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Page B~

The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS: Vikings react to Stringer's death, 81

VWednesday,Au&amp;Qstt,lOOI

Phillies 'pen suffers
another meltdown

AROUND THE DIAMOND
Attanta

Nlltlon.l League
&amp;siDlvl.,on
w L

Pel GB

80

46

.566

Phitadelpttla

57

49

Florida

53

52

3
.538
.S05 6~
,458 11 '\r
.421 15~

N.Y. ~IS (Chen 4·5) at Houston (Red·
ding 3-1 ), 8;05 p.m.
Florida (Clement &amp;-1) at Milwaukee
(Haynes 7·13), 8:05p.m.
Phlla&lt;lelphla (Wol! 5·10) at Colorado
(Neagle 6·5). 9:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Tapanl 8·8) at san
o;ogo (Jones 6·13), 10:05 p.m.
Montreal (Thwman 5·7) at Arizona
(B.Andorson 3-7). 10:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Davis 4·1) at Los Angeles
(Adams 7-3), 10:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Beimel 5·6) at Ban Francisco (Schmidt6-6), 10:15 p.m.
Thursday's G1mes
Florida (Knotts 0·0) at Milwaukee
(Levrault 4..S), 2:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Coggin 1·1) at Colorado'
(Thomson 0·3), 3:05 p.m.
,
Pittsburgh (McKnight1.0) at San Fran·
cisco (Rueter 1o-r, 3:35p.m.

8). 7:05p.m.

Amtrlclln Looguo
East Division

New Vorl&lt; •
Boston
TOf'ontO
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

w

L
42
45
58

64
60
49
44 83
35 71
Central Dlvtaton
w L
Cleveland
60 45
Minnesota
60 46
51 53
ChK:ago
46 58
Detroit
42 64
Kansas City
West Division
L
76 30
Seattle
Qakland
57 49
54 52
Anaheim
46 58
Texas

Pel GB
.804 .
.571 3~
.458 15',t,
.411 20',t,
.330 29

New York
49 58
ston to score standing up. No
Montreal
45 62
The Philadelphia Phillies are error was charged.
Central Division
Pel GB
w L Pet GB
probably already so rry they
.571
Chicago
62 43 .590
';
.566
traded Wayne Gomes .
Houston
58 46 .547 4),
.490 8';
St.
Louis
.510
51
8~
53
While Gomes was winning
.442 13h
Milwaukee
45 59 .433 t6b
.396 18~
his debut with th e San FranCincinnati
42 63 .400 20
PittSburgh
.391
21
41
64
cisco Giants, the Phillies
Pet GB
w
West Division
.717
bullpen had another meltCraig Biggio's 1Oth-inning
w L Pet GB
.538 19
Los Angeles
61 46 .570
down - losing for the thi rd homer otTJerrod Riggan (0- 1)
),
.509 22
Arizona
60 46 .566
.453 28
straight time on gave Houston the win and left
San Francisco
3
58 49 .542
san o;ogo
MOntreal {Vazquez 9-1 0) at Arizona
51 55 .481 9~
a game-endmg visiting N ~ w York on the
Monday'• Oame
Cotorado
. 45 61 . ~24 15'tr (Lopez 0·1), 4:35p.m.
Texas 6, Baltimore 4, 11 innings
Chicago Cubs (Bere 7·51 at san Diego
homer.
wrong side of a game-winning
(Williams 7..S), 5:05p.m.
Monday's Gamel
Todd
H el- homer.
Tu.tldly'a Games
N.Y. Mots (Trachsol5·10) at.Houston
No games scheduled
Anaheim 4, Boston 3
(Astac:lo 6·13), 8:05p.m.
Tuesday'a Oemea
ton's
second
The Mets won their previToronto 3,, Minnesota 1
Allanta (Gia\line 10.5) at St. Louis
Houston 3, N.Y. Mets 2, 10 Innings
solo homer of the game, a ous two
games
against
(Kilo 1().7), 8:10p.m.
Datrt&gt; t 4, SeaMio 2
Florida S, Milwaukee 1
Texas 6, N.Y. Yankees 2
Cincinnati (Dessens 6-8) at Los Ange·
St. Louis 6, Atlanta 2
one-out shot in th e ninth Philadelphia on homers in the
Qa~and 11 , Cleveland 2
los (Prokopec 6·5) , 10:10 p.m.
Colorado 7, Philadelphia 6
inning, gave Colorado a 7-6 bottom of the ninth inning.
Tampa Bay 5, Baltimore 4
Arizona 3, Montreal 1
Kansas City 2, Chicago White Sox 1,
Chicago Cubs 7, San Diego 3
victory over the Phillies on
Nelson C ruz (2-1) pitched
10 Innings
Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles t , 11 Innings
Tuesday night .
the 1Oth to get the win.
San Francisco 8, Plnsburgh 7, 11
wedneldly'a Gemea
Innings
"We've got veteran pitchers
Anaheim (Schoerieweis 7-8) at Boston
Today'a Gamea
down there who are not get(Nomo 11-4), 7:05p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 14· 51 at St. Louis
Seanto (AbboH 10·2) at Detroit (Hott7·
(Smi1h 3·0), 7:05p.m.
ting it done," Phillies manager
Larry Bowa said. " This is not a
2
one-time .happen ing."
Newly acquired Turk Wendell gave up three runs without retiring a batter in the
eighth to help Colorado rally allowed no earned runs in
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
from four runs down to tie it. seven innings as St. Louis beat
in th e second on a double by hom ered to lead otT the fifth .
Rhea! Cormier (5-5) lost it visiting Atlanta.
Troy
G lau s'
two-run Scott Spiezio, a walk to Tin:'
New York scored first, getagam.
J.D. Drew, activated from the hom er tn the eighth and Salmon and run -scoring si n - ting an unearn ed run in ·the
The Mets' Robin Ventura disabled list after missing 35 Ramon Ortiz's kna c k for gles by Bengie M olin a and fourth on Shane Spencer's
homered otT Wendell on Sat- games w ith a broke n right shuttin g dqwn the Boston Adam Kennedy.
singl e.
urday, and· Mike Piazza con- h and, hit a two-run triple in a Red Sox gave the Anaheim
nected against · Cormier on four- run seventh inning.
Angels a 4-3
Sunday. Cormier has lost hi s
win Tuesday
McGwire, whose last eight
last four outings - three on hits have been homers, is one .
m ght .
2
game-ending homers .
home run behind Harmon
Boston tied
''I'll be happy to turn the Kill ebrew for fifth place on ·
th e game at 2
Alex Rodriguez, Rafael
Brian Buchanan, playing
page on this month ," C~rmier the ·career list.
tn the seve nth on Doug Palm ei ro
and
[van in · place of M att Lawton,
said.
Mirabelli's third hom er of Rodriguez homered as the dropped a fly ball that se nt
Meanwhile, Gomes (5-3) the season.
Texas Ran gers ended the Toronto over Minnesota at
traded to San Francisco on
Anaheim got one hit from N ew York Yankees ' eight- SkyDome.
Friday when the Phillies
the third through the sev- game winning streak.
Buchanan·~ first error in
acquired Wendell and Dennis
enth' against Rolando Arro.Alex Rodriguez hit · hi s 44 career games ·led to the
Curt Schilling pitched an jo. But R ic h Garces (3-1) 29th home run of the season Twins' fourth straight loss.
Cook from th e Mets pitched two scoreless innings eight-hitter for his NL-leading came in to pitch to start the to lead otT the se venth and H e was in right field a day
as the Giants beat Pittsburgh 15th victory, and Steve Finely e ighth and walked Darrin tie it at 2 .
after Minnesota traded Law8-7 in 11 innings.
'
hit his eighth homer as host Erstad with. one out. Glaus
One
out
late r,
Ivan ton to the New York Mets.
"I said I hoped this "would Arizona snapped a four-game homered on the next pitch.
Rodrigu ez hit his 21st
Brad Fullmer's shallow fl y
be a fresh start for the season, losing streak.
Ortiz (9-7) all owe d five home r to chase Ted Lilly (3 - glanced otT Buchanan's glove
Schilling (15-5) struck out hits, struck out five an d
and that's what I got," Gomes
4) .
in the seventh inning.
said.
·
eight and walked two to tie walked one in eight innings.
Darren
Oliver
(9-6)
First
basema n
Doug
Helton's homer gave a boost Roger Clemens for the major
H e h e ld Boston hitless the pitched seven ·innings and Mienkiewicz retrieved the
to the Rockies after they trad- league lead in wins.
first time around the order improve d to 4-1 lifetime ball but threw it wildly to
ed right-hander Pedro Astacio
before Jose Offerman's two- aga inst th e Yanke es. Jeff second, and Fullmer circled
to Houston earlier in the day.
out double in the second.
Zimmerman got th e save. • · the bases for the go -ahead
11
[t was a good win 1 a co meTroy Percival got the save.
Lilly did not allow a run as the Blue Jays stopped
bac k win here, something we
The Angels took a 2- 0 lea d baserunner until Palmeiro a four-gam e skid .__ ~
haven't done in a while," Hel---'-----.
ton said. - - = - -MIChael · Tucker hit a, .-- - - - - The Rockies' last victory at tiebreaking solo homer in the .
home on a ninth-inning sixth
otT rookie
Brian
homer came June 2 when Lawrence (2- 1) as Chicago
Larry Walker hit a two- run won at San Diego. .
shot to beat San Francisco.
Jon Lieber (14-5) pitched
Giants 8, Pirates 7
seven strong innings to win for
Armando Rios mishandled the e ighth time in nine starts.
Pedro Feliz's single to right,
allowing his former teammates
to score the winning run iti
the 11th inning at San Francisco..
Ryan Dempster (12- 9)
Shawon Dunston led otT the
pitched
a three-hitter for his
11th with a single against
Marc Wilkins (0-1) , After two fourth career complete game
outs, Feliz drove · a pitch to as l'l orida snapped a fourgame losing streak by winning
shallow right.
at
Milwaukee.
Rios, who played right field
Brewers starter Ben Sheets
for San Francisco before a
trade sent him to Pittsburgh (1 0-8), winless in five starts
on Monday, stopped the ball, since June 29, gave up five
but didn't come up cleanly to runs and eight hits in 6 1- 3
make a throw, allowing Dun- mnmgs.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Astros 3,
Mets2

NL

l.otlnnesota (l:.ohse 3-3) at Toronto (Hal·
laday o-t ), 7:05 p.m.
•
TeiC8S (Bell 4·0) at N.Y. Yank¥S
(HitCflOOCk 0·0). 7:05 p.m.
•
Oakland (Hiljus 1·0) at Cleveland
(Nagy 4-4), 7:05p.m.
Tampa Bay (Aupe .C·9) at Bahimore
(Johnson 9-6), 7:05p.m.
Ka""'o City (George 0·1) at Chicago
WMo So• (Wnght 0.0). 8:05p.m.
Thursday's Games
Minnesota (Reed 0.0) at Toronto {car·
pontor 7-8), 12:35 p.m.
Texas (Myette 0.1) at N.Y. Yankee!
(Mussina 11-8). 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Sturtz;e 5-9) at Baltimore
(Roberto 7·8), 3:05p.m.
Anaheim (Ropp 3·9) at Boston (SOber·
hagen 1.0), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Pineiro 1-o) at Detroit (Pet·
!)'john ().3), 7:05 p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 12-6) at Cleveland
(5aba1hla 10·3), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City (.Suppan 4-9) at Chicago
WMe So• (K.Wells 6·6), 8:05p.m.

Meigs County's
~o cent~· Augu~t 2. 2001 • Vol. Sl, No. 241

BY MICHELE CAimR

AL

Blue Jays 3,
Twins 1.

Missy Scarberry, regional retail manager, said
there are 58 employees in the Ohio Valley
POINT PLEASANT,WVa. - ln an 'effort to
Region, including 24 in Point Pleasant, 13
streamline operations, reduce costs and sharpen
between Mason and New Hav~n . 18 in Ripley
its focus on the West Vitginia market, City
and three in Pomeroy.
Holding Co. announced it will eliminate up to
"We have to make sure there is adequate SL1tf
275jobs.
to take care of the custon1el"l;• Scarberry said.
City H olding is the parent company of C ity
uWe're here to serve the customers;' Lieving
National Bank, which employs 1,100 in 57
said. 'That's our job."
branches in West Virginia and bordering states. office.~·
Lieving said ·that due to consolidation
The Ohio Valley R egion includes City
How will this effect Mason County and the
throughout
City National B~nk, a lot of services
surrounding areas which make up the Ohio Val- National Bank of Point Pleasant, Mason, New
Haven, Ripley and Pomeroy, Ohio.
ley R egion?
Please see Cuts, AJ

'I
I

I

Cal . Rip ken
got
his
3,143rd hit and moved past
Robin Yount into 15th place
on th e career list in Baltimore's loss at Camden Yards.
Ben Grieve had two hits
and drove in two runs for
Tampa Bay.

Brent Mayne singled h ome
the go -ah ead run with two
outs 111 the 1Oth to lift
Kansas C ity at Comiskey
Park .
'
Ch.icago put a runner on ·
third base with one out in
the bottom of the 10th, but
Rob erto Hernandez retired
Herbert Perry on a grounder
and struck out M ark John~

son .

Marlins 5,
Brewers 1

'•

. MLB Leaders
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING- RAiornar, Cleveland , .358;
BATIING-Atou, Hlouston, .382; Baril· JGonzatez, Cleveland, .344; Suzuki, Seat·
man, Houston, .352; LGonzalez, Arizona, tie, .330; Mientkiewicz, Minnesota, .327;
.347; Floyd, Florida, .344; Vidro, Montreat, BBoono, SoaHia, .327; JaGiombi, Qakland •
.343; Aurilia, San Francisco, .340; Pierre, .326; ARodriguez, Texas, .3?1 .
C&lt;;orado, .33Q.
RUNS-Suzuki, SeatUe, 88; AAo·
RUNs-Helton, Colorado, 91 ; Floyd, driguez, Texas, 87; MJSweeney, Kansas
Florida, 90; LGonzalez, Anzona. 89; Bar!&lt;· City, 78; AA!omar, Cleveland, 78; BBoono.
man, Houston, 83; SSosa. Chicago, 83; Seattle, 76; Jeter, New York, 73;
Bagwell, Hlouaton. 82; Biggio, Houston, 82. MRamirez. Boston, 73; JGonzalez, CleveABI-.-l.Gonzalez, Arizona, 102; SSosa, land, 73.
ABI-BBoone, Seanle, 99; MAamirez.
Chicago, 99; Helton. Colorado, 98; Bar!&lt;·
man, Houston, 92; Bagwell, Houston, 90; Boston, 96; JGonzalez, Cleveland, 95;
Nevin, San Diogo. 68; Floyd, Florida, 68; AAodriguez, Texas, 88; ThOme, Cleveland,
88: TMartinez, New York, 81 ; JaGiambl,
LWalker, Colorado. 68.
HIT$-AuriUa , San Francisco. 142; Oakl!nd, 76; APalmelro, Texas, 76.
HITS-Suzuki, Seattle, ~54 ; AAiomar,
LGonzaJez, Arizona, 140; Berkman, Houston, 138; Pierre, Colorado, 131; VGuerrero, Cle11eiand, 137; Stewart, Toronto, 136;
Montreal, 131; BGiies, Pittsburgh, 128; BBoone, Seanle, 136; AAodr1guaz. Texas,
132; Jeter, New York, 129; MJSweeney,
Floyd, Ftonda. 128; Alou. Houston, 128.
OOUSLE8-Be.rkman, Houston, 34; KansaS City, 127.
DOUBLE$-MJSwoonoy, Kansas C;ty,
Helton, Colorado, 34; VGuerrero, Montreal,
32; Abreu, Philadelphia, 31; BGiles, Pitts~ 37; Stewart, Toronto, 31 ; JaGiambi. Oak·
burgh , 30; Flo)/d, Florida, 29; Kent, san land, 30; EChavez. Qakland, 29; O'Neill,
New York, 29; Mlentklewlcz, Minnesota,
Franciaco, 29.
28; Long , Oa~and,27 ; K~e, Ntinneso~ .
TRIPLE5-Rolilns. Philadelphia, 9; 27; Durham, Chicago, 27; EMartinez, Seat•
"NPerez, Colorado, 8; Vlna, St. Louis, 8; tie, 27.
.
.
P"'""· Colorado, 6; LCastillo, Florida, 6;
TAIPLE5-CGuz:man, M lnneaot~ • .13;
LGonzaiez, Anzona, 6; QCabrera, Monlre·
Cedeno, Detroit, 9; Suzuki, Seattle, 8;
al. S:.Ochoa, Colorado, 5; Kent. San Fran- AAiomar, ·cleveland. 8; JEncarnacion,
cisco, 5; Goodwin, Los Angeles, 5.
Detroit, 7; Easley, Detroit, 7; Stewart,
HCME RUN5-Bonds, San Fraocioco, Toronto, 6.
45; LGonzaioz,Anzona, 41 ; Ssosa, Chlea·
HOME RUN5-Thomo. Cleveland, 33;
go. 35; Helton, Colorado, 33; SGreen, Los MRamirez. Boston, 32: ARodriguez, Texas,
Angeles, 30; CJones, Atlanta, 30; Nevin, 29: CDelgaelo, Toronto, 28; APalrTMHro.
san o;ogo. 29.
•
Texas, 28; Glaus, Anaheim, 27; JGonzalez.
STOLEN BASES-Rollins, Philadelphia, Cleveland, 27.
34; LCaslillo, Florida, 30; Pierre, Colorado,
STOLEN BASES-Codono. De1rolt, 39;
26; Abreu, Philadelphia, 27; Furcal, Atlanta, Suzuki, Seanla, 36; Knoblauch, New York,
22; EYoung, ChK:ago. 22; Reese, Cincln· 31 : Soriano, New York, 28; Mclemore,
natl, 20; Womack, Arizona , 20.
Seattle, .27; Hairston, Baltimore, 22;
PITCHING (12
Ooclslons)- Oaal, JOCruz, Toronto. 22; Cameron, Seattle, 22:
Philadelphia, 1().3• .769, 4.52; Schilling, Jeter, New York, 22.
Allzona. 15-5, .750, 3.09; Ueber, Chicago,
PITCHING (12 Dac:isions)--Ciemens,
14·5, .737, 3.46: Maddux, Atlanta, 14--5, New Yorl&lt;. 15-1• .937. 3.58; PAbbott, Seal·
.737, 2.49; ADJohnson, Arizona, 13-5, tie, 10·2 •. 833, 4.18; FGarcla, Seattle, l2·3,
.722, 2.56; WMiller. Houston, 12-6. .667, .800, 3.31 ; Sole, Saanto, 12 · ~ .. 800, 3.41 ;
3.99; RuOiflz, San Francisco, 12-6, .667, Sabathia, Cleveland, 1().3• .769. 4.18;
3.42; G~vlna, AMnia, 10·5, .667, 4.04; Nomo, Boston, 11-4, .733, 3.86; Washburn ,
KBrown, los Angeles, 8·4, .667, 2.95.
Anaheim, 9·4, .692, 3.42; Milton, Minnesota. 9·4, .692. 4.34.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

(

i

Top of tbe Trai/...3 days. 2 nights,

Summer Special.·. .3 consecutive
days unlimited greens fees ... $99

Hampton Cove, Silver Lakes, O xmoor
Valley ...
starting at $178 per person.

per person• Hotels not included .
Available May 15-Septemberl5
/JorJ not im:ludr Capitol Hill, O.,·uwor

Capitol Hill, Grand National. Cambrian
Ridge ... starting at $172 per person

So11tbern Swing ... 3 days ,
two nights, Highla nd Oaks.
Magnolia Grove .. .starting
a t $171 per person

Bay anD BeyoniJ... 3 days, 2
nights, Stay ~t historic Grand
Hotel. play Magnolia Grove,
and Lakewood .... starting at
$213 per person

Please see MR/DD, AJ

Celebration ·
reinforces value
of breastfeeding
BY CHARLENE HO£FUCH
HARLEY ENTHUSIAST·- Steve Call of Middleport takes advantage of Wednesday's good weather to
clean the chrome on his Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Harley-David sons similar to Call's, along with Goldwings and other motorcycles, can be seen during Taz's Marathon and the Goldwing Road Riders Association Chapter E·3's fifth annual Car and Bike Show Aug. 12 at Five Points . (Tony M. Leach photo)

Locals hold
fondraiser to help
less fortunate
BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL

NEWS STAFF

FIVE POINTS - Helping feed
Meigs County's less fortunate is
the
purpose
behind Taz's
Marathon and the Goldwing
Road Riders Association Chapter
E-3's fifth annual Car and Bike

Hlp: IDs

Sentinel

Details, A2

16 P....

AS

Low:IDI

Lotteries
OHIO

84-6 Pick 3: 2-8-9; Pick 4: 1-7·2·9

87

SUp.- J.ollo: 1·12·31-37-4049
A4 Kidler: 2·3-5-5-3-9

A3 W.VA.

8!-3.5 O.ily 3: 7-&lt;Hl O.lly 4: 8 4 68
A2 C 2001 Ohio Va11ey Publishing Co•.

Show, set for Aug. 12.
The event will be along Ohio 7
in the parking lot of Taz's
Marathon ifl Five Points and will
feature many of the area's top
motorcycles and automobiles on
display for the public to view.
An entry fee of$10 is required
and sign-in is scheduled from 11
a.m. until 2 p.m. Judging will
begin at 2 p.m. and trophies for
best of show, stock car, street rod,
muscle car, Goldwing, Harl eyDavidson, open-class motorcycle,

and truck-class will be awarded at
3 p.m. Dash plaques will be given
to the first 25 entries signed-up for
the show.
Live mu sical entertainment will
be provided by Tom Payne. However, the artist's performance has
yet to be slated, said Allen Graham,
member of the Goldwing association.
A large assortment of food,
including hamburgers, hot dogs,
smoked sausage, variou s salads, and

Please see Charity, AJ

Please su FMcllng. AJ

Habitat for Humanity, Navy SEALS new at fair
COLUMBUS (AP) - The O hio State
Fair has long provided a temporary home
. for hundreds of animals and exhibitors.
This year, it .will provit:\e a permanen t
home for o ne Columbus family.
The house will be built by Habitat for
Humanity over the course of the fair, with
50 to 100 volunteers working each day.
Construction on the 1,250-square-foot
home will continue regardless of weather ..
"As many of our volunteers know, you

build in th e rain," said Sara Miesse, director of marketing for the Greater Columbus Habitat for Humanity. " N othin g will
be stopped and we hop e to have the house
don e by the 15th or the 16th."
After the house is complete, it will be
opened for public tours at the 148th O hio
State Fair, which runs Friday through Aug.
19.
Afterward, tbe home w ill be moved by
trailer on Interstate 71 to a lot about orie

m ile from the fairgrounds.
A single-mother of three who is buying
the $64,000 home interest fi·ee has. written
a letter thanking the volunteers, which
will be posted on the fairgrounds.
" Having our own home means the
world to me, because my family and [ now
have a place we can call our own, something that can be passed down through the
generations," wrote the woman, who
wants to be identified only as Sallie

Gallia County Fair Time!

Summ!l" Spedi! doe5 rtot iocWde 00tel5.
P1k e5 a n~ pe1 per~on . based on dollJ(.; (l(cupl!l(y
and pre·$t!lected hotel~. Summ er Special inc lude ~
uollmited rep l a~ at same lite. Cart fee c h~rged fu.all round5. Subject to availability. Some re~trktlon~
m~y apply. (artl aod ta • are not induded in prkv.
1
Valid Ma)' 1S-September lS, 1001..

FOR RESERVATIONS &amp; TfE TIMES

1-800-257.-3465
www. rtjgolfcom

'

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Mobile dnit
';dunnQ the Fair, July 30 - August 4. Free screenings
and health information will be provided.
Schedules will be posted daily.

•

'·

E·mail: reservations@rtjgolf.com
For a c:omplete state vacation guide c.I/1.800.ALAIAMA or visit www.touralabama.org

''

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information, call

(740) 446·5679
,,

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - "T he best gift you can give your
baby" was how Lee Newberry described breastfeeding
at Wednesday's celebration of Breastfeeding Awareness
Week at the M eigs County Library.
Mothers gathered to celebrnte their choice to breastfeed their infant&lt;, to share their experiences, and learn
more about nature's way of feeding babies.
They enj oyed a luncheon , were given packages of
information and thing; for their babies, and received
door prizes donated by local merchants.
Newberry, brcastfeeding councilor for Meig; County H ealth Deparm1 ent's Women, Infants and Children
(WIC) progrnm, said that while the day was a social
event, it also offered an opportunity. for her to reinforce
the values ofbreastfeeding. Currencly, she said, 30 percent of infants enrolled in WIC here are breastfed.
"We enco urage moms to breastfeed for at least six
months because of d1e advantages it gives babies and
we reward them for doing so by providing extra fuod
packages;· said Newberry.
She also noted that because many moms work, breast
pumps are provided for then1.

FEEDING THE NEEDY

Toclay's

Section• -

·Commissioners approve
1. 6-mill issue for November
POMEROY - Meigs Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities will make a seventh attempt to pass a taX levy in November.
During th eir regt.dar meeting on Wednesday, county
commissioners authorized cl1e MR / DD boan:l to place
a 1.6-mill continuing levy on the November ballot.
MR/ DD Director Steve Beha, Carleton School's
Kay Davis, and MR/ DD board member Sally Donaldson met with the board to discuss the levy proposal.
"The futt is that mental retardation and developmental disabilities fornmately does not affect all of the
families in M eigs County, but our services are appreciated and needed by those who use them ;' Beha said.
Beha said that a continuing levy, although rejected by
voters at least five times in the past, "best meets our
needs at this time."
The levy was last rejected in November 2000.
If passed this time, the levy would generate approximately $380,000 for MR/ DD services and fOr a capital improvement project at the board's Syracuse facility.
The two- phase project would involve construction
.of additional space for adult habilitation activities and

market
at work

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Vallf,VtW La/...·eu•or,J. GmuiJ Natitmaluot
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2

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BY 8RtAN J. REED

•

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SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

COLUMBUS (AP) Natural-gas
custome rs
who sw itch ed suppliers
after last winter's highcost h ea tin g will see lower
bills in th e coming winter,
but cu stomers who stayed
with their original utilities
could save eve n more, regulatory and industry officials said Wednesday. .
The price swings show
th e new gas marketplace
at work, th ey said.
Mo re abundant natural
gas supplies and new
drilling for gas, spurred by
last winter's prices, have
-combined to - ma-ke-ch·e
ou tlo o k good for customers
this
winter,
Columbia Gas of Ohio
spokesman Steve Jablonski
said.
Columbia on Wednesday dropped the price of
the gas it delivers to
home s and busin esses
from 87 cents per hundred cubic fe et to 60
cents. T h e pri ce will be in
effect until November,
when Ohio regulations
permit
Columbia
to
adjust the price again .
That cost makes up about
two-thirds of customers'
gas bills.
• Last winter's high pri ces
were
fueled by th e
demand from industrial
c ustom e rs and supplies
reserved for electricitygenerating power plants,
Jablonski said. The high
prices, in turn, led to n ew
drillin g for natural gas, h e
said.

Royals 2,
White Sox 1

Expos 1

Cubs 7.
Padres 3

Price

Devil Rays 5,
Orioles 4

Diamondbacks 3,

www m~d.Jtly"· nltn.-1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

. Mike Lieving, president of the Ohio Valley
Region, said evaluations are under way to ·
ensure the branch staffi can meet the n~ cds of
the customers.
"All ~f th e transactions at the five branches in'
the Ohio Valley R egion are being evaluated;'
ueving said."The staff of each office is based on
the number of transactions and business at the

OVP NEWS EDITOR

Glaus home run lifts Red Sox over Angels
Rangers 6,
Yankees

Hometown Newspaper

City Holding evaluates staff levels

cardinals 6,
Braves

~E~~~\ar~:~~:~:~~&lt;9a~~

•

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•

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•

The Daily 5entinel .

Nation·• World

Senate confinns new DEA chief
WASHINGTON (AP)- Rep.Asa Hutchinson, one of the
House prosecutors in former President Clinton's impeachment
trial, has won Senate confirmation to lead the Drug Enforcement Administration.
"I am thrilled that the Senate had given its consent to my
nomination," Hutchinson, R-Ark., said afier the 98-1 voice
vote by the Democratic-controlled Senate.
"It is difficult to leave Congress, but I am excited to have the
opportunity to serve Arkansas and the country by beginning
our great national crusade against illegal drugs," said Hutchinson, 50.
"This is a moment of grea.t pride for me," said Sen. Tim
Hutchinson, R-Ark., brother of the congressman.

Navy told to keep training
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Armed Services Committee approved a $343 billion defense budget that includes a
directive to the Navy that training should continue on a Puerto Rican island until an equal or better site becomes available.
President Bush has ordered the Navy to pull out ofVieques
by May 2003, without any conditions on a replacement site.
Under the House biD, the alternative site must allow simultaneous large-scale tactical air strikes, naval surface fire support
and artillery and amphibious landing operations. Such realistic
combat-style training was conducted at Vieques before a civilian working for the Navy was killed by an errant bomb in April
1999.
The Navy also cannot dose the Vieques range until top
Defense officials certifY that such an alternative is immediately
available, according to the provision passed during Wednesday's
marathon committee; meeting that began at 10 a.m. and lasted
past 11 p.m.
_j

Page A&amp;
lhund.y, Aupst l, 1001

Underwater music

Bush standing in polls improves

cials Wednesday. night.
Unfike a computer virus, which
needs a person to help it spread, a
worm infects other computers on its
own. It does not affect most home
computers.
Officials worried that the outbreak
would be as crippling as Code Red's
first appearance on July 19, in which
over 250,000 systems Y(ere infected in
its first nine ·hours. As a result, there
were widespread slowdowns and outages across the Internet.
This time, after Code Red launched
at 7 p.m. EDT, the worm has had a
,.
much lower infection rate.
German, French and British officials
reported that Code Red's impact was
minimal.

interests in 55 companies, as prosecutors allege, the defense
lawyers told judges.
"I have the opportunity now to answer all these charges .
against me," Estra&lt;la told reporters after a pretrial hearing under
tight security at the court. "I am willing to sacrifice to face the ·
. charges against me."
Estrada appearedThursday on the charge of peljury, the lesser of two main charges he faces. The other is the capital offense
of plunder. Prosecutors said they will prove in the trial, scheduled to start Oct. 29, that Estrada lied when he declared net
assets of$648,000 in 1999.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Candidate George W Bush built
his presidential campaign on strong personal traits, a priority on
education and less popular but consistent conservative stands.
President Bush has built his public support on the same foun·
dations, a new poll suggests.
Bush's standing in public opinion has been boosted by broad
approval of his work on education and Americans' high regard
for personal qualities like character, honesty and vision, says an
WASHINGTON (AP) agreed and ejected an
ABC News-Washington Post poll released Wednesday.
· President Bush scored a leg- attempt to strip from the
The poll suggested six in 10 Americans, 59 percent, currentislative victory as the House 51 0-page energy legislation
ly approve of the job Bush is doing. Slightly more said they like
Garbed as Elvis, Nell Goldberg of Key West, Aa. , left, strums approved a package of pro- a provision that would· allow
Bush personally.
on a fake guitar as Nancy Herlehy of Cudjoe Key, Aa., pretends posals aimed at boosting ·exploration and drilling in ·
to play a mermaid's harp as two yellowtail snapper swim by at energy development, con- the refuge's 1.5 million acre
the Underwater Music Festival in the Aorida Keys. The event servation arid drilling .in an coastal plain. The vote on
attracted more than 500 divers an.d snorkelers that listened to . Arctic wildlife refuge.
that provision was 223-206.
WASHINGTON (AP) - ·Republicans say they and Presi- a local radio station's six-hour radio broadcast piped beneath
Working past midnight, · Energy Secretary Spencer··
dent Bush wiD prevail this fall when the battle resumes over the sea at the Looe Key 'National Marine Sanctuary. (AP Photo)
the House passed the energy Abraham called passage of
whether Mexican trucks entering the United States should
bill by a 240 - 189 vote early the bill "a tremendous victo-,neet strict new safety standards.
But at least for now, Democrats were claiming victory in a offKey West early Thursilay for a woman and three young chi!a
ry for America, for the econbattle that asserted the power of the Teamsters union, which d
·
th
h
db
omy
and for the enyiron- '·.
ren w ho were th rown mto e water w en a spee oat smug- whether to allow oil compa~
supported the proposed rules, and inflicted a blow to Bush and
gling Cubans into the United States capsized.
nies into 'the pristine Arctic m~~~;s
supporters of free trade.
1\venty-two people were rescued early Wednesday after a National Wildlife Refuge in
moves America
Bush has threatened to veto the standards.
passing freighter's crew heard screams from the dark sea. Two northeastern Alaska.
backward,"
countered .
The conflicting claims came Wednesday as GOP senators
others died. One body was recovered, the other was spotted IJY · ' Bush has called the refuge Minority' Leader Richard
halted their delaying tactics after more than a week and allowed
a Coast Guard helicopter but sank before a cutter could arrive. the
country's
major Gephardt of Miss,?~ri. He
passage of legislation that would require the truck rules. In a
The survivors were spotted 17 miles southeast of Key West by . untapped source of petrole- said the bill was tilted to
clear challenge to Bush, the Senate approved by voice -vote a
$60j billiqn tranjportation spending hill that containuhe~p[(l.,o crew members of the 210-foot coastal freighter Claudia C. The urn and insisted dr!lling can _ t~e ~rgy Iobby"~ith too ,
crew·pulled 14-people-our-ofthnvaterlYefore twa-Coast Guara be done there without little to get Americans 't o ;
posed regulations.
cutters arrived to help.
.
.
harming the environment.
conserve energy and too '
The children still missing are all under age 6.
fi
In the end, a majority of many subsidies or oil, coal,
House members, including a nuclear and other energy
WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's largest banks continhandful
of Democrats, producers.
'.
ue to charge significantly more for many services than smaller
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -A 5,280-pound monument
banks that do business in only one state, the Federal Reserve dedicated to the Ten Commandments was unveiled in the
found in its latest ant'lual survey of bank fees.
Alabama Supreme Court rotunda Wednesday.
The Fed report, released Wednesday, also found that the numThe monument is four feet tall and holds two tablets with the
ber of banks and thrifis offering free checking accounts rose to Ten Commandments. Engraved on the granite are quotes from ·
26 percent last year from 13 percent in 1999. The average min- America's forefathers supporting the Commandments' basis as
imum balance to open a free account was unchanged at around the foundation for law:
$60.
"To restore morality we must first recognize the source from
On the difference in fees between big banks that operate in a which all morality springs," ChiefJustice Roy Moore said after
number of states and small banks, the Fed said, "In a majority of presenting the monument. "From our earliest history in ·1776
'
cases, the average fees charged by multistate organizations con- when we were declared to be the United States ofAmerica, our
~nue to be significantly highet;., than those charged· by single- forefathers recognized the sovereignty of God."
state organizations."
Moore, who has long displayed the Commandments in his
. Consumer advocates have said the disparity illustrates a need private office, paid for the statue along with other donors.
for legislative oversight; while banking industry officials have
defended the fees as a way to hold down basic charges.

House votes to allow
drilling in Arctic refuge ·

GOP loses truck ·battle

;;ht~:~:~e:~e-r ;~~:itt:!v-er

Survey targets bank fees

Court unveils monument

Up to 3400 minutes

Dad suspect in kidnapping
ROSEBURG, Ore. (AP) -A father embroiled in a custody
fight with the state kidnapped his three young daughters at
gunpoint from a child-care worker following a supervised visit
with the children, authorities said.
Brian Christine, 28, allegedly pulled a gun at a rest area where
the wo~ker had stopped while on the way to return the girls to
their foster home after the visit Wednesday. Christine then
drove away with the girls - ages 3, 4 and 6 - iti the worker's
·
vehicle, said Sgt. Rick Carlton.
Christine and the children were still missing Thursday, police
said.
I State work~rs took the children into custody about a year
ago, said Patricia Feeny, a spokeswoman for Services to Children
and Families. At least one of the three children had been hospitalized for malnutrition, she said.
.

Judge voids conviction

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

•

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A
peat wave smothering. the nation's
!fiidsection has claimed dozens of
lives, from a professional athlete to
the elderly trying to save money on
electricity.
Authorities encouraged residents
to drink plenty of water, avoid
1trenuous activity and check on
elderly neighbors as the mercury
climbs.
.
. "Seniors are often thrifty and
want to save on air conditioner
~ills;' said Brian Quinn, a Missouri
Department of Health spokesman.
"So they turn their air conditioner

Manufacturing
•
rema1ns
economy's

off and rely on fans."
Thunderstorms were forecast · for
the region Thursday, offering the
potential for a brief respite,
although temperatures were still
expected to be in the 90s.
Four deaths were attributed to
the heat in the Chicago area
Wednesday, bringing the total to 19
this year, a ·Cook County medical
examiner's spokeswoman said.
.There have been six heat-related
deaths in the Houston · area this
year, according to officials with the
Harris County medical examiner's
office.

__..--'

A record for consecutive days
with 1uu;degfee femperatures was
set in Austin, Texas . Wednesday
marked the 21st co~~,Secutive day
with temperatures above 100, shattering the former record of 19 days
set in 1925.
The heat contributed to the death
of Korey Stringer, a professional
football player for the Minnesota
Vikings. Stringet, 27, died of complications from heat stroke Wednesday, a day after cpllapsing at his
Minnesota training &lt;amp.
Missouri has already · recorded its
13th victim this summer. when a
7

79-year-old man was found dead
over the weekend- in his Raytown.
house, where temperatures had
reached 98 degrees inside.
And the Milwaukee County
medical examiner's office listed heat
as a possible factor in the death of a
56-year-old man Monday, a week
after a heat wave claimed the lives
of four other city residents.
In Kansas, some 498 fans have ·
been given to needy families, up
from 350 during all oflast year, said
Tina Labellarte, chief executive
officer of the Kansas Capital Area
Chapter of the American Red

·Playin' around

FBI gets
Levy's

weakest link
NEW YORK (AP) Manufacturing activity
dipped in July for the 12th
consecutive month, confirming that it remains the
economy's weakest link, a
private trade group said

•

I

•

WASHINGTON (AP) The FBI and police on
Wednesday examined an
anonymous tip to an Internet
site alleging Chandra Levy's
body was buried under a
parking lot near a Virginia
military base 130 miles away.
Plans . for a search were put
on hold.
Police who have investigated Levy's disappearance in
Washington asked authorities
at Fort Lee near Richmond,
Va. , to ;earch the site, but the
FBI announced late Wednesday there were no pl;,ns for
such a search "at this time."
"If the tip is deemed credible, appropriate investigative
steps will .be taken," the FBI
office in Richmond said in a
statement.

• ft , tu~M•i ·r ;t

~ednesday.

The report, along with a
sovernment report saying
construction spending fell
for the fourth straight ·
month in June, fueled
optimism among ' some
economists that the Federal Reserve Bank will
tnm mterest rates agam
when ·it meets later this
month.
•11he 'Tempe, Ariz.-based
National Association of
Purchasing Management
announced that its index
of \:&gt;usiness activity fell to
43.6 in July from 44.7 the
-prevjous month. Analysts ·
had been expecting an
index of 44.5. An index
above 50 signifies growth
in ma~lif;octuring, while. 'a
!i'~'tb '' 6~Iow' 50' shows
contraction.
"This report, among
gives - (f;edex:aL
· Reserve ChairmanY Alan
Greenspan the ammunition to justifY support for
further reductions in
i~terest rates," said Hugh
A. Johnson, chief economist at First Albany Corp.
The NAPM report is
closely watched because it
is one of the first Indications of how the manufacturing sector performed
in July. The figures are
based on a survey of purchasing executives who
buy the raw materials for
manufacturing at more
Jhan 350 industrial companies .

Cross, which serves Topeka and a
seven-country region in northeast
Kansas.
"We find that more people are
trying to keep utility costs down
because they're still paying off high
bills from the winter heating season," Labellarte said.
Hot St . Louis residents who can't
afford fans or air conditioners have
flocked to the New Life ·Evangelistic Center. The group, which advocates for the poor, has distributed
more than 100 free fans and about
60 air conditioners this summer.

• ,~t\\r~ ~f!~ ')~:"NO-\f!
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on where

might be
l'olice cautioned their
request was routine · and that
the tip, which came from a
California crime tip Web site,
was just one of hundreds of
leads being pursued since
Levy disappeared three
months ago.
Executive Assistant Police
Chief Terrance Gainer said
police requested the seatch
afier some information in the
tip about the purported location of Levy's body - a
parking lot - and a description of construction in the
area checked out.
"We called down there and
confirmed obviously that
there 's ·a Fort Lee, Va., that
there's constru ction and
there's a parking lot;' Gainer
said. ' ' ·

Students make slow
progress on math
''wASHINGTON (AP) - ·
The nation's fourth- and
eighth-grade students have
made slow, steady progress in
math over the past decade, but
only one in four is doing math
proficiently, a national test
found.
The National Assessment of
Educational Progress, knoWn as
''the nation's report card,"
shows that 25 percent of public-school fourth-graders performed at or above the "proficient" level in 2000. In 1992,
17 percent did.
Fourth-graders'
average
scores in the 500-point test
were 226 in 2000. That is four
points higher than in 1996 and
eight points higher than in
1992.
The percentage of public-

,.

~

... ,..

\ '.
;

. .:

.. ' ..

..

.'

·~ .

Caleb Hughes, 3, laughs as he emerges from .behind column of water just In front of his father,
David, and younger sister, Carson, 22 months, as they play in the water at the Salt City Splash
in Hutchinson, Kan. The Hughes's were beating the lOQ-plus temperatures by enjoying the day
at the pool. (AP Photo)

school eighth-graders doing
math proficiently rose to 26
percent from 20 percent in
1.992. Eighth-graders' average scores rose from 265 io 274.
The figures in both grades
rose about one .point when
private-school students' scores
were added.
Twelfth-graders in both
public and private schools
made gains fiom 1990 to 1996,
the scores showed, but their
average score declined three
points in 2000. About 17 percent of 12th graders scored .
proficient
or
better.
Researchers tend to be more
cautious about interpreting
student performance based on
the 12th-grade data, since older
students may not take the test
as seriously as younger ones.

for $39.99.

Suspect awaits more charges

__

Plus a free phone.
.....,
,...
$80.00 C.sh back

WHITE RIVERJUNCTION,Vt. (AP) -A man described
as a master of disguise admitted ·kiUing three strangers during a
weeklong crime spree, authorities said Wednesday.
Gary Sampson is also accused of bank robbery and caljacking. Authorities said Sampson told them he killed Philip
McCloskey, 69, a Taunton, Mass. , retiree; Jonathan Rizzo, 19, a
college student from Kingston, Mass.; and Robert Whitney, 58,
a contractor and former city councilor in Concord, N.H.
Sampson, 41, ofTamworth, N.H ., waived extradition in aVermont court Wednesday afternoon, then got in a police car to be
taken to Massachusetts.
"He just wanted to S':' home and face the charges," said Kevin
Griffin, Sampson's lawyer. "He wanted to go today."

·S40.00

MIIWISlt5fNI.Inl'll»t.

'ir.i ----

,.

Norwood broker deal on eve of House
vote; Demoaats lining up opposition

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Queen Mother to leave hospital
LONDON (AP) - The Queen Mother Elizabeth Jrlanned
to return home Thursday evening after receiving a blood trans~
fusion to treat her anemia, her office said.
The Queen Mother, who marks her IO!st birthday on Saturday, was taken to King Edward VII hospital in central London
Wednesday, A day earlier, she had withdrawn from a public
engagement because doctors said she had a mild case of heat
exhaustion.
"The treatment has been completed satisfactorily and Queen
Elizabeth The Queen Mother will be returning to ClareJ;~ce
House this evening," her office said.
·
The Queen Mother was reportedly eager to be at home in
time for her birthday celebrations. Traditionally, she goes to the
gates of Clarence House to greet well-wishers who gather outside.

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y (AP) .- A federal judge overturned a
manslaughter conviction, saying conversations among Alcoholics Anonymous participants should not have been used as
evidence because such exchanges are a form of confidential
religious communication.
U.S. District Judge Charles Brieant said treating AA meetings
with less protection than any other form of religious communication, which carries assurances of confidentiality, is unconstitutionaL
The entire AA relationship, l)e wrote, "is anonymous and
confidential."
Paul Cox, 33, had been convicted of two counts of
manslaughter for stabbing to death Laksman Rao Chervu and
his wife, Shanta, in their home in 1988. Cox claimed he was in
an alcoholic stupor when he broke into the home, where he
MANILA, Philippines ' (AP) - Former President Joseph
had lived as a child. He did' not know the couple.
Estrada was ordered Thursday to stand trial in October for perjury, and he will testifY in his own defense against the corruption charges that led to his ouster, his lawyers said.
Estrada will tell the Philippine anti-grafi court that he ne~er
MIAMI (AP) - Coast Guard crews searched the rough seas made false declarations about his assets and ·that he did not hold

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Ex-president will testify

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Hunt on for missing Cubans

f

,Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001

·Residents in nation's midsection ·struggle to stay cool

Computer virus ·not as severe as predicted
WASHINGTON (AP) -The virus- Wednesday night, according to SANS
like wCode Red"· worm infecred com: · data. Although tire rare of infecti'on
puters around the world Wednesday, doubled each hour eariy on, the rate .of
although the outbreak wasn't as severe increase gradually abated.
as predicted.
"We can't say for certain the threat
"We're still watchful, but for the first has been eliminated," said Ron Dick,
time, we're hopeful as well," said Alan head of the FBI 's National InfrastrucPaller, ~search director at the SANS cure Protection Center.
Institute, a computer security think
The Pentagon had to shut down
tank working with the government to public access to many Defense Depart·
· ment Web sites again, a week after it
monitor the Internet.
He said despite the good news, they shut down most ,military sites to prohad detected new variations of the teet against Code Red.
worm and were working overnight to
A spokesman said the Pentagon sysanalyze them and their capabilities.
tern was slowed and one civilian·
Almost 150,000 Internet-connected agency's server was infected.
computers running Microsoft's NT or
"We remain vigilant in monitoring
Windows 2000 operating system had this situation," said a joint statement by
been infected by Code Red by late the FBI, White House and other offi-

•

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) . The White House and House
GOP leaders are racing to put
the. finishing · touches on a
patients' rights bill base4 on an
11th-hour.
compromise
between President Bush and
the lead Republican author of
a version Bush had threatened
to, veto.
·
1
"After a lot oflabor and a lot
o£ discussion( we shook hands
in the Oval Office about ]0
minutes ago.'' Bush said Monday, standing beside Rep.
Charles Norwood, a Georgia
Republican who has worked
closely with Democrats but
finally made a deal with the
president.
"It does protect the patients
of this country," said Norwood, who followed Bush -to
the White House podium for
the late-afternoon announcement. "We have accomplished
th~ very 'goals we set out."
"We have found a way to get
a bill to the floor that the pres'.;..l.on&lt; can sign," Speaker DenHasten said late Wednesday.
Even as Democrats and
some
moderate
House
Republicans scrambled to
keep suppprters from .defecting 'Ia' the Bush- Norwood
comprotnfse, Norwood said:

"The bottom line and goal is,
we want to change the law.
The last time I looked, that's
pretty difficult to do· without
the presidential signature."
Notwithstanding a flurry of
activity, that stretched into the
wee hours Thursday, it
remained unclear whether a
package could he finalized in
time for a vote before the
House adjourns Friday for an
August recess.
Plans were being made for
Bush to visit the Capitol on
Thursday to speak to Republicans in the House and Senate.

"I have to have more of an
explanation. I have to see it in
writing," said R ep. Marge
Roukema, R - N.J. , as news of
the deal spread among law-·
makers Wednesday evening.
Roukema is a GOP .supporter
of the r.atients' rights plan
Bush opposes.
Bush and Norwood agreed
to a compromise on the
thorny issue of where patients
may sue their health plans in consumer-friendly state
courts or the uniform system
of federal court.

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�•

•

The Daily 5entinel .

Nation·• World

Senate confinns new DEA chief
WASHINGTON (AP)- Rep.Asa Hutchinson, one of the
House prosecutors in former President Clinton's impeachment
trial, has won Senate confirmation to lead the Drug Enforcement Administration.
"I am thrilled that the Senate had given its consent to my
nomination," Hutchinson, R-Ark., said afier the 98-1 voice
vote by the Democratic-controlled Senate.
"It is difficult to leave Congress, but I am excited to have the
opportunity to serve Arkansas and the country by beginning
our great national crusade against illegal drugs," said Hutchinson, 50.
"This is a moment of grea.t pride for me," said Sen. Tim
Hutchinson, R-Ark., brother of the congressman.

Navy told to keep training
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Armed Services Committee approved a $343 billion defense budget that includes a
directive to the Navy that training should continue on a Puerto Rican island until an equal or better site becomes available.
President Bush has ordered the Navy to pull out ofVieques
by May 2003, without any conditions on a replacement site.
Under the House biD, the alternative site must allow simultaneous large-scale tactical air strikes, naval surface fire support
and artillery and amphibious landing operations. Such realistic
combat-style training was conducted at Vieques before a civilian working for the Navy was killed by an errant bomb in April
1999.
The Navy also cannot dose the Vieques range until top
Defense officials certifY that such an alternative is immediately
available, according to the provision passed during Wednesday's
marathon committee; meeting that began at 10 a.m. and lasted
past 11 p.m.
_j

Page A&amp;
lhund.y, Aupst l, 1001

Underwater music

Bush standing in polls improves

cials Wednesday. night.
Unfike a computer virus, which
needs a person to help it spread, a
worm infects other computers on its
own. It does not affect most home
computers.
Officials worried that the outbreak
would be as crippling as Code Red's
first appearance on July 19, in which
over 250,000 systems Y(ere infected in
its first nine ·hours. As a result, there
were widespread slowdowns and outages across the Internet.
This time, after Code Red launched
at 7 p.m. EDT, the worm has had a
,.
much lower infection rate.
German, French and British officials
reported that Code Red's impact was
minimal.

interests in 55 companies, as prosecutors allege, the defense
lawyers told judges.
"I have the opportunity now to answer all these charges .
against me," Estra&lt;la told reporters after a pretrial hearing under
tight security at the court. "I am willing to sacrifice to face the ·
. charges against me."
Estrada appearedThursday on the charge of peljury, the lesser of two main charges he faces. The other is the capital offense
of plunder. Prosecutors said they will prove in the trial, scheduled to start Oct. 29, that Estrada lied when he declared net
assets of$648,000 in 1999.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Candidate George W Bush built
his presidential campaign on strong personal traits, a priority on
education and less popular but consistent conservative stands.
President Bush has built his public support on the same foun·
dations, a new poll suggests.
Bush's standing in public opinion has been boosted by broad
approval of his work on education and Americans' high regard
for personal qualities like character, honesty and vision, says an
WASHINGTON (AP) agreed and ejected an
ABC News-Washington Post poll released Wednesday.
· President Bush scored a leg- attempt to strip from the
The poll suggested six in 10 Americans, 59 percent, currentislative victory as the House 51 0-page energy legislation
ly approve of the job Bush is doing. Slightly more said they like
Garbed as Elvis, Nell Goldberg of Key West, Aa. , left, strums approved a package of pro- a provision that would· allow
Bush personally.
on a fake guitar as Nancy Herlehy of Cudjoe Key, Aa., pretends posals aimed at boosting ·exploration and drilling in ·
to play a mermaid's harp as two yellowtail snapper swim by at energy development, con- the refuge's 1.5 million acre
the Underwater Music Festival in the Aorida Keys. The event servation arid drilling .in an coastal plain. The vote on
attracted more than 500 divers an.d snorkelers that listened to . Arctic wildlife refuge.
that provision was 223-206.
WASHINGTON (AP) - ·Republicans say they and Presi- a local radio station's six-hour radio broadcast piped beneath
Working past midnight, · Energy Secretary Spencer··
dent Bush wiD prevail this fall when the battle resumes over the sea at the Looe Key 'National Marine Sanctuary. (AP Photo)
the House passed the energy Abraham called passage of
whether Mexican trucks entering the United States should
bill by a 240 - 189 vote early the bill "a tremendous victo-,neet strict new safety standards.
But at least for now, Democrats were claiming victory in a offKey West early Thursilay for a woman and three young chi!a
ry for America, for the econbattle that asserted the power of the Teamsters union, which d
·
th
h
db
omy
and for the enyiron- '·.
ren w ho were th rown mto e water w en a spee oat smug- whether to allow oil compa~
supported the proposed rules, and inflicted a blow to Bush and
gling Cubans into the United States capsized.
nies into 'the pristine Arctic m~~~;s
supporters of free trade.
1\venty-two people were rescued early Wednesday after a National Wildlife Refuge in
moves America
Bush has threatened to veto the standards.
passing freighter's crew heard screams from the dark sea. Two northeastern Alaska.
backward,"
countered .
The conflicting claims came Wednesday as GOP senators
others died. One body was recovered, the other was spotted IJY · ' Bush has called the refuge Minority' Leader Richard
halted their delaying tactics after more than a week and allowed
a Coast Guard helicopter but sank before a cutter could arrive. the
country's
major Gephardt of Miss,?~ri. He
passage of legislation that would require the truck rules. In a
The survivors were spotted 17 miles southeast of Key West by . untapped source of petrole- said the bill was tilted to
clear challenge to Bush, the Senate approved by voice -vote a
$60j billiqn tranjportation spending hill that containuhe~p[(l.,o crew members of the 210-foot coastal freighter Claudia C. The urn and insisted dr!lling can _ t~e ~rgy Iobby"~ith too ,
crew·pulled 14-people-our-ofthnvaterlYefore twa-Coast Guara be done there without little to get Americans 't o ;
posed regulations.
cutters arrived to help.
.
.
harming the environment.
conserve energy and too '
The children still missing are all under age 6.
fi
In the end, a majority of many subsidies or oil, coal,
House members, including a nuclear and other energy
WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's largest banks continhandful
of Democrats, producers.
'.
ue to charge significantly more for many services than smaller
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) -A 5,280-pound monument
banks that do business in only one state, the Federal Reserve dedicated to the Ten Commandments was unveiled in the
found in its latest ant'lual survey of bank fees.
Alabama Supreme Court rotunda Wednesday.
The Fed report, released Wednesday, also found that the numThe monument is four feet tall and holds two tablets with the
ber of banks and thrifis offering free checking accounts rose to Ten Commandments. Engraved on the granite are quotes from ·
26 percent last year from 13 percent in 1999. The average min- America's forefathers supporting the Commandments' basis as
imum balance to open a free account was unchanged at around the foundation for law:
$60.
"To restore morality we must first recognize the source from
On the difference in fees between big banks that operate in a which all morality springs," ChiefJustice Roy Moore said after
number of states and small banks, the Fed said, "In a majority of presenting the monument. "From our earliest history in ·1776
'
cases, the average fees charged by multistate organizations con- when we were declared to be the United States ofAmerica, our
~nue to be significantly highet;., than those charged· by single- forefathers recognized the sovereignty of God."
state organizations."
Moore, who has long displayed the Commandments in his
. Consumer advocates have said the disparity illustrates a need private office, paid for the statue along with other donors.
for legislative oversight; while banking industry officials have
defended the fees as a way to hold down basic charges.

House votes to allow
drilling in Arctic refuge ·

GOP loses truck ·battle

;;ht~:~:~e:~e-r ;~~:itt:!v-er

Survey targets bank fees

Court unveils monument

Up to 3400 minutes

Dad suspect in kidnapping
ROSEBURG, Ore. (AP) -A father embroiled in a custody
fight with the state kidnapped his three young daughters at
gunpoint from a child-care worker following a supervised visit
with the children, authorities said.
Brian Christine, 28, allegedly pulled a gun at a rest area where
the wo~ker had stopped while on the way to return the girls to
their foster home after the visit Wednesday. Christine then
drove away with the girls - ages 3, 4 and 6 - iti the worker's
·
vehicle, said Sgt. Rick Carlton.
Christine and the children were still missing Thursday, police
said.
I State work~rs took the children into custody about a year
ago, said Patricia Feeny, a spokeswoman for Services to Children
and Families. At least one of the three children had been hospitalized for malnutrition, she said.
.

Judge voids conviction

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

•

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A
peat wave smothering. the nation's
!fiidsection has claimed dozens of
lives, from a professional athlete to
the elderly trying to save money on
electricity.
Authorities encouraged residents
to drink plenty of water, avoid
1trenuous activity and check on
elderly neighbors as the mercury
climbs.
.
. "Seniors are often thrifty and
want to save on air conditioner
~ills;' said Brian Quinn, a Missouri
Department of Health spokesman.
"So they turn their air conditioner

Manufacturing
•
rema1ns
economy's

off and rely on fans."
Thunderstorms were forecast · for
the region Thursday, offering the
potential for a brief respite,
although temperatures were still
expected to be in the 90s.
Four deaths were attributed to
the heat in the Chicago area
Wednesday, bringing the total to 19
this year, a ·Cook County medical
examiner's spokeswoman said.
.There have been six heat-related
deaths in the Houston · area this
year, according to officials with the
Harris County medical examiner's
office.

__..--'

A record for consecutive days
with 1uu;degfee femperatures was
set in Austin, Texas . Wednesday
marked the 21st co~~,Secutive day
with temperatures above 100, shattering the former record of 19 days
set in 1925.
The heat contributed to the death
of Korey Stringer, a professional
football player for the Minnesota
Vikings. Stringet, 27, died of complications from heat stroke Wednesday, a day after cpllapsing at his
Minnesota training &lt;amp.
Missouri has already · recorded its
13th victim this summer. when a
7

79-year-old man was found dead
over the weekend- in his Raytown.
house, where temperatures had
reached 98 degrees inside.
And the Milwaukee County
medical examiner's office listed heat
as a possible factor in the death of a
56-year-old man Monday, a week
after a heat wave claimed the lives
of four other city residents.
In Kansas, some 498 fans have ·
been given to needy families, up
from 350 during all oflast year, said
Tina Labellarte, chief executive
officer of the Kansas Capital Area
Chapter of the American Red

·Playin' around

FBI gets
Levy's

weakest link
NEW YORK (AP) Manufacturing activity
dipped in July for the 12th
consecutive month, confirming that it remains the
economy's weakest link, a
private trade group said

•

I

•

WASHINGTON (AP) The FBI and police on
Wednesday examined an
anonymous tip to an Internet
site alleging Chandra Levy's
body was buried under a
parking lot near a Virginia
military base 130 miles away.
Plans . for a search were put
on hold.
Police who have investigated Levy's disappearance in
Washington asked authorities
at Fort Lee near Richmond,
Va. , to ;earch the site, but the
FBI announced late Wednesday there were no pl;,ns for
such a search "at this time."
"If the tip is deemed credible, appropriate investigative
steps will .be taken," the FBI
office in Richmond said in a
statement.

• ft , tu~M•i ·r ;t

~ednesday.

The report, along with a
sovernment report saying
construction spending fell
for the fourth straight ·
month in June, fueled
optimism among ' some
economists that the Federal Reserve Bank will
tnm mterest rates agam
when ·it meets later this
month.
•11he 'Tempe, Ariz.-based
National Association of
Purchasing Management
announced that its index
of \:&gt;usiness activity fell to
43.6 in July from 44.7 the
-prevjous month. Analysts ·
had been expecting an
index of 44.5. An index
above 50 signifies growth
in ma~lif;octuring, while. 'a
!i'~'tb '' 6~Iow' 50' shows
contraction.
"This report, among
gives - (f;edex:aL
· Reserve ChairmanY Alan
Greenspan the ammunition to justifY support for
further reductions in
i~terest rates," said Hugh
A. Johnson, chief economist at First Albany Corp.
The NAPM report is
closely watched because it
is one of the first Indications of how the manufacturing sector performed
in July. The figures are
based on a survey of purchasing executives who
buy the raw materials for
manufacturing at more
Jhan 350 industrial companies .

Cross, which serves Topeka and a
seven-country region in northeast
Kansas.
"We find that more people are
trying to keep utility costs down
because they're still paying off high
bills from the winter heating season," Labellarte said.
Hot St . Louis residents who can't
afford fans or air conditioners have
flocked to the New Life ·Evangelistic Center. The group, which advocates for the poor, has distributed
more than 100 free fans and about
60 air conditioners this summer.

• ,~t\\r~ ~f!~ ')~:"NO-\f!
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on where

might be
l'olice cautioned their
request was routine · and that
the tip, which came from a
California crime tip Web site,
was just one of hundreds of
leads being pursued since
Levy disappeared three
months ago.
Executive Assistant Police
Chief Terrance Gainer said
police requested the seatch
afier some information in the
tip about the purported location of Levy's body - a
parking lot - and a description of construction in the
area checked out.
"We called down there and
confirmed obviously that
there 's ·a Fort Lee, Va., that
there's constru ction and
there's a parking lot;' Gainer
said. ' ' ·

Students make slow
progress on math
''wASHINGTON (AP) - ·
The nation's fourth- and
eighth-grade students have
made slow, steady progress in
math over the past decade, but
only one in four is doing math
proficiently, a national test
found.
The National Assessment of
Educational Progress, knoWn as
''the nation's report card,"
shows that 25 percent of public-school fourth-graders performed at or above the "proficient" level in 2000. In 1992,
17 percent did.
Fourth-graders'
average
scores in the 500-point test
were 226 in 2000. That is four
points higher than in 1996 and
eight points higher than in
1992.
The percentage of public-

,.

~

... ,..

\ '.
;

. .:

.. ' ..

..

.'

·~ .

Caleb Hughes, 3, laughs as he emerges from .behind column of water just In front of his father,
David, and younger sister, Carson, 22 months, as they play in the water at the Salt City Splash
in Hutchinson, Kan. The Hughes's were beating the lOQ-plus temperatures by enjoying the day
at the pool. (AP Photo)

school eighth-graders doing
math proficiently rose to 26
percent from 20 percent in
1.992. Eighth-graders' average scores rose from 265 io 274.
The figures in both grades
rose about one .point when
private-school students' scores
were added.
Twelfth-graders in both
public and private schools
made gains fiom 1990 to 1996,
the scores showed, but their
average score declined three
points in 2000. About 17 percent of 12th graders scored .
proficient
or
better.
Researchers tend to be more
cautious about interpreting
student performance based on
the 12th-grade data, since older
students may not take the test
as seriously as younger ones.

for $39.99.

Suspect awaits more charges

__

Plus a free phone.
.....,
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$80.00 C.sh back

WHITE RIVERJUNCTION,Vt. (AP) -A man described
as a master of disguise admitted ·kiUing three strangers during a
weeklong crime spree, authorities said Wednesday.
Gary Sampson is also accused of bank robbery and caljacking. Authorities said Sampson told them he killed Philip
McCloskey, 69, a Taunton, Mass. , retiree; Jonathan Rizzo, 19, a
college student from Kingston, Mass.; and Robert Whitney, 58,
a contractor and former city councilor in Concord, N.H.
Sampson, 41, ofTamworth, N.H ., waived extradition in aVermont court Wednesday afternoon, then got in a police car to be
taken to Massachusetts.
"He just wanted to S':' home and face the charges," said Kevin
Griffin, Sampson's lawyer. "He wanted to go today."

·S40.00

MIIWISlt5fNI.Inl'll»t.

'ir.i ----

,.

Norwood broker deal on eve of House
vote; Demoaats lining up opposition

. . . Ywr p1al.,., Nlletft

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Queen Mother to leave hospital
LONDON (AP) - The Queen Mother Elizabeth Jrlanned
to return home Thursday evening after receiving a blood trans~
fusion to treat her anemia, her office said.
The Queen Mother, who marks her IO!st birthday on Saturday, was taken to King Edward VII hospital in central London
Wednesday, A day earlier, she had withdrawn from a public
engagement because doctors said she had a mild case of heat
exhaustion.
"The treatment has been completed satisfactorily and Queen
Elizabeth The Queen Mother will be returning to ClareJ;~ce
House this evening," her office said.
·
The Queen Mother was reportedly eager to be at home in
time for her birthday celebrations. Traditionally, she goes to the
gates of Clarence House to greet well-wishers who gather outside.

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y (AP) .- A federal judge overturned a
manslaughter conviction, saying conversations among Alcoholics Anonymous participants should not have been used as
evidence because such exchanges are a form of confidential
religious communication.
U.S. District Judge Charles Brieant said treating AA meetings
with less protection than any other form of religious communication, which carries assurances of confidentiality, is unconstitutionaL
The entire AA relationship, l)e wrote, "is anonymous and
confidential."
Paul Cox, 33, had been convicted of two counts of
manslaughter for stabbing to death Laksman Rao Chervu and
his wife, Shanta, in their home in 1988. Cox claimed he was in
an alcoholic stupor when he broke into the home, where he
MANILA, Philippines ' (AP) - Former President Joseph
had lived as a child. He did' not know the couple.
Estrada was ordered Thursday to stand trial in October for perjury, and he will testifY in his own defense against the corruption charges that led to his ouster, his lawyers said.
Estrada will tell the Philippine anti-grafi court that he ne~er
MIAMI (AP) - Coast Guard crews searched the rough seas made false declarations about his assets and ·that he did not hold

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·Residents in nation's midsection ·struggle to stay cool

Computer virus ·not as severe as predicted
WASHINGTON (AP) -The virus- Wednesday night, according to SANS
like wCode Red"· worm infecred com: · data. Although tire rare of infecti'on
puters around the world Wednesday, doubled each hour eariy on, the rate .of
although the outbreak wasn't as severe increase gradually abated.
as predicted.
"We can't say for certain the threat
"We're still watchful, but for the first has been eliminated," said Ron Dick,
time, we're hopeful as well," said Alan head of the FBI 's National InfrastrucPaller, ~search director at the SANS cure Protection Center.
Institute, a computer security think
The Pentagon had to shut down
tank working with the government to public access to many Defense Depart·
· ment Web sites again, a week after it
monitor the Internet.
He said despite the good news, they shut down most ,military sites to prohad detected new variations of the teet against Code Red.
worm and were working overnight to
A spokesman said the Pentagon sysanalyze them and their capabilities.
tern was slowed and one civilian·
Almost 150,000 Internet-connected agency's server was infected.
computers running Microsoft's NT or
"We remain vigilant in monitoring
Windows 2000 operating system had this situation," said a joint statement by
been infected by Code Red by late the FBI, White House and other offi-

•

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) . The White House and House
GOP leaders are racing to put
the. finishing · touches on a
patients' rights bill base4 on an
11th-hour.
compromise
between President Bush and
the lead Republican author of
a version Bush had threatened
to, veto.
·
1
"After a lot oflabor and a lot
o£ discussion( we shook hands
in the Oval Office about ]0
minutes ago.'' Bush said Monday, standing beside Rep.
Charles Norwood, a Georgia
Republican who has worked
closely with Democrats but
finally made a deal with the
president.
"It does protect the patients
of this country," said Norwood, who followed Bush -to
the White House podium for
the late-afternoon announcement. "We have accomplished
th~ very 'goals we set out."
"We have found a way to get
a bill to the floor that the pres'.;..l.on&lt; can sign," Speaker DenHasten said late Wednesday.
Even as Democrats and
some
moderate
House
Republicans scrambled to
keep suppprters from .defecting 'Ia' the Bush- Norwood
comprotnfse, Norwood said:

"The bottom line and goal is,
we want to change the law.
The last time I looked, that's
pretty difficult to do· without
the presidential signature."
Notwithstanding a flurry of
activity, that stretched into the
wee hours Thursday, it
remained unclear whether a
package could he finalized in
time for a vote before the
House adjourns Friday for an
August recess.
Plans were being made for
Bush to visit the Capitol on
Thursday to speak to Republicans in the House and Senate.

"I have to have more of an
explanation. I have to see it in
writing," said R ep. Marge
Roukema, R - N.J. , as news of
the deal spread among law-·
makers Wednesday evening.
Roukema is a GOP .supporter
of the r.atients' rights plan
Bush opposes.
Bush and Norwood agreed
to a compromise on the
thorny issue of where patients
may sue their health plans in consumer-friendly state
courts or the uniform system
of federal court.

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�Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Baseball roundup, Page B2
Browns sign Warren, Page BJ
URG releases Po/leyba// sked, Page B5

Page Bl

----

Vikings
go on
without
Stringer

2001

*

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GEORG'ETOWN,
. Ky.
(AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals waived first-year· fullback ·
Kenn eth
Williams
on
Wedn esday, one~"Hliy.ri·.after ""
placing
him
on
the
reserve/non - football injury
list.
~The team said Williams suffered a mild concussion out..,side training camp on Saturday. Team officials made no
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HOUSTON (AP) - The
Houston Rockets have agreed
to sign and trade longtime star
center Hakeem Olajuwon to
th e Toronto Raptors for two
draft picks, team owner Les
Alexander said.
Alexander, in an inrerview
with Houston television station KRIV. said the Rockets
wiU get a first-round pick and
a second-round· pick from
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NEW YORK (AP) -The
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Holyfield co uld take place in
China in late October.
The fi ght had been scheduled for Sunday in Beijing,
but was called off because of
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XPERIENCE
.,

WRECK AT THIRD - Cincinnati third baseman Aaron Boone, right, takes the late throw as Los Angeles Dodgers' Jeff
Green (15) .slides Into third for a triple in the third inning Wednesday. (AP)
·· ·

Bengals waive
first-year
fullback

Auto, V-6,
Only
20,000
mile&amp; •.

Step side,

HUNTINGTON - Former M arshall defensive tackle
Giradie MerCer has signed
with N ew England .
Mercer was picked up by
th e Patriots Tuesday after
being cut'by the Philadelphia
Eagles last week.
Mercer, who wasn't picked
in the· 2000 draft, originally
.• ·signed with Carolina as a free
agent.
He'll join another former
Marshall standout in New
England, wide receiver Troy
Brown. '

·-

ROCK SPRINGS - The
newly form ed Meigs Marauder Sideliner Booster C lub will
meet Sunday at 1:00 p.m. in
Meigs High School's Cafeteria. The club is a being formed
as a booster club to promote
Meigs Marauder football .
Any Meigs High School
football fan is urged to attend
to make plans for the upcoming season. For more jnformation you can call head football
coach Mike Chancey at 992- ·
006f or 992-2158.

.

.

'

LOS ANGELES . (AP) Aaron
'This is a character-building yea r winning nm , Griffey hit his ·ninth
Boone thinks the Cincinnati Reds can right h ere," said Dmitri Young, who had · homer of the season, ·off reliever Al
still enjoy this season despite being far three RBis and three hits against the Reyes. He needs three more before
NL West leaders. "Whether we finish at Aug. 24 to beco111e the youngest player
removed from the playoff race,
,N Baoite had four of the R E'ds: seus~s .: :a_QO '~~~tC!ver, this is the way we're ··:t&lt;r ~;J; .. r~ ·
·'r.~ ,.
high 20 hits in a 10-5 win over tl)e tos goi:ng to have to play from th is p9int
Left-bander Lan ce Davis (5-1) won
Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night. . on. We have to play like young lions.
his fourth straight start, becoming the
"We still have a chance to have. a fun- Ken Griffey Jr. ,-frustrated because of first rookie left-handel- to start a season .•
seaso n, and we feel real good abo ut the a troublesome left hamstring th at cost 5-1 for th e R eds since Fred Baczewski
team we're running o ut there now," him 50 games - and the re cent trades won six of his fir st seven decisions in
1953. D avis allowed three runs and six
Boon e said after. the R'eds won their of a few veterans to save mon ey fifth straight.
hinted at retirement last Friday before hits in six innings, striking out three
''We feel like we have a chance to retracting his remarks a day later after and walking none.
C incinnati pulled ahead 5-3 with a
return the (avor for some of the beat- talking with general manager Jim Bowinb" we've been taking for the first co u- den.
five-run fifth agaitmTerry Adams (7-4),
pte of months. We're finally a little bit
"Listening to aU th at talk, l can see en rou.te to its seventh victory in eight
more healthy, we've added a couple why Junior got mad," Youn g said. "He games.
more pieces and our yoqnger guys are saw a good young nucleu s, and then he
"They're a different team than w hen
saw them trying to trade everybody we fir st went to Cincinnati," Adams
starting to pitch welL"
Cincinnati's postseason aspirations away. So he had to put his foot down , said. "Their lineup is stacked. They've
collapsed · with a 6-22 record in May, and I applaud him for that."
got Todd Walker, Adam Dunn and a
and. just 16 victories in the first 53
One ni ght after robbing Shawn healthy Griffey - and they'r~ all very
Green of a home run and scoring the aggressive hitters."
hort1e games.

MANKATO, Minn. (AP)
-For the Minnesota Vikings,
training camp goes on .
With heavy hearts, the
Vikings planned to return to
the practice field Thursday . . - - - - -....... trying
to
focus
on
football
when th eir
thoughts
were surely
with
their
fallen friend,
Korey
Stringer.
Stringer
"We know
we have to
play football.' But that's not on
our mind right now," Vikings
coach Dennis Green said
Wednesday. "We have lost a
27 -year-old man and we are
going to mi'ss him."
Stringer, a 335-pound Pro
Bowl right tackle who started
every game for Minnesota the
last two sea&lt;ons, collapsed following an intense practice in
stifling heat and humidity
Tuesday morning and died 15
hours larer at a Mankato hospital. of · complications from
heat stroke.
"God needed the number
77 more than the Vikings," .
said owner R ed McCombs,
who remembered no conversations with Stringer about
football ::- otrly.,w.arm greetings. ''I couldn't hug much of
him, because l couldn't get
around him."
His dea th shocked nearly
everyon e in the Vikings community.
''I 've never seen h.tm rna d,
I've never see n him argue
with a player," said teammate
Randy Moss, who broke
down during a news conference. " I think if he's looking
down on us right now, he sees
all the pain that we feeL But at
the same time, he knows the
·show n1ust go on."

Please SH Xuxxn, XX

Northwestern preseason Big Ten grid favorite
.

C HI CAGO
(AP)
Northwes tern, ·
which
shared last season's Big Ten
title with Purdue and
Michigan,
was
chosen
Wednesday in a media poll
as the pre season favorite to
win the 200 I conferemce
championsh ip!
The Wildca ts return 10
starters from a high-scoring
offense led by tailba ck
D amien Anderson, who was

'

-Buckeyes picked to fini~ t~ir~·~~:
cho se as the . preseaso n
"It's gratifying to have
offensive player of th e year.· so me p eo ple think we can
Wisconsin ta ckle Welldell be a good tea m," North Bryant was the media westeril coac h R andy Walkc hoi ce as preseaso n de fen- er said Wed nesday. "But I
sive player of th e year.
always ta,ke the ca uti o us
Michigan was picked to approach."
finish seco nd , followed by
Walker noted that many
O hio State, under fir st-year preseason publication s last
head coach Jim Tressel.
. seaso n c hos e th e Wildcats

for last place in th e co nferen ce. But they won six of
eight conferen ce games and
went 8-3 before being beaten 66- 17 loss by N ebras ka
in the Al amo Bowl.
Northwestern return s 16
start ers ove rall. MicMga o
has 12 starters back, incl uding eight on defense, and

Ohio State has 13 returning
starters.
Anderson, fifth in last
yea r's Heisman Trophy balloting, rushed for 2,063~
yards and scored 23 touch- '
downs.
Brya nt will be a four-year
start er for the Badgers, w ho
won the Sun Bowl last season. He made six sac ks a
yea r ago and was a finalist
for the Lonibardi Award.

lbome doesn't hurt Ks, but
Cordova does in Tribe win
CLEVELAND (AP) - Oakland manager
Art Howe didn't want Jim Thome to beat
him. So Marty Cordova did instead.
Cordova hit a tiebreaking, two- run single
in the seventh inning to help the C leveland
Indians defeat the Athletics 6-5 Wednesday
night and ruin Howe's risky strategy.
With the game tied at 4 in the seventh ,
Howe ordered Thome walked wi th nobody
on and two outs after Jim Mecir feU b ~,hind
in the count 2~0 to the AL home run leader.
.. T hom e .as JUSt
. . so hot," Howe sa1'd. " [ was
not going to let him bea t us. Somebody else
beats us, I can live with that."
EUis Burks, activated earli er in . the day'
after recovering from a broken ti ght thumb,
followed with a double to left, sending
Thome to third . Then Cordova delivered ,
· poking a 2-1 pitch from Mecir (2-B) to rif ht
field.
t
.
'\.,
'

"Any time you get the winning hit, it fe els
good," Cordova said.
The Indians moved 1 1/ 2 ga mes ahead of
seco nd- place Minn esota in the AL Central.
T he Twins lost 3-1 in Toro nto.
" ! would have wa lked Thome, too," Burks
said :" I'm fresh off th.e DL, so why not challenge me instead of one of the hottest hitters
i'n the league?"
But Cordova made Howe pay for a gamble th at put the go-a head run on base.
"Marty got the big hit," Indians manager
C harlie Man uel said. " H e's bee n pu lli ng off
the ball, but he adj usted and went the other
way again st a tough pitcher."
Danys Baez (2-0) pitched a scoreless
inning, and John R ocker worked his way
into and out of a jam in the eighth. Bob
Wickman a lso ran into trouble in the nin th
before getting hi s 20th s've in 22 chances.

GONE- Cleve'land 's Jim Thome smacks a two run home run
off Oakland Athletics pitcher Erik Hiljus Wednesday. (AP)

.

.

�Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Baseball roundup, Page B2
Browns sign Warren, Page BJ
URG releases Po/leyba// sked, Page B5

Page Bl

----

Vikings
go on
without
Stringer

2001

*

MERCURY
VILLAGER

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

LUitUiiY

Mercury

V-B, Side Ak

lhursday, August ], :1001

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

lla&amp;••

Power Equipment

$19,305 MSRP

15,995
2001
RD F-150

4 Door,Equipment
Rear Air,
Power

AC, Sport Package

$23,995 MSRP

il!
'11'

.

STARTING AT.••

'14,559

Marshall's
Giradle Mercer
signed by Pats

19 798
A
l

2001

MERCURY

'2001

FORD

GRAND MAB(!U'S

BANGERXLT
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'12,285
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Autu, Side A1r Jlala, AJ;

Keyle.. Entry,
Premium Cloth Interior
Power Equipment

811,995.

GEORG'ETOWN,
. Ky.
(AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals waived first-year· fullback ·
Kenn eth
Williams
on
Wedn esday, one~"Hliy.ri·.after ""
placing
him
on
the
reserve/non - football injury
list.
~The team said Williams suffered a mild concussion out..,side training camp on Saturday. Team officials made no
other comme nt on the source
or severity of the injury.

Silver
Only
27,000
miles

4X4,

30,000
miles

~
eLINCOLN

Only
3,700
miles

4X4

V-B,
33,000
miles

Mercury il

SPECIAL ..lNANCE DEPARTMENT

Bankruptcy? Credil Problems?
"We Can Help"ll

Rockets agree
to trade
Olajuwon

White, ·
Auto, V-6

Dark Red
Only
21,500
miles

HOUSTON (AP) - The
Houston Rockets have agreed
to sign and trade longtime star
center Hakeem Olajuwon to
th e Toronto Raptors for two
draft picks, team owner Les
Alexander said.
Alexander, in an inrerview
with Houston television station KRIV. said the Rockets
wiU get a first-round pick and
a second-round· pick from
Toron,to.

Us First Or We 8oth Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800 .

Trucks and sport Utllltv
Call for ·
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
2-wheel

'2495

4-wheel

'4995:

Check and adjust camber and toe. Add~lonal parts and
labor
on some vehicles.

'1995

MOTORCRAn

FAST LUBE

• Service InclUdes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and new
Motorcraf1 oii1Hter • Per1orm Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Check and fill necessary fluids • Allin 29 minutes or less
• Diesel vehicles
be extra.

PORD MOTOR CO.
FLOORMATS
Starting
at

''

•4400

'

Tdle fight could
happen in
October

TIRES

We will meet or beat any competitor's
advertised price on the some lire.
We future all mator branda: Goodyear, Flrescone, General,
Michelin, Brldgestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, SF GOOdrich.
MOunting and balancing may be &amp;lltra.

NEW YORK (AP) -The
postponed WBA heavyweight
title fight between chatnpion
John Ruiz and Evander
Holyfield co uld take place in
China in late October.
The fi ght had been scheduled for Sunday in Beijing,
but was called off because of
Ruiz's neck injury.

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD

I

I
I
I

I
I .

starting
at

SPLASH GUARDS

sso4o

ss1 ,so . .
Installed

BED RAILS

$

New Meigs
booster dub
to meet

REMIER
XPERIENCE
.,

WRECK AT THIRD - Cincinnati third baseman Aaron Boone, right, takes the late throw as Los Angeles Dodgers' Jeff
Green (15) .slides Into third for a triple in the third inning Wednesday. (AP)
·· ·

Bengals waive
first-year
fullback

Auto, V-6,
Only
20,000
mile&amp; •.

Step side,

HUNTINGTON - Former M arshall defensive tackle
Giradie MerCer has signed
with N ew England .
Mercer was picked up by
th e Patriots Tuesday after
being cut'by the Philadelphia
Eagles last week.
Mercer, who wasn't picked
in the· 2000 draft, originally
.• ·signed with Carolina as a free
agent.
He'll join another former
Marshall standout in New
England, wide receiver Troy
Brown. '

·-

ROCK SPRINGS - The
newly form ed Meigs Marauder Sideliner Booster C lub will
meet Sunday at 1:00 p.m. in
Meigs High School's Cafeteria. The club is a being formed
as a booster club to promote
Meigs Marauder football .
Any Meigs High School
football fan is urged to attend
to make plans for the upcoming season. For more jnformation you can call head football
coach Mike Chancey at 992- ·
006f or 992-2158.

.

.

'

LOS ANGELES . (AP) Aaron
'This is a character-building yea r winning nm , Griffey hit his ·ninth
Boone thinks the Cincinnati Reds can right h ere," said Dmitri Young, who had · homer of the season, ·off reliever Al
still enjoy this season despite being far three RBis and three hits against the Reyes. He needs three more before
NL West leaders. "Whether we finish at Aug. 24 to beco111e the youngest player
removed from the playoff race,
,N Baoite had four of the R E'ds: seus~s .: :a_QO '~~~tC!ver, this is the way we're ··:t&lt;r ~;J; .. r~ ·
·'r.~ ,.
high 20 hits in a 10-5 win over tl)e tos goi:ng to have to play from th is p9int
Left-bander Lan ce Davis (5-1) won
Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night. . on. We have to play like young lions.
his fourth straight start, becoming the
"We still have a chance to have. a fun- Ken Griffey Jr. ,-frustrated because of first rookie left-handel- to start a season .•
seaso n, and we feel real good abo ut the a troublesome left hamstring th at cost 5-1 for th e R eds since Fred Baczewski
team we're running o ut there now," him 50 games - and the re cent trades won six of his fir st seven decisions in
1953. D avis allowed three runs and six
Boon e said after. the R'eds won their of a few veterans to save mon ey fifth straight.
hinted at retirement last Friday before hits in six innings, striking out three
''We feel like we have a chance to retracting his remarks a day later after and walking none.
C incinnati pulled ahead 5-3 with a
return the (avor for some of the beat- talking with general manager Jim Bowinb" we've been taking for the first co u- den.
five-run fifth agaitmTerry Adams (7-4),
pte of months. We're finally a little bit
"Listening to aU th at talk, l can see en rou.te to its seventh victory in eight
more healthy, we've added a couple why Junior got mad," Youn g said. "He games.
more pieces and our yoqnger guys are saw a good young nucleu s, and then he
"They're a different team than w hen
saw them trying to trade everybody we fir st went to Cincinnati," Adams
starting to pitch welL"
Cincinnati's postseason aspirations away. So he had to put his foot down , said. "Their lineup is stacked. They've
collapsed · with a 6-22 record in May, and I applaud him for that."
got Todd Walker, Adam Dunn and a
and. just 16 victories in the first 53
One ni ght after robbing Shawn healthy Griffey - and they'r~ all very
Green of a home run and scoring the aggressive hitters."
hort1e games.

MANKATO, Minn. (AP)
-For the Minnesota Vikings,
training camp goes on .
With heavy hearts, the
Vikings planned to return to
the practice field Thursday . . - - - - -....... trying
to
focus
on
football
when th eir
thoughts
were surely
with
their
fallen friend,
Korey
Stringer.
Stringer
"We know
we have to
play football.' But that's not on
our mind right now," Vikings
coach Dennis Green said
Wednesday. "We have lost a
27 -year-old man and we are
going to mi'ss him."
Stringer, a 335-pound Pro
Bowl right tackle who started
every game for Minnesota the
last two sea&lt;ons, collapsed following an intense practice in
stifling heat and humidity
Tuesday morning and died 15
hours larer at a Mankato hospital. of · complications from
heat stroke.
"God needed the number
77 more than the Vikings," .
said owner R ed McCombs,
who remembered no conversations with Stringer about
football ::- otrly.,w.arm greetings. ''I couldn't hug much of
him, because l couldn't get
around him."
His dea th shocked nearly
everyon e in the Vikings community.
''I 've never seen h.tm rna d,
I've never see n him argue
with a player," said teammate
Randy Moss, who broke
down during a news conference. " I think if he's looking
down on us right now, he sees
all the pain that we feeL But at
the same time, he knows the
·show n1ust go on."

Please SH Xuxxn, XX

Northwestern preseason Big Ten grid favorite
.

C HI CAGO
(AP)
Northwes tern, ·
which
shared last season's Big Ten
title with Purdue and
Michigan,
was
chosen
Wednesday in a media poll
as the pre season favorite to
win the 200 I conferemce
championsh ip!
The Wildca ts return 10
starters from a high-scoring
offense led by tailba ck
D amien Anderson, who was

'

-Buckeyes picked to fini~ t~ir~·~~:
cho se as the . preseaso n
"It's gratifying to have
offensive player of th e year.· so me p eo ple think we can
Wisconsin ta ckle Welldell be a good tea m," North Bryant was the media westeril coac h R andy Walkc hoi ce as preseaso n de fen- er said Wed nesday. "But I
sive player of th e year.
always ta,ke the ca uti o us
Michigan was picked to approach."
finish seco nd , followed by
Walker noted that many
O hio State, under fir st-year preseason publication s last
head coach Jim Tressel.
. seaso n c hos e th e Wildcats

for last place in th e co nferen ce. But they won six of
eight conferen ce games and
went 8-3 before being beaten 66- 17 loss by N ebras ka
in the Al amo Bowl.
Northwestern return s 16
start ers ove rall. MicMga o
has 12 starters back, incl uding eight on defense, and

Ohio State has 13 returning
starters.
Anderson, fifth in last
yea r's Heisman Trophy balloting, rushed for 2,063~
yards and scored 23 touch- '
downs.
Brya nt will be a four-year
start er for the Badgers, w ho
won the Sun Bowl last season. He made six sac ks a
yea r ago and was a finalist
for the Lonibardi Award.

lbome doesn't hurt Ks, but
Cordova does in Tribe win
CLEVELAND (AP) - Oakland manager
Art Howe didn't want Jim Thome to beat
him. So Marty Cordova did instead.
Cordova hit a tiebreaking, two- run single
in the seventh inning to help the C leveland
Indians defeat the Athletics 6-5 Wednesday
night and ruin Howe's risky strategy.
With the game tied at 4 in the seventh ,
Howe ordered Thome walked wi th nobody
on and two outs after Jim Mecir feU b ~,hind
in the count 2~0 to the AL home run leader.
.. T hom e .as JUSt
. . so hot," Howe sa1'd. " [ was
not going to let him bea t us. Somebody else
beats us, I can live with that."
EUis Burks, activated earli er in . the day'
after recovering from a broken ti ght thumb,
followed with a double to left, sending
Thome to third . Then Cordova delivered ,
· poking a 2-1 pitch from Mecir (2-B) to rif ht
field.
t
.
'\.,
'

"Any time you get the winning hit, it fe els
good," Cordova said.
The Indians moved 1 1/ 2 ga mes ahead of
seco nd- place Minn esota in the AL Central.
T he Twins lost 3-1 in Toro nto.
" ! would have wa lked Thome, too," Burks
said :" I'm fresh off th.e DL, so why not challenge me instead of one of the hottest hitters
i'n the league?"
But Cordova made Howe pay for a gamble th at put the go-a head run on base.
"Marty got the big hit," Indians manager
C harlie Man uel said. " H e's bee n pu lli ng off
the ball, but he adj usted and went the other
way again st a tough pitcher."
Danys Baez (2-0) pitched a scoreless
inning, and John R ocker worked his way
into and out of a jam in the eighth. Bob
Wickman a lso ran into trouble in the nin th
before getting hi s 20th s've in 22 chances.

GONE- Cleve'land 's Jim Thome smacks a two run home run
off Oakland Athletics pitcher Erik Hiljus Wednesday. (AP)

.

.

�Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

11aunday, August 2, 2001

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

first three inning. and held on
to beat Texas.
Chuck Knoblauch and Paul
O 'Neill homered m the first,
Alfonso Soriano and Derek
Jeter hit two-run homers in
the second and Tino Martinez
made it 8-1 with a leadoff shot
in the third off Rob Bell . (4-

&amp;at .Dtvl.,on

w

Allanta
Philadelphia
Florida
New Yoril:
Montreal

60
58
54

50
46

L Pet GB
47 .561
49 .542
2
o2 .509 5 ~
58 .463 10 ~
62 .426 14'1r

Cinclnnad 10, Los Angelos 5
San Francisco J, ~ t
Pli~ 8, Colorado 1, 6 imings,
rain

AmeriCJin LMgue

Ent Dlvtolon

w

L Pet
42 .608
Boston
60 48 .566
Toronto
50 58 .463
Baltimore
45 63 .417
Tampa Bay
35 72 .327
Control Dlvlolon
w L Pet
61 45 .576
.Cleveland
60 47 .561
Minnesota
Chicago
52 ·53 .495
Detroit
46 59 .438
Kansas City
42 65 .393

New York

Todey'o a . Fiorida (Knotls ().()) at MilwaukBe (leY·
rault 4-6), 2:05p.m.
Philadelphia ICoWn 1-1 I at CQiorado
(Thomson CJ.3), 3:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (McKnig:lt 1.0) at San Francisco (Rueter 1().7), 3:35p.m.
L

G8

Te~~:as (Myette

4'•

15'h
20~

30

Saints top pick
still unsigned

TOdOy 'o Gamel
Minnesota (Reed Cl-0) at Toronto (Car- .
·
pentef7·8), 12:35 p.m.

65

0- t ) at N.Y. Yankees :

(Musslna 11 ·8), t :05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Siurtze 5·9) at Battlmore
(Mec1Jro CJ.2), 3:05 p.J(l.
Anaheim (Aapp 3·9) at Boston (Saber·
hagen t ·O), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Pineiro 1·0) at Detroit (Pettyjohn 0·3), 7:05 p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 12·6) at Cleveland
{Sabathia 10·3), 7:05p.m.
Kansas Oily (Suppan 4·9) at Chicago
White Sox (K.Wells 8·6) , 8:05p.m.

,
•
'
:
.
·

Jose Canseco outdid even
Central Dlvlalon
w L Pet GB
GB
Babe Ruth.
Chicago
62 44 .585
Montreal (Vazquez 9·1 0) at Arizona
Houston
In a Bambinolike perfor58 49 .542
4'1.
~~
(lopez CJ.I), 4:35p.m.
St. Lou is
54 51 .514
7'1.
,
8~
mance, Canseco told four
Cllcago Cubs (Bore 7-5) at San Diego
Milwaukee
45 60 .429 16'!.
14'1.
•
Clncinnall.
43 63 .406
19 (Williams Nl), 5:05 p.m.
young cancer patients he
'
1~~
N.Y
.
Mels
(Trach,..
5-10)
at
Houston
Pittsbur{ll
41 65 .387 21
Weal Division
'
Friday's Gamel
,
hoped to homer for them
(Aslacio 6-13), 8:05p.m.
.
Weat Dhtlakx't
. w L Pel GB
Texas (HoflinQ 8·8) at Boston (Wake- .
(Giavine 1().5) at St. Louis (Smith
w L Pet GB 3-o),Atlanta
field 6..fi), 7:05 p.m.
,
Seanle
77 30 .720
Wednesday night, then hit ty;o,
8:10p.m.
LOS Angeles
61 47 .565
Oakland
57 50 .533 20
.Baltimore (Mercedes ~· 12) at. Toronto ~
Cincinnati
(Dessens
6-8)
at
los
Ange(es
leading
the
),
Arizona
60 47 .561
Anaheim
55 52 .514 . 22 (Escobar 2·5), 7:05p.m.
,
(Prokopec 6-5), tO: tO p.m.
San Francisco
59 49 .546
2
Texas
48 59 . .449 . 29
Oakland (Hudson 12·6) at Detroit ,
Chicago White 1).
Friday's
Games
San Diego
52 55 .486 8Yr
{Weaver 10·9), 7:05p.m.
•
FIO&lt;ida (Penny 7·5) at St. Louis {MorTis
Sox to a 7-6
COlorado
45 62 .421 15'!. t2-7), 5:40p.m .. lsi game
Mariano Rivera earned his
Seattle (Moyer 11·5) at Cleveland :
Tuetd.l"'s Gemea
Anaheim 4, Boston 3
(COioo 1CJ.7), 7:05p.m.
•
win over the 200th career save and 35th of
Atlanta (Burken ft.-8) at Milwaukee
•
Anaheim (Washbum 9-4) at N.Y. Yan·
Toronto 3, Minnesota 1
(WrigN
8-7),
8:05p.m.
.Kansas
City the season, dosing out the
Houston 3, N.Y. Me1s 2, 10 mrgs
Detroit 4, Seattle 2
kees (Penlne 11 ·6), 7:05 o.m.
·
Montreal (A(mas Jr. 8-10) at Houston
Florida 5, MitwaukBe 1
Texas 6, N.Y. Yankees 2
Kansas City (Durbin 7·9) at Minnesota :
Royals.
(Reynolds
9-1
0),
8:05
p.m.
Yankees' ninth win in I 0
51. Lou~ 6, Atlanla 2 .
(Radke tG-8), 8:05p.m.
Oakland 11 , Ctevelar&lt;f 2
Florida (Sarchez 2.0) at St. Louis (Benes
Colooldo 7, Philadelpl11a 6
"I said hopefully I can hit a games.
Tampa Bay 5, Baltimore 4
Tampa Bay (Bterbrodt 0·0) at Chicago
8-6),
DH,
2r&lt;f
II""'"
Arizona 3, ~ 1
Kansas City 2, Chicago White Sox 1, White Sox (Buehrle 8·6), 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh {J.Anderson 6-10) at Colorado
couple home runs for you
Chicago Culls 7, San Dlago 3
10 innings
(Hampton 1().8), 9:05p.m.
Clrcinnati 3, Los Angelos 1, II Innings
guys. But I also said, 'If I don't,
· Wedn11d1y'e G1me1
N.Y. Mets (Leiter 6-8) at Arizona (JohnSan Frant:loco 8, Plllsllurgh 7, 11 Mings son 13-5), 10:05 p.m.
Anaheim
4, Boston 2
watch batting practice because
·;-~
Toronto 3, Minnesota 1
Circimati (Brower 5-7) at San Diego
St.
Louis
4,
Atlanta
0
I'll probably hit a couple out in
(Jarvis 6-8), 10:05 p.m.
Seattle 7, Detrolt 1
N.Y. Mels 8, Houston 2, IO'I""ngs
Chicago
Cubs
(Wood
9-6)
at
Los
AngeN.Y.
Yankota D. To&gt;os 7
batting practice,"' Canseco said.
Fkiflda 5, Mitwaukll 4, 10 mingo
les (Park 1Hl), 10:10 p.m. . ·
Cleveland 8, 08ktand 5
Mootraal
8.
Arizona·S
Phllade~la (Daai1Q.3) at San Frarci ..
On Cancer Survivors Night,
Baltimore 8, Tampe Bay 5
Scott Schoeneweis (8-8)
San Diogo 4, Chicago Cubl3
co (Clfllz 1Nl), 10:3S.p.m.
Chicago Whtto So• 7, Kanus City 6
450 patients and their families pitched into the eighth inning
turned out at Comiskey Park. and Troy Glaus homered to
The children, two boys and lead charging Anaheim to vicrwo girls, were standing near tory at Boston.
the on-deck circle during batTim Salmon also homered
ting practice, meeting the play- for the Angels, who have won
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
game winning streak.
ers and getting their auto- 11 of 12 road games. Anaheim
pinch hitter, with five doubles
Jason
Schmidt
needed
only
a
McGwire's last nine hits and five RBis, since coming
graphs.
has won 12 of 16 overall to
Canseco wasn't trying to be · move within 5 1/2 games of couple of days to join the club have all been home runs. He back from a rwo-month stint
former Pittsburgh stars also flied out twice to the on the disabled list.
-'Ruth, who reportedly once the Red Sox, who lead the beating the Pirates.
warning track at Busch Stadicalled .a home run for a sick wild card race.
NL Central-leading ChicaNewly acquired Matt LawBarry
Bonds'
Backed
by
um.
go
committed
two
errors
in
child. But he performed like
ton
hit a go-ahead single and
Hideo Nomo (11-5) gave
major league-leading 46th
him.
the seventh to help the Padres' New York posted its biggest
up four runs in 7 2-3 innings
comeback.
Canseco hit a three-run to snap his five-start winning · home run, Schmidt pitched
extra inning ever, scoring six
one-hit
ball
for
homer in the first off Chris streak.
times in the 1Oth.
,
seven innings in
George (0-2) and a two-run
Lawton, ' obtained from ;
his San Francisshot in the third. Told about
Minnesota this week for Rick ;
co debut as the
Lee Stevens .and Orlando
Canseco's talk with the kids,
Reed, had two hits in the :
Giants
downed
Cabrera homered at Bank
teammate Ray Durham's eyes
leadoff spot.
the Pirates 3-1 Wednesday One Ballpark as Montreal
Randy Wolf gave up four
widened in disbelief.
Bruce Chen, making his first ;
night.
ended its four-game losing hits
and
Philadelphia
"That's pretty impressive;'
start since being traded from ·
Roy Halladay (1-1) pitched
Traded by last-place Pitts- streak.
stopped a four-game losing Philadelphia to the Mets last I
Durham said, shaking his head. eight strong innings to win for
Luis Gonzalez went 4-for-4 streak. The game at' Coors weekend, held Houston score- :
"If I said that and went out the first time in more than a burgh on Monday, Schmidt
drew
a
standing
ovation
from
with
his 42nd homer for Ari - Field was called in the top of less until the seventh inning at :
there, I think I'd be 0-for-4, 0- year as host Toronto handed
fans at Pacific Bell Park when zona. His solo home run gave seventh inning because of Enron Field.
for-5."
:
Minnesota its fifth straight
he
headed to the dugout after him a major league-leading rain.
In other .games, it was New loss.
his last inning.
103 RBis.
Wolf was credited with his
York 9, Texas 7; Anaheim 4,
The Twins matched their
"I
was
already
amped
to
be
a
second career complete
Boston 2; Cleveland 6, Oakland longest losing streak of the
part
of
this,
and
walking
off
the
game. The Phillies' bullpen
IS;Toronto 3, Minnesota 1; Seat- season and have dropped 14 of
field
like
.that
just
adds
to
the
gave up game-ending home
tle 7, Detroit 1; and Baltimore 17. Minnesota fell 1 I /2
Pinch-hitter Charles John- :
excitement,"
Schmidt
said.
runs
in
the
last
three
losses
.
6, Tampa Bay 5.
son's
two-out homer tied it in ·
games behind AL CentralThe
Giants
won
their
sevTodd
Pratt
·hit
his
first
Canseco's 454 career home leading Cleveland.
the ninth inning and Aorida ·'
enth
in
a
row
and
closed
withTony
Gwynn
delivered
home run sioce being traded won in the 1Oth at Miller :
runs moved him past Carl Yasin
two
games
of
Los
Angeles
in
another
key
pinch
hit,
douby
the Mets last weekend, Park..
trzemski (452) for 22nd in
.\.. :, · '·· 11 1 . ~ " i
NL
West.
the
bling
quring
a
three-run
rally
and Doug Glanville and Pat
baseball history The five RBis
Derrek Lee double.d to start :
Schmidt got another benefit, in· the seventh inning at San Burrell also connected. Col- a three-run rally in the ninth, :
gave Canseco a total of 1,3 78,
too.
He's playing with Bonds, Diego.
orado's Denny Neagle fell to capped by Johnson's two - run
passing Johnny Bench for 57th
rather than pitching to the
Gwynn
.
is
·
7
-for-12
as
a•
0-4
in his last six starts.homer. ·
·
,
on the.. career chart.
Brei Boone reached 100
one-time Pittsburgh slugger.
The homers - both off RBis, Paul Abbott (11-2) won
Bonds hit his 540th career
Royals starter Chris George (0- his ninth straight decision and
home run, a solo shot in the
2) - were Canseco's seventh . Seattle, despite hitting into a
first inning.
and eighth of the season.
triple play, won at Detroit.
Bonds stayed on the record
"I used to collect Canseco
The Tigers turned their first
pace set by Babe Ruth, who
baseball cards in high school;' triple play in nine years in the
also hit 46 homers in 108
George said. "I tried to put that fourth
inning.
Mark
games for the New York Yanout of my head."
,
McLemore hit a line drive to
kees in 1921. Mark McGwire
Royce Clayton also homered second baseman Damion
had 45 home runs through
for the White Sox, ~nd Dan Easley with men on first and
108 games on his way to a
#766
Wright (1-0) gave up four runs second running.
record 70 in 1998.
and seven hits in five innings in
Jason Kendall, Schmidt's
his first major league start. ·
·longtime catcher, homered for
Sandy Alomar got his 1,000th
the lone hit against the new
career hit with a single in the
Giants pitcher.
second inning.

AL

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The New Orleans Saints'
top · pick, running back
Deuce McAllister, says
money is not keeping him
out of training camp.
McAllister, selected 23rd
overall in the April draft, said
he's eager to join the team,
and all that is needed is a fair
offer fiom the Saints.
"1 don't want my teammates to think that this is all
about No. 22 or about being
a top-iO player;• McAllister
said. "I wasn't drafted
the
top 10, so I have to accept
that.
"All I want is a fair chance
to earn my money. If I'm
producing. then pay me so.
It's not as ifl'm copping out
and looking to miss prac-

_
.-

,_,.•

Angels 4,
Reel Sox 2

m

Pair of former Pirates help Giants beat Pittsburgh

tice."

Blue Jays 3,
Twins 1

Expos 8,

NL

Phlllies a,
Rockies 1

The

Mariners 7.·

'ngers 1

i

_j

Yankees 9,
Rangers 7
Sterling Hitchcock (1-0)
won in his return to New
York as the Yankees hit a season-high five homers in the

· Jerry Hairston hit a two-run
homer to cap Baltimore's first
ninth-inning comeback of the
season.
The Orioles, 0-59 when
trailing after eight innings
before Wednesday, rallied for
three runs against Esteban Yan
(3-4).

cardinals 4,
Braves 0

DolPHINS

Mark McGwire hit his
573rd home run and tied Harmon Killebrew for fifth place
on the career list as St. Louis
stopped Greg Maddux's 10-

2001
Prix
GT
2
.
001
G
d
p
·
SE
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ran rue
Slat • CIDIIJir w/gnphlc lllllllzlr

New

.

4 Dr • CD Diner. Power Slit

s19 995 ~:wsrsroa

Indians activate Burks; recall pitcher qrew

(

string in the second game of
a doubleheader Saturday.
Diaz has a swollen right
thumb, which was hit by a
foul tip during an 11-2 loss
to Oakland on Tuesday
night.
"X-rays on Diaz were
negative, but the thumb is
pretty sore, so we'll sit him
down for a couple days,"
Manuel said.
"The doc said Juan is still
· sore and probably won't play
until the weekend. I've got
no thought about putting
him on the disabled list. The
only place I want Juan is in
the lineup."
Gonzale~ has 27 homers,
95 RBis and his .344 average is second in the AL to
teammate Roberto Alomar,
who also is banged up.
"Robbie's very sore, but
he's playing," Manuel said . .
Alomar has a bruise
behind his right knee. The
second baseman got the

Washington linebacker
LaV.U: Arrington sprained his
right shoulder in a contact
driB and was scheduled for
X -rays.
Jeff George, still with a sore
arm, did not throw Wednesday morning for the third
consecutive practice.
'Jeff wanted to go today,
and I am very conservative;•
Redskins coach Marty

•

4Dr· 3A lher VB •Power Wlndo• .Nl-'~ "~ • ·cnalse Control· Casseae
·Auto· 3,000 mile dema
·

INDIANS BASEBALL
CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Indians, battling both injuries and the
1
• Minnesota Twins in the AL
Central race, boosted their
offense Wednesday by activating outfielder Ellis Burks.
The Indians also recalled
right-handed pitcher Tim
Drew from Triple-A Buffalo
and optioned right-banders
jake Westbrook and Ryan
lJrese to the Bisons.
· Burks, sidelined since July
16 with a broken right
thumb, was in. the starting
lineup against the Oakland
Athletics, but all-star outfielder Juan Gonzalez and
Einar Diaz were out with
injuries.
.
"Both -are day-to-day,"
manager Charlie Manuel
said. ''I'm glad we got Ellis
back. He's important to the
lineup. But so are Juan and
Einar."
Gonzalez has not · played
since pulling his left ham-

REDSKINS

2001 Grand Hm Sf 1 20,01 Buick
Century
Power 1111
c\ A'

injury when he collided
with right · fielder Jalbert
Cabrera while trying to
make a catch Tuesday night.
' Burks had his right thumb
broken when hit by a pitch
by Houston's Octavio Dote!
and was suhsequently placed
on the disabled list July 21 ,
retroactive to July 16.
"I've been taking batting
practice and the thumb feels
fine," Burks said.
Drew was 6-3 with a 3. 93
ERA in 13 starts at Buffalo
after being optioned to the
minors May 12. Before that,
he went 0-1 with a 6. 75
ERA in five starts for the
Indians.
Drese made his major
league debut Sunday in
Detroit, pitching 4 · 1-3
innings. He had a 3.38 ERA
in two outings covering 5 13 innings overall.
Westbrook was · 3-3 with a
5.40 ERA in 16 gam_es for
C leveland this year.
(

"~"On/!16J 900 •

slB}soo·

1999 Cad/llilc Seu//le SLS

1999 montiinil Uilns

Prices after

l'eilrlescent Red- still undu wt~mmtgt
Waa

$29,900

'$26 900

The New York Jets' likely
lost nose tackle Jason Ferguson for the rest of the preseason with a slight tear in his
right shoulder.
Coach Herman Edwards
said Ferguson, who signed a
four-year, $12.7 million contract in the offieason to stay
with the Jets, will need to
wear a harness for thre e
weeks. It could be another
two weeks before he is ready
to play, which would bring
the team up to its season
opener with Indianapolis.
"The rotator cuff kind of
went out;' Edmrds said.
[f Ferguson hasn't healed
in three weeks, he will
require surgery that . would
sideline him for the season.

~cp~yBucca-'

Miami Dolphins receiver
Dedric Ward is expected to
miss 4-to-6 weeks with a
stress fracture in his foot.
Ward, who felt soreness in
his foot while running pass
routes, will undergo surgery
to repair the injury Thursday.
Ward, signed as an unrestricted free agent in April,
was ·listed as a backup to
starter Oronde Gadsden. He
spmt the past four seasons
with the New York Jets and
caught 54 passes for 801
yards last season.
"Fortunately that's a posicion where we have some
depth;' coach Dave Wannstedt said." And he'll be back."

Fair Days

Orioles 6,
Devil Rays 5

JETS

humidity, though he said it
was not a direct response to
neers tried to shore up their . the heat-related death of
punting situation, signing Minnesota Viking. tackle
Jason Malecki signed a one- Korey Stringer.
year contract.
Jauron said the team had a
The Bucs lost Mark Roy- shortage of healthy defensive
als, the team's punter the last and offensive tackles and he
two seasons, with a knee did not want to take a
injury on the first day of chance . of depleting the
training camp: Royals is team's depth three days
expected to miss 3-to- 4 before ·Saturday's preseason
weeks with a sprained ligaopener.
ment.
"When we do that, we're
Malecki, who played with
NFL Europe's Amsterdam wearing out certain guys,
Admirals this offieason, joins putting more stress on
Andn!w Bayes as the only them:'Jauron said. "We don't
want to .do that. We mnt to
punters in camp.
make sure they· have their ·

Marlins 5,
Brewers 4

Padres 4,
Cubs:J

Schortenheimer said. "[ don't
want to take a two-three-day
injury and make it a ty;othree-week injury."
Tight
end
Stephen
Alexander missed his second
day of rractice with a
strained hamstring.

McAllister and the Saints
have agreed on the basic
parameters of a six-year; $6.2
million contract, said MeAllister's agent, Ben Dogra.
"This whole situation is
not good· for lum:· Saints
coach Jim Haslett said. "It's
BEARS
not really the best way to
Chicago Bears coach Dick
start out your career. Sooner Jauron canceled Wednesday
or later, Deuce just needs to afternoon's practice because
say: 'I want to play football:" of oppressive heat and high

Mets 8,
Astros 2

Diamondbacks 5

Browns sign Warren to six-year deal

NFL CAMPS

AROUND THE DIAMOND
N.lliONol I.Nguo

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Page Bl

\

Canseco promises
homer, delivers two

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

legs for Saturday night."

BEREA;' Ohio (AP) - A
slimmed down Gerard Warren
joined the Gleveland Browns
on Wednesday with a hefty contract.
Warren, who admitted being
overweight during the team's
mini-camps, ended his contract
holdout and arriwd at training
camp after signing a six-year,
$33.6 milli on deal.
''I'm j ust htce to compliment
this defense and hopefully take
the Browns to the Super Bowl,''
Warren said.
Dressed in shorts and Browns'
baseball camp, Warren appeared
to be at least 15 pounds lighter
than he was when he participated in the club's final mini-camp
mJune. .
Back then, he looked slow
during drills and said he was out
of shape after hitting the banquet circuit following an AllAmerican junior season at the
University of Florida:
Warren said h e has been
working out two ho urs daily
with the Gators football team in
Gainesville, Fla ., and wei ghed in
at 315 pounds - 7 po unds less
than his listed playing weight.
''I'm relieved and happy to be
back;' he said.
So are the Browns.
Cleveland is shifting secondyear end Courtney Brown ·over
to the right side of the. defensive
line alongside Warren, giving
the Browns a formidable front.

BROWNS SIGN TOP PICK - Cleveland Browns first round draft pick Gerard Warren answers
questions during a news conference In this April 21 file photo in Berea, Ohio. Warren j oined
the Browns on Wednesday with a hefty contract. (AP)

Browns coach Butch Davis waitin g around for his contract
said Warren has already missed . to be finalized, and stayed in
some valuable pracn,e time, but touch with running back Jam es
can hopefully make it u p quick- Jackson for updates from camp.
ly.
" It was eating me up,' ' he said.
" He's going to make a lot of
Warren will practi ce fo r the
rookie mistakes,' ' said Davis, first time on Thursd1y and said
who added that Warren would- he expects to play in the
n'r be punished for missing 14 Browns' scrimmage on Sanm:Uy
prac ti ces. "The re's nothin g in Edinboro. Pa. , against the
pu nit ive o ther than what he has . Buff.1lo Bills.
already done to ·him self."
Before that, though, he needs
Warren said it was diffic ult to get up to speed.

· " I've got a lot of learn ing to
do," he said." A lot of overtime."
Warren 's contract includes a
two-tier, S12 million signing
bonus, soid team president Carmen Policy. lf Warren h its certain incentives, the total., deal
could exceed $45 million .
Policy said the contract was
agreed to in principle at 6 a.m.
following neatly 18 hours of
Cllks between the club and Warren's agent. Joel Seg;tl.

Warrick could be more dangerous in second season
GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP) - Peter season, accounting for seven of the team's only deep threat, Darnay Scott.
Warrick won't promise that he's going to 21 · tou chdowns and becoming the first
"Last year was more like coming into
match .the impressive numbers he put up player in team history to score receiving, Florida St1te my first year, not knowing
during his rookie season.
rushing and kick- return touchdowns in what's going to happen or what's going
But he will guarantee .that the Cincin- the same season.
on," he said. "This year, it's more like 'Pete
nati Bengals wi~ be much improved over
In addition to his four TO catches, he has arrived.' It's better for me this year.
the team that won only four games last had scoring runs of77 and 4 yards and an
" .. . With Darnay coming back, that will
. electr&gt;f)oin g 82-yard punt return against take some of the pressure off m e. People
year.
"We're going to win '!lor~, no doubt," Jacksonville. He finished the season with
have to be . worried about Darnay's
the 5-foot-11, 195-pound receiver sai~ 51 catches for 592 yards and added speed and big play ability. That will just
between training camp sessions at another 148 rushing yards on 16 carries. open things up for me."
Georgetown College. "We just need
The numbers· were even more impresThe Ben gals . rook Warrick with the
more people to step up and lead."
. sivc considering Warnck was _a untested fourth overall ptck of the 2000 .draft &lt;;mt
Warrick may be the catalyst the Ben- rooki e thrust into ~he spotligl1t 7 dutill'g-~-or !'londa State, 'whete 'he senhe A!htt:itte
gals have been searching for for nearly .a trai~i~g camp follmvmg, a season ~endmg Com. Conferenc e · rec ord for career
decade. He did it all for Cmcmnatl last leg InJUry to the Bengals top recetver and recetvmg yard~ wtth 3,5 17.

will

--

BilLS
After relentless urging,
Buffalo Bills linebacker
Corey Moore was activated
off the physically unable td
perform list after missing the
first six days of training camp.
Moore's impatience boiled
over after spending the
morning session on the sideline because team ·trainers
considered him out of conclition after missing time
while recovering fiom being
shot in the left leg in June.
"I argued with the trainers;' Moore said." I told them
I'd rather be out here instead
-of standing around and getring stiff."
With the blessing of coach
Gregg Williams, the training
.staff allowed Moore to participate in the light afternoon
.
Practice.
· ." It felt good.You can stand
on the sidelines and get all
the mental reps you want,
but that only helps a little;'
Moore said. "It just feels
good to be here totally
focusing on football."

-Browns may not go
away for summer camp

"1"/n stock- Loaded- 1 E~tt

$15 '900
•

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The
. CJeyeland Browns may not be
moving their summer training
camp after all.
Browns coach Butch Davis
wants to relocate his team to a
summer headquarters away
from the dub's year-round
training facility here .to build
better team chemistry and avoid
distractions fur his players.
The club had been negotiat~
ing with Ohio Northern in Ada
to host the dub next year, but
the school was unable to build a
new stadium to . accommodate
the Browns.
"We had been negotiating
with them, and it's just not
going to work," team president
Carmen Policy said. "They bent
Ol'er backward for us and we

bent over backw•rd for them:'
Policy said the team is pursuing other locations including
Oberlin College and Hiram
College, the Browns' training
home fiom 1952 to 1974.
Policy added that ·there's a
strong chance the club may stay
put after drawing big crowds
during an energetic opening
week of practice in Berea under
Davis.
"The more the coach is here, .
the·stronger it gets,'' Policy said.
"I think he's starting to really
like it. If nothing works for us,
we'll just stay here:·
There's also a possibility the
Browns may open camp at an
undisclosed location and spend
I 0 to 14 days there before
returning to Berea.
I

I'

·~

�Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

11aunday, August 2, 2001

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

first three inning. and held on
to beat Texas.
Chuck Knoblauch and Paul
O 'Neill homered m the first,
Alfonso Soriano and Derek
Jeter hit two-run homers in
the second and Tino Martinez
made it 8-1 with a leadoff shot
in the third off Rob Bell . (4-

&amp;at .Dtvl.,on

w

Allanta
Philadelphia
Florida
New Yoril:
Montreal

60
58
54

50
46

L Pet GB
47 .561
49 .542
2
o2 .509 5 ~
58 .463 10 ~
62 .426 14'1r

Cinclnnad 10, Los Angelos 5
San Francisco J, ~ t
Pli~ 8, Colorado 1, 6 imings,
rain

AmeriCJin LMgue

Ent Dlvtolon

w

L Pet
42 .608
Boston
60 48 .566
Toronto
50 58 .463
Baltimore
45 63 .417
Tampa Bay
35 72 .327
Control Dlvlolon
w L Pet
61 45 .576
.Cleveland
60 47 .561
Minnesota
Chicago
52 ·53 .495
Detroit
46 59 .438
Kansas City
42 65 .393

New York

Todey'o a . Fiorida (Knotls ().()) at MilwaukBe (leY·
rault 4-6), 2:05p.m.
Philadelphia ICoWn 1-1 I at CQiorado
(Thomson CJ.3), 3:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (McKnig:lt 1.0) at San Francisco (Rueter 1().7), 3:35p.m.
L

G8

Te~~:as (Myette

4'•

15'h
20~

30

Saints top pick
still unsigned

TOdOy 'o Gamel
Minnesota (Reed Cl-0) at Toronto (Car- .
·
pentef7·8), 12:35 p.m.

65

0- t ) at N.Y. Yankees :

(Musslna 11 ·8), t :05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Siurtze 5·9) at Battlmore
(Mec1Jro CJ.2), 3:05 p.J(l.
Anaheim (Aapp 3·9) at Boston (Saber·
hagen t ·O), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Pineiro 1·0) at Detroit (Pettyjohn 0·3), 7:05 p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 12·6) at Cleveland
{Sabathia 10·3), 7:05p.m.
Kansas Oily (Suppan 4·9) at Chicago
White Sox (K.Wells 8·6) , 8:05p.m.

,
•
'
:
.
·

Jose Canseco outdid even
Central Dlvlalon
w L Pet GB
GB
Babe Ruth.
Chicago
62 44 .585
Montreal (Vazquez 9·1 0) at Arizona
Houston
In a Bambinolike perfor58 49 .542
4'1.
~~
(lopez CJ.I), 4:35p.m.
St. Lou is
54 51 .514
7'1.
,
8~
mance, Canseco told four
Cllcago Cubs (Bore 7-5) at San Diego
Milwaukee
45 60 .429 16'!.
14'1.
•
Clncinnall.
43 63 .406
19 (Williams Nl), 5:05 p.m.
young cancer patients he
'
1~~
N.Y
.
Mels
(Trach,..
5-10)
at
Houston
Pittsbur{ll
41 65 .387 21
Weal Division
'
Friday's Gamel
,
hoped to homer for them
(Aslacio 6-13), 8:05p.m.
.
Weat Dhtlakx't
. w L Pel GB
Texas (HoflinQ 8·8) at Boston (Wake- .
(Giavine 1().5) at St. Louis (Smith
w L Pet GB 3-o),Atlanta
field 6..fi), 7:05 p.m.
,
Seanle
77 30 .720
Wednesday night, then hit ty;o,
8:10p.m.
LOS Angeles
61 47 .565
Oakland
57 50 .533 20
.Baltimore (Mercedes ~· 12) at. Toronto ~
Cincinnati
(Dessens
6-8)
at
los
Ange(es
leading
the
),
Arizona
60 47 .561
Anaheim
55 52 .514 . 22 (Escobar 2·5), 7:05p.m.
,
(Prokopec 6-5), tO: tO p.m.
San Francisco
59 49 .546
2
Texas
48 59 . .449 . 29
Oakland (Hudson 12·6) at Detroit ,
Chicago White 1).
Friday's
Games
San Diego
52 55 .486 8Yr
{Weaver 10·9), 7:05p.m.
•
FIO&lt;ida (Penny 7·5) at St. Louis {MorTis
Sox to a 7-6
COlorado
45 62 .421 15'!. t2-7), 5:40p.m .. lsi game
Mariano Rivera earned his
Seattle (Moyer 11·5) at Cleveland :
Tuetd.l"'s Gemea
Anaheim 4, Boston 3
(COioo 1CJ.7), 7:05p.m.
•
win over the 200th career save and 35th of
Atlanta (Burken ft.-8) at Milwaukee
•
Anaheim (Washbum 9-4) at N.Y. Yan·
Toronto 3, Minnesota 1
(WrigN
8-7),
8:05p.m.
.Kansas
City the season, dosing out the
Houston 3, N.Y. Me1s 2, 10 mrgs
Detroit 4, Seattle 2
kees (Penlne 11 ·6), 7:05 o.m.
·
Montreal (A(mas Jr. 8-10) at Houston
Florida 5, MitwaukBe 1
Texas 6, N.Y. Yankees 2
Kansas City (Durbin 7·9) at Minnesota :
Royals.
(Reynolds
9-1
0),
8:05
p.m.
Yankees' ninth win in I 0
51. Lou~ 6, Atlanla 2 .
(Radke tG-8), 8:05p.m.
Oakland 11 , Ctevelar&lt;f 2
Florida (Sarchez 2.0) at St. Louis (Benes
Colooldo 7, Philadelpl11a 6
"I said hopefully I can hit a games.
Tampa Bay 5, Baltimore 4
Tampa Bay (Bterbrodt 0·0) at Chicago
8-6),
DH,
2r&lt;f
II""'"
Arizona 3, ~ 1
Kansas City 2, Chicago White Sox 1, White Sox (Buehrle 8·6), 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh {J.Anderson 6-10) at Colorado
couple home runs for you
Chicago Culls 7, San Dlago 3
10 innings
(Hampton 1().8), 9:05p.m.
Clrcinnati 3, Los Angelos 1, II Innings
guys. But I also said, 'If I don't,
· Wedn11d1y'e G1me1
N.Y. Mets (Leiter 6-8) at Arizona (JohnSan Frant:loco 8, Plllsllurgh 7, 11 Mings son 13-5), 10:05 p.m.
Anaheim
4, Boston 2
watch batting practice because
·;-~
Toronto 3, Minnesota 1
Circimati (Brower 5-7) at San Diego
St.
Louis
4,
Atlanta
0
I'll probably hit a couple out in
(Jarvis 6-8), 10:05 p.m.
Seattle 7, Detrolt 1
N.Y. Mels 8, Houston 2, IO'I""ngs
Chicago
Cubs
(Wood
9-6)
at
Los
AngeN.Y.
Yankota D. To&gt;os 7
batting practice,"' Canseco said.
Fkiflda 5, Mitwaukll 4, 10 mingo
les (Park 1Hl), 10:10 p.m. . ·
Cleveland 8, 08ktand 5
Mootraal
8.
Arizona·S
Phllade~la (Daai1Q.3) at San Frarci ..
On Cancer Survivors Night,
Baltimore 8, Tampe Bay 5
Scott Schoeneweis (8-8)
San Diogo 4, Chicago Cubl3
co (Clfllz 1Nl), 10:3S.p.m.
Chicago Whtto So• 7, Kanus City 6
450 patients and their families pitched into the eighth inning
turned out at Comiskey Park. and Troy Glaus homered to
The children, two boys and lead charging Anaheim to vicrwo girls, were standing near tory at Boston.
the on-deck circle during batTim Salmon also homered
ting practice, meeting the play- for the Angels, who have won
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
game winning streak.
ers and getting their auto- 11 of 12 road games. Anaheim
pinch hitter, with five doubles
Jason
Schmidt
needed
only
a
McGwire's last nine hits and five RBis, since coming
graphs.
has won 12 of 16 overall to
Canseco wasn't trying to be · move within 5 1/2 games of couple of days to join the club have all been home runs. He back from a rwo-month stint
former Pittsburgh stars also flied out twice to the on the disabled list.
-'Ruth, who reportedly once the Red Sox, who lead the beating the Pirates.
warning track at Busch Stadicalled .a home run for a sick wild card race.
NL Central-leading ChicaNewly acquired Matt LawBarry
Bonds'
Backed
by
um.
go
committed
two
errors
in
child. But he performed like
ton
hit a go-ahead single and
Hideo Nomo (11-5) gave
major league-leading 46th
him.
the seventh to help the Padres' New York posted its biggest
up four runs in 7 2-3 innings
comeback.
Canseco hit a three-run to snap his five-start winning · home run, Schmidt pitched
extra inning ever, scoring six
one-hit
ball
for
homer in the first off Chris streak.
times in the 1Oth.
,
seven innings in
George (0-2) and a two-run
Lawton, ' obtained from ;
his San Francisshot in the third. Told about
Minnesota this week for Rick ;
co debut as the
Lee Stevens .and Orlando
Canseco's talk with the kids,
Reed, had two hits in the :
Giants
downed
Cabrera homered at Bank
teammate Ray Durham's eyes
leadoff spot.
the Pirates 3-1 Wednesday One Ballpark as Montreal
Randy Wolf gave up four
widened in disbelief.
Bruce Chen, making his first ;
night.
ended its four-game losing hits
and
Philadelphia
"That's pretty impressive;'
start since being traded from ·
Roy Halladay (1-1) pitched
Traded by last-place Pitts- streak.
stopped a four-game losing Philadelphia to the Mets last I
Durham said, shaking his head. eight strong innings to win for
Luis Gonzalez went 4-for-4 streak. The game at' Coors weekend, held Houston score- :
"If I said that and went out the first time in more than a burgh on Monday, Schmidt
drew
a
standing
ovation
from
with
his 42nd homer for Ari - Field was called in the top of less until the seventh inning at :
there, I think I'd be 0-for-4, 0- year as host Toronto handed
fans at Pacific Bell Park when zona. His solo home run gave seventh inning because of Enron Field.
for-5."
:
Minnesota its fifth straight
he
headed to the dugout after him a major league-leading rain.
In other .games, it was New loss.
his last inning.
103 RBis.
Wolf was credited with his
York 9, Texas 7; Anaheim 4,
The Twins matched their
"I
was
already
amped
to
be
a
second career complete
Boston 2; Cleveland 6, Oakland longest losing streak of the
part
of
this,
and
walking
off
the
game. The Phillies' bullpen
IS;Toronto 3, Minnesota 1; Seat- season and have dropped 14 of
field
like
.that
just
adds
to
the
gave up game-ending home
tle 7, Detroit 1; and Baltimore 17. Minnesota fell 1 I /2
Pinch-hitter Charles John- :
excitement,"
Schmidt
said.
runs
in
the
last
three
losses
.
6, Tampa Bay 5.
son's
two-out homer tied it in ·
games behind AL CentralThe
Giants
won
their
sevTodd
Pratt
·hit
his
first
Canseco's 454 career home leading Cleveland.
the ninth inning and Aorida ·'
enth
in
a
row
and
closed
withTony
Gwynn
delivered
home run sioce being traded won in the 1Oth at Miller :
runs moved him past Carl Yasin
two
games
of
Los
Angeles
in
another
key
pinch
hit,
douby
the Mets last weekend, Park..
trzemski (452) for 22nd in
.\.. :, · '·· 11 1 . ~ " i
NL
West.
the
bling
quring
a
three-run
rally
and Doug Glanville and Pat
baseball history The five RBis
Derrek Lee double.d to start :
Schmidt got another benefit, in· the seventh inning at San Burrell also connected. Col- a three-run rally in the ninth, :
gave Canseco a total of 1,3 78,
too.
He's playing with Bonds, Diego.
orado's Denny Neagle fell to capped by Johnson's two - run
passing Johnny Bench for 57th
rather than pitching to the
Gwynn
.
is
·
7
-for-12
as
a•
0-4
in his last six starts.homer. ·
·
,
on the.. career chart.
Brei Boone reached 100
one-time Pittsburgh slugger.
The homers - both off RBis, Paul Abbott (11-2) won
Bonds hit his 540th career
Royals starter Chris George (0- his ninth straight decision and
home run, a solo shot in the
2) - were Canseco's seventh . Seattle, despite hitting into a
first inning.
and eighth of the season.
triple play, won at Detroit.
Bonds stayed on the record
"I used to collect Canseco
The Tigers turned their first
pace set by Babe Ruth, who
baseball cards in high school;' triple play in nine years in the
also hit 46 homers in 108
George said. "I tried to put that fourth
inning.
Mark
games for the New York Yanout of my head."
,
McLemore hit a line drive to
kees in 1921. Mark McGwire
Royce Clayton also homered second baseman Damion
had 45 home runs through
for the White Sox, ~nd Dan Easley with men on first and
108 games on his way to a
#766
Wright (1-0) gave up four runs second running.
record 70 in 1998.
and seven hits in five innings in
Jason Kendall, Schmidt's
his first major league start. ·
·longtime catcher, homered for
Sandy Alomar got his 1,000th
the lone hit against the new
career hit with a single in the
Giants pitcher.
second inning.

AL

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The New Orleans Saints'
top · pick, running back
Deuce McAllister, says
money is not keeping him
out of training camp.
McAllister, selected 23rd
overall in the April draft, said
he's eager to join the team,
and all that is needed is a fair
offer fiom the Saints.
"1 don't want my teammates to think that this is all
about No. 22 or about being
a top-iO player;• McAllister
said. "I wasn't drafted
the
top 10, so I have to accept
that.
"All I want is a fair chance
to earn my money. If I'm
producing. then pay me so.
It's not as ifl'm copping out
and looking to miss prac-

_
.-

,_,.•

Angels 4,
Reel Sox 2

m

Pair of former Pirates help Giants beat Pittsburgh

tice."

Blue Jays 3,
Twins 1

Expos 8,

NL

Phlllies a,
Rockies 1

The

Mariners 7.·

'ngers 1

i

_j

Yankees 9,
Rangers 7
Sterling Hitchcock (1-0)
won in his return to New
York as the Yankees hit a season-high five homers in the

· Jerry Hairston hit a two-run
homer to cap Baltimore's first
ninth-inning comeback of the
season.
The Orioles, 0-59 when
trailing after eight innings
before Wednesday, rallied for
three runs against Esteban Yan
(3-4).

cardinals 4,
Braves 0

DolPHINS

Mark McGwire hit his
573rd home run and tied Harmon Killebrew for fifth place
on the career list as St. Louis
stopped Greg Maddux's 10-

2001
Prix
GT
2
.
001
G
d
p
·
SE
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ran rue
Slat • CIDIIJir w/gnphlc lllllllzlr

New

.

4 Dr • CD Diner. Power Slit

s19 995 ~:wsrsroa

Indians activate Burks; recall pitcher qrew

(

string in the second game of
a doubleheader Saturday.
Diaz has a swollen right
thumb, which was hit by a
foul tip during an 11-2 loss
to Oakland on Tuesday
night.
"X-rays on Diaz were
negative, but the thumb is
pretty sore, so we'll sit him
down for a couple days,"
Manuel said.
"The doc said Juan is still
· sore and probably won't play
until the weekend. I've got
no thought about putting
him on the disabled list. The
only place I want Juan is in
the lineup."
Gonzale~ has 27 homers,
95 RBis and his .344 average is second in the AL to
teammate Roberto Alomar,
who also is banged up.
"Robbie's very sore, but
he's playing," Manuel said . .
Alomar has a bruise
behind his right knee. The
second baseman got the

Washington linebacker
LaV.U: Arrington sprained his
right shoulder in a contact
driB and was scheduled for
X -rays.
Jeff George, still with a sore
arm, did not throw Wednesday morning for the third
consecutive practice.
'Jeff wanted to go today,
and I am very conservative;•
Redskins coach Marty

•

4Dr· 3A lher VB •Power Wlndo• .Nl-'~ "~ • ·cnalse Control· Casseae
·Auto· 3,000 mile dema
·

INDIANS BASEBALL
CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Indians, battling both injuries and the
1
• Minnesota Twins in the AL
Central race, boosted their
offense Wednesday by activating outfielder Ellis Burks.
The Indians also recalled
right-handed pitcher Tim
Drew from Triple-A Buffalo
and optioned right-banders
jake Westbrook and Ryan
lJrese to the Bisons.
· Burks, sidelined since July
16 with a broken right
thumb, was in. the starting
lineup against the Oakland
Athletics, but all-star outfielder Juan Gonzalez and
Einar Diaz were out with
injuries.
.
"Both -are day-to-day,"
manager Charlie Manuel
said. ''I'm glad we got Ellis
back. He's important to the
lineup. But so are Juan and
Einar."
Gonzalez has not · played
since pulling his left ham-

REDSKINS

2001 Grand Hm Sf 1 20,01 Buick
Century
Power 1111
c\ A'

injury when he collided
with right · fielder Jalbert
Cabrera while trying to
make a catch Tuesday night.
' Burks had his right thumb
broken when hit by a pitch
by Houston's Octavio Dote!
and was suhsequently placed
on the disabled list July 21 ,
retroactive to July 16.
"I've been taking batting
practice and the thumb feels
fine," Burks said.
Drew was 6-3 with a 3. 93
ERA in 13 starts at Buffalo
after being optioned to the
minors May 12. Before that,
he went 0-1 with a 6. 75
ERA in five starts for the
Indians.
Drese made his major
league debut Sunday in
Detroit, pitching 4 · 1-3
innings. He had a 3.38 ERA
in two outings covering 5 13 innings overall.
Westbrook was · 3-3 with a
5.40 ERA in 16 gam_es for
C leveland this year.
(

"~"On/!16J 900 •

slB}soo·

1999 Cad/llilc Seu//le SLS

1999 montiinil Uilns

Prices after

l'eilrlescent Red- still undu wt~mmtgt
Waa

$29,900

'$26 900

The New York Jets' likely
lost nose tackle Jason Ferguson for the rest of the preseason with a slight tear in his
right shoulder.
Coach Herman Edwards
said Ferguson, who signed a
four-year, $12.7 million contract in the offieason to stay
with the Jets, will need to
wear a harness for thre e
weeks. It could be another
two weeks before he is ready
to play, which would bring
the team up to its season
opener with Indianapolis.
"The rotator cuff kind of
went out;' Edmrds said.
[f Ferguson hasn't healed
in three weeks, he will
require surgery that . would
sideline him for the season.

~cp~yBucca-'

Miami Dolphins receiver
Dedric Ward is expected to
miss 4-to-6 weeks with a
stress fracture in his foot.
Ward, who felt soreness in
his foot while running pass
routes, will undergo surgery
to repair the injury Thursday.
Ward, signed as an unrestricted free agent in April,
was ·listed as a backup to
starter Oronde Gadsden. He
spmt the past four seasons
with the New York Jets and
caught 54 passes for 801
yards last season.
"Fortunately that's a posicion where we have some
depth;' coach Dave Wannstedt said." And he'll be back."

Fair Days

Orioles 6,
Devil Rays 5

JETS

humidity, though he said it
was not a direct response to
neers tried to shore up their . the heat-related death of
punting situation, signing Minnesota Viking. tackle
Jason Malecki signed a one- Korey Stringer.
year contract.
Jauron said the team had a
The Bucs lost Mark Roy- shortage of healthy defensive
als, the team's punter the last and offensive tackles and he
two seasons, with a knee did not want to take a
injury on the first day of chance . of depleting the
training camp: Royals is team's depth three days
expected to miss 3-to- 4 before ·Saturday's preseason
weeks with a sprained ligaopener.
ment.
"When we do that, we're
Malecki, who played with
NFL Europe's Amsterdam wearing out certain guys,
Admirals this offieason, joins putting more stress on
Andn!w Bayes as the only them:'Jauron said. "We don't
want to .do that. We mnt to
punters in camp.
make sure they· have their ·

Marlins 5,
Brewers 4

Padres 4,
Cubs:J

Schortenheimer said. "[ don't
want to take a two-three-day
injury and make it a ty;othree-week injury."
Tight
end
Stephen
Alexander missed his second
day of rractice with a
strained hamstring.

McAllister and the Saints
have agreed on the basic
parameters of a six-year; $6.2
million contract, said MeAllister's agent, Ben Dogra.
"This whole situation is
not good· for lum:· Saints
coach Jim Haslett said. "It's
BEARS
not really the best way to
Chicago Bears coach Dick
start out your career. Sooner Jauron canceled Wednesday
or later, Deuce just needs to afternoon's practice because
say: 'I want to play football:" of oppressive heat and high

Mets 8,
Astros 2

Diamondbacks 5

Browns sign Warren to six-year deal

NFL CAMPS

AROUND THE DIAMOND
N.lliONol I.Nguo

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Page Bl

\

Canseco promises
homer, delivers two

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

legs for Saturday night."

BEREA;' Ohio (AP) - A
slimmed down Gerard Warren
joined the Gleveland Browns
on Wednesday with a hefty contract.
Warren, who admitted being
overweight during the team's
mini-camps, ended his contract
holdout and arriwd at training
camp after signing a six-year,
$33.6 milli on deal.
''I'm j ust htce to compliment
this defense and hopefully take
the Browns to the Super Bowl,''
Warren said.
Dressed in shorts and Browns'
baseball camp, Warren appeared
to be at least 15 pounds lighter
than he was when he participated in the club's final mini-camp
mJune. .
Back then, he looked slow
during drills and said he was out
of shape after hitting the banquet circuit following an AllAmerican junior season at the
University of Florida:
Warren said h e has been
working out two ho urs daily
with the Gators football team in
Gainesville, Fla ., and wei ghed in
at 315 pounds - 7 po unds less
than his listed playing weight.
''I'm relieved and happy to be
back;' he said.
So are the Browns.
Cleveland is shifting secondyear end Courtney Brown ·over
to the right side of the. defensive
line alongside Warren, giving
the Browns a formidable front.

BROWNS SIGN TOP PICK - Cleveland Browns first round draft pick Gerard Warren answers
questions during a news conference In this April 21 file photo in Berea, Ohio. Warren j oined
the Browns on Wednesday with a hefty contract. (AP)

Browns coach Butch Davis waitin g around for his contract
said Warren has already missed . to be finalized, and stayed in
some valuable pracn,e time, but touch with running back Jam es
can hopefully make it u p quick- Jackson for updates from camp.
ly.
" It was eating me up,' ' he said.
" He's going to make a lot of
Warren will practi ce fo r the
rookie mistakes,' ' said Davis, first time on Thursd1y and said
who added that Warren would- he expects to play in the
n'r be punished for missing 14 Browns' scrimmage on Sanm:Uy
prac ti ces. "The re's nothin g in Edinboro. Pa. , against the
pu nit ive o ther than what he has . Buff.1lo Bills.
already done to ·him self."
Before that, though, he needs
Warren said it was diffic ult to get up to speed.

· " I've got a lot of learn ing to
do," he said." A lot of overtime."
Warren 's contract includes a
two-tier, S12 million signing
bonus, soid team president Carmen Policy. lf Warren h its certain incentives, the total., deal
could exceed $45 million .
Policy said the contract was
agreed to in principle at 6 a.m.
following neatly 18 hours of
Cllks between the club and Warren's agent. Joel Seg;tl.

Warrick could be more dangerous in second season
GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP) - Peter season, accounting for seven of the team's only deep threat, Darnay Scott.
Warrick won't promise that he's going to 21 · tou chdowns and becoming the first
"Last year was more like coming into
match .the impressive numbers he put up player in team history to score receiving, Florida St1te my first year, not knowing
during his rookie season.
rushing and kick- return touchdowns in what's going to happen or what's going
But he will guarantee .that the Cincin- the same season.
on," he said. "This year, it's more like 'Pete
nati Bengals wi~ be much improved over
In addition to his four TO catches, he has arrived.' It's better for me this year.
the team that won only four games last had scoring runs of77 and 4 yards and an
" .. . With Darnay coming back, that will
. electr&gt;f)oin g 82-yard punt return against take some of the pressure off m e. People
year.
"We're going to win '!lor~, no doubt," Jacksonville. He finished the season with
have to be . worried about Darnay's
the 5-foot-11, 195-pound receiver sai~ 51 catches for 592 yards and added speed and big play ability. That will just
between training camp sessions at another 148 rushing yards on 16 carries. open things up for me."
Georgetown College. "We just need
The numbers· were even more impresThe Ben gals . rook Warrick with the
more people to step up and lead."
. sivc considering Warnck was _a untested fourth overall ptck of the 2000 .draft &lt;;mt
Warrick may be the catalyst the Ben- rooki e thrust into ~he spotligl1t 7 dutill'g-~-or !'londa State, 'whete 'he senhe A!htt:itte
gals have been searching for for nearly .a trai~i~g camp follmvmg, a season ~endmg Com. Conferenc e · rec ord for career
decade. He did it all for Cmcmnatl last leg InJUry to the Bengals top recetver and recetvmg yard~ wtth 3,5 17.

will

--

BilLS
After relentless urging,
Buffalo Bills linebacker
Corey Moore was activated
off the physically unable td
perform list after missing the
first six days of training camp.
Moore's impatience boiled
over after spending the
morning session on the sideline because team ·trainers
considered him out of conclition after missing time
while recovering fiom being
shot in the left leg in June.
"I argued with the trainers;' Moore said." I told them
I'd rather be out here instead
-of standing around and getring stiff."
With the blessing of coach
Gregg Williams, the training
.staff allowed Moore to participate in the light afternoon
.
Practice.
· ." It felt good.You can stand
on the sidelines and get all
the mental reps you want,
but that only helps a little;'
Moore said. "It just feels
good to be here totally
focusing on football."

-Browns may not go
away for summer camp

"1"/n stock- Loaded- 1 E~tt

$15 '900
•

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The
. CJeyeland Browns may not be
moving their summer training
camp after all.
Browns coach Butch Davis
wants to relocate his team to a
summer headquarters away
from the dub's year-round
training facility here .to build
better team chemistry and avoid
distractions fur his players.
The club had been negotiat~
ing with Ohio Northern in Ada
to host the dub next year, but
the school was unable to build a
new stadium to . accommodate
the Browns.
"We had been negotiating
with them, and it's just not
going to work," team president
Carmen Policy said. "They bent
Ol'er backward for us and we

bent over backw•rd for them:'
Policy said the team is pursuing other locations including
Oberlin College and Hiram
College, the Browns' training
home fiom 1952 to 1974.
Policy added that ·there's a
strong chance the club may stay
put after drawing big crowds
during an energetic opening
week of practice in Berea under
Davis.
"The more the coach is here, .
the·stronger it gets,'' Policy said.
"I think he's starting to really
like it. If nothing works for us,
we'll just stay here:·
There's also a possibility the
Browns may open camp at an
undisclosed location and spend
I 0 to 14 days there before
returning to Berea.
I

I'

·~

���Page

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

--

\

Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001
I

;Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•
The Dally Sentinel • Page

OOP
NEA

Crouword

B...
7

Puzzle

PHILIJP
ALDER

ACROSS

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HIAT

't~rt

IIIRROR TECIINOLOOY
KEEPS THE

4

~ NOTICES

Your Rl&amp;hl to Know,
Dcll•erod Right to Your Door.
Ol! loN•wJ~Mr-r"-~;.,;,...,

,
REAL ESTATE FOR ·
SALE

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
radio, tape player, and Devisees of 17.726 acres, more or
Blda will be comP"nY dlac player, Charles E. Weever, leaa, of which the
road
received at the Olllca loudiP"akerorother and all peraona preaant
of Barnard v. Fultz, electronic device claiming by, through, occuplaa 0.000 acrea,
t11 ·112 Waat Second uaad lor amplification or under them, more or laaa, are to
Straat, Pomeroy, Ohio · of the human voice Addre11 Unknown; . be deleted from
mualcal end (D) C.A. Knlllln, Auditor'• Parcel 07·
lor the .. le ol the and/or
Doing Bualneae Aa 00390.000; and 0. 118
residence ol the lata lnatrument.
(c)
"Plainly Great
Bend acres, more or laaa,
Harold and Lillie
ol which the preaent
Hubbard, located at audible" meana any . Petroleum
755 Park Street, aound produced by a Aaaoclatea, Addreao road occuplea 0.000 ·
Middleport, Ohio until aound amplification Unknown, will take acrea, mora or laaa,
Auguat 3, 200t at ayatem from within notice that they have are to be deleted
10:00 A.M. The the vahlcle · which been named aa lfom Audltor'l Parcel
by 07-4103113.000.
realdence Ia a 3· clearly can be heard dalandenta
, bedroom t· 112 bath, · at a dlatance of 50 Gordon Proctor,
Owner, hla halra,
or
more. Director
Ohio axecutora,
1 atory houae with feet
Department · ol admlnlatratora,
attached two car Muauremant
garage on a lot atandarda ahall be by Ttanaponlllon, who auccanora, and
approximately 100 · the auditory aenaea, lnatltuted Caae No.01 ualgna forever, are
fltat by 110 ""' daap. baaed upon direct ..CV-4135 now pending hereby dlvallad of
The
Executor Una ol alght. Worda In the Common Plan any and all abutter'a
raaervee the right to or phraaea n"d not Court of Malga rlghta, Including
ra1ect any or all bkla. be . dlacernlble and County, Ohio, which - • rtghllln, over
b..• reverberations Ia an action to and to the above
Linda
Foreman, are Included. The · appropriate certain deacrtbad - I Illite,
Executor al the motor vehicle may be property lor highway Including auch rtghll
Eatete al Lillie atapped, standing, purpoHa, namely tha with •••pact to any
Hubbard
P"rked, or moving an making, conatructlng, highway facility
a atr..t, highway, or Improving of State conatructad thereon.
(7) 28, 27, 28, 30, 31, allay, parking lot or Route 124, Section
All coal; oil and
2001
driveway.
31.57 and to fix tha 1111, and other
(8) t, 2, 2001
2. . It Ia an velua ol eald mlnarala underlying
7tc.;;.c_ _ _ __,,_- affirmative dafltnH to property.
the e~ve described
•·
a charge under thla
The
property property, and all
Public Notice·'
aactlan that the sought
to
be existing· rlghta to
_ _:;.:...:.:..:....~:.:..:..::.....__ operator w.. nat epproprleted Ia mora mine, extract, and
ORDINANCE 678
otharwlae prohibited apeclflcally daacrtbad remove the aama,
by law from operating •• lollowa:
ahall be, and the
An Ordinance· to 1 h 1
PARCEL 211-WLR
aama hereby are,
10 u nd
eatabllah the aalary amplification .Yatam, MEG-124-31.57
excepted
and
olthe Chief of Pollee and thet any ol the ALL RIGHT, TITLE raaarvad
.unto
lor the VIllage of · loll-Ing apply:
AND INTEREST. IN · Ownera, and their •
0 hI o
(a) A ayatam waa FEE SIMPLE IN THE halra, axacutora,
Pomeroy,
effective Auguat 1, baing operated to FOLLOWING
edmlnlatrato,.,
IUCCIIIOFI and
200t.
raquaat medical or DESCRIBED
BE IT ORDAINED vehicular aaaletanca PROPERTY,
111lgna forever;
BY THE COUNCIL OF or to warn al a INCLUDING
provided,· however, In
THE VILLAGE OF haurdaua
road LIMITATION
OF eo mining, extracting,
POMEROY, OHIO:
condition.
ACCESS, BUT
and removing •aid
Section 1: Thll
(b) The vehicle waa EXCLUDING COAL, coal, oil and 1111, and
the aalary lor the an emergency or OIL AND GAS, AND ot!Wr mlnerala, the
paaltlon of Chlal of public aefltty vehicle.
OTHER EXISTING · proper praaervallon
Pollee lor the Vlllaga
(c) TIW vehicle wee MINERAL RIGHTS
of the highway may
ol Pomeroy, Ohio, owned and operated
Situated In the not be Impelled.
shall be and Ia by the village or 1 Tawnahlp
of
Pursuant to Civil
hereby eatabllahed at gea,
electric, Lebanon, County of Rule 12(A)(1), aald
the rate of $25,000.00 communlcetlona, or Malga, State of Ohio, peraona mentioned
and In Section 28, above a hall taka
par year.
reluae company.
~ Section II: That
(d) The vehicle waa , 100 acre Loll 203 and · further · ·notice that
the
VIllage of uaad In authorized . 204, Town 2N, Ranga they have 28 daya
Pomeroy ahall pay public actlvltlaa, auch 11W, and bounded altar t!W completion
far family coverage 11
p., 1 d 11 ,
and daacrlbad aa of the Service by
lor the Chief al Pollee fireworks, epanlng laltowa:
Publication within
Section Ill: That
avent 1 , m ualcal
which
to anewar or
Baing a parcel of
thl a 0 rdl nanca a ha II producllona, and
atherwlaa deland
11
be take effect on ather actlvltl• which land ly ng an the lafl egalnat Plalntlll'a
Auguat1, 2001.
have the approval of and right aldea of t!W pathlon.
PASSED J uIY 18th, the
VIllage at centerline of a
The artglnel of any
2001 .
Pomeroy.
aurvay, made by lha euch anawar or other
3. Such offense Department
of pleading defending
Kathy HyHII, Clark
ehall be a minor Tranapanatlan and agalnet Plalntlll'a
John F. Muaaer, mladamalnor,
being locetad within pathlon muat be Iliad
Prealdant
·
h bl b
the boundary paints w 11 h
Marian 1
Bryan Shank
pun11 • e Y a 11 ne of Parcel No. 211 • Harrlaon, t!W Clark of
Larry Wehrung
up to S1 00.00 for WLR a a delineated the Common Plall
uch occurrence.
upon tiW Department
J ac k Welker
Thll ' Ordinance of Trenaportatlan'a Court of Malga
George Wright
ahall
become Rl ht IW
County, Ohio, It 100
11 -o •• • ay p 1an ...
"- con d strail, P.O.
VictorYoung Ill
allectlva at the MEG
• rile I data
~~~
·12......1.57,
Box 151, Pomeroy,
(7) 26, 2001
bay taw'.
prov ._, Shaata 20 and 21 of Ohio 415781; and,- a
42, and recorded In
(8) 2'' 200t
· Paaaad 18th day ol Pill Book 5, Pagaa 28 copy of any •uch
2tc
July, 200t.
and 27, recorda of anawer or other
the
Recorder'• pleading dalandlng
Office, Malga County, again at Plalntlll'a
__P_u..:.
bl_lc_N_o_t..:.lc..:.e_ . Kathy HyHII, Clark
petition muat be
John
Blaettnar, Ohio. It Ia undaratood . awvad
upon Mark E.
Mayor
that the atrlp of land Haye, Eeq., at S7
ORDINANCE 860
John
Muaaer, above daecrlbad South .High Str•t,
contalna 17.844
WHEREAS, the PNaldant
acraa, mora or laae, Suite 310, Columbua,
Village of Pomeroy
Ohio 43211-4132 . .
wlahea to adopt l7) 28, 200t
of wlllch the praeant
A lalluno to anawar
provlalona
8) 2, 2001
road occuplaa 0.000 or atharwlaa deland
prohibiting
the _21_•_ _ _ _ __
acral, more or lall.
within aald 28 daye
Thla daacrlptlon 11 will raaullln Plaintiff,
playing ol aound
Public Notice
baaed an a aurvey pursuant to Civil Rule
amplification
made by BALKE 55
equipment
at
ENGINEERS lor the
• aaklng tha court
excaaalve lavala, and
IN THE COMMON
Ohio
DIP"rtmant
of
to
grant 1 Judgment
WHEREAS, the
PLEAS COURT OF Transportation In by default agalnat
conduct prohibited Ia
MEIGS COUNTY,
any auch peraon who
2000 • By Joaeph D. lelia to anawar or
not
currently
OHIO
Kuhlmann,
P.S.
...rwl ,...... d
praacrlbed under tha
A-laterad su~or 01,,. 18 .,.,.n ·
axlatlng VIllage Code;
·•
· ••,
Gordon Proctor ,
Gordon Proctor,
No. S-8823 under the Director
Ohio
. NOW THEREFOR~,
Director Ohio
BE IT ORDAINED BT
direction
end
DIP"rtmant ol
aupervlalan
of Dapertmant
of
THE POMEROY
Tranaportatlon,
Tranaportadon
VILLAGE COUNCIL,
Ronald F. Rlaer, P.S. (7) 25, (8) 2
THAT:
.
Raglatarad Surveyor
Plaintiff,
No. 5-7083.
1. No person or
v.
Public Notice
All Iran plna eat ,,.
ogonlzatlon shall Ruby K. Ludwig, 11 al,
to
be
(3/4")x(30")
by
engage In any
Dalandanta.
a(t 112") aluminum
performance or uH
PUBLIC NOTICE
any electronic device CASE NO. 01.CV.035 cap, atamped "ODOT
In any matter ao aa to
R\W DIStRICT 10"
The
following
and the aurveyar'a achoor dlatrlcta:
· create o . public ' JUDGE FRED W.
dlalurbanca
or
Ohio Raglllratlon or Alexander Local
CROW Ill
operata or parmllt!W
aurvayor'a
nama, School Dlatrlct,
operation of any LEGAL NOTICE FOR number
and/or Athena City School
aound ampllllcatlon
company 11111111.
Dlatrlct, Eaatarn
PUBLICATION
Paints llatad with . Local SChool Dlllrlcl,
ayatam from within o PURSUANT To R.C.
·vehicle aa that the
(Iran pin all) era to M"ga Local School
183.07 .
aound Ia plainly
[Two (2) lnHnlona] . be aet by the District, Naleonvlllacontractor
aa York Clly School
audible II a 4111ance
Indicated
at
the
Dlatrlct, Southern
of 50 or mora feet
· (A) John li. Murphy,
from t!W vehicle.
laat known addreaa termination of the Local SChool Dlllrtct,
(a)
"Public 37831 Stile Route conatructlon proJect. l)'tmllle Local SChool
Said -lone baing Dtatrlct, Trt.County
Dlaturbanco" Ia 143, Pomeroy, Ohio
vocatlonal
defined, lor the 45718,
preaant the Billion numbera J o 1n t
purpoaea of the Coda Addraaa Unknown; •• etlpulated In the School, will hold a
apaclal combined
section, ae a loud (B) Raben E. Rogara,. hereinbefore'
muelc revelry, or ancllar the Unknown mentioned aurvey board meeting on
alactronlcolly
Tranalaraaa, Aaolgna, and aa ahown by Monday, August 8,
- ~plana on lila In the 2001 ' 7·00
reproduced eound Executora,
. p.m., ••
.,,.
Ohio
DaP"rtmant
of
Ohio
University
Inn,
dona or created at a Admlnlltratora, Halra
Galbraith Room .
. time and a place, or and Davlaau of Tranaponaaon,
In any manner 10 11 Raben E. Rogers, Marlette, Ohio.
Prior lnetrumtnt (8) 2, 2001
to
create
a and all peraons
aubatantlal likelihood claiming by, through, Reference: O.R. 37, ttc
of dlalurbl ng the or under them, Page 185, and O.R.
publlc'a raaaanabla Addraaa Unknown; 15, Pages 558, 185,
CLEAN HOUSE
expectation of peace (C) Chartaa E. Weaver 887, and 8ft, In
County
and quia!.
oncllor the Unknown the
WITH THE
(b)
•sound Tranala-a, Aaalgna, Recordar'a Oftlce. •
the
above
Of
Ct ASSIFI EDSi
Amplification
Executora,
Syatam" maana any Admlnlatratora, Holra daecrlbad area,

.

t

Cheste r, Ohio

OUALITY
WINDOW

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'•

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Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

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Repair
RemOdeling
New Additions
Garages

·&lt;

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Fully lnaured

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•
992-5479 ~~

W¥0282120

flEE ElliMIIII
741112-1121
Tllfnl

181112-1121

==~-~Advertise in ,
'
this space for !:
s100 per
'·
month

..

Lose Welghl Now
AakMeHow
WhoU.. you'ro lryJnv 1o
loot wolgl1t, aupplllnoort
your dial lor INIIImum
nulrHion, orjuatlooll your
Qrtlltlt with tilt blat
pii'IOIIII .. ro produclt,
HM»&gt;Iffln-1111

IOI!Ialhlng lor....,.,.,
Coli yaur lnclopondont
Horl&gt;olllt dlttrlbutor,
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.r
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S,.a.tbiaa In Sheet Metal Du&lt;•worll
"Trane' So... &amp; Senko For
Gallioa, Muon 0aDd Meip Countlea
Licensed and I-red
WVto$176

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fREE ESTIMATES
Phone fJ04J 6l4·6100

s.-,PL

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• Qaragea

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

P/B

(ONTRAaORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio un1

740.985-3'!48

.,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
M1ddl c por1. Oh1o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; .
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental. Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollover's;
Mortgage;, Major Medical
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El'lc llacnurn

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Replacemenll, • Walk!
and DrivH • Stendl ·

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Servlna Ohio ond W.V.
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AJI ,Makes Thactor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealen
Hauling &amp;
Excavating

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/v/1,_, OH 45723

740117-GIII

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Hauling • Umestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Servkes

992·3470
Advertise

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo
On Thursday•
At6:30 p,m . .
• Main Street ·
Pomeroy, 01 oio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
S1arburst
Progressive top line

Lie. #00·50

Howardl.
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Home
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Roofing •

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Spout
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740-742·8015 Jr
1-Bn-353-7022

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u.........

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Plll'l'l

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• Footen, Wollt, Slept •

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3.

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fliurlll
I.
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1~.

AU 1111111

20 - &amp; Taylor
(daP"rl·
mant atore)
2t King oftha
Scand~
bone
Huna
navla
3 Vall agea
22 lnexpar·
23 Wooden
4 Mineral
lencad one
1hoa
· aprlnga
23 Actreao
28 Author
5 - Aviv
Ward
Umberto- 8 Doll, • ·II·
24 Declare
27 Unlock
7 Hand~ (o
25 Smokey,
(poet )
tool)
e.g.
30 Tuma
eklllfully
27 Some
outward
8 Nat
poama
32 Gate away
outwardly
from
8 - -do-wall 28 Daatructlve
lnaact
34 lnlro
11 lnvltadon
28 Ancient
35 Moat II~
lnlta.
Italian
boding
12 ThNatanad
family
38 Pt. of ETA 13 Fr. holy
31 Nalay .
37 Actor
woman
al"para
Chaney
18 BHrllke
33 Macawa
38 Social rank
drink

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l'll~l

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t401N'6 Tttt

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

BORN LOSER

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ITHURSDAY

'Your

'Birthday.

hiday. Aug. J, 2001
Many of the restrictive con-

Advertise in ~
this space for 1
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s100 per
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1'

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LEO Quly 23- Aug.' 22) -- It
would be far better for you
today to o perate as independent of others as pos s1ble .. It
isn 't likely that people in geneul will be in a coope rative
inood at t hi~ time. Trying to

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21170 8uhln Rotld !
Racine, Ohio
:

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AUGUST21-.....,...J

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••.,...

1e

~

r---------;...,....;___,:'

in this
space
remodeling,
on
drywall, room
for
cuHing edge ••• addllions, and
plumbing.
•so per Read lha
Terry Lamm
992.;0739
month ClassiDad Ads

1

,v Is I I I

.'

.
'· Hill'• .tell

38 Gu'n grp.
40·1nharllcra
41 "-La
Douce"
42 Iced
drink
43 Compa11
point

Ycsterday. I gave a
deal in which an ex44 Art deeo
pert in a pro-am
nome
event played the ·
46 Days of llhe paat)
spade king from king47 City In
doubleton under his
Ruaala
48 Govt farm
partner's spade-ace
agency
opening lead . This
50 Dawn
goddeaa
was the only chance
52 Raram
to defeat the contract,
room
53 Buahy
but the leader immeclump
www .kl rtgfNIW".Qifft
diately -- and fatally - switched to another
suit.
As some compensation, the expert also
told me about this
deal.
After play, everyo ne
received a booklet
contai ning
some
"learne d': analysis.
(The writer even disc u.s sed an auction
co ntain ing an insuffiMtAT~OAF
cient bid.) For this
deal , . the notes suggested that, at the
prevailing vulnerabil ity, if South's one-notrump response was
nonforcing,
West
should pass. Perhaps
that is right, but I
by Lule Campo•
.·
Colabnty Cipher cryplograma art crnled lrom quollllonl b)' lamouo
doubt (m)any players
. pooplt, pool and preoonl. Eooch Iotter In 1118 cipher atandolor onolher,
would do in.
Todly'S clue: B equals L
Here,
though,
THE
GPE
CABK
-.
Sou
th
's
initi
al reEVU
MN
'RGAOU
~\\\:)IS ~OT 1\ CIZ:IM.If-.11\L "~
c~'r Pt.£.b..DTEM.I'O~~ I"':
I'M. 1\FRI\\D YOU'~ JUST
sponse was forcing,
JU
CDPNUBLUN
TR io\!... , f/\1(:. , (:,~IJE&gt;ITE. ...
I 1-\:)lo..N \1Y .•.
CW
JVMOV
001!\IG TO ~fo..\IE- TO '?1'\'(
which was tied in
'(QOC .I'(&gt;,RKJ t-lG
with a two-over-one
J )I •
CW
NED W W
EVU
GPU
response being gameTIC.I(E.T I .
'
forcing. This is a
EUR
ME MN ZGRU.' M0 V
popular tourn a ment
method.
NVGJA
Although East was
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Amateurs l)ape ..Prolosslonals wort&lt;.'
marked · with a near- Garson Kanln
Yarborough, West
'How do· I work? I grope.'- Albert Einstein
doubled, deciding she
WOlD
h:ld-!00 mu cK to
GAM I
overcall two . hearts.
Edilod ~y CLAY I . POLLAN_.;__ _ __
Then, when the pro
AND "ltliJ DION"T • HANG ~ OOOOH!
YOU DI[&gt;N 'T "cHICKEN
Rearr_onge letters of the
Ur~ "l'OU BECAME
.; $PIN ON.
I: HAVE
OUT.' YOU WERE
bid three clubs (with
four
scrambled words be·
THREE
INTOXICATED BY
. OVERWHELMED SY THE
~ I&gt;OCTOR,
considerable trepida - low to form four simple words .
OLDEI'.
SPIN
THE 50UNO OF
INTE.NSIT'( Of YOUR
tion, ·he commented),
HER VOICE .
FEEl-IN&lt;;.:'&gt;.
ON!
.,....---,
she had little option
OPRAUR
but to double .
1
1 I I I I
West started with
two top diamonds
and the h eart ace.
SUBLH
Now she got careless.
Instead of cashing the ,
sp ade ace next, she
P~UTS
led a second heart ,
hoping partner would
"'Well, we went to the salad bar,
SI-IE 60U6i-IT ME FIVE
51-lE WAS
.
I-lOW COULD TMAT GIRL
REALLV
MARSIIMALLOW SVNDAE5, AND ruff. Away went ~=~===::::...,deli bar and dessert bar," the man
TlliNK TI-IAT 't'OU ARE ME 7
South's spade loser on 1-r·.....,,..:.....:,.I.;.W~L:....:,E..;S::.,.-1
STRAN6E
~ lATE i).IEM ALL ..OF COliRSE,
. ~~d-t~ _h. i~ ~~.te. "how much should
NOW, I DON'T FEEL 50 GOOD... dummy's heart king.
4
Complete
chuckle quoted
Declarer co ntinued
-.1.
·
_.J_.J_.J_.J--1
by
filling
in
the
missing words
1
(fJ
•
•
•
"I
with th e heart jack, 1.
you dovelop from step No. 3 below.
~ ruffed and overruffed.
HERS IN
South trumped a dia . mond in the dummy
· an d ran the club
queen. When i t lost,
SCRAM-lETS . ANSWERS
he claimed nin e tricks
for a top. One down
Frosty · Abbot · Jingo· Fetish . JOB OFFERS I .
would · have been a
After repeatedly running items over a check out scanbottom. shared with
ner, the clerk announced, "This is the only challenge th·e
one other pair who
JOB OFFERS ."
went two down ·undoubled in three notrump.

I

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUatON
•Complete
Remodeling

" 'n l

BiG NATE .

1-lM-'75-7824
l.aJIO.JSt..,..,.,
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Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Top • Trim • Removal

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Rogara St.
17 Movtr'a
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truck
18 Ancient
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• A J

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Public Notices In Newspapers.

KQ 7 1i~

• J 7

8UIIIi!R
- H!AT
OUT AND· W1IITER
Till! HEAT Ill

ULTRAV101.ET RAYI
fACTORY DIRECT
PRICIIIQ

t Vlanor
8 ldonttc.l
46 Thou
llbllng
10 Secret
48 Weirder
wedding
51 EnglpartlciP"nl 54 Houaton
12 Ilea-, IoWa
team
14 Archlvea 55 Worahlppad
15 Holtolor a 511 Ha•dy "o

llt 1LlW I

¥ tU

40 Dlatraa- ·
42 Chirp
45 Organ lor
hearing

•

patch up a broken romanc e?
T h e AHro- Graph Match maker can help you understand what to do to make the
relationship work. Mail S2 .75
to Mat chmaker, c/ o this
newspaper , 1'.0 . Box 1758,
Murray H ill Station. New
York , N Y 10156,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Umally you're pretty good
at keeping your mouth shut
about thin~ sensitive to oth ers, whether you're asked to
or not. T odJy, however, yo u
could do too much talking for
your own good.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
... T hi5 ii1ight be o ne of tho~e
. days whcr~ socializing co uld
t\ltn out ttl be 3 negative ex-

ll

• .

pericnce, especially if t~1ere is
someo ne in the group who is
a bit abrasive.
SCORP IO (O ct, 24-Nov.
22) -- Make Cl'rtain everything yo u do today is above
rcpruJch . If you try to get coy
or spuri ous, it'll be recognized
and seam ed by those who are
important w yo ur cause .
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- It doesn't ·matter if
someone might deserve it or
no t, sounding off at him or
her will on!y hurt your image.
Hold your tongue by co unt· ing to 10, or even 20.

',

TAURUS (April 20 -May
20) -- It's not like you, yet today ym• could atta ck someone
for not glvihg yo u the credit
vou thin k you deserve for
sometlung in whi ch ·you
played· only a min or role. Fat:e
the facts.

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) •• Read all contracts.
agreements or warr;wti es

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

-- How you take a comm ent
m;~de by an other today will
reflect upon what othen think •
:~bout your ability to be llexible . Being too criti cal or sensitive will put you in a bad
light
"

down to the last line to:day.
, Fi nancial tra nsactiom of all
types could unwittingly conuin small details that may
work -against a legitimate

claim.

AQUARIUS Qan, 20-Fcb.

CANCER Qunc 21-July

19) •• Your friends may tolerate your rc!itlc~ m en today, but
will no t accept yo u smarting
ofT at th em over your own
(rmtrations. If you c;;m't be
civ il .· to wards o th en, stay

away .

PISCES (Feb. 20: March 20)
-- Speak well of friends who
ue not present and who cannot present the-ir side of a
story. Your commenu wi11 be
taken as a sign of unfriendlin~: ss and hostility.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- - Unfortu n&lt;~tdy . should you
be temptc:d to take shortcuts
o n your tasks or assignment5
today , th e meth od§ you 're
li ke ly to apply may caus e
more work for you than less.

\

22) -- You 're pretty good :lt
counting facts and tigmc~ today wht.n left to your own
devices. If you have to follmv
another 's way!l, however,
complic.ations could enter the
picture.

�Page

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

--

\

Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001
I

;Thursday, Aug. 2, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•
The Dally Sentinel • Page

OOP
NEA

Crouword

B...
7

Puzzle

PHILIJP
ALDER

ACROSS

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HIAT

't~rt

IIIRROR TECIINOLOOY
KEEPS THE

4

~ NOTICES

Your Rl&amp;hl to Know,
Dcll•erod Right to Your Door.
Ol! loN•wJ~Mr-r"-~;.,;,...,

,
REAL ESTATE FOR ·
SALE

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
radio, tape player, and Devisees of 17.726 acres, more or
Blda will be comP"nY dlac player, Charles E. Weever, leaa, of which the
road
received at the Olllca loudiP"akerorother and all peraona preaant
of Barnard v. Fultz, electronic device claiming by, through, occuplaa 0.000 acrea,
t11 ·112 Waat Second uaad lor amplification or under them, more or laaa, are to
Straat, Pomeroy, Ohio · of the human voice Addre11 Unknown; . be deleted from
mualcal end (D) C.A. Knlllln, Auditor'• Parcel 07·
lor the .. le ol the and/or
Doing Bualneae Aa 00390.000; and 0. 118
residence ol the lata lnatrument.
(c)
"Plainly Great
Bend acres, more or laaa,
Harold and Lillie
ol which the preaent
Hubbard, located at audible" meana any . Petroleum
755 Park Street, aound produced by a Aaaoclatea, Addreao road occuplea 0.000 ·
Middleport, Ohio until aound amplification Unknown, will take acrea, mora or laaa,
Auguat 3, 200t at ayatem from within notice that they have are to be deleted
10:00 A.M. The the vahlcle · which been named aa lfom Audltor'l Parcel
by 07-4103113.000.
realdence Ia a 3· clearly can be heard dalandenta
, bedroom t· 112 bath, · at a dlatance of 50 Gordon Proctor,
Owner, hla halra,
or
more. Director
Ohio axecutora,
1 atory houae with feet
Department · ol admlnlatratora,
attached two car Muauremant
garage on a lot atandarda ahall be by Ttanaponlllon, who auccanora, and
approximately 100 · the auditory aenaea, lnatltuted Caae No.01 ualgna forever, are
fltat by 110 ""' daap. baaed upon direct ..CV-4135 now pending hereby dlvallad of
The
Executor Una ol alght. Worda In the Common Plan any and all abutter'a
raaervee the right to or phraaea n"d not Court of Malga rlghta, Including
ra1ect any or all bkla. be . dlacernlble and County, Ohio, which - • rtghllln, over
b..• reverberations Ia an action to and to the above
Linda
Foreman, are Included. The · appropriate certain deacrtbad - I Illite,
Executor al the motor vehicle may be property lor highway Including auch rtghll
Eatete al Lillie atapped, standing, purpoHa, namely tha with •••pact to any
Hubbard
P"rked, or moving an making, conatructlng, highway facility
a atr..t, highway, or Improving of State conatructad thereon.
(7) 28, 27, 28, 30, 31, allay, parking lot or Route 124, Section
All coal; oil and
2001
driveway.
31.57 and to fix tha 1111, and other
(8) t, 2, 2001
2. . It Ia an velua ol eald mlnarala underlying
7tc.;;.c_ _ _ __,,_- affirmative dafltnH to property.
the e~ve described
•·
a charge under thla
The
property property, and all
Public Notice·'
aactlan that the sought
to
be existing· rlghta to
_ _:;.:...:.:..:....~:.:..:..::.....__ operator w.. nat epproprleted Ia mora mine, extract, and
ORDINANCE 678
otharwlae prohibited apeclflcally daacrtbad remove the aama,
by law from operating •• lollowa:
ahall be, and the
An Ordinance· to 1 h 1
PARCEL 211-WLR
aama hereby are,
10 u nd
eatabllah the aalary amplification .Yatam, MEG-124-31.57
excepted
and
olthe Chief of Pollee and thet any ol the ALL RIGHT, TITLE raaarvad
.unto
lor the VIllage of · loll-Ing apply:
AND INTEREST. IN · Ownera, and their •
0 hI o
(a) A ayatam waa FEE SIMPLE IN THE halra, axacutora,
Pomeroy,
effective Auguat 1, baing operated to FOLLOWING
edmlnlatrato,.,
IUCCIIIOFI and
200t.
raquaat medical or DESCRIBED
BE IT ORDAINED vehicular aaaletanca PROPERTY,
111lgna forever;
BY THE COUNCIL OF or to warn al a INCLUDING
provided,· however, In
THE VILLAGE OF haurdaua
road LIMITATION
OF eo mining, extracting,
POMEROY, OHIO:
condition.
ACCESS, BUT
and removing •aid
Section 1: Thll
(b) The vehicle waa EXCLUDING COAL, coal, oil and 1111, and
the aalary lor the an emergency or OIL AND GAS, AND ot!Wr mlnerala, the
paaltlon of Chlal of public aefltty vehicle.
OTHER EXISTING · proper praaervallon
Pollee lor the Vlllaga
(c) TIW vehicle wee MINERAL RIGHTS
of the highway may
ol Pomeroy, Ohio, owned and operated
Situated In the not be Impelled.
shall be and Ia by the village or 1 Tawnahlp
of
Pursuant to Civil
hereby eatabllahed at gea,
electric, Lebanon, County of Rule 12(A)(1), aald
the rate of $25,000.00 communlcetlona, or Malga, State of Ohio, peraona mentioned
and In Section 28, above a hall taka
par year.
reluae company.
~ Section II: That
(d) The vehicle waa , 100 acre Loll 203 and · further · ·notice that
the
VIllage of uaad In authorized . 204, Town 2N, Ranga they have 28 daya
Pomeroy ahall pay public actlvltlaa, auch 11W, and bounded altar t!W completion
far family coverage 11
p., 1 d 11 ,
and daacrlbad aa of the Service by
lor the Chief al Pollee fireworks, epanlng laltowa:
Publication within
Section Ill: That
avent 1 , m ualcal
which
to anewar or
Baing a parcel of
thl a 0 rdl nanca a ha II producllona, and
atherwlaa deland
11
be take effect on ather actlvltl• which land ly ng an the lafl egalnat Plalntlll'a
Auguat1, 2001.
have the approval of and right aldea of t!W pathlon.
PASSED J uIY 18th, the
VIllage at centerline of a
The artglnel of any
2001 .
Pomeroy.
aurvay, made by lha euch anawar or other
3. Such offense Department
of pleading defending
Kathy HyHII, Clark
ehall be a minor Tranapanatlan and agalnet Plalntlll'a
John F. Muaaer, mladamalnor,
being locetad within pathlon muat be Iliad
Prealdant
·
h bl b
the boundary paints w 11 h
Marian 1
Bryan Shank
pun11 • e Y a 11 ne of Parcel No. 211 • Harrlaon, t!W Clark of
Larry Wehrung
up to S1 00.00 for WLR a a delineated the Common Plall
uch occurrence.
upon tiW Department
J ac k Welker
Thll ' Ordinance of Trenaportatlan'a Court of Malga
George Wright
ahall
become Rl ht IW
County, Ohio, It 100
11 -o •• • ay p 1an ...
"- con d strail, P.O.
VictorYoung Ill
allectlva at the MEG
• rile I data
~~~
·12......1.57,
Box 151, Pomeroy,
(7) 26, 2001
bay taw'.
prov ._, Shaata 20 and 21 of Ohio 415781; and,- a
42, and recorded In
(8) 2'' 200t
· Paaaad 18th day ol Pill Book 5, Pagaa 28 copy of any •uch
2tc
July, 200t.
and 27, recorda of anawer or other
the
Recorder'• pleading dalandlng
Office, Malga County, again at Plalntlll'a
__P_u..:.
bl_lc_N_o_t..:.lc..:.e_ . Kathy HyHII, Clark
petition muat be
John
Blaettnar, Ohio. It Ia undaratood . awvad
upon Mark E.
Mayor
that the atrlp of land Haye, Eeq., at S7
ORDINANCE 860
John
Muaaer, above daecrlbad South .High Str•t,
contalna 17.844
WHEREAS, the PNaldant
acraa, mora or laae, Suite 310, Columbua,
Village of Pomeroy
Ohio 43211-4132 . .
wlahea to adopt l7) 28, 200t
of wlllch the praeant
A lalluno to anawar
provlalona
8) 2, 2001
road occuplaa 0.000 or atharwlaa deland
prohibiting
the _21_•_ _ _ _ __
acral, more or lall.
within aald 28 daye
Thla daacrlptlon 11 will raaullln Plaintiff,
playing ol aound
Public Notice
baaed an a aurvey pursuant to Civil Rule
amplification
made by BALKE 55
equipment
at
ENGINEERS lor the
• aaklng tha court
excaaalve lavala, and
IN THE COMMON
Ohio
DIP"rtmant
of
to
grant 1 Judgment
WHEREAS, the
PLEAS COURT OF Transportation In by default agalnat
conduct prohibited Ia
MEIGS COUNTY,
any auch peraon who
2000 • By Joaeph D. lelia to anawar or
not
currently
OHIO
Kuhlmann,
P.S.
...rwl ,...... d
praacrlbed under tha
A-laterad su~or 01,,. 18 .,.,.n ·
axlatlng VIllage Code;
·•
· ••,
Gordon Proctor ,
Gordon Proctor,
No. S-8823 under the Director
Ohio
. NOW THEREFOR~,
Director Ohio
BE IT ORDAINED BT
direction
end
DIP"rtmant ol
aupervlalan
of Dapertmant
of
THE POMEROY
Tranaportatlon,
Tranaportadon
VILLAGE COUNCIL,
Ronald F. Rlaer, P.S. (7) 25, (8) 2
THAT:
.
Raglatarad Surveyor
Plaintiff,
No. 5-7083.
1. No person or
v.
Public Notice
All Iran plna eat ,,.
ogonlzatlon shall Ruby K. Ludwig, 11 al,
to
be
(3/4")x(30")
by
engage In any
Dalandanta.
a(t 112") aluminum
performance or uH
PUBLIC NOTICE
any electronic device CASE NO. 01.CV.035 cap, atamped "ODOT
In any matter ao aa to
R\W DIStRICT 10"
The
following
and the aurveyar'a achoor dlatrlcta:
· create o . public ' JUDGE FRED W.
dlalurbanca
or
Ohio Raglllratlon or Alexander Local
CROW Ill
operata or parmllt!W
aurvayor'a
nama, School Dlatrlct,
operation of any LEGAL NOTICE FOR number
and/or Athena City School
aound ampllllcatlon
company 11111111.
Dlatrlct, Eaatarn
PUBLICATION
Paints llatad with . Local SChool Dlllrlcl,
ayatam from within o PURSUANT To R.C.
·vehicle aa that the
(Iran pin all) era to M"ga Local School
183.07 .
aound Ia plainly
[Two (2) lnHnlona] . be aet by the District, Naleonvlllacontractor
aa York Clly School
audible II a 4111ance
Indicated
at
the
Dlatrlct, Southern
of 50 or mora feet
· (A) John li. Murphy,
from t!W vehicle.
laat known addreaa termination of the Local SChool Dlllrtct,
(a)
"Public 37831 Stile Route conatructlon proJect. l)'tmllle Local SChool
Said -lone baing Dtatrlct, Trt.County
Dlaturbanco" Ia 143, Pomeroy, Ohio
vocatlonal
defined, lor the 45718,
preaant the Billion numbera J o 1n t
purpoaea of the Coda Addraaa Unknown; •• etlpulated In the School, will hold a
apaclal combined
section, ae a loud (B) Raben E. Rogara,. hereinbefore'
muelc revelry, or ancllar the Unknown mentioned aurvey board meeting on
alactronlcolly
Tranalaraaa, Aaolgna, and aa ahown by Monday, August 8,
- ~plana on lila In the 2001 ' 7·00
reproduced eound Executora,
. p.m., ••
.,,.
Ohio
DaP"rtmant
of
Ohio
University
Inn,
dona or created at a Admlnlltratora, Halra
Galbraith Room .
. time and a place, or and Davlaau of Tranaponaaon,
In any manner 10 11 Raben E. Rogers, Marlette, Ohio.
Prior lnetrumtnt (8) 2, 2001
to
create
a and all peraons
aubatantlal likelihood claiming by, through, Reference: O.R. 37, ttc
of dlalurbl ng the or under them, Page 185, and O.R.
publlc'a raaaanabla Addraaa Unknown; 15, Pages 558, 185,
CLEAN HOUSE
expectation of peace (C) Chartaa E. Weaver 887, and 8ft, In
County
and quia!.
oncllor the Unknown the
WITH THE
(b)
•sound Tranala-a, Aaalgna, Recordar'a Oftlce. •
the
above
Of
Ct ASSIFI EDSi
Amplification
Executora,
Syatam" maana any Admlnlatratora, Holra daecrlbad area,

.

t

Cheste r, Ohio

OUALITY
WINDOW

'

SYSTEMS

'•

7a-•as-uaa
Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

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Repair
RemOdeling
New Additions
Garages

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•
992-5479 ~~

W¥0282120

flEE ElliMIIII
741112-1121
Tllfnl

181112-1121

==~-~Advertise in ,
'
this space for !:
s100 per
'·
month

..

Lose Welghl Now
AakMeHow
WhoU.. you'ro lryJnv 1o
loot wolgl1t, aupplllnoort
your dial lor INIIImum
nulrHion, orjuatlooll your
Qrtlltlt with tilt blat
pii'IOIIII .. ro produclt,
HM»&gt;Iffln-1111

IOI!Ialhlng lor....,.,.,
Coli yaur lnclopondont
Horl&gt;olllt dlttrlbutor,
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i

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Gallioa, Muon 0aDd Meip Countlea
Licensed and I-red
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fREE ESTIMATES
Phone fJ04J 6l4·6100

s.-,PL

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• Qaragea

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

P/B

(ONTRAaORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio un1

740.985-3'!48

.,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
M1ddl c por1. Oh1o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; .
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental. Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollover's;
Mortgage;, Major Medical
• Nursing Home

ili!

7 40 -"'"t~h- 2422

El'lc llacnurn

FlotWork,
Replacemenll, • Walk!
and DrivH • Stendl ·

Crete F.rot Etdmatu
Servlna Ohio ond W.V.
WVIIIa171Z

AJI ,Makes Thactor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealen
Hauling &amp;
Excavating

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/v/1,_, OH 45723

740117-GIII

dl

Hauling • Umestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Servkes

992·3470
Advertise

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo
On Thursday•
At6:30 p,m . .
• Main Street ·
Pomeroy, 01 oio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
S1arburst
Progressive top line

Lie. #00·50

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

Roofing •

Free Estlmales

Spout
Free Estimates

740-742·8015 Jr
1-Bn-353-7022

949·1405
591•5011

;

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f

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••

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...

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.... a•ID•·tts 21. . .
u.........

. . . . . . . .?

' ritE~

· DIPOYIII
Plll'l'l

,.

Fully !neurad

'

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l

l

COHCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, Wollt, Slept •

l NT
3.

Dbt

fliurlll
I.
l ¥ •

1~.

AU 1111111

20 - &amp; Taylor
(daP"rl·
mant atore)
2t King oftha
Scand~
bone
Huna
navla
3 Vall agea
22 lnexpar·
23 Wooden
4 Mineral
lencad one
1hoa
· aprlnga
23 Actreao
28 Author
5 - Aviv
Ward
Umberto- 8 Doll, • ·II·
24 Declare
27 Unlock
7 Hand~ (o
25 Smokey,
(poet )
tool)
e.g.
30 Tuma
eklllfully
27 Some
outward
8 Nat
poama
32 Gate away
outwardly
from
8 - -do-wall 28 Daatructlve
lnaact
34 lnlro
11 lnvltadon
28 Ancient
35 Moat II~
lnlta.
Italian
boding
12 ThNatanad
family
38 Pt. of ETA 13 Fr. holy
31 Nalay .
37 Actor
woman
al"para
Chaney
18 BHrllke
33 Macawa
38 Social rank
drink

·~IIJt.l
l'll~l

l'ilS$

•••
•'

'I

L~~~~d !l

t401N'6 Tttt

TOl&gt;AY1

CELEBRITY CIPHER

BORN LOSER

r:(ou

'~~:~~~, S©tt~lA-Lt~~s·
O

I

I

I

,G_L,_u..,T~I,3. . -F
jh"'~

~1

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0

• •

•

~

..

ITHURSDAY

'Your

'Birthday.

hiday. Aug. J, 2001
Many of the restrictive con-

Advertise in ~
this space for 1
',
s100 per
1.
. month
1'

• ditions rh;H have existed in

I

gress, will be liti:ed in the year
ahead . These chan ges allow
yon to secure the success you
dl·servc.
LEO Quly 23- Aug.' 22) -- It
would be far better for you
today to o perate as independent of others as pos s1ble .. It
isn 't likely that people in geneul will be in a coope rative
inood at t hi~ time. Trying to

~------------------------..J ·•!

~
1

!'

45n1

•

I

740-949-2217 :
Slzta5'x 10'
1•
lo 10' X30'
,•
~

Hours
·•
•
7:00AM • 8:00 PM 1-i~

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•

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(

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past . proh ibitin g your pro-

I

21170 8uhln Rotld !
Racine, Ohio
:

t~a

~ J4;~l(/~/ll
AUGUST21-.....,...J

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in this
space
remodeling,
on
drywall, room
for
cuHing edge ••• addllions, and
plumbing.
•so per Read lha
Terry Lamm
992.;0739
month ClassiDad Ads

1

,v Is I I I

.'

.
'· Hill'• .tell

38 Gu'n grp.
40·1nharllcra
41 "-La
Douce"
42 Iced
drink
43 Compa11
point

Ycsterday. I gave a
deal in which an ex44 Art deeo
pert in a pro-am
nome
event played the ·
46 Days of llhe paat)
spade king from king47 City In
doubleton under his
Ruaala
48 Govt farm
partner's spade-ace
agency
opening lead . This
50 Dawn
goddeaa
was the only chance
52 Raram
to defeat the contract,
room
53 Buahy
but the leader immeclump
www .kl rtgfNIW".Qifft
diately -- and fatally - switched to another
suit.
As some compensation, the expert also
told me about this
deal.
After play, everyo ne
received a booklet
contai ning
some
"learne d': analysis.
(The writer even disc u.s sed an auction
co ntain ing an insuffiMtAT~OAF
cient bid.) For this
deal , . the notes suggested that, at the
prevailing vulnerabil ity, if South's one-notrump response was
nonforcing,
West
should pass. Perhaps
that is right, but I
by Lule Campo•
.·
Colabnty Cipher cryplograma art crnled lrom quollllonl b)' lamouo
doubt (m)any players
. pooplt, pool and preoonl. Eooch Iotter In 1118 cipher atandolor onolher,
would do in.
Todly'S clue: B equals L
Here,
though,
THE
GPE
CABK
-.
Sou
th
's
initi
al reEVU
MN
'RGAOU
~\\\:)IS ~OT 1\ CIZ:IM.If-.11\L "~
c~'r Pt.£.b..DTEM.I'O~~ I"':
I'M. 1\FRI\\D YOU'~ JUST
sponse was forcing,
JU
CDPNUBLUN
TR io\!... , f/\1(:. , (:,~IJE&gt;ITE. ...
I 1-\:)lo..N \1Y .•.
CW
JVMOV
001!\IG TO ~fo..\IE- TO '?1'\'(
which was tied in
'(QOC .I'(&gt;,RKJ t-lG
with a two-over-one
J )I •
CW
NED W W
EVU
GPU
response being gameTIC.I(E.T I .
'
forcing. This is a
EUR
ME MN ZGRU.' M0 V
popular tourn a ment
method.
NVGJA
Although East was
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Amateurs l)ape ..Prolosslonals wort&lt;.'
marked · with a near- Garson Kanln
Yarborough, West
'How do· I work? I grope.'- Albert Einstein
doubled, deciding she
WOlD
h:ld-!00 mu cK to
GAM I
overcall two . hearts.
Edilod ~y CLAY I . POLLAN_.;__ _ __
Then, when the pro
AND "ltliJ DION"T • HANG ~ OOOOH!
YOU DI[&gt;N 'T "cHICKEN
Rearr_onge letters of the
Ur~ "l'OU BECAME
.; $PIN ON.
I: HAVE
OUT.' YOU WERE
bid three clubs (with
four
scrambled words be·
THREE
INTOXICATED BY
. OVERWHELMED SY THE
~ I&gt;OCTOR,
considerable trepida - low to form four simple words .
OLDEI'.
SPIN
THE 50UNO OF
INTE.NSIT'( Of YOUR
tion, ·he commented),
HER VOICE .
FEEl-IN&lt;;.:'&gt;.
ON!
.,....---,
she had little option
OPRAUR
but to double .
1
1 I I I I
West started with
two top diamonds
and the h eart ace.
SUBLH
Now she got careless.
Instead of cashing the ,
sp ade ace next, she
P~UTS
led a second heart ,
hoping partner would
"'Well, we went to the salad bar,
SI-IE 60U6i-IT ME FIVE
51-lE WAS
.
I-lOW COULD TMAT GIRL
REALLV
MARSIIMALLOW SVNDAE5, AND ruff. Away went ~=~===::::...,deli bar and dessert bar," the man
TlliNK TI-IAT 't'OU ARE ME 7
South's spade loser on 1-r·.....,,..:.....:,.I.;.W~L:....:,E..;S::.,.-1
STRAN6E
~ lATE i).IEM ALL ..OF COliRSE,
. ~~d-t~ _h. i~ ~~.te. "how much should
NOW, I DON'T FEEL 50 GOOD... dummy's heart king.
4
Complete
chuckle quoted
Declarer co ntinued
-.1.
·
_.J_.J_.J_.J--1
by
filling
in
the
missing words
1
(fJ
•
•
•
"I
with th e heart jack, 1.
you dovelop from step No. 3 below.
~ ruffed and overruffed.
HERS IN
South trumped a dia . mond in the dummy
· an d ran the club
queen. When i t lost,
SCRAM-lETS . ANSWERS
he claimed nin e tricks
for a top. One down
Frosty · Abbot · Jingo· Fetish . JOB OFFERS I .
would · have been a
After repeatedly running items over a check out scanbottom. shared with
ner, the clerk announced, "This is the only challenge th·e
one other pair who
JOB OFFERS ."
went two down ·undoubled in three notrump.

I

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUatON
•Complete
Remodeling

" 'n l

BiG NATE .

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Resideallal Conunerdal New Comtructlon

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Top • Trim • Removal

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FAU .. HOME ESTIMATES • •I£UfQ IS IEIJEVIIIQ• •'fwYIOIM17

TREE SERVICE .

lhoiiiCI

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A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· P.lus, Inc.

WOODSHED

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t !U 5 I J
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• A J

ILOCKS DVT IIA
Of DAMAQIIIQ

Public Notices In Newspapers.

KQ 7 1i~

• J 7

8UIIIi!R
- H!AT
OUT AND· W1IITER
Till! HEAT Ill

ULTRAV101.ET RAYI
fACTORY DIRECT
PRICIIIQ

t Vlanor
8 ldonttc.l
46 Thou
llbllng
10 Secret
48 Weirder
wedding
51 EnglpartlciP"nl 54 Houaton
12 Ilea-, IoWa
team
14 Archlvea 55 Worahlppad
15 Holtolor a 511 Ha•dy "o

llt 1LlW I

¥ tU

40 Dlatraa- ·
42 Chirp
45 Organ lor
hearing

•

patch up a broken romanc e?
T h e AHro- Graph Match maker can help you understand what to do to make the
relationship work. Mail S2 .75
to Mat chmaker, c/ o this
newspaper , 1'.0 . Box 1758,
Murray H ill Station. New
York , N Y 10156,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Umally you're pretty good
at keeping your mouth shut
about thin~ sensitive to oth ers, whether you're asked to
or not. T odJy, however, yo u
could do too much talking for
your own good.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
... T hi5 ii1ight be o ne of tho~e
. days whcr~ socializing co uld
t\ltn out ttl be 3 negative ex-

ll

• .

pericnce, especially if t~1ere is
someo ne in the group who is
a bit abrasive.
SCORP IO (O ct, 24-Nov.
22) -- Make Cl'rtain everything yo u do today is above
rcpruJch . If you try to get coy
or spuri ous, it'll be recognized
and seam ed by those who are
important w yo ur cause .
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- It doesn't ·matter if
someone might deserve it or
no t, sounding off at him or
her will on!y hurt your image.
Hold your tongue by co unt· ing to 10, or even 20.

',

TAURUS (April 20 -May
20) -- It's not like you, yet today ym• could atta ck someone
for not glvihg yo u the credit
vou thin k you deserve for
sometlung in whi ch ·you
played· only a min or role. Fat:e
the facts.

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) •• Read all contracts.
agreements or warr;wti es

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

-- How you take a comm ent
m;~de by an other today will
reflect upon what othen think •
:~bout your ability to be llexible . Being too criti cal or sensitive will put you in a bad
light
"

down to the last line to:day.
, Fi nancial tra nsactiom of all
types could unwittingly conuin small details that may
work -against a legitimate

claim.

AQUARIUS Qan, 20-Fcb.

CANCER Qunc 21-July

19) •• Your friends may tolerate your rc!itlc~ m en today, but
will no t accept yo u smarting
ofT at th em over your own
(rmtrations. If you c;;m't be
civ il .· to wards o th en, stay

away .

PISCES (Feb. 20: March 20)
-- Speak well of friends who
ue not present and who cannot present the-ir side of a
story. Your commenu wi11 be
taken as a sign of unfriendlin~: ss and hostility.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- - Unfortu n&lt;~tdy . should you
be temptc:d to take shortcuts
o n your tasks or assignment5
today , th e meth od§ you 're
li ke ly to apply may caus e
more work for you than less.

\

22) -- You 're pretty good :lt
counting facts and tigmc~ today wht.n left to your own
devices. If you have to follmv
another 's way!l, however,
complic.ations could enter the
picture.

�SPO~TS: Reds sweep Dodgers, Bl

••

The ·Daily Sentinel
encoyrages your
support of these area
businesse·s who make
th,is page possible.

a1

~

·.u ... ".._ · 1\ullu&gt;t l, iOIJI ·Vol ~I. No . 1111

Jj ,.

All Timet Eaatern

-..

!

1.

:1.

·:8an

i.
4.

I.
I.
1.

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

WINSTON CU.
Jelf Gordon, 2,847
Rick)' RI.!Od , 2.802
' Dale Jarrett , 2.740
Tony Ste-ooart, 2.586
Ster11n11 MarlJI"i, 2.529
Ru5tv Waii!K:e, 2.492
0. E&amp;rnhardt Jr., 2.453

I. Bobby Labonte. 2.438

CI)Lt)

I . Kevin Her~lck 2.422
10. · JDtln~ Benson, 2,353

c..-

.. C}I
ON

•

CI)CJ)

Kevin Har.-iek , 3,188
Greg 81fflf, 3.025
Jason ~11e1, 3,010
Jeff Green, 2.934
M Mclaughlin, 2,550
IOfl)' Raines. 2.521
Jimmie JDtlnson. 2.502

Elton Sawter. 2.491
Chad Little. 2.379
Kenny Wallace. 2.377

·

c

1. (2) Jeff Gordon

Featuring
----

Kentucky
Fried Chicken
228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

992-5432

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour

Didn't win but led tho moot
laps
Finish a bit dlaappolntln&amp;
Nothln&amp; went rl&amp;flt
Seems to be beck on track
Ener&amp;lzer Bunny of racln•

3. ( i) Date Jarrett
4. t4) Tony Stewart
(5) Kevin Harwick
6 . (6) D. Earnhardt Jr. Has become a prime factor
ewery ~aak

s·.

,,I'
•
t.

I

c;o The a-ston Gazette
2&amp;00 E. Franklin Blvd.

Gutonla, N.C. 280M

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

What : Brickyard 400
Where : Indianapolis Motor
Speedway (2.5-mile track),
160 laps/ 400 mites
When: 2 p.m., Sunday

BUSCH GRANO NATIONAL
What: Kroger 200
Where: Indianapolis
Raceway Park, Clermont. Ind.
(0.686--mile track). 200
laos/137.2 miles
When: 8 p.m .. Saturday
Oefendln&amp; champion : Ron
Hornaday

Defendln&amp; champion:

7, (8) Bobby Labonte A victory that waolong
owerdue
8. (71 Sterling Marlin Dodges get aero halp at
Indy
9. (9) Ruaty Wallace Stuck In a rut
10. (10) Jimmy Spencer He's turning Into

Mr. Consl1tency

•

FROM lAST WHK
WINSTON CUP

ahead of 11th-place
finisher Ricky Rudd and
107 aheael of Jarrett, whO
entered the race tied with
Gordon. Jarrett was
involved in two diffe rent
crashes within eight la ps .

LONG POND. Pa . Winston Cup champion
Bobby Labonte brake out ot
a 2001 slump by passing
Dale Earnhardt Jr. with two
lap s remaining in the
Pennsylvania 5 00.
-BUSCH~ GRANO NATIONAL
The Pontiac driver
FOUNTAIN, Co lo . - Jeff
passed Earnhardt Jr.'s
Che11rolet at the start -finish Purvis, in a Chevrolet. ran
away ~ith the NAPA
line , capping a two-lap
AutoCare 250 at Pikes
dogfigh t between the two.
Peak International
Labonte's teammate, Tony
Raceway.
Stewart. finished third .
. Purvis won in only his
It was Labonte's third
second start for RlcharO
career victory at Pocono
·Chi ldress Racing·and
Raceway, where he swept
crossed the finish line
Mlh of the season's 50015.782 seconds ahead of
mllers in 1999.
Ford driver. and reigning
Jeff Gordon dominated
for _m ost of the day, leading se ries champion, Jeff
Green . The victory was
121 out of 200 laps. but
Purvis' first since 1996
he had to settle for eighth
and third of his career.
place after a decision to
Poi nt s leader Kevi n
change all four tire s on the
final pit stop caused him to Harvick finished third after
starting in the back of tne
lose track position .
field. Ja !l!on Keller finished
Still, Gordon took the
fou rth and Greg Biffle fifth.
poin t s lead, pulling 45

•

Track quallf)'lnc record:
Brett Bodine, Ford, 181.072
mph, Aug. 4. 2000
Race record : Bobby
Labonte. Pontiac. 155.912
mph, Aug. 5, 2000

FEUD OFTHE WEEK

Track quallfyln&amp; •ecord:
David Green, Chevrolet.
113 .461 mph. Aug. 4, 1994
Race record: Jimmy
Hensley. Oldsmobile, 96.923
mph, June 22. 1985
Not.t.le : Amazingly,
Oldsmobiles {no longer active
on the series) have won this
race four times.

TRUCK SERIES
What: Power Stroke 200
Wtlere : lrJ.dianapoiiS

.

'

There's actualty no lingeri ng -feud between these
siblings, but Jeff did cost older brother Ward a shOt at a
goad finish when he couldn't get his Ford slowed down in
.. time to avoid Ward 's Pontiac: · 1cost Ward a shot at
winning, and It was rny fault," Jeff said. "These things
happen.·

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

NASCAR Tblo Woek'o Monte Dutton IIIYao 1111 opinion:
"Act ually, the crash was not started by .Jeff Burton. As he
said, he just didn't get slowect Cklwn fast enough. The most
nOtaiJie result of this inddent was Jeff's sportsmanlike
willingness to admit he made 1;'1 mistake by not ge"tttng his
car slowed down as fast as some others, 'Nard ln ch.Jded.
did.~

Yfiit.J:,iil!f.1:ijii('Jil
=~~~~:-~·.~::~. .ltl, David P. .rson,
split with car owner
HOII Elllnct;en.
Elllneton eleCted not to
flplace ~with

Mother veteran, but
ln1t11d went wit~ 1
youftiC driver. As a
mutt, Davey Allison
made hl1 Wln1ton C~o~p ·
debut In Elllnaton'a
Chevrolet Mont. Carlo
SS, No. 1 1 atTaHede&amp;a

Supertpeedwey on July

27,1985.

cookln 't h.·we bc~:n th~t for forword.
Thai's a long way : you t"&lt;lllld hit your
d"tin 00 1111: wf~l. mayOC. btJ nut you1
ct~ . He h:KI bn"ia.'tl rib!i from the wl-..~1.
and thallm to (TICOO 11 broken bl.'ft.
" .. (l')rom looking nt the car and
kiiOI\·ing whal his inj1Jrics wt.-n:: Ti~
tllinJ;" Idl me wlmt hllPI"JI.'fk.'d.""
NASC-\R pri.'sidt·nt Mile l lel1on.

r+

CD

on her flrlit Win&gt;ton Cup race. His
first words were. "Well. dorlin11 . . . "'
Mr. Hammond, keep yo ur male
cheuvinistic vieu.·s 1o yourself.
Please lre-pt he-r u you would the
ot her drivers. and her name 1s
Shawna.
And~a Rar'nh1rdt
Johnstown, Pa.

"""'

X.

cI»

Dear NASCA R This Week,
This is kind ofpuzzlin~ to n11:. If
the Daytona SUOIS the Super 11owl
o f stock car mcittg. thrn why i~ it at
the beg in nin11 of the season ins1ead
o f at thi.! end of the se.1son'!
Sc:otl \ 'ogtl
Edon, Ohlo
Thai ~- u l't'r_r ~;ut&gt;d q ut'$linn. 0flf!
JJII!i\"ifrJt Qll.~ lfl'' i .l ' tltil l , I'OMing
11/;1.,- /Jte OJ/·.\"C:dSIJII, IIWSI I£'UIRS 1/f"f.'

ut th1•

hl'l~lrt

olwepu rotio1r and

IW \'1' .fl11d:p ifrd plt&gt;ll~\' f!{ll!SO/Ift;l!$
/u

ht!gln u

lll'll " l"I!USU/1.

Jn

Ollr l' r

0{ lhe

/t'Um $ (;lre Q/

Ron H. ......, 43, ...........

-but.-

for. Fte wants performance.
We can't stop and think
what would have happened
· with the crashes we've had
and the alternator belt
fa!lln&amp; off, oil leaks, stuff like
that But we're running well,
and we 're having fun. and
we're making races and
that's what counts."
Hal Foyt been positive, or

Conseco Pontiac team.
We're not where we want to
be, but we know where we
have to be. We're learning
mare In every race.
Wh8t do you think you've
done well, and Whei ....
you not done wttl? "In ~
Winston Cup racing, you
have a lot of fans, and 1
think you have to adapt to
hu hi been dla1ppolnted? the fans first. When you
"He's positi11e that we've gat adapt to that, I think the
to get it better. He's
whole day goes easier. I
disappointed where we're
haven't- done anything well
qualifying. He's happy the
so far {la ughs). We want to
wa~ we are running, but the
qualify better. You rea ll ~~
fin ishes aren't there. He's
can't say what you've done
coming to the shop more . well becaUse you don't
often . He's showing what we know. You know what you'~~e
need to be doing; he's
done bad because they are
definitely up on the team.
all going to tell you that
We've definitely got some
you 've done badly."
great people on the

Wtto-sNot

• NOT: Dale Eamhardt Jr.
is fulfilling his potential.

1. Who holds the record for most
second-place finishes?

2. What driver finished in the top 10 in 35
consecutive races?

• NOT: Hard to imagine

· L9·9961: 'Ja~es ~one · ~
·gg]: '.lllad PJe~OI!l "'f

Dale Jarrett having such

SllliMSNY

...-·-&lt;--·
IS

ltEI.P AT LA.~T : In 111 :mcmp: to
in~e the oompt11tiveness oflhe new
make. NAS('AK il111l(Mif1t-ethh,1f modi·
(K:;flii~JS to d-,e tlutl air rJaml_ 1h!: area
beloo IlK' bumper - tbr tiiC Dodg.! lntrcpid v.ill gn llltO clti.'CI stanirlj; with the
Aug. S Elril:kyllfll 4110 11 1 l nd~lllll[lOiiS
Motur Sr-..'t.\Jwuy.
The modilicattot1 w111 niiO'\.\• lnlreflid
tCnm~ toextcnd their liurllairdun 2illl.-hi-5 forw..U t-ck1." 11lo: bumper from the
c um'tllllm'il.1!\.'1llcrll. whrch IS 1'2inch.
Til: bw11p.•r'~ P-J"i1illi1Yoill nol du-1b'l:·

X
IT'S C"Iti::J\11STRY· Kl.'\·i nlt..~.
dri~u of the No. &lt;I

0

Is. holding a high-school essay
contest In memor~ of the late
wendell SCott. who was from
Danville, Va. Conducted in
cooperation with the
Commonweatth of VIrginia,
Halifax Chamber of Commerce,
J£ Burton Construction and
the Urban Youth Racing
league. this essay contest w111
encourage high-school-age
students to learn about AfricanAmerican~ and motarsports.
The essay contest will
culminate with the selection of
three finalists who will be
awarded a share of $5,000 In
scholarships.
Thl1 presentation of the
awards will t9ke place during
pre.racv activities prior to th~
start of South Boston's Sept.
28 NASCA~ Craftsman Truck
250 One of the expected
competitors In the race Is Willy
·t Ribbs. a black NASCAR driver.
S1udents wishing to participate
In the Wendell Scott Memorial
Essay Contest can secure
research ioformation via South
Boston Speedway's Web site.
www.southbostonsoeOOway.
com. Eligible high-school-age
participants are encouraged to
write an essay between 1,000
and 2.000 words that focuses
an African-Americans and
motors ports. To be eligible,
essays must be received by the
South Boston Speedway (F.Q.
Box 1066, South Baston, VA
24592) on or before Sept. 10.

-.

CD
~

::::s

C"!!.

2:cr
CD ...,.
oc.
I»

~

--·
fn

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135
l-ll•lllmll@lrognll,ntl
www.performlnctupgradtl.com

lany Mc:C"Iure. i~ sr:ill WJI'ki'lt on oommuniarlion with Ius 111:10.' cn:w chid

Scon Eggbton is in his

~ittlh n~.-e

~~oith the team as C!\."\1."chiefsirn

CCllllit1l

3board for the ~race lasl mooth. In
thai SJllll.l.q:l!gc's bn1 finiJJ is 21st.
:nl he has finished Jtllh Of 'Ml1"SC in the

foor ether,;.
INJUR\' UPDATE : l.k.cl; Whitt".
38. of Penskt: Racing. ~ uiTeltd a linctu~ left scllJUia. fi11ctured 1ct1 c:tn...iclc.
fhlcturcd rib. skull fmctl.ire 1111:1 ''sub-herill10id hemmtuige" wlltll he fell o fft~
1e:am 's IIUilspOf1er after t~ Nt.·w Englarkl
JW

I

www

111

yol.uly·.•

111 11 ..

~ 1 """

N

co
1\)
U1

g

Please see Highway, Al

Meigs Board·
delays action
on proposals_
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Teaching
positions were filled by
Meig; Local Board of Education Thursday in preparation
for the opening of school
later this month
Teachers hired Were Travis
J. Abbott, high school social
studies, with board member
Roger Abbott abstaining
from the vote; Kathy Hudson, high school science;
Matthew Kinnard, art at the
high school; Kimberly D.
Barrett, Tide I, and Martha
R. Holter,Tide VI-R, both at
Pomeroy
Elementary

SchooL
Hired as substitute teachers
were Jan Eldridge, Laur~
Ellis, Catherine GrosvenorHart, Gay Perrin, Jennifer
Roush
and
Lawrence
Wilcoxen.
In other personnel matters,
Ashley Thomas was approved
as a volunteer assistant cross
country coach, the resignations of Nancy freeman as a
substitute teachers' aide and
Traci Houda~helt as a health
handicapped student aide
were accepted; and Betty
Ann Wolfe was granted
maternity leave.
Kim ball W. Shields was
hired to assist the school dis-trict in grant writing at a
maximum cost of $6,000 for
the year, and approval was
given to pay Mark Thomas ·
for eight days of vacation
accrued while serving as. a
network technician for the
dis,trict.
Action to accept eight
grants was taken, They
included Title 1 $807,966;
Tide VI-B, $2460-70; Title

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

~

I

"Many, if not most, of these construction employment impacc; will be in the
local area," he said.
The first section of the DarwinAthens project will cost $33.3 million,
and the three phases of the Ravenswood
project are estin1ated at $77 million in
all.
While employment and commercial

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Sentinel

z
0

1\)

Varnadoe

BY CiwuNE HOERJCH

Today's

..2
~

· Contractors
working for the
Ohio Department
of Transportation
have begun working

As a result, Humphreys says, every $1
spent on highway projecc; can generate
an additional S1.50 in local economic
impact.
"Research done by the Federal Highway Administration indicates that every
$100 million spent on highway investment supports 839 full -time constructio n jobs in direct employment, and
2,092 jobs in supplying industries in
indjrect employmcnt;'Varnadoe said.

POMEROY -Action on construction bids for the
Meigs Local elementary and middle schools opened in
July has been postponed until a meeting next Thursday
night.
Jeff Engram, project manager for The Quandel
Group In c., met with Meigs
lo ca l Board of Education
The bid came
Thursday night to discuss the
in well ove;
project and ask for the extenbudget and
sion on making a re~ommeri­
dation to the board until next
Engram said
week.
he may request
Speaking of th e elementary
school, he reported that bids a duign review
had been evaluated, bidders by the architect,
interviewed and concern
then a rebid to
expressed about the window see if the figure
package.
would come in
The bid came in well oyer
IDENTIFICATION.Cf~c..,..t;lebble Baer, art teacher, 'I.~, 'and Faith Varney, ll)f.llti·handlcapped aide,
' significantly
budget ann Engram said he
place pictures arid a short biography of teachers and staff employed at Southern Elementary inside
may request a design review by
lower.
a display case near the school's entrance to help students and parents "get to know each Individual
the
architect, then a rebid to-seebetter" during Sunday's orientation. (Tony M. Leach photo) -if the figure would come in significantly lower.
He also expressed concern about the only bid on
masonry, which came in well below the project manager's estimate, and noted that a continuing investigation is taking place to determine qualifications.
I
Engram said that next Thursday he will be ready to
BY ToNY M. lEAcH
Orientation begins at 2 tions for students who plan to
make recommendations for both the elementary and
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
walk to school.
p.m.
and
those
attending
middle school construction projects.
RACINE Getting both
"Hop efully, the orientation
A r eport \V:lS also given on preparation of the site
should plan on staying will help case any anxiety that
students and parents ac~uainted
along
Ohm 124 near Rutland, where the new elemenwith the upcoming transition
for the entire two-hour could possibly interfere with a
tary school will be built.
into Southern Elementary wiU session. Teachers are urged smooth transition ," said Ku csma.
Superimendent Williati1 Dudcley said Ohio Departbe the main objective of a special
"It can be very stressful for stuto
arrive
at
the
school
no
ment
of Natural Resources had viewed the slip near the
orientation scheduled for Sundents to enter a new building as ·
planned playground area and indicated that money was
later than 1:45 p.m.
day at the new school in Racine.
large as this one and we want to
not available to repair the area which may have been
Principal Mi chaela Kucsma
make sure that they are as comcaused
by strip mming~
said the special orientation day is and parents with · the new build- fortable as possible."
Buckley said that he coi1tinucs to work with U.S.
intended for parents and their ~ ing's layout, meeting teachers,
Orientation begins at 2 p.m.
Rep. Ted Strickland, State Rep~ John Carey and State
children planning on attending asking questions, and learning and those attending should plan
Sen
. Mike Shoemaker in efforts to secure funding.for
the newly constructed facility current procedures and policies," on staying for the entire twothe slip repair. He said the intention is to address the slip
during 2001-02 school year, she said.
hour session. Tea chers are urged
while the site preparation contractor has heavy equipwhich begins Aug. 28.
Two main issues administrators to arrive at the school no later
ment in there.
"We would like to emphasize are prepared to focus on during than 1:45 p.m.
Engram said the "recommended flX from professionthat the orientation is not for the orientation are procedures with
"Each student's parent or
als" is to clear, then stabilize the area, grade to flatten it
general public who may have using the new high tech cafe ter~ grandparent must accompany
been unable to attend the open mina], and transportation mat- them to the orientation," said
out,and ·then do positive drainage with erosion control.
house celebration in July," said ters, namely changes in bus Kucsma. "Only those attending
Attending the meeting were Buckley, Treasurer Mark
Kucsma.
routes, instructions for parents will receive packets of informaE. Rhonemus and board members, John Hood, presi"This orientation is geared who drive their children to tional material imperative to the
dent; Scott Walton, Wayne Davis, Norman Humphreys
and Roger Abbott.
toward familiarizing students and/ or from school , and direc- transitional process."

Orientation set for new building

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C'hc\rolct &lt;M1L't1 lrj

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on two phases of the Ravenswood
Co nnector, and work is expected to
begin right away on the first of two sections of the new U.S. 33 between Darwin and Athens.
Humphreys . said the economic
impact ofhighway construction is higher than for many forms of manufacrnring, because road contractors tend to use
local materials in order to save on their
transportation costs.

Meigs
Local fills
teaching \
positions

Please see Teachers, A3

• Even thou•h
Sunday's wlctory w11
Bobby Labonte•• flrat
ot the ••••on, crew
chief Jimmy Makar
Mldom makes • wrone
move, and one" of
Makar'• talents 11 the
ability to cet Labonte 'I
Pontiac rll&amp;ht for the
flnallapa. That's whit
heppontd •• Labonte
tracked down Dale
Earnhardt Jr. with two
IIPI to Co In the
Pennsylvania 500.

The
Daily
Sentinel
for
details
.
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

992-2155

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:-: &lt;REW OF ni WEll

AROUND THE GARAGE

meanwhile. hinted oot-c Bgaln 1hat 1he
fi nd1ng of the rulilg body ·s irrvestigarion
mighl be ptKhcd back. Some ~n of
an[l()llltccrnent had bt.-cn 1."~~1~'\1 in
early AugtN. Hclroo said il: u.oold 1101
occur 1mtillotd. pcrh1lps r~o.:ar the end of ·
1111: n101t h and perhaps e-. en la!Cf thm
thut.

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FanTips ~ c:::r.
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"uuld su8l!t:St to Sha~na Robinson

P·lace Your Business's Ad here

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...&amp;.

SOflltt:llte ~sked HammonJ what he

Who's Hot ...

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...~,ocn3

NASCAR This We~:k ,
is 10 JefT Hammond: "'You
don 't have to ca ll me dnrll/11!. darD~:11r

••••••••••••

KEEP ON SUBIU!"'"' : Robby Gor·
dnrt. who lf.~llif~ Jf.lh ;~t l 'ounJ. wtll
etllllimJC to fill inasdmt.-rofth: No. 31
tlM.'YfUICI ati!!:ISI through the AlJI!. 12
rrnd-coorsc rna: ill Wirtkins Glm N.Y..
~s Mike Skimter t"Ofllin ~ to rl.'l:uwr
!Tom inju ries sw;laintod in a e m~ at

CD

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Thi~

Earnhardt Jr. convinced his father's seat belt broke

NASCAR This 1/Eek
Dale EJlrrVirulJ1 Jr.. in a lcnl¢1y Play·
~ imerview. said he bclit.'\'t'S a brtJoltet1
seat belt caused his f&lt;liiJ.,-'s O.:ath in the
L)i]y1ona 5011
'"1\oi(M' my f~d li."T\ !it:utiJI:h bn.lke ...
IYy my fin~ ); 1njuri!.'S.'" he told PlayOOj.
"He had 1mjX!d. wilh ~ sl&lt;..'t.-nng wheel
'lltal nlt!all'&gt; the bell ln.J broh'Tl, or f1l:

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an awful weekend .

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ccs:UICD

Letters fnlm Our Readers

By Monte Dutton

·

'·

tOUr ....urn .0)

Jeff Burton vs. Ward Burton

Supply

.,

Defendln&amp; champion: Joe
Runman
Track quallfwln&amp; record : Joe
Ruttman. Dodge, 111.843
mph, Aug. 2, 2000
Race record: Greg Biffle,
Ford, 88.704 mph, Aug. 5,
1999
Notable: IRP has hosted a
truck race (!Very year since
the series began in 1995.

V.

Winston Cup Series
NASCAA This Week
Ron Hornaday is a tough,
veteran racer who is now a
rookie in the Winston Cup
Series because he
Impressed the late Dale
Earnhardt.
Earnhardt fueled
Hornaday's rise by putting
the Californian In the
Chevrolet fielded by •
Earnhardt" :n the Craftsman·
Truck Series, where
Hornaday won
championships In 1996 and
1998. Hornaday still holds
the SuperTruck recOfd with
25 career 11ictories.
Hornaday prepped for the
Winston Cup Series by
· finishing second in the
2000 rookie-of-the-year race
In the Busch Series. where
he wan twice and finished
fifth In points.
&amp;&amp;•: 43
Wife: Lindy
Children: Ronnie Ill,
Candice
Hometown: Palmdale.
Cellf.
Crew-cblef:-Donnie.Brown
Car: No. 14 Conseco
Pontiac Grand Prix;, owned by
A.J. Foyt
,
.Carwr statlatlct: 27
starts, 0 wins, 0 top-S
finishes, 1 top-10 finish ,
almoSt $1 million in
earnings
Flrtts: Start (June 7.
1992. at Sonoma, Calif.),
pole (none). win (none)
How do you r11te the
team .. performance? "I
&amp;tve tne team a 10. They'11e
been working hard. We'.ve
been running well; we just
haven· t ·had the finishes.
We've been going through
the struggles : new tire,
different bodies and
different fabricators in there
trying different things. We're
just trying to change
everything around, A.J. isn't
the easiest owner to dri~~e

Raceway Park,·Ciermont, Ind .
(0.686-mile track), 200 laps/
137.2 miles
When: 8 p.m .. Friday

••••••••••••

Ron Hornaday

TOP TEN

2. (3) Ricky Rudd

Crow's
Family
'
Restaurant

Jack Sprague. 2.132
Ricky Hendrick. 2.081
lrB\IiS KvaPil. 2.070
led Musgr8\·e. 2031
Terry Cook. 1.939
Dennis Seuer. 1.869
Randy Tolsma. 1.753
Rick Crawford. 1. 749

• NASCAR Th is Week writer Monte Dutton ran~s the
top 10 drivers heading into this weekend's race. last
week's ranking Is in parentheses .

&gt;en
ca

IIIII('
KFC

SCOtt Riggs, 2.143

Joe RUttmBn, 2,135

POMEROY -Two major highway
construction projec;c; now under way in
Meig; County should bode well for the
local economy.
Meig; County Economic Develop-ment Director- Perry Varnadoe referred
to statistics from Jeff Humphreys, director of economic foreca&lt;ting at the University of Georgia, indicating that the

NASCAR Tblo W..k

Bobby Labonte

•

Cl)

or a comment, wrtte:

Notable: TMe last th ree
Winston Cup champions have
pre faced their titles by
winning the Brickyard 400.

•

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

construction projece&gt; will result in
short-term
and
long-term benefits
to the local econo-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.

.,, you've &amp;ot • question

WINSTON CUP

''

Hometown Newspaper

Highway could bring economic boom

\I jj~,.j (.J
J
j _/_,.. :_) -.:.-1_,.. J _J
• Cr.rtsman Truek, Power Stroke 200
8 p.m. · Friday • ESPN
• Busch Grnd National, Kroeer 200
H p .m : · Saturday · TNT
• Winston Cup, Brlc:kyard 400
2 p.m. • Sunday · NBC

.

Melp County's

BY Bllwi J. REED

•

Friday

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Sports

Weather

High: 80s
L-:sOs

Redistriding board holds first meeting

Details, A2

•

COLUMBUS (AP) - At· its first
meeting Thursday, the board charged
with redrawing Ohio's legislative district lines promised to open the pro cess
to citizens more than ever before.
The five - member Apportionment
Board's only Qemocrat, however, said
the public should have more time to
comment on the plan it intends to
adopt.
The bo ard elected Gov. Bob Taft as its

Lotteries

AS

OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 2·9-4; Pick 4: 6-4-8-7

85
A4

llucbye 5:7-11-25-35-36

A3 W.VA.
81.3-4,6 Daily 3: 4-3-' Dally 4: 6-' -9-'

A2

C&gt; 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

II

chairman, Auditor Jim Petro as its vice
chairman and political consu ltant Scott
Borgemenke, a former aide to Taft , as its
secre tary. Taft, Petro, Secretary of State
Kenneth Blackwell and House Speaker
Larry Householder are the Republicans
on the board. Senate Minority Leader
Leigh Herin gton is a Democrat.
Ohio's 99 Hou se and 33 Senate districts must be redrawn to reflect population shifts found in last year"s census.

Th e House districts are drawn first,
then. three House districts are combined to form one Senate district. The
new maps must be published by Oct. 5.
T he board will hold 10 hearings at
colleges around the state Aug. 20-24,
then meet to review redistricting plans
on Oct. 1. The board will consider any
plan that would hold · up · under the

Please see Board. Al

Kids' Fair

I
'

Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Unit is sponsoring a Kids' Fair ·

Monclay, August 6
1 0:00 ..... 2:00 pill '
French 500 Room

I

I

All are welcome and invited! . For more information, call

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446·5075

0

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