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Page Slxtaen- The Dally Sentinel 2000 Fall $porta Preview

••

TRI-COUNTY FOOTBALL ·SCHEDULE
August 25
Meigs at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 7:30
River Valley at Ross Southeastern,
7:30
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30
. Southern v. Clay County, 7:30 {at Laidley Field, Charleston)
Hannan at Hamlin, 7:30
August26
Wahama at Williamstown, 7:30
August31
Hannan at Clarksburg Notre Dame,
7:30
September 1
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 7:30
Roane County at Point Pleasant, 7:30
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30
Ross Southeastern at South Gallia,
7:30
Athens at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at Portsmouth East, 7:30
Eastern at Fort Frye, 7:30
Federal Hocking at Wahama 1 7:30
SeptemberS
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 7:30

Point Pleasant at Man, 7:30
Meigs at River Valley, 7:30
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Wahama, 7:30
Hannan at Buffalo-Putnam, 7:30
Septe~T~ber

15
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 7:30
River Valley at Point Pleasant, 7:30
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 7:30
Southern at Alexander, 7:30
Wahama at Ravenswood, 7:30
Marsh Fork at Hannan, 7:30
September 16
Meigs at Newark Catholic, 3:00
Parkersburg Catholic at Eastern, 7:30
September 22
Gallia Academy at Warren, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Logan, 7:30
River Valley at Athens, 7:30
Miller at South Gallia, 7:30
Fairland at Meigs, 7:30
Wahama at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Hannan, 7:30
September 29
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Jackson, 7:30

Parkersburg Catholic at South Gallia,
7:30
Wellston at Me(gs. 7.:30
Federal Hocking at Southern, 7:30
Trimble at Eastern, 7:30
September 30
Burch at Hannan, 7:30
October 6 ~ ·
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Warren at Point Pleasant, 7&lt;30
Jackson at River Valley, 7:30
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 7:30
Miller at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 7:30
Wahama at Gilmer County, 7:30
Hannan at Guyan Valley, 7:30
October 7
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia, 7:30
October 13
Logan at Gallia Academy, 7:3Q
Athens at Point Pleasant, 7:39
River Valley at Marietta, 7:30 '·
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame, 7:30
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30
Southern at Waterford, 7:30

Details, A3

October20
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy,
7:30
River Valley at Warren, 7:30
Hannan at South Gallia, 7:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30
Trimble at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Waterford, 7:30
St. Mary's at Wahama, 7:30

Meigs County's

The best sports coverage
for Meigs County!!
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2156

Hometown Newspaper
~o Cenb

New attomey appointed in Gillilan case
BY BRIAN

October 27
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Marietta, 7:30
Logan at River Valley, 7:30
South Gallia at Guyan Valley, 7:30
Belpre at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at Eastern, 7:30
Wahama at Wirt County, 7:30
Gauley Bridge at Hannan, 7:30

J.

has since appointed Atto rney Wilham
Eac hus of Gallipolis to represent G illilan .
G illilan, 32, is charged with two counts
of aggravated murder in the Au g. 18 death
of T homas M atthew Parker II. T he child
di ed after being rem oved from life support equipm ent at Cabeii- Huntingto n
H ospital in Huntingto n, W.Va. He was
fi rst taken to H olzer M eig.; C linic o n
Aug. I11, and was transported to the
Huntingto n fac ility by m edi cal heli copter.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - A new atto rney has
been appointed to represent Tony Gillilan ,
the Lo ng Botto m m an charged in conn ection with the death of a 2- year-old
boy.
Po meroy Attorney Steven L. Sto ry, who
w as fim appo inted last Friday 10 represent
Gillilan , fil ed a m o tio n to withdraw as
counsel in M eig.; C o unty C ourt earlier
this week, and Judge Patrick H. O 'Hrie n

October 28
Southern at Eastern, 7:30

Prosecuting Attorn ey Jo hn Lentes said
111 court M o nday tha\ investigators believe
the child died as a result of Sh aken Baby
Syndrom e, and that G illilan was allegedly
babysittin g the child at the time of the
mJury.
G illil an is in jail o n .two $ 1 millio n
bo nds, and w ill appear in court again
M o nday for a preliminary h earing.
Lentes said Thursday he would wait
Until after the Mo nday prel iminary hearin g before determining if the case will be

presented to th e M eig.; County Grand
Jury as a capital, o r death penalty, case.
An indictment of G illilan could com e
as early as Sept. 8, when the Grand Jury is

set to convene agam.
Story said he asked to withdraw from
the case because he has served as a private
atto rn ey fo r the victim's family fo r a
num ber of years.
In addition, Sto ry said , his contract w ith
th e co unty as a part- time pubhc defender
does no t require him to handle homicide

rose in July

energy costs this winter, with
natural gas and he,ating o il
pr ices near histori c highs.
"This year the squirrel isn 't
burying any nuts and we'regoin g into th e winter on
fume s," said Phil Flynn , an
energy analyst for Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago. "Unless
something dramatic happens,
we're looking at a very expensive winter."
Energy markets were jolted
this week by a combination of
devel o pments that sent prices
shooting higher - an unex•
pected drop in U.S. crude oil
stockpiles coupled with a
]iip eline explosion in New
M exico and a hurricane that
raised fears of. anoth er blow to
already-low natural gas supplies.
Soon the aftershocks will be
felt by co nsumers , whose utilities already were warning them
to brace for big bills ah ead.
Suzatme deGraff, a natural
gas customer from R ochester,
N.Y., said she's been told her
m onthly bill from R ochester
G as and Electric Co. will jump
abo ut S26 to S 130.
" I'm not h appy," she said,
" but , again , they're th e o nly
o nes in town . What am I going

to do?"
Wheth er a cu sto m er's utility
provides n atural b'&lt;~ S o r heating
o il , th ere appears to b e no way
around prices h eadin g high er
th an last winte r - one of th e
cos tliest home heating seasons
ever.
H o m e h eatin g o il pri ces
surged this week to their highest since th e G ulf War in th e
w ake of industry surveys
showing inve ntories o f U.S.
crude o il, its so urce, dro ppi ng
to 24-year low s. H eatin g oi l
rem ains m o re th an 50 p ercent
m o re expensive than a year
ago.
T he increase is blam ed partly o n a. cutback in prod uction
by th e O rgani zation o f the
l!etroleum Expo rting Coun -

tries.
N at u ral gas has roc keted
upward fo r d iffere nt reaso ns.
U.S. suppli es of natu ral gas
have been declini ng si nce the
mid- 1990•amid a drop in pro d uctio n by c ner b'Y fi rms that
did n't find it worth th ei r w hil e
w hen prices were low.
P rices have nlore than doubled in th'-" last year and a half
an d reached an all-tim e hi gh of
$4 .85 per I ,000 cubic feet this
week on t he New York Mere,
w here futures prices are a precursor for wholesale and retail

PIHH see Halt. Pill AS

In ano ther Meigs County murder case,
Lentes said he anticipates a competency
determi nati o n in the case of M ichael
Jackso n , who is accused of th e Easter Sunday murder of his wife; Victoria Jackson.
Psychiatric evaluations o n behalf of
both th e state and the defendant have
been completed, Lentes said, and a hearing could take place as earl y a.s next w eek
to determine if Jackson is competent to
stand trial .

imports

C HICAGO
(AI')
Whether . they use natural gas
or oil to heat their homes,
consumers can expect hi gher

•

cases.

Steel

Oil prices
mean
costly
winter

fnMn Page 9

Ob e rl in. w hi ch p laye d a l im ited co nfe re n ce sc h e d u le las t
year, will t r y to b reak a 29gam e los i ng strea k . C h ris
Mo ffatt (172 co mpl et ions,
1,633 ya rds) wi ll be t h row1 ng
to C o dy M cCoy (36 catc hes,
4 23 yards) a n d Bob Montag
. (34 ca tc hes, 249 yard s).

August 25, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 65

NCAC

recetvers.

Friday

•

Miller at Eastern, 7:30
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama, 7:30
Meadow Bridge at Hannan, 7:30

. Keep up with your favorite. football teams each week in The Daily Sentinel
and the Sunday- Times Sentinel!
.

broke school records for
total offense in a game (485
yards) and a season (2,780
yards) last year.
His top receiver should be
Kurt Casper (75 catches, 902
yards, 6 TDs). Desson Hannum
(326 yards) is the top returning running back.
Hiram went winless last yea.r
as 22 players went down with
season-ending injuries .
Kris Giebel ranks third on
. the Terriers' all-time list with
2,315 yards and will try to
lead the team in rushing for' a
fourth straight ye ar.
Junior Dwayne Pavkovi c h
(1 ,569 yards , II TDs) is at
quarterback for a third straight
year.
,
Nick Fletch e r , c oa c h at
Eureka for five years, rake s
over at Denison.
The return of two outstanding quarterbacks w i ll di ctate
his strategy as sophomore s
Ryan Hite and Greg N euendorf compete for the starting
job.
N e uendorf won the jo b in
training c amp but w as hurt in
the first game.
Earlham h as 19 sta r ters ba c k
among 4 2 re turning le tt ermen, includin g rec eive r Mike
Kitchel (3 7 catch es) a nd quarterback Quin cy Adam s (14 3
c.ompleti o n s, I ,087 yards) ,
who earn e d the j o b halfw ay
through hi s fre shm a n year.
Kenyon los t two ru nnin g
backs who combi ned fo r m o re
than I ,800 rushin g yard s last
year . Ju stin J o n es a n d To n y
Miga will b attle fo r t he start ing quar terba c k j o b .
Neil Hall a nd J oe Belle in
(40 c ombin e d ca t c h es, 422
yard s) are th e top retu rn in g

Meigs society news and notes, As
Reds win; Bengals take on Lions, Bl

.
Saturd~
Hlp: lOs; Low: lOS

GETTING UNDER WAY- Jim Sheets, pictured above, begins
to l:lreal&lt;grouno witn a oulldozer on the new- Rattartt1 Park
Project which is located on property near Depot Street.

Sheets and other residents have donated both time and
materials-tor- the construction or the facility. (Submittedphoto)
~·

Rutland park project under way
BY TONY M. LEACH

ment because of irs cl osen ess to the

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Rutland C ivic C enter and H arder cabin
lo ts, as well as .the nearby tircmen's park
and the baseball fields.
"The park will b e co mpleted in three
phases, " Dewhurst said . "An d a proposed walking t rail w ill be constructed
in two ser.:tions. "
Phase on e o f th e projec t will include
a soccer field and a fire pit area; phase
two will incorpora te a shelter area, pi cnic area and a gazebo co nce rt area; and
ph ase three will contain a sa nd vo ll eyball co urt , b as ketball co urt, te nms
courts, and a large playground equipm ent area.
"Ph ase on e o f the proj ect is alread y
near co rnplt: ti o n , 11 D ewhurst said .
" Phase two will be finished in o ne year
and phase three w ill be co mpleted in

UTLAND Local
volunteers used heavy
e qui p m ent 10 begin
moving dirt last week
o n comrruccio n w o rk
that w il l result in an exten.sive new park
fo r Rutland reside nts.
The park properry, w hic h is located
nea r D epo t Street m R u tl and, was
o btaine d throug h a FEMA tlood hazard
miti gatio n program that allowed residents to sell th eir nuod -vu ln crable
pro perti es to th e village so th ey m u ld
relocate o ut o f t he n ood plai n.
Th e an 1uired parcels of lan d co uld
not be used tor reb uildmg. H owever,
FEMA regulauons. do allow fo r such
property to be used fo r parks,
Rutland M ayor J ay Dewhu rst said the
pro perty was pr im e for p ar k develop -

Sentinel
Sections -

16 Pages

AS

Calendar
Clas1ifieds

B&lt;l-6
B7

Corni ~s

A4

Editorials
Obituaries

::iJ10rli
Weather

A3

Bl-2,

S, 8
AJ

Lotteries
OffiO
Pic k 3: 7-9-7; Pick 4: 6-&lt;•-''- I
Buckeye 5: M--2.1-3\~.lS-.11&gt;

W: YA,
Daily 3:

~ -6-.l

D aily 4:

The walkin g trail, w hi ch will run

tries.
Instead, th e administration has been imposing
tariffs o ne produ ct at a time and one country at a
tim e, after investi gating industry complaints:
Those trad e cases have b een a mixed bag, with
so m e resolved in th e exporte rs' favor and so m e
res ultin g in h efty tariffs .
" Very signifi can t unfair trade practices are still
threatening the U. S. steel industry and o ur sted
workers," said Sen .J ay Rockefell er, D - W.Va. "The
next Congress and administration may have to

consider eve n tougher action against countri es

needed tor th e park's co mpleti o n .
"To dat e, we .have collec ted around
$1.000 in do n ations fo r th e proj ec t ' '
Th e Rutlan d J&gt;ark and R ec reatio n
com m ittee is con.1p osed of Dewhurst ,

illegally dumping steel ."
Rep. Bo b N ey, R-Ohio, said the latest impo r t
figu res showed th e case-by-case approach has n ot
wo rked.
·
''I'm so sick and tired o f this stuff. It has to
end ," said Ney, suggesting th at President Ch nton
ask the C hinese to voluntar ily scale back th eir
expo rts.
With a general electio n approaching in th e fa ll ,
now is a good tim e to pressure th e Democ ratic
administratio n, N ey said .
" It is time fu r (Vice Preside nt) Al Gun: to walk
into his boss's o ffi ce and beat his fis t down," N ey
said . "Th ere are a lot of un io n ized steel wo rkers.
If th ey want to cater to these workers, th e best
way to cater to them is to let th em work and feed
their families."

Please see Pllrk. Paae A3

Please sae Steel, Pip AS

11

Wc are in th e process of tryin g to

acquire state and federal grant m o nies
to help pay fo r the proj ect," he said .

"The Park an d R ecrea ti on commi ttee
estim ates th at at least $400,111)0 w ill be

5Utvivor' proves.network TV can sutvive

1

Today's
1

three years."

along a portio n of the park , will consist
of seve ral mil es of trails and bridges that
will span nearby Leading C reek .
The estim "tcd tim e o f compl eti o n for
the walking trail po rti o n of the park
projec t is three to fi ve years, he said .
The cost of th e proj ec t is being fund ed b y do nati ons o btain ed th ro ug h
fund- raising eve nts, local banks, businesses and vari o us residen ts in th e com munity.

WASHIN G TON (AP) - Steel imports rose in
July, with C hinese steel imports tripling over Jun e
levels, the C omm erce Department repo rted
Thursday.
·
Overall , th e United States imported 3. 2 million
m etric tons of steel, up from 3 million metnc
tons in June .
C hinese steel m anufacturers sent 215 ,389 m etric to ns into the U .S. market during July, compared with 6 4,047 m etric tons a month earlier.
Imports from Japan rose to 202 ,5 14 metric to ns
from June's level o f 154,177 metric to ns.
"
The governmcpt tracks monthly changes in
steel imports because American steel companies
complained about a surge in low- priced imports
in late 1998 and through much of 1999.
D espite a high- profile lobbying ca mpaign ,
including m arch es and ralli es on C apitol Hill , the
· Clinton administration resisted demands from the
industry, unions and steel-state lawmakers fo r'
stro n ger sanctions a!fo!inst the .ex po&lt;ting cou n-

7 - ~-0-!1

LOS ANGE LES (AI ') - "Surv ivor," w hi ch · lio n vie\Vt'rs wcre watc hing.
"Survivor's" 28.(&gt; rati ng and 45 sh are of
Jo m in,necl rat ings anJ pnp-c ulru rl' discourst·.
has changed th e face o f su n·un er programmi ng those watching TV du r ing th e period was fat
and breath ed n ew life into netwo rk broad- from th e C.0.2 rating and 77 share for TV 's alltim e leader. the " MA SH" fi nale in 1983. But
castin g.
A BC, N BC and C BS have long h ung o u t a the prrfor manu: was t"Xtraonlinary in this age
"gone fishi ng" sign durmg th e hot weath er of m ultiple cable and satell ite options .
·· Last nig h t was one of th e m o~t mccessfu l
lllnnths. T h en "W ho Wants to lle a Mi llionain: .. scored w ith viewt·rs las t su m mL'r on nig hts in t he ne twork 's h istory;" C ll S
ABC, and C BS' "Survivor'' picked up th e ti ki spoke&lt; ma n C hris Ender crowed T hursday.
Th e n etwork hopes to relive th e experien ce
to rch and ran w ith it.
"The su m mer is no l ong~: r tht· repeat sea- with a "S urvivor" repeat in September and
son," S3 id Stacey Lyn n Koerner ofTN M edia "Survivor \I :Th e Austral ian O utbac k." debu ting after th e Super Bow l o n Jan. 2H.
in New York .
'
Co pycats arc li ning up. A slew of reality
Altho ugh Fox has trit•d o m new midyea r
progra m m in g fOr a de c~de , shl' sa1d, viewers S&lt;:ries are in the works. includ ing ADC's "The
wercn 't conUition t:d to tunt· tn, and the big Chase'' and "The M ole" an d possibl e NBC
contender "Ch ains of Love," about a woman
three networks did n't fo ll ow su1t.
chained ro four prospective boyfriends.
Un til uow.
' When about 75 mill ion people tuned in for
W hen w ily R.ichard H atch was selected by
his fe llow "Survivor" castaways as the S 1 mil- th e "Se infcld' ' f111ale in 1998, observers said it
lion prize w in ner Wednesday mght, 5 1.7 mi l- 111 ight rt·prc«·nt the last hurrah for broadcast

T V. Th ey Wt'rc \&lt;\' rong.
"Survivor" reaffi rmed broad casti ng's ability
to crl'atc a shared water-cooler ex perience in
a high- tec h wo rld m w hich people fmd contac t in creasi ngly t•l usive .
It was reminiscent of television's early history in 194R, w h en Milto n Bcrle's "Texaco Star
Th eater'' would score ratings as high as 80, as
people gath ered in the h omes of fr iends w ith

televisio ns.
"There are very few o p portun ities for peo-

ple to i'Xp er ience the same even t all at the
same ti m e and be abl e to talk about it day in
and day out ," Koerner said. "People are looking to be connected .''
Comp etition, not con nection, Was the rule
o n "Survivor,'' w hich dropp ed 16 people on a
Ma laysian island for 39 days and dangled a
mill ion b ucks in fro nt of th em. H atch prowd
the master of the· island domain, ou tlasting
finalists Susan Hawk. R u dy Boesch and Kelly
Wiglesworth .

'

'

II

�.,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pagt A 2 • The Dally Stntlntl

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Pollee hunt possible
lion
•
AKRON (AP) - Police in suburban Springfield Township are
teUing parents that their children can play outside after authorities
failed to find a mysterious big cat that reponedly was roaming the
area .
The last reported sighting of a large catlike anim.al with a long tail
was on Aug. 13. In early August, Springfield Township police
received nea~ly 20 reports of sightings of an animal that appeared to
be a young mountain lion and possibly someone 's pet.
Police Sgt. Garry Moneypenny s.Ud Wildlife expens could not
confirm a large cat was roaming in a wooded area in 'this community just southeast of Akron. He said the d~;partment no was longer
putting extra o£1icers on the road or stationing officers near locations where the animal was spotted.
"There has been no physical evidence- no tracks, no photos, no
carcasses" of prey, Moneypenny said.
"If it was here, it's obviously moved on or been reclaimed by its
owner."
•
Glenn James, Summit County animal warden, questioned
whether people who reported sightings actually saw a moumain
lion.
''I'm ·DOC saying they didn't see anything, but I mongly do11bt it
was. a mountain lion," he said.

Appeals court revives lawsuit
CINCINNATI (AP) -A federal appeals court has revived two
bwsuits filed on behalf of three members of a M1ch1gan family who
died when their pnv:1te plane crashed in Ohio.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Thursday that a district court jud!l" in Detroit erred by granting the defendants a summary judgment on their motion to dismiss the suits.
The pilot, Brian Jiggens of Romeo, Mich., his wife. Lisa, and their
son, Kaleb, were killed in April 1994 when their plane crashed near
Salem, while en route from Michigau to Leesburg,Va.
A judge ruled in August 1998 that a lawsuit filed on behalf of the
f.nuily failed to show enough evidence of negligence for a jury to
hear the case against the manufacturer, Piper Aircraft Corp., or the
Canadian company that refurbished the plane.
The appeals coun overturned that ruling Thursday, saying the
facts in the case are disputable, and sent the case back for trial.

Officer breaks woman's fall
HAMILTON (AP) - A rookie police officer is being credited
with preventtng serious injury to a woman who dived from an
overpass early Wednesday.
"She was going side to side and looking around like she w;.. confused and scared," said Officer Lanny Ash, 27. "Before you knew it,
she was coming down."
Ash, who was about 15 feet below the overpass, deflected the
140-pound woman's fall. He suffered a strained biceps, and she
broke her left elbow.
· "It seemed like it was in slow motion," Ash said Thursday. "The
first thing I thought when she jumped was, 'I hope I don't hurt my
back.' She feU pretty much in my arms."
Police Chief Neil Ferdelman commended Ash.
" We are thankful that Officer Ash was abl~ ro aet in such a way
as to prevent the death of (the woman)," Ferdelman said.
Ash downplayed his effort.
"Really, it's no big deal," he said.
Hamilton is about 20 nliles north of Cincinnati.

W~rk~ at Je~pns

plant kiO_ed_

CINC INNATI. (AP) -A worker died Thursday after an appar- ·
cnt mdusmal accident at the Andrew Jergens &amp; Co. plant.
The worker was identified as Gary Ayers, 28, of Mount Ornb, who
was employed by a subcontractor.
Fire ~nd police rcsp&lt;mded to the company shortly after 10 a.m .
Accordmg to a d11patch report, someone there called 911 to say that
workers we-re doing cardiopulmonary rc:suscitation on an unconscious nun who possibly had been crushed by machinery.

Student dies on.first day
LANCASTER. (AP) - A l6.y~ar-old lancaster High School
student lost consciOusness and d1ed m class on the first day of school
Thursday.
' Will !am Nicolia, a junior at the school, was pronounced dead at
Fairfield Medical Center, authorities said.
The cause of death was nm immediately known but it is believed
to be the result of na'i~ral causes, the Fairfield County Sheriff's
Office said. An autopsy was planned.
A teacher in the school had spotted Nicolia slumped over in a
classroom chau. Coaches who were nearby were called into the
~room and tried to revive Nicolia.
William ha~. a history .of heart problems. "He had heart surgery a
few years ago, sa~d Dav1d Hackmann of the sheriff's office.
Tom Maher, superintendent of Lancaster schools, said the student
passed out during a word processing dass .
Maher said that several crisis counselors would be on hand Friday
,
to comfort grieving students.
A moment of silence was observed for Nicolia by students Thursday evening.
Lancaster is about 30 miles southeast of Columbus.

Standoff with police ends
LIMA (AP) -Police shot and killed a man who barricaded himself and then set fire to his room at a homeless shelter.
Police' officers tried for six hours ·wednesday to get Michael
Hildebrandt out ufthe room, Maj . Larry Winegardner said. They
didn't ente r ~he room until they spotted 1moke coming from his
·
window, he sa1d.
"W hen they saw the fire. they went in with force and attempted
to use rubber bullets,'' said Colleen · Ferguson. treasurer of Lima
Resc ue Home. "Those didn 't faze him ."
Hildebrandt had two knives and charged at the officers even after
being 1hot with a bean bag gun, Wine~,;ardner smi.Thc· officen then
shot Hildebrandt with live anm1uniuon. he said.
Hildt·brmdt, 3(1, died an ho ur latn.
Th ~ fire was containc:J in h1s room . Otht·r rt'sllknts on thl.:' floor
.drL' .1dy had b~·t:n t:VJCU:ttcd.
Sht.·ltL'f n..·si~.h.· nt~ s.lid Hdch:br.wdt w.1s known tn lun· kniv~s .mJ
.. wo rd ~ 111 In ~ roo\ll anJ 'vas .1 m.nti ~tl .uts L'nthust;l'&gt;t .
L11 11,1 R t.•sntt.: Hollll' offl'r~ food, ,.- lothing :mJ shr..:ltt..:r to hmndc:ss
ll i L' Il .

The hullll.' 's dirL"ctor had ;t'&gt; kt..·d Hddl.:br.111dt to k.wl' bc:cw sc: hl·
w,l "i b1.·cmnmg vioh.:nt.
Joh n Malon , an l'mployl'L' .md slll' ltc..' r fl'"i tth.: nt . .:;,11d n.·siJc nts h;ld
bee n &lt;:umplaining of Hildt.: br.lmh':-. behavior for .1lmust two Wcl·ks.
T ht'y said lu.: w.1s 11\,lklll g rHml· w hd L· 111;1kmg k.lr.ltl·- lih· motion s.

'•

'

-

'

COLUMBUS (AP) -Teachers in Cleveknd student achievement.
"We're 30th in the county - out of 31 and Columbus, the state's Largest distriCts, cocild
go on strib: as the school year begins, affecting in pay scale," s.Ud Joanne DeMarco, chief negotiator for the Cleveland Teachers Union. "Once
about 140,000 students.
Cleveland teachers are ready to walk out we get people interested in teaching here, they
after their contract expires next Thursday, and go to Lakewood or Shaker (Heights) because
the Columbus Education Association is rp vote we can't compete with pay and \vorking condiMonday on whether to authorize a strike.
tions."
"You bet they're ready," Ohio Federation of
Cleveland is offering teachers annual raises of
Teachen President Tom Mooney said of the just over 3 percent for the nexr three years.
Cleveland teachers. "They have signs printed, Union negotiators have asked for 6 percent.
they have the strike authorization and they have
"To the general public, 3 percent a year
a history of strong discipline during strikes."
sounds good, but you have to look at the llliroThe main issues for Cleveland teachers are ry," DeMarco said Thursday.
salary and length of the school day, while
"In 1996, we were Sl50 million in debt. We
Columbus teachers are worried about proposed held our noses and talked them into a contract
"performance bonuses" that would be linked to that 1neant no raise. for the first two years and

Patrons bid farewell
to historic restaurant
Thomas Montague of Pickerington ate lunch there Wednesday
to say goodbye to a " part of good
old Columbus."
"To put a drugstore in- that ''
not progress," said hi1 wife, Pat.
Many encouraged own~r
Michael Tsao to keep the restaurant open, but he said the closing
wa~ unavoidable because of the
drastiC decline in busineiS. On a
road lined with strip maUs and
apartments, the K.ahiki sits miles
from the city's fashionable restaurant clusters.
Tsao, dressed in a flowered
shirt and a pink lei, said he wants
to re-create the restaurant at a
downtown location within two
years, po~Sibly along the riverfront . He said Walgreens is not
responsible for the closing and is
getting undue criticism.
"Without them how are we
going to get an opportunity to
stan again? This is progress," Tsao
said over the din of recorded
thunder as rain poured on the
Kahiki's indoor rain forest.
·

Offidals taking .precautions
in reaction to E. Coli cases ··
With more than 30 people
infected with the E. coh ba cteria in northeast Ohio, a suspe ct ed link to the Medina
County Fatr is resulting in new
precautions ;lt other cou nty

ft• ces.
" Wc 'rc taking this sJt uati·dlJ
se riou sly." sai d Terry Lash. S&lt;'C retary-managcr of 1he Ash lan'J
Cou nty Fair, which will 1\e

fair~ .

. " Prevw us to thi s, we already
had a munbc·r of hand-washi;&gt;'g
statwns,' ' Lash said. " We de ci'~t­
ed we absolutely had to add
more b ccausc Wt' need to provldt.· every person a w.1y to p revent getting this bacter ia."
At this week's Porta ge

Several county fairs haw
hand sanitizers and hand wa~h ing . statiqns available, alon g
with reminders to patrons that
they should wash their hands ,
especially after touching ani mals.

nt'Xt

month .

The number of people
infected with E. coli in north- Co unty- Randolph Fair, more
east Ohio has risen to 34, the sanitzers are throughout the
Ohio Department of Health grounds th an in years past.Ven.
dors and fair advisers also w e re
Sal S1xteen cases were repone: from Medina County, 25 . given pamphlets containing
miles southwest of Cleveland.
ways of preventing the 1proad
E. coli can cause bloody of bacteria , said Debi Heppa.-a
diarrhea, severe abdominal fair board director.
cramping and, in the worst
The Stark County Fair· \s
c.ses, kidney failure .
next week. Officia ls there will
While many of those infect- provide bottle~ of liquid han•d
ed did not attend the fair that sanitizer and portable handran from July 31 to Aug. 6, washing units near !ivesroc:k
investigators consider a source barns , the petting zoo and
of the contamination direct .pony rides, saici'Jane A. To rto lt•
contact with animals or animal · fair board secretary.
·

~

Reporters want
to see executions
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Reporters in Ohio and California
want to be able to s~e prisoner
executions from beginning to
end.
The states are resisting, and the
n:sulting debate pits the public's
right to know against a prison
worker's right to privacy.
Death penalty opponents and a
group that monitors executions
say the public has a right to know
if there are problems with executions.
"The state really should have
an interest in full disclmure of the
process of killing a person," said
Abe Bonawitz, of Citizem United for Alternatives to the Death
Penalty. "We've gone to lethal
injection supposedly to clean up
the process of killing people. If
they can't get that right, then the
people should . know."
"Execution is so mucb a juagment, an action by the community. It's a statement by the community that this is what they want,"
said Richard Dieter, executive
director of the Death Penalty
Information Center, an organization that tracks executions and
analyzes capital punishment
issues. "It used to be very public
and now it's done behind prison
walls.
"The more people know
about the death penalty, the better
the,y're going to be able to judge
it," Dieter said. "The whole
process is earned out in the people's name and they should know
if t~&lt;;)SC acting in their name are
doing it carefully and humanely."
Officials of both states say th ey
want to protec t the identities of
prison staff who volunteer to
ljerve on execution teams .
" It might be hard to get tilem
to volun teer ,f they had w c.lo 1t in
front of an .wdicncc," s.1id Jot:
Andn:ws, spokesman for Ohio 's
pri son syste m.
Witnnsc.·s to the cxt'Clltion l.1 st
year of Wilf&lt;&gt;rd Berry Jr. - a
!lrnup that included reporters w~rt• not .1Uowed tu Sl'l' tht:- priso ner through c h~mbt•r windows
Cllltil .&gt;fte r he h.1d been &lt;trapped
down and the needles fi1r the
leth al mjec11m1 had bee n inserted
1ll h1 ~ , Ifill ~ .

Hazel Fox
RACINE· Hazel Virginia Fox, 82, East Letart Road, Racine, died
•on Thursday, Aug. 24,2000 at her home.
She was born on April 23, 1918 in Letart, W.Va ., the daughter of the
late . Frank A. and Anna Rollins Shane. She was a homemaker and a
member of East Letart United Methodist Church and past president of
Letart Umted Methodist Women.
. She i1 survived by her husband, William E. Fox; a son and daughterm-law, Dav1d W. and Ruth Ann Fox, Racine; two step-grandchildren,
seven step-great-grandchildren and one great-great granddaughter;
and a brother-m-law, Ray Russell of Newark.
· In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her sister,
Anna Mae Harpold. two brothers, Daniel Shane and Walter Shane, a
.s1ster-m-law, Mabel Fox, and a brother-in-law, Ed. ~Neville.
. funeral services will be held on Saturday, Aug. 26, OOQ at 2 p.m. at
.th.e Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with Rev. Brian Harkness
offinarmg. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery
• Fnends may call at the funeral home o~ Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.

Eileen Elizabeth Lyons

Firstar - 24 ~.

Steel .
fmm PageAl
The Clinton administration has
· promised to examine policies in
, other comuries that enable foreign firms to sell steel in the U.S.
. market at low prices.
David Phelps is president of the
American Institute for lnterna. tional Steel, which represents the
steel importers. Much of July's
increase involved semi-finished
steel, the kind used by U.S. mills
to make other steel products, he
said.
. "Every time there's a hiccup in
ilie marketplace, they start
$~reaming bloody murder that
there's unfair trade, even if they're
~ponsible for the increase in the
(il~rketplace;• Phelps said . .
·:Higher imports in July can

yillage council members, the fire
~epartment, various businesses,
and a number of village residents.
: In March the Natural Resources
Department at Hocking College

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Insldt Meigs County
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'

News 0cp1r1mcnl1
the main number 11 991-2155. Department
e~tensloM uc:
qcncnl Manaaer ........................... Ext 1101
NtWI ................................................ ElCI. 1101
,................................................... or ElCt. 1106

,::,,

\i.'&gt;")
·•

Ht U r. K

West Virginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.

FRIDAY 9 am- 10 pm
. SATURDAY 9 am • MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY 1 pm • 9 pm

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Wea ther Service
says pleasant weather will comin ue Friday evening as a high pressure system moves to the east of
the the In-county region .
Lows will be around &amp;5 in the
far south.
An upper level disturbance will
approach on Saturday, spreading
clouds into the regiOn . Thunder- ·
storms are possibl e acrQss the
region Saturday night and Sunday. High' will be m the low to
mid 80s Saturday and from the
upper 70s to the low 80s Su nday.
Lows will be in the low to mid
60s.
Pardy cloudy skies and dry
conditions will return during the
first part of next week as high
pressure builds back into the
reg10n.

Forecast
fog this morning
otherwise mostly sunny. Highs 80
to 85.
Tomght...Mosdy clear. Lows in
the mid 50s to lower 60s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
c hance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs in the low to mid
80s.
Tod~y.. .Patchy

Extended furecast
Saturday night ... Mosdy cloudy.
A chance of shower~ and thunderstorms . Low1 60 to 65.
Sunday... Scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Highs 80 to 85.
Monday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
60s. Highs in the 8Qs.
Tuesday... A chance of thunderltorms. Lows in the 60s. Highs in
th e 80s.

LOCAL STOCKS

fmmPageAl

Brand New 2000 Chevy

Weekend thunderstorms?

LETART, WVa. -- Eileen Elizabeth Lyons, 63, of Letart, died
Wednesday, Aug. 23,2000, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
She was the daughter of the late Byron and Cora (Gibbs) Fry and
was a foster grandmother at Hartford Elementary School.
Al~ng with her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother,
Marvtn "Tom" Fry.
She is survived by her husband, Chuck Lyons of Letart; one son,
Randy and Joan Lyons of Kentucky; one daughter, Charlene and Lee
AEP - 35),
~nyde~ of Georgia; one sister, Nellie and Ralph Durst ofFlatrock; one Akzo - 43
!Jster-m-law, Alberta Fry of Flatrock; and 10 grandchildren.
.
. AmTech/SBC - 40 ~
Funeral services will take place Saturday at I p.m. at New Haven Ashland Inc. - 35\
AT&amp;T - 3H.
Funeral Home in New Haven. Officiating will be the Rev. Mike Lam- Bank One- 34),
Bob Evans - 17lo
bert.
Elot'gWarner361,
Bur,ial will follow at the Fry Cemetery in Letart.
Champion - 3
Friends may visit Friday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Charming Shops - 5,,.
Clly Holding - 7l.
Memorial donations can be made at the funeral home.
Federal Mogul - 11

Park

Brand New 2000 Pontiac

LOCAL BRIEFS

••

3 percent the third. Four years later, they've
increased revenue, and all we want is to n1.ake
up for the years we got nothing.''
The district has sa1d 1tudents will be told ·to
stay hotpe if teacher5 mike. Bringing in
replacement teachers can be clivisivc to rh.e
community and sc hool officials don't think stl\dents would learn very much, said Wilh~m
Wendling, Cleveland schools spokesman.
..
From the district's perspective, WendlitJg
said, the teachers union is not being reasonable
in irs demands about the length of the elementary school day.
"
Cleveland elementary teachers currently
work a six-hour day, he said, compared to seven
or eight hour days in other Cuyahoga County
schools.
·

hdd

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY WEATHER

as school year starts

Strikes

COLUMBUS (AP) Customers have been saying goodbye
to a Polyne~ian restaurant that
made bamboo poles and tik1
torches hip decades before "Survtvor·.' '
The Kahiki Supper Club,
which is listed .on the National
Register of Historic Places, was
· frequented by visiting celebritie~
and originated a brand of nationally sold frozen foods. It will serve
its last Smoking Eruption rum
qrink Friday and later be torn
down to make room for a Walgreens.
Bobbie Bennett of Bexley, said
she rememben the excitement in
1961 of watching the swooping
A-frame roof being built in a flat,
then-rural pan of Columbus.
"You can tell how much it
means to people because this
place has been besieged since
they said it was going to close,"
she said, sitting under a thatch
roof that gives the feel of eating
in a grass hut inside the darkened
restaurant.

. F:riday, August 25, 2000

Friday, August 25, 2000

OthuSrrvkn
AdYtrtls1ng ..................................... E:~t. 1104
Orc•lltion ......................_.............. E:~t. 1103
C!l:isaUicd Adl ...........................- .... E:~L 1100

largely be traced to orders placed
three or four months earlier,
when prices started rising, he
said. "They ·wanted to beat the
price increases;· Phelps said. "The
domestic industry itself has
stepped up its imports.''
At LTV Steel in Cleveland,
spokesman Mark R. Tomasch
noted that impqrts of hot-rolled
steel, one of LTV's main products,
declined in July. Hot-rolled is one ·
· of the types of steel that is subject
to punitive tariffs. That is because
the industry demonstrated to the
government's satisfaction that it
was being sold at below-market
pnces.
,
"That shows the effect of the
trade cases ,t hat were ~ffectively
brought by the industry;' he said.
"But the problem of imports
continues.
"The indmtry has been warning that this was occurring."

m Nelsonville provided global
positioning satellite mapping services for the village and prepared
plam for the park's layout.
"We have some minor property
issues that have to be finalized,"
Dewhurst said. "Once this is done,
the village will release the Hocking
College plans for the public to

view."

Gannen -

55 '~..

General Electric -

59Y..

Harley Davidson - 47 ,,.
Kmart - 7'1.

Kroger -

21 ~.

Lands End Ltd. - 20'~..

26 \~

OVB - 267.
BBT - 26l.
Peoples - , 411..
Premier - 5~1,
Rockwell - 39\

POMEROY G&amp;M Fuel
Co., Pomeroy, purchased two animals at the Meigs County Junior
Fair Livestock Sale last week. The
company purchased a hog shown
by Christina Miller at $2.50 per
pound, and a lamb shown by
Derrick Bolin at a cost of $2.50
per pound. The purchases were
reported incorrectly in the Sunday Times- Sentinel.

Sears- 31'/.,.
Shoney's-1
Wai-Mart- 49).
Wendy's- 18~·
1 Q),

16

Daly stock reports are lhe
4 p.m . closing quotes of
1he previous day's trans~
actions. provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Foreclosure OK'd
POMEROY - A foreclosure
judgment has been ismed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Home National Bank
against RogerT. Dowell, and oth-

ers.

Sentences issued

RACINE - The Southern
Local. Board of Education will
meet on Monday at 7 p.m. at
Southern High School.

POMEROY Ronald W.
Vance, Reedsville, was sentenced
to five years in prison on each of
two counts 9f gross sexual imposition by Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W ..
Crow Ill.
Vance recently pleaded guilty
to the charge~. third-degree
felonies, and was represented in
court by attorney Pat Story.
Also sentenced were Brent Bailey, to 18 months in prison for
cultivation of manjuana , as the
result of a probation violation;
Charles Stewart, to I 0 monthl,
suspended, and five years of community control, on a charge of
breaking and entering; Levi
McGrath, 18 months on eac h of
four counts of theft, and one year
on a count of vandalism; and
Bobby McConaha. one year, suspended, on a charge of receiving
1tolen property.

Meeting
rescheduled
POMEROY - The reg1,1lar
meeting of the Meigs County
Commi&gt;~ioner&lt; will 'be held on
Tuesday at '4:3!) p.m.

RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will
hold its yard sale Sept. 14-15 at
Star Mill Park, with proceeds to
benefit the RACO Scholarship
Fund for Southern High School
seniors. Donations are accepted,
and pickup service is available.
Arrangements can be made by
calling Dale and Kathryn Hart at
949-2656 or David and Ann
Zirkle at 949-2031.

Kidnapped mountain climbers Yearbooks are in
recount dramatic escape
DAVIS, Calif. (AP) - American
climbers held hostage for six days
by lslanlic militants in Kyrgyzstan
say they escaped by pushing a
guard off a cliff before making a
harrowing IS-mile trek to free dom.
"II, is so hard to think of that
now, but we were afraid we would
not survive," Beth Rodden, 20, said
Thursday.
Rodden returned to California
with fellow climber Tommy Caldwell of Estes Park, Colo.. on Tuesday, four day' after fleeing Uzbeki
militants in Kyrgyzstan, a former
Soviet republic.
The other climbers, San Francisco Bay-area residents John Dickey,
25, and Jason Smith, 22, were
expected to return Friday. The
fourso111e went to Kyrgyz.tan on
an expedition sponsored by The
North Face, a sports gear company.
On Aug. 12, the day after Caldwell's 22nd birthday, the climbers
were plotting routes on the steep
walls of the Kara-su Valley when
rebel solcliers began shooting. All
four were taken hostage and put

marriage has been filed in the
court by James Walter Bland ,
Pomeroy, and Jeannie E. Malloy
Bland, Syracuse.

Board to meet

RACO plans sale

Rocky Boots- sj,
AD Shell - 61 ~.

Wonhing1on -

Oak Hill Financial -

Couection

POMEROY The Meigs
High School Marauder 2000
yearbook&lt; are in and can be
picked up in the high school
office. Extra copies are av:Jilable
for sale.

under guard.
"They buried us under rocks,
put bmsh on us, basically hid us
from helicopters during the day
and sometimes we moved at
night;' Caldwell said.
RACINE .- A hymn sing will
The militant force~, seeking to
take control of the remote, rugged be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the.
area where the borders ofKyrgyzs- Mr. Moriah Church of God,
tan,Tajik.istan and Uzbekistan con- Racine. Delivered will sing.
verge, were 1tepping up fighting
efforts against government troops.
In the first hours of captivity, the
HARRISONVILLE - The
climbers heard their captors execute a fifth hosta!l", a government Harri1onviUe Senior Citizem will
meet at II :30 a.m. Monday at the
soldi er.
Forced to lie s.till up to 17 hours townhouse . All seniors are
a day in "teeth-chattering cold," encouraged to attend.
"
.
Caldwellc-•aid,-the - climbers •ur~
vived on half-portions of energy
bars and slabs of butter.
·
When the walkie-talkies the
guards took from them ran out of
POMEROY A divorce
batteries, one guard went back to
action has been filed in Meigs
the climbers' camp to get more. · County Common Pleas Court by
That's when the climbers say they Jason Brian Walla«, Pomeroy,
pmhed the other armed guard off against Angela Dawn Wallace,
a cliff and fled , dodging bullets as Pomeroy.
they made the 18-mile JOUrney to
An action for dissolution of
a military post.

.Hymn sing set

Seniors to meet

Dissolution
sought

Marriage license
· issued
POMEROY A marnage
license has been i1sued in Meigs
County P'r obate Court to Ryan
Eugene Dill, 19, and Amanda Virgmia Coates, 18, both of
Pomeroy.

EMS units
log 5 calls
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Services answered five calls for assistance
on Thur~day. Units
responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:07 p.m., Veterans Memorial
Hospital Clinic, Jonathan Gruser,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:38 p.m., Collins Road, Sara
McDowell, treated.

RUTLAND
10:00 p.m., New Lima Road,
Dorothy Hysell, Holzer Medical
Center;
11:56 p.m. , Dyesville Road,
assisted by Central Dispatch,
Willard Hudnell.
SYRACUSE
6:45 p.m., Dailey Run Road,
assisted by Pomeroy, John Ord,
HMC.

Bitterroot Valley tire advances as crews brace for wind, lightning
HELENA, Mont. (AP) - High
wind fanned wildfires in the Bitterroot Valley on Thursday as crews
braced for a weekend of gusty
wind and dry lightning.
Driven by 30- to 50-mph winds,
a fire in Montana', Bitterroot Valley
jumped a road Thursday, and crews
were trying to locate the fire's leading edge. A day earlier, wind swept
the blaze into new territory and
authoritie~ issued a ma ndatory
evacuation order for about 20
homes.
The fire ignited baled hay, but
there was no confirmed to~~ of
homes.
The blaze was part of the
54,700-acre Skalkaho Complex,
which is among 25 major fires
burning 591,851 acres in Montana.The fire sea1on in the 1tatc has
been intense for at least a month.
Fires this year have burned 5.7
million acre' across the country.
and the National Interage ncy Fire
Center said 78 major fires arc
burning on 1.4 million acres. The
fire season already is the worst in at
least a half-century, and the outlook n:maincd bleak.
The center said dry lightning
stornls were expected throughout
Idaho, Montana and Washington,
increasing the chances of new fires .
For the weekend, the fo recast in
western Montana is for winds up
to 40 mph, plus lightning.
In Washmgton , a light nin gsparked brush fire grew to 35,000
acres Thursday and threatened 50
rural hontes outside the town of

Mabton. The blaze had destroyed
10 o utbuildings by Thursday night,
said Penelope Christopherson of
the State Emergency Operations
Center.
The fire was ign ited Wcdnt·sd:.&gt;v
night 111 a remote area uf the Yab~
nu Indian R eservation and sprcJd
by high wind.
Wind and te mperature shifts
cloaked Helena, M ont.. in heavy
smoke Thur~day. A harried dis~
patcher at the Helena fire dispatch
center interrupted a reporter 's
question: " It's just smo ke. honey,''
she said. " We 're all gonna have to

live with it.There's no big blowup:·
Morning temperatures have
cooled across the Northwest and
there arc other signs that fall is
drawmg near, but the NIFC said
the end of summer does not signal
an end to the tires.
"We just don 't see a real end in
Sight," sa id E. Lynn Burkett, spokeswon lan for the interagency center
in Idaho.
"Tilis time of year, what usually
happen s is we get monsoon weather in the Southern states and it
moves north ," bringing rain , she
said.

But that isn't happening:
Given Montana's extraordinary
dryness and the high risk more
fires will ignite, Gov. Marc Racicot
this week doubled the amount of
public land closed to recreation
and other uses. An area roughly the
size of Maine now has been
declared off-limits, effec tive today.

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SPRING VAllEYCIIJE MA

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, JLOI!OU!l l'oWl!.l
lUIJ IArKSON &lt;'!~ (

7

FRI 8/25/00, THUAS 8/31 /00

Heat
from Page AI
trends . ·
Making nutte rs worse. produ ction hasn't been re vved b.JCk up.
ri1ingjust l pcr«·nt this year. And
dcnund is up sharply 111 a boo m· ing economy that has indmtrul
. use su rging and more Ameri ca ns
plu ggin g into co mpu te rs. The
nation depends increasingly o n
natural gas to gL·ncratc dcctrKity
a1 utilities gradually switrh fium
coal and nuclear-powered plants.
The situati o n has worsened this
sununer, with heavy usage tOr .1ir
co nditioner~
preve nlln g the
industry from stockpi ling fo r the
winter as it usually does. N atural
gas inventories are near six-ye ar
lows.

T hat leaves gas prices highly
susn• pnble to supply disruptions
- suo:h a~, last Saturday's pipeline
explosion in New Mexico ·chat
k1lkd II people and shut down a
primary gas main supplying Califo rnia . Hurricane Debby 's brief
advance toward key production
t:1cilitics in the Ca ribbea n and the
G ulf of Mexico raised fears of
similar trouble and propelled
pri ce s hi gher befo re th ey fell
back.
Experts say consum ers could
skate by this winter on ly if last
year's wanne st WI ntcr on record is
fo llowed by one at least as warm .
" If we have a winter that's just
norm;:d, wt·'rL' going to see potentially astro nomi cal natural gas
prices - much higher than we
sec today," sa id David C hang,
sen ior energy trader for Bank of
America in New Yo rk .

THE ART OF WAR (R)
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�·.Page A4
-: The Daily Sentinel

f=rlday, AUJUSt 15, 1000

...·, ..
.--..

The Daily Sentinel
'Lrtti!Jilslid i111948

R. Sh11wn Lewis
M11naglng Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

•

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

UIHn ttl tltt .dilor tuY w•lrollir. Th•y slw~IJ bt ~u tho JOO words . .411 kttus urr subfrcl
to tdilirlf Gnd m11s11H siftrrd aNi i~tclwk tuldrtn tutd lt!hplwnr n11.mbtr. No unsqn•d filius will
1w pNblishd. Ldt•n thot~ld IN in tood tMie, Gddnuinx intns, IUJf JWNlHUIIiti#s.
Tile opinions UPf"SS•d in IM (OIIImn Nlow~~n tlu cons1nnu oftlu Ohio VGilc] l'ublishint
Co. 't hliwrild boGrd, unleu Ofhtrwist Mild.

/

SCHOOL

OUR VIEW

TfACIIER

Together

~ut&lt;Mf EX'f/NCr
IN E,#L.Y'Z.lfT

CE/'fft/R'Y WHEN
ENTIRE HERP~

WERE WIPEPOIIT
/I'll. OWPAY

Lets remove the barriers
that impede progress

-..-....

COM~!NEP WITH

•

KONDRA CKE'S VIEW

U-N-1-T-Y.
Unity.
At fim glance, it's a short, simple word; a word whose m eaning
" most people, when asked: say is a key ingredient in the tri-county
region's future success.
" We need to be united ."
" If we can join forces, we can move forward."
"Togetherness is where it's at."
These phrases and others like them appear frequently within these
pages. They sound great, but are we really practicing what we're
preaching'
There is still much division within our ranks.
In some cases, the folks in th e coun·ty resent the folks in the city,
or vice versa. In other cases, the division continues to rise and fall
based o n the old skin color issue - a issue that should have died
more than 100 years ago. In still others, the gap is generatiOnal that is, y01.ij1g vs. old.
Yet we talk unity. The fact is, until we remove these silly barriers,
we can't, as the above quote says, "move forward ."
America is a co untry founded upon individualism, but when that
individu alism interferes with the common good, it needs to be
. reined in. A little rugged individualism is a goo d thing; too much
can be counterproductive.
The tri-county region's future rests on its three players - Gallia,
Mason and M eigs - becoming a team, not just in word but in
deed. This doesn't mean residents of each coun ty should ignore th eir
homeland's uniqueness. Heck, no. We say be proud of that, but don't'
let that pride stand in the way of progress.
If you arc traveling abroad ~nd someone as ks where you're from.
your first answer is likely to be, ''I'm an American." If they ask you
to elaborate, you might say,''l'm from (Ohio, West Virgin ia)." If th ey
ask again, the reply wou ld be, "I' m from (Gallia, M aso n, Meigs)
County." And so o n and so forth _
The point is, just because you show unity in your country by tlrst
say ing you're an American, doesn't make you less of a (Galli a, Mason
or M eigs) countian. In fact , you 're· probably darn glad to be both .
. We 're reminded of a bumper sticker that so metimes adorns vehicles from Dixie: " Ame rican by birth , South ern by t he grace o f
God ." Naturally, we would ame nd that to: "American by birth, TriCouncian by the grace o f God."
Let 's get together, folks. It's time to practice what we preach.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Aug. 25, the 23Rth day of2000. There are 128 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight m History:
On Aug. 25 , 1900 , phil osop her Fri edric h Nietzsche d1ed in
Weimar, Germany.
On this date :
In 1~25, Uruguay declared independen ce from BraziL
In 1875, Matth ew Webb became the first pe rso n to swim acruss
th e Edgli sh C hannel , getting fro m Dover. En gland. to C alais, Fran ce, ·
in 22 hours.
In I ~ 1 6, the National Park Service was es tablished Within th e
Department o f the Inte rior.
.
In 1921 , the U nited States signed a p eac e treaty with G erman y.
In 1944 , Paris was liberated by All ied forces after fo ur years o f
Nazi occupati o n .
In 1944 . R o m ania d e cl ared w ar on Germany.
In 1950. President Truman o rdered th e Army to seize co ntrol of
th e nation 's ra ilroads to avert a strik!!.
In 19811, t he l:lroadway muSical "42 nd Street " open e d. Pro ducer David M erric k stunned both case and audi ence dun ng the curt,nn
call by anno un cing that the show's director, Gow er C h ampion , had
died earli e r th at day.
In 1985, Sa m antha Smith. th e schoo lgirl w hose lette r to Soviet
leader Yu n V Andropov res ulted in her fa mous peace tour of the
Sovi et Unio n, di ed w ith her fath er in an m lin e r crash in M aine.
In 1998, retired Supreme Co urt Ju stice Lewis f Powell di e d in
Ri chmond, Va., at age 90.
Ten years ago : T he U nited N ations gave the world 's navies the
right to use fo rce to stop vessels trading w ith Iraq .
Five years ago : C hinese-Am erican huma n n g hts act iv ist H a rry
Wu. ufdy bac k on U.S. so il afte r two mo nth s in C hin ese de tenti o n,
said the spying case agains t him was "all hes." and vowed to seek
(Omp ensacio n fro m Ch in a.
O ne yea r ago :T he FBI , reversing itself after six years. admitted t hat
its agen ts m ight have fi red some potentiall y Aam mable tea r gas canister&lt; o n th e fi nal day o f the 1993 stando ff With the Branch D av idians near Waco. Texas, b ut said it co minu ed to believe law enforcement agents d id no t start th e fi re wh ic h en b-u lfed the w it 's co mpound.
Today's Birth days: Fo rm er U.S..um s contro l d irecto r Eu ge n e V.
R m tow is H7 . Actor Van Jo hn son is H4. Actor- p rodu ce r M el Fer rer
is 8.1. Game show host M onty H all is 77 . Acto r Sean C onnery is 711.
Acto r Page Johnson is 70.

Gore hands center to Bush with speech
Vice President AJ Gore ceded the political
center to Texas Gov. George W Bush at the
Democratic National Convention last week and with it, probably, the election.
Gore may or may not get a brief polling
bounce from the convention, but he handed
Bush huge gifts for th e fall campaign, leavi ng the
presidential debates as his last chance to win the
White House.
Gore's acceptance speech - written by himself, leaving no one else to blame - revealed
NEA COLUMNIST
him to be an old-line populist liberal with a
grim view of Amer ica's "working families"
being victimized by "powerful forces and pow- cal"swamp" th at neith er "Beltway party" would
erful interests."
drain because "to them , it's ... a protected wet· There was no . sense of optimism, despite . land , their natural habitat. T hey swim in it, feed
America's economic boom, and no sense that in it, spawn in it and are &lt;LI happy th ere a.s Brer
the high-tech new economy provides exciting Rabbit was in his briar patch ."
opportunities.
Gore's speech suggested that his campaign is
· Those t hemes are now owned by Bush, who seriously worried about the challenge being
enunciated them at the Republican convention mounted from the populiSt left by the Green
along with pro mises to be "compassionate" Party 's Ralph Nader, who's drawing close to 9
toward those in danger of being left behind.
perc em .
Gore also laid o ut suc h a lo ng laundry list of
Gore's disa.sttous speech capped a disappointgover11m em initiatives - - reminiscent of a State ing conventi o n in whic h, accord in g to daily
of the Union message in the Great Society d1ys p9lling by the Votcr.com Battleground survey,
of President Lyndon Johmon - that Bush Gore not only failed to b'&lt;lin on Bush, but fell a
seems JUStified 111 saying budget Surplu ses had bit furth er behi nd .
best not be left in Washington because they'll be
Polling data last Monday showed Bush leading
spent.
the race by 9 points. Tuesday and Wednesday
N ot on ly was Gores content politically self- polls showed him leading by 11. with conse rvadestructive, his delivery was so rushed that he tive Dm10crats and marri ed whi te workmg
tromped over his applause lines. And the speech women movi ng fu rther :1way fi-om Go re.
was utterly devoid c:Jf humor or poetry.
It's not hard to figure out w hy. First, President
H is best lines were: "That's the differen ce in Cli nton failed to dramatize Gore's part in th e
this election : They (Republicans) are for the country 's econun1ic and soc1al successes during
powerful , and we're for th e peoplt·. ll1g tobacco, th e past eight years.
big oil , the pharmace mical comp ani es, the
T hc·n, most speakers at the· convention - fi nHMOs . So metimes you have to be willing to ishing with Gore - spent all their en ergies
stand up and say no - so f.1milies can have a tending to the party's litO&lt;:: r:Il base instead of
better life." .
reachmg o ut to centrist !~wing vo~ers.
The message was a throwback to W illiam JenGar~ 's vice presi~ e nti a l nom_ince and_ prenings Bryan's 1896 "Cross of Gold " speec h, bu t sumptive emiSsary to the center, Sen .Joe liCberit was better expressed this year by !'at Buchanan man (D- Conn .), spent mu ch of the week conin his R eform Party acceptance speech.
vi ncing teachers unions and African- Am ericans
Buchanan referred to Washingto n ,, a po liti- that he is reliable on their issues: sc hool vo uch -

Morton
Kondracke

crs and affirma tive action.
Lieberman's speec h to the convencip n
Wednesday night, w hile winningly delivered,
was utterly devoid of the centrist New Democrat ideology h e's been espousing for years, especially as chairman of the Democratic Leadership
Co uncil.
·
Even the tw o New Democrats who nonunated Lieberman , Sen .John Breaux (La.) and Rep.
Ell en Tausch er (C alif.) , delivered speec hes
bleached of any mention of entitlement reform
or free trade, the ideas they've promoted .
T he one tou chy issu e that Lieberman did hit,
but li ghtly, was about Gore and his wife, Tipper,
once taking oii Hollywood over explicit son g
lyri cs - a position they later abando ned.
Lieberman said, "No parent sho uld be forced
to compete with popubr culture to raise their
children ." Though the convention audience
loved Lieberman, that line got scant applause.
Among the many rasks that Gore needed to
accomplish in Los Angeles, the one he perhaps
gnt f.1 rthc"it o n was acquainting people with his
life apart trom the No. 2 role he's played with
C lin ton. The many 6m!ly portraits presented
were h~art-wan 11 i n ~ if at times excessive.
To get himself o ut from C limon 's ethical
shadow, Gore mentioned C linton only once in
his ac ceptance speec h - and gave short shrift to
the accomplishments of the past eight years.
Evidently worried about seeming "too negative ." Gore f.1il ed to mention Bush directly. Gore
dispara!led the "personality contest" aspect of the
presid ential race, b ut he did little to erase Bush 's
aJvantage.
Gore campaibm aides said the Veep needed a
hugt• bounce tlum the convention to catch up
to Bush and then-start the fall campaign just a
few points behind . My guess is that Gore's only
hope now is a disastrous Bush performance in
the debates.

(Mo11o11 Ko11dmckc is exr&lt;11fil'e editor afRo// Call,
tilt' llt11 'Spapcr &lt;~( Capiro/ Hill .)
.

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

·Heroes put us on the right track
We all need he ro es 111 our hves - peop le
who kn ow how to coax th e best out of us and
lead us to new plateaus.
H eroes provides us with models - people
to emu late. Tht'y encou rage us no t to g~ ve up.
fo r we fe e·\ that co fail o urselves is to f.1Ii th e m .
Jesus pl ays tlw ro le in m any peopl e\ hws .
Fath er G eo rge Tyrell sa id , " Wh enever I
think of qu itting. I ~ce Hut st range lllan o n lw; .
crn,s, ~mJ hl· turn s m t· b ack Jg;t in ."
O ne of th_e he roes in my .life was Ruth
Ly m ~111. a pari shi oner of min e in Bo'iro n . She
is th e type o f peno n w ho comc..·s to !llilld
\v hcn we hea r the phrase " prope r Bo'\ttJni ;m _"
As th e quality of life in America slit" st,·adily lowe r. M rs , Lyman i1 st ill a re11Ji11der to m e
of th e· ro le of .t ,h ero - to kee p u' :twarc of
th e li igh idea ls n f wh ich we mi ght othcr\\'ise
lose sight .
Pt'rhaps it cann ot he '&gt;.lid th.u fi ne marm er'i
a nd gdf1 d ta'i tc arc indi ,~.h: ns ,lbk to th ~..· guod
life. Uu t they gi\'1..' it an t-: lcga ll l"l' "with ou t
w hic h goo d fortun e j.., hut v ul ~n. ;m d \Vlt h
w h ic h failure an d d isappo illtllll' llt h aw ,J
c harm " - wo rds th(lt C :1rdinal Ncwnun U'ied
to de'ic ri be the t·Uucat c..·d pe rso n.
My fath er was ;mother of my hcroc,_ .. Jmt
do it '' \\'J'i pa rt Df Ius vocabula ry lo ng: h ~..· forc
Nikt• tho ug ht abo ut it ~ ' .1 ..,Jng.m . A" chil dren,
m y 'i istn .md I Wl' Tl' rt·.1Jy with .111 o.;o rr"i of
t..' XCll'il ''i \Vh cn we w tTL" try ing to get o ut o f

do i n~

\O il H.' l

horc. f--k \HHdd hc.1r u-. out

~

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNISTS

u p ttJ a po in t. Th ,·n he· wo uld end all argun ient by say ing. "Just do 1t"
W hm h e had fi ni, hed so nie tix - it j ob
,1rou nd the h o u~ L'. he wou !d o;ta nd lu ck a nd
:1 '\'il''i'&gt; the com pktt'd proj cn . It may havt' left
\OII H,: thing to bt· de"ircd, hut he wo ul d say.
" Well, it\ bette r t h ~m 1t wa' ., T h,H satJsfi t·d

h111 1.
h \ J say it:g thar h ;l \ '\ tu ck wit h lll t' th ro ug h
th e years. It we W:111t tl 1111 b" to he perfect all
th e Linle , we arc gu in g ro he unh appy. If we
a rc :dv.:ayo;· co mpa r ing our&lt;;c: lvc..:' wit h rholic
v: ho .u c 111 orc 'i ll l"Ct''i~ llil rh.m \\"l' .1re, \\'L' will
ll11 ~L' r ~ h lc.

too.
· Bu~ 1t- \ \ 'L' L UI m.Jk c rh u1g.., "bcttn t h;m thcv
\ Vc,: rc." WL' w ill h.Jvc di ~c~werc J o ne o f th ~·
he

'\Ccrt't\ of h a pp in t·&lt;;s.

Anoth er of my r:u lwr''i c.:x pn·.,.,io n,, wh H_·h

he would use when I so u ~ht hi s help on some
m echani cal problem - su ch as trying to
repai r my biCycle - was, " What does th e
boo k o f in,tructio ns say?''
This is also a good q uestion to ~sk o ursel ve s
whe n we c m 't put o u r lives ba ck together or
wh e n ~n 1 m.: thin g in o ur lives go e-s o n the frit z.
Man y of o m diAi culti es - inrluding a lo t o f
heal th problems - are the res ult .of no t to llo\vin g th-e mak er's instr uction s.
My fa th n \ sayings have taug ht me that life
is a ll l.lttl~ r of doin g w h;H JJ t'l..'ds to be d o ne:
("Ju'a du a " ), improvi ng o n what W t' ·have..·
bee~ ll gi v~ 11 (" We ll , it's bettl·r th an i1 was"). and
takmg h k o nl y .IS d irected (" Wh at dot·s th e
hoo k of instr uc tinns say ?").
But 1f it 1.; unport;lnt to have hcrot:s t o look
up ro. it i' a. l11o impo rtant to rt: mem ber that
o the r pl'Opk may h e i'ookm g up to us - that
we may be• pi.Jying the role o f h ero t o oth ers.
Every day o f our \iv,·s . pe opl e ore watc hing
us and taki ng: notic e nf th(.· w;~y we live. of th e
w"y we re.ll t to troubl e and adversity, and of
th e way wt' make !I l l' of th e gifts we have
hctn g ive n . And from what th rv see in us a-nd
iu other peop le, th ey put t ogeth er lives o f
th e ir n\\'n .
It j.., an a wt''\Oillt' rh ing to reali z~..· th Jt ea ch

o f '"

lit!: -

"'·'Yhe hel pi ng to shape som ebo dy else's
.t'i

t hl' herot'S in o ur live s do fo r us.

(G''•' (~ " R . l'l~ee11 z is disrrilm rcd h)'

1:'111nprist' .4ssNr.nthm .)
'

Newspa'prr
:

Dear Penn: Give Rosie a break. She
may be a bit of a bumbler, but sh e means
no harm . Go to the party, look smashing,
and ask Rosie to please not seat you at
the same table with yo ur ex. A good hostess does not create uncomfortable situations for her guests . l am sure she' can find
a more appropriate spot for you and your
boyfriend. When you see your ex, be
civil, and let bygones be bygones. Real
ADVICE
class is grace under prrssure.
Dear Ann Landers: Are you out of
She feels that since we both have new
your
mind' " DISrespected in N.Y. C." said
companions, everythm g is OK .
Ann , this is the sa me fri end who com - her father-in-law and his two. dogs show
miserated w ith m e when I cold h er my up unannoun ced and uninvited , and sray
ex-husband was cheating. She ca lled hun fo r 1nonths at a time. H e demands homea Jerk , and gave me advice on how to cooked meals every night , and the best
handle the divo rce. Now, he is on her you can co me up with is to tell her to
guest }j st. They see him onc e: o r twice a in sist they t'at o ut nvice a week ?
" Di srespec ted" shou ld te ll het f.uh eryear. but the relationship is not close. Why
m-law
it is wundc!ful to see him , ~m d that
is she subjecting m e: to thr s disco mfort ?
Am I ovl'rri:a cung,or IS H. osic in se nsitive:;. she wou ld be glad to ca ll the rli.:.•J rL'St petCnendly hotd Ill hi s pn cc ra ngL' ;md
- - U n'illrl' in Pt•nnsyl\·an ia

Ann
Landers

FRIDAY
POMEROY Friday. c,
p.m. at Gene ral H artmger Park.
Middleport. th e Ladies for t he
Lord will hos t event for chil dren . Free school suplllies will
be givc n,following a st~v i cc and
smgin g. Parents m ust accompany their children . H ot dogs and
· beverages will be served. All
: ·a ctivities will be completed
before the school supplies are
given o ut . For more informa. tion co ntact Bmy Johnson 44114 15 or Jan Swigger, 99206667 .
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Reunion o f
descendants of Joel and Lydia
.S taneart, Saturday, noon , Route
33 roadside park, north . Those
attending .are to take a covered
dish along with pictures and hi story for display.
RAC IN E
Hudson
·reunion, Saturday, 5 p.m . at the
Sta r Mill Park. Table service w ill
be provided.
'

Benefit
SYRACUSE
Gospel Si n'g fo r Meigs Cou nty
Special O lympi cs. Saturday. 2
p.m. on th e C arleton School
lawn . Featured ;;roup, Th e
· Gabri el Quarte·t . Also appearin g.
· "His Will : and "One Way" . Bake
sa le and rc-fre sh nu:nt :; 111 the
:; ht·ltL'r hou st' . T;lkt· a l.nvn chair
SUNDAY
LETART. W VA. - Annual
Weaver reuni o n. Sun rby, I p.m .
at th e ho m e of Marcus an d Dora

We;w cr, Letart , W. Va . Take covered dish an d chair.

C HESTER lJescendants
of the late John L. Jeffers and
Viola Riggs Je!Ters, Sunday, at
the Meigs County IKES Farm,
Sunday 1 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT Gospel
sing, M iddleport C hurch of the
Nazarene, General Hartinger
Parkway, Sunday, 6:30 p.m . w ith
the Sisson Family of Gallipolis.
Refreshments. Pastor Allen
Midcap invites public.
ADDI SON Homecom ing at Poplar Ridge C hurch off
State Route 554. Carry-in dinner at noon ; afternoon service, 2
p.m. Singing, The Builders'
Quartet. Pastor Jo h n Elswick
invites public.
Eden
REEDSVILLE
United
Brethren
Churc h,
Reedsville, annual homecoming services Sunday. Morning
service, 10 a.m., carry-in dinner
12:308 p.m . aft ernoon servi ce,
1:30 p.m. Peter Martindale and
family, guest spc; ke rs: special
singing. Baptism, 1!\-·c nin g gathen ng at the h o me of Gary
Reed .

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Oh K.1n
Coin C lu b. Mon cb y. 7 p 111. at
Trolley H ou se in Middleport ,
bd1ind D atry Qu L't' !l . To fe ature
displ.ly of papn mon ey. Auction
and refreshm ents.

·Local artists invited
to exhibit at festival
JACKSON -Artist registration forms for the 19th Annual
Foothills Art Festival, Oc t. 2022 , are now avai lab le. The deadline for registering art entrie s ts
Sept. 8.
The Festival is a weekend fu ll
of VIsual arts, live mu sic, and
h ands-on arts activiti es presented free at th e lo d ge at Ca nter's
Cave 4- H C amp, fi ve mile s
northwest o f Jac kson .
Artists arc invited to exhibi t
in the cate;;ones o f 01l/ acrylic.
pastel/ draw ing. ph otog raph y,
pri nts. chree dimensiOnal work,
an d WJtercolor. A few JU ried
booth spaces are availabl e for
·ex hibiti ng. artists
T he show " prof,·ss iona ll y

judge but not Jllfied . Arti sts of
all ages and exp er ience arc
en couraged to e nter. Entrants
are limited to fo ur wo rks per
ca tegoty. Entry fee s are SS pe r
pie ce or S 16 for pie ces until the
Sept. 8 deadline and sli ghtly
hi gher the reafter.
A total o f $1, 2 10 in ca sh
pri zes w ill be awa rde d u11 de r
sponso rship of the Sands Hi ll
Coal Co. and O SCO Industr ies.
Dozens of purc ha se awa rd
do no rs will sel ect artw ork durmg a preview reccpnon o n On.
19 .
Foo thills Art hstival is a progra m of the Sout he rn Hills Art
C o unci l. M o re info rmation may
be obtain ed by 740 - 281&gt;-63 55 .

We want your photos!
The Sentinel welcomes your photograp.hs . Here are a few guidelines
for submissions :

• Colo r photographs are accepted. provided they are in focus and
have good contras t. Negatives also are accepted: however. pleas e
include a print along with the negat1ve .
• Blaek·and-white photograph s are accepted. provided they are 1n
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted : however.
please incl ude a print along w1th the negative.
• Standard·size s lides are ac cepted , provided they are in locus and
have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallel SJZe
and no larger than 8 x 10 .
• Polariod-type photos are discouraged SJ nce they do not reproduce
well on newsprint.

• When submitting digital photos , be s ure the 1mages are saved as
high-resolution , high-quality JPEG files .
• Advantix-type phOtographs are discouraged due to their un•que
s izes . whiCh do not translate well to newspaper columns . Advantix-type
negatives are not accepted .

reserve a roortl fo r him . If Jt we re n1e, I
would also tell the unsupport:ive. msensitivc clo d of a h usband that he can get a
room right next to D ad . -- Disgusted in

L.A
Dear Disgusted: Yo u r " soluti o n" co
the problem is a lo t bett er chan m ine. and
a great m any reade rs from Main e to Spain
wrote to tell me I wa s out of my tree.
Let's call it " \vork ove rl oad," warra ntin g
an unde signated number o f las hes with
the wet n oodle.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently broke
up with my boyfriend o f fo ur yc·ars . During th e time w e- \ VCrl' toge tht·r. I became
clo se with his famil y. Hi s motlin S!!l l o ils
me seve ral times a wel.' k, Jnd lm ~ I S tL~ rs Jsk
lllt..' to go sho ppin g \\'Jth the m . I to vc lu~
fa 1mly and l' llJ OY th t·ir co mp:my, bur I'm
not sure t hi ~ is 1ppropri at l'.
M y ex-bo)fn...:nd JS .t w .1y at cnl k·gc . .,n

he is rarel v .uou nd . Do I nce J tu " b rL'.lk
up .. with I; is fa mil y .l~ \\'ell ~ If '\o, how do

I go abou t Jt without hurting anyone's
fe dmgs' I rcJII y care· fo r these people, but
I do n't wan t to give my ex-boyfrie nd the
wrong uup n.:~s i o n . I need so me advice. -U ncertain 111 Y1rg1t!ia
Dear Virginia: If you e njoy your exboylri end 's family. it 's O K to remain
fnendly. b u t keep hun to tally out of yo ur
convt.'rs.aion .And tf they havt' good manne- rs, th ey \\"Il l not Jsk any que stions
.lb o llt " w h,ll· ha ppe'li L'd "
f l' chn g pre \" ur~d to have st x? How
\\.'dl -JtJfo nw.:d .1re \'Oll~ W rite fo r Ann
Lo.Id er,· boo ki e! "S~x and the Teenager."
Scud .1 ,,lf-.,dd r,·,le·d . long. bu Siness-size
L'!lVl' Jo p t• ,l!ld .l l hl' c k or lll Oilt.:)' order for
S.l 75 (th " inc Jude, P'" uge and handling)
w : Tec..' ll 'i, L q Ann L1nders, PO. Box
11 'i C&gt;:? . Cl ll c.Jt:o . Ill 60611 -0 561. (In
c:111.1d.J. ~e nd S-l..))_) Ti.) fin d. our more
:~b o m .A.-1 111 I . m de r~ .md Tl\ld ht·r past
co lun 1m , \' hit the &lt;: rc .Jtnr~ Sv ndi c.Jte wc..•b
p .l gl' ,It \\ "\\"W l"l"l.' ,lt Or:. l Ull !.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTE S

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

..

HIGH EXPECTATIONS

'

(

Friday, August 15, 1000

A'nn says real class ·is ·grace under press~re

·::; Dear Ann Landers: I was marned for
')8 years to a man who cheated on me
·. and left me for anoth er woman . We were
- divorced five years ago. The divorce was
· bitter. H e now has a new girlfriend, and I
am seeing a widower who treats me with
great respect and dignity.
During our marriage, my husband and
I often we nt out with my best friend,
" Rosie," and her husband. My husband
was not particularly close to eithe r of
them , but we were a compatible foursome. Since the divorce, my ex- husband
has given several parties to w hich Rnsic
and h er hu sband h ave been invited.
; Rosie is planning an elegant birthday
.party for her htisband. Sh e has invited me
and my boyfrie nd , alo ng With my ex- hu sli&gt;and a11d hi s girlfriend. Worse yet , she
plans to st· at us at the sam e table. I am
dre-ading thi s ev~ ning, and would li kt~ to
dt·clint• the invitation , bu[ I kn ow it
would cost me my friend ship ·wi th R osie-.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

IJytheBend

Daily Sentinel

~ .~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

:~Jhe

Page AS

Savings bond winners
POMEROY - The M eigs C o un ty Dl'mocratic Party award e d SIX
SSO sav in gs bonds throu gh daily draw in gs at the M eigs Co u nty Fair.
The winners we re: M o nday, Eric VanMeter, sponsored by Be tsy
Nico demu s; Tue sday, C arol Mac e, Athens , spo nsored by Tom Lowery: Wednesday, Eli Wdh s, Sy rac use, sponsored by John Le nte s:
Thursday, Tammy Wolfe , M iddlepo rt , sponsored by J eff Thornton:
Friday, Anna Farl ey, Rutland , sponsored by Jan et Howard; and Saturday, Shirley Buckner, Sh ade, sponso red by Dave Say re.
The winners ca n obtain their bonds by contac ting Rita Slavin ,
992-37 10 .

Scholarship applications accepted
POMEROY -The deadline for applying for the M eigs County
Retired Teachers' sc holarship is Sept . 23, it was an nounce d by the
co mmittee.
Applicants mu st be a resi dent of Meigs County, a junio r or CIVIL WAR STUDY - An entire morning of the enrichment program
se nior currently enrolled in a co lleg~ , majorin g in educa tioh, with was devoted to a presentation on the Civil War by Keith and Emma
Ashley who are act ive in reenactment gro ups. Students wearing some
at least a 2.5 grade point average.
of
the costumes in the Ashley collection included Talisha Beha, Kelsey
Appli cati ons mu st Include a current co llege transcript showing
the two previous years of cre dits and grades; a resume of activities Fife, Morgan Lentes , and Joannah Tindongan .
and career objectives listing at lease three references with one b ei ng
an instru cto r ; cu rrent photograph to be used for publi ci ty purpos- Bradley Ramsb urg, D ru R ee d . J&lt;&gt; .l nr!.lh Tin do n gan , Andrew
es , and name and address of college attendi ng.
() ' Bryant , Kelsey Fife, Ca iclyn Tho m "' . D.m iel Bookman, Chad BoilAll applicants will be eva lu ated o n grade point ave rage and com- net, D ee Cundiff, H eather Ea gle, NICole Haley. Kaylee Kennedy,
plian ce of requ irements, w ith consideratio n of extra c urri c ular Chalsie Manley, Dav1d Poo le, · Zach Sch wab, Courtn ey ·Mayes,
activities and caree r objec tives .
Bethany le e, C aitl in Swartz. and Caitlin W illmmon .
. Appli cations are to be mailed to MCRT Sc hol ars hip Commi ttee, c / o Jo'a n Corde r, 297 Wright Street, Pomeroy, O h io 45769.

New arrival

Enrichment classes held
MIDDLEPORT - Two sess ions of e nric hm ont- &lt;lasses fo r ho nor
roll stu de nts in the t hird through fifth grades were held over the sum mer at th e Meigs Middle School.
Funded through a gra nt written by Wendy Hal.n. M e1gs Local
ass1stant supe rin te nde nt , the pro g r::m1 offen..·d Stlldlt'S 111 art hi story,
N ari\.'l' Ameri cans. w arer saft.:ty, drug usc. ;\nd ' va rs, ~md in clud ed p rog ram '&gt; nn m ;-~t h g;Hll t'S and c ha ll c:n ges. multi cultur,JI aCU\'HIL"":&gt;., nu ktn g
qui lts blocks . :1 11 d workm g with p:-tpcr m ac he .
Prcst' ntcrs were brought in t' .1ch d ~1y tu wo rk with t h e J(l stud e nt s
\\·hu Wl'rt' diYidl'J betWI..'en [\\" 0 t(Jur-d;"ly Sl'Ss i on s. c ~uo l y n Smic h \\',)&lt;.;
d m.·cmr fo r the progr ~11 n.
The· students \\'l ' fl' tah·n O il ~l fi L·ld tnp to tht' _farm of c;rq; M cC.Ill
wh e rt' they lear ned .1bout w:ltt·r resc ue .md sJfcty.
Stude nts who participated were Amy Barr, T1li slu Beha. C lavw n
Blacksto n, Andy Ga rn es , Laura Ghee n, Morgan Kenn,-dy.. C hri s
Klll l t' S, Ca ra Lawless. Morgan Le 11 t l' S, Scott rv1 usser, Eug~ tl e 'PJtt c rStHl ,

LONC BOTTOM- Danielle
and Kenn y layne of Long Bottom
ann 01111Ce the birfh or· j W I!, D1ltnn Lee. o n July 4. at the Holzer
fvk thu l C enter. H t.• we-i ghed ~even
p ou n d ~ . '-,l'\'l' ll ou nt· cs.
lo r.llldp:u c n ts .lre To m
and
Su z.Ullll' Ktbbk· o f Long Bottom
.ln ll 1 l ' L' .1nd An n Ll\'lle of Rannl' .

Dalton Lee Layne

MEIGS C()lJNTY FAIR "THAN I( You~~ ADS

Want to show your appreciation?
Here are some of the most popular "Thank you" ad sizes.
(other sizes are available)
Please see Matt or Dave at The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992-2156 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

r----------..-----------------------------, r------------,
1 col . x 2"
I
I
I
I
I

2 col. x 5" $64 ..JO
Sunday 2x5 $96.50

$13.60
Sunday 1x2

$19.30

2 col.x 4"

L'\...-----------1

$51.60
Sunday'2x4
$77.20

1 col. x 3"
$19.35
Sunday 1x3
$28.95

2 col . x 2"

2 col. x 3"

$25.80
Sunday 2x2
$38.60

$38.70
Sunday 2x3
$57.90

�'1
I

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Impersonator arrested 17 times
NEW YORK (AP) - Danus McCullum 's hanJled an assortment
of JObs fur the uty's tr,mSlt agency toll taker, bus dnvc r, subway
motorman transit supervtsor
There's JUSt on,· problem - Me Collum doesn t work for Nc\\
York C 1tv Trarmt Ne\.c:r Ius Not for one mtnute, one hour one day
That hasn't stopped him from becnmmg the transit agenq. 's grt'Jt
pn.:tt'IH.ler a career that beg.1n whL'11 be LUmmamll:t'n:d a sub\\,ty Jt
ag~ 15 Hut after doubk~ - dtgH Jrrt.:sts stl' mnung from h1~ vanuu~
unpe'r~onattO i h ofcra nslt workers MtCollum has reJched a crossroad
fht.• ~5-yt.•ar-o ld Queens lllln ts behllld b~rs :t\\ ' lltmg tnal on vartnus durgt·s, mcludmg crumna1 tmp~..:rson Ilion H1s p trents are desper.Itc to help then obses&lt;~w son And Ius lawyer ts ready w plead that
M" Collu m 1s 1nsam:, unan oun r.1bk for lus ,\&lt;. tJons
Me Cullum dtsagrees
I am not ms.Ull\ he satd m 1 pilh&lt;"'u:o.t: Intt•rvte\\ wnh Th . . Nt:\\
Y01k Tunt.'S I Jill JUSt your JVl r:tg:t gu\ "l1o dot:Sll t mmd ht.·lpmg

om
Authontlt'S. qul•snon h1s ddlmuon ot .tsststltlll'
The l.ttest allegation ag.unst M cCoUum I-l L' pulk·d .1 sub\\J\ L'll1lr
gt'nn brakl' du11ng rush hour th~.:n tppo.. w:d - 111 n.:gubtmn bluL
umtorm- ls ,1 transit sup e l\1~ 01 LO!lHng: to tltt r~;sL t1L

Ad angers New York's mayor
MILWAUKEE (AP) Ad\e ltt&lt;ll ncllts tlut p&gt;rod\ the d.'" '
tndu&lt;;tn 's popultr (.ot Mdk: · td~ h 1\ l outr 1gcd New York M 1\ lll
Rudolph Cnd"m
l\HJ bt llbu.mls by til\· l'LDpk lor the Ethl cJI rreltllll'llt ot Allllllals
dl'p1Lt Glllll.tm WLJrmg J nulk mmt.lLh.: 1ml tsking "(-;ot prmtHi.:
c 111Clr:: The td d:ums 1 LOillll'CCIOn bLtWt'~ ll d11nkmg nulk m d
prost.1tt" cancer, for'' htch thl· m:-~yor ts bemg tr~ated
'It's tastdess .md uuppropn~te to t.·xplmt my tllness an d ;1lso t:1kes
.tdv~ntagt· of my posmon ;-JS thl' m 1ynr for advertt smg purposes,' (;Illham satd Thursday' The me ssage they re trymg to dehver JUSt makes
sense m then own zealous, om-of-t.ontrul thmking '
Gtuham s:ud he was l:Oilstdt:rlllg sLnng PETA because th~ org:~m ­
zauon was usmg his Image 111 ~n .tdverhsc mcnt without his pcrnusston
A study by the Harvard School of l'ubhc Health m Apnl ratsed the
posSibility that consunung lots of nulk and other datry products could
modestly mcrease the nsk of prostate cancer The study stressed the
case was far from settled and recommended fi.trther study of caluum s
effects on health
PETA targeted WISconsm for the ad be cause tt s " Amenca's Datryland, so It seems to be the perfect place to bnng the message that
datry products are hornble for human health, catastrophtc for the
enVIronment and a hvmg mghtnure for th ese cows 1nd thetr vea l calf
babtcs,' satd Bruce Fnednch, the groups vegctanan campatgn coo rdinator

Continental plane spins
NEWARK N J (AP) - A Cont111ental Atrhnes Jet spun a·round
and blew out four tires after Its brakes locked as 11 tned to land at
Newark lnternanonal Atrport late Thursday, o ffinals satd
No lllJUnes were reported
The 50-seat Contmental Express Embraer Jet, used for reg10nal
;thghts, was flymg from Savannah, Ga , wtth at least 20 passengers and
three c rew men1bers aboard, authonues satd
"The ptlot reported land111g was no rmal but the brakes locked and
that';-; \\hen the plane turn ed on th e runwa) ," s~ud Co ntmental
spokeswoman Karla Vtllalon
Sgt Wtllum Korbul of the Port Authonty ofNewYork satd he \\asn 't sure how nunr tunes the pl&gt;ne spun but that tt blew four ttres and
cu uldn 't be moved fo rcm g the urPort to close the runw:1y
Korbul s.ud t h t: Ft:lkral Av1 anon Adnumstratmn w.1s uwcsttgatmg
The passt·ngeis and ere\\ got otl tht: pl.mc bv staU"'vay .:md were
tlhn to :1 t~.:r mtnal b\ bus offin.1ls s:nd
It \\ ,IS th e scumd tnC!dL'nt 111\.0l\mg :1 Co mt th: utal pbnt: :tt tht•
N..:\\ark an pot t Thur sda\ E:ttlit'l 111 thl' d w ,, Contuh:ntal Jetlm eJ
ncarh bnch.· d 01 1 1 do~u..l run \\;t\
The: Bo~.mg 7=)7 \\ith 11~ j.Jls~.:ngus .md St'\t' ll tn.''' munbt:'J S
(:tl1lt \\lthtn 10 f~.:t.:t oflmdmgblh)ll' tht: p1lot Jk:rtt.::d by.u1 Jll tntfi( COil[ro iiL'r pull ed up ltld tJc\\ 1rotmd to bnd on the LOI ItLt run
\\.l\ No o ne \\:l S lllJtlrl'd :'LtH.:I thl' tn ctdL!tt ts undt:r t'l\ti.:Stlganon

Harrelson acquitted of pot charge
BEA1TYV ILLE, Ky (AI') - A JUn ' " JtlltteJ .1ctm Wood) Hll rclson of mtsdt· me.mor 11l.lriJLiana poss~.:ssto n ch ug~.: s Th\llsday ~o:Iu.l­
mg h1s four-year court b ~Htle w get the '\ tltt to d1fTen:ntlate bt"tween
hemp and maruuan.t
Harrelson planted tour hemp seeds 111 1996 knowmg he would be
arrested. so he.· could-challe ng(.' 11m outlm mg possessio n of an) p:ut
oft he ca nn."'bts pLmt The JUrors dt: hb(.'r.HLd about 2i mmuti.:S before

findm g hun mnm cnr
"Regardless of\\ hat thf' Supreme. Court ~ n s tnd regardless of 'dnt
the leg tshtors s,J) those people don t th111k 1t's nght th1t someone
should gn to J.Hllor gro\\IIlg mdustr r tl hcn tp H trrdson s:tH.i
The Kc:ntu ... ky Sup renJt.: Court cil';JrLd th L " 1\ for :1 tn :d \\hl'll It
rukd 111M tt t.h ti1Jt thete IS no d 1lft.:n..: Il&lt;.&lt;.' b&lt;.l\\ et.: tl the rnrcotl&lt;. m~r­
lJU:tn 1 md Its bnt :1 IHcal cousin ht:mp. whtch conra m ~ onh lllii1Utl'
amounts of the substanct: that nuh·s nunJU ma smokers h1 gh
tctr,•hydroconn,tbmol or THC
Lee County Attorney Tom Jones 1Skcd the Jllf) to fine H arrelson
th e nmamum $500 1nd gtvc h11n at lcost 10 do)s 111 the wunty JOtl
beca use th e ;"~ctor 1111'\ tP;ed ht s f;~mc m bre:lk the hw
" H e cou ld have come here and talk ed about &gt;e hoo l vtolen ce or
domestic vtolencc and tneJ ro bnng: attt:ntlon to those problem~
Instead he t:aliH' hn&lt;.· and broke :1 drug ltw ' Jont:s sa1d
Harrelson, who stun.:d 111 NatLJrJI Born K.ilkrs.' 'Tht.: Penpk vs
Larr y Flynt llld the TV ~encs Cheer,, 11o :1 lonbrt1me t.:ll\ Jlunm . . nt:t1 actlvt st He h 1s 111vec.;red Ill t ht:mp do thtng u)mpan\ md arb"llt.:~
thar 1fp:tpcr nunufJcruters LISL'd hl'mp tht.:re \\ould be no nnJ to Lut
down so manv frl'c.'s

Florida driver aiTested
FOR I I AUilFRJ)AJ F FJ, (AI') - A dmer wh arrestedThLm day 111 ( ot\llt.L unn \\ lt h ll tL l&lt;.C'IJ&lt;.·m tint s~.: nt 111 Hl-vo.. 1r-old
WOIJIJII.., L.l r ofl I LlrJd~L llld 11110 I '-llakt.-ltlfl'Sti.:d ~\\amp \\ ht: rl \hL
),J&gt; fi.Jf thrLt: dl\\ hlfPIL h t:11 H.~ 1t: Sl \lt.:J
St.ottAndrn\( mtpbt. \1 ~1 ot l-loii )'\O(I d\\t\t h1a gt'd\\ trhkl\JI) g tht.: ,~,. LTh.' nt l1l H t 1d1 11 t t h lt 1 t ~ t1 ltt d 111 lll]lll IL . , l!ld t1 h 11 g 1 f II ......
po!Jt t: I&lt;.'P• H 1
Po ht.L' ~n d ( nnp b~l! tl ll -t ll tkd fdh " [Dtllll ~ ( 11 o11 Allg 1~
'i(.'Jldlllg it 0\ l! 1 ·W-font-ha,:h bll~i l!t r, )f rillt ~.; d 1\' lltl t lilt ~ lll \\
,hl 11\ undo..tllLltllltJttrloltt~; i'J:::. 111 p111 htt Hhl ( 1111phL11 1llt gld
ly tnld rron p~.., . . rhn ht: h 1dnr htr llltlth t l t n
TootLI ~o Ut\1 \l d b\ ( o!l utlllg lll ll\\ltL I 111 1 ' {&lt;.'&lt;.1111 ~ \\ht&lt;.lto\o..1
111d \\I11[L I fltl'\\lJl !HHt: ((1 lltl fll\lll\ ~\lll\UJIJ\ I {llll- lgt.l J11 tklllg up It no.. r \)HH ll..d hl r md ~olu \\ ~ ~ hmplt d11&lt;.d m 't 1!(Ill' ~;nl ltbt to n
\VI{ )J 111 \t.Lt hit&lt;.\ l!ld dt.:l l\t!J \tiOil
l111 d1d th t.\ tnu tld \\l in drd tl11~o \ lid I 011 \t11llll~ lnt~tL r '
gr mdd l~!ghtt.:l I hop . . hL 1' prn~oL\ tltl'd 111 thL lu ll L'\ to..nt ol tho.. l 1\\
kft h~.: r w d1 L 1 h~~r": hL ~lh '' h1r 11 ... dl· ~l..r't'

ft...·

Friday, August 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Companies may pull funding over anti-gay stance
DALLAS (AP) - Cumpames that don.tte to
the Boy Scouts of Amcnca Jre m a quandary
Then t' mployment poh ctes contradtct the Boy
Scouts' court-upheld nght to b1n g:•y troop
members
The stan.e already has cost the Scouts finanCial support frnm compames sut.:h a~ LL"\'1
Strauss &amp; Co .md Wells Fargo Others. concerned about hunmg the benefiCianes of such
funding - the bovs themselves - arc wetgh Jng rhear options
A June ~H Suprl'!lll" Cnurt rultng :~llowcd
thc.:• Scouts to r&lt;.'Lun mLmbershap : m d It :~ders h rp
lrJtert.l tlut tX~;. Iud ... a\O\\ed hontosexu:1.ls
Aftl't\' ncl tht: Sl outs rt.: 1ffirmtd the Itght ' to

tsk .\II our ot members to dn thl· ll bL~t to hve
rh . .· Scout ():~th ;1t1d L.1w '' h1t. h mdudc
pkdges to revere ( rod :md be' lliOr.lllj ~ tr.ught •
Provu.k·nn.·, R I -b.l~l·d m utuf:lcwnng g1;~ nt
Tl xtron h 1s dt:ct(kd not to gt\1..' to :m mnual
dmner fi.1r thl· StotJts 1lthough tl gt\c.: S3.(X)(l
last yt·ar spokes\\OlllJn SuL Br ~ h np ~a1d
"We !ll;-Jd.e the deliSIOII 111 Apnl - betore
thl· Supreme Court Jeustnn ~ h i.: 'ml Tlnusd.w because the Boy Swuts p11h1 y chd not
mt.:Sh \\ 1th the Lompany's emplm mem poht y
Clus(' M.mlnttan C orp 1s &lt;.O il'i ldt•Jm g
revoking Jts nmttJbuttollS
On tlu: f.1t.e of tl ~ulliL i~~u ~.' 'Plh .lr to be.:
Ill Lont1ILt wtth our totlllllilllllllt tll dJ\trsltv,'

NHTSA says broader
Firestone recall possible
WASH ! Nl;Tl/N (A I') - rh,
Btldg . . '\ tO\lt.: I I II~; \(O!ll
!J :t,
ru t il o l &lt; ~; nulhon Fltl~tollL
r" tllcd dl J&gt; ~1i 7i Ri i AfX
tlfl''; 1111\ ht: L'\ P llldt•d tl :111 111\L'Stnd ATX II t1! Lio 1~ \\o..ll 1'
tlg.ttiOII by tcd,tl lrc•gul ttots finds \V!Idt•JtJ (._' . .\ Al ( 11 0 I ll thL lolllll'
~1zc m ac.!... H 1 pi 1m 111 D t.:t Hut
mort• \\ idL''Pll td Jdet ts
Ne\\ Nattontl Ht gll\\ 11 T10flll
Ill NH ~I SA 1.., rm c~tJg it lll~ r,2
S lfl'ty Adnumstrauun hc.1d Sue tkaths Jnd Jllotl' rh m I00 lll jl111l li
U.ulcy. \\ ho L.tlllt.' 0 11 tht. job th at ( ould he.: hn~ cd to thost. nrcs
Mond ay would nut dlst.:uss ~D illl of \\ lmh !13\l' bt't. lll&lt;.'pOl{ speetfi cs of the: lllVt'stq; mon but ed to ~u dJt. nl) lusl· tllt.'Ir tro..t~d
sat d. If we fcc I tht'll IS ,\ defect
Th e t c ntc r ror Aute&gt; S de t)
tflectmg ~."' ft.'tj, \\e Will ISSUe I filtd 1 bw o.; urt tu ton. l th L o..u m rc·nll ·
p 1111es to hto aden tht' Jt.t. ill
Co ng ress also IS getttng b..:y(1nd tlw s~; I i - lllL h tru&lt;. k tu o
lllvolvt"d
H o use Commer&lt;.c- tu all ATX, ATX II and Wddu l..ummatte-c
C hatrm.w
Tom nt.: ss AT s sttll on the ro:1d
Bhley, R - Va , satd Thursday he
On Tlwrsdav, a tormer ttl&lt;.'
w 1U send fo ur tomnnttL e ;udes ro expert for Bndgestone/ Firo..stOnl·
Dearborn, Mt r h , on Fnday to al ~o t1 rged 1 grc :~tcr rcc::~.ll, s 1ymg
meet wtth Ford M o tor Co offi- tint defects 111 Wtlderncss ATX
cl:lls and revu:·w t.:ompany donl- Jnd ATX II ttres h,wc been
ments related to the reca ll
known at the htghest In &lt;Is of
Scn;-Jtt:' Commerce Cmnm1ttce company manageme nt smcc tht·
C hatrnun John McC1111 , R.- 1'!70s
Anz , has sc heduled a Sept 6
' As lo ng as those ttre s 1rt'
heanng ,md plans to mvttc Ford ·hctng made ;-Jnd used the poten.md Bndgestone/ Ftrestone offi - tial for mOTt' de ;tt hs 1s real ," s:11d
uals to testtfy
ttre co nsu lt,mr Max Nonn;:~nnker
The tr pe uf ttres bemg recalled
Bndgestone/Ftreston e spokesate standard equtpmcnt un the woman Cy nthta McCaffet ty s nd
Ford Explorer a11d other hght the 6 5 nullion ttrcs recalled arc
trucks made by the company
t: IIOUgh

spokesman Jtm Fmn satd "We w ill make a 6nal
dcternunatton 011 tlus soon lr's not something
we .trc.:· gomg to lt·t n:st for a long tuue"
In ! 999, the National Council of Boy
Scouts, tht' orbramzattun that adnumsters separately mcorporatcd troops. recetvcd about $11
tmlhon 111 chantabl e comnbuoons
Gregg Shtclds a spokesmm for the lrvll1gbased natlollol cou nul, satd he could not predict
the 1mpart of corporate wtthdrawals, but fundmg h1s rcm11ned stable '
Wh .tt really m.tkes swutlng work ts the
SLOtlt le.ldL rand tht· volunteer - but that's nm
to Jmumsh tht.! finannal com nbunons that
Lompamcs make,' Sh1ekl&lt;&gt; &lt;;;11J

30Jears of tests chart gains
an slips among students
WASIIJ N( , 1\l N (1\1')
A11 11.lll l ' ..,, hodll lllld1 t 11 Ill
dn111 g I lt!IJ... htttt.l Ill 111HI1l'111lt ll\ thtn rht\ \\til 1 do..~ tLIL
1~11 hut ln1 11 111 \ ul thun 1&lt;. Jd lll ' 11HI 'l!llllL skill , hi\&lt;.
d u h md , \t gl lth \llllL I')'J2
J he
~ "' c llllllc Ill \
i&lt;J&lt;)!)
N 11 111 1111 A""·-~ . . m . . nt nt Ed11 ( tu on Pr ogll~' 1bo siH)\\ S .1
\\ tdtn ltl g !..! rp lll rhe tl'~ t pt rtm IIIIIH L oJ \\ Jiltt. md blKk c.::Jelllt.:lltll) ~L houl stud o..nts nn
llldlll ~ muh 1nd ~Llt.:l1tt.: And
bJtLk 1 7-'}t- 1r- old~ 011 :1\t.:rlgt.:
Ill ,ti Jl tom )'L'lls btlund whtti.:S
111 thl' ll to..' llhn g: skt lb
S11H to b"o 111e fodder for AI
trurL :1 11d ( rt: orgt' W Bush, both
self- d c~u tbc.:d '\·ducauun l:.lll dtd 1tes the Ed11catJon Departm t.:nt rt.:port p:11nts a m1xcd pt cturc of unprovm g Jnd f.1 lhng
rest &lt;~c.orl~ :l!ld n;-~nowmg and
\\ Ilknmg k ,\rmn g gaps
Tht.: Clt nton admmtstration
&lt;.jllll klv pmnrcd to LOnststcnt
.md stead; g.1ms 111 math scores
111 the report Bush, meanwhtle,
saKI the repo rt docum ents that
student JLiucvc.:ment stagnated
dunng Prest dent Clrnton 's tcrrh
tn offi, . .
" I wtll be co mnlltted to mak~

Sill&lt;.' th :l t \\L' Jo not rqwtt
the llledtoCIIt\ of the 1990s,"
Bt ~~oh S;lld
I ho.. lt. hiC\l'llH:.'llt
g! p b&lt;.t\\llll 11\Ulotlt) ;1JlJ
\\ hn o.. ~ tud . . nh 1., ~ till too" tde,"
• I hL n.: I'I d lt l both ca mp:~I gns
L111 \!lot.' to tlll!llJll't thetr LO lll ...
pl t111g l'dtlt H1on 1ge nd ts !t;-J td
Atm Wdkms ,, poltcy analyst
\\ttl&gt; Educ,ttloll Trust a WashIngwn -ba~ed te~e trt.h g1oup
Tlu~ IS 111 L.lS) o ne for the
Bush plople, she md In the
'lOs \\e flatbn ed He nn say
look It the tlttll css He'll soy
look wh 11 I Lhd 111 Texas"
For Go re, tt's harder,' she
slid "Tim corresponds to hts
ttme .1s \ 1ce president '
Gort s camp.ugn staff dtd 110t
unntcdt at d y respond to a
request for Ius reat.Uon to the
report
But EducatiOn Secretary
R tchord Rtley took up the cudgel "There IS good news here,
too," he satd, utmg the tmprovement 111 math scores and better
readmg sktlls among 9-year-nlds
stnce 1994 "We know how to
tmprove o ur sc hools We need
those who co unt themselves as
'congressional leaders' to get on
board

111g

Costly goods
take record dive
WASHINGTON ( AP)
Orders to US factones for costly
m:~nuf.tctun:d goods m July took
thr..:1r b tggc st-t:ver rt't:ord&lt;.·d dtV&lt;.'
.111 dc.·ntJnd fdl slut plv for 111 pllnl'" tnd lk&lt;.tlomt. Lqlllptll&lt;.llt
.Hid H!O il,ll l'\lliLllU' th:l t t!J~;
o..( mwm\ IS fin;1ll) slmv mg
Tht: &lt;.. Olllll lt:rCt' Dep trtnl&lt;.'llt
"lld Tlnn ~ d,l\ th.u the l.trgu thln - t.:X)li.: Ck'd
J1..J pt:lll'IH
Lh c hn ~ left o1de1 5 tor dur.J!Jk
goods- ttum ~xpt:ctr..:d to b ~ t Jt
k• ;1st three years - at a sc.tsoJu ll v
"dJmted mmtJ! rne of S2 L~ 4
btlbon
The bot tom hne tor Ament. as manufactu rers IS that th t•
econom.v IS slowmg to a mor~.:
sus ta mable p;-Jce, w1th strong noutnfhttonary grm'V th cont anu tng
btH at :1 less :~ccdt·rated r:~t e s:t1d
N ;ltl o nal Assou:ltton of MJnufaclun:rs econom ist Dave Huethu
Over the la st 14 months th e
r ed~.::Ja l Ke~c:ne Iu s hnn~tlli
~ hott - t l' rlll lll tl'ft'St ratLS SIX llllll'"i
Ill :m eflort to tuul the &lt;.'C011011l)
and ktx·p mfltuon from t::SL al.Jtlng
Th e durJble-goods teport
's hows th e econom) ts JUSt mov tng :H a slower pace than 1t had
but t hat Jocstr t me.m H'&lt;&gt; cr...twled
w a stop The economy continues
to furge ahead
md Rtch .ml
Y1tnaronc.· econom1st '' 1th Aq; u~
R esearch Corp
On T11cstby the central b mk
decid ed nor to ra1 se r:Hes the second meettng m t1. row 111 \\ luch 1t
opted to leavl r.ttes un t h;mged
Noncthek·ss the Fed !crt the d our
opi.: n to turthcr rJtt.: tllCfL t s~;' 111
dtl futun: '' Jflllll g th tt th t.: t1ght
l tbot m:u kcts t maid ' P 1rk \\ tge
111d p11t e prn\ LIIL s
In .1 lot:lPtJd flJHirt, t h~.: mnnbl.. l
td Alllttl l 1m fili ng: Il L\\ tl ll!ll'
h11 Ull l 111pln\11lo..Jl t bllll f'ih rn~t·
\1~t \\uk ltl l !Ill ln u11il \\o..Lk 11, I
fU illl tn 11 -lil llll lh1 t
t!J L 11 1..d 1t l lhPt 11 1 11ht I\
l\~lP'l lllll S l!Oll!ld t!JL t.:L{gllo
,1 1d l\lh ndl I \ nth
li.tli Hlllll &lt;;t
\r 111 \l11pk'
In ll llllt!t c~o nt It' lunL 27 -2:-1
lllu[IJ1l!; ll'i...l~old l lnn-.d1\ h.d
~ lil h &lt;.\llllko..l' htJrt o..t tLd h\ \;Jgm
~~t ' ln\\ 111~ Ll01lOI111l gro\\th,
\\o..1L un1n1111nm l!t th . . n dl't i\IOil
11ot tn hon~ot rltn
!tl\\

· Friday, August 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Refonn Party split opens complex ballot access fight
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)- A bmer
split m the Reform Party has left state
electton offirtals scrambl10g to dende
whether Pat Buchanan or John Hagelm
w tll get a spot on the November ballot
and usmg wtdely vary10g approaches to
figure It out
Iowa otlictals, faced wtth competmg
clatnJS for ballot space, resorted to drawmg lots from a spenally purchased glass
bowl Buc hanon's name was pulled, but
only after a rau co us exchange between
(he co mpeun g factiOns

Electton offictals m Montana. dtd the
same, pullmg Hagehn's name from a ballot box tmported for the occaSion
Meanwhtle, Buchanan's n ame was Jerked
from the ballot 10 Cahformo and party
leaders t h er~"conunue to meet to
resolve the pro!llem "
It's a split that was supposed to have
been resolved a couple of weeks ago
when the Reform Party held tts convention and ptcked former Republi ca n
Buchanan as It~ nommee
DISsenters labeled that sel ectiOn as

ngged and mstead nonunated Hagehn,
who prevwusly has sought the preSidency wah the N atural Law Party
Both camps cla11n to be the legmmate
nommee and that's caus10g trouble for
state electton otlictals who are facmg
deadhnes for pr111tmg the November ballot Most of those deadhnes are late
August or early September, so time IS
presstng
Sorne states are putting both candtdates on the ballot, some are allowmg
nenh e r and ot hers are putting the two on

the ballot 10 dtfferent spots
"Right now we constder that party
ove r-nonunated, so pendmg any Withdrawal by one o f the n onu nees or a court
order, netther set of names wtll appear on
the ballot," observed Larry Perosmo, a
spokesman for ConnectiCut's secretary of
state
Gtven the passwn between the two
farttons, court fights are expected m a
number of ~rate s
In Iowa and Montana, electton offioals threw up thetr arms and held a lot-

Gore outlines college tuition tax credit proposal
CO LL EGE PARK. Md (AP) - AI Gore
s 11d Thursdav hts pmposal for a college tuition
t.lx. Lr(·dtt \\ould s.wc most fanuhcs about
$2,800 a year and assure that
t.ollc:ge '"auld not' be hnuted to famtltes of \SL'alth md
niL' ms
On a camp U!,01 stop
at the UmverSity of Marvhnd JU St outSide Washll1gto n, Gore s01d hiS education
plan would mclude a new
tax-free savmbrs program to
help parents save for the
raptd!y tncrcJSillg costs ofh tgher educatton
In lm speech to about I ,000 people pack~d
ntto :1.11 outdoor amp httheater, Gore sa1d h1s
tmtwn pro posal would allow fanuhes w claun
e1ther a utdJt or a tax deductiOn of 2~ percent
on up to $ 10,000 m tm tton and fees for any
post- secondarv educatiOn , mdudmg college

and vocatiOnal tr;unmg st: hoob
Gore's staff sa1d most fJnuho '' ith 1 duld m
college would be 1blc to damt the lull $2 HlXI
credH
"It 1s ume to make d1&lt;.· l.trgL'\t mH·o.;rm&lt;.' llt 111
t.:ducatlon SllllC the (.,J b1ll. Coil' rolJ .111
,lUdtence that mdu(kd Stlltknh umun llll'l11 bers :md Democr~ti C .acttvJsts
Gore's propos~! also would mvolvc.: .1 llt:\\
"401( proviSIOn to whKh worhrs and th eJr
employers could contnbute JU St IS the\ do for
-101 k retirement accounts
Invested eormngs could be \\lthdrJ\\ n t.tx fr~e tf used for any edut ;-Jtton expenses
Gore also propo~cd a national tulttun savmb~
plan that would l111k tax-free savtngs mltlattves
started 111 son1e states to allow parents to b~.;:gm
savmg for thetr chddrcn 's educatton from btrth
Under Gore's proposal, exmmg state programs would be hnked IntO a nanonal program, and states wtthout them would be

&lt;.'llUHJr,tged to JOin
(;ore "-;"~Hi h1 s cduc:1t1on proposal hkl· the
r. . ,r of h1s tn: plan would t~rgt:t \\Orkmg ci.Jss
lmultc&lt; w lule the tax proposa ls 1dvanced by
(,loJgL W Bush \\Oltld mostl~ hdp Wl'althy
A111 t.: rt t.Jns
I \\ill not supp01 t J g1ant tJx utt for the
\\&lt;.: altln tl thl· expt:nst· uf an} one dsc. hL sa1J
Gort: s aidl's dtstnbuted a paper cu mp;u m g
the dfccts of the two plans on a marnl•d couple- earnmg $60 (){)() wtth a chtld m coll ege
The ramdy wo11ld saw $1,025 under the
Llcmocr.ttt c phn compared wtth $600 under
Bush's plan , s01d Chns Le hane, a Gore
spo kesman
Bush appeared wtth a LouiStana fanuly 111
New Orleans - father earmng $40.000, wtth
and twu small chtldren - and esnmated thetr tax btU would drop from $2,07S to
$475 under hiS plan and not at all under Gore's

,, "'fe

Cheney questions Clinton's monuments strategy
C ENTRAL POINT, Ore (AP) - Republica n vtce preSidenttal hopeful Dtck Cheney
ratsed the posStbthty Thursday that some of
the nattonalmonuments created by Prestdent
Chnton could be revtewed and poSSibly
rescmded tf he and George W Bush are elected m November
" Of course tt's not my deciSion to make It's
the prestdent-elect who has to make the deetston ' C heney satd, commcntmg on what ts a
hot toptc m the West ' But I certamly expect
\~e would revtew a lot of these dectstons to
~e whether or not any acnon was approprtate"

: He satd Chnton has used hts executtve
~thonty "willy-mlly all over the West" to
~ate nattooal monuments wtthout constdert,itg the deSifes of the people who wtll be
~tfected

, ; Many fear that creatmg monument after
tuonument could harm the Western economy
\))' removmg land from commerctal uses hke

grazmg, loggm g and nun111g
Dur111g hts time 111 offi ce, C lmton has created or added to 10 national monuments rovenng nearly 4 rrulhon Western acres m hiS
effort to carve out an envuonmental legacy
Juleanna G lover Wetss, a Cheney spokeswoman, later noted that Bush has conceded It
would be difficult to rescmcl a natwnal monument destgnauon She satd he wanted to
stress that a Bush-Cheney adnumstrat10n
would giVe local reSidents greater mput
regarding any future deSignatiOns
Cheney satd that as a congressman from
Wyonung he helped get 1 mtULOn acres deSignared as wtlderness - but only after hstenmg
to all stdes
11
We need to stnke a babm:: e We need an
opportumty for all to be heard," he satd
Later, after tlytng to Portland, Cheney
rebutted Democrauc clatms that as preSident
Bush would only appomt Supreme CourtJUSttces who favor outlawmg ,tbortlon

"We don't have any· htmus test when tt
comes time to ptck JUdges," Cheney told The
Assoctated Press 111 a bnef mtervtew He satd
that whtle he and Bush both oppose abortion,
"we recogmze that IS a tough tssue for people
on both Sides of the ISSue"
Whtle 111 Central Pomt, C h eney, formerly
chtef exec utive of the oil servtces firm Halhburton Co , addressed the ISSue of explmtmg
new ml fi.elds whtle protectmg surround111g
et.:osystems
He satd new dnlhng techmques make It
posSible to tap ml fields beneath the Alaska
Nattonal Wtldhfe Arcttc Refuge whtle leavmg
"m10trnal envtronmental footprmts"
Democraltc prostdenttal nval AI Gore
opposes opemng the Alaskan refuge to otl
dnlhng
Cheney satd th e Umted States must find
new sources for ml because domestiC production from exiSting fields declmes annually

tery, wtth Iowa Secretary of State Chet
Culver drawmg Buchanan 's name
As a result of the draw10g, Buchanan
Will be hsted as the Reform Party candtdate and Hagehn wtll be on the ballot as
"nonunated by petition"
' We're not taking anyone off the ballot" satd Culver
In M ontana, Secretary of State Mtke
Cooney pulled Hagehn 's name from a
ballot box, giVIng htm the Reform Party
deSignation Both Sides opposed the
drawmg and a lawsutt ts expected

Bush to address Latin
American issues in address
MIAMI (AP) t;eur!;&lt; W
Bush IS ~howmg off h1 s ..,t a . . smanslup \\ tth a pledge tll help
propel 1 rl:'\ nlutton uf h~.:~o:­
Jolll 111 L 1t1n
L o u ntt te\
b,
hghnng t.h' [;Jtorshtps and
fostL rtng tr;1de
whcr&lt;. he s tvs
tht:
( ' ltn to n
,H.illllllJStr 1[1( Hl
has let 1t tloun der
' As long as you arc on the
road toward hberty you wtll not
be alone ' he SJid m prepa red
remarks auned at Latm Amc:nLan
countnes south of thiS heavtly
HISpamc ctty "As long as you are
movmg toward freedom, you will
have a steady fnend 111 the Umted States of AmenCJ"
He had a different message for
Cuba, restatmg rus support for
econonut.: sanctions on the commumst country unul dictator
Ftdel Castro accepts democratiC
reforms
"I challen ge the Castro reg.me
to surpnse the world and adopt
the ways of democracy," Bush satd
111 hiS prepared remarks "Untiltt
frees polincal pnsoners, and holds
free electrons and allows free
speech, I wLll keep the sanctions
111 place'
"Mr Castro, tt IS time to let
your people go"
The Texas governor also took
a hard !me aga.mst the C lmton
adnurustratlpn, saymg tt "dropped
the baJ.l" m secunng new trade
deals wtth some Latin Amencan
nations And he pledged to suc.
ceed where Clmton failed m perSllodmg Congress to pass so-

'

c.JJIC"J "fast track" trade legtslmon
th:a Lould bt: pa!-~st.•d or rejected
wtthout llllo..·ndmc nt
Wahout tt , :1s \\l have St:cn,
Amenla 1s slo" to mml , .md
other 11;-Jtlons .Ill' llll \\ illing to
ut:gouarc With us senoudy" Bush
s;ud ' fhe Clint on-Gore Jdnun IStratton hJs h.td no strategy'
The speec h m tlus hnvily
Htspamc uty IS the ftrst Fmby of
l\\o hun1sphcnc" forugn pohcy
CVL'rttli ;~ subject on whiCh Bush
~tr1ves to prove hts com peten ce 111
the face of questtons about hts
knowledge and abtl tttcs
Should I become prestdent, I
"ill look South, not as an afterthou ght but as a fundamental
comnutment of my pres1dency,"
he satd 'Just as we ended the
great dtvtde bet\veen East and
West, so today we can overcome
the North-South divtdc"
Later 111 Dallas, he was to meet
pnvately \\~th Vtcente Fox to find
out, m part, what the MeXIcan
preSident-elect's plans are regardmg the eventual operung of the
nation's 2,000-mile border With
the Uruted States
"I don't thmk he's fully
explamed open borders," Bush
satd " ] behcve we ought to
enforce our borders"
But Bush also satd he would
carry a 1nessage of optmusm and
goodwill to the elected leader a
day after Fox met wtth PreSident
Clinton and Vtce PreSident AJ
Gore
'My pledge will be Should I
become the--pre!tdent, I'll work
and have a good, long-rerm relauonshtp wtth (hun) and contmue
a good telattonshtp Wtth Mextco," Bush told reporters aboard
hts campatgn plane Thursda)

Aboard a tractor, GOP sends veto-bound estate tax repeal to Clinton
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:WASHINGTON (AP) - Takt[1g a bnght red tractor Thursday
t!&gt;rough the capttal\ busy streets,
1£1ont.IJ1a ran cher Lynn Cornwell
S!Jll[:ht to dramatiZe the estate
t~x's impact on somt' farmers and
bu smesses as he dehvered a btll
rtpeolmg the tax to the Whtte
~ ome - where a cer tam veto
a" ::llt'i
The threat of havtn g a tax
like thts takes Jwoy all mcenttve
Of g rowmg your busmess," sa1d
Cor nwell. a thtrd-generatton
b'eef producer from Glasgow,
Mollt , who ts preSident-elect of
tbe NatJonal Cattlemen's Beef
A~&lt;onatton - a group that long
has lobbted for repeal
Repubhcan
congresstonal
le.aders brought 111 Cornwell
w}w rode on a tractor borrowed
fr.O m a Vngtma dealershtp, to
u:te te 1se pubhc preswrc o n Pres1-

dent Ch ntoll to Sign the btll
whtch he has vowed to veto, and
set the stage for a September veto
overnde vot~ m the House
"Tlus unfan tax IS so steep that
someuntcs the deceased owners
chtldren must break up a farm or
sell a busmess JUSt to cover th e
tax ," satd House Speaker Dennts
Hastert, R-Ill , appeanng at a
farmers' market tn ColumbtJ ,
S C " Your chtldren should not
have to sell what you worked
your whole ltves to produ ce"
Desptte the rhetonc, o11ly
about 2 percent of all Amen rans
who' dt e each vear are forced to
pay estate taxes, mamly because
of a S6 7 5,000 mdtvtdual exemption that a marned couple can
double wtth Simple planmng
steps The exemptions are even
lugher for farmers and snull
bus1 nesse s, but many arc sttll

Texas granting parole
to more inmates
:AU ST IN rcxas (AI') - The
jL;l) p trolL I ,\l(. fL 1Lht.:d ItS lu ght:st
p~1111 tn 111\ month .:; m el' Go\
( r'Cdl g&lt;.' w Bmh took nffi Le Ill
lti 1J-l but till pHniL btnl d o.. h111 llh111 \\\'I pul Jtt l' ph\~;d 110 wl...
~ No..nh 2'J pt.:l lL' !H tA t:ltg1bk
uill\ l tt~o \\l'll 1pprmnl fn1 p1ro k
111 lu h ne\\ '&gt;tltistlu sho" A \&lt;.'H
IH;l 1bout I K pt.nt.: nt ot llig1bl. .
u-&gt;nult' \\llL ptrokd md thL
1\£t.: ht, hL&lt;.Il tlm1blllg
P11 ole Bond Ch 1111llll1 (,trdd
(r:411t.:ft lttnb utu-itho.. 11\t.r&lt;.'Jiol' to
)l l )lt~' L h wg . . ~
: But I) LlllOtrttlt PJit\ l hHr-

\\ umllt Molly Beth Malcolm s llli
th&lt;. !ll"\V figures h1ghhght p1oh knh \\Hh hm\ the systt.:ll\1~ run
utd bl.l111ed the Jncrl'.lSl·d p11ok
r lte on pnhtL( s
Bush JS thl.. R Lp ubh~; tn t 11\lh dttl tnr p1LSJdent
Wh&lt;.·n ;ou &lt;.llt th1ou g:h rlw
b\llt.'ll1l. r.HIC l xpltll ltlOil'i
I(
1ppLll~ tlut the p.lTok houd h1 '
hLl'll hokhn g p ... opll' lll prl',llll
lon ger tlnn llLlt.:\'ilT\ H .1 h1gh
co&lt;~t to till' t.1xp.1\t:r~ or thl'\ .u . .
no\\ rdc1sm g llli11Jt es l ll h tl,
n11mnu ze rh&lt;.• budgl't ~o h m tl1ll
M,tltn lm slid 111 ~l st.ltt. lllL1 1t

..

forced m buv t.os tly msunn ce
poltc tes tnd pty IJ\;yers and
accoulltonts to protec t hardt'a rnt'd ass~:ts from a tax th;tt
reache s 55 percent
In Co rnwell s state of Mont.ll\1, for example only abo ut
5,000 estate tax returns are filed
111 :1 g i\L' Il ycJr ;l!ld onl y ;-~bout
150 of the m owe ~nv t.lx accordmg to stattsttcs from Sen M~x
Bau c u s D -Mo nt But Cornwell ,
who tuns 1 brge 100-year-old
ran c h, "'d he spend s .tbnut
$ 15 ,000 a yeor for estate planmng
to c~capc th e tax
"We're rrymg to avotd as
mu c h estare tax as \\e can he
sa td
The· legtslauon wluch passed
t h ~ H ome and Senate earlier thi s
sunune r With s1gmfi rant Democrati C support, would gradually
phase out the tax over 10 years 'Jt

a cost of S I O'i btllton l. hnton
wtll have unttl JUSt after Labor
Day to stgn or veto the btll,
me.unng GOP le tdcrs could hold
the House O\ t:l ndc vote the first
\\it'c k or two .tft er Congress
rcturns from 1ts summer recess
Many black and Ht spa nl c
Dt·mocr;"~ ts among them Tennesset• Rep Harold Ford , who
gave the ke ynote address at the
Dcmocr~nc Natwna l Co nven tion were .1mong the must
promment supportt:rs , argumg
that th e tax threatened to undercu t nunorny busmesse;-; that often
take sc·vera l fannly generatiOIIS to
bmld
!lut Wlute H ouse otlictals left
110 do ubt that Clt nton \\ould
veto the btll saymg tt pnmanly
benefi ts the wealthy and would
consume S7SO btl!ton of proJe Cted surplu ses dunn g the 10 years

D
'
The Middleport Clinic
kesh

788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760

IPIOIIIDI81ts:
11401 992-4226
Accepting New Patients · Walk-Ins Welcome

1fter the tax IS fully repealed
"Ht' will Vt'to 1t because \\l~
ca n provtde more nu.·a mn g-ful.
t:trgetc d t: st:tte t,\X rdacf that p10v1dcs lmmc:d!:ltc bl'nefits to
farmers md small bU'illlt:ssc:.·s :md
doesn t gJ \'e a\\ a) the store ~.ud
Cl mton spokesman Jake Slt'\\L'rt
Demo c rats l1:1 d offered lcsscos tlv alternottVt'S bJ&lt; ked bv
Clt ntun tlut wonld how reduced
est.ltc tax ratt's and m e n.:a~cd
excmptmns for f.lrtllL'rs a11d ml~ll
bus.messes DeuwLr,JtlC prcstdt:ntial nommee Al Gore :~dvoC:ltl'S :1
S11111lar apprn.1ch while Rcpubh ca n calldtdate George W Bush IS
calhng for co mplete repeal
C harles Ra
D- N Y

sa. td one Democrattc verston
\\ould h.tvc offered an 1mmedaate
S-1 nullton exemptton for famt ly
farms a11d small busmesscs ctfe cttVd) dm11natmg the tax for all
but th e we-J ltlu est cst:ttes
The
Republtc a11 le1 ders
acn t rL'lll) tntercsted m getttng
:1 1"1\ dung e1ncrcd that benefits
tht.• t;-Jmtly f.umer or small bu~r-.
nl'ss owner. s.:l!d Rangel semo r
Democrat on the H o use Way'
.1 11d Me.ms Com tm ttee All they
want IS an exc use ro hold more
political stunts"
On the Net
Congress
http I / thomas lor

�Pa~ A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

MNF report card, Page B2
NFL: Favre update, Page B5
Daily Scoreboard, Page BB

Page Bl
Friday, Aupst ~s. 1000

Ap o stol ic

a.- or J_. Christ Apoot&lt;&gt;lk

Ajlootollc Faith

Pomeroy Westside Church

New Uma Road

Wednad.oy, 7:30p.m.

•

Wednesday Services- 7 p. m.

or

A ssembly of God

Middleport: Church Christ
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
Youth Min iste r: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 u.m., 7 p.m.
W c dnc~ ay Services.- 7 p.m.

Ubort! Aatombl! of God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Muon, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 1"0:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Bapti st

Keno Chun:h of Christ
Worship · 9:30a. m.

Marooatha lllptlst Chu"'h
Burfinaham - 742-7606

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Pasror: John Swanson

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Momin&amp;Service II :OOa.m.
J:ve('lina Service -6:00p.m.
Wednesday Set\lict - 7:30p.m.

U...,. Baptist Churdl (Southorn}

Bearw.allow Ridge Church of Christ
Pmstor:Terry Slewilrl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worsllip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv ict:s - 6:30 p.m.

R111ud Flnt Baptist Churdl

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonv ille Rd . (Rt.l43)
Pasto r: Roger Watson
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOrship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

S10 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

•

••

Sunday School - 9:30'1.m.
Wor1hip ·10:45 a.m.

"

Pornoroy Flnt Baptist
East Main St.

•

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo~hip- 10:30 a.m.

.,..
~

~

••
~

•.

Tuppers Pt1in Church ot Chri!it
lnstrumemal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a. m.
Sunday School - 10: 15 a.m.
Youlh- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Flnt Southon BajMisl
41872 Pomero~ P1ke
Putor: E. Llmar O'Bryan1
Sull&lt;lay School -9:30a.m.

Bndbury Church of Christ
Pastor; Tom Run yon
Sunday School - 9:.30 a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Wonllip- !0:45a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

..

Rutland Chur-ch or Christ
Sunday School· 9:30a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p. m.

FiniBoptlst Cbo"'b
Pulor: Mart Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl., Middleport

Sunday School - 9:15a.m.

Bradtord Church or Christ
Corner of St . Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sund11y School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:00a.m., 10:30 11.m., 7:00p.m.
Wed nesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Wonhip · 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

-First Baplill

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

•

Hickory Hills Church or Chrisl
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a. m.
Worship - 10 a,m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

SUwer Run Baptist
Pastor: Sleven K. Uule
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worship· lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7:00 p.m.

Langs\'llle Christian Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

ML Unloo Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
-~~Baptist

Hrmlock Gron Church
Pastor: G~ne Zopp
Sunday ...chool · l0:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7 p. m.

Cbu"'h

,Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecca

•

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

~

Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible S!udy - 6:00 p.m.

•

or Christ

Reednlllr Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Oltlllet.,. Fm Will Baptist Chu"'h
28601 St. RL 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
EveninJ ~7: 00p . m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

Dutt'r Church of Christ
Pastor: Justin Campbe ll
Sunday sehoul 9:JO a.m.
NurmPn Will, superintendent
Sund&lt;~y worship - 10:30 tu n.

Hlllalde BaptiJt Cbu"'h
Sl. Rl. 143 just off Rt. 7

Churth of Christ
~.- lmcnteclion 7 :~ml Jl4 W
Evange list: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.m.
Worship : 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr~
-·- · Sunda~ School - 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Vidory Baptist lndopoodaol
S2S N. 2nd St. Middlepo&lt;t
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'

Hartford Churth or Christ In
C hristian Union
Hanfo rd, W.Va .
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wors hip -9:30a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Faillr Baptist Cbun:h.
Railroad St ., Mason

sua&lt;~ar

Christian Union

School - 10 ~m.

Wol'lhtp · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Fonst Run Bapllst

Church of God

Pastor: Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worstlip- 11 a.m.

Me. Moriah Cburch or God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine
Pastor: Brice Utt
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapti.U
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middleport
Pastor: Re\1. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worsh~p- 10:4.5 a.m.

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Kon Heath
Sunday Worsh ip - I 0 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Arrtiq•lty Bapllst
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.

Syracuse First Church or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru sse ll
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:JO p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30 p.m.

Rudud FrH Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Tay lor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Church of God o( Prophecy
0.1. Whi!C Rd . off St. Rt . .160
Paswr: P.J . Chapman
SLJnday Sc hoo l · I 0 u. rn.
Worship - I I a.m.
Wc(Jnesday Services· 7 p.m.

Catholic
Slcrtd Hr111 Calhollc Church
161 Mulberry A\le., Pomeroy, 992-.5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. He inz
Sat Con. 4:45-.5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4.5·9: 15 a.m.,
Sun. Mas."' - 9:JO a.m.
Dailey Mau ·8:30a.m..

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev: Craig Crossman
Worsh1p 10:2.5 a. m.
Sunday School 9: 15 a.m.

Centnl Cluster

Asbury (Synt&lt;UH}
Petor: Bob Robinson

Rev. James Bernacki , Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Sunday: Adult Education •
Sund~ty School 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m.
Wednesday: Holy Eucharist 5:00p.m.

33226 Children 's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - lOa.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30p.m.

•

Gnco Episcopal Chu"'h
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy

of Christ

Wednesday Ser,·ice!!o · 7 p. m.

a ....... or J.... Christ

(

Chu~

212 W. Maio St.
Minister: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School - 9 :30_a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m., (., p.m.

Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Evcnin' · 7:30p.m.

'•r

Episcopal

Pomeroy

VanZandt and Ward Rd:

•

Church of Christ

Holiness

Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

RuUaa.d Cburcb of lhr Nazarene
Enttrpriw
Pastor: Keith R11der
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worsh ip · 9 a.m.
flat wood!
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Community Chui'Ch
Pastor : Re\'. Amos Tillis
Main Sueet, Rutland
Sunday Worshi p- 10:00 a. m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.
Danville Holiness Chun:h
31057 Stale Roule 325, Langsv lle
Pas1or: G:ny Jackso n
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wed nesday prayer service - 1 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri son"vi lle Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Ser\'ice - 7:00p.m.

Fomt Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Heath (Middlopon}
Pastor: Rob Brower
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.
l\tlnen¥ille
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WorSh ip- lU a.m .

Rose or Sharon Holiness Chun:h
Leading Cree k Rd .. Rutland •
Pastor: Rc\'. Dewey King
Sundoy school-9:30a.m.
Sunday wo r~~i p ·7 p.m.
Wednesday prJyer mec!ing- 7 p.m.
Pint Grove Bible Holiness Chun:h
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Re v. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne sday Service-7:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
· 7$ Pearl St., Middleport.
Pas!or: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship-9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Mi Ch!ICI
Sunda)' School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Dible Sludy and Youth · 1 p.m.
Laurel Clifl' Fl'fe Methodist Church
Pastor: Donald Bal is
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · l0:30 a.m. and 6 p.ni.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
ReorpnlzN Church of Jesus Christ
or Lauer Day Saints
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
The Church or Jesus
Christ of Lattrr-Day Saints
Sl. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446· 7486
Sunday School 10:20· 11 a·.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Holll(making meeting, lst Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Lutheran

PoariChapol
Sunday School-,9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:3.5 a.m.

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc hool - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
: _outh Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.
Rutland
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship . IO:l.S a.m.
SnoWl'lllr
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
BelhiDy
Pastor; Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worstlip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

St. Paul Luthrnm Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

United Methodist

Ashs.-Chun:b

Harwest Ouln•cb Mlnhlrlts
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Ap:pe Ufe Center
~Fuii·Gospe l Church"
Pas1ors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Pastor: Helen Kline

Coohlllo Chu"'h
MBin-&amp;-Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport C hurth oflhe Nazarene .
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvicc!l • 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

773-5017

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4~ a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Paslor: Bob Randolph
Worship -9:30a. m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Long Dotlom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m.
Reedsville
Worship -9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Fi rs t Sunday of Month - 7:00p.m. se rvice
Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pus1or: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worsh ip· lU a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7:Jll p.m.

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

992~3978

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

923 S. Third St., Middleport.
Pastor Michael Pangia
Sunday ~rvic;, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Bill Quickel 992-6677

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local
churches
Place an ad in this space

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in the

Sentinel
CLASSIFIEDS!

;Momr

r31nc.

26&lt;1 South Second Ave .•Moddleport . OH 45760
740-992·5141
Bruce A. Fisher - Dtrector
500 East Main Streel • Pomeroy, OH 45769

740·992-5444
James A. Acree. Jr · Oirec!or

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

NEW
HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME

EWING FUNERAL HOME

'"lt'i· amp! 'Prmrnl ·7rilnsji-rs"

Established 1913

B82·8200
Lundy Brown

Director

Dignity and Service Always

992-2121

Regan Brown
Street 106 Mulberry Ave .

174

Clifton Tabernade C hurch
Clifton, W.Va .
Sund~y School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p. m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m .

Christian Fellowship Center
Salem St., Rut land
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 :15 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

New Lite VIctory Center

Hobtorr Cltrtltlao Fellowoblp Churdl
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship S~nday , 7:00p.m.
Wednesda)' service, 1:00 p.m.

Syracuse Ch urrh or the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adk ins
Sunda y School ·9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts • 7 p.m.
Pomt'roy Churth or the Naurenr
Paslor: Jan lavender
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

3773 Georges Creek Road , Gallipolis, OH

l'aslor: Bi ll Staten
Sunday Servia=s- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m . &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Full Go!iprl Church of the LlvinM Sa•lor
Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturd ay 7:30p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bouom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School· 9 :30a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesda~ - 7 p.m.
Friday_- fellowshtp service 7 p.m.

God's Temple of Prailie
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Paswr: Wayne Balco!m
Services: Thurs. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday se rv ice established.

Pentecostal
PentecGStal Assembly
St Rl. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • 1Q·a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m
Wed nesday Services · 7 p. m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave .
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Faith Valley Talxmadr Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor; Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

Syratuse Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Rl:V. Mllce·ttrampson,l'astor
Sunday School- JO a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Syncuse Flnt Unlled Presbyb~rian
F;.tswr: Rev. Kri!ionn Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Harrlson,·llle Pn:sbyteriau Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School -9:45a. m.

Hazel Community Churth
Off Rt. 124
Pastor; Edsel Han
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Middleport Preshylerian
Sunday Schtml - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Dye~vllle

Commun"lty Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se"enth·DIIy Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Paslor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship· 3 p.m.

Mont Cttapel Church
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship. II a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Faith Gotpol Church
LongBouom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4.5 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Me. Olin Comm•nlty Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedncday Service • 7 p.m.

Eden United Brethren In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsv ille
on Stale Rou1c J 24
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · II a.m.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 u.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Re~&gt;~ . Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Full Gotpol Ughthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
· Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thufflday • 7:30p.m.
South

~lhel

New Testamenl
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Sarber
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship- 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy

Clean out your basement "Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken" and full of compassion;
slow to anger. and
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•
992 5432

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We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
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Sentinel

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local church?
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every Friday!

in the

CLASS IFl EDS!
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075
172 North Second Ave .

Football Friday
Tonight's Games
Trl-county
Meigs at Galli a Academy
Ripley at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Ross Southeastern
South Gallia at Eastern
Southern v. Clay Cc&gt;unty (at
Laidley Field, Charleston)
Hannan at Hamlin
Wahama at Williamstown

TVC

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincin nati
Bengals have two goals for their final preseaso n game: Don't get l1urt and don't
give up any big plays.
The Bengals (1-2) fell behind 14-0 in
their first ga me at Paul Brown Stadium
last Saturday when the ,C hic a~o Bears
pulled off a pair of 45-yard tou chdown
passes in the opening minutes.
They were celebrating after they rallied
for a 24-20 vi ctory, but coach Bruce
Cosier didn 't particularly like what he saw
in those first few minutes.
The Bengals also gave up a touchdown
on a 73-yanl screen pass that led to a 2120 loss to Buffalo in 'the preseaso n opener. Coslet wains to see improvem ent in the

final preseason game tonight against the
Detroit Lions (1- 2) .
"The one thing I want to see from the
defen se is no more allowing the big play,"
Coslet said. ''I'm getting pretty tired of
that.
" We 're pretty salty on defense. We
pou nd ' em and pound 'em and pound
'em and then they hit a 45- yarder on us.
That's not consistell! enough to be a good
tean1 ."
The Bengals have given up more than
400 potllts each of the last three seasons,
the longest such streak in fran chise history. Another year of getting riddled would
mean another year without a winning
record - it's been nine years since they've

had one of those.
Coslet also would like to see his running gam,· work a little more efficiently
Friday night . Corey Dillon played in his
first game since ending a holdout and wa!
ineffective, gaining only 16 yards on seven
carries against Chicago.
Dillon is one of the few starters who
might get expanded playing time in the
final preseason game.
"We wanted to get him five or six carries last week. He got seven," Cosle! said.
" He's in a little different situation. This is
his second week of training camp."
Akili Smith will start at quarterb;)ck , but
backup Scott Mitchell will get most of the
playing time. Smith is generally happy

Nelsonville- York at Athens
Symmes Valley at Trimble
Vinton County at South Point
Shenandoah at Waterford
Jackson at Wellston
Zane Trace at Alexander
Belpre at Warren
Fort Frye at Federal Hocking
Miller at Linden McKinley

SEOAL

GoH
Gallia Academy at Huntington
lnv., 7:30
Point Pleasant at Huntington
lnv., TBA (at Esquire)

Boys Soccer
St. Marys at Point Pleasant,
7:00

NEWS &amp; NOTES

Meigs finishes second
In TVC golf IMkh
JACKSON - Belpre won a
TVC Ohio Division golf match
Wednesday evening a\ Franklin
V'!!ley_ with Yin!on Col!oty a~ the_
host team . Belpre had a team ·
score of 157, followed by Meigs
with a score of 167.
Wellston carded a 182, followed
by Vinton County (197), Nelsonville-York (203) and Alexander (204) .
Matt Preston of Belpre was
match medalist with a 35.
For Meigs, Carson Midkiff had
a 38, Nick Dettwiller a 41 ,Jeremy
Banks and Josh Napper 44s, Thad
Bumgardner a 46 and Andy Davis
a 49.

Fall baseball league
at Rio Grande
RIO GR_ANDE , Ohio - The
Universitv of Rw Grande is
holding a' fall baseball league for
students in grades 9- 12 who wish
to parti c 1pat~ in a rompt:titivc
league and develop their skills .
Play will las t for six weeks !rom
Sl'p!cmber 9 through O ctober
15.
For inform ation or ro reg ister.
co nta ct URG a&gt;Sistant Bill
Haines at 245-7486 or 6H2 -6421l.

great mercy.
'Psalm 14'5:8

pport your
local
churches
Place an ad in this space

Advertise your
business each week
in this space
and support local
chu

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio - The
BBYFL will haw sign- up dates
on Saturday, August 26, from I 0
a.m . until noon: Tuesday, August
29, from 6 to 8 p.m.; Thursday,
August 3 1, from 6 to 8 p.m .; and
Tuesday, September 5, at 6 p.m.
All four dates will be at the Middleport baseball fields .
For more information, call 3U4-882-3H 17.

Mallon tops Olds
Classic leaderboard
EAST LANSING, Mi ch. (AP)
- Meg Mallon tied her personal
best and set a to urnament record
with a I U-under 62 in the first
round of the Oldsmobil e C lassic.
Mallon , who shared the previo us reco rd of 63 with four ot hers,
had a two-stroke lead ove r
Mi chelle McGann, seekin g her
first win sin ce 1997. Australia's
Karrie Webb was four back after a
~6.

with his preseason production - a 64
percent completion rate, two touchdowns ,
no interceptions.
" I think I've played well in two of the
three games ," Smith said. "I've got to fin ish strong in the lasr preseason game. Ail of
us want to make some "lays and get it
started early."
The Bengals have a number of players
slowed by injury and might either hold
them out or limit their plays .The Ben gals
open the season with a bye week .
''Even though we have the bye, if you
get somebody ni cked up, you don 'r want
that lingering into the season;' Coslet said.

Please see aencals. Pap

n

Redlegs top
Phillies, 8-3

Morgan at Marietta
Belpre at Warren
Nelsonville-York at Athens
Jackson at Wellston
New Lexington at Logan

Bil Bend Youth
Football sign-ups

Time to clean house? Crow's Family Re$taurant 'The ford is gracious,
CLASSIFIED SECTION!

HIGHLIGHTS

Bengals take cautious approach against Lions

United Brethren
MI. Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas Co mmunity off CR 82
Paslor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School· 9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

merchants

Buy, Sell or. Trade Brogan-Warner

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,]fisl]rr

Rt'jolclng Ure Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Paslor : Emerilus Lawrence Foreman
Worship- 10:00 am
We dnesday Ser\'icc s- 7 p.m.

FaltbChapol

United FaUh Church

Reedsville Fellowship

~

Calvary Bible Church
· Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: ReV. Blackwood
Sunday Sc hool-9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a. m., ·7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

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

Service time: Sunday 10:30 a . ~ .
Wednesday,7 pm

announcements
PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Faith f'dloMblp Crwade ror Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 7 p.m.

Mlddlepon Communlly Churdl
575 Pearl St., Middleport

Tordl Church
Co. Rd. 63

Chesler
Pas1or: Jane Beattie
Worsh ip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

E1st Letart
P-astor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Meihod1st
Off 124 beh ind Wilkesv ille

Alfred

Fail"' lew Bible Church
Letart. W.Va. R!. I
Pas1or: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshir - _7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

HarrlsoaYUie Community Chu'n:b
· Pas1or: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

HockJngport Church
Grand Street ·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Pastor: Jane Bea11ie
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - I I a.m ., 6:30p.m.

Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Mornin&amp; Worsllip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service-6:30p.m.

Ash St., Middleport
Pastor Les Hayman
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

FRIDAY's

White 's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesda y Service - 7 p.m.

PortJud Flnt Cburdl of the Nazartnr

MomlnaStar
Pastor: Dewayne S!utler
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worsh ip· 10 8.m.

Graham Unlltd Methodist
Worship-9:30a.m. (l st &amp; 2nd Sun},
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7;30 p.m .

Meigs Coopen tlve Parish
Northeast Cluster

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

Tbt Bellrwen' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Cool•lll• United Motbodlst Parioh

Our Saviour IAttheran Church
Walnut and Henry S!s., Ravenswood, W.Va
• Pastor;-Dovid Ru s~ ll
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m
Worship - 11 a.m.

Frtfllom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Cu. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Carmd·Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd s.
Racine. Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Biblt Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Radne
Pastor : Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedne~ay 7 p.m.

St. John Lulheran Chun:h
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fri lz
Worship -9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m

Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Ser""ices

Cbnter Churdl of t•e Nazarenr
Paslor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts - 7 p.m.

THE VICTOR- Cincinnati's Steve Parris pitched 6 2/3 innings to pick up the win against Philiadelphia
Thursday. Parris gave up two runs while scattering nine hits , (AP)

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
majors' first matchup of 14game losers since 1992 turned
o n littl e thing; instead of big
hits, Omar Daal and the
Philadelphia l&gt;hiilies did way
too many of rhern wrong.
Daal stumbled on the bases,
let a popup drop in front of him
and became the first 15-game
loser in the majors as the
Cincinnati Reds beat the
Phillies 8-3 Thursday.
Sean Casey had a pair of sacrifice fli es off Daal (3-15) and
the Reds scored two more runs
on grounders, overcon1ing a
two-run first inning off Steve
Parris (8-14). An error made
two of the R.eds' runs unearned
and compounded Daal's woes,
Casey added a two-run
homer in the eighth oil Jason
Boyd to seal Daal's fate.
. " Mentally I'm ggo~," D.aaj
said. ''I've been in this game
long enough to know how it is.
This is a bad year for me. Everybody goes through it."
Tell Parris about it.
"Omar had 14 losses, I had 14
losses. so We were even going
in," Parris said. " We're both having bad years, though I personally don't fed I've pitched bad
enough. for 14 losses."
The R.eds won for only the
third time in I0 games and finished another discouraging
hornes!and at 3-4. They've gone
· 5-11 at home since July 24,
sq uashing their hopes of catching St. Louis 1t1 the NL Ce ntral.
The R.eds are the only team
in the majors with a losing
record at home (31-34) and a
winning road record (31-3D).
Ken Griffey Jr. got his second

day off this season a.s manager
Jack McKeon rested another
one of h.is regulars. Shortstop
Barry Larkin was out of the
starti.ng lineup Wednesday.
The last time ·two pitchers
with at least 14 losses faced each
other was Oct. I, 1992, when
Milwaukee's Bill Wegntan ( 1214) threw a to- inning complete
game 10 beat Seattle's Erik Hanson (8-17) in the Kingdome 7-

2.
Daal didn't get much help
from a defense that turn ed 10
double plays during the fourgame series. Shortstop Alex
Arias let Benito Santiago's
potential double-play grounder
bounce off him for an error in
·the third, setting up a pair of
unearned runs.
"I was pitching my ·boame. I
got a lot of ground bails,'' Daal
said. " T~at's my kind of game. I_
didn't make too many mistakes
today, but that's part of the
game."
Daal had a few misplays of his
own . He and catch er Tom
Prince looked at each other
while Dante Bichette's popup
dropped between them midway
to the mound in the second
inning for a single.
Daal also got thrown out at
third to undercut a rally in the
fourth . He singled with one out
and rounded second too f.1r
after Bobby Abreu singled to
center. Daal stood indecisively
until Brian Hunter threw into
second, then stumbled as he
belatedly headed for an easy o ut
at third .
The ddensive lapses doo med

Please see Reds, Pace Bl

Tiger leads by
Texas meets Venezuela in finale one stroke at NEC
LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES

WILLIAMSPORT. l':t. (AI')
- Tht down si dl' to wi nning the
U.S. title tor Bellaire, T,•x as, "
t hat it won't havt' Ro" Haggard
available to pitch in Saturday\
Little Lea gue World Series
championship.
Not that Bellaire rm n a~,· r
Terry McConn i" C011l'L'r ncd . He
said h t·\; gut thrt'l' u tlu..·r ctp:1ble
pitc her-; read y to go ,1 ~a i1 1&lt;;t

M aracaibo, Venezuel a. in th e title
~ a m c.
None of th em, howcvn , h:tve
been a~ goo d as Hagga rd .
The lan ky Ltttl e Le.t~ u er
capped .111 ex ce ptiun ,tl 'icrics
pcrfo rm anu:· w nh .1 1.1-'ltnh·o ut, fo ur-hit outing in · Bellaire'"
8-0 win over D.JVcnport, lnwa.
in Thursday night's U.S. tim!.
H .t~ga r, l fini shed with two
shuto ut w1ns. a sav~ . 27 strikeouts and ti\l· hi ts allowed in 16
2-3 inn in~s at William sport. He
also pitched a no- hitter a week
carlit•r

i1 1

t he Sout h ll c.:~i on

champi onsh ip ga me.
"I can 't Jlll :lg int• an uthl'r week
(lik. this)," Haggard sai d. "To be
in the Worl d Scnes and to have

m y bl·st pttching, that's awesome."
Asked what sparked him, he
scu J. "I thmk it's be-ca use I wan ted to ' how everyone on TV that
I was good."
N ow t!Vt"ryone knows.

strength of a last- inn ing rally to
beat Toronto 5- 4. Maracaibo is
on a roll.

In a jubilant celebration in
whi ch Maracaibo manager Edu vtno Quevedo hugged eve ry
player on th e fiel d - includtng
The I'L'St of hi li r eam mau~s are Tokyo\.
·" H is main goa] was to win a
no slouches L'ithcr. cons ide ring
Bel lai re' had neve r bdore t:ham pion ~ hip," .;;aid imerpret_cr
,tdvam·ed past th e di st ric t round. Lui s Sanchez, speakin g; for
Qu evedo. " H e came here and
lo~;et her, th ey'll take thc·ir balanced hitting attack and deep beat a very g rear team , and he's
pitching staff a!(ain st an upstart ver y happy. H e\ happy with
Maracaibo team that kno cked him se lf and hap py with the
otT favored Tokyo 'i- 4 in the team .''
The two opponents too k an
int ~r nati o n al tlnal carher 111 the
unlikel y parh to the final .
,b y.
Dellaire had a pool of j ust 42
Who eve r th e opponent, it
players to Jraw its team fro m .
docsn 't mattt.·r.
Th e Maraca ibo player&lt;, meanAs McCo nn sai d : " It's just
been a blu r. I'm ready ro pl ay wh ile, comt· fru m .1 puo r part of
that World SL-ril'~ gam t' o n Satur- th e region, and ar rivcll in
cl.ty and get hack ho m e and go Will iamsport with just one bat.
to work and think abo ut m me of Fo ur of their players didn 't have
spikes when th ey began tournathis stu!T."
ment play.
M ar:-~c :1ibo 's WL'L' k has been
.
..
" This is a team that h.ts a
JU S[ aS CXCltl ll g.
Desp ite spo radi c o!Tc nsivc bun ch of fi~ht c r s," QueVl'do
pum·h, and after barely reaching
Please see LLWS. Page Bl
rh t' international final on , the

AKRON, Ohto (A P)
Mayb e th e thing about Ja ck
Nicklaus that motivatt'S Tiger
Woods th e most is not what he
won , but what he sai d.
HYou ca n't turn the swltch on
and oil," Woods said . "jack was
probably rh e besr at th at. I
always rem ember reading -that
quote. H e says . T vc never
turned th e switch on and otT.
I've always had it on.'"
Woods was on in the first
round of th e NEC lnntat ional
o n Thursday, even if he felt a little otT. Whateve r th e rase, he had
a (Htnder 64 at Fireslone
Co untry C lub and fini shed the
lint round one stroke ahead of
Jim Furyk .
Just by watching Woods, o ne
mi ght h ave guessed ht· was
struggling to keep it around par.
N o one cou ld mi stake the
d esire, th o ugh , or even suspect
that Woods was suffering a letdown fro m win ni ng the PGA
C hampi o nship j ust tour days
before in a draining pl ayoff.
" I dmve it terrible on the
back," he said . " I was able to

keep it o n rhe property, whi ch is
go od. That's the extent of it. I
didn 't hit the ball very well
co ming in , and consequently. r
didn't shoot th e scores I wanted
to shoot."
Wh at a pity.
All Woods did was go 7 Ltndn
o n the first 12 holes, tl irr with
the course-record 61 - or bet ter - and wind up with his
lowest first-round score of the
year. All everyone else could do
was wonder,
" G et used to seein g Tiger's
name up tllt·re ~vt•ry wet!k," said
Dar ren C larke , who beat Woods
in th e Match Pl ay C hampi onship final in FebrLtary and was
.unong six players at li6 . " We're
all goi ng to have to play very
well ab-ain and see what happen s."
The N EC is to r playe rs fro m
th e Presidents C up and US.
R yder C up team , plus the top
12 Europeam from the European to ur money li st.
Lee Westwood of England,

Please see NEC. Pace B5

�/

)
Page B 2 • The Dally' Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August 25, 21lp0

Friday, August 25, 2000

AMERICAN LEAGUE

SCREEN PLAYS

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businesses who make this page ·
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Critics say ·new' Monday Oakland thumps Cleveland
Night
. I still
has a long way to go
'I

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Don Ohlmey&lt;'r is like an NFL coach who uses the
.preseason to check out his personnel and work out
kinks in the game plan.
The producer of ABC's "Monday Night Football"
acknowledges there still is some work to be done
before his show's regular season kicks off Sept. 4.
"There are a number of things that we want to
work on;' says Ohlmeyer, who was at the show in
the 1970s and returns this year with a hand-picked
cast. "The tint telecast, we were at about 40 percent,
the second telecast at about 50. Now we're about 65
percent to where I want to be.
"I think the basic coven!!" of the game is really
quite good."
A look at the tbree preseason games reveals some
positives and negatives:
• Al "Do You Believe in Miracles" Michaels is still
at the top of his game as a play-by-play announcer,
but the camaraderie - giggling doesn't count with Dennis Miller and Dan Fouts is often lacking.
Michaels should refrain &amp;om trying to match
Miller's wit, and might want to excise "baby" from
his vocabulary.
• The show's overwhelming effort to be hipper
than hip - embodied most glaringly by Miller was apparent in the scoreboard graphic Monday
identifying the home team as "Fins." fans can only
hope they wouldn't try to squeeze "Monsters of the
Midway" on there if the Chicago Bears were playmg.

• Miller, whose "Dennis Miller Live" gets a plug
from Michaels each broadcast, still doesn't seem to
be sure when to chime in, though his timing has
improved with each outing and he certainly can be
riotously funny. He could stand to drop yells of
"Yeah!" or "That's my guy!" on big plays. Miller also
will lose a lot of material now that the preseason is
over, ~ause much ofhis football commentary has
been about how players are fighting for roster spots.
• Who knows what will happen when there's a
meaningful game that's tight in the fourth quarter?
With about six minutes left in Monday's game
between Green Bay and Miami, Fouts was drowned
out by the clowning Miller and Michaels. "Why
would I break in with a football note? I was just
remarking to myself while I was watching the game
by myself over here," Fouts said, tongue-in-cheek to
be sure, but tellingly.
• There have been some technical problems,
including Brett Favre's name being spelled "Brent"
in a graphic comparing his statistics with Dan Marino's, and less-than-smooth transitions to sideline
repoiten Melissa Starkand Eric Dickerson (who is
out of his element and uses the word "now" in every
sentence). Those things are to be expected in a
three-hour live broadcast, Ohlmeyer says: "We have
an entirely new team. Rarely do you see a telecast
that doesn't have some technical glitches in it."
What's really important for ABC is whether people tune in. The show's preseason rating; were down
24 percent from last year, which doesn't worry
Ohlmeyer. He points out that two of the three
games started at 7 p.m. EDT instead of 8, and that
NFL preseason ratings are down for other networks,

too.
"What I know is, for the tint time in a long time
I sense a lot of people on Tuesday morning are talking about 'Monday Night Football' and that hasn 't
been the case," Ohlmeyer says. "And they weren't
talking about whether the score was 30-0 or 33-6."

Tiger's Hook
When CBS reporter Bill Macatee conducted the
PGA Championship award ceremony Sunday at the
18th green, he said, "Thank you,TigerWoods, thank
you, Bob May, for giving us all a day to remember."
He was speaking for golf fans, but he could have
been speaking for the network.
CBS' telecast drew the highest rating for the
PGA's final round in 29 years - and ·the secondhighest ever.
The 8.8 national rating, with a 21 share, was 28
percent higher rhan the 6.9/18 forWoods'1999 victory. Only the 1971 PGA, won by Jack Nicklaus, got
a higher final-round rating- ABC got a 12.1/32.
An estimated 38.5 million people watched all or
part of CBS' broadcast, the biggest turnout for a
PGA.
Viewen can watch Woods in another head-tohead contest Monday from 8-11 p.m. EDT, when
ABC ain "Bartle at Bighorn:• a $1.5 million madefor- TV match-play event between Woods and Sergio Garcia.
"They could play each 'other in the Ryder Cup
next year and whoever wins this one will be one-up
on the other guy. The loser will deny it, but it carries over with you;· said Curtis Strange, who will
share · announcing duties with jack-of-all-sports
Mike Tirico.
Garcia challenged Woods down the stretch at last
year's PGA Championship.
"You always want to beat your opponent, and you
want telvbeat Tiger more," Garcia said.
Woods' ddminance "brings people to the course,
it makes the purses go higher and it attracts more
sponsors and that's what keeps us playing golf," Garcia said." A lot of that is because ofTiger."
Broadcast News
ESPN, home of the ESPYs and X Games, has
come up with a new way to honor athletes and
attract younger viewen: The Action Sports and
Music Awards. A panel will vote for categories such
as Surfer of the Year and Skateboarding's Music Act
of the Year. The awards ceremony will air April 10,
2001. ... Catch Dan Marino's debut on HBO's
" Inside the NFL" next Thursday, at 8 p.m .
EDT /PDT.... CBS Sports, already home to SEC
regular season_college football games, "'qui red the
broadcast rights to the conference's 2001 championship.... Lee Corso's first "Yo!" of the new season
comes Sunday when he joins Kirk Herbstreit and
Chris Fowler for "College GameDay" in Blacksburg, Va. , at 7 p.m. EDT on ESPN2. The show precedes ESPN2's broadcast of the BCA Classic
between Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech .... ABC has
a "Classic Weekend": Aorida State against Brigham
Young in the Pigskin Classic, Saturday at 8 p.m .
EDT, and Penn State against USC in the Kickoff
Classic, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. EDT.

CLEVELAND (AP) Art
Howe tried to do the math and
couldn't.
As Oakland's manager sipped a
cold beer after the A's avoided a
sweep and salvaged the finale of a
brutal road ttip with an 11-7 win
over Cleveland, Howe assessed his
team's place in the playoff standmg;.
"Not bad at all, we're 2 1/2 out
(in the AL West) and I 1/2 in the
wild card," Howe said.
Told his team was actually one
game behind Boston in 1he wildcard scramble, Howe said, ''I'd lost
count."
Wjlo hasn't?
Terrence Long's tint grand slam
and career-high six RB!s Thursday night helped the A's conclude
a seven-game swing through
Detroit and Cleveland at 2-5.
It also sent Oakland home with
some momentum before facing
the AL East-leading New York
Yankees and Central-leading
Chicago White Sox.
"Right now;• said outfielder
Ben Grieve, putting it in perspective. "It just makes it a little better
plane ride. We're going home
with everyone in a little bit better
mood."
Long, who tormented the Indians all season, went 3-for-6 and
rookie Barry Zito (2-2) pitched 6
2-3 innings for his first win in six
Starts.
As he dressed after the game,
Long wondered what had happened to the ball he hit into Oakland's bullpen.
"I hope somebody's got it," he
said. "I want to send it to my
grandmother."
Despite winning for just the
sixth time in 18 games, Oakland
moved within 2 1/2 games of

first-place Seattle in the AL West.
The A's got a boost with regulars
Jason Giambi and Randy Velarde
back in the lineup from injuries.
"We needed that win pretty
bad," said Howe. "It was a tough
road trip. After the kind of road
trip we had, we're right in the
middle of thing;."
Oakland hadn't been able to get
the clutch hit in losing the first
two games in the series. The /'.'s
stranded 28 runners and had gone
50 innings without a homer
when Long connected in the second.
The Indians completed a sixg~me homestand at 5-1, but
missed a chance to gain ground
on Chicago. Cleveland, which
trails in the wild card by one-half
game, remained seven behind the
White Sox, who have led the
division by at least 6 I /2 games
since Jun~ 16.
"Anytime we can win five. out
of six, that's good," said Indians
manager
Charlie
Manuel.
"Tonight, we just got off bad and
it wasn't a good game for us. We
just never got into it."
When the A's swept the Indians
last week at Oakland, Long went
5-for-7, made two diving catches
in center and hit a game-winning, two-run double in the ninth
in the series finale.
He got· two hits in each of the
first two games of this series
before hitting his slam and a tworun single in his first three at-bats
against Steve Woodard (0-2).
Long went 12-for-24 (.500)
with nine RB!s against the Indians this year.
"They were trying to find a
way to get me out I guess," said
Long. "But I was patient."
Long thinks patience is the key

right now for the A's as they try
to reel in the Mariners.
'
"We're concentrating on tlle
division," Long said. uWe're riot
thinking about the wild card. I:ve
got a funny feeling we're about: to
turn it up a notch."
.
Zito, a first-round draft pick· in
'99. ·allowed three runs and five
hits. He walked six- four in one
inning - and struck out eight:
Matt Stairs. who entered the
game with the AL's worst battiilg
average (.214), had three hits, a)ld
Giambi returned after missipg
five games to drive in two run•. ·
"We had a little more energy,"
Howe said. "Giambi cathe
through with a big double. We
got our lineup back and that's c:he
most important thing."
.
David Segui had two RBis for
the Indians, who went 3-for-:15
with runners in scoring positioo. ·
In the second, Woodard walked
in a run and then fell behind 3,-1
\'n Long, who lined a fastball over
the right- field fence to make it 52. Stairs helped set up the inning
by surprising the Indians With a
bunt down the third-baseline.
"That surprised me, coo," Howe
said. " He did that on his own .: It
set the whole inning up."
Long added a two-run single .in
the third when the A's went up 82.
Notes: Oakland's 1 I grand
slatm this season are a franchise
record and one shy of the major
league mark shared by Atla nta
(1997) and C leveland ('99) . ~ ..
Oakland had lost 10 of its last I I
road games .... Segui has hit saf~ly
in 13 straight games .... The Indians tied a club record when ' INF
John McDonald became the 53rd
player used this season.
'

•

'

'

one-year deal to play for Chicago.
• Taylor, whose signing wi~h the
Rockets could be announced as
early as Friday, has emerged as the
biggest financial loser of this summer's free-agent class. Expecting
to get a maximum level contract
worth upward of $70 million,
Taylor has no guarantee from the
Rockets that he'll get anything
near that. The Rockets will, however, have salary cap space next
summer when Hakeem Olaju.won 's contract exptres.
.
• Agent David falk had a terrible week. Nothing turned out the
way Falk wanted after he worked
behind the scenes to take care of
clients Ewing, Rice and Taylor.
None got what they wanted, and
aU will likely end up making tens
of millions of dollars less than
they expected.
All that gossip was welcome
conversation fodder for the
Olympic team, which spent several hours going through USOC
processing at a naval base.They fly
to Hawaii on Friday and open
training camp Saturday.
Before having their team photo
taken, the players pushed big,
orange Home Depot shopping
carts around a room to load up on
warmup •uits, team hats, shoes,
·
sandals and leather jackets.
"Don't hurt anybody, Kevin,"
Garnett said to hinuelf as he play- .
fully screeched his cart around at
two or three times its intended
speed.

Cratt1man Truck, Chlca&amp;o 175

12:30 p.m. · Sunday • ESPN

--

2.
I.

4.
1.

I.
7.

1.
I.
10.

-

2000 POINTS STANDINGS
IUICH
Jefl Green. 3,618

~ BobOoj

Lltlonte, 3,335
Dell!! .J&amp;mllt. 3.224
O.le Eamhllrdl, 3.098
Jeff Burtoo. 3.083
Rvsty ~lleee, 2,983
T~ Stewart. 2.A5
Ricky Rudd. 2,883
Ward &amp;Jrton. 2.849
Mark Martin, 2,826
JeffGoroon,2.731

TOOd BoeHne . 3.068
Je'Wfl K@lleo. 3,024

Kevin Horvltk. 3,002
ROll Hornaday, 4,920
Elton saw,er. 4.825
R11ni.:fy La.to•e. 2.678
David Green . 2,481
casev At.....ood, 2.393
Jimmie John~n . 2,37:.!

Greg Biffle, 3.046
Mike Wallace, 2.858
Mdy Houston.1.793
Kurt Busch. 2.780
Jetk Spr!llue. 2.705
Raooy Tolsma, 2,593
Steve Grtuom, 2,5 72
O!!'lm1 ~ Sto!ttJo:u. 2,568
.loe Ruttman . 2.521
Bryan Reffner, 2.466

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
B.
7.

( 1)
(2)
(5)
( 3)
( 4)
(B)
( 7)
B. (I)
9. (9)
10. (-)

m
"""
~
._
Cl3

0

·-c::

-:a::
Q)

BobbJ Labonte

Uke the Enef11zer bunny

Dale Jarrett

Almoat •• contlatent

Dolo Earnhardt

Ha '• not out or It, either
Mada thD beat of thine:•

Ruoty w.n..o
!411 Burton
Tony Slowort
Mark Martin
Joll Gordon
Word Burton
Matt Konooth

WINSTON CUP
BROOKLYN, Mic h . -On race
.... rni ng Sunday at Michigan
lmernatlonal Speeoway, while
Rusty Wallace was visiting a
hospitality t ent, a rather brazen
fan walked up to h im and said,
· vou lead all day long, and
then you fade back to noth ing .~
wauace said his rep!~ was .
"Man. that's just not a good
way to start ~he day:
· He was a customer,
though. so 1had to be nice:
wallace said. "Hopefully, he
left saying, 'Hey. that's what
he's supposed to do.' ·
A lot of pnrases fit Rusty
Wallace 's stand ing at the end
, of Sunday's Pepsi 400 . Thf'
...eteran drive r cou ld have been
said to have been Ms itting 1n
the catbird seat," ~sitt i ng on
top of the world. ~ ~ riding htgh.·
• living right". or Mwalking down
eas) street."
But runner-up f in isher Ricky
Rudd had the best description
of all for Wallace when the
final { -g laps Brrived : • ... four
tires, fas t race car, short run ."
Rudd figu red to win this
race. at two--mile (a nd fre~hly
renamed) Michigan Inter·
national Speedway, and
become th e season's 14th dif·
ferent winner, but his Ford was

.r;

0

be-autiful shor~lin~ .

eau.
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Used Cars &amp; Trucks

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45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740·992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740·985-3709

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Ut.I}£U--wlti.f.t

ta.nd. an.tf.

fnllll

Dear NASCAR Th1s We~k.
Luck of the draw".' Gtve me a
break'
lt"qualifyrng is ra ined out (refer·
ring tO Watkins Ol en). then the lop
43 in poinrs should be the lrneup.
Todd Bodine and Robby Gordon
(my favorite) ~ hould not ha\'e made
the field O~'er Scott l'ruel\and Bn:u
Bodine.
Todd and Robby race only on a
limited basis. nnl full time . So why
do -.-·e penal ize the 1e11ms I hat ~ how
up week in and we~k outthaltue in
the top 43 in points'.'
Lt'l's he rea.lislic here. The honor
of starti ng a n1re sltould go to the
men who are in th e war, not to
those who just pick the ir battles.
PS : It was gl'fal to see Robhy
finish fourth , thou!! h!
Roaer Merta
Walford, Iowa

B~otol

Ninth .. bettor than nothln&amp;
More conelstent than
"thllt other rookie"

rU nning two fresh tires shy of
Wallace's .
On la p 178, Rob~ Gordon ·s
Ford hltthe wall leaving turn
four. and two other ca rs . the
Chevrolet of Da le Earnhardt Jr.
and the Po ntiac of Mike Blis s.
spun into the grass . and the
caution flag waved. No one pit·
ted. With fres her tires cooled
by four caution laps and
Rudd's advantage gone ,
Wallace needed only two laps
under green to clear Rudd for
gooc:l and sail otf to a 2.971second victor~. his third of the
seaso n.

BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL
BROO KLYN. Mich. - Todd
Bodine broke a long dry spell
with an Impressive . exc• ling
victory in the NAPAo nl ine.com

250.
Bodtne finished abou t three
car lengths ahead of Michael
Waltrip . The final laps were a
four-way shootout between
Bodine. Waltrip, Jeff Burton
and Wa rd Burton .

CRAnSMAN TRUCK
The Craftsman Tru e ~ Senes
was off la st weekend and will
return t o action thi s weekend
at Chicago Motor Speedway.

"What many may not realize abOut Stew&amp;rt Is that. once his
temper flashes , there is no lingering bad will. Stewart,
Eernhardt Jr. and Gordon will continue to have occasional
eplsodel, but It Is because they are aggressive drivers not
because they hold grudge s.~

RustrWIIaciiiMtnoNduptollflltlntlleWitilltw~...,.._

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Th is Week
Rusty ~llac~ fatfls an uphill fight for llli
second Winston Cup championshiP. out he
seem~ to be the hOttest driver at the moment.
Wallace has won the most poles (seven) and
led the most laps , and two of his three
victories have occurred in the last four races.
Wallace was driving a Pontiac when he won
the title In 1989. He flnishe&lt;:l second to Bill
Elllon in 198B and to Dale Earnhardt in 1993.
He has also won at least one race in each
of the last 15 seasons:
Hometown: St. Louis. Mo.
Alt: 44
Cer: No.2 Miller Ute Ford Tauru s, owned by
Roger Penske
Wife: Patti
Cl'llldren: Greg (20). Katie (15). Steptlen
(13)
~
Crew chief: Robin Pemberton
C1reer •tatlstica: 514 stan s. 52 wins, 170
top..tive finishes, :271 top-10 finishes , 33
poles. more than $23.5 mlll1on in earnings

••••••••••••
Who's Hot."

Who's Not

• HOI: Pomt leader Bobby
Labonte keeps ·gotng and gotng
and gotng." He currently stt5
111 POints a11 ear1 of second
place Dale Jarrett
• NOf: Jeff Gordon's las t tllree
fin•sh es : 33rd. 23rd. 36tll. He's
now 10th ·m point!i

" -

,.._.oy. In tile;

dUZIIn'tl-- of

...............bot

lolhe . . . . . T-.,

·nllht r-, Dale

..,.tantt bllmpH

'-1 Labonte on t11o

.. ............ o f .

tloellePtowlna,_
tljat -

'robobiY

NASCAII'IInoet
...~ ..,t ...
IHt ftV.ItMitna.

El!rnllefdi -

......d

•••*
Vlftoty thlo Soturda)

1ltilt llarohly

niCht

RcmJrkohly. Terry L~ll&lt;.1 n 1e orbrupl·
ly decided to dri,·e th e No. 5 Chevrolet
agam at M •dugan
Lobonte now knuwJ thnt lx: is s1rf·
fcring fmm ~mgn pilm11.ysmal jll l~ i ­
tiunill •ert1gll. wl111.:h . accnnJing lu ~~
medica l dtr.:umem cir.: ulated ln ~ t
v.~ck end &lt;tl M~&lt;:hr gan lnlcrn J110nal
Sp;.:niV. ,I)'. •~ "thu lj~hr I\&gt; lie \hll' th
d dm~ 1\h1ch ha, n&gt;llcc"IL'&lt;I 11 1thm .1
pan uf the lll lll'l , ..,, "
What L:th,, ntt' dul!~ nut ll:tvl! I\ a
Cll!lCU$SI&lt;lll.

Lnb(•ntc ptM'IIt't•l Smurd fl~ 11 11hou1
· 111lllll'nl lk h . , ~ ' l't'l'l'd th~ 1,,,1 ,,, ,,
m•."f• (\l111pkwh tr) lll g "·' l&lt;'l lllc'r
frtmt 111~ .!l hll&lt;' tll . \ll111.: h '' '·"II 111 lw

Flrets: Start (March 16, 1980, et Atlanta).
pole (Juhe 26, 1987, at Michigan), victory
(April 6. 1986, at Bristol)
tt Jw nld thd tht. ......, ltttkla ctolnlntnt
driver. M you tMt man? -1 don 't know. I let
my record speak for ltsert, and 1 hope you guys
thlnJ&lt; we're one of the more dominant teams
. out there .
·11cnow we work really, really har&lt;l on our
engine proeram; we·re in the wind tunnel a lot
, working on our car, and our guys are practicing
their pit stops a lot. I hope we're Of\.8 of the
teams that you say, 'Bay, those iluy&amp; are doing
great out there, and maybe they're aolng to
win a bunch more races :·
WMt wu the k.y to tM ~ory It
MlchiCJn? "The last time we were here, we
finished seventh. I was watching the cara out
there on the racetrack , and I couldn't believe
how m"any cars were runnlr\i low to the
ground, and the shocks end springs and some
of the stuff they were running. It was jiJit like
somebody flipped a switch , and all of a
sudden. what we normally do In the paBt,
changed in the lt~st race."

·

1. Mich igan marked the second time a
fatl•er and two. sons were in the same
Winston Cup race . When was the first?
2 . WhO arc the only Crothers t o have won titles in two
ma1or NASCAR series?
·(G66!l 1euoq eN pueJ9 l.l :&gt;S ng U! ,;qqoe. oue
1966t 'V86tl Cln:J ll015U!M U! ,A;.JJEU ' S9lUOQel 91.l! ·~
:pa )adwo :::~ Anad a:::nmeV!J pue pJelj:::ll tj •aa1 uaqM
'09 6t Jaqwo:ndas u• ··ept ·we4'8u!WJ! 8 lV' ' l

Sti:IMSNY

JJJ~IIl

l 1l!.ld Bodii\C ljllflltfl&lt;'ililk'&lt;'Hr tit \Jrtl
j'lilStllUII. and Lnh1.11rle lnthlll'd ~lith

J\ l ,•rt'llr} Oulllc•&lt;THh tt•ant~ ut Carl
Ku.J.h~di.·t 111 IQ~ .~- ~fl
\ ', ,hL1IIIll' thUpJ+l'tl 1\., l on~II!Tll'
rl'1 :1111•n-.l11p llilh ll·t ar~ \ofartrn and
R,,,hh ltac rn~ carl1er thi ~ year when
Jad, Kuush rcpurt t·dly demanded
rnur~ tha n Va h.,lm~ Wfl~ ~~•ll mglo
jl•l ) llw Ill'" tkal SCCI II ~ IU pre\Cfll
the ro--rbilll~ ,,f th:u hapl1~tllng

' t'''"

Ill&lt; 1'&lt;&gt;11111 111111'1 h, l,ol\1111\
lkn"'" nc'l ',.... I he '"' ,,,, 'I'·'' ''
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rh,· r'a&lt;.l&lt;''' t.',t•n, "1'1',. 1"1"'' •'llhl.'

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135
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( W\(' II.!Jl~ : \!kr I I 1 1111 111 ~ till'
l'"k h&gt;l I I&lt;." 1\'1'" -IIJH, !tile I .trniT&lt;iflil
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to• ]1 ,•11' h;dt ·hutha 1\.L·rr)" nw k,· the

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'" '' 11i&lt;lr• t tc'll llll' h o+l\ l o• filii thl'

•

lap."" sa 1d hoth drrvers" litthcr. who. ,11"
cuur,o:. ne.:(IL•d 11 provisional SPLit
'"'t'otr didn 't asl." rep lied D~le Jr.
"The k 1 d~ do ga11g up on you:· Slli d
the fother. "W hen they learr1 to play
ball or learn to m:l. :1b1ke as tood us
)'-'U. or dri1 r a r1r ~~good a~ )'OUcan.
that's just the way u ts m life ..

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Ruaty Wallace, who

hlmeelf makea moet of

the calla on pit etopt,_
hae made 1trateatc
declllont that aeemed
to cost him three

Ridenour

racee , leawlnC the No.

Supply

2 loom Feollni a bit
maHgned. The team,
led by crew chief Robin
Pemberton, put all that
behind them Sunday,
when Wallace won for
the third time thl•
seaaon, larply
becauea he and

JOI'li\C 1-' 0X : I ,,n~ 11 m.: \\'m ·
'It"' (up''~'" rind Jen ll amuu.:nul
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intcrmittem lhar n w ,n t~ LaiK'Ill&lt;' rmty
sutler l"rom the dtnmc;;, I'Pr a fn1
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mnUcm .md l h &lt;' ll h .IH' 11 &lt;'&lt;•me bJ~l

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Dea r NASCAR T his Week.
It ~eems like alier Dale Jarrett
won hi s champi orls hip. he lost
aggress t,•cncss to wm anothl'r otiC
He is an e:o.celkrll driver with th~,
fas test em. sa me ;,:rcw chtefand prt
crew.
Maybe he ts a lmle m ore emu·
tious. bul thar d oe~n't wm chl!lllpionshrps. He n..-ed!i to l-c a lillie
more agg reSS\IIC .
He l'iltl ()cat Bobby Labo nte l'asy
l thmlo: he is ton much nf a gentk··
m~m dri\'er. and tfml docsn '1 wm
races.
Brian Llflder~

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985·3308

Pemberton elected to
chana:• four tire• In
their final pit 1top.

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Dear NASCAR This Week,
You know those mces where it •s
extremely warm and the drillers
burn their behinds lhrouto: b the tr
septs'.'
I BOI to thinking abo ut ibt: Uay
Ricky Rudd climbt!d out of his car
in the winner"s crrcle and dropped
to th; sround ~~ause he wns so
hot, and also had hli st ers on hi s
back bc~;aust: of the seal gelling to
hot.
! have 11 sug11estion for them. It ts
to build the .~eat~ out of the same
materi al that NASA uses 011 the
honom of the space sh uttles 10 prepare them for re-entry.
I don't know how feasible Ibi s
would be. but to me it is worth
lookinQ into. I did hear someone on
one of tile races talking about this.
a couple of weeks aller I sent th1s
suggestion to Jack Rou sh . Maybe
he did read my e-mai I
Laurlt Poor
Vaualbnro, Main~&gt;

s ; •

Labonte shakes off dizziness, finishes 20th at Michigan
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Tht s Week

Domino's

Yrlu muie u gnf!J f!tJinl . r"'rl ll't'
&lt;"ungnuulare yvu for .w.our willillg·
m.•Js 10 (Jut fairnej S over the&gt; b!'st
i111l'restJ of your jai'Orite dril'tr.

••••••••••••

&amp;

'Deal~

91wt.. in.

Rusty Wallace

Mqnet for Stewart'• Pontiac

NAICAR Thla W..k'a Monte Dutton ctvM his opinion:

~· ~uuua. ~ -

Your
Tum
lenin
Ow Retdtn

A&amp;&amp;reetlvene.. bit him

Will be tou•h It

It was young Earnhardt, not Jeff Gordon, who Stewart was
raclna when he skidded out of control at Michigan. As the
c!rcu11 returns to the short tracks, wnere Earnhardt won
e!uller this year at ' Stewart 's expense. this rivalry may be the
heated one.

Ut.nlin.f;h;. uuil.t.u. .6/m. ~ p.a.uiluJ. luu.

••••••••••••

Trylne to win avery week

Dele Earnhardt Jr. va. TDIIY Stewart

(1.

I What: Sears Craftsman 175
of Chicago
•When : 12:30 p .m .. Sunday
• Where: Chicago M ol or
Speedway, Cicero. Ill. (1 -mile
track)
• Format: 175 laps/ miles
• Defendlne cl'lempfon: F1rst
race
• Qualffrln&amp; record: First race
• R.ce r.cord: First race
·• Not.bl.: Dodges won the
last three truck races at
Nashville SpeedWay USA.

Ken seth
• Qu•lif)lnt: teeonf: Mark
Martin. Ford. 123.746 mph , April
8 .1994
• R..::e ..cord: Harry Gant.
Buick . 92.929 mph, April 4 ,
1992
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
• NotaiN: Jason Keller also
won a race at Bristol in 1999 . .
• What: Food City 250
Morgan Shepherd has won four
1 When: 7 p .m .• Fnday
• times. the most or any driver....
I Where : Bristol (Tenn .) Moto r
Martin has won twice.
Speedway (0.533·mile track)

FEUD Of THE WHK

·

IJJ.(U

CRAFTSMAN mUCK

• Defendlne ch.mpkJn: Matt

FROM lAST WEEK

:::i

Include sugary·whlte beaches
hil l led by N.Jtion.t/ Geogrilphic
as some of tht" world's most

LU.

• When : 7:30p .m .. Saturday
• Where: Br•stol (Tenn ) MOtor
Speedway (0533-m•le track) ·
•Format: 500 l;aps/ 266 .5
mtles
• Dflendln• champion: Dale
Earnhardt
I QuaUf)'lfiC record: Steve
Park. Chevrolet.126.370 mph.
March 25. 2000
• Race record: cnar11e
Gi.:.t.r:ba ~h. Chevrol€1.101 .074
mph , July 11. 1971

• Form.t: 250 laps/133 .25
miles

Weekly ranKings by NASCAR This Week wriier Monte Dutton.
last week's ranking is in parentheses .

ll miles of &lt;.OJstllne
stretching from Mobile t o
Gulf Shores and Orange Du&lt;h

~ d. emdd

• What: GoRaCing.com 500

• Notabte: Retired car owner
Junior Johnsol'i won 21 races at
Bnstol, 13 more than anyone
else .. . Darre ll Waltrip is a 12·
time race winner. givmg him
three more victories than
Earnhardt. ... Cale Yarborough.
now long rel•red. won nine poles .

I

Cl3

•

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

fOP TEN

Of trades and rumors of trades
ently wants out of New York so
badly that he was willing to
accept a trade to a ciry, Seattle,
that lies a continent away from
the two places where he would
prefer to play, Washington or
Miami.
Ewing retains his no-trade
clause and can veto any trade not
to his liking.
While Gary Payton, Baker's
Olympic and Seattle teammate,
was unhappy he was left out of
the loop on what he thought was
a bad trade, the big winner of the
day among the Olympians was
their head coach, Rudy Tomjanovich.
Tomjanovich was elated to hear
that the Ewing-to-Seattle deal
was officially off because Seattle's
planned signing of free agent
Maurice Taylor collapsed along
with it. Houston wants to sign
Taylor to a one-year contract for
$2.5 million.
More fallout from the failed
four-team deal:
• Detroit looked set to trade
Laettner to Dallas for a package of
Cedric Ceballos, Eric Murdock
and John Wallace. Presumably,
Mav~ricks owner Mark Cuban
would throw in S3 million of his
Internet fortune.
• Rice, who also lost out on a
coveted chance to play in New
York, was running out of options.
According to a league sourc~
close to the Bulls, it would not be
inconceivable for Rice to sign a

e Butch Orand National, Food CHy 250
7 p.m. · Friday • ESPN2
Wlneton Cup, OoRaclne:.com 500
7:30p.m . • Saturday • ESPN

•

MEN'S OLYMPIC BASKETBALL

SAN DIEGO (AP) - U.S.
Olympic basketball players spent
their first day as a team gathering
gear and gossiping. No one had
his ear to his cell phone as often
a• Vip Baker, who Ie2rned that his
proposed trade to New York is
officially dead. ·
" It's been a difficult four or five
days, and it's a situation where we
have to look at how everything
shook ou t and see what will be
best for me," said . Baker, who
came close to going to New York
in a four-team trade involving
Patrick Ewing, Glen Rice, Christia n Laettner and others.
Sonics general manager Wally
Walker said the mega,lea] involving Seattle. New York, the Los
Angeles Laken and Detroit was
beyond salvaging.
Knicks general manager Scott
Layden said he would continue to
sea rch for a deal amicable to both
Ewing an d the Knicks, although
he said it was more likely than
not that Ewing will be a member
of the team when training camp
opens Oct. 3.
It was a day for both the So nics
and the Knicks to rally their losses and try to move on, their relationships with their star players
now frayed.
Baker, not fond of coach Paul
We~tphal, is eager to get out of
Seattle and play near his home
state of Connecticut.
Ewing, who has not made any
ru~nt public comm~nts , appar-

•

'All TlnNe E'aetem

"0

MORE LOCAL NEW~. MORE LOCAL FOLK~.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport,'Ohio

~

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�Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Frtday August 25 2000

Pomeroy Mtddleport Ohto

Friday Augut 48 2000
41 0 Houses for Rent

510

3 b amtly home newtv decors
ed &amp; Cll PI td 8 &amp; dtp I
Qu td S350 oo a mon 30. 875
2088

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
Household
Goods

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

AUTOS FROM $500 Luxu y
SUV T ucks Ca a &amp; Mo e
Se zed &amp; Sold oca ~ Fo a ngs
ca

To

Fee

BOO a 5 822

yPareo11111
Announc.ment
GIW-v Loat &amp; Found
Vud Sal-. oncl Wonted
To Do Ado
lluat 8o Pold In Advonce

80

210

110

Auction
and Flea Market

320 Mobile Homes

Business
Opportunity

BUY CARS FROM $500 Po ct
mpou ds and eposseu ona
Fee Fo s ngs ca 800 7 9

New &amp; UseCJ FUI'niture
New 2 Pace l ng oom Su es

300 ext AO o

$399 Buy Sou 'ode

for Sale

NFL PROFILE

710 Autos for Sale

EJCt t5 0

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

The Datly Sentmel Page B 5

CARS FROM $29 MO

Pack's Favre looking forward
to seeing live action again

TRIBUNE QEADYNE.

2 00 p m 1M doy before
tho eel lo to run
Suncloy &amp; Moncloy edition
2 00 p m Frldoy
SINDNEL peepyNE

1

oo p.m the dly before

tho od lo to run
Sundly &amp; Moncloy edition
1 00 ~ m Frtdoy
BIQIU A QIAQUNE,
2 doyo before tho ad lo
to runby4 30 pm
Saturdoy &amp; Mondoy
edition- 4 30 Thuredly
"OHdllnH .ubjecllo
Clllrlfle du. to hol/dllye
'

sex am a sa so na ana
o gn o any ent10 o
make any s ch p e erence

m a ono dec mna10
Th s newspape w no
know ng y accep

CONSTRUCT ON
SUPERINTENDENT
A hens Area
Gene a Con ac o Has An m
med ate Open ng Fo A Po ec
Supe enden Frvs Yea s E~e
perlence On Commercia P o
)8cts Mus Be Know edgeable n
A Phases 0 Cons uc on And
OSHA Flequ erne ts Good Com
mun ca ons A d Schedu ng
Sk s Pay Commensu ate W h
Ab tv Send Resume To
RWS B d g Company
4678 Larwe Or
Co umbus Ohio 43220

ANNOUN CEMENTS

005

ad en semen s o ea es a e
wh ch s
loahon o he
aw Ou reade s a e he eby
n o med ha a dwe ngs
advert sed n th s newspape
are ava abe on an eq al
opportun y bas s

Personals

EMPLOYMENT
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Fa~~:

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Business
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$83 500 Same a ea g an po e
ba n on 6 Ac es S3 000 Cash
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POST ON ANNOUNCEMENT
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FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

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NEC
from Page Bl
Ph1l M ckclson and Just n
Leonard were also at 66 wh1le
Erme Els and rece t Pres den s
C up pi&lt;k Loren Roberts were n
a group at 67 Twenty o e of the
37 players m the field broke par
on a F restone co urse w th greens
softened by overn ght ra n
Twenty of them will be e hasmg
T1ger- aga n
Woods has budt hiS year around
the maJO rs an d no o ne can argue
w rh the results H e bcca ne th e
first playe r s nee Ben H oga n n
1953 to w n three maJO s m one
year whe n he raU1ed to ca ch Bob
M ay w th b rd1cs o the last t vo
holes then beat hin m a three
hoe playoff at ValhaUa Golf C lu b
Wmn ng can be emot ona l)
exhau st n g W nn ng a maJor
espec ally one I ke the thr ller
Valhalla can really lead o a let
down
That s one reason Furyk was
so mewhat surpn sed to see
Woods name rae ng up the leader
board
I know l ve had trouble aftc a

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp; Vicinity

3 EASY SALES 53 000
Eas y ea n $3 DOD you
s
week Make $ K o e e y $99
sae We Te a h ou how Ca
800 294 9538
ACCESS TO A CO MPUTER
PUT T TO" ORK 1350 I 500
pe Wftek PT FT www

An hony land Compeny L d
800.213-8365

www coun rytyme com
c owa
rmsc

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Ded 575 00
axe c se
535 oo oouncy ens
5 oo
k chen eb e and cha s $40 00
So a

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Opportunity

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REAL ESTATE

par ' co d hoi w thm 9 nch
e fo a p
eag
H
as n the lead after five
l ol
nd ncv gave t back
Th o y laps was when he
go
o ble of! he tee - a par
sav t o 1 tl e ough on No 9
a o I er a f1 om a sl o t off a tree
root 0 tl e l3tl and men a cou
pi of
stak fran vhic h he
o d
ecov r
On the par 5 6 I he put his
vedge o er th e gree n mto a
bu k b r ly g t o u ofth ~and
a d I ad o ake a 6 foote r for
bogev Tl e o he 18th he went
to tl ro ug aga and h s sec
o d I o r I a ree leading to
a otl
bog v
W h th Wood went stratght
o h range nd spen 30 mmutes
rk g o
h fla s
Woods ha s Ire dy von seven
e l s year a d $6 9 mil on
o
I GA Tou breaking his
n gs c o d fro 1 last year At
e vill shatt r h s re cord
ag too
we rc play ng for
o
'"' l Stuart Apple
b)
o
7 T l ere s only
on
ore money
H g
of the pr ze

An hony Lind Compan)l Ltd
801).2 3-8386

ca sea $35 00 ca

www coun rytyme com

w

g

110 Help Wanted

TRANSPORTATION

ne

FINANCIAL

vm conung back and p ay ng
extre nely extren e y we l ke
that And I e to do afte the year
he s had Furyk a d Bur I e s
had a l tt e or xper nee aft r
th ose v n He k ow ho v to
hand e t bet er I a l lo
l obv ou ly a n t bo he ed
hin
What s eft for Woods M o e
v ctor es More o ey
In one of he f, w occas ons
wh e a go fer
tu a y ound
I ke a ou ball player - or maybe
even a onstru t o
vork~: r Woods sho\\ed vhy tale t alone
ha s t take n hi n to new he ghts
n the ga
H vorks hard and
he cares abo eve y hot
The goal of th w ek
o
w n he sa l When I n not
play 1g
he t c to e t WI
I m p ay g th s v ek
1:1 e o
work and l
y ng to get
ys
fD
o
n o
S day fee oon
He got of! o a good
r
Sure he so vJ d a h selfafi r
h s p ch g vc lg fro
1 (
y ds o the t rs hole vo d p
~o fee be nd tl p
AU took
v s o
ole fo Woods to p k
&amp;
up wl e h I of! He hi
ro tro
?06 va d ou o rhe

--- .r--

ed PM og a

'

eye to va d hav ng h m at fuU
strength fo
he regular season
ope e on Sep 3 aga nst the Jets
Coach M1ke Sherman s;ud the
Pa ke a e b ng ng back Favre
he sa e
ay a basebaU team
ou d b ng ba ck a p tc her wtth
end n t
He r ha
trle b t of pam
n th
lb o ' ust a t ny b t so 11 s
o to ally I 00 percent r ght
now Sl e an sa d But l think
f ve o v ) b g h m back and
be very
on erva ve n our
approa h l l k he II be ready to
go (to he egular seaso n)
If Fav
doe n t start agamst
C lev I d ba kup Matt Hassel
I get h s h d start of the
b k
pre a o and v play nro the
eco d I a f Ha s beck had the
NFL s l ghest p eseaso quarter
b k ra g befo e go ng 5 for 12
v h 7?) rds and an nterceptton
o n Mond ) ghr aga nst M1arru
Whe h (Favre) pays aga nst
Clev land tha s ou goal but
tha s e a ly 10 go 1 g to be
e ng e ll etch n stone
d
d
ands the value of
a t y r gl no
though he
ay he I ke t He ho pes to
ca
re rn to a gula p acnce sc hed
ex veek when the Packers
b g p epa a o s for the Jets
Yo se a vhole d ffercnt
vo ld on he del e Favre sa1d
ad) o g t back I know
tha

S 2 500 Cash

Chesh e esse C eek Ad 6
A es S 2 000 o 37 ac N
$4 000 C av Twp Ma abe Ad
ac es $20 ODD o 3 Ac es
W h Ba n $3 000 F en d y
Adge SA es$ OOOOCash

AER A ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Reb
S ock
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 9528

70

vouldn t be surpr sed f he sat our
aga n
I ve taken bas cally t vo veeks
off from compett ve thro v ng
and looking back t s the best
th ng I ve ever did he sa d l n
bemg a lot sma rter about no v
than n he pas l rh nk the
coac hes trust n e a lot more now
to (make dec s10ns) about my
health
But that docsn t mean 11 s bee
easy s tnng ou while his ream
mates make final prcparat ons for
th e regular season Fav re loves to
pract ce and he has been reduced
to contnbut ng his v ewpo nt to
fil n and strategy se s ons
You stand on the s del nes a d
you feel hke the kicker Favre
sa d v. th a gr n The on lv ttme
son ebody talks to you IS to say
How are you fee g
Favre sa1d 1t w II be difficult to
gam th e t ung w h h s rece vers
that s normal!) bu It dunng
tram ng camp He v II rely o h s
veteran skills and his longttme
rela omh ps v h top rece vers
Antomo Fre e nan an d B I
t ll won b
Scl roeder bu
easy
Its so I ard to orne back
w th out pract e he sa d If you
have to t hrow 30 yard crosSJ g
route t s got to be perfect a d
that t ke me
Packers offens v coord nato
and quart backs coac h Tom
Rossley sa d C ree Bay s non
tor ng Favre s recov r, v h an

s

a e ng r

•

as

710 Autos for Sale
760

304 675 8995

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Pleasant Valley Hospttal

RENTAL S

CRNA
MERCHANDISE

I told you It wouldn t stay up there
stlne

80

Auction
and Flea Market

es e em ey em e s A on
sa 740 388 0823 40 245
9866 Fu Se ce Ae e en es
A a al:l e L censea &amp; Bonded
0 P-ace a 'rb s

AUCTON
.2 Bg Sa e Days
EerySa 6PM
E eryTues 6 PM

li uckloads 0
New &amp; usea ems
FomSevea Saes
Se ng To The Public &amp; Dea e
P~ece Dozens &amp; Case Lo s
Bowen Auc on Service
Gary Bowen Aucl onee
PocoveOho
FeeMa ke
us A oss
Hun ng on WV
3sBdge
141).888 2288
l04 453 2587

810

Ohio Valley Publishing
has an opening In the
Graphics Department for an

Happy Ad

App ances
Re end oned
Washe s D ye s Ra ges Re
0 a o s Up To 90 Days Gus
an ead we Se New May ag Ap
p ances Fen h c y Ma)l ag

AD DESIGNER

740 448

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal currently has
opportumhes lm CRNA apphcants
Apphcants must meet the followmg
quahlicat10ns
Mus be a eg
I ursc Ihe slate of WV
Grad a e of a n \ c d cd schoo of Anesthesia
Cc t f ca on o cl g
o cc f ca11on by the
A mer ca Assoc
n a t Nu se Anes hehsts
Compellta\~

ngs

Wages and Excellent
Benefits

Jom out fatlll
Full Time 40 Hour Work Schedule
Vacations
401 K
Medical Dental Prescription and Ule Insurance

OOOD USED APPL ANCES
Washe 1 d ye s e ge a o s
anges Skaggs App ances 6
v ne S ee Ca
40 446 398
.:188888028

We we k n a Mac ntosh env on men us ng C ea o 2
Mu Ad Qua kXp ess Adobe Pho oshop and Types y e
Compu e Expa ence w h h s soffwa e s a pus
Stnd Rtsumts o

The Dally Tribune
Ann Fred Hoffman Product on Manager
825 Th d Avenue
I
Ohio 45631

I

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

R&amp;D

s

Used F

n

e &amp; Ap

p an es A ques G ea Se ec
on P ced To Se
wwwe pcwo

m

mecha n

om

I pr tess ona ls to the
best rcso tree t r c 1mmunny health

Sara Ann Barr
Celeb a ed her

18th Btrthday
August 17 2000
h he fa he

J,

'
Please Sui nut Resume I o
PLEASANl \ \I LD HOSPITAL
co!ERSO~NEL

2520 HI LE\ DRIVE
PT PLEASANT \\\ 255'i0
OR ~AX I 0 304) 675 61 75

Com9 A a

B owu Co ne 0 Rou e

&amp;

Add son Pke We Bu Fun
740 367 0280

e

ANEOE

J

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

::. Friday, August 25, 2000

"Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

tiRJDOE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Rt. 7 Pizza Express

1/J/

&amp; Racine Pizza Express

,,.

949-4900
Open 4:00 pm Daily

.

Closed Mondays
16" 3 Item Only $11.50
Also Try Our Chicken
Strips With Your Choice
Sauce $3.99. We Deliver.

Pomeroy, Ohto, reeervee the

right to bid atlhla aalt, and
to withdraw the obove
collateral prior 10 eelt.
Further, The Farmer's Bank
and Savlnge Compony
reoervoa the· right to rt)oct
any and all. bldt oubmltttd.
Further, the above
collateral will bo sold In the
condition ·It It In, with no
express or Implied

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

warrant1e1 given.
For further Information,

co~ ..cl Shalla Buchanan at
992-2136.
(8, 23, 24, 25 3TC

Public Notll••
"Final Actlona": are aouona
ol tha director whloh are
affective upon loauanca or 1
atated allacllvo date.
Purouant to the Ohio
Rtvlotd Code Section
3745.04, o final action may
be spptaled to the
Environmental Review
Appealo Commlulon
(ERAC) (Formerly known ao
tht Environmental Board ol
Review) by a paraon who
wao a party to a procetdlng
bolore the director by filing
an appeal within 30 doya ol
the final action. Purouant to
Ohio Revised Coda Soctlon
3745.07, a final acting
laoulng, denying, modifying,
revoking, or renewing a
permit, license, or variance

which Ia not preceded by a
proposed action, may be
appealed to tho ERAC bY
llllng an appeal within 30
days of lsauance of the final
action. ERAC appaala must
be
filed · with:
Environmental

Review

Appeals Commlaolon, 236
East Town Street, Room
300, Columbuo, Ohio 43215.
A copy of tho appeal must
be served on the director

within 3 days alter filing the
appeal with ERAC.
Final Issuance of permit to
Public Notice
operate
F &amp; A Sunshine Center
PUBLIC NOTICE .
The following applications 397 Well Main St.
and/or verified complaints Pomeroy, Ohio Issue Date
ware received and the 8/04/2000
No(s)
following draft, proposed , Application
or final actions were Issued, 0653000058 0001
by the Ohio Environmental PERC Dry Cleaning
Protection Agency COEPA) (8) 25, lTC
last

weak .

i

Public Notice

modification, or repeal of

orders (other than
emergency orders); the
laaua n ca,
danIa I•
modification or revocation

PROBATE COURT OF ·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In the Matter of tho

or'lfcensea, permits, laaeea,

Change

of

Name

of

variances, or carllllcatea; Jennifer Elizabeth Cleland
Lh! approval or. ' Caaa f,!o, -aQOOO; Docket 0;
dlsapprovol of plan.~ and Page 200.
specifications .
Orall
· NOTICE

~n!t

Actions"

are

written

Notice Is hereby given
that Jennifer E. Cleland, By:
Mother Karan Casto, Case
No. 30800 of 33171 Hyeell

Issuance, denial, etc., of a

Run Road., Pomeroy, Ohio,

permit, license, order, ole. 45769, has applied to the
Interested persons may
submit written comments or
request a public meeting

regarding droll actions .
Comments or public
meeting requests must be
subDIItted within 30 days of
notice of the draft a~tlon . "
Propooed Actions are
written atalomento ol tho
dlractor'o In tent with
respect to the Issuance,

permit, llconao or variance.

Written comments and
requests for a public

regardIng

Common Pleas Court
'Probate Division of Melg~
County, Ohio, for an order

740-667-6329

• New Homea
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

Coolpulerized Custom Embroidery

74().992-1671
7/22!TFN

Jennifer

The State of Ohio Meigs

County.
·
'
Personally appeared

and made solemn

was published one time, to

hearing may be held on a
proposed action II a haartng
request or objection Is
received by tho OEPA within
30 days of the proposed

wit: on the 21st day ol
August, 2000 (being at least
thirty days prior to the 25th
day of September, 2000, the
data the application Is to be

action

heard, as mentioned In said

.

Written comments, requests notice) In the Dally Sentinel,
lor public hearing, and a newspaper of general
adjudication hearing circulation of the County

requests must be sent lo :

aforesaid.

Ohio Judith R. Sisson

Environmental Protection

Sworn to before and signed

Agency, P.O . Box t049 , In my presence thla 2101
Columbus, Ohio 43216·1049 day of August, 2000.
(telephone: 614-644·2129). (8) 251T

EDUCATION ...
•

DECORATION ..
INSULATION ..

HIP"M

Auto Upholstery
~
Company Logos
--~
Hats
i
Jackets
' School Mascots

Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe
Se,..,ici!s

House &amp; Trailer Sit es
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Syotem• &amp;
Vtilitieo

Carmelita &amp; Kenny Osborne
J3869 Blackwood, Road · Off St Rt 143

Phone 740·742-2377
Fax 740-742·8 103

Advertise
in this
space for
$5Q per
month.

(740) 992·3131

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
- Pick-up &amp; delivery -Tfres &amp; Detail

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

A CRAFTY,
8UND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vertleal bllnde are
m..te to order at our
loeatlon
UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertleah • Wood
o Mlnle • Ete .

144 'lltlnl Awe. G .. ••

446·4995

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
9"«1~ ~

fiJt#U

1-800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors Welcome
Ohio

WANTED

UNDA'S
PAINTING

S tanding timb er large
"Take the pain out
or small tra.,ks. Top
pt·ices paid al so .
of paintingDozer work.
Let me do it for you" '
Interior
Free Estimates
FREE ESTIMATES
Ca II T &amp; R Logging
Before 6 p.m. ·
afte r 8:00pm
leove Message
740-992-5050
Alter 6 pm- 740-985-4180
(Rand y)
d 1 mo. 411

DENYSAG

PARft

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

· All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Dealei:s.
1000 St. Rl. 7 Soulh
C1111IVIIIe, OH 45723 -

740487-GIIJ

· Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT- 6 :30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
par ga"l"
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.

Lie. If oo-so '"'""'"

BISSELL BUIL~ERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENII~l
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o·
to 10' x 30'
-·
· Hours
7:00 AM - 8 PM '
.

~··

1121100 I

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
·""; Sales Representative
~::,'··

· ...,.;

Larry Schey

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.
NOTICE

Phone (740) 593-66

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

~~-.
·. "

~;

Simington :
Ufetlme WatTanty
Local Contractor

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Exf.erlence
7 40-37 -6349

,4NT..

BARNEY

••• IS YORE AUNT
•
•• Loweezy
HOME?

••

6a

YIS'M··
SHE'S IN
THAR
CHURNIN'

"Creep" Feed $9. 75noo
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
16-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

Call 740-985-3831
Pomeroy
7!5 J mo

I
•

•'
:' :FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·r
· ~==~--~----~------~

or ·one

EXPRESS

mont

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Replacement Windows,
Seamh:ss Gutters &amp;

Downspout. Garage room

additions, Polo Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Blown Insulation

992-2772 .
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

,
I

I

!

'•

I L-----~

i, ,',...THE BORN LOSER

.,

; WAA.\'~ N..L Tf\~1 C.I1~C.ON... .
;
FO~? .

..

TI1E Fl(&lt;:( TO

....

~

rnt~~CI-U..'l

C.OOK 0U(2:.

~ X WIENfJ~'&gt;'I&gt;U

WIU&lt;l£jf~

YOU I?Lhll.fllt-IG

C&gt;lN~R.

1

i GRiLL Tl1t:M OR
lto\Clt&gt;l~ T\\0\7 /

I 'LL fLIP A COIN'
HEADS THEY 'RE LUCKY,
TAILS THEY'RE NOT!

&lt;*'-ACOIN
JUST HIT t1E
lM THE EYE!

f .i.W'vEIN6TOE:TRc 1TREFE1~6NURED OUT, SIR ..

·t .

5

CANDY
MAKES SPARKS BECAUSE
ELECTRICAL Ci-IAR6ES ..

WaL,CI~I::W ~ARDER.

I'M TRVIN6 TO

one

or as ow as

,.

Pass 2 ..
Paso 5•
Pass Pas a

R::=,t..

(hMBklrvl

(2 wde.)

25 Peck-•Y
2a o-the28 Layer of
tlaaue

Pass
Pass

28Theume

Paso

30 "Auntie-"
. 31 Gocldeu of

(Lat.)

Dbl.

There is a writing ma)(im
something along the lines of:
" Never begin a sentence until you
know how to end it." E. M.
Forster's riposte to this was :
"How can lltnow what !think till
I see what I say?"
We have been looking at leaddirecting doubles. They are often
lethal, yet they don 't always result
in the contract's defeat. Sometime s, declarer has a riposte,
which allow s him to succeed anyway --as in this deal. How should
the play go in six spades after
West leads (a) the diamond queen
or (b) the heart seven?
Yesterday, we looked at the
double of a control-bid to direct
partner's opening lead. It is possible to transmit the same message by doubling a reply to Blackwood .. as East does here. (Yes,
South m1gh1 start with two spades,
a strong jump shift, but with the
one- level response he learned that
North had both spade support and
a minimum opening bid . After a
game-forcing two-spa,de jump.
South would learn only that North
liked spades.)
Without the double, West
would lead the diamo nd quee n.
givin g.de.dar.er atJ easy n~n . South
would draw trumps and take the
club fin esse. It loses , but declare r's heart loser dis appears on a
lon g club.
When West leads a heart ,
though, South has .lo be careful.
He should not rely on the club
fin esse. In stead, aft er winnin g
with the heart ace and drawin g
trump s, he eliminates the diamond s (ace. king. and a ruft)
before exiting with his last heart.
East is endpiayed, forced either to
lead away from the club king or
to concede a ruff-and-discard.

THIS MAP..

To get a current weather
report, check the

•

CARPET

Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

t-IOTl-INt

(740) 992-3470

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES

Phone (304) 674-6100
407B 6th Street
Point Pleasant, WV
Owne r Mile Balch
Pager (304 ) 540-4443

M~M,~~St-IIP

Bulldozer Services

lt•l

worde
21
22R
23 Mine produqt
24 Capable of

11 Grotttd

discord
37 Church
officiate
38 Mythical bird
41 Extromlet
42 -moneltr
43 Diving bird
44 TV ector
Ken45 Pocket brud
47 Llka ellck
talktre

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Fill Dirt• Mulch •

vert1se

apaem

Another double

Grovel• Sand e Topsoil ~

(7 40) 985-3948

monster
19Wecldlng

muscle

" Gel1ield'"

e.~.

12 Loch-

10 Painful

Opening lead: • 7 or t Q

Hauling • Limestone •

CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIC£5
BOBCAT SERVIC£5
Residential, Commercia
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully insured
lrl1n Morrl101/l1tl111 0•1•

CarPet. UlnYI Couerlnl 8r
floor rue Mill Direct

.. 4 2
• K Q 10 B
• 9 6 5 3
• K 53

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Soutb West Nortb East

JlbWICK"SC.
"fiOUHG and
EXCfiVfiTIHG

"fth~ad in .S&lt;Zrvi&lt;:'l"

Truck seats. car seats, h eadliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyi tops ,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00

976532
• Q J 10 8

.. Q 9

Replacement:
Windows

P/8 (ONTRA(TOR~, INC.

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

East

• A4
t A4

TH~

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

Rutland, Ohio

Over 40 yrs experience

mo. ad.

25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs

2 Handyman crew will do
painting Inside and out,
carpenter work, roofing,
siding. Have own tools.
Free Estimates
740-742-3225

West

South
•KQJI0965

MfNSA

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

ORA
VACATION ...

CO.

l.l••....,.•l'roMOU

Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

Elizabeth

AN adjunction

Clerk ,

i

EXCAV~TING

mother: Karen M. Casto.

Clerk

. ...

CBBSTER

08·2S.OO

• A 8 7 3
• J 9
+K72.
• A J to 8

.. 7 6 4 2

HOWARD

1

Mason, WV
304-773-5300
or 740-992-2403
Reserve a spot lor you, your team, or your league.

r·

submitted within 30 days of oath that the notice, a copy
notice of tho proposed of which Is hereto attached,

Hearing

Counties.
Plenty of TLC

to chango his/her name to
Jennifer Elizabeth Casto.
Said application will be
heard In Meigs County
Probate Court, at i :30 pm 750 East State Street
on the 25th day ol
September 2000 at tho IAthtens, Ohio 45701
Courthous~. Pom~roy, Ohio.
. "A Better

a before me Judith R. SIBBon,

proposed action may be
act i on.

State Route 7,
.Tuppers Plains has
openings. all shills.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. CertiH ed in
Meigs l'r Athens

(ormelilo ~ (reolion~

modification , Cleland, Applicant; by

revocation , or renewal of a

meeting

1,..11'1'.241

Revlaed Code, Sec. 2111 .01 (A)

statements of the director
of
E ~vI ron m on I~ I
Protections (Directors)
Intent with respect to the

denial,

BJDMLUMBER

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

" Actlona"

Include the adoption,

North

I

~

PUBUC NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby gtven
thll on Saturday, August 26,
at 10:00 a.m., a public oale
will be held at 211 Weot
Second Street, Pom.eroy,
Ohio, The Farmer's Bank
and Sovlnga Compony
extended parking lot
(boolde Powell'o Super
vatu,, to eell lor cash the
following colla..ral:
1995 FORD F-150 4X4
TRUCK
1FTEF14Y8SLB5112T
1896 YAHAMA BANSHEE
ATV JV43GGA03TA102762
The Farmor'o Bank and
Sovlngo
Compony,

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

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance ; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
1lfllnmmt1ll
Major Medical • Nursing Home
• ..., _ _.

992-9200

'

PRODUCTS
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

40 lnfluanoo
ACROSS
42 Gooey mixture
1 s-11• up (wltl1 46 Ramon 650
liquid,
47 Alum
7 On liM! !ritz
51 Cryatalllne
13 - pentameter
gem
(English meter) 53 Ruaotan -oon
14 Nonmetallic
55 Lag behind
- •houaa se Actre
..
15 ·
Movie
Lulu16 Makes Impure 57 Archive•
17 Novello!
se Under Ideal
Bagnold
condltlona
18 Cherry oeed
(2 wda.)
20 -oul(uaeo
frugally)
DOWN
21 Gave up
1 Blue pigment
23 Deocrtblng on
2 Placed
eaeyjob
3 " Present" start
27 Former
4 Not up yet
32 Ocular
.5 Comedian
33 Cloaet wood
Conway
3&lt;4 Carol Island
6 "Land" end
35 Fragrant
7 Nipped
oleoresin
36 Lee• Important 8 Brown kiwi
39 George and AI, 9 Dog in

Sentinel

:.-_____
_
,m
~-----,
uati o ns can be negotiated at thi s
SATURDAY, Au g. 26, 2000
1
ime.
, The year ahead wi II be one for
CAPRI CO RN (Dec 22 -Jan .
;grateful fri e nds fo r whom you've
!do ne fa vors in th e past to find 19 1 The talent you need to tmns:ways to repay you. What they . fo rm old things or systems into
'now do for you could help you some thing more u.scful and functio nal i&gt; within you today. Reno'either materiall y o r sociall y.
' VIR GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) vate thai whi ch needs updaling.
AQU ARI US (J an. 20-Fcb 19)
:1nstead of seeking recognition
:for yo urself today, you'll be th e Bo nds betwee n you and your
:most successful effec tive ly guid- loved ones ca n be st rengthened
;ing others fro m behind the scenes . today simpl y by la king th e inttia·
'Besides, th at's what gives you the tive to buoy up these assoc iati ons.
~rea les t pleas ure . ,
An oppo rtunity to do so w iII pre, LIBR A (Sept. 23-0c t. 23) se nt itself
Dw ing to something new that's
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
~titT ing. it's to your advantage It's a favorabie time to fin alize to
ioday to cont act and stre ngthen your sati sfaction any mailer that's
~e l ation shi ps . There may be some- important to your heart . Ju st keep
i hing in it Jor you by getting in your priorities in order an4 handl e
\ouch with old pal s.
th e most criti cal ones first.
) SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Preater benefits than usual can be Even if it .puts you a bit under
perived today from handling tasks pressure today, if possible, do not
pnd as~ig nment s effec tively. What delegate any important ass ign~ou ac~o m p li sh at this time will
ment s to others. You' re the best
have longevi ty attached to it.
candidate for handling these mat ; SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23- Dec. ters.
~ I )'Get togeth er today for a meet TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
jng of the minds with th at perso n Substantial return s for endeavors
)"i th whom you need to discuss an you 've launcbed which thu s far
tmportanl matter. Even senous sit-

has fail ed to bear fruit may be on
th eir way to you today. Keep the
faith . Thin gs a re about to pay off.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20 )
You r e nthusiasm is ca1chy today
and w ill act as a ca talysl for getting oth ers off .their duffs ami
doin g so methtn g meanin gful.
Take lh c lead. and they' ll foll ow.
- CANCER !June 21-Jul y 22)
Ev~n tho ugh th is is the weeke nd.
there co uld he some thi ng in the
works today fro m whic h you can
turn a profit. Be on your toes.
Yo ur malcrial aspects look
e n cu u ra~ i IH! .
LEO 'uuly 23- Aug. 221 Ironica ll y. ynu cnu id be the one who
ends up de ri\ ing the greatest benefits fro m a gc.&gt;turc to he lp anot her th at vou'l l make today.
Rewards for good deeds are lt ke ly.

- TRIVIA
Christopher Cerf, the creative
producer of Bttwten tht Lions,
helped launch National Lam·
poon magazine in 1970.

48 -

OooclriH

49~older

so Pub mloolle
52 -Aviv
54 Have a
eneck

CELEBRITY CIPHER

(

by Luis Campos
Cetebrily Clploer cryptograms are cteal&lt;od from quotations by famous pooplo, put and
present Each Ieite&lt; in tho cipho&lt; stands '"'another.

Today's clue: M equals H

'B

TBLZA

PZOYD;
NLZY

BX

WP

MOA
OX

XZLZV

KNNI

G N

NRZX

GYSKI

B

H BY Z .

HNYCNGGZX

WP

H NY
HNN/1.
MOLZ

GMOG.'-

KNPNGZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ."Frank Sinatra's music had a profound influence on
me, whether I know it or not"- Bob Dylan

RZGZV

T:~~:~:~' S©R~~-~~ifs·
ldltod by CLAY POLLAN
e \e ll trs of
0 Rearrang
lour scrambled words

WORD
lAM I

the

be·
low to form four simple words.

IIDVEOC
2

I

I

I 1 I I I

I

PYGYS

I

I" 10

j

~

I XE N 0
s
16
.
. . .

I. I I

I

"What is the
to a
'::;marriage ?" the man a sked i
~ friend Smiling he replied. "One
. work s days . and one works - . - -

ZONFER
I
f---,,...,,__,.,..,...
.
.,,7::-r-:,9~ Q
I

Comp let e lhe chuc kle quooed

by fdlm g in the missing words
L---L-L..--L-L.....L__J yo u d e... t!lop fr o m step No _ 3 belo w .

.

.

.

e PRI W

.

.

_

.

N UMB[~[D

t El l ERS IN SQUARES

@)

UNSC RAMBlE FOR
AN SWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Bodily - match - StOIC- Injury - MY JOB

"Th ere's no one here to pre pare the food I" the woman
admont shed lhe fast food clerk "Well," he replied d. "I
d1d MY JOB "
.
"

I FRIDAY

\

AUGUST 251

iCC)

Mystanes

ICC)

L11gut Bastblll S1. Lou11 Clrdln&amp;illl AUan.la Brt'lll (l ivt )

.

,\

�..

- ..... ,

•

.

'

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NFL

Pats' experiment pays
off in win over Carolina

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
I·PRO ••••• i
Notlonol~ue

Eliot

W L Pd.
.. ........ 77 50 .606

TeMI
Atlanta .... .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) -

In

an experimental role as a shortyardage quarterback , Michael
Qishop relieved Drew Bledsoe
and :ran for a touchdown Thursday night to lead the New England Patriots to a 29-21 exhibition victory over the Carolina
Panthers.
Cornerback Otis Smith intercepted a pass to set up another
f9Uchdown and added a sack just one day after he was signed
·by the Patriots (3-2). Patriots
receiver Dane Looker caught two
touchdown passes - one from
John Friesz and one from Tom
Brady.
Bledsoe was 7-for-8 passing for
78 yards.
, The Panthers finished the pre; season 0..4.
Colts 32, Vikings 30
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
, Indianapolis rookie Jamel White
. rushed for one touchdown and
, J:JOturned a kickoff 96 yards for
another, and Danny Kight kicked
a 43-yard field goal as the game
ended.
.. Minnesota (1-3) took the lead
with just over a minute to go on
a 4-yard pass from Bubby Brister
to Matthew Hatchette.
A 54-yard pass fiom Daunte
Culpepper to Randy Moss early
In the third quarter gave the
Vikings their first lead, 14-13.
Moss left the game with a slight
bruise to his hamstring later in
the period.
· Indianapolis finished the preseason 3-2.
Falcons 31, Jaguars 20
· JACKSONVILLE, Aa. (AP) Chris Chandler connected with

Reds
INmPapB1
him.
"If we make the plays, he's got
a chance to get out feeling pretty
good about himself instead of
being frustrated;' manager Terry
Francona said.
Daal gave up eight hits and five
runs - three earned - in six
innings. Since coming to the
Phillies as parr of the Curt
Schilling trade on July 26, he has
gone 1-5 in six starts with a 6.62
ERA.
Parris, a victim of poor run
support much of the season (2.4
per game), gave up nine hits and
' rwo runs in 6 2-3 innings, overcoming a shaky first. Doug
Glanville, Scott Rolen and Travis
t.ee hit consecutive doubles for a
2-0 lead.
Slow starts have been Parris'
downfall alf season.
"His problem was that he
would bury himself so deep in
the first few innings," manager
Jack McKeon said. "He would do
for several innings what he did in
the first inning today."
· More important to Parris was

Bengals
.from Page Bl
The Lions have bee n hi t even
harder by injuries. Quarterback
Charlie Batch , who cracked a
bone in his nght leg in June,
won't play and is still a question
for the first regular-season game
Sept. 3 at New Orleans. Backup
M1ke Tomczak broke his leg and
is on i'liured reserve.
That leaves Stoney Case, w ho
has completed 54 percen t in preseason with o ne touchdown.

LLWS
from Page Bl
said. "They're from a very
poor neighborh ood in Maraca ibo and they don 't give up very
easily."
They showed that against a
highly regarded Tokyo · tea m
r,hat went 3-0 in the prelimi nary round, includlll g a I 0- 0
win against M a racaibo, and
outscored its opponents by a
combined 28-8 .
Ruben Ma va rez 's three- run

Terance Mathis on a 37 - yard
tou chdown pass as Atlanta beat
Jacksonville to finish the preseason 4- 1.
Mark Brunell completed all five
of his passes for 111 yards for
Jacksonville (3-1 ). But he took a
beating behind a line that struggled, even when star tackle Tony
Boselli , recovering from a knee
injury, was in for his first I 0 maps
of the preseason.
·
Bills 16, Eagles 12
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Alex Van Pelt was 15-of-28 for
163 yards. and rookie Sammy
Morris ran for 101 . yards and a
touchdown in· Buffalo's victory
over Philadelphia.
Steve Christie's 30-yard field
goal with 8:47 remaining lifted
Buffalo to its third victory in four·
games. Christie was helped off
the field after getting hit on a 33yarder with 27 seconds left.
David Akers had field goals of
42, 33, 42 and 45 yards for
Philadelphi'l (1-3) .
Rams 24, Cowboys 17
IRVING, Te~as (AP) - Trent
Green threw touchdown passes of
15 and 48 yards and Keith Lyle
returned a fumble 42 yards for
another touchdown in St. Louis'
victory over Dallas.
St. Louis (2-2) kept star quarterback Kurt Warner and running
back Marshall Faulk on the sidelines in pads, while Dallas (0-5)
let running back Emmitt Smith
wear shorts as he capped a preseason in which he neve r played.
The Cowboys are 1-14 in their
last 15 preseason games. This was
Dallas' second winless preseason
in the last three years after two in
·
its first 38.

getting his first victory over
Philadelphia. He spent some time
in the Phillies' farm system in the
early 1990s and had been 0~!&gt; in
six career starts against them.
"The Phillies .curse is off," Parris said. "That's what I'm most
happy, about. Well, maybe it's not
off, but at leas t it's delayed . Ever
since they released me, they 've
put a hex on me. Now maybe it's
lifted."
Glanville also had a single in
five at-bats and extended his hitting streak to 11 games. Abreu
had three singles and a double .
Reds Notes: In his first five
career ga~1es batting ]ea dotr,
Abreu has gone 8-for- 19 with
sev~n walks. .. . The Phillies
haven't won three games in a row
since they contpleted a five- game
streak o n July 5. ... Philadelphia
finished its trip 3-4. The Phillies
haven 't had a winning trip since
the first week in July.... Bichette
hasn't homered since July 23, a
span of 105 at- bats. .. . Chris
Stynes went 0- for-3, ending his
hittin g streak at seven games ....
Juan Castro is 4- for-5 career off
Daal with a double and a triple ....
Parris has won hi s last three starts,
giving up only three runs in 20 23 in ni ng;.

R ookie offcllstvc gua rd Stockar
McDou gle is o ut with a sprained
knee, as is guard Kerlin Blaise .
Tony Semple 15 expected to start
Friday.
Ti ght e nd is another hard-hit
pbsi tion. Da vid Sloa n is still
recov~rin g fro m surge ry on hi s
left big toe and Pete C hryplewt cz
is o ut w ith a strained hip. Walter
Rasby is expected to start Friday.
Sloan ntigh t have to start th e
season after an inJury-shortened
trai ning camp.
'That really bothers me a lo t,''
coach Bobby R oss sat d. " I don 't
know w hat else l ca n do."

homer keyed J four-run seco nd
in ning, while Marcel Prado
sq uelc he d Tokyo's
offe nse,
allowing fi ve hits and striking
out nine as Mara ca ibo became
the firc;t Latin Ameri can team [0
reac h the final si nce Gu adalupe .
Mexi co. won it all I YY7.
Bell aire, mean w hil e. had littl e
trouble beat ing D aven port .
Catc h e r Te rren ce M cCon n
led the way with two homers,
m rl udm g .1 thrl'c.: -run ~ho t , and
drovl' In four run ~ ,,s 13clbirc
becan1l' the six th Texas tea m to
reac h the finals. and fi rst since
Spring in \995 .

N.Y. Yankees 8, Tegs 7
Dotroit to, seama 3
Baltimore B, 0\icago White So,.; 5
Oakland tt , Ctevoland 7
Boston 9, Kansas City 7, 10 innings
()rjy games SCheduled

New York .............
...... 75
Florida .... ...................... 62
Montreal ..... .......... .......... 53
Philadelphia ............... .... 53
Central
St. Louis .......................... 71
Cincinnati . . ............... 62

GB

52 .591
2
64 ..t92 14 112
11 .427 22 112
73 .421 23 lfl

Chicago .........................55
Milwaukee ................. 55
Pittsburgh .....
.. ..... 52
Houston ....................... ... 52

56
64
70
71
73
75

.560
.492 B 112
.440
15
.437 15 1/2
.416
18
.&lt;t09
19

53
56
61
64

.576
.558 2 Vl
.516 7 112
.496
10

Woot
San Francisco .................. 72
Arizona .
.. .... ......... 70
Los Angeles .....................65
Colorado ........................ 63

san Diego ........................61

66

.480

ThuradiY'I GlmM

12

Cincinnati 8, Philadelphia 3
Los~eles 7, MootreaJ 0
St. lollS 12, Atlanta 5
Only games sched&lt;Med

Los Angeles (DreifOft 10-7 and Perez 4-6) at

Chicago Cubs (U- 11-6 and Garibay 2·5). 2.

2:05 p.m.
Houston (Holt 5-12) at Montreal (Ura 3-3),
7:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Dessens 5-4) a1 FlOrida (Cornetius U), 7:05p.m.
Colorado (Ta.,Brez 8-2) at Pittsburgh (Ander·
son 4-6), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (Johnson 16·4) at N.Y. Mets (Rood
7·4) , 7:10p.m.
San Francisco {Ortiz g.10) at Pl"lil8detphia

t-1), 7:35p.m.

St. Louis (Reames 0-1) at Atlanta {Giavine

16-11). 7:&lt;0 p.m.

San Diego (Tollberg 2·2) a1 Milwaukee
(Wright 6-11), 8:05p.m.
S.turday'a Gamea_
Colorado at Pittsburgh, 1:15 p.m.
LDsAngeles at Chicago Cubs, 1:15 p.m.
san Francisco at Philadelphia, 4:05p.m.
Houston at Montreal, 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati a1 Florida, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.
St. LOuis at Allanta, 7:10p.m.
San Diego at MUwaukee, 8:05 p.m.
Sundlly'a Glima
Arizona at N.Y. Mets, 1:10p.m.
St. Louis at Atlama, 1:10 p.m.
Houston at Montreal, 1:35 p.m.
San Francisco at Philadelphia, 1::35 p.m.
Colorado at Pinsburgh , 1:35 p.m.
San Diego at Milwaukee, 2:05p.m.
LDs Angeles at cnicago Culls, 2:20 p.m.
Cincinnati at Florida, 4:05p.m.
Amerie~~n

League

Eoot
T•am

W

L Pet.

New York ......................... 70
Boston ............................ 67
Toronto ..
. ........... 66
Battimofe ........................ 58
Tampa Bay ............... ........55
Central

54 .564
57 .540

QB

3
61 .520 5 1/2
70 .444
15
70 .440 15 1/2

Chicago ...... .. ..... .... ...... 75 52 .590
Clevetand ................ ........ 66 57 .537

7

Oetrort ............................. 63 63 .500 1t 112
KansasCity ..................... 58 69 .457
17
Minnesota ................... 57
West
Seattle ..... ........ .. ............. 70
Oakland ..........................67
Anaheim ........................ 65
Texas
................... 57

Detroit {Blair 9-3) at Minnesota (RIIdke 9-

t 3), 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yank... (Cone 3·10) at Oakland (Appi·
er 11·9), 9 :05 p.m.
'
Chicago WMo So• (Sirotl&lt;a tt-tO) at 5oet·
tie (Selo t3-6), 10:05 p.m.
, Cleveland (Burba t t ·5) at Anaheim (Wiso 21), 10:05 p.m.

71

44519 1/2

57
59
62
69

.55t
.532 2 I 12
.512
s
.452 12 1/2

Thurad•v·• G•m••

152.

, SAVES-Atfonsoca, Florida, 38: Benitez,
N"" \lxtt, 34; Hollman. San Diego, 34; Nen,
5an Francisco, 30; AguiiEKa, Chicago, 27;
Veres, St. Louis, 22; Graves, Cincinnati, 21 .

Tampa Bay at Baltimofl, 1:35 p.m.
N.V. Yankees at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
Detroit at Mimesota, 7 : ~ p.m.
Tampa Bay at Batlimote, 7:05 p.m.
Toronlo at Te)(85, 8:05p.m.
Boston at Kansas City, 9:05p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Seattle. 9:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Anahein, 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at BahiiTtOfe, 1:35 p.m .
Boston at Kansas City, 2:05p.m.
' Detroit at Mimesota, 2:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at oakland, 4:05p.m.
Chicago White Sox at SeaRle, 4:35 p.m.
Cleveland at Anaheim , 8:05p.m.
Toronto at Te)t8S, 8:05 p.m.

Notional L.oogue L.Nd-.

BATTING-Holton, Colorado, .383; Ham·
rnoods, Colorado •. 357: LCastillo, Florida, .355:
Kent, san Francisco, .343; VGuerrero, Montre-

al .. 342; PiazZa, New York, .342; Vldro, Montre-

al, .341 .
RUNS-Bagwell, Houston, 117; Hatton, ColoradO, 114; Edmonds, St Louis, 110; Bonds,
San Francisco, 101; AJones, Atlanta, 99; Clril·
lo, Colorado, 94: Sholflold, Los Angeles, 93.

RBI- SSosa, Chicago, 116; Helton. Col-

orado, 110; Gilas, Pittsburgh, 105; K&amp;n'l, san
Francisco, 105; Bagwell, Houston, 105; Gri1'1'ey
Jr, Cincimati, 105; Cirillo, Colorado, 100; Plaz·
za. New Yorlc, 100.
HITS-Helton, ColoradO, 179; Vidro, Mon·
treal, 165; Kent, San Francisco, 160; AJones,
Atlanta, t 58; LGonzalez, Atlzone, t !14: SSosa,
Chicago, 152; VGuerrero, Montreal, 150.
DOUBLES-Helton, Colorado, 48; Cirillo,
Colorado. 42; Vldro, Montreal, 38; LGonzalez,
Arizona, 38; Green, Los Angeles, 38; Kent, San
Francisco, 36; Abfeu, Philadelphia, 35.

TRIPLES--NPilfez. Colorado, 10; Womaek,
Arizona, 10; VGuerrero, Montreal, 9; Belliard,
Milwaukee, 8; Abreu, Philadelphia. 8; Goodwin,
Los Angeles, 8; Giles, Pittstugh, 7; LWalker,
CoiOfadO, 7.

HOME RUN~SSosa, - Chicago, 43;
Sheffield, Los Angeles. 40: Bagwell, Houston,
39; Bonds, San Francisco, 38; Edmonds, St.
Louis, 36; Griffey Jr, Cincinnati, 35; Hidalgo,
Houslon, 32; Piazza , New York, 32.
STOLEN BASES-LCastillo, Florida, 48;
Goodwin, Los Angeles, 43; EYoung, Chicago,
41 : Womack. Arizona, 35; PWilson, Florid&amp;, 28;
Furcal, Atlanta, 27; QVeras, Atlanta, 25.
PITCHING (15 Decisfons)-ROJohnson,
Arizona, 16-4, .BOO, 2.30; Elanon, Houston, 144, .778, 4.68; Estes, San Francisco, 12·4, . 750,
4. 10; Aleiter, . New York, 14-5, .737, 3.08;
Glalline, Atlanta. 16-6, .727, 3.77; KBrown, Los
Angeles , 11-5, .687, 2.67; Stephenson, St.
Louis, 14-7, .667, 4.23; BJAnderson, Arizona.
10-5, .667, 46.45; GMaddux, Atlanta, 14--7,.687,
3.11.
STRIKEOUTS-ROJohnson, Arizona, 278;

TRANSACfiONS
BASEBALL

BeWIItlamtl, New Vorl&lt;, 93.
RB~EMartinez,

Saante, 123; Thom.t.s ,
120; CO,Igado, Toronto, 115 ;

Chk:ago,

MJSwooiley, Kanoas City, 113: BeWilliamo,
New York, 107; MOfdonez, Chk:ago, 106;
JaGiambl, Claktand, 104.
HITS-Erstad, Anaheim, t 89: MJSweeney,
Konoas City, 187: Damon. Kansas City, t66:
CDelgado, Toronto, 165; Thomas, Chicago,
156; MOrdonez, Ctlk:ago, 154; Jater, New
Yoril, 1olll; EMartinaz, SNttlo, t 4D.
DOUBLES...CDolgado, Toronto . ..a: GarctaparTa, Bos1on, 41 ; Olerud, Saame, 39 ; OCruz,
Detroit, 38; Lawton, Mlmesota, 38; Higginson.

JA\Ialllntln, Chicago, 34: Thomas.
Chicago, 34: lloShkllda, Baltimore, 34: Belle,

Ootrort, 38:

Baltimore, 34.
TRIPLE5-CGuzman, Minnesota, 19;
Al&lt;ennody, Anaheim, 9; Durham, Chk:ago, 8:
Altcea, Texas, 7; TNixon, Boston, 6; Damon,
Kansas City, I; JAVBiantin, Chicago, 6; BeWilliams, New Yoft(, e.
H~ RUNS-CO.Igado, Toronto, 38;

Thomao.

Chicago, 38: Glaus, Anaheim. 38:

TBatlata, Toromo, 38; Justice, New Yol1c, 34;

Rf'almelro, Toxu, 32: 5 ore tiod with 3t .
STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas City, 38:
DeShields, BaiUmore, 30; FWomar, Cleveland,

29; Herwrson. Seattle, 2e; Cairo, Tampa Bay,
Erriaa, Anaheim, 24; McLemore, Seattle,

28;

24.
PITCHING (1 5 Declslonsf-OWeiiS, Toran·
to, 18·5, .783, ...23; PMartinez, Boston, 14-4,

.778, t .77: Pettitte, New York, t6-6, .727, 4.t4:
- · · Chicago, 13-5, .722, 4.29: Burba,
Cleveland, 11·!5, , 687, 4.94; Hudson, Oakland,
13-6, .884, 5.23; Redman, Minnesota, 12-6,

.667, 4.46: Parque, Chicago, tO.S, .667,
Milton, Mlnneoota, 12-11; :667. 4.57.

4.27:

STAIKEOUTS-PMartinez, Boston, 226;
Musslna, 8attimofe, i60; Colon, CleYeland,
158; CFinley. Cleveland, 153: Nomo, pet:roit,
148; Burba, Cleveland, 144; Clemens, New
York, 143. "'
SAVE~TBJonos, DetroH, 36: Kooh, Toran·
to, 30; DL.owe, Boston, 30; Sasaki, Seattle, 29;
MRiv8111, New YOO, 27; Wetteland, Texas, 27;
lsringheUIOil, Oakland. 26.

Ch.mplonthlp Serln
(-~-3)

Thurod.ty, Aug. 20
Houston 59, New York 52, Houston leads
series 1-0
IIIINrdoy, Aug. 26
New York It Houston, 1:30 p.m.

Sundoy, Aug. 27

NotiONII !.Mg. .
LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Placed OF

F.P. Santangelo on the 15-0ay disabled list.
Purctlllsed tne contract of INF Jeff Branson
from .4Jbuquerque of the PCL. Designated RHP
Apostol Garcia for assignment.

BASKETBALL
Nlt~nel

Baaketbllll A81oclatlon

LOS ANGELES CUPPER8-Named Jol;ln
Hammond, Dennis Johnson and Rax Kalamian

assistant coaches.

FOOTBALL
National FOOibellleague
NFL- R9duced the suspension of New York
Jets OT Jumbo Elliott fr()tll two games to one
for his pan In a bar flgtlt in July 1999.
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Released RB
Mario Bates, WR Andy McCullough, TE Derek
Brown. DT Mike Moten and DT Angel Rub~.

DALLAS COWBOYS-Reached injuty set·

tlement will'l OB Paul Justin. Claimed TE Chris.
Fontenot off waivers from the Oakland Raiders. ,
NEW YORK GIANTS-Announced the resIgnation ol Jim Skipper. assistant coach, to
become coaCh of Memphis of the X.FL Promoted quality control coach Mike Gillhammer to
rumlng backs coach.
.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Agreed to terms
with S Ttm Hauck on a one-year contract.

HOCKEY
N•IIONII Hockey LNgue

COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Signed D
Kevin Dahl, 0 Mike Gaul and UN Mike Maneluk
to free-agent con1rae1s.
DALLAS STARS-Named Craig Ludwig
assistant coach for Utah of the IHL

MINNESOTA WILD-Named Dr. Sheldon

Burns medical director. Dr. Joel Boyd orlhop•
die surgeon, Don Fuller athletic therapist,
George Kinnear strength and conditioning
coacn, Tony DaCosta equipment manager and
Rick Szuber ,and Brent P'roulx assistam equip·
ment managers.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Announced
Tampa Bay and the Detroit Vipers of the IHL
have entered into a one-year affiliation agreement wttn Johnstown of the ECHL
CAZENOVIA- Named Todd Widrick men's
basketball coach , men's soccer coach and
spons Information director.
DOMINICAN, N.V.- Named Michael Swan·
wick men's soccer coach.
LA VERNE- Named Scon Winterburn baseball coach.
URSINUS-Named Terry McGowan softball
coach.
WEST A.LABAMA-Annour.ced the retirement of Dee Outlaw, athletic director, effective
July 1, 2001 .

New Vork at Houston, 1:30 p.m., if necessary

2000 ALTI

2000 MAXIMA SE

Automatic, air, tilt, cruise,
power locks, windows &amp;
mirrors, remote keyless
entry, AM/FM/CD, mats

LOADED!
stk# 2001590

Nissan Price
$19,738
Discounts &amp; Rebates 3,243

Clearance Price $16,495 AND

STARTING AT $25,995 AIID

Rates as low as 3.9%

.2000 SENTRA GXE'S

Nissan Pnce $28,432

2000 FRONTIER KING CAB 4X4 SE

Automatic, air, till, cruise,
remote keyless entry,
AM/FM/CD, power locks &amp;
windows, mats

V6, automatic, air, till, cruise,
power locks &amp; windows,
bedllner. bed extender, sport
package

Nissan Price
$15,048
Discounts &amp; Rebates 702

Clearance Price $14,346

AND

Rates as low as 3.9%

2000 CREW CAB 4X4'S

Nissan Price
$24,586
Discounts &amp; Rebates 3,091

Clearance Price $21 ,495 AND
Rates as low as 3.9o/o

V6, automatic, air, bedliner; mats

Nissan Price
$24,245
Discounts &amp; Rebales 1,712

Clearance Price $22,533 and

2000 XTERRA'S XE'S

Rates as low as 3.9o/o

7 in stock

Motor Trend
Award Winner

2001 PATHFINDER SE
Automatic, tilt. cruise ,
power locks , windows &amp;
mirrors

Nissan Price
$25,524
Discounts &amp; Rebates 1,043

'Nissan Price
$31,096
Discounts &amp; Rebates 2,101 AND

Clearance Price $24,481

Clearance Price $28,995

OR N I 5 SAN
594-8555
or 594-6631

• Tuoo l T1l1o b1rl

taylorteam.com

Williamstown 47, Wahama 6

Clay County (!N. Va.) 60, Southern 14

Logan 34, New Lexington 7

Highs: 80s Lows: 60s
Details 011 Pap AI

•

tmes

TEXAS RANGERS-Sent RHP Ryan G~nn

COLLEGE
WNBA Ployoll Gllonco

Details start on
PapBl

Point Pleasant 48, Ripley 7

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Purchased tho

to Oklahoma of the PCL on a rehabilitation
assignment.

New York, 84; Erstad, Anaheim, 93;

Hamlin 46, Hannan 8

contract ol RHP Ken Hill from Charlotte of the

. RUN8-0amon, Kansas CitY, 111 ; ARodriguoz, seama. t08: Durham , Cnicago. 104;

Cllelgado. Toronto, tOO: Thomas, Chicago, 97:

Eastern 36, South Gallia 0

Americ:.n LMigu•

BATIING-Gardaperra, Boston, .389;
CDelgado, Toronto, .366; Erstad, Anaheim,
.357; EMartinez, Saatlle. .348; MJSweoney,
Kansas City, .340; Segui, Cle\'~, .340;

St_,, Toronto, .338: Thomas, Chicago, .338.

Ross Southeastern 41, River Valley 6

I'

International League. Optioned AHP Kevin
Beirne to Ct\ar10tte.
CLEVELAND INOIANS-Rocallod INF John
McOooald from Buftalo or the International
League. Optioned INF-OF Chan Perry to Buffa.
10. Signed JNF Sean Berry to a minor league
contract and assigned him to Buffalo.
DETROIT TIGERS-Signed C Brad Wise to
a minor teague contract.

Jetw,

Satun:lliy'• Gamu

Su'!'h'Y'• Glmu

Tocloy'o Glmoo

(Boltentiold

TOCIOy'oaT""llll Bay (Lopez 10.9) at Baltimore (Rapp
B·tO). 7:35p.m.
Toroolo (Wells t8·5) at Texao (Davis 5-4),
8:05p.m.
Boston (Fossero 8· 7) at Kansas City (Sup·
pan !1-7). 8:05p.m.

Astacio, Colorado. t 114: AUitor, New \lxtt, t 70:
KBrown, LDo Angeln, te5: Oompst... Florida,
1Bt: Kie, St. L.oois, 157; Park. Los Ang- .

FRIDAY'S
FRAYS

Gallia Academy I 8, Meigs 6

250 North Columbus Road
Athens

•
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • August 27. 2000

Vol. J4, No. 27

Easbnan to head Rio Grande trustees
FROM STAFF REPORTS
RIO GRANDE - Robert H. Eastman , CEO and president of Ohio Valley
Supermarkets Inc., has been elected
chairman of the University of Rio
Grande Board of Trustees. His term of
office is two years . Eastman became a
member of the Rio Grande Board in

to
increase
Rio
Grande's enrollment
over th e nex t two

sto res in West Virginia , anJ. Ohio. Eastman's sons. ilrent an d Kevin, are now
active in the OVS co rporation with
offices located in Galli polis.
years. 11
Eastman and his
Eastman has received the West Virgini a
wife. Sheila, h ave Entrepreneur Award, the O hio Small
owned an d o perated Business Entrepreneur Award, the 1996
Ohio Vall ey Supermar- Galli a Cou nty Man oft heYearAward, th
t ~ or kets, Inc. since 1980. O utstand.ing · Food! a
OVS is the holding Award , and numerous Foodland special
company for a chain o( awards.
nine
supermarket
· Eastman is an Ohio Valley Bank dire c-

1984.
"Rio Grande is our hometown advantage in higher education," said Eastman.
''As chairman of the Doard, I would like

Eastman

tor and se rves on th e West Virginia Oil
M ark eters and Grocers Association
Boa rd .
H e holds m embership in th e Shade
Rive r M aso nic Lodge, the Gallipolis
Shrin e C lub, Gallipolis Rotary, Gallipolis
C hamber of Comm erce, Pt. Ple asant
Develop me nt Cornmin ;ee and First
Presbyterian C hurch . !He is the pas t
United Way honorary chairm an, th e Gallia Co mmunity Improvement Corporation chairman, a past president of the

Recycling

uor option,

station

levies ·
top local issues

returns
to Chester
BY TONY M. LIAc:H

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
CHESTER - Chester-area
"residents can properly dispose
'of their recyclable refuse now
that a recycle station has
returned to a site adjacent to
the Chester'Commons.
Kenny Wiggins, director of
the Mei~ Councy Recycling
and Litter Prevention Program, said the former recycling
station was moved to SumnerRoad after a number of residents had voiced complaints
about the original station's
location near the Chester
Commons.
: bn Sumner Road, the station was the target of several
vandalism ·incidents and a
number of Chester residents
objected to the move.
Wiggins said more than 190
signatures were obtained for
th e station's return and the
county
commissioners'
involvement in the situation
played a cruci:tl part . in the
placement of die new station.
"The commissioners' interest
and cooperation in reestablishing the station's site really got
things moving,'' Wiggins said.
"With their help, $5,000 in
funds were obtained from the
GJMV Solid Waste Manage- '
ment District to help pay the
construction costs of th e new
station."
Tlie new re cycling station
was constructed at Hogg and
Zuspan in Mason, W.Va., and
rrplaced the vandalized one
that was removed from the
Chester area.
Commissioners Jeff Thornton and Mick Davenport traveled to Chester o n Friday to
vi~w the installation of the
new station.
"I really appreciate the
p atience of C h ester's res1dents,'' Thornton said . "Many
ittdividuals were waiting for
the station's return .
"However unforese eable circ~mstances ~reared a delay th at
hi~de red th e stations arrival
back to th e commons area, .
We're just glad th at th e new
station is in place and ready to
serve the public."
Davenport agreed and said
without the co ntinuing effort s
of Ke nny Wiggins and the
Meigs Cou nty R ecycling and
Litter Preve ntion Program,
recyclable efforts throughout
the co unty would not be as
successful as they have been .
The C hester station, where
the volume of recycled materials is the h eaviest, is used by

THE VICTORY LAP - Twenty-four cancer survivors attending the Meigs County Relay for Life Friday night
walked the "path of hope" around 240 luminaries placed as a memorial or tribute to cancer victims. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Residents walk to find cancer cure
BY CHARLEIIIE HOEFLICH

SENTINEL·TIMES STAFF
POMEROY - "There is no finish rill we find a
cure ."
Those words printed in bright red on a huge banner gre eted th e hundreds of Meigs co unti ans who
·gathered on th e Meigs High School parking lor Friday night at th e Relay for Life, a team event to fight
cancer.
.
The benefit not only raised money for cancer
research , service and education, bur it gave th e community a way to recognize th ose who are cancer
survivors - and to remember those who lost the
battle.
The courageo us spirit of~~ winners was ev iden t

Good Morning!

Point Pleasant's John Bonecutter rushed for 27 3 yard
Friday against Ripley.

~llttlfleclt

Dl·Z

~Gillig

lnttrt
A4
Dl,l
AI

ll!ltod•ll
Monu
Obltu•rles
Spgrts
Stod!1
Jtmpg

Il-l
Rl
Cl-1

Cl 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pluse ... Bin. Pip AI
•
I

Foodland Grocery R etailers, and a past
vice president of Foodland Grocery
Retailers.
New university board officers joining
Eastman are : Chillicothe resident James
Caldwell, C PA, as first vice chainnan;
Jackson bu si nessman Evan E. Davis,
chairman of the board for Oak EliU
Financial, Inc., as second vice chairman;
and J. Gregory Fields, CEO of Dallas
Automotive Group in Jackson, as secretary / treasurer.

t.

as they too k up the survivors' banner to kick ofl" the
celebration. The 24 m en and women joined togeth er to walk a victory lap around the luminaries
which lin ed the path of hope.
Each of the 240 perso nalized luminaries was a
memo ri al or tribute to a cancer victim . They were
designe d by employee' of th e Farmers !lank under
th e direction of Jo Ann Crisp.
The event, sponso red by th e Meigs County unit
of th e Ameri can Cance r Society, and chai red by
Margie Sk idmore and Nancy Aldridge, was emoti onal , insp1ranm1al. en t~rtaining anJ t'nlightenln g. It
was aboll t a co mmunity coming together to share

Please see Relay. Pace A&amp;

BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY -Voters in rwo
Racine-area voting precincts
will decide liquor options when
they visit the polls Nov. 7, and
voters throughout the counry
wi ll determin e the fate of township, sc hool and village levies.
Thursday was the filing deadline lor levies and issues for the
- November ballot.
Voters in the Racine Precinct
will decide on two liquor
options .Victor Counts, operator
of the Old Lock 24 Campgrounds just outside of Racine,
has requested a carryout wine
and pac kaged mixed beverage
lice ns e, and a carryout beer
license.
Racine Village voters will
decide o n a carryout beer
option as proposed by Mike Hill
of the Racin e Sun- Fun service
sta[ion .
The M eigs County Board of
Mental R etardation and Developm e nt Disabilities seeks an
addition al tax of 1.6 mills for th e
purpose of maintenan ce, capital
constructi on and operation of
Ca rl eton School and M eigs
Industries in Syracuse.
The MR / DD board has proposed th e levy a number of
times, as both a permarlent and a
five -year issue, with no success.
Th e board plans a two-phase
co nstructi on project to expa nd
the fac ilmes an d make provi-

sions for a growing enrollment.
The Southern Local School
District seeks the renewal of ·a
four-mill, three-year current
expenses levy.
Pomeroy Village requests the
renewal of two mills for five
years for 'fire protection and one
mill for five years for current
expenses, and the Village of
Middleport will give a second
a ppeal -fll'n b e r erteWal of aont!mill , five- year current expenses
levy, which expired with the
collection of second-half real
estate taxes this year. The levy is
used to fund the operation of
street lights in the village, and
the village has vowed to turn
· the lights off at the beginning of
the year if the levy does not pass
this fall.
Racine V iUage asks for the
replacement of a three-mill,
five-year levy for current
expenses, Syracuse Village the
replacement of one mill for five
years for fire protection.
Voters in the Alexander Local
School District will decide tlte
fate of a 4.56-m.ill, 23 year bond
issue and a half-mill tax levy for
23 years.
Olive Township voters will
decide a one -mill levy for three
years for road maintenance. This
levy would fund dust control on
township roads, sai d · C lerk
Martha Durst.
Rutland Township seeks the

Please see Melcs. Pice A&amp;

Report: Mass. safest state, Miss. most dangerous
BOSTON (A P) - The co ngested roach of
th e Northeast are th e safest w hen it co mes
to car t ravel, while the wide - open hi ghways
of spraw lin g wester n S[ates are among the
most dangerou s, acco rd in g to a n &lt;lt io n.tl
report to be released next m onth .
Massac hu setts, deem ed the safest state t(n
dnvers, averaged O.t! deaths pe r I 00 millio n
miles travel ed la st year, co mpared to :l
nati onal average of 1.5 death s, th e N atio nal
Safety C o uncil found.
" Th e ol d joke is we can 't get going !:1St
enough to kill o urselves because of all t he
rong:estio n ," said Art Kinsman , spok esman
fur AAA Southern New England .
The de nse ly populated eastern states of
Conm·cti cut and New Jersey follpwe d Ma ssachu setts as the safest stares in terms of
deaths attributed to traffic accidents ' t he
report say s.
In co ntrast, Montan a, Wyoming and Ari zo na Wt're among th e six most da ngero u~
states, all recording more than 2 deaths per
toO milli on miles traveled last year. Mi ss issippi had the most deaths , with 2.7 per 100
million mil es. South Carolina followed at
•
2. 4.
.
.

The safest and most dangerous states
for traffic deaths in 1999 according to a
report by the National Safety Council.
Deaths are 100 million vehicle miles .
U.S. Average
Massechu setts

1.5 deaths .
0.8

Connec\ICLJI

New Jersey
-Rhode Island
Cali torn1a
Virginia
Oregon
Washmgton
New Yo rk
Delaware
Maryland
New Hampsh1re
Minnesota
Hawa1i

Ohio

Wisconsm
Maine
Vermont
District ol Columb1a
Illinois
Michigan
Pennsylvania
Indiana
Georgia
North Dakota
Nebraska

1.0
t0
t t

11
12
t 2
-1.2

South Dakota ·
Kentucky
Oklahoma
M ISSOUri

low a
North Carolina
Alaska
Texas
Utah

1.2

Kansas

t2
t2

Idaho

12
t2

' .2

1.3
13
13
1.4
14

14
14

'5
'5
15
16
16

Alabama

Nevada

t .6

1.7
1.7
t7
t7

t.7

1.7"

t.7

t .7
t .9
2.0
2.0

2.0

Tennessee
New Me,.;ico
Arkansas
Weet VIrginia
Florida
Arizona

2.0
2.0
2.1
2.1

louisiana

2.2

Monta na

Wyoming

21
2.2
2.2

2.3

South Carolina
2.4
MiSSISSippi
2.7
Colorado
(data not gi...en)

Source:
National Safety Council

WestV1rgmi,1 w,l, 1h e eigh[h most dangerous stat e t~r driwrs. with 2. 1 deaths pe r 100
millio n tnill'o;.
Al an H o,k in . 1Jl,Jll,1~t·r of rec;earch and sta-

tiStt cs for the non-profit safety group, sa id
motorists drive more slowly in states where
traffic is den se, so they are less likely to be
involved in wrecks .
When serio us accidems do occ ur, densely
populated states also tend to have more hospitals, so victim s are o fte n treated m o re
q mc kly, H oskin said .
T he m ost dangerous state s for traffic
deaths rend w have more wide-open spaces.
higher speed limits and less likelihood that a
hospita l is nearby, Hoskin said.
Bill y White, executi ve director o f th e
Gove rn or's Hi ghway Safe ty Program in
Mi ssissippi . said the state has tried seat belt
progra ms and anti-dr inking and driving
ca mp aigns , but they have so far failed to
make the state's roads safer.
" I don't really know why the rate is so
high,''White said . " It may be the old South e rn spirit that we are going to do what we
are going to do."
T he report found positive numbers overall , with motor-ve hicle deaths falling I percent from 1998 to 1999, the third consec utive decrease following four years of increases .

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