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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PRO FOOTBALL

Sanders, Rice, Matthew, Smith and
White headline NFL All-Decade Team
and Jo hn R andl e are the tackles: Kevin Greene , Junior Sea u
a n d Derrick Th omas were
chosen at linebac ke r.
R od Wo odson is the ot her
cornerba ck : S teve Atwat er and
LeRoy Butler are the sa fe ti es.
Darren Be nn e tt is the fir stteam puraer.
The fir st-team coac h is Bill
Parcells. M arv Levy is the second- team co ac h.
•

oon 5-11), 7:06p.m.

Not_,......,..
Toom

·-

8:35p.m.

Toronto (LOaiza 5· 7) at seame (Halama g..
5), 10:05 p.m.
lloiiDn (Fassero 7-3) at Oakland (Zilo HI) ,
10:05 p.m.
Chicago WMe So• (Garland 1·2) Bl Anahekn (Cooper 4-4), IO:O!j p.m.

43 .568

~--~

Milweutlee ................. ...... 41 59 .410 15 112
.370 18 1/2

w..tohrlelon

Arizona ........ ...................68 44 .5&amp;0

llo)Or '--guo Soccer

.551
1
.535 2 1/2
.480
1
·"""
11

eo

Eaatem

............................. s

MilwaUkee 4, Pinsburgh 1, 11 Innings

~ompaBoy . . ~~""9·~

!Ptago ..................... 10 e

Houston 7, Cincinnati 4

fromPapl1
lead into the seventh. Chris
Srynes and Sean Casey hit solo
homers and Ken Griffey Jr. hit a
two-run shot, his 31st.
The bullpen's wildness and an
against-the-book decision by
R eds manager Jack McKeon
helped the Astros pull it out.
Dennys Reyes and Scott Sullivan walked the bases loaded to
start the seventh. Bagwell and
Lance .Berkman then hit sacrifice
flies off Sullivan, who was making
his fourth appearance in five
games.
" I don 't know if I made one
pitch tonight," Sullivan said. "I felt
~ke I was in Little League out
there,just throwing the ball. I had
absolutely nothing on it. I gave j,t
all I had. It wasn't good enough."
Dierker noticed that Sullivan
loo ked tired.
"I don 't know how much Sullivan has pitc hed lately, but by his
body English, just looking at him,
he about looked like he was on

Herd
fromPapl1
Green, Kent and Buffalo.
To ledo was favored in the West
Division with 45 first-place votes
and 408 poinrs, followed by Western Michigan. Northern Illinois,
Central
Michigan,
Eastern
Michigan and Ball State.
The unbalanced divisions led to

a new wrinkl e in th e MAC
standings this year. Only games
played within the division will
count in the division race.
" Obviously the emphasis is on
division games now,'' Toledo
coach Gary Pinkel said. " You
can't make it up on th e other
side. Those (d ivisiOnal) games arc
of critical importance."
Though there's no m arqu ee
player like Pennington around
this year, there -'!_re still iUll!Inb.eL

St. louis 7, Arizona 3
M eluskey's do uble, gor the final
Los Ang.Oes 8 , ~do 4
o ut and started the ninth by givSan Diogo 3, san Franco.co 2
T-,..aa,_
ing up C raig Biggio 's single. Two
Houston (Eiarton i-4) at Cincinnati (PIIril5·
pitches later, Bagwell hit his 27th t2) . 12:35 p .m.
Milwaukee (Haynes i'9) at Pltttburgh (SIMI
homer to center, giving him a 6-4),
7:05p.m.
Montreat (lrabu 2-4) at New York (HamptOn
homer in four of the last five
9-7). 7:10p
games. C hris Truby added a run· - Chicaoo Cubs (Taponi 8-8) at Philodelphia
(Chon 5.0), 7:35p.m.
scoring double.
Florlda (Bumen HI) at Atlanta (Millwood 5·
Marc Valdes (2 -2) pitched the 8), 7:40 p.m.
7-8) at St. LOOis (Kilo 11 ·
last rwo innings, closing out the 6), Arizona(Aoynooo
8:to p.m.
Astros' season-high fourth straight
Los Angeles (Perez 4·4) at Colorado
(Bohanon 4-7). 9:05p.m.
win.
San Franci9co (Eitea a-3) at San Oiego
"Everybody forgot about the (Eaton 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
llturoclay'o aoAstros," said Lima, who ha s given
Mo
(Th....,., 2·1) at N.Y. Mels (Le«or
, p.m.
up a major league- leading 32 10-4),
Chicago CYbo (Downs 4-.'l) II Philad.Ophla
hom ers. "We have a lot of guys (BI'fd 2-8), 1:05 p.m.
.
LosAng-(Gogne 1-8) 11 Colorado (JaMs
with big hearts and we're out to
2-4), 3:05p.m.
finish strong. Our goal is not to
Milwaukee (Snyder 3·5) at Pittsburgh
(Anderson 3-5), 7:05p.m.
lose I 00 games ."
Flori&lt;II(C.Smnn 0-~1 at Atlanta (MullloiiAnd
They've lost 63 so far and are 9-!il) , 7:.CO p.m.
.
Arimna (Guzman 2· 1) at StLOuis (Anklel7·
ge tting the feeling that the win 5), 8:10p.m.
column is th e one that might start
Amortcon Leot..
going higher.
Eelt Dlvfak)n
"It hasn't happened aU year,"
Toom
W L Pet.
GB
Bagwell said of the two gritry New Yorl&lt;.. .. ..................... 53 ~2 .556
eo-. ............................st 48 .528
3
wins. "We kept saying we were Toronto
.......... .................. 53 48 .525
3
going to play better baseball at Battimort ................. ....... 43 M .434 12
...... .......39 5Q .398 15 1/2
some point because we're better Tampa Bay ..........
C.mroiDivlolon
that that. We're finally starting to Chicago ..........................e2 31 .820
ClwoloM ............. ...........51 47 .520
10
show some sign of it."
Detroil .... .... , .................. .06 52 .469
15

Kansas City ....... .... . ....... 48 53 .485 15 1/2

\:lf players to watch.
They include receivers Nate
Poole of Marshall and Steve N eal
of Western Michigan; running
back Chester Taylor of Tol edo;
quarterbacks Mike Bath of Miami
and Walt C hurch of Easte rn
Mi chigan ; and offensive tackle
Ryan Diem of Northern Illino is.
Diem , a 6-7. 336- pound senior,
is probably the league's top NFL
prospect.

Bengals

That's why we picked him with Scott, but I think I'm right up
the draft pick that we did. We li ke there with everybody."
him.''
Coslet knows the team can
from Pap 11
Yeast is listed as the team's to p only benefit with Yeast in the
punt returne r and a bac kup to lineup.
1974.
Tremain Mac k on ki ckoff
"I spent mo re time talking to
" He's an exciting young foot-· returns. But he knows he'll have Craig Yeast than any other player
ball player," Bengals head coach to compete for playmg time at o n our tea m last year because h ~
\ Bruce Coslet said. "He did a great receiver wi th D arnay Sco tt and was standing next to me aU the
\job punt returning after he carne highly touted rookies Peter War- time ," Coslet sai d. "As fa r as
bac k from what was basically a rick and Ron Dugans from Fl ori- where he fits o n this team this
devas.tating injury that screwed up da State.
year, we'll see. We've got a lot of
his whole year.
" I'm second-string right now competition at wide re ceiver.
"He's small but h e's quick, but I' m working hard to be a
" But he returned 10 punts last
tough and fast. He can catch, he 's starter," Yeast said. ''I'm playing
year and two of them were fo r
elusive and he's a great re turn guy. behind a grea t receiver in Darnay
to u chdow ns. That's 20 percent. If

Ciolf
from Page 11

records until Woods came along
and broke them. Because the o nly
record that matters at the end of a
career is how many majors a play-

er won.
" If he's starti ng to worry abo ut
numbers now. it wi ll drive him
crazy. When he gets to 12 or 13,
that's realisti c."
But four'
True. Woods IS wmmng major
championships in a fashi on few
could have imagmed . His 12stroke win at Augusta National
was the largest ever m the M asters, and the largest in a major
champi o nship since Young Tom
Morris wo n the 1870 Briti sh
Open by the same rnargm.
The record was 13 strokes by
Old Tom Morris until Woo ds
too k ca re of that with his ISstroke victory at Pebble Beach.
H e faded to wm by double digits in the firitish Ope n, settlin g
instead for a record score at St.
Andrews (269) and a reco rd sco re
in relation to par ( 19 under) in
any maj or champions hip.
N o o ne could rec ite such

osu
from Page 11
Th e win ne r was Les li e H .
Wex ner. chatrman of The Limited. O thers wi th prime seatin g are
Wolfe Enterprises, whic h owns

To say Woods is the grea test
player ever in a little prem ature.
Nicklaus is still th e leader in the
clu bhou se. Woods hasn't even
made the turn -even though he
is playing like he has nothing but
par Ss in front of him.
" If Ja ck was in his prime today,
I don't thin k he could keep up
with Tiger," Mark. Calcavecchia
said Sunday at St. Andrews .
T he truth is, no one will ever
know.
Ni cklam was asked whether he
ever wonde red what it would be
like if he and Woods h;1d come
along at the same time, on the
same cou rses, with th e sa m e
equipment.
He bri stle d at a questio n he says
he hea rs at least 20 tim es a day.
·In so me respects, Nicklaus wa.s
an underac hiever. H e won the
Grand Slam three times ove r, but
he probably should have won it at

The Dispatch Printing Co. and
publishes T he Columbu s Dispatc h;Jay Schotte nstein , chairman
of Schottenstein Sto res Corp .:
and h eal develop e r R.J. Solove .
Ya 1kee o wne r George Steinbrenner. who previo usly do nated
mo ney to th e O SU athletics
department and whose wife IS

least twice m o re - seven times a
Bntish. Ope n runn er- up, fou r
tim es each in the Masters, U.S.
Open and PGA.
His record reveals 18 majors,
an d that's what Woods wants .
" M y record and my golf is basically done," Ni cklaus said. ''I'm
kind of rooti ng for some body else
to co me along and if it's Tiger,
that's fine. Some of the golf I've
seen from thJS young man is pretry phenomenal."
Is Woods the best ever? Not yet.
Not until he reaches the magic
number.
As he has shown tim e and time
again , Woods is always up for an
encore.
A victory in the PGA C hampionship wou ld allow him to j o in
Hogan as the o nly players to win
three m aj o rs in one year. Perhaps
Woods is up to an ev~n greater
acco mplishme nt - Hogan's winning eight of 11 maj ors he playe d
from 1950 to 1953.
From now on, anythin g but the
majo rs will merely be a warm - up
act. The o nly way Woods ca n ca p-

from C olum bu;, also has a suite.
The suites include bars, refri gerators and smks, as well as fo ur to
16 seats, eac h of whi c h comes
wtth a ti cket to the football game .
Suite sales, co upled with the
sale of 2,500 seat licenses, are
exp ec ted to pay fo r abo ut 80 p ercen t of the re novati o n ,

Dlvl~on

.WLTP1oGFGA
NY-NJ ........................ 13 1 2 41 39 29
.New England .. ............. &amp; 9 5 32 35 36
tAiomi .. .................... .. .7 11 5 26 32 41
~.c
t3 6 21 34 48

AUanta 8, Florida 5

Reds

·

Reds' skid continues, larkin hurts,

Details, A3
'

Minnesota ... ......... ........... 46 57
Welt DIYielon
Seattle ............ ... .......... .58 41
Oakland .......... . ....... ...... 54 45
Anaheim ............ ..... ........ 54 47

.447 11 11'2

.s.cs
.535

Taxas ........................ ...... 47 51

.480 10 1!"2

\C=QII.mbua .......... .........8 11
·l'allu .......... ............. .. 9 11

l(onsuCily ....... .... .. 12

41 33
37 34
CoiOnldo ...... ............ .IO 10 3 33 30
.$00 Jol0 .. ................ ...6 10 8 23 27
·•
8olurday, July 21
Alt-Star game Ill Columbus, 3:30 p.m.

17

30
42
34

p.m.

Colorado at Kansas City, 8:30p.m.
COlumbus at San Jose, 10 p.m.

llolurdoy, Aug. 8
L.oiAngales a1 Kansas City, 4:30p.m.

BASEBAll
lbjor '--guo llaMboll
MLB--Suspended Tampa Bay Devil RB)IO
manager Larry Rothschild for two games 8nd
fined him an undisclosed amoum for making
contact with an umpire and exceuive arguing
in a July 18 game against the Atlanta Braves.
ArneriCiin L.ugue
BOSTON RED SOX- Activated OF Trot
Nixon from the 15-day disabled list. Destgnated
INF Sean Berry tor as~nment .
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Acquired AHP
Jake Westbrook and AHP Zach Day from the
New York. Yankees to complete the trade fof OF
David Justice.
TEXAS
RANGERS-Called
up B.J .
Waszgls from OklallOma af the PCL.
N..lon•l L.Ngw
COLORADO ROCKIES-Placed AHP Mike
DeJean on the 15-day disabled list. Aeteasad
RHP Stan Belinda. R-Iled AHP Dallld Lee
and RHP Giovanni Carrara from Colorado
Springs of the PCL

Meigs County's

Ntw York-New Jersey at Chicago, 4 p.m.

Eo-..eom...,..
TNIII
W L PC1.
New York ................ ....... 15 10 .600

GB

Cloveland ......................... 13

10 .565
1
,, .560
1
Wllshl~ton .. .. .... .. ...... ..... 11 13 .458 3 112

ortanoo ......... ............. -..... 14

DotroL .... .... .................. .IO 13 .434

4

Miami ... ..................... . .. .9 15 .375 5 1/2
Indiana .............................. 6 17 .261
8
CIIAriOIIa .......... ........ .......... 18 .250 8 112

WMt.,., Conf..nce
x-Los Angeles .......... ..... ... 22 3 .880
•·HOUston ................ ........ 22 4 .846
1/2
Phoonlx ........ ................... . IS 9 .625 8 1/2
Sacramento .... .. ............. .. 15 1o .600
7
UIAh.......

....... . . 13 12 .520

"''""ita . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
s- ,!.......... . . ................ 20
playon
1 ~~

spot

Todly'a

a. mea

Wilf;ngton at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Miaini at Delroi1, 7:30p.m.

Cltl.iiland at Utah, g p.m.
Indiana at Phoenix, 1a p.m.
Sacramenta at PortJand, 10 p.m.
Thursdly'e Games

Ckweland 10, Toronto 3

Orlanao ar Sacramenta, 10 p.m.
Seattle at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Kantat City 6, Chicago White Sox 1

N.Y. Yankees 19, Baltimore 1
Taus 51, Anaheim 6
Olkland I . Seante 7
TCMMy'IG•mee
CleileiiM (Colon 9·7) 81 Toronro (Wells 153), 12:35 p.m.
MinnetOta (Rooman 8_.) at Boston (Wakelietd 6-5), 1:OS p.m.

NFLP-.,n

0.
Satun:l~'l Gamet
Atlanta at Indianapolis, 8 p.m.
New Orleans at New York Jets, a p.m.
Sund.y'a Gamet
:
Philadelphia at Cleveland, 8 p.m.
Plttsbu;'gh at Dollas, 8 p.m.
IIWiY'i Game-

Kansas City (Reichert 4-6) at Chicago White
So)( (Baklwin 12-4), 2:05 p.m.
Oakland (Hudson 10-3) at Seattle (AbbottS3), 4 :05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Yan 4-7) at De!roit (WMIJer 6·
B), 7:05p.m
- - Ni!WY611&lt; (Gooden 4-3f at BIMimoro (Pon--

9

11 13 .458 10 1!2
.. .. ...... ..... ........ ..... 8 16 .333 131/2
.167 17112

Port

MONTREAL EXPOS--Optioned OF GuiU&amp;rmo Mota to 011awa of the International League.
UILWAJ.ji(EE BREWERS- Acquired C
Kevin Brown from rna Toronto S.ue Jays for OF
Alvin Morrow.
BASKETBALL

Women•• Nltlon•l B•akelball Aaaool•
Uon
WNBA-Fined Seattle Storm G Edna Campbell $200 for retuning to the playing area fol lowing her ejection In Friday's game against
Mimesota.

FOOTBALL
NlltiOMI Footbllll League
NFL- Suspended Denver Broncos OT
Cyron Brown fOr one season tor violating the
league's substance abuse po19.
BALTIMORE RAVENS-Signed P Kylo

NEW YORK GIANTS-Agreed to terms with
Ol CorneUus Griffin on a lour-year contract.
Signed CB Jermalne Jones.
TENN ESSEE TITANS-Released
RB
Spencer George. Signed DT Henry Slay. Promated Jimmy Sta nton to assistant director of
media relations. Named William Bryarn assistant director ot media relations.

HOCKEY

N•tlonll Hocker LHgue
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Signed t.W

Marty Mcinnis and C Marc Chouinard to .oneyear contracts.
BOSTON BRUINS-Signod RW Andrei
Kovalenko 10 a one·~ear contract.
CALGARY FLAMES-Signed F Dave IDwry

to a two-year contract.

EDMONTON OILERS-Signed G Joaquin
Gage ta a one-year contract.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Signed G Rick
DiPietro to a three-year contract.
.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed to terms
with 0 Manin Bichler.
PH ILAOELPHIA FLYERS- Re-signed 0
Andy Delmore to a two-year contract .
PHOENIX COYOTES-Named Vaughn
Karpan director al amateur scouting.
OLYMPICS

I

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTIM1!'1'1~TAFF

CENTER

Friday, July 28, 2000
In Dr. A. Jackson Balles' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00·Noon

..,.. . '""'"- · ·~·O ' Urien and Soul sby h;lve agreed that t(&gt;r
every day of wo rk perform ed. th e im11.1te will
IT Lcivl' cn:·. dit f(Jr an ,1dditi on;d day w w ,1rd ht'l

POMEROY - M t·igs Coun ty Jail irn m tes
luvc bt.·~.:· n t.·nlistt.·d to work fOr tiH· c nmnHIJl l ~
ty unde r the term s o f a new pilo t progra111 in i- "i l'ntcn cc.
tiatcd by Shc·ritl'James M . Sou lsby .md M eigs
'"Tl1is is not onl y bcndici" l to the vili .ll(e'&lt; in
C ou nty Ceurt Judge l~atci c k-l=l ~&lt;c) ' llrie n . - --rlre n lllll ty, \dm-Jrrlnrr:mp&lt;1wer. but If w ill
.. so~ ~ m.e n St'rvin g se ntenct"s il1 th : cou nty al'iU cut th e cost ?f hnu ~ : ~~~· food :lll d &lt; Hh ~. · r
JUI
tmsdcmcat JOr c hargt"s an: gtvt:n the expenses for eac h 111111:\ tl', So ul sby Sa id .
optio n o f working in vanous capanrit'S in
H o using .costs place .1 con sider,Iblt: strain ·on
exc hange for j ail credit.
th e sheri IT 's \ iepartnw llt bmlget.
Tasks including g rass and wee d .cutting a11d
Not on ly t'i rhe co umy n. ''Pdn -. , ihlc l(lr th e
titter co ll ee n on arc included in rh~..· assign- tOod an d medi cal cmt ~ ·.I . . . ~..)ci .lrcd '' rth •.: .11.: h

men's arid wOme n's swimming coach.

~..,. HEARING AID

m erus .

orr

O ' Brit'II I LlS ~.11 d tha t any llllll :ltl' w ho do es
11 o r compl y \Yit h ri 1L· sup ervisor or art cmpts to
b r L' ak J\\'a\' ti·o1 11 th e detai l will bt· ci JJ rged
,,·lth ~..~~c a~&lt;·.
Most of th t• In mar e'&gt; g1ven till' option to parr i c i~1 a te \\'ill be tfw,c jail t: d fOr o ld tin t'S, driVItl g w itl1ou t .1 li L"L' liSt\ t~1durL' to .tfJp ear and
~imi Lu l l l i ... dci iH.' atlor~ .

•••

fow s 011 rc, rdiu_~;, ~t•r iti H,!J
ami malll t:lll&lt; lli&lt;&lt;. Studerll .&lt; would talu scinrcc
a11d Cili Zt'II Sit ip H'SIS ill
tire six rlr -g ra dr 1111da 11
Mil Ir e is ofliTill.~.

._

Sou l"ih\' -;aid.

STATE FAIR BOUND

••
:

3 Meigs youths qualify for big show

•

Call loll Free 1·800·634·5265 for an Immediate •
appointment.
lhe tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid •
Specialist
·
•
•.

•
•

prisonc:r, but liuurcd housing l:Jpac:ity in the
Mctg,;; jail requires the coun ry to
illti\ ,Jfl'" w h o o r r fi H· tlll' wo rk de tails arc
drn·ctl y " liPt..' r v i ~c d hy Ri c h i~.,.: \X/at11sley. co urt
-;L'l' llnt~ · (1HICLT t(1r Mt·tg'i Co unty C o url.
~l nr i qu att·d

·

Sm . Roln' r/ G .mi111·r, u
M,tdi.&lt;OII R cpublic,m a ud
clwirnra11 of tl1&lt;· Serwtc
Edu catian Coi1111 1ittre,
.&lt;aid IM•du cs da)' th M tlrt
.fimrtlr-.stratlc tes ts should

"The governor has asked th e
Legislature not to il Ct, not to
make any subs tantive c han ges to
rh e profi ciency test system until
the commi ssion can co m plete
its work," Milburn said . " T hat is
still the case."
On Tu esday, Taft suggested
that the state should take a serious look at the five - day pro ficiency te sts.
"At least ar th e fourt h-grade
level, when you're askin g kids to
take tlve te sts. tha~ is an eno r111 0 LIS burde n both in tLTlll S o f
Lhe time tha t it takeo.; ro do t hat.
and .J ust quit e a burden on scudcnts at that level." Taft said .
\'&lt;.':1 r.
Some parents aud educators
T:dt s.1 id Wedn esd.1y he didn't
'\ LT .1 proble m wit h G anlllt'r 's haw cnti c ized rhe t(m rr h-grad e
pro posal. " I thmk he\ very well re sts, o.; aymg thcy put too much
inttrFmed- abmif-the im 1es,s o I vrt'&lt;Sl!Te()]'fChil dre fi and don 't
would respt:c t wh:HL·ver din:c- .Kcuratd y m t·as urt• w hat c h iltio n in whi ch he \VJ nt s to drl'n are learmng.
Sen . Anthony Latell, a G irard
move," Taft s:1 id .
said Ga rdn er\ pro D
emocrat,
Taft spokesm an Sco tt Milbu rn
added that a propmal is no t the posal means the publi c's unhapS:l ll1 t' as legisbt ivt· Ktio n.
Piease see Tests, Page Al

Sheriff puts inmates to work

Unhed Stlt.. Olymp6c CommlttM
USOC-Named Mark Muedeking"' general
counsel.
COLLEGE
BELMONT-Named Ricky Sanders sohball
coach and J ill Simmons assistant volleyball
coach .
CENTRAL WASH INGTON-Named Jack
Bishop athletic director.
CINCINNATI- Reinstated sophom ore C
B.J. Grave to the men·s baske1ball team .
FRANKLIN &amp; MARSHALL- Named Bren
Boreni baseball coac h and assistant director of
ath letic facilities and events.
HILBERT- Named Gina Collara women's
bast&lt;ett&gt;all coach.
INDIANA, PA. Named D.avid Caldwell

will be given In Melgs/Gallla Counties by

:

COLUMH US
(AI')
Although the ~o v cr nor asked
lawmaker'\ to n:s1st pres,ure to
c h an ~e ( )hJO \ proficiency tests
unt il a co mmi o;s io n issu es a
report. a leading Senate Repub lican w1 1l in trodu ce legislation
soon to l'hmmare rh c reo; ts' science ;md Citi zenshi p portions.
Sen. R obert Gardn er, a Mad ison R epu blican '111d chmman
of the Senate Educatio n Committ ee, said Wedne sday that the
fourth-grad c tests should focus
on readin g. writing and m;Itlu:matics. Students \\:ould tak e sc ience and citi zen ship tests in th e
six th- grade under a bill he is
otfering.
"The m ost important skill a
chi ld ne eds to have is readin g,"
l;ardn er said. " If a chi ld do esn't
ac quire that skill , othe r bodi es o f
kn owledge wo uld be very diflicul t tor that child to attain."
Cov. llob Tafr. also a R epubli can , has \vritt cn a lettcr aski ng
state lawnukers and candidates
for the Legislature· to delay
act 1o n.
Th e
co mm ission
arpoi nrcd by th e g overnor j,
looki ng at all aspe·cts .of Oh io 's
profic ien cy te11ts and is expected
to 111ake a fin al report brcr thi s

WORK DETAIL
- Inmates from
the Meigs County Ja il , participating in a new
pilot program
initiated by
Sheriff James
M. Soulsby and
County Court .
Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien, rece ive
jail credit for
working in the
commun ity.
Here, inmates
cut gtass and
brush from the
county's emer·
gency helipad .
(Brian J. Reed
photo )

.
••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS

•••
••

50 Cents

Fourth-grade
battery of tests
under attack

Mar'tinez Williams.
Won.n'a Nat10n11 Balk.tblll AMoclatlon

July 27, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 44

CAROLINA PANTHERS-A~eased AS Sirr
Parker and FB ·Nathan Norman.
INOIANPOLIS
COLT$-Signed
RB
Tremavne Stephens.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed DE 11m Martin.
, Waived K Jay Taylor.
.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Waived WR

Odes et Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Miami at DC United, 7:30p.m.
Son Jose at Coklnldo, 9 p.m.
lunrlllr. Aug. t

Bl

Hometown Newspaper

Richardson.

...count&gt;us at Now England, 7 p.m.

Oetroi1 8, Tampa Bay 4

''I'm going to be prepared no
matter what is asked of me," he
said . "Every time I touch the ball,
I want to end up in the end
zone."

39
41
40

~.Aug.2

Tueldey•e Oernte
Boston 4, Minnesota 2

elTon.

33

OaHu ot Now England, 7:30p.m.
Chicago AI Tllmpo Bay, 7:30p.m.
New Yortc·Ntw Jersey at DC United, 7:30

4
5

he keeps that up, he could return
a whole bunch of them this year."
Yealt, who scored 32 touchdownl at Kentucky, including
four punt returns for scores, won't
promi•e that rype of production
this season. He will, however,
guarantee that · his coaches and
fans will have no doubts about his

5 35 .as
4 31 36
4 31 40

w..t.rn Otvtak)n
5 5
i.:::&lt;"Ano"• .............. 10 7 7
~

x-cijiplad

.586

38 ..

Thursday

•

N.Y. Yankees (Cone 1·9) at Minne5ota

(Romero 0-0), 8:05p.m.
Dolroil (IWid&lt;i 4·10) at Te•as (Giym 1-1),

so .500 e 112
54 ....9 11 112
se .429 t3 112

San Francis00 .. ......... ....... 54 oW
Los Angeloo .................... 53 48
~ .......................48
San Diogo ... ..... .. .. . .. ..... 45 ""
Tuooday'o GornM
N.Y. Mtlts 5, Montreal 0

Frllftdsco at Canton

(llur1&gt;n H). 8:05p.m.

C.nlrol OMolon

1!53

vs. San

lburadl_y"• Gamu

N - - .... ........ .......... .. 54 +4 .551
8
Monlo&lt;loJ .............. ............ 47 48 .480
12
Florida ........................ ... 48 51 .485 12 112
Philad.Ophia ........ ............« 54 .+49
18

Houston .......................... 37

New England

Ohio. 7 p.m.

Society news and notes, A&amp;

Friday

High: 80s; Low: 60s

Tampa Boy (Aupe 2-4) at Kansas City

Eut Dlvtalon
WLPci.Q8

St. Loo~ ................ .... se
Cincinnati ...... .. ................so
Chicago ...................... ... ...
Pillsllurgn .......... ........... 42

·

Anaheim (Schoouowols 5·5) at Toxao (PerilllO 2-3), 8:35 p.m.

Chicago CYbs 8, Philad.Ophia 7

his last gasp just trying to get guys
out," Dierker said.
He got the first two batters out
in the eighth , then gave up a single to Julio Lugo. That brought
up switch-hitter Mitch Meluskey
and left McKeon with a decision .
All of Meluskey's 17 doubles
and II homers have come from
the left side, where he 's a .323 hitter. He hits only .171 right- handed - six singles in 35 at- bats.
Does McKeon leave Sullivan
in, allowing Meluskey to bat from
his f~vorite side? Or does he
bring in left-hander R o n V11lone,
who was warming up, and turn
him around?
"Sully had been getting the
guys out," McKeon said. " We
would do that (bring in Villone) if
we knew it would work."
His decision to stay with Sullivan didn't work. Meluskey, batting left- handed , hit a high fastball to the gap in right-center for
a game-tying double.
"That's the big hit of the
game," Bagwell said. "To get ba ck
to even going into the mnth that's what you need ro do."
Villone (8- 7) came o n after

·

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
Atlanta ........ ....................81 31 .810

NEW YORK (AP) - Barry
Emmitt Smith is th e othe r
Sande rs, Jerry Ri ce, Bruce first-t eam runniug back and
Matthews , Bruce Smit h and . C ris Carte r was chosen as the
R eggie White were unanimous seco nd receivt!'r.
select io ns to the NFL All William Roaf and Gary
Decade team for the 1990s, Z imme rman are t he tackles:
announced by the league .
R andall M cDaniel, th e o ther
Jo hn Elway of Denver is the guard ; Dennontti Dawson is
first-team quarterback. D eion the ce nte r
an d Sh a mi on
Sanders and Mel Gray are the Sharpe wa s pi cked at tight
only players se le cted at two end.
positions.
On d efense , Co rtez Kennedy

'

Wednesday, July 26, 2000

•

Bv

P

• Anyone who has 1rouble hearing or understanding conversation is invited to •
ture the imagination is to win the • have 8 FREE hearing test to see if this problem can be helped. Bring this •
•
Grand Slam in one year, or maybe • coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
each of the maJOrs by double- -- -- -- - --·
digit margins.
In the meantime, everyone will
be watc hing.
And waiting.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

q u . d J t) ·1 11 ~

U lVl[ ROY -

Th rn · lVl ei&gt;''

( ~ ml m \·

-t - 11 ( :luh

tju.di !l .:J

t\)

ll lL' Jl\ hc r -.

p.trtici p,Hr in tlw

Ol no Sl.l tl' r:.li r IHli''-L'

~h n\\'

.It ll L' IlL kr~ ~~~ ~ ·. ., Arc t LI 111

PRACTICE PAID OFF For So nny
Folmer. who co ul d be s een many
eve nin gs at th e Roc k Spr ings Fa irgrounds ma ne uve rin g he r ho rse .. Ruby
Rides Again " a round cones a nd barre ls .
the practice paid off when s he qua li fi e d
for competit ion at the Oh io State Fair.
(Charlen e Hoefl ich photo )

Electric &amp; Gas
Water Heaters
Availahle

Fair tickets on sale

Electric 19·50 Gallons

I'OME I~OV

Se:l'o n passe'
ti1r rhc 2111111 M e i ~s C m 1111Y F.1ir.
Au g. 1-l - 11) , ;Ill ' 1lm \' 0 11 \ edt•.
Passt•s may bt• l ' urdu scd for
.$12 fmm Joc'o.; Co u11L r y M .1rh· t.
Rut l.111 d: Woid Cn m
Sons .
R:1 cin l'; B .Hllll Lumber C o ..
C hN cr. Sn g.u· ltnn Flo m Mill.
P ol JK'rtJV; Swr~ h t..T Lol h L' Ph .lrlll ,tcy. Pu;l lt'rny; C: itgo. Tup pt• n
PLl im; G lncck n t'r's R esta uran t.
Po meroy; Wh.1it'y\ Grucny. D ar w tn; Ibn\ Mark et. SYfaCLI'il';
llorsc·l L n·kin ,, Long Botto m :
Dan \ ,
M idd le port,
TJZ's
MarAt ho n , Pnm l' roy; !t ee d 's
Co untr y
Stu rl' ,
R eedsv ille:
McDo nald\ Po meroy ; Cit gtf.
Middleport; .md ll..utland Dep.lrtm cnt St o r e, R utl.md.
A o;ca&lt;;n n pa~ o; cntirk . . tl h· hold -

ICKENS
HARDWARE
MAlON,
W.VA.

Sentinel
Sections -

to l' lltcr th e t~ 1 1rg ro un do;; l'Vt'r y
day ufrhc fai r, ro frt'c p.1rkin g an d

-

all tht..·

to :1tt end

c n tcrLll ll llll'l lt

Calendar
A6
C la ssifieds
B4- 6
C oan ics
B7
Editorials
A4
Obituaries -~- A .l
S11o rt s
B 1-5, 8
Weather
AJ

bot h on the· hi ll ,t,\ ~e and .It the
~ ra nds ta n d . lc doL'\ not co\·n rhe
CO'i t o f rid e~.

I h ily adtn is. . i o tl pr i ~. · c ,It the
~at e w.ill hL· $ ( 1 .m d rl lo...,l· tid .. e h
in l') Udl' !lilt o nl y ,d) L'll[t..TL\111 lll l' IH ,

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t ,l rlli v,tl ri dt''l .
\\'i ll l-w on . . .de .It

,t n y o f thl' t:J it r, lll t..'t' ~.tt t' 'i

to dw

Lotteries

(;,i rgmu nds.
C hil drc11 u ndn ~ ,\rt..' .1d m ml·d
tl·. .: . .·. h ut ll l ll"i t pu rc h,l"il..' " p.l 'i" to
rid t' tht· mi Jw;1y ri de-;.
Aga in t his yt·ar. o;c ni o r t·itizcm

and

k i d~

16 Pages

2

day.;;. will be

Pick .\ : (~-~ - 1 ); Pick 4: i J - H -.~ -! J
Su p~r Lotto: 1.::- U -2-t- .\ I --IS--H1
Kicker: H-9 -S- ~ 1-,'-:-rl

S~..· nior C i tiz~·n~ D .1y \V iii be t\ ug.

W.VA.
Daily 3 : .1 I

17 . until 2 p.m . ~1 \&gt; he ,,~! m i tt e d
ti·ce, 'iC tll o r c iti7l'll 'i ntmt 'i h ow

1'1 11\.11: l~l W -

••

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Please see Fair. Page Al

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.

-'

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i.

.

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'

/\ t th e 'lt.Jtl' b1r. w h L'J't' :~ II HH couJJties
will bt· rqJrl''I L'ntr:d in tlw h orst~ show.
h&gt;hn n w1ll co mp t' te ln her rwo categon c;o; on M o nday. K arr o n T uesday and

Wedne, day, and R o ush o n Tuesday and
Thur1d:1y.

pk

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An e·l dcrl y ro u-

ll ~lll l'L' d I ll

,\1 1 .1\lft Hll Ob l k'

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JJ \11/L'I fVk dil·.d C:c lltc r , w het\ ' hl'
\\ '.1' m·.HL',l .llld r~..· k.J:-.cd . ·
I IJ . , wtll:. F .t~ l' ~ 111ith. 'J l , \ \ '.l "i
t r.Jii~pnnt•d hy NkdF hgln ro St.
l\rl .11 , .. ., ! Jn,pital in H unt ington,
\X. 1.V.1. , \ \ ' l ll't\" ~ht• rl'll l :l ll lt'd llllTi tll .1) ~ nnd 1t io 11 \'A·d lll''i tb\' .1fter-

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\\ .1~ t t. JWI1 11g \\'l'"t LH l

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!\1.t111 \\he ll IH· lo. . r co mrol of the
c .1r hL' dron·.
It lett rh t· . . rrcl't on thl· r igl1t
-..,t nk111 ~ .1 t1t tl11 y po le. l'hlTL' W,lli
he.I\ ') d. JtJ ), J ~L' tn th~..· ..._. Jr .
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OHIO

o h licrvcd .

J.t ckm n ( :o urJty.
T h l' J\tk ih"i yourl1" U llli~Wt t• d t(lr ' tors at
the :-..tate t-:1ir wtth club ll lL' Il llxT~ ill
Arhcns, (;,,Jiu . 1-1 41Cki ng. ).h_. k,on . P Jkc,
R ms .111d S!..'il)tn L' U II l lt it'~.
Scored by JUdges, Kc\·111 Arn old ,tn d
T,JJni - Sh i ra- V.lllgh ,Ill , p,m ic1 p.lll ts were
rcqutrcd ro qu a lit~ · m ,It ka ~t t\\'o evt.."nts.
Mt·i t,~ qu .1hfi n . . wnc So1111! Fo lmn in
r onL'S .md harrds and barrel raci1w : Whit-

111..')' Karr in :-. howman ship western horses.
and h o rscmcm sh1p we~ tLTII hor\L'": and
Ashlt'y R oush in ~h owman sh1p western
h o rs t·~ .111d w~..·stcrn piL•JsurL' horsl.'.
C allia Co umy youth yu.il it)ring \\'t.' rc
Mcgha11 I k ck;mi, co nes ;111d lurrd11 , pole
bend111g. speed ;tnJ co ntro l. and h1rrel racJIIg; Nathan CClrdon, con es and barrels
and barrel racin g: ,md .C hr is Wn ght . con t·s
.md har rd :-.. l.i Jl t' l'd and cont rul. .llld bar rd

l-ear crash in Pomeroy injures 2

Today's

n

FRO M STAFF REPORTS

)'Oil tits

tl u n ll_l!. ,1 n.'\Ti l t

l.ll' Xt , \\'LT k
l' \ 'l' llf

mtupl'tcrl j(n,·
s/or s ,u tlt l' .&lt;1&lt;111' Ji1i r lf'itlt chth
m l' mh crs ;,, "-ltlt errs , G a/lia .
Hockiug, Ja cksou , Pike, Ross
.md Scicito co11u1i es.

Tire ilfl'igs

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SENTINEL NEW S STAFF

THE SCENE - ·James a nd Faye Smit h were injured wnen the ir car
str uck thi s utility po le in front of the o ld Po me roy Junior High Sc hool
Wedn e sday morning. Last yea r, a woman died of injurie s s uffered in
a n accid e nt involv ing the same pol e. Ribbons are place d there in he r
memory. (D ave Ha rris pho to)

�.. .

'

....

'

Thursday, July 27, 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Parents face loss of children
CLEVELAND (AP) - Parents who exhaust their welfare eligibility on Ocr. 1 may face agency reviews which could lead to the
lms of their children.
. Welfare agencies plan to send social workers to make sure that
: childre n are properly cared for.lfworkers believe children are being
m·glected, the children could be placed in councy custody.
Officials do not expect large numbers of children to be taken. ·
" That's what people fear the most but, we have no intention of
raking children from their parents simply because they're poor," said
Cuyahoga Councy Commissioner Jane Campbell.
"The reason we are doing these child safecy visits is so we can
, help them before they end up with no money, no resources, become
. homeless and something happens to the child."
Most families that lose welfare benefits will still be eligible for
food stamps, Medicaid and other services.
Ohio has adopted a rhree-year lifetime limit on cash benefits and
requires recipients to work or go to school to get benefits.
About 2,300 Cuyahoga Cquncy families lost benefits temporari- ly in the last 14 months because of failure to comply with work or
other requirements, Campbell said, but only three cases required
: intervention by the Department of Children and Family Services.\

NORWOOD (AP) - The mayor of thi s
· Cincinnati suburb was indicted Wedne sday
on 14 criminal charges accusing him of fa!sifying records and stealing money and services from the cicy.
Mayor Joseph Hochbein' said at a news
• conference Wednesday that he is innocent
.
and WI·ll fitg ht th e c h arges.
" I have a clear conscience," said
Hochbein. "1 am at peace with God."
Hochbein said he ·never has done anything to violate the public trust.
I( convicted, he could be · sent to prison
for as long as 36 years, said David Parker, the
Cincinn~ti attorney who is serving as special
prosecutor.
A Hamilton Councy grand jury indicted
Hochbein on charges offalsification, theft in
office and election fa lsification. Tw~lve of
the 14 counts are felonies .
The Republican is serving his second

Petro switches abortion stance
COLU MBUS (AP) - State Auditor ]1m Petro, an expected candidate fo r attorney generalm two years and possibly governor after
_t_h~r. said Wednesday~ th1t he now opposes abortion.-in- the fin1
trimester, a change from his previous abortion rights position.
Petro, who was endorsed by the National Abortion Rights Action
League in 1998, soid the change came as more information emerges
about the viabilicy of a living fetus out!ide the womb.
" If I believe it's a life that begins at conception and we have a
responsib ilicy to advocate the preservation of human life at conception. why do I support that at 13 weeks but not at 12?" he said.
' Petro said politics didn't enter his decision to oppose abortion in
all cases except for rape, incest or where the mother's life is in danger. Rather, it came after much soul-searching and discussions with
his wife and children, all of whom oppose abortion.
Petro, 51, a-former House lawmaker and Cuyahoga Councy commissioner, is in his second and last term as state auditor. Under state
law he cannot run again . He has expressed interest in running for
atto rney general in 2002 and hasn't ruled out a run for governor in
the future .

Bee sting causes acddent
N~RWALK (AP) -A truck driver allergic to bee stings blacked
out after he was stung and his rig slammed into a house, causing it
to be condemned.
·
·
Fred Houghtlen. 44. of Colli ns told troopers he lost control of his
tru ck Wed nesday after he was stu ng on his left calf and blacked out
while dnving we;r along U.S. 20.
.
Five people ms1dc t he house escaped injury, but the house was
con demned becau se of the damage.
· "I do n't remember anything except climbing out the window,"
.Hou ghtlen said.

: H oughtlen was feeling slee py because of the sting and was trying
:to pull off th e road when he lost control, struck a tree, a utilicy box
:a nd another tree before crossmg the yard and hitting the house.
• Ho ughrl en was ci ted for losi ng control the tru ck, which is owned
~y Smith Pavmg &amp; Excavating of Norwalk.

Two sought in teen shooting
, C ANTON (Af\) - A 17-year-old was shot and killed Wednes~by in th e parking lo t of Timke n High School and two suspects
~vere bemg .:.ough t, police ~aid.
· ~ ChiefThonus Wyatt said in a statement that Stanley T Jones of
Canton dtec! at Aultm an Hos pital in Canton shortly after the 4:59
p.m. shooting
Wyatt didn't specifY a possibl e mot1w in the shooting or identifY
tlu: ~u'ipects.

: Police re&gt;pondir1g to a call found Jones 111 the parking lor on the
\vest &lt;ide of the high school. Lt- Jerry Steiner said the victim was
wait1ng fo r a frienct to finish band practice.

Two-vehide
crash kills girl
'
.

NORWALK (AP) - A 14-year-old girl was killed WcdnesJ:Iy
wh en the 15- year-old driver of a pickup truck passed a car in a no~
pa ss1ng zone ::tnd "it ru ck an o ncoming auto, aUthorities said.
Km Szcze panski of Wakeman, a passenger in the pickup truck,
wa&lt; k1ll ed 11 1 the acCident along U.S. 224 in southeast Huron Counrv be twe en N onu lk :111d Mamfield, the State Highway Patrol said.
T he· dn vc r, Sh.ttll n ll H oliday of Sandusky, her 14-year-old sister
.tnd :h l' th~c c pcopk· 111 thl' l Hit:Uimng ca r ·were injured..
·
Ot the lllJUred, only the Sl'C ond driver, Melody Swiger, 42 , of
New Lo ndon. \\ ' JS Jdmittcd to F1 sher-Titus Medical Center in
Norw.1lk . Shl' w:l'\ rcportL·d in 'iJt1sfa c tory condition.
I

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

A Hamilton County grand jury
indicted Hochbein on charges of
.r.

.11:

falsification' tht;,t in O..utce and
election falsification. 1lvelve of the
14 counts are felonies.
.
.
Jerm as mayor 1n Norwood.
a
cay
of about
.
.
24,000 people. H e will be arratgned Aug. 4
in Hanulton County Common Pleas Court.
The md1ctmenr resulted from a yearlong
investigation by the county sheriff, Parker
said.
Hochbein is alleged to have improperly
used a city employee or employees to do
work· for a private function. the 1999 Norwood Car Show. He also is acc used Of having used city money for the private show.
Hochbein and his lawyers said he has
committed no crime.
The Common Pleas Court appointed

Driver cited
Helen Marie Zeigler

Parker as special prosecutor. Hamilton
County Prosecutor Michael All e n had said it
would be inappropriate for his office to be
involved in the case. Allen noted that he is ·a
former Hamilton Coun ty Republican Party
•
chairman and had prior associations with
Hochbein in GOP activities.
'
Hochbein is free on liis recognizatlCe.
Parker asked that Hochbein be sununont&gt;d
to co ll rt, saying that it was not necessary to
issue an arrest warrant .
Hochbein is the second Norwood c'ity
official to recently face charges. Last year.
former city poli ce c hiefTimothy Brown was
convic ted of charges that he fa lsified a
report in an effort to cover up Iu s ~wn
dru nk-driving accident in December 19\)8.
Brown, a Norwood police officer for 25
years, was allowed to retire after his misdemc:.:mor conv iction.

RACINE- ~den Ma~ie Zeigler, 43, Racine, died Tuesday, July 25.
2000 m St. Marys Hospital._Huntmgton, W.Va.
·
B~rn Dec. 13, 1956 in Wellsburg, W.Va .•daughter of th e late Samuel
William Sr. and Ruby Virginia Caldwell Zeigler, Jnd was a former
nurse's aide .
She was also preceded in death hy a brother, Samuel W. Zeigler Jr. .
SurviVIng are two sons, Michael Zetgler of Middleport, and William
Davtd Zeigler of Lancaster: five daughte rs, Alicia Francis Zeigler of
Col~mbus, Debra Ann Moodispaugh of Randleman , N. C., C harlene
M _ane Zeigler and Shelia Mari e Zeigler. both of Pomeroy, and Tricia
N1cole Zeigler of Middl eport ; a sister. Mary Wellman of Follansbee,
W.Va .; two brothers, John Zeigler of Follansbee. and William Pall off of
Thornton, Colo.; and two grandchildren.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland•. WJth the Rev. Samuel And erso11 officiating. Burial will be in
Burlmgham Cemetery, near Shade. Friends may call at the funeral ·
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Friday.

VALLEY WEATHER

Meigs 'fire training

Showers and thunderstorms
. will spread across the tri-county
: area the next couple of days as a
·: low pressure system moves into
: the region, the National Weather
- Service said on Thursday.
Damp weather is likely to continue through the weekend, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday will be in the
low to mid-80s. Lows tonight
will be in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:50
and sunrise on Friday at 6:27 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy with
~og developing after nudni ght .
Lows in the mid 60s. Southwest
wind 10 mph becoming·light and
variable.

TRAINING SESSION - The Pomeroy Fire Depar tme nt held a training
session for area firefighters last Sunday in an abandoned structure on
Kerr Street in Pomeroy. Firefighters were tra ined on search and res·

," fifth-grade.
The bill would create four categories based on a student's scores
instead: advanced placement for
high - scoring students, passage,
pmess With proficiency tests is passage with remediation and
starting to put pressure on maJOr- fail ure. The latter category would
ity Republicans . Latell has pro- be reserved for students w ith
posed a bill eliminating the clear reading problems.
fourth-grade guarantee.
Teachers and principals would
Gardner's proposal would also still have the final say in who
alter the propos ed guarantee, passes on to the fifth-grade . as
under which students who don't they do under the fourrh~grade
f,Bss reading can 'Lgo~an~to~the- guarantee,-Gardner sa id. - - -

Tests

cue, extinguishment, overhaul, and pump operations. Over 25 firefighte rs from Middleport, Syracuse, Tuppers Plains, Ga lli polis and
Pomeroy fire departments attended t he session. (Contributed photos)

from Page AI

'

Ohioans Jive $500,000
for Washington DC memorial
COLUMBUS (AP) - The War II, I don't believe we'd be
campaign to build a memorial standing here in this beautiful
_-~to ~orld War II v~terans in ~_j)l_aza as free rnen and women," -~~
Warnmgton got a $500,000 Dole said.
bo~st Wednesday, courtesy of
Taft recalled memories of his
Ohio taxpayers, when Gov. Bob late fath~r, Robert Taft Jr., w ho
Taft presented a check to former fought 111 the Pacific and in
.
Kansas Sen. Bo b Do Ie.
France dunng the war.
The
two
Republicans
" I was never more proud of
thanked about 200 Ohto veter- him than when 1 read hi s
ans and other officials during a account of his service during
ceremony at the Statehouse Vet- World War n;'Taft said.
Money for the memorial was
erans ~laza.
Melissa Growden of Toledo, included in the s4o billion budwhose grandfather brought the get state lawmakers approved
idea to Congress, said the $100 last year. The campaign for the
miUion memorial , to be built by memorial has received more
2003 in front of the Lincoln
than S92 millwn.
Memorial, will hono r veterans
If the National Capital Plan and the Americans who supported them throughout the ning Committee approves the
design, the 7.4 acre memorial
nation's history.
"It does not belong to one would feature 56 pillars, each 17
man, one family or even one feet high, and two large raingeneration. It belongs to all of bow-shaped pools surrounding
us," said Growden , whose a sunken plaza. Visitors would
grandfather, Roger Durbin, died enter throllgh two 41-foot-tall
arch es.
in February.
Two fountains would send
Dole, who lost the use of his
jets
of water twice as high as the
right arm because of a World
War II injury in Italy, has taken pillars. Trees and lawn wollld
the lead on raising money to occllpy two-thirds of the sit e. A
wall of gold stars would repre build the memorial.
"Had we not been in World sent veterans killed in the war.

Teacher who reported proficiency
cheating surprised by retirement ·
COLUMBUS (AP) · A
Barbara McCarroll, 59, ·
reacher who said cheating o n the
'd h
I' d
state proflcien(:y__gst was f&gt;CC~!'=--. sat , s e !'e~r ilJ'P ~e-c'i:-=---l
ring at a school praised by Presi- ~rlhremenl. She sa1il
e
dent Clinton for sizeable testthinks she's being
sc~reimprovements says the dis- punished for reporting the
tnct IS congratulatmg her on her
d h ,
.
aII eoe
c eattno,
renremenr.
6
6
But Barbara McCarroll, 59,
against her."
said she never applied for retireHe said he'll investigate .
.,
ment. She said she thinks she's
M
cCarroll
went
to
Columbus
being punished for reporting the
school officials early this year, oayalleged cheating.
"I feel like I'm being picked ing fifth-graders at Eastgate Eleour;• McCarroll said Wednesday. mentary told her that a "tutqr"
"This is the most nerve-racking had supplied answers to the I \1~9
statewide proficien cy test far
thing I've ever been through."
McCarroll said a letter she them. Eastgate students' scores
received from the district this had jumped as much as 394 perweek told her that the school cent in reading and 229 perce!'l
board approved her retirement at in math.
After a two-week investigaa May 16 meeting.
The letter was signed by tion, the state ruled that allegaColumbus Schools Superinten- tions of chea tmg couldn't be suo dent Rosa Smith and Executive stantiated.
Director of Personnel L. Ernest
She took leave from Eastgaie
Blandon.
in February, she said, because. of
• Blandon said he signed more the stress brought on by th e pub·:
than I 00 similar letters of con- licity of her allegations.
McCarroll said she hoped · io
gratulations for retirements and
doesn't remember McCarroll's.
take off work for about a year arid
" If a mistake was made, I'm had asked the State Tt'acheh
responsible ," Blandon said. "The Ret~tement System for disability
intent was nor ro do anything pay, but ha s never asked to rrtir¢ .

Fair
flomPageA1
their Golden Buckeye Card or
some other proof of age.
Kids days will be observed o n
both Aug. 16 and Aug. 19, with all
children 12 and under being
admitted free until noon. A hand
stamp to ride will cost $3.

-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·96ll )

Ohio Valll'y PuhllshinH Co.
Publtshcd ever}' aftcrrmlJn, Momh) through
Friday. ll I Coun Sr, Pomeroy, Ohro, by th e
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Memhtr: T he Assoc ialcd Press, and the Ohio
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The Daily Senlincl , Ill Courr St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

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Union:
Private prison
faces problems

No subscriptiPn h)' marl pcrmrtll:ll tn
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area~

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Friday... Mosrly cloudy with a
cha nce of showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be heavy at
times. Highs in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday night .. .A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Fog
after midnight. Lows in the mid
60s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 80s.
Sunday. .. Parrly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the lower 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the lower 80s.

Reader Services

•

I~

CIP hearing

Registration set

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in MeigS
County Probate Court to Earnest
Allen Greene, 29, and Angela
Ni cole Roberts , 24, both of
Racine; Walter James Robb Ill, 31,
and Mmha Marie Adkins, 39, both
of Albany; and Mi chael Andrew
Bailey, 23, and Kimberly Shawn
Godwin, 18 , Long Bottom.

Divorces filed
POMEROY - . Divorce actions
have been filed in Meigs Councy
Common Pleas Court by David E.
Pickrell, Portland, against Linda G.
Pickrell, Parkersburg, WVa.; David
Ri chard Long, Racine, against
Wendy Lynn Long, Pomeroy;
Michael Jones, A. P.O. , A.P.', against
Cynthia LynnJones,A.P.O.,A .P.

Foreclosures
sought
POMEROY Foreclosure
actions have been filed in Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court by
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Pomeroy. against John R. Hill,
Syracuse; Firstar Trust Co.,
Alliance, against Geron 0. Harvey,
Albany, and others; and by Home
National Bank, Racine, against
Richard M. Young, Pomeroy, and

... .
The state
patrol investigated this two-car crash at 11;55 a.m.
Tuesday on
Knot&gt;;Stiversville Road. The Racine squa(j transported
the victims to Jackson General Hospital. Further details were unavailable
as of presstime. (Racine Volunteer Rre Department photo)

others.

Units log calls
POMEROY Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered six call~ for assistance on
Wednesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:46a.m., East Main Street, Faye
Smith, St. Mary's Hospital;
11 :58 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Middleport.
Tina Warner, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
4:54 p.m.. South Second
Avenue. Dorothy Roush. Holzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
10:03 a.m .. East Main Street,

James Smith, HMC
REEDSVILLE
5:21 a.m .• Curtis Hollow, Gladys
Thomas, Camden-C lark Memoria!Hospital.
RUTLAND
10:57 a.m., State Route 143,
assisted by Middleport, .Alice
Chapman. HMC

Meeting slated
RUTLAND - Rutland Town ship Trustees will hold a public
flood mitigation meeting on Aug.
10 at 6 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center, to discuss the proposed
Langsville flood nlitigatio n project.
All residents of the Langsville
area arc e ncouraged to attend.
Information is available by caUing

REEDSVILLE - Kindergarten
registration and orientation in the
Eastern Local Sc hool District will
take place at 'the Eastern Elementary Building. 9 a.m. on Aug. 10.
For those who have not preregistered the c hild or c hildren,
screening will take place and parents are to rake birth certificates,
Social Securiry numbers, and
inununization records.
Information about the program,
conference timt:s, cl ass requirements and bus routes will be discusse d at the nlet'ting, and parents
will meet with the principal,
teacher, and transportation coo~di­
naror.

Special meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - A special meeting of the Eastern Board
of Education will be held at 7:30
p.m. Monday m the elementary
cafetorium for discu~&lt;Ion an d possible hiring of personneL
The regu lar board meeting will
be Aug. 9 at 7:30 p.m. in the cafe~

tori urn.

Trustees to meet
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of the clerk. Osie
Follrod.

McCain says ·it's 'time to serve' Bush in speech draft
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Offering closure began rehearsing th e speec h thiS week.
to a bitter primary, John McCain is preparing a. .. •. BIJW. . off!cial,s. had anxiously awaited the
prime-time convention speech in which he draft, hoping McCain would avoid conflict and
praises Texas Gov. George W. Bush and declares giVe full-throated support to the ticker,
"it is my time to serve" lus former rival and preThe Arizona senator issues his high est prai se
sumptive R epubhcan pre!lderitial nominee .
in a sec tion cymg hi~ ' grandfather, a World War
_ln _a draft of his SRl'e_cb bemg t:I'Yiew~by__j_J admiral, ta..Bush'&gt;-tathe.r, a World War II pilot
convention planners and Bush advisers, McCain and former U.S. president.
calls for "government reform" in general. but
"Many years ago, the governor's father
avoids direct mention of his bid to overhaul fought for our country, with distinction, under
election finance laws - the issue that divides the command of my gr.mdfather. Now it is my
M cCain from Bush and other GOP leaders.
turn to serve under th e son of my grandfather's
"Cynicism is suffocating the idealism of su bordinate," M cCam says.
many Americam, especially among the young
The address is expected to be a highlight of
- and with cause, for they have lost pride in the conven tion's second night, a reward for
their government:' McCain says in the text pre- winning seven primaries and posing the greatpared for Tuesday's night's appearance.
est th reat to Bush's candidacy. Though denied a
Portions of the address were read Wednesday spot on th ~ ticket, M cCain 's support is impor~
to The Associated Press by three senior Repub- rant as Bush tries to appeal to ticket-splitters and
lican officials. One so urce said the Bush cJ m- swing voters cnc rgtzed by the senator's undt:rpajgn has voiced no objections to it. McCain dog campaign.

In his most direct mention of the primary
fight, the text has McCam thanking the crowd
for warmly welcoming "a distant runner-up" to
the convention stage.
The theme of the :rddress is "America's .
greatness;· officials said. He urges Americans to
en:UJ!ate the WGrldWar--11-generation, saying~hot­
men of that era went to war for the sake of an
idea that was more V' luable than their own self
interests.
McCai n was a prisoner-of-war during the
Vietnam War for 5 ); years. Bush stayed home,
serving in the Texas Air National G uard.
"These are extraordi nary times to be alive.
We are so strong and so prosperous that we can
scarcely imagine th e heigh~&lt; we can asce nd if
we had th e will to make th e climb.Y~t I think
each of us senses that Ameri ca. for all our prospenry, is in danger of losing the best sense of
herself- that there is a purpose to being an
Amt'ri can beyond materiali sm," he says.

Bush, Cheney defend their records in first campaign trip together
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Dick
Cheney is offering no apologies
"cor his conservative V&lt;?ting record
or his oil industry ties as Democ rats pounce on vote s by the former Wyoming congressman.
" I am gen~rally proud of my
record in the House and the job I
did representing the sta te of
Wyoming," Cheney said Wednesday on a nostalgic trip back to his
roots in C.1sper with prcsmnpttve
GOP presidential no minee Texas
Gov. George W. Ilush at his s1de.
But the tOrmn defcnst: secre tary also acknowledged he mi ght
have voted ditlt·rently on some
matters m the cu rrent healthy
economy than be did in the
defi cit- plagued 1980s.
" I'm su re if ( WL're to go back
and look at the individual vmes. I
co uld probabl y fi nd so me th at I
might tweak an d do a bit d itli.·rcnrly," Cheney told reporters.
reft• rrin g to his 1l)79-R9 t clHJrL' in

the House.
H e said he voted agai nst some
new programs in the era of bud~
get deficits because he was he wa s
"concern ed about co ntroll ing
federal spend ing."
But with c urr&lt;!nt projections
for a $4.5 trillion surplus. " We've
got the opportunity now I think
to go do some things that we
could not have done ~0 years ago
and the governor's laid our a
number of those: for example,
such t hings as reforming the edu~
cation system, in1proving thl'
Medicare system, fixing 'Social
Security."
Democrats pounced on the
remark , saying it departed fi·om
Bush's proposal to spend the surplu s in other ways, c hidly on tax
cu ts.
"The fact is th ey hawn't pur a
d ime of the surplu s into shoring
up Medica re. That's a fact," Gore
spokesman Do ug Hattaway sa id .

" He has ruled tt out by spen din g
the surplus on a lax cut :md other
spending" 1n the proposal.
Replied Bmh spokesman Ari
Fleisc her: "The governor has not
ruled ou t using the surplu s for
anything.''
T:1king questions o n the tarmac
111 Casper alon gside Bush .
C hen ey defelllkd l11 s vot in g
rL' l Ord. indu d HI ~ hi s ~u pport for
n 'ltS in du111cstic programs and
opposition to' sa nn ions on rht:
system of ap.irthL·id th en 111 p b ct•
in So uth Africa.
"I cnn sistem ly o pp osed th e
11llposiuo n of lllilb[cr:JI economic &lt;:.a nction s," hL· sa id . '' I don't
believe (th ey) work."
Bu '&gt;h hackt_•d his newly installed
run~1ing Ill .Ht'. 111 .1king no ;~polo ­
g il'\ for dwtr support of l'OilSt'I'\'.Hl \'L' polni c"
"Thi) i S ,I COll'\t_'I'V:JtiVl' lliJil,
and '&gt; 0 J ill 1," Bu "h \aieL
"!IlL· kt_•y hL'fL' i..; t o stay

focuse d on the .future," Ch,•ney
sai d .
A week before the GOP convention is to Cro\vn Bush the
parry 's presidential rw minee, t he
Texas governor defetHkd h 1s
ch oiC&lt;.' of a running nutc .
"This is a good man standi ng
by my side," he s.tid. "Hc''s gmng
t o be wonderful to campaign
with .md wonderflll to serve

Cheney 'aid he has no apolog il's fo r hi~ tics to the oi lmdustry ·
cvl'll ~s Democrat ~ have taken to

rdc• rring to the GOP ticket as a
couple of1i:xas oi lmen .

Wlth."

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446•4524

0,[ AOUIF 1' Wl '&gt;l

l'lllJI\L~-.,llt.ll'll\l

7

FRI 7/21 /00- THURS 7/27/00

IOK OfFICI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MATINIIS
7:20 &amp;·9:20 DAILY

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20
THE PATRIOT (R)
9oo(\ DAILY

DISNEY'S THE K\0 (PG))
7:10 &amp; 9:20 DAILY

M4TINEES SAT/SUN UO &amp; 3:20
BIG MOMMA'S ljOUSE (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY

THE

lo be

acrunte. tr yo u know or an ern1r In a ~tot'),
nil tht newsroom 111 (7;40) 992 ·2 15~ . \\'t' will
c:htck your lnform1tlnn and make 11
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•

Opal D yer at 742-2805.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board of Education will have
a final hearing on the district's
Contmuing I mprovcm ent Plan
(C IP) Aug. &lt;J at 7 p.m., which will
precede the board's regular meet~
ing. in the Eastern Elementary
cJfetorium.

LOCAL. STOCKS

•
Our rn•ln con cl'fn In all stories

For those who want passes
which also give voting privilege
as well as the option of running
for a seat on the fair board, membership tickets are available. They
are S15 each.
Purchasers must be a member
of Meigs Councy and 18 years of
age o r older. Those tickets are for
sale at the Sugar Run Flour Mill ,
at the fair board office or from
any fair board director.

Two-car crash

RACINE - A Racine woman
was cited for failure to control following aTueS&lt;by accident.
Kelly A. Allen. 27. was eastbound
on State Route DH when she lost
control Qf her vehicle, a 1994 S-10
truck, according to Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
She refused treatment, but was
later taken to Ja r kson General
Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.

Chance for rain will remain
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
privately run state prison in
Grafton was nor ready to open
when it began accepting inmates
in February and still has problems, said the head of a union
representing guards at state-operated prisons.
Peter Wray, a spokesman for
the Ohio Civil S•rvice Employees Association, said the North
CoiiSt Correctional Facility is
unsafe. He sc heduled a news conference for Thursday to provide
more information :
The dhio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction
and CiviGenics, the Milford,
Mass.-based company that operates the prison under contract
with the state , both denied the
accusation.

Ttie Daily Sentinel _• Page A 3

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Norwood mayor indided, says he is innocent

Resnick seeks labor support
KETTERING (AP) - Ohio Supreme Court Associate Justice
· Alice Robie Resnick wants the help of Miami Valley labor leaders
in her bid for re-elec ti on to a third six-year term.
The 60-yea r-old, two-term Democratic incumbent is running
against Cleveland-area 3ppeals Jlldge Terrence O'Donnell, a Republican.
State business leaders oppose Resnick's re-election, citing the 43 majoricy opinions she authored that struck down an overhaul of
the stare's civil justice system and the stare's school funding system.
"I have many opponents," Resnick told about 50 labor leaders in
. this Dayton suburb. "This is such an unusual election I bur I'm glad
it's th~ third time I'm running because I'm prepared for it."
Resnick urged the leaders to get their people registered to vote
and edu cated about the Ohio Supreme Court's importance to their
·lives.
Wesley Wells. director of the AFL-CIO Regional Labor Council , promised labor support to help maintain some balance against
what he called a "mean-spirited" state legislature.
"Next to the presidential race, this is the single most important
race for organized labor," Wells told her. "You can rest assured we
will support you."
Resnick said while she and her opponent are limited by law to
· spending $500,000 on the campaign, insurance companies and the
Ohio Cha mber of Conm1erce have pledged to pour money into
their own advertising campaign to unseat her.
"All of these outside forces are entering the race," Resnick ~aid.
''I'm afraid people arc going to become very dismayed to have this
cype of election for the Supreme Court. I'm afraid they'll lose faith
in the judicial system."
Ohio Chamber of Commerce President Andrew Doehrel said his
organization is simply educating vote rs about Resnick, who he said
IS "out o f bounds and creating harm in this state."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AEP - 32),
Akz o - 43\,
AmTech/SBC. - 43 ~
Ashland Inc. - 32 "~..
AT&amp;T - 32:&lt;
Bank One - 32

Gannett - 54l.
General Electric - 52},.
Harley Davidson - 44'1•
Kmart - 7
Kroger - 21~ ..
Lands lend - 36

Bob Evans - 16\ a ·

Ltd. - 22 1 011
Oak Hil l Financial -

BorgWurier - 34 "1,..
Cham,&gt;ion - 3~ ..
Charrtlng Shops - 5'ia
Ci1y Holding - 7
Fedpral Mogul - 9',,..
Firstar - 20},.

OVB - 26
BBT - 25
Peoples - 143r,.

Rocky Boots AD Shell -

Sears -

sn

5'1111

30 ~..

Shoney's - l.
Wai-Mart - 58~.
Wendy's -

17 1t,.

Worth ington -

COMPANY

10'1 ,.
F.s rAm Nlrtl 1890

15}.

Premier . . . :. 53e

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions , provided
by

RockWell - 35' ..

Ad vest _Df Gallipolis.

520 W. Mrt1n St
Nr:1r

l'umrroy

th l• M .t Httt llr u l ~··

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740· 388·8603
Golti
740-446-0852

All AGES, All TIMES S4.00

�.. .

'

....

'

Thursday, July 27, 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Parents face loss of children
CLEVELAND (AP) - Parents who exhaust their welfare eligibility on Ocr. 1 may face agency reviews which could lead to the
lms of their children.
. Welfare agencies plan to send social workers to make sure that
: childre n are properly cared for.lfworkers believe children are being
m·glected, the children could be placed in councy custody.
Officials do not expect large numbers of children to be taken. ·
" That's what people fear the most but, we have no intention of
raking children from their parents simply because they're poor," said
Cuyahoga Councy Commissioner Jane Campbell.
"The reason we are doing these child safecy visits is so we can
, help them before they end up with no money, no resources, become
. homeless and something happens to the child."
Most families that lose welfare benefits will still be eligible for
food stamps, Medicaid and other services.
Ohio has adopted a rhree-year lifetime limit on cash benefits and
requires recipients to work or go to school to get benefits.
About 2,300 Cuyahoga Cquncy families lost benefits temporari- ly in the last 14 months because of failure to comply with work or
other requirements, Campbell said, but only three cases required
: intervention by the Department of Children and Family Services.\

NORWOOD (AP) - The mayor of thi s
· Cincinnati suburb was indicted Wedne sday
on 14 criminal charges accusing him of fa!sifying records and stealing money and services from the cicy.
Mayor Joseph Hochbein' said at a news
• conference Wednesday that he is innocent
.
and WI·ll fitg ht th e c h arges.
" I have a clear conscience," said
Hochbein. "1 am at peace with God."
Hochbein said he ·never has done anything to violate the public trust.
I( convicted, he could be · sent to prison
for as long as 36 years, said David Parker, the
Cincinn~ti attorney who is serving as special
prosecutor.
A Hamilton Councy grand jury indicted
Hochbein on charges offalsification, theft in
office and election fa lsification. Tw~lve of
the 14 counts are felonies .
The Republican is serving his second

Petro switches abortion stance
COLU MBUS (AP) - State Auditor ]1m Petro, an expected candidate fo r attorney generalm two years and possibly governor after
_t_h~r. said Wednesday~ th1t he now opposes abortion.-in- the fin1
trimester, a change from his previous abortion rights position.
Petro, who was endorsed by the National Abortion Rights Action
League in 1998, soid the change came as more information emerges
about the viabilicy of a living fetus out!ide the womb.
" If I believe it's a life that begins at conception and we have a
responsib ilicy to advocate the preservation of human life at conception. why do I support that at 13 weeks but not at 12?" he said.
' Petro said politics didn't enter his decision to oppose abortion in
all cases except for rape, incest or where the mother's life is in danger. Rather, it came after much soul-searching and discussions with
his wife and children, all of whom oppose abortion.
Petro, 51, a-former House lawmaker and Cuyahoga Councy commissioner, is in his second and last term as state auditor. Under state
law he cannot run again . He has expressed interest in running for
atto rney general in 2002 and hasn't ruled out a run for governor in
the future .

Bee sting causes acddent
N~RWALK (AP) -A truck driver allergic to bee stings blacked
out after he was stung and his rig slammed into a house, causing it
to be condemned.
·
·
Fred Houghtlen. 44. of Colli ns told troopers he lost control of his
tru ck Wed nesday after he was stu ng on his left calf and blacked out
while dnving we;r along U.S. 20.
.
Five people ms1dc t he house escaped injury, but the house was
con demned becau se of the damage.
· "I do n't remember anything except climbing out the window,"
.Hou ghtlen said.

: H oughtlen was feeling slee py because of the sting and was trying
:to pull off th e road when he lost control, struck a tree, a utilicy box
:a nd another tree before crossmg the yard and hitting the house.
• Ho ughrl en was ci ted for losi ng control the tru ck, which is owned
~y Smith Pavmg &amp; Excavating of Norwalk.

Two sought in teen shooting
, C ANTON (Af\) - A 17-year-old was shot and killed Wednes~by in th e parking lo t of Timke n High School and two suspects
~vere bemg .:.ough t, police ~aid.
· ~ ChiefThonus Wyatt said in a statement that Stanley T Jones of
Canton dtec! at Aultm an Hos pital in Canton shortly after the 4:59
p.m. shooting
Wyatt didn't specifY a possibl e mot1w in the shooting or identifY
tlu: ~u'ipects.

: Police re&gt;pondir1g to a call found Jones 111 the parking lor on the
\vest &lt;ide of the high school. Lt- Jerry Steiner said the victim was
wait1ng fo r a frienct to finish band practice.

Two-vehide
crash kills girl
'
.

NORWALK (AP) - A 14-year-old girl was killed WcdnesJ:Iy
wh en the 15- year-old driver of a pickup truck passed a car in a no~
pa ss1ng zone ::tnd "it ru ck an o ncoming auto, aUthorities said.
Km Szcze panski of Wakeman, a passenger in the pickup truck,
wa&lt; k1ll ed 11 1 the acCident along U.S. 224 in southeast Huron Counrv be twe en N onu lk :111d Mamfield, the State Highway Patrol said.
T he· dn vc r, Sh.ttll n ll H oliday of Sandusky, her 14-year-old sister
.tnd :h l' th~c c pcopk· 111 thl' l Hit:Uimng ca r ·were injured..
·
Ot the lllJUred, only the Sl'C ond driver, Melody Swiger, 42 , of
New Lo ndon. \\ ' JS Jdmittcd to F1 sher-Titus Medical Center in
Norw.1lk . Shl' w:l'\ rcportL·d in 'iJt1sfa c tory condition.
I

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

A Hamilton County grand jury
indicted Hochbein on charges of
.r.

.11:

falsification' tht;,t in O..utce and
election falsification. 1lvelve of the
14 counts are felonies.
.
.
Jerm as mayor 1n Norwood.
a
cay
of about
.
.
24,000 people. H e will be arratgned Aug. 4
in Hanulton County Common Pleas Court.
The md1ctmenr resulted from a yearlong
investigation by the county sheriff, Parker
said.
Hochbein is alleged to have improperly
used a city employee or employees to do
work· for a private function. the 1999 Norwood Car Show. He also is acc used Of having used city money for the private show.
Hochbein and his lawyers said he has
committed no crime.
The Common Pleas Court appointed

Driver cited
Helen Marie Zeigler

Parker as special prosecutor. Hamilton
County Prosecutor Michael All e n had said it
would be inappropriate for his office to be
involved in the case. Allen noted that he is ·a
former Hamilton Coun ty Republican Party
•
chairman and had prior associations with
Hochbein in GOP activities.
'
Hochbein is free on liis recognizatlCe.
Parker asked that Hochbein be sununont&gt;d
to co ll rt, saying that it was not necessary to
issue an arrest warrant .
Hochbein is the second Norwood c'ity
official to recently face charges. Last year.
former city poli ce c hiefTimothy Brown was
convic ted of charges that he fa lsified a
report in an effort to cover up Iu s ~wn
dru nk-driving accident in December 19\)8.
Brown, a Norwood police officer for 25
years, was allowed to retire after his misdemc:.:mor conv iction.

RACINE- ~den Ma~ie Zeigler, 43, Racine, died Tuesday, July 25.
2000 m St. Marys Hospital._Huntmgton, W.Va.
·
B~rn Dec. 13, 1956 in Wellsburg, W.Va .•daughter of th e late Samuel
William Sr. and Ruby Virginia Caldwell Zeigler, Jnd was a former
nurse's aide .
She was also preceded in death hy a brother, Samuel W. Zeigler Jr. .
SurviVIng are two sons, Michael Zetgler of Middleport, and William
Davtd Zeigler of Lancaster: five daughte rs, Alicia Francis Zeigler of
Col~mbus, Debra Ann Moodispaugh of Randleman , N. C., C harlene
M _ane Zeigler and Shelia Mari e Zeigler. both of Pomeroy, and Tricia
N1cole Zeigler of Middl eport ; a sister. Mary Wellman of Follansbee,
W.Va .; two brothers, John Zeigler of Follansbee. and William Pall off of
Thornton, Colo.; and two grandchildren.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland•. WJth the Rev. Samuel And erso11 officiating. Burial will be in
Burlmgham Cemetery, near Shade. Friends may call at the funeral ·
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Friday.

VALLEY WEATHER

Meigs 'fire training

Showers and thunderstorms
. will spread across the tri-county
: area the next couple of days as a
·: low pressure system moves into
: the region, the National Weather
- Service said on Thursday.
Damp weather is likely to continue through the weekend, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday will be in the
low to mid-80s. Lows tonight
will be in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:50
and sunrise on Friday at 6:27 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy with
~og developing after nudni ght .
Lows in the mid 60s. Southwest
wind 10 mph becoming·light and
variable.

TRAINING SESSION - The Pomeroy Fire Depar tme nt held a training
session for area firefighters last Sunday in an abandoned structure on
Kerr Street in Pomeroy. Firefighters were tra ined on search and res·

," fifth-grade.
The bill would create four categories based on a student's scores
instead: advanced placement for
high - scoring students, passage,
pmess With proficiency tests is passage with remediation and
starting to put pressure on maJOr- fail ure. The latter category would
ity Republicans . Latell has pro- be reserved for students w ith
posed a bill eliminating the clear reading problems.
fourth-grade guarantee.
Teachers and principals would
Gardner's proposal would also still have the final say in who
alter the propos ed guarantee, passes on to the fifth-grade . as
under which students who don't they do under the fourrh~grade
f,Bss reading can 'Lgo~an~to~the- guarantee,-Gardner sa id. - - -

Tests

cue, extinguishment, overhaul, and pump operations. Over 25 firefighte rs from Middleport, Syracuse, Tuppers Plains, Ga lli polis and
Pomeroy fire departments attended t he session. (Contributed photos)

from Page AI

'

Ohioans Jive $500,000
for Washington DC memorial
COLUMBUS (AP) - The War II, I don't believe we'd be
campaign to build a memorial standing here in this beautiful
_-~to ~orld War II v~terans in ~_j)l_aza as free rnen and women," -~~
Warnmgton got a $500,000 Dole said.
bo~st Wednesday, courtesy of
Taft recalled memories of his
Ohio taxpayers, when Gov. Bob late fath~r, Robert Taft Jr., w ho
Taft presented a check to former fought 111 the Pacific and in
.
Kansas Sen. Bo b Do Ie.
France dunng the war.
The
two
Republicans
" I was never more proud of
thanked about 200 Ohto veter- him than when 1 read hi s
ans and other officials during a account of his service during
ceremony at the Statehouse Vet- World War n;'Taft said.
Money for the memorial was
erans ~laza.
Melissa Growden of Toledo, included in the s4o billion budwhose grandfather brought the get state lawmakers approved
idea to Congress, said the $100 last year. The campaign for the
miUion memorial , to be built by memorial has received more
2003 in front of the Lincoln
than S92 millwn.
Memorial, will hono r veterans
If the National Capital Plan and the Americans who supported them throughout the ning Committee approves the
design, the 7.4 acre memorial
nation's history.
"It does not belong to one would feature 56 pillars, each 17
man, one family or even one feet high, and two large raingeneration. It belongs to all of bow-shaped pools surrounding
us," said Growden , whose a sunken plaza. Visitors would
grandfather, Roger Durbin, died enter throllgh two 41-foot-tall
arch es.
in February.
Two fountains would send
Dole, who lost the use of his
jets
of water twice as high as the
right arm because of a World
War II injury in Italy, has taken pillars. Trees and lawn wollld
the lead on raising money to occllpy two-thirds of the sit e. A
wall of gold stars would repre build the memorial.
"Had we not been in World sent veterans killed in the war.

Teacher who reported proficiency
cheating surprised by retirement ·
COLUMBUS (AP) · A
Barbara McCarroll, 59, ·
reacher who said cheating o n the
'd h
I' d
state proflcien(:y__gst was f&gt;CC~!'=--. sat , s e !'e~r ilJ'P ~e-c'i:-=---l
ring at a school praised by Presi- ~rlhremenl. She sa1il
e
dent Clinton for sizeable testthinks she's being
sc~reimprovements says the dis- punished for reporting the
tnct IS congratulatmg her on her
d h ,
.
aII eoe
c eattno,
renremenr.
6
6
But Barbara McCarroll, 59,
against her."
said she never applied for retireHe said he'll investigate .
.,
ment. She said she thinks she's
M
cCarroll
went
to
Columbus
being punished for reporting the
school officials early this year, oayalleged cheating.
"I feel like I'm being picked ing fifth-graders at Eastgate Eleour;• McCarroll said Wednesday. mentary told her that a "tutqr"
"This is the most nerve-racking had supplied answers to the I \1~9
statewide proficien cy test far
thing I've ever been through."
McCarroll said a letter she them. Eastgate students' scores
received from the district this had jumped as much as 394 perweek told her that the school cent in reading and 229 perce!'l
board approved her retirement at in math.
After a two-week investigaa May 16 meeting.
The letter was signed by tion, the state ruled that allegaColumbus Schools Superinten- tions of chea tmg couldn't be suo dent Rosa Smith and Executive stantiated.
Director of Personnel L. Ernest
She took leave from Eastgaie
Blandon.
in February, she said, because. of
• Blandon said he signed more the stress brought on by th e pub·:
than I 00 similar letters of con- licity of her allegations.
McCarroll said she hoped · io
gratulations for retirements and
doesn't remember McCarroll's.
take off work for about a year arid
" If a mistake was made, I'm had asked the State Tt'acheh
responsible ," Blandon said. "The Ret~tement System for disability
intent was nor ro do anything pay, but ha s never asked to rrtir¢ .

Fair
flomPageA1
their Golden Buckeye Card or
some other proof of age.
Kids days will be observed o n
both Aug. 16 and Aug. 19, with all
children 12 and under being
admitted free until noon. A hand
stamp to ride will cost $3.

-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·96ll )

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42x42x60" Oak Pedestal
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36x60" White Natural
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Friday... Mosrly cloudy with a
cha nce of showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be heavy at
times. Highs in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday night .. .A chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Fog
after midnight. Lows in the mid
60s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 80s.
Sunday. .. Parrly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the lower 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the lower 80s.

Reader Services

•

I~

CIP hearing

Registration set

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in MeigS
County Probate Court to Earnest
Allen Greene, 29, and Angela
Ni cole Roberts , 24, both of
Racine; Walter James Robb Ill, 31,
and Mmha Marie Adkins, 39, both
of Albany; and Mi chael Andrew
Bailey, 23, and Kimberly Shawn
Godwin, 18 , Long Bottom.

Divorces filed
POMEROY - . Divorce actions
have been filed in Meigs Councy
Common Pleas Court by David E.
Pickrell, Portland, against Linda G.
Pickrell, Parkersburg, WVa.; David
Ri chard Long, Racine, against
Wendy Lynn Long, Pomeroy;
Michael Jones, A. P.O. , A.P.', against
Cynthia LynnJones,A.P.O.,A .P.

Foreclosures
sought
POMEROY Foreclosure
actions have been filed in Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court by
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Pomeroy. against John R. Hill,
Syracuse; Firstar Trust Co.,
Alliance, against Geron 0. Harvey,
Albany, and others; and by Home
National Bank, Racine, against
Richard M. Young, Pomeroy, and

... .
The state
patrol investigated this two-car crash at 11;55 a.m.
Tuesday on
Knot&gt;;Stiversville Road. The Racine squa(j transported
the victims to Jackson General Hospital. Further details were unavailable
as of presstime. (Racine Volunteer Rre Department photo)

others.

Units log calls
POMEROY Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered six call~ for assistance on
Wednesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:46a.m., East Main Street, Faye
Smith, St. Mary's Hospital;
11 :58 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Middleport.
Tina Warner, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
4:54 p.m.. South Second
Avenue. Dorothy Roush. Holzer
Medical Center.
POMEROY
10:03 a.m .. East Main Street,

James Smith, HMC
REEDSVILLE
5:21 a.m .• Curtis Hollow, Gladys
Thomas, Camden-C lark Memoria!Hospital.
RUTLAND
10:57 a.m., State Route 143,
assisted by Middleport, .Alice
Chapman. HMC

Meeting slated
RUTLAND - Rutland Town ship Trustees will hold a public
flood mitigation meeting on Aug.
10 at 6 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center, to discuss the proposed
Langsville flood nlitigatio n project.
All residents of the Langsville
area arc e ncouraged to attend.
Information is available by caUing

REEDSVILLE - Kindergarten
registration and orientation in the
Eastern Local Sc hool District will
take place at 'the Eastern Elementary Building. 9 a.m. on Aug. 10.
For those who have not preregistered the c hild or c hildren,
screening will take place and parents are to rake birth certificates,
Social Securiry numbers, and
inununization records.
Information about the program,
conference timt:s, cl ass requirements and bus routes will be discusse d at the nlet'ting, and parents
will meet with the principal,
teacher, and transportation coo~di­
naror.

Special meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - A special meeting of the Eastern Board
of Education will be held at 7:30
p.m. Monday m the elementary
cafetorium for discu~&lt;Ion an d possible hiring of personneL
The regu lar board meeting will
be Aug. 9 at 7:30 p.m. in the cafe~

tori urn.

Trustees to meet
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of the clerk. Osie
Follrod.

McCain says ·it's 'time to serve' Bush in speech draft
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Offering closure began rehearsing th e speec h thiS week.
to a bitter primary, John McCain is preparing a. .. •. BIJW. . off!cial,s. had anxiously awaited the
prime-time convention speech in which he draft, hoping McCain would avoid conflict and
praises Texas Gov. George W. Bush and declares giVe full-throated support to the ticker,
"it is my time to serve" lus former rival and preThe Arizona senator issues his high est prai se
sumptive R epubhcan pre!lderitial nominee .
in a sec tion cymg hi~ ' grandfather, a World War
_ln _a draft of his SRl'e_cb bemg t:I'Yiew~by__j_J admiral, ta..Bush'&gt;-tathe.r, a World War II pilot
convention planners and Bush advisers, McCain and former U.S. president.
calls for "government reform" in general. but
"Many years ago, the governor's father
avoids direct mention of his bid to overhaul fought for our country, with distinction, under
election finance laws - the issue that divides the command of my gr.mdfather. Now it is my
M cCain from Bush and other GOP leaders.
turn to serve under th e son of my grandfather's
"Cynicism is suffocating the idealism of su bordinate," M cCam says.
many Americam, especially among the young
The address is expected to be a highlight of
- and with cause, for they have lost pride in the conven tion's second night, a reward for
their government:' McCain says in the text pre- winning seven primaries and posing the greatpared for Tuesday's night's appearance.
est th reat to Bush's candidacy. Though denied a
Portions of the address were read Wednesday spot on th ~ ticket, M cCain 's support is impor~
to The Associated Press by three senior Repub- rant as Bush tries to appeal to ticket-splitters and
lican officials. One so urce said the Bush cJ m- swing voters cnc rgtzed by the senator's undt:rpajgn has voiced no objections to it. McCain dog campaign.

In his most direct mention of the primary
fight, the text has McCam thanking the crowd
for warmly welcoming "a distant runner-up" to
the convention stage.
The theme of the :rddress is "America's .
greatness;· officials said. He urges Americans to
en:UJ!ate the WGrldWar--11-generation, saying~hot­
men of that era went to war for the sake of an
idea that was more V' luable than their own self
interests.
McCai n was a prisoner-of-war during the
Vietnam War for 5 ); years. Bush stayed home,
serving in the Texas Air National G uard.
"These are extraordi nary times to be alive.
We are so strong and so prosperous that we can
scarcely imagine th e heigh~&lt; we can asce nd if
we had th e will to make th e climb.Y~t I think
each of us senses that Ameri ca. for all our prospenry, is in danger of losing the best sense of
herself- that there is a purpose to being an
Amt'ri can beyond materiali sm," he says.

Bush, Cheney defend their records in first campaign trip together
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Dick
Cheney is offering no apologies
"cor his conservative V&lt;?ting record
or his oil industry ties as Democ rats pounce on vote s by the former Wyoming congressman.
" I am gen~rally proud of my
record in the House and the job I
did representing the sta te of
Wyoming," Cheney said Wednesday on a nostalgic trip back to his
roots in C.1sper with prcsmnpttve
GOP presidential no minee Texas
Gov. George W. Ilush at his s1de.
But the tOrmn defcnst: secre tary also acknowledged he mi ght
have voted ditlt·rently on some
matters m the cu rrent healthy
economy than be did in the
defi cit- plagued 1980s.
" I'm su re if ( WL're to go back
and look at the individual vmes. I
co uld probabl y fi nd so me th at I
might tweak an d do a bit d itli.·rcnrly," Cheney told reporters.
reft• rrin g to his 1l)79-R9 t clHJrL' in

the House.
H e said he voted agai nst some
new programs in the era of bud~
get deficits because he was he wa s
"concern ed about co ntroll ing
federal spend ing."
But with c urr&lt;!nt projections
for a $4.5 trillion surplus. " We've
got the opportunity now I think
to go do some things that we
could not have done ~0 years ago
and the governor's laid our a
number of those: for example,
such t hings as reforming the edu~
cation system, in1proving thl'
Medicare system, fixing 'Social
Security."
Democrats pounced on the
remark , saying it departed fi·om
Bush's proposal to spend the surplu s in other ways, c hidly on tax
cu ts.
"The fact is th ey hawn't pur a
d ime of the surplu s into shoring
up Medica re. That's a fact," Gore
spokesman Do ug Hattaway sa id .

" He has ruled tt out by spen din g
the surplus on a lax cut :md other
spending" 1n the proposal.
Replied Bmh spokesman Ari
Fleisc her: "The governor has not
ruled ou t using the surplu s for
anything.''
T:1king questions o n the tarmac
111 Casper alon gside Bush .
C hen ey defelllkd l11 s vot in g
rL' l Ord. indu d HI ~ hi s ~u pport for
n 'ltS in du111cstic programs and
opposition to' sa nn ions on rht:
system of ap.irthL·id th en 111 p b ct•
in So uth Africa.
"I cnn sistem ly o pp osed th e
11llposiuo n of lllilb[cr:JI economic &lt;:.a nction s," hL· sa id . '' I don't
believe (th ey) work."
Bu '&gt;h hackt_•d his newly installed
run~1ing Ill .Ht'. 111 .1king no ;~polo ­
g il'\ for dwtr support of l'OilSt'I'\'.Hl \'L' polni c"
"Thi) i S ,I COll'\t_'I'V:JtiVl' lliJil,
and '&gt; 0 J ill 1," Bu "h \aieL
"!IlL· kt_•y hL'fL' i..; t o stay

focuse d on the .future," Ch,•ney
sai d .
A week before the GOP convention is to Cro\vn Bush the
parry 's presidential rw minee, t he
Texas governor defetHkd h 1s
ch oiC&lt;.' of a running nutc .
"This is a good man standi ng
by my side," he s.tid. "Hc''s gmng
t o be wonderful to campaign
with .md wonderflll to serve

Cheney 'aid he has no apolog il's fo r hi~ tics to the oi lmdustry ·
cvl'll ~s Democrat ~ have taken to

rdc• rring to the GOP ticket as a
couple of1i:xas oi lmen .

Wlth."

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446•4524

0,[ AOUIF 1' Wl '&gt;l

l'lllJI\L~-.,llt.ll'll\l

7

FRI 7/21 /00- THURS 7/27/00

IOK OfFICI WILL OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MATINIIS
7:20 &amp;·9:20 DAILY

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20
THE PATRIOT (R)
9oo(\ DAILY

DISNEY'S THE K\0 (PG))
7:10 &amp; 9:20 DAILY

M4TINEES SAT/SUN UO &amp; 3:20
BIG MOMMA'S ljOUSE (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY

THE

lo be

acrunte. tr yo u know or an ern1r In a ~tot'),
nil tht newsroom 111 (7;40) 992 ·2 15~ . \\'t' will
c:htck your lnform1tlnn and make 11
C:OI'ft(tion If warnuued .
Ntws Urpar1mtnls
Thl' main numlH'r Is 91'2·2155. Utpilrfm.ml
extconslons aR:
Genenl M1na~er............................ E~t. 1101
NtWII .......................... ....................... [I{(. 1102
................ ,............................... ..... or Ed. 1106
Other Si!rvln!i
Advl!rtlilng ...................................... E"t. 1104
Cl~ullllon .................................. ..... [1lt. 1103
Clas~lned Ads .................................. E1lt. 1100

•

Opal D yer at 742-2805.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local Board of Education will have
a final hearing on the district's
Contmuing I mprovcm ent Plan
(C IP) Aug. &lt;J at 7 p.m., which will
precede the board's regular meet~
ing. in the Eastern Elementary
cJfetorium.

LOCAL. STOCKS

•
Our rn•ln con cl'fn In all stories

For those who want passes
which also give voting privilege
as well as the option of running
for a seat on the fair board, membership tickets are available. They
are S15 each.
Purchasers must be a member
of Meigs Councy and 18 years of
age o r older. Those tickets are for
sale at the Sugar Run Flour Mill ,
at the fair board office or from
any fair board director.

Two-car crash

RACINE - A Racine woman
was cited for failure to control following aTueS&lt;by accident.
Kelly A. Allen. 27. was eastbound
on State Route DH when she lost
control Qf her vehicle, a 1994 S-10
truck, according to Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
She refused treatment, but was
later taken to Ja r kson General
Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.

Chance for rain will remain
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
privately run state prison in
Grafton was nor ready to open
when it began accepting inmates
in February and still has problems, said the head of a union
representing guards at state-operated prisons.
Peter Wray, a spokesman for
the Ohio Civil S•rvice Employees Association, said the North
CoiiSt Correctional Facility is
unsafe. He sc heduled a news conference for Thursday to provide
more information :
The dhio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction
and CiviGenics, the Milford,
Mass.-based company that operates the prison under contract
with the state , both denied the
accusation.

Ttie Daily Sentinel _• Page A 3

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Norwood mayor indided, says he is innocent

Resnick seeks labor support
KETTERING (AP) - Ohio Supreme Court Associate Justice
· Alice Robie Resnick wants the help of Miami Valley labor leaders
in her bid for re-elec ti on to a third six-year term.
The 60-yea r-old, two-term Democratic incumbent is running
against Cleveland-area 3ppeals Jlldge Terrence O'Donnell, a Republican.
State business leaders oppose Resnick's re-election, citing the 43 majoricy opinions she authored that struck down an overhaul of
the stare's civil justice system and the stare's school funding system.
"I have many opponents," Resnick told about 50 labor leaders in
. this Dayton suburb. "This is such an unusual election I bur I'm glad
it's th~ third time I'm running because I'm prepared for it."
Resnick urged the leaders to get their people registered to vote
and edu cated about the Ohio Supreme Court's importance to their
·lives.
Wesley Wells. director of the AFL-CIO Regional Labor Council , promised labor support to help maintain some balance against
what he called a "mean-spirited" state legislature.
"Next to the presidential race, this is the single most important
race for organized labor," Wells told her. "You can rest assured we
will support you."
Resnick said while she and her opponent are limited by law to
· spending $500,000 on the campaign, insurance companies and the
Ohio Cha mber of Conm1erce have pledged to pour money into
their own advertising campaign to unseat her.
"All of these outside forces are entering the race," Resnick ~aid.
''I'm afraid people arc going to become very dismayed to have this
cype of election for the Supreme Court. I'm afraid they'll lose faith
in the judicial system."
Ohio Chamber of Commerce President Andrew Doehrel said his
organization is simply educating vote rs about Resnick, who he said
IS "out o f bounds and creating harm in this state."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AEP - 32),
Akz o - 43\,
AmTech/SBC. - 43 ~
Ashland Inc. - 32 "~..
AT&amp;T - 32:&lt;
Bank One - 32

Gannett - 54l.
General Electric - 52},.
Harley Davidson - 44'1•
Kmart - 7
Kroger - 21~ ..
Lands lend - 36

Bob Evans - 16\ a ·

Ltd. - 22 1 011
Oak Hil l Financial -

BorgWurier - 34 "1,..
Cham,&gt;ion - 3~ ..
Charrtlng Shops - 5'ia
Ci1y Holding - 7
Fedpral Mogul - 9',,..
Firstar - 20},.

OVB - 26
BBT - 25
Peoples - 143r,.

Rocky Boots AD Shell -

Sears -

sn

5'1111

30 ~..

Shoney's - l.
Wai-Mart - 58~.
Wendy's -

17 1t,.

Worth ington -

COMPANY

10'1 ,.
F.s rAm Nlrtl 1890

15}.

Premier . . . :. 53e

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions , provided
by

RockWell - 35' ..

Ad vest _Df Gallipolis.

520 W. Mrt1n St
Nr:1r

l'umrroy

th l• M .t Httt llr u l ~··

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740· 388·8603
Golti
740-446-0852

All AGES, All TIMES S4.00

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PageA4

•

The Daily Sentinel
•

Thursday, July 17, 1000

'

••
•

The Daily Sentinel

••
t

'E.stafJ&amp;fld in 1948

•••

I
••'
I
I

•'
I

111 Court St., Pome.roy, Ohio
740.992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

~FARM&amp;

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Ch~~trlea

W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Men•ger

-~COUNTRY.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

L.atrryBoyar
Advertlelng DII'Rior

.

Camltry laral

Oualltye
FARM AFLEET

Dl•ne Kay Hill
Controller

I

t.

iAII•n 1o t/1• •Jitor on wrlcolflt. Til~ duud~ H Ins dum JOO

wore. AU lttW't uw subj«t

t W edili"f 111111 •at H silrfH t"cd illclwN ...,.,lllftl klqilfHII 11ll~fi~Hr. No '""""N l#twn will

,_,.tnUililm.

,,

\ H publilltH. LMUrt Mould HIll fOOIINUU, IINTelliJtf imm, IUH
\.
Tltr opiMiou •zpnned ill Ill#~.,,.,.,. btlow .,.,,.. COiflfiiiMI of Ill• OIIW v.lll)ll'ubluJn,..
~ Ca. '.t rtHmritd 6oclnf. ukn oiAtrwl.t• ,.,.,_

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.•
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OUR VIEW

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Hunger

'·l
•

Food donations keep bad
· situation from getting worse

: As long as poverty exists, hunger will be a constant concern for
Qur region.
· To meet the need, food pantries have been established by churchei and advocacy organizations. Donations of food make the holidays
bi-ighter for those unable to afford the niceties of the season.
: Currently, workers who lost their jobs at American Alloys in
Mason County are getting help in feeding their families from the
community, businesses and unions.
' But the need co ntinues year-round. That's why the community's
involvement in keeping food pantries open and stocked is vital. As
southern Ohio and western W est Virginia confront the specter of
rising unemployment if more businesses are lost, the need will
expand.
Without th e help of food pantries, outreach centers and community drives, the situation for poor families has become a little less
BY WALTER R. MEARS
desperate.
WASHINGTON - Lon g- before D ick
Recent reports of hunger in Appalachia prompted 17 otflces in
C heney's transfor m ation from talent sco ut to
the South Central Credit Union Chapter to lend a hand. An o utrunning mate, G eorge W. Bush was relying
on hi m and other veterans of his fath er's
reach committee and volunteers set a goal of collecting 2,000 cans
of food over a two-month period.
presidency in his ca mpaign for a new
The group exceeded its goal by 400 percent, gathering more than
Republican lease on th e White House.
81000 food items for distribution to food pantries in several comShould he get there , Cheney as vice presi munities , including Gallipolis and Pomeroy.
dent surely would be joined by o th ers from
the old Bush adnunistration, in the Cabinet
It takes this kind of concern and leadership to make a difference
and Stem the tide Of deprivation that all tOO easily befalls people in
and top echelons of the new one.
our regiOn.
Bush has talked of Coli n Powell as a
prospective secretary of state, and the former
' Because charity has been abused, people are naturally reluctant to
take a risk for fear of being rooked. Sometimes it's hard to deterch airman of th e Joint C hi efs of Staff has sa~d
m.ine if people are genuinely in need or taking advantage of the syshe'd serve were he asked. That .c hoice could
rem
- -----·- . - - -be-mode-in ·adva nce- forcarnpaign impact.
But isolated bad experiences can't be allowed to ruin the good
While Democrats · will taunt Bush about
done for many deserving families.
the legacy of policy advise rs, they do the
Donations to food pantries are well-publicized during the latter
same thing. Presidentia l nominees always
look to peopl e who served in prior adminispart of the year when, as a character in Dickens' "A Christmas
trations for help, counsel , and often, major
Carol" reflects, the need of the poverty-stricken is more keen .
. But it's not the only time of the year for people to open their
roles on th eir team s.
shelves and share. Seek our food pantries in your area and help if you
That is , after all , the talent bank for each
can.
party. It is where th e comers come from , and
where the eld er statesmen ge t rh ar way.
:They say charity begins at home. When the times are tough, we
have to look to ourselves to get through it all. And that's o ne of th e
Still , the Democrats won't mi ss an opporqualities this area possesses in spades. It's not only the compassion,
tumty to suggest that th e so n is leaning on
but the ability to get thinS' done in a time of crisis.
his father's team. It fir s their argument that
' It 's not a bad quality to display, nor a bad example to set.
the Texas governor lacks experience and
experti se a president needs. especially on foreign policy.
Cheney brings those credenti als to the
ticket , but rea list ically, they arc no r tran sVi ce pres id ents seldom have had a
ferrable.
'

All Lawn
Ornaments,
Pots &amp; Planters

Select Casual
Clothing

All Patio
Furniture

Select Dog
&amp; Cat Toys

WASHINGTON TODAY

OFF

Bush staffirs look to get jobs through George W.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, July 27, the 209th day of 2000. There are !57
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight m History:
On Ju ly 27, 17R9, Congress established the Department of Foreign
Affairs, the forerunner of the Department of State.
On this date:
In 1794. French revolutionary leader Maxirnilien· Robespierre was
overthrown and placed under arrest; he was executed the fo llowing
day.
,In 1861 , Union Gen . George B. McClellan was put in command
of the Army of the Potomac.
·Jn 1866, Cyrus W. Field finally succeeded, after two failures, in layirjg the fif5t underwater telegraph cable between North Amenca
and Europe.
·In 1940, Bugs Bunny made his otflcial debut in the Warner Brothers animated cartoon "A Wild Hare."
In 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom, endmg three years of fighting.
In 19611. Vi ce President Nixon was nom mated for president at the
Republican nati Qnal convention in Chicago.
In 1974 , the H ouse Judi ciary Committee voted 27- 11 to recom mend Presi de nt Nixon's impeachment on a charge that he had personall y engage d in a "course of conduct" designed to obstruct JUS nee m the Watergate case.
In 1976, A1r Fo rce veteran Ray Brennan became the first perso n
to die of Le~IOn naires' disease fo llowing an American Legion con ve ntion in Ph iladelphi a.
.In I '.IHII. on day 267 of the Irani an hostage crisis , the deposed Shah
of Iran d1ed at a military hospital outside C mo, Egypt, at age 60.
In 19%, te rror struck the Atlanta Olympics as a pipe bomb
expl oded at the public Centennial Olympic Park, killihg one person
.md injurin g more than 100.
Ten years ago: Lo uis iana Gov. Buddy Roemer vetoed a tough
.1bortion bi ll passed by the state Legislature. A miStrial was declared
111 R aymond Buckey's retrial o n c harges of molesting children at th e
McMarnn Pre-Sc hool in California .
Five years ago: The Korea n War Veterans M emorial was dedicated
"' Wash mgto n by President C linton and South Korean Preside1H
K1111 You n g-~ant.
•
One year ago: The House approved President Clinton's one-year
L'Xtcn&lt;;ion of normal rrade wirh Chi na.
·

significa nt impatt o n the cho ice votl:rs make

for president.

·

As secreta ry of d t.· fcn se undt'r President

Bush. Cheney was the civi lian sid e of the

partnership that managed the 199 1 Persia n
G ulf War. Powell was the general. Cheney's
path to the inn er circl e, and onto the ti cket
with George W. Bush, began with his role on
a defense and foreign policy advi sory team
orgamzed a year before the 2000 campaign.
Condo leeza Ri ce, a ' nationa l securi ty
adviser in the !:lush White House. led that
group, and is Bush's campaign counselor on
foreign pohcy. She wo uld he a likely choice
to head the National Security Cou ncil
sho uld Bush be ekcted.
!:lush 's policy tc01ms began taking shape
more than two years ago, when for mer Secretary of State George P. Sh ultz invited fellows at tne H-oover lnstifution to his home in Palo Alto, Calif. , to talk with the governor.
R ice, then provost at Stanford Univers ity,
and veterans of both th e Bush and Ronald
R eaga n administrations were th ere, to discuss
issues fo reign and economic.
By 1999, advisory pan els were m eeting
with Bush in Austin , dealing with topics he
would face in a pres idential campaign he had
not yet declared . Th at wi nter, Cheney and
Sh ultl , who se rved in the Reaga n Cabi net,
were guests at the gove rnor\ m ansion for
dinner, a long ralk , and an overnight viSit.
Uush md it wasn't Cheney's first Austin
vim and woul dn't be hi s last. "H e's a person
whose judgment I trust," th e gove r nor said.
C heney had been an aide in R1 chard M .
Nixon's White H ouse. cluef of staff to Ge rald
R . Ford, then a Wyomi ng conf(ress man for
six terms, wit h a Rea ga n - right voting
re co rd . He left tlw H o use as th e No. 2
Repub lica n le adn when Bush chost· hull for
tht· Pentagon in 19~9. C heney has been

chairman of a Dallas oil services corporation .
Vice President AI Gore's campaign spokesm en started the sniping at once.
"A retro pick,'' said Chris Lehane. "Old
guard,'' Mark Fabiani said, versu s " the new
guard, represented by AI Gore."
Gore's vice presidential selection will come
later this month. Warren Christoph er, w ho is
screening prosp ects for him as Cheney did
earli er for Bush , is a veteran of thre e Democrati c administrations, . and served as President Clinton 's secretary of state.
Bush decided on C h eney for th e ticket 90
days after ch oosmg him to screen hi s field of
potential running mates. Announcing the
c hoice at ant\-ustm-rally on Weilnesday, Bush
said he had asked Chen'ey at the beginning
of th e process whether he wo uld consider
the vice presi dency. and was told n o.
"Gradually, I realized that the person who
was best qualitied to be my vice presidential
nomin ee was w&lt;;&gt;rkmg by my side,'' said
Bush .
C hen ey said he 'd ch anged his mind as he
watched Bush in action . "In the end, I
learned how pe rsuasive he ca n be," h e said.
"Big changes are coming to Washington
and I want to be a part of th em ,'' C heney
said .
.
After a campaign swing togeth er, Bush and
C heney wi ll be nomin ated in Philadelphia at
th e Republican National Convention, managed for rhe gowrnor by Andrew C ard,
another veteran of the George Bush Cabin et.

(vl'il frer R . .Hears lw.&lt; reporrrd 0 11 Washin.~foll
a]](/ '""'""''' pofirics _r., T11r A.&lt;Sotiatcd Press for
llh'H'

tlwn 35 yt&gt;ars.)

RYAN'S VIEW

All MARK t
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Selected Poly and All Quality Seled
Aluminum Truck
Fertilizer
Boxes

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Landscape
Timbers

:V$JSALE

VVOmen pursuing it all, but are .coming up short
BY JOAN RYAN
Pegb')' OrL·n ste in know;; thing~ about m y

hfe that I wmd d never in .1 btllion years tell
her, wh ich makt·s havin g lund1 with her both
unsettlinp; .md l t ' mpdlin~ . \X./e'n: L';lt ing Tha1
food in ll crkeley :md talkin f( about her nl'W
book . "Flu x: Wo rn~.: n on Sl'x. \\for k. Love,

Kids, and Life in .1
(Doub leday Books).

H . tii~C h.ln l(l' d

World"

She intnviL·wnl 2011 Wllfll l ' ll DVL'r dlL' ],..,r
four yeJr"i. hopmb to nu kL· .,•,:ml' of thl' "co n ~
tl Jcted v01n..· " 'lhl· kt·p t hcanng tl·o m women.
What she fOund \ \ ';-I" .1 chorm of U!Hpo ke n
~t=crL·t~.

th t: thil lb'~

\llv'O ill l' ll

(for .1 ~ m uc h a'\ we

talk ) do n't tell e01c h or her -

e1the.r hec1use
we think wt· 'rL' th e o ni J OTH''~ w ho fl'l'i o r
think ~u ch thiii!--'S or bcc.t\llit' rhe ".Wric.., don 't
fit the ncar, politiL·all y correct Vl'\ inn w t~ w,11 1t
ro havt' of ou r ~e l ve~ .
Orenstet n'' inrt~ r vicwce'\ ralk :1hnut wlut it\
reall y like in o ur 111 arriagl''\ once we h.I\'L' chil dren . H ow we judge o th er wome n w h o mak e
differen t c h oa:e~ from o ur own . H ow \VC t(:Jr
under mining o ur careen if \\'t' get married

and have chi ldrm -

yet fc .u be ing alone if
we d on't. H ow we '\tru~~l c to reconcile the
prb rni llc _of our teen yt·u~ - \vomen can Jn d
should have it all 1 - With 1he guilt .111d ro nfu sing di sappo intm c11 t of fal ling sho rt as
ad ults.

"Be neath the boundless oplll lli sm ," Orenstt:in wntes, "lies a '\ JH:aking '\Uspt cion th at th e
rhetoric of 'c hoicts' is in pan a ron job, di s-

(Assrd

o usly o ur comrol ovcr chi ld-rearing, treating
hmh;mds as a ss i ~ta n ts to ou r ch ief'\.·

As cme 3 1-ye ar-old filmmak er told OrenguJ -;in g impo ssibk dJ!cmmas as matters ofp cr- &lt;tein . " It's like I'm c au~,;ht in thi s whole
~u na1 prc:ft'rl'Jlrl' . As th ese young; women look
dynamic. I want to put the baby to bed, and
fi)rward . th ey "t'l' 'cho ic e~· thrt'&lt;ltt' lli ng rn yc.·t I want him to do it. I w:mt to be: 111 . durgc
morph mto cruel rrad t' - offo;; ... rhat cou ld ulti - o f the bi ll s, but I want l111n to do 1t. It's like I
m an.·ly tr::tp rh em in th e nar row rolt•'\ rh ~...·y'rt• wa nt pov.tcr ovt:'"r all tht'sc t hi llb"~· And I try to
ex pected to csctpt· ... For m e. the hook w ~1 s hkc ~ i vc tllL'!n up, I Jo. Uu t it \ hard fo r me . l [..'1 Iess
read tng my ow n diary projccrecl th roug h tht• I wafl t to ha\·e contro l ovn c:verythin g."
pri;;m of dOZt'll'\ of nther \~'011lt' l1 .
I .1sked Or,·mtcin lww she chang••d whi le
"Th e tl•rt r o f bcin~ a b .ll{ ntnthn i"' li ke writin f( th,• boo k. She 's .1H. Ill.lrr icd and hop krypro111r c:' Orcn "tc.:i n 1"- '~ a y in ~ at lu nch , in ~5&gt;- to SLirt .1 f.nmly. In the midsr of her
touchin g 0 11 .1 parti cularl y vulncr:1hk topic fo r re~c arc h , lihe wa!"l diagn osed with breast can ct•r
111 :111y \\'0 111 L'11. " T h~...· imp o\'iihk ".t,tndrlrc"h
(tOr w hid1 ..,ht' undt·nven t a lum pl'ctomy and
wome n 'll.' t fo r thc:lll'\t' lVt:'\ rt·m indcJ lll l' o t" th ~...· rJdiat io n). l3 ur ~ hl' o;; ay'\ lwr reporting work
rccn - .1ged girls I used to mten ·in\· who. no ch.u1 ged her more th an her brush with death .
marrn \vlut th ey weighed. 'iJW t hc m sc lv~s J~
Sh,· s.1ys she understands now that th ere's no
fa1
L'.l\Y villam anym o re for wom en. She undc:r"Th ere sho uld h:· rt 'pc: rfc.-·r t mothn' cqu tv- \ta ndli that somerimcli the.· choices women'
alcnt to an t'ating dtsordc.:.·r. I kept \A/OIH..kring make - the on e'\ we.· oftc: n stand in judgm ent
as I ta lkt!d to womt' n, ' H ow good Jm.·o;; a · of - arc not really choices at all.
moth er have to be before (she) fn· l&lt; goo d
" I was looking for a road map fo r myself,"
cnou g I1.',.
Orenste in says, " anJ I realized th ~re wasn't
wl' '' mi c ro- tnanag~ hke crazy" ,lJid "go tu o ne. Today, we have to define fo r o urselves
'u perhum,m le ngth &gt;'' lO allay o ur fears of what\ ' uccess and what's fai lure ."
being the baJ mother, to "prove our devot ion
Uoa/1 R )1dll i:; a coi1mH1i:if j'or the San F'mutisco
to :u l invi sibk churus of c ritit:s." As mu ch as Clmmic!r. St·" rl w,,,c,;ts ic, her '" care · ~( tfris
Wt" talk ab(\lut wa nung an egalit.lnan rl'lat io nll r11'Jfh1f' Cr
M
se11d
ha
e- mail
at
\h tp Wit h our hu '\ bands, we tl' nd to gu.1n.l jl'.ll- ioo~u Y}'rl t l .{(!nrc .t"tl JJJ . )

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5 Gallons

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(0271239)

1 gallon $4.99

(2f1205)

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$139.99 SALE
"

• Shed Extension Kit
$119.99 SALE 11942556)

'

1239 145) ,

8000 BTU Air Conditioner, Reg . S289.99

$219.99 SALE

12391 Ill

10000 BTU Air Conditioner, Reg. S379.99

$269.99 SALE 1239129)

(0239 103)

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PageA4

•

The Daily Sentinel
•

Thursday, July 17, 1000

'

••
•

The Daily Sentinel

••
t

'E.stafJ&amp;fld in 1948

•••

I
••'
I
I

•'
I

111 Court St., Pome.roy, Ohio
740.992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

~FARM&amp;

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Ch~~trlea

W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Men•ger

-~COUNTRY.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

L.atrryBoyar
Advertlelng DII'Rior

.

Camltry laral

Oualltye
FARM AFLEET

Dl•ne Kay Hill
Controller

I

t.

iAII•n 1o t/1• •Jitor on wrlcolflt. Til~ duud~ H Ins dum JOO

wore. AU lttW't uw subj«t

t W edili"f 111111 •at H silrfH t"cd illclwN ...,.,lllftl klqilfHII 11ll~fi~Hr. No '""""N l#twn will

,_,.tnUililm.

,,

\ H publilltH. LMUrt Mould HIll fOOIINUU, IINTelliJtf imm, IUH
\.
Tltr opiMiou •zpnned ill Ill#~.,,.,.,. btlow .,.,,.. COiflfiiiMI of Ill• OIIW v.lll)ll'ubluJn,..
~ Ca. '.t rtHmritd 6oclnf. ukn oiAtrwl.t• ,.,.,_

•

.•
~

•
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'

OUR VIEW

I

~'

Hunger

'·l
•

Food donations keep bad
· situation from getting worse

: As long as poverty exists, hunger will be a constant concern for
Qur region.
· To meet the need, food pantries have been established by churchei and advocacy organizations. Donations of food make the holidays
bi-ighter for those unable to afford the niceties of the season.
: Currently, workers who lost their jobs at American Alloys in
Mason County are getting help in feeding their families from the
community, businesses and unions.
' But the need co ntinues year-round. That's why the community's
involvement in keeping food pantries open and stocked is vital. As
southern Ohio and western W est Virginia confront the specter of
rising unemployment if more businesses are lost, the need will
expand.
Without th e help of food pantries, outreach centers and community drives, the situation for poor families has become a little less
BY WALTER R. MEARS
desperate.
WASHINGTON - Lon g- before D ick
Recent reports of hunger in Appalachia prompted 17 otflces in
C heney's transfor m ation from talent sco ut to
the South Central Credit Union Chapter to lend a hand. An o utrunning mate, G eorge W. Bush was relying
on hi m and other veterans of his fath er's
reach committee and volunteers set a goal of collecting 2,000 cans
of food over a two-month period.
presidency in his ca mpaign for a new
The group exceeded its goal by 400 percent, gathering more than
Republican lease on th e White House.
81000 food items for distribution to food pantries in several comShould he get there , Cheney as vice presi munities , including Gallipolis and Pomeroy.
dent surely would be joined by o th ers from
the old Bush adnunistration, in the Cabinet
It takes this kind of concern and leadership to make a difference
and Stem the tide Of deprivation that all tOO easily befalls people in
and top echelons of the new one.
our regiOn.
Bush has talked of Coli n Powell as a
prospective secretary of state, and the former
' Because charity has been abused, people are naturally reluctant to
take a risk for fear of being rooked. Sometimes it's hard to deterch airman of th e Joint C hi efs of Staff has sa~d
m.ine if people are genuinely in need or taking advantage of the syshe'd serve were he asked. That .c hoice could
rem
- -----·- . - - -be-mode-in ·adva nce- forcarnpaign impact.
But isolated bad experiences can't be allowed to ruin the good
While Democrats · will taunt Bush about
done for many deserving families.
the legacy of policy advise rs, they do the
Donations to food pantries are well-publicized during the latter
same thing. Presidentia l nominees always
look to peopl e who served in prior adminispart of the year when, as a character in Dickens' "A Christmas
trations for help, counsel , and often, major
Carol" reflects, the need of the poverty-stricken is more keen .
. But it's not the only time of the year for people to open their
roles on th eir team s.
shelves and share. Seek our food pantries in your area and help if you
That is , after all , the talent bank for each
can.
party. It is where th e comers come from , and
where the eld er statesmen ge t rh ar way.
:They say charity begins at home. When the times are tough, we
have to look to ourselves to get through it all. And that's o ne of th e
Still , the Democrats won't mi ss an opporqualities this area possesses in spades. It's not only the compassion,
tumty to suggest that th e so n is leaning on
but the ability to get thinS' done in a time of crisis.
his father's team. It fir s their argument that
' It 's not a bad quality to display, nor a bad example to set.
the Texas governor lacks experience and
experti se a president needs. especially on foreign policy.
Cheney brings those credenti als to the
ticket , but rea list ically, they arc no r tran sVi ce pres id ents seldom have had a
ferrable.
'

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OFF

Bush staffirs look to get jobs through George W.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, July 27, the 209th day of 2000. There are !57
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight m History:
On Ju ly 27, 17R9, Congress established the Department of Foreign
Affairs, the forerunner of the Department of State.
On this date:
In 1794. French revolutionary leader Maxirnilien· Robespierre was
overthrown and placed under arrest; he was executed the fo llowing
day.
,In 1861 , Union Gen . George B. McClellan was put in command
of the Army of the Potomac.
·Jn 1866, Cyrus W. Field finally succeeded, after two failures, in layirjg the fif5t underwater telegraph cable between North Amenca
and Europe.
·In 1940, Bugs Bunny made his otflcial debut in the Warner Brothers animated cartoon "A Wild Hare."
In 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom, endmg three years of fighting.
In 19611. Vi ce President Nixon was nom mated for president at the
Republican nati Qnal convention in Chicago.
In 1974 , the H ouse Judi ciary Committee voted 27- 11 to recom mend Presi de nt Nixon's impeachment on a charge that he had personall y engage d in a "course of conduct" designed to obstruct JUS nee m the Watergate case.
In 1976, A1r Fo rce veteran Ray Brennan became the first perso n
to die of Le~IOn naires' disease fo llowing an American Legion con ve ntion in Ph iladelphi a.
.In I '.IHII. on day 267 of the Irani an hostage crisis , the deposed Shah
of Iran d1ed at a military hospital outside C mo, Egypt, at age 60.
In 19%, te rror struck the Atlanta Olympics as a pipe bomb
expl oded at the public Centennial Olympic Park, killihg one person
.md injurin g more than 100.
Ten years ago: Lo uis iana Gov. Buddy Roemer vetoed a tough
.1bortion bi ll passed by the state Legislature. A miStrial was declared
111 R aymond Buckey's retrial o n c harges of molesting children at th e
McMarnn Pre-Sc hool in California .
Five years ago: The Korea n War Veterans M emorial was dedicated
"' Wash mgto n by President C linton and South Korean Preside1H
K1111 You n g-~ant.
•
One year ago: The House approved President Clinton's one-year
L'Xtcn&lt;;ion of normal rrade wirh Chi na.
·

significa nt impatt o n the cho ice votl:rs make

for president.

·

As secreta ry of d t.· fcn se undt'r President

Bush. Cheney was the civi lian sid e of the

partnership that managed the 199 1 Persia n
G ulf War. Powell was the general. Cheney's
path to the inn er circl e, and onto the ti cket
with George W. Bush, began with his role on
a defense and foreign policy advi sory team
orgamzed a year before the 2000 campaign.
Condo leeza Ri ce, a ' nationa l securi ty
adviser in the !:lush White House. led that
group, and is Bush's campaign counselor on
foreign pohcy. She wo uld he a likely choice
to head the National Security Cou ncil
sho uld Bush be ekcted.
!:lush 's policy tc01ms began taking shape
more than two years ago, when for mer Secretary of State George P. Sh ultz invited fellows at tne H-oover lnstifution to his home in Palo Alto, Calif. , to talk with the governor.
R ice, then provost at Stanford Univers ity,
and veterans of both th e Bush and Ronald
R eaga n administrations were th ere, to discuss
issues fo reign and economic.
By 1999, advisory pan els were m eeting
with Bush in Austin , dealing with topics he
would face in a pres idential campaign he had
not yet declared . Th at wi nter, Cheney and
Sh ultl , who se rved in the Reaga n Cabi net,
were guests at the gove rnor\ m ansion for
dinner, a long ralk , and an overnight viSit.
Uush md it wasn't Cheney's first Austin
vim and woul dn't be hi s last. "H e's a person
whose judgment I trust," th e gove r nor said.
C heney had been an aide in R1 chard M .
Nixon's White H ouse. cluef of staff to Ge rald
R . Ford, then a Wyomi ng conf(ress man for
six terms, wit h a Rea ga n - right voting
re co rd . He left tlw H o use as th e No. 2
Repub lica n le adn when Bush chost· hull for
tht· Pentagon in 19~9. C heney has been

chairman of a Dallas oil services corporation .
Vice President AI Gore's campaign spokesm en started the sniping at once.
"A retro pick,'' said Chris Lehane. "Old
guard,'' Mark Fabiani said, versu s " the new
guard, represented by AI Gore."
Gore's vice presidential selection will come
later this month. Warren Christoph er, w ho is
screening prosp ects for him as Cheney did
earli er for Bush , is a veteran of thre e Democrati c administrations, . and served as President Clinton 's secretary of state.
Bush decided on C h eney for th e ticket 90
days after ch oosmg him to screen hi s field of
potential running mates. Announcing the
c hoice at ant\-ustm-rally on Weilnesday, Bush
said he had asked Chen'ey at the beginning
of th e process whether he wo uld consider
the vice presi dency. and was told n o.
"Gradually, I realized that the person who
was best qualitied to be my vice presidential
nomin ee was w&lt;;&gt;rkmg by my side,'' said
Bush .
C hen ey said he 'd ch anged his mind as he
watched Bush in action . "In the end, I
learned how pe rsuasive he ca n be," h e said.
"Big changes are coming to Washington
and I want to be a part of th em ,'' C heney
said .
.
After a campaign swing togeth er, Bush and
C heney wi ll be nomin ated in Philadelphia at
th e Republican National Convention, managed for rhe gowrnor by Andrew C ard,
another veteran of the George Bush Cabin et.

(vl'il frer R . .Hears lw.&lt; reporrrd 0 11 Washin.~foll
a]](/ '""'""''' pofirics _r., T11r A.&lt;Sotiatcd Press for
llh'H'

tlwn 35 yt&gt;ars.)

RYAN'S VIEW

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VVOmen pursuing it all, but are .coming up short
BY JOAN RYAN
Pegb')' OrL·n ste in know;; thing~ about m y

hfe that I wmd d never in .1 btllion years tell
her, wh ich makt·s havin g lund1 with her both
unsettlinp; .md l t ' mpdlin~ . \X./e'n: L';lt ing Tha1
food in ll crkeley :md talkin f( about her nl'W
book . "Flu x: Wo rn~.: n on Sl'x. \\for k. Love,

Kids, and Life in .1
(Doub leday Books).

H . tii~C h.ln l(l' d

World"

She intnviL·wnl 2011 Wllfll l ' ll DVL'r dlL' ],..,r
four yeJr"i. hopmb to nu kL· .,•,:ml' of thl' "co n ~
tl Jcted v01n..· " 'lhl· kt·p t hcanng tl·o m women.
What she fOund \ \ ';-I" .1 chorm of U!Hpo ke n
~t=crL·t~.

th t: thil lb'~

\llv'O ill l' ll

(for .1 ~ m uc h a'\ we

talk ) do n't tell e01c h or her -

e1the.r hec1use
we think wt· 'rL' th e o ni J OTH''~ w ho fl'l'i o r
think ~u ch thiii!--'S or bcc.t\llit' rhe ".Wric.., don 't
fit the ncar, politiL·all y correct Vl'\ inn w t~ w,11 1t
ro havt' of ou r ~e l ve~ .
Orenstet n'' inrt~ r vicwce'\ ralk :1hnut wlut it\
reall y like in o ur 111 arriagl''\ once we h.I\'L' chil dren . H ow we judge o th er wome n w h o mak e
differen t c h oa:e~ from o ur own . H ow \VC t(:Jr
under mining o ur careen if \\'t' get married

and have chi ldrm -

yet fc .u be ing alone if
we d on't. H ow we '\tru~~l c to reconcile the
prb rni llc _of our teen yt·u~ - \vomen can Jn d
should have it all 1 - With 1he guilt .111d ro nfu sing di sappo intm c11 t of fal ling sho rt as
ad ults.

"Be neath the boundless oplll lli sm ," Orenstt:in wntes, "lies a '\ JH:aking '\Uspt cion th at th e
rhetoric of 'c hoicts' is in pan a ron job, di s-

(Assrd

o usly o ur comrol ovcr chi ld-rearing, treating
hmh;mds as a ss i ~ta n ts to ou r ch ief'\.·

As cme 3 1-ye ar-old filmmak er told OrenguJ -;in g impo ssibk dJ!cmmas as matters ofp cr- &lt;tein . " It's like I'm c au~,;ht in thi s whole
~u na1 prc:ft'rl'Jlrl' . As th ese young; women look
dynamic. I want to put the baby to bed, and
fi)rward . th ey "t'l' 'cho ic e~· thrt'&lt;ltt' lli ng rn yc.·t I want him to do it. I w:mt to be: 111 . durgc
morph mto cruel rrad t' - offo;; ... rhat cou ld ulti - o f the bi ll s, but I want l111n to do 1t. It's like I
m an.·ly tr::tp rh em in th e nar row rolt•'\ rh ~...·y'rt• wa nt pov.tcr ovt:'"r all tht'sc t hi llb"~· And I try to
ex pected to csctpt· ... For m e. the hook w ~1 s hkc ~ i vc tllL'!n up, I Jo. Uu t it \ hard fo r me . l [..'1 Iess
read tng my ow n diary projccrecl th roug h tht• I wafl t to ha\·e contro l ovn c:verythin g."
pri;;m of dOZt'll'\ of nther \~'011lt' l1 .
I .1sked Or,·mtcin lww she chang••d whi le
"Th e tl•rt r o f bcin~ a b .ll{ ntnthn i"' li ke writin f( th,• boo k. She 's .1H. Ill.lrr icd and hop krypro111r c:' Orcn "tc.:i n 1"- '~ a y in ~ at lu nch , in ~5&gt;- to SLirt .1 f.nmly. In the midsr of her
touchin g 0 11 .1 parti cularl y vulncr:1hk topic fo r re~c arc h , lihe wa!"l diagn osed with breast can ct•r
111 :111y \\'0 111 L'11. " T h~...· imp o\'iihk ".t,tndrlrc"h
(tOr w hid1 ..,ht' undt·nven t a lum pl'ctomy and
wome n 'll.' t fo r thc:lll'\t' lVt:'\ rt·m indcJ lll l' o t" th ~...· rJdiat io n). l3 ur ~ hl' o;; ay'\ lwr reporting work
rccn - .1ged girls I used to mten ·in\· who. no ch.u1 ged her more th an her brush with death .
marrn \vlut th ey weighed. 'iJW t hc m sc lv~s J~
Sh,· s.1ys she understands now that th ere's no
fa1
L'.l\Y villam anym o re for wom en. She undc:r"Th ere sho uld h:· rt 'pc: rfc.-·r t mothn' cqu tv- \ta ndli that somerimcli the.· choices women'
alcnt to an t'ating dtsordc.:.·r. I kept \A/OIH..kring make - the on e'\ we.· oftc: n stand in judgm ent
as I ta lkt!d to womt' n, ' H ow good Jm.·o;; a · of - arc not really choices at all.
moth er have to be before (she) fn· l&lt; goo d
" I was looking for a road map fo r myself,"
cnou g I1.',.
Orenste in says, " anJ I realized th ~re wasn't
wl' '' mi c ro- tnanag~ hke crazy" ,lJid "go tu o ne. Today, we have to define fo r o urselves
'u perhum,m le ngth &gt;'' lO allay o ur fears of what\ ' uccess and what's fai lure ."
being the baJ mother, to "prove our devot ion
Uoa/1 R )1dll i:; a coi1mH1i:if j'or the San F'mutisco
to :u l invi sibk churus of c ritit:s." As mu ch as Clmmic!r. St·" rl w,,,c,;ts ic, her '" care · ~( tfris
Wt" talk ab(\lut wa nung an egalit.lnan rl'lat io nll r11'Jfh1f' Cr
M
se11d
ha
e- mail
at
\h tp Wit h our hu '\ bands, we tl' nd to gu.1n.l jl'.ll- ioo~u Y}'rl t l .{(!nrc .t"tl JJJ . )

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Page A 6 ·The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

"

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Ann prints humorous 'History of the World'
'

•

.,

Dear Ann Landers: l have been
searching your column for my favorite
article, but have yet to see it . Would you
ple~se reprint "The Hi story of th e
World" ? It was a compilation of lines
from student papers, collec ted by histo ry
and English teachers, and put together by
Richard Lederer. It was hilarious. Laura in Atlanta
Dear Laura: I remember tt well.
because the man who put it together has
the same last na1ne as nUnc, although we:
are not related. Here it is:
The History of the World
Adam and Eve were crea ted from .m
apple tree . Jacob, sun of Isaa c, stole his
brother's birthmark. One of Jacob's -sons.
Joseph, gave refuse to the Israelites.
The inhabitants of Egypt were call ed
mummies. They traveled by Camelot.
Moses led the Hebrew slaves to the Red
Sea, where they made unleavened bread,
which is bread made without any ingredients. David was a Hebrew king who

Ann
Landers
•now•--- -·---•
ADVICE

fought the Pltilatdi sts. Solo mon, one of
David's sons, had SOU wives and 500 porcu ptnes.
The Greeks invented three kinds of
columns - Corinthian, Doric and Iro nic. The mother of Achilles dipped lum in
the Rtvcr Styx until he became intolerable. In the Olympic games . G reeks ran
races, jumped, hurled the biscuits, and
threw the java. The reward to the victor
was a cora] \Vrea[h. Socrates was a famous
Greek teacher who died from an overdose of wedlock .

Eventually, the Ramories conquered
the Greeks. Nero was a cruel tyrant who
tortured his poor subjects by playing the
fiddle to them.
In the Middle Ages, King Harlod
nlustarded his troops before the Bartle of
Hastings . Joan of Arc was canonized by
George Bernard Shaw. The Magna Carta
provided that no free man should be
hanged twice for the same offense.
William Tell shot an arrow through an
apple while standing on his son's head.
In the R enaissance, Martin Luther was
nailed to the church door at Wittenberg
for selling papal indulgences. H e died a
hornble death, being excommunicated
by a bull. The painter Donatello 's interest
in the female nude made him the father
of the Renaissance. Gutenberg invented
the Bible. Sir Walter Raleigh invented
cigarettes, and Sir Fran cis Drake circumcised the world with a I 00-foot clipper.
Qu een Ehzabeth's navy defeated the
Spanish Armadillo. William Shakespeare

ami/p
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hawkins
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Roben E. Hawkins will celebrate
their 30th wedding anniversary
Sunday-wlthapartyin-ffi e gym of
the Pomeroy Municipal Building
on East Main Street, Pomeroy.
The party will begin at 5 p.m .
and all friends and family of the
couple are invited to anend.

Hawkins and Dorothy louise
O hlinger were rnarried on Aug.
2, 1970 in Rutland. He is the son
Ol~eei1 Hawktns
the !ore-Albert Hawkins. She is th e
daughter of C harles and Opal
O hlinger. The couple has o ne
daughter, Christy Chaney on-uppers Plains, and a grandson .

arrd

SOCIETY NEWS
Special speaker at Asbury Church
.
'

SYRACU~E Congregations of Forest Run , Minersville, and
Asbury United M ethodist Circ uit will assemble for a combined worship
service at the Asbury Church in Syracuse Sunday at 11 a. m.
They will be led in the services by Pastor Dob R obimon and his
brother, the Rev. Dr. James C. Robimon of St. C lo ud, Fb. Speaking on
the topic,"Meetmg Jesus fo r the First Time", will be Dr. R obmson who
holds a doctor of divinity degn'e as well as a Ph.D in psychology.

Research group to condud surveys
POMEROY -Area mothers and their ch ildren who wer~ in the fifth
or sixth grade last sehool year arc invited ro be :1 parr of a health survey
to be conducted by Toborg AssoCiates. Inc. , a rese:trch :tnd evaluation
company based in Washington D. C.
Researchers of the company wdl be in Atl!l'ns, Aug . .3-5 to do inter-

views in an effort to seek to undcrst111d how mothers in n1r:1.l coJnnlunities influence the health-rehted behaviors uf their children.
Toborg Associates is conducting the resc:u-d1 with a gra nt from the
National Cancer lnstinlte. fmervkws .1rc don~ m group ~·s.o;;JOJT.;, m hotel
rrteeting rooms. An intervtt•wer rl•ad" questions while p:~rticip:mts con tidentially mark their answers o n a photompied form Though questi ons
are similar, mothers and young people respond to sli ghdy dtfferent su rveys that look at health issues from their respective perspectives. The ses-

rncrs

whose

judgments

are

impaired by
drinking or adults who become
ineb riatt·d while they are supervismg children in th~ water.
You can reduce your fa mily 's
risk of death in a water accident by
encouraging eac h teenage and
adult tamily member to enroll in a

cardiopuln1onary

resusc itatl on

(CPR) course. My medic:tl dictionary defi nes resuscitation as the
restoration to life of one who is
apparently dead. That pretty well
says why CPR is so important, and
thl' sooner it is started , the more
li kely 11 is to restore life to a
drowning victim. If you have the
tram ing, yo u might save a tife by
starting C PR before EMS personnd ::t rrive on tht· scene. If you
do n 't know basic CPR,l'd suggest
you contact you r loca l Amencan
H ea rt Association chapter for
int() rmarion about courses in your
area.
Ec[ually important , you should
insi st that each family member
rece ive suffi ue nt instruction to
become a co mpetent swimmer.
This includes adults that may have
missed the o pportunity to mastt·r
this skill when they were children .
The area Red Cross can direct you

to swinuning lessons.
As you may have gathered &amp;om
my earlier statement, one of the
biggest risks for your family may
be alcohol. Thirty-eight percent of
m en and II percent of women
involved in water-related accidents, including drowning, had
been drinking alcoholic beverages.
While the quantities they consumed were often enough to make
them legally drunk, you should
know that even a small q4antity of
alcohol slows your reflexes and
mildly impairs your ability to
make critical decisions.This is why
l think it's foolish to have any
alcohol before swinmung, water
skiing or operating a boat became
of the potentially severe consequences of an error in judgment.
People who dive into shallow
water can sustain one of the more
serious water-related injuries paralysis due to injury of the spinal
cord amhreck.lhe easiestway to
prevent this tragedy is to familiarize yourself with the area you're
diving in. It's a good idea to carefully go feet first into the water
before your first dive. That way,
you 'II know the water level and
you'll find out about any dangerous objects under the surface that
can't be seen from the shore or
from within the boat. Also,
remember that the water levels in
familiar lakes, streams and rivers
can change from day to day and
from season to season.
Here are a few final suggestions
to help prevent a needless summ ertime tragedy in your family:
Watch you ng c hi ldren CONSTANTLY when they arc near
water. Individu als of any age
should not "horse around'' on the
bank o f a stream, on a water sl ide,
o r while in a boat. Don't venture
into unfa miliar water alone. Don't
to ke chances. Wear a persona l
tlotatio n device whenever you an~
in a water craft or on \ 1.'ater skis.
And, if a child who doesn't know
how to sw1m is in the \\'ater, make
sure he or she is with an adult
swinuner at all times and has on an
approved
flotatio n
devi ce.
NEVER, let a child s~bstitute a
blowup tube or similar devi ce for
an approved flotation device.

sions take no more than Jn hour. 13oth thL· _mothl'r and chilO mu st parToborg AssoCiatt-s pays mother; $25 111 c.tsh :n the nc...·l·d of the session
and the young people. $11) in"cash at tit,· end ot'the s&lt;:&lt;Sion . R esearc hers
will return ag;tin in six nJunths to do a foli()W - up -;urvcy.At tlut tintc they
will pay mother~; another S25 and their childrL·n. :tnothcr .S I! 1To paa:ticipate in a ""-&lt;ion, reSld,·nts arc· to c:~ l Ann ,It toll-tree. HH~-403-3421 .

•••

27

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plain s VFW Post
9053 , 7:30 p.m. at th e hall .
RUTLAND
Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thurs day, 7 p.m. at the Rutland
Church of C h mt. ' Prog ram ,
Jane Wise, Jan e t Bolin and
Judy
Snowden.
Pomeroy
Church, d evo tions; report on
woman of the Bible.
SHADE- Revtval Thursday through Saturday, Graham C hap e l Chun;h between
County Road, 75 a nd county
road 25. Singers for Thursday, C huck and Shirley Dailey of Athens; for Friday
Marti Short of Chester; for
Saturday, Proclaim of l'll ew
Haven. W.Va. Evangelis~,Rev.
John ElswicK., Athens.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Town and Country
EXPO, 7 :30p.m. Thursday at
the grange hall on the fair-

0

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,

Microsoft files ruling appeal

RACINE
All those
interested in playing volleyball for Southern Junior
High , meet Friday, 4 p.m . at
the school. for more information , call Becky Adki'ns ,
949-1062.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Microsoft Corp. asked the Supreme
Court on Wedn esday to let a federal appeals court take the next ·
··c.rack at a titanic antitrusr fi g ht that threatens to break the computer software giant in two.
"The importan ce of th ese cases will not lie in how quickly they
are resolved but in their long-te rm effects on consumers and this
nation's eco nomy," Microsoft's lawyers told the ju~ti ces in an
appeal :
The 30-page appe~l. filed Wednesday with a 312-page appendix, urged the court to avoid "the onerous task of sifting through
a large and complex record and forgoing the many benefits of
intermediate appellate review."
" Indeed, the number of and nature of the errors below militate
strongly in favor of review by the court of appeals," the appeal

•••

SUNDAY, July 30
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel
sing at
the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene with
the Gabriel Quartet, Sunday,
6:30 p.m. Church is located
on General Hartinger Parkway. Pastor Allen Midcap
invites the public to attend.
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
promo~_ sales or fynd
raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of
days.

Hr-VAL
CIGARE.TTES
11 25
1 Pack
11
1245 ·Carton
GoSPEL
CASSETTES
Res. egoo

On!Y 7

Res.
On

uid.

5Qc

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20

oz.

IMEX

: Microsoft contends in the appeal that U.S. District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson wrongly concluded that it engaged in
illegally an ticompetitive conduct. The company also co mplains
about Jacks on'sc~ ntacts with reporters, saying he should be disqualified if the case ever returned to the trial court level.
The Justi ce Department, under an expediting agreement with
Microsoft, · has until Aug. 15 to respond to the company's
Supreme Court appeal. Government lawyers want the nation's
highest court to tackle the case directly, without first sending it
to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Cohim--bi• ~-- T-~

The nine justices are not expected to say until September at the
earliest whether they will grant direct review or send the case to
the appeals court. The highest court's 2000-2001 term will not
begin until Oct. 2.
A federal law allows major antitrust disputes to skip the appeals
court step and move from a trial court to the Supreme Court, but
.. the justices make the decision.

ARLINGTON,Va. (AP)- Prosecutors in Southern California
. plan to offer free DNA tests to some inmates even though the
results might overturn convictions, USA Today reported.
The paper said in Thursday's editions that San Diego County
prosec utors ha\'e been reviewing the cases of about 560 inmates
si n ce June to determine whether DNA tem developed since
; their convictions - all prior to 1992 - can be used to link bio: logica l evidenc:e from a crime scene to someone other than the
• perso n conv icted.
: It said th e co unty plans to pay for tests in such cases, at a cost
·: of about $5,000 each , and that-, would be the first program of
suc h free tests in the nation .
.
T h e paper said prosecutors in Riverside and Ventura counties
· have co ntacted th e California District Attorneys Association for
; hel p in preparin g suc h plans and that si milar initiatives are bein g

WASHINGTON (AP) Legislation to over the next decade, not counting Social
repeal a 1993 tax increase on the Social S~cu- !iccunry.
rity benefits of millions of se ni or citi zens is up
'The budget surplus is real, nor imagined ,
next for tax-cutting H o use Republicans, even and it means that the tax is no longer needed ,"
as President Clinton admonished the GOP to Archer. R - Texas. said Wednesday in a letter to
"stop passing tax bills you know I'll veto."
Treasury Secretary Lawrence Sununers.
The House was to vote Thursday o n the
In addition, money would be transferred out
bill, which would reduce taxes o n Social Secu- of the general budget surplus to make up for
rity for people with certain incomes - above any losses in Medicare, where_rlu: tax proceeds
$34,000 for individuals and above $44.000 for are now transferred . About 9 million senior c it ..;!
married couples' from ~5 percent of benefits izens now pay the higher tax rate, a number
to the pre-1993 level of 50 percent. The bi ~ expecte d to reach 13 million by 2010.
cost was estimated at S100 billio n over \(J ' \ Democrats say the bill's promise to use genyears.
era! tax revenue for Medicare could co me up
Rep. Bill Archer, chai rnt:tn of the House short if the surplus projections are wrong.They
Ways and Means Conmlittee, sa1d the original planned to offer an alternattve that would cu t
purpose of the wx increase - redu ci ng th e the Social Sec urity tax for all but those benefifederal budget deficit- has disappeared n ow ciaries with in comes above $100,000 - but
that projections indicate su rpluses of$2 trillion o nly if rhe surplus actually materializes.

GOP, Clinton spar over tax

The GOP bill , Summers said in lm own letter, "is th~: btc~ t in J se nt:'&gt; of co,tly .l!ld poorly targett'd tax proposals'' ru l'llll'fbl' lll Con gress, rcwforcing Chntun 's COIUJJH: nts .H a ll!.J\.V'
co nfc ren n~ Wcdnl'st.iay that thJs 'iummcr·~ ~e ric \
of tax cuts wasn 'r the WISl'St use of the surplu:-. .
" I say to Congress: Stop passing tax bills yuu
know I'll veto." C linton told reporters at the
Whtte Hou se. " Start workin g with u s o n a bal -

anced budget that cuts taxc.., fiJr middk•-til'l"
familie s. continu es to pay otr thL· n.Hl o n.tl debt
and invest in Amenca's future ."
The president repc~1tcd hi ., clurgc riut the
combined COlt of all COP ta' hdls over t he
past two YL'ars- some of whi ch .m.· dtlphcatt&gt;&lt;.,
- would all but consum e the s~ rrillum l ll
bu dgt:t surpluses projl' cted over th l' nc:-:r
dt:cack. not counrlng: money t(H· So~_· t.11 Scrudty.

Government wams states

cuts and budget surplus

to stop inflating Medicaicl

WASHINGTON (AP) - A1
House Republi cans prepared to
pass a bill repealing a 19'.)3 tax
increase on Social Securiry benefits, President C linton urged the
GOP-led Congress to abandon
their major tax cuts and work
instead for wiser uses of the budget su rplus.
" l say to Co ngress: stop passing
tax bills you know I'll veto," Clinton told reporters Wednesday at
the Whtte H ouse. "Start workin g
with us on a balanced budget that
cuts taxes for nliddle-class fami lies, continues to pay · off th~
n ational debt and invest in America's future.''
The ;president re pea ted his
charge that the combined cos t of
all GOP tax bills over th e past

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government warned states on
Wednesday to end a practice l;&gt;y
which they temporarily transfer
money into their own M edica id
programs to earn higher matching
funds from the federal government.
In a sharply worded le-tter,
Timothy M . Westmoreland, director of the H ealth C are Financing
Administration, which oversees
Medicaid, said many swtes allow
their Medtcaid providers to keep
only a fra ction of the nearly S2
billion generated by the transfers.
In some cases, he said, as little as 5
percent is properly allocated.
T h e INter was obta ined
Wednesday by The Associated
Press.

two years - so me of which are
dupli cates - would all but consume the S2 trillion in budget
surpluses projected, over the next
dcc:tdc, not counting money for
Socia l Security.
'' In good conscie n ce, I ca nn ot
s1gn ont~ of rhcsc tax breaks after
another w irhout any coherent
st rategy for safeguarding 6 ur
future :t nd meetin g oth~r national priorities," Clin ton said .
R cp ubhcans said they would
push ahead with more standalon e ta;&lt; cuts, including :i bill
scheduie"d for de hate Thursday in
the House that wou ld cut taxes
on SociJJ Scct!rity for an estimated lJ million st..·nior citizens, at a
cost of about Sl 00 billion over I U
years.

.

One warm, misty night
spent killing bloodsuckers
ELMSFORD, N.Y (AP) - As
he roared through the deserted
streets of Westche ster County,
Herb Lawrence had no gu:tlms
about the poison mist geyseri!\g up
from the bed of his pickup.

especially when jobs come up suddenly, like the fu nli gation of Central Park ordered , by New York
City M ayor Rudolph Gillham on
M cmclavo ··- --As the spraying spread1, so does
co ncern about the insec ticide,

ic~id progr;~m~.

7/14, 1111, 1120, 7/24, 1121, •

8/7, 11/8, 8/14, 8/18

over eJrlier pn.~t.'lllon ~ - with ~ 1
estim;tted S ! .'! b11lion due to tl~
loophole.

I

U

Marlene Harrison
Meigs County Clerk of Courts

He had come from Illin ois to
help stamp out the West Nile virus,
and had only one thought :~bout
the mosquitoes he was killing by
the thousands:"( don 't like 'em."
Lawrence, who works for
Clarke Environmental Mosquito
Management Inc. of Roselle, Ill. ,
was one of 14 drivers deployed
until the wee hours Wednesday in
Westchester's latest assault on the
virus.
An extensive effort to combat
the virus is under way across Ne\\'
York, where an outbreak last year
killed seven people. The virus also
has been found in Ma&lt;Sac huse tts,
New Jersey, Coni1ecticut and
Maryland.
The big demand for its servic,·s
has C larke juggling its resources.

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CharUta Riffle , R . Ph .
Mon. thru Fri. B : OO a.rn. to 9 p . m .
Sat. B:OO a.m. to a p . m .
Sunday 10: 00 a.m . to 4 : 00 p.rn.
PRESCRIPTION PH. 992-2955
East IVIeln Pomeroy, Ohio
Friendly Service
Week
hta Till 9

HELENA . Mont . (AP) - Two
. wi ldf ·es east of th e state capital
have blackened thpus:tnds of acres
and fOrced dozens of evacuations
'
- more misery as more th an 70
. firc•s burn across p;trtS of 10 West-

t•rn s tat t·~Th e twin

wildfires near
Ca nyon Ferry Lake had con sumed an estimated 20.000 acres
by Wednesday. Of!ici:tls said five
,rahins, th ree hOll Sl'S 3!ld 11\llllCfOU S
o utbuil di n gs have bt.'ch
destroyed.
' "T he extrellle lire be havior is
cuntinu111g.
and
Wl'
have
Absolutely no co ntainment at this
Point," fire infortnation . officer
Jodie Ca nfield said . "This is the
first d:ty we've been able to do
mute stratcgJC fircfighting. Until
D
now. it's been :til about protec ti ng
&lt;;trll ctl lrl'"i "
Unris

Roherts

(El 't'ryhtuly

' tarred with
Picrt.·c B r~l~ n an and StcphJnie

Lm T.\ R(lrmond)

Zimhali:-.t in the ll)KOs TV seri es
Rnni11gton St('f' k .

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Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have ASpecial Meigs
County Fair Preview Edition. This Year's Edition Promises To
Be One Of The BICCEST AND BEST EVER!
look For This Special Edition In Your
Friday, August 11th Paper

()

~

.9Lcqlf.i§:f:,tions ~

0 91 Mill Street • Middleport, OH • 9~2-6250 V

.,

Tht: practicr dnvcs up tht! cq;t
of M edicaid, the fcderal-st.1 te pn:)gram that provides he.drh beneflh
to low-incom c Americ:ms.
!
Westmoreland sa id the statcb '
cstinutcs of fcd~.?r;.d Ml'di cai:d
'
spending for fiscal ye:~r 21100 ha~e
already increJscd by S3.4 bililO)l

As Clerk of Courts, I would like to announce that the Meigs
County Title Department wlll be providing extended office
hours on Tuesday evenings. Commencing on Tuesday,
July 11, 2000, the staff wlll be available to serve the public
from 8:30a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
If there are any questions, please feel free to contact me at
(740) 992·5290
,........
Thank You.
~YY ~

f'11

''

Under th e prJL-tJ c6. wh1ch :i"'
legal under a loophole- m laws
concerning ML·dioid. some states
transfer lht.·ir own fund~ . boi-rowed , money or property t1x~· . .
into stJtt.· cotft.·r&lt;.; to L~liJlify f~r
more m;~rc hing ti.m ds. Tht.· st.:-.tb.
then siphon off a porllon of tl:i e
federal funds to u~c tOr JJOn - Ml'~ -

n.------------~--------~--~

;season grows

20%

pushes bill to repe~l 1993 tax inc~ease

·

.

19

ffi'
0n!Y =79c

(I(

•••

FRIDAY, July 28

'-..Prices Good Through uesday August 1st

Res.

Now At

"Every body counts, everybody deserves a chance, everybody
has a role to play, we all do bette r when we help each other,"
C linton said. "That's what this memorial represents , that's what
the ADA represents, that's America at its best."
To mark the anniversary of the law barring discrimination and
requiring w)leelchair ramps and other. accommodations for the
diSabled, C liifton asked federal agenCies to hire I 00,000 people
with disabilities over the next five years.
Clim o n directed federal agencies to recruit disabled candidates
for jobs at every level in the federal government .
"They don't want exc u se~. Instead, they want opportuniry in
terms of jobs and careers," Clinton said.

·Free DNA tests set for Inmates

CANDV
BARS

Goln~ On

Mu ch of that stigma has been erased since FOR's time, but
Clinton said too-many disabled people still face needless daily diffi c ulties.
'

'

30% OFF

Club enjoys picnic

WASHINGTON (AP) - When a light rain fell on President
.c;::Iinton and a crowd of people celebrating the ' lOth anniversary
of the Am eri ca ns With Disabilities Act on Wednesday, he per.form ed a simple act that most people take for granted: He
unfurled an umbrella and held it over his head.
Many of the young people i11 wheelchairs behind him o n stage
could not do the same, and White House aides scrambled to find
a motley assortment of golf umbrellas.
"A lot of what the American s with bisabihties Act is all about
is to make sure that people can live like people, can do things
other folks take for granted," Clinton said to applause from the
crowd of activists, disabled people and their families at the
· Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial.
FOR's use of a wheelchair was a secret from most Americans.
He and his aides worried that his di sability would be taken as a
·
. sign of weakness.

grounds .

THURSDAY, July

Hous~

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

ADA anniversary celebrated ·

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

WATCHES

ticipate.

CHESTER .- Pa&gt;t Cuunnlors C lub ufl :hc·,tcT Couneil323. Daughters of Anx·rica, held a piCmc ~t"thl' ' hl'ltl't hou'i.c JlL'ar the R.tcint.·
Methodist ~&gt;~acm e ~t•centl\'.
·
Erma C lebnd b"'ve the bk"ing.'.md Je.m Wcl,h. who read Psalm I '10.
conducted the meeting w hich opened With the Lord's Prayer and !'ledge
to the flag. For roll call members named their f.1vorite bird. Otlict·rs to r
the next six months were installed by presidcnt,Jean Welsh. They were
E1ther, presidem; Opal Hollon. VIC&lt;' presKknt;Thclma Wh1te.1 secretary;
and Charlotte Grant, treasurer: Goldie Fredc·nc k. tluwer committee: lnzy
Newell, sen tinel. and Mary K. Holter, news reporter. Poems read were
" Happy Birrhrby to the U.S.A ." hy Jean Welsh, and "About Age" by
Erma Cleland
Others anendtng were Ruth Smith. lle1cy Young. Dons Cmcser.
Erma Cleland. Opal Eichinger. Marf,.'Jlt't Ami &gt;ergtor. Elb Osborne. mc·mbers; and Scottie Smith. Everett Gr:mt , Slwrri Seals, Sandy White ,111cl
Richard White, visitors.

Handel was half-German, half-Italian
and half-English . He was very large. Bach
died from 1750 to the present.
Beethoven was so deaf that he wrote
loud music. He expired in 1827, and later
dted from this.
Samuel Morse invented a code for
telepathy. louis Pasteur discovered a c_ure
for rabbis. Madman Curie discovered
radi um. And Karl Marx became one of
the Marx Brothers.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funny to the poignantly insightful. Send a self- addressed, long, businesssize envelope and a check or money
order for $5.25 (this includes postage and
handling) to : Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $6.25.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her pas! columns, visit the C reators Syndi cate web page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY - Mei gs Soil
and Water Conservation Di stri ct in regular sess ion Thurs day, 8 p. m .. Meigs SWCD
Office.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: My family and l play
"" the water most weekends of
the sununer.We boat, ski and swim
in the river. I'm always worried
about someone drowning. Do you
have anv advice to help us minimize this risk?
Answer: Drowning is a major
caus~ of accidental death in the
United Swes. In 1997, the most
rece nt year for which complete
statistics are available, 4,051 people
drowned, including 964 children
under the age of 15. The ci rcu mst.mce of each death is unique, but
a close examination of the data
.:;how Ct'rtain unfortunate patterns.
These
lethal
combinations
include: yo ung children in backyJrd swimming pools, inattentive
swimmers who get in the way of
boats in lakes and rivers, and experienced swi m1ners who make fatal
judgment errors. In all of these situ:ttions. alcohol is 'frequently a
~ on t ributin g f-uc ror~'T'h i • · -may involve adolescent or adult swim-

NATIONAL BRIEFS

wrote about Romeo and Juliet, a romantic couplet. Miguel Cervantes wrote
" Donkey Hote." John Milton wrote
"Paradise Lost ." Then, his wife died , and
he wrote "Paradise Regained."
Christopher Columbus was a great
navigator who discovered .America while
cursing about the Atlantic . His ships were
the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Fe.
,
One of the causes of the Revolutionar'y War was that the English put tacks in
their tea . Benjamin Franklin invented
electricity by rubbing cats backward.
Franklin died in 1790, and is still dead.
Abraham Lincoln's mother died in
infancy. He signed the Emasculation
Proclamation. In 1865, lincoln got ·shot
by an actor in a moving picture. His
name was J o hn Wilkes Booth. This
ruined Booth's career.
Gravity was invented by Isaac Walton.
It is chiefly noticeable in autumn, when
the apples are falling off the trees. Bach
and Handel were famous composers.

ANNIVERSARY

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BE SURE YOUR
BUSINESS IS A PART .
OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!
Call
DAVE or MATT

at
992-2155 .
FOR MORE INFO R!\1.\TION

The Daily Sentinel

,.

'

�'

'

. ..

.-

.

'

•
,'

.'

•

•
Page A 6 ·The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

"

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Ann prints humorous 'History of the World'
'

•

.,

Dear Ann Landers: l have been
searching your column for my favorite
article, but have yet to see it . Would you
ple~se reprint "The Hi story of th e
World" ? It was a compilation of lines
from student papers, collec ted by histo ry
and English teachers, and put together by
Richard Lederer. It was hilarious. Laura in Atlanta
Dear Laura: I remember tt well.
because the man who put it together has
the same last na1ne as nUnc, although we:
are not related. Here it is:
The History of the World
Adam and Eve were crea ted from .m
apple tree . Jacob, sun of Isaa c, stole his
brother's birthmark. One of Jacob's -sons.
Joseph, gave refuse to the Israelites.
The inhabitants of Egypt were call ed
mummies. They traveled by Camelot.
Moses led the Hebrew slaves to the Red
Sea, where they made unleavened bread,
which is bread made without any ingredients. David was a Hebrew king who

Ann
Landers
•now•--- -·---•
ADVICE

fought the Pltilatdi sts. Solo mon, one of
David's sons, had SOU wives and 500 porcu ptnes.
The Greeks invented three kinds of
columns - Corinthian, Doric and Iro nic. The mother of Achilles dipped lum in
the Rtvcr Styx until he became intolerable. In the Olympic games . G reeks ran
races, jumped, hurled the biscuits, and
threw the java. The reward to the victor
was a cora] \Vrea[h. Socrates was a famous
Greek teacher who died from an overdose of wedlock .

Eventually, the Ramories conquered
the Greeks. Nero was a cruel tyrant who
tortured his poor subjects by playing the
fiddle to them.
In the Middle Ages, King Harlod
nlustarded his troops before the Bartle of
Hastings . Joan of Arc was canonized by
George Bernard Shaw. The Magna Carta
provided that no free man should be
hanged twice for the same offense.
William Tell shot an arrow through an
apple while standing on his son's head.
In the R enaissance, Martin Luther was
nailed to the church door at Wittenberg
for selling papal indulgences. H e died a
hornble death, being excommunicated
by a bull. The painter Donatello 's interest
in the female nude made him the father
of the Renaissance. Gutenberg invented
the Bible. Sir Walter Raleigh invented
cigarettes, and Sir Fran cis Drake circumcised the world with a I 00-foot clipper.
Qu een Ehzabeth's navy defeated the
Spanish Armadillo. William Shakespeare

ami/p
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hawkins
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Roben E. Hawkins will celebrate
their 30th wedding anniversary
Sunday-wlthapartyin-ffi e gym of
the Pomeroy Municipal Building
on East Main Street, Pomeroy.
The party will begin at 5 p.m .
and all friends and family of the
couple are invited to anend.

Hawkins and Dorothy louise
O hlinger were rnarried on Aug.
2, 1970 in Rutland. He is the son
Ol~eei1 Hawktns
the !ore-Albert Hawkins. She is th e
daughter of C harles and Opal
O hlinger. The couple has o ne
daughter, Christy Chaney on-uppers Plains, and a grandson .

arrd

SOCIETY NEWS
Special speaker at Asbury Church
.
'

SYRACU~E Congregations of Forest Run , Minersville, and
Asbury United M ethodist Circ uit will assemble for a combined worship
service at the Asbury Church in Syracuse Sunday at 11 a. m.
They will be led in the services by Pastor Dob R obimon and his
brother, the Rev. Dr. James C. Robimon of St. C lo ud, Fb. Speaking on
the topic,"Meetmg Jesus fo r the First Time", will be Dr. R obmson who
holds a doctor of divinity degn'e as well as a Ph.D in psychology.

Research group to condud surveys
POMEROY -Area mothers and their ch ildren who wer~ in the fifth
or sixth grade last sehool year arc invited ro be :1 parr of a health survey
to be conducted by Toborg AssoCiates. Inc. , a rese:trch :tnd evaluation
company based in Washington D. C.
Researchers of the company wdl be in Atl!l'ns, Aug . .3-5 to do inter-

views in an effort to seek to undcrst111d how mothers in n1r:1.l coJnnlunities influence the health-rehted behaviors uf their children.
Toborg Associates is conducting the resc:u-d1 with a gra nt from the
National Cancer lnstinlte. fmervkws .1rc don~ m group ~·s.o;;JOJT.;, m hotel
rrteeting rooms. An intervtt•wer rl•ad" questions while p:~rticip:mts con tidentially mark their answers o n a photompied form Though questi ons
are similar, mothers and young people respond to sli ghdy dtfferent su rveys that look at health issues from their respective perspectives. The ses-

rncrs

whose

judgments

are

impaired by
drinking or adults who become
ineb riatt·d while they are supervismg children in th~ water.
You can reduce your fa mily 's
risk of death in a water accident by
encouraging eac h teenage and
adult tamily member to enroll in a

cardiopuln1onary

resusc itatl on

(CPR) course. My medic:tl dictionary defi nes resuscitation as the
restoration to life of one who is
apparently dead. That pretty well
says why CPR is so important, and
thl' sooner it is started , the more
li kely 11 is to restore life to a
drowning victim. If you have the
tram ing, yo u might save a tife by
starting C PR before EMS personnd ::t rrive on tht· scene. If you
do n 't know basic CPR,l'd suggest
you contact you r loca l Amencan
H ea rt Association chapter for
int() rmarion about courses in your
area.
Ec[ually important , you should
insi st that each family member
rece ive suffi ue nt instruction to
become a co mpetent swimmer.
This includes adults that may have
missed the o pportunity to mastt·r
this skill when they were children .
The area Red Cross can direct you

to swinuning lessons.
As you may have gathered &amp;om
my earlier statement, one of the
biggest risks for your family may
be alcohol. Thirty-eight percent of
m en and II percent of women
involved in water-related accidents, including drowning, had
been drinking alcoholic beverages.
While the quantities they consumed were often enough to make
them legally drunk, you should
know that even a small q4antity of
alcohol slows your reflexes and
mildly impairs your ability to
make critical decisions.This is why
l think it's foolish to have any
alcohol before swinmung, water
skiing or operating a boat became
of the potentially severe consequences of an error in judgment.
People who dive into shallow
water can sustain one of the more
serious water-related injuries paralysis due to injury of the spinal
cord amhreck.lhe easiestway to
prevent this tragedy is to familiarize yourself with the area you're
diving in. It's a good idea to carefully go feet first into the water
before your first dive. That way,
you 'II know the water level and
you'll find out about any dangerous objects under the surface that
can't be seen from the shore or
from within the boat. Also,
remember that the water levels in
familiar lakes, streams and rivers
can change from day to day and
from season to season.
Here are a few final suggestions
to help prevent a needless summ ertime tragedy in your family:
Watch you ng c hi ldren CONSTANTLY when they arc near
water. Individu als of any age
should not "horse around'' on the
bank o f a stream, on a water sl ide,
o r while in a boat. Don't venture
into unfa miliar water alone. Don't
to ke chances. Wear a persona l
tlotatio n device whenever you an~
in a water craft or on \ 1.'ater skis.
And, if a child who doesn't know
how to sw1m is in the \\'ater, make
sure he or she is with an adult
swinuner at all times and has on an
approved
flotatio n
devi ce.
NEVER, let a child s~bstitute a
blowup tube or similar devi ce for
an approved flotation device.

sions take no more than Jn hour. 13oth thL· _mothl'r and chilO mu st parToborg AssoCiatt-s pays mother; $25 111 c.tsh :n the nc...·l·d of the session
and the young people. $11) in"cash at tit,· end ot'the s&lt;:&lt;Sion . R esearc hers
will return ag;tin in six nJunths to do a foli()W - up -;urvcy.At tlut tintc they
will pay mother~; another S25 and their childrL·n. :tnothcr .S I! 1To paa:ticipate in a ""-&lt;ion, reSld,·nts arc· to c:~ l Ann ,It toll-tree. HH~-403-3421 .

•••

27

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plain s VFW Post
9053 , 7:30 p.m. at th e hall .
RUTLAND
Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thurs day, 7 p.m. at the Rutland
Church of C h mt. ' Prog ram ,
Jane Wise, Jan e t Bolin and
Judy
Snowden.
Pomeroy
Church, d evo tions; report on
woman of the Bible.
SHADE- Revtval Thursday through Saturday, Graham C hap e l Chun;h between
County Road, 75 a nd county
road 25. Singers for Thursday, C huck and Shirley Dailey of Athens; for Friday
Marti Short of Chester; for
Saturday, Proclaim of l'll ew
Haven. W.Va. Evangelis~,Rev.
John ElswicK., Athens.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Town and Country
EXPO, 7 :30p.m. Thursday at
the grange hall on the fair-

0

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Microsoft files ruling appeal

RACINE
All those
interested in playing volleyball for Southern Junior
High , meet Friday, 4 p.m . at
the school. for more information , call Becky Adki'ns ,
949-1062.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Microsoft Corp. asked the Supreme
Court on Wedn esday to let a federal appeals court take the next ·
··c.rack at a titanic antitrusr fi g ht that threatens to break the computer software giant in two.
"The importan ce of th ese cases will not lie in how quickly they
are resolved but in their long-te rm effects on consumers and this
nation's eco nomy," Microsoft's lawyers told the ju~ti ces in an
appeal :
The 30-page appe~l. filed Wednesday with a 312-page appendix, urged the court to avoid "the onerous task of sifting through
a large and complex record and forgoing the many benefits of
intermediate appellate review."
" Indeed, the number of and nature of the errors below militate
strongly in favor of review by the court of appeals," the appeal

•••

SUNDAY, July 30
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel
sing at
the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene with
the Gabriel Quartet, Sunday,
6:30 p.m. Church is located
on General Hartinger Parkway. Pastor Allen Midcap
invites the public to attend.
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
promo~_ sales or fynd
raisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of
days.

Hr-VAL
CIGARE.TTES
11 25
1 Pack
11
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Res. egoo

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Res.
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uid.

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IMEX

: Microsoft contends in the appeal that U.S. District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson wrongly concluded that it engaged in
illegally an ticompetitive conduct. The company also co mplains
about Jacks on'sc~ ntacts with reporters, saying he should be disqualified if the case ever returned to the trial court level.
The Justi ce Department, under an expediting agreement with
Microsoft, · has until Aug. 15 to respond to the company's
Supreme Court appeal. Government lawyers want the nation's
highest court to tackle the case directly, without first sending it
to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Cohim--bi• ~-- T-~

The nine justices are not expected to say until September at the
earliest whether they will grant direct review or send the case to
the appeals court. The highest court's 2000-2001 term will not
begin until Oct. 2.
A federal law allows major antitrust disputes to skip the appeals
court step and move from a trial court to the Supreme Court, but
.. the justices make the decision.

ARLINGTON,Va. (AP)- Prosecutors in Southern California
. plan to offer free DNA tests to some inmates even though the
results might overturn convictions, USA Today reported.
The paper said in Thursday's editions that San Diego County
prosec utors ha\'e been reviewing the cases of about 560 inmates
si n ce June to determine whether DNA tem developed since
; their convictions - all prior to 1992 - can be used to link bio: logica l evidenc:e from a crime scene to someone other than the
• perso n conv icted.
: It said th e co unty plans to pay for tests in such cases, at a cost
·: of about $5,000 each , and that-, would be the first program of
suc h free tests in the nation .
.
T h e paper said prosecutors in Riverside and Ventura counties
· have co ntacted th e California District Attorneys Association for
; hel p in preparin g suc h plans and that si milar initiatives are bein g

WASHINGTON (AP) Legislation to over the next decade, not counting Social
repeal a 1993 tax increase on the Social S~cu- !iccunry.
rity benefits of millions of se ni or citi zens is up
'The budget surplus is real, nor imagined ,
next for tax-cutting H o use Republicans, even and it means that the tax is no longer needed ,"
as President Clinton admonished the GOP to Archer. R - Texas. said Wednesday in a letter to
"stop passing tax bills you know I'll veto."
Treasury Secretary Lawrence Sununers.
The House was to vote Thursday o n the
In addition, money would be transferred out
bill, which would reduce taxes o n Social Secu- of the general budget surplus to make up for
rity for people with certain incomes - above any losses in Medicare, where_rlu: tax proceeds
$34,000 for individuals and above $44.000 for are now transferred . About 9 million senior c it ..;!
married couples' from ~5 percent of benefits izens now pay the higher tax rate, a number
to the pre-1993 level of 50 percent. The bi ~ expecte d to reach 13 million by 2010.
cost was estimated at S100 billio n over \(J ' \ Democrats say the bill's promise to use genyears.
era! tax revenue for Medicare could co me up
Rep. Bill Archer, chai rnt:tn of the House short if the surplus projections are wrong.They
Ways and Means Conmlittee, sa1d the original planned to offer an alternattve that would cu t
purpose of the wx increase - redu ci ng th e the Social Sec urity tax for all but those benefifederal budget deficit- has disappeared n ow ciaries with in comes above $100,000 - but
that projections indicate su rpluses of$2 trillion o nly if rhe surplus actually materializes.

GOP, Clinton spar over tax

The GOP bill , Summers said in lm own letter, "is th~: btc~ t in J se nt:'&gt; of co,tly .l!ld poorly targett'd tax proposals'' ru l'llll'fbl' lll Con gress, rcwforcing Chntun 's COIUJJH: nts .H a ll!.J\.V'
co nfc ren n~ Wcdnl'st.iay that thJs 'iummcr·~ ~e ric \
of tax cuts wasn 'r the WISl'St use of the surplu:-. .
" I say to Congress: Stop passing tax bills yuu
know I'll veto." C linton told reporters at the
Whtte Hou se. " Start workin g with u s o n a bal -

anced budget that cuts taxc.., fiJr middk•-til'l"
familie s. continu es to pay otr thL· n.Hl o n.tl debt
and invest in Amenca's future ."
The president repc~1tcd hi ., clurgc riut the
combined COlt of all COP ta' hdls over t he
past two YL'ars- some of whi ch .m.· dtlphcatt&gt;&lt;.,
- would all but consum e the s~ rrillum l ll
bu dgt:t surpluses projl' cted over th l' nc:-:r
dt:cack. not counrlng: money t(H· So~_· t.11 Scrudty.

Government wams states

cuts and budget surplus

to stop inflating Medicaicl

WASHINGTON (AP) - A1
House Republi cans prepared to
pass a bill repealing a 19'.)3 tax
increase on Social Securiry benefits, President C linton urged the
GOP-led Congress to abandon
their major tax cuts and work
instead for wiser uses of the budget su rplus.
" l say to Co ngress: stop passing
tax bills you know I'll veto," Clinton told reporters Wednesday at
the Whtte H ouse. "Start workin g
with us on a balanced budget that
cuts taxes for nliddle-class fami lies, continues to pay · off th~
n ational debt and invest in America's future.''
The ;president re pea ted his
charge that the combined cos t of
all GOP tax bills over th e past

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government warned states on
Wednesday to end a practice l;&gt;y
which they temporarily transfer
money into their own M edica id
programs to earn higher matching
funds from the federal government.
In a sharply worded le-tter,
Timothy M . Westmoreland, director of the H ealth C are Financing
Administration, which oversees
Medicaid, said many swtes allow
their Medtcaid providers to keep
only a fra ction of the nearly S2
billion generated by the transfers.
In some cases, he said, as little as 5
percent is properly allocated.
T h e INter was obta ined
Wednesday by The Associated
Press.

two years - so me of which are
dupli cates - would all but consume the S2 trillion in budget
surpluses projected, over the next
dcc:tdc, not counting money for
Socia l Security.
'' In good conscie n ce, I ca nn ot
s1gn ont~ of rhcsc tax breaks after
another w irhout any coherent
st rategy for safeguarding 6 ur
future :t nd meetin g oth~r national priorities," Clin ton said .
R cp ubhcans said they would
push ahead with more standalon e ta;&lt; cuts, including :i bill
scheduie"d for de hate Thursday in
the House that wou ld cut taxes
on SociJJ Scct!rity for an estimated lJ million st..·nior citizens, at a
cost of about Sl 00 billion over I U
years.

.

One warm, misty night
spent killing bloodsuckers
ELMSFORD, N.Y (AP) - As
he roared through the deserted
streets of Westche ster County,
Herb Lawrence had no gu:tlms
about the poison mist geyseri!\g up
from the bed of his pickup.

especially when jobs come up suddenly, like the fu nli gation of Central Park ordered , by New York
City M ayor Rudolph Gillham on
M cmclavo ··- --As the spraying spread1, so does
co ncern about the insec ticide,

ic~id progr;~m~.

7/14, 1111, 1120, 7/24, 1121, •

8/7, 11/8, 8/14, 8/18

over eJrlier pn.~t.'lllon ~ - with ~ 1
estim;tted S ! .'! b11lion due to tl~
loophole.

I

U

Marlene Harrison
Meigs County Clerk of Courts

He had come from Illin ois to
help stamp out the West Nile virus,
and had only one thought :~bout
the mosquitoes he was killing by
the thousands:"( don 't like 'em."
Lawrence, who works for
Clarke Environmental Mosquito
Management Inc. of Roselle, Ill. ,
was one of 14 drivers deployed
until the wee hours Wednesday in
Westchester's latest assault on the
virus.
An extensive effort to combat
the virus is under way across Ne\\'
York, where an outbreak last year
killed seven people. The virus also
has been found in Ma&lt;Sac huse tts,
New Jersey, Coni1ecticut and
Maryland.
The big demand for its servic,·s
has C larke juggling its resources.

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aug
CharUta Riffle , R . Ph .
Mon. thru Fri. B : OO a.rn. to 9 p . m .
Sat. B:OO a.m. to a p . m .
Sunday 10: 00 a.m . to 4 : 00 p.rn.
PRESCRIPTION PH. 992-2955
East IVIeln Pomeroy, Ohio
Friendly Service
Week
hta Till 9

HELENA . Mont . (AP) - Two
. wi ldf ·es east of th e state capital
have blackened thpus:tnds of acres
and fOrced dozens of evacuations
'
- more misery as more th an 70
. firc•s burn across p;trtS of 10 West-

t•rn s tat t·~Th e twin

wildfires near
Ca nyon Ferry Lake had con sumed an estimated 20.000 acres
by Wednesday. Of!ici:tls said five
,rahins, th ree hOll Sl'S 3!ld 11\llllCfOU S
o utbuil di n gs have bt.'ch
destroyed.
' "T he extrellle lire be havior is
cuntinu111g.
and
Wl'
have
Absolutely no co ntainment at this
Point," fire infortnation . officer
Jodie Ca nfield said . "This is the
first d:ty we've been able to do
mute stratcgJC fircfighting. Until
D
now. it's been :til about protec ti ng
&lt;;trll ctl lrl'"i "
Unris

Roherts

(El 't'ryhtuly

' tarred with
Picrt.·c B r~l~ n an and StcphJnie

Lm T.\ R(lrmond)

Zimhali:-.t in the ll)KOs TV seri es
Rnni11gton St('f' k .

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G

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have ASpecial Meigs
County Fair Preview Edition. This Year's Edition Promises To
Be One Of The BICCEST AND BEST EVER!
look For This Special Edition In Your
Friday, August 11th Paper

()

~

.9Lcqlf.i§:f:,tions ~

0 91 Mill Street • Middleport, OH • 9~2-6250 V

.,

Tht: practicr dnvcs up tht! cq;t
of M edicaid, the fcderal-st.1 te pn:)gram that provides he.drh beneflh
to low-incom c Americ:ms.
!
Westmoreland sa id the statcb '
cstinutcs of fcd~.?r;.d Ml'di cai:d
'
spending for fiscal ye:~r 21100 ha~e
already increJscd by S3.4 bililO)l

As Clerk of Courts, I would like to announce that the Meigs
County Title Department wlll be providing extended office
hours on Tuesday evenings. Commencing on Tuesday,
July 11, 2000, the staff wlll be available to serve the public
from 8:30a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
If there are any questions, please feel free to contact me at
(740) 992·5290
,........
Thank You.
~YY ~

f'11

''

Under th e prJL-tJ c6. wh1ch :i"'
legal under a loophole- m laws
concerning ML·dioid. some states
transfer lht.·ir own fund~ . boi-rowed , money or property t1x~· . .
into stJtt.· cotft.·r&lt;.; to L~liJlify f~r
more m;~rc hing ti.m ds. Tht.· st.:-.tb.
then siphon off a porllon of tl:i e
federal funds to u~c tOr JJOn - Ml'~ -

n.------------~--------~--~

;season grows

20%

pushes bill to repe~l 1993 tax inc~ease

·

.

19

ffi'
0n!Y =79c

(I(

•••

FRIDAY, July 28

'-..Prices Good Through uesday August 1st

Res.

Now At

"Every body counts, everybody deserves a chance, everybody
has a role to play, we all do bette r when we help each other,"
C linton said. "That's what this memorial represents , that's what
the ADA represents, that's America at its best."
To mark the anniversary of the law barring discrimination and
requiring w)leelchair ramps and other. accommodations for the
diSabled, C liifton asked federal agenCies to hire I 00,000 people
with disabilities over the next five years.
Clim o n directed federal agencies to recruit disabled candidates
for jobs at every level in the federal government .
"They don't want exc u se~. Instead, they want opportuniry in
terms of jobs and careers," Clinton said.

·Free DNA tests set for Inmates

CANDV
BARS

Goln~ On

Mu ch of that stigma has been erased since FOR's time, but
Clinton said too-many disabled people still face needless daily diffi c ulties.
'

'

30% OFF

Club enjoys picnic

WASHINGTON (AP) - When a light rain fell on President
.c;::Iinton and a crowd of people celebrating the ' lOth anniversary
of the Am eri ca ns With Disabilities Act on Wednesday, he per.form ed a simple act that most people take for granted: He
unfurled an umbrella and held it over his head.
Many of the young people i11 wheelchairs behind him o n stage
could not do the same, and White House aides scrambled to find
a motley assortment of golf umbrellas.
"A lot of what the American s with bisabihties Act is all about
is to make sure that people can live like people, can do things
other folks take for granted," Clinton said to applause from the
crowd of activists, disabled people and their families at the
· Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial.
FOR's use of a wheelchair was a secret from most Americans.
He and his aides worried that his di sability would be taken as a
·
. sign of weakness.

grounds .

THURSDAY, July

Hous~

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

ADA anniversary celebrated ·

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

WATCHES

ticipate.

CHESTER .- Pa&gt;t Cuunnlors C lub ufl :hc·,tcT Couneil323. Daughters of Anx·rica, held a piCmc ~t"thl' ' hl'ltl't hou'i.c JlL'ar the R.tcint.·
Methodist ~&gt;~acm e ~t•centl\'.
·
Erma C lebnd b"'ve the bk"ing.'.md Je.m Wcl,h. who read Psalm I '10.
conducted the meeting w hich opened With the Lord's Prayer and !'ledge
to the flag. For roll call members named their f.1vorite bird. Otlict·rs to r
the next six months were installed by presidcnt,Jean Welsh. They were
E1ther, presidem; Opal Hollon. VIC&lt;' presKknt;Thclma Wh1te.1 secretary;
and Charlotte Grant, treasurer: Goldie Fredc·nc k. tluwer committee: lnzy
Newell, sen tinel. and Mary K. Holter, news reporter. Poems read were
" Happy Birrhrby to the U.S.A ." hy Jean Welsh, and "About Age" by
Erma Cleland
Others anendtng were Ruth Smith. lle1cy Young. Dons Cmcser.
Erma Cleland. Opal Eichinger. Marf,.'Jlt't Ami &gt;ergtor. Elb Osborne. mc·mbers; and Scottie Smith. Everett Gr:mt , Slwrri Seals, Sandy White ,111cl
Richard White, visitors.

Handel was half-German, half-Italian
and half-English . He was very large. Bach
died from 1750 to the present.
Beethoven was so deaf that he wrote
loud music. He expired in 1827, and later
dted from this.
Samuel Morse invented a code for
telepathy. louis Pasteur discovered a c_ure
for rabbis. Madman Curie discovered
radi um. And Karl Marx became one of
the Marx Brothers.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funny to the poignantly insightful. Send a self- addressed, long, businesssize envelope and a check or money
order for $5.25 (this includes postage and
handling) to : Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $6.25.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her pas! columns, visit the C reators Syndi cate web page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY - Mei gs Soil
and Water Conservation Di stri ct in regular sess ion Thurs day, 8 p. m .. Meigs SWCD
Office.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: My family and l play
"" the water most weekends of
the sununer.We boat, ski and swim
in the river. I'm always worried
about someone drowning. Do you
have anv advice to help us minimize this risk?
Answer: Drowning is a major
caus~ of accidental death in the
United Swes. In 1997, the most
rece nt year for which complete
statistics are available, 4,051 people
drowned, including 964 children
under the age of 15. The ci rcu mst.mce of each death is unique, but
a close examination of the data
.:;how Ct'rtain unfortunate patterns.
These
lethal
combinations
include: yo ung children in backyJrd swimming pools, inattentive
swimmers who get in the way of
boats in lakes and rivers, and experienced swi m1ners who make fatal
judgment errors. In all of these situ:ttions. alcohol is 'frequently a
~ on t ributin g f-uc ror~'T'h i • · -may involve adolescent or adult swim-

NATIONAL BRIEFS

wrote about Romeo and Juliet, a romantic couplet. Miguel Cervantes wrote
" Donkey Hote." John Milton wrote
"Paradise Lost ." Then, his wife died , and
he wrote "Paradise Regained."
Christopher Columbus was a great
navigator who discovered .America while
cursing about the Atlantic . His ships were
the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Fe.
,
One of the causes of the Revolutionar'y War was that the English put tacks in
their tea . Benjamin Franklin invented
electricity by rubbing cats backward.
Franklin died in 1790, and is still dead.
Abraham Lincoln's mother died in
infancy. He signed the Emasculation
Proclamation. In 1865, lincoln got ·shot
by an actor in a moving picture. His
name was J o hn Wilkes Booth. This
ruined Booth's career.
Gravity was invented by Isaac Walton.
It is chiefly noticeable in autumn, when
the apples are falling off the trees. Bach
and Handel were famous composers.

ANNIVERSARY

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BE SURE YOUR
BUSINESS IS A PART .
OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!
Call
DAVE or MATT

at
992-2155 .
FOR MORE INFO R!\1.\TION

The Daily Sentinel

,.

'

�..

-. -

-.
•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Inside:

0

THe Daily Sentinel

N L: DBacks lose agai11 , Page B2
A L: Ya11ks roll behind Doc &amp;justice, Pa.!!e B2
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8

Sale starts today
Ends Sunday. Aug. 6. 2000

Page 81
lhurscfay, July 27, 1000

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Includes window.

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Bu11d a palio o18c~ lh&lt;s weelcltfld. lt"s e&amp;ll« 1nan vou ll'lil'lkwilh our 1rM deck plant and~~ . Anyonewithjuat a,_ IIII"IJile
tools can create a d8dl thai will be thll envy ol y.:x. neighbofh!:lo:il! ~V. cle¥e4oped your own pia/'ll, bring tiiM:I ab\Q ... well be
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R OC K SPIU NGS T he
M eigs H igh School s•o ll ey hall
team w i1l meet fo r workouts Fri day and M on day from Il l a.1n . to
nou n at .th l' 'c hoo l h')'ll l.
Fo r infOrm atio n , co mact hl'a d
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Reds trade Aybar
to Marlins

2/8 or 3/0

. ,.,/ ,..., ...,. •lr&lt;OiA .

.w... ~ ~o

u.,..u., L..w•toory

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9B6:.!4kCio...._,.,,.
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replacement parts.

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5 999
These prices are for deck only &amp; do not include

..

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All models have factory
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24' X 32'
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16' O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C . engineered roof trusses. White vinyl
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379 900

16" o.c. w311 studs. 24" O. D. engineered roo! 1russea.
J.o· service door.
0$8 root shealhing .
GAF roof shingles. Alchilectural plans lor easv USer:IltHv.
Cemenl &amp; foundatiOfl eldra . includes gutter. GK2628
At1 for ill ustrative purposes only. Not exactly as shown.

7/16"~~:4'x8'

40 gal404 798 ............. .. ............... $160

--1

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2·9x7" garage doors/2·3'0" windows. White vinyl siding &amp; soffit.

gal. 404850 .... .. . .. .. .. ..... ...... .... . $159
6-35

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Mon-Sat. 8-7 •
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INTERIOR
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bored without
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per square

$5196 .
per square

2'8''
70074

2'6"
70078

2'8"

3'0"
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8"x8' 169919

$7999

Valley Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St. Middleport, Ohio
740-992·6611 • 1-800-733-3334
Mon.-Fri. 7-5 • Sat 7-3

LOS ANG ELES (AP) - T he·
Loo;; Angt'!t· ~ I )odgcrs reacqu ired
p i tc h l·r b m.1el Valdn ti·o m ti ll'
c :hi c lgO C ubs for (\VI) min o r IL·a' g ue rs ri.gh t- h;!J1dcr .J.llllk
/\ rno ld and o urfi l' ldcr Jo rge
Pit.:d c1. Th L· D odge rs .1l so get CJs h
&lt;.'U tl'iidcrat ions.
Voldc s was 2- -l " ·ith .1 'i.17
ERA in 12 start&lt; for th e C ub' tillS
yl'ar afte r opl' ni ng rhc 'i C;J'i Oll o n
the dJS.1bkd lisr. H e spen t rhe tirsr
\iX p..'.\1'\ of !Jj ~ Clrl'lT \\'H h the
I )od gn'\. gDing (, 1-S4 \\"tt h .1 J ..1H
ERA

Arizona State QB
suspended indefinitely
Tf:M I'E. Ari z. (A I') - 1\rizon.r
Sr.ttc 't' l ltDr L]ll .lrtt.·rh.tc k IZy.1n
Kt.'.1k ,,..h ,,I, ~)L' lhkd ltiddinirt·ly
ft n · ,\11 UtHihclt ht'd \'lt)l.lti nl l of
tL' ,tll l ruk,. Ke.IIY h.J , t ll ro\\'!l lnr
r~.2 7 4

c.l rcn y.1nk

Manning buys out final
year with Bucks

Venus rolls in Bank
of West Classic

Thomas

S I'ANrORI l. C.d•f. (AI') -

:loit center.

Scron d -~ ecLkd VL' llll'

Rt. 2 Bypass, Pt. Pleasant, WV 304-675-5200
Store Hours: Mon-Sat. 8:00am to 7:00pm
Sunday 11-S

$7.29

C INC IN NAT I (AI') - T h e
o;; crit's b egan o n ~Ill em otion al
notl' for C in CJilll.lti - . ; hortstop Ba r rv Larki n got a pro~
longed ~tan din g ovatio n fur hi \
three -year COilt rac t t:xte tls i~; ll ,
Fro n1 that point nn . everythlll g: Wl'llt the.:• H ou•aon
Astros · way hardly w ll.lt
th ey or a nyone cl"l' ex per tL·d .
Sals3 m m ic bLu·ed in r h ~_·
cl ubho use and the· maJ or
k"&lt;l gl,lt'S' wor'i.t t ea ill tal k e d
ab out a turn aro und aftt'r bc;Itlll l.( th e R eds 3-2 Wed n,·sday.
lo mpl e ri n g a rhrLT -ga me
Juli o L u~o. Jetr Bo~gwdl and
Moises A lo u h1t so lo ho m en
111 an e ight-pitc h span of tht.•
sixth in n ing cls the Astros c.un e
fro m bc: h m d to \ Vi n for :1 thi rd
. straig ht d ay.
A tL'a nl tlu t cou ldn 't -; tri rtt;
tngl'th e r m o re than two w in"
all 'it'aso n ha'i now \Vo n tl vc 11 1
a rm v and gottl'n a be tter tL·cl ing abo ut jtself.
'· M ore tlnn ;m yt hi n~. ir

unb y.

\\"i th rh i" '\L'a'\on ," "aid lnce, ;tt .29 th e
ch ief' on the circui t. "O ur
.;pomDn h .i \ ''~· bn ·n our vend o r-;, H opki ns
c h rHsis, llciH.l ric k eng lll e:-- and L'Ven
( ;oo dyc.Jr.''
And 11L· In ~ ,1 .17 -yL&gt;:lr- old dri ver whu was
llL'Vl' r ro mid ercd m_ucl t more th :1 11 a jourI H;y lll ~l l t , \\ lJu,c claim w f:ml t' w~1s drivin g
the· ti tih Llr in Lle'lllt; ll1\1!(UI jJc k R 11ush 's
ll ve-ctr garJgt".
B ut often the'il' days. the on ly pbi n \v hitc.:·
c.t r 111 11~.· l d ~ o f -D ca n be '\l'l'll r;~c in ~ am o n g
till· rnultt L·olo rL'd vl'111ck s o f so m l' o f rlw

"' We just want to get a look at
everybod y," he said . " T hat's th e
reaso n we do Jt. We get th e gu ys
som e li ve contact wi th o ut any cu t
bl oc king o r h ittin g the quarterb ack . Th ey have to get a taste of
som e real co ntact before we pl ay
o ur tirst preseason game."
Second- year quarterbac k Akili
Smith , wh o completed 80 of I 53
passes fo r 805 yards in ~eve n
ga mes last year, is expected to take
abou t half o f rh e sna ps durin g the
scr immage, with bac kups Sc&lt;l tt
Mi tc h ell an d Scott Cov mgton
splitting the rema inin g pbys.
Smirh w ill need all th e full -&gt;peed
pranice time he ca n get before
the 13e llgals travel to Bu ffa lo fi1r
the ir first preseaso n g.u ue A ug. ~ .
Coskt said .
" We've g:o t a youn g No. I guy
and I've gor to get him rea dy," he
sa id. "He's getting w hat he needs.
It rt·a ll y has n othing to do with
th l' num ber o f snaps.
" H e wo n "t ta ke· th e m all
tog~ {ill'J: _(So rurdayL I::l e'IL take .JL
. brt'ak w hil e Mit chell is in rh ere
and th en m m e bac k iu .Thrs is the
ideal situation to get h 1111 som e
exper ie nce because th ey can't hit
him . so I do n 't have to risk that
hh · I do in th e preseason· games."
Cosl et sai d h e·~ bl"l' ll lTl CU Li r:lgt·d ' by thL· g rowi ng ra ppo rt
betwee n Smith and roo kie wid e
l'l'Ce tver Peter War rick. rlw [L'am's
.fi rst- rou nd draft pi ck tiu m Flor ida St:~te. Warri ck h as ben.Jr m· u tu:
of Smith's m ost n.·liabk ta r!-!l' ts.
durin g dail y passi 11g dr ill s.
" They do n't lock an y con ti~
dl'Tl ce. do they'" Cos kt asked .
" Peter's workin ~; hard . I l1 ke his
wo rk t•thi c. Th t' vnv tlr-..t d.1v &lt;1f
Cl lllp. h e tw isted hi'i J11kk .m d

Please see NASCAR. Page Bl

Please see Bengals. Page 81

gives yo u some confi d ~ tKe,' '
managt= r Larry Di erker ..;a id.
" Wh e n yo u pby as poo rly os
we have t h is year, you general ly do n 't h ave man y thi n t.rs go
you r \vay. Ym1 'n: l'Xpec ting:
~ OI II l' rl n n g

w

~o wrong.

'"Now ynu'vt· had ~o m e
th lllJ;\ go r ight and you «J art to
, beli eve th ey \\'il l go right. It's a
ditfncnr P"yc hol ogy fro m
w hat we: 've h ~1d all year."
Th L·
l\ -.; trus ·
d l' lll L'a n o r
•.: hal iJ;t.'d d r.lnl ,It icall y du r11 1g

Please see Reds. Page

as

OUTFIELD COLLISION- Cincinnat i's Barry Larkin (left) and Pokey Reese collided as they attempted to
fie ld a pop-up in short center fie ld Wednesday. Larkin made th e grab , but was injurep on the play. (AP)

Benson~ &amp;

\X/ ill i.lt m

lnce roll on without sponsor

BY TH E ASSOCIATED PR ES :'

and alo11 g l".lll1&lt;.' a :-.pu nsor. But in a tt.•w
' !llo nrhs, th L· checks stOppe.Cf ar.i-i Vl ng alld rllL~­

It 's ca lled a plain whitc · wrapp·n - 11o
spon sor ship - ~liH.l whL' ll :1 r,ICl' l' ar lnoks
tlur w.1y . it ll\llall y 111 &lt;.\t ll -; tlt l' r,lnT won 'r lw

Iogo C llll c otT th e Po m iac.
Now. t h L'Y a re ltvin g o n h o p ~;.· ;1n d
ddl: r red pay u H..·m~ on engin es , c h as'\is. ,m d
tt rcs.
" \Vc: lu vc cs~ ~;.·ntia ll y ln d not h ing: to ran·

arou nd mu ch lon gt.T

Jo h nn y Beman and

j.tlth..''

lncL' h.iVL'

bucked rhar rrend tOr a \\'hik. but if rhc v
do n'r co ll ll' up wnh o.;otl lL' g ree n l"t'.l l .. non .
t hl'lr \urp ri singly good \l". I\D JI \\' ill hl· hi 'i ro -

y&lt;n m ge~ r LTt'W

ry.
'· WL· ·n· h.1 d tL'.l llh with bi g sp on,or' l' O i llL'
up an d o;; ay we're 111:1 kin g t h t'll l lnok h,h\.
tha t th ey 've got .Ill ri ll· lllD l lL' Y in thc wndd
.tnd we've got" I I D il l' and Wl'.rc -.r ill r unnin ~
prl' tty goo d," lk n ~o n s;Jid.
T hat's a n untkrstatt'lll l'llt. ltl thl· bigbu cks 1.\ ·o rl d o f NASC i\R . w h ~_·n.' top 'po tl'tlr' hl p j , pc.tktng ,lt clo'L' t d S lS llli l.l iun p ~· r
"L'.I\011. d rl \'\:r 11&lt;.'11\0it .111 d CI'L'\\" c hi e f' lnn·
.1n: l&lt;1th i1 1 th L· Wit h lOil ( :up 'l. na hn~" hu t
l.J'\f in .t, ,c r•:_

lr \\".1.., th .n

\\. 1y

\\'hen they h q_p l l the

PR.O S O CCE R

Crew salvages
draw with
·Newcastle

"l',t -

HAPPY CREW NA SC AR d river Jo hnny
Be nson and crew c h1 e f James lnce sha re a
laugh prior to th e Pe nn sylva nia 50Cl last
wee kend at Long pond. Pa. (AP)
~on ti \'l' rnn r h ~ .1go. \\hen lkmt~n wry Jh.:.Jr1\- ..,t(JIL• till' 11 ,1\'toll.t ~110. But t~) r .111 in cnn \ l"llll'll( l ,lll! Hll l IL l ~ .II 1\.lllt) l! r.Jiilll~ p. l l"rllL'l"'l

th·. •r ti t~,.· l'nd. hr rn t/-!hr h,t\l' pulkd It ott.
' \ Jut .!.!,~ ll tl tl' .l\(l"liti()I)IJ(,(ll\ l l' !ll,ll"kl'ILT \ .

Pickens ·agrees to deal with Tennessee
Tize disgnmtled ex-Bengal hopes for
better days with the AFC champs

COLUMBUS. \ ll 11 o (A I')
C .1rl Con· of Ncwc.J\th.:
United .m d Jdr C:unning lmn
of rhe Co lum bus C rl'w bo th

Cunnmg-h.un'.; go.ll r.1 m c
ti·or n ](, y.m.h ou t on .1 lo ng
p ,t'" ti·mn M ik" Jo,c..·ph . \\ hu
lud 'cored the fi r.., l l \) lutnhu,
go.d i11 the ()7th minutc ·"' lw
pKJ...l·d up .1 lome h,t ll. ~or p.l't
dd~· 1 Jd c rs .m d 'corl· d li'ol n 1 ()

NAS H VILLE. Tenn . (AI') W ide rcn·in· r C.1rl J&gt;ic kt·n ., IJ,~ s
,\greed tn .1 ti,·c - y~.:-.u· d t.:".d w ith
thL· AF&lt; ~ ch,nn pion TL·nnc''L'l"
Tit.lm .
"\X./l· .lrL" dvli~ h t c d tu add o1
pbyl' r of C.u-J'..; c1 libn to th t'
I'O 'i ft'r ," Tit.1 1h ge n n. 1l t n an ager
Flovd IZl'L'~t' ~.1id \\r'L•d ne,LLly.
" You .liW&lt;tY' ]nok ~'r pLlYII I,lk t'r'1
un bt~th i d h·n-..l' .111d ddl·11'i~· .md
C.1rl ddi tn tc ly qu .Jiitl l'" ,1, .1
pl.tynuh·r."
R n·~c did tl d t r cn·.d tht'
till .lll t'l.il t l'rlli" o f the dL·, d .
I'll ken' \\ dl \l~ll th1.· l"l)Jlt Llrt
l"l nlr,d.l \ . lt l't" ' L' ,,11d . lwl·,lt l'l'
!hl' nn1 - tilllL" Prd Ho\\ kr lud tn
th· ho tnc ro p,1d" l~n rr. ll lllll ~

\CUTl'd

in th l· H-tth 111inure .l'i

tl~Jlll .S

played to

J

Bengals
•
1mpress
Coslet
GEO RG ETOW N , Ky. (AP) Less than a week into trai nin g
camp, and o nl y three day&gt; before
hi o.; ream's tlrst preseason scrimmagL', C incin nati Benga ls coach
llruce Cos ier has been imprt'\Sed
with th e attit ude and effo rt o f his
playen.
"I do n't see any ~.~lac k e rs out
th ere." Cosier said Wedn esday fiJIlowin g the tea m 's m o rni ng work o ut at Georgetow n Co llege.
" We've had some rea l spirited.
upr~m po prahices, we're gettin g a
lor du m.· ... it 's bee n great."
Coslet w ill get to mc a~ u re how
we ll the wor ko ut&gt; h ave been
g01 ng w hen th e team ho lds its
fi rst full ~co n trlct scrimmage Sat-

sw~:e p .

tht:
SALT LAKE C ITY (i\1') VL·tc ran t(ww;.u·d l hn ny M ,111 n in~
reac hl·d ;m ;1 grl'l'llll' IH w bu y om
thl· tin ~d Vl';Jr uf lw. ro 11t ral"t w it h
till· M d\\:.lll h'L' Bur b. M .111 ning\
.1g-cn t ...1id the 6- t()Ot- 111 , 2.15po und fo rw.1rd \\'i\1 he .1\',lii.JhiL·
t.o 'ilgn \\'Jth orhn r ca l Jl"' Aug. I.

ON ALL 4'X8' PREFINISHED
WALLPANELS IN OUR STOCK
Save now on beautiful decorator
panels in a wide range of styles
to comple1J1ent the decor of an,..-~._
.......1- - room in your home. Sto re
only

Astros take broom to Reds

Dodgers pick up Valdes

TE RR E H AUTE , Ind . (1\l ') Flr\t - ro un d dra tt pick R oh Morn ' '1~n nl .1 ti, ·e-yc &lt;~r I'OI It Li tl
witl 1 th~,.· lnd i.111.1pnli, &lt;. 'olt,. MtJrl"h . . 1 lin cb .1 i. " kn
tlun1 l ~n g h .n n
Yt H t ll~. I'L'l"L' I \ "t'd .1 $.=).(1 1111l li on
de; d.

26"x8' • 5.29 26"x12'- 7.89
26"x10' • 6.49 26"x14'- 9.19

Add beauty &amp; safely to your home .
Round , Wh ite aluminum

:loit center.

ch,~ose

from

Round Aluanioum
Columns .....

Thomas

"8 Color•
10

Craft

$5799

Bell op en ed th e seaso11 as rh e
R eds' tl tth st artn bllt was
o ption n i to Lo UJ svilk o n jum: 25
atk r going 4-1• with .1 5.2H ERA .
H e we nt -t- O in 'i ix "it:lrts t~) f
Louiwtl le w irh a .1.7.\ ER A.

79

$3798

Prestique® I High Definition TM

Corrugated Galvanized Roofing

$11.79

I
I

ni ne wild pirche'i.

er Roll

www . elkcorp.com

5/8"-

c~, unty Co ugars. Tl ~t· right- han d er struck out 114 in 95 innin hl"\,
bu t also walked ~ I an d tlm·w

829

"7 Colors

&lt;I K15 50sq
II . 40 ~ n . fl.

6"x8' 159900

J

Bhealhlng by
Celotax 1/2" x 4'xa··

Prestique® II Raised ProfifeTM

All In
Stock

Face

$7.19

lit'

432 Sq. Ft.

Light tar paper.
Use for side walls
over sheathing ,
under siding, etc.

Insulation

7/16"-

~

'

~·

ASPHALT ROOF FELT

Kraft

Oriented Strand Board

0

er Roll
'

15 Lb.

-

4'x8'

.I
I
"1. !

lllf

0

addition needs
TuU-R'"

--·-

49

I

C INC IN NATI (AI') Th e
C in cit lnari R eds traJt·d rcl it-vl'r
M .n111y Aybar to the Fl o rid a M arli ns o n Wednesday fo r CbS&lt; A
p itc her J orge Cordova.
Th e R eds also ca lkd up s!Jrtn
R ob
Be ll
fi·o m
Triple - A
Luutw11le. T hey p b n to &lt;;tan hun
o n thc.:ir upco min g ro;JLI trip.
The R eds go t Avb.1r fro m C: ul or.1dn on April 7 fo r lc.: fi -h:u11..kr
Ga be White and cash . Th e m;ht lundcr went 1- 1 w it h a ~ . H.~
ERA m J2 appeara nc,·s fu r the
R eck
Co rd ov~ . 22, went 6-7 with a
3.XH ERA in 15 sta rts and seve n
relief appea rances fo r th e Ka ne

Colts sign
rookie linebacker

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3" ~~:10' ........................... &amp;~

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AU II STOC:I

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•

Me1gs volleyball
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ll•ndlc L.v•lo..,. l' •"c.-l
wtlh Pup-Up

'J&lt;HJV. 1:1....,.,.,., '""'

•

Deep embossed panels
look like wood, but have ·
the strength of steel. 1
3/4" thick with insulating
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gggoo

53900 BK1012P
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76900
. ..
66900 ~~~:~p .1agoo

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BK1212P .......
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BK1216P .....
Standard Kits- Features palntable primed siding.
B'xB'
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THURSDAY'S

2-:.! draw

Wedne,day m ght.
Con 'iCOred un a""i"kd lium
J 4 y,Jrds u u t atter a p.ts" fro m
Robert \lV:1rzych,, o f Co l u1n ~
h uo; w~;· nt row.trd rhL· C rL·w '...
~oal and bn dcd in fro nt o (

&lt;:on.

rh.H h.t... to deal w ith the dc.tl &lt;~t
th e L'lld of the day. so I ki nd of
kno\\. \d ut I WJIH. I can co me
Jo\\"n h ere an 4 sell 111\'self. [
don 'r ll L'e d an agenr tO tdl 11 11;'
yt".l or n.1y ove r a conrr:trt I ca n
rc.1d .1n d und n:--ta nd ."
P1ckcn" stJrred .\t t he Umvn'lty t~f T~nncsSt'J.' in thl· early
1t) l)(h Jnd has fr it'n ds 111
N,JS hvilil' .
Th e Tlt.lll ' have wanted PiL·kl'll'~ · ' ill rl' the C int: lnn .Hi Bt' J1 g.1h
I"L'k'. i 'l,' d hitl1 ],\li t \\"Cl'k, l' lldillL::

.111

,\LT l llhHlltH I'I

L~i!-.dn-yc.1r rcl .1~ ~a­

t Ill ll ~ !11 p.

TcnnL·"n· tin;dl y lurL·d him

ft)

tow n Tu l·,d.Jy morning .. tnd hl·
lud been .nh:ctin g wnh t c,un

v,m\&gt;; Ollt .

cunr.

dcfc.Jtcd TJti.ma P.mova ()-2, ( J-2
111 th e 1.1eco nd round o f thL·
$5JS.IIIHl, llank of rh c• We't ( :t.JS ~

Cnrt h .1d ~co red th e only
goal of th e tim h.df "' till'
J2nd 1111 11\l tl' rru 111 "'-"' y,ud"'

"' I (.

,1\\',IY L)tr ,,
Sp,·cd

Picken\ ncgoti.lt l'd wi th rlw ~ in rc t he n.
T i un ~ by hlt n ~c l f tln two d.iY"·
Picken.:. ha . . t.1lkl·d with Pro
A ~ h·d L\lrly \\ll' dtll''~ d ,lv 1f lw
lhwvl runnin g b .le k l:.ddtl'
would h.IYL' ,m\·o n~· lonl... nve r .1 CL·o r gl'. b.H: k up qu JrtL·rb,Jrk
nt.·\\· l mHr.Jcl. P1ckl· m ~.ud h e
Nl·li O ' D on nell .md r ~..·n· ivt· r
k nn\\''i \\'h ,lt to lnn k ti.1r ,lfin Y.II )Ce'\ Thl f,1Jt"ll .
L'i~ lll \ 'l'.lf~ ) tl thl· N I L.
, \YI l Dnllt'll pl.•ye cl ""h Pirk"Th i ~ h my , th1 rd tl111l" gom~
l' il' m CJIH.I llll .Hl 111 Jl J&lt;JH .•md
rhrnu~h rh 1" ...nu .lt lon ." ... .11d
Tl11 gp~.·n\ 111jury 1" \\'h~ lhe
P1 ckt'lh. who "i~ll l'd .1 11\'l'- YL',t r, Tit.llh 'o lk,pn.ltdy \\·,m t to

In thl· u t hl· r fl'dtllt'l"d 111.1trh.
ti tth - rankt·d Momr.1 Sl·k , t()ught
otr Mq~h .l tltl Sh.wg;hll L'"'Y 7-.i. ().\. E.1riln. No. X Clr.llld ,l R nbrn
dt:fL'.Itt·d 1Vl.t\IJ011,1 W.l 'l l llllgtot t (J4. (J-2 . .111 d li ti h-'l'cdcd S,mdrmc

TJo;;rud dm\'n~;.·J l~nhi .111.1 (; ,1rbin
(o - 2, (,-7 (I). 7- 5.
J

'

ill' .ldt~r

from t; ,,ry

A.1ro11 l lug h c~ .lhl l h.hl .Hl
,l,~l't for thL Engli' h Prt'llllL'r
Lc.tgnl' ttH'I Jibn,. \\ h\) were
he. ll l'll .l - I &gt;; ,llurd.l) h) I ),( ·.
U nited .n1, i 1rl· in the Un1tcd

Please see Crew. Page Bl

''

MEET THE PRESS- Tennessee's newest Titan me t with the me d1a
Wedne sday. Carl P1 ckens and the T1tans agreed to a five -year dea l, the
terms of wl11ch were not re leased yesterday. lAP)

S~J

ot1lci.tl"l.

L lJ.Idw o;,

,Jnd pLlyL' r'

111illion nmrr.lct \\ 1rh thL'

lkngrt], l.1,t y&lt;.-.Lr. "T m thL·

u 11 ~·

Please see Pickens. Pap Bl

�..

-. -

-.
•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Inside:

0

THe Daily Sentinel

N L: DBacks lose agai11 , Page B2
A L: Ya11ks roll behind Doc &amp;justice, Pa.!!e B2
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8

Sale starts today
Ends Sunday. Aug. 6. 2000

Page 81
lhurscfay, July 27, 1000

Flexible Drain
Pipe

Store Building Kits

Solid, Slotted, or
Perforated

10' Section
204 12,20411 , 20414

100' Roll
20421,20437, 2041 3

250' Roll
20420, 20430 , 2041 (),

Features stainable Texture 1-11 siding.
Includes window.

K" . . ... , , ~, , . ,

""'"' '"'"''""' ""'' .,. ...,.
.

n .... u.,

Kll r ~n

'*Ill, Sp.-•y

""~ '""'"''""
·
... o

11$./lf/: l:lt rmow,

, .._~ ,,., .,.,,.. 1&lt;/o r lt ~"f"u

'""'"' ~ ,. ,. . .... ..., ""'"' "'

B6900

64goo

-·

'7999

" ' " ' " J nl

:,1

DECK PACKAGES

Bu11d a palio o18c~ lh&lt;s weelcltfld. lt"s e&amp;ll« 1nan vou ll'lil'lkwilh our 1rM deck plant and~~ . Anyonewithjuat a,_ IIII"IJile
tools can create a d8dl thai will be thll envy ol y.:x. neighbofh!:lo:il! ~V. cle¥e4oped your own pia/'ll, bring tiiM:I ab\Q ... well be
glaa to quote you 1 pnce By us.ng PI'II&amp;Sure·lreatlld ll.lmbet. .,ou uaure )Ouf'MIII ol ~ ol ~with PlO malniiOWlte. Nwer
~s pail1l1ng
· i
want to. ftlete c1ec11
·
lor the lake ot comptlli10n. W. can help you wilh

t ·au.,•l

A.,,,/,.. tu._... ,_,. f"14n''
.... ,~. ~w.. .. ~o ....~. I,...Jir.

'4499

R OC K SPIU NGS T he
M eigs H igh School s•o ll ey hall
team w i1l meet fo r workouts Fri day and M on day from Il l a.1n . to
nou n at .th l' 'c hoo l h')'ll l.
Fo r infOrm atio n , co mact hl'a d
n&gt;ach Ri ck Ash at YlJ2-'ilJ60.

9 Lite

Reds trade Aybar
to Marlins

2/8 or 3/0

. ,.,/ ,..., ...,. •lr&lt;OiA .

.w... ~ ~o

u.,..u., L..w•toory

SinW.,

Finish off your next room
addition with beautiful patio
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F•ur ••

with Po~ U p
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~w ,..a,.

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..,;,A ~lo n-. ,.._~ '"" "'""

mu l ,.,.,..,.,.,fcoo i,. ,
.W.. u loo "o'!

See our store for your
water heaters and
replacement parts.

I

5 999
These prices are for deck only &amp; do not include

..

I

Sleps Of hand1all

All models have factory
installed T &amp;P valves.

24' X 32'
Pole Barn Kit

16' O.C. wall studs. 24" O.C . engineered roof trusses. White vinyl
siding. 16'x7' Clopay garage dOOr, pretiN&amp;hed 'Nhite.

40 gal. 404896 .. .. ....... ..... ........ .. ... $156

.

~~~~sf:~~~i:C:!e:~~~::.~--~~ ~.~~-~~:

50 gal. 40 5564 ............................. $159
'30

White Tank
and Bowl

. ... . ..

Model BK2432

32' X 48'
Pole Barn Kit

379 900

16" o.c. w311 studs. 24" O. D. engineered roo! 1russea.
J.o· service door.
0$8 root shealhing .
GAF roof shingles. Alchilectural plans lor easv USer:IltHv.
Cemenl &amp; foundatiOfl eldra . includes gutter. GK2628
At1 for ill ustrative purposes only. Not exactly as shown.

7/16"~~:4'x8'

40 gal404 798 ............. .. ............... $160

--1

FREE easy-to-follow plans w~h
material purchase

2·9x7" garage doors/2·3'0" windows. White vinyl siding &amp; soffit.

gal. 404850 .... .. . .. .. .. ..... ...... .... . $159
6-35

269900

26'x28' Premium 2 Car Garage Package

GAS

$4998

6 Ft

doors

24'x24' Standard 2 Car Garage Package
3'0" service door. 7/ 16"x4 'x8' osa rool sheathing .

s349

Andproblems
eliminate
the
of sliding glass

Garage
Packages

• No frost build
up or air and
water leakage
to worry about
• Greater energy
savings
• Strength of steel
for added se~urity
• Lower
maintenance

Model BK32'!8

4899

10% OFF

00

Less Lid

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95

HSee

Our New Displuy "

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DO-IT·

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399
69
2"&lt;10'.......................... .4
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Black, While,
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$

lo

ch.~o•e

from

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i.Aodel 42
t2416

1111111

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160• G1111ipolls, Ohio
740-446-2002
Mon-Sat. 8-7 •
11 ·5

INTERIOR
LAUAN
PREHUNG
DOORS
Holloy; Care
bored without
incident or
casing

per square

$5196 .
per square

2'8''
70074

2'6"
70078

2'8"

3'0"
70082

70080

8"x8' 169919

$7999

Valley Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St. Middleport, Ohio
740-992·6611 • 1-800-733-3334
Mon.-Fri. 7-5 • Sat 7-3

LOS ANG ELES (AP) - T he·
Loo;; Angt'!t· ~ I )odgcrs reacqu ired
p i tc h l·r b m.1el Valdn ti·o m ti ll'
c :hi c lgO C ubs for (\VI) min o r IL·a' g ue rs ri.gh t- h;!J1dcr .J.llllk
/\ rno ld and o urfi l' ldcr Jo rge
Pit.:d c1. Th L· D odge rs .1l so get CJs h
&lt;.'U tl'iidcrat ions.
Voldc s was 2- -l " ·ith .1 'i.17
ERA in 12 start&lt; for th e C ub' tillS
yl'ar afte r opl' ni ng rhc 'i C;J'i Oll o n
the dJS.1bkd lisr. H e spen t rhe tirsr
\iX p..'.\1'\ of !Jj ~ Clrl'lT \\'H h the
I )od gn'\. gDing (, 1-S4 \\"tt h .1 J ..1H
ERA

Arizona State QB
suspended indefinitely
Tf:M I'E. Ari z. (A I') - 1\rizon.r
Sr.ttc 't' l ltDr L]ll .lrtt.·rh.tc k IZy.1n
Kt.'.1k ,,..h ,,I, ~)L' lhkd ltiddinirt·ly
ft n · ,\11 UtHihclt ht'd \'lt)l.lti nl l of
tL' ,tll l ruk,. Ke.IIY h.J , t ll ro\\'!l lnr
r~.2 7 4

c.l rcn y.1nk

Manning buys out final
year with Bucks

Venus rolls in Bank
of West Classic

Thomas

S I'ANrORI l. C.d•f. (AI') -

:loit center.

Scron d -~ ecLkd VL' llll'

Rt. 2 Bypass, Pt. Pleasant, WV 304-675-5200
Store Hours: Mon-Sat. 8:00am to 7:00pm
Sunday 11-S

$7.29

C INC IN NAT I (AI') - T h e
o;; crit's b egan o n ~Ill em otion al
notl' for C in CJilll.lti - . ; hortstop Ba r rv Larki n got a pro~
longed ~tan din g ovatio n fur hi \
three -year COilt rac t t:xte tls i~; ll ,
Fro n1 that point nn . everythlll g: Wl'llt the.:• H ou•aon
Astros · way hardly w ll.lt
th ey or a nyone cl"l' ex per tL·d .
Sals3 m m ic bLu·ed in r h ~_·
cl ubho use and the· maJ or
k"&lt;l gl,lt'S' wor'i.t t ea ill tal k e d
ab out a turn aro und aftt'r bc;Itlll l.( th e R eds 3-2 Wed n,·sday.
lo mpl e ri n g a rhrLT -ga me
Juli o L u~o. Jetr Bo~gwdl and
Moises A lo u h1t so lo ho m en
111 an e ight-pitc h span of tht.•
sixth in n ing cls the Astros c.un e
fro m bc: h m d to \ Vi n for :1 thi rd
. straig ht d ay.
A tL'a nl tlu t cou ldn 't -; tri rtt;
tngl'th e r m o re than two w in"
all 'it'aso n ha'i now \Vo n tl vc 11 1
a rm v and gottl'n a be tter tL·cl ing abo ut jtself.
'· M ore tlnn ;m yt hi n~. ir

unb y.

\\"i th rh i" '\L'a'\on ," "aid lnce, ;tt .29 th e
ch ief' on the circui t. "O ur
.;pomDn h .i \ ''~· bn ·n our vend o r-;, H opki ns
c h rHsis, llciH.l ric k eng lll e:-- and L'Ven
( ;oo dyc.Jr.''
And 11L· In ~ ,1 .17 -yL&gt;:lr- old dri ver whu was
llL'Vl' r ro mid ercd m_ucl t more th :1 11 a jourI H;y lll ~l l t , \\ lJu,c claim w f:ml t' w~1s drivin g
the· ti tih Llr in Lle'lllt; ll1\1!(UI jJc k R 11ush 's
ll ve-ctr garJgt".
B ut often the'il' days. the on ly pbi n \v hitc.:·
c.t r 111 11~.· l d ~ o f -D ca n be '\l'l'll r;~c in ~ am o n g
till· rnultt L·olo rL'd vl'111ck s o f so m l' o f rlw

"' We just want to get a look at
everybod y," he said . " T hat's th e
reaso n we do Jt. We get th e gu ys
som e li ve contact wi th o ut any cu t
bl oc king o r h ittin g the quarterb ack . Th ey have to get a taste of
som e real co ntact before we pl ay
o ur tirst preseason game."
Second- year quarterbac k Akili
Smith , wh o completed 80 of I 53
passes fo r 805 yards in ~eve n
ga mes last year, is expected to take
abou t half o f rh e sna ps durin g the
scr immage, with bac kups Sc&lt;l tt
Mi tc h ell an d Scott Cov mgton
splitting the rema inin g pbys.
Smirh w ill need all th e full -&gt;peed
pranice time he ca n get before
the 13e llgals travel to Bu ffa lo fi1r
the ir first preseaso n g.u ue A ug. ~ .
Coskt said .
" We've g:o t a youn g No. I guy
and I've gor to get him rea dy," he
sa id. "He's getting w hat he needs.
It rt·a ll y has n othing to do with
th l' num ber o f snaps.
" H e wo n "t ta ke· th e m all
tog~ {ill'J: _(So rurdayL I::l e'IL take .JL
. brt'ak w hil e Mit chell is in rh ere
and th en m m e bac k iu .Thrs is the
ideal situation to get h 1111 som e
exper ie nce because th ey can't hit
him . so I do n 't have to risk that
hh · I do in th e preseason· games."
Cosl et sai d h e·~ bl"l' ll lTl CU Li r:lgt·d ' by thL· g rowi ng ra ppo rt
betwee n Smith and roo kie wid e
l'l'Ce tver Peter War rick. rlw [L'am's
.fi rst- rou nd draft pi ck tiu m Flor ida St:~te. Warri ck h as ben.Jr m· u tu:
of Smith's m ost n.·liabk ta r!-!l' ts.
durin g dail y passi 11g dr ill s.
" They do n't lock an y con ti~
dl'Tl ce. do they'" Cos kt asked .
" Peter's workin ~; hard . I l1 ke his
wo rk t•thi c. Th t' vnv tlr-..t d.1v &lt;1f
Cl lllp. h e tw isted hi'i J11kk .m d

Please see NASCAR. Page Bl

Please see Bengals. Page 81

gives yo u some confi d ~ tKe,' '
managt= r Larry Di erker ..;a id.
" Wh e n yo u pby as poo rly os
we have t h is year, you general ly do n 't h ave man y thi n t.rs go
you r \vay. Ym1 'n: l'Xpec ting:
~ OI II l' rl n n g

w

~o wrong.

'"Now ynu'vt· had ~o m e
th lllJ;\ go r ight and you «J art to
, beli eve th ey \\'il l go right. It's a
ditfncnr P"yc hol ogy fro m
w hat we: 've h ~1d all year."
Th L·
l\ -.; trus ·
d l' lll L'a n o r
•.: hal iJ;t.'d d r.lnl ,It icall y du r11 1g

Please see Reds. Page

as

OUTFIELD COLLISION- Cincinnat i's Barry Larkin (left) and Pokey Reese collided as they attempted to
fie ld a pop-up in short center fie ld Wednesday. Larkin made th e grab , but was injurep on the play. (AP)

Benson~ &amp;

\X/ ill i.lt m

lnce roll on without sponsor

BY TH E ASSOCIATED PR ES :'

and alo11 g l".lll1&lt;.' a :-.pu nsor. But in a tt.•w
' !llo nrhs, th L· checks stOppe.Cf ar.i-i Vl ng alld rllL~­

It 's ca lled a plain whitc · wrapp·n - 11o
spon sor ship - ~liH.l whL' ll :1 r,ICl' l' ar lnoks
tlur w.1y . it ll\llall y 111 &lt;.\t ll -; tlt l' r,lnT won 'r lw

Iogo C llll c otT th e Po m iac.
Now. t h L'Y a re ltvin g o n h o p ~;.· ;1n d
ddl: r red pay u H..·m~ on engin es , c h as'\is. ,m d
tt rcs.
" \Vc: lu vc cs~ ~;.·ntia ll y ln d not h ing: to ran·

arou nd mu ch lon gt.T

Jo h nn y Beman and

j.tlth..''

lncL' h.iVL'

bucked rhar rrend tOr a \\'hik. but if rhc v
do n'r co ll ll' up wnh o.;otl lL' g ree n l"t'.l l .. non .
t hl'lr \urp ri singly good \l". I\D JI \\' ill hl· hi 'i ro -

y&lt;n m ge~ r LTt'W

ry.
'· WL· ·n· h.1 d tL'.l llh with bi g sp on,or' l' O i llL'
up an d o;; ay we're 111:1 kin g t h t'll l lnok h,h\.
tha t th ey 've got .Ill ri ll· lllD l lL' Y in thc wndd
.tnd we've got" I I D il l' and Wl'.rc -.r ill r unnin ~
prl' tty goo d," lk n ~o n s;Jid.
T hat's a n untkrstatt'lll l'llt. ltl thl· bigbu cks 1.\ ·o rl d o f NASC i\R . w h ~_·n.' top 'po tl'tlr' hl p j , pc.tktng ,lt clo'L' t d S lS llli l.l iun p ~· r
"L'.I\011. d rl \'\:r 11&lt;.'11\0it .111 d CI'L'\\" c hi e f' lnn·
.1n: l&lt;1th i1 1 th L· Wit h lOil ( :up 'l. na hn~" hu t
l.J'\f in .t, ,c r•:_

lr \\".1.., th .n

\\. 1y

\\'hen they h q_p l l the

PR.O S O CCE R

Crew salvages
draw with
·Newcastle

"l',t -

HAPPY CREW NA SC AR d river Jo hnny
Be nson and crew c h1 e f James lnce sha re a
laugh prior to th e Pe nn sylva nia 50Cl last
wee kend at Long pond. Pa. (AP)
~on ti \'l' rnn r h ~ .1go. \\hen lkmt~n wry Jh.:.Jr1\- ..,t(JIL• till' 11 ,1\'toll.t ~110. But t~) r .111 in cnn \ l"llll'll( l ,lll! Hll l IL l ~ .II 1\.lllt) l! r.Jiilll~ p. l l"rllL'l"'l

th·. •r ti t~,.· l'nd. hr rn t/-!hr h,t\l' pulkd It ott.
' \ Jut .!.!,~ ll tl tl' .l\(l"liti()I)IJ(,(ll\ l l' !ll,ll"kl'ILT \ .

Pickens ·agrees to deal with Tennessee
Tize disgnmtled ex-Bengal hopes for
better days with the AFC champs

COLUMBUS. \ ll 11 o (A I')
C .1rl Con· of Ncwc.J\th.:
United .m d Jdr C:unning lmn
of rhe Co lum bus C rl'w bo th

Cunnmg-h.un'.; go.ll r.1 m c
ti·or n ](, y.m.h ou t on .1 lo ng
p ,t'" ti·mn M ik" Jo,c..·ph . \\ hu
lud 'cored the fi r.., l l \) lutnhu,
go.d i11 the ()7th minutc ·"' lw
pKJ...l·d up .1 lome h,t ll. ~or p.l't
dd~· 1 Jd c rs .m d 'corl· d li'ol n 1 ()

NAS H VILLE. Tenn . (AI') W ide rcn·in· r C.1rl J&gt;ic kt·n ., IJ,~ s
,\greed tn .1 ti,·c - y~.:-.u· d t.:".d w ith
thL· AF&lt; ~ ch,nn pion TL·nnc''L'l"
Tit.lm .
"\X./l· .lrL" dvli~ h t c d tu add o1
pbyl' r of C.u-J'..; c1 libn to th t'
I'O 'i ft'r ," Tit.1 1h ge n n. 1l t n an ager
Flovd IZl'L'~t' ~.1id \\r'L•d ne,LLly.
" You .liW&lt;tY' ]nok ~'r pLlYII I,lk t'r'1
un bt~th i d h·n-..l' .111d ddl·11'i~· .md
C.1rl ddi tn tc ly qu .Jiitl l'" ,1, .1
pl.tynuh·r."
R n·~c did tl d t r cn·.d tht'
till .lll t'l.il t l'rlli" o f the dL·, d .
I'll ken' \\ dl \l~ll th1.· l"l)Jlt Llrt
l"l nlr,d.l \ . lt l't" ' L' ,,11d . lwl·,lt l'l'
!hl' nn1 - tilllL" Prd Ho\\ kr lud tn
th· ho tnc ro p,1d" l~n rr. ll lllll ~

\CUTl'd

in th l· H-tth 111inure .l'i

tl~Jlll .S

played to

J

Bengals
•
1mpress
Coslet
GEO RG ETOW N , Ky. (AP) Less than a week into trai nin g
camp, and o nl y three day&gt; before
hi o.; ream's tlrst preseason scrimmagL', C incin nati Benga ls coach
llruce Cos ier has been imprt'\Sed
with th e attit ude and effo rt o f his
playen.
"I do n't see any ~.~lac k e rs out
th ere." Cosier said Wedn esday fiJIlowin g the tea m 's m o rni ng work o ut at Georgetow n Co llege.
" We've had some rea l spirited.
upr~m po prahices, we're gettin g a
lor du m.· ... it 's bee n great."
Coslet w ill get to mc a~ u re how
we ll the wor ko ut&gt; h ave been
g01 ng w hen th e team ho lds its
fi rst full ~co n trlct scrimmage Sat-

sw~:e p .

tht:
SALT LAKE C ITY (i\1') VL·tc ran t(ww;.u·d l hn ny M ,111 n in~
reac hl·d ;m ;1 grl'l'llll' IH w bu y om
thl· tin ~d Vl';Jr uf lw. ro 11t ral"t w it h
till· M d\\:.lll h'L' Bur b. M .111 ning\
.1g-cn t ...1id the 6- t()Ot- 111 , 2.15po und fo rw.1rd \\'i\1 he .1\',lii.JhiL·
t.o 'ilgn \\'Jth orhn r ca l Jl"' Aug. I.

ON ALL 4'X8' PREFINISHED
WALLPANELS IN OUR STOCK
Save now on beautiful decorator
panels in a wide range of styles
to comple1J1ent the decor of an,..-~._
.......1- - room in your home. Sto re
only

Astros take broom to Reds

Dodgers pick up Valdes

TE RR E H AUTE , Ind . (1\l ') Flr\t - ro un d dra tt pick R oh Morn ' '1~n nl .1 ti, ·e-yc &lt;~r I'OI It Li tl
witl 1 th~,.· lnd i.111.1pnli, &lt;. 'olt,. MtJrl"h . . 1 lin cb .1 i. " kn
tlun1 l ~n g h .n n
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C INC IN NATI (AI') Th e
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p itc her J orge Cordova.
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Please see Crew. Page Bl

''

MEET THE PRESS- Tennessee's newest Titan me t with the me d1a
Wedne sday. Carl P1 ckens and the T1tans agreed to a five -year dea l, the
terms of wl11ch were not re leased yesterday. lAP)

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..

PomerQy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ql'llo

Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

NATIONAL LEAGUE

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your support of these ·are~
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Struggling Diamondbacks pick up Curt Schilling
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
lead over hits and six walk s in fo ur innings.
St. Louis opened a 7 I 12 game\
Pirafes 5, Brewers 4
The Aflzona Diamondbacks were bolstered Cincinnati in the NL Central.
"This team has a lot of character," ile said .
Jose Si lva beat Milwauke e for the second
; by tqe acquisition of Curt Sc hilling. Just· not
"Every time it looks like we've got our backs tim e in a week after go in g w in less as a starter
: soon e nough to sto p th e ir losing streak.
Darryl Kil e (12-6 ) earned hi s first win this up against the wall, we come out fighting . To for more than a year, pit ching four - hit ball
; mont h and Thom as Howard went 2-for-4 with win two games against a team like that , it's over sevc: n innings in. Pittsbu rg h .
Aranu s Ramirez hit a two - run homer off
; four RBi s as the St . Loui s Cardinals handed good for us ."
"We shouldn 't feel singled out," Arizona Jimmy Hayn es (9 - 10), while two P ira te s runs
; Arizona its fourth stra ight Jos s, 8-4 Wednesday
· night .
manager Buck Showalter said. " It looks like he scored on errors as the Brewers lost their fifth
In SIX games.
~
It W:t'\ t he first tin1 c in two seasons that Dia- and St. louis are a perfect fit. "
Luis Gonzalez's 19th homer gave Arizona a
Silva (7 - 4) matched a career hi-gh with eight
: m ondbac ks startt•rs h ave lost four straight
; games, but third baseman Matt Williams said 1- 0 lead in the first.
st rik eouts and allowed on ly an unearned run .
Jim Edmonds finished 3 - for- 4 with two
Mike Williams allowed an RHI double to
:t h a t '~", not the problem .
" We 're not h i ttin g at all , that 's for su re," runs, an RBI and a walk for St. louis.
C hri s Jones and Luis Lop ez's sacrifi ce fl y m
Armando Reynoso (7 -7) allowed eight runs the ninth before gett in g his 15th save tn 17
; W illia ms sa id . "No matter how our pit c hing is,
: we've got to get so m e run s and we're not on I 0 hits in five innings, taking hi s first loss opportunitie s.
; doing th at."
in more than a month .
Rockies I I, Dodgers 4
Braves 6, Marlins 3
· Sc hillin !'. acquired befor.e the game from
Jeff Cirillo and Jeffrey Hammond s eac h
Kevin Millwood won for the first time in drove in four runs as Colo r ado snapped a
; P hila delphia for fi rs t baseman - outfielder Travis
; Lee and pitchers Omar Daal, Vicente Padilla five weeks and John Rocker picked up his first three- game lo sing streak at home.
Brian Bohanon (5-7) allowed four hits a nd
; and Nel so n Figueroa , is ,scheduled to make his save in more than a month as host Atlanta won
for the I Oth time in . 13" games since the All - four runs through 6 1-3 in nings, add111g an
:debut' for Ariz o na on friday night at florida .
RBI double and a walk.
, One start after a heartb reaki ng loss to Ari- Star break .
Javy Lopez homered for the second straight
After the Dodgers scored three 111 the first.
' zona, when he faced the minimum number of
: batters through five innings in a 3- 2 loss, Kile night and Wally Joyner hit his !99th career the Rockie s cou n tered with six in their half
homer.
·
against Carlos Perez (4 - 5) .
, go t run support.
, H oward hit a three-run homer, hi s sixth, in
Rocker pitched the fi!Jal two innings for his
Co lorado 's Bri a n Hunt er equaled a career
; the fifth to give Kile an 8 - 1 lead .
13th save - first since June 23 against Mil- high with four hits.
Cubs 14, Phillies 9
, Kile all owed 10 h its , stru c k out four and waukee .
At Rhiladelphia , Mark Grace went 4- for- 5
:wal ked two in e ig ht- plus innings.
Millwood (6-8) surrendered only one hit
"We've go t to go ah ead and finish off the through the first four innings while his team- with a career-high six RBi s. Sammy Sosa hit
•' swee p ," Howard sa id . "We have to pick up as mates built a 6-0 lead .
two homers and Chicago sco red the go-a h ead
Florida starter A.J. Burnett (I-I) gave up SIX run on a bases-loaded walk off Paul Byrd (2. m any game s as we ca n ."

9).
Grace hit a grand slam in t he n inth an d Sosa
capped the stx -ru n innin g w ith hi s 3 I st homer
as Chicago won it s seaso n - hi gh fifth straight.
Philadelphia, whi ch Ills los t fo ur of five, fell
b e hind 4- 0 in the seco nd inning o f a game
delayed three time s by rain .
After a :!9-min u tc de lay 111 the eighth,
pin c h-hitter Brian Hunt e r tied tt at 8 with a
three-run homer off Todd Van Poppe!. Felix
Heredia (6-3) retired Bob by AbrL·u wtth two
run ners on ro e nd the innin g.
Giants 3, Padres 1
Bobby Esulell a and Marvtn Benard hit so lo
hom e rs in th e sixrh to ruin Pad res rookie
Adam Eaton 's perfec t ga m e btd at Qualcomm
Stadium.
Eaton retired the fir st 16 Gtants before
Estalella hom e red with o n e out in th e sixt h.
One our lat e r , Benard hit h1 s ninth homer,
giving the Giants a ·2 - 1 lead. ,
The victory moved San Franc i ~co i nto ti.rst
in th e NL We &gt;r by two perce ntag e points over
Arizona.
Shawn Estes ( 10- 3) a ll owed o n e run Rub e n Rivera '~t 12th hontcr in the first inning
- on four hits in b 2-3 inmn g~.
Eaton (2 -2) all owed three run s o n five hits
in se ven in nings, st ru ck o ur five a nd wa lk L·d
{WO.

Robb Nen go t three outs fti r hi s 24 th save 1n
29 cha n ces.

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Bengals

:Gooden, Justice pace Yankees to win
Yankees also are in the market for a left field- Damon followed with a go-a head double for
While most of baseball's contenders are er, with interest in Milwaukee's Jeromy Bur- visiting Kansas City.
: shopping for th at fi nal piece before next nitz, Montreal's Randell White and PittsJerry Spradlin (4-2) got the win.
; week's trade deadline, the N ew York Yankees burgh's Wil Cordero. ;
Athletics 6, Mariners 1
; o ne~ agam showed otf some of their midseaPaul O'Neill drove in two runs and Bernie
Tim Hudson bounced back from the worst
; son acquisitions.
Williams tripled and walked twice for the start of his career to aUow one run m 7 1- 3
Dwight Goode n won his third straight start Yankees, who outscored ,Baltimore 27-5 in innings and lead Oakland to the win at Seat:since returning to the World Series champions the series and improved to 7-2 against the tle.
:and David Ju stice drove in two runs as the Orioles this year.
Hudson (11 -3), who allowed nin e run s and
; Yankees capped a three-game sweep of BaltiBaltimore went 1-fot-10 with runners in 12 hits in a 12-3 loss to Anaheim last Friday,
: more with a 4-1 victory Wednesday night.
scoring position and 3-for-32 in the series. gave up seven hits and stru c k out five .
' Gooden (5-3) allowed one run in 5 2-3 The Orioles stranded 28 runners in the three
Ranton Hernandez had a two- run home r
:innings and has a 2.05 ERA in three starts and games, including I 0 in the finale.
and a run-scori ng grounder otf Paul Abbott
:o ne reli ef appearance since being recalled
"We never could get that big hit that would (6-4) as Oakland dosed witltin three games of
' from tht• mino rs earlier this month.
allow us to maintain some momentum ," man- first- place Seattle in the AL West.
"We had no idea what to expect when we ager Mike Hargrove said.
Devil Rays 6, Tigers 2
.; called hun up. We were trying to catch lightSidney Ponson (5-7), who came in with an
Esteban Yan (5- 7) pttched stx solid mnin gs,
; ning in- a bottie;:_Yankee+-managef-:loo -Ter-r~ 8.87 EP..A in July, gave up four runs-and eight retiring the last 16 b:mers ·he f~Tc d , at1d Steve
~sai d . " The more he pitches like he did tonight,
hits in seven innings.
Cox hit a go- ahead two- run homer off Jeff
: the mo re confidence he gets."
Blue Jays 8, Indians 1
Weaver (6-9) for visiting Tampa Bay.
Justice went 2-for-4 with a double at CamDavid Wells pitched a five-hitter to become
Fred McGrilf h1t a two- run single m a
d en Yards. He's batting .333 with four dou- the first 16-game winner in the majors, and three-run seventh that broke the ga me open
' b les, five homers and 17 RB!s in 21 games Brad Fullmer homered, twice for host Toron- for the Devil Rays.
:sin ce joining the Yankees in a trade with to.
Rangers 6, Angels 5
:Cleveland on June 29.
Wells (16-3) struck out ll and pitched his
Frank Catalanotto had a pinch-hit triple on
" H e's swinging the bat really well," Torre league-leading fifth complete game of the the ninth innin g and scored on Rusty Greer's
:said.
season.
fourth hit of the ga me for host Texas.
T he Yankees, boosted by the addttions of
Bartolo Colon (9-8) tied Bob Feller's IndiThe Ran gers rallied to win after John WetJu stice, Gooden, Denny Neagle,Jose Vizcaino ans record by striking out his first six batters , teland (4- 3) bl ew his seventh save in 33
a nd G le11JII en Hill , have won fou r straight and . but gave up a career-high four homers and chances by allowing an RBI single to Scott
: nine o f12 .
allowing seven runs in 5 1-3 innings.
Spiezio m the ninth .
Despite those moves, New Yo rk talked to
Royals 7, White Sox 6
: Phil adelp hia about a trade for Curt Schilling,
Dave McCarty hit a game-tying single off
: who was dt·alt to Arizona on Wednesday. The Keith Foulke in the ninth inning and Johnny
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Larkin injured in Wednesday's loss to Astros
C IN C IN:-J ATI (AP) A
, trade turn ed down. o ne sta nding
ov:Hion :tfter anoth t: r, a stunning
con tract t'Xtcnsion. a dislocated
finger. It wa s qu itt' a homt~ s rand
fur Darr y Lnkut.
Th e Cinun natt Reds captain
&lt;..il"ilocatcd thl· pllikll.:.' fin ger on his
ri g ht hand wln lc maki ng a tumblin~ catc h Wednesday. fo rci ng
him our of a 1 - ~ loss to the
Houston Astros.
Lnrkin popped the fin ge r back
into place o n t he Geld, then left
:tnd got X- rays t hat fo und no

fra cture. l-I e might be able to play
Friday in MontreaL
"Things happened so fast,"
LJrkin said .
Th e sa me could be said of the
Red s' stx-game
homestand ,
whic h e nded for Larkin on one
odd play.
The shortstop ran into second
base man Po key Reese as they
went for Mitch Meluskey's soft
tly to shallow ce nter fi eld in the
fourth inning. Larkin caught the
ball and held o n as he fell awkwardly to the artificial turf. dislo-

eating the finger.
Moises Alou figured the ball
would drop and was running on
the play. After makin g his overthe-shoulder catch, Larkin tossed
the ball to center fielder Ke n
Griffey Jr., who made a relay to
complete a double play at second
base.
"The last thing I remember is
Pokey and Junior yelling. ' H ere,
here.' I said, 'What?' He sat d,
'Throw me the ball.'" Larkm said.
Once the doubl e play was
completed, Larkin stood up and

popp ed the finger back in pla ce.
"It was pointin g m the wron g
direction ," he said. " I pulled on it
and it popped back tn place. I
thought thJt was the end of it, but
that's when the pain started."
Larkin didn "t ackn owle dge an
ovation from th e crowd, an indi catio n he was hurt. Instead, he
stood and looked at hi s' right
hand for a few mom ents after fixing the finger, then walked off the
field slowly accom panied by a
trainer.

from Page 81
battled through that without
missing a snap. I really like that
about him.
"Akili obviously sees the talent
there. He knows Pet er is goin g to
be out th ere on the field with
him , and they have to develop
that relation sh ip. To see it canting
so ea rly is a good th ing."
With restri cted free-agent running back Corey Dillon continuing his holdou t from ca mp, the
bac kfield si tuation also h as
received :.1n inordinate amount of
scru tiny from coac hes.
Cosier said all four runnin g
backs comp etin g for the startin g
JOb - Michael Basnight , Brandon Bennett , Sedrick Shaw and
Cur~tis. Keaton have performed
welL They will get a chance to

Pickens
from Page 81
sign Pickens.
Thigpen has been slow to
recover from ankle surgery in
April and may ntiss most of train ing ca mp. That would leave Kevin
Dyson as the Titar)s' only receiver
with a 50-catch season on his
resume.
Pi ckens caught 57 passes in
1999 in what was essc nttally a

Crew
from Page 81
States as a warmup for the En gli sh season , which starts next
mo nth .
N ewcastl e had a 16- 6 overall

distin gui sh themsdws in the
coming \Vee ks, be ginnin g with
Saturday's scrimmage.
" I th ink they all realize what an
opportun ity this is," he said. " It's
been pretty intense. Just like anythin g else, the competi tio n will
make them .rll better."
Coskt said severa l players.
includin g Bennett who IS
c..:onung ba&lt;..:k from a kn ee lllJUry
that kep t him sidelin ed all of la st
season defensive end John
Cope bnd and cornerback Roosevelt Blac kl)lOn among others.
have been pra cticing only once a
day in order to keep them fresh
and inj ury-free ea rly in camp.
"There's :.1 list of guys we're
keeping out of two- a-day~;" he
said. "But we've got ro g~.·t our
work in. It's a balan cmg act. I'm
nor going lo be easy on them.
We're going to f,"Ct our work u1
- or else."

down year. He left . Ci ncin nat i
holding team records for career
receptton s (S30) and touchd own
ca tches (63).
The Titans u"ught necJ ro cle:u
some cap roo m if they have to
find hel p for the secondary.
becau se
co rnerba ck Do nald
Mit chl'il hurt h1s knee nt pr&gt;cti ce
Tu esday. Receiver C h ris Sa nde rs,
who caugh t onl y 20 pa sses last
~easo n . could be :t c:~ p casualty
sin n~ his -.alary will CO llllt $1.4
millio n again&lt;t th e ca p t his seaso n.

advantJ gc i11 shots ami :1 7 - l e dge
111 shr..HsGu n go al.
Both teatm swit ched goa lk ee pers at th e start of the sec ond half.
Newcastl e use d 18 playe rs, but
did no t play its captoin, in ternati onal star Ala n Shea rer, wh o ts
recover in g from injurie s.

9 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
Craftsman Truck , Powtrstroke 200
8 :30p.m . • Aug . 3 1 ESPN
Winston Cup, Brickyard 400
1 p .m . 1 Aug. 5• ABC
•

•

1. 9o00y L.JI)Ontt, 2 .8:25
2. 01111 J81'fltt. :2,772
! . Dale bnlhan!t. :2.718

-

4. Jotff Burton, 2,62•

l&lt;ewin Harvlcto., 2.532

•

...,... ....

NASCAR
from Page
81

wealt hy tt.&gt;am~; in the spo rt .
On Su nday, at Po co no Internationa l Raceway. Be nso n finished 12th tn the Pennsyl vania
500. beating lu c ra tive en tri es
backed by su c h sponsors as Tide,
M cDonal d's and Kodak .
Somebody shou ld te ll Benso n
to go to rea r of the field w here
he lie lo ngs, take his mobile billboa rd off the TV sc reen because
he has no thing to peddle .
Th.tt llltght not be a p roblem
afte r Aug. S. Inee SJys the Brtckya rd 4 011 NASCA R 's second - btggest rJ ce m tght be
th e e nd for this seaso n .
" We dciimtcly have stretched

-

2000 POINTS STANDINGS
Jetf Green , 3,162

Jnon IWUIJf, 2 ,610

Todd

15. Rust)" WBIIace. 2.557
1. Tony Stew!Wt. 2.5-40
1. 'M\fd Burt011. 2.!5J5
.. Jtfl Gordeln. 2,518
I. M&lt;ID! Martin, 2,487
10. Rielly Rucl(l, 2,468

Bodioe,

2,567

Ron Homad3y, 2.5 12

£n.on

S~r.

Rand~ LaJo~ .

2,471

2.339

Casey~ .

2 .195
OJH!d Green, :2 .189
Tony R!llntt. 2,078

Gret, Bitfle , 2,767

Mike ¥1811108, 2,!574

&gt;W1y Houston. 2,558
Jldl. Sfnp, 2,S05
~rt Busch. 2 .503

• Not1ble: The Brickyard 400
ha s been held six t imes . Gordon
and Jarrett have each won two.

• WM1e: Indianapolis Motor

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Speedway (2.5-mile track)

• Fonn.t 160 laps/400 miles
• Defenctlnc cMmplon: Dale
• Quallfyln&amp; "'"'"'' Jeff
Gordon. Chevrolet, 179.612
mph, Aug . 5, 1999
• Race record; ·Dale Earnhardt, Chevrolet. 155 .206 mph,
Aug. 5 , 1995

• Wh•t: CarQuest Au to Pa1ts

300
• When: 9 p.m., Saturday
• Where: Gateway In ter·
national Raceway. Maotson. 111.
(1. 25·mite track)
• Format: 240 laps/300 miles
• Defendlftl cllamplon : Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

• Quallf)tlna: recOfd: casey
Atwood . Chevrolet. 132. 42 3
mph , J1.1ly 30, 1999
• Race record: Dale Earnhardt Jr.. Chevro le t. 10 4 .566
mph, Oct. 17, 1998
• ·Notabll : No one who has
ever won th is race is in this
year's Field .

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
• What: Powerstroke 200
• When : 8:30p.m .. Aug . 3
• Whefe : lncllanapolis

.. .

Stew Grtuom . 2.282
DeMit Setnr, 2 ,252
Rick CrawfOfd, 2.213
&amp;yan Rerfntt, 2,182

Mike Bliss

&gt;J,l

(IQ

• Weekly rankings by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's ranking i s In parentheses.

1. ( 1) Bobby Labonte

Made the beat of fair car
In term• of consistency,

2. (4) Dale Jarrett
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

(3)
(11)
(9)
(7)
(6)

Dale Earnhardt
Tony Stewart
Rusty Wallace

Jell Gordon ·
JoH Burton
8. ( 5) Mark Martin
9 . (8)

10. (-)

he's a machine
Lost a 1pot to tire shredder
·The pole m•ant nothln&amp;
That second victory, at last
Moved up In points wlth third

Best of the Roush Gang

Ward Burton

First out with blown engine
Alto took a big fall

MattKenoeth

Filth place? Where did he

Raceway Park. Clermont. Ind .
{.6B6·mile track)
200 lats/ 137.2miles
• Defendln&amp; champion : Greg
Biffle
• Quallfrln&amp; rec:ord: Dennis
Setze r. Dodge. 111 .133 mph .
Aug. 5, 1999
• Race record: Greg 8 1ffle ,
Ford . 88 .704 mph, Aug . 5. 1999
• Notable: Mike Skinner tS
the on ly driver whO has won
here more than once . He won
the first two truck races at IRP
from the po le .

•r:onnat:

-

-

( I)

'&lt;

Your
Tum
Ft.

r

Our~

latters

c

Dear NASC AR This Week,
Your tx planat ion of how Ra ybestos Rookie oft he Year po1n1s an:
awarded wa s very interestmg and
e."&lt;lremcly comp lica ted. It .read as if
it had been devised by some one
wh o had helped write the htternal
Reve nue tax code! Apparemly 1he
drivers are s1ui sfied with the sy!i·
tem. but "discretionary point s by a
NASCA R-appoimed panel' ~~
Could you eKplain how the win·
n1ng dollars are passed oul'! Otlen
ti me~ it seems that a dri,er wh o
fmishes sevem h or eig hth ea• ns
111orc tha n the dri ver who comes in
fifth . Do 1hose f igures i nclude
sponsor money'!

3

C"
(I)

'""'

H enry H ec ky

GarreHsvlllt, Ohio

come rrom?

•

~

••••••••••••

Rlll'ldy Tol~ma . 2.279

TOPTEN

-~··

Ut&gt; end up fiiiJ K'f'ri11g tht• qu~ts tiull
abmu t'llnu'ng.~ I'W'ry Yl'Ur Tll t'l 'l t

FROM lAST WEI'K

Urt' /1\V rt'U.WIIS ji1r tit ~ l' ~t'ffli'IIJ

JiJ·

Fim, NASCA Rhas .H'v~
ertJI bonus tmJgro m.~ - lir e ,\'o·t·alled
"Wumer.&gt; Cirde" is th e most wefl·
known and lucra/il'e - that rrwarcl
dri~·rn who hm·c Jnn e well in tllr&gt;
{H.~' I, unrJ W 'f' /It ttl part oftho.\'1! pro·
gm m\, wi th .\ tmrdarJ bon u.wl·
Amnlier portum of the pwse i.~ Itt

t 'rt!fHJn c i e.\'.

WINSTON CUP
LONG POND. Pa . - Rusty
Wallace finally earned a second
victory to go with all those
poles. OdCiy enough. Wallace .
who has qualified first seven
times. did not win
the pole prior to
the Pen nsylvania

500.
Wallace's

~~ji'lvictory came at

the expense of
teamm ate Jeremy
Mayfield , who
was le ading on
the final tap when he had a fl at
tire Off hlS F6fi'r'MayfietCf WOrl
the earl ier race at Pocono
Raceway on June 19.
Jeff Burton finished second.
Jeff Go rdon third . Oal e Jarrett
fourth and M att Kenseth fifth

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
FOUNTAIN. Co lo~ - Point
leader Jeff Green won for th e
fi fth t ime this season In the
NAPA Autocare 250. a race he
and brother David turned into a
familY affair.

Jeff Green beat hiS o111er
brother by . 7 46 of a second
after a battle that took up the
fina l 85 laps around the mile
oval.
Former race winner And~
Santerre finished third, followed
by Hank Parker Jr. and Ptlil
Parsons . Casey Atwood. Hermie
Sad ler, Mike Mclaughlin, Ron
Hornaday and Tim Fedewa
rounded out the top 10.

BROOKLYN, Mich.- Five was
also the ma~ number for Gre&amp;
.Biffle. who wo n his fifth race of
th e truck season-and defen ded
his tit le in the Mi chigan 200 .
Biffle won •by 1.324 seco nds
over rookie Kurt Busch to give
Roush Racing . and Ford. a 1· 2
finish at Michigan Speedway.
Biffle led all but 10 of the
l DO la ps and set a race record.
Mike Wallace, who is chasing
Bi ffle for the Truck series titl e,
f1nished third. in another Ford,
Out fell 193 POints behind
Bi ffle in the seas~m sta ndings
witll seven race s left.

•--· ---- f£1100f THE WUK

thr fiJr m of cmuingenq• awards
hfJsrU on o.ffidal NASCAR
~ {:1 0/NASCAR Thl l

c - - . 111M currontly
By Monti Dutton
NASCAR This Week

a.

Mike Bliss. once highly successful openwheel·drlver and winner'ln the-craftsman -~
Truck Series, now competes as a rookie in
Winston Cup.
Bliss began the season driving the No. 14
Pontiac owned by A.J . Foyt but had trouble
making starting fields with the first-year
team . He later reunited with Barr y Dodson,
the 11eteran crew chief who had d1rected his
efforts In the trucks.
The 1993 United States Auto Club Silver
Crown champion, Bliss went on to f inish In
the top 10 In SuperTruck points In all five
years In which he competed In that series.
He won seven races and collected 15 poles.
Only Bliss and Ron Homaday won at least
one race In each of the series ' first fo ur
seasons.
Hometown: Milwaukie , Ore.

Wllo' S&lt;Je

Jeff Gordon fin ished th ird In the Pennsylvania 500, despite
minor sheet·metal damage that was the resul t or a bumping
Incident with rookie Bliss.
'What happened , I went in there and had new tires on ai"ld
the :27 (Bliss) drifted up the track, and I went underneath
him . I tnougflt he was &amp;iving me room. and then he came
back down, and we hit. and he spun . We were pretty
fortunate,' Gordon s aid .
Bliss saw It different ly.
•1 was trying to make a move on the 9 car (Stacey
Compton), and 1got bumped In the left rea r~ the 24 car
(Gordon),' Bliss said.
·
NASCAR Thl1 W1ek'1 Monte Dutton &amp;1YII 1\11 opinion:
' Lost in tne translation here, of course , Is the ract that the
Incident was more damaging to Bl iss, who finished 24th,
than it was to Gordon."

'olf':t"'
.-..-In-...
Cup raclnllln.tlle No.14 .
....._the No. 27 Pftzer/Vt.opa........,.,
.

- a . , l e f t , - hlo

Ali,35

Jeff Gordon vs. Mike Bliss

•••••••••••••
Who's Hot....

Who's Not

• HOT: Defending Win ston Cup
champion Dale Jarrett. who's
now up to second in the point
standings.
• NOT: Five straight finishes
worse than 30th for Bill Elliott
He was 32nd in Sunday'S
Penn sylvania 500.

Car: No. 27 Pflzer/ Viagra Pontiac Grand
Prix. owned by Jack Birmingha m
Career 1taU1tlc:t: 16 starts, 0 wins. 0 top.
five fin ishes. 0 to~10 fini shes. 0 poles,
mo'R!' tfiaii S500.000"Tilwinnings
Firsts: Start !Sept. 27. 1998, at Manins·
ville), pole (none), win (none)
What are your upectatlon1 for the 1econd
half ot the tn1on? · we know we need to
improve more . We have gotten bet,er. It might
be hard for others to see what kind of
progress we have made . but those of us on
the Eel River Racing (Birmingham's) team
know we have Improved."
Dot I It help to vl1lt to many of the track•
for 1 aecond Umt? ~ That shOuld really help.
Some track s In the first half were new to me,
and I had to try to get used to the different
feel of tne weight an d power of these Winston
Cup cars. plus get some l aps under my belt.
Now, whe n we go back , we'll have some good
notes on setups - both for qualifying and the
races - to rely on, and that , In itself, shOuld
be a re al DOSitllle for us:

1. Who was the on ly dri ver to wm !he
Daytona 500 without cha ngin·g tires ?
2 . How tong was the road cou rse at Ri verside. Ca li f.?
3 . wttat Indianapoli s 500 winner made hi S Wmston Cup
debut in the first Brickyard 400 ?
·uE'MIIns ~uuea ·E
:sa 11w (';g·z: ·z: :£ 961 w punl Awt '"t
SH3MSNY

••••••••••••
IXJji(.].~l,:!l· j :t~: I''if~
• In tho 1984 Wlnoton
500 ol Talladega

-

olllclallead chancoo.
Many other tlmee. th•
lead chan&amp;od hando
several tlm11 wlthln a

oln&amp;lelap.

Gont.

.\'fJOII ·

surJ. if reams tJo not c·hoo.H' w plpce
tlroJe vxm.mr.\· 'decal.~ rm lhoi!l' l..(lrJ,
th e~· dn 1101 get rh&lt;Jt purtirm f!f the
JIIII'St' II/OII It)'

tfiUf 1.1" {IU _\/t'IJ foy tfJIJ\ 1:'
fKtmm/.1 fu r why

·' pon.w r.1. Thix

t'urn i'lg.\- Ul 'l ' 1101 ul\l'U)'.\' Juglwr fo r
tlw higher-flni.Wring tea ms

X
Dear ~A SC AR This·Week, ·
I would like l o know if you ha"'e
aoy records of. say, !he lop·fii-'Cdrivers wilh 1he mos1 feature wins,
like Dick Trickle, ha s mure than
l ,000 win s. Jusl toia l wins. no m3 tter what type of track or cnr.
John Topolksy
Math~ r.

By Monte Dutton
NA SC AR This Week
Tim Beverley ha ~ :;old his Wins1on
Cu p leil m . Tyler Jl•! Motor.&gt;ptJr1 s. to
th~

n val MB2 team, effecli\'e ly giv ·

ing Nr\S C AR 1ls latest 1nuii1 Car
lcam.
Johnny Benson drives the No. 10
Pontiac r reviou5ly owned by Beve rle~. lie will Join Ken Schrader, who
drh·es MB2's No. 36 l'on1inc . The
team is owned by Geo rg i&lt;~ busin ess·
men Nelson Bowers, Tom Beard nnd
Read Mon on
" MoSI of 111)' su c~:c H in life co mes
fro m t e furbt s hin~ prc·owncd air·
planes ar1d se lling them," noted
BcH:rley, whose busmcss 15 hca dquan ercd 1n Tyler. Texas "The: way I

Pa.

HN't//(.\'4' dri l'f!rl' CO nlfh.'ll' in Xo
many difft'rt~/11 kind.{ of, ·a,..\ umlo11
WJ many dif!i.•t-ent c·in:uiiJ. it 1.1· n&lt;.•.t t

lo impm.1·iflle to of!icwf~l' .kx·llml'nt
Jfi• klllll\' nfno

.~lron- rmck vir·torir•-~ .
.1·11d1

.wmrrli11gs.

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

-

• For )'C ars. Rus ty Wal lace has
given names to hi s more
successfu l ca1s.
The Ford Taurus he drove to
victory Sun day at Pocono
Ra ceway does not , however,
h&lt;lve a name. Wallace sa1d
after th e race he wanted fans
to submit Ideas to the driver's
publiC re lations represe ntative.
Torn Roberts .
If you wouiO like to submit
a name. wr1te Robe rts at : 00.
So~ 890. 2222 Taylor 51.,
Guntersv1 11e . AL 35976: ca ll
(256 ) 582·3711 ; l aK (256}
582·3788; or e-mail at
trpm:..ne tcom .com .

'

SIIH£
Jdhlu.u

- - AROUNDTHEGARAGf ~

X CREW Of THE WEEK
Benson, Schrader become teammates in MB2 Pontiacs

Superepeedway In
northeast Alabama,
13 drivers twapped the
lead a record 75 tlm11,
and those were only the

what a good two-car tea m ca n,"
said Schrader. who is 17th in th e
standings .. "When yo u loo k
aro und out there at team s, that
one has really run good .
" Th ey've had eno ugh adversity to dea l with this year and still
perfor med good."
Frye says everybody o n both
team s is exci ted about the deaL
" It's almov like Mom and
Dad bringing home a· new baby
brother," he said .
How much farther the baby
crawls thi s year is unkn own . But
it's certain ly expected to be
walking o n its own in another
seven months, wh en th e 2001
seaso n opens at Daytona .
Maybe then, Ben so n will have
a drafting partn~ r. to help out
when the othe rs lin e up against
him.

at: Bri ckyard 400
hen: 1 p.m., Aug. 5

•

Jarrett

Cale Y•r1)oroua:h
won that race by two
car len,cths over Harry

a mckel farther than most peo- in this case one Benson says is a
ple cou ld ," he said. " lndianap o- la rge part of the reason for his
lts. it's real possibilitY that co uld success. But he's not worriod .
be o ur last race.
"We can afford to keep the
" For tim ra ce team to survive team together and we ca n afford
the rest of this year and for us to to build race cars," he said. "We
continue in the capacity we are JUSt can't afford to keep going to
with the people we've got, we races."
The purchase by MB 2 is cerdesperately need sponsorship.''
But I nee and Benson, both t&gt;f tain to improve the outlook for
whom are signed through 2003, Schrader and Benson, a nonfeel go od about the future winner in 146 starts over five
be cause their Tyler Jet Motor- Winston Cilp seasons.
They will be able to sha re
spo rts team was sold last week
to MB2 Motorsports, which informatio n, a great asset in a
fields M&amp;M's-backed Pontiacs sport where no single - car team
for Ken Schrader.
has won since 1998.
Schrader, who has four ca reer
Jay Frye, general manager for
MB 2, says sponsou,hip is in victories, but none since 1991 , is
place :or 2001, but won't elabo- excite d about having Benson as
rate.
a teammate.
A cessation of operations usu" I think as a single -car team it
ally means defection of a crew, is a ton hard er tp accomplish

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

• lltloch Grand Notional, CarQueot 300

•

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•

look ~• my e:-tpertc:ncc tn NASCAR
IS thai I did ju~ l whal l .do in lh~· ll ir·
plane business. I bough! a 1eam
whose fulure looked bleaL: m I 99B
and turned il into 'a IOp- 15 team . llul
tile grind of r a c m ~:: seven days A
wc:eL: , 51 wec L:s a y..:ar. look ti s loll
" MB2 is a fine tc:rm. and J wish
both cars a lot of success m th e
fulu rt . I'm oot ]raving NASCAR;
J 'm just ta kin g a rest. I'll see }'OU at
th e race Irack "

X
PETTY SH UI-'I·'I.t:: Oe~:iumtl g
with. Ihe Somh em ~00 a1 D:~rlm g mn
on Se pt . J, Steve Grissom will rcp larc
Kyle Pe tty as d nver of !he Winston
CupSencs No. 44 Puntll&amp;C. while Pel t)'
cn mplclcs. the season m I he Bu ~~: h

Series. dri,ing thc Nn. 45C'hevrnkt10r · lite n:n·nl l nd1ttnapol 1' t c~ t ~css ton s.
rncrlydriw.:n by Pc11 y 's late !-0.!0, Ad:trn
man y Cup dri\'ers \\'Cr\' bricfctlorJ
Kyle Pe tty wtlllh~· n r.:: tmn to Cup 11ha1 wlb ru lkd th e IJANS I head
In 200 1. whl~n th e Nn -l :' Dndt:c
;~n;] ner h. ' li PI &gt;~)rl ) Safl·ly DC\ ICC
De,rgned by an engm~ring p ro.
debut s Wtlh ~po n ~or~htr from Spru11
al l he Da y l o n~ 500.
rc-ssor al j\.llelllgUn Stotc Uruver.111y.
If spo n su~h i p l·an h~ ~tcurc&lt;l Petl y the dc~l l'C was unpru\cd aud re,iscd
Emerprise s w1 ll fi eld lhree Dodg¢s 1n response 10 the recent NASCAR
Cl'ashcs that took the lt ves of Petty
nc:~- 1 year, although Gnhom I!. ill not
and Kenn y lrwm
nec~:ss.ariiy d rwe I he No. 44 not yea r
Kenny Walla,·c ordaed a HANS
Presumably. it depend~ on how he
fa res fur the n:m.111xlcr of th e tur- l&gt;c \'ICC t\1r h1s N o.~~ Chc\ rokl
rent year. 11hen Gn~~o111 '&gt;'til lit&gt; !lou·
X
Ole dul~· m the (up ~~·rte~ a ~ well a ~
Ihe Crathm;m Trud. 'irrte&lt;;, 11hcrt·
Tilt: I'RUOt: '"'ITt 'Ol RSt:: Sttll
Gri ssom dm cs Pclty Fmcrprt,&lt;· ~· ~u!l'c nn ~ frorn a frill'ltm:d b.mc m hr s
leg. Tcrr:- Ll11'lont~ opt~d to lta.,e R1 ch
c .\ t ~ttn~ l)odgc entry
Bull e un ha~ nt i\te[1nn In pr~ri iCC.
X
qu:1 1if~ 3nd reird'.Jm c 111 1he Penn.
S,\H·: T \ . t'O\"it i OI S: i'unng ~yhillli"J 500 BK· l k frntshcd lllh

• The first race at
Pocono this seaton, June
19, was an embarratSing
• Sunday ror Rusty
Wallace, who probably
would "ave won had he
not Instructed his pit
crew to chance all four
tlre1 wllen moat other
driver~ were chanclnc
two. This time around,
Wallace and crew chief
Robin Pemberton did the
rl&amp;ht thin&amp;, I.e., chan&amp;ln&amp;;
two. And wit an taammate Jeremy Mayfield
faltered (due to, ye1 , a
flat tire) , Wallace was
then to prove that things
do even out .

W'IWW.

See us for Your Stih!•
Power Tools &amp;
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Supply
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(740) 992-2196

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PomerQy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ql'llo

Page B 2 • The Daily Sentinel

NATIONAL LEAGUE

The Daily Sentinel encourages
your support of these ·are~
businesses who make this page
possible.

Struggling Diamondbacks pick up Curt Schilling
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
lead over hits and six walk s in fo ur innings.
St. Louis opened a 7 I 12 game\
Pirafes 5, Brewers 4
The Aflzona Diamondbacks were bolstered Cincinnati in the NL Central.
"This team has a lot of character," ile said .
Jose Si lva beat Milwauke e for the second
; by tqe acquisition of Curt Sc hilling. Just· not
"Every time it looks like we've got our backs tim e in a week after go in g w in less as a starter
: soon e nough to sto p th e ir losing streak.
Darryl Kil e (12-6 ) earned hi s first win this up against the wall, we come out fighting . To for more than a year, pit ching four - hit ball
; mont h and Thom as Howard went 2-for-4 with win two games against a team like that , it's over sevc: n innings in. Pittsbu rg h .
Aranu s Ramirez hit a two - run homer off
; four RBi s as the St . Loui s Cardinals handed good for us ."
"We shouldn 't feel singled out," Arizona Jimmy Hayn es (9 - 10), while two P ira te s runs
; Arizona its fourth stra ight Jos s, 8-4 Wednesday
· night .
manager Buck Showalter said. " It looks like he scored on errors as the Brewers lost their fifth
In SIX games.
~
It W:t'\ t he first tin1 c in two seasons that Dia- and St. louis are a perfect fit. "
Luis Gonzalez's 19th homer gave Arizona a
Silva (7 - 4) matched a career hi-gh with eight
: m ondbac ks startt•rs h ave lost four straight
; games, but third baseman Matt Williams said 1- 0 lead in the first.
st rik eouts and allowed on ly an unearned run .
Jim Edmonds finished 3 - for- 4 with two
Mike Williams allowed an RHI double to
:t h a t '~", not the problem .
" We 're not h i ttin g at all , that 's for su re," runs, an RBI and a walk for St. louis.
C hri s Jones and Luis Lop ez's sacrifi ce fl y m
Armando Reynoso (7 -7) allowed eight runs the ninth before gett in g his 15th save tn 17
; W illia ms sa id . "No matter how our pit c hing is,
: we've got to get so m e run s and we're not on I 0 hits in five innings, taking hi s first loss opportunitie s.
; doing th at."
in more than a month .
Rockies I I, Dodgers 4
Braves 6, Marlins 3
· Sc hillin !'. acquired befor.e the game from
Jeff Cirillo and Jeffrey Hammond s eac h
Kevin Millwood won for the first time in drove in four runs as Colo r ado snapped a
; P hila delphia for fi rs t baseman - outfielder Travis
; Lee and pitchers Omar Daal, Vicente Padilla five weeks and John Rocker picked up his first three- game lo sing streak at home.
Brian Bohanon (5-7) allowed four hits a nd
; and Nel so n Figueroa , is ,scheduled to make his save in more than a month as host Atlanta won
for the I Oth time in . 13" games since the All - four runs through 6 1-3 in nings, add111g an
:debut' for Ariz o na on friday night at florida .
RBI double and a walk.
, One start after a heartb reaki ng loss to Ari- Star break .
Javy Lopez homered for the second straight
After the Dodgers scored three 111 the first.
' zona, when he faced the minimum number of
: batters through five innings in a 3- 2 loss, Kile night and Wally Joyner hit his !99th career the Rockie s cou n tered with six in their half
homer.
·
against Carlos Perez (4 - 5) .
, go t run support.
, H oward hit a three-run homer, hi s sixth, in
Rocker pitched the fi!Jal two innings for his
Co lorado 's Bri a n Hunt er equaled a career
; the fifth to give Kile an 8 - 1 lead .
13th save - first since June 23 against Mil- high with four hits.
Cubs 14, Phillies 9
, Kile all owed 10 h its , stru c k out four and waukee .
At Rhiladelphia , Mark Grace went 4- for- 5
:wal ked two in e ig ht- plus innings.
Millwood (6-8) surrendered only one hit
"We've go t to go ah ead and finish off the through the first four innings while his team- with a career-high six RBi s. Sammy Sosa hit
•' swee p ," Howard sa id . "We have to pick up as mates built a 6-0 lead .
two homers and Chicago sco red the go-a h ead
Florida starter A.J. Burnett (I-I) gave up SIX run on a bases-loaded walk off Paul Byrd (2. m any game s as we ca n ."

9).
Grace hit a grand slam in t he n inth an d Sosa
capped the stx -ru n innin g w ith hi s 3 I st homer
as Chicago won it s seaso n - hi gh fifth straight.
Philadelphia, whi ch Ills los t fo ur of five, fell
b e hind 4- 0 in the seco nd inning o f a game
delayed three time s by rain .
After a :!9-min u tc de lay 111 the eighth,
pin c h-hitter Brian Hunt e r tied tt at 8 with a
three-run homer off Todd Van Poppe!. Felix
Heredia (6-3) retired Bob by AbrL·u wtth two
run ners on ro e nd the innin g.
Giants 3, Padres 1
Bobby Esulell a and Marvtn Benard hit so lo
hom e rs in th e sixrh to ruin Pad res rookie
Adam Eaton 's perfec t ga m e btd at Qualcomm
Stadium.
Eaton retired the fir st 16 Gtants before
Estalella hom e red with o n e out in th e sixt h.
One our lat e r , Benard hit h1 s ninth homer,
giving the Giants a ·2 - 1 lead. ,
The victory moved San Franc i ~co i nto ti.rst
in th e NL We &gt;r by two perce ntag e points over
Arizona.
Shawn Estes ( 10- 3) a ll owed o n e run Rub e n Rivera '~t 12th hontcr in the first inning
- on four hits in b 2-3 inmn g~.
Eaton (2 -2) all owed three run s o n five hits
in se ven in nings, st ru ck o ur five a nd wa lk L·d
{WO.

Robb Nen go t three outs fti r hi s 24 th save 1n
29 cha n ces.

•llrou-..&amp;oto...Uoo
or a COiftfllant. wrtte:
NASCAR Tills W-

CVoTIMGelto.~

2500 I!. i'I'Mklln Blvd.

Qllltooht, N.C. 280114

On TV
All Time• Ea•t•m

Bengals

:Gooden, Justice pace Yankees to win
Yankees also are in the market for a left field- Damon followed with a go-a head double for
While most of baseball's contenders are er, with interest in Milwaukee's Jeromy Bur- visiting Kansas City.
: shopping for th at fi nal piece before next nitz, Montreal's Randell White and PittsJerry Spradlin (4-2) got the win.
; week's trade deadline, the N ew York Yankees burgh's Wil Cordero. ;
Athletics 6, Mariners 1
; o ne~ agam showed otf some of their midseaPaul O'Neill drove in two runs and Bernie
Tim Hudson bounced back from the worst
; son acquisitions.
Williams tripled and walked twice for the start of his career to aUow one run m 7 1- 3
Dwight Goode n won his third straight start Yankees, who outscored ,Baltimore 27-5 in innings and lead Oakland to the win at Seat:since returning to the World Series champions the series and improved to 7-2 against the tle.
:and David Ju stice drove in two runs as the Orioles this year.
Hudson (11 -3), who allowed nin e run s and
; Yankees capped a three-game sweep of BaltiBaltimore went 1-fot-10 with runners in 12 hits in a 12-3 loss to Anaheim last Friday,
: more with a 4-1 victory Wednesday night.
scoring position and 3-for-32 in the series. gave up seven hits and stru c k out five .
' Gooden (5-3) allowed one run in 5 2-3 The Orioles stranded 28 runners in the three
Ranton Hernandez had a two- run home r
:innings and has a 2.05 ERA in three starts and games, including I 0 in the finale.
and a run-scori ng grounder otf Paul Abbott
:o ne reli ef appearance since being recalled
"We never could get that big hit that would (6-4) as Oakland dosed witltin three games of
' from tht• mino rs earlier this month.
allow us to maintain some momentum ," man- first- place Seattle in the AL West.
"We had no idea what to expect when we ager Mike Hargrove said.
Devil Rays 6, Tigers 2
.; called hun up. We were trying to catch lightSidney Ponson (5-7), who came in with an
Esteban Yan (5- 7) pttched stx solid mnin gs,
; ning in- a bottie;:_Yankee+-managef-:loo -Ter-r~ 8.87 EP..A in July, gave up four runs-and eight retiring the last 16 b:mers ·he f~Tc d , at1d Steve
~sai d . " The more he pitches like he did tonight,
hits in seven innings.
Cox hit a go- ahead two- run homer off Jeff
: the mo re confidence he gets."
Blue Jays 8, Indians 1
Weaver (6-9) for visiting Tampa Bay.
Justice went 2-for-4 with a double at CamDavid Wells pitched a five-hitter to become
Fred McGrilf h1t a two- run single m a
d en Yards. He's batting .333 with four dou- the first 16-game winner in the majors, and three-run seventh that broke the ga me open
' b les, five homers and 17 RB!s in 21 games Brad Fullmer homered, twice for host Toron- for the Devil Rays.
:sin ce joining the Yankees in a trade with to.
Rangers 6, Angels 5
:Cleveland on June 29.
Wells (16-3) struck out ll and pitched his
Frank Catalanotto had a pinch-hit triple on
" H e's swinging the bat really well," Torre league-leading fifth complete game of the the ninth innin g and scored on Rusty Greer's
:said.
season.
fourth hit of the ga me for host Texas.
T he Yankees, boosted by the addttions of
Bartolo Colon (9-8) tied Bob Feller's IndiThe Ran gers rallied to win after John WetJu stice, Gooden, Denny Neagle,Jose Vizcaino ans record by striking out his first six batters , teland (4- 3) bl ew his seventh save in 33
a nd G le11JII en Hill , have won fou r straight and . but gave up a career-high four homers and chances by allowing an RBI single to Scott
: nine o f12 .
allowing seven runs in 5 1-3 innings.
Spiezio m the ninth .
Despite those moves, New Yo rk talked to
Royals 7, White Sox 6
: Phil adelp hia about a trade for Curt Schilling,
Dave McCarty hit a game-tying single off
: who was dt·alt to Arizona on Wednesday. The Keith Foulke in the ninth inning and Johnny
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Larkin injured in Wednesday's loss to Astros
C IN C IN:-J ATI (AP) A
, trade turn ed down. o ne sta nding
ov:Hion :tfter anoth t: r, a stunning
con tract t'Xtcnsion. a dislocated
finger. It wa s qu itt' a homt~ s rand
fur Darr y Lnkut.
Th e Cinun natt Reds captain
&lt;..il"ilocatcd thl· pllikll.:.' fin ger on his
ri g ht hand wln lc maki ng a tumblin~ catc h Wednesday. fo rci ng
him our of a 1 - ~ loss to the
Houston Astros.
Lnrkin popped the fin ge r back
into place o n t he Geld, then left
:tnd got X- rays t hat fo und no

fra cture. l-I e might be able to play
Friday in MontreaL
"Things happened so fast,"
LJrkin said .
Th e sa me could be said of the
Red s' stx-game
homestand ,
whic h e nded for Larkin on one
odd play.
The shortstop ran into second
base man Po key Reese as they
went for Mitch Meluskey's soft
tly to shallow ce nter fi eld in the
fourth inning. Larkin caught the
ball and held o n as he fell awkwardly to the artificial turf. dislo-

eating the finger.
Moises Alou figured the ball
would drop and was running on
the play. After makin g his overthe-shoulder catch, Larkin tossed
the ball to center fielder Ke n
Griffey Jr., who made a relay to
complete a double play at second
base.
"The last thing I remember is
Pokey and Junior yelling. ' H ere,
here.' I said, 'What?' He sat d,
'Throw me the ball.'" Larkm said.
Once the doubl e play was
completed, Larkin stood up and

popp ed the finger back in pla ce.
"It was pointin g m the wron g
direction ," he said. " I pulled on it
and it popped back tn place. I
thought thJt was the end of it, but
that's when the pain started."
Larkin didn "t ackn owle dge an
ovation from th e crowd, an indi catio n he was hurt. Instead, he
stood and looked at hi s' right
hand for a few mom ents after fixing the finger, then walked off the
field slowly accom panied by a
trainer.

from Page 81
battled through that without
missing a snap. I really like that
about him.
"Akili obviously sees the talent
there. He knows Pet er is goin g to
be out th ere on the field with
him , and they have to develop
that relation sh ip. To see it canting
so ea rly is a good th ing."
With restri cted free-agent running back Corey Dillon continuing his holdou t from ca mp, the
bac kfield si tuation also h as
received :.1n inordinate amount of
scru tiny from coac hes.
Cosier said all four runnin g
backs comp etin g for the startin g
JOb - Michael Basnight , Brandon Bennett , Sedrick Shaw and
Cur~tis. Keaton have performed
welL They will get a chance to

Pickens
from Page 81
sign Pickens.
Thigpen has been slow to
recover from ankle surgery in
April and may ntiss most of train ing ca mp. That would leave Kevin
Dyson as the Titar)s' only receiver
with a 50-catch season on his
resume.
Pi ckens caught 57 passes in
1999 in what was essc nttally a

Crew
from Page 81
States as a warmup for the En gli sh season , which starts next
mo nth .
N ewcastl e had a 16- 6 overall

distin gui sh themsdws in the
coming \Vee ks, be ginnin g with
Saturday's scrimmage.
" I th ink they all realize what an
opportun ity this is," he said. " It's
been pretty intense. Just like anythin g else, the competi tio n will
make them .rll better."
Coskt said severa l players.
includin g Bennett who IS
c..:onung ba&lt;..:k from a kn ee lllJUry
that kep t him sidelin ed all of la st
season defensive end John
Cope bnd and cornerback Roosevelt Blac kl)lOn among others.
have been pra cticing only once a
day in order to keep them fresh
and inj ury-free ea rly in camp.
"There's :.1 list of guys we're
keeping out of two- a-day~;" he
said. "But we've got ro g~.·t our
work in. It's a balan cmg act. I'm
nor going lo be easy on them.
We're going to f,"Ct our work u1
- or else."

down year. He left . Ci ncin nat i
holding team records for career
receptton s (S30) and touchd own
ca tches (63).
The Titans u"ught necJ ro cle:u
some cap roo m if they have to
find hel p for the secondary.
becau se
co rnerba ck Do nald
Mit chl'il hurt h1s knee nt pr&gt;cti ce
Tu esday. Receiver C h ris Sa nde rs,
who caugh t onl y 20 pa sses last
~easo n . could be :t c:~ p casualty
sin n~ his -.alary will CO llllt $1.4
millio n again&lt;t th e ca p t his seaso n.

advantJ gc i11 shots ami :1 7 - l e dge
111 shr..HsGu n go al.
Both teatm swit ched goa lk ee pers at th e start of the sec ond half.
Newcastl e use d 18 playe rs, but
did no t play its captoin, in ternati onal star Ala n Shea rer, wh o ts
recover in g from injurie s.

9 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
Craftsman Truck , Powtrstroke 200
8 :30p.m . • Aug . 3 1 ESPN
Winston Cup, Brickyard 400
1 p .m . 1 Aug. 5• ABC
•

•

1. 9o00y L.JI)Ontt, 2 .8:25
2. 01111 J81'fltt. :2,772
! . Dale bnlhan!t. :2.718

-

4. Jotff Burton, 2,62•

l&lt;ewin Harvlcto., 2.532

•

...,... ....

NASCAR
from Page
81

wealt hy tt.&gt;am~; in the spo rt .
On Su nday, at Po co no Internationa l Raceway. Be nso n finished 12th tn the Pennsyl vania
500. beating lu c ra tive en tri es
backed by su c h sponsors as Tide,
M cDonal d's and Kodak .
Somebody shou ld te ll Benso n
to go to rea r of the field w here
he lie lo ngs, take his mobile billboa rd off the TV sc reen because
he has no thing to peddle .
Th.tt llltght not be a p roblem
afte r Aug. S. Inee SJys the Brtckya rd 4 011 NASCA R 's second - btggest rJ ce m tght be
th e e nd for this seaso n .
" We dciimtcly have stretched

-

2000 POINTS STANDINGS
Jetf Green , 3,162

Jnon IWUIJf, 2 ,610

Todd

15. Rust)" WBIIace. 2.557
1. Tony Stew!Wt. 2.5-40
1. 'M\fd Burt011. 2.!5J5
.. Jtfl Gordeln. 2,518
I. M&lt;ID! Martin, 2,487
10. Rielly Rucl(l, 2,468

Bodioe,

2,567

Ron Homad3y, 2.5 12

£n.on

S~r.

Rand~ LaJo~ .

2,471

2.339

Casey~ .

2 .195
OJH!d Green, :2 .189
Tony R!llntt. 2,078

Gret, Bitfle , 2,767

Mike ¥1811108, 2,!574

&gt;W1y Houston. 2,558
Jldl. Sfnp, 2,S05
~rt Busch. 2 .503

• Not1ble: The Brickyard 400
ha s been held six t imes . Gordon
and Jarrett have each won two.

• WM1e: Indianapolis Motor

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Speedway (2.5-mile track)

• Fonn.t 160 laps/400 miles
• Defenctlnc cMmplon: Dale
• Quallfyln&amp; "'"'"'' Jeff
Gordon. Chevrolet, 179.612
mph, Aug . 5, 1999
• Race record; ·Dale Earnhardt, Chevrolet. 155 .206 mph,
Aug. 5 , 1995

• Wh•t: CarQuest Au to Pa1ts

300
• When: 9 p.m., Saturday
• Where: Gateway In ter·
national Raceway. Maotson. 111.
(1. 25·mite track)
• Format: 240 laps/300 miles
• Defendlftl cllamplon : Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

• Quallf)tlna: recOfd: casey
Atwood . Chevrolet. 132. 42 3
mph , J1.1ly 30, 1999
• Race record: Dale Earnhardt Jr.. Chevro le t. 10 4 .566
mph, Oct. 17, 1998
• ·Notabll : No one who has
ever won th is race is in this
year's Field .

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
• What: Powerstroke 200
• When : 8:30p.m .. Aug . 3
• Whefe : lncllanapolis

.. .

Stew Grtuom . 2.282
DeMit Setnr, 2 ,252
Rick CrawfOfd, 2.213
&amp;yan Rerfntt, 2,182

Mike Bliss

&gt;J,l

(IQ

• Weekly rankings by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's ranking i s In parentheses.

1. ( 1) Bobby Labonte

Made the beat of fair car
In term• of consistency,

2. (4) Dale Jarrett
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

(3)
(11)
(9)
(7)
(6)

Dale Earnhardt
Tony Stewart
Rusty Wallace

Jell Gordon ·
JoH Burton
8. ( 5) Mark Martin
9 . (8)

10. (-)

he's a machine
Lost a 1pot to tire shredder
·The pole m•ant nothln&amp;
That second victory, at last
Moved up In points wlth third

Best of the Roush Gang

Ward Burton

First out with blown engine
Alto took a big fall

MattKenoeth

Filth place? Where did he

Raceway Park. Clermont. Ind .
{.6B6·mile track)
200 lats/ 137.2miles
• Defendln&amp; champion : Greg
Biffle
• Quallfrln&amp; rec:ord: Dennis
Setze r. Dodge. 111 .133 mph .
Aug. 5, 1999
• Race record: Greg 8 1ffle ,
Ford . 88 .704 mph, Aug . 5. 1999
• Notable: Mike Skinner tS
the on ly driver whO has won
here more than once . He won
the first two truck races at IRP
from the po le .

•r:onnat:

-

-

( I)

'&lt;

Your
Tum
Ft.

r

Our~

latters

c

Dear NASC AR This Week,
Your tx planat ion of how Ra ybestos Rookie oft he Year po1n1s an:
awarded wa s very interestmg and
e."&lt;lremcly comp lica ted. It .read as if
it had been devised by some one
wh o had helped write the htternal
Reve nue tax code! Apparemly 1he
drivers are s1ui sfied with the sy!i·
tem. but "discretionary point s by a
NASCA R-appoimed panel' ~~
Could you eKplain how the win·
n1ng dollars are passed oul'! Otlen
ti me~ it seems that a dri,er wh o
fmishes sevem h or eig hth ea• ns
111orc tha n the dri ver who comes in
fifth . Do 1hose f igures i nclude
sponsor money'!

3

C"
(I)

'""'

H enry H ec ky

GarreHsvlllt, Ohio

come rrom?

•

~

••••••••••••

Rlll'ldy Tol~ma . 2.279

TOPTEN

-~··

Ut&gt; end up fiiiJ K'f'ri11g tht• qu~ts tiull
abmu t'llnu'ng.~ I'W'ry Yl'Ur Tll t'l 'l t

FROM lAST WEI'K

Urt' /1\V rt'U.WIIS ji1r tit ~ l' ~t'ffli'IIJ

JiJ·

Fim, NASCA Rhas .H'v~
ertJI bonus tmJgro m.~ - lir e ,\'o·t·alled
"Wumer.&gt; Cirde" is th e most wefl·
known and lucra/il'e - that rrwarcl
dri~·rn who hm·c Jnn e well in tllr&gt;
{H.~' I, unrJ W 'f' /It ttl part oftho.\'1! pro·
gm m\, wi th .\ tmrdarJ bon u.wl·
Amnlier portum of the pwse i.~ Itt

t 'rt!fHJn c i e.\'.

WINSTON CUP
LONG POND. Pa . - Rusty
Wallace finally earned a second
victory to go with all those
poles. OdCiy enough. Wallace .
who has qualified first seven
times. did not win
the pole prior to
the Pen nsylvania

500.
Wallace's

~~ji'lvictory came at

the expense of
teamm ate Jeremy
Mayfield , who
was le ading on
the final tap when he had a fl at
tire Off hlS F6fi'r'MayfietCf WOrl
the earl ier race at Pocono
Raceway on June 19.
Jeff Burton finished second.
Jeff Go rdon third . Oal e Jarrett
fourth and M att Kenseth fifth

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
FOUNTAIN. Co lo~ - Point
leader Jeff Green won for th e
fi fth t ime this season In the
NAPA Autocare 250. a race he
and brother David turned into a
familY affair.

Jeff Green beat hiS o111er
brother by . 7 46 of a second
after a battle that took up the
fina l 85 laps around the mile
oval.
Former race winner And~
Santerre finished third, followed
by Hank Parker Jr. and Ptlil
Parsons . Casey Atwood. Hermie
Sad ler, Mike Mclaughlin, Ron
Hornaday and Tim Fedewa
rounded out the top 10.

BROOKLYN, Mich.- Five was
also the ma~ number for Gre&amp;
.Biffle. who wo n his fifth race of
th e truck season-and defen ded
his tit le in the Mi chigan 200 .
Biffle won •by 1.324 seco nds
over rookie Kurt Busch to give
Roush Racing . and Ford. a 1· 2
finish at Michigan Speedway.
Biffle led all but 10 of the
l DO la ps and set a race record.
Mike Wallace, who is chasing
Bi ffle for the Truck series titl e,
f1nished third. in another Ford,
Out fell 193 POints behind
Bi ffle in the seas~m sta ndings
witll seven race s left.

•--· ---- f£1100f THE WUK

thr fiJr m of cmuingenq• awards
hfJsrU on o.ffidal NASCAR
~ {:1 0/NASCAR Thl l

c - - . 111M currontly
By Monti Dutton
NASCAR This Week

a.

Mike Bliss. once highly successful openwheel·drlver and winner'ln the-craftsman -~
Truck Series, now competes as a rookie in
Winston Cup.
Bliss began the season driving the No. 14
Pontiac owned by A.J . Foyt but had trouble
making starting fields with the first-year
team . He later reunited with Barr y Dodson,
the 11eteran crew chief who had d1rected his
efforts In the trucks.
The 1993 United States Auto Club Silver
Crown champion, Bliss went on to f inish In
the top 10 In SuperTruck points In all five
years In which he competed In that series.
He won seven races and collected 15 poles.
Only Bliss and Ron Homaday won at least
one race In each of the series ' first fo ur
seasons.
Hometown: Milwaukie , Ore.

Wllo' S&lt;Je

Jeff Gordon fin ished th ird In the Pennsylvania 500, despite
minor sheet·metal damage that was the resul t or a bumping
Incident with rookie Bliss.
'What happened , I went in there and had new tires on ai"ld
the :27 (Bliss) drifted up the track, and I went underneath
him . I tnougflt he was &amp;iving me room. and then he came
back down, and we hit. and he spun . We were pretty
fortunate,' Gordon s aid .
Bliss saw It different ly.
•1 was trying to make a move on the 9 car (Stacey
Compton), and 1got bumped In the left rea r~ the 24 car
(Gordon),' Bliss said.
·
NASCAR Thl1 W1ek'1 Monte Dutton &amp;1YII 1\11 opinion:
' Lost in tne translation here, of course , Is the ract that the
Incident was more damaging to Bl iss, who finished 24th,
than it was to Gordon."

'olf':t"'
.-..-In-...
Cup raclnllln.tlle No.14 .
....._the No. 27 Pftzer/Vt.opa........,.,
.

- a . , l e f t , - hlo

Ali,35

Jeff Gordon vs. Mike Bliss

•••••••••••••
Who's Hot....

Who's Not

• HOT: Defending Win ston Cup
champion Dale Jarrett. who's
now up to second in the point
standings.
• NOT: Five straight finishes
worse than 30th for Bill Elliott
He was 32nd in Sunday'S
Penn sylvania 500.

Car: No. 27 Pflzer/ Viagra Pontiac Grand
Prix. owned by Jack Birmingha m
Career 1taU1tlc:t: 16 starts, 0 wins. 0 top.
five fin ishes. 0 to~10 fini shes. 0 poles,
mo'R!' tfiaii S500.000"Tilwinnings
Firsts: Start !Sept. 27. 1998, at Manins·
ville), pole (none), win (none)
What are your upectatlon1 for the 1econd
half ot the tn1on? · we know we need to
improve more . We have gotten bet,er. It might
be hard for others to see what kind of
progress we have made . but those of us on
the Eel River Racing (Birmingham's) team
know we have Improved."
Dot I It help to vl1lt to many of the track•
for 1 aecond Umt? ~ That shOuld really help.
Some track s In the first half were new to me,
and I had to try to get used to the different
feel of tne weight an d power of these Winston
Cup cars. plus get some l aps under my belt.
Now, whe n we go back , we'll have some good
notes on setups - both for qualifying and the
races - to rely on, and that , In itself, shOuld
be a re al DOSitllle for us:

1. Who was the on ly dri ver to wm !he
Daytona 500 without cha ngin·g tires ?
2 . How tong was the road cou rse at Ri verside. Ca li f.?
3 . wttat Indianapoli s 500 winner made hi S Wmston Cup
debut in the first Brickyard 400 ?
·uE'MIIns ~uuea ·E
:sa 11w (';g·z: ·z: :£ 961 w punl Awt '"t
SH3MSNY

••••••••••••
IXJji(.].~l,:!l· j :t~: I''if~
• In tho 1984 Wlnoton
500 ol Talladega

-

olllclallead chancoo.
Many other tlmee. th•
lead chan&amp;od hando
several tlm11 wlthln a

oln&amp;lelap.

Gont.

.\'fJOII ·

surJ. if reams tJo not c·hoo.H' w plpce
tlroJe vxm.mr.\· 'decal.~ rm lhoi!l' l..(lrJ,
th e~· dn 1101 get rh&lt;Jt purtirm f!f the
JIIII'St' II/OII It)'

tfiUf 1.1" {IU _\/t'IJ foy tfJIJ\ 1:'
fKtmm/.1 fu r why

·' pon.w r.1. Thix

t'urn i'lg.\- Ul 'l ' 1101 ul\l'U)'.\' Juglwr fo r
tlw higher-flni.Wring tea ms

X
Dear ~A SC AR This·Week, ·
I would like l o know if you ha"'e
aoy records of. say, !he lop·fii-'Cdrivers wilh 1he mos1 feature wins,
like Dick Trickle, ha s mure than
l ,000 win s. Jusl toia l wins. no m3 tter what type of track or cnr.
John Topolksy
Math~ r.

By Monte Dutton
NA SC AR This Week
Tim Beverley ha ~ :;old his Wins1on
Cu p leil m . Tyler Jl•! Motor.&gt;ptJr1 s. to
th~

n val MB2 team, effecli\'e ly giv ·

ing Nr\S C AR 1ls latest 1nuii1 Car
lcam.
Johnny Benson drives the No. 10
Pontiac r reviou5ly owned by Beve rle~. lie will Join Ken Schrader, who
drh·es MB2's No. 36 l'on1inc . The
team is owned by Geo rg i&lt;~ busin ess·
men Nelson Bowers, Tom Beard nnd
Read Mon on
" MoSI of 111)' su c~:c H in life co mes
fro m t e furbt s hin~ prc·owncd air·
planes ar1d se lling them," noted
BcH:rley, whose busmcss 15 hca dquan ercd 1n Tyler. Texas "The: way I

Pa.

HN't//(.\'4' dri l'f!rl' CO nlfh.'ll' in Xo
many difft'rt~/11 kind.{ of, ·a,..\ umlo11
WJ many dif!i.•t-ent c·in:uiiJ. it 1.1· n&lt;.•.t t

lo impm.1·iflle to of!icwf~l' .kx·llml'nt
Jfi• klllll\' nfno

.~lron- rmck vir·torir•-~ .
.1·11d1

.wmrrli11gs.

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

-

• For )'C ars. Rus ty Wal lace has
given names to hi s more
successfu l ca1s.
The Ford Taurus he drove to
victory Sun day at Pocono
Ra ceway does not , however,
h&lt;lve a name. Wallace sa1d
after th e race he wanted fans
to submit Ideas to the driver's
publiC re lations represe ntative.
Torn Roberts .
If you wouiO like to submit
a name. wr1te Robe rts at : 00.
So~ 890. 2222 Taylor 51.,
Guntersv1 11e . AL 35976: ca ll
(256 ) 582·3711 ; l aK (256}
582·3788; or e-mail at
trpm:..ne tcom .com .

'

SIIH£
Jdhlu.u

- - AROUNDTHEGARAGf ~

X CREW Of THE WEEK
Benson, Schrader become teammates in MB2 Pontiacs

Superepeedway In
northeast Alabama,
13 drivers twapped the
lead a record 75 tlm11,
and those were only the

what a good two-car tea m ca n,"
said Schrader. who is 17th in th e
standings .. "When yo u loo k
aro und out there at team s, that
one has really run good .
" Th ey've had eno ugh adversity to dea l with this year and still
perfor med good."
Frye says everybody o n both
team s is exci ted about the deaL
" It's almov like Mom and
Dad bringing home a· new baby
brother," he said .
How much farther the baby
crawls thi s year is unkn own . But
it's certain ly expected to be
walking o n its own in another
seven months, wh en th e 2001
seaso n opens at Daytona .
Maybe then, Ben so n will have
a drafting partn~ r. to help out
when the othe rs lin e up against
him.

at: Bri ckyard 400
hen: 1 p.m., Aug. 5

•

Jarrett

Cale Y•r1)oroua:h
won that race by two
car len,cths over Harry

a mckel farther than most peo- in this case one Benson says is a
ple cou ld ," he said. " lndianap o- la rge part of the reason for his
lts. it's real possibilitY that co uld success. But he's not worriod .
be o ur last race.
"We can afford to keep the
" For tim ra ce team to survive team together and we ca n afford
the rest of this year and for us to to build race cars," he said. "We
continue in the capacity we are JUSt can't afford to keep going to
with the people we've got, we races."
The purchase by MB 2 is cerdesperately need sponsorship.''
But I nee and Benson, both t&gt;f tain to improve the outlook for
whom are signed through 2003, Schrader and Benson, a nonfeel go od about the future winner in 146 starts over five
be cause their Tyler Jet Motor- Winston Cilp seasons.
They will be able to sha re
spo rts team was sold last week
to MB2 Motorsports, which informatio n, a great asset in a
fields M&amp;M's-backed Pontiacs sport where no single - car team
for Ken Schrader.
has won since 1998.
Schrader, who has four ca reer
Jay Frye, general manager for
MB 2, says sponsou,hip is in victories, but none since 1991 , is
place :or 2001, but won't elabo- excite d about having Benson as
rate.
a teammate.
A cessation of operations usu" I think as a single -car team it
ally means defection of a crew, is a ton hard er tp accomplish

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

• lltloch Grand Notional, CarQueot 300

•

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•

look ~• my e:-tpertc:ncc tn NASCAR
IS thai I did ju~ l whal l .do in lh~· ll ir·
plane business. I bough! a 1eam
whose fulure looked bleaL: m I 99B
and turned il into 'a IOp- 15 team . llul
tile grind of r a c m ~:: seven days A
wc:eL: , 51 wec L:s a y..:ar. look ti s loll
" MB2 is a fine tc:rm. and J wish
both cars a lot of success m th e
fulu rt . I'm oot ]raving NASCAR;
J 'm just ta kin g a rest. I'll see }'OU at
th e race Irack "

X
PETTY SH UI-'I·'I.t:: Oe~:iumtl g
with. Ihe Somh em ~00 a1 D:~rlm g mn
on Se pt . J, Steve Grissom will rcp larc
Kyle Pe tty as d nver of !he Winston
CupSencs No. 44 Puntll&amp;C. while Pel t)'
cn mplclcs. the season m I he Bu ~~: h

Series. dri,ing thc Nn. 45C'hevrnkt10r · lite n:n·nl l nd1ttnapol 1' t c~ t ~css ton s.
rncrlydriw.:n by Pc11 y 's late !-0.!0, Ad:trn
man y Cup dri\'ers \\'Cr\' bricfctlorJ
Kyle Pe tty wtlllh~· n r.:: tmn to Cup 11ha1 wlb ru lkd th e IJANS I head
In 200 1. whl~n th e Nn -l :' Dndt:c
;~n;] ner h. ' li PI &gt;~)rl ) Safl·ly DC\ ICC
De,rgned by an engm~ring p ro.
debut s Wtlh ~po n ~or~htr from Spru11
al l he Da y l o n~ 500.
rc-ssor al j\.llelllgUn Stotc Uruver.111y.
If spo n su~h i p l·an h~ ~tcurc&lt;l Petl y the dc~l l'C was unpru\cd aud re,iscd
Emerprise s w1 ll fi eld lhree Dodg¢s 1n response 10 the recent NASCAR
Cl'ashcs that took the lt ves of Petty
nc:~- 1 year, although Gnhom I!. ill not
and Kenn y lrwm
nec~:ss.ariiy d rwe I he No. 44 not yea r
Kenny Walla,·c ordaed a HANS
Presumably. it depend~ on how he
fa res fur the n:m.111xlcr of th e tur- l&gt;c \'ICC t\1r h1s N o.~~ Chc\ rokl
rent year. 11hen Gn~~o111 '&gt;'til lit&gt; !lou·
X
Ole dul~· m the (up ~~·rte~ a ~ well a ~
Ihe Crathm;m Trud. 'irrte&lt;;, 11hcrt·
Tilt: I'RUOt: '"'ITt 'Ol RSt:: Sttll
Gri ssom dm cs Pclty Fmcrprt,&lt;· ~· ~u!l'c nn ~ frorn a frill'ltm:d b.mc m hr s
leg. Tcrr:- Ll11'lont~ opt~d to lta.,e R1 ch
c .\ t ~ttn~ l)odgc entry
Bull e un ha~ nt i\te[1nn In pr~ri iCC.
X
qu:1 1if~ 3nd reird'.Jm c 111 1he Penn.
S,\H·: T \ . t'O\"it i OI S: i'unng ~yhillli"J 500 BK· l k frntshcd lllh

• The first race at
Pocono this seaton, June
19, was an embarratSing
• Sunday ror Rusty
Wallace, who probably
would "ave won had he
not Instructed his pit
crew to chance all four
tlre1 wllen moat other
driver~ were chanclnc
two. This time around,
Wallace and crew chief
Robin Pemberton did the
rl&amp;ht thin&amp;, I.e., chan&amp;ln&amp;;
two. And wit an taammate Jeremy Mayfield
faltered (due to, ye1 , a
flat tire) , Wallace was
then to prove that things
do even out .

W'IWW.

See us for Your Stih!•
Power Tools &amp;
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Ridenour
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St. Rl. 248
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(740) 992-2196

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�Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Thursday July 27, 2000
540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

FREE
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Let Us Ass s Yo u In You New
M g Home Ca Fo P e App o at
1 888-736-3332

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Cue No OOCV035
Judge Fred W Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LaSalle National Bank as
Trustee under the Pooling

80 DAYS 1

0902

and Servicing Agreement

dated 6-1 99 Series 1999 2
c o Superior Bonk FSB
plaintiff vo Roy Stover at
al dolendll!tO
Roy Stover whose teat
known addreu Ia 461
Georgeo
Creek Rd
Gallipolis OH 45631 and
the
unknown
helra

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Services
New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Mon h F ee
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New 3 BA 2 SA Do b ew Cle
$300 Down $245 Pe Mon h

F ee De ..-ery

davlaeea
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Th s newspape w no
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aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med tha a dwe ngs
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opportun y bas s

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
MENTAL RETAROAT ON AND
DEVELOPMENTAL
0 SABIL TES
Poss b e pa t me opemfJ_g to a
P eschoo lost uc o a C'a e on

A.I..L Giveaway Adl Mutt
Be Paid n Advlnee

NEW BR AND NAME COM PUT
ER S
Amos E e yone Ap
p o eo w h $0 Down
ow
Moo h v Pay me s
800 6 7

National Bank ae Trustee

under the Pooling Jnd
Servicing Agraemenl dated
6 1 99 Serleo 1999 2 co
Superior Bank FSB flied Ito
Complaint In tho Common
Pleao Court and lhe object
and demand lor rellel ol
which pleading Ia to
foreclose the lien of
plaintiff&amp;
morlgage
recorded upon the lollowlng
described real oslote lo wit
Property Address
206
Bunemut Avenue Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 and baing more
particularly deacrlbad In
plalntlffo
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage Book
90 page 424 ollhls County
Recorder a OHice
All of the above named
defendants are required to
answer within twenty eight
(28) days alter last
publication which shall be
published once a week lor
six consecutive weeks or
they may be denied a
hearing In this case
LERNER
SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
Attorneys for Plaintiff
PO Box5480
Cincinnati OH 45201 5480
(513) 241 3100
(7) 27 (8) 3 10 17 24 31
6TC

EMPL OYMENT
SERVI CES

School to worioi on ou Spec a Ed
uca on P eschoo C ass Th ee
3) days a week Mus ha\le cu
ani Teach ng Ce
ca on o l
eenae om the on o Depa men
ot Educa lon and ha\le o be w
ng o obta n Ea y Educa on o
Hanci capped va da on Sene e
aume by Ju y 28 to
Ca leton Schoo
310CarleonS ee
PO BOIC 307
Sy aeuse OH 45779

Fa m l'l Me gs County Bed o d
Twp Gas mob e home w n aCid
on a Cl bu d on
0 ac es m
pond a ge ba
se e a ou
bu d ngs and oo shed Com me

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gas Ask ng $4
992 6793

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Bag 0 G Co hes Name 8 and
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$ 0 Sesame St ee Ho de W h
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446 0645

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- - Sa1urdly a-Monday i.
4 30 p m Thul'lday
DHdf nea tubjecr ro c,.ng•

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FDA THE GOVERN
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Tappa H E c ency 90
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a lavation of homes above

flood level Bide will ba
opened al regular Township
Meellng held at Salisbury
Township
Hall
In

m ates were talkmg about
trades
Who knows where I m
pack ng to sa~d Steve Parn s

from Page Bl

(5 13)

WI en the Red s get around
to comp1l ng the1r 2000 sea
1!~6
son tn revtew gu1de Parn s
The club! ouse va upbeat ought to be cons dered for the
but r served after the Amos cover He has ep 1tom1zed th e
ov rca 1 e th ee run ddic ts 1 1 R e ds fall from grace
Parr s who had never won
eac h of the first two games
After co plct ng thet tr lo
more than s x games 1n h s
career went 11 4 as the Reds
g) ot co mebac ks they turned
won 96 last seaso n
up the CD playe a1 d soaked
It In
Thmgs have evened up We ha;en t had th s all the nght hander IS t1ed With
Houston s Jose Luna for most
year Sa! d sta rt er Sc o tt Elar
ton {10 4) who wen t 7 ? 3 losses 111 the maJors
n 1 ngs fo r the w1n Its 1 ce
The p tchmg staff 11 a mess
to see
leavmg the Reds w th a los ng
fh e rc was no nusJ c over n record (50 51) and I ttle hope
as July wmds down
t! e Reds lubhou se Instead
We talk abou t that all the
pl ayers
wondere d
aloud
whctl er rtore trad~s are ahead tune The name of the gan e IS
now th at the club ha s fallen p tch1ng manager Jack McK
eon sa1d
vay be h nd a g am
After the bullpen blew
The Reds opened the ser es
thre
e run leads 111 each of the
5 ga 1 es beh 1 d St LouiS 1 1
first two games Parr s le t a
the NL Central With the Car
d 1 ah off Monday Cu c11nat1 two ru 1 lead shp away n the
co ld have moved to 4 I 2 SIXth n n ng Wednesday
Lugo led off With a hom er
back t s closest poSit on
and
Bagwell h1t hiS 28th h1gh
s nc June 15
I! ste ad the Reds blew a off the nght field foul screen
I ad and lo st n the 1Oth tv.o p tches later
Bagwell ha s home red m five
11111 g
s v tch g th e 1 selves
of h s last s x ga nes
1 lto reverse
On e out later Alou h t h11
0 ce they sweep e ded
they tr a1led th e Card 1n als by 7 16th homer and on ly the 33rd
to reach th e upper deck 111 the
I ? ga 1 e agam
srad1 1111 s 30 year htStorv
I! stead of gett 1 g o vat ons
Alou watched to see where
La k11 vas nursmg
d lo ca t
d finger In stead of talkmg It would land
It was on ly the second
a bo t t the playoffs h1&lt; tea n

h 1r fi rst ser cs sweep 1n
C 1 JJ nat1 s nc~ September

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LEG AL NOTICE
ATTENTION
CONTRACTORS
Salisbury Township will
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Hazard Mlllgallon Pro]ectlo
ba done In Salisbury
Township Work will cons st

FINANCIAL

l l i Lott &amp; Found Ada Must

upper deck homer of my
career so I had to enJOY tt
Alou sa d
I also htt one at
Shea Stadtum off (Dw ght)
Gooden
Elarton and Octavto Dote!
made t stand up Elarton
unproved to 4 1 n July by
I oldmg the Reds to five htts
n 7 ? 3 nmngs
Dote! got Ken Gnffey Jr to
fly out With two aboard n the
e1ghth then fimshed for hiS
seco nd save
Th sIS the k nd of team we
have Dote! sa d e nJoytng the
mus c that was hed over the
clubhouse
The last three
years we used to do that a
lot
Reds Notes The start was
delayed for 37 minutes by
ra n
The Astr os hadn t
swept any senes 1nce tak ng
three from the Cubs last Sept
10 P
Dote! hasn t allowed
a run 111 e ght relief appear
ances covenng 9 I 3 nn ngs
th1s season
Larkm dts!ocat
ed the ptnkle finger on hiS
r ght hand vh le mak ng a
tun bl ng catc h n the fourth
He came o t of the game but
sn t expe c ted to rr1 ss a 1y
nore t me
Sean Casey 1111
gled 111 the n nth extend mg
h s career best h tt ng streak
to 18 games
Mark Wohlers
p tched two scoreless tnn ngs
Wohlers
om ng back from
reconstruct iVe elbow surgery
last Jul y ha&lt; pitched SIX sco re
less 111111 gs n three appear

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August 3 at 6 00 p m For
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Nat onal Bank
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Public Notice

Lost and Found

2 days before the 1d

helre ol Roy Stover all
whose residences are
unknown and cannot by
reasonable diligence be
ascertained will taka notice
that on the 31st day of
March
2000
LaSalle

SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS?
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Repa ed New &amp; Aebu
n S ock
Ca Aon Evans 800 537 9528

P ob ems OK

Tu ned Down Be o e Aees ab sh
You c e&lt;l
800 659 0359

3476 E 330

1 to run Sund.-y &amp; Mondly
edition 2 00 p m Frld1y
SENTINEL DEAQL!Nii
00 p m ttle dey before the •d
1 to run Sund.-y &amp; Mondly
ectltlon 1 00 p m Frldly
REG STER DEADLINE
2 daya before the 1d
ttorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday ed tlon
4 30 p m Thul'lday
O.d net IUb}«t It) C,.~
due to holld.y•

40

C ed

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Get yours
today
The Oa1ly

0 Down Pas

328 85 0 Ex 29

ONS FOR MAJOR SHOPP NG

Be lo e Hea th Happ neas Of
Success
900 263 2518 0
888 974 6447 $3 99/M n 8

GY We F nance

Pay me s To 65 '¥.
CASH N
CENTIVE OFFER Ca
800

GET PA 0 TO MODEL FASH

Wo d Reknown Psych c l. ne
Ca N.ow Anel Le Ou Psych cs
Answe You Cues ons wnetha

R&amp;Ds Used Fu ntu e &amp; Ap
p ances G eat Select on P ced
Come And 8 own
To Se
Co e Of Rou e 7 &amp; Add son
P ke We Buy Fu n lu e 740

800-29 0098

6308

BUT

FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
App ca o W Se ce Reduce

Pomeroy D1 ly Senllne All
Ylrd SIIH Mu1t h Plld In Ad'f'IRCI Dtldl nt 1 OOpm Ull
day b•tore 11'11 ld Ia to run
Sunday • Mond1y edition
1 OOpm Fr d1y Alk about how
you cen get 1 FREE yard 11 t
algn

ALL Announcement Ad1 Mutt
Be Pa d n Adv1nce
TRIBUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the dly before the ad

CRED T PROBLEMS? CA L THE
CRED T EXPERTS l CENSEO
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO r BANKRUPTCY

GOOD CREDIT
BADCREDT
NO CREDIT!

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Household
Goods

WANT A COMPUT ER

NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

7 Davs 1
Yes One Week'
4 Lme Ad - 7 Ttmes

9/14/189)- 7/27/1991
&amp;idly .Missed 'DH

Chtldren,
Srandchtldren &amp;

C a sm.;~n Tab e Saw C u s up
2 Yea s o d Ha d y l.Jsed
4
$BOO
740 379 2464
o
740 446 4267

Jrt£nds

::ru~!.' _3!•_11.!.1!. ~II! ~'.'!~~r•1

---

~O_!IP~-:!

One Letter Per Box Allow Box lor Space

Words

MERCHANDISE

51 o
GALLJPOUS QAII.'f TRIBUNE
A.1..L V•rd S1le1 Muet
Be Pa d n Advance
PEACLINE 2 OOpm

o un

Sunday &amp; Monday

edton 200pm F fW.J
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALES GNI

WORK FROM HOME

Own A

Compu e ? n ~ M
Ma ke ng
Oppo un Ty $500 S6 000 m h

PTIFT

www you pc2wo k com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No E~pe ence Pa Cl
Tan ng G ea Be ne s Ca 7
Cays 800 429 3660 E.: 566

IFIEDS

NCOME

Mea ca B e 1 Needed Fu
Tan ng P ov CleU Home Com
p u t AIQu td To F le 800
772 5933 Ex •2005

OPB\1 FOR
70~1

•

Home
Improvements

illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll
:Name___________________________________________________

1 Phone

6
,Return Coupon To FREE BEE
Da1ly Sentmel
lll Court St Pomeroy, OH

S a
You B s P.SS Today
P me Shopo ng Ce e Soa e
A a ao e A A o dab e A a e
Sp ng va ey P aza Ca 740 446

0 0

220 Money to Loan
CASH
OW$ F om
Wea y Fam es Un oad ng M
ons 0 Do a s To He p M n m 2e
he Ta es v e mmeel a e y
W na a s 84 A SECOND oW E
• 350 NEV YORio( NEW YORK
00

Ph~, g.~ (? ~cv ,~·-~! ~5_

SF RE E

EARN EXCELLoNT

810

IAddress____________~------------~----------------1 City State Z1p _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

he dey be o • the 1d
1

Household
Goods

''The Bu! Buzz
sag e

~

•No Cancellations
•No Abbrev 1at1ons Pl ease
•Cuslomer Can Renew Free

~~ {7~9)_9_9~~·-1~~

In Melgs-Galha-Mason"

�Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Thursday July 27, 2000
540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

FREE
YARD SALE
SIGN

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQU PMENT

with ad!

NSTALLEO

f You Don Ca Us We Bo h
Lose Fee Es ma es 740 446

70

ANNOUNCEM ENT S

005

510

Yard Salt

Galli poll•

Personals

&amp;VIcinity

6JJ. PltiONII Adl Muat
BoP•kllnAdwonco
TR BUNE QE&amp;QLINE 2:00pm

... day bofol'ltlle ...

Is to un Sundlry I Monclev

150

ed t on 2 00 p m Frldoy

Schools
Instruction

SENTINEL DE•QUNE
1 00 p m lbo day bolol'l tht ICI
1 to run Sundey l Mof'tdeW
edlllon 1 00 p m Frlday
REG STER DEAQUNE
2 dlyl belote the ld

Ju~

ltoNnby430pm

28 &amp; 29 8 00-5 00 5110
on Rd Off State Route 325

AAA RAT NG 90

RIO Grande

888 8

S.turdey &amp; Mondty edttlon
4 30 p m Thursday
Oeadf tiel IUbject to c:Mng•

AW SU TS

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

d1.1t to hoHWy..

230

NE'\'WORK Send Pho o WISH
Dept A) I 60 Oak Rd Norry Pa
17857 0
Hr)

1 360 6 3

099

24

GOV T POSTA L JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hou Fu Bene! s No E~e
pe anee Requ ed Fee App ca
on And Exam nlo mat on 888
728 9083 E~e ens on 70
7

AM 7PM CST)

30 Announcements
B

530

Antiques
Public Notice

Let Us Ass s Yo u In You New
M g Home Ca Fo P e App o at
1 888-736-3332

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Cue No OOCV035
Judge Fred W Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LaSalle National Bank as
Trustee under the Pooling

80 DAYS 1

0902

and Servicing Agreement

dated 6-1 99 Series 1999 2
c o Superior Bonk FSB
plaintiff vo Roy Stover at
al dolendll!tO
Roy Stover whose teat
known addreu Ia 461
Georgeo
Creek Rd
Gallipolis OH 45631 and
the
unknown
helra

Professional
Services
New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Mon h F ee
A &amp; SM.
888 928 3426

AJ..L Wanted To Do Ada Mus
Be Paid n Advance
TR BUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p m
he dey before the ad
is to un Sunday &amp; Monday
edl on 200pm F day
SENT NEL QEAQLINE
t 00 p m the day be o ethead
1 to un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 100pm Frday
REGISTER DEADLINE
2 days be

o e the ad

1 o unby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday
Deadl nes subject to chllnge
due to ho days

ed P hO og a

New 3 BA 2 SA Do b ew Cle
$300 Down $245 Pe Mon h

F ee De ..-ery

davlaeea
legateea
executora administrators
spouses and aulgna and
the unknown guardlana of
minor and or Incompetent

888 928 3426

28x52 Doub eW de $500 Down
Take o e paymen s 800 69
67

TURN EO DOWN ON

888 S82 334S

a98
Th s newspape w no
know ng y a.ccep
ad11ert sements o ea esta e
whch s n\l o atonof he
aw Ou eade s a e he eby
n o med tha a dwe ngs
ad ert sed n h s newspape
a e ava abe on an equa
opportun y bas s

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
MENTAL RETAROAT ON AND
DEVELOPMENTAL
0 SABIL TES
Poss b e pa t me opemfJ_g to a
P eschoo lost uc o a C'a e on

A.I..L Giveaway Adl Mutt
Be Paid n Advlnee

NEW BR AND NAME COM PUT
ER S
Amos E e yone Ap
p o eo w h $0 Down
ow
Moo h v Pay me s
800 6 7

National Bank ae Trustee

under the Pooling Jnd
Servicing Agraemenl dated
6 1 99 Serleo 1999 2 co
Superior Bank FSB flied Ito
Complaint In tho Common
Pleao Court and lhe object
and demand lor rellel ol
which pleading Ia to
foreclose the lien of
plaintiff&amp;
morlgage
recorded upon the lollowlng
described real oslote lo wit
Property Address
206
Bunemut Avenue Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 and baing more
particularly deacrlbad In
plalntlffo
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage Book
90 page 424 ollhls County
Recorder a OHice
All of the above named
defendants are required to
answer within twenty eight
(28) days alter last
publication which shall be
published once a week lor
six consecutive weeks or
they may be denied a
hearing In this case
LERNER
SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
Attorneys for Plaintiff
PO Box5480
Cincinnati OH 45201 5480
(513) 241 3100
(7) 27 (8) 3 10 17 24 31
6TC

EMPL OYMENT
SERVI CES

School to worioi on ou Spec a Ed
uca on P eschoo C ass Th ee
3) days a week Mus ha\le cu
ani Teach ng Ce
ca on o l
eenae om the on o Depa men
ot Educa lon and ha\le o be w
ng o obta n Ea y Educa on o
Hanci capped va da on Sene e
aume by Ju y 28 to
Ca leton Schoo
310CarleonS ee
PO BOIC 307
Sy aeuse OH 45779

Fa m l'l Me gs County Bed o d
Twp Gas mob e home w n aCid
on a Cl bu d on
0 ac es m
pond a ge ba
se e a ou
bu d ngs and oo shed Com me

ca

wa e

8 AEC

gas Ask ng $4
992 6793

and FA EE
500 Ca
40

340 Business and
BUildingS

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

REAL ESTATE

Bag 0 G Co hes Name 8 and
S zes 0 2 2 2 L ke New
$ 0 Sesame St ee Ho de W h
~ _G ha ace il New $:JO 740
446 0645

0

s to un by 4 30 p ~;;.,.,.-~l~l!.\l!~rlf!
- - Sa1urdly a-Monday i.
4 30 p m Thul'lday
DHdf nea tubjecr ro c,.ng•

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FDA THE GOVERN
MENT FAOM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPER ENCE RE
OU REO 1100 757-0753

Tappa H E c ency 90
Ga
a e s 2 See
Fu na ce!&gt; 0 f
He a Pump &amp; A C o nd o n ng

Sys em
Benne

800 872 5q

':! 6

of

ea Wa a

a g&amp;

Coo

6

g

www o b com ben

a lavation of homes above

flood level Bide will ba
opened al regular Township
Meellng held at Salisbury
Township
Hall
In

m ates were talkmg about
trades
Who knows where I m
pack ng to sa~d Steve Parn s

from Page Bl

(5 13)

WI en the Red s get around
to comp1l ng the1r 2000 sea
1!~6
son tn revtew gu1de Parn s
The club! ouse va upbeat ought to be cons dered for the
but r served after the Amos cover He has ep 1tom1zed th e
ov rca 1 e th ee run ddic ts 1 1 R e ds fall from grace
Parr s who had never won
eac h of the first two games
After co plct ng thet tr lo
more than s x games 1n h s
career went 11 4 as the Reds
g) ot co mebac ks they turned
won 96 last seaso n
up the CD playe a1 d soaked
It In
Thmgs have evened up We ha;en t had th s all the nght hander IS t1ed With
Houston s Jose Luna for most
year Sa! d sta rt er Sc o tt Elar
ton {10 4) who wen t 7 ? 3 losses 111 the maJors
n 1 ngs fo r the w1n Its 1 ce
The p tchmg staff 11 a mess
to see
leavmg the Reds w th a los ng
fh e rc was no nusJ c over n record (50 51) and I ttle hope
as July wmds down
t! e Reds lubhou se Instead
We talk abou t that all the
pl ayers
wondere d
aloud
whctl er rtore trad~s are ahead tune The name of the gan e IS
now th at the club ha s fallen p tch1ng manager Jack McK
eon sa1d
vay be h nd a g am
After the bullpen blew
The Reds opened the ser es
thre
e run leads 111 each of the
5 ga 1 es beh 1 d St LouiS 1 1
first two games Parr s le t a
the NL Central With the Car
d 1 ah off Monday Cu c11nat1 two ru 1 lead shp away n the
co ld have moved to 4 I 2 SIXth n n ng Wednesday
Lugo led off With a hom er
back t s closest poSit on
and
Bagwell h1t hiS 28th h1gh
s nc June 15
I! ste ad the Reds blew a off the nght field foul screen
I ad and lo st n the 1Oth tv.o p tches later
Bagwell ha s home red m five
11111 g
s v tch g th e 1 selves
of h s last s x ga nes
1 lto reverse
On e out later Alou h t h11
0 ce they sweep e ded
they tr a1led th e Card 1n als by 7 16th homer and on ly the 33rd
to reach th e upper deck 111 the
I ? ga 1 e agam
srad1 1111 s 30 year htStorv
I! stead of gett 1 g o vat ons
Alou watched to see where
La k11 vas nursmg
d lo ca t
d finger In stead of talkmg It would land
It was on ly the second
a bo t t the playoffs h1&lt; tea n

h 1r fi rst ser cs sweep 1n
C 1 JJ nat1 s nc~ September

Our Classified
Advertisements Reach
Over 96,000 People
Every Day.

To Place Your
Classified Ad

DGIIY

740·992·2155

LEG AL NOTICE
ATTENTION
CONTRACTORS
Salisbury Township will
be taking sealed blda on
Hazard Mlllgallon Pro]ectlo
ba done In Salisbury
Township Work will cons st

FINANCIAL

l l i Lott &amp; Found Ada Must

upper deck homer of my
career so I had to enJOY tt
Alou sa d
I also htt one at
Shea Stadtum off (Dw ght)
Gooden
Elarton and Octavto Dote!
made t stand up Elarton
unproved to 4 1 n July by
I oldmg the Reds to five htts
n 7 ? 3 nmngs
Dote! got Ken Gnffey Jr to
fly out With two aboard n the
e1ghth then fimshed for hiS
seco nd save
Th sIS the k nd of team we
have Dote! sa d e nJoytng the
mus c that was hed over the
clubhouse
The last three
years we used to do that a
lot
Reds Notes The start was
delayed for 37 minutes by
ra n
The Astr os hadn t
swept any senes 1nce tak ng
three from the Cubs last Sept
10 P
Dote! hasn t allowed
a run 111 e ght relief appear
ances covenng 9 I 3 nn ngs
th1s season
Larkm dts!ocat
ed the ptnkle finger on hiS
r ght hand vh le mak ng a
tun bl ng catc h n the fourth
He came o t of the game but
sn t expe c ted to rr1 ss a 1y
nore t me
Sean Casey 1111
gled 111 the n nth extend mg
h s career best h tt ng streak
to 18 games
Mark Wohlers
p tched two scoreless tnn ngs
Wohlers
om ng back from
reconstruct iVe elbow surgery
last Jul y ha&lt; pitched SIX sco re
less 111111 gs n three appear

anccs

Rt. 7 &amp; Rac1ne
P1zza Express
16 Large P1zza
w1th 3 1tems
only $11 50
or 8 Hot Sub Sandwich
With ChipS &amp; Dnnk
For only ~4 50
Open 4 pm Da1ly
Closed Mondays

992-9200
or 949 4900

SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

Rockapr ngs on Thursday

August 3 at 6 00 p m For
scope of work call (740)
992 6839
(7) 12 13 14 26 27 28 6TC

FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo
2000 F ee Ca Fo App ca on
EM am na on n o ma on Fede a
800 598
H e Fu Bene s
4504 Ex ens on 516 8 AM 6

NEED LANO?
We C
en y Ha\le 0 e 80
T ac 5 0 land Ready Fo You
NEW HOME OR HUNTNG
NEEDS A 0 e Sou he n Oh o
Rang ng F om 4 To 4 7 A e
ac s Ca Us Oday Fo FREE
MAPS Anel l 5 g 0 A Th s

Telemarkei!OQ

SUMMER JOBS

Exce en

a~epe

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nat onal Bank
haa a ')'Oblle home on
approximately one hall (1 2)
The Home

RENTALS

ence o

yo es me
Fun anel end y wo kp ace
B ngyou 1 enos a a
ea n e~ aSS

CALl. TODAY

I00-92Q-5753
Crv c Dl\le opmen G oupJ
M eon um Te eserviCes

Ta a ow ho se /1. d men s
Ve y Spac o us 2 B ~id oo ms 2
F oo s CA
2 8 h Fu y Ca
pe ed Ad u Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o SJ a $365 Mo No Pe s
Lease Pus Secu y Depos Ae
q ea Days 740 446 348
Ev en ngs 140 367 0502 740
446 0 0

(7) 17 18 19 20 2

Dva 8JOhnson

app ca rons 0 SA
HUOs bsdzedap o ede y
a d hand cappea EOH
304 675 6679

p asma
conos ea n S35 oS45 o 2o 3
hou a week y Ca Sea Tee 740
592 665

SERVICES
810

WANTEC

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Advertise In Classified

23 24

~n !ovmg JfumorH Oj

Tw n owe 5 now accep ng

URGENTLY NEEDED

7st£E ••• ass

25 26 2710TC

In Memory

Home
Improvements

~

It's The
Meags - Galha - Mason

acre lot for sale In Racing
Information for the price
and to view property call
949 2210 and ask for George
George Lawrence
Col ectlon Off cer
Home National Bank

Land
Anthony lend Compeny d
-800 2 3 8365
www countrytyme com

-co ege S uden s
H gh Schoo G ads
H!Qh Schoo Sen o s
Anyone ook ng o ea n $$
Ea n up o $15fhou

Yard Sale

Big Buzz••

Public Notice

PM CST

sto unby4 30pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thurtday

70

Reds

Public Notice

Lost and Found

2 days before the 1d

helre ol Roy Stover all
whose residences are
unknown and cannot by
reasonable diligence be
ascertained will taka notice
that on the 31st day of
March
2000
LaSalle

SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS?
No Fee Un e5s We W

Interior/Exterior P.lntina. mobile
home roors barn• oytbylldlnqt
ond tin roola Expe enced F ee
Es ma es Fie e ences (304)895

Giveaway

REG STER PEAPLINE

Sent mel

367 0280

olhe s Send esume c o Po n
Pleasan Flag s a Ml34 200
Ma n St eat P Pleasant WV
25550

v

Be Pa d In Advance
TRIBUNE QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
the day before ttle ad
s to un Sunday &amp; Mondl)l
edit on 200pm F d.y
SENTINEL QEAQLINE
00 p m he day before the td
• to run Sunday &amp; Monday
OOpm F day
edUon

Bu1ld1ng
Supplies

UDGEMENTS

s

60

550

compu e sk s o ce mach ne
e c ency &amp; enjoys wo k ng w h

9 Was
mson A hens
740-592 842
Q)Ja y co h ng a no MuseM d
tams $ 00 bag sa e eve
Thu sday Mo day h u Sa u day
9 DO-S 30

due to holld•y•

Even

Loca Company seek ng Da a
Ent y C e k w h know edge o
cas c acco un ng p ocedu as

New To You Th tl ShOppe

TRIBUNE QEAQUNE 2 00 p m
the dey berore the ed
• to run Sunday
&amp; Mondsy edltkm
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL QEAP'-!NE
1 00 p m the dlty before the •d
1 to run Sun&lt;lll)' &amp; Mondly
edition 1 00 p m Frldly
REGISTER QEAQLINE
2 days before the ed

Repa ed New &amp; Aebu
n S ock
Ca Aon Evans 800 537 9528

P ob ems OK

Tu ned Down Be o e Aees ab sh
You c e&lt;l
800 659 0359

3476 E 330

1 to run Sund.-y &amp; Mondly
edition 2 00 p m Frld1y
SENTINEL DEAQL!Nii
00 p m ttle dey before the •d
1 to run Sund.-y &amp; Mondly
ectltlon 1 00 p m Frldly
REG STER DEADLINE
2 daya before the 1d
ttorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday ed tlon
4 30 p m Thul'lday
O.d net IUb}«t It) C,.~
due to holld.y•

40

C ed

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Get yours
today
The Oa1ly

0 Down Pas

328 85 0 Ex 29

ONS FOR MAJOR SHOPP NG

Be lo e Hea th Happ neas Of
Success
900 263 2518 0
888 974 6447 $3 99/M n 8

GY We F nance

Pay me s To 65 '¥.
CASH N
CENTIVE OFFER Ca
800

GET PA 0 TO MODEL FASH

Wo d Reknown Psych c l. ne
Ca N.ow Anel Le Ou Psych cs
Answe You Cues ons wnetha

R&amp;Ds Used Fu ntu e &amp; Ap
p ances G eat Select on P ced
Come And 8 own
To Se
Co e Of Rou e 7 &amp; Add son
P ke We Buy Fu n lu e 740

800-29 0098

6308

BUT

FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
App ca o W Se ce Reduce

Pomeroy D1 ly Senllne All
Ylrd SIIH Mu1t h Plld In Ad'f'IRCI Dtldl nt 1 OOpm Ull
day b•tore 11'11 ld Ia to run
Sunday • Mond1y edition
1 OOpm Fr d1y Alk about how
you cen get 1 FREE yard 11 t
algn

ALL Announcement Ad1 Mutt
Be Pa d n Adv1nce
TRIBUNE DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the dly before the ad

CRED T PROBLEMS? CA L THE
CRED T EXPERTS l CENSEO
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREO r BANKRUPTCY

GOOD CREDIT
BADCREDT
NO CREDIT!

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Household
Goods

WANT A COMPUT ER

NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

7 Davs 1
Yes One Week'
4 Lme Ad - 7 Ttmes

9/14/189)- 7/27/1991
&amp;idly .Missed 'DH

Chtldren,
Srandchtldren &amp;

C a sm.;~n Tab e Saw C u s up
2 Yea s o d Ha d y l.Jsed
4
$BOO
740 379 2464
o
740 446 4267

Jrt£nds

::ru~!.' _3!•_11.!.1!. ~II! ~'.'!~~r•1

---

~O_!IP~-:!

One Letter Per Box Allow Box lor Space

Words

MERCHANDISE

51 o
GALLJPOUS QAII.'f TRIBUNE
A.1..L V•rd S1le1 Muet
Be Pa d n Advance
PEACLINE 2 OOpm

o un

Sunday &amp; Monday

edton 200pm F fW.J
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU
CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALES GNI

WORK FROM HOME

Own A

Compu e ? n ~ M
Ma ke ng
Oppo un Ty $500 S6 000 m h

PTIFT

www you pc2wo k com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No E~pe ence Pa Cl
Tan ng G ea Be ne s Ca 7
Cays 800 429 3660 E.: 566

IFIEDS

NCOME

Mea ca B e 1 Needed Fu
Tan ng P ov CleU Home Com
p u t AIQu td To F le 800
772 5933 Ex •2005

OPB\1 FOR
70~1

•

Home
Improvements

illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll
:Name___________________________________________________

1 Phone

6
,Return Coupon To FREE BEE
Da1ly Sentmel
lll Court St Pomeroy, OH

S a
You B s P.SS Today
P me Shopo ng Ce e Soa e
A a ao e A A o dab e A a e
Sp ng va ey P aza Ca 740 446

0 0

220 Money to Loan
CASH
OW$ F om
Wea y Fam es Un oad ng M
ons 0 Do a s To He p M n m 2e
he Ta es v e mmeel a e y
W na a s 84 A SECOND oW E
• 350 NEV YORio( NEW YORK
00

Ph~, g.~ (? ~cv ,~·-~! ~5_

SF RE E

EARN EXCELLoNT

810

IAddress____________~------------~----------------1 City State Z1p _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

he dey be o • the 1d
1

Household
Goods

''The Bu! Buzz
sag e

~

•No Cancellations
•No Abbrev 1at1ons Pl ease
•Cuslomer Can Renew Free

~~ {7~9)_9_9~~·-1~~

In Melgs-Galha-Mason"

�I'

•

\. -/
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio .

Thursday, July 27, 2000

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
.

",1\hl!&lt;:~d in ~!Zrvic!Z"

I
1
'

'

SECURITY

"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs
.
16-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Caii740-985-383a
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Pomeroy

PROI)UCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

AD Mal.es Tractor &amp;

Protec1 your guns, family heirlooms , coin and card
collections . legal papers, investment records, photo
albums. cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Equipment Parts
Factory Authoriz.ed
Case-IH PIII15
Dealers.

BAUMLUMBER
S,.. R,.. 248
CHES'I'IR

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

7!5 3 mo

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1

Watkins
Products
740-949-302'l ·
7118 1 ma. pd.

· Stop In And See

Steve Riffle
·· · Sales R epresentative
-

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
· Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

"A Better

SALES
Th&amp; Ohio VallEy's automotivE IuclEr Is
Continually looking for ·aggi"EsslvE and
motivatEd PEOPlE to fill AlEs positions.
WE haVE thE BESt l;llillliflts, B§l Pay
and thE li!Ht family orlvltEd work
EnvironmEnt In today's automotlvlii
Industry!
Call or stop In .a nd sa...Mik&amp; Slr!j4;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and bEgin a
I'EWilrdlng Ciii'Hr as an
AutomotivE SalES PI'Ohisslonal
TODAY!

Ask for Jim

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

• Garages
-~ Siding-

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

WAII7ED
Standing timber large
or small trac ks. Top
prices paid also .
Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T &amp; R Logging
aft er 8:00 prn
740-992 -5050 .

FLAT-DUMP-LOG
_ SERVICE
Great Rates- Great
Service
"You call we haul"
740-949; 2610
7 40-591-6304_

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·

Leave Message
Aller 6pm· 740-985-4180

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month. ·

740/985-4465
7161 rnopd

GUARANTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

Oualltv Concrete Work

(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

• Gtll\d\1\9

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

Wood and Masoncy

l:Ywi

Garages, Porches, Decks '
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015
77-353-7022

Toll Fr

HERBALIFE
Independent
Distributor
For all your health ,
nutritio11 and
weight loss needs.

(304) "8 82·2079
New Haven WV

Septic Sy11enu &amp;
Utilitie•

CONCR.m
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercia
fREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlso1/Radoo, Ohio

' Optnllrgs 0t1 allslifts
' CertiRed Ia Meigs &amp;
llhtns Counties
'Locatetl Eastem School
Dlstrld &amp; Tuppers Plaitts
Head Slart
'CPR &amp; Flrsl Aid
'IS yrs. Experience ,
Call Jackie 985-43~~
7/26 1 mo

Downspout , Garage room

addit ions,

Po l ~:

Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Wo rk,

I TOLD YOU
IT WAS NOT

7/22/TFN

~·

..

.

!

THE BORN LOSER
~ -i-.- - . . , - " "

~ow co

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Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical ~ork done
Oil Change tn&lt;iudetlubt&amp; oll&amp;id~nk

Special

1hB&lt;k. 101hor oil b10nd "'~oblei

740•949•2700

~

I

FEE.L £1.00\.JT
If\'{ t\U)5/'N07

I

•

i

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need ·
in the Classifieds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place ~
your classified ad.

I

$1895

Mike Hill- Owner

Hou~~t~~g M-F

41 Beehive State
42 Nuke
43 Algerian
seaport

44 River In
France

f--+- -+--1

52 Allow
53 "School"
start

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
QJiebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people.
present. Each letter in the ciphe r stands for anothe r.

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tnilt , ..

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ARE YOU GOING TO START
YOU!l. BOOK AFTE!i:. DINNER?

cone ?

low to for-m four slmple words.

found

tile

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,.,.,...,r-oiiQ~
IZ.&lt;&gt;o t

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in di scarding two diamonds . From
thi s. dec larer drew the conclusion
Ihat w,·st had he gun with six diamond .,. Yet. as he hadn ·t ove rcalled . Au ke n placed East with th e
hea11 ace and cl ub ki ng. So. she
calm ly played a heart to dummy ·s
p ck. East won w1th the queen, but
was end played. When he led
away from the club king around to
dumm y\ quee n, declarer continued wi th th e di amond 10, es tabli shin g her jac k. South •s IOtri cks
we re li ve spades. tw o diamonds.
two clubs and a diamond n1ff in
th e dumm y

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ore

c "uc.~'. -::.• .. . Th.a+ '~
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+•+o~s.

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NO, IF 1 READ AFTER DINNER,
1 f.IAVE TO TURN ON THE
LAMP, AND THE L161-l~ ATTRACTS
MOSQUiroES .. l CANT REA[;'
WITH MOSQUITOES IN THE ROOM

winning with th e diaAuJ...e n ·drew trumps.

a~.:~.

rml in g that W!.!~ t had n o proble m

! ""'
HERE
!

mouse ?

! Nurse!

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t GA.SP!

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'(OU I-lAVE A

GOOD POINT
TI-1ERE ...

YOU I-1AVE
600D SARCA5M
TI-l ERE ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

•

A vertise your us1ness

SJCTLC. M

Cu penh &lt;tge n .

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YOU e~re. J I 'Do.c±Qr ~
~ Nurs&gt;e. •. J

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f.

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or
h

t!rlr-a e.
news.

Sentinel

•

or.one mont
or as ow as
'

one

shoo- in . WaitLIIHil yo ur th oug hts
are clear to di sc uss anything
important.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
To· be successful. oth ers must
fir st perceive you as being stable.
Be careful today that yo u don't
give them any cause to thmk oth erwi se with poor beha viOr or
cheap talk .
SAGITTARIUS (No v. 23-Dec.
21) Be wise enough 10 read the
signal s if a friend gives any indication that she or he is not interested in what you're espousing.
Persistence could cause a sudden
split in the relationship .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19 ) This might not be a day for
.working on a collective venture,
·especially if there is a mi sunderstanding co ncerning money. Both
parties could be the loser if things
can't be worked out.
AQUARIUS (Jan' 20-Feb . I 9)
Compounding your problems by
attempting to do that which is the
most expedient could be a dumb
idea today. Impulsive solutions
usually spe ll trouble, especially
, when a person is the issue.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Take extra measures to protect

.....,...R_wr--o,c_or;:--i,.

. 1 I I I' .
3

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T E L V A ~ ~outOn
of exerc1se class, ·· one thing
I

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los1ng weight is that you can
'
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1t
aga1n
with
ou t a rewa rd be'-...1...-L-..L....J.......J ..... "

r-----~~----~·~no-- -----

~I IFF YE

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.
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by f1 lling
L
f-,-6

1he chuckle quoled
in the m13smg wor d~
you develop from Slep No _ 3 below

&amp;t. P~INT NUMBERED LETT ER S 1
~ IN THE SE SQUARES

€)

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

I I I I
•

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.

Poetry. Harsh. Nudge. Quorum- UP for HOURS

One satu rday morn 1ng th e phone woke us uo ·Gee.
so early ," my husband groaned ·· T11at s aka\ · oc~r
fnend laughed , "I've bee n UP for HOURS ·
It'S

JULY 271

SO.lllL'OilC

new o r a p~rson \V ho JS not nnt.: d

for be mg fai r You co uiJ he
today·s pigeon.
ARI ES (Marcil 21-A pril I g 1 A
disappointing day could ~ c 111
store for you tucby L' OIKern ing:
so m eo ne w ho let"'. 'vou down . 1\'n

matter if it

IS .~o~oc i u l

or busi ness

related. get P" 't your feel in gs and
smil e. ·
TAURUS iApnl 20-\&gt;lay 201
Keep a close weal her C) e peeled
for the unex pected today. There\
a chan~.:~ someone nr ~omdhing:
disruptiv e could 0cn1r that' II,need
a quick fix .
GEMINI 1Mas 21-Junc 201
Before you get i.ns·oh ed t oJ a~.
keep 111 mind the track record of
u pal who h u~ a..., man y t' IT iiiK
ideas as good ones. It might be
wise 10 wait a bit instead of being
ru shed into anythin g.
CANCER (June 21 J ul y 22)
Be extra wat chfu l for hidden
costs or defeats you didn't ant icipate before making any large purchase today, no matter how wonderful th e item appears to you . It
co uld be ail paokagi ng.

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

your personJI interests i f you find

you rse lf wo rk. in g with

aAMI

'

------II~ 'Birthday
Friday. Jul y 2~. 2000
Alt hough yo u mi ght be asked
to work hard in th e year ah ead, the
reward s and benefi1s wi ll be more
fortunat e than usual. Do all th at
: you can to do th e be't job possi. ble .
· LEO (July 23-Au g. 22) Thi s is
· o ne of those days where you
·could be susceptib le to flattery by
: one wh o is hoping to manipulate
: you. Beware of anybody laying i~
: on a bit thick today. Get a jump on
: life by understanding the influ: ences that' ll govern you in the
: year ahead. Send for your Astro: Graph predictions by ~a1hng $2
· to Astro-Graph, c/o tht s newspa: per, P 0 Box 17 58, Murray .Hill
: Station. New York . NY I 0156. Be
: sure to state your Zodiac sign .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Be
. leery of getting impatient and
: attempting to do so methmg on
your ow n for which you l.ack the
.experlise . You cou ld get 111 trou . ble quickly. Better walt for the
Calvary to bail you out.
. LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. B)
: Assoc iates might have trouble
: toda y unde rstanding your ide as
, · and cou ld turn th eir backs on
:some thin g you th ought was a

WOlD

FLUDON

ITHURSDAY

~'Your

BJ .'

club. Yet Sabine Auken. a German
internati onal now living in

moml

'

· "h.tf!l~ F-"l· v~

HR

'~:~:~~' S©l\cril~-POLlAN
~ t.~S*
_ _ _ _;,_,.: ldl1od by CLAY
Rearrange letters · of the
0 four
scrambled words be-

A ft ~ r

oc.r~t~ ?

\.1 ho

RYHJTYJ

H ;

mon d kin g ( w h ~n any nondia·

h Oill L' .

BlG NATE

HR

VILAMJ

dcllart.!r WO.J s due to lose
lwo hl'arts. une diamond and o ne

: L&gt;.l.---'&gt;-~W..J..J..J..L..U_._J..L.Jj

past and

Today's ci~o: I equals L

~ lan...: t'

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46 Grows
darker
47 "Step --!"
48 New York
players
50 Sun. speech

mont! card works}. Still, at first

I

Blown Insulation

IMPROVEMENT

i ~/'-..
I

f

c

. 992-2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

r

A.N'fWfW I

(

Racine, OH 45771

Umberto-

40 Overact

: ~~~~~~

'

Oh

401 5th Street

natives
33, Transaction
38 Author

.

~ .

Phone 740-698·9400

RACINE SERVICE CENTER
'We feature Valvoline Products"

27 Sandwich
shop
28 Wile ol
Geralnt
29 Actor Autry
31 Ataska

n
U

w~

'1H=

'

Plumbing - ElectricalPainting
Ray Milani
42994 Rt. 2, C.sey Rd
A~y, OH 45710

!.IJJ

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

cer:N

.

Mllard J
&amp; Associates

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

motor

!'l!S~

BY PHtLI.IP ALDER
MINT II .
Quentin Cri sp cla1med, "The
you ng always have th e same
problem ·· how to rebel and con. form at the sa me time. They have
now so lved thi s by defying their
parents and copying one anot her."
At th e bridge table. th ere is a
similar problem: How to discard
without tel egraphing to declarer
that you have a problem --or no
SP~CIAL:
NO, .fl/l, IT'5 NOT
problem . An experi enced declarer
ben efits from defensive disMISSP~L£.~D ··".
ca
rd
s, whether produced quickly
SOUP
ONLY
or slowly-- as in this deal from a
ICNOW THAT
Dan is h league match.
IT W,AS 50UP !i
In th e othe r room. the contract
was
also four spades , but declared
ve.tnllDAY. B1
by North . East' s diamond-se ven
~
•
.
lead defeated the contract. (A
trump lead would have bee n
7 - 27
cquall y effec ti ve. )
Here. North ope ned li ght ,
which " sta ndard in Europe
because
they don ' l get as man y
[ WOULO LP\'{ 00¥.1~ II\'( UfE
Ht::&gt; NC.)(\ TO IMPO:i:ile.t£ 10
high-cu"l..l poinh as American s!
FOR- HIM 1
LIVE. WIH\
West
understand ably led the dia !

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

Guaranteed Work
References Available

!'!!IS

Proper discard

PEPPY

·-

Middleport; Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Seamless Guncrs &amp;

Pan

Opening lead: • K. .

17401 992·3131

J&amp;l INSUlATION &amp;
' CONSTRUCTION
Replacement Wi ndow~.

4 !It

ServicB•
Hou., &amp; Trailer Site•

740-992-S232
JACmS CHILD CARE

SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED, WATE R-GA
ELECTRIC LINES. BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME
SET UPS, ROAD BUILDING -LAND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
(UNCIEA:'10Aill BCoAIII
FIELD
II

Concrete
Connection

• 'tt\111
S\ll~~'~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
South West North Eul
1•
Pass
1•
Pass 2 •
Pass

Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio

A J 53

• A 7

HpgJigr
Bulhlo•er &amp; Backhoe

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

P/B CONTRAnORS, INC.

-Albany, Ohio

OHtO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

+

mo. 4 1100

IACXHO! • DOZING • END toAD!I•IIIUCXING •III!NCHING

Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome

JINES'
liAILLI&gt;'ULI:&gt;,

...... llll•

Box 189

Your

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
27", 18' long,
$35/ton,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

33795 Hiland Rd.

.~

• 7

• K J 10 8 3

•AJI082
• 5 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

GUTTERS
w .¥oj'pl
1·800·311·3391

I0 7 4
KQ9842
9 6 5

Soutb

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

FREE ESTIMATES
Great Prices on New Homes

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
6121/001 mo pd.

Need It done, gl11e us a call

992-2753

Now Renting

• 9 6 3
• A Q 9 6

7

ACROSS . 39 Leovo out
Answer to Previous Puzzle
speech oounds
1 Developed
40 Food lover
..,.,...,.,..,.,.:-r.==
8 Autl'lor
42 Type ol teno
Emtte 45 Bon - (clever
10 Muolcton Cugat
Nylng)
12 Letnt
46 Comedian
14 Exceoolvoty
Deluise
I 5 Congenltatty
49 Songttke
tolned
51 01 Swtoo
16 Author An8lo mountains
17 Llket~
54 Glueo
19 ENu o country 55 Type ol crab
20 Like
56 - -do-welt
appteo
57 Exams
"23 Tapeotry '
26 Thll chlm agcy.
DOWN
V Temr,. unit
1 Nerve part
30 Sew ng tool
32 Ancient J-loh 2 lluolclan
Shankar
ascetic
3 Part of a stove
34 Some military
4 Knlght'o title L:.:J.:::.L~.:.=.
forcea
20 Mohammedan
5 long llah
11 Actor O'Neal
35 Former Soviet
magistrate
6 Leot- (Brit.) t2 Original
IHder
21 In dreamland
7 Had
Inhabitants
3&amp; Printer'•
8 ntte role
13 Pro -(lor the 22 Spring
mea aurea
holiday
9 Concerning
lime belngt
37 -out
23 Actress
(2 wda.)
18 Ora. hra.
(atretch)
Archer
24 Quantity ol
paper
25 Guns the

•-•ned

East

(740) 992-3470

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
~ed-Hoy

• K Q 54
• K J 8 3
• 10 6
• Q 42

•

(Ra nd y)

(740) 985-3948

Racine, Ohio

• Decks
•-Roofing

A CRAFTY,

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

B&amp;T TRUCKING

o·

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

1

"~ 1

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
tl:!tiiiO t mocl!!l

Advertise 1n
this space for
$100 per
(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916 1•11·1
month.

446-4995

740-992-9636

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Remodeling

/m2/

PHILLIP .
ALDER

HILL'S
.,~cK·s·
SELF STORAGE HfiOLIHCI Clnd
29870 Bashan
Road
EXCfiVfiTI"Q

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps . convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
'
Mon - Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertical• • Wood
• Allnis • Etc
144 l'lllrd Ave. Gallpols

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

992•5479

740-ID-11311

All vertical blindo are
made lo order al our
localion

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

CO&lt;Jivlllo, OH 45723

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
perga..,
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-50 '"'lilfn

A. &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

6/29/mo.

- Pick-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp; Detail

DEPOYIAG
PARft

. ..

::lng Live tCCI
M1jor League Baseball FlOrida M!lrl1ns at A1lan1a Braves (l ve) 'CC · I

�I'

•

\. -/
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio .

Thursday, July 27, 2000

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
.

",1\hl!&lt;:~d in ~!Zrvic!Z"

I
1
'

'

SECURITY

"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs
.
16-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Caii740-985-383a
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

Pomeroy

PROI)UCTS

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

AD Mal.es Tractor &amp;

Protec1 your guns, family heirlooms , coin and card
collections . legal papers, investment records, photo
albums. cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items will be safe.
For more information call

Equipment Parts
Factory Authoriz.ed
Case-IH PIII15
Dealers.

BAUMLUMBER
S,.. R,.. 248
CHES'I'IR

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

7!5 3 mo

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1

Watkins
Products
740-949-302'l ·
7118 1 ma. pd.

· Stop In And See

Steve Riffle
·· · Sales R epresentative
-

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
· Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

"A Better

SALES
Th&amp; Ohio VallEy's automotivE IuclEr Is
Continually looking for ·aggi"EsslvE and
motivatEd PEOPlE to fill AlEs positions.
WE haVE thE BESt l;llillliflts, B§l Pay
and thE li!Ht family orlvltEd work
EnvironmEnt In today's automotlvlii
Industry!
Call or stop In .a nd sa...Mik&amp; Slr!j4;nt
Brian Ross. or Brad Sang and bEgin a
I'EWilrdlng Ciii'Hr as an
AutomotivE SalES PI'Ohisslonal
TODAY!

Ask for Jim

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

• Garages
-~ Siding-

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

WAII7ED
Standing timber large
or small trac ks. Top
prices paid also .
Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T &amp; R Logging
aft er 8:00 prn
740-992 -5050 .

FLAT-DUMP-LOG
_ SERVICE
Great Rates- Great
Service
"You call we haul"
740-949; 2610
7 40-591-6304_

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·

Leave Message
Aller 6pm· 740-985-4180

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month. ·

740/985-4465
7161 rnopd

GUARANTEED
AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

Oualltv Concrete Work

(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

Driveways, Sidewalks,
Patios

• Gtll\d\1\9

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

Wood and Masoncy

l:Ywi

Garages, Porches, Decks '
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015
77-353-7022

Toll Fr

HERBALIFE
Independent
Distributor
For all your health ,
nutritio11 and
weight loss needs.

(304) "8 82·2079
New Haven WV

Septic Sy11enu &amp;
Utilitie•

CONCR.m
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercia
fREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlso1/Radoo, Ohio

' Optnllrgs 0t1 allslifts
' CertiRed Ia Meigs &amp;
llhtns Counties
'Locatetl Eastem School
Dlstrld &amp; Tuppers Plaitts
Head Slart
'CPR &amp; Flrsl Aid
'IS yrs. Experience ,
Call Jackie 985-43~~
7/26 1 mo

Downspout , Garage room

addit ions,

Po l ~:

Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Wo rk,

I TOLD YOU
IT WAS NOT

7/22/TFN

~·

..

.

!

THE BORN LOSER
~ -i-.- - . . , - " "

~ow co

'
,r-

•\. .

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical ~ork done
Oil Change tn&lt;iudetlubt&amp; oll&amp;id~nk

Special

1hB&lt;k. 101hor oil b10nd "'~oblei

740•949•2700

~

I

FEE.L £1.00\.JT
If\'{ t\U)5/'N07

I

•

i

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need ·
in the Classifieds.

Call 740·992·2155 to place ~
your classified ad.

I

$1895

Mike Hill- Owner

Hou~~t~~g M-F

41 Beehive State
42 Nuke
43 Algerian
seaport

44 River In
France

f--+- -+--1

52 Allow
53 "School"
start

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
QJiebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people.
present. Each letter in the ciphe r stands for anothe r.

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ARE YOU GOING TO START
YOU!l. BOOK AFTE!i:. DINNER?

cone ?

low to for-m four slmple words.

found

tile

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,.,.,...,r-oiiQ~
IZ.&lt;&gt;o t

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in di scarding two diamonds . From
thi s. dec larer drew the conclusion
Ihat w,·st had he gun with six diamond .,. Yet. as he hadn ·t ove rcalled . Au ke n placed East with th e
hea11 ace and cl ub ki ng. So. she
calm ly played a heart to dummy ·s
p ck. East won w1th the queen, but
was end played. When he led
away from the club king around to
dumm y\ quee n, declarer continued wi th th e di amond 10, es tabli shin g her jac k. South •s IOtri cks
we re li ve spades. tw o diamonds.
two clubs and a diamond n1ff in
th e dumm y

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c "uc.~'. -::.• .. . Th.a+ '~
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NO, IF 1 READ AFTER DINNER,
1 f.IAVE TO TURN ON THE
LAMP, AND THE L161-l~ ATTRACTS
MOSQUiroES .. l CANT REA[;'
WITH MOSQUITOES IN THE ROOM

winning with th e diaAuJ...e n ·drew trumps.

a~.:~.

rml in g that W!.!~ t had n o proble m

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'(OU I-lAVE A

GOOD POINT
TI-1ERE ...

YOU I-1AVE
600D SARCA5M
TI-l ERE ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

•

A vertise your us1ness

SJCTLC. M

Cu penh &lt;tge n .

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YOU e~re. J I 'Do.c±Qr ~
~ Nurs&gt;e. •. J

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f.

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or
h

t!rlr-a e.
news.

Sentinel

•

or.one mont
or as ow as
'

one

shoo- in . WaitLIIHil yo ur th oug hts
are clear to di sc uss anything
important.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
To· be successful. oth ers must
fir st perceive you as being stable.
Be careful today that yo u don't
give them any cause to thmk oth erwi se with poor beha viOr or
cheap talk .
SAGITTARIUS (No v. 23-Dec.
21) Be wise enough 10 read the
signal s if a friend gives any indication that she or he is not interested in what you're espousing.
Persistence could cause a sudden
split in the relationship .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19 ) This might not be a day for
.working on a collective venture,
·especially if there is a mi sunderstanding co ncerning money. Both
parties could be the loser if things
can't be worked out.
AQUARIUS (Jan' 20-Feb . I 9)
Compounding your problems by
attempting to do that which is the
most expedient could be a dumb
idea today. Impulsive solutions
usually spe ll trouble, especially
, when a person is the issue.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Take extra measures to protect

.....,...R_wr--o,c_or;:--i,.

. 1 I I I' .
3

1-I

~==========~o·
T E L V A ~ ~outOn
of exerc1se class, ·· one thing
I

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los1ng weight is that you can
'
,find
1t
aga1n
with
ou t a rewa rd be'-...1...-L-..L....J.......J ..... "

r-----~~----~·~no-- -----

~I IFF YE

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.
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by f1 lling
L
f-,-6

1he chuckle quoled
in the m13smg wor d~
you develop from Slep No _ 3 below

&amp;t. P~INT NUMBERED LETT ER S 1
~ IN THE SE SQUARES

€)

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

I I I I
•

•

.

Poetry. Harsh. Nudge. Quorum- UP for HOURS

One satu rday morn 1ng th e phone woke us uo ·Gee.
so early ," my husband groaned ·· T11at s aka\ · oc~r
fnend laughed , "I've bee n UP for HOURS ·
It'S

JULY 271

SO.lllL'OilC

new o r a p~rson \V ho JS not nnt.: d

for be mg fai r You co uiJ he
today·s pigeon.
ARI ES (Marcil 21-A pril I g 1 A
disappointing day could ~ c 111
store for you tucby L' OIKern ing:
so m eo ne w ho let"'. 'vou down . 1\'n

matter if it

IS .~o~oc i u l

or busi ness

related. get P" 't your feel in gs and
smil e. ·
TAURUS iApnl 20-\&gt;lay 201
Keep a close weal her C) e peeled
for the unex pected today. There\
a chan~.:~ someone nr ~omdhing:
disruptiv e could 0cn1r that' II,need
a quick fix .
GEMINI 1Mas 21-Junc 201
Before you get i.ns·oh ed t oJ a~.
keep 111 mind the track record of
u pal who h u~ a..., man y t' IT iiiK
ideas as good ones. It might be
wise 10 wait a bit instead of being
ru shed into anythin g.
CANCER (June 21 J ul y 22)
Be extra wat chfu l for hidden
costs or defeats you didn't ant icipate before making any large purchase today, no matter how wonderful th e item appears to you . It
co uld be ail paokagi ng.

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

your personJI interests i f you find

you rse lf wo rk. in g with

aAMI

'

------II~ 'Birthday
Friday. Jul y 2~. 2000
Alt hough yo u mi ght be asked
to work hard in th e year ah ead, the
reward s and benefi1s wi ll be more
fortunat e than usual. Do all th at
: you can to do th e be't job possi. ble .
· LEO (July 23-Au g. 22) Thi s is
· o ne of those days where you
·could be susceptib le to flattery by
: one wh o is hoping to manipulate
: you. Beware of anybody laying i~
: on a bit thick today. Get a jump on
: life by understanding the influ: ences that' ll govern you in the
: year ahead. Send for your Astro: Graph predictions by ~a1hng $2
· to Astro-Graph, c/o tht s newspa: per, P 0 Box 17 58, Murray .Hill
: Station. New York . NY I 0156. Be
: sure to state your Zodiac sign .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) Be
. leery of getting impatient and
: attempting to do so methmg on
your ow n for which you l.ack the
.experlise . You cou ld get 111 trou . ble quickly. Better walt for the
Calvary to bail you out.
. LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. B)
: Assoc iates might have trouble
: toda y unde rstanding your ide as
, · and cou ld turn th eir backs on
:some thin g you th ought was a

WOlD

FLUDON

ITHURSDAY

~'Your

BJ .'

club. Yet Sabine Auken. a German
internati onal now living in

moml

'

· "h.tf!l~ F-"l· v~

HR

'~:~:~~' S©l\cril~-POLlAN
~ t.~S*
_ _ _ _;,_,.: ldl1od by CLAY
Rearrange letters · of the
0 four
scrambled words be-

A ft ~ r

oc.r~t~ ?

\.1 ho

RYHJTYJ

H ;

mon d kin g ( w h ~n any nondia·

h Oill L' .

BlG NATE

HR

VILAMJ

dcllart.!r WO.J s due to lose
lwo hl'arts. une diamond and o ne

: L&gt;.l.---'&gt;-~W..J..J..J..L..U_._J..L.Jj

past and

Today's ci~o: I equals L

~ lan...: t'

'I

46 Grows
darker
47 "Step --!"
48 New York
players
50 Sun. speech

mont! card works}. Still, at first

I

Blown Insulation

IMPROVEMENT

i ~/'-..
I

f

c

. 992-2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

r

A.N'fWfW I

(

Racine, OH 45771

Umberto-

40 Overact

: ~~~~~~

'

Oh

401 5th Street

natives
33, Transaction
38 Author

.

~ .

Phone 740-698·9400

RACINE SERVICE CENTER
'We feature Valvoline Products"

27 Sandwich
shop
28 Wile ol
Geralnt
29 Actor Autry
31 Ataska

n
U

w~

'1H=

'

Plumbing - ElectricalPainting
Ray Milani
42994 Rt. 2, C.sey Rd
A~y, OH 45710

!.IJJ

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

cer:N

.

Mllard J
&amp; Associates

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

motor

!'l!S~

BY PHtLI.IP ALDER
MINT II .
Quentin Cri sp cla1med, "The
you ng always have th e same
problem ·· how to rebel and con. form at the sa me time. They have
now so lved thi s by defying their
parents and copying one anot her."
At th e bridge table. th ere is a
similar problem: How to discard
without tel egraphing to declarer
that you have a problem --or no
SP~CIAL:
NO, .fl/l, IT'5 NOT
problem . An experi enced declarer
ben efits from defensive disMISSP~L£.~D ··".
ca
rd
s, whether produced quickly
SOUP
ONLY
or slowly-- as in this deal from a
ICNOW THAT
Dan is h league match.
IT W,AS 50UP !i
In th e othe r room. the contract
was
also four spades , but declared
ve.tnllDAY. B1
by North . East' s diamond-se ven
~
•
.
lead defeated the contract. (A
trump lead would have bee n
7 - 27
cquall y effec ti ve. )
Here. North ope ned li ght ,
which " sta ndard in Europe
because
they don ' l get as man y
[ WOULO LP\'{ 00¥.1~ II\'( UfE
Ht::&gt; NC.)(\ TO IMPO:i:ile.t£ 10
high-cu"l..l poinh as American s!
FOR- HIM 1
LIVE. WIH\
West
understand ably led the dia !

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~

Guaranteed Work
References Available

!'!!IS

Proper discard

PEPPY

·-

Middleport; Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Seamless Guncrs &amp;

Pan

Opening lead: • K. .

17401 992·3131

J&amp;l INSUlATION &amp;
' CONSTRUCTION
Replacement Wi ndow~.

4 !It

ServicB•
Hou., &amp; Trailer Site•

740-992-S232
JACmS CHILD CARE

SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED, WATE R-GA
ELECTRIC LINES. BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME
SET UPS, ROAD BUILDING -LAND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
(UNCIEA:'10Aill BCoAIII
FIELD
II

Concrete
Connection

• 'tt\111
S\ll~~'~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
South West North Eul
1•
Pass
1•
Pass 2 •
Pass

Ill

Pomeroy, Ohio

A J 53

• A 7

HpgJigr
Bulhlo•er &amp; Backhoe

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

P/B CONTRAnORS, INC.

-Albany, Ohio

OHtO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

+

mo. 4 1100

IACXHO! • DOZING • END toAD!I•IIIUCXING •III!NCHING

Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome

JINES'
liAILLI&gt;'ULI:&gt;,

...... llll•

Box 189

Your

POPLAR LOGS WANTED
8" in diameter to
27", 18' long,
$35/ton,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

33795 Hiland Rd.

.~

• 7

• K J 10 8 3

•AJI082
• 5 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

GUTTERS
w .¥oj'pl
1·800·311·3391

I0 7 4
KQ9842
9 6 5

Soutb

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

FREE ESTIMATES
Great Prices on New Homes

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
6121/001 mo pd.

Need It done, gl11e us a call

992-2753

Now Renting

• 9 6 3
• A Q 9 6

7

ACROSS . 39 Leovo out
Answer to Previous Puzzle
speech oounds
1 Developed
40 Food lover
..,.,...,.,..,.,.:-r.==
8 Autl'lor
42 Type ol teno
Emtte 45 Bon - (clever
10 Muolcton Cugat
Nylng)
12 Letnt
46 Comedian
14 Exceoolvoty
Deluise
I 5 Congenltatty
49 Songttke
tolned
51 01 Swtoo
16 Author An8lo mountains
17 Llket~
54 Glueo
19 ENu o country 55 Type ol crab
20 Like
56 - -do-welt
appteo
57 Exams
"23 Tapeotry '
26 Thll chlm agcy.
DOWN
V Temr,. unit
1 Nerve part
30 Sew ng tool
32 Ancient J-loh 2 lluolclan
Shankar
ascetic
3 Part of a stove
34 Some military
4 Knlght'o title L:.:J.:::.L~.:.=.
forcea
20 Mohammedan
5 long llah
11 Actor O'Neal
35 Former Soviet
magistrate
6 Leot- (Brit.) t2 Original
IHder
21 In dreamland
7 Had
Inhabitants
3&amp; Printer'•
8 ntte role
13 Pro -(lor the 22 Spring
mea aurea
holiday
9 Concerning
lime belngt
37 -out
23 Actress
(2 wda.)
18 Ora. hra.
(atretch)
Archer
24 Quantity ol
paper
25 Guns the

•-•ned

East

(740) 992-3470

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
~ed-Hoy

• K Q 54
• K J 8 3
• 10 6
• Q 42

•

(Ra nd y)

(740) 985-3948

Racine, Ohio

• Decks
•-Roofing

A CRAFTY,

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

B&amp;T TRUCKING

o·

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

1

"~ 1

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
tl:!tiiiO t mocl!!l

Advertise 1n
this space for
$100 per
(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916 1•11·1
month.

446-4995

740-992-9636

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Remodeling

/m2/

PHILLIP .
ALDER

HILL'S
.,~cK·s·
SELF STORAGE HfiOLIHCI Clnd
29870 Bashan
Road
EXCfiVfiTI"Q

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps . convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
'
Mon - Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertical• • Wood
• Allnis • Etc
144 l'lllrd Ave. Gallpols

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

992•5479

740-ID-11311

All vertical blindo are
made lo order al our
localion

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

CO&lt;Jivlllo, OH 45723

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
perga..,
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-50 '"'lilfn

A. &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

6/29/mo.

- Pick-up &amp; delivery · Tires &amp; Detail

DEPOYIAG
PARft

. ..

::lng Live tCCI
M1jor League Baseball FlOrida M!lrl1ns at A1lan1a Braves (l ve) 'CC · I

�....

•
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 27, 2000

Details, A3

TODAY'S
SCOREBOARD
.
PRO BASEBAll
NatiOOIII le-s!!U.
E•Bt Dlvllllon
Team
Atlanta
New York ..
Montreal .
Florida
Ptu lad ~ph1a

W L Pet.
GB
······· .......... 62 39 .614
.. 54 44 .551 6 1/2
.. ..... ... 47 49 .490 12 1/2
....... .48 52 .480 131/2
................... 44 55 .444
17
Centnll Division

St. Louis ..

. ............... 57

43 .570

C1ncinnati .. .... .. ....... ... SO 51 .495 7 1/2
Ctlicago

. ...45 54

455 11 1/2
......43 56 434 13 1/2
.........41 60 406 16 1/2
.............. 38 63 376 19 1/2
Weal Dlvlalon
San Francisco
.. 55 44 .556

P1ttsburgh .
Milwaukee
Houston

Anzona

56 45

Los Angeles ..
Colorado

San Diego.. ....

......53
.. 49

554

47 .530
50 495

2 1/2
6

.. ..... 45 56 .446

11

Wedneedly'a Gem"

Chicago, 85 .
HITS--Erstad, Anaheim . 166 ; MJSweeney,
Kansas City, 136; CDelgado. Toronto. 130;
LaYI'Ion, Minnesota, 127; !Rodriguez. Texas .
126: BeWilliams. New York, 125; Damon .
Kansas City, 120; Thomas, Ch1cago, 120
' DOUBLES--COelgado, Toronto. 35: Garciaparr&amp;. Boston, 34: Olen.Jd, Seattle, 34; Erstad,
Anaheim, 30; Lawton. Minnesota. 30; Higginson, Detroit, 30; Sagui, Te:ocas. 28; Belle, Baltimore , 28.
TRIPLES- CGuz man,
Minnesota .
14 ;
AKennedy, Anahei m, 7: Durham, Chicago, 7;
BeWil iams, New York. 6 ; Alicea. Texas, 6 : Singleton, Chicago, 5, TNixon , Boston, 5 ,
JAvalantin. Chicago, 5; Polonia, Oetro11, 5.
HOME - RUNS-CDelgado, Toronto, 32;
TBatista, Toronto. 31 ; Glaus. Anaheim . 30:
GAnderson, Anaheim , 29: Thomas, Chicago,
29: Thome. Cleveland . 27: !Rodriguez. Texas.

27

Sent INF Justin Baughman to Edmonton of
Rob Ducey to the Toronto Blue Jays for a
the Pacific Coasl League .
·
player to be named .
_
National League
•
BASKETBALL
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Acquired
National B ..ketblll Ataoclatlon
RHP Curt Schil ling from the Philadelphia
ATLANTA HAWK$-,Signed C Hanna MotPhillies tor 18-0F Travis Lee, LHP Orner , tola to a two-year contract
Daal, RHP Vicente Padilla and AHP Nelson "
FOOTBALL
Fig ueroa.
National Football L. .gue
CINCINNAT_I REDS- Traded RHP Manny
CHICAGO BEAAS-Waivetl 08 John
Aybar 10 Ftonda for RHP Jorge Cordova.
William•. Signed DL Jerome King.
Called up RHP Rob Bell from Louisville at the
CINCINNA.TI BENGALS-Ciaimed CB Sirr
1 Parker oft waivers trom the Carolina PanInternational league.
FLORIDA MAAUNS- Oesignated LHP ~ ·then.
Ron Mahay for assignment
GREEN BAY PACKERS--Placed WA-KR
LOS ANGELES OOOGERS- Acqulroo . Mandtell Dean on waivers:
'
RHP lsmaet VBldes from the Ctlicago Cubs , , INOI:'INAPOUS COLTS--Signed LB Rob
l or RHP Jamie Arnold, OF Jorge Piedra and
Morrie to a five-year contract.
cash considerations.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Waived OL
NEW YORK METS-Optioned INF David
Ethan Wektta. Signed OL Eric Moss . .
MINNESOTA VIKINGS- Announced the
Lamb
Norfolk ot the tntematlli&lt;o~nl~o;l,~~:~~··
RHP Gran1 Roberls 01
retirement of TE Chad Fann.

1RANSAcnONS
BASEBALL
-American Le1gue
ANAH EIM ANGELS--Activaled LHP Scan

li

STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas C~y. 27;
OeSh1eiC1s, Baltimore, 27: L.a'N1on, Minnesota ,
23; RAJomar, Cleveland , 23; Mondesi. Toronto,
22; Cairo, Tampa ~y, 20; McLemore. Seanle.

Jaso n ChOrak and DE Seneca Knight
Reached an injury settlement wilh DE Wa~ne
Hampton . Released OB Mike Bunon and WAKA Damon Gourdil1e.
TE NNE SSEE TITANS- Agreed to 1erms
with WA Carl Pickens on a fi ve-y ear contract.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
AT LANTA THRASH ERS- Agreed to terms
with G Norm Maracle .
CALGARY FLAMES-Signed F Dave
Lowry .
COLORADO AVALAN CHE- Signed C
Stephane Yelle and 0 Eric Messier.
DALLAS
STA A S- Sign9d
0
Brad
Lukowich, G M arty Turco an d D Jelf Tory to
one-year contracts
MINNESOTA WiLD-Agreed to te rms with
AW Sergei Krivokrasov
NEW YORK RANGER S- Named AI
-and general manager

Meigs County's

. Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 45

•·

Montreal at New York, ppd., ra in
ChiCago Cubs 14, Philadelphia 9
Atlanta 6, Florida 3
St. Louis 6, Arizona 4
Colorado 11, Los Angeles 4

Today'1G1m.1
Montreal (Thurman 2·1 and lrabu 2·4) at
N.Y. Mats (Aobens 0-0 and Hampto n 9-7], 2,
t2 :10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Down s 4-3) at Philadelph ia
(Person 5-3). 1 :OS p.m.
Los Angeles (Gagne 1-6) at Colorado (Jarvis
2-4), 3:05p.m .
Milwaukee (Snyder 3-5) at P111Sburgh
(Anderson 3-5) , 7:05 p.m.
Florida (Smith 0-3) at Atlanta (Maddu:oc 12-4).
7:40 p.m.
Arizona (Guzman 2-1) a1 St. Louis (Ankie175), B: t O p.m.
Flidty'• Gam.s
San Francisco (Hernandez 9-7) at Chicago
Cubs (WOOd 5·6) , 3:20p.m
Cincinnati (Dessens 4-0) at Montreal (Johnson 5·4), 7: 05p.m.
Arizona (Schilling 6-6) at Flonda (Cornelius
3-4), 7:05p.m.
San Diego (Clement 9·9) at Pinsburgh
(Arroyo 1-3), 7:05p.m .
St. Louis {Hentgen 9-7) at N.Y. Mats (Reed
5-2), 7:10 p.m .
Los Angeles (Dreilort 6-7) at Philadelphia
(Daal 2-10), 7:35 p.m.
Hou ston (Miller 1-.2) at Atlanta (Ashby 6-7) ,
7:40p.m.
Colorado (As tacio 9-6) at Milwau~ee (Be!'e
6-7), 8:05p.m .
American League

STRIKEOUTS- PMartin ez . Boston, t77 ;
CFinley, Cleveland, 130; Mussina, Baltimor~.
127: Colon, Cleveland, 125; Nomo, Detrort,
125: Burba, Cleveland, 121 : DWells, Toronto.
119.
SAVE&amp;-TBJones, Detroit. 28; Weneland,
Texas , 26; Sasaki, Seattle, 24 : Koch. Toronto ,
24: MAivera, New York. 24: Percival, Anaheii'n,
23; lsringhausen, Oakland. 22.

Major L•gue Soccer

17

3
5
9 1/2

Today'a Games
Tampa Bay (Rupe 2·4). at Kansas City
(Durb•n 2-4) , 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Cone 1-9) at Minnesota (Redman 8-4), 8:05 p.m .
Detroit (Sparks· o-1rat iexas'(Giynn t-1),
8:35p.m.
Toronto (Loaiza 5-7) at Seattle (Halam a 95), 10:05 p.m
Boston (Wakefield 6-5) at Oakland (Zito 10) . 10:05 p.m
Chicago Wh ite SOit (Gar1and 1-2) at Ana heim (Cooper 4-4), 10:05 p.m.
Friday 's Games
Cleveland (Burba 10·4) at Baltimore (M ussina 6-10), 7:35p.m .
Tampa Bay (Aekar 3-6) at Kansas City
(Ste1n 1 -2), a:os p.m
N.Y Yankees (Neagle 2-0) at Minnesota
(Radke 7-11). 8:05p.m
Detro•! (Moehler 6-6) Ell Texas (Helling 11 -7) ,
8:35p.m.
Toronto (Carpenter 7-9) at Seattl e (Garc1a 21), tO·os p.m.
Boston (P.Maninez 11-3) at Oakland (Mulder
6 -6). 10·05 p m
Ch•cago Wh ite Sox (Sirotka 9-8) at Anaheim
(Hill 5-6) . 10:05 p .m .

G.O.
29

36
41
48

'

33

....

41
40
17

30

42

THE.

34

. .

• ,

'

-

-

-

'

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'

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•

'

.

.&gt;t;. ' '
~

.

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'

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-~-

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.........

'

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•"

NOW COMES
JUDGING-

ilrfff
Vt;;..•

JudyCiark of
Gallia County
judged the Outdoor Chef project of Chris
Connolly. (Char·
len e Hoeflich
photos)

I I

~

PRO HOOPS
Women's Na1lonal Basketball Auoclatlon
Eastern Conference

THm

15

w

L T Pts GF
NY-NJ ........ ............. 13 7 2 41 39
... 9 9 5 32 35
New England
Miam1
.... 7 t1 5 26 32
.. .. 5 13 6 21 34
D.C...
Central Clvlalon
Tampa Bay ...... ........ 12 9 2 38 44
Chicago 10 . .... ...... .... 8 5 35 46 39
4 31 36
Columbus .
.... 9 t1
t1
4 31 40
Dallas
·········· 9
Wes1ern Dlvlalcn
Kansas City
......... 12 5 5 41 33
Los Angeles
........ 10 7 7 37 34
Colorado ..
..... 10 10 3 33 30
San Jose ...
....... 5 10 8 23 27
Saturday's Game
All- Star game at Columbus, 3:30p.m.

GB

10
14 1/2

BY BRIAN

W

L

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Eastern Division

East Oivtalcn
3
31!2
13
t5 1/2

•

PRO SOCCER
Team

Pet.

New York
.. 15 10 .600
Orlando ....
.... 14 11 .560
Cleveland .
13 11 .542
Delroit
.. 11 13 458
Washington ..
.11 14 440
Miami .
... 9 16 360
Cha flo11e
.. ........... 7 18 280
India na
........... 6 18 .250
Western Conference
x-Los Angeles .
..22
3 .aao
x-Houston ..
.. ....... 22
4 .846
Phoenix.......
.. .. ...... 16
9 .640
Sacramento
........... 16 10 .615
Utah ...........
.. ......... 14 12 538
Minnesota __ .
.. 11 13 .458
Portland ....
.. ........... 8 17 .320
Seanle
........ 4 20 .167
x-clinched playoff spot
Wtdnelday'a Games
Charlane 87 , Washington 80
Detroit 78, Miami 6.2
Ulatl 84. Cleveland 77
PhOenix 79, Indiana 65
Sacramento '73.15o rtfand 70
Todey's Games
Orlando at Sacramento, 1o p.m.
Seanle a1 Las Angeles, 10:30 p .ni.

GB

FRUIT PIZZA

Judging of 4-H youths'
best continues for fair

1
1 1/2
3 1/2
4
6
B
8 1/2
1/2

BY CHARL£NE HOEFLICH

6
6 1/2
8 112

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P

101 /2
14
17 112

OMEROY 4-H
judgi ng of proj ects 'in
pre paration fo r the
M eigs County Fair
got under way thi s

- .- week.
Tuesday, th e Livestock sklilathon and intcrvl ews took pbce;
Wed n esday, foods Judging was
hel d ; T hur sday, mi sce llaneous
projects were judg;ed ; and today,
dog judging and clothing p rojects
arc taking pl ace.
Toni ght at 7, th e annual style
revue will be hel d in Pomeroy's

AUIORACING
NASCAR Wln1ton Cup Series

T~e NASCAR Winston Cup schedule, winners tn parenthas,es . and driver poinl s1andings:
Feb. 20 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach,
Fta (Dale Jarrett)
Feb. 27 - Dura Lu bejK man 400, Rockingham, N.C (Bobby Labonte)
March 5 - Carsdirect. ::om 400, Las Vegas.
(Jeff Burton)
Marc h 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hamplon,
Ga. (Date Earnhardt)
March 19 - Mall.com 400. Darlington. s c
(Ward Bunon)
March 26 - Food City 500, Brislo l, Tenn.
(Rusty W allace)
·
April 2 - DirecTV 500 , Fort Worth.· Te.-as.
Natlon1111 League Leaders
(Dale Earnhardt Jr )
April 9 - Goody's 500 . Mart1nsv111e. va
BATTING- Helton , Colorado , .375; lCaSl il(Marl~; Martin)
lu, Flonda, 371 , Vidro, Montreal _35a · VGuerAprtl 16- DieHard 500, Talladega . Ala. uett
rer o. Montreal 356 , P•azza, N~w Yo~k . .350:
Gordon)
·
Sheffield , Los Angeles, .339: Kent, San Fran30
NAPA
Aulo
Parts
500,
Fontana.
April
CISCO. 333
Calif. (Jeremy Mayfield)
RUN S---- Ectr lOOds , St lOU I ~ . 95, Helton,
May 6 - Ponllac Excnement 400. RichColorado. 94. Bagwell . Houstc-"'1. 90; AJones .
mond. Va . (Dale Earnhardt Jr)
Allanla, 82 , Sheffield, Los Angeles . 81, C1nllo .
May 28 - Coca-Cola 600. Concord. N C
Colorado. 79, Bonds. San Franc•sco, 78.
(Matt Kenseth)
RBI - SSosa, Ch1cago. 90; Kent, San FranJune 4 - MBNA Platmum 400 Dover Del
CISCO, 88 , Gnff ey Jr. Cincinnati , 85; Sheffield,
. (Tony Stewan)
·
·
Los Angeles, 84, Helton, Colorado, 83 . VGuerJune
11
Kmart
400,
Brooklyn,
Mien
(Tony
rero , Montreal. 83 ; Pial2a , New Yorio; , 83 .
Stewart)
HITS- V1dro. Montreal, 133 ; Hellen. ColJune 19 - Poc ono 500 . Long Pond . Pa.
orado. 130: KeCit. San Franc•sco, 124. AJones:
(Jeremy Mayfield }
A11anta , 1.22. SSosa. Ch1cago . 122: VGuerrero,
June _25 - Save MartJKragen 350k. SonoMontreal , 121 , LGonzalez, Ar1zona, 121 .
ma, Calif . (Jeff Gordon)
DQUBLES--Hel ton, Colorado, 3-4 ; Vidro,
July 1 - Peps• 400, Daytona Beach, Fta
Mon1real. 34: Cirillo , Colora do, 30 ; Green. Los
(Jeff Burton)
Angeles, 29, Kent , San Francisco. 29: Zeite ,
July 9 - New England 300. Loudon. N H
New York, 29; Ueberthal. Philadelphia, 28:
(Tony Stewan)
EYoung, Chicago. 28.
July 23 - Pennsytvan1a 500. Long Pond
TRIPLES------NPerez , Colo rado, 8, Womack .
(Rusty Wallace)
Ar1zona, 8: Goodwin, Coloraoo . 8: VGuerrero.
Aug . 5 - Brickyard &lt;100. Indianapolis .
Monlreal, 7; Abreu , Philadel phia , 6, Lansing,
Aug . 13 - Global Cross1ng at The Glen,
Colo•ado, 6 , AMartin, San Diego. 6, Shumpert,
Wallbns Glen, N .Y.
ColOrado, 6 LWalker, Colorado , 6.
Aug . 20 - Peps1 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
HOME AUNS-Shelfield , Los Angeles , 34,
Aug . 26 - gorac1ng com 500. Bnstot. Tenn .
Bonds, San Franc1sco. 32 ; SSosa, Chicago,
Sept 3 - Southern 500 . Oarhngton, S.C .
31, Gnffey Jr, C•ncinna11, 31 : McGwire , St
Sept. 9 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400. RichLou1s. 30: Hidalgo. Houston, 29; Edmonds, St.
mond, Va .
Lou 1s, .28; Piazza , New Yor11, 28: Bagwell ,
Sept. 17 - New Hampshire 300 , Loudon.
Hous10n. 28 .
Sept. 24 - MBNA com 400. Dover, Del
STOLEN BASES--LCaslillo , Florida , 42;
Oct. 1 - NAPA AutoCare 500, MartinSVIlle,
Goodwin , Colorado. 38. EYoung. Chtcago, 31 :
va
OVeras. Atlanta , 25: Milson. Flonda . 2 1.
Oct. 8 - UAW-G M Ouahly 500 , Concord.
G larwllle, Philadelphia, 20·
s, San D1ego,
NG
20. Wom~ c: k. Anzo na
Oct. 15 - Wmslon 500, Talladega Ala
PITCHING. ( ! 3 D sie~- RDJohnson,
Oct 22 - Pop Secret M1crowave 400,
Afll ona , 15-3, 833 . 2
: Est , San FrancisRock1ngham . N C
co ! 0-3, 769 , 3 99, K own. os Angeles . t0Nov s· - Checker Auto Parts/Dura Lube
3 769 231 . G Madd~_611 nta 12-4, 750
500k , AVOndale. ArtZ .
3 27, Elarton, Houston, 1tl-4, .714 , 5.21 ; ALelt Nov 12 - Pennzo•l 400 , Homestead, Fla .
l}r, New York, 10-4 , 7 14, 3 41 : Glav•ne, Allanta ,
Nov 1Q
NAPA 500. Hampton . Ga
I 2-S. 706 3 49
Driver Standing•
ST RIKEOUTS -- RQJohnson , Anzona . 228:
1 Bohby Labonte. 2,825.
A~tacm. Colorado. 137, K•le, St. Louis , 132;
2 Oa tl .Jarrett 2, 772
KB•own . Los Angel ec:;. 132. Benson. Pittsburgh .
] Dale Earnhardt , 2,716
1JO Dempsler. Flor•da, 129; Aleiter, New York ,
4 J~ff Bunon, 2,624
125
5 R .~.t y Wallace , 2,557
SAVES - AIIonseca . Florida, 29: Hoffman,
6 Tor ~ Stewart, .2 .5&lt;10
San D1ego, 24, Nen , Sa n Francisco. 24: 8en 7 Wlrd Burton, 2 ,535
•tez. New York 22 Agu1lera, Ch•cago , 22;
8 .)Pff Gordon. 2,518
Verec;_ Sl Lo u•s, 18, Graves, Cincmnati. 17 ·
9 M.:m Man1n, 2,487
1o _R1cky Rudd ,· 2',468 .
11 M1ke Skinner, 2,236
Amarlcen leagu• Lea~rs
12. MaN Kenseth, 2,228
13. Terry Labonte . .2.082 .
BA TTING---Garc1aparra, Basion ,
391,
14. Dale Earnhardt Jr, 2,068.
Er stad , Anahe•m . 378 , CDelgado , Toronto .
15 Jeremy Mayfield, 2.030.
360_ EManmez. Seattl e. 355: IRodnguez,
16 Johnny Benson. 1.998
r..,.,. 347 MJ S weeney, Kansas C1ty. 346.
17 '(en Schrader. 1,951
.. ~&gt; ; S oatt l~ 345
18 .3teve Park , 1,936
·;:; ARod riQI IPl SPattle , 95, CDelgado,
19 B1ll Elliott. 1.932
,to 83. En;tad , Anahe•m . 80 . Damon.
20 Sterling Ma rl1n, 1,921
~.lns&lt;l.JC 11y 80 : Durh am. Ch1cago, 80: Monde 21 Chad Linle. 1.877
&lt;il. rorontn 78 , BeWtlllams. New York, 78
22 Joe Nemechelo;, 1,876
PBI EMan •n"ez. SoatlJf'!. 96 . BeWilhams.
23 John Andren.. 1. 793
N~&gt;w York. 94
COelgci"do, Toron1o , 92 ,
24 Aooen Pressley. 1 776
J1C.•a mb1 Oakland. 9 1 Thomas . Ch1cago. 90:
25 J1mmy Spencer, 1 732
,._,. SwpPnPy K"n!H''I S C1ty 99 . MOrdonel ,
26 Jerry Nadeau 1.677

Cents

Commission
•
reorganizes
for planning

395.

San Francisco 3, San Diego 1

so

MIDDLEPORT

PITCHING (13 Decisions)- OWells, Toronto, 16·3 .. 842 , 3.rl9; Hudson, Oakland. 11·3,
. 7~. 4.56 ; PMartinez, Boslon. 11-3,. 786, t .38;
M oy8f, Seattl e, 11 ·3, _786 , 4.00: Baldwin .
C hicago, 12-4, .750, 4.44; Burba, Cleveland ,
10-4, .714, 5.18: Parque, ChiCago, 9-4, .692.

P1ttsburgh 5, Milwaukee 4

July 28, 2000

•

20.

Houston 3, Cincinnati 2

Team
W L Pet.
New York
........ ... .... 54 42 .563
Toronto .
.. ...........54 48 .529
Boston ......... .. ...... ....... 51 46 .526
Balt imore
....... 43 57 .430
Tampa Bay ................... 40 59 404
Central Dlvislcn
Chicago .............. ...... .62 39 .6 14
Cleveland .............. .. ..... .51 48 515
Kansas City__
..... 47 53 470
Detroit ..........................46 53 465
Mmnesota
....46 57 447
West Olvlalon
Seattle
.58 42 sao
Oakland
.................. 55 45 .550
Anahe1rn
................ 54 48 .529
Ta:ocas .
. ..... 48 51 .485
W.ctnetday'a Gamta
Toronto a, Cleveland 1
M1nnesota at Boston, ppd ., rain
Kansas C11y 7, C hicago White Sox 6
Oakland 6, Seattle 1
Tampa Bay 6, Detroit 2
New YorK 4, Baltimore 1
Texas 6, Anahe•m 5

27. Kevin Lepage. I ,625.
28. Micl'lalij_ Walln ip, 1 ,614 .
29. Kenny Wallace, 1,539.
30. Bobby Haminon, 1,517.
31. Elliott Sad let", 1,479.
32. Kenny Irwin, 1,440
33. Dave Blaney, 1,374.
34. Stacy Campion. 1,248
35. Wally Oallenbach Jr., 1,210.
36. Kyle Peny, 1,167.
37. Brett Bodine, 1, 123.
38. Darrell Waltrlp,- 1,078.
39. R•ck Mast, 1,076
40. Scoit Pruett, 1.020.

Friday

News of local servicemen, ·As
NFL Hall of Fame preview, Bl

Saturday
High: 80s; Low: 60s

-Lindsey
Houser, a member of the Four
Co rners 4-H
Club brought in
a f ruit pizza for
j udging in her
"Fast Break for
Breakfast " project.

amphitheater. T hat 's w hen gran d
and reserve champwns in clothing projects will be anno unct:d,
along with tht• nami.;c; of th me
who havl' bl'en se lect ed to rcpn.·sen t the t:o unty in the show at th L'
Ohio State Fair.
"T h e You th of201/0. M aking a
Diffe rence" will be, th eme of this
yea r \ programs, cx hi bin .:md
parade at the Meib" Co un ty Fair.
which o pens on Au g. 14 .
For 4- H m e mbers, the f:1ir is
the highli ght of th ei r proj ecl
work, the culm ination of numer-

Please see 4-H, Page AJ

MIDD LE PORT - Thereform atio n of Middleport's Plannin g
Comm ission will li kel y change
th e way tll.1t econo mi c developm ent efforts arc ~oordinated.
M ayor Sa ndy lannardli recently appointed three f!lelllbers of
th e public, and a m ember of village council to . serve on the
board , which held it' firo;t m e&lt;""
in g on Thursd ay.
M ick C hilds wi ll serw as the
chairm an of the group, with
Myro n lluflie ld and Steve Dunfee also representing the citizens
of Middle-port. Councilman Bob
1-tobin son was also appo inted to
se rve, and hnnarc lli , who serves
as an e:x-ofli cio mt·mb e r of all
vi Jbge COilllll l tr.CeS, IS :J] SO :1
11lL'111bl'r.
MidJieport Vill age Planni ng
Commission wa'\ firo;t fOrmed in
I'J62, but fe ll by the waysid e in
the 1990s. The new members will
o;erve staggered three-year term s.
Tht• ~up's f1rst Jssit.r-tHllL' nt
will likely be to update 1h c village's mastn ~ tratcgic plan for
en HHlmic deve lopmem. wh1ch
out-lines- the villagt"Y- infrastru G
turc :1nd otht"r assets. an d wh ich ~
also wi ll set fo rth goa ls for dcve lop mem as Middleport en ters th e
2 1st ccntuty.
That plan , fi rst developed by
the planning commission yl'ars
af(O. also includes a stratq,')' for
stren~henin g the business climate of the central busmess district . accoRling to Uill C hikk

T iH· .1;1'&lt;//lf/' ,/Irs/ ol.': i.~:n111&lt;' 111 ll'i/1 lil:d)' ,,, ,,,
11pd;,,&lt;' rile , ·i/J,,\~&lt;' ·, l/l,l.q&lt;T
Sfr,ll('.{!it- pfdll _l(ll' CftJ/lt)IIJif
dt·r•doplllcnl , tl'lzith lilt/- .

/ir1t s rl1c r•il/.1.~&lt;' :, ill/r.ts/ructwT ,,,,i Mh!'l' .tsse/s,
a IILI tl'irirh &lt;I!so ll'ill se/
_t(mlr .~c&gt;.tls.f(,,· dc·l'rlc&gt;p"H'IH &lt;IS

Jfldr/li'f'0/'1 &lt;'11[1'/'S

the 21st 0'111111')'
\Vho ~ervt.·d on the fi rst planning
connn ission, beginning 111 the
1%1/s.
In rece nt n1onths, bnnarelli has
also rcorg&lt;H iizt·d a co Hmumity
develo pm ent amhority. w hi ch
ln:-. di 'ICUssrd pm~ ible plano;, fo r a
downtown revitJiization prnJL'L"t.
The planmng cum nHss ion will
also have authorit)' in dcvdoping
anJ strength l'nin g zo ning regulations in Middleport. and in rccom nlen ding ordinance cha nges
to help Middleport attract new
industry or retail businesses into
th ~: t.::ommun iry,..
Th e grou p wi ll al'o work
closely with a citizens ~ld':'lsory
grou p. headed up by Bill Ch ild,,
to develop plam for the 'C lJU ~&lt;i ­
tio n and subsequent use of the
three o;c hool hlllldmt-,"" now
O\V Il L'd by the Ml.:'i gs Loc al
Sc hoo l District. and to be v:lclfed
with tht: construction of a new
consulidatL'd d cmenra11' schoo l.

Local Highway Patrol troopers receive promotions
FROM STAFF REPORTS

1999
1999
1999
Crown Vic. Mustane Pont 4 Or
White LX Convertible Grand AM
Loaded

$ave

1998
Pontiac
Firebird

1997
ToYota
Corolla

2 left

Save on Gas

Local Trade

1
1999
1999
1998
Dodee Raneer S.C Ford
Lincoln
Duraneo 4 Dr OPt. Windstar Continental
White 4 Dr
Local Trade

1997
1996
Do dee
Geo
Dakota S.C Tracker
White 4K4

CA LLI POLI S - Three State H igh way
Pat ro l tro opers formerly or c..:u rrentl y
assl~llL' d to the Gallia- M eigs Post Wt.·rc
pro111otcd Tuesd.ty by Col. Kenn eth L.
Morckel. rhe patrol superintt•ntknt .
Lt. Kevin D. Teaford; prt· scntly COllimand e r of th e pat rol's West Jdfersnn
Post , was promot L·d to stafTli c utcnan t .
Sgr. !Jenu rd L. Dodd of tht· Ottie&lt; uf
Liccmin g and Commt·rcial Stand&lt;Irds is
now c1 li eute nant , and Trooptr Troy S.
John "on of the G - M po'it has b een pro motcJ w serg...:aiH.
\Vith Ius prom otion, Teati.).rd Ius been
rcassi~ncd to rhe patrol\ ,headquarters in

Conv. Red

Nice

1996
Lincoln
Town Car
Loaded

3 to choose

Loaded

1996
F-150

1995
Ranger

4x2

Blue 4x4

Today's

Sentinel

Turnpike QualitY.Pzre Servi~e~pecials

S~orts

Weather

AS

B2-'l
BS
A4

AJ
Bl, 6
AJ

Lotteries
Buckeye 5: lr7- U- Ito-.10

•

Daily 3: tr2-0 Daily 4:

I FGI
~
. fOlD

t111n ''"'"'"'
tlol

7-~ -7-4

TeJ ~(l!"d is .1 J lJX:) gr.1du .tt c of South ern
Hig h SdHlo l .IIIli hnld, .1 bac ltelnr 's
tkgrt·e fro111 thL· Un ivL'rsiry of Ri o
C r :m de. He ,d'io t"o m plc red 'lt udics at t h e
FB I N.1timul Acadc'IIIV.
I k IW\Y n . · ... idL''i in we . . t _lctli.:r. . on wi~h
h 1'i wttl· lkch· ,ull..l \nil Kndy, I 1.
I )od d wd\ rL't.1in hi:-. prL''l'lH .l ssi~n ­
lll l' ll t at p ~1trol h L'&lt;! dqu arttT\ \Vlth ln li pro Ill OtlO 11 .

H L· joinl.:'d thL· pc1tro l in llJH I .b ,1 c.1 Jc.:t
d ilipatdl cr :1r Porhmourh .. md W:l'i .1 L\Jdcr
di , p;tt clh.· r .H (; ,Il!ipo li~ h c.:fnrc t' niL"nng

P orr"nlntl th .

ProtilntL·d to sageant 111 IYHlJ. Dodd
was :1 11 assisr;1m comm anJL• r ,It New
Philadelphi a and Callipo lis. ond as ,1
COilllll L' rri.J l enforce ment cuordin.ttor .lt
_i;1ck ,on hdC:1rc transferring to headqua rters.
A nati w of C.t llipo li,, llodd graduated
ti-o m St. Aib ,uts Hi gh School 111 1 n~.anJ
stttJicd .lt Sh.nv nee State University and
l)hio Un ive rsity. Hl' c u rrently rcsidc:s in
ClrciL·vil k with hi s w ife Melva, and has

I' OM E l ~&lt; W - If yu u .m· ""
l!ldividual whn •.•njoy'\ ~pL· nding
hot "'llllllllL"r d.1ys noising the
U h10 Rivn llll ,JjL't \kl or '\k llllmin g: tht• waVL'" in :1 motorho ;lt,
thL·n it is in1p o rt.lllt to I"L' 111L' tllhn
.tnd pracn re ( )h1o \ boari11g law-;
.tnd safL"ty rcgubtiou ~.
According to th,· Ohio I kp.1rt111L'I1t of Natura l Re-;mlrCL''
(()!)Nil. ), thc·re Wl'l\' 40X .4'J'i

four children: N icholas, 12: G raha m , Ill;
C hmti , H; and Marcil', H.
Followin g p ru muti o n , Jo h mu n wd l
tramfer to M ari ett:l. whL't"l' he wt tl lx ,l ll
assistam post collHHandt-r.
Johnson join ed thL' p:uml 1n ll)l)( ) as .1
cadt·t di spa tc h er J,t Jao.:bo n. He trained
with th t' \ 22th patrol i1Cidt'I 11Y dis:-. ami
rL·ceived hi ' con11ni so; ion in June I') 1J2.
Prio r to tr.mstl:rrmg to c;.1 J! ipoli, in
I !.J&lt;JH, he snvL'd ar Atlwns.
A n:tti ve of l3iJ,vel'I,Joh nsL)n graduJtcd
fru m Gallia Ac.ld L
'I llY H1gh School 111
1 9~·N and iarL"r ~tudit..·d .1 r th e Uni\'LT:-.iry
ofKL·ntucky. H e c urrently n:sidt·s in GJ Ili pnli s \\/lth hi " witl· H:l\' lcy.

nn·d

t~)r boater n lur;1tion
{__)n jll flL' ~~. \ l)IJX. t!JL'1 l- l)l ll n
Gov. (;c.:orgl· Voinovich 'igncd

L'dll l-,ltinll LU ll r~L' . J fth L"\' h tl\'L" !lOt
Llkl'll the Cillll"'ot', l'hl' I"L'tlt.JJ hu st-

1-11.1 )1 /2 llltll Oltiu l.lw.
The Ja,v pmhib tt., any pcr.,on

en~nw.

m.nni.d to th e illdt\·idLI.tl . who. in
rurn. mu sr p.1ss .111 cX.llll \\"irh .1
sn, rc of iJr l percen t (lr hL·ttn
[-!;iVi..'ll hy th e l'l'llt',d ht·l ,im'"''·
Addn1m 'u lly, thL' law lumr....tt lV
pcP•nn under the .1~L' of 1(--, from
opl'J".lting ,1 pc..Tso n,1J \\'.ltnc r .lti .
J-lnwevcr, the law doe" permit
childrL·n ,1g&lt;..' 1~to 16 to oper.l tt· ,t
W.ltLTh&lt;Hilld \'\.''I'L' j j( ,l 'illpl' n ·j,i ng
pn"111 l X yt..·_.lr\ of .lg;t• or o lder l 'i
.1 ho.1rd the n .1 tl: \\'Hh thL' lll .
lkl\nc.: i1L'. h.:lin ~- 1.111t t!."1r ,I 'd,ry uC
ho .mn ~. the ( ) J &gt;Nlt , I] , ~) rcl" tl\1l lllL'1Hh th .It \'l lll r ho.lt ·lu .... in ,\ddi tinn to ht'l.·· jxkL·r-; ..~ tirL' ·t·xtill -

imhvidual must "1g11 a 'l t.ltl'llll'llr s:1ying th .lt they have "ll rl.L'"'fu lly cnn1p\ ott·d tit \.' h n,Hm ~

gui..,lJer. vi-;u,ll dio;rn'\\
~o und ..,ignahng d.._,\-iCL''i,
.md lin L', ,md h~.dlt ....

born on o r .tftcr j.111. \. J•JH2, fi·o nl
OptT,lti ng ,l Vl''iSd pmVLTL'd b~
mort• r·h .m . t 10- hp L'ngmc. u n]e-;:-.
the pLT'\Oil Iu s ·m cn·ss fu!l y co lnpktcd .1 boa tin~ cd uc.lt JOi l l·our!'c
.tppnwc J _
by t hl' ]'J ~1tiu n a l Ass(lrJ . tio t ~ B natin~ L.1w
Al minl'itr:ltor~ or .1 proticiL· ncy

rq_~l'\ll'f"l'd HI thl' .,Llli..' J.1-;t

L'.'\ ~111111 J.Itl011

RIVER EXCITEMENT- Le s and Tnsh Hayman. along with Jim Boyer.

·1 IlL· 11\llllhLT u( rq.~i,tncd ho.1h enjoy warm weather by doing some boati ng near the Middleport levee
)h10 h:l\ nHHHHICd ro grow · on Thursday afternoon . ODNR rem inds all usmg watercraft to utilize
:'\ lll(L' ( 1)1J.1, Whl'll t\HTL' \\'l..'I"L" Ohio ·s boating law s and regulations . (Tony M . Leach photo)
JH4.114X bo,lt'i rq;i..,tL·rnl. 'it.1tistin
111 J i.JL)l), and ro darL' tlll'rc ' havc ti(· .md thL· hiddl·n danger-; .1:'\:\0Ci'\ how.
,ltL·d \\"ith hn.Hi ng. t ht.• 122nd
There WL'rL' .1 toul of ll.J ho ,It- hcL'll 1.1 t~1taltriL' " rht'\ ye.tr.
i n~ fi1r:1liut''\ o n ( &gt;htn\ w.Jrcn\".I\"'
Wuh till' l ll tTt..', l ~t· 111 \\' .Iter tr.1f- ( :t.'11L'Ld A 'i\L'1llhly rL·~..·ng:niz~..·d .1
111 (

W.VA.

I 'NH.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Vt', l l"

Pi c k 3: 11-S-.\~ Pick 4: t~- --t -.'-~

ment
Tt·aforJ. a 1-larill L' nati vt:, joi n L·J th e
patrol in March 19Xh ;~"a c,Itkt d i ~p.Itc h ­
cr at J.tCkson. H e ,1lso ~LTYcd .ts .1 Cltkt
di&lt;patcht'T at Ca llip oli&lt; bdorc enter ing
r r :1111 in g 111 rhe p:nrol ac1 dellly\ I 17th
,· loss in Marc h I'IHR.
After l"t:Ct'Jvin g hi., l'0 11lllli'\.,HHl, he
served :-~t Jat:kson .md (;.lll ipolts as ~1
troopn. He wtts C .11li'pul i'i Po st Troopn
of rh e Ye;Ir 111 19tJ 1.
Teaford w:rs pro111ot e d to sergea nt in
l lJY4 and snved il'i :111 a ~.,ISLm t post comlllander at Iro nt on. and latL'r at G :tlli poh'i

t raming with the.: \1 2th p;Hrol acad emy
d .1'i:-. in J&lt;JR:1.
.A. ftl't" rL'L' C.:iVing hi ~ t"O lll!lli SS IUil 111
M ;Jrch I 'JHJ. Dodd sCr\'ed ~IX years ;It

BY TONY M . lEACH

J, o ,lt'\

OHIO

He was promoted to l i L'll tL~ na nt .md
,1:-.signn:l ro mmomd of West J ctll-r so i J in

ODNR makes pitch for boating safety procedures

1 Sedions - 11 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials .
Obituaries

Col um b us, whtTl' he \\"ill work in ti!L'
Oflice of I h1m:m R L·sourn· Manage--

.lp}lHl\'l'li

hy

thl'

OllNR. Divi&lt;ion &lt;&gt;fW:r ternalt .
Tlh· Lm· .11:-:.o .1 pplin to t htl"L"
who .Jrl' "n:k !llg to rnll ,, n·..,..,cl
powered by lllOTL' tl1.1n ,l 10- hp
A11

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prm·idL· &lt;.· du c 1ti on:d

1\ i~n J I ..,,
.HJC lh'l"

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