<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7894" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7894?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:18:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18307">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/081d14225302a3c5b8620a11f7c5aa54.pdf</src>
      <authentication>52049368c06f1839402ac632b159ba22</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25631">
                  <text>Hlp: 501;

=:=

Southern High School page, A7
Ohio tops Rio; NFL action, B1

Details, A3

I

Friday
November 24, 2000

•
Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 126

so

DARE
officer
evaluates
·program
I

Htbod to return
to road work

\
\

\

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY -After nearly seven years on the ·job,
Meigs County's DARE officer
will soon return to roupne bw
enforcement work, but he and
Sheriff James M. Soulsby consider the program a success.
Mony Wood was hired to
oversee the
county's
DARE
(Drug Abuse
Resistence
Education)
program tn
January
1994.
Beginning
with
' the
Wood
1994-95
school year, Wood taught the
official DARE curriculum to
the students in all of Meigs
County's sixth grade classrooms.
He also has helped Gallia
County SheriffJames Taylor to
teach DARE in Gallia County.
In the period following his
appointment, he was also
appointed by the Ohio Attorney General to the DARE
Advisory ·Board, which determines how much grant money
is awarded, and to which
counties receives the fun4ing.
He has also served on the
DARE hiring board, which
evaluates all officers interested
in working in the DARE program.
As a part of his training,
Wood has attended several
basic narcotics · investigation
classes, where he was taught
about different types of drugs,
and the effects they have on
the human body.
He has also received a number of certifications from the
prosecutor, and has taken the
DARE message to the general
public through a number of
events and programs:
Early Intervention, Child
Safety Week, Red Ribbon
. Week, Career Days, marijuana
cultivation investigation, abstinence education -program, the
Meigs County Family Fun
Fest, Veterans of Foreign Wars
and curriculum training in elementary, junior high and middle schools in Meigs County.

Ple•se see DARE, Pe1e Al

Southem
School I
passes
to 1,119.
The levy renewal was down
by four votes after the Nov. 7
general election, with an official vote tally of 1, 104 against,
and 1,100 for.'
· The levy, which was ongJnally approved in 1991 and
renewed in both 1994 and
1997, will help pay for expenses such as utilities, equipment,
FROM STAFF REPORTS
supplies,
textbooks, and teacher
RACINE
Southern
Local's three-year four mill benefits.
According to Meigs County
operating levy, which would
assist in the funding of expens- Auditor Nancy Parker Campes resulting
bell, the levy
from general
will
provide
f/t, ICI') ol l 'tl'''li ,/'1
school operdistrict
do !I'll h)• 11· It'll' Itt, the
ations,
has
with
about
th~
tJI', • IIC/l('l'tl{
been
$23 7,626 durrenewed, fol-lntion, ll'•t'' ,m o{ii."t 1 ing each year
lowing the
,,i/Ir •• , 1 toJ
of its co1lccofficial count
,/~IIi
liS(, 'lid I, /(I(}
tion.
of
ballots
In . 19\l!l, votconducted
1lzc I •') 1t 11 , /1 ''"'
ers approwd J
by the Meigs
t' i~i•l,!li} •'!'1''•'1 cd 111
5.39 lnl ll b"illl
County
J99J ollld Jl'lf•ll't&lt;l Ill
Board
of
issue tor t\;
llotlr JIJ'JJ olrld 997,
Elections on
cons~n •· t"'' ,.
,,.,,!hell' I'')' /t•l'
Wednesday.
a new 1, ~
WednesI 'I (./1.1,• ·'Ill h ,l
rnentarv bt
day's official
ing to b, l'
uti/it~&lt;·~., •fll't'''
count
ed in R.l &lt;...
tb(l(l
included
a •llf'P"· '•
Afte1 C&lt;H ll
/Uitf!IJ /;(Ill I
number of

Provisional
ballots prove
to be factor in
levy~ fate

/1

.~

,.p,,

f•'l'.

II'

Dave Freeman and George Vincent hang Christmas wreaths and lights Wednesday morning on Court Street
in preparation for the upcoming holiday season. Freeman and Vincent, along with George Wright and Dale
Riffle, spent a majority of the week hanging ornaments and decorations throughout Pomeroy for Meigs
County residents to enjoy. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·
·

provisional
ballots that had not been
counted during the general
election on Nov. 7.
The overall count, once finished, revealed that the levy
had passed by a vote of 1,130

pletinl:'
Wednesday's official count, the
Board of Elections reported
that no other changes in the
outcomes of the general clection's r.aces occurred.

Higher math scores target of after-school program
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

IDDLEPORT A
county-wide
effort to improve
elementary math
scores, funded through the Meigs
County Department of Job and
Family Services, has entered its
sec d school year, and prelimiy evaluations indicate that the
program is successful.
The Athens/Meigs Educational Service Center administers the
program in each of the 'county's
three local school districts, two
days a week, for an hour-and-ahalf each day.
The program is offered to
approximately 300 qualifYing stu-

M

· dents in grades one through eight
at each of the county's elemen- '
tary schools, with a goal of
improving performance on the
mathematics portion of the Ohio
Proficiency Tests by "at-risk" students.
Students who meet income
guidelines 200 percent of
poverty level are eligible to ·
participate in the program, and
other students who need assistance are also included, although
the DJFS does not pick up the
cost for those students.
In a propos;U submitted to the
commissioners by the ESC, the
math performance of the students
is low because "they lack (1) basic
skills, (2) problem solving skills,

EXTRA
ATTENTION-

(3) geometry, (4) algebra and (5)
measurement skills."
Math programs, like other curricula, change with the times. The
math program taught in the local
school systems emphasize problem-solving techniques, developing reasoning skills and giving
students enough information to
solve the problems using those
skills.
According to Doris Well,
Meigs County elementary supervisor for the ESC, mathematics
scores are a problem for elementary-age students, not only in
Meigs County, but across the
state.

Emma Ashley,
one of two teach·
ers overseeing
the county's afterschool math program at Middleport Elementary
School, is pic·
tured working
with students on
their math skills.
The county-wide
program uses
enrichment activities and one-onone attention to
reinforce math
skills. (Brian J.
Reed photo)

Pleese see Scores, P•l• Al
,__.-

Christmas theater
Brian Howard, Sharon
Sayre, Emma Perrin
and Brandon Mahr, as
the Innkeeper and his
family, are among the
performers in ·One
Bethlehem Night," a
music~\ dinner theater
to be presented by
Middleport Church of
Christ on Dec. 15-16.
All tickets for the dinner.theater have been
sold, but an encore
presentation will be
given Dec. 17 at 7
p.m. The "Broadwaystyle" production will
be directed by Amy
Perrin. Information is
available by calling
992-2914, 992-7396
or 992-6759. (Brian J.
Reed photo)

Cents

Toclay's

Sentinel
:z

.Blues and Jazz Society planning I
I
for another year of success

Sections - 16 Paps

Cal~nd!lr
Classified~
· Comis;~

EditQri!ll~

Obituaries
Sp2rt3
:W'@l!th~r

AS
B~-~

BZ
M
AJ
Bl-J,S
AJ

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 2-0-2 Pick 4: 4-9-6-7
Buckeye 5: 10-16-17-27-30

WYA,
Daily 3:0-1-6 Daily 4: 4-6-2-7
&lt;" 2tH.IO Ohw Vo~ll&lt;" y l'uhh ~ hin~o~ C n

BY TONY

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -After celebrating a successful first year in existence, The Pomeroy Blues and
Jazz Society recently announced
its plans and activities for the
summer of 200 I.
The appreciation society was
founded Feb. 24 and is committed to the sponsorship and promotion of live blues and jazz
mUSIC.

The founding members of
PB&amp;J consist of local businessn~en Jackie Welker, Mike Lindskold and Steve Hawk, and
Pomeroy attorney Christopher
Tenoglia, who feel that live music
should be nurtured and presented
in a format that all can enjoy.
According to Welker, the soci-

•'

•

M. LEACH

I lit

fl ,f' /If'
I.

i&lt;

•'1'] 111 lol 1 l(

fjl//•,f 1 1

tf&gt;fJPP

'f'OII.\111
IJJ'Il/1/(lfittl/

It

1

d

,foil'
(1/

t

1

l I

//1'(

I "'
I I

"''I

...

'

_ .)

'

~

tlild ,,,.- ""''' '

ety's Summer Concert Series was
such a success this year that they
immediately
began
making
preparations for more concerts
and activities in 20(ll .
·
"We\ were totally shocked with
the turnout that these concerts
produced," said Welker. "We had
people attending from all of the
state, as well as individuals from

\

•

days until
.1 nstmas
f

I"

&gt;rPt

ll/

,

_ , _ c _71t

t..l'

1\~•drtln 11!•

jiQ '1~\•

Pie••• see PB&amp;J, Pille AJ

'

�•

'
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio '

Fnda~Nov~ber24,2000

'· Page A I • The Dilly lentlntl

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

.
..

jellied cnnberrin, 48 pounds of
green beans and about 10 gallorn of gravy. About 30 loaves of
btead wete used for the dressing.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Drug
Jenkins and Butera, cooks at
Emporium is in danger ofbeing the jail, on Tuesday began getbooted olf the Nasdaq stock
ring six, 25-pound turkeys ready
market because its stock feU
for Thanksgiving as pm of a
below S I a share for 30 straight
long tradition of providing prisdays.
The stock, which trades as onen with traditional ThanksDEMP, will be delisted J:m. 26 if giving and Christmas dinners.
It aU began with the late Ted
it does not trade for at least Sl
a jailer whose passion
Maragos,
for I 0 consecutive day5. Nasdaq
was providing · a home-cooked
said Wednesday.
The drug sto"' chain, hea&lt;!- meal for those people who
. qume"'d in subwban PoweU, found themselves behind bars at
said in a prepared statement it is the holidays.
"looking into all possible
The Thanksgiving dinner is a
avenues to meet the tninimum chance for Sheri[ Fred AbdaUa
requirements to remain listed."
to give adult and juvenile prisDrug Emporium's stock oners a holiday meal"as good as
'; closed Wednesday at 37 cents, what they ger •.r home."
' down fro1.11 more than $5 in
"They are human being; and
' March.
should be treated as such,"
Delisting the stock would
AbdaUa said.
have. litde immediate impact on
The prisoners appreciate the
the company's operations but
feast.
likely would make it more diffi"We get little thank-you notes
cult for the company' to attract
back from the prisonen saying
\OVeS[Ors.
The development is the latest how much they enjoyed the
m a string of bad news for the dinner," Jenlcins said.
company.
Drug Emporium announced
last summer that'it was seUing its
online drug;tore to HealthCentral.com after losing millions on
KETTERING
(AP)
the venture. That sale was conTurkey,
stuffing,
cranberry
sauce,
. summated in September in a
. deal valued at S3 miUion - a gravy, buttery mashed potatoes,
fraction of the S17 million deal pumpkin pie. Americans sat
down to traditional ThanksgivongmaUy announced.
Drug Emporium owns and ing meals Thursday. And then
operates 132 stores under three came' the usual laments Over
names: Drug Emporium, F&amp;M stomach aches and the extra
Super Drug Stores andVix Drug pounds.
Stores. The company also franBut some sought to head off
chises another 38 Drug Empo- their post-meal lethargy with a
rmm scores.
pre-emptive attack the
The company posted $904 Thanksgiving Day Turkey Blast,
million in sales for its most
an hour-long morning aerobics
recent fiscal year, an 8 percent
class.
, increase over the previous year,
· About 50 sweaty; red-faced
but lost $28 million. The chain,
people
in this Dayton suburb
whtch employs 5,500, has closed
or sold I 0 stores in the last year vigorously · stepped to holiday
m an effort to improve finances. hits like "Santa Claus is Coming

Chain faces
dellstlnc thr11t

For some, holiday
a.workout

to Town."'

Leftoven?
recycled
(AP)- Dog ownmay not like giving table
scraps to their pets, but Rover
may have already eaten pieces of
, Thanksgiving
turkeys
left
behind at the processing pbnt.
"It's that environmental stewardship thing," said National
Turkey Federation spokeswoman Sherrie Rosenblatt told
The Blade for a story published
' Friday.
"Everything goes somewhere,
whether it's being recycled for
pet food or compoating or boats
and balta and evcm Indian ccnt\lm~~." 1hP •ilid.
VL.J:Ouv

th~ UnitPII Sf!lt~•
rrodll€~d mgrQ than 6.9 b1\liDn
pnllmk of llw lmk~ry", but I•••

· In 1\199,

S.J billion pound• ileiiiAIIy
1\'~ro !Old AI fOildy·tO•eook
~r~oy1, aeeordinll m tho fedarA·

()Mn

rign,

.

L~l'tover bone1, head!, feet,
~nd innarch were moat likely

"Think about the turkey!"
shouted their workout leader,
Heather Seibert-Balser, 28. "Get
that gravy right there!" she said,
pointing to her own slim thigh .
Seibert-Balser's mother, 51year-old Karen Seibert, has been
leading the Thanksgiving work·
out with her three daughters for
10 years at Gem Fitness.
But this year, Seibert-Balser
and her sisters, Paula Seibert, 25,
and Amy Kronour, 30, were left
to lead the workout on the];
own. Their mother had to
'attend to a family medical
emergency,
"We have a Chri1tma1 tape
that we've boon "'ln11 for yem,
and everybody lovoa h," 11ld
Soibori=BAI!or, "Bill M!lm hRa il
IPmowhom = we nmltln'l ~nd

it , Wv WQro up Ylllll I:30 lan

ni1Jlll punin11 nuff IO!!Oihor =
balleally hnprovi!IHI!,"
Ilut Tlah and llrnlr ford didn't 1ecm to mind,

Black civil rlptl lfOUp to boycott white
CINCINNATI (AP) -A =endy formed
black civil rights organization is initiating a
boycott of white-owned shops and restaurants
following the deaths of twO black men in
police custody.
The Cincinnati Black United Front said it
will embarrass the city until blacks are treated
fairly. The boycott is to start Friday and end
Jan. 7, the last day of Kwanzaa.
"We have fuund it necessary to take these
actions due to the blatant disrespect the city of
Cincinnati continues to show African-Americans," said the Rev. Damon Lynch Ill, chairman of the organiution.
Protesters say they are tired ofbeing targeted by police. Since 1995, 13 people - aU

'

CINCINNATI (AP) -A proposed new U.S. Postal Service mail
processing hub is drawing complaints from residents who are
concerned · about parking, noise
and fumes that might result from
the new facility.
Roselawn neighborhood residents got their first look at the
project's site plan last week. They
said the design places too much
parking near surrounding hous!"
and lacks adequate buffers to
decrease noise. They also are concerned about diesel fumes from
long-distance, mail-hauling trucks
that could be left running aU night
during cold weather.
"In every area of urban sociology I know, you don't put industria] areas next to residential areas,"

said resident Caryl Fullman.
Cynthia Shafer, Rosela~
Community Council president,
said an environmental impact
study will be conipleted before

Deal for
deparbnent
store dead,
for now
CINCINNATI (AP) -Nordstrom Inc. is backing out of a proposed S48.7 million deal with the
city to build a department store
on prime city-owned downtown
property.
The Seattle-based retailer said
Wednesday it was putting off for
at least a year any further discussions about the store. But Mayor
Charlie Luken •aid, "The deal i1
deAd, · Nordmom'1 hu pulled
OYI." he lllld City Cuundl.
NPrdumml boftrd Qf diro~um
nn '1\•~~tl~y d~fidod 111 1mp~ml
inddinit~ly

tnlk!

011

: West Virginia. Virgima and Ken·.• rue ky."
~
.. It was definiccly J pleasaut
. . surprise," he added.
'·
Welker said that the 200 I
~ Summer
Concert
Series
'· ''Rhythm on the River" will still
take place on at the Pomeroy

q;t.q;t.q;t.q;t.q;t.

Stop In f!ur Lobby For
Cooktes &amp; Punch
Or just To Visit

Amphitheater and, a'\ &lt;~lw.tys, is

~Bank!n~···
FB

FarmersBank

free to the public.
•

Q

Mill

.a: Sovtngs Company

"We're trying to lay the foundatioh for .a strong music and art
• scene here in · Pomeroy," said
· ~ Welker. " With Jorma 's guitar
'" 'eamp located within Meigs
.;County and our society's pres·. ·ence starting to be fdt, I fc·d that
· we are off ~o a good ~tart."
Jorma Kaukonen , form~r gui-.
tarist for the popular 1960s rock
and roll band Jefferson Airplane
and ;t member of the Rnl·k and
Roll Hall of Fame, is the owner
ofThe Fur Peace Ranch. a ~u itar
instru ction camp loc .1tcd tH: ar
Darwin that consists of a yearround restaurant, concert hall and·
a fully functional 32-channel
recording studio, as well as I 6
double occupancy cabins.
There will be a total of fi,·c
concert perform.1nce:-. n~xt &lt;;tllll-

IID!M7P.O.b:DI 211WIMSil:INSDIII
Tiwn P1lllt, DH P.o.Bal1121 ~ DH
457D
-

74N114111

7401JN1ll

IMIJpplrilllrllalil
Gllpall, DH 811
. 140 • • •
www.fbsc .com

• Select from beautifully
sheared and reasonably
priced Frazier Fir, White
Pine, and Scotch Pines.H UGooo Sru.criON
Colorado Blue Spruce
OFM!!rD&amp;

mer. startmg June 29, \\'luch w1ll

run c\'~·ry Fnday mght 11ntd July
27.
The series will culnnnarl' wirh
the 111Cmdu cno n ()ftlll' tir~t ,11lllllal Big Bend, l:l1g Bluc·s ll.1Sh Festival on july 2::1. The ti: stiV&lt;Il wdl
feature no l~ss than [\\'o promi nent national blues acts .1 nd tip to
five n.•gional performers among
other activities.
The festival is a uckc.&gt;ted CVL'llt

buRLAP TRU.SI

·Just
Arrived I

4ro6 rooT

To DECORATEYoUR HOME Fon 1HEHOLIDAYS
Live Fir Wreaths and
Pine Garland

Reader Services
Correction Polley
main concern in ·au stories

Our
is to
be accurate. If you know of an error in
a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156.

News Departments
Department extentions are: ·

Fresh From the Greenhouse
Poinsettias
'.

K &amp; C Jewelers
1om• m11or

Wish List

Bob's Gall

nter for Grear G1fl GMM Ideas:
• UnJque Crafts
• Pat Richter Prints
Park ln~ort Kitchen Accessories
• McC aH's Candles
• Collev1ate Collectables
• Ai1 d So Much More

For A Chance to Win A

$500.00
SHOPPING SPREE

--~
f~t:­

l:llu es Circuit.
Legends such .l'; Lynn White,
Little Johnnie Taylor, Z 7 . I lill
and 0. V \Vright cnc R.1wl .. ',I\ ,I
''alwJys 111
dc'm ,md pl.1ycr''
bec:mse of his uktll, :-cn.,Hl\'Jty,
rdi:tbility. profc .. sion:1h~n.1 .wd
musi..::al \'CTSJtiliry.

Rawls ha~ been around the
glohc more dun OIJCL' pL1ymg hts
mcn..'dtbk styk of' .. oul/bluL'\,

wluch m.trTJL'S togL"thcr the tr.tditions of the p.t~t \nth rh~,.· :-.tyltn~~
thL· futun.·~

of

p."'rL'J

1

Get your Orders
in Early f&lt;;&gt;r Bobs
Delicious Fruit
Basket-"l...
.And Don't For8el
5o~,~ t'or Delicious J)u!k
Chrislmas Candy and Bulk Nut
Metlls

1/4 mile North Pomeroy Mason Bridge

Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5323
2400 Eastern

I ;o

Ave, (Across from K-Mart)

Gallipolis, OH
•

,

.md

1~ nftCil ~

nm-

rhytlmt

.md

"fi~,.·ry

to

blues."
The con.:crt i'i. :-.cc ro bt.'~tll

ThmL·

nltl'IT\tcd

.1 llJL'lllbL'r

rng

in

berPllllllg

tlf' dlL' PBt".J, or

L"Olllt'rt

oht.l lll.-

inl~lr\11 ,\t.l~Hl. L'O il t,lC t

Jacki e Wdkcr at ~&lt;J2-Io524 l&gt;r
o,:hL•(k Oll( th(' ~tllll'ty\, \\Th~!IL' .! l

\V\\'\V.LOUrtstrcL'tg-rdi.(:O:lll, or qop
by the Courr Strl'l't Cnll nn
,Cu urt Stn:et in Pomeroy.

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published

every

afternoon.

Monday

Member : The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association
Postmaster: Send address corrections to
The Daily Sentinel, 1t 1 Court. St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

Subscription rates
By carrier or motor route

Ext 1102

Daily

or

Ext 1106

Ext1104

Circulation

Ext . 1103

Classified Ads

Ext. 1100

•

$2
$8 70
$104

50 cents

SlJbscrJbers not desinng to pay the earn
er may remit in advance drrect to The Daily
Sentinel. Credrt wrll be grven camer oach
week. No subscnption by marl permitted in
areas Where home earner servrce rs avml·
able ,

Mail subscription
Inside Meigs County

,
$2730

26 Weaks

$53 82

52 Weeks

$105 56

R.::~tes

13Weeks
26 Weeks
52Weeks

outside Meigs County
$2925
$56 68
$10972

county\ pannL·nhlp wah the
Ohm Dl·pannH.'Ilt ofJnb and r.dmtly SL'rv!Ce\ m pm\•tde .. welf~re-to­
wurk'' pmgram~ m an attempt to
brt."ak the dependency on pub~c
a.SSISt.lnCC.
Wtthout J p .1..p of tlte basic
~k:ilk sucb a~ mathe matiCS, a studem does nor .lu\·L'

pmmi-;ing
future i11 the workmg: world , and

Robert Annentrout

public welfan: prog1 .11m.
The program sef\·e!'! a sc:condary

purpose. as well The mdtvid;•alizcd
auenuon JHow. . \tud.:ntS tO .ovt:rcome cht' o;ti6'lna of askmg what
they may coJNder J .. ,tupid qut.-snon:· \\·ahour the n .. k of (.'!llb.ur J~~nu.·m
··A lot nfk1li\ don·r want 10 .1&lt;;k
quL·.,tiom 111 &lt;,l.l ~s.' ' \~k·ll s.1id. ''t..'.,IJl'ciall\' Lhl' olJlT dlles."
" In a snullt.·r gmup setting, 1t\
l',l'licr tu &lt;tsk quc..~t1ons without
bcmg l' mb.lrr.mt· Ll," -.he aJded.
TilL' prcSL'Ili,_ L' of te.:-n.1ged tuton

and s•w- in- law, Debbie White and Ernest Will of Co lumbu s; a stepdaughter and her hu sband. Judy and Thomas Batey of Middleport; a &lt;ister, Alice Wagner of Middleport; ami three stepgrandchildrcn .
Services will be held on Mnnday. November 27, 20m at 1 p.m. w1th
theRe\'. Bob Rubinson officiating. Burial willldlow at Bradford Cemetery. Fnemls n41y Llll at the funeral home on Sunday from 7-9 p.m.

Paul W. Sayre
PORTLAND- Paul W Sayre, 81, Pnrtbnd, d1ed Tuesday, Nov. 21.
2000 in Holzer M edi cal Center. ·
He was the son of the h te Thoma&gt; Ewing Sayre an d Fanny Angust1
Salser Sayre, and was a retired f,un1cr.
H e was a member of the F.1rm Bureau, Grange, Racine UnitcJ
Mcthodisc Men Prayer Bre.1kf..1st Grollp and ~evcr.1l bluegrass mu~ical
1

groups, includmg the Melodicrs.
He was also preceded in death by Ius wife,Jean LYoung Sayrc;a bmthcr. Thomas D. S:-~yrc; a &lt;;istcr-in-bw, Juanita Marie Furbee Say~: and .1
brothcr-1n- Llw, M:~rlin H.Young:.
Sun1v11'lg are two d.1ughtcr., .md om." snn-m-bw. P.ml.t L S.1)TL' of Porrbnd, Jnd S:mdr:1 L · .1nd J.HilL'S H. How.mi of l~c~.:d-..vdk: .1 Sl~ter-m-law.
Eh·:-~ Holter Yopng of Coro~l, Fl.1.; a brothcr-in -l.m·. Reid A. Young ot
R:1cinc; one granJchJd; .wd ~c\'Ci .1lnt c'ccs .md nephews.
Sl'rvtct'S will bl' I p.in . S:-~turLby in R;~cinc United Methodist Church.

gram 's

fundmg also include5allo,vanc~ fo r car mlit"age incurred
in transporting the studems home

after the sess1on' are completed.
Tho program was started in January, and continued through the
remamder of the last' school yeor,
beginning early in the current
".Chool year.
Acc~rding to Well, math scores

for tho ,n1d~nts served by the prog-ram ha\'t" incrl"ascd by an aVerage
of )J pen. l'Jlt on the fourth, sixth
Jnd etghrh gradt: proficiency tests,

or on the "off-based" standa rdized
tests wh.Kh are adnumstt·red during those years whcrr: no state pmficietK\'. test JS admumtcr.cd.

.

bl't{)rL· Boy Scout aud C1rl

Scom

troops for dcmonsrrJnons , and has
,·isiccd the Scm or Center on ditfcrL'm ocass1ons co disc\ISS tile d1ngers

.md it h.1~ h;~d ··• big impact on

,.ud.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
that. although the DARE program
nJtlOnwide rcce1ves more than ics
-..h:nc of criticio;;m t()r being ineffocnve, he teels it has been successful,
Jnd deserves to be expanded to
mclude older students, as well.
"I've always felt thJt if the program helps one child, or turns one
life around. it's worth the time and
mone y spent," Soulsby said. "1.
thi~ k it would be good if the progra m wen: exp:1ndcd inw high
sehoul cb~&lt;;mom~. as wdl.''

tht' county's h1gh schoob.''
''It's meant :1 lot to me to be

involved in DARE. Someone
n~ed!-i to he in the sc hools, tea chin g
kids ahnut the dange rs of drugs
and ,Jicuhol.''Wood s.1iJ.
"Evnyune h.1s brL'll very help ful, and generous with Jnnatio11~,'·
WooU s:1id. noling Lh .1t a number
uf g 1nups .h Jn ' n)nllihutcd finan -

Wood, \\'ho i~ now a lieutenant
in the dcp:lrtmcnt, said he will
return to road work now· chac his
DARE duties l"ve concluded.

VALLEY WEATHER

Warmer but wet weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED

Weather forecast:
l(lnlght ... Mos~ly cloudy. A
ch;uKL' of r~1in tow:mb. d.1wn. possibly hl·~rilllltng .1....1 bm~t' pt•riod of
ft·ct.'7lllS r.nn Lmn l1l the lnwer 30s.
l1~ht ~ottth~\bt \Yllli..l. Ch.mce of

P~ESS

rr~'ll1 JX'rJt1Jfl'~

Geneva Shumate
RUTLAND - C:cnt.:\\1 Slumutt'. H(i, New Lim.1 R.o,Hl. ll...utL111d, d1cd
Wcdnc\c:..b\', Nm·. ~2. 2000 111 Pll'.l\;lnr V.ilk·,· 1-lo&lt;;plt.d
Bor11 Juiy ~S. ! lJJ..J. 111 Ro.JIIL' Cmmty. K~·. ltlll~h tcr (11' the l.Jtc Jt~hn
.11ld lh.'~S lt' Stlg:lll rl~hcr. ..,!JL' \\',10., ,\ lmlll(.'lll,lktT ,llld ,\ n·l.ltltkik .. lJH.l .1
mcmbn of RllLL1ml ( :lu1n. h nf ( ;ud.
Sur\'i\·in~ .lrl' .1 ~tm .1nd d.ntghtcJ'-lll-Ll\Y. ILlll r1nd C\lllnic Slllltll.lt~,_' nt

M.mstleld; t\HJ d :w g-htn'l

.md Rich.ud Bro,Jd\\':ltl'r
ot New H.1n·n, W.V.1 , .111d Glllri .l .ltld Lt!T} Johnso n of J.lutl.l nd; .1 Stt•p~nn .md h1&lt;; wit{:. [),lnicl.llld Phylli~ Stidh.1m ofCallipoli~; 10 gr;111,k· lul.IIll i 'ilm'&gt;- l tl - Lnv.Jand

drl'n , ci~ht ~tepgr.111dl hildrcn .llld 14 gn:.lt-grJIKk hildr~.·n; .1 'li~ter,
K.nhr yn Md ;!nne nt' [) ~nHl'i~\'i lk . I&lt; y; .uH_I two bmt!JL'I'"i, Co~rl F1~ilcr of.
Br.lJiciiL'..,tcr. :md Jamn l 1~hL'r of I ndia11.1.
SilL' \\'AS preceded in dl·.1th hy her lmo.;b:md. CLJI\'Ill'L' Shunutc: .1 son,
I con Shum:lte; and several brotht·r-...
SL"rvicc~ will be 11 ;un. Satlln.by in Birc.hfidd Fun~.-'ral H ome, Rud.ll!d,
\Vith Pastor Ron.dd ll c.H h ofllcia ting. 13urbl \\'ill be 111 Mclb"S M emo ry
Gardens in Pon1 t'n1y. f-riends In.ly c.1ll :1t .th.:- fi1nenl honll' from 6:.10-f)
Hmight , :md on Saturd;Jy one h~mr prior to services.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP- 43~.
Akzo - 46l/.
AmTech/SBC - ~.,
Ashland Inc. - 32J,
AT&amp;T- 18" 1~

Gannett- 54'111
General Electnc - 48~·.,

Bank One - 33'1

Lands End - 24\
Ltd. - 23'•
Oak Hill Financial- 1S'11
OVB- 25
BBT - 30'&gt;
Peoples - 13 ~...

Harli3y Davidson - 43 ~.'1!
Kmart - 6\.

Kroger - 25',,

Bob Evans- 19'"

BorgWarner - 35~.
Champion - 2'1t
Charming Shops City Holding - 6
Federal Mogul - 2

Firstar - 1Bi'n .

5\

Premier - Se,111
Rockwell - 40 '1,

· Rocky Boots - 4'1oe

AD Shell - 60~ ..
3
Sears- 29 •
Shoney's - '..
Wai-Mart - 45 ',
Wendys- 25 11 w;
Worthington- e'Soe
Daily stock report s are the
4 p.m closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions. provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc . ot

Gallipolis

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'
qty

hf~,"Wood

of drub"·
.
'Tv.: cnjo)\'d being invoh·cd in
the DAR.E program ..mJ I've met a
lot of int&lt;.:resting ~tudcn ts and p:nents,"Wood sa1d Wednesday. "A lot
of the students I lm·e smrked with
will soon be gradu.1ting from ill of

Officiating will be the Rev. llri.m Ilarkns'ss. l3urialwill be in L,-un Falls
CemctC1)1. Friends nuy ca11 o.n Frid.1y fmm 7-'J p.m. in Ewlllg Funeral
Home. Pr,mcmy, .11~rl on S.Jturd.ly orK' hour prior to sen· ircs ,1[ the
dHirch

to the pmgram.

rhose fumh have been used t()
purdi:~se giveaWJ\' Items w P"?mote th~ progr:1m
"It \\'.IS .m honor to be lnvolvOO,

from PageAl

~.~r.

that they need to ask. (The tuto"
are pa1d S10 per week for thelrserV!Ce&gt;. also paid through the gram
program.)
The senu-wcekly sessions also
mclude a snack for d1e students, a
short break, ~nd nme set aside for
math homework.
TransportJrion is not provided
by the school tlistricts. but the pro-

n.1lly

DARE

Columbus, foUowing &lt;111 extL'ndcd illness.
He was born on J;m . 17. 19J1 in Columbus. son of the btc l cwi\ .md
Norm:1 ~ildman Dc.m . Hi.' was .1 coal miner and J ~elf-employed cruck-

111

He \\'.1-; .1 veter.m (lf rh~.· U.S: Army during rhe Korean Confl~t.: r, .md .1
member of thr Mr:ig-; County Di~ablr:d AmL' riC:lll V~tcr..ms.
· S u rvh·ing: arc .1 snn, Donald L. Armcntrm1t of Columbus; .l &amp;mghtt:r

d

will be more hkclv rn dt.•pend on

POMEROY - Robert (Pete Wildman) Armentrout. (o8. 18 Caw St.
Pomeroy. dit"d Tue~d.1y, NtJ\'. 11, 1:000 tn Columbus I kal th C:1n: &lt;:t.•ntr:r

Ohio. Second·class postage paid at
Pomeroy.

News

Advertising

.It

10 p.lll.

Ext. 1101

galtribune@eurekanet.com

. TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

W£ WANT TO HElP YOUR WISHE~
COME TRUE •••

r

sissippi, ha s \pent over two
dec:-~des . as a sideman :mJ produc er to ma.ny cop ma.,tcrs or the

General manager

To send e-mail

And Sign Up On Our

It

I'B&amp;:J's dedicatiOn to bnnging
the spirit of the blues to Pomeroy
continues this Friday night as the
society prc::sents world rl'nown
soul/blues &gt;rtist Johnny R.1\vls to
the Court Street Grill.
·
Rawls , born and raised in Mis-

13Weeks

pounds of turkey, 100 pounds of
mashed potatoes, 36 pounds of

•

obtam new membcr~hip an'd discuss fumre acrt\'ities.

One week
One month
One year

Other services ·

Come In To .

QUALITY SINCE 1959

or

The main number is 99.2-2156.

6 112 and 8 Inch Pots

Pink · White Marble
and • Jingle Bell

Welker said a special meeting
of PR&amp;:J . will be taking place
around the tiro;;t
the year to

through Friday, 111 Court St . Pomeroy,

··-·--•._........-..... ,..... .
Red

will
g:o towa rds the -,uocty's pn.:scrvacinn .ali \vel\ ;!'., fc.tr rhe funding of
,·~niuuo; b&amp;autdiu.non proJects
thr.uughuut Pnmt"'nly," s:1id Wdkt&gt;T. ".We jtist like tn g in:: somt.'thing bJck rn rhe ( tmnnun1ry th.H
Ius supponed u~ ~o \tron~l~' durmg our firsc yt~ar in t:xistence . .

The Daily Sentinel

18, 14, and 30 lnch

•

aforemention l'd evencs

ThC

• will also include crafcers, vendors
: ·and variouS artwork.

For the most beautiful selection of
trees in the Tri-County Area!

Cinl'inuRll ~nd d!JWII•
town J!il!ibllfllh,

HILLIARD - Mary Andre\VS. 86, HtUiard. formerly of Long l:lottom,
RACINE - Hilda R. Harris, 89, of Racine, formerly of Mtddlerued
Monday, Nov. 20.2000.
port, died on Thursday, November 23, 2000 at Holzer Medical Center
She was a member of St. Brendan Catholic Church, and a member of
.in Gallipolis.
the
Hilliard Senior Center. She was also acove with the Htlb ard Happt:, She was born on Aug. 27, 1911 in Clifton, West Virginia, daughter of
ness Entertainers.
-.the late Harry Harris and Lula Hall Harris.
·
She was preceded 1n death by her husband, Paul f' Andrews; and two
, ; · She was a graduate of Point Pleasant High School 'and a member oi
sisters, Nora McCrery and Josephine Corrig•n
· Sacred Heart Catholic Church. She was a homemaker.
Sur.~ving are nvo sons anJ daughtcrs-m-law, Paul J. and Jill Andrews uf
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Jane and Brady HutfWesterville, and John Mtchael ami Donna Andrews of Grandv1ew
1 man, and Jill and Clarence Williams, all of Middleport; seven grandchildren, David Miller of Columbus, Megan Roush ofWellston, Mary Heights; two daughters and sons-m-la", Rose Mary and Larry Milliron
"feffen of Rutland, Margery M1ller of Canal Wmchester, and Walt of ReyrJoldsburg, and Barb= ·and Dr.1i1m Andenon of Dublin; a mrer,
' · Williams, M~tt Williams and Sara Wilhams. aU of Middleport; 10 Frances Mcintosh of Daytmi; a brother, L1wrence Curtis of Fort M ye"·
Fla.; and eight grandchildren and scver:..Imeces and nephews.
grandchildren, a great granddaughter; a nephew and several llicccs.
Graveside service' L1kc place at J p.m. Saturday at Our Lady of LoretBesides her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband, Walter Burns Harris, in 1971 ; a sister, Alma Russell; and two brothers, Clif- ro Cemetery in Long Bottom.
A rosary and wake service will be held on Saturday at ll:30 a.m. fol• ~ord Russell and Chester A. Ru ssell.
; &gt; Services will be held at 1 p.m . on Saturday, November 25. 2000 at lowed by the Mass ofChnstian Burial at 10 a.m. at St. Brendan Catholic
&lt; Ftsher Funeral Home in Middleport, with the Rev. Father Walter Church in Hilliard. ,OffinJting will be Ce.lebrant Monsignor Wtll':'lll
Maroon. Friends may visit Friday fmm 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the T1dd
• ~einz officiating. Burial will follow in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
funeral Home in llilli ard.
·. ~ Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, No,·ember 25.
Memorial contributions may be made ro rhc Hearthnd Hom e Heal th
: ~ !rom 11 a.m. until the time of service.
Care,
6500 Busch Blvd., ColumbLIS, Ohio 43229.
::·::A Memorial Mass will be hdd ·at .1 later date.

'' l&gt;ro ceed~ fmm the f~stiv.ll

Come On Over To Bob's...

d(lwntuwt1

Mary Andrews

Hilda Harris

and will cost $5 to. artend.

Sunday, November 28th
.
1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

comfi)ruble wuh ;1.;;kmg que5nons

from Page AI

·.··----------------------------------------------------:..

council decides whether to support the project.
She said, however, that some
changes i're needed in dte design.
Cincinnati wants to buy 60
acres owned by the Ohio Department of Mental Health. The city
would then sell the ·site to p&lt;&gt;stal
officials for, an 800,000-squarefoot facility.
· The new hub would replace 'a
67-year-old processing facility,
which postal officials have said is
outdated and too smaU.
About 2,300 people work at
the postal center, which has an
estimated $60 million annual payroD. Cincinnati could lose S1.3
million in tax revenues annuaUy if
the jobs are moved to another city.
Overall cost for the project is
$116.1 million, much of which
would be paid by the Postal Service and state grants. The city's
portion is estimated at $10 million.

lm;iHiom in

Prisoners get
home cooking

ner was complete wtth

Councilman Charlie Winburn said the
motion was simply pbying to the ctowd.
"It's like telling the sun tomorrow mc&gt;rnin"
not to come our." he said. "We'te just tealing
the people:·
.
That received a round of applause from
family of Owensby, 29, of Cincinnati, who
was asphyxiated during a scuffie with police.
Family members urged the council to find
the truth surrounding Owensby's death and
pleaded with others for .res~t.
,
"If it doesn't stop, tt s gomg to escalate. I
don't want that," said Roger Owensby Sr.,
adding that he has been asked several ritpes
about taking part in violent protest against the
city and its police officers.

Residents. concerned about
plans for new postal hub

is later mixed into animal feed,

STEUBENVILLE (AP) Dru Jenkins and Anna Butera
~ot an early start on their
Thanksgiving cooking. After all,
they were preparing a feast for
'15, all prisoncn at the Jctfcr&lt;on
Couuty j•il in eastern Ohw
I hur&lt;day's l'hanksg1vm~ dm

black - have died in confrontations with
police, including two this month.
On Wednesday, about two dozen people some carrying signs with messages such as
"Police brutality will stop when you stop
purring up with it"- marched to City HaD.
There, City Council voted to ask the
Hamilton County prosecutor to convene a
grand jury and appoint a special prosecutor to
investigate the Nov. 7 death of Roger Owensby Jr.
"I agree we can't tell the prosecuting attorney what to do," said Mayor Charlie Luken,
who authored the motion requesting a grand
jury probe." AS a legislative body we can tell
him to do the right thing."
·

also helps 5tudent&lt; feel•t ease ,and

Scores

-

picked up at the processing plant
and trucked in large barrels to
various rendering plants.
At the G.A. Wintzer &amp; Son
Co.
rendering
plant
in
Wapakoneta, the leftover parts
.1re created into a byproduct that
Wintzer President Gus Wintzer
said.
At smaller farms, like Albright
Turkey Farm ·near Norwalk, and
Zachel's Farm in Morenci,
Mich. , the feathers are loaded
into a manure spreader and are
used on the fields, said farmer
John Zachel.
The down feathers also can be
used as fertilizer, lining in coatfii
and decorations. The skins can
be mcd as a kind of leather, and
rese:uchers are developing ways
to use the manure made into
pellets as fuel, Rosenblatt said.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

wi!J I'L'tllr11 to nor111.11 tt)r tbi~ t1111e of \'L':Ir but th~.·
rc~pltt' Gum· dli..' told will he 111.1rrcd
by r.llll rhrou~hout the wc:..•ch•tJd,
dw N.tti&lt;ln.tl

\X/~·.uh~·r

:--.. ...·n·,cc ,,,Jd.

I he r.1111 cloud, will bq;i11 llltJ\· -.
IIW \llf;l rill' In ltHIIll\. . .HL'.I (tJil! gl\1
.lltLI -..prc.!d n11 "i.nun l,l\ '
~

prl'tl)1ll.lllt l 11 :;11 pvnL'lll .

S.nurd ~l\' .. &lt; &gt;ll .\ '&gt;1~)11.1! r.1111

~

lli ~h-..

j) il

. ~ .l ttl1\l.ty .111d

5-+ t•)

Sund.ty

h~· .nnund jl J.
I ow~ tLlllighr wtll be Jll- .l)
Sum~.:c tonight wtl'l he ;H :1: I()

S.lt!Hd.l,.

with

\\'II\

'

.ll lli

-.. unrisc on S.tturd.lv

1!1 ,\l

7:'J.lJ

:l.tll

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
OL D ROIJTE l5 WEST
446•4524 1264 JACKSON PII(£

7

WED 11/23/00 THURS 11/30/00

OPEN THAHKSGIVJNGJ
BOX OFFICE Will OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM fOR MATINEES
THE 6TH DAY (PG13)
7;00 &amp; 9;30 DAILY
MATINEES FRI/SAT/SUN 1;00 &amp; 3:30
RUG RATS IN PARIS·
THE MOVIE (G)
7:30 &amp; 9:30 OAILY
MATINEES FAt/S AT/SUN 1:30 &amp; 3:30
CHARLIE'S ANGELS (PG13)
,

7:20 DAILY

MATINEES FAI SAT/SUN 1:20
UNBREAKABLE (PG13)
7;00 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES FAt/SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:1 5
MEN OF HONOR ( R)
9:10 DAILY
MAnNEES FRI SAT SUN 3:10
OR. SEUSS' HOW THE GRINCH
STOLE CHRISTMAS , (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES FRI/SAT/SUN 1;00 &amp; 3:15
LITILE NICKI (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY

Suhscribe today.

MATINEES FRI/SAT.SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10
102 DALMATIANS (G)

992-215()

MATINEES FR I/SATISUN 12:45 &amp; 2:4

6:45 &amp; 8:45 DAILY

111iJ

.

Highs
\'I r.llll :-;n p~.-rc~.·nt .
m~ht.. ,\~n . . tly dou~y

.~ ~ Ch.tll ll'

.1 ch.lll(L' ll( r.llll.

~lis.

l.ow'r in the

�.~......rh_e_D_ail_;:_y_Se_n_tin_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O~.P-Inion
~-1941
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charlene Hoeftlch
General Manager

Friday, November 14, lOOO

Frlct.y. Nov. 24, 2000

Make a list, check it twice, to ease holiday shopping
DEAR READERS : Since
: advice is my business, and the
· season for gift-giving is upon us,
: l offer .these suggestions to help
: avoid financial stress and holiday
:burnout:
: • - · Because the Internet makes .
: ~hopping easy, there is a danger of
losing track of holiday expenses.
:'rake control by making a gift list
~vith how much you can afford to
. spend on each, and stay as close
to the list as possible.
·
·
Consider giving "family
·gifts" instead of individual .gifts,
, ~specially to those who are not .
' immediate family. It could save
~ ~im e and trouble, not to memion
• • bundle. Announce that you
::think It is time to scale back a bit
.-::- and you'll probably h ear many
:.sighs of relief.

aLL '11-le. 'TiMe. •

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publleher

Page AS

VolJ CaN CDV~1" at.L. 1'Ha
~e ~e of -rHe 'tiMe
atcD 9JMe oF THe Pl!!oPIA aLL
"ruQ ,..;~ , sur YoO cat'1"
CoUN1'" aLL 'THfl PeoPle

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey

PageA4

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Adverttelng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

..,._.ttl

/..1am 10 til' wlitor.n w~. TIUJ slamdd N Ins tiWt JIJIJ wonb. A.IJ lltUn uw sllb}«&lt;
to I'JitilfJ •ttd MIIU 6.
ilul. . Ntlrtsr att4 Mkp#tfiM lllllfllwr. No tlllslfttetl llnMT will
M p11.11lisft&amp; ILifWI sJtmJ4 Ae i• r-J Ms#• .JdnuittW iuw.J, n« J¥rwnaii/Ws.
Tltt OfNnions uptaUll U. fiN tohiM11 &amp;dow u. tll~ COrtUIIJIIJ D/ lltt Ollio V.t&amp;ry PtdMdtirtJ
Co.·, 'di.lori41 ~ 1111kn otiNnt&gt;iu 11Wfti.

NATIONAL VIEW

Reasons
These factors may be why
Floridas vote became critical
• USA Today, "" wily. ellery •:ore docs

The country's future
often riJes on small accidents of history, unpredictable turns that
influence much larger events. Tuesday's election was a prime case.
Com1Jn this mt"nu of occurrences that influenced voters in Florida, whc'r&lt; the difference of a few hundred votes will deride the next
.
pre·" dent, with all that portends:
Confusing ballots. It's possible AI Gore will lose the Wh1te
Holl&lt;c because the supervisor of elections in Palm Beach Cnunry
deCJded to deviate from the usual ballot design, listing· Pat
lluchJnan's name beneath George Bush's. That meant AI Gore was
&lt;erond on the ballot but the third hole to punch. Resulting voter
contusion trigge red a large Buchanan vote in a heavily Democratic
eounry, possibly costing Gore the presidency.
Racial backfire . Gov. Jeb Bush thought he was doing black
Floridians a favor when he proposed "One Flonda" to steer affirmative action in a direction that he thought would survive legal
challenges. Blacks in Florida didn't see it that way, and that had
something to do with Tuesday's result: an astounding 88 percent
turnout among black voters in Miami-Dade Counry, who voted 9to-1 against brother George. Without them, there wou ld be no
recount today.
Elian. If President Clinton hadn't tak&lt;n such a hard line about
shipping child refugee Elian Gonzales back to Cuba, more of Florida's many Cuban-Americans might have voted for Gore ....
The Jewish vote. Florida seemed safe for the Bush family until
Gore named Joe Lieberman as his running mate. Suddenly, the huge
South Florida Jewish vote mobilized for the first Jew atop a nation al ticket ....
This election certainly will affect years of foreign policy, not to
.. mention domestic issues fi-om campaign finance co childcare. Worrisome' Not reallv. Aside from the odd ballot meddli ng in Palm
Beach Countv. it's. a welcome reminder to vott."rs that every vote
count' .mJ a ;eminder td politicians that no vote is a lock.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today IS Friday, Nov. 24, the 329th day of2000. There are 37 days
left in 'the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 24, 1963, Jack Ruby shot and mortally wounded Lee
Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President Kennedy, in a scene
captured on Jive television:
On this date:
'
In 178-f, Zachary Taylor, the 12th president of the United States,
was born 111 Orange Counry,Va.
In l R5Y, British naturalist Charles Darwin published "On the
Origin of Species," which explained his theory of evolution.
In 1863, the Civil War battle for Lookout Mountam began 111
Tennessee; Union forces took the mountain two days later.
In 1871, the National Ri fl e Association was incorporated .
In 1947, a group of writers, producers and directors th~t became
known as the "Hollywood Ten" was cited for contempt of Congress
for refusing to answer questions about alleged Communist innuence
in tht· movie industry.
In l947,John Steinbeck's novel "The Pearl" was first published.
In l969.Apollo 12 splashed down safely in the Pacific.
In 1971, hijacker "D. H. Cooper" parachuted from a Northwest
Airline&gt; 727 over Washington state with $200.000 in ransom- hi&lt;
fate remains unknown.
In l ')85, the hijacking of an Egyptair jetliner parked on the
ground in Malta ended violently as Eb'YPtian commandos stormecj
the plane. Fifty - eight people d1ed in the raid, in addition to two oth ers killed by the hijackers.
In I ')R7, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to scrap
~honer- ar1d medium-range missiles.
Ten years ago: President !:lush returned home from an eight-day
tour of Europe and the MidJic Ea&lt;t, during which he 'd lobbied foreign leaders on behalf of his PersiaTJ Gulf policy
·
Five years ago: Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic pmmised
during a televised addres~ accept a U.S.-brokered peace plan. Voters in lreland narrowly a~roved J constltuttonal amendment legalizing divon.:e.
One year ago: 280 people we~e killed when a ferry caught flre
ami foundered off the coast of eastern Chtna's Shandong province.
Today'$ Birthdays: Column ist William F. lluckley 11 75. Country
singer Jo hnny Carver is 60. Roc k 'n' roll drummer Pete llest " 50.
Rock musician Donald "Duck" Dunn (BookerT. &amp; the MG's) is SY.
Acto r-comedian Billy Connolly is SH. Former White House new&lt;
secretarv Marlin Fitzwater i&lt; 5H. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman is
Singer Lee Mi chaels is 55. Actor Dwight Schultz 11 5.1.
Actor Stanley Livingston 11 50. R ock numnan Clem U.urke
(Biondi e) is 45 . Recnrd produ ce r Terry ~ew11 1&lt; ·H . Aetres; Denise
Crosby i&gt;, 43. Rock musician John Squire (The St1one R me;) i&lt; .'\H.
Rock musician Gary Stonadge (llig Audio) i&lt; .3H. Roc k mu'lcian
Chad Taylor (Live) is 30. Ac tor Colin H .m k&lt; ("Rm\Sell") IS 2J
Actress Katherine Heigl ("Ro&lt;well") " 22.
Thought for Today: "Humor distorts not hing , and only 1:d"· gods
,If&lt; laughed off the.ir earthl·y pedestal&gt;"- AgrH'' Repplier, .A.meri·
can essayist (I R58-1 950).
·

.

ADVICE
Give home-baked goodies
or gift baskets you create to
neighbors and co-workers with
whom
you
traditionally
exchange gifts . Encourage them
to do the same. Rem ernber, it's
the though.t that counts, so put
on your thinking cap.
- Be a smart sh opper and
compare prices. Items may be
offered for a c heaper price at · a
-

•

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Popular vote selection only compounds problem
It's time to start thinking of some remedies
for this kind of a mess. T he complaints du jour
concern the Electoral College, low voter
turnout, miscounting of votes and alleged voter
di senfranchisement. Consider the problems in
reverse order, and watch some limited solutions
appear.
.
Which voters are the most disenfranchised?
Not . the ones who fai)ed to vote, or those
famously few who claim they couldn 't follow
the cute little arrow on the ballot.
About two-thirds of Americans- including
all those in California, New York and Texas, the
three most. populous states - do not cast a
meaningful vote for president. T heir sin? They
do not live in a so-called "battleground state."
T he same is true in my home area, the nation's
capitol. The voters in Virginia, Maryland and
the D istrict of Columbia, are also not battlegrounders.
Everyone knows that California, New York,
Maryland and D.C. will end up choosing a full
slate of Democratic electors, just as everyone
knows that Texas and Virginia will choose all
Republican electors. So why should voters in
these jurisdictions bother to cast a vote in a
presidential year? Perhaps 'th e voter's brotherin-law is running for sheriff. Perhaps there is a
tight Hcmse or Senate race. Perhaps they regard
it as symbolic dury, as do l. But these non-bat·
tleground voters are not casting an effecti ve
vote for president.
The f.1cile answer to this problem is to have
the national popular vote determine the outcome. But that would only. compound the
problem we see in Florida. We would have 50
other Floridas. with par.tisans in every county
and precmq claiming voter irregularities.
Moreover, going to a full popular-vote system
would require a constitutional amendment 1
which would almost certainly never pass,
because the smaller states, which gain some
leverage through the Electoral College, can easily block ~ constituti onal amendment.
But suppose, via a constitutional amend-

The other great disenfranchised bloc in
America are the voters who live in states where
the presidentia1 primaries co mt: late in the season.AI Gore effectively eliminated Bill Bmlley's
hope for the presidency after the Iowa caucuses, and early primaries in New Hampshire and
California. The'rest of America's Democrats and
some independent&lt; never got to play a meaningful role.
John M cCain had a tew more primaries to
NEA COLUMNIST
contest than Braclley, during which he captured
the hearts of many millions of Americans. But
he too wa&lt; closed out in California by March ,
ment, we added a small number of electoral
leaving a majoriry of Republicans and some
votes- say 21, or 1 l or 1 - to the winner of
independents without a chance tc! help pick
the national popular vote. Fi"t off, adding an
their candidate.
odd number would eliminate the possibiliry of
There was a smart scheme on the table to
a 269-269 tie: And everyone in every st ate
would have a bolstered reason to turn out. Can't amend the process. "The Deiawarc Plan" had
you hear it: "Honey, we better vote 'today, great support within Republican parry circk-s.
remember how close it was back in 2000; that Simply put, the small states would vote first, the
largest states last. This would likely decrease the
one electoral vote might count."
It is hard to imagine that such a system number of voters shut out of the primaries, a
would. not boost turnout. Of course, in a truly proct:s~ that is a great Arnencan comribucion co
tight election 'it could get us imo a "50 Rori- democmic theory and practice. We b't:t to pick
das" syndrom e, but, as we see, in a truly tight our leaders as well as a choice of who will com election we've got big prolilems anyway. 'pete for leadership.
Depending on how it would be scaled, such a
The p'lan was designed to go into effect in
plan could also diminish the possibiliry of one 2Ull4 but was scuttled at the last moment, with
candidate winning the popular vote while. Gov. Bush's approval. Presidential candi dates
another won the electoral vote.
don 't like mtramural parry figh t&lt; in an electidn
(And, by th e way, I have a bet that Bush will
year. But g1wn the current controversy abot1t
end up with ·;, popular 1mjoriry when all the
low participation , it seems that he could go
votes are counted, in all the s&lt;ates.)
back
to the Republican National Committee
Moreover, such a Pop Seat, or Seats, could
plausibly lead to a special national presidential to ask for reconsideration . That should happen
ballot pre-certified as .fair and clear. This would after he IS inaugurated as president, which I
put the' Feds into the act, which is not what I expect he will be.
(&amp;11 Wa!Cenbe(!l, a smirr ftllow at rhe Anrerim11
normally wish for. Dut, the presidency is a tcderal office.
Enretprise Imtiwre, is the host-essayist of the PBS
There seerrts to be no obvious reason w hy spcdcli '1171e First Alrasurcd Cemuryn a~Jd co-author
small states should resist the Pop Seat; their of a '""'' book of lite same ririe. He is the host.of the
leverage remains roughly intact, as long as the weekly prtblic te/c()isirm progrm1'1 1117Jitik 1lmk. 11 Yo11
number of new electoral seats created is rcla, may send ~tHIImeuts to him tJW e~mail :
rively small.
Watr •wiiaoi. com.)

Ben
Wattenberg

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

Rage becoming epidemic among our citizenry
It i&lt;n ;t only road rage. Anger is erupting
with deadly consequences in the home, the
workplace and the classroom.
Add to this the hate crimes fueled by
anger, like the recen t killing rampage in Pitts- ·
btrrgh, where a white lawyer gunned down
flve people of other racial and ethnic background~.

Even this may not be the worst of it. What
may be most worrisome is that anger has ·
become a way of life for many of us who used
to bt' pleao;am, mannerly citJzens.
A newspaper colleague of mine, forced to
take seve ral days off because of sickness, passed
muc h of his time at the beginning watching
&lt;oap ope ras. "But'! gave it up after a few days,"
he said." 1 co uldn't, take all the anger [ was seeing and hearing on every program."This is an
example of art imitating life.
You encounter anger everywhere today if not anger, then rudeness. A story in
New ~Wee k magazine tell~ t~bout a customer
who complained to the clerk about the poor
servicr: o;he wa'i rectiJing.
"If you want ~r service," snapped the
angered clerk, "go across the street.~~
The woman reported the incident to the
'to re manager. It did no gqod .
The n;.1g~1zine comments, "With helpwanted ~1p;n'\ papering the windows of stores
everywhere, workers hold th e power and
11\,ll1&lt;lg-c:rs hesit.ltl· to repri1nand."

Goerge R.
Plagenz
NEACOLUM~T
What's a customer to do? "Bite your
tongue'' seems to' be the advice of choice.
Blowing your top will only make the situation
\verse. A new study released at the Universiry
of North Carolina says people who are hi ghly anger-prone are three times more likely to
have a heart attack.
Will knowing this get us to hold our tempers in ch eck?
Author Carol Tavis says anger endures
because it works. "Raising your voice gets
results that kindness, unfortunately, does not."
It is neighborliness that makes for the
"kinder, gentler nation" that former president
George Bush said could be ours. But neighborliness belqngs to an era when we would
sprinkle our lawns after supper and gab with
the neighbors. Then we wou ld go in and
watch Herb Schreiner on TV. The late come~

dian epitomized the "kinder, gentler nation"
we could have if we really wanted it.
Schrdner once weJ~t up to the ticket window of o Broadway theater. "Hello," h e said
pleasantly to the man behind the glass.
"What?" the man said crossly.
"I didn't mean any harm," Schreiner said
apologeti cally,. "lt's just a little exp ressio n we
use 1n Indiana when we meet somebody.~~
The world has forgotten how to say hello.
Columnist Ellen Goodman and novelist
l'atncia O'Brien have written a book about
the power of friendship in women's lives,
titled, " I Know Just What You Mean."
Friendship is a wonderful thing. But there
is jomething the world stands more in need
of, and that is friendliness. "The urge to kill"
used to be JUSt an expression. Now we carry
out our urges.
Unneighborliness, unfriendliness and anger
all run with the &lt;ame crowd and account for
many of th e evils of the world , including broken famihcs, divorce, mental i1lnes!\ and even
murder - all things that can keep us from
enjoying the delight, of living in a kinder,
gentler nation .
Unless we learn how to turn down the
rhcrmonat on our hot 11eads - and do it fast
- the whole world might end up as road kill.
If a heart attack docsn 't strike•first .
(Geo,~e R. Pla,11mz is a col1&lt;mnisr for New;papl'r Enterprise Associa1io1t.)

MIDDLEPORT -Jarret
Durst, son ofTim and Kfisti
Durst, turned five on Nov.
3, and celebrnted sv1th a Je gs
NHRA drag racing theme
party at his home, Attendmg
the parry besides his parents
and brother, Trenton, were
]a rret's grandparents, Ed and
Ruth Durst, Glen Parsons,
Donna Browning, and great
grandparents Martha Blaine,
Jarret Durst
J im and Jackie Reed.
Nso attending were Mandy, Mackenzee , and
Nathan Redman, Ann , Ryan and Makayla VanMatre, Bill, Kathy, Megan and Madison Dyer, Jim, Pam
and Cole Durst, Sheila, Scott, Abbie and Emily Parsons, Mary and Nathaniel Shuler, Madeline and
Sandy Painter, and Tracy and Amber Davtdson.

Celebrates first birthday
RUTLAND - · Kayley
Annette Pierce, daughter of
Jeremy and Bobbi Pierce,
celebrated her first birthday
on Nov. 19.
The celebration was h eld
at the Rutland Americ an
Legion hall with cake and
decorations in a "Winnie
the Pooh" theme.
Attending, in additio n to
her
parents, were g randparKayley Pierce
en ts, Marty and B elva
Pierce, Ti na Norton, Torn and Joan Stewart, and
Elaine Quillen: aunts Amber Pierce, Dawn Yost and
Tere sa Stewarr; :mJ co u ~ ins Jcni Stewart, Mane
Pierce, Morga n Michael. Anna and Jenny Farley.
Tammy Starcher. Chucky R :uhburn , D avey, Crystal
dnd M 15sy Pnddy, Rainy Fitchpatnck, and Alex
Priddy: Bobbv, Heather and Ezra Rathburn, brry
Engle , Larry, We ndy an d M orga n Tuc ker, md Peggy
and Donnie Yost.
Sending gifts _wcrl' C.1ry and Jamie Adams :lnd
Dome Jones

Ashley chosen princess
R.ACINE -- Miss Emil y Ashley of Rockspri ngs h as been c hosen the 2000-200 1 M eigs
County Grange princess.
.
She is the daughter of Keith and Emn.' a Ashley
of Po me roy.
.
.
She is currently a member of Racme Subordinate Grange N a. 2606 where she has been act1ve
on the Fourth of Jul y parade float com mittee and
the fair booth committee. She is a former state
winner in the vocal category of the Ohio State
Grange J r. Grange talent contest at the Ohio State
Fa1r.
Ashley began h er Grange career at age five as a
member of Star J r. Grange No. 878 of Salem Cen·
ter where she served in several offices. She graduated and received her- Super Junior Granger
award, the highe st award given, at th e age of 10.
Sh e was a member of this year's four member
We st Virginia State G range installation team ..
. In addition to her Grange work, Em1ly 1s m
eight h grade at M eigs Middle School where she
is active on the volleyball team, tra ck , and band .
She studies piano privately at home. She is. a
·member of the M eigs County Pwneer and Hist orical Society, First Families ·of Meigs County,
First Families of Ohio, John S. Townsend Auxtliary to th~ Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil
War E li zabe th Re ctor Buell Tent No. 19 Daughters 'of Union Vet erans of the Civil War, and the
Mary Gardner Owen Society Children of the
American Revolution.
S h e is also a ch art e r memb er of the Maj. Daniel
McCook C ircl e No. I 04 Ladies of t h.e Grand
Army of th e Republic.
.
She is an active member of H ope BaptiSt
C hurch of M 1ddleport.
A s Meigs County G ran ge princess , she will be
com peting in the Ohio State Grange female
ambassador finals Jt Hudson la ter this m onth as
the you n gest part icipant in the Cont est. H ~r sister,
Wllltney, is curre ntly the reign ing. Oh10 State
'Gr:i n ge Female Ambassador, and Will be rehnquisliing her title at t he competition .
.
.
Whitn ey will be attend111g th e NatiOnal
Grange co nvention ill Fresno, Calif., in Novenl. ber as the Ohio State Grange Female Ambassador
;1long with Grange royalty frotn orht~ r stares.

--::-:-~43~ ~~~~--

(mr~'S rbdcy mrr

~nnual Qrii!IS ~rn ~'nit

ric does'n't seem like spending
•• ~al money," so the totals can get
out of hand. Write down everything you charge to more easily
keep spending in check, and
che ck the bills when they arrive.
It's easy to be seduced by the
idea that you don't have to pay
"until nex~ March." Ask yourself,
if I can't afford it now, will I be
able to afford it in March? (The
answer is probably "no.")
- If you shop online, use a
se·c ure browser, order only from
companies with which you are
familiar, and print out copies of
aU purchase orders and confi rmation numbers. This is invalu able if
you have to dispute an order.
-Once you have purchased a
gift for everyone on your list ,
STO P SHOPPING. With stores

and ads so festive, it's tempting to
buy extra gifts. If you don't go
shopping, you won't have to
. exercise your .. won 't power."
Everyone will be happier
without an overabundance of
gifts that only feed the "greed
gene."Trust me.
Happy holidays, one and all.
-LOVE,ABDY
DEAR ABBY: I must commont about the letter from
"Wondering in Murrieta , Calif.;'
who was upset about her teacher
who uses ihe expression, "Life's
unfair - and then you die."
[ do not understand the
teacher's reason for co ntinually
stating this. [ have a phrase I
coined myself, " Life's not fair but peop le try to be."
I hope this teacher is reading

your column today and will learn
something from it. -

POSI -

TIVE T HINKER IN ST. PAUL
DEAR THINKER: I hope so,
too.
Abby shares her favorite recipes
in two booklets: "Abby's Favorite
Recipes"

and "Abby's

More

l'!lvorite 'Recipes." To order, send
a

business-size, self- addressed

envelope, plus check or mon ey
order for $3.95 per booklet
($4.50 each in Canada) to : Dear
Abby Cookbooklets I and II , P.O.
Box

447, Mount M orris, IL

61054-0447. (Postage is included
in price.)

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS
Durst turns five

COI/II/:

TODAY IN HISTORY

S6.

.·

.Dear
Abby

store you don't usually frequent.
Compare Internet pri cing with
catalogs and local retail store ads.
The price advantage may warrant
the extra time and trouble to
sbop locally.
- Sh op early. Don't wait until
the last minute when you're des.
perate and willing to overpay just
to have .a gift. If possible, shop on
Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday
during nonpeak hours , such as
mornings or late afternoons.
Shop th'e Internet a few weeks in
advance of the holidays to avoid
paying "rush shipping" ch arges
and to guarantee that the items
are in stock and your packages
won't get bogged down in the
holiday shipping overloads.
- Shop carefully when using
credit cards. For some, using plas-

I
I
I
. I

SUSAN CLARIC, ALONG WITH HER PARENTS
'·.
EXTEND AHEART FELT INVITATION TO THBR FRIENDS AND CUSTOIERS FOR
ClARK'SRNEST SAlf OF THE CHRISTMAS SEASON; GMNG YOU THE OPPORTUNITY

TO \U IIIIIIIIJIIfACIIJRER CCW1E

II '

·I
I
I

County Community Band , a s
well as selections on organ.
piano and keyboard .

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - East·
ern Eagles "Meet the Team" d in·
ner at Eastern High School , Fri·
day at 5 p.m.

CHESTER - Evangest Harry
Wingler at Harvest Outreach
Church, 6 p.m. Pastor Mary and
Harold Cook invite the public .

MIDDLEPORT - Board of
Public Affairs meeting of Nov. 27
rescheduled to Friday at ~ 0
a .m., Village Hall.

The Community Calendar Is
publ11hed as a free service to

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A Christ ·
mas art project, with Kris White
as instructor , will be offered
Nov. 25 and Dec. 2, from 10 :30
until noon, at the Riverbend
Arts Council on N. Second Ave .
Registration Is made by calling
White at 992·5883 .

11:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.

I
I
I.
I

.

110 West Main St., Pomeroy

992-2284
'VII
. I -••

SO%

OFF

RACINE - RACO load drive ,
Saturday 8 a .m. until noon ,
across from U.S . Post Office in
Racine . All items collected will
be donated to the Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish
lood bank. Non-perishable food
items, monetary contributions ,
paper products, facial, dish and
laundry soaps, and shampoo
will be accepted ,

Ctaft Path!tn~

30%
OFF

II

d

All Quilt &amp;

t

l;.heck OUt OUt CUs:fOm rna l! VM 1:,
jum!Jets:, 8!J!Jilquod I!Weat~:hlttl! &amp;
hlnce rnatg••• GtAat Gift Idea~:(

. , ,_
~~~=~::r:~q:~;,:=t::i~I:~~E:~~t:::i~::i,~~

Church
Choir,
the Tnnlly
Meigs 'lij
Parade . Bell
Music
by the

REGISTER TO WIN
$30.00 Gift'Certificate
2 Lb. Russell Stover Assorted Chocolates
1 Lb . Elvis Presley Assorted Chocolates
Drawing Sunday 4:30 p.m.

Norelco Electric
Razors

SUNDAY ONLY

25%0FF

ONLY s3 39

Hi Val
Cigarettes

Russell Stover
Truffle Elf &amp; Peanu
Butter Santas

..Amit'l Billfolds

Reg. 49¢

ONLY 34¢

Mens &amp; Women's

1/2 Price

Zippo
Lighters

Timex Watches

40o/o o~r

#II#

Tf. .firs• .20 101d will be at

.

orr · .

)'~s.ocrt
Men 's Colognes, ~ (Limit
2 P*ll custC!..,.r)
&amp; Aftershaves Christmu Cards in

25%0FF

Cassette Tapes ·
Country &amp; Oldies
Cassettes Reg. '4"

30%0FF

SUNDAY, NOV. 26TH

.

The
Fabric Shop

TUPPERS PLAINS - East·
ern Eagles basketball preview
on Saturday at 5 p.m., begin·
nlng with the freshmen team,
with junior varsity and varsity
teams to follow. 2000 Club tiCkets are on sate from any basketball player or trom Howard
Caldwell, at 667 ·3493 .

SUNDAY
POMEROY -Annual holiday
concert al Trinity Church at 3
p.m., follow ing the Christmas

non·proflt groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
ealea or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be pr lnted .a
specific number of days. ·

"

1/2 Price

$1.25 1 Pack
12.45 I
Women's Spray
Colo[!ies
Famous Brands
.3 75 oz
Reg. $4.9 5

ONLY- $3.39
Russell S'tover
sorted Chocolat es
1 Pound
Reg. S6 .99

ONLY $4.99

•

'"
I,

.,

�Friday, November 24, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• Rusch Grand National, Daytona 300
Saturday • Feb. 1 7 • 2001 • FOX

• Winston Cup, Daytona 500
Sunday • Feb . 1~ • 200 1 • FOX

• •· ·-- lOOt POINTS STAHOIN6S

.....,.

WINSTON CUP

"

01111! lauetl. 4,684

S

R•c~) ~u•Xl.

e. Ttmp

~ur

-l ~~

,..•"

(j)

.,.c

.._

0

"""
::tt:

(1j

0
c

-t:

(].)

_J

"'0

(1j

..c.

0.._

.E

..c.
(.)
.......
(1j

$:

•

1\"ll~ol'. •1')-l.l
\111fk M i!r t rn, 4.&lt;110
rorr (.&gt;(lroor~. &lt;1 _ll'l

ll«rrd\ L&lt;tlUle, 3,670

CIISet o\tWOQ,(I , 3,-i04
lld\ •d tir~~n. :1,.3Ul

4.1~2

Junm1e

John~on.

3.264

'Mt

J1IIICtl

GrPg Bolli~ 3. 826
Kurt Bus ~h. 3. 5~
llnO'y Houston, 3.566

Mrkc Wlll!lte, 3,450
Jad Sprague, 3.316
Joe Runman , 3,278
Oennrs Seller. 3.214
Randy Tolsrne. 3,157 ar~llrl Reffner. 3.153
S1ev~ Grrssom. 3,Ul

Jeff Burton, Dale

0

z

~
..... zc

c
.2 ""

""0

The Wmston Cup season
ended Monday with Jerry
Nadeau·s vrctory in the NAPA
500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway
rn Hampton . Ga.
But the 2000 season srill

Rudd , Rusty Wallace, Mark
Martin, Jeff GoJdon and Ward

Burton - au earnea a spot at

~ur

!IJ

0

Q.

&lt;U
0

U'lt

Gll'ol
GIIOI
Cit 'It

.. ..., ~
&lt;t

.o

~

Ill

V)

!ill o~~r uth.·r drrvu ~. and
} ou' vc got Ma rk Mnrtin. \\hnm I
u~ed 10 like. But after the recenl
tilcc HI Honr e,tcad -Mi:uni Speed"ay. my mind haJo ~; h u n gcU. Rrck}
Rudd dc.serve' nwr~ recog ntttnn
lnr hi-. hard v.·nrl.. th r ~ ;e:u. ·
1·11" does not lln ve im) u~ ~u mt'
do. Wh~n he s t:•n ~ \1 1 nuin~. no onc
v.ill be able lo ~!up h11n .
G,KXJi uck nut !&gt;1.'&lt;1&gt;on.
Lind.:1 K. iltl) nes
S hl'lh ~. N.C.

the prestigious head tab le on

the stage.

has one event remarning - the

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

annual Wrnston Cup awards
banquet Dec . 8 at the WaldorfAston a in New York City.
The top-10 (imshers in the
points standrngs - senes
champron Bobby Labonte , Date

AND CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
The Busch and Craftsman
Truck senes ended their
seasons Nov. 11 and Oct. -28.
respectr11ely .

-

days to the Feb. t 8
Daytona 500.

PN0ftlE-

·Robby Gordon

)Pilr

e.,.,

&lt;t
u

Cl

-

c
.c

~

.,
0

a

9. (91

Ma'k Martin
Jerry Nadeau

WINSTON CUP

w

:z::

Ricky Rudd
Jeff Gordon

A worthy champion
Closed on a downer
Speechless afterward
Never made a move
Solid season
Once a champ,
No runs , no·hlts, no victories
Pla ,n nlng for big New Year's
Consistency slipped
Nothing beats a win

Ql

&gt;
·;:

0

1ii
Ql
~

&lt;t "
u 0::c
""&lt;D&lt;D
Ql

HAMPTOIII Go
Jei ry
r.:adenu whO cjme 10 Atlanta
'•l otor SPl'Pdwdy ranked No. 23
r,n I !"'t' '.'lltns11Jn Cup puu11~
'&gt;'rll'du•f;~ :t:' tt wrth the ·~A.PA.
5t)0 "' n ~ pocket.
'\J&lt;tUedu ~ frr,; t career
\rrtnry. ·n hiS l•lst run wttll
MJchaeiHOIIgan.co m
I J ~~ as spon sor. cAme
dt tlr~ expense of
Ponitac driver Ward
Burton. \~llo was
dominatmg the
Nedea.J
ttvent until a late
cautton f - a~.
With SC\'en laps rem amrng
r~n(J Burton leading . Nadeau·s
Chevrolet shot past rn the first
turn !:&gt;t1or::~ dt1er the green flog
wa~('(J_ Some cli'lltnf'd that
Nadeau ha(.! JUmccd the
res tat t.
"The flag was waving:
Nadeau S&lt;!ld. "arld Ward 's car
was JUSt talmosu stopped. 1
knew rf I Pdb~ed, hrm before the
ltnP. . I would have been black·
flagged. so 1 made sure 1
wasn 't."

.·
U
~

1

•• ·

In tlle closrng' laps, Nadeau
held off ttle Chevrolet of se11en·
ttme Wrnston Cup champton
Dale Earnhardt
"I knew 1 tlad to .;;tay clear of
htrn . • Nadeau smd. "I knew 1f
he had a !:'&gt;hut at me, he would
h&lt;:lve taken rt"
Nadeau p1cked up three
pldc~s 1n the point s standings
to frnt st'&gt; 20th.
The second place fi nrsh
enabled Earnhardt to tiri ish
second In the stand tngs. 265
behmd Bobby Labonte . who had
wrapped up the title a week
ea rlier
Earnhardt' s margrn over Jeff
Burton was 29 pomts.
Nadeau became the season's
14th different winner. the most
srnce 1991. He al so was the
fourth first ·time wrnner. a total
matched only in 1988. Th is
year's other f1 rst-trme winners
were Dale Earnhardt Jr.• Man
Kenseth and Steve Park.
The Wrnston Cup drivers and
team members ha\le a few
weeks off before the Dec. B
awards banquet in New York
C1ty.

FEUD OFTHf WUK

Ward Burton vs. Jerry Nadeau
Had it nOt been for a late caution flag, Burton would have
won the NAPA 500.
•
After a round of prt stops, however, Nadeau swept past
Bur ton on the inside, a move considered by many to have
been illegal since NASCAR prohibits ~passing to the le ft~ on
restarts.
"I was surprised that he was on the Inside that early,· sa 1d
Burton , who was penalized for a similar move In a Busch
race earliet th1s season . ~ There again , 1t was a judgment
call, t guess "
NASCAR This Wttf''4: '• Monte Dutton -'v•• his opinion:
"Nade au was 111e season 's 14th drfferent winner. and it had
been mne years stnce as many different drivers won races.
NASCAR could easil~ have ruled that he jumped the restar t.
It also wouiC! have been smart for Burton to have slowed
down and prevented Nadeau from ' la~ing back' prior to the

restart.·

1f/4,eet~

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 7-10-992-4442
T(•d Drxler
Home: 740-992-5260
Dwight Honaker

by....,.-..

Next_,, 11-, Gordon wtH ..,._. llolilor ......lion
-No.4 CIMmolet-By Monte Dutton

• Ttt.r tecond an nual
A.tlald• Motor- Speedwe~
race has not atway1
been tt. ftn.,., 111d It
has seldom Mn won by

an lneJCpertencued drlv.r,
as on Monday, When
J•rry N•deau won,
ThfJ only similar uPQt
may haY&amp; occurred In
~he ~ery first fall race
ever held at the
Hamptoo, Oa .. track,
when Bobby Jottns dro~e
a Pontiac to victory In

w-

1960-\

It
one of only two
Ylctorles In John!l'
care111r.

Home: 740-985-.H09

of

Monte ~utton
NASCAR Thts Week

Car: No. 13 TurtJewaxjTeam Menard s
Ford, owned by John Menard and Mike Held
Marital status: Single
Crew chief: Jerry Baxter
Career'atatlatlcs: 45 starts, 0 wins, 1wo
top-fiiJe finishes, three ~op.lO fln1shes, one
pole, almost $1 .5 miU1on ln earnmgs
Rrsta: Start (Feb. 17. 1991 . at Daytona),
pole (March?, 1997. at Atlanra), victory
(none)
What •re you looklnl tor In the new ride?
" It'S Important that we have success. I'm
e~~:clted about the opportunity. It gives us
time to work through It and hopefully come
up here someday and hold that san1e check
Boblly Labonte was holding not too long ago .
~I'm flattered they ehose me. I told Larry
(McClure)l o check around . If there 's some·
body else, I'm nor the guy, I understand. He
came back and he was excited to have me
drive the car, and I 'm excited to be he re.~ ·

11 ;\MI&gt;!O:-.i. (~ol
Sh;tWilP
h ,. · h ,
h
" b
"tl r n~o n ,w U tnts Cu .'&gt;CICIIt 1n
thc·-A LII~lr!ll1bllc l{a~·rng Club nf
,\ rocrlc,r 1'1&lt;11111'&lt; st am l ill~h. plan ~ to
run ~l'\1'11 \ ,\ SCAR Ww,lon Cup
r:rl·e~ IIC~1 }l':tr,
J.l.••hltl '~ 111 . ~~. j, til\' fir~! wum:tn
111 l im~h n1 I lit: tr•p 10 1•f &lt;l llitlrom1l
maltrM ~ \l' tl l'\.
\lrLir:rell\tanetu~~ . '.lht• rc~ 'L'III I ;
\or ld In~ , IJ,I i'L' nl J ~ tl'T I1\ M.tyfil•ld\
1t',JIII '" H: u~..r Pt· n~~f'. '.l.tll,li n·t:t
R •thlll ~t•ll \ (-llj) t:lirL'I.'r. "rhc h&lt;h 11011
·'l~'lt·llrt~ \L':tr.. n o\li k' ht~;m . hrr1 h tt~
lt'f t" \\.Ill otn '\ Rc 'A ''"~
'
I lio~t \ 11 11&lt;~1 lin• ..,port' ' all.tlll'lll.
"lllllt'r!.!. R11hrtt-n11 ,,ud. "\h· w;~nt

~ck-t:tcdARCAr~l·c, bt&lt;IU&lt; •111tl·fut1
~e ric' nt.'(l )C&lt;tr.

X
TEN Rlr; \'tARS · Ru,l &gt; \.~';tl l:• ~c
Cl)tllmernor,ued 10 yenr~ "Jiun..,)r·
~ h ipln•m Mrll r r Hre\\in~ (·,l. 111
r;u-111 ~ orl·nnJ pa iut~1! rn ;t ;,,rrrhr1t:t.
(1(\ IJ of cn lor ... fl""""-iall'tl "rlh \'w ,rl
l;rc&lt;:\ Nt•. 2l'~r~ .
'
WalhtL'l.: d r&lt;J.VI;' :t hl:tL'k .11\d \dl&lt;l\1
Lart lu nr&lt;[! hi' tlr'l f'11c ,,.a,, ,;,, Llllh
P~n ~kl.' R uc itt ~ "r• ll lth t II)&lt;/ I ''i'il.
" lu ll' the car h"~ he~·n prc;ll111111HUll
I~ bi\Jc ..md ~~o l ute irr rc~&lt;:nl Je.lr'

ui

Jft~·bim

I lnt Crt }'. N.C.

1. What foreign car make has won a
NASCAR race?
, 2. How man~ bonus points does ~ Wins ton Cup driver
@et for leC:tding the most laps?
3 . What unrversity helped deve lop the roof flaps on

NASCAR race cars?
·e1;l ' 4::1ees euov;ea U! .A: ~!S J&amp;Afun
J8:ll)n suoJa\( GI PP!I::l · ~JqW3 ' £ :a~!;l 'It :Jen8er 't
SH3MSN't

$9.99

Jack R11u ' h L' llrrcntl~ nun, ti;e
\\ rn~tu n C'u 11 mce team .,, 11r111 .1 1!
:lr,~ l or&lt;h
kif H11rton d rl \ t'\ the Nu. 1,19
Cit~n Tnuru ... M.rrl. 1\tnrtin prl uh
the No . 6 Vr1h Pirtll' m:tL'hrrh'
Ke' In Lepage h llmer of 1hc .~o.
16 lamil y~·lid.~;o m L':lr. fl.latl
K L·n•cth dn w" tht· No. 1"1 Dt·" ull
car •\nd rnol..l l' Kurt Bu,l·h rna rr ~
tile 1\hCel in the '\', l_ 97 l trllll lk crl'
h rrtl.
Bu,ch rcph&lt;~·cll Cha1l L111k r:u rlt ·
,·r thr~ ~eJs o n.
In ~001. K t•u~ h wi ll drup Lc pa gl'
orn~t rolll lliltl}' 11nJ 1\ rl l !'rdU mtl)
four t ,· a m ~.

I

I

Ridenour
Supply

Fan Tips

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3306

·Stock CQI' Rocn"g l.J\.€s- is ri

collection of shott brcgraphres of
people attached to NASCAR rac1~
in a vfficty of different ways.

'Nntten t1y RIChard ~rs . the
Wok ltK:Iudes majOr figures like Bill
Elllot1 . Ned Jarrett, 8cbb'f l.abonte,
RICha,d PEtty aoll Humpy Wheeler,

0

bLn also caterers. WIVeS, artrsts and

I»

e\lefl sportswritefs.
It is avaiiOOie fron1 David Bull
PubhShir"g ~ $24.95. Cal11800

&lt;D

&lt;

J:

831-1758, or go to www.l:atll

11 cl~ u~cU in th~·

p~11111 ~.:heme &lt;klr~nt. t'ur Atlanta
v

,..
( IIA ,\J(ii ; O~ f i i i::.HC&gt;RIZON;
[ .arr~ ~kRe)nol ds. whnwJIIJOIIl
thc hn. brnat.k. 1q tcmn ne-..: t year.
mat!&lt;· hr' -l~7th and f11ral ra~-e a~ u
Ltl'll ~·I Ill' I wrth Mrke Sk.inucr 10 tiM:

N ,.\1':\ .~flll .

thinking it was ~otncthln ~ '" gr1c
me a breilthcr. 1 Jn, 1&gt;c: tu 1Jc lla·n· Ill
year~ from now. hut there·,,, m 1111.
I
mum n tw.o )C•'"'.-. and pn1hrhl~ tnur
ye,u srn:lxtmum

TRI M\11NG Till: FA I' A'
cllpcctcd, Jack R1tu~h attnrtunccd
what tw ~ ixell r·urn(ltrd f11r ~i~

' I u•u hJrr't 11:1\l' h:tmJpickcd ;1 week s 11r ~n. nu ntd1 that h~· i• rr irn
r: 11'1' h) l.rlc Mi~c t'ur rn )' fimrl rw..'t' mill '[,! hi1 Wil t ~lll/l .('up ('\lrtllll).'t'nt
1\ Jl!r luJt l," ~: ml /o.kJ.I,•ynolds. nut in!&lt;:
l'mm frw 111 rt•trr tc:um, nmt th:rt
1l1;r( ~ lo.llllll.'r dnm1nated the sp r in~ Kevin Lepage 1\ lhL' ndd m.nr•111t.
~-~ , .. ,. hell' l~~:furl' falling out with 20
R ll U ~ h Wi ll t:ol ll ~u lidH1t• ;il l t 'ul)
lii lh lo t~ "
Ol&gt;t:" r:tlirrn) rl1 a tli' W (,,,tll"&lt;•r,l . ;-.., ('.
1\, l"r hr ~ fV tarecr. McJ.Ieynnl d ~ factl rty
'-&lt;WJ • It\ :t 1\\ 0 to fu1rr-Yclll' deal.
"I he ~hLrld ml.tt 11r lire \'11 . 1ft
hut I'm t:.l. irrg thrs &lt;lt'al with l o~ leave) the futc uf drt l'er 1\c\ m J l'\l'
rhm~rnr l•lll,!!·lc rrn I didn't take 11 :rgc t!IKl'rtaiu

'"""'.nthJuu.eom

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

...
CD :::!.
I»

publlstWng.com on the VYeb.

r\11 th&lt;I\C ,·nlnr,

STIHJ.:.

••••••••••••
•

AROUND THE GARAGE

tou rrron the tra~-k. lfthey'n: hnvin'g
qualtly.mg. \\c wamtu wr n the pol~:.
If they r~ havm~ the fii~T. we 11o~nt
[\1 Willi!
R••brn,&lt; •n ,t l~o will \:tlnl iJCH' 111

W.l.

DeeP Dish
litem

"'"' 31

Few have Questioned Robby Gordon·s
talent, but som(! h~ve questioned his
commitment to NASCAR racing.
Go.-don was Felix Sabates· chotce to
succeed Kyle Petty rn 1997. but the
experiment fizzled s hortl~ after the season's
midpoint. and Gordon went back lO lndy.car
racing, wher'e he has won twice. He ver~
nearly won the Indian apolis 500 In 1999.
Gordon returned to Winston Cup this
season. putting toge ther his own team wlth
the assistance of several other Investors.
The Np. 13 Ford struggled. and a tack of
sponsorship forced Gordon to cut back to a
limited schedUle for the final half of the
season.
Ne11t year Gor·don will move Into th e No. 4
Chevrolet of Abingdon, va., owner La r r~
McClure. Mc~ure 's entries have won 14
races over lhe years.

• HOT: Jeff Gordon finished in
the top-10 10 times in the last
11 races. The three-time se ries
champion closed out the season
ninth in the points standings.
• NOT: Steve Grissom failed to
qualify for seven of the last mne
races.

Laree

X

Shawna Robinson set for seven Winston Cup races in
B~

November
Special

1=.. 1\nJ)!er

Dt:lH NA~CA U I tu' \h:,•k.
I f,,w many ~·ur~ line~ .i;rd, l~&lt;tthh
11111 i rr a race rmd w hat ;trc 1hl'
IHIIIlhcTS''

Hometown: Cerritos. Calif.

NASCAR This Week

••••••••••••
Who's HotWho's Not

In--··-

Pizza

•

.'\ny :tUHm tagc tl lc•l' dn1 cr'
Ulr ght htl\'t' i~ m rn 1m;tl hl'r&lt;l ll'l'
\\ llhtotl C'ttp mill ll u~l'h l'ar' arc
t&lt;~•lll diff,·rcm

Johr1 Clllfii/ 1-W\CAR TtQ Wolek

.

-

&amp;

'De at~

Gar~

Domino's

l'a le ~tll ll'. l'n.t~

••••••••••••

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

cornmenb .

Dc:1r NASCA R f hi• w~~k .
\\e ha\e all heard ror ~Cli P. abo Ut
ho~~o NASCAR h&gt;l\ tr ied to rnainl:trn t'qmll ~tand,mh l11r nit nf rP•
('l 'tllpt'IIION h) tr~ r ll~ \,trlllll\ lt' lll
pl;u c ... . rr,uinor pl;tll.'~. l.'lc'
Y&lt;:t for the l;t~ l ~l'l1.'1'il l \t'ill ~ tt
ha\ ,11lolled RPttllt R.t..:rn~ : a~ \ld l
ll\ .1 tcV. otht"r lcani,, tn partrli iMie
Itt l!u&lt;odt "rt:rl l'~ Lten !ht' d,1\
l•d"r&lt;' ;1 \\~thh'll Cup c~c nt :11 th~
~: lil t!' track. I Llllr 111' the !i1c Cup
U~t, c: n fur R&lt;lll ~ lt 1ta1e b~en
" " 'nved to. in llt) 1•piniun. gmn an
Wlf:ur :H.I\&lt;.illla~e by help i n~ llr,·rrr
rna ho: thdr Sclll p~ fnr 1ht• l 'r r() ral·1.'s
thc next da~.
M, L'~ ll1('1'1ti •1 11 i ~ 1ilal &lt;' I'C' ll if
•h•u'h R1K in!! "':11 11p IV.t&gt;{' llf~ 1rnc
" 'II} and th&lt;: r11hcr I Wt• amu her 11 :t\'
l'ur tile I up rae'"'· thq •trl l ha1 r ~~
50 -.'iH ud l'rlrtta gc •ncr lll•hl nt the
tiel(!.

always a c hamp

7. (6)
8. (81

NASCAR Th is Week,

You' ,c !!01 Dale Earnhurdt , ... hu

- - fROMUSTWEEII · ·-

_,

•

B o bby Labonte
Tony Stewart

3 . (41 Dale Earnhardt
4 . ( 31 Jvff Burton
5. (71 Ru sty Wallace
6 . (51 Oal e Jarrett

10. (101

I

ID~

(11

2. (21

' I N.C. 31!014

run ~

,\f&gt;cl-.\ r.wkrnl(~ !11 NO.SCAR T/11~ Week IHIH~r Monte Dutton.
·p, '" n parentlleses

1

BYT~FRYAR

FrGII

Countdown
to Daytona

Jarrett, Tony Stewart. Ricky

X CREW Of THE WEEK

co en
~0

• Tony Furr Is considered
something of an lnno\lator

N'"'

...a.s:
(111»

and a risk taker.
For the first halt of the
season, th111 combl~llon
of Furr and young drfver
Jerry Nadeau ma~ hawe
been a llabUity, bllt l•te
In the summer, lhe rapport between th111 two
" kicked ln."
Ttie result?
A wildly Improbable
victory for Nadeau In
Monday 's NAPA 500 at
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
It was Nadeau's flrtt
win In 103 career
Winston Cup startt.

(11::::

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

RACINE - Tiunksgiving is
a special time to be thankful for
wlut you luve. It is a time for
being with your family and
loved ones. A time to express
the gntitude that we have.
Many people are so thankful for
so nuny thing. that they do not
know where to start. I randomly chose some students, including myself, fiom our student
body.
"I am grateful for my friends
and family. Without my friends I
don't know wh~t I .would be
like, how I would act, and mostly what fun I would be missing.
My friends have always been
there for me when I have needed them. My family has helped
me through all of the hard times
that I've been through. They
help me with the tough decisions that I am faced with and I
love them very much."
I spoke with Kevin Holter,
Tara Pickens, Chris Yeauger,
Brigene Barnes, Kim McDaniel
and Jeff Wallot. Here is what
they are g!dteful and thankful
for.
"I am tlunkful for deer season
because hunting is the best
thing in the world," said Kevin.
Ta!d Pickens is thankful for
ller faith in God.
"The reason why is because it
helps me get through my life;'
she said.
Chris Yeauger is grateful for
his family and friends. He feels
that no maner what, your family is always there for you and
that your friends are always
there to lend a helping hand.
Brigitte Barnes is thankful for
so nuny thing.. Friends, family,
happiness, and health are jwt a
few of them.
"Friends for helping keep me
happy when I'm sad, family,
where I would be without
them, happiness makes the
world go around, and health
means that I will live well without sickness."
. "The most important thing.
to me are my friends, family and
beirtg a Christian. My friends
and family are important to me
b~cawe they have atllck with
mo thrcml!h tho !!ODd dmoa and
lml dmu. DQing a Chrlldan II
imparlint b@etUI@ Cltld lm
h•lptd mf llmmllh vwrylhlni
In lifo," Mid Kim MeDanltl.
JotfWilllat il thnnkfill ror bill•
lu!tbAII boe.u1o ho thlnkl that It
II fun and It laiKlmethlna to do.
"It beataalttln~ in front of the
televi1ion all day. '
.
Theae are juat a few com·
, rncnts fiorn the students at my
school. There are probably a lot
of people who. feel the same
way. Everyone is thankful for
different thing. and their meaning oiThanksgiving may or may
not be different from everyone
else's opinion.

J:

What Would
You Say?

I»

(I)
~

-·(I)
:s

BY MARIAM EL DABAYA

If a person were to ask you,
"Whet do you think about during

,--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

Thanksgiving,•

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155
~

'

Teens - think twice
about tobacco .use

wnt.:

Your
Tum
Letters
Our Rtadtrl

'.J~t v.r·Ck 'i r.Jr•~·

.

~~~

Hon !1.orn8d l'r. J.670
flton s ..W)er, 3.776

.... ..,t. • .s ·o

10, WarCI 8111101',

.

· load &amp;Kirne, 4,075

p,.,r,

1
8
9

•

'•"' r •N!n. 5.005
1~'1011 Kt!llo-r. o1 ,3S9
1\e,rrl l'ldrvrck, 4 ll3

.,.....
....

••••••••••••

Frida)/ • Feb. 16 • 2001 • ESPN

J.. 0\Jl'l'~ \ ,li'l.''l'('
:
2 . Dille flll'n~lll'.tt J ~:1
J
It'! I fl11dU11 -1 "· k_&gt;

.,........... u

~~~W=IN~S~TO~N~C~UP~~~~Earnhardt.

The Dilly ltntlntl • P1g1 A. 7

Middleport, Ohio

Thoughts on
Thanksgiving

__
*----.--.

\
/
Jj
..,:..)
(~ JJ r J
j _}_,. ::,) ~_,. J _J
All Times Ea•tern
• Craftsman Truck, Daytona 250

Pomeroy,

The Daily Setitinel @
Southern High School

The Daily Sentinel encourages
your support of these area
businesses who make this page
possible.

On TV

• flrldty, Nov.mbtr 14, 1000

What would your reply be?
Is the first thing you think of
is the Pilgrims and Indians,

~

0

Ol

z

0

~

::r

fD

Cll

CD

0

1\)
I

(!)

0

:I

a.

~

1\)
(X)
1\)

!"

U'l

a.
ii

•

a:==

'tl

li~IJ

·o
,;:1-

0

;r,

setting aside their differences to

II
I•
!
I

I

share a meal together?
Or do you think of the k~chen,

warm from food baking In the oven ,

and the tantalizing smells drifting
through the air?
Do you think about the food.
and all that you wtll eat,

but hope that e stomach ache is not

the result?

Do your thoughts turn to your fami-

ly

and the time you will spend talking,

sharing news, happiness, laughter,
and love?

Or do you think about God.

and all that he has done tor you.
especially '14hen you realize

that all

of his blessings surround you?

So on this Thanksgiving, I urge you

1o take a moment

· and thin~. to look around you and
see all that you have,
then be thankful and take your time
and enjoy this holiday.

smoking make teens feel older or
seem to make them fit in1
One answer may be the way
tobacco is advertised. Cigarette
ads seem to make smoking seem
Se'xy" or "cool.. to teens. Bef(lre
Camel cigarenes inaoduced the
cartoon chmcter "Joe Camel,"
their portion of the I Band under
market was less than one percent ;
five years later this market had
grown to I B percent.
Cigarette advertisements rardy
give the facts. The fact is tllot
tobacco kills. Tobacco use lias
been connected with lung cancer, heart disease, upper respiratory disease, mouth, throat, bladd~r.
pancreatic, and lung cancers, and
emphysema.
·
Another fact is that nicotille.
which is found in cigarenes, ij a
drug and a highly addictive obe
manufacturers are Increasing at that. Studies have shown that
advertising in magazines with nicotine is jwt as addictive as
more teen readers, even though alcohol, cocaine, and heroin . . It
there was an agreement to not was even once used as a pesticide.
target advertisements toward
There are more people addictyoung people.
ed to tobacco than any other
Various state attorneys general drug. Cigarettes contain more
are researching whether these than 4,000 different chemicais.
advertisements break an agree- and 42 known can cer-C&lt;l usi~g
ment made in 1998 that settled agents.
lawsuits brought by 46 states to
In conclusion, whether tobai:pay for the treatment of sick co compames are targenng teens
smokers.
can be argued for hours. Wh~u
Kids and teens begin smoking can not be argued is that nicotine
for several different reasons. It's is a drug and tobacco is harmful
likely that the biggest influence to a persor.'s health.
.
on teens come from their p&lt;:t:fS.
When we talk to our childn;n
Teens who have friends who about drugs and alcohol. \ve m~t
smoke are inore likely to start, not leave out the dangers 9f
even if they aren't direcdy pres- tobacco products as well. Ple~e
sured. Some teens 'say they started talk to. your children about t~e
smoking to feel older. Why does risks of cigarette smoking.
BY BRITTANY Non fORTUNE

RACINE Today. teen
tobacco we is rising. Over 90
percent of new tobacco smokers
are ·teens and kids. Jwt this year
alone 1,047,301 kids have
become regular smokers.
It is estimated tlut 335,136 will
eventually die because of their
addiction. Statistics show that 48
percent of all teen boys and 36
percent of girls we some kind of
tobacco product.
Are tobacco companies targeting teens?
Tommy Theiss, a sophomore at
Southern High School says yes.
"When tobacco companies use
cartoons and other fascinating
ads, they· are assuming that
younger generations will find
these ads amwing."
Studies show that cigarette

RANCH VISIT- Members of the Racine-Southern FFA recently visited Bob Evans Hidden Valley Ranch to
learn about raising beef cattle. Pictured are, from left, Amy Wilson, Bob Evans and Lori Sayre.

Racine-Southem FFA students
tour Bob Evans' Hidden Valley
AMY M.

of the cattle's diet. He said that on produced per day and how much
ACINE - As part their diet, he can raise his cattle hard work it was to manage all of
of trip to National for 19 cents per pound. He said this at one time.
Bob Evans is retired but still
Convention, three he saves greatly with his yearof the students round grazing.
takes part in the activities going
Evans also told us how his on at the ranch.
from the RacineWe would like to thank our
Southern FFA toured Bob Evans' chain of Bob Evans Restaurants
Hidden Valley Ranch and were started out with one shop he· used county extension agent, Hal
able to meet with Mr. Evans and for a truck stop. When he first Kneen, for setting up the tour for
get his feelings on raising beef started out, he had no idea of how us and the other schools that
to make a restaurant work and went with us. We would also like
cattle.
Evans is one of the first people keep it working efficiently with- to thank Mr. Evans for letting us
to do year-round grazing. He out losing money. He opened the have the opportunity to meet and
doesn't believe in 'having major first restaurant to help support the talk with him.
·
The Racine-Southern FFA
farm equipment, such as tractors, family farm.
He also told us about the old Chapter is also in the process of
hay bailers, or even a barn. Several of hia field• are lefl alone dur- grill mill. The griat mill ia named aclling fruit. The aalc willlaat until
inili the !\Ullmer md fAll 1~110n1 Rll~r hi! wl(,, Jew~ll l!vRm. Tho Nov. 14.
PloRIO 1uppor1 tho Radno·
10 tho ·IJrlll ean lllllW tailor, 10 UTili mill WRI WhON many pooplo
that In thv wimor eattlo e1n atill took thoir jlrain to ~@t h 11mllnd So111h~rn I'M &lt;haptor by b11yln!l
~rn@ thoR! If II happon1 Ill !now. up. It i! ntl llmuor runninl!, but ftuit. !(you hiYQil 11 boon CO IliACI=
Rvam had 1\oldi with 90=day tho buildin!l i1 !llllmmlinll.
od about buyin!l tr11it, ploil!f fill
turnip!. Alivr the turnip! R!aeh
BVII\! il"ll hi! IIIU•AilO flftory, ono of our mombm or our ad vi·
thuir pgtun!lRl, thoy beeomo pm Hv wid 111 how mueh mtnllo WAI mr, Alf\IH S1yro,
BY

WILSON

11

.

Junior class launches into activities:
Bv ISJM McDANIEL

RACINE -The junior class has done many d1ings to start out th~
2000-0 I school year.
,
The third week of school we elected our class officials. Macy Re~s
is the class president, Tiffany Williams is the vice president, Lindsey
Smith is the secretary-treasurer, and Kim · McDaniel is the cl~s
reporter.
To raise the rest ofthe money for this year's prom, the junior clajs
rallied otr an Ohio River Bear. The bear waa donated by jetrThornton and Ita namo wu Tornado.We 1old the l'llflle ticket! atlhNe of our
liollll! pmoa, and Wll lllw aold thorn at the Racine Pall flenlval.
:
On homteomin!l nll!ht, Wll arnmuneed the wi11Uer of the h~.W.
whieh wu Shirloy Saylll.Thv ela~A mado abput
ptf the bear. :
Th1 el1111 of 2002 wgrkl!d on their ela~1 Otm fgr a full we~k . Th~
thtm@ tl( tht !loa! wu "Drajjtln '!m' Dawn." 'T'hu dm pill ~ lot ilf
hud WCJrk Into the llo11t, whieh Willi !lm pl~~e. Th~ diji! 2002 hili
wgn tht lloat eontl!t ror threo ye~n in ~ row.

noo

or

•

NHS chapter

Inducts new

I

DAVE
·992·2155 Ext.

members

.

BY SHAUNA MANUEL

RACINE - On Oct. 9, 2000,
the Southern Local National
Honor Society held their annual
induction ceremony in the Charles
W. Hayman Gymnasium.
·
The inductors were President
Emily Stivers, Vice President Chad
Hubbard,
Secretary-Treasurer
Macyn Ervin, R eporter Shauna
Manuel, and members Brenna Sisson, Jonathan Evans, and Clay
Enslen.
A total of 17 new members were
inducted. Among these 17 members were I 0 juniors. They were
Joe Cornell, Kim McDaniel, Carolyn Bentz, Amy M. Wilson, Tyler
Little, Rachel Marshall, Joey
Manuel, Lori Sayre, Matt Ash and
T.J. Moore.
The other seven tnembers were

seniors. They were Maggie Smith,
Jessica Janey, Brandon Hill, Jeremy
Fisher, Smh Ball, Jeff Circle and
Garret Kiser.
Following the ceiemony, old and
new members were joined by the
parents in the cafeteria for a reception.The new members were con-

gratulated and welcomed into the
National Honor Society.
T he Southern Local National
Honor Society bas plans for community activirie~ and outings for its
member~.

HOME
NATIONAL
BANK

333 Page Street

Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740) 992-6472

Racine 949-2210
Syracuse 992-6333

OHIO R~ER BEAR
COMPANY
253 N. Second Avep
Middleport, OH
992-4055
Mon · Sat
10am- Spm

Starting this
Sunday thJaugh
Christmas ...
Sundays 1 pm •

4Pm

&lt;

Downing Childs Mullen
Musser Insurance ·
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
992-3381

I

•I
I

•
j•

·Vaughan's
Supermarket
408 General

Hartinger Parkway
992·3471

I111//E;f
KFC'

Crow's Family Restaurant
Ult IUtilll tttll

FenturiliF l(,.,tm·ky f'rif!d Clli(·k·pn
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window
PHONE 992·5432

'J

�•

Page A 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 2000

Inside: ·

The Daily Sentinel

Utah blasts American, Page B2
Today's Scoeboard, Page 83
LAbontes learn lessons, Page B5

Apostolic

Ep1scopal

Church of Chr1st

Clooordl ol Jows Cllrtol !lpootoli&lt;
Vanlandc and Ward Rd.

Pastor; James Milh:r
Sunday School- 10:30 1.m.

Evening -7;30 p.m.
Cburrll ol J.,. Cluist
AposiOik FoMb
New Lima Road
Sunday, tO a.m. and ?:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7: 30p.m.

Pomtroy Westside Church orCbrisC
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School • I l a.m.
Wor1hip · lOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Holiness
Com••MJ Cburdl
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Suoday Worshi~10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

· Uberty !lis&lt;mbly or God
P.O . Box 467, Dulkhng Lane

Mason. W.Va.

V...llle Holiaeoo Cburdl
310S1 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pwor: Gary JackJon
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: N.:il Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Maruatba Bapdst Churdl
Burlingham • 742-7606
Pastor: John Swanson

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Mornin~t

Scrvi'-"C 11 :00 a.m.

Evening Service- fl:OO p.m.
Wednesday Service: - 7:30p.m.
Ho~

Baptist Church tSouthun)
570 Grant St, Middlepon
Sunday school -9:30a. m.

Worbhip - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Seryice - 1 p.m.

Rutland Flnt Baptise Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsh ip- 10:45 1.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist

East Main St.
Sunday Sl;:hool- 9JO a.m.
Worship · l0:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike

PaS1or: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · l0:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
Fint Baptist Churrb
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School · 9: 15 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
Racine First 8&amp;plist
Paslor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m .
Silver Run 8&amp;p11sl
Paslor: Sleven K. LitHe
Sunday School - JOa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
MI. Union Baptisl
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evemng- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services.- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baptisl Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
Sunday SchO?I -~ 9:30a.m.
Sunda)' Worsh1p- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study· 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Bapclsl Church
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middh:porl
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:00
Hllblde BapUst Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Strvices -7 p.m.
VIctory Baptist lndeptodant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Kee~e
Worship- 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Keno Churdl ol Christ
Worship-9:30a.m.
SuOOay School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wa lla~
lsi and Jrd Sunday

Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School· 9:30a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Suvices • 7 p.m.

' Bradford Church of Christ
Comer or St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
You1h Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p ·8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Reedsville Churth of Chriat
Pastor: Philip Slurm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Dtxler Church or Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbell ·
Sunday school 9:30a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m.
Church or Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study· 9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Fortst Run Baptist
Pastor: Arius Hurl
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Church of God

Aotiqutly Bapltlt
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4!i a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m .
Rolland Fr« Will Baptist
Salem St.
Paslor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday S&lt;;hool • lO a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service!i- 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4.5-5:15p.m.: Mass-5:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass ·8:30a.m.

0•

Hemlock Grove Chun-h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Chur&lt;:h
Ra ilroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 u.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.,bp.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Fne Methodist Chun:h
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.ITi.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hills Church or Christ

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brict Utt
Sunday School. 9:45a.m
Evenina- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicts- 7 p.m.
Rutland Chun:h or God
Pastor: Ron 1-ieath
Sunday Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Flnt Churc:h of God
Apple and Setand Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.
Church of God or Proph«y
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

Paslor: Rev. Craig Crossman
Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sundny Schoo! 9:1.5 a.m.

Flo,_
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Foren Run

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School-' 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Heolh (Middleport)
Paslor: Rob Brower
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- II :00 a.m.

P&lt;orl Chapel
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Hysell Rua Holiness Cburcb
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School .· 9:30 a.m.
Worshir, - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bib e Study and Youth- 7 p.m.

Rutland Cbunh or Christ
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

ROlf of Sbaroa Holloea Church

Wesley•• Bible Holiness Churcll
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Dqug Cox
Sunday Worship-9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service:- 7:.30 p.m.

Bradbury Church of Chri11
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday Schoo!· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Ea.........
Pastot: Keith Rader

Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sund.ay School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Cburdll
1/2 mile off Rr. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Tuppen rtaln Churth or Christ
Instrumen tal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Commu nion· 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Suaday S&lt;hool- 9:4lo.m.
Worship - ll a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30 p.m.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Ch1rles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
~orship- 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.
ltading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
, Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetins:-7 p.m.

Zton Church or Christ

Hartfunl Church or Chri~C In
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship • 9:30 B.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah O.pllsl
Fourth &amp; Main St, Middleport
Pa51or: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday SChool-9:30a.m.
Worship- l0:4!i a.m.

Colvory PiiJri• Chopel

Bear-wallow Rid1e Church of Chrl.!il
Pastor:Terry Srewan
Sunday School -9;30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Laaa;svllle ChriStian Church
Suntlay School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

........,.(Sy.....,..)

Groce £olocoool Chrdl
326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, OerJY
Sunday: Adult Education Sunday School 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist .5:00p.m.

Pun uo, CIIIU'dl of(luW
212 W. Main St.
Minister: Neil Proudfoot
Sund1y Sc;Dooi - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wed~y Services - 1 p.m.

Assembly of God

Baptist

Ce.tniOUiter

C1oeoter Clooordl or u.. " ' Pastor: Rev. Herbert Gnle
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednc~ay Services • 7 p.m.
Rutlud Cbon:b ollllt N...,_
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

--CIIurdl
Ash St. Middlepon
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School·lO:OO a.m.
Sunday Service • 6:00 p,m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00 p.m.

Potnfl'Oy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rock S~""'.'P
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
y~_uth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Rullud
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Sorvicc:.s - 7 p.m.
Salmi. Cmltr

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship ·10:15 a.m.
SaoWYUie
Sundoy Sc:hool- 10 o.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
lldlwty
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Aaape ur~ Centtr
•full-Gospel Cburch"
~utors John&amp;. Patty Wade
'f!OJ Second A'o'e. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

Flllth Chopel
923 S. Third St, Middlepon
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday Krvice, 7 p.m.
Christian Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rutland
'Pastor: Robtrt E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11:1S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowlblp Cburdl
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.
Fallh Full Gospel Church

Long Bouom
Pastor: Ste\'e Reed
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowshtp service 7 p.m.

Montlag Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
· Worship • 10 a.m.

Hanisonwllle Communlly Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
• .Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Ettll Lelort
Pastor: Brian Hukness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
.515 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening~ 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Lutheran

Radae ·

St. Paul Lulheran Cburcb
Corner Sycamore&amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Worshjp- 1 I a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
WorshiP•· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;: 4th Sun)
. Wednesday Servi~- 7:30p.m.
ML Olive Unlled Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev.·Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursda)' Services- 7 p.m.

Meta• Cooperatln Parish

Northwt Cluster
AI !rod
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School· 9:30~a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Cbuler
Putor: Jane Beattie
Worship- 9a.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Lon1Bouom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Reed1vUie
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday or Month-7:00p.m. service

Tuppen Plolno St. Pault
Pastor: Jane Beauie
Sunday School - 9 a.m
Worship· 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

foinlew Bible Cburdl
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Paslor: Brian May
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Faith Ftllowsllolp Crusade for Chrbc
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Calnry Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Re\1. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m.&amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

The Churth or Jesus

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Wblte's CUpel Wnleyoa
Coolville Road
Paslor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SerJicc- 7 p.m.

47439 Reibel Rd., Chester

ftc Belinen' Fellow!hlp Ministry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Rpbinson

Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship ~ 9:00a.m.
~unday School- 10:00 a.m.

·-GnopeiM'Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m.
Worship- 1 p.m.

Honetl Oulracb Mlnlotrin

Carmei·SuttoD
. Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
rutor: Dewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo - 9:.lG a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

St. Jolla Lutbei'IID Church

Carttt.. lo-l•ol'""ol Cllurdl
Kingsbury Road
Pascor: Robert Vance
Sunda7 School - 9;30 o.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or WedDCsday Nl&amp;hl Services ;

hrtlud Flnl Cburdl oCihe Nounae
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 o.m.
Mornina Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service - 6:30 p.m.

Reo1Jonlzed Chun:b or J""' Chrlll
or LaUer Day S.lob
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WorShip- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Christ of Latter~Day S.laU
St R1. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20-lla.m.
Relief Society!Prlesthood 11:0.5-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:1.5 a.m.
Homemakina meeling, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Frld11J.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cool•llle Churdl
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.
Belhel Cbun:b
Township RQ., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Hockingport Chtu'Ch
Orand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.
Torth Churth
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Churcb of the Nuareae
Pas1or: Allen Midcap
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicc:a • 7 p.m.
Putor: Allen Midcap

RHdiYIII&lt; F&lt;llowoblp
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Sync:Uit Chun:b of the Nuareae
Putor Mike Adkins
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -~10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Cbun:b or the Na.ureae
Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Stinnvllle Community Cburdll
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday-7:00p.m.

Rejoicing Ule Cbun:b
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepor1
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Enieritus Lawrence Foreman
Worship· 10:00 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Cllftoo Tabernade Churc•

Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

New Uft Vldory Cenler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
·Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of lht Uvlna Sulor
Rt.338. Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse: Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.
God's Ttmple of Praise
3166.5 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Bak:olm
Services: Thurs. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Pentecostal
hntecostal Autmbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastur: William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m .

Faith Valley Tabemade Church
Bailey Run Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday EveninJ7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 P·l'!'l·
Syracu.!le Mission
1411 Bridgeman S1., S)·racuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Hazel Community Cburch
OITR1.124

Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Dyesvllle Community Churth
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m:, 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
Harrisonville Presbyterian Churth
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day AdvenUst
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pas.tor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
.. Worship- 3 p.m.

Morse Chapel·Church
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Fallh Gospel Church
Long Bouom
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
ML Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence BU5h
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

United Fallh Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pas.!l
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneSday Strvice. 7 p.m .
Full Gospel Ua;hthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter •
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday -7:30 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10;30 a.m., 7;30 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea ·7:30p.m.

Eden United Bnthren In Chrilt
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Re.v. Robert Markley
Sunda,Y School • II a.m.
Sunday Worshap · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m .

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Roben Barber
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship- 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7 p.m.

ATIEND THE .CH.URCH OF YOUR CHOICE
~horch

Crow's Family Restaurant
'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

these Bl'ea

992-5432
Pomeroy flower Shop
106 Butternut flue.
Pomeroy, OH 992-6454
"'Flowers for all occasions"

I ngel' s Carpet

FUNERAL HOME

169 N 2nd. Ave

uwe accept Pre need Trarufers"

Middleport,

OH

992-7028

112·1200
Lundy Brown
106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

Director

Regan Brown

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075 .
172 North Second Ave.

174

•

•

Jlfialyrr

Jf unernl ;Momt ~nc_

260 SOulh Second Ave.•Middlepoo1, 0H 4571101
74o-992-5141
Bruce A. Fisher- Director
590 Easl Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769
740·992-5444
james R.

l!race Is sufficient for
thee:
for m~ strenl!th Is made
Perfect In weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

M~

always &amp; 'Forever

:Jift Sfiop

518 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH

992-1161
.

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Meigs to play in
Athens preview
ATHENS -The annual boys
basketball preview sponsored by
the Athens County Shrine Club
will be held tonight at Athens
High's McAfee Gymnasium.
The schedule includes Vinton
County and Meigs at 7 p.m.,
Logan will meet NelsonvilleYork at 8:30 p.m ., and Federal
Hocking and the host team
Athens will play at 9: 15 p.m.
Tickets will be available at the
door.

Page 81

Nov••b• 1... 1000

Moss and the Vikings spoil Turkey Day in Dallas
IRVING, Texas (AP)- To the national
audience Randy Moss has delighted two
of the last three Thanksgivings, his catches
are spectacular.
To the rest of the Minnesota Vikings ,
they're no big deal.
Moss added more footage to his career
highlight film with two great touchdown
grabs, and even amazed himself by catching a 52-yard bomb as the Vikings beat the
Dallas Cowboys 27-15 on Thursday.
"He's the same on a Monday night
game and a Wednesday practice;• said
Minnesota quarterback Daunte Culpepper, who was 15-of-22 for 205 yards. "He's
the same every day. What you see is what
you get."

Moss finished with seven receptions for
144 yards, and the two touchdowns gave
him an NFL-best 12. He's had eight in
four career games against Dallas, his most
against any opponent.
Moss' deep ball came against triple coverage: one safety on his back, another
jumping in front and a cornerback who
wa's in the area.
"That was probably the toughest catch
of my career," Moss said. "I had to look
back in the rain and turn my body. When
the ball hit me in the chestplate, I was
shocked."
Greg Myers, the safety who was on
Moss' back, said he saw the same thing
two years ago when he was with the Ben-

gals. Even knowing what to expect, he was
still helpless.
"We had double coverage on him and
he caught the ball. When we had coverthree, he caught the ball," Myers said . .
"He's great on the ball and he has great
speed. He 's great at the technique of shoving off just a little bit and catching the
ball."
Moss' first touchdown, a 7 - yarder, was
while running against the back line of the
end zone, arms fully stretched and the ball
getting jammed with the tip up between
his fingers . Culpepper said Moss was his
third option, but Moss had said he'd be
open.
His semnd touchdown, a 36-yarder,

came while getting unungled from a
shorter cornerback, then quickly dropping
his toes in bounds.
"I see it every day in practice," Culpepper said. "Put it in his area and he'll come
up with it."
The Cowboys are tired of seeing Moss
soar in Texas Stadium. On Thanksgiving
two years ago, Moss highlighted his rookie season by catching touchdown pa..ses of
51, 56 and 56 yards - his only throe
catches - as the Vikings beat the Cowboys 46-36.
Moss said he does like showing up the
Cowboys, one of many teams that

Please see Moss. Pap 85

Southem preview
set for today
RACINE - The Southern
Tornadoes will be hosting a preview today at 6 p.m. against Ohio
Valley Christian _ in Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium in Racine.
Varsity, junior varsity, and seventh and eighth grade boys teams
will play two quarters each.
Admission will be $3 for adults
and $1 for students. Donations of
· Gatorade and old bath towells to
clean the gym and accessories are
also needed and can be left at the
front gate.

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

OHIO

Meet the Eagles
tonight

33

· EAST MEIGS -The Eastern
High School basketball team and
cheerleaders .will host a "Meet the
Team" and spaghetti dinner on
tonight at the high school.
Dinner will be from 5 p.m.
until 6:30 p.m . Admission is $5
:or adults and S2 for children
under 12. The meet the team will
begin at 5:30 p.m.

Eastem preview
set for Saturday
EAST MEIGS -· The Eastern
High School basketball team a.nd
cheerleaders will host a preview
with the Wellston Rockets this
Saturday at 5:30 p.m. at Eastern
High School. Admission· is $3 and
$2 and no passes will be honored
for this event.
The freshman , junior varsity,
and varsity boys will each play
beginning with the freshmen at
5:30p.m. with the reserves beginning at 6:15 p.m . and varsity at 7
p.m.

Redwomen topple
Ursuline
PEPPER PIKE, Ohio - The
University of Rio Grande defeated Ursuline College 74-48 Tuesday.
· The Redwomen (5-l), ranked
1Oth in the NAIA Division II
poll, jumped out to a 36-21 halftime lead as Mindy Pop e score d
eight of her game-high 17 'points
in the first half.
Karley Mohler added 13 for
Rio. Emily Cooper had 12 and
Nicole Dauer chipped in 11
points.
Ni cole Tomaro and Sara
Schwartz led the Arrows with
nine points each.

Evansvill,e tops
Ohio '
EVANSVILLE, Ind . - Ohio's
Deckie Fischer matched career
highs with 15 points and six
rebounds as the Bobcats dropped
their season opener 84-73 to
Evansville.
Heather Laughlin had 12 points
and Lori Moorman added 10
p"oints for the Bobcats (0-1 ).
· : Jenna Hayes led Evansville with
!"9 points and eight rebounds.
Latasha Austin scored 12 points .

STRONG TO HOLE- Rio Grande freshman Mike Marshall (center) drives hard to the basket despite an
attempt by Ql\io's Jon Sanderson to block his shot. Ohio won the game, 91-70. (Bryan Long photo)

ATHENS Ohio head
coach Larry Hunter and Rio
Grande head coach Earl
Thomas each got what they ·
wanted out ofWednesday's 9170 Bobcat victory.
After scrimmages against a
pair of talented, but fairly disorganized squads, Hunter got to
see how his Bobcats would react
to an organized game plan.
Thomas got to see how his ·
club would respond to superior
physical competition afte,r tearing through its first five games
undefeated.
Both coaches were fairly
happy with the result. Hunter
was especially pleased with the
fact that his club was pushed to
work hard at both ends of the
floor.
"I thought the game tonight
was just exactly what we needed," Hunter said. "Unlike the
exhibil'ion games, it really made
us work a little bit at the offensive end. It wasn't just one or
two passes and somebody having an open jumper or a oneon-one situation in the post.
"They doubled and sometimes triple-teamed Brandon
(Hunter) inside and kept us
away from the basket in the first
half with their good team
defense," he added. "I thought it
was a good test ."
Thomas was happy with his
club's performance in certain
areas, and believes his team can
be a cOntender if improventents
are made.
"] was fairly pleased with the
way we played, probably, the

first 16 minutes, overall"
Thomas said. "We had some
breakdowns, but we knew that
was going to happen. I think we
really got hurt the last two or
three minutes of the first half
when it went from a 6-point
lead to 11, and the first five
minutes of the second half.
" This group (Rio Grande) is
going to be good, but we've got
to stop making so many fundamental
mistakes," Thomas
added. "Against a lot of the
teams that we play, we can get
by with it. Against OU with
their athletes and as we'llcoached as they ate, when you
make a mistake, they make you
pay."
Ohio (1 - 0) led by as many as
11 points in the first half and
eventually held a 42-31 halftime
edge, but Rio Grande kept the
game close, due in large part to
the play of Nathan Copas, Ran dar Luts and Joe Martin. Copas
scored eight points, while Luts
pumped in seven and Martin
added six.
The Dobcats nursed a 5-point
lead with 1:44 remain in" in the
half, but put together an H-2
run to dose out the half give
themsevles some breathing
room . Anthony Jones and Steve
Esterkamp had three point1
each and Dustin Ford added a
driving layup at the buzzer to
fuel the Bobcats' late run.
Ford finished with 10 point&lt;
in the 6rst half to lead Ohio. Jon
Sanderson, who sat out last season after transferring from Ohio
State, had eight poinll in the

Please see Rio, Page B5

GREAT ALASKA SHOOTOUT

Lions feast on
New England, 34-9 Buckeyes and Orangemen
PONTIAC, Mich . (A P) Charlie Batch appears to be
stepping things up for the
Detroit Lions - even when he's
beitig knock ed down and
bruised.
Batch , who threw for 194
yards and a touchdown and ran
for another, took a battering all
game long and finally left with a
bruised rib in Detroit's 34-9
victory over the New England
Patriots on Thursday.
"Have you ever seen 'Giadiator?"' Lions cornerback Marquis
Walker asked. "Charlie took
some shots llke Maximus. He
showed me he was Maximus
today."
Added Lions safety Ron
Rice: " It was ' like a boxing
m•tch. He was down and got a
couple of standing eight co unts,
but he still got up and fought."
· Metaphors aside, an aching
Batch helped Detroit (8-4) toll
up 28 second-ha lf points and
improve to 3-0 under Gary
Moeller, who took over as coach
when Bobby Ross r.signed.
Upbeat about their· Iate&lt;t win,

many Lions players credit
Moeller with freeing up the
offense, relaxing his troops and
instilling co ntldence in time for
, three straight road tests looming
against Minnesota, Green
·- Ray and the New York Jets.
'
,. "He's really got us believing
' in ourselves,'' Detroit wide
receiver Johnni e Morton said.
The Lions have potential
playoff tiebreaker wins over
. New Orleans, Washington a~d
the New York Giants, all of
whom also have four losses. But
Detroit has momentu m, having
beaten the struggling Patriots
(3-9) in the second of three
games the Lions play in 12 days.
"I think we're on a roll,"
Moeller declared after the Lions
held the Patriots to three field
goals by Adam Vinatieri . Two of
them came . in a first half that
ended just 6-6.
,
"We gave the ·game away in
the second half," New England
coach Bill Delichick said tlatly.
Patriots free safety Larry

Please see Lions, Page B5

meet in today's semifinals

Syracuse's big ea rly lead was
2-3 zone.
''No one plays a zone better due in part to DePaul's II fiNthan Syracuse." Kennedy said. half turnovers.
"It looked like we couldn 't
"We just played too mfi, gave
pass
and catch for the first 12
them
too
many
easy
looks,"
Syra ~ use.
DeShaun Williams had 25 minutes ," ·. Kennedy said. The
Preston Shumpert scored a
points
and Damone Brown 16 Dlue Demons did a better job of
career- high 36 points and Syrahandling the ball in the second
cuse held off a furious second- for the Orangemen (2-0).
half with just seven turnovers.
Lance
Williams
led
DePaul
(1half rally to upset No. 2 1 DePaul
Syracuse led 69-52 with 10:35
92-84 in the opening round of 1) with 18 points, and Dobby
left
, but the Orangemen's frontSimmons
had
17
points
and
13
the Great Alaska Shootout on
court got into foul trouble and ,
Thursday ni ght.
rebounds.
created an opportunity for
"My
team
did
a
good
job
of
Syracuse now takes on Ohio
Stat~ m the scnnfi nal s on Friday. finding me in key situations;' DePaul to· mount a comeback.
The Dlue Demons whittle&lt;!
The Duckeycs Y&lt;hipped' Florida Shumpert said.
One of those situation s came the lead to 80-73 on Willi.um'
State "0-65 behind the 23-point
performance .of Brian Urown on with 3:.S8 remaining after the jump hook with about 4:25 ldi.
Dlue Demons had tnmme&lt;l a But Shumpert drained a 3Thursday.
"We had all preseason to pre- 21 - point defi cit to 80-73. pointer to stifle the com,-b,Kk
pare for Preston, and we didn't Shumpert drained a 3-pointer to temporarily.
.After OrJ.ngemen et'nten Hilly
get it done,'' DePaul coach Pat blunt the rally.
"I think without that shot the Cduck and Jeremy ·M cNctl
Kennedy !iaid. "He was a oneman gang out there .You ca n't let game goes down to the wire," fouled out, a 3-pointcr by
a guy like that loose and let him Syr~cuse coach Jim Doeheim DePaul's Rashon Burno cut the
margin to 86-80 with 1:05 ldl .
light it up."
said.
"You can't spot a team 20 But Brow11 hit five free thn;&gt;ws
With two freshmen starting,
Kennedy said his 131ue Demons points and expect to come
Please see Alaska, Page BS
cou ldn't b,reak Syracuse's .tough · back," Kennedy said.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)
O ePaul seemed to forget
everything it practiced while
prcpanng for its game against

�: P~• B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday, November 24, 2000

,• Friday, November 24, 2000

0.13

VancolNel at Boston, 12 30 p m
Chicago at Tomnlo. 3 p m
utah at Detroit. 7 p m

•

Cali pari, the former coac h at Massac husetts and che NBA's New Jersey Nets, was hired by Memphis in M arc h. He lose his first game w1th
the Tigers, against Temple, last week.
.
Guard J ason Grunkemner had 24 points a nd five rebounds for
Miami (0-2).
Georgia 82, Indiana State 64
Ezra Williams scored 21 points to lead Geo rgia past Indiana State.
Robb Dryden, Georgia's 7-fooc- 1 center, had three blocks and nin e
rebounds. An thony Evans added tS points and four assists for the Stilldogs (1-2).
Michael M enser scored IS points, all o n 3-point shoes, and Djibril
Kame had t 2 for Indiana S~lte (0-1), w hich was oucrebounde d 45-22.
Georgia trailed by 10 ea rl y. but went up 32-31 ac halftime. The Bulldogs, playing strong zone defense, puc together a 14-4 run to lead 6252 with six minu tes )eft.

command against =tn' overmatched oppo.nem. and outrebounded them
45-15 overall
·
.
" We got a lor in," Hunsaker said. "Wt.• recogn1zc that they wc..·r~·n 'tat
our levd ;md we wanted to keep the score down, but we ~!so had to

luok out for ourselws. We have not been playing wdl. We're looking
for our Identity as .1 team because we have so m any new guys and we
don't really haw a team leader yec."
Chns Burg~ss added It 'p oints for Utah (2-0), which used 13 playCI'S, ea.ch ploy1ng at least t1 minutes. Kevin Bradly had 10 points and
&gt;~X amst.s. A1.11crtean (0-t) did not have a player in double figur.:s ,
, Ammc~n, severely mlt!llcd by Utah, stayed in the game during che
tmt 10 mmuccs. Utah C)p~ued ~ tO-poin t lead with 11:44 left in che
.half on a 3-poinc shoe 'by Kevin Bradly. From there, the Utes wok
charge and ended the half with a 59-16 lead.
Flor Melcnde2, former roach of the Puerto Rico and Arge 11cine
n.cwnal .teams who was recently hir.:d by America n, knew his team
Wa&gt; not 111 the same class as Utah.
. " W,• played with them for the first 1U minutes and chen agairt for
c1ght nunmes 111 the second half," Melendez sa id. "But I think chat uni~
~·ersicies like this are much more prepared than we are."
No. 5 Stanford 84, Old Dominion 60
... Ryan Mendez scored 18 points and Casey Ja cobsen added 16 as
Stanford beat Old Dominion.
Stanford led 36-26 at halftime, and used a I 0-2 run capped by Jason
Collms' layup to make it 50-32 with 14:44 left.
·
. · T he Cardinal (2-0), who will play Memphis on Friday, kept buildIng thetr advantage and went up by as many as 30 points - at 7 1-4 1
Wtth under ~IX nunutes remaining on Mendez's 3-pointer.
Stanfo rd coach Mike Montgomery said he wasn't pleased with his
,.
team's fint-half performance.
"We missed a lot of shoes," Montgo mery said. "We'd come down,
che.,Od fou l us. We'd miss free throws. We were getting a lot of good
looks and missing shots."
.
·
Collm s had 10 points and 10 rebounds, a~d his twin brother, Jarron ,
added e1ght points and· nine rebounds. .
.; ·Pierre Greene scored 10 points for Old Dominion (1-2), which shoe
JIISt 22-of-62 from the field.
Memphis 60, Miami (Ohio) 59
Scooter M cFadgon's jump shoe with a half-minute left lifted Memphts past Miami of Ohio for coach Jo hn Cahpan's first victory wich

,
WLTPtt. PFPA
Miami .... ..... ... . ..
8 3 0 727 220 146
Bultalo ........... ,............. 7 • o 636 220 200
lndlanai)Olls .............. 7 4 o .636 303 239
N.Y. JeiS .............. ........ 7 4 0 636 243 219
New England ............... 3 9 0 .250192 253
Cenlral
1
Tonne...,. ..................... 9 2 0 .818 228 159
· Baltimofe ....................... 8 4 0 .667 218· 128
Piltaburgh ...................... 5 6 0 .455 184 153
Jacksonville .................. .4 7 0 .364 220 259
g!&amp;v!!'a~
3 9 0 .250 130 268

..............·........

...................... 2 9 0 .162106 233

West
.. .. 9
Oakland ...
Denver .........
. ..... 7
· Kansas City .................. 5
Seattle ......................... 4

2
4
6
7

0 .818 311
0 .636 333
0 .455 267
0 .364 165

221

262
257

260

San Diego .................... o 11 0 .000 189 291

NFC

Ea1t
WLTPetPFPA
Philadelphia ............... a 4 o 667 264 , 79
NYGrants ................... 7 4 0636213184
Washington .................. 7 4 0 .636 218 178
Dallas ......................... ..4 8 0 .333 242 273
Arizona ..........
.......... 3 8 0 .273 170 311
Central
Minnesota .
.. .. 10 2 0 833 306 250
Detroit ..
......... 8 4 0 667' 24 7 227
Tampa Bay .
' ....... 6 5 0 545 262 180
Green Bay
.5 6 0 .455 235 231
Chicago ·~·
3 8 0 273 153 256
Watt
St. Louis ..
. . 8 3 0 727 412 336
New Orlea ns ..
7 4 0 636 225 183
Carolina .
4 7 0 .364 210 204
San Francisco .
4 B 0 333 290 336
A11anta ......................... 3 9 o 250 192 306
Thursday's Games
De troit 34, New England 9
Mrnnesota 27, Dallas 15
Sunday's Games
Chk:ago at N.Y. Jets. 1 p.m
New Or1eans at St, Louis , 1 p.rn
Cleveland at Baltimore. 1 p rn.
Phifacletphia at Washington, 1 p.m

Buttato atTampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.

Allanta at Oakland, 4:05p.m.

tt
TAKIN' IT TO THE TIN- Mike Puzey (12) of Utah drops in two points
off the glass during the Utes' 94-37 pasting of American in the Purto

. D~nver at Seattle, 4 :,5 p .m.
Mtamt at lndtanapolis, 4:15p.m.
Kansas Ci ty at San Diego, 4 1 ~ p m
Tennessee at Jacksonville, 4.15 p.m
N.Y. Giants at Arizona, 8:20p .m
Open : San Francisco
Monday'a Game
Green Bay at Carolina, 9 p.m .
Thurtday, Nov. 30
Detroit at M1nnesota . 8:20 p m.
Sunday, Dec . 3
Arizona at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Dallas at Tampa Bay. 1 p.m
Denver at New Orleans. 1 p.m
Miami at BIJffalo, 1 p.m.
New York Gtants at Washtngton, 1 p.m
Oakland at Pittsblngh. 1 p m.
St Louis at Carolina, 1 p m
Seattle at Atlanta , 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Philadelphta, 1 p .m.
San Francisco at San Otego. 4:05p .m.
Indianapolis at New York Jets. 4:15pm
Cle\leland at Jacksonville, 4 15 p m
Green Bay at Chtcago, 8.20 p m
Open : Baltimore
Monday, Dee. 4

Homemade Piea
and Deuerts

Rico Shootout. Utah closed the first half of Thursday's game with a

39-6 run. (AP)

the Tigers.
.
M emphis trailed 56-50 witt] 4:19 left, and was down 59-58 with 58
seconds remaining after M iami 's Mike Ensminger made a layup.
Kelly Wtse led M emphis (1-1) with 22 points and 14 rebounds. But
he mtssed two free throws with 14 seconds left chat wou ld have given
Memphis a three-point lead.
"We made it simple in the end, swing the ba ll and post him ," Calipan sa1d. " If he wants to have the ball, he's got to learn to make free
throws down the stretc h."

P~HOCKEY

AFC
E••t

rncmna

BAYAMON, Pu erto Rico (AP) -With coach Rick Majerus back
home recovenng from knee surgery, Utah nlade sure: it didn't have a
letdown at the Puerto Rtco Shootout.
Trace Caton scored 19 pomts as No. 13 Utah pounded Division II
Amencan Puerto Rtco 94-37 Thursday at American University's
Euge nio Gm~ rra Arena.
·
"This was a game we really needed," satd Utah assistant coach Dick
Hrmsaker, who filled in for MaJerus.
The Utes, who will play Georgia on Friday in the seco nd round of
the holiday tournament, closed the first haif with a 39-6 run to cake

Ea1tern Conf•rence
Atlantic Dlvlalon
W L
Pht!adetphla
. 10 1
New York .....
. .....
.8 5
New Jersey ................... 6 5
Boston . . .. .
. ....... 5 6
Miami .............................. 5 6

OrlandO . .....
Washington
Clevetand ...
Toronto
Charlotte
Indiana .
Detroit
Mllwaukee
Atlanta
Chicago

. ............. 4
...................3

Nlllonal Hockey League

Pet.
909

GB

615

3

545
.455
.455

4
5
5

8 .333 6 112
9 .250 7 112

Central Dlvlllon
.. .. 8 3

.727

6

5

545

7
5

6 .538
6 .455

2
2

3

... 4 8 .333 4 112
. ~ 7 .300 4 112
.2 10 167 6 ti2
............. 1 11 083 7 112
Weal•rn Conference
Mldweat Dlviaion
W L Pet
GB
San Antonio
8 3 727
Utah
.. 8 3 727
Minnesota
7 4 .636
t
Dallas ..
8 5 615
1
Houston
.7 6 538
2
Denver
6 6 500 2 112
Vancouver
4 7 364
4
Pacific Division
Phoenl)(
8 · 3 727
Sacramento
8 3 727
l A Lakers
B 4 667
112
Portland
9 5 643
112
Seattle
5 8 385
4
L.A Clippers
4 • 8 333 4 1/2
Golden Stat e..
3 9 25C 5 1/2
Wednesday's Games
Boston 96, Houston 81
AUanta 78, New York 74
Clevelanel 86, Miamt 67
Ct1arlotte 88, Philadelphia 73
Portland 93. Mtlwaukee B4
Mtnnesota 101 , Vancouver 100
San Antonio 112. Sea ttle 85
Utah 116, Denver 78
Phoenix 97. New Jersey 85
Sacramento tOO , Chicago 71
LA Lakers 111 , Golden State 91
Thursday's Game
Toronto 11 1, Indiana 91
Friday, Nov. 24
Miami at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7 :30pm
Orlando at Boston, 7 :30p.m
Washtngton at Indiana, B p .m
Vancouver at Detro11, 8 p m
Charlotle at Milwaukee 8:30p.m
San Antonio at Denver, 9 p m
Golden State at Phoenix , 9 p m
LA. Clippers al Seattle, 10 p.m.
New Jersey at Utah. 10 p rn.
Minnesota at L A. Lakers 10 30 p m
Saturday, Nov. 25
Toronto at New York. 1 1--l m
Cleveland at Chatlotte. 7 30 p m
Allanta at Orlando, 7 30 p m
Houston at Miami. 7.30 p m
Denver at Dallas. 8 p m
M•lwaukee at Washington. 8 p.m
Philadelphia at San An lonto , B 30 p m
New Jersey at Porl land, 10 p m.
Seallle at Sacramento, 10 30 p.m,
Mmnesota at Golden State. 10.30 p m
Phoenix at LA Clippers. 10 30 p m.
Sunday, Nov, 26

onshi p with a team bu ilt around

Pla\'c r of the Year Elton Brand
Except for Shane Battier, that
tc.1m v;tmsht!d almost overnight,
p1cked clean by the pros
Ycc here is Duke, back again
with the No.2 team in the co un -

try. young and talented and
potsed to play Chaney's Owls fo r
the Preseamn NIT champ10nsh1p
Fml..y night.
• "Duke is one of che better
't eJms I've seen," Chaney said. " !
·.;Ion 't know w hat they did to get
'So many replacemCnts in so fast .

H e must .have microwaved the
:_team
• Coach K knows the Devils
:~uvt: talent. Battier is surrounded
·by big-time players hke Nate
James. who had 26 pomcs on 9'of-12 shooting in the semifmal
rubout ofTexas. Pomt guard Jason
W1lhams scored 20, Carlos Boozi cr had 14 and II rebounds in 16
·minutes, and Mike Dunleavy,
who .1dded 11 in 18 minutes.
Still Krzyzewski see) room for

h.1ve to play each other twice chat
close," he said.
Temple IS a \VOrk 111 prog ress.

Duke to dea l with chat and the
Owls' ma tch up zone.

Chancy has turned th e ball over
to Lynn Gree r, m aking tht" transition from shooting guard to point
guard. The sp indly junior played

'They're ditfcrent," he said.
" Th ey're huge, fim of all. And it
is a ~tffercnt style I know their
system, bu( I don 'r kn ow their
peo ple. The thmg chat impresses

40 minutes against Indiana withou t a single tu rnover and has sur-

me most abo ut Teq1ple is their

rendered the ball jus1 twice

111

four games.

As happy and surpri sed as
C haney is \Vith Greer. he gri pes
over 6·foot-l 0 Wide body R on
Rollcrson . who has not been as
donunant off the backboards as a
man h1s sizt" shou ld be.
Krzyzewski noticed Temple's

·Jcvd ."
: Co.!Ch K will work on thos,·
-thll1£!

· ~ c hcJuled

gamt".

· Ch.tn~y g:~ttllalc~ ,H
tlut
' prmp,·rt Krzy1ewsk1 1111't thrdkrl

wttll it; dthcr
0:

"1 dun't know tf tlw 's 1mh .1
jlloli thtn'l! fi1r ~trhor r~•m ;- rn

GF GA

56

58

61

56

74

58
66

71
42
63
68
51
51

55
47

43
52

45
77
69

51

58
71
64

48
42

62
53

6()

WLTOLPioGFGA
St Louis ... .

13 ' 3 0 29 62 38
Detroit ....
12 8 1 1 26 65 56
Nashvtlle .. .
7 8 5 1 204552
Chicago
7 11 2 2 1B 56 67
Columbus
7 13 1 1 16 44 70
Northwest Division
Colorado
15 4 3 0 33 70 4 6
Edmonton
13 9 3 0 29 73 65
Vancoi.Jver
12 5 3 2 29 77 61
Calgary
. 5 11 4 3 17 48 64
Minnesota
' 5 12. 4 1 ·15 45 60
Pacific Division
SanJose
13 4 2 0 28 56 40
Phoent)(
11 5 6 0 28 64 50
Dallas
11 5 3 i 26 53 40
Los Ang eles
11 7 4 0 26 76 62
Anahetm . . . . . 810 3 2 2161 77
Two polnls lor a wtn, one potnl for a tte and
over1 tme toss
Wednesday's Games
Ph iladelphia 3, BuHalo 1
Washington 3, Vancouver 2, OT
Boston 5, Detroit 4
Tampa Bay B, Atlanta 2
Toronto 4, Edmonton 3
Carolina 3, Pittsburgh 1
N.Y. Rangers 4, N Y Islanders 3, OT
Calgary 1, Minnesota 1, lie
Dallas 1, Nashville o
Colorado 5, Columbus 2
San Jose 4, Ct1icago 1
New Jersey 5, Anaheim 2
Thursdav 's Games
Edmonton 5, Ottawa 3
Montreal 6, Atlanta 0
New Jersey 6, Los Angeles 1
Friday's Games
Carolina at Bos ton , Noon
Ptttshurgh at Philadelphta, 1 p m
Ch•cago at Mtnnesota , 2 p m
N Y Rangers at 8ulf ato, 7 p m
N Y Islanders at Washington, 7 p rn
Florida at Tampa Bay, 7 30 p m
Vanco;~ver at De troit . 7 30 p m
St Louis a1 Nashville, 8 p m
Columbus at Oalk1s, 8 ·30 p m
Anal1eim at Ca lg&lt;~f'1 , 9 p m
•
Saturday's Games
Ottawa al Toronto, 7 p m'
Bulfalo a\ MontreaL 7 p.m

PRO SOCCER

ICOLLEGE FOOl BALLI

saturday
WMellng ,... nc:f Stadium
No 1 Morgantown (13-0) vs No. 3 Park·
ersburg {12· 1), noon

01

DIVISION II
Games Friday at 7:30p.m.
At Parma Byers Field
Akron Buchtel (12·1) vs Olmsted Falls (12·

1I
At Dayton Welcome Stadium
Ptqua (11 ·2) vs Marysville (13·0)
DIVISION Ill
Games Saturday at 7 p .m.
At Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium
Copley (11 -2) vs Canton Cent. Cath (12-1)
At Grove City Stadium
Por! smoutt1 (13·0) vs Van Wert (9-4 )

DIVISION IV

Games Fnday at 7:30 p.m.
At Canton Cent. Cath . Stadium
Newatk ltcku.l g Vallt~y ( 13·0) vs Youngs
Ursulme (12·i)
At Troy Memorial Stadium
Germantown Valley Vtew (12- 11 vs Coldwa ter ( 11 -2)

DIVISION V
Game&amp; Satuday at 7 p.m.
At Tlfti n Frost-Kalnow Stadium
Liberty Center (13-0) YS . Bedford Chane!
(1 2· 1)
At Xenia Cox Stadium
Amanda-Ciearcreek ( 10&lt;3) vs Aeadtng (11·

2)
DIVISION VI
Games Friday at 7 :30p.m.
At Canton Fawcett Stadium

College Football Scores
SOUTH
MISSISSippi 45, MISSISSippi St. 30
Tuskegee 28. Alabama St. 27

I COLLEGE HOOPS I
Men's College Basketball
Prueason NIT
Friday, Nov. 24
Third Place
Indiana vs Te)(as, 6 :30p.m .
Cf1amplonsf11p
Temple vs Duke. 9 p m.
Tournaments
Carrs/Safeway Great Alaska Shootout
First Rou nd
OhtO St 90. FlontJa St 65
!3yracuse 92, OePalJI 84
Puerto Rico ShOotout
First Round
Georgia 82 , lndtana St 64
Mempnis 60. Miamt (Oh10) 59
SJantord 84 . Old Oon1tnton 60
Utah 94 . American U . P R 37

Cl11eAA
Flr•t round
Bndgepor1 48 . Sherman 8 .
Iaeger 22. Greenbner West 8
Oak H1ll 27. lndopendonce 7
Shady Sprin:9 !4, Magnolia 7
Tyler Consolidated 32, Wiliamstown 6
Wayne 21 , Franktort 11
v.Jinfield 17, Clay County 14, OT
Wyoming East 34, Ritchie County 6
Second round
Bridgeport 42, Tyler Consolidated 12
Iaeger 36, Winfield 7
Shady Spring 25 , Oak HiU 13
WayllB 14 ,Wyoming Easl 13, 20T

OHSAA Stale Semifinal I
DIV ISION I
At t&lt;ent St. Dht Stadium, Sat., 7 :07 p.m.
Solon (13-Q) vs Masstllon Perry (12-1)
AI Wel come Stadium, Sat., 7:31p.m .
UpperArhr\gton 113·0) vs Cin Colerain (13 -

National Professional Soccer League

Ea1tern Conference
W L Pet.
GB
Baltimore
.... 7 0 1.000
Harrisburg
. 4 3 571
3
Phtladelphia
3 3 .500 3 112
Cle\leland
2 4 333 4 1/2
BI.Jtfalo
2 5 .285
5
National Canterenee
WLPctGB
Toronto .
7 1 875
Wichita ... .
. 5 2 714 1 112
Edmonton
6 3 .667 1 112
Kansas City
2 6 250
5
Oetrott
1 6 143 5 112
Mtlwaukee
I
6 143 5 1/2
Thursday 's Game
Toronto 14, Detrot t 5
Friday's Game
Edmonton at Wichita
Saturday's Games
DetrOit at 8uHalo
Toronto at Cleveland
Balttmore at Harrisburg
Kansas City at Milwaukee
Wichita at Philadelpflta
Friday, Dec. 1
Townto at Ka nsas City
Mil&gt;.vaukee at Wichita

Parkorobl.rg 27 , U.......Jiity Z1, 20T
Chlnlpionohip

PREP FOOl BAll

....

55

195 N. Second
Middleport, OH
740-992-1622

Newark Cath (9-4) vs Mogadore {13·0)
At Findlay Donnell Stadium
Delphos St John's {13·0) vs. Maria Stein
Marion Local (12·1)
WVSSAC State Playoffs
Resulls I rom the West V1rgima · high school
tootball playoffs
ClanAAA
First round
Cabell Mtdland 20. George Washington 15
Morg ant own 48 Fili mtont Semor 7
Parkersburg 60 Hmnpsh1re 0
Prmce ton :l?. Wlleeltng Pa rk 28
AlVorsuie 30 Mart nsbwg 7
Robert C Byrd 14 Keyser 0
Un11:erstty 40 "lum~..ane 14
WoOdrow W1lson 28, Plltllp Barbour 0
Second round
Cabel l Midla nd 27. Prtnceton 8
Morgantown 18, Robert C. Byrd 9
Parkersburg 14, R1ver s1de 0
Umvers ily 38, Woodrow Wilson 7
Semlfinal3
Morgantown 33 Cabell Mtd!and 18

Semltln•l~

Brtdgeport 42, Shady Spring 7
Wayne 33, Iaeger 8
Championship
Frld•y
Wheeling lallnd Sllidlum
No I Bridgeport (13-0) vs. No '2 Wayne
(1 3·0) , 7 30 p m

c••••A

Flret round
BI.Jtfalo 47 , Madonna 7
Cameron 52, Gilbert 22
Fayetteville 42. Oceana 6
Matewan 40. Burch 22
Moorelielel 29 , East Hardy 18
Pendleton 28. Valley Fayette 20
WheeltnQ Centra1.42. Valley Wetzel 20
Williamson 20. Parkersburg CalhO hc 0
Second round
"
Cameron 26. Wt lliamson 0
Fayetteville 28, Matewan 6
Moorehelel 35 . Buffalo 26
Wheehr)g Central 61, Penelleton 12
Se'mlflnals
Moorelielel 41, Cameron 14
Wt1eehng Central 42. Faye1tevtlle 20
Championship
Saturday
Wheeling leland Stadium
No 1 Wheeling Central (12· 1) vs No. 6
Moorefielel (10.3), 7 p.m.

I

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
IND IANA PACERS-Placed C Sam Perkins
on the tnjured Its! Activated F·C Terry Mills~rom
tile lf'IJUISd list.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
~
DALLAS COWBOYS-Stgned C Craig Page
off lhe Tenne ssee Titans· practtce squael .
MIAMI DOLPH INS - Placed TEEd Perry on
InJured reserve Signed TE Brody Heffner·Liddi·
Rid

HOCKEY
National Hockey League

ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Recalled G
Jean ·Sebas!ten Giguere from Cincinnati of the
AHL
C ALGARY Fl!\MES-Recalled C Daniel
lkaczuk !rom Satnl John of the AHL. Assigned
F Marty Mutray to Satnt John.
''
COLU MBUS BLUE JACKETS - Recalled D
Rad\m Btca11ek from Syracuse of the AHL

"

I

The

arC'

Holidays

,_..Are Coming ...

its players.

Both team s had C'JW se mifin al
w in s in the Preseason 'NIT, Tem-

ple beating Indiana 69"6 1 and
Duke pummeli ng Texas 95-64.
Now 1t's on to the tournament

title ga!nc .

Signature Oak
Double Pedestal.
Table w/ 6 double
press back chairs. ·

Brand New 2001
Pontiac Sunfire SE Sedan

Brand New 2001 Chevrolet
Cavalier Sport Coupe

AM/FM CD Sys. W/6 Speakers! ,
• Air Conditioning
Rear Spoiler

Santa's

All New 2001·Chevy
Tahoe LS 4 Door 4x4

q2,950* ·• q5,450* q5,850* S21,950* S33,350

~1,550*

size and mu st figure out a way for

All New 2001
Ponliac Az1ek SRV

Brand New 2001 Chevy
S-Series LS Extended Cab

Brand New 2001 Pontiac
Grand AM SE Sedan

• Aulomalic, Keyless Entry
• Pwr Wind., Locks, Mirrors
• Tilt &amp; Cruise, CD Sys.

• Aulomatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cass., Rear Spoiler

• Automatic,Air Conditioning
• CD System/ Third Door
Tilt &amp; Cruise

2000 Olds Bravada
4 Door All Wheel Drive

2000 Chevy
Blazer LS 4 Door 4x4

. 2000 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

• Ultimate Recreational VPI&gt;ieiPI
• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Keyless Entry/CO System

• Third Seat, Full Power
. •.Keyless Entry/CO System
Front &amp; Rear Air/Heat

Saturday
November

25th

',Weaths
Roping &amp;

Poinsettias

Bulk Candy,
Amish Cheeses
ct Butter

WV Frazier Fur• Trees

2000 Chevy Silverado
LS Ext. Cab 4x4 .

lighted Bookcase,
Headboard, Triple
Dresser, Hutch, Armoire
4-Piece

2000 Chevrolet
Cavalier Coupe

Impala Sedan

•24,750* s21,950* qu,95D* qJ,950* qo,B5D* so '950*
....____,

sggggs

• V-8 Power/ Automatic ·
, Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt, Cruise, CD System

• Ta,;es, Tags, r 1ue Fees eXIra.

&amp;Gifts!!

2ooo Chevy

• V-6 Power/ CD &amp; Cass.
• Fully 'Power Equipped
• Totally Loaded!

•

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp;Cruise
• Alum. Wheels/ CD System

Rebate included in sale P.rice of new vehi cle ltsted where a~licable .

Order r rutt 111
&amp;Gin
Baskets

• Power Seat, CD System
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automahc
.
• Air Conditioning
.• Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Power Seat/CO System
• Power Wind ow &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

.

" On approved credit. On selected models. Not responSible 101 tyoographtcat err~rs. Pnccs Good November 241h Through November 26th

CHIVROLIT

&lt;V·
WE'U liTHIA I

r"

'

t '

., •

0

I uick
lsn'l

11tl ..,, lor

• r~RI '"' r"

O ldsmobile

00000~

3 MIUIS
To

E~R 132

Rt l?l Cho.m; h 51~

Cha rlo ~tun

West Virginia's #1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And Custom Van Dealer.

Door Prizes &amp; Refreshments
New Hours Man • Sat 9-7 Sun 1-5

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 8 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 7 pm

Paail' ill. VIcki Cummln1, Owner~
508 Wliahln1111in Sl. R•••nawon!l, WV

TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com

~o.1 ~m·~5~~o

•

'

.

•

I TRANSAaJ~~; I

-I

~~

aga111st a T•·mpk tL'al1l th.1t

; h,1, d1L• uncnviabh.· ta!lk of f:tcing
~h~· BLue D~o•vils twin~ in nine
:tby,., first on Fnd11y anJ then
ag.u11 on Dr:c. 2 in ;1 regul.uly

AUanlk: Olvi~Mon
W L TOLPte.
Phtlaelelphla .... 10 7 4 0 24
P1Hsburgh ...... 10 7 2 1 23
NewJersey
.... 10 8 3 0 23
N.Y. Rangers ....... 11 10 0 0 22
N.Y. lslanders .......,6 9 2 2 16
Northeast OIViliOn
Toronto ..
.12 6 · 3 1 28
Ottawa .......
. 11 6 4 0 26
Buffalo .............. 10 6 2 1 23
Boston ........ 7 10 2 2 18
Montreat ..
.. .. 6 14 2 0 14
Southeast Division
Carolina
7 9 3 1 18
Tampa Bay
7 9 2 1 17
Washington
5 9 6 1 17
Atlanta ............ 4 8 6 I 15
Flonda .......... ..4 8 4 3 15
We~tern Confenmce
Central Division

Women'• Colt.gt; BatketbaJf
SOUtH
Xav~er 72_ LAngston 61
MIDWEST
Empona St 72 St Mary·s . Texas 51
Wrtght Sl 76, lndtana St 74
SOUTHWEST
N M Hlghtall(l s 77 SW Oklahome 62
Tournaments
Southern U. Tournament
Flr.t Round
Grambling St 76. D1llai"d 71

coach."
And the thing that Impresses
Temple's coach most about Duke

jmprovement, which is like louk-

j ng at a Rembrandt and saying,
"Cce, if he just had added a
~ snudgen here or there.''
: " We need to develop depth,
: whjch we have no(' he said . " 1
:".like our team. We can score a
: good amvum of pomts . Wt• h:we
.to be able to defend at the same

Ea1tem Conferenee

Detrott at N v_ Islanders. 7 p m
washington at Atlanta. 7 p m
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, 7 .30 p m
Tampa Bay at FlOrida, 7.30 p m
Dallas at Columbus, 7 30 p m
Phoemx at St Louis, 8 p m
Anaheim at Edmonton, 8 p m
Calgary at Colorado, 10 p m
New Jersey at San Jose, 10 30 p m
Sunday'a Games
Nashvtlle at Carolina, 1 30 p m
Vancouver at Minnesota 2 p m
Los Angeles at Boston, 7 p m
Qttawa at N Y. Rangers, 7 p.m
Phoenix at Phtladelphta. 7 p rn.

•

Duke and Temple works in progress
NEW YORK (AP) - Temple
r·o.cch John Chanev loo ks Jt
JJukc, scratc hes hiS. head and
wonders how Mike Krzvzewski
doc~ it.
·
Two yelrs ago, the Blue Dt&gt;\'Jh
pbyed for the IIJC!onal champi-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

TODAY'S S-COREBOA.RD.

PUERTO RICO SHOOTOUT

•
mencan;
•
•
18 I,
59

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

!I·

�Page B 4 • The Dally. Sentinel

Fnday,Novembar24,20Qo

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 2000
Public Noll&lt;;e
1111e or 0111o
Ohio IChool FICIII!Iea

All Penonal
AnnounceiMIII
GIY-oy L&lt;* &amp; Found
Vord Solea and Won'-&lt;!
To Do Ada
Must B• Pold In Advonco

ToWok

$25 00 To $75 00/hf PT FT
888 604 74 9

Bruner Und

m!BUNE QEAQUNE

2 00 p m 11M day before
11M ad II to ron Sunday &amp;
MOndoy ldiUon 2 oo p m.
Friday
SENIJNEL QfAQUNE

1 00 p m 11M day beloro
11M ld II to ron
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday

(140)4411492
~bsolute~ Beau lui Home Si es
On Kerr Ad Ron ng 5 Ac es With
Pond $25 000 8 Ac es $21 000
Or Mow In Th~ 3 2 Home On 5
Ac ts Reduced! $68 000 RIO
G anoe Scene v ews Deadend
Road 8 N; es W lh Pond S25 000
Of 9 Acres $23 000 Chesh e 6

FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up lo S 8 65 hou H ng to
200 I ee ca fo app tea on e•
am na on no ma on Fade a
H e Fu Benet s 1 800 598

•so•

lltxtan$ on

516 (7am 9pm

CST)
Allen 10n

Wo k from nome

Ac es $8900 or 37 Aetas Re
ducltd S38 000 Clay Towns hop
31 Ac es Slream + Sa n $33 000
Tycoon Lake A ea 10 Aces
$12 000
Ca I Now Fo Maps Owne F
nancmg w 11&gt; S lgh P operty
Markup Land Ava labia n 42

REGISTER DEADLINE,

2 daya belor• tho od lo to
ron by 4 30 p m Saturday
&amp; Monday ldHion 4 30
Thurodoy
O.odllneo oubject to
chonga duo to holldoya

ATTENT ON
EARN ONL NE NCOME
$5000 $75001 mon h

PEPS COKE FR TO
lAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
S$All CASH BUS NESS$$ N
CREASE YOUR NCOME NOW
SMA l INVESTMENT EXCEl
LENT PROF TS
800 73 7322
EXT 4603

800 784 8556

www pcpays com

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals

FREE DATING
www S NGLES com
Guys
We Wan To Hea
F om You
We e IVA
AndWa ng

news-11 subject to

1ho Fldoral Fa~ Housing Act
011968 which malces Hllagal
to adYortlse arty ptalaNnce
limitation or dlsctlm natiOn
based on race COlor religion
sex tam lialllltUI 0( I'\IUON.I

ATTENTON
WORK FROM HOME
Up To
$25 00 $75 OOfn PT FT
Ma 0 de
188a 248 OS 5

origin or arty nt!1(111on 10
make any aucn preference

mltetion or Cliscrtm nation

900 226 2364
Ex1 35 7

Thll newspaper w I

S399Pe Mnua

not

knowtnglyaccapt

MsiBe 8Veas
Serv U 6 9 645 84~

$FREE
URGENTLY NEEDED p as ma
donors ea n S35 o $45 o 2 o 3
hou s week y Ca Sa a Tee 740
592 665
0

140

••

Bustness
Tra1n1ng

CASH

NOW$

wea hy am I es un oad ng m
of do as lo hep mnmze he
axes W e mmed a e y w nd
fa s 4542 EAST TROP CAN A
AVE •207 LAS VEGAS NE
VAOA 89 2

NEED CASH
12 500 &amp;50 000
Low Month y Pymls
daySe vee
No ee us Good SVS
Fo Appofntment
877 748-BILL 12055)

Fax (6141865-11001

look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land ? we Do Hu ry
Only 10 lo s Left 304 736 7295
11&gt; •

005

Phone(614)~9000

Counties

AI real estate actYeltls ng In

advert sements b real estate
which II In violation of lhe
law Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all &lt;Me!~
advertised In this rewspaper
are available on an equal

P event lo eclosu e w hou
bank uptcy Wtr; m0\le7 P va e
Realty Fund ng eco deC nlo ma
I on 888 809 2580 o

www C arkl nk com/help
6 7 ACRE WIPONO
Loca ed n Jackson Co Mad son
TWp On Emory Cente po nl Ad
Between A10 G ande And Oak
H I Electric And Counry Wa e
AYa lable Oak H I School 0 sl c
S2 900
W VIRG NIA Ritchie County
Rusuc 97 Ac "Ti acl Fo Sa e As
Aecraa on P ope 1y located n
R lch e County On Bunne Run
Road SS7 000
Ca I Us TOday Fo FREE MAPS
Anthony Land Company Ltd
1.fl00.213 8365
www.elcllnd com

oppcllunitybu~

Ta a Townhouse Ap a men s
V&amp; y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oosCA
2BahFuyCa
pe lid Adu 1 Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $365 Mo No Pes
lease Pus Secu y Oepos Re
qu ed Days 740 446 348
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740

446 0 0
Tw n Ave Towers now accep ng
appl ca ons Of" SA
HUO subs d zecl api o a de y
and d sabled EOH 304 675
6679

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Rebu In S ock
Ca Ron EYans 8D0-537 9528

RENTALS

PhOne (740 44~9476 Camp e e
'I Ramo ded ns de &amp; Ou Th ee
Bed oom lauM y Room La ge
K Iehan &amp; 0 n ng Room L ving
Room Ba h 2 Ca Ga age Two
Slo age Bu d ngs Aecluc&amp;d P ce
$95000 Sx M es Souh Of Ga

LOWER
HEATING
COSTI
HEAT NG
COST SAID TO
DOUBLE THIS WINTERI Re
p ace 0 d Gas Guzzle W h
Ama as 95 H ghes E c ency
Gas Fu naces And Heat Pumps
Fee Es ma es
You Don Ca

poos

Us We Bo h lose
(740)446
6308 800 29 0098

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

house $325 00 a mon
Homes ead Rea y ask to Nancy

2 b

320 Mobile Homes
30 Announcements

150

for Sale

Schools
Instruction

Home Deco a ng Open House
Sa u day
NoYe mbe
2~ h
7 OOa m 7 OOpm G o a 0 e
langsv le OhiO 740 742 2076

CAS H LOANS $2000 $5000
Co so da on o $200 000 Bad
C ed I No C ed OK C ed
Ca as Mo gages E c G oba
F nanc a Se v ces To F ee o
nlo ma on 1 888 604 444 Ex
303

I James E Thompson J

w no
be espons b e o any debs o h
e han rrry own om N011 6 2000
on James E Thompson J
New To YouTh tt Shoppe
9 Wes 5 mson A hens
740-592 842
Oua y co h g and house he d
ems

$

975 2B A Needs Handyman s
A enl on Mus Be Moved $4200
W I Negot a e (740 388 8002
Leave Message

304 67S 5540 0 304 675 4024

Huge rwen o y D scount P ces
0 V ny Sk ng Doo s W nd

460 Space for Rent
Mob e Home Space Takes 2 s
4 s 6 s W des $ 25 mo $ 00

Oepos Need Ae e ences
446-0 75

740

BR DGE STATE UN VERS TV

EXPANDING
COMPANY
NEEOS PEOPLE
Wo k om
Mme
Ma o de n e ne
S 500 mo PT $3000 $7000
mo FT FREE
o ma on 4 4
290 6900 o www home bus ness
sys ems com

Gallipolis
&amp;Vtcrnity

180

~·~.~~~~~~~~~

In Memory

In loving memory
of our wonclerful
Mae Estella McPeek on
her 90th birthday
November 24
Happy Birthday Aunt
Mae You re always n
our hearts We miss

you and love you
always

Tom janet

MILLENNIUM

TELESERVICES
IS pleased to
announce the Grand
Open ng of Is

wv 211003

7 A pro bid -ling will
bl held on Dacamber I
2000 at 1o 30 a m at the
lolfowlnO tocaUon
s E M PII1Mro Inc
117 SOUth Sta11 S Wlllervllla OH . .1
8 Tho Ownar r a - • the
right to reject any or 111 billa
and to wolve any or 111
lrragulorfllee mlatakea
omlaatona or lnlormalltlaa
rafltlve therato
All quoatlona pertolnlng
to 11curlng Contrect
documanta Blddara Uat
otc ahall bo directed to
Mogan Bohlan Tho Ouondel
Group
Inc
8181
Wo rl hI n 11 ton
Ao1d
Wutarvtlle OH 430112 (814)

885-9000
Ownar Malga Local School
Dlatrlct
(11) 24,(12) 1 a 3 tc

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
CU!~~UFU!EDSI

JACKPO~I!
~ ~

mterv ew

appo ntments for
ou bound teleserv ces
pOSitiOnS

NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY
Potent al to earn up to
$15/hr w11h quarte ly
salary rev ews Full
and part t me

pos1t ons ava lab e
3 Sh fls datly w h
fl ex ble schcdul ng
Management
Opportumt cs
Ava lable
MedJcal/Dental
40JK/Pa d Vacat ons
available for full me
employees

St rt your new career
w thus
Call I 800 929 5753

e

Wanted To Do

App ances
Recond
Washe s D ye s Ranges Re
g a o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New May ag Ap
p ances F ench C y May ag
74()-446 7795

Tappan H E c ency 90o/. Gas
Fu aces 0 I Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond o n ng

Sys ems F ee 8 Yea wa an y
Benne s Hea ng &amp; Cool ng
800 672 5967 www o vb co m/ben

ett
Sawm $3 795 New Supe lum
be mate 2000 a ge capac es
mo e op ons manufac u e of
sawm s edge s and s~ dde s
NORWOOD NDUSTR ES 252
Sonw 0 Ye Buf a o NV 4225
FREE

no ma on

383 EXT 200 ~
Government Joba $
$33 00 pe hou po en a
Tan ng Fu Bene s Fo mo e
n o ma on ca
888 674 9 50

ex 32 5
GOVT POSTA
$ 8 35 hou Fu ~ene s No ex
pe ence equ ed Fo app ca on
and exam no ma on
888 726
9083 ex 70 7am 7pm CST

800 578

WANTED Part ume live 1n COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTOR needed 1n Metgs
County Hours 10 pm Fr thru 10 am Mon
sleep over reqUired Dut1es nclude teaching
commumty and personal sktils to an
tnd1v1dual
wtth
mental
retardat on
Requtrements Htgh school d1ploma/GED
valid dnver s license three years good
dnv ng
expenence
and
adequate
automobile 1nsurance coverage Start ng
salary $6 00/hr Send resume to
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
P 0 Box 604, Jackson OH 45640
Deadline for applicants 11/29/00
Equal Opportun ty Employer

Merchandise

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

FINANCIAL

Weddngs

Sa 10 s
Fam ly Po a s
Ca fo an appo n me
304 675 7279

Help Wanted

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECUR TV ISSI?
No Fee Un ess We W n
688 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
B anch Manage s FfT
F s Ame can Cash Acl ance s
One 0 The Fas es G ow ng
Com~an es n The Un ed S a es
Ou Ga po s B anch s Look ng

560

810
Jack Ausse

Te

889 3449 EX ENS ON 22
h

s

24

$505 WEEKLY GRARANTEEO

WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PER ENCE AE
OURED
8007465
X 0
24HAS

6E

off a other pass by ill dso and
ran t back 101 )ard fa the b tal
marg n clos1ng
slru l g
shoWJ 1g b\ a L o s s con hr~
playmg v1thou t ic ~"t rc p
t 01 leader Kur S l lz
I o SAl
out "1tl a spra n 1 kls
You pia) to
d
hen
you los the ga c
l l o \ vo
tcrcepttons tt ust ut thruug5
the h eart sa~d B dso
I o had
148 )ards o
17 of )J p
r;
before be g epl ccd l) t l1
Brady aft r W stb nk
Her p

from Page Bl

e s 8 weeks

o d Fema e $200 Mae S 50
F s
Sho s and Wp med

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

740 388-8039

U11cond ona

loca

Mys c Poms Re open g any
b eed dog g oom g a a abe

ao~shed

446 0870

A so show qua y and pe Poms
ava labe o sa e 740 949 34 6

e me gua a ee

e e ences u n shed Es
975 Ca

24 H s 740)

BOO 287 0578 Rog

esWaepoolng

C&amp;C

Gene a Home Man
tenence Pa n ng
ny s d 1'\Q
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob e home epa and mo e Fo
I ee es mae ca Che
40 992
6323

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

G ow ng Team mmed a ety Cus
orne SeN~ Rea Saes An ~
0 Co ec ons Ekpe ence A P us
Fo These En ry Le e Pos 10ns
Bu A e No! AeQu td Fu me
Bene s nc ude
• Compe ve Wages
•Bon s ncen ves
•Pa d Vaca 10ns and Ho days
• S20K Fee Te m l e nsu anee
• Med ca Den a P esc p on
D gtOsab y
•T o Asssa ce
• Camp ehens ve a n ng P o
gam
•Ad ancemen Oppo un es
Pease Send You Resume 0 A
letts 0 l'l od c on Today n
Con dence To
F s Ame can Cash Ad an e
An Pe sonne Deco
90hoA e Paza
Ga po s Oh o 4563
Fa-. 740 446 835
E E0 MF
AO ugFeeWo kpace

Lawyer M lloy w ho was pet al
JZed I ) yards fo t rough n g
Batch \\JS helped off the field
sat o ut mo plays and returned to
t hro v 18 vards to S dnck lrv1 1
to the I After Batch failed to
sneak t n Ja 11 es Stewart dov 11
for a TO aJ d a 10 9 Detroll lead
wtth 11 18 left
Walker then ntercepted a pass
by Drew Bledsoe and rett r 1ed t
12 yards to the Ne vEt gla d 15
'l3atch late r s ored o 1 a 10 yard
scra11ble push ng the margu to
?7 ') and fimsh ng 16 of 24 for
194 yards befor he vas replaced
by Stoney Case
Cha rl e sl o ved good tough
1e s out th re Moeller s td H
co ld at least s le thro gl tl
pa~ 1 a 1 he va t d to be o ut
ther Tha t s vhat yot vane to sec
1
a I de
He re II ) got
punch d a 1d he k p go tg back
n th ga t
Brva 1t Westbrook l
p k 1

Lions

Fo Qua ty Peope To on Ou

$450 00 I 000 00 WEEK Y
Ma ng Le e s F om Home No
expe e ce necessa y FT PT
He p Needed mmed a e y Ca
Sundan e D s bu o s
800

and Aile Gr ffin one 11 the
final 44 seco tds to s al the v1 1
The Bite D m o 1s had troubl
pen trat ng Syrac s s zone 1 1 th e
first half IS the 7 (. at Cduck
bl ocked t vo shots at d d tsn pt d
tteJ pt t pound tl c ballt &gt;Jde
D ePaul t 1r1ed the bali ov&lt;r I I
t 1 s t 1 t1 t first JO n 1 mtes as
Syracuse led by as m my " 16
D e Pat! got 10 po m fron
reser e Steve Hti te
d tl
Blue Demons 1 Jek 13 of 17 frc
thro vs 11 tl e fi st I alf
We h t o 1e b g shots c I)

basket
After h aift 11c the Bt k ) s ('
0) w nt on a 1J J r
th t
opened a Ia ble d g t I d thn
1 ever reh qt shed Darb I l l
vay
1 I a du k
d a p
of
J 1 p sho t
01
St te sl
70 F
the first half and 6) p
th g 1 K
Jol so
fiH hot s p II d I
r bo 1ds a d o d 16 p
Oh o Stat
?)
,;
Flor da St t
h ftl fi
f
I I lp
fro 1 tts b
r
Mk
Mat! e s ed
16 p
ts II of tl
tl
I alf

tght

from Page Bl

Home
Improvements

Larry Whtgha 11 sa d Detro&gt;t
mply ope 1ed up and w h1pped
us
We st mk up the JOIIlt he
sa d
E 1 ter Batch \\ h o p1cked up
w here he left off o
Su 1day
w h en he ued h s career best wllh
three TD passes threw for ??5
y3rds and had a 11ean ngless
tllercepuon late 1 beat ng the
New York G1ants 3 1 21
W tl the Patr ots leadmg 9 6
&lt; n Thursday Batc h p t t e L o ns
al cad t st } vttb a 1 )ard TD
pass to ttght
I Dav d Sloa o
a fo rth a d goal wllh 3 4:&gt; left
111 tl e thtrd
On Detr &gt;
ext poss!!SSJ01
Bacci took a cr tsh 1 g shot to the
chest fro 1 I trot st o g safe tv

Buy

ALREADY HA ED AS THE
MOST
EXPLOS VE
HOME
N

H STORY GET N AT THE TOP
AST

EAR Y NCOME
WEEK Y
888 856 9336

PAD

dee ex @w nco ne

CARS FROM $29 MO

epos Fee $0 Dow
@ 9 9
Fo
3'323 ~ 2 56

s

gs

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Sell or
Traae
in the
classlfletlsl

&lt;1

, 1 1,

s

c e nK 1 t

l cau ' t I 1 tf field ustorv H
«p oall I k to pto'e I s po
1 1 th Th ksg ' 1g sp t tght
It 1 f 1t i'at S 1
11
d
Joh M dd 1 o Tt rk ) D 1
Moss s td I JtSt t ) to g 1 ot t
th r "'d
ke t haF p 1 - tha
td sl o
tl vll t s p
I
JrJft j )
M
s ta (I ) 1 } o ts
rl

C/LASS11FQ!EDSi
•

Detrmt s scor c b" ag kfi
Patr ots
defe
r
W II e
MeG 1 est dtsg seed 1 ugl t&lt;l
hold a play rs only
t g ft
vard
I told tl 1
ga 1es p so all
tea 1 h ts to b
tal I l oT
our 1 sake A
tl
t
goo 1

Jlc 1
k

Tl

from Page 81

All CASH CANOY ROUTE D
you ea n $800 day 30 ma h nes
and candy !.9 995
BOO 998
VEND
Fl
A N2000 033
SC Aeg664

till

t

Moss

ng

BUS NESS OPPOA UN TV

emergence as a star Wlth Joe

and vere able to use our spread
ffense Boe he n sa d We did
just e 10ugh defensiVely to get the
jOb do 1e
MtSsot r takes o 1 Valpara so 1
the o I r s n tfi I o
Fr d y
Rl ode ! sla t d 1 ects Alaska
At ci or gc a d I) Pa I fac s
Flonda St te 1 tl
co sobtton
bra ktt
01
Stat ll v lu t all nme
t h s shots 1 clu l t g five from
3 p011t ran '(c HIS I t po ts 1
tl c fi st halt pa e d th B )&lt; ) s
to
1 1 pot t I ad
Bt
Da by ad id 18 as tl c
llu k y
gu ards
er I I d
fionda Sta e Like ll o 1 1 ost
of D rbys p01 1tS ca 1 e 1 a vau
t} of t 1 p shots a y fro the

from PageBI

Alaska

SERVICES

That hasn t happened yet But
tlus JS almost as good
The older of the brothers from
Corpus Chnsn Texas won hiS
first tttle m 1984 and added
another m 1996 Smce then Terry
has struggled fallmg out of the
top I 0 m the standmgs and get
ttng lost m traffic at many races
Even as he has agon zed about
the problems of htS own Hen
dnck Motorsports tea 1 Terry JS
thnlled by hts I ttle brothers

18

Rio

RACO FOOD DRIVE
Nov 25 8 to noon
Across from
Rac1ne Post Off1ce

Pets for Sale

•

the bench late to score e glit
pomts m JUSt 1? mmutes nclud
mg a 3 pomter from JUSt mstde
the nght hash mark \\lth nme
runmng out
Rio Grande plays m a tourna~
ment at P kev ille College th~
weekend before returmng hom~
n ext Tu esday to face Mount Ver
non Nazarene m the AM C open
er
Oh10 s next game ts D ece 1 ber
? aga nst N agra 111 a ga 1 e that
w 1ll be played n Hal fax Nova
Scot a Canada

Sanderson fin sh ed With

Good Times
Come party w1th
B C &amp; the Long Hatrs
Sat Nov 25
9
1 am

••

pmnts h1rung 7 of 10 from the
field ncluding 4 of 6 from 3
pomt range to lead Oh10
Jones ended wtth 15 pomts
Ford had 13 and m assiVe cen ter
Brandon Hunter added 11 p omts
and 11 rebounds
Copas led the Red nen {5 1}
wtth 14 pomts Chm Ballenger
scored 13 pomts and grabbed a
tea 11&gt;- htgh etght rebounds
Joe D elaney who got mto early
foul trouble fin shed wtth etght
p011ts and two rebou nds Fo rmer
NJtro star Jason Beller came off

I

Mtzway Tavern
Fr Karaoke 9 1
Sat Band Bad Habit
9 1
$200 Cover

•

Gtbbs R aet g
We re pretty close th elder
Labonre satd WI e I see Bobb)
runn ng p fro 1t n the top five
most of the t1 1 e tt 1 ukes 1 c fe I
good I ve se
h 1 be co 11 a r al
th nk1 1g dnv r at d Bobby r ally
kno\\ s ab t t:ars
I crcd1t a I 1 of that s cc s to
Joe G tbbs He put togcthe a ~,;reat
tea u that ha dev loped a lot of
chem1strvTho e g J)S ha c gott n
really co lSlstem and that s whu
v ns c ha 1 p 01 sh1ps
mance thts year one that penn t
ted Bobby and Terry to become
Dale Jarrett who &lt; nc drove
the first brother c hamp ons 1 1 for the for 1 er Wasl 1 gto 1 Red
skms cOJch sees the san e qual
NASCARs 52 years
Man how neat IS that' saJd nes m the G1bbs operanon that
Bobby m what for htm was a h e now expenences wtth Robert
burst of enthustasm Sure I m Yates Racmg
We won the champ1onsh1p
proud of that When I was
w1th conststenc~ satd J3rrett
younger and w atching Terry race
I thought about us racmg agamst who JOmed hiS father Ned - a
each other and maybe competmg NASC AR p oneer - as a cham
for a champ onshtp
p10n 111 1999 You ve got to have

first ?Q m nutes Jones also
added etght pomts
Ohto put the game away early
m the second half wtth a 9 0 run
to start the final pertod that
extended tts lead to 51 31 The
Redmen never got any closer
than 19 pomts for the rest of the

540 Miscellaneous
PHOTOGRAPHY
Man S Pho ography
5 ManS
Now open o bus ness

BV THE ASSOCI.\TED PRESS

The most Important thmg
Bobby Labonte learn ed from hu
btg brother ts the cool demeanor
and racmg style that earned Terry
the ntckname Iceman
Stx years younger Bobby
watched Terry work hts way
through the ranks of stock car
racmg and become a champton
Along the way hts older brother
spoke little av01ded controversy
and won a lot
Nm" 36 year old Bobby who
had a w1ld stde as a kid IS JUSt hke
Terry cool qmet a 1d most
nnportant a Wmston Ct p cham
pton
Yeah I kind of got hot now
3 1d then and did a few th11 gs I
probably shouldn t h ave Bobb)
satd Without elaborat101 I guess
I kmd of cook after c ur dad wh&lt;
has a pretty good temper
B tt you grow up and learn
I 11 pretty much mer th at lOW
And It sh owed m h s pefor

CLASSIFIEDSI

Wayne s Place
Come party wtlh
Ptpe Dope
Sat Nov 25th
10pm 2am

••
••

B1Vtl1ers Labonte leam
lessons from each other

I Found Just What I Was
Look:ing For In The

and Tom

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

11 0

Employara council 21
Armory Drlva WhMIIng

Pomeroy call cen er
We are now set ng up

Holzer Home Care of Veteran's
Memorral Hosp1tal has an 1mmedtate
openmg for a Part T1me I Full T1me
Home Health A1de Pnor Home Health
expenence 1s preferred
If mterested please contact the
Home Health Coordmator at
740 992 2104 ext 253

based up on p a ea ca on and
sho s udy cou se Fo FREE n
o rna on boO I&lt; e phone CAM

Yard Sale

Help Wanted

por Article 1 10 ol the
lnatructi.One to Btcldera
e Tho contr1ct
Docum•nta
m1y
bo
r•vtewed lor bidding
purpo111 without char;•
dl!rlng bua1ne11 houro 11
thelollowlngi0C811ona
ArchHect a Office
S E M Port...,. Inc
Wlltervllla Ohlo
Owner Olllca
Melgalocal School Dlatrlct
Board
Pomaroy Ohio
Conatrucllon Manager a
Olllca
Tho Quondol Group Inc
Wtlltrvtllo Ohio
FW Dodga Plan Rooma In
lhtlollowlng cHill
Columbuo Ohio (43218
1073) 1175DubllnAo*d
Charlaaton Waat VIrginia
(25302) 405 CapHol Strott
and the lollowlng additional
plan rooma
Bulldaro Exchange ol Eot1
Control Ohio 2521 34th
Stroot NE Canton Ohio
44705
Central Ohio Minority
Bualn111 Admlnlotrotlon
815 Eaot Mound Street
Columbus Ohio 43205

110 Help Wanted

800 964 8316

70

110

Pub lie N ~ I-....:P:...;U:.:b:.:l:;;lc:...:.:N.:O:;;II::::C.:,e_
and oubmlt • bo~ld
Ohio volley conetruetlon

MERCHANDISE

EARN YOUR COL EGE DEGREE
Ba che o s Mas e s
Doc o a e by co espondence

00 bag sa e e e y

2 Provtdo
1 bid baeod
wwwquandal
com on
one (1) or tho producta
apecllled No aubotltullona
will ba permitted Sealed
bldl will be recelvad lor
Brick Procurement Package
Contract Coat Estimate
$200000
unlll Bid Date ol December
21 2000 at 10 30 a m (local
atandard time) when they
will be opened ond read
3 Bidding Documents
may ba obtained from the
Construction Manager by
Prime Bidders only upon
receipt ol a chock which Ia
rolundoblt In the amount ol
$5 00 Chacko aha II be
mada payable to the Malga
Local School Dlatrlct and
lorwardod
to
tho
Conatructlon Manager

ows An cho s Wa e Hea e s
P umo ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
na es &amp; Hea P mps Benne ts
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb corrvbenne

OU CK Y

Thu sday Monaay h u Sa u day
900 530

Public Notice

Upon rocelpt of 1 raqu111
accomponlad by a dapcalt
comm11110n
•• named above th•
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
conetroctlon Monoger will
1 8lcll will be ..-lvld by lorword coplaa ol bidding
tho lllelga Local School documanta to tho blddat
Olatrtcl boord II 320 Elll
4 Shipping chargea lor
Moln Streat, Pomeroy Ohio all bidding documents are
45711
Attn
Mark non relundoble and ora to
Ahonemua T,.....rar lor be paid via a aaporote
thllollowlng ProjiC!
chock In the omount of
New Elernenllry &amp; New
$5 oo also made out to tho
Middle School
Molga local School District
Early Brick Packlgo
and lorwarded to the
Molga Local SChool Dlatrlct conatn&gt;ctlon Monagor with
Boord
the dopcalt chock
Melgo County Pomeroy
5 lntereated blddero
tn •ccordanca with tha should contact Magan
Drowlnga
and Bohlen at (614) 865 9000 or
spactflcatlona praparld by
aend deposit check directly
S E M Partnaro Inc
to The Quandt! Group Inc
187 South Stell Stroll
8181 Worthington Road
W11tervlllo Ohio 43081
Waaltrvllle OH 43082 No
Phona (114) 794-3100
more than lhrH (3) aata wtll
Fax (614) 7114-3088
ba provided on a refundabla
Thl Conotroctlon Manager baala to a Bidder Deposit
lor 11M Projoct 11
will bt relunded to Prime
Th• Quondel Group Inc
Blddtrt only who return
818t Worthington Road
their drowlnga within IIHeen
Wutervllla OH 43082
(15) daya ol the bid opening

Own !t Compu er?
Pu

I

The Dally Sentinel • Pege B 6

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

p

t

It

(

cath

NFC r sh

Rob rt S
g I l
rds

cs I r 14R
K k r

'
~

I n. j

tl
I

tl

tt

�•

Friday, November 24, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

'

ALLEYOOP

Public Notice
Public Notice
lly virtue of en Order of told Lot 282, uld Iron pin
Sale loouod out of tho Mlng on tho South right of
Common Pleaa Court of way

llelgo County, Ohio, In tho
CillO ol tho Homo Nllllonel
Bank, Plalntln, va. Richerd
II. Young ako Richerd
Young ako Mike Young, ot

line

of

11., Defenda,..ta, upon a way line or 11ld General
.Judgment therein rendered,

Hartinger Parkway to an

being Caoo No. OO·CV·97 In Iron pin sot; thence Soulh 2

uld Court, I will offer tor
..,. at the front door or the

Courthouaa In Pomeroy,
Malga County, Ohio, on tho
15th dey of OoctmMr, 2000,
II to:oo a.m., lhe following

degrees 00' 00" Waat, 74.00
feet to an Iron pin aat on tha

South line of oald Lot 282,
said Iron pin being on tho
North line ol Child a Lot, eo
doacrlbad In tho Meigs

PHILLIP
ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

45769. A complete legal
dtlcrlptlon of the real
taloto Is 11 follows:
The following roal estate

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
County Dead Recorda:
Volume 264, Page 613; and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
thence North 88 degreea10' 1 Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
00" West, 59.24 lett along. Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~·
the South llno of said Lot
282 and along tho Nor1h line
of tho said Childs Lot to an

altu1ted In the County of

Iron pin set on the East line

Janda

and

tenements ,

..focatod at 521 Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy,

OH

Meigs, In tho State of Ohio,
· and In the Village of
Pomeroy, Fraction 25, and
bounded and described as
follows:
Beginning at the

of tho aald 20 loot wide
allay; thence North 2
degrees 00' 00" East, 74.00
feet along tho E11t lint of
the said 20 loot alley to the
point of beginning,

Northeast corner
of
Carman's
-S e c o n d
Subdivision on the South
aide of a Road; thence

containing 0.101 acres,
more or lass, excepting all
legal easements and right
of way. Bearings are taken

feet •long the South side of

maps, an actual survey on

South 80 deg. 30' East 100 from tho Meigs County Tax

said Road; thence South 13 October 26. 1994 by Rober1
dog. 20' West 150 feet ; R. Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
tl&gt;ance North 80 deg. 30' 7033.
Wast tOO feet to the East

the said Carman 's Second
Subdivision to the place of

beginning, containing .35
acres, more or less.

Save and Except the coal

end right to mine ani:t

remove the same without
unnecessary Injury to the
surface, which has been
heretofore conveyed or
roaarvod from said real
estate as shown by the

Meigs

County

Oeed

Records.
And the Said Grantors do
hereby grant unto the said

Grantees, their heirs and
aaslgns, the right and
easement to lay, maintain,
operate, repair and remove

Broadway
Street
as
recorded In the Meigs

County Plai Records,
, Section 29, Town 1 North,

Range 13 West of tho Ohio

COmpany's Purchase and

being described as follows:
Beginning a~ the Northeast
corner of Lot 282 of the said
V.B Horton Addition to the

Village of Middleport, Meigs
County

Plat

Records:

Volume 2, page 12; thence
South 88 degrees 1O' 00"
East, 20.00 feet to a point;
thence South 2 degrees 00'
00 " West, 74.00 feet to a
point ; thence North 88
degrees 10' 00 " West, 20.00
feet along the East line of

a gas pipe from the
Northeast corner and over
and through the following
doscrlbod real property, to·
wit: Being situate' In the ·
Vlllaglt, Township and
county aforesaid and lying
generally South of the
property of the parcel above
conveyed and bounded as
follows: Commencing at the
Southwest corner of the

description Is based on a
previous survey In 1994 by

parcel above conveyed,

Robert R. Eason , Ohio P.S.

thonce South 80 dog . 30 '
East 3971eet to an Iron pin ;
and thence south 13 deg.
20' West 208 feet to an Iron
pin; thenca North 80 deg.
30' West 397 feet to an iron
pin; and North 13 deg. 20'
East 208 feet to the place of
beginning. The said pipe
shl!.[l be laid generally along
the rrlSrthern boundary of
the above . described
property and shall be buried

IJJJ

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brian
Ohio

(740} 985-3948

BISSEll IUILDIIS
IIIC.

-

. New Homes • Vinyl

Protect your guns, family he~rlooms, coin and carq
collections. legal papers, investment records, photo
cameras, household inventory anct'
I s&lt;mtimental items will be safe.
For more information call

33795 Hiland Rd.

COMMERCIAL and R!SIDENTW.
FA Eli ESTIMATES'

Pomeroy, ·Ohw

740·992·7599

740~992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

BlUM LOBER

S,. R,. 248

Advertise

Advertise

in this
space for
.$50 per

in this

OF

GALLIPOLIS

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

month.

said Lot 282 to the point of
beginning, containing 1480
Sq. Feet, more Or less,
excepting all legal
easements and rights of

way.
Bearings are taken tram
the Meigs County Tax Maps,
M 1d d 1e port
village,
Reference Page 20. This

No. 7033.
PPN 15·00047.000 &amp; 15·
00027 .000 Address: 9t3
General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport OH 45760.
Also k'nown as 913
~ General Hartinger Parkway
Mlddlopor1 Ohio 45760 and
thilt there ~emalns du~ and
owing 44,126.23 with
interest at 7.75% per annum
from April 1 2000 and
costs· that th~ Oefe~dants
at leaat 6 Inches, provided, named In the Complaint
however, that all damages may have an Interest in said
to fences, sidewalks an.d property; therefore. Plaintiff

SLUG MATCH
Sat. Nov. 11th
Sat. Nov. 18th
Sun. Nov. 26th
12:oo Noon
Proceeds from Sat.
Nov. 11th to be
donated to
Bob Fisher Benefit

R&amp;S

potrl' lur ,· ar, :u td ltth J,,

38282 Stole Route 684
Pomeroy. Ohio
740-742-9501
740-742-2750
1-877-202-3262

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.

UINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
·Any Size Double Hune-

'

Free Estimates
· V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

Soutb

BARNEY

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. Local

FENCE

992-4119

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

.AlltEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Coolvlllo, OH 45723

741).6&amp;7-83&amp;3

591·5011

Advertise in
this space for
$100 per

m

or
Tracie

TELL

4NT
6.

IJ!:,WICK'SG
HfiULitfG ancl
EXCfiVfiTitfG
limestone •
Grav~ • Sand • Topsoil•
rill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
Hauling •

(740) 992·3470

h.
HILL'S
SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o· .
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
1 21

oo 1 me.

.

THE BORN LOSER

TfiE. TOPPtto(.~~
. 00 Tf'.E.

TOOCOCI!'..

Maple St. Mason
(Next to Wai-Mart)
10 X 20· $55.00
• 10 X 10 • $35.00
(740) 992-3961

" I'\ Z.Z.I\
FOC.

Bill Slack

I C:U:.SS EVE!Z'(OOO'(':; GOT
\1-t:.=::: tLFTOIJ(IZ.~ I

Wl-\1\\ I-f£

['I) Lt !(.f.

....

~

.....

~

-Dec. 24

DEER
Processine

• Firewood· Light
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

740·992·2269

Skin· CUI· Wrapped For Fretzll'
S.Usago M"', • .., Foo JtRy
~~~~ Anll1ble • Propane Avlllltllt

CHRISTMAS TREES
with rootball

Maplewood Lake

BIG NATE
i THE: BIROS AttP

· COME HID

Delivery Available
Call992-178S

(740) 949·2734

~ET

, - --1 ~~ SQUIR~ELS HIWE

IT!

,-

VAl\OA'TEt&gt; MY

. Or&amp;NION

Of

~ YOUR. THA.thc.s(:,l\IINC:.

BARR'S NURSERY

blfllNE~ .

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE
Certainteed,
Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

____

30

ce

Dump Truck Delivery Meigs
and Gallia Counties Call &amp;
Leave Message

992-6142 or
Toii·Free 1·877·604-7350
Ball Logging &amp;
· Firewood

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo per
month.

for Meigs &amp; Gai11a Counties

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671
7/22/TFN

Advertise . our business
on this page · or one month for
· ·as low as $2S

Pone 992·2155
1..

PEANUTS

35215 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
HEAP Vouchers accepled

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead in service"
·1 1.6% Protein Livestock/cattle Feed $5 50/100
·21% Hunters Pride Dog Food $6.75/1 00
·12% Western pride horse feed $5.50/50
$1 .00 off Coupon makes next purchase $4.25/50
· Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M . Salt Blocks $475/50 lb.
Shade River Ag. Service
35537 Sl. Rt. 7 North
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30-P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gall)ll
$300.00 Coverall
$soo.oo Starburst
Progr~sslve top tine.
Lie. # 00-50 '"'""'"

•J9762

30 Peaceful

32 Moll 11111111
34 Fins-lighting
old
35 Able to bo
. lngeoted

Flnnloh llret
ntorM
S1 Singer Lot

5I

DOWN
1 Groftlng twig
2 Concerning

12 wds.j

3 $klr1 lutuna

In lddltlo.n
5 HlghWfff curve

4

8

2,000 lbl.

8

Matlnae

9-·

7 Kites- utensil

""'n

West Nortlr
t•
Pass 3t
Pass 4.
Pass s•
Pass Pass

Eoat
Pus
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • Q

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

Daily 10 am til Dark

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

t K9 3

proof

55 Brown pigment

To finesse or cash

Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681,
to Cherry Ridge Rd., follow signs.

1-800-291-5600

HOLLYS
Self-Storage

village-wide refuse service

Sell

ABOUT
YOU-KNOW·WHD II

Christmas Trees

D£POYS AG
BARTS

lor 2002. Bid specifications
can be obtained by calling
(740) 992·5571. Bid opening
is scheduled for December
18, 2000 at 4:00 P.M. In
counc il chambers. All bids
must be received by 4:00
P.M. on the date of opening.
(11) 17 , 242tc

AN'

s•

SHHH f f IT'S

RUN OUT TO TH'

992-3505

(740) 742·2076

-.J:ub!lc Notice
The VIllage oi Mlddlepor1
Is accepting bids to provide

2•

Owner - John Ketchka

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

lloro

54 AOitrt without

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

~
* Free Installation
' ~ * Free in Home Estimates
Cal.l for Further Details

(lllntll

.-lng
28Swtoarlwr
27 Lie. and SSt,
e.g .

• 10 2

• Roofing &amp; Gulltn
• Vloyl Siting &amp; Patolls19
• Pallo &amp; Poidl Dtcks

51 Vast number

1711 "Or-1"

• A K J 10 8 7

740-985-3677

$229.00*

Oile~s Deer Shop

Chapma·n,

• 4 2
• 9 6 5

• 42
• AK3

Trimming and Removal
30 Years Experienee
Fully Insured
Senior Diseount
FREE ESTIMATES

l i;,:hl' • lill llt JH -r , • CJ.t,,
\Ju,th- { arl';llttl., \ ~otil.iltl,
\II nkri•!l tvpl.tntttt rtl l11uh

l _____

M.

East

• Q 6 3
• K7 4
• Q J 10 7
• 10 8 5

• A- ddltloos &amp; R....lotg

41 Alllr.tlc star
41 More lxtlniiYI

prior to

West

Soutb

• Eltdrinl .. Plu""-g

14 ~-- ..
15111n no wrr
20

• Q 4

MYERS TREE SERVICE

Quality
Replacement Auto
Body Parts

JONES'

Deceased, whose last
known address Is unknown
are hereby notified that lhe
Plalntlllllled a Complaint of
Foreclosure and Other
Equitable Relief on
September t3, 2000.
In Case No. OOCV1 20, on
property described as
follows :
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
EXHIBIT "A"
Tract I:
Situated In the VIllage of
Mlddlopor1, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio; Being Lot
No. 282 In tho V.B. Horton 's
Addition to the VIllage of
Middleport. Subject to all
legal easements and lease!».
EXCEPTING
and
reserving unto grantors, its
· heirs and assigns forever,
the following por11on of the
above described property,
to wit : Sl1uated In the
VIllage of Midd leport,
County of Meigs and State
or Ohio, and being in
Section 29, Town 1 North,
Range t3 West of the Ohio
Company's Purchase and
being the We s1 59.24 teet of
Lot 282 of the VB Horton
Addition to the vitiage of
Middleport and belng
described as follows :
Beg inning at an iron pin set
at the Northwest corne r of
&gt;

' ALLEY OOP ®by Dave Graue and Jack Bender

3e Ani
40 One Wfff to
ride
42The_ .....

-·~
a,::rc'
23 Euml
,

t A 8 6 5

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

month.

crops,
caused
by laying,
that Jt be
foundand
to ~~=====~=~=========!
operation
or removing
said demands
have a good,
valid
pipeline shall be paid by subsisting lien on said
said Grantee, their heirs premises, lor the amount
s t 0 p In And see
and asslgna. .
owing ; that the Defendants
1
Senior Citizen
Reference Deed: Volume equity of redemption be
'
Steve Riffle
28, Page 395, Meigs county foreclosed; that all parties
•
itUCk
Discount
Official records.
be required to answer as to
· • sa I e s Rep res en I a I i v e
Auditor's parcel No. : 16· their Interest In said
00448.ooo
.
premtses or be forever
""';
Larry s c h t: y
TREE SERVICE
Properly Address: 521 barred from asserting any
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Interest therein; that all
OH 45769
liens on sold premises be
Real Estate Appralsad at : msrshaled and their
• 'TOP
(740) 367·0266 • 5\Utl\9
$75,000.00. The real estate priorities determined; that
:•
&amp;I
cannot be sold for less than said premises be sold as 150 East State Street · Phone (140) 593-6671
.f'ell\0 "
1·800·950·3359 'c;tll\dil\~
two-thirds the appraised upon execution and the Ath
Oh'10 45"'01
value.
proceeds of said sale be
ens,
v
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Terms of sale: 10% down applied according to law:
. "A B
" 6 9
.JF~r~e~e!_!:!!!.!!!~!!!~
j
day of sale, balance on and for such other relief as l'-----~:::..::.:.:.::;:.._:.:.:!,1~:.!:!:..:..!:~~-!':!;2~/m~o;_.J
delivery of deed. Sold · is just equitable.
De1endants first herein
subject to accrued real
above mentioned are
Now Renting
estate taxes.
Jennifer L. Sheets, Attorney further notified that they are A·J MINI·SJORAGE
for Plaintiff
required to answer said
&amp;
(11) 10, 17,24
Complaint oli or before
SR325, Langsville, OH
992 •6396
December 29, 2000, which
Backhoe-4§rvices,
Includes twenty-eight (28)
992· 2.272
Public Notice
House site work,
days
from theorlast
date of ~~~;;~~;;;:~::::=.
publication,
judgment
IN THE COURT OF
Driveway &amp; lana
COMMON PLEAS
may be rendered as
clearing,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
demanded therein.
.
HOWARD
L.
WRITESEL
North American Mortgage
Septic systems
WELTMAN, WEINBERG, &amp;
Company
REIS CO., L.P.A
r'ft
Roofing
instal/ea.
Plaintiff,
By Monette Cope
~
Vt.
(#0067926) All Makes Tractor&amp;.
Home Maintenance
Martin J. Chapman, et al
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Equipment Parts
Gutters/Down
Defendant.
175 S . Third Street,
Case No. 00 CV t20
Suite 900
Factory
Authorized
.
.
Spout
Defendant, Unknown
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Case-HI
Parts
Heirs, Devisees , Legatees,
614·228·7272, Ext. 210
Free Estimates
Administrators, Executors , (10 27, pt) 3, 10, 17, 24, (12)
Dealers.
Creditors and Assigns of 1
Toll Free
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Marjorie

•AQJ83

ILVINIY

Racine Gun Club

11-24.00

• 9 5

THE&amp;. Wlt.L.
' fNI',&amp;L.~ 'OOU
10 SEE I~
I THE f»oRJl!

CHES'rER

•NtwG~s

space for
$50 per

North

37-.1,11111

u:::;r:hlp

t21n&gt;tH~

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Self-Storage

'tal:w

--·

PRODUCTS

High 8L Dry

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddHions
• Roofing

1 Soc181 .....
I MlllhMJtct

h.

~ ~tlltUt9

-

3e CIA..

ACROSS

'10"Hewtlo

Tract II:

line of the said Carman·s 20 Foot Wide Strip: Situated
Second Subdivision; thence In the Village of Middleport,
North 13 dog. 20' East 150 County of Meigs and State
loot along tho East line of of Ohio, and being a part of

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

General

Hortlngar Porkwoy and on
tho Eolt line of • 20 loot
wide olley; thence South I I
dogrota 10' oo• Eaat, '59.24
IHtelong tho South right of

The Dally Sentinel • Papa B V

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 2000

.•

THIS '&lt;EAR 11M 601N6 TO
MAKE ALL M'&lt; CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS .. AND GUESS
WHAT I'M 61VIN6 EVER'&lt;BOD'(..

1

PAPER
AIRPLANES!

;;

I

~/
~ "_./:

YOU RE LUCKV .. YOU
60T YOURS EARLY'

BY PHILLIP ALDER

It is still hard to believe that
George Bernard Shaw married
when he wrote lines like, "One
turns the ~heek: the other kisses it.
One provides the cash: the other
spends it."
Look at the North·South hands.
How would you plan the play in
six spades? West leads the dia·mond queen.
South is slightly too strong for
an initial two-spade response in
my book. But he adopted the attitude that if he could find , some
support and an ace or two opposite, he was driving to a siam.
Without the diamond .lead, the
contract · would effect·ively need
· either major-suit finesse to work.
Now, though, the heart finesse
must succeed. If it loses, they'll
cash a diamond trick. (All right,
you could play East for the heart
king by cashing dummy's hean
ace and leading a low heart
toward your I 0 , hoping East
thinks you have a singleton and
ducks. But why would you do that
unles s East's cards were made of
glass'') So, you assume the heart
finesse is on.
There remains the problem of
the lrump suit. One plan is. to
finesse immediately in spades-- a
50-50 shot. If it wins, you are
effectively home .
The alternative is to cash the
ace and king of spades. If ·the
queen drops (which it will onethird of the time), you draw the
last trump and take that winning
heart finesse to cruise home with
an ovet1rick. If the queen doesn't
drop, you need the opponent with
the spade queen to have at least
two hearts (or three hearts, if the
~pades broke 4-1). Then you can
pitch your losing diamond on the
third round of hearts .

To get a current weather
report, check the

'

Sentinel

.

'·
'

IFRIDAY

-----:--1~
..., - - - - - W %~!!t,.
u~

Saturday,Nov. 25, 2000 .
-uu
Your prospects for the year
ahead looks quite promising, pro- situation s today where your repvided you . take the necessary utation could be on the line. don't
• action to draw others to your press your luck. That limb on
cause. Do all that you can to pro- which you're sitting is a precari' duce good will.
ous one and will break under the
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. sl ightest mishap
21) Leaving the decision-making
ARIES (March 2 1-Aprii 19)
up to others will produce sorry The very tasks or assignments that
results. They won't be inclined to are so routine that you do them by
, look out for your interests -- only rote cou ld be the ones that give
theirs. Know where to look for you fits today. As your mind goes
romance and you'll find it. The wandering, your hands could go
Astra-Graph Matchmaker instant- blundering .
.
ly reveals which signs are romanTAURUS (April 20-May 20)
tically perl'ect for you. Mail $2.75 Beware of wolves wrapped in
to Matchmaker. c/o this newspa- gifts' clothing today. If you're
: per; P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hili secretly offered something to go
Station, New York, NY I 0156.
along with a particular deal, you
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. could be setting yourself up to be
19) Only methodical .and pur- devoured.
· poseful efforts will produce what
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
you hope to achieve today, Don't ·There are lots of opportunities
use half measures .with projects or around you today, but if you fail
in lituations where full strokes are to respect others and be cooperarc4uircJ.
tive with those who are involved,
N)l ji\IHUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) then nothing will come of them.
In "rtlcr lo cater to a current
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
J e,ire , Y"" c"11ld all emplto mcxl- The only way you're going to get
il'y an """" I'CII Icllll&lt;&gt;&lt;lay you huJ others to c.lo something for you
Cllnhlillt&lt;:d .wlllt '""'Iller, 'l'hi1 i1 loc.luy i1 to bu willln~ to do for
tlw &lt;jltidull w11~ 111 ttt t t~u ihu th~m. 111 w~ll . Slmrlnl!llw lnud IK
\lllpttlnilml h l
·
whut prntl~l~~ ~ ~ nllwliv ~. pmPISCi iS II c&lt;h J ll Mittdl 11 11111 dm: ll\1 ~ ~itin~
.•

LEO (July 23-A ug. 22) Placing
too much emphasis on having a
good time today cou ld yield you
more than you bargain for. If thi s
proves true , you'd better plan to
have the aspirin bottl e ready.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Forget about your own personal
ambitions today and pay a littl e
attentio n to your faniily. You can't
imagine the benefits that thi &gt; will
produce verses headaches from
neglect.

LIBRA (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 23) A
fina-ncial plan you devise that is of
personal importance to you
should be follo\wd to the letter.
Don't allow yourself to b~ unduly influenced by 1omeonc who
would betray your blueprint.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Try to operate from the resources
you have in hand today, because
those udditionul fund~ .you're
u~pectlns ml11hl not he fPrth·
co mlnj!'.

WOlD

'IIIAT lAlLY
PUILII

lAM I

••
•

leorronga lot!.r~ of lhl

0 foor

ocramblod word1 bllow to '"'"' fovr ~mplo word1.

II I Is tIc I

''

13

I

I·

·A

'.

~ LETTERS

•

I' I" r 1 I' 1 I' I' I
I I III IIII
7

5

PRINT NUMBFRED 11

•

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Curate - Blink. - Vague - Sonata - IGNORANCE

College expenses for our daughter were mounbng : My
husband concludeo that those expenses were not as
expensive as IGNORANCE.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

·.

celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created !rom quotations by tamous people, pasl and .
present. Each latter In the cipher stands for another.
:.

Today's clue: V equals B

'L Z G

YDEI

GULZGM
HYTG

LV

XZYL

U

VGFYCG

HGKEGM

YM

OKX

Z KH
K

F. M Y Y R ,

K 0

K
'

KFLYM,'

PYG
TKOLYEUKDY
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A t~anklul heart is not only the greatest virtue, but
the parent of all other virtues. - Ctcero
,
0 2000 by NEA. Inc.

NOVEMBER 241 .

�'
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 24, 2000

Gore won't
concede defeat
in Fla. recount
BY LAURIE ASSEO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

At Gon.-'s lawyCrs s.1y he won't
conc,•de defeat in the presidential
clecuon if certified hand recoum
totals show George W. Bush has
more votes in Florn..la, but lllStl'ad

ht·.wilv
Demm.:r&lt;Jtic Mum1 - D3dc Coun~
ty whert· tht" recount \\'.ls ca nwill contt:'st the results

111

cel«!.
On J busy Tlunksgmng Day.
the v1ce prt•,i dt~nt .1lo;;o .tskcd the

U.S.

SuprCm~.· Court

tn :--t.ry out

of tht.&gt; recount comrovcrsv. "This
(nurt's inttTfl:n::tKt' ... woL;ILionlv
Lhnumsh the !t:gltlm.Ky llf th~
out\."01111..' of th'c l'kctmn," h1s
b'\")'L"rs sJu.l m p.tp~.-r~ tikd Thur~­

dJy wtth dlL'

n.HJon 's

lughcst

court .

Tht· Jmtlct'' cou ld dl'Ci dc .1s

t:"arly as Fnd.1y whether ro gr.mt
Bush's t"xtraordih1ry n..·quc:st rh.1t
they 111tnn~ JH: .tnd deCidt~
whether 11Jndcount,·d ~.tllots may
be added to the Flt&gt;rida vote
totals.
Earlier Thursday. the Florida
Supreme Court rejected Gore's
bid to force Miami-Dade County
offidals to resume a manual
recount of its Election Day ballots. OfficJals in that county halted their recount Wednesday, saying they could not complete 1t by
the 5 p.m. Sunday deadline the
state Supreme' Court had set.
Gore's lawyers said they wiU go
to state court in Tallahassee to
contest the Miami-Dade election
results after rhe votes arc certified,
expected late Sunday.
"Nobody should be surprised
by thiS. Weve been saying all
along that we wanted a full and
fair coum and that's what we
intend to see happen," said Ron
Klain. a Gore campaign legal
adviser. He sa1d son1e results in
other counties also may be challenged, but he did not give details.
Asked if that meant Gore would
not concede the election cvel1 tf
he was behind in . vurcs, Gore
campaign spokeswoman Jenny
llacklls said that was correct.
"We want a full. fair and JCcu-

TEMPO

Taking flight:

'

See (1

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Jrc.1.

and ~.nd he \\'.1~ on.~ rho...'.l\·y dJ-.coulltm~

1m Th.lnbgn/ltJg.

.recommend arch
bridge design

Bmh 'rem Thanksgiving with
his family in Austin, Texas, whi le
tht• Gore [1milv was at the vice
pn:'Sidcntial rcsitlenc..:c in Washing-

Cites maintenance issues as
reason for (change of heart'

ton.

.. I \VJnt to wish everyone, aij
ThanksgiVing,"
Bush
told
reporters w hile jogging in the
drizzle and fog. Gore did not
appear in public.
GOP vice presidential candidate Dick Cheney, who suffered a
"very slight" heart attack Wednesday. was reported in good condition m ·a Washington hospital.
Doctors had implanted an arteryclearing device, and they said he
could be released as e~rly as Friday.
With Florida holding the balance in the closest presidential
election in .modern times, Bus h's
lead was a slim 713 votes - i f the
hand recounts are accepted . T he
state's secretary of state, Katheri ne
Harris, has officiaUy giVen Bush a
lead of 930 votes. Recounts were
due to resume Friday in Broward
and Palm Beac..:h counties.
In Broward. with aU precincts
and absentees recounted, Gore has
a net gain of 225 votes, including
88 votes from a partial review of
up to 2.000 questionable ballots.
In Palm Beac h , Bush has gained
14 votes with about one-third of
all precincts counted.

BY BRIAN J. R EED

Al exandria
West, a fifth
grader at Washington Elemen·
tary School,
expressed her·
hal iday wishes
to Santa Claus
during the annual Adamsville
Christmas Show
at the Bob
Evans Farm on
Saturday. She
is the d'aughter
of Scot and
Lorie West of
Rio Grande.
Santa's sched·
ule in the Gal·
lipolis City Park
begins Nov. 30
with the Christmas tree light·
ing ceremony at
6 p.m. (Kevin
Kelly photo)

my family and friends. a happy

huntn" TlntP. d.w.

t.mk1ng do\\-11 -thL· - rn.ld l.ty-

lll.lrket\

.II"L'

·I

'

..

TIMES·SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY - George M. Collins. deputy director of
the Oluo Department of Transportation, will recommend a tied arch bridge design for Pol11eroy and Mason.
W.Va., he said last week, citing future maintenance issues
and public convenience as his rea"m for changing his
preference about a bridge de,ign.
Three bridge types were originally under consideration - a
cable stayed bridge, a tied arch bridge and a truss bridge.
The public has expressed a definite preference for the cable stayed
design, a newer aiJd more distinctive design which ODOT has
begun to imp lement in a number of communities.
Collins said he. too, finds the cable stayed bridge the most attractive, but has learned that major ~maint.:-nance work would require
the bridge to be closed for traffic.
For several days, Collins said, he has bee n weighing input from
area residents, sugge~tions from bridge t'np;incering experts, and
facts relating to the design. construction and maintenance cost'l for
the two bridge types now being consi.dered for Pomeroy.
Collins said the truss design has sino: been eliminated from consideration because it was less attractive than ~ither the cable stayed
or the tied arch.
"I admit that, like approximately 70 percent of all area r&lt;Sidcnts

P

Please see Bridge, Page A6
•

Bush agrees to drop military ballot lawsuit G-M Post names top
trooper, dispakher
Of the 14 counties in the suit, six

EsPo

already have given the rejected bal-

George W. Bush g•ve up his legal fight Satlots a second look, accepting scores
urday to force counties to reconsider overseas
of them and adding 67 votes to
militaty ballots that were rejected for lack ·of a
postmark and other problems. And AI Gore's
Bush's previous vote total, the
camp said it wou ld contest Palm Beach CounRep11blican said.
ty's recount, extending its list of Florida counti.,; w here it plans to challenge vote coun ts
servicewomen that had been wrongful ly
once they are certified.
excluded will now be counted through volunDavid Boies, Gore's recount lawyer, said he
tary compliance with the law by many defenhad decided to add that key county to others
. dane canvassing boards," the document said.
where challenges are to be rnised most
Of the 14 counties ·in the suit, six already
important of which is M iam i-Oade, where the
have given the reject,·d ballots a second look.
re-examination of ballots was brought to an
' unexpected halt earlier this week, a setback for accepting scores of them and adding 67 votes to
llush's previous vote total, the ll..epublican said.
Gore.
Statewide, some I ,500 overseas ballol' ·were
In Palm Beach, Gore turces think they have
a chance to pick up a majority large enough to rejected for lack of a postmark or other probbe decisive in Florida. and thus in the election. lems. and Uush said about one-third were mili Bush's decision was signaled in a filing Satur- tary.
On the Democratic front, the Gore cha lday with the Leon County C ircuit Court that
said the I 4 cou nties named in the lawsuit are in lenges will be raised because Gore· forces
"substantial agreement" with Republicans and weren't satisfied with the standard election&lt; offiare reconsidering military ballots !Tom overseas, cials in . Palm Ueach were using in examinil1g
disputed ballots.
so the suit was not necessary.
The court challenge will be filed Monday,
"As a result of the filing of this action. it
appears that the votes of many servicemen ;md well before the U .S. Supreme Court hears

.

, 2000 FORD RA

0
.•$414°Mont
h
60 @8 .5%

'

1998

Friends establish memorial
fund to help family costs

S2862~tb
60@ 7. 9%

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

2000

o:tttJ-a"'ta

SSJ2~~nth
60@8.5%

$176~~nth
60@8.5%

AI pay!l)ll'llt calcullild at o dQWn,

r.x. l1tle and ftel -..

''

•

th,Jt_lmt llH:.m~
off\, nght? Plu~. m.:'n.: kmd of
pohnc.Illy liP Ill rhe ,1\r. r \Votikln't
\,ly that tt\ m.n rt to hr.:- 'ipcndmg Jll
of you r mone\',.. \,lid Renee
B.uk.m, .1 lcg,1l .lS'ii..,tlnt from IlenI
nctu , N.Y. who pl.m~ to spL·nd
.' \uh'it.IIJtLdly lt-v.;" thi' )'L'.Ir
e

GALLIPOLIS - Friends of the
late Patricia A. " Patty" Sanders who
were touched by her life and con~·ibutions to the com munity have
established a memorial fund to help
defray the cost of her medical
expenses and meet inunediate fam ily needs.
.
Mrs. Sanders, 50, died Nov. l in
die UniveNity of Cincinnati Medical Center during surgery for a
liver transp!anc ·
The mother of three daughters
and grandmother of rwo children
also left behind her husband,
Michael E Sande", her mother.
Clara Lockhart of Jackson, and
numerous otht·r relatives.
ller death. according to fi·iend
Jane Ellen McGovern , " has left a

great void in our Conmm niry."

•'

Bush's arguments for rejecting aU hand recounts
of Florida's ballots. A decision by the high court
· in favor of Bush potentiaUy could award Florida's 25 electoral vores to the Republican ticket
and bring an end to the tumultuous dcction.
ln a telephone interview from Tallahassee,
Boies said the extended chall enge would be
filed as soon ·as legally possible - after the
county-by-count results" certit1cation by Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, expected by 6 p.m. EST Sunday.
"We're preparing contest papers that will be
filed Monday, as early in the day Monday as we
can get t hem done;' l:loies talc.! The Associated

Cood Morning!

Farmers Uank &amp; Saving; Co. in
Patty Sanders' n ame.
An homemaker and activ~ craft
maker, Mrs. Sanders was a men1bcr
of Christ United Methodist
Church. and served on the FamilyChi·ldren First Council for Gallia.
Jackson and Meigs co unties. She
also operated the French City Crafi
Mall in downtown Gallipolis.
" Her optintism, kindnl'*'' and
smile, t'Vel1 in the f:uT onl~l" trclgH.:
tllness, touched those who knew
Patty personally," Mrs. McGovern
said.i'Shc was tntly an urtsun~ hero,
a wonderful Christian mother, and

Please see Family, Page.A6
•

,.

•

•

•

rc4uire~ but W(ln 't pay for.

Lawm akers now arc con" idcring a plan to rc.lJx those finanCI;Jl
re4uirelllL'11ts. llowc vcr,

Calendars
Classlfleds
Comics
Editorials
Money
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks
Tempo

C6
Dl-7

Insert
A4
Dl

AS
Bl-7,10
Dl

Cl-8

C 2000 Ohio Valley Publi5hing Co.

"111

n:n&gt;giiitlon

of out'lt.lndmg ~L'rVJL't',"
'aid
Lt .
Ri c hard
E.
Grau, thl' po!\t commanJcr.
The selection hy hi s fdlow
troopers w::ts based on John son's leadcrsl11p .lhilitic~. profession al L·thic.... courteous
treatment of orhl'r", l'nrhu.;;iao;tic work attitlH.k :m J coopera-

in contention
for che district and state

Shadystde Superintendent Jnry
Narcisi is pc ss imi "tic about how
mu c h lwlp the proposal will
gtvt:.
."! think it's all window dr''"ing," he said. "There\ really Ii o
substance to .dl this. lt's not
going tu -.ofve the problem."

'Educ.nion

officiah

J"kL•d

about the ~1lan "'·'Y H m.ty L',I"'l' il
burden experiL·ncnl by nnny
dimim but fall&lt; ten short of
solving Ohio's ,chool-fundllll(
probkms.
"\ would llHIL·h r.Hhl·t han.·

•

trnoper nf the
year awards. to
be announ ced

Russell
at

&lt;1

later datl'.

Johnson joined the patrol in
19lJ7 and has 'crved at Gallipo\i~ throughou t hi~, car~er. Origmally from C:allipohs. Johnson
1s a gr.Iduate of Gr1llia Acaden~y
High School and Hoc~ing
Collegt•.
He and hi s wife. An1y, afe the
pan:nts of .1 son, Jordan, and
rt&gt;'iJde 1n C.dlipnlis.
'
For the !'l'Cl&gt;nJ )'l'&lt;lr in a row

Please see Trooper, Page A6

Schools say proposal
welcome but not enough
COLUMOUS (A I') - Shadyside Local Schools in eastern
Ohio had to ask voters lor a
$450,111111 bailout Ja,t Y'''" to
help fund programs tlut the state

Boys basketball season
begins December 1.

peers and the
public, Grau
said.
Hl· is now

way

2111111

with

supervisors,

GALLIPOLIS- The trooper and dispatcher of the year
h;\ve been named at the GalliaMeigs Post of the State HighPatr?l.
Trooper
Nicholas S.
Johmon
II
W3~ selected
a~ the po,r\
top trooper
t(&gt;r

Gore's Palm Beach challenge is to center on
thl· way questionable ballots are handled - not
on the ballot itself, which some voters said led
them to vote for Reform Party candidate Pat
Buchanan instead of Gore.
In Washington, D.C., pro- Bush and proGort~ demonstrators gJthered across thl' street
ft·om the vice presidential residence at the Naval
Observatory, on embassy row. Initially, their
nun 1hcrs were about even strength - 2() each
side. But hundreds of Llush reinforcements.
alerted via e-mail the day before, arrived in t!w
next hour ·overwhelming th~.: opposition.

..

non

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Press.

Her death, according to
.frie11d Jane Ellen
McGotJeYII, "lias lift a
weal 110id .i tl OilY
communit)•·"

BY KEVIN KEU.Y

The fund has been established
through the Gallipolis branch of
I

Vol. lS, No. 40

ODOT official to

IO,lJLl.

~h.1rp l y dunng ( )crobcr
Ck.trly, fln.l!Kt,ll prL'\~~Jrc~ were
on 1hc JllliH_b uf rlll'~l' b.1rgain

Highs: 50s Lolivs: 40s
Details on Pap AI

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 26, 2000

The Bush campaign had nothing to sar abom Thursday's dt•vdopmcnts. "It's Th:m ksgi\'ing .1nd
we 'rc not going ro conuncnt,"
Bush ..,pokesman Ari Fleischer

''ThL'

The Knl.lrt whLTt' hL· \\",1'1 ... hoppmg w;1.., offL·nng 19-mt h color
TVs for $9H .
"I've bet•n 111 Atl.tnt.l for 15
years, :md I've n.:-vcr Sl'l'll the pncc~
so low. so m;uly b.ug~uns," hc s.ud.
''It's not JUSt .lt the. nJ,J!J.., It·.., tile
superm.trkcto.;, the rcst.wr;111t\,

.See Dl

Santa comes to town

crucial 25 presidential electors are
chosen on De-c. 12. Whoever wins
those dt&gt;ctors will have enough
votes to beconH.&gt; the next .President .

NEW YORK (AP) - Turkey, Kniart. aU owr:·
schmerky. WhL'rc ,l n.' the barbr;1im?
Confnmtcd with ~igns of slugMany Americans put otT rhc tr;~ - gish consumer sp~:nding. retailers
dinonal hohlby lllL':li ThursJ.1y to natiOJl\viJc rtre bankmg on a com- ,
pJck into ~to rl's tOr anorher uadi- bmation of discounts ~and intense
tion : Gettmg a nmmng start for thl' · advertismg to woo shoppers this
present-buying season.
· · holiday season ..
Only a limited number of stores,
"Christmas will be decent but
like Kmart and Wal-Mart Super not spectlCtdar," said Kurt Barnard,
Centers, were open on the holiday. publisher of Barnard's Rct1il Trend
But early birds took advantage of Report, based in Upper Montclair,
the special deals they offered and N.J. "You won't see the binge buyavoided the crowds expected Fri- ing you saw last year."
day.
Barnard and other analysts
Early birds like K.1y McC!ana- expect about a 3 percent to 4 perhan, from Sissonville, WVa., who ce nt sales increase at stores this hoiarrived at the Charleston Kmart at 1day shoppmg season, compared
6:45 a.m.
with 7 percent Lm year. ~en
Her cart was nverflowmg With onlme sales are slowing, with sales
boxes and topped with b.nh towels projectiom in De cember of $)1.6
wnhm an hour.
billion- up from last year's $7 bilaccording
to
Jupiter
She was shopping for her 9- hon,
year-old son and her husband . As Research. In previous years, holishe examined a S99 OVD player. day sales were known to double or
McClanahan said she hits Kmart triple.
eve ry year because of" the spew is."
After nnging up total sales of
''I'm one of those people -the SIR6 billion on mch itcillS as DVD
day after Thanksgivmg. I'm at Toys players and pashnuna ;hawls last
R Us at five o'clock in the morn - Christmas, retailers are Jess bullish
mg," she said. She plans to do that tlm year. Rising fuel prices and the
stock market's volatility helped
Friday
"This is the first year really make consumers much more cauwe've come out rh1s early;· 'iatd tious about spcndmg on non essenSara Chapman, 21. also fmm SIS- tials. Earlier this month, the ConsonviUe, who arnvcd at about 7 fcrence Board, a New York-based
a.m. in St!;-trch of "b.1rgains .md n.:~L'.uch group, rcportL·d that the
~alr.:s.''
comumcr confidenL't..: ind~x fdl

wiH.'illlL'd by the

See Bl

tmes

Early birds get head
start on shopping

Ad.mt.l

Shop offers little bit
of everything

•

rate count and the only way left
to do that is to file a contest for
Miami - Dade," she said.
The Florida Supreme Court, in
se rr~ng the Sunday deadline for
vote certification, anticipated the
vote would be contested and
wanted to ensure enough time for
such challenges before the state's

AP POLITICAL WRITER

the hunt for g(lod d~..·al~ Ill the

Odds and ends:

Duke wins
Preseason NIT

Bird business
soars

BY DAVID

Meanwhile, Lee Scutt W&lt;l.-. on

MONEY

SPORTS

\

see n this p1ece '" parr of .1 total
funding packagt'," .; ,1id Warren
Russell, deputy ex,-cutivc director of the Ohio School lh) ards

•

. I

AssociatiOIJ.,

,Tht· pbn w.1 . . announced two
wt•ek.;; ::lgo :1!in month:oi of publi c and private r.dk, by l.nvm.tk ers. 'fhc lt epub li can-conrrolkd
Senate pa'sscd the propos.d 2112 along parti,an lines la~t wn·k.

Sponsored by

Merry Christmas

House lawmakL'rs hold IH.~arinbl'&lt;i
Ilt::\t \Vt'r:k ..md llous . .· Spc~1kc-r
Jo Ann David\nll h,l"i promilied
quick ,H"tion .
Th~ · pl.tn trit'" to fi:x unfund ed m.ullhtt·~. or pro~r.tm' th.H
\chools lllll\t 1111plemL'Ilt wtthout th~ money to p.1y fiJr rhl'ln
The Suprl'lllC Court t.lrgL'tL'd
unfunded · 1n,md.ltL'' Ill 1t'i M.1y
rulin~

ap;ain-.t tht.•

~t.n~· .

~

----

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="445">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9884">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25633">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25632">
              <text>November 24, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1503">
      <name>andrews</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5729">
      <name>armentrout</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="22">
      <name>fisher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="211">
      <name>harris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4448">
      <name>shumate</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
