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•' ..... De •••..., G:l-·6tnlilltl

More details regarding the .BEST
, progr:am are available at the
extefl#on office or by calling
OCA at 614-873-6736.
2001 Preview Show exhibitors
are expected 6om all over the
stare, as well from Gallia County.
However, rhe Gallia County Catdemen's Association would like to
welcome and encour:age participation from 2001 Gallia County
Junior Fair exhibitors.
Members of the association will
be on hand on Feb. 17 and 18 ro
answer questions :and direct
:exhibitors. For more information,
please call Lenny Blosser at 441: 0303, or the Extension office at
446-7007.
Ag newo

. A

composting

~ortality

livestock

certification· course

will be offered on Feb. 12 from 79:30 p.m. ar C.H . McKen.zie
Agricultural Center. This is a
chance for livestock producer&gt; to
learn valuable composting techniques, and obtain legal certification.

I

Uuii'Crsity.)

use chemicals on field crop1, forage land, fruit ·crops, ornamental
plants, livestock, non-cropland,
and ponds a local recertification
fnwnPIIpD1
class will be held rhis coming
rive clothing, restrictions on re- Wednesday from noon to 3 p.m.,
·e ntry time spans, disposal of and a repeat session from ~9 p.m.
.empty chemical containers, stor- •t the Meigs County Extension
.age, specific chemicals use on cer- office,
Mulberry
Heights,
tain crops and animals, and envi- Pomeroy.
ronmental concerns.
A special recertification class
Private landowner study mate- will be available for greenhouse
.rials are available through rhe and vegetable grower&gt; on Feb. 13
extension office for a small fcc. from 6-9 p.m. at the Meigs
The next tesr dare for new pesti- County Extension office, Mul. cidc applicators will be Feb. 27 at berry Heights, Pomeroy. Please
'6 p.m. at the Meigs County call into the Extension· Office at
Extension office, please call 992- 992-6696 to reserve a space and
6696 to reserve a· space.
· to make sure sufficient handouts
are ready.
•••
. Current licensed private pesti(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
:cidc applicators need three hours Extension agent for agriculture and
of recertification credit every naturtJI resources, Olzio State Univer;three years. For applicators who sity.)
•

Kneen

AP NATIONAL ~RITER

Jay .·

+

Sons
as la-ndlords
.
'
&gt;
•

BY BRUCI WIUIAM'

' NlWSPAI'EA ENtERPRISE ASSOCIATION

'•

a

DEAR .BRUCE: We are in
high-income rax bracket, and
:We are very happy that we do as
well as we do out we hare to
Apend so much on taXe5, I have
lhree sons who are t_;,o years
;ipatt, and the oldest will be ofT
~o col.l ege come September.
!\)Vhar I have considered doing
~· buying a building and renting
~o co)lege students. My son
would be rhe manager of that
~uilding and I would p•y hilll a
dec~nt ula~y,- He ,would be
'•x~d at the .low' rate ·and ' I
:woilld ha~ ·son;e .income from
lhe home, which may ~!so •be--·
kiven to my son because of his
Jax bracket. When he graduates,
~he next guy will be a junior,
jlnd so forth. Wl\at do you
think? - L.S. Cincinnati, Ohio
: DEAR L.S.: This idea has

been around for many, many
years. Yes, if it's done properly
and the appropriate records are
kept, you could do rhis and
reduce the cost by giving
money to your son or sohs.
Further, it gives them • shot •t
being a very re1ponsible business operator. The only .possible
flaw that I see is, what makes
you believe that sons No. 2 and
No. 3 will go to the same
school or C!VCn Jive in the same
area as the first son?
This aside·, when the three
boys are through with school.
yoi.J, will have some- income
property partially paid for.
Then you will have to make a
judgment as to whether you
want to continue to have
someone r1,1n it for you or b•lc
out.

MACON, Ga. (AP) - Auto- the show. But did he really steal
SHREVEPORT, La . (AP) graphed portraits of Gallagher, the money?
For
more than 20 yeus, stuTommy Chong and dozens of
Police think so. They'v~
dents at Southern University
other touring comics hang charged the 43-year-old with
Shreveport
have known Ann
inside the Comedy Cafe. If the three counts of armed robbery.
Jackson as the friendly custo.d iowners want to add the latest If a jury decides Matthews
an who dusted off desks and
'ensation who left an audience wasn't kidding, he could be
mopped floors afrer class.
in stitches, they'll need his mug sentenced to life in prison.
Now, she's one of them.
shot.
Three times in the past 14
Once rhe classroom door
Glenn Matthews upstaged months, a masked man walked
closes,
the 61-year-old's age
his favorite comedian and into a bank and fired a warning
cracked up a sold-out crowd at shot from a rifle before robbing . and occupation ·disappear. She's
the. comedy club when he the tellers and escaping on a "' just a freshman, one who has
had to 'wait 42 years after gradhopped onstage to make a bicycle. Police were stumped
uating from Booker T. Washcriminal confession - "I'm before Smiley's bizarre one'
ington
High School to enter
the guy who 's been robbing. night performance.
college.
these banks around here:."
The J•n. 12 show had sold
She's always wanted to, but ·
Three days e•rlier, Macon's
d
"b"
b
d.
,
h
d
out
at
the
Comedy
Cafe,
raising three children as a sin3
so-ca11e.
. 1 cy~1e an _It.
where an audience of 300'
gle
mother made it difficult.
made hiS thml getaway In more . .
d ·
db 1db
than a year, pedaling away after stppe ~me an ott e ee~ at
'B ut when her 15-year-old
.
11
·
h
·fl
candleht tables as the comedtan
h a ld mg
granddaughter Kristyna Jackup te ers wn a n e.
k the stage.
,
.
too
Matt hews tmpromptu stage
son began ro slack ofT from
"Wh ,
.
, , .. h
ked
act got him booked into the
at s gomg on . e as
.
studies last year, Ann figured
county jail. Comedian Rickey a burly, Slit-and-pepper beardthe time was right.
Smiley, host of the show . ed man dancmg down front.
"I said to (my granddaugh"Comic View" on Black EnterMatthews hopped on stage
te,r). 'Supp_ose I graduate, and
tainment Television, is still and gr&gt;bbed Smiley's hand
ytiu're still in school?"' The gun
laughing about the suspect before he could even tell a
sounded, and the race was on.
who stumbled into his standup JOke.
J;he score - at least in grade
routine.
''I'm y9ur biggest fan. I
point averages - is grandma
"That was funny as hell!" watch you on TV every night.
.~lj) and granddaughter 3.8.
.
Smiley said. "I was on the You make me laugh, and I got
~ "I am so proud - to think
microphone, and I pretended I pressure on me," Matt~ews
I'~ 61 ;" Jackson said. "You're
was whispering. But I said, said, according to Smiley. ''I'm
im\class with young kids. I've
where the audience could hear the guy who's . been robbing
felt intimidated. But once the
me,'Where's the money?' The these banks around here .. And
d~or doses, we're all the same.
audience was dying!"
·
before I went to jail, I just
Mt focus is that I can do all
No ·doubt Matthews . stole wanted to come sec you."
thli)g; through Christ who

.

It's usually late •r night or
Saturdays when Ba.,;bie Argyle
shows up fer graduate school at
the University of Nebraska.
·Done with household and other
duties, it's her turn. ar the family
computer in a rugged \Vyoming
town called Mountain View.Tl&gt;e
Lincoln campus is 770 miles
away. ·
f

rooms, or by telephone. While
students may never mee\ the
professor or feUow students in
rhe flesh, some online courses
include opportunities for such
encounters.
Tests, essays and term papers
still play a pari. For a final exam
now, however, the professor may
ask the student to find a local
teacher or librarian to serve as
·proctor.

Hlth: 50s; Low: 30s

61-year-old custodian ~·~
hangs up mop for college 1

9ltdCasli

Details, A3

"t

a1
Mel1s'count(s

. ..,..,

.~

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ftzg/4gl

$CASH$
·
................
"

IOIIllEY

&amp;
204 w. 2nd ltrltt
Pomaroy. Olllo
112-&amp;461

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IT'S BUSINESS'AS

will

~ -·

· CLEVELAND (AP) - Art
Modell .finally won a Super
Bowl when his Baltimore
Ravens beat the New York
Giants, bur it earned him more
enmity in his former hometown.
The owner of the Ravens, a
team known as the Cleveland
Browns until Modell moved
rhe club to Baltimore in 199~.
was labeled a traitor and crybaby Sunday night by fans in
Cleveland.
Modell's name is guaranteed
to light up the phone lines on
radio talk shows in Cleveland,
where the Browns never
appeared in • Supet .Bowl. He's
·the butt of jokes and fans get
energized talking about him.
Henry Casey, 38, Cleveland,
out looking for a meal in the
Flats nightclub district ·during
the Super .Bowl on Sunday,
paused to say that Modell had
betrayed Cleveland after supporting his ream for 35 year&gt;.
"I don't think he should
have ever moved the old
Cleveland Browns to .Baltimore. It m•de everyone feel
down,"h e' sa1"d.
Football returned· to Cleveland in 11999 with an expan.sion Browns club that went 527 in two seuons and just fired
coach Chris Palmer.
With Cleveland bundled-up
against a 25-degree night, outward signs of an\i-Modell feelings were h•rd ro find during
the Super Bowl. Nightclub
crowds were sparse in the Fbts,
where barstools and street
parking spaces were available, a
rarity.
Still, the fans were willing to
"ent if given the chance.
"I thought Art really cheated Cleveland," said Ken,
Thom•s, 39, of suburban
Parma, •s he emerged from a
bar .Uter watching rhe Ravens
take a 10-0 halftime lead.
uThat is our team. He's a
traitor. I really feel he's a traitor. It really hurts to see them
even winning at halftime,"
Thomas said.
Thomas was wirh "Kirsten
Mahovlich, 34, of CleveJ.nd,
who was wearing • Browns hat
and had a personal story common in ' Cleveland: watching
the Browns as a child · and
attendirtg their final game at
Cleveland Stadium.
· "The very first game I went
to, I was 5, I went with my
father. The last · game I went
with my father," she said_.
·

P I - - Mod•IL ,_P AJ

_........ _......

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•

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New state .
ovemment
udget
'

•

Sentinel
2Siclh."ll-12,.._
I

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:Wcathe[

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Lotterie~
mno

Pick 3: 6-3-2; Pick 4:0-1-2-9
Sapir l.oUo: S-12-24-28-43-44
Kldolr: D-4-1-S-~

'JWA.

.

Doily 3: 6-5-4 Doily 4: 4-2-7-4 .
C 200 t Ohio Valley Publishillfl CO&lt;

I

•

amves

military version of Piper's J-3 Cub. The
biggest difference, the article points out,
is the L-4H has windows surrounding
the rear sear for • battlefield observer.
The two-seater planes were able to fly
over battlefields and help.direct artillery
fire and provide commander&gt; with critical b•ttle information .
, The plane is . operated by cables and
has no electric system and the plane's
propeller has to be turned several tinili'l
to start it: The tail wheel aircraft has rwo
wheels in the front and a third wheel in
the back. The L-4H, which has now
been restored, has been named the
"Grasshopper" bec1use during its
wartime glory it flew ofT of grass fields.
It needs only 100 feet of runway to take
off.
Completed last summer, it took Brey-

COLUMBUS (AP) - State agencies that dp
not touch on education, health care for rhc poor
or the prison system are going to have to work
with about the same amount of money for the
year that begins July I.
Gov. Bob Taft was expected ro outline a Low~
growth two-year budget. of nearly $44.9 bil!il:!n
on Monday morning. lr includes an average
increase of 0.8 percCnt for most agencies in the
first year.
Aides have singled out the departments ofJOb
and Family Services, Mental· Health and Mental
Retardation and Developmental Dis•bilities as
agencies that will have to tighten their belts.
Taft's stare budget is roughly 10.3 percent
more th•n the $40.7 billion the sme is sponding
in the current budget period, a senior Taft
administr&gt;tion official said Saturday.
The biggest increases in the $44.87 billiot;1
budget will go toward education, increasing costs
in the Medicaid program for low-income families and the state prisons syst.em, said the official,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
The budget calls for spending $21.83 billion
in fiscal 2002, a 1.6 percent increase over what y
being spent in fiscal 2001, and $23.04 billi·on in
fiscal 2003, a 5.5 increase over wh•t is project~
for ·2002, the official said.
Taft is calling it the tightest state budget in i
decade, the official said.
·
"Bec•use of my commi~m ro fi,m d schQ~
first, and the realities of • slo'(iing economy, the
budget for the rest of the sta~ giwernment will
be challenging," Taft s•id in dckum~nts obtained
Saturday byThe Associated Press. "In many cases,
agencies will receive less in FY 2002-2003 biennium than is currendy appropriated.
"However, I believe this will present .our
agencies and our employees the opportunity to
review, reassess and reenergize the services rhat
they provide."
Tafi's budget projects that the lottery will provide schools with $644.7 million in the year that

Pieale see Pilot. Pllp AJ

PIMH- Buclpt. Pllp AJ

BETTER THAN A HOT RO~- Breyden Haptonstall flies through the air in his 57-year-old warblrd, a Piper L·4H observation
plane that saw .action In France in World War II. Breyden, left, and his friend, William McNee who helped him res~ore it, stand
beside the "Grasshopper." (Contributed photo)
·

Teen gets license, pilots vintage aircraft
.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

P

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY For most
teen-agers, getting their
drivers' licenses is rhe highlight of their 16th birthday.
For Breyden Haptonstall, it was get-

ting his pilot's license.
Haptonstall, 17, who lived in Mei~
C?unty untn a few, Y."ars ago, flies the
sk1es above his honl.e. n,.Cadmas, Wash.,
in a· plane which 'l.a'W action i"n France
after the Allied Inv:lSion of Normandy
during World W•r II.
1
.
The Piper L-4H, a 57-year-old
artillery spotting plane is based at
Camas Airfield, and its pilot is about the
same age as some ofAmerican's "Greatest Generation" were when they enlisted for World War II.
.
The Cadmas. High School senior .got

.

his pilot's lice,;se last May. At .the time
he didn't have his driver's license, so he
rode his bicycle to the airport or got ofT
the school bus there and took to the air
in the plane.
Breyden began learning the techniques of flying when he was 12 from
his stepfother, Dong Herlihy, also a
pilot. It took only a,oouple of flights for
Breyden .t o know that what he wanted
most was to teart to fly an airplane("
Larer he took courses from instructors
·,· at th.e Evergreen flying Service airport.
· Last summer he exp•niled his flight
area to include a 600-mile solo flight to
ld•ho. He's now evaluating career
objectives and they, of course, involve
flying- maybe becoming a U.S. Coast
Guard pilot.
In a feature story on Ureyden in the
Camas
local
newspaper,
The
Columbian, the plane is described as a

SWCD elects officers for 2001
sor&gt; are John Rice and Tom
POMEROY - Chris Hamm Theiss.
The board discussed the
of Racine was elected chairman
Leading
Creek
of the Meigs Soil and Water Con- upcoming
Improvement
Project,
which
ir is
servation District Board of
Supervisors during its regular administering jn cooperation
meeting Thursday night at the with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Meigs SWCD office near Service.
The board is in the process of
Pomeroy.
identifying
and approving conserJoe Bolin of Rutland was elected vice president while Marco vation praqtices, and their costs,
Jeffers, Albany, w•s 'elected secre- for rhe program funded primarily
through fine money levied
.tary/rreasurer of the group.
The board of supervisors man- against Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
ages the Meigs SWCD, which which pumped water from the
assists privat~ landowner&gt; with flooded Meigs Mine 31 into
conservation projects designed to P•rker Run, a tributary of Leadenhance water qu.!ity and pre- ing Creek, in 1993.
Acidic mine water killed much
vent soil erosion. Other superviFROM STAFF REPORTS

of the aquatic life downstream of
the discharge point.
Some of the proposed conservation practices in the Leading
Creek w•tershed may include the
,installation of grassed filter strips
- designed to reduce soil runoff
along streams in the watershed,
use ·. exclusion a practice
designed .to keep livestock off of
stream banks and streams - to
enhance water quality and reduce
erosion, and waste management
facilities to help keep manure out
of streams.
·
The first round of LCIP fundSWORN IN - Joe Bolin of RuUand was sworn In as a re-electl!d Mei&amp;S SWCD
ing in the amount of $100,000 supervisor at the Ohio Federation of Soli and .Water Conservation Dlstr!ct'il amu;
should be released next month by al meeting In Columbus on Jan ..H. Administering the oath wa~ Ohio 5uptefTle
Court Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton. (Submitted photo)
·
Ple11•1" SWCD,PipAl

·Athens Landmark purchases CCK property

Tocllfs

•••

I. '

..'

'.''

•

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Argyle settles in the playroom rnffi;'"'Du&amp;;"nii!;c!&amp;;':-jijj;;""jjl.j;i'iili"""';a:i'Piiii"""';ft.;;;:;';i:;;;--;-===-";:;.;;';;;";;:;~
and logs on to read lecture texts,
get assignments, join class discussion by e-mail and take
quizzes . She also does research,
like a required virtual nmseum
tour.
"What a great opportunity
for me to live so far from a university, have a busy life as a wife
•nd mom anq also as a high
school teacher," 1aid Argyle of
earning a master's in Fam~ly and
Consumer Sci~nce - formerly
home ec. It costs about $650 per ·
course ·for tuition and books.
".But I don't have to go anywhere;' she said. "I don't have to
worry. about "travel time: I don't
have to worry about leaving the
family."
The 43-year-old teacher is
among
countless
students
attending college online. As high
school seniors he•d ofT ta college, as working people and athome. parents contemplate picking up .a postponed degree or
earning another, great number&gt;
are signing up for·class in ~yberspace.
.
·
While many students in
online classes are past the typical
college age of 18-24, experts
say, such courses are also taking
root in the conventio[lal undcrgr:aduate experience.
When Eric Hoffman· was
deciding where to apply to college, the San Diego high school
senior leaned roward schools
with many online courses. "It's
definitely an advantage," said the
17-year-old, who's seeking
admi.Sion .at about .I 0.schools.
, Hof!inan wants to be a docto[, He fi-gures the convenience
of one or two OQline courses
·each semester
help pack in
the pre-med learning he needs:
Since college is a lot of ''taking
notes and writing· essays,'' he
said, online uyou could kind of
do it wh~never you want t.o. in
your dorm room."
Format, pres~ntation and
technology of online courses
vary
widely: lectures in
Microsoft PowerPoint slides, in
rext on class Web .sites, in
streaming video, in real time 6r
on the ftudent's rime, even oldfashioned videot•pes sent by .
mail .
Class discussion takes plae&lt;
by e-mail, in special class chat

50 Cents

Cleveland
•
cnes as
Modell
:takes prize

· That means arriving ~11!
campus by 6 a.m. so she C!Q.•.
work in the mornings to ke~p
up her 40-hour-a-week duti'cl!.
as custodian. She also makes up;
hours at nights or on SaturdayC'
By noon, she's in class, writini":
on the same chalkboards shi • ·
cleaned just that morning.
'· An associate's degree l[b.
soci_9logy is her short-ten~~
goal, a step toward having h"!;;
own officr at Southern as ,a
student counselor.
.. !7"'
11
Shc- has a sincere desire to ;
move beyond whe,re . she,;
already is_." said Sonya .Hester-ct:
frie.nd and English instructor ar,
Southern. "Some would say it'i\
a late stage in life, but she does!::
n't see herself as a person with
.
.
"
,.., .
ttme runnmg out.

..

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 170

.

lr"

January 29.2001

•

strengthens me."
Jeanette Williams, vice chan-•
ccllor of administration, sup~r-:
vised the custodians at the tim.,.
Jackson made a move to enroll.;
While all employees have th~
same opportunity, not all seize
it like Jackson.
,
"The credit has to go t6
her," Williams said. "Alrea.ly
she's shown the potential an&amp;
sought out the support for any~
weaknesses she may have. Wid,:
that desire, she'll be able
. to puH
I On.

·Monday

Community news and notes, AS
Ravens win the big one! Bl

Tuesd.,

•

aacks up aowcl
at dub. But ·was it a joke?

BY ARLEIIE LEviNSON

· •L"'om

..

Sunday, January 28, 2001 :

E•dasses serve m
off campus and on

$8.33. The average cost to the
investor, however, would h;ave
been only $7.50 ($3,000 divided
111 Pip Dl
by 400 shares).
: 100 shares.
The ability to stick with the
original investment plan regard• Should the market then fall
Jess of changes in prevailing
.dramatically, reducing the value
:of fund shares 10 $5, the Sl,OOO market conditions is the key to
~second quarterly investment success in dollar cost averaging,
,would purchase 200 shares. If and investors should . consider
:rhe market were to rebound and · their ability to continue their
·fund shares were to rise to $10 ability to contin\le investing
:in the third quarter, the next during periods of low prices.
:investment would again purOf course, a profit is not guar·Citase 100 sh•res, valued at SIO a anteed and dollar cost averaging .
.p1ece.
_ will not protect against a loss in
; Where would the investor declining markets. However, fol. :Stand after making the purch•ses lowing a dollar cost averaging
;outlined above? He -would, of pl•n of action may help avoid
;course, own 400 . shares, pur- ·· getting out of the market when
:chased for a total mvestment of it's low and rushing in when it's
,$3,000, with an ending market high
price of S1 0 per mutual fund
.B e : sure t o ch ec k wtt
· h your
h
H
th
h
I
s are. owevcr, c s ares wou d fi
·a1 d ·
h h d 11
••ctually be worth more than was. 1nanC1 a '.VISOr w et er. o ar
paid for them. The total current cost averagmg can help g1~e you
;value is $4,000, even though the a disC!phne for success m the
purchase price was $3,000.
finanCial markers.
.
: If. this Strategy is viewed from
aay Caldwell IS a certified jinan~n&lt;iiher perspective, you can see cial planner at Raymond james
lhafthe average cost per mutual Financial Services, 441 Second
fund share of the three quarters Ave., Gallipolis, 446-2125 or
.involved ($l0 plus SS plus SIO, 740- 487-2129, member NASD
)l.ivided by three) would be and SIPC.)
•

•

Pomeroy • Mlddlepof't• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point PI-nt, WV

The pro~ram will cover mortality composting principles, site
selection, design options, site
management, bio-security and
disease prevention, as well as laws
and regulations. The cost is $5,
which covers the participant's
take home reference manual. Preregistration is requir.d by Feb. 6.
Please call the office at 446-7007
to register.
Peotii::ide recertification Private applicators should check
their pesticide license for expiration dates - if it says March
2001, we look forward to seeing
you at just one of the recertification classes offered at the following times and places:
South District Extension Office
in Jackson on Jan . 31. 9 a.m.noon or 6:30-9:30 p.m., and
again at C. H. McKenzie Agricultural Center on Feb. 6, 9 a.m.noon or 6:30-9 :30 p.m.
Special thanks to the
Forgeys for hosting the third
annual Lambing Management
program last Monday.
(jcuuifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
Cmmty~ Extertsion axcm.for dJ!l'iwl-·
fllrc a.11d 11aluml rcstmrces, Ohio Stale

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The facility will offer
a full line offarm supplies
and services, as well
as bulk fertilizer blending,
custom applications
for both liquid and dry
fertilizer and a variety
of new pull- type
spreaders, Skidmore said.

blending, custom applications
for both liquid and dry fertilizer
CHESTER - Athens Landand a variety of n~w pull-type
mark, Inc. has purchased the forspreaders, Skidmore said.
.
mer CCK property on Ohio 7
"We are really excited about
and will soon open a new farm
locating one of our stores her~ ·
supply store there.
in Chester," he said. "We h•ve a
The building is just across
large number of customers in
from the Chester bridge.
Meigs County md .are looking
Created by farmers of Athens
forward to being able to service
County in 1934, Athens Landthem more effectively and effinlark, Inc. is a farmer-owned
ciently."
and governed coopemive proSkidmore said the store will
new
warehouse
that
will
be
used
viding products and services to
open in mid-March and rh~l
local members of the farming for the stor•ge of merchandise, applications for employment are.
available.
. ~
community throughout south- such as feed, seed ~nd fencing.
In addition, a 1,000-ton bulk
"We anticipate hiring at least ·
east Ohio and parts of West VirNEW ·
Keys to the former CCK building on Ohio 71n Chester
fertilizer plant, 25,000-gallon IS Joc•l individuals for different
were ·exchanged as new owners, Athens Landmark Inc.,. prepare for Its ginia.
Butch Skidmore, gener:al man- liquid 28 bulk plant and retail positions wirhin rhe facility,''
grand opening. The farm cooperative store will offer a large selection of
Skidmore said. "So, if anyone is
farm supplies and Is sctietjuled to begin operations In March. Pictured •ger of L•ndmark, said plans for store also will be on site.
The
facility
will
offer
a
full
interested, we encourage them
from left are Derek Fauber, branch manager of Landmark, Bill Pooler, for. the re•l est3te include the conline
of
farm
.supplies
and
serto immediately pick up an appli..:
tinuance
of
the
site's
former
mer owner of CCK, Ronald Hartman, board president, Butch Skidmore,
restaur•nt plus the addition of a vices, as well as bulk fertilizer cation at the store."
general manager of Lilndmark. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·
IY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

p •• Atl• The .,..., 8enllnel

: BUCKEYE BRIEFS
HOI(LIIIII enJoy Supll'lowl
COLUMBUS (AP) - It was a rypical scent, with a group of
football fans gathered to munch on snacks and watch the Super
Bowl on telovision.
But everybody attending this parry was homeless.
About 75 homeless men got to root for their team Sunday
night in the warmth of the winter overflow center for the homeless in the basement of the Wolfe Park shelter. •
: The parry was hosted by Bob Ater, director Of the center.
He scavenged around to find pizza, cheese curls, potato chips
and other snacks.
Ater thought getting a television to watch the game on would
. be a &amp;igger problem, but it wasn't.
, The first place he called, a Sean store ai a local mall, came
' through with a 27-inch color TV.
.
: " I almost cried on the phone," said Ater, when Barbara Packer,
manager of the Sears :it at the Tuttle Crossing mall, called him
back last week.
"So, I went Friday to meet her. She's marvelous, a woman with
a lot of empathy. All I wanted was a loan. ' Oh, no,' sho said. 'You
gee co kc~:p it.' "
A U - shoped ·cluster of folding chain •et up anmnJ the new TV
,filled quickly after the shelter opened Sunday.
"At ~ u'dock.., I was one of th.e first ones in the building so I
could get a front- row " ' at," said Aaron Grant.

Fire destroys Ross Juvenile Jail
CHILLICOTHE (AP)- Fire destroyed a •mall juvenile detention facility in Ross County early today.
·
Fire officials said 13 juvenile: offenders and two sUP,.ervisors got
uut of the Hull House unharmed. The youths were temporarily
relocated.
'
·
The building, JUSt south of Chilllicothe, wa~ a total loss.
The cause of the fire had not been determined. '

Women bums fiancee
. CINCINNATI (AP)- A man says he was accidenully set afire
.by his fiancee after he doused hin11elf with lighter fluid during on
argument.
Dan Riley, 40, suffered second-degree burns ov&lt;r one-fourth of
·his body Saturday night. Police said Sherry Montone used a
lighter to set him on fire.
: Montone, 48, was in jail Sunday on charges of felonious assault
and domestic violence. Police said she could face additional.
.charges.
: Riley was in suble condition at Universiry Hospital. He con:firmed that he put lighter fluid on himself, but said his fiancee
was about 8 inches away when she flicked · the lighter and he
caught on tire.
' "I was upset that she wasn't listening to what I wai saying,''
Riley said. "And I did douse myself and say, "If you're going to

hurt me, hurt me:
: "But I had just gotten out of the shower and she (doubted) that
I had it on me. It was a 1uisundemanding."
·

Letlsletive schedule posted
COLUMBUS (AP) week ofjan. 29, 2001.

Here is the legislatiVe schedule for the
,
HOUSE
TUESDAY, Jan, 30
FINANCE ac APPROPRIATIONS
'(1:30 p.m., Rm. 313, Chr. Carey, Phone: 466-136(1.)
: 'Presentations by the Office of Budget and Monagement and
'th,e legislative Service Commission.
:
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
.
. .
: (2 p.m,, Rm. 114, Chr. Womer Benjamin, Phone: 466-

2004.)

.

; Pre•entMiom by rcpre.e11tatiws of the Supreme Court of Ohio
~nd the Ohio Attorner General,
·
.
·
WEDNESDAY, Jan. 31
.
FINANCE ac APPROPRIATIONS
(9:30 •·~·· llm• 313, Cbr. Carey, Phone: 466-1366.) '
, Pre•en!a!lons by the Bu~u ofWorkers' Compenmio11 Indus)rial Comt~tiuion, and the departments of Public Safery a 11 d .
Tran•poru!lon.
·
. LOCAL GOVERNMENT 1c TOWNStliPS , .
'
: (9:30 a.~., Rni. 121, Chr: RortUin, Phone: 466-1790.) · ,
P~tallons t.y teprescntativct of the Ohio Municipall,.eagu~
'rl)WIIship Auomtlon, the County Contmi11ioners Assoclatio'n of
and the Ohio Counry Auditors A1sociation.
;,
· ·
. IWLES lk REFERENCE
(4:30 p.m., Rm. 119, Chr. Jiouaeholder, Pho~e: 466-

pbio,

~500.)

;
THt1RSDAY, Feb. 1
.
; ECONOMIC DEVJ!LOPMEN't 1k SMAI,L BUSINESS
• (9 a.m., Rm. 017, Cbr. Coushlln, PhOae: 466-1117.) ·
• Orpllil!ational meeting.
·
: ~
FINANCE lk APPROPRIATIONS
(9 a.m., ibn, 313, Chr. Carey, Phone: 466-1366.) .
.
: Presentations by the Ohio Board of Regents and the Departptent of Education.
·

i

. Ford pl•nt lays off 20J worken
" CiNCINNATI (AP) - Ford Motor co: has laid off 203 work!'rs ~n~ its transntission plant in suburban Sharonville, citi~g a
·
· decline m customer dern•nd.
. The entployees who lost their jobs had about six months' ,e xpertence or less, Ford spokeswoman Della DiPietro said Saturday.
They learned of the layoffs Friday afternoon. The layoffs go into
j:ITect Monday and are indefinite.
'
· ;rhe plant produces four-spe~d transmissions for largor vehicles
hinging from f-series pickup truck• to the Mercury Mountaineer
and Grand Marquis·. Analysts have •aid thme vehicles could f.tll
out of favor as gas prices continue to my high and the economy
continues to •low.
, R .IJ. "Sonny" Blc•vins, presid,c nt of United AI"" Wurk,•rs Local
H63, whkh ,repri.·sents workers at the plant. said more lal'nffs had
b~n ~ntidpatcd.
·
' "Wh~n th&lt;')' ~ame ba,·k after Christmo&lt; and"''' initiall\· started
t.tlking about loroff&lt;, IW were talking :lbuut ,a ,·,msitkrabiy larger
number than 20.1.'.' Blevins said Saturdar.
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"Tli e last I heard late in the week was that it Wtlllld be .tbom
175. Bm still. the company and union luc:oll)' did an ,.x,·dlent jub
111 k&lt;•eping thme people,'' he 5aid.
·
,
During th&lt;· past year, the plnm "xp:111dcJ irs workfOI'L'&lt;' from
2.~5V to 3,!KIO. The layoff.• announc«i Fridny arc the tim mojnr
Jnb loss at th&lt;· plant since I 98(1, when th&lt;· company cut 1.~50
Jobs.
.
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Monday, J1nu1ry 2t, 2001

CLEVELAND (AP) - Full-time doctors
paid up to $140,000 a year at V.cerans Affairs
hospitals sometimes are off working in private
practices while they should be on VA duty, The
Plain Dealer reported Monday.
At a time when the Deparrn)ent ofVeterans
Affairs has &gt;Sked for more money, a full-rime VA
doctor ;. not expected to be at the veterans hospital 40 hours. Instead, a full-time surgeon, for
example, is expected to operate on patients
about 15 houn a week, the newspaper reported.
The rest of the time can be used for teaching,

doing n:search or other activities unconnected
with VA work, the paper said in the second part

of a series.
Some VA doctors have abused flexible hours,
the paper said, such as BoSion neurologis!S who
were spotted by FBI ~gen!S ·golfing or seeing
private patients while being paid to be at the VA.
In Cleveland, the chief&gt; of surgery was operating on private patien!S when scheduled to be
at the veterans hospital, according to the newspaper, which •aid the VA investigation is unresolved.

In Salisbury, N .C ., a VA doctor ignored his
part-time schedule and got paid for time he was
not there, including time he was supposed (o .
consult with other doctors and residen!S. CO- ·
workers complained for three yem before
doctor was &lt;;&gt;n:lered to reimburse the VA.
.. ·
None of the doctors was identified.
While some staff docton abused flexible ·
schedules. docton in training, including sur- .
geons, sometimes practice at VA hospitals while :
"supervised" by phone by sttff docton at work .
elsewhere,
··

State University o fficial s want a

st:itc exemption allowing' them
to raise tuitio n in the fall by
more thul the 6 percent m axi~mum aiJowcd

by Jaw.

Such an t'Xt'lllHtion would be
part of the mte )mdget bill for
the next two fiscal years, begin-

ning Jan. I . Gov•. Bob Taft will
release his budget re&lt;ommendations Monday.
Taft's office has declined to
comment ab~ut the exemption.
"I can't give out details of

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - A
federal judge Saturday_ reaf. finned a temporary restraining
order that keeps Union Pacific
engineers on the job after a
s~rike · was called against the
nation's l.:trgcst. rail carrier.
U.S. District Judge Lyle Strom
set a Feb. 7 hearing on the railI'Qild's request for a preliminary
injunction.
"Everybody's on the job as
normal," said John, Brurriley, a
raijroad spokesman.
Strom issued his original

tha[ until the budget is released,"
said Fred Stratmann of the governor's of!icc in a story published Smtrday by The Columbus Dispatch.
Tom Johnson, chief of the
state budget office, couldn't confirm that the exemption will be
part of the bill. But he said his
office ha s been given a dollar

figure to work with in 'onnection with an exemption.
" They (Ohio State) have
made a ·strong case,',' Johnson
said.
·

me

on:ler earlier Saturday, a lirtle
more than two hours after the
Cleveland-based Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers begafl
the walkout. The union repre- ·
sents more than 8,000 locomotive engineers at Union Pacific: ·
The union said the dispute
involves qualifications for pet- .
sonal leave that were imple'- ;
men ted at the start of the year: :
"Union Pacific has chosen to
unilaterally impose new workin~
conditions on locomotive engi-·
neers.

..

Police say new teen smoking Univenltles hiring outside :
law will be difficult to enforce lObbyists to get fUnding
FINDLAY (AP) -A new law paperwork and possibly have to
that makes it illegal for children to appear in court.
possess or consume tobacco prodI "Are we going to utilize our
ucts will be difficult - and possi- already limited resources to prose•
bly too time .consuming -. to cute a cigarette smoker when we
enforce, th~ city police chief said. have crack dealers out there?
Children who violate the law, Probably not," Renninger told
which· takes effect March 15, can The Courier. ''I'm concerned
be ticketed, fined up to $.100, and
.with how much time it is going to
required to attend a smoking edutake. It may only be a minor viocation program. Those who fail to
lation, but the same procedures
pay the fine or complete the eduare involved as any case."
cation program can be order~d to
· Sponsors of the legislation · say
do community service.
'
ifs designed to make parents
. Pol!fe , O~~~f 'I;o~1 ~enpinger
their child's smoking
sa1d the law will create additional aware
burdens . for officer.;. He doesn't 9•bit. Ohio law prohibits retailers
think his department has the from selling children cigarettes,
manpower to watch out for but previously did not prohibit
young smokers, let alone write children from having or using
tickets, confiscate evidence, do tobacco.

CLEVELAND (AP) - · Ohio's more than $2 million this year on
univenities are enlisting outsitk salaries and contracts ro lobby
lobbyists and consultants to fight their own state government.
For the first time ever, rwo unifor .funds at a time when state
venities
have hired their own outofficials are feeling pressure to
spend more on primary and sec- side representatives: lobbyist To.j. :
ondary education.
Green at Youngstown State ansi ;
Ur\iversities are afraid they will GOP.superloobyist Neil Clark at "
lose out on funding .S state law- . Ohio University, the alma ma~r .
makers look fur ways and a~­ he shares with new ~ouse Speaktional money to fix the way Ohio er Larry Householder.
.
Because of Clark's perceived
funds lis schools.
"With ... the total preoccupa- ties- as top fund-raiser for the ·
tion With primary and secondary, campaigns of Householder and
absolute frustiation h&gt;S driven those who backed him a• speaker .
them to it. It's :ilmost desperation - he also was being pushed last ;
time;· said MJ. Klyn, who retired fall as a lobbyist for Ohio State
from the University of Cincinnati University.,But Ohio State Presiafter a long career as a stafflobby- dent William Kirwan, who has
three lobbyists on staff, said it was
ist.
Sttte universities will spend u.nnecessary.

ot

Dutc~ farmers opening megafarms in Ohio·
ANTWERP (AI') - Ohio's f.trmlnnd has
become hot re;~l estate for Dut~h farmers who
find land prices and government tariffs too
high in their native" country.
Mally made huge profits by ·selling their
farms in the Netherlands and moving to the
cheaper fields of Ohio to open· modern
n1egadairie~.

Their arrival has made life difficult for
some of the state's smaller farms.
Ed Lu(rsman, 7 4, ..id the large forms started by the Dutch threaten hi. business. Luersman has been getting up with his 33 cows at
2:30 a.m. for more than 50 years.
His 90-acre farm in Fort Jennings is about
25 miles from leo Zylstra's farm of'SOO cows
in Antwerp. Zylstra moved from the Netherlands less than a year ago.
"How do we compete with something that
size?" Luersman asked. "The price of milk is
so low that,we lose money every day. But the

Dmchmet1 make money bocatlse they have so Dutch-owned farms ketJ' 699 cows.
Likf many of his countrymen, Zylstra···
many cows and such modern equipment.
They ~re keeping th~ price of milk down for learned of the economic opportunities in'
the rest of us. l'nt afroid this ·could mean the Ohio from the Vreba-Hoff IJairy Developend of the family farmer in Ohio."
ment Corp. of Hudson, Mich.
• '
For 20 years, Zylstra was a dairy farmer in
"My parents immigrated here in 1960," cO- ;
HoUand and spent his days taking care of the founder Cecilia Vander Hoff Conway said.:·
70 cows on his I 00 acres. • '
"We had a stnall dairy farm until 1997, when
:'In the Netherlands, it was hard to make
our fa.mily opened a large modern dairy farm
it," he said. "Everything was more expensive:
.
where we milk 3,000 cows."
land, food for the animals. The governinent
Won:! ftlter~d back home. In 1998, they
had a quota system."
An acre of land in the Netherlands, with its helped an uncle, jan Vander Hoff, sell his farm ;
16,033 square miles (less than half the size of and open a 500-cow dairy in Clayton, Mich. :
Ohio), qn sell for as much as $20,000. In . TheVreba-HoffDairy Development Corp. '
.has set, up or assisted 37 Dutch farmers to
north1vest Ohio, an acre costs about $2,000.
Most of the Dutch dairies here keep their build dairie• in Ohio, Michipn and lhdiana. :
herds to fewer than 700 cows because the Conway said there were three so-called ·
Ohio Environmental Protectjon Agency "Dutch dairies" operating in Ohio, two in :
imposes stri~t regulations at that level on the Paulding Counry and one in Detiance Coun- :
trearntent of cow' manure. s.v;,ral of the ty.

I
t

Church near
airport

g:ttio'n is bigger than ever.

The church is a f.tmiliar site tu
. thousands nf d.1ily commuters
along lnrermtc 270 and tmyd,-rs
1-:-Im S&lt;'&lt;' the building'" they land

ac Port ( :(•lumbus Intcrnation:1l
Airport.
Tho Rei'.' Ed Sutherland. its
pastor sinc.:t• I 9X9, said Sund:t\'
morning scn·icl.'s till th~ cin\•
bllilding tn its rapadty ,,f aboll't
100 P&lt;'opk with c·rowds on orca-

si()ll spilling

ovt~r

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Pilot
fnwPipAI

Paul Elch

~ALLIPOLIS- Paul G. Eich, 83, died on Saturday, Jan. 27,2001 at

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.John Paul Miller
an

Jf.:~~~;. ~~t:~'40,

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Meigs PERl

Meigs Counry Multipurpose
Senior Center. A representative of
Meigs. EMS will spea~ . Lunch
will be served at noon.

meet

EMS lop calls

SYRACUSE Wildwood
Garden Club meet Wednesday, 1
p.m . at the home of Ada Titus,
Water Street, Syracuse.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meig• · Emergency
Service
answered four calls for assistance
over the \veekend. Units respond-.
eo as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sunday, 1:12 a.m., Third Street,
Elizabeth Salser, Pleasont Valley
·
Hospital;
5:30 p.m. , R ailroad Street,
Patncia Roush, Holzer Medical
Cenn~r : '
7:2·4 p .m., South Second
Avenue. Mildred Lambert, HMC;
9:29 p.m ., Lincoln Heights,
Dennis Musser, tn:ated.

ESC s~ meetings

ATHENS - The Governing
Board of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Cemer will hold
its 2001 regular meetings on ihe
second Thursday of each tnomh
at 7 p.m ., alternating locations
between the Athens office, 507
· Richland Ave., Athens, and the
Pomeroy office &gt;t 320 1/2 E.
dance at the OHio Conservation Main St. The next scheduled
....
..
Partners All- EmP,Ioyes meeting in
Much in Columbus. ·
The board also met in ex&lt;eutive ses.~ion for annual employee

~~~:;~• ~~~,~~;.~~~~:,!a~;t~·~~

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Modell

Modell

evaluations.

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ac knowl edg~d

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yem of support of Clevelanders

from PlpAl
Clevelanders, where baseball
fans detest the dominant New
York Yankees, found themselves
tooting for the Giants .~.s the. enly
alternative to Modell getting a
ring.
"Everyone's a New York fan,"
Thomas said of the bar crowd.
"You know how much .Clevelanders hate NewYork, but everyone's a New York fan. It's insanity.."
'
Mahovlich saili ModeU had
whined about .wanting a .new stadium, and then moved to Baltimore V,hen Cleveland made
avertufes on the issue.
"He cried the blues," she said.
"I really think that anything that
he's gotten, he deserves. Then he
comes back and says, 'I'd like to
thank the fans in Cleveland.' Well,
Cleveland fans don't thank him at
I·

Subscribe ·ttJday. ., •·

two weeks ago when the Ravens
qualified for the Super Bowl.
When ·asked by Jim Nance of
CBS Sports after Sunday's 3A-7
win what he had to say to the
people of Baltimore and Clevelan91 Mo~ell stuck to thanking his
family and staff.
Of course, not everyone in
Cleveland dislikes Modell.
Rob Dintaman, 28, of Parma,
worlcing as a nightclub securiry
guan:l, was mellow on the Modell
issue. "I don't feel that bad about
itt he said.
. Do his buddies feel the same
way? " Split down the middle,•urprising, same way," said Diptaman, who was complimentary of
the Ravens fans in' the 'club.
"They've actually behaved them-

selves ."

Michael .laD Block (Ed) wu '
· the man behind the voice of the
sock puppel doJ on the

:..~::•o"! ,t~\~-'~!).ot&gt;~,.~P.'!P•''

992-2156 .

SWCD EMPLOY!E RECOGNIZED - Opal Dyer of Rutland, Meigs
SWCD program administrator, received a .2().year employee award at
the Ohio Federation of Soli and Water Conservation Districts annual
meeting In Columbus on Jan. 17. She Is pictured with OFSWCD President Steve Robinson. (Submitted photo)

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qegih to . filter into the region
with temperatures slowly falling
or !l~arly steady in the mi&lt;l-,10. to
'ltid-40~.
,
Forecast
,
Today: Mostly cloudy. Hig~ 54,
low 44.
,
1, ,
DAYTON (AP) -When she
Tuesday: Rain. High 53, 1ow
answered the phone Sept. ·1,
34. ·
','
~ Wednesday: Mostly driudy. 1991, police dispatcher Desda
Doersam heard a gunshot.
High 47,low 36.
. ·Thursday: Showers. High ' 45, · The hysterical caller said she
low 28.
'·
was hiding behind a coffee table
' ;
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I• • '·r
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and that her son had just shot his
·
'
wife.
"This is probably the worst
call I had ever dealt with," .
recalled Doersam, a 20-year vet(UIPI 21UIO)
..
eran with the Miami Township
.
0111!1 .~ Pultlllhlnl Co.
Pubuahed every ' afternoon, Moneta~
police department. "All I C'ould
·~
I
.,,Jttwou;n Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroyq
.Correc:tlon Polley
Ohio. Second-clall pootage paid at
think of is the 'woman OK? I
.. Our'inlln c:Onearri 1n 111 lttorles Is to ' Pomltoy.
actually heard the shot being
'• , be occur4\t Hyou know of an onor In _ , The AIIOCiatod Pre.. and the 1
'a I!Oty ' coli the neW.room at (740) Ohlo--Aoeoclllton.
'
fired."
- : Send- comtellot~ to "
99'2•2156, ·
The Dtl~ SenHnol, 111 .Court. St.,
Doersam dispatched officers,
~
P.._, Onio457tlll.
tben. waited for .· what seemed
'~"~um&amp;er"1a ee2-21~i.' .... ···
mea~·
like an eterniry before hearing
.

Think your job is stressful?.
Try answering 911

A. cold front will bring showers
and possibly ,even , th\lnder~
storms - . to t~e tri~.~ounty .
region t91\i&amp;~t· .
. ,
.
~ But W&gt;rmer 'temperatures ; will
::prevent a repeat of the freezing
rain that hit parts of Ohio and
~·sr Virginia early today, , th~
·; N~ti6nal Weather Setvice said.
Overnight lows will 'be 4Qc45...
·MOisture' will linger behind the .
' front on Tuesday. Colder air will

. . th~I5any Sentinel

~.·

·~ Reader · services
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Sublclil&gt;erl not dnlring lo pay the carri1(1111~ oemll itt II&lt;Mnco direct 1o The Oaltv
So.-.1;&lt;edll will be g1v0n carrtor eacll

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13 WHI&lt;o
Ext. 5 20 w.eoe
. , 52 Weeki

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', ' ·,'"" 1li'!iii!"' ,._:ln•If '-·

doN-"""nei!JyllhOO.com·•·
r-""
~i Jo.~ ,,,. _,' • "' • '

.$27.30
$53.82
$105,.68

AIIOo outold. Molgo CounN". .

&gt;3WHI&lt;o
26 Weeki
~;· 5?'Wte1ta

• ,

529.25
~. 68
$109.72

..

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that the suspect had surrendered
and her caller W3S safe. However,
the caller's daughter-in-law lay
dead and her boyfriend wounded.
Doersam said she went to. her
doctor later that day because she
feared she was having a heart ·
attack.
"! just couldn't deal with it
very weU,'' she said: "I was stressing out."
Shootings, drownings and.
even tornadoes may i)e all in a
day's work for police ~nd fire
dispatchers, but the pressures
take a toll and affect how
smoothly public safery . iiutitu- .
tions run.

LOCAL STOCKS
AeP- 43\
Arch Coal -

Gannau- 61\
General Electric - 44\
Ha~eyOavldson- 42'!•

141.

Akzo :- 47~ ·

AmTechiSBC- 4~')• .
Kmart- 7~. •
Ashl111d lne. - 38~
Kroger - 2 '"
'-' ATU- 23,.
L111d1 End- 30%.
Bank One- 16~
Ltd. - 19\
Bob Evans - 16~
Oak Hill Financial , BorgWamer - 42}•
r ·i'! OVB - 25
!'"•amplon-2'
' " t BBT-36"'
• " '"'
Channing Shops
Peoples - ~16),
~
,
,
.,City Holding. - 5 /11
Premier - 611

3

•'

I ·I

6'•

Rockwell- 46~..

Federal Mogul'- 4"r.

1

~-~·i'·.c·-.-;~.:..--:---~~--:.:..-.J :p,.
q Firitar LS:-..::.'-;r-:;;~s·~·2.,f.''i' ·l.'t~ft•.

"

POMEROY -

will meet Friday at 1 p.m . at

Garden dub to

all."

"

~ r ,~.
· . . ,.,
• ' BYTHE ASSOCIATED PR~SS •

I

PERl poup 'al!eets

CHESTER Chester Ball
Association will have ~n organization meeting Wednesday, 6:30
p.m. at the Chester firehouse.

rising Medicaid costs aqd the
preparation of a response to the
sl)lte ~upreme Court's ruli~g that
the way Ohio funds its "public
schools
~elies too much on
local
. ,
I
properry taxes.
, ,
Hearings are sched4led to
begin this week on the bf1_dget in
the House ·Finance and &lt;t&lt;ppropriations Cominittee. Taft is,n;9uired
by law to sign tl)e budget jnto law
QQforeJuly 1.
·''"'

.Rain,".l&gt;.ut not free~ing ·variety ..

:

.

~

Ofllnlze · .

Others attending included Program Specialist Constance White,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Soil and
Water; Naturol Resource Conservation Service District .Conservationist Mike Duhl; Blair Windon,
technician; Vicki Morrow, education coordinator; and Jim FreenizCd for 20 years of service to man, wildlife specialist/watershed ·
the SWCD. She was also recog-· coordinator. ·

·VALLEY WEATHER

:.~ ,

•

the u.SFWS, which is cooperatmg wtth the bo~rd to put procedures into place for using the
money.
Some of the fine money is also
being used to initiate the redamarion of abandoned strip mines
in the Leading Creek watershed,
while $8,000 is to be used for
watershed ec\ucation.
The board ;cheduled a .special
meeting for Tu&lt;sday at I 0 a.m . at
the SWCD office to discuss plans
for the Leading Creek Improven\ent Project.
Regular meetings will be held
on the fourth Thursday of March
and April at 11 :30 a.m., :11 8 p.m.
from May to October. and at
11:30 a.m. in November ond
December. The next meeting will
be held Feb. 20 at .11 :30 a.m. AU
meetings will be at the Meigs
SWCD Office at 33101 Hiland
Road.
ln addition, Opal Dyer, program administrator, was recog-

meeting will be Feb. 8 at 7 p.m .

Ballaroup~

,I

'

::·

Applllllntl mutt lllllt Inoome gulclellnM to bl tllglble 1nc1 will be piJCICI on tilt lilt on ,
ftm come • flrlt ..rvec~ bultl. .
.

•

from Pip AI ·

nized Jan. 17 at the Ohio Federation of Soil and Water C .onservation Districts annual meeting in
Columbus.
Also at the me~ting, re-elected ·
Meigs SWCD Supervisor joe·
Bolin was swortl into office by
Ohio Supreme Court Justice
Evelyn
Lundberg
Stratton .
Reelected supervisor Marco Jef"
fers was sworn in locally by
Columbia Township Clerk Mary
Brady.
In other businc'Ss, the board
approved committe&lt; appoint-

LOCAL BRIEFS

e~-than~e?'pected tax colle~tions,

,,

t:or

Appllcltlonl will M IYIIIIIIfll beginning .len. II, 1001 lhru hb. t. 1001 In the 111'11111
Ofllollt #II Mtllll County Annex.It 117111t Mlmorlll Drlvl, Poineooy, Ohio. The oflloe
ltl open from 1:00 A.M. to 1110 P.M., llondey 1t1ru l'rldly.
.

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iJ

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SWCD

marked as it was in World War II .
Breyden, whose mother is the
former Janel Cumings fron1
Pomeroy, is the son of Bill Haptonstall, who lived in Pomeroy
until a couple of yean ago when
the family moved to Canal Winchester. He is the grandson of
Lennie Hapstonstall of Middleport and Gladys Cumings of
Pomeroy, and his sister, Whitney,
attends Rio Grande CoUege.

budget this year again · will be
considered in separate bills. '
T&gt;ft said the Ipw-growth budget is .necessary bec&gt;use. ofsmall-

begins July 1•· and $665 :7' million
tlie following ' year, The Plain
D~aler ~otted· Sunday: Annual
state funding 'for ' schools now
tops·$8 billion.
• •· •
,.,•. ·
The projections are based · on
the assumption•"that • Ohio · will
join Powerball or•allother multistit!elottery by.Maroh 3h 2002. .
•,Jn 1999, Taft:s:first budget was
Sl\1..S· b,illion, i.oclll&lt;ilillg $17 .2 billi&lt;lll· for ec!ucatiol'! and $22.6 'billiol) ,for all odl.e~. ptllglilms. The

..,

'

.... "l' ~

frvm'. Pip .Al ·

. :.

:c1ouHied Ado

to a bnst•mcnt

:~

Budget.

'•

lnt-lttcl houHIIoklll mey 01111 .llln Truiaell, Clllp Aclmlnlltrator for more lnfornwtlon, It
(740) 1112·7101.
.
.

·

,,
,
· .EVANS,:W.Va. - John .l.'aul Miller,,54, of Evans died Friday,Janua.~y
26, 4001 , of injuries received in
automobile accident.
l;le was aq employ~e of P~chiney Rolled Products, Ravenswood, an
"Army ve\e~an, of the Vietna\)l War, attended Lark Meade Faith Tabern4cic, Park~rsburg, was a member of t~e United Steelworkers, American Legion ~ost 23, P~int Pl~asant, Eagles Lodge 4135, Porkersburg,
Moose Lodge 731, Point Pleasant, Masonic Lodge. 12, Ravenswood,
Royal Arch Masons 48, Ravenswood, and .Beni Kedem Shrine,
'
Charleston.
'Surviving a~e :i son,John'William of Charleston; daughter,Johnette
Shultz ofWin&lt;ton-Salem, N.C.'; sisters, Martha Conger of Sandyville,
Peggy Me~zge'r 'o f Flagler Beach, Fla., Betty Jean Dingman 0f Florida,
and Faye Roland of Altavista,Va.; and rwo grandchildren.
Service will...be.l1 a.m. Tuesday at Casto Funeral Home, Evans with
the Rev. Junior Conger officiating. Burial will be in Jackson Counry
Me~norial j;lar(ic,ns,.Cotcageville with Masonl.c"rites by Ashttin~dge
12; RavehtM\otl;·· ' ,
"~
·
· · '
1\
Friends .may'~ ~.t the funeral home Monday from 5 to 8 p.m.

~. New•

The Melgt County G,.nil Oflloa Hu fllncllllf IVIIIIIIII for Ull8tlnoe to low to m....lncome houMhoklll In Melgll County who will! to lltoomt homeowntrel Tilt CHI,P ·
Homebuyer Alllltlrloe llfOIII'Itl'l will pnr.'ldl erant f11n111 to pay for ~ of 1ny rtqUII'ICI
downpeyment lncl Ill clotlng GOtta to IIIII In a. purDh 111 of 1 home for your fllmHy. The
=.,.1'111'1 will lito provklll grant fundi to l'lllllllllltltt the hoft!e onot you beoomt the

den with assistance from a friend,
William McNee, nearly two years
to restore the plane which he
purchased with money he earned
· by laying brick and doing construction work· on the family
home. The plane was painted p nd

Holzer Senior Care Center.
·
~ native .of Switzerland, he W&gt;S born on April 6, 1917 to Gottfried
, ani:! Sara Etch m Neuhausen, Switzerland. He was a retired director of
.Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy, and a retired employee of
E~on Corp.
.
is survived by his wife, Grace Crow Eich of Pomeroy; his chil- ·
~Q~n, Paul H. E1ch of Malaysia, John R . Eich of Astoria, Ore., Su,san K.
',l;t~h of Portland, Oregon, and Wi)liam A. Eich, of Durango, Colo.; a ·
tSter, Fnedle Neck ofLausaiin'e, Switzerland; and four grandchildren. '
• BeSides hts parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Kath-leen Safford Eich, in 1966.
At his r~quesf, there will be no fun e'ral.
Gravesid_•;.'~,ry,ices ~i!J. b;o,he!!l ~ 'll',jt:nt. T~u~day at Mound Hill
Ce~etery · · ·
• ,.,.~~
,..,,
• ·•
•
.
Arrangcments are • undet the&gt; direction of Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral H Sn•e"'n ·Gailijlol1s&gt;' ' .• :
• , n • :
Memoriatco~tributions n~ay be mad&lt; to the AmeriCa•; Red Cross,
or the Meigs County H4mane Society.

1•,.

FUNDING AVAILABLE . FOR .
DOWNPAYMENT/CLOSING COST ASSISTANCE .
MEIGS COUNTY CHIP PROGRAM

and a dassroom rrailcr.

•

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,.l•(lenelllllll__, .

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The
neighborhood that gave Wonderland Community Church its
name and membership b~se was
lost to · airport runway . cohstruction a decade ogo, )'~[the congre-

•

,

f?n..r
,. Department extentiona are:

NOTICE TO THE· PUBLIC

survives loss·

...

•

Ohio State wants approval Judge iss~es ·restraining.
order aga1nst walkout ·
to increase tuition
COLUMBUS (AP) - . Ohio

'

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VA hospital docton sometimes double-dip

The Dilly Sentinel • Pege IU

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

23\ •

.

Rocky

~t· -

s\

RD Sheil - 59'4 .

Sears- 36\
Shoney's -~
Wai-Mart - 53\
Wendy'a - 24'1•
WOflhlngtan - 6~.

14'1.

Dolly staclt repone are the

p.m. closing qu01e1 at
the p&lt;avlouo doy'o trans·
actlona, provided by Smith
Partners at Advell Inc. of

4

Gal~ polls.

/\ I I

1\( , \

•,

/\ I I

l l r., l •,

I

!I l l

~

The Roth IRA Ia for retirement.
But the tax Implications are
anything but relaxing •
................................... .......................................... .....
~

""

Because the ~oth'. IRA 'is' different
from any oth~r IRA, rt
.

. brings up some confusing tax Issues. At H&amp;R Block, we can
answer your questions about !lie Roth IRA's tax implications. ·
hrbloc;k.com or 1-800-H ABLOCK
HUIILDCil

618. E Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Monday thru Friday
9:00AM thru 6;00i?M

740·992-6674

Saturday
9:00AM to 5:00PM
;

.'

�••
•
•
~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

p •• Atl• The .,..., 8enllnel

: BUCKEYE BRIEFS
HOI(LIIIII enJoy Supll'lowl
COLUMBUS (AP) - It was a rypical scent, with a group of
football fans gathered to munch on snacks and watch the Super
Bowl on telovision.
But everybody attending this parry was homeless.
About 75 homeless men got to root for their team Sunday
night in the warmth of the winter overflow center for the homeless in the basement of the Wolfe Park shelter. •
: The parry was hosted by Bob Ater, director Of the center.
He scavenged around to find pizza, cheese curls, potato chips
and other snacks.
Ater thought getting a television to watch the game on would
. be a &amp;igger problem, but it wasn't.
, The first place he called, a Sean store ai a local mall, came
' through with a 27-inch color TV.
.
: " I almost cried on the phone," said Ater, when Barbara Packer,
manager of the Sears :it at the Tuttle Crossing mall, called him
back last week.
"So, I went Friday to meet her. She's marvelous, a woman with
a lot of empathy. All I wanted was a loan. ' Oh, no,' sho said. 'You
gee co kc~:p it.' "
A U - shoped ·cluster of folding chain •et up anmnJ the new TV
,filled quickly after the shelter opened Sunday.
"At ~ u'dock.., I was one of th.e first ones in the building so I
could get a front- row " ' at," said Aaron Grant.

Fire destroys Ross Juvenile Jail
CHILLICOTHE (AP)- Fire destroyed a •mall juvenile detention facility in Ross County early today.
·
Fire officials said 13 juvenile: offenders and two sUP,.ervisors got
uut of the Hull House unharmed. The youths were temporarily
relocated.
'
·
The building, JUSt south of Chilllicothe, wa~ a total loss.
The cause of the fire had not been determined. '

Women bums fiancee
. CINCINNATI (AP)- A man says he was accidenully set afire
.by his fiancee after he doused hin11elf with lighter fluid during on
argument.
Dan Riley, 40, suffered second-degree burns ov&lt;r one-fourth of
·his body Saturday night. Police said Sherry Montone used a
lighter to set him on fire.
: Montone, 48, was in jail Sunday on charges of felonious assault
and domestic violence. Police said she could face additional.
.charges.
: Riley was in suble condition at Universiry Hospital. He con:firmed that he put lighter fluid on himself, but said his fiancee
was about 8 inches away when she flicked · the lighter and he
caught on tire.
' "I was upset that she wasn't listening to what I wai saying,''
Riley said. "And I did douse myself and say, "If you're going to

hurt me, hurt me:
: "But I had just gotten out of the shower and she (doubted) that
I had it on me. It was a 1uisundemanding."
·

Letlsletive schedule posted
COLUMBUS (AP) week ofjan. 29, 2001.

Here is the legislatiVe schedule for the
,
HOUSE
TUESDAY, Jan, 30
FINANCE ac APPROPRIATIONS
'(1:30 p.m., Rm. 313, Chr. Carey, Phone: 466-136(1.)
: 'Presentations by the Office of Budget and Monagement and
'th,e legislative Service Commission.
:
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
.
. .
: (2 p.m,, Rm. 114, Chr. Womer Benjamin, Phone: 466-

2004.)

.

; Pre•entMiom by rcpre.e11tatiws of the Supreme Court of Ohio
~nd the Ohio Attorner General,
·
.
·
WEDNESDAY, Jan. 31
.
FINANCE ac APPROPRIATIONS
(9:30 •·~·· llm• 313, Cbr. Carey, Phone: 466-1366.) '
, Pre•en!a!lons by the Bu~u ofWorkers' Compenmio11 Indus)rial Comt~tiuion, and the departments of Public Safery a 11 d .
Tran•poru!lon.
·
. LOCAL GOVERNMENT 1c TOWNStliPS , .
'
: (9:30 a.~., Rni. 121, Chr: RortUin, Phone: 466-1790.) · ,
P~tallons t.y teprescntativct of the Ohio Municipall,.eagu~
'rl)WIIship Auomtlon, the County Contmi11ioners Assoclatio'n of
and the Ohio Counry Auditors A1sociation.
;,
· ·
. IWLES lk REFERENCE
(4:30 p.m., Rm. 119, Chr. Jiouaeholder, Pho~e: 466-

pbio,

~500.)

;
THt1RSDAY, Feb. 1
.
; ECONOMIC DEVJ!LOPMEN't 1k SMAI,L BUSINESS
• (9 a.m., Rm. 017, Cbr. Coushlln, PhOae: 466-1117.) ·
• Orpllil!ational meeting.
·
: ~
FINANCE lk APPROPRIATIONS
(9 a.m., ibn, 313, Chr. Carey, Phone: 466-1366.) .
.
: Presentations by the Ohio Board of Regents and the Departptent of Education.
·

i

. Ford pl•nt lays off 20J worken
" CiNCINNATI (AP) - Ford Motor co: has laid off 203 work!'rs ~n~ its transntission plant in suburban Sharonville, citi~g a
·
· decline m customer dern•nd.
. The entployees who lost their jobs had about six months' ,e xpertence or less, Ford spokeswoman Della DiPietro said Saturday.
They learned of the layoffs Friday afternoon. The layoffs go into
j:ITect Monday and are indefinite.
'
· ;rhe plant produces four-spe~d transmissions for largor vehicles
hinging from f-series pickup truck• to the Mercury Mountaineer
and Grand Marquis·. Analysts have •aid thme vehicles could f.tll
out of favor as gas prices continue to my high and the economy
continues to •low.
, R .IJ. "Sonny" Blc•vins, presid,c nt of United AI"" Wurk,•rs Local
H63, whkh ,repri.·sents workers at the plant. said more lal'nffs had
b~n ~ntidpatcd.
·
' "Wh~n th&lt;')' ~ame ba,·k after Christmo&lt; and"''' initiall\· started
t.tlking about loroff&lt;, IW were talking :lbuut ,a ,·,msitkrabiy larger
number than 20.1.'.' Blevins said Saturdar.
•
1
"Tli e last I heard late in the week was that it Wtlllld be .tbom
175. Bm still. the company and union luc:oll)' did an ,.x,·dlent jub
111 k&lt;•eping thme people,'' he 5aid.
·
,
During th&lt;· past year, the plnm "xp:111dcJ irs workfOI'L'&lt;' from
2.~5V to 3,!KIO. The layoff.• announc«i Fridny arc the tim mojnr
Jnb loss at th&lt;· plant since I 98(1, when th&lt;· company cut 1.~50
Jobs.
.
·

•

•

Mondly, J1nuary 28, 2001

.
•.
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Monday, J1nu1ry 2t, 2001

CLEVELAND (AP) - Full-time doctors
paid up to $140,000 a year at V.cerans Affairs
hospitals sometimes are off working in private
practices while they should be on VA duty, The
Plain Dealer reported Monday.
At a time when the Deparrn)ent ofVeterans
Affairs has &gt;Sked for more money, a full-rime VA
doctor ;. not expected to be at the veterans hospital 40 hours. Instead, a full-time surgeon, for
example, is expected to operate on patients
about 15 houn a week, the newspaper reported.
The rest of the time can be used for teaching,

doing n:search or other activities unconnected
with VA work, the paper said in the second part

of a series.
Some VA doctors have abused flexible hours,
the paper said, such as BoSion neurologis!S who
were spotted by FBI ~gen!S ·golfing or seeing
private patients while being paid to be at the VA.
In Cleveland, the chief&gt; of surgery was operating on private patien!S when scheduled to be
at the veterans hospital, according to the newspaper, which •aid the VA investigation is unresolved.

In Salisbury, N .C ., a VA doctor ignored his
part-time schedule and got paid for time he was
not there, including time he was supposed (o .
consult with other doctors and residen!S. CO- ·
workers complained for three yem before
doctor was &lt;;&gt;n:lered to reimburse the VA.
.. ·
None of the doctors was identified.
While some staff docton abused flexible ·
schedules. docton in training, including sur- .
geons, sometimes practice at VA hospitals while :
"supervised" by phone by sttff docton at work .
elsewhere,
··

State University o fficial s want a

st:itc exemption allowing' them
to raise tuitio n in the fall by
more thul the 6 percent m axi~mum aiJowcd

by Jaw.

Such an t'Xt'lllHtion would be
part of the mte )mdget bill for
the next two fiscal years, begin-

ning Jan. I . Gov•. Bob Taft will
release his budget re&lt;ommendations Monday.
Taft's office has declined to
comment ab~ut the exemption.
"I can't give out details of

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - A
federal judge Saturday_ reaf. finned a temporary restraining
order that keeps Union Pacific
engineers on the job after a
s~rike · was called against the
nation's l.:trgcst. rail carrier.
U.S. District Judge Lyle Strom
set a Feb. 7 hearing on the railI'Qild's request for a preliminary
injunction.
"Everybody's on the job as
normal," said John, Brurriley, a
raijroad spokesman.
Strom issued his original

tha[ until the budget is released,"
said Fred Stratmann of the governor's of!icc in a story published Smtrday by The Columbus Dispatch.
Tom Johnson, chief of the
state budget office, couldn't confirm that the exemption will be
part of the bill. But he said his
office ha s been given a dollar

figure to work with in 'onnection with an exemption.
" They (Ohio State) have
made a ·strong case,',' Johnson
said.
·

me

on:ler earlier Saturday, a lirtle
more than two hours after the
Cleveland-based Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers begafl
the walkout. The union repre- ·
sents more than 8,000 locomotive engineers at Union Pacific: ·
The union said the dispute
involves qualifications for pet- .
sonal leave that were imple'- ;
men ted at the start of the year: :
"Union Pacific has chosen to
unilaterally impose new workin~
conditions on locomotive engi-·
neers.

..

Police say new teen smoking Univenltles hiring outside :
law will be difficult to enforce lObbyists to get fUnding
FINDLAY (AP) -A new law paperwork and possibly have to
that makes it illegal for children to appear in court.
possess or consume tobacco prodI "Are we going to utilize our
ucts will be difficult - and possi- already limited resources to prose•
bly too time .consuming -. to cute a cigarette smoker when we
enforce, th~ city police chief said. have crack dealers out there?
Children who violate the law, Probably not," Renninger told
which· takes effect March 15, can The Courier. ''I'm concerned
be ticketed, fined up to $.100, and
.with how much time it is going to
required to attend a smoking edutake. It may only be a minor viocation program. Those who fail to
lation, but the same procedures
pay the fine or complete the eduare involved as any case."
cation program can be order~d to
· Sponsors of the legislation · say
do community service.
'
ifs designed to make parents
. Pol!fe , O~~~f 'I;o~1 ~enpinger
their child's smoking
sa1d the law will create additional aware
burdens . for officer.;. He doesn't 9•bit. Ohio law prohibits retailers
think his department has the from selling children cigarettes,
manpower to watch out for but previously did not prohibit
young smokers, let alone write children from having or using
tickets, confiscate evidence, do tobacco.

CLEVELAND (AP) - · Ohio's more than $2 million this year on
univenities are enlisting outsitk salaries and contracts ro lobby
lobbyists and consultants to fight their own state government.
For the first time ever, rwo unifor .funds at a time when state
venities
have hired their own outofficials are feeling pressure to
spend more on primary and sec- side representatives: lobbyist To.j. :
ondary education.
Green at Youngstown State ansi ;
Ur\iversities are afraid they will GOP.superloobyist Neil Clark at "
lose out on funding .S state law- . Ohio University, the alma ma~r .
makers look fur ways and a~­ he shares with new ~ouse Speaktional money to fix the way Ohio er Larry Householder.
.
Because of Clark's perceived
funds lis schools.
"With ... the total preoccupa- ties- as top fund-raiser for the ·
tion With primary and secondary, campaigns of Householder and
absolute frustiation h&gt;S driven those who backed him a• speaker .
them to it. It's :ilmost desperation - he also was being pushed last ;
time;· said MJ. Klyn, who retired fall as a lobbyist for Ohio State
from the University of Cincinnati University.,But Ohio State Presiafter a long career as a stafflobby- dent William Kirwan, who has
three lobbyists on staff, said it was
ist.
Sttte universities will spend u.nnecessary.

ot

Dutc~ farmers opening megafarms in Ohio·
ANTWERP (AI') - Ohio's f.trmlnnd has
become hot re;~l estate for Dut~h farmers who
find land prices and government tariffs too
high in their native" country.
Mally made huge profits by ·selling their
farms in the Netherlands and moving to the
cheaper fields of Ohio to open· modern
n1egadairie~.

Their arrival has made life difficult for
some of the state's smaller farms.
Ed Lu(rsman, 7 4, ..id the large forms started by the Dutch threaten hi. business. Luersman has been getting up with his 33 cows at
2:30 a.m. for more than 50 years.
His 90-acre farm in Fort Jennings is about
25 miles from leo Zylstra's farm of'SOO cows
in Antwerp. Zylstra moved from the Netherlands less than a year ago.
"How do we compete with something that
size?" Luersman asked. "The price of milk is
so low that,we lose money every day. But the

Dmchmet1 make money bocatlse they have so Dutch-owned farms ketJ' 699 cows.
Likf many of his countrymen, Zylstra···
many cows and such modern equipment.
They ~re keeping th~ price of milk down for learned of the economic opportunities in'
the rest of us. l'nt afroid this ·could mean the Ohio from the Vreba-Hoff IJairy Developend of the family farmer in Ohio."
ment Corp. of Hudson, Mich.
• '
For 20 years, Zylstra was a dairy farmer in
"My parents immigrated here in 1960," cO- ;
HoUand and spent his days taking care of the founder Cecilia Vander Hoff Conway said.:·
70 cows on his I 00 acres. • '
"We had a stnall dairy farm until 1997, when
:'In the Netherlands, it was hard to make
our fa.mily opened a large modern dairy farm
it," he said. "Everything was more expensive:
.
where we milk 3,000 cows."
land, food for the animals. The governinent
Won:! ftlter~d back home. In 1998, they
had a quota system."
An acre of land in the Netherlands, with its helped an uncle, jan Vander Hoff, sell his farm ;
16,033 square miles (less than half the size of and open a 500-cow dairy in Clayton, Mich. :
Ohio), qn sell for as much as $20,000. In . TheVreba-HoffDairy Development Corp. '
.has set, up or assisted 37 Dutch farmers to
north1vest Ohio, an acre costs about $2,000.
Most of the Dutch dairies here keep their build dairie• in Ohio, Michipn and lhdiana. :
herds to fewer than 700 cows because the Conway said there were three so-called ·
Ohio Environmental Protectjon Agency "Dutch dairies" operating in Ohio, two in :
imposes stri~t regulations at that level on the Paulding Counry and one in Detiance Coun- :
trearntent of cow' manure. s.v;,ral of the ty.

I
t

Church near
airport

g:ttio'n is bigger than ever.

The church is a f.tmiliar site tu
. thousands nf d.1ily commuters
along lnrermtc 270 and tmyd,-rs
1-:-Im S&lt;'&lt;' the building'" they land

ac Port ( :(•lumbus Intcrnation:1l
Airport.
Tho Rei'.' Ed Sutherland. its
pastor sinc.:t• I 9X9, said Sund:t\'
morning scn·icl.'s till th~ cin\•
bllilding tn its rapadty ,,f aboll't
100 P&lt;'opk with c·rowds on orca-

si()ll spilling

ovt~r

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Pilot
fnwPipAI

Paul Elch

~ALLIPOLIS- Paul G. Eich, 83, died on Saturday, Jan. 27,2001 at

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.John Paul Miller
an

Jf.:~~~;. ~~t:~'40,

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Meigs PERl

Meigs Counry Multipurpose
Senior Center. A representative of
Meigs. EMS will spea~ . Lunch
will be served at noon.

meet

EMS lop calls

SYRACUSE Wildwood
Garden Club meet Wednesday, 1
p.m . at the home of Ada Titus,
Water Street, Syracuse.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meig• · Emergency
Service
answered four calls for assistance
over the \veekend. Units respond-.
eo as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sunday, 1:12 a.m., Third Street,
Elizabeth Salser, Pleasont Valley
·
Hospital;
5:30 p.m. , R ailroad Street,
Patncia Roush, Holzer Medical
Cenn~r : '
7:2·4 p .m., South Second
Avenue. Mildred Lambert, HMC;
9:29 p.m ., Lincoln Heights,
Dennis Musser, tn:ated.

ESC s~ meetings

ATHENS - The Governing
Board of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Cemer will hold
its 2001 regular meetings on ihe
second Thursday of each tnomh
at 7 p.m ., alternating locations
between the Athens office, 507
· Richland Ave., Athens, and the
Pomeroy office &gt;t 320 1/2 E.
dance at the OHio Conservation Main St. The next scheduled
....
..
Partners All- EmP,Ioyes meeting in
Much in Columbus. ·
The board also met in ex&lt;eutive ses.~ion for annual employee

~~~:;~• ~~~,~~;.~~~~:,!a~;t~·~~

.

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Modell

Modell

evaluations.

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ac knowl edg~d

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yem of support of Clevelanders

from PlpAl
Clevelanders, where baseball
fans detest the dominant New
York Yankees, found themselves
tooting for the Giants .~.s the. enly
alternative to Modell getting a
ring.
"Everyone's a New York fan,"
Thomas said of the bar crowd.
"You know how much .Clevelanders hate NewYork, but everyone's a New York fan. It's insanity.."
'
Mahovlich saili ModeU had
whined about .wanting a .new stadium, and then moved to Baltimore V,hen Cleveland made
avertufes on the issue.
"He cried the blues," she said.
"I really think that anything that
he's gotten, he deserves. Then he
comes back and says, 'I'd like to
thank the fans in Cleveland.' Well,
Cleveland fans don't thank him at
I·

Subscribe ·ttJday. ., •·

two weeks ago when the Ravens
qualified for the Super Bowl.
When ·asked by Jim Nance of
CBS Sports after Sunday's 3A-7
win what he had to say to the
people of Baltimore and Clevelan91 Mo~ell stuck to thanking his
family and staff.
Of course, not everyone in
Cleveland dislikes Modell.
Rob Dintaman, 28, of Parma,
worlcing as a nightclub securiry
guan:l, was mellow on the Modell
issue. "I don't feel that bad about
itt he said.
. Do his buddies feel the same
way? " Split down the middle,•urprising, same way," said Diptaman, who was complimentary of
the Ravens fans in' the 'club.
"They've actually behaved them-

selves ."

Michael .laD Block (Ed) wu '
· the man behind the voice of the
sock puppel doJ on the

:..~::•o"! ,t~\~-'~!).ot&gt;~,.~P.'!P•''

992-2156 .

SWCD EMPLOY!E RECOGNIZED - Opal Dyer of Rutland, Meigs
SWCD program administrator, received a .2().year employee award at
the Ohio Federation of Soli and Water Conservation Districts annual
meeting In Columbus on Jan. 17. She Is pictured with OFSWCD President Steve Robinson. (Submitted photo)

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qegih to . filter into the region
with temperatures slowly falling
or !l~arly steady in the mi&lt;l-,10. to
'ltid-40~.
,
Forecast
,
Today: Mostly cloudy. Hig~ 54,
low 44.
,
1, ,
DAYTON (AP) -When she
Tuesday: Rain. High 53, 1ow
answered the phone Sept. ·1,
34. ·
','
~ Wednesday: Mostly driudy. 1991, police dispatcher Desda
Doersam heard a gunshot.
High 47,low 36.
. ·Thursday: Showers. High ' 45, · The hysterical caller said she
low 28.
'·
was hiding behind a coffee table
' ;
,.
I• • '·r
.'
and that her son had just shot his
·
'
wife.
"This is probably the worst
call I had ever dealt with," .
recalled Doersam, a 20-year vet(UIPI 21UIO)
..
eran with the Miami Township
.
0111!1 .~ Pultlllhlnl Co.
Pubuahed every ' afternoon, Moneta~
police department. "All I C'ould
·~
I
.,,Jttwou;n Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroyq
.Correc:tlon Polley
Ohio. Second-clall pootage paid at
think of is the 'woman OK? I
.. Our'inlln c:Onearri 1n 111 lttorles Is to ' Pomltoy.
actually heard the shot being
'• , be occur4\t Hyou know of an onor In _ , The AIIOCiatod Pre.. and the 1
'a I!Oty ' coli the neW.room at (740) Ohlo--Aoeoclllton.
'
fired."
- : Send- comtellot~ to "
99'2•2156, ·
The Dtl~ SenHnol, 111 .Court. St.,
Doersam dispatched officers,
~
P.._, Onio457tlll.
tben. waited for .· what seemed
'~"~um&amp;er"1a ee2-21~i.' .... ···
mea~·
like an eterniry before hearing
.

Think your job is stressful?.
Try answering 911

A. cold front will bring showers
and possibly ,even , th\lnder~
storms - . to t~e tri~.~ounty .
region t91\i&amp;~t· .
. ,
.
~ But W&gt;rmer 'temperatures ; will
::prevent a repeat of the freezing
rain that hit parts of Ohio and
~·sr Virginia early today, , th~
·; N~ti6nal Weather Setvice said.
Overnight lows will 'be 4Qc45...
·MOisture' will linger behind the .
' front on Tuesday. Colder air will

. . th~I5any Sentinel

~.·

·~ Reader · services
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Dltly
eo c.nts
Sublclil&gt;erl not dnlring lo pay the carri1(1111~ oemll itt II&lt;Mnco direct 1o The Oaltv
So.-.1;&lt;edll will be g1v0n carrtor eacll

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~Circullllon
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13 WHI&lt;o
Ext. 5 20 w.eoe
. , 52 Weeki

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', ' ·,'"" 1li'!iii!"' ,._:ln•If '-·

doN-"""nei!JyllhOO.com·•·
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~i Jo.~ ,,,. _,' • "' • '

.$27.30
$53.82
$105,.68

AIIOo outold. Molgo CounN". .

&gt;3WHI&lt;o
26 Weeki
~;· 5?'Wte1ta

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529.25
~. 68
$109.72

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that the suspect had surrendered
and her caller W3S safe. However,
the caller's daughter-in-law lay
dead and her boyfriend wounded.
Doersam said she went to. her
doctor later that day because she
feared she was having a heart ·
attack.
"! just couldn't deal with it
very weU,'' she said: "I was stressing out."
Shootings, drownings and.
even tornadoes may i)e all in a
day's work for police ~nd fire
dispatchers, but the pressures
take a toll and affect how
smoothly public safery . iiutitu- .
tions run.

LOCAL STOCKS
AeP- 43\
Arch Coal -

Gannau- 61\
General Electric - 44\
Ha~eyOavldson- 42'!•

141.

Akzo :- 47~ ·

AmTechiSBC- 4~')• .
Kmart- 7~. •
Ashl111d lne. - 38~
Kroger - 2 '"
'-' ATU- 23,.
L111d1 End- 30%.
Bank One- 16~
Ltd. - 19\
Bob Evans - 16~
Oak Hill Financial , BorgWamer - 42}•
r ·i'! OVB - 25
!'"•amplon-2'
' " t BBT-36"'
• " '"'
Channing Shops
Peoples - ~16),
~
,
,
.,City Holding. - 5 /11
Premier - 611

3

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Rockwell- 46~..

Federal Mogul'- 4"r.

1

~-~·i'·.c·-.-;~.:..--:---~~--:.:..-.J :p,.
q Firitar LS:-..::.'-;r-:;;~s·~·2.,f.''i' ·l.'t~ft•.

"

POMEROY -

will meet Friday at 1 p.m . at

Garden dub to

all."

"

~ r ,~.
· . . ,.,
• ' BYTHE ASSOCIATED PR~SS •

I

PERl poup 'al!eets

CHESTER Chester Ball
Association will have ~n organization meeting Wednesday, 6:30
p.m. at the Chester firehouse.

rising Medicaid costs aqd the
preparation of a response to the
sl)lte ~upreme Court's ruli~g that
the way Ohio funds its "public
schools
~elies too much on
local
. ,
I
properry taxes.
, ,
Hearings are sched4led to
begin this week on the bf1_dget in
the House ·Finance and &lt;t&lt;ppropriations Cominittee. Taft is,n;9uired
by law to sign tl)e budget jnto law
QQforeJuly 1.
·''"'

.Rain,".l&gt;.ut not free~ing ·variety ..

:

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Ofllnlze · .

Others attending included Program Specialist Constance White,
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of Soil and
Water; Naturol Resource Conservation Service District .Conservationist Mike Duhl; Blair Windon,
technician; Vicki Morrow, education coordinator; and Jim FreenizCd for 20 years of service to man, wildlife specialist/watershed ·
the SWCD. She was also recog-· coordinator. ·

·VALLEY WEATHER

:.~ ,

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the u.SFWS, which is cooperatmg wtth the bo~rd to put procedures into place for using the
money.
Some of the fine money is also
being used to initiate the redamarion of abandoned strip mines
in the Leading Creek watershed,
while $8,000 is to be used for
watershed ec\ucation.
The board ;cheduled a .special
meeting for Tu&lt;sday at I 0 a.m . at
the SWCD office to discuss plans
for the Leading Creek Improven\ent Project.
Regular meetings will be held
on the fourth Thursday of March
and April at 11 :30 a.m., :11 8 p.m.
from May to October. and at
11:30 a.m. in November ond
December. The next meeting will
be held Feb. 20 at .11 :30 a.m. AU
meetings will be at the Meigs
SWCD Office at 33101 Hiland
Road.
ln addition, Opal Dyer, program administrator, was recog-

meeting will be Feb. 8 at 7 p.m .

Ballaroup~

,I

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Applllllntl mutt lllllt Inoome gulclellnM to bl tllglble 1nc1 will be piJCICI on tilt lilt on ,
ftm come • flrlt ..rvec~ bultl. .
.

•

from Pip AI ·

nized Jan. 17 at the Ohio Federation of Soil and Water C .onservation Districts annual meeting in
Columbus.
Also at the me~ting, re-elected ·
Meigs SWCD Supervisor joe·
Bolin was swortl into office by
Ohio Supreme Court Justice
Evelyn
Lundberg
Stratton .
Reelected supervisor Marco Jef"
fers was sworn in locally by
Columbia Township Clerk Mary
Brady.
In other businc'Ss, the board
approved committe&lt; appoint-

LOCAL BRIEFS

e~-than~e?'pected tax colle~tions,

,,

t:or

Appllcltlonl will M IYIIIIIIfll beginning .len. II, 1001 lhru hb. t. 1001 In the 111'11111
Ofllollt #II Mtllll County Annex.It 117111t Mlmorlll Drlvl, Poineooy, Ohio. The oflloe
ltl open from 1:00 A.M. to 1110 P.M., llondey 1t1ru l'rldly.
.

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SWCD

marked as it was in World War II .
Breyden, whose mother is the
former Janel Cumings fron1
Pomeroy, is the son of Bill Haptonstall, who lived in Pomeroy
until a couple of yean ago when
the family moved to Canal Winchester. He is the grandson of
Lennie Hapstonstall of Middleport and Gladys Cumings of
Pomeroy, and his sister, Whitney,
attends Rio Grande CoUege.

budget this year again · will be
considered in separate bills. '
T&gt;ft said the Ipw-growth budget is .necessary bec&gt;use. ofsmall-

begins July 1•· and $665 :7' million
tlie following ' year, The Plain
D~aler ~otted· Sunday: Annual
state funding 'for ' schools now
tops·$8 billion.
• •· •
,.,•. ·
The projections are based · on
the assumption•"that • Ohio · will
join Powerball or•allother multistit!elottery by.Maroh 3h 2002. .
•,Jn 1999, Taft:s:first budget was
Sl\1..S· b,illion, i.oclll&lt;ilillg $17 .2 billi&lt;lll· for ec!ucatiol'! and $22.6 'billiol) ,for all odl.e~. ptllglilms. The

..,

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frvm'. Pip .Al ·

. :.

:c1ouHied Ado

to a bnst•mcnt

:~

Budget.

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lnt-lttcl houHIIoklll mey 01111 .llln Truiaell, Clllp Aclmlnlltrator for more lnfornwtlon, It
(740) 1112·7101.
.
.

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· .EVANS,:W.Va. - John .l.'aul Miller,,54, of Evans died Friday,Janua.~y
26, 4001 , of injuries received in
automobile accident.
l;le was aq employ~e of P~chiney Rolled Products, Ravenswood, an
"Army ve\e~an, of the Vietna\)l War, attended Lark Meade Faith Tabern4cic, Park~rsburg, was a member of t~e United Steelworkers, American Legion ~ost 23, P~int Pl~asant, Eagles Lodge 4135, Porkersburg,
Moose Lodge 731, Point Pleasant, Masonic Lodge. 12, Ravenswood,
Royal Arch Masons 48, Ravenswood, and .Beni Kedem Shrine,
'
Charleston.
'Surviving a~e :i son,John'William of Charleston; daughter,Johnette
Shultz ofWin&lt;ton-Salem, N.C.'; sisters, Martha Conger of Sandyville,
Peggy Me~zge'r 'o f Flagler Beach, Fla., Betty Jean Dingman 0f Florida,
and Faye Roland of Altavista,Va.; and rwo grandchildren.
Service will...be.l1 a.m. Tuesday at Casto Funeral Home, Evans with
the Rev. Junior Conger officiating. Burial will be in Jackson Counry
Me~norial j;lar(ic,ns,.Cotcageville with Masonl.c"rites by Ashttin~dge
12; RavehtM\otl;·· ' ,
"~
·
· · '
1\
Friends .may'~ ~.t the funeral home Monday from 5 to 8 p.m.

~. New•

The Melgt County G,.nil Oflloa Hu fllncllllf IVIIIIIIII for Ull8tlnoe to low to m....lncome houMhoklll In Melgll County who will! to lltoomt homeowntrel Tilt CHI,P ·
Homebuyer Alllltlrloe llfOIII'Itl'l will pnr.'ldl erant f11n111 to pay for ~ of 1ny rtqUII'ICI
downpeyment lncl Ill clotlng GOtta to IIIII In a. purDh 111 of 1 home for your fllmHy. The
=.,.1'111'1 will lito provklll grant fundi to l'lllllllllltltt the hoft!e onot you beoomt the

den with assistance from a friend,
William McNee, nearly two years
to restore the plane which he
purchased with money he earned
· by laying brick and doing construction work· on the family
home. The plane was painted p nd

Holzer Senior Care Center.
·
~ native .of Switzerland, he W&gt;S born on April 6, 1917 to Gottfried
, ani:! Sara Etch m Neuhausen, Switzerland. He was a retired director of
.Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy, and a retired employee of
E~on Corp.
.
is survived by his wife, Grace Crow Eich of Pomeroy; his chil- ·
~Q~n, Paul H. E1ch of Malaysia, John R . Eich of Astoria, Ore., Su,san K.
',l;t~h of Portland, Oregon, and Wi)liam A. Eich, of Durango, Colo.; a ·
tSter, Fnedle Neck ofLausaiin'e, Switzerland; and four grandchildren. '
• BeSides hts parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Kath-leen Safford Eich, in 1966.
At his r~quesf, there will be no fun e'ral.
Gravesid_•;.'~,ry,ices ~i!J. b;o,he!!l ~ 'll',jt:nt. T~u~day at Mound Hill
Ce~etery · · ·
• ,.,.~~
,..,,
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•
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Arrangcments are • undet the&gt; direction of Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral H Sn•e"'n ·Gailijlol1s&gt;' ' .• :
• , n • :
Memoriatco~tributions n~ay be mad&lt; to the AmeriCa•; Red Cross,
or the Meigs County H4mane Society.

1•,.

FUNDING AVAILABLE . FOR .
DOWNPAYMENT/CLOSING COST ASSISTANCE .
MEIGS COUNTY CHIP PROGRAM

and a dassroom rrailcr.

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,.l•(lenelllllll__, .

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The
neighborhood that gave Wonderland Community Church its
name and membership b~se was
lost to · airport runway . cohstruction a decade ogo, )'~[the congre-

•

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f?n..r
,. Department extentiona are:

NOTICE TO THE· PUBLIC

survives loss·

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Ohio State wants approval Judge iss~es ·restraining.
order aga1nst walkout ·
to increase tuition
COLUMBUS (AP) - . Ohio

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VA hospital docton sometimes double-dip

The Dilly Sentinel • Pege IU

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

23\ •

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Rocky

~t· -

s\

RD Sheil - 59'4 .

Sears- 36\
Shoney's -~
Wai-Mart - 53\
Wendy'a - 24'1•
WOflhlngtan - 6~.

14'1.

Dolly staclt repone are the

p.m. closing qu01e1 at
the p&lt;avlouo doy'o trans·
actlona, provided by Smith
Partners at Advell Inc. of

4

Gal~ polls.

/\ I I

1\( , \

•,

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l l r., l •,

I

!I l l

~

The Roth IRA Ia for retirement.
But the tax Implications are
anything but relaxing •
................................... .......................................... .....
~

""

Because the ~oth'. IRA 'is' different
from any oth~r IRA, rt
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. brings up some confusing tax Issues. At H&amp;R Block, we can
answer your questions about !lie Roth IRA's tax implications. ·
hrbloc;k.com or 1-800-H ABLOCK
HUIILDCil

618. E Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Monday thru Friday
9:00AM thru 6;00i?M

740·992-6674

Saturday
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;

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Pap~·

. :.:Th;.:.:e-=D. : ai~Iy. :.Se.:.:.n:.: :tin:.;:. : .e.:. .I_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;0;:;.P-Inion
The Daily Sentinel
'btUIUiid ilt1941
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

• • • • JlniiiTJ 2e. 20CU.

.. IEMPTA~ QAND"
AlD110N'

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
I

Charle!l W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

G81Mrll Manager

R. Shewn Lewis

Larry Boyer

• ' \.1.1 r '

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Diane Key Hill

Advertlelng Director

1 {Ut

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Managing Editor

\ttJ

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Controller

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Laurr to Jlle diJI.w lll'tl w•ko.•. TINJ should H lt11 th1111 300 wordr. All ktrn't llfW rubj.tt
to Mlltllrf tutd "'"" h ripU aNI ittdMMtllltlnu .U t.kpMM nu,.W. No MMitnrd lmtrs wlU
h plllllbhd. UIUn 1lwdiiM i1f pod WU, ddtwulltf illllfl, not I'"JOMUIWI.

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. . . ...

Tit• 11pinWnr upnu1d in tht column hlow fiN dw toi'IUifltll of tiN QhJq V.tky l'u61hlri111
Co.'• MlllorW bodtd, •lfku«Mrwirl 110Hd.

f

~·

NATIONAL VIEW

reat
Initial mistake with Iraq
remains problematic
• New York Post, on lessons of the GulfW&lt;lr: Ten years ago
this morning, Iraqi time, a coalition of armed forces led by
American troops launched an air strike against Baghdad.
Diplomacy and sanctions had failed to move Saddam from his
illegal occupation of a neighboring country, so America and its
allies prepared for war.
Most of the Democrats on Capitol Hill vehemently opposed
the effort. But President George Bush had declared that the
conquest of Kuwait "will not stand" - and he meant it.
' Six weeks later, it was all over. Saddam's forces had been
routed and Kuwait was liberated as Iraqi troops fled for their
lives.
The allies had achieved their short-term objective. But the
Iraqi dictator had been allowed to survive, his regime intact . .In ·
the decade since, that regrettabl!! decision not to finish the job
and .wpple Saddam has had long-term - dangerous - ramifications. ·
Several of those who led the allies to victory took office on
Jan. 20, including Secretary of State Colin Powell and Vice
President Dick Cheney. After eight years of the Clinton-Gore
team's neglect 'of.the military, that's a welcome development.
But the incoming officials include some who sought not to
push the war ro its logical - and necessary - .- con~lusion.
And that's far from reassuring ....
Saddam's ultimate survival is the fruit of an initial mistake
compounded by eight years of neglect and visionless strategy.
That he remains a threat on the lOth anniversary of the Gulf
War is soniething the next Bush administration will have to
contend with.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of2001.T~ere are 336 days
'-......)
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 29, 1820, Britain's King George III died at Windsor Castle, ending reign that had seen both the American and French revolutions.
On this date:
In 1843, the 25th president of the United States, William McKinley, was born in Niles, Ohio.
In ~845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven" was first published,
1
in the New York Evening Mirror.
'
In 1850, Heriry Clay introduced in the Senate a compromise bill
on slavery which 1ncluded the admission of California into the
Union as a free state.
In 1861, Klruas became the 34th stare of the Union.
'n 1900, tl)e Amerf.c:in League, comisting of eight baseball teams,
was organized in Philadelphia. .
·
'
·
In 1936, the first members of baseball's Hall of Fame, includingTy
. CObb ai).d Babe Ruth, were named.in Cooperstown, N.Y.
In 1958, actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were married.
In 1963, the first members of football's Hall of Fame were named
in Canton, Ohio.
·
In 1963, poet Robert Frost died in Boston.
In 1979, President Carter formally welcomed Chinese Vice Pre·
mier Deng Xiaoping to the White House, following the establishment of diplomatic relations.
Ten years ago: In his State of the Ullion address, President George
Bush assured Americans tl!,at the war against Iraq would be won and
that the recession at home would end in short order. (Extraordinary
·security measures were in effect for the first wartime State of the
Union address since the Vietnam era.)
Five years ago: A Na'lly F-14 fighter jet crashed in Nashville, Tenn.,
demolishing" three houses and killing five people. French President
Jacques Chirac ordered an early end to underground nuclear tests in
the South Pacific. Fire des[Joyed Italy's opera house La Fenice.
One year ago: Delegates meeting in Montreal reached an internatiQnal agreement on the trade of genetically modified food and
other products. Joe Montana and Rorutie,. Lott, . archirects of San
Francisco's Super Bowl dynasty, were among five individuals elected
to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian "Professor" IrWin Corey is 89.Actor
john Fonythe is 83. Actor Noel Harrison is 6 7. Author Germaine
Greer is 62.~ctorTom Selleck is 56.Actor Marc Singer is 53.Actress
AnnJillian is 50. Rock musician Tomniy Ramone (Ramol).es) is 49.
Rock musician Louie Perez (Los Lobos) is 48.Talk show host Oprah
Winfrey is 47. Country singer lrlene Mandrell is 44. Actress Judy
Norton Taylor ("The Wakons") is 43. Rock musician Johnny
Spampinato (NRBQJ is 42. Olympic gold-medal diver Greg Louganis 41. Rock musician Eddie Jackson (Queensryche) is 40. Actor
Nichola. Turturro is 39. Rock singer-musician Roddy Frame (Aztec
Camera) is 37.Acror·director Edward Burns is 33.Actress Heather
Graham Is 31. Actrts.~ Sara Gilbert is 26.
'

a

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•••

--

Dear Ann Landen: I a;,.. a 39-yearold divorced single father -- and gay. I
have had sole custody of my two
teenage children for the last six years
and am proud of the way they are turning out. They have a good understanding of my sexual orientation, which has
made my life a lot easier.
I have been ~eeing a wonderful man
for over a year. " Ricky" and my chi ldren get ·along well and treat each other
with respect. He attends all our family
functions and fits right in. The problem
is, l want Ricky lo be a real life partner,
bur my ~ids don't want him living in
the hpuse with us.
TIJeJo; have been very accepting of
our j:l~ting, and I. know they like Ricky
alpf; ) can't understand why they are so
~t us, living together as a family. I
t&amp;b!t. ·want to wait until they are o ut of
e ·&amp; use {the youngest is only I~). and
1:1:•\_:if I do wait, thert"'s no guarantl!c
iJtl'?1ildren would accept him in their

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
hOmes .
I don't want to cause my children
any pain, but when do I get to live my
own life the way I want to? -- Feeling
In complete in Ohio .
.
Dear Ohio: I suspect your children
might be concerned about what their
friends would think. Most teenagers
might feel. a bit uncomfort able about
letting their friend s know their dad has
.1 same-sex partner living in the house.
I hope you, Ricky an~ the children
have son)e joint counsdiug sessions

-.- ~·

before you make any decisions. This is a
heavy load to lay on teenagers, and they
will need a lot of emotional support.
Please see that they get it.
Dear Ann 'Landers: This is for
"Out of Sorts Out West," whose ' ion
kept showing up two hours late every
time lie was invited for dinner. You said
to wait 20 minutes and then eat without him. I wouldn't wait 20 se conds.
My sister used to show up late all the
time, and [ got sic k of it. I decided to
tell her we would be sitting down at the
table two hours earlier than we actually
were. If dinner was sc heduled for 7
o'clock, I told "Julie" we were eating at
5 o'clock. That worked well for a while.
Then Julie caught on to my little
scheme and went back to her old ways.
Finally, I had my fill of it . I said,
"Julie, we're eating at 6 o'clock. and will
not wait for you ." And· that's what we
did. The first time Julie arrived late, she
WilS shocked to s~e us finishing dessert.

History will also judge Robert Ray~ actionsjC •
~

JJ I_I"

ishrnenr;· Posner wrote, "for one count of p-erJ.ury or subornation of peljury• is fiw ycars·l~
H. ~I{ I
prison, and for one count of Witness tampenr,g,,
. .10 years." In Clinton's ca.&lt;e, the likely outco~
says Posner, "would be a prison sentence ~f,~_w,;
to 37 months."
.. ~,~r
in "Alice's ·Adventures in Wonderland," '•it
But Robert Ray refused to indict CliniQit:'
means just what I choose it to mean -neither
Why? Because, Ray said on "M~et the ~s;:
more nor less. The question is, who is to be
he acted "in the best interest of the country,~
master- t hats' all"
.
that the new president would be afforded, ;a.!}~
So it was that Climon's lawyer; David.
opportUnity with sop1e space, perhaps not ·~
NEA COLUMNIST
Kendall, emphatically told the press- after the
much space as one would h;tve liked, for a ~"K;
· deal was signed and a reporter asked whether
start." Astonishingly, Ray added, "sonietijnes..'f9,·
Clinton had admitted he had intentionally lied rice." But· Ray had been investigating whether may rely too much on law and constitution '!!lit.
- "He did not lie. We have not admitted he Clinton had committed peljury and obstruc- statutes."
!
.
,, "''
lied. And he did not do so today:'
.
tion ofjustic;e.
All of us have been repeatedly subjectecl ;·to
And White House Press Secretary Jake SiewAnd both petjury and obstruction did take the mantra "the rule of law;• but Robert R~ .
ert assured the nation that Clinton was not .•"'t- place. In his book, "An Affair ·of State: The has carved an exception into thapme for, t11F,.
ing that he knowingly gave false testimouy.
Investigation, Impeachment and 'I'rial of ·Presi- .. convenience of the new president and to ~.
But on NBC-TV's :'Meet the Press," inde- · dent Clinton'; (Harvard University Press), the ardent desire f,many iq ,this counlr)l.to Mill!
0
pendent counsel Robert Ray pointed out that Richard Posner, chiefjudge of the Seventh Cir- all f hi ·
·
o t Signonuny come t o c1osure. .
.. . " ..' :
Clinton "dearly now had admitted that por- cu.i t Court of Appeals, stated Ul1equivocally: ".Ir
But Mr. Ray, when he took on this responsi.; :
tions of his testimony under oath were false, and is clear that Clinton peljured himself in the bility, pledged that he would affirm the prinri.,,
that his intent was to knowingly evade and mis- Paula Jones deposition, even t]jough, as Clin- pie that "no person is above the law, ·not even!:
lead a federal judge:' And that what he did "was ton's defenders emphasized, the crime of perd
N
·JUty 1s· narrow1y d efi ned m
· fce d'erail aw."
the president of the Unite tates.
ot evenp :
prejudicial to the administration ofjustice."
n
·
d : "A nurn b er o f th e presi·
Mr. Ray, if the new president and much of tbo!:
But Robert Ray, in this deal, allowed Clinton
rosner contmue
to admit that he lied only in h.is deposition in dent's lies before the (federal) grand jury were populace would prefer ·that the furmer presi••.
the Paula Jones case. Clinton, however, lied incontesvbly material to the grand jury's inves- dent be treated in a manner fundamentally dif"! ·
under oath to a federal grand jury, and he did ligation into whether he had petjured himself ferendy from the way he would have ~en
that with' the American public watching on in the Paula Jones case and whether he ~nd oth- treated had he been an ordinary citizen wh&amp;.
televisiol}. By clearing Clinton of this more ers had committed other obstructions bfjustice obsliucted justice. Or even the CEO of a majdf ~
serious .act of peljury, Ray failed in his own in that case.... The charge of petjury before the company who had committed serial petjury.: 'V ':
grand jury (was) even stronger than the charge
As Jennifer Qureshi, a 26-year-old teac118'.' ·
responsibility to do justice.
Not surprisingly, on "Meet the Press" Clin- of petjury at the deposition in the Paula Jones told the N.WYork Daily News:"lt's not a gi'IO'd"
message for our country. It tells people if ynu ~
ton's long-time whirling flack, James Carville, case:•
said triumphandy about the Ray-Clinton deal:
Judge Posner noted that petjury is included in something wrong; there's a way to get a~;·
"Never, ever was there any allegation about the the definition of obstruction ofjustice - along with it." ,
'
".' ~
president's testimony before the grand jury; with tampering with witnesses, which, he
(Nat Hent~is a nati...,/ly renowned authority' Jll·
never, ever anything about obStruction of jus- wrote, Clinton also did. "The maxiinum pun- the FirstAmendment and the Bill of Rights.) ··' ''l'
Lewis Carroll would not' have been surprised
at th.e meticulous evasiveness of the language in
the deal between independent counsel Robert
Ray and William Jefferson Clinton on the last
day of the latter's presidency. .
"When I use a word;' Humpty Dumpty said

Nat '

Hcmtoff

s

,

I I !! '/'

l{ILPATRICK'S VIEW

The Court of Peeves is now in session

' l"fi

• ~ 1 I

; I )S.

SOCIAL SECURITY
Local help is available
for Medicare questions
~ ;av

SOCI~L

Jlin. 21. 2001

I told her, "The leftovers are in the Mom
fridge. Warm them up." After two repeat
Dear Mom: It is perfectly OK to
episodes, Julie realized she'd better be take those "little bottles." Guests are
on time -- and now she is . -- South e~pected to use them up or take them
Dakota Sister
home. Guests may not , however, take ·
Dear Sis: More people should do the towels. bed linen, pillows, shower
what you did. [ hope your letter gives curtains, pictures or1'the wall, bathinats
them the courage to do so. There or radios . Don't laugh -- some folks
should be a penalty for tardiness and have tried &gt;II of the above.
lack of consideration for others.
Is life passing you by' Want to
Dear Ann Landers: My daughter iS'
improve your social skills' Write for
a flight attendant and often stays in
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to
hotels. uMargaret" takes all the little
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
bottles the hotel provides -- shampoo,
Send
a self-addressed, long, businessmouthwash, lotion and so on, and
brings them to me. I then donate these size envelope and a check or money
items to 3 shelter for :'lbused women , order for $4.25 (this includes postage
where the bottles are warmly rt:"ccivcd and handling) to : Friends, c/o Ann Landers , P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
and considered a luxury.
My friend says these bottles are not- 60611-0562. (In Canada , send $5 .1 5.)
supposed to be taken from the hotel. I To find out more about Ann Landers
and read ht-r past colllmns, visit thealway~ thought rhose sa mple -size ite-ms
were a· "gift" to hotel guests. Please tell . Creators Syndicate web page at
me who is right. -- Frequent Flyer's www.creat ors.co m .

VALREA THOMPSON

SECURITY MANAGER, ATHENS

Many senior citizens have
ques~ions about their Medicare
c"overage. There is now an
otganization in each state and
t&amp;'ritory that can help youSf-UP. which stands for State
Health Insurance Assistance
Program.
;;' Each sta~e or territory
receives funding from the fedr!l'al government to give free
"~alth insurance counseling to
p~op.le with Medicare. Nation\lfitle, over 12,000 SHIP couns~ltin help tWo million people
a'llriually with their Medicare
questions.
'' ' SHIP counselors can help
you· · understand the various
'tpes of Medkare health plans,
st~cll'"as Med1care Part A and
Pa~t ' ·B within the original
Medicare plan, as well as
Medicare nunaged care plans
and private fee-for-service
plans. They can also answer
questions about the types of
private imurance that' supplement Medicare, such as Medigap:
•: !p additi9n to explaining
)19.\lt. choices, the SHIP co~n­
SJOiq(J can ~tip you select the
type, of coverage that fits your
i!)Pividual needs and locate
i9,11/.l:ance companies in your
liJC~ : Other ., SHIP servi~es
iP,cl11de help w1th quesuom
a6out your Medicare bill and
fi.,nding out if you qualify for
prog'rams that can help with
your health care costs.
~ G•ll
1-800-MEDICARE
(I ~800-633-4227) to get the
number of your local SHIP
(TTY/TDD at 1-877-4862048 for the heariQg ,and
speech impaired) or. look · ·on
the
Internet
at

SOCIETY NEWS
conferences should be dire cted to the schools
Parent-teacher
where the children attend.
conferences scheduled
O'Bieness offers dasses
POMEROY - The Meigs Local School District will be holding parent- teacher conferences on
Thursday, Feb. 8 and Thursday, Feb. 15 after the
dismissal of schpol for three hours.
William L Buckley, superintendent, said that
parents will receive letters describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information
on the conferences this week.
Purpose of the conferences, he explains, is to
allow the parents and teachers to discuss pupil
progress and to keep the parents and schools information about students activities as they relate to
school behavior and performance.
Parents are encouraged to take advantage of this
opportunity to communicate with their children's
instructors in the hope that ·a more effective educational program can result from the exchange of
information and ideas. Any questions about the

www.medicare.gov Under the
"Helpful Contacts" section.

New laws

make it easier
Disabled Social Security
beneficiaries whose benefits
.have ended because of earnings :
from work and have again
become unable to work
because of their medical condition may now request reinstatement of benefits without
filing a new di.ability application.
This expedited reil)statement of benefits is. a welcomed
provision of the Ticket to Work
and Work Inc'entives Improvement Act of 1999. The various
provisions of this law assure
that more Americans \vith disabilities have the opportunity
to participate in the workforce
and lessen their dependence on
public benefits. ·
To take advantage of this
·provision, beneficiaries must be
unable to work because of
their medical condition·. They
must file the request for reinstatement oftheir·bendits with
Social Security within 60
months from the month their
bei1efits terminated.
·Beneficiaries may receive
provisional . (temporary) benefits as well as Medicare and
Medicaid-for up to six months
whil~ their case is being
reviewed by So~ial Security
using the medical improvement review sta.ndard. If they
are found not disabled; generally these benefits will not be
considered an overpayment. :

ATHENS -· O'Bieness MeJnorial Hospital will
offer a companion class for expeCtant mothers and
their birth coaches or companions Thursday, Feb. B
from 6:30 to 9 p.m at the hospital.
The class will be held in the basement conference room B-7. It is designed to prepare a birth
coach or companion to provide reassurance to the
expectant mother during the delivery of her baby.
The class is offered free of charge and no registration is required.
Information presented during the class includes ·
what to expect during labor, delivery and the first
hours after delivery, the role of the companion,
hospital procedures, variations of labor, and postpartum care. Class participants will also tour the
O'Bieness Birth Center.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
MONDAY
POMEROY - Veterans Service
Commission, 7:30p.m., 117 E. Memorlar

Dr.
• POMEROY - Pomeroy Alumni Asso·
ciation first planning meeting, 7 p.m.
Monday at the home of Yvonne Young .
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden Club,
Monday, 1 p.m. allhe home ol Betty Low·
ery, Harrisonvilfe.
•

. WEDNESDAY
•
- Chesler Bell Assocla·
lion, organizational meeting, Wednesday,
6:30p.m. allhe Chester firehoose'
CHEST~R

·

The Community Celondllr Ia publllhod 11 a free Hrvlco to non-profit
groupa wlehlng to announce ..-.
lnge end epeclol evonla. The cal-.r
11 not dnlgnod to promote ..lee or
lund rei-• olany type. 1te1111 are
· printed only 11 tpece permlte tnd

cannot be gutren!Mdto be printed a
apecltlc numbef at

ca.v•.

camera angles: Slide shows go digital

'

(AP) - I fondly remember my
dad's 35 mm slide shows. First, my
dad would try to see what was on
the sinall slides so he could put
them in some kind of order. Next '
he would drop the slides into a tray,
hoping they would all drop in
place - which did not always
happen. Then, I'd help him set up
the projector ·and bulky screen.
Finally, he would ask ·me to turn
off all the room lights.
Sccollds later, my fiunily \vas
transported .to Venice or Istanbul
- or back ih time to a fun fiunily
vacation.
Some of dad's slides, inevitably,
had dust spots on them, others
were accidentally placed in back\\~rds. Occasionally, one or two
slides would be upside-down. The
shows, technically speaking. were
not perfect. Still, seeing the big piccures· on the screen was fun magic, back in 1962.
Slide shows have come . a long
way since I was a teen-ager. Today,
·the cool (as my son would say) way
of giving a slide show has changed.

Big time. Slide shows have gone
digital - which means you can,
indeed, create a picture-perfec.c
slide show.
Several software programs, for
PC and Windows computers, are
available that let you create slide
shows on your home or portable
comput!.!r. Kai's Power Show, fi&gt;r
example, is a basic, very easy-to-use
program that otTers more than &lt;1
do.zcn fun transitions bc:t\v.:cn
slides - a·;~nsitions that add pizazz
tt&gt; slide presentations. Microsoft's
Power Point is at the other end of
the spectrum. It is a professional
presentation program; you have
/fore .:ontml of hpw your images
arc p~sented on the screen. You
can make multi-image slides, complete \vith text and different color
borders. Professional transitions
between slides are a snap.
The first step in making a computer-generated slide presentation
is to get your pictures into your

computer. That's possible with a
digital camera, a film or flat bed
scanner, Picture CD or through an
online photofinisher.
Once you have your pictures on
·your hard drive, you can use a
computer imaging program, such
as ·Adobe's Photoshop, Ulead Systems' Photo Impact, MGI's PowerSuite or Met.1 Creations' Painter
Classic co ch:an up your images if
they have dust spots, and turn them
. right side up if they were scanned
poorly.
The next step is to "dtop" your
''shdes" into your slide program.
With some programs, that is a
drag-and-drop procedure. With
others, putting slides in order is
done wiill a few clicks of a mouse.
Once the slide show is completed, it can and should be saved and shared- on a CD or Zip.
Slid.e presentations, if done correctly, look cool on a computer
monitor- or even on a television

'

sec. PiCture-takers who are serious
about giving slide shows, however,
go one step future. They present
their slide shows \vith a digital proJector, which hooks up easily to a
home or portable computer. Most
of my professional photographer
friends show their work digitally.
At photography meetings, if they
were to show up with .a tray of
slides. they may get a funny look.
Digit.1l projectors don't come
cneap. They ranb"' in ·cost from
about $3,000 to S6.000 - many
cimf!S more than 35 mm projt:ctors , which, by the '':'ay, still do a
great job projectillg slides.
Canon, CTX, !nFocus, Polaroid
andVie\vSonic all offer several digital projectors that &gt;re about ihe
Size of 35 nun projectors. As the
price increases, so does the quality
and the brightness of the ima~ both of )Vhich are very tmportant
factqrs. to consider when ?urchasing a digital projector.
·

==~~

Th~~

The Court of Peeves; Crotchet&gt; &amp; Irks opens
ought to be kept :,; the private. domairl.
~
its winter assizes with a petition from Walter
· ·court will say no more.
!oo'
.:
Boone ofrerrell, N.C. He asks the court for an
Harri.et Lee o. f Los Angeles asks the court~o'-·
order that would obliterate "got:' Indeed, the
rule on "actually" and "basically:' She qu
:
court' infers from his plea that he regards .oblitfroJ11. a newspaper' article on school vouchen:
eration as too go!)d for"got:' He wou)d send •
"Attually, many polls suggest that the public is ..
the offending pas\ paniciple into orbit, never to
divided on t)1e matter:' And fiOJn a magazine,•; :
be seen on Earth again.
"Basically, C~lir WiiS a successful president." In~.:
As an exhibit, Reader Boone offers a headline
these examples, the adVerb$ ate ;yaw-wor:ds.$
from The . Charlotte Observer: "Think you .
They pennit a little movemef!t sidewU&lt; ~re""
' UPS COWMNIST
know racing? W~'ve ·got some stall for you." He
a sentence gelS baCt{ on co~. ,. ' . .:
also submits an anide from the O~rver about
Precisely used, the adverbs se~ p
..
the vanishing pigeons of']}yon Street. "We've
Nothing is wrong with, "The gems·looke'J':1,
got major banks and glitzy hotejs. We've got ·soned objection ~ to the redundancy that but actually they were fakes.'•' The court v&lt;licesf ·
Dean &amp; Deluca. We've got some Panthers, hut . occ~ in "We've ·got raspberries today."WoUkl- no objection to, "Basieally, ali.internal combus-:: ·
'
.
no pigeons.'' .O n its own motion, the court will n't it be better just to HAVE raspberries today? · tion engines are the ~e." An
injunctipn will.!;:
'The coUrt will• rule with uncharacteristic be entered against the nundlesS ernploymertt m;:
admit a headline from USA Today, "You've got
junk trWI." Reader John ' Rickert of Blue Ash, ambivalence: Yes and no. Beyond dispute, "got" these otherwise useful modiGe.,. Even so, ast
Ohio, joins the plaintif!S with a complaint . is a more vigorous verb than "haw." If a para- professor John Bremner used to\lemark, it's bet-=: .
against the folksy message from America graph demands vigor, informality, emphasis, go ter to say ackjully than ynnno. \ · •
: ~·
Online, "You've gnt mail:'
with "got." It the tone of your prose calls for
A petition from John Willian\$ of Chi~~ .
The court has ruled on "got" before, but alas, coat and tie, and cloth napkins instead of paper asks the couit to distinguish betweep, "clod" and§;
the court has ruled to no avail. No objection ones, stick with "we have;' as in, "We have to get . "dot."The distinction is mudlly..~ comes in~
can be taken to "She got lucky" or "He got a on ~th this co!IIII1lli''
'
either dollS or clods. An oafish feUJit is a clod,~
George Yakobian of Sonoita, Ariz., revives a not a clot. Coagulated blood forms a 'clot, not a
glimpse of Madpnna." The present rense gives
no trouble: "The play gets worse in the second long-ago controversy in asking tbr a declarato- dod.Verbwise,S o'clod ttaffic may ~or clog._.
act:'The participle does not offend:"lt is getting ry judgment on "else."The word is an adjective, but clod it does not. This cqurc lives~ 'clarify. f
colder day by day." Only a pedant _ a pedant he complains, and does not ~~ the possesl&gt;nother dUtinction occun to · us .(\Ia sponte:f
with a tin ear- would urge that the name of sive apostrophe that appean in "someone else's Oust thougi1t ofit a minute ago) .,Ni YllllQmS are~
the song be amended to read "I Have Rhythm!' book." He asks the courtJo approve "someone\ poisonous, but not aD· poisotil ue ~ous.;i
No. The 'court underst:.nds that the animus is else book."
Venom is secreted by snakes, scorpions ani:
No way. A hundreg YJ'atS ago, "someone\ else book reviewers. Poisom can be
directed solely against "have got;' and the court,
old thin~
sympathizes with th~ petitioners. In the court's book" was indeed r.i:garded as the correct for- that could cause death when eaten, drunk or::
irrational vie.w, "gnt" is simply an ugly word. marion. Today the "else" takes the apoStrophe absorbed On that macabre note the court ~
•• ,
The ,glottis closes on that final"t" and the ten· and does all the work. The court finds it odd, a recess.
ocr ear winces. Curiously, the ear does not and even a bit indecorous, to write about someOames J Kilpatrick is a columnistjiW Unlvma~·
flinch at dbt, hot, lot, pot or Scot. A more rea- one\ else. Some thinS', ~ecially one\ else, Press SyndiCJ2te.)
.
• •10&lt;

James .

.l&lt;.ilpatrick

a

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•

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20 oz. bottle
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HENTOFFS VIEW
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Page AS

the Bend .
Gay father battling issue of life partner

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�•

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. :.:Th;.:.:e-=D. : ai~Iy. :.Se.:.:.n:.: :tin:.;:. : .e.:. .I_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;0;:;.P-Inion
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'btUIUiid ilt1941
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740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

• • • • JlniiiTJ 2e. 20CU.

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.... '
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
I

Charle!l W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

G81Mrll Manager

R. Shewn Lewis

Larry Boyer

• ' \.1.1 r '

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Diane Key Hill

Advertlelng Director

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Managing Editor

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Controller

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NATIONAL VIEW

reat
Initial mistake with Iraq
remains problematic
• New York Post, on lessons of the GulfW&lt;lr: Ten years ago
this morning, Iraqi time, a coalition of armed forces led by
American troops launched an air strike against Baghdad.
Diplomacy and sanctions had failed to move Saddam from his
illegal occupation of a neighboring country, so America and its
allies prepared for war.
Most of the Democrats on Capitol Hill vehemently opposed
the effort. But President George Bush had declared that the
conquest of Kuwait "will not stand" - and he meant it.
' Six weeks later, it was all over. Saddam's forces had been
routed and Kuwait was liberated as Iraqi troops fled for their
lives.
The allies had achieved their short-term objective. But the
Iraqi dictator had been allowed to survive, his regime intact . .In ·
the decade since, that regrettabl!! decision not to finish the job
and .wpple Saddam has had long-term - dangerous - ramifications. ·
Several of those who led the allies to victory took office on
Jan. 20, including Secretary of State Colin Powell and Vice
President Dick Cheney. After eight years of the Clinton-Gore
team's neglect 'of.the military, that's a welcome development.
But the incoming officials include some who sought not to
push the war ro its logical - and necessary - .- con~lusion.
And that's far from reassuring ....
Saddam's ultimate survival is the fruit of an initial mistake
compounded by eight years of neglect and visionless strategy.
That he remains a threat on the lOth anniversary of the Gulf
War is soniething the next Bush administration will have to
contend with.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of2001.T~ere are 336 days
'-......)
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 29, 1820, Britain's King George III died at Windsor Castle, ending reign that had seen both the American and French revolutions.
On this date:
In 1843, the 25th president of the United States, William McKinley, was born in Niles, Ohio.
In ~845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven" was first published,
1
in the New York Evening Mirror.
'
In 1850, Heriry Clay introduced in the Senate a compromise bill
on slavery which 1ncluded the admission of California into the
Union as a free state.
In 1861, Klruas became the 34th stare of the Union.
'n 1900, tl)e Amerf.c:in League, comisting of eight baseball teams,
was organized in Philadelphia. .
·
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·
In 1936, the first members of baseball's Hall of Fame, includingTy
. CObb ai).d Babe Ruth, were named.in Cooperstown, N.Y.
In 1958, actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were married.
In 1963, the first members of football's Hall of Fame were named
in Canton, Ohio.
·
In 1963, poet Robert Frost died in Boston.
In 1979, President Carter formally welcomed Chinese Vice Pre·
mier Deng Xiaoping to the White House, following the establishment of diplomatic relations.
Ten years ago: In his State of the Ullion address, President George
Bush assured Americans tl!,at the war against Iraq would be won and
that the recession at home would end in short order. (Extraordinary
·security measures were in effect for the first wartime State of the
Union address since the Vietnam era.)
Five years ago: A Na'lly F-14 fighter jet crashed in Nashville, Tenn.,
demolishing" three houses and killing five people. French President
Jacques Chirac ordered an early end to underground nuclear tests in
the South Pacific. Fire des[Joyed Italy's opera house La Fenice.
One year ago: Delegates meeting in Montreal reached an internatiQnal agreement on the trade of genetically modified food and
other products. Joe Montana and Rorutie,. Lott, . archirects of San
Francisco's Super Bowl dynasty, were among five individuals elected
to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian "Professor" IrWin Corey is 89.Actor
john Fonythe is 83. Actor Noel Harrison is 6 7. Author Germaine
Greer is 62.~ctorTom Selleck is 56.Actor Marc Singer is 53.Actress
AnnJillian is 50. Rock musician Tomniy Ramone (Ramol).es) is 49.
Rock musician Louie Perez (Los Lobos) is 48.Talk show host Oprah
Winfrey is 47. Country singer lrlene Mandrell is 44. Actress Judy
Norton Taylor ("The Wakons") is 43. Rock musician Johnny
Spampinato (NRBQJ is 42. Olympic gold-medal diver Greg Louganis 41. Rock musician Eddie Jackson (Queensryche) is 40. Actor
Nichola. Turturro is 39. Rock singer-musician Roddy Frame (Aztec
Camera) is 37.Acror·director Edward Burns is 33.Actress Heather
Graham Is 31. Actrts.~ Sara Gilbert is 26.
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--

Dear Ann Landen: I a;,.. a 39-yearold divorced single father -- and gay. I
have had sole custody of my two
teenage children for the last six years
and am proud of the way they are turning out. They have a good understanding of my sexual orientation, which has
made my life a lot easier.
I have been ~eeing a wonderful man
for over a year. " Ricky" and my chi ldren get ·along well and treat each other
with respect. He attends all our family
functions and fits right in. The problem
is, l want Ricky lo be a real life partner,
bur my ~ids don't want him living in
the hpuse with us.
TIJeJo; have been very accepting of
our j:l~ting, and I. know they like Ricky
alpf; ) can't understand why they are so
~t us, living together as a family. I
t&amp;b!t. ·want to wait until they are o ut of
e ·&amp; use {the youngest is only I~). and
1:1:•\_:if I do wait, thert"'s no guarantl!c
iJtl'?1ildren would accept him in their

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
hOmes .
I don't want to cause my children
any pain, but when do I get to live my
own life the way I want to? -- Feeling
In complete in Ohio .
.
Dear Ohio: I suspect your children
might be concerned about what their
friends would think. Most teenagers
might feel. a bit uncomfort able about
letting their friend s know their dad has
.1 same-sex partner living in the house.
I hope you, Ricky an~ the children
have son)e joint counsdiug sessions

-.- ~·

before you make any decisions. This is a
heavy load to lay on teenagers, and they
will need a lot of emotional support.
Please see that they get it.
Dear Ann 'Landers: This is for
"Out of Sorts Out West," whose ' ion
kept showing up two hours late every
time lie was invited for dinner. You said
to wait 20 minutes and then eat without him. I wouldn't wait 20 se conds.
My sister used to show up late all the
time, and [ got sic k of it. I decided to
tell her we would be sitting down at the
table two hours earlier than we actually
were. If dinner was sc heduled for 7
o'clock, I told "Julie" we were eating at
5 o'clock. That worked well for a while.
Then Julie caught on to my little
scheme and went back to her old ways.
Finally, I had my fill of it . I said,
"Julie, we're eating at 6 o'clock. and will
not wait for you ." And· that's what we
did. The first time Julie arrived late, she
WilS shocked to s~e us finishing dessert.

History will also judge Robert Ray~ actionsjC •
~

JJ I_I"

ishrnenr;· Posner wrote, "for one count of p-erJ.ury or subornation of peljury• is fiw ycars·l~
H. ~I{ I
prison, and for one count of Witness tampenr,g,,
. .10 years." In Clinton's ca.&lt;e, the likely outco~
says Posner, "would be a prison sentence ~f,~_w,;
to 37 months."
.. ~,~r
in "Alice's ·Adventures in Wonderland," '•it
But Robert Ray refused to indict CliniQit:'
means just what I choose it to mean -neither
Why? Because, Ray said on "M~et the ~s;:
more nor less. The question is, who is to be
he acted "in the best interest of the country,~
master- t hats' all"
.
that the new president would be afforded, ;a.!}~
So it was that Climon's lawyer; David.
opportUnity with sop1e space, perhaps not ·~
NEA COLUMNIST
Kendall, emphatically told the press- after the
much space as one would h;tve liked, for a ~"K;
· deal was signed and a reporter asked whether
start." Astonishingly, Ray added, "sonietijnes..'f9,·
Clinton had admitted he had intentionally lied rice." But· Ray had been investigating whether may rely too much on law and constitution '!!lit.
- "He did not lie. We have not admitted he Clinton had committed peljury and obstruc- statutes."
!
.
,, "''
lied. And he did not do so today:'
.
tion ofjustic;e.
All of us have been repeatedly subjectecl ;·to
And White House Press Secretary Jake SiewAnd both petjury and obstruction did take the mantra "the rule of law;• but Robert R~ .
ert assured the nation that Clinton was not .•"'t- place. In his book, "An Affair ·of State: The has carved an exception into thapme for, t11F,.
ing that he knowingly gave false testimouy.
Investigation, Impeachment and 'I'rial of ·Presi- .. convenience of the new president and to ~.
But on NBC-TV's :'Meet the Press," inde- · dent Clinton'; (Harvard University Press), the ardent desire f,many iq ,this counlr)l.to Mill!
0
pendent counsel Robert Ray pointed out that Richard Posner, chiefjudge of the Seventh Cir- all f hi ·
·
o t Signonuny come t o c1osure. .
.. . " ..' :
Clinton "dearly now had admitted that por- cu.i t Court of Appeals, stated Ul1equivocally: ".Ir
But Mr. Ray, when he took on this responsi.; :
tions of his testimony under oath were false, and is clear that Clinton peljured himself in the bility, pledged that he would affirm the prinri.,,
that his intent was to knowingly evade and mis- Paula Jones deposition, even t]jough, as Clin- pie that "no person is above the law, ·not even!:
lead a federal judge:' And that what he did "was ton's defenders emphasized, the crime of perd
N
·JUty 1s· narrow1y d efi ned m
· fce d'erail aw."
the president of the Unite tates.
ot evenp :
prejudicial to the administration ofjustice."
n
·
d : "A nurn b er o f th e presi·
Mr. Ray, if the new president and much of tbo!:
But Robert Ray, in this deal, allowed Clinton
rosner contmue
to admit that he lied only in h.is deposition in dent's lies before the (federal) grand jury were populace would prefer ·that the furmer presi••.
the Paula Jones case. Clinton, however, lied incontesvbly material to the grand jury's inves- dent be treated in a manner fundamentally dif"! ·
under oath to a federal grand jury, and he did ligation into whether he had petjured himself ferendy from the way he would have ~en
that with' the American public watching on in the Paula Jones case and whether he ~nd oth- treated had he been an ordinary citizen wh&amp;.
televisiol}. By clearing Clinton of this more ers had committed other obstructions bfjustice obsliucted justice. Or even the CEO of a majdf ~
serious .act of peljury, Ray failed in his own in that case.... The charge of petjury before the company who had committed serial petjury.: 'V ':
grand jury (was) even stronger than the charge
As Jennifer Qureshi, a 26-year-old teac118'.' ·
responsibility to do justice.
Not surprisingly, on "Meet the Press" Clin- of petjury at the deposition in the Paula Jones told the N.WYork Daily News:"lt's not a gi'IO'd"
message for our country. It tells people if ynu ~
ton's long-time whirling flack, James Carville, case:•
said triumphandy about the Ray-Clinton deal:
Judge Posner noted that petjury is included in something wrong; there's a way to get a~;·
"Never, ever was there any allegation about the the definition of obstruction ofjustice - along with it." ,
'
".' ~
president's testimony before the grand jury; with tampering with witnesses, which, he
(Nat Hent~is a nati...,/ly renowned authority' Jll·
never, ever anything about obStruction of jus- wrote, Clinton also did. "The maxiinum pun- the FirstAmendment and the Bill of Rights.) ··' ''l'
Lewis Carroll would not' have been surprised
at th.e meticulous evasiveness of the language in
the deal between independent counsel Robert
Ray and William Jefferson Clinton on the last
day of the latter's presidency. .
"When I use a word;' Humpty Dumpty said

Nat '

Hcmtoff

s

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l{ILPATRICK'S VIEW

The Court of Peeves is now in session

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SOCIAL SECURITY
Local help is available
for Medicare questions
~ ;av

SOCI~L

Jlin. 21. 2001

I told her, "The leftovers are in the Mom
fridge. Warm them up." After two repeat
Dear Mom: It is perfectly OK to
episodes, Julie realized she'd better be take those "little bottles." Guests are
on time -- and now she is . -- South e~pected to use them up or take them
Dakota Sister
home. Guests may not , however, take ·
Dear Sis: More people should do the towels. bed linen, pillows, shower
what you did. [ hope your letter gives curtains, pictures or1'the wall, bathinats
them the courage to do so. There or radios . Don't laugh -- some folks
should be a penalty for tardiness and have tried &gt;II of the above.
lack of consideration for others.
Is life passing you by' Want to
Dear Ann Landers: My daughter iS'
improve your social skills' Write for
a flight attendant and often stays in
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to
hotels. uMargaret" takes all the little
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
bottles the hotel provides -- shampoo,
Send
a self-addressed, long, businessmouthwash, lotion and so on, and
brings them to me. I then donate these size envelope and a check or money
items to 3 shelter for :'lbused women , order for $4.25 (this includes postage
where the bottles are warmly rt:"ccivcd and handling) to : Friends, c/o Ann Landers , P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
and considered a luxury.
My friend says these bottles are not- 60611-0562. (In Canada , send $5 .1 5.)
supposed to be taken from the hotel. I To find out more about Ann Landers
and read ht-r past colllmns, visit thealway~ thought rhose sa mple -size ite-ms
were a· "gift" to hotel guests. Please tell . Creators Syndicate web page at
me who is right. -- Frequent Flyer's www.creat ors.co m .

VALREA THOMPSON

SECURITY MANAGER, ATHENS

Many senior citizens have
ques~ions about their Medicare
c"overage. There is now an
otganization in each state and
t&amp;'ritory that can help youSf-UP. which stands for State
Health Insurance Assistance
Program.
;;' Each sta~e or territory
receives funding from the fedr!l'al government to give free
"~alth insurance counseling to
p~op.le with Medicare. Nation\lfitle, over 12,000 SHIP couns~ltin help tWo million people
a'llriually with their Medicare
questions.
'' ' SHIP counselors can help
you· · understand the various
'tpes of Medkare health plans,
st~cll'"as Med1care Part A and
Pa~t ' ·B within the original
Medicare plan, as well as
Medicare nunaged care plans
and private fee-for-service
plans. They can also answer
questions about the types of
private imurance that' supplement Medicare, such as Medigap:
•: !p additi9n to explaining
)19.\lt. choices, the SHIP co~n­
SJOiq(J can ~tip you select the
type, of coverage that fits your
i!)Pividual needs and locate
i9,11/.l:ance companies in your
liJC~ : Other ., SHIP servi~es
iP,cl11de help w1th quesuom
a6out your Medicare bill and
fi.,nding out if you qualify for
prog'rams that can help with
your health care costs.
~ G•ll
1-800-MEDICARE
(I ~800-633-4227) to get the
number of your local SHIP
(TTY/TDD at 1-877-4862048 for the heariQg ,and
speech impaired) or. look · ·on
the
Internet
at

SOCIETY NEWS
conferences should be dire cted to the schools
Parent-teacher
where the children attend.
conferences scheduled
O'Bieness offers dasses
POMEROY - The Meigs Local School District will be holding parent- teacher conferences on
Thursday, Feb. 8 and Thursday, Feb. 15 after the
dismissal of schpol for three hours.
William L Buckley, superintendent, said that
parents will receive letters describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information
on the conferences this week.
Purpose of the conferences, he explains, is to
allow the parents and teachers to discuss pupil
progress and to keep the parents and schools information about students activities as they relate to
school behavior and performance.
Parents are encouraged to take advantage of this
opportunity to communicate with their children's
instructors in the hope that ·a more effective educational program can result from the exchange of
information and ideas. Any questions about the

www.medicare.gov Under the
"Helpful Contacts" section.

New laws

make it easier
Disabled Social Security
beneficiaries whose benefits
.have ended because of earnings :
from work and have again
become unable to work
because of their medical condition may now request reinstatement of benefits without
filing a new di.ability application.
This expedited reil)statement of benefits is. a welcomed
provision of the Ticket to Work
and Work Inc'entives Improvement Act of 1999. The various
provisions of this law assure
that more Americans \vith disabilities have the opportunity
to participate in the workforce
and lessen their dependence on
public benefits. ·
To take advantage of this
·provision, beneficiaries must be
unable to work because of
their medical condition·. They
must file the request for reinstatement oftheir·bendits with
Social Security within 60
months from the month their
bei1efits terminated.
·Beneficiaries may receive
provisional . (temporary) benefits as well as Medicare and
Medicaid-for up to six months
whil~ their case is being
reviewed by So~ial Security
using the medical improvement review sta.ndard. If they
are found not disabled; generally these benefits will not be
considered an overpayment. :

ATHENS -· O'Bieness MeJnorial Hospital will
offer a companion class for expeCtant mothers and
their birth coaches or companions Thursday, Feb. B
from 6:30 to 9 p.m at the hospital.
The class will be held in the basement conference room B-7. It is designed to prepare a birth
coach or companion to provide reassurance to the
expectant mother during the delivery of her baby.
The class is offered free of charge and no registration is required.
Information presented during the class includes ·
what to expect during labor, delivery and the first
hours after delivery, the role of the companion,
hospital procedures, variations of labor, and postpartum care. Class participants will also tour the
O'Bieness Birth Center.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
MONDAY
POMEROY - Veterans Service
Commission, 7:30p.m., 117 E. Memorlar

Dr.
• POMEROY - Pomeroy Alumni Asso·
ciation first planning meeting, 7 p.m.
Monday at the home of Yvonne Young .
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden Club,
Monday, 1 p.m. allhe home ol Betty Low·
ery, Harrisonvilfe.
•

. WEDNESDAY
•
- Chesler Bell Assocla·
lion, organizational meeting, Wednesday,
6:30p.m. allhe Chester firehoose'
CHEST~R

·

The Community Celondllr Ia publllhod 11 a free Hrvlco to non-profit
groupa wlehlng to announce ..-.
lnge end epeclol evonla. The cal-.r
11 not dnlgnod to promote ..lee or
lund rei-• olany type. 1te1111 are
· printed only 11 tpece permlte tnd

cannot be gutren!Mdto be printed a
apecltlc numbef at

ca.v•.

camera angles: Slide shows go digital

'

(AP) - I fondly remember my
dad's 35 mm slide shows. First, my
dad would try to see what was on
the sinall slides so he could put
them in some kind of order. Next '
he would drop the slides into a tray,
hoping they would all drop in
place - which did not always
happen. Then, I'd help him set up
the projector ·and bulky screen.
Finally, he would ask ·me to turn
off all the room lights.
Sccollds later, my fiunily \vas
transported .to Venice or Istanbul
- or back ih time to a fun fiunily
vacation.
Some of dad's slides, inevitably,
had dust spots on them, others
were accidentally placed in back\\~rds. Occasionally, one or two
slides would be upside-down. The
shows, technically speaking. were
not perfect. Still, seeing the big piccures· on the screen was fun magic, back in 1962.
Slide shows have come . a long
way since I was a teen-ager. Today,
·the cool (as my son would say) way
of giving a slide show has changed.

Big time. Slide shows have gone
digital - which means you can,
indeed, create a picture-perfec.c
slide show.
Several software programs, for
PC and Windows computers, are
available that let you create slide
shows on your home or portable
comput!.!r. Kai's Power Show, fi&gt;r
example, is a basic, very easy-to-use
program that otTers more than &lt;1
do.zcn fun transitions bc:t\v.:cn
slides - a·;~nsitions that add pizazz
tt&gt; slide presentations. Microsoft's
Power Point is at the other end of
the spectrum. It is a professional
presentation program; you have
/fore .:ontml of hpw your images
arc p~sented on the screen. You
can make multi-image slides, complete \vith text and different color
borders. Professional transitions
between slides are a snap.
The first step in making a computer-generated slide presentation
is to get your pictures into your

computer. That's possible with a
digital camera, a film or flat bed
scanner, Picture CD or through an
online photofinisher.
Once you have your pictures on
·your hard drive, you can use a
computer imaging program, such
as ·Adobe's Photoshop, Ulead Systems' Photo Impact, MGI's PowerSuite or Met.1 Creations' Painter
Classic co ch:an up your images if
they have dust spots, and turn them
. right side up if they were scanned
poorly.
The next step is to "dtop" your
''shdes" into your slide program.
With some programs, that is a
drag-and-drop procedure. With
others, putting slides in order is
done wiill a few clicks of a mouse.
Once the slide show is completed, it can and should be saved and shared- on a CD or Zip.
Slid.e presentations, if done correctly, look cool on a computer
monitor- or even on a television

'

sec. PiCture-takers who are serious
about giving slide shows, however,
go one step future. They present
their slide shows \vith a digital proJector, which hooks up easily to a
home or portable computer. Most
of my professional photographer
friends show their work digitally.
At photography meetings, if they
were to show up with .a tray of
slides. they may get a funny look.
Digit.1l projectors don't come
cneap. They ranb"' in ·cost from
about $3,000 to S6.000 - many
cimf!S more than 35 mm projt:ctors , which, by the '':'ay, still do a
great job projectillg slides.
Canon, CTX, !nFocus, Polaroid
andVie\vSonic all offer several digital projectors that &gt;re about ihe
Size of 35 nun projectors. As the
price increases, so does the quality
and the brightness of the ima~ both of )Vhich are very tmportant
factqrs. to consider when ?urchasing a digital projector.
·

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Th~~

The Court of Peeves; Crotchet&gt; &amp; Irks opens
ought to be kept :,; the private. domairl.
~
its winter assizes with a petition from Walter
· ·court will say no more.
!oo'
.:
Boone ofrerrell, N.C. He asks the court for an
Harri.et Lee o. f Los Angeles asks the court~o'-·
order that would obliterate "got:' Indeed, the
rule on "actually" and "basically:' She qu
:
court' infers from his plea that he regards .oblitfroJ11. a newspaper' article on school vouchen:
eration as too go!)d for"got:' He wou)d send •
"Attually, many polls suggest that the public is ..
the offending pas\ paniciple into orbit, never to
divided on t)1e matter:' And fiOJn a magazine,•; :
be seen on Earth again.
"Basically, C~lir WiiS a successful president." In~.:
As an exhibit, Reader Boone offers a headline
these examples, the adVerb$ ate ;yaw-wor:ds.$
from The . Charlotte Observer: "Think you .
They pennit a little movemef!t sidewU&lt; ~re""
' UPS COWMNIST
know racing? W~'ve ·got some stall for you." He
a sentence gelS baCt{ on co~. ,. ' . .:
also submits an anide from the O~rver about
Precisely used, the adverbs se~ p
..
the vanishing pigeons of']}yon Street. "We've
Nothing is wrong with, "The gems·looke'J':1,
got major banks and glitzy hotejs. We've got ·soned objection ~ to the redundancy that but actually they were fakes.'•' The court v&lt;licesf ·
Dean &amp; Deluca. We've got some Panthers, hut . occ~ in "We've ·got raspberries today."WoUkl- no objection to, "Basieally, ali.internal combus-:: ·
'
.
no pigeons.'' .O n its own motion, the court will n't it be better just to HAVE raspberries today? · tion engines are the ~e." An
injunctipn will.!;:
'The coUrt will• rule with uncharacteristic be entered against the nundlesS ernploymertt m;:
admit a headline from USA Today, "You've got
junk trWI." Reader John ' Rickert of Blue Ash, ambivalence: Yes and no. Beyond dispute, "got" these otherwise useful modiGe.,. Even so, ast
Ohio, joins the plaintif!S with a complaint . is a more vigorous verb than "haw." If a para- professor John Bremner used to\lemark, it's bet-=: .
against the folksy message from America graph demands vigor, informality, emphasis, go ter to say ackjully than ynnno. \ · •
: ~·
Online, "You've gnt mail:'
with "got." It the tone of your prose calls for
A petition from John Willian\$ of Chi~~ .
The court has ruled on "got" before, but alas, coat and tie, and cloth napkins instead of paper asks the couit to distinguish betweep, "clod" and§;
the court has ruled to no avail. No objection ones, stick with "we have;' as in, "We have to get . "dot."The distinction is mudlly..~ comes in~
can be taken to "She got lucky" or "He got a on ~th this co!IIII1lli''
'
either dollS or clods. An oafish feUJit is a clod,~
George Yakobian of Sonoita, Ariz., revives a not a clot. Coagulated blood forms a 'clot, not a
glimpse of Madpnna." The present rense gives
no trouble: "The play gets worse in the second long-ago controversy in asking tbr a declarato- dod.Verbwise,S o'clod ttaffic may ~or clog._.
act:'The participle does not offend:"lt is getting ry judgment on "else."The word is an adjective, but clod it does not. This cqurc lives~ 'clarify. f
colder day by day." Only a pedant _ a pedant he complains, and does not ~~ the possesl&gt;nother dUtinction occun to · us .(\Ia sponte:f
with a tin ear- would urge that the name of sive apostrophe that appean in "someone else's Oust thougi1t ofit a minute ago) .,Ni YllllQmS are~
the song be amended to read "I Have Rhythm!' book." He asks the courtJo approve "someone\ poisonous, but not aD· poisotil ue ~ous.;i
No. The 'court underst:.nds that the animus is else book."
Venom is secreted by snakes, scorpions ani:
No way. A hundreg YJ'atS ago, "someone\ else book reviewers. Poisom can be
directed solely against "have got;' and the court,
old thin~
sympathizes with th~ petitioners. In the court's book" was indeed r.i:garded as the correct for- that could cause death when eaten, drunk or::
irrational vie.w, "gnt" is simply an ugly word. marion. Today the "else" takes the apoStrophe absorbed On that macabre note the court ~
•• ,
The ,glottis closes on that final"t" and the ten· and does all the work. The court finds it odd, a recess.
ocr ear winces. Curiously, the ear does not and even a bit indecorous, to write about someOames J Kilpatrick is a columnistjiW Unlvma~·
flinch at dbt, hot, lot, pot or Scot. A more rea- one\ else. Some thinS', ~ecially one\ else, Press SyndiCJ2te.)
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Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFSWashington
sending aid

'

WASHINGTON (AP)
The United States will se nd S5
million in enlt~rgency supplies to

earthquake-stri cken India, officials said Sunday, and ~ould send
more as the situation worsens.

More than 6,000 bodies have
been rccovcn:d in the quake, and
the death toll was expected to
climb by scvcr:\] th o usand more.
Tetis o(thousa nds uf Indians are
ho!ltt!less.

"Thi&gt; is clearly a terrible

the Saturday morning accident.
Troy Schueller, a wrosrling
coach at Kdlogg High School in
northern Idaho, suffered a broken jaw, broken teeth and a broken leg.
The driver was identified as
C.eorge Wild, 63, of Osburn. He·
likely suffered a stroke or heart
attack, Idaho State Police said.
The passengers were traveling
to a wrestling tournament.

Celebrities aid
animal sanduary

carthquak~o:,"

:o.J.id Len Rogers,
acting asstst.1nt adminiHram r 111

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Hollywood celebrities tapped their

thl· bun.::1u

musical talents in a recording to

lntcrnariona l
Development.
Rogers said tht· United Stat~..·s
will m onitor th~..· relit{ dTorr and

L'Xotic animal santtuary. ·

for humanitarian
response at the US. AgL'ncy for

send more
CSS.l ry.
"Thi~ 11:.

:1id

if it

b&lt;.'(Oillt..'S u~o.·~.:-

di.:;.t .:; r~..·r.

:md
.1ccordingly." hi.."

a maJor

we will n.: ~pond
said.
A
~l: \"t:ll-p\.TSOil
Ji ~ JSU:r
respon se team wi ll bL· in India

Monchy. U'A ID "'id the

011

Unitt'd St:m.·s wo uld sc:nd suppli~.·s t"hat mdudt: plastic shet:ting, bl:mkets, \varer comaincrs,
purification and distribution kits
and genL'r;ttors.
Tht: agency, rhmugh the orga-

nization CAlli, also began distributing ·100 metric tOns of

benefit the Wildlife Waystatiop
Act&lt;&gt;rs Brad Pitt, Russell
Crowe, Bruce WilliS, Milia
.Jovovich and Kl•aml Rccv~: s arc
:1111011g th(' stars on thL~ CD.

said.

.

USAID also will

·

provide

fin ;mcial assistance to support

the work of relief groups already
on the ground in Gujarat, the
Indian state hardest hit.
Bhuj, a town in Gujarat, was
near the epicenter of Friday's
7.9-magnitude quake and suffered the most casualties and
damage.

Deaths Jolt Ivy

League town

from c&lt;1mpus.
"Tiwy \\Tn: wondc1ful people. They were spc·cial - intdlcctu :-tlly, hum:1nly, t'\'L'rything;·
Dartmouth
bngu:1gcs
said
instructor R.oxanne Vcroua .
Vt.·rona told neighbors she
stumbled upon the Zantops'
bodies when sht' ,\rrived Jt the
house for dinner S:1wrday
evening and found the door

unlocked . .
Police have since ("amioned
verona not to discuss the discovery, but some details about the

slayings have seeped out.
"She went in and called out.
There was no answer," neighbor

and friend Audrey McCotlum
said. "She turned and saw
Susanne on the floor with blood
around her."·

Verona rushed to McCotlum's
home to call police while
. McCoUum's husband Robert, a
doctor, went over to' the Zan-

l

tops' home. Robert McCotlum
said he saw enough to know for
certain the couple had been
dead for several· hours.
· Acrorney General Philip
McLaughlin on Sunday refused
to discuss a possible motive, sus-

pects, the cause of che deaths or
the condition of the house, saying he did not want to jeopardize tht&gt; investigation.
Susanne Zantop, 55, was chairwoman of the GL•quan Studies

istries and drug treatment, among other things.
To build support, Bnsh will meet throughour the week with leaders of spiritual and
charitable groups and he planned to attend the
National Prayer Breakfast on Thursd':ly.
The New York Times reported Monday
fronting California's energy crisis.
that Bus~as settled on University of PennBush on Monday was establishing a White sylvania political science professor John J.
House office that would distribute billions of Diluli;, Jr. to head the office and that former
dollars to religious gm~ps ani:! charities over Indianapolis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith will
the next 10 years. The president wants to let chair a new advisory board whose work will
such groups compete for taxpayer n10ney to complement the new White House office.
provide afttr-school programs, prison 111111Skeptics say shifting government money to

NEW YORK (AI') -

Advcr-

tisc..'rs who had spc!'nt record stuns
for commcrcials got link~ hdp

and Mare Winningham.
"This is a wunde1ful gesture

before the third quarter ·ended.
That left it co advertisers to use

tion.
Anheuser-Busch was the single

from our neighbors, the Hotly- · ·

the telecast's re.p~tation as :1n
advertising showcase to keep
viewers tuned in.
More th:an 30 companies

biggest advertiser on the program

Willis~

Porsche up
for sale

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It
takes only a click of the mouse,
and a sizable bank .account balance, to own the 1999 Porsche
911 driven by Bruce Willis in
"Disney's The Kid."
The Porsche, which is worth
about $73,000, is being auctioned on http://www.disneyauctions.com. The successful
bidder also will · be treated to
$2,500 in Porsche accessories
and apparel.
"We are pleased not only to

The auction coincides with

the Jan . 23 video and DVD
rdease of" Disney's The Kid."
Bidding begins at SoS,OOO. A
portion of the proceeds will go
to clurity.

.Opry retums to
· Ryman
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Decked out in his traditional
cowboy boors, hat and denin1
jacket, Alan Jackson stepped out
of hi.s tour bus and made his way
to Ryman Auditoriunt stage.
He was one of several coumry

stars performing to a sellout ·
crowd Saturday night at the
Ryman Auditorium where the
Grand Ole Opry returned after a
two-decade absence.
Jackson took a minute to note
che significance of the path he
was walking to the Ryman, a
former church in downtown
Nashville known as "The Mother Church of Country Music."
"Anytime you walk out here
where Hank and all them played
its pretty haunting;' said Jackson,
who in 1991 was inducted into
the ·Grand Ole Opry.
The Ryman played host to
Hank Williams, Patsy Cline,
Minnie Pearl and other country
music pioneers from 1943 to
197 4, before the show moved to
the Opry House at Opryland
USA.

LANSING, Mich. (AI') - . prices they are charging on the
Soaring energy bills are t:ating

deeply into the budgets of
schools, hospitals, churches · and

The

cost of wholesalL~ natural gas,

which has quadrupled over the
last year. High demand intensified
hom.dess shdtefs across the country, forcing them to look · for by cold weather has ·contributed
increasingly hard-to-find ways to to the problem. The leap in natur~
al gas prices coupled with a shorttighten their belts.
"It will come out of the hides, age of hydrodectric power in the
so to speak, of the kids," says Don Northwest also has contributed
Tharpe of the Association of to California's energy crisis.
School Business Officials. Unlike

ROSE LAKE. Idaho (AP) Tlw driwr of a bus caJ'rying 33
hi.;h school athlcrl'S, checrleadL'rs :md two chachc.11 ~ lumped

over Jnd died, sending the bus
carccnill.g ofT the ro.1d and inro
scwra l tn:~.·s.

Twelve scud . .·nts WL'rl:' trc:atcd
.an&lt;l rele ased from hospit;lls ;~ftcr

•

.

·-,.., ~.

... - . . ..

books from the basemeql:·~
found a lcarher-boutid datebl)l&gt;)&lt;
from 1964, Cherry Sertl~ c®J
the Lexington Herald-Lea~kt.:.:
Among appointments : itttl
other notes was a recipe for fr.W
chicken that called for 11 heros
and spices, she said.
• "'
It's the same: number 'hat
1i1akes up the recipe for onct;f

the temples of fast-food ci1ltlffl'
KFC's "Original Re~i~'
fried chicken. The exact blend,js
a ·secret as wen kept as the: f~):mula for Coca-Cola.
• ,
. ....,
~

•

Discove~ of bones may close

O'Hair disappearance case ·
CAMP WOOD, Texas (AP)
- For years, federal investigators believed Madalyn Murray
O'Hair \lias killed. They just
couldn't prove it.
. Bur the weekend discovery
of human remains in a shallow
grave on a ranch suggest the ·
long investigation into the
atheist leader's 1995 disappearance ffiay be near an end.
Investigators
believe
O'Hair, - her son Jon Garth
Murray and adopted grandd~ughter,
Robin
Murray
O'Hair, were killed, dismembered and dumped on the private, 5,000 acre ranch in south
Texas.
A metal artificial hip and

three skulls were

unearth~d

Sunday nea; the same . are:l

where other human bones h~d
been found a day earlier. • "
"The bones indicate three
sets of human remains," said
'
,Roderick Beverly, special
agent in charge of the FBI's
San Antonio . office. "All
appeared to have their legs Cl!t
off."
O'Hair had · a hip replacement operation several year~

before her disappearance.
,
Though Beverly stopped .
short of con firming t_h e identi-

ty of the bodies, he said offtcials believe the search is .over,

••••••
lO

Inside:

CIIPIIIIIIEIIEliiiiUI WCTIIIIC HUll .
Will IUIOIII J lllllEI If . . U lllll
IU..II • TIE .IICD Y. IUIE · ·.
TIIIIVIIIIJIII TIE IIIIT Cll. ,

raise the prices on their product
to make up for higher costs.
Many hospitals need to pass
their heating costs along to
patients, although that's not
always possible because hospitals
get fixed · reimbursements from
,Medicaid and Medicare for many
patients, said George Quinn, a
spokesman for the Wisconsin
Health and Hospital Association.
"If your costs go above what
you budgeted, you .aren't able to
recoup that from government
payers, so there will be solne passing along to patients who can
pay," he said. "It has to come from

BYERS, Colo. (AP) - After a
snowy day walking through a
mile of scattered wreckage, aviation investigators focused on
whether a University of Okla'homa chartered plane had been
.de-iced before takeoff.
"We have some very detailed
and painstaking work ahead of us
in what are not the best weather
conditions;· · john Hammerschmidt, head of the National
Transportation Safety Board crash
investigation team, said Sunday.
Ten people, including two
Oklahoma State basketball players
and six staffers, were killed Saturday when the twin-engine plan
crashed into a field.The plane had
taken off from Jefferson County
Airport in light snow and with a
visibility of one mile.
The crew were told ice could
form on the wings, but investigators said conditions were not
harsh enough for authorities to
ground the plane.
, The Beechcraft King Air 200
Catpass was one of three planes
carrying the school's basketball
team and associates back to Scillwater, Okla., after they lost to
Colorado at Boulder.
. No distress call was made
before the crash, said Arnold
Scott of the NTSB.
Among the victims were Okla·homa State players Nate Fleming
and Daniel Lawson, sports information employee Will Hancock,
director of basketball operations
Pat Noyes and their trainer Brian
Luinstra.

~tral

Michigan
defeats Manhall

MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich.
(AP) - David Webber scored 27
points, including four 3-pointers,
to lead Central Michigan to an
80-68 win over Marshall on Saturday.
Webber was 5-of-5 at the freethrow line and also had five
The score was tied 33-33 at the
end of the first half, but baskets
from the free-throw. line helped
put ·central (13-4, 7-1 MidAmerican Conference) on top in
the second.
The l=hippewas made 57.7 percent of their shots during the sec;ond half, and were 14-of-21 from
the free-throw line in the last .20
minutes. The Thundering Herd
shot
44.8 percent
from rite floor
1
,
m the second half.
Cornelius Jackson led Marshall
(12-5, 6-3) with 19 · points,
including three 3-pointers. Tan1ar
Slay added 16 points and three 3pointers. · 1
Chds Kaman chipped in 17
points aJ;Id three rebounds · for
(:entral. Mike Mandel added 11
points and four rebounds. Tim
Kisner had six assists.

·"My record is still intact,'' Park
said. "And tha~ goes all the way
back to junior golf.''

•

short

OSU hoops team

in a row.

786 ·N. 2nd, Middleport

rally falls

Plane crashes
killing membea s of

. MIAMI (AP) - Grace Park
certainly knows how to finish
tournaments.
Park said she has never lost a
golf tournament when she' was
leading going into the final .
round, or even the final hole. And
by her best estimates, that's more
than half her 62 victories.
She added another on,e on S!lnday.
Park held off two-time LPGA
Player of the Year Karrie Webb
with a final-round !-under-par
71 to win The Office Depot by a
·stroke on a course where she first
tasted success as a junior.
At 6-under 280, , Park edged .
Webb, the two-time defending
champion, whose 71-281lefr her
a runner-up for tile second week

.FRUTH PHARMACY

Meigs ~

HIGHLIGHTS

.' office Depot·

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC

'

SUPER BOWL XXXV

MONDAY'S

Park wins lbe

Gas companies blame the

•
•

Page~~

'

soniewhere."

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio State upsets Spartans, Page B3
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

assists.

businesses, he notes, schools can't

•

thJ[

of the country's best kept culi- .
nary secrets - Colonel Harland
Sanders' recipe for fried chick&lt;•11.
The couple bought cheir
Shdbyville home, a white mansion on U.S. 60 West, from
Sanders and. his wife, Claudia, in
the early 1970s. •
About" a year ago, the two ·
were digging through a box of

husband mught Earth sciences.

Driver dies. coach
injured

note

c.:overed in th4.·ir basement :a yt:ar
agt;) could be the answer to one

Deparui1ent. Her · 62-ye.1r-old
Boch had taught at Dartmouth
for at least 25 years and had two
•dult daughters.

handwritten

Tommy and Cherry Settle dis-

with fi:mr minutes of ads ..Two of

Services struggle
with high energy costs

.. ;_ ;

~

SHELBYVILLE, Ky. (AP) -

Philip Morris and smoking foe
Tho American Legacy Founda-

chem played off the popular
"Whassup" ads for Budweiser
bought the 30 minutes of net- that have run for more than a
work commercial time in the year. ln one, Brett, Brad and Chad
CBS telecast, paying what insiders offered a limp preppy imitation
said was a record average price of by asking "What art you doing?"
$2.3 million for each half-minute on the phone as they watched a
ad. That was $100,000 more than market re·cap on · television :and
ABC cbimed a year ago when 17 sipped imported beer. In another
dot-com companies gobbled up ad, an alien who just got back
40 percent of the available. ad from Earth delivers the "Whastinte.
sup" line perfectly" to his space
Only three dot-corns came pals.
back this Y"ar. One of them, the
A Bud Light • ad showed a
online broker E-Trade Group, ran tubby ma~ trying ' to impress .a
an ad that mourned the passing of · woman, but showering her in
some online businesses.
suds when he took the cap off a
In the commercial, a chimp shaken bottle. The boy group 'N
riding a horse as if through .a Sync appeared in an ad thanking
western ghost town passed vacant a father for talking to his kids
buildings that once housed the about "drinking.
mythical TieClasp.com and
Pepsi-Cola tweaked its '1oy of
Pimentoloaf.com and an aban- Cola" theme to make it 'Joy of
doned sports car. with the license Pepsi ." In one of its ads, one-time
plate "Dot Comer," A sock pup- GOP presidential contender Bob
pet, similar to the "mascot of failed Dole sP,oofs his Viagra pitches to
Pets. com, dropped in the dirt.
attest that the "little blue· friend"
" Invest wisely," the ad said as a that he turns to for his vitality is a
close-up showed a tear falling can of Pepsi.

programs."

.

down the chimp's check.
Ri va ls in bevl!rages, ·~ rcdit
c:1rds, wirelcss phone service- and
job listinbrs tried to keep viewers
\\'cltching despite the- ·lopsided
sco re.
.
ThcrL' wcrL' even competing
advertisers with anti -smoking
me ssages Marlboro ma~cr

Thornton, Johnny Depp, Juliette
Lewis, Jeff Goldblum, lggy Pop

churches, synagogues and mosques so they qn
expand assistance programs raises churcb-~rate
separation questions . Even some churcl)e{afe
wary of government money that migh( conie
with strings attached.
: ;
. Striking preemptively at those critics, :Bush
said religious groups must be part of the ~~ti­
tian to society's ills.
. . •
"A compassionate society is.ohe whi&lt;;h re~­
ognizes the great power of faith," Bush s~iJ la!t"
,week. "We in governmept must not fear (ailhbased programs, we must welcome faith-b~

Couple believes they've ; i:~
found fried chicken recipJ.

Advertisers competed to keep
Super Bowl viewers' attention

unspecified portion of salt·s will
bt: dnnated to the- 160-a~.:rt~ S:l!K -"
tuary.
The recording, set for rdcas1.'
March 7, also features Billy Bob

HANOVER, N.H. (AP)
The humanity that Susanne and
Half Zantop brought to Dartmouth College has made it diffi- offer an opportunity to win a
cult for colleagues to accept how truly exciting car, but also to
the couple's hves could have own a rare collectible from a
Disney movie;H s:aid George
ended in a double homicide.
The Zantups, both longtime · Grobar of Walt Disney Internet
professors at the Ivy League Group ~uccions .
school. wen:: found shin in the.ir
secluded hou se abuut three miles

WASHINGTON {AP)- President Bush is

from tho football fidd in kt·oping

food on Saturday. The emergency food will meet half the
da~ly requirements for 4,000
families for 15-20 days, USAID · donations, Collette said.

.. -. .-

moving to tap religious institmions for more
charibblc work, confronting critics who say
using public money for such pmgr:ams could
violate the wall between church :and state.
Bush also is taking on a greater role in con-

Supc:r Bowl vit"wc."rs watching.
The Baltin1ore Ra\·c ns crushL·d
the Nt?w York Giants 3~-7 on
Sund:1y in what many had
t•xpc ctcd would be J low-scoring
matchup, unresolvt.'d until thl' last
1-ninutes. But it wa s all bm OVt..'r

The Wayst.1tion, which houses
abandoned
animals
1,200
including lions. rigers, wolves
and bears, is entirely funded by

Monday, January 29, 2001

Bush unveiling ~ligious-basecl charity pia~·

'· Hollywood Cocs Wild ." An

wood community," said Wayst.1tion founder Martine Collette.

.

•

Bv DAY! HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDfNT

RAVENS ROCK - Baltimor~ quarterback Trent Dilfer holds the
. Vince Lombardi Trop~y after the Ravens defeated the New York

Giants to win Super Bowl OOV Sunday in Tampa. It was the Ravens
first world title. (AP)

Ravens D rocks Giants
TAMPA., Fla. (AP) ]-. All· of those boasts
and predictions of shu~uts no longer sound
like so much brava ·. If the BaltJmore
Ravens want to "claim hey own the greatest
defense in NFL history, wetl, let them. .
''People who said we couldn't do this or
that and we couldn't ride this defense, well,
look now," Ray Lewis said after the Ravens'
34-7 ~maritling of the New York Giants in
Sunday's Super Bowl. "W:e rode all the way
to the Super Bowl c han;~ionship.·
"If we're not called t~e greatest defense
ever now:, we never will be,"
' the game's most
valuable player added. ~
·
The evidence is imp ive, punctuated by
Baltimore's overwhelmJ g postsea~on performance. Tlie Ravens allowed JUSt 165
points this season,-easily{a 16-game record.
They surrendered 23 in the playoffs and the
Super Bowl. Had Ron O*on not run back
a kickoff97 yards for·a thirid-quarter touchdown - the . middle oft' three successive
plays for TDs - they probably would have
gotten the first shutout ini!S Super Bowls.
New York, which wop 41-0 and g;tined
518 yards against Minnesoli' in the NFC
championship, game, mauiged an embar~
rassing 1.52. Collins w~~ntercepted a
record-tying four times , and sacked lour

J

more.

,"1"

·1~:1"\

.

Rarely has a . Supe~ •:f1pwl been ·· "'
oneslded, and this is a· ga~1 with a ~istory

...

r

I.

game winning streak snapped like a twig.
While there was no denying New York
earned its way here, there also was no ques-

I')

'

tion which team was superior.

"They had a great
today,': Giants receiver
don't like to compare
came to the big game,
better than we were."

game plan for us
Ike Hilliard said. "1
teams, but when it
they definitely were

Beginning with Ray Lewis, the league's

top defender this season. A year ago, Lewis
wound up in jail, charged in a murder case.
0

0

of routs.
Sure, it was just I0-0 at halftime, but only
because Baltimore, which won its 11th in a
row, doem't have much of an otli:nse.

But oh, what a defense!
"This is what we do," said defensive coor-

dinator Marvin Lewis, who probably will
wind up as"head coach in Cleveland or Buffalo. "This is how we've played defense for
the last five years. This is our group, our
family.':
' Maybe not the kind of family you would
invite over for dinner. Nobody wants to see
this bul)ch on any given Sunday.
Certainly not the Giants, whose seven-

He subsequently pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge .of obstructing justice.
"If yo~ put this in a storybook, nobody
would believe it," he said. "We didn't just
break records, we shattered them. We dominated literally. This is what you work your
whole life for."
It's what Art Modell has waited 37 years
for. In 1964, his Cleveland Browns won the
NFL title. But he'd never been to a Super
Bowl, and he was chastised throughout the
league for moving the franchise to Baltimore in 1996.
He also was . up against his close friend,

ROCK SPRINGS - · Ironton
built a 20-point lead in the second half, but had ro hold off a
fourth quarrel Meigs comeback
to defeat "the Marauders 63-~2 .
Saturday.
The large crowd in attendance
for Home National Bank Night
saw what looked to be a blow out
in the Tigers favor, turn into
quite a bill game in the fourth
period.
Ironton (8-6) took a 8-1 lead
right out of the .blocks, before a
pair of Derrick Johnson buckets
pulled Meigs to within 8-5. But
the Tigers ended the period ol) .
the run with a 17-7 lead, when
Andy Brown nailed a 3~pointef
at the four second mark of the
period.
In the second period, Ironton
took a 21-9 lead on a basket by
Chris Haney. But a basket by J. P.
Staats, and a 3-pointer by Travis
Siders the last coming at the 5:19
mark pull Meigs to within 21-14.'
But Meigs went the next 5:03
without scoring as the Tigers
built up a 31-14lead. Siders finally ended the Meigs scoring
drought when he made another
3-pointer at the six-second mark
to cut the Tiger lead to 31-17 at
the half.
ln the third period, the Tigers
looked to blow the game wide
open as they opened up as much
as a 21-point lead on three differ~
ent occasions. Ironton held a 47.30 lead heading into the final
period as the Marauders John
Witherell made one of two fionf
the line with two seconds left. •
But in the fourth period it wai
• different batl game. Ironton
held a 54-34 lead with 6:17 leff
after a Issac Hannon basket. But
Staats got the ball rolling for the
Marauders when he plucked an:
air ball out of the air and laid it in
at the 6:10 mark.
Meigs chipped away at the
Tiger lead, and when Staats and
Johnson scored back-to-baclC:
hoops as the maroon and gold:
had made it a ten point contesf
(60-50) with 1:05 left. Johnson'~
basket ended a 16-6 Maraudei
run. But that was as close

aS

Modell before the game that the loser
would call the winner on Monday. Modell
shot back, "Do you have my number?"

Meigs would get and the Tigen:
. had escaped with a 63-52 win. :
, Josh Harmon led ill score~
with 20 points. Chris Hane~
added 13 and Josh Sands 11 for
the Tigers.
•
Staats led a balanced scorin~
attack for Meigs with 14 points.
Siders added nine and Matt
Williamson. Matt Lewis and Der-·
rick Johnson each added six for.
Meigs.
The Marauders hit 19-of-62
from the floor, including 4-of-~ 1
from long range. Meigs went. to
the line 26 times and made only
10.
Meigs had 26 rebounds led by.

Ple•se see hvens, Pll&amp;e Bl

PIMM-MIIp,PapBI

Giants owner Wellington Mara, who told

the big and strong fVOn on Super Sunday
•••
. ._,,.-,
.,., , ~-....

;:.

.

a misdemeano~ violation.
"The big and st~ng, continu~ to Win in ·
',
Regardless of his off-field troubles,
the NFL."
, · , ,, '
'
Lewis
is undoubtedly the best player at his
That's what CBS Jl"analyst 'llbll .'Sinuns
position, doing everythi!lg expected of a
said in the waning pioments o(Baltimoie's
middle linebacker. Bottom, Ray Lewis
34-7 victory in Super Bowl ~V.
..;-'1~
,
makes plays, and continued to do that last
And when it comes right tldwn to it,
1
night, He didn't necessarily dominate the
that s what football is ·all abo~t\Blocking,
game as he has done in other games this
tockling, hitting, just plain i&gt;fng more
season,
but he made all the right moves,
.
physical than the other guy. '
THE CHEAP SEAT
including deflecting a couple of pmes that
And that, in· a nutshell, is .ealrimore
that wound up incomplecc.
.
'
Ravens footbalL
.~
Lewis
took
home
the
hardware.
·The
Beleaj!Uered
quarterback
Trent
Dilfer
Bottom line: the Ravens ~ !)luch
· more physical than the Giants, 'and the much-maligned Lewis, who was the NFL's gained some me:asure of vindication in the
def'ensive player of the year and in the Baltimore win. Dilfer, who spent six seafinal score reflected that ,fact. ·•
mind of many, the league MVP, has b~en sons with Tampa Bay, returned to his forThe best defense in th~ NFL' rose up
the object of much debate over the course mer home and did what head coach Brian
and carried one ' of the most" anemic
of ihe last year following his involvement Billick expected of him: he didn't make
of!'e~ ever to win a Sup~r BoWl to the in a murder case following last year's
· any mistakes to hurt the team.
ultiniare prize. After\~. it is d~ftpse that
Super Bowl in Atlanta..
Though not spectacular (12-for-25, I 53
wins championships.
After being cleared of murder charges,
In a game that 1houldn't have.J&gt;ad an Lewis pled guilty to obstruction of justice, yards, 1 TO, 0 INT), Oil fer was at least efficient in directing th e Ravens offense. His
MVP, Ravens middle - linebacker Ray

' ........

"

' Andrew
Carter

crowning moment came in the first quar-

. ter when he hit Brandon Stokley for a 38yard touchdown. Fotlowing that, Dilfe~
took what his defense gave him. to move
his club into position for a Matt Stover
field goal in the second quarter and a
short touchdown run by rookie Jamal
Lewis in the fourth quarter.

In his postgame comments, Dilfer said
that, at its root, football is a team game and
is about winning, and that he didn't mind
being remembered as the quarterb~ck
who wasn't supposed to win the Super
Bowl.
Baltimore enjoyed quite possibly the
most dominant ·postseason in NFL history. The Ravens gave up just two touchdowns in ·w ins over Denver, Tennessee,

Oakland and New York. And only one o(
those touchdowns came against the

Pl....... c............

t

•

�.......... . .
.- .
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFSWashington
sending aid

'

WASHINGTON (AP)
The United States will se nd S5
million in enlt~rgency supplies to

earthquake-stri cken India, officials said Sunday, and ~ould send
more as the situation worsens.

More than 6,000 bodies have
been rccovcn:d in the quake, and
the death toll was expected to
climb by scvcr:\] th o usand more.
Tetis o(thousa nds uf Indians are
ho!ltt!less.

"Thi&gt; is clearly a terrible

the Saturday morning accident.
Troy Schueller, a wrosrling
coach at Kdlogg High School in
northern Idaho, suffered a broken jaw, broken teeth and a broken leg.
The driver was identified as
C.eorge Wild, 63, of Osburn. He·
likely suffered a stroke or heart
attack, Idaho State Police said.
The passengers were traveling
to a wrestling tournament.

Celebrities aid
animal sanduary

carthquak~o:,"

:o.J.id Len Rogers,
acting asstst.1nt adminiHram r 111

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Hollywood celebrities tapped their

thl· bun.::1u

musical talents in a recording to

lntcrnariona l
Development.
Rogers said tht· United Stat~..·s
will m onitor th~..· relit{ dTorr and

L'Xotic animal santtuary. ·

for humanitarian
response at the US. AgL'ncy for

send more
CSS.l ry.
"Thi~ 11:.

:1id

if it

b&lt;.'(Oillt..'S u~o.·~.:-

di.:;.t .:; r~..·r.

:md
.1ccordingly." hi.."

a maJor

we will n.: ~pond
said.
A
~l: \"t:ll-p\.TSOil
Ji ~ JSU:r
respon se team wi ll bL· in India

Monchy. U'A ID "'id the

011

Unitt'd St:m.·s wo uld sc:nd suppli~.·s t"hat mdudt: plastic shet:ting, bl:mkets, \varer comaincrs,
purification and distribution kits
and genL'r;ttors.
Tht: agency, rhmugh the orga-

nization CAlli, also began distributing ·100 metric tOns of

benefit the Wildlife Waystatiop
Act&lt;&gt;rs Brad Pitt, Russell
Crowe, Bruce WilliS, Milia
.Jovovich and Kl•aml Rccv~: s arc
:1111011g th(' stars on thL~ CD.

said.

.

USAID also will

·

provide

fin ;mcial assistance to support

the work of relief groups already
on the ground in Gujarat, the
Indian state hardest hit.
Bhuj, a town in Gujarat, was
near the epicenter of Friday's
7.9-magnitude quake and suffered the most casualties and
damage.

Deaths Jolt Ivy

League town

from c&lt;1mpus.
"Tiwy \\Tn: wondc1ful people. They were spc·cial - intdlcctu :-tlly, hum:1nly, t'\'L'rything;·
Dartmouth
bngu:1gcs
said
instructor R.oxanne Vcroua .
Vt.·rona told neighbors she
stumbled upon the Zantops'
bodies when sht' ,\rrived Jt the
house for dinner S:1wrday
evening and found the door

unlocked . .
Police have since ("amioned
verona not to discuss the discovery, but some details about the

slayings have seeped out.
"She went in and called out.
There was no answer," neighbor

and friend Audrey McCotlum
said. "She turned and saw
Susanne on the floor with blood
around her."·

Verona rushed to McCotlum's
home to call police while
. McCoUum's husband Robert, a
doctor, went over to' the Zan-

l

tops' home. Robert McCotlum
said he saw enough to know for
certain the couple had been
dead for several· hours.
· Acrorney General Philip
McLaughlin on Sunday refused
to discuss a possible motive, sus-

pects, the cause of che deaths or
the condition of the house, saying he did not want to jeopardize tht&gt; investigation.
Susanne Zantop, 55, was chairwoman of the GL•quan Studies

istries and drug treatment, among other things.
To build support, Bnsh will meet throughour the week with leaders of spiritual and
charitable groups and he planned to attend the
National Prayer Breakfast on Thursd':ly.
The New York Times reported Monday
fronting California's energy crisis.
that Bus~as settled on University of PennBush on Monday was establishing a White sylvania political science professor John J.
House office that would distribute billions of Diluli;, Jr. to head the office and that former
dollars to religious gm~ps ani:! charities over Indianapolis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith will
the next 10 years. The president wants to let chair a new advisory board whose work will
such groups compete for taxpayer n10ney to complement the new White House office.
provide afttr-school programs, prison 111111Skeptics say shifting government money to

NEW YORK (AI') -

Advcr-

tisc..'rs who had spc!'nt record stuns
for commcrcials got link~ hdp

and Mare Winningham.
"This is a wunde1ful gesture

before the third quarter ·ended.
That left it co advertisers to use

tion.
Anheuser-Busch was the single

from our neighbors, the Hotly- · ·

the telecast's re.p~tation as :1n
advertising showcase to keep
viewers tuned in.
More th:an 30 companies

biggest advertiser on the program

Willis~

Porsche up
for sale

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It
takes only a click of the mouse,
and a sizable bank .account balance, to own the 1999 Porsche
911 driven by Bruce Willis in
"Disney's The Kid."
The Porsche, which is worth
about $73,000, is being auctioned on http://www.disneyauctions.com. The successful
bidder also will · be treated to
$2,500 in Porsche accessories
and apparel.
"We are pleased not only to

The auction coincides with

the Jan . 23 video and DVD
rdease of" Disney's The Kid."
Bidding begins at SoS,OOO. A
portion of the proceeds will go
to clurity.

.Opry retums to
· Ryman
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Decked out in his traditional
cowboy boors, hat and denin1
jacket, Alan Jackson stepped out
of hi.s tour bus and made his way
to Ryman Auditoriunt stage.
He was one of several coumry

stars performing to a sellout ·
crowd Saturday night at the
Ryman Auditorium where the
Grand Ole Opry returned after a
two-decade absence.
Jackson took a minute to note
che significance of the path he
was walking to the Ryman, a
former church in downtown
Nashville known as "The Mother Church of Country Music."
"Anytime you walk out here
where Hank and all them played
its pretty haunting;' said Jackson,
who in 1991 was inducted into
the ·Grand Ole Opry.
The Ryman played host to
Hank Williams, Patsy Cline,
Minnie Pearl and other country
music pioneers from 1943 to
197 4, before the show moved to
the Opry House at Opryland
USA.

LANSING, Mich. (AI') - . prices they are charging on the
Soaring energy bills are t:ating

deeply into the budgets of
schools, hospitals, churches · and

The

cost of wholesalL~ natural gas,

which has quadrupled over the
last year. High demand intensified
hom.dess shdtefs across the country, forcing them to look · for by cold weather has ·contributed
increasingly hard-to-find ways to to the problem. The leap in natur~
al gas prices coupled with a shorttighten their belts.
"It will come out of the hides, age of hydrodectric power in the
so to speak, of the kids," says Don Northwest also has contributed
Tharpe of the Association of to California's energy crisis.
School Business Officials. Unlike

ROSE LAKE. Idaho (AP) Tlw driwr of a bus caJ'rying 33
hi.;h school athlcrl'S, checrleadL'rs :md two chachc.11 ~ lumped

over Jnd died, sending the bus
carccnill.g ofT the ro.1d and inro
scwra l tn:~.·s.

Twelve scud . .·nts WL'rl:' trc:atcd
.an&lt;l rele ased from hospit;lls ;~ftcr

•

.

·-,.., ~.

... - . . ..

books from the basemeql:·~
found a lcarher-boutid datebl)l&gt;)&lt;
from 1964, Cherry Sertl~ c®J
the Lexington Herald-Lea~kt.:.:
Among appointments : itttl
other notes was a recipe for fr.W
chicken that called for 11 heros
and spices, she said.
• "'
It's the same: number 'hat
1i1akes up the recipe for onct;f

the temples of fast-food ci1ltlffl'
KFC's "Original Re~i~'
fried chicken. The exact blend,js
a ·secret as wen kept as the: f~):mula for Coca-Cola.
• ,
. ....,
~

•

Discove~ of bones may close

O'Hair disappearance case ·
CAMP WOOD, Texas (AP)
- For years, federal investigators believed Madalyn Murray
O'Hair \lias killed. They just
couldn't prove it.
. Bur the weekend discovery
of human remains in a shallow
grave on a ranch suggest the ·
long investigation into the
atheist leader's 1995 disappearance ffiay be near an end.
Investigators
believe
O'Hair, - her son Jon Garth
Murray and adopted grandd~ughter,
Robin
Murray
O'Hair, were killed, dismembered and dumped on the private, 5,000 acre ranch in south
Texas.
A metal artificial hip and

three skulls were

unearth~d

Sunday nea; the same . are:l

where other human bones h~d
been found a day earlier. • "
"The bones indicate three
sets of human remains," said
'
,Roderick Beverly, special
agent in charge of the FBI's
San Antonio . office. "All
appeared to have their legs Cl!t
off."
O'Hair had · a hip replacement operation several year~

before her disappearance.
,
Though Beverly stopped .
short of con firming t_h e identi-

ty of the bodies, he said offtcials believe the search is .over,

••••••
lO

Inside:

CIIPIIIIIIEIIEliiiiUI WCTIIIIC HUll .
Will IUIOIII J lllllEI If . . U lllll
IU..II • TIE .IICD Y. IUIE · ·.
TIIIIVIIIIJIII TIE IIIIT Cll. ,

raise the prices on their product
to make up for higher costs.
Many hospitals need to pass
their heating costs along to
patients, although that's not
always possible because hospitals
get fixed · reimbursements from
,Medicaid and Medicare for many
patients, said George Quinn, a
spokesman for the Wisconsin
Health and Hospital Association.
"If your costs go above what
you budgeted, you .aren't able to
recoup that from government
payers, so there will be solne passing along to patients who can
pay," he said. "It has to come from

BYERS, Colo. (AP) - After a
snowy day walking through a
mile of scattered wreckage, aviation investigators focused on
whether a University of Okla'homa chartered plane had been
.de-iced before takeoff.
"We have some very detailed
and painstaking work ahead of us
in what are not the best weather
conditions;· · john Hammerschmidt, head of the National
Transportation Safety Board crash
investigation team, said Sunday.
Ten people, including two
Oklahoma State basketball players
and six staffers, were killed Saturday when the twin-engine plan
crashed into a field.The plane had
taken off from Jefferson County
Airport in light snow and with a
visibility of one mile.
The crew were told ice could
form on the wings, but investigators said conditions were not
harsh enough for authorities to
ground the plane.
, The Beechcraft King Air 200
Catpass was one of three planes
carrying the school's basketball
team and associates back to Scillwater, Okla., after they lost to
Colorado at Boulder.
. No distress call was made
before the crash, said Arnold
Scott of the NTSB.
Among the victims were Okla·homa State players Nate Fleming
and Daniel Lawson, sports information employee Will Hancock,
director of basketball operations
Pat Noyes and their trainer Brian
Luinstra.

~tral

Michigan
defeats Manhall

MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich.
(AP) - David Webber scored 27
points, including four 3-pointers,
to lead Central Michigan to an
80-68 win over Marshall on Saturday.
Webber was 5-of-5 at the freethrow line and also had five
The score was tied 33-33 at the
end of the first half, but baskets
from the free-throw. line helped
put ·central (13-4, 7-1 MidAmerican Conference) on top in
the second.
The l=hippewas made 57.7 percent of their shots during the sec;ond half, and were 14-of-21 from
the free-throw line in the last .20
minutes. The Thundering Herd
shot
44.8 percent
from rite floor
1
,
m the second half.
Cornelius Jackson led Marshall
(12-5, 6-3) with 19 · points,
including three 3-pointers. Tan1ar
Slay added 16 points and three 3pointers. · 1
Chds Kaman chipped in 17
points aJ;Id three rebounds · for
(:entral. Mike Mandel added 11
points and four rebounds. Tim
Kisner had six assists.

·"My record is still intact,'' Park
said. "And tha~ goes all the way
back to junior golf.''

•

short

OSU hoops team

in a row.

786 ·N. 2nd, Middleport

rally falls

Plane crashes
killing membea s of

. MIAMI (AP) - Grace Park
certainly knows how to finish
tournaments.
Park said she has never lost a
golf tournament when she' was
leading going into the final .
round, or even the final hole. And
by her best estimates, that's more
than half her 62 victories.
She added another on,e on S!lnday.
Park held off two-time LPGA
Player of the Year Karrie Webb
with a final-round !-under-par
71 to win The Office Depot by a
·stroke on a course where she first
tasted success as a junior.
At 6-under 280, , Park edged .
Webb, the two-time defending
champion, whose 71-281lefr her
a runner-up for tile second week

.FRUTH PHARMACY

Meigs ~

HIGHLIGHTS

.' office Depot·

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC

'

SUPER BOWL XXXV

MONDAY'S

Park wins lbe

Gas companies blame the

•
•

Page~~

'

soniewhere."

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio State upsets Spartans, Page B3
Today's Scoreboard, Page B6

assists.

businesses, he notes, schools can't

•

thJ[

of the country's best kept culi- .
nary secrets - Colonel Harland
Sanders' recipe for fried chick&lt;•11.
The couple bought cheir
Shdbyville home, a white mansion on U.S. 60 West, from
Sanders and. his wife, Claudia, in
the early 1970s. •
About" a year ago, the two ·
were digging through a box of

husband mught Earth sciences.

Driver dies. coach
injured

note

c.:overed in th4.·ir basement :a yt:ar
agt;) could be the answer to one

Deparui1ent. Her · 62-ye.1r-old
Boch had taught at Dartmouth
for at least 25 years and had two
•dult daughters.

handwritten

Tommy and Cherry Settle dis-

with fi:mr minutes of ads ..Two of

Services struggle
with high energy costs

.. ;_ ;

~

SHELBYVILLE, Ky. (AP) -

Philip Morris and smoking foe
Tho American Legacy Founda-

chem played off the popular
"Whassup" ads for Budweiser
bought the 30 minutes of net- that have run for more than a
work commercial time in the year. ln one, Brett, Brad and Chad
CBS telecast, paying what insiders offered a limp preppy imitation
said was a record average price of by asking "What art you doing?"
$2.3 million for each half-minute on the phone as they watched a
ad. That was $100,000 more than market re·cap on · television :and
ABC cbimed a year ago when 17 sipped imported beer. In another
dot-com companies gobbled up ad, an alien who just got back
40 percent of the available. ad from Earth delivers the "Whastinte.
sup" line perfectly" to his space
Only three dot-corns came pals.
back this Y"ar. One of them, the
A Bud Light • ad showed a
online broker E-Trade Group, ran tubby ma~ trying ' to impress .a
an ad that mourned the passing of · woman, but showering her in
some online businesses.
suds when he took the cap off a
In the commercial, a chimp shaken bottle. The boy group 'N
riding a horse as if through .a Sync appeared in an ad thanking
western ghost town passed vacant a father for talking to his kids
buildings that once housed the about "drinking.
mythical TieClasp.com and
Pepsi-Cola tweaked its '1oy of
Pimentoloaf.com and an aban- Cola" theme to make it 'Joy of
doned sports car. with the license Pepsi ." In one of its ads, one-time
plate "Dot Comer," A sock pup- GOP presidential contender Bob
pet, similar to the "mascot of failed Dole sP,oofs his Viagra pitches to
Pets. com, dropped in the dirt.
attest that the "little blue· friend"
" Invest wisely," the ad said as a that he turns to for his vitality is a
close-up showed a tear falling can of Pepsi.

programs."

.

down the chimp's check.
Ri va ls in bevl!rages, ·~ rcdit
c:1rds, wirelcss phone service- and
job listinbrs tried to keep viewers
\\'cltching despite the- ·lopsided
sco re.
.
ThcrL' wcrL' even competing
advertisers with anti -smoking
me ssages Marlboro ma~cr

Thornton, Johnny Depp, Juliette
Lewis, Jeff Goldblum, lggy Pop

churches, synagogues and mosques so they qn
expand assistance programs raises churcb-~rate
separation questions . Even some churcl)e{afe
wary of government money that migh( conie
with strings attached.
: ;
. Striking preemptively at those critics, :Bush
said religious groups must be part of the ~~ti­
tian to society's ills.
. . •
"A compassionate society is.ohe whi&lt;;h re~­
ognizes the great power of faith," Bush s~iJ la!t"
,week. "We in governmept must not fear (ailhbased programs, we must welcome faith-b~

Couple believes they've ; i:~
found fried chicken recipJ.

Advertisers competed to keep
Super Bowl viewers' attention

unspecified portion of salt·s will
bt: dnnated to the- 160-a~.:rt~ S:l!K -"
tuary.
The recording, set for rdcas1.'
March 7, also features Billy Bob

HANOVER, N.H. (AP)
The humanity that Susanne and
Half Zantop brought to Dartmouth College has made it diffi- offer an opportunity to win a
cult for colleagues to accept how truly exciting car, but also to
the couple's hves could have own a rare collectible from a
Disney movie;H s:aid George
ended in a double homicide.
The Zantups, both longtime · Grobar of Walt Disney Internet
professors at the Ivy League Group ~uccions .
school. wen:: found shin in the.ir
secluded hou se abuut three miles

WASHINGTON {AP)- President Bush is

from tho football fidd in kt·oping

food on Saturday. The emergency food will meet half the
da~ly requirements for 4,000
families for 15-20 days, USAID · donations, Collette said.

.. -. .-

moving to tap religious institmions for more
charibblc work, confronting critics who say
using public money for such pmgr:ams could
violate the wall between church :and state.
Bush also is taking on a greater role in con-

Supc:r Bowl vit"wc."rs watching.
The Baltin1ore Ra\·c ns crushL·d
the Nt?w York Giants 3~-7 on
Sund:1y in what many had
t•xpc ctcd would be J low-scoring
matchup, unresolvt.'d until thl' last
1-ninutes. But it wa s all bm OVt..'r

The Wayst.1tion, which houses
abandoned
animals
1,200
including lions. rigers, wolves
and bears, is entirely funded by

Monday, January 29, 2001

Bush unveiling ~ligious-basecl charity pia~·

'· Hollywood Cocs Wild ." An

wood community," said Wayst.1tion founder Martine Collette.

.

•

Bv DAY! HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDfNT

RAVENS ROCK - Baltimor~ quarterback Trent Dilfer holds the
. Vince Lombardi Trop~y after the Ravens defeated the New York

Giants to win Super Bowl OOV Sunday in Tampa. It was the Ravens
first world title. (AP)

Ravens D rocks Giants
TAMPA., Fla. (AP) ]-. All· of those boasts
and predictions of shu~uts no longer sound
like so much brava ·. If the BaltJmore
Ravens want to "claim hey own the greatest
defense in NFL history, wetl, let them. .
''People who said we couldn't do this or
that and we couldn't ride this defense, well,
look now," Ray Lewis said after the Ravens'
34-7 ~maritling of the New York Giants in
Sunday's Super Bowl. "W:e rode all the way
to the Super Bowl c han;~ionship.·
"If we're not called t~e greatest defense
ever now:, we never will be,"
' the game's most
valuable player added. ~
·
The evidence is imp ive, punctuated by
Baltimore's overwhelmJ g postsea~on performance. Tlie Ravens allowed JUSt 165
points this season,-easily{a 16-game record.
They surrendered 23 in the playoffs and the
Super Bowl. Had Ron O*on not run back
a kickoff97 yards for·a thirid-quarter touchdown - the . middle oft' three successive
plays for TDs - they probably would have
gotten the first shutout ini!S Super Bowls.
New York, which wop 41-0 and g;tined
518 yards against Minnesoli' in the NFC
championship, game, mauiged an embar~
rassing 1.52. Collins w~~ntercepted a
record-tying four times , and sacked lour

J

more.

,"1"

·1~:1"\

.

Rarely has a . Supe~ •:f1pwl been ·· "'
oneslded, and this is a· ga~1 with a ~istory

...

r

I.

game winning streak snapped like a twig.
While there was no denying New York
earned its way here, there also was no ques-

I')

'

tion which team was superior.

"They had a great
today,': Giants receiver
don't like to compare
came to the big game,
better than we were."

game plan for us
Ike Hilliard said. "1
teams, but when it
they definitely were

Beginning with Ray Lewis, the league's

top defender this season. A year ago, Lewis
wound up in jail, charged in a murder case.
0

0

of routs.
Sure, it was just I0-0 at halftime, but only
because Baltimore, which won its 11th in a
row, doem't have much of an otli:nse.

But oh, what a defense!
"This is what we do," said defensive coor-

dinator Marvin Lewis, who probably will
wind up as"head coach in Cleveland or Buffalo. "This is how we've played defense for
the last five years. This is our group, our
family.':
' Maybe not the kind of family you would
invite over for dinner. Nobody wants to see
this bul)ch on any given Sunday.
Certainly not the Giants, whose seven-

He subsequently pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge .of obstructing justice.
"If yo~ put this in a storybook, nobody
would believe it," he said. "We didn't just
break records, we shattered them. We dominated literally. This is what you work your
whole life for."
It's what Art Modell has waited 37 years
for. In 1964, his Cleveland Browns won the
NFL title. But he'd never been to a Super
Bowl, and he was chastised throughout the
league for moving the franchise to Baltimore in 1996.
He also was . up against his close friend,

ROCK SPRINGS - · Ironton
built a 20-point lead in the second half, but had ro hold off a
fourth quarrel Meigs comeback
to defeat "the Marauders 63-~2 .
Saturday.
The large crowd in attendance
for Home National Bank Night
saw what looked to be a blow out
in the Tigers favor, turn into
quite a bill game in the fourth
period.
Ironton (8-6) took a 8-1 lead
right out of the .blocks, before a
pair of Derrick Johnson buckets
pulled Meigs to within 8-5. But
the Tigers ended the period ol) .
the run with a 17-7 lead, when
Andy Brown nailed a 3~pointef
at the four second mark of the
period.
In the second period, Ironton
took a 21-9 lead on a basket by
Chris Haney. But a basket by J. P.
Staats, and a 3-pointer by Travis
Siders the last coming at the 5:19
mark pull Meigs to within 21-14.'
But Meigs went the next 5:03
without scoring as the Tigers
built up a 31-14lead. Siders finally ended the Meigs scoring
drought when he made another
3-pointer at the six-second mark
to cut the Tiger lead to 31-17 at
the half.
ln the third period, the Tigers
looked to blow the game wide
open as they opened up as much
as a 21-point lead on three differ~
ent occasions. Ironton held a 47.30 lead heading into the final
period as the Marauders John
Witherell made one of two fionf
the line with two seconds left. •
But in the fourth period it wai
• different batl game. Ironton
held a 54-34 lead with 6:17 leff
after a Issac Hannon basket. But
Staats got the ball rolling for the
Marauders when he plucked an:
air ball out of the air and laid it in
at the 6:10 mark.
Meigs chipped away at the
Tiger lead, and when Staats and
Johnson scored back-to-baclC:
hoops as the maroon and gold:
had made it a ten point contesf
(60-50) with 1:05 left. Johnson'~
basket ended a 16-6 Maraudei
run. But that was as close

aS

Modell before the game that the loser
would call the winner on Monday. Modell
shot back, "Do you have my number?"

Meigs would get and the Tigen:
. had escaped with a 63-52 win. :
, Josh Harmon led ill score~
with 20 points. Chris Hane~
added 13 and Josh Sands 11 for
the Tigers.
•
Staats led a balanced scorin~
attack for Meigs with 14 points.
Siders added nine and Matt
Williamson. Matt Lewis and Der-·
rick Johnson each added six for.
Meigs.
The Marauders hit 19-of-62
from the floor, including 4-of-~ 1
from long range. Meigs went. to
the line 26 times and made only
10.
Meigs had 26 rebounds led by.

Ple•se see hvens, Pll&amp;e Bl

PIMM-MIIp,PapBI

Giants owner Wellington Mara, who told

the big and strong fVOn on Super Sunday
•••
. ._,,.-,
.,., , ~-....

;:.

.

a misdemeano~ violation.
"The big and st~ng, continu~ to Win in ·
',
Regardless of his off-field troubles,
the NFL."
, · , ,, '
'
Lewis
is undoubtedly the best player at his
That's what CBS Jl"analyst 'llbll .'Sinuns
position, doing everythi!lg expected of a
said in the waning pioments o(Baltimoie's
middle linebacker. Bottom, Ray Lewis
34-7 victory in Super Bowl ~V.
..;-'1~
,
makes plays, and continued to do that last
And when it comes right tldwn to it,
1
night, He didn't necessarily dominate the
that s what football is ·all abo~t\Blocking,
game as he has done in other games this
tockling, hitting, just plain i&gt;fng more
season,
but he made all the right moves,
.
physical than the other guy. '
THE CHEAP SEAT
including deflecting a couple of pmes that
And that, in· a nutshell, is .ealrimore
that wound up incomplecc.
.
'
Ravens footbalL
.~
Lewis
took
home
the
hardware.
·The
Beleaj!Uered
quarterback
Trent
Dilfer
Bottom line: the Ravens ~ !)luch
· more physical than the Giants, 'and the much-maligned Lewis, who was the NFL's gained some me:asure of vindication in the
def'ensive player of the year and in the Baltimore win. Dilfer, who spent six seafinal score reflected that ,fact. ·•
mind of many, the league MVP, has b~en sons with Tampa Bay, returned to his forThe best defense in th~ NFL' rose up
the object of much debate over the course mer home and did what head coach Brian
and carried one ' of the most" anemic
of ihe last year following his involvement Billick expected of him: he didn't make
of!'e~ ever to win a Sup~r BoWl to the in a murder case following last year's
· any mistakes to hurt the team.
ultiniare prize. After\~. it is d~ftpse that
Super Bowl in Atlanta..
Though not spectacular (12-for-25, I 53
wins championships.
After being cleared of murder charges,
In a game that 1houldn't have.J&gt;ad an Lewis pled guilty to obstruction of justice, yards, 1 TO, 0 INT), Oil fer was at least efficient in directing th e Ravens offense. His
MVP, Ravens middle - linebacker Ray

' ........

"

' Andrew
Carter

crowning moment came in the first quar-

. ter when he hit Brandon Stokley for a 38yard touchdown. Fotlowing that, Dilfe~
took what his defense gave him. to move
his club into position for a Matt Stover
field goal in the second quarter and a
short touchdown run by rookie Jamal
Lewis in the fourth quarter.

In his postgame comments, Dilfer said
that, at its root, football is a team game and
is about winning, and that he didn't mind
being remembered as the quarterb~ck
who wasn't supposed to win the Super
Bowl.
Baltimore enjoyed quite possibly the
most dominant ·postseason in NFL history. The Ravens gave up just two touchdowns in ·w ins over Denver, Tennessee,

Oakland and New York. And only one o(
those touchdowns came against the

Pl....... c............

t

•

�\

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•

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Mteh1gan State had already
weathered an 8 mrnute span
wrthout a pomt but was ued at 22
bte tn the first half
Bmw 1 b'"ve the Buckeyes the
lead for good with a p:ur of free
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on [hree occaSions

Each ttme Ohro State - m
partiCular Brown - had an
answer He htt t vo free throws
after the Spartans had cur It to
51 43 wtth JUSt under 4 mmutes
left then ass sted on Darby s 3
pomter wtth I 53 remammg
After MIChigan State cut tt to 58
51 on Taylors 3 pmnter with
I 13 remammg Brown h1t two
more foul shots
Oh o States last e1ght !&gt;Otnts
came at tl1e hne where the Buck
eyes went 20 of 28 to Mtch1gan
States 10 of.14
We were every bit as tough as
we ve ever been smce I ve 'been at

Oh1o State satd 0 Bnen m hiS
fourth year wtth the Buckeyes

Central Michigan closing in on ra~re
winning season, beats Marshall

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•
•

•

t g fr 11 ' r t to firsl Ill the
M l A11 r 311 C &gt;tferenc We t
D VISl)
An l that 1 kes Ch ppc vas
co ad J •Y Smtih 11ervot s
Too 1 u h p my tn thts leag&lt; &lt;
to get to h1gh Stud satd after
liS team beat Marshall HO 68 Sat
urday When t gets to be cde
braung tune Ill be the first to lei
(the players) k 01v
The Cluppe "'as VICtc.&gt;ty hfted
thetr record to 13 4 melt dmg 7
I m the MAC They lead the West
by ? 112 games owr Toledo and
three over Ball State
Central M1ch1gan hasn t had a
wmnmg record smce gomg 19 13
(10 6 MAC) n 1987 88 when
M~amt (Ohto) coach Charhe
Coles was runn ng the show and
Mmm Heat guard Dan MaJerle
was the top scorer
The Chippewas were 6 23 last
season and last tn MAC West itt 2
16
There s 10 games to go Smuh
satd It was a great WJn and we
move on from here
Were
learnmg how to wm as a te•m
now
Davtd Webber the younger
brother of Sacramento Kmgs star
Chns Webber earned the
Ch1ppcwas to vtctory scormg ?7
pmnts
Webber " awt'\111) good md

Morshall (12 o 6 3) coach Gr&lt;g
Whtte When vot ll't 0 7 p tltS
1 1 s you played a httle b t
The Cluppe 'as got
boost
atop the West sta 1d 1 gs fro 1
Mta 111 (9 I J o 4) \11 ch beat
Ball State (9 8 4 4) o7 o6 on
Alex Shorts 18 foot 1 npcr wtth
four seconds to plav
Shorts came off the bench to
scor&lt; 19 pomts ndudmg the
RcliHowks final 10 down the
str tch
He satd he dtdn t reahzt that
he d h11 Mmm s last five baskets
bL t he knew he wanted the ball m
h s hands at the end of the game
I JUst remember what we md
m the huddle That was 011e two
three wm Shorts sa1d
Elsewhere m the MAC on Sat
urday Akron beat Eastern Mtch1
gan 63 56 Kent State beat Bowl
mg Green 81 57 Oh10 beat )luf
falo 83 66 and Western M~ehtgan
beat Northern (lhnoa 83 77
The Ztps (8 9 5 3) topped the
Eagles (2 15 0 B) despite •hoot
mg JUst :19 percent front the field
and 61 percent from the free
throw line
1\vicc m the second half East
ern Mrchtgan pulled wtthin on~
pomt- the second at 42 41 wtth
10 17 rematn ng - but Akron
never lost the lead
Emmanuel Snuth who had 13
pomts scored on a byup and
added a three pmnt play to gtvc
Akron a 47 41 lead \lth 7 o6 to
go Mumres later he followed

N3te Schmdewolf s 1" d fl'l'e
thro v v11h a 3 po 1 r to 1ak 11
o? 46 The Z p I d b, t I a t ~~
d1c rest of tl c 1
Kent State le d 01 o ~ one
game m the MAC Ea 1 f&lt;1llowmg
1ts :v n over Bod 1g Gr~.ca

De nctr c Sl ' had 24 pmhts
and 11 rebounds ond t • ned v1th
Kyre n Mas&lt;cy to blo v tl e Fa I
c IS (6 I 0 ? 5) ot t e rly
Sha v sc red 12 pomts a 1d
Mass :y had mne of Ius 13 m the
game s first 15 nnnutes as the
Golden Flashes (14 5 7 1) took a
31 8l~ad
Len Matela- bad l7 pomts apd
14 rebounds and Ketth Mcleod
sco1ed 16 for Bowhng Green
llrondon, Hunter led four Ohto
players 1t1 dl!lt,tble figures W1tl! 16
Points as the Bobcats handi;d Ilyf
falo m mnrh 11r:nght los~ ~
P•mck Ffomo and Anthony
Jones scored 14 pmnts ap1ece and
Dusnn Ford added 10 po111ts for
Oh1o (11-6 6 2) Flomo also
blocked stx shots and Jon Sander
son had 10 rebounds
Robert Brown (2 14 0 9) led
Buffalo With 17 pomts
Leon Rodgers 34 pmnts and 11
rebounds weren t enough to keep
Northern llhnms (4 13 3 5) from
losthg to Western M1ch1gan
Jo 1 Pow~ll scored 28 pomts and
lm five 3 pomters fot Western (4
14 4 5) mclud ng three dun 1g
an 18 6 run that gave the Broncos
a late 70 68 lead

West Virginia defeats No. 16 Seton Hall

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also had SIX amsts and five
COLUMBUS Ohm (AP) After lostng four games to ranked rebounds for Ohto State (13 7 4
teams- tncludmg two thu week 4)
Brtan was tcrnfic Playmg all
- Oh10 State took a mammoth
40 mmutes says 1t all- we d1dn t
strtde tow.&gt;rd saVIng Its season
Its huge when we havef! t thmk we could afford to lake htm
out 0 Dnen satd H1s floor
beaten anyone who ms rankcl:l
Ohto State coach Jun 0 Brten game was great hts game aware
md of the Buckeyes 64 55 upset ness ond hts pn:sencc throughout
of No 3 ranked M1ch1gan State the whole gum was marvelous
Brent Darby added II pmnts
on Saturday
ncludn
g a late 3 pmntcr to stem
Thts goes a I 1 tg way toward
a Sparta 1 mrge
hdpmg s get what vc nocd
llewtld red all da) by Oht&lt;
0 Br en md Y&lt; u 1ccd quabty
Stales 2 ~ zone Mt lu~an State
w ns Any mnc ym belt some
b d) 1 1 the top five - anywhere never g t d( Sl:r tha l li~V 1 p 11 ts
after the llt &lt;k&lt;)'CS sn red the fi 1al
11 g &gt; s a lc))g \1) 1&lt; vanl
four
p011ts bcf1 re I alft 11e a 1d
h lpmg people take toncc
Bra Bmwn a. st~rtt:r o 1 h:anu 12 of the first 14 p 1m 11 th
that we 1t t the Fu al Four at d scwnd half
We ~or a ks" 1 11 h w to play
v a share of a ll g Te 1 t de md
hard
Mtchtgan State c ach To 1
there was 1oth11g to compare
Izzo 1a d Ohm State g t exactly
vtth the BLCk&lt;yes pset
what
they deserved They played
Thts IS the b1ggest wm of my
ca -eer bccau!;e ve d Jll t have tht: better defense than us
The Sp rta 11 Andre Hutson
t•let t we had befqre Bra vn sa d
after sconng a carc&lt;r best 25 scored 17 po nts •nd Jason
Rtchardson had 11 ~ all 111 the
pomts
The Spartans (16 ? 5 ?) who first half - before foulmg out
had won thetr l~st four games The startmg backcourt of Charhe
would have ued llhnms for the Bell and Marcus Taylor combmed
to hit JUS! 5 of. 21 shots from the
BtgTen lead with a viCtory
Oh o States se•son had seemed field a 1d totaled 14 pomts Bell
was batdmg the flu
to be sptraling out of control
Ohto Slate had been outre
S1x days earlier defendmg
natwnal champton M1chtgan bounded 36 27 m the preVIOUS
State dommated the Buckeyes m meenng as the Spartans p1led up
the second half to wm 71 56 m 20 offen11ve rebounds That w~s
East lansmg Then on Wednesday Without startmg center Hutson
mght Ohio State shot JUst 25 who was recovermg from pneu
percent from the field and lost mohu.
The Spartans agam outre
57 41 .rNo 19Wtsconsm
bounded
the Buckeyes 31 28 on
But Brown wouldn t allow
Saturday but Oh1o State
another top 25 failure
The pressure comes down on outscored them 12 6 m the pamt
We didn t rebound the ball for
me he oa1d
Brown went 8 of 13 from the the first nme m a long 11me lzzo
field 7 of 9 on free throws and sa1d

Sampltt

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83

Sentinel•

Middleport Ohio

2001

MORGANTOWN WVa (Al')
- We&lt;t Vtrp; 11 c m t 3\\ y the
n &lt; nker of bcmp;
Bt!l E 1
push 1\ct
( lvm Bo' nan cored 1 (
p tH• md Lt u d Armstc ul h J a
" n h111h 24 n West Vtrg n a
1 k d\nnt 11e &gt;f 1 r cc&lt; J
half sh 1otmg b) N H Scto H til
tr 1H17&gt; drvSttJ)
mght
We t V11 ~ 1 1 ( 12 o 1 ~ B g
Ea t) be t ta 1ked &gt;pp&lt; 11&lt; t for
the fitst 1 11 s 1cc December

IJ9il asp

11

fl' ~"'I"

I h; I

lot

I m 11ld we t N" I the
streak sa J We t V rgm a c11 eh
( a! &lt; •tl tt Th r s n ~ c 1 th1
bt ldmg nl 1 \\ rkc d n nght

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Set 1 Hnll 11 \) er ntllltte I 11
' " 1&lt; ugh pl) tlg 1\ th lhe 10 e
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Htndrcds f lim• st mned the
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A1nnkcr There may be
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Monday,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

January at, 2001

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

GO

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Help Wented

Do . .
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"TMMtNWI.
a:OOp.m 1M dey-..
the ed 18111 IIIII lundoy 6

ltandly edlllan a oo p.m
l'l1dey
""JWII MAQI !NI

1:00 p.m .... dey before
tlleedl81otun
luncler 611-.y edition
1 00 p m l'rlday

wme••mw•

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Nn lly 4 3D p m ldlrdoy
6 lloncloy ecllllao,. 4 :10

FEOIUL POITAL JOII
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Monday JanUiry ztth
Tunday Jlnutry 30th
Wldnttdly Jlnuary 311h

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Grteioua vlrtg 1 and 2 bedroom
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R 11era dt Apartments n Mlddtt

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2 homes a ualed on ont lot In

M dd epa
Oh 4 bed oom 2
battl
bed oom $66 000 ca

no land contracll

ltlf Add lllld

Sewage Troon $325 Mo 740
(740)4411482
Galllo Co Ke Ad 3-2 Homo
On S k; ea Fleduced I $M.900
5 AciOI Wllll POnti $25 000 Or 5
Acres Wllll Bo no S3 000 RIO
Grande Scenic+ PMii 8 ~

eo With Pend 125 000 or 9 -

e-

$23 000 Cl10sN10
$8 500 Dr 20 Acrol $ 9 500
CtayTownsnt~

tho F - Flit Houllng Act
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to ICMftiM .,.,. pilfti•ICi,

on-

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t lbulo I 1 100 lit 3441 IX
TENEION II (14M)

coloo: owllglon
flmlllllllli1Ul or nolloMI
or1gln or 111!1-10

-

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llolfll co Plo ...
SR681 Houai On 3 Acroa Fill

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0r11 AciOI$10000 Con Ad 5
""'' S13 ooo 5 ,~an 123 ooo
0 Heyb8no0n5Ac181
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to S 4 000 Rutlontl 9 AcFII
$8!100 Co wa.. On A1
can Now Fo Ownt F
nondng W ltl Sllgltt Mlrk!.ll Le""
Avol- In 4l! Ohio Counllol
Land 3 1 3 rtllrlcted IC II w th
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D lvl Go Ia County 3 milts f om
Holzer $28 000 cal 740 982

8440
Look ng To Buy A Ntw Home?

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us 11 1111 Joltno- 1'111 Columup to 111 II hour Hiring lor bus
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111-7174 r1gm now ona IH " you
4504 oxlont on 1111 (7om tpm l*t
1'hllllllicoo

Mon:re

210

Ouollty Houoa C!Hntng 1 IHk
ng HouH C:,._ll l'or Moro n
format on 01 (740)158 It 31
All!"" Doo

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mtnt rtqu ftCI lxoel tnt Montt'lty

P of 1 llottnt al ,. nance Avr
ab I Good C od I -(188) 210

a1-

3 BR B ok Homo geg Bunool
0 tvo Nowly RomoldOCI Clrport
Fu I laoamonl Eocollonl Cond
lion (740,._111
41R 3 1/lllltn a 800 lqFI In
Go llpo to Uc 11 C A Now
Ktchon lim lh Coblnoto) Hord
wood 'IOOIIL Qorqa llotllllnl
1 4UOO Ceo (740)44e 0101
,ORICLOIID GOY T HOM II
Low or 10 downl Til ftapoo l
llnkoupto ul HUD VA ,HA
Low or no monoy OK Croott l'o
Llol ngo Coli 1 100.101 111 ' "

HIS

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740 446

003

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n Country On 1 e Aoret Nttdlng

HI Nlfll.',
'

410

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for

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ltd OOMI Porte Olld
Homoo Ftam 1111/Mo 4'11 Down
1

3

Fo Llollngo_ I Poymont Dotollo
1100-31 ..:111:1 Eot 1108

1 SR lUI Monlllly a 8R lal5
Monthly 1010 1 1011 3rd Avo
nut Dl)lOOII Roqutrod (740)4410218

Tara TownhQult Apa menta
Very Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2

F ooro CA. 1 112 Boll&gt; Filly Co
pettd Adu 1 Poo &amp; Btby Pool
Pr lo Sta S385 Mo No Ptll
Le11e P ua Stcur ty DIPOih AI
qu od Dayo 740 44e 3481
Evtn nga 740 387 0502 1•0
44H101

t l'ldom l'or Aonl a lt1110
u tohono 4 '" MQOimo , uo
Dapoo 1 (7401441-4734 Or
(740)441-1:111

•

•

Mteh1gan State had already
weathered an 8 mrnute span
wrthout a pomt but was ued at 22
bte tn the first half
Bmw 1 b'"ve the Buckeyes the
lead for good with a p:ur of free
throws and Tm1 Martm added
two more to put the Buckeyes
ahe3d 2( 22 ot the b«ak
F 1ur players &lt;eored 111 the 12 2
run at the utsct of the second
half a Oh1 State bUilt a 38 24
lead by th I o to 1 ork Mtch g:m
State ,,
abl to get ut &gt;nd
n 1 a d I ad d f!icult) gcttmg
m J ag 1 t the ll kL~cs Ken
Jll 1 de
t 1 tpsht
bl &lt;kcr v r ag
We 1 " t d t pr sure the
ball W tl ught f vc kepi them
It
f [he.: rr:m liltl m ga 11.: ve
w t ld b OK Da1by sa d Our

p se vas s

bctt r today
th;u t vas last St 1day
Th Buck y s I d by as 1any as
16 p liS before MlCh gan State
regrouped to cut the lead to e1ght
Jtucl

on [hree occaSions

Each ttme Ohro State - m
partiCular Brown - had an
answer He htt t vo free throws
after the Spartans had cur It to
51 43 wtth JUSt under 4 mmutes
left then ass sted on Darby s 3
pomter wtth I 53 remammg
After MIChigan State cut tt to 58
51 on Taylors 3 pmnter with
I 13 remammg Brown h1t two
more foul shots
Oh o States last e1ght !&gt;Otnts
came at tl1e hne where the Buck
eyes went 20 of 28 to Mtch1gan
States 10 of.14
We were every bit as tough as
we ve ever been smce I ve 'been at

Oh1o State satd 0 Bnen m hiS
fourth year wtth the Buckeyes

Central Michigan closing in on ra~re
winning season, beats Marshall

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Hoopllll Bid (304)571-2400
J)!T

AERATION MarORS
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Clll Ron e-. 1-eoo.M1 11528

Budget P lc.d Trantmlt~lona
A Types Acce sa To Ove

111110 Matda BZ600i to2 Eotend
od Cab 4 cyll~de} S speed
$2200 740-992-449:1M• ngs
993 Fo d Flanger Xi.T Supe cab
2 Cloo 96 000 mJits tea w1g ay
ntlrio au oma lc ltft ton dam

-ILl NDMI OWNIIII

Trr t apect tor rtnt 740 992
58111

470

Wented to Rent

Mllu • Couplt Wanta To Rent 3
4 Bodroom HO&lt;lU In RIO Q ondO
Rodney 0 Nta Holzer Artl
Have Ptlt tan Fu n rh EJ:ctl
tnt
Rtltrtncaa
Phone
(740)387 7401 Anyllmo

ForLe111

1800 Sq Fttl Buu ltu y Rt
stored 2nd Floor 3 a,a oom
Apa tmtnt f 1 2Bttht llv ng
D n ng Aoom Rtar Otck HVAC
Down1own Ba lpo 1 A Moelt n
Amtnllllt 1500/mo Socur 1y And

Prloo~

ago 12800 OBO 741l-112 1506

On Vlny Skirting, coo 1 wnd
OWl Anoho I Wlltr HNIIrl
P umb ng &amp; E-lt:ll Pont Fur
nactr &amp; Hlrt Pum_pa Bennett.

19115 C1'1evy Du y 414 Loaded
Cond I on $13 000

3785

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

1999 Pa om no Pony Pop up

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(304)e7! 5305

(740)255-5890

Mob o Homo SuJ&gt;pl)' 740 44t

SEfWICES

9418 www OtW OOI'I1tbtlw1111

810

New &amp; Used Etectr c And Gil
Furnaoea Fo hit Oal Far Sl.r:
11
lnsttllat on
A:va labte.
(7~)'18

e301 t-100-atHXlll

Ntw And Uttd 8111

(7~)118

8tt1l

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tie •nell u nlrhad Ea

tablsttod t975 Co 24 H • 1740)
448 0170 1 800 287 o571 Rog

33&amp;1

trl Wale proo ng

poy-

NEW BAAND name computer"'

Amotl IVtf'Y.ont approwtd wtth
tD downl Low mon11tty
1 1100-117 3&lt;'7t ut 330

Home
lmprovem•nt•

BAilMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncandlt on• It me guaran at

B11mo Ptpo AOilll For COncrwlo
A 8 zoo &amp; Langtho LIL &amp;crop
Matoa
(740)441 7300 Or

and Floor Spec ouo 3 SOCiroom
Unturn tt'lld Aprrtmtnl In VIctor

Blwm 13 'ltll Naw 1!1)10 Lvmoo moto aooo: argor capabllltl

lon Hou11 On C ty Park HVAC
011 IIIHI 1'1r1&lt; ng 1415/mo """
Ul lloo ltou ly And Koy Do
pooll lloqu rod 1'10 l'oll ftoftr
tnOH Atqulrtd (1-40)ttl ....

towm 111 odaoro anO okllltloro
NORWOOD lNDUITftlll 211
lanwll Drlvl lullato NY 14ut
Pllll lnlormallon 1 100 571

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'0 000 T ansm ss ona Tra.nste
Cans 740 245 5677 Ce 339

EKCI tn

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Ptrlii'Ol G fl AKC Exce 1nt
a boG nt De 11trv Poll I) 1
(740)319-906

Kay Dopo~ll No Polo Atloronc
11 RoqulrOCI (140)445 4425 Or
(740)448--

Houeellold

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

beachas and rel,xallon Beac;ll
front condos o hOmes For rtnll
11 11 Century 21 111 Southtm

llko now no top 1"111011 1100
740-9411-2483.

460 Spece lor Rent

2000 Yamatla Wove ne
0 ve $3800

350 4 Whee
(304 576 3088

8214

Hugo Inventory Dlocount

1

2000 Fo d Range XLT Suptretb

4 door 4Jt4 of oad 401-EF. VI
eng !liP au oma c 11'11 lead
td t e ooo m •• Muat 11 I wll
ae I for pryofl or bttl ol e 740
ees-3558

1313 IXT ZOO.U

T)ftiO OP HI!IH ILICTRIC:
IlLLI? How about no o oolrlo
bHiol 100' oood 10 bo llU01?
Por ou lnlorm.ITOft ·~ Yllod
Coli 1 HI Ill lOa (tol froo) or
hi!Ptlwww -rvll!ll!l oom
Wltorllnt lpoolo t/4 aoo 'II
111 IS l'or 100 1 100 'II
U7 00 l'or 100 A I Iron Com
fi!IIIIOn ~II\ IIDGk
liON IVANI INTIIIPIIllll

-Ohlo.I--

Subscrzbe today

Wood ~or lao 1111 Lolli (7401
368-1010

•
•

•

t g fr 11 ' r t to firsl Ill the
M l A11 r 311 C &gt;tferenc We t
D VISl)
An l that 1 kes Ch ppc vas
co ad J •Y Smtih 11ervot s
Too 1 u h p my tn thts leag&lt; &lt;
to get to h1gh Stud satd after
liS team beat Marshall HO 68 Sat
urday When t gets to be cde
braung tune Ill be the first to lei
(the players) k 01v
The Cluppe "'as VICtc.&gt;ty hfted
thetr record to 13 4 melt dmg 7
I m the MAC They lead the West
by ? 112 games owr Toledo and
three over Ball State
Central M1ch1gan hasn t had a
wmnmg record smce gomg 19 13
(10 6 MAC) n 1987 88 when
M~amt (Ohto) coach Charhe
Coles was runn ng the show and
Mmm Heat guard Dan MaJerle
was the top scorer
The Chippewas were 6 23 last
season and last tn MAC West itt 2
16
There s 10 games to go Smuh
satd It was a great WJn and we
move on from here
Were
learnmg how to wm as a te•m
now
Davtd Webber the younger
brother of Sacramento Kmgs star
Chns Webber earned the
Ch1ppcwas to vtctory scormg ?7
pmnts
Webber " awt'\111) good md

Morshall (12 o 6 3) coach Gr&lt;g
Whtte When vot ll't 0 7 p tltS
1 1 s you played a httle b t
The Cluppe 'as got
boost
atop the West sta 1d 1 gs fro 1
Mta 111 (9 I J o 4) \11 ch beat
Ball State (9 8 4 4) o7 o6 on
Alex Shorts 18 foot 1 npcr wtth
four seconds to plav
Shorts came off the bench to
scor&lt; 19 pomts ndudmg the
RcliHowks final 10 down the
str tch
He satd he dtdn t reahzt that
he d h11 Mmm s last five baskets
bL t he knew he wanted the ball m
h s hands at the end of the game
I JUst remember what we md
m the huddle That was 011e two
three wm Shorts sa1d
Elsewhere m the MAC on Sat
urday Akron beat Eastern Mtch1
gan 63 56 Kent State beat Bowl
mg Green 81 57 Oh10 beat )luf
falo 83 66 and Western M~ehtgan
beat Northern (lhnoa 83 77
The Ztps (8 9 5 3) topped the
Eagles (2 15 0 B) despite •hoot
mg JUst :19 percent front the field
and 61 percent from the free
throw line
1\vicc m the second half East
ern Mrchtgan pulled wtthin on~
pomt- the second at 42 41 wtth
10 17 rematn ng - but Akron
never lost the lead
Emmanuel Snuth who had 13
pomts scored on a byup and
added a three pmnt play to gtvc
Akron a 47 41 lead \lth 7 o6 to
go Mumres later he followed

N3te Schmdewolf s 1" d fl'l'e
thro v v11h a 3 po 1 r to 1ak 11
o? 46 The Z p I d b, t I a t ~~
d1c rest of tl c 1
Kent State le d 01 o ~ one
game m the MAC Ea 1 f&lt;1llowmg
1ts :v n over Bod 1g Gr~.ca

De nctr c Sl ' had 24 pmhts
and 11 rebounds ond t • ned v1th
Kyre n Mas&lt;cy to blo v tl e Fa I
c IS (6 I 0 ? 5) ot t e rly
Sha v sc red 12 pomts a 1d
Mass :y had mne of Ius 13 m the
game s first 15 nnnutes as the
Golden Flashes (14 5 7 1) took a
31 8l~ad
Len Matela- bad l7 pomts apd
14 rebounds and Ketth Mcleod
sco1ed 16 for Bowhng Green
llrondon, Hunter led four Ohto
players 1t1 dl!lt,tble figures W1tl! 16
Points as the Bobcats handi;d Ilyf
falo m mnrh 11r:nght los~ ~
P•mck Ffomo and Anthony
Jones scored 14 pmnts ap1ece and
Dusnn Ford added 10 po111ts for
Oh1o (11-6 6 2) Flomo also
blocked stx shots and Jon Sander
son had 10 rebounds
Robert Brown (2 14 0 9) led
Buffalo With 17 pomts
Leon Rodgers 34 pmnts and 11
rebounds weren t enough to keep
Northern llhnms (4 13 3 5) from
losthg to Western M1ch1gan
Jo 1 Pow~ll scored 28 pomts and
lm five 3 pomters fot Western (4
14 4 5) mclud ng three dun 1g
an 18 6 run that gave the Broncos
a late 70 68 lead

West Virginia defeats No. 16 Seton Hall

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COLUMBUS Ohm (AP) After lostng four games to ranked rebounds for Ohto State (13 7 4
teams- tncludmg two thu week 4)
Brtan was tcrnfic Playmg all
- Oh10 State took a mammoth
40 mmutes says 1t all- we d1dn t
strtde tow.&gt;rd saVIng Its season
Its huge when we havef! t thmk we could afford to lake htm
out 0 Dnen satd H1s floor
beaten anyone who ms rankcl:l
Ohto State coach Jun 0 Brten game was great hts game aware
md of the Buckeyes 64 55 upset ness ond hts pn:sencc throughout
of No 3 ranked M1ch1gan State the whole gum was marvelous
Brent Darby added II pmnts
on Saturday
ncludn
g a late 3 pmntcr to stem
Thts goes a I 1 tg way toward
a Sparta 1 mrge
hdpmg s get what vc nocd
llewtld red all da) by Oht&lt;
0 Br en md Y&lt; u 1ccd quabty
Stales 2 ~ zone Mt lu~an State
w ns Any mnc ym belt some
b d) 1 1 the top five - anywhere never g t d( Sl:r tha l li~V 1 p 11 ts
after the llt &lt;k&lt;)'CS sn red the fi 1al
11 g &gt; s a lc))g \1) 1&lt; vanl
four
p011ts bcf1 re I alft 11e a 1d
h lpmg people take toncc
Bra Bmwn a. st~rtt:r o 1 h:anu 12 of the first 14 p 1m 11 th
that we 1t t the Fu al Four at d scwnd half
We ~or a ks" 1 11 h w to play
v a share of a ll g Te 1 t de md
hard
Mtchtgan State c ach To 1
there was 1oth11g to compare
Izzo 1a d Ohm State g t exactly
vtth the BLCk&lt;yes pset
what
they deserved They played
Thts IS the b1ggest wm of my
ca -eer bccau!;e ve d Jll t have tht: better defense than us
The Sp rta 11 Andre Hutson
t•let t we had befqre Bra vn sa d
after sconng a carc&lt;r best 25 scored 17 po nts •nd Jason
Rtchardson had 11 ~ all 111 the
pomts
The Spartans (16 ? 5 ?) who first half - before foulmg out
had won thetr l~st four games The startmg backcourt of Charhe
would have ued llhnms for the Bell and Marcus Taylor combmed
to hit JUS! 5 of. 21 shots from the
BtgTen lead with a viCtory
Oh o States se•son had seemed field a 1d totaled 14 pomts Bell
was batdmg the flu
to be sptraling out of control
Ohto Slate had been outre
S1x days earlier defendmg
natwnal champton M1chtgan bounded 36 27 m the preVIOUS
State dommated the Buckeyes m meenng as the Spartans p1led up
the second half to wm 71 56 m 20 offen11ve rebounds That w~s
East lansmg Then on Wednesday Without startmg center Hutson
mght Ohio State shot JUst 25 who was recovermg from pneu
percent from the field and lost mohu.
The Spartans agam outre
57 41 .rNo 19Wtsconsm
bounded
the Buckeyes 31 28 on
But Brown wouldn t allow
Saturday but Oh1o State
another top 25 failure
The pressure comes down on outscored them 12 6 m the pamt
We didn t rebound the ball for
me he oa1d
Brown went 8 of 13 from the the first nme m a long 11me lzzo
field 7 of 9 on free throws and sa1d

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83

Sentinel•

Middleport Ohio

2001

MORGANTOWN WVa (Al')
- We&lt;t Vtrp; 11 c m t 3\\ y the
n &lt; nker of bcmp;
Bt!l E 1
push 1\ct
( lvm Bo' nan cored 1 (
p tH• md Lt u d Armstc ul h J a
" n h111h 24 n West Vtrg n a
1 k d\nnt 11e &gt;f 1 r cc&lt; J
half sh 1otmg b) N H Scto H til
tr 1H17&gt; drvSttJ)
mght
We t V11 ~ 1 1 ( 12 o 1 ~ B g
Ea t) be t ta 1ked &gt;pp&lt; 11&lt; t for
the fitst 1 11 s 1cc December

IJ9il asp

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t

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1 hkc th"
Set 1 Hnll 11 \) er ntllltte I 11
' " 1&lt; ugh pl) tlg 1\ th lhe 10 e
tr 1 1 tl" 1 t o er wd ' f ) 41 )
Htndrcds f lim• st mned the
m rt after the g 11 a I mobbed
llowm m a 1J &lt; thcr West Vtrgnua
player&lt;

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.Monday, January 29 2001

•
The Dally Sentl"!l • Page__

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

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BEGINNER'S
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Tuesdays 6:00-7:00 p.m.
February 6 to
Aprll10 At
Meigs Senior
Citizens' Building
Cost: $2.00 per class
Call992-2161
to register

The annual llnonclol
,..port of Salem Tciwnohlp
'll'ua!NI, Molgo County II
complete and avolloblo ot
lht oHica of the Clark or at
lht January Boord MHifng.
To view tho roport at the
olllce of the Clerk an
appointment m•y be made
by calling (740) 1168-3091.

(t) 211
1tc

PROBATe COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF Jacquollnl Mo~l
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Marte Nave.

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Suled propoHII Will be '
received by the Boord. of .
Education of the Molga
Local School Dlatrlct of
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
Truau....-·a Otllot until 1:oo

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a.tten

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opened by 1111 TrH8Uror of
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HVInty-one
(71) poeHngor
CH~GE OF NAME
dl01tl achool buHa (body
and chants may bt bid
Applicant hereby gl•*•
notice to all lnternted aeporately or together ao
poraono ond to Jet! one complete bua).
Rodenback .t hat the Specifications
and
applicant hn tiled on lnllructlona to btddtra may
Application lor Change of be obtained 11 the olflca of
T,..aourer, 32o e. Main
Name In the Probate Court
of Meigs County, Ohio, Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
requeatlng the chango of 45711 or by calling (740)
By order of
name of Jacqueline Marte 882·5650.
Rodenbeck to Jacqueline Melgl Local Board of
Mark e.
Marte Nove. The heo~ng on Education,
the application will be held Rhonemu1, Trteaurer.
on the 2nd day of March, (1) 18, 21, 2!1, 3tc

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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AI') - If another win by
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Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

Mark Calcwecchia in the Phoenix Open w;tsn 't
surprising, the m;,ugin of victory wa s.
Calca.vecchia started rewriting tou'rnamt·nt

records halfway through and, at the end, he did the
sanu: to the PGA Tour record book.
"All in all, it was my best-ever pt.:rformance for
sure,'' he '"said Sunday aftt"r finishing four rounds at
28-under-par 256, the loWt'St 72-holc score in histOry. "I just don't sec hOw I could t•ver tup this."

Larry

'

.
v'rt1se our
.us1ness.· ·

Sch.~;y

'

'
·"'

The 72-hnle rocord was set bv Mike Sou chak
East State Slreei· ·. Phone (140) 593-6671
who shot 257 at the 1955 Texas Open- five year; IAtlhents, Ohio 45101
·
·
before Calcavecchia was boni.
1
IL___;_·.:._·.:._·'~'A!J!B~e!!ll~er~~~J:'!!IJ~C...!!!.~
"I've looked at that record, and it never crossed r
/
my mind that 1 could attain or do som~thing like
MOLLOHAN CARPO
thar," he said. "I know I'm streaky, but I'm not that
QuiUty Clr)let et low
good. Looking at the board when I was out OJ! the
green and seeing a red 28, it just looked crazy."
Prices
•Free
estimates
with
Calcavecchia ended a three-year victory drought
appointments at your
and added another Phoenix trophy to those he
convenience
'won in 1989 and 1992. He closed with a 67- his
•
Financing
available, 90
worst score of the event - after completing the ·
days same as cash
last I0 holes of the 'third round.
• We except Visa or
MasterCard.

·sayre
Truckins

TENNIS

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - Crushed by
Andre Agassi's pinpoint hea'vy hitting, Arnaud
Clement wanted to know whether it was a normal
effort or something special by his opponent in the
Australian Open final. '
.
So he asked Agassi as they waited for the trophy
presentation.
"He seemed pretty.surprised at the question," the
French speedster recounted. "Then he said, 'Oh, it
was pretty good."'
, Agassi appeared to be in his , comfort · zone
through most of the 1-hour, 46Cminutc m;ltch,
running the No. 15 seed fri&gt;m side to side in ~ 6-4,
6-2, 6-2 victory.
It was Agassi's foiarth tide in his last eight Grand

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"This nnast look a lot easier than it feds," said
Agassi, who played in the tennis equivalent of the :
minor leagues and pu~ in strenuous physical· training to work back up from a ranking of 141st in
1997.

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"fiCJLIHG Cl
an ·
EXCfiVfiTIHCI

Pa88

z•
Pus

On Friday, Sept. 8, my second
J_...._.te:adting tour began with a twohour
southwest from Brisbane to ·Warwick. .I remembered
this club from IllY 1996 tour
because the president, Les Poole,
when supposedly using fourthhighest leads, had attacked with
his fifth-highest helut against 'my
contract of three no-trump. Thinking the hearts w,ere 4-4, I played
for an overtrick and went one
down, when I would have succeeded if he hadn't been so nefarious!
This time, I partnered the new
' I
president, John Rose. He played
perfectly on this deal, but was given help.
I overbid by responding two
clubs, but only slightly.
Against four spades doubled,
/Q'(.. "~11'\Plf.
the defense started with a heart to
Q~TlOM »&gt;I&gt; l G.f.T
the ace and a heart. Rose entered
""''"""" "~11..000'!' fli:OM.
dummy with a club to the king,
11\C~OF
then called forthe spade eight: 10,
urn.ru~IUL!
ace, diamond eight. Next, dedtarer played a club to dumrfiy•s
jack, East ruffing. Best defense is
a heart, conceding a useless ruffand-discard. However, in''answer ·
to partner's unwise signal, East ·
switched to the diamond jack:
· queen, ace, two. Now West must
1Jff:~~~~fWVJ =..,.-=-=-=-=---.~,F/';;:::;;;o;M;t:"-----, go back to hearts, but she led a
li:i
low diamond. Rose won with
dummy's
10, finessed the spade
!'OINk!
jack, continued with the spade
nine, ruffed a club to hand, drew
the last trump, and ran the diamonds for plus 590. Declarer had
lost only one heart, one diamond
and one club ruff.
East's worst error was doubling
the final contract. Her oppo(\ents
had bid strongly. there was no
guarantee of four defensive tricks,
and why warn South about the
bad
trump break?
AT OT~ER RINKS T~EV
1-lERE WE HAVE TO DO
PLAV T~E NATIONAL ANTI! EM
ntE "IIOKEVPOI&lt;EV'' •
BEFORE TI-lE 6AME ...

I MONDAY

Monday thru Frida~
t:oo.&amp;:OO

· ·

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Eut

Sentinel

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Porter, Ohio.

· •

Pass
Pass

li~~~~~~1=o~:~.~~-M~~r.-~ab~~--r.r~~
...

To get a current weather
report, check the

vlalt ua at

nal victim, 28-year-old Patrick Rafter, arl' scriou:-;.-

•

I

1.a77-113D-8182 or

when many players have retired nr, like his semifi-

!iev~n

Give ua a call iot

I

740-441-7444 or ·

Agassi wins fourth title
in last eight Slams·

the last two, and

'

'

Pass
Pass

s ..

lm-

3111ebmonth

411 Ac1or John -

41 k:tloncllc

writing
42 Chlcktn43Grollod
(hlrlldl'y)
45 Author
Gardner
48 Chilly
47 Wild

BY J.'HILLIP ALDER

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•
tn
sound
7 -Lima
11 o 8 ---(In
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ttoublol)
12
kllr
t 'lnl111grualon 18 llap

· Teaching tour

Dream A Reslity!

..GLLUiL

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A19tNn

tMport

38 Wintry

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Sldlq.

Over 40 yrs experience

GOLF

'I.

DOWN
t Antle

38More-ng
37 Not ao Ill

764

Vulnerable: E&amp;JI-West

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
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'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
Protect your guns, family heirlooms, cpin and
collections, legal papers, Investment records,
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household Inventory
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Sizes 5' x 10'
to tO' x 30'

month.

2001, at 1:30 o'clock p.m. In
tha Problle Court of Meigs
County.

992 -6524

Racine, Ohio
4sn1

701d-

15 11.-rut
• peelry
1. - l y

• AK

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

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NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Public Notice .

. New Homes • Vinyl
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• Replacement Windows
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FAEii ESTIMATES'

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Public NotiCI
LEGAL NOTICE

~iee.ev.,

COMMER(LU cnll!SID~

4t -out
44PolltiW45 Author
Uol--

13 ran~~

IISSILL IUILDIIS
INC. •

-IO . . .

&lt;•-1

ACROSS

$ntcrprises or ventures that
are :novel or extraordinary could
_...._ be fllrtunate for you in the year
ahead. Even if you're in unfamilftelds, you'll still do well.
~QUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You ltave the marvelous faculty
today for being able to buoy the
sagging spirits of others. You
might get a chance to •utilize it
with ·someone important to you.
1\'ying to patch up ~ broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, ·
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
PJ~CES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Thel'8's a strong possibility you'll
be able to find opportunities lOW·
ly mhsed by others. Thi1 Is
bec&amp;We you'll see orchids today
In plbs where others see only
weeds.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Moat :Of the time your ldeu 'are
pretty:Ciever, but today they could
•

be ingenious. Now it only remains ·
for you to. have the courage to
implement them.
, TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
When we say, "What goes around
comes around," we usually mean
one will get his or her comeuppance, but in your case this phrase
means you'll receive rewards for
past good deeds.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Devote your time and energy
today on Interests you believe
could further your aims. You'll be
luckiest when working with new
ideas.
CANCER (June 21·1uly 22)
An opportunity may come your
way today under some kind of
cover or code for you to decipher.
Listen very carefully when others
talk about anythina unique.
LEO (July 23-Au•. 22) Don't
make any concessions today with·
out tint euminina whether they
are necessary: Upon reflection,
you will see that you're in a
stronger position than you real·
ized.
.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 2l)

Although you might get dragged
il)to a situation today not of your
choosing, after everything gets
underway, it could prove to be
extremely beneficial.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
You'd be wise not to rush to judgmenton an idea offered today just
because it sounds too different.
After careful study, it may not be
as outlandish as you first thought.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't be surprised today if you
get the title of champion of lost
c~uses, owing to your unique
ability to transform endeavors
that are gasping for air,
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Especially if there's a chance
of meeting new people, do not
tum down any social invitations.
Someone you meet could get you
access to an opening blocked to
you. ·
CAPRICORN (Deo. 22-Jan.
19) .Unusual circumst~nces could
~ngmeer two potenttally prof•
liable developments for you
·today. Each will happen independently.

4t~ftlh

50 Belonging till
him
521WopHI-

-pOd

53 Lorge
rodent

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

celebrity Cipher cryptograms are creatlld from quotatlonl by famous peopft, past and
present. Each lttlel' In the cipher standi lot another.
Today~ clue: L equals 0

'E . PYHH
MJX. ·

C

UCYTE
EPH

EPCODT

QYH

BGO'E
ERJ,

VOL

UJY

YHWHWVHY

VXE

LJXDPOXET
(BJGBP)

EPCY .L.'

EPH
GYH

VCKK

NHEHYTHO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don'! like pe~ect (movie) heroes: 1 like flawed
characters ... In !hem I sea more ol the !ruth." - Nicolas Cage

I

T RE T 0 T

I II I 1
-Cr-..:.0rN~K;._r:.K.,--ll .

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2

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::::::::::::~~
Nl / lc HI E Is ~-~

I==·:::·:::·==·~-:...,
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S 0 GS L y

~..:1;...:;:.,1.::...;:;,1:,.=.1..;,

L.-L-..1.-J......JL-.J......J

always liked
dogs.
askIhave
no questions,
find no
faultThey
and
will always .keep your - - - __·_-.
Complel&lt;l !he chuckle QUOted
by lilting In !he milling words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS J1
IN THESE SQUARES
I

•

6

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER ·

J1 . I
I

r

.1'

'I

1° .

I

IIII IIII

SC.AM LITS ANSWERS
;.;amper- Check- Youth- Author- TAKE THEM

We finally paid off the expense of our last vacation .
'That only shows you." my husband sighed. "for every·
one ready for a v.acation. there's someone ready to TAKE
THEM ."

JANUARY29I

�..

.

.Monday, January 29 2001

•
The Dally Sentl"!l • Page__

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vertical bHnde are made to order at
our location

UPTO 70% OFF

BEGINNER'S
YOGA CLASS
Tuesdays 6:00-7:00 p.m.
February 6 to
Aprll10 At
Meigs Senior
Citizens' Building
Cost: $2.00 per class
Call992-2161
to register

The annual llnonclol
,..port of Salem Tciwnohlp
'll'ua!NI, Molgo County II
complete and avolloblo ot
lht oHica of the Clark or at
lht January Boord MHifng.
To view tho roport at the
olllce of the Clerk an
appointment m•y be made
by calling (740) 1168-3091.

(t) 211
1tc

PROBATe COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF Jacquollnl Mo~l
Rodenbeck To Jecquellne
Marte Nave.

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per

29670 Baahan Road

IIUM LUIIIII

1'1'. 11'1'. 148

Clll

.. J 9 8
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• 10 4 2

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MEIGSICAN MONDAY

Hours

Jecquellne Mo~•
Rodenbeck
33885 Plna Qrova Road
llaclno, OH 45771

DAY

.......... , ••• adillg

•NowtT,
• EIKirkll Ft

Backhoe se111tfces.
Ho14se sfte ~ric,
Driveway alana
clearing,

Public NotiCI

Suled propoHII Will be '
received by the Boord. of .
Education of the Molga
Local School Dlatrlct of
Pomeroy, Ohio, at the
Truau....-·a Otllot until 1:oo

.·::ru.

a.tten

••P~ &amp;rwdohdlo
' Pal!otlot ·
Free Estimates

Septic systems

I

V.C. YOUNG Ill .

instal/ea.

'

992·6215

PomeroyloOhio
22 yr•.

OF
GALLIPOLIS

eal

p.m. on Monday, February

A &amp; D Auto

5, 2001, and at the time

opened by 1111 TrH8Uror of
oald Boord lor thrH (3) new
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
HVInty-one
(71) poeHngor
CH~GE OF NAME
dl01tl achool buHa (body
and chants may bt bid
Applicant hereby gl•*•
notice to all lnternted aeporately or together ao
poraono ond to Jet! one complete bua).
Rodenback .t hat the Specifications
and
applicant hn tiled on lnllructlona to btddtra may
Application lor Change of be obtained 11 the olflca of
T,..aourer, 32o e. Main
Name In the Probate Court
of Meigs County, Ohio, Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
requeatlng the chango of 45711 or by calling (740)
By order of
name of Jacqueline Marte 882·5650.
Rodenbeck to Jacqueline Melgl Local Board of
Mark e.
Marte Nove. The heo~ng on Education,
the application will be held Rhonemu1, Trteaurer.
on the 2nd day of March, (1) 18, 21, 2!1, 3tc

CAN

www.courtatreetgrlll.com
112 Court Street •
OhiO

"1

•

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tartps,l
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat cove~, carpets, etc.
Mon· Frl 8:30- 5:00

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Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

to PGA Tour record in

Phoenix Open

Mole

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992-5479

Calcavecchia breezes

!

740-742-3411

'

(7 40) 36 7·0266
1-800-950-3359

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AI') - If another win by
• Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

Mark Calcwecchia in the Phoenix Open w;tsn 't
surprising, the m;,ugin of victory wa s.
Calca.vecchia started rewriting tou'rnamt·nt

records halfway through and, at the end, he did the
sanu: to the PGA Tour record book.
"All in all, it was my best-ever pt.:rformance for
sure,'' he '"said Sunday aftt"r finishing four rounds at
28-under-par 256, the loWt'St 72-holc score in histOry. "I just don't sec hOw I could t•ver tup this."

Larry

'

.
v'rt1se our
.us1ness.· ·

Sch.~;y

'

'
·"'

The 72-hnle rocord was set bv Mike Sou chak
East State Slreei· ·. Phone (140) 593-6671
who shot 257 at the 1955 Texas Open- five year; IAtlhents, Ohio 45101
·
·
before Calcavecchia was boni.
1
IL___;_·.:._·.:._·'~'A!J!B~e!!ll~er~~~J:'!!IJ~C...!!!.~
"I've looked at that record, and it never crossed r
/
my mind that 1 could attain or do som~thing like
MOLLOHAN CARPO
thar," he said. "I know I'm streaky, but I'm not that
QuiUty Clr)let et low
good. Looking at the board when I was out OJ! the
green and seeing a red 28, it just looked crazy."
Prices
•Free
estimates
with
Calcavecchia ended a three-year victory drought
appointments at your
and added another Phoenix trophy to those he
convenience
'won in 1989 and 1992. He closed with a 67- his
•
Financing
available, 90
worst score of the event - after completing the ·
days same as cash
last I0 holes of the 'third round.
• We except Visa or
MasterCard.

·sayre
Truckins

TENNIS

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - Crushed by
Andre Agassi's pinpoint hea'vy hitting, Arnaud
Clement wanted to know whether it was a normal
effort or something special by his opponent in the
Australian Open final. '
.
So he asked Agassi as they waited for the trophy
presentation.
"He seemed pretty.surprised at the question," the
French speedster recounted. "Then he said, 'Oh, it
was pretty good."'
, Agassi appeared to be in his , comfort · zone
through most of the 1-hour, 46Cminutc m;ltch,
running the No. 15 seed fri&gt;m side to side in ~ 6-4,
6-2, 6-2 victory.
It was Agassi's foiarth tide in his last eight Grand

,!

•

•

30 -

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FMJ Dirt • Mulch •
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''

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·'

DIIDYI II

Grand Stun tourn:qnt.&gt;m ·

titles in all .
·
"This nnast look a lot easier than it feds," said
Agassi, who played in the tennis equivalent of the :
minor leagues and pu~ in strenuous physical· training to work back up from a ranking of 141st in
1997.

-~

t1'm_;'
'.'!''t : '

nan

' . l 11'J 1 '

. r..
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An Mala!. Tractor .t
~-nt Put8 ·

Factory Autlm~
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nth. ,

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'======;:::=~=======~
(

ly considering it.
Agassi hanvon rhrec Australian Opens. including

Wl~t

·!"~ 1~d.

. 1000~~~;..,. .

'

"

·· nui!

'\

.

'· n:M

••. t~}! .

'

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' I
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.

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'

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~~~·· q

'·

Agnn
Mooreh11d
roll
23 KDhlll'lll'l
24 Lying on the

-

25 Young
ooclalltol
:ze Hawaiian
food lleh
27 Phonad
2!1 Dellc!lve

Cha~lt-

30 tee-cream

Obi.

.. '

'&lt;:

i

"fiCJLIHG Cl
an ·
EXCfiVfiTIHCI

Pa88

z•
Pus

On Friday, Sept. 8, my second
J_...._.te:adting tour began with a twohour
southwest from Brisbane to ·Warwick. .I remembered
this club from IllY 1996 tour
because the president, Les Poole,
when supposedly using fourthhighest leads, had attacked with
his fifth-highest helut against 'my
contract of three no-trump. Thinking the hearts w,ere 4-4, I played
for an overtrick and went one
down, when I would have succeeded if he hadn't been so nefarious!
This time, I partnered the new
' I
president, John Rose. He played
perfectly on this deal, but was given help.
I overbid by responding two
clubs, but only slightly.
Against four spades doubled,
/Q'(.. "~11'\Plf.
the defense started with a heart to
Q~TlOM »&gt;I&gt; l G.f.T
the ace and a heart. Rose entered
""''"""" "~11..000'!' fli:OM.
dummy with a club to the king,
11\C~OF
then called forthe spade eight: 10,
urn.ru~IUL!
ace, diamond eight. Next, dedtarer played a club to dumrfiy•s
jack, East ruffing. Best defense is
a heart, conceding a useless ruffand-discard. However, in''answer ·
to partner's unwise signal, East ·
switched to the diamond jack:
· queen, ace, two. Now West must
1Jff:~~~~fWVJ =..,.-=-=-=-=---.~,F/';;:::;;;o;M;t:"-----, go back to hearts, but she led a
li:i
low diamond. Rose won with
dummy's
10, finessed the spade
!'OINk!
jack, continued with the spade
nine, ruffed a club to hand, drew
the last trump, and ran the diamonds for plus 590. Declarer had
lost only one heart, one diamond
and one club ruff.
East's worst error was doubling
the final contract. Her oppo(\ents
had bid strongly. there was no
guarantee of four defensive tricks,
and why warn South about the
bad
trump break?
AT OT~ER RINKS T~EV
1-lERE WE HAVE TO DO
PLAV T~E NATIONAL ANTI! EM
ntE "IIOKEVPOI&lt;EV'' •
BEFORE TI-lE 6AME ...

I MONDAY

Monday thru Frida~
t:oo.&amp;:OO

· ·

21 Threll

Eut

Sentinel

202 Clark Chapel Rllad,
Porter, Ohio.

· •

Pass
Pass

li~~~~~~1=o~:~.~~-M~~r.-~ab~~--r.r~~
...

To get a current weather
report, check the

vlalt ua at

nal victim, 28-year-old Patrick Rafter, arl' scriou:-;.-

•

I

1.a77-113D-8182 or

when many players have retired nr, like his semifi-

!iev~n

Give ua a call iot

I

740-441-7444 or ·

Agassi wins fourth title
in last eight Slams·

the last two, and

'

'

Pass
Pass

s ..

lm-

3111ebmonth

411 Ac1or John -

41 k:tloncllc

writing
42 Chlcktn43Grollod
(hlrlldl'y)
45 Author
Gardner
48 Chilly
47 Wild

BY J.'HILLIP ALDER

Can Mske ltlur

Advertise io
this space for~
$100 per
month. ,~-

s.

z:.

3 ~
4 · - of
Fortune" buy (2
--)
1-'4"-l.!.
5 U.S:IOiclltrl
•
tn
sound
7 -Lima
11 o 8 ---(In
· =b. form)
ttoublol)
12
kllr
t 'lnl111grualon 18 llap

· Teaching tour

Dream A Reslity!

..GLLUiL

Pass

A19tNn

tMport

38 Wintry

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION
New Hom., Room

~

38 TV iillltm

2

37 Poetic "yoUr"

Decks:
Kltclww, Dr;wallll

(740) 742·8888
1·888·521·0916

.

3t
41
Pass

· Addltlou, G....,_,
.Pole lkal1d!lllltl
Sldlq.

Over 40 yrs experience

GOLF

'I.

DOWN
t Antle

38More-ng
37 Not ao Ill

764

Vulnerable: E&amp;JI-West

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
,
"Ahttd In MIVIct"
. ,
•
-11 .6% Protein Uvestock/catlle Feed $5.75/l 00
-21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.'75150
-12% Western pride horse feed $5.75/50
,
$1 .oo off Coupon makes next t\urchast $4.25/50 ·
Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M. Sail Blocks $4:75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy; Ohlo~4117eli~l
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IISSILL IUILDIIS
INC. •

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ACROSS

$ntcrprises or ventures that
are :novel or extraordinary could
_...._ be fllrtunate for you in the year
ahead. Even if you're in unfamilftelds, you'll still do well.
~QUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You ltave the marvelous faculty
today for being able to buoy the
sagging spirits of others. You
might get a chance to •utilize it
with ·someone important to you.
1\'ying to patch up ~ broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the relationship work. Mail $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, ·
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156.
PJ~CES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Thel'8's a strong possibility you'll
be able to find opportunities lOW·
ly mhsed by others. Thi1 Is
bec&amp;We you'll see orchids today
In plbs where others see only
weeds.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Moat :Of the time your ldeu 'are
pretty:Ciever, but today they could
•

be ingenious. Now it only remains ·
for you to. have the courage to
implement them.
, TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
When we say, "What goes around
comes around," we usually mean
one will get his or her comeuppance, but in your case this phrase
means you'll receive rewards for
past good deeds.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Devote your time and energy
today on Interests you believe
could further your aims. You'll be
luckiest when working with new
ideas.
CANCER (June 21·1uly 22)
An opportunity may come your
way today under some kind of
cover or code for you to decipher.
Listen very carefully when others
talk about anythina unique.
LEO (July 23-Au•. 22) Don't
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are necessary: Upon reflection,
you will see that you're in a
stronger position than you real·
ized.
.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 2l)

Although you might get dragged
il)to a situation today not of your
choosing, after everything gets
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extremely beneficial.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
You'd be wise not to rush to judgmenton an idea offered today just
because it sounds too different.
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Don't be surprised today if you
get the title of champion of lost
c~uses, owing to your unique
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that are gasping for air,
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21) Especially if there's a chance
of meeting new people, do not
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Someone you meet could get you
access to an opening blocked to
you. ·
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19) .Unusual circumst~nces could
~ngmeer two potenttally prof•
liable developments for you
·today. Each will happen independently.

4t~ftlh

50 Belonging till
him
521WopHI-

-pOd

53 Lorge
rodent

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

celebrity Cipher cryptograms are creatlld from quotatlonl by famous peopft, past and
present. Each lttlel' In the cipher standi lot another.
Today~ clue: L equals 0

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don'! like pe~ect (movie) heroes: 1 like flawed
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find no
faultThey
and
will always .keep your - - - __·_-.
Complel&lt;l !he chuckle QUOted
by lilting In !he milling words
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SC.AM LITS ANSWERS
;.;amper- Check- Youth- Author- TAKE THEM

We finally paid off the expense of our last vacation .
'That only shows you." my husband sighed. "for every·
one ready for a v.acation. there's someone ready to TAKE
THEM ."

JANUARY29I

�- .... - .........
~

I

Redmen dodge
bullet to beat Tiffin ....

Ironton

chipped in 10 points. Nathan
Copas dished out six assists.
Marrin topped the scoring
chart for Tiffin (4-15, AMC 38) with 2S points. J.C. Lenk
poured in 19 points and Brian
Thompson added 11 points
before fouling out late in the
game. Tiffin's second leading
scorer Kipp Huntsberger (11.6
ppg) was held to eight points as
Davis blanketed him defensively.
.
. Rio Grande led 43-31 at
halftime . Tiffin fought back to
within three points (81-78) but
would get no closer.
Rio shot 52.5 percent (JI of- 59) from the floor anc,l won
the rebounding battle. 37-29.
Rio GrJnd~ has won [hrel'
games in a row and heads bttck
to the ro"d on Tuesday night
for a rematch with Mount Vernon Nazarene.

BY MARM WIWAMS
URG SID

RIO GRANDE \he
Unive rsity of Rio Grande
Redmen
basketball
team
dodged a bullet at home on
Saturday night, holding offTiffin University 85-80.
Th e game opened with the
post players starting strong.
Rio's Joe Delaney scored the
first s~ven po ints fo r his t~am
and Josh Martin scored the
Drago ns fi rst 11 points of the
ga me olST iffin grabb ed an 11-9
lead.
Dd:ml'Y k d th{" WJY for Rio
Grande (16-X, AMC 7- 4) with
.:!5 po ints and six rt.•bounds.
Mike Mm hall added 1:2 points,
m cl udi ng eight m the seco nd

h.1lf, and
grabbed
mne
n.·bou nds.
Jerry Barl ow added 11. points
.1nd ~ i :-.:: boards and Scott O;tvis

'

Monday, lanue'ty 29, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

Today's Scoreboard
- a , 11oi00 12

CHI. Colerain 43, 1oti11ot&lt;1 .:1
Cln. lndilnHIII!ie, -34.,_'"_"'

16 · 16' -63
7 10 13
22 ':...52

17

14

Cln. Mount-yll3.Cin. rio~IIO.
OT
~
Cln. Dak Hib 78, WOII CtloO* L1ll&lt;oOI Wool

e.

Ironton- Josh Sandl3~t1 . Drew/
Mains 1-0..2/1=3, Andrew Harvey 0-0-00:0,
Andy Brown I·I.O.O.S, DoriQue Baoon 1)-().
Chris Ha"''' 6.()..411•13, Joth Honnon
814c20, Isaac Hannon 1·0..614=&amp;. Tommy
2.0·411 ..5, Totals 22·1-30116=63.
Meigs- J. P. Staatl7-4).2t0=14 1 Adlm
Bullington 0·0·211 =1, Man Williamson 2·0.
312=6, Derek Johnson 0--6-0Kh:O, Jason Knight
Q..i-QJ0--3 , Buzzy FaCkler 0+~ . Derrick
Johnson 3·0.1.()=6, John Witherell ()..()-814~ .
Man Lewll340/0:6, Totals 15·4·25110=52.

56

Cin. Princeton 61 , Cln. S)'CIITIOI'"8 50
Cin. Aea&lt;lillfl 49, Notwood 47
Cln. w,.on;ng 57, Doer Part&lt; 49
Clart&lt;svlllo Clinlon-Masolo 70, t,;reeoMcClain 60
Clo. St. Ignatius 76, Tol. St. Jolv!'a 56
Collins Western Reserve 60, Athland
Crestview 53
'
Cola. Academy 64. Nowart&lt; Cath. 44
Cols. Big Walnut 78, COis. Watterson 61.
Cola. Brookhaven 75, Gall. Uarion-Franklln
54
CoiS. OeSalel77, Astw. . Teays Vlley ~ ·
Cots. Hamilton Township eo, New Allar'fiiM~
OT
Cots. Unden 68, Coli. Worla Hat"'lest "7
COli. wellington 60, Plain City Jonatnan
Alder 46
Convoy Crestview 66, Antwerp "5

Ohio High Sc:IM&gt;ol Boyo BPkotboll
Sunctay'a AMuft.
.
Akron St. Vlnceni·St . Mary 58, Akr. Buchtel 50

Slturday'a AMutta
Akr. E. 59, Uniontown Lake 53
Akr Fireston 68, Youngs. Aayen 6.1
Amanda·Ciearcraak 76, MI. Gilead 68

Conlana Maplewood 61 , Soulhlflg!On Chile·

Arcanum 72, Cartisle 69
Bal.a\lia 63 , Blanctlester 50
Bellville Clear Fork 56, Mansfield Temple
ChritJiian 44
Belmont Union Local 75, Belaire St JOhn's

er o18
Covington 82, Tlpp Clty TIJlPIC8.noe 64
Day. Christian 73, Day. Meldowdate 63
Day. COl. While 77, Sidney 62 ·
Da~. Dunbar 67, Tol. St. Franeis 60
Day. Northmont 80, New Cartlall Tecumseh

45

8e"'81'1y Fort Frye 39, Wat8fforcl35
Bloom-Carroll.70, Heath 48
Bnstolville 9ri1;tol 82, Ashtabula Sts. J&amp;P 46
Brooklyn 74 , Rocky River Lutheran W. 60
Bryan 69, Poland 57
Bucyrus Wvn10f"d 57;Bucyrus 47
Butler 67, Fairborn 45
campbell 59, Union 34
Can. GlenOak 60, Can. McKinley 59
Carey 90, Arcadia 66
Casstown Miami East 74, Newton 53
ChilliCOthe Huntington Ross 55, Piketon 45
Cin. Anderson 80, New Rlchmon&lt;f61
Cln. Christian 64, Cin. SCPA 45

64
Oay. Stebbins 65, Greerivllle 56
Defiance 48, Tol. Cent Cath. 47
Delaware Christian 55, Ol'llo Valley Christian
52
Doll Hardin Northern 71 , Ada .84
E. Cia. Sl1aw
8ecllord 68
t. L.iverpool84, Cia. Benedictine 72
Edgerton 63, Edon 55
Elida 63, $1. Henry 36
Elyria Ope11 Door 61 , Lorain Cat h. 58, OT
Fairfield 49, West Chester Lakota East 47 ·
Fairport Harbor Harding 69, Lordstown 62

12:

~L-- 83, Baocom

I.Dudon53

- S l - &amp; . I . T o i. Wollo58

n

FldlidOOwn 7i, N RcbiiiiiOn Col. CrawfOrd

FromontRooo4&amp;,Sondttll&lt;y37

The Giants managed only 86 ballgame," he 'said.
yards passing and 66 running.
All week long; the buzzsaw
They had 11 first downs, but · seeined trained on Lewis.
three of those were by penalties.
He gave his team a rallying
It was a total shutdown - an point, sitting through a tough,
exclamation point, Lewis said weeklong grilling from the
evidence that this defense is the
media after being on trial in the
best ever.
murder of two men in Atlanta
But, he said, it's not as good as following last year's Supet Bowl.
it can be.
He was often sullen, never
"You can always play better," repentant.
he said." Anytime we step on the
Lewis came to Tampa, hoping
field, we can always improve. to talk football, preferring to
You're going to be hit for 60 discuss a dominant Baltimore
minutes when you play us. We're defense that had set an NFL
going to have fun and smite."
record for a 16-game season by
Lewis, the Defensive Player of allowing only 165 points and
the Year, glowed as he talked then continued that in the play'
about the game.
offs by surrendering only one
"I'm 25 and I'm a world touchdown and 16 points in
champion," he said. "There is no three games.
feeling like this. My body is tinHe would have liked to talk
gling. We're world champions, about 12 tackles and an interanyway you look at it.
ception returned for a touch"If you can't put us down as down in the divisional playoff
the greatest defense in history against Tennessee, or seven tacknow, we'll never be. We domi- les and a fumble recovery in the
nated everybody we played."
AFC
championship
game
Lewis said the Ravens' defense against Oakland.
took the fire out of the Giants.
Instead, he was ·cross-exam"When you 've got a buzzsaw ined over and over about his
from all different directions trial. Coach Brian Billick and his
com.ing 01t you, it's a ditTerent players trie.;l to prote&lt;t the big

linebacker. tried to turn the
questioning away from · the
Atlanta affair.
The trial was over, they said.
Lewis had been acquitted, pleading guilty to a lesser charge. He
had be~fined $250,000 by the
league, a punishment he has
appealed. Now, move on and
leave the man alone.
Still, the interrogaiion continued, and Lewis - a floppy hat
puUed down tight over his fore. head- sat through them.
On Sunday, there were no
more questions, just a football.
game to be played. And Lewis
has never needed any protection
there.
"There is no emotion like
this," he said, "right now, to be
here after being where I was last

year."
He is the seventh defensive
player and first middle linebacker picked as Super Bowl
MVP. The previous defensive
winners were Chuck Howley,
Jake Scott, Randy White and
Harvey Martin, who shared the
award, Richard Dent and Larry
Brown.

.

GrlncMew 50, Colt. Tree ol Ule U
Grarwlll&amp; 56, JoMatown Norti"Mldgglt7
Groonwidl S. Cent. 73. London 50
Grove City (Pa.) George Junior Republic ~ .
Cln ..Withrow 58
Hlmlllon Rou 54, Cln. Nonhwelt 42
Haviland wayne Trace 64. Ft. Recovery 54
Hebron LakewOOd 50, Patukala Watkin&amp;
Momoi1al36
H11Mop 50, Liberty Center 45
Houslon 56, Ansonia 44
Huron 117, Cestalll Margaretta 43
ludepeudeuce 75, Beachwood 59
konton 63,, Melga 52

NapoleOn 70, Perrysburg 56
New Madison Tri·Village 7~. Preble Shawnee
53
New Mict_dletown Spring. 71 , Mineral Rldi;M
&lt;48
.
New Philadelphia 50. Navarre Fairless 45
Newark 51, Cola. Northland 36
Newark Licking VIII. 61 , Whitehall· YsariOQ
59
.
'
NewlOn Falla 68, G111ntttsvitte Gar1ield 47
Ontario 78, ShelbY 81
"'
Oregon Clay 75, ~ostorla 69
Ottawa Hila 64, Northwood 45

Jlmntown GrHneVtew 55, Spring.
Shawnee 34
Kllldl 59, Leipsle 47
Lancast~r Fisher Catholic 68. Hemlock Miller
38
leesburg Fail11tld 75, Sardinia Eastern
Brown.70
Lexington 57, Manalleld Madison 48
Lima C.nt. Cath. 52. Van Wert 38
Lima f'erry 63 Qt1ovilte SO
Uma Sr 72, Tot Start45
Lima Temple Christl an 56. Vanlue 43
L.lnsly (W. Va.) 55, Bexley- 52
Lorain Admiral King 67, Lorain South~iew 57
Lucuvilte Valley 63, Coal GrO\Ie Dawson·
Bryant 47
Manslield Chri&amp;lian 83, Galion Northmor 67
Manalleld Sr. 59, Ashland 49
Marion Harding 74, Vermilion 62

Wayne 38

Ravens
from PlpBl

"It's been a long time coming,"
Modell said. "There's a lot of
chemistry in ~his organization
~nd a lot oflove for each other.'.'
The game itself was impossible
to love if · you prefer efficient
offenses. Although Trent Dilfer
found backup wideout Brandon
Stokley behind Jason Sehorn for a
38-yard touchdown in the first
quarter, Dilfer also was scatter~med. One second-quarter pass
weQt directly to Giants linebacker
Jessie Armstead, who ran it into
the end zone. But the Giants'
Keith Hamilton was caUed for
holding, negating the game-tying
interception TD.
Baltimore·; · two receivers beas
Sehorn deep, but either Dilfer's
pass missed or the ball was
dropped. There were 21 punts, six
more than the previous record.
lind although rookie Jamal
Le,yis rushed for 102 yards ,.few
came when the issue was in
do,ibt.
J::&lt;o, this was a game for defense
and special teams, something represented best by a 36-second span
of !he third quarter in which 21
pQin ts were scored.
.; puane Starks steppe&lt;;! in front

01tawa.Qiandort 54, l'v'lltohouse AnthOny

Peninsula Lake Ridge 49, The Village 34
Ptckerlnoton 54, WettiHVItl~ S. 50
1
Piqua 41 , St, Marys Memorial 46
Port Clinton 71 1 SanduSky Parldna 52' "'
. Portsmouth 49, McArthur Vlnlon County !8
AichmoncfHta. 45, CuyahOga Hta. 41 .
Aoddorcl Parkway 55, Van Wert Uncoh;Mew

43
Scioto McDermott NW 55, Portsmouth Wt 44
Shaker HIS. 67 , eta. HIS. 65
Shekinat"i 7 I , Ktdron Central Chr. 53
Sparta Highland 67, Centerburg 52
SpetiCeNUie 66, New Bremen 58
Spring. Cath. Cent 66, Greenan 61
51. Paris Graham 73, Spring. NW 64
Tallam&amp;dge 90, Rootstown 52
Tol. Emmanuel Baptist 74, Aldge._.ille Chllsl·
ian 46

of Amani Toomer at the New
· York 49 and sped untouched to
the end zone to make it 17-0
with 3:49 left in the period. •
" But Dixon, a rookie who ;i\5o
had a 97-yard kick return score to
open the playoff victory over
Philadelphia, raced the same distance for the Giants' first - and
only - touchdown. ·
Jermaine Lewis ·answered 18
seconds 4ter by going 84 yards to
make it 24-7.
"The emotional' swing of, the
game at that point, you could see
it on their side," Ravens coach
Brian Billick said. "When Jermaine took it back the other
it was more dramatic. .. : '!'he
emotional flip-flop, even thou~h
the points were the same, f think
had to be devastating to them."
Jamal Lewis scored on a 3-yard
run and Matt Stover, who earlier
hit a 47-yard field goal, made a
34-yarder to dose the scoring. ·
Not that the Ravens, ' who
became the third team to take. the
wild-card route to the title r n;eded that many P.oints. · •:
"I told Shannon (Sharpe) to
get us 10 points and that would
be enough," Ray Lewis said.'' 1At
halftime, I told him they did' their
job and we would do the rest~'
When you anchor the hest
r
' ' &lt;
de1ense, you can mak¢··,
s~dl
promist!s.

W.y,

Pope, Mohler reach milestones in Redwomen
win
.
'

Pope scored her I,OOOth point
earlier this season, while Mohler
pulled down her
I ,OOOth
rebound.
Rio Grande (16~9. AMC 7-5)
got · big games fiom Pope (24
points, 12 rebounds), Kassie
Kendall (18 points, 10 rebounds)
and Emily Cooper (18 points, 9

BY MARK WILLIAMS
URG SID

RIO GRANDE - On a day
that senio rs Mindy Pope and Karley Mohle r rL~c eived commemorative ba s kro:tb:~ll s for ca,rcc r reaching milestones the Rio Grande
women's b"skctbatl rolled to a 9780 vi ctory over.. Tiffin on Saturday.

Carter

flom PageBl

1
·I

Ravens defense when Eddie George gave the
Titans ·a short-lived lead in the AFC divisional playoff game . The Ravens defense surrendered just 19
pomr. m the playoffs, while the team gave 1,1p only
26 points through four games.
·
Special teams and defense accounted for most of
the Ravens scoring in the playoffs, and it was no different in Super Bowl XXXV.Jermaine Lewis took a
kickoff back for a score after cornerback Duane
Starks picked off a pass and returned it for a .score
during a flurry that saw three touchdowns in 36

seconds.
As much as this year's Super Bowl showcased the
strengths of the R avens, it also unmasked the Giants
shortcomings, and displayed that parity is alive and
well in the National...Football ... League.
Following last year's Super Bowl, and in the wake
of one of the most dominating regular season performances in NFL history, many pundits crowned
St. Louis ·cmpt&gt;mr of the new millennium in [he
NFL. However, thanks to good old parity (Pete

'

assists) en route to the triumph .
Nicole Bauer scored I 5 points
and Renee Turley added II
points and eight assists. Mohler
grabbed 10 rebounds.
Tiffin (8-11,AMC 5-6) was led
by Nicki King with 19 points.
Laura Goins added 13 points and
recorded four steals.

Rozell's dream), and the fickle finger of fate, the
Rams barely made the playoffs this year and were
quickly eliminated.
'
The new king was dead.
In many ways, Super Bowl XXXV was refreshing ·
for the so-called football purists (myself included)
who enjoy watching dominating defense and old
school, smash-mouth football. Baltimore never
allowed the Giants offense to get untracked and
eventually forced five turnovers, including four
intet;;:eptions by quarterback Kerry Collins.
For many Cleveland Browns fans, though, Baltimore's victory is a bitter pill to swallo\v. After all, it
was the evil Art Modell (aka the great satan of the
North Coast)' who stole their team and took it to
Baltimore.
· Realistically, what Modell did was barter a better
deal for his club than he was getting in Cleveland.
Modell wanted to win, and he knew he couldn't do
it in Cleveland.
In the end, it w'as the better team that won Super
Bowl XXXV. The key word here is "team."
The Ravens victory was a total team victory, as
they say. No one stood out. Different players came
up with big plays in key situations. It was truly a victory for good old team ethic.
·

•
• •

.

•

·-------.----.
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r-----------------,
wheel alignment . 1
I
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95
95
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1 2·wheel
. 4-wh•el
1 1 advertised price on the same tire. 1 • ·

Meigs

from Page Bl
St,\atS with eight, Lewi.&lt; added

seven and BulJington six: Meit,rs
had 13 ste:tls, led by Bullington
with five, 12 turnovers ;111d 12
assists with Bullington and Buzzy
Fackler getting two c•ach .
Marauder coach Carl Wolfe
kept the Marauders fresh in the

~

.

" I'm really proud of the kids,"
Wolfe said 01ftcr the contest.
"Especially ror the ,second half,
we ar~ learning more .1bom tlu~c
kids ewryday. Maybe we should
have been played like this all
along. Everybody was emhuscd
in the second half, both on the
bt!nch and on the floor." ·
Wolfe wenc on to comment
about Saturday's crowd.

"I hope the fans don't giw up
on tht'se kids , we have six gan"h.'S
left. The coaches .md the kids
&lt;~ppr&lt;riJtc·
what they
did
tonight."

1

Check ond lldjull Cll!llber ond loll. Additional paral
ond labor may be roqulrlld on IOfiM1 VllllciH. I

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1$1995
· Motorcraft
1
1
Fast Lube
1
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I Perform Mu~l·Polnt Vehicle lnsp8ctfon i
I Check and flll necessarY fluids • All In 21lj
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Melp County's

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.

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

in Pa

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PAGEVILLE - Four are dead following· Monday morn!ng trailer fire
near Pagevi!le.
The Meigs County SherifPs office
said the remains ofiwo women and two
girls were recovered from a mobile
home on Goose Creek Road, following
a fire that destroyed the trailer.
The sheriff's department received a

a

Cou

FROM STAFF REPORTS

.,

we

health."

varsity contest by
Cril1g Lewis. cd the w·nncrs with
14 points Chris·. •tlins addc·d
12. For Me' . " 'aniel Lambert
scored 13, M"tt Lewis ;1ddcd 10.
Meigs (IJ-14) will play host to
Wellston on Tuesday.

Bv CHARi !W IIDtatucH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•
FIRE TRAINING ..,. Volunteer firef)ghtars from Pomeroy and New H~~ven Jearn the proper way to adVance toward a working
fire dunng the firefighter training session held recet]tiY at AEP's Sporn Plant. (Submitted photo)

Sporn i.ncludes firefighters in training
' .

"u-1! schedule it that way so
that we can make it available

FROM STAFF REPORTS

EW

HAVEN,

recently umted .a num~ onx:al, ~ inside a'' spccia)ly ·equipped 48-foot·
departmcnts ~ ~ part in specialized · long ttaner.
firefi~ter tmrung under conttolled
'Il:mperitures inside the trailer comcondi~~ ~ th~ plant, ~e. of c~. . IJIOnly reach ~00 to 700 degrees during
~c1paung m the tnlnlllg exercue .the exercise, just as they do in an actual
. this year were firefit!htcn born the house fire .
Members 'of Sporn staff and rcpresenMason, New Haven ~d Point Pleasant,W.V..., volunteer fire deJ&gt;aflW,~Is ·and tatives of Rural/Metro, the company
members of the Gallipoli~, ~me~ . which provides training for Sporn's
and Middleport departmentsj!n Ohio.
employee fire brigades, c&lt;ionlinated the
To gain familiarity. With ,Jndustrial ·event and provided the hands-on

d

tWQ-day meeting on i n policy Thesday.·An anna~
of the policy-makers' decision' on
rates is expected Wednesday after.,
noqn.
.
A
Zandi, other economists an~·
Wall Street expect the Fed afi:e~

pRiidena of the betw.t naw and tlien, economilll
.
Fed's regional bank, opens a private saki. '

..

instruction for the local firefighters.
"Most volunteer fire . departments
simply don't have access to training
opportunities like this," said Greg Powers, safety and health supervisor at
Sporn. "They operate on limited budgets, so they don't have the finances or
the facilities to conduct this type of

W.Va.- Generat- as many volunteer firiftgh.ters
ing electricity may
as possible."
be the primary .
mission of AEP's
a..t Cililg
Phillip Sporn Plant, but boosting
.
1
.
the skills of volunt~e,! _ firefi~ten lim, meml:lm ofthe loc.al departme~ts practice."
"'It's not a great expense for us
in Mei~, M~so11 and q~ , b;Ckled ~ ~u~. ~ fueled by ~q- be~ause.
we already have the
. ·' be · •
'd li
41"\Jidlp\'t;p~ pt. lb.praCtice cxnnguuhT
counttes IS · conung a ~ e ne.. f ing ·h~~~ lim and ..escwng the inhabi~ Rural/ Metto trainers, their trailer and
· For th~ f~urth year in a row, S~., . tants, .~ Wghter's battled a blaze t!teir LP gas props set up to train our
own firefighters here at the plant. We
just arrange ·for them to be here an
extra day," he added.
Gilbert Craig, fire protection coordinator at Sporn, said the training takes
place between 1 and 8 p.m.
"We schedule it that way so that we
cap. malce it available as many volunteer
firefighters as possible," Craig said.

"

·Anatyg:s exped.Fed rate·c .·*

Greensp~n, and

l~s .

or2001

,I .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Worried that the economy may be
stalling, federal Reserve Board
Chairman Alan Greenspan is tikdy
' to push for another bold half-point

on

·
undWork

·c .r

~he junior
a 5(1-~3 score.

and investigators found a wood stove, a first grade at Harrisonville Elementary
kerosene heater and a space heater School last week.
Cause of the fire is believed to have
inside the home.
The vi ctims have not been identi- originated near a heating source inside
fied, and will not be identified until the . the trailer but has yet to be officially
next · of kin are notified, said Meigs dhermined. T\le incident is still being
investigated by the state fire marshal,
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell..
However, Meigs Local School Dis- who was on the scene with investigators into the late hours of Monday
trict Superintendent Bill Buckley told
evemng.
the Columbus Dispatch that the two
,.,... _ ......... A:s
children had started kindergarten and

goes
smoke-free
POMEROY -The Meigs
~ounty Multipurpose Building on Memorial Drive
became a smoke-free fa.cility
Monday. ·
The Meigs County Council
on Aging, Meigs County
Health Department, · Meigs
!;;ounty Tuberculosis Clinic,
Treatment Alternatives to
St&gt;eet Crimes, and Woodland
Centers 1 housed in the county-owned building, have all
signed a resolution designating the center a smoke-free
facility.
The Board of Health took
action recently to enforce a
smoke-free policy for the
multipurpose building 'to be
in compliance wfth Public
Law 103-227, also known as
the Pro-Children Act of 1994.
Making the building a
smoke-free facility is a part of
a.program geiired to achieving
better health through smok. ing reduction ..
Tracey O'Dell, R. N.,
Tobacco Prevention Program
coordinator at the Health
Department, said Meigs
County is in a section of the
state · where smoking seems
more acceptable, where the
age when smoking begins is .
younger and where there
seems to be somewhat of a '
lack of concern about smoking, iis role in disease, detriment to the unborn, and dan-·
ger to those in !he line of sec·ond-hand ·smoke.
"By enforcing !he policy,
the Board of Health continues
to be in compliance with both
· federal and state requirements:' O'Dell said.
"By doing this
help
promote and protect the community liom disease and
injury which follows the mission statement of public

Cenh

etrai

call from a school bus driver at 6:44
Cause of the fire is believed to
a.m . about a possible trailer fire near
have origina.ted near a heating
Pageville.
source inside the trailer.
When firefighters arrived on the
scene, the mobile home was engulfed in
the mobile home," said Davis. "The
flames and no signs of the trailer's residents were evident, acco(ding to Rut- remains of the victims were discovered
only after the fire had been extinland Fire Chief David Davis.
.. There were no immediate rescue . guished." ·
attempts made because firefighters had
The bodies were found lying on
n9 information that anyone was insid~ matresses in the trailer's living room,

That\ what private analysts are Wednesday's meeting to announce
predicting in !he wake of reduction ofhalf a percentage point
Greenspan's assertion to Congress . in the federal funds rate, the imerest
last week that economic growth at banks charge eaeh other, trom 6
is probably ''very . close to percent to s.sp percent.
Economists don't believe that
"
"That was ·a strong ~essage ... will be the last ~;ate cut.
In coming months, economists
that he will continue to be aggres' sive in easing monetary policy." said predict the funds rate will drop to 5
~ Za,n.di, chief ~c,ononiist for percent in a series of rate-cutting
moves by May or June. Fed policyEcl1t\'om.y.'c6m, a consUlting 6rm.
The Federal Open Market makers could decide to pwh the
Committee, comprising Feb board funds rate even lower, depending
membq~ in Washington, including on h\JW the economy unfolds

The Tigers also won

so

Building

grQWth.

..I

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. NumbPr 171

intetat: rate cut to try to rev up

-.

•

•

•'

I

~ecop'~ half, by substi~Lttmg five 01t

•,

-.-

I
I

·

t.bi'J U 80, Gomlm Fayette 60
J.tow~n llo'l-70. Hilltboro 68, OT
111. Blonchord Riverdale 69, uppers~
Valley 65
N. Can. Hoover 67, Youngs. Boardrnln iB ·
N. Royoltoo 70, Parma Valley Forgo 48 •

January 30, 1001

•

......... Ploalort 71 , Marton River Volloy 66
lloryovllloSS, t..w;oCenlorQienlangyS5

Fl Jennii'IDI63, New KMxvile 58
Gal1anna SS, Or.- TrHIIIloy 49
Gallon 4&amp;, C1o. e. Tech 44
Galoo Millo Gimour 15, Columbia 63, 2 Or
Germantown Vdl~ View 72, LfNT"'Ino-Monloe
41

Lewis leads Ravens to championsh.ip
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) ~ As Ray
Lewis came o ut of th ~ tunnel
before the Super Bowl began, he
followed a season-long ritual:
He scooped up a few blades of
grass from Raymond James Stadium.
"That 's a symbol," Lewis said.
"This is our turf."
And hmy.
Lewis led a Baltimore 'd efensive charge that bottled up the
New York Giants in a 34- 7 rout.
He seemed to be everywhere
- stuffing running plays, helping the secondary, deflecting a
couple of passes, including one
that turned into an interception,
and making five tackles. He was
a constant presence on defense,
one New York was never able to
avoid. It earned him the MVP
award.
The Ravens' defense established itself early. Lewis recalled
the seque-nce of New York possessiOns that told him this would
be Baltimore's game.
"Thn·c and out. Three aQd
out. Thrc-~.~ and out. You got
problems the r.•st o f the dav," he·
said.
·
Indeed they Jtd .

Details, A3

l.tlomlllalloy81 , 8ra&lt;JonU3 ·
M'&lt; 5 town 55, HlmHton 53
Miler CMv &gt;13. HolgoiO ~
- 1 1 , SldnoyLohman31

Tuesday

Community news and notes, AS
Eastern crushes South Gallia, B1

WednHCIIIJ
Hlp: 401; Low: 40s

Sentinel
2 S1tiiDM- 12 P1111
cla11iflcda
~~um,.

Edibtdlll

.

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Spgua
~,

.._

mittees.
She said that only two centers in Ohio are
now accredited. It was announced that the Area
Agency on Aging has .a new director, Joetta
Lane.
The board voted to made the center a
smoke-free facility as recommended by the
Meigs County Board of Health.·A report, was
given on the work ofJoy Bendey as fitness cen-

PI 111- C1•r' .... A:s

Medicaid·cost means less for oth• aplldes

. d .I
'll-dlfl

Clltoda&amp;:

)ll·nse- Spa.._ ..... A:s

POMEROY .- Anticipated income and
expenditures for 2001 were reviewed and committee assignments were made during Ian
week's meeting of the board of trUstees of the
Meigs County Council on Aging.
Projected expenses for the year total
$1,130,649, according to reports presented by
Joyce Bunch, interim fiscal director. She
reviewed anticipated sources of income for the
year and gave an end-of-the year update during
the meetifll!, conducted by Catherine Shenefield, president.
During the meeting, Bunch was appointed
fiscal director for the agency. She ~served as
interim director since the resignation of Scott
Dillon several months ago.
It was noted that a fiscal assiStant position bas
been posted.
Gina Pines and Charlene Hoeflich, new
board members, were welcomed and committees were appointed as follows: personnel and
finance, Paul Kloes, chairman, Joann Corder
and Mick Davenport; nominating, Davenport,
chairman, Pines and Maxine Gaskill; policies
and procedures, jennifer Sheets, chairman,
Becky Baer and Pines; progn.m and evaluation,
Helen Swartz, chairman, Joann May and Hoeflich; special events, Baer, Gaskill, Sara Gibbs
and Hoeflich; and regional council, Shenefield,
May, Swartz and Davenport.
The executive committee is composed of the
officers, Shenefield, president; Davenport, first
Vice president; May, second vice p~sident;
Swartz, s~cretary; and Corder, treasurer.
Susan -Oliver,. executive director, reported on
the Senior Center accreditation process and
commended members fur their work on com-

A5

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D5
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4.1
Dl.J.Ii
AJ

Lotteries
OHJO
Pick 3: 3-8-4; Pick 4: 4-3-4-7
Btv 1 .,. 5:7-18-24-31..33

'\IWA.
n.IIy l: 3-7-7 0.0,. 4: 5-4-2-9

COLUMBUS (AP) - The cost of the Medicaid
program · for low-income families continues to
increase, but more predictably than it did last year, state
officials said Monday as they roUed out Gov. Bob Taft's
$45 billio~ budget for the next two years.
Tali: in November ordered agency cuts of2 percent
to 4 percent for the rest of the budget year that ends
June 30 to pay for a S249 billion l&gt;ailout of the feder- ·
al-st:tte health care program. Budget writers said Monday that a bailout should not occur in the next two fiscal years.
UnderTafi:'s budget, the state will spend $14.5 billion on Medicaid in the two years beginning July 1.
The state's .share of the healthccare plan is $5.98 billion.
The federal government pay. the rest. About l.l million Ohioans take part in the program.
. Tafi: cited Medicaid as a primary reason he has given
most state agencies an average 0.8 percent increase in
the next budget year, and 3.4 percent in the year after
that. Bqdgets for those agencies don't reflect spending
on Medicaid, education, prisons or the cost of Ohio's

debt.

.
M tir.P' apencling is projected. to increase 7.7 per-

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

UtJder Taft's budget, the $late wl.ll1pend
$14.5 billion on Medicaid itt the two
years beginning July 1.
cent in the budget year beginning July I, and 7.2 percent the year after that.
State official. blamed the bailout, which also included $398 million in tederal money, on inflation in the
health care industry, the high cost of care fur the elderly and the disabled, and the re-registr.ttioil of patients
who improperly had been rCI1lO\Ied fi:om the tolb.
Tim Keen, assistant State budget director, said the
patient roDs should Slabitize and budpt hecam::ts
have a better idea this.year of what costs wiD be.
"At this point, we feel that we've lakcn that into
account,'' Keen said. "I beliCM: that we
need 10
go for additiOnal appropriations."
Agencies still are preparini pl1ns to iuJFiement the
low-growth budget. For -mp1e. some unemployment offices may close. Taft said. He hopes that ·
agencies can reduce staffing level! tbrouab llltlition and'
withobt layofli.
•

·---·~-----------------.

won'

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