulsby added two charity tosses and
ano~er Davis hoop brought to count
to 34-24 at the intermission.
Meigs came out in a full court press

•

·PlaaH IH Melp, B:i

..
I,

•

..

I

I

�Frkllly,;JM.11,2002

•

L

• •

Frtct.y, Jen. 11, 2002

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties like
No One
Else Can!

private

'

Philadelphia coach Andy R eid, acknowledging that last
week"s game meant nothing.
The weather is another story. The Eagles beat the Bucs 21 -3
last Sl!350n in Phila&lt;lelphia in a cold-weather game and Tampa
Day has yet.to break that cold-weather jinx.

•

NewYorkjeu-(!0-6) at Oakland ·(to-6)
Sebastian Janikowski, who sat out last week's game wit)1 a
sore foot, is· back, after Brad Daluiso missed an extra ·point and
a short tieltl goal . T hose four po in ts were the difference in a
game won by New York 24-22 on John Hall's 53-}'ard fiel4 ·
goal w ith 59 seconds left.
But Oakland's problem is more than kicking.
The Raiden , who seemed on course for the top seed in the
AFC, have lost three straight and four of six to lose their firstround bye. One reason could be old legs- the offense has faUen off markedly in those half-dozen games and so has R.ic)l
Ganno n, who turned 36 last month.
The win by the Jets was their 'first in Oakland since 196Z,
when they were the New York T itans.'
And they survived despite three turnovers.

••

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Sunday ln· Colum n: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
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1
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Gentleman Seeking While
2nd Job up to
Female Over 50 Years For
$25.·$75./hr. Pt-Ft.
Walko And Friendship. Re1-800·216·7~

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SMI4jlnvtolllon"OftM ....

l..,.t_..~--~--...1r . ~ .Ir. ~ ll!'fit_i;;;rui:;ooi'l

1991 Mansion 14x70, 3
bedroom, will help with delivery, call Harold, 740-3859948.
-:-:-:-::-:-::-:-:-- -:---

2 Level Acres with Mobile
Home and 2 ato&lt;y garage.
Mason 80 Road. Aahton
Less lhan 2 mllel lrom
Routt 2 $48,000 (aa.)273·

1 and ·2 bedroom apart·
men-.,t u - and unlurnlohecl locur1ly dopoolt,..
qulred, no poll, 740-992·
221 B. •

www.Monay·Dreams.com

r

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88 needed to meet

iir-----...,

r

•

r

2 bath, call 740-385·962t 3323 Ext. 1700.
"""')6 5ask lor CheryL
,_ 7 1385
1 bedroom, $300/ me. pluo

Call (740)446·3093 lor de· tor.
/VC,
Galllpollo.
tails.
(740)44B-S867
Umited Or No Credit? Govemment Bank Anarict Only 2 bedroom house in Pomor·
At Oakwood In Barbours· ay, $375 p8f mo. pluo ~
ville, WV 30+7:JB.:l409.
posit, with option to buy on
land contract, no pets,
Muot sell· 14x70 mobile (740)896·7244
·
h
11 740·•• 85•24"• 4 2-3 bedroom houM for rent
a':!:;, ~~ne.
IHn dPom~~no lckpol8, not
New 14x70 3 br12blh Only u aPe••·~ · P ·IJP ap$975. down and $189 G4 ~·ca:on at 5 Cave Slrett,
per month. Call Nlkk 140 om ray.
:l85·?871 ·
New t4x70, 3 bedroom, 2 3 bedroom home Mlnamlllo
bath. Only $99S down &amp; area. river view, $450 por
$189.62/month. Call Cheryl, month, refer..- rtqulrad,
·740-:l85·787t
depoolt required, no pela,
·
740·892-llm after Spm.
14do slap/siding 2x6
walla., 14x70 olap/aldlng 3 Bedroom, 2 Both Duplex.
2x8 walls 3br. 2ba., late Downtown, $3501 month.
model double wldaa 3br. Depoolt and Relerancos
2balreodellvery&amp;aotup. ln Naodad. (740)448-3849.
house llnanclng IO quallllad 3br. Houoe, Fenced Yard

All,.,,_

lnthilnewlpiperll

oubJoct to lhll -..r

FllrHouolngActol11168
which n ttlopl to
advertiH "any
profo11noo, llmltotlon or
dl..-lon

-on

t:.:"ai.=u':'~':;.::.

orlgtn, or ony ,.,_ to
moko onv ouch
p&lt;Wflfenoo,llmltollonor
dlocrtmtnatlon."·
Thl8 newapopor will not
knoWinGlY occopt
~ntll lauut
" - - l e In
-lonoflholoW.OUr
""' hoNby
Informed thel all
-llngolldv....-ln
lhlonutp por..
avolloblo 011 . , oqua1

_..,Ky-. =~~4~=):~~91

~~~;~;~~~!~w=

sell Avon.
Free Ronweller/Dalmataln
Need a JOB?
opment. 740-992-66011.
mix puppies black with aliiWantNUaRCorSINeoG?r In
.Equal Opponun~ Emplayor
tie white on ihem very play· N I Aaal
c
Enccuraglng Workplace 01lui, (740)992.073S
a~'"~ o:~:l 0~8".:,1 venrlty.

:;t':'P~~;';;

or
1970 Champion 12x60 2
bedrooms. $3,000 • OBO
HOMI!S
Call (304)675·2470
3br.' House. Fenced Yard
FOR SALE
,
mobile
home,
198714 70
3 ~~~:,n·p~f;j::of;':;
14, 2002. If you are. car- Seles Position . immediate, -,
bedrooms, 2 full baths, 4082
Give 10 a good home. Po- lng, compaaslonata P1f1011, Opening. Apply In Poroon. 2 bedroom unfinished up- stove, raklgerator, heat
GMAWAY

$200 d!!P"Sit. $330 por
month rent. rent lncludoo
water, 1Mwer

&amp;

(740)378,e111

trash,

riO·

w~ &amp; Friday, llam4:30pm. Croo,d Thuredly,

8044

.

llouii!How

I

==-r=

Pll
p
R
1987 14x70, 3 br./2bth, ot rOijram, enters
$4995. Will help with dellv- Needed, 304·7:J8.7296.
ery. Call Kavena. 740·385·
8946.
1990 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
homo-call Cheryl 0 740·
MOIIIIZ lloMEs
:l85-9821 . 2002 Sunpolnte
mR RENr
3 bodroom/2bath 14 x 70· -

·
2 BR, w.-, Dryer
Hool&lt;up, Appllancoa Furnlshtd; Cloll to Hoapltal.
Rol.....,.l
Roqulrod.
(740)oMt.()117
North :ltd Avenue, Mldcteport, 1 &amp; 2 bedroom lumlshad apanm-. depoalt &amp;

Lost or stolen-mala Golden Apply In !=larson 859 Third an applk:atlon or call Pam 3583.

must sell-call Mike 0 740·

references,

month. 152 • Olive Strest.
(740)446·3845

Satu)~:l

(740

R~ard. (740)448-2:l80

dryer;-.;;;

match Elcctllont

r

AlicnoN AND

~M.uua;;r

$700.· (304)874·3837 or
'""1775
=-;.:;..,:-:":.,..-~--=Fa&lt; Sale: LAwn Engino. Aak tor Jr., Phone
(740)258-1102

=~~7~: - ~..=:=~~~
9182. FrH EotimatH, Euy (740)446-8308 or HIOO.
financing, 90 dayo...,., aa 211t.oove. II you don~ cal
CUll. Vlu/ Maotor Card ....... bolh '""'
.
Drive- a- IHie eave alol.
FuH Slzo Bad, AI

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ANnQul!s

I

wood. Chlldl Honda Power

WhHio. Complete Ouoen

4734.

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Now

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Buy

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!l?g.

I

pets, 171nch Rims and Tires. Fits

u

.

·

WAN11!D

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-

.

':m":)"

Licanoad 168,0hlo &amp; wool
Virginia; 304-773-5766 Or
304-773·5447.

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rage, $148,000. Call
(740)446·2311
41/2 yr. old ·Cottage style
houso.near river Milson
area, near Walman lg.
pon:h, lencedyard 304-773-

l.

·

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Olamon~•.
11

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Clold
Ringo,. u.s, Curronay,M.T.S. Coin~. 151 Sooond A'*'ue Qolllpolil 7404411-21142 '
•
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ftj'lljbl""--,-.,·___,
JIJi:Lp n•

.
New 2002 t4 wide only
$799 down &amp; $155.:Wmo,
Call Nikki, (740)385-767t .
New
t 4 wide only
s799 2002
down &amp; only
$155.38/mo. Cali , Kavena,
.M••-7a71·
7...,.~.,.
New 2002 t4 wldo. Only
$899 Down &amp; $155.:l8 per
month Call Harold 740:l85-7S71.
'
Nice '2Bx80 Double Wide
setting on rented lol In
Point Pleasant area. 2x6
walla, thermal pane win-

:=.~~")::/.3~\"'

111

In'**"''

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·'m )9'3::

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Eastem

r

.
1987 Ford Ranger, 4&gt;14, 5

apaad. (740)245-9502

artc. $300/mo. $200 deposit

r':

r

I

I

t{3Q4)882-3121

Dramatic R~autta. ,100%

~~~ ~:S:'w =~~~ ~l~7H~Wlar (£r,~:

,:f.'io-==~ ~:~::-:w.=.
lor eldarly tmG

dlllblld.
EOH.
l»&gt;)e75-ee7tl.

electric gl8 fuma·
Efftc*'c:y Heat

HI

-

www.orvb.comr'bennett
·~-- R nchkl

snow

Ult,l-r,

800-537-ella.

a

no

Pro. fwo.otage, B HP, 28"
wlda, electriC otan, now.
$600, (740)11112-2368
Sunwcll Tanning Bad. •~.
(304)773-8000
.....,

Two New Chalnaaw Chalnf
will nt on 13 dltforant sawa.
112 prlco, ·$.14.00 each.
(740)448- 1127
Wolkln1 Produoto- doubll
otran\llh doric and White va·
nllla, opioeo, IIIYII, llnl·
monttandmony=od·
UOII, call (740)14
·
-

:::-: =~~~

In
· Clll Ron Evono, 1· lrtgerator ttSO
11108

•

(~)e~t

'
Wood for lole. 188 1 lood
rga pickup load ml•ad dalharad. 0111 Aondy Cox.
will diiiVOr locally, (740)ilf1·7ea3
toe t.oouol Stroot, Ullllalra 148.00 148-21117 8YIIIInga
La

n-.

~

.=

rtmtnl Q bad Moft
&amp;

rlftlaertt..; IH.~I~ ~~m:

fumlahod, 1275/mo., 1160
dopollt, 1740)448-8081
15 Cou~ SIIHI. 2 lad·
roomt; 1 1/J balhl, I&lt;IIOhon
with atova and r.klaoraior.
011 llreol Plrlclnll, c:loH to
&amp;ohoolo •"d Downtown

=·'="

=:.~ 1:

Pill l740)4olll-4tH
·
2 Bedroom Apanmanl In
Cantonory, oppllonon rurnllhod, ulllftiH pold' ei!Oopl
electric, oiMn, uw molllh·
call (740)255·1135 oftlr
5:00.

Truck Toalltr, FlbtfVIIII,
lloolr ancf81da SlidinG WJn.
40M, It" lana • BO'"wlda,
180.(740)2se-f•~"':'-?=-·
Mila! Oealr, 4 ora-. on
One 8lclt, - · vez:::
Pt1!tot for lttrdonto
-.uo. (740)8II5 uoe
- n o lpooloi: :114 100
F'BII21.811 Par tOO: 1" zoo
F'BI 137.00- Per 100; All
..._ eomp-.. Flftfngs
In Stooir.
IIOH IVANI INTIIIPIIIIII Jaokaon, Oh~, 1·1J00.
837-0521
.

moaaogi.

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

-

(740)982-3452, no ana- Pumpi, leaturing Tappona
leave-~~~·
Free lncradlblo warranty
.
paclqrge
Amulng
M.uobollam . BENNETr'l HEAnNG &amp;
-.ughll
Lose 10 pound• 200 COOLING (740)448-1411
pounds quick Faat ar 1o1CJ0.172.1M7.

(740):l87.QB47
Notural Dr Rocommerr-·
Studlol.mclency apartmenl
' ·
,_,.,
2 bedroom, for salo or rant, $225 unluml-, $250 fur: (7
·~)~"J"fa:'EE Sample"
quiet community, nlca clean ~-. $300 dapoalt, water, _
·
·
home, (740)992·2187
trash Included, Mlddlepon. AT&amp;T Anawortng Service,
!?,~1.()6118, (740} 586- $16:(740)4411-1127
2 bedroom, Furnished. In ~
lhe Country, $2751 month 1i · ·
Baby bod Complete Charry
plus $200 dapollt and ullllt· ora Townhouse Apart· . Wood, $80. Call (740)11112las. Call (740)258-6202
manta, V, Spaclouo, 2 34112, no aniWifleava m..
s.
BR,
All
Elactrlc.
St
Rt
· '
2
7 ~~· Fu~~~~ - · .
0
=aft::a~ r;b~) 4~~ tO mllos lrom town, Relor· ·Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pa· Dlnotta Sol, $75. DrooMr,
4391 aok ior Rooemary.
tnces and Depoolt R• llo, Slln $3811/Mo. No P.r., $75. Enterlll- Corrtlr,
qulred. No Plio. 5275/ .laue Plua Security Oopoalt $35. Swoopor. 120. Pal
Only $850 down and monlh: (740)441·15118. Call Roqulred, Dava: 740-448· Cogt, Baby Slrolilr, 125.
$181.:l8pormonlhpel8you · after3.30pm
.
3481; Evanlnga: 740-307· Mlcrowava, 125. (740)448a now homo. Cal 1-800.
OW, 740-4411.0101.
Q742
837·3238 aok for Mlkl.
2br Trallar In Counlry 1275 · 1'wlo Rlv ,_,.
JET

Allot your lromo
Ira, adprtmontll l'lllrdoHon In Bid· dHionl &amp; remodel~. 24hr FS: Brand Now Homo teoo and Govommont Lolnl for 8303
·
woll. Raoponolbllltloo In· . amerganoy · Hnlor oq ft., 1 112 aero lol, Ronlorl. Own Your Now
aluda the day. to- day IU· oHIZanl dlocount. Z2yro. 1115,000. Call lor lnlo. Homo Todoyl (740)4411- 3 &amp; 2 BR Mot&gt;llo Home In
pervlolon of the homoo. ••P· (304)87$-2085
(740 ) •45141 (7 40 )4411 _ 3570.
Portor. You Pay Dapoolt
Muot haYI on year oxpon.
.
:12&lt;18 448
and UtiiiiiH. Coli (740)311onot ond olour VIII' daarll · CloofVII P~rtal&gt;le S.wmlll,
·
Spoclll Financing· Down 1112
In 1 human 111Y10H .lid; don'l haul rour I~ to tho Portlolly Romodolad homo Paymonll ao low ao 1%. 3 bedroom, 1 btth an el...
PmiOUI Ptrtonntl IIIPtrvi· mill tuot 011 304-t 111!17. on Coffman Stroot In Jock· Pr~!!UiilfY . bV
phona. Wlo, nlca olun homo, no
lion prtferrecl. Vtlld dltvar'o Top lo Bottom Clunlng 10". Nloo Out Building. (740)4411-3570.
potl, (740)1112•2157
:.r,;·e:.rt,re~:.r.: 1titirvloo. Profllllonol ololn- 142•000 · (740)&lt;I48•78111 Wo havo opproKimallly 20 Animal lovora wanted 2
quota aulomablla lnouranco ng ot oHordoblo · prtooo. Romodolod 3 bedroom, In uoad homao lor undar ba~room 14x7D moblla
-ulrad Muol rrvo within so A-ol, ollloa, rtrl1odol· Mlddl=, call Tom Andar· 12,000, call t-800-837-3238
'
.•,
·
1ng and oonotructforl oiHn
•
(74o)•- lor lnlo
homo on 1010111, 15 min.
mlnull&amp;' 30 mllot of homo.
C fid tlal 882 2871 aon a or opm,
ou·
'
N. ol Pomaroy, 1425/mo
Flo•lbll hours. Ubtral ban·
113411.
ptu1 dapoolt • u111111o1,
38
off1
Salary: 123-&gt;
• .
MOIIIIZ HOMES
Turnor Roalty, (740)811·
:'::· au!..;; Soc':m':~n'1::
FOR SALE . .
2881!
·
ServiOII, PO lox 80-4,
lluiJNa!i .
8000 Sq. tool commtrlcal Beoutllul Rlvor ViiW ldaol
JIOkaOn, OH 45840o0804.
~--·
1880 Hlllcrnt Nloe· Condl· olorago with 14,000 rrq. loot For 1 Or 2 PtoPII, Aafo""'"
AM _.._ muit bt pool·
VI'I'UKnJ,.,n lion. 2 BR, Gal Fumace, ol outtldo aru. Call ERA . ceo. Oepollt, No Poll, Foamarlcad bV 1118/02. EQUal ~
contra! AC 1 Qwnar Town &amp; Counlry RHI Eo· tar Trallor Parle, 740·441·
Opportunity Employer.
Sian Your Bullnaol To· S7eoo (740):iMot814
, ttto304-875-5546
0181 .
day... Primo Sltopplng Can·
'
Plano Plavar for lmall ol,llr• ter Spooe Avolloble At Af• tllfl5 Sk)lllne14x70, 3 bad· Commercial Building for Trallar In Muon noxl 10
llmltlo church. If lnllrailad lonllbla Rato. Sp~ng Valley room. Good Condition. Call Rent Cadar Straot, l)alllpo· Wal·mart, C.A., covared
.pleaH call (740)318-o414 Plua, Clll 740-445-0101 . Hl rold, 740-:l85•9948.
llo, OH. (740)258-81111
Clrpotl 740-1182·38111

l . •••ANIJ!D•IIil_.lI
..__

-,
Are you Hmfng whit you
Ira wor1111· IUOO·Sklmo
FrH Info IJOO.ll2l·1~7.
Aro you 1or1ouo Alrou1
Wo!fdng From Homo'! oan
Now FOI' Free lnfonnallon.
1·1e&amp;·8CI1.4Sfl8
-.IUOOIII4U4mt.oilm·
~·
Domino·,.• now .......
-..
callonllor Hf8 dtlvoii. I·
llpolil and Pomatoy loca•
lionl only. Ajlply

wow Sewage, Trash,
.
SSBO/Mo., 740 H8 OOOB.
2 bedroom mobile home lor River Bond " ' rent, no pets, (740)982· ceptlng opplicallorlllor
now -oc5858
1 br.
Hud SUbsidize Apt. for the
2 Bedroom Tralklr, AI alec- olderty__&amp; dleablad. EOH.

s

·

lo.

to, 4 wd,

mechanically 1

oound, very IIHie rust, came
'""" Calllomlo 5 yeara. ago.
$1,fSOO. 080. Daya
(304)675-3852
1986 8·10 Blazer, $90,000
mil•, No Ruol Good Condition. $2,800 (304)882·

"'---~~
,

811% Hyb&lt;ld Wo# Pup. 10
wMkl old, tzoo. (740)44t.
15888
.

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS
OPENINGS IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:
DFT\11. SPFCL\UST
Previous experience helpful.
State of the art equipment
Great working atmosphere,
We offer a benefit package,
including 40lk, medical and
·retirement benefits, a five day .
work week and no Sundays. ·

No Phone.Calli Pleaa
~Clarence Fielder
BeCWHn to a.m. li 7 p.m.

1986 Ford Ringer 4 v-e angina, lang bod,
'good oondftlon, · 11209,
(740)148·:1248
1Ht Chi'!Y Bl11,1er Slrv-ra,do. 4x4, 3&amp;0, aukl. loaded,
·vary good condlllcrll, 13HD,
(740)882-'514
..
1814 Ctrovy 31410n Plok•IIP,
drivl,

. IXCIIIInt -oondltlon •. Aut~
motio, v-e, loodad with opo

.uona, bumper hl1on, neck • Oth _ . towing
. poolragt. (740)24W572
SO 111!¥100 II, illol, 5 oyllndar, 4111Hd 'Mill o;11rdrivl,
11100 oso: (740)44e-:138e
ATI'INTIOIII AMIIH

TIIAN.OIITATION A
CNUIICHIB.
Z-2001, 18 P-Yant
· Low MIIH/!XInl CIHn
Turnp!ka Ford .

~~~~~~:;

fromPageB1

2221

CIII.Amr~ "

=.;.;-:;::;.--- ' - - •

Gun Shoot
forked Run

Per Hour

1876 Fold F-150, AutomarV·B, 83,000 actual miles,
garage kept, EI&lt;Cellent Con·
dillon. $4500. (740)446·
4053
1962 Ford Bronco, 11-8, au-

I

:~.;~~~~~ ::;:,.~"'=:::."::

t3S for each

Waterbed ·

NOW
HI RING

Caldwol lor more lnlomla385-2434.
12x60
all electric. (740)992.0165
Cavalier and Noons, $800. A N - Homo awn..
uon. (740)446-7150
4 BR, 3.5 Bath ranch with
$350/month, InclUdes water
(740)«6-6889
· T-n Hleftlcloncy 90 p1ua
over 3000 aq It, large 1891 Mansion 14x70, 3 &amp; sewer fees. Localad be· Now Taking AppiiCatlonogerr lumacao lnoludlng oil

plasma donors, earn $50 Ia 5452

Rick Pearson Auction Com-

c...-

point game either way. Federal went up three points, but
a Lee drive .and Dunn free
Hay &amp; Bright Wlnt 11s 11''111"""------,
throw tied the score. Stevens
Siraw, Year 'Aound Dollvary 1110 Bar WANIID
Announcement
scored a Federal bucket on a
&amp; Volume Dlocount Available. He~lage
~Sml. ~~~~~~~~
baseline drive to put Federal
laa.)675·~724.
.I
,-~-~~-"\
up 57-55, then Sayre hit a
I I&lt;\ \-, l 'c IIC I\ I II 1\
jumper from the line to tie
16
57- 57. Faith Gilders again put
._F. . .:.urosiiiis..w:iiiiro..ll
.
the Lancers up 59-57 with a
pair .of free throws, but Deana
1966 Nova II of alot
$6~$8
Pullins tied the score at 59- 59
new parts $7000. 3()4.8953078
to throw the game into over1973 Plymouth Ouster, Autime .
tomatic with slant six 2 door,
FuiUPart Time
Tied at 62-62 . after Sayre
hard top, Excellent work
OFFICE
car. (304)675-2547
hit 1-of-2 free throws, South1974 4x4 GMC Dual Wheel . ENVIRON.MENT
ern overcame an intentional
Pickup. 4 apo8d with :150. · 1·888-974-JOBS
foul and three straight, excel(304)675-2547
lent defensive stands. South1967 Lincoln Town
ern, however, turned the ball
Very Good Condition,
CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
94,000 mllea, $3100.
.
(740)446.0788
The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings CQ)11pany over two of three times with~
1986 Oidemoblla Delta of Pomeroy, Qhlo is seeking an out a shot at the bucket.
Lackey put Federal up 64Eighty Elghl Nice Interior, experienced Consumer Loan Offic&amp;r lei ns
62
with a jumper from the
:.:'t ~,;. '!~~~~ Gallipolis, Ohio Branch location. puallfled
(aa.)675-6937
candidates will have 1·3 years direct block, then Deana Pullins hit
1996 Chevy Lumina, Auto. lending experience in personal ~nd rea•. the second of two free throws
pw/pb. Greet work Car. estate (t ·4 family) financing transactions, for a 64- 63 tally. Federal had
Runs good. $2500 or nag.
(304)4SB-t 775
be computer .literate and possess good the ball and another chance
1987 Monte Cor1o LS. Load· customer relations skills. The Farmers with 39 seconds left, but
od, Mull Salll $5300 Firm. Bank offers a competitive salary, Southern fouled sending
.(740~471!0 · · ·' · ,•.. ' ' commensurate with experience, a'nd fringe Gilchrist to the line where
1917 Dido Cutlaaa su- beneflls package. Send cover Jetter and she missed both ends of a
\':Sari~
detailed resume to:
double- bonus and Rachel
0
2671.
Farmers Bank &amp; Saving• Company
Chapman got the rebound.
91 GMC Jimmy 4&gt;&lt;4, Runs
ATTN: Human Resource• Director
Brooke Kiser drew a foul
••
Good.
$3000
OBO.
PO Box 626 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740)448-8044
I'armors Bank Is an Equal Housing Lender
91 Plymouth Acclaim, 4 L__M_e_m_be_r_Fo_•_c_alitnl!ldalanax!Et.t.q..
ua_r_o_p_po_rt_Uf1_ity_..J
Ooor, 58.000 mllee. $2000
080. ·(740)446-8044

19811 Bronco' I), 4x4, 88,000
mlloo. Eic~lent Condition.
(740)387.()869
1991 Chov)o Sllverodo ~x·
tandad Cab, 4x4, 4.3 lfor·
toe, 5 opoad, American
.RaCing Rima with 32 Inch
uroo. Manv Extnls, $S700
OBO. (740~2124 laavo

Operating E.V,_rs are the $80 per week for 2 or 3
men and women who oper. hours weekly. Call Sera- 818 Main Street, F'l. Pl .
ate and repair the equip- Tee, 740-592-6651 .
ComptetBiy Relurblahod. 2
mont that builds Amerlcal
story, 2 Fun Bath. 3 BedWanted- drummer lor rock, rooms. Large Kllchen ,
•eam Aa You Laam•
country, blues band, Large Utility Room, LRI DR/
(740)992·7818
Family Am. New Carpet
ws win bt aocoptlng appll·,l«i
'throughOut. F/A &amp; /VC,
cations, with 0 Sto.oo cash
BVSJNESS
$79.QOO, (740)448-9585 or
non· relundabla lao altha
'flwNING
(740)448-2205 or (740)446·
lollowlng locallon: '
211BS.
~~:':: ~0
For aslo by owne" Nice bl~0T~Inlng ~=·
Can Todayl740-4411-43fl7 lovol homo on 1 aero noar
rawn
1-800-214.()482
' Cheltar. ThrH bedroom,
Logan,~ 4 3t:l8
RogtQ0.05·1274i!.
two batho, ona-car garage,
·
lomlly room with flrtploco.
IOCIAL WOIIK POIITION: ,,.,
WANIJ!D
oun room. New cenlrol halt·
Program Coordlnalor
To Do
lng &amp; 1/o oyotom. Ono ml-

1111""""!~-----,

·.

Now Sontonlol 22 RHio,
Fancy Stock. Semi Auto.
$145. caJI (740)448-1127
·
Flfewood IOf lllo, (740)24728fl1.
.
Flfewood $SO Dump Truck
Load. (7.0)379-2758
~---~- ••• L.~.- load.
(7r•40
~~1 •.-~ ~-~·~ 109· ~
;;.•ry~·~.;;.·_ _ _ _ __
Floral Print Couch w/matchlng · - a1oo chair to

both are weartng red collars Ohio Operating Engineers STNA/ CNA Flart- time posi· fenced yard, new kitchen, bedroom e~tcellent condi· hind Fo~e'a Pizza In Point 35 Wilt 2 Bedroom Town- 4 Sheela, White Marble and
newroof,2caranachedga· ~:'4ScanKavena, (740)385· :~~aant. Call (304)875· hOu~Apenmenta, lncludn 60X25x1, 100 OBO. Cell ca.

AI Krogera Galllpolia1-5-02.

SUnday.

fiomPaaeB1

Quality hay lor ..... 11.50
bile; free mixed dog to
good homo (740)965-:l81 0

·
ltom. (740)448.2805
or 1111 Rlvarlno Anti- _ _ . : . - - ' ' - - - - quea 1124 · Eaol Main on Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
SR i24 E. Pomeroy, 740- ~~":·C:.~~"t,'
992·2526. Ruoa Moore. 740 446 •525
'
ownar.
=--:-:::-:--:-:---:-= Ha"'" Muml $3 00 Hell 4
Suo'oSalaclableoonthe"l" '"'
.
In ~- Dolla, g~aaa- :."'
~i.t~
ware, Aladdin manlolo, and ..;.,.. Mt. Mo. (304)1185mora. (740)1192.()296
3740 leave ,.._118 _ or
I.ANEQUi
(aa.)895-:!789
t Harballle
1
MllRaiANDisJ;:
~I For Product~Opport' nlty (740)44 1 1 ~

:~ .':n~ ~th"~~':~ ~C:~n~ceship &amp; Training =n~:~:~U:in~llc:':::
homo near Cheater, chll·
Locai1B
Stop by and 1111 out an appll·
dron &amp; I mlu our dogs very
4 Year Appranllcaohlp cation or call Pam Caldwell
uch please
tu th
m
• questionsre masked,
em, •"002 Appllcollon Dlln (740)446-7150
lor more lnlormatlon.
no
(740)985-1138
Jan. 28, 29,:10, Fob. 7, B, 9 ·
9:00am to 3:00pm
URGENTLY
NEEDED·

lolt: Eening wfth Nine very
email white atones (pleroad)

&amp;

7300

=

=7"'.

9 rooms. 3 baths. CIA and
Heat. $500/ !119. (740)448-

new waler lines, new vinyl
house replacemer&gt;~ win·
dowa, very good condition,
sitting on rented lot·
$12,000 or best offer. Cali
(740):l8 7.o521

co1n Ptllo. (740)H8

:=.·

wa· pump, some new carpet, 4 Rooms &amp; Bath, $3001

I

Retriever &amp; female ' black Ave , (lalllpolla.
Lab (needs medication)
.

nel, Flat Bar, Stool Gratfng
For oralno, ortvawaya &amp;

3 R~~f'd Both, Nowl)'
GoollS
Remode..u.
Down...lrt • ....,
Slova an&lt;f Rol!lgoralor, All
ulllltleo ~old. 411 Olive Appllancot: Rocondhlonad
Street. $415. (740)448 38•5 Wulrlft, Drysra. Rangos,
BEAUni'UL
APART· Refrlgraloro, Up To 90 Days
MENTS AT BUDGET PAl- G.....-1 wa Sell New
CEB .AT JACKSON E&amp;- Moytag Applanceo, French
TATES. 52 W - Driva -city Maytag, 740-4411-7785.
I(Orll $28_7 ,10 $383. Wllk 10 For Salo: Rocondldi&gt;nfd
shep•&amp; · Call 740.
448·2!568. Equal Houllng
l~!~~
Opponunlty.
ance. 3407 Jocklon A..
nue 1304)675-73118
s-h St., Middleport, 2
·
.·
·
~m~~. ~~ Fumllural0fllloat69Gar,_. ...,_. field Avo Stove Rol~&amp; referenca, nq petl, tor; w..her and'
(740)1192~,166
s.do and mora. (7-40)448CMIIy'a Fomlly Living. 7681 0&lt;(740)448-8780.
33140 ~ Uma Ad., Rut•
.

Mix, Small female dog. Haalthcare Teaml Contacl Jewelry, 151 2nd Avo., Gal· ler/gu Hns, ·new heating &amp;
Judy Han, LPN, Instructor llpolla.
.
, cooling system. newly painl·
at 740·992·5806 or 740·
ed dish washer chain link
7&lt;12·2370
Seen~ HHis ls accepting ap- !once. 89 BurdeHe Addition.
"---oii'!iiiiro-_.1·
OR
pllcati~. fO&lt; a :!2 hour • call (304)875·2902
•
Slop By Rockaptlnga Rtha· W'!"k hll-1n LPN lor the 11-7
·
Found· 2 puppies Collie bllitatlon Center localad at sh•h. Stop by and 1111 oul an 3 bedroom house lor sale
Mix? MJF, BrownandWhKa, :l8759 Rockoprlngo Road, application or call Pam on land conlract, (740)992·
Clarlc Chapel Road , Pomsroy, end fill oul a Caldwell lor mora l•lonna· 5858 .
(740):l88-1520
Claoo Application! EQual tion. (740)448-7150
- - - -- - - - Opportunity Employer En· SceniC Hilla is accepting ap- 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
LOBI 2 young pupa 1 male, 1 couraglng, Workplace 01· pllcatlonslor :1-11 Full· lime (304)67S·S332
lemale. FogloM&gt;ng Rd 11ea verslly (EOEEWD).
RN Supervisor and a :1-11 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. S.t up
Mason. chlldrens pots 304· Now Hiring. Pan time PCA, Pan- lime AN Supervisor, on Privata Property Take
773-5115
·
Home Health Aides, CNA'a Please atop by and 1111 out over paymenra. (740)446·

I

r•o

kenese Australian Sheppard you could be a part of OOR Bring Reaume. Acqulaltiona atairs, large deck; new

r

I, _....,.._
eo

SI!I.CE
n....-

· 11112·2187.
·

lrontt available lor loaao.
Vaoancloo now
.. .
Gracloui. living. 1 an.d 2
bedroom apa~ents It VBlage Manor and AlvaApanmtnts in Middleport.
From ~711-$348. Call 740992 ' 50114· Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Modem 1 l!odroom Apan·
mont. (740)448 OG90

!740)379·2280
LosTFOUNDAND

j

=-•Ina
.. ~~~r ~:~~~ ~~~ $~~h ~~r.:'\t~:le~a~rtge;:: ~.~:"'rtrf l~ra"ru~: =~~~Re~tU; ;:=o~~r:.::

PAV,:::O~~~!o~:S ~~r.~~ra~lu!"r!.~~d~

.
I~~~-=to

&amp; dapoolt NqUirad. COOLING (740)'Me-M11·
(740)H8 31114
or 1~ .

For sale· 16x70, 3 bedroom, APR. for Ustlngs, 800-319-o lea pd. t;xcept Electric. 18x80, $100 per month. oall Slell Bllml, Pipe- Rebar
Ed o1 Country Homos, 740- FOI Concntto. Anglo, Cha"'

~

tree 1·800·768·2623 ext 800·531-8553.
deadNnas.
1621 .
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT We offer a genarous beneAfo.NouNcEMFNrs. l
at
~
. 1-80().467-5588 Ext. 12170 vancemanl.
www.homejobl.com/12170
ADOPTION
Experienced and qualified
Blrthmothar/ We promise to Experienced Cashier Need- persons should oond re·
love your baby uncondilion· ad-(304)1185-3803
sumeto:
ally throughout llleo Jayo Help wanted caring lor the
Ohio Valley Bank
and Challenges. Coolklen- elderty, Darst Group Home,
.Po.aox 240
tlal. LAgat Call Margaret now paying minimum wa~, · Gallipolis, OH 45831
and Leo t-see-2CJS.O:l3a
•·
EOE
new ahHta: 7am-.:lpm, 7am·
FHouller PBrush &amp; bSta,nleyl ~~~: ca~p7~~5odJpm· AIIONI All Aroasl To Buy or
me roducto, uy sel , c..:::;:,:;c:.c,.:.,::,:~=::,,- S 11 Shl~ •(740)843-1025
LIFE YOU OESI!AV!I
t ·
oy ...,..ars, 304·
Furr Exercloo Prlvoll LAo- Be YOUR OWN BOS81 675·1428.
sono. -Leem ~defense at
Income potentlallll
Pan-time RN and full·tlme
your own pace. Jay Clark's FREE Info. Full Training. and pan'llme LPN IOf tOO
Keopo Kara18 School. 740- WWW .JaodPEnJemdau com bod nursing faCility. EI&lt;Cel·
· 742-2546
888-884-4325
• lent opportunity lor chal·
- -- -- - - - McClure's Restaurant now longing and rewarding oxOaln Confldonco In An hlrt 11 3 loc tion 1 11 periilnce. Sign on bonuo.
:="',::,r~eamel· pa~~e ploka up~~~~ Great sian ratlls, excellent
moves tion at ,..;,·tlon &amp; bring back rogutato&lt;y oomplla""' hlatotoday at Jay Clartc's Kenpo betwee~ 9:30am
&amp; ry. Interested candidates
Karate School. 740-742- 10·008 M nda lh Sat· should apply to: Rock·
2548
urday m, o . y ru
ap~nga Rel1abllltatlon Conttr, :l8759 Rockoprtnga

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
lnr.&lt;111otm &amp; Colomln gu.
oil &amp; electric l u - '"'
eluding hi oftlcllncy halt
pump oyatOml. Wo cany 1

Mono lhon orlg. Wr011101g
pluo dopolll. No "-11, ~
JiOR.....,,
-$35.00 for all Exc.
(740)146 •043- 6:00pm
cond. 304-882-2438
~ lei
.... 101•
1 br Fuml- Apt LMng · N~
~ - · qu .ooun.,
....,;, kltchon. bath. All utlln· ling, will accommodate NEW AND IIIED STEEL

.:.._.:._·_ _ _ _ _ Abllitytocomputollgureo
TURNED DOWN ON
ered porch. 6x10 building.
dentlal. &amp;pm · to Bam. Olivero wanlad, no COL. 23 and place in a logical and SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? (304)875· 7116 or (304)675- 1 -3 Badrooma Foraclotod
'"""" dri v· •Ability-!
understandabkl
No FH Unleu Wo Wlnl 5018
-(7_40.:.)388_·_1_799'-'.--- - - yrs. old oroIde r, .,......
.. ~ x1lormat
h
Homos From $199/Mo., 4%
0
Why walt? Start meeting lng record, benellls. drug
~·• ra oura
1-1188-582·:3345
Down, so Yoara at 8.5%
Ohio singles lonlght, cal toll screen, seniors welcome. 1-

2 Badroom Aportment, all
utlllliH Included. . $400/
month, $100 dopoalt.
(740)367.()611

·
·
very nice, 2oo3 bedroom complete line of Mobile
1 Bed.room Ap.rtment1, apanmem, In town. large home partl: &amp; accaaa~.
$288 mOntfl. Oopoalt &amp; Rol" ldlcllon, LA. SSOO/mo. Rol· BINNI!TT'I HIAnNG &amp;

possess the follOwing quail· money through the mall until 1995 16x80, excellent con- 0916
tin:
you have Investigated the dltion, will help with delivery,
·
Apanment 403
- - - - - - - - ·•eoosldefable tact with offaring.
call Nikki, 740·385·9948.
- - - - . . , - - - -- Beautician, FT &amp; PT Ho1p
cuatomarw
~;=::;;::;::;:;;:::=~ oronco. HUD Approved.
Moon Ught Eocortt. Atten- Neodsd. Paid Vacation/
•(lood oral and written
~ 1 1995 Clayton 14x70 2 bed·
(740)+,11-1518
.
tlon Ladles. Full Service Houny Wage VI. Commiaskill
Smvl~
r~s 2 full baths, dining
~
1 Bedroom Apt. Glllpolla.
Male EICOfta. Prompt Pro- sian, Free CEU hours, l"Ability to usa a l'l'llftnl•ter ....._
• area, laundry room, central
lesslonal Dlocreet &amp; Conti- (740)448 7267
•
- .. ~.
air, underpinning. Bxt6 covFOR RENr
Wotor Paid. $275 lllonlh
ply To: 553 2nd Avenue,
Gatupolls, Ohio 45631,

80 Round Qf hay: 800
10. 82 Chov)o Truol&lt;, 2 drivo, long bad worlc,
$500. (740):l87·7586

W.
tcllloft.

The O.lly Sentinel • Page B 3

(140)jll11 · -

rM~I
.tees Ka-111 Mulo m .
Molal Top, Roll Bar. Wind·
1hlold, Hlloh, Llkl Now,
. ~ (740j379-27'88
2001 ' Harioy Davldaon Su· ·
por Cillda, hN. _ . on ·It
ond hal only four hundrod
miiH on It, aoldng 118,000,
(740)742·3302 uk . for

Thanks to all my
customers for the gifts
given In 2001. .
Bernice Durst &amp; Helper
. Eagles 2171
Dance Jan: 11 &amp; 12
Lonewolf
8 pm - Mldmght ·
.

I

VFWMason
Dance Sat. Night .
9-1
.
Music by A-Mix

off a moving pick, but came
up short .on both safeties.
Southern, however, rebounded and missed four hasty shots
in the last six seconds as time
expired on the Federal 64-63
win.
Federal Hocking outrebounded Southern 45-34
(Gilchrist 14, Lackey II); the
Lancers had 27 turnovers, 11
steals (Stevens six), 16 assists
(Gilders four, Sidwell five),
and 18 fouls . Southern had 34 ..,
caroms (Dunn eight, Chapman eight, Pullins seven), 28
turnovers, 20 steals (Dunn
five , Lee four) , II assists (Lee
5), and 29 fouls.
Federal Hocking won the
reserve game 48- 30 led by B.
, Hart with 17 .Southern was
led by Susan Brauer and
Joanne Pickens with ten
points each, Brooke Kiser
added four, Ashley Roush 3,
and Jessica Hili 3.•
Southern plays at Eastern
Saturday at 1 p.m .
11-rt

,........, Hocking 14, 8outiiiM 83
Southam
19 15 11 4 - 83
Federal 17 13 t• 15 5 - 64
80UTHEIIN - Rochel Chapman 12.
Brlgette Bameo 3, 008na Pulllnl17. Amy
Leo 10, Kalla Sayra 18, Alhley Dunn 3,
Tara Plckona 0, Brooke Kloer 0, Totals 24
13-21 ~ .
I'IDIIIAL HOCKING - T-v _.,
12, Amber GoodlelloW o; Renee Stevena
5, Krisha Johnaon 0, K~stlo M~~nnlng 2,
Kolaoy Lackey 21, Faith Gild&lt;irw11, Sheila
GlicMot 13. TOIIII 24 14-36 64.
Throa point ;ball - Soulhom 2(Pulllna
1, BamH 1); Fad Hock 2 (s-112)

t•

filled the position rather nice~
ly. Robertson netted eight
points in the third frame. The
Eagles full court pressure put
the Eagles up 40-27 at the
end of the third period.
Eastern substituted freely
throughout the fourth quarter, and placed 10 players in
the scoring column. Tiffany
Bissell saw extensive action at
guard in the fourth , and
teammate Jess Dillon also
received some weD-deserved
playing time. Morgan Weber
and Casey Smith were among
those coming off the bench
and scoring for the Eagles.
"I'm very pleased that we
were able tci work everyone
into the game tonight. We had
10 out of 13 players score, and
we played with great intensity
the second half," said Brannon.
Trimble did not dress a
junior varsity team , and therefore had a very young team.
Freshman Mandi ·Russell
chalked up eight for the Tom- .
cat cause, and was paired with
Sandi Giffin and Allory
Hooper who both had eight
apiece as welf.
Eastern wiU .be practicing
hard for the upcoming shoot.- .
out·with Southern.
J"he game . marks the first
and much -aw~ited meeting
with the Tornados this year.
Game time inet for 1:OOpm
at Eastern .High School.

an Allory Hooper I ~2 free
throw attempt.
Trimble continued to pluck
·away at the Eagles' feathers
and soon led 5-2 with 3;40
remammg. Eastern called
time-out in an attempt to get
something going offensively.
Evidently, the plan worked,
for in no time at ail the Eagles
stormed ahead and took the
lead off a Watson jumper with
2:15 remaining. Eastern continued its 11 point streak until
t~e first quarter buzzer
sounded.
Freshman Terri Wolfe was
responsible fer' five of the 11
points. Wolfe converted a
three-point play when she
was fouled on a lay in and
picked the pocket of the
Trimble point . guard for
another two. .1
At the en'd of the tint, Eastern led 13-S.The Eagles
weren't ·able to stymie the
Tomcat offense much in the
second quarter. Trimble's
Allory Hooper poun:d !n five
second-quarter points iticludirtg a bomb from thn:e-point
range. When the pos.t wasn't
open, Mansfield was giV!In the
green light and .was abl~ to
answer Hooper's three-pointer with her own trey; making
the score 15-8 With 5;15 left
II T u - Plllnl
. _ , ; 811, 111-H
to play.
5 12 1 • - 211
Wat10n powered her way' to Trimblo
Eaottm 13 14 13 15 - 5e
the hoop for. five boards and TIIIMILI - Mogan floynolda 0 2-1 I,
.Monell Au-11 • 0.2 I,.AIIotv Hoopor 3 t •
eight Eagle points in the sec- U, Sandi CllfllnrU-1 8. TO,.AL810 5-12
. ond . qu~rter, keeping the 26.
IAITIIIN - Alyaea 4 0.0 I . .,_nl
inside game alive for Eastern . . Wolla
3t·t 7. casav Bmllh 2 o-o 4. Jelo
1 ·o-o
Watson's barrage of points, .... &amp;oyiH 1 0.() 2, Sora 3, Kalla Robartaon 4 2-4 10, Mor!lan
and a bucket from the
1 o-o 2, 11nc1v 1o-o a,Jto.
perimeter by Holter put tqe 11ca Dillon 1 o-2 2. Stoole wa- 1 1·2
15. TOTALS 25 4-D 58.
Eagles up 27-17 at half-time. . Stllll - Eaotorn 13 (Wat- 3, Aoborl· .
.
Eastern broke out into fi.dl- -3).
Alllltl - Eutom i(Morlollold, Powoll,
court pressure to start the Bekor, Hollor 2). ·
·
EIIIO&lt;n 10.
third. period. Watson was TurnovsroAeboundo - Ealltm :14(Wall0n 10,
given a rest, and Robertson -rtaonl).

w-

San Francisco (12-4) at Green Bay (l2-4)
More ·weather issues. The ·Packen have never l10st a playoff
game at Lambeau and Brett Favre has ne"!'r lost at home in
temperatures under 34.
.
But the 49en have Jeff Garcia, who played in C anada befote
coming south.
"Did you evl!r play in Canada? The weather gets a little iffy
sometimes;• says San Francisco coach Steve M ariucci, who
grew up on Michigan's upper peninsula. "Cold weather doesn't Sl!em to bother Brett, and I hope our quarterback is the
same way."
.
Before they fell off the playoff map for two seasons, San Francisco beat the Packers 30- 27 three seasons ago on a last-minute
pass tiom Steve Young (remember him?) to Terrell Owens. And .
Green Bay won the NFC title the year before, 23-10 in San
Francisco.
Baltimore (10-6) at Miami (11-5)
The defending NFL champion Ravens were the last team to
make it into the postseason with their somewhat ugly 19-3 win
over Minnesota Monday night. Now that th ey're in, wi ll they
remember that they won last season and play accordin gly?
Probably not.
Elvis Grbac has been disappointing and even the revived
Terry Allen isn't a replacement for Jamal Lewis. T he defense
gave up exacdy 100 points more than the record-breaking 165
it allowed last season.
Miami has a strange playoff pattern .The Dolphins have won
their first postseason game each of the last three years , but have
gotten blown out in the second round by a combined score of
127- 10.That includes a 62-7 blowout in Jacksonville two seasons ago when Jay Fiedler, now their starter, .threw two T D
passes for the Jaguan.
That may be the reason that there were 25,000 tickets
remaining for this game early in the week.

Meigs
.from Pap 81
Meigs came out in a full
court press to start the second half, Lindsay Bolin
scored just :16 seconds into
the third quarter and after a
Davis hoop off a Wellston
, turnov~r, Meigs was within
6 at 34-28 . The Marauders
continued to claw their way
ba~k into the game but
couldn't seem to get over
the proverbial hump in the
third quar[er as Wellston hit
key shots each time the
game gi&gt;t close. Meigs' Katie
Jeffers followed a Kimmy
Cremeans basket to bring
the score to 37-30. After
another Cremeans goal, five
consecutive· points by Davis
closed the gap to four with
5:05 to play in the third
quarter. Meigs, on ·.a three
point play by Davis cut the
lead to one point and
seemed to have the momen tum on their side but Massie
scored inside for the Rockets to provide some short
lived breathing room. Soulsby scored to offset a Patrick
basket, and then Dusty Cremeans . nailed a big. three
pointer for the Rockets with
less than a minute left in the
period. Soulsby again ~oun­
tered with a put back off an
offensive rebound. Massie
and Davis traded free throws
and Wellston led at the end
of three quarters 49- 45 .
Meigs fin ally took the lead
in the game as Pierce
opened the fourth quarter
with her secQnd three pointer of the game. Chancey followed with a jumper fron1
just inside the arc at t)!e 6: IS
mark to give Meigs a 50-49
advantage. But the Marauders would score no more
points from the field :1! they
scored their last six points
tiom the foul line. Wellston
was only able . to · can two
field goals the rest of tli~ way
but d id hit critical free
throws down th e stretch .
Soulsby made it a 55-53
ga111e· with two foul shots at
the 2;42 mark and Pierce
tied the score at 55- 55 ;26
seconds later as the fi'eshman

also connected on two freebies. Brooke Linton gave th e
Rockets a 57-55 1ead by hitting two free throws . arid
Dusty C remeans hit o ne of
two with but 33 seconds to
play to give Wellston a 3
point lead. Lindsay Bolin hit
one of two from the line
with ;02 showing on ~he
clock as Wellston held on for
the 58-56 witt. Meigs Coach
Dave Wilcoxen said he was
pleas ed the way his team
fought back in th e seco nd
half but th'ey had j ust d ug to
big of a4JOle jn th e first half.
Meigs was led· in scor in g
by Davis who no tched 1'5,
Soulsby j o ined her in double
figure s with 14, and Pie rce
also finished in double figure s with 12.
M assie led four Go lden
Roc k e ~s in do uble d igi ts
with 14, Patri ck added 12,
and Thomas had 13 a nd
Du~ty C rem eans 10.
M eigs haul ed in 26
rebo unds led by Davis wi~h
12 and Bo lin w it h fi ve.
Pie rce had five of her team's
12 steals and Davis led the
team with three asmts.
M eigs hi t on just 17-of-62
field goals, but bl istered the
net at the free th row line by
hitting 19-of-23.
Meigs j uni o r fory."ard
Kayte Davis w ho was
injured in the December 6
game with Wellston underwent surgery to repai r a torn
ACL on Wednesday was .able
to join her teammates on
the· Marauder bench .
Me igs won the JV ga me
'by a 57-17 score. Xan the
Smith le d Meigs with 16,
R ene e Bailey had 14, Maria
Drenner 10. Alici• Werry
added six, C h rissy M iller
· four,Justine Dowler two and
M eghan Garnes one.
It Wallalon
Wtllaton 151, Melgo 5e
Melga
9 16 21 11 - 5e
Wallaton 18 16 !5 9 -sa
MIICII ~ Llndoay Bolin 1 1-3 3: B•cok
·Bolin

o: 'Mindy Chancey

1 4·4 6 ; Katie

Jlffert 1 O..Q 2: Samantha Pierce 4 2·2
12; Shlnnon SOultby 4 5·6 14; Jaynee

Davit 5 5-8 15; Alicia Worry 1 2-2 4.
TOTALS t7 19-2J 56.

WILLITON - Alex Measle 4 6·9 14; .
Abby Thomlt 5 2·3 13; Klmmy Cre·
muna 3 o-o ~ Ouaty Cremeans 3 2·3
10; Hillary F'atrick 8 0·0 12; Brooke lin·

ton 0 2·2 2. TOTALS 21 12· t 7 58.

Tt'lrH·polnt goals- Meigs 3 (Pierce 2,

SOulaby); Wellaton 4 (O .Cremeans 2.

K.Cremeana, Thomas)

01'111.

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�Frtdlly, Jan. 11, 2002

Page a 4 • The Dilly 81nUMf ·

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

1

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

3

''

NEA Cro11word Pu&amp;&amp;le

Cincinnati Moeller u·nder.
investigation by .Oi-ISM

ALDER

Woods falls . eight strokes back
in windy New Zealand Open

.. .
I'ARAPARAUMU BEAC H, New ed with a birdie on No. 18to make the
Zeabt1d (AP) -Tiger Woods had trou- · cut by three strokes.
l•lc dealing with the wind he wanted in
He three-putted the first hole for a
t i re New Zealand Open.
bogey, ·but g&lt;&gt;t the stroke back with a
Woods, who said he 'd welcome a birdie on No. 2. He then dropped two
l"·althy breeze so that the Paraparaumu strokes on No. 3 aftet shanking a shot
Beach course would play l*e a tradi- abo!Jt 35 yards from a near-impossible
unnal links la)IOUt, had three straight lie in thick rough with a tree affecting
hol;cys Friday in a round of 2-over-par his backswing. .
J3 tlrat left him closer to the cut than
on the sixth, the. wind possibly ·saved
tir e leaders.
him from going ont of bounds as he
" I hit a lot of good putts,"Woods said. crossed the parallel seventh fairway . to
" It's j ust the greens are not smooth right the right and was only about 15 yarcls
""IV and a little tough, and on top of from a house.
th.\l· th e wind was blowing which makes
On the par-S seventh, he pulled his
i1 t•w n more difficult."
tee shot and saw it sail with the wind
Now he might need the wind to get into heavy rough, with 3 pine tree
'"to contention Saturilay
" 1 need to have a day like today with blocking his path , to the green. He hit
Llw wind blowing this hard,"Woods said. his approach to about .1 5 feet and
" And hopefully make a few putts.'~ , . watched his eagle putt jUst slither past
'T he American star had a l-over .143 the cup. ·.
t11L rl to fall eight strokes behind second~
WoQcls, paid $2 milhotj to · make _hi~
ro u11d leaders James McLean ahd _first appearance in Ne'!" Zealand, didn't
::itc· phen Leaney, both from Australia. appear to. be bothered by the bad luck,
McLean, the 1998 NCAA champion for · however, smiling bro~dly, choking down
tla• University of Minnesota, shot a 70, on his· putter ·and . then tapping in ihe
and Lcaney had a 67.
·
· · birdie putt knock~kneed to the delight
W ith. the gusty southerlies affec.t ing Qf the croWd..
. ·
pl.1y, Wooc;is, who opened with a 70 on .. Jae An, the 13~year-old South Korean
Thursday, got off to a slow start and was who qualified for the tournamen~ Manin danger of missing the cut after the day, shot a 7 4 to make the cut by a stroke
bogey run on Nos. 13- 15. He rebound- with a 3-over 145 total. ·
.

•

'

Hearst wins NFL comeback award

Hill \ Srlf
Stor ~ ge

"'"
••

.....

••

___ _

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

• J, 1

6

bt llwt • .....,_,.

lllloyt ....... -

•'

35537 St. Rt. 7 Nonh • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equ111112

',"

.

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Qealers
JO()() St. Rt.

7 South
Coolvillt, OH 45723

'229.00*

740-667-0363.

BARNEY

° FREE INSTALLATION .
° FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE

MANlEVS
SElF STORAGE
. g7 Beech st.
Middleport, OH

• FULLY WELDED ·
'SO YEAR WARRANTY

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

992-4119 1-800-291-5600 .

[IO'xlO' 6 1fx20')

NEVER Bo~~"T,
..)UGHAID!.
MAI&lt;E S VA LOOK

FIRSTCIME.
FIRSTSERED
$200.10 PER JIINT
REIUURLY
$327.10 PER JIINT

BAD!!

VIsit Our Showroom On State RoUte 3J

[7401 ggz. 31!14
ggz-6635

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• No Dealert or Contractors Please
Visa/ Mutercard

wv trol3477

ns,

L \l\1:\I'S

MY

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

( 0'"-11!11 I HI'
SprQellpqp lp;

Roonna, Decks

BUT Tt-ltY''~
~AI..I..Y Cl..fANINti

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

RemodeUng,
DrywaD,and
Additions

.·.~

UP MY OII..Y
S'~ll~ P~OBI..eM.

THE BORN LOSER

',

Owner: .'lerry Lamm

740·992·1671

(740) 992-0739

1122/TF

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per .
month

Bnn:l ranes yru can
Cettai'Eed, ~.,.,. ...-~

12-12

(740) :949-1521

Pd. I Mo.

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Ca&amp;h Available ,

BIG NATE

Sunset Home .
· Construction

If your weight is '
unbecoming tu .
pH; You shauld be. :

Local 843-5284
M;.dicare Supplement; life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental , Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers; .
Mortgage; Major Medic~!.
• Nursing Home

New Homes, .Rc:5om AddiHons,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
AMore

HERBRLIFE •,
lnDEPfRDEnT :~
. DISTRIBUTOR : :

•

12% Swet Horu feed ................ $4.40150
IHutlltltl Prlt:ft 21% dog food .........$8.95160
Economy a..t 12% atook feed ..... $8.75150
Trace Mtntnll Blookl ....................$4.751100

.
'

.,

· ~~ · ·

U'

.~·

--~
'··

'

.

Call .
·740-8824410
···-- --- ··---·······

.,.

. __ ,.,.

·.ferty bins start
6:30 .
Progressive top line
· Tbundays.·

.Pregmslve
Ceuerell on SuMays

~,.·. · ~··' ' ~

-·--. ..

·-- - - ~ ~-

·•·······

WlLL.S...i:~~~::J
I ~EAAD TilE TEACJ.IER, SIR ..
SHE SAID YOUR REPORT
SOUNDED LIKE YOU WROTE
ON THE SCHOOL 9US ...

Pd. 1 mo.

. rr

'

. ... . ...
~

.

"' ~ '- · · ·~

1 WAS FLATTERED.
MARCIE ...

ACTUALLY. I WROTE IT AFTER

1 60T OFF TI1E 6U5, AND
WAS WALKIN6 UP TilE
STAIRS INTO SCJ.IOOL ..

CONTRAOORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

CONCRETf/BLOCK/IRICK
• Footen, Walls•.s1eps • ·
Flat Wort, · ·
Repl ace ments~ • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete
Free Estimares
.Serving Ohio and W.V.
wv 1'03i712

~~~
High Bl Dry
Self·Storage
l '

BISSELL
BUILDERS IRC.

74o-885-3848

.

Mon-Sal

New HollieS • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemen,1
Windows'• Roofing

g

GUA~Atm!ED

Home lmprovemenls
Siding • Remud• ling ·

Porehoo • Deck•

COMMIR!~land IESIDENTIAL

Add ·OO's • Ruonnr:

FRE!= ESTIMATES

Quality Work
FREE ESTII\1A'fllS
Bill Dveif•r

740.992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

(740) 992-2979

Advertise
In this space
for
125· per month

_..~' ~ - ~· ~ ·

0.5 !)

TOday's clue: Y equals U

•

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S;iltli d;•y. J. ui. 12. 20(1:!

T hen• i~ a c.h:lllll' th.lt you
1111~h t p;•rt•ri p.Uc in .ltl c.·nter. p rise i11 the yc.•.J r :IIH.',1J \l.ih nc
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all im1,n r t:111C wd:1y jf you
lwpc tu io~p~rt" or in1luc.'tll'c
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ti1h the k 1d, vm• lllll"t tint
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T ryinl-\ tu patdl ttp a hrukc.• n
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Matdm~t1k..:r '-':'I ll hl'll' you ll ll ·
dl.'r ~l illll l wh :1t 10 dn m mi1kC
rill' rda t h,n~hip \Vmk , Mil il

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A QUAI ~I US

Cellular.
992-5479

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BDOLVNI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It's a sad day lor rock and roll." Fan Pate Degan, on the passing ol George Harrison
WOlD
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"Th ings re al ly hav e gotte n
crazy" an otd tim e r mu se d .
~People think co_mpet ing is too
risky. The y want some one e lse to
take the chances and th e n -. _ _ _

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Complete .the chuckle quored

by fdlrng rn th e mi.s.s •ng words
you devel op fro m step No.3 below .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
We asel - Uncle -- Welsh . Nimbly - ISSUE'

One dummy wa s re ading the paper. He turned to his
buddy a nd asked , "Did you hear about the newspape r
·
editor who made world affa trs an ISS UE ?"

~~~-.--~-----

Ht·w~p.,~w r . 1'.0. Ul,~ . 175K,
M1may ~Ji ll St.lt itlll'. Nc•w

. 740-99i-5232
.

..... .

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P.~Obio

'

JANUARY 11

CONSTRUCTION
~IATISFACnDN

57 Primary
color

by Luis Campos

I

imm e d iately

B.D.

33795 Hilmul lid ·

' .. "'·-···~··

I FRIDAY

(740) 992-5908

P/1

arge

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pa.sl and prasent. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

'-·-'--1.-L.-1.--' T 1 N K H r,

played a heart to her
nine , tn:tking th e con tr;K t for plus 600 and ·
1U imps. Ge rmany
had w on b y 2. 5.
(N o te that if NorthSo uth had bee n non vuln e rabl e, Fr.111 c c
would have w ori by

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio
fully tneured

r.

29 Gets
cion

aeel
56 - out a ltv·
ing

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

two.
So, W est be gan
with si x spades atl&lt;~
three di.uno nds, East
wi th two spades and
tw.o di amonds. Th e
odds w ere clear. Von
Arnim

Gultat"$ • Soine Fu[lllture • Crut\s :
No~ Available· Tiger Sharp Knives

Advertise your business on this page for
one month for as low. as $25 r
'
Phone 992·21 SS · ,
. . ...

pe1h

27

taway

-llo.l tw o, th en the club ~~==·

740-992-7036 .

10A~-4PM

5 Snout
6 Vole grad .
7 Pithy

Perforation

39 Fly bill's

1-·

every week

740-742-3411

•'

.

~7

25 South Seas

bump

klln111roo

munds, ending\ n..the /.,.
dumm y. Eas t diS.! -.,..--,.-.,.,..-..,.-1.
·carded first t•he heart

lose 2-81bs. '

FREE ESTIMATES!

4 Skialopo

35 Young

r----o:::"-=:::00,

Mlng to us.

Bryan Reeyes .

A..._

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!~~====~\

1rust

1·877 466·1234

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Mtddlcport. Oh10 45760

(140).!n-!Ol5

l:f:Y,.,.t

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MONUMENTALLIFEINSURANCE CO.

6 Sllnday.

T~eY POLl-IJTe
ATMOJ"pt~e~e.

conflict

30 Slrong oult
59 Busy place 8 Sladlum
feature
31 A alngle
10 Hlah heel '
20 Frflgronce 81 CIA
lime
· 9 Actress
22 Brouhorua ·
.Gray
36 Caterwaul
employee
tune
38 Wedalp
82 Loop trolna 10 Legal
24 Styllll'a
document .
haste
83 Tended !hi
12 Setl
44 Surprloe
IJII'den
25
19 Llncelot'o 46 Pep
21 F81Ung IIIII
oon
47 Furry feet
DOWN
21 The aldnny
21 Barretto
48 Wallop
32 The 1hlng'a 1 Cable
22 Wear
-49 Spacloua
33 Klnclof
network
23 Common· 50 Boling
2 Umb
· cement
trlumpha
3 Canopo
34Lowly
24 Earth
• 53 Our oun
topper
llboror
science
55 Library

was d o wn to 7.5.
Thi s was th e dec isive
p t• nttltim ate d ea l.
(The tiu al boa rd was
nat.)
T he iJUctiu n sta.rtt•d
th e sa ut e way at both
tables, with three dia ~
ll lU IH I S
p r omisin g .
some (&gt; -9 points .
(With a bad ' hand ,
So uth wo uld have
started with two no·
trump -- th e L~ b ~ n ­
so hl convention.) The
Fren ch N orth passed
out th ree diamonds.
West led her s ingleton heart, mlving that
probkm for declarer,
~T~ Tt-\E 5m. f0
and So uth lost onl y
"'- TIZ.IC.'&lt;C.~\&gt;1"'-,
th r~e black-suit tricks:
f:.)(C£1'\ IT OOLY
plus 130.
! f.\PQ \\-.10 'Nflffl.S!
· Th e
G ·e rman
North , Sabi ne Auken,
cue-bid three spades,
.i I==~
" king her partner to
. bid three no- trump
with a spade stopper.
If West had led th e
.A''r--l! l -- :----....:
•• .;.. .
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club jack, the contract
would have died, but
r----"7'==-=,--, she led a spade . to
dummy' s king, leavHE'S
ing declarer Daniela
HUtoi&lt;;RY .
vo n Arnim needin g
fo ur h ea rt tri cks.
So uth ran h er dia-

6 Mlln North Of Pomeroy, Ohio, AI County Road· IS

52 Invite
54 Colli
5&amp; Major

!Hie
17TwlceDI
18 Whim

W ith H&gt; dea ls to
go, France led by 4tr.5
(the half coming fro m
t he
ro u n d - ro bin
&lt;iualifying section c~ r­
r yov c r
fo rm ttl a).
However, Ge rmany
starte d a stro 11 g run.
With two dea ls to ~o,
th e Frt· n r h ma rgin

'I&lt;AY~,UNCLE
SNv~Y !!

OJ•

oltllm

Newton'•

K S 43

against Germ any.

..

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T he %-boa rd tin;~ l
of the Venice C up
pittl'll France (w ho
h;td n' t qu ali fied for
th e l'V&lt;nt, bu t · was
perm itted to play as
tl1 e .h ost co unt ry)

VIm IEPliCEMDIT WIIDOWI
_,., 1111.,.,. ., -

50 Sp allug

1st..::a'...

.. A K Q I

Vulnerable: North-South
lnutla
Wut North Eut
l'an
2A
DIU.
Pak•
3•
Pan 3 •
Pan
3 NT
Pu1 Pall
Pau ,

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

All Makes Tractor &amp;

~Qpen4:30 .

·- .·

12% SWeet Hot'H feed ................ $5.00150

Sweet Stuff

··/~.

,.&amp;-.........

9 JTtSI

Openlnaltad: • 1

DIPOYIU
Pllfl _

.

7

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•
Utalcr: Soulh

(740) 992·3470

•

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992-62t

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) career - fresh off a 1,570-yard season
Through two torturous years of surgeries and his first Pro Bowl selection -· in
and rehabiliution, Garrison Hearst never front offamily and 'friends in his homedoubted his resiliency - even though town. After :In · operation . to help the WICit'l
injury heal, Hearst developed icirculato- IL\VUNC aad
trot many people share&lt;;! that faith.
, " I could probably count them on one ry problem that threatened his ability to IXCAVATJHG
hand, but it didn't matter what anybody r w•lk.
.
.
.U.UIIng oLimmhclieved," Hearst said. "It wal what I
Avascular necrosis .preyented ·proper oOmtl • Sand •Tojlloll
oflil Dirt .Yulch .
believed that mattered."
blood tlow from reaching Hearst's ankle, ·
Hearst, the San Francisco 49ers' run- and it killed
of the .bones in his foot.
ni ng back who keeps coming back, was a That led to risky .boiU!-plug surgery in
runaway winner ofThe Associated Press ·July 1999 and ·again in March 2000 to
NF L Comeback Player of the Year award stimulate circulation.
T hursday in balloting .by writers and · He had arthroscopic surgery early in
broadcasters who cover the NFL
2001 , then' continued the thousands of
T he sight of Hearst ducking tacklers hours of rehabilitation -· many while
and dodging linebackers this fall was holding a· football as a reminder of the
itnprobably .thrilling to those who fol- game he loved.
lowed the two-year odyssey of Hearst's
Physical rehab was nothing new for
retu rn to IOotball after he broke his left Hearst, who won the Victor Award. the
l e ~ on ·his first carry of a playoff game at predecessor to th~ Comeback Player of
Atlanta in 1999.
the Year award :- with Arizona six years
Hearst, who received a similar award ·in ago.
·Hearst rushed for 1,206 yanb this sea1')95 ~tier recovering from a serious knee
itti ury, received 47 of the 50 votes.
son, lOth in the NFL, with fou r 100-yard
His second return has been the NFL's games and four touchdown&lt; as part ·of a
East Stale Street Phone(740)593-667
Athens, Ohio .
ted-good story of the year. Even the formidabl e rushing ta.ndem with rookie
4'1ers' opponents love the ebullient run- Kevan Barlow. Hearst also caught 41 passning back who 'simply wouldn 't quit.
es, filling the multiple roles demanded of
Hearst went down in the prime of his a running back in the West Coast offense.
BANKRUPTCY
can relieve 1 debtor of financial obliaations ~d
manae 1 flir disaibution of useu among
·creditors. A penon goina throu&amp;lt bankruptcy
may retain certain propeny•.bown as
."exempt" property, ·ror hla or hc.r personal uae,
Thla may hx:lude a car, alll!u~e; clctlhes, lfid
houJeho.!d aOOd&amp;. You af\iluld direct 111)' ·
queatlbna reptdln1 binklup!Cy 19 an attorney
PomenvfiGies .before pr6ccediq. Por lnformlllllll regarding
11~~~~~· · ·. '
Shade River AG Service
~
Blllklilptcy contact: · ·
.IIIGO 2171
J~·.
t}~ ' ' t f ' '
'
. "Ahead In Service•
Wlllllm Satt~Mk, Alloi'De)'
• (uef1111Hndall
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Ft'H Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill

Houl'8
7:00AM • 1:00PM

AQHIS

•
6

A AJI7tS

Nlwca.t .,

1 lieu 111
41 EtnntGI
5 Altertuee 42 Mlplbbr.
43 Fllcal'l
bundlt
11 =::,~
45 W1t1 loci
ciUIW
47 Cllolr
, J Bullfight
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40 Cruy

ACROSS

'

CI NCINNATI (AP) Moeller other .cts of the si:hool, including
High School, which won seven state academics.There is no mention of acadfootball championships, has been emics in M~llds pamphlet.
;fccused by rival schools of violating
" Where we made the mistake was ...
11rles against r«ruiting playe rs.
oor inl:Juding uthe r aspecn of ,,_,,-rhe Ohio High 'School Athletic Asso- scho&lt;&gt;l," said football coach Bob C rable,
ciJtion is conducting an investigation who led the team to a 5-5 record in his
th at is expected,. to last about two weeks. first season.
Con1missil&lt;)ner C lair Muscaro declined
T he OHSM also is investigating an
tu comment.
allegation that C rable met with seventhIf Moeller has violated rules, it faces a and eighth-grade boys to recruit them.
r.111ge 'of penalties including a a maxi- C rable admitted to the · newspaper that ·
mum S1 ,000 fine, censure, a ban on he did so, but said there was nothing
pustseaon play and suspension.
.improper. OHSAA bylaws prohibit
Alt ho ugh the O HSAA wo n't· talk sports recruiting beyond the sixth grade,
Jbout the allegations, T he Cincinnati the newspaper said .
Enquirer reported Friday that the school
·c rable also confirmed to the newspais accused of three violations. Through per that he recruited 11 -year- old boys at
the Frt&gt;edom of 1nfo rmation Act, the a Pe~ Wee football practice, distributing
ll c'\Vspaper obtained th e letter from the pamphlet. The Greater Miami Conpri llcipals of the Grea ter Miami Co nfer- ference letter said that violated the spirc'IICC that prompted 'the investigation. · it of the rules.
The letter focuses on a pamphlet sent
C rable played at Moeller in the 1970s ·
to ,eventh- and eighth-graders that ;ISks under Gerry Faust, who started the
lhr personal informatio11 an·d whether . sch ool's football pro.gram i n 1963 and
tire student is interested in financial aid too k it to national prominen ce befo re
li&lt;&gt;m Moeller. It includes a stamped card beco ming coach at Notte Dame: Crable
li •r return.
went 0 11 to play linebackeF at Notre
O HSAA bylaws say schools can use D ame before playing seven ye~rs with
q rdr pamphlets only if they talk about the New York Jets. . ·
·

-

PHILLIP

to il \"oi tl a glo01uy ;ll l ll n~­

AIU [ S (March 21-A pri l I")
-- A 111L':lll il l~fll l objl·divc i~

bt· pn·p ;1n·d to 't"t' it throu )-111
rt,l iltl' llni ~ h . Yuu_"ll h .l\"l' tbt•
l~t.·t"t.-s~.tr,o.• stn yin~ powt-r if you
dlOO~l' to USC i~ , l'~'&lt;. ' ll \'v"ith :1
dilllr ul r 1 ;1~k .
V!ltGO (/H I ~ . 2J -ScpL 22)

&lt;&amp;c hi t•\•ah ]t' t n d ,1v, bu t V&lt;lU

--

llltftld uci n)J: hc;tvy i ~­
cmild ~Hi t p;l llm over the

p h l'l't'

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~l't- tU~l·t] ll'f.

rl'Hihlh,' .lbOllt 1-:~lill~
J(tl'r il, It 'll al~o hl'l p 1f you
nick to tri t.: d an d tn1~· lll \'th Oll~ in )"1)\lr appw.Kh to it.
IIHIS t

,lbidc b\' lilt' Will ur the 111:1 Jmiry 1)u n· ~ 111.1\..:r \\",1\ 't'~ .
Lilli~ A (S&lt;'pt. "3-0 c" t. "-') - Tla· 'lll.lrl l'~ t thin~ )'11 1.1 r .1 11
dl) tud.1y i~ lo l'l.l lllf'lt..·t~· to

1[1) ~..

M.1k~· an d l"ort t ~l
bruilth•n your pL·r~pt'(tivt.·~ tutby, lw~· onl ~ t· it will wi~h.•n
your horizon • amt ' pr&lt;widt•
~y u wil h ~rt.•:H~.·r pm~ihi liti~:~
lm new "1'}-'nrwniti ~·· in the
&lt;Iii\'~ ah,·ad.
(;EMIN I (M.ry 21·Junc 211)
.... If thl·r~· is '(i11\l' t hin~ tholt

ym1r s.Jti ~ r.lL" titm .1n~· thin).l you
bt·~in, bl.'cms~· th.1t whkh you
ll·ave und\}\\e wdl l".lll~l' \'llll
f,l,llih.
.
SCO I~I' I O (\M. 24- Nm·.
22) .. - Sholi ld ym 1 tiJ1d ymlrcdf lllOH' Tll~' llt ~ llv rc,tll'"
th.1n J,hyskahy ant.~y tlld ay,
~r.HitY )10ll f 11l'l' d~' by (l'll'\li11~
l'nmp.1ni01u wi!h who111 )'llll

yo u've hl't l1 ('tlrium ahm1 t hl·l".HI~t· you lu w il hund1 it
may hl' lh.'fit )'tHI, ~hh i~ the
do1y ro do it. Yom n·~l'arr h .

prud J i n_~.t or deh~~tii1K ~kllh
nre k~'\,'11 tnd oly.

oi1

(juno 21-Ju ly

SAC: ITTARII:JS (N ow. " ·' ·

21) - - C:l't Utlt yo ur
.md mmt.1r t~,d .1~· . l' t',- .m~e tla•rt" is .\11 ilu!u·,niu n
W111l'lllinv; mi~llt r o11W up
trtJ\\'t'l

tlw othl' r ~uy·~
view . I t'll m:lkl' ·all

ynut rdatwmhips

Him u l.11i n ~

l ?~'l'.

rh il 1~~ [rmn
(Jt'

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itkl\.

2.2) -- Make il t'Uil\dtH I ~ l'tli.lrl
todily to t..•xplOu· un tl sec

· poim

wh;tt

your p :1ls rod.1y, bw shollld
thl'y ha..-l' the ir nwn thm1gln,,

T AU il US (April 20-Mov

CA NCE l{

P rt..'~l' llt )'01.11' id c .t~ tlll

to do a~ a sori.ll ,lcrivity 10

bt•

th at l' nahlt·~
fmmdatiun

n HlH' er1-

joy.1hk·.

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LEO lJ uly 23-Au~. 22) ..

Wh.1tt.'Wr JOb ym1 MMI lod.l)'•

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TEMPO

Inspired by the
Madonna,
Cl
'
.

INSIDE

Prep hoops
roundup,.Bl

•

Mason Co. law firm
&lt;"'
turns 100, Dl
•

•

tmes
Newsniaker

EVANS INDUSTRIAL PARK

EDUCATION

Grant·moves Gallia
Co. pro ect forward

Gallia Local officials
·pleased with school .
district's improveme~t

.

:Speculative
building setfo~
industrial park
BY KEVIN KELLt

affect veteramn~~~~~~;~
tors like Rep. Ted S
above, and Rep. James Traficant.
Story, A3

Deaths
·Orlando Andreoni, 75
Franklin Blackburn, 68
Tommy Joe Davis, 51
Thelma P. Meeks, 86
Charles R. Rutt, 62
Elizabeth Taylor, 97
Hilda Triplett, 68
Susan A. Turner, 56
John M. Williams, 81
Marty E•. Dugan, 43
·
Henry Wells
Detllils, A6

s1.25

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS _ Gallla
County commissioners' sign. ing of a grant agreement
with the state is allowing a
speculative ·building for the
Dan Evans Industrial Park to
move forward, with · ~onstruction expected to sta~ by
March at the latest.
•
The grant of $1 00,000

'

from the Ohio Department
of Administrative Services
will l?e used with other
funding on the project,
which Richard Northup,
executive vice president of
the · Gallia Coupty Chamber
of Commerce and Commu· nity lmp~vement Corporation, . said ~~. ~ "a really
. good mcentlve 1n attractmg
busmess to the Site.
The 50,000 square foot
structure w1ll be financed
with $700,000 from the
Rural industrial Park Loan
Program, $100,000 from the ·
Ohio Department of Devel-

opment, and $100,000 from
CIC..
Northup said CIC's share
is equity in the land where
the building goes up.
The building will be a shell
with a finished ' office,
equipped with all needed
utilities. A business can purchase the structure from CIC
and finish
it .as seen fit, and
'
space is available for expansion, Northup said.
"It's taken us about a year
to set this up," he said. "The
amount of ·space · we''ve

....... _Park.Al

ms!
~

'

.

Icenhower third
· in LAs
~ga.L
'. ..
'

.

•

Jim Harper, Owner, demonstrates the "Cart Tipper" . Southern Ohio Disposal continues to operate our full size
action of emptying the 95 gallon toter cart.
garbage packers for residential and .commercial services.
J

1·

•

'

Hlp: 401, Low: 301 .
.

lnveston ·play

.Southern Ohio Disposal is pleased to introduce the newest addition to our fleet: a 2002 8 yard
NewWay "Pack Rat". The "Pack Rat" was purchased to meet the new 12 ton weight limit
requirements to help preserve the streets through out the Village of Pomeroy. A smaller version of a
.full size garbage packer, the ':Pack Rat" is. able to provide the same dependable service to narrow
streets and confined areas with ease. Equipped with a "cart tipper", the "Pack Rat" can effortlessly
empty the 95 gall~n toter carts that are availabl~ for an ad~itional $3.00 per month.

· .It safe · ..

NEW . YORK (AP) Investors opted for safety again ·
Friday, selling stocks and pushing the Dow Jones ·industrials
below 10,000 as they braced
for earnings reports expected
to begin irr~arnest this week.
The Dow Jones industrial
average dosed down 80.33, or
0.8 percent, at 9,987.53,Josing
~72.21 points, or 2.7 percent,
in the week's five straight losing session. The Dow more
than erased its 238-point
advance, from the previous
week.

Southern Ohio Disposal continues to provide rear load dumpster service with various size d1;1mpsters.
·If a dumpster is what you need, but don't have the available space, our 95 gallon toter carts .may be
the answer and can be provided to meet your needs. ·

.
Jim and Mi~helle Harper, owners of Southern Ohio Disposal, have over 2o years experience in the
.

•
• •

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.

P.O. Box 152
Pomeroy; O~io 4576~
1•800-809-7721
740-992-9330
FAX 740-385-8101

· Q ~001

GALLIPOLIS - The results of the recenty released
school district report cards from the Ohio Department of
Education were · a welcome sight for officials of Gallia
County Local Schools. ,
.
"We're real ple2sed," Interim Superintendent Chiula "
Evans said. "We not onJy went up overall but in most all
areas. In fourth grade proficiency math we took a big jump,
in writing and science, too."
Galli a County Local moved from academic emergency to
academic watch after meeting 11 of the state's"27 proficiency standards in 2001.The district met just eight of the stan. dards in 2000.
Gallia County Local Schools experienced a fifty percent
increase in the number of students passing science in 2001.
In the sixth grade, GCLS gained ground in each of the
areas.
.
"We made what I would call significant increase. in all
levels of the ninth grade proficiency levels except writing,
and we maintained last year's percentage of 86 .9 percent:'
Evans said.
Looking at the number of 10th graders who passed the
ninth grade profici~ncy, which is required to graduate,
.
GCLS improved in all five test areas.
"The results for the 12th grade proficiency test weren't as
strong as they have been in past years," .Evans said. · .
Math is an area that both Gallipolis City :l,llc'uel'- ~
County Local' Schools plan to focus on in the'. exploSlo
"Mathematics will be addressed with sd m a vault
strategies," Evans said." At th e high schoolleve'Jh-voltage ele
~it.,&gt;~~~~~~·~~-~·:;:·•:. !he beginning of the Y"¥') fed powl:r mto
· plans for individual students. ., ~ ~ttermg Tower.
"We'll be utilizing intervention classes, isolating ~--·
tiJTle a student has to work in the school compuierl
c
"
mat h sottware.
....
Free time? In high school?
·
Yes, at River Valley High School a pilot program will be
established to provide a more flexibl e sc hed~le that w1ll

1

POMEROY
meocy!
· 1'!Jeil'' ·.iniperlwnatot .
Dwllftt, Ice~hower of
Pomeroy has won third·
place in the "World's Best
Elvis" contest, held last
week at the River Palms ·
Resort in Las Vegas, Nev..
During the three-day
contest, Icenhower com~
peted as,ainst a field of 45
impersonators from around .
the globe, incluJing cone
testants from Brazil, China
and Japan vying· for
the coveted .title of
'~World's Best Elvis Imper-

J

Pluse see Schools. A2

Church recogntzes
Meigs County native

all

BY KEviN

Kli&amp;.y

.,

I

C4
C2

02
insert.
Cl
A4
A6
A2
81
A3

Ohio Volley Pul&gt;lishlns Co.

GAL~IPOLIS
Guardrail placement along 'ii
. stretch of Ohio 7 south · of
·Gallipolis will 1\appen sometime in a, week to 10 days,
. . .
.,
weather permlttmg, OhiO
.
1
Department of Transporta7
" tion District 10 reported, 1.
ODOT responded to con-;
cerns from residents alon~
the road who believe no barrier berween the highway
.
. an .
and the Ohio River
1s

the world· imd I still can't
belie~e I placed third in
such a large field of talented performers," said . !tenhower.
"The atmosphere in Las

Ple1se see Elvis, A2

•

a

The .Holzer Medical Center
Didbetes Support.Group will meet
Su~day, January .13 from '2:00 • 4:00 pm .
"
in the Hospital's French 500 Room ..

.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.Qrg

All are Yielcomel For rriore information, call · ·
'

'

'I.

.

'

(740) 446·5010

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POMEROY - · Monsignor John F. Wippel, a native of
Meigs County, has been named orte of 10 high achievers by
the Catholic University of America's Alumni Association.
In the Catholic Universityof America's Fall200l edition,
Wippel is noted as being "perhaps ,the
world's leading scholar in the philosophy
of St. Th"omas Aquinas." ·
A spokesman for ·the university said ·
that thousands of Catholic University
alumni excel in their professions, and that
each year the university pays tribute to
about 10 special people by giving th'm
Alumni Achievement Awards. .
Wippel's award came...in the category of
research and scholarship.
Wippel is the son of the late Joseph E .
Wippel an d Mary Andrews Wipple of Pomeroy.
He received hls elementary education at Sacred 'ieart
School in Pomeroy closed for n~any years, and his secondary
education at St.John Vianney Seminary it:t Steubenville and
Bloomingdale, Ohio. .
.
·
His first rwo years of college were at St. John V~anney
Seminary, Bloomingdale. He then entered the School of
Philosophy at the Catholic University of America, Washing. ton D. C., as Basselin Scholar.
.
His doctoral studies were completed at the University of
Louvain in Belgium and he received his post-doctoral
degree from the Universite Catholique de-Luvail! in 1981.
He has written and published "Several books along w1th
num~rous scholarly articles.
·

accideQt wai,~\ng to happen.
f~refront of their minds," said
But the state agencY, h~d Filson.
,
planned to place guardrail . The eros10~ ~ontrol proafter- a streambank erosion JCCt · ended m November
project
conducted
by after three months of work,
ODOT and u:s. Army removmg trees, bru~h and
C
f Engmeers
.
. H t
other potential barners on
orps o
un .
d 'I
.
D' .
It
the Site. Guar raJ . was not
mgton lStnct was comp e h
th · b
d
.d S h . F I
replaced w en e JO was
e • sal . tep ame 1 son, done, causing
concern
pubhc mformatwn officer among, nearby residents and
fo~. Di~trict 10. .
.
people who use the road that
Th1s prOJect IS defimtely a vehicle conld eas1ly leave
going to be completed and I
PI
AS
kn ow It
. was someth.mg at the
usesee Road
,
·

,

. TIMEs-SENTINEL STAFF

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

.

er' of Pomeroy placed third in the "World's Best Elvis"
contest last week In Las Vegas, Nev.

sonator."
··
·Icenhower's third place
finish garnered him the V:.otld-wide touring "tribtide of "Third Best Elvis ute ·theater" whose cast
Impersonator
in
the specializes in imitating
World," an ornate Elvis music's most famous enterplaque, $1,000 in prize tainers.
money, and m.ost impor~ · "I'm very honored to
tantly, an audition with . have competed against the
Legends in Concert, a best Elvis impersonators in

•

.• Sectloa• - 21 P!IPS

. Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds .
Comics
Dear Abby .
Editorials
Qbituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

·~· .~

.BY KRIS DoTSON
TIMES.SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Ohio 7 iua,J'Cirail wolk to start.soon

Index

· waste hauling industry. We are currently providing service to areas of Meigs, Gallia, Athens and
. Hocking Counties of Ohio and Mason and Putnam Counties ofWV:: C9ritact our office for more .
informa~ion on service areas and prices.

.

Details, A3

'

Interim superintendant lauds .
{significant iturease'

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