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                  <text>SPO~TS: Reds sweep Dodgers, Bl

••

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

a1

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

Jj ,.

All Timet Eaatern

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1.

:1.

·:8an

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4.

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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

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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·.

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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.

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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.

"""'

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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

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

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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.

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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

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yol.uly·.•

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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

~

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"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

\)

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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CD

.,.,uth Boston (Va:) Speeclway"- l-

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C~all

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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.
\l"Ort{S, IIIIU I

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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 ...

('h""""'"' """""" ~

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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 .

a,--

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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

f
:I
D.

~
CD
•

•

.I:

a:D.

i'

-a

0
~
•

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

::z:

•

'I ,

.,

•

•

�•

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

State drafting rules for storing radioactive waste .

Ohio weather
Saturday, Aug. 4
Ac:cuWeathe~

IND.

0

forecast for

I Monolleld Iw/82' I •

0

Friday. August l. 1001

•

0
•I COiumbtJo 111'118' I
.

-~
KV.

C 2001 Ac&lt;uWeather, tnc.

..

W. VA.

COlUMBUS (AP) - The stote i&lt;
drafting rules to allow private companies
to store low-level radioactive waste for up
co 100 years.
,
The goal is to have regulations in place
if a company proposes to ,create such a
storage depot, although no proposal is
forthcoming, Roger Suppes, chief of. the
Department of Health's Bureau of Radiation Pro.tection, said T~ursday.
" It's not coming ro Ohio next week or
next month or next year, or it may never
come, but we do believe that it's better to
be prepared to have a set of standards that
we have looked at and are credible and
that you can evaluate," Suppes said.
The state Radiation Advisory Council
is drafting the regulations with help from
Health Department staff.

Sudt ~ regulorion would be for Slorage
only, not for permanent disposaL Material would remain the property and responsibility o( the entity that created it and
would eventually have to be retrieved.
Users could include nuclear power
plants and academic research facilities,
among otheri, Suppes said. The material
could range fiom contaminated clothing
and tools to some contaminated m~dical
waste.
Ohio now sends its radioactive waste to
sites in Utah and South Carolina. The
South Carolina site is reducing its capacity and will stop accepting waste by 2008.
Ohio companies that generate lowlevel waste typically receive five-year
licenses to store waste on their sites, said
Dan Swanson, a council member and

chairman of thl'. committee drafti~g tbe
regulations.
Some companies might prefer a place
to store waste longer, either to store up
more before shipping or because they're
running out of room, Swanson said.
"If you don't have the capacity to store
more than X amount and you're going to
accumulate more than that, you're going
to have to do something," he said. "If you
don't have a disposal option, a commercial storage facility might be answer."
In 1997, the Midwest Interstate LowLevel Radioactive Waste Commission
voted to shelve plans for an Ohio
radioactive waste dump that would have
held waste from the compact's six states
- Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri and Wisconsin .

sible cause of a plane crash that killed rwo people, but the firial
· determination may not come for a year or more, an investigator
Sunny . Pt.Cioody Cloudy . ~ T~storm1
~~n '
Au~s c~ ~~"" ~1:-e~
said.
LEBANON (AP) -Two former city officials pleaded innocent
Soil samples fiom the crash site in a cornfield east ofXenia show
to taking part in a scheme to take nearly $500,000 in illegal retire- · the airplane had fuel when .it crashed Tuesday, Robert. Gretz, air
ment buyouts fiom the city in 1999.
safety investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board,
Former Auditor Debbie Biggs and former Law Director Bill
said Thursday.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low Duning filed written pleas Thursday in Warren County Common
The crash killed pilots Paul Frank, 58, of Riverside and Air Force
Weather forecast: .
in the mid 60s and high 83 to Pleas Court, just as City Manager James Patris:k and Robert NewMaj . Charles Brothers Jr. , 43, of Beavercreek.
ton, the former city electric department manager, had done a day
Tonight.. .Showers
and 89. Their plane, a Beech Baron BE-55, belonged to the Wright-Patthunderstorms likely, mainly
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A earlier.
Patrick and Newton are charged with helping Biggs and Dun- terson Air Force Base Aero Club.
•until midnight. Fog late. Low chance of thunderstorms: Low
in the mid 60s. South wind 5 in the mid 60s and high in the ing obtain the buyouts - lump sum payments made to statel'!'tirement accounts in exchange for the offi;::ials leaving their city
mph becoming northeast. upper 80s.
jobs.'
·
'
·
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wedn esday... Partly cloudy
ENON (AP) - One person was killed Thursday in a fire that
In !999, Lebanon 't:ity Council approved $480,000 in buyout
Saturday... Partly
cloudy with a chance of showers and
totally
destroyed a house, fire officials said.
with fog until mid-morning. thunderstorms. Low m the payments to Duning, Biggs and N ewton as Patrick moved to bring
·
The victim could not immediately be identified, Enon-Mad
High in the lower 80s. South upper 60s and high in the new people into his administration.
wind 5 mph becoming north- upper 80s.
River Township Assistant Fire Chief Chris Norman said.
east early in the afternoon.
. Thursday... A chance of
Two firefighters suffered heat exhaustion , were treated at a hosSaturday
night ... Pa rtly showers and thunderstorms,
pital and released.
DAYTON (AP) - Investigators have ruled out_at least one poscloudy. Low in the lower 60s. otherwise partly cloudy. Low
The fire started about 4 p.m. in the rwo-story hotne.
Extended forecast: .
in the upper 60s and high in
Sunday...Partly cloudy. High the upper 80s.
in the upper 80s.

&lt;) --·- ~-

~·

Ex-officials plead innocent

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

n

Markets roundup
August 2, 2001

lnvestigatols rule out cause

Marathon names new president

Fifth person
charged "

-------1""!!1!"'!1""'

in Traficant

case ··
'

a

11,000
10,000

10,551.18
Pl::t mqo 1om ll'O"iouu
+0.39

8,000

Hlsill
Low
10,609.65 10,512.47
Record high: 11,722.98 L--"o:;.a_ __.Ji
. Jan. t4, 2000
MAY
JUNE
JULY

8,000
7,000
AUGUST

August 2, 2001

1,400

Poor's500

1,300
1,220.75
Pl::t cllqo 1om pnMous
+0.40
Hlsill
Low
1,226.27
1.215.31

1.200
1,100

Record high: 1,527.46
Marth 24, 2000

1,000
MAY

JUNE

JULY

AUGUST

August 2, 2001

Nasdaq

f - - - - 3,500

f---- 3,000
2,087.38
f----2.500

Pl::t change from ll'O"iouu

+0.92

HJsh

Low
2,061.75

2,102.53

Record high: 5,048.62
· March 10, 2000

MAY

JULY

'----1,500
AUGUST

AP

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-46

Federal M&lt;1gul- 1~.

Premier- 6'1.
AockweH- 16~
Rocky Boals - 6%
AD Shell-57%

USB-2~.

Arch Coal - 19
Akzo-41
AmTechSBC ~ « ~.
Ashland Inc. - 39~

AT&amp;T-~

BankOne-39
BLI-12~

DuPont-42~

Gannett-58
General Electric - 42%
GKNLY-10~

Seera-46~
Shoney'a-~

Harley Davidson - 53
'l&lt;mart- 12~.
.
Kroger- 26l.
· Lands End - 39

Wai·Mart - 56

Ltd. - 16~

NSC-20),
Oak Hill Financial- 16'1.
OVB-25 .
BBT-37~

Peoplea-20%

Wendy's ~ 27'1.
Worthington- 14'1.
Dally atook reports are
the 4 p.m. closing '
quotes Df the pmvloos
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc.

Power plant's polluti9n
controls create acid clouds

Ck-=·

•

Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is
to be aoc:urate. It you know Df an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Naw1

Department•

The main number 18 992·2156.
Department ell1entions are:
General manager

ADVERTISING DEADLINE· THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2001 ~5:00P.M.

The Daily Sentinel

New•

or

E111. 12

Ext. 3

Clrculetton

E111. 4

Claulflecl Adl

E111. 5

To eend a-mall.

For More Information

news 0 mydallysentlnel.com

On the Web
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

'

I

'•

..

"'

through Friday. 111 Court St..

---don.

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Sacond-&lt;:laoo
poataga paid at Pomeroy.
Alloclated- and

·-

· The

""'Ohio
P01tm1111r. Sind addresa ·COI'I'et&gt;
to The Dally 8onllnol. 111 Court.
st.: Pomon&gt;y, 0111o &lt;15769.

SubKrlptlon

rate1

lycorrtorormotorroul8

OhoOno month
Oho-

$2
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$104

Dolly ,
50 cents
SUbocrlbers not deolrlng to. pay tha
may remit In advance dll'ect 10
Ext. 14 · cBFTier
The Dally SenHnol. Crad~ wtll be gt..,n
canter esch woek. No oubecrtptlon by
Other eervlcee
mall parml11ed In a- wtlero home
carrier II8IVice lo avalllblt.

Call Dave or Debbie at 992-2155
•

(UBPS 213-MO)

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
Published overy a - . Mondly

Ext. 13

Advertlllng

0

•

Ucenses issued

thefts reported

Trustees to
meet

Plan outage

Golf practice

from

Reader Services

.,

Woman
arrested

Teachen

The Daily Sentinel

AKRON (AP) - Akron
poli.ce have arrested three
boys and three girls, all 14 to
16 years old, who are accused
ofbeating up and raping a 16year-old girl in a field behind
a city high schooL
·
Police say the six are mem•,, pers of the same Akron gang,
called the T- Knots, and that
officers suspec t the July 26
attack was gang-related.
"They were beati,n g her,
stomping her with their feet
alld kicki ng her in the head,"
said Maj . Paul Callahan.
Several of them then raped
her, he said.

LaShaye Wamsley, Pamela S. be boiled for three minutes
Parker and WiUiam R . Mor- before it is consumed.
POMEROY Units of gan, and to Diane S. Mills and
the Meigs Emergency Service Homer Mills Jr.
Divorces have been granted
answered calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded tci Keith A. Jones from Ginger
as follows:
M . Jones, Brian K. Frederick
POMEROY
from
Stacy
Frederick,
Mary
A
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Ava
Bates
from
Gary
Bradley
·
Reedsville
woman
was
incar9:22
a.m., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Elizabeth Bates and to Tammy Lynn cerated Wednesday mght after
Burkett, Holzer' Medical Bog~ from Troy Eugene allegedly ftling a false report.
Metgs County Sherttf
Boggs Sr.
Center;
'
Ralph E. Trussell said Juanita
11:46 a.m. , "Success Road,
Lane contacted the sheriff's
Doris Deeter, treated;
office, reported she had been
4:27 p.m ., Sheriff's Office,
assaulted and wanted to file
POMEROY ForecloDonny Edwards, treated;
charges.
4:43 p.m., with assistance sure actions have been filed in
Deputies were dispatched
from Racine and Syt2cuse Meigs County Common
to Lane's residence, where
units, Jeff Musser, Jackson Pleas Court by Altegt'2 Credit Lane gave a statement saying
Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., against
General Hospital;
she had been struck in the
10:06 p.m., Sixth Street, Larry E. Klein, Pomeroy, and head with a chair from a male
others, alleging default on a
Racine, Ruby Kelly, treated.
subject who was at her home.
promissory
· note in the
REEDSVILLE
Deputies filed charges
9:32 . p.m., Forked Run . amount of $30,913, and by against the male subject and
State Park, auto fire, Charles . M&amp;l Bank, Milwaukee, Wis., arrested him. Once he was in
against Giles Lee Hysell, custody, Lane recanted her
Hensley, owner.
RUTLAND 8:06
p.m., Racine, and others, alleging story and said that she had
C.R. 10, Paula Lewis, Holzer. default on a note in the made the whole thing up
amount of$79,976.30.
because she was angry, said
I
Trussell.
The male subject was
POMEROY A free
released. Lane was arrested
POMEROY Marriage and is currently being held in
breast and cervical cancer
screening will take place Aug. licenses have been issued in Gallia County Jail until her
30 inside the OU-COM's Meigs County Probate Court court appearance.
Mobile Health Van on the ·to Matthew Edward Gilliland,
parking lot of the Meigs 29, and JUlie Marie Spradlin,
County . Health Department 22, both of Middleport;
Sha'Vtl Ray King, 22, and Sara
in Pomeroy.
POMEROY Several
Appointments may be LeAn Lee, 21, both of theft incidents are being
arranged by calling 593-2432 Pomeroy; Tory David Swartz, investigated by Meigs County
21, and Kendra Pauline Cle- Sheriff's Depa~ment.
or 844-2654.
land, 18, both of Mason,
Robert Davis informed
W.Va.; Revna Jay. Reynolds, deputies about the theft of
30, and Beanna Marie Lisle, rwo four-wheelers and one
23, both of Long Bottom; and motorcycle from outside his
Jason Andrew Harris, 20, and residence on Rice Run
LETART - Letart Town- Heather Nicole Whaley, 18, Road,
ship Trustees will meet Mon- both ofPomeroy.
The missing equipment is a
day at 5 p.m.at the office ·
red 1999 Kawasaki Lakota, a
building.
·
\,
yellow 1999 Yarnaha Warrior
and a ,g reen 1993 KX60.
CHESTER Tuppers . In an unrelated matter,
Plains-Chester Water District Steve James, Portland, reportP0MEROY -- The 2001 plans an outage on Monday ed the theft of six tires a.nd
Meigs High School golf team from 8 a.m,. to 4 p.m. for the wheels from . his trailer
will meet Monday at the Pine following areas in Chester and Wednesday night.
Hills Golf Club at 9 a.m. All Sutton Township: Pine Grove
James said a maroon 1980
MHS students interested in Rd. from the Lutheran Ford truck . with two males
• area.
participating on this year's Cemetery south. to 2,000 feet was seen leaving the
team should attend. Qualify- past Salser Rd., Forest Run
Anyone with information
ing rounds will be played at Rd. from the .block plant to can call the sheriff's departvadous courses Aug. 7~ 10. For --Pine- Grove Rd., Morning ment-at -992--3371. ~
more information contact Star Rd. from Pine Grove Rd ."
Coach John Krawsczyn, 992- to 2,000 feet past Court
6394.
Street Rd., Salser Rd., Court
Street Rd., Bailey Rd., Roy
MIDDLEPORT - Glenn .
Jon.s.Rd., snowball Hill Rd., Rowe ofVinton will speak at
Nease Rd., Amberger Rd., the Ash Street Church in
POMEROY - An action ·. Vinegar St., Yost Rd., Han- Middleport on Sunday at 6
for dissolution of marriage son-Holter Rd., Dutchtown P:m. The public is invited.
has been filed· in Meigs Rd., Minersville Hill Rd ., and
County . Common Pleas Welshtown Rd.
Court by Joyce M. Day,
In case of rain, the work
Porneroy, and Keith Day, will be rescheduled for TuesREEDSVILLE Olive
Wapakoneta.
day.
Township Trustees will hold a
. I;&gt;issolutions have been
Once service is restored, a regular meeting on Aug. 6 at
granted to Stephanie R. Wolfe boil advisory will be in effect 7:30 p.m. at the township
and Michael P. Wolfe, Roy until further notice. All cook- office building on Joppa
Allen Marshall and Debra ing and drinking water should Road. Residents who wish to

To speak

·file dissolutions

fighting law

'

Mal
subsalatlon
tnoklo
Melga CC4iriij__ _
13Woeb
26Woeb
52Woeb

$27.:JO
$53.82
$105.56

Rote• outoldo lllotgo COUnly
13Weeks
$29.25
26Weeks
$56.88
52Weeks
$109.72

"

Branded Marketing by G&amp;M
Fuel for fuel.
·
, The board approved a con-

futer

with Athens-Meigo; Educa_tional Service (:enter to provide
services related to special education for the coming school )'='

Higtlway
frcMii Pllp A1

benefits of the construction of
the new highways cannot be
ignored, Varnadoe said that the
most important impacts will be
the economic oppor\unities
afforded by new modem highways, and the public safety
improvements.
"The
most
important
impacr;'Varnadoe said, "will be
in the economic opportunities
these highways will provide our

Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

EMS runs

CHESHIRE . (AP) _- A
'-"n=-cm, ost often al'peared on ho.t,
anti-pollution system a power humid days and disappeared
company installed to stop within an hour or so.
smog-causing emissions from
The U.S. Environmental
drifting to the East Coast is Protecti;,n Agency and. the
creating blue clouds of sulfu- Ohio EPA identified the gas.
ric acid gas that .descend on The agencies have installed
this tiny Ohio River commu- air monitors in Cheshire and
nity.
across the Ohio River in
The $200 million system to Point Pleasant, W.Va.
reduce nitrogen oxide emisSulfuric acid can cause
sions at the Gen. James M. many medical problems, but
Gavin power plant, the largest short-term exposure is not
coal-burning plant in Ohio, considered life-threatening,
was installed to comply with reports the federal Agency for
federal mandates.
Toxic Substances and Disease
Columbus-based American
Registry.
Electric Power Co., . the
·
Residents · have reported
plant's owner, is scrambling to
burning eyes, headaches, sore
stop the acid releases but can't throats . and white-colored
predict how long it will take,
spokesman Paul Chodak 111 burns on the lips, tongue and
told the Akron Beacon Jour- inside of the mouth.
Kay Gilmer of the Ohio
!
na.
Page A1
EPA
called the situation "a
"It's a unique situation ...
and One \ve 're st I'll grapp·[1'ng serious issue - with lots of VI-R, $149,663; Carl D.
with," Chodak said.
concerns for the community." Perkins, $120,079; Title II,
Several · coal-burning utiliState officials are unable to S22,997;Tide VI, $15,888;Title
. ties across the country are determine why the equip- N. $8,882; and Martha Holde'!
installing the same kind of ment produces the acid.
Jennin~ $.3,885. It was noted .
anti-pollution equipment at
Ohio has no limits for sui- that the Jenningo; grant has
their plants.
furic acid in the' air, though come to Pomerov Elementary
Blue acid clouds fell on some states do, the Ohio EPA School for the past three years
Cheshire, a town of 200 in said. The levels of gaseous sui- for art enrichment programs.
Service bids were awarded to
southern Ohio north of Gal- furic acid in the blue clouds
lipolis, more than ·a dozen have exceeded permitted Heiner's Bakery Inc. for baktimes in June and July. They amounts in some other states. ery/bread; Broughton Foods
· Co. for dairy products; Waste
Management for trash and
garbage hauling. and Ashland

ancy hosting bias confelence

The

.
File foreclosures

1,500

standard&amp;

Bob Evans - 19%
BorgWamer - 52%
Champlon-3
'Charming Shops- 6~
City Holding - ,,,
Col-21
.

THURSDAY, AUIUST 23, 2001
• SOUTHERN • MEIDl • EIITERI
HIM A

FINDLAY (AP) - Marathon Ashland Petroleum has chosen a
longtime employee to become its next president.
··
'
Gary Heminger, who is executive vice president for Sl\pply,
transportation and marketing, will become president Sept. 1, the
company announced Wednesday. He joined Marathon in 1975 and
has held several managerial positions.
,
CLEVELAND (AP) H eminger succeeds John Surma Jr., who was named assistant to Federal officials have charged
USX Corp. Chairman Thomas]. Usher.
·
fifth person in connection with
Pittsburgh-based USX is part owner of Marathon.
the bribery investigation
again'st U.S. Rep.James A. Traficant Jr., The. Plain Dealer
reported Friday.
C INC INNATI (AP) -. A national conference on pGlice rela- · Former businessman James
tions with minorities is being organized in Cincinnati because of I( Sabafirie,49,'ofCanfield was
the city's recent problems in that area.
cnarged Thursday with bribing
The Sept. 17-18 conference is being organized by the National a public official to help his
Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives and the Uni- company gain access to a rail
line. ' ' · ·'
·
versity of Cincinnati's criminal jmtice department
'·
"This is not an atta~k on the city of C incinnati," said Ron Davis,
Traficant, who is defending
a NOBLE vice president and Oakland, Calif., police captain. "We 'himself even though he is not
want to rurn it into something where we take lessons ti:tim Cincin- an attorney, is 'facing a Februnati ... so other cities don't have to go through this, too."
ary trial on racketeering,
The classes will not promote "cop-bashing," Davis said. Instead, bribery and tax evasion and
they'll present ways - through discipline, training and · other· obstruction of justice. He has
administrative actions- that police agencies can teach 1officers 'to pleaded innocent.
"put blinders on" their biases.
In his May indictment, officials accused the 60-year-old
Youngstown-area Democrat ;,f
accepting cash and thousands
COLUMBUS (AP) - One hundred municipalities in 50 Ohio of dollars worth of free work at
counties are banding together to overturn the state's new annexa- his Mahoning County horse
tion law.
·
farm . in exchange for helping
The t oalition filed a petition with the Ohio Secretary ·ofState businessmen gain contracts.
Kenneth Blackwell on Wednesday asking for a statewide vote on
Two others charged in conthe issue in November 2002.
nection with Traficant's case
"A lot of cities and villages believe this is a bad bill and will hurt have already pleaded guilty in
the economic viability of the state," said Joyce Bushman, city man- U.S. District Court in Cleveager in suburban Pickerington and treasurer of the referendum land.''
coalition.
Without naming Traficant
Signed by Gov. Bob Taft a week ago, the law generally will give outright, 'the charges against
counties and townships more say in annexation decisions by cities Sabatine cite a federal statute
and villages. It takes effect Oct. 26.
defining a public official as a
"There are some real concerns about how this new law will "member of Congress, delework," said Westerville Mayor Stewart Aaherty. "A successful refer- gate or resident commissionendum drive will let the voters decide."
er."

12,000

DowJonaa
lndultlfals

Dry, less yvarm after tonight

One kUied in house fire

Pomeroy, Middleport, 01\lo

Plan meeting

in the amount of$.385,747.
Members ttarisferred funding
into the Meigo; High School
Principal~ Fund in the amount
of SIO;OOO, the athletic fund,
$.3,000, and the Meigo; Middle
School principal's fund, $2,500,
to make up for their loses ·in
profits from vending machine
now operated by fOod service.
Other action taken by the
board included:

• approving new courses of
study, industrial technology,
grades 9-12 and science,.grades
K-6;
' approving a contr.lct for the
district's general purpose financial statements in an amount not
to exceed $16,550;
• setting tuition rate for students whodo not qualifY under
open enrollment in the amount
of $128.40 for in-state, and
$544.09 for out of state for the
conung)'='.
community upon their completion. It is easy to docutnent the
employment-producing projects that have sprouted· along
the Appalachian Highway in
Ohio over the last decade."
"The transportation efficiencies for business and consumers,
and the resulting savingo; in fuel
costs will add additional discretionary dollan to the local economy:Vamadoe said."It's impossible to put a dollar figure on the
safety benefits, we'll enjoy over
the hazardous highways to
. which we have become far too
accustomed."

Board
faumPageAI

discuss business ar rh .- meeting should call 378 -6 149 to
be placed on the agen da.

To meet
RUTLAND Rutland
Township Trustees will m~et
Aug. 8 at 5 p.m . at the Rutland Fire Station .

Eblin reunion
RACINE The 34th
reunion of the Samuel Alan
Eblin family will be held
Sept., I, 4 p.m . at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Those attending are to take their own table
service and favorite foods.
Meat w ill be furnished. Call
992-2272 or 992- 6396 for
more information.

Paving.begins
MIDDLEPORT - Paving
work will begin on Tuesday in
Middleport.
Black Top Contracting of
Nelsonville will begin milling
and then paving streets in the
followi ng order: North Seco nd Avenue ·t o Third Avenue ,
Brownell Avenue, · Seventh
Avenue, Grant Street, Powell
Street, General Hartinger
Parkway,
Pearl
Street,
Sycamore Street, Broadway
Street, Elm Street, Railroad
Street and Ash Street.
Residents who park on
those streets are asked to
remove their vehicles from
curbside during the paving
project, said Mayor Sa nd y
lannarelli.

Plan giveaway
.-

CHESHIRE
Gallia/ Meigs
Community
Action Agency will distribute
new clothing to in come-eligible persons at the Cheshire
office on Aug. 8 from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. All ho useholds eligible under th e HEAP program
guidelines, with children, are
urged to participate.
Clothing is new and will be
provided to families in need at
no cost. It ·has been donated
through a regional program,
Kids in Distressful Situations.
Applicants will be required
to complete an application,
providing income proof, birth
dates and Social Secu rity
number s of all houshould
members.

Presentation
MIDDLEPORT .- A special presentation from the
Dominican ' Republic mission
triip will be given at the Middleport Church of C hrist
Sunday, 7 p.m.

Plans mus.t be submitted
by Sept. 24 to Blackwell's
office, which will post them
ona special Interne t si te.

Ohio Constitution and U.S.
Supreme Court decisions.
However, the board historically has adopted the maps
designed by its own staff.
The constitution requires
that district be as compact as
possible and gives preference
to cities and counties that
. can quality as a single district. The Supreme Court
rulings mostly concern the
makeup of districts with

SCARY MOVIE 2

111

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'

l:$0 p.,.,

Al l AC ES , All TIME S S 4 .00

�•

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

State drafting rules for storing radioactive waste .

Ohio weather
Saturday, Aug. 4
Ac:cuWeathe~

IND.

0

forecast for

I Monolleld Iw/82' I •

0

Friday. August l. 1001

•

0
•I COiumbtJo 111'118' I
.

-~
KV.

C 2001 Ac&lt;uWeather, tnc.

..

W. VA.

COlUMBUS (AP) - The stote i&lt;
drafting rules to allow private companies
to store low-level radioactive waste for up
co 100 years.
,
The goal is to have regulations in place
if a company proposes to ,create such a
storage depot, although no proposal is
forthcoming, Roger Suppes, chief of. the
Department of Health's Bureau of Radiation Pro.tection, said T~ursday.
" It's not coming ro Ohio next week or
next month or next year, or it may never
come, but we do believe that it's better to
be prepared to have a set of standards that
we have looked at and are credible and
that you can evaluate," Suppes said.
The state Radiation Advisory Council
is drafting the regulations with help from
Health Department staff.

Sudt ~ regulorion would be for Slorage
only, not for permanent disposaL Material would remain the property and responsibility o( the entity that created it and
would eventually have to be retrieved.
Users could include nuclear power
plants and academic research facilities,
among otheri, Suppes said. The material
could range fiom contaminated clothing
and tools to some contaminated m~dical
waste.
Ohio now sends its radioactive waste to
sites in Utah and South Carolina. The
South Carolina site is reducing its capacity and will stop accepting waste by 2008.
Ohio companies that generate lowlevel waste typically receive five-year
licenses to store waste on their sites, said
Dan Swanson, a council member and

chairman of thl'. committee drafti~g tbe
regulations.
Some companies might prefer a place
to store waste longer, either to store up
more before shipping or because they're
running out of room, Swanson said.
"If you don't have the capacity to store
more than X amount and you're going to
accumulate more than that, you're going
to have to do something," he said. "If you
don't have a disposal option, a commercial storage facility might be answer."
In 1997, the Midwest Interstate LowLevel Radioactive Waste Commission
voted to shelve plans for an Ohio
radioactive waste dump that would have
held waste from the compact's six states
- Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri and Wisconsin .

sible cause of a plane crash that killed rwo people, but the firial
· determination may not come for a year or more, an investigator
Sunny . Pt.Cioody Cloudy . ~ T~storm1
~~n '
Au~s c~ ~~"" ~1:-e~
said.
LEBANON (AP) -Two former city officials pleaded innocent
Soil samples fiom the crash site in a cornfield east ofXenia show
to taking part in a scheme to take nearly $500,000 in illegal retire- · the airplane had fuel when .it crashed Tuesday, Robert. Gretz, air
ment buyouts fiom the city in 1999.
safety investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board,
Former Auditor Debbie Biggs and former Law Director Bill
said Thursday.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low Duning filed written pleas Thursday in Warren County Common
The crash killed pilots Paul Frank, 58, of Riverside and Air Force
Weather forecast: .
in the mid 60s and high 83 to Pleas Court, just as City Manager James Patris:k and Robert NewMaj . Charles Brothers Jr. , 43, of Beavercreek.
ton, the former city electric department manager, had done a day
Tonight.. .Showers
and 89. Their plane, a Beech Baron BE-55, belonged to the Wright-Patthunderstorms likely, mainly
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A earlier.
Patrick and Newton are charged with helping Biggs and Dun- terson Air Force Base Aero Club.
•until midnight. Fog late. Low chance of thunderstorms: Low
in the mid 60s. South wind 5 in the mid 60s and high in the ing obtain the buyouts - lump sum payments made to statel'!'tirement accounts in exchange for the offi;::ials leaving their city
mph becoming northeast. upper 80s.
jobs.'
·
'
·
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wedn esday... Partly cloudy
ENON (AP) - One person was killed Thursday in a fire that
In !999, Lebanon 't:ity Council approved $480,000 in buyout
Saturday... Partly
cloudy with a chance of showers and
totally
destroyed a house, fire officials said.
with fog until mid-morning. thunderstorms. Low m the payments to Duning, Biggs and N ewton as Patrick moved to bring
·
The victim could not immediately be identified, Enon-Mad
High in the lower 80s. South upper 60s and high in the new people into his administration.
wind 5 mph becoming north- upper 80s.
River Township Assistant Fire Chief Chris Norman said.
east early in the afternoon.
. Thursday... A chance of
Two firefighters suffered heat exhaustion , were treated at a hosSaturday
night ... Pa rtly showers and thunderstorms,
pital and released.
DAYTON (AP) - Investigators have ruled out_at least one poscloudy. Low in the lower 60s. otherwise partly cloudy. Low
The fire started about 4 p.m. in the rwo-story hotne.
Extended forecast: .
in the upper 60s and high in
Sunday...Partly cloudy. High the upper 80s.
in the upper 80s.

&lt;) --·- ~-

~·

Ex-officials plead innocent

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

n

Markets roundup
August 2, 2001

lnvestigatols rule out cause

Marathon names new president

Fifth person
charged "

-------1""!!1!"'!1""'

in Traficant

case ··
'

a

11,000
10,000

10,551.18
Pl::t mqo 1om ll'O"iouu
+0.39

8,000

Hlsill
Low
10,609.65 10,512.47
Record high: 11,722.98 L--"o:;.a_ __.Ji
. Jan. t4, 2000
MAY
JUNE
JULY

8,000
7,000
AUGUST

August 2, 2001

1,400

Poor's500

1,300
1,220.75
Pl::t cllqo 1om pnMous
+0.40
Hlsill
Low
1,226.27
1.215.31

1.200
1,100

Record high: 1,527.46
Marth 24, 2000

1,000
MAY

JUNE

JULY

AUGUST

August 2, 2001

Nasdaq

f - - - - 3,500

f---- 3,000
2,087.38
f----2.500

Pl::t change from ll'O"iouu

+0.92

HJsh

Low
2,061.75

2,102.53

Record high: 5,048.62
· March 10, 2000

MAY

JULY

'----1,500
AUGUST

AP

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-46

Federal M&lt;1gul- 1~.

Premier- 6'1.
AockweH- 16~
Rocky Boals - 6%
AD Shell-57%

USB-2~.

Arch Coal - 19
Akzo-41
AmTechSBC ~ « ~.
Ashland Inc. - 39~

AT&amp;T-~

BankOne-39
BLI-12~

DuPont-42~

Gannett-58
General Electric - 42%
GKNLY-10~

Seera-46~
Shoney'a-~

Harley Davidson - 53
'l&lt;mart- 12~.
.
Kroger- 26l.
· Lands End - 39

Wai·Mart - 56

Ltd. - 16~

NSC-20),
Oak Hill Financial- 16'1.
OVB-25 .
BBT-37~

Peoplea-20%

Wendy's ~ 27'1.
Worthington- 14'1.
Dally atook reports are
the 4 p.m. closing '
quotes Df the pmvloos
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners
at Adveat Inc.

Power plant's polluti9n
controls create acid clouds

Ck-=·

•

Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is
to be aoc:urate. It you know Df an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Naw1

Department•

The main number 18 992·2156.
Department ell1entions are:
General manager

ADVERTISING DEADLINE· THURSDAY, AUGUST 16,2001 ~5:00P.M.

The Daily Sentinel

New•

or

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Ext. 3

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E111. 5

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For More Information

news 0 mydallysentlnel.com

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'

I

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..

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---don.

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Sacond-&lt;:laoo
poataga paid at Pomeroy.
Alloclated- and

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· The

""'Ohio
P01tm1111r. Sind addresa ·COI'I'et&gt;
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st.: Pomon&gt;y, 0111o &lt;15769.

SubKrlptlon

rate1

lycorrtorormotorroul8

OhoOno month
Oho-

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Dolly ,
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SUbocrlbers not deolrlng to. pay tha
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Call Dave or Debbie at 992-2155
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(UBPS 213-MO)

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
Published overy a - . Mondly

Ext. 13

Advertlllng

0

•

Ucenses issued

thefts reported

Trustees to
meet

Plan outage

Golf practice

from

Reader Services

.,

Woman
arrested

Teachen

The Daily Sentinel

AKRON (AP) - Akron
poli.ce have arrested three
boys and three girls, all 14 to
16 years old, who are accused
ofbeating up and raping a 16year-old girl in a field behind
a city high schooL
·
Police say the six are mem•,, pers of the same Akron gang,
called the T- Knots, and that
officers suspec t the July 26
attack was gang-related.
"They were beati,n g her,
stomping her with their feet
alld kicki ng her in the head,"
said Maj . Paul Callahan.
Several of them then raped
her, he said.

LaShaye Wamsley, Pamela S. be boiled for three minutes
Parker and WiUiam R . Mor- before it is consumed.
POMEROY Units of gan, and to Diane S. Mills and
the Meigs Emergency Service Homer Mills Jr.
Divorces have been granted
answered calls for assistance
on Thursday. Units responded tci Keith A. Jones from Ginger
as follows:
M . Jones, Brian K. Frederick
POMEROY
from
Stacy
Frederick,
Mary
A
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Ava
Bates
from
Gary
Bradley
·
Reedsville
woman
was
incar9:22
a.m., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Elizabeth Bates and to Tammy Lynn cerated Wednesday mght after
Burkett, Holzer' Medical Bog~ from Troy Eugene allegedly ftling a false report.
Metgs County Sherttf
Boggs Sr.
Center;
'
Ralph E. Trussell said Juanita
11:46 a.m. , "Success Road,
Lane contacted the sheriff's
Doris Deeter, treated;
office, reported she had been
4:27 p.m ., Sheriff's Office,
assaulted and wanted to file
POMEROY ForecloDonny Edwards, treated;
charges.
4:43 p.m., with assistance sure actions have been filed in
Deputies were dispatched
from Racine and Syt2cuse Meigs County Common
to Lane's residence, where
units, Jeff Musser, Jackson Pleas Court by Altegt'2 Credit Lane gave a statement saying
Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., against
General Hospital;
she had been struck in the
10:06 p.m., Sixth Street, Larry E. Klein, Pomeroy, and head with a chair from a male
others, alleging default on a
Racine, Ruby Kelly, treated.
subject who was at her home.
promissory
· note in the
REEDSVILLE
Deputies filed charges
9:32 . p.m., Forked Run . amount of $30,913, and by against the male subject and
State Park, auto fire, Charles . M&amp;l Bank, Milwaukee, Wis., arrested him. Once he was in
against Giles Lee Hysell, custody, Lane recanted her
Hensley, owner.
RUTLAND 8:06
p.m., Racine, and others, alleging story and said that she had
C.R. 10, Paula Lewis, Holzer. default on a note in the made the whole thing up
amount of$79,976.30.
because she was angry, said
I
Trussell.
The male subject was
POMEROY A free
released. Lane was arrested
POMEROY Marriage and is currently being held in
breast and cervical cancer
screening will take place Aug. licenses have been issued in Gallia County Jail until her
30 inside the OU-COM's Meigs County Probate Court court appearance.
Mobile Health Van on the ·to Matthew Edward Gilliland,
parking lot of the Meigs 29, and JUlie Marie Spradlin,
County . Health Department 22, both of Middleport;
Sha'Vtl Ray King, 22, and Sara
in Pomeroy.
POMEROY Several
Appointments may be LeAn Lee, 21, both of theft incidents are being
arranged by calling 593-2432 Pomeroy; Tory David Swartz, investigated by Meigs County
21, and Kendra Pauline Cle- Sheriff's Depa~ment.
or 844-2654.
land, 18, both of Mason,
Robert Davis informed
W.Va.; Revna Jay. Reynolds, deputies about the theft of
30, and Beanna Marie Lisle, rwo four-wheelers and one
23, both of Long Bottom; and motorcycle from outside his
Jason Andrew Harris, 20, and residence on Rice Run
LETART - Letart Town- Heather Nicole Whaley, 18, Road,
ship Trustees will meet Mon- both ofPomeroy.
The missing equipment is a
day at 5 p.m.at the office ·
red 1999 Kawasaki Lakota, a
building.
·
\,
yellow 1999 Yarnaha Warrior
and a ,g reen 1993 KX60.
CHESTER Tuppers . In an unrelated matter,
Plains-Chester Water District Steve James, Portland, reportP0MEROY -- The 2001 plans an outage on Monday ed the theft of six tires a.nd
Meigs High School golf team from 8 a.m,. to 4 p.m. for the wheels from . his trailer
will meet Monday at the Pine following areas in Chester and Wednesday night.
Hills Golf Club at 9 a.m. All Sutton Township: Pine Grove
James said a maroon 1980
MHS students interested in Rd. from the Lutheran Ford truck . with two males
• area.
participating on this year's Cemetery south. to 2,000 feet was seen leaving the
team should attend. Qualify- past Salser Rd., Forest Run
Anyone with information
ing rounds will be played at Rd. from the .block plant to can call the sheriff's departvadous courses Aug. 7~ 10. For --Pine- Grove Rd., Morning ment-at -992--3371. ~
more information contact Star Rd. from Pine Grove Rd ."
Coach John Krawsczyn, 992- to 2,000 feet past Court
6394.
Street Rd., Salser Rd., Court
Street Rd., Bailey Rd., Roy
MIDDLEPORT - Glenn .
Jon.s.Rd., snowball Hill Rd., Rowe ofVinton will speak at
Nease Rd., Amberger Rd., the Ash Street Church in
POMEROY - An action ·. Vinegar St., Yost Rd., Han- Middleport on Sunday at 6
for dissolution of marriage son-Holter Rd., Dutchtown P:m. The public is invited.
has been filed· in Meigs Rd., Minersville Hill Rd ., and
County . Common Pleas Welshtown Rd.
Court by Joyce M. Day,
In case of rain, the work
Porneroy, and Keith Day, will be rescheduled for TuesREEDSVILLE Olive
Wapakoneta.
day.
Township Trustees will hold a
. I;&gt;issolutions have been
Once service is restored, a regular meeting on Aug. 6 at
granted to Stephanie R. Wolfe boil advisory will be in effect 7:30 p.m. at the township
and Michael P. Wolfe, Roy until further notice. All cook- office building on Joppa
Allen Marshall and Debra ing and drinking water should Road. Residents who wish to

To speak

·file dissolutions

fighting law

'

Mal
subsalatlon
tnoklo
Melga CC4iriij__ _
13Woeb
26Woeb
52Woeb

$27.:JO
$53.82
$105.56

Rote• outoldo lllotgo COUnly
13Weeks
$29.25
26Weeks
$56.88
52Weeks
$109.72

"

Branded Marketing by G&amp;M
Fuel for fuel.
·
, The board approved a con-

futer

with Athens-Meigo; Educa_tional Service (:enter to provide
services related to special education for the coming school )'='

Higtlway
frcMii Pllp A1

benefits of the construction of
the new highways cannot be
ignored, Varnadoe said that the
most important impacts will be
the economic oppor\unities
afforded by new modem highways, and the public safety
improvements.
"The
most
important
impacr;'Varnadoe said, "will be
in the economic opportunities
these highways will provide our

Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

EMS runs

CHESHIRE . (AP) _- A
'-"n=-cm, ost often al'peared on ho.t,
anti-pollution system a power humid days and disappeared
company installed to stop within an hour or so.
smog-causing emissions from
The U.S. Environmental
drifting to the East Coast is Protecti;,n Agency and. the
creating blue clouds of sulfu- Ohio EPA identified the gas.
ric acid gas that .descend on The agencies have installed
this tiny Ohio River commu- air monitors in Cheshire and
nity.
across the Ohio River in
The $200 million system to Point Pleasant, W.Va.
reduce nitrogen oxide emisSulfuric acid can cause
sions at the Gen. James M. many medical problems, but
Gavin power plant, the largest short-term exposure is not
coal-burning plant in Ohio, considered life-threatening,
was installed to comply with reports the federal Agency for
federal mandates.
Toxic Substances and Disease
Columbus-based American
Registry.
Electric Power Co., . the
·
Residents · have reported
plant's owner, is scrambling to
burning eyes, headaches, sore
stop the acid releases but can't throats . and white-colored
predict how long it will take,
spokesman Paul Chodak 111 burns on the lips, tongue and
told the Akron Beacon Jour- inside of the mouth.
Kay Gilmer of the Ohio
!
na.
Page A1
EPA
called the situation "a
"It's a unique situation ...
and One \ve 're st I'll grapp·[1'ng serious issue - with lots of VI-R, $149,663; Carl D.
with," Chodak said.
concerns for the community." Perkins, $120,079; Title II,
Several · coal-burning utiliState officials are unable to S22,997;Tide VI, $15,888;Title
. ties across the country are determine why the equip- N. $8,882; and Martha Holde'!
installing the same kind of ment produces the acid.
Jennin~ $.3,885. It was noted .
anti-pollution equipment at
Ohio has no limits for sui- that the Jenningo; grant has
their plants.
furic acid in the' air, though come to Pomerov Elementary
Blue acid clouds fell on some states do, the Ohio EPA School for the past three years
Cheshire, a town of 200 in said. The levels of gaseous sui- for art enrichment programs.
Service bids were awarded to
southern Ohio north of Gal- furic acid in the blue clouds
lipolis, more than ·a dozen have exceeded permitted Heiner's Bakery Inc. for baktimes in June and July. They amounts in some other states. ery/bread; Broughton Foods
· Co. for dairy products; Waste
Management for trash and
garbage hauling. and Ashland

ancy hosting bias confelence

The

.
File foreclosures

1,500

standard&amp;

Bob Evans - 19%
BorgWamer - 52%
Champlon-3
'Charming Shops- 6~
City Holding - ,,,
Col-21
.

THURSDAY, AUIUST 23, 2001
• SOUTHERN • MEIDl • EIITERI
HIM A

FINDLAY (AP) - Marathon Ashland Petroleum has chosen a
longtime employee to become its next president.
··
'
Gary Heminger, who is executive vice president for Sl\pply,
transportation and marketing, will become president Sept. 1, the
company announced Wednesday. He joined Marathon in 1975 and
has held several managerial positions.
,
CLEVELAND (AP) H eminger succeeds John Surma Jr., who was named assistant to Federal officials have charged
USX Corp. Chairman Thomas]. Usher.
·
fifth person in connection with
Pittsburgh-based USX is part owner of Marathon.
the bribery investigation
again'st U.S. Rep.James A. Traficant Jr., The. Plain Dealer
reported Friday.
C INC INNATI (AP) -. A national conference on pGlice rela- · Former businessman James
tions with minorities is being organized in Cincinnati because of I( Sabafirie,49,'ofCanfield was
the city's recent problems in that area.
cnarged Thursday with bribing
The Sept. 17-18 conference is being organized by the National a public official to help his
Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives and the Uni- company gain access to a rail
line. ' ' · ·'
·
versity of Cincinnati's criminal jmtice department
'·
"This is not an atta~k on the city of C incinnati," said Ron Davis,
Traficant, who is defending
a NOBLE vice president and Oakland, Calif., police captain. "We 'himself even though he is not
want to rurn it into something where we take lessons ti:tim Cincin- an attorney, is 'facing a Februnati ... so other cities don't have to go through this, too."
ary trial on racketeering,
The classes will not promote "cop-bashing," Davis said. Instead, bribery and tax evasion and
they'll present ways - through discipline, training and · other· obstruction of justice. He has
administrative actions- that police agencies can teach 1officers 'to pleaded innocent.
"put blinders on" their biases.
In his May indictment, officials accused the 60-year-old
Youngstown-area Democrat ;,f
accepting cash and thousands
COLUMBUS (AP) - One hundred municipalities in 50 Ohio of dollars worth of free work at
counties are banding together to overturn the state's new annexa- his Mahoning County horse
tion law.
·
farm . in exchange for helping
The t oalition filed a petition with the Ohio Secretary ·ofState businessmen gain contracts.
Kenneth Blackwell on Wednesday asking for a statewide vote on
Two others charged in conthe issue in November 2002.
nection with Traficant's case
"A lot of cities and villages believe this is a bad bill and will hurt have already pleaded guilty in
the economic viability of the state," said Joyce Bushman, city man- U.S. District Court in Cleveager in suburban Pickerington and treasurer of the referendum land.''
coalition.
Without naming Traficant
Signed by Gov. Bob Taft a week ago, the law generally will give outright, 'the charges against
counties and townships more say in annexation decisions by cities Sabatine cite a federal statute
and villages. It takes effect Oct. 26.
defining a public official as a
"There are some real concerns about how this new law will "member of Congress, delework," said Westerville Mayor Stewart Aaherty. "A successful refer- gate or resident commissionendum drive will let the voters decide."
er."

12,000

DowJonaa
lndultlfals

Dry, less yvarm after tonight

One kUied in house fire

Pomeroy, Middleport, 01\lo

Plan meeting

in the amount of$.385,747.
Members ttarisferred funding
into the Meigo; High School
Principal~ Fund in the amount
of SIO;OOO, the athletic fund,
$.3,000, and the Meigo; Middle
School principal's fund, $2,500,
to make up for their loses ·in
profits from vending machine
now operated by fOod service.
Other action taken by the
board included:

• approving new courses of
study, industrial technology,
grades 9-12 and science,.grades
K-6;
' approving a contr.lct for the
district's general purpose financial statements in an amount not
to exceed $16,550;
• setting tuition rate for students whodo not qualifY under
open enrollment in the amount
of $128.40 for in-state, and
$544.09 for out of state for the
conung)'='.
community upon their completion. It is easy to docutnent the
employment-producing projects that have sprouted· along
the Appalachian Highway in
Ohio over the last decade."
"The transportation efficiencies for business and consumers,
and the resulting savingo; in fuel
costs will add additional discretionary dollan to the local economy:Vamadoe said."It's impossible to put a dollar figure on the
safety benefits, we'll enjoy over
the hazardous highways to
. which we have become far too
accustomed."

Board
faumPageAI

discuss business ar rh .- meeting should call 378 -6 149 to
be placed on the agen da.

To meet
RUTLAND Rutland
Township Trustees will m~et
Aug. 8 at 5 p.m . at the Rutland Fire Station .

Eblin reunion
RACINE The 34th
reunion of the Samuel Alan
Eblin family will be held
Sept., I, 4 p.m . at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Those attending are to take their own table
service and favorite foods.
Meat w ill be furnished. Call
992-2272 or 992- 6396 for
more information.

Paving.begins
MIDDLEPORT - Paving
work will begin on Tuesday in
Middleport.
Black Top Contracting of
Nelsonville will begin milling
and then paving streets in the
followi ng order: North Seco nd Avenue ·t o Third Avenue ,
Brownell Avenue, · Seventh
Avenue, Grant Street, Powell
Street, General Hartinger
Parkway,
Pearl
Street,
Sycamore Street, Broadway
Street, Elm Street, Railroad
Street and Ash Street.
Residents who park on
those streets are asked to
remove their vehicles from
curbside during the paving
project, said Mayor Sa nd y
lannarelli.

Plan giveaway
.-

CHESHIRE
Gallia/ Meigs
Community
Action Agency will distribute
new clothing to in come-eligible persons at the Cheshire
office on Aug. 8 from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. All ho useholds eligible under th e HEAP program
guidelines, with children, are
urged to participate.
Clothing is new and will be
provided to families in need at
no cost. It ·has been donated
through a regional program,
Kids in Distressful Situations.
Applicants will be required
to complete an application,
providing income proof, birth
dates and Social Secu rity
number s of all houshould
members.

Presentation
MIDDLEPORT .- A special presentation from the
Dominican ' Republic mission
triip will be given at the Middleport Church of C hrist
Sunday, 7 p.m.

Plans mus.t be submitted
by Sept. 24 to Blackwell's
office, which will post them
ona special Interne t si te.

Ohio Constitution and U.S.
Supreme Court decisions.
However, the board historically has adopted the maps
designed by its own staff.
The constitution requires
that district be as compact as
possible and gives preference
to cities and counties that
. can quality as a single district. The Supreme Court
rulings mostly concern the
makeup of districts with

SCARY MOVIE 2

111

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Al l AC ES , All TIME S S 4 .00

�The Daily,Sentinel

Frlct.y. Aupst 5, 2001

~e ·D~y ~tinel

•

BETTER-NOT

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

T~MYiACK­

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ARE ALL AUI&lt;E.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

DEAR ABBY: I have five children and am neither an overbearing
nor overly protective mother. After
reading Michelle Klein's code of
conduct for chi ld ren's sporting
events, I have a few comments and
suggestions for coaches .
Our youngest son is 10. He was
adopted fiom an overseas · orphanage. We took him knowing he had
some physical challenges. Last year, I
asked a tenderhearted baseball coach
to place him on a team with
younger players. He played all season
and did fine.
This year, my request was di..-egarded. My son is now on a team
with other 10-year-old boys. H e is
not only struggling as a player, but
his self-esteem is in the cellar.
Every week , h is coach prints out

THESE5U&gt;S

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l.nttn to tilt editor are wricom,, They shcudd be len llkln JOO woniJ. All htten
IITt subj«t to rditing ond mu.fl bt ~titntd and include addren a11d tdtp,.one IIII.W~r.
, No unsigned lt«t'n wiU bt publidrtd. Unen should b11 in rood taslt, tultlnmlf8
l!tUII, rwt penonolilits. ·
111t opinions exprtutd in the C'olumn btfo., au the conu1uu~ oftht Ohio 'i!Ut]
. Publishing Cu.'s tdilflrilll board. rmltSI oth trwlst nOltd.

OHIO VIEWS

No malice
Supreme Court's belief it's
being _punished not valid
• The Columbus Dispatch: Word is that some Ohio
Supreme Court justices think the legislature is sticking it to
th em .
In an ottempt to comply with the court's demand to eliminate inequities in the funding of public sc hool s, lawmakers ransacked the budget, squeezing cash out of virtually every other
state department, agency and program to cobble together a
S1.4 billion in crease for edu cation in th e next rwo years.
Among the losers, though cerfainly not the .hardest hit, was
the court itself. The budget modestly increases funding for the
court over the next two years, but the allocation is $8 milljon
less than C hi ef Justice Thomas J Moyer had requested. ·
No doubt this budget tightening will be painful, not.only for
court employees but also for perhaps thousands o( Ohioans
wi th pending cases who will see the wheels of justice turn that
mu'ch slower.
But is the General Assembly's allocation a payback for twice
stickin g lawmakers with the job of overhauling public-school
fundin g' Not likely.
Th e fact is: Funding for the Supreme Cou rt and subsidiary
state courts is just nne of hundreds of important finan cial obligations that 'lawmakers eac h year must weigh and balance as theydivvy up the state's limued revenu es.
.
• The Wapakoneta Daily News: Gov. Bob Taft and the
General Assembly ended the legisla tive budget process and
veto-override .debate...p.ositivcl¥, with the governor agreemg to
restore so me funding for strapped soc ial agencies - fundin g
th at he had line- ite m vetoed out of the hudget approved by the
General Assembly.
·
The agreement by the governor came under the threat of a
veto overr ide led by ... his own parry. So not only did some
social agencies get a needed fundin g boost, the governor managed to save some political face. The Democrats would have
feasted on the governor and Republican majoriry in both
houses of th e General Assembly had the veto-override movement conti nued.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday,Aug. 3, the 215th day of2001.There are 150
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 3, 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Palos,
Spain, on a voyage that took him to the present-day Americas.
On this date:
In 1914, Germany declared war on France.
In 1921, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis
refused to reinstate the former Chicago White Sox players
implicated in the "Black Sox" scandal; despite their acquittals in
a jury trial.
In 1923, Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as the 30th president
of the United States, following the death ofWarren G. Hardmg.
In 1936, the State Department urged Americans in Spain to
leave because of that country's civil war.
· In 1949, the National Basketball Association was formed.
In 1958, the nuclear- powered submarine Nautilus became
the first vessel to cross the North Pole underwater.
In 1980, closing ceremonies were held in Moscow for the
Summer Olympic Games, which had been boycotted by
doz.ens of countries, including the United States.
In 1981 , U.S. air traffic controllers went on 'strike, despite a
warning from President Reagan they would be fired, which
they were.
In 1993, the Senate voted 96-3 to confirm Supreme Court
· nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
In 1994, Stephen G. Breyer was sworn in as the Supreme
Court's newest justice in a private ce remony ·at Chief Justice
William H. R ehnquist's Vermont summer home.
.
Ten years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker Ill met with
King Hassan II of Morocco. Baker asked the monarch for his
help in gaining Palestinian participation in a Middle East peace
conference.
Five years ago: At the Atlanta Olympics, the U.S. men's 400meter relay, without 'Carl Lewis, failed to win the gold )11C:dal,
· finishing behind Canada. The American wom en 's 400 arld 1600
relay~. and the men's 1600, all won gold. The U.S. men's basketball "Dream Team" beat Yugoslavia, 95-69, to win the gold.
One year ago: George W Bush accepted the R.epublican
presidential nom ination at the parry's convention in Philadelphia, presenting himself as an outsider who would return
"civiliry and respect" to Washington politics.
Today's Birthdays: Author P.D. James is Bt: :'Broadway composer Richard Adler is 80. Singer Gordon Stoker (The Jordanaircs) is 77 . Author Leon Ur is is 77 . Singer Tony Uennctt is
75. Actor Alex Cord is 70. Actor Martin Sheen is 61. Lifestyle
guru Martha Stewart is liO. Singer Beverly Lee (The Shirelles)
is 60. M ovie d irc·ctor Jp hn Lat1dis IS 5 1.

tilt! end

Page AS
Friday, Aucust 5, 1001

Baseball coach-strikes out with struggling player~ mom

'

I

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

_Th~e_D_a_i_ly_s_e_nti_·n1e_l__________~l~11f.

PageA4

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
eac h player's batting average, number
of doubles, triples, home runs and
strike- outs. (My son averages nine
strike-outs and zero runs .) After
some sleepless nights, I told the
coach how damaging and humiliating this is for my son. I explain ed
aga in about his two eye surgeries
and other disabilities.
T he coach said that baseball is all

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar
Is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wlshll)g to announce meetIngs and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to
promote sale!l or fund ralS"
ers of any type. hems are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaran·
teed to be printed a specific
number of days.

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Root cifproblem lies in violence, not in radal issues
Herewith some itejllS on the racial
front, perhaps with a pattern, and perhaps
not a ]?ad one. We have a winner for the
harshest political rhetoric of the year. The
award goes to Julian Bond, Chairman of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored P/ople, who said at that
organization's~fnt meeting: "Instead of
uniting us, tlfenew (Republican) administration almost daily separates and divides.
They selected nominees from the Talibah
wil)g of American politics, appeased !he
wretched appetites of the extreme right
wing and chose cabinet officials whose
devotion to the Confederacy is nearly
canine in its uncritical affection ."
I've been to many political and organizational meetings in my life, and I think I
know the function of raw red meat to
rouse an audience. But this reeked.
Bond's . words sent House Republican
Leader Dick Armey into orbit He wrote
to Kweisi Mfume, presid ent of the
NAACP, suggesting that they get together
to talk about items on the NAACP agenda. And he also wrote: "I believe there is a
phenomenon iti American politics today
that could justly be called 'R.acial
M cCarthyism ' or 'reverse race-baiting.' .. .
In my opinion, it ha' become an all- toocommon practice to spread unfounded ,
racially · charged falsehoods against
Republicans for 'political advantage.
Deliberate or not.. this. practice will continue to divide our nation ... and do
untold harm in the lives of real. people
who are unjustly accused of conspiracy
against the civil rights of African Ameri-

COLUMNIST

have no idea what will come fiom it.
There are some intractable issues in play,
and some intractable politics. But the tone
is better than Bond's by 99.5 percent.
At about the same time, with very little
publiciry, Hugh Price, President o( the
N ationgl Urban League, delivered an
opening address . to h is o r&gt;,&gt;anization's
meeting, in Washington . It was calm and
constructive, offering Presid ent Bush
some agenda items to consider.
Some suggestions made good sense. The
election process in Am erica must be
improved. The African-American homeownership rate has gone up to almost 50
percent, bttt that amount still trails the 73percen~ home-ownership rate of whites .•
Whatever can reasonably be done to
in crease black home ownership further,
should be done. Price also favors an
increase in the minimum wage. There is a
vigorous argument among economists
about whether such a move would stoke
inflation. I've been on several sides of that
argument over !he years. With inflation
low, it's time to look at.it again.
cans."
The troubling part of Price's address is
Mfume's response to Armey's charge
was moderate, without giving an inch. He · what it didri't consider.About 20 years ago
wrote: " Dear Dick, I'm sure we could Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (D-N.Y.) made
not
agree that there is enough blame to be the point that Republicans Democrats
,had
become
the
party
of
placed on both sides, but the real question
is where do we go from here? ... Like you, ideas. That's still an interesting, if contestI know that all Republicans are not racists ed, argument. R epublicans do (!) have
or bigots and neither are all Democrats . some good new notions, many -of which
would have been cons.idered liberal in earsaints or saviors."
Mfunie and Armey will meet soon. I , lier times. These include, for · example,

school choice vouchers for disadvantaged
children, a program which has the support
of many. rank-and-file African-Americans.
In addition, there is the Himalayan matter of partial privatization of Social Securiry. Price says it would hurt' blacks. I'm
dubious. I believe it can give every American a piece of the Rock. In any event, the
Social Securiry argum ent will last for
ye~rs, and we might all be wise to keep
our powder dry before the argument is ·
drenched and drowned in partisan politics.
Finally, there is the haunting issued of .
"racial profiling.'' Price urges Bush to do
away with it. Everyone in politics agrees.
But a recent article by Heather MacDonald in the Ciry Journal makes the case that ·
cops and law enforcement officials blacks and whites - are going where the
crime is, which is disproportionate among ,
minorities and in minority neighboF•
hoods. In the process, though, innocent
people, are suffering harm and humiliation.
~ __
On a PBS "Think Tank" program I ·
recently moderated an extremely tense
program about racial profiling. Passionately arguing against MacDonald's view were .
Paul Buder, former prosecuting attorney
and professor of law at George Washington Universiry and David Cole, law pro- '
fessor. at Georgetown University.
I confess: I came out on both sides, and ·
I think to some extent the panelists did
too. The root of the problem is violence,
not race.The remedies are unclear. But the
result is social tragedy. Maybe if we can .
understand just !hat much, for now, we'll
keep moving ahead, slowly.

Ben Wcmenberg, a senior fellow at the A merican Enterprise Institute, is the host-essayist '!/
the PBS special "71te First Measured Centtlry" and co-author of a new book of tlte same
title (AEI Press, 2000). He is tlte ltost of the ·
weekly p11bli' televisio~1 program · "Think ·
Tank." You may send com111e~its to him via e- ·
mail: Watmailaol.com .

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

There is a different approach to the concept of winning
Vince Lombardi was a great football
coach. But his philosophy oflife had a gap- ·
ing hole in it. He is known for having said
" Winning isn't the most important thing.
It is the only thing.''
That view has done more to ruin our
hopes for happiness than anything else in
the world.
What makes it so insidious is that it
sounds so right. On the athletic field and
elsewhere, we ~re told, it is the heat of
competition tlut brings out our best qualities. Jim and Ruth Deacoves brought their
children up believing in !he spirit of competition.
What !hey found was that games that
should have been fun brought out the
worst in !heir children. Every game whether it was a board game or an athletic competition - ended in a squabble.
The older kid. always won, which encouraged the younger ones to cheat.
The Deacoves decided to develop games
that fostered cooperation, not rivalry. In
one board game called Harvest Time, players work together to plant and harvest gardens. In an6ther game, Beautiful Places,
playerS share ideas on how to eliminate
overcrowded cities and pollution.
O thers are in on the secret. One night, I
walked m the house and found my parents
playing Scrabble. I noticed that when my
mother. was stumped for a word, my father

George

Plagenz
COLUMNIST
would look at her letters to see if he could

think of a word for her.

steps so he could lob the ball in softly.
Shaya swung the bat clumsily and missed. ;
On the next pitch, he hit a slow ground ·
ball to the pitcher, who could easily have
thrown the ball to the first ba&lt;eman, which
would have ended the game.
Instead the pitcher took the ball and
threw it over the first ba&lt;eman 's head. By ·
the time the right fielder had retrieved the ·
ball and threw it into the infield, Shaya was
heading toward second base. A good throw
to the second baseman would have beaten
Shaya to the bag and the game would have
been over.
But !hen another wonderful thing happened.
The right fielder, who was now aware of
what was happening, threw the ball high
over !he second baseman's head.
"Shaya, run to third!" the players from
both teams yelled. As he ran, the ball not
only sailed over the second baseman's head
but over !he third baseman's head.
"Shaya. run home!" everybody was now
screaming. Shaya ran and stepped on home ·
plate. He had won the game for his teant.
The players on the losing team that day
had found the hole in Vince Lombardi's
philosophy. It is not winning that is "the
only thing:' It . i&lt; making someone else's
day shine brighter.

"That's not how to play;' I said.
But the best example of how to play !he
game of life is in a story by Rabbi Paysach
Krohn in "Chicken Soup for the Father's
Soul" (HCI, 2001). . .
A father had taken his learning-disabled
son Shaya to a softball game. Dufing the
.game, die boy asked if he could play.
The father put the request to !he members of one of the teams. Since tlieir team
wa&lt; losing by six runs and it was !he eighth
inning, they agreed to let the boy play.
Wlut harm could it do?
But then Shaya's team rallied. The
potential rying run was on base when it
wa&lt; Shaya's first turn to bat. What happened next was truly wonderful.
(George R. Plagmz is a columnist for News- .
The opposing pitcher moved
in
a
few
paper
Enterprise Association.)
, _,
.

.

..

•

about tattsllcs, and my son's selfesteem problem was mine to deal
with. He said he's been coaching for
12 years (his sqn is the No. 1 player),
and he was not going to change. My
instinct is to pull my son out of the
league, but I know that would only
make him feel worse.
So, Abby, this being said, I urge
coaches to ke ep in mind these two
additional suggestions for the code
of conduct:
(1) Please don't have children run
laps for a lack of talent. It is counterproductive for building the skill they
la ck: (After running laps, my son was
so tired he struc k out again , and had
to run laps again!)
(2) P lease ]eave your misdirected
hormones, ego and military sryle at
home and remember yol,l are coach- .

ing children - and this is a GAME!
- PROUD OF MY SON IN
WASHINGTON
DEAR PROUD: Your son 's
coach is so focused on winning that
he has lost sight of the fact that children's spom are supposed to teach
them sportsmanship and a love of
the game.
·
Talk to the parents of your son's
teammates. It's possible that you can
find allies. Together you might be
able to convjnce the board that hired
the coach to dismiss him. If that's not
possible, rather than allowing .your
son to be humiliated, consider ta king
him o ut of baseball for a year and
involving him in another activiry he
will enj oy and at which he can
excel.
P.S. I agree with you that making a

. SUNDAY
Taylor
POMEROY
reunion, Poplar Ridge Fellowship: Hall, Sunday. Dinner at

·

MIDDLEPORT Glenn
Rowe, Vinton, to speak at Ash
Street Church, Sunday, 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - Eichinger
POMEROY - "Fun, Food reunion Sunday,
Carleton
and Fellowship" at God's NET.
School, 1 p.m.
Free meals, video games,
computer programs, board
RUTLAND - 83rd annual
games, pool tables. 6 to 10:30
Davis
reunion, descendants ol
p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Orlando and Katherine She·
POMEROY
Meigs line Davis, Sunday, Rutland
County Chapter, PERI noon Fire Department, 12:30 p.m.
on Friday at the Meigs County dinner.
Senior Center. Insurance rep·
MIDDLEPORT - Special.
resentatives will speak, and
presentation from the Dominibirthday cake will be served.
can Republic mission triip,
MIDDLEPORT Meigs Middleport Church ol Christ,
Middle school volleyball meet· Sunday, 7 p.m.
ing Friday, 10 a.m.
MONDAY
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -Vacation
SALEM CENTER - Star Bible School, Hope Baptist
Grange 778 and Star Junior Church, 570 Grant St., MiddleGrange 878, regular session, port. "Truth Trackers" theme,
Saturday, potl\lCk supper at Monday throughAug .. 10, 6:30
6:30 p.m. followed ~y meettng to 9 p.m. Regtstrat1on day,
- 1--- aL B p.m. CWA, photograpby_ Saturday, 3 to 5 p.m. Free,
and art contest items to be lood and games.
judged.
S'I'RACUSE
Sutton
MIDDLEPORT - Family Township Trustees regular
Carnival of Fun, Saturday from meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the River Syracuse Village Hall.
Valley Apostolic Worship Cen·
ter, formerly known as the MidCARPENTER - Columbia
dleport United Pentecostal Township Trustees, Monday,
Church . Family members will fire station, 7:30 p.m.
enjoy a variety of activities
. including games, food and a
RACINE - "Explore Jesus
puppet show. The event will be Love" themed vacation Bible
held at the church on Third school, Monday through Aug.
Avenue _in Middleport.
10, 6 to 8 :30 p.m. at Mount
Moriah Church · of God, Mile
Hudson Hill Road, Racine.
RUTLAND
reunion, Saturday, Rutland
,
Park, 1 p.m. Table service proRACINE- Racine Chapter
vided. Take covered dish.
134, OES Monday 7:30p.m.;
one member to be initiated;
MIDDLEPORT - Informational meeting for Meigs .Junior officers urged to attend; take
High football players (7th and covered dish for refreshments.

Phillips aud daughter j eanne Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

11 p.m. Chinese auction. Family friends Invited to dance.

noon.

ch ild run laps as a punishment is
counterproductive. Depending .on
the child's health, it could also be
damaging or even fataL
DEAR ABBY: When dining
out in a restaurant, where do you
leave yo ur napkin when the meal is
over? I say it should be left on th~
table, but my cousin thinks it should
be placed on the seat of your chair.
Who is right? CLUELESS
COUSINS
DEAR COUSINS: When the
meal is finished,.your napkin should
be placed to the left of the place set'ting, unfolded. However, if you need
to leave the table during the meal,
leave your napkin on your chair and
push-the chair in, close to the table.
Dear Abby is writrm by Pauline

TOWING THE LINES - Area educators learned about power
generation and river commerce in the fourth annual workshop
held by American Electric Power.

Educators briefed on river
comm¢rce at workshop

I

_

LAKIN, W.Va. - Twenty
educators from Ohio and West
Virginia learned about modern
river commerce and power
generation during the fourth
annual teachers' workshop

sponsored by American Electric Power's River Transpiration
Division.
The teachers, who earned
academic credit from Marshall
. Universiry, also came away

from the "Towing the Line" teacher had the opportuniry to
workshop with a bit of nostai- "work" like a deckhand during
gia stories about their an afternoon line throwing
adventure to pass on to stu- exercise that left them "feeling"
dents.
muscles they hadn't used in a
"This is soooo great," Central while.
Elementary School (Point
Classroom topics included
Pleasant, WVa.) teacher Jill safety. a history of AEP's River
Martin said to no one in partie- Division, an overview of the
ular while riding downriver on maritime towing industry, coal
the front of a coal barge.
combustion products, electric
Eastland Career Center · industry deregulation and cus(Groveport) teacher Richard tamer choice, and maintenance
Roberts used his cell phone to services for the river operation.
call home. "You'llnever believe
Presenters represented AEP's
where I am and what I'm River Transportation Division,
doing," he told his listener. ''I'm Ash Management and Corporiding a coal barge down the rate Communications groups,
Ohio River."
and the U.S. Coast Guard and
The rwo-day workshop July U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
18 and 19. gave participants an
The workshop's second dayup-dose-and-personal intra- was devoted to field trips to
duction to various aspects of Racine Locks and Dam, tours
the movement of commodities of AEP's Racine Hydro Plant
' on America's inland waterways, and Mountaineer Plant, on an
and hydro electric and coal- approximately 15-mile ride
fired power generation. The aboard the M / V C.J Bryan
workshop also armed the down the Ohio River fi:om
teachers with a "boatload" of Ravenswood to the Mounresource materials they can use taineer Plant. The trip included
passage through the Racine
in their classrooms.
Most of the first day was lock, a process that took almost
spent in the classroom at the 40 minutes after the front of
Lakin complex, but eacll the lead barge entered-the lock.

Bth graders) .Saturday, 10 a .m.
at the school. Practice to begin
Aug. 6 at 8 a.m.

TUESDAY
POMEROY Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6 p.m.
RACINE - Beegle family Tuesday, township hall, Rockreunion, Saturday, farm of springs R_o ad.
Ronald and Leanna Beegle ,
WEDNESDAY
Hogg Hollow Road , Racine.
RUTLAND
Rutland
Registration noon , potluck
(drinks and dinnerware provid- Township Trustees, Wednesed), business and social activ- day at 5 p.m. at the Rutland
ities, 2 to 4; square dance , 7 to Fire Station .

·

ffiftUlEY'S ftentln
flow
SElf STORHGE · g

"ouJ
at\aO

ae

97 Beech Street

middleport, Ohio

10 n. a 10 n ........................~......S35.oo
1o n. a 20 n ...............................S55.oo

e''

HUGE SAVINGS
R~~iuler

Price $5,4j15

·SALE PRICED

SALE

EXTENDED!

',$3,50Q"'

LOWELL C.

GMC.
... ....... ·

....-..

~

;

4358 Slltl 1111111181•140-448-1044 • 1111110111. II

••

-

·---·---'

�The Daily,Sentinel

Frlct.y. Aupst 5, 2001

~e ·D~y ~tinel

•

BETTER-NOT

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

T~MYiACK­

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ARE ALL AUI&lt;E.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

DEAR ABBY: I have five children and am neither an overbearing
nor overly protective mother. After
reading Michelle Klein's code of
conduct for chi ld ren's sporting
events, I have a few comments and
suggestions for coaches .
Our youngest son is 10. He was
adopted fiom an overseas · orphanage. We took him knowing he had
some physical challenges. Last year, I
asked a tenderhearted baseball coach
to place him on a team with
younger players. He played all season
and did fine.
This year, my request was di..-egarded. My son is now on a team
with other 10-year-old boys. H e is
not only struggling as a player, but
his self-esteem is in the cellar.
Every week , h is coach prints out

THESE5U&gt;S

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

l.nttn to tilt editor are wricom,, They shcudd be len llkln JOO woniJ. All htten
IITt subj«t to rditing ond mu.fl bt ~titntd and include addren a11d tdtp,.one IIII.W~r.
, No unsigned lt«t'n wiU bt publidrtd. Unen should b11 in rood taslt, tultlnmlf8
l!tUII, rwt penonolilits. ·
111t opinions exprtutd in the C'olumn btfo., au the conu1uu~ oftht Ohio 'i!Ut]
. Publishing Cu.'s tdilflrilll board. rmltSI oth trwlst nOltd.

OHIO VIEWS

No malice
Supreme Court's belief it's
being _punished not valid
• The Columbus Dispatch: Word is that some Ohio
Supreme Court justices think the legislature is sticking it to
th em .
In an ottempt to comply with the court's demand to eliminate inequities in the funding of public sc hool s, lawmakers ransacked the budget, squeezing cash out of virtually every other
state department, agency and program to cobble together a
S1.4 billion in crease for edu cation in th e next rwo years.
Among the losers, though cerfainly not the .hardest hit, was
the court itself. The budget modestly increases funding for the
court over the next two years, but the allocation is $8 milljon
less than C hi ef Justice Thomas J Moyer had requested. ·
No doubt this budget tightening will be painful, not.only for
court employees but also for perhaps thousands o( Ohioans
wi th pending cases who will see the wheels of justice turn that
mu'ch slower.
But is the General Assembly's allocation a payback for twice
stickin g lawmakers with the job of overhauling public-school
fundin g' Not likely.
Th e fact is: Funding for the Supreme Cou rt and subsidiary
state courts is just nne of hundreds of important finan cial obligations that 'lawmakers eac h year must weigh and balance as theydivvy up the state's limued revenu es.
.
• The Wapakoneta Daily News: Gov. Bob Taft and the
General Assembly ended the legisla tive budget process and
veto-override .debate...p.ositivcl¥, with the governor agreemg to
restore so me funding for strapped soc ial agencies - fundin g
th at he had line- ite m vetoed out of the hudget approved by the
General Assembly.
·
The agreement by the governor came under the threat of a
veto overr ide led by ... his own parry. So not only did some
social agencies get a needed fundin g boost, the governor managed to save some political face. The Democrats would have
feasted on the governor and Republican majoriry in both
houses of th e General Assembly had the veto-override movement conti nued.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday,Aug. 3, the 215th day of2001.There are 150
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 3, 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Palos,
Spain, on a voyage that took him to the present-day Americas.
On this date:
In 1914, Germany declared war on France.
In 1921, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis
refused to reinstate the former Chicago White Sox players
implicated in the "Black Sox" scandal; despite their acquittals in
a jury trial.
In 1923, Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as the 30th president
of the United States, following the death ofWarren G. Hardmg.
In 1936, the State Department urged Americans in Spain to
leave because of that country's civil war.
· In 1949, the National Basketball Association was formed.
In 1958, the nuclear- powered submarine Nautilus became
the first vessel to cross the North Pole underwater.
In 1980, closing ceremonies were held in Moscow for the
Summer Olympic Games, which had been boycotted by
doz.ens of countries, including the United States.
In 1981 , U.S. air traffic controllers went on 'strike, despite a
warning from President Reagan they would be fired, which
they were.
In 1993, the Senate voted 96-3 to confirm Supreme Court
· nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
In 1994, Stephen G. Breyer was sworn in as the Supreme
Court's newest justice in a private ce remony ·at Chief Justice
William H. R ehnquist's Vermont summer home.
.
Ten years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker Ill met with
King Hassan II of Morocco. Baker asked the monarch for his
help in gaining Palestinian participation in a Middle East peace
conference.
Five years ago: At the Atlanta Olympics, the U.S. men's 400meter relay, without 'Carl Lewis, failed to win the gold )11C:dal,
· finishing behind Canada. The American wom en 's 400 arld 1600
relay~. and the men's 1600, all won gold. The U.S. men's basketball "Dream Team" beat Yugoslavia, 95-69, to win the gold.
One year ago: George W Bush accepted the R.epublican
presidential nom ination at the parry's convention in Philadelphia, presenting himself as an outsider who would return
"civiliry and respect" to Washington politics.
Today's Birthdays: Author P.D. James is Bt: :'Broadway composer Richard Adler is 80. Singer Gordon Stoker (The Jordanaircs) is 77 . Author Leon Ur is is 77 . Singer Tony Uennctt is
75. Actor Alex Cord is 70. Actor Martin Sheen is 61. Lifestyle
guru Martha Stewart is liO. Singer Beverly Lee (The Shirelles)
is 60. M ovie d irc·ctor Jp hn Lat1dis IS 5 1.

tilt! end

Page AS
Friday, Aucust 5, 1001

Baseball coach-strikes out with struggling player~ mom

'

I

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

_Th~e_D_a_i_ly_s_e_nti_·n1e_l__________~l~11f.

PageA4

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
eac h player's batting average, number
of doubles, triples, home runs and
strike- outs. (My son averages nine
strike-outs and zero runs .) After
some sleepless nights, I told the
coach how damaging and humiliating this is for my son. I explain ed
aga in about his two eye surgeries
and other disabilities.
T he coach said that baseball is all

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar
Is published as a free service to non-profit groups
wlshll)g to announce meetIngs and special events. The
calendar Is not designed to
promote sale!l or fund ralS"
ers of any type. hems are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaran·
teed to be printed a specific
number of days.

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

Root cifproblem lies in violence, not in radal issues
Herewith some itejllS on the racial
front, perhaps with a pattern, and perhaps
not a ]?ad one. We have a winner for the
harshest political rhetoric of the year. The
award goes to Julian Bond, Chairman of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored P/ople, who said at that
organization's~fnt meeting: "Instead of
uniting us, tlfenew (Republican) administration almost daily separates and divides.
They selected nominees from the Talibah
wil)g of American politics, appeased !he
wretched appetites of the extreme right
wing and chose cabinet officials whose
devotion to the Confederacy is nearly
canine in its uncritical affection ."
I've been to many political and organizational meetings in my life, and I think I
know the function of raw red meat to
rouse an audience. But this reeked.
Bond's . words sent House Republican
Leader Dick Armey into orbit He wrote
to Kweisi Mfume, presid ent of the
NAACP, suggesting that they get together
to talk about items on the NAACP agenda. And he also wrote: "I believe there is a
phenomenon iti American politics today
that could justly be called 'R.acial
M cCarthyism ' or 'reverse race-baiting.' .. .
In my opinion, it ha' become an all- toocommon practice to spread unfounded ,
racially · charged falsehoods against
Republicans for 'political advantage.
Deliberate or not.. this. practice will continue to divide our nation ... and do
untold harm in the lives of real. people
who are unjustly accused of conspiracy
against the civil rights of African Ameri-

COLUMNIST

have no idea what will come fiom it.
There are some intractable issues in play,
and some intractable politics. But the tone
is better than Bond's by 99.5 percent.
At about the same time, with very little
publiciry, Hugh Price, President o( the
N ationgl Urban League, delivered an
opening address . to h is o r&gt;,&gt;anization's
meeting, in Washington . It was calm and
constructive, offering Presid ent Bush
some agenda items to consider.
Some suggestions made good sense. The
election process in Am erica must be
improved. The African-American homeownership rate has gone up to almost 50
percent, bttt that amount still trails the 73percen~ home-ownership rate of whites .•
Whatever can reasonably be done to
in crease black home ownership further,
should be done. Price also favors an
increase in the minimum wage. There is a
vigorous argument among economists
about whether such a move would stoke
inflation. I've been on several sides of that
argument over !he years. With inflation
low, it's time to look at.it again.
cans."
The troubling part of Price's address is
Mfume's response to Armey's charge
was moderate, without giving an inch. He · what it didri't consider.About 20 years ago
wrote: " Dear Dick, I'm sure we could Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (D-N.Y.) made
not
agree that there is enough blame to be the point that Republicans Democrats
,had
become
the
party
of
placed on both sides, but the real question
is where do we go from here? ... Like you, ideas. That's still an interesting, if contestI know that all Republicans are not racists ed, argument. R epublicans do (!) have
or bigots and neither are all Democrats . some good new notions, many -of which
would have been cons.idered liberal in earsaints or saviors."
Mfunie and Armey will meet soon. I , lier times. These include, for · example,

school choice vouchers for disadvantaged
children, a program which has the support
of many. rank-and-file African-Americans.
In addition, there is the Himalayan matter of partial privatization of Social Securiry. Price says it would hurt' blacks. I'm
dubious. I believe it can give every American a piece of the Rock. In any event, the
Social Securiry argum ent will last for
ye~rs, and we might all be wise to keep
our powder dry before the argument is ·
drenched and drowned in partisan politics.
Finally, there is the haunting issued of .
"racial profiling.'' Price urges Bush to do
away with it. Everyone in politics agrees.
But a recent article by Heather MacDonald in the Ciry Journal makes the case that ·
cops and law enforcement officials blacks and whites - are going where the
crime is, which is disproportionate among ,
minorities and in minority neighboF•
hoods. In the process, though, innocent
people, are suffering harm and humiliation.
~ __
On a PBS "Think Tank" program I ·
recently moderated an extremely tense
program about racial profiling. Passionately arguing against MacDonald's view were .
Paul Buder, former prosecuting attorney
and professor of law at George Washington Universiry and David Cole, law pro- '
fessor. at Georgetown University.
I confess: I came out on both sides, and ·
I think to some extent the panelists did
too. The root of the problem is violence,
not race.The remedies are unclear. But the
result is social tragedy. Maybe if we can .
understand just !hat much, for now, we'll
keep moving ahead, slowly.

Ben Wcmenberg, a senior fellow at the A merican Enterprise Institute, is the host-essayist '!/
the PBS special "71te First Measured Centtlry" and co-author of a new book of tlte same
title (AEI Press, 2000). He is tlte ltost of the ·
weekly p11bli' televisio~1 program · "Think ·
Tank." You may send com111e~its to him via e- ·
mail: Watmailaol.com .

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

There is a different approach to the concept of winning
Vince Lombardi was a great football
coach. But his philosophy oflife had a gap- ·
ing hole in it. He is known for having said
" Winning isn't the most important thing.
It is the only thing.''
That view has done more to ruin our
hopes for happiness than anything else in
the world.
What makes it so insidious is that it
sounds so right. On the athletic field and
elsewhere, we ~re told, it is the heat of
competition tlut brings out our best qualities. Jim and Ruth Deacoves brought their
children up believing in !he spirit of competition.
What !hey found was that games that
should have been fun brought out the
worst in !heir children. Every game whether it was a board game or an athletic competition - ended in a squabble.
The older kid. always won, which encouraged the younger ones to cheat.
The Deacoves decided to develop games
that fostered cooperation, not rivalry. In
one board game called Harvest Time, players work together to plant and harvest gardens. In an6ther game, Beautiful Places,
playerS share ideas on how to eliminate
overcrowded cities and pollution.
O thers are in on the secret. One night, I
walked m the house and found my parents
playing Scrabble. I noticed that when my
mother. was stumped for a word, my father

George

Plagenz
COLUMNIST
would look at her letters to see if he could

think of a word for her.

steps so he could lob the ball in softly.
Shaya swung the bat clumsily and missed. ;
On the next pitch, he hit a slow ground ·
ball to the pitcher, who could easily have
thrown the ball to the first ba&lt;eman, which
would have ended the game.
Instead the pitcher took the ball and
threw it over the first ba&lt;eman 's head. By ·
the time the right fielder had retrieved the ·
ball and threw it into the infield, Shaya was
heading toward second base. A good throw
to the second baseman would have beaten
Shaya to the bag and the game would have
been over.
But !hen another wonderful thing happened.
The right fielder, who was now aware of
what was happening, threw the ball high
over !he second baseman's head.
"Shaya, run to third!" the players from
both teams yelled. As he ran, the ball not
only sailed over the second baseman's head
but over !he third baseman's head.
"Shaya. run home!" everybody was now
screaming. Shaya ran and stepped on home ·
plate. He had won the game for his teant.
The players on the losing team that day
had found the hole in Vince Lombardi's
philosophy. It is not winning that is "the
only thing:' It . i&lt; making someone else's
day shine brighter.

"That's not how to play;' I said.
But the best example of how to play !he
game of life is in a story by Rabbi Paysach
Krohn in "Chicken Soup for the Father's
Soul" (HCI, 2001). . .
A father had taken his learning-disabled
son Shaya to a softball game. Dufing the
.game, die boy asked if he could play.
The father put the request to !he members of one of the teams. Since tlieir team
wa&lt; losing by six runs and it was !he eighth
inning, they agreed to let the boy play.
Wlut harm could it do?
But then Shaya's team rallied. The
potential rying run was on base when it
wa&lt; Shaya's first turn to bat. What happened next was truly wonderful.
(George R. Plagmz is a columnist for News- .
The opposing pitcher moved
in
a
few
paper
Enterprise Association.)
, _,
.

.

..

•

about tattsllcs, and my son's selfesteem problem was mine to deal
with. He said he's been coaching for
12 years (his sqn is the No. 1 player),
and he was not going to change. My
instinct is to pull my son out of the
league, but I know that would only
make him feel worse.
So, Abby, this being said, I urge
coaches to ke ep in mind these two
additional suggestions for the code
of conduct:
(1) Please don't have children run
laps for a lack of talent. It is counterproductive for building the skill they
la ck: (After running laps, my son was
so tired he struc k out again , and had
to run laps again!)
(2) P lease ]eave your misdirected
hormones, ego and military sryle at
home and remember yol,l are coach- .

ing children - and this is a GAME!
- PROUD OF MY SON IN
WASHINGTON
DEAR PROUD: Your son 's
coach is so focused on winning that
he has lost sight of the fact that children's spom are supposed to teach
them sportsmanship and a love of
the game.
·
Talk to the parents of your son's
teammates. It's possible that you can
find allies. Together you might be
able to convjnce the board that hired
the coach to dismiss him. If that's not
possible, rather than allowing .your
son to be humiliated, consider ta king
him o ut of baseball for a year and
involving him in another activiry he
will enj oy and at which he can
excel.
P.S. I agree with you that making a

. SUNDAY
Taylor
POMEROY
reunion, Poplar Ridge Fellowship: Hall, Sunday. Dinner at

·

MIDDLEPORT Glenn
Rowe, Vinton, to speak at Ash
Street Church, Sunday, 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - Eichinger
POMEROY - "Fun, Food reunion Sunday,
Carleton
and Fellowship" at God's NET.
School, 1 p.m.
Free meals, video games,
computer programs, board
RUTLAND - 83rd annual
games, pool tables. 6 to 10:30
Davis
reunion, descendants ol
p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Orlando and Katherine She·
POMEROY
Meigs line Davis, Sunday, Rutland
County Chapter, PERI noon Fire Department, 12:30 p.m.
on Friday at the Meigs County dinner.
Senior Center. Insurance rep·
MIDDLEPORT - Special.
resentatives will speak, and
presentation from the Dominibirthday cake will be served.
can Republic mission triip,
MIDDLEPORT Meigs Middleport Church ol Christ,
Middle school volleyball meet· Sunday, 7 p.m.
ing Friday, 10 a.m.
MONDAY
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -Vacation
SALEM CENTER - Star Bible School, Hope Baptist
Grange 778 and Star Junior Church, 570 Grant St., MiddleGrange 878, regular session, port. "Truth Trackers" theme,
Saturday, potl\lCk supper at Monday throughAug .. 10, 6:30
6:30 p.m. followed ~y meettng to 9 p.m. Regtstrat1on day,
- 1--- aL B p.m. CWA, photograpby_ Saturday, 3 to 5 p.m. Free,
and art contest items to be lood and games.
judged.
S'I'RACUSE
Sutton
MIDDLEPORT - Family Township Trustees regular
Carnival of Fun, Saturday from meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the River Syracuse Village Hall.
Valley Apostolic Worship Cen·
ter, formerly known as the MidCARPENTER - Columbia
dleport United Pentecostal Township Trustees, Monday,
Church . Family members will fire station, 7:30 p.m.
enjoy a variety of activities
. including games, food and a
RACINE - "Explore Jesus
puppet show. The event will be Love" themed vacation Bible
held at the church on Third school, Monday through Aug.
Avenue _in Middleport.
10, 6 to 8 :30 p.m. at Mount
Moriah Church · of God, Mile
Hudson Hill Road, Racine.
RUTLAND
reunion, Saturday, Rutland
,
Park, 1 p.m. Table service proRACINE- Racine Chapter
vided. Take covered dish.
134, OES Monday 7:30p.m.;
one member to be initiated;
MIDDLEPORT - Informational meeting for Meigs .Junior officers urged to attend; take
High football players (7th and covered dish for refreshments.

Phillips aud daughter j eanne Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

11 p.m. Chinese auction. Family friends Invited to dance.

noon.

ch ild run laps as a punishment is
counterproductive. Depending .on
the child's health, it could also be
damaging or even fataL
DEAR ABBY: When dining
out in a restaurant, where do you
leave yo ur napkin when the meal is
over? I say it should be left on th~
table, but my cousin thinks it should
be placed on the seat of your chair.
Who is right? CLUELESS
COUSINS
DEAR COUSINS: When the
meal is finished,.your napkin should
be placed to the left of the place set'ting, unfolded. However, if you need
to leave the table during the meal,
leave your napkin on your chair and
push-the chair in, close to the table.
Dear Abby is writrm by Pauline

TOWING THE LINES - Area educators learned about power
generation and river commerce in the fourth annual workshop
held by American Electric Power.

Educators briefed on river
comm¢rce at workshop

I

_

LAKIN, W.Va. - Twenty
educators from Ohio and West
Virginia learned about modern
river commerce and power
generation during the fourth
annual teachers' workshop

sponsored by American Electric Power's River Transpiration
Division.
The teachers, who earned
academic credit from Marshall
. Universiry, also came away

from the "Towing the Line" teacher had the opportuniry to
workshop with a bit of nostai- "work" like a deckhand during
gia stories about their an afternoon line throwing
adventure to pass on to stu- exercise that left them "feeling"
dents.
muscles they hadn't used in a
"This is soooo great," Central while.
Elementary School (Point
Classroom topics included
Pleasant, WVa.) teacher Jill safety. a history of AEP's River
Martin said to no one in partie- Division, an overview of the
ular while riding downriver on maritime towing industry, coal
the front of a coal barge.
combustion products, electric
Eastland Career Center · industry deregulation and cus(Groveport) teacher Richard tamer choice, and maintenance
Roberts used his cell phone to services for the river operation.
call home. "You'llnever believe
Presenters represented AEP's
where I am and what I'm River Transportation Division,
doing," he told his listener. ''I'm Ash Management and Corporiding a coal barge down the rate Communications groups,
Ohio River."
and the U.S. Coast Guard and
The rwo-day workshop July U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
18 and 19. gave participants an
The workshop's second dayup-dose-and-personal intra- was devoted to field trips to
duction to various aspects of Racine Locks and Dam, tours
the movement of commodities of AEP's Racine Hydro Plant
' on America's inland waterways, and Mountaineer Plant, on an
and hydro electric and coal- approximately 15-mile ride
fired power generation. The aboard the M / V C.J Bryan
workshop also armed the down the Ohio River fi:om
teachers with a "boatload" of Ravenswood to the Mounresource materials they can use taineer Plant. The trip included
passage through the Racine
in their classrooms.
Most of the first day was lock, a process that took almost
spent in the classroom at the 40 minutes after the front of
Lakin complex, but eacll the lead barge entered-the lock.

Bth graders) .Saturday, 10 a .m.
at the school. Practice to begin
Aug. 6 at 8 a.m.

TUESDAY
POMEROY Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6 p.m.
RACINE - Beegle family Tuesday, township hall, Rockreunion, Saturday, farm of springs R_o ad.
Ronald and Leanna Beegle ,
WEDNESDAY
Hogg Hollow Road , Racine.
RUTLAND
Rutland
Registration noon , potluck
(drinks and dinnerware provid- Township Trustees, Wednesed), business and social activ- day at 5 p.m. at the Rutland
ities, 2 to 4; square dance , 7 to Fire Station .

·

ffiftUlEY'S ftentln
flow
SElf STORHGE · g

"ouJ
at\aO

ae

97 Beech Street

middleport, Ohio

10 n. a 10 n ........................~......S35.oo
1o n. a 20 n ...............................S55.oo

e''

HUGE SAVINGS
R~~iuler

Price $5,4j15

·SALE PRICED

SALE

EXTENDED!

',$3,50Q"'

LOWELL C.

GMC.
... ....... ·

....-..

~

;

4358 Slltl 1111111181•140-448-1044 • 1111110111. II

••

-

·---·---'

�-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

\ po~tulk
Cloomo of J..'l' Clorbt A,..lolk
VIII1Zand1

~MJ

16 1 Mulbtrry A\ C. . Pomeroy. 991·.5898
Paswr: Rev. Waller E. Heint
Sa&amp; . Coo 4.H -!i. l5p.m.• Mus· .S .•\0 p.m.
Sun. Con. · 11 :4'i -9. 1 ~ :a.rn.,

ChuR""h of Jnu~ Chri~t
Ap:tstolic Faith
New Lm\8 Road

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

Baptist
Little Cl'ftk Baptist Church
Price Hollow Rd .. Rutland
Pa ~ t or : J1~hn Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service II :00 a.m.
Evening Sen'k e- .6:00p.m_.
Wednesday Sen'ice · 7:30p.m.
Hope B11ptist Church (Southtml
510 Grant St. Mi ddkpon
Sunday school · Y:JO a.m.
Worship · t I a.m. and b p.m.

Wednesday Scrvii.'C· 7 p.m
Rudand First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Pomtroy first Baptist
Eas1 Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30 u. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
First Southun Baptist
41 872 Pomeroy Pike
P~tslur; E. Lamar O'Dryant
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.. '1:00 p.m.
Wednesda)' Sen·iccs · 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Churth
P~ stor : Mark Morrow
6th ami Palmer St.. Middlepun
Sunday s,·hool - 9:15a.m.
Worlihip · I0: 15 il. lll .• 7:00p.m
Wcdncsda)l Ser"ice- 7:00p. m.

Radnt first Hapli!il
Pa~ lor: Rick Rule
Su nday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m.. '7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.

Sef"oice~- 7

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
, Worship - 11 a.m.
ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St .• Middleport
Pastor: Re v. Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. ·
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W&lt;nhip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.
Pastor. Mark McComas

Danville Hollnns Church
3105'7 Shit( Route 325, Langsvlle
Paslor: Gary Jacl son
Sunda.y school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer sen-kt - 7 p.m.

Sunday Scllool • 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrty Wall ace
ISl and 3rd Sunday

Thppt:n Plain Churth of Christ

Instrumental
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:1.5 a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
BiblC Study Wednesday 7 pm

We:sleyau Blblt Holiness Cbun:h
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
P11.s1or: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedi1esday Service - 7:30p.m.

Brtdbury Church of ChriJt
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m.
Rulland Church of Christ
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

t

CarJ~H;IoSutton

The Church of Jesus
Christ of Lauer-bay Saints
SL RL 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- ll .a .m.
Relief SOciety/Priesthood I J :05- 12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, ht Thurs. · 1 p.m.

SL John Lutheran Church
.. PiM~

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • I0:00 a.m.

Inxter Chun:h or Christ
Pastor: Natl\an Robinson
Sundny s.c:hooi'J:30 a.m.
Nonnan Will.-supc rintendcnt Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday 1 p.m.

St. P11ul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamol'e' &amp; Sa:ond St., Pdmeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship ~ II a.m.

( 'hrislian l nion
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sllllday School - II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SDrVices - 730 p.m.

Graham United MethodiSt
Worship - 9:30a.m. (I st &amp; 2nd Sun ).
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
. Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

&lt; hurd1 ol' Cod
ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Un
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
0

Joppo

•

Reedsville Fellowship
Church or the Na.zarene
Pastor: Teresa Walde1;k
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · .10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedncsda)t Sen-ices • 7 p.m.

Pas10r: Bob Randolph
Worihip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rt 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m ..
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

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

( 'atholic
Sacred Heart CathoU( Church

St. Rl. 124,

Rn ~ine

Paslor. William Hoback

-

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pa~tor: Rev. Clark. Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

l're~h\

ll'l'ian
y

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robin50q
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wol'!ihip : II a.m.

Harrlso•l'IDe PreabyteriiR Churcb
Worship - 9 a.m. '
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Middleport Pmbylerian
Sunday School • 9
Won~hip • 10 a.m.

a.m.

•

l nited Brl'lhrl'n

Unllcd Faith Chun:h
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Re'l'. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

MI. He:nnn United Brethrtn
In Christ Churth
Texas Community oiTCR 82
Pastor: Raben Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic~. 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Llshthouse
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening.7:30 p.m. ··
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday - 7:30p.m.
Soulh Bethel New Testament
Sil'l'er Ridge
Pastor: Robert BIUber

Eden United Brethrtn In Christ
1ln mile s north of Reeds'l'ille
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday ScMol - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
~Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

E
228 W. Main St., Pon1erovl

992-5432
137-C N. 2nd Ave. ·
Middleport, OH
Bill Quickel

992~376

992.a877

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028
(.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ~

2~:2~S~;~n ~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY .

w;:!~~;.~!~:··
992·2955

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

~nnvflOWER

106 BUITERNU1 AVE.
POMEROY,OH 992·6454

MeijJ•

HOME

FUNERAL HOME

0/gnlty.•nd Service A/Wily•
E111tbllshed 1913

-we accept Preneed Transfers·
882 8200
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East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

a_
W

•ut ,,. ttnd yout thouiflfl with IJ*III ura·

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992·2121
106

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Ave.

Lundy Brown

Director

Regan Bro~ml

174 Layne

SERVICE
9112"7075

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - A former DuPont
High School football standout
has been charged with firstdegree murder in the fatal
shooting of a man.
Tremain Straughter; 20, of
Rand turned himself in to
Charleston police at about
8:45 p.m. Thursday, Detective
Aaron James said.
Straughter was charged with
shooting Gary McGee, 21,
.early Monday mornmg.
McGee's body was found lying
in a street. He had been shot at
least twice.
James said police have not
determined a motive. The gun
has not been found.

740..992·5444

(AP) -A back injury will force

740-992-5141
.
...... fllller..._
590 EAd . . Slrlll• "-'J, 01t 45769

-., R.

Jr.· Dlroct•

m:eaforb
1\eal ~state
216 E. Sec,ond Pomeroy

"Flowers for all occasions•
SAFETY SALES &amp;

murder

264 SootUoaoUvt.• Mllll111 ~ 01145760

--TlE~WiffiiiNGrFiroffiN~EffiR.A:A:tLhN;fEE\iwiiHAiAl:VEffiiNNilsisN~oiUuFFFFiiERiiF:.iJRiEEi&amp;~ict-;;a~~zw:ay;:,s &amp; Cforever

;jcifiFFklo;;iris;t

Straughter
charged with

Herd backup
QB is out with
back problems

§cru .1'unnll
Chicken"

ROCK SPRINGS - The
newly formed Meigs Marauder- Sideliner Booster Club-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 information you can call head football
coach Mike Chancey at 9920064 or 992-2158.

•

Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Lawinsky
Soturday Sel'\'lces:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship . 3 p.m.

Mt. OIIYe Community Church
Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednedoy Service - 7 p.m.

NFesturlng Kentuclcy Fried

,_,.

St'\l'lllh-ll.l\ \chn11i~l

3304~

Syntuse Church or the N111~ne
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Roeds&gt;llle
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month· 7:00p.m. service

New Meigs
booster dub
to meet

Pe:nttro~tal Assembly

. Faith Gospel Churth
Long Bottom
SunC•y School - 9:30a.m. ·
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wed11esday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Cllun:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wol'!ihip • 10:30 a.m., ti:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen-ices - '1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcop

W01'5hip • 9 a.m.

· Salem Community Church
Ucving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.·
Pa.c;ror: Clyde Fem:ll
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday e'l'enini service 6 pm
Wednesdily t.e['\lice 7 pm ·

Mone Ch11pel ChuKh
Suflday school- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.

'\atarene

Cbe:ster
Paator: lane Beattie

God's Te~nple or Pi'alse
3166.5 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor. Wayne Balcolm
Services: TIIUN. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service establ.ished.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Torch Cburch
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. .
Wors.hip - 10:30 a.m.

Meigs CooperatiYe Parisb
Northeast. Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: lane Beattie
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - It a.m.• 6:30 p.m.

Full Gospel Churth or the: Living Savior
Rt.338 , Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morri~
Assl. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Dyesvllle Community Chllrch

HocklnRPOrt Chureh
Orand Street
Surxlay School · tO a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive UaUed Me:lhodW
Off 124 beh.ind Wilkes-ville
Pa!!.tor: Rrv. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Clifton, W.Va.
Sundsy School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt . 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m,, ?:30 p.m.

Bethel Chun:.h
Township Rd.• 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - tO a.m.
Wednesday Servi'ce~ • 10 a.m.

GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP)
- Jon Kitna will start at quarterback in Cincinnati's preseason opener Saturday at Chicago.
But how long he'll play and
'who will follow him remains a
mystery. even to Bengals coach
Dick LeBeau.
"We'll start Jon in this game
and, beyond that, we'll see
what's going on," LeBeau said. "I
don't even know what the progression is going to be yet:'
Kitna, who played in Seattle
for live se.Som, was signed as a ·
free agent in March to compete
with Akili Smith and Scott
Mitchell for the starting job. He
started and played the first series
In
the
Bengals'
annual
mtrasquad sqimmage on Saturday.

Cllhon Tabtrnacle Chun:h

Syratuse Missloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Cool.,llle Unlied Methodist Pari!lh
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Surxlay School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

getting edge as
Bengals' QB

Rejoicing Life Churc:h
N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worshlp- 10:00 am
WedllCsday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Volley ~bernatle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmen Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m:-Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Recine

Our SavJoor.Lutheran Churt'h
Walnut1md Henry St.~,. Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Ru!l.'icll
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Chun:h of Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
E~angelist : Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible S1udy ·9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Apple and Seco11d Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sund~y School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
E~ening Service•- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen&lt;ices - 6:30 p.m.

East Letart

Kitna may be

~CXJ

Middleport Community Churth
5'75 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wedne!lday SerYice o 7;30 p.m.

Pastor:: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m . .
Wo~hip • 9 LID.
· Wednesday· 7 p.m .

'HIGHLIGHTS

Sll,envUie Communl&amp;y Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sund11 y Sen-ices· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday-7 :00p.m..

HarrisonviUe Community Chun::b
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - '1 p.m.

MomlnaStar
· PIIStor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship . I0 a.m.

l .utlwran

Bible Study, We41 eaday, 6:30p.m.

The Believers' Ft:l~wshlp Ministry
New Lime Rd. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. RobinsOO
Services: Wedneisday. 7:30p.m.
Sunday. 2:30 p.nl.

Ca rmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sunday School -·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m,

FRIDAY's

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneMiay Service-7:30p.m.

New Life Vl~tory Center
3773 GeoraesCreek Road, Gallipolis', OH
·
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service~ - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 1 p.m.

Follh Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bmtom
Pastor. Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 1 p.m.

Belblny
Patitor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
WOrship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

l.alln-l&gt;m Sainls

Fallh F.eUowsblp Cruaadt for ChriM
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 7 p.m.

~bundanl Gnte R.F. I.
923 S. Third St. , Middleport
Pastor Tert~a Davis
Sunday service, 10 ll.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Snow-rille
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Laurel CIJII' Free Metbodld Church
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00_p.m.

Reedsville Chun:h or Chrbt
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a. m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Syncuse First Church or God

Salem Center
Pa!&lt;itor: Ron Fien:c
. Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10: IS a.m.

Hysell Run HoHne55 Chun:-h
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thul'5day Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Woohip · '7 :00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

AKape Life Ce:nter
"Fuii·Gospel Church"
Pastor'!J John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017 •
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedneolday 1 pm

Rutland

Vikings practice·as state
inve~tigates Stringer d.eath

Lctarl , W.V.. Rt. I

Outrt:ach MlnistriH
47439 Reibel Rd.. the!itcr
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Servk:es: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~&gt; - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thursday SerYices - 1 p.m.

Friday, August 3, 2001

Falnlew Bible Churth

Harve~~t

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunda~ • 6 p.m.

•

Whlte'• Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday,School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Ash StrH:t Church
Ash St., MiddlcponSunday So.:houl - 10:00 a.n1.
Sum.la~ Scrvict' · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - H.Kl p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor. Rod Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m .

Pine: Gmn Bible: HOliness Churc:h
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor:: Rev. o· Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 'a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rulland Cllurth ot lht N•zartnto
Pa.'itor. Rev. Samuel W. Ba.sye

Hemlock Grove ~hristlan Church
Pastor: Richard Nease
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.

· Pearl Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
~orship - IOa.m.

Rose or Sharon Holiness Chun:h
'cading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pas1or: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday s1.:hool· 9:30a. m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Chri!lt
Pomeroy. Hanisonv ille Rd . (R\.1431
Pasror; Roger Watson
Sunday School - -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wcdnc:sday Scn&lt;K:es • 7 p.m.

Salem St.

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Robin50n
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Page 81

frttdom. Gosl?'d Mtt.Soa
Bald Knob, on Co, Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Rogt r Wi ll fOJd
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 1 p.m.

Community of Christ
Pon.land-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Worship - II :OOa.m.

NFL camp roundup, Page B3
Baseball roundup, Page B6

Road

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOOihi p Service I0:30a.m.
No Su~y or Wednesday Night Services

Ollwr ( 'hurdll's

Hralh (Middleport)
Paslor: Rob Brower
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri50nville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Su nday School 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:{111 p.m
Wedne!iday Sc:rvice - H XI p.m.

Beilrwallow RJd11e Cburch ol Cbrtst
P ~tstor: Te rry Stewan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne~y Servlces- 6:30 p.m.

Pastor: Re~. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~es- '1 p.m.

FomtRun
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Pastor. Robert Vance

Portland Flnt Churth of the Nua~ne
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30p.m. ·

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

Communlly Chun:h
Pastnr: R e~. Amm Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-? p.m.

Kin~es~l')'

Cbtiter Church ot tht N•zartnt
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30 a.ni.
Wor!l.hip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. ti:JO p.m.
Wednesday Servicts - 7 p.m.

Flit woods

Rudand Free WUI Bapllst

Scoond B•pti!lt Churrh
Ravenswood. WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchoolJO amMorning wonhip II am Evening · 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Enterp..u.t
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday ScOOol - 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Sunday School and
Holy EuchariSI II :00 a.m.

K(no Chun:h or Christ
Worship · 9:30a.m.

LanpviUe Christian Churth
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service '7 :30 p.m.

Forysl Run Baptist ·

\

Gn« Ep....,pal Chur&lt;h
326 E. Main St .. Pomeruy
Rt'v. J!Jrnes Jkmacki. Rev. Kathatin F~trr

Middleport Churth of Chrl.1l
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Han son
Youth Min ister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptl.ilt Chun:h
Grtat Bend, Rome 124, Ra cine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mccea
Sunday Schoo l -9: 30a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St., Masob
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'iccs - 7·p.m.

Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Snvices - 7:30p.m.

l·.pbl'opal

Pomeroy Wntsidc Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wonhip · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wr dnesday Services • 7 p .m.

Mt. Unton Baptist
Pastor: Joe N. Say re
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evcnicg - 6:30p.m.
Wedm:sday Services - 6:30p.m.

Vlclory Baptist lndepend&amp;nt
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: lames E. Keesee
Worship- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wrdnesday Services· 7 p.m.

Central Clusta-

p m.

Hickory Hills Church or Christ
Evangclisl Mike' Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a. m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday S~rvice s- 1 p.m.

Hillside Baptkit Churth
St. Rt . 143 just off R1. 7
Pa~tor: Rev. Jame~ R--:--A~.: ree;-Sr7Sundlly Unijied Sen·icC
Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCes -7 p.m.

IOa.m.
Tuesday ~rvi «&amp; · 7:30p.m.

Craig CMSmrul

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sun. Worship - 10:10 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedncliday ServK:e • 7 p.m.
C.rldoa lntenltoomlnallo.,.J Cburth

Worship • I0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

A!buty(Syracuse )

•
212W. Main St.
Mimster: Amhooy Moms
Sunday Sdtuol - 9:30 a.m.
Wcorship- 10 30 a.m.. 6 p.m.

Silver Run Baptlsl
Pa s101 : Steven K. Little
Sunda)' Sc hool- J O~ .m .
Worship - II a.m ., H IO p.m.
Wednesday S~n·kcs · 7:00p. m.

28601 St. R1. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

R~v.

J~

Worsht~ -

Worship 10:2j :tm.
Sunday School 9: I~ a.m.

y

Bradrord Churth or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini ~ t er: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Hill Amhergcr
Sunday School-9:30a. m.
Worship - 8:00 11.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\·ices - 7:00p.m

Old Bethel FrH Will Baptist Churc:h

Sa:ond &amp;: Lynn. Pon~ruy

Pa!lor:

PaslOr: Jan Lavender
Sundll y School - \.1:30 lLm.

Buni('
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

( 'hurd! ol' ( 'hrbt

Wednesday

Liberty Assembly of God
P.O. Bolt 467 , Dudding Lane
Mason. W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sundoy Sef\· ic~s - 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

,

Pastor

Inside:

Pomeroy Cburc:h of lbe NWrtM

Tuppen Pblos St. Plul

( 'uncon•co,1tiunal
....
....

Sun. Mass - 9:JO a.m.
Da1ley Mas5 · ,8 : ~ a.m.

Ward Rd.

Pastor Ja~s M1ll er
Surwluy Sl.'hool - 10:30 a.m.
E\'erung - 7:30p.m.

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

-

-

.

ift Sfi

9l

op

172 North Second Ave-

518 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH

Middleport, Oh

992•1161

HUNTINGTON,

W.Va.

Marshall backup ·quarterback
Stephen Galbraith's t" miss his
senior season and end his college
career.
The University of Memphis
tr:lnSfer has been bothered by
disc probleius and only ;ppeared
in five games last season. He
completed 13-of-24 for 283
yards and rwo touchdowns. Galbraith missed the 1999 season.
Redshirt freshmen quarterbacks Andrew English and Sran
Hill will now compete for the
No. 2 spot behind Byron Lcft\vich.

"I

MANKATO. Minn. (AP) -As the Minnesota Vikings' training camp resumed without Korey Stringer, grief prevailed over guilt.
His coaches said no one was to blame for
the Pro Bowl tackle's death from complications finm heatstroke. He collapsed after an
intense Tuesday morning practice a day after
he skipped a sweltering workout.
"I hope thkt our team doesn't feel any
guilt," coach Dennis Green said.
The 335-pound Stringer had trouble with
the heat on Monday, and the heat index in
Mankato reached l I 0 degrees the next day
on the team 's first day in full pads.

Some could have been critical of the
Vikings for allowing him to practi ce, but
offensive line coach Mike Tice said Stringer
showed no warning signs.
"He didn't look like he needed water," Tice
said. "He looked good on film, too. He had a
fantastic practice. He was sharp. H e was crisp.
He got all his blocks."
Longtime train er Fred Zamberletti recalled
Thursday how Stringer, 27, walked off th e
field on his own and entered an air-conditioned trailer set up as a makeshift training

Please see Stringer, B4

PRAYER- Minnesota offensive ilnemen hold their own prayer
prior to the start of workouts Thursday in honor of their fellow
lineman Korey Stringer. (AP}

Reds sweep Dodgers

Warren
eager
to get
started

LOS ANGELES (AP) Dmitri Young and Jason.
LaRue each homered
twice and Ken Griffey Jr.
homered for the second
straight game as the
Cincinnati Reds went deep
six tim es Thursday night
and beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 7-4 for their sixth
consecutive victory.
Aaron Boone also homered for the Reds.
Elmer Dessens (8-8) ;was
charged with four runs and
seven hits over 5 2-3
innings after being staked
to a 6-0 lead.
The right-hander. who
has won consecutive starts
for the first time si(lce May
20-26, was lifted after giving up a homer to McKay
Christensen - his first as a
Dodger·- and a two-run
single to Paul Lo Duca.
Chris Nichting wildpitched Lo Duca to second
and Adrian Beltre drove
him in with a · two-out
double, narrowing the gap
to 6-4.
Scott Sullivan pitched
two scoreless innings and
Danny Graves got three
outs for his 19th save in 24
chances.
Cincinnati's first four
homers came in a span of
l 1 batters· against Luke
Prokopec,_who has surrendered a team-high 26
homers in 114 2-3 innings
during his 19 starts this season.
Prokopec (6-6) is winless
in 11 start• with a 5.54
ERA since winning six of FEEUNO YOUNG -Cincinnati's Dmitri Young celebrates his second home run of the game
his first seven decisions.
during the sixth inning Thursday in Los Angeles. (AP)

BEREA, Ohio (AP)- Gerard Warren practiced with the
Cleveland Browns for the first
rime Thursday, eager to show
his coaches and teammates that
he's worth the hefty contract
he signed the day before.
Warren said he wanted to
use training camp to wQrk
toward becoming the domaninating defensive tackle the
Browns desperately need.
"This is such a relief to me to
finally get on the field," Warren
said. "I got tired ofjust running
and working out."
Warren's conditioning in
Florida left him at 315 pounds
- 7 pounds less than his listed
playing weight. Still the
slimmed down first-round
draft pick - dubbed "Big
Money" by his teamrnateHfter
signing a six-year, $33.6 million deal Wednesday - knows
the workouts are far fiom over.
"You've got to work hard up
here;'Warren said. "That's how
you make plays. II) college
football, you can make one
move and get past a guy. But
here, you've got to really light
to get pa.&lt;t him."
Warren said he has been
studying the Browns playbook
and has a good feel for plays
and alignments.
· The alignment the Browns
hope to use most often this
year was used for the first time
Thursday. Warren lined up at
right tackle with Courtney
Brown - la.&lt;t season's No. 1
pick - next to him at right
end.
"It was great lining up next
to Courtney, but lining up
with the first-team defense was
even better,"Warren said.
Coach Butch Davis is glad
Warren is wilting to work hard.
"It was good to have Gerard
back out there," Pavis said. "He
· was moving around pretty
good. Now we need to go in
and catch him up on the video
work."
·warren says he'll be ready to
play in Saturday's scrimmage
against the Buffalo Bills in
Edinboro, Pa.

long, Dye help P.s dominate Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) - Terrence Long
thinks the addition of Jermaine Dye
makes the Oakland Athletics a better team
than last year's AL West champions.
The Cleveland Indians might agree
after the beating they took Thursday
night .
I
Dye and Long each drove in four runs
a.&lt; the Athletics handed the Indians their
worst loss ever at Jacobs Field, 17-4.
" All-around, we're better with Jermaine;• Long said after getting tour of
Oakland's season-high 20 hits. "Now;
we've got a potent lineup and I think the
best defensive outfield around:'
The A's scored 33 runs in winning two

of three games in the series. Oakland, with . acquired in a trade with Kansas City on
its highest-scoring game since getting 23 July 25.
nms against Texas last Sept. 30, is within
Given an 11-0 lead in the fifth inning,
three games of Minnesota in the AL wild Mark Mulder (13-6) cruised to his fifth
card race.
straight victory. In his last six st:lrts, Mulder
"We've got to treat evet') game like it's is 5-0 with a 1.39 ERA.
playoff atmosphere;• said Jason Giambi,
"I didn't know what to do with all
who had two hits and two RBis.
those runs;' he said. " I don 't remember
C. C. Sabathia (I 0-4) was pounded as ever getting that many that early."
Cleveland's lead in the Al Central was cut
Indians manager C harlie Manuel wa.&lt;
to a half-game over the Twins.
ejected by third-base umpire Eric Cooper
Dye, Miguel Tejada and Obncdo Saenz in the fourth. Manuel kicked a bucket out
all homered for Oakland.
·
· of the ·dugout, then argued nose-to-nose
· "There are just so many good hitters with Cooper.
" I kicked the stuff, but it wasn't about
here that I feel comfortable and don't have
to try and do foo much," said Dye, the umpires;' Manuel said.

New members to be induded in the HOF
CANTON, Ohio (AP)
Nick Buoniconri's name .was
never called in the NFL draft.
Later · he played for the "NoName Defense" in Miami .
Now ,after being bypassed for
selection for years, Buoniconti
will finally have his name
engraved on a bust at the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. He will
be inducted Saturday along
with coach Marv Levy; offenSive linemen Mike Munchak,
I

•

Jackie Slater and Ron Vary, wide was selected by a seniors cornreceiver Lyn1n Swann and mittee after he failed for 15
defensive end Jack Youngblood. - years to garner enough votes for
The road finm overlooked induction. "They give you .
collegian to the top player on seven minutes, supposedly. I
the only unbeaten t~ant in NFL can't say my name in seven
history has left Buoniconti minutes."
groping for a way to thank
He will receive help fiom his
everyone when he steps to th e son, Marc, who will present his
podium on the fiont steps of father in what pmmi&lt;cs to be a
the hall.
memoi"Jble mom ent. Marc \vas
"There's so much I'm grate- paralyzed from the neck down
ful fiJr," said Buoniconti, who m a football accident in 19R5.

The Buoniconti family has
worked tirelessly ever since raising around SI 0 , million
annually over the last . 15 years
- in an effort to find a cure for
para!}'Sis.
'"It's just a n1atter of titne,"
Marc said of the quest for
reaching that.goal.
It was just a matter of time
until Buoniconri received the
acclaim he missed early in his
professional career. An All -

'

American at Notre Dame,
Buoniconti was dismissed as too
small and was passed over in the
draft by every NFL team. He
waited until the 13th round to
finally be selected by the AFL's
Boston Patriots.
Buoniconti flourished in
seven seasons Mth the Patriots
and was later named to the
AFL's all-rime ream. He is best
..,

PleaHSHHOF,I4

•

�-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

\ po~tulk
Cloomo of J..'l' Clorbt A,..lolk
VIII1Zand1

~MJ

16 1 Mulbtrry A\ C. . Pomeroy. 991·.5898
Paswr: Rev. Waller E. Heint
Sa&amp; . Coo 4.H -!i. l5p.m.• Mus· .S .•\0 p.m.
Sun. Con. · 11 :4'i -9. 1 ~ :a.rn.,

ChuR""h of Jnu~ Chri~t
Ap:tstolic Faith
New Lm\8 Road

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

Baptist
Little Cl'ftk Baptist Church
Price Hollow Rd .. Rutland
Pa ~ t or : J1~hn Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service II :00 a.m.
Evening Sen'k e- .6:00p.m_.
Wednesday Sen'ice · 7:30p.m.
Hope B11ptist Church (Southtml
510 Grant St. Mi ddkpon
Sunday school · Y:JO a.m.
Worship · t I a.m. and b p.m.

Wednesday Scrvii.'C· 7 p.m
Rudand First Baptist Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Pomtroy first Baptist
Eas1 Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30 u. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
First Southun Baptist
41 872 Pomeroy Pike
P~tslur; E. Lamar O'Dryant
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.. '1:00 p.m.
Wednesda)' Sen·iccs · 7:00p.m.
First Baptist Churth
P~ stor : Mark Morrow
6th ami Palmer St.. Middlepun
Sunday s,·hool - 9:15a.m.
Worlihip · I0: 15 il. lll .• 7:00p.m
Wcdncsda)l Ser"ice- 7:00p. m.

Radnt first Hapli!il
Pa~ lor: Rick Rule
Su nday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m.. '7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.

Sef"oice~- 7

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
, Worship - 11 a.m.
ML Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St .• Middleport
Pastor: Re v. Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. ·
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W&lt;nhip - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00 p.m.
Pastor. Mark McComas

Danville Hollnns Church
3105'7 Shit( Route 325, Langsvlle
Paslor: Gary Jacl son
Sunda.y school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer sen-kt - 7 p.m.

Sunday Scllool • 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrty Wall ace
ISl and 3rd Sunday

Thppt:n Plain Churth of Christ

Instrumental
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:1.5 a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
BiblC Study Wednesday 7 pm

We:sleyau Blblt Holiness Cbun:h
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
P11.s1or: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedi1esday Service - 7:30p.m.

Brtdbury Church of ChriJt
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woohip - 10:30 a.m.
Rulland Church of Christ
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

t

CarJ~H;IoSutton

The Church of Jesus
Christ of Lauer-bay Saints
SL RL 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- ll .a .m.
Relief SOciety/Priesthood I J :05- 12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, ht Thurs. · 1 p.m.

SL John Lutheran Church
.. PiM~

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • I0:00 a.m.

Inxter Chun:h or Christ
Pastor: Natl\an Robinson
Sundny s.c:hooi'J:30 a.m.
Nonnan Will.-supc rintendcnt Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday 1 p.m.

St. P11ul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamol'e' &amp; Sa:ond St., Pdmeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship ~ II a.m.

( 'hrislian l nion
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sllllday School - II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SDrVices - 730 p.m.

Graham United MethodiSt
Worship - 9:30a.m. (I st &amp; 2nd Sun ).
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
. Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

&lt; hurd1 ol' Cod
ML Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Un
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
0

Joppo

•

Reedsville Fellowship
Church or the Na.zarene
Pastor: Teresa Walde1;k
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · .10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedncsda)t Sen-ices • 7 p.m.

Pas10r: Bob Randolph
Worihip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Chun:h of God or Prophecy
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rt 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m ..
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

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

( 'atholic
Sacred Heart CathoU( Church

St. Rl. 124,

Rn ~ine

Paslor. William Hoback

-

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pa~tor: Rev. Clark. Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

l're~h\

ll'l'ian
y

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robin50q
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wol'!ihip : II a.m.

Harrlso•l'IDe PreabyteriiR Churcb
Worship - 9 a.m. '
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Middleport Pmbylerian
Sunday School • 9
Won~hip • 10 a.m.

a.m.

•

l nited Brl'lhrl'n

Unllcd Faith Chun:h
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Re'l'. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

MI. He:nnn United Brethrtn
In Christ Churth
Texas Community oiTCR 82
Pastor: Raben Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic~. 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Llshthouse
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening.7:30 p.m. ··
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday - 7:30p.m.
Soulh Bethel New Testament
Sil'l'er Ridge
Pastor: Robert BIUber

Eden United Brethrtn In Christ
1ln mile s north of Reeds'l'ille
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday ScMol - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
~Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

E
228 W. Main St., Pon1erovl

992-5432
137-C N. 2nd Ave. ·
Middleport, OH
Bill Quickel

992~376

992.a877

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-7028
(.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ~

2~:2~S~;~n ~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY .

w;:!~~;.~!~:··
992·2955

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

~nnvflOWER

106 BUITERNU1 AVE.
POMEROY,OH 992·6454

MeijJ•

HOME

FUNERAL HOME

0/gnlty.•nd Service A/Wily•
E111tbllshed 1913

-we accept Preneed Transfers·
882 8200
-

Counay~ 0/Jua Fl&lt;&gt;rill

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

a_
W

•ut ,,. ttnd yout thouiflfl with IJ*III ura·

74().992·2644

992·2121
106

.'

Ave.

Lundy Brown

Director

Regan Bro~ml

174 Layne

SERVICE
9112"7075

CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - A former DuPont
High School football standout
has been charged with firstdegree murder in the fatal
shooting of a man.
Tremain Straughter; 20, of
Rand turned himself in to
Charleston police at about
8:45 p.m. Thursday, Detective
Aaron James said.
Straughter was charged with
shooting Gary McGee, 21,
.early Monday mornmg.
McGee's body was found lying
in a street. He had been shot at
least twice.
James said police have not
determined a motive. The gun
has not been found.

740..992·5444

(AP) -A back injury will force

740-992-5141
.
...... fllller..._
590 EAd . . Slrlll• "-'J, 01t 45769

-., R.

Jr.· Dlroct•

m:eaforb
1\eal ~state
216 E. Sec,ond Pomeroy

"Flowers for all occasions•
SAFETY SALES &amp;

murder

264 SootUoaoUvt.• Mllll111 ~ 01145760

--TlE~WiffiiiNGrFiroffiN~EffiR.A:A:tLhN;fEE\iwiiHAiAl:VEffiiNNilsisN~oiUuFFFFiiERiiF:.iJRiEEi&amp;~ict-;;a~~zw:ay;:,s &amp; Cforever

;jcifiFFklo;;iris;t

Straughter
charged with

Herd backup
QB is out with
back problems

§cru .1'unnll
Chicken"

ROCK SPRINGS - The
newly formed Meigs Marauder- Sideliner Booster Club-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 information you can call head football
coach Mike Chancey at 9920064 or 992-2158.

•

Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Lawinsky
Soturday Sel'\'lces:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship . 3 p.m.

Mt. OIIYe Community Church
Pastor. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednedoy Service - 7 p.m.

NFesturlng Kentuclcy Fried

,_,.

St'\l'lllh-ll.l\ \chn11i~l

3304~

Syntuse Church or the N111~ne
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Roeds&gt;llle
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday of Month· 7:00p.m. service

New Meigs
booster dub
to meet

Pe:nttro~tal Assembly

. Faith Gospel Churth
Long Bottom
SunC•y School - 9:30a.m. ·
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wed11esday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Cllun:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wol'!ihip • 10:30 a.m., ti:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen-ices - '1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcop

W01'5hip • 9 a.m.

· Salem Community Church
Ucving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.·
Pa.c;ror: Clyde Fem:ll
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday e'l'enini service 6 pm
Wednesdily t.e['\lice 7 pm ·

Mone Ch11pel ChuKh
Suflday school- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.

'\atarene

Cbe:ster
Paator: lane Beattie

God's Te~nple or Pi'alse
3166.5 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor. Wayne Balcolm
Services: TIIUN. Nites 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service establ.ished.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Torch Cburch
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. .
Wors.hip - 10:30 a.m.

Meigs CooperatiYe Parisb
Northeast. Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: lane Beattie
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - It a.m.• 6:30 p.m.

Full Gospel Churth or the: Living Savior
Rt.338 , Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morri~
Assl. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Dyesvllle Community Chllrch

HocklnRPOrt Chureh
Orand Street
Surxlay School · tO a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive UaUed Me:lhodW
Off 124 beh.ind Wilkes-ville
Pa!!.tor: Rrv. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Clifton, W.Va.
Sundsy School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt . 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m,, ?:30 p.m.

Bethel Chun:.h
Township Rd.• 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - tO a.m.
Wednesday Servi'ce~ • 10 a.m.

GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP)
- Jon Kitna will start at quarterback in Cincinnati's preseason opener Saturday at Chicago.
But how long he'll play and
'who will follow him remains a
mystery. even to Bengals coach
Dick LeBeau.
"We'll start Jon in this game
and, beyond that, we'll see
what's going on," LeBeau said. "I
don't even know what the progression is going to be yet:'
Kitna, who played in Seattle
for live se.Som, was signed as a ·
free agent in March to compete
with Akili Smith and Scott
Mitchell for the starting job. He
started and played the first series
In
the
Bengals'
annual
mtrasquad sqimmage on Saturday.

Cllhon Tabtrnacle Chun:h

Syratuse Missloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Cool.,llle Unlied Methodist Pari!lh
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Surxlay School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

getting edge as
Bengals' QB

Rejoicing Life Churc:h
N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
Worshlp- 10:00 am
WedllCsday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Volley ~bernatle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmen Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m:-Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Recine

Our SavJoor.Lutheran Churt'h
Walnut1md Henry St.~,. Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Ru!l.'icll
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Chun:h of Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
E~angelist : Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible S1udy ·9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Apple and Seco11d Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sund~y School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
E~ening Service•- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sen&lt;ices - 6:30 p.m.

East Letart

Kitna may be

~CXJ

Middleport Community Churth
5'75 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wedne!lday SerYice o 7;30 p.m.

Pastor:: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m . .
Wo~hip • 9 LID.
· Wednesday· 7 p.m .

'HIGHLIGHTS

Sll,envUie Communl&amp;y Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sund11 y Sen-ices· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday-7 :00p.m..

HarrisonviUe Community Chun::b
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - '1 p.m.

MomlnaStar
· PIIStor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship . I0 a.m.

l .utlwran

Bible Study, We41 eaday, 6:30p.m.

The Believers' Ft:l~wshlp Ministry
New Lime Rd. Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. RobinsOO
Services: Wedneisday. 7:30p.m.
Sunday. 2:30 p.nl.

Ca rmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sunday School -·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m,

FRIDAY's

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneMiay Service-7:30p.m.

New Life Vl~tory Center
3773 GeoraesCreek Road, Gallipolis', OH
·
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Service~ - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 1 p.m.

Follh Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bmtom
Pastor. Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
Friday- fellowship service 1 p.m.

Belblny
Patitor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
WOrship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

l.alln-l&gt;m Sainls

Fallh F.eUowsblp Cruaadt for ChriM
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 7 p.m.

~bundanl Gnte R.F. I.
923 S. Third St. , Middleport
Pastor Tert~a Davis
Sunday service, 10 ll.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Snow-rille
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Laurel CIJII' Free Metbodld Church
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00_p.m.

Reedsville Chun:h or Chrbt
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a. m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Syncuse First Church or God

Salem Center
Pa!&lt;itor: Ron Fien:c
. Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10: IS a.m.

Hysell Run HoHne55 Chun:-h
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thul'5day Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Woohip · '7 :00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

AKape Life Ce:nter
"Fuii·Gospel Church"
Pastor'!J John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017 •
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wedneolday 1 pm

Rutland

Vikings practice·as state
inve~tigates Stringer d.eath

Lctarl , W.V.. Rt. I

Outrt:ach MlnistriH
47439 Reibel Rd.. the!itcr
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Servk:es: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~&gt; - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Thursday SerYices - 1 p.m.

Friday, August 3, 2001

Falnlew Bible Churth

Harve~~t

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunda~ • 6 p.m.

•

Whlte'• Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday,School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Ash StrH:t Church
Ash St., MiddlcponSunday So.:houl - 10:00 a.n1.
Sum.la~ Scrvict' · 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - H.Kl p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor. Rod Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m .

Pine: Gmn Bible: HOliness Churc:h
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor:: Rev. o· Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 'a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rulland Cllurth ot lht N•zartnto
Pa.'itor. Rev. Samuel W. Ba.sye

Hemlock Grove ~hristlan Church
Pastor: Richard Nease
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.

· Pearl Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
~orship - IOa.m.

Rose or Sharon Holiness Chun:h
'cading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pas1or: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday s1.:hool· 9:30a. m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Chri!lt
Pomeroy. Hanisonv ille Rd . (R\.1431
Pasror; Roger Watson
Sunday School - -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wcdnc:sday Scn&lt;K:es • 7 p.m.

Salem St.

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Robin50n
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Page 81

frttdom. Gosl?'d Mtt.Soa
Bald Knob, on Co, Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Rogt r Wi ll fOJd
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 1 p.m.

Community of Christ
Pon.land-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Worship - II :OOa.m.

NFL camp roundup, Page B3
Baseball roundup, Page B6

Road

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOOihi p Service I0:30a.m.
No Su~y or Wednesday Night Services

Ollwr ( 'hurdll's

Hralh (Middleport)
Paslor: Rob Brower
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri50nville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Su nday School 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7:{111 p.m
Wedne!iday Sc:rvice - H XI p.m.

Beilrwallow RJd11e Cburch ol Cbrtst
P ~tstor: Te rry Stewan
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne~y Servlces- 6:30 p.m.

Pastor: Re~. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~es- '1 p.m.

FomtRun
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Pastor. Robert Vance

Portland Flnt Churth of the Nua~ne
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30p.m. ·

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

Communlly Chun:h
Pastnr: R e~. Amm Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-? p.m.

Kin~es~l')'

Cbtiter Church ot tht N•zartnt
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30 a.ni.
Wor!l.hip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. ti:JO p.m.
Wednesday Servicts - 7 p.m.

Flit woods

Rudand Free WUI Bapllst

Scoond B•pti!lt Churrh
Ravenswood. WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchoolJO amMorning wonhip II am Evening · 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Enterp..u.t
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday ScOOol - 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Sunday School and
Holy EuchariSI II :00 a.m.

K(no Chun:h or Christ
Worship · 9:30a.m.

LanpviUe Christian Churth
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service '7 :30 p.m.

Forysl Run Baptist ·

\

Gn« Ep....,pal Chur&lt;h
326 E. Main St .. Pomeruy
Rt'v. J!Jrnes Jkmacki. Rev. Kathatin F~trr

Middleport Churth of Chrl.1l
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Han son
Youth Min ister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptl.ilt Chun:h
Grtat Bend, Rome 124, Ra cine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mccea
Sunday Schoo l -9: 30a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St., Masob
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'iccs - 7·p.m.

Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Snvices - 7:30p.m.

l·.pbl'opal

Pomeroy Wntsidc Church of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wonhip · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wr dnesday Services • 7 p .m.

Mt. Unton Baptist
Pastor: Joe N. Say re
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evcnicg - 6:30p.m.
Wedm:sday Services - 6:30p.m.

Vlclory Baptist lndepend&amp;nt
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: lames E. Keesee
Worship- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wrdnesday Services· 7 p.m.

Central Clusta-

p m.

Hickory Hills Church or Christ
Evangclisl Mike' Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a. m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday S~rvice s- 1 p.m.

Hillside Baptkit Churth
St. Rt . 143 just off R1. 7
Pa~tor: Rev. Jame~ R--:--A~.: ree;-Sr7Sundlly Unijied Sen·icC
Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCes -7 p.m.

IOa.m.
Tuesday ~rvi «&amp; · 7:30p.m.

Craig CMSmrul

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sun. Worship - 10:10 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedncliday ServK:e • 7 p.m.
C.rldoa lntenltoomlnallo.,.J Cburth

Worship • I0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

A!buty(Syracuse )

•
212W. Main St.
Mimster: Amhooy Moms
Sunday Sdtuol - 9:30 a.m.
Wcorship- 10 30 a.m.. 6 p.m.

Silver Run Baptlsl
Pa s101 : Steven K. Little
Sunda)' Sc hool- J O~ .m .
Worship - II a.m ., H IO p.m.
Wednesday S~n·kcs · 7:00p. m.

28601 St. R1. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

R~v.

J~

Worsht~ -

Worship 10:2j :tm.
Sunday School 9: I~ a.m.

y

Bradrord Churth or Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini ~ t er: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Hill Amhergcr
Sunday School-9:30a. m.
Worship - 8:00 11.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\·ices - 7:00p.m

Old Bethel FrH Will Baptist Churc:h

Sa:ond &amp;: Lynn. Pon~ruy

Pa!lor:

PaslOr: Jan Lavender
Sundll y School - \.1:30 lLm.

Buni('
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

( 'hurd! ol' ( 'hrbt

Wednesday

Liberty Assembly of God
P.O. Bolt 467 , Dudding Lane
Mason. W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sundoy Sef\· ic~s - 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

,

Pastor

Inside:

Pomeroy Cburc:h of lbe NWrtM

Tuppen Pblos St. Plul

( 'uncon•co,1tiunal
....
....

Sun. Mass - 9:JO a.m.
Da1ley Mas5 · ,8 : ~ a.m.

Ward Rd.

Pastor Ja~s M1ll er
Surwluy Sl.'hool - 10:30 a.m.
E\'erung - 7:30p.m.

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

-

-

.

ift Sfi

9l

op

172 North Second Ave-

518 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH

Middleport, Oh

992•1161

HUNTINGTON,

W.Va.

Marshall backup ·quarterback
Stephen Galbraith's t" miss his
senior season and end his college
career.
The University of Memphis
tr:lnSfer has been bothered by
disc probleius and only ;ppeared
in five games last season. He
completed 13-of-24 for 283
yards and rwo touchdowns. Galbraith missed the 1999 season.
Redshirt freshmen quarterbacks Andrew English and Sran
Hill will now compete for the
No. 2 spot behind Byron Lcft\vich.

"I

MANKATO. Minn. (AP) -As the Minnesota Vikings' training camp resumed without Korey Stringer, grief prevailed over guilt.
His coaches said no one was to blame for
the Pro Bowl tackle's death from complications finm heatstroke. He collapsed after an
intense Tuesday morning practice a day after
he skipped a sweltering workout.
"I hope thkt our team doesn't feel any
guilt," coach Dennis Green said.
The 335-pound Stringer had trouble with
the heat on Monday, and the heat index in
Mankato reached l I 0 degrees the next day
on the team 's first day in full pads.

Some could have been critical of the
Vikings for allowing him to practi ce, but
offensive line coach Mike Tice said Stringer
showed no warning signs.
"He didn't look like he needed water," Tice
said. "He looked good on film, too. He had a
fantastic practice. He was sharp. H e was crisp.
He got all his blocks."
Longtime train er Fred Zamberletti recalled
Thursday how Stringer, 27, walked off th e
field on his own and entered an air-conditioned trailer set up as a makeshift training

Please see Stringer, B4

PRAYER- Minnesota offensive ilnemen hold their own prayer
prior to the start of workouts Thursday in honor of their fellow
lineman Korey Stringer. (AP}

Reds sweep Dodgers

Warren
eager
to get
started

LOS ANGELES (AP) Dmitri Young and Jason.
LaRue each homered
twice and Ken Griffey Jr.
homered for the second
straight game as the
Cincinnati Reds went deep
six tim es Thursday night
and beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 7-4 for their sixth
consecutive victory.
Aaron Boone also homered for the Reds.
Elmer Dessens (8-8) ;was
charged with four runs and
seven hits over 5 2-3
innings after being staked
to a 6-0 lead.
The right-hander. who
has won consecutive starts
for the first time si(lce May
20-26, was lifted after giving up a homer to McKay
Christensen - his first as a
Dodger·- and a two-run
single to Paul Lo Duca.
Chris Nichting wildpitched Lo Duca to second
and Adrian Beltre drove
him in with a · two-out
double, narrowing the gap
to 6-4.
Scott Sullivan pitched
two scoreless innings and
Danny Graves got three
outs for his 19th save in 24
chances.
Cincinnati's first four
homers came in a span of
l 1 batters· against Luke
Prokopec,_who has surrendered a team-high 26
homers in 114 2-3 innings
during his 19 starts this season.
Prokopec (6-6) is winless
in 11 start• with a 5.54
ERA since winning six of FEEUNO YOUNG -Cincinnati's Dmitri Young celebrates his second home run of the game
his first seven decisions.
during the sixth inning Thursday in Los Angeles. (AP)

BEREA, Ohio (AP)- Gerard Warren practiced with the
Cleveland Browns for the first
rime Thursday, eager to show
his coaches and teammates that
he's worth the hefty contract
he signed the day before.
Warren said he wanted to
use training camp to wQrk
toward becoming the domaninating defensive tackle the
Browns desperately need.
"This is such a relief to me to
finally get on the field," Warren
said. "I got tired ofjust running
and working out."
Warren's conditioning in
Florida left him at 315 pounds
- 7 pounds less than his listed
playing weight. Still the
slimmed down first-round
draft pick - dubbed "Big
Money" by his teamrnateHfter
signing a six-year, $33.6 million deal Wednesday - knows
the workouts are far fiom over.
"You've got to work hard up
here;'Warren said. "That's how
you make plays. II) college
football, you can make one
move and get past a guy. But
here, you've got to really light
to get pa.&lt;t him."
Warren said he has been
studying the Browns playbook
and has a good feel for plays
and alignments.
· The alignment the Browns
hope to use most often this
year was used for the first time
Thursday. Warren lined up at
right tackle with Courtney
Brown - la.&lt;t season's No. 1
pick - next to him at right
end.
"It was great lining up next
to Courtney, but lining up
with the first-team defense was
even better,"Warren said.
Coach Butch Davis is glad
Warren is wilting to work hard.
"It was good to have Gerard
back out there," Pavis said. "He
· was moving around pretty
good. Now we need to go in
and catch him up on the video
work."
·warren says he'll be ready to
play in Saturday's scrimmage
against the Buffalo Bills in
Edinboro, Pa.

long, Dye help P.s dominate Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) - Terrence Long
thinks the addition of Jermaine Dye
makes the Oakland Athletics a better team
than last year's AL West champions.
The Cleveland Indians might agree
after the beating they took Thursday
night .
I
Dye and Long each drove in four runs
a.&lt; the Athletics handed the Indians their
worst loss ever at Jacobs Field, 17-4.
" All-around, we're better with Jermaine;• Long said after getting tour of
Oakland's season-high 20 hits. "Now;
we've got a potent lineup and I think the
best defensive outfield around:'
The A's scored 33 runs in winning two

of three games in the series. Oakland, with . acquired in a trade with Kansas City on
its highest-scoring game since getting 23 July 25.
nms against Texas last Sept. 30, is within
Given an 11-0 lead in the fifth inning,
three games of Minnesota in the AL wild Mark Mulder (13-6) cruised to his fifth
card race.
straight victory. In his last six st:lrts, Mulder
"We've got to treat evet') game like it's is 5-0 with a 1.39 ERA.
playoff atmosphere;• said Jason Giambi,
"I didn't know what to do with all
who had two hits and two RBis.
those runs;' he said. " I don 't remember
C. C. Sabathia (I 0-4) was pounded as ever getting that many that early."
Cleveland's lead in the Al Central was cut
Indians manager C harlie Manuel wa.&lt;
to a half-game over the Twins.
ejected by third-base umpire Eric Cooper
Dye, Miguel Tejada and Obncdo Saenz in the fourth. Manuel kicked a bucket out
all homered for Oakland.
·
· of the ·dugout, then argued nose-to-nose
· "There are just so many good hitters with Cooper.
" I kicked the stuff, but it wasn't about
here that I feel comfortable and don't have
to try and do foo much," said Dye, the umpires;' Manuel said.

New members to be induded in the HOF
CANTON, Ohio (AP)
Nick Buoniconri's name .was
never called in the NFL draft.
Later · he played for the "NoName Defense" in Miami .
Now ,after being bypassed for
selection for years, Buoniconti
will finally have his name
engraved on a bust at the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. He will
be inducted Saturday along
with coach Marv Levy; offenSive linemen Mike Munchak,
I

•

Jackie Slater and Ron Vary, wide was selected by a seniors cornreceiver Lyn1n Swann and mittee after he failed for 15
defensive end Jack Youngblood. - years to garner enough votes for
The road finm overlooked induction. "They give you .
collegian to the top player on seven minutes, supposedly. I
the only unbeaten t~ant in NFL can't say my name in seven
history has left Buoniconti minutes."
groping for a way to thank
He will receive help fiom his
everyone when he steps to th e son, Marc, who will present his
podium on the fiont steps of father in what pmmi&lt;cs to be a
the hall.
memoi"Jble mom ent. Marc \vas
"There's so much I'm grate- paralyzed from the neck down
ful fiJr," said Buoniconti, who m a football accident in 19R5.

The Buoniconti family has
worked tirelessly ever since raising around SI 0 , million
annually over the last . 15 years
- in an effort to find a cure for
para!}'Sis.
'"It's just a n1atter of titne,"
Marc said of the quest for
reaching that.goal.
It was just a matter of time
until Buoniconri received the
acclaim he missed early in his
professional career. An All -

'

American at Notre Dame,
Buoniconti was dismissed as too
small and was passed over in the
draft by every NFL team. He
waited until the 13th round to
finally be selected by the AFL's
Boston Patriots.
Buoniconti flourished in
seven seasons Mth the Patriots
and was later named to the
AFL's all-rime ream. He is best
..,

PleaHSHHOF,I4

•

���..

.

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

.

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~·

The Dally Sentinel • Page .B, 5

.ALLEY OOP
•
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Charlie Wolfe

• Room Addttlon• &amp;

RomO&lt;MIIng
• New G1rtgea

• Electrical I Plumbing
• RDQflng &amp; Gutt•ra

• Vinyl Siding 6 Pointing
• P1tlo end Porch Decikl

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

- • ·"""

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Hom&lt;S • Vin1l
Sidlnc• New Gon...
• R&lt;ploament
Windows • Room
Additions • Roonng
COMMEJCI.Il an6 RISIDIH11Al
FREE ESTIMATES

740~992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notices in Newspapers.

·NOTICES
-· BIDDERS reject
any and
NOTICE
bids, and the

Your Right to Know,
Dcll ven!d Right to Your Door.
Ollio N•..,.,..IX' ADU€MfhHf

ell

TO

The Molga Loc•l
Board ol Education
wlehea to receive
blda
lor
the
following: PropQeale
lor Depoeltory of
Acllve, Inactive and
Interim Depoelta.
. All bide shell be
received In, and bid
et&gt;eclflcetlone may be
obtained from,
TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 320 E. Main
StrHI, Pomeroy, OH
457811, on or before
1:00 P.M., Monday,
Auguat13, 2001.
The Melge Local
Boord ol Education
reaervee the right to

submitting of any bid
shall lmpooe no
liability or obligation
upon the said Board.
All envelopes must
be
CLEARLY
MARKED according
to the type of bid.
Mark E. Rhonemue,

Get Your ••••1• Aero••
With ADollr Se•tl•el

BULLETIN BOARD
1'" colu1111 l•ck wMkd•r•
10" col11111 l1ck S••dor

1

1

(7) 15, X'l,

(8) 3, 2001
3tc

2001

For15Words
1to 3 Days
Yard Sole Ado Only
Over 15 Wordo,
2~ . PerWord

The Daily Sentinel
Classified Ads
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

on
cuHing edge •••

Read the
Classified Ads

HOF
from Page Bl ·
~nown, however, as

the,cornerstone of
the Dolphins' perfect season in 1972.
" I take great pride in the fact that I'm
wearing the only ring in the history of .
the NFL that signifies that we had an
undefeated season," said Buoniconti,
who has been ail analyst on HBO's
"Inside the NFL" for the past 23 seasons.
"That's a special club, that Hall of
Fame dub, and he certainly belongs;·
said his coach in Miami, fellow club
member Don Shula.
Levy is remembered as the coach of
the only team to make it to four straight
Super Bowls - . and to lose every time.
Levy averaged 10 wins a year in his 11
I /2 seasons with the Bills, believes those
four losses - one on a tantalizingly close
missed field goal on the final play simply showed the mental toughness of
his team.
" It takes -tremendous qualities of character to get so disappointed, to get so
knocked down , and then to pick yourself
up and then go through all the hard
work and dedication it takes to get back
there," he said. "lt was a very resilient
group, guys who stuck together:·
Munchak, Slater and Vary labored as
dominant blockers on great teams. They

Sbinger

. from Page BI

room on the practice field.
" He went in there, walked around in
there," Zamberletti said. "The kid did
everything perf~c t . The paramedics
thanked us and said they appreciated
what we've done here."
Green again declined to discuss any
medical topics Thursday.
" I think that people can talk about
guilt, but tragedies are something that
aren't explainable."
The state of Minnesota is investigating to determine whether th e team

Murray, MTD,
Echo, Oregon
Open
Mon-Frl 9-4:30
Sat. 9-12:00
(740) 949·2804

~~~
High&amp; Dry

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE.

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULV.ERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

ll
\I

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LAROE OR SMALL

Full Service Deli • Rotisserie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now available .

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

SUIIMEifilME HEAT
OUT AND WWTEA
TillE HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUTQU%
OF D411AGING
ULTIIAVIOLET RAYS

Q 712
llt5

LOST
Reward for information:
Female Beagle dog
· "Malti.e", Male Jack
Russell Terrier w/collar,
last seen around ·
Bone Hollow area
contact: Millies
Restaurant 992-7713 or
9 2-2420 le ve m

Mason-VFW Dance
Sat. Night 9-1
Music by: Route 33
Members &amp; Guest

also received their share of individual
honors, too. Munchak was named firstor second-team All-Pro 10 times for the
Houston Oilers. Slater played 20 superlative s~asons with the Rams - still an
NFL record for longevity with one
team.Yary was All-Pro six times and AIINFC eight Stt'\light seasons fiom 197077 with the Minnesota Vikings.
"I could have been better at basketball,
but it wasn't physical enough;'yary said.
" I loved being knocked doWn as much
as knocking someone down."
Swann saved his best for the big games
with the Pittsburgh Steelers dynasty of
the 1970s. In the Steders' 21-17 Super
Bowl victory in I 975, he had four receptions for I 61 yards, including a 64-yard
catch and run that provided the winning
score.
In 14 years with the Rams, Youngblood was AII-NFC eight times and was
the league's defensive MVP in 197 5.
Youngblood, Swann and Munchak
will each be presented by former teammates: fellow Hall of Farner Merlin
Olsen, John Stallworth and Bruce
Matthews, respectively.
Vary's line. coach at Minnesota, John
. Michels, will introduce him, while Slater
will be presented by his coach with the
Rams, John Robinson. Levy selected
longtime friend and Indianapolis Colts
president Bill Polian to make his presentation speech.

was negligent, a standard practice for
deaths that occur in the workplace.
James Honerman, a spo~esman for
the Minnesota Department of Labor
and Industry, said the agency met with
Vikings officials "and they were very
cooperative with us in our investigation."
State officials are talking to the team
about "what type of training the staff
and employees might have received
with regards to heat- related illnesses,"
Honerman said.
Filing past bouquets and balloons '
left by fans, ~he team returned to the
field to focus on (ootball in conditions
considerably cooler than earlier in the
wee k.
·

.

t

KQJt7~2

.
,.......

6 1\13

A ,\ 1\QJ&amp;E~I

•

SOSSY.' THE.Q£'$
YOUR. FIFTY DOLlARS!

PRICING

J IQ t

.. II I

CONGAATU~,O..TIONS,

FACTORY DIRECT

Deul~ r:

Wt.••!!l

Vulnerable: Neclhcr
, Suuth

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

)'UJ
l'a~s

\Vr~t

Pau

••
••
""'
Phs

Pin

1-&amp;Q0-291-5600 • Pomerov. OH

HIN TELLS

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521.()916

TREE SERVICE
Tap • Trlna • Ranaanl
BucllatServlea

46Likooome

· sllirca51 PIIU Hotel
tool
girl
16 Cycles
54 Term In
17 Mo. Luplno
office
18 Electrical 55 Angora
unit
goat Iabrie
20 Camp
10 One altha
56 Dozea
bed
B vlllmina
57 Oral
21 Chicago,
11 Romano.g.
tlcolty
DOWN
23 "Cenalnlyl"
Involved
24 Split
1 Claoalcol
12 wda.)
orchltocturo 12 Social ronk
aaunder
25 Lime tree
~rder
111 TV' a·27 Fruit
2 Type ol
H1w•
ripener
card
22 '60s r1dlcal
29 Pel holder 3 Concelvi
(al.)
31 Fuel
4 He's no
24 Become
gentleman
32 Certain
more
captive
5 Mae Weal
'forgiving
(abbr.)
role
26 Symbol ol
33 AAA Info
&amp;Foe
crazlne11
34 Hoopltal
7 Deceiver
28 Smacks
37 Haughty
8 Fair grade
30 Decrouea
9 Along In
one
bit by bH
yearo
40 DebauchH
34 Force

AI\.13
•\J I12

So11th

35 WoHieh

38 BIU.nd 38

39
40

42

44

49
50

52
53

·

Eoklmo
boat (VIr.)
BlUM
linger
Smhh
Becomea
corroded
Abounda
Uncompromlalng
Feel
.-grot
Art Deco
painter
Prune
(bronchia)
try ol
surprln

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I

RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS &amp;
ROUTE 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
effective 816/01
will accept all major credit
cards and bank debit cards.
949·4900 992·9200

Tomato Pickers
needed
Clifford Hill &amp; Sons

tormlne
14 Actteu
Mercourl
15 Piercing

F.at.t

word

Foot tlpo
Rei's
CDUnterparl
Bambl'o
mother
47 lcr.ho hro.

13=

...

KEEPS THE

!'lutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. ·

740-992-5232

740-.IS-4281

WINDOWS HEAT
IIIAAOII TECHNOLOGY

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery- Plus, Inc.

Pollltl'flJ, Obio

Chester, Ohio

' water
43
column
45
7 Ofoocred ..
. I
46

PRU II HOllE EITIIAnl • "'UUIQ II IEUEYitO~ •'fMoum

33795 Hilmul Ri.

41 "Woyne's
World"

ACROSS

KENSINGTON

CAN HELP

SeU-Storage

JIM'S
WOODSHID

740-247-2063
!ny!te The Entire
Neighborhood
To Your Yard Salel
Mall to:

Racine
Mower
·Clinic

ALDER

1 Frozen

.------· -- - - - - - ,

CALL gUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Tret~surar

MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
OF
EDUCATIONP.O. Box 272 ·
Pomeroy, OR 45769
PH (740) 992-5850

~~~~---

NEA Cros sw ord Puzzle

PHIU.IP

••
c,

Lou Walghl Now
AskMaHow
lou wolgh~ oupploment
your diet lor moxlmum

nirtrfllon, or juotlool&lt; your

oroo~oo~ wllh lht boot
poroonolcaro prodtlctt,
· Hlrl&gt;l/lftlnllnWNwlhao
oomothlng lor ovoryont.
Col your lndopondonl

Entorprlu
-J&amp;L
··
dlotrlbulor,

(140)-1

Wt can poriOIUIIIu o
prO(IIIIm lor you I

~\) ~ 0~ I 1-\0W

WHAT AM I

GONNA, ()0
WELL, .
ABOUT KEI..I..Y'. I TI11NI&lt;.
I CAN'T Ju,;;r
YOU ..
(,() UP TO
+IER ,A.Nt&gt; ...

1-800-150-9077
Residential Commercial New Co~lruction
Soles Senlce lnstoll1tion

Flat Work,

Senlnc Ohio oDd W.V.

WV IIOJ1711

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
. .Excavating

...

~

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mul&lt;h
Bulldozer Servk:es

(740) 992-3470
Advertise

NUNMWIK

HYDYWIY

J

PWMRYBIY .' -

CXRYH

yc

KZY
SBXXLI

M J X U Y W y ·,

HMH.'

M

I M "H

-

FINISH ;TEI&gt;I&gt;'&lt;!
I ""'S JUST

'ft&gt;U
SHOULD

REALLY

ABOUT TO

TALi&lt;.

";.,._'( THAT

"BOUT

KElLY IS

O four
Rearrange leners af
scrambled words

THIS

LATER .

the

be·

low to form four simple words .

II

BLACKB

.PEANUTS

TREE SERVICE

'(OU SURE FOOLED ME ..
I Tll0ll61lT ''ROSEBUD"

Top • Trlna• Renaoval
Bucket Se1rvlc:e

WAS filS SKATEIIOARD

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Ohoo 45760

Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Ca~cer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40IK Rollovers;
Mortgage; .Major Medical
• Nursing Home

CONCREif/BLOCK/BRICK
Replacemeacs, • Walkl
ond Drha • Steodl ·
Crete Free Estimates

NWXKZVB

T PI K

L-ET ME

PROI!oo\BLY ..

Spedalizl"'lin Shed Metol Duclwvrk
"Trane" Sales I&lt; Senice For
Gollia, Mason, 1'nd Meigs Counti"'
Llunsed and J""ured
WV 005176

· •NewHomaa

• Footen, Walls, Steps •

Ml

BIG NATE

1·~75-78:14

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

74G-985-3948

f'I'AA'( ')('::, f\i&gt;..\JE. '&lt;0\l GOtt

CO

BYNCCE

nv..-·

•CarPet
• Hardwood floorJna
• Conaoleum
fREE ESTIMATES
Phone f304) 674-61 oo

Racine, Ohio 45771

'ZPJXB

'M

Mohawk Dealer

CONTRACTORS, INC.

... -:, ....

YOJ~D7

Exclusive

P/B

~

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations tiy famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands lor another.

/

EXPRESS

7~()-992-1671

by Luis Campos

.~

•

~H-1'&lt;, 1'10-WE- f-\f&gt;..\Jt:''2X," "3X."' ~OW

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

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

CELEBRITY CIPHER
TOday's clue: S equals B

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

Whothor you're trying to

•

.... .

-DBPOYIII
PIRft
All Makes 'n-a&lt;lor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
100(1 St. Rl. 7 Soultl

....

,.....,

Coo/viii•, OH 45723

youe
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates ·

740-742-8015 or
1-&amp;n-353-7022

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo
On Thundaya
Al8:30 p.m.
• Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
· Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 COYOI'Illl
Starburst
Progressive top line
Lie. #00-50

Howardl.
Wr.ltesel
Roofing - Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

7

-2422

EriC ai•CIIIIUI'II

Fully lneunl&lt;l

I I

... UNSC~AMBLE LETTERS TO
V
GET ANSWER
,

•llll•s••fiHibllllll* WLII
•lllll&amp;.• hJ.II•MIIIIWIIl

.....................

SC:JlAM.LETS ANSWERS

·-PIIIII'I PWII._.IIUI

Uproar· Blus~ Guilt- Swivel· TIP US
"Well, we went to the salad bar, deli bar and dessert
bar," the man said to his date, "how much should we
TIP US?"

Tire Barn
~7

Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

74o-992--5344

HOUI!S: lion· Frl

SJlurday, Au g. ~. 2UU I
Owing to an unusual chain
· of event~ thai"!\ o'a ur in the
yea r ahead, two o ld en~eayon
which hn· c been t::ntn g 11 0
place can be r~juvc natcd and
turnc(t into profit m:.king en-

Advertise in
this ~pace for
s100 per
··month

tcrpriscs.
LEO Quly 23- Aug. 22) ..
Don't h.ke a b~ c k. so;~t t o d:~v
an d leave the mana gement Or
a venture entirely up to oth'cn.. Ac an active pa~ticip:.t o r
at allttmes. You can contnb ute a lot. Try ing to patch up a
broken romance? T he AuraGraph Matchmaker com help
you undenund what to do to
m ~kc the r ~:btiomhip work.
Mail ~ 2 . 75 t o M :~tc hmak e r.
c!o thi s new~rt~per. P.O . llnx

Spout
Fret Etllllllfet

949-1405

I 1:

,

591-5011
in this .
~·
space
an
drywall, room
for
cuHing edge••• additions, and
plumbing.
sso per Readlha
Terry Lamm
992.;0739
month Classlftad Ads ·

Murr~ y Htll Sto:~ t t.o n ,
York , NY lf_)\56.
V~RGO (Aug. 2J-S,•pt. 22)

175'8,

'

Nqo~

Hill's S1ll
st~r~e•

'.

28f70 llalhln lklllcl
Recine, Ohio

740-949-2217
tiOUI'I

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
•

'

,Atlanta Boaves al

rh;~t will m 11ke )'OU smile.

~om ething

AQUARIUS U"'· 20-Frb.
19) -- It shouldn 'l be ra· ccssary for you to ahrr a p:~st de-

that' s been lumbt.·rinv; in the
dumps.
UBI~/\ (S•pt . 2.1 -0cL 2J) - It's important today tlut you
rch1:1i n duty ~:omCto m. be came tfbttcrs Y'lU d'-•al wtth in
a practical, respomiblc fashi~m
have il· more tlun average

cisio n :tbout which you've ftlt
dubious. bcc :~use, upon review today, it looks "like it'!
going to resolve itself the way
yo u, anticipated.
·I'ISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
-- Provided you rel y upon
past &lt;.&gt; nd~·;won for gu idance

h~p

45771

.Sizes 5' X10'
tD 10'x30'

-- As of today, :~. ~i tmtion tha t
h o:~s had a rcstn ctt vc effect
up on you sho ul d H.ut to dimimsh cousidcr•bly . It wtll

dt:mce (or great 5Ut:CCS5 at this'
time .
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov.
22) -- A signifi cant, but diffi .;ulr objl'..:tivc that pertains io
your stat us aud uutenal well
bein g c.-m be achieved today if
you make it a priority isme.
Uc decisive.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23·
D ec. 21) - - This is an ex:ccl ~
lent day t o make some revisions concern ing your bluepr int for the- future . You'll
recognize the unw orkable :md
repla ce the m with new wis- ·
' dam you've gained fr om ex perience .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - ~ Even th.ough a
matter abo~1t w hi ch you were
once hopeful hasn't given you
much to chee-r about , it
should not be rclinqui .~hed today. Changes ue in the ofling

to

elev :~t e

.

.

and experience today, a new
project about which you've
been doubtful 'tan, be successfu lly launched . It'll fly better
tha1.1 you thought .
ARIES (March 21-llpril19)
-- Due in part to firiding a
~;;am mon ground from which
you can both opcrilte, a per- mancnt and mutually benefi cial friendship can be established today with someone
yoU've previously ignored .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - - As a result of :1 maj or
turn around you've re cently
implemented, beginning today
a change might be in the offing that could h:~ve a favorable
c"lfect, not onl y o n ypu, bu t
your entire famiJy.
GEM INI (May 21-Junc 20)

-- The fou nda tio n for an illli:~nce may resu lt

from a muttlal
need coday. but the end resuhs from en terin g .into thi5
partncnhip amngement could
ha.ve far-rea ching, beneficial
effects,
CANCER Qune 21-July
22) ·-You 're in 3 short cycle
today and tomorrow of being
cspc~: ially lucky with your undertakings. It behooves you to
~e,:: ure · positive measures tha t
could prov.idc )'Ou With more
material security .

�..

.

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

.

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aug. 3, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~·

The Dally Sentinel • Page .B, 5

.ALLEY OOP
•
•~ 'IM WliA.T

8RtDOII:

00, e.LAC.k.JACK.!

-.....:---...,

. YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• NewHomM
·Siding
• Rooflng
• Remodeling
• Ga..gn
• Addltlone
• Decko
• Home Repairs

Free Estimales
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740-949-1521

740-992-1101
or992-2153

Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

• Room Addttlon• &amp;

RomO&lt;MIIng
• New G1rtgea

• Electrical I Plumbing
• RDQflng &amp; Gutt•ra

• Vinyl Siding 6 Pointing
• P1tlo end Porch Decikl

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

- • ·"""

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New Hom&lt;S • Vin1l
Sidlnc• New Gon...
• R&lt;ploament
Windows • Room
Additions • Roonng
COMMEJCI.Il an6 RISIDIH11Al
FREE ESTIMATES

740~992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Public Notices in Newspapers.

·NOTICES
-· BIDDERS reject
any and
NOTICE
bids, and the

Your Right to Know,
Dcll ven!d Right to Your Door.
Ollio N•..,.,..IX' ADU€MfhHf

ell

TO

The Molga Loc•l
Board ol Education
wlehea to receive
blda
lor
the
following: PropQeale
lor Depoeltory of
Acllve, Inactive and
Interim Depoelta.
. All bide shell be
received In, and bid
et&gt;eclflcetlone may be
obtained from,
TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 320 E. Main
StrHI, Pomeroy, OH
457811, on or before
1:00 P.M., Monday,
Auguat13, 2001.
The Melge Local
Boord ol Education
reaervee the right to

submitting of any bid
shall lmpooe no
liability or obligation
upon the said Board.
All envelopes must
be
CLEARLY
MARKED according
to the type of bid.
Mark E. Rhonemue,

Get Your ••••1• Aero••
With ADollr Se•tl•el

BULLETIN BOARD
1'" colu1111 l•ck wMkd•r•
10" col11111 l1ck S••dor

1

1

(7) 15, X'l,

(8) 3, 2001
3tc

2001

For15Words
1to 3 Days
Yard Sole Ado Only
Over 15 Wordo,
2~ . PerWord

The Daily Sentinel
Classified Ads
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

on
cuHing edge •••

Read the
Classified Ads

HOF
from Page Bl ·
~nown, however, as

the,cornerstone of
the Dolphins' perfect season in 1972.
" I take great pride in the fact that I'm
wearing the only ring in the history of .
the NFL that signifies that we had an
undefeated season," said Buoniconti,
who has been ail analyst on HBO's
"Inside the NFL" for the past 23 seasons.
"That's a special club, that Hall of
Fame dub, and he certainly belongs;·
said his coach in Miami, fellow club
member Don Shula.
Levy is remembered as the coach of
the only team to make it to four straight
Super Bowls - . and to lose every time.
Levy averaged 10 wins a year in his 11
I /2 seasons with the Bills, believes those
four losses - one on a tantalizingly close
missed field goal on the final play simply showed the mental toughness of
his team.
" It takes -tremendous qualities of character to get so disappointed, to get so
knocked down , and then to pick yourself
up and then go through all the hard
work and dedication it takes to get back
there," he said. "lt was a very resilient
group, guys who stuck together:·
Munchak, Slater and Vary labored as
dominant blockers on great teams. They

Sbinger

. from Page BI

room on the practice field.
" He went in there, walked around in
there," Zamberletti said. "The kid did
everything perf~c t . The paramedics
thanked us and said they appreciated
what we've done here."
Green again declined to discuss any
medical topics Thursday.
" I think that people can talk about
guilt, but tragedies are something that
aren't explainable."
The state of Minnesota is investigating to determine whether th e team

Murray, MTD,
Echo, Oregon
Open
Mon-Frl 9-4:30
Sat. 9-12:00
(740) 949·2804

~~~
High&amp; Dry

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE.

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULV.ERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

ll
\I

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LAROE OR SMALL

Full Service Deli • Rotisserie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now available .

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

SUIIMEifilME HEAT
OUT AND WWTEA
TillE HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUTQU%
OF D411AGING
ULTIIAVIOLET RAYS

Q 712
llt5

LOST
Reward for information:
Female Beagle dog
· "Malti.e", Male Jack
Russell Terrier w/collar,
last seen around ·
Bone Hollow area
contact: Millies
Restaurant 992-7713 or
9 2-2420 le ve m

Mason-VFW Dance
Sat. Night 9-1
Music by: Route 33
Members &amp; Guest

also received their share of individual
honors, too. Munchak was named firstor second-team All-Pro 10 times for the
Houston Oilers. Slater played 20 superlative s~asons with the Rams - still an
NFL record for longevity with one
team.Yary was All-Pro six times and AIINFC eight Stt'\light seasons fiom 197077 with the Minnesota Vikings.
"I could have been better at basketball,
but it wasn't physical enough;'yary said.
" I loved being knocked doWn as much
as knocking someone down."
Swann saved his best for the big games
with the Pittsburgh Steelers dynasty of
the 1970s. In the Steders' 21-17 Super
Bowl victory in I 975, he had four receptions for I 61 yards, including a 64-yard
catch and run that provided the winning
score.
In 14 years with the Rams, Youngblood was AII-NFC eight times and was
the league's defensive MVP in 197 5.
Youngblood, Swann and Munchak
will each be presented by former teammates: fellow Hall of Farner Merlin
Olsen, John Stallworth and Bruce
Matthews, respectively.
Vary's line. coach at Minnesota, John
. Michels, will introduce him, while Slater
will be presented by his coach with the
Rams, John Robinson. Levy selected
longtime friend and Indianapolis Colts
president Bill Polian to make his presentation speech.

was negligent, a standard practice for
deaths that occur in the workplace.
James Honerman, a spo~esman for
the Minnesota Department of Labor
and Industry, said the agency met with
Vikings officials "and they were very
cooperative with us in our investigation."
State officials are talking to the team
about "what type of training the staff
and employees might have received
with regards to heat- related illnesses,"
Honerman said.
Filing past bouquets and balloons '
left by fans, ~he team returned to the
field to focus on (ootball in conditions
considerably cooler than earlier in the
wee k.
·

.

t

KQJt7~2

.
,.......

6 1\13

A ,\ 1\QJ&amp;E~I

•

SOSSY.' THE.Q£'$
YOUR. FIFTY DOLlARS!

PRICING

J IQ t

.. II I

CONGAATU~,O..TIONS,

FACTORY DIRECT

Deul~ r:

Wt.••!!l

Vulnerable: Neclhcr
, Suuth

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

)'UJ
l'a~s

\Vr~t

Pau

••
••
""'
Phs

Pin

1-&amp;Q0-291-5600 • Pomerov. OH

HIN TELLS

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521.()916

TREE SERVICE
Tap • Trlna • Ranaanl
BucllatServlea

46Likooome

· sllirca51 PIIU Hotel
tool
girl
16 Cycles
54 Term In
17 Mo. Luplno
office
18 Electrical 55 Angora
unit
goat Iabrie
20 Camp
10 One altha
56 Dozea
bed
B vlllmina
57 Oral
21 Chicago,
11 Romano.g.
tlcolty
DOWN
23 "Cenalnlyl"
Involved
24 Split
1 Claoalcol
12 wda.)
orchltocturo 12 Social ronk
aaunder
25 Lime tree
~rder
111 TV' a·27 Fruit
2 Type ol
H1w•
ripener
card
22 '60s r1dlcal
29 Pel holder 3 Concelvi
(al.)
31 Fuel
4 He's no
24 Become
gentleman
32 Certain
more
captive
5 Mae Weal
'forgiving
(abbr.)
role
26 Symbol ol
33 AAA Info
&amp;Foe
crazlne11
34 Hoopltal
7 Deceiver
28 Smacks
37 Haughty
8 Fair grade
30 Decrouea
9 Along In
one
bit by bH
yearo
40 DebauchH
34 Force

AI\.13
•\J I12

So11th

35 WoHieh

38 BIU.nd 38

39
40

42

44

49
50

52
53

·

Eoklmo
boat (VIr.)
BlUM
linger
Smhh
Becomea
corroded
Abounda
Uncompromlalng
Feel
.-grot
Art Deco
painter
Prune
(bronchia)
try ol
surprln

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I

RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS &amp;
ROUTE 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
effective 816/01
will accept all major credit
cards and bank debit cards.
949·4900 992·9200

Tomato Pickers
needed
Clifford Hill &amp; Sons

tormlne
14 Actteu
Mercourl
15 Piercing

F.at.t

word

Foot tlpo
Rei's
CDUnterparl
Bambl'o
mother
47 lcr.ho hro.

13=

...

KEEPS THE

!'lutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. ·

740-992-5232

740-.IS-4281

WINDOWS HEAT
IIIAAOII TECHNOLOGY

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery- Plus, Inc.

Pollltl'flJ, Obio

Chester, Ohio

' water
43
column
45
7 Ofoocred ..
. I
46

PRU II HOllE EITIIAnl • "'UUIQ II IEUEYitO~ •'fMoum

33795 Hilmul Ri.

41 "Woyne's
World"

ACROSS

KENSINGTON

CAN HELP

SeU-Storage

JIM'S
WOODSHID

740-247-2063
!ny!te The Entire
Neighborhood
To Your Yard Salel
Mall to:

Racine
Mower
·Clinic

ALDER

1 Frozen

.------· -- - - - - - ,

CALL gUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Tret~surar

MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
OF
EDUCATIONP.O. Box 272 ·
Pomeroy, OR 45769
PH (740) 992-5850

~~~~---

NEA Cros sw ord Puzzle

PHIU.IP

••
c,

Lou Walghl Now
AskMaHow
lou wolgh~ oupploment
your diet lor moxlmum

nirtrfllon, or juotlool&lt; your

oroo~oo~ wllh lht boot
poroonolcaro prodtlctt,
· Hlrl&gt;l/lftlnllnWNwlhao
oomothlng lor ovoryont.
Col your lndopondonl

Entorprlu
-J&amp;L
··
dlotrlbulor,

(140)-1

Wt can poriOIUIIIu o
prO(IIIIm lor you I

~\) ~ 0~ I 1-\0W

WHAT AM I

GONNA, ()0
WELL, .
ABOUT KEI..I..Y'. I TI11NI&lt;.
I CAN'T Ju,;;r
YOU ..
(,() UP TO
+IER ,A.Nt&gt; ...

1-800-150-9077
Residential Commercial New Co~lruction
Soles Senlce lnstoll1tion

Flat Work,

Senlnc Ohio oDd W.V.

WV IIOJ1711

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
. .Excavating

...

~

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mul&lt;h
Bulldozer Servk:es

(740) 992-3470
Advertise

NUNMWIK

HYDYWIY

J

PWMRYBIY .' -

CXRYH

yc

KZY
SBXXLI

M J X U Y W y ·,

HMH.'

M

I M "H

-

FINISH ;TEI&gt;I&gt;'&lt;!
I ""'S JUST

'ft&gt;U
SHOULD

REALLY

ABOUT TO

TALi&lt;.

";.,._'( THAT

"BOUT

KElLY IS

O four
Rearrange leners af
scrambled words

THIS

LATER .

the

be·

low to form four simple words .

II

BLACKB

.PEANUTS

TREE SERVICE

'(OU SURE FOOLED ME ..
I Tll0ll61lT ''ROSEBUD"

Top • Trlna• Renaoval
Bucket Se1rvlc:e

WAS filS SKATEIIOARD

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Ohoo 45760

Local 843·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Ca~cer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40IK Rollovers;
Mortgage; .Major Medical
• Nursing Home

CONCREif/BLOCK/BRICK
Replacemeacs, • Walkl
ond Drha • Steodl ·
Crete Free Estimates

NWXKZVB

T PI K

L-ET ME

PROI!oo\BLY ..

Spedalizl"'lin Shed Metol Duclwvrk
"Trane" Sales I&lt; Senice For
Gollia, Mason, 1'nd Meigs Counti"'
Llunsed and J""ured
WV 005176

· •NewHomaa

• Footen, Walls, Steps •

Ml

BIG NATE

1·~75-78:14

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

74G-985-3948

f'I'AA'( ')('::, f\i&gt;..\JE. '&lt;0\l GOtt

CO

BYNCCE

nv..-·

•CarPet
• Hardwood floorJna
• Conaoleum
fREE ESTIMATES
Phone f304) 674-61 oo

Racine, Ohio 45771

'ZPJXB

'M

Mohawk Dealer

CONTRACTORS, INC.

... -:, ....

YOJ~D7

Exclusive

P/B

~

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations tiy famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands lor another.

/

EXPRESS

7~()-992-1671

by Luis Campos

.~

•

~H-1'&lt;, 1'10-WE- f-\f&gt;..\Jt:''2X," "3X."' ~OW

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

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

CELEBRITY CIPHER
TOday's clue: S equals B

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

Whothor you're trying to

•

.... .

-DBPOYIII
PIRft
All Makes 'n-a&lt;lor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
100(1 St. Rl. 7 Soultl

....

,.....,

Coo/viii•, OH 45723

youe
CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates ·

740-742-8015 or
1-&amp;n-353-7022

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Bingo
On Thundaya
Al8:30 p.m.
• Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
· Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 COYOI'Illl
Starburst
Progressive top line
Lie. #00-50

Howardl.
Wr.ltesel
Roofing - Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

7

-2422

EriC ai•CIIIIUI'II

Fully lneunl&lt;l

I I

... UNSC~AMBLE LETTERS TO
V
GET ANSWER
,

•llll•s••fiHibllllll* WLII
•lllll&amp;.• hJ.II•MIIIIWIIl

.....................

SC:JlAM.LETS ANSWERS

·-PIIIII'I PWII._.IIUI

Uproar· Blus~ Guilt- Swivel· TIP US
"Well, we went to the salad bar, deli bar and dessert
bar," the man said to his date, "how much should we
TIP US?"

Tire Barn
~7

Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

74o-992--5344

HOUI!S: lion· Frl

SJlurday, Au g. ~. 2UU I
Owing to an unusual chain
· of event~ thai"!\ o'a ur in the
yea r ahead, two o ld en~eayon
which hn· c been t::ntn g 11 0
place can be r~juvc natcd and
turnc(t into profit m:.king en-

Advertise in
this ~pace for
s100 per
··month

tcrpriscs.
LEO Quly 23- Aug. 22) ..
Don't h.ke a b~ c k. so;~t t o d:~v
an d leave the mana gement Or
a venture entirely up to oth'cn.. Ac an active pa~ticip:.t o r
at allttmes. You can contnb ute a lot. Try ing to patch up a
broken romance? T he AuraGraph Matchmaker com help
you undenund what to do to
m ~kc the r ~:btiomhip work.
Mail ~ 2 . 75 t o M :~tc hmak e r.
c!o thi s new~rt~per. P.O . llnx

Spout
Fret Etllllllfet

949-1405

I 1:

,

591-5011
in this .
~·
space
an
drywall, room
for
cuHing edge••• additions, and
plumbing.
sso per Readlha
Terry Lamm
992.;0739
month Classlftad Ads ·

Murr~ y Htll Sto:~ t t.o n ,
York , NY lf_)\56.
V~RGO (Aug. 2J-S,•pt. 22)

175'8,

'

Nqo~

Hill's S1ll
st~r~e•

'.

28f70 llalhln lklllcl
Recine, Ohio

740-949-2217
tiOUI'I

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
•

'

,Atlanta Boaves al

rh;~t will m 11ke )'OU smile.

~om ething

AQUARIUS U"'· 20-Frb.
19) -- It shouldn 'l be ra· ccssary for you to ahrr a p:~st de-

that' s been lumbt.·rinv; in the
dumps.
UBI~/\ (S•pt . 2.1 -0cL 2J) - It's important today tlut you
rch1:1i n duty ~:omCto m. be came tfbttcrs Y'lU d'-•al wtth in
a practical, respomiblc fashi~m
have il· more tlun average

cisio n :tbout which you've ftlt
dubious. bcc :~use, upon review today, it looks "like it'!
going to resolve itself the way
yo u, anticipated.
·I'ISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
-- Provided you rel y upon
past &lt;.&gt; nd~·;won for gu idance

h~p

45771

.Sizes 5' X10'
tD 10'x30'

-- As of today, :~. ~i tmtion tha t
h o:~s had a rcstn ctt vc effect
up on you sho ul d H.ut to dimimsh cousidcr•bly . It wtll

dt:mce (or great 5Ut:CCS5 at this'
time .
• SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov.
22) -- A signifi cant, but diffi .;ulr objl'..:tivc that pertains io
your stat us aud uutenal well
bein g c.-m be achieved today if
you make it a priority isme.
Uc decisive.
SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23·
D ec. 21) - - This is an ex:ccl ~
lent day t o make some revisions concern ing your bluepr int for the- future . You'll
recognize the unw orkable :md
repla ce the m with new wis- ·
' dam you've gained fr om ex perience .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - ~ Even th.ough a
matter abo~1t w hi ch you were
once hopeful hasn't given you
much to chee-r about , it
should not be rclinqui .~hed today. Changes ue in the ofling

to

elev :~t e

.

.

and experience today, a new
project about which you've
been doubtful 'tan, be successfu lly launched . It'll fly better
tha1.1 you thought .
ARIES (March 21-llpril19)
-- Due in part to firiding a
~;;am mon ground from which
you can both opcrilte, a per- mancnt and mutually benefi cial friendship can be established today with someone
yoU've previously ignored .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - - As a result of :1 maj or
turn around you've re cently
implemented, beginning today
a change might be in the offing that could h:~ve a favorable
c"lfect, not onl y o n ypu, bu t
your entire famiJy.
GEM INI (May 21-Junc 20)

-- The fou nda tio n for an illli:~nce may resu lt

from a muttlal
need coday. but the end resuhs from en terin g .into thi5
partncnhip amngement could
ha.ve far-rea ching, beneficial
effects,
CANCER Qune 21-July
22) ·-You 're in 3 short cycle
today and tomorrow of being
cspc~: ially lucky with your undertakings. It behooves you to
~e,:: ure · positive measures tha t
could prov.idc )'Ou With more
material security .

�•

as

The Daily Sentinel

----

-~

~

61

w

.,L

Ft*«;Wia

59

49 .546
53 sa;

S4

Twins 9,
Blue Jays 4
Rick Reed won his first
start for Minnesota despite
giving up a career high-tying
12 hits, and the Twins .
stopped a five-game losi1_1g
streak by winning at Toronto.

The Twins scored three
unearned runs on two errors
by Alex Gonzalez. But Gonzalez also set a team record
for shortstops with eight
putouts.

Rangers 12,
Yankees2
Alex Rodriguez and Gabe
Kapler hit three-run homers
in Texas' six-run third i1Jning
against Mike Mussina (11 -9)

Friday, August :S, 2001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Mariners cruise
to 78th victory
By the Associated Press
joel Pineiro got the better
of fellow rookie Adam Pettyjohn to give the Seattle
Mariners their 78th victory
in I 08 games.
•
Pineiro (2-0) allowed one
run . in seven innings as the
Mariners beat the Detroit
Tigers 2-1 Thursday night.
Pineiro, who won his first
major league start last Aug. 8
against the White Sox,
allowed four hits without
walking a batter. In his last
two starts, Pineiro ha s
allowed one run and five hits
with no walks in 13 innings.
Jeff Nelson stn,tck out the
side in the eighth on 11
pitches, and Kazuhiro Sasaki
pitched a 1-2- 3 ninth for his
34th save in 38 opportunities.

Page 86

as the Rangers won their
first sNies at Yankee Stadium
in eight years.

50

47

Corn~

w

6\

m

59 .459
62 .431

1• •

62
59

Sl Louis

S4

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45 .579
49 .546
52 .509

&lt;16

60 .&lt;130

7\
15\

44

63

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11

66

.363

21

L
&lt;16
&lt;16
49
55

Pet
.560

GB

.,

Otchllll

f'llsllu!tl

Tampa Oay won its first
road series of the year against
anAL club.
Tanyon
Sturtze
(6-9)
pitched seven strong innings
and Steve Cox drove in two
runs for the Devil Rays, who
took two . of three from
slumping Baltimore.

2

O*"'!P

..............

Devil Rays 3,
Orioles 2

GB

Pc;t

.565

w

Los /VyJI!t8
Arizona
SM Fnn::iso:l
San lliog&gt;

Ill
60

Coior;rj:)

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53 .417

GB

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'tJedillliiidll(s Glrra
SlloUs4.-()
N.Y. MeisS. Hcubl2, 10i"mgs
- 5 , .............. 4, 10 iri1gs
6, Arizllna 5
&amp;vllliog&gt; 4, O*"'!P CltB 3
Clucillllil 10, Lot Angolel5
SanF..-.cisco3.~1

PI ~ E 8, ColoriD:l 1, 6 iri1gs. rain
'llv.ndoy'o~4. FDI:ia3
~ 4, Cdolilll:&gt;2
Slw\F..-.cisco3.~0

Angels 13,

1' Arizllna 0

-

Reel Sox 4
Garret Anderson drove in
four runs with two homers
and a double as Anaheim
stayed within five games of
Minnesota in the AL wild
card race.
The Angels have charged
into contention by winning
13 of their last 17 games and
12 of 13 on the road. Anaheim finished with 17 hits
and turned a 4- 4 tie into a
runaway with six runs in the
sixth at Fenway Park.

Royals 6,
White Sox3

Slwt Clio!lo (, O*"'!P CltB 3
- 4 , N.Y. Mels 3. 10 iri1gs
- - 2 , SllOlis 1
a.diulllll7.
Fridoy'o{l'llrnll?-6) .. SllOlis (Mcrris 127),5:40p.m., ,,.game

u....-•

-I&amp;IMIH)al~·

----

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65

Ill

-....

...... ~~~- T-Bay

36

L

Pet

(3 .Wl
(1 .561 41.'2
59 .459 15112
64 ,(13 20 1/2
72 .333
2!1

=

'*'

=Qtz

llallimolo"

Giants 3,

Pirates 0

Expos 1,

I

Astros 4,
Mets3

flllillit!st 4,
Rockies2

Copeland copes
with new job

Old school ways
in modern days

•

tmts

llwrpo Bay (Bilrtln&gt;IO.O) .. CtW:oo&gt; -

Sao&lt; ~&amp;6), 8:06p.m.

see.

dli(aGirnll

ANt1oin (Voldos 7-11) Ill N.Y. Yarl&lt;eeS
(Ciornlno! 15-1 ~ 1;()6 p.m.
r..... (O;Mss.n•-ICcne&amp;-1), us
p.m.
Sooftle (Gon:lo 12-3) II Clovolond
~d 1 -1~ 1:25pm.
Ballinore (l'lnion 5-6) .. r...., ~
5-6). 4;()6 p.m
Ooldond (Zio 6-1) .. Dolrolt lSilM&lt;S &amp;-5).
5:0S p.m
Kamas Cly (Wiaon 5-1) · - (MIb19-4), 7:06 p.m
Tarrpo Boy (Kemedy 3-6) 81 C1i:ago Sao&lt; (lowe 6-2), 7;06 p.m

&amp;.ncloYaGona

r.... at-.,, 11l5p.m

Ballinore a! T....,, 1:a; p.m
Ooi&lt;Jand al Oe1roil; 1:05 p.m.
ANtloina!N . Y. ~ 1;()6p.m,
Kamas Clly at Mmooola, 2:05p.m.
Tarrpo Boy at O*"'!P wtile SO., 2:06 p.m.
Seolle Bl CIIMiinl s:a; p.m

cardinals 1
javy Lopez hit a two-run
homer and Tom Glavine
won his fifth straight decision as Atlanta avoided a
three-game &amp;weep at St.
Louis.
Glavine (11-5) gave up a
run on three hits and a walk
in six innings. He's 9-1 at
Busch Stadium for his career
and 15-5 overall against the
Cardinals with a 3.68 ERA.
Lopez hit his lith homer
off Bud Smith (3-1) after
Andruw Jones singled to '
start the second,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GALLIA
CATTLE

Calf
.•

New 2001 Chevy

~iJ5i· .qa~95i· . ~f,a5i· •2i,iii· 822,95
• Air Condlllonlng
• AMIFM Stereo
• Sporty Equipped!

• Air Conditioning
• Power Locks, AM/FM cass.
• Delay Wipers, Tilt

• V-6 Power, AutomaUc
•Air Condlllonlng, CD System
• Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

• 7 Pass;0Onstar System
~aylesa Entry, Alum, Wheals
Fully Power Equipped!

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Automatic, Air Conclltlonlng
AMIFM ~tereol Tilt

1

Brand New 2002 Buick
Rendezvous CX AWD

830,950*

• 7 Passenger Sealing, Onstar
• Leather, Fully Power Equipped
• Tollally Loaded!

c

pr1ces•
rema1n
strong

Gallipolis • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • August 5, 2001

2001 Buick Regal
LSSedan

2001 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Alero GL Sedan

2001 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

~2,450* ~4,&amp;50* ~&amp;,550* ~8,550* ~9,&amp;50*

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Rear Spoiler, Till Wheel
AMIFM Ste~ea W/CD

• Automatic, Air Condlllonlng
• Power Seat, Windows, Locks
• CD System, Till &amp; Cruise

• Ta.es, Tags,rrtle Fees extra. Rebate indudeO in sale pri&lt;:e o1 new wehK:Ie lls1ed whe~e applicable. "On approved
Prl&lt;:es Good Augus1 3rd through August 51h.

CHIVROLIT
-'IIIHIRI "

-·-

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• Power Sea~ CD System
• Power Wi,ndows &amp;Locka
Till Wheel, Cruise Control

• Power Seat, Windows, Locka
1 CD System, Alum. Wheels
Till Wheel, Cruise Control

AUtomatic, Air
• Power Windows &amp; Locka
• Till Wheel, Cruise Control

1

2001 Chevy Blazer
LT 4 Door4x4

820,1

• Power Seat, Windows, Locks
• CD System -Alum. Wheels
• Tilt Wheel Cruise Control
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On selected model~ Not respon~ble lor!ypOgraphlcal err011.

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Buick ~

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It's all

GALLIPOLIS - A local
union's contract with. thecity expired today, but membe,rs will continue reporting
to work, its president said.
"There will be no work
stoppages,"
said
Floyd
Wright, who leads American
Federation of State, County
and 1\1\unicipal Employees
Local 1316, which represents 23 workers in Gallipolis' water, sewer, street, and
parks and recreation departments.
The 'local's three-year
contract w1th the city ended
without last- minute bargaining since the city opted
against negotiating a new
agreement with the local.
. Since March, city officials
have maintained .that with
Gallipolis' population dropping below city status, it's
not obligated legally to bargain wit11'1.11t! uriio -.. .,,

GALLIPOLIS -A year
of work with animals and
tobacco, projects comes to
a head at the Gallia County Junior Fair, not only
through judging but selling
at the annual livestock sale.
The first
of sales,
set
• Gallia
covermg
Junior Fair steers,
lambs
buyers
and tobacco,
listed,
were Friday,
Al,7 and the hog
sale was Saturday. The steer sale .holds
the record as . the oldest at
50 years, followed by lambs
· at 43 years and hogs with
41.
The tobacco sale was
introduced in 1983.
Friday's sales, covering
· slightly more · than four
hours, saw 117 lai!.lbs, 8~ '·
steers and the top 10 ·
tobacco proj~cts s9ld to thll

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West VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Ofds, And Custom Van Dealer.
'

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-PI- ii"~-· -Wuf~'Ar-

Title Ill
grant from -Ed. Dept.

OUT OF CONTROL - A firefighter attempts to extinguish the blaze Saturday that engulfed the
Haskins-Tanner building on Second Avenue In downtown Gallipolis. (R. Shawn Lewis photo)

Blaze still raging as of 8 p.m.
BY KEviN KE~Y
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS - The. century-old building
housing Haskins-Tanner Clothiers erupted into
flames late Saturday afternoon, sending all. Gallia
County volunteer fire departments and mutual
aid from twO others into town to contain the
blaze.
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department was alerted to the blaze around 5:30 p.m. and found the
blaze bad originated at Haskins-Tanner. Within
an hour, flames had engulfed all three stories of
the buildfug.
.
Flames were shooting out of the 'roof as the
GVFD's ladder truck poured water on it, sending
smoke billowing out of the structure and across

- - - - - , Second
Avenue.
. GVFD Chief
Bob Donnally
said the goal as
of presstime
Saturday night
was to contain
the fire to the
Haskins-Tanner building.
Firefighters ·
were pouring

Please see
Fire, AI

total of five years and provide $1,723,220 to improve
student retention if all stipulations of the grant are met.
One hundred percent of the
funding for the program
originate.s from the Title Ill
Depart~
federal government grant.
of
ment
"Because the State of
Education
Ohio is failing to adequately
has award- fund its public colleges and
ed
universities, this grant by the
S341,164 to U.S. Department of Educafund Rio tion comes as welcome
Grande's
news," Strickland said.
grant proposal under Title
"With the increasing
III of the Higher Education demand for employees with
Act's "Strengthening Instituhigher education in. today's
tions Program."
market, this money will help
The funding is effective
students in southern Ohio
Oct. 1, 2001, tluough Sept.
· remain . competitive as they
30, 2002.
Officials anticipate the enter the workfoFce," he
grant will be extended for a
Plun see Grant. AI

RIO GRANDE - R,io
Grande Community College has been notified by
U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland's office
U.S.
that

Pomeroy ABLE center opens; third in·county
'diploma.
Imagine the prospect of going "back to
school" 20, 30 or even 50 years after you
left.
Intimidating? You bet Impossible? Not
at
aiL
BY BRIAN J. REEO
For those who have mack the decision
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
to
take care of unfinished educational
POMEROY Imagine living life
business, to get their high school diploma
without knowing how to read or write.
Imagine trying to compete in the 2151- or to learn to read and write after years of
century job market without a high school struggle, that decision is a tough one, but

· Last crack at current
GED approaches

C5
02-7
insert
A4

J.O!.!.Ib~jt.yu2Jan!l!·e~s._____-"'A"'6

Nintendo's 'Mario Party 3'
&gt;~.SI!po!.!!rtucSL--'-----'B"-1-':--,.8 reviewed, C8

,;!S!!,!tOi!!C!;!ksll!.__ _ _ _ _.-!06!.!.1

Officials recently turned
down the local's offer to
extend the contract. '
"All union members will
report to work as scheduled
on Sunday and beyond,"
Wright said. "Our members
are willing to work Without
a contract to ensure that the
good people of Gallipolis
shall suffer no interruption
of vital services."
The !_@Cal has.existe&lt;l- since

~ RGCC-gets

--

. . DesJili1te , , a we~k!;ning..
~e'il'Q'itomY, 'prices remai~ed
steady, and with steers,
none fell below $1 per
pound, a fact auctioneer
Donnie Craft was compelled to point out to buyers and spectators ntidway
through the sale.
"You need to give your. self-a hand," he said. "We've
sold 48 calves at this point
and the price hasn't
dropped below $1. That's
saying something."
Craft is in his seventh
year sharing auction duties
at the sale with Lee johnson, hi s former vocational
agriculture teacher at
Symmes Valley
High
School and mentor in the·
business.
"I enjoy the ~oik," said
Craft, a member of
Lawrence County's fair
board who also performs
auction duties at Tri-State

Floyd Wright, American Feder•

lion of Sbolo, County end M~Mic­
lpal Emp1oyo111 Local131&amp;

c 2001 Ohio V•lley Publishinc Co.

it's one the staff members at Meigs County's Adult Basic Literacy Education are
fantiliar with.
A new ABLE learning center has
opened at 111 West Second St. in
Pomeroy, making a third Meigs location
for adult students who need to prepare for
their General Education Development
test, to learn to read and write, or to brush

Please see ABLE. AI

Kicls' Fair
The Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Unit is sponsoring' a Kids' Fair

(2:) Oldsmobile.

gooa

"Our members are
willing to work
without a contract to
ensure .that the good
people of Gallipolis
shall suffer no
interruption of vital
services. "

BY KEVIN KELLY
TIME&amp;sENTINEL STAFF

~

I

new contract

''

Details, A3

.

5 Workers on

BY KEviN KELLY

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

Vol. l6, No. 25

GALLIPOLIS

1re
•

Hlp: 80s
Low: 10.

2001 Pontiac
Sunfire SE Sedan

s1.25

TIMEs-SENTINEL STAFF

.;hJgttdt' lliader.- ',. '

Brand New 2001 Chevy

I

~ 10-8), 8;05 p.m

Braves 2,

Cubs3

Old car show
coming to park

Biltill1018 (Mercedes 5-12) 8l "lv."'f"''I
(EMxltlor 2-5), 7;05 p.m.
~ (tUiaon 12-6) .. OMoi1 fNeEMJr
11&gt;f), 7:06 p.m
(llo!olr 11-6) II Clo\*:cl ~
10.'1), 7:05pm.
(WarHun 9-4),. N.v: Ylri8Bs
~ 1Hl), 7:06p.m
Cly (Dt.dJin 7-9) al , . . . , _

Brewers 4,
Marlins 3

Javier Vazquez and Scott
Stewart combined for a
three-hitter and Orlando · Mark Sweeney homered
Cabrera homered as Montre- and Henry Blanco hit a twoal won at Arizona.
run double as Milwaukee
Vazquez (10-10) gave up beat Florida to end a fourthree hits in eight innings. game losing streak.
Stewart worked. a perfect
Allen Levrault (5-6) was
ninth for his second save in the winner. Curtis Leskanic
as many games.'
pitched the ninth for his
Cabrera homered in the 12th save.
·fourth · against Albie Lopez
Ryan Klesko's grand slam (0-2).
·in the eighth inning lifted
San Diego to victory over
visiting Chicago.
Moises Alou's infield si,ngle
Reliever Chuck McElroy
in the bottom of the I Oth
(1-0) got one out for his first
Pat Burrell homered in his inning lifted Houston over
decision with the Padres.

MONEY

I &amp;-

New York.
The Astros, who tied it in
the ninth on Orlando
Merced's two - run double,
handed the Mets their first
loss in 40 games in which
they led after eight innings .

Diamondbacks 0

SPORIS.

8), 7:06 p.m

third straight game as
Philadelphia won at Colorado.
David Coggin (2- 1) won
for the first time since july 4,
allowing two runs and nine
hits in seven innings.

Padres'4,

Raul Ibanez hit a basesloaded triple to spark a sixrun third and make a winner
of Jeff Suppan (5-9) as
Kansas City won at Chicago.
Kip Wells (6-7) worked
just two-plus innings, his
shortest outing of the season
one start after he gave up

GB

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(O!!iz 12-6), !o:36p.m
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Kansas Cly 6, Ctic:a{p- Sao&lt; 3
{Toll!olg 4-3), 10:05 pm.

seven runs and eight hits in Trevor Hoffman got his 26th
the first inning against save.
Boston .
Fred McGriff homered
and drove in all three runs
for the Cubs.

Kirk Rueter allowed one
hit in seven innings, and Jeff
Kent drove in two runs as
San Francisco defeated Pittsburgh at Pac-Bell Park for its
eighth straight victory.
The Giants completed
their first three-game sweep
of the Pirates in five years.

50
45

Atdoy'a8cd:ln (\" 'al $

T81135 (Helrv &amp;8) at

TEMPO

&lt;'

.j'.

. -~·--

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 prn - 8 pm

Monday, August 6
1 0:00 aM • 2:00 p1n
French 500 -oo1n
All are welcome and invited'! For more information, call

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer· Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-5075 '

.'
J

'

.
•

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