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r
Page B 8 "The o.Jiy Santhwl

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thurwday, June 8, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

-I

Dotrvlt ........................ ..... 21 34 .382 12 1/2

PRO

League

EulamDMolon
Toam
W L . Pet. 011
....................... :.... 37 21 .838
Montreal ..........................31 35 .554
s
N"' Yor1&lt; ......................... 32 2e .552
5
f'lo!l&lt;la .............................27 33 .450 ,
f'1llladelpllle ....................22 35 .38e 14 112
CentraiDivlalon
et. Louls.................... .......33 2e .ssa
Cincinnati .....................31 27 .134 1 1/2
Pit18burgh .......................26 31 .455
8
ChlcagQ ..........................26 35 .415 I 1/2
Mj!wa&lt;lkH ...................... .23 38 .380
10
Houotcn .......................... 21 37 .382 11 112
WNI OMolon
Artzona ...........................36 24 .583
Color""a ........................ 31 2S .553 2 112
Lao ~ ..................... 31 2e .553 2 1/2
Son Franct..., .................. 27 211 .482 8 112
Son Dlega ........................25 33 .431 g 1/2

Amook:an

~.ng.,.

Eaatern Olvlalon
W L
TMm
Now Yon. ....................... .. 32 23
8oo1t&gt;n .......... ........ .......... 31 24
TOtonto ............................ 31 30
BaiUmore ........................ 24 32
Tampa Boy .... ................... 21 37

Pel.

~-lo•I.Cindnmt114

Chlclogo Cubs 8, Arizona •
Lot Angeleo I 1, Ttxal8
OOI&lt;I&lt;Ind 10, Son Diego 4
N.Y. YankHI 7, Montteal2
Flot1doe, Booton2

Pittsburgh 4, llo1roi 3
St. Loulo 4, Kanoas Cl1y 2
N.Y. Mell11 , Baltimore 3
Ptolllldllphla 5. Tampa Boy 4
Toromo 12, Attanta B

c-

l,llllwaulloo 1

AnatwMm 10, san Francieco 8
Today'aGa,_
Boltlmont (Jolvuoon Cl-4) a1 N.V. M.,. (A.-

op.m.

floU01on (Holt 3-tl ol Lot l.ngeleo (Park
4), 10:10p.m. Frlday'aGamM
,

1
4

Mont!MI (Tuot&lt;or 0-0) at Toronto (Carpenter

.4211 8 1/2
.382 12 1/2

Central DlvleiOft

Clicago ..........................35 23 .803
Cltveland ...................... .32 23 .112 I 1/2
Kanoas Cl1y .................... 30 28 .517
5
Minnesota ....................... 27 33 -~
8

Lakers
fromPapB1
in a big game."
The Lakers never trailed after
the ga~e's first basket and opened
a IS- point lead in the first quarter. When Indiana finally made it
close in the second half, O'Neal,
who was 21-of-31 from the field,
shot and passed the Lakers to
another cornfort:oble lead and an
easy victory.
Game 2 is Friday night at the
Staples Center.
• O'Neal's performance was
made possible by the Lakers'
adherence to their game plan,
something mat hasn't always been
this talented but mercurial team's
strength .
Los Angeles patiently worked
the ball into O'Neal all night,
while Shaq continually established excellent low-post position
and scored on short shots. He .
made 12 layups and dunks, six
jumpers from inside 12 feet and
three hook shots.
Kobe Bryant had 1-4 quiet
points for the Lakers, while Ron
Harper added 12.
"We executed the game plan
I 0 times better than we have at
any time in this playoff run;· said
Rick Fox, who scqred nine of his
It points in the fourth quarter as
the Lakers pulled away. "This was
a, performance that was due."
. While Shaq was immensely
successful in his first finals game
with the Lakers, 12-year veteran
and California native Miller made
a disastrous finals debut.
He missed all seven of his shots
· in the first half, finally scored on a
weak layup midway through the
third quart,er, and didn't hit
another shot despite numerous
open looks.
His trademark _bravado still
int:oct, Miller almost seemed as
·though he didn't believe what he
had done - or rather, hadn't
done.
"I tell you what, if they continue to give me those looks, they're
going to be in trouble;' he said.
"My first four baskets went in and

Reds
fromPapB1
they did a year ago: When is it
all going to come togedler?
. "This is still a good club;'
McKeon said. "We're just not
clicking on all cylinders yet.
Hopefully, soon."
Both teams have braggingrights series ahead this weekend.
The Reds go to Cleveland to play
their intrast:ote rival; while the
White Sox play the crosstown
; ;val Cubs at Comiskey Park.
"It will be like three World
Series games with 40,000-plus
yelling;' Thomas said. "It's going
to be good this weekend."
Thomas played a key role in
Chicago having a good series in
Cincinnati. In a 2-for-21 slump
when the White Sox arrived, he
broke out by hitting a three-run
homer and driving in four runs to
lead the 17-run avalanche on
Thesday.
He was on the bench getting a
day of rest Wednesday when Griffey hit a three-run homer in the
first offjim Parque (6-2) , the only
big mist:oke of me day by the leftbander.
Manager JetiY Manuel planned

ClnelftMII (Naagla
(II-~). 7:05p.m.

~)

at Cleveland

4·5), 7:05 p.m.

N.Y. Moto (lellor 8·1) at N.Y. Yankooo
(Clem..,. 4-6), 7:05 p.m.
Florkla (Oornpotor 6-3) at Tampa Bay (TraCiloel3.e), 7:15p.m.
Pf111adolphla (Wolf 5-3) at BoWmoro (Aapp
4-3), 7:35p.m.
.
•

.•

.."

27

McGuire oulllghlto Norfolk ollho lnt8(1181ion11

20

(~

Columbut ............. ......&amp; 7 2 17 21
Dal1ao ......................... 5 8 1 18 23

30

(~~). 8:05p.m.

W-Oiv-.
- C i l y ............... 10 I 2 32 27

8

24 20

13

18 21

34

4 13 17

21

L.Nguo.
·
PHILAOELPHI... PHIWES--Activated 3B
Soo11 Rolen from 1ho 15-day disab!Od oel.
Optionoc:l
RHP
St...
SChrenk
to
Sc:ranton/WIIkii~Barre of the lnt«natlonal
Loaguo. Signed RHP Taylor Bucl'llolz. OF
Brandon caraway, 1B Flegineld Gnggo, OF
Anthony H&lt;lnoiOy, LHP TrfiW&lt; Bullod&lt;, and C
Kevin SUllivan.
,
SAN DIEGO PAOAES-Piacoc:l RHP Brian
8oohrlnger ootho 15-day disablod H!l, rotroactllloto June 4. Racalled RHP Domingo Guzman

Piftllbulgh (Schmidt 2-5) at l&lt;ansoo Cl1y
2·5), 8:05p.m.
Mllwaukoo (Wright 1-0) st Minnooota

Cubs (~ !1-4) at Chicago WMe
So• (K ell• 3-5), 8:05 p.m.
Toxu (Aogoro !1-5) ot Colorado (AS!aclc 62), a:05 p.m.
.
Anaheim (Cooper 2·1) al Arizona (Johnson
9-1), 10:05 p.m.
Hwoton (Ootll 1·4) at San Diogo (Spon&lt;:er
2-t) . 10:05 p.m.

Natlonol Hockey League

)f'.,:r-...............

8
....................8

San Jooa ................... ,.3

Stanley Cup Flnalo
(lle-·7)

Tuo&amp;day,llay 30
New Jersey 7, Dallas 3
Thul'lday. June 1
Dallas 2, New JerMy 1
SlltUI'day. June 3
Now Joroay 2, Dallas 1
Monday. June I
New Jersey 3, Dallas 1, New

_,.rMY leada

at

FlnMe

(BNI-ol·7)
WedneMiy, June 7 ·

e o

. fof•tlt.

e

2
8

0

s

·'

2e '

'o!faoa-

a win and one point

-no

Dollao 3. Columwo

.

Ch~o 2, Miami 1&gt; ~

from Lea Vogao oil"- Pacilic CO&amp;!I leogUIO..

Frlday'a Game

,
Tampa Boy at New Yorlo-Now Jersey, 7:30
p.m.

Saturday, JuiiO'IO

_,_...

CLEVELAND INDI~NS--Acllvatoc:l AHP

Paul Rigdon from lll!)l 5~ dloablod lot.
AHP Joto1 'Mijjlrt on tho 15-day dlolbled lilt, retr'OIICIHe10 June 3.

LA. Lakers 1o.l, Indiana 87, LA. Lakers

SEATTLE

lood-1-0

frtdly, June 8
Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m.

...,...Loo _ _

Sundey, Juno 1 I
LA. Lakers at Indiana, 7:30p.m.

EIOitm Dlvlalon

,
Wllclnoocloy, Juno 14
LA. L.akers at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Frlday, Juno 10
LA. L.akersat Indiana, 9 p.m., it necessary
Monday, Junt 1g
Indiana at LA. lak8fl, 9 p.m., If necessary

Toom
WLTPioQFQA
New England ...............e 4 • :i2 22 18

NY-NJ .........................&amp; 8 0 18 18 18
Miami .............. ...... .....4 B 4 18 13 18
D.C.............................3 9 2 11 22 31
ControiDivltlon

FOOTBAU.

NaUonii 'F-11 Leogue
CINCINN.4TI BENGIILS-Waived P Oeone
Horlnek.
GREEN BAY PACKEAS41amoc:l David
Stollen ex8C1111Va dlreclor ol Toam Latrl&gt;oou.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS--Named Tom
Zupancic vice prooidonl ol business develOp-

MAFIINER$-Optionod FIHP
Kevin Hodgoo to TlOOIIIII ol1ho PCic A-lid
INF·OF ChatleJ Glpaon ln:&gt;m Tacoma.
TOAONTQ BLUE JA'i'S-,..~ OF Todd
Gr""" on 1ho 15-day QL Ailcalled C Josh
Phelpo ~om ~lCVIMt oi.Vlf 8ou1hom Loogut.
-~ ~~uo
MILWAUKEE BRI'W!!A5- Placed on lho
FIHPJtl! 0 ' -.!5-dliy 'dlaobl"" Hot,-tive June to\8. . .

NEW YORK MET5'-Sent INF-DF Ryan

SAN FR.6.NCISCO 49ER5-Signed TE
Greg Clat1&lt; to a lflree-year "'"tract, OT Mall
Willig 1o a two-year contrac1 and L8 E Thomaa to a on•yoar contract.
SEATTLI; SEAHAWKs-Raloaoo L8 Mall

Bock.

HOCICI!Y

N - 1 . - y League
COLDR.6.00 ...V...L.ANCHE-Traded G Mao:
Denl&amp; to tho Coklmbuo Blue Jackets lor a ,...
ond·round pick In lflo 2000 draft.
CQLUMBUS . BWE JACKETS--Signed F
David Vytomy and F Martin Spanhoi to two-

yeer contracts.

CHICAGO BLACKH.6.WKS-Signoc:l G Eraomo Saltarelli.

.,
out. Every shot but one felt good.
If they're going to play me like
that, it's only a matter of time."
Light-scoring guard Mark Jackson led Indiana with 18 points,
while Austin Croshere added 16
and Rose and Rik Smits had 12
ap1ece.
The L.A. glitterati turned out
in heavy numbers for the first
finals game in the year-old Staples
Center's history, and the Lakers
put on a performance worthy of
the stage. Los Angeles shot 68
percent in the first quarter to grab
a big lead, then protected it by
hitting 10-of-18 shots in the
fourth quarter.
Los Angeles led 77-71 when
the fourth began, but O'Neal
quickly got an assist on Brian
Shaw's jump shot and then a
rebound dunk.
Even when Shaq began to tire
in the closing minutes, he continued to score with metronomic
regularity. He had a layup with
7:42 to play; a leaner with 6:16
left; another layup with 5:15 left;
an offensive rebound, a layup and
a foul with 4:02 to play.
The capper came with three
minutes left. After Bryant blocked
Miller's final shot attempt, Brian
Shaw spotted O'Neal cutting
toward the hoop and threw an
alley-oop pass.
O'Neal tripped over a defender's leg, righted himself; leaped
awkwardly at the basket - and
somehow slammed the ball
through the hoop with preternatural grace,- giving Los Angeles a
98-81 lead.
O'Neal's heroics covered up a
quiet night by his teammates.
Rice was 1-for-8 from the field
and had just three points, while
Shaw was just 2-of-9 and missed
all four of his 3-point attempts.
Bryant went scoreless in the second quarter and didn't score1in
the fourth until the game was dut
of reach.
But on this night, he didn't
need to contribute. Shaq took
care of everything.
"Tonight in the locker room, I
said, 'Thanks for the night off,
Chief;" Bryant said with a grin.

to use Thomas as a pinch hitter in
just the right spot. With the score
3-2, a runner at first, two outs and
Parque due up in the sixth,
Manuel decided to give Thomas
his first pinch-hit at-bat of the
season against Rob Bell (4-4).
"When you get an opportunity
to rest guys, it creates a dangerous
bench," Manuel said. "It gives you
the opportunity to pick and
choose the matchups you like.
"1 thought he (Bell) had
thrown enough pitches to where
a fresh hitter could put a good.
swing on it. And there's no better
hitter than Frank Thomas."
R.edl Notta: Thomas is 4-for13 career off the bench .... Keith
Foulke pitched the ninth, convetting hio 13th consecutive save
chance. ... Carlos Lee's firstinning single extended his hitting
streak to a career-high nine
games (15-for-34}. ... Parque's
seven strikeouts matched his
career high. ... Griffey has only
two homers and three singles in
his last 35 at-bats, leaving his average at .215. His homer Wednesday was his 414th, tying Darrell
Evans for 27th on the ca~er list.
... Dante Bichette was 0--for-4,
ending his hitting streak at 10
games.

Factory Invoices

pos

our

"NEW'' FORD• LINCOLN• MERCURY
.

~

"

•

...
·.·
·-·
.••.•.
...

Melp County's

\'•''"""' ' ' N"mlwo

..

.

.

You will' know what we paid, ·so you'll NEVER PAY TOO MUCH!

.....•.
..........
•

-

--

-

-

·~

Middleport • Pom"roy, Ohio

!il) Cent&lt;

Freedom
railroad

8Y TONY M. LIAcH

to be

SENTlNoL NEWS STAFF:

OMEROY - Mcif!$
County
Recycling
and Litter Prevention
Program will be participating in the 12th
·~nnual Ohio Riv_er Sweep 2000
'oalJ11ne 17.
·
'·'River Sweep is an annual river• j)ank cleanup effon that extends
. the length of the 0 hio River and
beyond.
: 1.: More than 3,000 miles · of
-~reline, from Pittsburgh, Pa., to
'Cairo, Ill., will be combed by volunteers for trash and various
·debris. This event 'is- the largest
environmental event of its kind
,31\d will encompass six st:otes.
·. ; Jhe purpose of the Riv'er
,S~ep is to draw att ntion ro the
, existing.litter problem and to t:oke
s!Cps to rectify the situation by
Bliysically removing the litter
'through a volunteer effort. It will
al5o enhance die ' witer .quality as ,
~U as wildlife potential.
, · pver the ·. pan 20 years,
' 'iinpmvements made in water
' ~~ality have multed in i~creased
· recreational· use "of the Ohio
'\t-lyer.
.This increase in recreation pro:duces more litter on die river. ballks. Because of this progres,
a yearly cleanup program
the River Sweep· is necessary.
,.,.~..~•·. hoped th~t increased publi~ TtiASH BUSTERS- Kenny Wlsgins, above, prepares to hang a biiQ·;&lt;tif!JQilllo«&lt;.to me river will fuat,er . ,~r that wiiiJemlnd ·Meigs Co~nty residents of the upcomi~g Ohio
.

111.\J..•Mlid·,d·l,e-

At

Kneen will
~trt~et
vqh~ntc:ers at tte ·stage ·
area of the
lot next to the
bOat levee.
·Indiana and ·lllinoi1.
. The ·R.\I.cine' site will headed by
Mel!!$ County ·Recycling and
Litter Prevention program will be Larry and PattY Circle, and will
coordinating clean up sites in meet at the Fe.no Landing Shelter .

..

'

.

honored
BY KRII DoTsoN
OVP NEWS STAFI'

GALLIPOLIS - Sixteen of
America's most historic areas
have been designated •as
National Millennium Trails by
the U.S. Department ofTrampomtion under a collaborative
initiative of the White House
Millennium Council, die
Department of Transport:otion
and the Rails-to-Trails COnservancy, one of which is the
Underground Railroad. ·
"When they announce.d the
UGRR as having received the
millennium trail designation,
people actually stood and gave
it an ovation;' said Cathy Nelso~r, the trail's executive director.

.

"It was very moving because
none of the other trails were
..- given such enthusiastic recognition;' she said.
The Trail's Strategic Planning
Committee, comprised of rep-.
resent:otives, from eight st:otes,
have scheduled a national event
to publicly announce the
River Sweep 2000. The clean-up effort will be June 17. (Tony M.
UGRR Trail for Sept. 22 in
Leach photo)
Gallipolis.
. .
The date commemorates the
House.· In Middleport, the ' gath- Kenny 'Wiggins, · director of · stopping by the Meif!$ CoUJ)~
signing· of 'l.~e Emancipation
l:ring place .~ , 9~ ~h~ ;JJ14- '~ei~Jr\ .R.ec;Y~nd Litter Pre- . Recycling and ~~t!r P]e~~ention
Pro~lamation. \D 186;2, by PresiFreight Depot m Dali1! '15fies vention Program. Thi:.t:e should . Office on the ·~~onl:! floor of the
dent.Abraham: L!~c~lr). . . , .
Park, with Kenny Wiggins .sefV· be between 125 to 150 irtdividu~ M~i!!$ Co.q nty, APqex to obtain
Tlie theme lOr dlr: ~~ Will
als who will be out ' lending ·. a the a'ppropriai~"waiv~r forms. ·
be "2000 Lights of Freedom."
ing as coordinator.
'
T~h ball$ and gloves will be
"We plan to end the event
.The Long Bottom site will be hand to help beautify the Ohio
as
well
as
Meif!$
County."
prov:aded
and
each
volunteer
will
River,
with
over 2000 people holdiitg
supervised by'· the Forked Run
candles as they walk to the river
' Volunteers are desperately receave a !fee T-s~rt .
Sportsmen's Club.
front,"
said Nelson.
Wiggins
said,
and
can
Safety
tips
for
River
Sweep
Valneeded,
"We are really excited about
She is also working with local
Pllelc1 ... S.Mp, ,... AS
dlis year's cleanup effort," said sign up by calling 992-6360 or by
educators to include the
UGRR in their curriculum so
.
.
dley can' use die celebration as
one of their field trips.
Several national dignitaries
plan to attend and this should
attract attention frOm all over
Agreeing to p~cipate "were Bubba's Market Place,
BY CIIARuNI H~CM
die country. S:o why in GallipOBuckeye Farm Market, CCK, Crow's Steak House,
SENTIN~L NEWS STAFF ·
lis?
POMEROY - Wim · tobacco use .being the Kountry Kitchen, Pizza · Works, Racine Pizza
"When they asked me where
largest cause of preventable deaths in America, the Express, Route 7 Pizza Express, Washburn's
I thought this giant celebrarion
Meif!$, County Health Department is coD;tinually Dairyette and Wendy's.
should be held, I immediately
After the event, managers for the most part
involved in wa'ys to discourage smoking.
said Gallipolis," said Nelson.
A Tobacco Risk Reduction Program was put in reported they received good feedback from cusBeside the many UGRR
place at the Health Department earlier this year, tomen, and several expressed an interest in taking
sites, Gallipolis has consistently
with Nancy Aldridge as coordinator. For the first part again next year. Only one indicated negative
celebrated the Emancipation
rime, the agency participated in the annual statewide comments from a customer.
Proclamation for 138 years now
&amp; emphasized by the coordinator, being"exposed
event, "Eat, Breathe, and Dine Smoke Free."
at the John Gee Church, to be
Educating resi'dents not only about the dangers of to secondhand smoke is dangerous to your health."
dellj,cated on the evening of
She
said
.
exposure
can
.
cause
inunediate
adverse
smoking, but of secondhand smoke, and promoting
Sept. 22.
Nelson, from Columbus, and
non-smoking areas in public places, such as rest:ou- effects on nonsmokers by increasing dleir heart rate
and blood pressure, causing eye irritation, headache,
members of Ohio's Friends of
rants, is a part of the risk reduction program.
·
chest discomfort and difficulty in breadling.
FreedOm Society Inc., are the
When Aldridge began contacting restaurants to
"Secondhand smoke is the third leading puse of
designated leaders for the
participate in the "Eat, Breathe, and Dine Smoke
prevent:oble death, killing over 53,000 American
UGRR Trail Initiative because
Free;' she found ·three in the county which already
nonsmokers each year. II' contains over 4,000 chemof their impressive record of
have a no-smoking , policy - Fur Peace Ranch,
ical compounds including ammonia, arsenic,
documenting more than 600
Dairy Queen and ~arpenter Inn.
cyanide, acetone, formaldehyde, and carbon monoxRei.ta~!fll!!'i)thout a policy were invited to
PI , ............. AI
PIPI" ... S•oklnt. .... AS
becon;e· a -'ji~ 'ilf the no-smoking scene for a day.
. .'

Anti-smoking program gets .results.

NO

TODAY- Heather Knlgllt, an·employee
Steak
House In Pomeroy, explains "Eat, Breathe ,and Dine Smoke Free·· to
Jol:ln R. Quails, Who was eating lunch~ at the t'estauranfiiii smoke-free
djlrf. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
'

Mason.·. man iwinsj~ S&amp;O.OOO home
.' ...
' '..

•,.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorce??
No Embarrassment•••Your Tr•ated' with Respect!

II

""'· .i.l!·

..y,
..

'

'

OYP NEWS STAFF

'

...

Sentinel

2 51 ct'loll- II ......

nothing. It's mind boggling. "

•'

- - ---

BZ

M

Objtuerjea

A3

Sporg
Weather
1

BH

Bditorjele

Bl-3. 8

.·

A3

Lotteries
owo .
Plo;k 3: 3-6-1; Pic:k 4: 7-5-7·2
U...l )0 5: 17-18-2(}.22-29

1EVA.
Deily 3: 1~ Deily 4: 4-2-8--2
0 2000 Ohio VaDey Publishins Co.

.

.,.'

AS

Caltpder
Clenjficda
Comics

J•,.. w. utchlllkl, Apple o-.

•

,.

Sweari~g in

Tada(s

",f~u work hard to.get ~omething and
~them someone gwes 1t to you for

might want tO because you just won a house!"'
recalled Litchfield:
"You work hard to get something and diem someone gives it to ~u for nothing. It's mind boggling;' he
said. ~ '
the u.s.
The 31-year old selected die Bonus Room Home,
'~ •J.Ionestly.l usually d1row thlll8li like mat out;' said
a 2,025-square-foot, four bedroom, two bam home to
Ll~thfield.
; 'lie ~e it irito Oakwood's local office at5:30 p.m. be located on a plot of land he already owns. Litch~uriday. which was lucky because die stpre closed at 6 field; a union laborer, works on scaffolding for a living.
He has three children and is expecting another this
alid that WliS the last day of die contest.
·' ~[ was late because I had to go back and get my fall.
"We're building his home now;• said Gary Whitpine pieee;· he said.
·
·
tington,
general manager of Oakwood Homes-Gal--the winning moment came over the phone ,that
everung after corporate had a chance confirm the lipolis. "After he picks out his colors he should be in
his home within six weeks:'
Win.
·
Wheil asked when it finally sank in that he just won
"I can stiH hear Delman (Cheney, from Oakwood)
a
house
Litchfield replied, "Just now."
'Are yo~ sitting down?' and I said no. 'Well, you

Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1·800-272-5179.~.:-"

DRIVE HOME IN A CAR ·o R TRUCK TO

8Y Kills Dcmoll

•. ~QALLIPOLIS- Oakwood Homes 'of Gallipolis
Pfl'S"nt~ a $60,000 home to a ;west Virginia man
Wednesday after he won o~·s special nationwide sweepstakes promotion.
jiunes W. Uichfield, 31, Apple Grove, received the
WiDn,ing Qame piece in me mail after expressing inter~!' in purchasing an Oakwood home.
· , Qver 1 million pieces ·were given out throughout

• I•

'•.

.-

-

HO..town News,.per

mom.

IIABEIIALL

New Jersey at Dallas, 8 p.m., II neciiUry

llondey, Juno 12
Dallao at New Jersey, 8 p.m., Hnecooaory

8

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June 9, 2000

." '

21 21

Chicago .. .....................8

T-Bay .................J~

VMH scholarships awarded, A&amp;
Red Sox blank Tribe; Chancey lauded, 11

•

1 2s 34

W-ay, J..,.21
Indiana It I.A. Lekoro, 9 p.m., H necooaory

1

M l - 2. Houlton o
Colorado e, soame 1

3-4), 7:1

Bolton (Fusaro e- 1) at Allanta (MIJholland

5-5), 7:40p.m.

Oakland (Hudson 6·2) at LOs Angeles
(Perez 4-2), 10:10 p.m.
·
Saanlll' (Halama 6-1) at San Francisco
(Ruorer 2-4), 10:35 p.m.

51. L.oulo .(S1aphanoon 8-1) et Detroi
(Waovar 2·5), 7:05p.m.

.582
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Oolclond .......................... 32 27 .542
Seonlo ............................ 30 2e .5301
112
Anoholm ......................... 31 2e .!52S
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-· -.. -

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•

. ,.-----

Marlene
was swom In Tuesday as Meigs County Clerk of
Courts by Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill, followh1II'Mir
appointment to the position by t!le Melp County Republican Central
Committee Monday night. Harrison replaces Lllrry E. Spencer, who
retired last week for health reasons. (Brian J. Reed photo)

�•

..... A I • The Dlllly ltntlntl

· BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Man stnttnced In aoss bumln1
. WOO~TER (AP) -A man Was sentenced to two yean in prison
., fo~ burrung a cross in a woman's yard and spray-paintina racist anf~
fitt on her house:
'
Chad Trent, 22, of Plain Township, wu sentenced Thunday on
, eth~c intimidation and vandalism charges.
::. _Prosecuton say Trent and James ~alone, 22, of Wooster, spray• pamted a house m March. The family had lived at the apartment
'. complex for three months and wu the only black family living
· there at the time.
,.
.
The spray-painting on the front door and a brick wall included
' a swastika, "KKK" and two lightning bolts, representative of the
., Aryan Nation white supremacist group.
· Trent apologized in court for the incident.
•
''I'm sorry that it happened," he said. "I wish I could take it
'· back"
..
_ ·He admitted to the 'judge that he and Malone were intoxicated
' at the time.
':· Malone has pleaded innocent to ethnic intimidation, vandalism
• and escape. No court date has been scheduled for him.

.

-..

Woman accused In beating

'

MIDDLETOWN (AP) - A 9-year-old boy has told police he
was offered S10. to help setde a feud between two women by beat. mg up one woman's child.
, Hei~ McCullough, 25, has been charged with contributing to
. . the delinquency of a minor. Police said she hired the youth to
_ assault Pa_mEverson's 9- year-old son at a birthday party on May 21.
.
The v1cttm was not seriously iqjured, police said.
, . The alleged attacker told police that McCullough never gave
..: him the S10.

....

Fugitive In killing captured

.;·

'·

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man wanted· in connection with a
murder 11 years ago in Cleveland has been ~aptured in England,
·
police said.
Police in London, England went to Lawrence McCiutchen's
home Tuesday to break up a 6ght with his girlfriend and discovered
what appeared to be phony identification ·documents. Officers
looked-into McCiutchen's background and discovered a warrant for
his arrest in Cleveland.
FBI agent Robert Hawk said Thunday that McClutchen had
. • been using the name Larry Howard in London.
·
,··. · McCiutchen is charged with aggravated murder in the slaying of
&gt; Clarence Jackson, 38, on Oct. 27, 1989, over what police say was a
: • drug debt.
Officials plan to bring McClutchen back to Cleveland, a process
that could take six months, the FBI said. He is now in jail in London.
Cleveland police said McCiutchen and his brother, Phillip, went
to Jackson's home and shot him several times before running off.
Phillip McCiutchen, 43, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and drug abuse in 1990 and sentenced to 10 to 25 years in
•· prison.
Lawrence McCiutchen ran and the FBI issued a federal warrant
" charging him with fleeing to avoid prQsecution.
Cleveland police spokeswoman Lt. Sharon MacKay would not
'. describe Lawrence McCI\Itchen's role in the sla)'ing.

Frlct.y, June t, 2000

Prldly, June' I,

Poll'lti'Oy, Mlclcllepor1, Ohio

.

Jager had shortest tenure·of any PltG .CEO
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. tried to
make toO many internal changes
too quickly, slicing profits and sending stock prices rumbling, say the
men who are taking over the top
jobs in the consumer products
gi,mt.
~lbe magnitude and pace of
change ~ undertook this fiscal year
is a major factor in our results;' said
Alan G. Lafley, who was promoted
to president and chief executive
officer on Thursday.
"In hindsight, it's clear · we
changed too much toO fast. I'm
con6dent we know now what we .
need to fix ;~nd how to do it."
Lalley had been president of
P&amp;G's divisions for global beauty
care and North America. John E.
.Pepper, who headed P&amp;G trom
1995 until he retired as chairman
Sept. 1, returned as chairman.
Durk I. Jager had held all the top
tides since Pepper left. The surprise
announcement of his 4eparture
ended the shortest tenure of any
chief executive in Procter &amp; Gambles 163-year history.
"The John Pepper eff'ect is really
buying them some grace here," said
Pete Sorrentino, director of equity
resean:h at Bardett &amp; Co. in
Cincinnati. "They're de6nitely trying to bring some credibility \lack
to the company."
Company watchen said it will
be up to Pepper, 61, to deal with

employees, analysts and stockholders while Laney, 52, tries to stem ~e
bleeding in P&amp;G's earnings and
stock price.
"I think morale got a real shot in
the aqn here today," said Bob
Wehling, ·who like Pepper has
worked his entire career at P&amp;G
and is the company's global marketing officer.
"People love both John and A. G.
They hated to see John go, and
they're glad he's back!!
News of the shakeup sent shares
ofP&amp;G down nearly 10 percent, or
$6.125, to $56.75 Thursday on the
New York Stock Exchange. Since
P&amp;G reached its 52-week-high of
$118.37 in January, the company's
stock has dropped 52 percent.
Some analysts and investors were
quick to blame Jager, a 30-year
P&amp;G veteran they held responsible
for the January loss of$38 billion in
market value. That stenm1ed 6om
failed merger talb with drug giants
Warner-Lambert and American
Home Products Co., and a $35 billion drop in the value of P&amp;G's
shares Man:h 7 when the company
isSued an earnings warning for the
6scal third quarter,

"He had two strikes against him.
He got his third strike today, and
now he's out," Douglas Christopher, who follows P&amp;G for Crowell, Weedon &amp; Co. in San Francisco,
said Thursday.
"I think' it just got to a point
where they said enough iS enough;'
Christopher said.' ''I' think the
change is absolutely necessary, and
it's the best thing that could have
happened to the company and its
shareholden."
Don Apking, 62, who retired in
1993 after . 36 years with P&amp;G,
hailed the board's move to repta'ce
Jager with Pepper and Lafley.
"I think they should have done it
a long time ago;• said Apking, who
is among shareholders suing the
company over stock price 'declines .
"Quite tiankly, I think he's messed
the company up:'
Pepper isSued a statement praising Jager for his innovative leader- .
ship.
"We have an accelerated pace· of
produc~ innovation that never
would have been possible without
(his) leadenhip;'.Pepper said.
Some analysts shared th'at sentiment.

Durk'1 ctedit. he got
company fOcused on brands, ·
vations. new products and acquisitions," said William Steele, ~g­
ing director of Bane of Am~rica
Securities. "He really got P&amp;G
energized trom a top-line (sales)
perspective. And over the long
term, that's what consumer-prP&lt;~­
ucts companies need co jliD"' their
worldwide market share:
"It's stunning how ~ttle lime
Durk Jager was giV~:n, but his mmdate was very diflicult;' wd Daiuel
Peris, an analyst with
Resean:h. "He wanted to
around a company with more
$35 billion in sales and double 'lt
a short period of time. Obviously,
he needed more time." '
._

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Rojoctedl
Accidontsl '
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New Driverl

dri!\•1 I'KOrd

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Call Us First
ForA Quote

'
COLUMBUS (AP) - A former mayor cited for parking in a
· handicapped apace settled the cue by pleading guilty to a leuer citation, a prosecutor said.
:'.. Gres; Lashutka, who 'served two terms "' mayoi from 1991 to
'· 1999, had been scheduled for arraignment Wednesday in Franklin
• ' County Municipal Court, but paid 11 fine Thesday to settle the case
\ ' said City Prosecutor Stephen Mcintosh.
·
'
"He called last week askin,, 'Is there any way we can resolve this
, thing?"' Mcintosh said. .
· .
: Mcintosh said he reviewed the case and decided that it would be
: a~propriate for Lashutka to plead guilty 't o a less-expensive parking
: Citation rather than pay a $275 fine for the original handicapped• parking violation.
·
! Tpe former mayor's sport-utility vehicle wasn't parked in a space
: for the disabled in a Kroger supermarket parking lot. Rather,
: Lashutka parked next to the handicapped spot in a yellow-striped
! no-parking ma, Mcintosh said.
•
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Chief took role .........

AKRON (AP) -· On the day before his retirement, the city's
police chief participated in an im&gt;ett:ipti0 n that lftUited in the
~~ of his graQdson.
.
·
. .
DarneD E. ltvine, 18, was arrested Tliunday on a charge of aJigravated robbery in the holdup at a BP p station, poli~e Maj. Paul
,
Callahan said.
.
Edward' Irvine, 64, is reqring Friday alter 37 ynn in various jobs
within rhe Akron Police Department.
He and Darnell Irvine's father, Police Detective Pierre Irvine,
found the cat witnesses said was used in the holdu1&gt;. Darnell was
arrested without incident.
The (!;as station was robbed Tuesday night. N o one was hurt.
Police believe there were two robbers, one with a basebaU bat and
·
'
the other with a handgun.
.

:

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Doris Jeane Ashley, 73, of Ravenswood,
• ~iied at Holzer Medical Center ·in Gallipolis Ohio following an
; . extended illness.
.
'
'
;,. · .She was born on October 19, 1926 in Letart Falls, daughter of the
v 1
. ~te Ralph Dennis and Naomi Belle Sayre Ashley.
_ . •. She was retired from Kaiser Aluminum Corporation of
~ _}l.avenswood, where she worked in the accounting department.
. She was a 1944 graduate of Racine High School, and was past pres' . ,l~ent otthe Racine Alumni Association. She was an original member
of the B1g Bend Minstrel Association.
,_: . · Surv~ving are a brother and sister-in-law, Burl S. and Pau.line Ashley
• _o f Spnng6eld, Missouri; a sister-in-law, June Ashley of ·Racine; a
.: ~ qephew, Clifford D. Ashley of Morning Star, a nephew, Keith D. Ash. . I~ of ~o~k Springs; a niece, Mrs. Randolph (Heidi) Smith of Alta
,VIsta,Vu·gtma; a nephew, Stephen R . Ashley of Smithville, Maryland; a
. nephew, Craig]. Ashley of Allen, Texas; and eight great-nieces.
Bes1des her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, Robert
D. Ashley, and an infant niece.
, _ Arrangements are by Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswpod. and
there will be no calling hours.

I· .

.''

•Low down payment ..
~a.ow monthly paylrianta
'
"
•Immediate SR·22 filings
•Preferred • AND high risk
drlvera welcon'l'e

'

Smoking

•• • "

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I

I'

which already make up the- majoriry of the
company's operations.
Gannett, the publisher of USA Today, is paying $1.125 billion for 21 newspapers located
in Seven different clusters in Louisiana, Mary-

land, Ohio, Wisconsin and Utah.Those newspapers have a combined circulation of
466,000.
Ten of the 21 newspapers are in Ohio. They
are the Telegraph-Forum of Bucyrus, ihe
Chillicothe Garette, the Coshocton Tribune,
the Journal-News of Hamilton, the Lancaster
Eagle-Gazette, the News Journal of Mansfield, The Marion Star, The Middletown Journ~, The Advocate of Newark, and the Times
Recorder of Zanesville.
Community Newspapers, which owns The
Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register and
Gallipolis Tribune, bought 17 dailies located
in Indiana, South Georgia and West Virginia
for $455 million. Combined circulation of
those papers is 260,000.
The West Virginia acquisitions were the

·, @

Trail

..~?.'.

BUtCK~

lrum

c:-:

'-·

Beckley Register-Herald and the Bluefield
Telegraph .
The other newspapers purchased by Community Newspaper include the Americus
Times-Recorder, Cordele Dispatch , Moultrie
Observer, Thomasville Times-Enterprise,
Tifton Gazette and Valdosta Daily Times in
Georgia; Anderson Herald-Bulletin, Greensburg Daily News, Kokomo Tribune, Lebanon
Reporter, Linton Daily Citizen, Logansport
Pharos-Tribune, Rushville Republican and
Terre Haute Tribune-Star in Indiana; and
Cumberland Times-News in Maryland.
The sales involved 38 offhomson's 49 daily
U.S. newspapers, and the Toronto-based company said it expected to announce the sale of
the remaining 11 soon. One of those 11 is The
Repository of Canton, Ohio. Also ·on the
block are five Canadian newspapers, which
T_h01nson said it expects to· sell late this year
or early next year.
Richard J. Harrington, president and CEO
of Thomson, said the company was "pleased
that these exceptional assets wiU have new
1
homes with established newspaper compa. "
n;es.
Thomson said the proceeds from the sale
would be used to reduce debt and allow the
company to develop its information services
business through investments and acquisitions.
Thomson operates several professional information services such as West Law and First
Call.
In the other big industry news Thursday,
Central Newspapers Inc. said it was exploring
a sale or merger. The biggest prizes among the
company's six daily newspapers are The Arizona Republic and The Indianapolis Star.
The company, in releasing the news late

f::

=' ::

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......
""·
....

The Daily Sentinel

,....

.... MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
..

1:::... '

That much instability hurts a
school system, she said.
"When there's that kind of
turnover, any rype of reform effort
a superintendent puts in .stops
cold;' Seltz said. "You need five
years before reforms work."
Toledo community leaden and
board members have spent 10
months searching for a replacement for Superintendent Merrill
Grant, who is retiring. Harrisburg,
Pa., superintendent Lucian Yates
had accepted the job but decided
last week he didn't want it.
Contract negotiations stopped
when Yates asked for a package
that could have paid him as much
as $400,000 during .his 6rst year,
including bonuses and benefits.
"It's very frustrating," said Toledo board member Peter Silverman. "You'd hope there'd be a
whole crop a great leaders you
could pick from, but there's not."
Yates would taken over a
38,000-stud~nt district planning
to lay off teachers and close some
schools to cover a $17 million
de6cit.
"There are so many problems
in urban districts that you can't
6nd someone who's that multitalented;' Sykes said.
Toledo, like many other big city

,~ ~

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.~~;•..·;.----------..,
The Dally Sentinel
f* ,, • ~

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1998 Cadillac

1998"neVJ

Monte

Sedan Deville

V8, Leather, Loaded
Was '20,999~

Now 818,800°

2 Dr. V6, Auto,
Air&amp; More
Was 18,99500

1997 FQrd Muataq··

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V6, Auto, Air, Loaded,
Low Miles, Sharp
W. 113,99900

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1888 Olcla Cutlau ~Auto, A1r, PW, PL, Cass., Tilt, Cruise, Silver, ytas '13,99900 ..................
14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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1998 Chevy Aatro Van- Auto, Air, V6, M6;~. s Passen'g~~;·wi;ii·~:.. w~~·i9;9oir•&lt;'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'........ ,............. ..
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•

More summer-like on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It'D get ho.tter and stickier this weekend as southwesterly winds continue to pump progressively
warmer and more humid air into the tri-county
area.
The winds are being pulled into the region by a
high pressure cell that's also responsible for the
sunny skies.
Temperatures will creep into the 90s in the area
on Saturday.
Overnight lows will be in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9 p.m. and sunrise on
Saturday at 6:03 a.m.
Weather forecast:

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs Emergency Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:03 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Doris Vanfoss1 man, Holzer Medical Center;
11:49 p.m., Mount Olive, assisted lly Reedsville, Crystal
Williams, O 'Bieness Memorial
Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
8:49 p.m., State Route 7, auto
fire, Roy McDaniels.
POMEROY
3:02 p.m., U.S. 33, assisted by
Central Dispatch, Bryon Watson;
10:16 p.m.,Walnut Street, assist-

ed by Central Dispaich, Grace
Dorst, OBMH .
RACINE
9:41 a.m., Elm Street, Sonya
Medley, Jackson General Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
5:56 p.m., Eden Ridge, Crystal
Williams, OBMH .
RUTLAND
10:17 a.m. , Meigs Mine 2,
Ronald Downey, HM C.
SYRACUSE
4:27 p.m., Fifth Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Melinda
Lau-dermilt, treated.

Board to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Board of Education
will meet on June 14 ar 6:30 p.m.
at the administrative offices in
Thppers Plains.

ddicit.
Detroit's school board brought
in an interim superintendent to
clean up the district's budget
deficit and fix its buildings before
hiring a permanent superintendent.
Allowing the interm superintendent to do the "heavy lifting
and bloodletting" will allow the
school's new superintendent to
concentrate on academic achievement, said board President Freman Hendrix.
Schools also -want leaders who
can play the role of politician.
Dealing with school boards that
are 6lled with aspiring politicians
and with ipcreasing expectations
from voters has made the job
much more difficult, Sykes said.

• Wear gloves to protect your
hands 6om sharp objects like .glass
and metal .
• Avoid areas that are overgrown
· from Page AI
•
with shrubs.
During 1999, more than 20,000
unteers are as follows:
• Watch were you walk and volunteers participated and colavoid broken glass, rusty nails or lected more than 9,000 tons of
trash and debris 6om the banks of
poison ivy.
.
• Never plac.e yo)ltself in a dan- waterways located within the .
gerous sitUation, such as trying to Ohio River Valley.
Many industries also joined the
get trash that is floating in the river.
• The current can be strong, so effort by cleaning miles of their
don't get in the water.
own property and shoreline.
Volunteers should report at 8:30
• ,..void high cliffS or bluffi .
• Watch for traffic when work- a.m. at their designated cleanup
ing in the (lull-over areas along the location on June 17.
side of the ro.ad.
·
Following the cleanup, refresh• Wear old, comfortable clothing ments will be served at each River
and shoes.
Sweep location.

Sweep

LOC·AL STOCKS
Gannett- 61\
General Electric - 50:0
Harley Davidson- 37%

K mart-7'•
Kroger- 18~
Landa End -29'·

ltd.- 22~ '
Oak HUI Financial -

2'·

OVB - 27~

8,

LOCAL NEWS .IN BRIEF
Squads answer
9 calls

schools, hired a consulting firm to
help with its search.
But even those 6rms have trouble fin!iing people with the needed skills in business and academic
improvement, said John Isaacson,
president of the Isaacson, Miller
executive sean:h 6rm, which handles many superintendent sean:hes.
Some districts are looking outside the usual education areas.
Dayton's school board conducted a nine-month national sean:h
before settling on Jerrie McGill, a
Baptist minister and educational
consultant: She was appointed
interim superintendent after the
district last year fired James
Williams because a special state
audit disclosed a $14 million

Tonight.. .Clear. Lows in the lower and mid 60s.
Light south wind.
Saturday... Mostly sunny, hot and more humid.
Highs 6om the upper 80s to the lower 90s, with ·
some mid 90s in urban locations .
Saturday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid
60s.
AEP - 34).
Extended forecast:
Akzo-40'1.
Sunday... Pardy cloudy, hot and humid. Highs in AmTech/SBC- 4n
Ashland Inc. - 34'•
the lower 90s.
Monday... Mostly clear, hot and humid. Lows in AT&amp;T-35%
Bank One- 34~.
the mid and upp er 60s and highs around 90.
Bob Evans - 14~.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and BorgWarner - 39'·
Championhighs in the upper 80s.
Charming Shops - 5).

81NGU COPY raJCI

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1981 Chevy GIO Conversion Van Mark Ill Converalon ·:'[.;;~d~~i;A~t~,'Ai~,'white

'

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S atur d ay 9:00-4:00 Sunday 1:0,0-5:00
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1888 Oldalatrlpe - *OM1844 • V6, Auto, Air, PS, PB, Tilt, Cruise, White, Was '16,999*' ................ . , .~.

Wednesday, declined to say who the potential
suitors were. But a story in The Indianapolis
Star said partners could include Gannett, Tribune Co. or Knight Ridder. Other possibilities include Cox Enterprises Inc. and The
McClatchy Co., whose newspaper operations
are similar in size to Central's.
Central's chairman, Louis A. "Chip" Wei!
III, said there is no guarantee the talks will
lead to a s~le. Nonetheless, the reaction from
investors was unequivocally enthusiastic. After
soaring as much as 72 percent, Central Newspapers' shares closed up $20.50 or 65 percent
to $52 on the New York Stock Exchange.
The Thomson deal was announced late
Thursday after stock markets had closed.
The twin announcements Thursday come
at a time of increasing consolidation in the
newspaper business, where rismg valuations
have helped prompt a number of publishers co
shed assets, usually papers with circulations
under 50,000.
Hollinger Inc., led by the Canadian newspaper baron Conrad Black, has . also
anno11nced its intention to seU off a ~)umber
of its smaller newspapers in order to lift the
company's stock price.
One major exception to the trend of smaller papers changing hands was Chicago Tribune publisher Tribune Co.'s 'takeover of
Times Mirror Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times.
Both Thomson and Hollinger are holding
onto their large metropolitan dailies even as
they trim their holdings of smaller-circulation
papers. Thomson is keeping its flagship, The
Globe and Mail, while Hollinger is keeping
the London Telegraph, the Chicago SunTimes and Canada's National Post.

City schools struggling to fill superintendent spots

s·~ .

•

sional and financial infor'm ation services,

E:
F.~·
.::.--------------------------------------------~--

.&lt;;Z) Oldsmobile.

.·

'
NEW YORK (AP) - Thomson Corp.,_
publisher ofThe Globe and Mail ofToronto,
sold most of its daily U.S. newspapers.to Gannett Co. and Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. on Thursday in a two-part deal
worth $1.58 billion in cash.
Separately, Central Newspapers Inc., owner
of The Arizona Republi c, The Indianapolis
Star and four other daily newspapers, said it
was putting itself up for sale. The Phoenixbased company's stock soared as much as 72
pen:ent on the news.
Thomson's sale largely completed its goal,
announced in February, of exiting the U.S.
newspaper business to focus on selling profes-

ed separation of smokers and
nonsmokers .in an area ventilated
to the outside.
'
. lromPepA1
Ten percent favored a separation of smokers and non-smokers
; ide. Children, the elderly and in the same air space, ancl only 4
: adults with cardiac or respiratory percent did not want any restric• problems are especially sensitive;' tions on smoking in restaurants.
Aldridge said that a 1998 study
said 1Jdridge.
· She noted that in preparation confirmed that the simple separafor th'e smoke-free restaurant day tion of smokers from non-smokin May staff at the Health Depart- ers within the same airspace
l}lent randomly surveyed 50 local reduces, but does not eliminate,
:tesidents concerning their prefer- the exposure of non-smokers · to
• ence for smoking in restaurants. secondhand smoke. The U.S.
'• Results of that survey showed Environmental
Protection
;:.:That 80 percent requested to eat Agency recommends th~t smokIn the non-smoking section of ing sections be eliminated in
~. : restaurants, 44 petcent said they order to protect nonsmokers in
.,;: favored a total ban on smoking in endosed areas from secondhand
TOLEDO (AP) - School
restaurants, a~d 30 percent want- smoke, she concluded.
superintendents who can lead the
nation's biggest districts are in
short supply, leaving some schools
among the vast network of routes, without a top administrator for
trails, and people throughout the months.
,
Midwestern, central and eastern
Within the past year, the top
half of the country.
~·
Page A1
positions have been vacant in
~ Scattered throughout a geo- nearly half of the country's 50
:::::·. Ohio sites that were part of the graphical region covering 15-20 biggest school districts. Sean:hes
states, UGRR sites are located in are under way in Denver, Balti::~· UGRR movement.
~
"Our work honors hundreds of cities and small villages, on farms more, Philadelphia and Washingordinary people who, by resisting and in cemeteries, along water- ton, D.C.
~~· slavery, ~~nged the course of this ways and across mountains.
Educators say there is too much
"The locales, when identi6ed pressure in dealing with low test
r;..; ·country, she s:ud.
·
~ :; "This remarkable American suc- and properly documented provide scores, money shortages. union
11•'".: cess story . will be forever lost · rich, 111for~tive, and· e;luc~tional leaders, school boards, crumbling
; :_. unless physical structures and sites tourism experience for visiton, buildings and competition from
;f:: connected to UGRR activity are and they help to document an alternative schools.
·
~: ·: preserved and identified for the important aspect of American his"Superintendents are like sintory;' said Nelson. ·
..,. :: Ameri&lt;;an public:'
gle moms;• said Toledo school
"We envision a series of mini- board member Larry Sykes. "They
While many fugitive slaves
:;=; · escaped to Canada, Mexico, and trails, intra- and inter-state, which have to be everything to everyC:: the Caribbean,the UGRR Trail is will link up to tell a comprehen- body and still take care of the
~: ; concentrating , on linking sites sive, national story;' she added.
children."
•
The average stay for superinten1\i"
"'(f • • •
dents in urban districts is 2i, years,
according to the American Asso.~
'
ciation of School Administrators.
ff',,,
Nationwide, it's 6'/, years .
"Superintendents have told us
t:·
......
..
there is a tremendous amount of
l'f t • • ""
stress
on the job;' said Judy Seltz, a
~ ...
.....
Subscribe
today.
spokeswoman for the organiza..,;• '
tion.
992-2156
:

,.

D. Jeane Ashley

.

:t:

0

Ex•IIIIJOr llttiM parldn1 CIH

Community, Gannett acquire Thomson newspapers

uro

New1 of the 1hakeup 1ent IMUI of P&amp;G down nearly
10 percent, or $6.125, to $56.75 Thur~day on the New
York Stock Exchange. Since P&amp;G reached lu
52-wule-high of $11 B. 37 in January, tlte company~
stock htU dropped 52 percent.
..

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

.~ ..----~--~~~----------------------------------------~~::~::::::::::~----------------------~--~~~~::::~~::~

~

Customers to get more data
COLUMBUS (AP) - Electric utility customers would Jearn
more about the soun:e of their power if an order the Public Utili.,, ties Commission of Ohio approved Thursday is adopted.
•.• The order still must be approved by a legislative rules ' agency. It
would require providers to explain how much of the customer's
,, electricity is generated from coal, natural gas, nuclear energy,.wind,
solar and other sources.
: • The information would be provided when a customer signs a
startup contract and would be inserted .in .monthly bills four times
a year. The Legislature included.the disclosure requirement in a law
.. it passed last year deregulating the sale of electric power. That legis• '. lation goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2001.
" A 3-2 majority of the collll'nission believes the order represents a
,, , common-sense approach to getting the customers the information,
commission spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro said.
'·
"They felt they came up with rules the reflect the legislation;• she
.. , said.
.
·
.,, The Ohio Environmental Council, a nonpro6t advocacy group,
believes the order will help customers choose their energy soutces
_. , more wisely. But it wu disappointed with a section dealing with the ·
, : environmental impact ol'those soutces, spokesman jack Shaner said.
He said' the 1ection is too vague, noting that it shOWJ coal has an
impact on air emiulon• and aolld waste, but soea no further. Shaner also quntioned how much of an impact solar power could have
on "wildlife:' 11 1tated in the aection.
However, he abo laid the aroup found something to like about
the order. ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

One Valley - 36 'Y.
Peoples -14'•

City HoldingFederal Mogul - ~.
Ftrstar - 24 '·

Premler-7~

Rockwell - 39\

Rocky Boots - 5:0.
AD .Shell - 62h
Sears - 35'1.
, Shoney's - ,~.

Wai-Mart - 5,.,.

15

Wendy's- 20'1.
wotthlngtoo - 12)•
DaUy 8tOCk reports are the
4 p.m. dOSing quotes of
the preyloua day's transactions. provided by
Adve81 of Gallipolis.

Antique club
meeting
ROCK SPRINGS Big
Bend Farm Antique Club will
meet June 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Fairgrounds office .

Bloodmobile
planned
POMEROY -American Red
Cross Bloodmobile will visit the
Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Center on June 14 from
1-6 p.m.To give blood. individuals must be at least 17 years of age
or older, weigh at least I 05
pounds be in generally good
health.
. People can generally donate
blood every 56 days.

-~
~ - - ~

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IIAl'lNEEISATIIUN 1.:00 &amp; 3:20

All A!:l S, Al l II MI S S1 llll

.,'

�•

..... A I • The Dlllly ltntlntl

· BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Man stnttnced In aoss bumln1
. WOO~TER (AP) -A man Was sentenced to two yean in prison
., fo~ burrung a cross in a woman's yard and spray-paintina racist anf~
fitt on her house:
'
Chad Trent, 22, of Plain Township, wu sentenced Thunday on
, eth~c intimidation and vandalism charges.
::. _Prosecuton say Trent and James ~alone, 22, of Wooster, spray• pamted a house m March. The family had lived at the apartment
'. complex for three months and wu the only black family living
· there at the time.
,.
.
The spray-painting on the front door and a brick wall included
' a swastika, "KKK" and two lightning bolts, representative of the
., Aryan Nation white supremacist group.
· Trent apologized in court for the incident.
•
''I'm sorry that it happened," he said. "I wish I could take it
'· back"
..
_ ·He admitted to the 'judge that he and Malone were intoxicated
' at the time.
':· Malone has pleaded innocent to ethnic intimidation, vandalism
• and escape. No court date has been scheduled for him.

.

-..

Woman accused In beating

'

MIDDLETOWN (AP) - A 9-year-old boy has told police he
was offered S10. to help setde a feud between two women by beat. mg up one woman's child.
, Hei~ McCullough, 25, has been charged with contributing to
. . the delinquency of a minor. Police said she hired the youth to
_ assault Pa_mEverson's 9- year-old son at a birthday party on May 21.
.
The v1cttm was not seriously iqjured, police said.
, . The alleged attacker told police that McCullough never gave
..: him the S10.

....

Fugitive In killing captured

.;·

'·

CLEVELAND (AP) - A man wanted· in connection with a
murder 11 years ago in Cleveland has been ~aptured in England,
·
police said.
Police in London, England went to Lawrence McCiutchen's
home Tuesday to break up a 6ght with his girlfriend and discovered
what appeared to be phony identification ·documents. Officers
looked-into McCiutchen's background and discovered a warrant for
his arrest in Cleveland.
FBI agent Robert Hawk said Thunday that McClutchen had
. • been using the name Larry Howard in London.
·
,··. · McCiutchen is charged with aggravated murder in the slaying of
&gt; Clarence Jackson, 38, on Oct. 27, 1989, over what police say was a
: • drug debt.
Officials plan to bring McClutchen back to Cleveland, a process
that could take six months, the FBI said. He is now in jail in London.
Cleveland police said McCiutchen and his brother, Phillip, went
to Jackson's home and shot him several times before running off.
Phillip McCiutchen, 43, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and drug abuse in 1990 and sentenced to 10 to 25 years in
•· prison.
Lawrence McCiutchen ran and the FBI issued a federal warrant
" charging him with fleeing to avoid prQsecution.
Cleveland police spokeswoman Lt. Sharon MacKay would not
'. describe Lawrence McCI\Itchen's role in the sla)'ing.

Frlct.y, June t, 2000

Prldly, June' I,

Poll'lti'Oy, Mlclcllepor1, Ohio

.

Jager had shortest tenure·of any PltG .CEO
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. tried to
make toO many internal changes
too quickly, slicing profits and sending stock prices rumbling, say the
men who are taking over the top
jobs in the consumer products
gi,mt.
~lbe magnitude and pace of
change ~ undertook this fiscal year
is a major factor in our results;' said
Alan G. Lafley, who was promoted
to president and chief executive
officer on Thursday.
"In hindsight, it's clear · we
changed too much toO fast. I'm
con6dent we know now what we .
need to fix ;~nd how to do it."
Lalley had been president of
P&amp;G's divisions for global beauty
care and North America. John E.
.Pepper, who headed P&amp;G trom
1995 until he retired as chairman
Sept. 1, returned as chairman.
Durk I. Jager had held all the top
tides since Pepper left. The surprise
announcement of his 4eparture
ended the shortest tenure of any
chief executive in Procter &amp; Gambles 163-year history.
"The John Pepper eff'ect is really
buying them some grace here," said
Pete Sorrentino, director of equity
resean:h at Bardett &amp; Co. in
Cincinnati. "They're de6nitely trying to bring some credibility \lack
to the company."
Company watchen said it will
be up to Pepper, 61, to deal with

employees, analysts and stockholders while Laney, 52, tries to stem ~e
bleeding in P&amp;G's earnings and
stock price.
"I think morale got a real shot in
the aqn here today," said Bob
Wehling, ·who like Pepper has
worked his entire career at P&amp;G
and is the company's global marketing officer.
"People love both John and A. G.
They hated to see John go, and
they're glad he's back!!
News of the shakeup sent shares
ofP&amp;G down nearly 10 percent, or
$6.125, to $56.75 Thursday on the
New York Stock Exchange. Since
P&amp;G reached its 52-week-high of
$118.37 in January, the company's
stock has dropped 52 percent.
Some analysts and investors were
quick to blame Jager, a 30-year
P&amp;G veteran they held responsible
for the January loss of$38 billion in
market value. That stenm1ed 6om
failed merger talb with drug giants
Warner-Lambert and American
Home Products Co., and a $35 billion drop in the value of P&amp;G's
shares Man:h 7 when the company
isSued an earnings warning for the
6scal third quarter,

"He had two strikes against him.
He got his third strike today, and
now he's out," Douglas Christopher, who follows P&amp;G for Crowell, Weedon &amp; Co. in San Francisco,
said Thursday.
"I think' it just got to a point
where they said enough iS enough;'
Christopher said.' ''I' think the
change is absolutely necessary, and
it's the best thing that could have
happened to the company and its
shareholden."
Don Apking, 62, who retired in
1993 after . 36 years with P&amp;G,
hailed the board's move to repta'ce
Jager with Pepper and Lafley.
"I think they should have done it
a long time ago;• said Apking, who
is among shareholders suing the
company over stock price 'declines .
"Quite tiankly, I think he's messed
the company up:'
Pepper isSued a statement praising Jager for his innovative leader- .
ship.
"We have an accelerated pace· of
produc~ innovation that never
would have been possible without
(his) leadenhip;'.Pepper said.
Some analysts shared th'at sentiment.

Durk'1 ctedit. he got
company fOcused on brands, ·
vations. new products and acquisitions," said William Steele, ~g­
ing director of Bane of Am~rica
Securities. "He really got P&amp;G
energized trom a top-line (sales)
perspective. And over the long
term, that's what consumer-prP&lt;~­
ucts companies need co jliD"' their
worldwide market share:
"It's stunning how ~ttle lime
Durk Jager was giV~:n, but his mmdate was very diflicult;' wd Daiuel
Peris, an analyst with
Resean:h. "He wanted to
around a company with more
$35 billion in sales and double 'lt
a short period of time. Obviously,
he needed more time." '
._

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~

CaneeUedl

Hu,..lr

Rojoctedl
Accidontsl '
Ticirltsl
New Driverl

dri!\•1 I'KOrd

broulht you t

·~·~
·, haiti

Call Us First
ForA Quote

'
COLUMBUS (AP) - A former mayor cited for parking in a
· handicapped apace settled the cue by pleading guilty to a leuer citation, a prosecutor said.
:'.. Gres; Lashutka, who 'served two terms "' mayoi from 1991 to
'· 1999, had been scheduled for arraignment Wednesday in Franklin
• ' County Municipal Court, but paid 11 fine Thesday to settle the case
\ ' said City Prosecutor Stephen Mcintosh.
·
'
"He called last week askin,, 'Is there any way we can resolve this
, thing?"' Mcintosh said. .
· .
: Mcintosh said he reviewed the case and decided that it would be
: a~propriate for Lashutka to plead guilty 't o a less-expensive parking
: Citation rather than pay a $275 fine for the original handicapped• parking violation.
·
! Tpe former mayor's sport-utility vehicle wasn't parked in a space
: for the disabled in a Kroger supermarket parking lot. Rather,
: Lashutka parked next to the handicapped spot in a yellow-striped
! no-parking ma, Mcintosh said.
•
•
•

•
•
l

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Chief took role .........

AKRON (AP) -· On the day before his retirement, the city's
police chief participated in an im&gt;ett:ipti0 n that lftUited in the
~~ of his graQdson.
.
·
. .
DarneD E. ltvine, 18, was arrested Tliunday on a charge of aJigravated robbery in the holdup at a BP p station, poli~e Maj. Paul
,
Callahan said.
.
Edward' Irvine, 64, is reqring Friday alter 37 ynn in various jobs
within rhe Akron Police Department.
He and Darnell Irvine's father, Police Detective Pierre Irvine,
found the cat witnesses said was used in the holdu1&gt;. Darnell was
arrested without incident.
The (!;as station was robbed Tuesday night. N o one was hurt.
Police believe there were two robbers, one with a basebaU bat and
·
'
the other with a handgun.
.

:

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Doris Jeane Ashley, 73, of Ravenswood,
• ~iied at Holzer Medical Center ·in Gallipolis Ohio following an
; . extended illness.
.
'
'
;,. · .She was born on October 19, 1926 in Letart Falls, daughter of the
v 1
. ~te Ralph Dennis and Naomi Belle Sayre Ashley.
_ . •. She was retired from Kaiser Aluminum Corporation of
~ _}l.avenswood, where she worked in the accounting department.
. She was a 1944 graduate of Racine High School, and was past pres' . ,l~ent otthe Racine Alumni Association. She was an original member
of the B1g Bend Minstrel Association.
,_: . · Surv~ving are a brother and sister-in-law, Burl S. and Pau.line Ashley
• _o f Spnng6eld, Missouri; a sister-in-law, June Ashley of ·Racine; a
.: ~ qephew, Clifford D. Ashley of Morning Star, a nephew, Keith D. Ash. . I~ of ~o~k Springs; a niece, Mrs. Randolph (Heidi) Smith of Alta
,VIsta,Vu·gtma; a nephew, Stephen R . Ashley of Smithville, Maryland; a
. nephew, Craig]. Ashley of Allen, Texas; and eight great-nieces.
Bes1des her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, Robert
D. Ashley, and an infant niece.
, _ Arrangements are by Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswpod. and
there will be no calling hours.

I· .

.''

•Low down payment ..
~a.ow monthly paylrianta
'
"
•Immediate SR·22 filings
•Preferred • AND high risk
drlvera welcon'l'e

'

Smoking

•• • "

DO

I

I'

which already make up the- majoriry of the
company's operations.
Gannett, the publisher of USA Today, is paying $1.125 billion for 21 newspapers located
in Seven different clusters in Louisiana, Mary-

land, Ohio, Wisconsin and Utah.Those newspapers have a combined circulation of
466,000.
Ten of the 21 newspapers are in Ohio. They
are the Telegraph-Forum of Bucyrus, ihe
Chillicothe Garette, the Coshocton Tribune,
the Journal-News of Hamilton, the Lancaster
Eagle-Gazette, the News Journal of Mansfield, The Marion Star, The Middletown Journ~, The Advocate of Newark, and the Times
Recorder of Zanesville.
Community Newspapers, which owns The
Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register and
Gallipolis Tribune, bought 17 dailies located
in Indiana, South Georgia and West Virginia
for $455 million. Combined circulation of
those papers is 260,000.
The West Virginia acquisitions were the

·, @

Trail

..~?.'.

BUtCK~

lrum

c:-:

'-·

Beckley Register-Herald and the Bluefield
Telegraph .
The other newspapers purchased by Community Newspaper include the Americus
Times-Recorder, Cordele Dispatch , Moultrie
Observer, Thomasville Times-Enterprise,
Tifton Gazette and Valdosta Daily Times in
Georgia; Anderson Herald-Bulletin, Greensburg Daily News, Kokomo Tribune, Lebanon
Reporter, Linton Daily Citizen, Logansport
Pharos-Tribune, Rushville Republican and
Terre Haute Tribune-Star in Indiana; and
Cumberland Times-News in Maryland.
The sales involved 38 offhomson's 49 daily
U.S. newspapers, and the Toronto-based company said it expected to announce the sale of
the remaining 11 soon. One of those 11 is The
Repository of Canton, Ohio. Also ·on the
block are five Canadian newspapers, which
T_h01nson said it expects to· sell late this year
or early next year.
Richard J. Harrington, president and CEO
of Thomson, said the company was "pleased
that these exceptional assets wiU have new
1
homes with established newspaper compa. "
n;es.
Thomson said the proceeds from the sale
would be used to reduce debt and allow the
company to develop its information services
business through investments and acquisitions.
Thomson operates several professional information services such as West Law and First
Call.
In the other big industry news Thursday,
Central Newspapers Inc. said it was exploring
a sale or merger. The biggest prizes among the
company's six daily newspapers are The Arizona Republic and The Indianapolis Star.
The company, in releasing the news late

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The Daily Sentinel

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.... MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
..

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That much instability hurts a
school system, she said.
"When there's that kind of
turnover, any rype of reform effort
a superintendent puts in .stops
cold;' Seltz said. "You need five
years before reforms work."
Toledo community leaden and
board members have spent 10
months searching for a replacement for Superintendent Merrill
Grant, who is retiring. Harrisburg,
Pa., superintendent Lucian Yates
had accepted the job but decided
last week he didn't want it.
Contract negotiations stopped
when Yates asked for a package
that could have paid him as much
as $400,000 during .his 6rst year,
including bonuses and benefits.
"It's very frustrating," said Toledo board member Peter Silverman. "You'd hope there'd be a
whole crop a great leaders you
could pick from, but there's not."
Yates would taken over a
38,000-stud~nt district planning
to lay off teachers and close some
schools to cover a $17 million
de6cit.
"There are so many problems
in urban districts that you can't
6nd someone who's that multitalented;' Sykes said.
Toledo, like many other big city

,~ ~

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....

.
.~~;•..·;.----------..,
The Dally Sentinel
f* ,, • ~

-~

1998 Cadillac

1998"neVJ

Monte

Sedan Deville

V8, Leather, Loaded
Was '20,999~

Now 818,800°

2 Dr. V6, Auto,
Air&amp; More
Was 18,99500

1997 FQrd Muataq··

,.. ~.

f, 1

1:'.•;

V6, Auto, Air, Loaded,
Low Miles, Sharp
W. 113,99900

;., &gt;

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1

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1888 Olcla Cutlau ~Auto, A1r, PW, PL, Cass., Tilt, Cruise, Silver, ytas '13,99900 ..................
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1999 Chevy s-10 4z4- 1o,ooo Miles, v6, ssp., Ps, PB,Air, eass'.';-Jii:W'i~·~...w~~-i-i7:49900 .................... .
......................... ,.............................................................................:.......... ,...............
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1998 Chevy S· ~ 0 - 5 Sp., PS, PB, Air, Cass., Tilt, Cruise, 18,000 miles, Maro~~·:·w~s'it1,9{)()00

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•

More summer-like on Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It'D get ho.tter and stickier this weekend as southwesterly winds continue to pump progressively
warmer and more humid air into the tri-county
area.
The winds are being pulled into the region by a
high pressure cell that's also responsible for the
sunny skies.
Temperatures will creep into the 90s in the area
on Saturday.
Overnight lows will be in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9 p.m. and sunrise on
Saturday at 6:03 a.m.
Weather forecast:

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs Emergency Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:03 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Doris Vanfoss1 man, Holzer Medical Center;
11:49 p.m., Mount Olive, assisted lly Reedsville, Crystal
Williams, O 'Bieness Memorial
Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
8:49 p.m., State Route 7, auto
fire, Roy McDaniels.
POMEROY
3:02 p.m., U.S. 33, assisted by
Central Dispatch, Bryon Watson;
10:16 p.m.,Walnut Street, assist-

ed by Central Dispaich, Grace
Dorst, OBMH .
RACINE
9:41 a.m., Elm Street, Sonya
Medley, Jackson General Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
5:56 p.m., Eden Ridge, Crystal
Williams, OBMH .
RUTLAND
10:17 a.m. , Meigs Mine 2,
Ronald Downey, HM C.
SYRACUSE
4:27 p.m., Fifth Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Melinda
Lau-dermilt, treated.

Board to meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Board of Education
will meet on June 14 ar 6:30 p.m.
at the administrative offices in
Thppers Plains.

ddicit.
Detroit's school board brought
in an interim superintendent to
clean up the district's budget
deficit and fix its buildings before
hiring a permanent superintendent.
Allowing the interm superintendent to do the "heavy lifting
and bloodletting" will allow the
school's new superintendent to
concentrate on academic achievement, said board President Freman Hendrix.
Schools also -want leaders who
can play the role of politician.
Dealing with school boards that
are 6lled with aspiring politicians
and with ipcreasing expectations
from voters has made the job
much more difficult, Sykes said.

• Wear gloves to protect your
hands 6om sharp objects like .glass
and metal .
• Avoid areas that are overgrown
· from Page AI
•
with shrubs.
During 1999, more than 20,000
unteers are as follows:
• Watch were you walk and volunteers participated and colavoid broken glass, rusty nails or lected more than 9,000 tons of
trash and debris 6om the banks of
poison ivy.
.
• Never plac.e yo)ltself in a dan- waterways located within the .
gerous sitUation, such as trying to Ohio River Valley.
Many industries also joined the
get trash that is floating in the river.
• The current can be strong, so effort by cleaning miles of their
don't get in the water.
own property and shoreline.
Volunteers should report at 8:30
• ,..void high cliffS or bluffi .
• Watch for traffic when work- a.m. at their designated cleanup
ing in the (lull-over areas along the location on June 17.
side of the ro.ad.
·
Following the cleanup, refresh• Wear old, comfortable clothing ments will be served at each River
and shoes.
Sweep location.

Sweep

LOC·AL STOCKS
Gannett- 61\
General Electric - 50:0
Harley Davidson- 37%

K mart-7'•
Kroger- 18~
Landa End -29'·

ltd.- 22~ '
Oak HUI Financial -

2'·

OVB - 27~

8,

LOCAL NEWS .IN BRIEF
Squads answer
9 calls

schools, hired a consulting firm to
help with its search.
But even those 6rms have trouble fin!iing people with the needed skills in business and academic
improvement, said John Isaacson,
president of the Isaacson, Miller
executive sean:h 6rm, which handles many superintendent sean:hes.
Some districts are looking outside the usual education areas.
Dayton's school board conducted a nine-month national sean:h
before settling on Jerrie McGill, a
Baptist minister and educational
consultant: She was appointed
interim superintendent after the
district last year fired James
Williams because a special state
audit disclosed a $14 million

Tonight.. .Clear. Lows in the lower and mid 60s.
Light south wind.
Saturday... Mostly sunny, hot and more humid.
Highs 6om the upper 80s to the lower 90s, with ·
some mid 90s in urban locations .
Saturday night ... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid
60s.
AEP - 34).
Extended forecast:
Akzo-40'1.
Sunday... Pardy cloudy, hot and humid. Highs in AmTech/SBC- 4n
Ashland Inc. - 34'•
the lower 90s.
Monday... Mostly clear, hot and humid. Lows in AT&amp;T-35%
Bank One- 34~.
the mid and upp er 60s and highs around 90.
Bob Evans - 14~.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and BorgWarner - 39'·
Championhighs in the upper 80s.
Charming Shops - 5).

81NGU COPY raJCI

-·· : S - n no1 doolrlll 10 Plf Uti &lt;1rrla m&amp;f

1981 Chevy GIO Conversion Van Mark Ill Converalon ·:'[.;;~d~~i;A~t~,'Ai~,'white

'

·

SUIICRimON IIATU

:::; ; Dllr .._ ...............................................50 c.n

1881 Ford Tempo- Auto, Air, Runs Oood, Green, Was 13,99900 .. ~, .'.'.'.'.'..'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'................., .............
··· ·~ ............... .... .................................. ... ......... . ...........................................
·
Now u .JUJ
1981 Poatlac Grand Am- 2 Dr., Auto, Air, Stereo, Aqua, Was 1f~99900'::::·,.·.:·.'.'.'.'.'.'.:::.·:.::·:.:·.:·.: ..;... ·

.
Monday- Friday 9:00- 8:00 .
S atur d ay 9:00-4:00 Sunday 1:0,0-5:00
All
_...,

;_•
0. •

r:

~!.~~~-~-~.~~~-~-~~~-~~. ~-~:. ~~-~-~~~:.~~~~:.~~P..~~:.~~~~~· ~ii;'cnii~e·;·pw,·iik~w .011·.JY lJ-J

··..,. ...................... ·........ ·............
·............ ·... ·.. ·................... ·..... ·.... ... .... ......· ...................................... Now "'•.,
Hours
vaa

1llllom69.

.

•1 ~ 100110:
.

Ncwtplptf "'*lldon.

~,ft .

or
co - uto, Air, Stereo, PS, PB, Black, Was 18,99900 ........................................:...
.................................................................................................................~ .........
Now

.................................................................................................................

c.m,..,.,

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~.~~~. ~~.~~~~~-~~~~.~ . ~~~~-.~~~~-~.~.~~~~.:.~~:.~~~~~:~.................;.....::::::::::::::::r:fc;:w·oai~·'ft'l''

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(1JIN 2J3.Ht) .
01111 Vollq' Ptt! t . . ca.
P,bl- lVII)' I~ _ , 1"1'*&amp;11
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Oblo Vollo1 Mllohln&amp;
~.
Oblo '!769, PI!. 991·2"6. SooloDtl olou pool•
... pold 11 ........,, Olllo.

~ .. : M-'lllo -lied l'ml, ond Uti Oillo

1888 Oldalatrlpe - *OM1844 • V6, Auto, Air, PS, PB, Tilt, Cruise, White, Was '16,999*' ................ . , .~.

Wednesday, declined to say who the potential
suitors were. But a story in The Indianapolis
Star said partners could include Gannett, Tribune Co. or Knight Ridder. Other possibilities include Cox Enterprises Inc. and The
McClatchy Co., whose newspaper operations
are similar in size to Central's.
Central's chairman, Louis A. "Chip" Wei!
III, said there is no guarantee the talks will
lead to a s~le. Nonetheless, the reaction from
investors was unequivocally enthusiastic. After
soaring as much as 72 percent, Central Newspapers' shares closed up $20.50 or 65 percent
to $52 on the New York Stock Exchange.
The Thomson deal was announced late
Thursday after stock markets had closed.
The twin announcements Thursday come
at a time of increasing consolidation in the
newspaper business, where rismg valuations
have helped prompt a number of publishers co
shed assets, usually papers with circulations
under 50,000.
Hollinger Inc., led by the Canadian newspaper baron Conrad Black, has . also
anno11nced its intention to seU off a ~)umber
of its smaller newspapers in order to lift the
company's stock price.
One major exception to the trend of smaller papers changing hands was Chicago Tribune publisher Tribune Co.'s 'takeover of
Times Mirror Co., publisher of the Los Angeles Times.
Both Thomson and Hollinger are holding
onto their large metropolitan dailies even as
they trim their holdings of smaller-circulation
papers. Thomson is keeping its flagship, The
Globe and Mail, while Hollinger is keeping
the London Telegraph, the Chicago SunTimes and Canada's National Post.

City schools struggling to fill superintendent spots

s·~ .

•

sional and financial infor'm ation services,

E:
F.~·
.::.--------------------------------------------~--

.&lt;;Z) Oldsmobile.

.·

'
NEW YORK (AP) - Thomson Corp.,_
publisher ofThe Globe and Mail ofToronto,
sold most of its daily U.S. newspapers.to Gannett Co. and Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. on Thursday in a two-part deal
worth $1.58 billion in cash.
Separately, Central Newspapers Inc., owner
of The Arizona Republi c, The Indianapolis
Star and four other daily newspapers, said it
was putting itself up for sale. The Phoenixbased company's stock soared as much as 72
pen:ent on the news.
Thomson's sale largely completed its goal,
announced in February, of exiting the U.S.
newspaper business to focus on selling profes-

ed separation of smokers and
nonsmokers .in an area ventilated
to the outside.
'
. lromPepA1
Ten percent favored a separation of smokers and non-smokers
; ide. Children, the elderly and in the same air space, ancl only 4
: adults with cardiac or respiratory percent did not want any restric• problems are especially sensitive;' tions on smoking in restaurants.
Aldridge said that a 1998 study
said 1Jdridge.
· She noted that in preparation confirmed that the simple separafor th'e smoke-free restaurant day tion of smokers from non-smokin May staff at the Health Depart- ers within the same airspace
l}lent randomly surveyed 50 local reduces, but does not eliminate,
:tesidents concerning their prefer- the exposure of non-smokers · to
• ence for smoking in restaurants. secondhand smoke. The U.S.
'• Results of that survey showed Environmental
Protection
;:.:That 80 percent requested to eat Agency recommends th~t smokIn the non-smoking section of ing sections be eliminated in
~. : restaurants, 44 petcent said they order to protect nonsmokers in
.,;: favored a total ban on smoking in endosed areas from secondhand
TOLEDO (AP) - School
restaurants, a~d 30 percent want- smoke, she concluded.
superintendents who can lead the
nation's biggest districts are in
short supply, leaving some schools
among the vast network of routes, without a top administrator for
trails, and people throughout the months.
,
Midwestern, central and eastern
Within the past year, the top
half of the country.
~·
Page A1
positions have been vacant in
~ Scattered throughout a geo- nearly half of the country's 50
:::::·. Ohio sites that were part of the graphical region covering 15-20 biggest school districts. Sean:hes
states, UGRR sites are located in are under way in Denver, Balti::~· UGRR movement.
~
"Our work honors hundreds of cities and small villages, on farms more, Philadelphia and Washingordinary people who, by resisting and in cemeteries, along water- ton, D.C.
~~· slavery, ~~nged the course of this ways and across mountains.
Educators say there is too much
"The locales, when identi6ed pressure in dealing with low test
r;..; ·country, she s:ud.
·
~ :; "This remarkable American suc- and properly documented provide scores, money shortages. union
11•'".: cess story . will be forever lost · rich, 111for~tive, and· e;luc~tional leaders, school boards, crumbling
; :_. unless physical structures and sites tourism experience for visiton, buildings and competition from
;f:: connected to UGRR activity are and they help to document an alternative schools.
·
~: ·: preserved and identified for the important aspect of American his"Superintendents are like sintory;' said Nelson. ·
..,. :: Ameri&lt;;an public:'
gle moms;• said Toledo school
"We envision a series of mini- board member Larry Sykes. "They
While many fugitive slaves
:;=; · escaped to Canada, Mexico, and trails, intra- and inter-state, which have to be everything to everyC:: the Caribbean,the UGRR Trail is will link up to tell a comprehen- body and still take care of the
~: ; concentrating , on linking sites sive, national story;' she added.
children."
•
The average stay for superinten1\i"
"'(f • • •
dents in urban districts is 2i, years,
according to the American Asso.~
'
ciation of School Administrators.
ff',,,
Nationwide, it's 6'/, years .
"Superintendents have told us
t:·
......
..
there is a tremendous amount of
l'f t • • ""
stress
on the job;' said Judy Seltz, a
~ ...
.....
Subscribe
today.
spokeswoman for the organiza..,;• '
tion.
992-2156
:

,.

D. Jeane Ashley

.

:t:

0

Ex•IIIIJOr llttiM parldn1 CIH

Community, Gannett acquire Thomson newspapers

uro

New1 of the 1hakeup 1ent IMUI of P&amp;G down nearly
10 percent, or $6.125, to $56.75 Thur~day on the New
York Stock Exchange. Since P&amp;G reached lu
52-wule-high of $11 B. 37 in January, tlte company~
stock htU dropped 52 percent.
..

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

.~ ..----~--~~~----------------------------------------~~::~::::::::::~----------------------~--~~~~::::~~::~

~

Customers to get more data
COLUMBUS (AP) - Electric utility customers would Jearn
more about the soun:e of their power if an order the Public Utili.,, ties Commission of Ohio approved Thursday is adopted.
•.• The order still must be approved by a legislative rules ' agency. It
would require providers to explain how much of the customer's
,, electricity is generated from coal, natural gas, nuclear energy,.wind,
solar and other sources.
: • The information would be provided when a customer signs a
startup contract and would be inserted .in .monthly bills four times
a year. The Legislature included.the disclosure requirement in a law
.. it passed last year deregulating the sale of electric power. That legis• '. lation goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2001.
" A 3-2 majority of the collll'nission believes the order represents a
,, , common-sense approach to getting the customers the information,
commission spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro said.
'·
"They felt they came up with rules the reflect the legislation;• she
.. , said.
.
·
.,, The Ohio Environmental Council, a nonpro6t advocacy group,
believes the order will help customers choose their energy soutces
_. , more wisely. But it wu disappointed with a section dealing with the ·
, : environmental impact ol'those soutces, spokesman jack Shaner said.
He said' the 1ection is too vague, noting that it shOWJ coal has an
impact on air emiulon• and aolld waste, but soea no further. Shaner also quntioned how much of an impact solar power could have
on "wildlife:' 11 1tated in the aection.
However, he abo laid the aroup found something to like about
the order. ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

One Valley - 36 'Y.
Peoples -14'•

City HoldingFederal Mogul - ~.
Ftrstar - 24 '·

Premler-7~

Rockwell - 39\

Rocky Boots - 5:0.
AD .Shell - 62h
Sears - 35'1.
, Shoney's - ,~.

Wai-Mart - 5,.,.

15

Wendy's- 20'1.
wotthlngtoo - 12)•
DaUy 8tOCk reports are the
4 p.m. dOSing quotes of
the preyloua day's transactions. provided by
Adve81 of Gallipolis.

Antique club
meeting
ROCK SPRINGS Big
Bend Farm Antique Club will
meet June 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Fairgrounds office .

Bloodmobile
planned
POMEROY -American Red
Cross Bloodmobile will visit the
Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Center on June 14 from
1-6 p.m.To give blood. individuals must be at least 17 years of age
or older, weigh at least I 05
pounds be in generally good
health.
. People can generally donate
blood every 56 days.

-~
~ - - ~

·:.'
--~

,, '•

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'

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1

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r:oa a t:ao

IIAl'lNEEISATIIUN 1.:00 &amp; 3:20

All A!:l S, Al l II MI S S1 llll

.,'

�Page A~ :-

0_P-Inion

Frldey, June t, :ZOOO ·

T_h_e_o_ai.....
ly_se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

....
~_he_D_ai....;;ly_S_e_n_ti_n_el_ _ _ _ _

..·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chari- Hoeflich
Ganeral Manager

•
•

..•

A. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

I.Atlm 10 tlt1 lllilor u. w~:lco.w.

Prince celebrates
4lnd birthday

1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

n., 1/wultl N Ins lUll JOO

'

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

wo,.

•.

AU l.ttan u. sMbjtct

to fllin~tt•M "''"' H titllul IUUIIMituUIIMnu •INI lfl•Pitolfl ""'"H" No lltfliglll4 kttm wUJ
N pMIJillltH. IAtun dto..U H ill 1fJOfi l«lt., flllltlnuU., irsll~tl, not JNno..utiel.
TAt oplttlolll fXIrfllffl Ill 11M collllffll btlow ~~nlltt CDIU1flll4111/llll Ollio Vdllf1 PubliiiiU.t
Ce. \' ~IWI"iid IHHul, ,,.,_., oiJi•,.,g• 11otd.

OHIO VIEWS

Confused
Leader's knowledge ofAIDS
issue sorely lacking
• (Cievelend) Plein Duler: On his first state visit to the
United States, South Mrican President Thabo Mbeki talked about
trade and the problems of Africa, topics on which he is quite knowl edgeable.
But ·he attracted more attention last
week as a confused amateur in the field of
AIDS, a disease ravaging South Africa.
Mbeki has raised doubts about the link
between HIV and AIDS, going so far as to
invite two American scientists who do not
•
believe HIV causes AIDS to an int~ha­
rional AIDS conference in South Africa .
This is, of course, deadly heresy Evidence of the link between
HIV and AIDS is well documented.
By casting doubt on it, Mbeki is forfeiting an opportunity to play
a role in reining in the AIDS epidemic in his own country. Unfortunately, there is no sign that his visit to the United States has
changed his mind.
Mbeki is known as a brilliant scholar with a grasp of many subjects. But in the area of AIDS, he is clearly out of his depth. As he
fiddles with guacks, South Africans are dying.
• The Columbus Dispatch: In some sports, endurance is key.
In otl-ie·rs, brawn. But as Jack Nicklaus has illustrated time and time
again, intelligence and concentration go a long way toward making
the difference between a good day on the greens and one better
spent in the clubhouse.
Today, at long last, Nicklaus, without question the greatest player
in the history of the game, will be the honoree of the Memorial
Tournament he founded 25 years ago. During ceremonies at Muirfield Village Golf Club, which he built, he will be the 30th individual enshrined in Memorial Park, near the course's first fairway.
Nicklaus is a credit to the game and to his home town. Not only
is his tournament record the standard by which all other players will
be judged, but the Golden Bear has left a permanent imprint on the
game he loves so much through the design of many championship
courses, including Muirfield. The Memorial Tournament will
remain an arpropriate symbol of his substantial contributions.
• The ,cantant Repository: One of the goals of the
Streetscape project was to modernize downtown Canton for the
21st Century. The fun part of the unfolding redevelopment is seeing how building owners use wonderful details, like the French
sailors on the renovated Parisian building, to help them recreate
downtown's glory days.
Rivitalizarion projects that give communities an old-fashioned
look are all the rage. Canton, Alliance, Minerva, cities across the
country are banking on nostalgia to give them and edge in drawing
tourists. But with all the brick sidewalks and iron lampposts, all
these towns could end up looking alike.
So communities that have restored their downtowns in a way
that's true to their unique history will have something special to
offer that communities favoring a generic old-fashiqned look will
not.

A look at
what state
newspapers
are saytng

SALE!

Friday, June 9, 2000 •

chance;' he ·said. ·
Prince recently reclaimed his name
after going by an unpronounceable
symbol for the last seven years, To celebrate, he kicked off a wee~ong gala
featuring studio tours, nightly parties
and a concert next Tuesday at Northrop
Auditorium in Minneapolis.

London home.
A children's playground also is being
built in Kensington Gardens in memory of the princess, who died in a Paris
car crash in August 1997.

Princess Diana
remembered

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Asked if he
expected to be walking by 2002 - his
personal goal actor Christopher
Reeve says he isn't sure.
"2002 was a thing I put forward a~ a
way to motivate the scientists," said the
former "Superman" actor, who was
paralyzed in a 1995 horse riding accident. "We all do better when we have a
speCific goal. Whether it happens on
that day is not the issue."
Those comments came Thursday
dur,ing Reeve's 15-minute speech at
Pqter Lowe's Success 2000, a motivational seminar featuring speakers
including television broadcaster Deborah Norville and former Notre Dame
football coach Lou Holtz.
Reeve condemned the ban on federal funding for human embryonic stem
cell research, saying it hinders medi cal

. CHANHASSEN,
Minn. (AP) - Prince
rolled out the purple
carpet and fans from
around the world
responded.
Fans from as far
away as Scotland,
N&lt;&gt;rway and Japan
..__ _.,._....J turned out as the
LONDON (AP) -The first plaques
• Prince
diminutive rock star
charting
a walkway through London's
'
opened his Paisley
Patk Studios to public tours Wednesday, parks commemorating Princess Diana
have been installed.
his 42nd birthday.
The seven-mile path through St.
,About 150 people waited to buy $15
James's
Park , Green Park, Hyde Park
tour tickets or pick up $70 VIP packets
and Kensington Gardens will be
th~y hall purchased in advance.
;Kjersri Stolan, 26, of Norway said she marked by 80 plaques with a rose
m~sed a final exam to make the trip. emblem in the center. The first few
Slie said she likely will be forced to were installed Thursday.
Embedded in the ground, . the
mike up the entire class.
plaques
·will highlight buildings and
:"My exam will come again ·next
locations associated with the princess,
ye~r," Stolan said.
:Joost Plantaz, 20, of Holland said including Kensington Palace, where she
w~en he could not get time off from lived for 15 years; Buckingham Palace;
St. James's Palace, where she once
hi~ job, he left anyway.
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime shared an office with Prince Charles;
and Spencer House, her family's former

Reeve talks

about goals

MILITARY NEWS
'Sailor of year selected

THINK TANK

Degradation ofarmy is Israels biggest ,threat
BY DAVID GUTTMANN

The disorderly retreat of the Israelis from
Lebanon, which left their Chris.rian allies in the
lurch, materiel abandoned on the battlefield and
their border defenses unprepared, is only the
l:ltest symptom of a breakdown that could
threaten the Jewish state's existence: the degradation of a once-superb people's army.
Hizballah is boasting that their superior
courage beat the Israel Defense Force (IDF),
while the Israelis cite their weariness with a
chronic Arab-Jewish war that first flared in
1920.
These claims contain only pieces of the truth.
They focus attention on the external Arab-Jewish struggle but overlook Israel's current
internecine and fraqicidal "Wars of the Jews."
These civil struggles are ultimately more dangerous to. Israel than any combination of Arab
armies. And, for the moment, they are being
won by the wrong side.
The culture war that most harmfully touches
on Israel's security is centered on the Jewish
state's relations with the Palestinians and other
Arabs, and embroils the secular parties of the
Right and Left. It has its origins in the confused
ideology of the early Zionist pioneers, who
were both militant nationalists and rather
dreamy, air-headed Socialists - an odd combination that proved very unstable . .
The more tough-minded, pragmatic, working- class Jews, who opted for "Greater Israel"
and a sttong IDF, pooled in the Rightist Likud

patty.
But many guilt-prone Israelis of the left came
to prefer a clear conscience over a victorious
nation and rejected the nationalist part of the
mix. Meanwhile, the Soviets and the international ' socialist parties, always hostile to the
Zionist project, bullied their Jewish comrades
into choosing between Love of Israel and the
Workers of the World.
The more intellectual leftists, who sought
acceptance and absolution from the Arabs and
by the world community of Socialists, congre-

These claims contain only
pieces of the truth. They
focus attention on the external Arab-Jewish struggle
but overlook Israel's current
internecine and fratricidal
"Jtars of the Jews."

.... '•

. '

blood. When the Jews entered history, as acto~ .
rather than victims, they bloodied their hands ¥ ,,
red as any Christian's. Jewish brutality? Certain,-"
ly. .Just three years after the Holocaust ha.~ ..•
ended, Palestinian Jews showed little mercy fo~ ,Arabs who had started the '48 war.
·. ·
But while our motives were not perfect, I will"
not concede the main revisionist charge: th~t .
our infant army fielded superior forces of mel) ' •
and equipment. When boys fi-om my unit sor:' .
tied to open the vital jerusalem road, those lack:: ·
ing weapons were told, at the assembly point, t!' ·'
take them from their slain comrades in the field.
Nevertheless, the leftist myth trumps t!):r ':
Zionist legends, and gathers new constituencies:: :
"Peace Now" members march, often wiih ' ·
Arabs; det:Jla!lding further withdraWals, support- :.,
ing ·conscientious objectors, and trashing the
"patriarchal" warrior culture. They "soften" th~ .. .
people. And since the army and the people are·
one, they inevitably ·"soften" the IDE An army
defends its own great traditions as well as its..
nation. Weaken the tradition, and you get lsraers ·
Lebanese Dunkirk.
Various writers have questioned whether th.e .
gender, feminized U.S. military can still wip
wars. That same question is even more relevant .
to the Middle East. Can the softer Israel survive·
at all as anything more than a shrunken hi-tech
ghetto, Tel-Aviv. com?
'.
I believe it can. Traditions founded on the re:il. ·
deeds of extraordinary individuals sometimes ·
skip a generation, but they cannot be final~¥· .
obliterated. My hope and my hunch is th~t
those stiff-necked Israelis, who req:ntly rejecte~ •
the Zionist legend, will find that there is not,
much nourishment for Jews in the sentimental, ··
, dangerously unrealistic platitudes of the left. I( ·
not they, then their children will return to ·
Zion. And the IDF will once again be Israel's' .
swift sword.
·
·

gated in the Labor and Peace patties.
Like the ultra-orthodox rabbis, they too agi~
tate for their version, albeit secular, of a pure
Zion: Israel m11st abandon its col\)nialist, mili~ ·
taristic path, and sin no more.
Recently, their intellectual leaders, often from '
their tenured university perches, have -systematically, even gleefully, trashed the myths and
accomplishments of their ideological rivals those low-brow, male-chauvinistic, "Macho"
old-line Zionist~ .
Thus, the revisionist historians of the Tel Aviv
and Hebrew Universities deconstruct the heroic legend of Israel's Independence War and
replace it with the PLO's anti-myth of Zionist
Original Sin.This distorted narrative denies that
· the Jews prevailed against great odds in 1948.
Instead, they are depicted as being the aggressors, European colonialists who deployed overwhelming, genocidal force against Third World
Palestinian peasants.
·
I was a U.S. merchant marine in World War II
· and went to Jewish Palestine in 1947, first as a
sailor for the Jewish underground (the Hagana),
· then as an officer of the fledgling Israeli navy.
After those wars, I returned to America and
made my home here. Perhaps I have lived this
long to bear wimess against the revisionist·hisl ' .' ·
torians who violate the truth and do great
(Dm,id Guttmann, Ph. D., an emeritus priifess.or
injustice to fallen heroes.
of psychology at Northwestern University Medical .
. I will grant that even their big lies can. hold School, has been a panelist on Ben Wattenberg:~ . r
grains of truth. History is, after all, a tal~ of "Think Tank" on PBS.)

.,.·.

TODAY IN HISTORY

...

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday,June 9, the 161st day of2000.There are 205 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 9,A.D. 68, the Roman Emperor Nero conunitted suicide.
On this date:
In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in. Godshill, England.
In 1940, Norway surrendered to the Nazis during World War II.
In 1953, about 100 people died when a tornado struck Worcester,
Mass.
In .1954,' Army counsel Joseph N. Welch asked Sen. Joseph R.
McCarthy, "Have you no sense of decency, sir?" during the SenateArmy Heari~.
In 1969, the Semte confirmed Warren Burger as chiefjustice of the
United States, succeeding Earl Warren.
In 1973, Secret:lriat won the Behnont Stakes and thoroughbred racing's first Triple Crown in 25 yean.
...
In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered alniost tiual burns at his
San Fernando Valley, Calif., home when a mixture of free-base co.caine
exploded.
.
In 1985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kidnapped in
Leb:mon. (He w.is rel~d in November 1991 along with fellow
hostage Terry Waite.)
·
·
In 1986, the Ragen Commission released its report on the Challenger disaster, criticizing NASA :md rocket-builder Morton Thiokol
for management problems leading to the explosion that claimed the
lives of seven astronauts.
In 1993,Jap:mese Crown Prince Naruhito wed commoner Masako
Owada in an elaborate Shinto religious ceremony.
·
T9rlay's Birthdays: Guitarist Les Paul is 85 . Robert S. ¥cNamara,
former World Bank president and former defense secretary, is 84.
Movie writer-producer-director George Axelrod is 78. Actress Mona
Freeman is 74. Broadcast journalist Marvin K;Ub is 70. Comedian
Jackie Mason is 66. Actor jpe S..ntos is 64_. Author Letty Cortin Pogrebin is 61 . Rock musician Jon Lcrd (Whttesnake; Deep Purple) ts 59.
Actor Michael J. Fox is 39. Actor Johnny Depp is 37.

Page AS

NAMES IN THE NEWS

The Daily Sentinel
'Est~Crslittl in

_;IJ the

There's more than one cure to our ills
So far so good, says my friend' Ken, who
underwent acupuncture treatment for
migraine headaches. The headaches have not
returned.
If they should, there are other things Ken
can try. In Africa, healers have good results
using drums. The different rhythms are said to
affect the flow of blood and the functioning of
vanous organs.
The idea that the whole universe is made up
of sound and rhythm, and that once you tune
in to this rhythm you become one with the
perfect working of the universe, lies at the
heart of certain sects of Buddhism.
Devotees find that through chanting, their
lives .are put in rhythm with the spheres. When
that happens, everything goes well, they say.
If Ken suffered from arthritis, he might see a
dowser. Dowsers, with their divining rods, are
more typically employed to locate underground water supplies.
The divining rod need be nothing more
than a twig, but in the hands of a dowser it will
virtually come to life when the dowser stands
over a subterranean body of water. The dowser sometimes has to ·hold tight to keep the
divining rod from jumping out of his or her
hands.
The explanation some give for this is that ·
the dowser is sensitive to magnetic en~rgy cur-

.

''

This dowser says that by having his- "
"patients" move their furniture away from .
these spots, their pain has gone away.
· ·
Some early faith healers relied on manipula~ ·
tion - or the laying on of hands - to effect
., •,

cures.

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST
rents, and water provides such a current. But a
dowser friend of mind maintains that the
power is psychic, not magnetic. He knows this,
he says, because he can get his divining rod to
move around and jump merely by holding it
over a map.
Once he has pinpointed the spot OQ the map
that is causing the flurry. he goes to the area
and, sure enough, the rod does its dance in 'the
place indicated on the map.
There was a man in Vermont who had been
dowsing for more than a decade and discovered that when two or more underground
currents of water cross, they send up malign
fotces. This, he says, may even cause you to
develop arthritis if your bed or the desk where
you work is above such a confluence.

.

~:.., '

According to the Bible's Book of Acts, the
ap~stles transmitted the_Holy Spirit by laying
thetr hands on new believers. Later faith heal-•: ·
ers .decided to try this method, figuring that :.
psychic and spiritual forces emanate from thb•. ,
body and, particularly, from the palms of th~ ,.
hands because there are more pores there. 1
Some people were indeed healed by the lar.- _ ·
ing on of hands, but many authorities feel .lt, ,,
was "suggestion" or faith that did it . - not ·,
anything coming from the hands.
·., '.:
Reflexology is another ancient science tha~ ·.
works on the assumption that the body · ' ~· . ,
composed of a network of energy "me~idians': ·'~
or pathways.When ailments are present, reflex-,d ,I
ologists will massage the hands and feet - the,
places where the meridians end. They wj( ~
probe for tender spots or "crystals" (s~,.,".
bumps). They claim to be able to correct th!l
trouble through gentle massage.
,. ..
So Ke'l has · quite a few other options to ·
explore if his migraines should recur.
·. · ·
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newspapfr.
Enterprise Association.)
·• '.

advancement. Some believe the cells
could provide treatment for di seases
and injuries, including spinal injuries.

Two new Grammy
Awards offered

LOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Burt
SANTA MONI CA, Calif. (AP)
Bac harac h ,
who
Native American recordings will be elirequired
sho ulder
gible for special Grammy Award .
surgery after a fall in
The National Academy of R ecordApril , has canceled
ing Arts and Sciences has established
performances
for
two new award categories Best
Jun e because the
Native American Music Album in th e
injury is still botherfolk field · and Best Pop Instru mental
ing him .
Album in the pop field . The additions
Bacharach, 71,
Bacharach
announced Wednesday expand th e
performed at a chariaward categories to 100.
ty event last Saturday for the first time
"Just a few years ago, the numb er of since fallin g after he missed a step
artists, releases, and industry support during rehearsal April 5.
necessary to create a category such as
The Oscar- and Grammy-winning
Native American music did not exist," songwriter shortened the show after
NARAS president Michael Greene fe eli ng pain and di scomfo rt in his left
said. "Our understanding of the music, shoulder, according to a statement
traditions and challenges which face Wedn esday fro m his pu blicist.
this community is growing and the
Bacharach did n't perform in May
academy is pleased to be able to and decided to cancel performances in
acknowledge the achievements of these June to give himself another month to
musical styles with a new category."
recover.
Previously, Native American record-

a

••••

graduate of Meigs High School.
Donahue is married to the former Janet Lambert
and is the father of two sons, Matthew and Jonathan.

FRIDAY, June 9
CHESHIRE -Widows Fellowship will meet in Cheshire
Park for a pot luck picnic at
noon Friday. Those attending
are asked to bring a covered
dish and their own table service. In case of rain, the event
will take place at the Church of
Christ, Middleport.

Gilmore joins army

MIDDLEPORT Free
concert by Big Bend Community Band, Stewart-Bennett
Memorial Park, Mill St., sponsored by Middleport Community Association, Riverbend
Arts Council and Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion. Coney dogs and other
refreshments to be sold by
Legion Auxiliary.
REEDSVILLE - Revival,
Eden United Brethren Church,
friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.
Sunday, 10 a.m. followed by
carry-in dinner, second service,
2 p.m. Comfort Touch Ministries to present chalk artist Dr.
Dean Watson.

Dinguss retums from Gulf

•••

and again at 6:30p.m. ihe public is invited .

RACINE - ·WhJ!ey family
reunion Saturday, Racine Star
Mill Park. Take covered dish,
chairs and dancing shoes. There
will be live music by True
Country. Dinner at 1 p.m.

.MONDAY, June 11

JUy

Pomeroy.
Joshua Clark, son of Roger
"Steve" and Penny Clark of
Pomeroy and Wes Crow, son ofJim
and Pam Crow of Pomeroy will
represent Eastern High School, and
Mickey Williams, son of Mickey
Williams of Minersville and Sandy
Halstead, will represent Southern
High School.
The program is developed by the
American Legion with 49 states
having a program in place. Ohio's
Legions host the:largest Boys State
program in the nation, with one of
the longest programs - nine full
days.
Buckeye Boys State is a "hands
on" experience in the operation of
the Democratic form of government, the organization of political
parties, and the relationship of one
to the other in shaping Ohio gov-

ernment.
The boys will begin their cout:5e
on Saturday, and will conclude on
June 18.
Each young man attending is
given '"The Digest of Ohio Government:' which tells of all of the offices
in state, county and city government
planned for the event. In addition to
goverrunent positions, the program .
includes an Ohio Pattol group,
bankers and reality groups, and a
newspaper, which is published
entirely by Boys Staters.
"Of special interest is the Buckeye Boys State Band, which consists
of between 125 and 150 pieces, and
is outstanding;' acc01ding to Frank
Vaughan .o f the Dtew-Webster POSl.
Recreation, competitive athletic
events, and a number of church services will also be available to young
men who participate.

•••

SATURDAY. June 10 •

BURLINGHAM
Burlingham Camp, Modern
Woodmen, potluck dinner, 6
p.m. at the hall Saturday. Fathers
will be recognized. Friends and
neighbors welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Alumni Association
alumni banquet, Saturday.
Social hour at 6 p.m.; dinner at
7 p.m. in air-conditioned cafetorium. at Eastern Elementary
School.

•••

SUNDAY, June 11'
CARPENTER -The Boclk
Family of Virginia will be
singing at the Mt. Union Baptist Church Sunday at 9:45 a.m.

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
meetin g. Hall located at 28051
St. Rt. 7, Cheshire.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday, 7:30 p.m. in
the band room at the high
school. All parents of high
school band members are
encourage d to attend since
upcoming hand activities will ·
be discussed.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

EXTRA! EXTRA.!·

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1000

The Daily Sentinel

Baby Edition
The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photog.raphs of local kids - ~es
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear In the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included.
Complete the fonn below and
enclose a sna~shot or wallet sized
picture plus a $6.00 charge for each
pho~ograph. I' more than one child
IS m th~ _picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE

Local Boys S~te delegates prepare for trip
"

Bacharach cancels
shows due to injury·

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

HARRISONVILLE- PRi (AW) Dennis M .
Donohue has been selected as the Naval Aviation
Schools Command (NASC) Sailor of the Year for
1999.
Donohue oversees the initial stages of all PT,
POMEROY - Stacy J. Gilmore has joined the
water survival, land and CPR/first aid. instructor United Stated Army under the Delayed Entry Protrai"ning at N ASC.
·
·
gram at the U.S. Army Recruiting Station, Athens.
~n 1999, Donohue qualified 25 instructors, of
The program gives young men and women the
whom 60 percent are dual swim/PT qualified, and opportunity to delay entering active duty for up to
30''percent are certified as emergency medical tech- one year.
ni.;ians.
The enlistment gives the new soldier the option
:flis other accomplishments include the upkeep to learn a ne'l' skill, travel and become eligible to
ofthe survival training facility, which has an inven- receive as much as $50,000 towards a college degree.
tory of more than $1 inillion in training equipment, After completion of basic military training, soldiers
and the instruction of more than 6,000 students in will receive advanced individual training in their
career job speciality.
wa~er survival, land survival, and CPR/first aid.
·Jn addition to his administrative duties, he is a
The recruit qualifies for a $6,000 enlistment
qualified master training specialist and lifeguard bonus.
Gilmore, a 2000 graduate of Meigs High school
insl:~ctor. As NASC's swim subject matter expert,
he· .was the only E-6 selected to a team which con- will report to Fort jackson, Columbia, S.C., for basic
ducted a site inspection and evaluation ofVance Air "training june 14, 2000.
Fo.oce Bases's water survival program.
'
She is the daughter of Jo N. Jewell" of 'Pomeroy
_Donohue is consistently cited on critiques and and Everett Gilmore of Middleport.
evaJuarions as an "exceptional instructor."
About these duties, he is unflinchingly positive.
"(love being an instructor. It's a chance for me to
directly influence not only junior personnel, but to
POINT PLEASANT,W.Va.- Marine Corp Cpl.
make a difference up and down the chain of com- Gregory A. Dinguss, a 1993 graduate of Point Pleasmand. I get to instruct aU ranks-it's a great environ- ant High School, Point Pleasant, W.Va., recently
ment."
returned from a six-month deployment to the
He has involved himself in additional duties Mediterranean Sea and Arabian Gulf while assigned
within the naval community.
·
to the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU),
bonohue was recently elected president of the · home based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
NASC Non-Conunisioned Officers Association,. In
While deployed aboard the ships of the U.S.S.
this position, he coordinated board member partie- Bataan Amphibious Ready Group, Dinguss' unit
ipation and served as chairman for the quarterly served as part of the Strategic Reserve Foree for the
Juclor Military Member of the Quarter/Instructor '·Balkans and participated in multi-national exercises
of the Quarter selection boards.
including Bright Star, Noble Shirley and Infinite
In addition to his Work with the Navy, Donohue Moonlight.
is 'also a dedicated conununity service volunteer,
The~e exercises focused on developing friendtaking the rime to lend a hand to those who can use ships, trust and teamwork between coalition nations
it. In the past 12 months he dedicated more than 80 and increased their combined military readiness for
hours to the l3lue Angel Baptist Church outreach contingency operations.
program, w,here he provides weekly services to the
Doctors and corpsmen from the 22nd MEU also
elderly, maintaining their homes and· ensuring other participated in civilian medical assistance programs
domestic needs are. met.
durin~ these exercises.
..
In this capacity, he has demonstrated a willingness
Additionally, Dinguss had the opportunity to visit
to ·reach beyond his immediate surroundings to several ports of call_including Creie, Israel, ltaly,Jormake a difference.
dan, Malta, Spain and Turkey. During these visits
In the rapidly evOlving ~nvironments of today's Marines participated in community relations proNavy, individuals like Donohue are realizing that it Jects.
is ·not enough to merely fulfill the basic requireDinguss' unit is an expeditionary intervention
ments of a billet.
force with the abiliry to rapidly organize for combat
· Advancement and success, both for the Navy and operations in virtually any environment. MEUs are
the individual, require a conunitment to doing more c?~posc:d of ~ore than 2,000 pe~onnel and are
than what is required, to getting involved on a per- div1ded mto an mfantry battalion, atrcraft squadron,
sonal and con'unand level, and constantly seeking to support group and command element. With this
improve the way in which the Navy gets its job combination, Dinguss' unit supplies and sustains
done.
itself for either quick mission accomplishment or
,Donohue is the son of Raymond and Delores clearing the_ Yr.rf for foUo~-on forces.
··
Donohue of the Harrisonville area and is a 1978
Dmguss JOmed the Mannes m August 1996.

POMEROY Six Meigs
a;imty boys will aavcl to Bowling
Green State Univemty this weekend to begin a week-long exercise
in govmuntnt, Buckeye Boys State.
Drew-Webster Poi 39 Am~an
~on of POmeroy and FeeneyBennett Post 128 AmeriQD Legion
of ·Middleport jointly spons'or the
Six delegates fiom each of the county's ' ~ hi~ schools. Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
Pomeroy, Peoples Banking and Trust
Company of Pomeroy and an
. anonymous donor have joined the
Legion posts as sportsors of this year's
local progrun.
Delegates from Meigs High
School are Derrick l3olin, son of
Rick and Brenda Bolin of Rutland,
Chris Dodson, son of Russell and
Dodson, Pomeroy, and Michael
Stacy, son ofJim and Cathy Stacy of

ings were placed in the fol k, wo rld or
New Age categories.

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Frldey, June t, :ZOOO ·

T_h_e_o_ai.....
ly_se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

....
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chari- Hoeflich
Ganeral Manager

•
•

..•

A. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

I.Atlm 10 tlt1 lllilor u. w~:lco.w.

Prince celebrates
4lnd birthday

1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

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Diane Kay Hill
Controller

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OHIO VIEWS

Confused
Leader's knowledge ofAIDS
issue sorely lacking
• (Cievelend) Plein Duler: On his first state visit to the
United States, South Mrican President Thabo Mbeki talked about
trade and the problems of Africa, topics on which he is quite knowl edgeable.
But ·he attracted more attention last
week as a confused amateur in the field of
AIDS, a disease ravaging South Africa.
Mbeki has raised doubts about the link
between HIV and AIDS, going so far as to
invite two American scientists who do not
•
believe HIV causes AIDS to an int~ha­
rional AIDS conference in South Africa .
This is, of course, deadly heresy Evidence of the link between
HIV and AIDS is well documented.
By casting doubt on it, Mbeki is forfeiting an opportunity to play
a role in reining in the AIDS epidemic in his own country. Unfortunately, there is no sign that his visit to the United States has
changed his mind.
Mbeki is known as a brilliant scholar with a grasp of many subjects. But in the area of AIDS, he is clearly out of his depth. As he
fiddles with guacks, South Africans are dying.
• The Columbus Dispatch: In some sports, endurance is key.
In otl-ie·rs, brawn. But as Jack Nicklaus has illustrated time and time
again, intelligence and concentration go a long way toward making
the difference between a good day on the greens and one better
spent in the clubhouse.
Today, at long last, Nicklaus, without question the greatest player
in the history of the game, will be the honoree of the Memorial
Tournament he founded 25 years ago. During ceremonies at Muirfield Village Golf Club, which he built, he will be the 30th individual enshrined in Memorial Park, near the course's first fairway.
Nicklaus is a credit to the game and to his home town. Not only
is his tournament record the standard by which all other players will
be judged, but the Golden Bear has left a permanent imprint on the
game he loves so much through the design of many championship
courses, including Muirfield. The Memorial Tournament will
remain an arpropriate symbol of his substantial contributions.
• The ,cantant Repository: One of the goals of the
Streetscape project was to modernize downtown Canton for the
21st Century. The fun part of the unfolding redevelopment is seeing how building owners use wonderful details, like the French
sailors on the renovated Parisian building, to help them recreate
downtown's glory days.
Rivitalizarion projects that give communities an old-fashioned
look are all the rage. Canton, Alliance, Minerva, cities across the
country are banking on nostalgia to give them and edge in drawing
tourists. But with all the brick sidewalks and iron lampposts, all
these towns could end up looking alike.
So communities that have restored their downtowns in a way
that's true to their unique history will have something special to
offer that communities favoring a generic old-fashiqned look will
not.

A look at
what state
newspapers
are saytng

SALE!

Friday, June 9, 2000 •

chance;' he ·said. ·
Prince recently reclaimed his name
after going by an unpronounceable
symbol for the last seven years, To celebrate, he kicked off a wee~ong gala
featuring studio tours, nightly parties
and a concert next Tuesday at Northrop
Auditorium in Minneapolis.

London home.
A children's playground also is being
built in Kensington Gardens in memory of the princess, who died in a Paris
car crash in August 1997.

Princess Diana
remembered

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Asked if he
expected to be walking by 2002 - his
personal goal actor Christopher
Reeve says he isn't sure.
"2002 was a thing I put forward a~ a
way to motivate the scientists," said the
former "Superman" actor, who was
paralyzed in a 1995 horse riding accident. "We all do better when we have a
speCific goal. Whether it happens on
that day is not the issue."
Those comments came Thursday
dur,ing Reeve's 15-minute speech at
Pqter Lowe's Success 2000, a motivational seminar featuring speakers
including television broadcaster Deborah Norville and former Notre Dame
football coach Lou Holtz.
Reeve condemned the ban on federal funding for human embryonic stem
cell research, saying it hinders medi cal

. CHANHASSEN,
Minn. (AP) - Prince
rolled out the purple
carpet and fans from
around the world
responded.
Fans from as far
away as Scotland,
N&lt;&gt;rway and Japan
..__ _.,._....J turned out as the
LONDON (AP) -The first plaques
• Prince
diminutive rock star
charting
a walkway through London's
'
opened his Paisley
Patk Studios to public tours Wednesday, parks commemorating Princess Diana
have been installed.
his 42nd birthday.
The seven-mile path through St.
,About 150 people waited to buy $15
James's
Park , Green Park, Hyde Park
tour tickets or pick up $70 VIP packets
and Kensington Gardens will be
th~y hall purchased in advance.
;Kjersri Stolan, 26, of Norway said she marked by 80 plaques with a rose
m~sed a final exam to make the trip. emblem in the center. The first few
Slie said she likely will be forced to were installed Thursday.
Embedded in the ground, . the
mike up the entire class.
plaques
·will highlight buildings and
:"My exam will come again ·next
locations associated with the princess,
ye~r," Stolan said.
:Joost Plantaz, 20, of Holland said including Kensington Palace, where she
w~en he could not get time off from lived for 15 years; Buckingham Palace;
St. James's Palace, where she once
hi~ job, he left anyway.
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime shared an office with Prince Charles;
and Spencer House, her family's former

Reeve talks

about goals

MILITARY NEWS
'Sailor of year selected

THINK TANK

Degradation ofarmy is Israels biggest ,threat
BY DAVID GUTTMANN

The disorderly retreat of the Israelis from
Lebanon, which left their Chris.rian allies in the
lurch, materiel abandoned on the battlefield and
their border defenses unprepared, is only the
l:ltest symptom of a breakdown that could
threaten the Jewish state's existence: the degradation of a once-superb people's army.
Hizballah is boasting that their superior
courage beat the Israel Defense Force (IDF),
while the Israelis cite their weariness with a
chronic Arab-Jewish war that first flared in
1920.
These claims contain only pieces of the truth.
They focus attention on the external Arab-Jewish struggle but overlook Israel's current
internecine and fraqicidal "Wars of the Jews."
These civil struggles are ultimately more dangerous to. Israel than any combination of Arab
armies. And, for the moment, they are being
won by the wrong side.
The culture war that most harmfully touches
on Israel's security is centered on the Jewish
state's relations with the Palestinians and other
Arabs, and embroils the secular parties of the
Right and Left. It has its origins in the confused
ideology of the early Zionist pioneers, who
were both militant nationalists and rather
dreamy, air-headed Socialists - an odd combination that proved very unstable . .
The more tough-minded, pragmatic, working- class Jews, who opted for "Greater Israel"
and a sttong IDF, pooled in the Rightist Likud

patty.
But many guilt-prone Israelis of the left came
to prefer a clear conscience over a victorious
nation and rejected the nationalist part of the
mix. Meanwhile, the Soviets and the international ' socialist parties, always hostile to the
Zionist project, bullied their Jewish comrades
into choosing between Love of Israel and the
Workers of the World.
The more intellectual leftists, who sought
acceptance and absolution from the Arabs and
by the world community of Socialists, congre-

These claims contain only
pieces of the truth. They
focus attention on the external Arab-Jewish struggle
but overlook Israel's current
internecine and fratricidal
"Jtars of the Jews."

.... '•

. '

blood. When the Jews entered history, as acto~ .
rather than victims, they bloodied their hands ¥ ,,
red as any Christian's. Jewish brutality? Certain,-"
ly. .Just three years after the Holocaust ha.~ ..•
ended, Palestinian Jews showed little mercy fo~ ,Arabs who had started the '48 war.
·. ·
But while our motives were not perfect, I will"
not concede the main revisionist charge: th~t .
our infant army fielded superior forces of mel) ' •
and equipment. When boys fi-om my unit sor:' .
tied to open the vital jerusalem road, those lack:: ·
ing weapons were told, at the assembly point, t!' ·'
take them from their slain comrades in the field.
Nevertheless, the leftist myth trumps t!):r ':
Zionist legends, and gathers new constituencies:: :
"Peace Now" members march, often wiih ' ·
Arabs; det:Jla!lding further withdraWals, support- :.,
ing ·conscientious objectors, and trashing the
"patriarchal" warrior culture. They "soften" th~ .. .
people. And since the army and the people are·
one, they inevitably ·"soften" the IDE An army
defends its own great traditions as well as its..
nation. Weaken the tradition, and you get lsraers ·
Lebanese Dunkirk.
Various writers have questioned whether th.e .
gender, feminized U.S. military can still wip
wars. That same question is even more relevant .
to the Middle East. Can the softer Israel survive·
at all as anything more than a shrunken hi-tech
ghetto, Tel-Aviv. com?
'.
I believe it can. Traditions founded on the re:il. ·
deeds of extraordinary individuals sometimes ·
skip a generation, but they cannot be final~¥· .
obliterated. My hope and my hunch is th~t
those stiff-necked Israelis, who req:ntly rejecte~ •
the Zionist legend, will find that there is not,
much nourishment for Jews in the sentimental, ··
, dangerously unrealistic platitudes of the left. I( ·
not they, then their children will return to ·
Zion. And the IDF will once again be Israel's' .
swift sword.
·
·

gated in the Labor and Peace patties.
Like the ultra-orthodox rabbis, they too agi~
tate for their version, albeit secular, of a pure
Zion: Israel m11st abandon its col\)nialist, mili~ ·
taristic path, and sin no more.
Recently, their intellectual leaders, often from '
their tenured university perches, have -systematically, even gleefully, trashed the myths and
accomplishments of their ideological rivals those low-brow, male-chauvinistic, "Macho"
old-line Zionist~ .
Thus, the revisionist historians of the Tel Aviv
and Hebrew Universities deconstruct the heroic legend of Israel's Independence War and
replace it with the PLO's anti-myth of Zionist
Original Sin.This distorted narrative denies that
· the Jews prevailed against great odds in 1948.
Instead, they are depicted as being the aggressors, European colonialists who deployed overwhelming, genocidal force against Third World
Palestinian peasants.
·
I was a U.S. merchant marine in World War II
· and went to Jewish Palestine in 1947, first as a
sailor for the Jewish underground (the Hagana),
· then as an officer of the fledgling Israeli navy.
After those wars, I returned to America and
made my home here. Perhaps I have lived this
long to bear wimess against the revisionist·hisl ' .' ·
torians who violate the truth and do great
(Dm,id Guttmann, Ph. D., an emeritus priifess.or
injustice to fallen heroes.
of psychology at Northwestern University Medical .
. I will grant that even their big lies can. hold School, has been a panelist on Ben Wattenberg:~ . r
grains of truth. History is, after all, a tal~ of "Think Tank" on PBS.)

.,.·.

TODAY IN HISTORY

...

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday,June 9, the 161st day of2000.There are 205 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 9,A.D. 68, the Roman Emperor Nero conunitted suicide.
On this date:
In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in. Godshill, England.
In 1940, Norway surrendered to the Nazis during World War II.
In 1953, about 100 people died when a tornado struck Worcester,
Mass.
In .1954,' Army counsel Joseph N. Welch asked Sen. Joseph R.
McCarthy, "Have you no sense of decency, sir?" during the SenateArmy Heari~.
In 1969, the Semte confirmed Warren Burger as chiefjustice of the
United States, succeeding Earl Warren.
In 1973, Secret:lriat won the Behnont Stakes and thoroughbred racing's first Triple Crown in 25 yean.
...
In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered alniost tiual burns at his
San Fernando Valley, Calif., home when a mixture of free-base co.caine
exploded.
.
In 1985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kidnapped in
Leb:mon. (He w.is rel~d in November 1991 along with fellow
hostage Terry Waite.)
·
·
In 1986, the Ragen Commission released its report on the Challenger disaster, criticizing NASA :md rocket-builder Morton Thiokol
for management problems leading to the explosion that claimed the
lives of seven astronauts.
In 1993,Jap:mese Crown Prince Naruhito wed commoner Masako
Owada in an elaborate Shinto religious ceremony.
·
T9rlay's Birthdays: Guitarist Les Paul is 85 . Robert S. ¥cNamara,
former World Bank president and former defense secretary, is 84.
Movie writer-producer-director George Axelrod is 78. Actress Mona
Freeman is 74. Broadcast journalist Marvin K;Ub is 70. Comedian
Jackie Mason is 66. Actor jpe S..ntos is 64_. Author Letty Cortin Pogrebin is 61 . Rock musician Jon Lcrd (Whttesnake; Deep Purple) ts 59.
Actor Michael J. Fox is 39. Actor Johnny Depp is 37.

Page AS

NAMES IN THE NEWS

The Daily Sentinel
'Est~Crslittl in

_;IJ the

There's more than one cure to our ills
So far so good, says my friend' Ken, who
underwent acupuncture treatment for
migraine headaches. The headaches have not
returned.
If they should, there are other things Ken
can try. In Africa, healers have good results
using drums. The different rhythms are said to
affect the flow of blood and the functioning of
vanous organs.
The idea that the whole universe is made up
of sound and rhythm, and that once you tune
in to this rhythm you become one with the
perfect working of the universe, lies at the
heart of certain sects of Buddhism.
Devotees find that through chanting, their
lives .are put in rhythm with the spheres. When
that happens, everything goes well, they say.
If Ken suffered from arthritis, he might see a
dowser. Dowsers, with their divining rods, are
more typically employed to locate underground water supplies.
The divining rod need be nothing more
than a twig, but in the hands of a dowser it will
virtually come to life when the dowser stands
over a subterranean body of water. The dowser sometimes has to ·hold tight to keep the
divining rod from jumping out of his or her
hands.
The explanation some give for this is that ·
the dowser is sensitive to magnetic en~rgy cur-

.

''

This dowser says that by having his- "
"patients" move their furniture away from .
these spots, their pain has gone away.
· ·
Some early faith healers relied on manipula~ ·
tion - or the laying on of hands - to effect
., •,

cures.

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST
rents, and water provides such a current. But a
dowser friend of mind maintains that the
power is psychic, not magnetic. He knows this,
he says, because he can get his divining rod to
move around and jump merely by holding it
over a map.
Once he has pinpointed the spot OQ the map
that is causing the flurry. he goes to the area
and, sure enough, the rod does its dance in 'the
place indicated on the map.
There was a man in Vermont who had been
dowsing for more than a decade and discovered that when two or more underground
currents of water cross, they send up malign
fotces. This, he says, may even cause you to
develop arthritis if your bed or the desk where
you work is above such a confluence.

.

~:.., '

According to the Bible's Book of Acts, the
ap~stles transmitted the_Holy Spirit by laying
thetr hands on new believers. Later faith heal-•: ·
ers .decided to try this method, figuring that :.
psychic and spiritual forces emanate from thb•. ,
body and, particularly, from the palms of th~ ,.
hands because there are more pores there. 1
Some people were indeed healed by the lar.- _ ·
ing on of hands, but many authorities feel .lt, ,,
was "suggestion" or faith that did it . - not ·,
anything coming from the hands.
·., '.:
Reflexology is another ancient science tha~ ·.
works on the assumption that the body · ' ~· . ,
composed of a network of energy "me~idians': ·'~
or pathways.When ailments are present, reflex-,d ,I
ologists will massage the hands and feet - the,
places where the meridians end. They wj( ~
probe for tender spots or "crystals" (s~,.,".
bumps). They claim to be able to correct th!l
trouble through gentle massage.
,. ..
So Ke'l has · quite a few other options to ·
explore if his migraines should recur.
·. · ·
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newspapfr.
Enterprise Association.)
·• '.

advancement. Some believe the cells
could provide treatment for di seases
and injuries, including spinal injuries.

Two new Grammy
Awards offered

LOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Burt
SANTA MONI CA, Calif. (AP)
Bac harac h ,
who
Native American recordings will be elirequired
sho ulder
gible for special Grammy Award .
surgery after a fall in
The National Academy of R ecordApril , has canceled
ing Arts and Sciences has established
performances
for
two new award categories Best
Jun e because the
Native American Music Album in th e
injury is still botherfolk field · and Best Pop Instru mental
ing him .
Album in the pop field . The additions
Bacharach, 71,
Bacharach
announced Wednesday expand th e
performed at a chariaward categories to 100.
ty event last Saturday for the first time
"Just a few years ago, the numb er of since fallin g after he missed a step
artists, releases, and industry support during rehearsal April 5.
necessary to create a category such as
The Oscar- and Grammy-winning
Native American music did not exist," songwriter shortened the show after
NARAS president Michael Greene fe eli ng pain and di scomfo rt in his left
said. "Our understanding of the music, shoulder, according to a statement
traditions and challenges which face Wedn esday fro m his pu blicist.
this community is growing and the
Bacharach did n't perform in May
academy is pleased to be able to and decided to cancel performances in
acknowledge the achievements of these June to give himself another month to
musical styles with a new category."
recover.
Previously, Native American record-

a

••••

graduate of Meigs High School.
Donahue is married to the former Janet Lambert
and is the father of two sons, Matthew and Jonathan.

FRIDAY, June 9
CHESHIRE -Widows Fellowship will meet in Cheshire
Park for a pot luck picnic at
noon Friday. Those attending
are asked to bring a covered
dish and their own table service. In case of rain, the event
will take place at the Church of
Christ, Middleport.

Gilmore joins army

MIDDLEPORT Free
concert by Big Bend Community Band, Stewart-Bennett
Memorial Park, Mill St., sponsored by Middleport Community Association, Riverbend
Arts Council and Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion. Coney dogs and other
refreshments to be sold by
Legion Auxiliary.
REEDSVILLE - Revival,
Eden United Brethren Church,
friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.
Sunday, 10 a.m. followed by
carry-in dinner, second service,
2 p.m. Comfort Touch Ministries to present chalk artist Dr.
Dean Watson.

Dinguss retums from Gulf

•••

and again at 6:30p.m. ihe public is invited .

RACINE - ·WhJ!ey family
reunion Saturday, Racine Star
Mill Park. Take covered dish,
chairs and dancing shoes. There
will be live music by True
Country. Dinner at 1 p.m.

.MONDAY, June 11

JUy

Pomeroy.
Joshua Clark, son of Roger
"Steve" and Penny Clark of
Pomeroy and Wes Crow, son ofJim
and Pam Crow of Pomeroy will
represent Eastern High School, and
Mickey Williams, son of Mickey
Williams of Minersville and Sandy
Halstead, will represent Southern
High School.
The program is developed by the
American Legion with 49 states
having a program in place. Ohio's
Legions host the:largest Boys State
program in the nation, with one of
the longest programs - nine full
days.
Buckeye Boys State is a "hands
on" experience in the operation of
the Democratic form of government, the organization of political
parties, and the relationship of one
to the other in shaping Ohio gov-

ernment.
The boys will begin their cout:5e
on Saturday, and will conclude on
June 18.
Each young man attending is
given '"The Digest of Ohio Government:' which tells of all of the offices
in state, county and city government
planned for the event. In addition to
goverrunent positions, the program .
includes an Ohio Pattol group,
bankers and reality groups, and a
newspaper, which is published
entirely by Boys Staters.
"Of special interest is the Buckeye Boys State Band, which consists
of between 125 and 150 pieces, and
is outstanding;' acc01ding to Frank
Vaughan .o f the Dtew-Webster POSl.
Recreation, competitive athletic
events, and a number of church services will also be available to young
men who participate.

•••

SATURDAY. June 10 •

BURLINGHAM
Burlingham Camp, Modern
Woodmen, potluck dinner, 6
p.m. at the hall Saturday. Fathers
will be recognized. Friends and
neighbors welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Alumni Association
alumni banquet, Saturday.
Social hour at 6 p.m.; dinner at
7 p.m. in air-conditioned cafetorium. at Eastern Elementary
School.

•••

SUNDAY, June 11'
CARPENTER -The Boclk
Family of Virginia will be
singing at the Mt. Union Baptist Church Sunday at 9:45 a.m.

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
meetin g. Hall located at 28051
St. Rt. 7, Cheshire.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday, 7:30 p.m. in
the band room at the high
school. All parents of high
school band members are
encourage d to attend since
upcoming hand activities will ·
be discussed.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wishing to announce meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

EXTRA! EXTRA.!·

COMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1000

The Daily Sentinel

Baby Edition
The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a
Special Edition filled with
photog.raphs of local kids - ~es
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear In the
July 7th issue. Be sure your child,
grandchild or relative is included.
Complete the fonn below and
enclose a sna~shot or wallet sized
picture plus a $6.00 charge for each
pho~ograph. I' more than one child
IS m th~ _picture, enclose an
additional $2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE

Local Boys S~te delegates prepare for trip
"

Bacharach cancels
shows due to injury·

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

HARRISONVILLE- PRi (AW) Dennis M .
Donohue has been selected as the Naval Aviation
Schools Command (NASC) Sailor of the Year for
1999.
Donohue oversees the initial stages of all PT,
POMEROY - Stacy J. Gilmore has joined the
water survival, land and CPR/first aid. instructor United Stated Army under the Delayed Entry Protrai"ning at N ASC.
·
·
gram at the U.S. Army Recruiting Station, Athens.
~n 1999, Donohue qualified 25 instructors, of
The program gives young men and women the
whom 60 percent are dual swim/PT qualified, and opportunity to delay entering active duty for up to
30''percent are certified as emergency medical tech- one year.
ni.;ians.
The enlistment gives the new soldier the option
:flis other accomplishments include the upkeep to learn a ne'l' skill, travel and become eligible to
ofthe survival training facility, which has an inven- receive as much as $50,000 towards a college degree.
tory of more than $1 inillion in training equipment, After completion of basic military training, soldiers
and the instruction of more than 6,000 students in will receive advanced individual training in their
career job speciality.
wa~er survival, land survival, and CPR/first aid.
·Jn addition to his administrative duties, he is a
The recruit qualifies for a $6,000 enlistment
qualified master training specialist and lifeguard bonus.
Gilmore, a 2000 graduate of Meigs High school
insl:~ctor. As NASC's swim subject matter expert,
he· .was the only E-6 selected to a team which con- will report to Fort jackson, Columbia, S.C., for basic
ducted a site inspection and evaluation ofVance Air "training june 14, 2000.
Fo.oce Bases's water survival program.
'
She is the daughter of Jo N. Jewell" of 'Pomeroy
_Donohue is consistently cited on critiques and and Everett Gilmore of Middleport.
evaJuarions as an "exceptional instructor."
About these duties, he is unflinchingly positive.
"(love being an instructor. It's a chance for me to
directly influence not only junior personnel, but to
POINT PLEASANT,W.Va.- Marine Corp Cpl.
make a difference up and down the chain of com- Gregory A. Dinguss, a 1993 graduate of Point Pleasmand. I get to instruct aU ranks-it's a great environ- ant High School, Point Pleasant, W.Va., recently
ment."
returned from a six-month deployment to the
He has involved himself in additional duties Mediterranean Sea and Arabian Gulf while assigned
within the naval community.
·
to the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU),
bonohue was recently elected president of the · home based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
NASC Non-Conunisioned Officers Association,. In
While deployed aboard the ships of the U.S.S.
this position, he coordinated board member partie- Bataan Amphibious Ready Group, Dinguss' unit
ipation and served as chairman for the quarterly served as part of the Strategic Reserve Foree for the
Juclor Military Member of the Quarter/Instructor '·Balkans and participated in multi-national exercises
of the Quarter selection boards.
including Bright Star, Noble Shirley and Infinite
In addition to his Work with the Navy, Donohue Moonlight.
is 'also a dedicated conununity service volunteer,
The~e exercises focused on developing friendtaking the rime to lend a hand to those who can use ships, trust and teamwork between coalition nations
it. In the past 12 months he dedicated more than 80 and increased their combined military readiness for
hours to the l3lue Angel Baptist Church outreach contingency operations.
program, w,here he provides weekly services to the
Doctors and corpsmen from the 22nd MEU also
elderly, maintaining their homes and· ensuring other participated in civilian medical assistance programs
domestic needs are. met.
durin~ these exercises.
..
In this capacity, he has demonstrated a willingness
Additionally, Dinguss had the opportunity to visit
to ·reach beyond his immediate surroundings to several ports of call_including Creie, Israel, ltaly,Jormake a difference.
dan, Malta, Spain and Turkey. During these visits
In the rapidly evOlving ~nvironments of today's Marines participated in community relations proNavy, individuals like Donohue are realizing that it Jects.
is ·not enough to merely fulfill the basic requireDinguss' unit is an expeditionary intervention
ments of a billet.
force with the abiliry to rapidly organize for combat
· Advancement and success, both for the Navy and operations in virtually any environment. MEUs are
the individual, require a conunitment to doing more c?~posc:d of ~ore than 2,000 pe~onnel and are
than what is required, to getting involved on a per- div1ded mto an mfantry battalion, atrcraft squadron,
sonal and con'unand level, and constantly seeking to support group and command element. With this
improve the way in which the Navy gets its job combination, Dinguss' unit supplies and sustains
done.
itself for either quick mission accomplishment or
,Donohue is the son of Raymond and Delores clearing the_ Yr.rf for foUo~-on forces.
··
Donohue of the Harrisonville area and is a 1978
Dmguss JOmed the Mannes m August 1996.

POMEROY Six Meigs
a;imty boys will aavcl to Bowling
Green State Univemty this weekend to begin a week-long exercise
in govmuntnt, Buckeye Boys State.
Drew-Webster Poi 39 Am~an
~on of POmeroy and FeeneyBennett Post 128 AmeriQD Legion
of ·Middleport jointly spons'or the
Six delegates fiom each of the county's ' ~ hi~ schools. Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
Pomeroy, Peoples Banking and Trust
Company of Pomeroy and an
. anonymous donor have joined the
Legion posts as sportsors of this year's
local progrun.
Delegates from Meigs High
School are Derrick l3olin, son of
Rick and Brenda Bolin of Rutland,
Chris Dodson, son of Russell and
Dodson, Pomeroy, and Michael
Stacy, son ofJim and Cathy Stacy of

ings were placed in the fol k, wo rld or
New Age categories.

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�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VMH scholarships awarded

SOCIETY NEWS

Girl graduates with honors
. POMEROY - Jessica Butcher, middle daughter of Jennifer
. Butcher and Jim Butcher, both of Rockport, Ind., and granddal\ghter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Pomeroy, graduated with acad. ernie honors from South Spencer High Sc hool recendy.
.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee, their other daughter,
, Patricia Circl e of Wichita, Kansas who has been here visiting her
, • parents, and Mark and Lisa Circle of Olathe, Kansas, who later vis. · ited fami ly in Meigs County.
Both daughters along with Jessica had been in Pomeroy for
Mother's Day. It was the first time in 23 years that both had been
, home for the observance of Mother's Day. While here Mr.
Blakeslee's 90th birthday was celebrated.

National Library Week observed

':."P...-y, .lunu, 2000

In _an effort to expand the GI Bill as a
tool to keep military personnelm the service, the Senate on Thurs.
day approved a measure allowing such service members to cramfer
unused educational stipends to spouses and .children.
The amendment to the defense authorization bill proposed by ·
Se_n. Max Cle~nd, D-Ga., is an attempt to keep key workers who
nught _oth~rw"" be tempted to leave the armed services for higher-paymg Jobs.

·. The Senate app~UVed it by voice vote. The House rejected a simila~ proposal last year, but Cleland believes he might have the Votes
ihis orne.

SOUTHERN SCHOLARSHIPS - Libby Fisher and Sally Ebersbach,
members of Veterans Memorial Hos pital Ladies Auxiliary, presente~
scholarships to Brandon Wolfe, a $1,000 recipient, and ~esther 0~1ley, who received $500. Dailey plans to study sports med1cme _at Oh1o
University, and Wolfe will study pharmacy at Oh1o Northern Umver~lty.
(Brian J. Reed photos)

Health: Thoughts for food
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Calcium Calculus
So, your teen doesn't like to
drink milk most days, but occasionally pigs om on dairy products to make up the difference.
T his feast-or-famin e approach
simply doesn't work, says Dr,
Steven Abrams, a physician who
•tudies calcium metabolism at
,,,e USDA / ARS Children's
Nutrition Research Center at
Baylor Coll ege of Medicine in
Houston.
The body needs 'a steady supply of calcium to build bone and
keep cells functioning properly,
he says, and the average adolescent body won't absorb much
more than the 1300 milligrams
recommended for this age group.

~b,.,

.,.

He advises stocking up on
calcium-rich or calcium-fortified foods to spark the teen's
interest and appetite when he
doesn't want dairy products.
Choose calcium-fortified juices,
breads, and ready-to-eat cereals,
and calcium-rich foods such as
Chinese cabbage, mustard and ·
turnip greens, broccoli, and
almonds.
·
Tip of the Iceberg
Good old iceberg lettuce is
OK It's j ust not top of the line.
'This most common of salad
ingredients has fiber for digestion and vitamin K, which may
help bone growth, says the Mayo
Clinic Health Letter.
And since it's half water, it's
low in calories.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS,·
Subscribe today. 992-2156

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Be
Smart
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Don't waste your time
~~
~ at the local Inconvenience Store. ~
l(_J . (That's Right INCONVENIENCE)
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Just stop by your area Smoker Friendly Store for
the fastest and friendliest service for all your
.tobacco needs.
No Lottery • Dell • or Fuel P.ump lines to walt II).

.

. : "We've increased pay, increased retirement benefits but we need
: lo ~se the GI Bill as a rete~tion. tool.:' Cleland said. ,;What is hap:, . _perung now 1s that the military 1s baSically married, so when these
f ~:fareemts get to that eight- . to 10-year mark, they don't need the
;~.:~enefits anymore ..We need to recruit a soldier but retain a family."
&lt;· ·' More t_r1cky will be securing money for an across-the-board pro. ~ram, which Cleland also advocates. According to the Congression• -"~Budget Office, It would cost an estimated $9 billion over 10 yean
" . ..- almost a doubling of the program's current cost.
·'' . Last month, the House passed a measure to increase benefits
. · under the Gl Bill, the longtime federal law that pays veterans' college costs, from $536 a month for a nine-month term to $600
beginning Oct. I. The payment would rise to $720 a month in
2002.
Under Cleland's measure, .such benefits could be made available
to spo~ses and chiJclren once a military worker completes 10 years
of serv1ce.ln additi?n: pe~onnel who chose not to sign up for free
education upon enlistmg m the.armed services would ' be able to do
so later .for a $1,500 fee.
l!nlike last year's proposal, which ran into funding problenu, this
..,.._verston allows the Pentagon to select which specific workers could
•• transfer their benefits.

..•
•:•

• WASHINGTON (AP)- Legislation to combat money launder• !ng - giving the government new authority to ban some transac: tions between U.S. banks and offShore havens - overwhelmingly
: '' tleared the House Banking Committee on Thursday and appeared
~ headed toward House passage.
_
The action comes as a trial opened in Florida, where five people
% stand accused of participating in a money-laundering and invest: . ment s~am that allegedly robbed some 400 victims, including
: Dionne Warwick, of $60 million. The case, dubbed "Operation
~sky Business:• which used a Caribbean bank, is. said to be the
~~·t;iggest money-bund.ering case not involving drugs ever pursued by
·
e U.S. Customs Service.
;,~J;; .Mos.t money laundering involves illicit profits from drug iraffick1f~g; prostitution or other criminal activities, which' are moved
. ~ through a series of bank or_ brokerage accounts to make them
appear to be proceeds oflegitimate busin~ss activity.
:• •1. Money laundering absorbs nearly $600 billion annually, or up to
~ 5 percent of the world's gross domestic product. Public attention
~_:i;(pcused on money laundering after last surruner's revelations that
: the Bank of New York, one of the nation's largest, had served as a
~ conduit for an astonisrung $7 billion in Russian money, some of it
1! believed to be from criminal activities.

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LX, V8, Auto, Cllma1e Control, Tift, Crulee,
Power Seat, All·Powar Equipment.

National Library Week was observed ai: the Salisbury Elementary
School with a Read-a-Thon• sponsored by Connie Halley, librarian.
The third graders which read a total of 560 books was rewarded
with a pizza party. Top readers in each class were presented baseball sports bottles. For meeting a challenge given by Halley, the stu;
dents threw whipped cream pies in her face. Participating wer~
Morgan Kennedy, Kelly Satterfield, art teacher, Adam Fairchild,
Christi Will and Jessamyn Reynolds.

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Ashley to attend Girls State

:

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992-2156

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Committee approves action

~

t

RACINE - Whitney Ashley,
daughter of Keith and Emma
Ashley ofRocksprings, has been
selected by the Auxiliary of
Racine Post 602, AmeriCan
Legion, as a delegate to the
Buckeye Girls State to take place
at Ashland College.
· Ashley is a junior a Meigs
Local High School where is a
member of the National Honor
Society and the yearbook staff
and is an office aide. She has
participated in the Summer
Scholars program at Ohio University, and has been active in
the marching band.
She is a third-generation
Whitney Ashley
member of th e American
: Legion Auxiliary with both her grandfa thers being members of the
: Racine Pon. She is a member of 4-H , the Meigs County Pioneer
: and Histori cal Society, the Meigs County Genealogical Society,
: First familie s of Ohio, and John S. Townsend Auxiliary to the Sons
· of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
: She is currently Ce res in Racine Subordinate Grange, the 1999: 2000 Ohio State Grange female Ambassador, state coloL bearer for
: the Ohio Department Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil
: 'War, and is active at Hope Baptist Church, Middleport.

Senate votes to expand Gl bill

WASHING~?N (AP) -

MEIGS WINNERS- Lit&gt;t&gt;y Fisher and Shelly Et&gt;ersbach, president and
treasurer of Vete rans Memorial Hospital Ladies AuKiliary, presented
$1,000 and $500 scholarships to Meigs High School graduates Ryan
Pratt and Amber Blackston. Pratt plans to study pre-ophthalmology at
Ohio University, and Blackston will study respiratory therapy at Wash·
ington State Community College.

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Officials at an Episcopal church have
cast out a member of the congregation• who has spent years criticirlng them for welcoming gay members. He's been banned until
he apologizes.
Lewis Green accused the Cathedral of All Souls in Biltmore of
trampling on his First Amendment right to free speech . .
"I've been writing bad things about gays for some time, deleterious thing~, and that's what this is about," said Green, 68. "What I'm
doing is exercising my First Amendment rights~ and if it's about
. them, too ·bad:There's nothing they can do about it."
Church leaders sent Green-a letter May 30 notifying him that it
was banning him fiom church property ;md denying him the sacrament of communion.The rare but reversible step of excommunication is so infrequently imposed that the Episcop~ Chutch USA
does not keep statistics.
"In my experience- and I've been in this position in this church
for 20 years ·- I've heard of this maybe three times;• said Todd Duffy, director of archives for the Episcopal Church USA.
.
Green would be reinst;~ted only after studying a Bible passage on
how to treat fellow Christians and apologizing in writing for making an obscene gesture to the congregation at a Ma_u last December.
"Due to your refusal to seek reconciliation with the parish ofAll
Souls and its memben, and your continued efforts to attack this
parish al)d ill memben, I hereby place you excommunicate," wrote
the cathedral's putor; the Very Rev. Todd DonateUi.
Green wa1 warned that if he sets foot on church property and
refuses to leave, "a warrant for trespass wiU be issued and a reatraining order obtaimtd:' Donatelli wrote.

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740-992-2196
www.jerrybibbee.com

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

ne GA.o "'H''t ~Oflcludu thAt
"1111~u lift

not yet In 11 poritiDfJ to

the
tJuUJtional autcomu of
duadvantllgtd 1tNdents, the childma
that remain central to the mullan
of the Title I program."
·au.tt II«DIInlll•flity for

Tide I program."
The report - requested by three members
of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee - recommends that federal lawmakers require states to collect specifics
on the disadvantaged srudents as well.
Last month, President Clinton in an executive order directed Education Department officials to compile and publish information on
low-performing schools and help states fix
them.
In response to the report, Michael Cohen, a
deputy to Education Secretary Richard Riley,

Study: 13 million Americans
have downloaded music for free
NEW YORK (AP) If
you've downloaded music for
free on the computer, a new
study indicates you have plenty
of company.
An estimated 13 million
Americans have done it, and
the practice is by no means
· confined to college students,
the Pew Internet Project
reported Thursday from the
results of a survey. Fewer than 2
million people have paid to
download music files.
"Millions of Americans have
joined the online .music revolution in recent months
because it's simple, it's free and
so far, nobody's stopping
them," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet Project, which researches the
Internet's effect on society
with funding by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Freeloading is "a huge threat
to the music industry now and
it is a harbinger of the trouble
the Internet will pose to other

entertainment forms like the
movies," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet Pro. ject .
The recording industry, and
bands like Metallica, are trying
to halt the trading of music
online, much of it done with
the aid of Napster, a company
that lets users search for audio
files. Record companies · see it
as stealing their work.
Pew's findings are disturbing
and "of no surprise to us," said
Amy Weiss, spokeswoman ~or
the Recording Industry A5so,
ciation of America.
Approximately 14 percent of
all Internet users have downloaded music for free, Pew said.
Nearly half of the freeloaders
are between 18 and 29, but 42
percent are between 30 and 49,
according to the survey.
:These are the office workers who are rocking out at
their desks to Steely Dan or
whatever," said Susannah Fox,
Pew research director.
.···

said in a letter that the Clinton adminiltiation
has proposed the state clara requirement for the
renewal of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act. That legislation was stalled earlier this year by lawmalten grappling over
vouchers, money for class-size reduction and
other issues.
Sens.JamesJeffords,R-Vt., chair of the Senate education committee; Edward Kennedy, of
Massachusetts, the panel's top Democrat; and
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., sought the study
delivered to Congress last week.
A law passed in 1994 says that this fall states
must start reporting test scores and other student information based on their gender, racial
and ethnic group, English bnguage ability, disabilities, migrant status and economic status.
Besides issuing public reports, states are to supposed to use the information gathered tinm
schools and districts to decide how schools are
doing and what to do with ones that are faili11g
to help students.

CBS has a hit with SUIVivor'
1

NEW YORK (AP) - A clash
of the titans is emerging on television, with CBS's "Survivor" fast
becoming a summer hit capable
of taking on - and beating "Who Wants to Be a Million-

aire."
"Millionaire," hosted by Regis
Philbin, was last summer's phenomenon and a boon {or ABC.
"Survivor" beat it in the Wednesday night ratings in only its second week on the air.
"We're thrilled in the manner
that viewers have re;ponded to
the show," CBS spokesman Chris
Ender said, "and beating 'Mil•
lionaire' m*es it that much
sweeter."
CBS executives were miffed
that ABC, at the last minute,
scheduled episodes of "Who
Wants to Be a Millionaire" opposite "Survivor" for the first two
weeks of the heoavily hyped summer reality series about a group
stuck on a tropical island.
"Survivor" averaged 18.1 million viewers on Wednesday night,
compared with 15.5 million for

" Millionaire," Nielsen Media
Research said Thursday. Last
week, Philbin's game show beat
''Survivor."
During the last half of the
show, when a "tribal council"
vote sent retired contractor B.B.
Andersen of Mission Hills. K.an.,
home to reduce their ranks to 14,
the viewership jumped to 19.4
million people.
CBS is also elated that "Survivor" is drawing a mu ch
younger audience than its typical
fare. Among viewers aged 18-34,
"Survivor" had more than twice

the viewers of .. Millionaire,"
Nielsen said.
"Survivor" also drew more
viewers Wednesday than the first
game of the National Basketball
Association finals between the
Los Angeles Lakers and the Indiana Pacers, and a Britney Spears
concert special.
"'Survivor' is the event of the
summer and even the power of
Regis cannot beat it;' said Marc
Berman, a televisi.o n analyst for
Mediaweek.com.

·.

PIIJ the

An E. coli out~ak that sickened at
least. five children·has been traced to animals at a petting farm.
·
Four of the children had visited The Farm.The fifth ~hi1d appar" · ently contracted the infection from a sibling who had gone there,
: said Dr. Jo Hofinanp, director of communicable disease for the Snot homish Health District.
~ · Norie of the cases appeared to involve lasting or life-threatening
: conditions, and the three children who were hospitalized have been
: released.
·
'
· .· .
:
The victinu were among more than 200 youngsters who visited
~ the farm on May 18.
,~
The farm has added ·a hand-washing station.
51
"This has just blown us away:· co-owner Ben Krause said. "We've
' been told we have one of the nicest, clea,rlest petting zoos.around." ·
J ~ E.' coli infections are comm~nly ass~iated with contaminated
~ ~ter or undercooked meat. The disease also may be transmitted
~ t~rough direct contact with feces. In this ~ase, you~gsters. apparent-

~ ~ m"&lt;hod;;.::.:::::;:·~"'M.

I-

DECATUR, Ill. (AP) -A fire broke out early Thursday at a fra~ ternity house near Millikin University, killing one s!udent.
Firefighters _rescued another student from ~e tJtird ·floor of t~e
!' Kappa Sigma hous~. He was treated at a hosp1tal ;md released, md
t Mark Hansen, a battalion chief with the Decatur fire department.
The other 19 people in the building got out uninjured.
II'
The fire was. reported at 'a bout 4:20a.m. and was extinguished· by .
6 a.m., Hansen said. He did not know the cause.
.
~·
The student who died was found in a third-floor bedroom. H1s
~ name was not inunediately ·released pending ~o.tification of rela.: . tives, but authont1es sa1d he had JUSt fimshed hiS JUmor year.
' - ~. The Presbyterian college has an enrollment of about 2,300.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -States that receive
federal money to boost the learning of poor
schoolchildren are using data too YIJUe or
confusing to prove those studentl are benefitting academically, government auditon say.
With tl)e exception.ofi'exas, states that share
more than S8 billion under the Tide 1 program
generally evaluated thrir successes based on the
performance of aU students, rather than the
low-income or non-English speaking children
the law is designed to help, said the General
Accounting Office. Texas alone includes the
performance of poor and minority children in
its state definition of yearly progress on the
program.
The GAO report - which comes as policy-maker.; are demanding that schools prove
they are spending education dollars wisely concludes that "states are not yet in a position ·
to ensure accountability for the educational
outcomes of disadvantaged students, the children that remain central to the mission of the

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NATIONAL BRIEFS

.-

Alumni observes reunion
HARRISONVILLE - T he 7 1st annual banquet and dance of
the H arrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association was held at the Harrisonville School ove r Memorial Day weekend with 24 members
· · · and guests attending.
· ··
President Harold Gr~h a m welcomed the group and R ev. Joy
Clark gave the invocation. Sc holarships were awarded to James
." Stanley and Tasha Joy Johnson.
·
Pauline H alliday Atkins (1930) was awatded a flower for being
·. • the oldest female graduate. All gradu ates received pansies of purple
and white. Gradu ates that are married to each other received hanging pots of fl owers.
Candy j ars with purple and w hite balloo ns attached decorated
the tables.
Alumni members attending were Mary Welsh Woodyard (1933);
. , Thor C arsey (1934); Cecil Morris (1937); C linton Gilkey (1938);
Warren Turner (1939); Elizabeth Lambert Wardle (194 0); Joan Fin. law Sorden (1 941 ); R o bert Alkire and Frances Gilkey Alkire,
. · Annabel Stacy Bebout (1942); Virginia Alkire Burke (1943) ;
. · Bernard Gilkey, Howard Day Gilkey, Anna C ircle Cleland (1944) .
•·
Jose(lh Stanley and Marianna Throckmorton Whitlock (1945) ;
: ' Garnet Henderson Swisher and Lena Alkire Hewitt (1'146); LeRoy
Lambert and H elen Alkire Picke ns (1948);Jean Wyant Wood (1949);
Edwin Oberholzer, Lavern Chase, Rosella Borgan Birchfield
(1950); John Edmonds, Pansy Turner Jordan, Juanita Wyant Beal
(1951 ).
James Borgan and Paul Cotterill (1952); Russell Mason, Pauline
Birchfield Parke r, Fred Stanley (1953);Walter Edmonds (1955) ;Jan: ice Wyant DeBord, Dorothy Anderson Frum, Larry Clark (1956) ;
.. Rachael Burbridge LeFebre (1957); Annie Arnold Bennett and
" Danny Arnold (1958);
Virgil R eeves (1959); Dorothy Arnold Underwood, Martha
, · Arnold Cunningham, Joy Wiseman C lark, Harold Gra ham (19b0) .
The Arno ld Family was recognized for the most family members
· present. Scholarship fund coll ection was $300.
'
. Deceased alumni since last banquet were Velma Hannon Long
· (1934); Donald Welch (1959); Ivan Cotterill (1937); Frances Ball
. · Young (1929); Nora Wilson Jordan (teac her). Officers named for
next year were Harold Graham, president; Larry Clark, vice presi,. dent; Joy Clark, secretary; and Virgil Reeves, treasurer.

.

Come try our spedal recipe for fun and relaxation. Head south to the
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The•legendary Grand Hotel, home to southern hospitality and luxury for
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�Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VMH scholarships awarded

SOCIETY NEWS

Girl graduates with honors
. POMEROY - Jessica Butcher, middle daughter of Jennifer
. Butcher and Jim Butcher, both of Rockport, Ind., and granddal\ghter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Pomeroy, graduated with acad. ernie honors from South Spencer High Sc hool recendy.
.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Blakeslee, their other daughter,
, Patricia Circl e of Wichita, Kansas who has been here visiting her
, • parents, and Mark and Lisa Circle of Olathe, Kansas, who later vis. · ited fami ly in Meigs County.
Both daughters along with Jessica had been in Pomeroy for
Mother's Day. It was the first time in 23 years that both had been
, home for the observance of Mother's Day. While here Mr.
Blakeslee's 90th birthday was celebrated.

National Library Week observed

':."P...-y, .lunu, 2000

In _an effort to expand the GI Bill as a
tool to keep military personnelm the service, the Senate on Thurs.
day approved a measure allowing such service members to cramfer
unused educational stipends to spouses and .children.
The amendment to the defense authorization bill proposed by ·
Se_n. Max Cle~nd, D-Ga., is an attempt to keep key workers who
nught _oth~rw"" be tempted to leave the armed services for higher-paymg Jobs.

·. The Senate app~UVed it by voice vote. The House rejected a simila~ proposal last year, but Cleland believes he might have the Votes
ihis orne.

SOUTHERN SCHOLARSHIPS - Libby Fisher and Sally Ebersbach,
members of Veterans Memorial Hos pital Ladies Auxiliary, presente~
scholarships to Brandon Wolfe, a $1,000 recipient, and ~esther 0~1ley, who received $500. Dailey plans to study sports med1cme _at Oh1o
University, and Wolfe will study pharmacy at Oh1o Northern Umver~lty.
(Brian J. Reed photos)

Health: Thoughts for food
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Calcium Calculus
So, your teen doesn't like to
drink milk most days, but occasionally pigs om on dairy products to make up the difference.
T his feast-or-famin e approach
simply doesn't work, says Dr,
Steven Abrams, a physician who
•tudies calcium metabolism at
,,,e USDA / ARS Children's
Nutrition Research Center at
Baylor Coll ege of Medicine in
Houston.
The body needs 'a steady supply of calcium to build bone and
keep cells functioning properly,
he says, and the average adolescent body won't absorb much
more than the 1300 milligrams
recommended for this age group.

~b,.,

.,.

He advises stocking up on
calcium-rich or calcium-fortified foods to spark the teen's
interest and appetite when he
doesn't want dairy products.
Choose calcium-fortified juices,
breads, and ready-to-eat cereals,
and calcium-rich foods such as
Chinese cabbage, mustard and ·
turnip greens, broccoli, and
almonds.
·
Tip of the Iceberg
Good old iceberg lettuce is
OK It's j ust not top of the line.
'This most common of salad
ingredients has fiber for digestion and vitamin K, which may
help bone growth, says the Mayo
Clinic Health Letter.
And since it's half water, it's
low in calories.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS,·
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~~
~ at the local Inconvenience Store. ~
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Just stop by your area Smoker Friendly Store for
the fastest and friendliest service for all your
.tobacco needs.
No Lottery • Dell • or Fuel P.ump lines to walt II).

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. : "We've increased pay, increased retirement benefits but we need
: lo ~se the GI Bill as a rete~tion. tool.:' Cleland said. ,;What is hap:, . _perung now 1s that the military 1s baSically married, so when these
f ~:fareemts get to that eight- . to 10-year mark, they don't need the
;~.:~enefits anymore ..We need to recruit a soldier but retain a family."
&lt;· ·' More t_r1cky will be securing money for an across-the-board pro. ~ram, which Cleland also advocates. According to the Congression• -"~Budget Office, It would cost an estimated $9 billion over 10 yean
" . ..- almost a doubling of the program's current cost.
·'' . Last month, the House passed a measure to increase benefits
. · under the Gl Bill, the longtime federal law that pays veterans' college costs, from $536 a month for a nine-month term to $600
beginning Oct. I. The payment would rise to $720 a month in
2002.
Under Cleland's measure, .such benefits could be made available
to spo~ses and chiJclren once a military worker completes 10 years
of serv1ce.ln additi?n: pe~onnel who chose not to sign up for free
education upon enlistmg m the.armed services would ' be able to do
so later .for a $1,500 fee.
l!nlike last year's proposal, which ran into funding problenu, this
..,.._verston allows the Pentagon to select which specific workers could
•• transfer their benefits.

..•
•:•

• WASHINGTON (AP)- Legislation to combat money launder• !ng - giving the government new authority to ban some transac: tions between U.S. banks and offShore havens - overwhelmingly
: '' tleared the House Banking Committee on Thursday and appeared
~ headed toward House passage.
_
The action comes as a trial opened in Florida, where five people
% stand accused of participating in a money-laundering and invest: . ment s~am that allegedly robbed some 400 victims, including
: Dionne Warwick, of $60 million. The case, dubbed "Operation
~sky Business:• which used a Caribbean bank, is. said to be the
~~·t;iggest money-bund.ering case not involving drugs ever pursued by
·
e U.S. Customs Service.
;,~J;; .Mos.t money laundering involves illicit profits from drug iraffick1f~g; prostitution or other criminal activities, which' are moved
. ~ through a series of bank or_ brokerage accounts to make them
appear to be proceeds oflegitimate busin~ss activity.
:• •1. Money laundering absorbs nearly $600 billion annually, or up to
~ 5 percent of the world's gross domestic product. Public attention
~_:i;(pcused on money laundering after last surruner's revelations that
: the Bank of New York, one of the nation's largest, had served as a
~ conduit for an astonisrung $7 billion in Russian money, some of it
1! believed to be from criminal activities.

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JERRY BIBBEE

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CROWN VICTORIA

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LX, V8, Auto, Cllma1e Control, Tift, Crulee,
Power Seat, All·Powar Equipment.

National Library Week was observed ai: the Salisbury Elementary
School with a Read-a-Thon• sponsored by Connie Halley, librarian.
The third graders which read a total of 560 books was rewarded
with a pizza party. Top readers in each class were presented baseball sports bottles. For meeting a challenge given by Halley, the stu;
dents threw whipped cream pies in her face. Participating wer~
Morgan Kennedy, Kelly Satterfield, art teacher, Adam Fairchild,
Christi Will and Jessamyn Reynolds.

·:i

Ashley to attend Girls State

:

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992-2156

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1999 FORD F350

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Committee approves action

~

t

RACINE - Whitney Ashley,
daughter of Keith and Emma
Ashley ofRocksprings, has been
selected by the Auxiliary of
Racine Post 602, AmeriCan
Legion, as a delegate to the
Buckeye Girls State to take place
at Ashland College.
· Ashley is a junior a Meigs
Local High School where is a
member of the National Honor
Society and the yearbook staff
and is an office aide. She has
participated in the Summer
Scholars program at Ohio University, and has been active in
the marching band.
She is a third-generation
Whitney Ashley
member of th e American
: Legion Auxiliary with both her grandfa thers being members of the
: Racine Pon. She is a member of 4-H , the Meigs County Pioneer
: and Histori cal Society, the Meigs County Genealogical Society,
: First familie s of Ohio, and John S. Townsend Auxiliary to the Sons
· of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
: She is currently Ce res in Racine Subordinate Grange, the 1999: 2000 Ohio State Grange female Ambassador, state coloL bearer for
: the Ohio Department Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil
: 'War, and is active at Hope Baptist Church, Middleport.

Senate votes to expand Gl bill

WASHING~?N (AP) -

MEIGS WINNERS- Lit&gt;t&gt;y Fisher and Shelly Et&gt;ersbach, president and
treasurer of Vete rans Memorial Hospital Ladies AuKiliary, presented
$1,000 and $500 scholarships to Meigs High School graduates Ryan
Pratt and Amber Blackston. Pratt plans to study pre-ophthalmology at
Ohio University, and Blackston will study respiratory therapy at Wash·
ington State Community College.

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Officials at an Episcopal church have
cast out a member of the congregation• who has spent years criticirlng them for welcoming gay members. He's been banned until
he apologizes.
Lewis Green accused the Cathedral of All Souls in Biltmore of
trampling on his First Amendment right to free speech . .
"I've been writing bad things about gays for some time, deleterious thing~, and that's what this is about," said Green, 68. "What I'm
doing is exercising my First Amendment rights~ and if it's about
. them, too ·bad:There's nothing they can do about it."
Church leaders sent Green-a letter May 30 notifying him that it
was banning him fiom church property ;md denying him the sacrament of communion.The rare but reversible step of excommunication is so infrequently imposed that the Episcop~ Chutch USA
does not keep statistics.
"In my experience- and I've been in this position in this church
for 20 years ·- I've heard of this maybe three times;• said Todd Duffy, director of archives for the Episcopal Church USA.
.
Green would be reinst;~ted only after studying a Bible passage on
how to treat fellow Christians and apologizing in writing for making an obscene gesture to the congregation at a Ma_u last December.
"Due to your refusal to seek reconciliation with the parish ofAll
Souls and its memben, and your continued efforts to attack this
parish al)d ill memben, I hereby place you excommunicate," wrote
the cathedral's putor; the Very Rev. Todd DonateUi.
Green wa1 warned that if he sets foot on church property and
refuses to leave, "a warrant for trespass wiU be issued and a reatraining order obtaimtd:' Donatelli wrote.

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Parts &amp; Service
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•:--il .. -il .. :--iiidl1a111 •Cc ·o •·;! t' Liii .. ..-I

JER.RV BIBBEE ..
"

,.

Phone
740-992-2196
www.jerrybibbee.com

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

ne GA.o "'H''t ~Oflcludu thAt
"1111~u lift

not yet In 11 poritiDfJ to

the
tJuUJtional autcomu of
duadvantllgtd 1tNdents, the childma
that remain central to the mullan
of the Title I program."
·au.tt II«DIInlll•flity for

Tide I program."
The report - requested by three members
of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee - recommends that federal lawmakers require states to collect specifics
on the disadvantaged srudents as well.
Last month, President Clinton in an executive order directed Education Department officials to compile and publish information on
low-performing schools and help states fix
them.
In response to the report, Michael Cohen, a
deputy to Education Secretary Richard Riley,

Study: 13 million Americans
have downloaded music for free
NEW YORK (AP) If
you've downloaded music for
free on the computer, a new
study indicates you have plenty
of company.
An estimated 13 million
Americans have done it, and
the practice is by no means
· confined to college students,
the Pew Internet Project
reported Thursday from the
results of a survey. Fewer than 2
million people have paid to
download music files.
"Millions of Americans have
joined the online .music revolution in recent months
because it's simple, it's free and
so far, nobody's stopping
them," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet Project, which researches the
Internet's effect on society
with funding by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Freeloading is "a huge threat
to the music industry now and
it is a harbinger of the trouble
the Internet will pose to other

entertainment forms like the
movies," said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet Pro. ject .
The recording industry, and
bands like Metallica, are trying
to halt the trading of music
online, much of it done with
the aid of Napster, a company
that lets users search for audio
files. Record companies · see it
as stealing their work.
Pew's findings are disturbing
and "of no surprise to us," said
Amy Weiss, spokeswoman ~or
the Recording Industry A5so,
ciation of America.
Approximately 14 percent of
all Internet users have downloaded music for free, Pew said.
Nearly half of the freeloaders
are between 18 and 29, but 42
percent are between 30 and 49,
according to the survey.
:These are the office workers who are rocking out at
their desks to Steely Dan or
whatever," said Susannah Fox,
Pew research director.
.···

said in a letter that the Clinton adminiltiation
has proposed the state clara requirement for the
renewal of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act. That legislation was stalled earlier this year by lawmalten grappling over
vouchers, money for class-size reduction and
other issues.
Sens.JamesJeffords,R-Vt., chair of the Senate education committee; Edward Kennedy, of
Massachusetts, the panel's top Democrat; and
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., sought the study
delivered to Congress last week.
A law passed in 1994 says that this fall states
must start reporting test scores and other student information based on their gender, racial
and ethnic group, English bnguage ability, disabilities, migrant status and economic status.
Besides issuing public reports, states are to supposed to use the information gathered tinm
schools and districts to decide how schools are
doing and what to do with ones that are faili11g
to help students.

CBS has a hit with SUIVivor'
1

NEW YORK (AP) - A clash
of the titans is emerging on television, with CBS's "Survivor" fast
becoming a summer hit capable
of taking on - and beating "Who Wants to Be a Million-

aire."
"Millionaire," hosted by Regis
Philbin, was last summer's phenomenon and a boon {or ABC.
"Survivor" beat it in the Wednesday night ratings in only its second week on the air.
"We're thrilled in the manner
that viewers have re;ponded to
the show," CBS spokesman Chris
Ender said, "and beating 'Mil•
lionaire' m*es it that much
sweeter."
CBS executives were miffed
that ABC, at the last minute,
scheduled episodes of "Who
Wants to Be a Millionaire" opposite "Survivor" for the first two
weeks of the heoavily hyped summer reality series about a group
stuck on a tropical island.
"Survivor" averaged 18.1 million viewers on Wednesday night,
compared with 15.5 million for

" Millionaire," Nielsen Media
Research said Thursday. Last
week, Philbin's game show beat
''Survivor."
During the last half of the
show, when a "tribal council"
vote sent retired contractor B.B.
Andersen of Mission Hills. K.an.,
home to reduce their ranks to 14,
the viewership jumped to 19.4
million people.
CBS is also elated that "Survivor" is drawing a mu ch
younger audience than its typical
fare. Among viewers aged 18-34,
"Survivor" had more than twice

the viewers of .. Millionaire,"
Nielsen said.
"Survivor" also drew more
viewers Wednesday than the first
game of the National Basketball
Association finals between the
Los Angeles Lakers and the Indiana Pacers, and a Britney Spears
concert special.
"'Survivor' is the event of the
summer and even the power of
Regis cannot beat it;' said Marc
Berman, a televisi.o n analyst for
Mediaweek.com.

·.

PIIJ the

An E. coli out~ak that sickened at
least. five children·has been traced to animals at a petting farm.
·
Four of the children had visited The Farm.The fifth ~hi1d appar" · ently contracted the infection from a sibling who had gone there,
: said Dr. Jo Hofinanp, director of communicable disease for the Snot homish Health District.
~ · Norie of the cases appeared to involve lasting or life-threatening
: conditions, and the three children who were hospitalized have been
: released.
·
'
· .· .
:
The victinu were among more than 200 youngsters who visited
~ the farm on May 18.
,~
The farm has added ·a hand-washing station.
51
"This has just blown us away:· co-owner Ben Krause said. "We've
' been told we have one of the nicest, clea,rlest petting zoos.around." ·
J ~ E.' coli infections are comm~nly ass~iated with contaminated
~ ~ter or undercooked meat. The disease also may be transmitted
~ t~rough direct contact with feces. In this ~ase, you~gsters. apparent-

~ ~ m"&lt;hod;;.::.:::::;:·~"'M.

I-

DECATUR, Ill. (AP) -A fire broke out early Thursday at a fra~ ternity house near Millikin University, killing one s!udent.
Firefighters _rescued another student from ~e tJtird ·floor of t~e
!' Kappa Sigma hous~. He was treated at a hosp1tal ;md released, md
t Mark Hansen, a battalion chief with the Decatur fire department.
The other 19 people in the building got out uninjured.
II'
The fire was. reported at 'a bout 4:20a.m. and was extinguished· by .
6 a.m., Hansen said. He did not know the cause.
.
~·
The student who died was found in a third-floor bedroom. H1s
~ name was not inunediately ·released pending ~o.tification of rela.: . tives, but authont1es sa1d he had JUSt fimshed hiS JUmor year.
' - ~. The Presbyterian college has an enrollment of about 2,300.

I

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Ol

tish

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Source of oidb....k found

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"Tilxee Not Included to Qualified Buyers 48 Month

WASHINGTON (AP) -States that receive
federal money to boost the learning of poor
schoolchildren are using data too YIJUe or
confusing to prove those studentl are benefitting academically, government auditon say.
With tl)e exception.ofi'exas, states that share
more than S8 billion under the Tide 1 program
generally evaluated thrir successes based on the
performance of aU students, rather than the
low-income or non-English speaking children
the law is designed to help, said the General
Accounting Office. Texas alone includes the
performance of poor and minority children in
its state definition of yearly progress on the
program.
The GAO report - which comes as policy-maker.; are demanding that schools prove
they are spending education dollars wisely concludes that "states are not yet in a position ·
to ensure accountability for the educational
outcomes of disadvantaged students, the children that remain central to the mission of the

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A~dlt: States not measuring progress of poor students

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Pomeroy, Mlcldlepart, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

.-

Alumni observes reunion
HARRISONVILLE - T he 7 1st annual banquet and dance of
the H arrisonville-Scipio Alumni Association was held at the Harrisonville School ove r Memorial Day weekend with 24 members
· · · and guests attending.
· ··
President Harold Gr~h a m welcomed the group and R ev. Joy
Clark gave the invocation. Sc holarships were awarded to James
." Stanley and Tasha Joy Johnson.
·
Pauline H alliday Atkins (1930) was awatded a flower for being
·. • the oldest female graduate. All gradu ates received pansies of purple
and white. Gradu ates that are married to each other received hanging pots of fl owers.
Candy j ars with purple and w hite balloo ns attached decorated
the tables.
Alumni members attending were Mary Welsh Woodyard (1933);
. , Thor C arsey (1934); Cecil Morris (1937); C linton Gilkey (1938);
Warren Turner (1939); Elizabeth Lambert Wardle (194 0); Joan Fin. law Sorden (1 941 ); R o bert Alkire and Frances Gilkey Alkire,
. · Annabel Stacy Bebout (1942); Virginia Alkire Burke (1943) ;
. · Bernard Gilkey, Howard Day Gilkey, Anna C ircle Cleland (1944) .
•·
Jose(lh Stanley and Marianna Throckmorton Whitlock (1945) ;
: ' Garnet Henderson Swisher and Lena Alkire Hewitt (1'146); LeRoy
Lambert and H elen Alkire Picke ns (1948);Jean Wyant Wood (1949);
Edwin Oberholzer, Lavern Chase, Rosella Borgan Birchfield
(1950); John Edmonds, Pansy Turner Jordan, Juanita Wyant Beal
(1951 ).
James Borgan and Paul Cotterill (1952); Russell Mason, Pauline
Birchfield Parke r, Fred Stanley (1953);Walter Edmonds (1955) ;Jan: ice Wyant DeBord, Dorothy Anderson Frum, Larry Clark (1956) ;
.. Rachael Burbridge LeFebre (1957); Annie Arnold Bennett and
" Danny Arnold (1958);
Virgil R eeves (1959); Dorothy Arnold Underwood, Martha
, · Arnold Cunningham, Joy Wiseman C lark, Harold Gra ham (19b0) .
The Arno ld Family was recognized for the most family members
· present. Scholarship fund coll ection was $300.
'
. Deceased alumni since last banquet were Velma Hannon Long
· (1934); Donald Welch (1959); Ivan Cotterill (1937); Frances Ball
. · Young (1929); Nora Wilson Jordan (teac her). Officers named for
next year were Harold Graham, president; Larry Clark, vice presi,. dent; Joy Clark, secretary; and Virgil Reeves, treasurer.

.

Come try our spedal recipe for fun and relaxation. Head south to the
Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. Play as much championship golf as you can
handle at the Trail's Magnolia Grove course in Mobile, then buzz over to
nearby Point Clear, ,Alabama and the famous Marriott Grand Hotel. Get in
more golf on the Trail's resort division courses at The Grand, and top it off
with a deep sea fishing trip, leaving from.The Grand's picturesque marina.
The•legendary Grand Hotel, home to southern hospitality and luxury for
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Page A 8 • The Deily SentiMI

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l\postoi1C
Cloonll " . . _ Cllltll t

VoaZandt aod Wild U
I'IAor. J - Millet
Suoday Sdlool· 11!:30 a....
Even!.. • 7:30 p.m.

·" •

r

Pa

II

Sundar School • II o.m.
Worshtp . IOa.m. 6 p.m.
Wedneiday Service$ · 7 p.m.

A sse mbly of God
l..lbotV "-1&gt;17 olGod

F l n l - n Boetlst
4l872 Pomeroy P1kc
Putor: E. Lamu O'Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woralllp • JO:'!S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednclday ServiQCI • 7;00 p.m.

Llurol Dill FNe Medoorlbl Cbii'Cio
Putor: Olarles Swiger
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W011hlp · 10:30 a.m. alid 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service • 7:00p.m.

Bl'lldford Cbwdl or Chrill
Comer of St. R~ 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minlltcr: Dou&amp; Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a. m.~ 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne!dly Services • 7:00p.m.

L;-~lter - Day Samts
Reoopobed Cbun;b or JIIUI Cltrist
ol Latter Day Salnla
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:00p.m.

Hlckor7 Hllil Cburcll or Clorist
EY&amp;nJclist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worahlp · 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services.· 7 p.m.

IAopvlllt Chrildao Cbordl
Suuday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday. Service 7:30p.m.

The Clturch of Jetu.

Homlod&lt; GI'OYe Cborch
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sundaf school-10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

BopCist
Gn:at
Bend,
Route
124, Cltordl
RKine, OH
Pastor : Damicl Mecca
su ...ay School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 6:00 p.m.

Cbrilt or Liller·Day Salata
St.-Rt. !60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Sc:hooi!0:20-!!a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Se~Viee 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina ~tin1. 1at Thu,._ -7 p.m.

lleednlllt Cbur&lt;b orChrilt
Pucor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 o.m.
Wor1~ip Service: t0:¥t a.m. ,
Bllllt Sllidy, Wedncoday, 6:30p.m.

•••

Old Bo111a1 fno WUIIIopllst Cbrdl
28601 SL RL 7, Middleport
Sunday Scllool· 10 a.m.
Evenlna · 7:00p.m.
·
Tltllfi!IIY Servk:n 1 7•00 .

Dt- Clollldl or Cbrlsl
Putnr: Juatla Clm(lbell
Sunday scbool9:30 a.m.
~an Will, aupor!r\tcnden\
Sunday worilllp • 10:30 a.m.

lliMalde Boptlll Cltlll'tb

Luthcra 11
St. J..o Lullleno Cbllldl

Piae Grove

'

'

I

Rev. Dould C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School · IO:OO.o.m.
Our S.'lour IAIIIK!ran Churdl

St.Rt.143justoii'Rt. 7
Putor: Rev. JIII'IU R. Acree, Sr.
Sundar SchOol ·IO a.m.
Worah•p • !!a.m. 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Services -7 p.m:

Cburdlof Cbrilt
lnteraedion 7 ind 124 W
Evanplilt: Dennis S.raenl
Sullday Bible Study · 9:30a.m.
Wonblp: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Viclorr ...... ladef:a d•t
525 N. 2nd SL Mlddteport

PUior. Jama E. Keoaee
Worahip. 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednc!dly Servl..s • 7 p.m.

p.- -llltodlt
Pator : Arlu1 flurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wol&gt;hlp • II a.m.

Socnla.iColl' ~

Alii Slioel Cltoordl
Alii St.. Middleport
Putol Lea Hayman
Sunday Schooi · IO:OO a.m.
Sunday Service • 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvl&lt;e • 7:00p.m.

Mloenvllo
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

11arYe1t iloinocb Mlalstrla
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pu ton: Rev. Mary and Huold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

PeoriC..pel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WoBhip • 10 a.m.

.........,
Pulor: Connie FJ•res

Aarlpe uro Ceroter
"FUII.Qoopol Church'
Paston John &amp;. Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon
nJ-5017
Service lime: Sunday 10!30 a.m.
Wedneaday 7 pm

Sunday School-9:15 a. m.
Wonhip • 10:30 1.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.
Rock Soriflp
Putor: Kekh Rader
Sund1y School · 9:U a.m.
.
Worshi~ • 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowshtp, Sunday. 6 p.m.

Cillo"
923 S. Thin! St., Middleporo
Falllt

Pwor Mlc:htc:l Ptnaio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednadoy oervlcc, 7 p.m.

Rutlud
Sunday School · 9:30 1.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Thurldly SeiVicet • 7 p.m.

Cbriltloo ftllowaWp .Ceater
Stlem St., Rutland
Putor: Robert E. Muaser
Suoday Schq61· 10 a.m.
Wo11hlp -11:1' !-m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~""' • 7 p.m.

SolemCeultr
Paslor: ROn Fierce
Sunday School- 9:1! a.m.
Worship • lO:U a.m.

u-. C b - htlowllllp Cbur&lt;b
Sunday ~ervice, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Fc;llowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday sen~lce, 7:00p.m.

SrloWY. .
Sunday School-10 ~ .m .
Worship . 9 t .m.

_, _

follh Poll GQapol.Cburdl
LonaBottom
PIISillr: Steve Reed
Sunday ~ • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 9:lO'o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday • 7 p.m.
Ftlday • followahlp oervl&lt;e 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worshlp - 9 a...,
Wednesday Se!VIoos -'10 a.m.

CaniMI-Sut...
Carmel &amp;: Buhao Rdl.
Racine, Ohio ·
Pastor: Dewaine Stuller
Sunda, Schoo · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Tht BelleYert' f - l p Mlalalr7
New Umc Rd,. 'Rutland
Putor: Rev. Mu~ 1. Robla10n
Services: wee~. 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2::lf,P.m. .
.

MoralnaSior

Ho-vllh c..,.li.lty Cborch
Putor: Theroll~rham
Sunday · 9:30 a.m. ond 7 p.m ..
Wednesday •

Putor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School • 11a.m.
Worship • 10 o.m.

! .m.

M~ Com.....,.Cbun:h
515 Pearl St., Middlepoll

EuiiAtolt
Putror. Brian Hukneu
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wedno!dly • 7 p.m.

Putor: Sam Ander10n
Sllllday School tO a.m.
Evenina • 7:30p.m.

Wedneoday Se!VIce • 7:30p.m.

~ ··~~-&lt;:'

••

Coolvlle Vnl!ed ~~t••1•111 ~
Pastor: Helen Kline ·
Coolvlllt Cbon:b
Maio &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· Worship·9a.m.
Tue!dly Servlr:oo • 7 p.m.

,_...., ,

Bethel Church

Flllll VIlify 1'lborude Cburdl
•
Bailey Run Roid
Pastor: Rev. EmmeU· Rawao~
Sunday ~vcniBa 7 p.r,~.
Thursday Setvicc • 7 p.m.
Sy-Mialoa
1411Brldaeman 51., Syracu,.
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Evenlli&amp;· 6 p.m.

Wednoaday Sorvlcoa • 7 p.m.

Mllaa Cooperadvel'ultll
. foi-Cio*&lt;

AI-

Putot: Jaoe Beattie
Sunday School · 9:30a.m. •
Wonhip • 11 1.m., 6:30p.m. .

Cllaler

Co nq req;-~t ton a I
. 'l'rlolly ~

Socond &amp;: Lynn, POIDOI!IY

Ptlcor: Rev. Crai&amp; CI'OIIinan

Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School9:!5 a.m.

•

·

Co. Rd.6l
Sunday Sc:bool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

N;lzilrene
Middleport Cbllldl or tire N Putor: Allen Mlclcap
Sunday School· 9"'10 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm., ~:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcos• 7 p.m.
Put«: ADen MlclcaP

Putor. Jaoe Beattie

Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m. .

).. Puux: Bob Randolph
Wonhlp' • 9;30 a.m.
Sunday Scllool-10:30 a.m.
- ~...-.

Sunday School .. 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp • IO:lO a,m.

lieediYIIe
Worship • 9:30a.m •
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Finl Sundty of Month· ?:00 p.m. scrvlw
Tu_.. . . . . St. Paul

Pastor: lane Beattie
. Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wol&gt;hip ·IOa.m.
Tuesday Sc:Nices • 7:30p.m.

-~~~~ f'lllowslllp
QurdloltlloNPuiOr: Toreu Waldack
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Worahlp ·10;45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
s , _ CMidoollbe N PIIIor Mike Adkins
Sunday SChool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne!dly Servl"' • 7 p.m.
.._..,CMidoorllooNPuaor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • !O:lO 1.11. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVIm • 7 p.m.

-FRIDAY'S

.--GQapo~-

Bald Knob, on Co . Rd. 31
Putar; Rev. R..., wmronl
Sunday ~1 - 9:30 Lm.
Worshlj&gt;- 7 p.m.

GHLIGHTS

Cba"

Wblte'o
We*ju
Coolville1Road
Pasf:or: Rev. Pbillip Ridenour
Sunday Sche ·
9:30 a.m.
Worship
• a.m.
Wedacsday rv ice • 7 p.m.
Fain'ltw JllbltCioon:b
Letart, W.Vo. Rt. I
Pucor: Brian May
Sunday School · .9:30a.m.
WOI!hip -1:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

M1lp hoGp Cllmp
. bepwMondly

.-'..
.•.'

Paltb Fellowship Crusode lor Cbrilll
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dickcna
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvll')' Bible Churcll
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.

Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday ~hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedne!dly Service • 7:30p.m.

.•

..

-,
.,·.,
_

Sdvomllle Word of Follh
· Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 Lm.
EYcning • 7 p.m.

I

.,'
•'.•

' ~olclq ure Cbur&lt;b
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

,

.•
...,•

Pastor: Mike Foreman

Pa!tor:' Emeritus Lawtence Fore man
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

•
',
.•
'
•·,•

Cllftoo T - Cblll'&lt;b
Oilton, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

New Ule VIctory c..ter
3nJ Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pa5lor: Bill Staten
·
Sunday Sc:Nioeo - 10 a.m. &amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m .

,•

Full Goa pel C~IU'dlol lbe Urlaa Sa.tor
Rt 338, Anliquit'

Pastor: Jesse Monis
Assl. Puton: Jim Morris
Service•: Saturday 7:30p.m,

.

'

Gnd'oTemoleorl'ralae
311i65 McQuire lid. Pomeroy, Ohio
Putor: Wt,ne Balcolm
. Services: Thurs. Nltaa 7:00 pm
New church tfo Sunday service esttbUalaedt
Penteco s t;-~ I
Peule&lt;olltal AaaeriliJI1
St. RL 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
~sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servias • 7 p.m.
.

Mlddltport l'elrltcostll
ThirdAvc.
PasiOr: ReY. Clark Baker
Sunday Scbool-10 a.m.
Evenlna • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se!Vicea • 7:00p.m.

-

Sunday School·· 9:3oa.m.
Worship • 10;30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

_,.

Monf~Qur&lt;b
Sunday ll&lt;lll&lt;ii\. • 10 a.m.
Wol&gt;hl~l a.m.
Wlldnarlay
7 p.m:

"'J foe ·

Flllb~ur&lt;b ·

Sanda=· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:45•o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
•
ML OR'" Ca

!111101 CIHiftlt

r-r. Law..... Busb

Sunday Schocil- 9;30 a.m.
Evcnina- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.
VoltodFallltCburdl
Rt. 7 oa Pomeroy By·Pau
Puto&lt;: Rev. Rflben E. Smith. Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30 a:m.
Worship · 1~:30·a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday-Service • 7 p.m.

Pull GeaPot u p -

!A' lf~\11 •·.t;.··nO~~~· ·
Syracuae tim tJoltell •
Pastor: Rev. Kri11na Robinson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ lla.m.
lllrrilooYUit l'relby'IJilu Cburcll
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday ;&gt;cllool • 9:45 a.m.
Mlddltpoot Prwb taiu

Sunday Scilool • ~a.m.
Wortbip 10 a.m.
w

Scvcnth · D &lt;ly Adventist
Sorioalll-1101 Alho-*t

MLH..- V•lledlo Cbriot Cburcll
~ Tex?J Community off CR 82
Pulor: ~rt· Saaders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
\Ycdnelday Service• · 7:30 p.m.

on Swc ·Rouae 124

Puk!r: Rev. Jlobert Markley
' Sunday Sdlool- II a.m. - • • 'i
Sunday Worship • 10;00 a.m. &amp;: 7:00p.m.
· Wednnclay Services· 7:30p.m.
..
Wednelday You'tb Service· 7:30p.m. ~

._n St., Pomeroy

..

'INSURANCK

current Church
.~·
_.,,

EHC118 IIIC.

-~-XII•

1.

listings..

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
'
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Thanb .b s unto
God fDt his: .·
uns:fJaqlaibla gift.

II Cot. 9:1.5·

Waltrip, who won the race on his 17th

bir.eRt .far 011ch

RIO GRANDE - Former
Eastern softball ace Rebecca
Evans rounded out her career at
the University of Rio Grande by
earning top academic honors.
Evans, an elementary education
~or with a 3.79 GPA, earned
NAJA Schplar-Athlete and
American Mideast Conference
scholar-athlete honors this sea-

•••

:
..... Dodpn
'
..

: :~INCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds completed tlieir
~ 1 trade for backup shortstop
Jqan Castro by sending minorleigue pitcher Kenny Lutz to the
Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday. .·
~"The Reds received Castro and
J1?0,000 in cash from the
Dodgers for a player to be named.
. C::astro is hitting . .261 in 10
~es, including 10 starts.

\·

\

\

."''

'
GOING, GOING,
GONEI' .,... Carl Everett of Boston watches his seventh inning home run sail out of Fenway
,,,
Park: The Red Sllx shut out Cleveland 3-0 Thursday. (AP)
-

ci-f::A NCEY HONORED

:.WMhlnpMI
St. post
.

. ' -~

2114 Sou1h SGnd Aye.•Middllport, OH 41111111
740-11112-5141
llrur:o R. • Dlr.-

Pooo•or. OH 45711''·

580 EArll 1oto1n StrMI •
740-11112-5444

!francis FLORIST
M•YI• Courur~ Olde11 Fl&lt;&gt;rill
.fllt.I IIIIP .,,.
740·992·2644
74().992-6298

l.n Vo S.ool !\Nor T""""li. .... S,..W c-

..

excellent fielding plays, a sliding
catch by right fielder Nixon in
the third and a diving stop by
second baseman jeff Frye in the

fifth.
Facing Cleveland in the fifth
game of the AL division series
last year, he pitched six hitless
relief innings in his first appearance since hurting his back in
the series opener.
Colon was sharp through
seven innings before allowing
RBI singles by Brian Daubach
and Mike Stanley in the eighth.
He gave up three runs on nine
hits in 7 2-3 innings, striking
out nine and walking two.
Besides Branyan, the only
runners against Martinez on
Thursday Wl[re R:-oberto Alomar, who .-cached on a throwing error by catcher Jason
Varitek in the first, and Richie
Sexson, who walked after
Br~yan doubled in the fifth.
But Martinez then fielded Einar
Diaz's grounder and stepped on
first base himself to end the
inning.
Alomar left the game in the
third with a head contusion
after Varitek's throw hit him in
the back of the helmet. He was
listed as day-to-day.
Martinez faced the Indians for
the first time since April 30
when he was ejec,ted after hitting Alomar with a pitch in the
eighth. Earlier that game, Martinez sent Diaz sprawling with a
high, inside pitch. Cleveland's
Charles Nagy then hit Jose
Offerman with a pitch. Martinez and Boston manager Jimy
Williams were ejected after Alo-

, , ..... 'MM. .... _..

.-

.

&lt;sPOKANE, Wash . (AP) Marshall Athletic Director Lance
~st is among six candidates for
die:vacant athletic director's job
at ~ashington State, a· newspaper
reports.
'West was identified by the
.Spokane Spokesman-Review as
· wong the candidates ·to replace
Rick Dickson, who left to
~ecome . a~hletlc director at
Thlane.
"The others are WAC Commissioner Karl Beruon and athletic
directors Doug Woolard of Saint
Louis, Wayne Hogan of Montana,
Mike Bohn of Idaho arid Jim
Sterk of Portland State.
· -West, a native of Pull!nan,
Wash., where Washington State is
' located, is under contrac~ at Mar- .
shall through June 2003 .

BOSTON (AP) - Pedro
Martinez just keeps getting better.
His mastery of the Cleveland
Indians grew even stronge,r
Thursday night as he allowed
one hit in eight innings, winning his second straight pitcher's
duel, 3-0.
Carl Everett's 21st homer of
the season, leading off the sevemh inning · against Bartolo .
Colon (6-3), gave . the Boston
Red Sox the olfense they needed as Martinez (9-2) allowed no ·
runs for the fourth time in his
last five starts. Derek Lowe
pitched the ninth for his -13th
save in 15 chances, allowing one
hit.
In his previous srut May 28,
Martinez !)eat Roger Clemens
and the New York Yankees 2-0
on Trot Nixon's two-run homer
in the ninth.
The AL's 1998 Cy Young
award winner is 8-0 in his
career against
Cleveland,
including 2-0 in the playoffi,
and handed the Indians their
first shutout of the season.
Martinez ·extended his score'less streak to 22 innings and
lowered his ERA to 0. 95. Perhaps ·even more impressive is the
number of hits he's allowed per
nine innings, 4.75.
struck
out 10 and walked one.
He showed no ill effects from
missing his last scheduled start
with a sore left side Sai:Jlrday
night in Philadelphia. Pitching
for t}!e first time in' 11 days,
Martinez allowed only a clean
ground-rule double to right
field by Russell Branyan with
two outs in the fifth.
Martinez was helped by two

He

:_;,.,.n~uan AD up far

~i•~er ~umriil ~

try, said afterward that Hammond was a
cheerleader as they wondered if they
could make the final fou r laps when the
fuel pressure began to flirt with zero.
"Each time I thought I was out, I told
Jeff and he'd say, 'Shake, baby, shake,"' Waltrip said, meaning swerve the car slightly
to slosh the remaining fuel around. " I said,
'I can make it:Then I drafted, and I drafted and I drafted."
Although he was clean that day, Hammond was to be caught in what is called
"the gray area."
Later in 1989, during a pre-race inspec-

it."

'•
· . EAST MEIGS -There will be ·
a ·music benefit in the Eastern
High . School gymnasium today
fi'om 7 p.m. to II p.m. to raise
~oney for the Don Jackson Bendit Fund.
· Jackson, a long- time coach in
l~e district, was stricken with
cancer and has ainassed huge hospieal and 'medical biDs.
· ' The benefit will feature country music, bluegrass and gospel.
Some of the area's finest bands
i.vill donate their time for the
cause, including Stoney Creek,
Blllegrass Country, and various
· gospel singers. ·
.. Concessions will be available
along with various items for auction and drawings for door prizes.

-

228 w.

two championships as a crew chief. He
and Waltrip were together for one . more
title, and would share another 3 1 trips to.
the winner's circle.
T he most unforgettable came in 1989,
when Waltrip's bad luck in the Daytona
500 reversed itself and he won by stretching his gas.
The 53-lap run was met with skepticism. But NASCAR didn 't find the type
of hidden hoses sometimes used by cheating crew chiefS to increase the fuel load .
Asked how much gas remained in the
tank, an inspector said: " For 55 I'd drink

East.rntohost

::Reds c:ompllle bide

l!dao Volled 81....,.111 Cbrilt
2 1/2 mllea north of Roedsvllle

Soulb Betllil N..,T-....t
Sliver Ridp
Plllor: Robert Bomer
. SundaY School • 9a.ll.
Sun. Wonlllp. 10:10 a."'., 6 p.m.
WednOiday S..VIce • 7 p.m.

"Ffflllllrlnfl ~ Frild Chicken•

and has called the shots fo r 43 victories in
19 years. No active crew chief has won
nearly as many races .
And none certainly can match his
record for high-profile bosses - from
Darrell Waltrip to Junior Johnson to Rick
Hendrick to Jack R oush.
Hammond started as a tire changer for
Waltrip in 1974. Eight years later, he
became a crew chief for Waltrip, who by
that time was driving for Johnson.
"I went to Junior and told him I wamed the opportunity to run a team;' Hammond said.
That was 1982, when Waltrip won 12
races and Hammond got the first of his

Martinez
blanks Tribe

Evarts was the ace of the URG
pitching staff this season. She finished . wiih a 6-5 record and a
2.28 ERA.
: Evans recorded 38 strikeouts in
S.!l: innings, earning AU- AMC
honorable mention.
: ' Rio Grande finished 13-22 this
$eason.

Untied Bretht en

33045 ljlilnd ROod, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Ewnina7:30 p.m.
Tuesday A 1\ur!dly • 7;30 p.m.

Crow'a Fimlly
ReataLnnt
i
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Crew chief Jeff'Hammond sits near a
shiny, sleek car almost pining for the old
days of dented-up racers o n dusty dirt
tracks.
"We used to bring up the cars on
flatbed trucks. It was a much simpler
,
time," Hammond) aid.
There's nothinJ.'Simple about the trucks
used nowadays. ' At Michigan Speedway
this weekend, Hammond will unload
.Chad Little's Ford .fium a hauler that's
really a tnveling 'hce shop and prepare a
Winston Cup car
., for the 501st time.
He has learned much in more than a
quarter-century on the NASC AR circuit,

son.

Mulberry Hll. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawilwky
Saturdaf Services:
Sabbllth School· 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

HOICE·

Ful-&lt;tf

ROCK SPRINGS - · The
Meigs. boys basketball camp will
l;le held on June 12- 16 fiom 9
~ . Ql. until noon at Meigs High
S(:hool's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
· : lfhe camp is for kids entering
(tUrd through ninth grades. Cost
Of.the camp is $40 ond includes
five days of instruction in basketball fundamentals, camp t-shirt
anll various prizes. Instructors
WliJ include Meigs High School
coaching staff and players.
!tegistrntion will be in.the high
school gym on June 12, from 8
a.m. to 9 am. For more information contact Chris Stout at 9926600.

NAStAR: Jeff Hammond's on the right track

Presbyterian

Wednesday Servl&lt;e • 7 p.m.

ML Marioll Qllldl o!Gerl
Milo Hill Rd, Racine
r-r. Brioo VII
Sunday School • 9:4.! a.m.

II....,...,.

161 Mulberry Avo., Pomeftl)', 992-51191
Putor: Rev. Wll"' E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15(o.m.; M- 5:30p.m.
Suo. Con. -11:45·9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mua • 9-.JO Lm.
Dailey Maa • 8:30a.m.

Other Churches

Healb (Midolopol1) ·
Pu tor: Vcm•pye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 1.m.

Tor&lt;bCbrrn;~

Cbordl of God
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. !60
Putor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worlhip • ! la.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

C.ltil ol1c

'Pallor: Bob Robi11.10n
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Worship • 9 a. m.

ML Olive United Metbodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pilum Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshlo • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thundty Service• - 7 p.m.

Paotor: Ro!v. David R-11
Sunday Sdloolalld Wonlllp· 10 a.m.
Evoaln1 Servloea-- 6:30p.m.
Wedneeday Sen~lcea · 6:30 ~· '"·

P11oor: ll&amp;v. Paul Taylor
Sunday Scilool· 10 a.m.
Evcnia&amp; -7 .p.m.
Wednesday SCrvicea • 7 p.m.

,._ .,

Orond Stn:et
Sundiy School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wcdriuday Services • 8 p.m.

Apple aod Second Sts.

SaltmSt.

.

r.rttucl nnt Cb- or till Nua""'
Putor; William lulltis
Sunday Schooi -IO:OOa.m.
Momin1 Worship · 10:4S a.m.
Sunday Se!Vloe • 6:30p.m.

GnlluoVoi... Madoodlal
Wonlli~ • 9:30 Lm. (111 A 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rrlol 4111 Sun)
Wed~y Service • 7:30p.m.

s,.- PlniCioordl or God

Rrodudfno_..,...

Fllltwoodl
Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worahlp • 11a.m.

Pallor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday Schooi·IO o.m.
Worahip • 11 a.m.
· Wednesday 7 p.m.

Klnasbury Road
Pu1o0r: Clyde Hcndet10n
·
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonllop Servia: !0:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Servia:l

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ' 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicos • 1 p.m.

0,11YIIIt Coiro.-IIY Clturdl

....... Qllldl of God
Putor: Ron Hallo
Sunday Wcnhip • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnelclay Sorvloea . 7 p.m.

Sunday 'School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenlna ·6:00p.m.

Putor: kt1tb Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Page Bl

~ 1-. dau·leet' 111 Clnardl

Rlflllld Clorlrdl ol Ore I l l - •
Puto&lt;; Rev. Samuel W. Buyo

Eo~rtoa

HociriiiiJIOI'I Clourcll

Eve nina . 6 p.m.

"'"~ Boplllt

Sunday Sdlool· 9:45 a.m.
W011hlp - II a.m.
Wfdneoday S..VIea • 7:30 p.m.

Unit ed M etho dist

Church of God

ML Morloll lloptlal
Fourth A Main St., Middleport
Put«: Rev. Ollbat CraiJ, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W011hlp • 10:45 a.m.

St. Palll Lulloeno Church
Comer Syc:a.more &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sundoy School • 9:45 a.m. ·
Worship -1 to.m.

Clooalor Cltordl oltllo N Purot: lltY. Hertocrr Orate
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
W"'**! • II Lm., 6 p.m.
WednadOy Sc:Nices • 7 p.m.

Corro-11)' Cliur&lt;b
OffRt.l24
r-r. Edoel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Woralllp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

-~ oiCiorillla
~Voloo
Hanlord, W.Va.
Pulor:lim Huahea
Sunday School·l!a.m.
WOIIblp · 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wed-oy Services· 7:30p.m.

Sunday Scllool • 10 a.m.
Wonlolp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
We&lt;lneaday Services • 7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Vt.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday Scl\ool • 10:00 a.m.
Wol&gt;hlp • I! a.m.

Ceolnla-

Aabo..,. (Sy , _)
'-or. Bob ltobiuon

Tow111hip Rd., -468C
Sundly School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 t .m.

Ch liSit itll Unton

Falllt ...... Cloucll
Railroad Sr. Mason

..

Hyaell Ruo Holnm Durch
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
.
Worship • 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Tbur!dly Bible Study and Youllo . 7 p.m.

Rudolld Cbur&lt;b orCbrlllt
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Wor1bip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

MI. Ualoa Boptlot
Putor ; Joe N. S.yn:
SunGoy School-9:45 a.m.
EYenina · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 6:30p.m.

•
•
•

Weaityu Jllblt Hollotu Durdo
1S Pead St., Middleport.
Puaor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sundly Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday SeiVI&lt;e ·7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:30 a.m.

SUYerRuaiiOpdlt
Putor: Steven K. Lillie
Sunday School · !Oa.m.
Worship • !!a.m., 7:00p.m.
W~dnetday Services- 7:00p.m.

t

Pine Gn1vt Bible Holt- Chord!
1/2 mileoffRt. 32S
.
Pu 1or: R.ev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worahlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Pasaor: Totp Runyon

- Pu10r.Flnlllopllsl
Rick Rult
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hlp -10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

•·.

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: ReY. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

-bill')' Church orChrilt

flnt Bopllllt Cblll't~
Putor: Mark Monow.
6lh and Palmer $1., Middleport
Sunday School • 9:15 a.m.
Worship· 10:1' a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

tf.

Roae or Slri1mn Holllltll Cb•rch

Tuppm Plohl Cburdl o!Cbrill
Instrumental '
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Commu,nion • 10 a.m.
Sunday Schooi -!O:!S a.m.
Youlh· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

East Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wora hlp • !0:30 a.m.

Qo"

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sund ay School 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice· 7:00p.m.

ZloD Chlll'th or Cluut .
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastoc: Roaer Wataon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

.........,Y nnt 11op11s1

•

CalVIU')' Ptlptm

...,.allow 1W1t Cburcll oiCbriot
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Rutlud flnllapdlt Cbur&lt;b
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
WOI"' hip · 10:45 a.m.

•
•

Duvllt. Holt.. d urdl
310!7 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sund1y worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wcdnnday prayer ac:JVii.'C • 7 p.m.

1st and Jrd Sunday

Dittr.

•
•
•'

Putor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Sueet, Rutland
Sunday Wonhi1;&gt;"'" 10:00 a.m.
Sundly Scrvace-7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· I0:30a.m.
Pastor-Jcftrey Wallace

Hope Bolllllt Cburdl (Southem)
Puror: Jim
570 Grant St., Mldd pon
Sunday ldlool • 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp • I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

•

c -m....,.Cburch

Keao Cbon:b orCbrlsl

Baptt~t
Marlllllllo lloqrllot Cbllldl
Bwllnaham • 742-7606
Pastor: John Sw1naon
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Service 11:00 a.m.
EYenlna Scrvltc · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice~ 7:30 p.m.

•
•
•

Holt ness

Mlddltpol1 Cburdl orCbrilt
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Miniller: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wol&gt;hlpo 8:15, 10:30 a..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday S..Vk:n • 7 p.m.

P.O. Bo• 467, Ouddina Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Putor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Ser~lceo- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

•

pllellarft
326 E. in St., Pumeroy
Re'tl . Jamu Bcl'llld.l, Rev. Katharin Folltr
Rev. Deborah Rlnkio, Cieri)'
Sunday: Adult Educatioo •
Sunday Sdlool 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Euchariot S:OO p.m.

r.......,.
Walllde Clollldl ol Cllrtst
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Buick Open - Day 1, Page BJ
_,...,,,.". Doolan, ]ang shMe lead, Page B3
:vu..oll roundup, Page B8
~oc•~er back on track?, Page B8

..

Gnct~

1

The Daily Sentinel
~ • .,.., ·

Eptscop.ll

0) a.rdl of Qdlt
212 W. Main St.
Ministet: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonllipo 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.Nk:n • 7 p.m.

New U maRoad
Sunday, 10 ...,, ond 7:30 p.m.
Wedneoday, 7:30 p.m.

.

.....

CllUrch of Clmst

Clollldl or J - &lt;:.rill
Paldl

Friday, June 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

•

CHANCIY HONORID ~ Longtime Meigs High School football coach Charles Chancey wBs honored
recently·at the annuaf'Melgs Marauder Band Memorial Golf Tournament. Pictured from left to right Is
his son Mike, wife M~ry, Charlie and' son Rick. Mike; following In his father's footsteps, Is now the
Marauder foo~all coac_t) with Rick as one of his assistants. Nineteen -teams played In the tournament
deaplte a rain that fall almoat tha entire tournament. The team of Shawn Baker, Mett -Baker, Don Nel·
aon and Jaff Nelson battled the elements and fired a 13-under par to win the tournament.

•

-calls it a
career with 49ers
SANTA CLARA, Cali{. (AP) pionship legacy, leaves the game
- Steve Young still w.mts and as the highest-rated passer in the
believes he can play. That's just NFL's SO-year history.
not enough to keep his brilliam . He also was a dazzling, powerful runner, rushing for an NFL
career going.
Young,. sidelined since Sep- ~cord 43 touchdowns, includtember by a devastating hit that ing a tackle-busting 49- yard run
caused his foqrth concussi,on in against Minnesota ln 1988 that
three years, is walking away into endures as a testament to his
rough-and-tumble style.
a reluctant retirement.
General manager Bill Walsh is
The two-time league MVP,
who led the San Francisco 49ers aware of Young's decision and
to a Super Bowl title in the confirmed he would make an
1994 season, will announce his anR!)Uncement Monday. Walsh
retirement at a farewell news would say only that all signs
conference Monday. I
point to Young retiring.
Two team sources, spealcing
"I think we all have a sense of
on condition of anonymity, said what's occurring.~' Walsh said
the 38-year-ol\1 Young, married before leaving team headquarin March and now an expectant tim Thursday ev~ning for a
father, spent months agonizing weekend getaway: "But it's for
over what to do before finally Steve Young now to do the personal statements and relate his
calling it quits.
"He's made up his mind," one · feelings to you."
Walsh added that the 49cn
source said Thursday.
"The day has been set;' the will go ahead and pay Young a
other club source said. "Tiie $1 million roster bonus that was
coming due on Saturday.
only issue is the setting."
"That is a reflection of .our
Young, who succeeded Hall
of Farner Joe Montana and went
on to c~ out his own cham.............. ~ .... 12

\~

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• '1-.

Page A 8 • The Deily SentiMI

,

l\postoi1C
Cloonll " . . _ Cllltll t

VoaZandt aod Wild U
I'IAor. J - Millet
Suoday Sdlool· 11!:30 a....
Even!.. • 7:30 p.m.

·" •

r

Pa

II

Sundar School • II o.m.
Worshtp . IOa.m. 6 p.m.
Wedneiday Service$ · 7 p.m.

A sse mbly of God
l..lbotV "-1&gt;17 olGod

F l n l - n Boetlst
4l872 Pomeroy P1kc
Putor: E. Lamu O'Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woralllp • JO:'!S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednclday ServiQCI • 7;00 p.m.

Llurol Dill FNe Medoorlbl Cbii'Cio
Putor: Olarles Swiger
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W011hlp · 10:30 a.m. alid 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service • 7:00p.m.

Bl'lldford Cbwdl or Chrill
Comer of St. R~ 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minlltcr: Dou&amp; Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a. m.~ 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne!dly Services • 7:00p.m.

L;-~lter - Day Samts
Reoopobed Cbun;b or JIIUI Cltrist
ol Latter Day Salnla
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:00p.m.

Hlckor7 Hllil Cburcll or Clorist
EY&amp;nJclist Mike Moore
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worahlp · 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services.· 7 p.m.

IAopvlllt Chrildao Cbordl
Suuday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday. Service 7:30p.m.

The Clturch of Jetu.

Homlod&lt; GI'OYe Cborch
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sundaf school-10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

BopCist
Gn:at
Bend,
Route
124, Cltordl
RKine, OH
Pastor : Damicl Mecca
su ...ay School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 6:00 p.m.

Cbrilt or Liller·Day Salata
St.-Rt. !60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Sc:hooi!0:20-!!a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Se~Viee 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakina ~tin1. 1at Thu,._ -7 p.m.

lleednlllt Cbur&lt;b orChrilt
Pucor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30 o.m.
Wor1~ip Service: t0:¥t a.m. ,
Bllllt Sllidy, Wedncoday, 6:30p.m.

•••

Old Bo111a1 fno WUIIIopllst Cbrdl
28601 SL RL 7, Middleport
Sunday Scllool· 10 a.m.
Evenlna · 7:00p.m.
·
Tltllfi!IIY Servk:n 1 7•00 .

Dt- Clollldl or Cbrlsl
Putnr: Juatla Clm(lbell
Sunday scbool9:30 a.m.
~an Will, aupor!r\tcnden\
Sunday worilllp • 10:30 a.m.

lliMalde Boptlll Cltlll'tb

Luthcra 11
St. J..o Lullleno Cbllldl

Piae Grove

'

'

I

Rev. Dould C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School · IO:OO.o.m.
Our S.'lour IAIIIK!ran Churdl

St.Rt.143justoii'Rt. 7
Putor: Rev. JIII'IU R. Acree, Sr.
Sundar SchOol ·IO a.m.
Worah•p • !!a.m. 6 p.m.
Wedneldly Services -7 p.m:

Cburdlof Cbrilt
lnteraedion 7 ind 124 W
Evanplilt: Dennis S.raenl
Sullday Bible Study · 9:30a.m.
Wonblp: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Viclorr ...... ladef:a d•t
525 N. 2nd SL Mlddteport

PUior. Jama E. Keoaee
Worahip. 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednc!dly Servl..s • 7 p.m.

p.- -llltodlt
Pator : Arlu1 flurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wol&gt;hlp • II a.m.

Socnla.iColl' ~

Alii Slioel Cltoordl
Alii St.. Middleport
Putol Lea Hayman
Sunday Schooi · IO:OO a.m.
Sunday Service • 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvl&lt;e • 7:00p.m.

Mloenvllo
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

11arYe1t iloinocb Mlalstrla
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pu ton: Rev. Mary and Huold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

PeoriC..pel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WoBhip • 10 a.m.

.........,
Pulor: Connie FJ•res

Aarlpe uro Ceroter
"FUII.Qoopol Church'
Paston John &amp;. Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon
nJ-5017
Service lime: Sunday 10!30 a.m.
Wedneaday 7 pm

Sunday School-9:15 a. m.
Wonhip • 10:30 1.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.
Rock Soriflp
Putor: Kekh Rader
Sund1y School · 9:U a.m.
.
Worshi~ • 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowshtp, Sunday. 6 p.m.

Cillo"
923 S. Thin! St., Middleporo
Falllt

Pwor Mlc:htc:l Ptnaio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednadoy oervlcc, 7 p.m.

Rutlud
Sunday School · 9:30 1.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Thurldly SeiVicet • 7 p.m.

Cbriltloo ftllowaWp .Ceater
Stlem St., Rutland
Putor: Robert E. Muaser
Suoday Schq61· 10 a.m.
Wo11hlp -11:1' !-m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~""' • 7 p.m.

SolemCeultr
Paslor: ROn Fierce
Sunday School- 9:1! a.m.
Worship • lO:U a.m.

u-. C b - htlowllllp Cbur&lt;b
Sunday ~ervice, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Fc;llowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday sen~lce, 7:00p.m.

SrloWY. .
Sunday School-10 ~ .m .
Worship . 9 t .m.

_, _

follh Poll GQapol.Cburdl
LonaBottom
PIISillr: Steve Reed
Sunday ~ • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 9:lO'o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday • 7 p.m.
Ftlday • followahlp oervl&lt;e 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worshlp - 9 a...,
Wednesday Se!VIoos -'10 a.m.

CaniMI-Sut...
Carmel &amp;: Buhao Rdl.
Racine, Ohio ·
Pastor: Dewaine Stuller
Sunda, Schoo · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Tht BelleYert' f - l p Mlalalr7
New Umc Rd,. 'Rutland
Putor: Rev. Mu~ 1. Robla10n
Services: wee~. 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2::lf,P.m. .
.

MoralnaSior

Ho-vllh c..,.li.lty Cborch
Putor: Theroll~rham
Sunday · 9:30 a.m. ond 7 p.m ..
Wednesday •

Putor: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School • 11a.m.
Worship • 10 o.m.

! .m.

M~ Com.....,.Cbun:h
515 Pearl St., Middlepoll

EuiiAtolt
Putror. Brian Hukneu
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wedno!dly • 7 p.m.

Putor: Sam Ander10n
Sllllday School tO a.m.
Evenina • 7:30p.m.

Wedneoday Se!VIce • 7:30p.m.

~ ··~~-&lt;:'

••

Coolvlle Vnl!ed ~~t••1•111 ~
Pastor: Helen Kline ·
Coolvlllt Cbon:b
Maio &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· Worship·9a.m.
Tue!dly Servlr:oo • 7 p.m.

,_...., ,

Bethel Church

Flllll VIlify 1'lborude Cburdl
•
Bailey Run Roid
Pastor: Rev. EmmeU· Rawao~
Sunday ~vcniBa 7 p.r,~.
Thursday Setvicc • 7 p.m.
Sy-Mialoa
1411Brldaeman 51., Syracu,.
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Evenlli&amp;· 6 p.m.

Wednoaday Sorvlcoa • 7 p.m.

Mllaa Cooperadvel'ultll
. foi-Cio*&lt;

AI-

Putot: Jaoe Beattie
Sunday School · 9:30a.m. •
Wonhip • 11 1.m., 6:30p.m. .

Cllaler

Co nq req;-~t ton a I
. 'l'rlolly ~

Socond &amp;: Lynn, POIDOI!IY

Ptlcor: Rev. Crai&amp; CI'OIIinan

Worship 10:25 a.m.
Sunday School9:!5 a.m.

•

·

Co. Rd.6l
Sunday Sc:bool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

N;lzilrene
Middleport Cbllldl or tire N Putor: Allen Mlclcap
Sunday School· 9"'10 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm., ~:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servlcos• 7 p.m.
Put«: ADen MlclcaP

Putor. Jaoe Beattie

Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m. .

).. Puux: Bob Randolph
Wonhlp' • 9;30 a.m.
Sunday Scllool-10:30 a.m.
- ~...-.

Sunday School .. 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp • IO:lO a,m.

lieediYIIe
Worship • 9:30a.m •
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Finl Sundty of Month· ?:00 p.m. scrvlw
Tu_.. . . . . St. Paul

Pastor: lane Beattie
. Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wol&gt;hip ·IOa.m.
Tuesday Sc:Nices • 7:30p.m.

-~~~~ f'lllowslllp
QurdloltlloNPuiOr: Toreu Waldack
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Worahlp ·10;45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
s , _ CMidoollbe N PIIIor Mike Adkins
Sunday SChool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne!dly Servl"' • 7 p.m.
.._..,CMidoorllooNPuaor: Jan Lavender
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • !O:lO 1.11. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVIm • 7 p.m.

-FRIDAY'S

.--GQapo~-

Bald Knob, on Co . Rd. 31
Putar; Rev. R..., wmronl
Sunday ~1 - 9:30 Lm.
Worshlj&gt;- 7 p.m.

GHLIGHTS

Cba"

Wblte'o
We*ju
Coolville1Road
Pasf:or: Rev. Pbillip Ridenour
Sunday Sche ·
9:30 a.m.
Worship
• a.m.
Wedacsday rv ice • 7 p.m.
Fain'ltw JllbltCioon:b
Letart, W.Vo. Rt. I
Pucor: Brian May
Sunday School · .9:30a.m.
WOI!hip -1:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

M1lp hoGp Cllmp
. bepwMondly

.-'..
.•.'

Paltb Fellowship Crusode lor Cbrilll
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dickcna
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvll')' Bible Churcll
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.

Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday ~hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedne!dly Service • 7:30p.m.

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.,·.,
_

Sdvomllle Word of Follh
· Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 Lm.
EYcning • 7 p.m.

I

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•'.•

' ~olclq ure Cbur&lt;b
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

,

.•
...,•

Pastor: Mike Foreman

Pa!tor:' Emeritus Lawtence Fore man
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services ·1 p.m.

•
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•·,•

Cllftoo T - Cblll'&lt;b
Oilton, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

New Ule VIctory c..ter
3nJ Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pa5lor: Bill Staten
·
Sunday Sc:Nioeo - 10 a.m. &amp;: 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m .

,•

Full Goa pel C~IU'dlol lbe Urlaa Sa.tor
Rt 338, Anliquit'

Pastor: Jesse Monis
Assl. Puton: Jim Morris
Service•: Saturday 7:30p.m,

.

'

Gnd'oTemoleorl'ralae
311i65 McQuire lid. Pomeroy, Ohio
Putor: Wt,ne Balcolm
. Services: Thurs. Nltaa 7:00 pm
New church tfo Sunday service esttbUalaedt
Penteco s t;-~ I
Peule&lt;olltal AaaeriliJI1
St. RL 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
~sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servias • 7 p.m.
.

Mlddltport l'elrltcostll
ThirdAvc.
PasiOr: ReY. Clark Baker
Sunday Scbool-10 a.m.
Evenlna • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se!Vicea • 7:00p.m.

-

Sunday School·· 9:3oa.m.
Worship • 10;30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

_,.

Monf~Qur&lt;b
Sunday ll&lt;lll&lt;ii\. • 10 a.m.
Wol&gt;hl~l a.m.
Wlldnarlay
7 p.m:

"'J foe ·

Flllb~ur&lt;b ·

Sanda=· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:45•o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
•
ML OR'" Ca

!111101 CIHiftlt

r-r. Law..... Busb

Sunday Schocil- 9;30 a.m.
Evcnina- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.
VoltodFallltCburdl
Rt. 7 oa Pomeroy By·Pau
Puto&lt;: Rev. Rflben E. Smith. Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30 a:m.
Worship · 1~:30·a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday-Service • 7 p.m.

Pull GeaPot u p -

!A' lf~\11 •·.t;.··nO~~~· ·
Syracuae tim tJoltell •
Pastor: Rev. Kri11na Robinson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ lla.m.
lllrrilooYUit l'relby'IJilu Cburcll
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday ;&gt;cllool • 9:45 a.m.
Mlddltpoot Prwb taiu

Sunday Scilool • ~a.m.
Wortbip 10 a.m.
w

Scvcnth · D &lt;ly Adventist
Sorioalll-1101 Alho-*t

MLH..- V•lledlo Cbriot Cburcll
~ Tex?J Community off CR 82
Pulor: ~rt· Saaders
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
\Ycdnelday Service• · 7:30 p.m.

on Swc ·Rouae 124

Puk!r: Rev. Jlobert Markley
' Sunday Sdlool- II a.m. - • • 'i
Sunday Worship • 10;00 a.m. &amp;: 7:00p.m.
· Wednnclay Services· 7:30p.m.
..
Wednelday You'tb Service· 7:30p.m. ~

._n St., Pomeroy

..

'INSURANCK

current Church
.~·
_.,,

EHC118 IIIC.

-~-XII•

1.

listings..

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
'
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Thanb .b s unto
God fDt his: .·
uns:fJaqlaibla gift.

II Cot. 9:1.5·

Waltrip, who won the race on his 17th

bir.eRt .far 011ch

RIO GRANDE - Former
Eastern softball ace Rebecca
Evans rounded out her career at
the University of Rio Grande by
earning top academic honors.
Evans, an elementary education
~or with a 3.79 GPA, earned
NAJA Schplar-Athlete and
American Mideast Conference
scholar-athlete honors this sea-

•••

:
..... Dodpn
'
..

: :~INCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds completed tlieir
~ 1 trade for backup shortstop
Jqan Castro by sending minorleigue pitcher Kenny Lutz to the
Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday. .·
~"The Reds received Castro and
J1?0,000 in cash from the
Dodgers for a player to be named.
. C::astro is hitting . .261 in 10
~es, including 10 starts.

\·

\

\

."''

'
GOING, GOING,
GONEI' .,... Carl Everett of Boston watches his seventh inning home run sail out of Fenway
,,,
Park: The Red Sllx shut out Cleveland 3-0 Thursday. (AP)
-

ci-f::A NCEY HONORED

:.WMhlnpMI
St. post
.

. ' -~

2114 Sou1h SGnd Aye.•Middllport, OH 41111111
740-11112-5141
llrur:o R. • Dlr.-

Pooo•or. OH 45711''·

580 EArll 1oto1n StrMI •
740-11112-5444

!francis FLORIST
M•YI• Courur~ Olde11 Fl&lt;&gt;rill
.fllt.I IIIIP .,,.
740·992·2644
74().992-6298

l.n Vo S.ool !\Nor T""""li. .... S,..W c-

..

excellent fielding plays, a sliding
catch by right fielder Nixon in
the third and a diving stop by
second baseman jeff Frye in the

fifth.
Facing Cleveland in the fifth
game of the AL division series
last year, he pitched six hitless
relief innings in his first appearance since hurting his back in
the series opener.
Colon was sharp through
seven innings before allowing
RBI singles by Brian Daubach
and Mike Stanley in the eighth.
He gave up three runs on nine
hits in 7 2-3 innings, striking
out nine and walking two.
Besides Branyan, the only
runners against Martinez on
Thursday Wl[re R:-oberto Alomar, who .-cached on a throwing error by catcher Jason
Varitek in the first, and Richie
Sexson, who walked after
Br~yan doubled in the fifth.
But Martinez then fielded Einar
Diaz's grounder and stepped on
first base himself to end the
inning.
Alomar left the game in the
third with a head contusion
after Varitek's throw hit him in
the back of the helmet. He was
listed as day-to-day.
Martinez faced the Indians for
the first time since April 30
when he was ejec,ted after hitting Alomar with a pitch in the
eighth. Earlier that game, Martinez sent Diaz sprawling with a
high, inside pitch. Cleveland's
Charles Nagy then hit Jose
Offerman with a pitch. Martinez and Boston manager Jimy
Williams were ejected after Alo-

, , ..... 'MM. .... _..

.-

.

&lt;sPOKANE, Wash . (AP) Marshall Athletic Director Lance
~st is among six candidates for
die:vacant athletic director's job
at ~ashington State, a· newspaper
reports.
'West was identified by the
.Spokane Spokesman-Review as
· wong the candidates ·to replace
Rick Dickson, who left to
~ecome . a~hletlc director at
Thlane.
"The others are WAC Commissioner Karl Beruon and athletic
directors Doug Woolard of Saint
Louis, Wayne Hogan of Montana,
Mike Bohn of Idaho arid Jim
Sterk of Portland State.
· -West, a native of Pull!nan,
Wash., where Washington State is
' located, is under contrac~ at Mar- .
shall through June 2003 .

BOSTON (AP) - Pedro
Martinez just keeps getting better.
His mastery of the Cleveland
Indians grew even stronge,r
Thursday night as he allowed
one hit in eight innings, winning his second straight pitcher's
duel, 3-0.
Carl Everett's 21st homer of
the season, leading off the sevemh inning · against Bartolo .
Colon (6-3), gave . the Boston
Red Sox the olfense they needed as Martinez (9-2) allowed no ·
runs for the fourth time in his
last five starts. Derek Lowe
pitched the ninth for his -13th
save in 15 chances, allowing one
hit.
In his previous srut May 28,
Martinez !)eat Roger Clemens
and the New York Yankees 2-0
on Trot Nixon's two-run homer
in the ninth.
The AL's 1998 Cy Young
award winner is 8-0 in his
career against
Cleveland,
including 2-0 in the playoffi,
and handed the Indians their
first shutout of the season.
Martinez ·extended his score'less streak to 22 innings and
lowered his ERA to 0. 95. Perhaps ·even more impressive is the
number of hits he's allowed per
nine innings, 4.75.
struck
out 10 and walked one.
He showed no ill effects from
missing his last scheduled start
with a sore left side Sai:Jlrday
night in Philadelphia. Pitching
for t}!e first time in' 11 days,
Martinez allowed only a clean
ground-rule double to right
field by Russell Branyan with
two outs in the fifth.
Martinez was helped by two

He

:_;,.,.n~uan AD up far

~i•~er ~umriil ~

try, said afterward that Hammond was a
cheerleader as they wondered if they
could make the final fou r laps when the
fuel pressure began to flirt with zero.
"Each time I thought I was out, I told
Jeff and he'd say, 'Shake, baby, shake,"' Waltrip said, meaning swerve the car slightly
to slosh the remaining fuel around. " I said,
'I can make it:Then I drafted, and I drafted and I drafted."
Although he was clean that day, Hammond was to be caught in what is called
"the gray area."
Later in 1989, during a pre-race inspec-

it."

'•
· . EAST MEIGS -There will be ·
a ·music benefit in the Eastern
High . School gymnasium today
fi'om 7 p.m. to II p.m. to raise
~oney for the Don Jackson Bendit Fund.
· Jackson, a long- time coach in
l~e district, was stricken with
cancer and has ainassed huge hospieal and 'medical biDs.
· ' The benefit will feature country music, bluegrass and gospel.
Some of the area's finest bands
i.vill donate their time for the
cause, including Stoney Creek,
Blllegrass Country, and various
· gospel singers. ·
.. Concessions will be available
along with various items for auction and drawings for door prizes.

-

228 w.

two championships as a crew chief. He
and Waltrip were together for one . more
title, and would share another 3 1 trips to.
the winner's circle.
T he most unforgettable came in 1989,
when Waltrip's bad luck in the Daytona
500 reversed itself and he won by stretching his gas.
The 53-lap run was met with skepticism. But NASCAR didn 't find the type
of hidden hoses sometimes used by cheating crew chiefS to increase the fuel load .
Asked how much gas remained in the
tank, an inspector said: " For 55 I'd drink

East.rntohost

::Reds c:ompllle bide

l!dao Volled 81....,.111 Cbrilt
2 1/2 mllea north of Roedsvllle

Soulb Betllil N..,T-....t
Sliver Ridp
Plllor: Robert Bomer
. SundaY School • 9a.ll.
Sun. Wonlllp. 10:10 a."'., 6 p.m.
WednOiday S..VIce • 7 p.m.

"Ffflllllrlnfl ~ Frild Chicken•

and has called the shots fo r 43 victories in
19 years. No active crew chief has won
nearly as many races .
And none certainly can match his
record for high-profile bosses - from
Darrell Waltrip to Junior Johnson to Rick
Hendrick to Jack R oush.
Hammond started as a tire changer for
Waltrip in 1974. Eight years later, he
became a crew chief for Waltrip, who by
that time was driving for Johnson.
"I went to Junior and told him I wamed the opportunity to run a team;' Hammond said.
That was 1982, when Waltrip won 12
races and Hammond got the first of his

Martinez
blanks Tribe

Evarts was the ace of the URG
pitching staff this season. She finished . wiih a 6-5 record and a
2.28 ERA.
: Evans recorded 38 strikeouts in
S.!l: innings, earning AU- AMC
honorable mention.
: ' Rio Grande finished 13-22 this
$eason.

Untied Bretht en

33045 ljlilnd ROod, Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Ewnina7:30 p.m.
Tuesday A 1\ur!dly • 7;30 p.m.

Crow'a Fimlly
ReataLnnt
i
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Crew chief Jeff'Hammond sits near a
shiny, sleek car almost pining for the old
days of dented-up racers o n dusty dirt
tracks.
"We used to bring up the cars on
flatbed trucks. It was a much simpler
,
time," Hammond) aid.
There's nothinJ.'Simple about the trucks
used nowadays. ' At Michigan Speedway
this weekend, Hammond will unload
.Chad Little's Ford .fium a hauler that's
really a tnveling 'hce shop and prepare a
Winston Cup car
., for the 501st time.
He has learned much in more than a
quarter-century on the NASC AR circuit,

son.

Mulberry Hll. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawilwky
Saturdaf Services:
Sabbllth School· 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

HOICE·

Ful-&lt;tf

ROCK SPRINGS - · The
Meigs. boys basketball camp will
l;le held on June 12- 16 fiom 9
~ . Ql. until noon at Meigs High
S(:hool's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
· : lfhe camp is for kids entering
(tUrd through ninth grades. Cost
Of.the camp is $40 ond includes
five days of instruction in basketball fundamentals, camp t-shirt
anll various prizes. Instructors
WliJ include Meigs High School
coaching staff and players.
!tegistrntion will be in.the high
school gym on June 12, from 8
a.m. to 9 am. For more information contact Chris Stout at 9926600.

NAStAR: Jeff Hammond's on the right track

Presbyterian

Wednesday Servl&lt;e • 7 p.m.

ML Marioll Qllldl o!Gerl
Milo Hill Rd, Racine
r-r. Brioo VII
Sunday School • 9:4.! a.m.

II....,...,.

161 Mulberry Avo., Pomeftl)', 992-51191
Putor: Rev. Wll"' E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15(o.m.; M- 5:30p.m.
Suo. Con. -11:45·9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mua • 9-.JO Lm.
Dailey Maa • 8:30a.m.

Other Churches

Healb (Midolopol1) ·
Pu tor: Vcm•pye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 1.m.

Tor&lt;bCbrrn;~

Cbordl of God
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. !60
Putor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worlhip • ! la.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

C.ltil ol1c

'Pallor: Bob Robi11.10n
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Worship • 9 a. m.

ML Olive United Metbodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pilum Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshlo • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thundty Service• - 7 p.m.

Paotor: Ro!v. David R-11
Sunday Sdloolalld Wonlllp· 10 a.m.
Evoaln1 Servloea-- 6:30p.m.
Wedneeday Sen~lcea · 6:30 ~· '"·

P11oor: ll&amp;v. Paul Taylor
Sunday Scilool· 10 a.m.
Evcnia&amp; -7 .p.m.
Wednesday SCrvicea • 7 p.m.

,._ .,

Orond Stn:et
Sundiy School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wcdriuday Services • 8 p.m.

Apple aod Second Sts.

SaltmSt.

.

r.rttucl nnt Cb- or till Nua""'
Putor; William lulltis
Sunday Schooi -IO:OOa.m.
Momin1 Worship · 10:4S a.m.
Sunday Se!Vloe • 6:30p.m.

GnlluoVoi... Madoodlal
Wonlli~ • 9:30 Lm. (111 A 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rrlol 4111 Sun)
Wed~y Service • 7:30p.m.

s,.- PlniCioordl or God

Rrodudfno_..,...

Fllltwoodl
Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worahlp • 11a.m.

Pallor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday Schooi·IO o.m.
Worahip • 11 a.m.
· Wednesday 7 p.m.

Klnasbury Road
Pu1o0r: Clyde Hcndet10n
·
Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonllop Servia: !0:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Servia:l

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ' 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicos • 1 p.m.

0,11YIIIt Coiro.-IIY Clturdl

....... Qllldl of God
Putor: Ron Hallo
Sunday Wcnhip • 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnelclay Sorvloea . 7 p.m.

Sunday 'School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenlna ·6:00p.m.

Putor: kt1tb Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Page Bl

~ 1-. dau·leet' 111 Clnardl

Rlflllld Clorlrdl ol Ore I l l - •
Puto&lt;; Rev. Samuel W. Buyo

Eo~rtoa

HociriiiiJIOI'I Clourcll

Eve nina . 6 p.m.

"'"~ Boplllt

Sunday Sdlool· 9:45 a.m.
W011hlp - II a.m.
Wfdneoday S..VIea • 7:30 p.m.

Unit ed M etho dist

Church of God

ML Morloll lloptlal
Fourth A Main St., Middleport
Put«: Rev. Ollbat CraiJ, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W011hlp • 10:45 a.m.

St. Palll Lulloeno Church
Comer Syc:a.more &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sundoy School • 9:45 a.m. ·
Worship -1 to.m.

Clooalor Cltordl oltllo N Purot: lltY. Hertocrr Orate
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
W"'**! • II Lm., 6 p.m.
WednadOy Sc:Nices • 7 p.m.

Corro-11)' Cliur&lt;b
OffRt.l24
r-r. Edoel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Woralllp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

-~ oiCiorillla
~Voloo
Hanlord, W.Va.
Pulor:lim Huahea
Sunday School·l!a.m.
WOIIblp · 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wed-oy Services· 7:30p.m.

Sunday Scllool • 10 a.m.
Wonlolp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
We&lt;lneaday Services • 7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Vt.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday Scl\ool • 10:00 a.m.
Wol&gt;hlp • I! a.m.

Ceolnla-

Aabo..,. (Sy , _)
'-or. Bob ltobiuon

Tow111hip Rd., -468C
Sundly School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 t .m.

Ch liSit itll Unton

Falllt ...... Cloucll
Railroad Sr. Mason

..

Hyaell Ruo Holnm Durch
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
.
Worship • 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Tbur!dly Bible Study and Youllo . 7 p.m.

Rudolld Cbur&lt;b orCbrlllt
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Wor1bip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

MI. Ualoa Boptlot
Putor ; Joe N. S.yn:
SunGoy School-9:45 a.m.
EYenina · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 6:30p.m.

•
•
•

Weaityu Jllblt Hollotu Durdo
1S Pead St., Middleport.
Puaor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sundly Worship · 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday SeiVI&lt;e ·7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:30 a.m.

SUYerRuaiiOpdlt
Putor: Steven K. Lillie
Sunday School · !Oa.m.
Worship • !!a.m., 7:00p.m.
W~dnetday Services- 7:00p.m.

t

Pine Gn1vt Bible Holt- Chord!
1/2 mileoffRt. 32S
.
Pu 1or: R.ev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worahlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Pasaor: Totp Runyon

- Pu10r.Flnlllopllsl
Rick Rult
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hlp -10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

•·.

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: ReY. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

-bill')' Church orChrilt

flnt Bopllllt Cblll't~
Putor: Mark Monow.
6lh and Palmer $1., Middleport
Sunday School • 9:15 a.m.
Worship· 10:1' a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

tf.

Roae or Slri1mn Holllltll Cb•rch

Tuppm Plohl Cburdl o!Cbrill
Instrumental '
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Commu,nion • 10 a.m.
Sunday Schooi -!O:!S a.m.
Youlh· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

East Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wora hlp • !0:30 a.m.

Qo"

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sund ay School 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice· 7:00p.m.

ZloD Chlll'th or Cluut .
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastoc: Roaer Wataon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

.........,Y nnt 11op11s1

•

CalVIU')' Ptlptm

...,.allow 1W1t Cburcll oiCbriot
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Rutlud flnllapdlt Cbur&lt;b
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
WOI"' hip · 10:45 a.m.

•
•

Duvllt. Holt.. d urdl
310!7 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sund1y worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wcdnnday prayer ac:JVii.'C • 7 p.m.

1st and Jrd Sunday

Dittr.

•
•
•'

Putor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Sueet, Rutland
Sunday Wonhi1;&gt;"'" 10:00 a.m.
Sundly Scrvace-7 p.m.

Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· I0:30a.m.
Pastor-Jcftrey Wallace

Hope Bolllllt Cburdl (Southem)
Puror: Jim
570 Grant St., Mldd pon
Sunday ldlool • 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp • I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

•

c -m....,.Cburch

Keao Cbon:b orCbrlsl

Baptt~t
Marlllllllo lloqrllot Cbllldl
Bwllnaham • 742-7606
Pastor: John Sw1naon
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp; Service 11:00 a.m.
EYenlna Scrvltc · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice~ 7:30 p.m.

•
•
•

Holt ness

Mlddltpol1 Cburdl orCbrilt
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Miniller: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wol&gt;hlpo 8:15, 10:30 a..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday S..Vk:n • 7 p.m.

P.O. Bo• 467, Ouddina Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Putor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Ser~lceo- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

•

pllellarft
326 E. in St., Pumeroy
Re'tl . Jamu Bcl'llld.l, Rev. Katharin Folltr
Rev. Deborah Rlnkio, Cieri)'
Sunday: Adult Educatioo •
Sunday Sdlool 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Euchariot S:OO p.m.

r.......,.
Walllde Clollldl ol Cllrtst
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Buick Open - Day 1, Page BJ
_,...,,,.". Doolan, ]ang shMe lead, Page B3
:vu..oll roundup, Page B8
~oc•~er back on track?, Page B8

..

Gnct~

1

The Daily Sentinel
~ • .,.., ·

Eptscop.ll

0) a.rdl of Qdlt
212 W. Main St.
Ministet: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonllipo 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.Nk:n • 7 p.m.

New U maRoad
Sunday, 10 ...,, ond 7:30 p.m.
Wedneoday, 7:30 p.m.

.

.....

CllUrch of Clmst

Clollldl or J - &lt;:.rill
Paldl

Friday, June 9, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

•

CHANCIY HONORID ~ Longtime Meigs High School football coach Charles Chancey wBs honored
recently·at the annuaf'Melgs Marauder Band Memorial Golf Tournament. Pictured from left to right Is
his son Mike, wife M~ry, Charlie and' son Rick. Mike; following In his father's footsteps, Is now the
Marauder foo~all coac_t) with Rick as one of his assistants. Nineteen -teams played In the tournament
deaplte a rain that fall almoat tha entire tournament. The team of Shawn Baker, Mett -Baker, Don Nel·
aon and Jaff Nelson battled the elements and fired a 13-under par to win the tournament.

•

-calls it a
career with 49ers
SANTA CLARA, Cali{. (AP) pionship legacy, leaves the game
- Steve Young still w.mts and as the highest-rated passer in the
believes he can play. That's just NFL's SO-year history.
not enough to keep his brilliam . He also was a dazzling, powerful runner, rushing for an NFL
career going.
Young,. sidelined since Sep- ~cord 43 touchdowns, includtember by a devastating hit that ing a tackle-busting 49- yard run
caused his foqrth concussi,on in against Minnesota ln 1988 that
three years, is walking away into endures as a testament to his
rough-and-tumble style.
a reluctant retirement.
General manager Bill Walsh is
The two-time league MVP,
who led the San Francisco 49ers aware of Young's decision and
to a Super Bowl title in the confirmed he would make an
1994 season, will announce his anR!)Uncement Monday. Walsh
retirement at a farewell news would say only that all signs
conference Monday. I
point to Young retiring.
Two team sources, spealcing
"I think we all have a sense of
on condition of anonymity, said what's occurring.~' Walsh said
the 38-year-ol\1 Young, married before leaving team headquarin March and now an expectant tim Thursday ev~ning for a
father, spent months agonizing weekend getaway: "But it's for
over what to do before finally Steve Young now to do the personal statements and relate his
calling it quits.
"He's made up his mind," one · feelings to you."
Walsh added that the 49cn
source said Thursday.
"The day has been set;' the will go ahead and pay Young a
other club source said. "Tiie $1 million roster bonus that was
coming due on Saturday.
only issue is the setting."
"That is a reflection of .our
Young, who succeeded Hall
of Farner Joe Montana and went
on to c~ out his own cham.............. ~ .... 12

\~

I .

�.

~ -'-_a_•_B__2_•_Tn.
__o.
__~~S-•_nd_~----------------------------------~P~om~NW~~o~~~M~I~dd~I~~~~·~O~h~lo~----------------------------~Fri~dl~y~,J=une::~~~·~~=OO~~

TODAY'S SCOREBOAR-D

.•

_........

~

ChlcoQa Culto (WOOdo 2·3) It Chicago

-t' ?' .........

.

· •. W L
........................... .37 21
. ""'"""' .........................33 21
•• ..........................31 25
Florida ............................ .27 33
' Ptlllodtlpnlo ....................22 35
Cenlnll Dhillon
St Loulo ...........................33 21
' C~IOionlll ·----..a1 Z7
F'lalburgh ...................... .21 3t

Pet.

.1:18

Ql

.1558 41/2
.564'
5
.&lt;150
11
.3811 14 t /2
.1558
.1M 11/2

.OM
Chlcego ......................... .21 35 .418
- " ...................... .23 311 .3110
..........................2t 31 .3511

---

e

a t 12

tO
t2

...........................35 24 .583
LA&gt;o~ .....................32 21 .58t

-

2

Colorldo .........................3t 25 .553 2 t/2
San Froncioco ................. .27 211 ~.a2 a t/2

. 8an Ologo ........................21 33 .431

e t/2

Whllo'Sooc (Silo4tco 4-5) , 2:05p.m.
- " " " ' " ' 1-3) II Toronto (EIOObor 58), 4:05 p.m.
" •
~ (Wuhbum 1·1)1tAtlzono (OUIZ·
8), 4:05p.m.
(Abbo1t 2-2) at San Francloc:o (Ea.
8-2), 4:05p.m.
Flotldo (Comolluo 0.1) It Tompo lily (Yln:l3), 4:15p.m.
St. Louis (MOloJ 5-2) It 0o1ro1t (Moohlor 2·
3), 5:05p.m.
Phllodelpnta (&amp;:hiRing 1-3) It lll~imoro ·
(I'I:IMM 3-3), 7:05p.m.
Mllwoukoo (Hoynes 8-4) at Mjnneocta (Rod·
mon 4-0), 7:05 p.m.
9ooton (Sc:hou-olt 2·5) at A!loiMO (MulltOI·
lond 5-5), 7:to p.m.
TOJCU (LDIIza :1-3) II Colorado (Jarvis 2·t),
8:05p.m.
.
Piltlburgh (Bon1011 4-5) It l&lt;on111 City
(Sulul&lt;l3.0), 8:D5 p.m.
Houllon (Elotton 4-1 1 at Son Diego (MOod.
OWl 4-11), 10:05 p.m.
Ollctand (Otlvoroo 3-7) 1t LDs Angelos
(Bf"""' 4-2), 1~: 10 p.m.
Gllmu
81. LDull 01llolrt&gt;l1, t :05 p.m.
Clnd...., Ill Clwlllnd, 1:05 p.m.
Monlreolll Toronto, 1:05 p.m.
Booton IIA!IInta, 1:10 p.m.
Florldo 11 Tompo lily, 1:15 p.m.
Philadelphia It Blltlmore, 1:35 p.m.
Pltllburgh ot Kon111 City, 2:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at "nneao~a, 2:05 p.m.
Chleogo Culto II Clllc:ogo While Soil. 2:05

Bahlrnof8 ............ ,..•....... .24 33 ,421

8

. Tempo llly........ ......... :.... .2t 37 .312 12 t/2

c..--

• Cnlcogo .... ...................... 35 23 .103

Clonlond ..........._,_..az :14 .871

2

Kanlao Ci1y ............. ........ :l!J 21 .517
5
.. . Ml,_ta .. .....................27 33 .&lt;150
e
. De1rol1 ........ ............. ........2t 34 .312 12 t/2
,. •
WMt Dlvtelon

RUN~Rodr~ez, Seattle, 59: ' Delgado,
Toronto, ~~: Mondesl, TOronto, 49; Glaus, Anaheim, 48; Erotld, Anaheim, 48: Damon, Kanoas
City, 45; Selmon, Anaheim, 44; Rodriguez,

Texu, 44.
ABI-Martinez , Seattle, 63; Sweeney,
Kanou Ci1y, 5D; Ja. Glambl, Oakland. 59; Dot·

gada, Toronto, 58; Everett, ~ton, 58; ~ughn,

Anaheim, 52; Dyo, Kan111 Ci1y. 51; Rodnguez.
Seattte, 51 ; BeWilllarNI, New York, 51 .
HIT~rstad,

Kanau City, 74: Williams, Tampa lily, 73;

""ugnn, Anlhelm, 73.

OOUBLES---Uiw1on, MlnnOIO!a. 21 ; Glaus,
Anohelrn, ~; Dye, Kanou City, 18; SWMOOy,
Kon111 City, 18: Sogui, Texas, 18; O.Shlok!s,
lllffifll()(e, 18; 041Nd, Slltue, 18.
TRIPLES-Guzman, Mim.-, 8; Durllam,
Ch,cago, fJ; Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Nixon,
Sooton. 4; Valentin, Chicago, 4: Mortinez, New

-·~'-

YorX, 4; Alicea, Texas, " ·

HOME RUNS-Oeigado, Toromo, 22;

Everta, Boston, 21 ; Ja. Giambl, Oe.kland, 19;

eo.

.. (lullll.,,.
~

...

-··...-

.,

• 4

appreciation for St~ and what
he's contributed to the 49ers,"
Walsh said. "We would love to
have Steve Young with us for the
next 20 years, but I think he's got
bigger and better things to dO.
He might have my jgb, I don't

know. But I think we're agreed, if
he were to retire, he can look forward to a very sqccessful life, ·
w~tever his endeavor, from politics to broadcasting to sports to

·business."

·

Young W2S not available for
conunent Thursday. .
The sources said Young wanted
to w:Ut until Monday to make his
retirement announcement to give
his family. college coach and
other key figures in his life a
chance to be on hand.

.

.

introduced to it somewhat and ·1
think I can handle those sorts of
things:•
.
Coach Steve Mariucci said the
tho~ght of replacing ·Young was
daunting.

.

"When you lose a great player,
to generate up to S2 million in you have to replace his producpayroll relief for . the · 49ers, who· tion on the field, which is nearly
have struggled ·throughout the impo$Sible - he's the most effiotfseason with salary cap · prob- cient quarterback of all time and
lems. ·
nobody is really even close," Mar· While ·no formal announce- iucci said. .
. ment wu made, players leaving
"He's difficult to replace from a
the team:'s minicamp took word
leadership standpoint, from an
o£y011ng's decision in stride.
image standpoint, from the sundFormer Canadian Football point of a certain team swagger
League star Jeff Garcia will move and confidence level:'

frailll

,...1

inspection at Charlotte Motor
Speedway, NASCAR found a
fake ndio weighing 25 pounds.
The i&lt;ka would be to remove
the radio after the car weighed in,
then race at the lighter weight.
"When I caught that thing, we
told Jeff ifhe,w.anted to wear it all
during the
we wouldn't fine
him," Dick Beaty, then WiiiSIOn
Cup director, said at the time. "If
he didn't wear it, we were. going
to 6ne him $500.
"I 6ned him $500."
Hammond lau&amp;hs about it now.
"I wasn't going to wear that
thing:• he said. "And I dido 't put
it in there:'
·A few weeks ago. the 43--~ar­
old Hammond saw a tape o( the

60o,

WNneedey, June 1'

l .A. L.akoro ot lndlono, e p.m.

1. llol&gt;by l.lban1e, 1,948.

27

Loo Angeles .......................3 · 0 1.000
Houston ............................5

1 .833

9urtan. 1,814.
3. Dl'&gt; Eomhlr&lt;lt, 1,848.
4.

.'

0.. Jarratt, 1,790.

5. Mlt1i Mortin, 1,755.
6. Jell BUIIDn, 1,733.
7. Rusty Wallace, 1,704.
B. Ricky Rudd, 1,878.
e. Tony Stewart, 1,841.
10. Jei1Gotdon 1,80e.
11 . TtrJY Llbonle, 1,514. ·
12. Min l&lt;8nHOh, 1,514.

'•

Phoellix .................... .. .......3
Minnesota .................. .......3

I
2
2
3

Utah ..................................3

S"'rOLEN BASES-OeShleldo, Baltimore,
20; Dimon, Kanou City, 17; Mondll, Toronto,
17: AID,_, Cleveland, 13; Kennldy. Anaheim,
11 :· Febles, Kantat Qty, 11; L.lwton, Minneeo-tl, 11; Jeter, New York, 11; McL.arnore, Seattle,
11.

PITCHING (8 Oeclllont)-Bik!wln, Chlca·
go, J-1, .eoo, 3.07; WoWo, Toronto. 10·2, .833,
3.45; Monlnez, llooton, 11-2, .818, .es; Hudlon,
Dlkllnd, 8-2. .180, 4.70; Parque, Chlclgo. 8-2,
.750, 4.18; Solo, Slltt!e, &amp;-2, .750, 3.88;
Eldred, Cillcogo, 8·2, .180, 4.18.
9TAIKEOlJT8-Moninoz, ec.wn, 114; Fin·
loy, Clovlland, 87; Clome!lo, Now '!bt1i, n;
Nomo, Detro~. 73; 9urbo, dlovllond, 73;
Colon, Cleveland. 72: Mulino, lllltlmoro, 88.
SAVE~onoo, Detrok, f7; WoHolond,
T-.18: Po&lt;dvoi,Anohelm,15; lorlnghluoon,
Oolclond: 14; Riv«l, Now Yot1i, 14; Foulke,
Chicago, 13; Lowe, Sooton, 13.

.750
I
.600 1 1/2
.600 1 1/2
.250
3

Portland ................... .. .......1
Sacramento ...... ................1 · 3 .250
Soottle ....................... .. ..... 0 4 .000
Thul'ldoy•o Gomu

3
4

Washington 73, Miami 51

Mlnnesota71 , Oflando 57
Utah Bt , Pontand 72
Todlay'oGomoo
Sacramenw at Niw York, 7 p.m.
Seanle at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.

lnd,_.,.ll Dotron. 7:30 p.m.
-rcloy'oGornoo
Phoenix at Lot Angeles, 3:30 p.m.

Minnesota at Miami, 7 p.m.
7 p.m.

-·• c-.

Orlanao at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.

New York at Indiana, B p.m.

Houston at Utah, 8 p.m.

8undliy,•ea.me
LDI Angeles 01 Sacramento, 3 p.m.

National -~ -'"*llllon
Plnolo

w ..

Startloy Cup Plnelo

•

1\llldoy, May 30
NewJorsey7.~1a13 .
ThuNCI&lt;Iy, June 1
0111812, NOW JerHy 1
.
s.tunllly1 June 3
New Jerooy 2, Dll\11 1
·
Monday, June I
Now Jerooy 3, Dallal 1
Thurodly, Juno a
011111 1, New J..ay 0, 30T, Now Jerny
llldll•l•:l-2
8oblrcloy, Jtm010
New Jersey a1 Dallu, 8 p.m.
Monday, Juno 12
Oali11 at Now Jerse~. 8 p.m., Wneeoillry

MoW Lliguo s*.

. (8uto01·7)

-~.Juno?

lold ..,.. 1.0

Nlllonol Hockey L.Nguo .
~-&lt;&gt;1·1)

t04, lndllfll! 87, LA. Llkerl

Frtay,Junet

..

I.

•r

13. Mkl ~. 1,557,

14. Bill Ellolt. 1,4811.
15. Dolo EamhlrdtJr., 1,485.
1e. Jt&lt;omy Mlyfiold, 1,4 11. , •
17. Steve l='ark, 1,3M.

,

18. Chad LJnle, 1,3;55.

1e. Johnny Senoon. 1,355.
Kon Sdvadlr, 1,315.

~-

' "'

112

llodrigUN, Tolrao, 19; Dye, Kansas City, t8;

LA.

2. -

l!olllom Dlvloton
Toom
W L T P1o QF CIA
Now Engllnd ..,............e 4 4 22 22 IB

--Cup-

IIA8fi!IALL

Tho NASCAA Wlni1Qn Cup odtedule, winners in parentheses; and driver point standings:
Feb. 20 - Oey10na 500, Daytona ·

Fla. IOaia Jarrll!t)
Feb. 27 - Dura Lubei1&lt;matt 400, Aoci&lt;ing·
ham, N.C. (Sobby Llllonte)
Morell 5- Corodlrect.oom 400, Llo \lag11.
(Jell Burton)
MarCil 12 - Co'ackor Barrel 500, Hampton,

Ga. (Dele Earnhardt)

Morell 19- Moll.c:om 400, Darlington, S.C.
(Ward 9ur1on)

Morell 21 - FocU City SOD, Brtotol, Tenn.
(AuotyWoilacot) .
.
Apttl 2 - lli!'IICfV 500, Fort WDrlt1, Texas.

(Dale Eo~ Jr.)
Apttl 9 - Goolti• 500, Mlrllfll'ltlle,
(Mat1i M8111n)

'

va.

· Apil11 a- OltHaid 500, Taladega, Ala. (Jeff
Gordon)
.
April 30 - NAPA Auto Pam 500, Fontana,

CIIW. (Jeremy Mlylleld)
May B - Pontiac Exclt...., 400, Richmond; Va. (Dele Eanltiaid1 Jt.)
Moy 21 ~ Coca-Colo 800, Concord, N.C.

(MIInl&lt;lnllth)

.

·

June 4 - MBNA Plotloom 400, oa-,.,, Del.
(Tony S18W1111)
..
. June 11 - Kmort 40o, Brooklyn, Mlclt.
Juno 18- Pacono1500, t.00g ·Ponc1, Po.
June '25 - Save ~on ~. Sonoma, Calif.
·
'
July 1 - Papol400, Daytona Bllch, Fla.
July 8- Now England~. I.Dudon, N.H.
July 23- PaJVtoylvonla 800, ~ Pond.
Aug. 5- Brtckyord I'OQ,Indloinopoilo.
Aug. 13 - Globol. -Ina at Tho Glon,
Wlllclno Cllon, N.Y.
Aug. ~- Papoi400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 21- goraclng.oom 800, llrtolol, Tonn.
Sopt.
~. Dorllngton. S.C.
Blpt, D- Chovroiot·Monlo Corio 400, Rich-

3--

mond,

v..

.I~

~op1.

17.-'- Now Homplhlril300, LDudon.
Blpt. 24- MBNA.oom 400, DoY•, Dol.
Oct. 1 - NAPA AutoCaoe 800, Mllr1ifll'ltlt,
\Ia.
1'
Oct. 8 - UAW-GM ~ 500, Concord,
N.C.
Ill
'
.Oct. 15- Wlnolon SAq, Tallldoga, All:
Oct. 22 - N.C.
Pop - .1.
Aoci&lt;lnghorn.
. - 400,
Nov. 5 - ~ Allo ~ Lube
500k, 1\Yondlllo, Ariz.
'·

,,,

-n~
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Piacad
AHP Klnl8o1·
tonlleld on lho 15-day disabled list. Rocal~
RHP Lou Palo from Edmonton at !he PC(.•
CLEVELAND INOIANS-Purellllld tho
oontrad of AHP Kane Davia frqm Bliffllk) of. the
ln1. . .tlonal League. Optlonod I.HP M111&lt;WIIson to Buffalo.
•
DETROIT TIGERS-Signed RHP .'Matt
Whea~and . Announcod that AHP Masao Kldl
cleared unconditional waivers ancl waa ~ to
Ooix at tho Japan ... Pacific ~u.:
,; .
TAMPA BAY DEVIl AAY~n0d38 !\81ly
Eddlemon, AHP Richard Oorrnqn,.RHP ~
lhy Coward, RH~ Josh Andoroon, CF JohnHII
and RHP Juan Renteria..
•,
TEXAS AANGER~Signed ze·Tytet: Mortln
and OF Robart Evono, and allignld them to
Pula~l at lho Appoilchlon Leoguo, 1nd IIHP
Morton Gie850n, RHP Thorniii\.Grjlhlm, ~HP
Reggio Rivard, OF J110n Gray end SS L8tanci
Swanton, and assigned t~.to the Aq'IN at
the GCL
o
TORONTO BLUE JAYS,..Sigri.G 3B Nom
Slrlveaw. RHP Tracy T~orpe, •SS Richard
BfOIIIIU, C John I!Jockbum, , OF 'Jtromtah
Johnoon, OF Brian SeiNer, C Chris Smoii.'RHP
William Morrl•. LHP Krll . Kozlowski, · 28

Thomu Calion, 28 Jeromy Rk!loy, 1B stlphon

Wood, I.HP Jeromle Spillman, RHP Daniel

Hueogen. C Cosey Mlltlnez aild. I.HP §t!lart
McF1itOnd.
. '
Nattonol LMtluo
.!
CINCINNATI AEOS...Sont AHP Konny Lutz
to tho lA&gt;o Anglleo Dadg. ., to oomp1ate an
oartltr 1rlde.
MILWAUKEE BREWERB-Ptot:od AHP Jell
O'Amloo'o on the 15·dly dloabtod lilt, ratroactlve to Juno 8. Callld up RHP Alllrl Llvroul1
from lndlanopollo of the ln1ematlonlll.ooguo.
NEW YORK MET $-Sold 1he oontroct at OF
Jon Nunnaly to Orix of tho ~
League.
. , .,
.;
FOOTBA~ ·\'"
"
Notional footb.oll L.Nguo
BUFFAlO BIL.L9-Nomad Mortin lllyleoo
dlroctol at ploylf dovtlopmerrt·opociol proj-.
CAAOUNA PANTHERS ~eod 10 11rm1
wl1h OL Lllnd• Jordan lnd OT 11ilio Wlloon
on lhroo-)'• oontriCIO. WoiYad QI.Jim ""-·
lv. P Brondon Kalt lnd P Donald s-, L9
~arlo lonon, OT Glrldla Milt•. 08 A'Jonl
Sondlftlnd 08 Seen Snyder.
'
1 ·
CHICAGO BEAR~$ignod CB Reggie
Auotln and K P1u Edlng.-.
·

'-alllc

1979 Daytona 500, when he was
with Johnson but not yet a ctew
chief.
"One of my first lessons came
that day:• Hamtnond said. "We
had an opportunity to win but
didn't. Junior didn't get mad. I
remember thinking, 'I'm not
doing anything my boss doesn't
do. If he gets excited, I'll get
excited:
"That's when I first realized
that there is going to be another
race. You. just have to put it
behind you and look forward."
Hammond recalls a race in the
1980s in Richmond, Va., where
Waltrip W2S ttailing Dale Earnhardt with about 12 laps to go.
''Junior got on the radio and
told Darrell, 'Go now. PaM him, I
mean pau him now,"' Hanunond
re'mctnbei\"Cl. "Darrell was just
being patient, but Junior told him
to go. With Darrell trying to pass,

It appeared Monday that '
Young's options had been
teduced to retirement or playing
elsewhere after Walsh all but ruled
out his return to the 49ers.
But Walsh backed off the
remarks the next day. He said the
teturn of the two-time league
MVP was possible if he gained
medical clearance from a series of
doctors.

Cavalier Sedan

·18,850*
•Automatic
• Air Conditlcining
• .Tilt &amp; Crulee

1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE1.Sedan

~~~5o·

• Power wrhdows &amp; Lockl
• Tilt &amp; Cr,uiee
• Aluminum Whnls

1999 Old1moblle ·

Alero Sedan

qa,&amp;5D0

Automatic, Air Condltlcmln1~ ~~­
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lockt..
•TIH&amp;Cru!ee
'

He said he was visiting Sh;mahan, who is a close' friend, simply ·
to get advice.

2000 Blul!:k
Regal LS Sedan ·

"When I have trouble getting
up fo.r a race, I'll knOYi it is time
to stop:• he said. ~'To this day I still
get excited when they say 'Gentlemen, start your engines."'

qJ,850*

1999 Chevy Blazer
·Door 4x4

~

• Power Window &amp;Locka
• Tilt &amp; Crulu
Loaded!

750*

&amp; Lockl

Wheele

2000 Buick

.,

LeSabre Cuatom

~1,150~
• Power Seat
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Locka·
• Tilt &amp; Crulu
"

,,

HARRISON, N .Y. (AP) pu.t ting on at Pebble."
Davis Love Ill is exactly where he
Love birdied the final two
wants to be, in contention in the holes, making a 12-foot putt on
Buick Classic and right on sched- No. 17 and two- putting from 20
ule for next week's U .S. Open.
feet on 18.
Love, winless since the 1998
"All it would take is to win this
MCI Classic, shot a S-under-par week and win next week, and it
66 on Thursday, leaving him a would be a huge year:' joked
stroke behind leader Dennis Paul- Love, who has finished second
son.
eight times since his last victory.
"J feel like I'm very close to . Paulson, who lost a playoff with
where I want to be for the Duffy Waldorf in last year's tourOpen," Love said. "I'm happy nament, shot a 65 to take a onewith everything. I'm swinging stroke lead over Waldorf, Love
pretty well and !' m making a few and Spain's Miguel Angel
p'utts."
Jimenez.
He's coming off a two-week
"Leading the first day is no big
bteak following consecutive sec- deal. It doesn't matter. What mat.. .ond-place finishes in the Byron ters is not shooting 74, 75, 76,"
· Nelson Classic and the Colonial. Paulson said." Anything in the 60s
· . · "There's no substitute for play- or under par is a bbnus. Leading
-~ _ing - playing competitive golf:' doesn't matter until Sunday."
In his last 11 tournaments,
• •said Love, the 1997 PGA winner
: &lt;tt nearby Winged Foot. "You can Paulson has opened with only
· :play all you want this weekend at one sub-par round, a 68 in the
, .Pebble Beach, but the guys play- Masters. In his last four events, he
.: 1!!g here under the gun are really started with three 75s and a 79.
. playing golf:'
.
"I've been 'shooting myself out
: ·· ·: ' With its deep rough and tight of tournaments," Paulson said. "It
·. &gt;tree-lined fairways, the Westch- seems like I'm always 2 or 3 over
.. ester Country Club course is a after four holes."
; . good 'primer for the U.S. Open;s
Paulson, who started on No.
, .. &lt;lifficult conditions.
10, capped his bogey-free round
:_-. : "Any traditional-style course, with a two-putt birdie on the
' ;'any, real good ·golf course like par-59th.
'· ·this, is a good warmup," Love .
"That's probably the most solid
;:.. said. "Thete's deep rough and a round I've played all year," the
1 ·lot of long par-4s. The grass here
former national long-driving
.is very similar to what we'll be champion said. "I d!'O'ie the ball
''·
."

·.
. '

.·Can't anyone stop Shaq Diesel.?
:. ·: . LOS ANGELES (AP) - Now
.. that Larry Bird knows how Pat
, ~ }:liley felt during the 1980s, he .
might just call up the former Lak. · "ers coach and apologize.
More than a decade after Bird
c.aused massive headaches for
;l.!il_ey"; ~re ey~ry .!?.flJ~[ . NB,A_
~li w011e leading the Boston
~eltics to thre.e titles, the Indiana
~cen coach is receJvmg a 7fqot-1, 330.pound dose . of
iarmic payback in the NBA

finals," Miller said. "So I'm more to do in the conference finals.
"It hasn't worked yet, so no
upset with myself now, and I've
got to contend with myself, need for me to make it work
which is kind of scary."
now," he said.
· By his own calculations, Miller
Several Pacers were disappointmissed 11 shots that were wide- ed in their entire team's lack of
open. O'Neal didn't miss , that · defensive energy, particularly
W&lt;I~Y. in. t~_entire ga~e, ~~spj,!e ;gixen~, the, importance _of the
being · surrounded by Pacers ' game. Austin troshere said Indidefenders for much of the night. ana didn't accomplish any of its
O'Neal dominated the game primary objectives on defense.
early, scoring' 15 points in the first
"Our scouting report . on this
quarter, and late, when his 12 . team is basically to worry · about
fourth-quarter points helped put Shaq first, and when somebody
the game away. He has averaged else starts killing you, you worry ·
41 points per game in series- about them," Croshere , said.
opening contests this year, but !ys ''Nobody else even got a chance ·
average dropped to 28 points in to kill us. I( we can stop Shaq
the second game as teams adjust- from getting the ball so easily in
ed their defenses.
·
the low post, Game 2 might look
"I've said all along (that) after a whole lot different."
Throwing out Miller's dismal
we get Game 1 . .. Game 2 is
probably going to be more diffi- performance, the Pacers had a
cult:' O'Neal said. "We just have solid offensive game. Indiana shot
to be extra ready. We' know 33-for-60 and got strong contrithey're going to be pumped up." butions from Mark Jackson (1 8
O'Neal also scoffed at the points, seven assists) and Croshere
notion he can be stopped by pte- (16 points on 6-of-7 shooting).
emptive fouls, as the Blazers tried

Welt Vlrglnll'a 11 Chewy, Pontile, au)Ck--;--Oida,
And Custom Van Dialer. . ' ·
'
JiQr
'
(&lt;dil
" 0
("',~UUU"Ie \.Jvovrne,., PC11\,~
~/.
~-01'~""--• ·•-•

Mtllt"l:r•

...,.......IIOI)tle

'

Monday- saturday 9 am - 9 pnt•
Sunday 1 pm • 8 pm

' Tl~. Togo, Till FMI Oxtfll. P - Oood .Moo 9th TlifOOgh Juno t ttl!. Not ro~ lor lf?O;r~ tffQII,

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

·

'
J

~als. In fact, the man who says
~ thrives on hate for his oppo~nts might· have found a new

target for his ire - himself.
: "You need that extra motiv2rK!n, you need to create that little
something that gets you ticked
off, and I think I've created it
ri)yself by going 1-for-16 in
Qame 1 of my first-ever NBA

Dallas signs
Cunningham
IRVING, Texas (AP) - The
Dallas Cowboys signed 37"yearold Randall Cunningham to
become Troy Aikman's backup at
quarterback .
Cunningham, cut by Minnesota after declining to renegotiate
his contract, will receive a base
salary ofSSOO,OOO this season, and
a $500,000 signing bonus, the
team said.

Seattle unloads
Dawkins
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) -

Brand New 2000 Chevy
5-Series LS Sportside

The Seattle Seahawks released
wide receiver Sean Dawkins, who
led the team with 992 yards
receiving last season.
Dawkins, who signed with the
Seahawks last offseason as an
unrestricted free age!lt, had 58
receptions, including seven
touchdowns.

CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan won a court batde over
the use of his name on a Chicago
restaurant as a federal judge threw
out a contract that gave rights to
the name to two business executives.

ATLANTA (AP) - NBA veteran Rick Mahorn and Orlando
Magic assistant Eric Mussehnan
will be assistant coaches on Lon
Kruger's staff with the Atlanta
Hawks.

Brand New 2000 Ponti~~:
Sunflre SE Coupe

• Air Conditioning

• AMIFM CD System

• AMIFM Stereo

Brand New 2000 Chevy Astro
Raised Roof Conv. Van

•

• Ram Air V-6.Power

Brand New 2000 Chevy Full
Size Conversion Van

•A~e
~AMIFMCD

Entry

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Silverado LS Ext. Cab 4x4

823,150* 824,150* 824,15
TV 6 VCP

Power Windows &amp;.LOcks
Chairs, Rear Sofa

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• Aamota Keyless Entry
• Aluminum Wheals!

• Ta•es, Tags. Title Fees eX1ra. Rebate included In sale price of new valticie 'usied where :applicable. "On approved credit,
On selected models. Not mspon~ble tor typographical errors. Prlcft Good Juf'&lt;! 9ttl Through June 11th.

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Grand Am GT Coupe Or Sedan

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Restaurants using Jordan's
name in New York and elsewhere
are not affected by the lawsuit.

Hawks sign Mahom

• Air Conditioning

• Aluminum Wheals

U.S. District Judge James
Moran voided a contract that had
given business executive Gene
Silverberg and his brother,Joseph,
exclusive rights to use the Jordan
name on a restaurant in the sixcounty Chicago area.

Jordan wins
court battle

~1,450* ~1,5

:Miller was disgusted with his

,.

to fill a vacant slot.
Jang chipped in from 20 yards off the 16th green
fo r one of six birdies at the tree-lined Locust Hill
course, but also had four bogeys.
·
''I'm not excited at all because I've bee n in this
kind of situation many times;· said Jang, who was a
leading amateur in her homeland. " If I get excited,
next day I don't play very well, so I try to subdue
my excitemenc."
. Doolan said swirling winds made play very tricky
at times; but her round was a little more consistent
than Jang's with four birdies and two bogeys.
"Things have been coming together," said
Doolan, who has accumulated three top- 10 finishes
in three months, including a career- best tie for third
at the Electrolux.
A rainstorm slowed play in late afternoon while a
batch of players vying for the lead were still on the
back nine of an already soggy course.
Defending champion Karrie Webb of Australia,
already a four-time winner this year, shot a 2-over
74. A year ago, after opening with a season-high 75,
she squeaked past Cindy McCurdy with three
birdies on the last three holes.
South Korea's Grace Park, who earned her first
LPGA title last week, tumbled back to reality with
an 82. Naree Song Wonglu ekiet, a 14-year-old from
Thailand, shot a 75, but her twin sister, Aree, faded
with an 80.

ROCHEST ER , N .Y. (AP) - Wendy D oolan ,
w inless in fo ur years on the U.S. golf circuit, steers
clear of predicting an eventual victory.
" I have no deter mination in that. I' m j ust doing
my best every week," said th e shy, soft-spoken Australian.
Bubbly South Korean rookie Jeong Jang said she
no longer expects to quickly land in the LPGA's
top-20 m oney list. But neither does she shy away
from more modest predictions.
" Now I get more ~ onfidence, so I'd like to win a
tournament this year, hopefully," she said through a
translator.
Doolan, 33, and Jang, 19, a studied contrast in personalities, both fired 2-under-par 70s Thursday to
share the opening-round lead at the Rochester
International.
Nine players were 'one shot off the lead, notably
South Korean Se Ri Pak and LPGA veteran Dale
Eggeling. LaRee Pearl Sugg, making a comeback on
the professional circuit this year after a three-year
absence, had a double-bogey 6 on No. 18 and
dropped to a 71.
Jang, a native ofTaejeon who lives in Los Angeles,
finished in a 13th-place tie at the Electrolux USA
Championship in May, was in the top 50 in three
other events and niissed the cut three times.
She tied for 37th at the LPGA final qualifYing
tourn~ment. Her nonexempt status means she must
either quality for tournaments or join a waiting list

NBA FINALS

okn effort in his first trip to the
'

well when r had to, and I hit a lot
of good iron shots."
John Maginnes, Skip Kendall
and Sweden's Gabriel 1-ljertstedt
were two strokes back, and Canadian Mike Weir and Jo hn Cook
topped a nine-player group at 68.
Phil Mi c kelso n, a three-time
winner this year, and Fred Couples shot 69s.
David Duval, winless in the last
14 months, shot an eventful 70.
He had seven birdies, four bogeys
and a double-bogey. ·
Ernie Els and Masters champion Vijay Singh, both two-time
Buick Classic winners, and Jose
Maria Olazabal opened with 70s.
Waldorf closed with an eagle
on the par-59th, holing a 20-foot
putt after a 2-iron approach from
·220 yards.
"I put the ball in the fairway.
That was the key, because the
rough is really tough;' Waldorf
said. "When I had the opportunities, I made the putts, for the most
part." ,
Jimenez, playing his first full
round on the course, hit all 14
fairways and missed only one
green in regulation.
"Every time, it was right in the
middle. I'm driving very, very
straight," the European Ryder
Cup player said.

------------------------------------------------------

•
scat.

•

LPGA ROCHESTER

Open-minded love one back of Paulsen Doolan, Jang share lead after one day

:.. Shaquille O'Ne¥ is mote than
~ ll)igraine for Bird, who was one
:Of the few players of recent years
:Who could similarly dominate a
Jiame. With 43 points and 19
Fbounds in Los Angeles' 104-87
t!ctory in Game 1, O'Neal is a
puzzle that must be solved if the
facers have any hope of winning
tpeir tint championship.
• "lt1s not an easy series for us:·
Bird said. "The match ups aren't
jood. They're a quick team.
They're big with Shaq, and
~ey're stro.ng."
.
·' Game 2 is tonight at Staples
Center. The series moves to Indianapolis for the next three games
Sunday, Wednesday and Friday.
: On Thursday, Bi~ said the Pac~rs spent their morning practice
',llorking on quicker defensive
rotations and double-teams. He
also said Indiana will consider
(ouling O'Neal early and often.
: Hack-a-Shaq is the only
defen5e that has proven consistently; effective against, .tl:ris poor
·ltee-throw shooter who was 1ft&gt;r-6 from the line on Wednesday.
: "If a guy's going to take 30 ·
spots, he should go to the line 12,
1-4 times," Bird said. "There will
be situations (where) we might
&amp;aye to foul him if he gets the ball
tOo close to the baske~. It's disap)li:&gt;inting knowing that he had 30
sb,ots and he just went to the line
spc times."
: But O'Neal might not even be
Bird's biggest problem. Though
P..eggie
Miller"s
teammates
e'Xpress confidence their. offensive
l~der will rebound from his 1~r-16 shooting performance in
Cfame 1, Bird's team likely doesn't
stand a chance without an
improved effort from its shooting

Young met with Broncos coach
Mike Shanahan in Denver on
Monday. but he said there were
no negotiations or contract talks.

Earnhardt bumped him and sent
hint into the wall.
"Well, Darrell and Dale were
going to get into it. Junior says, 'I
better go on down and help my
driver 'cause he's about to get
into a fight with Dale: I remember thinking that it was a throwback to the old dirt-racing days."
Roush Racing driver Little finished 20th last Sunday in Dover,
Del., in Hammond's SOOth race as
crew .chief.It's bee~ a struggle for
both.
They've not wofi together, with
a second-place finish in 1998
their mt showing.
But Hanunond lias no plans to
quit anytime soon.

PGA BUICK CLASSIC
..

:P.ina!s.

1999 Ch11vrollat

The Dally Sentln11 • Page B3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..

.intd' the .i9b 'h~lcfl)y Young and ~ ..Young has 'been stiuggling to
. Montana for the last 19 years.
ch09se among three options: play
for the 49ers, join another NFL
"I've been preparing myself for
team or retire.
that situation all offseason, so I'm
ready for it:' said Garcia, adding
He hasn't played since a head
he won't be fazed by following in . blow Sept. 27 at Arizona left him
the footsteps of Young's Hall of with his latest concussion.
· Fame-caliber career.
Young's agent, Leigh Steinberg,
"I've been in a situation (in did not return phone calls seek- .
Calgary) where I've been behind ing comment Thursday.
a legend before, mayb,e in a differYoung, whose wife, Barbara, is
ent league, but Doug Flutie was
one of the best to ever play in the expecting the couple's first child
CFL, and ·I was kind of looming in December, has been menbehind him for a couple of sea- tioned as a candidate for the
sons befote I got my bteak up vacancy in the "Monday Night
Football" booth.
there:' Garcia said. .
ABC is expected to announce a
"Maybe it wasn't on the scale
that the NFL is, but I've been choice later this month,

His retirement is now expected

Hammond

Ta=. . . . . .

CMw!IDtvlolon
Chlc:lgo ..................... 8 8 1 25 34

.""UIIhn. AnahMm, 18; Mlll11nez. Soatue, 18.

Ang-.

.. &lt;-

Anaheim, 98; Sweeney,

Kansas City, 81; Rodriguez, Texu, 81 : Delgado, Toronto, 78; Llw1on, Mlm-., 75; A&lt;lnda.

111- &lt;-ux

ca...-

LA. Likert II Indiana, 7:30 p.m.

Nov. 12 - Pennzoll 400, Homeoteod, Fla.
Nov, 19 - NAPA 500, Ham!*&gt;n. Ga.

WHtemCont....n~

Toronto, .341.

Texu at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
-tUe II San FrlllCisoo, 4:05 p.m.
Oolcland It LA&gt;o Anglloo, 4:10 p:m.
Anaheim at Arizona, 4;35 p.m.
Houolon at Son Diego, s p.m.
N.Y. -~~N .Y. Yank-. ,:05 p.m.

BAl'rtNG-H-., Cololldo, .405; Guer·
roro, Montreol, .3n: Clldlto, Florldo, .368;
~ro, Montreal, .386; Piazza, New YOfk, .380;
Edmondo, st. Louis, .355: Alfonzo, Now Yot1i,
.3152.
RUNS Hollon, Coionldo, 57; Edmondo, m:
Loulo, 58; Bondi, San Franalooo, 55; lllogwolt,
Houlton, .151; Atfonzo, N.w Yortc, 48; Green,
LA&gt;o Anglllo, 48; Kont, San ~rancloc:o, 48; FJn.
li\'.Artl0111,48.
, 4-5}, 7:06p.m.
ABI-Hollon, COlorado, 57; Glloo, Pltll·
N.Y. (loltw 1-1) at N.Y. Yank- . burgh, 58: Kent, San Franclsoo, 55; Konoo; LA&gt;o
' , (Ciemono 4-5), 7:05p.m.
·
~.M;~.Chlclgo.~;~I\'.AII·
. F1orldl (0on1111• H) Ill T - lily (Tnl· zona, M: Hidalgo, Houoton, 51; ~oro.
• C118113-ll), 7:t5 p.m.
Monlrlll, 51.
Phllodolplllo (Wolf W) Ill - . . . . (Rapp
HIT&amp;--&lt;1_,.,, Monlrlll, 80; Hollon. Col·
4-3~p.m.
D111do, N; 'llldro, Montrllil, 18; Young, Chicago,
( F - 1-1)
7· 18; Manm, '!bt1i, 74; Owono, Son Diogo,
' ' 1), 7:40p.m.
73; 5 ntioG wtlh 12.
.. ' ~ (8chmldt 2-5) It 1&lt;11-. Cl1y
OOUBLEB-Young, Chlceoo, 23; Groon,
2·11). arsam . .
LA&gt;o
21; Allonzo, Now York. ~; Whlto,
. Mil!'8uk"
ht 1.0) 11 Mln,.IOII
Montreill, 20; Vldro, MantrMI, 1e; Kent, san
3-4), :05 p.m.
Franclooo, 11; Holton, Colorado, 18; Cinllo,
Colllo (t.Jebtr 11-4) 11 Chicago Wl1lta Coionldo, 18.
(1&lt;.
3-11), I:QB p.m.
TRIPLE~. Coionldo, 7; A-.
(Rogort 8-11) • Cololldo (Ait.clo e.
Cinclnnod, 4; Poroz, Coionldo, 4; Cldono,
2), 1:05 p.m.
Hou-. 4; Grudzloionok, LDI Anooloo, 4;
Anoholm (Cooper 2·1) at AlllOIII (Johnton Wo!noolc, Atlzono, .4; 'llnl, st. LDull, ~; MorUn;
l-1~:" p.m.
Ciogo, 4; Biggio, Houlton, 4.
1 (Oolol 14) II San Diogo (9ponoor SonHOM£
RUNS-&amp;lndt, San Fronclloo, 25;
2·1), 1o:o11 p.m.
·
·
S
t
. Loulo, 21 ; Finlay, Atlzonl, ~:
• Ootdand (Hudoon 8·2) It LDI Ang- Hldllgo, Houlton, 18; Guerrero, Montrool, 11:
• · (Portz 4-2), 10:10 p.m.
· Chico go, 18; Holton, Color-, 17;
" Stlll1o (Halon 1·1) at lin Franalooo Edmondo, St. I..Dull, 17; Kon1, lin Francl1100,
24), 10:38 p.m.
17; Shof11old, LD1Anoo111, 17.
STOLEN BASE~Itlllla, Florida, 28;
' ' Clnaln,.. ft'omo N) 111 Clovlllnd Goodwin,
COlorado, 21; '!bung, Chlcogo, 21;
1:oil p.m.
N.Y. Moto (,.._ 1-2) at N.Y. Ylnlc- (Pel· Cldono, HOUlton, 17; OWono, son Diogo, 18;
A-. Clnclmod, 15; Votu, Atlonto, 15.
tifto 8-2), 1:05 p.m.

NY-NJ ......................... 8
0 18 1i 18
Miami ,.................. ......4 a 4 t6 13 tB
D.C............................. 3 9 2 11 22 3t

Sunday, June 11

L.oo!t-.. . . . . . . .

p.m.

' Ookland .... ........ .............. 32 Z7 .1142
.. S00111o ...... ........ ..............30 21 .11311
1/2
Anlhtlm .... .....................3t 21 .521
t
lOJCBI ........ ......................30 28 .517 t t/2
ThuNCI&lt;Iy'o Gomoo
N.Y. Moll 8, Boltimore 7, tO lmlngo
LotAngeleo 5 , - 2
Todoy'a Clomoo
St lAulo (S1ophoneon 8-t) ot 0e1ro11
·· • ~ 2·5), 7:05p.m.
,
ClnolnnMI {Neltlo U) 111 Clftoland
• ~ CJoO), 7:QII p.m.
••· · Montrllil (Tuck• Q.O) at ToroniO (Corpon1er

•

lnclilno 11 LA. l.lke&lt;o, e p.m.

friday, J\nl ,,
7 e 0 2t 27 ~
LA Llkero at lnclilno, e p.m.. K nece1181Y
Col .
-·-··!... - ...1 7 2 17 21 21
STRIKEOUTS--Johnson, Arizona, t31 ;
Monday, Jun. ,,
0&amp;... ................... 1"' " 5 8 1 18 23 30
-'ltaalo, Colo&lt;ado, 84: K.le, St. ...~.'!· 84;
lnclilno at L A.. Lakers, 9 p.m.. Kneceolll)' •
w..tee " DlvleJon
u - . Cticago, 80; Dernpoter, r.._ 78;
Ka11111 City............... 10 t 2 32 27 8
Wtdnetday, June 21
Plfoon, Phiia&lt;IMphla. 78; Senoon, Pittsburgh,
8 2 e 24 20 13
Indiana a1 LA. L.akars, g p.m., if necessary
Col
.............. ...... 8 8 0 18 21 34
74; t.laddux. Allonta, 74.
SanJole ............... ...... 3 6 4 t3 17 2t
SAVE~Aifonoeca, Florida, 17: Bookez.
Womon'a Nlllonel l•kotb.oiiAoooclatlon
New Yorlc. 15; Hoffman, San Diego, 13; Shaw,
NOTE: Thr11 polnto lor a w1n and ono poi!"
LDo Angeles, 1t: Aguilera, Chicago, 11 ;
EaolomCon,_,_
lor I tlo.
Jimenez, COkN'adO, tO; Rocker, At&amp;a.ma, 10;
Totm
W L Pet. Gl
Prldoy'a Clorno
Vef81, St. L.oulo, 10.
Clovlllnd ..~. :._ ..............3 1 .750·
Timpe lily 1t Now '!bt1i-New Jersey, 7:30
, Indiana ................... ..... .... ..2 1 ·.887
1/2
p.m.
Wethington ......... .......... ....3 2 .600
1/2
llatunlly'o Clomoo
-'-Icon L.Nguou.&lt;IOrlandO ............................3 3 .500
t
Oellao at Coluonbuo, 4:30 p.m.
Son Jose 11 New EngilrN!, 4:30 p.m.
BATIING-Erttad, Anaheim, .389; Mar- New '!bt1i ...........................2 3 .400 I 1/2
Kan111 City at OC Unltod, 7:30 p.m.
tinez. Seanlo, .311 ; Rodriguez, TtX8!, .370; Ootrolt ...............................1 2 .333 I 1/2
Miami ....................:...........1 3 .250
2
Chicago at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
s~, Kan~ City, .352; Rando, Kansas
Loa Angtlel ., po!Omdo. v p.m.
Ctty, .344; Aodnguez, Seanlo, .341: Delgado, Char1otte ...........................0 3 .000 2 112

aun.r'•

T.
WLPet.CIII
NIW '!bt1i .........................32 23 • .582
BollOO ............................32 24 .571 1P.
.. Toromo ........................... .3t 30 .508
4
I

PITCHING (8 Decltlono}---(Ovll, Clnc:lnnod, a.o. 1.000, t .N; RDJohnlon, Allmnl, 91, .900, 1.41 ; Sttphenoon, St. L.oulo, a. t, .aeg,
4.00; Maddux, A!lonla. 7·1, .875, 2.71; Cllavlna,
Aflonta, 7·2, .n8, 3.73; 1/azquoz, Mootroal, e.
2, .7!0, 3.37; - · Coior8do, 8-2, .750,
4.n: Kilo, st. LD.n. 1-3, .750. 4. ~.

.·:

. Frtdlly, June 9, 2000

'•

�.

~ -'-_a_•_B__2_•_Tn.
__o.
__~~S-•_nd_~----------------------------------~P~om~NW~~o~~~M~I~dd~I~~~~·~O~h~lo~----------------------------~Fri~dl~y~,J=une::~~~·~~=OO~~

TODAY'S SCOREBOAR-D

.•

_........

~

ChlcoQa Culto (WOOdo 2·3) It Chicago

-t' ?' .........

.

· •. W L
........................... .37 21
. ""'"""' .........................33 21
•• ..........................31 25
Florida ............................ .27 33
' Ptlllodtlpnlo ....................22 35
Cenlnll Dhillon
St Loulo ...........................33 21
' C~IOionlll ·----..a1 Z7
F'lalburgh ...................... .21 3t

Pet.

.1:18

Ql

.1558 41/2
.564'
5
.&lt;150
11
.3811 14 t /2
.1558
.1M 11/2

.OM
Chlcego ......................... .21 35 .418
- " ...................... .23 311 .3110
..........................2t 31 .3511

---

e

a t 12

tO
t2

...........................35 24 .583
LA&gt;o~ .....................32 21 .58t

-

2

Colorldo .........................3t 25 .553 2 t/2
San Froncioco ................. .27 211 ~.a2 a t/2

. 8an Ologo ........................21 33 .431

e t/2

Whllo'Sooc (Silo4tco 4-5) , 2:05p.m.
- " " " ' " ' 1-3) II Toronto (EIOObor 58), 4:05 p.m.
" •
~ (Wuhbum 1·1)1tAtlzono (OUIZ·
8), 4:05p.m.
(Abbo1t 2-2) at San Francloc:o (Ea.
8-2), 4:05p.m.
Flotldo (Comolluo 0.1) It Tompo lily (Yln:l3), 4:15p.m.
St. Louis (MOloJ 5-2) It 0o1ro1t (Moohlor 2·
3), 5:05p.m.
Phllodelpnta (&amp;:hiRing 1-3) It lll~imoro ·
(I'I:IMM 3-3), 7:05p.m.
Mllwoukoo (Hoynes 8-4) at Mjnneocta (Rod·
mon 4-0), 7:05 p.m.
9ooton (Sc:hou-olt 2·5) at A!loiMO (MulltOI·
lond 5-5), 7:to p.m.
TOJCU (LDIIza :1-3) II Colorado (Jarvis 2·t),
8:05p.m.
.
Piltlburgh (Bon1011 4-5) It l&lt;on111 City
(Sulul&lt;l3.0), 8:D5 p.m.
Houllon (Elotton 4-1 1 at Son Diego (MOod.
OWl 4-11), 10:05 p.m.
Ollctand (Otlvoroo 3-7) 1t LDs Angelos
(Bf"""' 4-2), 1~: 10 p.m.
Gllmu
81. LDull 01llolrt&gt;l1, t :05 p.m.
Clnd...., Ill Clwlllnd, 1:05 p.m.
Monlreolll Toronto, 1:05 p.m.
Booton IIA!IInta, 1:10 p.m.
Florldo 11 Tompo lily, 1:15 p.m.
Philadelphia It Blltlmore, 1:35 p.m.
Pltllburgh ot Kon111 City, 2:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at "nneao~a, 2:05 p.m.
Chleogo Culto II Clllc:ogo While Soil. 2:05

Bahlrnof8 ............ ,..•....... .24 33 ,421

8

. Tempo llly........ ......... :.... .2t 37 .312 12 t/2

c..--

• Cnlcogo .... ...................... 35 23 .103

Clonlond ..........._,_..az :14 .871

2

Kanlao Ci1y ............. ........ :l!J 21 .517
5
.. . Ml,_ta .. .....................27 33 .&lt;150
e
. De1rol1 ........ ............. ........2t 34 .312 12 t/2
,. •
WMt Dlvtelon

RUN~Rodr~ez, Seattle, 59: ' Delgado,
Toronto, ~~: Mondesl, TOronto, 49; Glaus, Anaheim, 48; Erotld, Anaheim, 48: Damon, Kanoas
City, 45; Selmon, Anaheim, 44; Rodriguez,

Texu, 44.
ABI-Martinez , Seattle, 63; Sweeney,
Kanou Ci1y, 5D; Ja. Glambl, Oakland. 59; Dot·

gada, Toronto, 58; Everett, ~ton, 58; ~ughn,

Anaheim, 52; Dyo, Kan111 Ci1y. 51; Rodnguez.
Seattte, 51 ; BeWilllarNI, New York, 51 .
HIT~rstad,

Kanau City, 74: Williams, Tampa lily, 73;

""ugnn, Anlhelm, 73.

OOUBLES---Uiw1on, MlnnOIO!a. 21 ; Glaus,
Anohelrn, ~; Dye, Kanou City, 18; SWMOOy,
Kon111 City, 18: Sogui, Texas, 18; O.Shlok!s,
lllffifll()(e, 18; 041Nd, Slltue, 18.
TRIPLES-Guzman, Mim.-, 8; Durllam,
Ch,cago, fJ; Hunter, Minnesota, 4; Nixon,
Sooton. 4; Valentin, Chicago, 4: Mortinez, New

-·~'-

YorX, 4; Alicea, Texas, " ·

HOME RUNS-Oeigado, Toromo, 22;

Everta, Boston, 21 ; Ja. Giambl, Oe.kland, 19;

eo.

.. (lullll.,,.
~

...

-··...-

.,

• 4

appreciation for St~ and what
he's contributed to the 49ers,"
Walsh said. "We would love to
have Steve Young with us for the
next 20 years, but I think he's got
bigger and better things to dO.
He might have my jgb, I don't

know. But I think we're agreed, if
he were to retire, he can look forward to a very sqccessful life, ·
w~tever his endeavor, from politics to broadcasting to sports to

·business."

·

Young W2S not available for
conunent Thursday. .
The sources said Young wanted
to w:Ut until Monday to make his
retirement announcement to give
his family. college coach and
other key figures in his life a
chance to be on hand.

.

.

introduced to it somewhat and ·1
think I can handle those sorts of
things:•
.
Coach Steve Mariucci said the
tho~ght of replacing ·Young was
daunting.

.

"When you lose a great player,
to generate up to S2 million in you have to replace his producpayroll relief for . the · 49ers, who· tion on the field, which is nearly
have struggled ·throughout the impo$Sible - he's the most effiotfseason with salary cap · prob- cient quarterback of all time and
lems. ·
nobody is really even close," Mar· While ·no formal announce- iucci said. .
. ment wu made, players leaving
"He's difficult to replace from a
the team:'s minicamp took word
leadership standpoint, from an
o£y011ng's decision in stride.
image standpoint, from the sundFormer Canadian Football point of a certain team swagger
League star Jeff Garcia will move and confidence level:'

frailll

,...1

inspection at Charlotte Motor
Speedway, NASCAR found a
fake ndio weighing 25 pounds.
The i&lt;ka would be to remove
the radio after the car weighed in,
then race at the lighter weight.
"When I caught that thing, we
told Jeff ifhe,w.anted to wear it all
during the
we wouldn't fine
him," Dick Beaty, then WiiiSIOn
Cup director, said at the time. "If
he didn't wear it, we were. going
to 6ne him $500.
"I 6ned him $500."
Hammond lau&amp;hs about it now.
"I wasn't going to wear that
thing:• he said. "And I dido 't put
it in there:'
·A few weeks ago. the 43--~ar­
old Hammond saw a tape o( the

60o,

WNneedey, June 1'

l .A. L.akoro ot lndlono, e p.m.

1. llol&gt;by l.lban1e, 1,948.

27

Loo Angeles .......................3 · 0 1.000
Houston ............................5

1 .833

9urtan. 1,814.
3. Dl'&gt; Eomhlr&lt;lt, 1,848.
4.

.'

0.. Jarratt, 1,790.

5. Mlt1i Mortin, 1,755.
6. Jell BUIIDn, 1,733.
7. Rusty Wallace, 1,704.
B. Ricky Rudd, 1,878.
e. Tony Stewart, 1,841.
10. Jei1Gotdon 1,80e.
11 . TtrJY Llbonle, 1,514. ·
12. Min l&lt;8nHOh, 1,514.

'•

Phoellix .................... .. .......3
Minnesota .................. .......3

I
2
2
3

Utah ..................................3

S"'rOLEN BASES-OeShleldo, Baltimore,
20; Dimon, Kanou City, 17; Mondll, Toronto,
17: AID,_, Cleveland, 13; Kennldy. Anaheim,
11 :· Febles, Kantat Qty, 11; L.lwton, Minneeo-tl, 11; Jeter, New York, 11; McL.arnore, Seattle,
11.

PITCHING (8 Oeclllont)-Bik!wln, Chlca·
go, J-1, .eoo, 3.07; WoWo, Toronto. 10·2, .833,
3.45; Monlnez, llooton, 11-2, .818, .es; Hudlon,
Dlkllnd, 8-2. .180, 4.70; Parque, Chlclgo. 8-2,
.750, 4.18; Solo, Slltt!e, &amp;-2, .750, 3.88;
Eldred, Cillcogo, 8·2, .180, 4.18.
9TAIKEOlJT8-Moninoz, ec.wn, 114; Fin·
loy, Clovlland, 87; Clome!lo, Now '!bt1i, n;
Nomo, Detro~. 73; 9urbo, dlovllond, 73;
Colon, Cleveland. 72: Mulino, lllltlmoro, 88.
SAVE~onoo, Detrok, f7; WoHolond,
T-.18: Po&lt;dvoi,Anohelm,15; lorlnghluoon,
Oolclond: 14; Riv«l, Now Yot1i, 14; Foulke,
Chicago, 13; Lowe, Sooton, 13.

.750
I
.600 1 1/2
.600 1 1/2
.250
3

Portland ................... .. .......1
Sacramento ...... ................1 · 3 .250
Soottle ....................... .. ..... 0 4 .000
Thul'ldoy•o Gomu

3
4

Washington 73, Miami 51

Mlnnesota71 , Oflando 57
Utah Bt , Pontand 72
Todlay'oGomoo
Sacramenw at Niw York, 7 p.m.
Seanle at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.

lnd,_.,.ll Dotron. 7:30 p.m.
-rcloy'oGornoo
Phoenix at Lot Angeles, 3:30 p.m.

Minnesota at Miami, 7 p.m.
7 p.m.

-·• c-.

Orlanao at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m.

New York at Indiana, B p.m.

Houston at Utah, 8 p.m.

8undliy,•ea.me
LDI Angeles 01 Sacramento, 3 p.m.

National -~ -'"*llllon
Plnolo

w ..

Startloy Cup Plnelo

•

1\llldoy, May 30
NewJorsey7.~1a13 .
ThuNCI&lt;Iy, June 1
0111812, NOW JerHy 1
.
s.tunllly1 June 3
New Jerooy 2, Dll\11 1
·
Monday, June I
Now Jerooy 3, Dallal 1
Thurodly, Juno a
011111 1, New J..ay 0, 30T, Now Jerny
llldll•l•:l-2
8oblrcloy, Jtm010
New Jersey a1 Dallu, 8 p.m.
Monday, Juno 12
Oali11 at Now Jerse~. 8 p.m., Wneeoillry

MoW Lliguo s*.

. (8uto01·7)

-~.Juno?

lold ..,.. 1.0

Nlllonol Hockey L.Nguo .
~-&lt;&gt;1·1)

t04, lndllfll! 87, LA. Llkerl

Frtay,Junet

..

I.

•r

13. Mkl ~. 1,557,

14. Bill Ellolt. 1,4811.
15. Dolo EamhlrdtJr., 1,485.
1e. Jt&lt;omy Mlyfiold, 1,4 11. , •
17. Steve l='ark, 1,3M.

,

18. Chad LJnle, 1,3;55.

1e. Johnny Senoon. 1,355.
Kon Sdvadlr, 1,315.

~-

' "'

112

llodrigUN, Tolrao, 19; Dye, Kansas City, t8;

LA.

2. -

l!olllom Dlvloton
Toom
W L T P1o QF CIA
Now Engllnd ..,............e 4 4 22 22 IB

--Cup-

IIA8fi!IALL

Tho NASCAA Wlni1Qn Cup odtedule, winners in parentheses; and driver point standings:
Feb. 20 - Oey10na 500, Daytona ·

Fla. IOaia Jarrll!t)
Feb. 27 - Dura Lubei1&lt;matt 400, Aoci&lt;ing·
ham, N.C. (Sobby Llllonte)
Morell 5- Corodlrect.oom 400, Llo \lag11.
(Jell Burton)
MarCil 12 - Co'ackor Barrel 500, Hampton,

Ga. (Dele Earnhardt)

Morell 19- Moll.c:om 400, Darlington, S.C.
(Ward 9ur1on)

Morell 21 - FocU City SOD, Brtotol, Tenn.
(AuotyWoilacot) .
.
Apttl 2 - lli!'IICfV 500, Fort WDrlt1, Texas.

(Dale Eo~ Jr.)
Apttl 9 - Goolti• 500, Mlrllfll'ltlle,
(Mat1i M8111n)

'

va.

· Apil11 a- OltHaid 500, Taladega, Ala. (Jeff
Gordon)
.
April 30 - NAPA Auto Pam 500, Fontana,

CIIW. (Jeremy Mlylleld)
May B - Pontiac Exclt...., 400, Richmond; Va. (Dele Eanltiaid1 Jt.)
Moy 21 ~ Coca-Colo 800, Concord, N.C.

(MIInl&lt;lnllth)

.

·

June 4 - MBNA Plotloom 400, oa-,.,, Del.
(Tony S18W1111)
..
. June 11 - Kmort 40o, Brooklyn, Mlclt.
Juno 18- Pacono1500, t.00g ·Ponc1, Po.
June '25 - Save ~on ~. Sonoma, Calif.
·
'
July 1 - Papol400, Daytona Bllch, Fla.
July 8- Now England~. I.Dudon, N.H.
July 23- PaJVtoylvonla 800, ~ Pond.
Aug. 5- Brtckyord I'OQ,Indloinopoilo.
Aug. 13 - Globol. -Ina at Tho Glon,
Wlllclno Cllon, N.Y.
Aug. ~- Papoi400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 21- goraclng.oom 800, llrtolol, Tonn.
Sopt.
~. Dorllngton. S.C.
Blpt, D- Chovroiot·Monlo Corio 400, Rich-

3--

mond,

v..

.I~

~op1.

17.-'- Now Homplhlril300, LDudon.
Blpt. 24- MBNA.oom 400, DoY•, Dol.
Oct. 1 - NAPA AutoCaoe 800, Mllr1ifll'ltlt,
\Ia.
1'
Oct. 8 - UAW-GM ~ 500, Concord,
N.C.
Ill
'
.Oct. 15- Wlnolon SAq, Tallldoga, All:
Oct. 22 - N.C.
Pop - .1.
Aoci&lt;lnghorn.
. - 400,
Nov. 5 - ~ Allo ~ Lube
500k, 1\Yondlllo, Ariz.
'·

,,,

-n~
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Piacad
AHP Klnl8o1·
tonlleld on lho 15-day disabled list. Rocal~
RHP Lou Palo from Edmonton at !he PC(.•
CLEVELAND INOIANS-Purellllld tho
oontrad of AHP Kane Davia frqm Bliffllk) of. the
ln1. . .tlonal League. Optlonod I.HP M111&lt;WIIson to Buffalo.
•
DETROIT TIGERS-Signed RHP .'Matt
Whea~and . Announcod that AHP Masao Kldl
cleared unconditional waivers ancl waa ~ to
Ooix at tho Japan ... Pacific ~u.:
,; .
TAMPA BAY DEVIl AAY~n0d38 !\81ly
Eddlemon, AHP Richard Oorrnqn,.RHP ~
lhy Coward, RH~ Josh Andoroon, CF JohnHII
and RHP Juan Renteria..
•,
TEXAS AANGER~Signed ze·Tytet: Mortln
and OF Robart Evono, and allignld them to
Pula~l at lho Appoilchlon Leoguo, 1nd IIHP
Morton Gie850n, RHP Thorniii\.Grjlhlm, ~HP
Reggio Rivard, OF J110n Gray end SS L8tanci
Swanton, and assigned t~.to the Aq'IN at
the GCL
o
TORONTO BLUE JAYS,..Sigri.G 3B Nom
Slrlveaw. RHP Tracy T~orpe, •SS Richard
BfOIIIIU, C John I!Jockbum, , OF 'Jtromtah
Johnoon, OF Brian SeiNer, C Chris Smoii.'RHP
William Morrl•. LHP Krll . Kozlowski, · 28

Thomu Calion, 28 Jeromy Rk!loy, 1B stlphon

Wood, I.HP Jeromle Spillman, RHP Daniel

Hueogen. C Cosey Mlltlnez aild. I.HP §t!lart
McF1itOnd.
. '
Nattonol LMtluo
.!
CINCINNATI AEOS...Sont AHP Konny Lutz
to tho lA&gt;o Anglleo Dadg. ., to oomp1ate an
oartltr 1rlde.
MILWAUKEE BREWERB-Ptot:od AHP Jell
O'Amloo'o on the 15·dly dloabtod lilt, ratroactlve to Juno 8. Callld up RHP Alllrl Llvroul1
from lndlanopollo of the ln1ematlonlll.ooguo.
NEW YORK MET $-Sold 1he oontroct at OF
Jon Nunnaly to Orix of tho ~
League.
. , .,
.;
FOOTBA~ ·\'"
"
Notional footb.oll L.Nguo
BUFFAlO BIL.L9-Nomad Mortin lllyleoo
dlroctol at ploylf dovtlopmerrt·opociol proj-.
CAAOUNA PANTHERS ~eod 10 11rm1
wl1h OL Lllnd• Jordan lnd OT 11ilio Wlloon
on lhroo-)'• oontriCIO. WoiYad QI.Jim ""-·
lv. P Brondon Kalt lnd P Donald s-, L9
~arlo lonon, OT Glrldla Milt•. 08 A'Jonl
Sondlftlnd 08 Seen Snyder.
'
1 ·
CHICAGO BEAR~$ignod CB Reggie
Auotln and K P1u Edlng.-.
·

'-alllc

1979 Daytona 500, when he was
with Johnson but not yet a ctew
chief.
"One of my first lessons came
that day:• Hamtnond said. "We
had an opportunity to win but
didn't. Junior didn't get mad. I
remember thinking, 'I'm not
doing anything my boss doesn't
do. If he gets excited, I'll get
excited:
"That's when I first realized
that there is going to be another
race. You. just have to put it
behind you and look forward."
Hammond recalls a race in the
1980s in Richmond, Va., where
Waltrip W2S ttailing Dale Earnhardt with about 12 laps to go.
''Junior got on the radio and
told Darrell, 'Go now. PaM him, I
mean pau him now,"' Hanunond
re'mctnbei\"Cl. "Darrell was just
being patient, but Junior told him
to go. With Darrell trying to pass,

It appeared Monday that '
Young's options had been
teduced to retirement or playing
elsewhere after Walsh all but ruled
out his return to the 49ers.
But Walsh backed off the
remarks the next day. He said the
teturn of the two-time league
MVP was possible if he gained
medical clearance from a series of
doctors.

Cavalier Sedan

·18,850*
•Automatic
• Air Conditlcining
• .Tilt &amp; Crulee

1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE1.Sedan

~~~5o·

• Power wrhdows &amp; Lockl
• Tilt &amp; Cr,uiee
• Aluminum Whnls

1999 Old1moblle ·

Alero Sedan

qa,&amp;5D0

Automatic, Air Condltlcmln1~ ~~­
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Lockt..
•TIH&amp;Cru!ee
'

He said he was visiting Sh;mahan, who is a close' friend, simply ·
to get advice.

2000 Blul!:k
Regal LS Sedan ·

"When I have trouble getting
up fo.r a race, I'll knOYi it is time
to stop:• he said. ~'To this day I still
get excited when they say 'Gentlemen, start your engines."'

qJ,850*

1999 Chevy Blazer
·Door 4x4

~

• Power Window &amp;Locka
• Tilt &amp; Crulu
Loaded!

750*

&amp; Lockl

Wheele

2000 Buick

.,

LeSabre Cuatom

~1,150~
• Power Seat
• Power Wlndowa &amp; Locka·
• Tilt &amp; Crulu
"

,,

HARRISON, N .Y. (AP) pu.t ting on at Pebble."
Davis Love Ill is exactly where he
Love birdied the final two
wants to be, in contention in the holes, making a 12-foot putt on
Buick Classic and right on sched- No. 17 and two- putting from 20
ule for next week's U .S. Open.
feet on 18.
Love, winless since the 1998
"All it would take is to win this
MCI Classic, shot a S-under-par week and win next week, and it
66 on Thursday, leaving him a would be a huge year:' joked
stroke behind leader Dennis Paul- Love, who has finished second
son.
eight times since his last victory.
"J feel like I'm very close to . Paulson, who lost a playoff with
where I want to be for the Duffy Waldorf in last year's tourOpen," Love said. "I'm happy nament, shot a 65 to take a onewith everything. I'm swinging stroke lead over Waldorf, Love
pretty well and !' m making a few and Spain's Miguel Angel
p'utts."
Jimenez.
He's coming off a two-week
"Leading the first day is no big
bteak following consecutive sec- deal. It doesn't matter. What mat.. .ond-place finishes in the Byron ters is not shooting 74, 75, 76,"
· Nelson Classic and the Colonial. Paulson said." Anything in the 60s
· . · "There's no substitute for play- or under par is a bbnus. Leading
-~ _ing - playing competitive golf:' doesn't matter until Sunday."
In his last 11 tournaments,
• •said Love, the 1997 PGA winner
: &lt;tt nearby Winged Foot. "You can Paulson has opened with only
· :play all you want this weekend at one sub-par round, a 68 in the
, .Pebble Beach, but the guys play- Masters. In his last four events, he
.: 1!!g here under the gun are really started with three 75s and a 79.
. playing golf:'
.
"I've been 'shooting myself out
: ·· ·: ' With its deep rough and tight of tournaments," Paulson said. "It
·. &gt;tree-lined fairways, the Westch- seems like I'm always 2 or 3 over
.. ester Country Club course is a after four holes."
; . good 'primer for the U.S. Open;s
Paulson, who started on No.
, .. &lt;lifficult conditions.
10, capped his bogey-free round
:_-. : "Any traditional-style course, with a two-putt birdie on the
' ;'any, real good ·golf course like par-59th.
'· ·this, is a good warmup," Love .
"That's probably the most solid
;:.. said. "Thete's deep rough and a round I've played all year," the
1 ·lot of long par-4s. The grass here
former national long-driving
.is very similar to what we'll be champion said. "I d!'O'ie the ball
''·
."

·.
. '

.·Can't anyone stop Shaq Diesel.?
:. ·: . LOS ANGELES (AP) - Now
.. that Larry Bird knows how Pat
, ~ }:liley felt during the 1980s, he .
might just call up the former Lak. · "ers coach and apologize.
More than a decade after Bird
c.aused massive headaches for
;l.!il_ey"; ~re ey~ry .!?.flJ~[ . NB,A_
~li w011e leading the Boston
~eltics to thre.e titles, the Indiana
~cen coach is receJvmg a 7fqot-1, 330.pound dose . of
iarmic payback in the NBA

finals," Miller said. "So I'm more to do in the conference finals.
"It hasn't worked yet, so no
upset with myself now, and I've
got to contend with myself, need for me to make it work
which is kind of scary."
now," he said.
· By his own calculations, Miller
Several Pacers were disappointmissed 11 shots that were wide- ed in their entire team's lack of
open. O'Neal didn't miss , that · defensive energy, particularly
W&lt;I~Y. in. t~_entire ga~e, ~~spj,!e ;gixen~, the, importance _of the
being · surrounded by Pacers ' game. Austin troshere said Indidefenders for much of the night. ana didn't accomplish any of its
O'Neal dominated the game primary objectives on defense.
early, scoring' 15 points in the first
"Our scouting report . on this
quarter, and late, when his 12 . team is basically to worry · about
fourth-quarter points helped put Shaq first, and when somebody
the game away. He has averaged else starts killing you, you worry ·
41 points per game in series- about them," Croshere , said.
opening contests this year, but !ys ''Nobody else even got a chance ·
average dropped to 28 points in to kill us. I( we can stop Shaq
the second game as teams adjust- from getting the ball so easily in
ed their defenses.
·
the low post, Game 2 might look
"I've said all along (that) after a whole lot different."
Throwing out Miller's dismal
we get Game 1 . .. Game 2 is
probably going to be more diffi- performance, the Pacers had a
cult:' O'Neal said. "We just have solid offensive game. Indiana shot
to be extra ready. We' know 33-for-60 and got strong contrithey're going to be pumped up." butions from Mark Jackson (1 8
O'Neal also scoffed at the points, seven assists) and Croshere
notion he can be stopped by pte- (16 points on 6-of-7 shooting).
emptive fouls, as the Blazers tried

Welt Vlrglnll'a 11 Chewy, Pontile, au)Ck--;--Oida,
And Custom Van Dialer. . ' ·
'
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'
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·

'
J

~als. In fact, the man who says
~ thrives on hate for his oppo~nts might· have found a new

target for his ire - himself.
: "You need that extra motiv2rK!n, you need to create that little
something that gets you ticked
off, and I think I've created it
ri)yself by going 1-for-16 in
Qame 1 of my first-ever NBA

Dallas signs
Cunningham
IRVING, Texas (AP) - The
Dallas Cowboys signed 37"yearold Randall Cunningham to
become Troy Aikman's backup at
quarterback .
Cunningham, cut by Minnesota after declining to renegotiate
his contract, will receive a base
salary ofSSOO,OOO this season, and
a $500,000 signing bonus, the
team said.

Seattle unloads
Dawkins
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) -

Brand New 2000 Chevy
5-Series LS Sportside

The Seattle Seahawks released
wide receiver Sean Dawkins, who
led the team with 992 yards
receiving last season.
Dawkins, who signed with the
Seahawks last offseason as an
unrestricted free age!lt, had 58
receptions, including seven
touchdowns.

CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan won a court batde over
the use of his name on a Chicago
restaurant as a federal judge threw
out a contract that gave rights to
the name to two business executives.

ATLANTA (AP) - NBA veteran Rick Mahorn and Orlando
Magic assistant Eric Mussehnan
will be assistant coaches on Lon
Kruger's staff with the Atlanta
Hawks.

Brand New 2000 Ponti~~:
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Restaurants using Jordan's
name in New York and elsewhere
are not affected by the lawsuit.

Hawks sign Mahom

• Air Conditioning

• Aluminum Wheals

U.S. District Judge James
Moran voided a contract that had
given business executive Gene
Silverberg and his brother,Joseph,
exclusive rights to use the Jordan
name on a restaurant in the sixcounty Chicago area.

Jordan wins
court battle

~1,450* ~1,5

:Miller was disgusted with his

,.

to fill a vacant slot.
Jang chipped in from 20 yards off the 16th green
fo r one of six birdies at the tree-lined Locust Hill
course, but also had four bogeys.
·
''I'm not excited at all because I've bee n in this
kind of situation many times;· said Jang, who was a
leading amateur in her homeland. " If I get excited,
next day I don't play very well, so I try to subdue
my excitemenc."
. Doolan said swirling winds made play very tricky
at times; but her round was a little more consistent
than Jang's with four birdies and two bogeys.
"Things have been coming together," said
Doolan, who has accumulated three top- 10 finishes
in three months, including a career- best tie for third
at the Electrolux.
A rainstorm slowed play in late afternoon while a
batch of players vying for the lead were still on the
back nine of an already soggy course.
Defending champion Karrie Webb of Australia,
already a four-time winner this year, shot a 2-over
74. A year ago, after opening with a season-high 75,
she squeaked past Cindy McCurdy with three
birdies on the last three holes.
South Korea's Grace Park, who earned her first
LPGA title last week, tumbled back to reality with
an 82. Naree Song Wonglu ekiet, a 14-year-old from
Thailand, shot a 75, but her twin sister, Aree, faded
with an 80.

ROCHEST ER , N .Y. (AP) - Wendy D oolan ,
w inless in fo ur years on the U.S. golf circuit, steers
clear of predicting an eventual victory.
" I have no deter mination in that. I' m j ust doing
my best every week," said th e shy, soft-spoken Australian.
Bubbly South Korean rookie Jeong Jang said she
no longer expects to quickly land in the LPGA's
top-20 m oney list. But neither does she shy away
from more modest predictions.
" Now I get more ~ onfidence, so I'd like to win a
tournament this year, hopefully," she said through a
translator.
Doolan, 33, and Jang, 19, a studied contrast in personalities, both fired 2-under-par 70s Thursday to
share the opening-round lead at the Rochester
International.
Nine players were 'one shot off the lead, notably
South Korean Se Ri Pak and LPGA veteran Dale
Eggeling. LaRee Pearl Sugg, making a comeback on
the professional circuit this year after a three-year
absence, had a double-bogey 6 on No. 18 and
dropped to a 71.
Jang, a native ofTaejeon who lives in Los Angeles,
finished in a 13th-place tie at the Electrolux USA
Championship in May, was in the top 50 in three
other events and niissed the cut three times.
She tied for 37th at the LPGA final qualifYing
tourn~ment. Her nonexempt status means she must
either quality for tournaments or join a waiting list

NBA FINALS

okn effort in his first trip to the
'

well when r had to, and I hit a lot
of good iron shots."
John Maginnes, Skip Kendall
and Sweden's Gabriel 1-ljertstedt
were two strokes back, and Canadian Mike Weir and Jo hn Cook
topped a nine-player group at 68.
Phil Mi c kelso n, a three-time
winner this year, and Fred Couples shot 69s.
David Duval, winless in the last
14 months, shot an eventful 70.
He had seven birdies, four bogeys
and a double-bogey. ·
Ernie Els and Masters champion Vijay Singh, both two-time
Buick Classic winners, and Jose
Maria Olazabal opened with 70s.
Waldorf closed with an eagle
on the par-59th, holing a 20-foot
putt after a 2-iron approach from
·220 yards.
"I put the ball in the fairway.
That was the key, because the
rough is really tough;' Waldorf
said. "When I had the opportunities, I made the putts, for the most
part." ,
Jimenez, playing his first full
round on the course, hit all 14
fairways and missed only one
green in regulation.
"Every time, it was right in the
middle. I'm driving very, very
straight," the European Ryder
Cup player said.

------------------------------------------------------

•
scat.

•

LPGA ROCHESTER

Open-minded love one back of Paulsen Doolan, Jang share lead after one day

:.. Shaquille O'Ne¥ is mote than
~ ll)igraine for Bird, who was one
:Of the few players of recent years
:Who could similarly dominate a
Jiame. With 43 points and 19
Fbounds in Los Angeles' 104-87
t!ctory in Game 1, O'Neal is a
puzzle that must be solved if the
facers have any hope of winning
tpeir tint championship.
• "lt1s not an easy series for us:·
Bird said. "The match ups aren't
jood. They're a quick team.
They're big with Shaq, and
~ey're stro.ng."
.
·' Game 2 is tonight at Staples
Center. The series moves to Indianapolis for the next three games
Sunday, Wednesday and Friday.
: On Thursday, Bi~ said the Pac~rs spent their morning practice
',llorking on quicker defensive
rotations and double-teams. He
also said Indiana will consider
(ouling O'Neal early and often.
: Hack-a-Shaq is the only
defen5e that has proven consistently; effective against, .tl:ris poor
·ltee-throw shooter who was 1ft&gt;r-6 from the line on Wednesday.
: "If a guy's going to take 30 ·
spots, he should go to the line 12,
1-4 times," Bird said. "There will
be situations (where) we might
&amp;aye to foul him if he gets the ball
tOo close to the baske~. It's disap)li:&gt;inting knowing that he had 30
sb,ots and he just went to the line
spc times."
: But O'Neal might not even be
Bird's biggest problem. Though
P..eggie
Miller"s
teammates
e'Xpress confidence their. offensive
l~der will rebound from his 1~r-16 shooting performance in
Cfame 1, Bird's team likely doesn't
stand a chance without an
improved effort from its shooting

Young met with Broncos coach
Mike Shanahan in Denver on
Monday. but he said there were
no negotiations or contract talks.

Earnhardt bumped him and sent
hint into the wall.
"Well, Darrell and Dale were
going to get into it. Junior says, 'I
better go on down and help my
driver 'cause he's about to get
into a fight with Dale: I remember thinking that it was a throwback to the old dirt-racing days."
Roush Racing driver Little finished 20th last Sunday in Dover,
Del., in Hammond's SOOth race as
crew .chief.It's bee~ a struggle for
both.
They've not wofi together, with
a second-place finish in 1998
their mt showing.
But Hanunond lias no plans to
quit anytime soon.

PGA BUICK CLASSIC
..

:P.ina!s.

1999 Ch11vrollat

The Dally Sentln11 • Page B3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..

.intd' the .i9b 'h~lcfl)y Young and ~ ..Young has 'been stiuggling to
. Montana for the last 19 years.
ch09se among three options: play
for the 49ers, join another NFL
"I've been preparing myself for
team or retire.
that situation all offseason, so I'm
ready for it:' said Garcia, adding
He hasn't played since a head
he won't be fazed by following in . blow Sept. 27 at Arizona left him
the footsteps of Young's Hall of with his latest concussion.
· Fame-caliber career.
Young's agent, Leigh Steinberg,
"I've been in a situation (in did not return phone calls seek- .
Calgary) where I've been behind ing comment Thursday.
a legend before, mayb,e in a differYoung, whose wife, Barbara, is
ent league, but Doug Flutie was
one of the best to ever play in the expecting the couple's first child
CFL, and ·I was kind of looming in December, has been menbehind him for a couple of sea- tioned as a candidate for the
sons befote I got my bteak up vacancy in the "Monday Night
Football" booth.
there:' Garcia said. .
ABC is expected to announce a
"Maybe it wasn't on the scale
that the NFL is, but I've been choice later this month,

His retirement is now expected

Hammond

Ta=. . . . . .

CMw!IDtvlolon
Chlc:lgo ..................... 8 8 1 25 34

.""UIIhn. AnahMm, 18; Mlll11nez. Soatue, 18.

Ang-.

.. &lt;-

Anaheim, 98; Sweeney,

Kansas City, 81; Rodriguez, Texu, 81 : Delgado, Toronto, 78; Llw1on, Mlm-., 75; A&lt;lnda.

111- &lt;-ux

ca...-

LA. Likert II Indiana, 7:30 p.m.

Nov. 12 - Pennzoll 400, Homeoteod, Fla.
Nov, 19 - NAPA 500, Ham!*&gt;n. Ga.

WHtemCont....n~

Toronto, .341.

Texu at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
-tUe II San FrlllCisoo, 4:05 p.m.
Oolcland It LA&gt;o Anglloo, 4:10 p:m.
Anaheim at Arizona, 4;35 p.m.
Houolon at Son Diego, s p.m.
N.Y. -~~N .Y. Yank-. ,:05 p.m.

BAl'rtNG-H-., Cololldo, .405; Guer·
roro, Montreol, .3n: Clldlto, Florldo, .368;
~ro, Montreal, .386; Piazza, New YOfk, .380;
Edmondo, st. Louis, .355: Alfonzo, Now Yot1i,
.3152.
RUNS Hollon, Coionldo, 57; Edmondo, m:
Loulo, 58; Bondi, San Franalooo, 55; lllogwolt,
Houlton, .151; Atfonzo, N.w Yortc, 48; Green,
LA&gt;o Anglllo, 48; Kont, San ~rancloc:o, 48; FJn.
li\'.Artl0111,48.
, 4-5}, 7:06p.m.
ABI-Hollon, COlorado, 57; Glloo, Pltll·
N.Y. (loltw 1-1) at N.Y. Yank- . burgh, 58: Kent, San Franclsoo, 55; Konoo; LA&gt;o
' , (Ciemono 4-5), 7:05p.m.
·
~.M;~.Chlclgo.~;~I\'.AII·
. F1orldl (0on1111• H) Ill T - lily (Tnl· zona, M: Hidalgo, Houoton, 51; ~oro.
• C118113-ll), 7:t5 p.m.
Monlrlll, 51.
Phllodolplllo (Wolf W) Ill - . . . . (Rapp
HIT&amp;--&lt;1_,.,, Monlrlll, 80; Hollon. Col·
4-3~p.m.
D111do, N; 'llldro, Montrllil, 18; Young, Chicago,
( F - 1-1)
7· 18; Manm, '!bt1i, 74; Owono, Son Diogo,
' ' 1), 7:40p.m.
73; 5 ntioG wtlh 12.
.. ' ~ (8chmldt 2-5) It 1&lt;11-. Cl1y
OOUBLEB-Young, Chlceoo, 23; Groon,
2·11). arsam . .
LA&gt;o
21; Allonzo, Now York. ~; Whlto,
. Mil!'8uk"
ht 1.0) 11 Mln,.IOII
Montreill, 20; Vldro, MantrMI, 1e; Kent, san
3-4), :05 p.m.
Franclooo, 11; Holton, Colorado, 18; Cinllo,
Colllo (t.Jebtr 11-4) 11 Chicago Wl1lta Coionldo, 18.
(1&lt;.
3-11), I:QB p.m.
TRIPLE~. Coionldo, 7; A-.
(Rogort 8-11) • Cololldo (Ait.clo e.
Cinclnnod, 4; Poroz, Coionldo, 4; Cldono,
2), 1:05 p.m.
Hou-. 4; Grudzloionok, LDI Anooloo, 4;
Anoholm (Cooper 2·1) at AlllOIII (Johnton Wo!noolc, Atlzono, .4; 'llnl, st. LDull, ~; MorUn;
l-1~:" p.m.
Ciogo, 4; Biggio, Houlton, 4.
1 (Oolol 14) II San Diogo (9ponoor SonHOM£
RUNS-&amp;lndt, San Fronclloo, 25;
2·1), 1o:o11 p.m.
·
·
S
t
. Loulo, 21 ; Finlay, Atlzonl, ~:
• Ootdand (Hudoon 8·2) It LDI Ang- Hldllgo, Houlton, 18; Guerrero, Montrool, 11:
• · (Portz 4-2), 10:10 p.m.
· Chico go, 18; Holton, Color-, 17;
" Stlll1o (Halon 1·1) at lin Franalooo Edmondo, St. I..Dull, 17; Kon1, lin Francl1100,
24), 10:38 p.m.
17; Shof11old, LD1Anoo111, 17.
STOLEN BASE~Itlllla, Florida, 28;
' ' Clnaln,.. ft'omo N) 111 Clovlllnd Goodwin,
COlorado, 21; '!bung, Chlcogo, 21;
1:oil p.m.
N.Y. Moto (,.._ 1-2) at N.Y. Ylnlc- (Pel· Cldono, HOUlton, 17; OWono, son Diogo, 18;
A-. Clnclmod, 15; Votu, Atlonto, 15.
tifto 8-2), 1:05 p.m.

NY-NJ ......................... 8
0 18 1i 18
Miami ,.................. ......4 a 4 t6 13 tB
D.C............................. 3 9 2 11 22 3t

Sunday, June 11

L.oo!t-.. . . . . . . .

p.m.

' Ookland .... ........ .............. 32 Z7 .1142
.. S00111o ...... ........ ..............30 21 .11311
1/2
Anlhtlm .... .....................3t 21 .521
t
lOJCBI ........ ......................30 28 .517 t t/2
ThuNCI&lt;Iy'o Gomoo
N.Y. Moll 8, Boltimore 7, tO lmlngo
LotAngeleo 5 , - 2
Todoy'a Clomoo
St lAulo (S1ophoneon 8-t) ot 0e1ro11
·· • ~ 2·5), 7:05p.m.
,
ClnolnnMI {Neltlo U) 111 Clftoland
• ~ CJoO), 7:QII p.m.
••· · Montrllil (Tuck• Q.O) at ToroniO (Corpon1er

•

lnclilno 11 LA. l.lke&lt;o, e p.m.

friday, J\nl ,,
7 e 0 2t 27 ~
LA Llkero at lnclilno, e p.m.. K nece1181Y
Col .
-·-··!... - ...1 7 2 17 21 21
STRIKEOUTS--Johnson, Arizona, t31 ;
Monday, Jun. ,,
0&amp;... ................... 1"' " 5 8 1 18 23 30
-'ltaalo, Colo&lt;ado, 84: K.le, St. ...~.'!· 84;
lnclilno at L A.. Lakers, 9 p.m.. Kneceolll)' •
w..tee " DlvleJon
u - . Cticago, 80; Dernpoter, r.._ 78;
Ka11111 City............... 10 t 2 32 27 8
Wtdnetday, June 21
Plfoon, Phiia&lt;IMphla. 78; Senoon, Pittsburgh,
8 2 e 24 20 13
Indiana a1 LA. L.akars, g p.m., if necessary
Col
.............. ...... 8 8 0 18 21 34
74; t.laddux. Allonta, 74.
SanJole ............... ...... 3 6 4 t3 17 2t
SAVE~Aifonoeca, Florida, 17: Bookez.
Womon'a Nlllonel l•kotb.oiiAoooclatlon
New Yorlc. 15; Hoffman, San Diego, 13; Shaw,
NOTE: Thr11 polnto lor a w1n and ono poi!"
LDo Angeles, 1t: Aguilera, Chicago, 11 ;
EaolomCon,_,_
lor I tlo.
Jimenez, COkN'adO, tO; Rocker, At&amp;a.ma, 10;
Totm
W L Pet. Gl
Prldoy'a Clorno
Vef81, St. L.oulo, 10.
Clovlllnd ..~. :._ ..............3 1 .750·
Timpe lily 1t Now '!bt1i-New Jersey, 7:30
, Indiana ................... ..... .... ..2 1 ·.887
1/2
p.m.
Wethington ......... .......... ....3 2 .600
1/2
llatunlly'o Clomoo
-'-Icon L.Nguou.&lt;IOrlandO ............................3 3 .500
t
Oellao at Coluonbuo, 4:30 p.m.
Son Jose 11 New EngilrN!, 4:30 p.m.
BATIING-Erttad, Anaheim, .389; Mar- New '!bt1i ...........................2 3 .400 I 1/2
Kan111 City at OC Unltod, 7:30 p.m.
tinez. Seanlo, .311 ; Rodriguez, TtX8!, .370; Ootrolt ...............................1 2 .333 I 1/2
Miami ....................:...........1 3 .250
2
Chicago at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
s~, Kan~ City, .352; Rando, Kansas
Loa Angtlel ., po!Omdo. v p.m.
Ctty, .344; Aodnguez, Seanlo, .341: Delgado, Char1otte ...........................0 3 .000 2 112

aun.r'•

T.
WLPet.CIII
NIW '!bt1i .........................32 23 • .582
BollOO ............................32 24 .571 1P.
.. Toromo ........................... .3t 30 .508
4
I

PITCHING (8 Decltlono}---(Ovll, Clnc:lnnod, a.o. 1.000, t .N; RDJohnlon, Allmnl, 91, .900, 1.41 ; Sttphenoon, St. L.oulo, a. t, .aeg,
4.00; Maddux, A!lonla. 7·1, .875, 2.71; Cllavlna,
Aflonta, 7·2, .n8, 3.73; 1/azquoz, Mootroal, e.
2, .7!0, 3.37; - · Coior8do, 8-2, .750,
4.n: Kilo, st. LD.n. 1-3, .750. 4. ~.

.·:

. Frtdlly, June 9, 2000

'•

�Frldl~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

June e, 2000

Frldly June 9, 2000

M--

480 lf*)elor Rent

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

540 Mltcellaneou1

MerchandiM

Lo WIITake12
4 t Wlclea I 25 !AOftlll $ 00
De.,.. Ra 1 onc11 740 441
0 75

1710 Autos lor S11e
13 Fo d Aanger

seoo car'' $1200
Honda

CRX, 2 - 1j10&lt;11

740-182 2804

of tht VIllage o1 Pomeroy
trtntltr the eum of
$80 000.00 (llxty Thouund
dolltrl) from the Gtn•rtl
Fund to the Street Fund tor
thl oparatlon of current
ll!Pifllll
Thlt reaalutlon Ia deem
tn 1mergenay d111 to lick of
Iundt
far
current
operatlont
PoiiACI 51111/00

740-24H595

MEH CHAN DIS E

CAREER OPPOATUN TY
!AEO CAL B LEAS Ea n Up To
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Wai'hl I 0 ye I Aeng11 Ae
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GY We F nanc:t 0 Down Paa
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Ybu c edlll ~59-0359

KllhyHyHI

Cltrk/TrAI
John W Blllllntr Mtyor
John f: Mu- Prttldtnl
(I) 2, t2 tc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
IIIII on laturdoy JuM 10
2000, 1110 00 1 m a publla
111t will bt lilld 11211 Will
Stcond Street Pomeroy
Ohio The Firmer • Btnk
tnd Savina• Camptny
exltnded ptrklng lot
(b11ld1 Powell a Super
lllllu) to 1111 for Cllh tilt
tallawlng colleteral
1113
Ford
Prabt
1zvtrr2ZIMJP5111t12
The Fermtrt Btnk tnd
lltvlngt
Comptny
Pomeroy Ohio rtHIWIIhl
right to blcl 11 thll Mil tnd
to withdrew tht above
colllttrtl prior to 1111
Ful'll* Tht Ftrmtra Btnk
end Savlngt Comptny
rtllr'VH the right to rtJtct
1ny or 111 bldtl tubmltllcl
the abavt
Furtlltr
colllleral will bl10ld In the
condition II It In with no
txprn• or lmplltd
wtmrnllll given
For further Information
contact Shtlla Buchantn ot
fle2.2138

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem

be ah p 0 T mesh a e

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Citric of Council
John Bt.lltnlr
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dono a ea

S35toS45 o 2o 3

hou a week y Ca Sa a Tee 7&lt;40
592-665

Aen 0 Sa e On Land Cont ac
M nute From
GAHS740-44 59

Home On S A 588

Kawaaak Je ma e new 650cc
eng ne eaa lhan ! h 29
mph uses e pump d va sya em
w ..,.. se 3 paasenge dry boal
nc udas a t $2800 304 875

7323

II Ca Now 800
EXl: 7832

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A moa Eve yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Down Low
MOI'I h y Paymen s
800 6 7
;l47~Ex 330

Public Notice
and prectlota of oltv
govtrnmltlt are 1 modll
and example tor other
community lnllltuttont tnd

SERVICES

810

Home
lmprovemanta

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Alffle.Lutz Vol 311 Pg 411
FOR LAST SOURCE OF :
"•"Ill1 011t 111 R
d TITLE SEE VOL 68 Pg 1tlll •
nd
I
"""
c
tcOf
of tht Official Rtcorda Of
68 Pg 184 S 07 37 44
w..t 3&amp;2 • fHt 10 tht Mt a• county Ohio Pa.- • "
center of Manuel Roed No CJ8.001183.000
pualng an Iron pin 11t ot
Tht Plaintiff requeiCa!Mt "
217 14 ful
thtnct uld ll"tml- bt lOki, your ~
follOWing Mlnuel Rood s lnterell therein torsalond '"
• 01 2-t Wtll 115181HI ond for .,Y otl1tr rela.t •
b 1 th 1
1
1 thlll bt IIIII and equitable ,:
e ng
t rue po nt o
You ' " required to •"
BEGINNING lnd contllnlng tntwtr tht told com""olnt
1 312 Acree more or 1111
,..
and being the 11m1 reol by Auguet 4 2000 or •
e•tate •• deecrlb•d In Judgment by Default will bt
Officio I Record 68 Pg 1M rendered egelnll you
but with 1 mare accurote Merle K McC-n Reg No
detcrlpUan by thll 1urv1y
~~ for Plaintiff
Surv•y for Caunto woa (S) 2 1 16 23 30 (7) 7
perfarmild an Jun1 19 1988
by Philip M Roberti Oh o
M
Reglaterad Surveyor No 1 :=::;:l:n:;;:e:mo::::::ry~=:::;
818&amp; Iron pin 111 trt 58 x 1,
30 rtblr With pl11tlc ID
In Memory Of
ctpa lsbeltcl PMR 61H All
Dave Buskirk
oth1r monument• " ' I I
619196 619100
nottcl
SubJtct to 111 legtlllllll
Ills memory Is as dear
tallmtnt• tnd right of today as In the hour he
wtya ol record
passed a way

......_

THEREFORE IE IT
REIOLYEO THAT the
P - y City Council daM
hereby endoral 1 reuae
policy lor city government
tnd tncourtgtl all city
alit-to
1 AtuH mttlrlllt within
lhtlr OffiCI WhtftiVer
polllblt and/or tpproprlltt
2
Share unwanted
turplut mattrltll with other
OffiCII ol lhl city
gOYtrnmtnl WhtntVtr
ponlblt tn:l/or tpproprllle
lnd
3 Btlort dltpotlng lteml
11 gsrbtge mtkl theJII
IVIIIIblt
Whentvtr
po11lbl1 or approprltte to
other government 1gtnclt1
to tchoolt and other
publicly
aupporttd
lnetltutlone tnd to loctt
non-profit orgtnlzltlont
John B tlltntr
Mtyor
JohnMu111r
Council Member
VIctor Young Ill
Council Mtmbtr
David Btllard
Council Mtmbtr
Llrry Wehrung
Council Mtmbtr
Elfyan Shank
Council Mtmbtr
George Wright
Council Mtmbtr

Happy Ad

KllhyltyHII

(8) 2 12 to

Clerlc,ll'rt11
Doottd 5/111/00

Public Notice
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
NoUct to contractora
In ICCOrdtnCI with
-'19n 307 18 of tiM Ohio
AtVIIId Codl lllltd bldl
will bt rtcelvtd by tht
Botrd of Mtlgt County
Commltalonere Court
HOUII Pomeroy Ohio
457et until 3 00 P M on
Frldll~ Juftl 1eth 2000 The
bldt will thtn bl optned
tnd rttd aloud 11 1o 15
A II on Mondty June 1tth
2000 tor AC-20 liquid
Thll will bt In MBE
PROCUREMENT
CONTRACT for aupplylng
AC 20 bltumlncul liquid.
dtllvtl'ld to tiM dlllgntttd
pltnt of the aaphalt
concrete tupplltr of Round
14 OhiO Public Warb
Proltct Thlt mtllrltl ahall
conform to thl Pertln1nt
Stitt of Ohio Departmlnt Of
HlghW11yl Conllnlctlon and
llaterltll Specification
Mtnutl
THIS WILL BE A TOTAL
TONS BID The MBE
Supplier will bid totel tan•
of AC.20 Uquld that ctn bt
dlllvlrtd for a flxtcl emaunt
0112500000
Bid lfiiCiflCIIIIOnt may bt
plcktd up 11 the Mela•
Countv Englnttr e Olflce or
lhl OffiCI of thl Melgt
County Commllllonera
Tht Board of 111111
County Commtulontre
mty - p t tht IOwtll bid
or Hltct t11t bttt bid for tht
lntandtd purpo11 and
rtlti'VII tiM right to - p t
tnd/or re)ICI any or 111 bldt
tndlor env part thereof and
wiH IWird 1 contnct to thll
bidder which 11 In thl blet
1nme11 01 Mllg• County.
Glorll Kloee. Clark
Board of Melga county
Camml11lon«a
(8)2 t 2tc

MIZ)NAY TAVERN
Sat Char eu y900 1 oo
Wed Open Stage 7 oo 11 00
B ng your own nst uments
We have the est

'

PAY BY MAIL OPTION
•Convenient
•Safe

authority hat
lht nttc1 to ildJutt
pay
ICIII for ftiW tmptoyell
thtt .,, working out their
probtltCHJary period
Now thtrtlort bl It
rtHivld by the Council of
tht VIllage of Pomeroy
IIIII of Ohio thll tht
attachtd ply ICIII thall bt
In efftct from thll time
forwtrd
.. It further r-lvld thlt
tht 0 to abc (I) monlht pay
-1• thtll be In efftct ••
long 11 tha tmployH 11 on
problllon
Thla Ordlntnct provldtd
II rtciiVII thl afflrmttlvt
VOII of Ylllllll Council
-~ t.kt tfftct and bt In
IorGe from tnd tlttr tht
11rll11t ptriOd aiiOWid by
law

2 7470

2!188 Equa HoUI ng Opportun!y

RENTALS

1101

TRANSPORTATION

Public Notice
REUSEPOUCY
RIIOiutlon 3.00
WHEREAS rtUII end
rtcycllng help protect th1
tnvlronmtnt, lnd
WHEREAS thl rtUA of
local material• prtventa
VIIUabll rtiOUrCel from
btlna walltd and
WHEREAS thl riUII of
local material• IIVII
dollare th1t would be
ntldtd to purchlll naw
lnd
WHEREAS lhl rtuet of
local meterllll reducea
rtlltnce on coattv mlllrllll
productd tnd Imported
from outtldt tht region
end
WHEREAS the pollclll

CARS FROM $200 PO CE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyo a s
Chtvys Jeeps And Spo Ut

~EAUT FUL APARTMENTS AJ
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woo wood
D lvo om $289 o $370 wa k o
shop &amp; mov ea Ca 740 446

LAND
CHEAP AS D1RT

ab e $660 DOwn Ca Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO

for Sale

71 o Autoa for Sala

Huge
en o y 0 scoun P cea
on v ny Sk ng Ooo s w nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e a
Pumb g&amp; Etc ea Pa a Fu
nacea &amp; Hea P1.1mps Benne 1
Mob e Home Supp y 7,.0 446
94 6 www orvb c:om'bennett

Se e a Loca on1 In Ga a &amp;
MeiQa Coun 11 5 Ac as As Low
As $6 eoo Land Con ac A a

750 Boatl &amp; Motora

JET

800 2 3

Altfnllon Dovelopars

no 9 h 0 h 9 AM 5 PM
Stale Ro... 325 2 !Allot North Of
Rio Grando !AclloNid'a

3TC

ORDINANCE NUMBER 187
WHEREAS th1 Ohio
Rtvllld Codt autharlzta
thl leglelattve authority to
crallt tht poeltton Of Cltrt
of lltyor 1 Court, and
WHEREAS theltgi...Hw
tuthorlty hll recognlz•d
tht nted to cr11t1 th1
polltlon 01 Citric of Mtyor 1
Court,
Now tllerefare be II
NIOIVId by lhl Counoll of
the VIllage of Pomeroy
Sttll of Ohio thll lht
poeltlon of Clark Of Mayor 1
Court Ia her1by etttbllahtcl
lnd
Thtt the 11l1ry for lhl
Citric Of Mayor 1 Court ehtll
rtngt from 05 cent• per
hour to 110 Clnta per hour
Tht Vllltge Council thtll Ill
th1 ulary under thle renge
upon thl recomm1ndatlon
olthl Chill of Polloi and 11
tilt Council fit.
Thlt OrdinanDI, provldtd
II rteiiVIe tha afflrmttlva
vote ol VIllage Council
1h1ll tiki eflacl and bt In
!orca from tnd after thl
•arll••t period tllowld by

oa

Aaasonat:JM ales
Ca o appo ntmen
304)675 7472
304)6 5 72 9

AI real estate advert 1 ng n
hlo newapapo osub oct to
tl1e Federo Fa Houo ng Act
of 1988 wh ch makeo NHlegal

at

Public Notice

P H-0-T.(J..Q.R-A-P Ho~
Wodd hgs
Pols
Spo sTeams
P o ess ona Ce
ad Pho og a
pho

Los blaCI&lt; &amp; while ltmale P tU&gt;u
o ange cGI a very peop e end
y ewa d 740 742 803 ... 740

ooncumna
Thll tht Clerii,ITNIIUNr

tl1lreto

UHd Fu n Ufl Couch 2 FIK n
I I Co ttl IEnO Tables K &lt;::hen
Tabt I Ch~ 1 TV Cobot

51 D

Public Notice
RUOLUT10N 2 00
BE IT RESOLVED by thl
council of thl VIllage of
POIMI'OY all member•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Pa11tc1 515/00
JohnMuPrnldtnt 01 Council
KlthyHyllll
Citric ol Council
John Blllltrllf
Mayor

(1)2 Ute

•Flexible

Rece1ve A Bill For Your Paper
Duectlv From

The Daily Sentinel

· n'lkjH'Jf~l!frfJj~
.
.

.;

-

~

Public Notlca
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
IIII).STATE TRUst VII
PLAINT!~

YS

KELLY A COUNTY. ET AL
DEPINDANTI
CASE NO OO.CVNOTICE FOR PUBLICA110N
Kelly A County and
Lutnnt C Cot,1nt1 akt
Louenne C Caunt1 will
tlkt notice thtl an March
20 2000, Mld-8- Trull, VII
fllild 111 compltlnt 1g11net
you In thl court Of Common
PIHI Of Mtlge County Ohio
requ11t1ng the Court to
ttrmlntll tny lntertat that
you hive In tht premla11
dlterfbtd .. followa
81N1111n the Townahtp of
Lttlrt Mllge County Ohio
btlng bounded and
dllcrlbed 11 followa
BEOINNINQ on tht North
lint Of 100 Acre Lot No 222
lllhiNW OO"*Ofa11/2
Aort ti'IIOI of land now or
formerly awned by Mix
Mtnutl (8 E DB 131 Pg

For More InformatiOn
Call Today Switch To Office Pay
The Dally Sentinel

992-2155
Hours 8 AM to 5 PM

�Frldl~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

June e, 2000

Frldly June 9, 2000

M--

480 lf*)elor Rent

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

540 Mltcellaneou1

MerchandiM

Lo WIITake12
4 t Wlclea I 25 !AOftlll $ 00
De.,.. Ra 1 onc11 740 441
0 75

1710 Autos lor S11e
13 Fo d Aanger

seoo car'' $1200
Honda

CRX, 2 - 1j10&lt;11

740-182 2804

of tht VIllage o1 Pomeroy
trtntltr the eum of
$80 000.00 (llxty Thouund
dolltrl) from the Gtn•rtl
Fund to the Street Fund tor
thl oparatlon of current
ll!Pifllll
Thlt reaalutlon Ia deem
tn 1mergenay d111 to lick of
Iundt
far
current
operatlont
PoiiACI 51111/00

740-24H595

MEH CHAN DIS E

CAREER OPPOATUN TY
!AEO CAL B LEAS Ea n Up To
S4SK 1'/rt Fu ~a~ ng /PC Aeq d
888 860-66!)3 E&gt;&lt;t 4&lt;4Q2

Houaehold

App ances

Good a

AeconCI oned

Wai'hl I 0 ye I Aeng11 Ae
gao a 80DayGuaanee We
Se New May ag App ances
F enc:h C y May ag 740 446
1m

WANT A CO!APUTER77?7 BUT
NO CASH7? !A!AX TECHNOLO
GY We F nanc:t 0 Down Paa
C ed ft obems OK E en
Tu nad Down Bolo 1 R... abl sh
Ybu c edlll ~59-0359

KllhyHyHI

Cltrk/TrAI
John W Blllllntr Mtyor
John f: Mu- Prttldtnl
(I) 2, t2 tc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
IIIII on laturdoy JuM 10
2000, 1110 00 1 m a publla
111t will bt lilld 11211 Will
Stcond Street Pomeroy
Ohio The Firmer • Btnk
tnd Savina• Camptny
exltnded ptrklng lot
(b11ld1 Powell a Super
lllllu) to 1111 for Cllh tilt
tallawlng colleteral
1113
Ford
Prabt
1zvtrr2ZIMJP5111t12
The Fermtrt Btnk tnd
lltvlngt
Comptny
Pomeroy Ohio rtHIWIIhl
right to blcl 11 thll Mil tnd
to withdrew tht above
colllttrtl prior to 1111
Ful'll* Tht Ftrmtra Btnk
end Savlngt Comptny
rtllr'VH the right to rtJtct
1ny or 111 bldtl tubmltllcl
the abavt
Furtlltr
colllleral will bl10ld In the
condition II It In with no
txprn• or lmplltd
wtmrnllll given
For further Information
contact Shtlla Buchantn ot
fle2.2138

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem

be ah p 0 T mesh a e

WE lL

TAkE T Amt ca 1 Mol Sue
ceu u Campg ound And T me

sna e Resa e C ea nghoust Ca
A

Rea n ce 4 bedroom ranch sty •
house w h n shed ba .. men 2
bed oom Oownsta rt
&amp; 12 bath
ea n ce 111 a ga age 26~~:32 on
68 between Reeds
t &amp; Tup

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

RESORT SALES NTEANAT ON
BOO 423 5967 24 Hou 1

www esortsales com

po s 'F&gt;
6337

a ns $65 000 740 378-

Pos a Jobs $48 323 00 Y Now
H ng No E11pe ence Pad

T a n ng G ea Bene &amp; Ca 7
Days 8D0-429 3660 E&gt;&lt;t J 365

Now To YouTh ft Shoppo
9 Wes S mso Athens
740 592 842

Are You Connec ed?

v

Oua
o h ng and houaehO d
ems S 00 bag sa e eve y
T~u sday Mo day h u Sa u day

n e ne users wanted
$350-$850/waak
88826 33
www e-commb z ne

9110-5 30

Giveaway

L.oca Ti uck ng Company Seek g
Oua ed COL 0 vera F
Pa
T me Good Pay Bene s A d
Home E en ngs Ca 740 286
463

FREE FREE MONEY PROB
LE!AS7 NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APP CAT ON FEE
877
543-8357 EXl: 402

230

Professional
Services

Wooden bunk beds $40 00 elte
• o e $50 00 wo ks good 304

REPOSALE
Neve L ed n No Money Down
Sa o Ova $5 000 Ca
888
685 0 6

675 8888

(1)7
FED UP W TH THE
RUNAROUND?
1/{an A New Home W h No Has

s e Ca Fo P a App
888 585.0 87

--:--:---=-=-=-=.:.:.:.:::__ 1 570

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS ?
NoFeeUnessWeWn
888 582 3345

Mualcal
ln11rument1

WANT A CO!APUTER7? BUT

NO CASH17 !A !AX Techno ogy
W F nance W h o Down Pas
C edh Problems No Problam Ca
Tou F&lt;aa 8n 293-4082

Now 8x80 3BR 2BA $288 pe
mon h ow Down Paymen F ee
~iij F eo Do o y
888 928

FAF1M SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

N&amp;"l' Doub ew de 3 BA 2BA
$276 pe mon h low Down Pay
men FeeA FeeOe
888 ~28 3428

ev

o ad\ler1ioe any pre1etenco
mlta lon o dlsCrim na on
baaed on race colo re g on
sex fam a status o nldona
orig n o any n ent on to
make any such p ere enee
Nmlta km o d scrim na 6on

law

P11Hd 1/111/00
JohnMu111r
Prnld1111 of Council
KodhyHyllll
Citric of Council
John Bt.lltnlr
Mtyor

This news- wl not
knowingly accept
advortiaomon 1 fo 11101 e
whleh a n vlolaUon of tl1e
law Ou tlldora are hereby
ntormod tl1tt a dwe1 ngo
advertiHd nth 1 new~paper

(6) 2 12 tc

Llve1tock

a e aval able on an equa

Farms for Sale

opportunl1y baeil

$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CAED T
NEEDED GOVT /BANK REPOS
C~ L NOW
800 360 4620
EXT 8509

DR VERS WANTED OTA AE
GIONAL LOCAL Roach Tho

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

La d Touches USA Land 29
Aces Fo As Low .As $27 900
Land Con ac s A a abe Ca
Now

G ubbs Pano tunng &amp; epa a
Probtems7 Need Tuned? Ca ht
plano Dt 740-448-4525

BOO 2 3 8365 An hony
d www coun ry

land Company
1ymacom

.JANITROL HEATING AND
COOUNO EOU PMENT
NSTALLED
You Don Cs us We Bo h

WV HUNT NO LAND
30To OOAceTacao P
~cre••· · l Hun ng Land
S a ng A
S 6 500 97 Ac as Fo $57 000

Summ Ot You F nanc a Goa s
Wo k Fo A Company Tha Ca as
Abou You You Fam y A d You

Fu u e L m ed Open ngs 29

Can Comb ne F ee Maps

CPM A M 11 Un oad ng Pay
Peraona zed Dispatch Home 0
1en Holiday Nacallon Pay 40 K

8365

Con ac A a ab e

Mad ca IPrea lOan a R de P o

6 oom house on 2 o a n P
P easan enced n ya d ou aide
bu d ng $38 000 co 304 675
6 88 and leava message

g om 9811 No Touch F o gh
Aaa gned f. 2000 s Ca Summ
T anopo a on 800 876 0880 0
5 3-5848946EOE

6 9 h &amp; 6 0 h 9 To Aou e
Ju1
Be o e Add son P ke
Some hlng For Everyone

740-643-5253

3 T ac s Of P me Ree ea on a

310 Homes for Sale

742 2340

4 monlh old bull &amp; 2 roar old r..u
by Touchs one Young S mmen a
cow due o ashen S 000 nch

NEWUSTNG
HUNTERSH1U

REAL ESTATE

Lose Fee Ea ma ee 740 446
6308 -800-29 .OQ98

and

AERATION MOTORS
Repilrod New &amp; Robum n S oc1&lt;
Cq. Ao Evans BQ0-537-9528

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
LAND NEAR RIO
Oft SA 35 5+ Acre&amp; G aa Home
s es and Con ac Ava abe
l'leo Mapa 1 600-2 3-8365

33 Acres App oxtma e v a Ac e

Lake Mobile Home W h Add On

dea Fo Hous ng Campg ound
Es1ao $99l!OO 740-388 8878

ro

eoo-2 3-8365

G aclous tv ng
and 2 bed oom
apa men e a V age Mano and

Ft e s aa Apa men a n M dd e
po F om $273 $338 Co 40
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo
un es

EW' LOYMENT
'; [F1VI CES
Now Tak ng App ca on&amp; 35
Was 2 Beet oom Townhouae
Apa men a
nc udtl Wa
Sewage T ash S325 Mo 740

et

448 0008

WEEKLY GUARANTilD
WORK NQ '011 THE OOVliiN

MINT 'ROM HOME PART
T ME NO iXPER ENCE RE
OU RED -800 757-&lt;1753

UAGEN LV NEEDED p asma

dono a ea

S35toS45 o 2o 3

hou a week y Ca Sa a Tee 7&lt;40
592-665

Aen 0 Sa e On Land Cont ac
M nute From
GAHS740-44 59

Home On S A 588

Kawaaak Je ma e new 650cc
eng ne eaa lhan ! h 29
mph uses e pump d va sya em
w ..,.. se 3 paasenge dry boal
nc udas a t $2800 304 875

7323

II Ca Now 800
EXl: 7832

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A moa Eve yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Down Low
MOI'I h y Paymen s
800 6 7
;l47~Ex 330

Public Notice
and prectlota of oltv
govtrnmltlt are 1 modll
and example tor other
community lnllltuttont tnd

SERVICES

810

Home
lmprovemanta

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Alffle.Lutz Vol 311 Pg 411
FOR LAST SOURCE OF :
"•"Ill1 011t 111 R
d TITLE SEE VOL 68 Pg 1tlll •
nd
I
"""
c
tcOf
of tht Official Rtcorda Of
68 Pg 184 S 07 37 44
w..t 3&amp;2 • fHt 10 tht Mt a• county Ohio Pa.- • "
center of Manuel Roed No CJ8.001183.000
pualng an Iron pin 11t ot
Tht Plaintiff requeiCa!Mt "
217 14 ful
thtnct uld ll"tml- bt lOki, your ~
follOWing Mlnuel Rood s lnterell therein torsalond '"
• 01 2-t Wtll 115181HI ond for .,Y otl1tr rela.t •
b 1 th 1
1
1 thlll bt IIIII and equitable ,:
e ng
t rue po nt o
You ' " required to •"
BEGINNING lnd contllnlng tntwtr tht told com""olnt
1 312 Acree more or 1111
,..
and being the 11m1 reol by Auguet 4 2000 or •
e•tate •• deecrlb•d In Judgment by Default will bt
Officio I Record 68 Pg 1M rendered egelnll you
but with 1 mare accurote Merle K McC-n Reg No
detcrlpUan by thll 1urv1y
~~ for Plaintiff
Surv•y for Caunto woa (S) 2 1 16 23 30 (7) 7
perfarmild an Jun1 19 1988
by Philip M Roberti Oh o
M
Reglaterad Surveyor No 1 :=::;:l:n:;;:e:mo::::::ry~=:::;
818&amp; Iron pin 111 trt 58 x 1,
30 rtblr With pl11tlc ID
In Memory Of
ctpa lsbeltcl PMR 61H All
Dave Buskirk
oth1r monument• " ' I I
619196 619100
nottcl
SubJtct to 111 legtlllllll
Ills memory Is as dear
tallmtnt• tnd right of today as In the hour he
wtya ol record
passed a way

......_

THEREFORE IE IT
REIOLYEO THAT the
P - y City Council daM
hereby endoral 1 reuae
policy lor city government
tnd tncourtgtl all city
alit-to
1 AtuH mttlrlllt within
lhtlr OffiCI WhtftiVer
polllblt and/or tpproprlltt
2
Share unwanted
turplut mattrltll with other
OffiCII ol lhl city
gOYtrnmtnl WhtntVtr
ponlblt tn:l/or tpproprllle
lnd
3 Btlort dltpotlng lteml
11 gsrbtge mtkl theJII
IVIIIIblt
Whentvtr
po11lbl1 or approprltte to
other government 1gtnclt1
to tchoolt and other
publicly
aupporttd
lnetltutlone tnd to loctt
non-profit orgtnlzltlont
John B tlltntr
Mtyor
JohnMu111r
Council Member
VIctor Young Ill
Council Mtmbtr
David Btllard
Council Mtmbtr
Llrry Wehrung
Council Mtmbtr
Elfyan Shank
Council Mtmbtr
George Wright
Council Mtmbtr

Happy Ad

KllhyltyHII

(8) 2 12 to

Clerlc,ll'rt11
Doottd 5/111/00

Public Notice
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
NoUct to contractora
In ICCOrdtnCI with
-'19n 307 18 of tiM Ohio
AtVIIId Codl lllltd bldl
will bt rtcelvtd by tht
Botrd of Mtlgt County
Commltalonere Court
HOUII Pomeroy Ohio
457et until 3 00 P M on
Frldll~ Juftl 1eth 2000 The
bldt will thtn bl optned
tnd rttd aloud 11 1o 15
A II on Mondty June 1tth
2000 tor AC-20 liquid
Thll will bt In MBE
PROCUREMENT
CONTRACT for aupplylng
AC 20 bltumlncul liquid.
dtllvtl'ld to tiM dlllgntttd
pltnt of the aaphalt
concrete tupplltr of Round
14 OhiO Public Warb
Proltct Thlt mtllrltl ahall
conform to thl Pertln1nt
Stitt of Ohio Departmlnt Of
HlghW11yl Conllnlctlon and
llaterltll Specification
Mtnutl
THIS WILL BE A TOTAL
TONS BID The MBE
Supplier will bid totel tan•
of AC.20 Uquld that ctn bt
dlllvlrtd for a flxtcl emaunt
0112500000
Bid lfiiCiflCIIIIOnt may bt
plcktd up 11 the Mela•
Countv Englnttr e Olflce or
lhl OffiCI of thl Melgt
County Commllllonera
Tht Board of 111111
County Commtulontre
mty - p t tht IOwtll bid
or Hltct t11t bttt bid for tht
lntandtd purpo11 and
rtlti'VII tiM right to - p t
tnd/or re)ICI any or 111 bldt
tndlor env part thereof and
wiH IWird 1 contnct to thll
bidder which 11 In thl blet
1nme11 01 Mllg• County.
Glorll Kloee. Clark
Board of Melga county
Camml11lon«a
(8)2 t 2tc

MIZ)NAY TAVERN
Sat Char eu y900 1 oo
Wed Open Stage 7 oo 11 00
B ng your own nst uments
We have the est

'

PAY BY MAIL OPTION
•Convenient
•Safe

authority hat
lht nttc1 to ildJutt
pay
ICIII for ftiW tmptoyell
thtt .,, working out their
probtltCHJary period
Now thtrtlort bl It
rtHivld by the Council of
tht VIllage of Pomeroy
IIIII of Ohio thll tht
attachtd ply ICIII thall bt
In efftct from thll time
forwtrd
.. It further r-lvld thlt
tht 0 to abc (I) monlht pay
-1• thtll be In efftct ••
long 11 tha tmployH 11 on
problllon
Thla Ordlntnct provldtd
II rtciiVII thl afflrmttlvt
VOII of Ylllllll Council
-~ t.kt tfftct and bt In
IorGe from tnd tlttr tht
11rll11t ptriOd aiiOWid by
law

2 7470

2!188 Equa HoUI ng Opportun!y

RENTALS

1101

TRANSPORTATION

Public Notice
REUSEPOUCY
RIIOiutlon 3.00
WHEREAS rtUII end
rtcycllng help protect th1
tnvlronmtnt, lnd
WHEREAS thl rtUA of
local material• prtventa
VIIUabll rtiOUrCel from
btlna walltd and
WHEREAS thl riUII of
local material• IIVII
dollare th1t would be
ntldtd to purchlll naw
lnd
WHEREAS lhl rtuet of
local meterllll reducea
rtlltnce on coattv mlllrllll
productd tnd Imported
from outtldt tht region
end
WHEREAS the pollclll

CARS FROM $200 PO CE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyo a s
Chtvys Jeeps And Spo Ut

~EAUT FUL APARTMENTS AJ
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Woo wood
D lvo om $289 o $370 wa k o
shop &amp; mov ea Ca 740 446

LAND
CHEAP AS D1RT

ab e $660 DOwn Ca Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO

for Sale

71 o Autoa for Sala

Huge
en o y 0 scoun P cea
on v ny Sk ng Ooo s w nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Hea e a
Pumb g&amp; Etc ea Pa a Fu
nacea &amp; Hea P1.1mps Benne 1
Mob e Home Supp y 7,.0 446
94 6 www orvb c:om'bennett

Se e a Loca on1 In Ga a &amp;
MeiQa Coun 11 5 Ac as As Low
As $6 eoo Land Con ac A a

750 Boatl &amp; Motora

JET

800 2 3

Altfnllon Dovelopars

no 9 h 0 h 9 AM 5 PM
Stale Ro... 325 2 !Allot North Of
Rio Grando !AclloNid'a

3TC

ORDINANCE NUMBER 187
WHEREAS th1 Ohio
Rtvllld Codt autharlzta
thl leglelattve authority to
crallt tht poeltton Of Cltrt
of lltyor 1 Court, and
WHEREAS theltgi...Hw
tuthorlty hll recognlz•d
tht nted to cr11t1 th1
polltlon 01 Citric of Mtyor 1
Court,
Now tllerefare be II
NIOIVId by lhl Counoll of
the VIllage of Pomeroy
Sttll of Ohio thll lht
poeltlon of Clark Of Mayor 1
Court Ia her1by etttbllahtcl
lnd
Thtt the 11l1ry for lhl
Citric Of Mayor 1 Court ehtll
rtngt from 05 cent• per
hour to 110 Clnta per hour
Tht Vllltge Council thtll Ill
th1 ulary under thle renge
upon thl recomm1ndatlon
olthl Chill of Polloi and 11
tilt Council fit.
Thlt OrdinanDI, provldtd
II rteiiVIe tha afflrmttlva
vote ol VIllage Council
1h1ll tiki eflacl and bt In
!orca from tnd after thl
•arll••t period tllowld by

oa

Aaasonat:JM ales
Ca o appo ntmen
304)675 7472
304)6 5 72 9

AI real estate advert 1 ng n
hlo newapapo osub oct to
tl1e Federo Fa Houo ng Act
of 1988 wh ch makeo NHlegal

at

Public Notice

P H-0-T.(J..Q.R-A-P Ho~
Wodd hgs
Pols
Spo sTeams
P o ess ona Ce
ad Pho og a
pho

Los blaCI&lt; &amp; while ltmale P tU&gt;u
o ange cGI a very peop e end
y ewa d 740 742 803 ... 740

ooncumna
Thll tht Clerii,ITNIIUNr

tl1lreto

UHd Fu n Ufl Couch 2 FIK n
I I Co ttl IEnO Tables K &lt;::hen
Tabt I Ch~ 1 TV Cobot

51 D

Public Notice
RUOLUT10N 2 00
BE IT RESOLVED by thl
council of thl VIllage of
POIMI'OY all member•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

Pa11tc1 515/00
JohnMuPrnldtnt 01 Council
KlthyHyllll
Citric ol Council
John Blllltrllf
Mayor

(1)2 Ute

•Flexible

Rece1ve A Bill For Your Paper
Duectlv From

The Daily Sentinel

· n'lkjH'Jf~l!frfJj~
.
.

.;

-

~

Public Notlca
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
IIII).STATE TRUst VII
PLAINT!~

YS

KELLY A COUNTY. ET AL
DEPINDANTI
CASE NO OO.CVNOTICE FOR PUBLICA110N
Kelly A County and
Lutnnt C Cot,1nt1 akt
Louenne C Caunt1 will
tlkt notice thtl an March
20 2000, Mld-8- Trull, VII
fllild 111 compltlnt 1g11net
you In thl court Of Common
PIHI Of Mtlge County Ohio
requ11t1ng the Court to
ttrmlntll tny lntertat that
you hive In tht premla11
dlterfbtd .. followa
81N1111n the Townahtp of
Lttlrt Mllge County Ohio
btlng bounded and
dllcrlbed 11 followa
BEOINNINQ on tht North
lint Of 100 Acre Lot No 222
lllhiNW OO"*Ofa11/2
Aort ti'IIOI of land now or
formerly awned by Mix
Mtnutl (8 E DB 131 Pg

For More InformatiOn
Call Today Switch To Office Pay
The Dally Sentinel

992-2155
Hours 8 AM to 5 PM

�Junet, 2000

Pomeroy, .Middleport, Ohio

OOP
.

DDOYIAI
PIBft

CREDrr PROBLEMS??? , SMIT"'S COrtSTROCTIOrt
No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

• Remodeling
• DICkl
• Roonng

•NewHom11
•Garag11
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraaament...

All Makee Tractor &amp;
Equipment PuU

Factory Authorked

Nt.. It done, give us • call

You're Treated with Respect!
Call Now for lnatent APt~ro••alll ..

FREE ESTIMATES

Cue-IH Parts
Dealen.

Gr11t Prloet on Now Hom11

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvm., OH 45723

'

992•11 01

992·2753

5117100 1

748117.UIII

mo..,

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Satlltlm ·1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawn mower &amp; weedeater npair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Plc:k1na
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
, Sales Representative
Larry Schey

7 40·949-2804

IZI

5122 1 mo 1)(1 ,

(140) 742·8888
1._888·521·0916

~--:.

21670 Baahan

EXCfiVf'TI"G;:•'

Road
Racine, Ohio

Hauling •limestone • :;
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil t;
Fill Dirt • Mukh • .
Bulldozer Services (740) --- ~~~

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes s· x 10'
to 10' x 30'

-

Houra
7:00AM · 8PM
1121100 I nio. ""·

Weal
• 9 3
9 Q 10 4
tAQ043

~

• KQZ

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC •.·,
c
CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES M:
0

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners,•
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers. carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

N

c

MASONRY

BOBCAT SERVICES

.

--·

• A 10 7 3

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
E FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N

IIIH

Soudl

a:

:BARNEY

4J241tl0 1 mo pd.

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) :r:1c1-oo

"A Better

Racine
46909 SR 124
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• NlghUy • Weakly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Belt &amp; Tac:kla

6/29/mo.

•

740·949·7039

"Get in while you can, apace i8 limited"

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs -Decks - uas:ages1
Free Estimates

..4LltEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contra~tor
Prices D.R. Bissen ·
30 Yrs. E.xp. ,
Free Estl·mates 740-378-6349
NOTI E

2 Handyman crew will do ·
yard work, pa!nUng Inside

and ou~ carpenter work,
roofing, sldlng. Have own

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Standing timlier large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.
frM Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)
,;,

' ~' ' "'""'

BUILDERS
..
' BISSELLINC.

'

- New Homes • Vinyl
"Take the pain out
Siding • New Garages
ofpainting· • Replacement Windows '
i ·• Room Additions · Let me do it for you"
Interior
!
• Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
· : COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
I
Before 6 p.m. FREE ESTIMATES

.

;

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales· 5 9111. b~ekats
to 55 gal. drums
· 2 Y2 miles out of
Chestel" o~ SR 248

Joseph Jacks

MIKE YOUNG
740.992-7724
PAT YOUNG
740-949·0046

740-992·2068
513111

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers, Dish Washers
'

740·985·4194

rno pel.

,!,

:

Ill E.l,nd .

._...,,Ohio
Senior Citizen

JilES' Discount

tiALUPCILIS, OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

(740)367-0266
l-800-950-3359

• 'tr\111
• s\11111\'

~"""'"~

.
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie
Jones

r....

1

EARNEST

'.

•

· 20 Yrs •xptd~~Cf;

'

'.

•

SON

::
•• ·

.

:~

:I

.

'

''·'
,.

Commercial· metal studs,
drywall, suspended ceilings

Mike w. Marcum ·
Owner
.

'

f:L£, SON, ['f.\ NO?
!lU~E. WI{() WOO\E.:
TI\E:. Fl~~i 001::.

'

No~Ren~ .

High &amp; Dri!
Self-Storagi ;

.

,,,

:

'lo;l

33795 Hiland Rei. .

·Pomeroy, Ohio :'

740·992-st~a ~
41281

4119,100 1 mo pd.

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free E~timatl!S ·

30 Yrs. Experience

Leove Message
Alter 6pm· 614-985-4180

.

.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Custom Corpet, Vinyl,
Commercial an Ceramlt
Tile, AU 'JYpes or
Hardwood Flooring,
Carpet Binding and
Restretthlng.

740·992·7599

ftla ·Appllaaca
Man

LINDA'S
PAINTING

!FRANK &amp;

'"

&amp;

HE '5 BEING.

SUCH A
JERK

mo. !XI:

.'\BOUT
tT, TOO!

QUALITY &lt; .

LANDSCAPr:
Weeding: Mulching: ·;
Pruning: Edging .;~
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

Free Eatimatea • 4

Mike Sharp

Eul

Pua

••
Pus
Pus

39

Pua

-1-+--+--1 21"Hollr
Cl•ld;Sil , ....
luthor,
.Jolln30 MUifc hllll
31 8111me
..--!-+-+--+-~ 37 Purcl1 r

9

.'i

740·949·3606~~

1-\0W 1:&gt;10 ~ ~"'
HOW TO ~ TI\E.
WO~C&gt;~'?

More often than not, I write a
column and it is too long. So, it
has to be made shorter. I don't
have the lu1tury of Blaise Pascal,
a French scientist and philosopher, who wrote, "I have only
made this letter longer because I
have not had the time to make it
shorter."
Moving to bridge, how would
you try to make four hearts in this
deal? You have had two obscure
hints in the opening paragraph.
After North raised hearts,
South moved on to game because
he had good distribution and
wouldn't know until seeing the
dummy whether 'or not it contained suitable high cards.
At the table, many players
would bash out the two top hearts,
hoping to drop the queen. But
they would end one down, losing
one spade, one heart and two
clubs. However, there is no gnat
rush to draw trumps. Why not
start the clubs first? Although you
can judge from the lead that West
began with a singleton or'doilbleton spade. even if East gives West
a ruff in the suit, he will be trumping South's loser.
So, ~in with dummy's spade .
king, then run the club six to
West;s queen. Bac~ comes the
spade three. Repeat the procedure,
Win with dummy 's ace and
finesse the club eight to West's
king . Suppose he tries to cash the
diamond ace. Ruff and take the
two top trumps. No luck there, but
next cash the club ace. When
clubs split, lead the last club and
discard dummy's remaining
spade. Then you . can ruff the ,
spade jack in the dummy.
·
Whenever you can ruff in the
shorter trump hand, it is virtually
certain to be the right line of play.

PSI

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
992-4119 or
l-800-291-5600

eMSTRUCnlltl

eflw4flillrt eCu41• Rlfillt
•W114WIIkilt •Wr11th1
~ 143

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
FrH Estimates

Seamless Gutters &amp;

·

Nutrena Western Prtdel7" Sweet Feed ...................15.25/50 lb bag
Hutrena 16" Rabbit Pellm ....................................16.95/SO lb. bag
Hutrena Hunter~ Pride 21% Dog Food.....................16.75/50 lb. bag
Nutnna 16" lDyer (rumbels...............................}5.99/50 lb. bag
Nllllena Suat1h Feed ............................................,16.75/SO lb. bag
SMde Rivtr 12" Callie Feed ................................16.75/IOO lb. bag

Caii740·98S·3831

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

P-or, Olllo

DEPUtlllt
BIUMLUIBD
State Route 248

Chester, OH

• Ealeo RoekelA and Aeeeooorleo
• Trairu by Lionel &amp; MTH
• K-Line
• Garvavn Track
• Athearn
• Model Power
• Lifeline
• Allu

youR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

of tho Month

Quality Driveways,
Sal a
Patloa, Sidewalks.
New Summer Days , 25 years experience
Thur &amp; Fri 10 am ·6 pm .
FrH Eatlmaatas
Satunday 10 am • 4 pm
On other days II we are
740-742-8015
home, we are OPEN.
1-877·353-7022

Downspaut, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

or

992·2n2

140-992-1709

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

gr&amp;,-3'557

"Ahead In Service"

~ry Canal6 Shop
SJHaclal Scant

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,

815100 1 mo. nd,

AuntBs
· Candbs &amp;Crafts

The

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

Box 189
Mlddlepert, Ohio 45760
Local843·5264

Advertise in ·'~
this space for .:
s~oo per
month.

'

Advertise your business

'·

...

Mediciue Supplement; Life·Insurance; Buri:"
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement.,pj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
,
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~·
~·••••••""

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43 ...... engry
44Gunaa.

ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE e

•:

:•

W a ten Edge of Syracuse

:•

• : Now Taking Applications for 1 aedroom
Apartment
' •
,•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
: Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On,SHe Laundry,
• , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
Provided
•
•:
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
•,•
Monday and Thursday 10 .ain - 3 pm
•
Phone (740) 992-6419

:

TDD 1-800-750-0750

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

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PRINT NUMBERED ,
LETTERS IN SQUARES

'I

UNSCRAMBLE FORI .
ANSWER ·
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWilS

Dorsal- Draft- Opine - Prance· CREDITORS

·.

. ''I'm worried about running into debt," one fellow fold
, his pal. "But I worry most about running into my CREDITORS!"

•
•'

••

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CELEBRITY .CIPHER
by Luis c.mpoe

·

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PREVIOUS SOI.UTtON: 'NO .,_. Miel- -lhingla t11ty ru1ty .,. H
hl1 old
be ... arlltl..- o.c.r Wilde
.

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·-llfWA.Inot

...· ------~--~---(

I

.

'Your

'BirthdaY .

. Predicated upon a
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
you take on ·
arrangement, an investment you ·
If
you do something nice for
ak ·
h
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
10
.,.Jll e the year a ead could pro- You won't be able to buy yourself someone today, do so without
I· duce long tenn dividen~s. Of
this person feel obligated
I course, if it isn't well thought out, into people's good graces and tomaking
you in any manner. It would
: that could be another story.
cooperation today. You're going
negate
all that you did right.
; GEMINI (May 21-June 20) to need to convince them with
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It
·I Spending some ofthe family bud- logical, inspiring thoughts. Use might
be time to revive long
,
your brains, not your wallet.
I get on a momentary whim today LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2~) Pos- standing soc.ial plans if it looks
. would not be a smart thing to do. sibilities for success today, will like they aren't going to produce
You could end up collecting a lot
the types of results you anticipat1of
guilt as' well as the wrath of come through und~rstandings, ed. A clever change might do the
your kin. Gemini, treat yourself to sensitivity to others and genuine trick.
l a birthday gift. Send fer your caring. Self-serving aims and
Astro-Graph predictions for the objectives will fall flat.
year ahead by mailing $2 and
SCORPIO' (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ·
SASE to Astro-!]raph, c/o this Generosity to others pays off bigARIES (March 21-April 19)
• news~aper. P.O. Bo1t 1758, Mur~ ger today than the most clever ·This is a good day to make some
l ray Htll Station, New York, NY manipulative talk . If you're not plans with friends and take a
~ 10156. Be sure to state your sincere about what you're espous- break from family obligations. A
: Zodiac sign.
·
ing, you won't get any' support.
diversion will prove to be
: 'CANCER ,(June 21-July 22)
SAGmARIUS(Nov.23-Dec. extremely good for you at this
; &lt;;arefully assess all proposals pre- 21) Depend solely oil yourself time .
'
; sented to you today. There's a today and not on the promises of .
: chance that certain elements of the others -- even those with whom
l plan brought before you will not you have some involvement. , TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
: be what they seem. Gather all the They could steer you astray.
you feel what is being asked of
~ facts.
·
.
CAPRICO~ (Dec. 22-Jan. , you today is unfair, take a firm .
, LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) 19) If you ·your instincis are
: Although you might be ready to telling you something ·is wrong position and stand up for your
: e1tecute your methods and proce- concerning a risky involvement, rights. Don' t succumb to making
: dures in a practical manner today, follow them instead of someone concessions under pressure.
: it isn't likely your insights are as . else's ·would-be logical assessl..~arp as you ,think. Be cureful ment, You'll be. right.

I

•

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Mllefofe.
IIOIIIciiiV

,...--i--1--~-1--l

CFW

SHfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE

'

Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
..
.remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

Free Estimatea
Conlr1ctors Wel'eom1

4119!00 1 mo. pd.

(740)992·3131 ; :

Long Bottom, Ohio

i

1·800~311·3391

Ken Young

:

740·985-4141

/Fufiny g; '9Jofltt'

....

Septic Sy•temo &amp; "
-,
Utiliile•

BUILDING

for Yo• Ptt's Nettls.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
'

992·1550
The AppiiCIDCI

'

MARCUM

Op111 for Groonllnel

ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

· Land Clearing &amp; ;
Grading
:;

lasurtd· Prof11sf01GI Slr'ICI

Poms •

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

"We're Back"

5

WANTED

Advertise In
this space for
.25 per
month.

Pus
Pus

Nordl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

, ...
HenDar

BuUJooer &amp; Backhoe:
Senice•
'
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sire,~ :

New Haven WV

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a.- ••~·

1.1

(304) 812·2079

7122/TFN

lools. Free Est!mates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

SERVICE

Mylltlc

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

Sunset Rome
Construetlon

' Ill CONDITIOIIINI

Weal

Opening lead: •

-

HOWARD '
EXCAVATING CO.,

GUARANTEED

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-.992-5404

29
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Brian Mprrlaon/Raclne, Ohio
(7 40)985-3948

12 Rt.-tn

BoaU.
• J 72

A' ·

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NBA Croaaword Pullale

PHILLIP
ALDER ·

.91
HfiQU"G

SELF STORAGE

A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

IJDdl[ t4D ilWDI[IbiD

BalDOI:

~l\.1\':.

HILL'S

Pomeroy EegiM
Club Bingo On
Thuradaya
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Peylng $80.00
per 1111111
$300.00 coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progre111vo top line.
Lie. II D0-50 1111tllfn

The Dlllly Sentinel • hge B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

J

�Junet, 2000

Pomeroy, .Middleport, Ohio

OOP
.

DDOYIAI
PIBft

CREDrr PROBLEMS??? , SMIT"'S COrtSTROCTIOrt
No Credit • Slow Credit • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Dlvorded

• Remodeling
• DICkl
• Roonng

•NewHom11
•Garag11
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraaament...

All Makee Tractor &amp;
Equipment PuU

Factory Authorked

Nt.. It done, give us • call

You're Treated with Respect!
Call Now for lnatent APt~ro••alll ..

FREE ESTIMATES

Cue-IH Parts
Dealen.

Gr11t Prloet on Now Hom11

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvm., OH 45723

'

992•11 01

992·2753

5117100 1

748117.UIII

mo..,

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Satlltlm ·1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawn mower &amp; weedeater npair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Plc:k1na
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
, Sales Representative
Larry Schey

7 40·949-2804

IZI

5122 1 mo 1)(1 ,

(140) 742·8888
1._888·521·0916

~--:.

21670 Baahan

EXCfiVf'TI"G;:•'

Road
Racine, Ohio

Hauling •limestone • :;
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil t;
Fill Dirt • Mukh • .
Bulldozer Services (740) --- ~~~

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes s· x 10'
to 10' x 30'

-

Houra
7:00AM · 8PM
1121100 I nio. ""·

Weal
• 9 3
9 Q 10 4
tAQ043

~

• KQZ

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC •.·,
c
CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES M:
0

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners,•
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers. carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

N

c

MASONRY

BOBCAT SERVICES

.

--·

• A 10 7 3

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
E FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N

IIIH

Soudl

a:

:BARNEY

4J241tl0 1 mo pd.

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) :r:1c1-oo

"A Better

Racine
46909 SR 124
Camping- Fishing - Boating
• NlghUy • Weakly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Belt &amp; Tac:kla

6/29/mo.

•

740·949·7039

"Get in while you can, apace i8 limited"

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs -Decks - uas:ages1
Free Estimates

..4LltEL
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contra~tor
Prices D.R. Bissen ·
30 Yrs. E.xp. ,
Free Estl·mates 740-378-6349
NOTI E

2 Handyman crew will do ·
yard work, pa!nUng Inside

and ou~ carpenter work,
roofing, sldlng. Have own

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Standing timlier large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.
frM Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)
,;,

' ~' ' "'""'

BUILDERS
..
' BISSELLINC.

'

- New Homes • Vinyl
"Take the pain out
Siding • New Garages
ofpainting· • Replacement Windows '
i ·• Room Additions · Let me do it for you"
Interior
!
• Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
· : COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
I
Before 6 p.m. FREE ESTIMATES

.

;

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales· 5 9111. b~ekats
to 55 gal. drums
· 2 Y2 miles out of
Chestel" o~ SR 248

Joseph Jacks

MIKE YOUNG
740.992-7724
PAT YOUNG
740-949·0046

740-992·2068
513111

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers, Dish Washers
'

740·985·4194

rno pel.

,!,

:

Ill E.l,nd .

._...,,Ohio
Senior Citizen

JilES' Discount

tiALUPCILIS, OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

(740)367-0266
l-800-950-3359

• 'tr\111
• s\11111\'

~"""'"~

.
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie
Jones

r....

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::
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Commercial· metal studs,
drywall, suspended ceilings

Mike w. Marcum ·
Owner
.

'

f:L£, SON, ['f.\ NO?
!lU~E. WI{() WOO\E.:
TI\E:. Fl~~i 001::.

'

No~Ren~ .

High &amp; Dri!
Self-Storagi ;

.

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33795 Hiland Rei. .

·Pomeroy, Ohio :'

740·992-st~a ~
41281

4119,100 1 mo pd.

T&amp;D

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free E~timatl!S ·

30 Yrs. Experience

Leove Message
Alter 6pm· 614-985-4180

.

.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Custom Corpet, Vinyl,
Commercial an Ceramlt
Tile, AU 'JYpes or
Hardwood Flooring,
Carpet Binding and
Restretthlng.

740·992·7599

ftla ·Appllaaca
Man

LINDA'S
PAINTING

!FRANK &amp;

'"

&amp;

HE '5 BEING.

SUCH A
JERK

mo. !XI:

.'\BOUT
tT, TOO!

QUALITY &lt; .

LANDSCAPr:
Weeding: Mulching: ·;
Pruning: Edging .;~
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

Free Eatimatea • 4

Mike Sharp

Eul

Pua

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1-\0W 1:&gt;10 ~ ~"'
HOW TO ~ TI\E.
WO~C&gt;~'?

More often than not, I write a
column and it is too long. So, it
has to be made shorter. I don't
have the lu1tury of Blaise Pascal,
a French scientist and philosopher, who wrote, "I have only
made this letter longer because I
have not had the time to make it
shorter."
Moving to bridge, how would
you try to make four hearts in this
deal? You have had two obscure
hints in the opening paragraph.
After North raised hearts,
South moved on to game because
he had good distribution and
wouldn't know until seeing the
dummy whether 'or not it contained suitable high cards.
At the table, many players
would bash out the two top hearts,
hoping to drop the queen. But
they would end one down, losing
one spade, one heart and two
clubs. However, there is no gnat
rush to draw trumps. Why not
start the clubs first? Although you
can judge from the lead that West
began with a singleton or'doilbleton spade. even if East gives West
a ruff in the suit, he will be trumping South's loser.
So, ~in with dummy's spade .
king, then run the club six to
West;s queen. Bac~ comes the
spade three. Repeat the procedure,
Win with dummy 's ace and
finesse the club eight to West's
king . Suppose he tries to cash the
diamond ace. Ruff and take the
two top trumps. No luck there, but
next cash the club ace. When
clubs split, lead the last club and
discard dummy's remaining
spade. Then you . can ruff the ,
spade jack in the dummy.
·
Whenever you can ruff in the
shorter trump hand, it is virtually
certain to be the right line of play.

PSI

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
992-4119 or
l-800-291-5600

eMSTRUCnlltl

eflw4flillrt eCu41• Rlfillt
•W114WIIkilt •Wr11th1
~ 143

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
FrH Estimates

Seamless Gutters &amp;

·

Nutrena Western Prtdel7" Sweet Feed ...................15.25/50 lb bag
Hutrena 16" Rabbit Pellm ....................................16.95/SO lb. bag
Hutrena Hunter~ Pride 21% Dog Food.....................16.75/50 lb. bag
Nutnna 16" lDyer (rumbels...............................}5.99/50 lb. bag
Nllllena Suat1h Feed ............................................,16.75/SO lb. bag
SMde Rivtr 12" Callie Feed ................................16.75/IOO lb. bag

Caii740·98S·3831

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

P-or, Olllo

DEPUtlllt
BIUMLUIBD
State Route 248

Chester, OH

• Ealeo RoekelA and Aeeeooorleo
• Trairu by Lionel &amp; MTH
• K-Line
• Garvavn Track
• Athearn
• Model Power
• Lifeline
• Allu

youR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

of tho Month

Quality Driveways,
Sal a
Patloa, Sidewalks.
New Summer Days , 25 years experience
Thur &amp; Fri 10 am ·6 pm .
FrH Eatlmaatas
Satunday 10 am • 4 pm
On other days II we are
740-742-8015
home, we are OPEN.
1-877·353-7022

Downspaut, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

or

992·2n2

140-992-1709

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

gr&amp;,-3'557

"Ahead In Service"

~ry Canal6 Shop
SJHaclal Scant

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,

815100 1 mo. nd,

AuntBs
· Candbs &amp;Crafts

The

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

Box 189
Mlddlepert, Ohio 45760
Local843·5264

Advertise in ·'~
this space for .:
s~oo per
month.

'

Advertise your business

'·

...

Mediciue Supplement; Life·Insurance; Buri:"
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement.,pj
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
,
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~·
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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE e

•:

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W a ten Edge of Syracuse

:•

• : Now Taking Applications for 1 aedroom
Apartment
' •
,•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
: Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On,SHe Laundry,
• , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance
Provided
•
•:
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
•
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
•,•
Monday and Thursday 10 .ain - 3 pm
•
Phone (740) 992-6419

:

TDD 1-800-750-0750

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

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PRINT NUMBERED ,
LETTERS IN SQUARES

'I

UNSCRAMBLE FORI .
ANSWER ·
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWilS

Dorsal- Draft- Opine - Prance· CREDITORS

·.

. ''I'm worried about running into debt," one fellow fold
, his pal. "But I worry most about running into my CREDITORS!"

•
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CELEBRITY .CIPHER
by Luis c.mpoe

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'Your

'BirthdaY .

. Predicated upon a
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
you take on ·
arrangement, an investment you ·
If
you do something nice for
ak ·
h
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
10
.,.Jll e the year a ead could pro- You won't be able to buy yourself someone today, do so without
I· duce long tenn dividen~s. Of
this person feel obligated
I course, if it isn't well thought out, into people's good graces and tomaking
you in any manner. It would
: that could be another story.
cooperation today. You're going
negate
all that you did right.
; GEMINI (May 21-June 20) to need to convince them with
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It
·I Spending some ofthe family bud- logical, inspiring thoughts. Use might
be time to revive long
,
your brains, not your wallet.
I get on a momentary whim today LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2~) Pos- standing soc.ial plans if it looks
. would not be a smart thing to do. sibilities for success today, will like they aren't going to produce
You could end up collecting a lot
the types of results you anticipat1of
guilt as' well as the wrath of come through und~rstandings, ed. A clever change might do the
your kin. Gemini, treat yourself to sensitivity to others and genuine trick.
l a birthday gift. Send fer your caring. Self-serving aims and
Astro-Graph predictions for the objectives will fall flat.
year ahead by mailing $2 and
SCORPIO' (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ·
SASE to Astro-!]raph, c/o this Generosity to others pays off bigARIES (March 21-April 19)
• news~aper. P.O. Bo1t 1758, Mur~ ger today than the most clever ·This is a good day to make some
l ray Htll Station, New York, NY manipulative talk . If you're not plans with friends and take a
~ 10156. Be sure to state your sincere about what you're espous- break from family obligations. A
: Zodiac sign.
·
ing, you won't get any' support.
diversion will prove to be
: 'CANCER ,(June 21-July 22)
SAGmARIUS(Nov.23-Dec. extremely good for you at this
; &lt;;arefully assess all proposals pre- 21) Depend solely oil yourself time .
'
; sented to you today. There's a today and not on the promises of .
: chance that certain elements of the others -- even those with whom
l plan brought before you will not you have some involvement. , TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
: be what they seem. Gather all the They could steer you astray.
you feel what is being asked of
~ facts.
·
.
CAPRICO~ (Dec. 22-Jan. , you today is unfair, take a firm .
, LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) 19) If you ·your instincis are
: Although you might be ready to telling you something ·is wrong position and stand up for your
: e1tecute your methods and proce- concerning a risky involvement, rights. Don' t succumb to making
: dures in a practical manner today, follow them instead of someone concessions under pressure.
: it isn't likely your insights are as . else's ·would-be logical assessl..~arp as you ,think. Be cureful ment, You'll be. right.

I

•

'

,..1

Il

.. ~

f' ........................................................... ..

::

Mllefofe.
IIOIIIciiiV

,...--i--1--~-1--l

CFW

SHfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE

'

Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
..
.remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

Free Estimatea
Conlr1ctors Wel'eom1

4119!00 1 mo. pd.

(740)992·3131 ; :

Long Bottom, Ohio

i

1·800~311·3391

Ken Young

:

740·985-4141

/Fufiny g; '9Jofltt'

....

Septic Sy•temo &amp; "
-,
Utiliile•

BUILDING

for Yo• Ptt's Nettls.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
'

992·1550
The AppiiCIDCI

'

MARCUM

Op111 for Groonllnel

ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

· Land Clearing &amp; ;
Grading
:;

lasurtd· Prof11sf01GI Slr'ICI

Poms •

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

"We're Back"

5

WANTED

Advertise In
this space for
.25 per
month.

Pus
Pus

Nordl

BY PHILLIP ALDER

, ...
HenDar

BuUJooer &amp; Backhoe:
Senice•
'
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sire,~ :

New Haven WV

t•

...-1-+-+-+-+-lze ~:"
...--1-+-+-+-+-121:::::.

Shoehorning text

a.- ••~·

1.1

(304) 812·2079

7122/TFN

lools. Free Est!mates

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

SERVICE

Mylltlc

ROBERT BISSElL
CONSTRUCTION

Sunset Rome
Construetlon

' Ill CONDITIOIIINI

Weal

Opening lead: •

-

HOWARD '
EXCAVATING CO.,

GUARANTEED

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-.992-5404

29
49

y

._

OLD LOCK24
CfiMPGROOnD

=·~-:'E.-

11
21 Clet
22 ..... fllzy
23111nl .......
_ _,...,,......,.....,...,.24 AI MY time
...
25 llolller ol

9AK86S2

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The Dlllly Sentinel • hge B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

J

�••
•

•

•

•'

'

...... 8 8 • The o.lly Sullnel

Friday, June e,

Pomll oy, Middleport, Ohio

20IICl
TEMPO

••

INTERLEAGUE BASEBALL

· NEW YORK (AP) - The Baltimore Orioles
~.nded their odd, extended road trip the worst way
possible. The New York Mets couldn't think of a
better way to head into their Sub-Nay Series showdown.
Kurt Abbott homered with one out in the lOth
iilning as the Mets rallied from four runs down early
in the game to beat the road-weary Orioles 8-7 on
Thursday night.
"This is a big boost. Not only for me, but for the
t~am also." Abbott said. "We were down early, and
down big, and we came back. This is a good
momentum builder heading into the Bronx."
' That's where the Mets will be tonight to start a
three-game, pressure-packed series against the World
Series champion Yankees.
Todd Zeile added a three-run homer and Jay Payton went 2-for-4 with a homer and two RBis as the
Mets rallied from deficits of 4·0 and 6-3 to win.
"We had to go overtime and it was a little stressful:' Mets manager Bobby Valentine said. "But it was
a confidence builder! It was a really good win on. our
part. I think we wanted it a little bit more than the
other team."
That's understandable after what Baltimore has

•••

Cntisin':

•

Looking for fun
:in Point Pleasant

.•

past Housto·n ~

Mets hold off Baltimore; Hansen's homer lifts l

fourth inning.
been through this week. Afier Tuesday night's rainJohnson retired the first two batten in the bott..otJl
·
out led to Thursday's makeup game, the Orioles wm.
Elsewhere, it was Boston 3, Cleveland 0 in
of the fourth before Mike Piazza hit a hard, on were unable to find hotel rooms in the New York
American
League,
Los
Angeles
5;
Houston
2
.in
t
e
hopper off his left side for an 'infield single. Johnso~
area and chartered a plane home after Wednesday's
National League.
appeared flustered, throwing 10 of the next 1&gt;4
11 -3 loss.
Mets
8,
Oriol
..
7
P"
pitches for balls. Two of the four strikes were IJ,it
Six players stayed in New York, but the rest of the
Many Orioles contributed to the loss. The thi4 hard: a double by Robin Ventura and Zeile's 11 ~
team didn't get home until about 2 a.m. and was
worst
pitching staff in baseball allowed 11 hits and homer.
~
back at the airport 13 hours later to finish the 11six walks to wa:ste a big offensive game. .
,. , . Piazza grounded a ball off Johnson again in ~~
day road trip.
.
"It's
a
tough
way
to
end
anything:·
manager
fifth, but this time it was the Mets catcher who ~t
"Just over a month is how it feels:· reliever Mike
Hargrove
said.
~We
played
well
enough
and
scored
banged up on the play. Ripken fielded the ricocn,.t
Trombley said. "It has been tough. And it's not over
enough runs to win. We just gave up the long ball at near third and threw Piazza our at first. Pia4a
yet. We're nor home."
. , '' tripped over the bag and injured his right heei.J'le
Abbott made sure Baltimore's second plane ride the wrong times.''
Payton's
fifth
homer
gave
the
Mets
a
7-6
lead
in stayed in •the game and said he was fine.
&lt;home in rwo days won't be a happy one.
Dodgers S, Astros 2
. ;
· With one out in the lOth, he hit the first pitch the eighth, but John Franco and Armando Benitez
couldn't
hold
it
in
the
ninth.
Pinch-hitter
Will
Dave
Hansen
hit
a
tiebreaking
pinch-homer
1t1
fiom Jose Mercedes (2-3) into the left-field seats to
Clark's
sacrifice
fly
tied
the
game.
.
'
the
seventh
inning,
and
Chan
Ho
Park.
pitch!&lt;J
send the 9,540 fans who showed up - the smallest
Jason Johnson, who declined to stay back in New seven strong innings for his third st~ight victory. :
crowd in three years - home happy.
York,
tired in the sixth inning as the Mets scored
Hansen batted for Park (7-4) With one out aii'd
Abbott pumped his fist. as he ran to first and was
mobbed by teammates as he reached home plate three runs to tie it at 6.Johnson, who won his lasl!' drove a 1-2 pitch from Chris Holt (3-7) just insi(le
five decisions in 1999, remained winless in eight the right-field pole for his third homer - all as'~a
following his second homer of the year.
pinch-hitter.
~
"Rounding third base, seeing your teammates starts this season.
Cal
Ripken,
who
stayed
in
New
York,
homered
The
loss
dropped
the
three-time
defending
N,L
waiting to rrample you is a great feeling;' Abbott
11
said. "I don't know if I've ever done that before. I for the second straight game, and Mike Bordick hit Central champs' record to 21-38, worst in t~
a two-run homer to give Baltimore a 4-0iead in the majors.
~
certainly hope to do it again."

i

SPORTS

Mi¥

All revved up:
Bobby Labonte
wins the pole

Got it COYen!CI:

Quik shop gets
new location

•
•

'
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"
Dennis Cook (5-2) pitched ~ petfect I Oth for th~

MONEY

·--.·•.

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 11, 2000

Vol. 35. No. 16

Southem
projecls on

schedule

•

Rocker working to regain control

CINCINNATI
(Al')
They've just been swept at home
by the AL Central leader. Their
record is 31-27, not quire up to
expectations. A winning streak
remains elusive.
That's a petfecr description of
the 2000 Cincinnati Reds- and
the 1999 Cincinnati Reds, as

_ MAUMEE, Ohio (AP) - Standing in the. shadows of reporters and cameras, John Rocker was
muttering to himself again. This time his fastball was
the source of his frustration.
Rocker spent his first day back in the minor ·
leagues Thursday smoothing out his delivery on a
bullpen mound.
He didn't see any action Thursday with the
'triple-A Richmond Braves against the Toledo Mud
Hens.
· ·The reliever who has become a target of fans
across the nation. for his offensive
remarks was welcomed with a
standing ovation and only a few

well.
The Reds' lackluster season so
far is a . carbon copy of last year,
when
Cindnnati
struggled
through 2 1/2 months before
getting on a roll that lasted right
up to a one-game tiebreaker for
the NL wild card.
That's the main reason why the
Reds weren't too unhappy coming off a 5-7 homestand during
which they went in ~nd out of
first place in the NL Cenrral.
They trailed St. Louis by 1 1/2
games Thursday.
"You've got to keep the whole
thing in perspective," first baseman Sean Casey said. "We're in
first or second place now, and
where else would you want to be?
We know we're berter than 'we've
been playing."
There's not much concern in
the clubhouse because the Reds
assume they can continue duplicating last season and put together another run at the playollS.

r----..,....,

boos.
"I was shocked by how the fans

Rocker

love him;' said Richmond third .
baseman W~ Helms._
Mter waiting rwo days to
report to his minor league assign-·
ment, Rocker finally was in uniform with Richmond.
.
He signed autographs for fans
and a sheriff's deputy before· the

game.
Chris Edwards, a fan fiom Bowling Green, couldn't believe there were cheers.
"This is pathetic:· he said. "That's the last reaction
I· would suspect."
There were far more fans holding signs like
"Rocker You Don't Offend Me:•
"I think we have to look at ourselves closely wjlen
we take a pitcher more serious than our. presidein;·
said Matthew Barton of Bowling Green. "People
who show up at a minor league baseball game are
here for the love of the game, not for the politics:•
: ·Rocker's appearance drew 6,212, Toledo's second
largest crowd this season.
There were a few boos and some people left once
it became apparent Rocker wouldn't see any action
in Toledo's 10-4 victory. Rocker was expected to
pitch today in a relief appearance against the Mud
Hens.
The reception in the clubhouse was just as friendly.
"To me, it was like old times," Helms said. "He
fiave everybody a warm hello:·
·
' Rocker wouldn't speak to reporters.
He sperit 20 minutes throwing in the bullpen
before Thursday's game, wotking on his delivery. At
times, he appeared frustrated with the command of
bis fastlfall, muttering to himsel£
- 'Besides :working on his pitching, the Braves hope
· Rocker will work out his off-the-field problems.
Atlanta assistant general manager Frank Wren said
some of the pitcher's problems come from stress.
"Physically, he's throwing the ball better than
ever;· Wren said, "but this has taken a real toll on

' hi m...

Wren was at the ballpark to oversee Rocker's
arrival. the 'reliever signed a few autographs at the
Toledo airpOrt for passengers on his flight before he
and Wrel) drove away, a'Voiding reporters.
Unlike majot ~agum, Rocker had to carry his
own bag off the plane.
But it was obvi9US he
nor just another player
JIOinl down to the minors.
Rocker arrived' at Ned Skeldon Stadium in this

was

..,
Alomar was hit, and Martinez

W. suspended for five games.
· • On his fint at-bat Thursday.
Diaz was booed loudly. He SWUJ'I
at and missed the lint two pitches, then Qied out to center.
After Alomar reached b~se,
Martinez l'&lt;!tired the next 12 bat~
ten, four on strikeoutJ, before
Brany..n's double.

'·

'

Bv TONY

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"This is still good club," man- and Houston and went on a 19ager Jai:k McKc;lln said. "We're game winning . streak that got
just not clickingi'Pn all cylinders them off and running.
yet. Hopefully s~."
This week, the AL Ce'ntralEveryone figured it would be leading Chicago White Sox visiteasier this time {t_ou nd because ed and swept a three-game series;
the Reds got Ken~Griffey Jr. from scoring 27 runs in all, to leave the
Seattle, giving thjn one of the Reds with an identical record and
NL's most danj!eNus lineups in identical reaction.
theory.
"I'll say the same thing that ' I
Instead, the offense has strug- said last year after the Indians
gled, the bullpen has been erratic series: Let's get these guys out of
and the wins have~ come only in . town:· McKeon said. "They:re
spurts. Some players who had playing the exact same way we.
career years last seasbn - Casey, played last year."
Pokey Reese, Eddie Taubensee,
The question is whether the
Scott Williamson, Oennys Reyes, Reds can start playing the exact
Steve Parris - are lagging this same way they did last year. Fol''
lowing their day off Thursday,
time around.
Dante Bichette, acquired from they head to Cleveland for thre~
Colorado to take over for Greg games, then on to San Francisco
Vaughn, has finally come around, and San Diego.
"We're still right there,"
hitting homers in five of his last
seven games. But Griffey remains Bichette said. "We ne~d to put a
in a slump - · a .215 'average and good month or couple of week
team-high 51 strikeouts to go together."
along with his team-leading 16
The biggest change from last
homers and 42 RBis.
year is the standings. The ~me
The Reds recoguize it's their record in 1999 only got the Reds
time to make a move.
third place, five games out. With
A yeai ago, the AL Central- the rest of the division·struggling,
leading Cleveland 1Indiatls came they're closer to the top this tjme.
to •town a swept ... three-game
Even though they went 5-7 on
series, dropping the Reds to 31- their longest homestand of the
27 on June 13. One week later, season, they gained a half-game
the Reds hit the road for Arizona or\ St. Louis.

PLANS CHANGED- The Pomeroy-Mason Bridge looms over piles of fill dirt recent·
banks of the Ohio. While the site was tQ have been the toea-

.iY moved along the

Toledo suburb in a rental car instead of on the ream
bus. When Rocker walked onto the field, several
Toledo players taking batting practice stopped to
watch.
Wren said he was not disappointed that Rocker
waited until the last minute to show.
"Most players take their time when they're sent
down:' Wren said.
Rocker, who had 38 saves last season with Adanta,
was banished to the minor leagues Monday for control problems. He also was fined $5,000 for a confrontation before Sunday's home game in Adanta
with Sports lllustrated ·reporter Jeff Pearlman. In
December, Pearlman had written a story on Rocker's comments about gays, minorities, and foreigners.
Rocker had 10 saves in 11 opportunities and a
3. 93 ERA this season with Atlanta, but walked 25
batters in 18 1-3 inning$.
Security was tight in Toledo for Rocker's first
appearance. Temporary fences kept fans away from a
walkway both 'earns lise on the way to the field. .
There were 18 sheriff's deputies on duty instead
· of the usual four.
Major League BasebalL security officials also were
at the game, assisting with the crush of media members and fans.
Reporters and photographers were limited to
where they could stand. Both clubhouses were
closed.

Colon was nearly as stingy until in the sixth before Everett's
homer.
Everett's homer.
· After a leadoff single by Frye
Smoke Signals: Martinez beat
starting the lint, Nixon struck Colon 1-0 in Boston on a solo
out and Nomar Garciaparra homer by Midre Cummings on
grounded into a double play. After July 15,1998.
·
a one-out walk to Daubach in the
.One of Martinez's two losses .
sec:Qr\d, Colon retired the next 10 was a 1-0 game May 6 against
batten, five on strikeouts.
Tampa Bay in Boston.
Troy O'Leary's single broke the
The Red Sox are 5-6 in their
Kring with two outs in the sixth, last 11 games. The Indians have
and he went to third on Varirek's lost twice in their last seven.
liJitlle. But Wilton Vem ended the Diaz and Alomar were the only
inniDI with a popout.
Cleveland bitten who didn't
Colon retired the side in drder strike out.

RE

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.
.
idge -~·-· .~~~d;:~~i~n~~!;rh;~!~~~e~n~:i~~~ea;:t~~g se~;:~~s~;~~~au.~~~~~ t~~,:~1:n~~~;:e~~
l on/1 h

route.
river clearance, ODOT now plans to purchase all
Th,e b~idge is to built approximately 1'20 feet of the property under the existing bridge.
4
',
south .of the ·~xislfing bridge's centerline.
This includes the Adolph's Dairy Valley lot and
· •
' • • ,, ~.,...Y,~ J•.~...,.,.., ;
.": .fa~sl. have modified earlier 'pl~ns for a "T" the :Pr;operty occupied by the Pool People on West
,..,, """"• .~.. , -_il. TI~I~L ST.v=F, ·. .,._, '," ~:t.:"'
nitf.;;,~til?n .tor tl:!e bndge appr,oach, s1mdar t~ that , .M~ :St,teet, as weU, /IS.&amp;tp.r:~ge !,!nits and other.lots
'P0~ROY -;-- li&gt;1,1e. to clhan~Jd•construction seryin~ ~g bridge, ro a 'T' inteisecriofi'.'' under the bri(!ge, '
' ·
.
, . reg!llalions and design, the Ohio D~paranent of which will. pro;.ride a separate route for through . Big ~end Foodland ;uid Auto Zone, farther
Tr.i.r\Spbrration' ~ys th~t lll~re propertY acqui~ition traffic oet~eh ,Pomeroy, and MiddlepQrt. , ,
south of the ·-bridge site, will not be affected by
will be teq!Jired before constructioii 'ca begin bn . lifnder:rhose working plaru, through traffic&lt;will construction, while Hutton's Car Wash on the
the new Pomeroy-Mason Bridge: ,
. .
' .
travel :dong a four-lane road under ihe bridge, and north is "on the borderline,'; Collins said.
ODO'J . District 10 Deoury , Director George · traffic approaching ·and leaving the bridge will
A bright point in the most recent changes,
Collins said Friday that required clearance over the travel a separate two-lane road to a light at the
Ohio River has made it necessary for the stat.c; to . · bridge itself. ,
Plun ... lltdp, Pilp .U
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Gallia.marn speaking

••REBATE•••

, BY KEVIN KELLY

'.

TIMES.SENTI~EL STAFF ·

MORGAN Ct:NTER -· A Gallia
County man's q11est to voice his opinion .
on individual rights earned him recognition at last month's annual meeting of the
Nati~ral Rifle Association in charlotte,
N.C.
Morgan Township resident Ernie . L.
Roush found his belief that responsible
gun owners should nor·be penalized with
, further restrictions was·cheered by NRA
· members.
.
''I;m just ~ citizen concerned about
our fi:eeaom," said Roush. "lf citizens ·
don't . s~and up and start speaking out,
aftEtJ·· R:Oullh !lll~~~:~~~h;l~~si~c:~on~· . God forbid."
fret9doms riur·ln11
R
"
Roush recei"ed several pins and
patches liom th~ organization and was

REBATE••• '
Just Announcedlhis Month
•

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Pkg.
Sun I
O.I'N ·48Mo.
0.9¥1. 36Mo.

Prix•••• _'1JOO
'1,500
'1,500
LeSabre•••-.. 11

tlon of a new business, recent changes in the design of thli bridge's replacement
will require .OOOT to purchase more .land, Including this tot. (Tony M. Leach photo)

,More prope

,j

ROCKER WITH RICHMOND - Banished Braves
reliever. John Rocker warms up In Toledo after join·
ing Atta~ta ·s Richmond club on Its road trip. (AP)

''

M. WCH

RACINE -Walls are being raised as construction
continues on the new Southern Local Elementary
School project.
Renovations and additions to the Southern ·H~
School - right next door - are also underway. ·
The highly anticipated $9.8 million building,
expected to be .c ompleted around May 1, 2001;and
fully operational at the beginning of the 2001-02
school year, is continl.)ing on schedule and starting tQ
. take form.
· ·
·Since classes e~ded last month, construction· has
begun to move at a more rapid pace. Construction
workers have much more accessibility io the school
building and properry now that students are home
for the summer. . .
·
The new elementary school will replace the old
junior high school in Racine, as well as elementary
schools located in Letart, Portland and Syracuse.
The new school will be an 80,001) square foot,
two-story structure that will house. over 20 classroo!DS, ·a .gymnasium, a library and several laborato"
ries.
Tlie new school is being funded through the Ohio .
Department of Education's Building Building Assistance Program, matched locally by $4 million from a
23-year bond.is$uc •approved in May 1998.
.
,
Work also conti.nues on several building .additions ·
~novations to ~utb~ fi~.. Sc.!'ool ~twill
mclude a new media c~rl!er, computer laBPratory

~

'

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TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

2000 Reds no better no worse than 1999.,
.

Detallt• ..... AI

SHBI

'

THE ROCKER CHRONICLES

Highs: 90s lows: 60s :

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Southern Elementary School project In Racine, est!\ mated for completion by the start of the 2001..02
\ school year. (Tony M. Leach photo)
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recognized by the North Carolina Rifle
and Pistol . Association during NRA's
four-day session, ~hich saw re-election
of actor Charlton Heston as its p~sident
. for another year.
Roush 'alsO' got the opportunity to discuss his views with rising Republican
leader Rep. J.C. WattS of Oklahoma, and
with ABC- TV World News anchor Peter
Jennings.
"I really think I made a difference for
this country and this state," he said. ''I'm .
just a country \&gt;oy, but this was the ,,,
biggest place I'd ev~r been in. It was 'a
rotaUy different world."
. ,
Roush; who served a hitch in the U.S.,
Army in the late 1970s and is disabled 1

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TRI-COUNTY
VOICES"-~.
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. . high. ~ 'We,.e in
and my
.•,,..::-Chicago last week and U
7 .. : it's un-Ame'rican:"
was already $2.30 a gal- /
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!on."
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· &lt;1u,•re driv!P( two vel~clci to
/&lt;C::/7ft;;c;;~~·~:fe~?. 1"f/,~e
grvJifis then flying 011 to the
~lifmas and one cousin just purchtJ.&lt;ed his ticket ltJ.&lt;t night tifter tire

gas·hike.) "Plane tickets skyrocketed
within minutes of thp gas jump."

"I WllS extremely foriow, to put
it nicely. I do a lot of driviNg ·
;,rvolved rvith work and the more
gas prices go up, the less I make."
(Rodgers is heading to Myrtle
Beach on his hoHeylnoon.) "It)
goi,tg to cost twice as much as we
planned."

"It's hard for people who
work for a living. I'm a sin- .
gle parent with three children, so it's a strain on· our ·
budget."
•

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