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•

Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 30, 2000

Tuesday

Society news and notes, AS
Titans top Redskins, 11

Hlp: 1:--.::~~:1

Details, A3

CHAMPION·SHIP IMAGES

Melp County's

October :s 1, 2000

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 . Number 111

so

cents

Jackson to remain·in jail until facility is chosen
Jackson was !'lot competent to stand trial in
the murder of his wife.
POMEROY - Michael Jackson, 31,
He was accused of administering a fatal .
who was accused in the April death of his
overdose to his wife.Victoria, 46, who was
wife, Victoria, will not spend time at Gallipolis Development Center, but will be confined to bed due to a physical disability at the time.
locked down in another facility.
Jackson allegedly confessed to the crime
In court on Oct. 27, County Court
Judge Patrick H . O 'Brien concurred with shortly after his arrest on Easter Sunday,
Prosecutor John Lentes and defense attor- but, because' of his &lt;lisability, .that confesneys Mike Westfall and Jay Wamsley, that sion would
not hold up in court,

BY IIRwl J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Big Saturday
M eigs County teams
enjoyed success Saturday
night.
In the upper photos, the
Eastern football celebrates
Its first TVC championship since 1995 and
gives thanks for being the
first football team from
Meigs to earn a berth in
the OHSAA state playoffs.
The Eagles will play
Newark Catholic in the
first round of the Division
VI, Region 23 playoffs this
Friday at East Shade River
Stadium. Game time is set
for 7 :30 p.rr{.
In the left photo, the
Eastern volleyball team
battled its way to the
Division IV district final
Saturday at Northwest

Eastem

Kayla·Gibbs was 7-7 servi ng with
five points and Kass Lodw ick was
2-3 spikin g With one kill .
Bl
Two of Eastern's losses this sea.
.
son came at the hands of Frank Against Mil ler Juli Bailey had fort Ade na. Adena, ranked third
5-5 serv•ng wi th three poi nts, m the state, playe d to tlm r potenand wen t 10- 10 spiki ng wit h tial and defeated Eastern quite
seven kill s; and abo was 1-1 sct- ha n&lt;lily, 15-2, 15- 5.
tingt and Kriste n C hevali er had a
Coa ch Paul Brann on sa id ,
13- 13 'erving ni ght with ten " Look for Adena to go to the
points with t\Vo aces wh tle going ' state. They are a powerful tea m. I
1-3 spikin g. AdditiO nally, Cheva- thought we played well but they
her was 18-26 settm g With e&gt;ght arc just a top cal iber tt!am ."
sets for kills. Ambe r l:laker h.td a
Bailey was 1-1 serving, and 9- 9
9- 13 settin g mghr wnh o ne set spilung with on e ktU; Chevalier
fo r a k11l; Damell c Spencer was 5- was 7-8 with fi ve po ints. and had
7 ~ervin g w tth rwo aces, and \VJS an ace: She was also 1-2 spikm g,
4-6 spikmg With one kd1 .111d four and 17-23 se tting with th ree . sets
pmnt&lt;; .llld C !ll da C hffiHd was 6- for kills and one block; Amber
6 se rv in g wJt h o ne t~ ce J nd fi ve Raker was 1- l se rvin g, -1- - ..J "'t' ttm g
pomts. Sh.1 u11.1 Elh ott w.11 1- 1 ·a nd on e &gt;ct for a kil l Danielle
servin g; T.tmm y Bis..,c ll \\',\:\ J--t Spence r WJ s .2- 2 sc rvm g wn h one
servin g with th ree pottlt\, and \ \",1 ';, pomt, 1-J spikin g with o ne ki ll;
6 - fl sp1k1n g \V tth rwo kill ~ .1 11...! S.~rah C:htfurd " ·" 1- 1 se rvmg 1two blocks. wht lc W hitll l'\' K .1r r 1 -.pt kmg, .llld lud o n~;.~ k11l . whi ll'
\\" :'IS 1 -~ . ; pt ktn g W ith Oil\.' hJc )L k,
go in_g 1- l ..,l·u mg; C: nu.b ChtTord

from Page

Meigs
from Page Bl
o uts t.1ndm g record ot I,., _).
indu di11 g th e I VC;\ O h&gt;n I l"·'-·
SiOll Ch.l 11 lpt o nshtp, [\1\ !..' l g~ lmL'"'

Pn t..: .l!ld Br.ttton .
tho\l.' .\fL' b1g hol e"&gt; to fill llL' \: t
YL' ;H , bm with th L
· n:\t of' tc.un
rL' turn 1ng lllt .l ct lo ok fn r dll'
M .lr .H H.i c r ~ to bt.· one o f lh c
t~l\'o nt co.; ro w tn d1 c- t;tk .1 g.:~ u l.
t\Yo \L' II Hlr-. 111

W.t-. h lng-tu n
t~J\'.tn ccd

to

C uun

was 0-1 servm g, and Ta mmy Bissell was 3-3 serving with one
poin t, 2-2 spiki ng wi th o ne kill
and o ne block;Whitney Karr was
3- 4 spikin g, an d Kass Lodw1ck
was 1- 1 se rvin g and 2-3 spiking.
Bra n no n adde&gt;i , "We played an
outs&lt;a nding game against M ill er.
We were up o nce 13-2 and up 90, but let it slip away. Kayla Gibbs
di d a good j ob passmg, and our
spikers sp1 ked wel l.
'
"Wi th th e injur ies wcive had
and to finish the way we did is a
c r~dtt to th ese ktds. We lose seven

se niors and they w1 ll be hard to
replace. I am looking fot wa rd to
next yea r. We have som e good
k1ds co min g alo ng."
The EJ,tc rn fros h endCd up 121 an d wo n the to urn amt.· n t. Th ~

Eas tern rL·~ cr ;...•t.'' fint shed .tt I &lt;J -0.
th ctr 'ieco nd undcfc.ttl·U "it:; J.-.on m
J Tl JW .

''Th e o utloo k 1 ~ good ." . . .1id
Br.llllllll l. "' I .l\11 lookin g: fnn n rd
to .1 good Yt.',lf n ext yc.1 r."

dcfc.ltln g th t.· Buildup 111 thrcL'
g.1 m es in th e: tltl L' lll ,l tt h .

C ourt I fou . , c l1.1d

.ILk ,llh .l ' d

to

th e: fin.lls by knor klll g u!f un dc fcd tl'J W .l \'l' rl y 111 th ~ !..'\\.'lll n g..,

first

IILltdl Ill th rL' l' g,l lll l'S.

High School in McDer- against Ath ens durin g the
Marauders ' di stri ct se mifimott.
The Eagles won the n;tl match at th e UniversiTVC Hocking Division ty of Rio Grande.
title and a sectional chamMeigs, winners of the
pionship this year.
TVC
Ohio
Division
In the lower photo, c hampionship and the
Meigs semor Shannon sectional crown, lost to
Price serves the ball Athen s in two games.

FHEE INSPEf:Tif)N

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC
'
ESDRI oaGBEit 31st Z:lo-4:00 PM
FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport

r-----------------, r-----------------,
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. 1
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I
2-wheel
4-wheel
I
I Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional parts I
I and labor may be required on some vehicles. I
L.
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I advertised price on the same tire. 1
I We realure all major brands: Goodyear, Firestone, I
I General, Michelir,, Brid gestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, I
L. BF GOOdrich. Mounting and balancing may be extra .

-------------- - - - ~
1$1995 Motorcraft
I

r-----------------,
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Fast

I
1·1
1

preventative
maintenance

1

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I
Mo&gt;orcroft a&gt; 1
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1
• '"" ~.,;,. waml~ I

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Lube
1
I
I • Service Include s up 10 5 quarts otl .
I Motorcraft oil and n ew Motorcraft oi l fitter .I
Perform Multi -POint Veh&gt;cle mspecti on •I
I Check and tilt necessary flu ids • All in 291
1minu1es or less • Di ese l vehicles may bet
Le~r!;,________ _ __ ___
.J

~~~--~~

-~O~
P~EN--~

O ' Brien ordered Jackson's commitment to GD C, but Lemes said M onday
that the facility no longe r o ffers' a locked
facility for patieilts.
" We still plan to place Qackson) in a
MR/ DD- ba.sed facility;' Lentes said , "but
if there is no secured MR/ DD facility in
the region, he will be placed in a mental'
health facility and professionals will be
brought in to treat him ."

BY BRIAN

J.

m r:ntal status.

. Lentes said that Jackson's placement
should not take more than a week. Unlil
that time, Jac kson will rem ain in the M eigs
Coun ty JaiL

,
'

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - With two
months remaining in the fiscal
year, the Meigs County commjssroners processed a number
of funds transfers, and discussed the financial benefits of
the county's new health insuranc e plan during their regular
meeting on Monday.
Th e
int er- departmental
tran sfers were approved for the
prosecutor's office, in the
amo unts . of $4,000 and
$1 ,00 4.96 ; County Court;
S145 and $90; county co mmissioners, $7, 100; Board of Elections, $1 ,000 ; and grants office,
$6,687 .
An additional appropriation
of $336 was also approved for
the prosecuting attorn ey's budget.
Janet H oward, president of
the board, said the county will
be nefi t financially from the
conversio n of the . county 's
he alth insuran ce plan from a
self-funded plan to a private
pl an under Anthem.
H oward said that the county's general fund could save
fro m $200,000 to $300,000
next year, because the commissioners have funded their selfinsurance plan at that level for
the past two to three ye ars .
Becaus e the commissioners
. were unwilling to increase the
county employees' premiums
for the plan, th e commissioners
were required to make up the
difference by supplementing
the fund used to pay claims .
with money from the general
fund .
Now that the new plan is in
pl ace, th e additional funding
will not be n ecessary.
U nder the old plan, premiums from employees and th e
county, as employer, were
place d in a fund th en used to
pay the medical claims of parti cipatin g employees. That fund
was usually insufficient to m eet
the claims, however, and th e
commissioners were required
to make up the difference.
Part of that differen ce was
paid through the assess ment of
a " user's fee" {or sp ecial revenu e agencies and other co un ty agencies not fu nded
thrqugh the co unty's general
fu nd .
· T h at user's fe e was calculated
b ased on th e fund s n eeded to
p ay claims and th e number o f
empl oyees in each d epartment,
H oward said.
T he D epartment of Job :md
Fam ily Services, the agency
empl oyi ng th e most peopl e,
al one paid more than $60, 000
in user's · fee~ t his year to help
p ay clai ms.
T he com missio ners tabled
action on an amr.:nd men t to
th e county's contract with th e
DJ FS, for au dit co nsulting services through R ob ert J Shipka.
T he proposed amendm ent

,

BY BRIAN J. REED

•

SENIORS RESPOND - When the appeal went out fpr volunteers to participate in the Make a Difference
Day project of painting the Senior Center, Don Young responded. He and his wife, Lee, frequent users of
Center facilities, were both using paint brushes and rollers. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Volunteers lmake a difference: with project
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY, - If enthusiasm
any measure of success, the
dozen or so volunteers who
turned out to paint the Senior
Citizens activity room had a very
successful Make a Difference Day
project Saturday.
Volunteering their time to
paint th e room in an eggsh ell
with a parchment faux finish
were several employees and
seniors in the Retired $enior Vol-

IS

Group~

All of the work, she said, will
unteer Program, along with other
community members. Saturbe done by volunteers with mateday's work is just the beginning of rials to be purchased with the the
an overall facelift for the center, $1,000 donated by the Wai-Mart
according to Patty Pickens , the Foundation.
center's activity director.
This the lOth year for M ake a
She said the work will continue
Difference D ay, founded by USA
for several weeks until the entire
Weekend Maga zine · and th e
center has been redecorated .
Plans call for b orders to be 4sed Points of Light Foundation ,
to make the Center look more whi cli uses locally design ed prohomelike, and for a mural to be jects to mobilize vo lunteers to
painted oo a conference room m ake a difference in their comhalL
numities.

I

say agencies must accept blame.

INEZ , KY. (AP) - · Environmental groups say state and federal regulatory agencies have to
acc ept som e of the blame for one
of the worst environmental disasters ever in the Southeast.
Lo ng before 250 millio n gal-

would wreak havoc on th e environment if it escaped , th e groups
contend .
Ye t neith er o rdere d Martin
County Coal Corp. to stop using
the 70-ac re reservoir to hold

Ion s of coal sludge . spilled from a
mountaintop pond near Inez, the
U. S. Mine Safety and H ea lth
Administration knew the potential existed , and the U.S. Environm ental Protection Agency knew
the material sto red in the pond

Please see Blame, Page Al
'

Meigs band

any wrongdo ing on the part of
his office or the la,w enforcement
POME ROY - A request fo r age nc&gt;es w hi ch were also
an investi gation through the in volved in the forfeiture.
Ohio Burea u of C rimin al Identi"We abso lutely deny that this
fi cati o n and Investiga tion has o.ffi ce has done anything wrong
been mailed by Prosecutor John o r i mprop~r;' Lentes said in the
.Lentes, asking that th e agency letter, addressed to Assistant
probe th e h andling of the Fred Attorney General Brad Barben.
Priddy drug forfeiture case, and a The attorn ey gen eral's office
subsequ ent civil ca.o;e resultin g oversees the BC L
fro m th e di sposition of ·property
Meanwhile, in a response to
seized in th e investi gation .
Craw's latest deadline, Lentes
Lentes. in a separate document urged Crow to join in the requ est
· filed late on Friday, asked Com- fo r a13C ! investigation, reinforcmon Pleas Judge Fred W. C row ing hi s earlie r assertion th at a speIll to join in
cial prosecuhis request.
tor and grand
Tile latest deadline ll'I1S
Sin ce
jury investi27 ,
Sept.
O ct . Z7, bur Lentcs, in the gation, call ed
Crow
Ius
Crow,
rncantilll e,filcd clll appec1l by
two
filed
would
be
witlr tir e Fourrlr District
docun 1ents ,
Improper.
setting two CCi urr ~{Appt•a/s, mrd c1skcd
" If.·
dea dlines for fo r a stay in t i lt' proacdirr.~s co mrary to
to
Lcntes
comm on perperrdirrg &lt;1 Court t!f
request the
ception , it is
Appeals mlirrg
appo in tm en t
th e
co urt 's '
o f a special
only inte nprosecutor to investigate th e way ti on to be assured (that the case
the case was handled and prope r- was handled initially and resolved
ty was accounted for.
finally in an appropriate manner),
The latest deadlin e was O ct. then the court should join in the
27 , but Lentes, in th e meantim e, prosecutin g attorn ey's recent
filed an appeal wi th the Fourth request for the attorney general
Distri ct Co urt of Appeals, and of O h10's BC I to review this
asked for a stay in the p-roceedin gs matter," LetHes sai d in his
pending a Court of App eals rul- response.
mg.
"Inves tigations proceed before
If Lenres does not respo nd to accusatio ns of cri minal behavior
the deadline, C: mw has said in hi!'. in ol1r justice system. Investigatwo noti ces, th en C row himself ti o ns are ca rried out by law
w ill ;1ppoint a special p rost"cu tor enfo rce ment agenc ies such as the
and call a grand j ury to inves ti- l:lC I," he added .
gate, th e handling of the case.
" If the court truly believes that
An aflidavit signed by Lentes 'iom erhmg ill egal was done, th t&gt;n
and his ass i stant~. all egmg prej u- the cou rt sho uld have no probdice on C raw's part, was ove r- le m allowing the system to work
turn ed by the O hi o Sup reme , a~ it . does in every other ca&lt;;e.,"
Court last wee k. T he fil in g of that Lc·ntes said.
atTtdav it stayed the proceedin );\
Crow\ initi al notice of inteqt
. for three weeks.
to appoi nt a speci al prosecu tor
Lcntes , in ;1 letter requ esting a r.1ised 16 individu al questio ns as
IJ C:I inwstigation, dated last to how Lemes handled the dispoT hursday, and filed as an exh ibit sition of property, in cluding cars,
111 Common Pl eas Courr, J emL· d
Please see BCI, Page AJ
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Today's

Sentinel

WINS 'EXCEL·
LENT' RATING
-The Meigs
High School
Marching
Band won a
"11-Excellent "
rating for its
Doobie Brothers Show at
the Ohio
Music Educators Association State
Marc hing
Band Finals
Saturday
afternoon in
Columbus.
(Jeremy W.
Schneider
photo}

l

sec:a.ns -

l l Pages

Calendar

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

Modem Woodmen
make a difference
MAKING A DIFFERENCE - Mem oe rs
of the Mode rn
Woodme n Camp
6335 observed the
principl es of "Make
a Di fference Day"
on Monday. a s th ey
pla nted a n orname ntal pear t ree in
downtown Pomeroy.
The day, obse rved
offici ally on Saturday, encourages
community vo lunteerism. Dale Co lburn. Jim Colburn
and George Wright
are pictured as
they set the tree
into place. (Bria n J.
Reed photo}

AS

B2-4
BS
A4
A3
Bl,3, 6
. A3 ·

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3 : 2-4- 3; Pick 4: 4- 1- 1-ll
Buckeye 5: 2-4-1 R-22-35

W,YA .

I

DaUy 3: 0-4-ll Daily 4: 2- t -K-9

rt' gJn rul pLly by

t
•

O' Brien ordered the loc kdown as pah
of Jackson's treatment. An annual evaluation for competency v.:ill also be included
in that treatment, and O'Brien has asked
for more frequent reports on Jackson's

Lentes asks Crow
to join request l
for BCI probe ·

Local leaders
discuss
•
Insurance
•
sav1ngs

Please see Local, Pllge AJ ·

( luuo,; t'

according to the attorneys and Dr. Alan
O ' Leary, an Athens psychologist who testified in Jackson's hearing on Friday.
Two psychiatric evaluations were performed while Jackson was in jail this summer, and Jackson, who is mentally retarded, was found to suffer from a memory
deficiency, which attorneys felt would prevent him from assisting his attorn eys in
trial preparation.

J

�Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
DeWine wins endonements
COLUMBUS (AP) - The (Toledo) Blade and th~ Dayton
Datlv News on Monday endorsed Republican Sen M1ke
DeWme for ..,._eJewon
Both newspape" endorsed Democrat Al Gore for president
The Blade sa1d DeWme's record on tssues unportant co
Oluoans has earned the Ohto Repubhcan a second term m the
US. Senate
The newspaper expresoed dtsappomtment that DeW1ne's
DemocratiC opponent, Ted Celeste, has puc ' up htde fight
"What pohucal experts had rated a potennally compennve
rat:e, dt'sptte- a ca mpa1gn-finance system that favors mcumbetns,
turned out co be lackluster," the newspaper satd
The Blade praiSed DeWme for supporting chtldren's healrh
ISsues and rewrmng federal JOb laws, whtch was vml to reformtng "dfare and promottng employment Unfortuna&lt;ely, DeW1ne
rardy bu c ks the parcv's posttwns, the newspaper sa1d
The Da1ly News satd Cdeste has been unable co make a rase
tg nnst DeW we b~yond De-mocra uc ctrclcs becaust' no case- can
be made
Mtke DeWmL~ LS not one oftht!' most m1portant St..'nators ..md
he does not ha\ e the bold wt!!tngnc·ss to cross hiS partys leaders
thH
Sen John McC.u n !l.ls.' the Dati) Ne\\ s satd 'But he's a
dt'ltnt, uHnmtned guy Wlth a proven n:cord'

''l·

.

2 quit school funding panel
CO LUMBUS (AI') S.tymg lllljOrtt) Repubht.tlls do11 t
thmg unul 1fter rhe ekcnon n\o DL·mo~..r :as h,wc
!(.;~tgnl"J from .1 JOillt lt·g1sbuve tOI11lll JC Ce~.: crt'J(ed ro taLkie
()hiO.., -.duml-fundmg: probk·ms
State Sens Mtchael Shoemaker of Bourneville and Robett
HJgan ofYoungsro,\n s:ud the Republicans are wamng ro see 1f
Oluo Supreme Cout r Justtce Ahce Robte Rcsntck IS defeated 111
hor b1d for re-electto 1n next Tuesday
Resntl k, a Democrat, cast a key vote and wrote the court's rulmg .tfTinnm g the unconsmutlonahty of Oh10's school-fundmg
\\,1m ln do ,l1J\

')~rem

SboentJker termed the work of the Jomt Comnuttee on
Sc boo! Fundmg md Arcountabthty a "charade··
He md the pand has met only five tunes smce June
"I'm kd up wtth their secret meettngs and pompous rhetonc,"
Hagan sa1d 'Tm not gomg to SJt there and be a mmonty puppet
tor (Senate Prest dent) D1ck Fman"
Rep Randall Gardner, R-Bowhng Green, the committee codtatrman. demed Democrats are bemg excluded from closeddoor meetmgs
Other Democrats w1ll be appomted to fill the vacanctes

Boy dangles from tree in prank
NEWARK (AP) - A boy found danglmg from a tree m an
apparent Halloween prank that went awry was m cntl cal co ndition early Tuesday at Chtldren's Ho spttal m Columbus
Mtchael Markley, 14, and some fnends had prepared a stunt m
whtch one of the boys was to place a noose around h1s neck,
pohce satd
The noose was suspended from a gnarled old maple tree Mond.ty mght The boy was to stand on a plastic laundry basket covered wtth leaves and pretend he was hangmg hmp When mcko r-treaters came by, he \Vas to move and scare them
Instead, po!tce sa1d, soon after Markley chmbed on the basket,
he apparen tly shpped off or the basket collapsed because It would
not hold hiS \\etght The boy was left suspended by the rope, hts
feet sttll cove red by leaves
It tnok Markley's fra~nds St"\t"ral mmLltes to reahze he was m
ttouble They took hm1 down and c.tlled the emergency ~quad
Th~ .tu"Jdent ou.urrcd ncar an apartment on the cny's north
~ IJt.•

"

HAMIL rON (AP) - A 1mn c&lt;~n\ln~d of nmrdonng lm It week-old d .tu~ htc' J Iu s been sentenced to ~3 years to hfe 111
pl

l~Oll

R.Hnun GolllL'i" S1lv.t, 21 w,ts ~l"tltCtlt:t'd Mow.hy ll1 Buth.~r
C ount\ Commou Pleas Court
Judge MIL h,,cl J Sage sent&lt; need S.Jv,, to I 'i years w hfe for
murJLt .md t:1ght \'t'&lt;lrs fur felnmous 1s~ault 111 the dt.'.Hh of Mana
c;omez S!l-.. ,1 Th~ nundatory terms must be served cq nse-cuuvelv
fh e babv ,ufTered a fatal sku ll fr.cturc that unpatred h&lt;r abthty to breathe, 22 nb fractures, two broken legs, a broken collarbone, two dtslocared neck vertebrae and countless brutses ·
She dted June 12 when !tfe support wlls removed Her mother
had t.tken l]er to the hospttal three days ear!tcr because the mfant
was not breath111g
The 16-yeat-o!d mother later adnu tt ed sha kmg th e baby and
g rabb•ng her by the face to stop her from crytng, prosecutors
satd
L st \\eek. the teen-ager pleaded gut!ty to mvoluntarv
11\Jmbughter, telontous assault and cluld endangenng She w;s
sente n ced to the st.1te JUVentk detentiOn S\Stem unttl thl" age of
21

Youth hurt in fire released
AKRON (AP ) - A !-year-old boy tnjuted m a car fire that
kt lied two brothers has been released from the hospttal
TaJzon James of Akron was released from the burn umt at Ch,]clren's Hosp•tal Medt ca l Center of Akron on Monday as tnvesttg,tto rs co nttnucd to che ck for the cause of Sunday's fire
The boy's brothers, 2-ye&gt;r-old Robert and 4-year-old Shar~f
j.1m~s. dtcd of smo ke mhalatwn the mcdtc.:d ex:tm1ner ruled
The· three til dres,ed for a H all owee n party, \\ere •n the back
'ol.'H of the famdy's c 1r when thcu mother T:n:t J:anc'i stopped at
a home to ptck up a food platter for the party
Ftr(,; 111\t.''Stlg.ltors cxJmmt:d the c:u Monda.v and .trr.m gc d to reJntcrvt(,;'\ \\ltncsscs Tuesday ln v(,;sng:ltors s.uJ the cal \\J~ not
runlllng lt the Ollll' of the: fire

Ex-teacher faces sentence
AKRON (A. I') - A lornler h1gh sc hool teac het lm been '"1!~..~Jll"l'd tO ()Ito.; 'r('H Ill prhOI'l tor ht\Jilg ~t.:\: \'Jth Ill lK-,t H-Old
'ltlldLIJt

,\lw ph.·Hit.:d gudt\ to HtLnlpt~..·d ,.._;..:uti bmtr\
,
tt h1..1 Stlltl'lll ll lg bdo11..' ludg . . Jnllll Adttll~ ot
'11111\Jlllt ( \lllllt\ ( Plli! I IOI1 Jlkh ( Ollrt
I ht f(lJlllt l ln~l,-.h t1..'1Lhr..1 1t ... uhuthln 'iplm~ll~.. ld lhgh
. ._ I • lPI IJ'''hl~ll~d to th\. ~rudr..nt tnd h1' t ltlld\
I 11n \Jtth ... nJJ\ tor 111\ h~..ht\Hll \tlt ~._ 111 t undu..,nnd th~
f l,t ll tn"d
11~ l \.\llll1il\

Jq1rl1 t)f Ill\

A~ pllt t&gt;t

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!lilt:

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llLI pld unngl..'llll'IH II Lmd \'1~ forLL'd to todLlt
llu tc 11. lung u:rtl fH... ltc A ftc! rdL 1\t: tnHll pll'IOll ~hL llHt\t H:gJ~­
t~.:t ,1\ 1 'ii..'X u.ll oftcm.kr

Tuesda~October31,2000

COLUMBUS (AP) -At least 20 regtonal
and mnonal conservation groups werJO ready
to ask the federal government on Tuesday to
hst the Cerulean warbler songb1rd - whose
range mcludes Oh10 as a threatened
species
The· gcoups, mcludmg the Nanonal
Audubon Soctety and the Sterra Club, Cited a
70 percent dechne over 33 years m the population of the blue-backed, white-breasted
songbtrd that favors large tracts of unbroken
forest
"As an mdJCator of overaU forest health, the

Cerulean reaUy pomts to an alarn11ng problem
wtth the dechne of our mtact, mature forest
communities," md Andrew George, direcror
of the Southern Appalachtan 81odivemty
ProjeCt m Ashev1Ue, N C
The lJ S Geological Survey's North AmerIcan Breeding Btrd Survey says the songb1rd
faces an annual dechne of 5.1 percent m
Oh1o, 11 5 percent m Illinois and 27 percent
decline m West Virg1ma, among other states.
The btrd IS hsted as endangered 111
Delaware. threatened m WnconSln and
Rhode Island and a "spectes of concern" m

Repub!Jcan pre~1dentJal nommee

George W Bush
Gore
mtc:nd~
to
dlvert
resources to stares where he wants
to protec! a dwmdhng lead m the
polls, mcludmg llhnots and Mtnnl.'sota
Spokesmen for the donunant
celev1s1on stat1ons m Columbus,
Cleveland and Cmonnatl co nfirmed Monday that the Gore
campa1gn canceled ad buys 1t had
placed Fnday for thiS week.
In Columbus 1 televJSion station
WBNS satd the Gore campa1gn
had canceled 33 ads scheduled for
that stanon
The Democratic National
Commmee bought replacement
time 111 Columbus and Cleveland
on Gore's behalf, so sam~ proGore Ads w1U be aned m the
week before the Nov 7 election
Although Gore cut hiS TV

time w most Ohw markets, ht'
apparently hJs cho sen to contmuc
advertJsm g on Ohm tdt.'VISJon
st.tnons that covt~r closely contt.·sted Wc:sr V1rguua
"He's bought tune nght up to
Elertwn Day here." satd Vern
Schofield. general sales manager
at WTOV-TV (Channel 9) m
Steubenvillt", whiCh cove rs five
counties m WestVIrgiiua
Kara Gerhardt, press secretary
for the Gore campatgn m Ohto,
sa1d the campJJgn has no TV ads
currently runnmg m Ohto, but
Gore ads sponsored by the state
party and the DNC were amng
"There are sttll Gore ads that's the bottom !me," she satd
"It's a normal ebb and flow Ads
go up 'and down"
The campa•gn was concentratmg ItS resources m Oh10 m the
final week of the campa~gn on
get-out-the-vote efforts, she sa1d.
"By no means have we conceded Oh10, because we are on
our;. way to victory," Gerhardt
satd
Bob Hopkins , a Bush campaign spokesman m Austm, Texas,
satd It appears " the Gore campatgn IS gtvmg up on Ohto"

but the number of breedmg pms m those
states are tmy, satd Jeffrey Wells, dtrectur of
Bud Conservation for the National Audubon
Soctety
The Cerulean request ts stgmficallt because
1ts habitat range- much of the eastern Umred States -

IS so large and ItS dcchnc " so

dramatiC, he sa1d

IilOVe

" I love Cleveland and I have
I
no mtentton of movmg the
headquarters, but I can't speak
' for my successor and future
boards," Gorman s;ud on a recent
broadcast of PBS "N1ghcly Bustness Report" He has been wtth
TRW for 32 years m vanous

COLUMDUS, O hto {i\1') The Ohw Envtrmllmnt.tl ]&gt;mtet.
non Ag~ncy \1111 bog1n teqmrttll:
larg~ ltvcstofk opet.t!ll&gt;ns th,lt
pollme O htu warets to .tpply fm
federal clean w.\tc'l permits, the
.tgency s.11t1 Monday
Any of Oluo's 120 megafmm
whtch have been follnd to have
polluted Ohto srre.11ns 01 other
bod1es of water must apply fo1 the
pernut, wh1rh w1ll regllbtc poilunon from the farms
Ohto would have lost $3 5
nulhon annually m fedora! funds
for ItS surface water program
wahout makmg the change, EPA
spokeswonun Hctdt Gnesmer
sa1d Monday
The EPA always has beheved
that a state permit could be JUSt as
protetttve as a federal permtt,
"but we went ahead and made
thiS change because of our grant,"
she sa1d
The change apphes to farms
wtth more than 700 da1rv cows
1,000 beef cattle, 2,500 hogs,
50.000 turkeys or 100,000 chtckens
The US EPA determmed 1n
December 1999 that Ohw's
megafarms were vJOl.ltmg state
and federal laws The f~dnal government concluded that O lu o's
current permit prog:r:tm d1dn 't
stop pollutJOIJ from StlL h megafarms
The ch,mge tomt·~ a~ Ohto
lawnnken prt:p:ue to rene"
deb :nt: on 1 propoqJ to sh1ft
. .wthontv o\t:r m Lg lr.llms from
thL· EPA to the ()I no I )ep.n tllll'lit
(·&gt;f Agraul ture
1
SuppmtLl'
111Liudtl1g

ol thl

thl Olm&gt; f Htn

FcdLt HJon

~.1,

Lhl tlgc
BlliL .Ill

thL AgtJlultuJL
i)L'p;lrtniL'tlt 1~ lxtt~..r 'l lllted to
flllldk th1.. pt:l tlHt plOlU\ t01
t lllll~ ( )pp011liH 't ~ 1\ th(,; Al•JJ'
b
~ ultun.: lkp.l rtmuH "on t tLkqtutd} pohlt. l trgl' t 11111,
(;!ll..~llll..'l
'lid tht.: \)ld!L\
lhll1gL· '\ 1-. 1 ll..' l LtlO il to th~: pm'-lhil tt\ ot lo-.miJ; lu.klll moun
llld h.1d nothlllg to do '\ Hll thL

k gJ~I.lt iOI1

po~mons

.md beL..Hl\1.! duuman
and duef exeLutt\l' otliLn 111
1988
Gurm.w h.b s.:ud ht.· J~K'Sll 't
want h1s St.1tt.'llll'nt~ tu be comJden.~d a threJt. bm TRW hI\ fl''\
busmcs'i nes w Clen•l.md Tht•
company has 121l,llllll emplmees
m 40 countnes, bm on l) .1bout
400 at 1ts heJdquarters. TRW
SJid
TRW ~vams to r.1ke ad,.:,mt.Jge
of the 'llue of the prnperry. lirsr
through an upscale shoppmg
cente-r, and mavbe beer wnh
office but!dmgs TRW's camp.11~;n
says the suburb would benefit
through mcome and propt"rty
taxes
Om,/TMK satd Oct I ~ th.tt
It will donate S1 nulhon to Lvn' edu dhurst as an endowment for
cation and commtllllt) unpro\e ment,lf the Legacy Village development occurs
But Bob Goble, a member of
Lyndhurst Voter Coahr1on,
whtch opposes the TRW plan ,
satd the tssu es are land conscrv:ltton, rer.-ul sprawl and traffic congestion, espec1ally smce there are
already shoppmg centers and
malls nearby. Goble sJid the
pronused SI million endowment
amounts to a bribe

Honor Our
Heroes ·
On Friday, No11•mb•r 10, our nation llllll pau•• to pay tribute to the
thoUiande of 1rn1n cmd tllOIIWn lllho ha11• proudly lfll'llfld their cour~try during
tlmfl1 of crif•• Pnd peac••
Thi1 Veteran 'I Day, th• DaUy S•ntlnflllllUl publt.h a 11ery apectal tribute
honorllfll anm l!flteraru. You can Join In our 1alute by includlr~g the 11eterun
In your life, U11lng or deceaaed, tllho ha11e lfll'lled or u currently ael'lling in
any branch oflhe V.S. Armed Forcea.

" Your choice Of 1\vo Styles...
Ad Only $7.00

r-------------------,
Please Fill Out And Return With
Your Payment to:
V~TERAN

(shown actual size)

SALUTE

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

In Honor Of
M~or

Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family

Ad With Photo- $14.00

houn

EMS nns

POMEROY- PaulE Kle1n, 42, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Oct. 26,
_QOO In Oh10 State Umverstty Hospital, Columbus, foUowmg an
extended tllness.
Born Jan 7, 1958 m Pomeroy, ;on of the late Henry andVtrgle Russell Klem , ht• ""a US Army wterJn and a member of the Pomeroy
Youth League
He was a 1')76 graduate of Metgs H1gh School, and was employed
by several busmcsses 111 the commumry
Sun •vmg arc a dallghter, Jesstca (Todd) Ackerman of Nelsonvtl!e,
three grandchtldren, brothers and mters, Gene {Audra) Klem of Middleport. Lawren ce {Pat) Klem, Charles (Caro l) Klem, Gert (Marvm)
WISe, Edna OesS!e) Buchanan , Conme Klem, Davtd Klem, 'Kepny
Klem ,Tommy {Becky) Klem and Kane (Dav1d) Lewts, all ofPoml:roy.
Mary (Sherman) Gerlach nfWestVtrguua. Donna Klem (Russell C:undtfl) of M"on . W Va , Btl! Kle.n of Connecncut, and Darlene (Denms)
Bovd of Arhens. 27 ntc·ces .tnd 1 I t1C'phews. and 38 great-meccs aMI 35

POMEROY - A power outage left several thousand mdiVIduals wtthout electricity Monday
when a surge arrester failed at a
local AEP substatton.
Accordmg to AEP Lme Crew
SuperviSor Roger Hoffman and
AEP spokesman Ronn Robmson, more than 3, 700 AEP customers were affected by yesterday's power outage when a surge
arrester fatled at the Rudand sub-

POMEROY - Umts of the
Metgs
Emergency
Servtces
answered 10 calls for assistance on
Monday Umts responded as follows:

?

g re.lt- nt.•p h&lt;..•ws

Elmo F. Smith
POMEROY - Elmo F Smuh 7') of Pomeroy, dted Suncl.ty, October 29 2000 ,It 0 flkne" Muml!l.t! Hosptra!m Athens
Born M ,1y 3 1921 1n 0:1k H1ll \\lc-.tVtrgmla, he \\a~ the son ot the
l.tt~ EJ1lW Sml(h and Nelhcln lLh',l) Smah .md w,ts :1 Umted States
N.n"\ \etci.ln l!l \X/mld \Vtr II \\hue h~ \crVl'd 111 the PaufiL theater
He \U\ fuJnll'r!) cmplo\l'd '" .1 ho1st engmecr tOr 18 ye.1r~ 1r1 the
to 11 llllllt'" tnd he \\,1\ Jbo 1 retired employee of K;user Alunmmm Ill
Rn en~"' ooJ WL•sr Vug:uua HL' \\ :ts .1 member of Drew Webster Post
)\) AmaJ ( m r egwn md :Ittl'nded Carleton Church
Alung "uh Ius p.uents, he \\ ;~s ptcceded 111 death by three brothers
""' Hl' 1s \lln 1vcd by hts lovmg "tk of 60 )l'ars, Vtrgm1a Snuth of
Pomeroy. three sons .md two d;mghters-m-l:nv, Stephen and Patn cta
Snmh of Conneaut Edward and Janet Snuth of Nashport, and Alvm
Snmh of Pomeroy. a SISter, Dorothy Jones of St Albans, Wesr Vtrgm ta,
.md mne grandcht!dren and 17 great-grandchildren
Sentccs Will be 2 p m Wednesday, November I 2000 at fisher
Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy Offietanng wtll be the Rev Cly&amp; V H en derson Bunal Will foUow 111 Metgs Memory Cardens Fnends may call
on Tuesday, October 31, 2000 from 7-9 p m at the funeral nome

Local ·
from Pile AI
changes the ttl tal amount of the
contract
from
$34,000 to
S69 3H5 Accordmg to ComnusSJoner J effThornton, Slupka 's sc·rVl\CS .uc us..:d to ensure that the
T~mpor.lry A'slstance to Nc:cdy
FHHihC''-, Prt.:\'t.'lltton R.ett&gt;nnon
111d Conungt'llC\' pwgrams ,md
ot he1 p1ogr.1m~ undt'r tht• st.Ht•\
nt.'" "df.m: ptogtllll ,tTL' h :mdlcd
ptoperh
Thotntnn ..,ml thtt thl..' (oun-

's Jnts,tm glllld mm pl.tm :1
\\L·bp.tgL' fm ,llti~J il \ "!to WJ'Ih to
~L'l l rhea ttl'lll'i nn the 111 tel net
1 he "'tt.' '\til follo\\ the ~.1mc
thL'Illl' ,.., thL count\\ n1ft
brt&gt;L hulL but orhc1-. \\ ho d1d not
p.Hnupttc 111 the brochure lll'
"till Ill\ Jtcd to p trtH 1p.1te
llwrllt~Hl -.1JLl the haxhuiL' 111
.tddmnn w promuung the countv~ u:-.fr~mcn l!ld trtP:.,Ju-. , has 1ho
been a bo o~t rn wun~m
Those tntct L~te d 111 pntJc1p1tt}

BCI
from Page AI
farm equlpmelH.JCWdf), and otbt:r
pu;on.1l propert\, :md real estat(,;
whJCh tht· cou nty has retuned
The person.tl property was ult!m;~tdy turneJ over to state and

Your Name - - - - - - - - - -

Our rnam concern tn all stones ts to
be accurate If you know ol an error 1n
a story Cdl the newsroom at (740)
992 2156
'

Correction Policy

In Honor Of

Corporal Bob
Johnson
1991-1992
Marines
Desert Storm
I

•

Love, Your Family

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone (740) 992-2155

12 55 p m, Race Street, Nelhe
Zerkle, HMC,
6 43 p m , Ftsher Street, Wllltam
Snvcrs. OMH

RUTLAND
12 30 p m., Holzer Med1cal
Center Clime. Tbercsa V.mcooney. HMC:.
6 37 p m , Veterans Memonal
Hosptta! , Augusta Hall, HMC.
9 08 p m , Me1gs Mme &gt;
Robert Mercer Jr, HMC

TUPPERS PLAINS
5 I CJ p m , K~.!no, motor vehtcle
:lcudent, Tom G1vens, treated

News Departments
The rnatn number
Department extenttons

IS

992·2156

are

General manager

Ext 1101

News

Ext 1102

or

Ext 1106

Other &amp;ervices
Advert1stng

Ext 1104

Ctrculauon

Ext 1103

Classtfted Ads

Ext 1100
I

To send e-ma1!
galh1bune'Geurekanet com

l'le.lS Court by Samuel V Wamsley, Mtddleport, and Tomn\1e
Lynn Wamsley, Rutland

To meet

Licenses issued

POMEROY The Metgs
County Pomona Grange w1ll
hold tts regular meetmg, Fnd •'
Hemlock Grange hall The annual officers conference will be held
at 6 30 p m preceded by the regular
meetmg
Officers arc
renunded that pKtures w1U be
taken for the hJStoty book.

POMEROY
Mamage
hcenses have been ISSued tn Metgs
County Common Pleas Court to
Steven Wayne Rettnure, 2) and
Anshta Dawn Russell, 27,
Pomeroy, and to Ttmothy Shane
Beck, 23, Pennsboro, WVa , and
1

1Wenty-six ballot measures
give Oregonians voter fatigue
ers' Pamphlet thts year has a
record 375 pages - more than
the whtte pages of the phone
book for Grants Pass, a southern
Oregon town of 21,000.
"I've been heanng people
wh1mng about 1t, 'Oh God, I've
got to study thn for a month,"'
sa1d Tomnu Drake, dtrector of art
gallenes for Rogue Commumty
College, who keeps the pamphlet on her mght stand for ref-

GRANTS PASS, Ore (AP) Should a IS-year-old be trted as
mg m the webstte proJect should an adult' Should nude dancmg
call th~ comnuss10ners office, be zoned' Should wt!d ammals
Thornton sa1d It should be "up be caught wtth body-gnppmg
and runmng" m · time for the traps?
Chmtmas shoppmg season
What a):JOut allowmg pubhc
The commt!Sioners also tabled teachers' pay to be based on thetr
a request from the DJFS for the Job performance' Or permmmg
county's share of pubhc assistance a new county to be created confundmg, 111 the amount of tammg less than 400 square
Si 1,674 50, for fint half of FIScal nules',
Year 2000
Wtth 26 d1fferent measu res on
The· buatd also
the November ballot, Oregon
• Appwved b1ds fon bJtunu- voters are strugglm g to make
llOll\ 11l.ltl'J J,lj!\ for ~ovembe1 mfurmt'd decmons as they wade
f1om Aspkdt M.ltt:IJ.1l\ of M.Jnetth1ough .111 c:xplanatory gutdt·
t.l .md Mtddlcpm t Ternun.tl. (;,,]- that nvals the local telephone•
!tpo!ts,
book 111 SIZe and heft
• Appa)\cd pJVIllCllnof bills m
' I won't read all that,' satd Btll
the ,111H)llllt of$1(, 1),})9~ 31,
Doody, mttng 111 Ius used books
• Tabled actiOn on ptJs t(n J ~tmc .mnd sc:~cks of ma tcn:ll h~
nc\\ HnbuLlnLe fot th~ EMS IS mort..' mten:stcd m teadmg
de~\Ct1t, whtLh \\Cit: op~:ned
'I'll look ove r the fitlanctal
t"~\ wctks ,tgo, pcndtng 1 tecom- 1111paet they nught haw, and pay
ll1l'IHLHwn
trom
the EMS attL'IltlOn to the tssues near and
tlll ~tet'S

Procnr 111

1ddmon to l-Im\ 1rd

Tho 1nton WI..'!C Comnus\JnneJ Milk Davcnpqct ,md

.1nd

C:lct k (,]"''" Kloes l'r~ secutot
John Lcntes 1lso attclldccf,
'
fcder:1l Juthnnttes, ;md wbs to be
sold to ~tllsfy the t,tx debt ,tllegedly mcurred b) Pnddy and Ius w1fe
ll.u bara a1 a result of the drug traffi ckmg for \\ h1 ch they were ulnmatdy COIIVlCted
Crow has declined comment on
any of the documents ftled.l!l the
matter, CJtlllg restnct10ns on JUdieta! co nduct ;;et forth by state' lm•

The .Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

L--------------~----~

POMEROY

fik·d w Me1gs County Common

AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV 3, 2000
Tnbutes must be prepaid
Photos may b'l9p1cked up after Nov 11th.

Phone

The fatlure affected the mam
transformer, whteh knocked out
power to vanous substattons m
Pomeroy and Maynard
The power outage, wh1ch
began around 11 56 a m , was
.tttended to by AEP crews diSpate hed to the scene Th~ power
wa~ out for more.!' than
dun•
hours :md w;~s restort.•d around
3 2~ p m

POMEROY - An ~etlan for

Love, (Name relat1onsh•p to veteran)

Address: - - - - - - - - - - -

~tatton

dJssolutton of marnag\! has bt.·c.!'n

(Shown actual size)

Photo of
Your Veteran

CENTRAL DISPATCH
9.28 a m., Ohto 7, Robert Jeffe", Holzer Medtcal Center, 1
12 20 p 111 , Gold Ridge Road,
Davtd RusseU, O'Bleness Memonal Hospttal;
5 03 p m , Mulberry Avenue ,
LJSa Huggs, HMC,
7 46 p m , Crosspomt, Helen
VYoung, treated

Dissolution filed

Dates of Act1ve Duty

Confltct/War

.J "

He \\ '" aho prl'Ledl·d Ill de 1tb b, two sisters, a nephe\\ ; md t\\{O
g n:.1t- m·p hc" s
Sel\1{l'" 'H'te hdd lt 11 .1 m [ndh , Tu t·~d :n .Ott ·q . 2000111 F1sher
Funn1l H omL'. PomL·i\1\ BUJ 1d \\,1~ Ill Bt•t•ch GIO\t.' Centt.'k'ryVtsltatmu '\ 1\ held Ill the fun~..·1 tl h\)ll1 t. on Mond l\
Ml·morul u'mtnbut1 011S to\\,Jrd rh e rtllll' J.IIL·x pen ~l'S !Ill\ be sent to
F1~hu FuJll' t.ll Hnme, =)0(1 E M.11n St. Pnmnm. ()hiO 4S7J,9

In 1-tonor of (name and rank)

Branch of Service

Dusty Dawn T1JlJS, 21, Rutland

Paul E. Klein

necticut wtth 12 4 percent, for example, -

LYNDHURST (AI')- Voters wtll dec1de Nov 7 wheth~r
TRW Inc can turn part of tts
park-hk~ headquartt·rs property
mto a retail development, and the
outcome may mfluence whether
the Fortune 500 company stays
m the Cleveland area
TRW - wtth busmesses m
Jutomouve parts, mformauon
technology and defense work wants to allow developer
Onx/TMK of Chtcago to bmld
Legacy VtUage on more than a
thtrd of Its 165 acres of wooded,
rollmg land But the S145 million
proJect's start depends on a
voter-approved zomng change to
retail use The land now IS zoned
for reSJdenoal or office use.
TRW Chatrman Joseph Gorman, who IS 63 but has not
announced retirement plans, has
left open the possibility that losmg the vote could one day mfluence future lea de" of TRW to

State
announces
requirement
for megafarms

Power out for 3

Ohto, Indiana, and Kansas, among others

Gore campaign cuts back TRW awaits suburb's
on campaign ads for Ohio vote on HQ retail plan
{AP) Vtce I'remlent AI Gore's
campaign Ius sharplv cut Hs
advcrnsmg m l)hto to devore
resoun.es to st.ltcs where rhe
Democranc pn:su:f~nnal nommee
LS working to proCCC[ h1s kad m
the polls
Gore h.1s reduced by t\\oothtrds Ius ad r.llnpatgn m Oh1o, all
but conredmg the Buckeye
State's 21 dector.tl votes to

LOCAL BRIEFS

A few states are sh&lt;&gt;wmg mcreases- Con-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Groups seek 'threatened' status for songbird

Newark ts ,1bout .10 nules e.tst of Columbus 111 contrll Oh10

Dad senteced In child slaylna

TUeeda~CNrtober31,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co
Published every afternoon
Monday
through Fnday 111 Court 51 Pomeroy
OhiO Second class pos1age pad at
Pomeroy
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Poslmasler Send address correct1 ons to
The Da1ly Sent nel
111 Court Sl
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One week
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er may rcm 11 1n advance dtrectto The Dally
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Mail subscription
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Wt1 8kf:;

vote 'No' all the way on somedun g I JUSt dun 't want to take
tune to constde r "
Wah all the arguments for
and .1g.unst c,tch ot the measures
the first vo lume of the state Vat-

VALLEY WEATHER

Warming trend expected

$27 30
$53 82
$105 Sti

Rale!l outside Meigs County

13 W~" e ks

S29 25

2b Wt .eh

$56 68

52 Wee ks

Si09 72

7 01 am

BY THE ASSOCI ATEO PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tomght . Clear Low! 30 to
35 Calm wmd
Wednesday Sunny Htghs 61
to 70
Wednesday mght Clear Lows
34 to 39
Extended forecast:
Thursday Partly
clolldy
H•ghs 111 the lower 70s
Fnday Partly cloudy Lo'" 111
the upper 40s and lughs 111 the
lower 70s
Saturd.ty l'at t!v cloudy Lows
111 the lowe1 .j.Os wd h1ghs 111 thL·
m1d r,o,

Partly cloudy sktes and slowly
moderatmg temperatures are
expected across che tn-county
area through Thursday, forecasters
S.lld
Temperatu(es wdl warm from
the ni1d-60s to the nud-70s,
thanks to a h1gh pressutc cell centL' Ied ovc1 Canada, the NatiOnal
Weather Sen. 1ce sa1d
Lows romghr will hover near
the frccz111g ntJrk, but by Fnday
nto1nmg wlll get nn lower than
nnd- -+Os
Wtllght wdl be

Slllli\L't

111d

~tlllll Sl'

.lt

on Wedne-;d 1y

S 30
1s l t

LOCAL · STOCKS
I

AEP - 41 1 •
Akzo- 45
AmTechi SBC- sa,
Ashland Inc - 31 1

AT&amp;T- 22\

Inside Mergs Coun)y

"Whc'l1 you get something an
mch thtck to read three weeks
before the ele cuon, n's pu:'Uy
tough to be Jll mfornu:d voter tf
tlut 's yotlr only SOL\rcr:"
,.
That sho uld be no surpnse to
Oregom.tns Then state holds all
the maJor 1ecotds when It come~
to ballot mmauves, s,ud Dane
Waters, ptestdent of the lmuattvc
,1nd Rl'fercndum lnstttute 111
Washmgton, DC:
Oregon was the first state to
vote on a statewtde tmttattvc.!' m
1904, Waters md, and tn I 927
voted o n the most mtttauves eve 1
on a state ballot, 27 Oregon
leads the natton wtth a total of
II 0 laws enacted by mlttattve

dea L to me," he sa 1d " Bu t I'd

t ht..:

Subscription rates

erenc~

Gannett- 57'•
General Electr1C - 54
Harle y Oavrcfson- 47 \,
Kmart- s•,.
Kroger 22
24' ~

Bank One - 35 ~
Bob Evans - •1 8',.
BorgWarner - 37 ,
Champ1on - 2''li
Charm1ng Shops- 5' ,
C1ty Hold1ng- 51' ;
Federal Mogul - 3).

Lands End Ltd - 24 11

F~rstar -

Rockwell - 37'',.

191 ~

Oak Htll Ftnanctal OVB -26

BBT-31\,
Peoples- 13

Premter -

5 ~ •a

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 59',.

Sears - ~9'.
Shoney s - ·~
Wal MM -43,
Wendys- 21.

Worthtngton - 9' ~
14 ,
Da1ly stocK reports are the
4 p m clostng quotes ol
the prev1ous days trans
actmns
provtded
by
Advest of Galltpolts

to cast aspcrs10ns yet "
Wesley Lambert, a spokesman
for the EPA m Atlanta, sa1d hiS
agency has no rnle m regulatmg
coal nune ponds, more than 200
waste generated from washing of wh1ch now extst m Appalachta
coal
But the EPA had constdered
"It seems hke they all were tncludtng the Marun County
aware of tt, and they were all pond on a hst of Superfund mes
draggmg thetr feet," satd Patty because of 1ts potentta! for harmWallace, a member of the envi- mg the environment
ronmental \vatchdog group KenMaleva Chamberlatn, a spokes-·
tuckians for the Commonwealth
woman for the state Dlviston of
"Everybody let down on the Water, sa•d the Impoundment
JOb"
met state and federal regulatiOns.
•Tom FttzGerald, dtrector of
"We have to do what the law
the Kentucky Resources Coun- says we can do, and not go
ul, satd the diSaster could have beyond that," she satd
been avo1ded tf the coal company
FitzGerald sa td coal compames,
used a safer method of dtSposmg have a!ternatt\'CS for dca!tng Wtth
of tts waste
\\ast~ produ cts other than dumpWallace and FttzGerald sa1d tng them 111 Impoundments He
the coa l L.:ompany bear~ most of sa 1d pre sses s1nular to those
the re sponstbthty for the sp11l but ctttes ar,: reqUired to usc to 'comthey satd sure and feder.tl r&lt;gu!J- paLt sewilg~.· - arc availabl1: for
tory .lgL'DClt'S could lu\t:- done
u.JJl "'ludgl'
more to prevent It
The prl·~se' -,q LIL' l"Zt.' th~..· warl"r
State Rep Greg Stumbo. D- uttt of the matt:IJ:tl so th:lt It ra n
Pre"onsburg. called Monday for .1
be dl"'poscd nf 111 so!td f01 m
legtsbn,·c 1nqUJry uno the cJ.us~:
McA tee• s.ud MSHA "tl!
of the Jt&gt;aster MSHA .t!so ts
c xplorc orhc1 methods- mdud1memgarmg And US Rep Hal
mg: pre..,~n - fu1 di ,p&lt;)smg of
Rogers , R.-Somcrset, IS seekmg
tOll WJ~tl'\
feder;1l fundmg fi}r an mdl'pcn We th1nk 11 lu~ suffinent
dl'nt mve"tlg:Jtlon by the Nauonmerit du{ \'C \\til look at Jt," ht'
.1 l Acadt:my of Suence
Said
"The cam~ of thJ'i coll,1psc 1s. a
G ary Dr.1ke , prestdent of
number of b1cJkdo" m 111 the
Phoemx Proccs~ Eqmpment 111
wav the regul.mons an~· HnpleLoLnsvt!lc
sa1d the cost of purmented,'' FttzGc.rald satd "There
chasmg ;~nd operaung [he presses
arc so m.my dlfft.•rcnt wnnkles to
tim fat!ure that need to be looked IS about 25 ce nt~ a ton
Phoemx gen~ntes Jbout $15
.It
The head of MSHA, Davitt null10n a year 111 sales of presses to
McAteer, s.11d the method now coal compa111es around the world
"I ve been k111d of surpnsed,
used for approvmg and momtorthat
durmg thts whole sltuaoon,
mg: su c h Impoundments w1l1 be
no one has s:ud there has been
eva l u;~red
' Th e system dtd not work,· he technology avatlable for over 25
sa1d "] don't thmk anybody years that would have prevented
It," Drake satd "If the technology
would contesf that"
M cAteer satd hiS agency IS rry- ts avat !able, why does MSHA
mg to deternune where the even allow coa l compa mes to put
m ponds'"
breakdown occurred
Drake satd several vanenes of
"The pubhc has every nght to
raiSe questions as to the adequacy the presses are on the market. He
of the efforts of federal and state satd a Stngle press, purchased at a
agenctes,'' he satd " I thmk the cost of about $150,000, w1ll treat
questions have to be answered 30 tons of coal waste an hour
Two of the presses, Drake sa1d,
through a complete, proper and
thorough mvemgatlon of what w1ll treat all wastes gene rated by
happened I thmk 1t's premature most coal-preparation plants

'

Blame
homPageA1

Consumer spending
continues to rise
Both the 1ncom.: lllClt'.lSC and
WASH INGTON (AP)
Amcncflns' mcomes, boosted by spendmg gam \\elL' "ell above
hugt• fcdnal farm pjyments
cxp~..·ct.lt!Oil). .wd ~omc an.th sts
mue.m.•d by t h~ l.ugest lmotmt 111 s 11d they would tr m~bte 11Jto Jll
13 month s 111 Septembe i "h1le upw.11d JeV!SJOn 111 the gwss
consumer spendmg wse at the doJI1L'StiL. proJuct the economy's
fastL'St p.Kl' SIIH e Februarv
tot:tl outpllt, fot tht• thud quarter
The Com mel&lt; e Depilnment
Comumer spt&gt;nd111g :lctnunts for
sat d M cmday rh ,1t pe1 sonal
t"o-thuds of tot,JI elOilOllllC
mcomes rose b) .1 ~t10ng 1 1 percent bst month \' h!lc spendmg, l l { \ ' lf\
On FtH.i n tht: govc1nmcnt
p•opdled bv ho.tvy demand f01
durable goods such as autos, \\as h 1J 1cporteJ tlut tlu: O\ erall
CCOil0111) as lllC:l SU!Cd b) tht:
up 0 8 pe1cenr
ELonom1sts s;nd the Ill'\'-' GDP, ..,Jowl'd to .1 growth rJte nf
report showed that whtlc the JUst 2 7 percent 111 the Ju!) -SepO\Crall economy slowed sharply t~mbu LJUll ter, le~~ than h.tlf the
111 the summe r, tht• all-unport.tnt
t0111d 56· percent Apnl-June
consu mer sect01 still had plent)" p:1L L'
of strength, led by btg gams 111
T im dt a111att c &lt;lowdown had
mco11ne that are hdpmg con- checru.i financial m.1rkcts who
sumers contmue to buy wlth
lwht•vc•d 11 ~hmved t hl'lt the Fedabandon despite rmng debt buren] R~.· ~L·n~ IS close to :~ch1e\ mg
dens Jnd a wcakemng stock marItt;; destrt'd soft hnd111g tr1 whtch
ket
"Consumers h.wc a ton of gnmth slo\\ S enough to keep
money to spend and that IS exact- mthuon 111 check but nm enough
ly wh at they dtd," sa1d Joel to bnng on a re~.:cssmn
On Monday, the Do\\ Jones
Naroff, heJd of a Holland Po
economH co nsultmg finn
tndu stnill an~rage po~tcd Hs scLThe 1 1 perce-nt 1 tse 111 ond stt .11ght 200-plu, ponlt gam
lll CO I1leS "'\~ tht: i.lq;cst :\IIlCe :\
Llm1ng ,H 10,815 7i, up 2-tS .1::1
I J pt'l C~ nt JUmp 111 Octohc1 uf for the day ,1!i uwc!\tors tlcd te ch1999
•
nolo!:,"' stocks fo r the Jcl.Ht\c s;~fc­
B oth month~. hm\e\ er \\eTC
t\ of the I )m, s blu e L h1p~
strongly mtlut.:&gt;n u:-J h' tl·der.1l
subs1d) p.l) mt:nt~ to f.l! 111t'rs "hn
.trl' stru gglin g tn Lnpe "nh \\ el k
farm p1 1 cc~
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
ROUTt 35 WEST
Wtthout 111 mcrt.'.l~e 111 tht:
446 •4524 OLO
"04 JACK S ON PIKE
kdCJ,ll lJl,lllLilh thL ~'LI~OI I~~
FRI 10/27/00 • THURS 11/2100
BOX OffiCI Will OPEN AT
tnC O illl.:.' ~.llll \\ otdd h n (,: bcL'll ,1
6:30
PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
lllOIC m"odcl.lt(.; ( l -f J1Cil t:nt Ill
2:30
PM FOR MATINIIS
SLptL'lllher

7

BOOK OF SHADOWS· BLAIR
WITCH 2 (R)
7 00 SUN·THUR
BEDAZZLED (PG13)
7 10 SUN·THURS
LADIES MAN (R)
7 20 SUN·THURS
MEET THE PARENTS (PG13)
7 15 SUN· THURS
THE LITILE VAMPIRE (PG)
I 7 00 SUN· THURS
REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)
7 00 SUN· THURS
LUCKY NUMBERS (R)
7 00 SUN· THURS

Il

�Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
DeWine wins endonements
COLUMBUS (AP) - The (Toledo) Blade and th~ Dayton
Datlv News on Monday endorsed Republican Sen M1ke
DeWme for ..,._eJewon
Both newspape" endorsed Democrat Al Gore for president
The Blade sa1d DeWme's record on tssues unportant co
Oluoans has earned the Ohto Repubhcan a second term m the
US. Senate
The newspaper expresoed dtsappomtment that DeW1ne's
DemocratiC opponent, Ted Celeste, has puc ' up htde fight
"What pohucal experts had rated a potennally compennve
rat:e, dt'sptte- a ca mpa1gn-finance system that favors mcumbetns,
turned out co be lackluster," the newspaper satd
The Blade praiSed DeWme for supporting chtldren's healrh
ISsues and rewrmng federal JOb laws, whtch was vml to reformtng "dfare and promottng employment Unfortuna&lt;ely, DeW1ne
rardy bu c ks the parcv's posttwns, the newspaper sa1d
The Da1ly News satd Cdeste has been unable co make a rase
tg nnst DeW we b~yond De-mocra uc ctrclcs becaust' no case- can
be made
Mtke DeWmL~ LS not one oftht!' most m1portant St..'nators ..md
he does not ha\ e the bold wt!!tngnc·ss to cross hiS partys leaders
thH
Sen John McC.u n !l.ls.' the Dati) Ne\\ s satd 'But he's a
dt'ltnt, uHnmtned guy Wlth a proven n:cord'

''l·

.

2 quit school funding panel
CO LUMBUS (AI') S.tymg lllljOrtt) Repubht.tlls do11 t
thmg unul 1fter rhe ekcnon n\o DL·mo~..r :as h,wc
!(.;~tgnl"J from .1 JOillt lt·g1sbuve tOI11lll JC Ce~.: crt'J(ed ro taLkie
()hiO.., -.duml-fundmg: probk·ms
State Sens Mtchael Shoemaker of Bourneville and Robett
HJgan ofYoungsro,\n s:ud the Republicans are wamng ro see 1f
Oluo Supreme Cout r Justtce Ahce Robte Rcsntck IS defeated 111
hor b1d for re-electto 1n next Tuesday
Resntl k, a Democrat, cast a key vote and wrote the court's rulmg .tfTinnm g the unconsmutlonahty of Oh10's school-fundmg
\\,1m ln do ,l1J\

')~rem

SboentJker termed the work of the Jomt Comnuttee on
Sc boo! Fundmg md Arcountabthty a "charade··
He md the pand has met only five tunes smce June
"I'm kd up wtth their secret meettngs and pompous rhetonc,"
Hagan sa1d 'Tm not gomg to SJt there and be a mmonty puppet
tor (Senate Prest dent) D1ck Fman"
Rep Randall Gardner, R-Bowhng Green, the committee codtatrman. demed Democrats are bemg excluded from closeddoor meetmgs
Other Democrats w1ll be appomted to fill the vacanctes

Boy dangles from tree in prank
NEWARK (AP) - A boy found danglmg from a tree m an
apparent Halloween prank that went awry was m cntl cal co ndition early Tuesday at Chtldren's Ho spttal m Columbus
Mtchael Markley, 14, and some fnends had prepared a stunt m
whtch one of the boys was to place a noose around h1s neck,
pohce satd
The noose was suspended from a gnarled old maple tree Mond.ty mght The boy was to stand on a plastic laundry basket covered wtth leaves and pretend he was hangmg hmp When mcko r-treaters came by, he \Vas to move and scare them
Instead, po!tce sa1d, soon after Markley chmbed on the basket,
he apparen tly shpped off or the basket collapsed because It would
not hold hiS \\etght The boy was left suspended by the rope, hts
feet sttll cove red by leaves
It tnok Markley's fra~nds St"\t"ral mmLltes to reahze he was m
ttouble They took hm1 down and c.tlled the emergency ~quad
Th~ .tu"Jdent ou.urrcd ncar an apartment on the cny's north
~ IJt.•

"

HAMIL rON (AP) - A 1mn c&lt;~n\ln~d of nmrdonng lm It week-old d .tu~ htc' J Iu s been sentenced to ~3 years to hfe 111
pl

l~Oll

R.Hnun GolllL'i" S1lv.t, 21 w,ts ~l"tltCtlt:t'd Mow.hy ll1 Buth.~r
C ount\ Commou Pleas Court
Judge MIL h,,cl J Sage sent&lt; need S.Jv,, to I 'i years w hfe for
murJLt .md t:1ght \'t'&lt;lrs fur felnmous 1s~ault 111 the dt.'.Hh of Mana
c;omez S!l-.. ,1 Th~ nundatory terms must be served cq nse-cuuvelv
fh e babv ,ufTered a fatal sku ll fr.cturc that unpatred h&lt;r abthty to breathe, 22 nb fractures, two broken legs, a broken collarbone, two dtslocared neck vertebrae and countless brutses ·
She dted June 12 when !tfe support wlls removed Her mother
had t.tken l]er to the hospttal three days ear!tcr because the mfant
was not breath111g
The 16-yeat-o!d mother later adnu tt ed sha kmg th e baby and
g rabb•ng her by the face to stop her from crytng, prosecutors
satd
L st \\eek. the teen-ager pleaded gut!ty to mvoluntarv
11\Jmbughter, telontous assault and cluld endangenng She w;s
sente n ced to the st.1te JUVentk detentiOn S\Stem unttl thl" age of
21

Youth hurt in fire released
AKRON (AP ) - A !-year-old boy tnjuted m a car fire that
kt lied two brothers has been released from the hospttal
TaJzon James of Akron was released from the burn umt at Ch,]clren's Hosp•tal Medt ca l Center of Akron on Monday as tnvesttg,tto rs co nttnucd to che ck for the cause of Sunday's fire
The boy's brothers, 2-ye&gt;r-old Robert and 4-year-old Shar~f
j.1m~s. dtcd of smo ke mhalatwn the mcdtc.:d ex:tm1ner ruled
The· three til dres,ed for a H all owee n party, \\ere •n the back
'ol.'H of the famdy's c 1r when thcu mother T:n:t J:anc'i stopped at
a home to ptck up a food platter for the party
Ftr(,; 111\t.''Stlg.ltors cxJmmt:d the c:u Monda.v and .trr.m gc d to reJntcrvt(,;'\ \\ltncsscs Tuesday ln v(,;sng:ltors s.uJ the cal \\J~ not
runlllng lt the Ollll' of the: fire

Ex-teacher faces sentence
AKRON (A. I') - A lornler h1gh sc hool teac het lm been '"1!~..~Jll"l'd tO ()Ito.; 'r('H Ill prhOI'l tor ht\Jilg ~t.:\: \'Jth Ill lK-,t H-Old
'ltlldLIJt

,\lw ph.·Hit.:d gudt\ to HtLnlpt~..·d ,.._;..:uti bmtr\
,
tt h1..1 Stlltl'lll ll lg bdo11..' ludg . . Jnllll Adttll~ ot
'11111\Jlllt ( \lllllt\ ( Plli! I IOI1 Jlkh ( Ollrt
I ht f(lJlllt l ln~l,-.h t1..'1Lhr..1 1t ... uhuthln 'iplm~ll~.. ld lhgh
. ._ I • lPI IJ'''hl~ll~d to th\. ~rudr..nt tnd h1' t ltlld\
I 11n \Jtth ... nJJ\ tor 111\ h~..ht\Hll \tlt ~._ 111 t undu..,nnd th~
f l,t ll tn"d
11~ l \.\llll1il\

Jq1rl1 t)f Ill\

A~ pllt t&gt;t

-.h

).J.

!lilt:

\!JL'

\.lid

llLI pld unngl..'llll'IH II Lmd \'1~ forLL'd to todLlt
llu tc 11. lung u:rtl fH... ltc A ftc! rdL 1\t: tnHll pll'IOll ~hL llHt\t H:gJ~­
t~.:t ,1\ 1 'ii..'X u.ll oftcm.kr

Tuesda~October31,2000

COLUMBUS (AP) -At least 20 regtonal
and mnonal conservation groups werJO ready
to ask the federal government on Tuesday to
hst the Cerulean warbler songb1rd - whose
range mcludes Oh10 as a threatened
species
The· gcoups, mcludmg the Nanonal
Audubon Soctety and the Sterra Club, Cited a
70 percent dechne over 33 years m the population of the blue-backed, white-breasted
songbtrd that favors large tracts of unbroken
forest
"As an mdJCator of overaU forest health, the

Cerulean reaUy pomts to an alarn11ng problem
wtth the dechne of our mtact, mature forest
communities," md Andrew George, direcror
of the Southern Appalachtan 81odivemty
ProjeCt m Ashev1Ue, N C
The lJ S Geological Survey's North AmerIcan Breeding Btrd Survey says the songb1rd
faces an annual dechne of 5.1 percent m
Oh1o, 11 5 percent m Illinois and 27 percent
decline m West Virg1ma, among other states.
The btrd IS hsted as endangered 111
Delaware. threatened m WnconSln and
Rhode Island and a "spectes of concern" m

Repub!Jcan pre~1dentJal nommee

George W Bush
Gore
mtc:nd~
to
dlvert
resources to stares where he wants
to protec! a dwmdhng lead m the
polls, mcludmg llhnots and Mtnnl.'sota
Spokesmen for the donunant
celev1s1on stat1ons m Columbus,
Cleveland and Cmonnatl co nfirmed Monday that the Gore
campa1gn canceled ad buys 1t had
placed Fnday for thiS week.
In Columbus 1 televJSion station
WBNS satd the Gore campa1gn
had canceled 33 ads scheduled for
that stanon
The Democratic National
Commmee bought replacement
time 111 Columbus and Cleveland
on Gore's behalf, so sam~ proGore Ads w1U be aned m the
week before the Nov 7 election
Although Gore cut hiS TV

time w most Ohw markets, ht'
apparently hJs cho sen to contmuc
advertJsm g on Ohm tdt.'VISJon
st.tnons that covt~r closely contt.·sted Wc:sr V1rguua
"He's bought tune nght up to
Elertwn Day here." satd Vern
Schofield. general sales manager
at WTOV-TV (Channel 9) m
Steubenvillt", whiCh cove rs five
counties m WestVIrgiiua
Kara Gerhardt, press secretary
for the Gore campatgn m Ohto,
sa1d the campJJgn has no TV ads
currently runnmg m Ohto, but
Gore ads sponsored by the state
party and the DNC were amng
"There are sttll Gore ads that's the bottom !me," she satd
"It's a normal ebb and flow Ads
go up 'and down"
The campa•gn was concentratmg ItS resources m Oh10 m the
final week of the campa~gn on
get-out-the-vote efforts, she sa1d.
"By no means have we conceded Oh10, because we are on
our;. way to victory," Gerhardt
satd
Bob Hopkins , a Bush campaign spokesman m Austm, Texas,
satd It appears " the Gore campatgn IS gtvmg up on Ohto"

but the number of breedmg pms m those
states are tmy, satd Jeffrey Wells, dtrectur of
Bud Conservation for the National Audubon
Soctety
The Cerulean request ts stgmficallt because
1ts habitat range- much of the eastern Umred States -

IS so large and ItS dcchnc " so

dramatiC, he sa1d

IilOVe

" I love Cleveland and I have
I
no mtentton of movmg the
headquarters, but I can't speak
' for my successor and future
boards," Gorman s;ud on a recent
broadcast of PBS "N1ghcly Bustness Report" He has been wtth
TRW for 32 years m vanous

COLUMDUS, O hto {i\1') The Ohw Envtrmllmnt.tl ]&gt;mtet.
non Ag~ncy \1111 bog1n teqmrttll:
larg~ ltvcstofk opet.t!ll&gt;ns th,lt
pollme O htu warets to .tpply fm
federal clean w.\tc'l permits, the
.tgency s.11t1 Monday
Any of Oluo's 120 megafmm
whtch have been follnd to have
polluted Ohto srre.11ns 01 other
bod1es of water must apply fo1 the
pernut, wh1rh w1ll regllbtc poilunon from the farms
Ohto would have lost $3 5
nulhon annually m fedora! funds
for ItS surface water program
wahout makmg the change, EPA
spokeswonun Hctdt Gnesmer
sa1d Monday
The EPA always has beheved
that a state permit could be JUSt as
protetttve as a federal permtt,
"but we went ahead and made
thiS change because of our grant,"
she sa1d
The change apphes to farms
wtth more than 700 da1rv cows
1,000 beef cattle, 2,500 hogs,
50.000 turkeys or 100,000 chtckens
The US EPA determmed 1n
December 1999 that Ohw's
megafarms were vJOl.ltmg state
and federal laws The f~dnal government concluded that O lu o's
current permit prog:r:tm d1dn 't
stop pollutJOIJ from StlL h megafarms
The ch,mge tomt·~ a~ Ohto
lawnnken prt:p:ue to rene"
deb :nt: on 1 propoqJ to sh1ft
. .wthontv o\t:r m Lg lr.llms from
thL· EPA to the ()I no I )ep.n tllll'lit
(·&gt;f Agraul ture
1
SuppmtLl'
111Liudtl1g

ol thl

thl Olm&gt; f Htn

FcdLt HJon

~.1,

Lhl tlgc
BlliL .Ill

thL AgtJlultuJL
i)L'p;lrtniL'tlt 1~ lxtt~..r 'l lllted to
flllldk th1.. pt:l tlHt plOlU\ t01
t lllll~ ( )pp011liH 't ~ 1\ th(,; Al•JJ'
b
~ ultun.: lkp.l rtmuH "on t tLkqtutd} pohlt. l trgl' t 11111,
(;!ll..~llll..'l
'lid tht.: \)ld!L\
lhll1gL· '\ 1-. 1 ll..' l LtlO il to th~: pm'-lhil tt\ ot lo-.miJ; lu.klll moun
llld h.1d nothlllg to do '\ Hll thL

k gJ~I.lt iOI1

po~mons

.md beL..Hl\1.! duuman
and duef exeLutt\l' otliLn 111
1988
Gurm.w h.b s.:ud ht.· J~K'Sll 't
want h1s St.1tt.'llll'nt~ tu be comJden.~d a threJt. bm TRW hI\ fl''\
busmcs'i nes w Clen•l.md Tht•
company has 121l,llllll emplmees
m 40 countnes, bm on l) .1bout
400 at 1ts heJdquarters. TRW
SJid
TRW ~vams to r.1ke ad,.:,mt.Jge
of the 'llue of the prnperry. lirsr
through an upscale shoppmg
cente-r, and mavbe beer wnh
office but!dmgs TRW's camp.11~;n
says the suburb would benefit
through mcome and propt"rty
taxes
Om,/TMK satd Oct I ~ th.tt
It will donate S1 nulhon to Lvn' edu dhurst as an endowment for
cation and commtllllt) unpro\e ment,lf the Legacy Village development occurs
But Bob Goble, a member of
Lyndhurst Voter Coahr1on,
whtch opposes the TRW plan ,
satd the tssu es are land conscrv:ltton, rer.-ul sprawl and traffic congestion, espec1ally smce there are
already shoppmg centers and
malls nearby. Goble sJid the
pronused SI million endowment
amounts to a bribe

Honor Our
Heroes ·
On Friday, No11•mb•r 10, our nation llllll pau•• to pay tribute to the
thoUiande of 1rn1n cmd tllOIIWn lllho ha11• proudly lfll'llfld their cour~try during
tlmfl1 of crif•• Pnd peac••
Thi1 Veteran 'I Day, th• DaUy S•ntlnflllllUl publt.h a 11ery apectal tribute
honorllfll anm l!flteraru. You can Join In our 1alute by includlr~g the 11eterun
In your life, U11lng or deceaaed, tllho ha11e lfll'lled or u currently ael'lling in
any branch oflhe V.S. Armed Forcea.

" Your choice Of 1\vo Styles...
Ad Only $7.00

r-------------------,
Please Fill Out And Return With
Your Payment to:
V~TERAN

(shown actual size)

SALUTE

C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

In Honor Of
M~or

Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family

Ad With Photo- $14.00

houn

EMS nns

POMEROY- PaulE Kle1n, 42, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Oct. 26,
_QOO In Oh10 State Umverstty Hospital, Columbus, foUowmg an
extended tllness.
Born Jan 7, 1958 m Pomeroy, ;on of the late Henry andVtrgle Russell Klem , ht• ""a US Army wterJn and a member of the Pomeroy
Youth League
He was a 1')76 graduate of Metgs H1gh School, and was employed
by several busmcsses 111 the commumry
Sun •vmg arc a dallghter, Jesstca (Todd) Ackerman of Nelsonvtl!e,
three grandchtldren, brothers and mters, Gene {Audra) Klem of Middleport. Lawren ce {Pat) Klem, Charles (Caro l) Klem, Gert (Marvm)
WISe, Edna OesS!e) Buchanan , Conme Klem, Davtd Klem, 'Kepny
Klem ,Tommy {Becky) Klem and Kane (Dav1d) Lewts, all ofPoml:roy.
Mary (Sherman) Gerlach nfWestVtrguua. Donna Klem (Russell C:undtfl) of M"on . W Va , Btl! Kle.n of Connecncut, and Darlene (Denms)
Bovd of Arhens. 27 ntc·ces .tnd 1 I t1C'phews. and 38 great-meccs aMI 35

POMEROY - A power outage left several thousand mdiVIduals wtthout electricity Monday
when a surge arrester failed at a
local AEP substatton.
Accordmg to AEP Lme Crew
SuperviSor Roger Hoffman and
AEP spokesman Ronn Robmson, more than 3, 700 AEP customers were affected by yesterday's power outage when a surge
arrester fatled at the Rudand sub-

POMEROY - Umts of the
Metgs
Emergency
Servtces
answered 10 calls for assistance on
Monday Umts responded as follows:

?

g re.lt- nt.•p h&lt;..•ws

Elmo F. Smith
POMEROY - Elmo F Smuh 7') of Pomeroy, dted Suncl.ty, October 29 2000 ,It 0 flkne" Muml!l.t! Hosptra!m Athens
Born M ,1y 3 1921 1n 0:1k H1ll \\lc-.tVtrgmla, he \\a~ the son ot the
l.tt~ EJ1lW Sml(h and Nelhcln lLh',l) Smah .md w,ts :1 Umted States
N.n"\ \etci.ln l!l \X/mld \Vtr II \\hue h~ \crVl'd 111 the PaufiL theater
He \U\ fuJnll'r!) cmplo\l'd '" .1 ho1st engmecr tOr 18 ye.1r~ 1r1 the
to 11 llllllt'" tnd he \\,1\ Jbo 1 retired employee of K;user Alunmmm Ill
Rn en~"' ooJ WL•sr Vug:uua HL' \\ :ts .1 member of Drew Webster Post
)\) AmaJ ( m r egwn md :Ittl'nded Carleton Church
Alung "uh Ius p.uents, he \\ ;~s ptcceded 111 death by three brothers
""' Hl' 1s \lln 1vcd by hts lovmg "tk of 60 )l'ars, Vtrgm1a Snuth of
Pomeroy. three sons .md two d;mghters-m-l:nv, Stephen and Patn cta
Snmh of Conneaut Edward and Janet Snuth of Nashport, and Alvm
Snmh of Pomeroy. a SISter, Dorothy Jones of St Albans, Wesr Vtrgm ta,
.md mne grandcht!dren and 17 great-grandchildren
Sentccs Will be 2 p m Wednesday, November I 2000 at fisher
Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy Offietanng wtll be the Rev Cly&amp; V H en derson Bunal Will foUow 111 Metgs Memory Cardens Fnends may call
on Tuesday, October 31, 2000 from 7-9 p m at the funeral nome

Local ·
from Pile AI
changes the ttl tal amount of the
contract
from
$34,000 to
S69 3H5 Accordmg to ComnusSJoner J effThornton, Slupka 's sc·rVl\CS .uc us..:d to ensure that the
T~mpor.lry A'slstance to Nc:cdy
FHHihC''-, Prt.:\'t.'lltton R.ett&gt;nnon
111d Conungt'llC\' pwgrams ,md
ot he1 p1ogr.1m~ undt'r tht• st.Ht•\
nt.'" "df.m: ptogtllll ,tTL' h :mdlcd
ptoperh
Thotntnn ..,ml thtt thl..' (oun-

's Jnts,tm glllld mm pl.tm :1
\\L·bp.tgL' fm ,llti~J il \ "!to WJ'Ih to
~L'l l rhea ttl'lll'i nn the 111 tel net
1 he "'tt.' '\til follo\\ the ~.1mc
thL'Illl' ,.., thL count\\ n1ft
brt&gt;L hulL but orhc1-. \\ ho d1d not
p.Hnupttc 111 the brochure lll'
"till Ill\ Jtcd to p trtH 1p.1te
llwrllt~Hl -.1JLl the haxhuiL' 111
.tddmnn w promuung the countv~ u:-.fr~mcn l!ld trtP:.,Ju-. , has 1ho
been a bo o~t rn wun~m
Those tntct L~te d 111 pntJc1p1tt}

BCI
from Page AI
farm equlpmelH.JCWdf), and otbt:r
pu;on.1l propert\, :md real estat(,;
whJCh tht· cou nty has retuned
The person.tl property was ult!m;~tdy turneJ over to state and

Your Name - - - - - - - - - -

Our rnam concern tn all stones ts to
be accurate If you know ol an error 1n
a story Cdl the newsroom at (740)
992 2156
'

Correction Policy

In Honor Of

Corporal Bob
Johnson
1991-1992
Marines
Desert Storm
I

•

Love, Your Family

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone (740) 992-2155

12 55 p m, Race Street, Nelhe
Zerkle, HMC,
6 43 p m , Ftsher Street, Wllltam
Snvcrs. OMH

RUTLAND
12 30 p m., Holzer Med1cal
Center Clime. Tbercsa V.mcooney. HMC:.
6 37 p m , Veterans Memonal
Hosptta! , Augusta Hall, HMC.
9 08 p m , Me1gs Mme &gt;
Robert Mercer Jr, HMC

TUPPERS PLAINS
5 I CJ p m , K~.!no, motor vehtcle
:lcudent, Tom G1vens, treated

News Departments
The rnatn number
Department extenttons

IS

992·2156

are

General manager

Ext 1101

News

Ext 1102

or

Ext 1106

Other &amp;ervices
Advert1stng

Ext 1104

Ctrculauon

Ext 1103

Classtfted Ads

Ext 1100
I

To send e-ma1!
galh1bune'Geurekanet com

l'le.lS Court by Samuel V Wamsley, Mtddleport, and Tomn\1e
Lynn Wamsley, Rutland

To meet

Licenses issued

POMEROY The Metgs
County Pomona Grange w1ll
hold tts regular meetmg, Fnd •'
Hemlock Grange hall The annual officers conference will be held
at 6 30 p m preceded by the regular
meetmg
Officers arc
renunded that pKtures w1U be
taken for the hJStoty book.

POMEROY
Mamage
hcenses have been ISSued tn Metgs
County Common Pleas Court to
Steven Wayne Rettnure, 2) and
Anshta Dawn Russell, 27,
Pomeroy, and to Ttmothy Shane
Beck, 23, Pennsboro, WVa , and
1

1Wenty-six ballot measures
give Oregonians voter fatigue
ers' Pamphlet thts year has a
record 375 pages - more than
the whtte pages of the phone
book for Grants Pass, a southern
Oregon town of 21,000.
"I've been heanng people
wh1mng about 1t, 'Oh God, I've
got to study thn for a month,"'
sa1d Tomnu Drake, dtrector of art
gallenes for Rogue Commumty
College, who keeps the pamphlet on her mght stand for ref-

GRANTS PASS, Ore (AP) Should a IS-year-old be trted as
mg m the webstte proJect should an adult' Should nude dancmg
call th~ comnuss10ners office, be zoned' Should wt!d ammals
Thornton sa1d It should be "up be caught wtth body-gnppmg
and runmng" m · time for the traps?
Chmtmas shoppmg season
What a):JOut allowmg pubhc
The commt!Sioners also tabled teachers' pay to be based on thetr
a request from the DJFS for the Job performance' Or permmmg
county's share of pubhc assistance a new county to be created confundmg, 111 the amount of tammg less than 400 square
Si 1,674 50, for fint half of FIScal nules',
Year 2000
Wtth 26 d1fferent measu res on
The· buatd also
the November ballot, Oregon
• Appwved b1ds fon bJtunu- voters are strugglm g to make
llOll\ 11l.ltl'J J,lj!\ for ~ovembe1 mfurmt'd decmons as they wade
f1om Aspkdt M.ltt:IJ.1l\ of M.Jnetth1ough .111 c:xplanatory gutdt·
t.l .md Mtddlcpm t Ternun.tl. (;,,]- that nvals the local telephone•
!tpo!ts,
book 111 SIZe and heft
• Appa)\cd pJVIllCllnof bills m
' I won't read all that,' satd Btll
the ,111H)llllt of$1(, 1),})9~ 31,
Doody, mttng 111 Ius used books
• Tabled actiOn on ptJs t(n J ~tmc .mnd sc:~cks of ma tcn:ll h~
nc\\ HnbuLlnLe fot th~ EMS IS mort..' mten:stcd m teadmg
de~\Ct1t, whtLh \\Cit: op~:ned
'I'll look ove r the fitlanctal
t"~\ wctks ,tgo, pcndtng 1 tecom- 1111paet they nught haw, and pay
ll1l'IHLHwn
trom
the EMS attL'IltlOn to the tssues near and
tlll ~tet'S

Procnr 111

1ddmon to l-Im\ 1rd

Tho 1nton WI..'!C Comnus\JnneJ Milk Davcnpqct ,md

.1nd

C:lct k (,]"''" Kloes l'r~ secutot
John Lcntes 1lso attclldccf,
'
fcder:1l Juthnnttes, ;md wbs to be
sold to ~tllsfy the t,tx debt ,tllegedly mcurred b) Pnddy and Ius w1fe
ll.u bara a1 a result of the drug traffi ckmg for \\ h1 ch they were ulnmatdy COIIVlCted
Crow has declined comment on
any of the documents ftled.l!l the
matter, CJtlllg restnct10ns on JUdieta! co nduct ;;et forth by state' lm•

The .Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

L--------------~----~

POMEROY

fik·d w Me1gs County Common

AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV 3, 2000
Tnbutes must be prepaid
Photos may b'l9p1cked up after Nov 11th.

Phone

The fatlure affected the mam
transformer, whteh knocked out
power to vanous substattons m
Pomeroy and Maynard
The power outage, wh1ch
began around 11 56 a m , was
.tttended to by AEP crews diSpate hed to the scene Th~ power
wa~ out for more.!' than
dun•
hours :md w;~s restort.•d around
3 2~ p m

POMEROY - An ~etlan for

Love, (Name relat1onsh•p to veteran)

Address: - - - - - - - - - - -

~tatton

dJssolutton of marnag\! has bt.·c.!'n

(Shown actual size)

Photo of
Your Veteran

CENTRAL DISPATCH
9.28 a m., Ohto 7, Robert Jeffe", Holzer Medtcal Center, 1
12 20 p 111 , Gold Ridge Road,
Davtd RusseU, O'Bleness Memonal Hospttal;
5 03 p m , Mulberry Avenue ,
LJSa Huggs, HMC,
7 46 p m , Crosspomt, Helen
VYoung, treated

Dissolution filed

Dates of Act1ve Duty

Confltct/War

.J "

He \\ '" aho prl'Ledl·d Ill de 1tb b, two sisters, a nephe\\ ; md t\\{O
g n:.1t- m·p hc" s
Sel\1{l'" 'H'te hdd lt 11 .1 m [ndh , Tu t·~d :n .Ott ·q . 2000111 F1sher
Funn1l H omL'. PomL·i\1\ BUJ 1d \\,1~ Ill Bt•t•ch GIO\t.' Centt.'k'ryVtsltatmu '\ 1\ held Ill the fun~..·1 tl h\)ll1 t. on Mond l\
Ml·morul u'mtnbut1 011S to\\,Jrd rh e rtllll' J.IIL·x pen ~l'S !Ill\ be sent to
F1~hu FuJll' t.ll Hnme, =)0(1 E M.11n St. Pnmnm. ()hiO 4S7J,9

In 1-tonor of (name and rank)

Branch of Service

Dusty Dawn T1JlJS, 21, Rutland

Paul E. Klein

necticut wtth 12 4 percent, for example, -

LYNDHURST (AI')- Voters wtll dec1de Nov 7 wheth~r
TRW Inc can turn part of tts
park-hk~ headquartt·rs property
mto a retail development, and the
outcome may mfluence whether
the Fortune 500 company stays
m the Cleveland area
TRW - wtth busmesses m
Jutomouve parts, mformauon
technology and defense work wants to allow developer
Onx/TMK of Chtcago to bmld
Legacy VtUage on more than a
thtrd of Its 165 acres of wooded,
rollmg land But the S145 million
proJect's start depends on a
voter-approved zomng change to
retail use The land now IS zoned
for reSJdenoal or office use.
TRW Chatrman Joseph Gorman, who IS 63 but has not
announced retirement plans, has
left open the possibility that losmg the vote could one day mfluence future lea de" of TRW to

State
announces
requirement
for megafarms

Power out for 3

Ohto, Indiana, and Kansas, among others

Gore campaign cuts back TRW awaits suburb's
on campaign ads for Ohio vote on HQ retail plan
{AP) Vtce I'remlent AI Gore's
campaign Ius sharplv cut Hs
advcrnsmg m l)hto to devore
resoun.es to st.ltcs where rhe
Democranc pn:su:f~nnal nommee
LS working to proCCC[ h1s kad m
the polls
Gore h.1s reduced by t\\oothtrds Ius ad r.llnpatgn m Oh1o, all
but conredmg the Buckeye
State's 21 dector.tl votes to

LOCAL BRIEFS

A few states are sh&lt;&gt;wmg mcreases- Con-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Groups seek 'threatened' status for songbird

Newark ts ,1bout .10 nules e.tst of Columbus 111 contrll Oh10

Dad senteced In child slaylna

TUeeda~CNrtober31,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co
Published every afternoon
Monday
through Fnday 111 Court 51 Pomeroy
OhiO Second class pos1age pad at
Pomeroy
Member The Assoc1ated Press and lhe
Oh1o NewspaptH Assoctat1on
Poslmasler Send address correct1 ons to
The Da1ly Sent nel
111 Court Sl
Pomeroy Oh1o 4S7G9

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Mail subscription
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Wt1 8kf:;

vote 'No' all the way on somedun g I JUSt dun 't want to take
tune to constde r "
Wah all the arguments for
and .1g.unst c,tch ot the measures
the first vo lume of the state Vat-

VALLEY WEATHER

Warming trend expected

$27 30
$53 82
$105 Sti

Rale!l outside Meigs County

13 W~" e ks

S29 25

2b Wt .eh

$56 68

52 Wee ks

Si09 72

7 01 am

BY THE ASSOCI ATEO PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tomght . Clear Low! 30 to
35 Calm wmd
Wednesday Sunny Htghs 61
to 70
Wednesday mght Clear Lows
34 to 39
Extended forecast:
Thursday Partly
clolldy
H•ghs 111 the lower 70s
Fnday Partly cloudy Lo'" 111
the upper 40s and lughs 111 the
lower 70s
Saturd.ty l'at t!v cloudy Lows
111 the lowe1 .j.Os wd h1ghs 111 thL·
m1d r,o,

Partly cloudy sktes and slowly
moderatmg temperatures are
expected across che tn-county
area through Thursday, forecasters
S.lld
Temperatu(es wdl warm from
the ni1d-60s to the nud-70s,
thanks to a h1gh pressutc cell centL' Ied ovc1 Canada, the NatiOnal
Weather Sen. 1ce sa1d
Lows romghr will hover near
the frccz111g ntJrk, but by Fnday
nto1nmg wlll get nn lower than
nnd- -+Os
Wtllght wdl be

Slllli\L't

111d

~tlllll Sl'

.lt

on Wedne-;d 1y

S 30
1s l t

LOCAL · STOCKS
I

AEP - 41 1 •
Akzo- 45
AmTechi SBC- sa,
Ashland Inc - 31 1

AT&amp;T- 22\

Inside Mergs Coun)y

"Whc'l1 you get something an
mch thtck to read three weeks
before the ele cuon, n's pu:'Uy
tough to be Jll mfornu:d voter tf
tlut 's yotlr only SOL\rcr:"
,.
That sho uld be no surpnse to
Oregom.tns Then state holds all
the maJor 1ecotds when It come~
to ballot mmauves, s,ud Dane
Waters, ptestdent of the lmuattvc
,1nd Rl'fercndum lnstttute 111
Washmgton, DC:
Oregon was the first state to
vote on a statewtde tmttattvc.!' m
1904, Waters md, and tn I 927
voted o n the most mtttauves eve 1
on a state ballot, 27 Oregon
leads the natton wtth a total of
II 0 laws enacted by mlttattve

dea L to me," he sa 1d " Bu t I'd

t ht..:

Subscription rates

erenc~

Gannett- 57'•
General Electr1C - 54
Harle y Oavrcfson- 47 \,
Kmart- s•,.
Kroger 22
24' ~

Bank One - 35 ~
Bob Evans - •1 8',.
BorgWarner - 37 ,
Champ1on - 2''li
Charm1ng Shops- 5' ,
C1ty Hold1ng- 51' ;
Federal Mogul - 3).

Lands End Ltd - 24 11

F~rstar -

Rockwell - 37'',.

191 ~

Oak Htll Ftnanctal OVB -26

BBT-31\,
Peoples- 13

Premter -

5 ~ •a

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 59',.

Sears - ~9'.
Shoney s - ·~
Wal MM -43,
Wendys- 21.

Worthtngton - 9' ~
14 ,
Da1ly stocK reports are the
4 p m clostng quotes ol
the prev1ous days trans
actmns
provtded
by
Advest of Galltpolts

to cast aspcrs10ns yet "
Wesley Lambert, a spokesman
for the EPA m Atlanta, sa1d hiS
agency has no rnle m regulatmg
coal nune ponds, more than 200
waste generated from washing of wh1ch now extst m Appalachta
coal
But the EPA had constdered
"It seems hke they all were tncludtng the Marun County
aware of tt, and they were all pond on a hst of Superfund mes
draggmg thetr feet," satd Patty because of 1ts potentta! for harmWallace, a member of the envi- mg the environment
ronmental \vatchdog group KenMaleva Chamberlatn, a spokes-·
tuckians for the Commonwealth
woman for the state Dlviston of
"Everybody let down on the Water, sa•d the Impoundment
JOb"
met state and federal regulatiOns.
•Tom FttzGerald, dtrector of
"We have to do what the law
the Kentucky Resources Coun- says we can do, and not go
ul, satd the diSaster could have beyond that," she satd
been avo1ded tf the coal company
FitzGerald sa td coal compames,
used a safer method of dtSposmg have a!ternatt\'CS for dca!tng Wtth
of tts waste
\\ast~ produ cts other than dumpWallace and FttzGerald sa1d tng them 111 Impoundments He
the coa l L.:ompany bear~ most of sa 1d pre sses s1nular to those
the re sponstbthty for the sp11l but ctttes ar,: reqUired to usc to 'comthey satd sure and feder.tl r&lt;gu!J- paLt sewilg~.· - arc availabl1: for
tory .lgL'DClt'S could lu\t:- done
u.JJl "'ludgl'
more to prevent It
The prl·~se' -,q LIL' l"Zt.' th~..· warl"r
State Rep Greg Stumbo. D- uttt of the matt:IJ:tl so th:lt It ra n
Pre"onsburg. called Monday for .1
be dl"'poscd nf 111 so!td f01 m
legtsbn,·c 1nqUJry uno the cJ.us~:
McA tee• s.ud MSHA "tl!
of the Jt&gt;aster MSHA .t!so ts
c xplorc orhc1 methods- mdud1memgarmg And US Rep Hal
mg: pre..,~n - fu1 di ,p&lt;)smg of
Rogers , R.-Somcrset, IS seekmg
tOll WJ~tl'\
feder;1l fundmg fi}r an mdl'pcn We th1nk 11 lu~ suffinent
dl'nt mve"tlg:Jtlon by the Nauonmerit du{ \'C \\til look at Jt," ht'
.1 l Acadt:my of Suence
Said
"The cam~ of thJ'i coll,1psc 1s. a
G ary Dr.1ke , prestdent of
number of b1cJkdo" m 111 the
Phoemx Proccs~ Eqmpment 111
wav the regul.mons an~· HnpleLoLnsvt!lc
sa1d the cost of purmented,'' FttzGc.rald satd "There
chasmg ;~nd operaung [he presses
arc so m.my dlfft.•rcnt wnnkles to
tim fat!ure that need to be looked IS about 25 ce nt~ a ton
Phoemx gen~ntes Jbout $15
.It
The head of MSHA, Davitt null10n a year 111 sales of presses to
McAteer, s.11d the method now coal compa111es around the world
"I ve been k111d of surpnsed,
used for approvmg and momtorthat
durmg thts whole sltuaoon,
mg: su c h Impoundments w1l1 be
no one has s:ud there has been
eva l u;~red
' Th e system dtd not work,· he technology avatlable for over 25
sa1d "] don't thmk anybody years that would have prevented
It," Drake satd "If the technology
would contesf that"
M cAteer satd hiS agency IS rry- ts avat !able, why does MSHA
mg to deternune where the even allow coa l compa mes to put
m ponds'"
breakdown occurred
Drake satd several vanenes of
"The pubhc has every nght to
raiSe questions as to the adequacy the presses are on the market. He
of the efforts of federal and state satd a Stngle press, purchased at a
agenctes,'' he satd " I thmk the cost of about $150,000, w1ll treat
questions have to be answered 30 tons of coal waste an hour
Two of the presses, Drake sa1d,
through a complete, proper and
thorough mvemgatlon of what w1ll treat all wastes gene rated by
happened I thmk 1t's premature most coal-preparation plants

'

Blame
homPageA1

Consumer spending
continues to rise
Both the 1ncom.: lllClt'.lSC and
WASH INGTON (AP)
Amcncflns' mcomes, boosted by spendmg gam \\elL' "ell above
hugt• fcdnal farm pjyments
cxp~..·ct.lt!Oil). .wd ~omc an.th sts
mue.m.•d by t h~ l.ugest lmotmt 111 s 11d they would tr m~bte 11Jto Jll
13 month s 111 Septembe i "h1le upw.11d JeV!SJOn 111 the gwss
consumer spendmg wse at the doJI1L'StiL. proJuct the economy's
fastL'St p.Kl' SIIH e Februarv
tot:tl outpllt, fot tht• thud quarter
The Com mel&lt; e Depilnment
Comumer spt&gt;nd111g :lctnunts for
sat d M cmday rh ,1t pe1 sonal
t"o-thuds of tot,JI elOilOllllC
mcomes rose b) .1 ~t10ng 1 1 percent bst month \' h!lc spendmg, l l { \ ' lf\
On FtH.i n tht: govc1nmcnt
p•opdled bv ho.tvy demand f01
durable goods such as autos, \\as h 1J 1cporteJ tlut tlu: O\ erall
CCOil0111) as lllC:l SU!Cd b) tht:
up 0 8 pe1cenr
ELonom1sts s;nd the Ill'\'-' GDP, ..,Jowl'd to .1 growth rJte nf
report showed that whtlc the JUst 2 7 percent 111 the Ju!) -SepO\Crall economy slowed sharply t~mbu LJUll ter, le~~ than h.tlf the
111 the summe r, tht• all-unport.tnt
t0111d 56· percent Apnl-June
consu mer sect01 still had plent)" p:1L L'
of strength, led by btg gams 111
T im dt a111att c &lt;lowdown had
mco11ne that are hdpmg con- checru.i financial m.1rkcts who
sumers contmue to buy wlth
lwht•vc•d 11 ~hmved t hl'lt the Fedabandon despite rmng debt buren] R~.· ~L·n~ IS close to :~ch1e\ mg
dens Jnd a wcakemng stock marItt;; destrt'd soft hnd111g tr1 whtch
ket
"Consumers h.wc a ton of gnmth slo\\ S enough to keep
money to spend and that IS exact- mthuon 111 check but nm enough
ly wh at they dtd," sa1d Joel to bnng on a re~.:cssmn
On Monday, the Do\\ Jones
Naroff, heJd of a Holland Po
economH co nsultmg finn
tndu stnill an~rage po~tcd Hs scLThe 1 1 perce-nt 1 tse 111 ond stt .11ght 200-plu, ponlt gam
lll CO I1leS "'\~ tht: i.lq;cst :\IIlCe :\
Llm1ng ,H 10,815 7i, up 2-tS .1::1
I J pt'l C~ nt JUmp 111 Octohc1 uf for the day ,1!i uwc!\tors tlcd te ch1999
•
nolo!:,"' stocks fo r the Jcl.Ht\c s;~fc­
B oth month~. hm\e\ er \\eTC
t\ of the I )m, s blu e L h1p~
strongly mtlut.:&gt;n u:-J h' tl·der.1l
subs1d) p.l) mt:nt~ to f.l! 111t'rs "hn
.trl' stru gglin g tn Lnpe "nh \\ el k
farm p1 1 cc~
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
ROUTt 35 WEST
Wtthout 111 mcrt.'.l~e 111 tht:
446 •4524 OLO
"04 JACK S ON PIKE
kdCJ,ll lJl,lllLilh thL ~'LI~OI I~~
FRI 10/27/00 • THURS 11/2100
BOX OffiCI Will OPEN AT
tnC O illl.:.' ~.llll \\ otdd h n (,: bcL'll ,1
6:30
PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
lllOIC m"odcl.lt(.; ( l -f J1Cil t:nt Ill
2:30
PM FOR MATINIIS
SLptL'lllher

7

BOOK OF SHADOWS· BLAIR
WITCH 2 (R)
7 00 SUN·THUR
BEDAZZLED (PG13)
7 10 SUN·THURS
LADIES MAN (R)
7 20 SUN·THURS
MEET THE PARENTS (PG13)
7 15 SUN· THURS
THE LITILE VAMPIRE (PG)
I 7 00 SUN· THURS
REMEMBER THE TITANS (PG)
7 00 SUN· THURS
LUCKY NUMBERS (R)
7 00 SUN· THURS

Il

�0_P-inion

Page A4·

_Th_e_o_ai...::.Iy_s_en_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

The Daily Sentinel
'Esttl6llslid bl194&amp;

Tuesdllf. October 31, 2001

ac; $VQf all atOfoYiNI9 ·

Wltl"lbo PuSHY ,..

!QioW·JT..aLL!

'1'* PeBaT~!

DEAR ABBY: I am 50 and have been
,hvorced for two years after a 29-year
marriage that was, at times, physically and
emotio nally abusive. I work full - time and
attend college full-time .
. Two loving and caring friends have
helped me through the bad times with
enco uragement and advice. I often heed
their advice, since most of the time it has
been good and held true. However, I
recently made a decision that has caused
a rift between us and this disturbs me.
fvly son (age 30) and my daughter-inJa,~ (24) have invited me to live with
them until I complete my schooling, and
I have accepted their invitation. This eases
my financial burden (tuition, books, bills,
life} greatly. They both have good jobs, no
children
yet, and are solid and easygoing.
,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Generlll M1nager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l..ealnll:l dtl Hlilor liN wkomt. Tlrn showld bot Wn lhfltt 3()() won/s, All ~am,.,.. s11bj«r
,. . . . . . Mfl •lUI' . . siftud •fill incl!Uk ~~u fjtul tek,hunr fU4mbrr. No unsifnftl Wtt.n •·iU
Ldkn slroMIJ H in 1ood W$k, oddrt'u·inr issues, not p#Nortal~lin.
. .

..,...W

S~,AL.

J'A;e .,WUO.U •xpnslfll in lltr column belo"' an thr con!tlf$11J of thr Ohw l-allr1 l'llbluhu.f

C• 'I .,.,._ 6o.ant, •nlns othr,......u .. niJlrtL

NATIONAL VIEW

Backlash
• Wheeling (W~Va.) News-Register: Cell phones can be precry handy things. Carpenters, plumbers, electricians and other roving
independent craftsmen depend on them the se days. But the widespread use of cell phones also has led to a cultural backlash against
them, complete with studies claiming to demonstrate the phones
pose a threat to the Republic.
We despise obnoxious cell phone behavior as much as anyone.
When some clown yaks loudly on a cell phone in the middle of a
nice restaurant, we doubt we're alone in fantasizing about serving
him a cellular Popsicle for dessert.
But the emerging safety campaign agamst cell phones is starting
to look even sillier than cellular Popsides. A few cities have banned
lallcing on a cell phone while drivmg, claiming that cell phone use
is a major traffic hazard.
·
Using a cell phone while driving obviously is not as safe as keeping quiet and putting both hands on the wheel. Statistically, according to the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis, there is a 6. 4 in 1 mil·
lion chance of a driver dying while talking on a cell phone, and a
1.5 in I million chance- th at another motorist will be killed by a driver talking on a cell phone.
But other risks are much greater. There's a 16.8 in 1 million
chance of being killed in a crash with a heavy truck, and a 17.6 in
I million chance of being killed by a drunken driver, according to
the Center.
Why aren't cell phone-related fatalities more common? Beca use
most cell phone calls are made during rush hour, when peopl e are
driving at slower speeds.
·
Cell phon.es. or devices very much like them, are here to stay.
Clearly a lot of cell phone users could stand to take a few l~ ssons
ftOm Miss Manners , but they hardly pose a grave threat to hfe and
limb.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday. Oct. 31, the 305th day Df 201/U . There are 61
days left in \he year. This is Halloween.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 31. 151 7. Martin Luther posted tiTe ~S Theses on the
door of the Wittenbng· PJ.bce' chu rch, marking th e "ita rt of the
Protestant Reformation in Gamany.
On this date:
-In 1795, English poet John Keats was b&lt;&gt;rn in Lo ndon.
In 1864; Nevada became the 36th state.
In 1926, magicia n Harry Houdini died in Detroit of gangrene
and peritonitis resultin g from . a ruptured appcndu(.
In 1941 , th~ .U.S. Nas'y destroyer Reuben James was torpedoed
by a German U-boat off Iceland with the loss of I 15 lives. eve n
though the United States had not yet entered World War II.
In 1956, R ear Adm. G.J. Dufek became the first person. to land :m
airplane at the South Pole.
lni 1959, a former U.S. Marine from Fort Wrrth , Tl'xas.
3nnounced in Moscow that he would never return to the United
States. His name: Lee Harvey Oswald
In 1968, President Johnson ordered a halt to all U.S. bombing of
North Vietnam, saying he hoped for fruitful peace negotianons.
In 1980, R eza Pahlavi . elde&lt;t son of th e late shah, proclaimed
himself the rightful successor to the Peacock Throne.
In 1984, Indian Prime Minister lndira G ~mdhi was as~assi nated by
rwo Sikh security guards.
,
ln 1994, a Ch ic ago-bound American Eagle 1'\TR-72 crashed in
northern Indiana, killing all 68 people aboard.
Ten years ago: Dunng a campaign swin g in suburban Washinb'ton,
President Bush said "I have had it" with the way Iraq was treating
American diplomats and hostages . but added he had no timetable for
deciding on a possible military 'trike. ~
Five years ago: Stung by defeat in the secc&gt;&lt;ion referendum, Quebec Premi~r Jacque ~ Parizeau said he would res~gn as head of the
bitterly divided province at year's errd .
One year a3o: EgyptAir Flight 990 cr&lt;l\hed off the Mmachmetts
coa.•t, killing all 217 people aboard.
Today's Bmhdays: Actress-si nger Dale. Evans is 8!:1. Former Attar. ney General Griffin Bell is H2. Actress Barbora Uel Geddes is 7H.
Cambodian f(jng Norodom Sihanouk is 71l. Movte criti c Andrew
Sar.ris is 72. Former astronaut Michael Collins is 70. Actress Lee
Grant is 69. CBS anchorman Dan Rather is W. Actor David Ogden
Stiers i• 58. Actress Sallv K~rkbnd IS 56. Singer Kinky Friedman is
56. Actress Deidre Hall ;s 52. NUC .mchorwom.m J,me P.tulcy is 50.
Actor Brian Stoke&lt; Mttchcll 1s 4~ . Rock mustcl&lt;m Lorry Mull en is
39. Actor Dermot Mulrcmey " .17 Rock muSJcian Mikkey Dee
(Motorhead) IS 37. Actor Rob Schneider 11 3(&gt;. .R.Ip mustctan
Adrock is 34. Songwnter Ad.un Schlesinger IS 3J. R .tp pnfimner
Vanilla Ice is J2. R ock \ln~er Linn llerggrL'n (Ace o f lla1e) IS .lll.
Actor Eddie Kaye Thon1.11 ("A merican l'te") is 21).
Thought ~(Jr Today: .. An o ld error" ,dsv:tyl more poputer tlun a
new truth ." - Gnrnan proverb.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE
My girlfriends arc appalled that I could
live with my children who have been
married only two years! They feel I
would be invading their privacy and giving up mine, along with my independence. I assured them that this is only a
temporary arrangement, since I have only
a year and a half to finish school. I told

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Cell phones' risk to life and
limb about nonexistent

HENTOFF'S VIEW

CNN abandons all journalistic responsibility
On Friday, Oct. 20, CNN's "Crossfire"
aired a debate on whether the federal government should require schools and libraries to
use Internet filters to protect children against
pornography. One of the combatants was
Larry Flynt, publisher of H us tier magazine.
He has a considerable track record of making
scan~alous charges against presidential candidates without providing evidence.
As the program was drawing co a close,
Flynt said of George W Bush: "We've found
out in the early 1970s he was involved in an
abortion in Texas .... If the abortion issue is
tr~e. then that puts him lower on the moraliry scale than Bill Clinton."
Co-host Robert Novak said: "Mr. Flynt,
you said if n's true, and you have no proof of
that .... 1 gather you're a very strong Gore supporter."
Flynt responded: "The hell we don't have
proof."
Neither Novak nor the olher host, Bill
Press, followed up with a demand that Flynt
providr: the "proof."
All that Press said -as the debate program
was ending - was: ''Larry Flynt, a man who
speaks hi~ word. But we:: reniind you {the
audience) they are Larry Flynt's words, not
ours. Larry Flynt, thank you very much for
joining us .... Live television ... too bad ."
The Bush abor tion story was left to float in
the air. Quickly, there were many references
to it on th e Internet , with many of" the messages asking why N ovak and l'ress had no r
demanded that Flynt give his "pnJOf"
Two days later, o n C-Span's "Washington
Journal,'' a caller repeated Flynt's :Kn.J.~ation.
He htH.f no .duubt that it W:l'&gt; t rUL'. NeJther the
host nor Matt Coopl'r, Jeputy W,tshington
bureau ch ief of New&lt;&gt;week, who was being
interviewed. gave rhe story .my cre-dence. 13ut
the charge had been spread aga11 1.

have some idea of how intense political campaigns , especially in Boston , could become. I
was on the front Jine, having covered among other inflammatory campaigners
James Michael Curley.
On WMEX , as on other stations, the
schedule was rigid. All programs had to end
exactly on time so th at WL' could bro adcast a
station break - the identifying call letters or else we'd hear from the Federal Communications Conunission.
NEA COLUMNIST
If, during an interview, even with only seconds left, someone had made cbe kind of
CNN's reach is worldwide. A friend of charge Larry Flynt did· on "Crossfire," I would
mine, a filmmaker who lives in Denmark and have ignored th e station break and taken as
travels throughout Europe, told me recently long as necessary to demand proof of the
that much of what Europe knows about charge. If I hadn't, the boss would have fired
America comes from CNN. And the George me, even though 1 was the union 's shop stewBush abortion stOry is likely to have circled at ard.
Later, in New York, I was host of a weekly
least part of the globe.·
television
progran1 on WNBC- TV th.t often .
But what could Bill Press and Robert ·
Novak have done? That section of th~ pro- had controversial guests, Thert\ too, I wa~
gram had run out of time. Ati:er commercials, rcstricteJ to a st:t tim~ pl'rind, hur I Would.
however, there is a final segn1ent, called "Clos- have hmken that rule rather than k·r so harm ing Comments."When Flynt sprang his Octo- ful a 11ersonal attack float by.
Flynt's charge on CNN was made near to
ber surprise on national and international
televi sion, "Closing Comments" shou ld have the end of a closely co ntc '\ ted pn:siJential
been jettiso ned and Flynt should have been ele ctio n. rioth Press and Novak ,Ire skilled at
presse d co tell precisely what h!S evidence was. giving rapid-fire. accusatory 4UL'Slion~ to their
But even during "Closing Comments," nei- guests - and to each other.
Fly nt , ,waiting la te imu the prugr&lt;-lm to
th er host referred to the abortion charge.
smear
George W. Uuo.; h, ca ught Press and
I've had sotne cxpcncncc doing live imcrvicws with controversial public figures. I Novak ofr gu:ard. But th,L"y 'n: prnfl''i'iionalJn&lt;l~- ·
broke into journalism at radio station WMEX tcrs 'of debate. Moreowr, ;tlthougb Flynt has
i11 Uoston, where for nearly ! 0 years I did li ve tht· same fret'- speech ri ghts we :dl share, as a
intervkw11 in th~ studio, on the stn.·ets. :111 d journalist, I'm not constitutionally bound to
during the ferocious political campai,;ns f(lr ·int ervll'\\' \Oil leon e with hi~ rL"cort! of shotwhich M,t'\S,JC hu setts was f:unous (or in fa- gun charge'i. And if I d1d , [ wo uldn 't have let
him off the hook. Nor, I rh111k. would Chris
mous).
Matthew\
on " Hardh,tiL"
If yo u've read the novel "The La.st llurrah,"
(Na t Hl'llrf.!.tr is a HtHiotJilfiJ' rcJWl/IJ/cd dtlllwiitr
or seen the movi e \vith Spencl.:'r Tracy, yo u
"" tl1e First Amrlldllll'llt a11d tlu· Hill of H.i_~hts.)

Nat
Hentoff

K I L PAT R I C K' S· V I E W

Flip of the coin highlights juror responsibility
At the erial of llidro Sa mue l Reyes 111 11)95,
Juror No. 12 went through two days of worrisome indeci.., iun. He tru ly believed the defenJ;mL w~ not guilty, but the weekend 'WaS

appruaching, and he was the only holdout.
What wa' Juror Shakeed Fa reed to do' At
lun chtime o n a Thursday afternoon he went to
his car, ate :;,urne lwK h and thought the n1atter
over. Then he flipped a coin. Heads, Reyes was
guilty T,iJs, Reyes was not guilty. The quarter
came &lt;tp heads. H e thought, better go for two
NEA COLUMNIST
· out of three. H e flipped again. Heads again .That
did it. He returned to the jury room and voted
"guilty." The judge gave Reyes seven years in approaching, Reyes threw three plastic bags
onto the coof of a building. The bags contain ed
prison fi)r pn'i~t:s'iion of cocaine br1se tOr sale.
What about ir , you nlrb . . rune constitutional' cocaine. One trial resulted in a hun gjury.A ..,eclawyers? Was R eyt:!'. entitled to a new trial ond trial bc~an on Nov. I, 199S.The 12-tnembecause the verdict wa~ reached by chance, ber jury bcb'&lt;ln it.s deliberations on Nov. 7 and
rather than by informed deliberation' The Cal- r"turned its b"' ilty verdict around 3 p.m. on
.
ifornia Court of Appeal aftirmed the convic- N~q
Three months wcm by. and the juror's co noon:
"While the method used by (the juror) may science got the better of him. On a nlo tion for
a new trial, he 'fessed up.
~e disturbing, and is indeed unorthodox, it does
Q: Why did you flip the coin a second time?
not constitute &lt;l chance verdict or one deter. A: I flipp ed a seco nd rime because I was i1ot
nUned by lot. Were we to examine his reasons
for voting. we would be probing the mental satisfied. with a guilty. My whole thing was I
processes of this one juror,&lt;omething which we never thought he was gu ilty to begin with.
Q: So when you fiipped it a second time,
are prohibited from Jomg."
Reyes has taken the case to the Supreme what happened'
A: It came out heads again , meaning he W&lt;l\
Court, where It IS pending on his petition for
rev1 ew. If there 1 ~ &lt;my Supreme Court precedent guilty due to the coin.
Q: Did you stop there'
precisely on pomt. cmmsel has f~1ilcd to state it .
A: Yes, I d.id .
In any eve nt , because the cloudy facts make this
In
denying Rcye,: motion for .1 lll'\\ rr i.d. tlw
a ilJrd case, I doubt tim the ht~h co urt willlwar
jtJdgl' ruled th at :t!'. .1 gencr.d prop m ain1 1·, .t
1t. Hard ca'c' m.tkc t()r h,1d bw.
The crimm.1l charge dates from July 1(,. jllror\ 11 ubjcctivc mental processes are out-of-I 'J'J4. when Reyes w.J&lt; 111 .1 housing project 111 bounds. Th~rc arc exceptions to this rule. ( )ne
Culver· C ity. When he s.Iw .1 poli ce officer \•xceptinn is tht'tt jbries art' not permittl'd tn

James

Kilpatrick

decide a case by ch,mce or by lot. If the jury as
&lt;1 whole l1 ad agrel'd in adv:mce to the juror's
coin . ,. flipping jurisprudence, a would h:lVe been
.1 ditfcrL~nt m atte r. O n the final Thursday afternoon the other 11 JUrors had no way of knowing "'''hy Fareed had changCd his vote at last.
Ca lifornia'~ penal code permits a nc\V trial
"when the verdict has been decided by lot, Of·
by mean1 other chan a fai' expression on the .
part uf all the jucors." Moreowr, the code
specifically permits the testin~ony of one juim
to bt: used as evidence to prove thl.! verdi ct was
retched "by ::~ rcsurt to the determination of
ch ance."

To justifY a retrial, said the Court of Appeal,
a ttlinted verdict nmst n.:&gt;~ulr ti·0111 a jury's agreement in advance. "A vl'rdi ct by· ch,mce or lot
does nor refer to the memal proc.:csscs of one
juror, in i~olation from his or her tt·llow jurors.
If the jury panel uses some tool, such as ;1 coin,
the roll of a dice or a niathcmatic.1l formula, to
assist i.t in reaching a conclusion. but there wa.~
no anteccdt·nt agreernent to liSe that result as
the verdict, there is no impropriety."
I "Ill of two minds. All chc Constitution
requires in a criminal case is a "spccdy an.J publi c erial by"" impartial ju"y." It certainly is not
unknown - or even unusual - for holdout
jurors to change their votes tOr pcro;ona1 reasons
that have nothing to do wirh the evidence. My
inclination would ht' to give defendant Reye"i a
third tri,Il , hut I don't know. Suppose there h,d
ht:crl nn flip of a coin. Supposl· juror FarL·cd had
\ 1cldnl ..,lmply lwt;.IU\L' hl' \V,I\ tm.:d .111d \Vant
cd to gn I HHllc~

ljamcs J. Kilpafn(k . rs a
Prl'ss S)IWlicatc.)

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar is
not desi.gned to promote sales
fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to he printed a
specific number of days.
'

/or

October 31,

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30
p.m. at Pageville town hall.

or

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW, regular meeting
Thursday night, potluck dinner at
6:30p.m.

TUESDAY
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township Trustees, regular ses&gt;~on, Tuesday. 5 p.m, at the town, hip building.
·

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778, regular session, Saturday, 6:30 ·p.m potluck supper;
meeting, 7:30 p.m.

Cetcustody
'

POMEROY The Rev.
Charles and Susie Mash of
Portsmouth,
formerly
of
Pomeroy, have been granted legal
custody of their granddaughter
Melyla Noel Mash, who was
born on Aug. 3, 1999, in Virginia
B e'ach,Va.
The Rev. Mash , who formerly
pastored the Reedsville and
Cheshire United Methodist
Churches, now serves Manly and
Valley
United . Methodist
Churches in Portsmouth.

them the most important factor is that it
is OK with my children and OK with
me.
My kids and I have discussed privacy
issues and personal issues, and we all feel
very comfortable with this. One of my
friends said she wouldn't visit me at their
home because she would "feel uncomfortable." My other friend told me she
just doesn't feel that this is right. I love my
friends dearly, but I am getting that eerie
feeling of" control" from them· that I had
in my marriage. Am I right, or just paranoid? I'm afraid of making the wrong
decision,
My children and I really do feel comfortable with the whole thing. Should I
tell my friends it's time to "let me go" and
lead my own life now' My friends also

Meyla Noel Maeh

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• Please be sure alt subjects in photographs are eleany identified on
the back of the photograph or 6n an attached sheet of paper.

Students receive
excellence award

* EXPERIENCED:

LONDON (AP) Elton director of]ohn Reid EnterprisJohn is taking his top accountants to court to recoup millions
of dollars in tour ing costs he
claims they mistakenly charged
him.
The 53-year-old singer and
pianist is suing PricewaterhouseCoopcrs and Andrew
Haydon, former managmg

l

es

UREL). Both

compames

looked after hiS busine ss interests.

Holzer Meigs Clinic

20 Years as Judge.

by the Ohio Supreme Court in every year that the award
was given.
MEMBER of the Ohio Judicial College.
FIRST Meigs County Court Judge to establish a
probation and community corrections department from
state grants at no cost to 'the county.
TOUGH but consistent on criminal and civil decisions.
COLLECTED and deposited with the Meigs County
Auditor over $118,000.00 earmarked for new jail
construction and/or renovation .
ESTABLISHED a County wide Community Service Work
Program.
APPOINTED by Chief Justice Moyer of the Ohio
Supreme Court to serve as visiting judge in the counties
of Lawrence, Gallia, Morgan and Fayette.
Pilid For By The C.. ndldalt

f..lllir Tt~al

•queen Lucia·

Elton John taking his top accountants to civil court ·

* EARNED and received superior judicial service awards

*

cage, an automobile identified as
a Royc e, a Steinway Grand, and
a houseful of servants.
Ms. Bowen com mented on the
humor in the novel when Phillip
and LuCia inje cted Italian phrases in their conversations. pretending to be fluent in the language when they really were not.
She said that the author Benson
elegantly \vrites of the plots and
counterplot and little intrigue_s
that .swirl around Lucia in the life
of Riseholmc.
Bowen told the club that the
Lucia novels were made into ~
series of ten episodes for British
television in 1985 and 1986, and
later were adapted to be broadcast in the United States on public televiSion's Masterpiece Theater.The novels have been newly
published in the United States in
!998 and 1999. The author E.F.
Benson, who lived in Rye, England, wrote 72 novels, and had
many fans devoted to his writmgs.
The reviewer quoted the
famous American critic Gilbert
Seldes who .said, "lt is my opinion that these books about Lucia
are the most enchantingly malicious works written by the hand .
of man. And Mr. Benson was so
urbane about the absurd and
magnificent woman he had created that he becomes complete
fascinating."
Kloes showed the group an
antique Amberola which used
round roll.s instead of flat recorcb,
playing songs and humorous
readings.
Club members answered roll
call by mentioning other ·book.s
or literary characters who pro- ·
vide a good bit of humor.
The next club meeting wa.s
announced as being on Nov. 1, ·
2000, at the home of Pat Holter.

reviewed at club

QUALIFICATIONS

*

DEAR DIAMONDS: A diamond
bracelet is a very expensive gift. Since you
had it only a month before breaking up
with Howard, the honorable thing would
be to return it. Perhaps he'll be lucky
enough to find another young woman
who'll realize that as precious as the
bracelet may be, he's the real "jewel."

·skylark 2ooo·

COUNTY COURT JUDGE

*
*

EVER?

Visions and has had poetry Abell, director of admissions at
recorded on cassette. Her bio- Rio Grande. They both display
graphical data is jncluded in the many qualities we want to see in
current edition of "Who's Who an Atwood Award recipient and
In Poetry" published in Cam- we are happy that Melissa and
bridge, England.
Nick has elected to study at the
. WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.
She attends Salem Church of University of Rio Grande."
Sandra Fowler of West West Columbia where she is an
The Atwood Award for ExcelColumbia, W.Va. has been inter- active member of the prayer line, lence is presented to .students in
viewed by the editorial staff of helps with programs, sends out honor of the
universiry'&lt;
Skylark about her life in poetry. cards on behalf of the congrega- founders, Nehemiah and PermeSkylark is a tion and is a substitute Sunday lia Atwood. Eligibility for the
fine arts liter- school teacher.
award is based on scholastic
ary
aQn.ual
achievement, aptitude test scores
published by.
and leadership in extracurricular
Purdue Uniactivities.
versity
Calumet
of
MIDDLEPORT
Two
Hammond,
Meigs
County
residents
have
Ind. Each issue
been awarded the Atwood Award
contains
for Excellence
MIDDLEPORT - · A review
poems by both
Skylark
from the Uni- of" Queen Lucia" written by the
children and
versity of Rio British novelist E. F. Benson was
adults, short stories, artwork, and
Grande.
reviewed by Jeanne Bowen at a
photographs.
They
are recent meeting of the Middle"Skylark 2000" is scheduled
Melissa
Holport Literary Club held at the
for publication in early winter.
man, daughter home of June Kloes with Phyllis
The theme for the issue will be
James and Hackett as contributing hostess.
The American Worker.
Denise HolLeah Ord, vice · president,
In addition to the interview
man,
and
Nick
introduced
Bowen who noted
some of Fowler's poems will be
Holman
Michael, son that the . book was written
included along with cwo black
of Mark and between 1920 and 1939 along
and white photographs. One of
Denise
with four other novels centering
Fowler and one of The Salem
Michael.
With
around
the same heroine.
Church which has become a part
the
award
The first novel in the series of
of her creative history since that
comes
a
five,
is the account of Lucia\
1S where she began to write
tuition-free
· career as queen in the little Elizpoetry 43 years ago.
scholarship
to
abethan village of Riseholme,
She has had three books of
the
two
stuEngland.
·
poetry published. One in Israel,
dents
who
The reviewer stated that in this
one in the United States, and
demonstrated
novel
Benson introduces Lucia,
one in India.
a~ademi~
her husband Philip, her best
Her photograph, bio-data and
excellence
friend
Georgie Pillson. and the
some of her poems have
while in high "friends" that form~d her social
appeared on website of the
school.
circle in Risel\olme.
International Poetry Hall of
Holman
plans
to
major
in
Phillip had made his fortune
Fame Museum and at the webbiology,
while
Michael
will
be
a
years
before .in the practice of
site ofThe International Library
major
in
music
education.
•
law,
and
they lived extremely
of Poetry.
"The university is very well on the proceeds of their
Fowler is ·a part of The Interpleased
to offer this special award investments. They had a restored
national Library's Contemporary
Poets on tape series entitled to Melissa and Nick," said Mark and improved Elizabethan cot-

PATRICK H. "PAT" O'BRIEN

*

friends.
DEAR ABBY: I dated " Howard" for
eight month,s. He gave me a beautiful
diamond tennis bracelet for my birthday.
1 broke up with him a month later. Now
he's asking for the bracelet back! I don't
want to rernrn it. Do you think I have to?
- DIAMONDS ARE NOT FOR-

Sandra Fowler
interviewed for

RE-ELECT

'*

disagree with the friendship my ex-husband, his wife and I have. My ex and I
both sought counseling during and after
our divorce which uncovered a lot of
hurt and allowed a lot of healing for both
of us.
Help! These two are driving me crazy!
-JANE IN YAKIMA, WASH.
DEAR JANE: You appear to have
your life on track after many unhappy
years. Your friends may be well-meaning,
but threatening not to visit as long as you
live with your son and his wife is blackmail. Don't submit to it.Your r'Mationships
with your son, his v.Gfe and your former
husband are admir1ble. Unless your
friends are willing to stop dictating how
you should live your life, now may be 'the
time to stare broadening your circle of

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

WEDNESDAY

I

(t1flii/IIIISI

Page AS

Friends who lent helpiftg hands must learn to loosen their grip

{S\rr ~ CPMe'S DFF

6U1'6*WSS

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey .
Publisher

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Are you prepared for the flu season?
We are at the Holzer Meigs Clinic.
NOW OFFERING A
FLU VACCINE CLINIC
NOVEMBER 1, 2 &amp; 3, 2000

10:00 A.M.-7:00P.M.

I
I

•

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The flu vaccine will be given .on a first come tir~t serve basis;
No appointments will be made just walk-in .

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-0060

i

�0_P-inion

Page A4·

_Th_e_o_ai...::.Iy_s_en_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

The Daily Sentinel
'Esttl6llslid bl194&amp;

Tuesdllf. October 31, 2001

ac; $VQf all atOfoYiNI9 ·

Wltl"lbo PuSHY ,..

!QioW·JT..aLL!

'1'* PeBaT~!

DEAR ABBY: I am 50 and have been
,hvorced for two years after a 29-year
marriage that was, at times, physically and
emotio nally abusive. I work full - time and
attend college full-time .
. Two loving and caring friends have
helped me through the bad times with
enco uragement and advice. I often heed
their advice, since most of the time it has
been good and held true. However, I
recently made a decision that has caused
a rift between us and this disturbs me.
fvly son (age 30) and my daughter-inJa,~ (24) have invited me to live with
them until I complete my schooling, and
I have accepted their invitation. This eases
my financial burden (tuition, books, bills,
life} greatly. They both have good jobs, no
children
yet, and are solid and easygoing.
,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
Generlll M1nager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l..ealnll:l dtl Hlilor liN wkomt. Tlrn showld bot Wn lhfltt 3()() won/s, All ~am,.,.. s11bj«r
,. . . . . . Mfl •lUI' . . siftud •fill incl!Uk ~~u fjtul tek,hunr fU4mbrr. No unsifnftl Wtt.n •·iU
Ldkn slroMIJ H in 1ood W$k, oddrt'u·inr issues, not p#Nortal~lin.
. .

..,...W

S~,AL.

J'A;e .,WUO.U •xpnslfll in lltr column belo"' an thr con!tlf$11J of thr Ohw l-allr1 l'llbluhu.f

C• 'I .,.,._ 6o.ant, •nlns othr,......u .. niJlrtL

NATIONAL VIEW

Backlash
• Wheeling (W~Va.) News-Register: Cell phones can be precry handy things. Carpenters, plumbers, electricians and other roving
independent craftsmen depend on them the se days. But the widespread use of cell phones also has led to a cultural backlash against
them, complete with studies claiming to demonstrate the phones
pose a threat to the Republic.
We despise obnoxious cell phone behavior as much as anyone.
When some clown yaks loudly on a cell phone in the middle of a
nice restaurant, we doubt we're alone in fantasizing about serving
him a cellular Popsicle for dessert.
But the emerging safety campaign agamst cell phones is starting
to look even sillier than cellular Popsides. A few cities have banned
lallcing on a cell phone while drivmg, claiming that cell phone use
is a major traffic hazard.
·
Using a cell phone while driving obviously is not as safe as keeping quiet and putting both hands on the wheel. Statistically, according to the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis, there is a 6. 4 in 1 mil·
lion chance of a driver dying while talking on a cell phone, and a
1.5 in I million chance- th at another motorist will be killed by a driver talking on a cell phone.
But other risks are much greater. There's a 16.8 in 1 million
chance of being killed in a crash with a heavy truck, and a 17.6 in
I million chance of being killed by a drunken driver, according to
the Center.
Why aren't cell phone-related fatalities more common? Beca use
most cell phone calls are made during rush hour, when peopl e are
driving at slower speeds.
·
Cell phon.es. or devices very much like them, are here to stay.
Clearly a lot of cell phone users could stand to take a few l~ ssons
ftOm Miss Manners , but they hardly pose a grave threat to hfe and
limb.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday. Oct. 31, the 305th day Df 201/U . There are 61
days left in \he year. This is Halloween.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 31. 151 7. Martin Luther posted tiTe ~S Theses on the
door of the Wittenbng· PJ.bce' chu rch, marking th e "ita rt of the
Protestant Reformation in Gamany.
On this date:
-In 1795, English poet John Keats was b&lt;&gt;rn in Lo ndon.
In 1864; Nevada became the 36th state.
In 1926, magicia n Harry Houdini died in Detroit of gangrene
and peritonitis resultin g from . a ruptured appcndu(.
In 1941 , th~ .U.S. Nas'y destroyer Reuben James was torpedoed
by a German U-boat off Iceland with the loss of I 15 lives. eve n
though the United States had not yet entered World War II.
In 1956, R ear Adm. G.J. Dufek became the first person. to land :m
airplane at the South Pole.
lni 1959, a former U.S. Marine from Fort Wrrth , Tl'xas.
3nnounced in Moscow that he would never return to the United
States. His name: Lee Harvey Oswald
In 1968, President Johnson ordered a halt to all U.S. bombing of
North Vietnam, saying he hoped for fruitful peace negotianons.
In 1980, R eza Pahlavi . elde&lt;t son of th e late shah, proclaimed
himself the rightful successor to the Peacock Throne.
In 1984, Indian Prime Minister lndira G ~mdhi was as~assi nated by
rwo Sikh security guards.
,
ln 1994, a Ch ic ago-bound American Eagle 1'\TR-72 crashed in
northern Indiana, killing all 68 people aboard.
Ten years ago: Dunng a campaign swin g in suburban Washinb'ton,
President Bush said "I have had it" with the way Iraq was treating
American diplomats and hostages . but added he had no timetable for
deciding on a possible military 'trike. ~
Five years ago: Stung by defeat in the secc&gt;&lt;ion referendum, Quebec Premi~r Jacque ~ Parizeau said he would res~gn as head of the
bitterly divided province at year's errd .
One year a3o: EgyptAir Flight 990 cr&lt;l\hed off the Mmachmetts
coa.•t, killing all 217 people aboard.
Today's Bmhdays: Actress-si nger Dale. Evans is 8!:1. Former Attar. ney General Griffin Bell is H2. Actress Barbora Uel Geddes is 7H.
Cambodian f(jng Norodom Sihanouk is 71l. Movte criti c Andrew
Sar.ris is 72. Former astronaut Michael Collins is 70. Actress Lee
Grant is 69. CBS anchorman Dan Rather is W. Actor David Ogden
Stiers i• 58. Actress Sallv K~rkbnd IS 56. Singer Kinky Friedman is
56. Actress Deidre Hall ;s 52. NUC .mchorwom.m J,me P.tulcy is 50.
Actor Brian Stoke&lt; Mttchcll 1s 4~ . Rock mustcl&lt;m Lorry Mull en is
39. Actor Dermot Mulrcmey " .17 Rock muSJcian Mikkey Dee
(Motorhead) IS 37. Actor Rob Schneider 11 3(&gt;. .R.Ip mustctan
Adrock is 34. Songwnter Ad.un Schlesinger IS 3J. R .tp pnfimner
Vanilla Ice is J2. R ock \ln~er Linn llerggrL'n (Ace o f lla1e) IS .lll.
Actor Eddie Kaye Thon1.11 ("A merican l'te") is 21).
Thought ~(Jr Today: .. An o ld error" ,dsv:tyl more poputer tlun a
new truth ." - Gnrnan proverb.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE
My girlfriends arc appalled that I could
live with my children who have been
married only two years! They feel I
would be invading their privacy and giving up mine, along with my independence. I assured them that this is only a
temporary arrangement, since I have only
a year and a half to finish school. I told

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Cell phones' risk to life and
limb about nonexistent

HENTOFF'S VIEW

CNN abandons all journalistic responsibility
On Friday, Oct. 20, CNN's "Crossfire"
aired a debate on whether the federal government should require schools and libraries to
use Internet filters to protect children against
pornography. One of the combatants was
Larry Flynt, publisher of H us tier magazine.
He has a considerable track record of making
scan~alous charges against presidential candidates without providing evidence.
As the program was drawing co a close,
Flynt said of George W Bush: "We've found
out in the early 1970s he was involved in an
abortion in Texas .... If the abortion issue is
tr~e. then that puts him lower on the moraliry scale than Bill Clinton."
Co-host Robert Novak said: "Mr. Flynt,
you said if n's true, and you have no proof of
that .... 1 gather you're a very strong Gore supporter."
Flynt responded: "The hell we don't have
proof."
Neither Novak nor the olher host, Bill
Press, followed up with a demand that Flynt
providr: the "proof."
All that Press said -as the debate program
was ending - was: ''Larry Flynt, a man who
speaks hi~ word. But we:: reniind you {the
audience) they are Larry Flynt's words, not
ours. Larry Flynt, thank you very much for
joining us .... Live television ... too bad ."
The Bush abor tion story was left to float in
the air. Quickly, there were many references
to it on th e Internet , with many of" the messages asking why N ovak and l'ress had no r
demanded that Flynt give his "pnJOf"
Two days later, o n C-Span's "Washington
Journal,'' a caller repeated Flynt's :Kn.J.~ation.
He htH.f no .duubt that it W:l'&gt; t rUL'. NeJther the
host nor Matt Coopl'r, Jeputy W,tshington
bureau ch ief of New&lt;&gt;week, who was being
interviewed. gave rhe story .my cre-dence. 13ut
the charge had been spread aga11 1.

have some idea of how intense political campaigns , especially in Boston , could become. I
was on the front Jine, having covered among other inflammatory campaigners
James Michael Curley.
On WMEX , as on other stations, the
schedule was rigid. All programs had to end
exactly on time so th at WL' could bro adcast a
station break - the identifying call letters or else we'd hear from the Federal Communications Conunission.
NEA COLUMNIST
If, during an interview, even with only seconds left, someone had made cbe kind of
CNN's reach is worldwide. A friend of charge Larry Flynt did· on "Crossfire," I would
mine, a filmmaker who lives in Denmark and have ignored th e station break and taken as
travels throughout Europe, told me recently long as necessary to demand proof of the
that much of what Europe knows about charge. If I hadn't, the boss would have fired
America comes from CNN. And the George me, even though 1 was the union 's shop stewBush abortion stOry is likely to have circled at ard.
Later, in New York, I was host of a weekly
least part of the globe.·
television
progran1 on WNBC- TV th.t often .
But what could Bill Press and Robert ·
Novak have done? That section of th~ pro- had controversial guests, Thert\ too, I wa~
gram had run out of time. Ati:er commercials, rcstricteJ to a st:t tim~ pl'rind, hur I Would.
however, there is a final segn1ent, called "Clos- have hmken that rule rather than k·r so harm ing Comments."When Flynt sprang his Octo- ful a 11ersonal attack float by.
Flynt's charge on CNN was made near to
ber surprise on national and international
televi sion, "Closing Comments" shou ld have the end of a closely co ntc '\ ted pn:siJential
been jettiso ned and Flynt should have been ele ctio n. rioth Press and Novak ,Ire skilled at
presse d co tell precisely what h!S evidence was. giving rapid-fire. accusatory 4UL'Slion~ to their
But even during "Closing Comments," nei- guests - and to each other.
Fly nt , ,waiting la te imu the prugr&lt;-lm to
th er host referred to the abortion charge.
smear
George W. Uuo.; h, ca ught Press and
I've had sotne cxpcncncc doing live imcrvicws with controversial public figures. I Novak ofr gu:ard. But th,L"y 'n: prnfl''i'iionalJn&lt;l~- ·
broke into journalism at radio station WMEX tcrs 'of debate. Moreowr, ;tlthougb Flynt has
i11 Uoston, where for nearly ! 0 years I did li ve tht· same fret'- speech ri ghts we :dl share, as a
intervkw11 in th~ studio, on the stn.·ets. :111 d journalist, I'm not constitutionally bound to
during the ferocious political campai,;ns f(lr ·int ervll'\\' \Oil leon e with hi~ rL"cort! of shotwhich M,t'\S,JC hu setts was f:unous (or in fa- gun charge'i. And if I d1d , [ wo uldn 't have let
him off the hook. Nor, I rh111k. would Chris
mous).
Matthew\
on " Hardh,tiL"
If yo u've read the novel "The La.st llurrah,"
(Na t Hl'llrf.!.tr is a HtHiotJilfiJ' rcJWl/IJ/cd dtlllwiitr
or seen the movi e \vith Spencl.:'r Tracy, yo u
"" tl1e First Amrlldllll'llt a11d tlu· Hill of H.i_~hts.)

Nat
Hentoff

K I L PAT R I C K' S· V I E W

Flip of the coin highlights juror responsibility
At the erial of llidro Sa mue l Reyes 111 11)95,
Juror No. 12 went through two days of worrisome indeci.., iun. He tru ly believed the defenJ;mL w~ not guilty, but the weekend 'WaS

appruaching, and he was the only holdout.
What wa' Juror Shakeed Fa reed to do' At
lun chtime o n a Thursday afternoon he went to
his car, ate :;,urne lwK h and thought the n1atter
over. Then he flipped a coin. Heads, Reyes was
guilty T,iJs, Reyes was not guilty. The quarter
came &lt;tp heads. H e thought, better go for two
NEA COLUMNIST
· out of three. H e flipped again. Heads again .That
did it. He returned to the jury room and voted
"guilty." The judge gave Reyes seven years in approaching, Reyes threw three plastic bags
onto the coof of a building. The bags contain ed
prison fi)r pn'i~t:s'iion of cocaine br1se tOr sale.
What about ir , you nlrb . . rune constitutional' cocaine. One trial resulted in a hun gjury.A ..,eclawyers? Was R eyt:!'. entitled to a new trial ond trial bc~an on Nov. I, 199S.The 12-tnembecause the verdict wa~ reached by chance, ber jury bcb'&lt;ln it.s deliberations on Nov. 7 and
rather than by informed deliberation' The Cal- r"turned its b"' ilty verdict around 3 p.m. on
.
ifornia Court of Appeal aftirmed the convic- N~q
Three months wcm by. and the juror's co noon:
"While the method used by (the juror) may science got the better of him. On a nlo tion for
a new trial, he 'fessed up.
~e disturbing, and is indeed unorthodox, it does
Q: Why did you flip the coin a second time?
not constitute &lt;l chance verdict or one deter. A: I flipp ed a seco nd rime because I was i1ot
nUned by lot. Were we to examine his reasons
for voting. we would be probing the mental satisfied. with a guilty. My whole thing was I
processes of this one juror,&lt;omething which we never thought he was gu ilty to begin with.
Q: So when you fiipped it a second time,
are prohibited from Jomg."
Reyes has taken the case to the Supreme what happened'
A: It came out heads again , meaning he W&lt;l\
Court, where It IS pending on his petition for
rev1 ew. If there 1 ~ &lt;my Supreme Court precedent guilty due to the coin.
Q: Did you stop there'
precisely on pomt. cmmsel has f~1ilcd to state it .
A: Yes, I d.id .
In any eve nt , because the cloudy facts make this
In
denying Rcye,: motion for .1 lll'\\ rr i.d. tlw
a ilJrd case, I doubt tim the ht~h co urt willlwar
jtJdgl' ruled th at :t!'. .1 gencr.d prop m ain1 1·, .t
1t. Hard ca'c' m.tkc t()r h,1d bw.
The crimm.1l charge dates from July 1(,. jllror\ 11 ubjcctivc mental processes are out-of-I 'J'J4. when Reyes w.J&lt; 111 .1 housing project 111 bounds. Th~rc arc exceptions to this rule. ( )ne
Culver· C ity. When he s.Iw .1 poli ce officer \•xceptinn is tht'tt jbries art' not permittl'd tn

James

Kilpatrick

decide a case by ch,mce or by lot. If the jury as
&lt;1 whole l1 ad agrel'd in adv:mce to the juror's
coin . ,. flipping jurisprudence, a would h:lVe been
.1 ditfcrL~nt m atte r. O n the final Thursday afternoon the other 11 JUrors had no way of knowing "'''hy Fareed had changCd his vote at last.
Ca lifornia'~ penal code permits a nc\V trial
"when the verdict has been decided by lot, Of·
by mean1 other chan a fai' expression on the .
part uf all the jucors." Moreowr, the code
specifically permits the testin~ony of one juim
to bt: used as evidence to prove thl.! verdi ct was
retched "by ::~ rcsurt to the determination of
ch ance."

To justifY a retrial, said the Court of Appeal,
a ttlinted verdict nmst n.:&gt;~ulr ti·0111 a jury's agreement in advance. "A vl'rdi ct by· ch,mce or lot
does nor refer to the memal proc.:csscs of one
juror, in i~olation from his or her tt·llow jurors.
If the jury panel uses some tool, such as ;1 coin,
the roll of a dice or a niathcmatic.1l formula, to
assist i.t in reaching a conclusion. but there wa.~
no anteccdt·nt agreernent to liSe that result as
the verdict, there is no impropriety."
I "Ill of two minds. All chc Constitution
requires in a criminal case is a "spccdy an.J publi c erial by"" impartial ju"y." It certainly is not
unknown - or even unusual - for holdout
jurors to change their votes tOr pcro;ona1 reasons
that have nothing to do wirh the evidence. My
inclination would ht' to give defendant Reye"i a
third tri,Il , hut I don't know. Suppose there h,d
ht:crl nn flip of a coin. Supposl· juror FarL·cd had
\ 1cldnl ..,lmply lwt;.IU\L' hl' \V,I\ tm.:d .111d \Vant
cd to gn I HHllc~

ljamcs J. Kilpafn(k . rs a
Prl'ss S)IWlicatc.)

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
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Items are printed only as
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to he printed a
specific number of days.
'

/or

October 31,

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30
p.m. at Pageville town hall.

or

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW, regular meeting
Thursday night, potluck dinner at
6:30p.m.

TUESDAY
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township Trustees, regular ses&gt;~on, Tuesday. 5 p.m, at the town, hip building.
·

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778, regular session, Saturday, 6:30 ·p.m potluck supper;
meeting, 7:30 p.m.

Cetcustody
'

POMEROY The Rev.
Charles and Susie Mash of
Portsmouth,
formerly
of
Pomeroy, have been granted legal
custody of their granddaughter
Melyla Noel Mash, who was
born on Aug. 3, 1999, in Virginia
B e'ach,Va.
The Rev. Mash , who formerly
pastored the Reedsville and
Cheshire United Methodist
Churches, now serves Manly and
Valley
United . Methodist
Churches in Portsmouth.

them the most important factor is that it
is OK with my children and OK with
me.
My kids and I have discussed privacy
issues and personal issues, and we all feel
very comfortable with this. One of my
friends said she wouldn't visit me at their
home because she would "feel uncomfortable." My other friend told me she
just doesn't feel that this is right. I love my
friends dearly, but I am getting that eerie
feeling of" control" from them· that I had
in my marriage. Am I right, or just paranoid? I'm afraid of making the wrong
decision,
My children and I really do feel comfortable with the whole thing. Should I
tell my friends it's time to "let me go" and
lead my own life now' My friends also

Meyla Noel Maeh

We want your photos!
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lines lor submissions:
.
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· good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however, please Include T
print along with the negative.
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have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however, please Include
e print along with the negative.
• stan.dard-slze sl ides are accepted, provided they are in locus and
have good contrast.
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no larger than 8 x 10.
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well on newsprint.
·
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reproduce well on newsprint.

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the back of the photograph or 6n an attached sheet of paper.

Students receive
excellence award

* EXPERIENCED:

LONDON (AP) Elton director of]ohn Reid EnterprisJohn is taking his top accountants to court to recoup millions
of dollars in tour ing costs he
claims they mistakenly charged
him.
The 53-year-old singer and
pianist is suing PricewaterhouseCoopcrs and Andrew
Haydon, former managmg

l

es

UREL). Both

compames

looked after hiS busine ss interests.

Holzer Meigs Clinic

20 Years as Judge.

by the Ohio Supreme Court in every year that the award
was given.
MEMBER of the Ohio Judicial College.
FIRST Meigs County Court Judge to establish a
probation and community corrections department from
state grants at no cost to 'the county.
TOUGH but consistent on criminal and civil decisions.
COLLECTED and deposited with the Meigs County
Auditor over $118,000.00 earmarked for new jail
construction and/or renovation .
ESTABLISHED a County wide Community Service Work
Program.
APPOINTED by Chief Justice Moyer of the Ohio
Supreme Court to serve as visiting judge in the counties
of Lawrence, Gallia, Morgan and Fayette.
Pilid For By The C.. ndldalt

f..lllir Tt~al

•queen Lucia·

Elton John taking his top accountants to civil court ·

* EARNED and received superior judicial service awards

*

cage, an automobile identified as
a Royc e, a Steinway Grand, and
a houseful of servants.
Ms. Bowen com mented on the
humor in the novel when Phillip
and LuCia inje cted Italian phrases in their conversations. pretending to be fluent in the language when they really were not.
She said that the author Benson
elegantly \vrites of the plots and
counterplot and little intrigue_s
that .swirl around Lucia in the life
of Riseholmc.
Bowen told the club that the
Lucia novels were made into ~
series of ten episodes for British
television in 1985 and 1986, and
later were adapted to be broadcast in the United States on public televiSion's Masterpiece Theater.The novels have been newly
published in the United States in
!998 and 1999. The author E.F.
Benson, who lived in Rye, England, wrote 72 novels, and had
many fans devoted to his writmgs.
The reviewer quoted the
famous American critic Gilbert
Seldes who .said, "lt is my opinion that these books about Lucia
are the most enchantingly malicious works written by the hand .
of man. And Mr. Benson was so
urbane about the absurd and
magnificent woman he had created that he becomes complete
fascinating."
Kloes showed the group an
antique Amberola which used
round roll.s instead of flat recorcb,
playing songs and humorous
readings.
Club members answered roll
call by mentioning other ·book.s
or literary characters who pro- ·
vide a good bit of humor.
The next club meeting wa.s
announced as being on Nov. 1, ·
2000, at the home of Pat Holter.

reviewed at club

QUALIFICATIONS

*

DEAR DIAMONDS: A diamond
bracelet is a very expensive gift. Since you
had it only a month before breaking up
with Howard, the honorable thing would
be to return it. Perhaps he'll be lucky
enough to find another young woman
who'll realize that as precious as the
bracelet may be, he's the real "jewel."

·skylark 2ooo·

COUNTY COURT JUDGE

*
*

EVER?

Visions and has had poetry Abell, director of admissions at
recorded on cassette. Her bio- Rio Grande. They both display
graphical data is jncluded in the many qualities we want to see in
current edition of "Who's Who an Atwood Award recipient and
In Poetry" published in Cam- we are happy that Melissa and
bridge, England.
Nick has elected to study at the
. WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.
She attends Salem Church of University of Rio Grande."
Sandra Fowler of West West Columbia where she is an
The Atwood Award for ExcelColumbia, W.Va. has been inter- active member of the prayer line, lence is presented to .students in
viewed by the editorial staff of helps with programs, sends out honor of the
universiry'&lt;
Skylark about her life in poetry. cards on behalf of the congrega- founders, Nehemiah and PermeSkylark is a tion and is a substitute Sunday lia Atwood. Eligibility for the
fine arts liter- school teacher.
award is based on scholastic
ary
aQn.ual
achievement, aptitude test scores
published by.
and leadership in extracurricular
Purdue Uniactivities.
versity
Calumet
of
MIDDLEPORT
Two
Hammond,
Meigs
County
residents
have
Ind. Each issue
been awarded the Atwood Award
contains
for Excellence
MIDDLEPORT - · A review
poems by both
Skylark
from the Uni- of" Queen Lucia" written by the
children and
versity of Rio British novelist E. F. Benson was
adults, short stories, artwork, and
Grande.
reviewed by Jeanne Bowen at a
photographs.
They
are recent meeting of the Middle"Skylark 2000" is scheduled
Melissa
Holport Literary Club held at the
for publication in early winter.
man, daughter home of June Kloes with Phyllis
The theme for the issue will be
James and Hackett as contributing hostess.
The American Worker.
Denise HolLeah Ord, vice · president,
In addition to the interview
man,
and
Nick
introduced
Bowen who noted
some of Fowler's poems will be
Holman
Michael, son that the . book was written
included along with cwo black
of Mark and between 1920 and 1939 along
and white photographs. One of
Denise
with four other novels centering
Fowler and one of The Salem
Michael.
With
around
the same heroine.
Church which has become a part
the
award
The first novel in the series of
of her creative history since that
comes
a
five,
is the account of Lucia\
1S where she began to write
tuition-free
· career as queen in the little Elizpoetry 43 years ago.
scholarship
to
abethan village of Riseholme,
She has had three books of
the
two
stuEngland.
·
poetry published. One in Israel,
dents
who
The reviewer stated that in this
one in the United States, and
demonstrated
novel
Benson introduces Lucia,
one in India.
a~ademi~
her husband Philip, her best
Her photograph, bio-data and
excellence
friend
Georgie Pillson. and the
some of her poems have
while in high "friends" that form~d her social
appeared on website of the
school.
circle in Risel\olme.
International Poetry Hall of
Holman
plans
to
major
in
Phillip had made his fortune
Fame Museum and at the webbiology,
while
Michael
will
be
a
years
before .in the practice of
site ofThe International Library
major
in
music
education.
•
law,
and
they lived extremely
of Poetry.
"The university is very well on the proceeds of their
Fowler is ·a part of The Interpleased
to offer this special award investments. They had a restored
national Library's Contemporary
Poets on tape series entitled to Melissa and Nick," said Mark and improved Elizabethan cot-

PATRICK H. "PAT" O'BRIEN

*

friends.
DEAR ABBY: I dated " Howard" for
eight month,s. He gave me a beautiful
diamond tennis bracelet for my birthday.
1 broke up with him a month later. Now
he's asking for the bracelet back! I don't
want to rernrn it. Do you think I have to?
- DIAMONDS ARE NOT FOR-

Sandra Fowler
interviewed for

RE-ELECT

'*

disagree with the friendship my ex-husband, his wife and I have. My ex and I
both sought counseling during and after
our divorce which uncovered a lot of
hurt and allowed a lot of healing for both
of us.
Help! These two are driving me crazy!
-JANE IN YAKIMA, WASH.
DEAR JANE: You appear to have
your life on track after many unhappy
years. Your friends may be well-meaning,
but threatening not to visit as long as you
live with your son and his wife is blackmail. Don't submit to it.Your r'Mationships
with your son, his v.Gfe and your former
husband are admir1ble. Unless your
friends are willing to stop dictating how
you should live your life, now may be 'the
time to stare broadening your circle of

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

WEDNESDAY

I

(t1flii/IIIISI

Page AS

Friends who lent helpiftg hands must learn to loosen their grip

{S\rr ~ CPMe'S DFF

6U1'6*WSS

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey .
Publisher

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Are you prepared for the flu season?
We are at the Holzer Meigs Clinic.
NOW OFFERING A
FLU VACCINE CLINIC
NOVEMBER 1, 2 &amp; 3, 2000

10:00 A.M.-7:00P.M.

I
I

•

~-

.,

,I

''

The flu vaccine will be given .on a first come tir~t serve basis;
No appointments will be made just walk-in .

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-0060

i

�•
Page A I• The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Trellsury to sell steck
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Treasury Department announcrd
Monday it is in the process of selling 2.4 million common shares
of chemical manufacturer Uniroyal Technology Corp. that the
government rece1ved in settlement of d•ims lodged by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1992.
Officials of the Treasury Department's Bure•u of Public Debt
said that over the past month it has sold 262,900 shares and pbns
to continue sales over the next several mtmths until all 2. 4 million
shares of its holdings have been wld . ihe government's total shares
represent less than I 0 percent of the company's stock.
While the government is not covered by disclosure rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Treasury officials said they
decided it was appropriate to announce the soles program after the
gowrriment had disposed of 1 percent of the company's outstanding common stock.
Uniroyal Technology Corp., based in Sarasota, Fla., manufactures
a broad range of specialty chemicals and plastics.
The government acquired its holdings after predecessor companies were reorganized as part of bankruptcy proceedings. EPA
accepted shares in the reorganized company as settlement of
daims filed under the law that created the Superfund waste
cleanup Ltw.
• Uniroyal Tt•chnology Cnrp. trades ' on the Nasdaq under the
symbol UTCI. Its shares were trading Monday at SllU7.

Police nab wrong susped
PHOENIX (AI') -A Florida woman thought to be a burglary
suspect \vas arrested, strip-s('arched and sent w jail before author-

I .

itit!'s realizt:d they had the wrong woman.
Phoenix police Detective Bob Brunansky •sked sheriff's
deputies in Florida to check out a burglary suspect believed to
haw fled Arizona. Brunansky said he didn't ask them to ;~rrest anyone.
Pinellas Cou~ty sheriff's deputies went to Linda Sue Hardester's
home to see if she was the suspect Linda Sue Andrews, 45. Both
women share the same birthday.
·
"They gave us the Hardesters' address," Sgt. Greg Tita said.
"When we got there, Linda Sue Hardester generally met Andrews'
description and her birthday was the same. So we arrested her."
Seventeen hours after Hardester was jailed, the fingerprint
check came back and proved she was not Andrews.
"I think 1've been in Arizo na once," she said. "I was just driving
through."

Lost man survives in woods
GORMAN , Calif. (AI') -A 25-year-old ma n who wandered
into the Angeles National Forest a month ago and got lost has
boen found alive, police said.
Sean Kelly, who was reported missing Sept. 30, was found by a
hunter Monday in the Knapp Ranch area of the forest, about 60
miles north of downtown Los Angeles, sheriff's Deputy Michael
Lorenci said.
Too weak to walk out, rescuers airlifted the man to Henry Mayo
Newhall Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for exposure.
Kelly told the hunter he had been lost for about two weeks and
survived by eating roots and bugs, Lorenci said. To survive, he covered himself with dirt and branches at night to keep warm.
"We're all surprised that he'd been out there for 30 days and that
he survived," Loren~;i said.
·

Wrestler's family settles suit
KA N SAS CITY. Mo. (AP) - The family of wrestler Owen
Hart, who died in a botched stunt last ye;~r, has settled a wrongful
death lawsuit against the World Wrestling Federation ·and the city.
Hart, known as the Blue Blazer, died May 13, 1999, when he fell
78 feet ;~fter the harness that was lowering him to the ring opened
early during a WWF event at Kemper ArenJ, " :hich ·is owned by
the citv.
·The .lawsuit was filed by Hart's widow, two children and his p•rents, who contended the stunt was dangerom and poorly planned
and th~t the harness system wJs defective.
The settlement, which needs court appro\'Jl, was fi led Frid•y
with the Missouri Court of Appeals. The appeals court had been
scheduled to hold J hearing Tuesday in. a dispute over a document
in the case.
Neither side disclo,ed terms of the settlement.
The Kansas City Star quoted an unidentified source close to the
settlement negotiations a.1 saying the WWF had agreed to pay the
Hart family S18 million.

Kissinger released from hospital
NEW YORK (AP) Fonner Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger was released from a hospital on Monday, about a week
after suffering a heart attack.
Kissinger, 77, had entered NewYork Weill-Carnell Medical
Center on Wednesday after suffering what a hospital spokeswoman called "a limited heart attack." He had undergone bypass
surgery in 1982.
Kissinger was secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations and played a pivota.l role in ~stablishing a U.S. dialogue
with Communist China. After the 1973 Middle East war, he negotiated agreements between Israel and two of its Arab foes, Egypt
and Syria.
He shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973 with North Vietnamese chief negotiator Le Due Tho for the accord that allowed
America to pull out ofV'ietnam. But he was criticized for the 1970
American invasion of Cambodia.
In re.c ent years, Kissinger has worked as .a consultant and written his memoirs and other books.
__/

Shriver condition still critiCIII
BALTIMORE (AI') - Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the sister of
President John F. Kennedy. remained in critical condition Monday,
a week after entenng Johns Hopkins Hospital for treatment of a
postoperative infection.
,
,
"Her family continues to be grateful for and to ask for the
prayers and support of p,·ople t'\'erywhere," her son. MJrk Sluivt'r, said.
·
Shriver, 7~J. h:lll .l bcnign p :mcre~ltl C wmor removed ()cc 12 and
her do~· turs ~ant tht•y expected a full rcco\'L'ry aftt.•r her Oct. 11
rdcase. Hcm:evc r. Shiiver w,Js re.ldmatt.•d nvo d.1ys LH"L'T .l ft~..· r &lt;.:o mplain.ing of pain , and donor~ di scovt.•n:d a poswp~..-r.ltiv~.· mfccuon,
her f.1mily ,,u·d.
''She\. in critir.d condition, but shl·'s doing berra dun ~he \\'JS
J few d;ry.., .1go," her men·. lr. Gov. K.uhk· ..·tJ Kc 1111 1
..'dy Tlnvmcnd,
said Monday.
Shriver fotllldl'd the Spt'ual ( llympt« 111 I %X. Her hmb.md, R .
Sargcnt Shnver, \\'.1~ the nl'IJHKr.Hi c \"t(l' pn..'S idl'llti.tl c.mdlli.lti.' til
19T]. .tnd sought the pn:..,iL.krHi.d nnnHn ,nion in 197(•. Ht.·r brothl'T is Sen .. Edw.HJ Kennedy. I &gt;-M,1..,... . ,mJ she has five dt1ldn:u,
including NBC n·portl'r M.tri ;t Shrl\'l'L

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

Tuesday, October 31, 2000

Baptist with draws SS million in funding
CORPUS CHRISTI,Tex•s (AP) -Texas'
2.7 million Baptists dealt a severe blow to the
Southern Baptist Convention on Monday,
withdrawing $5 million in funding on the
grounds that the denomination is becoming
too conservative.
Mter a brief, civil debate, the 6,000 representatives of the Texas Baptists approved the
ri1ove as a sizable majority held up voting
cards.
The vote is considered a watershed by both
sjdes in the doctrinal conflict that has long

roiled the nation's largest Protestant denomination, which has 15.8 million members.
Texas accounts for 17 percent of the members and 13 percent Qf the money that supports Southern Baptist Convention programs.
Texas Baptists spokqman, Kenneth Camp,
said the group was at a crossroads and caUed
the meeting "the decisive turning point for
the next century."
In recent years, the Southern Baptists have
barred female pastors, declared that wives
should "submit .graciously" to their husbands,

Survey shows many parents
have vaccine misconceptions
CHICAGO (AI') -A sizable
number of parents hav~ misconceptions about vaccines, with
many bdieving tl1.1c too many
inununizations can weaken their
children's ability to fi~ht discases, a surVl'Y found .
About one-fourth of parents
surveyed said children get too
many immunizations, according
to the telephone survey of 1.600
purents of you ng children Jcross
the nation. The resu lts are published in next month's edition of
Pediatric&lt;.
The findings suggest that
some parents might withhold
,vaccines, .. needlessly placing
their child - and their community - at risk for outbreaks of
infectious disease," said Dr.
Br uce Gellin ofVanderbilt University, who led the study and
· . prese nted th e fi ndings Monday
at the American Academy of
Pediatrics' annual n)eeting.
Gellin heads the newly
form ed National Network for
lmmu niz.a tion
Information,
formed by the academy and
three other medical groups to
provide parents clear information about immunizations.
Suzanne Walther, a Murfreesboro, Tenn., mother of three,
didn't get her two-month-old
daughter the usual va~cines incl u ding the Haemop h ilus
·influenzae type b. (Hib) Vaccine,
w h ich protects against a potentially fata l for m of menmgitis.
When the infant was 11' months

old, she co ntracted the disease,
the first seen at Vanderbilt University in eight years.
Though her daughter rt'covered, the expencncl' turned
WJlther into a va cci 1iL" believer.
She sJid she h.1d been a skeptic partly be-cause she never
knew anyone with polio, n 1easles
or Hib, once-feared diseases that
have been tJmed by vaccines.
Such thinking by younger
parents and pediatricians who
haven't lived through epidemics
may explain why some undervalue the need for vaccines, said
Dr. Samuel Katz, NNII's cochairman and professor etueritus
at Duke University.
Polio has been vir tu~lly eradicated in this country, but is st1ll
a problem in some parts of
Africa and India - and co ul d
still pose a threa t, Katz said.
"They're no further th~n a jet
plane away," he said.
Ka tz also said misconceptions
abound. Mea.les vaccines have
linked to autism, for example,
and hepatitis B vaccines to multiple sclerosis - myths perpetuated in part by erroneous information on the Internet, Katz
md. ·
On
the
Net:
hup:/ /www.inuuunizationinfo.org
AAP: http:/ /www.aJp.org

tuesd,.Y. October 31,1000

demning homosexuahry.
Earlier this month, former President Carter
severed ties to the Southern Baptist Conven-

TuEsDAY'S

tion because of its .. increasmgly rigid" cret:d.

0~ Monday, the Texans voted to cut the

HIGHLIGHTS

amount of money they brivc w several Southern Baptist seminaries by about 80 percent
next year and send the $4 million instead to

Reclwomen sweep
weekend matches

three mOderate campuses in Texas.

Boy killed after

RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande volleyball
team continued its up and down
season, this weekend at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Friday night, the Redwomen
dropped Tiffin in three games,
15-5, 15-11and 15-7 and on Saturday, they finished off Notre
Dame CoUege in three games,
15-9, 15-6, 15-13.
Rio Grande ( 16-23, 6-7 AMC)
received strong play from senior
outside hitter Alisha Flesher with
12 kiUs, five digs and two blocks
against the Lady Dragons. Freshman Rebecca Wierwille and
junior Andrea Brown each registered nine kills. Wierwille had 10
digs and Brown, nine in the winning effort. ·
Sophomore Maria Robers continued' her solid serving, netting
four aces and freshman Laura
Ondera posted four blocks.
Sophomore setter Jessica Wheeler
recorded 18 of the teams' 21

falle gun is drawn
LOS ANGELES (AP) - . Lee's f.m1ily. ;,h.~ ,1 tragi&lt;-- l'Vt:'nt,"
Potice Chief Bernard C. Parks on he ~.1iJ.
Monday bbmed a realistic-lookLee'... '-15tt..·r Tina Vogt. who
mg prop gun for the fatal poli cl' worh for thL· S.tcr:mll'ntn Poh cc
shooting of an actor at a weekend DL~p ,trtlneiH . ~;ml -.he 1~ baffiL·d by
costume party.
the killing .md qw..·,noneJ the
Th~ officer. who 6rt:"d nint:'
LAPD\ ~te co um of th L• shoonng.
shots at Anthony Dwain Lee
She pl:mnl'd t.n .lttl·nd a canthrough ~ window of :1 West L&lt; 1s dlelight Vlgtl Monda\' mght outAngeles mansion -after seeing him stde the Wc~t Lo~ An.gdcs police
raise what looked like a !,'llll, had divisi0n whcrt.• Hopper is sta"no time" co find out if the tioned.
weapon was real or to shout :1
Lee, YJ. was shot early Saturw;u ning, the chief said at a news day \vhcn he .1lkgcdly pointed
conference.
the f.1ke b'l.tn Jt Hoppl'r .md his
Officer T.1rrid· Hopper. 17, .PJrtner who wen: Jll\'e~tigating a
who has been with the depart- neighbor's compL1int ab out the
ment for three yc.1rs, h~s been nmsy party.
placed on paid leave while the
P,uks ~.tid rhc two umformed
LAPD and counry district attor- officers idcnttficd thcmsckcs to
ney's office investigate the death.
some partygoers J[ the home and
Parks on Monday displayed were directed to the rear of the
Lees prop gun, which he said was house to find the host. Instead,
made of solid gray rubber in the they spotted Lee through J winshape of an Israeli-made .357 dow.
Desert Eagle serniautomatic
The tenant.;; n( the m:msion
handgun .
where the shooting occurred said
Pa rks said such replicas they were shocked by the shootoften used as movie props - ·
ing but declined further comhave led to at least seven recent ment.
officer-involved shootings. He
Lee had appeared in smaU TV
did not elaborate and left the and film roles on show&lt; such as
news
conference
without "ER," "NYPD Blue" and the
answering questions.
1997 Jun CJrrey movie " Liar
"Whether it's a Halloween Ltar.''
party, on the street or at a robbery
Those who knew him said he
... we can't take for granted that (a carried the f.1ke we&lt;~pon as part of
gun) is a replica," Parks said.
a devil costume .wd imi~tcd ht•
Parks expressed his depart- .w ould -never h:~Vl' poi mt·d it at
ment's "deep condolences" co ·anyone - c\'cn .1s .1 Jnke .

sagg

3SS I ~tS .

.

Tiffin (10-17, 4-7 AMC) could
never gain any momentum in the
defeat.
On Saturday, the Redwomen
gained control early and just
never let go, although the final
game of the day, NDC (1 1-20, 210 AM C) tied the contest at 1313 before falling to Rio Grande.
Flesher was huge with 16 kills
and six digs while serving 7-for7. Ondera posted 10 kills and
two blocks, while feUow freshman
Wierwille registered seven kills,
two serve aces (15-for-15 serving) and four digs. Robers contributed five kills, six digs and
three blocks.
. Wheeler had 29 assists and
three aces (18-for-18 serving).
With the pair of victories this
weekend, the Redwomen still
have an outside chance to play in
the AMC Tournan1ent. Today's
night match at Mt. Vernon
Nazarene is a must win situation
for the hope to remain.

Lane

from hospital
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fh.
(AP) - A smiling Liza Minnelli
was released from a hospital Monday after spending the better part of
October recovering from viral
encephalitis and de hydration .
The 5-1-yc•r-old singer, clutching the hand of her half-stster
Lorna LUft, waved as she was
escorted in a wheelchair down a
hospital ramp to a wa)ting limousme.
" I feel wonderful," Minnelli said.
'Tm with my sister, and I've never
felt better in my life."
She stood and hugged Luft,
from whom she has reportedly
been estranged, before getting in
the limousine. Minnelli said her
near-death experience has brought
her and her sister closer together.
"My sister is the best," Luft said.
The Oscar-winning diva was
hospitalized at the Cleveland Clinic Hospital about three weeks ago
after contracting the disease, a
potentially deadly inflammation of
the brain that had left her m scnous
condition.
"Although tl)e condition is now
under control, due to the mmal
severity of viral encephalitis, it will
be several months before Ms. Minnelli is completely well," Dr. Mau-·
rice Hanson said m a statement.
Publicist Michael H•rtman sJid
Minndli is "ft.•diug much bettL'r
and is looking forward to bemg
home:··

DBacks hire
Bre.nly

-.--...--....
·------...

PHOENIX (AP) -Bob Brenly, a broadcaster and former major
league catcher, was hired as manager of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Brenly signed a three-year
contract worth $2 million, with a
fourth year at the club's option.
Brenly, TV analyst for the Diamondbacks and the Fox network,
replaces !luck Showalter, who
was tired the day after the season
ended.

~

:=-~---

ChlllllriDIIUI' 111'11 ,. STa"
HIICIIN II lftCiillnler
1111' own Clllr CIIIICII

..,

. lloJ . .

.

-.

cards decline
Hentgen's option

•

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Pat Hentgen 's $6 million option for next
year was declined by the St. Louis
Cardinals, who instead wiU pay a
$600,000 buyout. Hentger, the
1996 AL Cy Young winner, was
15-12 with a 4.72 ERA in 33
starts chis season.
The Cardinals exercised a11
$8SO.UOO option on catcher Mike
Matheny, who threw out a major
league- high 51 percent of wouldbe basestealers and had a career
high in almost every offensive
category.

Boone's a free
agent

.-----·-.
a.he· .............................
c--11111'

Hours:

M~:::?a;~:~:-s
1-800-200-4005 or
(740) 667-7388

....._..

PageBI

boycotted Disney and issued resolutions con-

•

Minnelli
released

-

NBA opens play tonight, Page B6
Fired up Bengals, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

The Daily Sentinel

caflrl. Till IIIlA . . . . ..........., . .

-

QualiiV Furniture Plus
42123 STATE ROUTE 1 • TUPPERS PLAINS, OH 45783

SAN DIEGO (AI') - The San
Diego Padres declined to exercise
seco nd baseman Bret Boone's $4
million contract &lt;&gt;ption for 200 I.
lloonc becomes eligible for fre e
agency and will receive a
S~SO,IIOO buyout. He hit .25 1
with 1\1 homers and 74 RBis in
127 games in his one season in
San Diego.
In nine major leafle seasons
wtth the Mariners , Reds, Braves
and Padres, Do~ne has hit .255
with 125 homefs and 536 RBis.

Bidding wa~ for A-Rod begins
NEW YORK (AP) -Alex Rodriguez finally can start
Some have said the Yankees also might be interested in
talking with other tealliS.
him, even though World Series M VP Derek Jeter is their
The All-Star shortstop, among 33 players who filed for shortstop. Following two down years by Scott Brosius, the
fr~e agency Monday, said for more than a year that he
Yankees might be interested in an upgrade at third base.
didn't want to talk money with the Seattle Mariners until
"Hasn't Brian Cashman said Alex Rodriguez is the best
after he became a free agent.
- player in the game?" Boras said. "I would say you would"He just wants a club that is goi,n g to be consistently n't move the best player·in the game, if that is what l1e is."
committed to making the team competitive every year,"
Before the World Series, Toronto signed Carlos Delgasaid the 25-year-old shortstop's agent, Scott Boras.
do to a S68 miUion, four-year contract, a deal with a
"He's been to the playoffs three rimes as a Mariner. But record average of Sl7 million. Some have speculated
the fact is, he just wants to be in a position where the Rodriguez. who hit .316 with 41 homers and 132, could
tlub is really, really committed, where he has a chance to command an average of S20 miUion a year or more.
go to spring training every year and know his club has to
"Alex and I spent a good week together last week,"
win it all. He wants to have repeat opportunities to win Boras said. "We've kind of identified what his goals are. I~
the world championship:'
don't think we're going to be visiting that many cities.
Th'e Atlanta Braves', Los Aogeles Dodgers and New We're going to be visiting some.
York Mets are thought to be interested in Rodriguez.
"Free agency has a lot of blind curves .. The ant place

he knows and is very comfortable with is Seattle, and
they're going to be a major part of the process.''
Boras wiU go to the general managers· meetings this
weekend in Amelia Island, Fla.
''I'm going to' begin the process of talking to clubs
there," he said.
Also filing Monday were Chicago Cubs first baseman
Mark Grace, Atlanta first baseman Aodres Galarraga,
Chicago White Sox shortstop Jose Valentin, Cleveland
first baseman David Segui, Toronto shortstop Alex Gonzalez, San Francisco outfielder Ellis Burks and Los Angeles right-banders Darren Dreifort and Ismael Valdes.
While the New York Yankees were given a parade up
Broadway, two players on their 40-man roster filed: outfielders Luis' Polonia and Roberto KeUy, who spent most

Pleue -

QB by

Red men
sweep ,
weekend

·committee

at OSU?

-The

RIO GRANDE
University of Rio • Grande
Redmen
soccer
team
blitzed St. Vincent and
Point Park in back-to-back
shutouts over the weekend.
The Redmen defeated St.
Vincent 6-0 and Point Park

11-0.
Rio Grande (14-4-2, 9-2
AMC)
dominated
the
Bearcats on Saturday with a
hat trick from sophomore
Maurice Muteti. Muteti
1
scored in the 17th and 20th ~
minutes to get the scoring
underway.
Alcides
De
Andrade scored his first goal
of the season in the 46th
minute. Michael McManus
and Tom WhittaKer added
goals .
Rio goalkeepers O liver
Sanders and Tristan C harles
shared the shutout. Both
men recorded a Save eac h .
' Point Park was no match
for the Redmen in the 11 0 rout. Muteti scored two
more goals to give him five
for the weeke·nd. David
Schofield started· the scoring in the 11th minute, he
would add a goal 18 min utes later to make the score
6-0 and assisted 'on ano ther
tally.
The Redmen spread the
soaring around as M ichael
Swarbrick, Kevin Peacock,
Wh ittaker, De !yldrade,
• Haydn Jones, Jon Leonard,
Nils Hacke all rung up
goals. Newcomer Robert
Richards had two asfst~.
. Sanders and Chari~ again
shared a shutout!;, wuh
Sanders recording three
saves and Charles had one
for the game.
Rio Grande will find out
today about the seeding for
the AMC/NAIA · Region
IX Tournament that ~egins
Wednesday. The Redrnen
will have a first round bye
and host the semifinal
match on Saturday at Stanley Evans Field.
,,

BIG NIGHT FOR EDDIE - Eddie George of Tennessee had 113 total yards from scrimmage against
Washington in the Titans 27-21 victory Monday. (AP)

'

Tennessee finds a way
to defeat Washington
LANDOVER, Md. (AI')- In
a few weeks, almost no one will
remember how the Washington
Redskins scored. Tennessee's
touchdowns will be on highligh!
reels for a long time.
Derrick Mason re_curned a
punt 69 yards, Samari Rolle
returned an interception 81
yards on the last play of the first
half and
Frank Wycheck
bounced off tacklers to score
against his old team as the Titans
beat the Redskins 27-21 Monday night.
" Again, this football team

found a way w win," Tennessee
coach Jeff Fisher said. "It was not
necessarily the conventional
way."
,
The victory was !he seventh in
a row for the Titans (7-1), who
maintained a two-game lead
over Pittsburgh in the AFC Central. The loss knocked the Redskins (6-3) out of first place in
the NFC East, one-half game
behind the New York Giants,
and was the second Monday
night fai lure of.the season for a
team openly craving the national spotlight.

"You ve got to win these
games at home," Washington
quarterback llrad Johnson said .
uWe'ye lost two big games at
home on Monday night. It r"lll'
down tn two plays: the punt
return and the interception
before halftime. lla,icolly, that
was the ball game."
The Redskin' lmt to Dallas,
also 27-21, on a Monday night
in Septembl'r.
Roll e's intnception toppl'd
the chart&lt; for both drama and
Please see Titans, Page B3

.J

Spartans, lllini Big 10 favorites
CHICAGO (AI') - Defending national champion Michigan State, which returns two
three-year starters, was the preseason pick of Big Ten coaches
to again win the conferen ce.
Illinois, whi ch returns all five
starters from 1 the team that was
runner-up . in the Big Ten Journament last se~son, was the
media's choice for preseason
·
o,t,
favorite.
The Illini were second in the
coaches poll. Wisconsin was
third in both polls as co~hes
and beat reporters were ask&lt;fl to
vote for only the top three:
• !Uinois junior Cory Bradfwd
was picked by the coaches and
the media as the preseason player of the year,

Free A1ents, Pllp B:S

Though · the Spartans lost
point guard and emotional
leader Mateen Cleaves as well as
Morris . Peterson and A.J.
Granger, they stiU have Charlie
Bell and Andre Hutson, starters
on both Final Four teams.
Five other players who averaged I 0-plus minutes last sea.1on
return, ~nd the Spartans add
Zach Randolph, .the MVP of
the McDonald's All-American
game, and Michigan Mr. Basketball Marcus Taylor.
"Michigan
State
didn't
rebuild, they JUS! reloaded," .
Minnesota co~ch Dan Monson
sa id Sunday at th,e conference
media day.
llut replacing Cleaves, Peter'on and Granger will be tough,

early cxpectatiom are J little
coach Tom Izzo said.
The three combined tor 46 high , but there is :1 window of
percent of the Spartans points opportunity to be very gooJ
last season, 34 percent of th e this year."
Bradford led th e llhni and Wa\
rebounds and 46 perce nt of the
assists.
seve mh in the Big Tt·n in 'rar"If there's a serious weakness ing \a&lt;;t season, avt'r&lt;tging 15.4
on this yt:ar's team, it is do we poinb,
have the leadership?" Izzo said.
He's mad e a 3-pninter in (14
While the !Uini have one of co nsecutive t;!:Jillts ,111d is third
the deepest and most experi- . on Illinoi s' career list with 181.
en ced teams in the conference,
Also On the coaches presea"ion
this is· somewhat ol an acljust- team arc.: Michigan St.ltl' gu.trd
ment year.
Charbe lkll , Ohio St.ttc center
Lo11 Krueger left lllinois tn Ken Jobmon, lndi ,ma t{Hward
May to take' th e Atlanta Hawks Kirk Hmon ,md Michtgcm forh ead coac hing job and wris ward LaVell Lllanrhard.
repla ced by Bill Self.
The mcdi.1 'eleetcd llradford ,
"Hopefully by the Big Ten llell, Johmon , Blanchard •nd
season we will be worthy of our Penn Statt' guJrd Jot Cno;;pm t(n
rankinb,;," Self sa id. "I think the ns preseason te ,1m.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AI') Steve Hellisari is 1 1-7 as a starter
at Ohio State. Drew Brees may
end up carrying Purdue to the
Rose Bowl.
On a sunny Saturday in Indiana, the two teams and their
quarterbacks squared off in a
showdown for first place in the
Big Ten. Brees and the Boilermakers won 31-27 thanks to a
gaudy fourth-quarter finish.
Now BeUisari may be in for
some job sharing. Ohio Sta(e
coach John Cooper said Monday
that if he gets the chance, he
would love to put backup quarterbacks Scott McMullen or
Craig Krenzel in ·the lineup
against Michigan State on Saturdav.
:'I'd consider that, absolutely,"
Cooper said. " If I thought that
would help us wiri a game. I'd do
· it in a minute."
The lluckeyes (6-2) are eighth
in the llig Ten in rushing yardage
and sixth in passing. Perhaps more
revealing, Ohio State i&amp; last in the
league tn first downs and next to
last in time of possession.
Yet
offensive
coordinator
Ch uck Stobart said even though
Bellisari is responsible for some of
the problems with Ohio State's
freqcently punchless offe nse. he's
still the best the Buckeyes have at
the position.
·
"Until ymfl decipher down to
the point where the problem lies
on his shoulders, then I don't
know if anybody else wou ld .do
any better," Stobart said.
- Stobart and the rest of the
offensive staff throws its support
behind Bellisari even though he
has had difftculty throwing the
football.
With llellisari t~king over as
thl' starter in the third game of
199~. the Buckeyes finished 6-6.
lldli sa ri completed just 45.1 percem of his passes and fa1led to
complete better than half his passe., in I() uf tho'ie starts.
This year~ hL" is comp leting 53.3
percent of his passes but was just
ll-tor-1H for 130 yards in a stunning 29-17 loss at home to Minnt.·sota two wt:cks ago.
. F•ns at Ohio Stadium frequently booed the otTense - or was it
Belli sari, Cooper, Stobart or some
combitlation? - in that game.
l&gt;dlisari was 17 -for-29 for 208
yard~ with an interception against
Purdue as the llu \;kcyes were
knocked out of the. running f&lt;lr
the Uig l e n · mlc. a berth in the
Rme Bowl and a llCS game.
Thl' Ohio State left-bander suffen~d in compari~om with Brees.
With Purdue trailing by I 0
points going into the fourth
quarter, Brees led the Boilermakers to tou c hdown ~ mi three drives
while completing 12-of- 17 pmes
tor 174 yards. He also ran twice
tor 1o y•rds.
llrt·es kilkd one po ssession
with .111 ill-advised pass that was
intnccptcd. but chen CJlHe right
back with J 64-yard bomb to
Se-th Mo raks for the game-winner w ith I :55 remaining.
On tlw winning play, llrees
Please see

osu, Pace B:S

�•
Page A I• The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Trellsury to sell steck
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Treasury Department announcrd
Monday it is in the process of selling 2.4 million common shares
of chemical manufacturer Uniroyal Technology Corp. that the
government rece1ved in settlement of d•ims lodged by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1992.
Officials of the Treasury Department's Bure•u of Public Debt
said that over the past month it has sold 262,900 shares and pbns
to continue sales over the next several mtmths until all 2. 4 million
shares of its holdings have been wld . ihe government's total shares
represent less than I 0 percent of the company's stock.
While the government is not covered by disclosure rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Treasury officials said they
decided it was appropriate to announce the soles program after the
gowrriment had disposed of 1 percent of the company's outstanding common stock.
Uniroyal Technology Corp., based in Sarasota, Fla., manufactures
a broad range of specialty chemicals and plastics.
The government acquired its holdings after predecessor companies were reorganized as part of bankruptcy proceedings. EPA
accepted shares in the reorganized company as settlement of
daims filed under the law that created the Superfund waste
cleanup Ltw.
• Uniroyal Tt•chnology Cnrp. trades ' on the Nasdaq under the
symbol UTCI. Its shares were trading Monday at SllU7.

Police nab wrong susped
PHOENIX (AI') -A Florida woman thought to be a burglary
suspect \vas arrested, strip-s('arched and sent w jail before author-

I .

itit!'s realizt:d they had the wrong woman.
Phoenix police Detective Bob Brunansky •sked sheriff's
deputies in Florida to check out a burglary suspect believed to
haw fled Arizona. Brunansky said he didn't ask them to ;~rrest anyone.
Pinellas Cou~ty sheriff's deputies went to Linda Sue Hardester's
home to see if she was the suspect Linda Sue Andrews, 45. Both
women share the same birthday.
·
"They gave us the Hardesters' address," Sgt. Greg Tita said.
"When we got there, Linda Sue Hardester generally met Andrews'
description and her birthday was the same. So we arrested her."
Seventeen hours after Hardester was jailed, the fingerprint
check came back and proved she was not Andrews.
"I think 1've been in Arizo na once," she said. "I was just driving
through."

Lost man survives in woods
GORMAN , Calif. (AI') -A 25-year-old ma n who wandered
into the Angeles National Forest a month ago and got lost has
boen found alive, police said.
Sean Kelly, who was reported missing Sept. 30, was found by a
hunter Monday in the Knapp Ranch area of the forest, about 60
miles north of downtown Los Angeles, sheriff's Deputy Michael
Lorenci said.
Too weak to walk out, rescuers airlifted the man to Henry Mayo
Newhall Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for exposure.
Kelly told the hunter he had been lost for about two weeks and
survived by eating roots and bugs, Lorenci said. To survive, he covered himself with dirt and branches at night to keep warm.
"We're all surprised that he'd been out there for 30 days and that
he survived," Loren~;i said.
·

Wrestler's family settles suit
KA N SAS CITY. Mo. (AP) - The family of wrestler Owen
Hart, who died in a botched stunt last ye;~r, has settled a wrongful
death lawsuit against the World Wrestling Federation ·and the city.
Hart, known as the Blue Blazer, died May 13, 1999, when he fell
78 feet ;~fter the harness that was lowering him to the ring opened
early during a WWF event at Kemper ArenJ, " :hich ·is owned by
the citv.
·The .lawsuit was filed by Hart's widow, two children and his p•rents, who contended the stunt was dangerom and poorly planned
and th~t the harness system wJs defective.
The settlement, which needs court appro\'Jl, was fi led Frid•y
with the Missouri Court of Appeals. The appeals court had been
scheduled to hold J hearing Tuesday in. a dispute over a document
in the case.
Neither side disclo,ed terms of the settlement.
The Kansas City Star quoted an unidentified source close to the
settlement negotiations a.1 saying the WWF had agreed to pay the
Hart family S18 million.

Kissinger released from hospital
NEW YORK (AP) Fonner Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger was released from a hospital on Monday, about a week
after suffering a heart attack.
Kissinger, 77, had entered NewYork Weill-Carnell Medical
Center on Wednesday after suffering what a hospital spokeswoman called "a limited heart attack." He had undergone bypass
surgery in 1982.
Kissinger was secretary of state in the Nixon and Ford administrations and played a pivota.l role in ~stablishing a U.S. dialogue
with Communist China. After the 1973 Middle East war, he negotiated agreements between Israel and two of its Arab foes, Egypt
and Syria.
He shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1973 with North Vietnamese chief negotiator Le Due Tho for the accord that allowed
America to pull out ofV'ietnam. But he was criticized for the 1970
American invasion of Cambodia.
In re.c ent years, Kissinger has worked as .a consultant and written his memoirs and other books.
__/

Shriver condition still critiCIII
BALTIMORE (AI') - Eunice Kennedy Shriver, the sister of
President John F. Kennedy. remained in critical condition Monday,
a week after entenng Johns Hopkins Hospital for treatment of a
postoperative infection.
,
,
"Her family continues to be grateful for and to ask for the
prayers and support of p,·ople t'\'erywhere," her son. MJrk Sluivt'r, said.
·
Shriver, 7~J. h:lll .l bcnign p :mcre~ltl C wmor removed ()cc 12 and
her do~· turs ~ant tht•y expected a full rcco\'L'ry aftt.•r her Oct. 11
rdcase. Hcm:evc r. Shiiver w,Js re.ldmatt.•d nvo d.1ys LH"L'T .l ft~..· r &lt;.:o mplain.ing of pain , and donor~ di scovt.•n:d a poswp~..-r.ltiv~.· mfccuon,
her f.1mily ,,u·d.
''She\. in critir.d condition, but shl·'s doing berra dun ~he \\'JS
J few d;ry.., .1go," her men·. lr. Gov. K.uhk· ..·tJ Kc 1111 1
..'dy Tlnvmcnd,
said Monday.
Shriver fotllldl'd the Spt'ual ( llympt« 111 I %X. Her hmb.md, R .
Sargcnt Shnver, \\'.1~ the nl'IJHKr.Hi c \"t(l' pn..'S idl'llti.tl c.mdlli.lti.' til
19T]. .tnd sought the pn:..,iL.krHi.d nnnHn ,nion in 197(•. Ht.·r brothl'T is Sen .. Edw.HJ Kennedy. I &gt;-M,1..,... . ,mJ she has five dt1ldn:u,
including NBC n·portl'r M.tri ;t Shrl\'l'L

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

Tuesday, October 31, 2000

Baptist with draws SS million in funding
CORPUS CHRISTI,Tex•s (AP) -Texas'
2.7 million Baptists dealt a severe blow to the
Southern Baptist Convention on Monday,
withdrawing $5 million in funding on the
grounds that the denomination is becoming
too conservative.
Mter a brief, civil debate, the 6,000 representatives of the Texas Baptists approved the
ri1ove as a sizable majority held up voting
cards.
The vote is considered a watershed by both
sjdes in the doctrinal conflict that has long

roiled the nation's largest Protestant denomination, which has 15.8 million members.
Texas accounts for 17 percent of the members and 13 percent Qf the money that supports Southern Baptist Convention programs.
Texas Baptists spokqman, Kenneth Camp,
said the group was at a crossroads and caUed
the meeting "the decisive turning point for
the next century."
In recent years, the Southern Baptists have
barred female pastors, declared that wives
should "submit .graciously" to their husbands,

Survey shows many parents
have vaccine misconceptions
CHICAGO (AI') -A sizable
number of parents hav~ misconceptions about vaccines, with
many bdieving tl1.1c too many
inununizations can weaken their
children's ability to fi~ht discases, a surVl'Y found .
About one-fourth of parents
surveyed said children get too
many immunizations, according
to the telephone survey of 1.600
purents of you ng children Jcross
the nation. The resu lts are published in next month's edition of
Pediatric&lt;.
The findings suggest that
some parents might withhold
,vaccines, .. needlessly placing
their child - and their community - at risk for outbreaks of
infectious disease," said Dr.
Br uce Gellin ofVanderbilt University, who led the study and
· . prese nted th e fi ndings Monday
at the American Academy of
Pediatrics' annual n)eeting.
Gellin heads the newly
form ed National Network for
lmmu niz.a tion
Information,
formed by the academy and
three other medical groups to
provide parents clear information about immunizations.
Suzanne Walther, a Murfreesboro, Tenn., mother of three,
didn't get her two-month-old
daughter the usual va~cines incl u ding the Haemop h ilus
·influenzae type b. (Hib) Vaccine,
w h ich protects against a potentially fata l for m of menmgitis.
When the infant was 11' months

old, she co ntracted the disease,
the first seen at Vanderbilt University in eight years.
Though her daughter rt'covered, the expencncl' turned
WJlther into a va cci 1iL" believer.
She sJid she h.1d been a skeptic partly be-cause she never
knew anyone with polio, n 1easles
or Hib, once-feared diseases that
have been tJmed by vaccines.
Such thinking by younger
parents and pediatricians who
haven't lived through epidemics
may explain why some undervalue the need for vaccines, said
Dr. Samuel Katz, NNII's cochairman and professor etueritus
at Duke University.
Polio has been vir tu~lly eradicated in this country, but is st1ll
a problem in some parts of
Africa and India - and co ul d
still pose a threa t, Katz said.
"They're no further th~n a jet
plane away," he said.
Ka tz also said misconceptions
abound. Mea.les vaccines have
linked to autism, for example,
and hepatitis B vaccines to multiple sclerosis - myths perpetuated in part by erroneous information on the Internet, Katz
md. ·
On
the
Net:
hup:/ /www.inuuunizationinfo.org
AAP: http:/ /www.aJp.org

tuesd,.Y. October 31,1000

demning homosexuahry.
Earlier this month, former President Carter
severed ties to the Southern Baptist Conven-

TuEsDAY'S

tion because of its .. increasmgly rigid" cret:d.

0~ Monday, the Texans voted to cut the

HIGHLIGHTS

amount of money they brivc w several Southern Baptist seminaries by about 80 percent
next year and send the $4 million instead to

Reclwomen sweep
weekend matches

three mOderate campuses in Texas.

Boy killed after

RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande volleyball
team continued its up and down
season, this weekend at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Friday night, the Redwomen
dropped Tiffin in three games,
15-5, 15-11and 15-7 and on Saturday, they finished off Notre
Dame CoUege in three games,
15-9, 15-6, 15-13.
Rio Grande ( 16-23, 6-7 AMC)
received strong play from senior
outside hitter Alisha Flesher with
12 kiUs, five digs and two blocks
against the Lady Dragons. Freshman Rebecca Wierwille and
junior Andrea Brown each registered nine kills. Wierwille had 10
digs and Brown, nine in the winning effort. ·
Sophomore Maria Robers continued' her solid serving, netting
four aces and freshman Laura
Ondera posted four blocks.
Sophomore setter Jessica Wheeler
recorded 18 of the teams' 21

falle gun is drawn
LOS ANGELES (AP) - . Lee's f.m1ily. ;,h.~ ,1 tragi&lt;-- l'Vt:'nt,"
Potice Chief Bernard C. Parks on he ~.1iJ.
Monday bbmed a realistic-lookLee'... '-15tt..·r Tina Vogt. who
mg prop gun for the fatal poli cl' worh for thL· S.tcr:mll'ntn Poh cc
shooting of an actor at a weekend DL~p ,trtlneiH . ~;ml -.he 1~ baffiL·d by
costume party.
the killing .md qw..·,noneJ the
Th~ officer. who 6rt:"d nint:'
LAPD\ ~te co um of th L• shoonng.
shots at Anthony Dwain Lee
She pl:mnl'd t.n .lttl·nd a canthrough ~ window of :1 West L&lt; 1s dlelight Vlgtl Monda\' mght outAngeles mansion -after seeing him stde the Wc~t Lo~ An.gdcs police
raise what looked like a !,'llll, had divisi0n whcrt.• Hopper is sta"no time" co find out if the tioned.
weapon was real or to shout :1
Lee, YJ. was shot early Saturw;u ning, the chief said at a news day \vhcn he .1lkgcdly pointed
conference.
the f.1ke b'l.tn Jt Hoppl'r .md his
Officer T.1rrid· Hopper. 17, .PJrtner who wen: Jll\'e~tigating a
who has been with the depart- neighbor's compL1int ab out the
ment for three yc.1rs, h~s been nmsy party.
placed on paid leave while the
P,uks ~.tid rhc two umformed
LAPD and counry district attor- officers idcnttficd thcmsckcs to
ney's office investigate the death.
some partygoers J[ the home and
Parks on Monday displayed were directed to the rear of the
Lees prop gun, which he said was house to find the host. Instead,
made of solid gray rubber in the they spotted Lee through J winshape of an Israeli-made .357 dow.
Desert Eagle serniautomatic
The tenant.;; n( the m:msion
handgun .
where the shooting occurred said
Pa rks said such replicas they were shocked by the shootoften used as movie props - ·
ing but declined further comhave led to at least seven recent ment.
officer-involved shootings. He
Lee had appeared in smaU TV
did not elaborate and left the and film roles on show&lt; such as
news
conference
without "ER," "NYPD Blue" and the
answering questions.
1997 Jun CJrrey movie " Liar
"Whether it's a Halloween Ltar.''
party, on the street or at a robbery
Those who knew him said he
... we can't take for granted that (a carried the f.1ke we&lt;~pon as part of
gun) is a replica," Parks said.
a devil costume .wd imi~tcd ht•
Parks expressed his depart- .w ould -never h:~Vl' poi mt·d it at
ment's "deep condolences" co ·anyone - c\'cn .1s .1 Jnke .

sagg

3SS I ~tS .

.

Tiffin (10-17, 4-7 AMC) could
never gain any momentum in the
defeat.
On Saturday, the Redwomen
gained control early and just
never let go, although the final
game of the day, NDC (1 1-20, 210 AM C) tied the contest at 1313 before falling to Rio Grande.
Flesher was huge with 16 kills
and six digs while serving 7-for7. Ondera posted 10 kills and
two blocks, while feUow freshman
Wierwille registered seven kills,
two serve aces (15-for-15 serving) and four digs. Robers contributed five kills, six digs and
three blocks.
. Wheeler had 29 assists and
three aces (18-for-18 serving).
With the pair of victories this
weekend, the Redwomen still
have an outside chance to play in
the AMC Tournan1ent. Today's
night match at Mt. Vernon
Nazarene is a must win situation
for the hope to remain.

Lane

from hospital
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fh.
(AP) - A smiling Liza Minnelli
was released from a hospital Monday after spending the better part of
October recovering from viral
encephalitis and de hydration .
The 5-1-yc•r-old singer, clutching the hand of her half-stster
Lorna LUft, waved as she was
escorted in a wheelchair down a
hospital ramp to a wa)ting limousme.
" I feel wonderful," Minnelli said.
'Tm with my sister, and I've never
felt better in my life."
She stood and hugged Luft,
from whom she has reportedly
been estranged, before getting in
the limousine. Minnelli said her
near-death experience has brought
her and her sister closer together.
"My sister is the best," Luft said.
The Oscar-winning diva was
hospitalized at the Cleveland Clinic Hospital about three weeks ago
after contracting the disease, a
potentially deadly inflammation of
the brain that had left her m scnous
condition.
"Although tl)e condition is now
under control, due to the mmal
severity of viral encephalitis, it will
be several months before Ms. Minnelli is completely well," Dr. Mau-·
rice Hanson said m a statement.
Publicist Michael H•rtman sJid
Minndli is "ft.•diug much bettL'r
and is looking forward to bemg
home:··

DBacks hire
Bre.nly

-.--...--....
·------...

PHOENIX (AP) -Bob Brenly, a broadcaster and former major
league catcher, was hired as manager of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Brenly signed a three-year
contract worth $2 million, with a
fourth year at the club's option.
Brenly, TV analyst for the Diamondbacks and the Fox network,
replaces !luck Showalter, who
was tired the day after the season
ended.

~

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•

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Pat Hentgen 's $6 million option for next
year was declined by the St. Louis
Cardinals, who instead wiU pay a
$600,000 buyout. Hentger, the
1996 AL Cy Young winner, was
15-12 with a 4.72 ERA in 33
starts chis season.
The Cardinals exercised a11
$8SO.UOO option on catcher Mike
Matheny, who threw out a major
league- high 51 percent of wouldbe basestealers and had a career
high in almost every offensive
category.

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boycotted Disney and issued resolutions con-

•

Minnelli
released

-

NBA opens play tonight, Page B6
Fired up Bengals, Page B6
Daily Scoreboard, Page B6

The Daily Sentinel

caflrl. Till IIIlA . . . . ..........., . .

-

QualiiV Furniture Plus
42123 STATE ROUTE 1 • TUPPERS PLAINS, OH 45783

SAN DIEGO (AI') - The San
Diego Padres declined to exercise
seco nd baseman Bret Boone's $4
million contract &lt;&gt;ption for 200 I.
lloonc becomes eligible for fre e
agency and will receive a
S~SO,IIOO buyout. He hit .25 1
with 1\1 homers and 74 RBis in
127 games in his one season in
San Diego.
In nine major leafle seasons
wtth the Mariners , Reds, Braves
and Padres, Do~ne has hit .255
with 125 homefs and 536 RBis.

Bidding wa~ for A-Rod begins
NEW YORK (AP) -Alex Rodriguez finally can start
Some have said the Yankees also might be interested in
talking with other tealliS.
him, even though World Series M VP Derek Jeter is their
The All-Star shortstop, among 33 players who filed for shortstop. Following two down years by Scott Brosius, the
fr~e agency Monday, said for more than a year that he
Yankees might be interested in an upgrade at third base.
didn't want to talk money with the Seattle Mariners until
"Hasn't Brian Cashman said Alex Rodriguez is the best
after he became a free agent.
- player in the game?" Boras said. "I would say you would"He just wants a club that is goi,n g to be consistently n't move the best player·in the game, if that is what l1e is."
committed to making the team competitive every year,"
Before the World Series, Toronto signed Carlos Delgasaid the 25-year-old shortstop's agent, Scott Boras.
do to a S68 miUion, four-year contract, a deal with a
"He's been to the playoffs three rimes as a Mariner. But record average of Sl7 million. Some have speculated
the fact is, he just wants to be in a position where the Rodriguez. who hit .316 with 41 homers and 132, could
tlub is really, really committed, where he has a chance to command an average of S20 miUion a year or more.
go to spring training every year and know his club has to
"Alex and I spent a good week together last week,"
win it all. He wants to have repeat opportunities to win Boras said. "We've kind of identified what his goals are. I~
the world championship:'
don't think we're going to be visiting that many cities.
Th'e Atlanta Braves', Los Aogeles Dodgers and New We're going to be visiting some.
York Mets are thought to be interested in Rodriguez.
"Free agency has a lot of blind curves .. The ant place

he knows and is very comfortable with is Seattle, and
they're going to be a major part of the process.''
Boras wiU go to the general managers· meetings this
weekend in Amelia Island, Fla.
''I'm going to' begin the process of talking to clubs
there," he said.
Also filing Monday were Chicago Cubs first baseman
Mark Grace, Atlanta first baseman Aodres Galarraga,
Chicago White Sox shortstop Jose Valentin, Cleveland
first baseman David Segui, Toronto shortstop Alex Gonzalez, San Francisco outfielder Ellis Burks and Los Angeles right-banders Darren Dreifort and Ismael Valdes.
While the New York Yankees were given a parade up
Broadway, two players on their 40-man roster filed: outfielders Luis' Polonia and Roberto KeUy, who spent most

Pleue -

QB by

Red men
sweep ,
weekend

·committee

at OSU?

-The

RIO GRANDE
University of Rio • Grande
Redmen
soccer
team
blitzed St. Vincent and
Point Park in back-to-back
shutouts over the weekend.
The Redmen defeated St.
Vincent 6-0 and Point Park

11-0.
Rio Grande (14-4-2, 9-2
AMC)
dominated
the
Bearcats on Saturday with a
hat trick from sophomore
Maurice Muteti. Muteti
1
scored in the 17th and 20th ~
minutes to get the scoring
underway.
Alcides
De
Andrade scored his first goal
of the season in the 46th
minute. Michael McManus
and Tom WhittaKer added
goals .
Rio goalkeepers O liver
Sanders and Tristan C harles
shared the shutout. Both
men recorded a Save eac h .
' Point Park was no match
for the Redmen in the 11 0 rout. Muteti scored two
more goals to give him five
for the weeke·nd. David
Schofield started· the scoring in the 11th minute, he
would add a goal 18 min utes later to make the score
6-0 and assisted 'on ano ther
tally.
The Redmen spread the
soaring around as M ichael
Swarbrick, Kevin Peacock,
Wh ittaker, De !yldrade,
• Haydn Jones, Jon Leonard,
Nils Hacke all rung up
goals. Newcomer Robert
Richards had two asfst~.
. Sanders and Chari~ again
shared a shutout!;, wuh
Sanders recording three
saves and Charles had one
for the game.
Rio Grande will find out
today about the seeding for
the AMC/NAIA · Region
IX Tournament that ~egins
Wednesday. The Redrnen
will have a first round bye
and host the semifinal
match on Saturday at Stanley Evans Field.
,,

BIG NIGHT FOR EDDIE - Eddie George of Tennessee had 113 total yards from scrimmage against
Washington in the Titans 27-21 victory Monday. (AP)

'

Tennessee finds a way
to defeat Washington
LANDOVER, Md. (AI')- In
a few weeks, almost no one will
remember how the Washington
Redskins scored. Tennessee's
touchdowns will be on highligh!
reels for a long time.
Derrick Mason re_curned a
punt 69 yards, Samari Rolle
returned an interception 81
yards on the last play of the first
half and
Frank Wycheck
bounced off tacklers to score
against his old team as the Titans
beat the Redskins 27-21 Monday night.
" Again, this football team

found a way w win," Tennessee
coach Jeff Fisher said. "It was not
necessarily the conventional
way."
,
The victory was !he seventh in
a row for the Titans (7-1), who
maintained a two-game lead
over Pittsburgh in the AFC Central. The loss knocked the Redskins (6-3) out of first place in
the NFC East, one-half game
behind the New York Giants,
and was the second Monday
night fai lure of.the season for a
team openly craving the national spotlight.

"You ve got to win these
games at home," Washington
quarterback llrad Johnson said .
uWe'ye lost two big games at
home on Monday night. It r"lll'
down tn two plays: the punt
return and the interception
before halftime. lla,icolly, that
was the ball game."
The Redskin' lmt to Dallas,
also 27-21, on a Monday night
in Septembl'r.
Roll e's intnception toppl'd
the chart&lt; for both drama and
Please see Titans, Page B3

.J

Spartans, lllini Big 10 favorites
CHICAGO (AI') - Defending national champion Michigan State, which returns two
three-year starters, was the preseason pick of Big Ten coaches
to again win the conferen ce.
Illinois, whi ch returns all five
starters from 1 the team that was
runner-up . in the Big Ten Journament last se~son, was the
media's choice for preseason
·
o,t,
favorite.
The Illini were second in the
coaches poll. Wisconsin was
third in both polls as co~hes
and beat reporters were ask&lt;fl to
vote for only the top three:
• !Uinois junior Cory Bradfwd
was picked by the coaches and
the media as the preseason player of the year,

Free A1ents, Pllp B:S

Though · the Spartans lost
point guard and emotional
leader Mateen Cleaves as well as
Morris . Peterson and A.J.
Granger, they stiU have Charlie
Bell and Andre Hutson, starters
on both Final Four teams.
Five other players who averaged I 0-plus minutes last sea.1on
return, ~nd the Spartans add
Zach Randolph, .the MVP of
the McDonald's All-American
game, and Michigan Mr. Basketball Marcus Taylor.
"Michigan
State
didn't
rebuild, they JUS! reloaded," .
Minnesota co~ch Dan Monson
sa id Sunday at th,e conference
media day.
llut replacing Cleaves, Peter'on and Granger will be tough,

early cxpectatiom are J little
coach Tom Izzo said.
The three combined tor 46 high , but there is :1 window of
percent of the Spartans points opportunity to be very gooJ
last season, 34 percent of th e this year."
Bradford led th e llhni and Wa\
rebounds and 46 perce nt of the
assists.
seve mh in the Big Tt·n in 'rar"If there's a serious weakness ing \a&lt;;t season, avt'r&lt;tging 15.4
on this yt:ar's team, it is do we poinb,
have the leadership?" Izzo said.
He's mad e a 3-pninter in (14
While the !Uini have one of co nsecutive t;!:Jillts ,111d is third
the deepest and most experi- . on Illinoi s' career list with 181.
en ced teams in the conference,
Also On the coaches presea"ion
this is· somewhat ol an acljust- team arc.: Michigan St.ltl' gu.trd
ment year.
Charbe lkll , Ohio St.ttc center
Lo11 Krueger left lllinois tn Ken Jobmon, lndi ,ma t{Hward
May to take' th e Atlanta Hawks Kirk Hmon ,md Michtgcm forh ead coac hing job and wris ward LaVell Lllanrhard.
repla ced by Bill Self.
The mcdi.1 'eleetcd llradford ,
"Hopefully by the Big Ten llell, Johmon , Blanchard •nd
season we will be worthy of our Penn Statt' guJrd Jot Cno;;pm t(n
rankinb,;," Self sa id. "I think the ns preseason te ,1m.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AI') Steve Hellisari is 1 1-7 as a starter
at Ohio State. Drew Brees may
end up carrying Purdue to the
Rose Bowl.
On a sunny Saturday in Indiana, the two teams and their
quarterbacks squared off in a
showdown for first place in the
Big Ten. Brees and the Boilermakers won 31-27 thanks to a
gaudy fourth-quarter finish.
Now BeUisari may be in for
some job sharing. Ohio Sta(e
coach John Cooper said Monday
that if he gets the chance, he
would love to put backup quarterbacks Scott McMullen or
Craig Krenzel in ·the lineup
against Michigan State on Saturdav.
:'I'd consider that, absolutely,"
Cooper said. " If I thought that
would help us wiri a game. I'd do
· it in a minute."
The lluckeyes (6-2) are eighth
in the llig Ten in rushing yardage
and sixth in passing. Perhaps more
revealing, Ohio State i&amp; last in the
league tn first downs and next to
last in time of possession.
Yet
offensive
coordinator
Ch uck Stobart said even though
Bellisari is responsible for some of
the problems with Ohio State's
freqcently punchless offe nse. he's
still the best the Buckeyes have at
the position.
·
"Until ymfl decipher down to
the point where the problem lies
on his shoulders, then I don't
know if anybody else wou ld .do
any better," Stobart said.
- Stobart and the rest of the
offensive staff throws its support
behind Bellisari even though he
has had difftculty throwing the
football.
With llellisari t~king over as
thl' starter in the third game of
199~. the Buckeyes finished 6-6.
lldli sa ri completed just 45.1 percem of his passes and fa1led to
complete better than half his passe., in I() uf tho'ie starts.
This year~ hL" is comp leting 53.3
percent of his passes but was just
ll-tor-1H for 130 yards in a stunning 29-17 loss at home to Minnt.·sota two wt:cks ago.
. F•ns at Ohio Stadium frequently booed the otTense - or was it
Belli sari, Cooper, Stobart or some
combitlation? - in that game.
l&gt;dlisari was 17 -for-29 for 208
yard~ with an interception against
Purdue as the llu \;kcyes were
knocked out of the. running f&lt;lr
the Uig l e n · mlc. a berth in the
Rme Bowl and a llCS game.
Thl' Ohio State left-bander suffen~d in compari~om with Brees.
With Purdue trailing by I 0
points going into the fourth
quarter, Brees led the Boilermakers to tou c hdown ~ mi three drives
while completing 12-of- 17 pmes
tor 174 yards. He also ran twice
tor 1o y•rds.
llrt·es kilkd one po ssession
with .111 ill-advised pass that was
intnccptcd. but chen CJlHe right
back with J 64-yard bomb to
Se-th Mo raks for the game-winner w ith I :55 remaining.
On tlw winning play, llrees
Please see

osu, Pace B:S

�)

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday•.pctober 31 2000

osu
from

yards and was sacked twiCe for 6
yards 1n losses Two dnvcs ende&lt;i

m punts on(! resulted m Jerry
Westbrooks ? yard touchdow~

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of 1968 wtllch maJies It !legal
to advertise any prefarenc411
I mltatloo or d scrim nation
based on race color re lgion
sex ram al status or national
origin or any ntentlon to
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kroowl"!!r accept
advertisements lor real astale
which s in \11018 iOn ot the
law Our readerl are hereby
1hal all dwellnga
adven sed In this newspape
are 8\18 able on an equal
OppoljUilily baSis

PHYS CS TAROT READERS &amp;
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64 Ex 47 Cross lanes
Save housandt; A dlspley
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shop &amp; mo\1 es Cal 740 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Oppo unity

full t me employees
Start your new
career v th us

All
STEEL
BU LD NG
Clea a nee JOJCJG Was $8 960
Se $3 990 40JC62 Was S 4 880
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SOx 00 Was
$32 00 Se S 2 900 Ne e Pu
Up Bes1 0 e Tom 800)388

OnHaUoween
Morning,
A l1ttle gobltn
came Into thts
world
Robb1e was
her name
Now 16 years
later she has
grown tnto a
beautiful goblin
Here she Is w1th
her ltttle sister
tf you tnow who
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give Fier a caD
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culling edge•••
Read the
Classified Ads .

IS pleased lo announce

No EXPERIENCE

mlted 0 No Credit? Govern

of the season on the diSabled
list
St LoUis beaten by the Mets m
the NL champ1onsh1p senes
declined a $6 nullion option on
nght hander Pu Hentgen elect
mg to pay a $600 000 buyout to
the one ttmeAL CyYoungAward
wmner
St LoUIS also dectined a $1 3
milhon optmn on 43 year old
left hander Jesse Orosco and a
$2 5 rmllion option on left han
der 32 year old left hander Scott

from PapBl

Happy Ad

MILLENNIUM

mlerv ew appomtments
for outbound
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5678

S199 P• mon ca now

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IELESERVICES

boll: &amp; o he J11panese ems c
ca 1940 950 maka ole
500
sma page messages vo c8 &amp;
d 81 $25 828 438 8637

Need We And SeptiC? No Down
Payment Requ ad large Se ec
ton 01 Homes Cal t 800 9-48

14 II w de $499 down only

a hard h1t agamst Purdue
but Srobart sa1d It wasn t as 1f the
coachmg staff looked at 1t as a
pnme opportumty to see what
McMullen oRKrenzel could do
When he got hurt there were
a lot of real nervous people on
the Sldehne Stobart sa1d

Birthday"

Card of Thanks

•

•
Thanks for all
your prayers &amp;.
cards while I have
been recuperating
fromsur~i'

•will

opening my
Gun Shop

FREE

YARD SILl
SIGN

with ad!
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Tues &amp;. Wed 12 5

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740 742 2421

Stewart

. Gun Sho

The Daily
Sentinel

Leskamc finiShed 39 games th1s
year If he had fimshed one more
the salary of the opt on year
would have ncreased to $) 2 nul
hon
San D1ego declined a $4 nul

•
hon optton on second basem.an
Bret Boone electmg to pay a •
$250 000 buyout
Anahem1 gave nght hander
T1m Belcher 4 &gt; wuh a 6 86 •
ERA a S1 m1lhon buyout rather
than exerciSe a $5 1 m•lhon
optiOn The Angels also turned
down a $3 45 nullmn optiOn on
shortstop Gary D1Sarcma hrmted
to 38 at bats thiS year because of
InJuncs and exercised a Sl 15
nuU on opt1o1 on nght hander
Sh1getosh1 Hasegawa
Among the I oS players paten
t~ally ehg~ble for free agency 43
have filed smce the end of the
World Senes The deadhne to file
IS Nov 10

I thmk that pretty much d1d
them ln Mason sa1d He: was
dcternuned to get t nto the end
zone Some: people ntercept tr

Wycheck snll smartmg over hiS I
rdease by the Redskins m 1995
I JUSt vanted to go out and
prov ~o the 11 that they made a

Radmsky who gets a $500 000
buyout The Cardmals rxerClsed
an S850 000 opnon on catcher
M1ke Matheny who mmed the
playoffs after acCidentally cumng

Titans

c.

New

qu.1rterback

&lt;~fter

The Dazly Sentmel
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

F om Rent To Own low Down
Payment Low Month y Payment
j 80Q.!I48 5678

736 3409

Stobarr s:ud he hasn t even con
s de red makmg any cha 1ges at

flom ..... Bl

Belhsan w;a.s bncfly ndelmed

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL SPORTS MORE LOCAL FOLKS

Ani QUI hand st tched qu 11 w cot
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$350 080 o d Japanese jewe y

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74o-367-o280

OAIVE A LITTLE !SAVE A LOTI
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S ngll Wide&amp; OoiAJie Wldes
Hurry I

l

run after Mtchael Doss mtercep.,
non The Buckeyes last pos.esS!on
ended With a fumble when the
snap hn a rccetvcr who was m

I don r see anything at all that
would cause th&gt;t rtght no"' he
s:ud

New &amp; Used Furn1~ e

304 675-7279

A ESTABL SHED SNACK
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w ttl n 3 week&amp; Unde SSK nvesl
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And Up SodW hWarany Ca
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to an appo ntment
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No Fee Unless We W nl

510

1399 B&lt;ly Sel T-

NEED CASH? Ha\18 an annUity or
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1993 Brandyw ne 14JC70 Mob le
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K tchen Appl ances Art nclud&amp;d
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ed Read~ For lmmed ate Pos
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odhlon 4 30 Thurodoy

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566

REGISJER PfAQUNE
2 d1ya Mtore the ad Ia
to run by4 30 p m
Saturday &amp; Mondoy

Professional
Service•

230

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomaroy, Middleport, Ohio

rwo tendons

In

hiS nght nng fin

ger w11h a hunnng kmfe
Infielder Lms Lopez agreed to a

Sl 4 mill on two year contraGt
With the Milwaukee Brewers
who also exerciSed a S1 6 m lhon
opnon on pttcher Curus Lesk.an
IC

and ru 1 up the s dehnes and our

mo nemum The clock showod
JUst 10 seconds when tne play
started so when he p1cked off
Johnson s pass at the Titans I'&gt; he
knew he had to go the dtstJ.nce
for It to ncan a 1yth1ng
He tiptoed along the s del ne
then meandered across the field
to the other S!dehne readmg Ius
blocks along the way Fmally he
stumbled the last yard mto the
end zone for the fOuchdown
Two football fields nonstop
md Rolle asked to estnnate th e
length of hiS run Luckily I saw
nobody was around me and that
was when the rest of the blockers

came
After he scored Rolle was
buned under a pile of celebrating
teammates m che end 2one
He was exhausted but the
damage the done The Titans
went mto the locker room w1th
emotion and a ?Q 7 lead

of bounds a d are sa tiSfied w th

that Not Sa 11:1r
Rolle.: also hnd

wtht.:r 11 ter
ccpt on at the ReJsk 1s 11 v th
1 o9 to play end g Wasl gto s
last real chance t&lt; dnh tht: ball
down field
Masons p "'t rett r also had a
b g vow fa tor thanks to a fly g
blo ck by Keith B lluck that
opc.:ned the field Mason dartc.:d
I ft :md JUkcd punter T01 lnl)
Barnhardt ~ r h1s seco nd can::~r
punt retur touLhdu vn giVmg
the Titans the lead for good at I 0
7 n rhe c.:c nd quarter
Wycheck s touchdo vn pro ed
to be t:sse 1 Ial msuranu: n the
fourth quarter Break g tackles
t
cross tl goal I ne W) d cck
sp1kcd th b II ha d and looked at
the Wash ngton bench after the
score
I was I ungr) for that end
zone I vanted t bad sa d

1

make.: Ir

w:~.s

ddinnely an emo

ton a! ga llr.: for 1~
~\O s cond 1uarter fidd goals
b AI D I Greco one set up b) an
ab &gt;rtc I R~Jsk 1S punt when Joe
Zde b one 1opped the snap
p ov d d tl v ~ al narg of v c
tOr\

R lsk n scored the r rou
t
touch do v s on three long
dr v s th first tl 1rd and fourth
q rt rs M k S 11 rs caught a 5
ard r t ch 1
pass Stephen
Da shad a I 1ard n and Larry
Cc tcrs caugl a 3 y::ud sconng
pass
Ther
ere th 1 gs ' ' d dwell
1 ov1 g the football Washmgro 1
coa h N n Turner sad But
vc re go ng co I&lt; ok at the film
a 1d say tlu: sa
tl mg punt
Tl

retu

lo a

uchd " n an nter

ccp twn r tur
Its hard

t

for a touchdown

o\crcomc that

Follow the Eastern Eagles mthe OHSAA playoffs mthe Daily Sentmel'
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

982

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

560

Pets for Sa ie

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Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

•

Da lea

t

I

�)

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday•.pctober 31 2000

osu
from

yards and was sacked twiCe for 6
yards 1n losses Two dnvcs ende&lt;i

m punts on(! resulted m Jerry
Westbrooks ? yard touchdow~

Page 81

110 Help Wanted

a._w•v
Lost··w~'::·
Yard S.leo, 1~ •
To Do Act.

Muot 1111 Pold In Advonce
MIBUNE QfiAQUNE
2 00 p m tho doy belor11
the ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Mondly odhlon
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEAQUNE
1 00 p m thtl doy b&lt;llor11
the ad 1110 n.m
Sunday a Mondoy odHion
1 00 p m Friday

180 Wanted To Do

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,..

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up lo$1Sihour

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PART TIME COOBOtNATOR
AND VAN DRIVER GALLIA
COUNTY RETIRED ~NO SENIOR VOLUNTEER PAOGRAM
T~ UnMtrs ty Of Rio Grande
R SV P. G entee rMtas Appllca
Ions For A Par1 lime Coord nato
And Van 0 lvef For The Galla
County Rabred Senlo \lo unteer
Prog am
Aesponslb itlea ncluOe But Are
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of the season on the diSabled
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St LoUis beaten by the Mets m
the NL champ1onsh1p senes
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mg to pay a $600 000 buyout to
the one ttmeAL CyYoungAward
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St LoUIS also dectined a $1 3
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a hard h1t agamst Purdue
but Srobart sa1d It wasn t as 1f the
coachmg staff looked at 1t as a
pnme opportumty to see what
McMullen oRKrenzel could do
When he got hurt there were
a lot of real nervous people on
the Sldehne Stobart sa1d

Birthday"

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•

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The Daily
Sentinel

Leskamc finiShed 39 games th1s
year If he had fimshed one more
the salary of the opt on year
would have ncreased to $) 2 nul
hon
San D1ego declined a $4 nul

•
hon optton on second basem.an
Bret Boone electmg to pay a •
$250 000 buyout
Anahem1 gave nght hander
T1m Belcher 4 &gt; wuh a 6 86 •
ERA a S1 m1lhon buyout rather
than exerciSe a $5 1 m•lhon
optiOn The Angels also turned
down a $3 45 nullmn optiOn on
shortstop Gary D1Sarcma hrmted
to 38 at bats thiS year because of
InJuncs and exercised a Sl 15
nuU on opt1o1 on nght hander
Sh1getosh1 Hasegawa
Among the I oS players paten
t~ally ehg~ble for free agency 43
have filed smce the end of the
World Senes The deadhne to file
IS Nov 10

I thmk that pretty much d1d
them ln Mason sa1d He: was
dcternuned to get t nto the end
zone Some: people ntercept tr

Wycheck snll smartmg over hiS I
rdease by the Redskins m 1995
I JUSt vanted to go out and
prov ~o the 11 that they made a

Radmsky who gets a $500 000
buyout The Cardmals rxerClsed
an S850 000 opnon on catcher
M1ke Matheny who mmed the
playoffs after acCidentally cumng

Titans

c.

New

qu.1rterback

&lt;~fter

The Dazly Sentmel
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

F om Rent To Own low Down
Payment Low Month y Payment
j 80Q.!I48 5678

736 3409

Stobarr s:ud he hasn t even con
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run after Mtchael Doss mtercep.,
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snap hn a rccetvcr who was m

I don r see anything at all that
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Professional
Service•

230

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomaroy, Middleport, Ohio

rwo tendons

In

hiS nght nng fin

ger w11h a hunnng kmfe
Infielder Lms Lopez agreed to a

Sl 4 mill on two year contraGt
With the Milwaukee Brewers
who also exerciSed a S1 6 m lhon
opnon on pttcher Curus Lesk.an
IC

and ru 1 up the s dehnes and our

mo nemum The clock showod
JUst 10 seconds when tne play
started so when he p1cked off
Johnson s pass at the Titans I'&gt; he
knew he had to go the dtstJ.nce
for It to ncan a 1yth1ng
He tiptoed along the s del ne
then meandered across the field
to the other S!dehne readmg Ius
blocks along the way Fmally he
stumbled the last yard mto the
end zone for the fOuchdown
Two football fields nonstop
md Rolle asked to estnnate th e
length of hiS run Luckily I saw
nobody was around me and that
was when the rest of the blockers

came
After he scored Rolle was
buned under a pile of celebrating
teammates m che end 2one
He was exhausted but the
damage the done The Titans
went mto the locker room w1th
emotion and a ?Q 7 lead

of bounds a d are sa tiSfied w th

that Not Sa 11:1r
Rolle.: also hnd

wtht.:r 11 ter
ccpt on at the ReJsk 1s 11 v th
1 o9 to play end g Wasl gto s
last real chance t&lt; dnh tht: ball
down field
Masons p "'t rett r also had a
b g vow fa tor thanks to a fly g
blo ck by Keith B lluck that
opc.:ned the field Mason dartc.:d
I ft :md JUkcd punter T01 lnl)
Barnhardt ~ r h1s seco nd can::~r
punt retur touLhdu vn giVmg
the Titans the lead for good at I 0
7 n rhe c.:c nd quarter
Wycheck s touchdo vn pro ed
to be t:sse 1 Ial msuranu: n the
fourth quarter Break g tackles
t
cross tl goal I ne W) d cck
sp1kcd th b II ha d and looked at
the Wash ngton bench after the
score
I was I ungr) for that end
zone I vanted t bad sa d

1

make.: Ir

w:~.s

ddinnely an emo

ton a! ga llr.: for 1~
~\O s cond 1uarter fidd goals
b AI D I Greco one set up b) an
ab &gt;rtc I R~Jsk 1S punt when Joe
Zde b one 1opped the snap
p ov d d tl v ~ al narg of v c
tOr\

R lsk n scored the r rou
t
touch do v s on three long
dr v s th first tl 1rd and fourth
q rt rs M k S 11 rs caught a 5
ard r t ch 1
pass Stephen
Da shad a I 1ard n and Larry
Cc tcrs caugl a 3 y::ud sconng
pass
Ther
ere th 1 gs ' ' d dwell
1 ov1 g the football Washmgro 1
coa h N n Turner sad But
vc re go ng co I&lt; ok at the film
a 1d say tlu: sa
tl mg punt
Tl

retu

lo a

uchd " n an nter

ccp twn r tur
Its hard

t

for a touchdown

o\crcomc that

Follow the Eastern Eagles mthe OHSAA playoffs mthe Daily Sentmel'
Subscnbe today • 992 2156

982

540 Miscellaneous
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560

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ces 800 295 9470

$505 WEEKLY GRARANTEED
WORK NG FOR HE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PAFl
T ME NO EXPER ENCE AE
OU FlED
800 46 57 fl E
01

computer/modem

I:~;:~~FF ee

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Oon Ha\le Land? We Do Hu y
On y 0 lo s Left 304 73fH295

IMMEO ATE CAstt
$2 500 $75 000
Fee noNoFel!
-sn 740.2455

230

potential
Paycheckl r om home Venery
J®• Nations only legitjma e "'" .,.••••
Guaranl&amp;ed 8~808 0192 G735

3490

220 Money to Loan

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donos ean$3510$45 o 2o 3
hou s week y Ca Sea Tee 740
592 665

Pro&lt;::ess Clatms from hnn"'

95 Kawasak KX250 elc cond
many eJC as S2 SOC 304 882

Buy A New Home W h No Down
Paymen ? We F nance and
Sep c Wa e And E ec c Ca
J740 446 3583

WELL TEACH YOU
STEP BY STEPI

LOWER
HEATING
COST!
HEATING
COST SAID TO
DOUBLE TH $ W NTEA Ae
pace 0 d Gas Guzz e W h
Amana s 95 ~ H ghes E c ency
Gas Fu naces And Hea Pumps
Fee Esl ma es r You Don ca
us We Bo h Lose
(740 446
6306 I 800 29 0098

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

METAL BU l D NGS Does you
dea e sh p no wo k o you? we
ha ... e compel "e, p ces &amp; NO
dea e sh p ees Ca 1 o a ee
b ochu e E Do ado Bu d ng Sys
ems 800 279 4300

WATERPROOF NG

Uncond one e m1 gua an1ee
Loca ale ancn ru nl•had E1
tabl&amp;hed 975 Ca 24 HI 7o40
-446 0870
800 287 0578 Aog
eswaepoo ng

Genu ne Opportun tyl

For F 11 n ormat on
CaliTol F H

you oen rt~at
you monty Great ltmt ro voYrl F'REE
lilt F tt Cata og fttlu lng

Department AM

e a d ye 1 and e ge a o s
Thompsons App ance 3407
Jackson Avenue (304 675 7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washe s d ye~s e ge a o s
anges Skaggs App ances 76
v nt S u
Ca 740 o446 7398
888 818 0 28

Sa 11 Broehuretl
FrH Supplies Posta;~
Stan mmtd • e y

WAREHOUSE FIXTURES Pa e
Rack n~ Baclc oom She g
Mezza ne Con eyo Powe ed
G a ty And Be ed Ca BOO
939 3233

oned wash

Gas Fu nace
0 000 BTU
Good Shape S 00 S I n Use
(7401446-787&lt;

Mallng 0~

01 214 333-60 19 Dep A63

Huge n enoy Osco n p es
On V ny Sk ng Ooo s w nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Rea e s
P umC ng &amp; I': ec ca Pa 1s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www o vb com/benne

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

•

Da lea

t

I

�•

•

•

..... 84 • The D•lly S.ntlnel

Tueaday, October 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 31,2000
'
-·

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

OOP

NEA Croasword Puzzle

BRIDOIE

PHJLLIP
ALDER.

~~-·
fairies

45 OUeen of lila

1 ,..._. •

.,.-ror
SUf1II'Y

YOUR
CONCRETE .
CONNECTION

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS

JMlealca.re Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
1-Jt:mergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~Medical • Nursing Home

JJJJ

16" Large 8 Item pizza

$13.99
Open 4 p.m. Daily

Closed Mondays

I

I

Meigs Ca. Bikers
Taking appl. for toys for low·
income families.
Meigs Health Dept.
8am-4pm·
No phone calls

I.

P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Residential, Commercial
· Free Eatlmates
Fully Insured

Brian Morrlsoa/Radne, Ohio
(7 40) 985·3948

i

I

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX·LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TIE TEN MILL UMITATION

Salem Townahlp for tho
purpose of: Fire Proltcllon.

CRell11d Code, Sectiona
a)l.tt (G), !5705.19, !5705.25)

NOTICE Ia .hero by given
· thol In purou1nco of a
RIIIOIUIIon of the VIllage
Council of the VIllage of
Middleport, Middleport,
Olllo, p1111d on tha 24th
a, ol July, 2000, there will
be IUbmlttad to • vote of
the pooplt of uld
aubdlvlllon at 1 General
ILECTION to be held In tho
Vllllgo of Mlddlapon, al the
r..ular placaa of voting
llllroln, on lhl 7th ·day of
Navember, 2000, the
queetlon of levying a tax, In
axcaaa of tho ten mill
lmltJitlon, lor the benefit of
lllclcllapcn Vll1go for the

,

The CRARY, BLIND SPOT

At a rate not exceeding 1
(one) milia for each one

dollar of valuation, which

amounts

to

Ten

cents

($0.1 0) for each one
hundred dollara of valuallon
for live (5) yaara.
The Polls for aald Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock

(Factory Outlet)

All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location

UPTO 70% OFF

A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.

• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Et~

'

By order of the Board of
Elections of Melgo County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated Seplember 6, 2000
(10) 10, 17, 24,31 4TC

144 Third Ave. Galh]IOIIs 446·4995
Toll Free 1·888-745·8847

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
e~na·unla to Ten cents
(Revised Code, Sacllona
(10. 10) for 11ch one 3501.11 (G),5705.19, 57.~.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby given
llulldr8d dolllro of valuation
that In pursuance of a
lor !Iva (5) yHro.
The Poll a . for said Reaolullon of the VIllage
llectlon will opon at 6:30 Council of the VIllage of
o'clock A.M. 1nd rom11n Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio,
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. passed on the 3rd day of
August, 2000, lhore will be
olllld dly.
ey order of lha Board of submitted to. a vote of the
llectlona of Meigs County, people of oald subdlvlalon
at a General ELECTION lo
Ohio .
be held In the Vllloge of
· .John N. lhlt, Cl:lalrman
Syracuse, at the regular
I'Uto D. Smith, Dlrtctor
places of vollng lhoroln, on
o.IM Sopltmber 6, 2000
the 7th day of November,
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC
2000, the queallon of

I

I

Public Notice
NOTIC! OF ELECTION ON

TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
tR1'•'111d Code, Sections

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

\;~

Jtt!'

·,,,~ Sa

Ie s

·~

Re pre seil ta ti v e

Larry Schey

levying a tax, In excess of

the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of VIllage of

Syracuse for lhe purpose

of: Fire Protection.
A replacement of a tax of

1 mill.

-1.11 (0), 5705., 9, 5705.25)
At a rata not exceeding 1
NOTICE Ia hereby given (one) mills for each one
tllll In purau1nco of a dollar of valuation, which
-utlon or lha Board of amounts to Ten cents
Townahlp Truateoo of tho (50.1 0) for each 'one
Townlhlp of Salam. hundred dollars of valuation
~lie, Ohio, paaaed on
lor five (5) years.
1M :atth dly ol Juno, 2000,
The Polls for said Election
will be aubmltted 10 a will open at 6:30 o'clock
wto of tho people of oald A.M. and remain open until
eullcflvlalon at a General 7:30 o'clock P.M. of sold
ILICTION to be held In the day.
·
Townefllp of Salem Ohio, at
By order of lhe Board of
1M raglllor pllcaa ol voting ElecUona of Meigs County,
theteln, on lha 7th day of OhiO
Novtmbar, 2000, lho John N. lhla, Chairman
.,..uon of lavylng a tax, In Rita D. Smith, Director
••o••• of the ten mill Dated September 6, 2000
flmltltlon, tor the benefll of (10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Bill Slack
• Firewood • Ught
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

740-992-2269

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take rhe pain our
of painting·
Let me do it for you."
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·

leove Message

740·992·2155

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/vlllo, OH 45723

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

-.-

740·949·2217

ANt&gt; VOIJ

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1/21/00 1 nio. od.

~

'

I

I

/

Windows Installed
Certalnteed,
Simington
Lifetime Warranty'
Local Contractor

TON16~T IS I-IALLOWEEN .. I-lOW COME YOU RE
NOT SITTING OUT IN·A PUMPKIN PATCI-1 WAITING
FOR TJ.lE GREAT PUMPKIN, AND MAKING A TOTAL,
COMPLETE AND A850LUTE FOOL OF YOURSELF?
1

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30Yrs

'

·on t ' 'iS~ If e:z · Or one
•

or as ow as

mont

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

8 131 mo

S,O.l t&gt; KIDS

V.OUl.I&gt;N'T WANT · WHAT
r WAS H,O.NDII'IG OUT!
r 6UE~ THIS PRO\IES
THAT I ..

'(OV I-lAVE A NICE

OF WORDIN6 TI-IINI65 ..

one
.

•

and find lal enl ed, innovative
Wednesday, Nov. I. 2000
· There will be· lois of interesting friends with whom to pal around.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
,deve lopment s in the month s
&lt;•head lhat could accelerate your Should a se lf-servin g acquainri&gt;e to the top. Do your part to tance hatch a plot against you
today, don' t fret. Given a few
:make this a red-leiter year.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) hours, hi s or her ploy will
' rurbulence i.s a given if you let boomerang and produce advan·
money become an issue today in Iages for you.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) A
.a relati onship thai is purely of a
' .social nature . Stick to fun aiTange- solution to an earl y problem that
nlents and th is shou ld be a pleas- pops up can be found through a
.ant day. Tryingto patch up a bra· frank di sc ussion with those
•ken romance? The Astro·Graph involved. Even if the conversalion
:Mat&lt;l'hmaker can help you under- gets a bit testy, all wj ll eventual ·
:stand whal to do to make th e rela- ly end happil y.
ARIE~ (Marc h 2 1·April 19)
'l ionship work, Mail $2.75 to
;Matchma~er, c/o th is 11ewspaper, Because you· re apt to split your
P.O. Box 17Sg, Murray Hill Sta- forces early in the day, there's a
good chance you could get to a
tion, New York. NY 101 56.
' SAGIITAR!US (Nov. 23-Dec. very slow start. Through some
21) Your amb iti ous objectives concerted effort , however. you
;have a pretty good chance of can get back on track.
TAURUS (Aprii 20-May 20) If
being fu lfi li ed today, but perhaps
you
make winning all important
not before you do somelhing oth·
crs dislik e. It'll be 'your honest today, chances are you're going to
apology that' ll undo the faux pas. end up on the short end of the
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. stick. Relax , enjoy yourself, and
19) Those who lack vision could everylhing will work out in your
make you shortsighted , as welL If fav.or.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
yo u find you,elf involved w1th
Don't
get discouraged early today
'uch ileople. make a quick exit

..

if somethin g you deem importa~t
to you doesn' t work out. Regroup
and tackle it more methodically
and you' II make short order of il.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) A
close friend's behavior could
severely di sappoint you. Howev~ r. in stead of makin g an issue of
it, be tolerant. Your pal will get
back in charac ter.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Although yo ur concept may be
pretty good, things could qui ckly
slip away from you if you forget
ahoul. 1he detail s. Think about all
th e pa11s th at make s up the whole
and you' ll pull ,it off. '
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) If
yo u depart. from a proJected procedure that you wrote and
promised to follow. everyone
involved could end up thorough·
ly confused. Get back to the
script.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Just
because a secret may be nol be of
a personal r1atme but instead work
related is no reason to think you
can talk about it. These are the
very ones apout which you should
keep mum.

:;·

31 Being lin
Inferior

"'""'

aubetnute

40 "--1•
human"

41 Playwrlghl
Henley
,
42 On the ocaan
43 Futuro LL.B•I·
exam
45 Afrlclln lind
46 Solar dlok • ·
471ce mas•
49 Superlallva
aufflx
500ncenamad
52 "Scooby ~·· .

53 Author
Anoia-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people past and
ptestnt. Each lettef tn the cipher stands for another.
'

Today's clue: V equals M

'MT

LDGI

ADDIPSCC
RNSIS,

ODPDAL'E
VWIRMWODIEDO

MR'E

FSCCSE

!MOUE

RN W R

F

WOA

WE

OD

NWCCDFSSOI .' -

lRNS

FWI

DT

'.

·

RNS . ,

FDICAE)
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Goll: a day spenl in a round ol slrenuous idleness.' ,'
- W. Wordsworth
. .
"GcH Is a good walk spoiled.'- Marl&lt; Twain
THAT DAILY d_ (i"J

WORD
GAM I

0~

PUULU

0

Rearrange letters cf th•
four acrombled words be·
low to form four simple woids

/~~~;:~;::;;;;;;~-

C U P A .N K

S 0 J T I
r-:::--:::"7'-:-...,.,..--.~

Mom told us no lo name a new
'"Er-D.,...L-ri_v"'T~/2. found kitten or become altached
';"to rt. So na lurally we named her
s 1 1&amp; 1
-.J.L-.J.-..1.-L..J:': Here Kilty and we had her for -- ,..--~.,.....,---__:_;
· - -- -

~

L.

WHEKAR
.I

.I

I_

7
1_ ·

je

_

IO
.

Comple1e tho chu;kl.e quo1od
by f1ll1ng fn the m1n1ng words
you develop from step No . 3 below.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Ita lic- Jerky- Quest - Leaven - EASIER

Sentinel

I overheard my nerghbor admori1sh her son for bemg
a bully She told h1m that he cou ld get through lrfe bemg
a bu lly, bul LiSinQ good manners would make 11EASIER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I

11

L

..
•.

ITUESDAY

.:....__--(1~ 'Your
'Birthday

VIshnu

27 Harrow's rlval 29 Drlnka slowlY'"
30 Author
:;. .
Gardner
~
31 Obeervll :-37 Fiber cluotar::

•

SMITH'S COfiSTROCTIOH

992-1101

...

l\
''LOW F/1.\ BRN-1

SELF STORAGE

741J.887..0383

Meed it done, gillt UF a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Cheat Priced on Mew Homes

T~YCN1£D

HILl'S

vertise our

All pass

The National Geographic Soci·
ety has announced that Mount
Everest is seven feet higher than
previously , believed. It is now
considered to be 29,035 feet high .
Looking for a deal featuring a seven, I found this story in "Right
Through the Pack" by Robert
Darvas and Nonnan de Villiers
Hart (Devyn Press). It was a
goulash, in which the cards were
dealt in groups of three. four or
five without being shuffled . .
If you or I had been South, we
would have opened with a boring
seven hearts ; West would have
overcalled seven spades; North
would have doubled; and the contract would have gone one down
for plus 100 to Norlh-South.
(West gets I00 for his honors,
remember.)
HoWeve r, South was a~ imaginative
player. For a reason that
(;(t;~ Tfl.fo...\ Qli!.U fY-,
seemed good at the time. he
PO fo... TO:.tCK OR /1.
opened with a strong two spades!
w:EAP
West knew what was happening.
Yet he was loath to overcall seven spades. Instead. he made an
even more imaginative bid: seven
·
hearts'
South willed his partner Ia
pass, but North raised to .seven
spades. South quietly groaned.
Wesl was elaled. He doubled, try·
ing not 10 sourd too delighted.
Still not readin g the vibes around
I IIELIEVE
the table, !'lorth naively redouOUR HOUSE
bled.
15 BEING.
~ELTED
I! was West' s lead. Knowing
WITH
had the miss ing trumps, ·
dummy
1'-IC.E
C.,O.KES .
he selected th e spectral spade seven. South incorrectly played low
from the dummy. (South knew
from West's seven-heart overcall
that he was planning 10 retreal to
seven spades if doubled. West had
.litL.:.::::..~~~ to have excellent spades.) West
drew trumps and ran his clubs for
I 3 down, a small matter of 7,700,
TI-I~INK '&lt;OU .. l WORK TI-IEM
including West' s honors!
,
OUT ON LITTLE SLIPS OF
That was a ghoulish goulash
6EFOREHAND..
for Halloween.

..

Roofing
Home Maintenance
Gutters/Down
Spout
Free Estimates
Toll Free

· All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equip~nem Parts
Factory Ant\torized
Case-lH Parts
Dealen.

:THE BORN LOSER

IZJ·

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Pass

lh PHILLIP ALDER

Rutland. Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. .

Pomero , Ohio 45769

HOWARD l. WRIUSEL

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

992·2753

mo.

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

"I'"""

Redbl.

13 -.uncanny 51 ~lt.lly
14 Una on a map
1o1noc1
15 "lmmed~l" 54 l&gt;uzzling
16 Reel - ogont
problem
17 Lid
55 Laborer
18 French noble 56 HeodW. .r
20 Youngmaker
21 Highest
57 Marking oil
mountain
city sacttono
25 Aaaumplton
..,_
28 Molllfila
DOWN
!-7-~crt.=.
321ngealld
1 Ninth mo.
33Pinn2 Finnish first
34 SplrHiooo
(okl-otylol
n•me
3 F•ll•u-ly
35 II could ba
4 OWn (Scot.)
delicious!
5 Southeaol
12 Allowance tot '
8 Highway
36 Ballroom
Asian holiday
waste
::.:
curve
di!ICI
19 "Vent" flnlah
9 Flnloh an "I"
37 Sourcea ol ruin 6 Wears away
7-olwork
39Wentln10 Blind • • - - 21 Become
(ramarkablo
apparent
11 Mil. alliance
41 French d•nca
. peraonl
lormed In 1949 22 Singer
44 Photo-~23 Type of beget
24 Hit lightly "
25-mou
:·
26 lncamallon of-

Ghoulish goulash ·

CHASIN' OFF?

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

740-985-3831

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

. ~@:,WICK'S.
, HfiOLinG and
EXCfiVfiTinG

OL' BULLET

22 yro. Local

Now Renting

S91-S011

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding ·

992·6215

740·992·7599

. "Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
•12% Cattle feed 16.751100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters P~de Dog food 16.75/50 lbs.
1 fall Fertilizers
35537 St Rt 7 North

After 6pm- 740·985-4180

(740) 992-3470

Lie. 11 oo-so

1•

.I

Puzzle

Jewlah

Opening lead: ??

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

7or !!
Obi.

ascetic

MAW, WHO'S

FREii ESTIMATES

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

Phone (740) 593-6671

. "A Better Wa , Eve

Hauling • limeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

Our Classified
Advertisements Reach
Over 96,000 People
Ev•ry DaY,.
Call.Today To Place Your
Classified Ad

•

. Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

COMMERCIAL and RBIOEHTIAL

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:3D P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiiJil
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sterbtnst
Progressive top line.
·

Pass

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windo~
• Room Additions
• Roofing

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

992-5479

2e!

• Polio &amp; Ponh Docks

-

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

'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
SouU. West North East

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC •

1-800-291.-5600

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

1 rat1 not exceeding t
(Dna) mlllo lor each one
dDII1r ot vlluotlon, which
~t

1014 1

.QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS; INC.

Public Notice

•98764
eJ9175432

A K Q 10 6

• A K Q J 10 98 7 6 54 3 2

• Vinyl Siding &amp; """'""'

304·273·0036

l~
~ Call for Further Details

of: . Current

tu. baing A renewal -..:...==~::.!!:~oh tox oft mill
-

6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, 'NV

• Free.Installation
* Free in Home Estimates

992-4119

e

CARPENTER SERVICE

$229e00*

~

eAKQJ987f

• Room additions &amp; Romo4tllnt
• Hew Garages
• lltnrkal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gullort

·AnY Size Do!lble Huns-

Said tax being A renewal

of a tax of 1 mill

IRON CITY GYM

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
J

J 10 5 3 2

East

West

YOUNG'S

.Ask For Mr. Ford

740-992-3961

• A K Q

South

(:all Us First Or We 8oth Lose!

On Maple
Street in
Mason
Next to Wai-Mart
10x20 and 10x10
II'·'

740-992-5232

"W.elp"

HOLLY'S
SELF-STORAGE

·-···-·- ····-

BAUII LUMBER
ST. RT. 148
CIESTIR

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

7122/TFN

1

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS

740-992-1671

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Self-Storage

OF

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

North
tHI.OO
• 10 6 5 3 2

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

URNPIKE

·New Homes

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOEiCAT SERVICES

Garage Sale
Ro-nald Beegle residence
Thurs &amp; Fri
Nov. 2 &amp; 3
9:00 am • 5:00 pm

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CONCRETE

Pt. Pleasant
Save•A•Lot
Now taking Ohio
Food stamp
EBT Cards

Quality Drlvewaya,
Patloa, Sldewalka.
25 yeara experience
Free Eetlmatea

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

SECURITY ·
PRODUCTS
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

High 8l Dry

~

Middleport, Ohio 45760
. Local 843·5264

48 Anclanl

7 Seta' 1tlc prig

~1(~

An-to-

--~---------------------~•
(plct~
ACROSS

1 76E!rs at New York Krncks (Lilla)

..

�•

•

•

..... 84 • The D•lly S.ntlnel

Tueaday, October 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 31,2000
'
-·

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

OOP

NEA Croasword Puzzle

BRIDOIE

PHJLLIP
ALDER.

~~-·
fairies

45 OUeen of lila

1 ,..._. •

.,.-ror
SUf1II'Y

YOUR
CONCRETE .
CONNECTION

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS

JMlealca.re Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
1-Jt:mergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~Medical • Nursing Home

JJJJ

16" Large 8 Item pizza

$13.99
Open 4 p.m. Daily

Closed Mondays

I

I

Meigs Ca. Bikers
Taking appl. for toys for low·
income families.
Meigs Health Dept.
8am-4pm·
No phone calls

I.

P/ 8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Residential, Commercial
· Free Eatlmates
Fully Insured

Brian Morrlsoa/Radne, Ohio
(7 40) 985·3948

i

I

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX·LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TIE TEN MILL UMITATION

Salem Townahlp for tho
purpose of: Fire Proltcllon.

CRell11d Code, Sectiona
a)l.tt (G), !5705.19, !5705.25)

NOTICE Ia .hero by given
· thol In purou1nco of a
RIIIOIUIIon of the VIllage
Council of the VIllage of
Middleport, Middleport,
Olllo, p1111d on tha 24th
a, ol July, 2000, there will
be IUbmlttad to • vote of
the pooplt of uld
aubdlvlllon at 1 General
ILECTION to be held In tho
Vllllgo of Mlddlapon, al the
r..ular placaa of voting
llllroln, on lhl 7th ·day of
Navember, 2000, the
queetlon of levying a tax, In
axcaaa of tho ten mill
lmltJitlon, lor the benefit of
lllclcllapcn Vll1go for the

,

The CRARY, BLIND SPOT

At a rate not exceeding 1
(one) milia for each one

dollar of valuation, which

amounts

to

Ten

cents

($0.1 0) for each one
hundred dollara of valuallon
for live (5) yaara.
The Polls for aald Election
will open at 6:30 o'clock

(Factory Outlet)

All vertical blinds are made to order at
our location

UPTO 70% OFF

A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of said
day.

• Verticals • Wood • Minis • Et~

'

By order of the Board of
Elections of Melgo County,
Ohio
John N. lhle, Chairman
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated Seplember 6, 2000
(10) 10, 17, 24,31 4TC

144 Third Ave. Galh]IOIIs 446·4995
Toll Free 1·888-745·8847

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
e~na·unla to Ten cents
(Revised Code, Sacllona
(10. 10) for 11ch one 3501.11 (G),5705.19, 57.~.25)
NOTICE Ia hereby given
llulldr8d dolllro of valuation
that In pursuance of a
lor !Iva (5) yHro.
The Poll a . for said Reaolullon of the VIllage
llectlon will opon at 6:30 Council of the VIllage of
o'clock A.M. 1nd rom11n Syracuse, Syracuse, Ohio,
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. passed on the 3rd day of
August, 2000, lhore will be
olllld dly.
ey order of lha Board of submitted to. a vote of the
llectlona of Meigs County, people of oald subdlvlalon
at a General ELECTION lo
Ohio .
be held In the Vllloge of
· .John N. lhlt, Cl:lalrman
Syracuse, at the regular
I'Uto D. Smith, Dlrtctor
places of vollng lhoroln, on
o.IM Sopltmber 6, 2000
the 7th day of November,
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC
2000, the queallon of

I

I

Public Notice
NOTIC! OF ELECTION ON

TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
tR1'•'111d Code, Sections

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

\;~

Jtt!'

·,,,~ Sa

Ie s

·~

Re pre seil ta ti v e

Larry Schey

levying a tax, In excess of

the ten mill limitation, for
the benefit of VIllage of

Syracuse for lhe purpose

of: Fire Protection.
A replacement of a tax of

1 mill.

-1.11 (0), 5705., 9, 5705.25)
At a rata not exceeding 1
NOTICE Ia hereby given (one) mills for each one
tllll In purau1nco of a dollar of valuation, which
-utlon or lha Board of amounts to Ten cents
Townahlp Truateoo of tho (50.1 0) for each 'one
Townlhlp of Salam. hundred dollars of valuation
~lie, Ohio, paaaed on
lor five (5) years.
1M :atth dly ol Juno, 2000,
The Polls for said Election
will be aubmltted 10 a will open at 6:30 o'clock
wto of tho people of oald A.M. and remain open until
eullcflvlalon at a General 7:30 o'clock P.M. of sold
ILICTION to be held In the day.
·
Townefllp of Salem Ohio, at
By order of lhe Board of
1M raglllor pllcaa ol voting ElecUona of Meigs County,
theteln, on lha 7th day of OhiO
Novtmbar, 2000, lho John N. lhla, Chairman
.,..uon of lavylng a tax, In Rita D. Smith, Director
••o••• of the ten mill Dated September 6, 2000
flmltltlon, tor the benefll of (10) 10, 17, 24, 31 4TC

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Bill Slack
• Firewood • Ught
hauling • Tree &amp; hedge
trimming &amp; removal

740-992-2269

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take rhe pain our
of painting·
Let me do it for you."
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·

leove Message

740·992·2155

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/vlllo, OH 45723

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

-.-

740·949·2217

ANt&gt; VOIJ

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1/21/00 1 nio. od.

~

'

I

I

/

Windows Installed
Certalnteed,
Simington
Lifetime Warranty'
Local Contractor

TON16~T IS I-IALLOWEEN .. I-lOW COME YOU RE
NOT SITTING OUT IN·A PUMPKIN PATCI-1 WAITING
FOR TJ.lE GREAT PUMPKIN, AND MAKING A TOTAL,
COMPLETE AND A850LUTE FOOL OF YOURSELF?
1

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30Yrs

'

·on t ' 'iS~ If e:z · Or one
•

or as ow as

mont

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

8 131 mo

S,O.l t&gt; KIDS

V.OUl.I&gt;N'T WANT · WHAT
r WAS H,O.NDII'IG OUT!
r 6UE~ THIS PRO\IES
THAT I ..

'(OV I-lAVE A NICE

OF WORDIN6 TI-IINI65 ..

one
.

•

and find lal enl ed, innovative
Wednesday, Nov. I. 2000
· There will be· lois of interesting friends with whom to pal around.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
,deve lopment s in the month s
&lt;•head lhat could accelerate your Should a se lf-servin g acquainri&gt;e to the top. Do your part to tance hatch a plot against you
today, don' t fret. Given a few
:make this a red-leiter year.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) hours, hi s or her ploy will
' rurbulence i.s a given if you let boomerang and produce advan·
money become an issue today in Iages for you.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) A
.a relati onship thai is purely of a
' .social nature . Stick to fun aiTange- solution to an earl y problem that
nlents and th is shou ld be a pleas- pops up can be found through a
.ant day. Tryingto patch up a bra· frank di sc ussion with those
•ken romance? The Astro·Graph involved. Even if the conversalion
:Mat&lt;l'hmaker can help you under- gets a bit testy, all wj ll eventual ·
:stand whal to do to make th e rela- ly end happil y.
ARIE~ (Marc h 2 1·April 19)
'l ionship work, Mail $2.75 to
;Matchma~er, c/o th is 11ewspaper, Because you· re apt to split your
P.O. Box 17Sg, Murray Hill Sta- forces early in the day, there's a
good chance you could get to a
tion, New York. NY 101 56.
' SAGIITAR!US (Nov. 23-Dec. very slow start. Through some
21) Your amb iti ous objectives concerted effort , however. you
;have a pretty good chance of can get back on track.
TAURUS (Aprii 20-May 20) If
being fu lfi li ed today, but perhaps
you
make winning all important
not before you do somelhing oth·
crs dislik e. It'll be 'your honest today, chances are you're going to
apology that' ll undo the faux pas. end up on the short end of the
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. stick. Relax , enjoy yourself, and
19) Those who lack vision could everylhing will work out in your
make you shortsighted , as welL If fav.or.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
yo u find you,elf involved w1th
Don't
get discouraged early today
'uch ileople. make a quick exit

..

if somethin g you deem importa~t
to you doesn' t work out. Regroup
and tackle it more methodically
and you' II make short order of il.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) A
close friend's behavior could
severely di sappoint you. Howev~ r. in stead of makin g an issue of
it, be tolerant. Your pal will get
back in charac ter.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Although yo ur concept may be
pretty good, things could qui ckly
slip away from you if you forget
ahoul. 1he detail s. Think about all
th e pa11s th at make s up the whole
and you' ll pull ,it off. '
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) If
yo u depart. from a proJected procedure that you wrote and
promised to follow. everyone
involved could end up thorough·
ly confused. Get back to the
script.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Just
because a secret may be nol be of
a personal r1atme but instead work
related is no reason to think you
can talk about it. These are the
very ones apout which you should
keep mum.

:;·

31 Being lin
Inferior

"'""'

aubetnute

40 "--1•
human"

41 Playwrlghl
Henley
,
42 On the ocaan
43 Futuro LL.B•I·
exam
45 Afrlclln lind
46 Solar dlok • ·
471ce mas•
49 Superlallva
aufflx
500ncenamad
52 "Scooby ~·· .

53 Author
Anoia-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people past and
ptestnt. Each lettef tn the cipher stands for another.
'

Today's clue: V equals M

'MT

LDGI

ADDIPSCC
RNSIS,

ODPDAL'E
VWIRMWODIEDO

MR'E

FSCCSE

!MOUE

RN W R

F

WOA

WE

OD

NWCCDFSSOI .' -

lRNS

FWI

DT

'.

·

RNS . ,

FDICAE)
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Goll: a day spenl in a round ol slrenuous idleness.' ,'
- W. Wordsworth
. .
"GcH Is a good walk spoiled.'- Marl&lt; Twain
THAT DAILY d_ (i"J

WORD
GAM I

0~

PUULU

0

Rearrange letters cf th•
four acrombled words be·
low to form four simple woids

/~~~;:~;::;;;;;;~-

C U P A .N K

S 0 J T I
r-:::--:::"7'-:-...,.,..--.~

Mom told us no lo name a new
'"Er-D.,...L-ri_v"'T~/2. found kitten or become altached
';"to rt. So na lurally we named her
s 1 1&amp; 1
-.J.L-.J.-..1.-L..J:': Here Kilty and we had her for -- ,..--~.,.....,---__:_;
· - -- -

~

L.

WHEKAR
.I

.I

I_

7
1_ ·

je

_

IO
.

Comple1e tho chu;kl.e quo1od
by f1ll1ng fn the m1n1ng words
you develop from step No . 3 below.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Ita lic- Jerky- Quest - Leaven - EASIER

Sentinel

I overheard my nerghbor admori1sh her son for bemg
a bully She told h1m that he cou ld get through lrfe bemg
a bu lly, bul LiSinQ good manners would make 11EASIER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I

11

L

..
•.

ITUESDAY

.:....__--(1~ 'Your
'Birthday

VIshnu

27 Harrow's rlval 29 Drlnka slowlY'"
30 Author
:;. .
Gardner
~
31 Obeervll :-37 Fiber cluotar::

•

SMITH'S COfiSTROCTIOH

992-1101

...

l\
''LOW F/1.\ BRN-1

SELF STORAGE

741J.887..0383

Meed it done, gillt UF a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Cheat Priced on Mew Homes

T~YCN1£D

HILl'S

vertise our

All pass

The National Geographic Soci·
ety has announced that Mount
Everest is seven feet higher than
previously , believed. It is now
considered to be 29,035 feet high .
Looking for a deal featuring a seven, I found this story in "Right
Through the Pack" by Robert
Darvas and Nonnan de Villiers
Hart (Devyn Press). It was a
goulash, in which the cards were
dealt in groups of three. four or
five without being shuffled . .
If you or I had been South, we
would have opened with a boring
seven hearts ; West would have
overcalled seven spades; North
would have doubled; and the contract would have gone one down
for plus 100 to Norlh-South.
(West gets I00 for his honors,
remember.)
HoWeve r, South was a~ imaginative
player. For a reason that
(;(t;~ Tfl.fo...\ Qli!.U fY-,
seemed good at the time. he
PO fo... TO:.tCK OR /1.
opened with a strong two spades!
w:EAP
West knew what was happening.
Yet he was loath to overcall seven spades. Instead. he made an
even more imaginative bid: seven
·
hearts'
South willed his partner Ia
pass, but North raised to .seven
spades. South quietly groaned.
Wesl was elaled. He doubled, try·
ing not 10 sourd too delighted.
Still not readin g the vibes around
I IIELIEVE
the table, !'lorth naively redouOUR HOUSE
bled.
15 BEING.
~ELTED
I! was West' s lead. Knowing
WITH
had the miss ing trumps, ·
dummy
1'-IC.E
C.,O.KES .
he selected th e spectral spade seven. South incorrectly played low
from the dummy. (South knew
from West's seven-heart overcall
that he was planning 10 retreal to
seven spades if doubled. West had
.litL.:.::::..~~~ to have excellent spades.) West
drew trumps and ran his clubs for
I 3 down, a small matter of 7,700,
TI-I~INK '&lt;OU .. l WORK TI-IEM
including West' s honors!
,
OUT ON LITTLE SLIPS OF
That was a ghoulish goulash
6EFOREHAND..
for Halloween.

..

Roofing
Home Maintenance
Gutters/Down
Spout
Free Estimates
Toll Free

· All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equip~nem Parts
Factory Ant\torized
Case-lH Parts
Dealen.

:THE BORN LOSER

IZJ·

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Pass

lh PHILLIP ALDER

Rutland. Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. .

Pomero , Ohio 45769

HOWARD l. WRIUSEL

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

992·2753

mo.

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

"I'"""

Redbl.

13 -.uncanny 51 ~lt.lly
14 Una on a map
1o1noc1
15 "lmmed~l" 54 l&gt;uzzling
16 Reel - ogont
problem
17 Lid
55 Laborer
18 French noble 56 HeodW. .r
20 Youngmaker
21 Highest
57 Marking oil
mountain
city sacttono
25 Aaaumplton
..,_
28 Molllfila
DOWN
!-7-~crt.=.
321ngealld
1 Ninth mo.
33Pinn2 Finnish first
34 SplrHiooo
(okl-otylol
n•me
3 F•ll•u-ly
35 II could ba
4 OWn (Scot.)
delicious!
5 Southeaol
12 Allowance tot '
8 Highway
36 Ballroom
Asian holiday
waste
::.:
curve
di!ICI
19 "Vent" flnlah
9 Flnloh an "I"
37 Sourcea ol ruin 6 Wears away
7-olwork
39Wentln10 Blind • • - - 21 Become
(ramarkablo
apparent
11 Mil. alliance
41 French d•nca
. peraonl
lormed In 1949 22 Singer
44 Photo-~23 Type of beget
24 Hit lightly "
25-mou
:·
26 lncamallon of-

Ghoulish goulash ·

CHASIN' OFF?

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

740-985-3831

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992·6396
992·2272

. ~@:,WICK'S.
, HfiOLinG and
EXCfiVfiTinG

OL' BULLET

22 yro. Local

Now Renting

S91-S011

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding ·

992·6215

740·992·7599

. "Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
•12% Cattle feed 16.751100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters P~de Dog food 16.75/50 lbs.
1 fall Fertilizers
35537 St Rt 7 North

After 6pm- 740·985-4180

(740) 992-3470

Lie. 11 oo-so

1•

.I

Puzzle

Jewlah

Opening lead: ??

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

7or !!
Obi.

ascetic

MAW, WHO'S

FREii ESTIMATES

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

Phone (740) 593-6671

. "A Better Wa , Eve

Hauling • limeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

Our Classified
Advertisements Reach
Over 96,000 People
Ev•ry DaY,.
Call.Today To Place Your
Classified Ad

•

. Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

COMMERCIAL and RBIOEHTIAL

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:3D P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiiJil
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sterbtnst
Progressive top line.
·

Pass

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windo~
• Room Additions
• Roofing

• No Dealers or Contractors Please WV #023477

992-5479

2e!

• Polio &amp; Ponh Docks

-

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

'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
SouU. West North East

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC •

1-800-291.-5600

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

1 rat1 not exceeding t
(Dna) mlllo lor each one
dDII1r ot vlluotlon, which
~t

1014 1

.QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS; INC.

Public Notice

•98764
eJ9175432

A K Q 10 6

• A K Q J 10 98 7 6 54 3 2

• Vinyl Siding &amp; """'""'

304·273·0036

l~
~ Call for Further Details

of: . Current

tu. baing A renewal -..:...==~::.!!:~oh tox oft mill
-

6 Month
Membership $100
plus tax
with this ad
Ravenswood, 'NV

• Free.Installation
* Free in Home Estimates

992-4119

e

CARPENTER SERVICE

$229e00*

~

eAKQJ987f

• Room additions &amp; Romo4tllnt
• Hew Garages
• lltnrkal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gullort

·AnY Size Do!lble Huns-

Said tax being A renewal

of a tax of 1 mill

IRON CITY GYM

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
J

J 10 5 3 2

East

West

YOUNG'S

.Ask For Mr. Ford

740-992-3961

• A K Q

South

(:all Us First Or We 8oth Lose!

On Maple
Street in
Mason
Next to Wai-Mart
10x20 and 10x10
II'·'

740-992-5232

"W.elp"

HOLLY'S
SELF-STORAGE

·-···-·- ····-

BAUII LUMBER
ST. RT. 148
CIESTIR

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

7122/TFN

1

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS

740-992-1671

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Self-Storage

OF

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

North
tHI.OO
• 10 6 5 3 2

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

URNPIKE

·New Homes

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOEiCAT SERVICES

Garage Sale
Ro-nald Beegle residence
Thurs &amp; Fri
Nov. 2 &amp; 3
9:00 am • 5:00 pm

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CONCRETE

Pt. Pleasant
Save•A•Lot
Now taking Ohio
Food stamp
EBT Cards

Quality Drlvewaya,
Patloa, Sldewalka.
25 yeara experience
Free Eetlmatea

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

SECURITY ·
PRODUCTS
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

High 8l Dry

~

Middleport, Ohio 45760
. Local 843·5264

48 Anclanl

7 Seta' 1tlc prig

~1(~

An-to-

--~---------------------~•
(plct~
ACROSS

1 76E!rs at New York Krncks (Lilla)

..

�.... 8 •• The Dally Sentinel

Season opens today
with 13 games on tap
The ball geu tossed up in
Ad•nt•. Orlando and New Jersey first. Three hours loter, it's •
rematch oflhe Western Conference final&lt;.
Tuesday night is opemng
night in the NBA, with 13
games scheduled. Included are
national telecasts of Philadelphia •t New York (8 p.m . EST,
TBS) ar\d the defending ch•mpion Los Angele s Lakers at
Portland (10:30 p.m . EST.TBS).
Final roster moves wore made
Monday as teams cut down to
12 active players.
There were a few surpmes
•round the league :
- Rookie free agent Srophcn
Jackson . who took the long
road from high school to the
pros , not only made the Nt"w
Jersey Nets, but will bt· a starter.
-Daniel Santiago, who went
from Lubbock, Texas, to l'ucrto
Rico to Varese, Italy, made the
team in Phoenix and is ahead of
heralded rookie Jake Tsakalidis
on the depth chart.
- The Chicago Bulls will
begin the season as the
youngest team in league history.
With an average age of JUS(
under 23 . They have five rookies on the roster Jamal
Crawford, Khalid El-Amin,
Marcus Fizer, A.J. Guyton •nd
Dragan Tarlac - and two more
rookies. Dalibor Bagaric and
Jake Voskuhl, on the injured list.
- Joe Smith appears on no

one's · roster. Commissioner
David Stern made the Timberwolves forward a free agent last
week, although Smith's status
will remain on hold until an
nbitration hearing ts held
Thursday on whether Stern
overstepped his authority in
voiding Smith's previous two
contracts in Minnesota .
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf
and Tyus Edney have returned
to the league, Abdul-Rauf as
the backup point guard in Vancouver and Edney has .the same
job in Indiana .
- There's a new Marc Jackson in the league. a rookie forward from Temple who spent

the past three years in Turkey
and Spain. He and Adam Keefe
will back up starter D•nny
forrson in Golden State. The
other Mark Jackson that's
Mark with a 'k' - has relocated from Indiana to Toronto and
led the league in assists during
the preseason .
- Thrre is no n~xr Michael
Jordan. A rookie by that name
from Penn was cut by the
Boston Cd1ics during training
camp.
Stephen Jackson took ·a notso-direct route from high
school to the pros, with no. college in between . A htgh scho&lt;'l
All-American in 19%, he didn't
have the grades to attend Arizona after signing a lener o(
mtent. He enrolled for the
spring semester 01t a cummunuy
college in Kansas, but did nut
play, th en declared for the draft
in 1997 and was a secondround choice of the Suns.
·He was cut during training
camp, then made professional
stops in Ven&lt;Zuela and the
Dominican Republic before
being cut a year ago by the Vancouver Grizzlies.
The Nets gave him a tryout,
and coach Byron Scott had no
idea who he was on the first day
of training camp. But he was
the team's leading scorer for
much of the preseason and will
begin the season as a starter in
place of the injured Keith Van
Horn.
"This is unexpected, very ·
unexpected," Jackson said. "I
have high expectations for
myself, but I'm surprised, very
surprised."
Santiago, a 7-foot-1 center
who played in Italy the past two
seasons and also was a member
of the Puerto Rican national
ream, will begin tpe season as
the backup center to Chris
Dudley.
.
"What we're going to get is
someone who will be more
reliable to us than Oliver Miller
was last year," Suns general
manager- Bryan Colangelo said.

-

W
,-....,.. ...................&amp;
Mllml ............................8
N.Y. - .........................&amp;
BuWilo ........................... 4
Now Englond ..................2

L
2
2
2
4

Pill
171
111
163
173
171

r.,.,....... .....................7

1
3
•
8
8
7

o.8751n ne

T Pia. PF
0 .750232
0 .750 177
0 .150 185
0 .500 163
8 0 .250 143

lnciana ..................••.......0
.. .........................0

0 .000
0 .000

TOfOOto ..............................0

0 .000

- - ................. ...........0
Minne- ......................... 0
San Antonk) ......................0
Utah ..................................0
Vancouver ... , .....................0

-

Porllond ............................0

0 .000

...... 6 3 o .667 110 142

0 .000 ·
0 .(I())

Arlzona .......................... 2 . 8 0 .250131 231

COntrol
Mlnn..ota .................... 7 1 0 .875 197 178
Detroit ........... 1... ............ ! 3 0 .625 161 164

.

W L Pet
0 1.000
Plll!adelpNa ..•................... 2 o 1.000

S"ndey'• Gam••

Toronto ............................ 2
Edmonton ......................... 1
Detroit ............................... 1
Wk:hill , ............................. 1

Miami II Detroit, 1 p.m.

Buffalo at New EnQIInd, 1 p.m.
lndllnapoHs at ChiCago, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay 11 At1anta. 1 p.m.

o

1
4

3

0

0 0
3 1 1
Montreal .............. .4 5 2 0
Boston ................. .4 5 1 1
SOutheast Dlvlllon
Florida .
.. .... 1 3 3 3
Carolina .......... .... 2 5 3 0
Ailanla ................. 1 3 . 5 0
Washington ......... 1 5 4 1
Tampa Bay ............ 2 6 1 0
Buffalo .................. 5

Sunday, Ni:')v. 6

39
33
21

BASEBAll
.
American League
ANA\-tEIM ANGElS-Exercised the 2001
contract option on AHP Shlge1oshi Hasegawa

15 39
12 23

21

Announced they have not exercised the contract options on AHP Tim Belcher and SS Gary
OISarclna.

20
26

12 29
10 31
10 27

36

8 21
7 23
7 24
7 23

29
30
28
34

5 26

39

17 37'

20

3 0 1 15 33
2 3 1 1 2 23
7 0 1 . 7 20
8 0 1
5 18
Northw. .t DM1Ion

.23

St.louis ..............8

2

1 0

Detroit: ................. 7
NashviKe .............. 4
Chtcago ................ 3
Columbus ............. 2

National Ba1kltbell Alloclatlon

33

1 2

0

20 36

19

Vancouver ............ &amp;
EdmOnton ............ 6
Calgary ................ 3
Minnesota ............ 2

2
5
8
1

1
o
o
o

15
14
7
7

40
37
26
23

31
36
35
37

P.atftc Dlva.lon
Phcenl• ......... ..... .9 1 2 0 20 42

23

Conf«&lt;ft~

AU•nttc Dl¥111on

W L Pet.
Boston .............................0 0 .000
Miami ...................... .......... 0

0 .. ooo

New Jersey ........................0

0 .000

New Yo1'11; ............·...............0

0

OrlandO

o .000

22
34
39

Colorado ..............9

QB

Anaheim ,, ............. 6
Dallas ................ 6
San Jose ............... 6

2
2
1
3

15 40
14 33
13 25
losA.ngeles .......... s 5 2 o 12 45
Two points lor ,p win, one point for a tie
overtime loss.

.000

Philadelphia
Washington

....... o
0 .000
........... 0 0 .000
Centre! Olvlelon
Atlanta ....
.. ........ 0
0 .000
cnartone ........................ o o ooo
Chicago .
. 0 0 000

4
c
2

1
1
1

2
1
0

45
31
18
38
and

Sundly't Gam..
N.Y. Rangers 5, Boston 1
Washington 1, Philadelphia 1, tie
St. louis 4, Carolina 1

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

Cincinnati seeks revenge on Baltimore
CINCINNATI (AP) -After
the 0-3 start that prompted coach
Bruce Coslet to quit. the Cincinnati Bengals felt they had scores

decided.
The Bcng;l}s' ire was overshadowed the next morn-ng wht."n
Coslt:t quit as coach and defensive

to settle with two t~.lm s.
coordinator Dick leBeau took
First were tho Cleveland over. Although LeBeau is playing
Browns, who showed up for the down the get-even angle, his
Paul Brown Stadium opener and players unmistakably want to
overwhelmed the llengals 24-7 as prove a point Sunday at Paul
. their fans woofed 111 delight. The Brown Stadium.
Bengals silenced the Dawgs and
"It's not necessarily what they
evened the season series with a dtd at the end of the game," line12-3 win Sunday in Cleveland.
backer Takeo Spikes said. "What
Now comes the team thar sent sticks in my ·mind is what they
them to a low pomt m franchise did the entire game. That's what
history, then rubbed it. m their realty hurt, because we know
faces.
we're better than that. They pretThe Bengals are convinced that ty much embarrassed us.
coach Brian Billick ran up the
" But lt's a new team, a new
score during the Ravens' 37-0 attitude. Everything happens for a
victory in Baltimore on Sept. 24, reason . I wonder why they're not
and they've still got some passion- scoring. They haven't scored a
ate feelings about it .
touchdown since they played us."
"I think they were trying to
He's right. The Ravens (5-4)
embarrass us ," defensive lineman haven't reoched the end zone
John Copeland said Monday. since Obafemi Ayanbadejo went
"That's always stuck in the back in from 1 yard out with 6:39 left
of our minds. I think what they against the Bengals . Baltimore
did was unprofessional. There's no scored four touchdown&lt; in all
place for that in this game."
that day. but has managed nothing
During that lopsided win, the bur field goals since.
Ravens rhrew 10 tim-down passThe Ravens are one quarter
es while leading comfortably in · short of matching the 1991 lndi- ·
the second half and challenged a anapolis Colts' string of 21 quarcall with 2 minute s to play, pro- ters without a touchdown. the
longing a gall' e that was already longest streak in the NFl since

the 1970 merger.
On Sept. 24, no one cou ld have
foreseen such a · drought. The
Ravens rolled up 391 yards and
basically had their way, even late
in the game when the Bengals

thought the Ravens should have
gone a little n1ore conservative.

"Their coach thought he needed to do . that," tackle W1llie
Anderson said. "We took it kind
of hard , but it's not going to be a
payback thing in our minds."
Anderson was giving the parry
lin.e on that one. LeBeau was
emphatic Monday that he wants
his players focused on getting
better, not getting even.
Asked if he thought the Ravens
ran up the score, LeBeau said, " It
doesn 't interest me . I have no

thought about it. The situation of
the game - you can't allow it to
get like that. That's what we have
to focus on."
There 's plenty of room for
improvement. The Bengals completed only two passes but got
407 yards rushing in a 31-21 victory over DenVer two weeks ago,
· then struggled again Sunday in a
12-3 victory in Cleveland. Akili
Smith was only 7 -of-20 for 84
yards with four sacks, and the
Bengals (2-6) repeatedly dropped
passes and set themselves back

Leftwich tabbed MAC player of the week
CLEVElAND (AP) - Marshall qu;~rterb.Kk £lyron Leftwich. Northern 1\hnols rornt:r-

back Vince Thomp&gt;on .111d M.lrshall kick returna Curtis Jon,·s
haw b&lt;en sckcred ,IS the MaiAmcrkan Confcren&lt;L" ·~ pbyr.:~ of
the week.
Leftwich . .1 sophomore from
Washington. D.C. . p.l&gt;s,•d for a
ca reer-best and MAC season-

high 393 ya rd s in lend1ng Marsha ll to a J 1-2H win at Akron. He
cngincL"n:d .m H7-y,trd drivc tha t
ended \vith the g;unc-winning

111

' 73-10 wtn over
the Huskies'

touchdown, Ill wlw:h hL· &lt;om-

Bufr.1lo ;md all led to wuch- \
downs.
·
Joncs .•l sop'homorL' from Okl'l'chobee, Fla . sporked M.mlull\

plcted 7-of-10 p.mes ti&gt;r 75 yards.

co mc?b:Kk wtn .n Akron w1rh

Thompson. a sophomore from
Clu . :.tgo. b"·camc thc' fourrh

XJ-yard kiCkoff rc::u rn la tL' 111 rhl'

MAC pl.tyer tlm
thrcL' p;~sscs in

r•··" to intercept

:1 si ngle g.unc .
Thompson's inte-rceptions L'.lntC:

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

-~--

.111

thtrd qu.mer tim sc•t up M.ashal l's gamt'-t)'lng toLKhdown.

with pcnaltiL·s

•.

Corey Dillon was their o nly
threat once again, cJrrying 27
times for 137 yards and their only
touchdown.
" It defimtcly feels good to
come in here wtthout a loss, but
we still think we can play better,
especially on offense," Anderson
said. "We're not cheering,
whooping and going crazy
around here."
All they're doing for now is
remembering.

Wichita at Detroit
Toronto at Milwaukee

9 30
8 30
8 21

Centrll Dlvtalon

Minneaotl at Graen Bay. 9 p.m.

Thunday's Game

Ballirnore at.Philadelphia
Saturday, Nov. 4
Cleveland at Buffalo
Baltimore at Harrisburg

Weatem ConMnce

Open: Jact&lt;5oovllle
Mondoy, - · I

................o

0
0

2

Detroit at Edmonton
Friday'• O.me

North111t Dlvltlon
Ottawa . .. ...... 6
Toronto ................. 6

OaQas at Philadefphla, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Ctnctnnati, 1 p.m.
Ptnsburgl'l at Tennessee, t p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
5an Franctsco at New Orteans, 1 p.m.
Washington at Arizona, .C:OS p.m.
Denver at N.Y. Jeta, 4:15p.m.
San Oitgo at ·Seattte, 4:1 5p.m.
Kansas City at Oakland. 4 :15p.m.
Carolina at St Louis, 8 :20 p.m.

E11twn

3
0
2

3 .ooo

Sunday'• Gam••

·-

E11tem Conference
Atlantic Olvltlon
W L TOLPto. Qf QA
New Jersey .. .. ... 6 2 2 0 14 45 28
P'lnsburgh ............. 5 4 1 0 11 31 33
5
6
3

1

Edinonton 16, Buffalo 8

Kansu City 24, Sea me 19
JacktOIWitle 23, oanas 17, OT

Philadelphia ......... 3
N.Y. Aangers ......... 4
N.Y. tslanders ........ 3

.333

'"''

t

N..lonal League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Named Bob
Brenly ms.nager.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Sent RHP Chad
Fox and RHP Rocky Coppinger outright to tndl·

FOOTBALL
National Football League

anapolis of the International League .
Announced Coppinger refused his outrigh1
assignment and ele~tecl to become a free
agent. Signed Coppinger lo a m1nor·league
contract. Signed INF Luis Lopez to a two-year
contract. Exercised the option on the contract
of RHP Curtis Leskark.

SAN FRANCISCO 49E.R S--Cialmed LB
Jason Kyle oH walv.,rs. Placed KR Travis Jervey on injured reserve.
HOCK~Y

National Hockey league

CAROLINA HURRICANES- Recalled G
Jean-Marc Pelletier from lhe Cincinna1i of the

· PITTSBURGH PIRATE5-Namod Bill Vir·
don bench coach.

IHL.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING- Recalled LW Nlls
Ekman from Deti'oit of the IHL.
TORONTO MAPlE LEAFS- Assigned C
Don McLean to St. John's o! the AHL.

ST. LOUI~ CARDINALS-Exercised lhe
2001 contract option ol C Mike Matheny.
Announced lhey have not exercised the con·
tract options on LHP Jesse Orosco, RHP Pat
Hentgen end LHP Scott Aadlnsky.

Ahh. This is the life.
•
,_;.:;.''

Going\fishing, just I he two of you , you and
the little' one who calls you grandpa · this "
just one of the many rewards you deserve for
a life of hard work.
Your retirement should be one of the most
enjoyable times in life. Yet, so many people
are financially unprepared when retirement
rolls around . Some don 't stan saving soon
enough and some are not aware or how much
they will need to maintain their lifestyle.
The good news is it doesn't have 10 be that
way. With the proper planning, you'll be able
to make the most of your retirement.
Please call today for a retirement managemen t plan designed to
help you enjoy this time in your life ... he'll be happy you did.

John C. Miller, CFP
Branch Manager

AngelaWa
C6tnt S.rvl&lt;t Ma''"~"

RAYMONDJAMFS
I.
,d

ENANCI,AL SEAV"?FS ~
... .., •• ,

~AIDIII'C

311 Fourth Street, Marietta, OH 45750

740-376-9186 ° 800-726-8412
John.Miller@RJFS.com
Cortuni tted to

~

Meics County's

Hometown

N~wspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 51 , Number 112

AWard@RjFS.com
financial futmt• .

~~~

~etea-

Pat

STORY
Proseeutor

Successful criminal and civil trial experience ... 6th
. in graduating class from Capital Law School... ·
BA and.Masters of Business Administration from
Ohio State University... 6th generation M.eigs
Countian... married; .. 2 children.
Paid For By The Candidate

50 Cents

·Levy passage

Democrats
enlist
•
un1on
support

will,aid Mll/DD
•
expans1on

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Placed F

oltroit 26. Wichita 19

National Hockey Lugu.

Tenoesaee 27, Washington 21
Sunday, Nov. 5

112
112
112

2

Milwaukee ....................... o
;·.

1 .500
1 .500

0 1.000

OEf\IVER ·NUGGETS-Wah1ed G Cory
Alexander and C Dan McCHntock. Placed C
Mamadou N 'dlaye, F Ryan Bowen and G.f
Calbert Cheaney on lfle Injured list .
•
DETROIT PISTONS- Pla ced G Dana bat·
ros. F Torraye Braggs. and F Brian Cardinal on
the injured list.

Chris Mullin and F. Bob Sura on. the _•njure&lt;111s).
INDIANA PACERS- Waived G J1mmy K1r.g
Placed f ·C Terry M111s. C Bruno Sundov and Fe Lari Ketner on the injured list
LOS ANGELE S CLIPPERS-Placed G Earl
Boykins and F Zendon Hamilton on the mjured
IISI.
.
MIAMI HEAT-Wa1ved F Dale Ellis. Placed
C Alonzo Mourmng, G R ICky Davis and F
Harold Jamison on the 1njured liS! .
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Placed G Jason
Hart and F Mar1&lt; Pope on the Injured list.
MINNESOTA TlMBERWOLVES- Wa1ved C
Sharone Wright Placed G·F Todd Day, F Tom
Hammond s and F Andrae Patterson on the
injured list.
NEW YORK KNICKS-Piaced C Luc longlay, C Jonathan Ke rner and•F Pete Mickeal on
the injured list.
NEW JERSEY NETS-Wa ived G ElliOt
Perry and F Kevin Freeman
PHILADELPHIA 76EA S-Waived G Jermatne Ja ckson.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS- Waived F
Rodrick Rhodes and F Nikita Morgunov. Placed
C Arvydas Sabonis and F Oetlef Schremp! on
the injured list.
TORONTO RAPTORS- Waived C Vladimir
Stepania . Pla ced c Garth Joseph, C Alek
Radojevic and C Michael Stewart on the injured
list.
SACRAMENTO KINGS- Wa1ved F Malik
Allen, F Antonio Lang and F Roy Rogers . Place
F Jaban Smith on 1n1ured ltsl.
UTAH JAZZ-Placed G John Crotty and F
Seen Padgeu on the 1njured list

2

1 .667

Kansas City ...................... 1

N.Y. Qlonts 24. Phiadelphia 7
Oakland 15, san Diego 13

QB

Cltveland ... , ...................... 0
2 .000
NatkM11I conrerenc•

PROIIikF'Y

Open: New England, Denver, Chicago
Mondlly'1 Glm•

•

1/2
Hllrtllburg ......................... 2 1 .667
1
North Carolina .................. 0 0 .000
Bul'l'alo .............................. 1 .2 .333 1 1f2

Minnesota al San Antonio, 8 p .m.
indiana at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Milwaukee at Houslon, 8:30p.m.
Golden State at Denver, 9 p.m
Ponland at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Vancouver at L.A.. Ciippern, 10:30 p.m.

Atllntl13 , Carolll"ll 12
Indianapolis 30, Detroit t8
Buffalo 23, N.Y. Jets 20
Miami 28, Green Bay 20
Pittaburgh 9, Baltimore 6
Tampa Bay 41, Minnesota 13
Cincinnati 12, etevetand 3
St. Loula 34, San Francisco 24
Naw Or1eans 21 , Arizona 10

Injured list.

.

a.ttimore .......................... 2

Thuraday's Gamet
Atlanta at New York , 7:30 p.m.

1 0 .222 238 292

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Placed F-C
Mar11: Bryant, G Brevin Knight and F-C J.a.
Rekf on the injurecl list Exercised their options
on F Man Harping and F·C Robert Tm~r.
DAlLAS MAVERICKS-Placed F Domill
Harvey. F Eta n Thomas and F Gary Trent on

Amerteaft conferenc•

WHMiday'1 Gam11

Green Bay ................... 3 5 o .375 168 167
Chlcago ..................... t 7 0 . 125110 202
W11t

W-doy'o Gomoo

Tampo Bay at N.Y. Ranger&lt;, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Montreal, 7!30 p.m.

Nltlon.l ProleMionel Soccer League

Toronto at Phlladelptlia. 7 p.m .
Detroit at Boston, 7 p.m.
Sacramento at Clevelancl, 7:30p .m.
washington at Chanone, 7·30 p.m.
Orlando at Miami. 8 p.m.
Denver at Seattle , 10 p .m.
Utah all. A. Lakers , 10:30 p.m.

Tampo Bay .... ., .............. .4 4 0 .500 205 138

St. Louie at NashviHe. 8 p.m.

injured llsl.
BOSTON CELTICS-Walvod f·C John
Williams. Placed G Greg Minot, G Chris Herren
aJ'Id F Walter McCarty on the Injured list.
CHAAlOITE HORNETS---Placed F lee
Nailon and F Terrance Roberson on the injured
list.
•
t;:HIC~GO
BULLS- Waived F Steve
Goodrich. Placed G Corey Berlamin, C Jake
Voskuhl and C DallbOr Bagar1c on the 1n1ured
list

Pnoem a1 Anaheim , 10:30 p .m.
Pittsburgtl at San Jose. 10:30 p.m.

L.A. Clippers at Utah, 9 p.m.
L.A. Lak8f5 at Portland. 10:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Golden Stati, 10:30 p.m.
Seattle at Vancouver, 10:30 p.m.

O.ltu ............................ 3 5 0 .375191 197

).

ATLANTA HAWKS-Placed C Dlkem!)e
Mutombo, F Cal Bowdlef, G Olon Glover on

.,..... Colu!OOus al DaHas. 8:30 p.m.
Calgary ot EdmOnton, 9 p.m.
·• Colorado at V.ncower, 10 p .m.

0 .000

Minnesota at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Indiana at San Antonto, 8:30p.m.
SacJamento at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

PhitodoipNII .. . .... . .... 5 4 0 .556 188 134

,.~

lot Angttes al eotumbus, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bly at'CaroHnl, 7 p.m .
Bolton 1r N.Y. latandars, 7:30 p .m.
Detroit at Waahlngloo. 8 p.m .

"'

N.Y. ts!andera at Florkia, 7:30 p .m.
Philadelphia 11 New Jersey. 8 p.m.

0 .000

1\leodoy'o-

N.Y. Glantl ................... 6 2 0 .750 144 112

the concluskln ol a game against Sacramento
on Oct. 27,

Toronto 11 Ottawo. 7 p.m.

j .

Washinglon at Orllndo. 7:30 p.m.
Char1otte at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Cleveland at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Detroit at Toronto, 8 p .m.
Philadelphia at New YoB;, 8 p.m..
Milwaukee at Dallas, 8 p.m.

WLTPctPFPA

3 0 .625152 127
5 o .375 156 129
6 0 .333 162 250

0 .000

Seante . . .........................0

219

Ntw011tans ................. 5
Carolina .........
.. 3
Atlanta ....
..... 3
San F!llncisco ............ .... 2

LA. Clippers ......................0
LA. lakars ........................0
Phooni• ..... ........................0

Sacromento ......................0

178
224

1 0 .875 330 252

-

ao- State ........... ...........o o .ooo

141
166

St.Louis ........................ 7

.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

Pooltlc Dlwtllon

Woot

-

0
0
0
0
0

November 1, 2000

BASKETBAU
Nallonal a..katball Auoclatlon
N8A-Aned Portland F Rasheed Wallace
$10,000 tor verbalty abusing a game oHicialat

. . . . . .,., _

'

'

Details, A3

SAN DIEGO PADREs-Declined to exBf·
dse 2001 contract oplion on 26 Stet Boone.

Chicago 3, 2
Anaheim B. C.igary 3
IIOhcll»'a GaiMe
Now Jorwy 8, Florldo 5, or
4, C04orodo 0
Edmonton 5, Anaheim 3

,

Uidawt Otvt.lan
Oalas ................................0 0 .000
O.nvtr ........................•..... 0 · 0 .000

0 .625 130 114
0 .556 140 98
0 .333185 207
0 .250 80 187
0 .222 98 209

OOidlnd ....................... 7 1 0.875207
Karwu City .................... 5 3 0.625 212
o.n- ························· • 4 0 .500 238
5Mftle ........................... 2 7 0 .222 140
SOn Diogo .......... . .... 0 8 0 .000 130
NFC

Waantnglon

0 .000
0 .000

W-COn-

IIC

PlnOburgfl ..•..................5
81111moto ........................ 5
................... 3
Ci1&lt;:mati •..................... 2
Clt-nd ......................2

Cievoland ........................0
Detroit ...............................0

Wednesday

Society news and notes, AS
.Eagles have come a long way, a1

ThUrsciiiJ
Hlp: 70s; Low: 40s

TODAY'S SGOREBOARD

NBA

8~ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tuesday, October 31, 2000 ,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BY TONY M.

COlUMBUS (AI') - The
busitu~ss:..lab o r clash over two
Ohio Supreme Court sea ts
intensitied Tue'\day wlth Teamsters union pn:.·sident James

Hoffa Jr. rallying to support
Democratic candidatL'S.

· HotTa urged the re-election
ofJustice Ali ce R obie R esmck
aqd the election of muninpal
couri judge Timothy Black as .
abo ut 300 Teamsters irl black
jackets and green ca ps waved
"Ohio Teamsters for Gore''
signs in downtown Columbus.
HotEl said Teamsters J.re

backing court candidates in
Mi chigan and Ohi o for the
same n:.1son: to fight a probu lii ne 'i'\ imbalan ce on the
court'\.
"The Supreme Court rKL'S
arc important hnc as they, are
in Mi chibr.ln - th crt' is a conCt'ftcd effint here to put n:'actionary jw.lg-l'li on the cnurt
ami get rid ofjudgeo., th ,l t &lt;;pc.Jk
uut ti.1r working peopl~ and
working Cnnilic.;;,'' H o tfa s~~1d.
Ub ck , running to umc;~t
in cumbent Ju o.,tict' D e b ora h
Cook of Akron , told th e crowd
at tlw noon rally th.tt the -.;t;Jke..,
in Tuesday\ election an; high .
" There is in fact evil afoot
the insurance companies
anJ their allks arrdoiiig \vhat
we :1ll know they're d o ing:
rht..·y're misrepresenting th e
re cord .1nd trying to dt stort rhc

Lori McGhee, mother of 2-week-old Layne Caldwell of Rutland, learns about
"safe steep" from Dortha Riffle, LPN. coordinator for the Meigs County Health Department's Women,
Infant and Children program . (Contnbuted photo)

LEARNING ABOUT SIDS -

Program combats SIDS occurrence
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY
p&lt;lfl'Jll'i

.1bnut

Educa ting

Sudden

lnf&lt;mt

I k .1th Svndrome (S f J)S) anJ how
to prL'Vt' llt it n:mams a ptmrity in
parenting programs ar th e Meihrs
County H l':tlrh I )epartm ent .
A "Safe Sleep" campa ign is
undL'.f\V~IY

at

the department,

where· p~trents, grandparl'nt'i ,md
c hild carL' providers can k·:tnl
abotlt Sl I lS ri,ks .ind how to

pt~ rn·ptiom of vOtL'r~.··· he sa id.

~nini111i zc rhc po11sibility.

Citizens for a Strong Ohio,
a ~roup backed hy the Ohio
Clumbcr of Co nuHcrcL', Jus
spt'llt at least $1.7 mill1on on a

According to Margi e Skidm ore, R.N .. JirL· cto r of nur'\ing.
Mei h" C:ouuty ha' lud fiw SlJ)S
dl';H]lo., o.,jlll L' ll)lJ ..j. .
. '
"On n· known ,\.\ 'crib Jc ;Jth,'
tlwse in f:un dL•arhs remain unexplained after all known causes had

television .tJ campa ign critir.1l

of Resni ck ..The U.S. Chamber
of Commerce h;1s spent more
than $1 million on its own ads
attacking Resnick and Black .
Business groups . niticiZL'

l'/rl'

import.uia

vr

/l('i/1,!!

.&lt;lilT lfrtll t/u• /J,J/1)' :~ /!t'ollf

rnrr.rirrs IIHmt'nTcl d11ri11.~
slap ll'oiS or/so sii'I'SSi'd.
been nded out through autopsy.
death seen~ investigation, and
medica l history." said the nurjc .'
SJi,· added . rhat SlDS aflccrs
f:tmi)i,·s of all t·aces and in co me
levels and strikes without warning; to app ,lrent healthy babies.
Skidmore o.;aid that Dr. Douglas

H umc•r, child and family health
serv ice·, child health clinic physiL'ian, recommends that babies
under 12 months b" plac ed on
thei r back on a firm. tight fitting
nl ;Jttres~ in a safi-ry-approved crih

comforters and she epskin s. be
removed from th e crib; and that a
sleeper b e considered as an alternative to a blanket.
The import:mce of being sure

that the baby's head. remaim
uncovered during sleep was also
stressed.
Additi.ona1 steps recom.mended
by the director of nursing for protection of a baby include not
allowing anyone to smoke around
an inf.1nt, t•ducatiug chi iJ cJrL'
providers and granJparc11ts about
S IIJ S ri.,ks and maximizing the

baby 's health through regular
medi cal checkups.
. SitlCe 1'192, when the American Aco~d c my nf Pedia trics ismcd

ur bas~inet ; rhat pi llows, quilts,

Please see SIDS. Page Al

POMEROY - When Mei!."
County voters go to the po}]o;;
Tuesday, they will decide a 1.6
mill continuing lc: vy fi&gt;r tht=
Meigs Board of M ental Retardation and Developmental Disabil ities to ex pand Sl~ r viccs and
upgrad,· facilities at the Carleton
School and Meib" lnditstries.
The proposed levy. if p;t\Scd.
will allow the MR./DD board to
e~-pand the current kvd of ser"
vices at the school, as wdl ao; to
help fund a capital constru ction
proj~ct that Exl'curiw Dirccror
Steve
Ueha
says is needed
!11 additio11
to serve the
~:nrullmcm

in

schobl age and

pro-

grams.
The

In .tddiriun to local tax doUars ,
the lil houl r"'ceived approximately $H211.1 1t l0 in state funds and.
S233,1HKI in federal monies for it1
pmvio.;ion nf &lt;;ervices.
Parker said the financial
imp .1ct of the levy upon property
o\vners. if pa";d, would require
individuals to P·'Y additional taxes
each yc-;tr. Those who have property .1ppraiseJ at $20.000 would
rL·ceivl· J tax incrl·ase of S1O.OH
per y.·ar: a $40,111lll appraisal
would garner a
$211.26
ta x

to /om/ tax
dollars, tire sc!Jool

in creased

adult

JllOilll'~ .

pro-

gram" ar the
f.1cility
now
lil' I'Vl'
more

tnc:n:ase;

a

$611.1Kl(l appr•isal

rcet'ir&gt;cd tiJ1proximately.

would garnl'r a

S311 24

$820,000 ;, state .fimds
111rd $233,0()0 itJ_fi•deral
mouics .f.'r its }JrOr&gt;isiotJ
of scrr&gt;ices.

tax

increase; and a

$HO.IIIIIJ appraisal
would garner a
. $4tl.32
t.tx
incrcasl'.

The

than ISO children ,md adults wi th
developmental di sabi li tis·s ami
their families throughout M eih"
Co unty.
This is the sixth time that a
request f(n addittona.l fundin g has
gone w voters. It was last defeated in the Nuvl'lllbtT 1999 ).!;l'ller'
al election .
If the kvy passes nn Tw·o.,d;Jy, it
will gt:nt:r;JtL' an addttimLJI
$3K4,5H9 a y&lt;··" i11 lool t.1.' dol1m for tlw M R I )))) p ro~rams,
according to fit,rtlrcs provided by
Nancy l'arker Campbell. Meif._'S

ctpital constnlt:tion projL·ct, to bl'
funded th m ugh the levy and by
'it~1 tc G!p it.tl improvement tltm.h
p1wiously approved. entaih rwo
ph.Jsl'\ of construction that \VOL1ld
hl" added o n to rhe l'xistin~ [tcil
lty.
Thl' tirst pluse woult~ octur
dt1rin g 2002 ;md ,2()()J and wo uld
.H.Id 4,200 "quare fl~ct tn the Adult
Service~ Prog ram tl1r v,niou-.;
luhilitalinn anivitieo., ,tnd th e rcn
ovation of pmductinn ~acilitics.
Phd&lt;;(' Two would be completed during 20114 and 21105 .md
would add .mother 4,21111 sq uare
fe,·r to the school for the addition

County auditor.

The progra1h now n:ceivt·s
from tounty tt.x revcnul's a totd
of more than S727,111JII annually.

Please see Levy, Page Al

Two Democratic members of school-funding panel quit

Resni ck for voting t&lt;) overturn
a o.;tatc Lnv limiting law suit
tLunagco., ;nJLl decbring Ohio's
srhonl - fundin g '\)'StL·m uncon-

COLUMBUS (A I') -Two lkmo crats
reo.,igncd TuL·~d.ty fmm J kgisbtive committel' work ing to revamp C)hio's school fund lllg o;y.;; tl' 111 h~ctusc they o;;;:ty it wam't getti.ng
:lllytl tlll!; done.
St.lt l' Scm . Michdl'l Sh ucnw ker, of

'ltittttiontll.

Re"'nick , running .1gain"'t
Ckvd.md .lppe.th. court juLlgc
Tt'rrenc c O'Donnell. dd~'n dcd
th u-.e rulingo.; Tuco.;day. thl'll
raio.;L·d Ho tr1\ lund in ;~ victory gl''\ture.
"We .nt.· ~ni ng to show tl nd
prove th at rhc ppwer of rhL·
peopl e will overcnme thl'
powe r of th e pur~e." Rt.·sn ick
said.
RH'k Mayvald, a Tcanl'itcr
from
C lc vd;~nd, said
thl'
Resnick and Blac k races .trt~
more tmponant dun the p residemial race for worki ng pco-

Please see Union, Page Al

Parker said. Passage of the levy on
Tuesday will bring that amount
to about S1,1 11 ,ll(M I in local tax

lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Bournevilll' , ,tnd lto.bert 1-htgan, nf
Yount-.rsrown, s,t id they might f()rrll th l'ir
own {'() llllllHCt.:e.
They -.;,J id they resigned because the 10

'

1-t..~.:p uh l i r.t n" on rhc 16-membcr co m111i ttn: won't move t0n-v3rd 111 devdoping a
pl .m to fix Ohio\ school&lt;.
"TlH.:ir tadic i'i kt's -.;t,tll until after th e
df.:.'Ction," Jnd in the meantime. att~H.'k Ohio
Supreme Court J ustice Alice Rob1e
R esnick in h L~r re-e lnrion biJ. Shocmakcl'
said.
"Thor's ,,b,olutely f:tlse," saiJ R ,·p. Ra11-

Tire)' sai(lrlrq /ik£'1)' u·illjorm tlt&lt;'ir ,,,., rotllmitte&lt;' u•lwse lllt'llrl~t•rs
tl'ill .~ll olll.&lt;idt• ·~f Colrwrlms ,,, solior ,,,,;,;""-'from tcadrcr.&gt;, s_t,.f,·rrr.&lt;
a11d part'lll.'. Tholl •IJIJ'I'O•II/r, 1/rq· s,rid, is lrctrrr th,m tlrat ·~ft/r ,
(fii'YCII(

((lJIJtllillt'&lt;, 'tl'/ric/r /i$11'JIS clllf}' Ill COI'JWI'oi(C iiiii'I'C.'IS

ill the

Stollt'IIIIIISI'.

ing turno., ;!tt.Jr lin g R l·o.,ni l· ~. v.:ilill' ignori ng
real n lu cation i 'l, u t.:~.

Tlwy ,.tid th c·y ilkc·l y will t\mn their
mvn colll tl lii(L'L' \\.'hose llll'mh ero., will go
m1tside l&gt;f Col u1nbus to ~olic it opi nion ~
from tc.lrhl'ro.,, 'o tudent., ~md p.1rcnto.,. That

Nov. 7 election has nu bt~~lring whatsoever
on thl' sc hL·duk or work of the joint &lt;.:o m.
,.
mtttce .
Rt·'inick, a Democr.lt, cast a key vote JnJ
wrote the c'ourt'.; majori ty opinion in May
tb.tt said the ~t&lt;ttt'\ ~;c huol fundin g: system
remained unco nstitu tio nal because it relied

helicvt' the mandate t(l cr;Jft a new ~c h.nul
funding fi1rnu1la wil l disappear, Sh&lt;ll'lll.lkcr
I
sat.d.
Shoemaker and Hagan also acc.: uo.;cd
R e publi can s on the co mmittee of ho lding
Sl'c rct meetings without Dem ocra t"..1
charge Gardner dL'nicd.
The two se nato r~ rai led thL· tOur-hourlo ng meetings o f the Joint Committct' on

appro:Kh. tlw) ~.11d. is bem..·r tlun that ofrhc
curretll LOllllllittl'L'. wh1ch li~t~,.·ns only to
corpor:HL' imcrests in the St.1tehumL'.
(;,lfdllLT O.,,ltd JJL'\ l'lll'Ot\r.lgL'd C011111littL'(,'
Jlll'llllll'r., I ll ulk tn l'ducltor., th ro u ~hout
till' ~t.1tl' .llld J"l'Oph: tilHll lll.lllY ditli.'rL'IH
grou p ~ h,l\'l' 'PLlkrn .1t ll)l} llll ittcr llll'L'tingo.,.

too much on property taxes and widened
dispa ritie s between ri ch and poor districts.
If she is not re-elected, R epublicans

School Fundin g and Ac countability
''unproducrivt•" and a ''charade'' in which
Republican members "play politics" by tak-

tht' yt&gt;.lr."
OthL'r I kmocr:lts will be .1ppoimcd to

Jail Gardner, a l.lowlm~; Green R epublican
who is the commttte~'s co-chairman. "The

{)hH).lll\,

llle.tJI -

~

fill the

cn mmi tt~l' 's

\'3Gl.llcics.

Today"s

Sentinel
Sections -

Law firms, realty

offices 1J1d courthouse offices are usually
pretty conservative ploces, but ohce a
)e&lt;;lr. on Halloween, staff members put
aside their usual v-.&lt;l!1&lt; attire ard slip into
somethif~S a b~ more 'glloulish. In the
Meigs Counly Recorder's office. Jo Hill
and Sheni Hart, who represented the Cfe.
land Realty firm. m8(le for an impressMJ
sight in their exotic costumes, and
Recorder Judy King and her deputy, Wanda
Shank, are pictured in their Indian maiden
costumes. made by OO'MXker Kay Hill. ·
DoY.fl the street. at the la.v firm of UttJe.
st-eets &amp; warner, Diane LeV!is, Ann
Ryther. Mary Shuler, Diana Windon,
Stephannie King ard J&lt;i1ire Reuter represented creatures from all dimensions,
rarging from Dorothy Gaie of Wizard of Oz
fame. to a -.ery I!Diuptuous alien and a
spoooooky ghost. They 'hill resume a more
traditional appearance on Wednesday.
(Brian J. Reed photos)

~.llll. c.u 1 L':\}Wl'l ",1

lll•Tful
changL'
in fundlntT l.1w by. tlk' L'lld of
b
•

Halloween customes
'PRETIY' SCARY -

he

12 Pages

2

Calendar
Classifieds
Co1nics
Editorials
·.Obituaries
Sports

AS

B2-4
BS

M
A3
B1,6
AJ

w~~~h~r

Lotteries

•

OHIO
Pick 3: 7- 7--H; Pick 4: I

&lt;•-&lt;•·2

DuckP)'l' 5: 7-K-II-IX-2o

.

W.VA.
Daily 3: 1-S-h DRily 4: .\ 4-11 "
~111"1

( ) hlo'\

ttl.'\

['uhh,\nnl.( t ''

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