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'

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

tance, so I JU~t wanted to gt•t
gomg s.~ra1ght

MNF

I

from Page 81
sca&gt;on tor rhe Ra"lers (s-:n.
both tll the Brnncos. and It ended
thctr s1x-g.une winmng sneak ~
Dcnwr (o - 4) h"' bear~n the
Ra1ders 1 I our of 12 meeungs
unJer ShJn.th.ln .
" It wa&gt; h~e a plJyoff game,''
l l&lt;nw• kt ck&lt;·r Jason Ebm said.
' 'We neL"ded it . ro ~ray m the

hunt."
" Denver madt•

.~&lt;ome

timdv

'plays." 0.1kland coar h Jon Cru~
dr..·n s.ud. '' Tht"y !&lt;~howr..·J J lot of
rt•siht'IKy. The blnlkt·d pum wo1s ,,
btg pl.ly. Tht· turn on~ r rano
tomght dcJrly w,1, Jnothr..·r kl'y
HH.lH: .ltur 111 thl.· Slon.:bo.nd."

Aftn .th~.:.·

R.ud~..·n,

r.1lllr..·d from J
.2.4 - 10 th:tl( lt WJth .1 p.11r of
fuurrh - LJ LUrt~o·r t OLh.' hd o \\'11\ -

thL." l.lst

\\1th I :O(J k·ft ( ;nt''-l' drnn.• tbt• Br(~!li.."O" -44
v.n~h
t(,r Fl.tm\ -+ 1- Y
.
. .trd til'ld ~ ·o .\l
on the g.un r..·".., tiu.1l pby
'" I dJdn 't h1t ll goml," ' EL1m . . .ud
" I t,\ U~.dH ,\lot ut'g LI\\ \dlt.' II lint
lt , but It \U-. -.tJ.li ght . I kil L' \\ fm111
_.1 It \\ ,\'\ gmn g to h.l\'t' thL' di~ L'Ollllllg

~

It

"The balls were hke Kl' I'm
gl.ul they got me as do!!L' a~ thl')'
thd ..
At kH.·kutT, th e tempt•rawr~ wJs
20 degn.•es, and It dropp,•d to 13
111 the second half.
It m ay hJ\'C bel'll Broncos
wc;.nher, but tht• R.:ndl'rs Jonunatl·d t•.trly.
After Tt&gt;rrdl Davis scored on a
) - ·/.ad run less than four nunmes
Ill, the Raiders mok control i.J\1
bmh &gt;ide, llf the ball .
They 'ilammed Grtl'~t· to thl'
ground on .1 ~cramble, mjunng
his shoulder. C.ril'~t' ,,Ire;tdy Ius
torn ca rtilage lil the ~ h oulder, hm
tht• !11Jlln~s arL' .1pp.1rl·ntly unrc-

!Jkd.
Brcu

Conw;~y.

subbing tC.)J till·

111JI.In.:: d Scba~tl.\11 J.uukow~ikl,
k1 r ked .1 19-yml tield g&lt;1.1l Lit&lt;' 111
tht· first qu.trtn, .111d tht.· ICulkrs
wem up 10:...7 .1r h.dftlllll' .lflt.•r
ltlllb.lck Z.1ck Croch•!t\ 1- \'.l rd
\ U ll'lll,!;
\'.1

run. w h 1ch

C. 1ppl·d

r&lt;'turnt·d It 12 yards for a touchdown . Gnese threw •n It -yard
TD pass to nghr ,·nd Byron
Chamberlam early Ill the fourth
quan,•r tilt a ~ -1-10 lead.
But tht• R a1ders thdn 't qmt.
At(t"r nne dnvt' fizzlt•d at the
Denver 11, Crockett scored .1ga1n
on J l -yard run , and RH:h Gannon ha T 11n Brown on a 22-yard
\COrill g p.lSS

to tle It .

St:\ 'l' ll

of

El.11n\ ~ .1 - v.ndcr ttt.•d H n11dw.n·
rhruugh tlw thu-d pl'nod . .111d
l kil\'t.'l' WI.'IIt ,J!ll'.ld \\'ht.'ll fi ) Ok: I t.'
l.1 n (~old bl~,ckt.·d .1 punt .llld

.ll'l'

opportunity to contiilLIC
p1tchmg." Buston gcncr.tl lllJn.lgt'r DJn Duquette :-..ud. " H c:'s
g-ot

.111

rt.' :tchc-d

t.'Xtn.:mdy h1gh kvd

Jii

.lt .1 \'i.&gt;ung .tgc:."

M:1rnnc:z \Vt.'lH 1H- 6 \Vi.th a
1.7 4 ERA nearly two runs
benc:r th :m Clemc:m · second-best
AL ma rk of .J. 70 . It was the low-

est ERA b)' an AL starter smce
LlllS TIJnt 's 1.60 ERA in 1968.
" Ib iS IS equa lly Js good a sea~&gt;Jn. nuybc better," 5aid J\11artincz.
who led the league with 28-1
stnkeouts :tnd four r;hu tout s.

BCS
from Page 81
pl.lY"

rlond.! Sr.Ht.' S.uunby.
Flond:1 Sute t.· n' ,Jch B~)hb\'.
.It

Bowden 1\ jll\t g01 11 g \\'Hh tht'
flnw untJ! tla.' tin.rl \LHHhns,'\ .
"We ·\'l' ,till t.";Ot m1r \\'t l rk t.' llt
lJLit fur ll". hut lllll'-f llf dH· te.nm
kf( h,lH' g,\1\\t.''- to ~-, I.J\· .1'1 Wt•ll,"
B\&gt;\n.kn .... ud . " Likt.' I ..,,l id . I'll be .1
t~111 of the 13C ~ unnl It kt, 11~
th~..·n

I 'll
r~·th111k lilY .llkgJ.lll lt.'."

dnwll . .1nd

h,l\ 'l'

to

sc hedulc .md zero ten losses. The
Sooners have g:~ m ~s rem :~ inin g
aga inst Texas Tech .mJ Okbhoma
Swe before .1 prob.1bk Big 12
ntk g:~mt.• ag:.unst K.ws.h Sr:uc.
Mt.ll111 h:lli. (J.J.J. pmnts 2 for
}Wii .tve rJgt.': J.J .. for COIIlpUtl'r
r.1nk .n·t· r.Igt.': fl.2 (1 tC.)r ,trc ngt hnf-.., r hl'dule .md I fc.n lo~sc::..
.\1 1.11111 Iu s g.ltnt.'" rl' l1l ,lllllll g
.1!;.11 11\t Syr.lt.'ll\l' .uH.:i Bost n11 Col-

gory.
In the l'i gh t n Hnputer r ,J nktll !-,"S.
the Hurri cme~ had an ,1\'l'l'.H.:;t.' n t~

k·gc.
Fhlrid.l St:ltc lud

pl.1yotr. A(tcr
(J . •I.\1

,\\'l'Llt;l';

pmnt"
1. 1-t fnr

t.' Oi nputl' r r.1nk ,J\'l'.r.lgl'; O.fl}ol fo r

The tt'Jllh tlut tin1'h 1-~ 111 the
tln.d BCS ,t,lnt.l!n g-. rc·k.l~l'd ! &gt;cc.
J wd l pl.ty 111 .1 n,ltton .d title g .lll\l'
in rht.• Or.1ngc Bo\\'1 ()Jl J,u1. .1 .
Th l· sunJrug" .lrt.· b.hl'd on .1 fo rnnd ,t tlu t Jll ln rpnr.H . . , the A P
poll pith the t. o.K llt•,· poll. t.' tght
c ompute r r&lt;~nklllg~. ~t.' hcduk
strength .md 11\Itn b t.•r of losses .

"Whl'l1 Flortd.l St.Ht.' Jll111pcd

by us, there \\',\s rc .llly nothing

\VC

could do," D an:-. s.nd . "\X/c'll JUSt
try to w rn gJnh:s .111d hope the
rest takes e m: of a,df."
Ok.Llhonu totJkd 2.:&gt;2 pmnt~
tim week I p01nt for poll
avcragc. I (or ~.· olll p titt.' r r.mk

Southem
from Page 81

;.,tre n gth -nf-~l'he t.lulc
\ o~SC'S.

.md

I fur

Tht.• BCS W.l:-. Cl'l'.Hn1 t\\·o n·.1r\
.1go tn com l' up \\'lth .1 n .H;O t l. t!
uti ~ g.tlll l' wHhmlt lll,tltlH IIl g ,J
th~· t~)p.

t\\\)

tl'.llll~

the rt.·nuining BCS
g.J lliL''&gt;
the R me, 'Sug.1r .1 nd
F l t'~t.l buwh ..,l·kn frolll t ht'
rcm :nning p lJo! of qll .liltl ~:d
dt.·cHkd,

Matt A ~ h. B t.· ~ t Dcfcn :-. tw LllH:-

m.m; l)·kr Lmk. Best Ofle nSJvc
Ltn t.· man : .111d A.tro n Ohl111!!;l' r.
1k•sc S p~c t .1l Tc.111.1:-.. Ab..,L' nt ~"·""
Mo~t lmpn )\'e d , Andq..'\\' C n tf lll.l ll .

le n ,ttldl' tl'.., \ \ 'l'l't' hn nnrc d for
~.·. rnnn g A l l ~ rv&lt; · All - A L. ILi L' Illl l
i l r 1111H ~ \u ~tlcr H' ,ll llhl k·nl' J
d tl l'lll !-'; t h t' ll l lll l"l'll t '&gt; ( Hl rl ~ ,l', l
'l lll. I I J.llllt.i tJI ., \l

lllllLlt l\ \' (

lc.1q ,l

;l't\ . .nid hL·

m orl' . ] U JU.H . or

-; ~

IU

II

\o ph o
\l' Jli()l A ll Au cl
.1

hllll\ H Cl'\ .trt.· An\\
In·.
R .tl hL· l JVI .n ,Jull. M.ll\'11 l n ttl.
l::.IIJII\' \11\'t.' r\ , \ h, IUJl,\ i\ \.lt ll\l' J.
li?l' ( :(lJtldl. t\tLI{l A~ h . h ·k·J I It
.tit'. [o n .t,t h.m l ·un~ llld ih.n Hhlll
l'l t.' l\ \..'
C;ord n11 h ... hn IJ I.u.k th ~.· fHL'

t' !llh

'l' l l f.\t l!l l l\

.

1:

Oakland .. .

Denver .. ..
Kansas C1ty .
Seatt!e ..
San Diego

216
206

Monday'• Gam"

149
128
1t9
235

Portland 94 , New Jersey 82
Dallas 90, L.A. CIWers 76

Tuelday'• Gamn
Portland at Atlanta, 7;30 p.m .
Char1otte at Miami, 7 ~ 30 p m.
Golden State at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
Or1ando at Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Utah at San Antonio, 8.30 p.m.
Chicago at HouS1on, 8:30p.m.
New York at Seatt&amp;e. 10 p.m.
·oenvar at LA. Lakers , t 0:30 p.m.

....... 2 8 0 .200 93 217
Wu1
........ 8 2 0 .BOO 280 t 99

225
236
260
253

Wednnc;llty'e Gem ..

NFC

Washington at Soslon, 7 p .m.
Ctevejand at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 7:30p.m
Atlanta at Milwaukee , 8 p.m .
Miami at New Jersey. 8 p.m .
Golden Stale at Minnesota, 8 p .m .
Dallas at Phoeni)(, 9 p.m
New York arLA Clippers, 10:30 p.m

Eatt

WLTPctPFPA
...... 7 3 0 .700 192 153

NY G•an!s
Philadelphia

.. ......... 7 4 0 636 230 170

Washmgton

..... 6 4 0 .600 185 158
.... ...... 4 6 0 400 227 219
..... 3 7 0 .300 161 277
Central
.8 2 0 800248 218

Dallas .

Arizona _,

Mmnesota

.. ;... 6 4 0 .600
6 4 0 600
..... 4 6 0 .400
........ 2 B 0 .200

Detro11 .
Tampa Bay
Green Bay

182
252
209
140

.750
1/2
3 .625 1 t/2
3 .571
2
6 .250 4112
6 250 4 t/2
5 167 • 1/2

LA. Clippers ... .. .............2
Seattle ............................ 2
GoktenState ....................... 1
SuncHy'a a.m..
Detroit 101 , Seattle 92
Sacramento 109, Dallas 84
Denver ~5. l..A. Clippers 79
Orlando 105, Goklen Slate 99, OT
L.A. La)&lt;ers 105, Houston 99

...... ~ ... 3 8 ,1) .273 120 244

........... 6 4 0 .600 295
............ 5 5 0 .500 250
... 4 7 0 .364 185
.......... 0 10 0 .000 t 52

.857

2

197
167
207
246

8 2 0 800 392 303
... 7 3 0 700 203 152
.... 4 6 0.400 193 173

PRO HOOPS
National Basketball Alloclatlon
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Divl•lon

Rhiladelphia

W L Pet.

o 1.000

...... .... 7

New York
.. .. .5
. .4
Orlando ....
Miami ........... ..
. ... .. .... .. 3
New Jersey .
. .... ...... 3
Boston ... ........ .. .. .... .. 2

Wa shington

.. 2

GB

2 .714
2
4 .500 3 1/2
3 .500 3 1/2
4 .429
4
4 .333 4 1/2
6 .250 5 112

Central Div1slon
.. ., .... .... 5
1
Cleveland ..
lndtana .
.. ...... 4
2
3
Charlotte ...................... 4
Toronto ..
4
3
Detroit
3
5
Chicago .
. .. 1 5
Mtlwaukee ....... ... . ........ t
5
Atlanta
... 0
7

.833
1

.667
.571
.571
375
167
. 167
.000

5 1/2

Pet

GB

1 .833
2 7 t4

112

1 1/2
1 1/2

3
4

4

Western Conference
Midwest Division
W
L

.

Utah
................... 5
SanAnton to
....... 5
Da llas .
.. ... 5
..... 4
Vancouver
.. .. .3
Denver . .
Mtnnesota ..
.. .. , 3
Houston
......... ... ... .... 3

3 625
1
3 57 1 1 112
4 429 2 1/2
4 .429 2 112
5 .375
3

Euterri Conference
Atlantic Dlvl•lon
W L TOLPta,
Pt1tsburgh ......... 9 5 2 1 2t
NV Rangers ........ 8 B 0 0 16
Phtladelphta ........ 6 7 4 0 16
NV Islanders ....... 6 6 2 1 t 5
New Jersey ........... 6 7 3 0 15
Northeast Division
onawa .............. 9 4 4
22
Buffalo .................. 9 4 1 1 20
Toronto ............... 9 6 2 0 20
Boston .................. 6 8 2 1 15
Mohrreal ............ 5 10 2 0 12
Sautheast Olvl1ion
Carolina ......... :.. ... 5 8 · 3 0 13
Tampa Bay ........ .... 5 a 1 1 12
· Allanta ............ ...... 3 5 6
12
Washington ........ 3 a 5 1 12
9
Florida ......... . ,.. 1 7 4 3
Western Conferanee
Central Divlalon

o.

o

W L

GF GA
54 48

so

55
43
34

51
39

55

48

58

43

44

35

47

34

42

62

44

54

40

50
61

47

42

42

!39
29

52
46

TOL Pto GF GA

StLouis ............. 11 2 3 0 25 51
Detroit..
. 10 5 1 1 22 49
· Nashvitte .
.6 4 5 1 18 38
Chicago .
. 5 9 1 2 13 41
Columbus..
.5 10 1 1 12 33
Northwest Division
Co lorado ............ . 13 2 3
29 55
Edmonton ...... . .. 10 8 2 0 22 57
Vancouver .. .. ..... 8 5 3 1 20 57
Calgary .. ;... . .... 5 9 3 2 15 41
Minnesota
. ... 4 10 3 1 12 35
Pacific Division
Phoenix ......... ... 10 3 5 0 25 53
San Jose .... ... .... 10 3 2 0 22 43
Los Angeles ........ ,.!) 6 4 0 22 64
Dallal\ ..... .............. 8 4 2 1 19 41
Anaheim ............... 6 8 3 2 17 51
Two points for a wln, one point for a lie
overtime loss.
Sunday'• Games
Carolina 4, Ottawa 0
Atlanta 2, Washington 2, tie
Phoenl~~; 2, N.Y. Rangers 0
Detroit 3. Anaheim 2
Edmonton 5, Minnesota 4
Monday's Gamet
BuHalo 3, Calgary 2, OT
Atlanta 4, Florida l
Colorado 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT
Tuesday'• Games
Phoeni,.; at Washington, 7 p.m.
Dallas at Columbus . 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Montreal , 7:30p.m.
San Jose at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
St. Louis at Edmonton, 8:30 p,m
Chicago at Vancouver. 10 :30 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Florida at carolina, 7 p.m.
PhiiEidelphia at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Nashville at Atlanta . 7:30p.m.
San Jose at Detroit, 7 :30p.m.
.Dallas at Buffalo, 8 p.m
N.V Rangers at Minnesota, 8 p.m
Colorado at Anaheim, 10:30 p.m

27
43
37
53
53

o

I

W-1.
1. Connectlcul(41 J .
2. Tennesaee ................

...o-o
.. ..... .2·0

982

t
2

900

5

4. Purdue ........................ ....... 1-Q

891

4

5. Gemgia .. ... .........................0.1

863

S

8. Notra Dame ....................0-o
7. Rutgers ..... .... ... ............. .. 0-o
8. Louisiana Tech .
.. ... .2-o
9. LSU .
........................ 1-1
tO . Iowa St. ............ ,_, .. ...........0.0
11 . Penn St. ............................ 1-0
12. Stanlord ................
.. .0-0
13. Virginlll . . . ... . .. .. .
..2·0
14. OW.Ianoma.. .
...o-o
15. Texas 'Tech ................
..0·0
16. W isconsin .......................... O·O
17. Misslssippi Sl.... ......
..0-0
18. Old Dominion . .
. 0·1
·19. N.C State
........ o-o
20. Vanderbill ..........................o-0
21 . SW Missouri St. ............. 0-0
22 . North Carolina .......
. .0-0
23. Auburn ...
. ...... 0·0
24 OrAgOn .. .. ..-...................0·0
25 . 111inois ................................O·O

811
746

6
6
&amp;
7
10
13
11
15
14

3. !luke. ...........

68-4
683
640
614

538
462
437
434
331
321

f'lorith had ').62 ponm ,md
\\'ou ld mo,·c imo ntlc cuntl'lltHHl
wah J. win o \·cr Florid;l St.1te
Fl onJ.t State's ~c hedulc ~ t renglh
dropped I 0 pLlccs - fm nt ~ ev ­

cnth to 17th toughest - follow ing tht: Wake r:orcst gam e.
MiJmi \
sc hedule
strl'hgth
improved from sixth to fifth. The
Hurri c;mcs picked up .-1-4 pnilllS

CI1Jmp1o11 &lt;:. of '&gt;IX co nt~·rt.'llft.'~
the AlT. Ill ,; EN, II• ~ Tl'n.
ll1~ 12. I'J c- ltt.md SEC - qlu lt fy for .1 BCS g:1me ..tnd t \\'\1 .ltl:t rge tt'.llllS :J rt' sclectt·d tn fill o u t
thl' tield.

-

20

172
150

21
22

135

24

131

23'

Thanks to the 1 many voters who honor me by
finding some reality in the Red Packet Plan for
Meigs. Don't lose faith by your small number. If
the economic numbers lead to the hard future
reality that all indicators point to, your friends will
need you . Each to help lead our counties,
farmers, and even our small businesses back into
an area based economic system . I recommend
that you investigate the initiative system to help
your disconnected two-heritage units of fighting
neighbors think of a single Meigs problem . They
are both good people who love their families· and
neighbors, just lost in a media world too smart for
the level of time and personal concentration they
can give to see their reality. Mr. Nader did speak
uncontested truths and each of you can find
support in each other to help raise these truths to
your neighbor's minds if you work together.
Good luck.
C.E . Ed Evans

tt

67

Friday, Nov. 26
Third Place
Semifinal losers
Championship
Semtfinal wmne1s

49

51
52
35
30
S1
33
66
and

COWGE HOOPS

J.

•

TRANSACIIONS ·1
BASEBALL

American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Exercised the
2001 contract option on CF Kenny Lofton and
RHP Paul Shuey_ E,.;ercised the 2002 contract
option on LHP Ricardo Rincon.
TEXAS FlANGERS-Slgned RHP Jayson
Durocher to a minor league contract.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-S igned AHP
Jason Dickson to

a minor league contract.

National League
ATLANTA BAAVE5-Named Jim FregoSI
special assistant to the general manager

BASKETBALL
National Basketball A1aoc:latlon
NBA- Fined Boston F Antoine Walker
$2,500 lor verbally abusing a: game official. ·

FOOTBALL
National Football League
MIAMI DOLPHINS- Re·signed 06 Mike
Quinn Wai11ed LB Michael Hamilton
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Placed RB Trung
Canidate Qn injUJed reserve

SAN DIEGO CHAAGEAS-s;gn ed 08
Ke11m Oalt to the practice squad .
HOCKEY

National Hockey league
COLORADO AVALANCHE- Reca lled AWs
Ville Nteminen and B1ad Larsen
DALLAS STARS-Recalled LW Jon S1m
from Utah of the IHL

I

The AP Women'a Top 25
T he lop 25 teams tn The Associated Press '
women' s colle ge baskelball.pou. w1th first -place

FLORIDA PANTH ERS- Recalled 0 Peter
Ratchu k lrom Louisville ol the AHL. Activated
RW Scott Mellanby from the 1n1ured reser\le
Sent RW DAv1d Emma to LOUI Sville
NEW YORK RANGERS - Watved RW John

Macl ean.

~il11ifli! ~11
~milteur

Photographers!

9 wish to thank those who

supportec1 me during the re cent
elec tion ana extenc1
congratulations to
Sheriff-tlect '[russell.

17
t2

315
277
207

TBA

32

November 15, 1000

The Daily Sentinel is looking for the
dozen best photos of Meigs County
people, places or events to be used in a
speciai"YEAR 2001" calendar. Winning
photos will be included in the calendar,
along with the photographer's name and
town.

•
Volume 51 , Number

Mel1s County's

no

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so Cents

Chamber gets

open1n
delaye

update.on

programs

FROM STAFF REPORTS

CHESTER - "The bridge
at Chester will not be ready to
open by Nov. 15," says George
. M . C:ollins, deputy director of
the · Ohio Department of
Transportation, District 10.
"The earliest date the structure could possibly re-open is
Dec. 11 due to the c.u.re time
needed for the concrete deck,"
Collins said Tuesday. "Since the
deck was nor poured before
Oct. 15, the concrete requires a
30-day cure time."
The Ohio Departme nt of
Transportation and irs contractor, Maiden and Jenkins Construction Co., N elsonville,
began work on the $489,000
project on Sept. 5. The contract calls for replacing_ th e
deck and abutments of th e
structure.
The co ncrete deck was
poured on Saturday.
According
to
Philip
Roberts, ODOT's project
engineer, this project has been
very time consuming due to
the "tremendous amount of
hand work" that was needed to
preserve the rainbow arches of
the bridge.
"We cou ldn 't remove all of
the damaged parts of the structure with heavy equ ipm ent
and force, and not damage the
arches ," he explained. "So we
had to just peck away."
The fact that the bridge is
one of the few remaining concrete arch bridges in Ohio is
the re as on for the extreme care
being taken during the construction .
Because of this historical sigmficance, the bridge is being
rehabilitated to look exactly
thc .same, but with Significant,
yet unseen, structural changes
which will allow it to carry
heavy traffic once again.
A load limit was placed on
the old bridge in January 1999 .
when problems of deterioration became evident during a
regul ar inspection.
Eventually, th e structure was
closed to traffic, and although
ODOT's official detour follows
state
routes, mo st
motorists use a nearby GO \lntY
road to bypass the closure and
get to th e community of
Chester.
When submitting a bid, 'the
contractor estimated costs on

the al lowable 75-day closure
period.
.
"The contractor has · been
working 10-hour days, five

Please see Bridge, Page A3

According to Dugan, Inner
Reflections is a short - term
MIDDLEPORT
The acute admissio n that trl'at"
Meigs County Chamber of patients that may have difficul ty
Commerce
with stressful issues associated
listened
to with aging, such as grief, lonelithe presenta- ness, copin g with illness or
tion of pro - physical di sabi lity, changing
. grams
roles and status, death and dying.
intended to and confli cts with children.
assi,st older
"The average length of stay is
and around 14 days,'' said Dugan.
adults
studen ts dur- "However, that time is really
ing Tue&lt;day's determined by how th e patient
ge neral
Escandon
responds to the treatments ."
membership
"Our goal is to maintain and
m eeting held at Overbrook
improve each patient's quality of
Nursing Center in Middleport .
life as well as enhancing the·
Donett&lt;."' Dugan , unit adminpatient's self-respect and digniistrator
of
ty," added Dugan .
Veterans
Some of the fe atures o( the
Memor ial
program consist of a compreBehavio r
H ealth Umt, hensive medical and psychologdiscussed the ical evaluation, therapy, coping
and life skills training, stress
hospi tal's
new
Inner redu ction, and medication 'm anagement education, said Dugan.
R efl ections
The chamber also listened to
program , a
Hernando
Esca ndon, SCI'
10-bed
Dugan
'upervisor
for
ACCESS (A
secured l1nit
BY TONY M . lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

that is desig11ed to rreat co mplex
problems associated with older
adults.

Center for Co unsel ing, Educa tion and Social Services), discus'!

Please see Update, Page Al

Commissioners
withdraw Issue
Two
paving
projed
Parade highlights Christmas events

HOLIDAY PREPARATIONS'- It's beginning to look a tot like Christmas in Middleport, as village workers

install holiday banners and snowflake lights in the business district. The decorations wilt likely add to the
holiday spirit for the Middleport Community Association's annual Christmas Parade on Sunday. The village
has purchased additional decorations this year, allowing the village to extend the decorations on North
Second, on Mill, and on General Hartinger Parkway. (Tony M. Leach photo)

.·
M

BY BRIAN

BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

JDDLEPORT " Middleport ; Th e
Christmas Village:' is
once
again
th e

theme fC:r ~he Christmas festivities

in Middleport.
The Middl eport Community
Association will k)ck 'off it&lt; schedule of holiday festivities on Sunday, with the annual Christmas
parade.
The parade wi ll form along Ash
Street between IJeech and Broadway, and will procee d on Beech ,
General Hartin ger Parkway, South
Second Avenu e and dmyntown on

North Second Avenue.
In addition to the parJde, me rchanl' in Middleport will observe
their annual H ol iday Open House
on Sunday.

Registration for rlie merchants'
annual Christmas drawinb" wiD
begin on Nov. 20, and the weekly
drawinb" start Nov. 24.
Sunday shopping hours, from I
to 5 p.m., will also begin for participating downtown · merch rmts

beginning this weekend, and participating merchants will also
observe extended .shopping hours,
through 8 p.m., Monday throu gh
Friday, for the convenience of
those who wishing to shop locally.
· Following th e parade,· which
begins al 2 p.m., Santa Claus will
visit the Middleport office of Peoples Banking &amp; Trmt Co., where
he will distribute treall to children
attending. He will also pose for
photographs, at no charge, cour. resy of th e bank.
The Middleport Co mmunity

Great American
Smokeout
.Thursday
BY CHARLENE HpEFLICH

1. All photos must be taken by an amateur photographer, 18 yeart1 or older, who currently resides In

SENTINEL NEWS STA FF

Melgo County.
2. Photos must Include either Meigs County people, places or eventl.
3. Winning and runnero·up photoo will become the property or the Dolly Sentinel. Photographers of
winning and runner·up photos will be aeked to sign a releaoe to Ohio Valley Publishing for news and
promotional purposes.
4. Photographers of winning photos Will be asked to obtain a photo relJ'ase from any subject In the
photo, other than the photoJifapher'e Immediate family.
5. All declolono of the judg.,. will be final.
6. The Daily Sentinel reaervet the right to reject any photo.

POMEROY -Tomo rrow the
American Cancer Sori~ty will '
host its 24th annut~l Great American Smokeout in Meigs Cnllnty.
In recognition of tht! obse rvance, the Mc•gs County Health
Department Tobacco Prevention

Write name, addreas and phone number on the back of photo entries and mall to:

HURRY! Deadline is Wednesday, November 15, 5:00p.m.

.,

Bridge•

Official Rules

The Daily Sentinel Photo Contest
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Hometown Newspaper

16
18

Preae11on NrT
First Round
Monday, Nov. 13
Temple 56, Delaware 49
Texas 79. NallY 65
New Me•ico 79, George Mason 68
California 83, Mississippi St . 76. OT
Tuesday, Nov. 14
Pepperdtne at Indiana. 7 p.m.
FaJrfteld at Villanova. 7 .30 p.m.
South Alabama at Marquette. 8 p.m
Duke vs . Princeton, 9 p .m.
Oual1erflnala
Sites and Times TBA
Wednasday, Nov. 15
New MeJCico at Temple
Callforn1a vs. Te11as
Friday, Nov. 17
Ouke·Princeton winner vs. Falrlleld-Villanova· winner
Pepperdine-lndiana w1nner vs. South Alaba ·
ma-Marquelle winner
At Madison Square Garden
New Vork
Wednetday, Nov. 24
Semifinals

55

I

Wednesday

Pta. PYe,

... Hl 1,025

Olhers receiving votes: UC Santa Barbara
64, Boston Cottage 62, Xa11ier 47 , Texa s 48,
UAB 45, Florida 40 , Clemson 36, DePaul 31.
Southern Cal 30, Michigan 21 , Tulane 21. Art·
zona 13 , George Washington 11, W is .-Greeo
Bay 9. UCLA 7, Utah 7, Nebraska 4, New Me~·
ico 4, Arkansas 3, Stephen F.Austln 3, SMU a,
Colorado St. 1. St. Joseph's 1, Virginia Tech 1.

P.ROHOCKEY

Meigs honors fall athletes; Rio wins, B1

Details, A3

votea ln parentheses, recordS thtol9' Nov. 1t
total points based on 25 points lor a lir&amp;ti)41Ct
vote through OrU!I potnl for I 25th-ptact vole
and iast week's ranking

tl'.lli1S.

Jim Souisby, Sheriff
thiS p.l:-.t sea son .
Thcst· SH S griJ . . t.H.., \\'ere
honored '-Vith :-.pt'C I,ll h .1 rdwarc
Speci.ll W11111crs \\·ere joihtthan
Evan s. lle ' t Otknm•e B.1ck .llr.1 n
don H1ll. B~st llefeml\·e ll.J t k.

New England

.. ....... 6 4 0 .600 223
.......... 2 8 0 .200 167
Centr•l
.... 8 2 0 800 204
....... 7 4 O.S36 i91
......... 55 0 .500160
......... 3 7 0 .300 186

.. 3 8 0 .273 186 290
..... 3 8 0 273 27 4 330
Sunday 's Games
De1r011 13. Atlanta 10
Buffalo 20. Chccago 3
Dallas 23, Ccnctnnatt 6
New Orleans 20, Carolina 10
Sea!lle 28 Jacksonville 21
Balllmore 24 Tennessee 23
Mtnnesota 31 . Anzona 14
Cleveland 19 , New England 11
Philadelphia 26. P't1!Sburgh 23, OT
Mta mt 17. San Diego 7
San Francisco 2 1. Kan sas City 7
St. Louis 38. N.Y. Giants 24
Tampa Bay 20, Green Bay 15
Indianapolis 23, NY. Jets 15
Open · Washmgton
Monday 's Game
Denver 27. Oakland 24
Sunday, Nov. 19
Detroit at N.Y. Gtants, 1 p.m.
Butfalo at Ka nsas Ctty 1 p m.
Tampa Bay at Ch1cago. 1 p.m.
Oakland at New Orleans. 1 p m
Arizona at Phtladelphia . t p.m.
Indianapolis at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Cleve land al Tennessee, 1 p.m.
C1ncinnati at New England. 1 p.m.
Caroltna at Mcnnesota , 1 p m.
San Diego at Denver, 4 :05p.m
NY Jets at Miami, 4 :15p.m.
Dallas at Baltimore. 4 15 p.m.
Allanta al San Francisco. 4.15 p.m.
Jacksonville at Pillsburgh , a :20 p.m .
Open : Seattle
Monday, Nov. 20
Washington at St. Louis , 9 p.m.

J. I -J., lK' ltl'r dJ:1n thl' J ..17 'ti·nm
l.tsr \\'ct.·k: th e Seminoll·-.· .JHT .I gc
r.1ting \\',IS ~.14. the ....IIllt' .1... l.1..,t
\\'L't:k . Mi.tmi g.un ed ....'\ I Hll llt \
here.

.1 re

N.Y. Jels..........

New Orleans
Carolina
Atla nta
San Franci SCO

111 the strength-of-schedule c.lrl'-

,) for poll

Indianapolis.
.. ... 7 3 0 .700 279 213
Buffalo ....................... 6 4 0 .600 199 189

St l.OUIS

l ) l' ll\'t,.' f.

st rt' ngth -of-

-

W L TPta. PI' PA
Miami ........................... 8 2 0.800 2H 126

t

................... 6
Sacramento .
. .... ... &amp;
Ponland
.... . .5
LA. lakers . .............. . . .4

West

.Jg.utt-.1

lu:-.dull\ best piu-her. · ,In 1 17
inmn g~. hl' allowl'd o n ly 12H hits
I h.1n·n 't co m pared t he number;., ." .wd .l~ walks.
l.1 ~t yc.tr. M.1rrincz wctlt ~3-_.
Hl· .1lso stnH.'k o ut 2H-l b.lttLT\
wt th ;1 2.07-ERA to bc~.: omc only and wasn't afraid to bl'L~&gt;h b.1ck
the· fourth pitcher to \\'in the· AL hml'r.s in Jn t"t1C.nt to IIHlmid.ttc
Cy Young Aw:~rd un:~· nimou s ly. the oppositi o n .
H t.' :~!so joined 'G:~ylord Perry .md
Whik 2000 \\""' os good - or
RJndyJo hnson .IS th e onlv pl t.-11 - better - than 1999 indiVldu.1lll'
crs to \\'in tht.• honor in each fOr MJrtin cz. it w.ts .1 frmtr.Jting
k·Jguc. Mart lll l'Z \\·on it in \ 9l.J7 sc:tson n o netheless . The R cJ. So:-.;,
for Montrt.~al.
despite h;t\'ing tht.• bc-.t te;Jm
" I thmk he lud .1 be tter yc.u ERA in thc'' AL. went S5-77 .md
tlm yc.1r:· Rt:d Sox man.1gt.'r Juny tinish~d 2 I / 2 games bl'lund th,·
Wrlli.tms said. " You ca n 'tJUSt look New YorkYonkees 111 th e AL East.
at h1s \\' 111 5 :md losses."
" ] would trade thiS ,1\\'ard for a
fvl arnm:z ,iolllcd Clc m t.~ns as tht:" chance ro play in th t· World
only pitchers to \1'111 the award Series," he said. "As a te:1m. we
unanunously t\VICe , but C lemens did pretty good. We didn \ do tlu t
d1d his 12 years aport: in I 986 for bad to be disappointed . We were
Boston and 1998 for Toro nto. in co nten tion until the end."
R o n Guidry of the Yankees was
Martinez ea rned a S51lll,OOO
the unanimous winner m 1978 bonus on top of hi s S I t million
and McLain in 1968. .
sala ry for winning ~ he :1\\'ard.
M:~rtinez's wins were down due
Wells got $50,000 fi1r his third1
in part to poor run support. But place fini sh.
evt: rythmg d sc \Vas the s:11nc for

:1 ve rage . 0.52 for

AFC

Ch•cago

I~

().Jkl.lnd\

turnoYt.'n th1~ \l',\\011

I

I

Ea1t

Jacksonville .
Cleveland
Cinc•nna1i .

yar d ~.
'' Ht" was m pJin. but he want('d
tn pl.1y," Shanahan sa1d. ' 'Tiut'..,
tht.• way ht• Jlw.1ys IS . I k w.mt;., to
pia~'· I k 's J w.1rnor."
Gannon. who compktt:J 30 of
"1
' j"H
:':1 . pa ~St'' t'or .ooo
l ( ,_ y.tnj s. ':lh.
rt.•.tl!y hurts to lost' to tht·~c guys
t \\' \ Cl' 111 .I St.'.ISl Hl ~or wh.Ht.'n.' l'
rL'.lSlHl, \\'t' hun oursd\'l':-. whl' n
\\' l' pl.\y thL'St.' guy\ ."
..,

-:oo••"

Natlonlil Foott.ll L...-

Baltimore
Pittsburgh .

J- -of·-~'
"7 rm r _J(J_J
" ".t:-. _:1

.1 7_1-

rd d n \ t.'.

[ PRO

Poc:11lc OMolon
PhOIAI)(

Society news and notes, As

lhunclay: aoudy
Hlp: 501; l.ow: lOS

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Tenne ssee

Griese's 22- yard pass tn Rod
Smith tgnaed thl• Bnmcos' final
dnve.
Gne~t· , whn Ll1ltt.' into [he
ga m e as the AFC\ le JLhng p:~~scr,

"Tht.TL' .liT otht.·r thin ~.;, tlut con trib l,ltt.· to t hl' wins ti-nm Lt:-.t \ 't',lr.

Young A\\'.trd s. t~llh)\n.·d l~y
Stt.'\'t' C.trltnn .md Gr( g Maddux
wnh four t.'.tch . Tnm St'.l\'t.'r,
S.utlk Kolift:x .md P.dma .ds~)
lun· rhrl'l' .
"Ht.· Jlbt nawt·d 111 wah P.ll!llt.'f
.uhJ St.'.l\'t.T .wd Km1t:1x ..IJ\d hl''s

Tuesday, November 14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

SMOKEOUT TALK- Tracey L. O;Dell, R.N., Tobacco Prevention Pro-

Association plans a number of
other events dunng the holida y
seas"On. A Christmas ca ndlelight
service will be held o n Dec. 2 at
the "T.'' under the direction of the
Middleport Mini sterial Assoc iation .
A Christmas decorating: contt·st
for Middleport residenti is also
planned.
Pre-registration for the C hri stmas parade i's not required, but
question s can be dire cted to
Myron Duffield at Yn-4I Y7, or
Dick Owen at Locker 2 19, at '1925627.
The assoc iation ask&lt;:. only that
floats not include a costu m ed
Santa, sin ce the " rl'a l' \ Santa tradi-

tionally brings the parade to a
close.

Jh,·

POMEROY -A controversial paving project, proposed by
Enginee"r R obert Eason. has
been cut from the list of Meigs
C:ou nty projects to be submitted

1

,H&lt;"i.~s

(

(111111)'

!ll'llli."'SiOJJ~'I"". /'~Jft'i/

\Jcllld&lt;t) 1&lt;1 ll'itirdr.tll'd

s ~-,t ijt;
ti11H

I

1'""

'•'·"/ l't ,,,,.•...,
&lt;II hill t rtd /&lt;'
J

for consideration for tht" IssUe

Two State C:api tal Improvement
Program.
The Meig:&lt;. County Commissioners voted Monday to w ithdraw a $375·,33R loa n request
that Eason 'i ubmittl'J for paving .
of county ro,tds.
T he project, with a tot:tl cmt

t'Stllnate of $507.213, W'd&gt;
ra nked first in the Burkew
Hills/ H ockmg Vallev Rq~ioml
Dt'vclopmcnt Dl'\trict prior to
the loca l ranking procc".
T he cou nty 's lo cal re\'1ew
committe~, madt; up of Janet
Howard. president of the Mt'l~~

County Board of County Commissioners, Middl eport Mayor
Sandy
lannarelli , Salisbury
'lbwns hip Trustee Ed Durst,
Engineer-elect Eugene Triplett,
and R ichard Vaughan , an atlarge m ember, met last week to
assign point~; to the sevt"n local
projects submitted for the next
round of fu nd ing.
Pnor to that meeting, the
commissi o ners su bmitted a letter to Eason, asking that the pro ject proposal be changed from a

Please see Issue, Page A3

Today"s

Sentinel
lSectlons-llPages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A5
B3-4
B5
A4
A3

BL3-4,6
Al

Lotteries

Program and the Meigs County
Council on Aging encourage residents to participate by putting
out their cigorettes.
As explained by Norma Torre1,

OHIO

health c o mmis~ioncr, this nation-

W,YA.

gram coordinator, right. and Joy Bentley, fitness;weltness coordinator, ally recognized day takes place on
discuss information distribution to take place Thursd ay and Fnday as the third Thur~tlay of ea ch
a 'part of the Great American Smokeout. They wilt be available both Novetnber.
days to answer question ~ about smoking and provide tips on smoking 1
Please see Socl~ty. Page A3
cessation. (Contributed photo)

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Pick 3: 0-2-H; Pick 4: S-}{-2-2

Daily 3; i\-ll-1 Daily 4; 1&gt;-1•-.l-2

DRIVER INJURED -

A one-car accident on Ohio 124 near Pomeroy
injured the driver. Brandy Tobin, who was taken to St. Mary's Hospi~
tal, Huntington. W.Va ., by LifeFiight from the scene ofthe noon crash.
The accident is being investigated by the Gatlia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol . The Central Dispatch and Pomeroy squads of
the Meigs EMS responded to the scene. (Dave Harris photo)
I

�Page A 2 • The Dally hntlnel

BUCKEYE

IEFS

Trial set In
- MARION (AP) -Marion County Conunon Pleas Court Judge
!tic hard Rogers on Tuesday set a Feb. 5 trial date for a man charged
m the rape and murder of a 7-year-old gul.
!:larry Satta, 38, of Marion was arrested Aug. 28, the day after fintgrader Bobbie Jo Barry was abducted from h~r home.
The girl's body, her neck. broken, had been found that same day
wrapped in a sleeping bag in a field along a rural road north of Marton.
Satta, a friend of the girl's family, W3S indicted on twO counts of
aggravated murder and one count each .of burglary, kidrupping and
rape. He has pleaded innocent.
Marion County Prosecutor James Slagel told Rogers he expected the trial to take three week.s and at least 125 people to be sum~oned for the jury pool.

Hunt on for gas-tainted can
FINDLAY (AP) - Authorities are trying to find customers who
purchased gasoline-tainted kerosene &amp;om a gas station.
About 190 gallons of the potentially explosive mixture was purc h;~sed Monday &amp;om a Fuel Man gas station north of downtown.
Officials with Wooster-based Ports Petroleum, which operates 70
Fuel Marts in 12 states, said they had accounted for about 93 gallons of the caint~d fuel by Tu..day afternoon.
- Mik.e Ports, president of the company, said a fuel carrier accidentally dropped gasoline into the kerosene tank.
'.' 1 don't think the driver did it on purpose. It was a mistake. a terrible mistake, but it was a mistake," Ports said.
Customers who purrhased the kerosene are urged to return the
fuel to the ga&lt; station where it wtll be replaced with pure kerosene.

Lottery player stays lucky
ERLANGER, Ky. (AP) -Ronald Feder is having quite a run of
luck.
The 47-year-old self-employed electrician &amp;om Erlanger, just
south of Cincinnati, has had several winning Ohio Lottery tickets,
and recently won a scratch-off game that sent him to Hollywood to
compete in Powerball's television game show.
Feder won't say whether he won the $1 million grand prize
because the episode he taped last month is scheduled to be broadcast Saturday. But since returning from California, he has won
S1,000 on another lottery· ticket and found out he won another
drawing and trip to the game show next month.
·"I don't know why I'm so lucky," said Feder, who typically spends
about $9 a week on three Instant Powerball Game Show tickets.
"There is no technique. I've hit five numbers on the Ohio lottery
three times. It paid $1,000 two times and S1,500 the third time. But
that's been six or seven years ago."
Feder traveled with his wife, Donna, on his first trip to Hollywood. He\ ta~ing his daughter next time.
" I promised my daughter Megan. who's 8, that if I won again I
would take her with us," he said. "I never imagined that would really happen, so I guess I will be buying an extra ticket."

EJ:..Bible teacher sentenced
CLEVELAND (AP) - A former Bible teacher was sentenced to
five years in prison for showing a student sex-torture photos.
Judge Carolyn Friedman of Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court also labeled Steven Craddock, 38, as a sexual predator on
Tuesday. When Craddock is released from prison, he will be
required to register his address with law enforcement officials. .
Craddock pleaded guilty in September to one count of ch1ld
endangen ng. two counts of illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material and one count of possession of criminal tools.
Craddock, of Parma Heighlli, wotked as a Bible teacher at Greater
Cleveland Christian School in Middleburg Heights. Beginning in
1998, Craddock made a 15-year-old student come into his classroom and view sexually explicit torture pictures and describe what
she saw.
· Prosecutors said Craddock. also devised a scheme where he told
the n~dent she was being considered for a prestigious position in
J\lnnesty lnt~rnational. But first Craddock told the girl she h~d to
palS tests in which she was to dress provocatively and mak.e a v•deotape where she described what aroused her and tell how she would
torture her boyfriend, prosecutors said.
Midway through making the tape, she erased it and told her
mother about the test. Her, mother then went to the police.
"Thqe's absolutely no excuse for my behavior whatsoever.( hope
eventually you find it in your heart to forgive me in some way,"
Craddock told the girl and her family.

Teacher faces additional charge
CINCINNATI (AP) - An elementary school teacher from
Columbus who already faced charges in an Internet sex investigation was indicted Tuesday on a new charge that he .raped a 12-year·
old girl ~ e met through the Internet.
The Hamilton County indictment unsealed Tuesday charged that
Stephan BaUmann, 49, raped the suburban Cincinnati girl sometime
dunng OctOber. Ballmann had met her through Internet commu nication, mvcstigators said.
lf convtcted, he could face up to 11 1/2 years in pmon, prosecutors said.
BaUmann, a fifth-grade physical education teacher, awaits arraignment in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court in Cincinnati. He
re1nains free on $50,000 cash bond following his Nov. 4 arrest at a
Cincinnati hotel.
Sheri/r's officers who arrested BaUmann then said he was at the
hotel because he was planning to have sex with a 14-year- old girl
wl)o had been communicating with him through the Internet. The
"girl" turned out to be a male investigator for the Hamilton County sheriff.
BaUmann sent sexually expli~it material through an Internet chatroom to the investigator, sheriffs officers said.
The felony charges pendmg against Ballmann in that case are
attempted disseminatton of material har~ful to juveniles and
.lttempted corruption of a nunor. If co nviCted, he could get SIX
months to a year behind bars and a $2,500 fine on each charge.
Investigators said Ballnnnn i~ a teacher at Dunloe Elementary
School in suburban Columbus.

Bond set for slaying susped
BATAVIA (AP)- Bond was set at $1 million on Tuesday for a
man accused of killing a IS-year-old boy whose body was found 10
front of a burned house in Milford, ou thorities said.
.Christopher Thomas Alford's body was found Monday morning
on the front lawn of hi&lt; home 111 the Cmcmnan suburb 10 Cler•· •ont County.
_
l'ro&lt;ecutor&lt; &lt;ay J( andy ~ 1\hll' . 2'1, be,lt Alt ord to Jc ,ah and set
th 1: fire to cov&lt;: r up t h e d,-;,rh ·,\ ldh I'• to .1ppca r hctorc J C!ern~ o nt ·
&lt; oun ty gr:lll d Ju ry Nov .~ &gt; l ' l m&lt;..' l mar&lt;., .uc ~cekmg ~vtdls mdicrment on charges of aggravated murder, aggravated mon and aggravated burglary.

•

Wednesday, November 15,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

s ·Person of the Year'

Moore named

Update

appropriate utihution of other
important community mental
health and drug abu~e prevention
servic.- at the same time," added
Esandon.
The parent must consent to
the student's participation m the
program as weD as being determined eligible by the Meigs
County Department of Job and
Family Services.
In other chamber business,
Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry V:irnadoe
informed those in attendance that
the Meigs County Industrial Park
is nearing completion and that he
is currently working on seVeral
existing projects within the county.
Meigs County Tourism Board
Director IUrin Johnson also
announced that last month's HalloWeen cf.uise was a success and
that she is the process of preparing material for the upcoming
spring advertising and trade
shows.

ftom'-PA1
GALLIPOLIS -Jay Moore was honorm as Scheduling Conunittee for Gov. Richard
Gallia County's 2000 Southeastern Ohio Celeste and his cabinet during the 1990 BicenRegmnalCouncil Person of the Year during the tennial Time Capsule Conunittee.
recent recognition ceremony sponsored by
As chairman of the 1993 River Rweation
SEORC in Nelsonville.
Festival, he was instrumental in bringing astro'Jay has very unselfishly given much of his naut Lt. Col. Susan Helnu to Gallia County, as
time and talent to his conununity in recent well as securing a fuU NASA Station and Moon
yean," Gallia County Chamber of Conunerce . Rock. display for that event.
President Dr. Clyde Evans said.
Moore was elected to the Gallia County
''The chamber is pleased to recognize his Chamber of Conunerce ooilld of directors in
contributions at this time," Evans added.
1994. He was elected secretary of the chamber's
A native of Gallia County, Moore graduated Executive Conunittee in 1995 and . served as
from the University of Rio Grande, earning his first vice president 6um ·1996 until 1998.
bachelor of science in social sciences, majoring
He was elected president of the Gallia Counin.history, sociology with a minor in psycholo- ty Chamber of Conunerce in 1998 and held
gy
the position until 2000. He also served on the
In. 1987, Moore was an honor graduate 6um Executive Conunittee of the Community
Xavier University, CCMS, with an associate Improvement Corporation of Gallia County.
degree in mortuary sciences, and was elected a
As a member of the chamber, Moore serves
class officer.
on the Executive Conunittee as immediate past
He returned to G.Uia County in 1987 and president, chairman of the Building\Conunitjoined the family-owned business, McCoy- tee, and member of the Legislative C.:lmmittee.
Moore Funeral Hom.- Inc., in Gallipolis and · In ·addition, he is a member of the board of
Vinton. where he is serving as vice president directors for the Gallia County Conununity
and manager of the Gallipolis Chapel.
Resource Conunittee and is on the Business
In addition, Moore served on the Gallipolis Advisory Council for the Gallipolis City
Kiwanis board of directors from 1988 to 1991, Schools. ·
where he was president 6um 1990 to 1991.
He is a member of Grace United Methodist
Moore was chairman of the Transportation and Church in Gallipolis, where he serves on the

Administrative Council, Stewardship Conunittee and is head ·commuruon usher. He is a
member of the Gallipolis Shrine Club, Aladdin
Temple, 32nd Degree Mason by the Ancient
and Accepted Order of the Scottish Rite, Vmton Masonic Lodge 131 and the Grand Lodge
of the State of Ohio.
Moore is a certified disaster coordinator
under the National Funeral Directors Association of American (N FDA) and the ~deral
Emergency Management Agency. He is also a
member of the Ohio Embalmers Associanon of
the Ohio Funeral Directors Association
(OFDA), where· he currently serves on the
OFDA Legislative Conunittee.
Moore is a licensed private pilot and member .
of the Airplane Owners and Pilots Association
of America. He has served on the Gallia-Me1&amp;'
Regional Airport Authority Board and the Gallia-Mcigs Regional Airport Relocation Committee.
Moore is the son of Herb and Jean McCoy
Moore, the grandso~ of Elsie P. McCoy, and the
brother of Joe and Jared Moore. He and his
wife• Melissa • are the parentli of twO sons,
Michael, 6, and Man:us, 3. He enjoys piloting,
playing guitar and most importantly. family

Pearl L. Powell to Thomas 0.
P11rceU. Sandra L. Purcell, deed,
Otive·
Ti~othy William Willis, Debra
K. Willis, to Robert 0. Willis,
Shirley A. Willi~ deed, Sutton;
LoiS E. Mc.t:lhinny, deceased,
to Kenneth S. McElhinny, affidavit, Middleport;
Roy D. Adkins, Alice H .
Adkins, to Jimmie D. Dyer, Elaine
Dyer aee&lt;f. Sutton·
Charles Clifford Beegle Chifford Beecle, to Mattie F. Beegle,
Aflidavit,'Sutton· ·
Timothy A. Curfman, Brenda
K. Curfman, to Scot F. Gheen,
deed, Sutton;
Leota Srmth to Sharon Johnston, Ron Smith, deed, Bedford;
Austin Glen Lawson Christine
W Lawson,.. to Blaine Alan Wells,
Geraldine .1:. We Us, deed, Columbia·
Belva
Louise
Mitchell,
deceased'pto Calvin L. Mitchell,
affidavit, omeroy/Salisbury;
Robert WeUnian to Ernie L.
J:ilton,Vickie K. Tilton, deed, Scipw~vtc
•. k.te L . B rown v·1c1c.·te L..
1
Metheney,_ George Brown, to
Ricky A. Methenev. Jr.,~aticia M .
Metlieney, Erik. 'E'. Metheney,
deed, Salem·
Erik. E. Methen\Y to Ricky A.
Metheney, Sr., deed, Salem·
Ricky A. Metheney, Jr., Laticia
M. Metheney to Ricky A.
Metheney, Sr., aeed, Salem~
Paul Everett Smith :.baron
IUy Smith, to Michael Dale Dill,
Isabel Mae Dill, deed, Rutland;
Shawn David Gilinore Vikki
Lynn Hn-es to Edward T. Baer,
Patri~ia D. BRer, deed, Pom'eroy;
'Albert Pelkey, Claudia Pelltcy,
to Candy R. Barnett, Jeremy J.
Rowe, de~d. Rutland;
Donald W. B~nett Mary R.
Barnett to Can y R. Barnett,.
Jeremy). Rowe, eed, Rutland;
Ro~r L. Mariley, Sr. Conpie
M . Manley, to Conme M. Manley
Trust affidavit·
. John E. Blake Charles E.
Blake, Barbara B. Blake, r,o Simon
H. Geistwhite, Mary M. Geistwhite, deed, Sutton/Racinek·
Kenneth Mcelhinny to athy
S. Mullins, Russell S. Mcelhinny,
deed MiddleP.ort;
Allen L. Pap~ Allen Pape,
Carol A. Pape, &lt;....arol Pape, to
Home • National Bank, sfierifl's
deed, Syracuse· ·
Eber I. Pickens to Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Sutton·
William Maynard to Columbus Southern Power, easement,
Sutton;

from PageA1

I

Ruth · S. Foley, Craig C. Foley,
to Columbus Southern Power,
easement, O~ge;
Nancy L. Watson, William A .
Watson, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, On_nge;
Ralph E. Trussell Martha Jean
Trussell, to Columbus Soutl\ern
Power, easement, Chester;
Scott Trussell, Teresa M.
Trussell, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, Chester;
Harold SargenJ, deceased, to
Wilma Sargent, amdavit, Middleport·
·
.
J.B. O'Brien, Roberta C.
O'Brien, to Brian E. Hall, Mary
M . Hall, easement, Lebanon;
Norma K. Schirtzinger, Jerry
Cannon Betty J. Cannon_.., to
!tndiew t Cannon. Jerrold J. L-annon, Jr.lii.awrence Schirtzinger,
Eric 'Sc irtzi11ger, deed, Lebanon;
Mindy l'atterson, She,.Yle
Tiemeyer, to Kelly Hayman,
deed, Lebanon;
Elsie L. Cook. to Robert D.
Williams, Scott A. WiUiams, deed,
Salisbury;
Secretary ofVeterans Atrairs to
Julia F. Murdock Schultz, Julia F.
'Murdock., deeg. Chester; ·
Matthew \.. , Erwin Vinda
Erwin~ to Donna R . Wilson,
deed, :.alisbu!)';
Rtchard R. Prater, Patsy A.
Prater, to Dorena F. Card, John P.
Card, deed,fhester;
Donna wilson to Corey B.
Lewis, Heather J. Lewis, deed,
Bedford;
Larry Allen Vance, Sharon L.
Vance to Tim H. Parsons, KimberlY. G. Parsons, deed, SciEfo;
Co~A':~estj-c?~:rfis0 ';.uC~~n;tl
Living trustAdeed, Lebanonb·
Mtchael . Ki.!lf:~~on to on&gt;l.d E. Kin~ison! T ~'G!ma R . KinmsoC!), deeM' CEOIII!ll ta; Ed .
:letus
. dd,Y_JQ
WIJ'I •
W~erry, Rhonda J. Wherry, dee ,
Qhve;
Wendi Krautter, John Doe,
Harry Young, Jane Doe, deed,
Pomeroy;
.
Norman 0. Weber, Vera A .
Weber1 to Michael A. Sanders,
Rhonaa Sanders, deed, o..,n_ge;
John W. Call, Selma Cali, to
Margaret Ellen Miller. deed,
Chester;
John W. Call, Selma Call, to
!olin Steven Miller, deed,
'Chester·
·
Charles R. Cozart to Robert
L. Sellers, Tris A. Sellers, deed,
Lebanon;
Rhonda S. Roberts, Rhonda S.
Mark.s, Scott D. Roberts; to Patri- ·
cia N. Neff, deed , Scipio;
Thomas E. Freed, Sandra

r.

a

BEF posts earnings increase for 2nd quarter
COLUMBUS Financial
results for Bob Evans Farms
Inc.'s second quarter showed
earnings · per share increased 8
percent to a record 40 cents,
company officials announced
Tuesday.
A year ago, earnings per share
were 37 cents for the same period.
Net sales were $261.3 million.
up 6 percent from $245 .6 million . Profitability in the food
products segment, sigmficant!y
improved from the first fiscal
quarter, was below year-ago levels, which essentially off&lt;et prof-

it growth in the restaurant busi-

ness .
Net income was $14 'million,
compared with $14.4 million a
year ago, in part reflecting a substantial increase in interest
expense related · to the company's share repurchase program .
For the first six months of fiscal 2001. net sales were $516.9
million, up 6 percent froni the
corresponding period last year,
while earnings per share rose 5
pe rce nt to . 78 cents.
Same-store sa1es i.n the restaurant segment Were up 3 percent
for the quarter, the company's

•·••·•·•·•.•· •..•.•.•.•.•.•.· ·:... ..· =·
- .. -

'

'

- - - -

(

................. ·.· .. ···" ""·.:

·:

. . I would like to congratulate all of the winners In the
. . 2000 general election. I would like to thank everyone . .
who helped me In any way· whether It was calling . ;..;:
,:.:, your neighbors, going door to door; putting a sign In ~.
. . your yard,. contributing to my campaign,. or just being . .
'-*..' kind to me· I thank you all very much. Watch lor me. . . . ..
~
I'll be back. .
:. :

'*'

• .
•

.

~et4-'f ~elf-a-U 1ttet~-de~Hou4-

.•

Paid for by candidate

•

···:·······••:.•••:.•:·~·

Issue

activiti~.

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
POMEROY - The following land tqnsfers were recently
reported bY. Meigs County
Recorder Juilith A. King,:
Roscoe Mills, Sandra.J. MiUs,
to Don M. Rose, deed, Sutton;
Don M . Rose to John M. Pape,
Sr...,Patricia S. Pape, deed, Sutton;
K.oscoe Mills, Sandra J. Mills,
Don M, \tose to John M.., Pape,
Sr.,_!'atnCJa S. Pape, easement;
von M. Rose to RoY. D.
Adkins, Alice H . Adkins, ileed,
Sutton;
Mary C. Vanmeter to Paul A.
Vanmeter, Angela Irene Kennedy,
deed, Rutland:
Ernel M. Spires to State of
Ohio, deed Pomeroy;
.
Dennis E. Richards, Jr., Melissa
L. Richards, to State of Ohio,
deed, Letart·
Dennis E. Saelens Carla D.
Saelens, to State of Ohio, deed,
Pomerox;
Dennis Lee Richards, Eva M.
Richards, to State of Oliio, deed,
Letart;
Tom Theiss, Sheha A. Theiss, to
Columbus Southern Power, easement, Sutton;
LQura Jaye Hupp to Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Sutton·
Lawrence E . .HyseU, DorotiJ._y
L. Hysell to 1\.ntnonY.. W .
McGrath, Rebecca K. McGrath,
deed, Rutlal)d;
Richard N. Warner to Henry
Eblin, Jrt Hester M. Eblin, Eblin
Family rust Agreement, deed,
Rutland;
Roger B. Hill, Debra M. Hill,
to David B. Cundiff, Karen R.
Cundiff, deed, Sutton;
R9berr T. Lambett, Jr. , to
Ban~k One Financial S"ervice,
deed, Salem·
Atvin W. G , . dec~~d. to
Flo~nce Got!., a clavit, Oliye;
Florence vo to. D~nn L.
Roush, Heather D. Roush, deed,
Olive;
Arthur Eblin, Adria Eblin, to
Harry S. Yarbrough, deed, Rutland·
Carrie Ella Roush to Robert
H. Roush, Jr., Paul B. Roush,
deed, Letart;
James R. Walker, deceased, to
Violet Walker, affidavit, Salisbury;
Violet Walker to Karen S.
Sloan, Larry R. Walker, deed, Salisbury·
Robert
Hawk,
Ramona
Hawk, to Robert F. Hawk,
Ramona M . Hawk, deed, Bedford;
Robert F. Hawk, Ramona M.
Hawk, to Robert F. Hawk.,
Ramona M. Hawk, deed, Bedford;

the importance of the Meigs
County PRC Progran1.
According to an ACCESS
hand-out, PRC; which stands for
prevention, retention and contingency. is a program designed to
have case tnanagers work. with
students who are at risk for
requiring more intensive services
if they are allowed to continue
being unsuccessful academically,
emotionally or behavioraUy.
'The goals of the program are
to reduce behavioral and social
difficulties of the identified students, increase self-esteem and
increase academic performance
by decreasing truancy and other
school attendance problems;· said
Escandon.
"Hopefully, we can also
increase fan1ily involvement in
school activities and increasing

16th
consecutive quarterly
increase. Overall net sales in the
segment . rose 7 percent,. while
operating.income was up 3 percent.

Freed, Mary Malinda Mustard,
Larry Mustard, Glenn Edward
Freed, Marianne Freed, DomtaGrace Pariseau, Kristina A. Freed,
to Charles D. Jeffers, deed, Middleport;
Joe Howard Keys to Hertn2
Keys, affidavit;
Heram Keys to Darrel Keys;
DarreU Keys, deed, Salem;
Donald R. Taylor, Diana S.
Taylor, to Gregory' A. Taylor,
deed, Olive;
Charles David Jeffers to Gerald
Pullins; Jr., Brenda Pullins, deed,
Salisbury;
William M. Hannum, Barbara
A. Hannum, to Phillip R.
Lacomb, Ann B. Lacomb, deed,
Olive;
Mary Elizabeth O'Brien to .
Patrick H. O'Brien, deed, Salisbury /Po11J.eroy;
Patrick. H. O'Brien to Mary
Elizabeth O'Brien, deed, Syracuse/Sutton;
George Napier, Joyce Napier,
to George and Joyce Napier,
deed, Orange;
Russell L. Day, Brenda S. Day,'
to Randy J. Johnson, Teresa A.
Johnson, deed, Orange.

Cold
weather is
Here!
We have
heat tape
and stove .
pipe.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

straight loan request to a grant
request.
At Monday's meeting, Howard
introduced a letter 6um Triplett,
dated Nov. 9, in which he asked
that the project be withdrawn, so
that the chances for funding of
the county's other projectli will
not be threatened.
·"The willingness of the county · to accept a loan in lieu of a
grant was the reason for the high
raling,"Triplett wrote. "While the
use of a loan may at times be prudent, 1 do not believe at one of

those times."
"I will be the Meigs County
engineer in January and do not
wish to burden the County
Highway Department with this
debt," he added.
Howard voted against the
withdrawal of the project, saying
that she did not feel that the loan,
·if approved, would place the
c~unty highway department in a
financial bind, another reason that
the board requested that the proposal be changed from a loan
request to a grant request.
The projects will be reviewed
at the district level later this week,
. ranked, and then submitted at the
state level.

LOCAL STOCKS
Gannett- 55~

A6P - 40.,.
Akzo-46~

AmTech/SBC- 57l.
Ashland Inc. -

AT&amp;T-20'~

32-,.

Bank One - 36l.
Boll Evans- 18).

BorgWamer - 36~
Champion - 2'Y.
Charming Shops - 5'tr
City Holding - 6'1.
Federal Mogul - 3
Firstar -

18~

General Electric - 52'/..
Harley Davids~- 47).
Kmart - 6).
Kroger- 225~.
Lands End - 23
Ltd.- 26l.
Oak Hill Rnancial- 15~
OVB -26),
BBT -31),
Peoples - 13l.

Premier - 5,..
Rockwell - 40),

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 60),

Sears -

30~

Shoney's - ),
Wai-Mart-

46"•

Wendy's - 23), ·

Worthington- 91.
Daily stock raports are the
4 p.m. closing quofes of
the previous day's tr~s·
actions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

NEW YORK (AP) In
agreeing to pay $53.4 million to
Universal
Music
Group,
MP3.com ended its legal dispute with the last of five major
tousie makers and secured a
licensing agreemen't that . pertnits the online mustc servtce to
use songs owned by the world's
iargest record company. .
The· deal with Umversal
Music Group was announced
Tuesday as testimony began in
the damages phase of a federal
trial that had already deter;,ined MP3.com willfully violated Universal's copyrights.
' Under the settlement, Universal will also ' get the right to
buy a stake in MP3.com,
MP3.com
chief . executtve
Michael Robertson said.
"Our shareholders should be
excited about today's development," Robertson said. "It gets
us out of the cburtroom and
into the business of delivering

digital music."
The company had earlier
reached settlements with the
four other major companies Warner Music Group, BMG.
EM! and Sony Music Entertainment and had arranged
licensing deals with each of
them.
The overall amount of the
settlements has not been disclosed, but Robertson said it
falls within the $170 million the
company set aside for legal
costs.
. Hadrian Katz, Universal's
lawyer, declined to comment
outside court.
In a joint statement issued by
the companies, Universal President Zach Horowitz said his
company had "pursued this case
to send a strong· message that
copyrights will be protected and
that copyright owners and
artists need to be properly compensated for their work."

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
•
Correction Polley
: Our main concern in all stories is ~o
, be accurate. If you know of an error 10
· a story, call the newsroom at (7 40)
992·2156 ..

News Departments
· The main number Is 992·2156
: Department extent ions are:

. G•n•ral manager

Ext. 1101

:Newt

Ext. 1102
Ext. 1106

or

Other services
. Advertising

Ext. 1104

Circulation

Ext. 1103

My thanks to the voters of Meigs Co.

fe-PIIpAI
days a week, and most Saturdays,"
Roberts said.
Collins said that the curing
time for the concrete, if the Oct:
15 date was missed, was not taken

Society
fnwnPipAl

In 1971, Arthur P. MuUaney
created the event, asking people
to give up cigarettes for one &lt;lay
and to donate the money that
would be used on cigarettt&gt; to a
·.local ' high school scholarship
fund. The event has spread from a
small town in Massachusetts to
the national level, according to
Torres.
She said information wiU be
available at the Meigs Multipurpose Center both tomorrow and
Friday during the annual health
fair and flu shot clinic.
Torres cited statistics from the
American Cancer Society that
show smoking is the number one
cause of preventable death in

society today.
She cited six facn:
• I 0 to 20 million current
smokers will die from tobaccorelated diseases.
• 48 miUion Americans smoke
today.
• Ohio has one of the highest
smoking rates in the U.S., 25.1
percent of adult Ohioans smok.e
cigarettes regularly.
·• 3,000 nonsmoking adults die
from lung cancer caused by secondhand smok.e annually.
•150,000- 300,000 infants and
children younger than 18 months
-of age suffer from lower respiratory tract infections caused by secondhand smoke.
• Formaldehyde, ·acetone,
cyanide, methanol and tar are 5 of
the 43 k.nown cancer-causing
compounds found in cigarettes.

VALLEY WEATHER

Chilly conditions to continue

Ohkl Vlll•y Pub118hlng Co.
Published e\lery afternoon,
through Friday, 111 Court St,
Ohio. Second-class postage
Pomeroy.

Classified Ado

..

·..
•.

~xt.

To send e·mall
galtribune@eurokanet.com

1100

.

Monday
Po~eroy,

pa1d at

Member: The Associated Press al'ld lhe
Ohio Newspaper Association.
.
Poltm..ter: Send address correct1ons to
The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769."

111

Court St.,

Subscription rates
By carrl•r or motor route

$2
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On• month
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Sul:lscrlbBf'S not desiring to pay the carri·
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On•wMk

able.

Mail subsalntlon
Inside Meigs

Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

c~.UV

$27.30
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Flates outelde Meigs County
$29.25
26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weeks
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13 Weeks

LOCAL BRIEFS
•

EMS runs

Art projed

POMEROY - Unilli of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered seven calls for assistance
on Tu..day. Units responded as
foUows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:27 a.m., Lincoln Heights,
Sam Williams, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
7:46 a.m., Page Street, James
Smith, treated;
12:12 p.m., Ohio 124, assisted
by Pomeroy, motor vehicle accident, Brandy Tobin, St. Mary's
Hospital;
.
7:28 p.m ., Perry Run , Dean
Bowman,Jackson General Hospital.
POMEROY
• 4:56 p.m., Ohio 7, auto fire,
Bart Boggs' vehicle, no injuries.
REEDSVIL,LE
3:42 p.m., Ohio 681, Mary
Barringer, refused treatment.

MIDDLEPORT - A Christmas art proJect, with Kris White
as instructor, will be offered Nov.
25 and Dec. 2, from 10:30 until
noon, at the Riverbend Aru
Council on North Second
Avenue. Registration is made by
calling White at 992-5883.

RUTLAND
10:58 p.m., Hysell Run, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Bethany
Gibbs, Holzer Medical Center.

Board to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
regular meeting of the Easterp
Local Board of Education wiU be
held Nov. 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the
administrative offices in TupperS
Plains.

. Flu shots
POMEROY - The available
flu vaccine will be administered
to those 65 and older at the
Meigs County Health Department on Friday. The public is
ask.ed to caD 992-6626 to check
on the standing of the Nov. 20 flu
shot clinic.

Blues artists to perfonn
at·Court Street Grill .
La., has traveled the world over

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Blues and Jazz Society will be
presenting nationally renowned
blues artists "Smokin"' Joe Kubek.
and Bnois King during a special
concert performance tonight at
the Court Street Grill.
According to a Bullseye Productions news release, Kubek. and
King are a pair of exciting performers who explode onstage
with their fiery display of blues
guitar and intense understanding
of jazz music.
Kubek, who hails from Dallas,
Texas, has played alongside blues
greats such as B.B. King, Freddie
King and Stevie Ray Vaughn,
while King, a native of Monroe,

playing his intense style of jazz
guitar and belting out haunnng
blues songs with his whisper-to~
growl voice.
Mter I 0 years of touring and
playing together, Kubek. and King
• stiU play more t~an 270 shows a
year and cite their par.tnenh•p as ·
the secret behind their success.
"When you're eatin' breakfast
and your having some toast, you
gotta have jam with it. Bnois. and
I go together like toast and Jam.
1'm kind of like the toast and he's
the jam."
Tickets for the performance,
which begins at 9 p.m., are S8 and
can be purchased at the Court
Street GriD in Pomeroy.

-chance of rain showers, mainly
Temperatures dipped into the during the afternoon. Highs in .
20s in the tric-ounty area early the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30
today and gusty winds made it percent, mainly during the afterfeel even colder.
noon.
Temperatures averaging I 0-15
Thursday
night, .Mostly
degrees below normal were clot~dy with a chance of rain
expected to remain through the showers until midnight, then a
weekend, except for a brief chance of snow showers after
respite on Thursday, when the midnight. Lows 30 to 35.
mercury \viii climb to around 50
Extended forecast:
degrees, the National Weather
Friqay... A chance of snow
Service said.
showers during the day, otherwise
On Friday, highs will be orily
partly cloudy and cold. Highs in
in the mid-30s and there will be. a
the mid 30s.
chance of snow showers.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
Sunset tonight will be at 5:15
in
the upper 20s and highs
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:19
around 40.
a.m.
Sunday and Monday... Partly
Weather forecast:
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s and
Tonight .. .lncreasing · high
cloudiness. Lows 30 to 35. Light highs in the lower 40s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows
wind becoming squth 5 to I 0
in
the upper 20s and highs in the
mph toward dawn.
COLUMBUS (AP) Rep. to be appointed to Schafrath's seat
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A mid 40s.
Larry Householder was elected in the Senate, leaving HouseholdTuesday to the post of House er the lone contender for the top
speaker for the I 24th Legislature,
job.
which is to convene in early January.
Republicans who were elected
to the House on Nov. 7 nominated Householder, a Glenford
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP) for the Pharmaceutical Research Republican who currently serves
- In the three years since feder- and Manufacturers Association, as assistant majority whip and
0
al regulators approved direct-to- said concerns about patients represents the 78th House . DISconsumer advertising of prescrip- demanding drugs they don't need trict. He will replace term-hrruted Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, a
tion drugs , the ubiquitous ads are overblown.
Reynoldsburg Republican who
have changed the face of health
•'Direct-to-consumer empow- has held the job for three terms.
care.
Householder's election to the
I'WII ITIPIIIf IJ 2:11
~
Yet while consumers arc clear- ers patients. It helps solve the
u
Entrvs
Weleeme
most
powerful
position
in
th
e
problems
of
undertreatment
and
ly more educated about pharmaceuticals on the market. experts underdiagnosis but still leaves the House was expected.
The stage was set in August.
·-···--11-fllllt
disagree on whether they are decision up to the doctors," Art
III!IIIICIU11flllllllll~lllllllt
;a;;
when then-Sen. Dick Schafrath, a
actually better off.
said. "Bottom hne is you can't get
Pati.ents today regularly ask for a prescription medication with- Mansfield Republican, resigned ~ 1re1L Pltne Clll1nn1 1111 :m
from his seat to lead the Healthy O IliOn Rlm~ersll ftllllltllr lreL
the latest drugs they've seen on out a doctor's written order."
Ohioans, Healthy Communities
television, sometimes requesting
. The People's Medical Society, campaign initiated' by Gov. Bob
medication that's niore expensive
based in Allentown. Pa .. is one of Taft.
than what they are taking or that
Schafrath's resignation opened
they don't even need, some physi- a handful of consumer groups
the
door for then-Rep. Bill Harthat supports direct- to-co nsumer
cians say.
. "Some consumers are almost advertising. Charles Inlander, the ris, who was expected to share
demanding, or heavily requesting, society's president, says his group . speaker duties with Householder,
the prescription that's being asked the FDA as early as I 983 to
advertised," Dr. Keith Burkhart approve prescription drug adversaid Tuesday night during a ~ym­
tising.
posium on the issue at Pennsylva. nia State University.
Since the Food and Drug
Administration regulations went
into effect in l997, it's been hard
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
QlllHOU TI y,W[&lt;; I
to miss the drug ads on television
446·4524 I . IIIJo,L KSC IJ PIK I
and radio and in print - '$1.3
FRI11 /10!00 THURS 11/9/00
billion worth in the first half of
BOX OFFICI WIU OPEN AI
6:30 PM FOIIVINING SHOWS
2000, according to IMS Health, a
12:30 PM FOI MATINIIS
Pennsylvania group that tracks
BOOK
prescription drug activity.
Not everybody is convinced
that's a bad thing.
RED PLANET (PG13)
Dr. Laurie Fowler, an assista"nt
professor ,at the University of
Missouri Health Sciences Center,
. sai&lt;;f advertising can alert consumers to conditions they might
otherwise have overlooked or
ignored.
"I think that it helps to open
up a new line of communication
that might not have been opep
otherwise," Fowler said .
112 Court Street
Representatives from the pharOhio 45769
maceutical mdustry were invited
to particiPate i;1 the symposium
www.courtstraatgrlll.com
but refused.
Meredith Art, spokeswoman
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Householder named speaker

~~0~-~

POMEROY
MERCHANT'S
CHRI5TMAS

PARADE

~ SUNDAY. NOV. 26TI
LINE UP ·1:00

--~~~~~----

~*@o*®

7

(USPS 213•oeG)

~3

I

Marlene Harrison

Bridge

into consideration when the
length of closure was estimated
"The bridge will reopen as
soon as possible," Collins said,
"but weather will be a factor.
Delays due to the weather are a
risk you tak.e when a construction
project begins late in the year, as
this one did."

MP3.com ends dispute with
Universal with $53.4 million Health professionals at
symposium question benefits

1·304·773·5583

I am honored to have been elected as
your clerk of courts, and I will continue
to serve the community with pride.

The Dally Sentinel • P-ueli 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WednesdaY

·November 15th

®

.$.

�Page A 2 • The Dally hntlnel

BUCKEYE

IEFS

Trial set In
- MARION (AP) -Marion County Conunon Pleas Court Judge
!tic hard Rogers on Tuesday set a Feb. 5 trial date for a man charged
m the rape and murder of a 7-year-old gul.
!:larry Satta, 38, of Marion was arrested Aug. 28, the day after fintgrader Bobbie Jo Barry was abducted from h~r home.
The girl's body, her neck. broken, had been found that same day
wrapped in a sleeping bag in a field along a rural road north of Marton.
Satta, a friend of the girl's family, W3S indicted on twO counts of
aggravated murder and one count each .of burglary, kidrupping and
rape. He has pleaded innocent.
Marion County Prosecutor James Slagel told Rogers he expected the trial to take three week.s and at least 125 people to be sum~oned for the jury pool.

Hunt on for gas-tainted can
FINDLAY (AP) - Authorities are trying to find customers who
purchased gasoline-tainted kerosene &amp;om a gas station.
About 190 gallons of the potentially explosive mixture was purc h;~sed Monday &amp;om a Fuel Man gas station north of downtown.
Officials with Wooster-based Ports Petroleum, which operates 70
Fuel Marts in 12 states, said they had accounted for about 93 gallons of the caint~d fuel by Tu..day afternoon.
- Mik.e Ports, president of the company, said a fuel carrier accidentally dropped gasoline into the kerosene tank.
'.' 1 don't think the driver did it on purpose. It was a mistake. a terrible mistake, but it was a mistake," Ports said.
Customers who purrhased the kerosene are urged to return the
fuel to the ga&lt; station where it wtll be replaced with pure kerosene.

Lottery player stays lucky
ERLANGER, Ky. (AP) -Ronald Feder is having quite a run of
luck.
The 47-year-old self-employed electrician &amp;om Erlanger, just
south of Cincinnati, has had several winning Ohio Lottery tickets,
and recently won a scratch-off game that sent him to Hollywood to
compete in Powerball's television game show.
Feder won't say whether he won the $1 million grand prize
because the episode he taped last month is scheduled to be broadcast Saturday. But since returning from California, he has won
S1,000 on another lottery· ticket and found out he won another
drawing and trip to the game show next month.
·"I don't know why I'm so lucky," said Feder, who typically spends
about $9 a week on three Instant Powerball Game Show tickets.
"There is no technique. I've hit five numbers on the Ohio lottery
three times. It paid $1,000 two times and S1,500 the third time. But
that's been six or seven years ago."
Feder traveled with his wife, Donna, on his first trip to Hollywood. He\ ta~ing his daughter next time.
" I promised my daughter Megan. who's 8, that if I won again I
would take her with us," he said. "I never imagined that would really happen, so I guess I will be buying an extra ticket."

EJ:..Bible teacher sentenced
CLEVELAND (AP) - A former Bible teacher was sentenced to
five years in prison for showing a student sex-torture photos.
Judge Carolyn Friedman of Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court also labeled Steven Craddock, 38, as a sexual predator on
Tuesday. When Craddock is released from prison, he will be
required to register his address with law enforcement officials. .
Craddock pleaded guilty in September to one count of ch1ld
endangen ng. two counts of illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material and one count of possession of criminal tools.
Craddock, of Parma Heighlli, wotked as a Bible teacher at Greater
Cleveland Christian School in Middleburg Heights. Beginning in
1998, Craddock made a 15-year-old student come into his classroom and view sexually explicit torture pictures and describe what
she saw.
· Prosecutors said Craddock. also devised a scheme where he told
the n~dent she was being considered for a prestigious position in
J\lnnesty lnt~rnational. But first Craddock told the girl she h~d to
palS tests in which she was to dress provocatively and mak.e a v•deotape where she described what aroused her and tell how she would
torture her boyfriend, prosecutors said.
Midway through making the tape, she erased it and told her
mother about the test. Her, mother then went to the police.
"Thqe's absolutely no excuse for my behavior whatsoever.( hope
eventually you find it in your heart to forgive me in some way,"
Craddock told the girl and her family.

Teacher faces additional charge
CINCINNATI (AP) - An elementary school teacher from
Columbus who already faced charges in an Internet sex investigation was indicted Tuesday on a new charge that he .raped a 12-year·
old girl ~ e met through the Internet.
The Hamilton County indictment unsealed Tuesday charged that
Stephan BaUmann, 49, raped the suburban Cincinnati girl sometime
dunng OctOber. Ballmann had met her through Internet commu nication, mvcstigators said.
lf convtcted, he could face up to 11 1/2 years in pmon, prosecutors said.
BaUmann, a fifth-grade physical education teacher, awaits arraignment in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court in Cincinnati. He
re1nains free on $50,000 cash bond following his Nov. 4 arrest at a
Cincinnati hotel.
Sheri/r's officers who arrested BaUmann then said he was at the
hotel because he was planning to have sex with a 14-year- old girl
wl)o had been communicating with him through the Internet. The
"girl" turned out to be a male investigator for the Hamilton County sheriff.
BaUmann sent sexually expli~it material through an Internet chatroom to the investigator, sheriffs officers said.
The felony charges pendmg against Ballmann in that case are
attempted disseminatton of material har~ful to juveniles and
.lttempted corruption of a nunor. If co nviCted, he could get SIX
months to a year behind bars and a $2,500 fine on each charge.
Investigators said Ballnnnn i~ a teacher at Dunloe Elementary
School in suburban Columbus.

Bond set for slaying susped
BATAVIA (AP)- Bond was set at $1 million on Tuesday for a
man accused of killing a IS-year-old boy whose body was found 10
front of a burned house in Milford, ou thorities said.
.Christopher Thomas Alford's body was found Monday morning
on the front lawn of hi&lt; home 111 the Cmcmnan suburb 10 Cler•· •ont County.
_
l'ro&lt;ecutor&lt; &lt;ay J( andy ~ 1\hll' . 2'1, be,lt Alt ord to Jc ,ah and set
th 1: fire to cov&lt;: r up t h e d,-;,rh ·,\ ldh I'• to .1ppca r hctorc J C!ern~ o nt ·
&lt; oun ty gr:lll d Ju ry Nov .~ &gt; l ' l m&lt;..' l mar&lt;., .uc ~cekmg ~vtdls mdicrment on charges of aggravated murder, aggravated mon and aggravated burglary.

•

Wednesday, November 15,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

s ·Person of the Year'

Moore named

Update

appropriate utihution of other
important community mental
health and drug abu~e prevention
servic.- at the same time," added
Esandon.
The parent must consent to
the student's participation m the
program as weD as being determined eligible by the Meigs
County Department of Job and
Family Services.
In other chamber business,
Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry V:irnadoe
informed those in attendance that
the Meigs County Industrial Park
is nearing completion and that he
is currently working on seVeral
existing projects within the county.
Meigs County Tourism Board
Director IUrin Johnson also
announced that last month's HalloWeen cf.uise was a success and
that she is the process of preparing material for the upcoming
spring advertising and trade
shows.

ftom'-PA1
GALLIPOLIS -Jay Moore was honorm as Scheduling Conunittee for Gov. Richard
Gallia County's 2000 Southeastern Ohio Celeste and his cabinet during the 1990 BicenRegmnalCouncil Person of the Year during the tennial Time Capsule Conunittee.
recent recognition ceremony sponsored by
As chairman of the 1993 River Rweation
SEORC in Nelsonville.
Festival, he was instrumental in bringing astro'Jay has very unselfishly given much of his naut Lt. Col. Susan Helnu to Gallia County, as
time and talent to his conununity in recent well as securing a fuU NASA Station and Moon
yean," Gallia County Chamber of Conunerce . Rock. display for that event.
President Dr. Clyde Evans said.
Moore was elected to the Gallia County
''The chamber is pleased to recognize his Chamber of Conunerce ooilld of directors in
contributions at this time," Evans added.
1994. He was elected secretary of the chamber's
A native of Gallia County, Moore graduated Executive Conunittee in 1995 and . served as
from the University of Rio Grande, earning his first vice president 6um ·1996 until 1998.
bachelor of science in social sciences, majoring
He was elected president of the Gallia Counin.history, sociology with a minor in psycholo- ty Chamber of Conunerce in 1998 and held
gy
the position until 2000. He also served on the
In. 1987, Moore was an honor graduate 6um Executive Conunittee of the Community
Xavier University, CCMS, with an associate Improvement Corporation of Gallia County.
degree in mortuary sciences, and was elected a
As a member of the chamber, Moore serves
class officer.
on the Executive Conunittee as immediate past
He returned to G.Uia County in 1987 and president, chairman of the Building\Conunitjoined the family-owned business, McCoy- tee, and member of the Legislative C.:lmmittee.
Moore Funeral Hom.- Inc., in Gallipolis and · In ·addition, he is a member of the board of
Vinton. where he is serving as vice president directors for the Gallia County Conununity
and manager of the Gallipolis Chapel.
Resource Conunittee and is on the Business
In addition, Moore served on the Gallipolis Advisory Council for the Gallipolis City
Kiwanis board of directors from 1988 to 1991, Schools. ·
where he was president 6um 1990 to 1991.
He is a member of Grace United Methodist
Moore was chairman of the Transportation and Church in Gallipolis, where he serves on the

Administrative Council, Stewardship Conunittee and is head ·commuruon usher. He is a
member of the Gallipolis Shrine Club, Aladdin
Temple, 32nd Degree Mason by the Ancient
and Accepted Order of the Scottish Rite, Vmton Masonic Lodge 131 and the Grand Lodge
of the State of Ohio.
Moore is a certified disaster coordinator
under the National Funeral Directors Association of American (N FDA) and the ~deral
Emergency Management Agency. He is also a
member of the Ohio Embalmers Associanon of
the Ohio Funeral Directors Association
(OFDA), where· he currently serves on the
OFDA Legislative Conunittee.
Moore is a licensed private pilot and member .
of the Airplane Owners and Pilots Association
of America. He has served on the Gallia-Me1&amp;'
Regional Airport Authority Board and the Gallia-Mcigs Regional Airport Relocation Committee.
Moore is the son of Herb and Jean McCoy
Moore, the grandso~ of Elsie P. McCoy, and the
brother of Joe and Jared Moore. He and his
wife• Melissa • are the parentli of twO sons,
Michael, 6, and Man:us, 3. He enjoys piloting,
playing guitar and most importantly. family

Pearl L. Powell to Thomas 0.
P11rceU. Sandra L. Purcell, deed,
Otive·
Ti~othy William Willis, Debra
K. Willis, to Robert 0. Willis,
Shirley A. Willi~ deed, Sutton;
LoiS E. Mc.t:lhinny, deceased,
to Kenneth S. McElhinny, affidavit, Middleport;
Roy D. Adkins, Alice H .
Adkins, to Jimmie D. Dyer, Elaine
Dyer aee&lt;f. Sutton·
Charles Clifford Beegle Chifford Beecle, to Mattie F. Beegle,
Aflidavit,'Sutton· ·
Timothy A. Curfman, Brenda
K. Curfman, to Scot F. Gheen,
deed, Sutton;
Leota Srmth to Sharon Johnston, Ron Smith, deed, Bedford;
Austin Glen Lawson Christine
W Lawson,.. to Blaine Alan Wells,
Geraldine .1:. We Us, deed, Columbia·
Belva
Louise
Mitchell,
deceased'pto Calvin L. Mitchell,
affidavit, omeroy/Salisbury;
Robert WeUnian to Ernie L.
J:ilton,Vickie K. Tilton, deed, Scipw~vtc
•. k.te L . B rown v·1c1c.·te L..
1
Metheney,_ George Brown, to
Ricky A. Methenev. Jr.,~aticia M .
Metlieney, Erik. 'E'. Metheney,
deed, Salem·
Erik. E. Methen\Y to Ricky A.
Metheney, Sr., deed, Salem·
Ricky A. Metheney, Jr., Laticia
M. Metheney to Ricky A.
Metheney, Sr., aeed, Salem~
Paul Everett Smith :.baron
IUy Smith, to Michael Dale Dill,
Isabel Mae Dill, deed, Rutland;
Shawn David Gilinore Vikki
Lynn Hn-es to Edward T. Baer,
Patri~ia D. BRer, deed, Pom'eroy;
'Albert Pelkey, Claudia Pelltcy,
to Candy R. Barnett, Jeremy J.
Rowe, de~d. Rutland;
Donald W. B~nett Mary R.
Barnett to Can y R. Barnett,.
Jeremy). Rowe, eed, Rutland;
Ro~r L. Mariley, Sr. Conpie
M . Manley, to Conme M. Manley
Trust affidavit·
. John E. Blake Charles E.
Blake, Barbara B. Blake, r,o Simon
H. Geistwhite, Mary M. Geistwhite, deed, Sutton/Racinek·
Kenneth Mcelhinny to athy
S. Mullins, Russell S. Mcelhinny,
deed MiddleP.ort;
Allen L. Pap~ Allen Pape,
Carol A. Pape, &lt;....arol Pape, to
Home • National Bank, sfierifl's
deed, Syracuse· ·
Eber I. Pickens to Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Sutton·
William Maynard to Columbus Southern Power, easement,
Sutton;

from PageA1

I

Ruth · S. Foley, Craig C. Foley,
to Columbus Southern Power,
easement, O~ge;
Nancy L. Watson, William A .
Watson, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, On_nge;
Ralph E. Trussell Martha Jean
Trussell, to Columbus Soutl\ern
Power, easement, Chester;
Scott Trussell, Teresa M.
Trussell, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, Chester;
Harold SargenJ, deceased, to
Wilma Sargent, amdavit, Middleport·
·
.
J.B. O'Brien, Roberta C.
O'Brien, to Brian E. Hall, Mary
M . Hall, easement, Lebanon;
Norma K. Schirtzinger, Jerry
Cannon Betty J. Cannon_.., to
!tndiew t Cannon. Jerrold J. L-annon, Jr.lii.awrence Schirtzinger,
Eric 'Sc irtzi11ger, deed, Lebanon;
Mindy l'atterson, She,.Yle
Tiemeyer, to Kelly Hayman,
deed, Lebanon;
Elsie L. Cook. to Robert D.
Williams, Scott A. WiUiams, deed,
Salisbury;
Secretary ofVeterans Atrairs to
Julia F. Murdock Schultz, Julia F.
'Murdock., deeg. Chester; ·
Matthew \.. , Erwin Vinda
Erwin~ to Donna R . Wilson,
deed, :.alisbu!)';
Rtchard R. Prater, Patsy A.
Prater, to Dorena F. Card, John P.
Card, deed,fhester;
Donna wilson to Corey B.
Lewis, Heather J. Lewis, deed,
Bedford;
Larry Allen Vance, Sharon L.
Vance to Tim H. Parsons, KimberlY. G. Parsons, deed, SciEfo;
Co~A':~estj-c?~:rfis0 ';.uC~~n;tl
Living trustAdeed, Lebanonb·
Mtchael . Ki.!lf:~~on to on&gt;l.d E. Kin~ison! T ~'G!ma R . KinmsoC!), deeM' CEOIII!ll ta; Ed .
:letus
. dd,Y_JQ
WIJ'I •
W~erry, Rhonda J. Wherry, dee ,
Qhve;
Wendi Krautter, John Doe,
Harry Young, Jane Doe, deed,
Pomeroy;
.
Norman 0. Weber, Vera A .
Weber1 to Michael A. Sanders,
Rhonaa Sanders, deed, o..,n_ge;
John W. Call, Selma Cali, to
Margaret Ellen Miller. deed,
Chester;
John W. Call, Selma Call, to
!olin Steven Miller, deed,
'Chester·
·
Charles R. Cozart to Robert
L. Sellers, Tris A. Sellers, deed,
Lebanon;
Rhonda S. Roberts, Rhonda S.
Mark.s, Scott D. Roberts; to Patri- ·
cia N. Neff, deed , Scipio;
Thomas E. Freed, Sandra

r.

a

BEF posts earnings increase for 2nd quarter
COLUMBUS Financial
results for Bob Evans Farms
Inc.'s second quarter showed
earnings · per share increased 8
percent to a record 40 cents,
company officials announced
Tuesday.
A year ago, earnings per share
were 37 cents for the same period.
Net sales were $261.3 million.
up 6 percent from $245 .6 million . Profitability in the food
products segment, sigmficant!y
improved from the first fiscal
quarter, was below year-ago levels, which essentially off&lt;et prof-

it growth in the restaurant busi-

ness .
Net income was $14 'million,
compared with $14.4 million a
year ago, in part reflecting a substantial increase in interest
expense related · to the company's share repurchase program .
For the first six months of fiscal 2001. net sales were $516.9
million, up 6 percent froni the
corresponding period last year,
while earnings per share rose 5
pe rce nt to . 78 cents.
Same-store sa1es i.n the restaurant segment Were up 3 percent
for the quarter, the company's

•·••·•·•·•.•· •..•.•.•.•.•.•.· ·:... ..· =·
- .. -

'

'

- - - -

(

................. ·.· .. ···" ""·.:

·:

. . I would like to congratulate all of the winners In the
. . 2000 general election. I would like to thank everyone . .
who helped me In any way· whether It was calling . ;..;:
,:.:, your neighbors, going door to door; putting a sign In ~.
. . your yard,. contributing to my campaign,. or just being . .
'-*..' kind to me· I thank you all very much. Watch lor me. . . . ..
~
I'll be back. .
:. :

'*'

• .
•

.

~et4-'f ~elf-a-U 1ttet~-de~Hou4-

.•

Paid for by candidate

•

···:·······••:.•••:.•:·~·

Issue

activiti~.

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
POMEROY - The following land tqnsfers were recently
reported bY. Meigs County
Recorder Juilith A. King,:
Roscoe Mills, Sandra.J. MiUs,
to Don M. Rose, deed, Sutton;
Don M . Rose to John M. Pape,
Sr...,Patricia S. Pape, deed, Sutton;
K.oscoe Mills, Sandra J. Mills,
Don M, \tose to John M.., Pape,
Sr.,_!'atnCJa S. Pape, easement;
von M. Rose to RoY. D.
Adkins, Alice H . Adkins, ileed,
Sutton;
Mary C. Vanmeter to Paul A.
Vanmeter, Angela Irene Kennedy,
deed, Rutland:
Ernel M. Spires to State of
Ohio, deed Pomeroy;
.
Dennis E. Richards, Jr., Melissa
L. Richards, to State of Ohio,
deed, Letart·
Dennis E. Saelens Carla D.
Saelens, to State of Ohio, deed,
Pomerox;
Dennis Lee Richards, Eva M.
Richards, to State of Oliio, deed,
Letart;
Tom Theiss, Sheha A. Theiss, to
Columbus Southern Power, easement, Sutton;
LQura Jaye Hupp to Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Sutton·
Lawrence E . .HyseU, DorotiJ._y
L. Hysell to 1\.ntnonY.. W .
McGrath, Rebecca K. McGrath,
deed, Rutlal)d;
Richard N. Warner to Henry
Eblin, Jrt Hester M. Eblin, Eblin
Family rust Agreement, deed,
Rutland;
Roger B. Hill, Debra M. Hill,
to David B. Cundiff, Karen R.
Cundiff, deed, Sutton;
R9berr T. Lambett, Jr. , to
Ban~k One Financial S"ervice,
deed, Salem·
Atvin W. G , . dec~~d. to
Flo~nce Got!., a clavit, Oliye;
Florence vo to. D~nn L.
Roush, Heather D. Roush, deed,
Olive;
Arthur Eblin, Adria Eblin, to
Harry S. Yarbrough, deed, Rutland·
Carrie Ella Roush to Robert
H. Roush, Jr., Paul B. Roush,
deed, Letart;
James R. Walker, deceased, to
Violet Walker, affidavit, Salisbury;
Violet Walker to Karen S.
Sloan, Larry R. Walker, deed, Salisbury·
Robert
Hawk,
Ramona
Hawk, to Robert F. Hawk,
Ramona M . Hawk, deed, Bedford;
Robert F. Hawk, Ramona M.
Hawk, to Robert F. Hawk.,
Ramona M. Hawk, deed, Bedford;

the importance of the Meigs
County PRC Progran1.
According to an ACCESS
hand-out, PRC; which stands for
prevention, retention and contingency. is a program designed to
have case tnanagers work. with
students who are at risk for
requiring more intensive services
if they are allowed to continue
being unsuccessful academically,
emotionally or behavioraUy.
'The goals of the program are
to reduce behavioral and social
difficulties of the identified students, increase self-esteem and
increase academic performance
by decreasing truancy and other
school attendance problems;· said
Escandon.
"Hopefully, we can also
increase fan1ily involvement in
school activities and increasing

16th
consecutive quarterly
increase. Overall net sales in the
segment . rose 7 percent,. while
operating.income was up 3 percent.

Freed, Mary Malinda Mustard,
Larry Mustard, Glenn Edward
Freed, Marianne Freed, DomtaGrace Pariseau, Kristina A. Freed,
to Charles D. Jeffers, deed, Middleport;
Joe Howard Keys to Hertn2
Keys, affidavit;
Heram Keys to Darrel Keys;
DarreU Keys, deed, Salem;
Donald R. Taylor, Diana S.
Taylor, to Gregory' A. Taylor,
deed, Olive;
Charles David Jeffers to Gerald
Pullins; Jr., Brenda Pullins, deed,
Salisbury;
William M. Hannum, Barbara
A. Hannum, to Phillip R.
Lacomb, Ann B. Lacomb, deed,
Olive;
Mary Elizabeth O'Brien to .
Patrick H. O'Brien, deed, Salisbury /Po11J.eroy;
Patrick. H. O'Brien to Mary
Elizabeth O'Brien, deed, Syracuse/Sutton;
George Napier, Joyce Napier,
to George and Joyce Napier,
deed, Orange;
Russell L. Day, Brenda S. Day,'
to Randy J. Johnson, Teresa A.
Johnson, deed, Orange.

Cold
weather is
Here!
We have
heat tape
and stove .
pipe.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

straight loan request to a grant
request.
At Monday's meeting, Howard
introduced a letter 6um Triplett,
dated Nov. 9, in which he asked
that the project be withdrawn, so
that the chances for funding of
the county's other projectli will
not be threatened.
·"The willingness of the county · to accept a loan in lieu of a
grant was the reason for the high
raling,"Triplett wrote. "While the
use of a loan may at times be prudent, 1 do not believe at one of

those times."
"I will be the Meigs County
engineer in January and do not
wish to burden the County
Highway Department with this
debt," he added.
Howard voted against the
withdrawal of the project, saying
that she did not feel that the loan,
·if approved, would place the
c~unty highway department in a
financial bind, another reason that
the board requested that the proposal be changed from a loan
request to a grant request.
The projects will be reviewed
at the district level later this week,
. ranked, and then submitted at the
state level.

LOCAL STOCKS
Gannett- 55~

A6P - 40.,.
Akzo-46~

AmTech/SBC- 57l.
Ashland Inc. -

AT&amp;T-20'~

32-,.

Bank One - 36l.
Boll Evans- 18).

BorgWamer - 36~
Champion - 2'Y.
Charming Shops - 5'tr
City Holding - 6'1.
Federal Mogul - 3
Firstar -

18~

General Electric - 52'/..
Harley Davids~- 47).
Kmart - 6).
Kroger- 225~.
Lands End - 23
Ltd.- 26l.
Oak Hill Rnancial- 15~
OVB -26),
BBT -31),
Peoples - 13l.

Premier - 5,..
Rockwell - 40),

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 60),

Sears -

30~

Shoney's - ),
Wai-Mart-

46"•

Wendy's - 23), ·

Worthington- 91.
Daily stock raports are the
4 p.m. closing quofes of
the previous day's tr~s·
actions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

NEW YORK (AP) In
agreeing to pay $53.4 million to
Universal
Music
Group,
MP3.com ended its legal dispute with the last of five major
tousie makers and secured a
licensing agreemen't that . pertnits the online mustc servtce to
use songs owned by the world's
iargest record company. .
The· deal with Umversal
Music Group was announced
Tuesday as testimony began in
the damages phase of a federal
trial that had already deter;,ined MP3.com willfully violated Universal's copyrights.
' Under the settlement, Universal will also ' get the right to
buy a stake in MP3.com,
MP3.com
chief . executtve
Michael Robertson said.
"Our shareholders should be
excited about today's development," Robertson said. "It gets
us out of the cburtroom and
into the business of delivering

digital music."
The company had earlier
reached settlements with the
four other major companies Warner Music Group, BMG.
EM! and Sony Music Entertainment and had arranged
licensing deals with each of
them.
The overall amount of the
settlements has not been disclosed, but Robertson said it
falls within the $170 million the
company set aside for legal
costs.
. Hadrian Katz, Universal's
lawyer, declined to comment
outside court.
In a joint statement issued by
the companies, Universal President Zach Horowitz said his
company had "pursued this case
to send a strong· message that
copyrights will be protected and
that copyright owners and
artists need to be properly compensated for their work."

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
•
Correction Polley
: Our main concern in all stories is ~o
, be accurate. If you know of an error 10
· a story, call the newsroom at (7 40)
992·2156 ..

News Departments
· The main number Is 992·2156
: Department extent ions are:

. G•n•ral manager

Ext. 1101

:Newt

Ext. 1102
Ext. 1106

or

Other services
. Advertising

Ext. 1104

Circulation

Ext. 1103

My thanks to the voters of Meigs Co.

fe-PIIpAI
days a week, and most Saturdays,"
Roberts said.
Collins said that the curing
time for the concrete, if the Oct:
15 date was missed, was not taken

Society
fnwnPipAl

In 1971, Arthur P. MuUaney
created the event, asking people
to give up cigarettes for one &lt;lay
and to donate the money that
would be used on cigarettt&gt; to a
·.local ' high school scholarship
fund. The event has spread from a
small town in Massachusetts to
the national level, according to
Torres.
She said information wiU be
available at the Meigs Multipurpose Center both tomorrow and
Friday during the annual health
fair and flu shot clinic.
Torres cited statistics from the
American Cancer Society that
show smoking is the number one
cause of preventable death in

society today.
She cited six facn:
• I 0 to 20 million current
smokers will die from tobaccorelated diseases.
• 48 miUion Americans smoke
today.
• Ohio has one of the highest
smoking rates in the U.S., 25.1
percent of adult Ohioans smok.e
cigarettes regularly.
·• 3,000 nonsmoking adults die
from lung cancer caused by secondhand smok.e annually.
•150,000- 300,000 infants and
children younger than 18 months
-of age suffer from lower respiratory tract infections caused by secondhand smoke.
• Formaldehyde, ·acetone,
cyanide, methanol and tar are 5 of
the 43 k.nown cancer-causing
compounds found in cigarettes.

VALLEY WEATHER

Chilly conditions to continue

Ohkl Vlll•y Pub118hlng Co.
Published e\lery afternoon,
through Friday, 111 Court St,
Ohio. Second-class postage
Pomeroy.

Classified Ado

..

·..
•.

~xt.

To send e·mall
galtribune@eurokanet.com

1100

.

Monday
Po~eroy,

pa1d at

Member: The Associated Press al'ld lhe
Ohio Newspaper Association.
.
Poltm..ter: Send address correct1ons to
The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769."

111

Court St.,

Subscription rates
By carrl•r or motor route

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Mail subsalntlon
Inside Meigs

Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

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Flates outelde Meigs County
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26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weeks
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13 Weeks

LOCAL BRIEFS
•

EMS runs

Art projed

POMEROY - Unilli of the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
answered seven calls for assistance
on Tu..day. Units responded as
foUows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:27 a.m., Lincoln Heights,
Sam Williams, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
7:46 a.m., Page Street, James
Smith, treated;
12:12 p.m., Ohio 124, assisted
by Pomeroy, motor vehicle accident, Brandy Tobin, St. Mary's
Hospital;
.
7:28 p.m ., Perry Run , Dean
Bowman,Jackson General Hospital.
POMEROY
• 4:56 p.m., Ohio 7, auto fire,
Bart Boggs' vehicle, no injuries.
REEDSVIL,LE
3:42 p.m., Ohio 681, Mary
Barringer, refused treatment.

MIDDLEPORT - A Christmas art proJect, with Kris White
as instructor, will be offered Nov.
25 and Dec. 2, from 10:30 until
noon, at the Riverbend Aru
Council on North Second
Avenue. Registration is made by
calling White at 992-5883.

RUTLAND
10:58 p.m., Hysell Run, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Bethany
Gibbs, Holzer Medical Center.

Board to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
regular meeting of the Easterp
Local Board of Education wiU be
held Nov. 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the
administrative offices in TupperS
Plains.

. Flu shots
POMEROY - The available
flu vaccine will be administered
to those 65 and older at the
Meigs County Health Department on Friday. The public is
ask.ed to caD 992-6626 to check
on the standing of the Nov. 20 flu
shot clinic.

Blues artists to perfonn
at·Court Street Grill .
La., has traveled the world over

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Blues and Jazz Society will be
presenting nationally renowned
blues artists "Smokin"' Joe Kubek.
and Bnois King during a special
concert performance tonight at
the Court Street Grill.
According to a Bullseye Productions news release, Kubek. and
King are a pair of exciting performers who explode onstage
with their fiery display of blues
guitar and intense understanding
of jazz music.
Kubek, who hails from Dallas,
Texas, has played alongside blues
greats such as B.B. King, Freddie
King and Stevie Ray Vaughn,
while King, a native of Monroe,

playing his intense style of jazz
guitar and belting out haunnng
blues songs with his whisper-to~
growl voice.
Mter I 0 years of touring and
playing together, Kubek. and King
• stiU play more t~an 270 shows a
year and cite their par.tnenh•p as ·
the secret behind their success.
"When you're eatin' breakfast
and your having some toast, you
gotta have jam with it. Bnois. and
I go together like toast and Jam.
1'm kind of like the toast and he's
the jam."
Tickets for the performance,
which begins at 9 p.m., are S8 and
can be purchased at the Court
Street GriD in Pomeroy.

-chance of rain showers, mainly
Temperatures dipped into the during the afternoon. Highs in .
20s in the tric-ounty area early the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30
today and gusty winds made it percent, mainly during the afterfeel even colder.
noon.
Temperatures averaging I 0-15
Thursday
night, .Mostly
degrees below normal were clot~dy with a chance of rain
expected to remain through the showers until midnight, then a
weekend, except for a brief chance of snow showers after
respite on Thursday, when the midnight. Lows 30 to 35.
mercury \viii climb to around 50
Extended forecast:
degrees, the National Weather
Friqay... A chance of snow
Service said.
showers during the day, otherwise
On Friday, highs will be orily
partly cloudy and cold. Highs in
in the mid-30s and there will be. a
the mid 30s.
chance of snow showers.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
Sunset tonight will be at 5:15
in
the upper 20s and highs
and sunrise on Thursday is at 7:19
around 40.
a.m.
Sunday and Monday... Partly
Weather forecast:
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s and
Tonight .. .lncreasing · high
cloudiness. Lows 30 to 35. Light highs in the lower 40s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows
wind becoming squth 5 to I 0
in
the upper 20s and highs in the
mph toward dawn.
COLUMBUS (AP) Rep. to be appointed to Schafrath's seat
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. A mid 40s.
Larry Householder was elected in the Senate, leaving HouseholdTuesday to the post of House er the lone contender for the top
speaker for the I 24th Legislature,
job.
which is to convene in early January.
Republicans who were elected
to the House on Nov. 7 nominated Householder, a Glenford
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP) for the Pharmaceutical Research Republican who currently serves
- In the three years since feder- and Manufacturers Association, as assistant majority whip and
0
al regulators approved direct-to- said concerns about patients represents the 78th House . DISconsumer advertising of prescrip- demanding drugs they don't need trict. He will replace term-hrruted Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, a
tion drugs , the ubiquitous ads are overblown.
Reynoldsburg Republican who
have changed the face of health
•'Direct-to-consumer empow- has held the job for three terms.
care.
Householder's election to the
I'WII ITIPIIIf IJ 2:11
~
Yet while consumers arc clear- ers patients. It helps solve the
u
Entrvs
Weleeme
most
powerful
position
in
th
e
problems
of
undertreatment
and
ly more educated about pharmaceuticals on the market. experts underdiagnosis but still leaves the House was expected.
The stage was set in August.
·-···--11-fllllt
disagree on whether they are decision up to the doctors," Art
III!IIIICIU11flllllllll~lllllllt
;a;;
when then-Sen. Dick Schafrath, a
actually better off.
said. "Bottom hne is you can't get
Pati.ents today regularly ask for a prescription medication with- Mansfield Republican, resigned ~ 1re1L Pltne Clll1nn1 1111 :m
from his seat to lead the Healthy O IliOn Rlm~ersll ftllllltllr lreL
the latest drugs they've seen on out a doctor's written order."
Ohioans, Healthy Communities
television, sometimes requesting
. The People's Medical Society, campaign initiated' by Gov. Bob
medication that's niore expensive
based in Allentown. Pa .. is one of Taft.
than what they are taking or that
Schafrath's resignation opened
they don't even need, some physi- a handful of consumer groups
the
door for then-Rep. Bill Harthat supports direct- to-co nsumer
cians say.
. "Some consumers are almost advertising. Charles Inlander, the ris, who was expected to share
demanding, or heavily requesting, society's president, says his group . speaker duties with Householder,
the prescription that's being asked the FDA as early as I 983 to
advertised," Dr. Keith Burkhart approve prescription drug adversaid Tuesday night during a ~ym­
tising.
posium on the issue at Pennsylva. nia State University.
Since the Food and Drug
Administration regulations went
into effect in l997, it's been hard
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
QlllHOU TI y,W[&lt;; I
to miss the drug ads on television
446·4524 I . IIIJo,L KSC IJ PIK I
and radio and in print - '$1.3
FRI11 /10!00 THURS 11/9/00
billion worth in the first half of
BOX OFFICI WIU OPEN AI
6:30 PM FOIIVINING SHOWS
2000, according to IMS Health, a
12:30 PM FOI MATINIIS
Pennsylvania group that tracks
BOOK
prescription drug activity.
Not everybody is convinced
that's a bad thing.
RED PLANET (PG13)
Dr. Laurie Fowler, an assista"nt
professor ,at the University of
Missouri Health Sciences Center,
. sai&lt;;f advertising can alert consumers to conditions they might
otherwise have overlooked or
ignored.
"I think that it helps to open
up a new line of communication
that might not have been opep
otherwise," Fowler said .
112 Court Street
Representatives from the pharOhio 45769
maceutical mdustry were invited
to particiPate i;1 the symposium
www.courtstraatgrlll.com
but refused.
Meredith Art, spokeswoman
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Householder named speaker

~~0~-~

POMEROY
MERCHANT'S
CHRI5TMAS

PARADE

~ SUNDAY. NOV. 26TI
LINE UP ·1:00

--~~~~~----

~*@o*®

7

(USPS 213•oeG)

~3

I

Marlene Harrison

Bridge

into consideration when the
length of closure was estimated
"The bridge will reopen as
soon as possible," Collins said,
"but weather will be a factor.
Delays due to the weather are a
risk you tak.e when a construction
project begins late in the year, as
this one did."

MP3.com ends dispute with
Universal with $53.4 million Health professionals at
symposium question benefits

1·304·773·5583

I am honored to have been elected as
your clerk of courts, and I will continue
to serve the community with pride.

The Dally Sentinel • P-ueli 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WednesdaY

·November 15th

®

.$.

�•

pageA4

ion

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesd.y, November 15, 2000

The Daily Sentinel
ca~L

•

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

FavoRif~ HaS

iT.

Dear Ann Landers: Five years ago,
my husband's best fnend since childhood was co nvicted on 12 counts of
child molestation while baby-sitting
three young girls. Since hiS incarcentiori, this man's mother has been calling
my husband regularly, eneol!raging him
to write ,and visit her son. She has told
my husband that if it wcren 't for his support, her son would have killed himself.
Now, once a year, my husband takes
two days off and drives to the middle of
nowhere to visit this man who will
NEVER be welcome in ou r home
a~~i~. I th~nk it's time fo r hi m to stop
VISitmg thiS felon Our ch ildren need
their father at home. What do you say' - Alta Loma, Calif., Wife an d Mother
Dear Alta Lorna : I understand )tOU r
fears, but you rio nor belong in this pi~-·
ture. Stay out of it. It is up to yqur husband to decide w ho he want's ro visit
and how ofte n. Your children can nun age two days a year without then f~ther.

eMQRGe.D gy Md/1!

.,Phio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
Publisher
Ctwtene Hoeflldl
~!Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer .
Advertising Director

wliJ,.-

Diane K1y Hill
Controller

l...dln ~ fiW
wK-. T~ dtoUI .W 1ft. 1/t.u JOB wonls. AU~ .,... rdjed
"' . . . . .,., JUUh ~IVflaltfl im-ltMir ..wras .NJ 16"f'ltoN• 11111W'.-I lfttns rill
H rHMtM Lrtlltn dotdd k U. rooJ MAr, Mllrrullw
Jlllf ~llflliiW•.
TIM ......... u,-wnr~ ill liN &amp;oluu ~-.. - dl. CVAHIUJU" uf d.. OltiD V.U...t P•~
Cct. '6 MiiDriiU ...,., ~11/.eu flflwrwW 1tOiftL

iu--,

••MIIrr:

NATIONAL VIEWS

Rules don't apply when it
comes to technology stocks .
• Chicago Tribune, MJ im'l'Sf&lt;lrs and eco1wmic

this time, I have purchased over $60,000
worth of tools, attended hundreds of
hours o f classes to stay current with
technology, and damaged my body by
bending it in ways Mother Nature never
intended.
Why am I telling.you this? Because I
am tired of auto mechanics being the
bad guys. People don't realize that the
ADVICE
amount they ·pay for auto repairs covers
not o nly my costs, but my boss' overIf you don't want [his man in your head . I pay my own health insurance and
home ever again , so be it. I agree wi th work 60-hour weeks. I do not get paid
that. But there ha s been a strong bond for ho lidays.
l attract customers because I have
between your husband and hi s best
friend since childhood, and your hus- expe rtise in identifying problems and
band needs to make these visits for his fixing them. Don 't be mad at me when
own peace of mind. C hild moleste rs a re your tune- up costs $300 or more. I am
very sic k people. I hop e the lllan is nor the one who made your car so complicated that it takes co mpu ters and flow
rec eiving treatment.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a profes- charts to ch eck th e li'ghts. I am not the
sional auto technician an d have been one who bought a car that requires a $ 14
repairing cars for over 30 yea rs. During spa rk plu g. l am not the on..:- w ho
bought a fancy fo reign m odel that needs

Ann
Landers

amilp
edicine ·

ntfe_~ :

Some investors
have discovered r:o their amazement r:hat the rules of the staid old
bricks-and-mortar economy apply as well to their sizzling technology 'stocks.
They shouldn 'r be surprised. Economics is economics - even
when it's practiced on the Internet. That's what happens when you
get caught up in a frenz y. It's like being in low. No, actually, it's like
being infatuated. Love withstands disappoin tmt:nt ; infatuation docs. n't.
A lor of invesro~ who were infatuated wuh technology stocks
are now waking up with pounding heads, looking across the room,
and wondering, "What was I thinlcing?"
What they were thinkmg is this: So w hat ifYahoo' Inc. was trading last Decembe r at 500 ttmes projected profits for this yea r' Why
would anyone think that unreasonable? What do you mean C isco
Systems' stock p rice can't grow at I 5 percent a year forever? Who
says Dell Computer Corp.'s revenues can't continue to rise 50 percent a year like they did between 1996 and 1998'
Good questions all- and they have ·now been answered. A slowing economy and rising interesr rate'i - pesky old economy speed
bumps - slow down everything, espt.:cial!y unrealistic expectations.
And when expectations have become m unrealistic that they defy
gravity and the rules of nature, they don't ju't llo•t back to earth.
They burst like a bubble....
• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C.,''" the Middle East
pea&lt;e talks: The Middle Ea.t peace process could be saved by one
man and one courageo us act . The man is Palestinian h::ader Yasscr
Arafat, and the act ofbravery that he cou ld perform would be to call
a rime-our on violence and pledge a return to th e negotiating tablc.
Unfortunately, it appears Ara(1t has no interest m stoppi ng the
bloodshed....
It is encouraging that lsrJel's pe&lt;~ee nego tiator, Gilead Sher, places
hope in a "package di:!al to sulw tht:: confl ict" outlined by President
Bill Clinton. Only Arafat hold' the key that co uld end the conflin
rhar is raging m rhe West 13ank and even in I ~rad itself Israeli Primt•
Minister Ehud Barak ha'i performed hi~ act of bravery. H e went
against the majority opinion of his own coalition to otTer Araf:1t
concessions on J erusalem, as well as lsrtu::'li tT-oop withdrawals th::tt
would allow the creation of a coherent Palestini an state ....
The future will be dec ided by Arafat's words and actions.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

1

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATE D PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 1·5, the 321lth d ay of 20illl.There are 4(,
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 15, 1777, the Con tinental Congress approved the Articles of Confederation, a precursor to the Constitutio n of the United States.
· On th is date:
In IR06, explorer Zebu lon Pike sighted the m ountai ntop_now
known a~ Pikes Peak.
In 1889, Brazil's monarchy was overt hrown.
In 1926, the National Broadcasting Co. debuted wi th a rndto network of 24 stations.
In 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt laid the cornerstone of the
Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C.
In 1940, 75,000 men were called to armed forces duty under
peacetime conscrlpnon.
h;t 1966, the flight of Gemini 12 ended successfully as astro nauts
James Lovell and Edwin "!3uzz" Aldrin, Jr. splashed down safely in
the Atlantic.
In 1969, 250,000 protesters staged a peaceful demonstration in
Washington against tht: Vietnam War:
In 1982, funeral servtces were held in Moscow 's Red Square for
the late Soviet President Leonid 13rezhnev.
In 1985, Britain and Irela nd signed an accord giving Dublin an'
official consu ltative role in governing Northern Ireland.
In 1998, Kwame Ture, the civi l rights activist formerly known as'
Stokely Carmichael, died in Guinea at age 57.
Ten years ago: The Senat e Ethics Committee began hearings o n
the "Keating Five," senators accused of going too far in helping
failed savings-and-loan owner Charles Keating, Jr. The space ' huttle
Atlantis was launched on a secret military mission. Milli Vanilli's pro, ducer confirmed rumors the duo had not done any of the singing
on their debut album, "Girl You Know It's True."
Five years ago: A partial government shutdown stretched into a
second day. The space shuttle Atlantis docked with the orbtting
Russian space station Mir.
One yea r ago: The C li nton admini~tration claimed victory in a
~even-year struggle to pcrsuadt! Congr·e,~ to pc~y nearly$ I billion in
back dues to the Umted N,ltlun-.. Chlllt''&gt;C JfH.I U.S. nt·gotiators
reached a breakthrough agre-c.·ment to reniovc: trade barritT,, &lt;.: learing the biggest h~trdlt' to China\ entry mtn the World T1aJ:· Org.tnization.
Today's Birthdays: Judgl' Jmcph Wapn er 1'&gt; H1. Formt·r \X.' hitt·
Hbuse C hi ef of Staff H oward B.tker Jr. " 7S. Actor Ed A'ncr is 71.
Actor Whttman Mayo 1S 70. ~in~cr 1-'etula Clark J&lt; 6H.

of Family Medicine

Cause and
treatment qf leg
cramps qften elusive

RUSHER'S VIEW

Legal system may ultimately decide this election
As the days unfold, the strategies of the two
parti es in the Florida election brouhaha are
slowly becoming clear.
The Republi ca ns rake rhe positi on that the
t'
.
first state\vide 'vote Count showed Go\'nnor
!3mh narrowly but clearly ahead, and that the
. .. . .
., ". ,:;
' ..mhscqucnr recount confirmed thi..;. All that
rcmo~ins, th~..:y insist, is w t"Ount and :tdd w the
toto~Js those owrseas abst:nt.:e ballob postI
m arked on o r before Election Day and
received by Friday, N ovember 17th. Whoever
NEA COLUMNIST
is then ahead will have won Florid;1 and its·25
elec toral votes and, w ith them , the prt·~id ~ncy
of the Umted States.
overseas absentee ba ll ots is considered.
The Democrats. profc ssm~ to lx· disturb ed
To thi s, the R epublicans respond th at
J.t the :~llebredly brge number of votl'rs w ho
h uman bt.:in~ are more fe~llib l c:. aml &lt;.:ertainly
were misled by tht: ballot's d e~ ign into casting
far more prt'ju diced. thJn machines, which ts
rhetr vott'S for Uu chan,m ratht·r than Gort::, art::
why the u niform trend in elections has been
refu sing w accept rht~ results of tht or iginal
to count the returns by machine. The Democcount and the: rt·&lt;.:ount. both of which were
rats are simply trying to massage th e ballots in
conducted by' machi ne. · Instead. th ev have
selected co unti es until ·they get a s:~t isfactory
prompted the loc.1l electi on offintlh in four
result.
heavily Derno&lt;.:ratic counties (whp ;1re, of
But how ran the Republicans prevent thts?
co urse, p n:domi t1antly lJenm&lt;.:rats the1m~.: lvcs)
T lu::y have ~ought an injunction against rh e
to order a third, manua l count of all the votes
m anual co unt in the l~deral district court,
in those counties. Nu un it(,nn rl1l es govern .
argu ing rhat ..;uch a coun t vio lates the feckral
these officials Ill determini ng w hi ch votes tu
constitution . If rhat e~rgumcnt f:1ih (:md rh L'
&lt;.:()unt, or for \vh ich.candHbte-:. T hey ,tre simj udge w ho \vil\ d ec ide the cast:: is a Clinton
ply to inspeCt e:ach ballot. note rh t' condition
appoinr ee), the ckci~i on ca n bc &lt;lppt·all'd to
of the holc~ pun ched (o r nnt p unr ht·d. or parthe U.S. Court of Appeal' t(&gt;r the II th .C: trcuit
tiall y punth..;d) t(Jr the c,\lltilcLne;.,, ,111d .trrive
m Atlanta , &lt;llld thl'JKt' to the:: Suprt'nH: Court
:a a subj ectm.: Jlldgmcnt .1~ to whn 111 the voter
o( the United St.ltl'\.
was trying to vote for. Civt.'ll tht· ci rcumAUemativdy, tht.· l ~t:pubhcam 1night .tgn:c
stan&lt;.:e'&gt;. th e puliric\ of rlw othci.ds ,md the
to a man ual recount
the.· vote ~ cast m th e
hu'ge lJcm ocratic major iti ~·~ in the counties in
entire state of \'":lor ida. ThJt wou ld run
4m:stion, the outcome \\.'ill inevitably bt:: an
cou nter to th eir stated and pc::r ~ua s ive objl:cincreased margin for Mr.. Gore. suffi~ i ent to
tions. to \1 m an ual re count anyw h ere. but
put him ahea d of Mr. l3ush sta tewide , even
would at least enable them tu countc.:r hiasecl
(they hope), afte r any Bush margin in the

•'' .,t·, ,..."

:

·~';

~~

William
Rusher

or

m anual reco unts in Democratic cou nties with , · 1
eq ual ly biased ones in Republican counties.
All in all, it seems hard to escape th e ·con- · :'
elusion that this mess will ~ventua lly end up
being decided by a court som ewhere, no matter how mu ch everybody p rote~~es ro disl ike
th at iUea. If ::.o, um· G ill only hope the court in .1
y uc.'stion won't bt:: t he Supn:rnc Court of ~ .
,_
Flor ida, which is heavily dommated by impassioned liberal Democrats. (They recently. ,: :
barred fi·o m the baHot an initiative banning · _._,
affi~m:I ti ve actio n in state cducltion, contracts
anJ ~mploymcn t, which ,pu lb , h uw~..:d \vas . ''
"
strongly favor~d by the voters.)
',
_ll ov. 'cve r it all turn s out. one wonders
"
whether rhe presidency rhw. won will be
much of .1 como larion to th e "wj nn t'r." If 1t is "·
Mr. C..~ on:. ht· will have tq confro nr :1 Rcpub- · ·'
licm-Jomi natcd Congress \Vithour luving "
thl.:' slightest mandate worthy of the u;une. If it "
ts Gove rn or ~ush, hC' may have a better rdatiom hi_p \virh .th t&gt; Cn ngress. but wtll, like Mr.
Gore. h:lVc to battle wide~pread doubts as to
tht· lcgitimKy of h is daim on the otlln:. And
elrhc.·r m an w ill knu\\ that hi' d eft.:atcd opponcnt is oul then'. thtrsting fOr ~~ n.'Jll.ttc h in
211114.
o~- co ur~c. Mr. Gore might h.IVC \C::J' iOU'i
COlll)JCtiuon fm111 ,1 b.d y rcccntiY l'kcted to
the ScnJtt.:.

rrVillicmr RrHI1er is a Vistii(~Hisllc' rl l·'dlow cif
rl~e Claremont lltsritwe for rl1e StHdy of States-

''Ja"sltip arul i'olitiral i'l1ilosoi•h.y )

"

•

'·

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Career (trophy wift' has to be someone special
You see these old guys with the young exmodel wives. You know the ones I mean. He's
a shrivdcd up billi onai re, ond she's gorgeous
and the same age as his soc ks. She's called a
"trophy wife." A little something to have on
your arm to let the other guys know that you·
have more to offer at 90 than they do at 27.
You may have more to offer but not for nearly as long.
So OK, I can understand the trophy concept from the old guy's point of view; I j ust
don't see the appeal for the woman. Now if
it's love, that 's fine . Logic and love rarely imasect. But if it's ~omcth in g d'ie, th en it "eems to
me that this old codger is a ''trophy hu sband"
for her. Some trophy. I've got bowling award~
that look better than m ost uf these guys.
I'm thinkmg that these wo man arc more
attracted to the safety and sec urity of a rich
g randfather type than they are to the good
looks and virility of a m an their own age. And
I guess wht::n ht:: passes on in a year or two, she
just finds another one like him. TIH:rt: an: a lot
of rich old guy~ who find young wom en
attractive.
But it takes sonwone special to be.: ,1 c.m:cr
" trophy wife" You tlt't'd tht• pcr\orl:tlny uf .1
nur'&gt;e and ,1 hunth of'blark ~lre\'il'~.
Where credit is due
'They have sophisticated com putt'\~ 111 car~
thc'e days. Things li ke the C I'S that tells you

exactly how to get to where you're going, for
anyone who dot::sn 't l~ave a wife. Or the cen tral monitoring unit that tells you if there's a
door open o r :t sfatbe'lt undone or your
engine just fell o ut. I'm thinking they could
easily devise a computer that kep t track of
how fast you're going compared to the speed
limit.
For example, if you're driving to work and
the speed li mit is 60, but you're only gotng 30
because th e traffic is so bad, that wou ld be
registered in the computer. Let's say you dtd
. that for 15 minutes. The computer wo uld
show th at as a credit on the· dashboard scrt::c.:n.
That means that as soo n as you hit an open
stretch of road, you'd be allowed to use that
credit without getting a speeding tickt:t. You
could go 90 fur 15 min utes or 120 for seven
and a half minutes or ISO for three and three
quarters minmes or the speed of light for a
nanosecond. As soo n ::~s you( credit was l!Sec;l
up, you would resu m e the speed limit._
I know thi, would nt'Vt' r work, but it's nice
to dream about.
Ways to get even
• When you know your reen-agt' son i~
gmn~ to uw \'uur t.tr, e111pty the p;.h t.mk :md
fill rhc b.1ck \C,ll wah Lt~t tood p.\ cL1ges.
• When you'n• ·imb your ~c co nd hour of \It
ting in tht..· Joctor's office, sing "Tired ofWaiting" by th&lt; Kinks at the top of your lunb~·

..

• When your bos~ criticizes you in fi·o nt of
yo ur fell ow ·wo rke rs, yd l back that you know
what he's up to, but you don't find him even
remotely attrac tive.
• Buy three sets of golf clubs and keep them
together so they can see that you don 't ~&lt;ed
to keep using ones that misbehave.
··1
• Wh il e -the cop is writing out your ticker, !
do an unflattering sketch of hi m and hand it
to him when he's done.
Teach by bad example
...
We have all these biograp hies in print and
on telev ision that highlight the lives of vt:: ry •
successful fatuous people. Over rime. thi s con- •
•
stant exposure to people w ho have exce lled
"
•
makes us feel like total losers.
'·-.:;
I say we Start featuring the stories of abject ~
fai lures. Th e Esperanto teacht:r or the Yugo · ~
salesma n o r that guy up th e street with the
;
emu . It's time to feel good about o'urselves ~ !
•
again.
• •
Quote of the Day: "Body parts are like
mt•mbers of a large.: fim1ily. They &lt;;tart o ut as a
team. but they get o lder they e.. ch do what- ·~

:,.

••

..

....

as

ever rhc heck they want."- R ed Green
(l~cd Gree11 is thl' $lil r (If "'l1u· u~~d Cn·fn
SI1! 1HI," 11 1dl'1 1t .ii1 lll scric.&gt; sc('l; iu tlif ( '.S t1~1 PDS
111/d ill Ctmadll Ul/ thl' cnc f,}C{I/Wk, ([11(1 the
aralu:-&gt; r (!f"T!Jr Re(l Cre(/11 Book " aiUI "lt1:d Grecf/
'Talks Cars: 11 Lwe Story.")

.

Page AS:
'

Nov. 15,

2000-·~

Reader does not want husband to visit child molester best friend

\J$U3LLYa GIA3~

'EsttiSilsMI 01.948

the Bend

rlw LJ,lily Sl'ntind

-t

In a normal contraction only some
of the individual nluscle fibers are
called upon to contract. Simultaneously with the contraction of muscles
on one side of the joint, the muscles
on the opposite side are Signaled to
relax. This produces the expected
smooth coordifutcd movement. A
more fun:eful effort, such as lifung a
heavy weight, is accomplished by
recruiting a greater number of muscle ·
fibers to contract
In a muscle cramp the number of
muscle fibers cl1at contract is large, as if
you 'vere picking up a heavy load,
and the opposing muscles ofi:en don't
relax. This abnormal and forceful contraction causes the typical muscle
cnmp pain. If it's sutliciendy strong,
the cramp can cause injury r.hat nukes
the ·muscle sore for several da)'·
Research done to dat~ hasn't identified pn:c~dy which step in the
complex lnreracrion of body systems

. Most scientists who have investigated this question, however, believe
that the problem is not a disorder
within the brain. These researchers
cite evidence that the problem is in
the nerves after they leave the spinal
cord but before they reach d1e muscles. For instance, the data show that
people with conditions such as diabetes that aJfect the nerves outside the
brain and spinal cord (doctors call
them peripheral nerves) have an
increased frequency of leg cnmps.
Similarly. those with circulation problems that prevent these peripheral
nerves from getting proper nourishment are more likely oo have nocturnal cramps.
The best way to stop a leg cramp is
to stretch the sore muscle just as you
ha"" done.When this happens to me,
I jump out of bed and do a less than
graceful pirouette until the cramp sub-

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT.
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

POMEROY - Millions of peo ple get sick
each year from bacteria found in food. Studies indicate that there are more than five
times the number of illness-ca using 'bacteria
in food as opposed to sixty years ago.
These illnesses, which have flu-like symp-·
toms, can occur from 20 minutes to six
weeks after ingesting foods with the bacteria.
People who are young, old, pregnant or have
chronic illnesses are ·esp-e cially susceptible.
To help prevent foodborne illnesses, use
. food thermometers. Th ey will msure that
foods have been cooked to the proper temperatures that destroy harmful bacte ria . The
old method of che cking the color of food to
determine " doneness" is no longer safe. Some
foods may be brown inside , but have not
reach ed the correct inter nal temperature.
Others may reach the correct temperature,
but still be pink.·A thetmometer is the only
safe way to be sure th at the food JS properly
cooked.
To encourage the use of fo od thermometers in promoting food safety, the United
States Depattment of Agriculture has developed a new slogan and logo. "Thermy the
ThermomC::ter" says, "It's safe to bite when

"Famil}' i\-laiid~IC" is a Wt't:kl)' colww, ,70 suftmit
q111.~&gt;tian.J, ttntc to }~m C. 11-Uif, D 0., Oltio Uni~
~'lnity C(llh]r?f· q{ Otcopatlric I'.-lt~fia't1c, Cm~t.uwr
Httlf,Ad~t7b~ OllkJ 4570 1. Fbst coll mm.s mt' (JUI/1·

alltt··ou/inc at !VLHI!flmuiio.olr~li tr.

the temperature is righ t!"
cause a color ch ange on the thermometer. If
To help Thermy fight bacte rio that causes the food has not yet rt•ac ht:d th ~ prop er tem foodborne illness, several types of ther- perature, the thermometer can be r('inserteJ
m omete rs are avai lable to detect inter nal until a safe temperature IS indKated. T he
temperatures of food. These th ermo meters rhern'lomcter can not bt; use-d again .
may b.e digital, dial, di sposable, instant-read,
To avoid foodborne illnesS. internal temprobes, pop- ups or forks. Read the instruc- peratures should be 180 degrees Fahrenheit
tions to determine the type of thermometer for thighs, wings, legs or whole chickens,
be st suited for the food being prepared, as turkeys, dncks and geese. Poultry breasts and
well as how it should be properly used.
roasts need to b_e 170 degrees. Ground meat
Some thermometers are made to stay in should be 160 degrees for beef, pork. lamb
the food throughout the coolcing process. and veal and 165 degreel fo r turkey and
These should be placed in the meatiest part
chicke n . Fresh beef, lamb and vea l shou ld be
of the food, away from bone, gristle and fat.
145 degrees for medium rare, 160 degrees for
In a turkey or chicke n, thlS would be in the
m edium and 170 degrees for we ll done.
thickest part of the thigh.
Fresh ham or po rk needs tO be 160 degrees
Other instruinents do not stay in the food .
for medium and 170 degrees for well done.
They can register. the internal temperature
Precooked ham sho uld be rehe:ited to 140
within a few seconds of insertion (although,
they, too, should be inserted in the thickest degrees. Eggs should be cooked until yolk s
area). C heck as completed coolcing time and whites are firm; t::gg Jishes should reach
a temp erature of 160 degrees. Leftovers and ·
nears to avoid overcooking.
Some thermometers are slend er for dete r- combination dishes or casserole s mu st reach'
mining the temperature of thin foods, su ch as an internal temperature of 165 degrees.
Take proper care of food thermometers, ·
hamburgers and po rk c hops . The sensor stem
should be place d through the side of the food Wash them by hand in ho t soapy wa ter. Do
not 1mmerse.
for a correct reading.
For more information on food safety con-"
Single-use thermometers have recently
appeared on the market. They can only be tact the USDA's Meat and Poultry Hotline at
used for specific foods. When the food reach- 1-800-535-4555 or check their website at
es the appropriate temperature, _a sensor will www.fsls.usda .gov/thermy.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Star Grangers have
'dlanksgiving program
SALEM CENTER - Thanksgiving was the theme 'for the
program conducted by Lecturer Vicki Smith at the recent meeting of Star Grange #778 .
The meeting, whic h was conducted by Ray Midkiff, master
pro tern, . includ~d readings "Time Out for Thanks" by Rick
Macomber and "Thanksgiving Pray~r" by Christine Napier.
There was also a history ofThanksgiving and a Turkey Qu iz .
Awards from the State Convention were presented to the following: Opal Dyer, 14 ye ar secretary awards: Janis Macomb er.
certificate for Deaf Report and Program and second place on
wash cloth creation; Janet Morris, secon d place on decorated
can dl e; Ryan Watson, thtrd place on three- rin g binder an d fifth

..

'

'

place o n. school logo.
In th e Juni o r DivisiOn, Stacy Ma'comber re cc1ved first place on
her water color art, second place on her Millennium Memory
Book, fourth place on recycled spool craft, eighth place on
canned candle, sixth plac·e on teacher appreciati on, an d eighth
place on poster. Justin Midkiff received sixth place on Scene-in- ·
a•Box, third place on canned candle, sevenrh place on rec1pe
holder, and foLtrth place on suncatcher. Mallory Nicodemu s
received third pla ce on her tea c her .appreciation gift.
Others receiv ing participotion ribbons for items disployed
were R.ose Barrows, Maxine Dryer, Emily G ibson, and Lll1da:
Mo n.t go·mery.
.Plans for the Thanksgiving- Dinner to be held on Nov. 1M at
6:30p.m . were also ap proved .

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Ewing Chapter, Sons of American
Middleport Liternry Oub, 2 p m..
Wednesday, nr home of ho.~tess. PJJuline Horton · Revolution. di.nm!r 6:.m p.m .. mecring 7:.1,() p.m.
Betsy Parsons lo .review ''Ctl~iUlova Wa.~ a Book
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Thanksgivi ng DiniiC.'t al Vf\\'
Lover" by John M. Hamilton.
Po~t 9053. Tuppers Plnins. Thursday, 6 p.m Memhe~ . wi-.·es, fnti'nds, au11.ilinry members and husbands
RACINE - Wildwood G~den Club. 1 p.m . E~\)'11
anti fnend~ mvitL'Ii Specml ~aker from National ,
Hollon residence .
Heackjunrters
TUPPERS PU\INS - The Eas1cm Alhktic Boosters
RACINE - Pomemy·Rocmt: Lodgt: IM. F&amp;AM .
will meer at the high school. WednL'Sd.1y. 7 Jl.lll.
regu lar meeting. Thu!Way. with clccnon of officers
and work in he EA degree. Refreshments.
THURSnAY
REEDSVILLE - Rivcr.·lew Garden Club. LID
FRinA"t'
p.m . Reedsville Olurch of Olnst Chrismw woO;..
MIDDLEPORT - Food pantry, clodung bank..
shop. Members lo bnng finger food. gi flS for nursing
Abundaflt Grocr. fonnerlv Fa~th OWJeL \0 ~~ II a.m.
home. rec1pes. dues.
MIDDLEPORT -

ROCKSPRINGS - Rocksprings ~Iter Heallh Oub,
I p.m .. ho~ of Harb;.u-d Fry Members are lo bfing
canned guod.~
POMEROY - Preceptor Hela Rt:ra . St Pliui Luther·

an Omrch , l'iJO p m. Thnnk.'igivmg program. Jarw:
BroWn, Shirley ~g~ . Norm01 CustL'l' hoslesses.

THANK YOU TO ALL THOSE WHO
SUPPORTED 1\I!E AND TO THE
ONES THAT TOOK THE TIME TO
~'WRITE IN" MY NAME.

ietJ-de~Z-t

'Cee9-te

Paid for by candidate

,.~i ~.,?·~.?·itit.?.~.?·~.?·ll'iJ)'.~)'·rfit.?·6~,

~

.

HTTEUTIOU PHREUTS: g
.

~

2 Ouerbrook Center is collecting l~tters for Santa to 2 · ·
read on the local teleuision station WJOS channel27 ~·
~ on December 12, 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21 from 7:30- ~·· ·
2 8:00 p.m. If you would like your child's letter read ' .
by Santa on TU please haue all letters to:
e.

Sixth Annual Health I
Fair &amp;Flu Shot Clinic
.,

-~·

S•lor Volunteer
Prtigram (RSVP)

Hoohh RI&lt;OVII'f

Servlctl, Inc.

OU COM Arthrhla
Provr•m (flbttll
Aw11m101l)

1

CALENDAR

stdes.
Several medicines have been used
for nocturnal leg cramps. Quirune has
been around the longest, but it&gt; benefit is modest and the drug ts not free of
side effect&gt;. Calcium channel blockers
m: also occasionally ofbenefit.Talk to
your doctor. He or she "ill search for
a "cause" ofyour leg cramps by checking your nervous system and evaJuatmg your cin::ularion. Unfortunately. in
most cases neither a simple cause nor
an effective remedy is to be found.

line? If I were the store owner, I wou ld
be embarrassed. Maybe I'm not up to
speed on tipping these days. Please
enlighten me. ·- Royal Oak, Mich.
Dear Royal Oak: Tipping salespeople in a retail store? Sounds like a racket
to me. I've never heard of such a thing. I
doubt the boss knows about this tacky
shakedown. Someone ought to report it:
An alco hol problem? How ca n you
help yourself or ·someone you love?
" Alcoholism: How to Recogmu It,,
How to Deal With It, How to Conquer
It" will give you the answe.rS. Send a self-.
addressed, lo.ng, business-size envelope
and a check or money order for SJ .75
(this includes postage and handltng) to :
Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers, PO.. 13ox
11562, Chicago, Ill. 606 11- 0562 (In
Canada, se nd $4.55.) To find our mon:
about Ann Landers and read he r past
columns, v1sit the Crcators Synd icatc
web pagt' at www.cn:arors .com.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

~

~

..~

rt'

"p •'·

dreams.

ly.

Serenity Hoult

J

~:J

a•

produces nighttime muscle cramps.
. Most, however, suggest that the problem is \\;th the nerws controlling the
muscles rather than being a problem
with the muscles themsel=.
Some tesean:h point&gt; to a problem
with the o:ansition from wakefulness
to sleep.'\X!hen we dream about running, our legs don't move, but they
certainly do when we are awake and
running. Many individuals who have
nocturnal leg cramps have them at
the time of dreaming. That's why
some researchers think that these
cramps result from a subde malfunction in the control system that nor.:
mally "disconnect&gt;" our brain from
the body movements we make in our

Question: I've been haVlllg trouble With leg cr:tmps waking me at
night. [ gt:t up and stretch the muscle
until it quits cramping. Sometimes cl1e
cramp is so hard that my muscles are
sore the next day. What could be caus. this'.
mg
Answer: Ev'='ryone can occasionally have leg cr:tmps at night. While
they are not ~nknown in children,
they are most collllllon in the elderly.
Regardles.' of ag.:, an episode of
c~amping is usually annoying because,
as you descnbe, it interrupt&gt; sleep as
well as causes discomfOrt. To explain
this common disorder I need to
remind you of the way muscles normally work.
We usually take the intricate operation of muscles for granted. A muscle
contraction is caused by a complex
interaction of =ral body systemsincluding the brain, spinal cord,
periphernl nerws, the junction of the
individual nerve 'vith the muscle fiber
and die muscle itself.All of these parts,
of course, also require a healthy supply
of nourishing blood to work proper-

••
•

••

IIIIo

to get parts shipped tn from Englan,d,
Germany and France.
People should investigate mamtenance costs before th ey buy a new car.
Reviews of a car's performance based on
road tests do not give the whole picture.
Please tell them, Ann .-- Auto Technician
in Germantown, Md.
'
Dear Technician: You told them -·
and your admonition is based on many
years of professional experience. Thank
you for speaking for auto mechanics
everywhere. I'm su re yo u have their
ete rnal gratim de.
Dear Ann Landers: Maybe I'm out
of touch, but I'd like your opin ion on
somethin g. The other day, my fiance and
I were shoppi ng in a retail store. O n the
counter was a paper cup with a handwritten ri'ott:: sayin g, " We would lpprcciate whatever g ratuity you are able to
gtve."
This was a regular retail establishmt!nt, not ·a piano bar. Isn't rhis out of

. loor • Meigs Multipurpose Center
First F

~c.,,.,

wounou

(Scmnlogo By

Friday, November 17th~
9 a.m. - 11 a.m. &amp;1 p.m. - 3 p.m.
Muot Havo Medicare Carda For Flu Shots
DOOR PRIZES • RADIO REMOTE BY WYVK

The Health Fair Is funded by the Ohio Department of Aging
through Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development
District Area Agency on Aging, the Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. and the Meigs County Health Department

'"::;:!'~~~··
Mtdlcoro)
Or. Mukesh Kumar,
PVll Cllnln \Skin

Canctr Screening)
Ohio Conaumer
Council

2

!

~

Ouerbrook Center
,
333 Page Street
middleport, OH 45-760 .

~
~·
~·

' by 12:00 noon on friday, nou. 17, 2000. If you haue '
~
any questions, please call (740) 992-6472.
~·
..?tEJ~)'·~..,·~~·~.?·~.?·!tt!J)'.!tt!J)'.!tt!J.?.()rnt}' .

�•

pageA4

ion

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesd.y, November 15, 2000

The Daily Sentinel
ca~L

•

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

FavoRif~ HaS

iT.

Dear Ann Landers: Five years ago,
my husband's best fnend since childhood was co nvicted on 12 counts of
child molestation while baby-sitting
three young girls. Since hiS incarcentiori, this man's mother has been calling
my husband regularly, eneol!raging him
to write ,and visit her son. She has told
my husband that if it wcren 't for his support, her son would have killed himself.
Now, once a year, my husband takes
two days off and drives to the middle of
nowhere to visit this man who will
NEVER be welcome in ou r home
a~~i~. I th~nk it's time fo r hi m to stop
VISitmg thiS felon Our ch ildren need
their father at home. What do you say' - Alta Loma, Calif., Wife an d Mother
Dear Alta Lorna : I understand )tOU r
fears, but you rio nor belong in this pi~-·
ture. Stay out of it. It is up to yqur husband to decide w ho he want's ro visit
and how ofte n. Your children can nun age two days a year without then f~ther.

eMQRGe.D gy Md/1!

.,Phio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
Publisher
Ctwtene Hoeflldl
~!Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer .
Advertising Director

wliJ,.-

Diane K1y Hill
Controller

l...dln ~ fiW
wK-. T~ dtoUI .W 1ft. 1/t.u JOB wonls. AU~ .,... rdjed
"' . . . . .,., JUUh ~IVflaltfl im-ltMir ..wras .NJ 16"f'ltoN• 11111W'.-I lfttns rill
H rHMtM Lrtlltn dotdd k U. rooJ MAr, Mllrrullw
Jlllf ~llflliiW•.
TIM ......... u,-wnr~ ill liN &amp;oluu ~-.. - dl. CVAHIUJU" uf d.. OltiD V.U...t P•~
Cct. '6 MiiDriiU ...,., ~11/.eu flflwrwW 1tOiftL

iu--,

••MIIrr:

NATIONAL VIEWS

Rules don't apply when it
comes to technology stocks .
• Chicago Tribune, MJ im'l'Sf&lt;lrs and eco1wmic

this time, I have purchased over $60,000
worth of tools, attended hundreds of
hours o f classes to stay current with
technology, and damaged my body by
bending it in ways Mother Nature never
intended.
Why am I telling.you this? Because I
am tired of auto mechanics being the
bad guys. People don't realize that the
ADVICE
amount they ·pay for auto repairs covers
not o nly my costs, but my boss' overIf you don't want [his man in your head . I pay my own health insurance and
home ever again , so be it. I agree wi th work 60-hour weeks. I do not get paid
that. But there ha s been a strong bond for ho lidays.
l attract customers because I have
between your husband and hi s best
friend since childhood, and your hus- expe rtise in identifying problems and
band needs to make these visits for his fixing them. Don 't be mad at me when
own peace of mind. C hild moleste rs a re your tune- up costs $300 or more. I am
very sic k people. I hop e the lllan is nor the one who made your car so complicated that it takes co mpu ters and flow
rec eiving treatment.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a profes- charts to ch eck th e li'ghts. I am not the
sional auto technician an d have been one who bought a car that requires a $ 14
repairing cars for over 30 yea rs. During spa rk plu g. l am not the on..:- w ho
bought a fancy fo reign m odel that needs

Ann
Landers

amilp
edicine ·

ntfe_~ :

Some investors
have discovered r:o their amazement r:hat the rules of the staid old
bricks-and-mortar economy apply as well to their sizzling technology 'stocks.
They shouldn 'r be surprised. Economics is economics - even
when it's practiced on the Internet. That's what happens when you
get caught up in a frenz y. It's like being in low. No, actually, it's like
being infatuated. Love withstands disappoin tmt:nt ; infatuation docs. n't.
A lor of invesro~ who were infatuated wuh technology stocks
are now waking up with pounding heads, looking across the room,
and wondering, "What was I thinlcing?"
What they were thinkmg is this: So w hat ifYahoo' Inc. was trading last Decembe r at 500 ttmes projected profits for this yea r' Why
would anyone think that unreasonable? What do you mean C isco
Systems' stock p rice can't grow at I 5 percent a year forever? Who
says Dell Computer Corp.'s revenues can't continue to rise 50 percent a year like they did between 1996 and 1998'
Good questions all- and they have ·now been answered. A slowing economy and rising interesr rate'i - pesky old economy speed
bumps - slow down everything, espt.:cial!y unrealistic expectations.
And when expectations have become m unrealistic that they defy
gravity and the rules of nature, they don't ju't llo•t back to earth.
They burst like a bubble....
• The Post and Courier, Charleston, S.C.,''" the Middle East
pea&lt;e talks: The Middle Ea.t peace process could be saved by one
man and one courageo us act . The man is Palestinian h::ader Yasscr
Arafat, and the act ofbravery that he cou ld perform would be to call
a rime-our on violence and pledge a return to th e negotiating tablc.
Unfortunately, it appears Ara(1t has no interest m stoppi ng the
bloodshed....
It is encouraging that lsrJel's pe&lt;~ee nego tiator, Gilead Sher, places
hope in a "package di:!al to sulw tht:: confl ict" outlined by President
Bill Clinton. Only Arafat hold' the key that co uld end the conflin
rhar is raging m rhe West 13ank and even in I ~rad itself Israeli Primt•
Minister Ehud Barak ha'i performed hi~ act of bravery. H e went
against the majority opinion of his own coalition to otTer Araf:1t
concessions on J erusalem, as well as lsrtu::'li tT-oop withdrawals th::tt
would allow the creation of a coherent Palestini an state ....
The future will be dec ided by Arafat's words and actions.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

1

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATE D PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 1·5, the 321lth d ay of 20illl.There are 4(,
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 15, 1777, the Con tinental Congress approved the Articles of Confederation, a precursor to the Constitutio n of the United States.
· On th is date:
In IR06, explorer Zebu lon Pike sighted the m ountai ntop_now
known a~ Pikes Peak.
In 1889, Brazil's monarchy was overt hrown.
In 1926, the National Broadcasting Co. debuted wi th a rndto network of 24 stations.
In 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt laid the cornerstone of the
Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C.
In 1940, 75,000 men were called to armed forces duty under
peacetime conscrlpnon.
h;t 1966, the flight of Gemini 12 ended successfully as astro nauts
James Lovell and Edwin "!3uzz" Aldrin, Jr. splashed down safely in
the Atlantic.
In 1969, 250,000 protesters staged a peaceful demonstration in
Washington against tht: Vietnam War:
In 1982, funeral servtces were held in Moscow 's Red Square for
the late Soviet President Leonid 13rezhnev.
In 1985, Britain and Irela nd signed an accord giving Dublin an'
official consu ltative role in governing Northern Ireland.
In 1998, Kwame Ture, the civi l rights activist formerly known as'
Stokely Carmichael, died in Guinea at age 57.
Ten years ago: The Senat e Ethics Committee began hearings o n
the "Keating Five," senators accused of going too far in helping
failed savings-and-loan owner Charles Keating, Jr. The space ' huttle
Atlantis was launched on a secret military mission. Milli Vanilli's pro, ducer confirmed rumors the duo had not done any of the singing
on their debut album, "Girl You Know It's True."
Five years ago: A partial government shutdown stretched into a
second day. The space shuttle Atlantis docked with the orbtting
Russian space station Mir.
One yea r ago: The C li nton admini~tration claimed victory in a
~even-year struggle to pcrsuadt! Congr·e,~ to pc~y nearly$ I billion in
back dues to the Umted N,ltlun-.. Chlllt''&gt;C JfH.I U.S. nt·gotiators
reached a breakthrough agre-c.·ment to reniovc: trade barritT,, &lt;.: learing the biggest h~trdlt' to China\ entry mtn the World T1aJ:· Org.tnization.
Today's Birthdays: Judgl' Jmcph Wapn er 1'&gt; H1. Formt·r \X.' hitt·
Hbuse C hi ef of Staff H oward B.tker Jr. " 7S. Actor Ed A'ncr is 71.
Actor Whttman Mayo 1S 70. ~in~cr 1-'etula Clark J&lt; 6H.

of Family Medicine

Cause and
treatment qf leg
cramps qften elusive

RUSHER'S VIEW

Legal system may ultimately decide this election
As the days unfold, the strategies of the two
parti es in the Florida election brouhaha are
slowly becoming clear.
The Republi ca ns rake rhe positi on that the
t'
.
first state\vide 'vote Count showed Go\'nnor
!3mh narrowly but clearly ahead, and that the
. .. . .
., ". ,:;
' ..mhscqucnr recount confirmed thi..;. All that
rcmo~ins, th~..:y insist, is w t"Ount and :tdd w the
toto~Js those owrseas abst:nt.:e ballob postI
m arked on o r before Election Day and
received by Friday, N ovember 17th. Whoever
NEA COLUMNIST
is then ahead will have won Florid;1 and its·25
elec toral votes and, w ith them , the prt·~id ~ncy
of the Umted States.
overseas absentee ba ll ots is considered.
The Democrats. profc ssm~ to lx· disturb ed
To thi s, the R epublicans respond th at
J.t the :~llebredly brge number of votl'rs w ho
h uman bt.:in~ are more fe~llib l c:. aml &lt;.:ertainly
were misled by tht: ballot's d e~ ign into casting
far more prt'ju diced. thJn machines, which ts
rhetr vott'S for Uu chan,m ratht·r than Gort::, art::
why the u niform trend in elections has been
refu sing w accept rht~ results of tht or iginal
to count the returns by machine. The Democcount and the: rt·&lt;.:ount. both of which were
rats are simply trying to massage th e ballots in
conducted by' machi ne. · Instead. th ev have
selected co unti es until ·they get a s:~t isfactory
prompted the loc.1l electi on offintlh in four
result.
heavily Derno&lt;.:ratic counties (whp ;1re, of
But how ran the Republicans prevent thts?
co urse, p n:domi t1antly lJenm&lt;.:rats the1m~.: lvcs)
T lu::y have ~ought an injunction against rh e
to order a third, manua l count of all the votes
m anual co unt in the l~deral district court,
in those counties. Nu un it(,nn rl1l es govern .
argu ing rhat ..;uch a coun t vio lates the feckral
these officials Ill determini ng w hi ch votes tu
constitution . If rhat e~rgumcnt f:1ih (:md rh L'
&lt;.:()unt, or for \vh ich.candHbte-:. T hey ,tre simj udge w ho \vil\ d ec ide the cast:: is a Clinton
ply to inspeCt e:ach ballot. note rh t' condition
appoinr ee), the ckci~i on ca n bc &lt;lppt·all'd to
of the holc~ pun ched (o r nnt p unr ht·d. or parthe U.S. Court of Appeal' t(&gt;r the II th .C: trcuit
tiall y punth..;d) t(Jr the c,\lltilcLne;.,, ,111d .trrive
m Atlanta , &lt;llld thl'JKt' to the:: Suprt'nH: Court
:a a subj ectm.: Jlldgmcnt .1~ to whn 111 the voter
o( the United St.ltl'\.
was trying to vote for. Civt.'ll tht· ci rcumAUemativdy, tht.· l ~t:pubhcam 1night .tgn:c
stan&lt;.:e'&gt;. th e puliric\ of rlw othci.ds ,md the
to a man ual recount
the.· vote ~ cast m th e
hu'ge lJcm ocratic major iti ~·~ in the counties in
entire state of \'":lor ida. ThJt wou ld run
4m:stion, the outcome \\.'ill inevitably bt:: an
cou nter to th eir stated and pc::r ~ua s ive objl:cincreased margin for Mr.. Gore. suffi~ i ent to
tions. to \1 m an ual re count anyw h ere. but
put him ahea d of Mr. l3ush sta tewide , even
would at least enable them tu countc.:r hiasecl
(they hope), afte r any Bush margin in the

•'' .,t·, ,..."

:

·~';

~~

William
Rusher

or

m anual reco unts in Democratic cou nties with , · 1
eq ual ly biased ones in Republican counties.
All in all, it seems hard to escape th e ·con- · :'
elusion that this mess will ~ventua lly end up
being decided by a court som ewhere, no matter how mu ch everybody p rote~~es ro disl ike
th at iUea. If ::.o, um· G ill only hope the court in .1
y uc.'stion won't bt:: t he Supn:rnc Court of ~ .
,_
Flor ida, which is heavily dommated by impassioned liberal Democrats. (They recently. ,: :
barred fi·o m the baHot an initiative banning · _._,
affi~m:I ti ve actio n in state cducltion, contracts
anJ ~mploymcn t, which ,pu lb , h uw~..:d \vas . ''
"
strongly favor~d by the voters.)
',
_ll ov. 'cve r it all turn s out. one wonders
"
whether rhe presidency rhw. won will be
much of .1 como larion to th e "wj nn t'r." If 1t is "·
Mr. C..~ on:. ht· will have tq confro nr :1 Rcpub- · ·'
licm-Jomi natcd Congress \Vithour luving "
thl.:' slightest mandate worthy of the u;une. If it "
ts Gove rn or ~ush, hC' may have a better rdatiom hi_p \virh .th t&gt; Cn ngress. but wtll, like Mr.
Gore. h:lVc to battle wide~pread doubts as to
tht· lcgitimKy of h is daim on the otlln:. And
elrhc.·r m an w ill knu\\ that hi' d eft.:atcd opponcnt is oul then'. thtrsting fOr ~~ n.'Jll.ttc h in
211114.
o~- co ur~c. Mr. Gore might h.IVC \C::J' iOU'i
COlll)JCtiuon fm111 ,1 b.d y rcccntiY l'kcted to
the ScnJtt.:.

rrVillicmr RrHI1er is a Vistii(~Hisllc' rl l·'dlow cif
rl~e Claremont lltsritwe for rl1e StHdy of States-

''Ja"sltip arul i'olitiral i'l1ilosoi•h.y )

"

•

'·

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Career (trophy wift' has to be someone special
You see these old guys with the young exmodel wives. You know the ones I mean. He's
a shrivdcd up billi onai re, ond she's gorgeous
and the same age as his soc ks. She's called a
"trophy wife." A little something to have on
your arm to let the other guys know that you·
have more to offer at 90 than they do at 27.
You may have more to offer but not for nearly as long.
So OK, I can understand the trophy concept from the old guy's point of view; I j ust
don't see the appeal for the woman. Now if
it's love, that 's fine . Logic and love rarely imasect. But if it's ~omcth in g d'ie, th en it "eems to
me that this old codger is a ''trophy hu sband"
for her. Some trophy. I've got bowling award~
that look better than m ost uf these guys.
I'm thinkmg that these wo man arc more
attracted to the safety and sec urity of a rich
g randfather type than they are to the good
looks and virility of a m an their own age. And
I guess wht::n ht:: passes on in a year or two, she
just finds another one like him. TIH:rt: an: a lot
of rich old guy~ who find young wom en
attractive.
But it takes sonwone special to be.: ,1 c.m:cr
" trophy wife" You tlt't'd tht• pcr\orl:tlny uf .1
nur'&gt;e and ,1 hunth of'blark ~lre\'il'~.
Where credit is due
'They have sophisticated com putt'\~ 111 car~
thc'e days. Things li ke the C I'S that tells you

exactly how to get to where you're going, for
anyone who dot::sn 't l~ave a wife. Or the cen tral monitoring unit that tells you if there's a
door open o r :t sfatbe'lt undone or your
engine just fell o ut. I'm thinking they could
easily devise a computer that kep t track of
how fast you're going compared to the speed
limit.
For example, if you're driving to work and
the speed li mit is 60, but you're only gotng 30
because th e traffic is so bad, that wou ld be
registered in the computer. Let's say you dtd
. that for 15 minutes. The computer wo uld
show th at as a credit on the· dashboard scrt::c.:n.
That means that as soo n as you hit an open
stretch of road, you'd be allowed to use that
credit without getting a speeding tickt:t. You
could go 90 fur 15 min utes or 120 for seven
and a half minutes or ISO for three and three
quarters minmes or the speed of light for a
nanosecond. As soo n ::~s you( credit was l!Sec;l
up, you would resu m e the speed limit._
I know thi, would nt'Vt' r work, but it's nice
to dream about.
Ways to get even
• When you know your reen-agt' son i~
gmn~ to uw \'uur t.tr, e111pty the p;.h t.mk :md
fill rhc b.1ck \C,ll wah Lt~t tood p.\ cL1ges.
• When you'n• ·imb your ~c co nd hour of \It
ting in tht..· Joctor's office, sing "Tired ofWaiting" by th&lt; Kinks at the top of your lunb~·

..

• When your bos~ criticizes you in fi·o nt of
yo ur fell ow ·wo rke rs, yd l back that you know
what he's up to, but you don't find him even
remotely attrac tive.
• Buy three sets of golf clubs and keep them
together so they can see that you don 't ~&lt;ed
to keep using ones that misbehave.
··1
• Wh il e -the cop is writing out your ticker, !
do an unflattering sketch of hi m and hand it
to him when he's done.
Teach by bad example
...
We have all these biograp hies in print and
on telev ision that highlight the lives of vt:: ry •
successful fatuous people. Over rime. thi s con- •
•
stant exposure to people w ho have exce lled
"
•
makes us feel like total losers.
'·-.:;
I say we Start featuring the stories of abject ~
fai lures. Th e Esperanto teacht:r or the Yugo · ~
salesma n o r that guy up th e street with the
;
emu . It's time to feel good about o'urselves ~ !
•
again.
• •
Quote of the Day: "Body parts are like
mt•mbers of a large.: fim1ily. They &lt;;tart o ut as a
team. but they get o lder they e.. ch do what- ·~

:,.

••

..

....

as

ever rhc heck they want."- R ed Green
(l~cd Gree11 is thl' $lil r (If "'l1u· u~~d Cn·fn
SI1! 1HI," 11 1dl'1 1t .ii1 lll scric.&gt; sc('l; iu tlif ( '.S t1~1 PDS
111/d ill Ctmadll Ul/ thl' cnc f,}C{I/Wk, ([11(1 the
aralu:-&gt; r (!f"T!Jr Re(l Cre(/11 Book " aiUI "lt1:d Grecf/
'Talks Cars: 11 Lwe Story.")

.

Page AS:
'

Nov. 15,

2000-·~

Reader does not want husband to visit child molester best friend

\J$U3LLYa GIA3~

'EsttiSilsMI 01.948

the Bend

rlw LJ,lily Sl'ntind

-t

In a normal contraction only some
of the individual nluscle fibers are
called upon to contract. Simultaneously with the contraction of muscles
on one side of the joint, the muscles
on the opposite side are Signaled to
relax. This produces the expected
smooth coordifutcd movement. A
more fun:eful effort, such as lifung a
heavy weight, is accomplished by
recruiting a greater number of muscle ·
fibers to contract
In a muscle cramp the number of
muscle fibers cl1at contract is large, as if
you 'vere picking up a heavy load,
and the opposing muscles ofi:en don't
relax. This abnormal and forceful contraction causes the typical muscle
cnmp pain. If it's sutliciendy strong,
the cramp can cause injury r.hat nukes
the ·muscle sore for several da)'·
Research done to dat~ hasn't identified pn:c~dy which step in the
complex lnreracrion of body systems

. Most scientists who have investigated this question, however, believe
that the problem is not a disorder
within the brain. These researchers
cite evidence that the problem is in
the nerves after they leave the spinal
cord but before they reach d1e muscles. For instance, the data show that
people with conditions such as diabetes that aJfect the nerves outside the
brain and spinal cord (doctors call
them peripheral nerves) have an
increased frequency of leg cnmps.
Similarly. those with circulation problems that prevent these peripheral
nerves from getting proper nourishment are more likely oo have nocturnal cramps.
The best way to stop a leg cramp is
to stretch the sore muscle just as you
ha"" done.When this happens to me,
I jump out of bed and do a less than
graceful pirouette until the cramp sub-

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT.
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

POMEROY - Millions of peo ple get sick
each year from bacteria found in food. Studies indicate that there are more than five
times the number of illness-ca using 'bacteria
in food as opposed to sixty years ago.
These illnesses, which have flu-like symp-·
toms, can occur from 20 minutes to six
weeks after ingesting foods with the bacteria.
People who are young, old, pregnant or have
chronic illnesses are ·esp-e cially susceptible.
To help prevent foodborne illnesses, use
. food thermometers. Th ey will msure that
foods have been cooked to the proper temperatures that destroy harmful bacte ria . The
old method of che cking the color of food to
determine " doneness" is no longer safe. Some
foods may be brown inside , but have not
reach ed the correct inter nal temperature.
Others may reach the correct temperature,
but still be pink.·A thetmometer is the only
safe way to be sure th at the food JS properly
cooked.
To encourage the use of fo od thermometers in promoting food safety, the United
States Depattment of Agriculture has developed a new slogan and logo. "Thermy the
ThermomC::ter" says, "It's safe to bite when

"Famil}' i\-laiid~IC" is a Wt't:kl)' colww, ,70 suftmit
q111.~&gt;tian.J, ttntc to }~m C. 11-Uif, D 0., Oltio Uni~
~'lnity C(llh]r?f· q{ Otcopatlric I'.-lt~fia't1c, Cm~t.uwr
Httlf,Ad~t7b~ OllkJ 4570 1. Fbst coll mm.s mt' (JUI/1·

alltt··ou/inc at !VLHI!flmuiio.olr~li tr.

the temperature is righ t!"
cause a color ch ange on the thermometer. If
To help Thermy fight bacte rio that causes the food has not yet rt•ac ht:d th ~ prop er tem foodborne illness, several types of ther- perature, the thermometer can be r('inserteJ
m omete rs are avai lable to detect inter nal until a safe temperature IS indKated. T he
temperatures of food. These th ermo meters rhern'lomcter can not bt; use-d again .
may b.e digital, dial, di sposable, instant-read,
To avoid foodborne illnesS. internal temprobes, pop- ups or forks. Read the instruc- peratures should be 180 degrees Fahrenheit
tions to determine the type of thermometer for thighs, wings, legs or whole chickens,
be st suited for the food being prepared, as turkeys, dncks and geese. Poultry breasts and
well as how it should be properly used.
roasts need to b_e 170 degrees. Ground meat
Some thermometers are made to stay in should be 160 degrees for beef, pork. lamb
the food throughout the coolcing process. and veal and 165 degreel fo r turkey and
These should be placed in the meatiest part
chicke n . Fresh beef, lamb and vea l shou ld be
of the food, away from bone, gristle and fat.
145 degrees for medium rare, 160 degrees for
In a turkey or chicke n, thlS would be in the
m edium and 170 degrees for we ll done.
thickest part of the thigh.
Fresh ham or po rk needs tO be 160 degrees
Other instruinents do not stay in the food .
for medium and 170 degrees for well done.
They can register. the internal temperature
Precooked ham sho uld be rehe:ited to 140
within a few seconds of insertion (although,
they, too, should be inserted in the thickest degrees. Eggs should be cooked until yolk s
area). C heck as completed coolcing time and whites are firm; t::gg Jishes should reach
a temp erature of 160 degrees. Leftovers and ·
nears to avoid overcooking.
Some thermometers are slend er for dete r- combination dishes or casserole s mu st reach'
mining the temperature of thin foods, su ch as an internal temperature of 165 degrees.
Take proper care of food thermometers, ·
hamburgers and po rk c hops . The sensor stem
should be place d through the side of the food Wash them by hand in ho t soapy wa ter. Do
not 1mmerse.
for a correct reading.
For more information on food safety con-"
Single-use thermometers have recently
appeared on the market. They can only be tact the USDA's Meat and Poultry Hotline at
used for specific foods. When the food reach- 1-800-535-4555 or check their website at
es the appropriate temperature, _a sensor will www.fsls.usda .gov/thermy.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Star Grangers have
'dlanksgiving program
SALEM CENTER - Thanksgiving was the theme 'for the
program conducted by Lecturer Vicki Smith at the recent meeting of Star Grange #778 .
The meeting, whic h was conducted by Ray Midkiff, master
pro tern, . includ~d readings "Time Out for Thanks" by Rick
Macomber and "Thanksgiving Pray~r" by Christine Napier.
There was also a history ofThanksgiving and a Turkey Qu iz .
Awards from the State Convention were presented to the following: Opal Dyer, 14 ye ar secretary awards: Janis Macomb er.
certificate for Deaf Report and Program and second place on
wash cloth creation; Janet Morris, secon d place on decorated
can dl e; Ryan Watson, thtrd place on three- rin g binder an d fifth

..

'

'

place o n. school logo.
In th e Juni o r DivisiOn, Stacy Ma'comber re cc1ved first place on
her water color art, second place on her Millennium Memory
Book, fourth place on recycled spool craft, eighth place on
canned candle, sixth plac·e on teacher appreciati on, an d eighth
place on poster. Justin Midkiff received sixth place on Scene-in- ·
a•Box, third place on canned candle, sevenrh place on rec1pe
holder, and foLtrth place on suncatcher. Mallory Nicodemu s
received third pla ce on her tea c her .appreciation gift.
Others receiv ing participotion ribbons for items disployed
were R.ose Barrows, Maxine Dryer, Emily G ibson, and Lll1da:
Mo n.t go·mery.
.Plans for the Thanksgiving- Dinner to be held on Nov. 1M at
6:30p.m . were also ap proved .

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Ewing Chapter, Sons of American
Middleport Liternry Oub, 2 p m..
Wednesday, nr home of ho.~tess. PJJuline Horton · Revolution. di.nm!r 6:.m p.m .. mecring 7:.1,() p.m.
Betsy Parsons lo .review ''Ctl~iUlova Wa.~ a Book
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Thanksgivi ng DiniiC.'t al Vf\\'
Lover" by John M. Hamilton.
Po~t 9053. Tuppers Plnins. Thursday, 6 p.m Memhe~ . wi-.·es, fnti'nds, au11.ilinry members and husbands
RACINE - Wildwood G~den Club. 1 p.m . E~\)'11
anti fnend~ mvitL'Ii Specml ~aker from National ,
Hollon residence .
Heackjunrters
TUPPERS PU\INS - The Eas1cm Alhktic Boosters
RACINE - Pomemy·Rocmt: Lodgt: IM. F&amp;AM .
will meer at the high school. WednL'Sd.1y. 7 Jl.lll.
regu lar meeting. Thu!Way. with clccnon of officers
and work in he EA degree. Refreshments.
THURSnAY
REEDSVILLE - Rivcr.·lew Garden Club. LID
FRinA"t'
p.m . Reedsville Olurch of Olnst Chrismw woO;..
MIDDLEPORT - Food pantry, clodung bank..
shop. Members lo bnng finger food. gi flS for nursing
Abundaflt Grocr. fonnerlv Fa~th OWJeL \0 ~~ II a.m.
home. rec1pes. dues.
MIDDLEPORT -

ROCKSPRINGS - Rocksprings ~Iter Heallh Oub,
I p.m .. ho~ of Harb;.u-d Fry Members are lo bfing
canned guod.~
POMEROY - Preceptor Hela Rt:ra . St Pliui Luther·

an Omrch , l'iJO p m. Thnnk.'igivmg program. Jarw:
BroWn, Shirley ~g~ . Norm01 CustL'l' hoslesses.

THANK YOU TO ALL THOSE WHO
SUPPORTED 1\I!E AND TO THE
ONES THAT TOOK THE TIME TO
~'WRITE IN" MY NAME.

ietJ-de~Z-t

'Cee9-te

Paid for by candidate

,.~i ~.,?·~.?·itit.?.~.?·~.?·ll'iJ)'.~)'·rfit.?·6~,

~

.

HTTEUTIOU PHREUTS: g
.

~

2 Ouerbrook Center is collecting l~tters for Santa to 2 · ·
read on the local teleuision station WJOS channel27 ~·
~ on December 12, 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21 from 7:30- ~·· ·
2 8:00 p.m. If you would like your child's letter read ' .
by Santa on TU please haue all letters to:
e.

Sixth Annual Health I
Fair &amp;Flu Shot Clinic
.,

-~·

S•lor Volunteer
Prtigram (RSVP)

Hoohh RI&lt;OVII'f

Servlctl, Inc.

OU COM Arthrhla
Provr•m (flbttll
Aw11m101l)

1

CALENDAR

stdes.
Several medicines have been used
for nocturnal leg cramps. Quirune has
been around the longest, but it&gt; benefit is modest and the drug ts not free of
side effect&gt;. Calcium channel blockers
m: also occasionally ofbenefit.Talk to
your doctor. He or she "ill search for
a "cause" ofyour leg cramps by checking your nervous system and evaJuatmg your cin::ularion. Unfortunately. in
most cases neither a simple cause nor
an effective remedy is to be found.

line? If I were the store owner, I wou ld
be embarrassed. Maybe I'm not up to
speed on tipping these days. Please
enlighten me. ·- Royal Oak, Mich.
Dear Royal Oak: Tipping salespeople in a retail store? Sounds like a racket
to me. I've never heard of such a thing. I
doubt the boss knows about this tacky
shakedown. Someone ought to report it:
An alco hol problem? How ca n you
help yourself or ·someone you love?
" Alcoholism: How to Recogmu It,,
How to Deal With It, How to Conquer
It" will give you the answe.rS. Send a self-.
addressed, lo.ng, business-size envelope
and a check or money order for SJ .75
(this includes postage and handltng) to :
Alcohol , c/o Ann Landers, PO.. 13ox
11562, Chicago, Ill. 606 11- 0562 (In
Canada, se nd $4.55.) To find our mon:
about Ann Landers and read he r past
columns, v1sit the Crcators Synd icatc
web pagt' at www.cn:arors .com.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

~

~

..~

rt'

"p •'·

dreams.

ly.

Serenity Hoult

J

~:J

a•

produces nighttime muscle cramps.
. Most, however, suggest that the problem is \\;th the nerws controlling the
muscles rather than being a problem
with the muscles themsel=.
Some tesean:h point&gt; to a problem
with the o:ansition from wakefulness
to sleep.'\X!hen we dream about running, our legs don't move, but they
certainly do when we are awake and
running. Many individuals who have
nocturnal leg cramps have them at
the time of dreaming. That's why
some researchers think that these
cramps result from a subde malfunction in the control system that nor.:
mally "disconnect&gt;" our brain from
the body movements we make in our

Question: I've been haVlllg trouble With leg cr:tmps waking me at
night. [ gt:t up and stretch the muscle
until it quits cramping. Sometimes cl1e
cramp is so hard that my muscles are
sore the next day. What could be caus. this'.
mg
Answer: Ev'='ryone can occasionally have leg cr:tmps at night. While
they are not ~nknown in children,
they are most collllllon in the elderly.
Regardles.' of ag.:, an episode of
c~amping is usually annoying because,
as you descnbe, it interrupt&gt; sleep as
well as causes discomfOrt. To explain
this common disorder I need to
remind you of the way muscles normally work.
We usually take the intricate operation of muscles for granted. A muscle
contraction is caused by a complex
interaction of =ral body systemsincluding the brain, spinal cord,
periphernl nerws, the junction of the
individual nerve 'vith the muscle fiber
and die muscle itself.All of these parts,
of course, also require a healthy supply
of nourishing blood to work proper-

••
•

••

IIIIo

to get parts shipped tn from Englan,d,
Germany and France.
People should investigate mamtenance costs before th ey buy a new car.
Reviews of a car's performance based on
road tests do not give the whole picture.
Please tell them, Ann .-- Auto Technician
in Germantown, Md.
'
Dear Technician: You told them -·
and your admonition is based on many
years of professional experience. Thank
you for speaking for auto mechanics
everywhere. I'm su re yo u have their
ete rnal gratim de.
Dear Ann Landers: Maybe I'm out
of touch, but I'd like your opin ion on
somethin g. The other day, my fiance and
I were shoppi ng in a retail store. O n the
counter was a paper cup with a handwritten ri'ott:: sayin g, " We would lpprcciate whatever g ratuity you are able to
gtve."
This was a regular retail establishmt!nt, not ·a piano bar. Isn't rhis out of

. loor • Meigs Multipurpose Center
First F

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District Area Agency on Aging, the Meigs County Council on
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Mtdlcoro)
Or. Mukesh Kumar,
PVll Cllnln \Skin

Canctr Screening)
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�'
•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Wannest on
record
WASHINGTON (AP)
The 10-month average temperature of 58.1 degrees fot January through October was the
warmest for that period since
records started being kept in
1895, government scientiSts ~ay.
All states in the contiguous
United Stares but Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts. North
Carolina, South Carolma and

Georgia were warmer than normal for that period, according
to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheri c Administration's
National Climatic Data Center
in Asheville, N.C.
Most of the country west of
the Mississippi River experienced temperatures much higher than normal.
Also during that 10-month
period, states in the South and
Southeast were much drier than
nornul. But it was wetter than
normal in the NortheaSt and in
much ·of central United States.
Overall, the I 0-month period
was the 24th driest since 1895.
The center archives weather
data ·obtained by the National
Weather Service, military services, Federal Aviation Administration and the Coast Guard.

Sentenced issued
in attack
NEW YORK (AP)- A man
conv1cted of defacmg a controvemal painting of the Virgin
Mary has been fined $250 and
given a chance to clear his
rec.ord.
Dennis Heiner, 73, was arreste:d last December after smearing
white paint on " The Holy Virgin Mary" ·a t the Brooklyn
Museum of Art. The work, part
of the British "Se nsation"
exhibit, incensed many people
because it was decorated with
elephant dung and pornographic cutouts.
Heiner was told by the judge
at Tuesday's sentencing that if he
stays out of trouble for · six
months, his record will be
wiped clean. ·
A jury convicted Heiner last
morith of criminal mischief,
w~ich carries penalties of up to
a year in jail and a $1 ,000 fine .
Prosecutors alleged Heiner
was trying to destroy the painting. The defense argued Heiner
was exercising free speec h,
protesting what he considered a

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

latest execution
POTOSI, Mo. (AP) -A man
who was convicted and sentenced to dearh three times for
a fatal shooting during a bar
fight died by mjection early
Wednesday.
James Chambers, 48, was convicted of killing Jerry Oestricker, 33, outside a suburban St.
Louis tavern on May 29, 1982.
The incident was .p rovoked
after Oestricker bumped into
Chambers' friend.
Chambers' first two trials
were reversed once on a
technicaliry, once because of
ineffective counsel. A federal
appeals court in September
denied the appeal of his third
convictjon.
His wife, Darlene, cried loudly and pounded on the window
of the observation area at PotoSl
Correctional Center as
Chambers took his last breath.
In an adjacent room, a relative
of the victim yelled, "Now you
know how it feels."
Chambers' last words were a
four-paragraph written sratenlent that said in part, "I want
to thank God for the life that he
gave me." He also asked for forgiveness from the victim's family.
Court testimony indicated
Chambers intentionally provoked the argument to lure
Oestricker outsicle. then struck
him in the head with the gun
and shot him as he came out.
Chambers
gave
another
account, claiming that once
outside, Oesrricker struck first,
jabbing a pm of needle-nose
pliers into Chambers' arm, then
hitting Chambers in the face .
Gov. Roger Wilson, who
. leaves office Jan. 8, faced his first
death penalry decision since
becoming governor following
the death of Gov. Mel Carnahan
in a plane crash Oct. 16.

Study targets
bike injuries

Partidpatio~

in school breakfast program doubles ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -About 6.4 million poor schoolchildren are getting free or
reduced-pnce breakfasts, nearly double the
number a decade ago, bur millions of other
needy kids aren't receiving the meals because
roo few schools offer them, an advocacy
group says.
About 42 percent of low-income children
who participate in the federal school lunch
program also got the government-subsidized
breakfasts during the 1999-2000 school year,
acc~rding to a report released Wednesday by
the Food Research and Action Center.
West Virginia has the highest participation

in the breakfast progrant, with 56 percent of
kids getting free or reduced-priced lunches
also receiving the breakfasts, the report said.
If children in other states participated in
the breakfast program as much as they do in
West Virginia, an additional 2 million kids
would be getting the meals, at a cost to taXpayers of $321 million, the report said.
In 1990, about 3.4 million participated in
the breakfast program.
"Children eating school breakfasts come to
school on time, are less likely to be absent,
learn more and behave better," said Jim Weill,
president of the Food Research and Action

Center. "States and schools that lag in break•
fast are rying one hand behind their teachers
backs."
Wisconsin has the lowest level of participation in the breakfast program at 22 percent of
children in the lunch program, the report
found.
The report was funded by a variery of
foundations and food companies,
Schools are often reluctant to offer breakfast because there is a stigma attached to children who participate, said Marilyn Hurt, president of the American School Food Service
Associatio!l.

Miqdle East talks quiet despite Clinton efforts.
WASHINGTON (AP) The Clinton going to try to see what we can do this week,"
administration implored all Middle East lead- he said Tuesday aboard Air Force .One as he
ers Tuesday .not to undermine an agreed truce flew to 'Brunei for a Pacific Rim economic .
between Israel and the Palestinians that has sununit. He did not explain: "That's all I can
say. I'll do my best."
faiied to take hold.
"We expect all sides to avoid actions and
Clinton rnet in the White House last week
words that can escalate or contribute ro the with Palestinian leader Vasser .Arafat and Israeli
cycle of confrontation and violence," Philip , Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Dennis Ross, the
Reeker, a State Department spokesman, said.
State Department's Middle East specialist, left
President Clinton had that confrontation in for Israel Tuesday with Hill~ry Rodham Clinmind as he told The Associated Press that this ton ro attend the funeral of Leah Rabin,
week should make clear "whether there is widow of Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli prime
· going to be any kind of effort to change minister who signed the first peace agreement
course" in the. Middle East.
with Arafat. A U.S. official said Monday that
" I think there's a way to do it, and I'm Reiss might have meetings about the Palestin-

Man missing after
scaffold collapse
DETROIT (AP) Rescue
workers searched to no avail for a
man who plunged into the ch illy
Detroit River when a scaffold on
a bridge between the United
Stares and Canada collapsed in
gusry wind.
'
Three of the 10 workers on
the scaffold Tuesday were thrown
into the icy water. Two of them
were rescued by the U.S. Coast
Guard but a third was missing.
Windsor police planned to
"'edn
resume thel·r "earch
,
w'
esd ay
for Jamie Barker, 27, a father of
·
five from Windsor, Ontario.
"They will pull the (scaffo ld)
wreckage because they believe
the missing man is in the wreckage," U.S. Coast Guard Petty
Officer Tim Bogeman said. "If
they don't find him there, then

they will send divers down."
The mery, who work for the
Ambassador Bridge · Corp., had
been pamtmg the . privately
owned bridge when the scaffold
collapsed. Temperatures were in
the upper 30s, and winds were
gusting to 22 mph.
"That high wind must have
been some factor," Windsor Fire
Chief Dave Fields said.
Seven workers were left dangling from safery harnesses about
. 100 feet above the water, police
said. Three of them managed to
climb back to the bridge. The
others were hoisted to safery by
fire crews after about an hour:
"The rappel teams dropped
rope to them and just hoisted
them up, one at time," Fields said.

CHICAGO (AP) Children suffered an estimated 2.1
million bicycle~e1ated injuries
in the United States between
1992 and 1997, with boys much
more likely than girls to get
hurt, a study released Tuesday
·
found.
About 1,500 deaths occurred
during
the six-year period.
slur agamst a sacred symbol.
Boys ages 5 through 14 were
the most conunon victims) with
an estimated 224,200 cycling
injuries each year, compared
with about 93,000 for girls the
DETROIT (AP) Ford customers have rejected FireLOS ANGELES (AP) - A same age.
Motor
Co.
said
Tuesday
that stone tires on Explorers, asking
company that distributes some
The findings by Drs. Elizaof the hottest-selling scooters beth Powell and Robert Tanz of
consumers ordering 200 1 Fold that Firestone Wilderness AT
has won a restraining order Children's Memorial Hospital
Explorers
may
substitute tires be swapped out with other
against nval companies rhat are
Goodyear
tires
for
Firestone
in Chicago were published in
brands before making the puraccused of a patent violation.
brands questioned in a recall the
the November issue of Archives
chase.
A federal judge issued the
automaker has blamed for
of Pediatrics &amp; Adolescent
temporary restraming order
DiPietro said Tuesday's move
declining sales of the sport uriliMedicine.
Tuesday against 12 companies
sig11als a formal program to let
ry vehicle.
The researchers analyzed
that make or sell aluminum
Ford spokeswoman Della people who order new Explorscooters similar to ones distrib- national data, including a survey
DiPietro said ·she could nor ers have them already delivered
of 600 emergency rooms.
uted by Razor USA.
·specify
whether the move was with other tlres.
The figures were weighted to
The judge issued the order at
directly related to the recall of
Bridgestone/Firestone
the. request of Razor, which . produce a national estimate of
6.5 million Firestone tires under
spokeswoman Susan Sizemore
sued 16 makers and distributors about 2.1 million total inJuries
federal scrutiny iQ 119 deaths
sa1d the move's impact' on
of rival scooters, dannmg the among children ages 1 through
over reports of sudden tread sepcompanies violated a recently 14.
13ridgestone/Firestone business
aration, mostly on Explorers .
issued patent on a key design
Boys in every age group were
"It's definitely a matter of "remains to be seen."
component. Razor also said much more prone to injury,
giving consumers a choice, parthey copied dmincr1ve features probably becapse they tend to
ticularly in this segment where
of its scooters in an attempt to develop the motor skills needed
there's been so much focus ·on
confuse consumers.
for cycling before girls do and
tires," DiPietro s~id.
The order prohibits the com- tend to take more risks, Tanz
Ford dealers have said some
panies from making or ·selling said.
the scooters through Dec. 4,
when a hearing is scheduled on
a preliminary injunctlon that
would extend the ban until a
trial could be held.
Razor reached our-of-court
agreements with seveul companies Tuesday, leaving 12 defendants.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Razor, based m Cerritos,
(Old Unemployment Building)
Calif., sells scooters made by
Taiwan-based JD Corp. It was
Mon.- Sat. Hours'lla.m. -7 p.m.
assigned a U.S. patent on Oct.
31 for the rear fender of lis

Jan 1mpasse.
The State Department's Reeker directed
the appeal for support the ttuce npt only to
the two sides but to "regional leaders~'
although he made no direct reference to a~y
of them.
Israel's depury defense minister, Ephraim
Sneh, accused Syria's new president, Bashar
Assad, of giving terrorists a green light t~
wage a guerrilla war on Israel from souther!)
Lebanon.
" It's not just rhetoric. It's the real policy of
Basilar, which is a source of concern," Sneh
said in a speech at a Washington think tank
that specializes in the Middle East. ·
·

Woman given death penalty
for starving daughter
PITTSBURGH (AP) A
mother of five was sentenced
Tuesday to die for starving her
7-year-old daughter to death,
making her the fourth woman
currently on death row in
Pennsylvania.
A jury in Washington Counry, about 25 ·miles southwest of
Pittsburgh, sentenced Michelle
Sue Tharp, 31, to death for the
first-degree murder of her
daughter, Tausha L~e Lanham.
The same jury Monday also
found Tharp guilry of child
endangerment and abuse of a
corpse:
. h 1
k
M 1c
ae Lu ens, spokesman
for the state Department of
Corrections, said three other
women are on death row in the
state; Pennsylvania has 230 men
on death row.
Jurors deliberated for about

an hour before handing down
the death sentence Tuesday.
Tharp, 31, quietly sobbed and
· slumped as her attorney, Glenn
Alrerio, helped lower her "'"to
her chair after the verdict ":'as.
announced.
Before jurors left, Washington Counry Judge Paul Pozonsky played a song by country
and western smger John
Michael Montgomery, "The
Little Girl."
The judge declined to
explain that action, except to
h
h
· d
say t at t e song contame a
I'
"Oh h
d I' I 1 f, ,
' me,
w at a sa Itt e 1 ~·
and he had dec1ded to play 1t m
court when the case concluded.
Jurors declined comment
about the sentence.

Ford offers to substitute
Goodyear tires

Company gets
restraining order

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scooter, whtch acts as a brake

when stepped on. The ,next day,
the company filed lts patent
infringement lawsmt.
In September, the Razor was
the top-selling toy in the nation
based on total sales, according
to the NPD Group, wh1ch
tr:acks toy sales.

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Sports Notebook, Page ·B4
NBA: Cavs whip Wcmiors, Page B6
NHL: Columbus upsets Dallas, Page B6
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

Paid for by candidate

•

Page Bl

Wednesday, November 15, 1000

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Duke ·aattiers·
Princeton in NIT
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - If
Princeton can't slow down No.2
Duke, who can?
The normally deliberate Tigers
came unraveled Tuesday night as
the Blue Devils unleashed a barrage of 3-pointers and some stifling defense en route·tO an 87-50
victory.
Shane Battier scored 29 points
on a school-record nine 3-pointers in Duke's season-opener.
Jason Williams added 17 points
and Nate James had 15.
Duke led by 24 points at halftime by holding the Tigers without a basket ove r a 9 112-minute
stretch. The Blue Devils then hit
five straight 3-pointers to start the
second half. Battier had three as
the lead reached 34.
Battier made two more longrange shots later in the second
half before he was taken our with
5:18 left and the Blue Devils up
81-45.
.

Rio Grande edges Pikev~lle, 68-63
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

RIO GllcANDE -The Universiry of
Rio Grande, ranked No. 10 in the latest
NAJA Division II women's poll , survived
a scare from unranked Pikeville College
Tuesday, winning 68-63 in the home
opener for the Redwomen.
Rio Grande (3-0) jumped out to a 218 lead midway through the first half, but
then had to stave off a fierce charge by the
Lady Bears that closed the gap to 27-26 at
the half.

Pikeville (3-2) took the lead early in the
second half when Jamie Steele knocked
down a shot from the right corner to give
the Lady Bears a 2R-27 edge. The lead
changed hands six times in the final 20
minutes with Rio Grande taking the lead,
albeit a tenuous one, for good at the 4: 15
mark.
Senior Karley Mohler hit two free
throws and tipped in a missed shot .in the
final minute to he!p Rio Grande escape
with its third consecutive victory.
Mohler scored eight points down the·

stretch for llio Grande and finished with
16 points and 14 rebounds offthe bench.
She had a key blocked shot. with 4Y seconds left in the game to keep the game
tied at 63-ti3.
"We did play well early;• Rio Grande
head coad1 David Smalley &lt;aid. "Our kids
were fired up. It's our home opener and
we came off a pretty impn:s'iive tournament up at Indiana Wesleyan: Every one of
our kids, as well as the coaching staff, we're
still exploring. We've got a lor of young
kids."

The Redwomen's starting lineup featured sop homore Emily Cooper at the
point wah sophomores Nikki Dauer and
Kate Sease at the other guard and small
forwa;d. Junior Sarah Ward started at the
two-guard slot. Senior Mindy Pope was
the lone upper class man at tip-off for Rio
Gr,mde.
"At times, we scratch our heads a link
bit," Smalley said in ref,&gt;ard to his club\
youthfulness. "Sometimes we look like :m

Please see Rio. Pace 86

HONORING CHAMPIONS Cooper: No
nightmares
because of
Michigan

Bowling Green
. hoop squad
robbed
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(AP) - Thieves walked into a
locker room and made off with
cash,meal cards and coats belonging to the Bowling Green men's
basketball team.
Players discovered their belongings were missing following a
Monday morning practice.
"You couldn't even tell the
place had been ransacked," said
coach Dan Dakich. "They must
have taken their time and known
what they were doing."
Police placed the value of the
missing items at more than $500.
The locker room isn't locked
during practice because players
often go in there during practice,
Dakich sa1d.
"It was probably somebody
who knew our schedule, knew
where the locker room door, was
and that it was likely open,"
Dakich sa1d.

lhai people lobby
Tiger for help
l:lANGKOK, Thailand (AP) Activists holding a giant cutout of
Nike's logo demonstrated inside a
hotel where Tiger Woods · was
being honored, urging him to ask
the company tu improve \\,'Urking
conditions in Thailand.
About two dozen labor ' union
workers and students 11~arched
into the riverside Shangri-La
hotel while Woods was in ·a ballroom receiving an honorary doctorate in sports science from a
university.

I would like to thank all
who voted for me and who
supported ·me. Thank you.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Woods, whose mother is Thai,
is a n&lt;ttional hero in Thailand. He
is in 'Bangkok for the Johnnie
Walker C lassic, a golf tournament
thet begins Thursday.
·

Browns place
Bundren on
injured reserve
CLEVELAND
(A I')
Browns guard Jim Bundren , who
broke his ankle in the vil'iory
agaimt the Patriot~ 1 was phrced on
injured reserve Tuesday.
· Cleveland signed rookie cornerback Todd Franz to till the
spo[ on the 5.3- lnan ro!liter.
Bundren had 'urgery on his
right ankle Munday, a Jay after he
was hurt a~ainst New England.
He !S the team\ fifth offensive
starter lost for the 'it:a\Oil.
Franz, who played at Tulsa, had
been on the New Orleans Saints'
practice squad. He was drafted in
the fifth round by the Detroit
Lions.

AWARD WINNERS
The fol·
lowing athletes receivec:J golf
awards (above photo) Tuesday
evening at the Meigs High
School fall sports banquet.
From left to right in the front row
are Jeremy Banks, Jason
Knight. Second row Thad Bum·
gardner, Carson Midkiff, Andy
Davis and Nick Detwiller. The
following girls receiyed volleyball

awards (right) at the Meigs fall
sports banquet on Tuesday
evening. Front row: Shannon
Price and Margie Bratton, Sec·
ond row: Mindy Chancey and
Kayte Davis. Football and cross
country athletes were also recognized during the annual ban·
quet. See more photos on Page
B3. (Dave Harris photos)

1

Meigs honors fall athletes
at annual sports banquet
BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPR IN GS - The annual Fall
Sports Banquet for Meigs High School was
held on Tuesday even ing in the school's
cafeteria. Meib" Athletic Booster pres1dent
J im Sou!sby was the Master of Ceremonies,
and Rick Ash gave the Invocation.
Mike Kennedy coach of the boy's cross
country team presented awards to Brandon
Bumgardner,
Jason
Stanley,
Matt
Williamson, Derri ck Bolin, Chris Dodson,
Derek Johnson and Michael Stacy.
Kennedy then introdw.:ed membcr:s oft he
TVC champion girls nu~s collntry team .
the team was·~1lsu a regional qu&lt;1lifin. Team
members mclude l3Emdi Thomas, Andrea
l3urdette , Je"ica Preasr, Emily Story, Ilea
Morgan, Ashley Th(llllas and An1ber Vining.
Story earned second team All-- TVC, while
Uurdette and Thomas ea rned first team
honors . Thomas w;is the Most Valuable Player for the third year in a row.
·. Junior varsiry volleyball coach Delle Harri.;;on prcsl'ntcJ m t:mhers of his [l'am . They

'included Aubrie Kopec, Christina Miller,
Miranda Stewart, Sarah Stobart, Angela Wile
son, Tirzah Dodson, Maria Drenner and
Chelsea Ray. The team fimshcd with a 15-5
mark overall and 12-4 in theTVC winmng
the junior varsiry championship.
Coach Ri ck Ash then presented members
ofthe.TVC champwn and Sectional Champion varsity volleyball team. Players were
N1kki l3utcher, Jaynec DaviS , Mindy
Chancey, Kayte Dav1s, Katie Jeffers, Corrie
Hoover, Marjorie Bratton and Shannon
Price. ijratton was named tint tt·am AliTVC and honurablr mention district 1J,
Price was a ' first tt.:'&lt;llTI All - TVC ~;election
and was naml·d the Ohio Division's Most
Valuabh.- Player, she was ah;o a ;1l1 district
\t" lectior1.
..
Golf co;~ch john Kr~tw~czyn introducl'd
memht:rs of't.t&lt;.' TVC co-c hampio~1 golf
tt"JIIl. They includ ed Jcrt'my 11mb, J;tson
Peckham , Jmh lby, !:len Bookm an, Jo,h
Napper, Thad Blllngardnn,, Andy Davis.
Nick lkrtwiller. Jason Knight and Carson
Midkifr. Derwilkr was a second team sekc-

•

tion and Midk1tf and Banks was first ream
All-TVC performers. Other awards went to
Andy Davis who won the JKk Sbvin
Memorial Coaches Award and Midkiff who
\Von the Parker Long-Rodd Harno.;on
Memorial Award for Most Valuable Golfer.
Jennifer Jones cheerleader advimr pre sented the cheerleaders. RL'\ervc cheerleader .nva rds went to NicolL' Burm;1n,
Diane Jones, Bridt;ct Balser, Holly Fnrell,
Am &lt;1 nda Ft'tty, HcJther Phalin , Hann r1h
Wonlan\ cmd Jenniter Young. Vtlr'iity awards
went to Carrie Ahhott,Jcssica Grl'y.Jcnnifcr
Ret·ws, Britt,mY Williams, Ali-;on Hays.
Debby Sc,rb, Amber Haning and Whitney
Ashley.
,
Mike Chancey head footb,1ll co,1ch prc'it:ntcd junior varsity awards went to Brandon Williams. Jonath o n Larkins. Shclwn
R.ardifr, Gary M oore Cor,·y Lon~,ostreth,
Brun: Clover. Corey V.1ugh.m. Ja ~on Murdock, Ray Ratcl iff. Cort·y Wood,. T)•kr
Barnes. Clay Stonl". KeYin Butchr.:-r :md

. Please see Meigs, Page Bl

Please see Dreams, Pace Bl

Big Unit wins NL
Cy Young Award

Marshall &amp;
Ohio set
for battle

win thrl'L' Cy Ynunh~ ·in hi:-.
CVL'Il co throw the h.1ll ovl'r the · c trt•t•r, joining Bn ... ton's Pt"dro
plate a~ a \Vild young; pitcher. Martinc7, who won hi.:; third on
Arizona\ Rt11Hlv jnhn\nn has Mo11d.tv.
Reign Clem&lt;"ns h:l' tive. foljoinL\il'lltt' rnmt;,ll;) Jnwt~ni rhc·

NEW YORK (AI') -

BY DAN POLCYN ·
OVP SPORTS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT,W.Va.Somc co lle~c football rivalries,
like the Catho li cs vcrsLJ s Convicts pairings of the I ~I!Os and
90s :ire about an im osity and
hatred, blood and .mgcr.
The Ohio University Vl'NlS
Marshall University .. Bartle for
the Bell" is not one of those venomous painnt-,,.,. where the pldycrs w1ll stand-olr at the 50- yml
line~ as Jl lusrr.ttcd at Modday\
annual press ronlt:-rence with
Ohio's Jim Grobe and Marshall's
Bob Pruett.
The ~wo ht•tal coache'i, who
coachL·d togl·tht:r al M,u'ih,li\

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach John Cooper
has learned a lor fron\ the disappointments he and his ream have
encountered ilJ his 12 games
ah&gt;ainst rival Michigan.
The learning process - even
for a 63-year-old ..grandfather never quite ends and never gets ·
anv easier.
·:cl don 't have nightmares,"
Cooper said Monday as his team
prepared for the Y7rh meeting
between the teams. No. 12 Ohio
State plays host to No. 19 Mii::hi- ·
' gan on Saturday, with the winner
assured of no worst': than a shart"
of the Big Ten title.
If Cooper's dreams are hauntt'd
by playtTS in s[riped bdmets no ·
one co uld really blame him .
MH:higan .is Cooper's great white
whale, a ncmesi'i that alw;~y&lt;&gt;
seems to bring out the worst in
O hio State:
• Three ttmes Cooper and tht'
Buckeyes have had perfect seasons
shattered by the Wolverine s
(1993, ''i!i, .96) . .
• The 1996 loss ostensibly cost
the Buckeyes a national champi onship. If they had . won, they
would have gone into the Rose
llowl as the country's only
unbeaten ream . The subsequent
victory over Arizona State would
have confirmed their No. 1 ranking imrcad of their eventual No.2
. finish.
• !'our times the Buckeyes and
Cooper needed only to beat
Michigan to win at 1ea~t a sharl' of
the Btg Ten titlt• and ;1 tnp to the
Rose Bowl . and th ey have lost
every .ri me C'lll, ·93, '95. '97).
• In 19R9, Ohio State could
have captllrt'd a sh:-~re of the confen:m-e
championship
even
though it \~ntddn't have gone to
Pasaden a. The Buckeyes lost, 34.'l l.
Critic'&gt; haw said that . Cooper
didn't give the gam(' enough
c..·mpl1.1si.; in his first yc:ars, then
lx-c.Hnl' jittery anJ dd~nsive after
lmmg a few g.unes in th e rivalry.
Those critics say tl13t his player&lt;

from 1979 to I 'JH2. met in th e
casual setting of Point Pk·.1~,mt's
Lowe H otel to kick-off the
week before the rivalry game.
''jimmy .111d I have talked
we~kly. t(&gt;r the past 'ix W&lt;'eks:·

.. aid Prul'tt. "both of th hoping
that we would be playint; tor the
champiomhip lx·c1use I think
tlut t&lt;.ve ;trc the two lK'St ti..'J.\11\

.Please see Bell, Page B6

nr

hi, f;lrl'CL
Johnson W.h the overw helm ing winner ·of the N;ltH)nal
Lt:aguc c:y Young A\V,lrd Oil
Tuesday, hi"i 'il' 1cond o,;tr,light
award .md third of hi.., C.ln·cr.
"If yo liSa id' tlut I() or I 2 ye:m
ago. when I wa' \\';t\king lOP
g-uY"' .\ yc.tr. you \\'ould luvc
bet:n Lwghcd lt." thl· J7- yc.trold .JohihOil ~.lld. "I \.\'.1\

l'lld

BELL COMBATANTS- Ohio head coach Jim Grobe (left) and Mar·
shall head coach Bob Pruett addressed the media concerning the
annual Battle for the Bell this Saturday. (Dan Polcyn photo)

Unable

lowed bv Stew C.u·lton and
(;reg M.tddux with f(H.lf each.
Sandy Knut~1x. Tom Sl'&lt;lVC:r and
jim l'.llmer ,J!,o luve three
·'Any time:\ you'n: mcntionni
in the s;mw scnt~:ncc as thmc
pl[che-r.,, you get .1 grt•at deal of
liJtt:-.CKt1011.'. Johnson s:11d. "I'm
Ycry proud of \vhen: I Glmc

fi-om. In th t' mmor

ka~uc.:s,
'

I

h- 1nn )11'11\tl'm : ·
.Johmnn, who \\'Oil the AL
,1\v,ud in 1CJlJ~ with ~c:.1ttlc, Ius

tll'vcr HllA~lnt'd I wou iJ be in
dw cate[(ory wlth those ryp&lt;c of
pLl)'ers. It's been a long road to
get w wht·rc I am.''

bct·n' the oppmltl' of Ll~c . H.e
bc(.lllll' the l'tghth pw.:hcr to

Please see Cy Younc. ...,e Bl

t: xtrl'llll'

�'
•

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Wannest on
record
WASHINGTON (AP)
The 10-month average temperature of 58.1 degrees fot January through October was the
warmest for that period since
records started being kept in
1895, government scientiSts ~ay.
All states in the contiguous
United Stares but Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts. North
Carolina, South Carolma and

Georgia were warmer than normal for that period, according
to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheri c Administration's
National Climatic Data Center
in Asheville, N.C.
Most of the country west of
the Mississippi River experienced temperatures much higher than normal.
Also during that 10-month
period, states in the South and
Southeast were much drier than
nornul. But it was wetter than
normal in the NortheaSt and in
much ·of central United States.
Overall, the I 0-month period
was the 24th driest since 1895.
The center archives weather
data ·obtained by the National
Weather Service, military services, Federal Aviation Administration and the Coast Guard.

Sentenced issued
in attack
NEW YORK (AP)- A man
conv1cted of defacmg a controvemal painting of the Virgin
Mary has been fined $250 and
given a chance to clear his
rec.ord.
Dennis Heiner, 73, was arreste:d last December after smearing
white paint on " The Holy Virgin Mary" ·a t the Brooklyn
Museum of Art. The work, part
of the British "Se nsation"
exhibit, incensed many people
because it was decorated with
elephant dung and pornographic cutouts.
Heiner was told by the judge
at Tuesday's sentencing that if he
stays out of trouble for · six
months, his record will be
wiped clean. ·
A jury convicted Heiner last
morith of criminal mischief,
w~ich carries penalties of up to
a year in jail and a $1 ,000 fine .
Prosecutors alleged Heiner
was trying to destroy the painting. The defense argued Heiner
was exercising free speec h,
protesting what he considered a

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

latest execution
POTOSI, Mo. (AP) -A man
who was convicted and sentenced to dearh three times for
a fatal shooting during a bar
fight died by mjection early
Wednesday.
James Chambers, 48, was convicted of killing Jerry Oestricker, 33, outside a suburban St.
Louis tavern on May 29, 1982.
The incident was .p rovoked
after Oestricker bumped into
Chambers' friend.
Chambers' first two trials
were reversed once on a
technicaliry, once because of
ineffective counsel. A federal
appeals court in September
denied the appeal of his third
convictjon.
His wife, Darlene, cried loudly and pounded on the window
of the observation area at PotoSl
Correctional Center as
Chambers took his last breath.
In an adjacent room, a relative
of the victim yelled, "Now you
know how it feels."
Chambers' last words were a
four-paragraph written sratenlent that said in part, "I want
to thank God for the life that he
gave me." He also asked for forgiveness from the victim's family.
Court testimony indicated
Chambers intentionally provoked the argument to lure
Oestricker outsicle. then struck
him in the head with the gun
and shot him as he came out.
Chambers
gave
another
account, claiming that once
outside, Oesrricker struck first,
jabbing a pm of needle-nose
pliers into Chambers' arm, then
hitting Chambers in the face .
Gov. Roger Wilson, who
. leaves office Jan. 8, faced his first
death penalry decision since
becoming governor following
the death of Gov. Mel Carnahan
in a plane crash Oct. 16.

Study targets
bike injuries

Partidpatio~

in school breakfast program doubles ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -About 6.4 million poor schoolchildren are getting free or
reduced-pnce breakfasts, nearly double the
number a decade ago, bur millions of other
needy kids aren't receiving the meals because
roo few schools offer them, an advocacy
group says.
About 42 percent of low-income children
who participate in the federal school lunch
program also got the government-subsidized
breakfasts during the 1999-2000 school year,
acc~rding to a report released Wednesday by
the Food Research and Action Center.
West Virginia has the highest participation

in the breakfast progrant, with 56 percent of
kids getting free or reduced-priced lunches
also receiving the breakfasts, the report said.
If children in other states participated in
the breakfast program as much as they do in
West Virginia, an additional 2 million kids
would be getting the meals, at a cost to taXpayers of $321 million, the report said.
In 1990, about 3.4 million participated in
the breakfast program.
"Children eating school breakfasts come to
school on time, are less likely to be absent,
learn more and behave better," said Jim Weill,
president of the Food Research and Action

Center. "States and schools that lag in break•
fast are rying one hand behind their teachers
backs."
Wisconsin has the lowest level of participation in the breakfast program at 22 percent of
children in the lunch program, the report
found.
The report was funded by a variery of
foundations and food companies,
Schools are often reluctant to offer breakfast because there is a stigma attached to children who participate, said Marilyn Hurt, president of the American School Food Service
Associatio!l.

Miqdle East talks quiet despite Clinton efforts.
WASHINGTON (AP) The Clinton going to try to see what we can do this week,"
administration implored all Middle East lead- he said Tuesday aboard Air Force .One as he
ers Tuesday .not to undermine an agreed truce flew to 'Brunei for a Pacific Rim economic .
between Israel and the Palestinians that has sununit. He did not explain: "That's all I can
say. I'll do my best."
faiied to take hold.
"We expect all sides to avoid actions and
Clinton rnet in the White House last week
words that can escalate or contribute ro the with Palestinian leader Vasser .Arafat and Israeli
cycle of confrontation and violence," Philip , Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Dennis Ross, the
Reeker, a State Department spokesman, said.
State Department's Middle East specialist, left
President Clinton had that confrontation in for Israel Tuesday with Hill~ry Rodham Clinmind as he told The Associated Press that this ton ro attend the funeral of Leah Rabin,
week should make clear "whether there is widow of Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli prime
· going to be any kind of effort to change minister who signed the first peace agreement
course" in the. Middle East.
with Arafat. A U.S. official said Monday that
" I think there's a way to do it, and I'm Reiss might have meetings about the Palestin-

Man missing after
scaffold collapse
DETROIT (AP) Rescue
workers searched to no avail for a
man who plunged into the ch illy
Detroit River when a scaffold on
a bridge between the United
Stares and Canada collapsed in
gusry wind.
'
Three of the 10 workers on
the scaffold Tuesday were thrown
into the icy water. Two of them
were rescued by the U.S. Coast
Guard but a third was missing.
Windsor police planned to
"'edn
resume thel·r "earch
,
w'
esd ay
for Jamie Barker, 27, a father of
·
five from Windsor, Ontario.
"They will pull the (scaffo ld)
wreckage because they believe
the missing man is in the wreckage," U.S. Coast Guard Petty
Officer Tim Bogeman said. "If
they don't find him there, then

they will send divers down."
The mery, who work for the
Ambassador Bridge · Corp., had
been pamtmg the . privately
owned bridge when the scaffold
collapsed. Temperatures were in
the upper 30s, and winds were
gusting to 22 mph.
"That high wind must have
been some factor," Windsor Fire
Chief Dave Fields said.
Seven workers were left dangling from safery harnesses about
. 100 feet above the water, police
said. Three of them managed to
climb back to the bridge. The
others were hoisted to safery by
fire crews after about an hour:
"The rappel teams dropped
rope to them and just hoisted
them up, one at time," Fields said.

CHICAGO (AP) Children suffered an estimated 2.1
million bicycle~e1ated injuries
in the United States between
1992 and 1997, with boys much
more likely than girls to get
hurt, a study released Tuesday
·
found.
About 1,500 deaths occurred
during
the six-year period.
slur agamst a sacred symbol.
Boys ages 5 through 14 were
the most conunon victims) with
an estimated 224,200 cycling
injuries each year, compared
with about 93,000 for girls the
DETROIT (AP) Ford customers have rejected FireLOS ANGELES (AP) - A same age.
Motor
Co.
said
Tuesday
that stone tires on Explorers, asking
company that distributes some
The findings by Drs. Elizaof the hottest-selling scooters beth Powell and Robert Tanz of
consumers ordering 200 1 Fold that Firestone Wilderness AT
has won a restraining order Children's Memorial Hospital
Explorers
may
substitute tires be swapped out with other
against nval companies rhat are
Goodyear
tires
for
Firestone
in Chicago were published in
brands before making the puraccused of a patent violation.
brands questioned in a recall the
the November issue of Archives
chase.
A federal judge issued the
automaker has blamed for
of Pediatrics &amp; Adolescent
temporary restraming order
DiPietro said Tuesday's move
declining sales of the sport uriliMedicine.
Tuesday against 12 companies
sig11als a formal program to let
ry vehicle.
The researchers analyzed
that make or sell aluminum
Ford spokeswoman Della people who order new Explorscooters similar to ones distrib- national data, including a survey
DiPietro said ·she could nor ers have them already delivered
of 600 emergency rooms.
uted by Razor USA.
·specify
whether the move was with other tlres.
The figures were weighted to
The judge issued the order at
directly related to the recall of
Bridgestone/Firestone
the. request of Razor, which . produce a national estimate of
6.5 million Firestone tires under
spokeswoman Susan Sizemore
sued 16 makers and distributors about 2.1 million total inJuries
federal scrutiny iQ 119 deaths
sa1d the move's impact' on
of rival scooters, dannmg the among children ages 1 through
over reports of sudden tread sepcompanies violated a recently 14.
13ridgestone/Firestone business
aration, mostly on Explorers .
issued patent on a key design
Boys in every age group were
"It's definitely a matter of "remains to be seen."
component. Razor also said much more prone to injury,
giving consumers a choice, parthey copied dmincr1ve features probably becapse they tend to
ticularly in this segment where
of its scooters in an attempt to develop the motor skills needed
there's been so much focus ·on
confuse consumers.
for cycling before girls do and
tires," DiPietro s~id.
The order prohibits the com- tend to take more risks, Tanz
Ford dealers have said some
panies from making or ·selling said.
the scooters through Dec. 4,
when a hearing is scheduled on
a preliminary injunctlon that
would extend the ban until a
trial could be held.
Razor reached our-of-court
agreements with seveul companies Tuesday, leaving 12 defendants.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Razor, based m Cerritos,
(Old Unemployment Building)
Calif., sells scooters made by
Taiwan-based JD Corp. It was
Mon.- Sat. Hours'lla.m. -7 p.m.
assigned a U.S. patent on Oct.
31 for the rear fender of lis

Jan 1mpasse.
The State Department's Reeker directed
the appeal for support the ttuce npt only to
the two sides but to "regional leaders~'
although he made no direct reference to a~y
of them.
Israel's depury defense minister, Ephraim
Sneh, accused Syria's new president, Bashar
Assad, of giving terrorists a green light t~
wage a guerrilla war on Israel from souther!)
Lebanon.
" It's not just rhetoric. It's the real policy of
Basilar, which is a source of concern," Sneh
said in a speech at a Washington think tank
that specializes in the Middle East. ·
·

Woman given death penalty
for starving daughter
PITTSBURGH (AP) A
mother of five was sentenced
Tuesday to die for starving her
7-year-old daughter to death,
making her the fourth woman
currently on death row in
Pennsylvania.
A jury in Washington Counry, about 25 ·miles southwest of
Pittsburgh, sentenced Michelle
Sue Tharp, 31, to death for the
first-degree murder of her
daughter, Tausha L~e Lanham.
The same jury Monday also
found Tharp guilry of child
endangerment and abuse of a
corpse:
. h 1
k
M 1c
ae Lu ens, spokesman
for the state Department of
Corrections, said three other
women are on death row in the
state; Pennsylvania has 230 men
on death row.
Jurors deliberated for about

an hour before handing down
the death sentence Tuesday.
Tharp, 31, quietly sobbed and
· slumped as her attorney, Glenn
Alrerio, helped lower her "'"to
her chair after the verdict ":'as.
announced.
Before jurors left, Washington Counry Judge Paul Pozonsky played a song by country
and western smger John
Michael Montgomery, "The
Little Girl."
The judge declined to
explain that action, except to
h
h
· d
say t at t e song contame a
I'
"Oh h
d I' I 1 f, ,
' me,
w at a sa Itt e 1 ~·
and he had dec1ded to play 1t m
court when the case concluded.
Jurors declined comment
about the sentence.

Ford offers to substitute
Goodyear tires

Company gets
restraining order

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scooter, whtch acts as a brake

when stepped on. The ,next day,
the company filed lts patent
infringement lawsmt.
In September, the Razor was
the top-selling toy in the nation
based on total sales, according
to the NPD Group, wh1ch
tr:acks toy sales.

'

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Missouri logs

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.

Sports Notebook, Page ·B4
NBA: Cavs whip Wcmiors, Page B6
NHL: Columbus upsets Dallas, Page B6
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

Paid for by candidate

•

Page Bl

Wednesday, November 15, 1000

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Duke ·aattiers·
Princeton in NIT
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - If
Princeton can't slow down No.2
Duke, who can?
The normally deliberate Tigers
came unraveled Tuesday night as
the Blue Devils unleashed a barrage of 3-pointers and some stifling defense en route·tO an 87-50
victory.
Shane Battier scored 29 points
on a school-record nine 3-pointers in Duke's season-opener.
Jason Williams added 17 points
and Nate James had 15.
Duke led by 24 points at halftime by holding the Tigers without a basket ove r a 9 112-minute
stretch. The Blue Devils then hit
five straight 3-pointers to start the
second half. Battier had three as
the lead reached 34.
Battier made two more longrange shots later in the second
half before he was taken our with
5:18 left and the Blue Devils up
81-45.
.

Rio Grande edges Pikev~lle, 68-63
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

RIO GllcANDE -The Universiry of
Rio Grande, ranked No. 10 in the latest
NAJA Division II women's poll , survived
a scare from unranked Pikeville College
Tuesday, winning 68-63 in the home
opener for the Redwomen.
Rio Grande (3-0) jumped out to a 218 lead midway through the first half, but
then had to stave off a fierce charge by the
Lady Bears that closed the gap to 27-26 at
the half.

Pikeville (3-2) took the lead early in the
second half when Jamie Steele knocked
down a shot from the right corner to give
the Lady Bears a 2R-27 edge. The lead
changed hands six times in the final 20
minutes with Rio Grande taking the lead,
albeit a tenuous one, for good at the 4: 15
mark.
Senior Karley Mohler hit two free
throws and tipped in a missed shot .in the
final minute to he!p Rio Grande escape
with its third consecutive victory.
Mohler scored eight points down the·

stretch for llio Grande and finished with
16 points and 14 rebounds offthe bench.
She had a key blocked shot. with 4Y seconds left in the game to keep the game
tied at 63-ti3.
"We did play well early;• Rio Grande
head coad1 David Smalley &lt;aid. "Our kids
were fired up. It's our home opener and
we came off a pretty impn:s'iive tournament up at Indiana Wesleyan: Every one of
our kids, as well as the coaching staff, we're
still exploring. We've got a lor of young
kids."

The Redwomen's starting lineup featured sop homore Emily Cooper at the
point wah sophomores Nikki Dauer and
Kate Sease at the other guard and small
forwa;d. Junior Sarah Ward started at the
two-guard slot. Senior Mindy Pope was
the lone upper class man at tip-off for Rio
Gr,mde.
"At times, we scratch our heads a link
bit," Smalley said in ref,&gt;ard to his club\
youthfulness. "Sometimes we look like :m

Please see Rio. Pace 86

HONORING CHAMPIONS Cooper: No
nightmares
because of
Michigan

Bowling Green
. hoop squad
robbed
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(AP) - Thieves walked into a
locker room and made off with
cash,meal cards and coats belonging to the Bowling Green men's
basketball team.
Players discovered their belongings were missing following a
Monday morning practice.
"You couldn't even tell the
place had been ransacked," said
coach Dan Dakich. "They must
have taken their time and known
what they were doing."
Police placed the value of the
missing items at more than $500.
The locker room isn't locked
during practice because players
often go in there during practice,
Dakich sa1d.
"It was probably somebody
who knew our schedule, knew
where the locker room door, was
and that it was likely open,"
Dakich sa1d.

lhai people lobby
Tiger for help
l:lANGKOK, Thailand (AP) Activists holding a giant cutout of
Nike's logo demonstrated inside a
hotel where Tiger Woods · was
being honored, urging him to ask
the company tu improve \\,'Urking
conditions in Thailand.
About two dozen labor ' union
workers and students 11~arched
into the riverside Shangri-La
hotel while Woods was in ·a ballroom receiving an honorary doctorate in sports science from a
university.

I would like to thank all
who voted for me and who
supported ·me. Thank you.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Woods, whose mother is Thai,
is a n&lt;ttional hero in Thailand. He
is in 'Bangkok for the Johnnie
Walker C lassic, a golf tournament
thet begins Thursday.
·

Browns place
Bundren on
injured reserve
CLEVELAND
(A I')
Browns guard Jim Bundren , who
broke his ankle in the vil'iory
agaimt the Patriot~ 1 was phrced on
injured reserve Tuesday.
· Cleveland signed rookie cornerback Todd Franz to till the
spo[ on the 5.3- lnan ro!liter.
Bundren had 'urgery on his
right ankle Munday, a Jay after he
was hurt a~ainst New England.
He !S the team\ fifth offensive
starter lost for the 'it:a\Oil.
Franz, who played at Tulsa, had
been on the New Orleans Saints'
practice squad. He was drafted in
the fifth round by the Detroit
Lions.

AWARD WINNERS
The fol·
lowing athletes receivec:J golf
awards (above photo) Tuesday
evening at the Meigs High
School fall sports banquet.
From left to right in the front row
are Jeremy Banks, Jason
Knight. Second row Thad Bum·
gardner, Carson Midkiff, Andy
Davis and Nick Detwiller. The
following girls receiyed volleyball

awards (right) at the Meigs fall
sports banquet on Tuesday
evening. Front row: Shannon
Price and Margie Bratton, Sec·
ond row: Mindy Chancey and
Kayte Davis. Football and cross
country athletes were also recognized during the annual ban·
quet. See more photos on Page
B3. (Dave Harris photos)

1

Meigs honors fall athletes
at annual sports banquet
BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPR IN GS - The annual Fall
Sports Banquet for Meigs High School was
held on Tuesday even ing in the school's
cafeteria. Meib" Athletic Booster pres1dent
J im Sou!sby was the Master of Ceremonies,
and Rick Ash gave the Invocation.
Mike Kennedy coach of the boy's cross
country team presented awards to Brandon
Bumgardner,
Jason
Stanley,
Matt
Williamson, Derri ck Bolin, Chris Dodson,
Derek Johnson and Michael Stacy.
Kennedy then introdw.:ed membcr:s oft he
TVC champion girls nu~s collntry team .
the team was·~1lsu a regional qu&lt;1lifin. Team
members mclude l3Emdi Thomas, Andrea
l3urdette , Je"ica Preasr, Emily Story, Ilea
Morgan, Ashley Th(llllas and An1ber Vining.
Story earned second team All-- TVC, while
Uurdette and Thomas ea rned first team
honors . Thomas w;is the Most Valuable Player for the third year in a row.
·. Junior varsiry volleyball coach Delle Harri.;;on prcsl'ntcJ m t:mhers of his [l'am . They

'included Aubrie Kopec, Christina Miller,
Miranda Stewart, Sarah Stobart, Angela Wile
son, Tirzah Dodson, Maria Drenner and
Chelsea Ray. The team fimshcd with a 15-5
mark overall and 12-4 in theTVC winmng
the junior varsiry championship.
Coach Ri ck Ash then presented members
ofthe.TVC champwn and Sectional Champion varsity volleyball team. Players were
N1kki l3utcher, Jaynec DaviS , Mindy
Chancey, Kayte Dav1s, Katie Jeffers, Corrie
Hoover, Marjorie Bratton and Shannon
Price. ijratton was named tint tt·am AliTVC and honurablr mention district 1J,
Price was a ' first tt.:'&lt;llTI All - TVC ~;election
and was naml·d the Ohio Division's Most
Valuabh.- Player, she was ah;o a ;1l1 district
\t" lectior1.
..
Golf co;~ch john Kr~tw~czyn introducl'd
memht:rs of't.t&lt;.' TVC co-c hampio~1 golf
tt"JIIl. They includ ed Jcrt'my 11mb, J;tson
Peckham , Jmh lby, !:len Bookm an, Jo,h
Napper, Thad Blllngardnn,, Andy Davis.
Nick lkrtwiller. Jason Knight and Carson
Midkifr. Derwilkr was a second team sekc-

•

tion and Midk1tf and Banks was first ream
All-TVC performers. Other awards went to
Andy Davis who won the JKk Sbvin
Memorial Coaches Award and Midkiff who
\Von the Parker Long-Rodd Harno.;on
Memorial Award for Most Valuable Golfer.
Jennifer Jones cheerleader advimr pre sented the cheerleaders. RL'\ervc cheerleader .nva rds went to NicolL' Burm;1n,
Diane Jones, Bridt;ct Balser, Holly Fnrell,
Am &lt;1 nda Ft'tty, HcJther Phalin , Hann r1h
Wonlan\ cmd Jenniter Young. Vtlr'iity awards
went to Carrie Ahhott,Jcssica Grl'y.Jcnnifcr
Ret·ws, Britt,mY Williams, Ali-;on Hays.
Debby Sc,rb, Amber Haning and Whitney
Ashley.
,
Mike Chancey head footb,1ll co,1ch prc'it:ntcd junior varsity awards went to Brandon Williams. Jonath o n Larkins. Shclwn
R.ardifr, Gary M oore Cor,·y Lon~,ostreth,
Brun: Clover. Corey V.1ugh.m. Ja ~on Murdock, Ray Ratcl iff. Cort·y Wood,. T)•kr
Barnes. Clay Stonl". KeYin Butchr.:-r :md

. Please see Meigs, Page Bl

Please see Dreams, Pace Bl

Big Unit wins NL
Cy Young Award

Marshall &amp;
Ohio set
for battle

win thrl'L' Cy Ynunh~ ·in hi:-.
CVL'Il co throw the h.1ll ovl'r the · c trt•t•r, joining Bn ... ton's Pt"dro
plate a~ a \Vild young; pitcher. Martinc7, who won hi.:; third on
Arizona\ Rt11Hlv jnhn\nn has Mo11d.tv.
Reign Clem&lt;"ns h:l' tive. foljoinL\il'lltt' rnmt;,ll;) Jnwt~ni rhc·

NEW YORK (AI') -

BY DAN POLCYN ·
OVP SPORTS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT,W.Va.Somc co lle~c football rivalries,
like the Catho li cs vcrsLJ s Convicts pairings of the I ~I!Os and
90s :ire about an im osity and
hatred, blood and .mgcr.
The Ohio University Vl'NlS
Marshall University .. Bartle for
the Bell" is not one of those venomous painnt-,,.,. where the pldycrs w1ll stand-olr at the 50- yml
line~ as Jl lusrr.ttcd at Modday\
annual press ronlt:-rence with
Ohio's Jim Grobe and Marshall's
Bob Pruett.
The ~wo ht•tal coache'i, who
coachL·d togl·tht:r al M,u'ih,li\

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach John Cooper
has learned a lor fron\ the disappointments he and his ream have
encountered ilJ his 12 games
ah&gt;ainst rival Michigan.
The learning process - even
for a 63-year-old ..grandfather never quite ends and never gets ·
anv easier.
·:cl don 't have nightmares,"
Cooper said Monday as his team
prepared for the Y7rh meeting
between the teams. No. 12 Ohio
State plays host to No. 19 Mii::hi- ·
' gan on Saturday, with the winner
assured of no worst': than a shart"
of the Big Ten title.
If Cooper's dreams are hauntt'd
by playtTS in s[riped bdmets no ·
one co uld really blame him .
MH:higan .is Cooper's great white
whale, a ncmesi'i that alw;~y&lt;&gt;
seems to bring out the worst in
O hio State:
• Three ttmes Cooper and tht'
Buckeyes have had perfect seasons
shattered by the Wolverine s
(1993, ''i!i, .96) . .
• The 1996 loss ostensibly cost
the Buckeyes a national champi onship. If they had . won, they
would have gone into the Rose
llowl as the country's only
unbeaten ream . The subsequent
victory over Arizona State would
have confirmed their No. 1 ranking imrcad of their eventual No.2
. finish.
• !'our times the Buckeyes and
Cooper needed only to beat
Michigan to win at 1ea~t a sharl' of
the Btg Ten titlt• and ;1 tnp to the
Rose Bowl . and th ey have lost
every .ri me C'lll, ·93, '95. '97).
• In 19R9, Ohio State could
have captllrt'd a sh:-~re of the confen:m-e
championship
even
though it \~ntddn't have gone to
Pasaden a. The Buckeyes lost, 34.'l l.
Critic'&gt; haw said that . Cooper
didn't give the gam(' enough
c..·mpl1.1si.; in his first yc:ars, then
lx-c.Hnl' jittery anJ dd~nsive after
lmmg a few g.unes in th e rivalry.
Those critics say tl13t his player&lt;

from 1979 to I 'JH2. met in th e
casual setting of Point Pk·.1~,mt's
Lowe H otel to kick-off the
week before the rivalry game.
''jimmy .111d I have talked
we~kly. t(&gt;r the past 'ix W&lt;'eks:·

.. aid Prul'tt. "both of th hoping
that we would be playint; tor the
champiomhip lx·c1use I think
tlut t&lt;.ve ;trc the two lK'St ti..'J.\11\

.Please see Bell, Page B6

nr

hi, f;lrl'CL
Johnson W.h the overw helm ing winner ·of the N;ltH)nal
Lt:aguc c:y Young A\V,lrd Oil
Tuesday, hi"i 'il' 1cond o,;tr,light
award .md third of hi.., C.ln·cr.
"If yo liSa id' tlut I() or I 2 ye:m
ago. when I wa' \\';t\king lOP
g-uY"' .\ yc.tr. you \\'ould luvc
bet:n Lwghcd lt." thl· J7- yc.trold .JohihOil ~.lld. "I \.\'.1\

l'lld

BELL COMBATANTS- Ohio head coach Jim Grobe (left) and Mar·
shall head coach Bob Pruett addressed the media concerning the
annual Battle for the Bell this Saturday. (Dan Polcyn photo)

Unable

lowed bv Stew C.u·lton and
(;reg M.tddux with f(H.lf each.
Sandy Knut~1x. Tom Sl'&lt;lVC:r and
jim l'.llmer ,J!,o luve three
·'Any time:\ you'n: mcntionni
in the s;mw scnt~:ncc as thmc
pl[che-r.,, you get .1 grt•at deal of
liJtt:-.CKt1011.'. Johnson s:11d. "I'm
Ycry proud of \vhen: I Glmc

fi-om. In th t' mmor

ka~uc.:s,
'

I

h- 1nn )11'11\tl'm : ·
.Johmnn, who \\'Oil the AL
,1\v,ud in 1CJlJ~ with ~c:.1ttlc, Ius

tll'vcr HllA~lnt'd I wou iJ be in
dw cate[(ory wlth those ryp&lt;c of
pLl)'ers. It's been a long road to
get w wht·rc I am.''

bct·n' the oppmltl' of Ll~c . H.e
bc(.lllll' the l'tghth pw.:hcr to

Please see Cy Younc. ...,e Bl

t: xtrl'llll'

�Wednesday, November 15, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS SPORTS BANQUET

I

MORE LOCAL
NEWS
11 o

All"-lal
Announc~

GivMWIIW. Loat • Found
Y8rd

s.lee. and Wantoct

Mull

To Do Ado
Paid In AciVJinc:e

a.

IBIIlJNf Df&amp;QUNE
2 00 p m. the dlly before
the oct Ia to run Sundlly •
Mondlly ociiHon 2 00 p m

Frldlly
SENDNEl DEAQUNE
1 00 p m. the ct.y be!Dtll
the odie to run
Sunday • Monday oclltlon
1 00 p m Frldlly
REGISTER QEAQUNE.
2 dllya be!Dtlllho ad Ia to
run by • 30 p m Saturday
• Monday odltlon 4 30
Thuroctay
"Dudllnoo aubJoct to
chango duo to holidays

ANNOUN CEMENTS

005

S987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUD FHA Mo tgage Refunds No
Eape ence Requ ed Fo FREE
nlorma on c-a I 800 50 6832
.. 300
FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up to S 8 24 hou H ng fo
2999 ee ca lo appl ca on/ex
am na on nlo mat on Fede al
H e Fu I Benet s 1 800 598
4504 e~ ens on 1516 (Sam 6pm
CST)

ATIENTION AL.L STUDENTS
We have ove
200 )Obs ava lable mmed a e y
Ful and pa I lime ava able
EARN up to S151hour
plus ele ra bonuses
I you need wo k ghl away
Call1 800-929-5753
C..ll toct.y stlrt tomorrow
C VIC DelieiOpment G Oupl
M enmum TeleserviCes

Help Wanted

210

Busmess
Opportunity

REAL ESTATE

ve Wages

w 111

Poss be Health

Benelts App y AI 859 Th d Ave
nue Gallipolis
OUTDOOR CAREERS
•Hiring F'elcl CNW Foreman

•Peld On-the- Job T,.lnlng
•Tough Jol&gt; Gnat Cornpa!'ly
Must En,oy PhySlca Ou doo
Wo k Possess S rong
leade shiP Sk Is Have A Good
D v ng Record And Be flex!O!e
To Trave To Va IOUS Work
L.ocabOns In M d east States
P ma lly n Eas e n OhiO AAd
Wes e n West V rg nl8
OSMOSE nc
Cell Ton. Free For Information
1 87N176-6731
EOE M/FfON
VIs t Out Weballe at
www osmate com

FREE lONG DISTANCE SERV
CE
F aedom o sp&amp;ak No
ong d slanca b I s
Reca ve
FREE long d slanca se v ce Go
o www s xr gu e ncome comtt ee
?392393 28
FRITO lAY PEPS HERSHEY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE liS All CASH BUS
NESSSIS BUILDING A BUS
NESS THAT S All YOURS
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROF TS 1 800 731 7233
EXT 4503

HOME BASED BUSINESS P T
OR Ffi Wo k on o off you com
pu e w h an nte na onal corTIJ)a
ny Se you own hou s E.:celen
ncome Full suppo t www Be
Bossf eecom

OWN A COMPUTER? Put
to
wo k $25 to $75 pe hou wo k ng
om home Request FREE de(a Is
www 911 success com

Personals

310 Homes for Sale
S 99 30
MONTH? HOMES
FORECLOSURESIREPOSSES

New 14 II w de $499 down only
$199 pe mon ca now 1 BOO
691 6n7

SONS 0 TO 4% DOWN CRED T
OK 1 3 BEDROOMS MUST
CALL NOW FOR LOCAL LIST
lNG AND PAYMENT DETAILS

18008 58221 eat H2 01

460 F sl Avenue &amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments Depos t &amp; Rete enc
es Requ ed (740) 44 0952
(740)886-4531
5th Avenue 1 Bed oom $300 +
Uti t es Deposit &amp; References
(740)446-7903

New daub e w de 3 b 2 ba
1998 00 down only S295 per
moo call now 1 800-691-6777

S ngle Wkle Blow Oull
HURRY

S499 Down low Monthly

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
D ve 1 om $289 o $370 Walk to
shop &amp; moves Ca I 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Opportun ry

All real esrate adYerliSing In
!his ,_..pape&lt; ~ subject to
the Federal Fair Housing AIJt
or 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise any preference
Imitation 01 diserim nation
based on race color: rehg1011
sex tamllial stalus rx national
or1g n or any mention to
maka any such prafefence
This newspaper Will not
knowingly accept
advertisements fof real estate
wh6ch is n violation o1 the
aw Our readers are hef8by
nlomlod lila! al dwe Hngs
advert sed in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

STAAT
DATING
TON GHT
Have tu n meetng e gbe snges
~you aea Ca
o moe no
mat on
800 ROMANCE el(
9735

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
$600 NEW MEX CO REMOTE
HAlF ACRES Great wells roads
SOl vieW a llle freedom 1 505531; 3813

20 acres beaullfu Texas land
Near boom ng El Paso Roads
su ~eyed rele ences $899.5/$0
down 189 mo No qua ly ng 1
800 843 7537

looking To Buy A New Home?
Don Have Land? We Oo Hu ry
Only 1 Lots left 304 736 7295

o

For lease Unlurn shed La ge
Second F oo Th ee Bed ooms
A C Apt living Room 0 n ng
Room On C y Pa k Off S eel
Pa k ng $400 00 Mon h Plus
U It es Secu 'i An d Key De
pos t No Pe s Aele ences Re
qu ed (740)446-4425

Grac ous I v ng t and 2 bed oom
apartments at V age Mano and
A ve s de Apartmen s n M ddle
pt:trt From $273 $336 ca 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tun lies

30 Announcements

230

900530

Professional
Services

NEEC CASH
$2 500 &amp;50 000
L.ow Monthly Pym s
day Serv~ee
No ee us Good SVS
For Appointment
1-877 748-BILL (24551

EARN $?5 000 TO $50 000 VA
Med ca nsu ance B ng Ass s
ance Needed lmmed a e y Use
you Home compu te ge FREE
n e ne
FREE LONG DIS
lANCE Webs e E Ma
Ca I
Now 800 291 4683 Oep I 109

140

Busmess
Tralnmg

FORECLOSED HOMES FROM
$ 99 MONTH 0 TO 4'¥. DOWN
AEPOS BAD CRED T OK CALl
NOW ~MME DIATE LOCAL l ST
NGS 1 800 8 0 2807 eM H
2103

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD B llS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can
con so da e you b Is nto one
man h y paymen Reduce n e
es Avo d ate cha gas &amp; S op
ha assmen l censed Bonded
Non P o
BOO 288 £33 Ex
5
www go dcoaslcc com
BUSINESS LOANS ca
BOO 22 9391 ex
2 THE
BUS NESS RESOURCE STORE

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
Bache o s Mas~e s
Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon pro educal on and
sho study cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e1 phone CAM
BR DGE STATE UN VEAS TV 1
BOO 964 8316
QU CKLY

WanledTo Do

Tara Townhouse Apa tments
Ve y Spac o us 2 Bed ooms 2
Foors CA 1 1 ~Bath Fuly Ca
peted Adu I Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pal o Sta 1 $365 Mo No Pets
L.ease Pus Secu ly Oepos Re
QU ed Days 740 446 348
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740

446 0 0

RENTALS

Available Now
Tw n Towe snow accept ng
app !Cal ons to 1 BR
HUD subs d zed ap o elde ly
and hand capped EOH
1304)675 6679

41 0 Houses far Rent
2 b house $325 00 a mon

Two bed oom apa 1men1 Rock
sp ngs Ad w th ga age
12
m les o Me gs HS cent a hea &amp;
a s1ove &amp; ef ge ato 740 593

Homes ead Rea y ask fo Nancy
304 675 5540 0 304 675 4024

The Dally Senlmel
Subscnbe today
992 2156

AMAZING METASIL SM Break
liough !Lose 10 200 Lbs Easy
Ou ck Fasl D a mal c Resul s
100% Nalu al Doctor Aecom
mended
Free
Samp es
(740 441 982

AntiQue table needs work S8 00
2m kcans$ 500
sm new C\lpboa d $55 00 Gone
W th The W nd amp $55 00 a
o1he amps $5 oo each F sh
lank &amp; gh $15 oo antique ma
p e d op eaf tab e wf 2 cha rs
$110 00 304 682 2436

Phone (740)446 9476 Camp e e
y Remo ded Ins de &amp; Oul Th ee
Bed oom Laund y Room la ge
K chen &amp; D n ng Room L. v ng
Room Ba h 2 Ca Ga age Two
Sto age Bu d ngs Reduced P ce
$95 500 S x M es Soulh 01 Ga

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ANNOUNCEMENTS

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu In S1Qd(
Cal Ron evans 800 537 9528

ctassiffeds!

Huge nven o y 0 scoun P ces
On V ny Sk 1 ng Doo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wale He a e s
P umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne! s
Mob le Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/benne 1

a success!

New &amp; Used E ec c And Gas
Fu naces Fo Sa a Ca Fo S z
es
ns a Ia on
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(740)446-6308
800 291 0098

210

Busmess
Opportunity

Assume oan W
733 9102

ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800 Oay? 30 Mach nes
and Candy $9 995
BOO 998
VEND
F A N2000
033 SC Aeg664
ALREADY HA LEO AS THE
MOST
EXPLOSIVE
HOME
BUSINESS OPPORTUN TY N
HISTORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EARLY' NCOME PAD
WEEK Y
1 888 859 9336
DEEAEFXAOW NCO NET

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He D no Pe op t At ct ve Gove n
men Aelundt F ee Oeta 1 24
h
teo ded meuege 1 800
.149 462!5 Ex ~700

4x70
304
New&amp; Used Fun ue
New 2 Pece L.v g oom Sules
$399 Buy 5e 1i ade

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E Zfnancng
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Hu y
(304)722 7148
A ESTABL SHED SNACK
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ons Qua ty mach nes W se
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man E•ce en! pol po en a
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888) 466 4200-

WEEK~V

Move

F om Ren To Own low Down
Payment L.ow Mon h y Payment
Ca
BOO 948 5678
NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHECK OUT THE REST
Up to $500 INSTANTLY! 1 877
EARlY PAY L CICC70036

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

630

Livestock

$ 50 00 e ec

NEED CASH? Rece ng pay
men s on NOTE &amp; TRUST DEED
MORTGAGE lAND SA E CON
TRACT Ca 4 0 64 8229 Cap
o Fnanca Sevces

L m ed 0 No C ed

Gove n
me Bank F nance On y A Oak
wood In Ba bou sv e WV 304
736 3409
?

M lL.ENNIUM 2001 Aen Susie
16x70 3 bed oom 2 bah e
duced 0 $21 900 As ow as
S 95 a mon h nc udes de ve y
b ock and eve ng sk tlng and
mo e Check u1 out we e dta
ng Co e1 Mob le Hom11 US Ro
Ule .50E A hent OH 4570 740
592 972 0 1 800 468 4887

PHOTOGRAPHY
~a n S Photog aphy
5 ManSI
Now open fo bus ness
Wedd ngt
Sen o s
FamlyPota!
Ca lo en appo !"men
304 67.5 7:i!79

'

At the Home of Robert Holiday (Salem Lot Ad ) County Ad 1
LangsVI e Ohto Oi echons from Albany Ohlo St At 32 50 W to St
Rt 143 tum left 5 m to COunty Ad ~ tum A 4 112 mi or from Rt 7
take St At ~ 24 thru Rut and Oh &amp; on to 5alem Center &amp; tum R on

go 4 1 2 ml to s ght Signs w!ll oosted MANY
ARE FRQM JHE mAR QF JHE LATE .JOHN HQlUQAY

County Ad 1

560

rn;ys

HOUSEHOLD Maylag washer &amp; dryer RCA 25 color TV
humOback clock lwaterb!.JNl p cturu Hot Point microwave
refngera o k ng s ze water bed
CO I

.1i21i

·~~~~f.

bed oom suite rol away bed
8UQGY lWJTH RESERVE) oAK
DRAWER
NIGHT STAND
ROUGH
w•o ~ooT
CUPBOARD DEPRESSION GLASS QU LT &amp; MORE CAST IRON
LON BANK 6 1/2 HULL ART coffee grinder coppe kett es ox yokes
p 1cher pump o d scoote corn jObber sea es old wood work ng tools
p anes e c sacl rons baskets ~st i on seats c ank phone parts and
much more not yet dug outlll
ANTIQUE EQUIPMENT: 3 1 1/ 2 HP H 1 &amp; m ss engines 2 cy1 nder
Maytag 1 cyl nde Maytag &amp; other Maytags Johnson I on Horse 2
B gg Eng nes w/overhead valves 7 HP hercules hit &amp; m ss eng ne on
whee s w{saw f arne orchard spraye wJ 1 1/2 H P hit &amp; m ss motor
mounted on wagon B ggs Honzontal 5 HP motor feed grlndar from
Old m 16 HP wood spllngr wDift tfl goose neck trailer 4x8 wood
t a er w 6 8 ti es 501 Fo d r mower heavy duty scoop boom pole
fu I set of steal wheels fo W C Allis Chaime s tracto ea stee wheets
fo F 20 Fa ma Home ite Wate Pump (GAS) 5 HP Wlza d Roto Tiller
1 1/2 HP s demount Mower lo lawn tractors tab esaw JOinters
sande o drums corn meal g nde 12 Volt Hydro! c pump electric
motors h tch for Sth whee camp ng t a e tank air compresso 10 &amp;
12 plas c: p pe 20 long MODEL A&amp;T pARIS nclud ng runn ng
bOard luggage rack bel housing fo MODEL T VALVE TOOLS FOR
FLAT HEADS VALVE CAPS CO LS
M SC on &amp; on 1 La d cans garden saede fodder cutters gas light
fixtu e hay ha poon wood p\J lays o d mouse trap cow k akers long
hand e ad e lg anv I flal belt ng wheat a ckles erose cut saws lg
round saw b ades poe cl mbers lg d nner bel shop vac mow ng
mach ne parts m ld cans tool boxes mechen c tools &amp; bOKeS 2 48
Hyd o IC cy lnders o d v se jacks 100 ga gas tank ch cken feeders
garden pow o d baskets cha ra books o d jewa
tab eware
Metmack d nnerwa a o d seed c eaner m I ng mach ne lg wooden
bucket potbel y stove wood &amp; coa cookstove tue o tu naca wood
medic ne cab ne &amp; morel! Items tar to numerous to menton &amp; a 10
not yet pu ed from bu cl nga
PLENTY PARKING BRING VDUR LAWN CHAIRS REFRESHMENTS
BV THE LADIES OF THE TEMPLE CHURCH

rv

TERMS CASH OR CHECK W/POI ID
AUCTIONEER RODNEY HOWERY
~ ~214-6390 or 1 74HH-n31

71 0

a Bonded In St1t1 of Ohio &amp; WV

Autos for Sale

back
$40 00
lu oak cab

o

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs

304 773

Building
Supplies

1740)

Pets for Sale

2000 400EX 4 whee e Ike new
ova $ 000 n ex as $5 300 00
304 675 7423 eave message
Whee er Honda 250 4
Fou
T ac Exce en Cond on Ready
Fo Oea Season 740)256 267
A e 7pm

Sawm I $3 795 New Supe L.um
be ma e 2000 a ge capac t es
mo e 9P ons manu la c u e ol
sawm Is edge s and sk dde s
NORWOOD INDU STR IES 252
Sonw 0 ve Bu Ia o NY 4225
FREE In o ma on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U

Buclget Pr ce d Tranam sslont
A
Types Access To Ove
o ooo T ansm ss ons eve
Jo n s 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3765

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Reg ste ed Lab Pups 8 ack And
Ye ow
50 Each ( 740 )446
0080

s

570

Apartments
for Rent

SERVICES

Mus1cal
Instruments
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
1993 N ssa n ca
990 Toyo a
Tu se has damage on passenge
s de 85 000 m es $500 00 d sh
was he used on y 3
mes
$225 00 Bundy c a ne $75 00
33 000 BTU gas hea ng s ove
$ 25 00 304 675 7362

2 P235 T es

s

Coach Ash then presented
awards for the TVC s Ali Acade
team
mcludmg N1 ck
m1c
McLaughhn
Shannon Pnce
Kayte DaviS Mmdy Chancey
Andy DaviS Bea Morgan Enuly
Story Chm Dodson Dernck
Bohn Wh1tney Ashley and JeSSica
G tey To be ehg1ble for the all aca
denuc team you must have a 3 5
G PA earn a vamty letter and be
at leasr a sophomo!1'

Ohw nat' es) and players who
n v r constdercd to be any
th11g spcual
Tm B1ab butuka had a decent
career but torched Oh a State for
1 I 1 n sh 1g yards 1 199o Todd
Platt: v s \\ alk o 1 who Inter
cepr d two pmes 11 M1ch ga 1
198J vm over the l11ckeyes Jolll
Kolesar 1 de a lcap1 •g goal lu e
catch tl at wo 1 the 1988 game for
the Wolvcnnes a play that
Cooper never fa1ls to ment1on
'h en th s tunc of war ro ll s

Con ments by Oh10 State pia)
ers 1' rr) Gle1 1 and Da\ld
Boston have ft eled the hre and
prov ded bullet11 board nater al
11 tht past n It the:: B Kkeyes
'VL' I~ 01 1pl1 t' ltlr) of M chtga 1
and sol 1 1 thur appmsal of
the ga 1 c d 1r 11 g Monday nter

Meigs

from Page

from Page 81
have se sed the.: r c aLh ~ tppt t:
ht: s 01
They p ' Jt to h s 0 ' I e or I
g 11 st tlu: \Vo Vt::Ullt: as p Ot f
thilt I c has nc\ et q 1 tl: g aspt:d
th proper approach
No 11a tter The en tics 'iee 1 to
be verywhere afte1 1 loS&gt;- par
tiC hrl) OJ call 11 sl ows 1 ch t
roo ns and 1 1 le tters to tl e e I to
ObvloLslv [ 1 a va e f hats
happc1 ed and what could h 1p
pe1 Cooper md Lh t the 1 xt
g;unc IS the most 1 nportant 0 1 c
to me
O luo State has been beaten by
He s nan Trophy w 1 1c..-s su ch o
Des 10 1d H oward a 1d Charles
Woodson (both of who n \Hre

w.,; r

HOtl1d

Asked vhat he had lear 1ed
f10 n c aclung 1 1 \\hat IS called
The Cra ne around the reg1on
Coor
sa d [ thm k you learn
tl at the team that plays the best
that day s go ng to w n the ga 1 e
Not tl e t an th t ta lks th 1 ost
or the tea 1 tl at hypes the ga 1 e
the I lOSt

\\alks from 1 '190 92
t
appeared that Johnson wou d
never be able to harness h s over
powenng stufl
After gomg 49 48 111 hiS first
SIX seasons Johnson has go 1e
Johnson rece1Hd 12 of 32 first
place votes 111 ballonng bv the 110 47 SJnce to beco m to
Baseball Wmers Asso 1 t on f bccomt: a donu1at11g pttcher
Whe 1 I \\JS vounger I fa1led a
A1 1enca Joh 1son 1s
t s \.C 1
scco 1ds and t\\U I nds for 1 '13 lot ~llh" '" ad Nobody Ike&gt;
to f,I but I learned a gr at deal
p011ts
Atbntas Ton Gl ' " fi 1shed fro ' fail11g Now I know \\hat 1t
se o d v1th 64 p 1 s g tt g takes to be successful
After gomg 14 2 v th a I 80
fa" firsts 12 seco d a d 1gl t
ERA
before tht All Star break
tl rds Madd x v th rd v th S9
J I JSOI faltered do' n the stretch
po nts ~ llo v d b R I b Ne
S11 Fra JCISco (2() I J n vi Kik of as Anzo 1a t II out of the pel n 1t
St Lams (8) a d K
Bro v 1 I rt ~..: He vo onl) five u 1 es 11
lu I 1 I 16 sta t gm 1g o o v th
Los A 1geles (4)
1 ~I ERA aft r the br&lt;ak
rhe e vas a I Jt of o 1 p t
I 15) I I ad fi 1 sh d tro •g r
tl01 thiS )CJ
j h1 11 Sl j
r rt t J
Every ye" a I set ld
t 5 l1 I st II fe I tl t f1o
I 1 sl
p tt) g 1 I ) ar
llJldcr t&lt; pt t the t 1b&lt;1 s f
Tl b1ggcst g at fi t &lt; 1 I get 5 J h
I
'
'" cl)
lie
I e fir t I II 1 l th" ~
ion g t at 1 1g
I c 1 lot
d 11 t , 1 as "II n tl e
nd
pcopk rl J 1ght
•ght b
I Ill
th h II
N crt I k &lt; I
1 Sled
J hl ) 1 JO l M l ld X
I
Ko 1hx IS th
h b ck t t k 1h ' " v th a ? ( 4 ERA~
1 1e1 1 the Nl M ld x \
1 1 tht.: k 1~ t.: o Br '
0
(
oH )
I de I ,J g t1,
ft
st 1 g 1t lr ' I no h '
I g'
tllkc&lt; Lt &lt; (H7)
I J
K t lax o 1 1 I H , r r
1llg fcl 1tg (7 11)
d
I he B1g U1 1t I
1 e 1 &lt;1 g
t
d
tor
t
r~t
l
1
pi
tl'
'' •Y from I IS ' I I ) tl 1tl tl '
(K) 1 d I 1t t t (1)
Mar 1 crs Aft r I d g tl I g e g
111

Quean s ze wa e bed .exc
$ 50 00 304-675 2466

440

Brandon Bobb B J Kennedy
Jeremy Roush Tyson Lee Marc
Barr Billy Soulsby Zach Bolin
C hm Jeffers Ross Stewart Jusnn
81
G1lmore Kenny Zuspan Derek
M11ler Jason Rosier Evan Shaw
R!Chard DeWeese
N1 ck McL aughhn Josh Eagle
Chancey then presented m em
hers of the vamty football Jusnn Robson J l' Vann Joe
Ma rauders wh1ch fimshed Wlth a Rupe Brandon Ramsburg and
6 4 mark overall and a 3 2 mark manager Ph11l1p Murdock
All TVC selections were Derek
m the TVC Vamty players mclud
Mlller Adam Bullmgton Matt
ed Jo 1 D1ddle Adam Bullmgton
Stewart and Chm Jeffers all tim
Kyle Hannan Dernck Fackler
team selec uons
Matt Stewart Dernck Knapp

Dreams

eadm

27 Zen h TV bea
ne 304 882 2258
5505

Uncond ona
e me gua antee
loca e e ences lu n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
esWaepoo ng

S ee Bu d ng c ea ance 30x30
was $6980 sel 53890 401150
was $
900 se $5800 55x 30
was $29 900 se $14 900 Mus
se Can de ve Tom (800) 392
7803

610 Farm EqUipment
984 John Dee e backhoe 500c
.$17 000 986 900 Ag a am 96
hp uns good good es made
by A s Cha me s &amp; 0 e
$7500 740 742 2.230 any me

Gene a
Home Man
enence Pan ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob le home epa and mo e Fo
ee es ma e ca Che 740 992
6323

C&amp;C

s

5 Each
gma
Gu a W h Case 5260 (740
367 7729

840

Now rec ev ng tobacco ~ 1t ule
Nov 20th New Fa me s Tobacco
Wa ehouse A p ey Oh o ca
888 S44 4365 ask o oo man
age 0 v e Wha e o T m T app
o phone Ed son Mayes 304
675 858

Need A New Home
(740 44i 3583 To P e Qua
Phone

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS!?
NoFeeUn111WeWn
88B 582 3345

FARM AUCTION
Sat. Nov. 18, 2000 at 10:00 a.m.

95 Geo Tacke
2WD Blue
Auto A C 42K New Top Ve y
C ean $4200 OBO 740)446
3789

a chad

FOOTBAU AWARDS - The fol~
lowmg Me1gs Marauders were
presented
awards
TuesdaY
even1ng at the Me1gs H gh School
fall sports banquet Front row
from left to nght are Chns Jeffers
and N1ck Mclaughhn Second
row Derek M ller Matt Stewart
and Adam Bull ngton (Dave Har
r s photo)

Public Sale and Auction

87 Fo d F 50 4 Speed Good
Cond on $3 00 86 Me cu y
Couga
Runs Good
$900
(740 256- 425

Wa e I ne Spec al 3 4 200 PSI
$2 95 Pe
00
200 PS
$37 00 Pe
00 A B ass Com
p esslon F ngs InS ock
RON EVANS ENTEAPR SES
Jackson Oh o ADO 537 9528

Need We And Sep c No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Sa ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

NEED CASH? Have an annu ty o
s uc u ed se I ement? We pu
c hase hem and pay tas De
pen dab e 0 des n he bus ness
Ca Se emen Cap a
BOO
959 0006

The
Jlatlp 'aCttbune
Classified&amp;

Licensed

Tappan H E c ency 90 Yo Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond t on ng
Systems Fee 8 Yea Wa anly
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 872 5967 www o vb com ben
ne

PUT T
TO WO RK $25 175 HOUR PT
FT
CAll
888 32 7083
,ww cZ PC NET

U25

merchants and

everyone who
helped to make
the Sleepy
Hollow haynde

wooDen day bed w

s

FINANCIAL

OV'IN A COMPUTER

\!'; OAK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN T FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
QUIRED
BOO 746 !17 6 Ex
• 0

Feeney Bennett
Post 128 would
hke to thank the

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

110

$505 WEEKlY GRARANTEEO

•

meetmg you

Appl ances
Recond oned
Washe s D ye s Ranges Rei
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se I New May lag Ap
p ances F ench C v Maytag
740-446 7795

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Management

Opportun1t es
Available
Medical/ Dental/
40 I K I Pa d VacatiOns
ava1lable for
full t me employees
Start your new
career wtth us
Call I 800 929 5753
for an appomtment
We look forward to

550

GOVT POSTAL OBS Up o
$ 8 35 hOu Fu bene! s No ex
pe ence eQu ed Fo app ca on
and exam no ma on
888 726
9083 ext 70 7arn 7pm CST

pleased to announce
the Grand Opemng of
Its Pomeroy call center
We are now senmg up
mterv ew appo ntments
for outbound
teleserv1ces poSitions
No EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY
Potential to earn up to
$15/hr w1th quarterly
salary reviews
Full and part hme
pos1t ons available
3 Slufts da1ly w1th
tlex1 ble schedu hng

1n

pos
Mode n 2 BR House No Pe
$260 mo $ 50 Dep os
446-36 7

Help Wanted

IS

•

MOBilE HOME OWNERS

Right In
To Your
Favorite
Classified
Section And
See What's
Newl

MILLENNIUM
TELESERYICES

COOKWARE
AMERICAS
HEAVIEST
Surg ca
Stee
NEW 1 p y waterless se s
liFETIME GUARANTEED Nor
ma ly $ 800 Sac I c ng $399
(FREE s ock po OR e ec ie Sk
e ) Checks C 0 D VI/MC AMX/
D SCOVER B ochu es 1 800
926-7253

lOWER
HEATING
COSTI
HEAT NG
COST SAIC Td
DOUBL.E TH S WINTE~ Re
place 0 d Gas Guzzle W th
Amana s 95'¥. H ghes E c ency
Gas Fu naces And Hea Pumps
F ee Es ma es You Don ca
Us We Both Lose
(740 446
6308 800 291 0098

Local on $600 mo Oepos &amp;
Ae e ence Aequ ed Wiseman
Rea Es a e (740)446-3644

CREO T PROBlEMS ? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS l CENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG 90 80 DAYS
888
8 0902

4300

6937

3 BR 2 Ba h Home In Convement

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Con so da on o $200 000 Bad
Cred 1 No C ed OK C ed
Ca ds Mo gages E c G oba
F nan c a Serv ces To F ee l o
nlorma on I 888 604 444 EM
303

oo

FACTORY
D RECT
STEEL
BUILDINGS Save housands
one WEEK clea ance sa e Ca
NOW 877 898 0508

6 7 ACRE W/POND
Loca ed n Jackson Co Mad son
Twp On Emory Centerpo nt Ad
Between Rio Grande And Oak
H E ac nc And County Wa e
Ava able Oak H II School 0 stnc
$21 900
W V RGINIA Ritchie County
Aus IC 97 Ac Trac Fo Sa e As
Rec ea1 on P ope ry Loca ed In
A ch e County On Sunne Run
Road $57 000
Ca Us Today Fo FREE MAPS
Anthony land Company ltd
1-800-213 8365
www elcland com

$FREE CASH NOW$ I om
wea hy lam es un oad ng m ens
o do a s o he p m n m ze he
axes W e lmmed a e y W nd
a s 4542 EAST TROPICANA
AVE •207 LAS VEGAS NE
VADA 89 2

NO Hun ng On Meek Fa ms
Raccoon TownshiP

MORE LOCAL
FOLKS

ALL STEEL BU LOING WINTER
SAL.E
Stra ght
wa
24~36x 0 $4485 00 30x50x10
$5475 00 40JC60X12 $8325 00 5
0•100II14 $13425
E Do ado
Bu d ng Syslems 1 800 279

Honeysuckle H s A.pa tments
located On Colon al 0 ve Be
h nd H ghway Pat o Pes 1&amp;2
Bed ooms Now Ava lab e Rent
Sla s $235/ mo low &amp; Mode ale
Income Equal Hous ng Oppo
lun 1Y (740 44&lt;Ml344

P even lo eclosu e w lhout
bank uptcy WI'Ty move? Private
Realty Fund ng ecorded nfo ma
t Qn 1 888 809-2580 o
www C arXUnk conVhelp

New To YouTh tt Shoppe
9 WestS mson A hens
740 592 1842
Qual ty c oth ng and ho seho d
ems $1 DO bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day

Merchandise

110

Slowpays Repo s Bank uplcy
Got Bad C ed f? Get A New Start
W th A B and New Home Ca
(740)446 3570 Fo Specla F

'

540 Miscellaneous

Payments
cau Now (304)722 7140

limitation or diserlmlnauon

MAKE $2000 TO $12000
WEEKLY! HAVE FUN WORK
OWN HOURS NOT MlM 26
FREE VACATIONS TRAVEL &amp;
CRUISES CALL TOLL FREE 1
800 883 7476 24 HR AEC
MESS ) www coas ale ub netlvsa
ga ese

ATTENT ON
EARN ONL NE lr&lt;JCOME
$5000 $75001 month
800-7 S4 8556

Apartments
for Rent

for sale

Now H ng PCA And CNA Home

Hea h Ads Needed In Gall a
Jackson &amp; ¥e QS Couro es Fu 1
0 Pa IT me Ava abe Compel

440

320 Mobile Homes

CROSS COUNTRY ~ARDS
The follow1ng athletes rece1ve&lt;f
awards for cross country at the
Me1gs Fall Sports Banquet Tues
day evenmg In the front row from
left to r ght are tm1ly Story
Andrea Burdette Second row
Bea Morgan Ashley Thomas
Chns Dodson and Derr ck Bol1n
(Dave Harr s photo)

•

as Chevy Ce eb ty S ~ onwagon
N ce Wo k Ca ve y Dependab e
740 256-6574

Electrical and
Refrigeration

,J,

\ Jt" \

~

Coope r vas shd f players ca1
be too fired 1 p for a b1g show
dov. 1 s 1 h o M ch ga 1 Oh o
State
In response Cooper reCited a
poe n What 11ore can )OU ask a
11an than g ve t all \\lth 1 hiS
sp31 To g1vc 1t all t s e 1 s to me
s n )t too f:~.r fro 11 vtctory
But 'he1 playmg your nval
Cooper has kar l&lt; d that be 1 g
not too fat from victory ts no
subsntut~::

for wtn n ng

Joh 1son J0111ed Nolan Ryan as
the only p1tcher to record 300.
stnkeouts m three stratght seasons.
and became the 12th ph)er to
reach the 3 000 stnkeout plateau
Watchmg hun O\ cr the last
co •pie of years has bee 1 a treat t
really I as to watch a guy at the
top of h s game sa d new D~a
1 o 1dbacks ma lJger Bob B 1 ly
the tea 11 s TV analyst dur ' g
Joh 1s01 s two )c::ars m Ar zo1 a
It s been a JOV to watch and l11
sur ts go ng to be a JOY to pe 1
c I h s 1a ne 1 at tl e botto 1 f
th b 1 up ever) fiftl lay
Glavme (11 J 1 40 ERA) a
t\\O t11nc C) Yotu g \ 11er kJ
tl e league 1 VllS nd \lS key
co 1 po '" ' t on tl c Braves NL
East \ l l l t g t :1.1
Ma:l:hx
' w Ins t tr C) Yo tngs H 1t
IJ 9
th
1 10 ERA t
11 ,
rht ~.: fit st ~ b c
tt.:s
N1
I g t , frstpl•
\ { tt.:
\
I t' I lSt ltlll1t
h
, t1 I •g
go 1 g 4 1
I ,o ERA
\lth 41
c
j
KI
, th
h
Ic
1( g 1 L:
g t I
fit I
h t pi e
tc
J h1 n 1 got a S oll( II( 11 l '
t&lt; 1
1 l I g 01 t l)
t I
I ) 1,
1 db 1
sab ) Nc.:t rn t\t' I
S4 I )11(
11 Kll gets So il ()()()

s

�Wednesday, November 15, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MEIGS SPORTS BANQUET

I

MORE LOCAL
NEWS
11 o

All"-lal
Announc~

GivMWIIW. Loat • Found
Y8rd

s.lee. and Wantoct

Mull

To Do Ado
Paid In AciVJinc:e

a.

IBIIlJNf Df&amp;QUNE
2 00 p m. the dlly before
the oct Ia to run Sundlly •
Mondlly ociiHon 2 00 p m

Frldlly
SENDNEl DEAQUNE
1 00 p m. the ct.y be!Dtll
the odie to run
Sunday • Monday oclltlon
1 00 p m Frldlly
REGISTER QEAQUNE.
2 dllya be!Dtlllho ad Ia to
run by • 30 p m Saturday
• Monday odltlon 4 30
Thuroctay
"Dudllnoo aubJoct to
chango duo to holidays

ANNOUN CEMENTS

005

S987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUD FHA Mo tgage Refunds No
Eape ence Requ ed Fo FREE
nlorma on c-a I 800 50 6832
.. 300
FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up to S 8 24 hou H ng fo
2999 ee ca lo appl ca on/ex
am na on nlo mat on Fede al
H e Fu I Benet s 1 800 598
4504 e~ ens on 1516 (Sam 6pm
CST)

ATIENTION AL.L STUDENTS
We have ove
200 )Obs ava lable mmed a e y
Ful and pa I lime ava able
EARN up to S151hour
plus ele ra bonuses
I you need wo k ghl away
Call1 800-929-5753
C..ll toct.y stlrt tomorrow
C VIC DelieiOpment G Oupl
M enmum TeleserviCes

Help Wanted

210

Busmess
Opportunity

REAL ESTATE

ve Wages

w 111

Poss be Health

Benelts App y AI 859 Th d Ave
nue Gallipolis
OUTDOOR CAREERS
•Hiring F'elcl CNW Foreman

•Peld On-the- Job T,.lnlng
•Tough Jol&gt; Gnat Cornpa!'ly
Must En,oy PhySlca Ou doo
Wo k Possess S rong
leade shiP Sk Is Have A Good
D v ng Record And Be flex!O!e
To Trave To Va IOUS Work
L.ocabOns In M d east States
P ma lly n Eas e n OhiO AAd
Wes e n West V rg nl8
OSMOSE nc
Cell Ton. Free For Information
1 87N176-6731
EOE M/FfON
VIs t Out Weballe at
www osmate com

FREE lONG DISTANCE SERV
CE
F aedom o sp&amp;ak No
ong d slanca b I s
Reca ve
FREE long d slanca se v ce Go
o www s xr gu e ncome comtt ee
?392393 28
FRITO lAY PEPS HERSHEY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE liS All CASH BUS
NESSSIS BUILDING A BUS
NESS THAT S All YOURS
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROF TS 1 800 731 7233
EXT 4503

HOME BASED BUSINESS P T
OR Ffi Wo k on o off you com
pu e w h an nte na onal corTIJ)a
ny Se you own hou s E.:celen
ncome Full suppo t www Be
Bossf eecom

OWN A COMPUTER? Put
to
wo k $25 to $75 pe hou wo k ng
om home Request FREE de(a Is
www 911 success com

Personals

310 Homes for Sale
S 99 30
MONTH? HOMES
FORECLOSURESIREPOSSES

New 14 II w de $499 down only
$199 pe mon ca now 1 BOO
691 6n7

SONS 0 TO 4% DOWN CRED T
OK 1 3 BEDROOMS MUST
CALL NOW FOR LOCAL LIST
lNG AND PAYMENT DETAILS

18008 58221 eat H2 01

460 F sl Avenue &amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments Depos t &amp; Rete enc
es Requ ed (740) 44 0952
(740)886-4531
5th Avenue 1 Bed oom $300 +
Uti t es Deposit &amp; References
(740)446-7903

New daub e w de 3 b 2 ba
1998 00 down only S295 per
moo call now 1 800-691-6777

S ngle Wkle Blow Oull
HURRY

S499 Down low Monthly

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
D ve 1 om $289 o $370 Walk to
shop &amp; moves Ca I 740 446
2568 Equal Hous ng Opportun ry

All real esrate adYerliSing In
!his ,_..pape&lt; ~ subject to
the Federal Fair Housing AIJt
or 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise any preference
Imitation 01 diserim nation
based on race color: rehg1011
sex tamllial stalus rx national
or1g n or any mention to
maka any such prafefence
This newspaper Will not
knowingly accept
advertisements fof real estate
wh6ch is n violation o1 the
aw Our readers are hef8by
nlomlod lila! al dwe Hngs
advert sed in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

STAAT
DATING
TON GHT
Have tu n meetng e gbe snges
~you aea Ca
o moe no
mat on
800 ROMANCE el(
9735

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
$600 NEW MEX CO REMOTE
HAlF ACRES Great wells roads
SOl vieW a llle freedom 1 505531; 3813

20 acres beaullfu Texas land
Near boom ng El Paso Roads
su ~eyed rele ences $899.5/$0
down 189 mo No qua ly ng 1
800 843 7537

looking To Buy A New Home?
Don Have Land? We Oo Hu ry
Only 1 Lots left 304 736 7295

o

For lease Unlurn shed La ge
Second F oo Th ee Bed ooms
A C Apt living Room 0 n ng
Room On C y Pa k Off S eel
Pa k ng $400 00 Mon h Plus
U It es Secu 'i An d Key De
pos t No Pe s Aele ences Re
qu ed (740)446-4425

Grac ous I v ng t and 2 bed oom
apartments at V age Mano and
A ve s de Apartmen s n M ddle
pt:trt From $273 $336 ca 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tun lies

30 Announcements

230

900530

Professional
Services

NEEC CASH
$2 500 &amp;50 000
L.ow Monthly Pym s
day Serv~ee
No ee us Good SVS
For Appointment
1-877 748-BILL (24551

EARN $?5 000 TO $50 000 VA
Med ca nsu ance B ng Ass s
ance Needed lmmed a e y Use
you Home compu te ge FREE
n e ne
FREE LONG DIS
lANCE Webs e E Ma
Ca I
Now 800 291 4683 Oep I 109

140

Busmess
Tralnmg

FORECLOSED HOMES FROM
$ 99 MONTH 0 TO 4'¥. DOWN
AEPOS BAD CRED T OK CALl
NOW ~MME DIATE LOCAL l ST
NGS 1 800 8 0 2807 eM H
2103

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD B llS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can
con so da e you b Is nto one
man h y paymen Reduce n e
es Avo d ate cha gas &amp; S op
ha assmen l censed Bonded
Non P o
BOO 288 £33 Ex
5
www go dcoaslcc com
BUSINESS LOANS ca
BOO 22 9391 ex
2 THE
BUS NESS RESOURCE STORE

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
Bache o s Mas~e s
Doc o a e by co espondence
based upon pro educal on and
sho study cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e1 phone CAM
BR DGE STATE UN VEAS TV 1
BOO 964 8316
QU CKLY

WanledTo Do

Tara Townhouse Apa tments
Ve y Spac o us 2 Bed ooms 2
Foors CA 1 1 ~Bath Fuly Ca
peted Adu I Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pal o Sta 1 $365 Mo No Pets
L.ease Pus Secu ly Oepos Re
QU ed Days 740 446 348
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740

446 0 0

RENTALS

Available Now
Tw n Towe snow accept ng
app !Cal ons to 1 BR
HUD subs d zed ap o elde ly
and hand capped EOH
1304)675 6679

41 0 Houses far Rent
2 b house $325 00 a mon

Two bed oom apa 1men1 Rock
sp ngs Ad w th ga age
12
m les o Me gs HS cent a hea &amp;
a s1ove &amp; ef ge ato 740 593

Homes ead Rea y ask fo Nancy
304 675 5540 0 304 675 4024

The Dally Senlmel
Subscnbe today
992 2156

AMAZING METASIL SM Break
liough !Lose 10 200 Lbs Easy
Ou ck Fasl D a mal c Resul s
100% Nalu al Doctor Aecom
mended
Free
Samp es
(740 441 982

AntiQue table needs work S8 00
2m kcans$ 500
sm new C\lpboa d $55 00 Gone
W th The W nd amp $55 00 a
o1he amps $5 oo each F sh
lank &amp; gh $15 oo antique ma
p e d op eaf tab e wf 2 cha rs
$110 00 304 682 2436

Phone (740)446 9476 Camp e e
y Remo ded Ins de &amp; Oul Th ee
Bed oom Laund y Room la ge
K chen &amp; D n ng Room L. v ng
Room Ba h 2 Ca Ga age Two
Sto age Bu d ngs Reduced P ce
$95 500 S x M es Soulh 01 Ga

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

ANNOUNCEMENTS

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu In S1Qd(
Cal Ron evans 800 537 9528

ctassiffeds!

Huge nven o y 0 scoun P ces
On V ny Sk 1 ng Doo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wale He a e s
P umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne! s
Mob le Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb com/benne 1

a success!

New &amp; Used E ec c And Gas
Fu naces Fo Sa a Ca Fo S z
es
ns a Ia on
Ava ab a
(740)446-6308
800 291 0098

210

Busmess
Opportunity

Assume oan W
733 9102

ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
you ea n $800 Oay? 30 Mach nes
and Candy $9 995
BOO 998
VEND
F A N2000
033 SC Aeg664
ALREADY HA LEO AS THE
MOST
EXPLOSIVE
HOME
BUSINESS OPPORTUN TY N
HISTORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EARLY' NCOME PAD
WEEK Y
1 888 859 9336
DEEAEFXAOW NCO NET

Make Money
He D no Pe op t At ct ve Gove n
men Aelundt F ee Oeta 1 24
h
teo ded meuege 1 800
.149 462!5 Ex ~700

4x70
304
New&amp; Used Fun ue
New 2 Pece L.v g oom Sules
$399 Buy 5e 1i ade

DRIVE A l TTL~ SAVE A LOTI
E Zfnancng
SngeWdes DoubeWdes
Hu y
(304)722 7148
A ESTABL SHED SNACK
VEND NG ROUTES P me loca
ons Qua ty mach nes W se
w lh n 3 weeks Unde $9K nves
man E•ce en! pol po en a
F nance ava lab e good c ed
888) 466 4200-

WEEK~V

Move

F om Ren To Own low Down
Payment L.ow Mon h y Payment
Ca
BOO 948 5678
NSTANT
CASH
LOWEST
RATES CHECK OUT THE REST
Up to $500 INSTANTLY! 1 877
EARlY PAY L CICC70036

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

630

Livestock

$ 50 00 e ec

NEED CASH? Rece ng pay
men s on NOTE &amp; TRUST DEED
MORTGAGE lAND SA E CON
TRACT Ca 4 0 64 8229 Cap
o Fnanca Sevces

L m ed 0 No C ed

Gove n
me Bank F nance On y A Oak
wood In Ba bou sv e WV 304
736 3409
?

M lL.ENNIUM 2001 Aen Susie
16x70 3 bed oom 2 bah e
duced 0 $21 900 As ow as
S 95 a mon h nc udes de ve y
b ock and eve ng sk tlng and
mo e Check u1 out we e dta
ng Co e1 Mob le Hom11 US Ro
Ule .50E A hent OH 4570 740
592 972 0 1 800 468 4887

PHOTOGRAPHY
~a n S Photog aphy
5 ManSI
Now open fo bus ness
Wedd ngt
Sen o s
FamlyPota!
Ca lo en appo !"men
304 67.5 7:i!79

'

At the Home of Robert Holiday (Salem Lot Ad ) County Ad 1
LangsVI e Ohto Oi echons from Albany Ohlo St At 32 50 W to St
Rt 143 tum left 5 m to COunty Ad ~ tum A 4 112 mi or from Rt 7
take St At ~ 24 thru Rut and Oh &amp; on to 5alem Center &amp; tum R on

go 4 1 2 ml to s ght Signs w!ll oosted MANY
ARE FRQM JHE mAR QF JHE LATE .JOHN HQlUQAY

County Ad 1

560

rn;ys

HOUSEHOLD Maylag washer &amp; dryer RCA 25 color TV
humOback clock lwaterb!.JNl p cturu Hot Point microwave
refngera o k ng s ze water bed
CO I

.1i21i

·~~~~f.

bed oom suite rol away bed
8UQGY lWJTH RESERVE) oAK
DRAWER
NIGHT STAND
ROUGH
w•o ~ooT
CUPBOARD DEPRESSION GLASS QU LT &amp; MORE CAST IRON
LON BANK 6 1/2 HULL ART coffee grinder coppe kett es ox yokes
p 1cher pump o d scoote corn jObber sea es old wood work ng tools
p anes e c sacl rons baskets ~st i on seats c ank phone parts and
much more not yet dug outlll
ANTIQUE EQUIPMENT: 3 1 1/ 2 HP H 1 &amp; m ss engines 2 cy1 nder
Maytag 1 cyl nde Maytag &amp; other Maytags Johnson I on Horse 2
B gg Eng nes w/overhead valves 7 HP hercules hit &amp; m ss eng ne on
whee s w{saw f arne orchard spraye wJ 1 1/2 H P hit &amp; m ss motor
mounted on wagon B ggs Honzontal 5 HP motor feed grlndar from
Old m 16 HP wood spllngr wDift tfl goose neck trailer 4x8 wood
t a er w 6 8 ti es 501 Fo d r mower heavy duty scoop boom pole
fu I set of steal wheels fo W C Allis Chaime s tracto ea stee wheets
fo F 20 Fa ma Home ite Wate Pump (GAS) 5 HP Wlza d Roto Tiller
1 1/2 HP s demount Mower lo lawn tractors tab esaw JOinters
sande o drums corn meal g nde 12 Volt Hydro! c pump electric
motors h tch for Sth whee camp ng t a e tank air compresso 10 &amp;
12 plas c: p pe 20 long MODEL A&amp;T pARIS nclud ng runn ng
bOard luggage rack bel housing fo MODEL T VALVE TOOLS FOR
FLAT HEADS VALVE CAPS CO LS
M SC on &amp; on 1 La d cans garden saede fodder cutters gas light
fixtu e hay ha poon wood p\J lays o d mouse trap cow k akers long
hand e ad e lg anv I flal belt ng wheat a ckles erose cut saws lg
round saw b ades poe cl mbers lg d nner bel shop vac mow ng
mach ne parts m ld cans tool boxes mechen c tools &amp; bOKeS 2 48
Hyd o IC cy lnders o d v se jacks 100 ga gas tank ch cken feeders
garden pow o d baskets cha ra books o d jewa
tab eware
Metmack d nnerwa a o d seed c eaner m I ng mach ne lg wooden
bucket potbel y stove wood &amp; coa cookstove tue o tu naca wood
medic ne cab ne &amp; morel! Items tar to numerous to menton &amp; a 10
not yet pu ed from bu cl nga
PLENTY PARKING BRING VDUR LAWN CHAIRS REFRESHMENTS
BV THE LADIES OF THE TEMPLE CHURCH

rv

TERMS CASH OR CHECK W/POI ID
AUCTIONEER RODNEY HOWERY
~ ~214-6390 or 1 74HH-n31

71 0

a Bonded In St1t1 of Ohio &amp; WV

Autos for Sale

back
$40 00
lu oak cab

o

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs

304 773

Building
Supplies

1740)

Pets for Sale

2000 400EX 4 whee e Ike new
ova $ 000 n ex as $5 300 00
304 675 7423 eave message
Whee er Honda 250 4
Fou
T ac Exce en Cond on Ready
Fo Oea Season 740)256 267
A e 7pm

Sawm I $3 795 New Supe L.um
be ma e 2000 a ge capac t es
mo e 9P ons manu la c u e ol
sawm Is edge s and sk dde s
NORWOOD INDU STR IES 252
Sonw 0 ve Bu Ia o NY 4225
FREE In o ma on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U

Buclget Pr ce d Tranam sslont
A
Types Access To Ove
o ooo T ansm ss ons eve
Jo n s 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3765

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Reg ste ed Lab Pups 8 ack And
Ye ow
50 Each ( 740 )446
0080

s

570

Apartments
for Rent

SERVICES

Mus1cal
Instruments
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
1993 N ssa n ca
990 Toyo a
Tu se has damage on passenge
s de 85 000 m es $500 00 d sh
was he used on y 3
mes
$225 00 Bundy c a ne $75 00
33 000 BTU gas hea ng s ove
$ 25 00 304 675 7362

2 P235 T es

s

Coach Ash then presented
awards for the TVC s Ali Acade
team
mcludmg N1 ck
m1c
McLaughhn
Shannon Pnce
Kayte DaviS Mmdy Chancey
Andy DaviS Bea Morgan Enuly
Story Chm Dodson Dernck
Bohn Wh1tney Ashley and JeSSica
G tey To be ehg1ble for the all aca
denuc team you must have a 3 5
G PA earn a vamty letter and be
at leasr a sophomo!1'

Ohw nat' es) and players who
n v r constdercd to be any
th11g spcual
Tm B1ab butuka had a decent
career but torched Oh a State for
1 I 1 n sh 1g yards 1 199o Todd
Platt: v s \\ alk o 1 who Inter
cepr d two pmes 11 M1ch ga 1
198J vm over the l11ckeyes Jolll
Kolesar 1 de a lcap1 •g goal lu e
catch tl at wo 1 the 1988 game for
the Wolvcnnes a play that
Cooper never fa1ls to ment1on
'h en th s tunc of war ro ll s

Con ments by Oh10 State pia)
ers 1' rr) Gle1 1 and Da\ld
Boston have ft eled the hre and
prov ded bullet11 board nater al
11 tht past n It the:: B Kkeyes
'VL' I~ 01 1pl1 t' ltlr) of M chtga 1
and sol 1 1 thur appmsal of
the ga 1 c d 1r 11 g Monday nter

Meigs

from Page

from Page 81
have se sed the.: r c aLh ~ tppt t:
ht: s 01
They p ' Jt to h s 0 ' I e or I
g 11 st tlu: \Vo Vt::Ullt: as p Ot f
thilt I c has nc\ et q 1 tl: g aspt:d
th proper approach
No 11a tter The en tics 'iee 1 to
be verywhere afte1 1 loS&gt;- par
tiC hrl) OJ call 11 sl ows 1 ch t
roo ns and 1 1 le tters to tl e e I to
ObvloLslv [ 1 a va e f hats
happc1 ed and what could h 1p
pe1 Cooper md Lh t the 1 xt
g;unc IS the most 1 nportant 0 1 c
to me
O luo State has been beaten by
He s nan Trophy w 1 1c..-s su ch o
Des 10 1d H oward a 1d Charles
Woodson (both of who n \Hre

w.,; r

HOtl1d

Asked vhat he had lear 1ed
f10 n c aclung 1 1 \\hat IS called
The Cra ne around the reg1on
Coor
sa d [ thm k you learn
tl at the team that plays the best
that day s go ng to w n the ga 1 e
Not tl e t an th t ta lks th 1 ost
or the tea 1 tl at hypes the ga 1 e
the I lOSt

\\alks from 1 '190 92
t
appeared that Johnson wou d
never be able to harness h s over
powenng stufl
After gomg 49 48 111 hiS first
SIX seasons Johnson has go 1e
Johnson rece1Hd 12 of 32 first
place votes 111 ballonng bv the 110 47 SJnce to beco m to
Baseball Wmers Asso 1 t on f bccomt: a donu1at11g pttcher
Whe 1 I \\JS vounger I fa1led a
A1 1enca Joh 1son 1s
t s \.C 1
scco 1ds and t\\U I nds for 1 '13 lot ~llh" '" ad Nobody Ike&gt;
to f,I but I learned a gr at deal
p011ts
Atbntas Ton Gl ' " fi 1shed fro ' fail11g Now I know \\hat 1t
se o d v1th 64 p 1 s g tt g takes to be successful
After gomg 14 2 v th a I 80
fa" firsts 12 seco d a d 1gl t
ERA
before tht All Star break
tl rds Madd x v th rd v th S9
J I JSOI faltered do' n the stretch
po nts ~ llo v d b R I b Ne
S11 Fra JCISco (2() I J n vi Kik of as Anzo 1a t II out of the pel n 1t
St Lams (8) a d K
Bro v 1 I rt ~..: He vo onl) five u 1 es 11
lu I 1 I 16 sta t gm 1g o o v th
Los A 1geles (4)
1 ~I ERA aft r the br&lt;ak
rhe e vas a I Jt of o 1 p t
I 15) I I ad fi 1 sh d tro •g r
tl01 thiS )CJ
j h1 11 Sl j
r rt t J
Every ye" a I set ld
t 5 l1 I st II fe I tl t f1o
I 1 sl
p tt) g 1 I ) ar
llJldcr t&lt; pt t the t 1b&lt;1 s f
Tl b1ggcst g at fi t &lt; 1 I get 5 J h
I
'
'" cl)
lie
I e fir t I II 1 l th" ~
ion g t at 1 1g
I c 1 lot
d 11 t , 1 as "II n tl e
nd
pcopk rl J 1ght
•ght b
I Ill
th h II
N crt I k &lt; I
1 Sled
J hl ) 1 JO l M l ld X
I
Ko 1hx IS th
h b ck t t k 1h ' " v th a ? ( 4 ERA~
1 1e1 1 the Nl M ld x \
1 1 tht.: k 1~ t.: o Br '
0
(
oH )
I de I ,J g t1,
ft
st 1 g 1t lr ' I no h '
I g'
tllkc&lt; Lt &lt; (H7)
I J
K t lax o 1 1 I H , r r
1llg fcl 1tg (7 11)
d
I he B1g U1 1t I
1 e 1 &lt;1 g
t
d
tor
t
r~t
l
1
pi
tl'
'' •Y from I IS ' I I ) tl 1tl tl '
(K) 1 d I 1t t t (1)
Mar 1 crs Aft r I d g tl I g e g
111

Quean s ze wa e bed .exc
$ 50 00 304-675 2466

440

Brandon Bobb B J Kennedy
Jeremy Roush Tyson Lee Marc
Barr Billy Soulsby Zach Bolin
C hm Jeffers Ross Stewart Jusnn
81
G1lmore Kenny Zuspan Derek
M11ler Jason Rosier Evan Shaw
R!Chard DeWeese
N1 ck McL aughhn Josh Eagle
Chancey then presented m em
hers of the vamty football Jusnn Robson J l' Vann Joe
Ma rauders wh1ch fimshed Wlth a Rupe Brandon Ramsburg and
6 4 mark overall and a 3 2 mark manager Ph11l1p Murdock
All TVC selections were Derek
m the TVC Vamty players mclud
Mlller Adam Bullmgton Matt
ed Jo 1 D1ddle Adam Bullmgton
Stewart and Chm Jeffers all tim
Kyle Hannan Dernck Fackler
team selec uons
Matt Stewart Dernck Knapp

Dreams

eadm

27 Zen h TV bea
ne 304 882 2258
5505

Uncond ona
e me gua antee
loca e e ences lu n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870
800 287 0576 Rog
esWaepoo ng

S ee Bu d ng c ea ance 30x30
was $6980 sel 53890 401150
was $
900 se $5800 55x 30
was $29 900 se $14 900 Mus
se Can de ve Tom (800) 392
7803

610 Farm EqUipment
984 John Dee e backhoe 500c
.$17 000 986 900 Ag a am 96
hp uns good good es made
by A s Cha me s &amp; 0 e
$7500 740 742 2.230 any me

Gene a
Home Man
enence Pan ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob le home epa and mo e Fo
ee es ma e ca Che 740 992
6323

C&amp;C

s

5 Each
gma
Gu a W h Case 5260 (740
367 7729

840

Now rec ev ng tobacco ~ 1t ule
Nov 20th New Fa me s Tobacco
Wa ehouse A p ey Oh o ca
888 S44 4365 ask o oo man
age 0 v e Wha e o T m T app
o phone Ed son Mayes 304
675 858

Need A New Home
(740 44i 3583 To P e Qua
Phone

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS!?
NoFeeUn111WeWn
88B 582 3345

FARM AUCTION
Sat. Nov. 18, 2000 at 10:00 a.m.

95 Geo Tacke
2WD Blue
Auto A C 42K New Top Ve y
C ean $4200 OBO 740)446
3789

a chad

FOOTBAU AWARDS - The fol~
lowmg Me1gs Marauders were
presented
awards
TuesdaY
even1ng at the Me1gs H gh School
fall sports banquet Front row
from left to nght are Chns Jeffers
and N1ck Mclaughhn Second
row Derek M ller Matt Stewart
and Adam Bull ngton (Dave Har
r s photo)

Public Sale and Auction

87 Fo d F 50 4 Speed Good
Cond on $3 00 86 Me cu y
Couga
Runs Good
$900
(740 256- 425

Wa e I ne Spec al 3 4 200 PSI
$2 95 Pe
00
200 PS
$37 00 Pe
00 A B ass Com
p esslon F ngs InS ock
RON EVANS ENTEAPR SES
Jackson Oh o ADO 537 9528

Need We And Sep c No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Sa ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

NEED CASH? Have an annu ty o
s uc u ed se I ement? We pu
c hase hem and pay tas De
pen dab e 0 des n he bus ness
Ca Se emen Cap a
BOO
959 0006

The
Jlatlp 'aCttbune
Classified&amp;

Licensed

Tappan H E c ency 90 Yo Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond t on ng
Systems Fee 8 Yea Wa anly
Benne s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 872 5967 www o vb com ben
ne

PUT T
TO WO RK $25 175 HOUR PT
FT
CAll
888 32 7083
,ww cZ PC NET

U25

merchants and

everyone who
helped to make
the Sleepy
Hollow haynde

wooDen day bed w

s

FINANCIAL

OV'IN A COMPUTER

\!'; OAK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN T FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
QUIRED
BOO 746 !17 6 Ex
• 0

Feeney Bennett
Post 128 would
hke to thank the

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

110

$505 WEEKlY GRARANTEEO

•

meetmg you

Appl ances
Recond oned
Washe s D ye s Ranges Rei
g ato s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se I New May lag Ap
p ances F ench C v Maytag
740-446 7795

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Management

Opportun1t es
Available
Medical/ Dental/
40 I K I Pa d VacatiOns
ava1lable for
full t me employees
Start your new
career wtth us
Call I 800 929 5753
for an appomtment
We look forward to

550

GOVT POSTAL OBS Up o
$ 8 35 hOu Fu bene! s No ex
pe ence eQu ed Fo app ca on
and exam no ma on
888 726
9083 ext 70 7arn 7pm CST

pleased to announce
the Grand Opemng of
Its Pomeroy call center
We are now senmg up
mterv ew appo ntments
for outbound
teleserv1ces poSitions
No EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY
Potential to earn up to
$15/hr w1th quarterly
salary reviews
Full and part hme
pos1t ons available
3 Slufts da1ly w1th
tlex1 ble schedu hng

1n

pos
Mode n 2 BR House No Pe
$260 mo $ 50 Dep os
446-36 7

Help Wanted

IS

•

MOBilE HOME OWNERS

Right In
To Your
Favorite
Classified
Section And
See What's
Newl

MILLENNIUM
TELESERYICES

COOKWARE
AMERICAS
HEAVIEST
Surg ca
Stee
NEW 1 p y waterless se s
liFETIME GUARANTEED Nor
ma ly $ 800 Sac I c ng $399
(FREE s ock po OR e ec ie Sk
e ) Checks C 0 D VI/MC AMX/
D SCOVER B ochu es 1 800
926-7253

lOWER
HEATING
COSTI
HEAT NG
COST SAIC Td
DOUBL.E TH S WINTE~ Re
place 0 d Gas Guzzle W th
Amana s 95'¥. H ghes E c ency
Gas Fu naces And Hea Pumps
F ee Es ma es You Don ca
Us We Both Lose
(740 446
6308 800 291 0098

Local on $600 mo Oepos &amp;
Ae e ence Aequ ed Wiseman
Rea Es a e (740)446-3644

CREO T PROBlEMS ? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS l CENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG 90 80 DAYS
888
8 0902

4300

6937

3 BR 2 Ba h Home In Convement

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Con so da on o $200 000 Bad
Cred 1 No C ed OK C ed
Ca ds Mo gages E c G oba
F nan c a Serv ces To F ee l o
nlorma on I 888 604 444 EM
303

oo

FACTORY
D RECT
STEEL
BUILDINGS Save housands
one WEEK clea ance sa e Ca
NOW 877 898 0508

6 7 ACRE W/POND
Loca ed n Jackson Co Mad son
Twp On Emory Centerpo nt Ad
Between Rio Grande And Oak
H E ac nc And County Wa e
Ava able Oak H II School 0 stnc
$21 900
W V RGINIA Ritchie County
Aus IC 97 Ac Trac Fo Sa e As
Rec ea1 on P ope ry Loca ed In
A ch e County On Sunne Run
Road $57 000
Ca Us Today Fo FREE MAPS
Anthony land Company ltd
1-800-213 8365
www elcland com

$FREE CASH NOW$ I om
wea hy lam es un oad ng m ens
o do a s o he p m n m ze he
axes W e lmmed a e y W nd
a s 4542 EAST TROPICANA
AVE •207 LAS VEGAS NE
VADA 89 2

NO Hun ng On Meek Fa ms
Raccoon TownshiP

MORE LOCAL
FOLKS

ALL STEEL BU LOING WINTER
SAL.E
Stra ght
wa
24~36x 0 $4485 00 30x50x10
$5475 00 40JC60X12 $8325 00 5
0•100II14 $13425
E Do ado
Bu d ng Syslems 1 800 279

Honeysuckle H s A.pa tments
located On Colon al 0 ve Be
h nd H ghway Pat o Pes 1&amp;2
Bed ooms Now Ava lab e Rent
Sla s $235/ mo low &amp; Mode ale
Income Equal Hous ng Oppo
lun 1Y (740 44&lt;Ml344

P even lo eclosu e w lhout
bank uptcy WI'Ty move? Private
Realty Fund ng ecorded nfo ma
t Qn 1 888 809-2580 o
www C arXUnk conVhelp

New To YouTh tt Shoppe
9 WestS mson A hens
740 592 1842
Qual ty c oth ng and ho seho d
ems $1 DO bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day

Merchandise

110

Slowpays Repo s Bank uplcy
Got Bad C ed f? Get A New Start
W th A B and New Home Ca
(740)446 3570 Fo Specla F

'

540 Miscellaneous

Payments
cau Now (304)722 7140

limitation or diserlmlnauon

MAKE $2000 TO $12000
WEEKLY! HAVE FUN WORK
OWN HOURS NOT MlM 26
FREE VACATIONS TRAVEL &amp;
CRUISES CALL TOLL FREE 1
800 883 7476 24 HR AEC
MESS ) www coas ale ub netlvsa
ga ese

ATTENT ON
EARN ONL NE lr&lt;JCOME
$5000 $75001 month
800-7 S4 8556

Apartments
for Rent

for sale

Now H ng PCA And CNA Home

Hea h Ads Needed In Gall a
Jackson &amp; ¥e QS Couro es Fu 1
0 Pa IT me Ava abe Compel

440

320 Mobile Homes

CROSS COUNTRY ~ARDS
The follow1ng athletes rece1ve&lt;f
awards for cross country at the
Me1gs Fall Sports Banquet Tues
day evenmg In the front row from
left to r ght are tm1ly Story
Andrea Burdette Second row
Bea Morgan Ashley Thomas
Chns Dodson and Derr ck Bol1n
(Dave Harr s photo)

•

as Chevy Ce eb ty S ~ onwagon
N ce Wo k Ca ve y Dependab e
740 256-6574

Electrical and
Refrigeration

,J,

\ Jt" \

~

Coope r vas shd f players ca1
be too fired 1 p for a b1g show
dov. 1 s 1 h o M ch ga 1 Oh o
State
In response Cooper reCited a
poe n What 11ore can )OU ask a
11an than g ve t all \\lth 1 hiS
sp31 To g1vc 1t all t s e 1 s to me
s n )t too f:~.r fro 11 vtctory
But 'he1 playmg your nval
Cooper has kar l&lt; d that be 1 g
not too fat from victory ts no
subsntut~::

for wtn n ng

Joh 1son J0111ed Nolan Ryan as
the only p1tcher to record 300.
stnkeouts m three stratght seasons.
and became the 12th ph)er to
reach the 3 000 stnkeout plateau
Watchmg hun O\ cr the last
co •pie of years has bee 1 a treat t
really I as to watch a guy at the
top of h s game sa d new D~a
1 o 1dbacks ma lJger Bob B 1 ly
the tea 11 s TV analyst dur ' g
Joh 1s01 s two )c::ars m Ar zo1 a
It s been a JOV to watch and l11
sur ts go ng to be a JOY to pe 1
c I h s 1a ne 1 at tl e botto 1 f
th b 1 up ever) fiftl lay
Glavme (11 J 1 40 ERA) a
t\\O t11nc C) Yotu g \ 11er kJ
tl e league 1 VllS nd \lS key
co 1 po '" ' t on tl c Braves NL
East \ l l l t g t :1.1
Ma:l:hx
' w Ins t tr C) Yo tngs H 1t
IJ 9
th
1 10 ERA t
11 ,
rht ~.: fit st ~ b c
tt.:s
N1
I g t , frstpl•
\ { tt.:
\
I t' I lSt ltlll1t
h
, t1 I •g
go 1 g 4 1
I ,o ERA
\lth 41
c
j
KI
, th
h
Ic
1( g 1 L:
g t I
fit I
h t pi e
tc
J h1 n 1 got a S oll( II( 11 l '
t&lt; 1
1 l I g 01 t l)
t I
I ) 1,
1 db 1
sab ) Nc.:t rn t\t' I
S4 I )11(
11 Kll gets So il ()()()

s

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5 •

BRIDGE

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ill

NEA Crossword Puzzle

. . . ,...,,, II al

......... ,.

PHILLIP

.• umiBOUD

.......
••.-••

MONUMENTAL
UFE INSURANCE CO.
•
Rocky R~ Hupp, Agent

..... s.~

t
. . OfRG IT "I:IIJ5

Box 189 ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

large special
CHRISTMAS AUCTION
Thursday,
November 16th
6pm
Doors open at 4:30
Thousands of Christmas
items and toys.
Also donating
Toys for Tots
HENDERSON AUCTION
CENTER
Behind Post office in
Henderson, W. Va
Lon Neal Auctione r

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~.

tJ/

P/ BCONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

BISSELL BUILDERS

ALDER

~ ~utl'~f9
High 8l Dry
Self-Storage

INC •
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addnions
• Roofing

SECURITY·

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

BAUM LUMBER
ST. RT. 248
CHESTER

33795 Hiland RJ.

COMMERCIAL and l!SIDEHTJAL
FREii ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

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

ESTIMATES

Brian Marrisoft/Radllt, Olllo

•llollrkll &amp;Ft II 1
•R~Gonon

GALLIPOLIS

:~u.l&amp;:.,.

.Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

.740·992·1671

(7 40) 985-3948

•AKJ

•

• 8 4 3

+K2

.•••
~

'

Racine Gun Club

R&amp;S

SHERIFPS SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 99CV086
~..tar Blink, N.A., FKA Star
Blink, N.A.
P1alnlln

1bandoned roed, thence
oouth 89' 30' wool 121 loti

SLUG MATCH

Replacement Auto

Set. Nov. 11th
Set. Nov. 18th

l r_lrl··l:utUJI&lt;I' •(,l ,h•

VL

Section No. 8, thence 110uth

along obandoned road to
public road, thence ooulh
65' 30 welt 300 foe! along
public road to tho Wilt line
of tho ooutheut quonor of

Edmund T.·GIIoo, ot ol
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

alztHn and 56/100 acre•

In purauanca of an Order

t

~oi

Soulb

1

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•

992·6215

;

22 y ... Local

:

Courthouea

1

Legal Deocrlpllon:
Tho f(!llowlng doocrtbod
real ootato altuatod In tho
Tawnahip of Scipio. County
of Molgo and Slate of Ohio:
Situate In tho County of
Molgo, In tho State of Ohio
and In tho Tawnohlp of
Scipio and being located In
Town 7, Range 14, of tho
Ohio Company's Purchase,

Reference Dead: Volume

Volume 245 Page 453
Property Address:
38720 Hornor Hill Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Appralaed at $40,000
Terms of sale: Cosh
Jamea M. Souloby
SheriH, Molgo County
Brlan S. Jackson

53' 50' ..., 192 feet along
center of said road, thence

aald road, thence north so·
45' east, 302 feet along
center of said road, thence

north 53' 45' east 235.5 feet

2 NT

AN' YOU GOT
A &amp;OOD

•

WHUPPIN'

to center of

Wingett Memorial Education
Trust has flied Ita annual
return of a
private

S t o p In And See

•

ooulh 60' wool 443.5 foot foundation, Form 990·PF,
along canter of abandoned with the Internal Revenue
road, thence south 79" 30' Service for fiscal yaBr 199S:.
west 141 feet along cantor 2000. In accordance filth
of abandoned road, thence

Internal

Revenue

Steve Riffl e
S a l es R e p resen t a'ti ve

1

L a r ry S c h ey

..,..

.s:G-

Code

north 56' 45' west 136 feet Section 6104 (b), this form
along abandoned road , Is available for public '750 East State Street
Phone (740) 593-6671
thence north 39' 45' west Inspection at the home of
253 loot along center of Robert Wingett, Trustee , Athens, Ohio 45 701
'
abandoned road ; thence 1367
College Road ,
· "A Betrer Wa , E ~erv Da " 6!20/mo
north 54' wool 174 foal Syracuse, Ohio , during the
along center of abandoned 180 day period beginning
ro1d, thence north sa· west Novambar 15, 2000.
Advertise in
Now Renting
88 feet along center of (11) 15, 1TC

NOTEBOOK
OAC names players
of the week
CLEVELAND (AP) - O tterbein running back 1
Shane R annebarger and John Carroll nose guard Eric
Urdzik were chosen as the players of the wee k in the
O hio Conference, the league said Tuesday.
Ran nebarger ran for 252 ya rds on 29 carries,.

including a 62-yard run with 2:22 left to pur Otterbein ahead in its 30-26 victory over Muskingum Saturday.
Urdz1k h ad mne tackJes, mcludmg two sacks, as
John Carroll bear crosstown rival Baldwin-Wallace
20-17 Saturday.

this space for
$25 per
month.

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

HILL'S

HOWARD L. WRITESEL

SELF STORAGE

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (Al' ) - West Virginia
University safety Rr ck Shermd lm been chosen Big
East Defensive Player of the Week for his performanre in the Mountamcm' 11-24 dmlbre overtime

tialli
go:dmclu
ottempr.
· He blocked
made 12a lield
tJck..lt:s,
ti111 ~ ,, tnuchdown-'iJ\·ing stop, in the set:ond ovcrtu'nt:.

NASCAR fines Pruett
S10,000 for bump
DAYTONA BEAC:H , H.t. (AI') -

Scott Pruett

\Vas tin e d $10,000 t(n Jnt t.:nt lt&gt;Jullv ru nn ing into the

car dnvt:n by R obert Prc,~ky ;H thl' t:n J of th~..· Nov.
5 race 111 Phoemx . Pru l'tr. :1 rouk1e til till" \\l tmtoll
Cup sencs, hit (&gt;rc.ssky\ t.1r dunn~ {he cool- down

lap of the 500-kiiQmctcr r.tcc .

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WI/ #0234 77

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead in service"
·11.6% Protein Liveslock}catlle Feed $5.50/100
-2t % Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/100
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.25/50
$1.00 off coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Cr.umbels $5.99/50
TM . Sail Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St. At 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740·985·3831

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
Dump Truck Del ivery Meigs
and Gallia Counties Call &amp;

Leave Message

992-6142 or
Toll-free 1-877-604-7350
Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
HEAP Vouchers acqepted
for Mbigs &amp; Gallia Coumies

•

Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt 1 Mulch •

Factory Aut{torized
Case-IH Parts

Equipment Parts
Dealers.

·
8Ulid ozer S81VICes
(740) 992·3470

1000 St. Rr. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

• New Homes

• Garages
• Siding

I

li c~~~=

Lifetime Warranty
~ ~ Local Contractor

I
I

992·1101
e 13

1

mo

PEANUTS

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Biss ell
30 Yrs Experience

50 TJ.IE REST OF TJ.IE F'AMll'&lt;
GOES INTO THE MALL, AND
I'M LEFT ALONE IN THE CAR ..

740-378-6349

one

•

fiber

11 Dried up
·12 Allowance tor ~­

9 FruHOHCI
10 _:_
"How_ .

waate
19Wordona

AK72

West

Pass

Norlb
I •

3NT

11M GLAD TJ.IE'( LEFT
THE SUN ROOF OPEN

,,'

ow~ OS'·
~

''

blc for you r own good today. A . Anoth er's version of an issue
shrewd salesperson who perceives might differ considerabl y from
thi s may take advantage of th at yours, but it may not be due to the
fac t and dump a lemon on you.
facts. It could be that both of you
AQUA RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) mi ght ha ve heard or seen onl y
A partnership in which you are what you wanted to.
presentl y in volved could collapse
CANCER (June 21-J ul y 22) If
today if eac h of you thinks the your intuitive perceptions suppon
other one is holdi ng down the fort. yo ur log ic, don't let yoursel f be
Check with each other alid make drawn into a financial endeavor
sure someone is on dut y.
today about whic h you have some
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20) . se rious doubts.
This could have been a producti ve
LEO (July 23-A ug. 22) Shoul d
day fo r you, but, un fortun ately, you accept a l ead~rsh i p role today.
chances are you' ll go off on tan- remember ·- you w!l l sink or
gents in stead of foc u ~ ing on spe- swim on your decisio n-making
cific objectives that need your processes. Don't come to any conclusions out of emot ion -· on ly
attention.
from
facts.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
V
IRGO
(Aug . 2.1-Scpt. 22)
A!though your pal may be we llin tentioned wi ih info rmation he Tl1a1 which you sweep unde r the
imparts to you today, his sources rug today may not 'ee the light of
cou ld be faulty. Check out the day again for a long time to come.
Someth ing val uab le cou ld be
facts before acting on them.
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20) buried needlessly becau&gt;e of your
Better check all the fi ne print apat hy.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
carefull y today before signing
any type of agreement that locks You' ll have to make it so if you
you in on a deal. There could be want something to happen today.
someth ing in the details that All the wishes and hopes in the
world won't make th ings transpire
wou ld work against you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) as you'd like them to.

•

~.,.

·-'·

·22 Service
•"
'
23 Motor
24 Drencheo
"
25 Salamanders : '
26 l'loralan eH • :
27 Seed
~

East
Pass

All pass

29
00

covering
:
Top 40 ftemo •

Cook'o pot •
31 Cry
~
37 Funny person
38 Medicinal
. .
40 Ia concerned
41 Dlvlolon word'
42 - -do-wllll
43 Hourvt••• fill
45 Racetrack
ah46 Nerve
network
47Raleed
..
49 Wish undone _
50 Sin
52 ZodiiiC olgn 53 Spenloh gold

""''

.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

.

by Luis Campos

....

.

Celebrity Cipher coyplograms are ctealed lrom q....llons by lomouo peopje, post and
present Each tener In the cipher stands fol another.

..

'

Today's clue: A equals P

' J X L VZ W0 W Z M
C L

W R

S L T J X W C L S

AGZZWRB
ZD8LZNLX

T J WL R J L

VT

ZUD

VRS

ZD

HVEL

z· N "L

VJ Z

J 0 G K S ·::
0 p

ZUD

.

... ··
•

.

PWOL . '

~·

......

V XZ N G X
'e 0 L T Z K L X
"
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In creating, the only hard thing's to begtn· a grass- &lt;
blade's no easier to make than an oak.' - James Rusaetl Lowell '
.. .

'=:~:~:~' S@\\.&lt;illA-L&amp;£~s·
::::
1411od lor CIAT I. POlLAN ....,;:.,__ _ __

...
•.

O Rearrange

•

leottrs of the
four scrambled words be·
low to form four Jlm~lo words.

I
I

BEBWOC

I

VAROS

1--rl--.-1~~

-. -

I

.,

3 0
........ll

...

r-...::...,C....,L--:-A-=T,_H.......,, ~

lI

I I

~~

.

'

: you·Overheard
at local gym: "Have
ever noticed that most of the

,..,_..E_L_P_O_P_E_-. ~?~'ople here don 't need to ·-.

--_

5 I I I I' 1 O
IL-1..1
. ....J.L......I.-.1.._J..
. .....1

Complete the chudle quoted
bv fillinv In the milling words
you dovelop from Ito~ No. 3 below.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Denote • Irate - Qualm - Vermm · MODERN

Sentinel

While looking a;ound an antique mall . I believe. t11al
.antiques are sold with very definite prices tha t are MOD·
ERN .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

NOVEMBER15

Thursday, Nov. 16, 2000
There are hopeful· indications
that you could have some maJor
accomplishme nts in th e year
ahead. Your solid preparations
before taking .on the challenges
will be a big fac tor in your suc cess .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Those who are fearful of makin g
mistakes are dest ined to make
them because they' foc us on the
fear, not the act. Take the bull by
the horns today wheneve r bold
measmes are called for. Scorpi o,
treat yourse lf to a birthday gif! .
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions fo r the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to AstroGraph, c/o th is newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, "Murray Hill Stati.on,
New York, NY I0 !56. Be su.re to
state yo ur Zodiac sign.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Withholding valuable infor. mation fro m another today in ·
order to feather your own nest
would be a serious mistake, no
matter how your rationalize it.
The piper will have to be paid.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You could be far too vulnera·

•

litigation

There is a metro stop in Paris
named after Cardinal Richelieu .
However, l am told that this isn' t
his greatest claim to fame : Still, he
wrote something apposite for
today's deal : " To know how to
dissimulate is the knowledge of
kings."
Given th at train-sized hint,
how did West persuade declarer to
go down in this three-no-trump
contract?
With strong hands uncertain of
direction, both in tenms of strain
and level, it pays to keep lhe bidding low early in the auction . So ,
silting South, I would have
responded two diamonds. Perhaps
coincidentally. that would have
worked welL North would have
rebid two no-trump, and South ·
would have raised to three . East
would surely have led the heart
two, giving declarer any easy ride.
Still, at first glance, South is
well placed. He ducked trick one,
won West's club continuation
with dummy's king , and played a
spade to his ace . No problem -until West smoothfy threw the
king under th e ace'
Thinking this had to be a singleton, South aband oned spades.
In stead, he fin essed the heart
jack, but East produced the queen
and returned a heart. A third heart
didn 't establish South 's nine as a
trick. He tried du cking a diamond
to West's jack, but a club back left
declarer with onl y eight tric ks,
two in each suit.
Note that West's gambit with
the spade kin g was a no-cost
~ maneuver. He was due to win
only one spade trick, and he was
still going to get thai if South persevered with the suit. And if West
hadn't sacrificed his king, South
would have led his second spade
and collected at least one overtrick.

m'Your
-'Birthday

~~

maze
21 Llableto

Another trick

''

~

Remodeling
Decks
Roofing

Meed It done, give us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Priced on New Homes

992·2753

Replacement
Windows Installed

"

SMITH'S COHSTROCTIOH

TOO U1UN.L'i'!

ROVE T&lt;;AT
""\..\.. YOU~ STUD'(INI;
~!&gt; A WASTE Of TIME"
Flt-ANCIS! HERE'S
EliMISIT A! LAST
WEEK'S SOCIAL STUDIES
QU IZ.'

'

r"========~========i

: eru~tt{G ?
'

' '.

740o887-G383

111\W.., &amp;J..AC&gt;'i 7:J?
\1:) ~~Tf\tt-IG

/
( Tf\I~K. YOO'Rt.
TI\KII'\G Tf\E:~
Cf' Tf\1\1 Dt7:J f\ ·

1: CAN

•

or 'OS

I

BIG NATE

.,

mont

.,

/
'I
'tlt~r-J'::. Tt\r-,1 I

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

·;

'·

lJ '_

•

vert1se our
•
us1nes.s

591-5011

, .

-

•'

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Paying $80.00
per ga"JI'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00·50 tt/1 0/llo

..
'I

-

Pomeroy, OH

~llli

•

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

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,

tQI096 ·
• 10 8

25Shaulder
ornament
2S Not at all
32Sav•
33 SkiiHul -H
34 Social group
35 Tropical bookal

DOWN
1 1412 ohlp
2 Biblical name
3 "Slop, Silveri"
41naane
5 Everything
6 Pine loll
7 Bird C8ll
8 s-t potato

BY PHILLIP ALDER

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

(

. '· All Makes Tractor &amp;

T he 195-pound junmr from Ch,trlcston mterceptcd a pass at the goal line . rcco,·cn:d .1 fumbk md par- · ·

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MitES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18

. ' ..

· HAULING unci
EXCfiVfiTIHG

victory at Rutger"i Sawrday.

1·800-291-5600

Free Estimates
Toll Free

WVU's Sherrod tabbed Big :.,WICK'SCI

Easfs top defensive player

992-4119

Roofing
Home Maintenance
Gutters/Down
Spout

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

HER YET·· I'M JEST
GITliN' WARMED UP

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

6 4

• Q 10 5 2

officer

Opening lead: • Q

I DIDN'T TELL

740-985-3677

,....

992-5479

Public Notice
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION
The Ernest and Maxi ne

abandoned road, thence

lbandoned road, thence

·AnY Size Double Hunl!·

Bulldozing Er
Backhoe services,
House site work,
Driveway Er land
clearing,
Septic systems
installed.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Rothluaa
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241·2100
OH Sup Ct 10066516
(11) 15, 22, 29

141 .5 feet along center of

north 21 " 45' west 199 loot
along center of said

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

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

.AlltEL

Lerner, Sampaon &amp;

along center of said road ,
thence north ss· 45 ' east
aald road

Pom eroy. Ohio

144 Third Ave. Gallipf!lls 446·4995
Toll Free 1-888·745·8847

Prior Instrument referencea:

aoutheaat quarter of
Section No. 8, thence south

road, thence north 65' 45'
eall 612 feel along center of

.md 1111\'h. '

'r------------------.

245, Pago 453 of tho Melgo
County Deed Recorda.

tho road loading from
Harrloonvllto to Klngebury
In the West Uno of the

along the center of said

p ~ trb !11 1 r.l l' '

38282 Stole Route 684

UPTO 70% OFF

, beginning In the center of

north 84' 30' eoet 177.51oot

l' .t l ll ,, \• .lll.tl olt

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

on

OIICombor 20, 2000 at 10:00
a.m. of 11ld ·day, tho
following doocrlbod r,al
aatata:

.II

C:.tluy

Vulnerable: Boi.h
Dealer: North

Trimming and Removal
30 Years Experience
Fully Insured
Senior Disceunt
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

-

• A 54

MYERS TREE SERVICE

\tlt\ltr iu t l t i'I .H LI'Itllil"·•l\

(16.56) more or 1111.
Exceptingreal
fromoototo
the obovo
deocrlbod
tho "
following: .82 acreo by deed
recorded In Volume 259,
Pogo 437 of the Molgo
County Doed Recorda.
(Factory Outlet)
4.523 acreo by doed
All vertical blinds are made to order at
recorded In Volume 267.
Pogo 159 of the Molgo
our location
County Deed RIICordo.
.52 ,acroo by deed
recorded In Volume 299.
Page 3 of tho Meigs County
• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Etc
Deed RIICordo.

of Sale to me directed from
aald Court In tho above
anUIIed action, I wilt oxpoot
to oalo at public auction at
the

\Ill'&lt;,, I

Sun. Nov. 261h
12:oo Noon
Proceeds from Sat.
Nov. 11th to be
donated to
Bob Fisher Benefit

olong tho well llno of tho
oouthooot quarter of
Section No. 8, to tho place
of beginning, contolnlng

Def-anta

Body Parts

• 10

•
·!
"

Pomenay, Ohio

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

Quality

44~:...

45 sun, e.g.
4aCIDHr

21~on

• A 2
• 9 7 6 4

'
Public Notice

• KJ 9
• 8 3
• J 5
•QJ9763

PtWI0' '8 Puat.

51 Four-IMI15 l'lllla piece
54 --.c:hor'a
1SRM1m
17 Red-- beet 55
1SF...,.Ie
56 Give lhlll to
. antelope
14Acrou
20 Cotleclor'a
57 Ueedofan

Soulb

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Public Notice

East

!

Free Estimates

"W. .elp"

7/2 &gt;/TFN

Wesl

I

••wGart~ts

OF

11-15-GO

•Q8753

.~!P!~.R, ~!!Y~~

I

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Norlb

------.1. ')I
,...-~~~----:•
YOUNG'S

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

::"

13Takee14 RMtaurant

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

~ 10

37WI-epple
3ta.t.41 ~-

7 Olllco-

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns. family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, Investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe .
For more information call

36Uuee-7

ACROSS
1 Redford'•

1
' •

.•

'

..

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Wednesday, November 15, 2000

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5 •

BRIDGE

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ill

NEA Crossword Puzzle

. . . ,...,,, II al

......... ,.

PHILLIP

.• umiBOUD

.......
••.-••

MONUMENTAL
UFE INSURANCE CO.
•
Rocky R~ Hupp, Agent

..... s.~

t
. . OfRG IT "I:IIJ5

Box 189 ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

large special
CHRISTMAS AUCTION
Thursday,
November 16th
6pm
Doors open at 4:30
Thousands of Christmas
items and toys.
Also donating
Toys for Tots
HENDERSON AUCTION
CENTER
Behind Post office in
Henderson, W. Va
Lon Neal Auctione r

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~.

tJ/

P/ BCONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

BISSELL BUILDERS

ALDER

~ ~utl'~f9
High 8l Dry
Self-Storage

INC •
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addnions
• Roofing

SECURITY·

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

BAUM LUMBER
ST. RT. 248
CHESTER

33795 Hiland RJ.

COMMERCIAL and l!SIDEHTJAL
FREii ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

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

ESTIMATES

Brian Marrisoft/Radllt, Olllo

•llollrkll &amp;Ft II 1
•R~Gonon

GALLIPOLIS

:~u.l&amp;:.,.

.Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

.740·992·1671

(7 40) 985-3948

•AKJ

•

• 8 4 3

+K2

.•••
~

'

Racine Gun Club

R&amp;S

SHERIFPS SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 99CV086
~..tar Blink, N.A., FKA Star
Blink, N.A.
P1alnlln

1bandoned roed, thence
oouth 89' 30' wool 121 loti

SLUG MATCH

Replacement Auto

Set. Nov. 11th
Set. Nov. 18th

l r_lrl··l:utUJI&lt;I' •(,l ,h•

VL

Section No. 8, thence 110uth

along obandoned road to
public road, thence ooulh
65' 30 welt 300 foe! along
public road to tho Wilt line
of tho ooutheut quonor of

Edmund T.·GIIoo, ot ol
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

alztHn and 56/100 acre•

In purauanca of an Order

t

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Soulb

1

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•

992·6215

;

22 y ... Local

:

Courthouea

1

Legal Deocrlpllon:
Tho f(!llowlng doocrtbod
real ootato altuatod In tho
Tawnahip of Scipio. County
of Molgo and Slate of Ohio:
Situate In tho County of
Molgo, In tho State of Ohio
and In tho Tawnohlp of
Scipio and being located In
Town 7, Range 14, of tho
Ohio Company's Purchase,

Reference Dead: Volume

Volume 245 Page 453
Property Address:
38720 Hornor Hill Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Appralaed at $40,000
Terms of sale: Cosh
Jamea M. Souloby
SheriH, Molgo County
Brlan S. Jackson

53' 50' ..., 192 feet along
center of said road, thence

aald road, thence north so·
45' east, 302 feet along
center of said road, thence

north 53' 45' east 235.5 feet

2 NT

AN' YOU GOT
A &amp;OOD

•

WHUPPIN'

to center of

Wingett Memorial Education
Trust has flied Ita annual
return of a
private

S t o p In And See

•

ooulh 60' wool 443.5 foot foundation, Form 990·PF,
along canter of abandoned with the Internal Revenue
road, thence south 79" 30' Service for fiscal yaBr 199S:.
west 141 feet along cantor 2000. In accordance filth
of abandoned road, thence

Internal

Revenue

Steve Riffl e
S a l es R e p resen t a'ti ve

1

L a r ry S c h ey

..,..

.s:G-

Code

north 56' 45' west 136 feet Section 6104 (b), this form
along abandoned road , Is available for public '750 East State Street
Phone (740) 593-6671
thence north 39' 45' west Inspection at the home of
253 loot along center of Robert Wingett, Trustee , Athens, Ohio 45 701
'
abandoned road ; thence 1367
College Road ,
· "A Betrer Wa , E ~erv Da " 6!20/mo
north 54' wool 174 foal Syracuse, Ohio , during the
along center of abandoned 180 day period beginning
ro1d, thence north sa· west Novambar 15, 2000.
Advertise in
Now Renting
88 feet along center of (11) 15, 1TC

NOTEBOOK
OAC names players
of the week
CLEVELAND (AP) - O tterbein running back 1
Shane R annebarger and John Carroll nose guard Eric
Urdzik were chosen as the players of the wee k in the
O hio Conference, the league said Tuesday.
Ran nebarger ran for 252 ya rds on 29 carries,.

including a 62-yard run with 2:22 left to pur Otterbein ahead in its 30-26 victory over Muskingum Saturday.
Urdz1k h ad mne tackJes, mcludmg two sacks, as
John Carroll bear crosstown rival Baldwin-Wallace
20-17 Saturday.

this space for
$25 per
month.

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

HILL'S

HOWARD L. WRITESEL

SELF STORAGE

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (Al' ) - West Virginia
University safety Rr ck Shermd lm been chosen Big
East Defensive Player of the Week for his performanre in the Mountamcm' 11-24 dmlbre overtime

tialli
go:dmclu
ottempr.
· He blocked
made 12a lield
tJck..lt:s,
ti111 ~ ,, tnuchdown-'iJ\·ing stop, in the set:ond ovcrtu'nt:.

NASCAR fines Pruett
S10,000 for bump
DAYTONA BEAC:H , H.t. (AI') -

Scott Pruett

\Vas tin e d $10,000 t(n Jnt t.:nt lt&gt;Jullv ru nn ing into the

car dnvt:n by R obert Prc,~ky ;H thl' t:n J of th~..· Nov.
5 race 111 Phoemx . Pru l'tr. :1 rouk1e til till" \\l tmtoll
Cup sencs, hit (&gt;rc.ssky\ t.1r dunn~ {he cool- down

lap of the 500-kiiQmctcr r.tcc .

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WI/ #0234 77

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead in service"
·11.6% Protein Liveslock}catlle Feed $5.50/100
-2t % Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/100
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.25/50
$1.00 off coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
Cr.umbels $5.99/50
TM . Sail Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St. At 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740·985·3831

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
Dump Truck Del ivery Meigs
and Gallia Counties Call &amp;

Leave Message

992-6142 or
Toll-free 1-877-604-7350
Ball Logging &amp;
Firewood
35215 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
HEAP Vouchers acqepted
for Mbigs &amp; Gallia Coumies

•

Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt 1 Mulch •

Factory Aut{torized
Case-IH Parts

Equipment Parts
Dealers.

·
8Ulid ozer S81VICes
(740) 992·3470

1000 St. Rr. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

• New Homes

• Garages
• Siding

I

li c~~~=

Lifetime Warranty
~ ~ Local Contractor

I
I

992·1101
e 13

1

mo

PEANUTS

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Biss ell
30 Yrs Experience

50 TJ.IE REST OF TJ.IE F'AMll'&lt;
GOES INTO THE MALL, AND
I'M LEFT ALONE IN THE CAR ..

740-378-6349

one

•

fiber

11 Dried up
·12 Allowance tor ~­

9 FruHOHCI
10 _:_
"How_ .

waate
19Wordona

AK72

West

Pass

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11M GLAD TJ.IE'( LEFT
THE SUN ROOF OPEN

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~

''

blc for you r own good today. A . Anoth er's version of an issue
shrewd salesperson who perceives might differ considerabl y from
thi s may take advantage of th at yours, but it may not be due to the
fac t and dump a lemon on you.
facts. It could be that both of you
AQUA RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) mi ght ha ve heard or seen onl y
A partnership in which you are what you wanted to.
presentl y in volved could collapse
CANCER (June 21-J ul y 22) If
today if eac h of you thinks the your intuitive perceptions suppon
other one is holdi ng down the fort. yo ur log ic, don't let yoursel f be
Check with each other alid make drawn into a financial endeavor
sure someone is on dut y.
today about whic h you have some
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20) . se rious doubts.
This could have been a producti ve
LEO (July 23-A ug. 22) Shoul d
day fo r you, but, un fortun ately, you accept a l ead~rsh i p role today.
chances are you' ll go off on tan- remember ·- you w!l l sink or
gents in stead of foc u ~ ing on spe- swim on your decisio n-making
cific objectives that need your processes. Don't come to any conclusions out of emot ion -· on ly
attention.
from
facts.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
V
IRGO
(Aug . 2.1-Scpt. 22)
A!though your pal may be we llin tentioned wi ih info rmation he Tl1a1 which you sweep unde r the
imparts to you today, his sources rug today may not 'ee the light of
cou ld be faulty. Check out the day again for a long time to come.
Someth ing val uab le cou ld be
facts before acting on them.
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20) buried needlessly becau&gt;e of your
Better check all the fi ne print apat hy.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
carefull y today before signing
any type of agreement that locks You' ll have to make it so if you
you in on a deal. There could be want something to happen today.
someth ing in the details that All the wishes and hopes in the
world won't make th ings transpire
wou ld work against you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) as you'd like them to.

•

~.,.

·-'·

·22 Service
•"
'
23 Motor
24 Drencheo
"
25 Salamanders : '
26 l'loralan eH • :
27 Seed
~

East
Pass

All pass

29
00

covering
:
Top 40 ftemo •

Cook'o pot •
31 Cry
~
37 Funny person
38 Medicinal
. .
40 Ia concerned
41 Dlvlolon word'
42 - -do-wllll
43 Hourvt••• fill
45 Racetrack
ah46 Nerve
network
47Raleed
..
49 Wish undone _
50 Sin
52 ZodiiiC olgn 53 Spenloh gold

""''

.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

.

by Luis Campos

....

.

Celebrity Cipher coyplograms are ctealed lrom q....llons by lomouo peopje, post and
present Each tener In the cipher stands fol another.

..

'

Today's clue: A equals P

' J X L VZ W0 W Z M
C L

W R

S L T J X W C L S

AGZZWRB
ZD8LZNLX

T J WL R J L

VT

ZUD

VRS

ZD

HVEL

z· N "L

VJ Z

J 0 G K S ·::
0 p

ZUD

.

... ··
•

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PWOL . '

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......

V XZ N G X
'e 0 L T Z K L X
"
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In creating, the only hard thing's to begtn· a grass- &lt;
blade's no easier to make than an oak.' - James Rusaetl Lowell '
.. .

'=:~:~:~' S@\\.&lt;illA-L&amp;£~s·
::::
1411od lor CIAT I. POlLAN ....,;:.,__ _ __

...
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O Rearrange

•

leottrs of the
four scrambled words be·
low to form four Jlm~lo words.

I
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BEBWOC

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VAROS

1--rl--.-1~~

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r-...::...,C....,L--:-A-=T,_H.......,, ~

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: you·Overheard
at local gym: "Have
ever noticed that most of the

,..,_..E_L_P_O_P_E_-. ~?~'ople here don 't need to ·-.

--_

5 I I I I' 1 O
IL-1..1
. ....J.L......I.-.1.._J..
. .....1

Complete the chudle quoted
bv fillinv In the milling words
you dovelop from Ito~ No. 3 below.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Denote • Irate - Qualm - Vermm · MODERN

Sentinel

While looking a;ound an antique mall . I believe. t11al
.antiques are sold with very definite prices tha t are MOD·
ERN .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

NOVEMBER15

Thursday, Nov. 16, 2000
There are hopeful· indications
that you could have some maJor
accomplishme nts in th e year
ahead. Your solid preparations
before taking .on the challenges
will be a big fac tor in your suc cess .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Those who are fearful of makin g
mistakes are dest ined to make
them because they' foc us on the
fear, not the act. Take the bull by
the horns today wheneve r bold
measmes are called for. Scorpi o,
treat yourse lf to a birthday gif! .
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions fo r the year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to AstroGraph, c/o th is newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, "Murray Hill Stati.on,
New York, NY I0 !56. Be su.re to
state yo ur Zodiac sign.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Withholding valuable infor. mation fro m another today in ·
order to feather your own nest
would be a serious mistake, no
matter how your rationalize it.
The piper will have to be paid.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You could be far too vulnera·

•

litigation

There is a metro stop in Paris
named after Cardinal Richelieu .
However, l am told that this isn' t
his greatest claim to fame : Still, he
wrote something apposite for
today's deal : " To know how to
dissimulate is the knowledge of
kings."
Given th at train-sized hint,
how did West persuade declarer to
go down in this three-no-trump
contract?
With strong hands uncertain of
direction, both in tenms of strain
and level, it pays to keep lhe bidding low early in the auction . So ,
silting South, I would have
responded two diamonds. Perhaps
coincidentally. that would have
worked welL North would have
rebid two no-trump, and South ·
would have raised to three . East
would surely have led the heart
two, giving declarer any easy ride.
Still, at first glance, South is
well placed. He ducked trick one,
won West's club continuation
with dummy's king , and played a
spade to his ace . No problem -until West smoothfy threw the
king under th e ace'
Thinking this had to be a singleton, South aband oned spades.
In stead, he fin essed the heart
jack, but East produced the queen
and returned a heart. A third heart
didn 't establish South 's nine as a
trick. He tried du cking a diamond
to West's jack, but a club back left
declarer with onl y eight tric ks,
two in each suit.
Note that West's gambit with
the spade kin g was a no-cost
~ maneuver. He was due to win
only one spade trick, and he was
still going to get thai if South persevered with the suit. And if West
hadn't sacrificed his king, South
would have led his second spade
and collected at least one overtrick.

m'Your
-'Birthday

~~

maze
21 Llableto

Another trick

''

~

Remodeling
Decks
Roofing

Meed It done, give us a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Great Priced on New Homes

992·2753

Replacement
Windows Installed

"

SMITH'S COHSTROCTIOH

TOO U1UN.L'i'!

ROVE T&lt;;AT
""\..\.. YOU~ STUD'(INI;
~!&gt; A WASTE Of TIME"
Flt-ANCIS! HERE'S
EliMISIT A! LAST
WEEK'S SOCIAL STUDIES
QU IZ.'

'

r"========~========i

: eru~tt{G ?
'

' '.

740o887-G383

111\W.., &amp;J..AC&gt;'i 7:J?
\1:) ~~Tf\tt-IG

/
( Tf\I~K. YOO'Rt.
TI\KII'\G Tf\E:~
Cf' Tf\1\1 Dt7:J f\ ·

1: CAN

•

or 'OS

I

BIG NATE

.,

mont

.,

/
'I
'tlt~r-J'::. Tt\r-,1 I

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

·;

'·

lJ '_

•

vert1se our
•
us1nes.s

591-5011

, .

-

•'

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Paying $80.00
per ga"JI'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00·50 tt/1 0/llo

..
'I

-

Pomeroy, OH

~llli

•

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

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,

tQI096 ·
• 10 8

25Shaulder
ornament
2S Not at all
32Sav•
33 SkiiHul -H
34 Social group
35 Tropical bookal

DOWN
1 1412 ohlp
2 Biblical name
3 "Slop, Silveri"
41naane
5 Everything
6 Pine loll
7 Bird C8ll
8 s-t potato

BY PHILLIP ALDER

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

(

. '· All Makes Tractor &amp;

T he 195-pound junmr from Ch,trlcston mterceptcd a pass at the goal line . rcco,·cn:d .1 fumbk md par- · ·

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM ON STATE ROUTE 33
6MitES NORTH OF POMEROY, OHIO AT COUNTY ROAD 18

. ' ..

· HAULING unci
EXCfiVfiTIHG

victory at Rutger"i Sawrday.

1·800-291-5600

Free Estimates
Toll Free

WVU's Sherrod tabbed Big :.,WICK'SCI

Easfs top defensive player

992-4119

Roofing
Home Maintenance
Gutters/Down
Spout

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

HER YET·· I'M JEST
GITliN' WARMED UP

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

6 4

• Q 10 5 2

officer

Opening lead: • Q

I DIDN'T TELL

740-985-3677

,....

992-5479

Public Notice
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION
The Ernest and Maxi ne

abandoned road, thence

lbandoned road, thence

·AnY Size Double Hunl!·

Bulldozing Er
Backhoe services,
House site work,
Driveway Er land
clearing,
Septic systems
installed.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Rothluaa
120 E. Fourth Street, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241·2100
OH Sup Ct 10066516
(11) 15, 22, 29

141 .5 feet along center of

north 21 " 45' west 199 loot
along center of said

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

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

.AlltEL

Lerner, Sampaon &amp;

along center of said road ,
thence north ss· 45 ' east
aald road

Pom eroy. Ohio

144 Third Ave. Gallipf!lls 446·4995
Toll Free 1-888·745·8847

Prior Instrument referencea:

aoutheaat quarter of
Section No. 8, thence south

road, thence north 65' 45'
eall 612 feel along center of

.md 1111\'h. '

'r------------------.

245, Pago 453 of tho Melgo
County Deed Recorda.

tho road loading from
Harrloonvllto to Klngebury
In the West Uno of the

along the center of said

p ~ trb !11 1 r.l l' '

38282 Stole Route 684

UPTO 70% OFF

, beginning In the center of

north 84' 30' eoet 177.51oot

l' .t l ll ,, \• .lll.tl olt

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

on

OIICombor 20, 2000 at 10:00
a.m. of 11ld ·day, tho
following doocrlbod r,al
aatata:

.II

C:.tluy

Vulnerable: Boi.h
Dealer: North

Trimming and Removal
30 Years Experience
Fully Insured
Senior Disceunt
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-272-5179or446-9800

-

• A 54

MYERS TREE SERVICE

\tlt\ltr iu t l t i'I .H LI'Itllil"·•l\

(16.56) more or 1111.
Exceptingreal
fromoototo
the obovo
deocrlbod
tho "
following: .82 acreo by deed
recorded In Volume 259,
Pogo 437 of the Molgo
County Doed Recorda.
(Factory Outlet)
4.523 acreo by doed
All vertical blinds are made to order at
recorded In Volume 267.
Pogo 159 of the Molgo
our location
County Deed RIICordo.
.52 ,acroo by deed
recorded In Volume 299.
Page 3 of tho Meigs County
• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Etc
Deed RIICordo.

of Sale to me directed from
aald Court In tho above
anUIIed action, I wilt oxpoot
to oalo at public auction at
the

\Ill'&lt;,, I

Sun. Nov. 261h
12:oo Noon
Proceeds from Sat.
Nov. 11th to be
donated to
Bob Fisher Benefit

olong tho well llno of tho
oouthooot quarter of
Section No. 8, to tho place
of beginning, contolnlng

Def-anta

Body Parts

• 10

•
·!
"

Pomenay, Ohio

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!
Ask For Mr. Ford
Over 30 Year Experience

Quality

44~:...

45 sun, e.g.
4aCIDHr

21~on

• A 2
• 9 7 6 4

'
Public Notice

• KJ 9
• 8 3
• J 5
•QJ9763

PtWI0' '8 Puat.

51 Four-IMI15 l'lllla piece
54 --.c:hor'a
1SRM1m
17 Red-- beet 55
1SF...,.Ie
56 Give lhlll to
. antelope
14Acrou
20 Cotleclor'a
57 Ueedofan

Soulb

I

Public Notice

East

!

Free Estimates

"W. .elp"

7/2 &gt;/TFN

Wesl

I

••wGart~ts

OF

11-15-GO

•Q8753

.~!P!~.R, ~!!Y~~

I

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Norlb

------.1. ')I
,...-~~~----:•
YOUNG'S

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

::"

13Takee14 RMtaurant

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~ 10

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ACROSS
1 Redford'•

1
' •

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•
Page B &amp;• The Dally Sentinel

Cavaliers bu~p off Warriors
CLEVELAND (AP) - Lamond Murray scored Cleveland's
first nine pomts of the fourth
quarter and had 14 of hi&gt; 14 m
the pcrtod as the surprismg Cavalier~ continued thru fasc start
with a 96-86 wm Tuesd..y night
over the Golden Stat~ Warriors.
Murny scored sewn fourthquarter points dunng a 14-0 run
that helped the Cavs open a 13point lead.

Clr:veland got sloppy down th~
stretch and Jllowed Gold~n Sutt'
to pllll wtthm four pomt~ befort"
holding on to unprove to 6-1 tim
St"d~Oil .

Thr: CaY-., whn h.n't' wo11 their
six ~amc~ by .l tot.tl of JJ pomts.
wlll pby thl' unbt·.Ht•n PlubddphtJ 76a, on \'(/edncsd.J\' mght.
Andre M1lla aJJcd 19 point ....
lllllt' .hSi!&lt;&gt;t~ .md mnc r~bounds 111
JUSt 2~ 111111lltl'~ for d11..· C.t\·~ .
The W.unur'), \\ lw wcrl'· \nth om D.umy Fo rt-.on. the NBA\
tup rl'bounJt•r, \\'l'rl' lc.:d by
Ant.lwn Junison \ 2:) points and
II rebounds. Larry H ugh« JJdcd
17 point-. l.lll 4-of-18 shooting
.md Chns Mullin. m.&gt;kmg his fi.rst
scan for Golden Sure ~mcc !997 ,

Weatherspoon , and C leveland
had 13 points.
•looked
hke It was ready to roll to
Golden State mtssed Fortson as
the Cavs ou trebounded the War- an easy wm .
But the Warnors outhustled the
riors 55-41.
Murray, using his superior Cavs and took a 59-56 lead when
speed to free himself of the 37- Hughes picked off a lazy pass and
year-old Mullin , drilled two co nverted a three-point play with
jumpers to start the fourth and 3: 12 remaining in the quarce-r.
Warri o rs g uard Vinny De l
madt: tive st raight fret: throws
during the 14-0 spurt that helped Negro rolled his left ankle trying
Cleveland go up 84-71 wtth 6:42 a desperation 3-point~r at the
buzzer to end the first half a~&gt;cl
rematnmg.
Januson brought the Wamors dtd not return.
Notes: After com m'i.tting H7
back by himself, scoring mne
po!l1ts in a 10-1 run that nude it turno\'e rs m their b st rhrt:l'
ga m ~:s, the Warnors had only 13.
85-81 With 3:23 left.
Cavs F Chns Gathng ~at our
But Miller, who picked up
three qu&gt;ck fouls 111 th e thu·d with a bruised left kner..• .... Warlfllartcr auJ haJ to ~it ou t, drove riors gu:~rd Bob Sur.1 \\',iS b~ll- k .H
the." bne .1 nd fed Zyd run:l.S Gll nd An:na for the tirst time
ll gausbs for a 'dunk. Milkr then ~ince be-ing t r&lt;ld~d thi s &lt;;U illlll t 'f by
'corL·J on a layup to put the Cavs th~;." C:l\'s. Sur.l. who spr..· nt tOLir
seasons in C lt"vebnd, h a~ bl'l'll on
.lhC.ld 90-8 1.
The C,a\·s. now 4-0 ,l{ home thL" inJ ured list .1ll season \\'ith .1
du s sea~o n , h .we bc.1tt'll the War- strJmr..· d lmn·r back. " lr'" bL'e n
·frustr,tting,'' sa id Sura, \Vho needners 1U straight tmlt'S at home.
Fortson, \c,1d1ng the le.1gue m ed 34 ncko:ts to acco mmo tbt~,·
rebounds \\'Ith' 16.3 per game, sat fnends and f:umly. '' ) know till'
stren gth coach and trJincrs better
ou t with a sore right foot.
. The C.&gt;vs took a 56-48 le&gt;d th:1n my te.:~.mmatcs .''
with 4:57 left in the third quarter
on two free thrmvs by C laren ce

NHL

Blue Jackets upend Stars, 3-2
COLUMBUS. Ohw (AP) Steve Hemze had two power-play
goals and Ron Tugnutt stopped
26 shots as the Columbus Blue
Jackets extended thelf wmning
strea k to three with a J-2 victo ry
Tuesday mght ove r the Dallas
Stars.
All the wms have com e at
hom~ and against t~am s from the
Pacifi c Division. Th e Blue Jac kets
jumped past idle Chic ago and out
of the basement in the Central
Division .
Enjoying the first winning
strt:ak in the expa nsion team's
bnef history. Co lumbus has wOn
five of its last six Jt Nationwide
Arena. After a 1-7-0-1 start, the
Blue Jackets have gone 5-3- 1-0.
Tugnun unproved to -+-1- 1 m
his last six stans by turning aw:ty
the..: routine ~hots ;llld m.1king ~ev L'rJl '-pect,lcub r SJ\rcs.
'

It was a good recovery for the
Blue Jackets, who were soun dly
beaten bv the Stars 4-0 on Nov. 1
as Ed Beifour only had to stop 14
shots. Joe Nieuwendyk had two
gua ls.
In tl'le first period on Tuesday,
Tugnu n stopped Mike Modan o's
redirection of a Brett Hull pass
and gloved a hard slap sho t by
Hull.
Hull rebounded with two
tlurd -period goals after Columbus bmlt a 3-0 lead. He scored his
ninth afte r M oda no rifled a centering pass from the left boards:
chen tapped m a rebound with
3:43 left to close the gap to a
goa l.
Frantisek Kucera, the only Blu e
Jackets player who hadn't scored a
pOint rh1s . season, finally got on
the buJrd at 7:39 of the first penod with a sla p shot from the cop ·

"W~ got 111 so me

Rio

foul trouble
tonight ... Snulley sa id. ''I'm a little
more conservative on fouls and
It·, our sta nding philosophy that
whL"n ynu ge-t two thJt first half,

from Page Bl
All-Amnic.m team, ,md somc-

you have co co 1ln· down. You can
get cu'ned away real qt1ick and
Th(,.· g,lJ11L' marked a homecom- be co me ·mentally inetTt:&gt;rtive. I
mg nt .,orts for \Vard . The formL·r \vantcd to save evl'rybody for the
Rl\'t.:r Valky st.lf played t\vo Yl' J rs
sl..'rond half
.1c
Sh.m·IH.'e State Um\'crsny,
" I felt the first half, thor even
where shL' w,1.:; p.1rt uf .m NAIA though we were 111 fo ul trouble,
D1v1 sion II
na.twnal c lumpl- our rcsl" rves w ho \ve-nt m _played
on&lt;;hip squad. before dec id in g to
wel l." Smalley added. " We JUSt
tr.wsfer to R1q Grande.
couldn't score. We let them bac k
\N'ard had nine po tnts. fou r 111 the ga me, but they (Pikeville)
,lS~l~ts, four
steab ,md two hjd to. burn a lot energy to get
rebounds In her home debut.
back in it. I felt good about that
The Pikeville r.&gt;lly 111 the tirst even though we didn't play as
half was fu ded largely by foul well ~s we could have."
troub le for Riu Grande. Ward,
Mohler hit 5-of-1 4 field goal
Sease and Pope all went to the attempts and was 6-for-8 at the
bench with two fouls eac h during foul !me. Mohler had five oifena 3-mi nute span midway through sive rebounds, three of which she
the half
put back for key bas kets in the
Pikev&gt;lk outscor~d R1o Grande second ha lf.
I 0-2 to puU to withm two pomts
Pope led R1o Grande with 17
with 1: I 0 left 111 the half. Court- points on 6-of-16 shooting (rom
ney Mercer dnlled J 3- pointer the field She ha 5-of-6 foul
wah 19 seconds left to cut the shots. Pope had four rebounds .
gap to 27-2(,
Coo per ·scored II pomts and
tllll~li \\ 'l' fJlr~r .1

littk bJt ...

Bell
from Page Bl
on th1~ std~o· :·
M.mh.&gt;ll rlmched the MAC
" Eastern DtVl Sion tale with S.nurLLly·~ 31 - 31 wm mTr the Mtanu
R~:dH.1wb, but th;tt Ju., not
dnmnJ:..hL·d th1..· :.JglllfJL.Ullt: of thL'
g.mll' tt) thl' two p.trtiup.liH\
Oh1o enrn!' the g,\llh.' With .• 1 ( 1-J. JTLurd . . \\I 11th ltH:Iudc~ .1 \\'1 11
n\·cr Mtllllt.:\ot.L who d1d h l'.lt Bq.~
T'-.:11 co-lc.Jdcr ( )hw S.t.Hc . ( &gt;u\
l"l'Cllflll ... J 2 111 tl1L' E,t-,{ J )J\'1~1011 .
,1

M.Jr.,h.dl 1., .1l..,o (, _.J.. b11t L.lrrl L'"
pl·rfen 3-0 lllJrk 111 rhe E.l\L
After Pruett

L nlllllll'll(L·d

on

how lw:. (L',llll lnokL·d fnrw.1rd to
pbymg tht Bnbt ,lt..., Grob(,.·
rL·s.pnmkd. nnit.h to the dcbght of
th.c c rll\\·d. "He nngiH look for~
\\'!lrd to pbylllg u~ ~ 1norc rh 111 J
look fi1nvard to pl.lying thtm

''It would be nice to have a
chance to beat such a great football program," sa id Grobc,"but it's
not gonna be easy. It ought to be
a great game. It ought to be a lm
of fun. I don't 'think th~t there's a
program that we respect more or
re:~lly have more admi ration for
than Marshall's progr&gt;m."
Grobe added, "I ulled Bobbv
thts morning and congr.ltuLned
h1111 on winning the E~~tcrn
D1vi . . ion . They pLty~:d ,1 gn:•,lt
g.1mc b.)t S.mnd.1y .1ga Jml: Ml.lllli
·,111d lud .1 lot uf l3obot'&gt; roottng
fo r them LlH week .
" Ccrtalllly With my bL'Illg .1

1 hln~Jngton n.ltl\ L' ,md h.wmg
co.1cheJ .&gt;t Mar&lt;h.1ll \\'lth Bobbv
.IIH.i h,l\:mg gre.H fec:h11t,k f&lt;lr M.ll:~
~h.lll Lnt\'ers Jty, they get my 'up port

L'\Try w~.·ck l':\Cl'pt cl11s ()Ill' ...

M.tr...h.111 \Hill l,l . . t . . l'.l ... (lJ)\
m.&gt;tthup by a 34-3 t.&gt;lly. M.mh.&gt;ll
hdd the Bobut~ to Jll'&gt;t ! !2 ru~h 1!1,1!: \'.11'&lt;.1\ .1\ the 1---lt'nf~ C:h.1d J)cn-

frtd.y
Hlp: JOs; Low: lOs

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

NBA

of the left circle. Teammate Kevyn
Adams was parked in fro n t of the
crease and drew the attention of a
defender and of Belfo ur. Kucera's
shot appeared to catch the skate
o f a D allas player before rico~het­
ing into the net.
Golumbus made it 2-0 late m
the first period on ''!me nifty
work by Espen Knutsen. Petteri
Nummelin se nt the pu ck along
the boards and behind the D allas
goal, where Knutsen was tryi ng
to shake a defender. While ge ttmg
hit, Knutsen whisked a quick pass
to the front of the goal where
H einze slapped it in at I S: I 0.
H ei nze made it 3-0 earlv in the
third period again ~n the
power play. N~unmelin 's slap ~ ho t
from j ust inside th e blue lin t.'
bou nced oif Belfour's pad md
Heinze \vas there to cle.1F1 11p.

hand e d o ut .1 g:.u n e-h igh ~IX
:lSSISts. Coopl'r was 4-for-7 fi-;l ll \
the tll'lJ, in cluding a 3-pouncr
with 7:37 to play ti&gt;Jt f;·"·e R1o
Gr.1ndc :1 53--1--t .c ushi o n.
Ward hit 4-of-8 fi c· ld goal
at'l:t'mpts.
l'ik cv &gt;lle 's Amand&gt; Co l11n s
topped all ~corers wit h 19 poim ~ .
Sht' conncctcd on 5-uf-1 I field
goa l Jttt.·mpts on 1)-of-1 I ti.HJl
shots .
C indy Burks hit 4 - ot~ II shn ts,
including: four 3-pO!nten. and
fin ished wuh 16 poims. Burks
watched a 3-point J ttempt rim·
o ut Wlth ll.!'ss than 30 seco nds to
play that wou ld have give the
Lady Bears. a o ne-poi nt lead.
R io Grande pl ays ho st to
Sha\vnee State, Bresci a and
Spaulchng in the llevo Francis
Classic this weekend.
The Redwomcn play Spaulding Friday at 6 p.m ., then face
Brescia Saturday at ll p.m .
Shawnee State. ranked No. 9 in
the latest NAJA D1vis10n II po ll.
will play Brescia Friday at 2 p.m.,
then face Spaulding Saturday at 2
p.m .

nmgton threw for 378 yords and
the Herd out-gained th e 'Cats by
10 ya rds on the g round .
Mars hall has won· the last four
meetmgs, incl udin g the thre e
smce Marsha ll rcJm ned the MAC
in 1997.
Pru rtft cb,aractenzcd the meetmg. "Two fine footbal1 tt'&lt;lm~. two
good fnends go in g up there ,tnd
gt."tting r~o~.ldy to do b.1ttll' for th~·
13cll."
I

M.~rslnll

lu ~tonan

\Vond,·
Woodrum .d~o con) lll l'lltl'd rh.1·r
the g.lllll' tH:d 111 tn t h i:.' .. A.,hc~ to
c; lll ry'' theme \\'h tch h,l ...... urround~.:d rhL· 30th ,Jll llJ Vt.'r., ,ln· of
lh(.· M.lrshall pl.Hh.' Lr.1s h ,,.]11 ch
IKCLIJTL'd un NoVL'lllbn 1-t, I tJ7(1.
"M,u~lul l rcentl'nng thl' MAC:
re'&gt;rued .1 grc.H n\',lll;· from tht·
a~hl·~:' llt:" rnmmentL·d ·Ol11o IL·.td~
thl· .lll~tll111..' ~~,.·ne, .-:!H-1 .1- r,, hut
the

'l'rlCS 1~ ,1

dc,IJ hl',lt ,lt H- 7 111
( )Jm, \ t~l\'Or ~l!Kl' thl' 11J 7(l lllt.'l't-

lllg

'

Cleveland ..................... ...6
lnd11na .............................. 4

1

Toronkl .............................4

en. none .... ...

Detroit ............................ 3
Milwaukee ......................... 1

AFC
E.. l
W L TP,.. Pf PA
M1ami .... .
Indianapolis
...
BuffalO ..
NY. Jets ..
New England .......

.. ....... 8 2 0 .800 217 126
.. ....7 3 0 700 279 213
..... , .. 6 4 0.600 t99 189
.. ....... 6 4 0 .600 223 216
.. ........2 8 0 .200 167 206

Central
Tennessee ..
.. .......8 2
BaH1more ..
.. ....... 7 4
Pittsburgh
.... .. ... 5 5
Jacksonville ·-·
........ 3 7
Cle.... eland
....... 3 8
Cincinnall .............. .......2 8
Welt
0i)kland
....... .... ... 8 2
Denver .
.. ...... 6 4
Kansas C1ty .......... ........ 5 5
Sea"l e ............ ....... .. .... .4 7
San Diego
... .........0 10

NFC

0 .800 204 t49
0 .636191 128
0 .500 160 11 9
0 300 186 235
0 273 120 244

0 .200 93 217

0 .800 280 199
0 .600 295 225
0. 500 250 236
0 .364 185 260
0 .000 152 253

Eaal
WLTPciPFPA
N.Y. Giants ............... ..... 7 3 0.700 192 153
Philadelphia ......... ... .. ... 7 4 a .636 230 170
Wash1ngto n .... ........ .... 6 4 0 600 185 158
Dallas.
.... 4 6 0.400227 2 19
Al1zona . . .. ... .... .. ....... 3 7 a .300 161 277

Central
Minnesota
Detroit .
Tampa Bay
Green Bay

Ch,cago

.4

.. ........ 8 2 a .B00248
.. ........ ...... 6 4 0 600 182
.. 6 4 0 600 252
.... ....4 6 a .400 209
... 2 8 0 .200 140

West
St. Louis
........ ..... .8 2 D 800 392
New Orleans
7 3 0 700 203
Ca rollna
4 6 0 .400 193
A11anta
.. 3 8 a .273 186
San Franc1sco
.. 3 8 a . 273 274
Sunday's .Games
Detro1t 13, Atlanta 10
BuHalo 20. ChiCago 3
Dallas 23. Cincinnati 6
New Orleans 20, Carolina 10
Seattle 28. Jacksonville 21
Baltimore 24, Ten ne ssee 23
M1nnesota 31, Arizona 14
Cleveland 19. New Engla nd 11
Philadelphia 26, PittSburgh 23, OT
Miami 17, San Diego 7
San Francisco 21. Kansas City 7
Sl. Louis 38. N.Y. Giants 24
Ta~a Bay 20. Green Bay 15
Indianapolis 23, N.Y. Jets 15
Open: Washington
Monday'• Game
Denver 27, Oakland 24
Sunday, Nov. 19
Detroit a1 N.Y. Giants. 1 p.m.
Bullalo at Kansas City, 1 p.m .
Tampa Bay at ChicagO, 1 p .m.
Oa~land at New Onaans. ·1 p.m.
Arizona at Philadelphia, 1 p.m
Indianapolis at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Tennessee. 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at New England, 1 p.m.
Carolina at Minnesota, 1 p.m
San Diego at Denver, 4:05p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Miami, 4:1 5p.m .
Dallas at Baltimore, 4:15p.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Jacksonvi lle at Pittsburgh, 8 :20p.m.
Open: Seattle

218

197
167

201
246
303
152

173
290
330

Monday, Nov. 20
Washinglon at St. Louis, 9 p.m.

PRO .HOOPS
National Baaketblll AsaociaUon

Eutern Conference
Atlantic Division

GB •
W L Pet.
Philadelphia ............
..7
o 1.000
New Yorll .......................... 5
3 .625 2 112
Miami ......................... :.. 4
3 .57 1
3
Orlando
.. 4
5 .444
4
N13w Jersey ...................... 3 4 .429
4
Bos1on ............. : .............. .2'
4 .333 4 112
Washington .. ......
.'.2
6 .250 5 112
Central Dlvl~on

Chicago ............................ 1
Artanta ............................ 1

Callos ..'.............. -.8

2
3
4
s
5

667 1 112
.57 1
2
soo 2 1/2
375 3 1/2
.167 4112

Anaheim ............... 6
Two polnls lor 1 win,
overtime loss

6

.143

s 1/2

Mldw. .t Olvtttoft
W L Pet
San Antonio ..... ,....... .. .... 6 2 .750

GB

~ah

.714

f/2

.625

1

.............. -- ......... .... .... 5 2
Dallas ............. .. ................. 5 3
Vancouver .................... .... .4
3
Houston ..........
.. .... 4
MinnesD!a ...
.. ...... 3 4
Denver .... ....... .. ......... ........ 3
5
Pac:lflc Dlvlalon

P,hoeni)( ............................ .6

Wednnda~··

61

1

Gamea

Thursday's Games
San Antonio at Washington. 7 p.m.
Portland at Toronto, 7 p.m.
LA Lakers at Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Houston, 8:30p.m.
OrtanCSO at Utah, 9 p.m.·
Chicago at Denver, 9 p m.
LA Clippers at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

Meigs Coun.-rs

•••

Atlantic Dlvlalon
W L TOLP11.
Plnsburgh ............. 9 s 2 1 21
N.Y. Rangers ...... 8 8 0 0 16
PhRadelphla ......... 6 7 4 0 16

N.Y. lslanders ........ 6 6 2 1 15 34
New Jersey .......... 6 8 3 0 15 57
Northeaat Division
Onawa ................. 9 4 4 0 22 58

Buffalo .................. 9
Toronto ................. 9

4
6

1

2
2

1 20 44
0 20 47

Boston ................. 6 8
1 15
Montreal ............... 5 11 2 0 12
Southust Division
Tampa Bay
.. 6
1 , t4
Carolina ............... 5 8 3 0 13
Washington .......... 3 8 6 1 13
Atlanta .
.. ... 3 5 6 0 12
Florida .................. 1 7 4 3
9

a

39

51
43
35

34

42

62

44

55

48

a1
so
54
42
46

40
41
42
29

Western Conference
Central Division
W L T OL Pto OF GA
St. Louis .............. 11 3 3 a 2:5 5 1 30
Detroit ................ 10 5
Na shville ............. 6 4
Columbus ............. 6 10
Chicago ................ 5 10

1

1

22 49

5
1

1
1

18 38
14 36
13 43

1 2
Northwest Division
.. ... 13 2 3 0 29 55

Colorado .
Edmonton ........... 11 8 2 o
Vancouver ............ 9 5 3 1
Calgary ................ 5 9 3 2
Minnesota
.. 4 10 3 1
Pacific DIVIfiOn
PhoeniK .............. 10 3 6 .0
San Josa
.. 11 3 2
Los Angeles.. ..... 9 6 4

o
o

24
22
15 ,
12

60
61
41
35

26 55
24. 46
22 64

43
37
55
57
32
55

51
51
52
37
32

51

'
•••

i · TRAN~S ,;J
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON REO SOX-Named Nelson Nor~an .infield coach . Announced Joe Kerri!JM,

P•tchmg coach ; Tommy Harper, llrst base
coach: and John Cumberland. bullpen coach,
will retum next season.

BASKETBALL
ATLANTA HAWKS-Placed F Rosh6wn
McLeod on the injured reserve. Activated F Cat
Bawdier from lnju,red reserve .
""
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS-Activated C
Arvydas Sabonis from Injured reserve. Placed
F Antonio Harvey on Injured reserve .

FOOT1)ALL
ATLANTA FALCONS- Released DE Chris
White. Signed T Wes Shivers from 1he practk:e
squad.
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Placed G Jim
Bundre n on injured reserve .
DENVER BRONCOs-Waived WA Robert
Bra&lt;»c.s. Waived Ol Jon Blackman frOm lhe
practice squad.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Placed OT
Mark Banlewlcz on injured reserve. Release'd
• DE Michael Mason hom the practice squad.
SI!Jned OT Reggie Nelson to the practice
squad.
.MIAMI DOLPHINS- Placed RB Thurman
Thomas on injured reserve. Signed OL Jason ·
Ande.rsen. Signed LB Nate 'H emsley to lhe
practice squad.

2001
Heavy Duty

Silverado
340 HP Vortec B100 VB With 5 Speed Allison Automatic
Transmlsslon, Auto Trac 4·Wheel 'orlve System

BY BRtAN

I

• Third Place
Semifinal losers
·
Championship
Semifinal winne rs

GF GA
54 48
55 50
43 · 51

J.

REED

POMEROY - The death-penalty
trial of Michael "Tony" Gillilan will not
proceed next month, as sc heduled, and
just who will prosecute the case w~en it
goes to trial in 200 1 will be a decision
left to Meigs County's new prosecutor.

Chevv
Leather Interior, VB Engine, Auto Transmission,
Loaded With Options, Also 3rd Seat

Judge Fred W. Crow Ill presided over
a motions hearing on We~ne sday, during
whi ch Prosecutor J ohn Lentes and
defense attorney William Eachus again
asked for a continuance of the D ec. 4
trial date.
Lentes, who was defeated io hi s bid
fo r re- election earli er this month , said

that he and his successor, Pat Story, have looms now that Story has been elected.
discussed the ·case; met together with , Hi s broth er, Steven Story, was first
age nts from the Ohio Bureau of C rimi - appointed to represent (;illilan when his
nal Identification and Investigation, and case was st ill pending in Meigs County
have been in contact with th~ state . Court, but. according to buth Lt·ntes and
Attorney General 's office about the Eachus, the lead defense attorney, Gi llilan
m.·vcr met w ith Steven Story .or ta lked
future prosecution of the case.
w
it h him at all befo re Eachus was
Th e question of :1 conflict of interest

shorten
proficiency
exams
COLUM BUS (A P)
Ohio's fourth-grade proficiency test would be shortened and
a requ irement that stude nts
pass the test's reading portion
to attend fifth -grade wou ld be
rela xed under a bill before
Ohio lawmakers.
The bill , sponsored by Senate
Edu·catio n
C hairrrtan
R obert Gardn er, a Madison .
R epubl ican, would also require
,th e Department of Education·
to ra te districts' academ ic
effectiveness annually instead
of every chrl'c.: years.
Gardner, w ho has discussed
his proposals for months, said.
Wednesday that he introduced
th e bill this late in th e leg islative sess ion in case a governor's
raskforce n ow studyi ng proficiency tests w:eds a last- minute
vehicle for irs own proposals.
. Gov. Bub Taft formed the
Governor's Com mission for
Student Suc{;e~s in April to
find ways to incn:ase Ohio
sc hoolc hildren 's
academic
achievement.
The commission meets
again at the end of the mo nth .
Gardner said he believes it will
issue a report th e first week of
D ecember.
The bill would el iminate
th e citizen ship and sc ie nce
portio ns of the fourth -grade
profidcn cy test.
It wo ul d also create a " basi(
skills" score o n th e test 's read·mg portion that
would
demonstrate a student ha ~ the
reading ski lls necessary fer the
fifth gradt•, provided t he, student gets reading help in the
fifth grade.
Under curre nt law, students
who don 't pass th e reading
portion o f the fourth-grade
test beginning -;n the 2001 2002 sc hool year can't move
on to the fifth-grade.

the nutr ition program of th e M eigs
Coun ty Counci l o n Aging.
The ''bkssi ng bag~" consist of an
ordin;-~ry white paper bag fill ed with an
apple, orange, gra pr!Tuit, as11o rted dried
fruits, cand ies. anLl a greeting card. Th e
outside of the bags have been decorated with both Thanksgiving and fall
themed·drawings created by the elementary ~tuLknts with colo red pencils,

POMEROY - A hearing before th e Ohio
Elections Commissio n today will-d etermine if U.S.
R ep. Ted Strickland's complain t at,'&lt;linst Republican
challenger Michael Azinger has any merit or not .
If the co mmission agrees with Strickland's allegatwn that Azinger di~tribut.:d fal se info rmation
about him during th e recent campaign , it will be set
fo r a further hearing, sa id Betty Springer, the commission 's secre tary.
The congrt'ssm an , who won re-e-lection Nov. 7,
said a l ~:tter Azinger's campaign sent ro vote r~
claimed Str ickland, D-Lti cawill e. "voted to give
child molesters a free ride:"
Azin~er's ca mpaign r~:fc rred to S~ rickf~1J\
J eclin in g to vote on a Hou se.' resolu tion condemnm g a statem e nt in an American Psyc hologica) Association stud y interpn~ted as Jn endor sem ent of
chiiJ-adult sexual rd anons.
Stri ckland said th ~ ~la im i~ untrue and ··mo..,l
despi cable," he told, th e lluntington (W.Va. ) H erald- D ispatch.
" H e has no right to engage in s l anderou~ be havio r," Strickland sa id.
Azinger con tends he did nothing wrong and the
fa cts bear o ut his statement.
" I would be more than happy to substantiate Jll)'
and all of th c~e claims to the commission and the
voters of th e Sixth Distri ct," Azingct said Wednesday.
Ohio election law forbi ds disse lll\nation of f:1lse
st;ltemcnts by candidates. The electiom co mmi ss imi
can eith er J ismiss the complain t, fik a public reprimand or re fer th e case for prosecution .
Azinger said he plans to td l thl' co mmission that

Please see Local, Page A3

Please see Merits, Page Al

BLESSING BAGS - Eastern Elementary art teacher Becky Edwards helps her students Wednesd.ay morning with the creation of "blessing bags" for the area's homebound senior citizen s. The decorated bags, to be f illed with fruit. candy and
a greeting card, will be included with the seniors' home delivered meals Thanksgiving week. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Local students prepare /blessing bags'
Bv

ToNY

M.

o utcome of thi ~ election
w ill no t be the resu lt of deals or
effort~ t o m old publi c opi n ion,"
Bush co untc.n:d a tCw hours later
in rejecting dw Vi(e president's
1 " The

·'

Tlu')' '/ll1c $&lt;'HI ll'illt tllci r
llmnc dclil't'l'&lt;!.d me.ds
Tilanksgir•in.~ II'CCk I•)' tire
1111triti011 J'W,\!f"tl/11 11( the
i\feigs County C(llllrci/

LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAIN S - Thanksgiving for many Meigs Co unty se ni o r citizens will be a bit more festive this
yea r beca use o f efforts to sp read h ~ li­
day cheer by Becky Edwards' art stridents at Eastern Elementary School.
T h e ~tud ents at the sc hool are
designing colorful "ble.&lt;Si ll g b36&gt;s" for
more than 3UO homcbollnd ~~ nior cit-

(l/1

l .~ill.i!·

17t'llS.

They'll

b&lt;.· se nt with their home

delivered 1neals Th;m k&lt;;giving week by

Report outlines improvements for streamlining state government
COLUM13U S (A P) Im prove ments
outl in ed in :1 managL'tw:nt plan for stre.tmlining state govl'rn mcm \"·i\1 save Ohio
abou t $300 nnllion a n lltl Jlly o nce all
changes an: pur into .eftect, sa1d th e l,~.:adt·r
o f the gro up that drafted the plan .
' David Phillips, chairman of the governor's Managemc..·nt Im provement Commission 2000, presented the pbn Wednc sd"y

Bush, Gore go public as
legal wrangling intensifies

111g.

Please see Gillilan, Pap AJ

BY KEVIN KELLY
OVP NEWS EDITOR

..

(AP) - Court cases pending
and countywide- h;md reco unts in
dispute. Florid&lt;1's contested dec- ·
cion re.mains an llnprcdictabl e
struggle, the White House tlw
prize, fOll ow ing an unusual longdista nce t:&gt;xchange between AI
Gore and George W Bush.
" I do n't know what the flnal
results will ;( how," Gore said
Wednesday ,night as he suggested
a statuwide hand recount of
Florida's 6 million votes :1s a way
to achicvt' a "fair and final" resul~
without further lcg: l m ~me uver-

appointed to replace him .
Shortly after his appointment, Steven
Story was removed from the case by
County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
because he has represCnted members. of
th e victim's family.
Whether . Pat Story ass um es the lead

Commission
to gauge
merits of
complaint

Bill would

TheAll New

2001

50 Cents

Gillilan trial continued until next year
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 51. Number 121

Friday, Nov. 26

TheAll New

2500HD

.,

TBA

Ellatern Conterenc1

November 16, 2000

•
•

Semifinal a

Nat1or111 Hockey League

I

Thu.rsday

•

coWGE Hoot{
Preseason NJT
First Round
,
Monday, Nov. 13
Temple 56, li&gt;elaware 49
TaKaS 79, Navy 65
New Me)(ioo 79, George Mason 68
Catifornla 83, Mississippi St . 76, OT
Tunday, Nov. 14
Indiana ao. Pepperdine.ea
Villanova 1P t . Fairtililld as
South Alabama 67, MarQuette 5 4
Duke 87. Prince ton 50
Quar1erflnala
Wednesday, Nov. 15
New MeKiCO at Temple , 7 p.m.
California at Texas , 9 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 17
Villanova at Duke. TBA
South Alabama at Indiana . TBA
AI Madison Square Garden
New York
Wedne sday, Nov. 24

Washington at Boston, 7 p.m .
Cleveland at Phi ladelphia. 7 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 7:30pm
Atlanta at M ilwaukee. 8 p.m.
M1ami at New Jersey, 8 p.m
Golden Stale at M1nnesota, 8 p m.
Dallas at Phoeni)(, g p.m.
New York at LA. Clippers, t0:3D p m.

:

'•

s

~

•

one point for 1 tte .,.,

•
•
••
•••

•

Atlanta 99, Portland 97
Miami a9, Charlotte a6, OT
Cleveland 96, Golden Stale 86
Sacramento 96, Orlando 82
San Anton io 86. Utah 79
Houston 110. Chicago 83
Seallle ·96, New York 75
LA Lakers 119, Denver 103

$

17 51

Wedneadly'a GlmH

I 1/2
2 112
.429 2 1/2
.375
3

6 .143
Mond1y'a G•ni••
Portland 94, New Jersey 82
Dallas 90, L.A. Clippers 76
.
Tutldly'a G1mn

1 18 43
2

Flortda at Carolina, 7 p.m.
San Jose at Detroit. 7:30 p.m.
Na~hviUe al Atlanla, 7:30 p.m.
P1111adelphla at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
oauas at BuffalO, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Minnesota. 8 p .m.
Colorado al Anaheim, 10:30 p.m.
Thuraday'a Games
New Jersey at Boston, 7 p.m .
'•
Carolina at Onawa, 7 p.m.
Pinsburgt1 at Sl Louis. 6 p.m.
Columbus at Nastwille, B p.m .
;
Chicago at Calgary, 9 p.m.
·'
Colorado at Phoenix, 10 p .m.
..~
N.Y Islanders at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.na;"'"

1 857
2 .778
3 .625 1 1/2
4 .556
2
6 .33,3
6 .250 4 112

Sacramento ..................... 7
L.A. Lakers ..... .. ......... ... ..... 5
Portland .................... ........ 5
Seattle ..·......... . ........ .. ..... 3
L.A. Clippers
...... 2
Golden Slate ... .............. ..... 1

3

Edmonton 3, Sl. Louis 0
Vancouver 4, ChicagO 2

571
.444

s

S 2

e

TUMdly'a Gamee
Pt1oenb: 2. Wa$1'11ngton 2, tie, OT
Columbus 3, Dallas 2
Tampa Bay 1, Montr&amp;al 0
San Jose 3, New Jersey 2

s

7 .125

Details, A3

•

1 .657

w....m Conferenc•

Society news and notes, AS·&amp;
NIT: Texas tops Cal, Bl

.

Wednesday, November 15,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Bu.&lt;/1 holds ,, 300-Potc
/c,rd tll'l'l" Iu s ril'al iu
Flol'id&lt;~, tire sf ,JI !' tiJ t~t

u·il/

hand one 111•111 M tire oth er
a llh1Jorit}', of the E/cctoml
College and till' kq:&gt; to
the H'lrite House.
suggestions. Hand recounting,
which Gore wants, "introduces
human error and p olitirs into th~
vote-counting proccs~ ." Bush
said.
Bush hold&lt; a ]1111-vote lead
over his riva l in Flnrid.1. the .;rate
that \vill hand une t n.ln or thC
other a m ,~jo rity· of th e Ekctoral
Co llege .111d the· key; to the White
Huust•.

to Gov. Bob Taft .' rhc govl.·rno r htld lOlll m issio nL·d the yea rl o ng -;tudy co idc11tify
ways a11 state agencies ca n improve L:ustomcr :..e rvin· and o;.;we money.
" Wr. looked a ways to gt•t the b igge-o;t
ban~ .for the buck," Phillips sa1d.
The state will u sc a11y money saved durmg the nex t two years to offs.et · cost' of
putting the plan into effect, he sa id .

Today's

Sentinel
2 Sections - 11 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Suorts
Weatb~r

AS
B2-4
BS
A4

A3
Bl,,l-:!,6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-9-U; Pick 4: 1-.\-7-J

WVA.
Daily 3: 11-S-S Daily 4: 1-7-4-7

M;,my of tht: duzem of recomm cndatiom arc administrative change., that ca n be
madl· wi dmut goi ng to th e Legislature.
O rh cr~ rl'qttire laws to be pa~sed. Ph illi ps
~a id lH' :mticipates many of thl' changes to
take pl.a ct' wit hin th(' next 'year.
Hc sa iJ Taft has indic,ltcd ro lum th;Jt
" thi s wou ld be a work ing document. 1 :1111
(O nvinced ht is in agrt&gt;en.lcnt abom whal

Flower
show boosts
holiday spirit
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - . If gettin~ into
a festive mood f(x thi~ .,cntl lll Cllt.ll
seaso n is prL''iL'lHin~ a clulll'n~L' for
you, attendi ng tht; hollday tlcJ\\.er
sh ow thi~ Wl'CkL·nJ ,1t thr: Sl'nior
Citizen~ Centt.•r 111ight ju~t'bc the
thing to lift your spirits.
Staged by M eif\' County C.lrden C lubs, it will feature nor only
el q.,~n t arrangements .u.:ces,orizcd
with thing"! of Chrio;tm:l~. but
wteath~. wall han gi n~N.. potted holid.ty pbms, Clble setti.nt.~ . and educationa l dbpi.Jy"'.
It is open to view111g by thL·

Please see Flower. Page Al

net"Js to bt" done."

Phillips said doze ns o f private-sector
officiab and 'itatc agency employees pm~
vided the s[udy with information about
how JitTerent

~lg~nc il' S .lrC

run .

A s.t.ltl' employees union criticized the
report. ~aying union members should have
been allowed to p,trticipatc.

CREATIVE
DESIGNThi s arrangement made
by Judy
Bunger,
Christm&lt;;~s

Flower Show
chairman,
fits the K&amp;C
Jewelers
class,
"Where
Wishes
Come True,"
a reflective
design. A
large gold
ball and container .tor the
arrangement
reflect the
pla11t material of red alii·
um. evergreen and
twisted vine.

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