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•

County fair premium section inside
Kyger Creek tourney preview, Bl

Wednesday
Hlch: aos; Low: &amp;Os
Details, A3

Meigs County's

Tuesday
· July 11, ~000

Hometown Newspaper
so

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 11

Cents

Sheriffs
budget
faces deficit
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

and $4,9()() in fuel bills.
The fuel bills, already a conPOMEROY- Meigs Coun- cern beca use of the rising cost
ty commissioners reviewed a of gasolin e, are also ori the rise
projected budget shortfall in the because deputies travel to Noble
sher iff's budget Monday, and County on a regular basis to
mu st now consider how the transport prisoners. The county
department will operate for thl' has a negotiated rate with the
next six m onths.
Noble County Jail for housing.
Lisa Roush , the sheriff's secreThe department got a bad
tary, presented a breakdown of start in 2011!1, Roush sa id ,
line item balances in the sheriff's because $40,000 in 199CJ bills
general fund budget, which were paid out of the 2000
includes current or projected appropriation , and because the
deficits in areas includin g hous- appropriation was based on
ing, supplies, food , and fuel..
what the board appropriated in
To date, S 100,000 in expendi1999; rather than w h at was
tures h ave been
·
actuall y spent.
made for the
" It 's imporRoush s,rid.fircl '"'"
. operatiOn
of
tant to rememth e
departtllllsidc ho11sirr.\! ,·o.''-'
ber that most
ment: to pay
,,n· ~~r
,·o'lt'' r11 r., co unty offices
deputies,
to
operate on an
date. The dcpartmnll
house and feed
eight- hour,
1/tll/' Oll't'S .\'! _;, (1111/ Ill
pnsoners, and
five-day work
to operate and
ftousill.\! hi/Is to COIII/I it.· week," Roush
maintain
th e
said, " while the
11'110 lll&lt;lht• Jllil -'Jl•l(t'
department's
sheriff's
'"''"lahil· ro .\Ic(l!s
fk et of cruisers.
department is ·a
Coull!)', and S-1.,900 i11
The commis24- hour .a day
swners
are
.fiu•/ bills.
operation."
required
by
The
com- .. · - Ohio law to provide the fund - nmswners made plans to meet
lng necessary to house, feed and wi th Sou lsby for a more in provide nwdical care for priso n- depth disc.llssion of his depart.
ers, and also must meet a num- mental budget.
·,- -~c ber-of---mandatc s se t ~forth ~ m~-~- ln T\lflcr =-b1Tsiims;-lrhecc-5nr::--~·
··
their negotiated labor contract mt ss wners m et with Steven
with deputies in the depart- Moort; of Buckeye Hills / Hockment, but Commission Presi- in g Valley Regional Developdent Jan et Howard said the ment District to discuss a disboard will meet with Sheriff trier-wide economic develop· James M . Soulsby to discuss pos- ment plan.
sible budget cuts.
BH / HVRIJI) serves as a
Roush said fuel and outside clearinghouse for federa l and
housing costs are of major con- state grant programs for local
cern to date. T he department gowrnments, ~nd provides oth er
now owes $1,2,000 in ho using econ omtc development and
bills to cou nti es w h o make j ail
Please see Deficit. Page A3
sp ace available to Meigs County,

READY ... AIM
... FlREISoldiers prepare to engage
the enemy at
last year's Battle of Buffington Island
reenactment
which attracted
a large number
of spectators
and reenactors
to the Portland
battle site.
(File photos)

Ready to stage war
(Soldiers' set to
invade Portland
battle~round

.
P

BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS S.,.AFF

ORTLAND
The sights and
__
.smmds of th ~ Civil
0
War ' wi-!1
ec h o
throughout
Lebanon Township July 14-1 6
as the o nly signifi cant C ivil
War battle fought on Ohio soi l
will be recreated in Portland,
137 years after the original
engagem ent.
The event, which recreates
the July 19, 1863, struggle
between Con federate cavalryrnen under Gen. John Hunt

Morgan and pursuing Union
soldiers, will occur at 1 p.m. at
Buffington · Island park in
Portland along State Route
124.
Civil War military camps
arid battle recreations, as well
as a tent city containli1ffpetiod merchants and a blacksm ith , will be ;ivailable for the
publio to examine.
SatUJ;day's highlights include
two memorial serv ices at 11
a. m . and noon along with a
discussion of the local history
surrounding the battle. The
discussion will begin at 1 :30
p.m. and will be conducted by
the Meigs Counry Pioneer
and Historical Society.
At 3 p.m. the battle of Corydon will be recreated at a site

Please see Battle, Pace A3

m.,;or

TENT CITY - Along with several military camps and various battle
reenactments, a tent city containing period merchants and a blacksmith will be on display for the public during festivities commemorating the Battle of Buffington Island. (File photo)

Buckley denies rumors that Salem Center school
will be closed
.
.

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - No decision has been
made to close the Salem Center Elementary School, said William L, Buckley,
Meigs Local School District superintendent.
Buckley was responding to rumors that
a decision has been made to close the
school this fall . "That is not true," the
superintendent said.
However, he acknowledged the matter
has been discussed, and there is a possi-

Today's

Sentinel !

l Sections - 1:a Paps
Calendar
Classifi~~;b

AS
B ~-~

Comics

B~

Editori~ls

A4

Ob'1tuanes
'

AJ

S~orts

Weather

Bt, 6
AJ

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-4-H; Pick 4: 8-2-3-3
Buckeye 5: \11-l'r&gt;-IB-20--30

W.YA.
Daily 3: 5-h-4 Daily 4: 3-2-U-6
,. 2Ut HI Ol11n VAlll'y

Pubh shin~

Co

bility som e decision will be made at
tonight's meeting of the Mei~ Local
Board of Education. T he item is included on the agenda for disc ussion and possible action.
If the school is closed, the students and
staff would be moved to the Rutland
Elementary Sc h oo l where there is
reportedly plenty of classroom space, and
the largest class size would be about 20
students pe r class.
As Buckley explained, "the Board of
Education holds discussions about o ur .

schools and the costs to m aintain them.
These discussions are a norm al part of
developing o ur budget for the upcoming
sc hool years. As part of this process , eac h
sc hool's needs are discussed and a dollar
amount is assign ed to meet these needs.
Salem Center is ce rtainly part of this
process, and yes, there are definite needs
for that building."
In a letter to parents and guardians of
Salem Center students, Buckley outlined
the needs of the building. He said the
most pressing need at Salem Center right

now is the situatio n in the modular classroom building, hom e to th e fo urth - and
fifth-graders.
"That modular building is quite o ld
and is in need of major r~pair. T h e heating/cooling units in the building both
need to be replaced . The com pressor on
one of them is bad and is completely
gone on the other unit. In addition, we
have fought termites in the modular
classrooms for the past several years."
Bu ckley emp hasized the Board of
Education h as the responsibi lity to spe nd

the taxpayers' money in a responsible
manner.
"The board must comider w hether or
not it is a good idea to put several thousand dollars into repair of a building.
w he n we all k"now that building will be
closed in a couple of years when our new
elementary is built. In Salem Ce nter's situation, there· wi i4J be no way to get back
the investment of those thousands of dollars.
"As such, th e Board is looking at alter.

Please see School, Page A3

Middleport Co.uncH approves emergency pay raises
BY BRIAN J. REE~.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Our c!f lll'o ordill,tii&lt;'I'S ''Jll'~'~'''&lt;'d
last 11 (\!ht .~r,ll/lcd ,, 35'-cmr 1'•1)'
raise to"" i11dil'idu,i/ sln'l'l ,111d
Jl'atcr di'J'tl rrnwd ,.,,p/o)'t'c, tl'il i I,:
the sao11d .~tll't' a 5 pt ricnl 1'•1)'
iucrcasc to ,,I/ l'ilf,l,l!t' &lt;' IIIJJ!O) 't't s,
,,.;tit the e.wc,ti''" ~~r

M ayor Sandy lannarelli reported on the
progress of park improvem ents at General
Hartinger Park , funded through a grant
from the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources NatureWorks program, a grant
program operated with proceeds from a
statewide bond issue approved by voter~.
1annarelli said that work has b t~en nearly
comp leted on the basketball courts, an d
II'Mkcrs.
that or\ly work on _repairing the park
restrooms rem ains. New p layground
equipment, lights, and improvements to
payraise ordinance last night.
Councilman_ Stephen Houchins voted, the basketball and tennis courts were fund against the emergency declaration, .but ed through the grant.
lannarelli said that Nick Mills, and Justin
voted to approve th.e raises.
·
Cou ncil also apJ)roved a proposed 2001 and Corey Seymour have volunteered theit'
tax budget as submitted by Meigs County time to complete the repairs to the basketball co'u rt, and ' that Ohio Pallet Co. of
Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell.
The budget estimates revenue for the Pomeroy has donated several truckloads of
village general fund at $509,354, as well as wood chips for the playground areas in
revenue for special revenue .funds, and esti- both General Hartinger and Dave Diles
p'arks .
mates expenditures at SS2R,OOO.

MIDDLEPORT - .Ordinances granting pay raises to village employees were
read and approved on an emergency basis
during Monday evening's regular meeting
of Middleport Village Council.
One of two ordinances approved last
night granted a 35-cent pay raise to an
individual street and water department
employee, whi le the seco nd gave a 5 percent pay in crease to all village employees,
with the exception of seasonal workers.
That ordinance was read at council's
meeting on Jun e 26, but was approved last
nig~t with minor changes in language.
C lerk Bryan Swann asked that the rules
be suspend e~ and the ordinances passed on
an em ergen cy basis, citi ng "e mploye e
morale" and ea1e of bookkeeping. · Since
the raises will be retroactive to June 26,
counci l held all required readings on the

_,('''-'''"'''

\

•

lannarelli sai d she had received a number
of qu .:·stiom about ad mission prices and
other fees at thl' village pool.
General adm iss ion at the pool is t3 for
adults. S2 for stud ems, and S 1 for
preschoolers, with chi ldren under 3 admitted free of charge. Passes are $30 for a single patron .md $6il for a fami ly. Po o i parties arc $40 for the first hour, $Hll for two
hours, and S I illl for thrcl' hours.
Swimmi ng classes are $5 per session.
C hri s Kelley, pool ntanagl'r, announced
plans for a community yard sale at the park
on Aug. 5 and 6, to benefit the pool's operation. Don;uions will be pll:.kcd l!P .'It residents ' homes . Thosl' with items to donate
e m ca ll Kelley at thl' po'bl at 9')2 - ')240 .
A three- on - three ml'n 's baskl'tball tour- ·
nament will also be held ,lt thl' same time,
for men 16 and o ldl'r. A $20 l'ntry fee· will

Please see Council, Page A3

�Tuesday, July 11, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Boy dies in drain pipe
NORTH CANTON (AP) -An 8- ycar-old boy dted after he
was swept away by a flash flood that dragged him more than 300
feet throt!gh a 12-inch drain pipe.
Bradley Williams , of Plain Township, died Monday afternoon at
Timken Mercy Medtcal Center tn Canton. He was unconsciOus
when rescue workers pulled him from the p1pe, sa1d neighbor Steve
IJ'

From mo.

Harry Campbell, investigator for the Stark County coroner's
• office, said Williams probably drowned.
Plain Township Fire ChiefJo hn Sabo said he and others were still
trying to figure out exactly how the boy, who was playmg in hts
fro nt yard, ended up mSide the narrow p1pe.
"ObviOusly, he go t mto some very last- moving water that had a
1m of force," he said .
A narrow band of heavy showe rs hit the area at about 3 p.m.,
.*'mping 1.5 mches of ram m an hour or less, said Frank K.teltyka,
llleteorologtst with the National Weather Serv1ce at Cleveland
H opkins International Airport.
Netghbors and .rescue workers pulled off manhole covers and
du·g frantically at three drain grates, throwing up clumps of mud and
grass, before someone with a flashlight spotted the boy's feet.
"Every tune it rains, they're (netghborhood children) playmg m
t hat ditch," said Jim Guy, who lives next door to Williams. "But I've
never thought something hke thts would happen ."
North Canton " about 45 nules south of Cleveland.

Taft seeks help with plant
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov. Bob Taft on Monday asked President
Clinton to mvestigate several key issues surroundmg the decis10n to
close the Portsmouth Gaseous DtffusJOn Plant m southern Oluo.
The plant's operator, the Umted States Ennchment CorporatiOn,
recently announced plans to cease production at the plant, eliminating about 1,400 jobs.
.
Piketon is about 70 miles south of Columbus.
Taft's office said the governor spoke w1th C lmton at the summer
n)eeting of the National Governors' AssoCiation in State College.
Pa.
"You don 't get an opportunity like that often, so I took it to personally talk to the president about one of Ohio's most critical situations right now, and that's our fight to kee p Piketon open," Taft
said.
.
Taft also gave Chnton a letter dtscussing the P1ketoll plant and
asJ&lt;ing for his personal mtervention to block or reverse the planned
closure
In the letter, Taft asked the preside nt to mvestigate the claun by
US.EC that high energy costs at P1keton caused the company to
close the plant.

Youth charged in slaying
COSHOCTON (AP) - A 12-year-old boy has been charged 111
th~ slaying of h!S 7 -year-old cousm, authonttes sa1d.
Billy J. Mounts entered a plea of mnocent Monday in Coshocton
County Juvemle Court to a delinquency charge of aggravated murder, T he Coshocton Tribune teported Mounts is accused of fatally
shootmg Homer Austin Ill of Frankfort. Austin died Sunday, two
days after bemg shot.
Austin had been vtsiting hts cousin's home in Wills Cre!'k·
Cos hocton County sheriff's deputies said the two cousms argued,
which led Mounts to get his father's .38-caliber pistol and shoot his
cousm in the back of the head Friday afternoon.
Mounts then called the 911 emergency number and reported that
Austin had shot himself.
.
Maunu w~s sit\ing on the back of a truck petting his dog when
Cos hocton County authorities arrived nt the Mounts home, the
newspaper reported for its Tltesday edititln .
Within 30 mimttes, Mount• admitted firing the gtlll, Detective Lt.
Steve ~ c hcreek said.
Ltw enforcement officials would not say what the two co111ins
had argued about.
Mounts rem~ined in custody Monday night and was transported
to a detention center in Jefferson County in eastern Ohio.

Church distributes SS bills
PARMA (AP) - A church distnbuted $2,500 to pamhioners.
Sunday in hopes they will make the money grow and return tt as a
g ift.
As part of the annual Spmt Day celebratiOn at St. John the Baptist Byzantine Rite Cathedralm tillS Cleveland suburb, th e first 500
regiStered worshipers eac h rece1ved a $5 btU
.'they were encouraged to put the money to good use, multtply 11
and return it Within the next year to the Eparchy of Parma , whtc h
was established in I CJ69 and includes mote than 30 pamhes.
· : It's not a n ongmaltdea, but It's never bee n tned before 111 thiS
are~. as far as I know." Sai d the Rev Denms H rubiak , pastor of Holy
Spmt Byzan tm e Carhohc C hurch in Parma and an orgamzer of the
Spmt Day fund-ra istng campa1gn .
The $5 gifts rec.dl a New Tc&gt;tl111cllt par,1blc 111 wlm h a landowner trusts hts scrvJnt~ to watch Over Ins m oney as he travels When he
retu rns home, he c elebr;~re s. and rewards two worke rs \vho make
mvestments Jnd 1nc reasc thetr sharn of l'ts fOrtune. One St' rvant 1s
repnmandcd for burymg hiS money o ut of fear.
Hrub1ak sa1d those who earn the most mon ey ;1nd arc creative
w1Gh the1r e ndeavors will be acknowledged and possibly rewarded

..

Officer killed in ac,ident

GENOA (AP) -

A polt ce otlicn d1ed ea rl y Monday when a

tra c to r-trader struck hts c nuse r, the State Htghway Patro] s.ud .

(~ J ay Towmh1p Poltce Ofli ce r Wtll13m l lctn k Jr. d1ed after the

cn~~cr burst uno tlllllt.'s. IIt ~
the: patrol sa1d .

.Jgt.'

J_nc\

homctOWII \\'t..'H' not

av;ulabJe,

1:ht· acCJdt:nt ur..curn:d o n State R o ut L' =i 1 m•Jr Genoa
A.uthontJL'S sJ td tl was foggy .lt the n mL' of the c r~; h about 4 .15
a.ni.. but the y \verc not surt' w h,11 role we 1thcr pl ayed 111 the cras h .
\!'l"Jbthry \V;lS down to a ft.'\\! hundred t'Cd , the patro l ~:,a1d

Prisoner charged with escape
S:TRYKER (AP) - A pnson e r accused o f sca lmg a &lt;ecunry f~nce
at;} rcgmn a] jJtl and spendmg two day-. on tlw run b:l s bcen cl1.1rged
\Vlth escJpe .
Dav1 d Rutledge, 20. of Wause on , co uld be g1wn five years in Jad
1f CO llVICtt..'d
Rutkdg ~..: dtmh·d the ti..· ~t u· topped WJ th r.tzo r wm: Fnday afteJn nO II ,Jt the ( 'o rrc l ll UJJ\ ( l'lltl'r o f Nor th west Oh m.saJdj11n Den Ill &lt;;, th t• 1 .111·~ r..':\l'll lt l\L' d1rct 101
l~ t

tptu n·d !' ~rh' "'lliiHi t\ .t\J r, nH '1 ~ llllk'"
I h,;,, l pu . . flln~ .1 bh'\ ( lc Ill 1 d11r h. ]\r )llt t .,,JJd
\\,J\ (_

Tuesday, July 11, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The pany Sentinel

,1 \\'l\ llt' .t r

Fayette

Jtutledge 1ppc.ued 111 B1) 11 1 ,\1uttlc ip.tl Co urt Momby.
ft..utledgc had bc·en 111 the Jill &gt;lltcc Aprd 22. He IS .wa iting sen ten cing after pleading gmlty last week to charge&lt; of burglary and
grand th eft

•

AKRON (AP) - For yea.rs, the body of
Armando Carlone was kept m an arne bedroom at his house. When the house caught on
fire in the mid-1990s, his w1fe and son put Ius
remains in two garbage bags and camed him
to the basement so fire inspectors wouldn't
find hun.
Carlone's death m W89 went unnonced
until Saturday when police found some of his
remams in a plastiC bag below the liasement
stairs.

His wtfc , Delia, was found dead slumped in
a living room chm in a scene eerily reminiscent of the Bates Motel m the movte "Psycho." She had been dead smce June 24, nty
police Maj. Paul C&lt;lllahan sai'il.
The couple's son, Ralph Carlone, 47, is
being held on a SI rnill1on bond. He has
pleaded mnocent to failing to provtde for a

Police are still looking for answers
in the couple's death and how
Ralph Carlone came up with more
than $140,000 that they found in a
brown paper bag he was carrying.
'
functionally impaired person in his mother's
death.
Detectives planned to return to the home
Tuesday with a cadaver-sniffing dog to search
for the missing remains of Armando Carlone,
Callahan said. Detectives also wiU dig through
a section of newer concrete m the basement
to see if any more remains are m the home.
Police are still looking for answers in the
couple's death and how Ralph Carlone came
up w1th more than $140,000 that they found
m a brown paper bag he was carrymg.

Will~en Nutter,39,Tuppers

Man jailed
POMEROY A Chapm ,t llvilk WVa., man turned himsel f 111 to a uthont~t·s on Monday
and was jaded ovcrrught o n
domesti c VIolence charges.
Accordr11g to Meigs County
Shentl'jallle&gt; M Soulsby, Robert
W o rkman, 25, was charged wtth
domL· ~tl c VlOknce followmg an
allegt•d .l ltercation at Sh1pman
C e mctc'ry o n State Ro111c 143.
An area lcSidcnt called deputies
la st Wl·ck to &lt;.:omplam of notse at
the cemetery, but Slupman and
the othe r party allegedly mvolvcd
had left the '&lt;&lt;'nc when dep unes
:1 rnvcd .

. Workman ts expected to appear
111 Meigs County Court today.

Actions filed

AME to vote on bishops;

Police say investigation
of death threats now inactive

could elect first woman
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two
women were in the running to
become the African Methodist
EpiScopal Church's first female
btshop, but conference delegates
turned aside a proposal that
would have guaranteed one of
them would be elected.
The two were among 41
candtdates for four open btshop
positions for the 2.3 ll1lllionmember AME , the natton's oldest black church group which
traces its founding to 1787.
AME officials said 1,876 delegates would be voting. A majority vote is reqmred to elect a
biShop, and multtple ballots are
sometin1es necessary.
C hurch delegates on Monday
mght voted 980-604 to open a
fourth bishop's posttion to be
filled m votmg. Votmg for the
new bishops was planned for
Tuesday, satd John Adams, senior
bishop with the AME church.
On Fnday, a group of AME
activtsts introduced a resolution
asking the Episcopal Committee, which~versees election of
oisnops ev ry four years, to
dtrect that ne of the new btshops be
' female. Delegates
rejected thaf resolution Saturday
by a vote c{ 716-667 after critics said ' it ' 1u:nounted to
1
tokenism.
"The results of this vote
mean there is no set-aside or
automatic selection," said Bishop John R. Bryant, presiding
officer of the conference.
"Women are free to run and this
delegation is free to respond to
each candidate regardlen of
gender."
Jayme Coleman Williams,
author of the defeated resolution, said she was disappointed

the resolution was turned down,
but said it wouldn't stop her
efforts to push for election of a
female bishop.
Having an all- male roster of
bishops sends a message that the
AME Churc h supports, or at
least condones, gender discrimination·, she and her supporters
argued.
The two female candidates
were the Rev. Carolyn Tyler
Guidry, a presiding elder and
former pastor who supervises 19
AME churches in the Los Angeles area, and the Rev. Vashti M '
McKenzie, pastor of Payne
Memonal AME Church m Baltimore.
In another move, the Episcopal Committee decided late
Sunday to declare a thad bishop's poSition vacant. The church
body had been expected to elect
two new bishops, replacing men
who have reached mandatory
retirement age . The number was
increased to three when another
btshop asked to retire for health

..

~llt J O O .

The tl ag was lJSt carrt cd at th o
I H62 bmle of Chtckasaw 131uff&lt; in
MISSISSippi. The Wayne County
regtment took more than 300 casualties Wltlun 30 to 40 mmutes.

msuffic1ent evidence at this time
to seek indictment and prosecution against anyone."
" It was conunon or public
knowledge that there was one
mdividual that this case turned
to," but there was not enough
evidence to file charges, Denton
said, refernng to Kent Ware, the
husband of Charmame Ware, one
of the fired admimstrators.
The couple and their attorney
could not be reached to com:
ment. The Wares have an unhsted
telephone number, and the re was
no answer at theu attorney's
office.
Their attorney, John Waddy,
previously called the investigation
fnvolous.
If police receive new information , they w1ll act1vate the case,
Denton said.

ukesh

reasons.
The churc h has 26 biShops.
Women make up abour 70
percent of the denomination.
Twenty bishops l~ad the
AME Church in the four-year
interim between the general
conferences. Nineteen bishops
lead districts . in the United
States, Canada, the Caribbean,
England and Africa; the 20th
represents the church with other
denominations,
church
spokesman Mike McKinney
said. B1shops are required to
retire at 75.

r,

The Middleport Clinic
788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OK_4S76() _

IDIIIntmants:
17401112-4228

POMEROY - An actwn for
chssolut1on of marnagc has been
filed in Mt' lgs County Common
l'lca&gt; Court by M artha Renee
Otto, an d Micah John Otto, both
of' Long Bottom.
A dtssolu tio n has been gr,tnted
to l)au l CJ1d and Sharo n Elain e
Card .

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
hu:n scs h;1vc been 1ssued in Mei gs
County
Prob:u c Cou n
ro

··what•s The
•.Bi2 Buzz" ~

T-bill rates
mixed Monday

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6. No wa~ing at your hometown daily~ slart your ad as
The total pnce must not eKceed $300
soon as posstble after send 1! to us, fax us or phone us.
Nocommerctal ads, garage- yard sales, servtces, rentals,
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Phone ________________________________~-------------

Coupon To: FREE • BEE
Daily Sentinel
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

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•No AbbreviaJ ions Please
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C HESTER - Past Counselors
Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of Ameri ca, will have
Its ptcni c and meeting at the shelter house behind the Methodtst

Council
from Page AI
be reqUired .
CounCil galle the third and final
readmg o n an ord mance incrcasmg the reconn ec tton fee fo r
water ;e rviCc from S21J to $45. for
those accounts di'\connectcd du e
to nonpayment.
Council man R oger Manley,
ch:llrman of coun ctl's strl·et co mnllttec, s;ud the comnuttct: 111et
pnor to the counetl mcc tm g and
had d1scussed a proposal mad e at
rht· !Js.r mce tmg.
The proposal would constder
clung 1ng the flow of tr.1Hic and
pa rkm g co nfigurattons on the
\V.1lnu t Street bl ock of North
Thtrd Avenue. The co mnuttee
rL'(U illiiiCtllit:d that no t han ges be
m ade at thts tunc.
Srrcl't Co mmt sstunt:r Kenny
Madden dtscu-;sed wtth counol a
n ew poltcy p roh tblting e111ployce,s
from
dnvmg vtllage -owncd
trucks hcimc.
Madden ;a1d he fdt he should
have accc..·ss to a vil b gc tru ck

Ice aeam sodal
RACINE - Commumty 1ce
cream social Reorgamzed Latter
Day Saints Church, Saturday, 6:30
p.m. located on Lovett Road JUSt
off Portland-Racine Road .
MuSic. Donations only.

New pastor
STIVERSVILLE Wayne
Jewell of Mason,WVa. is new pastor of the Stiversville Community Church. Sunday school 10
a.m., evening serv1ces, 7 p.m.

•

Song fest set
RACINE - Proclamt w1ll be
singing at Mount Moriah C hurch
of God Mile HiD Road, Ranne,
Saturday night at 7 p.m. Bruce
Utt invites the public to attend ,
'

Announces
change
POMEROY - Meigs County
Adult Basic and Literacy Education (ABLE) program announces
a change Ill sc hedule and loca tions for cla.,es.
At the present time, two centers
are open m Meigs County. In
Middleport adults can study at
the Middleport Ltbrary. and m
Tuppers Plams, the center IS
housed at the former Tuppers
Plains Elementary.
Located 111 the basement of the
Middleport Lrbrary, the Middleport Center hours are Monday
through Fnday, 9 a. m.-2 :30 pm.,
and evening hours are 4-8 p.m
Tuesday through Thursday.
The Tuppers Plains center IS
open T~esday through Thursday, 9
a.rn.-2:30 p.m.
Information about the center
and the ABLE program IS available by callmg 667 - 0441 dunng
those hours.

Fiber optics
merger planned

Kristal Lynn Bolin
MIDDLEPORT - Knstal Lynn Bol111, 35. of Middleport, d1cd
Tuesday. July II, 2000 at. her residence.
Born 111 Galhpohs o n June II. 1965, she was the daughter of George
R . Sisson and Sh1rley A.' Radford SISson . She was employed as a secretar y at Rutland Bottle Gas.
She IS surv1ved by three children, Zachary Stephen Bohn, Joshua
Allen Bolm, and Adnan Ntcole Bolm of Middleport; her parents,
George R . and Slurley A. Sisson of Pomeroy: two brothers, George
Brent Si;son of Cmcmnatl, and the Rev. Pfullip R . and Pattt Ann Gaul
of Plymouth, Ind ., her grandmother, Myrtle SISson of Pomeroy: aunts
and Ul)cles, Philhp and R1ta Radford, and Carol yn and John Teaford of
Pomeroy, cousms, tlnan Teatord of Chester. and Beth Kennedy of
Mason. Ohw; and one niece and three nephews.
Memonal se rvices w1ll be held at 10 30 a. m . Fnday,July 14,2000 at
Rocksp nn gs Cemcrery, Pomeroy. Offic1atmg w1ll be the Rev. Les
Hayman There Will be no callin g hours. Arran,;emcnrs are by Ftsher
Fun eral Home, P01neroy.
In li eu of flowers , contnbuuons may be madt· to the An1erican Cancer Society, M e1gs County Unit, PO. Box 703. Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

VALLEY WEATHER

Cooler, drier on Wednesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

More co mfort able weather
cond1t10ns, with lower hunudit1es
and coole r teffipera tures, are
expected tn the trl-county area
on Wednesday
Partly cloudy skies are forecast
wtth tempe ratures of 7~-80, the
Nat10nal Wea ther ServiCe sa1d.
Tomght, lows wtll be m the 60s.
Sunset ronight w1ll be at
9·02and su nrise on Wednesday at
6:14a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy w1th a
c hancc of showers and thunderstorm's. Lows in the mid 60s.

SAN FRANC ISCO (AP) JDS Uniphase Corp. " buymg
rival fiber-opttc company SDL
Inc. for about $36 bilhon in stock,
the latest dcalm th e rapidly consolidating industry.
The compames manufacture
AI
products needed for htgh-capact ty fiber-opt1c networks. Demand JUSt no rth of the park. Corydon
for such products i\l growmg as was a C1v tl War battle that
htgh-speed aud10 .a nd vtdeo occurred 111 lnd1ana dunng Mortransn11SSIOn becorlr es more gan's ratd, whtch preceded the
prevalent on the lnter~et.
general 's cmssmg mto Ohio, and
The acqutsttton was' valu ed at eventually resulted in the rwo
$41
b11hon when tt was oppostng arnues fighting it out at
announced early Monday, after Buffington Island.
which .m vestors p~IS.bed shares of
Saturday's even ts Will conclude
JDS Umphase ,;6wn 13 pe rcent.
w1th a Mihtary Ball . and the
The deal, expected to clo~ e by _Sanqy.:_Rtver Miqstrili a! .7 pJn _
year's e nd, needs to be approved
On Sunday, ther'e wdl be a
.by the government and both penod church service at 10 a.m.
compa ni es' shareholders.
followed by vanous army drills,
Mtke Phillips, a JDS Umphase and fina lly, the dramattc reenactsenior vice president, sJid the ment of the battle of Buffington
company will cooperate With lsland at I p m
federal regulators. "As Wtth EThe reenac tment weekend is
Tek, we are optimistic we wtll
obtain the required approval," he
sat d.
Under the deal, each share of
SDL wtll be exchanged for 3.8
shares of JDS Uniphase. At FnAI
day's closmg pnces. It represents a
49 percent prem1um for SDL
pubh c adnunistration se rvices.
because of hts superviSory posi- shareholders.
M oore p rov1ded the comnustton and becau;e he IS often on
Shares of JDS Uniphase tell
swne
Ls wtth a qu estionnaire rdat24-hour call .
Sl5.063 to $ 101 125 on the NasCo unul referred his questions daq Stock Market, while shares of mg to Infrastructure needs and
other eco nomi c d evelopm ent
to the village eq uipment comnut- SDL rose $25 .375 to $320 688.
conet•rns for m clu s10n ITl th e dtstee, wluch Will meet prior to
tn ct's comprehensive economi c
counctl's July 25 meetmg

Houchins discu ssed a number
of pothok·s on Broadway Street
and in other areas whtch are m
need of repatr, and noted that the
water department should be
re sponsible for repamng those
streets damaged as a result of
water !me rcpatrs.
·
Counc1l member R ae Gwlazdowsky reponed a trash dumpster
on the Mill Street &lt;t de oftheVdlage Manor apartment comj&gt;lex
in ne ed of emptymg
·,
lannarell1 sa1d she had been in
co ntact with the apartments'
management, and that the matter
should be add ressed ngh t away.
Coun c1l al;o approved the payment of bills 111 the amount of
$ 19,866.55, approved appropnatmns adjustments 111 the '&gt; trcct.
water and sewer budgets, and
.1pproved the mayor's report of
fe es and fines collected 111 the
amou nt of $2,833. 92.

Battle

froni Page

Deficit

from Page

School
from Page AI
nat1ves ·to spendm g that kind of
money aud one of the alternattvcs
IS to close Salem Center Elementar·y and move all the ;tudc nts and
staff members to RutLtnd Ele mentary."

That move. Buckley 'Jill, would
result m consJd crablc savmgs of
mon ey. The ~tudent s would g-e t
on buses about an hou r earlier 111
the mormn g, but \Vould ge t
hom e ti-om sc hool abnut :m hour
earhcr in d1c evem ng.

The new modular at Salem
Center would be moved to Rutbnd for u s l~ as ne cdl'tL hl' noted.
But kiev md t he· tloard oC Edu CJIJOn W,JJI COWitdcr .. Jll of the
alternatrve. to the Sl tliJtiOll at
Sale m Center"
"Com to keep the blllldu1 g ·
open will be discussed as well as
o tlwr l''ut:s .1nd a dcctsJOn as to
whether to ket·p the IJu tld mg •
open or to close 1t will bl' m.1de"

Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
C hance of rai n 30 percent.
Wcdnesday... Partly
cloudy.
Hi ghs 111 the lower 80s.
ntght. ...Partly
Wednesday
cloudy. Lows m the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thur;day . Partly cloudy with a
c han ce of showers. and possibly a .
thunderstorm . mamly dunng the
day H tghs tn the mid 80s.
Fric\ay. .. Partly clou dy. Lows m
the nud 60s and h1ghs m the
upper 80s.
• Saturday. Partly cloudy. Lows
m the mid 60; and highs in the
upper 80s

bemg spo nso red by the Meigs
County HIStorical Society and
Harris Farms, and Will be hosted
by the 91st Ohio Volunteer
Infantry CIVIl War reenactment
group. Proceeds will be used to
help preserve the Buffington
Island battlefield which has been
receptly en tan gled in a gravel.
minmg dt spute.
Many consider the Barrie of
Buffington Island to be one of the
most luston ca lly Significant in the
Umted States because it mvolved
many d1ffe rent types ' of forces,
mcludm g
cavah:.y,____i nfantry,
artillery and naval and guerrilla
warfare.
There arc only three northern
Civ1l War battlefields throughout
the eastern Umtcd States in existence. those betng Gettysburg,
Pa., Corydon, Ill. and Portland.

developme nt plan.
The c01hm.issioners met with
Mi chael SwiSh er, director of the
Meigs County Department of
Jo bs and Family Serv1ces m executive sesSion. and approved the
promotiO n of Chns Shank to the
poSitiOn of soc tal program developer at th e department
A numb er of fund s transfers
su bmitted by department heads
were approved· $4,211.45 for the
prosecu tmg attorney, $5,000 for
the t1tle office: and $] ,471 m the
Indigent Dnvers' Alcohol Treatment fund.
·
The bo ,~rrl .tlso approved the
payment of county bills 1n th e
am ou nt of S2~8 . R03 . 86 .

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
SPRING VALLEY ClriEMA
7
446•4524

OLO R0 U l E- l~ .'Vl •, I
128~ JACII:OON Prl&lt;.t

FRI7(1(00. THURS 7/13/00

BOX OFFICE WILL OPEN AT

MORE LOCAL NEWS .

6:30 PM fOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MAnNIIS
SCARY MOVIE (R)
7:20.&amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; a:20
THE PATRIOT (R)
1.00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00
CHICKEN RUN (G)
7·20 &amp; 9'00 CAlLY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1.20 &amp; 3:00

BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP - 32 1•
Akzo - 42'1
AmTech/SBC - 44"'•
Ashland Inc. AT&amp;T - 32'.

•

Js'•r,.

Bank One ~ 30ioe
Bob Evans - 15',,,
. 6orgWarner -: 37
Champton ~ 4
Charming Shops Cily Holdmg ..c. 7',

Federal Mogul - 9\
F rfstar -

In Meii!s-Gallia-Mason ..

•

~Ill~ Jh• JI1111111C II I ~

"I Ill' m:rmnrrmht•r

~~~P~Ih~~~~(1~~~~~·~!~5- _ _, .'f~ {7_:49)_9_9~~~J.~~ _

•

Picnic. meeting
scheduled

POMEROY - Fmt Southern
Baptist C hurch Will have "adventure week" Btble school Monday,
July 17- 21. Sesswns will be held
from 6:30-9 p.m. and there will
be classes for ages three through
youth.
For transpoharion or more
information, residents may conrace the church at 992-6779 or
Pasto.r Lamar O'Bryant at 9926328

•

Sunday and Thursday

71S~~ . 1S!lAILY

City, State, Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

··rhe Bii! Buzz

POMEROY - M e1gs County
Clerk of Courts Marle ne Harrison ISSued a renunder on Monday
that the Me1gs Cou nty Title
Department wtll begm provtdmg
exte nded office hours on Tuesday
evemngs, begmning tomght. The
office wtll be ·open from 8 :30
a.m. to 6:30 p.m. each Tuesday,
Harmon sa td.

Reader Services

:tAddress
Name'--------------------------------~--~----------_____________________________________________
1

dur-

Sul•~clljlll llll r.rlt

1 tr: rll );t'l11,11 be rrnpi&lt;I J\tnltll h1 th.rngrn!" lht

One Letter Per Box. Allow Box tor Space Between Words.

:ltlllllll

Office to open

I""''

7 Days
Yes, One Week!
4 Line Ad - 7 Times

!«! ____

POMEROY -A n appeal of a
~orkers comp.en sation case has
been filed m, M e1gs County
Common Pleas Court by James
A. Thomas, Middleport, against
Tri State Steel Erectors Inc.

Clinton will skip
VacatiOn

I ru.),r&lt; Ill
'it , l'mnLru\ Oln•• In the
1 Jhh • \ rlh.\ l'uhlr\lllll l-: ( o mp.m 1 , l't•mcro\ ,
Ohu1 ~- ' I•'' l'h •N~ 2l~ i l S&lt;'L&lt;~nd r.l r ~~ fl&lt;l~ l ­

Advertise In Classified ·-

7hfngs
7u_r!' _l!e_~~

Civil case filed

AIDS among the black population, the Rev. Jesse Jackson 1ssued
a chauenge co Iocalnumsters: rake
an HIV test, and do tt publicly.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Jackson spoke Monday before a
Interest rates on short-term Treaservice at an Indianapolis church,
sury sc· cunties W&lt;'re nuxed in
WASHINGTON (AP) . kicking off the 30th Summer
M o nday\ auct1on .
Prest dent Clinton has abandoned Celebration of the Indiana Black
The Treasury Department sold plnns for a fanuly vacation this Expo.
SR 5 bil hun 111 three-month bills SllllU11 er, opting tnstead to spend
"The numster tends to have the
at ,t dt&gt;cO III!t r.1le of 5 lJOO per- exten ded
weekends
raiSing moral authonty," Jackson said
cc 11t, up from 5.830 percent last money for the D e mocratic Party, before the se rvice, which attract\\ee k All .tdditt ona l $7 5 bilhon the White House said Monday.
ed an estimated 400 people. "You
was sold 111 stx-mon rh bdls at a
The prestdent and first lady Will have to have the courage to take
rotc of5 '.145 percent, down from spend the first weekend 111 August the test."
5 'J75 percent.
in Massachu se tts, attendmg a
Indianapolis Mayor Bart PeterThe three-month rate was the fund- raiSer on Martha's Vmeyard · son, Attorney Qeneral Karen
highest since May 15 when the and another m · Hyanms. said Freeman-Wllson and several area
brll&lt; so ld for 6.065 percent The Wh1t e House spokesman Joe numsters accepted'Jackson's chalstx - montlt rar e was the lowest Lockhart.
lenge and were tested for HIV at
SIU Ce June I 'I whe n the rate was ·
The C lmtons expect to take at the church Monday. Jackson also
:; 'J:YI
least two more extended week- was rested.
The new diScoun t rates under- ends Ill upstate New' York, one
Jackson also challenged profes. '&gt;St:tte...tUe...,.ow~l r&lt;eturn to mve•tors - followm g
th~ --Dcmocratl&amp;-- lf6 nalllliJe·resand- otl\er public
(&gt; 07 1 pcrcmt for three-month I , Nattonal Convc nnon 111 mtdleaders to take the AIDS test.
bdb wtth .1$ 10.000 bill selling for August and another over Labor
"None of us are safe until aU of
S9.Holl.911 and 6.215 percent for a Day weekend, Lockhart satd. Mrs. us are safe," he said.
qx - month
bdl
&gt;e lhng for Clinton IS mnnmg for the Senate
Jackson sa~d commumty leaders
S'J.I&gt;'I'!.41J.
from New York .
should take the test pubhcly to
In a &gt;epa r.ttc repo rt , th e Federal
help people of all races and ceoRe se rve s,ml Monday that the
nomic backgrounds learn that
.wcr.1gc y1e ld tor one-year Treagetting tested for rhe virus that
sury bi llS, the mos t popular index
causes AIDS is not taboo.
tnT makm g r i1.111grs Ill adJUStable
"However you may have gotten
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - In
.. .e mortgages, fe ll to 6 08 perit, early d etectiOn leads to early
an effort to curb. the spread of
cutt bst week from 6. 13 percent
correction," Jackson said.

il 'f,ip.; 2 IJ·'l60) l
Ohw \ 'ull l•V PuhllshinR t'u.
I'Lih\ r ~h d Ll&lt; 11 r • i~r rHH111 1\l n nda) lhr,r ugh

. '-.

Adventure week
planned

the previous week.

The Daily Sentinel

It's The
Meigs - Gallia - Mason

church in ~acine on Wednesday,
July 12 at -6 p.m.
Membe rs are encouraged to
bnng a covered dish , plates, silverware, cups. and something to
drink .

NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS

\lt• mh~·r

7st~£

Plains, and Debbie Lynn Barber,
25, Tuppers Plains; Dustin Aaron
Hershbeq!;er, 19, and Nancy Elvira June R1fc, 16, both of Dexter;
and Scott Eugene Golden , 25,
and Candace M arie Barber, 22,
bo th of Rae me.

Jackson iSSUeS
h II
AIDS c a enge

Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welcome

On the Net:
AME
Church:
http: / /www.amenet.org

Historical
Society hopes
to save flag
WOOSTER (AP) - The pnce
of preserving a pennant-shaped flag
wrth hand-pa11l!ed stars that was
earned mto Ov1l War battles 1111ght
be ItS destruction , The Daily
Record repo rted
Over the years, the silk flag that
was used by the 16th 0 luo Volunteer Infantry has become mcreasmgly fragile.
T hat's prompted the Wayne
County HIStoncal Society to begm
contacting professiOnal comerva- '
tors around the country to deter:
uune 1f the flag can be restored.
1 he cost. however, may be pro1-uhnwc, the newspaper said for a
Monday story.
Jet!' Musselman, a C 1vtl Wa r rec nactor, rese:uchcr and historical
soocty board membl'r, sJl d the cost
co uld bt' 111 excess of$2.51JU.
C ht10rd Cune'rman .' cur.1t0r of
collcl t1ons fOr tht• sout·ty, ~ud he
has reservat1ons about attcmptmg
work on rhe fl ag
" I don't thmk they'd be tter
touch 1t," Co nernu n ~.aid "That
fl ng as m very poor cond ati o n , :md I
don't know 1f \Vc QLtght to even
open the case that tt's m"
Cotwrman conccdcs not d01ng
anythmg to &lt;ave the flag could
1csult in Its cvc ntuaJ loss. but he ~u d
he _IS torn as.,.to the .proper course
of
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Police
said Monday there is not enough
evidence for charges in an tnvestigatton of death threats against
the city schools supenntendent.
The decision to halt the mvestigation comes as the school diStrict considers hiring full-time
bodyguards for Supenntendent
Rosa Smith.
Sll1lth had been the target of
threatening phone calls, e-mail
and letters for two months in the
spring after she suspended two
administrators accused of falsifymg documents . She has been
under 24-hour protection since
March 7, six days after the threats
began.
"We're not acttvely pursuing
tt, but it's not closed either,"
Detecnve Bureau Cmdr. Paul
Denton said Monday of the
mvestigation. "There was just

Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Authorities looking for ·answers in couple's death
Ralph Carlone was found wandering Saturday on Route 303 near Grafion in Loram
County, in the midst of a 50-mile walk from
the tidy North Akron home he shared with
h!S ltahan -ummgrant parents. Poli ce said he
had started walking m June.
His shoe&gt; were pamted bright yellow. He '
was polite, but insistent on contmumg his
walk to western Ohio m search of farm work.
Police in Medina County had picked up
Carlone several days earlier because he looked
suspicious but set him free at the Lorain
County line after a criminal record check
turned up no outstanding arrest warrants,
Callahan satd.
The county medtcal exanuner's office said
it could take a long time to determine how
the parents died.

Th~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

22~B

s·,,

Gannett - 57 '.,
General Electnc Harley

Davtdson -

Kmart ~ 7"~oa
Kroger 22 '1,
Lands End - 36 /,
Ltd - 23"1,.

Oak H1ll Ftnancial OVB - 26 1ill
One Valley - 0
Peoples - 14
Premier - 6 "oa
Rockwell -

33

THE PERFECT STORM (PG13)
7:00 ·9:30 CAlLY
MATINEES SAT'S UN 1 :00.3·30
THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY

Rooky Boots - 5'/,
52 ~ ..

'

39 r,

AD Shell -

Sears - 36

62 111!1

'
&amp; BULWINKLE (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9.10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10
ME, MYSELF &amp; IRENE (R)
7·00 &amp; 9·30 DIALY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30
STARTING JULY 14
DISNEY'S "THE KID"

1
1.,

Shoney's- 1
Wai-Mart Wendy's - 18'1,
Wor1hington - 11f..

en.

13.,»

Da1ly stock repOrts are the
p.m ciOSir1Q quotes of
the prev1ous day's transacltons,
provided
by
4

Advest of Galltpolis.

Cody joseph Parsons
2 Months Old
Grandparents:
Danny a... Dorothy Shain
Racine, Ohio

STARRING BRUCE WILLIS
&amp; X-MEN
ALL AGES. AU. TIMES 84-00

�Tuesday, July 11, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Boy dies in drain pipe
NORTH CANTON (AP) -An 8- ycar-old boy dted after he
was swept away by a flash flood that dragged him more than 300
feet throt!gh a 12-inch drain pipe.
Bradley Williams , of Plain Township, died Monday afternoon at
Timken Mercy Medtcal Center tn Canton. He was unconsciOus
when rescue workers pulled him from the p1pe, sa1d neighbor Steve
IJ'

From mo.

Harry Campbell, investigator for the Stark County coroner's
• office, said Williams probably drowned.
Plain Township Fire ChiefJo hn Sabo said he and others were still
trying to figure out exactly how the boy, who was playmg in hts
fro nt yard, ended up mSide the narrow p1pe.
"ObviOusly, he go t mto some very last- moving water that had a
1m of force," he said .
A narrow band of heavy showe rs hit the area at about 3 p.m.,
.*'mping 1.5 mches of ram m an hour or less, said Frank K.teltyka,
llleteorologtst with the National Weather Serv1ce at Cleveland
H opkins International Airport.
Netghbors and .rescue workers pulled off manhole covers and
du·g frantically at three drain grates, throwing up clumps of mud and
grass, before someone with a flashlight spotted the boy's feet.
"Every tune it rains, they're (netghborhood children) playmg m
t hat ditch," said Jim Guy, who lives next door to Williams. "But I've
never thought something hke thts would happen ."
North Canton " about 45 nules south of Cleveland.

Taft seeks help with plant
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov. Bob Taft on Monday asked President
Clinton to mvestigate several key issues surroundmg the decis10n to
close the Portsmouth Gaseous DtffusJOn Plant m southern Oluo.
The plant's operator, the Umted States Ennchment CorporatiOn,
recently announced plans to cease production at the plant, eliminating about 1,400 jobs.
.
Piketon is about 70 miles south of Columbus.
Taft's office said the governor spoke w1th C lmton at the summer
n)eeting of the National Governors' AssoCiation in State College.
Pa.
"You don 't get an opportunity like that often, so I took it to personally talk to the president about one of Ohio's most critical situations right now, and that's our fight to kee p Piketon open," Taft
said.
.
Taft also gave Chnton a letter dtscussing the P1ketoll plant and
asJ&lt;ing for his personal mtervention to block or reverse the planned
closure
In the letter, Taft asked the preside nt to mvestigate the claun by
US.EC that high energy costs at P1keton caused the company to
close the plant.

Youth charged in slaying
COSHOCTON (AP) - A 12-year-old boy has been charged 111
th~ slaying of h!S 7 -year-old cousm, authonttes sa1d.
Billy J. Mounts entered a plea of mnocent Monday in Coshocton
County Juvemle Court to a delinquency charge of aggravated murder, T he Coshocton Tribune teported Mounts is accused of fatally
shootmg Homer Austin Ill of Frankfort. Austin died Sunday, two
days after bemg shot.
Austin had been vtsiting hts cousin's home in Wills Cre!'k·
Cos hocton County sheriff's deputies said the two cousms argued,
which led Mounts to get his father's .38-caliber pistol and shoot his
cousm in the back of the head Friday afternoon.
Mounts then called the 911 emergency number and reported that
Austin had shot himself.
.
Maunu w~s sit\ing on the back of a truck petting his dog when
Cos hocton County authorities arrived nt the Mounts home, the
newspaper reported for its Tltesday edititln .
Within 30 mimttes, Mount• admitted firing the gtlll, Detective Lt.
Steve ~ c hcreek said.
Ltw enforcement officials would not say what the two co111ins
had argued about.
Mounts rem~ined in custody Monday night and was transported
to a detention center in Jefferson County in eastern Ohio.

Church distributes SS bills
PARMA (AP) - A church distnbuted $2,500 to pamhioners.
Sunday in hopes they will make the money grow and return tt as a
g ift.
As part of the annual Spmt Day celebratiOn at St. John the Baptist Byzantine Rite Cathedralm tillS Cleveland suburb, th e first 500
regiStered worshipers eac h rece1ved a $5 btU
.'they were encouraged to put the money to good use, multtply 11
and return it Within the next year to the Eparchy of Parma , whtc h
was established in I CJ69 and includes mote than 30 pamhes.
· : It's not a n ongmaltdea, but It's never bee n tned before 111 thiS
are~. as far as I know." Sai d the Rev Denms H rubiak , pastor of Holy
Spmt Byzan tm e Carhohc C hurch in Parma and an orgamzer of the
Spmt Day fund-ra istng campa1gn .
The $5 gifts rec.dl a New Tc&gt;tl111cllt par,1blc 111 wlm h a landowner trusts hts scrvJnt~ to watch Over Ins m oney as he travels When he
retu rns home, he c elebr;~re s. and rewards two worke rs \vho make
mvestments Jnd 1nc reasc thetr sharn of l'ts fOrtune. One St' rvant 1s
repnmandcd for burymg hiS money o ut of fear.
Hrub1ak sa1d those who earn the most mon ey ;1nd arc creative
w1Gh the1r e ndeavors will be acknowledged and possibly rewarded

..

Officer killed in ac,ident

GENOA (AP) -

A polt ce otlicn d1ed ea rl y Monday when a

tra c to r-trader struck hts c nuse r, the State Htghway Patro] s.ud .

(~ J ay Towmh1p Poltce Ofli ce r Wtll13m l lctn k Jr. d1ed after the

cn~~cr burst uno tlllllt.'s. IIt ~
the: patrol sa1d .

.Jgt.'

J_nc\

homctOWII \\'t..'H' not

av;ulabJe,

1:ht· acCJdt:nt ur..curn:d o n State R o ut L' =i 1 m•Jr Genoa
A.uthontJL'S sJ td tl was foggy .lt the n mL' of the c r~; h about 4 .15
a.ni.. but the y \verc not surt' w h,11 role we 1thcr pl ayed 111 the cras h .
\!'l"Jbthry \V;lS down to a ft.'\\! hundred t'Cd , the patro l ~:,a1d

Prisoner charged with escape
S:TRYKER (AP) - A pnson e r accused o f sca lmg a &lt;ecunry f~nce
at;} rcgmn a] jJtl and spendmg two day-. on tlw run b:l s bcen cl1.1rged
\Vlth escJpe .
Dav1 d Rutledge, 20. of Wause on , co uld be g1wn five years in Jad
1f CO llVICtt..'d
Rutkdg ~..: dtmh·d the ti..· ~t u· topped WJ th r.tzo r wm: Fnday afteJn nO II ,Jt the ( 'o rrc l ll UJJ\ ( l'lltl'r o f Nor th west Oh m.saJdj11n Den Ill &lt;;, th t• 1 .111·~ r..':\l'll lt l\L' d1rct 101
l~ t

tptu n·d !' ~rh' "'lliiHi t\ .t\J r, nH '1 ~ llllk'"
I h,;,, l pu . . flln~ .1 bh'\ ( lc Ill 1 d11r h. ]\r )llt t .,,JJd
\\,J\ (_

Tuesday, July 11, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The pany Sentinel

,1 \\'l\ llt' .t r

Fayette

Jtutledge 1ppc.ued 111 B1) 11 1 ,\1uttlc ip.tl Co urt Momby.
ft..utledgc had bc·en 111 the Jill &gt;lltcc Aprd 22. He IS .wa iting sen ten cing after pleading gmlty last week to charge&lt; of burglary and
grand th eft

•

AKRON (AP) - For yea.rs, the body of
Armando Carlone was kept m an arne bedroom at his house. When the house caught on
fire in the mid-1990s, his w1fe and son put Ius
remains in two garbage bags and camed him
to the basement so fire inspectors wouldn't
find hun.
Carlone's death m W89 went unnonced
until Saturday when police found some of his
remams in a plastiC bag below the liasement
stairs.

His wtfc , Delia, was found dead slumped in
a living room chm in a scene eerily reminiscent of the Bates Motel m the movte "Psycho." She had been dead smce June 24, nty
police Maj. Paul C&lt;lllahan sai'il.
The couple's son, Ralph Carlone, 47, is
being held on a SI rnill1on bond. He has
pleaded mnocent to failing to provtde for a

Police are still looking for answers
in the couple's death and how
Ralph Carlone came up with more
than $140,000 that they found in a
brown paper bag he was carrying.
'
functionally impaired person in his mother's
death.
Detectives planned to return to the home
Tuesday with a cadaver-sniffing dog to search
for the missing remains of Armando Carlone,
Callahan said. Detectives also wiU dig through
a section of newer concrete m the basement
to see if any more remains are m the home.
Police are still looking for answers in the
couple's death and how Ralph Carlone came
up w1th more than $140,000 that they found
m a brown paper bag he was carrymg.

Will~en Nutter,39,Tuppers

Man jailed
POMEROY A Chapm ,t llvilk WVa., man turned himsel f 111 to a uthont~t·s on Monday
and was jaded ovcrrught o n
domesti c VIolence charges.
Accordr11g to Meigs County
Shentl'jallle&gt; M Soulsby, Robert
W o rkman, 25, was charged wtth
domL· ~tl c VlOknce followmg an
allegt•d .l ltercation at Sh1pman
C e mctc'ry o n State Ro111c 143.
An area lcSidcnt called deputies
la st Wl·ck to &lt;.:omplam of notse at
the cemetery, but Slupman and
the othe r party allegedly mvolvcd
had left the '&lt;&lt;'nc when dep unes
:1 rnvcd .

. Workman ts expected to appear
111 Meigs County Court today.

Actions filed

AME to vote on bishops;

Police say investigation
of death threats now inactive

could elect first woman
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two
women were in the running to
become the African Methodist
EpiScopal Church's first female
btshop, but conference delegates
turned aside a proposal that
would have guaranteed one of
them would be elected.
The two were among 41
candtdates for four open btshop
positions for the 2.3 ll1lllionmember AME , the natton's oldest black church group which
traces its founding to 1787.
AME officials said 1,876 delegates would be voting. A majority vote is reqmred to elect a
biShop, and multtple ballots are
sometin1es necessary.
C hurch delegates on Monday
mght voted 980-604 to open a
fourth bishop's posttion to be
filled m votmg. Votmg for the
new bishops was planned for
Tuesday, satd John Adams, senior
bishop with the AME church.
On Fnday, a group of AME
activtsts introduced a resolution
asking the Episcopal Committee, which~versees election of
oisnops ev ry four years, to
dtrect that ne of the new btshops be
' female. Delegates
rejected thaf resolution Saturday
by a vote c{ 716-667 after critics said ' it ' 1u:nounted to
1
tokenism.
"The results of this vote
mean there is no set-aside or
automatic selection," said Bishop John R. Bryant, presiding
officer of the conference.
"Women are free to run and this
delegation is free to respond to
each candidate regardlen of
gender."
Jayme Coleman Williams,
author of the defeated resolution, said she was disappointed

the resolution was turned down,
but said it wouldn't stop her
efforts to push for election of a
female bishop.
Having an all- male roster of
bishops sends a message that the
AME Churc h supports, or at
least condones, gender discrimination·, she and her supporters
argued.
The two female candidates
were the Rev. Carolyn Tyler
Guidry, a presiding elder and
former pastor who supervises 19
AME churches in the Los Angeles area, and the Rev. Vashti M '
McKenzie, pastor of Payne
Memonal AME Church m Baltimore.
In another move, the Episcopal Committee decided late
Sunday to declare a thad bishop's poSition vacant. The church
body had been expected to elect
two new bishops, replacing men
who have reached mandatory
retirement age . The number was
increased to three when another
btshop asked to retire for health

..

~llt J O O .

The tl ag was lJSt carrt cd at th o
I H62 bmle of Chtckasaw 131uff&lt; in
MISSISSippi. The Wayne County
regtment took more than 300 casualties Wltlun 30 to 40 mmutes.

msuffic1ent evidence at this time
to seek indictment and prosecution against anyone."
" It was conunon or public
knowledge that there was one
mdividual that this case turned
to," but there was not enough
evidence to file charges, Denton
said, refernng to Kent Ware, the
husband of Charmame Ware, one
of the fired admimstrators.
The couple and their attorney
could not be reached to com:
ment. The Wares have an unhsted
telephone number, and the re was
no answer at theu attorney's
office.
Their attorney, John Waddy,
previously called the investigation
fnvolous.
If police receive new information , they w1ll act1vate the case,
Denton said.

ukesh

reasons.
The churc h has 26 biShops.
Women make up abour 70
percent of the denomination.
Twenty bishops l~ad the
AME Church in the four-year
interim between the general
conferences. Nineteen bishops
lead districts . in the United
States, Canada, the Caribbean,
England and Africa; the 20th
represents the church with other
denominations,
church
spokesman Mike McKinney
said. B1shops are required to
retire at 75.

r,

The Middleport Clinic
788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OK_4S76() _

IDIIIntmants:
17401112-4228

POMEROY - An actwn for
chssolut1on of marnagc has been
filed in Mt' lgs County Common
l'lca&gt; Court by M artha Renee
Otto, an d Micah John Otto, both
of' Long Bottom.
A dtssolu tio n has been gr,tnted
to l)au l CJ1d and Sharo n Elain e
Card .

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
hu:n scs h;1vc been 1ssued in Mei gs
County
Prob:u c Cou n
ro

··what•s The
•.Bi2 Buzz" ~

T-bill rates
mixed Monday

... B££

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. You must be aprivate mdtvtduat selling one or moreitems. 5. Please, no more than 3ads per personat attme
Each 1tem must be pnced
6. No wa~ing at your hometown daily~ slart your ad as
The total pnce must not eKceed $300
soon as posstble after send 1! to us, fax us or phone us.
Nocommerctal ads, garage- yard sales, servtces, rentals,
wail?
1
produce, an1nials, etc

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Phone ________________________________~-------------

Coupon To: FREE • BEE
Daily Sentinel
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

~

11

91}2 -2 1-e;$ . llt·pa rlmt·ul

1\ltn l run ~ un·:

•No Cancellations
•No AbbreviaJ ions Please
•Customer Cah Renew Free

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C HESTER - Past Counselors
Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of Ameri ca, will have
Its ptcni c and meeting at the shelter house behind the Methodtst

Council
from Page AI
be reqUired .
CounCil galle the third and final
readmg o n an ord mance incrcasmg the reconn ec tton fee fo r
water ;e rviCc from S21J to $45. for
those accounts di'\connectcd du e
to nonpayment.
Council man R oger Manley,
ch:llrman of coun ctl's strl·et co mnllttec, s;ud the comnuttct: 111et
pnor to the counetl mcc tm g and
had d1scussed a proposal mad e at
rht· !Js.r mce tmg.
The proposal would constder
clung 1ng the flow of tr.1Hic and
pa rkm g co nfigurattons on the
\V.1lnu t Street bl ock of North
Thtrd Avenue. The co mnuttee
rL'(U illiiiCtllit:d that no t han ges be
m ade at thts tunc.
Srrcl't Co mmt sstunt:r Kenny
Madden dtscu-;sed wtth counol a
n ew poltcy p roh tblting e111ployce,s
from
dnvmg vtllage -owncd
trucks hcimc.
Madden ;a1d he fdt he should
have accc..·ss to a vil b gc tru ck

Ice aeam sodal
RACINE - Commumty 1ce
cream social Reorgamzed Latter
Day Saints Church, Saturday, 6:30
p.m. located on Lovett Road JUSt
off Portland-Racine Road .
MuSic. Donations only.

New pastor
STIVERSVILLE Wayne
Jewell of Mason,WVa. is new pastor of the Stiversville Community Church. Sunday school 10
a.m., evening serv1ces, 7 p.m.

•

Song fest set
RACINE - Proclamt w1ll be
singing at Mount Moriah C hurch
of God Mile HiD Road, Ranne,
Saturday night at 7 p.m. Bruce
Utt invites the public to attend ,
'

Announces
change
POMEROY - Meigs County
Adult Basic and Literacy Education (ABLE) program announces
a change Ill sc hedule and loca tions for cla.,es.
At the present time, two centers
are open m Meigs County. In
Middleport adults can study at
the Middleport Ltbrary. and m
Tuppers Plams, the center IS
housed at the former Tuppers
Plains Elementary.
Located 111 the basement of the
Middleport Lrbrary, the Middleport Center hours are Monday
through Fnday, 9 a. m.-2 :30 pm.,
and evening hours are 4-8 p.m
Tuesday through Thursday.
The Tuppers Plains center IS
open T~esday through Thursday, 9
a.rn.-2:30 p.m.
Information about the center
and the ABLE program IS available by callmg 667 - 0441 dunng
those hours.

Fiber optics
merger planned

Kristal Lynn Bolin
MIDDLEPORT - Knstal Lynn Bol111, 35. of Middleport, d1cd
Tuesday. July II, 2000 at. her residence.
Born 111 Galhpohs o n June II. 1965, she was the daughter of George
R . Sisson and Sh1rley A.' Radford SISson . She was employed as a secretar y at Rutland Bottle Gas.
She IS surv1ved by three children, Zachary Stephen Bohn, Joshua
Allen Bolm, and Adnan Ntcole Bolm of Middleport; her parents,
George R . and Slurley A. Sisson of Pomeroy: two brothers, George
Brent Si;son of Cmcmnatl, and the Rev. Pfullip R . and Pattt Ann Gaul
of Plymouth, Ind ., her grandmother, Myrtle SISson of Pomeroy: aunts
and Ul)cles, Philhp and R1ta Radford, and Carol yn and John Teaford of
Pomeroy, cousms, tlnan Teatord of Chester. and Beth Kennedy of
Mason. Ohw; and one niece and three nephews.
Memonal se rvices w1ll be held at 10 30 a. m . Fnday,July 14,2000 at
Rocksp nn gs Cemcrery, Pomeroy. Offic1atmg w1ll be the Rev. Les
Hayman There Will be no callin g hours. Arran,;emcnrs are by Ftsher
Fun eral Home, P01neroy.
In li eu of flowers , contnbuuons may be madt· to the An1erican Cancer Society, M e1gs County Unit, PO. Box 703. Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

VALLEY WEATHER

Cooler, drier on Wednesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

More co mfort able weather
cond1t10ns, with lower hunudit1es
and coole r teffipera tures, are
expected tn the trl-county area
on Wednesday
Partly cloudy skies are forecast
wtth tempe ratures of 7~-80, the
Nat10nal Wea ther ServiCe sa1d.
Tomght, lows wtll be m the 60s.
Sunset ronight w1ll be at
9·02and su nrise on Wednesday at
6:14a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy w1th a
c hancc of showers and thunderstorm's. Lows in the mid 60s.

SAN FRANC ISCO (AP) JDS Uniphase Corp. " buymg
rival fiber-opttc company SDL
Inc. for about $36 bilhon in stock,
the latest dcalm th e rapidly consolidating industry.
The compames manufacture
AI
products needed for htgh-capact ty fiber-opt1c networks. Demand JUSt no rth of the park. Corydon
for such products i\l growmg as was a C1v tl War battle that
htgh-speed aud10 .a nd vtdeo occurred 111 lnd1ana dunng Mortransn11SSIOn becorlr es more gan's ratd, whtch preceded the
prevalent on the lnter~et.
general 's cmssmg mto Ohio, and
The acqutsttton was' valu ed at eventually resulted in the rwo
$41
b11hon when tt was oppostng arnues fighting it out at
announced early Monday, after Buffington Island.
which .m vestors p~IS.bed shares of
Saturday's even ts Will conclude
JDS Umphase ,;6wn 13 pe rcent.
w1th a Mihtary Ball . and the
The deal, expected to clo~ e by _Sanqy.:_Rtver Miqstrili a! .7 pJn _
year's e nd, needs to be approved
On Sunday, ther'e wdl be a
.by the government and both penod church service at 10 a.m.
compa ni es' shareholders.
followed by vanous army drills,
Mtke Phillips, a JDS Umphase and fina lly, the dramattc reenactsenior vice president, sJid the ment of the battle of Buffington
company will cooperate With lsland at I p m
federal regulators. "As Wtth EThe reenac tment weekend is
Tek, we are optimistic we wtll
obtain the required approval," he
sat d.
Under the deal, each share of
SDL wtll be exchanged for 3.8
shares of JDS Uniphase. At FnAI
day's closmg pnces. It represents a
49 percent prem1um for SDL
pubh c adnunistration se rvices.
because of hts superviSory posi- shareholders.
M oore p rov1ded the comnustton and becau;e he IS often on
Shares of JDS Uniphase tell
swne
Ls wtth a qu estionnaire rdat24-hour call .
Sl5.063 to $ 101 125 on the NasCo unul referred his questions daq Stock Market, while shares of mg to Infrastructure needs and
other eco nomi c d evelopm ent
to the village eq uipment comnut- SDL rose $25 .375 to $320 688.
conet•rns for m clu s10n ITl th e dtstee, wluch Will meet prior to
tn ct's comprehensive economi c
counctl's July 25 meetmg

Houchins discu ssed a number
of pothok·s on Broadway Street
and in other areas whtch are m
need of repatr, and noted that the
water department should be
re sponsible for repamng those
streets damaged as a result of
water !me rcpatrs.
·
Counc1l member R ae Gwlazdowsky reponed a trash dumpster
on the Mill Street &lt;t de oftheVdlage Manor apartment comj&gt;lex
in ne ed of emptymg
·,
lannarell1 sa1d she had been in
co ntact with the apartments'
management, and that the matter
should be add ressed ngh t away.
Coun c1l al;o approved the payment of bills 111 the amount of
$ 19,866.55, approved appropnatmns adjustments 111 the '&gt; trcct.
water and sewer budgets, and
.1pproved the mayor's report of
fe es and fines collected 111 the
amou nt of $2,833. 92.

Battle

froni Page

Deficit

from Page

School
from Page AI
nat1ves ·to spendm g that kind of
money aud one of the alternattvcs
IS to close Salem Center Elementar·y and move all the ;tudc nts and
staff members to RutLtnd Ele mentary."

That move. Buckley 'Jill, would
result m consJd crablc savmgs of
mon ey. The ~tudent s would g-e t
on buses about an hou r earlier 111
the mormn g, but \Vould ge t
hom e ti-om sc hool abnut :m hour
earhcr in d1c evem ng.

The new modular at Salem
Center would be moved to Rutbnd for u s l~ as ne cdl'tL hl' noted.
But kiev md t he· tloard oC Edu CJIJOn W,JJI COWitdcr .. Jll of the
alternatrve. to the Sl tliJtiOll at
Sale m Center"
"Com to keep the blllldu1 g ·
open will be discussed as well as
o tlwr l''ut:s .1nd a dcctsJOn as to
whether to ket·p the IJu tld mg •
open or to close 1t will bl' m.1de"

Northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
C hance of rai n 30 percent.
Wcdnesday... Partly
cloudy.
Hi ghs 111 the lower 80s.
ntght. ...Partly
Wednesday
cloudy. Lows m the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Thur;day . Partly cloudy with a
c han ce of showers. and possibly a .
thunderstorm . mamly dunng the
day H tghs tn the mid 80s.
Fric\ay. .. Partly clou dy. Lows m
the nud 60s and h1ghs m the
upper 80s.
• Saturday. Partly cloudy. Lows
m the mid 60; and highs in the
upper 80s

bemg spo nso red by the Meigs
County HIStorical Society and
Harris Farms, and Will be hosted
by the 91st Ohio Volunteer
Infantry CIVIl War reenactment
group. Proceeds will be used to
help preserve the Buffington
Island battlefield which has been
receptly en tan gled in a gravel.
minmg dt spute.
Many consider the Barrie of
Buffington Island to be one of the
most luston ca lly Significant in the
Umted States because it mvolved
many d1ffe rent types ' of forces,
mcludm g
cavah:.y,____i nfantry,
artillery and naval and guerrilla
warfare.
There arc only three northern
Civ1l War battlefields throughout
the eastern Umtcd States in existence. those betng Gettysburg,
Pa., Corydon, Ill. and Portland.

developme nt plan.
The c01hm.issioners met with
Mi chael SwiSh er, director of the
Meigs County Department of
Jo bs and Family Serv1ces m executive sesSion. and approved the
promotiO n of Chns Shank to the
poSitiOn of soc tal program developer at th e department
A numb er of fund s transfers
su bmitted by department heads
were approved· $4,211.45 for the
prosecu tmg attorney, $5,000 for
the t1tle office: and $] ,471 m the
Indigent Dnvers' Alcohol Treatment fund.
·
The bo ,~rrl .tlso approved the
payment of county bills 1n th e
am ou nt of S2~8 . R03 . 86 .

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
SPRING VALLEY ClriEMA
7
446•4524

OLO R0 U l E- l~ .'Vl •, I
128~ JACII:OON Prl&lt;.t

FRI7(1(00. THURS 7/13/00

BOX OFFICE WILL OPEN AT

MORE LOCAL NEWS .

6:30 PM fOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MAnNIIS
SCARY MOVIE (R)
7:20.&amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; a:20
THE PATRIOT (R)
1.00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00
CHICKEN RUN (G)
7·20 &amp; 9'00 CAlLY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1.20 &amp; 3:00

BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP - 32 1•
Akzo - 42'1
AmTech/SBC - 44"'•
Ashland Inc. AT&amp;T - 32'.

•

Js'•r,.

Bank One ~ 30ioe
Bob Evans - 15',,,
. 6orgWarner -: 37
Champton ~ 4
Charming Shops Cily Holdmg ..c. 7',

Federal Mogul - 9\
F rfstar -

In Meii!s-Gallia-Mason ..

•

~Ill~ Jh• JI1111111C II I ~

"I Ill' m:rmnrrmht•r

~~~P~Ih~~~~(1~~~~~·~!~5- _ _, .'f~ {7_:49)_9_9~~~J.~~ _

•

Picnic. meeting
scheduled

POMEROY - Fmt Southern
Baptist C hurch Will have "adventure week" Btble school Monday,
July 17- 21. Sesswns will be held
from 6:30-9 p.m. and there will
be classes for ages three through
youth.
For transpoharion or more
information, residents may conrace the church at 992-6779 or
Pasto.r Lamar O'Bryant at 9926328

•

Sunday and Thursday

71S~~ . 1S!lAILY

City, State, Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

··rhe Bii! Buzz

POMEROY - M e1gs County
Clerk of Courts Marle ne Harrison ISSued a renunder on Monday
that the Me1gs Cou nty Title
Department wtll begm provtdmg
exte nded office hours on Tuesday
evemngs, begmning tomght. The
office wtll be ·open from 8 :30
a.m. to 6:30 p.m. each Tuesday,
Harmon sa td.

Reader Services

:tAddress
Name'--------------------------------~--~----------_____________________________________________
1

dur-

Sul•~clljlll llll r.rlt

1 tr: rll );t'l11,11 be rrnpi&lt;I J\tnltll h1 th.rngrn!" lht

One Letter Per Box. Allow Box tor Space Between Words.

:ltlllllll

Office to open

I""''

7 Days
Yes, One Week!
4 Line Ad - 7 Times

!«! ____

POMEROY -A n appeal of a
~orkers comp.en sation case has
been filed m, M e1gs County
Common Pleas Court by James
A. Thomas, Middleport, against
Tri State Steel Erectors Inc.

Clinton will skip
VacatiOn

I ru.),r&lt; Ill
'it , l'mnLru\ Oln•• In the
1 Jhh • \ rlh.\ l'uhlr\lllll l-: ( o mp.m 1 , l't•mcro\ ,
Ohu1 ~- ' I•'' l'h •N~ 2l~ i l S&lt;'L&lt;~nd r.l r ~~ fl&lt;l~ l ­

Advertise In Classified ·-

7hfngs
7u_r!' _l!e_~~

Civil case filed

AIDS among the black population, the Rev. Jesse Jackson 1ssued
a chauenge co Iocalnumsters: rake
an HIV test, and do tt publicly.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Jackson spoke Monday before a
Interest rates on short-term Treaservice at an Indianapolis church,
sury sc· cunties W&lt;'re nuxed in
WASHINGTON (AP) . kicking off the 30th Summer
M o nday\ auct1on .
Prest dent Clinton has abandoned Celebration of the Indiana Black
The Treasury Department sold plnns for a fanuly vacation this Expo.
SR 5 bil hun 111 three-month bills SllllU11 er, opting tnstead to spend
"The numster tends to have the
at ,t dt&gt;cO III!t r.1le of 5 lJOO per- exten ded
weekends
raiSing moral authonty," Jackson said
cc 11t, up from 5.830 percent last money for the D e mocratic Party, before the se rvice, which attract\\ee k All .tdditt ona l $7 5 bilhon the White House said Monday.
ed an estimated 400 people. "You
was sold 111 stx-mon rh bdls at a
The prestdent and first lady Will have to have the courage to take
rotc of5 '.145 percent, down from spend the first weekend 111 August the test."
5 'J75 percent.
in Massachu se tts, attendmg a
Indianapolis Mayor Bart PeterThe three-month rate was the fund- raiSer on Martha's Vmeyard · son, Attorney Qeneral Karen
highest since May 15 when the and another m · Hyanms. said Freeman-Wllson and several area
brll&lt; so ld for 6.065 percent The Wh1t e House spokesman Joe numsters accepted'Jackson's chalstx - montlt rar e was the lowest Lockhart.
lenge and were tested for HIV at
SIU Ce June I 'I whe n the rate was ·
The C lmtons expect to take at the church Monday. Jackson also
:; 'J:YI
least two more extended week- was rested.
The new diScoun t rates under- ends Ill upstate New' York, one
Jackson also challenged profes. '&gt;St:tte...tUe...,.ow~l r&lt;eturn to mve•tors - followm g
th~ --Dcmocratl&amp;-- lf6 nalllliJe·resand- otl\er public
(&gt; 07 1 pcrcmt for three-month I , Nattonal Convc nnon 111 mtdleaders to take the AIDS test.
bdb wtth .1$ 10.000 bill selling for August and another over Labor
"None of us are safe until aU of
S9.Holl.911 and 6.215 percent for a Day weekend, Lockhart satd. Mrs. us are safe," he said.
qx - month
bdl
&gt;e lhng for Clinton IS mnnmg for the Senate
Jackson sa~d commumty leaders
S'J.I&gt;'I'!.41J.
from New York .
should take the test pubhcly to
In a &gt;epa r.ttc repo rt , th e Federal
help people of all races and ceoRe se rve s,ml Monday that the
nomic backgrounds learn that
.wcr.1gc y1e ld tor one-year Treagetting tested for rhe virus that
sury bi llS, the mos t popular index
causes AIDS is not taboo.
tnT makm g r i1.111grs Ill adJUStable
"However you may have gotten
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - In
.. .e mortgages, fe ll to 6 08 perit, early d etectiOn leads to early
an effort to curb. the spread of
cutt bst week from 6. 13 percent
correction," Jackson said.

il 'f,ip.; 2 IJ·'l60) l
Ohw \ 'ull l•V PuhllshinR t'u.
I'Lih\ r ~h d Ll&lt; 11 r • i~r rHH111 1\l n nda) lhr,r ugh

. '-.

Adventure week
planned

the previous week.

The Daily Sentinel

It's The
Meigs - Gallia - Mason

church in ~acine on Wednesday,
July 12 at -6 p.m.
Membe rs are encouraged to
bnng a covered dish , plates, silverware, cups. and something to
drink .

NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS

\lt• mh~·r

7st~£

Plains, and Debbie Lynn Barber,
25, Tuppers Plains; Dustin Aaron
Hershbeq!;er, 19, and Nancy Elvira June R1fc, 16, both of Dexter;
and Scott Eugene Golden , 25,
and Candace M arie Barber, 22,
bo th of Rae me.

Jackson iSSUeS
h II
AIDS c a enge

Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welcome

On the Net:
AME
Church:
http: / /www.amenet.org

Historical
Society hopes
to save flag
WOOSTER (AP) - The pnce
of preserving a pennant-shaped flag
wrth hand-pa11l!ed stars that was
earned mto Ov1l War battles 1111ght
be ItS destruction , The Daily
Record repo rted
Over the years, the silk flag that
was used by the 16th 0 luo Volunteer Infantry has become mcreasmgly fragile.
T hat's prompted the Wayne
County HIStoncal Society to begm
contacting professiOnal comerva- '
tors around the country to deter:
uune 1f the flag can be restored.
1 he cost. however, may be pro1-uhnwc, the newspaper said for a
Monday story.
Jet!' Musselman, a C 1vtl Wa r rec nactor, rese:uchcr and historical
soocty board membl'r, sJl d the cost
co uld bt' 111 excess of$2.51JU.
C ht10rd Cune'rman .' cur.1t0r of
collcl t1ons fOr tht• sout·ty, ~ud he
has reservat1ons about attcmptmg
work on rhe fl ag
" I don't thmk they'd be tter
touch 1t," Co nernu n ~.aid "That
fl ng as m very poor cond ati o n , :md I
don't know 1f \Vc QLtght to even
open the case that tt's m"
Cotwrman conccdcs not d01ng
anythmg to &lt;ave the flag could
1csult in Its cvc ntuaJ loss. but he ~u d
he _IS torn as.,.to the .proper course
of
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Police
said Monday there is not enough
evidence for charges in an tnvestigatton of death threats against
the city schools supenntendent.
The decision to halt the mvestigation comes as the school diStrict considers hiring full-time
bodyguards for Supenntendent
Rosa Smith.
Sll1lth had been the target of
threatening phone calls, e-mail
and letters for two months in the
spring after she suspended two
administrators accused of falsifymg documents . She has been
under 24-hour protection since
March 7, six days after the threats
began.
"We're not acttvely pursuing
tt, but it's not closed either,"
Detecnve Bureau Cmdr. Paul
Denton said Monday of the
mvestigation. "There was just

Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Authorities looking for ·answers in couple's death
Ralph Carlone was found wandering Saturday on Route 303 near Grafion in Loram
County, in the midst of a 50-mile walk from
the tidy North Akron home he shared with
h!S ltahan -ummgrant parents. Poli ce said he
had started walking m June.
His shoe&gt; were pamted bright yellow. He '
was polite, but insistent on contmumg his
walk to western Ohio m search of farm work.
Police in Medina County had picked up
Carlone several days earlier because he looked
suspicious but set him free at the Lorain
County line after a criminal record check
turned up no outstanding arrest warrants,
Callahan satd.
The county medtcal exanuner's office said
it could take a long time to determine how
the parents died.

Th~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

22~B

s·,,

Gannett - 57 '.,
General Electnc Harley

Davtdson -

Kmart ~ 7"~oa
Kroger 22 '1,
Lands End - 36 /,
Ltd - 23"1,.

Oak H1ll Ftnancial OVB - 26 1ill
One Valley - 0
Peoples - 14
Premier - 6 "oa
Rockwell -

33

THE PERFECT STORM (PG13)
7:00 ·9:30 CAlLY
MATINEES SAT'S UN 1 :00.3·30
THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY

Rooky Boots - 5'/,
52 ~ ..

'

39 r,

AD Shell -

Sears - 36

62 111!1

'
&amp; BULWINKLE (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9.10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10
ME, MYSELF &amp; IRENE (R)
7·00 &amp; 9·30 DIALY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30
STARTING JULY 14
DISNEY'S "THE KID"

1
1.,

Shoney's- 1
Wai-Mart Wendy's - 18'1,
Wor1hington - 11f..

en.

13.,»

Da1ly stock repOrts are the
p.m ciOSir1Q quotes of
the prev1ous day's transacltons,
provided
by
4

Advest of Galltpolis.

Cody joseph Parsons
2 Months Old
Grandparents:
Danny a... Dorothy Shain
Racine, Ohio

STARRING BRUCE WILLIS
&amp; X-MEN
ALL AGES. AU. TIMES 84-00

�~Th~e~D~a~~·ly~S_en~ti_ne_l________________()~~ifli()ll
The Daily Sentinel

~ch CD"~""

PageA4 _
TUes4ay, July II, 10QG ,

.....

.--:.---~-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740.992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Dear Ann Landers: I hope you will
help me with an etiquette question . My
sister and I are currently nor on speaking
terms. She recently became engaged. My
mother called me and said, "Mary wants
to know why you have not phoned to
congratulate her on her engagement."
I replied that Mary has a telephone
and that it is HER responsibility to call
and tell me about her engagement.When
my wife and I were engaged, we called
fa mily members and close fnends and
told them the good news. We did not sit
by the phone, waiting for the news to get
around and for people to call us.
This is becoming a "family affair." My
aunt called yesterday With the same ~ om­
plain! I admit I don't particularly care for
M ary or her fiance, and we w1ll not be
sociahzmg wah t.hem. However, do I
owe them an apology for not calling to
say "congratulations," or should they
have called ,me? The truth IS, I had no

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane-Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Utters w tlrt ~dll&lt;H art .,..,,~tJme. Tluy l lwuld bt ll'ss tlra11 Jotl~tord:i. Alllttters an subjtcl
lo edlli111 11.1td m1ut br srgtu•d and rncludt aildrtss and ttlephunt numbt r. No 11nsrgnrd leUtrs writ
bt p11bluhed. Uttus sltmdd ~ 111 good taJit, addrtmng U Uif'S, not pmwnoldus.
.
1'11t aputiuns uprentd in tlu CrJI.mn Mlo ... arC' tht con..~tJUilS of lht Ohw Valley rublt.dung
'
Co.'s tdildrWl b.10rd, 1111ltn otht ,..,.,iu twttd.

OUR VIEW

-

Be heard

- -

--

--

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
idea the engagement had taken place.
Who is responsible for spreadmg the
word under these circumstances? Did I
miss something? Bewildered m
Westchester, Ill.
Dear Be: You were not renuss for
failing to otfer congratulations. It is
incumbent on the person whose celebration it is to notify family members and
friends . Laying the blame on you is a
cop-out. Don't buy it.
Dear Ann Landers: You recently

•

~

On Wednesd.Jy. the fifth of.1 S&lt;'Jie&gt; o f town Jllt'etlnf,~ w ill be held In
Ironto n to hdp the Appalach ian Rc:g-ion.tl Com mJ S'ilO il devt·lo p a new
strategy tn asststing the regto n 's dt"tn-sscd counttt'S
_
Two governors - Oh10's llob T1ft .md i'au l i'.a ton ot Kentucky will be on hand. West Virgmta Gnv Cl'nl Undawood, co-cluirman
of ARC 's st.ltes' comnntte;. 1s url.lble to ,mt·nd. butts supporttve of the
.
agency's outreach dlorts.
The forum WJII explo re critical issue&lt; to the regio n af\9 allow fo r
citizen mput.
The problems facmg the Ohio Vallev ,1ft' o nes that have been wtth
us seenungly forever- poverty and bck of JObs the most common
-but new perspectives on how to tesolvc these ISS ues Jn: needed.
The meeting offers an opportumty to votee ideas. It's one thmg to
sit around and compl.1m about th ese problems. But when the chance
arises to put m some construcnw comment. " sho uld be heeded
"The high level of parnnp.Hwn .. demonstrates th·e Importance that
the commission IS givmg to eflo tts to develop an enhan ced program
for distressed counties," AR C Federal Co-C hamnan Jesse L White Jr.
said. "The commtss1on already has held meetmgs m Tennes"iee andVtrgima as wdl as t\VO meenngs ll1 Kcmucky.
"We anticipate holdmg addltlun.d meetmb" m West V1rgm1.1 and
other states later tim summer." he adchl.
So what does this planrung minative mean' More hot air about
what needs to be done or should have bec· n done decades ago' There
IS no argument that m a land of plenty, th e 1.1 statL&gt;s covered by the
ARC should have progre»ed mure than they have.
Prosperity and be"tter living conditions exist m pockets around those
states. It's time tor more ISolated .ueas to get a sli ce of thc p1c. And
ARC IS lookm,; to see 1f that goal can be ad11ew d Wlth a new plan
and unified purpose.
Although ARC has acted as .1 tundmg conduit for public works pmje£ts and qualiry_n£Jife. efforts, It ha.;_bccn a_d epend .Ibl e-sou rce-ot:~sm­
tance. ~
So we should not dJSJmss ARCas anoth er bureaucracy or Its endeavors a~ token cttlOrts. Its o utreach to tht· rcg~ un dc.:.· sc rvt:~a~ mu ch attention from the public as It does from leadersh ip 111 the Ueltw.Jy.
"ARC strate~t cs to unprovt"--thc qtuhty of hft· .md cconoimc devc lopmenr fOr dtstressed co u1mcs .m: working." Patton 'a1d ''I'm vny
pleased to have tlus mt'amn b-t\!1 d1 ~r ussto n o f thc ncw d L·vdop mcnt
plan and ways rn which we LJil better serve th e .Jre.IS that need ARC 's
help the most."
Partiopanon in \\.lcdnc'\day'o; town m c;·. ctin g and otht·rs planned by
ARC IS encouraged Uy spea kmg up. otliCJ .Jis &lt;lild citizens from distressed areas w1ll h,avc their say - .l!ld nuke .111 1111 pact o n th e n:g10n's
future improvcrn c:nt .

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

To day IsTuesday.Ju lv I I . the i'J.1rd d.l\ o t'2111111 The1c· .m· 17.'1 d.1ys
left 111 th e ye,Jr.
Today's H 1ghhght 111 History·
On July II, IH114, VI ce l'rcSJlieiH A.non Bu rr mortall y "ou ndcd
former Tn:asurv ScnctJrv Alcx.mder H.un dton 111 a pisto l du el near
Weehawkcn , N I
' '
On tim datc.
In ISJ3. Pop e C lement VI I L'Xtolllii Hill lL.ltL\.l EngLmd's Kmg
Henry V Ill.
In 1767, Jo hn QullK Y Ad.m1 ~ . \\ho wuu iJ h l'u Hn t' th l' '&gt;lx th prL"ildem of t he U naed ~ t.ltcs . \.Va ~ born 1ll Br.~llltrl' t' . Nl.lss.
In 17YH, th e U.S. Manne Cor ps w.JS timml ly re- t·&lt;tabhshed by a
congres~10n a l act that .al so t n.· &lt;~ tL·d th e U S M.1r111c f.h nJ
In 1864, Confederate fo rces led b~ ( ot' ll Juba l Early bega n an
abortlVe 1nva'\ IOll ofWaxhm gt un f) C . turmng baLk tl1 e next day.
In 1934, Frank lm Roosn c·l r hec.1mc the tlrst U.S. pres ident rn
travel thro ugh the l'anam a C.u1II
In 1953, the U. S An Fo rLL' A.t.J l klll y \V.l~ dedll:.ltcd .It Low ry A1r
Uase 111 Col o r,Jdo.
In 1977 , the Mcd .1l of FrL·edo111 \\ ,\.., .1w.udnl pmthumuusly to the
R ev. M .ll'tlll Luther Kill ).'; Jr
In 1lJ7lJ. thl' ab, IIH..I on c d U S ~ p ,l t c ~ un on Sk ybb lll.7u.k .1 "Pt' Ct,Kular retu rn to Earth , burnmg up 111 th e .ltlllO'i phere .111 0 ~ hmvenng
debrl " OV L'r t he lndun ()ct·.m .111d Atl ~ lr!ll ,l .
In I YRll. Ammc.JJJ host.I ).';l' l'ich:m l I ()ucen, ticTd b) lr.JJ J ,IftcT
eight mon th-. ot Ldptt vlty b cu u ~c n f poor healt h. left T('hr.m t()r
Sw1 rzc ri.I rH..I .,.,.
In I Y ~ &lt;J. clLto r LHll t' ll ll.' ()!J vlt'f dl L'd ,\( .tgl' ))2
Ten ycn r11 ;1 gn LL'ihi t-r" of the Gro up of St'Vl' ll n:1t1m 1'i conduJt'd
theJr "i lll11llllt 111 Hom to n by L' m our,l g Jng SoviL·t Pn.:o,; idellt M1kh.ul
S Gorb.1chev to e n .1cr rdorm c; Ill I L' rllrn fo r We".tcrn ,nJ
Frvc ye.lf\ .lgo rilL: L . N . - d L' \ Ib ll atl' d ~.Itt• h.lVl'll of SrehrenitJ fell
to Bo'i m.ln Serb fCJ i l t'~. fhc..• Un itL'l,l SLl tt~ nornL1IlzL'd rc hltlOil "i wn h
V1 etnarn
O ne yc ~1r ,tgo A US A11 Fon L' c:1rgo yt. hr.lv ln g Ant.trLtl c wmtn.
swept d own ovt.: r ril e AlllltlllhL' ll -"iu Jrt Smuh Pnlc R. c'lc.lrt h CL'ntn
to drop otT cJn ergc 11 c y III L'lh,,d ' upp hL'' t&lt;I r I lr.Jcrn Nicl sl'll. 1 physiCian at th t' C\..' ll(l'r w ho l1 4d dl sLu\~.; r~ d ;1 lump 111 her h n -.1 ~1.
Todav'• Birthday' ALtre,s ll rc•tt So l!lns Is 7.l Actor T.1h llu nte r I'
69. Smgcr Jell' H.mna (Nitty ( :rrtty I )Jrt Iland) IS 'i3 . Smgc r Bon nll·
l'omter is 49 Actor Steph e n Lan g " ·IH

SOCIETY NEWS
" Others Thank God for Putting Roses in the
car show to be held
Weeds" and "Those Who Bring Sunshine to Others

fOL.lTICA\.. SURVIVOR

opportunity for input

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Abortion issue may give Gore a ray of hope
VJCe President AI Gore's presidential fortunes
adnures .ue ant1 - Roe conservatives Antomn
con tmucd Si nking, but the Supreme Court
Scalia and C laren ce Tho mas, two of the four
may have thrown him a lifeline by suggestmg
who voted to uphold state bans on parnal-birth
th,Jt abornon nghts are endangered.
abortions
Stnking down laws prohibmng partial-birth
Gore declared , overstatmg somewhat, that
abortions by a nurgm of just 5-4. the court
"t he next president will nominate at le.JSt three
gave Gore the o pportunity to declare that
· and probably four justi ces," potentially tipping
"wome n are JU St one vote away fi·om lmmg
tlw balance agalnsr abortion n g:hts
th en nght to choose"
Tlm·e JUStices .Ire over 70 years of age,
Gore was pla.1mng to make thl· power to
1ncludmg two - Sandr.1 D .1y O'Connor and
nommate h1 g h cou rtJll'ltlces a lll a.JOr campa1 gn
Jo hn P.wl Stevens - who voted to stnke down
NEA COLUMNIST
ISSlll' sooner or later. but the Nebraska decisio~
thc N ebraska b.m C hiefJustice Wilham Rchnboave lnm .md h1i .lili es 111 the .rbortiOn n ghts
4u1st. J const'rvanve, 1s th e dnrd septuagenarimovement a c h.m ce to start early.
an .
Most polls nv.h catc that Gore IS running mgly, to cope With GOP chaq;es that th e C lmCourt experts ~y Gore also is overstatmg
abo m even \.\ith Texas Cov Georgt· W Bush ton admmistrarion 's lack of one h.td c tust·d when he says that just one vote stands in the
.u non,; female voter&gt;, and abortion could be gasolme prices to me.
way of overturning R oe It's actually two
the leve r Gore needs to pry tlwm b.JCk m to the
H e proposed a $75 b1lhon pl.m to mvest Ill
Ot her key abortion cases have been deCided
Democratic co lumn
alternative fuels and clea n technology, seeming- by a margm of 6-3, with JustiCe Anthony
Th e Los Angdes Times poll shows that vot- ly. to keep environmentalists from boltmg to Kennedy voting to maintain abortion rights.
ers have e~trcmely complicated view' about Green Party nominee R.tlph Nader.
Kennedy voted to uphold a ban on partialabortion but that 68 percent - mrludmg 73
At the sam e tJJlll' hr w.JS cupmf( Wi th the birth abortrons bcc.tuse ht· found the proceperccm of V.'Q\111:'11 - believe ''u Is a Jc·oswn Nader threat, he abo h.ui to as:mre .uno work - dtlrt' " abhorrent .''
tlw has to be ·moM by a woman and hc·r doc- ers .md hohday llnvers th .It he w.JS not "ann Th e Tunes po ll md1ciued that the public IS
car." while Bush hanlllll'Jed hun 'Alth nt.1t1omi confli cted Jbuut .tborti o n. Fifty -seven percent
tor.,,
.
On other frorKs la•t-wc~k. th" n"ws for Gere - from- lu• -1W2 bcJQk,:'Ea rt h rn t·he ll.IInn ee," of-voters thmk&gt;that abortion .. , murder," yet 85
continued to be bad The Gallup pollrnchcated callin g for hi gher gasolinc pric es.
percent wo uld pcnmt it when the mother's
On top of all that. (; ore had to punch hiS physic.tl he.rlth is at stake, 54 percent when her
that Uush's lead over Core jumpc·d from 4 to
l.l perccJJt la&gt;t mo nth. 13oth Dem ocrats and message th1ough a fog of ne" c har~,;es th.Jt lm emotron.d health IS threatened.
R.epublicans do ubted th e m.n~m w.rs tha t b1g, 1996 fund-raiSing activitic'S - and IllS rc·co ll ecSupport fo r Roe IS down to 43 percent, but
hut th ey saw no signs th .u th e rate 1s 11 :11 row- nons about th ~m under oath merited It had been as h1gh as 56 percent Ill 1991, when
mg
appomtrn em of an mdepcndcm co unst'l .
abortion n ght~ were thought to be 111 danger.
l&gt;n thL· stump. Bush had thl:' lu xury of rc.1chIn tins stormy t:' IWI! on mcnt, th e .1bortJot1
This eb no n yca r, nearly a quarter of all votmg o ut to groups not m thl· (;(J P orb![ issue opportunity rep resen ted :t ray of hght tOr ers wd th at tht• power to appomt up to three
Atfi t ,1n- Am cncms, I hsp.1n1Ls. ti H..: d 1s,1bkd Core. Bush s,tid he rq~rL' ttcd the Nebrask;:t justic es woulJ nl.lke them focu s on abortion m
wh1 le Gore still wa'\ playin g ddl·nst· .llld trymg decJsm n but IS unhkl'ly to m.1ke 1t .111 nnponam dc[ermlnin g th eir presidcntlaJ sdect10n.
tu shore up the Demm ratit. h.1 sc
tht' mc: of l11s c.unp.ugn .
C learly. Gore JS gomg to tro/ to mob1hze Accordmg to Gallup, only (J.1 percent of
Llush , while .mtr -Jbortion , h"' do nc hi s best that IIi, Sl.II"C - pro-r hmce \Vomen to the polls
Democr.1ts W&lt;l.llt the1r party tu nurmnate Gore to stgn;:il tlut hc \vould not try to ovntu1 n thL' Bush might help hun If it appears tiJ.I[ lm viCe
tins year, while 25 pcrcmt prefer someone else
ILJ73 Roe vs Wade deciSio n. dechring that presidenti.li se lection has bee n drctated by the
Amon g R epublicans. HI\ pl'rctnt favor 13ush womc11 have a LOI IStltllttun.al fl bht to .m carly- fl ~ht-to - IJf(: lll OVC:' IIlCilt .
alld o nl y 15 percent w.mt "iOmeonc d o,;c
tenn abortion
(i\1orf(lll K,1 ,dmckc is l'XlXIUWt' f'dllor of RaiJ
Gore t...lm e up w 1th au energy pohry. see m Sn!J, Bu sh has s;ud that the julitiCt's he most C 11/, the II&lt;'II'.'J!&lt;If"'' &lt;!f Cap!/(&gt;/ Hill .)

Morton
Kondracke

•

COOLVILLE -A car show will be held in conjunction with Founder's Day at Coolville on Aug. 5.
Registration will be from 9 a.m. until noon with
judging to take place between 12:30 p.m. and 3:30
and awards to be given out at 4:30p.m.
Trophies will be awarded in 12 classes plus a best
of show trophy, along with numerous door prizes.
The!'l' will also be 75 dash' plaques for the first 75
entries. All cars are welcome to participate in the
parade which will begin at I 0 a.m. The entry fee is
$10. Carol Beha is on the car show comnuttee and
can be reached by caliing 740-667-3166.
Other events on Founder's Day will include a
motorcycle-show, antique farm show, arts and crafts,
food booths, clowns, kiddie games, bands, the
Swingin' Seniors, and a dilly clunker.

Can't Keep it From Themselves.'·
Charldene Alkire showed a video on the ChnstIan Children's Home of Ohio in Wooster where
orphans six through 18 are accepted. The home
seeks out Christian families to adopt children.
Next meeting will be held on July 27 at the Rutland Church of Christ, 7 P·lll· The program will be
on women of the Bible with Pomeroy to have
devotions. The closing song was "At Calvary" with
Ida Murphy givmg the closing prayer. Refreshments
were served by the host church.

Hospice benefited

ATHENS -The Women's Golf Association of
the Athens Country Club will hold its sixth Mary
Hope Memorial Women's Golf Tournament on
Wednesday, July 19, to raise funds for Its designated
chanty, Appalachian Conunumty Hospice, which
MIDDLEPORT
serves Athens, Hocking, M eigs, Morgan, Perry, VmDoug and Theresa Laventon and Washington Counties.
der announce the birth of
The field is open to 64 golfers. The tournament
their first child, Lauren
committee, led by chairpersons Nan Cooley and
Elise, born May 9 at St.
Connie Stanforth, is planning a day of fun, enterJoseph's Hospital, Parkerstainment, and friendly competition at the ACC. The
burg, W Va. She weighed
entry
fee of S55 includes the cost of a golf cart, coneight pounds three ounces.
Maternal grand- tinental breakfast, and awards luncheon.
The Association mvites all women golfers in the
parents are Charles and
Judy Lee of Syracuse. area to participate in the tournament. The first 64
Great-grandmother
is players to register will be accepted. To register, call
Lauren Lavtndlr
Edith Cogar.
Paternal the Athens Country Club office at (740) · 592-!655
. - .grandparents are Ralph and and P!'OYid~ a hapdjqp .Qr E.!lring_average. The
Mary Janice Lavender of Syracuse. Great-grand- entry fee may be paid on the tournament day.
The tournament will consist of 16 groups of four
mother is Rachel Cundiff'.
players in one eight hole medal play. Playen will be
placed in flights according to their golf handicap.
Competition begins wit~ a 9 a.m. shotgun !tart, folPOMEROY - A program on arthritis, osteo- lowing a continental breakfast that will be available
porosis and fibramyalgia was presented by Amber starting at 8 a.m. Prizes will be awarded to the first
Findley of Pleasant Valley Hospital when the and second place winners in each llight and to skill
Women's Fellowship of the Meigs County Church- prizewinners at the awards luncheon after the comes of Christ met recently at the Pomeroy Church.
pletion of play.
She discussed the three diseases and then
The previous five Mary Hope Memorial tournaanswered questiOns from those attending, several of ment events have provided more than $6,000 for
whom suffer from one of the diseases.
hospice and other area agencies. The tournament
The meeting opened with singing of"The Old committee has received pledges of support from
Rugged Cross" and prayer by Jean Thomas. Scrip- many area businesses and individuals and is seeking
ture was taken from Phil. 4 and Gal. 6 and Linda more. All .proceedi of the event will be donated to
Bates used "Why did God Put Thorns on Roses?", the hospice.

New arrival

Propam presented

~

· --------~--------------------------~----------------

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

RYAN'S VIEW

Women may be addicted to stress
Bv JoHN

RYAN

As usu .ll. au u ,d Amcncan dollars have
bcc11 spent to find o ut 111form.1tto n readily
:rv.Hi able 111 any K1 wa ms C ln h, i'TA 1nr
ki tc ht' n 111 Am e n ca . UCLA rc.., c,lrrh c rs
rcccn tl v co n cl ud ed that m en .m d wo m en
tnpond to '\tress d1tfcrently.
When m en feel strLss; tht·y rc~pond w nh .t
''fi ~ ht 01 fl1 ~ ht "

TUesday, July II, 1000

'

printed a letter
m a man who suggested that dogs p ide good secunty. I
work for a large home secunty company
m Texas, and our sales staff often hears,
" My dog will protect me." Unfortunately, too many crooks have figured out
ways to hurt pets so they cannot protect
I
you .
My Wife purchased her first home
secunty system after she saw a woman
searchmg for her dog. Apparently, thieves
had opened the door to her home, and
the dog had chased the fastest crook
down the block while the other plundered her house.
I realize, Ann, there are professionally
trained dogs that provide excellent security, hut people should not assume that
the family pet can do the job of a welltramed ammal. Please warn them . Secure m San Antomo
Dear San Antonio: How nght you
are. An eJ&lt;perienced house robber can

'

ARC town meeting offirs

Page AS :·

Reader needs advice on the tiquette attached lo engagements

~m~h\~oon .
~-tr~egl!..,

'Bta6fislierf zn 1948

._..I y the Belld

_Th_e_D_a_ily;;.__Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _

•

response.

Sn n1e 'ltrt·s~l·d men go o n the ,lt t ac k . kll klll g .and ' Pt'\\'ln g ove1 t h l' btk e 111 rh e dnve W:l)' as tf thl'i r li ves wo uld h .tV L' hceq pcr-

fecrl y tin e 1f on ly tht.' h1kc l1.1d ht·cn put
,\\\ JY 111 the gar,tgt' \\ hct c It bc l o11g~
The nl ,lJOrity, h owever, s1nk into the.: ~ofJ ,
di ck o n the tel ev ision Jn d \v lthd r.nv 11 tto

th...: k1nd o f hy pe r- fOcus th,1t ~1 mnb o n 1\0 I.ltL'd n l u ullt a lllt o p ~ &lt;ii pcnd d L·t. adt''i pnfecrJJi g (Th e stud y d idn 't give· thc•sc exact
dctatl s, bur tru st lll l' o n r h1 ~.) In th eir strc ss lll du ced o:; tupors, 111 l' ll do not he,ar h ,lb l t.' "i
n ylllg. dr ye r"i h1177lllg, p ho n es rm g1n g o r
tl'lllll .., Gallo:; t h w ,H k111 g .1g::nmt stl' l'l'O u ba ll t'ts.
\X;'o mcn . th t· stud y ~.11d, l' lllp luy a d1!Tt..TL.'IH
Jc'l po nsc:, w h a.h th e Jt..'st..·.lnht·Js t l' llll l'd
" tend or hd .rH.:nd ." 1 h L' ) 'J,IJ d \\'l' n. ·'ipo nd to
.1 .. trc~~ ful d.ty ,Jt ril e ottile hy Lt lk1n g ro
fl. it-u d~ .md te nd1n~ ro nur c hddr~,: n
()f &lt;.: ou ro:; e we do Oll! hush.md~ art·
.,1111npcd 111 fron t of the TV 1
Wlllclt bnn ~~5 u ~ to ho\\ w o .fll ('ll ll'.11l y

rco.; pond to -;tress It 's the ltrtl t.• set ret \'vl'
b.1rely adm1t to ounc lvcs. though tht· '\ tudy
allud cd to It politel y· "Fe males arc le-ss likely
ro bL' phy'\ic.11ly :~gg rc ss t vc .md more likdy
to t:'X press aggressio n mdlrL'ctl y "
Wt:' :1re m.tster s .lt th e untct urruhk .1ttack .
Let's say yo u r husband 1sn 't 1cady to leave
(aga m ) . .111d su y(,u both WJII be l:ttc• (aga 111 )
to meet fn ends. As yo u fe e l rht..• srn•o.;&lt;.; build
with cve1y rl'd hght, yo ur hu sb:llld asks
about yo ur da y
"F IIlt.' "You 1 VOilt' l"i ,1~ thr .ts. .1 tclcphonL'
rl.'cordlll g

"W h.u 's nnv wn h the pru.Jt'rt ?''
"Same."
Yt lll o pen .t lll .tgazllH' 0 11 you r l.1p .md
t..k hvl'l ,1 few " !w ho,; ." mdr ca tltl ~ ~nll J t• rhm g
surpnstn g o r ll lte rl's[] ng
''W hat are you rc.tdm g' " he ' ll a'k ..1' yo u

knt'\V he wou ld
" A !11 .lg.lZII1 C"
" I know. Bu t\\ h,H\ ~ n intt'll''itlllb?
At whlLh pn1111 yo u l l o~ c th t:· l,n.tgazm c
.md x.1y you' ll get t.ll ~ I Lk lf yo uJ c, td ~m y
fu rth n .
Wh l' n Ill· ,1~b w h.tt \
wro ng yn u \ ,1\'.
" Nothr n g. WL·'rL' J.,tc, \\ h1 c h ~~ !11\' l.llll t I
k il O\\

\'O ll t.. lll t kt·e p tl.h k o!" II II IL"

" [ \\ 1\ 011

" !'Ill n1ad .It
e xpt'C tatl ons.' ·

A

p hnlll· 1 Yuu'rt' rn .hl !t lil t';,
!ll)''i t'lf fo r h.tv in g unn· .th \L IC

th t·

...rJ L''i~ l'd WOlll,lll O il ,I p.I 'I~ ! Vt' - :l gg t l' \\! Vl.'

tear cou ld Jn vt..' Jem s to :r. tel"th-gnndmg
fum e. We 're hasr c.dl y clueless about how to
rt:"ltevt• sness . WL· .1 rc way behind m en in tht s
area . Studi es of lo llege students show th at
me n spend large por tions of their non -c lassroom h o urs playin l!; vid eo ga me s, partying,
w~rc h111g TV an d cxc rc1smg:. Wom en spt.md
mo re tnnc volu lllt' crln g, do mg houst· hol d
cho res, ".tudymg:, .m d vvorkmg wrt h studetlt
clu bs and groups. Nut smpmmgl y, 39 pertent of ft:n t::alc ~ tu Lknts st11 d th ey ft&gt;lt slgmfi t,lllt ~ t1 c ~ s . wl11k· on ly 20 percent uf m.1k
~hld C llt S Lfld.
1 he truth 11 , wc lli ight be addi cted tu
~ rreo,;s. lr ha s &lt;&gt;o nH·thin g to do w ith bem g
depl'ndcnt on sttess- mdu cc J ::adn:nah nt•,
wh 1c h g1vco;; u s l' llt'lgy to ge t throu gh th~
d.uh t.b ks .md n:s po n s tb1ht 11.: ~ that prod uce
th t. · st ress Ill ~h l' tirst pl.1ce.
We bl'lu111e su accustom ed to '\tress th at
we ILTI st1.mgd y p;111 ickcd 1f tt\ not the re :-.orr of hk c hl' m g om with o ut yo ur pu rse. So
we sta y bu sy, ti grll'IJJj!; - stupid ly - that by
( ; ettlll !; Thin g' Don e th e stress will dl s.lp IW.lr And we unlo,H.I o n o ur fnends. And of
coursc, wli c·n "II else· f.u ls, there·\ rht· bag o f
II.JllowL.'L'Il c 1nd y lll the frL'l'Zt'r lhat eve ryullL' c l ~L' I L l ~ lm ~ otr \.' 11.
(J ot /11

J&lt;yu11

15 11

w iiWll /1\ ·t

{ tl l tilt' ."idll J'n llltt.'-

w Clno 111 rll'. Se111l ( (11/lllll 'llf S In lu r i11 u11(' &lt;lf th is
lll' II'~'JJ il]J r r
11r
11'11d
her
c- mcul
ar
f tlrH/1 )1(1/l

(ln,) f.~n ft ' ( &lt;l llf . )

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY ANO CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COM MUNITY DEVELOPMENT

The aroma of a fresh b a ked berry p1e . Sounds
good' Well. now is the season for finding fresh blueb e rri es, ' ra spberries
and
bla ck be rrJ es . They ca n be
u se d 1n so many d iffere nt
re c 1pc· s sa lad s, qu ic kbre ads ,
sa u ces, desserts , ptes and
Jan~s . or just eaten plain or
with milk .
What should you know
when se le c tin g them at the
peak of flavor? Th e color JS
!he prunHy cnt e na . Bluebernes should be dark blue
In colo r wrth a sil very
" bl oo m ." Raspberri es m ay
be bright , sh my red, black,
pu rp lc o r yellow Blackberrie s are np e when they h ave
a
dull - bl ac k
co lo r
All
bernes sh o uld be plump and
JUi cy. Each vanety wdl vary
111 th e .unuunl of swcetnt'SS
that It offers.
When se lec tlll g berries,
do n o t c ho ose o ne s that are
dirty, m o ld y or soft. You
sh o uld also be aware of co n tainers with stain s . Thi s is an
mdJ ca t1 on th at t h e fruit ha s
been c rush ed.
Be ca reful when handling
t he fragile b err1es. They
b rui se eaSily. ca u sin g e arly

•

spoil age. Berries should be have a delicious and h ea lthy
stored in a shallow container dessert. You may choose to
to allow air to circulate, as use your berries in muffins,
well as to prevent crushing
cobblers and pancakes, or
Store the berries immedi- you co u ld add them to a
ately 1n the refrigerator vegetable or fruit sal ad For
without washing. Place them something really spe c ial ,
in the vegetable h ydra tor to puree raspberries , then strain
ke e p th em · fresh longer . o ut th e seeds for use 111 Icc
Ra spb e rrie s and blackb e rrie s cream toppmgs or sauces for
wdl keep up . to two day s pound o r angel food ca ke . If
refrigerated, whde blueb e r- you absolutely lov e fresh
ries wdl last up to five days .
be rry pie, but are trying to
Of c ourse, you may freeze
cu t ba.c k on fat, make .1 one th em for later use. In that
cr ust pi e in st ea d of a dou ca~e. pla ce them unwashed
ble-cr u st. You will still h ave
in a moJStu re-v~por-proof
that wonderful ber ry tlav~ r.
conta!llet.
Washmg
will
but wrthout th e extra ca lotoughen the skins and make
ries .
them st1ck together. To furBlueb e rries , ra sp b err ie s
ther prevent them from
and bla c kberries are n o t
sticking together, free ze the
only tasty, but the y are
bernes on a tray in a sin g le
layer, th e n tra nsfe r to the h ea lth y fo o ds as we ll. They
freezer
co nt ~uner .
WJs h are exce ll ent sou rces of ca rb o hydr a tes
b ecaus e th ey
before usin g
When rea dy to prepare , lu ve V1t :tmin C, Vitanun A
wa sh bcrnes 1n co ld water and c :1 l c ium w uh very few
by gently hfung th e m o ut o f cal o ri es - less th a n 4 5 ca lothe water to drain . Th ey ries In one - h a lf cup o f
shoulll.. never so ak in water. un swe etene d berries. makm g
Di scard tho se berries t hat them a di eter's delight .
With th e b erry se.1so n
a re t oo soft or have· be gltn to
u
pon
u s. why n o t tr y them
d ecay.
_
On, p1nt of bc rn es will rn some di'ffe re n t recipes as
yield .app rox unatel y fo ur well as u si ng them 1n t h e o ld
serv !llgs of fresh frui t . Fre sh sta nd ard s' Sec what a Wi de
bcrr1 es are great WI,th pl.11n va ri ety o f ways you can add
or valll ll a lowfat or n o nfa t the fl avo r of berries to your
yogurt. Add g ranola a nd yo u meals and sna c ks .

•

outmaneuver a dog any night of the the only one' - T.E 111 Iowa
week. A favorite trick is to bnng a nice,
Dear Iowa: Y~u are NOT the onl y
JUICY steak along and make fnends with one. I am behmd you 100 percent. By all
the dog, who will enJOY his treat wh1le means, tell lier that Ann Landers thinks
the thief steals the valu\trles.
her behavior IS crude and disgusting, and
Dear Ann Landers: Am I the only let's hope she finally gets the message.
pe~on who finds it annoying when peo- Noisy eaters are an abominati o n. but
ple smack their lips while eating, cracl('gum snappers Irritate me to the ·poi nt
their chewing gum, or talk With a mouth where I must speak up I urge others to
full of food? Added to the aforemen- do the sa me. It 15 the ultimate m bad
tioned irritations are those who eat an manners.
entire meal while talking on the phone.
Planning a wedding' What's nght!
My fiancee IS a wonderful woman, What's wrong' "The Ann Landers Gu1de
and I love her dearly, but she does all of for Bndes" will re heve your anxiety. Send
the above. I have told her how much it a self-addressed,lo ng, busin ess-size envebothers me, but she thmks I am bemg lope and a c heck or mon ey order for
excessively criucal. I am 36 years old $3 .75 (this includes postage and han no fuddy-duddy, but I cringe when she dlmg) to: Brides, c/o Ann landers, P.O.
does these things.
Bo1&lt; 11 562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
I don't want to be unreasonable or Canada, send $4.55.) To find out mo re
sound snobbish, but It's becoming about Ann Landers and read her past
increasingly difficult to be around her columns, visit the Cteators Syndicate
and listen to these uncouth noises. Am I web page at www crcators .com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

TUESDAY, July 11
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District, special
meeting to discuss health msurance, Tuesday, 5 p.m.
CHESTER- ChesterTownship Trustees will hold their regular meeting in the Chester Town
Hall on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The
budget for 2001 will be viewed
during the meeting.
RACINE - Board of Public
Affairs, Tu.esday, 10:30 a.m.,
municipal building.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Band Boosters, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., band room. All parents
of marching and concert band are
urged to attend.
SYRACUSE- Suhon Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. ; t
Syracuse Village Hall
~

•••

\

WEDNESDAY, July 12
RACINE - The .Ohio University College 'Jf Osteopathic
Medicine Childhood lmmuniza.
tion 'Program- (CH-IP), -a mobile .
health program, will be providing
free immunization for all area
children from birth through 18

yem of age on Wednesday, July

Va., speaker.

12, 2000, at the Racine Pizza
Express from 3 p.m . to 4 p.m. The
Hepatitis B vaccine is a three shot
series that IS admimstered over a
minimum of four months and IS
now required upon a child entering either preschool or kindergarten.
A Varicella vaccine is also available. The child's shot record IS
required for immunizations.
•

POMEROY - Semor Citizens Center program, I Q.30 a m .
Thur&gt;day
rega rdmg
cancer
screemngs and Medicare coverage. Julie leonard , benefi ciary
educatwn manager from th e . ·
Medicare office in Columbus to
speak. Program sponsored by
Meigs County C ancer Initiative.

POMEROY Euchre-fest,
Trinity Church, beginning at 2
p.m., $5 fee mcludes supper.

•••

THURSDAY,July tl
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the post
home, 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation
District Board of SuperviSors,
special meeting, Thursday at non,
SWCD office, to consider logjam
removal applications and personnel matters.
POMEROY -: Faith Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run
Road, weekend revival, Thursday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. Elder
Robert Hall; Point Pleasant, W.

•••

FRIDAY,July 14
MIDDLEPORT - W1dows'
Fellowship · potluck luncheon,
Fnday noon. Middleport C hurch
ofChnst.

•••

SUNDAY, July 16
RACINE Charles A. and
Alma Hmzman Snyder family
reunion, Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Star
Mill Park, Racine.
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
oale• gr f~tnd taisen of anytype. Items are printed only
•• apace permita and cannot
be auaranlled to be printed
a specific number of daya .

Healthy habits kids need now
BY

up an attractive, g~me-filled, TVfree play space inside your home
Nearly 25 percent of U.S. kids that gives y9ur child room to
are overweight today, double the stretch hiS legs and run ·around
number 30 years ago, according when he's mdoors. Set daily limto the July issue of Parents mag- its on computer and VIdeo game
azine.
use as well.
Parents sliould be role models
• Cu t the junk. Clear yo ur
for kids when It comes to eating kitchen of junk food, but don't
and e xercise, the magazine says. ban It from your child's d1et
These expert stra tegies can help: altogether, says Parents. Giving
• Play with you r kids. You him an oc casional treat a
child will be more hkely to candy bar at the movies oc a
exerCise 1f you do It with her. piece of cake at a party - will
Take a family b1ke nde, toss a help keep those foods from
football 111 the yard, p l /8lan a gaining too much signifi ca nce 111
Saturday-aftenoon h1ke, or vol - his eyes.
unteer to coach her softball
• Push fluids. Water should
team.
always be your child 's first
• Move the televiSIOn . Don't
choi ce Aim for five to SIX glassle t you r child have a televiSion
es a dav. Kids
need to dnnk
in his room, and don 't make It
the foca l po mt of your fami ly
room or den , advises Parents. Set

PARINTI MAGAZINE

FOR M' SPECIAL FEATURES

NEWS
fLJ\sat
'FREE
Yard Sale
Sign
When you place
your yard/garage
sale advertisement
in the classifiedsl
It reac!~esJI:UOn-Gall.ia·
Meigs Residents•.
Flaee your ad today!

· · The Daily
Sentinel

two or three glasses of nulk . Two
small servings of frUit JUICe a day
are fine, but don't overdo it. Save
soda for a once-in-a-while treat .
• Don't tolerate teasing. If
your child is bemg teased about
her weight 111 a schoo l o r by k1ds .
in· the ne ighborhood, ta ke :
action. It is your responsibility to
talk ,to the teacher, pare nt s o r
coaches who are allow rng tim
b'e havior to continue
• Make meals fun. To get yo u r
c hil d Interested 111 L'ati ng nght,
get her involved . Ta ke her shop- .,
pmg With you and tc .rch her
how to read food label s Ask he r
to toss a sa lad or help you ba ke
lowfat muffi ns Serve her hors ·

- Blood Drive PVH Wei/ness Center
Thursday, July 13. 2000
Noon to 6 p.m.

+ FREET-ShirtsToAII Donors
+ Door Prizes
Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospit~J
Auxiliary
&amp;
I
American Red Cross

�~Th~e~D~a~~·ly~S_en~ti_ne_l________________()~~ifli()ll
The Daily Sentinel

~ch CD"~""

PageA4 _
TUes4ay, July II, 10QG ,

.....

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740.992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Dear Ann Landers: I hope you will
help me with an etiquette question . My
sister and I are currently nor on speaking
terms. She recently became engaged. My
mother called me and said, "Mary wants
to know why you have not phoned to
congratulate her on her engagement."
I replied that Mary has a telephone
and that it is HER responsibility to call
and tell me about her engagement.When
my wife and I were engaged, we called
fa mily members and close fnends and
told them the good news. We did not sit
by the phone, waiting for the news to get
around and for people to call us.
This is becoming a "family affair." My
aunt called yesterday With the same ~ om­
plain! I admit I don't particularly care for
M ary or her fiance, and we w1ll not be
sociahzmg wah t.hem. However, do I
owe them an apology for not calling to
say "congratulations," or should they
have called ,me? The truth IS, I had no

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane-Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Utters w tlrt ~dll&lt;H art .,..,,~tJme. Tluy l lwuld bt ll'ss tlra11 Jotl~tord:i. Alllttters an subjtcl
lo edlli111 11.1td m1ut br srgtu•d and rncludt aildrtss and ttlephunt numbt r. No 11nsrgnrd leUtrs writ
bt p11bluhed. Uttus sltmdd ~ 111 good taJit, addrtmng U Uif'S, not pmwnoldus.
.
1'11t aputiuns uprentd in tlu CrJI.mn Mlo ... arC' tht con..~tJUilS of lht Ohw Valley rublt.dung
'
Co.'s tdildrWl b.10rd, 1111ltn otht ,..,.,iu twttd.

OUR VIEW

-

Be heard

- -

--

--

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
idea the engagement had taken place.
Who is responsible for spreadmg the
word under these circumstances? Did I
miss something? Bewildered m
Westchester, Ill.
Dear Be: You were not renuss for
failing to otfer congratulations. It is
incumbent on the person whose celebration it is to notify family members and
friends . Laying the blame on you is a
cop-out. Don't buy it.
Dear Ann Landers: You recently

•

~

On Wednesd.Jy. the fifth of.1 S&lt;'Jie&gt; o f town Jllt'etlnf,~ w ill be held In
Ironto n to hdp the Appalach ian Rc:g-ion.tl Com mJ S'ilO il devt·lo p a new
strategy tn asststing the regto n 's dt"tn-sscd counttt'S
_
Two governors - Oh10's llob T1ft .md i'au l i'.a ton ot Kentucky will be on hand. West Virgmta Gnv Cl'nl Undawood, co-cluirman
of ARC 's st.ltes' comnntte;. 1s url.lble to ,mt·nd. butts supporttve of the
.
agency's outreach dlorts.
The forum WJII explo re critical issue&lt; to the regio n af\9 allow fo r
citizen mput.
The problems facmg the Ohio Vallev ,1ft' o nes that have been wtth
us seenungly forever- poverty and bck of JObs the most common
-but new perspectives on how to tesolvc these ISS ues Jn: needed.
The meeting offers an opportumty to votee ideas. It's one thmg to
sit around and compl.1m about th ese problems. But when the chance
arises to put m some construcnw comment. " sho uld be heeded
"The high level of parnnp.Hwn .. demonstrates th·e Importance that
the commission IS givmg to eflo tts to develop an enhan ced program
for distressed counties," AR C Federal Co-C hamnan Jesse L White Jr.
said. "The commtss1on already has held meetmgs m Tennes"iee andVtrgima as wdl as t\VO meenngs ll1 Kcmucky.
"We anticipate holdmg addltlun.d meetmb" m West V1rgm1.1 and
other states later tim summer." he adchl.
So what does this planrung minative mean' More hot air about
what needs to be done or should have bec· n done decades ago' There
IS no argument that m a land of plenty, th e 1.1 statL&gt;s covered by the
ARC should have progre»ed mure than they have.
Prosperity and be"tter living conditions exist m pockets around those
states. It's time tor more ISolated .ueas to get a sli ce of thc p1c. And
ARC IS lookm,; to see 1f that goal can be ad11ew d Wlth a new plan
and unified purpose.
Although ARC has acted as .1 tundmg conduit for public works pmje£ts and qualiry_n£Jife. efforts, It ha.;_bccn a_d epend .Ibl e-sou rce-ot:~sm­
tance. ~
So we should not dJSJmss ARCas anoth er bureaucracy or Its endeavors a~ token cttlOrts. Its o utreach to tht· rcg~ un dc.:.· sc rvt:~a~ mu ch attention from the public as It does from leadersh ip 111 the Ueltw.Jy.
"ARC strate~t cs to unprovt"--thc qtuhty of hft· .md cconoimc devc lopmenr fOr dtstressed co u1mcs .m: working." Patton 'a1d ''I'm vny
pleased to have tlus mt'amn b-t\!1 d1 ~r ussto n o f thc ncw d L·vdop mcnt
plan and ways rn which we LJil better serve th e .Jre.IS that need ARC 's
help the most."
Partiopanon in \\.lcdnc'\day'o; town m c;·. ctin g and otht·rs planned by
ARC IS encouraged Uy spea kmg up. otliCJ .Jis &lt;lild citizens from distressed areas w1ll h,avc their say - .l!ld nuke .111 1111 pact o n th e n:g10n's
future improvcrn c:nt .

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

To day IsTuesday.Ju lv I I . the i'J.1rd d.l\ o t'2111111 The1c· .m· 17.'1 d.1ys
left 111 th e ye,Jr.
Today's H 1ghhght 111 History·
On July II, IH114, VI ce l'rcSJlieiH A.non Bu rr mortall y "ou ndcd
former Tn:asurv ScnctJrv Alcx.mder H.un dton 111 a pisto l du el near
Weehawkcn , N I
' '
On tim datc.
In ISJ3. Pop e C lement VI I L'Xtolllii Hill lL.ltL\.l EngLmd's Kmg
Henry V Ill.
In 1767, Jo hn QullK Y Ad.m1 ~ . \\ho wuu iJ h l'u Hn t' th l' '&gt;lx th prL"ildem of t he U naed ~ t.ltcs . \.Va ~ born 1ll Br.~llltrl' t' . Nl.lss.
In 17YH, th e U.S. Manne Cor ps w.JS timml ly re- t·&lt;tabhshed by a
congres~10n a l act that .al so t n.· &lt;~ tL·d th e U S M.1r111c f.h nJ
In 1864, Confederate fo rces led b~ ( ot' ll Juba l Early bega n an
abortlVe 1nva'\ IOll ofWaxhm gt un f) C . turmng baLk tl1 e next day.
In 1934, Frank lm Roosn c·l r hec.1mc the tlrst U.S. pres ident rn
travel thro ugh the l'anam a C.u1II
In 1953, the U. S An Fo rLL' A.t.J l klll y \V.l~ dedll:.ltcd .It Low ry A1r
Uase 111 Col o r,Jdo.
In 1977 , the Mcd .1l of FrL·edo111 \\ ,\.., .1w.udnl pmthumuusly to the
R ev. M .ll'tlll Luther Kill ).'; Jr
In 1lJ7lJ. thl' ab, IIH..I on c d U S ~ p ,l t c ~ un on Sk ybb lll.7u.k .1 "Pt' Ct,Kular retu rn to Earth , burnmg up 111 th e .ltlllO'i phere .111 0 ~ hmvenng
debrl " OV L'r t he lndun ()ct·.m .111d Atl ~ lr!ll ,l .
In I YRll. Ammc.JJJ host.I ).';l' l'ich:m l I ()ucen, ticTd b) lr.JJ J ,IftcT
eight mon th-. ot Ldptt vlty b cu u ~c n f poor healt h. left T('hr.m t()r
Sw1 rzc ri.I rH..I .,.,.
In I Y ~ &lt;J. clLto r LHll t' ll ll.' ()!J vlt'f dl L'd ,\( .tgl' ))2
Ten ycn r11 ;1 gn LL'ihi t-r" of the Gro up of St'Vl' ll n:1t1m 1'i conduJt'd
theJr "i lll11llllt 111 Hom to n by L' m our,l g Jng SoviL·t Pn.:o,; idellt M1kh.ul
S Gorb.1chev to e n .1cr rdorm c; Ill I L' rllrn fo r We".tcrn ,nJ
Frvc ye.lf\ .lgo rilL: L . N . - d L' \ Ib ll atl' d ~.Itt• h.lVl'll of SrehrenitJ fell
to Bo'i m.ln Serb fCJ i l t'~. fhc..• Un itL'l,l SLl tt~ nornL1IlzL'd rc hltlOil "i wn h
V1 etnarn
O ne yc ~1r ,tgo A US A11 Fon L' c:1rgo yt. hr.lv ln g Ant.trLtl c wmtn.
swept d own ovt.: r ril e AlllltlllhL' ll -"iu Jrt Smuh Pnlc R. c'lc.lrt h CL'ntn
to drop otT cJn ergc 11 c y III L'lh,,d ' upp hL'' t&lt;I r I lr.Jcrn Nicl sl'll. 1 physiCian at th t' C\..' ll(l'r w ho l1 4d dl sLu\~.; r~ d ;1 lump 111 her h n -.1 ~1.
Todav'• Birthday' ALtre,s ll rc•tt So l!lns Is 7.l Actor T.1h llu nte r I'
69. Smgcr Jell' H.mna (Nitty ( :rrtty I )Jrt Iland) IS 'i3 . Smgc r Bon nll·
l'omter is 49 Actor Steph e n Lan g " ·IH

SOCIETY NEWS
" Others Thank God for Putting Roses in the
car show to be held
Weeds" and "Those Who Bring Sunshine to Others

fOL.lTICA\.. SURVIVOR

opportunity for input

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Abortion issue may give Gore a ray of hope
VJCe President AI Gore's presidential fortunes
adnures .ue ant1 - Roe conservatives Antomn
con tmucd Si nking, but the Supreme Court
Scalia and C laren ce Tho mas, two of the four
may have thrown him a lifeline by suggestmg
who voted to uphold state bans on parnal-birth
th,Jt abornon nghts are endangered.
abortions
Stnking down laws prohibmng partial-birth
Gore declared , overstatmg somewhat, that
abortions by a nurgm of just 5-4. the court
"t he next president will nominate at le.JSt three
gave Gore the o pportunity to declare that
· and probably four justi ces," potentially tipping
"wome n are JU St one vote away fi·om lmmg
tlw balance agalnsr abortion n g:hts
th en nght to choose"
Tlm·e JUStices .Ire over 70 years of age,
Gore was pla.1mng to make thl· power to
1ncludmg two - Sandr.1 D .1y O'Connor and
nommate h1 g h cou rtJll'ltlces a lll a.JOr campa1 gn
Jo hn P.wl Stevens - who voted to stnke down
NEA COLUMNIST
ISSlll' sooner or later. but the Nebraska decisio~
thc N ebraska b.m C hiefJustice Wilham Rchnboave lnm .md h1i .lili es 111 the .rbortiOn n ghts
4u1st. J const'rvanve, 1s th e dnrd septuagenarimovement a c h.m ce to start early.
an .
Most polls nv.h catc that Gore IS running mgly, to cope With GOP chaq;es that th e C lmCourt experts ~y Gore also is overstatmg
abo m even \.\ith Texas Cov Georgt· W Bush ton admmistrarion 's lack of one h.td c tust·d when he says that just one vote stands in the
.u non,; female voter&gt;, and abortion could be gasolme prices to me.
way of overturning R oe It's actually two
the leve r Gore needs to pry tlwm b.JCk m to the
H e proposed a $75 b1lhon pl.m to mvest Ill
Ot her key abortion cases have been deCided
Democratic co lumn
alternative fuels and clea n technology, seeming- by a margm of 6-3, with JustiCe Anthony
Th e Los Angdes Times poll shows that vot- ly. to keep environmentalists from boltmg to Kennedy voting to maintain abortion rights.
ers have e~trcmely complicated view' about Green Party nominee R.tlph Nader.
Kennedy voted to uphold a ban on partialabortion but that 68 percent - mrludmg 73
At the sam e tJJlll' hr w.JS cupmf( Wi th the birth abortrons bcc.tuse ht· found the proceperccm of V.'Q\111:'11 - believe ''u Is a Jc·oswn Nader threat, he abo h.ui to as:mre .uno work - dtlrt' " abhorrent .''
tlw has to be ·moM by a woman and hc·r doc- ers .md hohday llnvers th .It he w.JS not "ann Th e Tunes po ll md1ciued that the public IS
car." while Bush hanlllll'Jed hun 'Alth nt.1t1omi confli cted Jbuut .tborti o n. Fifty -seven percent
tor.,,
.
On other frorKs la•t-wc~k. th" n"ws for Gere - from- lu• -1W2 bcJQk,:'Ea rt h rn t·he ll.IInn ee," of-voters thmk&gt;that abortion .. , murder," yet 85
continued to be bad The Gallup pollrnchcated callin g for hi gher gasolinc pric es.
percent wo uld pcnmt it when the mother's
On top of all that. (; ore had to punch hiS physic.tl he.rlth is at stake, 54 percent when her
that Uush's lead over Core jumpc·d from 4 to
l.l perccJJt la&gt;t mo nth. 13oth Dem ocrats and message th1ough a fog of ne" c har~,;es th.Jt lm emotron.d health IS threatened.
R.epublicans do ubted th e m.n~m w.rs tha t b1g, 1996 fund-raiSing activitic'S - and IllS rc·co ll ecSupport fo r Roe IS down to 43 percent, but
hut th ey saw no signs th .u th e rate 1s 11 :11 row- nons about th ~m under oath merited It had been as h1gh as 56 percent Ill 1991, when
mg
appomtrn em of an mdepcndcm co unst'l .
abortion n ght~ were thought to be 111 danger.
l&gt;n thL· stump. Bush had thl:' lu xury of rc.1chIn tins stormy t:' IWI! on mcnt, th e .1bortJot1
This eb no n yca r, nearly a quarter of all votmg o ut to groups not m thl· (;(J P orb![ issue opportunity rep resen ted :t ray of hght tOr ers wd th at tht• power to appomt up to three
Atfi t ,1n- Am cncms, I hsp.1n1Ls. ti H..: d 1s,1bkd Core. Bush s,tid he rq~rL' ttcd the Nebrask;:t justic es woulJ nl.lke them focu s on abortion m
wh1 le Gore still wa'\ playin g ddl·nst· .llld trymg decJsm n but IS unhkl'ly to m.1ke 1t .111 nnponam dc[ermlnin g th eir presidcntlaJ sdect10n.
tu shore up the Demm ratit. h.1 sc
tht' mc: of l11s c.unp.ugn .
C learly. Gore JS gomg to tro/ to mob1hze Accordmg to Gallup, only (J.1 percent of
Llush , while .mtr -Jbortion , h"' do nc hi s best that IIi, Sl.II"C - pro-r hmce \Vomen to the polls
Democr.1ts W&lt;l.llt the1r party tu nurmnate Gore to stgn;:il tlut hc \vould not try to ovntu1 n thL' Bush might help hun If it appears tiJ.I[ lm viCe
tins year, while 25 pcrcmt prefer someone else
ILJ73 Roe vs Wade deciSio n. dechring that presidenti.li se lection has bee n drctated by the
Amon g R epublicans. HI\ pl'rctnt favor 13ush womc11 have a LOI IStltllttun.al fl bht to .m carly- fl ~ht-to - IJf(: lll OVC:' IIlCilt .
alld o nl y 15 percent w.mt "iOmeonc d o,;c
tenn abortion
(i\1orf(lll K,1 ,dmckc is l'XlXIUWt' f'dllor of RaiJ
Gore t...lm e up w 1th au energy pohry. see m Sn!J, Bu sh has s;ud that the julitiCt's he most C 11/, the II&lt;'II'.'J!&lt;If"'' &lt;!f Cap!/(&gt;/ Hill .)

Morton
Kondracke

•

COOLVILLE -A car show will be held in conjunction with Founder's Day at Coolville on Aug. 5.
Registration will be from 9 a.m. until noon with
judging to take place between 12:30 p.m. and 3:30
and awards to be given out at 4:30p.m.
Trophies will be awarded in 12 classes plus a best
of show trophy, along with numerous door prizes.
The!'l' will also be 75 dash' plaques for the first 75
entries. All cars are welcome to participate in the
parade which will begin at I 0 a.m. The entry fee is
$10. Carol Beha is on the car show comnuttee and
can be reached by caliing 740-667-3166.
Other events on Founder's Day will include a
motorcycle-show, antique farm show, arts and crafts,
food booths, clowns, kiddie games, bands, the
Swingin' Seniors, and a dilly clunker.

Can't Keep it From Themselves.'·
Charldene Alkire showed a video on the ChnstIan Children's Home of Ohio in Wooster where
orphans six through 18 are accepted. The home
seeks out Christian families to adopt children.
Next meeting will be held on July 27 at the Rutland Church of Christ, 7 P·lll· The program will be
on women of the Bible with Pomeroy to have
devotions. The closing song was "At Calvary" with
Ida Murphy givmg the closing prayer. Refreshments
were served by the host church.

Hospice benefited

ATHENS -The Women's Golf Association of
the Athens Country Club will hold its sixth Mary
Hope Memorial Women's Golf Tournament on
Wednesday, July 19, to raise funds for Its designated
chanty, Appalachian Conunumty Hospice, which
MIDDLEPORT
serves Athens, Hocking, M eigs, Morgan, Perry, VmDoug and Theresa Laventon and Washington Counties.
der announce the birth of
The field is open to 64 golfers. The tournament
their first child, Lauren
committee, led by chairpersons Nan Cooley and
Elise, born May 9 at St.
Connie Stanforth, is planning a day of fun, enterJoseph's Hospital, Parkerstainment, and friendly competition at the ACC. The
burg, W Va. She weighed
entry
fee of S55 includes the cost of a golf cart, coneight pounds three ounces.
Maternal grand- tinental breakfast, and awards luncheon.
The Association mvites all women golfers in the
parents are Charles and
Judy Lee of Syracuse. area to participate in the tournament. The first 64
Great-grandmother
is players to register will be accepted. To register, call
Lauren Lavtndlr
Edith Cogar.
Paternal the Athens Country Club office at (740) · 592-!655
. - .grandparents are Ralph and and P!'OYid~ a hapdjqp .Qr E.!lring_average. The
Mary Janice Lavender of Syracuse. Great-grand- entry fee may be paid on the tournament day.
The tournament will consist of 16 groups of four
mother is Rachel Cundiff'.
players in one eight hole medal play. Playen will be
placed in flights according to their golf handicap.
Competition begins wit~ a 9 a.m. shotgun !tart, folPOMEROY - A program on arthritis, osteo- lowing a continental breakfast that will be available
porosis and fibramyalgia was presented by Amber starting at 8 a.m. Prizes will be awarded to the first
Findley of Pleasant Valley Hospital when the and second place winners in each llight and to skill
Women's Fellowship of the Meigs County Church- prizewinners at the awards luncheon after the comes of Christ met recently at the Pomeroy Church.
pletion of play.
She discussed the three diseases and then
The previous five Mary Hope Memorial tournaanswered questiOns from those attending, several of ment events have provided more than $6,000 for
whom suffer from one of the diseases.
hospice and other area agencies. The tournament
The meeting opened with singing of"The Old committee has received pledges of support from
Rugged Cross" and prayer by Jean Thomas. Scrip- many area businesses and individuals and is seeking
ture was taken from Phil. 4 and Gal. 6 and Linda more. All .proceedi of the event will be donated to
Bates used "Why did God Put Thorns on Roses?", the hospice.

New arrival

Propam presented

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TIME OUT FOR TIPS

RYAN'S VIEW

Women may be addicted to stress
Bv JoHN

RYAN

As usu .ll. au u ,d Amcncan dollars have
bcc11 spent to find o ut 111form.1tto n readily
:rv.Hi able 111 any K1 wa ms C ln h, i'TA 1nr
ki tc ht' n 111 Am e n ca . UCLA rc.., c,lrrh c rs
rcccn tl v co n cl ud ed that m en .m d wo m en
tnpond to '\tress d1tfcrently.
When m en feel strLss; tht·y rc~pond w nh .t
''fi ~ ht 01 fl1 ~ ht "

TUesday, July II, 1000

'

printed a letter
m a man who suggested that dogs p ide good secunty. I
work for a large home secunty company
m Texas, and our sales staff often hears,
" My dog will protect me." Unfortunately, too many crooks have figured out
ways to hurt pets so they cannot protect
I
you .
My Wife purchased her first home
secunty system after she saw a woman
searchmg for her dog. Apparently, thieves
had opened the door to her home, and
the dog had chased the fastest crook
down the block while the other plundered her house.
I realize, Ann, there are professionally
trained dogs that provide excellent security, hut people should not assume that
the family pet can do the job of a welltramed ammal. Please warn them . Secure m San Antomo
Dear San Antonio: How nght you
are. An eJ&lt;perienced house robber can

'

ARC town meeting offirs

Page AS :·

Reader needs advice on the tiquette attached lo engagements

~m~h\~oon .
~-tr~egl!..,

'Bta6fislierf zn 1948

._..I y the Belld

_Th_e_D_a_ily;;.__Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _

•

response.

Sn n1e 'ltrt·s~l·d men go o n the ,lt t ac k . kll klll g .and ' Pt'\\'ln g ove1 t h l' btk e 111 rh e dnve W:l)' as tf thl'i r li ves wo uld h .tV L' hceq pcr-

fecrl y tin e 1f on ly tht.' h1kc l1.1d ht·cn put
,\\\ JY 111 the gar,tgt' \\ hct c It bc l o11g~
The nl ,lJOrity, h owever, s1nk into the.: ~ofJ ,
di ck o n the tel ev ision Jn d \v lthd r.nv 11 tto

th...: k1nd o f hy pe r- fOcus th,1t ~1 mnb o n 1\0 I.ltL'd n l u ullt a lllt o p ~ &lt;ii pcnd d L·t. adt''i pnfecrJJi g (Th e stud y d idn 't give· thc•sc exact
dctatl s, bur tru st lll l' o n r h1 ~.) In th eir strc ss lll du ced o:; tupors, 111 l' ll do not he,ar h ,lb l t.' "i
n ylllg. dr ye r"i h1177lllg, p ho n es rm g1n g o r
tl'lllll .., Gallo:; t h w ,H k111 g .1g::nmt stl' l'l'O u ba ll t'ts.
\X;'o mcn . th t· stud y ~.11d, l' lllp luy a d1!Tt..TL.'IH
Jc'l po nsc:, w h a.h th e Jt..'st..·.lnht·Js t l' llll l'd
" tend or hd .rH.:nd ." 1 h L' ) 'J,IJ d \\'l' n. ·'ipo nd to
.1 .. trc~~ ful d.ty ,Jt ril e ottile hy Lt lk1n g ro
fl. it-u d~ .md te nd1n~ ro nur c hddr~,: n
()f &lt;.: ou ro:; e we do Oll! hush.md~ art·
.,1111npcd 111 fron t of the TV 1
Wlllclt bnn ~~5 u ~ to ho\\ w o .fll ('ll ll'.11l y

rco.; pond to -;tress It 's the ltrtl t.• set ret \'vl'
b.1rely adm1t to ounc lvcs. though tht· '\ tudy
allud cd to It politel y· "Fe males arc le-ss likely
ro bL' phy'\ic.11ly :~gg rc ss t vc .md more likdy
to t:'X press aggressio n mdlrL'ctl y "
Wt:' :1re m.tster s .lt th e untct urruhk .1ttack .
Let's say yo u r husband 1sn 't 1cady to leave
(aga m ) . .111d su y(,u both WJII be l:ttc• (aga 111 )
to meet fn ends. As yo u fe e l rht..• srn•o.;&lt;.; build
with cve1y rl'd hght, yo ur hu sb:llld asks
about yo ur da y
"F IIlt.' "You 1 VOilt' l"i ,1~ thr .ts. .1 tclcphonL'
rl.'cordlll g

"W h.u 's nnv wn h the pru.Jt'rt ?''
"Same."
Yt lll o pen .t lll .tgazllH' 0 11 you r l.1p .md
t..k hvl'l ,1 few " !w ho,; ." mdr ca tltl ~ ~nll J t• rhm g
surpnstn g o r ll lte rl's[] ng
''W hat are you rc.tdm g' " he ' ll a'k ..1' yo u

knt'\V he wou ld
" A !11 .lg.lZII1 C"
" I know. Bu t\\ h,H\ ~ n intt'll''itlllb?
At whlLh pn1111 yo u l l o~ c th t:· l,n.tgazm c
.md x.1y you' ll get t.ll ~ I Lk lf yo uJ c, td ~m y
fu rth n .
Wh l' n Ill· ,1~b w h.tt \
wro ng yn u \ ,1\'.
" Nothr n g. WL·'rL' J.,tc, \\ h1 c h ~~ !11\' l.llll t I
k il O\\

\'O ll t.. lll t kt·e p tl.h k o!" II II IL"

" [ \\ 1\ 011

" !'Ill n1ad .It
e xpt'C tatl ons.' ·

A

p hnlll· 1 Yuu'rt' rn .hl !t lil t';,
!ll)''i t'lf fo r h.tv in g unn· .th \L IC

th t·

...rJ L''i~ l'd WOlll,lll O il ,I p.I 'I~ ! Vt' - :l gg t l' \\! Vl.'

tear cou ld Jn vt..' Jem s to :r. tel"th-gnndmg
fum e. We 're hasr c.dl y clueless about how to
rt:"ltevt• sness . WL· .1 rc way behind m en in tht s
area . Studi es of lo llege students show th at
me n spend large por tions of their non -c lassroom h o urs playin l!; vid eo ga me s, partying,
w~rc h111g TV an d cxc rc1smg:. Wom en spt.md
mo re tnnc volu lllt' crln g, do mg houst· hol d
cho res, ".tudymg:, .m d vvorkmg wrt h studetlt
clu bs and groups. Nut smpmmgl y, 39 pertent of ft:n t::alc ~ tu Lknts st11 d th ey ft&gt;lt slgmfi t,lllt ~ t1 c ~ s . wl11k· on ly 20 percent uf m.1k
~hld C llt S Lfld.
1 he truth 11 , wc lli ight be addi cted tu
~ rreo,;s. lr ha s &lt;&gt;o nH·thin g to do w ith bem g
depl'ndcnt on sttess- mdu cc J ::adn:nah nt•,
wh 1c h g1vco;; u s l' llt'lgy to ge t throu gh th~
d.uh t.b ks .md n:s po n s tb1ht 11.: ~ that prod uce
th t. · st ress Ill ~h l' tirst pl.1ce.
We bl'lu111e su accustom ed to '\tress th at
we ILTI st1.mgd y p;111 ickcd 1f tt\ not the re :-.orr of hk c hl' m g om with o ut yo ur pu rse. So
we sta y bu sy, ti grll'IJJj!; - stupid ly - that by
( ; ettlll !; Thin g' Don e th e stress will dl s.lp IW.lr And we unlo,H.I o n o ur fnends. And of
coursc, wli c·n "II else· f.u ls, there·\ rht· bag o f
II.JllowL.'L'Il c 1nd y lll the frL'l'Zt'r lhat eve ryullL' c l ~L' I L l ~ lm ~ otr \.' 11.
(J ot /11

J&lt;yu11

15 11

w iiWll /1\ ·t

{ tl l tilt' ."idll J'n llltt.'-

w Clno 111 rll'. Se111l ( (11/lllll 'llf S In lu r i11 u11(' &lt;lf th is
lll' II'~'JJ il]J r r
11r
11'11d
her
c- mcul
ar
f tlrH/1 )1(1/l

(ln,) f.~n ft ' ( &lt;l llf . )

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
FAMILY ANO CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COM MUNITY DEVELOPMENT

The aroma of a fresh b a ked berry p1e . Sounds
good' Well. now is the season for finding fresh blueb e rri es, ' ra spberries
and
bla ck be rrJ es . They ca n be
u se d 1n so many d iffere nt
re c 1pc· s sa lad s, qu ic kbre ads ,
sa u ces, desserts , ptes and
Jan~s . or just eaten plain or
with milk .
What should you know
when se le c tin g them at the
peak of flavor? Th e color JS
!he prunHy cnt e na . Bluebernes should be dark blue
In colo r wrth a sil very
" bl oo m ." Raspberri es m ay
be bright , sh my red, black,
pu rp lc o r yellow Blackberrie s are np e when they h ave
a
dull - bl ac k
co lo r
All
bernes sh o uld be plump and
JUi cy. Each vanety wdl vary
111 th e .unuunl of swcetnt'SS
that It offers.
When se lec tlll g berries,
do n o t c ho ose o ne s that are
dirty, m o ld y or soft. You
sh o uld also be aware of co n tainers with stain s . Thi s is an
mdJ ca t1 on th at t h e fruit ha s
been c rush ed.
Be ca reful when handling
t he fragile b err1es. They
b rui se eaSily. ca u sin g e arly

•

spoil age. Berries should be have a delicious and h ea lthy
stored in a shallow container dessert. You may choose to
to allow air to circulate, as use your berries in muffins,
well as to prevent crushing
cobblers and pancakes, or
Store the berries immedi- you co u ld add them to a
ately 1n the refrigerator vegetable or fruit sal ad For
without washing. Place them something really spe c ial ,
in the vegetable h ydra tor to puree raspberries , then strain
ke e p th em · fresh longer . o ut th e seeds for use 111 Icc
Ra spb e rrie s and blackb e rrie s cream toppmgs or sauces for
wdl keep up . to two day s pound o r angel food ca ke . If
refrigerated, whde blueb e r- you absolutely lov e fresh
ries wdl last up to five days .
be rry pie, but are trying to
Of c ourse, you may freeze
cu t ba.c k on fat, make .1 one th em for later use. In that
cr ust pi e in st ea d of a dou ca~e. pla ce them unwashed
ble-cr u st. You will still h ave
in a moJStu re-v~por-proof
that wonderful ber ry tlav~ r.
conta!llet.
Washmg
will
but wrthout th e extra ca lotoughen the skins and make
ries .
them st1ck together. To furBlueb e rries , ra sp b err ie s
ther prevent them from
and bla c kberries are n o t
sticking together, free ze the
only tasty, but the y are
bernes on a tray in a sin g le
layer, th e n tra nsfe r to the h ea lth y fo o ds as we ll. They
freezer
co nt ~uner .
WJs h are exce ll ent sou rces of ca rb o hydr a tes
b ecaus e th ey
before usin g
When rea dy to prepare , lu ve V1t :tmin C, Vitanun A
wa sh bcrnes 1n co ld water and c :1 l c ium w uh very few
by gently hfung th e m o ut o f cal o ri es - less th a n 4 5 ca lothe water to drain . Th ey ries In one - h a lf cup o f
shoulll.. never so ak in water. un swe etene d berries. makm g
Di scard tho se berries t hat them a di eter's delight .
With th e b erry se.1so n
a re t oo soft or have· be gltn to
u
pon
u s. why n o t tr y them
d ecay.
_
On, p1nt of bc rn es will rn some di'ffe re n t recipes as
yield .app rox unatel y fo ur well as u si ng them 1n t h e o ld
serv !llgs of fresh frui t . Fre sh sta nd ard s' Sec what a Wi de
bcrr1 es are great WI,th pl.11n va ri ety o f ways you can add
or valll ll a lowfat or n o nfa t the fl avo r of berries to your
yogurt. Add g ranola a nd yo u meals and sna c ks .

•

outmaneuver a dog any night of the the only one' - T.E 111 Iowa
week. A favorite trick is to bnng a nice,
Dear Iowa: Y~u are NOT the onl y
JUICY steak along and make fnends with one. I am behmd you 100 percent. By all
the dog, who will enJOY his treat wh1le means, tell lier that Ann Landers thinks
the thief steals the valu\trles.
her behavior IS crude and disgusting, and
Dear Ann Landers: Am I the only let's hope she finally gets the message.
pe~on who finds it annoying when peo- Noisy eaters are an abominati o n. but
ple smack their lips while eating, cracl('gum snappers Irritate me to the ·poi nt
their chewing gum, or talk With a mouth where I must speak up I urge others to
full of food? Added to the aforemen- do the sa me. It 15 the ultimate m bad
tioned irritations are those who eat an manners.
entire meal while talking on the phone.
Planning a wedding' What's nght!
My fiancee IS a wonderful woman, What's wrong' "The Ann Landers Gu1de
and I love her dearly, but she does all of for Bndes" will re heve your anxiety. Send
the above. I have told her how much it a self-addressed,lo ng, busin ess-size envebothers me, but she thmks I am bemg lope and a c heck or mon ey order for
excessively criucal. I am 36 years old $3 .75 (this includes postage and han no fuddy-duddy, but I cringe when she dlmg) to: Brides, c/o Ann landers, P.O.
does these things.
Bo1&lt; 11 562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
I don't want to be unreasonable or Canada, send $4.55.) To find out mo re
sound snobbish, but It's becoming about Ann Landers and read her past
increasingly difficult to be around her columns, visit the Cteators Syndicate
and listen to these uncouth noises. Am I web page at www crcators .com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

TUESDAY, July 11
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District, special
meeting to discuss health msurance, Tuesday, 5 p.m.
CHESTER- ChesterTownship Trustees will hold their regular meeting in the Chester Town
Hall on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The
budget for 2001 will be viewed
during the meeting.
RACINE - Board of Public
Affairs, Tu.esday, 10:30 a.m.,
municipal building.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Band Boosters, Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., band room. All parents
of marching and concert band are
urged to attend.
SYRACUSE- Suhon Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. ; t
Syracuse Village Hall
~

•••

\

WEDNESDAY, July 12
RACINE - The .Ohio University College 'Jf Osteopathic
Medicine Childhood lmmuniza.
tion 'Program- (CH-IP), -a mobile .
health program, will be providing
free immunization for all area
children from birth through 18

yem of age on Wednesday, July

Va., speaker.

12, 2000, at the Racine Pizza
Express from 3 p.m . to 4 p.m. The
Hepatitis B vaccine is a three shot
series that IS admimstered over a
minimum of four months and IS
now required upon a child entering either preschool or kindergarten.
A Varicella vaccine is also available. The child's shot record IS
required for immunizations.
•

POMEROY - Semor Citizens Center program, I Q.30 a m .
Thur&gt;day
rega rdmg
cancer
screemngs and Medicare coverage. Julie leonard , benefi ciary
educatwn manager from th e . ·
Medicare office in Columbus to
speak. Program sponsored by
Meigs County C ancer Initiative.

POMEROY Euchre-fest,
Trinity Church, beginning at 2
p.m., $5 fee mcludes supper.

•••

THURSDAY,July tl
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the post
home, 6:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation
District Board of SuperviSors,
special meeting, Thursday at non,
SWCD office, to consider logjam
removal applications and personnel matters.
POMEROY -: Faith Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run
Road, weekend revival, Thursday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. Elder
Robert Hall; Point Pleasant, W.

•••

FRIDAY,July 14
MIDDLEPORT - W1dows'
Fellowship · potluck luncheon,
Fnday noon. Middleport C hurch
ofChnst.

•••

SUNDAY, July 16
RACINE Charles A. and
Alma Hmzman Snyder family
reunion, Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Star
Mill Park, Racine.
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
oale• gr f~tnd taisen of anytype. Items are printed only
•• apace permita and cannot
be auaranlled to be printed
a specific number of daya .

Healthy habits kids need now
BY

up an attractive, g~me-filled, TVfree play space inside your home
Nearly 25 percent of U.S. kids that gives y9ur child room to
are overweight today, double the stretch hiS legs and run ·around
number 30 years ago, according when he's mdoors. Set daily limto the July issue of Parents mag- its on computer and VIdeo game
azine.
use as well.
Parents sliould be role models
• Cu t the junk. Clear yo ur
for kids when It comes to eating kitchen of junk food, but don't
and e xercise, the magazine says. ban It from your child's d1et
These expert stra tegies can help: altogether, says Parents. Giving
• Play with you r kids. You him an oc casional treat a
child will be more hkely to candy bar at the movies oc a
exerCise 1f you do It with her. piece of cake at a party - will
Take a family b1ke nde, toss a help keep those foods from
football 111 the yard, p l /8lan a gaining too much signifi ca nce 111
Saturday-aftenoon h1ke, or vol - his eyes.
unteer to coach her softball
• Push fluids. Water should
team.
always be your child 's first
• Move the televiSIOn . Don't
choi ce Aim for five to SIX glassle t you r child have a televiSion
es a dav. Kids
need to dnnk
in his room, and don 't make It
the foca l po mt of your fami ly
room or den , advises Parents. Set

PARINTI MAGAZINE

FOR M' SPECIAL FEATURES

NEWS
fLJ\sat
'FREE
Yard Sale
Sign
When you place
your yard/garage
sale advertisement
in the classifiedsl
It reac!~esJI:UOn-Gall.ia·
Meigs Residents•.
Flaee your ad today!

· · The Daily
Sentinel

two or three glasses of nulk . Two
small servings of frUit JUICe a day
are fine, but don't overdo it. Save
soda for a once-in-a-while treat .
• Don't tolerate teasing. If
your child is bemg teased about
her weight 111 a schoo l o r by k1ds .
in· the ne ighborhood, ta ke :
action. It is your responsibility to
talk ,to the teacher, pare nt s o r
coaches who are allow rng tim
b'e havior to continue
• Make meals fun. To get yo u r
c hil d Interested 111 L'ati ng nght,
get her involved . Ta ke her shop- .,
pmg With you and tc .rch her
how to read food label s Ask he r
to toss a sa lad or help you ba ke
lowfat muffi ns Serve her hors ·

- Blood Drive PVH Wei/ness Center
Thursday, July 13. 2000
Noon to 6 p.m.

+ FREET-ShirtsToAII Donors
+ Door Prizes
Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospit~J
Auxiliary
&amp;
I
American Red Cross

�,•

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

tuesday, July 11, 2000 .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
T-bill rates mixed Monday
WASHINGTON (AP) - lntemt. i:ates on short-term Treasury
securities were mixed in Monday's auction.
The Treasury Department' sold $8.5 billion in three-month bills
at a discount tate of 5.900 percent, up from 5.830 percent lost week.
An additional $7.5 billion was sold in six-month bills at a rate of
5.945 percent, down from 5.975 percent.
The three-month rate was the highest since May 15 when the
bills sold for 6 .065 percent. The six-month rate was the lowest since
June 19 wh the rate was 5.920.
The new scount rat~s und@rstate the actual return to investors
- 6.071 perc t for three-month bills with a $10,000 bill selling
6.215 percent for a six-month bill selling for
for $9,850.90 a
$9,699.40.
In a separate report, the Federu Reserve said Monday that the
average yield for one-year Treasury bills, the most popular index for
making changes in adjustable rate mortgages, fell to 6.08 percent last
week from 6 .13 percent the previous week.

Consumer c~it rise excee.ds ex~tions
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans borrowed Jll.Oney freely in May, ringing up the
biggest rise in cm\sumer cn•dit sin ce the beginning of the year, the Federal Reserve said
Monday.
Total consumer credit rose a seasonally
adjusted $11.8 billion in ' May for an annual
growth rate of 9.8 percent.That was the largest
gain since January, when Americans increased
their borrowing by $15.7 billion.
May's bigger-than-expected · increase surprised many analysts .They were expecting borrowing to grow by $8 billion .
Still. analysts weren't troubled by the
increase.
"The bonom line is that it isn't worrisome ·

because we're seeing delinquency rates on
loans and mortgage are trending lower. That's
the most important thing," said Richard
Yamamne, economist with Argus Research
Corp.

Another reason it's not worrisome, he said,
is because people have jobs.The nation's jobless
rate is now hovering near a 30-year-low of 4
percent" Assuming a higher debt burden is not
troublesome because consumers can afford to
pay the money back,"Yamarone said.
Consumer credit in April grew by $8.8 billion , less than: the Fed estimated one month
ago. That translates into an annual growth rate
of 7.4 percent.
·
In May, the total amount of nonrevolving

credit, such as loans for new cars. vacations and
other big- ticket ite1m. advanced by $7.1 billion
at an annual rat&lt;· of I 11.5 p ercent. also the
biggest increase si nce JJnuary.That was up from
$2.3 billi~ and an 3.4 percent rate m ApriL
Demand for revolving credit, such as th&lt;)t
used for credit cards, rose S4.u billion or at an
8.9 percent annual rate in May. That was down
fimn S6.5 billion and J 12 .7 percent rate in
April .
The Fed has r.1ised intere'\t rates six times
over the last year to slow the econo my and
keep inflation from becomin g a problem.·
The Fed's rate increase.;; are design ed to raise
borrowing costs and thus cool demand fo r such
big purchases as ens and hom es.

ou

•••

Tair 'Fhursoay. - · ·

·

TRENTON, NJ (AP) - A 1996 photograph of Gov. Christie
Whitman frisking a black man during a drug sweep has sparked
outrage from cnt1cs who say it is another example of racial profilmg.
Whitman has maintained her pat-down of rhe unidentified man
while accompanying State Police on a tour of Camden. the state's
poorest city, was an attempt to understand the, rigors of police work .
Troopers had searc hed the man at least once during the ~sweep
before offer ing him to the governor.
·
A photograph obtained by The AS!ociated Press shows Whitman,
who appears to be smiling, standing beh1nd a black man with his
arms sp rea d and his palms pressed up against a wall .
The photograph. taken by an officer, was subpoenaed in May by
several black and H1spanic troopers who claim their superiors subjected them to discritnination.
C ritics promised protests when Whitman returns to Camden later
this month for the OJlening ceremonies of the Republican National Convention, wh-ich will take place in nearby Philadelphia.
"S he 's just stepped m a mess," Camden City Councilman Ali
Sloan-E! said Monday.
The search was illegal and a violation of the man's civil rights, said
D ebo rah Jacobs, executive director of the New Jersey American
Civil Libe rties Union .

HIGHLIGHTS

BY ANDREW CARTER

Youth Baseball
Kyger Creak Little
League Tournament
Kyger Creek Employ- Club,
Cheshire
July 14-~3, 2000

Fri., July 21
Quarterfinals at 6 p.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.

With.YOU this

on vacation!

summer!!~
--

- -- -

'

• On the Beach
• In the Water·· The Boat
• Mountains • Fish in!! ~- Etc.
,..-.

cr- Be Creative
'-- - .'·--~

You name it••• you show us!
Just have a Picture taken .of YOU readinl!
The GalliPolis DailY Tribune. The DailY Sentinel
or The Point Pleasant Resister
While You are havins vacation fun in the sun!
Time to have some fun and WIN SOME CASH!

Here·s what to do
··When YOU return home, submit Your Picture and exPlanation to one of our offices.
• All Photos must be in eood taste. we reserve the rieht to reject anY and all Pictures.
• Contest ends SePtember 21. 2000 • PhotorsJ will be Published at alater date
• All Photos become the ProPertY of Ohio ValleY Publishing for Promotional PurPoses
• Contest not oPen to OUP emPloYees &amp; immediate families • All decisions of the judees final

&lt;Ute most interesting ana·or unique mill
have chance to min...
1st Place· $100 2nd Place $50 Jrd Place $25

r

For More Information Call
I!Palhpolts mailp mrtbune 446-2342
The Daily Sentinel
992-2156
_ ~oint ~leasant l\egtster
675-1333

Kyger Creek toumey begins Friday
I

Thu., July 20
Quarterfinals at 6 p.m. &amp; 7 :30p.m.

Fiber optics merger planned·

Whitman photo nets critidsm

TuEsDAY'S

Tue., July 18
New Haven Reds v. Middleport
Astro~/Green Gators winner, 6 p.m.
Bidwell #2 v. Chester Reds/Point
Pleasant Deel Funeral Home winner,
.7 :30p.m.

·

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - JDS Uniphase Corp. is buying rival
fiber-optic company SOL Inc. for about $36 billion in stock, the latest deal in the rapidly consolidating industry.
The companies manufacture prodycts needed for high-capacity
fiber-optic networks. Demand for such products is growing as highspeed audio and video transmission becomes more prevalent on the
Internet.
The acquisition was valued at $41 billion when it was announ~ed
early Monday, after which investors pushed shares ofJDS Uniphase
down 13 percent.
The ~eal , expected to close by year's end, needs to be approved by
the. government ~nd both companies' shareholders.
Mike Phillips, a JDS Uniphase senior vice president: said the company will cooperate with federal regulators." As withE-Tek, we are
optimistic we will obtain the required approval," he said.
Under the deal, each share of SOL will be exchanged for 3.8
shares of JDS Uniphase. At Friday's closing prices, it represents a 49
percent premium for SOL shareholders.
Shares ofJDS Uniphase fell $15.063 to $101.125 on the Nasdaq
Stock Market, while shares of SOL rose $25 .375 to $320.688.
California-based SOL. with about I ,700 employees, earned $14
million on revenue of $72 million in the three months ended
March 31.
JDS Uniphase, with offices . in San Jose and Ontario, has about
17,000 employees. During the first quarter of2000, it lost $241 million on revenue of$395 million.
last month , JDS Uniphase bought E-Tek Dynamics for $17 billion. Also recently, communications network company Lucent
Technologies Inc. announced plans to buy optical network systems
maker Chromatis Networks for $4.5 billion.

Tuesday, July II, 1000

Mon., July 17
Racine v. Point Pleasant Nationwide/Kyger Creek Bobcats winner. 6
p.m.
Gallipolis
#2
v.
Federal
Hocking/Gallipolis #1 winner. 7:30
p.m.

Just show us where YOU read
our newsPaPer while

Page Bl

'&gt;

Sun., July 16
Mason Twins v. Green Braves, 1
p.m.
Middleport Reds v. Rio Grande,
2:30p.m.
Pomeroy Indians v. Bidwell #1, 4
p.m.

Yes. take us

Sentinel~'

NBA: Duncan remembers the Alamo, Page 86
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6
,

Sat., July 15
Middlepo!1 Astros v. Green Gators,
1
1 p.m .
Chester Reds v. Point Pleasant
Deal Funeral Home , 2:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant Hardware v. Point
Pleasant Home Care Medical , 4 p.m.

Jackson issues AIDS challenge
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - In an effort to curb the spread of
AIDS among the black population, the Rev. Jesse Jackson issued a
challenge to' local ministers: take an HIV test, and do it publicly.
Jackson spoke Monday before a service at an Indianapolis church,
kickmg btl" the 30th Summer Celebration of the Indiana Black
Expo.
"The minister tends to have the mo,ral authority," Jackson said
before the service, which attracted an est\mated 4\)0 people. "You
have to have the courage to take the test."
Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson, Attorney General Karen Freeman-Wilson and several area ministers accepted Jackson's challenge
and were tested for HIV at the church Monday. Jackson also was
tested.
Jackson also chall~nged professional athletes and other public
leaders to take the AIDS test.
"None of us are safe until all of us are safe," he said.
Jackson said community leaders should take the test publicly to
help people of all races and economic backgrounds learn that getting tested for the virus that causes AIDS is not taboo.
"However you may have gotten it, early detection leads to early
correction," Jackson said.
'
The Black Expo's Summer Celebration, billed as the largest exposition of its kind focused on the black American community, will
run through July 16, drawing hundreds of thousands of participants
to conferences, concerts, health and job fairs and other sessions.
Some 200,000 attended events last year.
The Expo will feature medical screenings- for HIV. high blood
pressure, several types of cancers an&lt;! other diseases - .. au health _

The Daily

Friday, July 14
Point Pleasant Nationwide v.
Kyger Creek Bobcats, 6 p .m.
Federal Hocking v. Gallipolis #1,
7:30

Clinton will skip vacation
WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton has abandoned plans
for a family vacation this summer, opting instead to spend extended weekends raising money for the Democratic Parry, the White
Hou se said ' Monday.
The president and first lady will spend the first weekend in
August in Massachusens, attending a fund-raiser on Martha's Vineyard and another m Hyannis, said White House spokesman Joe
lockhart.
The Clintoris expect to take at least two more extended weekends in upstate New York, one following the Democratic National
Convention in mid-August and another over Labor Day weekend,
lockhart said. Mrs. Clinton is running for the Senate from New
York.

Inside:

•

Sat, July 22
Semifinals· at 6 p.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Sun., July 23
Home_Run Derby, 3 p.m . .
Consolation Game, 5 p.m.
Championship Game, 6 :30 p.m.

MAC looking
into bowl options
-HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The Mid- American Conferen ce is exploring,. it~ oprions for
championship bowls.
ror the past thrrc ye;lfS, since
tht· MAC was formed , the MAC
c hampion ha s played in the
Motor City Bowl in Pontiac.
Mi ch.
Marshall played all three years
- losing the first game to MissisS1 pp1 111 I '197, but defeating
Louisvilk in !998 and Brigham
Young in I '199.

ThL· conference is considering
th,· Hoosier Bowl, wh ich hopes
to gain NCAA cert ification this
t~1ll and begm play in th e Hoosier
Dome in Indi anapol is ii1 200 1.
Th,· Superdorn e-based New
Orleans Bowl also Interests MAC
co mmi~~ IOilt'r

!ti ck Chryst.

"Wc'n;· in a position that we'll
k)()k at "'Y bowl opportunity.''
C:hry~t s;aid. "\X/e'rt• vt"ry interestl'd in tlndin g more bowl opportlltlltks for our team~ ."

Hubbard Toumey
rained out
SYRACUSE Torrential
downpours washed out M o nday's
,\ction · at th e Bill l·lubbard
Mc:lllo ritl Little L ~aguc TournalllL'Ilt .

Th 1.:

tournan1cnt

continues

tonight .

Armstrong takes
over Tour lead
LOUIU&gt;ES- HAUTACA M ,
Framt· (A I') - Lance Armstrong
~ urgl' d throu gh th e JJIOUiftams
,\IH.l into fir"t pla cl' i1l thl' Tour clc
r r dll Ll',- gr.tbbin g th t.• leader 's yd ..
low JLT Sl' Y flll· the fi rst tim e in
t.ic fense of rh e titl e he won last
yt:"ar after co m1ng·back from canLl' L

Arlll "\t rong u sl'll a Jramati c
,m ac k in rh: final rl unb to fimsh
second in the day's stag:l'.
· In ra in ami cold, Armstrong 1
who .rarted th e day in 16th p lace. '
turntJ a deficit of almost six min utes into a lead Of 4: 14 over seco nd- place Jan Ullrich. 't he !9'!7
c hampi on .
I

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

C HESHIRE - Racine, Gallipolis #2, the New Haven Reds
and Bidwell #2 eac h drew a bye
for the Y2K edition of the
Kyger Creek Little League
Tournan1ent.
The official drawing was held
last evening at the Kyger Creek
Employees Club in Cheshire.
Racine was the first team
drawn from the hat and will play
n ext Monday at 6 p.m. against
either Point Pleasant Nationwide or the Kyger Creek Bobcats.
• Gallipolis #2, the second team
selected in the blind draw, will
face Federal Hocking or hometown rival Gallipolis # I next
Monday ~ t 7:30 p.m.
The New Haven Reds were
the third team drawn, and will
square off with e1ther the Middleport Asrros or the Green
Gators one week from today at
6 p.m.
Bidwell #2 was the last team
to receive a bye, and will meet
either the Chester Reds or
Point Pleasant Dee! Funeral
Home in round two adion next
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Twelve of the 20 coach es who
enteted tean1s in this year's tournament were on hand for the
draw, which was conducted by
tournament board of directors
Mark Werry, Roger Dee!, Mark
Eutsler and Mark Mooney.
Fnday's first round schedule
features Point Pleasant Nationwide taking on the Kyger Creek
Bobcats at 6 p.m . in the tournament's opening game.
Game 2 on Friday finds Federal Hocking fa cing off against
Gallipolis. # I at· 7:30 p,m,
Action continue s Saturday
with the Middleport Astros
meeting the Grc~n G :uqrs at 1
p.m. The C hester Reds and
Dee! Funeral Home of Point
Pl eas ant meet at 2:30 p.m : Sat•lrday.
The final Sarmday game pits a
pair of Mason County cl ubs

against each other. Point Pl easant Hardware and Point Pleasant
Hom e Care Medical square otT
at 4 p.m .
The Mason Twins and Green
Braves kick otT Sunday's slate of
games at I p.m . The Middleport
R eds meet Rio Grande at 2:30
p.m.
The defending champion
Pomeroy Indians battl e Bidwell
#I Sunday at 4 p.m.
Q11arter6nal play is scheduled
for next Thursday and Friday
with the semifinals set for July
22
The .annual Home Run
Derby sets the stage for the final
day of competition on July 23.
The long ball bash begins at 3
p.m., followed by the consolation game at 5 p.m.
The championship game is
slated to starr at 6:30p.m.
Tournament chairman Mark
Werry of Pomeroy, is excited
about renewing the annual tradition, whidi began in 1959 and
was sidelined for a brief time
due to construction at the
Kyger Creek Power Plant.
" I lhink this tournament is
probably the best tournament in
the area," Werry said. "I just do it
for the kids in the area. I've been
involved with it for about 15
years, since it returned. We had
So me construction over here
. and the tournament had to quit
for a w hile, be cause \Ve stored
steel w here the ball field is."
Following the hiatus, whi ch
lasted for I 0 year&lt; beginning in
1976, Werry became involved as
a member of the board of directors responsibl e for organization
of the annual event. He has also
served
as
publi c
adqress
announcer for the tou rna ment.
Werry said that throughout
the storied history of the Kyger
Creek little league Tournament, there has been one focus .
" The main thing is, It's for the
k 1'ds," wcrry sa1 d . H\V.'
we try t·o
give them as mu ch as we can

Please see KCLLT, Page B6

•

IT'S

HE

t

hom erun derby

•

•

TRADITION - In the~top photo, Kyger Creek Little League Tournament board members Mark Werry (left)
and Mark Mooney display the plaque with the names of the teams that have won the tournament over the
years since 1959. In the lower photo, Werry shows off the"shirt that entrants in the Home Run Derby will
receive this year. The Kyger Creek Tournament begins Friday with two games. (Andrew Carter photo)

Brown &amp; Karl turn down North Carolina offer
CHAPEL HILL, N :C. (AP) - North
Caroli na remains determined to pick one
of its own to be the basketball coac h .
Former Tar H eels Matt Doherty, JdT
Lebo and Randy Wid appear to be at the
rop of the list for the Tar Ht•els coaching
job to replan' Bill Guthridge. George Karl
and larry Brown, also former North Carolina players. tu rned down their alma
mater Monday.
Wi el, 49 , a reserve guard in 1976-79. is
th e only re mainin g candidate who
coached as an assistant under Dean Smith.
The Middle Te nn e~sec coach also roomed
wirh current assisrahr coach Phil Ford
while both played for Smith .
Wiel returned ea rl y from h is coach ing
clinic 11l Spain to mtcrvit·w Tuesday in

C hapel Hill .
" I'm not sure (UNC) will let him leave
after he gets there," MTSU athletic llirector Lee Fowl er said.
Wicl m ade the trip after a ·phone ca ll
lat e Sunday from North Carol ina athletics
director Dick Baddour.
"They wamed me to fly straight ·ro
Chapel Hill, S&lt;.i I don 't eve n have a Sl!it for
the ' tnterview," Wicl told The C harlotle
Observer on Monday night from Du lles
Airport in Washi ngton , where he awaitt:J
his con n cctmg tl1ght to Raleigh - Durh am
Airport .
In Wiel's five seasons at MTSU, five
schools have inquired ab o u t hun, Fowler
said.
" He\ loya l. !tkc coa ch Stn ith," Fowk r

said. "Not a day or two goes by without Doherty's wife. Kell y. said her hmband
Rand y talking to coa ch Smith. H e talk s was still in Indian&lt;1poh s ~couting pro"PL'cts
with (Roy) William s, (Eddie) Fogler and at the Nike basketball ca mp. Kelly DoherGuthridge every week, too .
ty is a native.:· of Co ncord. N.C.
"
"Those guys are the innr:r, inner circle
" /\11 I can really ~ay rs that he's 011 t he
of that f.1mily. and Randy is one of th em . road." she told the Fayetteville Obscrwr.
That\ why I think Rand y may have a "He's not sc heduled to be back until the
chance to gt•t tbt s job.''
20th. Tha t's all I ca n say righ t now."
Doherty, who playe d on the I 'JH2
B::t ddo ur was gr:m tt' J permission to
nationa1 champi o nship team and now i ~ contclct Ld.,o. co~H: h at 1t•nnes~ce Tl'ch .
coach at Notre Damt". m et SLmday in
But Lcbn ~a!d J\1onday h e hadn 't hcl' ll
C hapel Hill with Baddour. Smith and called by anyone from the sc hool.
Guthridge. pol1L'rry sai d mt.·etin!-,7"$ with
" I do n 't kn ow anyt hin g ngh t now; '
North Carolina athletic otlic ials went l ebo ~Cl itl. "T hey havc·n 't ca lled me . I
well . but h e hasn't been otlered the j ob. knu\v they called fi:1r pt•rmi"swn, bur I
uor was ht' given a timctabiL· on rh e · don 't know whar it lll t.'Jil!&lt;l."
'\t'arc h .

Co ntact l' d at

Sosa wins

holllL'

Please see UNC, Page 86

Monday night,

Fox wins Riverside
Open by two strokes

Home Run
Derby title
ATLANTA (AI') r - Sammy
Sosa finally has a home- run title.
Just not THAT home- run
title .
Sosa. edged by Mark M eGwire the la st two y~ars ror the
smgle-sea son ret.'Ord and m aj or
league lead, ended Ken Griffey
Jr.'s two-year reign as H o me
Run Derby champton , hitting
th e lo ngest, loud est and largest
, number of sh ots at Turner Field
on Monday night.
The Chicago Cubs star, at the
ce nter ofwh ac ht• dt'scribed "as a
hurricane h appe ning to me the
last m ont h." beat Grifl'ey 9-2 in
the tinals and hit 2o overall , 14
mo re- ch a-n any oth er pb.ycr;· ,..
H e got the fans standing and
sho utin g with a pair of SOH- fo ot
shots - on e to the 75S Club in
the left- field upper dec k and one

:

Mi\ SON. W. Vc1. - St eve Fox's
rounds ot' 7:2 and 7 1 propelled
h ln1 to a t\vo -•arokc wm ove r
Chad W,· srt:dl of Glenv ill ,·, ot t
Sunday ,tt the 2'ith Anmd
RtVL'rstdt.· Upcn (;o)f TolJnJamcnt .

SLAMMIN' SAMMY - Sammy Sosa of the Cubs won the 2000
Home Run Dr"'' Y at Turner Field in Atlanta, Ga ., Monday night . (AP)
thilt G llllt" to rest atop the sec ond
g re en l&gt;atter's backdrop 111
straightaway centt:r, below the
scoreboard.
" I ca me here t o put on;~ sh ow.
I didn't nen•s._o;arily co me here to
get th e win, but I guess I got the
lvin:' Sosa said.

So.,a. at rh e c.:cnrer of wh at he
said has b l..~t:"n "a hurrican t: happt:ning to me the last month .''
was angry the Cubs woufon 't
cxt l'IH.i hi -, co ntrKt, Sl'r to exp ire
afte r nt.·xt seaso n, and at;kcd them
to trad e hun .

Please see !&gt;erby, Pace 86

Nin e pbyLT" t~nr;;hc d ~\\'ithin
fiv t.' stwkL"s l)t t h L· k.Hkr i11 tht.'
ciLnnpioml np thgl n whKh ti:,Jturcd -J. -t pLtyL'I"'\. Til LTL' \\"L"!\' I ()
pLiycrs who tlni shL·d \\' ithin J()
st n_)kcs of Fox\ l'h.lnlp lon'\hlpwinnin g- round.
Jami e Whitt ltdd .1 rlm·cstroke lc:1d attn 1H holes, luv in~
played ,, hH. ~k lu t .t 7'J o n th e
sec ond day ro f~1ll · rn Sl'VL' mh
overall .
Aaron Btrkk of G allipo lis.
was in ~eco .nd ;tt rhc t·nd of day
o ne wirh a 7 1 and fini shed ti ed
for t!md mwall with Bill Don.lhot• of 1-!unricJnt', ;lt 146.

The pu rs1,: fo·r thL"

tot .t bl S7 . ~ 711 .
The fln,Jl ."l.mdin gs fo r the
tou nu 111 cnt:
C hamp io nsh ip
Flif'ltt : I. Sr,·ve fox 72-7 1- I 43:
2 . C:h .td Wt•stt;tl! 72 - 7.'\ ~ 14 5: .l .
Bill 1J on .1hoc 76 - 711 -1 4 6: 4.
Aaro n Bick le 71-75- 146: 5.
J o hn Duty Sr. 7.'\·-74- 147 : 6.
Jlr.tdJdTcr&lt; 7] -72- 147 : 7 .J:11111t'
Wlmt I&gt;H -7'! - 147 : H. Rvan Nnrri' (let.ll't J=.t!ls)74 - 74- 14H: 9.
J.1Son Shuln (!l.Jcim·)7'J- 6'J 14H:
Ill. [)ave
Re e d Jr.
(Ma"ltt )77 - 7.'1 - l :ill II. Ja son .
Coad 7H-7~ - 1 )II: 12. Phil Mayes
77-74- 151; 1.\ M1ke C hapm an
7'!-7.1- 152: 14. l&gt;al e Browning
7 6- 76- 152: IS .John Du ty Jr. 757H- I S.l: R citl C arroll 76-7715.'\: luk e' Kmn er 78-73- 153 ;
Ri ck M o mT 77-7 6-153: J o n
lt ,•ed 72- H1- 1S.l .
First ili ~ ht : Scott Wi c kline -

l'\'l' llt

Please see Golf, Pase B6

-

'

�,•

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

tuesday, July 11, 2000 .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS
T-bill rates mixed Monday
WASHINGTON (AP) - lntemt. i:ates on short-term Treasury
securities were mixed in Monday's auction.
The Treasury Department' sold $8.5 billion in three-month bills
at a discount tate of 5.900 percent, up from 5.830 percent lost week.
An additional $7.5 billion was sold in six-month bills at a rate of
5.945 percent, down from 5.975 percent.
The three-month rate was the highest since May 15 when the
bills sold for 6 .065 percent. The six-month rate was the lowest since
June 19 wh the rate was 5.920.
The new scount rat~s und@rstate the actual return to investors
- 6.071 perc t for three-month bills with a $10,000 bill selling
6.215 percent for a six-month bill selling for
for $9,850.90 a
$9,699.40.
In a separate report, the Federu Reserve said Monday that the
average yield for one-year Treasury bills, the most popular index for
making changes in adjustable rate mortgages, fell to 6.08 percent last
week from 6 .13 percent the previous week.

Consumer c~it rise excee.ds ex~tions
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans borrowed Jll.Oney freely in May, ringing up the
biggest rise in cm\sumer cn•dit sin ce the beginning of the year, the Federal Reserve said
Monday.
Total consumer credit rose a seasonally
adjusted $11.8 billion in ' May for an annual
growth rate of 9.8 percent.That was the largest
gain since January, when Americans increased
their borrowing by $15.7 billion.
May's bigger-than-expected · increase surprised many analysts .They were expecting borrowing to grow by $8 billion .
Still. analysts weren't troubled by the
increase.
"The bonom line is that it isn't worrisome ·

because we're seeing delinquency rates on
loans and mortgage are trending lower. That's
the most important thing," said Richard
Yamamne, economist with Argus Research
Corp.

Another reason it's not worrisome, he said,
is because people have jobs.The nation's jobless
rate is now hovering near a 30-year-low of 4
percent" Assuming a higher debt burden is not
troublesome because consumers can afford to
pay the money back,"Yamarone said.
Consumer credit in April grew by $8.8 billion , less than: the Fed estimated one month
ago. That translates into an annual growth rate
of 7.4 percent.
·
In May, the total amount of nonrevolving

credit, such as loans for new cars. vacations and
other big- ticket ite1m. advanced by $7.1 billion
at an annual rat&lt;· of I 11.5 p ercent. also the
biggest increase si nce JJnuary.That was up from
$2.3 billi~ and an 3.4 percent rate m ApriL
Demand for revolving credit, such as th&lt;)t
used for credit cards, rose S4.u billion or at an
8.9 percent annual rate in May. That was down
fimn S6.5 billion and J 12 .7 percent rate in
April .
The Fed has r.1ised intere'\t rates six times
over the last year to slow the econo my and
keep inflation from becomin g a problem.·
The Fed's rate increase.;; are design ed to raise
borrowing costs and thus cool demand fo r such
big purchases as ens and hom es.

ou

•••

Tair 'Fhursoay. - · ·

·

TRENTON, NJ (AP) - A 1996 photograph of Gov. Christie
Whitman frisking a black man during a drug sweep has sparked
outrage from cnt1cs who say it is another example of racial profilmg.
Whitman has maintained her pat-down of rhe unidentified man
while accompanying State Police on a tour of Camden. the state's
poorest city, was an attempt to understand the, rigors of police work .
Troopers had searc hed the man at least once during the ~sweep
before offer ing him to the governor.
·
A photograph obtained by The AS!ociated Press shows Whitman,
who appears to be smiling, standing beh1nd a black man with his
arms sp rea d and his palms pressed up against a wall .
The photograph. taken by an officer, was subpoenaed in May by
several black and H1spanic troopers who claim their superiors subjected them to discritnination.
C ritics promised protests when Whitman returns to Camden later
this month for the OJlening ceremonies of the Republican National Convention, wh-ich will take place in nearby Philadelphia.
"S he 's just stepped m a mess," Camden City Councilman Ali
Sloan-E! said Monday.
The search was illegal and a violation of the man's civil rights, said
D ebo rah Jacobs, executive director of the New Jersey American
Civil Libe rties Union .

HIGHLIGHTS

BY ANDREW CARTER

Youth Baseball
Kyger Creak Little
League Tournament
Kyger Creek Employ- Club,
Cheshire
July 14-~3, 2000

Fri., July 21
Quarterfinals at 6 p.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.

With.YOU this

on vacation!

summer!!~
--

- -- -

'

• On the Beach
• In the Water·· The Boat
• Mountains • Fish in!! ~- Etc.
,..-.

cr- Be Creative
'-- - .'·--~

You name it••• you show us!
Just have a Picture taken .of YOU readinl!
The GalliPolis DailY Tribune. The DailY Sentinel
or The Point Pleasant Resister
While You are havins vacation fun in the sun!
Time to have some fun and WIN SOME CASH!

Here·s what to do
··When YOU return home, submit Your Picture and exPlanation to one of our offices.
• All Photos must be in eood taste. we reserve the rieht to reject anY and all Pictures.
• Contest ends SePtember 21. 2000 • PhotorsJ will be Published at alater date
• All Photos become the ProPertY of Ohio ValleY Publishing for Promotional PurPoses
• Contest not oPen to OUP emPloYees &amp; immediate families • All decisions of the judees final

&lt;Ute most interesting ana·or unique mill
have chance to min...
1st Place· $100 2nd Place $50 Jrd Place $25

r

For More Information Call
I!Palhpolts mailp mrtbune 446-2342
The Daily Sentinel
992-2156
_ ~oint ~leasant l\egtster
675-1333

Kyger Creek toumey begins Friday
I

Thu., July 20
Quarterfinals at 6 p.m. &amp; 7 :30p.m.

Fiber optics merger planned·

Whitman photo nets critidsm

TuEsDAY'S

Tue., July 18
New Haven Reds v. Middleport
Astro~/Green Gators winner, 6 p.m.
Bidwell #2 v. Chester Reds/Point
Pleasant Deel Funeral Home winner,
.7 :30p.m.

·

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - JDS Uniphase Corp. is buying rival
fiber-optic company SOL Inc. for about $36 billion in stock, the latest deal in the rapidly consolidating industry.
The companies manufacture prodycts needed for high-capacity
fiber-optic networks. Demand for such products is growing as highspeed audio and video transmission becomes more prevalent on the
Internet.
The acquisition was valued at $41 billion when it was announ~ed
early Monday, after which investors pushed shares ofJDS Uniphase
down 13 percent.
The ~eal , expected to close by year's end, needs to be approved by
the. government ~nd both companies' shareholders.
Mike Phillips, a JDS Uniphase senior vice president: said the company will cooperate with federal regulators." As withE-Tek, we are
optimistic we will obtain the required approval," he said.
Under the deal, each share of SOL will be exchanged for 3.8
shares of JDS Uniphase. At Friday's closing prices, it represents a 49
percent premium for SOL shareholders.
Shares ofJDS Uniphase fell $15.063 to $101.125 on the Nasdaq
Stock Market, while shares of SOL rose $25 .375 to $320.688.
California-based SOL. with about I ,700 employees, earned $14
million on revenue of $72 million in the three months ended
March 31.
JDS Uniphase, with offices . in San Jose and Ontario, has about
17,000 employees. During the first quarter of2000, it lost $241 million on revenue of$395 million.
last month , JDS Uniphase bought E-Tek Dynamics for $17 billion. Also recently, communications network company Lucent
Technologies Inc. announced plans to buy optical network systems
maker Chromatis Networks for $4.5 billion.

Tuesday, July II, 1000

Mon., July 17
Racine v. Point Pleasant Nationwide/Kyger Creek Bobcats winner. 6
p.m.
Gallipolis
#2
v.
Federal
Hocking/Gallipolis #1 winner. 7:30
p.m.

Just show us where YOU read
our newsPaPer while

Page Bl

'&gt;

Sun., July 16
Mason Twins v. Green Braves, 1
p.m.
Middleport Reds v. Rio Grande,
2:30p.m.
Pomeroy Indians v. Bidwell #1, 4
p.m.

Yes. take us

Sentinel~'

NBA: Duncan remembers the Alamo, Page 86
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6
,

Sat., July 15
Middlepo!1 Astros v. Green Gators,
1
1 p.m .
Chester Reds v. Point Pleasant
Deal Funeral Home , 2:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant Hardware v. Point
Pleasant Home Care Medical , 4 p.m.

Jackson issues AIDS challenge
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - In an effort to curb the spread of
AIDS among the black population, the Rev. Jesse Jackson issued a
challenge to' local ministers: take an HIV test, and do it publicly.
Jackson spoke Monday before a service at an Indianapolis church,
kickmg btl" the 30th Summer Celebration of the Indiana Black
Expo.
"The minister tends to have the mo,ral authority," Jackson said
before the service, which attracted an est\mated 4\)0 people. "You
have to have the courage to take the test."
Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson, Attorney General Karen Freeman-Wilson and several area ministers accepted Jackson's challenge
and were tested for HIV at the church Monday. Jackson also was
tested.
Jackson also chall~nged professional athletes and other public
leaders to take the AIDS test.
"None of us are safe until all of us are safe," he said.
Jackson said community leaders should take the test publicly to
help people of all races and economic backgrounds learn that getting tested for the virus that causes AIDS is not taboo.
"However you may have gotten it, early detection leads to early
correction," Jackson said.
'
The Black Expo's Summer Celebration, billed as the largest exposition of its kind focused on the black American community, will
run through July 16, drawing hundreds of thousands of participants
to conferences, concerts, health and job fairs and other sessions.
Some 200,000 attended events last year.
The Expo will feature medical screenings- for HIV. high blood
pressure, several types of cancers an&lt;! other diseases - .. au health _

The Daily

Friday, July 14
Point Pleasant Nationwide v.
Kyger Creek Bobcats, 6 p .m.
Federal Hocking v. Gallipolis #1,
7:30

Clinton will skip vacation
WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton has abandoned plans
for a family vacation this summer, opting instead to spend extended weekends raising money for the Democratic Parry, the White
Hou se said ' Monday.
The president and first lady will spend the first weekend in
August in Massachusens, attending a fund-raiser on Martha's Vineyard and another m Hyannis, said White House spokesman Joe
lockhart.
The Clintoris expect to take at least two more extended weekends in upstate New York, one following the Democratic National
Convention in mid-August and another over Labor Day weekend,
lockhart said. Mrs. Clinton is running for the Senate from New
York.

Inside:

•

Sat, July 22
Semifinals· at 6 p.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Sun., July 23
Home_Run Derby, 3 p.m . .
Consolation Game, 5 p.m.
Championship Game, 6 :30 p.m.

MAC looking
into bowl options
-HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The Mid- American Conferen ce is exploring,. it~ oprions for
championship bowls.
ror the past thrrc ye;lfS, since
tht· MAC was formed , the MAC
c hampion ha s played in the
Motor City Bowl in Pontiac.
Mi ch.
Marshall played all three years
- losing the first game to MissisS1 pp1 111 I '197, but defeating
Louisvilk in !998 and Brigham
Young in I '199.

ThL· conference is considering
th,· Hoosier Bowl, wh ich hopes
to gain NCAA cert ification this
t~1ll and begm play in th e Hoosier
Dome in Indi anapol is ii1 200 1.
Th,· Superdorn e-based New
Orleans Bowl also Interests MAC
co mmi~~ IOilt'r

!ti ck Chryst.

"Wc'n;· in a position that we'll
k)()k at "'Y bowl opportunity.''
C:hry~t s;aid. "\X/e'rt• vt"ry interestl'd in tlndin g more bowl opportlltlltks for our team~ ."

Hubbard Toumey
rained out
SYRACUSE Torrential
downpours washed out M o nday's
,\ction · at th e Bill l·lubbard
Mc:lllo ritl Little L ~aguc TournalllL'Ilt .

Th 1.:

tournan1cnt

continues

tonight .

Armstrong takes
over Tour lead
LOUIU&gt;ES- HAUTACA M ,
Framt· (A I') - Lance Armstrong
~ urgl' d throu gh th e JJIOUiftams
,\IH.l into fir"t pla cl' i1l thl' Tour clc
r r dll Ll',- gr.tbbin g th t.• leader 's yd ..
low JLT Sl' Y flll· the fi rst tim e in
t.ic fense of rh e titl e he won last
yt:"ar after co m1ng·back from canLl' L

Arlll "\t rong u sl'll a Jramati c
,m ac k in rh: final rl unb to fimsh
second in the day's stag:l'.
· In ra in ami cold, Armstrong 1
who .rarted th e day in 16th p lace. '
turntJ a deficit of almost six min utes into a lead Of 4: 14 over seco nd- place Jan Ullrich. 't he !9'!7
c hampi on .
I

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

C HESHIRE - Racine, Gallipolis #2, the New Haven Reds
and Bidwell #2 eac h drew a bye
for the Y2K edition of the
Kyger Creek Little League
Tournan1ent.
The official drawing was held
last evening at the Kyger Creek
Employees Club in Cheshire.
Racine was the first team
drawn from the hat and will play
n ext Monday at 6 p.m. against
either Point Pleasant Nationwide or the Kyger Creek Bobcats.
• Gallipolis #2, the second team
selected in the blind draw, will
face Federal Hocking or hometown rival Gallipolis # I next
Monday ~ t 7:30 p.m.
The New Haven Reds were
the third team drawn, and will
square off with e1ther the Middleport Asrros or the Green
Gators one week from today at
6 p.m.
Bidwell #2 was the last team
to receive a bye, and will meet
either the Chester Reds or
Point Pleasant Dee! Funeral
Home in round two adion next
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Twelve of the 20 coach es who
enteted tean1s in this year's tournament were on hand for the
draw, which was conducted by
tournament board of directors
Mark Werry, Roger Dee!, Mark
Eutsler and Mark Mooney.
Fnday's first round schedule
features Point Pleasant Nationwide taking on the Kyger Creek
Bobcats at 6 p.m . in the tournament's opening game.
Game 2 on Friday finds Federal Hocking fa cing off against
Gallipolis. # I at· 7:30 p,m,
Action continue s Saturday
with the Middleport Astros
meeting the Grc~n G :uqrs at 1
p.m. The C hester Reds and
Dee! Funeral Home of Point
Pl eas ant meet at 2:30 p.m : Sat•lrday.
The final Sarmday game pits a
pair of Mason County cl ubs

against each other. Point Pl easant Hardware and Point Pleasant
Hom e Care Medical square otT
at 4 p.m .
The Mason Twins and Green
Braves kick otT Sunday's slate of
games at I p.m . The Middleport
R eds meet Rio Grande at 2:30
p.m.
The defending champion
Pomeroy Indians battl e Bidwell
#I Sunday at 4 p.m.
Q11arter6nal play is scheduled
for next Thursday and Friday
with the semifinals set for July
22
The .annual Home Run
Derby sets the stage for the final
day of competition on July 23.
The long ball bash begins at 3
p.m., followed by the consolation game at 5 p.m.
The championship game is
slated to starr at 6:30p.m.
Tournament chairman Mark
Werry of Pomeroy, is excited
about renewing the annual tradition, whidi began in 1959 and
was sidelined for a brief time
due to construction at the
Kyger Creek Power Plant.
" I lhink this tournament is
probably the best tournament in
the area," Werry said. "I just do it
for the kids in the area. I've been
involved with it for about 15
years, since it returned. We had
So me construction over here
. and the tournament had to quit
for a w hile, be cause \Ve stored
steel w here the ball field is."
Following the hiatus, whi ch
lasted for I 0 year&lt; beginning in
1976, Werry became involved as
a member of the board of directors responsibl e for organization
of the annual event. He has also
served
as
publi c
adqress
announcer for the tou rna ment.
Werry said that throughout
the storied history of the Kyger
Creek little league Tournament, there has been one focus .
" The main thing is, It's for the
k 1'ds," wcrry sa1 d . H\V.'
we try t·o
give them as mu ch as we can

Please see KCLLT, Page B6

•

IT'S

HE

t

hom erun derby

•

•

TRADITION - In the~top photo, Kyger Creek Little League Tournament board members Mark Werry (left)
and Mark Mooney display the plaque with the names of the teams that have won the tournament over the
years since 1959. In the lower photo, Werry shows off the"shirt that entrants in the Home Run Derby will
receive this year. The Kyger Creek Tournament begins Friday with two games. (Andrew Carter photo)

Brown &amp; Karl turn down North Carolina offer
CHAPEL HILL, N :C. (AP) - North
Caroli na remains determined to pick one
of its own to be the basketball coac h .
Former Tar H eels Matt Doherty, JdT
Lebo and Randy Wid appear to be at the
rop of the list for the Tar Ht•els coaching
job to replan' Bill Guthridge. George Karl
and larry Brown, also former North Carolina players. tu rned down their alma
mater Monday.
Wi el, 49 , a reserve guard in 1976-79. is
th e only re mainin g candidate who
coached as an assistant under Dean Smith.
The Middle Te nn e~sec coach also roomed
wirh current assisrahr coach Phil Ford
while both played for Smith .
Wiel returned ea rl y from h is coach ing
clinic 11l Spain to mtcrvit·w Tuesday in

C hapel Hill .
" I'm not sure (UNC) will let him leave
after he gets there," MTSU athletic llirector Lee Fowl er said.
Wicl m ade the trip after a ·phone ca ll
lat e Sunday from North Carol ina athletics
director Dick Baddour.
"They wamed me to fly straight ·ro
Chapel Hill, S&lt;.i I don 't eve n have a Sl!it for
the ' tnterview," Wicl told The C harlotle
Observer on Monday night from Du lles
Airport in Washi ngton , where he awaitt:J
his con n cctmg tl1ght to Raleigh - Durh am
Airport .
In Wiel's five seasons at MTSU, five
schools have inquired ab o u t hun, Fowler
said.
" He\ loya l. !tkc coa ch Stn ith," Fowk r

said. "Not a day or two goes by without Doherty's wife. Kell y. said her hmband
Rand y talking to coa ch Smith. H e talk s was still in Indian&lt;1poh s ~couting pro"PL'cts
with (Roy) William s, (Eddie) Fogler and at the Nike basketball ca mp. Kelly DoherGuthridge every week, too .
ty is a native.:· of Co ncord. N.C.
"
"Those guys are the innr:r, inner circle
" /\11 I can really ~ay rs that he's 011 t he
of that f.1mily. and Randy is one of th em . road." she told the Fayetteville Obscrwr.
That\ why I think Rand y may have a "He's not sc heduled to be back until the
chance to gt•t tbt s job.''
20th. Tha t's all I ca n say righ t now."
Doherty, who playe d on the I 'JH2
B::t ddo ur was gr:m tt' J permission to
nationa1 champi o nship team and now i ~ contclct Ld.,o. co~H: h at 1t•nnes~ce Tl'ch .
coach at Notre Damt". m et SLmday in
But Lcbn ~a!d J\1onday h e hadn 't hcl' ll
C hapel Hill with Baddour. Smith and called by anyone from the sc hool.
Guthridge. pol1L'rry sai d mt.·etin!-,7"$ with
" I do n 't kn ow anyt hin g ngh t now; '
North Carolina athletic otlic ials went l ebo ~Cl itl. "T hey havc·n 't ca lled me . I
well . but h e hasn't been otlered the j ob. knu\v they called fi:1r pt•rmi"swn, bur I
uor was ht' given a timctabiL· on rh e · don 't know whar it lll t.'Jil!&lt;l."
'\t'arc h .

Co ntact l' d at

Sosa wins

holllL'

Please see UNC, Page 86

Monday night,

Fox wins Riverside
Open by two strokes

Home Run
Derby title
ATLANTA (AI') r - Sammy
Sosa finally has a home- run title.
Just not THAT home- run
title .
Sosa. edged by Mark M eGwire the la st two y~ars ror the
smgle-sea son ret.'Ord and m aj or
league lead, ended Ken Griffey
Jr.'s two-year reign as H o me
Run Derby champton , hitting
th e lo ngest, loud est and largest
, number of sh ots at Turner Field
on Monday night.
The Chicago Cubs star, at the
ce nter ofwh ac ht• dt'scribed "as a
hurricane h appe ning to me the
last m ont h." beat Grifl'ey 9-2 in
the tinals and hit 2o overall , 14
mo re- ch a-n any oth er pb.ycr;· ,..
H e got the fans standing and
sho utin g with a pair of SOH- fo ot
shots - on e to the 75S Club in
the left- field upper dec k and one

:

Mi\ SON. W. Vc1. - St eve Fox's
rounds ot' 7:2 and 7 1 propelled
h ln1 to a t\vo -•arokc wm ove r
Chad W,· srt:dl of Glenv ill ,·, ot t
Sunday ,tt the 2'ith Anmd
RtVL'rstdt.· Upcn (;o)f TolJnJamcnt .

SLAMMIN' SAMMY - Sammy Sosa of the Cubs won the 2000
Home Run Dr"'' Y at Turner Field in Atlanta, Ga ., Monday night . (AP)
thilt G llllt" to rest atop the sec ond
g re en l&gt;atter's backdrop 111
straightaway centt:r, below the
scoreboard.
" I ca me here t o put on;~ sh ow.
I didn't nen•s._o;arily co me here to
get th e win, but I guess I got the
lvin:' Sosa said.

So.,a. at rh e c.:cnrer of wh at he
said has b l..~t:"n "a hurrican t: happt:ning to me the last month .''
was angry the Cubs woufon 't
cxt l'IH.i hi -, co ntrKt, Sl'r to exp ire
afte r nt.·xt seaso n, and at;kcd them
to trad e hun .

Please see !&gt;erby, Pace 86

Nin e pbyLT" t~nr;;hc d ~\\'ithin
fiv t.' stwkL"s l)t t h L· k.Hkr i11 tht.'
ciLnnpioml np thgl n whKh ti:,Jturcd -J. -t pLtyL'I"'\. Til LTL' \\"L"!\' I ()
pLiycrs who tlni shL·d \\' ithin J()
st n_)kcs of Fox\ l'h.lnlp lon'\hlpwinnin g- round.
Jami e Whitt ltdd .1 rlm·cstroke lc:1d attn 1H holes, luv in~
played ,, hH. ~k lu t .t 7'J o n th e
sec ond day ro f~1ll · rn Sl'VL' mh
overall .
Aaron Btrkk of G allipo lis.
was in ~eco .nd ;tt rhc t·nd of day
o ne wirh a 7 1 and fini shed ti ed
for t!md mwall with Bill Don.lhot• of 1-!unricJnt', ;lt 146.

The pu rs1,: fo·r thL"

tot .t bl S7 . ~ 711 .
The fln,Jl ."l.mdin gs fo r the
tou nu 111 cnt:
C hamp io nsh ip
Flif'ltt : I. Sr,·ve fox 72-7 1- I 43:
2 . C:h .td Wt•stt;tl! 72 - 7.'\ ~ 14 5: .l .
Bill 1J on .1hoc 76 - 711 -1 4 6: 4.
Aaro n Bick le 71-75- 146: 5.
J o hn Duty Sr. 7.'\·-74- 147 : 6.
Jlr.tdJdTcr&lt; 7] -72- 147 : 7 .J:11111t'
Wlmt I&gt;H -7'! - 147 : H. Rvan Nnrri' (let.ll't J=.t!ls)74 - 74- 14H: 9.
J.1Son Shuln (!l.Jcim·)7'J- 6'J 14H:
Ill. [)ave
Re e d Jr.
(Ma"ltt )77 - 7.'1 - l :ill II. Ja son .
Coad 7H-7~ - 1 )II: 12. Phil Mayes
77-74- 151; 1.\ M1ke C hapm an
7'!-7.1- 152: 14. l&gt;al e Browning
7 6- 76- 152: IS .John Du ty Jr. 757H- I S.l: R citl C arroll 76-7715.'\: luk e' Kmn er 78-73- 153 ;
Ri ck M o mT 77-7 6-153: J o n
lt ,•ed 72- H1- 1S.l .
First ili ~ ht : Scott Wi c kline -

l'\'l' llt

Please see Golf, Pase B6

-

'

�2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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edton 200pm F dey

Fo sa e by owne
y o d anch
sye home on 5 a ces lu base
men 2 ca ga age d n ng oom
k tchen ram y oom W1 h ca hedra
ce ng 2 bed oom 2 ba h shade
a ea ask ng $ 65 ooo 740 696

0902

a

due to ho dsy•

TRANSPORTATION

oCUSTOMEA SERVICE Take
0 des W h Pho ne 0 P C Fu
0 Pa T me A. a abe
aaa
526 4660 0 v s www
oco m60 5

RENTALS

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Paymen Aequ ed W h
Gove nmen Sponso e d Loa n
Good C ed And S eady ncome
Aequ ed Ca Today Fo Mo e
n o ma on ndependence Mo
gage Se ces
26
Mad son
Lakewood OH 44 07 MB 679
800 845 0036

Stops He pes Ou b eaks
96' Success Rate
To I Fee 1 877 EVERCLA
nfo www eve c com

ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALE SIGN

once v s t necessary Up to $500
$4 5 OOOIYR po ent a 0 s need ns ant y Tot fee
(877) EARLYPAY L c#cc70036
peop e to process cia ms Must
CASH LOANS!
own compute modem We a n
o BadCedtOK
Cal 1 888 567 4886 exl695
• Easy Qua ly ng
o Fasl Se vee
o Low Paymen s
• Coni dental
1 BOD-332 241
Bankruptcy $7S+ Stq&gt; garnishments
D vorce $99+ Stq&gt; Foreclosu es
sales· II $350 Protected terrttones avwlable
at
phcme,ll$795+ 1 888-419-94 7

ed Ph o og a

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

SERVICES

810
FINANCIAL

nu1mb4~r

Home
Improvements

WE D LIKE TO SHOW YOU
HOW YOUR AD IN THIS
SPACF.~ULD BE SEEN BY
OVER l MlLLION PEOPLE

Hmerlcen
Communlly
marketplacolll

listed below

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

21 o

Business
Opportunity

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUA TY SS ?
No eeu essWe W

888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
A e Pa k M o b e Home Com
mun y P me oy Spaces a $ 0
pe mon h o ce space o en
$325 pe mon h $325 depos t
a e o en $275 pe mo n h
740 949 2093 o
$2 5 depos

6 4 876 66

MERCHANDISE

51 0

Real Estate General
Gerre a

e e

Home

e Pa

ng

Man

ny s d g

810

ca pen y doc s w ndows ba hs
mob e home epa
ee es mae
6323

a

and me e Fo
Che

740 992

Household
Goods

840
F NANG A.~ CO NSU ANT OP
PORTU N Ty Bu d A F nanc a
Cons an Agen y W
One 0
he Fa s ea G ow ng F nenc a
Se ces Comp an es n No h
Ame a W H S UART &amp; ASSO
CATES TOM POWERS
877
3 8 8278

A pp ances
Re co nd toned
Washe s 0 ye s Ranges Ae
g a o s 90 Day G ua an ee We
Se New May ag App ances
F en c h C y May ag 740 446

7795

Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

Brtck Ran ch H ome
3 Bedroom• I I 2
Baths Knchen
Dmmg Room U t hty
Roont L vmg Roo 1
Uul ty Room Walk In
Pantry 112 Acre MI L
2 Car Attacl cd
Garage H ea t P 1 11Jl
45262 Baum Addtt on
Rd Po ncroy Oh o
I 740 985 3894

I

I lftniDI')

Of

Freda Mae
Vanln 1&lt; agen
On Hrr B rtlodaf

I If II 1926
She L 1 es Wrtlo
In
Men O') And W II
Fortvermorl'
Sadl) 111 urd By Tl e

u,

I

1 I
age
S" rs 11
and 0
Bro I rr R

Fam I) a d
ld.-d Jarob&lt;

a N'elscm

Ita d BeTel

�2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

510

Household
Goods

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

560

Pets lor Sale

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.
A subscription can bdng you local mer~hants' ads,
information 0'11 sales, and mGney-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Telemarke!'oo

Personals

.College S udents
oHIQh Schoo G ads
H~gh Schoo Sen o s
Anyone oak ng o ea n $$
Earn up to 515/hou
Ex e en &amp;Kpe tence lo
you esume

AU Per&amp;one

Adt Musl
Be Plid n Adv.nc:e
TRIBUNE DEAQLIN£' 2 oo p
the day before the lid

m

a to run Sunday &amp; Monday

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVA LABLE

edtlon 200pm F day
SENTINEL QEAQL!NE
1 00 p m the &amp;.y before he ed

I

odltio&lt;l 1 00 p m F~day
REG STEA QEAQLINE
2 daya before the ad

la1Drunby•3opm
Monday ed t on
t 30 p m Thursday
DHdllne• •ub}«t ro ~n~
due ro holltlayt

a

CLASSB OTR
Team S a gh T uc1c
a e Mode
Fegh nesW hSeepes Must
Have A B ake Endo semen s
BOO M es Rad us Home De e

30 Announcements

es

'90T A CAMPGROUND Mem

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

b. sh p 0 T me5ha e? WE
TAKE T Arne cas Mos Su
ceu u Campg ound And T me
stfafe Resa e Clea ng hause Ca
R~SORT SALES NTERNAT ON
AL
800 423 ]5 967 24 Hou s
wwW esortsa es om

11 0

Help Wanted

he Federa Fa Hous ngAcl
1968 wh ch makes It ega

endly wo kp ace

Ada Must
Be Paid n Advance
BUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p m

B ng you ends and
ea eM aSS

o actvert se any p efe ence

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

mtatono dsc m ~na on

CALL TODAY!

based on race coo re g on
seK lam a status o nat ona

1-80(1.929-5753

Crv c Oe'ole opmen G oupl

o g n o any ntention o
make any such p efe enc:e
mtat on o d sc mma on

M lenn um Te eserv~es
URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors ea $35 o $45 fo 2 o 3
hou s weekly Ca Se a Tee 740

Th s newspape w oo
koowmg y accep
advert semen s to ea es ate
whch s nvroa on of he
aw Ou eadera a e he eby
nformed hat a dwe ngs
advert sed n h s newspape
are ava abte on an equa
opportun ty bass

592 665

c

Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.
..tYMr
Wltll AD1lly

needs
740 99:2

BULLETIN
R 0 GRANDE

5 Ac es W h Pond Me adows
Beau u Bu d ng 5 es $ 3 900
and Con a A a abe 0 SA
35 Cen e po n Road aoo 2 3

thtl dly before the ad

11 to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edhlon 2 00 p m Frlday

8365

SENT NEL DEADLINE

t:eo p m

the dly befo e the ad
ll to run Sundly &amp; Monday
!Killion 1 00 p m Friday

340

REGISTER DEADLINE
2 dlrya before the ad
ltorunby430pm
S.tunt.y a Monday edldon
• 30 p m Thursday

Business and
Buildings
ISLAND V EW MOTEL

Rt 7 Galpo 1 Oho

. .,.,_ct. ,.,. subfect to clwnge
dwtoho day•

150

New To You T fl Shopoe
9 Wes S m son Alt'tens

Fou Un s A.nd U

Schools
Instruction

C1,1a y co h ng and nouseho d
ems S 00 bag sa e e e y
T hu sdav Monday h u Sa u day

900530

Giveaway
FULL TIME POSIT ONS
AVAILABLE
Compe ve Sa ary And
E~~:ce p ona F nge
Bene It j)ackage

AU G veaway Ad s Must
Be Paid n Advance
TA BUNE DEAQl!NE 2 00 p m
the dey before the ad
1 to run Sunday

a Monday ed t on

Med ca T ansc p on s
Ae
qu emen s
Camp e he n s ve
Know edge 0 Med ca Te m no o
gy M c oso f Wo d And Ab ty
To "TYpe 35 40 l nes Pe Hou

2 00 p m Friday

SENT NEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the dly before the ad
It o run Sunday Monday
edition 1 00 p.m Fr day
REGISTER DEADLINE
2 days before the ad
storunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday ed t on
4 30 p m Thuraday

a

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 We s woo d
D e om $289 o $370 Wak o
shop &amp; moves Ca 740 446
2569 EQua Hous ng Oppo un ty

y Room P s

One F oo Home n Two Ap a
men s Ca n Be Con e ed Back
ToNceS nge Home

740 592 842

40

So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!

of

Weet&lt;ly Pay
Hea h nsua ceA a abe

w hThe Pub

A mos E e yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Dow
ow
Mon h y Pay me s
800 6
34 6 Ell 330

Al ea esta e advert s ng n
his neWJpape 18 subjeCt to

BOTH POST ONS
A. leas 25 Yea s 0 c;t
A leas 2 Yea s Expe ence
Good MVR

Wok We

NE\o'J BRAND NAME COMPUT

EAS

Fo Mo e nfo ma on Ca 800
431.S764 Hrs 8 30 AM 5PM

&amp;LJ. Announcemenl

'fR

Fun and

CLASS A OTR
S ng e D ve La e Mode Ken
wo hs w h Aeete s We s Coas
Carre

a to run Sunday &amp; '-'Pnday

Seturday

no

SUMMER JOBS

The Dally Sent.nel • Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

EARN A LEGAL CO LLEGE DE
GRE E OU CK Y Ba c he o s
Mas e s Ooc o a e By Co e
sponde ce Based Upon P o Ed
uca on And Sho S udy Cou se
Fo FREE nfo ma o n Book e
Phone CAMBA DGE STATE
UN VERS TV 800 964 83 6

Advertise your
message

G ade Bad e
F n s h M owe
Bed 740 256
7276

630

$8 00 co umn 1nch wee kdays
$10 00 column nch Sundays

I can t remember the last time you put
your arm around me at the movies

Livestock

La ge Lo Beau u R e V ew
fo Appo n men To See And Ad
d on a no rna on Con ac T e
Owne 740 869 3407

180 Wanted To Do
A1J. Wanted To Do Ada

Must

Be Paid n Advance
TA SUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p

m

he day before the ad
s to un Sunday &amp; Monday
edt on 200pm Frday
SENT NEl DEADLINE
00 p m the day before the ad
s to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edit on 1 00 p m Fr day
REG STER l!EAI!l.l/ili
2 days before the ad
so unby430pm
Saturday 4: Monday edit on
4 30 p m Thursday

De6d. nes subject to change
due to hol dsys

Desdl nes subject to chsnge
due lo flo ldays

60 Lost and Found

BUS NESS OWNERS!
You
n o ces n o Ca s h
Non Pe o m ng nvo ces A.ny
Noes Ca S e e
888 982

AU. Lost &amp; Found Ada Mull
Be Pa d In Advance
TA BUNE Q£&amp;DLINE 2 00 p m
tile day before the ad
1 to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edltton 2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEl QEAQLINE

2228
CREO T PROBLEMS CA L HE
CRED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BO NDED COR R ECT REMOVE
BAD C REDT BANKRUPTCY
AWSU TS
JUDGEM ENT S
80 DAYS
AAA RAT NG 90

---.-, 00 lf.l£1Hediy tie!Ooellio aif
11 to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edit on 1 00 p m Friday
REG STER QEAQLINE
2 days betore the ad
storunby430pm
Saturday Monday ed t on
4 30 p m Thursday
Oelld nes subject to chsnge

889 8

0008

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

ega y
FR EE DE BT CO N SO L OAT ON
App ca n W Se ce Reduce
Paymen s To 65
CAS H N
CENT VE OFFER Ca
800
326 65 0 Ex 29

CLA MS PROCESSOR $20 $40
H Po en a P ocess ng Cams
s Ea sy T a ng P o ded
MUS Own PC CAL NOW
888 565 5 97 EXT 642

70

FREE FREE MONE Y PROB
LEMS NOW ACC EPT NG AP
P CAT ON S $3 000 AND UP
NO APP CA.T ON FEE
877
543 8357 EXT 402

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
GALLIPOLIS QAILYTRIBUN£.
ALL Yard Sa es Must
Be Pa d n Advance
QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
he day before the ad
Is o run Sunde~ &amp; Monday
edton 200pm F dey

Fo sa e by owne
y o d anch
sye home on 5 a ces lu base
men 2 ca ga age d n ng oom
k tchen ram y oom W1 h ca hedra
ce ng 2 bed oom 2 ba h shade
a ea ask ng $ 65 ooo 740 696

0902

a

due to ho dsy•

TRANSPORTATION

oCUSTOMEA SERVICE Take
0 des W h Pho ne 0 P C Fu
0 Pa T me A. a abe
aaa
526 4660 0 v s www
oco m60 5

RENTALS

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Paymen Aequ ed W h
Gove nmen Sponso e d Loa n
Good C ed And S eady ncome
Aequ ed Ca Today Fo Mo e
n o ma on ndependence Mo
gage Se ces
26
Mad son
Lakewood OH 44 07 MB 679
800 845 0036

Stops He pes Ou b eaks
96' Success Rate
To I Fee 1 877 EVERCLA
nfo www eve c com

ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALE SIGN

once v s t necessary Up to $500
$4 5 OOOIYR po ent a 0 s need ns ant y Tot fee
(877) EARLYPAY L c#cc70036
peop e to process cia ms Must
CASH LOANS!
own compute modem We a n
o BadCedtOK
Cal 1 888 567 4886 exl695
• Easy Qua ly ng
o Fasl Se vee
o Low Paymen s
• Coni dental
1 BOD-332 241
Bankruptcy $7S+ Stq&gt; garnishments
D vorce $99+ Stq&gt; Foreclosu es
sales· II $350 Protected terrttones avwlable
at
phcme,ll$795+ 1 888-419-94 7

ed Ph o og a

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

SERVICES

810
FINANCIAL

nu1mb4~r

Home
Improvements

WE D LIKE TO SHOW YOU
HOW YOUR AD IN THIS
SPACF.~ULD BE SEEN BY
OVER l MlLLION PEOPLE

Hmerlcen
Communlly
marketplacolll

listed below

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

21 o

Business
Opportunity

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUA TY SS ?
No eeu essWe W

888 582 3345

REAL ESTATE
A e Pa k M o b e Home Com
mun y P me oy Spaces a $ 0
pe mon h o ce space o en
$325 pe mon h $325 depos t
a e o en $275 pe mo n h
740 949 2093 o
$2 5 depos

6 4 876 66

MERCHANDISE

51 0

Real Estate General
Gerre a

e e

Home

e Pa

ng

Man

ny s d g

810

ca pen y doc s w ndows ba hs
mob e home epa
ee es mae
6323

a

and me e Fo
Che

740 992

Household
Goods

840
F NANG A.~ CO NSU ANT OP
PORTU N Ty Bu d A F nanc a
Cons an Agen y W
One 0
he Fa s ea G ow ng F nenc a
Se ces Comp an es n No h
Ame a W H S UART &amp; ASSO
CATES TOM POWERS
877
3 8 8278

A pp ances
Re co nd toned
Washe s 0 ye s Ranges Ae
g a o s 90 Day G ua an ee We
Se New May ag App ances
F en c h C y May ag 740 446

7795

Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

Brtck Ran ch H ome
3 Bedroom• I I 2
Baths Knchen
Dmmg Room U t hty
Roont L vmg Roo 1
Uul ty Room Walk In
Pantry 112 Acre MI L
2 Car Attacl cd
Garage H ea t P 1 11Jl
45262 Baum Addtt on
Rd Po ncroy Oh o
I 740 985 3894

I

I lftniDI')

Of

Freda Mae
Vanln 1&lt; agen
On Hrr B rtlodaf

I If II 1926
She L 1 es Wrtlo
In
Men O') And W II
Fortvermorl'
Sadl) 111 urd By Tl e

u,

I

1 I
age
S" rs 11
and 0
Bro I rr R

Fam I) a d
ld.-d Jarob&lt;

a N'elscm

Ita d BeTel

�.

·

•
Tuesday, July 11 ,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tyesday, July 11, 2000

.
- -.A),LEYOOP
. .

.

0

-

- -

•
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Ohio
;

The Dally Stintlnel • Page B 5

BRIDGE

SMITH·s COn5mOCTIOn
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

Nud It done, give

Factory Authorized
~IHP1111s

FREE ESTIMATES
Great PrJeu on New Homet

992•2753
GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING
SERVICE
1304) 882·2079
New Haven WV

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulh
Cootvlllo, OH 45723

O/l7/ll0 1 mo

WE hav. thE ~ BEnEfits. l!g1 Pau
and thE BH1; family oriEntal work
EnvironmEnt In today's automotivE
lnclustrul
Call or stop In and SH...MikE S&amp;rg&amp;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and bEgin a -.
rEWarding cal'lilr as an
AutomotivE Sakis Prof&amp;slonal
TODAYI

6!29/mo.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.

.AllLEl
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Most Makes and
-Models
Pickup and
Delivery
(740) 949·2804

.. w

.

...

Sunset Home
Construetion

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates
740· 742·3411
Bryan Reeves
www.sunsethome.co

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
,.
..
GUTTERS

- - -1- - - - For-Information regardlrJg- -

.'?ul~ w .fi'o/1'4-

1·800-311·3391
Fre e Estimates

Ill E. lad
Pomeroy, Oblo

Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

6J151mopd

1r.!I/OO 1

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(7401991·9083
(Mobilej740·339·0163

t

After 6 pm· 614·985·4180

WHY DIDN'T
YOU STOP
HER?

IT WAS GOODER
TH'

..

992·1550
The Appliance ·
Man

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r

Plumbing • Electrical·
Painting
Ray Milord
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
Albtlty, OH 45710

Phone 740·69.8-9400
Guaranteed Work
References Available

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinda are
mad e to order al our
location
• Verticals • Wood

144 Tlrlrd Ave. Gallipolis

6/15 I me pd.

446·4995

-

BIG NATE
WELL , JUNIOR
!! !
'-'OOPO&lt;UCKS,
GOS H .
_LEi'S . H~ cT_ ,_ 1,.90!&lt; AT..
·T HE TR AIL
A•L THES E
FOR OU~
FIR ST

Bankruptcy contact:

MOSQL.JlTOE S ~

· tJI'\TU1'.E

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens
6/:21/00 1

B~~~~

H\KE~

JINES'

TREE SERVICE
T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose "'pairs,
cylinder repairs, ail
Sales· 5 gal. buckets
to 55 gal drums
2 Y, miles out of

Chester on SR 248

740·985;~1~1•••

TIM DEEM
CONSTRUCTION
·Roofing, Siding,
Windows, Decks,
Porches, Room Add,
Garages, Pole
Building, Kitchen's,
Baths
WV Lie WV02B2120
rr~~ 61imat~~
716 1 mopd

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
2 7", 18' long,
$35/ton ,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest o n
right

740/985-4465
7/61 mopd

P/B (ONlRAClOR~, IN(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• Top

. ~e

• 'trim ll
• &amp;\\111' "

11'0 val

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Advertfs"-e,.....
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CaNSTRUCTION

-

Decks. Boat Docks,
Co ncrete &amp; Block Work,

Pomeroy
7/5 3 mo

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect you r guns, family heirlooms. co1n and card
collections. legal papers. inveslment records. photo
albums. cameras. household inventory and
senlimental items will ba safe
For more information call

BlUM LUMBER
IT. RT. 248
CHESTER

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addttions
• A-ooling
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise In
this.space for
$25 per
month.

or as· ow as
•
er 1nc

B&amp;.T TRUCKING
Racine, Ohio_
FLAT-DUMP-LOG

SERVICE
Great Rates- Great
Servloo
"You call we haul"
740-949·261 0
7 40-591·6304

'Your

or one mon·

(740) 985-3948

Advertise in
this space for $25 per
month.

East

I •

Pass

4•

All pass

•

54 Set down In
writing
55 Large arteries
56 Landlord
57 S,ahara, for one

DOWN

1 "Woe Ia mel"
2 Area
3 Llke - - ol
28 S1rong man of
bricks
myth
Roman
5 Long lime
32 "Goodbye,
6 Rower port
Pedro"
7 Like 1 gymnast
33 Arrow poloon
8 · - - Clear
34 Makeo a .
Day"
canoola play
9 Request
35 Clooet wood
10 Conked out
36 Bottery part
1 I Singer Adams
37 Make a shrill
12 Cozy rooms
sound

4 52

:22~~;.r:;J

19 Malt

beverage
21 In

o.::.

23

disagreement
(2
wds.)

.'Birthday
Wednesday, July 12. 2000
You cou ld find yourse lf in Ihe
happy positi on to effect change in
the year ahead in stead of being
subjected to it. Make sure what
you dt'vt se benefi ts oth ers as we ll
as yourself.
CANCE R (June 2 1-July 22)
.Provided yo u pu rsue your task in
a tenacious. method teal manner. a
difficult obJecti ve can be achieved
more eas il y than yo u ex pec t
today. Practicality and persistence
a r~ the keys to success·. Cancer, ·
treat yourself to a birthday gi ft .
Se nd for you r Astra-Graph predicttohs for the year ahead by
mai ling $2 ·aml SASE to AstraGraph , c/o thi s newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station.
N~w Yo rk . NY I0 156. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sign.
LEO (Jul y 2.1-Aug. 22) You
have the happy facult y today for
bein g ab le to mobi li ze constructive efforts for th ose with whom
yo u' ll be in vo lved soc ial ly.
Tl1ings will start to move when
you arrive .
VIRGO (Allg. 1.1-Sept . 22l
Don't leave anythi ng of importance up to the wltims of chance
today. Exercise fll ll conl ro l over

yo ur ow n destiny by stayi ng
(o\: Used and .se lf-direc ted.
LIBR A !Sept. 23-0ct. 2.1)
Trans late your gregari ous inc linat ions inlo something produ cli ve
and wort hwhi le today instead of
me rely soc ial izing aiml essly. '
Make geH ogethers se rve a purpose .
SCO RPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22)
You could have a special talent
today for gelling the most mileage
from the do llars you have to
spend oh personal, domestic or
house hold items. It 's a good day
to go shopping.
SAG ITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The demeanor you present to
the world today will be one of lit ·
ti e doubt as 10 where you sta nd
and how you plan to acco mplish
things . People wi ll want to foll ow
your lead.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Take pos iti ve measures tod ay
to devise plan&gt; to reorga ni ze or
ren ov at~ that which has dis·
pleased you for quite so me time.
What you conceive now will
work like a charm .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Ri se to the defense of a loyal

friend if in the presence of someone today who is allemptin g to
besmirch his or her reputati on.
Don 't stand idl y by sayi ng or
doing noth ing.
PISCES (Feo. 20- March 20) If
there is a position about whi ch
you feel strongly. convey it today
to th ose who are in posit ions to
help furt her your cause. Chances
:ire yott"ll get th eir support .
AR IES (March 21 -Ap ril 19)
What worked for you before
should worK fur you once ag ain .
Tr~lll l' upon your past experi L· nces

if a probh:m s1 111i lar l o one yo u · \'1.~
slfccessfull y dea lt with pops up
today.
TAURUS iApnl 20-Ma y- 201
Being ca lled upo n today to pcr..;ona !ly sa l \'age a situat ion ot hers

ha\'e fnund too · tnugh is su me thmg yo u wou ld greatl y enjoy
doi ng. You kn01y yo u possess th e
resourcefulness lo prov ide a sol u-·
t ion.
GEMINI ..(May 21-June ~0)
Be careful what you ask for today,
because you might just ge t it,
especiall y when requesting a candid opini on from another. Yet._in
retrospect, it"ll be exactl y whal
he Ips you the most.

25 ~~~~~!:!:

24

Vasco da 26 Home of Eve
27 Farm building
29 Actress
Cheiyl30 Inland Asian

•••

31 Beget
37 Pair
_
38 Employment

Opening lead: • 9

notice

(2 wds.)

Avoiding losers

!TUESDAY

Blown Insulation

"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

North

Sentinel

additions, Pole Building.

lrla!' Martllln/ladno, Ohio

.Ca11740-985-3831

_)_.,)......._]/-~----

Garage Doors &amp; Opener.

992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

Wesl

To get a current weather
report, check the

Fully Insured

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

A TEAM Tl-lAT DOESN 'T
HAVE YOU ON IT!

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

·FREE ESTIMATES

25-3-3 $3.25/20 lbs
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

SECOND TIME
AROUND II

Replaceme nt Windows,
Seamless Gullers &amp;
Downspo ut , Garage room

"jth!lad in .$11r11icll"

SECURITY ·

WHAT WOULD '(OUR
FANTAS'I' TEAM BE.
Cf.lARLIE BROWN?

.

L__________JF~·~·~·~~~

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

PEANUTS

G1111d'""

48 Wild •'-!&gt;
51 Hlo and hero

40 Church
olllclai
41 Lament

42 First-rate
(2 wds.)

•'

·UP TO 70 % OFF

Ken Young

(2 wdo.)
17 b .C. hotshot
18 Shout of
•muaement
20- Moineo 21 Eternal
25 Token move

A.nawer to Prevtoua Puzzle

,.

Soutb

BY PHII.I.ll' ALDER
It occurred to me man y years
t
ago that my intentiona,lly walking ·
under ladders was in its own way
•••
a superstition. Now I find that
Francis Bacon pointed out somethin g similar 400 years ago when
he wrote, " There is a superstiti on
in.avoiding superstition ."
Yesterday, we saw how declarer could have made his three-notrump contract with an avo idance
play. Here is another example in
a different gui se . How would you
try to bring home four spades? In
an swe r to his partner's opening
bid, West leads the heart nine :
three, king, fi ve. East cashes the
heart ace : jack, fo ur. six. East conS' 7-11
tinues with the heart two .
Nohh bid what he hoped his
partner co uld make. If he had
wanted to invite game, he would
have cue-bid 1wo heart s. Thi s
doe sn'l show a game-force with a
first -rou nd heart controL That
han d (virtuall y) never comes up.
Instead. it ann ounce.s at least
ga me·i nvitational va lues wi th
support for partner' s suit.
It looks as though the cont ract
depends on the diam ond fin esse.
Bui given East' s openin g bid. that
is a long shot. Instead. after ruffing the third hea rt high. draw
AND !
it-\OUISHT
'T I L
t_rumps e ~ gin g in 1he dumm y.
,... NATURE
wt::
th en call fo r the club three .
HIKE
WOULO
If East rises with the ace, dum~E
my's diamond two will di sappear
on your club qtleen. So Eas t ·
dm:ks. Yet now you cross to dum·
my with a trum p and cash th e
heart queen. discarding a low club
· from hand . Finall v. exi t wi th
dummy's club kin g. East winswith the ace, but is trapped . A diamond switch is away from the
king; a rounded-suit return perI 51-lOULD NEVER ASK
mits you to ruff in hand and di sSTIONS LIKE
card dummy 's di amond two.
Either leaves only three losers:
two hearts and one club.

&amp; flssocle~ta

• Mlnlo • Etc

1 Gorden flower
7 Having lola or
dough
13 C011medc Rem
1• Not •lfresc:o ·
15 eon-role
with oil
16 Deceive

31 Actor Jomeo -

41 Uoedtobe
4ol Actor Chlney
45 Mortltrl&gt;oard

''

BLIND SPOT
SINCE 1964

ACROSS·

!

A CRAFTY,

219 E. 2nd

•AJ9

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer. East

MiiGrdA
'

K tO 8 2

t K 8 7 4

• Q J 6
.. Q 7 6

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

LINDA'S
PAINTING

• s
e A

8 4
9 4

•AQJ92
• J 5

BuUdo..,r &amp; Backhoe
Service•
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

1740) 992·3138

East

•
•

South

&amp;dtg

6/21/00 1 mo pd

West

• 10 9 s 3
•t 08S42

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
,,.,.,...a. n

740-992-5232

leave Message

A 2

• K 3

Seplic Sy•le"" &amp;
Ulililie•

"Toke the pnin oUI
_of paintingl"et me do it for you"
lnlerior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. -

07-11-00

• Kl0763
• Q 7 6 3

(740) 992·3470

33795 Hilarul Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohi.o

"We're Back"
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Applian«;es
Parts- All Makes

North

mo 4 .11 0

•{You 'vt tried the rest ...
now try the btst"

Insured

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sond • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

mo. Dd.

Sta mling timber la1·ge
or small tracks. Top
price,s paid also .
Dozer work.
free Estimates
Ca ll T&amp;R Logging
aft.,,- 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Handy)

Interior - Ex terior
R'csidential - Commerical

7/22{fFN

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges- R efrigemlor~
Freezers- Dish Washers

can ,..'-..,• • ~btorol flnan cl•l obligations and arrenga 1 fllr dlatr lbulton ol
••nts among creditors. A peraon ;olngthrough bankruptcy may ~lin
c.n.ln property, known IS " exempt" property, for his or her personal u~e .
Tflll mey Include 1 Clr, 1 house, ciOihll, and househOld gOOde. You ehould
direct eny queetlone r~genUng bankruptcy to an 1ttorney before procHdlng .

1'

HfiOU"G Clnd
EXCAVfiTI"Ci

29670 Bash&amp;'n
Road
'
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· BPM

Now Renting

9 o-lt·Rile ~
Painting

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992-1671

J@:,WICK•s •

SELF STORACE

WANTED

ell

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

989-3881

BANKRUPTCY

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-.Q916 ,,• • ,

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

HILL'S

Advertise in
this space .f or
s100 per
month.

Rutland , Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headline r s.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers . .carpets. e t c.
Mon - Frl 8:30 - s:oo ·
Over 40 yrs experience

Parts and Service

The Appliance
Man

992-5479

7__,-GJIJ

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Th• Ohl9 Vall-u's automotivE lllldv Is
continually look1ng for aggrtssMI and
motlvatal !MOP!• to fill Yla positions.

Phone (740) 593·66 71
"

Dralers.

SALES

Stop In And See
1
Steve Riffle
,. Sales Repr ese ntative
+
Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

992•11 01

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
•
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
'
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 11•"1"
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. II 00-50 11n..,n

An Makes Tractor 8c
Equipment P1111s

oall

ut 1

DBPDYIAG
PUft

'

43 Lather
45 Quote as an
authority
46

Resin ~

producing

tree
47 Anentlon-

genlng sound
49 Be rude to
(ol.)

5Q from- - Z.

52 Do farm work
53 Umo' kin

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by' Luis Campos
Celebrity Ci pher crypiograms are created from quotations by lamous people, pas\ and
present. Each lener In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: T equals Y

' BYF

MRZDAI

RZDAB
AS

BVF

SRIBT
GDAWBIT

RSRBYT.'

-

SDMOBOGORWI

OE

KOOWK

EBOIIOWK

(ZIOBOEY
JOMMORX

JYOBFMRJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm not saying my goll game wen! bad, but
tomatoes they'd come up s liced . ~- Lee Trevino

11 I grew

'::~:t:~y S@ R&lt;il ~- ~ "E tfS * &amp;AMI
14itd ~r CU.Y
POLLAN - - - - - 0 R•grrascrambled
nge lert•r•- gf tke
words be-

..

WORD

four

low to form four simple wards

L E VV0 E
E NR I

I' I I
K A B E L /:::~:
A famou s mountain cli mber
h:--..--....,.--,-.,....-1.
lhinks
that to set a new altitude
6
7
. .I 1
_ .I .I
record it is us ua lly easier if you
L--L-L.-L--l_._i,.. wan t to - - - - - - -- - olhers

I

I

VAS!LH

1---...,8~,,....;..,,,.:....:;,.,..9:.;.....,,-.f G)
L.-L.-L.--l.L-...1.-.l.--l.

8 lfTTfRS

PR INT NUMBERED

11

Comoiele the

.

chu~kle

quoted

by filli ng in the m1ssmg words
you de~elop from step No. 3 below

SCRAM·LfTS ANSWERS
Shrewd · _C hurn- Enact - Morose - OUT m SNOW
Country boy to ctty fr•end "''ll never ge t used to b1g

city living People he re lock up toilet paper and leave
expensive cars OUT tn SNOW ..
·

JULY 1J

I

�.

·

•
Tuesday, July 11 ,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tyesday, July 11, 2000

.
- -.A),LEYOOP
. .

.

0

-

- -

•
Pomeroy,
Middleport,
Ohio
;

The Dally Stintlnel • Page B 5

BRIDGE

SMITH·s COn5mOCTIOn
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

Nud It done, give

Factory Authorized
~IHP1111s

FREE ESTIMATES
Great PrJeu on New Homet

992•2753
GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING
SERVICE
1304) 882·2079
New Haven WV

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulh
Cootvlllo, OH 45723

O/l7/ll0 1 mo

WE hav. thE ~ BEnEfits. l!g1 Pau
and thE BH1; family oriEntal work
EnvironmEnt In today's automotivE
lnclustrul
Call or stop In and SH...MikE S&amp;rg&amp;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and bEgin a -.
rEWarding cal'lilr as an
AutomotivE Sakis Prof&amp;slonal
TODAYI

6!29/mo.

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.

.AllLEl
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

Most Makes and
-Models
Pickup and
Delivery
(740) 949·2804

.. w

.

...

Sunset Home
Construetion

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates
740· 742·3411
Bryan Reeves
www.sunsethome.co

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
,.
..
GUTTERS

- - -1- - - - For-Information regardlrJg- -

.'?ul~ w .fi'o/1'4-

1·800-311·3391
Fre e Estimates

Ill E. lad
Pomeroy, Oblo

Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

6J151mopd

1r.!I/OO 1

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(7401991·9083
(Mobilej740·339·0163

t

After 6 pm· 614·985·4180

WHY DIDN'T
YOU STOP
HER?

IT WAS GOODER
TH'

..

992·1550
The Appliance ·
Man

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r

Plumbing • Electrical·
Painting
Ray Milord
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
Albtlty, OH 45710

Phone 740·69.8-9400
Guaranteed Work
References Available

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinda are
mad e to order al our
location
• Verticals • Wood

144 Tlrlrd Ave. Gallipolis

6/15 I me pd.

446·4995

-

BIG NATE
WELL , JUNIOR
!! !
'-'OOPO&lt;UCKS,
GOS H .
_LEi'S . H~ cT_ ,_ 1,.90!&lt; AT..
·T HE TR AIL
A•L THES E
FOR OU~
FIR ST

Bankruptcy contact:

MOSQL.JlTOE S ~

· tJI'\TU1'.E

William Safranek, Attorney
(740) 592-5025 Athens
6/:21/00 1

B~~~~

H\KE~

JINES'

TREE SERVICE
T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose "'pairs,
cylinder repairs, ail
Sales· 5 gal. buckets
to 55 gal drums
2 Y, miles out of

Chester on SR 248

740·985;~1~1•••

TIM DEEM
CONSTRUCTION
·Roofing, Siding,
Windows, Decks,
Porches, Room Add,
Garages, Pole
Building, Kitchen's,
Baths
WV Lie WV02B2120
rr~~ 61imat~~
716 1 mopd

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
2 7", 18' long,
$35/ton ,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest o n
right

740/985-4465
7/61 mopd

P/B (ONlRAClOR~, IN(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• Top

. ~e

• 'trim ll
• &amp;\\111' "

11'0 val

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Advertfs"-e,.....
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CaNSTRUCTION

-

Decks. Boat Docks,
Co ncrete &amp; Block Work,

Pomeroy
7/5 3 mo

PRODUCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect you r guns, family heirlooms. co1n and card
collections. legal papers. inveslment records. photo
albums. cameras. household inventory and
senlimental items will ba safe
For more information call

BlUM LUMBER
IT. RT. 248
CHESTER

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addttions
• A-ooling
COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise In
this.space for
$25 per
month.

or as· ow as
•
er 1nc

B&amp;.T TRUCKING
Racine, Ohio_
FLAT-DUMP-LOG

SERVICE
Great Rates- Great
Servloo
"You call we haul"
740-949·261 0
7 40-591·6304

'Your

or one mon·

(740) 985-3948

Advertise in
this space for $25 per
month.

East

I •

Pass

4•

All pass

•

54 Set down In
writing
55 Large arteries
56 Landlord
57 S,ahara, for one

DOWN

1 "Woe Ia mel"
2 Area
3 Llke - - ol
28 S1rong man of
bricks
myth
Roman
5 Long lime
32 "Goodbye,
6 Rower port
Pedro"
7 Like 1 gymnast
33 Arrow poloon
8 · - - Clear
34 Makeo a .
Day"
canoola play
9 Request
35 Clooet wood
10 Conked out
36 Bottery part
1 I Singer Adams
37 Make a shrill
12 Cozy rooms
sound

4 52

:22~~;.r:;J

19 Malt

beverage
21 In

o.::.

23

disagreement
(2
wds.)

.'Birthday
Wednesday, July 12. 2000
You cou ld find yourse lf in Ihe
happy positi on to effect change in
the year ahead in stead of being
subjected to it. Make sure what
you dt'vt se benefi ts oth ers as we ll
as yourself.
CANCE R (June 2 1-July 22)
.Provided yo u pu rsue your task in
a tenacious. method teal manner. a
difficult obJecti ve can be achieved
more eas il y than yo u ex pec t
today. Practicality and persistence
a r~ the keys to success·. Cancer, ·
treat yourself to a birthday gi ft .
Se nd for you r Astra-Graph predicttohs for the year ahead by
mai ling $2 ·aml SASE to AstraGraph , c/o thi s newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station.
N~w Yo rk . NY I0 156. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sign.
LEO (Jul y 2.1-Aug. 22) You
have the happy facult y today for
bein g ab le to mobi li ze constructive efforts for th ose with whom
yo u' ll be in vo lved soc ial ly.
Tl1ings will start to move when
you arrive .
VIRGO (Allg. 1.1-Sept . 22l
Don't leave anythi ng of importance up to the wltims of chance
today. Exercise fll ll conl ro l over

yo ur ow n destiny by stayi ng
(o\: Used and .se lf-direc ted.
LIBR A !Sept. 23-0ct. 2.1)
Trans late your gregari ous inc linat ions inlo something produ cli ve
and wort hwhi le today instead of
me rely soc ial izing aiml essly. '
Make geH ogethers se rve a purpose .
SCO RPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22)
You could have a special talent
today for gelling the most mileage
from the do llars you have to
spend oh personal, domestic or
house hold items. It 's a good day
to go shopping.
SAG ITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The demeanor you present to
the world today will be one of lit ·
ti e doubt as 10 where you sta nd
and how you plan to acco mplish
things . People wi ll want to foll ow
your lead.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Take pos iti ve measures tod ay
to devise plan&gt; to reorga ni ze or
ren ov at~ that which has dis·
pleased you for quite so me time.
What you conceive now will
work like a charm .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Ri se to the defense of a loyal

friend if in the presence of someone today who is allemptin g to
besmirch his or her reputati on.
Don 't stand idl y by sayi ng or
doing noth ing.
PISCES (Feo. 20- March 20) If
there is a position about whi ch
you feel strongly. convey it today
to th ose who are in posit ions to
help furt her your cause. Chances
:ire yott"ll get th eir support .
AR IES (March 21 -Ap ril 19)
What worked for you before
should worK fur you once ag ain .
Tr~lll l' upon your past experi L· nces

if a probh:m s1 111i lar l o one yo u · \'1.~
slfccessfull y dea lt with pops up
today.
TAURUS iApnl 20-Ma y- 201
Being ca lled upo n today to pcr..;ona !ly sa l \'age a situat ion ot hers

ha\'e fnund too · tnugh is su me thmg yo u wou ld greatl y enjoy
doi ng. You kn01y yo u possess th e
resourcefulness lo prov ide a sol u-·
t ion.
GEMINI ..(May 21-June ~0)
Be careful what you ask for today,
because you might just ge t it,
especiall y when requesting a candid opini on from another. Yet._in
retrospect, it"ll be exactl y whal
he Ips you the most.

25 ~~~~~!:!:

24

Vasco da 26 Home of Eve
27 Farm building
29 Actress
Cheiyl30 Inland Asian

•••

31 Beget
37 Pair
_
38 Employment

Opening lead: • 9

notice

(2 wds.)

Avoiding losers

!TUESDAY

Blown Insulation

"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

North

Sentinel

additions, Pole Building.

lrla!' Martllln/ladno, Ohio

.Ca11740-985-3831

_)_.,)......._]/-~----

Garage Doors &amp; Opener.

992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

Wesl

To get a current weather
report, check the

Fully Insured

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

A TEAM Tl-lAT DOESN 'T
HAVE YOU ON IT!

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

·FREE ESTIMATES

25-3-3 $3.25/20 lbs
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

SECOND TIME
AROUND II

Replaceme nt Windows,
Seamless Gullers &amp;
Downspo ut , Garage room

"jth!lad in .$11r11icll"

SECURITY ·

WHAT WOULD '(OUR
FANTAS'I' TEAM BE.
Cf.lARLIE BROWN?

.

L__________JF~·~·~·~~~

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

PEANUTS

G1111d'""

48 Wild •'-!&gt;
51 Hlo and hero

40 Church
olllclai
41 Lament

42 First-rate
(2 wds.)

•'

·UP TO 70 % OFF

Ken Young

(2 wdo.)
17 b .C. hotshot
18 Shout of
•muaement
20- Moineo 21 Eternal
25 Token move

A.nawer to Prevtoua Puzzle

,.

Soutb

BY PHII.I.ll' ALDER
It occurred to me man y years
t
ago that my intentiona,lly walking ·
under ladders was in its own way
•••
a superstition. Now I find that
Francis Bacon pointed out somethin g similar 400 years ago when
he wrote, " There is a superstiti on
in.avoiding superstition ."
Yesterday, we saw how declarer could have made his three-notrump contract with an avo idance
play. Here is another example in
a different gui se . How would you
try to bring home four spades? In
an swe r to his partner's opening
bid, West leads the heart nine :
three, king, fi ve. East cashes the
heart ace : jack, fo ur. six. East conS' 7-11
tinues with the heart two .
Nohh bid what he hoped his
partner co uld make. If he had
wanted to invite game, he would
have cue-bid 1wo heart s. Thi s
doe sn'l show a game-force with a
first -rou nd heart controL That
han d (virtuall y) never comes up.
Instead. it ann ounce.s at least
ga me·i nvitational va lues wi th
support for partner' s suit.
It looks as though the cont ract
depends on the diam ond fin esse.
Bui given East' s openin g bid. that
is a long shot. Instead. after ruffing the third hea rt high. draw
AND !
it-\OUISHT
'T I L
t_rumps e ~ gin g in 1he dumm y.
,... NATURE
wt::
th en call fo r the club three .
HIKE
WOULO
If East rises with the ace, dum~E
my's diamond two will di sappear
on your club qtleen. So Eas t ·
dm:ks. Yet now you cross to dum·
my with a trum p and cash th e
heart queen. discarding a low club
· from hand . Finall v. exi t wi th
dummy's club kin g. East winswith the ace, but is trapped . A diamond switch is away from the
king; a rounded-suit return perI 51-lOULD NEVER ASK
mits you to ruff in hand and di sSTIONS LIKE
card dummy 's di amond two.
Either leaves only three losers:
two hearts and one club.

&amp; flssocle~ta

• Mlnlo • Etc

1 Gorden flower
7 Having lola or
dough
13 C011medc Rem
1• Not •lfresc:o ·
15 eon-role
with oil
16 Deceive

31 Actor Jomeo -

41 Uoedtobe
4ol Actor Chlney
45 Mortltrl&gt;oard

''

BLIND SPOT
SINCE 1964

ACROSS·

!

A CRAFTY,

219 E. 2nd

•AJ9

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer. East

MiiGrdA
'

K tO 8 2

t K 8 7 4

• Q J 6
.. Q 7 6

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

LINDA'S
PAINTING

• s
e A

8 4
9 4

•AQJ92
• J 5

BuUdo..,r &amp; Backhoe
Service•
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

1740) 992·3138

East

•
•

South

&amp;dtg

6/21/00 1 mo pd

West

• 10 9 s 3
•t 08S42

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
,,.,.,...a. n

740-992-5232

leave Message

A 2

• K 3

Seplic Sy•le"" &amp;
Ulililie•

"Toke the pnin oUI
_of paintingl"et me do it for you"
lnlerior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. -

07-11-00

• Kl0763
• Q 7 6 3

(740) 992·3470

33795 Hilarul Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohi.o

"We're Back"
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Applian«;es
Parts- All Makes

North

mo 4 .11 0

•{You 'vt tried the rest ...
now try the btst"

Insured

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sond • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

mo. Dd.

Sta mling timber la1·ge
or small tracks. Top
price,s paid also .
Dozer work.
free Estimates
Ca ll T&amp;R Logging
aft.,,- 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Handy)

Interior - Ex terior
R'csidential - Commerical

7/22{fFN

We Service All Makes
Washers· Dryers
Ranges- R efrigemlor~
Freezers- Dish Washers

can ,..'-..,• • ~btorol flnan cl•l obligations and arrenga 1 fllr dlatr lbulton ol
••nts among creditors. A peraon ;olngthrough bankruptcy may ~lin
c.n.ln property, known IS " exempt" property, for his or her personal u~e .
Tflll mey Include 1 Clr, 1 house, ciOihll, and househOld gOOde. You ehould
direct eny queetlone r~genUng bankruptcy to an 1ttorney before procHdlng .

1'

HfiOU"G Clnd
EXCAVfiTI"Ci

29670 Bash&amp;'n
Road
'
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· BPM

Now Renting

9 o-lt·Rile ~
Painting

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992-1671

J@:,WICK•s •

SELF STORACE

WANTED

ell

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

989-3881

BANKRUPTCY

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-.Q916 ,,• • ,

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

HILL'S

Advertise in
this space .f or
s100 per
month.

Rutland , Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headline r s.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers . .carpets. e t c.
Mon - Frl 8:30 - s:oo ·
Over 40 yrs experience

Parts and Service

The Appliance
Man

992-5479

7__,-GJIJ

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

Th• Ohl9 Vall-u's automotivE lllldv Is
continually look1ng for aggrtssMI and
motlvatal !MOP!• to fill Yla positions.

Phone (740) 593·66 71
"

Dralers.

SALES

Stop In And See
1
Steve Riffle
,. Sales Repr ese ntative
+
Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

992•11 01

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
•
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
'
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 11•"1"
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. II 00-50 11n..,n

An Makes Tractor 8c
Equipment P1111s

oall

ut 1

DBPDYIAG
PUft

'

43 Lather
45 Quote as an
authority
46

Resin ~

producing

tree
47 Anentlon-

genlng sound
49 Be rude to
(ol.)

5Q from- - Z.

52 Do farm work
53 Umo' kin

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by' Luis Campos
Celebrity Ci pher crypiograms are created from quotations by lamous people, pas\ and
present. Each lener In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: T equals Y

' BYF

MRZDAI

RZDAB
AS

BVF

SRIBT
GDAWBIT

RSRBYT.'

-

SDMOBOGORWI

OE

KOOWK

EBOIIOWK

(ZIOBOEY
JOMMORX

JYOBFMRJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm not saying my goll game wen! bad, but
tomatoes they'd come up s liced . ~- Lee Trevino

11 I grew

'::~:t:~y S@ R&lt;il ~- ~ "E tfS * &amp;AMI
14itd ~r CU.Y
POLLAN - - - - - 0 R•grrascrambled
nge lert•r•- gf tke
words be-

..

WORD

four

low to form four simple wards

L E VV0 E
E NR I

I' I I
K A B E L /:::~:
A famou s mountain cli mber
h:--..--....,.--,-.,....-1.
lhinks
that to set a new altitude
6
7
. .I 1
_ .I .I
record it is us ua lly easier if you
L--L-L.-L--l_._i,.. wan t to - - - - - - -- - olhers

I

I

VAS!LH

1---...,8~,,....;..,,,.:....:;,.,..9:.;.....,,-.f G)
L.-L.-L.--l.L-...1.-.l.--l.

8 lfTTfRS

PR INT NUMBERED

11

Comoiele the

.

chu~kle

quoted

by filli ng in the m1ssmg words
you de~elop from step No. 3 below

SCRAM·LfTS ANSWERS
Shrewd · _C hurn- Enact - Morose - OUT m SNOW
Country boy to ctty fr•end "''ll never ge t used to b1g

city living People he re lock up toilet paper and leave
expensive cars OUT tn SNOW ..
·

JULY 1J

I

�•
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NBA

Loyal puncan stays with Spurs
SA N ANTON IO (AP) M aybe the re's no thi ng magi c
abo ut O rlando after all .
Tim Duncan, the biggest prize
in this year's NBA free-agent
pool, was e xpec ted to an nounce
Tuesday that he is rej ecting offer.;
to play in Orlando with Gram
H ill and will re-sign with· the San
Antoni o Spur.;.
Al tho ugh Duncan has made no
public anno uncem ent, news
acc;ounts M o nday repo rted that
Duncan told the Magic he was
turning down a six-year, $67.5
million o ffe r fro1n Orlando.
Lo n Babby, Duncan's attorney,
flew to San Antonio on Monday
and met with Spurs officials.
Contacted by The Associated
Press, Magic o ffi cials declined
comment until Duncan made an
announcement.
Duncan was scheduled to hold
a news confe rence at 11 a.m.
EDT to announce his plans.
T he news was a welcome relief
· ,for Spurs fans , who pleaded for
his return to the team he guided
t.o the 1999 NBA ti tie.
Fans in the Alamo ·city dotted
the conmtunity in recent weeks

KCLLT
frOm Page81
possibly give them. We've had
som~ good baseball players come
out of the Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament who've gone
on to play in college and so forth.
We've had some good high
school ball players I've followed
throughout the years."
, Werry thanked the many sponsors who have contributed to the
eve nt, and also expressed thanks
to Kyger Creek plant manager
Ralph Amburgey.

with billboards and placards readBut the Spurs appli ed th e ir
ing: "Stay Tim, Stay!" .
own pressure.
With the Spurs' aging lineup,
Veteran cen ter David R o binthe 24-year- old Duncan is con- son, who alo ng with Dunca n
sidered the key to San Antooio's gives San Antonio the m ost fo rfuture. Without him , the Spur.; midab1e front -line duo in th e
would be left with a brand-new league, returned early from a
$175 million arena fo r the 2002- Hawaii vacation to p ersuad e
2003 season and without one of Duncan to stay.
the game's super.;tar.;.
In the end, it appears Dun can 's
Orlando pushed hard to sign loyalty to the Spurs and his desire
both Duncan and Hill, who has to keep playing with R obinso n
said he will likely leave Detroit to won out.
sign with the Magic.
"Tim stayed at Wake Fo rest all
Both player.; traveled to Orlan- four years;· an NBA source told
do on the same weekend and the Express-News. "He isn 't a guy
were treated to stays in one of the who likes a lot of chan ge in his
theme-park city's top resort life. He has played with David
hotels and luxurious parties host- Robinson and for the sam e coach
ed by Magic executives.
for the past three years. But the
Duncan even met Tiger Woods, Magic made it a difficult decision
who lives nearby.
for him."
Had the Magic pulled off the
Duncan could sign a seve n- year
Duncan deal , Orlando would deal worth $86.5 million if he rehave had a lineup capable of tip- signs with San Antonio, although
ping the balance of power in the he is considered more likely to
Eastern Conference.
sign a shorter deal.
The Magic have the NBA's
Duncan has a nonbinding comcoach of the year in Doc River.; mitment to the Spurs and cannot
and enough salary cap room to officially sign a contract with the
sign rwo of the league's top free team until Aug. I.
agents.

Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament
(Teams listed in the order they
were drawn. the fir.;t four teams
receive a bye.)
I. Racine
2. Gallipolis #2
. 3. New Haven Reds
4. Bidwell #2
5. Point Pleasant Nationwide
6. Kyger Creek B?~cats
7. Federal Hocki\!!
8. Gallipolis #1
·
9. Middleport Astros
10. Green Gators
II . Chester Reds
12 . Point Pleasant Deel Funeral
Home

13. Point Pleasant Hardware
14. Point Pleasant Home Care
Medical
15. Mason Twins
16. Green Braves
17. Middleport Reds
18. Rio Grande
19. Pomeroy Indians*
20. Bidwell #1
(*. 1999 tournament champions)
,
(Editor's note: I had the privilege of being allowed to draw the
No. 3 team from the hat during
Monday's proceedings. The New
Haven Reds received a firstround bye.)

Tuesday, July 11 , 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

--oy.

I. PRO Bi$EU11
.

-~

San Jose 1, Colorado 0

Tampa Bav at DC United, 7:30 p.m.

4

New England at Columbus, 7:30 p m.

Notlonol~

S.lurdoy, July 15

Ealt Otvfak)n
W L Pet.

TMm
Atlanta .

New vcn

......... ..... 52 36

........................48

New Yorit·New Jersey at New England 3:30

GB

.591

38

.sse

FIOfida
... ... . . ...... 45 "3
Montreal ........ ..... .. ........... 42 42
Philadelphia ...... ,.. ....... :... 39 47

.51 1
.500
.453

UNC

m&lt;ter a week after Guthridge
announced his retirement.
Sou·th Carolina coach Eddie
Page 81
Fogler, an assistant with Williams
· and Guthridge under Dean
Leba·, who has a 28- 27 record Smith, then withdrew his name
in two seasons at Tennessee Tech, from consideration. Karl, the Milwas an AU- AC C point guard at waukee Bucks coach, and Brown,
North Carolina.
the Philadelphia 76ers coach, said
North Carolina officials remain Monday they did not want to be
determined to keep the coaching considered for the job. Both
job in the school's basketball fam- played under Smith.
ily. The 1999 basketball media
Karl and Brown both said the
guide listed 26 NBA and college timing of the vacancy was not
coac hes who were either former good for them.
Tar Heels players or coaches.
Karl said he was flattered to be
Kan sas coa ch Roy Williams approached.
announ ced Thursday he decided
"Right now, however, I also
against re turning to his alma have a loyalty to an organization

that has treated me very well, an
owner who has shown a g reat
deal of faith in me and a team
that's on the verge of something
special," h e said. ·
The Bucks went seven seasons
without · a playoff appearance
before Karl led them to two con secutive postseason berths.
Brown announced his decision
after meeting .with North C arolina officials over the weekend . · ·
Guthridge is acting as the interim coach until his replacement is
found . Meanwhile, Ford and fel low assistant coaches Dave Han ners and Pat Sullivan have started
recruiting while th e hiring
process continues.

here today, I came here to represent him."
What started off as a listless,
humid night sparked up immediately when Sosa starred swinging.
No other player totaled more
than 12.
" Sammy made it look easy,"
said Griffey, who has won the
derby three times overall. "When
people in the first couple of rows
of the upper deck are looking up,
that's power. I didn't hear oohs
and aahs for my wallscrapers. I
heard them for Sammy's upperdeck shots."
Sosa, who lost out to MeG wire
70-66 for the home-re cord
record two years ago and 65-63
for last year's title, made flashbulbs
sparkle and fireworks explode in
the night.
In the semifinals, Sosa beat
Boston's Carl Everett 11 - 6 and
Griffey topped Toronto 's. Carlos
Delgado 2-1.
Griffey and Sosa tied 2- 2 i1, the
tim round of the finals, which
was split into two rounds with
each player all owed five no nhomer swings each.
Sosa, pra cticing his swing in the
runway between rounds, then
went ahead with a 4 29- foot
homer to left. took a pitch , and
connected o n fo ur s~ raight sw ings

- hard, long shots of 476 , 488.
4 77 and 443 feet. He added two
mores, at 460 feet and 508, while
fans in the crowd of 50,118 stood
clapping, chanting his nam e and :
bowing, much like the Wrigley
Field bleacher bums pay homage
to him back home in Chicago.
After Sosa finished, he highfived Griffey and bo th players
hugged .
Sosa thanked his pitcher, t hino
Cadahia, the Atlanta Braves'
minor league field coordinat o r.
"He used to be my manage r
when I was in the minor leagues
in Texas •(Gastonia in 1987 ). H e
knows. where I like the ball," Sosa
sa,id. "He was throwing me some
cookies today. I have to thank
him for that."
Griffey, who won titles in 199 4
at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium , 1998 at Denver's Coors
Field and last year, then fail ed to
homer in five straight swinb"·
Last year, Sosa bombed o ut at
Fenway, hittin g j ust one honie

from

from Page 81
After talks with the New York
Yankees fell through , Sosa's agents
told the C ubs on Sunday that he
'doesn't want to be trade, and
wo uld use his rights as a veteran
to block any deal.
" I do n't wan t to talk about a
con trac t nght now because I
want to wan until the year's over
and rela x," Sosa said . "Whatever
happens from there, happens. I
wou ld love to stay in Chicago.
This IS the c1ty I want to stay
with . Bu.t if it docsn 't work out,
you kn ow, if I have to go, I don 't
have a ·ch o ice."
,
With inj uries to Mark MeGwire. Barry Bo nds and Manny
Ramirez, there wasn't nearly the
d ra ma o f last yea r, when G riffe y
won, bu t M cGw ire conquered
th e Gree n M o nster at Fenway
Park, with hun dreds of fans filling
Lo nsdow 'le Stree t to catch the
balls.
l:lefore M o nday's competition,
sca lpe rs were d umping tickets
wi rh $~,0 face valu e for $10 eac h.
" Mark M cGwire Js .one of the
guys everybody is looking at,"
SosJ sa id . '' Because he was nor

·Golf

from ~ge 81
(R acine) 79-72- 151; M arshall
Woo te n (M iddle po rt) 73- 8 1- 154;
Ed Ste wa r t 79-7 6- 155; C hri s
Stou t (R acin e) 80-76-156.
Seco nd flight: Kyl e Wi ckline
(Ra cine) 77-81- L58 ;Tony Dugan
79- 79 - 158; C raig
(R uth nd)
S1111pkms (Pt. Pl easant) 80-80-

160; Larry Wh o brey (Middleport)
77- 83- 160.
Third flight : Jami e Anderso n
(Pomeroy) 81 - 81 - 162; Nathan
Fowler (Mason) 92 -7 9- 171 ; Steve
Ni chols 84- 88-1 72 ; Bob O liver
(Maso'n) 87- 86- 173.
Fourth flight: Ivan Puc kett 8278- 160;Jet ryTucl:.er (Mason) 808 4- 164; R ich R eymond (Pt.
Pleasant) 83- 84- 16 ?; Bill Rainey
(Pt. Pleasant) 85- 85- 170.
Fifth fli ght: Sean Hugh es (Pt.

p.m.
Kansas City at Columbus, 4:30 p.m.

e

Ceml'lll Dtvlllon

St. Louis .. ___ ...... ............. 51 36 .586
Cincinnati .... ....... .............43
Pinsburgtl ......... ..... ... ......38
Milwaukee ............ .. ....... 37
Chicago .................... ......35
Houston ............. .............30

44
48
51
51
57

W•tt DIYialon
Arizona ..... ....... .... ......... 51

san Francisco ....... .. ...... ....S

PRO HOOPS

.494
8
.442 12 112
.420 14 112
.407 15 112
.3-15
21

37

39 .541 3 112
C&lt;Horado ..... ......... ....... ..45 40 .529 4 1/2
Los Angeles .. ... ............... 44 42 .512
6
San Diego ....................... 38 49 .437 12 1!2

hltem Cont.....-.ce
W L Pet.
GB
Orlando ......... .................. 13
6 .684
a .558 2 112
Clevefand ............ ..... .... ... 10
9 .526
3
NewVonc ........ .............. . to
Detroit ... ........ .. .......... .. .. .8 10 .444 4 1/2
w_~ngton .. .................... 8 10 .. 444 4 112
Mram1 ................. ... ....... . __ 7 12 .368
6

L Pel.

W

New Yorlc .
Toronto .. ..
Boston ... .
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

.. ............. ..45 38

Gil

.542

...48 41
... ..43 41

.539
.512 2 1/2

.«2 8 , 12
.400
12

.. ............. 38 48
... .34 51
C.ntn1l DMalon
Ct;cago ... .......
. .55 32
Cleveland ..... ...... .........&lt;14 42
Kansas City .......... ......... ..39 46
Detroit ............. ........ ........38 46
Mimesota ...... ..... ........... 38 52
w..t Dlvlalon
Seanle ....... 1. .. .............. ..51 · 35
O~kland

632
.512 10 1/2
.J69
15
452 t51/2
422 18 1/2

.593

Houston ............. ............. 18
2 .900
LosAngele!l ···-· ............. 16
2 .689
Sacramento ..................... 13
6 .684
Phoenix .......... ...... ............ 11
fl 647
Minnesota .. ... ... . .... _. ... . ... 10
8 .556
Utah ................. ....... .......... 9 10 .474
Portland .. .... ............... .. ..... 5 12 .294
Seenle ... ...................... ..... 3 HI .158

~

.,-

.. ,

9

~•m

W

L Pet.

15
15
London ... .. .. ......... ...... ... .. 18 18
Richmond
.... ..... . 17 20
Canton ....
............ ...... 15 22
Weat Dlvlelon
RNer City ........ .................24 14
Cook County ... .............. 18 20
Springfield ........ ...... ... ..... 17 20
Dubois County .. .... ........... 16 20
Evansville .. ........ ... ............ 16 20
Mond•v'• Gllme1
London 3. Canron 2
Springfield at Chillicothe, ppd.,
Cook County 3, Evansville 2
River City 2, Dubois County 0
RiC'IImond t 0, Johnstown 5

Pet.

GB

Carey discusses
•
progress 1n
Meigs County
BY TONY M. lEACH

Game

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

M IJ)I)L EI'U ilT
1 IJ,·
M t' ig-.; C o unt y C lu mh n of
C mflm e rL"L" h L-.t rd St.tt ~..· R t· p.
Jullll Ca rey. R - WL'I lsto ll . di \U l\ ~
the cu r re m "!t are of M t' Jg..,
County a11 d Iii _~ co ncern l!1r

GB

.595
.583
1/2
.500 3 1/2

459
.405

0 33 ¢0

31

Powtu&lt;;klll (RodSo•) ...... .. 51
Syracuse (Biu6Ja~) ........ 4 t

38
39
37

30 13
28 26
27 40
25 30
one point

Rochestef (Onoles) .. ....... 40
Ottawa (~poa) ................34

Nati o nal F Ootball League

B UF F A L O. BILLS - Sig n e d W R
A v i o n B l a c k t o a t hre e - ye ar

con tr ac t .

444

A g r eed t o term s w i lh DE Er ic
C handl er. DB R as h i d i B ar ne s.

CLEVEL A ND

7

.444

7

O L M a n u • a S a vea a n d O L BTa d

GRE E N

BA Y

TO STAY OPEN - Salem Center Elementary School will stay open for at
le ast another year. The Meigs Local Board of Education agreed to keep the

school open after listening to their concerns along with their offers of vol·
unteer worl&lt; and money. (Cha~ene Hoeflich photo)

P A C KERS -

S ign e d LB E -ugene M c Cas l i n 10
a m u t tiye ur co n tr a c t
Place d
Q B B e n S a nk e y o n wa i ve r s .

KAN SA S
C IT Y
C HIE FS A gr eed t o t e rm s w rth TE A rc k ey Br ad y o n a tw o - yea r co n tra c t .

.614

N E W YORK J ETS - S i g n ed D E
S h a un E lli s a n d · L B Jo hn Ab r a h am to frve - ye a r co ntrac t s .
TENN ESSEE TITA N S - Sig n e d
RB M i k e G r e e n
WA SH IN GTON
REDS KIN $ ~
S i g n e d CB Lloy d H a r r i s o n t o a
f ou r - y ea r c on t ra c t ·

48

.455 13 112

GB

HOCKEY
NtHcnal H oc k ey LII Q Ui
AT LANTA
THRA S H E RS A cq u i r e d
F - 0 . S t eve
S t aios
fr o m th e N ew J e r se y De v i l s f o r
tutu re c o n s iderati o n s .

:sa2 2 112
37 .580
3
44 .4a2 11 1/2

Mond1y'1 Game•
Indianapolis 10, Charlotte 2

BRO WN S -

B e d ell, on f o ur - year c o n t ra c t s

rain

L
34
38

Charlotte (WhiteSox) .... ... 43 44
Norfolk (Mets) .......... ...... .. 42 50
'Richmond (Braves) . ........ 27 62
Wutern Dlvlelon
Indianapolis [Brewers) ... .. 50 40
Louisvine-(Reds)-:-:-:=.:.:.513- ~n Columbus (Yankees) .... ...48 42
Toledo (Tigers) ................. 37 47

projl·cts a11 J II L' W sc hoo l ~ .
"T he additio n of t hest· n t· w
roads ;md o.;chool;; will ddi nitd y
b ring abo u t IIIO I"t' j obs." :-. ~u d

tio n

6
.459 6 1/2

48 .415
Southern Olvlalon
Durham (DeviiReys) ...... 48 43 .527

C arey r oll llll ellded M c lg \ u 11
cu r n._'tlt o., ucn's "i 111 .lttracn ng
fu ndi ng fo r h1ghw.ty com rruc-

tr -;

FOOTBALL

5
7

.632
.474

Pet.

loca l milll'T'i d uri n ~ Tw..--. day\
gc n a~1 l m embershi p m t·cting .tt
&lt;.J n ·rbroo k Nursing C cntl.' r.

National League
NEW YOR K M ETS ~ O p tio n e d
AH P Eri c Ca mm ac k t o N o rf olk
o I t he I n tern a t io n a I L-ea gu e .
Re ca ll ed L H P A rch Ro d r i guez .
fr o m N o r f o lk

17

CA R O L I N A
S i gn e d

.494
3
.457 6 112
303
20

-

.533
.440

10

2

tan

M c Neil

to

a mul-

tiy ea r c o n t r a ct
M I N N ES OTA
C hr rs Han s en

~556 -~-·
-~

F

HURRI C A N E S -

Jim

I ne

lb is t er

WI L D - Named
p re s illent
an d
vi c ti __p_r e..s.icle.n t of .

ST:"""TaUI- Are-n a co m p a n y .

NE W
YORK
R AN GERS S ign e d 0 V ladimi r M a l a k h ov t o
a to u r - y e ar con t r act p l u s a n
o p t io n yea .r .

Salem Center gets its wish
School staying open
for ari~other year

ulat ions -

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

I'U MEROY t l',\t: h n~

M nrc· than lt l parents and

ti·um S:tkm Ce nt er Element ary

School :lrtcndin g lTuL·"'day's m'cctin g of th e
Nl l· i g~ Local Bo:lfiJ of Edu cJ tion go t th t'ir
W t-"i-h w h !l-11 th L· bo-a rd ag-rt."ed~-ro keep th e
" '""'! npen fo r tht· 20tlll- 111 ye ar.
Bllt w ith rhat ag recnH.·m ca m l'

'IL'Vl' r:l[

sri p-

that volunteers m ove the largest

class. abo u t 19 fi1urth gra d e r~ . o'ut o f· a modu lar uni t into a classroo m in th L· main bu1lding
wlm·h is n ow used a' a li}]_rary; th e lib rary will
be move(f to ihc n~dubr; that th ey arr:mgc
tor repair of th e he at pump in th e mo dula r at
no cost t o the district, and th J.t th ~.:y unJ\!rstand th-: ,,·hoi.: i-;suc will be rec onsid c.' JTd in
the· spn11g of 21 HII .
Sup erintendent William Bm·kky present ed
the ·stipulat io ns fo llmving a shor t CXl'L" Uti vc
..
SCS SIO!l .

_

abo ut the propo ~.d fo r dolilll g the .;choo l
b ecau se of nc.·cJ l· d rt'p:11rs J !HJ co o;; t of opl'l".l tion . and ;H.l drl· o;;~ c d their c otJCc r m abo ut muvin ~ s tud~rJts to ~ Rutl ,md Elein cmary ,Sd1&lt;io l.
Salem C en ter \vtll h:we onl y 70 sruden rs in
th e &lt;choo l thi' f:rll and the proposal fo r moving ~}lc studen ts to l-tutland - w\Uch no't"
h ~1 o;; o nly 1:) 4 o;wdcms wao; v iewed ao.; a \\',IV
of sav1 1~g m o nev f() r th e diqn ct. whic h is in
t he..: pro~css o t" buildm g a tH.' W distr ict-\x id c
"-'h: m c.' !lt.JrV -.ch ou!.
Th e ne,;, buildi i J ~ will opch in bt ~ ~\1112 m

The closed-- do ur m ei.' tmg t(Jll owcJ a YOllllllll tt' di sc ussio n w 1rh p&lt;~rt' IHS :m d reachers

Please see School, Page A3

C arey. ~" M l· i gs Count y's hard

\-vork L'thi c and goo d attribute&lt;;
\\' ill hop efull y imp rt''ili b usin L'SSt''i
tha t arL' loo ki n ~ for a plact' to
lo c.ltl'."
C arey ab o . ; poke abu ut th t·
pli gh t uf local co ,d m inns
affened by rhc :mn cipated clo-.in g o f the So ut hn n (.)hi o C l&gt;a l ·
Co.\ fyl l· igs M i n e ~ .
A $ 1.2 rn il hon U.S. D epl rtlll t' IH of Labo r ~ r;m t \\':I S tT lT il th · :t \\iardn l tu l 1 ~.: lp aso,; i, r tn
r~·tr,l jll ill r d l(Jrto,; o f l"O;t ] lllllll'J"Ii
an d llt'l p w ith l l\' 111 ~ L'X}lL'll'-L'"
fo r them ;l!H.i their fam ilil'li.
" We w :111t to make till· l tl illl.
joho;; in M t' l ~ County h "r." o;a i~
( ~ .t i"L'\'. ".111d \\'l' tnm r tlnd .1 \\'.1~
to h ·L·p t he 11 1\ Jh.T .., in ou r .II"L'. \.
M inn :- .1re proVl'll \Vo r kn ~ .
Th eir vaii r.Ihk &lt;kil ls ,JJIJ.Lku md
L' dgL' .t rc .m inn:eJi bk a:-\L' l to
ho rh rhc -; r:Hl' of C)lu o ;md our
. lo c tl co m l llllllit i l·~ ."

MUG PRESENTATION ·- Steve
Story, pres ide nt · of the Meigs .
County Chamber of Commerce,
prese nts State Re p. John Carey
with a decorative mug during Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs Coun·
ty Cha mbe r of Comme rce mem~
bership. (Tony M. Leach photo)
c ~l n.'y

urgl·d .Ill Meigs COllll t! ,liJ 'o to .. a hv~t)'" kn ·p positi ve"
.111 d ,J-..sun·d t!t e c hantber thar
thl' M L• ig.; Co unty ero no my is
" getting bL·rtcr J lld bette r."
St L' Vl' Story, presiden t of the
Nlo..:ig-. C o t t n t y C lu mbt'r of
Cun unt: n.:~, 1nfo nncJ th..: nl.cm.lw r ~hi p " th :lt M L' igs C u um y\
til'\\' ro.td .111d h nd~c proJn"t"
wil l :-O ~) Il b cco ll\1.:' re.1liry nt Kl'
the p rojl' l"t~ bl'g in to sl' ll.
T he tlr'\t ~t' l"t ! O;A
tlt e
]\..;t \.\'11.,\VOtH f COlliiCCTnr \"lll l Sl' lJ

ur

Please see Carey, Page A3

Chester/Shade Day this weekend American Red Cross issues
ACCORDING TO )1M LOVELL
IT'S SOME ·OF THE BEST GOLF
ON THE PLANET.

Events center
around Ohio's
oldest courthouse
BY BRIAN

what w as to have b ee n m .tn 's
third landing o n th e m o o n .
We didn't get to mr npl etc t ha t
mission - but th e sto ry of w h ,n
happen ed o n Ap ol ln l l r.1p turcd
th e imag inati o n of peo pk a ll
ove r th e world .
Another ph e n o m en o n th,,t 's
ca ught p eo pl e's i nt c resl is th e

Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail .
378 ho les o f wor ld -c!a ss go lf o n
eight sit es th ro ug ho nt Alaba n1 &lt;1.
It 's so m e o f the b es t golf yo u c,m
play in this ga laxy.

Whe n I'm pl ay in g g ul r o n co m ses
thi s great.. .ll o ust n n , I d o n' t have
a. pro bl e m .

I came here the last three years
and I didn 't do anything," he said .
") came here today with a different plan . I went up there tryin g to
g ive myself an opportunity. ! too k
a few pitches."
u

'
Jim Lovell, Commander, Apollo 13

REED

H EST ER
EntL'rra mn1cnt
from tlw 2 1-. r er nw ry and .1 glimpse
,H ch ,u-ar tns and
ht sto rt c.ll porrr.1y:1ls fro m th e
I lith n· ntmy w ill high lig ht th e
C hc·&lt;tn / Sh ,&lt;ck I lay Fe &lt;ti v.rl Fri d .J\" .111d Saturday.
't he n ·c m o,; . s r.urin ~ Fri d,ty
l'\ 'l' lli ng, \v iii &gt;~ lt mvcase .md cc..•n-

tc r

)li io'' o iLk :-t stan din g
l·u urtl1l&gt;l1 Sl', to hl· dedicatt'd as
ti i&lt;: Appal.Jdll :lll H cn tae&gt;;e C ul rur,d ( :l' lltl'l' as a p,trt of this
\ 'l'.1r\ Lc lcbr.ttin n.
. T h~· nHi rth ou sc, whi ch has
h l'l'l l I"L'110\",lll.'d by tlw ,ISSOLiaf! Ol l , \\'il l be u ~ cd . 1 ~ .111 t'&lt; _
l ucatmll al l l' ll tl'r tt&gt; ho u.;c 111 o ck tri .11 ~ . ,tnd p rog r.1111 ~ l' lllp hasizin g
Jlll l"iL d .ttl n ' . •ulll App.da cltian
.11"011 11d (

folk ltl rl'.

l\rno \d, :l - ~oca l vnra li -;r,
\\·ill pnfor111 .It rltl' courthous e
FESTIVAL CHAIRMEN - Debbi e and Ron Snyder of Pom e roy are the
festiva
l chairmen for thi s ye ar' s Chester/ Shade Day Festival. They
l · rl ' ltdi ( :n-y B.lrh no,; h np C ho rm
al
s
o
will
·pa rt ic ipate in th e HOPE R1d e rs Equestrian Drill Show.
.
w d l pl'r! l)\"11\ .It K p.m .T hc1r pro l!;I".IIIL t1 J lw titk d '' Berl in , B r o .l d ~\' ,1\" .nnl H.u·lX"r'I IHIJ)- · \\·ill t~ H." ll\ Hi~ tort c a l A :-.~onatl (. liJ will h o n o r fort n ,a 7 p.m .. a11d lilt' ou tch1nt·
o n ·'th l· m u .; 1c of Ir ving lk rlm .
M el t."' Co u nry ';; Fin c ~r . th e .o kiL''-'1 dram.1, " I ) o o r to rh t· Pao,;r'" w ill
Lu l. d ti!C ttt lwr.., nf rlw cl m rm m an .md wo nl ~lll prc \L' Ilt . o n Sa r- bt'g m .H 7: 30 p.m ., tl· ,H u r i n~ "igi1H·Iud c l h ·n vn
Ri t e. J o llll u rJav ,a 11oon . Ent n t.I inmc nt 011 ni fic mt PL'opk anJ even ts fi-o m
th t· hi story of C hl'Stn / Sltadc
A lld n -.on Jr .. (; cr.dd K dl y .111 d Satu~d.ly .lfi:n iJoon will mcl u l k
( ;t-rald I'm\ L· ll.
Bif( Shm·, tli l· Clo wn, liu m 1- .1 COlllllltl ll ity.
Swc: ctic \ K.tr.10kc and lasn
T he Or.r n ~e Ml' IIHli·I,rl V FW p.m ., mu o;ic hy Bob W h ir t' ar 2
light
&gt;ho w wi ll be held-at _H:J(I
nffup JkT" Pl.um w ill co ndu ct .111 p . lll., and _.1 :- how by th e H ( )I'E
lti, \cr' E&lt;j uiik Drill Tc.1111 .lt 4 p.m ., ;Hid .1 lun nn.try SC r\' JL" l' w ilf
op"-' 11 111-A . t' l' l"t ' ll J\lllY a t IO ,1, 111 .
con c\ud l· the l'VL·n rs on S.lt1.1rday
S. Jtunl.1y.. tm l H .1l K n lT II , M c i g~ p.lll .
C o un ty .Jg r i L·ul rura l L' X l\..' t1 ~ t on
A p:~r.Ick wdl be held th r«Li f! h at t tl p.m . .
In add u ion to l' ntn tain cr s and
.lgL' llt . \viii prc-.c nt .1 J"lrog r.Hn ( ~ lll'"'tl' r _.H 5 p . 111 .•• 111 d th L· A11 nu ah n ut h l· rh ~ .. 111 d t h L' l r u -.c:- at a \ O h in St.ltl; l-l ar111o ti iC,I 'i PL'l:ia l cvcuts, Yisitor.., t hrough]II : _"\ () .1. 11 1.
C h:nnpion ship will her~ p.m .
l:lig LIL'11 d C lnf(f( LT&lt; will perPlease see Events. Pllge A3
A" .tlw;ty-.. thL· Che:-.rn / Sh.lLk

h

l ~b y

local blood donor appeal ,
FROM STAFF REPORTS

l'Orv1 Elt0Y -

Th l' Amcri c:In

R t: d C ross Bl ood SlTVicc..; rq.';10il
se n ·in g Gall i.!, MciJ-,TS .md M.1:-on

_]O ill L'd Ill ,1 do no r
appeal Ln.IIlL'hc· d M o nday by the
natio1ul R ed C: rn..;. , ru bno-.r aitica ll y In\\' JJ.lti on.lf bl ood ~ upp l il' ' ·
.. Although , our lol·.il sit u .trio 11
1,1.1:- llllprovnl stn n · \H' .J ll!l ll ll ll L"nl
our apf)l':il on Jun l' I &lt;J, blood
invcntor ic' rctllain below (k-. irl·d
minillllllll levels in Sl'W r;d blond
f)l'~ l· ~. t"l·~u l t i n ~ in p u r in.1hihty lo
ti1lti ll ho&gt; pll .rl llrd L' I&lt; tl &gt;r "II l&gt;lll&lt;&gt;d
pro d t id ' ." .;,n_d Ted M ,\77.1. nun.tgcr
of hlo(hl "&lt;.TvicL'\ tt u· t h e C rc.ltlT
Allr..·LdiL' IIil'S R L'l-!:io n. ·
Tll l' !t ed (' m« blun dmo bik
wi ll lw :It l'kas:JI It V.dkv We line"
(lJU I! t! e S •!Ja \

,I t

7

jl . lll .,

,111d th ~:

( :em L' r in l&gt;nim Pk .h.Jilt , W.V.J. , 0 11
T hu ro,;d:1y ffom noon - () p.m . T hl·

ccntn is lucarnl ll l' Xt ro Pk·a,,Jnt
V.dky ll m pi t.d.
·M .u za ur~l·d d u n ur~ 111 the tn ~
co un ry .Jrc.l ro giw hlnod during
rhe .; top
R ed Cro,.,.· ILttin n.d .l pp ~,.·.tl
rc-.; td t;. fro m ~.-nnti n .u cd hi gh p.ltil' llt
lk lll ollld . l"Olll blll l'd \\ I[IJ lo\HT
co llt·ctio n c; d u n n ~ .; un JIII tT.

" Th L· L'nt irc R L·d ( :rm..; """(l' lll
,;1\\" hi&lt;Hlll prndlh"l di ,tTihu t in l h
11 1nc .h L'

.1 11d

('1, ]

I C)tJ!J ." '

by ::; _:--;

11 1

April

i\'\. Jy

0\"l' l

,,nn· tJt

J1l'l l ~ · tl t

Ill

M ~ 71. 1

"1.\ld,
"" Th l' Ill() '\ ( Ct ll\111\()lll y [l'.l lh fu..,l'd hkJod produ ~, h h.1n· . , jll· lt·
]i,·l·-. nf juq tlH· d .i~' j( rr p l.i t l·kt\
and -L~ \ 1. 1\'" ft lr r l· d bl o~ .,d l l'll":· lll'

New game means no Wednesday
Super Lotto drawing this week
BY THE ASSO CIATED PRESS

~ h l· ll.t

Ul l

1.8.0 0,949 .4444
www.rt.jgo/fco /11

J.

SENT INEL NEWS STAFF

~ny yea;s ago, I co mmand ed

run .

Pleasant) 87 -8 1- 168; R ay R edm an Jr. (Maso n) 87-83- 170; G ab e
Scott (West Columbia) 90- ~ 3173.
Seni o rs : I . Gary
R o ush
(Mason) 7 4- 8 2- 156; 2. !:l ob
Mcintosh 7 4- 87- 16 1: 3. D ave
Bodkin (Pt. Pl easant) 8 1- 84- 165.
Jet: 1. E? Coon (New H.wc;J)
72-7!- 143; 2. Tom D o tso n (P t.
Pl easant) 71 -73- 144 ; 3. D an
M o ore 73- 71-144 and Ca rl C line
(Maso n) ·77- 6 7- 144.

50 Cents

BASEBALL

Northern Division
Te•m
W
Buffalo (Indians) .. _... .... .. 54
Scranton {Phillies) ... ... ....- .53

saturcsav·• uam.a

.

27
45

New York -New Jersey 1. Kansas City 0
Los Angeles 5, Miam1 3
Dallas 3, DC United o
Chicago 3, Columbus 1

.

W~neaday'a Game
All-Star game at O'Falloo, M o

17 30
45
36
29

W~neaday ' s

Eastern Ol..,lelon

Chillicothe ...... ...... ... ...... 22
Johnstown ....... ... ..........21

5 26 31 , 29.
4 25 29 33

C hicago ....... .. ....... ..... 10 8 3 33
Dallas .. .. ...... ............. .. 8 11 3 27
Columbus . ......... . ... 7 10 4 25
w..tem Ol"l•lon
Kansas City ............... 11 3 5 38
Los Angeles ...... ........ 10 5 7 37
Colorado ... ...... ...... ..9 10 2 29
San Jose ............. ........ 5 8 a 23
NOTE: Three points tor a win and
for a tie.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Doub le A All-Sta r game at Bow1e. Md.
Thursday's Games
Ene at Portland
Bowie at New Haven
Altoona a t Norwich ·
Reading at Tren1on .
Binghamton at Akron
New Britain at Harrisburg

Frcrntler ~gue

ln1ematlonal League

l •')'P• BaY .. ." ....... .. 11

~

. ,..,.

Eestern Olvlalon
WLTPtaGFGA

MIBn'll -· ....... .... .. ....... 7 9
D .C . ........ ............ .... .. ..4 13 5
Cemn~l Dlvlelon

8 1/2
11 1/2
14 112

Seanle at Detroit, Noon
Indiana at Washington, 7 p .m .
0118ndo at Cleveland , 7 p .m .
Charlotte at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Porttancl at Utah, 9 p.m.

'

35 33

Hometown Newspaper

i;;;;;;;;~UES I I TRANSACJIONS I

PR~ SQ~~·t ':~ I
7

5 112
7

Wedneld8y'a Gaun•

frklay's Gamea
Canton at Johnstown
Dubois County at Cook County
London at Chil~cothe
Richmond at River City

7- 2

1
4 112

Thursday'• G•me•

Today•• Game

NY-NJ .. ...................... 11

10

Washington at Miami, 7 P-m .

All-Star Game at Atlanta, 8:35p .m .
Thuract•y '• O.m.a
Seattle at San Diego, !5:05p .m.
Hooston at Detroit 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia at "Toronto, 7:05 p.m .
Florida at N.Y. Yankees , 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Boston, 7:05p.m .
Montreal at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Atlanta at Baltimore, 7:35 .p.m.
Milwaukee at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Minnesota. 8:05p.m.
St. LOuis at Chicago VVhite Sox, 8 :05p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorado, 9:05 p.m .
Texas at Arizona, 10:05 p.m .
Anaheim at Los Angeles , 10:10.p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

New Eng land ...... .. ... ..7

9

Monday'l Game•

....... ....48 38 .558
3
Anaheim .
... .47 41 .534
5
Texa s ............................. .42 43 .494 8 112
Suncl•y·a Gtlmu
Boston 7, Atlanta 2
Cleveland 5, Cincinnati 3
Baltimore 5, Philadelphia 4
Minnesota 3, Pinsburgh 2
TOfonto 13 , Monlr&amp;al3
Milwaukee tO, D8troit 2
St. Louis 8, San Franctsco 7
Chicago Cubs 9, Chicago \Nhite Sox B
Houston 9, Kansas City 6
Arizona 4, Oakland 2
Seattle 2, Los Angeles a
Florida 10, Tampa Bay 9
Anaheim 10, Colorado 4
N.Y. Me1s 2, N.Y. Yanke&amp;s 0
San Diego 4, Texas 3

Meigs County's

50 38 .see
48 42 .533
3
45 43 5 11
5
44 43 .500 5 1/2
Trenton (Reel Sox) .. .... 43 46 .483 7 112
New Brrta1n(Twins) ........ 35 54 .393 15 1/2
So uth Division
Read1ng (Phrll ies) ....
. 58 32 .644
..... 46 41 .529 10 112
Akron {Indians)
Altoona (P1rates) .
.... 47 44 5 16 11 1/2
Harrisburg (Expos) ........ 4 7 44 516 11 1{2
Bowie {Orioles ) ...
. . 43· 48 473 15 1!2
Erie (Angels) ....... ....... ...... 28 59 .322 28 1!2
Monday's Games
Norwich 6 , Portland 0
Tren ton 4, New Britain 2, 10 innings
New Haven 10, Brngham1on a
Akron 6 , Reading 5
Altoona 3 , Bowie 1
Erie 7, Harrisburg 4, comp . of susp. game
Erie 5, Harrisburg 4. 8 rnn rngs

Miami 59, Seanle 42
Cteveland 72, Char1one 65
•
TOdlly. O.maa
1
Minnesota at Phoeni.rc, 10 p.m .
Portland at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

........

Team

14, .176
16 .158

Nor1h Division
W L

Team
New Haven (Maril19fs) ....
Norwrctl (Yank ees) ... . ...
_
Binghamton (Mets)
Portland (Marlins) .. .....

Wll(tem Conference

Eaet Dtvlalon

Toam

•
Volume 51, Number JJ

Indiana ............. ... ..... ..... 3
Charlotte ................. .......... 3

Amertcan League

July 12, 2000

Eastern League

Tum

.580

Wednesday

W.ctneadey's Gem••

Tampa Bay at Cticago, 8 p.m.
ColOrado at san Jose, 10 p.m.
OC United at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

12

Details, A3

Triple A All-Star Game at Rochest er, N.Y.
Thurldey'a Games
Buffalo at Pa wtucket
Durham at Columbus
Indianapolis at Toled o. 2
Richmond at onawa
Rochester at louisvil1 9
ScrantorvWilkes-Bar re at Norfolk
Syracuse at CMriOne

Dallas at Miami, 7:30p.m .

3
1

•

Chester DAR picnic planned, As
Rio Grande, Fed Hock win in Hubbard, Bl

Thursday .

High: 80s; Low: 60s " _....-.

Columbus 11 , Durham 10, 12 inrVngs
Nor1olk 5, Toledo 1
Buftalo 10, Rochester 7, 1st game
Sutfalo 1, Rochester o. 2nd game
ScrantonJWilkes-Barre 5, Pawtucket 3
Only games scheauled

July 12

MaJor Lqgue Soccer

Derby

'

li\."l'

rh ~ ' l\'

w ill hl· 11 0 lll ithn·d,
Su pn l.ntto dr.1 \\' it1 ~ .WL·Lil ll'"d ,l y
night ,1:- the l ) hio L o ttery gran ltp
t~1r th l· -.t.J rt of it:-. Il L'\\" Su pn Lott u
Plu ~ g. tll h' o 11 S.!lu nby.
r \\' tL"l'- ,1 - \\ "l'l'].;_

d f. l\\'11\ g~

\\' t il

llllll l h l'l"..,

111

lll l '

rq.!,td ."n ~ 1 \ ­

l ll l ll lhn d r .m 11 1~_/\ pl.1 \'~·r -, ollllltl' '

11 1.H d1
tP \\ "I ll

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d (t] IL' ti r~ t" ~ I X

h, tJ\'1

dr.t}\ '11

rhl- _~c1d. r'ol.

tlll-l'l' pf thv !ir"'l '11.\
h.tll \\"1 11 p.1y S.1
M .nc l n n ~ t"o u r n1 tin· mu nh n~
\\ "tth nr, witlwul !lt,l' honu.., [,,ill
qu ,Jlltic.., I ~ J r r.t:- h . .111 d d 1c 10p lHll lp ckpt 1t pr i 7l' i-.; j; HIJ )(Il l t { H" ll l.l tt ·lt ·, 11~ ti\·c rq~u l.t r h.tl h ,IIlli th e h(11\ll..,
M .ll th ll l!-':

.ntd 1hl·

h n n u~

l" l"., ll llll' lll '\t \\'t' l' k :
A dr. t\\'1\lg t() r .1 SIJ tmllitll l j.J L" kp &lt;l t wtll d1ri ~tl' ll the Ill'\\. g.1111~·
wh id1 lottny otli&lt;."i.tl-. hope \\·ill
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Today's

Sentinel
l Sections - 12 Pages
----

C ale nd ar
C lassifi cd s
C omi cs
Ed itorials

O bitu a ries
Sport&lt;
~ il tht[

AS
B2-4
B5
A4
A3
B1 6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pid ;; J ; :!-(•-h; P ick 4 ; -1-n 2 J
Ruckcye !;: I ~ ')- I'J ~ 2 K -."\r,

W.VA .
O;.,i1 ~·

3: -; .., ~~ Daily 4: I~-1--Pl

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