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The Daily Sentinel
p

Fall sports· preview inside today!

_
PageB&amp;
Wednesday. August ll, 1001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Schilling denied 19th victory by lowly Pirates; Cubs lose
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

What looked like an obvious mismatch turned into an
• unlikely victory for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Going into the game with a
seven-game losing streak and
eight fewer victories th~ n any
team in · the NL, the Pirates
came away wirh a 4-2 victory
Tuesday night over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Five Pirates pitchers combined on a two-hitter aga inst
_the team with the league's best
record, and Pittsburgh beat
Curt Schilling (18-6), base ~
ball's winningest pitcher.
" We got up 2- 0 with Curt
on the mound, but they didn't
fold their tent," Arizona first
baseman Mark Grace said.
"They tied it, scored a co uple
of more and we didn't do anything."
Abraham Nunez and Ararnis
· Ramirez s:ngled home r ~ ns in
the eighth inning, ending the
Diamondbacks' nine"game
winning streak.
_
Schilling failed to become
the majors' first 19-game winner, _giving up four runs and
nine hits in 7 2-3 innings. It
· was his first loss in five starts
and only his second in his last
nine. decisions against Pittsburgh.
The Pirates have a 17-48
· record against the eight NL
teams still in playo ff contention. They were coming off
a 12-2 loss Sunday in Houston
that ended ·an 0-7 road trip.
Omar Olivares (6-7) struck
out Matt Williams with two
on in the eighth to preserve a
2-2 tie, and Mike Fetters
pitched th e ninth for his
fourth save.

The Diamondbacks, who
lead the NL West by 1 112
games, were coming off three
co nsecutive
rhrec-game
sweeps. They were held hitless
the last four innings.
" We had a lot better at-bats
against Schilling than we did
in Arizona," manager Lloyd
McClendon said. " We did the
little things you have to do to
beat a pitcher like him ."

Astros 8, Phillies 2
Houston broke a 2-2 tie
with a six-run eighth inning at
Philadelphia, highlighted by
Lance Berkman 's two-run
double and a two- run triple
by Brad Ausmus.
The Astros matched their
season high for consecutive
victories with five, and the
Phillies lost their fifth straight
for the first time this season.
They stayed a game behind
Atlanta in the NL East.
Pedro
Astacio
(8-14)
improved his record to 2-1
si)lce being acquired by the ·
Astros from Colorado. He
allowed two runs m seven
innings.

Brewers 3, Cubs 1
Ruben Quevedo struck out
I 0 to win his third straight
start, and Jeromy Burnitz hit a
two-run double in the sixth
inning for Milwaukee.
The Brewers have won six
of 'seven games against the
Cubs this season, including
five of six at Wrigley Field.
The Cubs have lost eight of
11.
Quevedo (3- 1), acquired
from the Cubs on July 30 for
reliever David Weathers,
allowed one run, five hits and

four walks in

.

s~ven

innings.

its' eighth consec utive loss.
With one out in the eighth
inning and Mark Grudzielanek
Giants 10, Expos l
Russ Ortiz didn't allow a hit on first, Sheffield hit Vladimir
until the seventh inning, and Nunez's pitch over the leftH..i ch Aurilia and JetT Kent field wall for his 29th homer,
breaking a 3-all tie.
hom er~d at Montreal.
Ortiz (14·6), who allowed
two hits and one run in eight
innings, held Montreal hitless
until Mark Smith singled with
two ou to;; in the seventh.
Barry Bonds went 0-for-2
with three walks .

Mets 5, Rockies l

Hampton (12-10), pitching at
Shea Stadium for the first time
since beating St. Louis to win
the NLCS la&lt;t season.
AI Leiter (8- 10) allowed one

50 cents· Augu~t 23. 2001 • Vol. 52. No. 6

Mike Piazza hit his 300th
homer as a catcher, and the
Mets spoiled Mike Hampton's
return to New York with a vicrun . in seven innings to stop
tory over Colorado.
The Mets scored five runs in the Rockies' three-game winthe first two innings against ning stteak. _

Padres 3, Braves 1

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Holzer Clinic
welcomes
•

POMEROY -. Regulations
prohibiting smoking in all public
places will be given a third and
final reading by the Meigs County Board of Health at its Sept. 12
meeting.
If passed at that meeting, all
workplaces in Meigs County wiD
be expected to be in compliance
within 30 days, said Health Comtnissioner Norma Torres.

Dr. Craig Dodrill
Ophthalmologist

HOLZER

Dodgen 5, Martins 4

Holter Clinic Meigs
(740) 992-0060

Craig H. DodrlH, MD joins Holur C/Jnlc jrom

Holur Clinic Jackson

SIIIIUIIIl H~alth Syst~m
(Akrolf Clly Hosp/IQI) ilf Akrolf, OH.

CLINIC

Hernandez return to Yank's
anything but pleasant
Orlando Hernandez felt
good in his return to the New
York Yankees, he just didn't
look it. ·
"El Duque," on the disabled
list since June 1 with an
injured toe on his left foot,
was roughed up by the Texas
Rangers in a 13-3 road loss
Tuesday night.
Ruben Sierra went 5-for-5
with two homers, including
one of the four hit off Hernandez in his fir st major
league start since May 25.
"My control wasn't what it
was like in the past, and l was
leaving a lot of pitches up,"
Hernandez said. "I'm not really happy with how I pitched."
A playoff siar for the Yankees
with an 8-1 postseason record,
Hernandez (0-6) allowed
eight runs and 11 hits in five
mmngs.
" He was tentative, mor~
than timid," manager Joe Torre
said. " The good news is that
nothing hurts him. We'lllook
forward to the next start."
Alex Rodnguez hit a tworun homer on Hernandez's
eighth pitch. Rafael Palmeiro
and Sierra hit solo shots in the·
third, giving Texas a 7- 1 lead.
AU four homers Hernandez
gave up were on pitches left
out over the plate.
Sierra needed only a triple
to complete the cycle. He did-.
n 't g~t it, but con nected for his
st&gt;cond homer of the night in
th e eighth inning off Mark
Wohlers.
Before . the fir st five- hit
game of his career and the
15th muliihomer game. Sierra
. was 5-for-30 (.16 7) in seven
games since being activated
from the disabled list Aug. i 1.
A pulled left gro in kept him
· out of the lineup.
Doug Davis (7-8), 3-1 his
last seven sta rts, allow~d just
one run and six hits in seven
mmngs.

Blue Jays 7, Twins 5
Shanno n Stewart, Carlos
-Delgado and Raul Mondesi
hit consec utive homers in the
sixth inning as visiting Toronto spoiled Brad Radke's return

.

appointment call

Leaders

Holur Main Clinic

look for

To schedule

an

(740) 446-5421

(740)3~873

252 Upper River Road

Dodge~Different.

STARTING AUGUST 22 lJ.JllL THEY'RE AU. GONE!!!

•

White Sox ~. Royals 1
Jose Valentin and Jeff Liefer
homered as C hicago snapped
Paul Byrd's five-game winning
streak.
Byrd (6-5), attempting to
become the first Royals pitcher to win six straight starts
since David Cone in 1994
. '
yielded eight hits and four
runs before being replaced in
the sixth.

Devil Rays 8, Orioles 4

wm.

Red Sox 8, Angels 5
Doug Mirabelli capped an
eight-run third inning with
his first care~r grand slam, as
Boston beat Anaheim.
David Cone (8-2) allowed
two runs, six hits and one
walk in seven innings, matching his longest outing of the
season. The Red Sox have
won 14 of his last 15 outings.
Scott Scho eneweis (I 0-9)
allowed seven hits and two
walks in 2 2-3 innings, matching his shortest outing of the
season.

Mariners 4, ngers I
Aaron Sele (13-4) allowed
three hits in eight innings, and
Mark McLemore had a
ti ebreaking RBI single in the
seventh as Seattle beat visiting
Detroi(.
Jeff Weaver (10-13) pitched
seven innings, allowing four
runs on 11 hits.

2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
2000
1999
1999
1999
199 9
1999
1999
1999
1998
1998
1998
199 8
1998
1998
1998
1997
1997
1996
1994
1994

Jeep Grand Cherokee - Lorado, 6 Cyl, 4X4, 23,963 miles, Gold 15861 ..... .'............. $22,000 ... ... $396/mo.
Dodqe Neon · ·Gas Saver, 34,000 miles, Red #5576A .................. .... .................... $ 9,400 ....... $171 /mo.
Dodge Neon -Gas Saver, 18,000 miles, Silver #5807 ............................... .-...... ... $1 0,300 ...... $1 87 / mo .
Plymouth Neon -Gas Saver, 19;0DO mlles, While 15808 ..................................... $1 0,800 ...... $196/mo.
Dodge Rom 83500 - 15 Possenver Von, Toke Everyone!, While #581 S.. .. .... ........... $20,500 ...... $369/mo.
Chevrolet S- 10 -.AC, Like New, t52D4TD .. ..... ................ .... .............................. $10,300 ...... $187/mo.
Dodge Stratus - llke New, 28,000 miles, While #5731 ........................................ $11,900 ...... $215/mo .
Chrysler T&amp;C - Leather &amp; Loaded, CD, LXI, 19,267 miles, Brown #5858 ....... .......... $24,800 ...... $446/mo.
Dodge Intrepid - PWR Windows &amp; Locks, Like New, Brown #5859 ....... .................. $14~500 ...... $262/mo.
Jeep Gran d Cherokee ·4X4, Extra Clean, 12,000 miles #5861TA ........ ........ ; ......... $1 8,000 ...... $325/mo.
Dodqe Neon - Gas Saver, 23,000 miles, Green 15752 ........................... .... .......... $9,800 ....... s·t8D/mo.
Chrysler Cirrus -Nice Cor, 34,000 miles, Red #5481TD ....................................... $ 12,500 ..... $241 / mo.
Ford Taurus - Exira Clean, 48,000 mlles, Ton 15529B ............................ .... ......... $ I 0,500 :.... S2D4/mo.
Chrysler 300M - Complet,e ly Loaded! 54,000 miles, Brown 15745 ........................ $16,200 ...... $313/mo.
Chrysler Concorde - Luxury At Its Best! #5747 ........................... : ...................... $14,800 ...... $286/mo.
Ford Explorer - RunnlnQ Boards, Very Clean, XLT, 39,000 miles, Blue t5687B ........ .. $ 18,000 ...... $3 4 7/mo .
Chrysler LHS - NlceCor, 39,000 miles, Block#5800 ................................. .. ........ $17,800 ...... $343/mo.
Ford f ISO - Work Truck, Priced lo sell! 45,000 miles, Red t5704A ........................ $12,300 ...... $238/mo .
Pontiac Sunfire - Aula Trans., CD Player, 49,000 miles, Blue 15519TA .. ................ $ 8,300 ....... $176/mo .
ford F150 - Greol Buy! 43,000 miles, .Red #5784 .............. ... ............................... $ 13,800 ...... $291 /mo.
Jeep Ch erokee - 4X4, 6 Cyl, 43;000 mlles, While #581 8 ............................. .. ... , ... $13,000 ...... $274/mo.
Dodge Ram 1500 - Must See, A-1 Truck, 4X4, Sport, 45,306 miles, Blue 15855 ....... $ 16,000 ...... $337 / mo.
Chrysler Concorde - PWR seal, CD, Local Owner, 62,000 mlles, While #5586A ............ $11,500 ....... $243/mo;
Dodge Durango - leother, Loaded, 3rd Seat, Fog Lamps, 4X4, Red 15639TA .... ... ... $18,800.' ..... $395/mo.
Dodge Neon - 5-speed, Sport, 4 Door, 86·, 000 miles, Red 15648A ..... :.. ................ $ 6,000 ....... $1 28/mo .
Ford Rang er - Gas Saver Pickup, 52,000 mlles, Blue #5522A ............. .................. $ 7,500 ....... 5173/mo .
Dodge Intrepid -Nice Cor, 64,000 miles, Opal #5775A ........................................ -s 8,100 ...... , $187/mo.
Chrysler LHS - Leather, Loaded, 69,000 mlles, Red #536 1B ................................ $ 9,500 ....... $241
Chrysler T&amp;C - Leather &amp; Loaded, Blue 15759 ....................... ........ ............ .. ...... $8,500 ....... $2?
Chevy C- I 50'0 - 4X4, 90,000 miles, Brown 15842 ......... ................... : ................ $8,900 ....... $28

~a[fi)®M~rru~

-=-

g@lM

Owner Mike Northup

Sales Team: AI Durst Neal Plefer John Saunders Joe Tillis Larry Pierce
Jamie Adamson Sherman Green Jimmy Hamilton
Rebatu included In

www.mydailysentinel.com

A required public hearing o n
the · new regulations was held at
the Pomeroy Library on Juty 31,
and a second one will be Sept. 6 in
the Meigs High School cafet~r ia
at 6:30p.m.
Both opponents and proponents
will be invit~d to speak . at that
'time, said Tracy O'Dell , RN ,
tobacco prevention coordinator at
th~ health department.
O'Dell pointed out that not one
person showed up to object to the

I

new regulation at the July hearing.
The new regulation will prohibit smoki n!l in all enclosed publie places in .Meigs County. The
new rules will be enforced by the
health department with assistance
from poli c~ departments and the
Meigs County Sherit'f's Department.
Penalties will be $100 for a first'
violation , $200 for a second violation, and SSOO for each additional
violation within one year.

Byrd's sister
wants to
meet with
governor

O'Dell said that "~ nclosed publie places" means elevators,
r~strooms, lobbi~s. hallways, buses,
taxicabs, retail stores, attorneys'
and other business offices, motels.
restaurant~, h&lt;trs, libraries, schools,
waiting rooms at health f.1cilities,
polling -places, and any places of
public assembly, including places
where bingo games are condu cted.
T he regulation further provides

COLUMDUS (AP) -A sister of a convicted killer whose execution is scheduled in
thre e weeks delivered a handwritten letter to
Gov. Dob Taft's office Wedn esday asking to
meet with the governor before he decides
whether to grant clemency.
"It's th e least he can do, and it's the least I
can do to ask," Kim Hamer said.
Also Wednesday, the attorneys for her
brother, John W Byrd J r-~ asked the Ohio
Supreme Court to delay the execution. The
attorneys want the Supreme Court to thoroughly consider whether the trial· court
co mplied with a March order that a hearing
be held on Byrd's claim that he didn 't kill a
Cincinnati convenience store clerk .
Byrd says a robbery accomplice stabbed
Monte Tewksbury, a 40-year-old Procter &amp;
Gamble Co. employee who was moonlighting to pay for his daughter's education.
The accomplice, John Brewer, has admitted to the crime in two sworn affidavits.
However, pro~ec utors counter that he first
said he wasn't involved an d changed his story .
to save Byrd's life_ Brewer was convicted as
an accomplice and could not legally be tried
again. He was se ntenced to life in prison.
The I st Ohio District Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati ruled Tuesday that a Hamilton

Please see Rules, Al

O..ler

reb•te. Void where

1

for

~ew

rendering

econom
reboun

Gallipolis, Ohio

from the disabled list.
Jack Cressend (2- 2) opened
the sixth in relief of Radke by
giving up the homers.
Minnesota lost for the 11th
time in 12 games and is a
major league worst 10-29
since the All-Star break.

Greg Vaughn knocked in the
go-ahead run with his first
extra-base hit in 14 games,
and Chris Gomez hit a threerun homer for host Tampa
Bay.
Cal Ripken went 1-for-4,
and has a hit in 44 of 49 games
for Baltimore.
Travis Phelps (2-1) went'!
I ~3 scoreless innings for the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Ophthalmology

800-446-0842
.

Hometown Newspaper

Smoking rule decision pending
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

-Bubba Trammell hit an RBI
double and D'Angelo Jimenez
added a run -scoring single off
Steve' Karsay in the 1Oth
inning for San Diego.
The Braves, 29-31 at hom e,
have lost their last six games at
Turner Field, where they are
5-12 since July 13.
Jose Nunez (2-2) pitched a
perfect ninth for San Diego.
Trevor Hoffman earned his
32nd save.

Gary Sheffield homered for
the fourth straight game as Los
Angeles handed host Florida

Meigs County's

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE3S

Thursday

WASHINGTON (AP)
-The Bush administration
is pinning its budget hopes
on a rapid, robust economic
recovery driven by its huge
tax cut despite figures
released Wednesday that
show a steep drop in the
government surpluses projected for 2001 and 2002.
The White House Office
of Management and Budget
is expecting an economic
rebound n~xt year, including a growth rate of3.2 percent in gross domestic product. That's nearly double the
anemic 1,7 percent ~ate
forecast fot this ·year and
higher than the 2.8 percent
----~~~~~~~ ofman~Rri­
vate economists.
Budget Director Mitch
Daniels said the 10-year,
$1.35 trillion tax cut President Bush signed,into law in
June coupled with
restrained
government
spending and the Federal .
Reserve's interest rate cuts
- would boost U.S. economic growth and fortifY
the budget bottom line.
"Economic growth is the
key to continuing this very
strong fiscal picture;' Daniels
told reporters. "A return to
economic growth will - be
the focus of the president
and the administration in
the months ahead."
The .impact of the economic slowdown and -the
$40 billion in tax refund
checks was apparent in the
midyear budget outlook
released Wednesday by the
White House. It
ed a
fiscal 2001 su Ius of 158
billion, only $1
the tax receip
ial Securi

Please see _Byrd, Al

.

Flun' king
b
ld
-test S OU
hold back
State aid comes to homeless shelter fourth-graders

Plans for the new Pomeroy/Mason Bridge are shaping u·p. The Ohio Department of Transportation unveiled
this latest rendering of the distinctive cable stay bridge and Its _approaches at the Meigs County Fair last week.
The "J" Intersection on the Pomeroy side of the bridge approach is designed to provide optimum traffic flow
for both bridge traffic and through traffic, and to eliminate standing traffic on the bridge. The bridge also
includes-a-56-foot-wide walkway. ODOJ expoots-that-the--new~stn:let~re;-to-be--located-just down-rhter:-frorrrthe-. -existing bridge, will cost $25 million to build. Const ruction is now slated for late summer 2002. (ODOT photo)

BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meigs
County Homeless Shelter
will receive $56,300 in
funding from the nearly
$6 million distributed to
69 communities and
organizations' in the state
to help alleviate the plight
of the homeless.
The mon~y is being
made -available through
Ohio's Emergency Shelter
Grant Program - a program that provides funding to sustain · current
emergency shelter operations and strengthen supportive services such as
employment assistance,
case management, referral
services and transporta-

'IOday's

Hlp: 80s

Sentinel

Details, A2

:1 Sections - 16 Pllps

calendar
Classifieds
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Lotteries

AS

OHIO
.
84-6 Pick 3: 5--4-2; Pick 4: 5-5-o-6
87 .51.,..-l.ollo: 2--4-ll-24-26-36
M KkMr: 9-8--7-5-7-1
A3 W.VA.
B!-2.5.8 Dally 3: 3-5-5 Dally 4: 2-7.()-()

A2

· C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

-

DAYTON (AP)- A study has 'round that
th e passing score on the reading part of the
Ohio fourth grade proficiency test should
not be used to determine whether fourth~
graders are held back.
.
The state-commissioned study said flunking th ~ r~adin g tost doesn't necessarily predict whether a child will be successful in fifth
grade. The Ohio Department of Education is
al rea dy changing the grading system.
· Assessment and Evaluation Services of San
Antonio condu cted th e study. The results
were publish ed by the Dayton Daily N ews
on Thursday.
The study surveyed fourth-grade teach ers
i1\ 73 sc hools during spring 2000. It com-'
pared teachers' responses regarding their students' reading skills and academi c perfor~
mance with the results of each fourth-grader's proficiency test.
The authors then surveyed the students''
fifth-grade teac hers about th~ students' acad-'
emic performance at the start of the following school Y.ear and in spring 2001.

tion.
Hilda Stotts, director of
Serenity H ouse Inc., said
Tuesday the shelter in
Pomeroy is "extremely
pleased" to receive the
fundin g and that most of
the mon ey will go toward
operating expenses.
"Our goal is to · help
individuals who are down
on their luck help th em- ·
HOMELESS SHELTER - Meigs County Homeless
. selves," said Stotts. "The Shelter In Pomeroy has received $56,300 through
shelter takes 'in both tran- Ohio's Emergency Shelter Grant Program to help sus·
si~nts and what we term tain current emergency shelter operations and
'l'oc-al homeless,' and strengthen sup'portlve services, such as employment
attempts to give them a assistance , case management, referra l services and
fresh s~art, either through transportation. (Tony M. Leach photo)
a new job or specific assisbusinesses and organiza- Meigs Coun ty ·Departtan ce.''
Stotts added tha t tions, such as lnfoC ision, ment of Jobs and Family
Serenity House currently Meigs County Comm u- Services, to try and find
works with various local nity Action. and the
Please see Aid, Al ·

State lags in hiring minority-owfted firms:
COLUMBUS (AP) - The stat~ uses
fewer minority- and female-owned businesses in construction contracts than other
public entities in Ohio, according to a
study to be released Thursday.
The state also applies its program for
awarding all types of contracts to minorities and women uneve nly. with not
agencies complying with the program,
according to so urc~s familiar with th~
Ohio Predicate Study. The sources spoke

au

to The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity.
Con1parisons of state, county, city, federal and private sector construction contracts
indicate the-state used such businesses th e
lea&lt;t, the report said.
"Similarly, the state shows the most
overu tilization of white, . male-owned
businesses," it said.
The sttJdy e~&lt;amin ed records of co ntracts·
at 11 state· agencies from 1996 to 2000. It

New at Holzer Medical Center ...

'

compared the state's contracting record to
those of cities, counties, the federal government and the private sector.
Among the agenci~s. the Oliio Department ofTransportation had the best record
of using minority and women contractors,
th e source said.
· Lawmakers approved the study in 1999,
and the state hired D.J. Miller &amp; Associates
of Atlanta in April 2000 to conduct a

Please see Firm, Al

-

Prowess 3D
The most advanced patient treatment simulation
and radiation planning system.
For more information, call the
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Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer ~org

(740) 446·5316

1 1

•

•

,_

~

. I

�Thursday, Aug. 23, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

PageAl

Ohio

•

Friday, Aug. 24
AccuWeathere forecast for

PA.

•

_ W
.VA
KY.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The latest
environmental flash point for the Bush
administration is a bit of a surprise. After
all, Donald Schregardus, Bush's pick to be
the nation's top environmental enforcement pfficer, was so low profile during
eight yean as Ohio's top consefV?!tion
official · that some environmentalists in
that state still cap't pronounce his name.
A dozen national environmental groups
have announced opposition to his
appointment, with a spokesman for one
calling Schregardus a "one-man environmental wrecking ball." Two Democratic ·
senators - New York's Charles Schumer
and California's Barbara Boxer - have
placed a "hold" on his nomination, effectively halting confirmation by the full
Senate.
If confirmed to the Environmental

Protection Agency po;t, as the assistant
administrator for enforcement and compliance, Schregardus's job would be to
enforce federal clean air, hazardous waste,
water and pesticide laws.
Some who knew Schregardus (shrubGAR'-duhs) when he headed the Ohio
environmental agency expressed surprise
that his nomination has created controversy.
"My first experience with him was to
be beat up because he was a tough
enforcer," said Columbus .attorney Rob
Brubaker, who represented utilities in
lawsuits pitting him against the Ohio olEcia!. "Donald Schregardus is not a partisan
political guy. The record speaks for itself."
Schregarous, 50, started his career in
1974 at the EPA's regional office · in
Chicago as a water quality expert. The

Cleveland native returned to Ohio in
1989 to work under former Democratic
Gov. Richard Celeste. He ran the 1,400employee Ohio EPA from 1991 to 1999
under then-Republican Gov. George
Voinovich, who now is a senator.
Schregardus did not return phone calls
seeking comment; But Voinovic~
spokesman ScQtt Milburn said his accomplishments include improv~d staff training, bringing all 88 counttes and every
metropolitan area in 0 hio into co~pli­
ance with the Clean Air Act and tripling
the amount of fines collected fiom Ohio
polluters.
Milburn dismissed the opposition to
Schregardus as purely political and meant
to exact concessions from the Bush
administration as Congress considers the
president's energy plan.

to look for the bodies of two more women who may have
been killed by the same man.
'&lt;'"
Sunny PI, ~ 0ou&lt;1y
Showe11 T-storma
Rain
Aurriea
Snow
Ice
"We know that their bodies were dumped in two other
,_
areas of the county. We'll continue our search ... ," Jefferson
County Sheriff Fred Abdalla said Wednesday night.
The body was found Wednesday after a man arrested in
another unspecified state said he had shot a woman to. death
,
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shine. High in the mid 80s. on Aug. 17 in Mingo Junction, Abdalla said.
The man said he and another man had taken the woman's
The rain was ending across Light and variable wind.
thwe region just in time for
Friday night ... Mostly clear. body to Fernwood State Forest, about 5 miles southwest of
Steubenville, and set it on fire, according to the sheriff.
the weekend.
Low in the lower 60s.
The National Weather SerExtended forecast:
vice said high pressure buildSaturday... Partly
cloudy.
ing into the region would pro- High in .the mid 80s.
LANCASTER (AP) - An Ohio woman who won two
vide partly sunny skies and · Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
highs in the mid-SO on Friday with a chance of showers and Emmys for outstanding makeup artistry while working on
and Saturday.
thunderstorms. Low in the ABC's "General Hospital" soap opera has died.
Pamela Kay Cole, 52, of Amanda, Ohio, died Wednesday at
Sunset tonight will be at upper 60s and high in the
her home. The cause of death was not immediately known .
8:17, and sunrise on Friday is . lower 80s.
Her
family was with her.
at 6:51 a.m.
Monday... A chance of
Cole was born in Hamilton County on May 21,1949.After
Weather forecast:
showers during the day... Othgraduating
from A-C High School in 1967, she became a
Tonight ... A chance
of erwise partly cloudy. Low in
showers and thunderstorms the upper 60s and high in the flight attendant .with United Airlilles. Later, she joined the
ABC soap opera "General Hospital" where she won two
eady. Remaining mostly lower SOs.
cloudy with areas offog formTuesday... Partly cloudy. Low Emmys for her work in the makeup department, the Laning. Low in the upper 60s. in the lower 60s and. high in caster-Eagle Gazette rel'orted.
Cole was also a former president of the Clearcreek EleWest wind 5 to 10 mph . the upper 70s.
becoming light. Chance of
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. mentary Parent-Teacher Organization and a member of the
rain 30 percent.
Low in the lower 60s and high Clearcreek Township Ladies Auxiliary.
Friday... Morning clouds and in the upper 70s.
fog, giving way to some sun-

0 ~---··-..~•

•

//.('

t

...

.LOOo••~&lt;

'&lt;'

Rain will·end in area tonight

Emmy Award winner dies

•

'

Aug. 15 by her 13-year-old com~n, who was baby-sitting h~r.
and three of her siblings. The g1rl s 11-year-old brother also n
accused in her death.
Both boys were. charged as juveniles with murder. The 13year-old also was charged with three counts of rape.

BB shot killed teenager.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The 13-year-old boy killed in a
drive-by shooting while he· picked fruit Tuesday was shot
with a BB, not a bullet, police said.
At a news conference Wednesday, Mayor Michael R. White
displayed a small, round BB that police said had killed Bozak.
"These type of pellets are in the air rifles and air guns of
children across this entire city and entire county and they will
kill," White said. "Parents ought to be looking at what their
children are carrying, and look at what they are doing with
these weapons,"White said.
.
Raymond Bozak was picking fruit from a tree in front of
Cavotta's Garden Center in the city's Collinwood neighborhood when he was shot by a gunman in a passing car.

ss hearings set for Ohio

'.
.,

'

does not enter the area
through entrances, windows,
ventilation systems or any
from PapAl
other means."
"No Smoking" signs are to
that the employer is responsi- be p9sted, O'D~ll said. She
ble for advising employees of also noted that the health
the new regulation so that the department personnel will
business or facility can be in conducted sessions to help
_compliance by providing a
employees and others quite
smokefree workplace within
smoking.
the time frame set by the
O'Dell said the purpose of
health department. It also
the
program is educate and
provides for nonretaliation
toward employees who report protect the health of Meigs
County residents.
'(riolations to officials.
"Tobacco is responsible for
· · Also included in the regulation is a requirement that one in every five deaths and
"smoking occur at a reason- Meigs County has the highest
able distance of 20 or more cancer rate in the state. It is
'
feet outside any enclosed area the right of all adults and chilwhere · smoking is prohibited dren to breathe clean air in all
to insure that tobacco smoke public ~laces;' she concluded.

Rules

BJlld

Police share anti-pom tips

Ky. gift entertains clinic
CLEVELAND (AP) - ·cancer patient Jonathan Ferguson
went on a mission and returned to Cleveland Clinic Hospital with a
from
attention other than medical
treatments.
They have about 2,200 videos that Ferguson's Kentucky
friends, neighbors and others in Ashland donated because
Ferguson asked. The video drive started with one e-mail message. In the Ohio River town of 23,000, word spread quickly.
.
Soon schools were holding c.&lt;.&gt;ntests to see who could collect the most movies . Boxes of videos showed up.

State demands back wages
COLUMBUS (AP) - Contractors who have been accused
· of underpaying workers building student housing at Ohio
University aie facing $756,072 in fines and back Wages, stare
regulators said.
,
.
The fines and back_ wages were ordered by· the Ohio
Department of Commerce Wage and Hour Bureau.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported Thursday that more
fines and demands for back wages are possible. The stat~
agency continues to cry to obtain payroll records from more
than a dozen subcontractors.
Commerce officials began their probe last spring when
union leaders complained that contractors had not paid the
required union-negotiated wages, employed illegal immigrants and allowed minors to work on the .·site.

Burned body found in forest
STEUBENVILLE (AP) '\uthorities who found a
woman's burned body in a state forest planned on Thursday

1

Rain soaks ·Western Ohio

Assault susped arrested

OSU finds ranking unfair

· Boys can't attend funeral

mg.
Hamer and several religious
and human-righll organizations appealed to Taft to commu. te Byrd's sentence to life i_n
pnson and to put a morator_1·llJ1' on .. the death penalty m
Ohio.
"Once Johnny is executl'd,
there'S no bringing him
back," Hamer said, her voice
cracking and her eyes brimming with tears.
As Byrd's execution nears,
Hamer' said she can't help but
be reminded of her relationship with her brother.
She recalled climbing trees
him during their childhood,
as well as her only meeting
with him - a two-hour visit
last week- in th e more than
18 years he has bee n in
pnson.
"I finally got to hug him,"
she said. "Even in prison, he is
still teaching me faith; forgiveness and strength never to
. up."
'
g1ve
Byrd came within hours of
execution in 1994 before the
U.S. Supreme Court stepped
in to allow his appeals to proceed. He had chosen electrocution at the time and will do
so again to illustrate the bru"
tality of capital punishment,
his lawyers say.

.MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

Court overtums ruling on Megan's Law challenge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _: The
state's 1997 sex offender law, named for a
slain New Jersey girl, does not violate the
separation of powers required in the state
constitution, the Ohio Supreme Court
ruled Wednesday.
The court ruled 7-0 that Megan's Law,
which requires a judge to. consider several factors before labeling someone a sexual predator, does not override the judge's
own discretion.
Those factors include a defendant's age,
pnor criminal record, the victim's age and
the· nature of the defendant's sexual conduct.
The case involved the 1975 rape senrenee of Montgomery County defendant
David Thompson.
After Thompson was found guilty of a
parole violation, a Montgomery County
judge conducted a hearing in 1999 and
labeled Thompson a sexual predator.
Thompson appealed that ruling to the
2nd Ohio District Court of Appeals in
Dayton. He argued that requiring judges
to consider those factors violated the sep-

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Thompson appealed that ruling · decisions on whether a defendant was a
to the 2nd Ohio District Co11rt sexual predator could very widely .
depending on a judge's own viewpoint
ofAppeals in Dayton. He
on the issue."
argued tlrat requiring judges to
Carley Ingram, a Montgomery County
conside.r those factors violated . assistant prosecutor, said she believes the
decisi9n may signal the end oflegal chal. tlte separation of powers
doctrine meant to preserve tlte lenges to Ohio's sexual predator law.
A message seeking comment on the
independence of the state's
r1.1ling was left with Thompson's attorney
judicial, legislative and
·William Ary.
exec11tive branches.
The ruling was the latest in a series of
. aration of powers doctrine meant to preserve .the independence oft1le state's judicial,legislative and executive branches.
The court agreed in November 1999
and returned the case to the trial judge.
Wedne~day 's ruling overturned the
appeals court decision .
The factors a judge must consider "are
guidelines that serve an important function by providing a fram ework to assist
judges," Justice Evelyn Lllfldberg Stratton
wrote. "Without such gtl-i'*lines, judges
would be left in un charted waters and

••

challenges to the law.
In April 2000, the court ruled that the
law; which requires communities to be
notified of sex offenders living nearby,
does not deprive defendants of rights the
state constitution guarantees.
In July 1999, the court ruled 6-1 that a
sexual offender already released from
prison cannot Iacer be labeled a sexual
predator.
In September 1998, the court ruled 70 that offenders can be labeled sexual ·
predators even if their crimes. were committed before ~he law went· into effect.

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LOCAL BRIEFS
Driver ticketed

George Jacob Neigler

·POMEROY - Virginia L. D.ean. 71, Wolfe Pen Road,
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001 at the extended care unit
dfVeterans Memorial Hospital, following an extended illness.
. She was born on Oct. 24, 1929 in Meigs County, daughter
of the late Thomas and Vermont Brown Terrell . She was a
homemaker and a caretaker, and attended Carleton Church.
, Surviving are her hu,band, John A.. Dean of Pomeroy: two
sons and daughters-in-law, John W and Belinda Dean of
Pomeroy, and Richard L. and Tussinee , Dean of San Angelo,
Texas; two brothers and a sister- in -law, Robert and Frances
Sinalley of Weirton, WVa., and Mary Terrell of Pataskalo; rwo
sisters , Betty Reid QfPataskala, aild Donna Young of Pomeroy;
and five grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
·' She was also preceded in death by her stepfathers, Kenneth
Markins and Hobart Smalley; a grandson, Michael Bradley
Dean; a brother, Walter Ter,rell: a brother-in-law, Robert Reid;
ahd an aunt, Mildred Spencer.
·: Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Floyd Ross officiating. Burial will be
in Wells Cemetery. Friends may call at funeral home from 6-8
tonight.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice,
Meigs County Branch, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Residents in Ohio and California will get a chance co tell President Bush how he should
refo.rm Social Security, Rep. Rob Portman's office said
Wednesday.
The President's Commission to Strengthen Social Secudty
will hold two public meetings next month, one in Cincinnati
.'
on Sept. 21 and the other in San Diego on Sept. 6.
from Page A1
. "Our area of nearly 2 million people represents a micro,
XENIA (AP)- Detectives are teaching authorities how to
,
d
R
bl'
fi
·1
h 1
h
1
fi d cosm of the country, ' sai Portman, a
epu 1can rom
1
lk l.k
County Common Pleas ·
ta 1 e teen g1r s on t e nternet so t ey can earn to m
·
·1
d
ddl
Cincinnati.
'.'They
will
get
good,
common-sense
testimony
d
d I
h
an arrest a u ts w o see k· sex firom JUVem es an pe e
r- 0.11~, J· ,-t~~ pad ;o, right tQ .
h 'ld
h
from hardworking citizens who understand the need to 5ave
"' ' ... -~
c J pornograp Y·
·
dismiss Byrd's argument withnut hearing from witnesses.
Since last ye·ar, Xenia P91ice Department detectives Alonzo the system."
W .l
dD · B 1 h
t d d t b t e g' I on
Bush established the 16-n .. mber bipartisan commission to
"
1 son an
arrm ar ow ave pre en e o e e'. ' ~n~l~r:s_:'_rr:~,;i';j~;;~~;;;~~~~~d;·tio,~~~hii;_{~~~~~~;~~~~~~i'~~l~~~ih~-S~~iaci--II-_:_~~~td ~f:. :::il;~~~~-.~e~~~~UJt~~
- Greene Securitv system and improving its financial
Sept. 12 in what could be .
At th
d
Any pro·-·
m. a th1's week the detect1'v'es and
a ree- ay se m r
•
'1
Ohio's first electrocution in
County Assistant Prosecutor Craig C. King are showing posal would be subject to col)gl:'tssional approval.
years. The state's rwo exe38
about a dozen Ohio law enforcement officers and prosecucutions since 1963 have been
tors how to set up online sex crimes units.
.
by injection .
, The Ohio Parole Authority
Topics at the program in southwest Ohio range from setling up an America Online screen pseudonym to dodging a
CINCINNATI (AP) - Thunderstorms dumped heavy
i~ expected to recommend to
defense attorney's cry of entrapment in trial.
rain in parts of western Ohio on Wednesday, flooding streets
Taft on Friday whether Byrd ·
.
s.J;!Ould be granted clemency.
and triggering flash flood warnings.
The National Weather Service estimated that up to 4 inch~
Taft probably will make a
es
ofrain
fell
in
portions
of
Darke
County.
decision soon after hearing
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) - Authorities on Wednesday
The downpour flooded streets in the village of Palestine,
from the parole board, said
arrested a man who was accused of assaulting an Ohio state
Joe Andrews, a spokesman for
about 30 miles northwest of Dayton.
trooper and stealing his gun.
.
"It waneally pouring \!own," said Donna Grow, who works
Taft.
Lawrence Combs, 30, of Steubenville was awaiting extradi· The governor will decide
tion following his arrest in·a Wheeling hotel, authorities said. at the village post office. "It \V;\S 'like pitch dark. The electric'what other information he
He is charged in Ohio County, W.Va., with being a fugitive ity flashed a couple of times."
needs -· and from whom -.
from justice and in Jefferson County, Ohio, with felonious
to make a decision, Andrews
assault, theft of a firearm and aggravated robbery.
said.
He is accused ·of attacking State Highway Patrol Trooper
COLUMBUS (AP) - An Ohio State University spokesTaft did not meet with reiEric Golias early Sunday on Ohio 7 in Steubenville during a
woman said the unscientific ranking of the country's .top
~tives of Jay D. Scott or Wiltraffic stop. The patrol says he took Golias' gun, fled into
party schools, which listed OSU as No. 8, was unfair.
Steubenville and abandoned his vehicle.
ford Beery, the only two
"When you look at t~e attention that a survey like this
inmates put to death in Ohio
gets, it's unfortunate because I don't think it paints an accusince ·1963, while weighing
rate picture of life at Ohio State," said Elizabeth Conlisll:.
whether to grant them
is
a
big
place
and
there
are
a
lot
of
things
to
choose
"This
clemency, Andrews said.
CINCINNATI (AP) -Two boys accused of beating and
from.
·
None of their family memstomping an 8-year-old relativ.e to death were not allowed to
"Everybody knows that kids exaggerate how much they
attend her funeral Wednesday.
l\ers requested such ~ meetHamilton County Juvenile Court Judge Sylvia Hendon drink and how much they party. This is not a survey that
.
denied requests from the boys' mothers to. release them from we're taking seriously."
The list was . compiled by the Princeton Review in New
juvenile detention center so they could go to the service.
Prosecutors have said Takeya Bryant was raped and killed York, a company that sells testing materials for college
entrance exams.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

bituaries

Virginia L. De41n

0 2001 AccuWoalher, Inc.

,· '

Deaths

Thursday.Aucust2l.2DD1

Former chief at center with latest Bush showdown

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

To meet

EMS runs

Homecoming

Aid

from

RACOtomeet

VSC meeting

Firm

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Markets 'roundup

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Club to meet

ltACINE - Tyler J. JohnMIDDLEPORT - OH&lt;on, 17,54342 New Portland
RACINE - George Jacob Neigler, 81, of Racine, died Road, l'ortland, was cited for KAN Coin Club will hold its
unexpectedly 011 Wednesday, Au gmt 22, 2001 at hi1 re&lt;idence. :murc.d dear dtstance by the regular monthly meeting on
He was born in Hartford, West Virginia, on June 6, 1920, son Gallia-Meigs l'ost of the State Monday at 7 p.m., at the Trolof the late Howard D. and Frankie Pickens Neigler.
Highway Patrol following a ley Station in Middleport.
He was a retired union carpenter and a former t•mployee of two -vehicle accident WednclFree and paid drawings will
Pomeroy Cement Dlock Company.
day on County Road 34 be followed by an open aucHe was a veteran of the U.S. Army Air Force duri ng World (Pine Grove).
tion. Refre,hments will be
War II, and a nwmber of the Racine First Baptist Church a11d
Troope rs said Johmon was se rved . New member'i are ·
the Carpenters Union in Pomeroy. He was also a life member westbou nd. 200 feet east of welcome at $10 lor adults and
of American Legion Post No. t&gt;02, Tuppers Plain&lt; Post No. Sutton Township Road 118 $5 for children under 16.
9053, Veterans of Fore i~n Wars, and Post No. 53, Disabled (Amberger) at 7:30a.m. when In formation is available by
A1nerical1 Veterans ·.
he w.1s unable to stop in time writing to th e club at .100
Surviving are his wife, Beulah Marr Neigl er, whom he mar- and struck th e rear of a car Union Ave. , Pomeroy. Ohio
. ried on July 25, 1944 in Gal lipolis; two daughters and so Ill-in- driven by Urandy L. Lauder- 45769 .
law, June and Phillip Miller of Patriot, and Shirlee and Joe milt, 28, 45602 Morningstar
Cappo of Waynesboro, Virginia; a son and daughter-in-law, Road, Racine.
David G. and Tina Ncigler of Racine; and four grandchildre11,
laudernilt was stopped for
Sarah Miller, Billy Miller, Ginny Miller andJason Cappo.
HARRISONVILLE
traffic ahead at the time of the
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sis- crash, according to the report: Harrisonville Senior Citizens
ter, Selma Cross.
Damage to both vehicles Was will meet Aug. 27 at 1 I a.m. at
Services will be held on Friday, August 24, 2001 at 2 p.m . at slight.
the Scipio Fir:ehouse. Blood
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Riel.
pressures will be tak en.
Rule officiating. Burial will follow at l etart Falls Cemetery.
Potluck dinner will follow. All
Military graveside se rvices will be co ndu cted by Racine Post
seniors are invited to attend. ·
No. 602, American Legion, and Tuppers Plains Post No. Y053
PO MEROY - Units of
oftheVFW
the Meigs Emergency Service
Friends may call at the fUiieral home on Thursday, August 23, answered six calls for assis2001 from 6-9 p.m.
tance on Wednesday. Units
RUTLAND - Hysell Run
responded as follows:
Church will hold homecomCENTRAL DISPATCH ing services on Saturday, with
"I am pleased that th e
1:37 a.m., Powell Street, dinner and special singing,
Emergency, Shelter Grant !Jawne Borden, Holzer Med- . beginning ac 1 p.m.
Program allows th e state ' to ical Center;
PapAl
3:45
a. m., · Butternut
assist those who are committed to· helping Ohio's home- Avenue, Clarence Cogar,
employment opp01;tumt1es less pers 0 ns," said Gov. Bob HMC;
RACINE - Racine Area
for residents of the shelter.
· Taft, after he was asked about
11:38 a.m., Ohio 692. ,, Community Organization
"This funding will definite- the assistance program.
Louise Burbri_dge, O'Bleness will meet on Aug: 28 at 6:30
ly help pay our operating
p.m . All volunteer fair gate
The · Emergency Shelter Memorial Hospital;.
expenses and keep hope alive
3:41 p.m., Coal Street, workers are invited.
Grant Program is funded
for many homeless individuthrough a combi.nation of Michael Fryar, treated.
als," said Stotts.
RACINE
federal McKinney EmerOhio
Department
of
10:.1 0 a.m., Sixth Street,
Development's Office of gency Shelter Grant Program George Neigler, dead on
POMEROY
Meigs
Housing and Community funds, monies appropriated by arrival.
County Veterans Servjce
Partnerships administers the the legislature and federal
RUTLAND
Commission will meet on
Eoiergency · Shelter Grant funds from the Ohio Small
11:38 a.m., Nelson Road, Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Program and fimds are award- Cities Community Develop- Eva Parsons, Jackson General office · at 117 E. Memorial
ed on a formula basis .to non- ment Block grant Program.
Hospital.
'
Drive, Pomeroy.
·'
Meigs ' County Homeless
profit organizations, cities and
counties th at are current for- Shelter is a program of Serenmula grantees.
ity House.
'T m surprised any time a
public entity on a matter as
important as this perhaps
could have done better," he
from PageAl
said Wednesday. "But looking
$922,000 analysis of the state's forward, I suppose we always
AEP - 447.
Federal Mogul - 1
Premier- 9
. history of contracting with can do better and should aspire
Arch Coal - 19).
USB - 25
Rockwell - 16},
minority- and female-owned to do better."
Akzo-44%
Gannett - 627.
Rocky Bools - 6
The study itself has a troubusinesses.
AmTect&gt;SBC- 42),
General Electric - 40l. RD ·Shell - 57
Ashland Inc. :..._ 41),
bl
ed-hi~tory~
. ~·~~
GKNbcY---4'/,
-~~:sears--44'1·---Among-other-findings:- AT&amp;T -19),
Harley DavidsOn - 50
Shoney's - ),
It was conceived after U.S.
-Statistically significant
Bank One- 37
Kmart- 12
Wai·Mart - SO),
disparities exist between the District Judge James Graham
BLI- 11),
Kroger - 26:'.
Wendy's- 29
Bob Evans- 20Y.
Lands End- 37
Worthington - 14),
availability of minority firms ruled in 1998 that the state's
BorgWarner - so\,
Lid. - lSi,
Daily slack reports are
and their use by the state. Dis- minority set-aside program for
Champion - 3 ~.
NSC- 19),
the 4 p.m. closing
parities varied by agency and construction contracts was
Charming Shops - 6 ~
Oak Hm Financial - 16. quotes of lhe previous
City Holding - 11 ~
OVB - 25
day's transactions, pro·
unconstitutional. The program
type of contract.
Col-197.
BBT- 38 ~
vided by Smith Part·
- Minority firms have a had given minority- owned
DuPont - 41 Y.
ners al Advesllnc.
Peoples - 22
better record of receiving pri- companies a certain percentvate sector construction con- .age of state business since
tracts in Ohio than state con- 1980.
The study by D.J. Miller, a
tracts.
August 22, 2001
12,000
- Most agencies kept black-owned company, was
to
determine
Dow Jones
incomplete information ()n supposed
11,000
their history of awarding con- whether the state discriminatIndustrials
ed in the past against minoritracts of all types.
10,000
The study recommends the ties in awarding state contracts.
state adopt uniform standards
10,276.90
9,000
Pet change 1rom pmvliius
for collecting data and keeping
+1.01
records related to contracts.
High
8,000
Low
" The study results ~ re
10,305.13
10,134.50
~
mixed," said Ben Pi sd~ li ,
Record high: 11 ,722.98 '-~-----'--~"---- 7.000
JULY
AUGUST
spo kesman for th e Ohio
Jan. 14,2000
MAY
JUNE
Department of Administrative
1,500
Services. "Numbers show disAugust 22, 2001
crepancies in some ogencies
standard&amp;
but not in others."
1,1100
Poor's500
He refused to conunent'furth er.
1.300
-,:,~.05
D.]. Miller &amp; Associates
1,165.31
refused
1.200
comment, pending the
Pet change tram previous
study 's release Thursday.
+0.70
Told of the report's findings,
1.100
High
Low
1,168.56
1,1 53.34
Rep. Jon Peterson, a Delaware
. I,COO .
Record high: 1,527.46
R epublican who is on a comAUGUST •
JULY
March 24, 2000
MAY
JUNE
mittee overseeing the study,
said the results were surprising.

AP

Outside Hymn Sing On The Knob
When : Saturday August 25th
Where : Freedom Gospel Mission

AMERICAN OUTLAWS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 8:10
MATINEES SAT 6 SUN 1:10 I 3:10

AMERICAN PIE 2 (R)
7:15 '8:30
MATINEES BAT &amp; BUN 1:11 I 3:30

··cHURCH I s lo c:-~ted on Bald - Knob St ivcr sv illc Rd . on
County Ad . 31, in Portland, Ohiou
Time . 5: 00p .m .

'
Delivered (From Portland, OH)
o
Eternal Life ( From Jackson, WV)
Jodi Rife ( From Gallipolis, OH) .
There will be FREE hotdogs &amp; refreshments ...
SO PACK UP YOUR LAWN CHAIRS &amp; COME &lt;PRAISE
THE LORD&gt; ALONG WITH US...
:

t .... _ _ ,,.,.__w
...E_H__
oP....E ~~~~~!!~.~-~·~·--

MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:00 I 3:30

..•

RUSH HOUR 2 (P013)
7:30 &amp; 9:30
MATINEESSAT · SUN 1:301 3:30

THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G)
7:00 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT· SUN 1:00.3:20

PLANET OF THE APES (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30
MATINEES SAT- SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

9:55

~)I*- BltCiylll..lmQISI!i

N, Sbotl1 Slllrtl111 FrlUy
JGM~I

GHOSTS OF MARS ~

7:051 9:30

lllf~l:ell.le,PJnlia

JAY,. !lilT 101 SIIIE ua 7:30, to:OO
(CIItiy1 Kftil !ml\ Jasti~ Lll.llli Pai

BUBBLE BOY

II

,...., 7:50,

~lll;'blal '1m Tqr, Jikeil]lmal

All AGES, All TIMES $4.00

�Thursday, Aug. 23, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

PageAl

Ohio

•

Friday, Aug. 24
AccuWeathere forecast for

PA.

•

_ W
.VA
KY.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The latest
environmental flash point for the Bush
administration is a bit of a surprise. After
all, Donald Schregardus, Bush's pick to be
the nation's top environmental enforcement pfficer, was so low profile during
eight yean as Ohio's top consefV?!tion
official · that some environmentalists in
that state still cap't pronounce his name.
A dozen national environmental groups
have announced opposition to his
appointment, with a spokesman for one
calling Schregardus a "one-man environmental wrecking ball." Two Democratic ·
senators - New York's Charles Schumer
and California's Barbara Boxer - have
placed a "hold" on his nomination, effectively halting confirmation by the full
Senate.
If confirmed to the Environmental

Protection Agency po;t, as the assistant
administrator for enforcement and compliance, Schregardus's job would be to
enforce federal clean air, hazardous waste,
water and pesticide laws.
Some who knew Schregardus (shrubGAR'-duhs) when he headed the Ohio
environmental agency expressed surprise
that his nomination has created controversy.
"My first experience with him was to
be beat up because he was a tough
enforcer," said Columbus .attorney Rob
Brubaker, who represented utilities in
lawsuits pitting him against the Ohio olEcia!. "Donald Schregardus is not a partisan
political guy. The record speaks for itself."
Schregarous, 50, started his career in
1974 at the EPA's regional office · in
Chicago as a water quality expert. The

Cleveland native returned to Ohio in
1989 to work under former Democratic
Gov. Richard Celeste. He ran the 1,400employee Ohio EPA from 1991 to 1999
under then-Republican Gov. George
Voinovich, who now is a senator.
Schregardus did not return phone calls
seeking comment; But Voinovic~
spokesman ScQtt Milburn said his accomplishments include improv~d staff training, bringing all 88 counttes and every
metropolitan area in 0 hio into co~pli­
ance with the Clean Air Act and tripling
the amount of fines collected fiom Ohio
polluters.
Milburn dismissed the opposition to
Schregardus as purely political and meant
to exact concessions from the Bush
administration as Congress considers the
president's energy plan.

to look for the bodies of two more women who may have
been killed by the same man.
'&lt;'"
Sunny PI, ~ 0ou&lt;1y
Showe11 T-storma
Rain
Aurriea
Snow
Ice
"We know that their bodies were dumped in two other
,_
areas of the county. We'll continue our search ... ," Jefferson
County Sheriff Fred Abdalla said Wednesday night.
The body was found Wednesday after a man arrested in
another unspecified state said he had shot a woman to. death
,
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
shine. High in the mid 80s. on Aug. 17 in Mingo Junction, Abdalla said.
The man said he and another man had taken the woman's
The rain was ending across Light and variable wind.
thwe region just in time for
Friday night ... Mostly clear. body to Fernwood State Forest, about 5 miles southwest of
Steubenville, and set it on fire, according to the sheriff.
the weekend.
Low in the lower 60s.
The National Weather SerExtended forecast:
vice said high pressure buildSaturday... Partly
cloudy.
ing into the region would pro- High in .the mid 80s.
LANCASTER (AP) - An Ohio woman who won two
vide partly sunny skies and · Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
highs in the mid-SO on Friday with a chance of showers and Emmys for outstanding makeup artistry while working on
and Saturday.
thunderstorms. Low in the ABC's "General Hospital" soap opera has died.
Pamela Kay Cole, 52, of Amanda, Ohio, died Wednesday at
Sunset tonight will be at upper 60s and high in the
her home. The cause of death was not immediately known .
8:17, and sunrise on Friday is . lower 80s.
Her
family was with her.
at 6:51 a.m.
Monday... A chance of
Cole was born in Hamilton County on May 21,1949.After
Weather forecast:
showers during the day... Othgraduating
from A-C High School in 1967, she became a
Tonight ... A chance
of erwise partly cloudy. Low in
showers and thunderstorms the upper 60s and high in the flight attendant .with United Airlilles. Later, she joined the
ABC soap opera "General Hospital" where she won two
eady. Remaining mostly lower SOs.
cloudy with areas offog formTuesday... Partly cloudy. Low Emmys for her work in the makeup department, the Laning. Low in the upper 60s. in the lower 60s and. high in caster-Eagle Gazette rel'orted.
Cole was also a former president of the Clearcreek EleWest wind 5 to 10 mph . the upper 70s.
becoming light. Chance of
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. mentary Parent-Teacher Organization and a member of the
rain 30 percent.
Low in the lower 60s and high Clearcreek Township Ladies Auxiliary.
Friday... Morning clouds and in the upper 70s.
fog, giving way to some sun-

0 ~---··-..~•

•

//.('

t

...

.LOOo••~&lt;

'&lt;'

Rain will·end in area tonight

Emmy Award winner dies

•

'

Aug. 15 by her 13-year-old com~n, who was baby-sitting h~r.
and three of her siblings. The g1rl s 11-year-old brother also n
accused in her death.
Both boys were. charged as juveniles with murder. The 13year-old also was charged with three counts of rape.

BB shot killed teenager.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The 13-year-old boy killed in a
drive-by shooting while he· picked fruit Tuesday was shot
with a BB, not a bullet, police said.
At a news conference Wednesday, Mayor Michael R. White
displayed a small, round BB that police said had killed Bozak.
"These type of pellets are in the air rifles and air guns of
children across this entire city and entire county and they will
kill," White said. "Parents ought to be looking at what their
children are carrying, and look at what they are doing with
these weapons,"White said.
.
Raymond Bozak was picking fruit from a tree in front of
Cavotta's Garden Center in the city's Collinwood neighborhood when he was shot by a gunman in a passing car.

ss hearings set for Ohio

'.
.,

'

does not enter the area
through entrances, windows,
ventilation systems or any
from PapAl
other means."
"No Smoking" signs are to
that the employer is responsi- be p9sted, O'D~ll said. She
ble for advising employees of also noted that the health
the new regulation so that the department personnel will
business or facility can be in conducted sessions to help
_compliance by providing a
employees and others quite
smokefree workplace within
smoking.
the time frame set by the
O'Dell said the purpose of
health department. It also
the
program is educate and
provides for nonretaliation
toward employees who report protect the health of Meigs
County residents.
'(riolations to officials.
"Tobacco is responsible for
· · Also included in the regulation is a requirement that one in every five deaths and
"smoking occur at a reason- Meigs County has the highest
able distance of 20 or more cancer rate in the state. It is
'
feet outside any enclosed area the right of all adults and chilwhere · smoking is prohibited dren to breathe clean air in all
to insure that tobacco smoke public ~laces;' she concluded.

Rules

BJlld

Police share anti-pom tips

Ky. gift entertains clinic
CLEVELAND (AP) - ·cancer patient Jonathan Ferguson
went on a mission and returned to Cleveland Clinic Hospital with a
from
attention other than medical
treatments.
They have about 2,200 videos that Ferguson's Kentucky
friends, neighbors and others in Ashland donated because
Ferguson asked. The video drive started with one e-mail message. In the Ohio River town of 23,000, word spread quickly.
.
Soon schools were holding c.&lt;.&gt;ntests to see who could collect the most movies . Boxes of videos showed up.

State demands back wages
COLUMBUS (AP) - Contractors who have been accused
· of underpaying workers building student housing at Ohio
University aie facing $756,072 in fines and back Wages, stare
regulators said.
,
.
The fines and back_ wages were ordered by· the Ohio
Department of Commerce Wage and Hour Bureau.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported Thursday that more
fines and demands for back wages are possible. The stat~
agency continues to cry to obtain payroll records from more
than a dozen subcontractors.
Commerce officials began their probe last spring when
union leaders complained that contractors had not paid the
required union-negotiated wages, employed illegal immigrants and allowed minors to work on the .·site.

Burned body found in forest
STEUBENVILLE (AP) '\uthorities who found a
woman's burned body in a state forest planned on Thursday

1

Rain soaks ·Western Ohio

Assault susped arrested

OSU finds ranking unfair

· Boys can't attend funeral

mg.
Hamer and several religious
and human-righll organizations appealed to Taft to commu. te Byrd's sentence to life i_n
pnson and to put a morator_1·llJ1' on .. the death penalty m
Ohio.
"Once Johnny is executl'd,
there'S no bringing him
back," Hamer said, her voice
cracking and her eyes brimming with tears.
As Byrd's execution nears,
Hamer' said she can't help but
be reminded of her relationship with her brother.
She recalled climbing trees
him during their childhood,
as well as her only meeting
with him - a two-hour visit
last week- in th e more than
18 years he has bee n in
pnson.
"I finally got to hug him,"
she said. "Even in prison, he is
still teaching me faith; forgiveness and strength never to
. up."
'
g1ve
Byrd came within hours of
execution in 1994 before the
U.S. Supreme Court stepped
in to allow his appeals to proceed. He had chosen electrocution at the time and will do
so again to illustrate the bru"
tality of capital punishment,
his lawyers say.

.MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

Court overtums ruling on Megan's Law challenge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _: The
state's 1997 sex offender law, named for a
slain New Jersey girl, does not violate the
separation of powers required in the state
constitution, the Ohio Supreme Court
ruled Wednesday.
The court ruled 7-0 that Megan's Law,
which requires a judge to. consider several factors before labeling someone a sexual predator, does not override the judge's
own discretion.
Those factors include a defendant's age,
pnor criminal record, the victim's age and
the· nature of the defendant's sexual conduct.
The case involved the 1975 rape senrenee of Montgomery County defendant
David Thompson.
After Thompson was found guilty of a
parole violation, a Montgomery County
judge conducted a hearing in 1999 and
labeled Thompson a sexual predator.
Thompson appealed that ruling to the
2nd Ohio District Court of Appeals in
Dayton. He argued that requiring judges
to consider those factors violated the sep-

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Thompson appealed that ruling · decisions on whether a defendant was a
to the 2nd Ohio District Co11rt sexual predator could very widely .
depending on a judge's own viewpoint
ofAppeals in Dayton. He
on the issue."
argued tlrat requiring judges to
Carley Ingram, a Montgomery County
conside.r those factors violated . assistant prosecutor, said she believes the
decisi9n may signal the end oflegal chal. tlte separation of powers
doctrine meant to preserve tlte lenges to Ohio's sexual predator law.
A message seeking comment on the
independence of the state's
r1.1ling was left with Thompson's attorney
judicial, legislative and
·William Ary.
exec11tive branches.
The ruling was the latest in a series of
. aration of powers doctrine meant to preserve .the independence oft1le state's judicial,legislative and executive branches.
The court agreed in November 1999
and returned the case to the trial judge.
Wedne~day 's ruling overturned the
appeals court decision .
The factors a judge must consider "are
guidelines that serve an important function by providing a fram ework to assist
judges," Justice Evelyn Lllfldberg Stratton
wrote. "Without such gtl-i'*lines, judges
would be left in un charted waters and

••

challenges to the law.
In April 2000, the court ruled that the
law; which requires communities to be
notified of sex offenders living nearby,
does not deprive defendants of rights the
state constitution guarantees.
In July 1999, the court ruled 6-1 that a
sexual offender already released from
prison cannot Iacer be labeled a sexual
predator.
In September 1998, the court ruled 70 that offenders can be labeled sexual ·
predators even if their crimes. were committed before ~he law went· into effect.

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ill'rited to atteDd. This is • peat
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paHDts to ~t the school.
clasll'OOID, and meet the Great Stall'
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LOCAL BRIEFS
Driver ticketed

George Jacob Neigler

·POMEROY - Virginia L. D.ean. 71, Wolfe Pen Road,
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Aug. 21, 2001 at the extended care unit
dfVeterans Memorial Hospital, following an extended illness.
. She was born on Oct. 24, 1929 in Meigs County, daughter
of the late Thomas and Vermont Brown Terrell . She was a
homemaker and a caretaker, and attended Carleton Church.
, Surviving are her hu,band, John A.. Dean of Pomeroy: two
sons and daughters-in-law, John W and Belinda Dean of
Pomeroy, and Richard L. and Tussinee , Dean of San Angelo,
Texas; two brothers and a sister- in -law, Robert and Frances
Sinalley of Weirton, WVa., and Mary Terrell of Pataskalo; rwo
sisters , Betty Reid QfPataskala, aild Donna Young of Pomeroy;
and five grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
·' She was also preceded in death by her stepfathers, Kenneth
Markins and Hobart Smalley; a grandson, Michael Bradley
Dean; a brother, Walter Ter,rell: a brother-in-law, Robert Reid;
ahd an aunt, Mildred Spencer.
·: Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Floyd Ross officiating. Burial will be
in Wells Cemetery. Friends may call at funeral home from 6-8
tonight.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Hospice,
Meigs County Branch, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Residents in Ohio and California will get a chance co tell President Bush how he should
refo.rm Social Security, Rep. Rob Portman's office said
Wednesday.
The President's Commission to Strengthen Social Secudty
will hold two public meetings next month, one in Cincinnati
.'
on Sept. 21 and the other in San Diego on Sept. 6.
from Page A1
. "Our area of nearly 2 million people represents a micro,
XENIA (AP)- Detectives are teaching authorities how to
,
d
R
bl'
fi
·1
h 1
h
1
fi d cosm of the country, ' sai Portman, a
epu 1can rom
1
lk l.k
County Common Pleas ·
ta 1 e teen g1r s on t e nternet so t ey can earn to m
·
·1
d
ddl
Cincinnati.
'.'They
will
get
good,
common-sense
testimony
d
d I
h
an arrest a u ts w o see k· sex firom JUVem es an pe e
r- 0.11~, J· ,-t~~ pad ;o, right tQ .
h 'ld
h
from hardworking citizens who understand the need to 5ave
"' ' ... -~
c J pornograp Y·
·
dismiss Byrd's argument withnut hearing from witnesses.
Since last ye·ar, Xenia P91ice Department detectives Alonzo the system."
W .l
dD · B 1 h
t d d t b t e g' I on
Bush established the 16-n .. mber bipartisan commission to
"
1 son an
arrm ar ow ave pre en e o e e'. ' ~n~l~r:s_:'_rr:~,;i';j~;;~~;;;~~~~~d;·tio,~~~hii;_{~~~~~~;~~~~~~i'~~l~~~ih~-S~~iaci--II-_:_~~~td ~f:. :::il;~~~~-.~e~~~~UJt~~
- Greene Securitv system and improving its financial
Sept. 12 in what could be .
At th
d
Any pro·-·
m. a th1's week the detect1'v'es and
a ree- ay se m r
•
'1
Ohio's first electrocution in
County Assistant Prosecutor Craig C. King are showing posal would be subject to col)gl:'tssional approval.
years. The state's rwo exe38
about a dozen Ohio law enforcement officers and prosecucutions since 1963 have been
tors how to set up online sex crimes units.
.
by injection .
, The Ohio Parole Authority
Topics at the program in southwest Ohio range from setling up an America Online screen pseudonym to dodging a
CINCINNATI (AP) - Thunderstorms dumped heavy
i~ expected to recommend to
defense attorney's cry of entrapment in trial.
rain in parts of western Ohio on Wednesday, flooding streets
Taft on Friday whether Byrd ·
.
s.J;!Ould be granted clemency.
and triggering flash flood warnings.
The National Weather Service estimated that up to 4 inch~
Taft probably will make a
es
ofrain
fell
in
portions
of
Darke
County.
decision soon after hearing
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) - Authorities on Wednesday
The downpour flooded streets in the village of Palestine,
from the parole board, said
arrested a man who was accused of assaulting an Ohio state
Joe Andrews, a spokesman for
about 30 miles northwest of Dayton.
trooper and stealing his gun.
.
"It waneally pouring \!own," said Donna Grow, who works
Taft.
Lawrence Combs, 30, of Steubenville was awaiting extradi· The governor will decide
tion following his arrest in·a Wheeling hotel, authorities said. at the village post office. "It \V;\S 'like pitch dark. The electric'what other information he
He is charged in Ohio County, W.Va., with being a fugitive ity flashed a couple of times."
needs -· and from whom -.
from justice and in Jefferson County, Ohio, with felonious
to make a decision, Andrews
assault, theft of a firearm and aggravated robbery.
said.
He is accused ·of attacking State Highway Patrol Trooper
COLUMBUS (AP) - An Ohio State University spokesTaft did not meet with reiEric Golias early Sunday on Ohio 7 in Steubenville during a
woman said the unscientific ranking of the country's .top
~tives of Jay D. Scott or Wiltraffic stop. The patrol says he took Golias' gun, fled into
party schools, which listed OSU as No. 8, was unfair.
Steubenville and abandoned his vehicle.
ford Beery, the only two
"When you look at t~e attention that a survey like this
inmates put to death in Ohio
gets, it's unfortunate because I don't think it paints an accusince ·1963, while weighing
rate picture of life at Ohio State," said Elizabeth Conlisll:.
whether to grant them
is
a
big
place
and
there
are
a
lot
of
things
to
choose
"This
clemency, Andrews said.
CINCINNATI (AP) -Two boys accused of beating and
from.
·
None of their family memstomping an 8-year-old relativ.e to death were not allowed to
"Everybody knows that kids exaggerate how much they
attend her funeral Wednesday.
l\ers requested such ~ meetHamilton County Juvenile Court Judge Sylvia Hendon drink and how much they party. This is not a survey that
.
denied requests from the boys' mothers to. release them from we're taking seriously."
The list was . compiled by the Princeton Review in New
juvenile detention center so they could go to the service.
Prosecutors have said Takeya Bryant was raped and killed York, a company that sells testing materials for college
entrance exams.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

bituaries

Virginia L. De41n

0 2001 AccuWoalher, Inc.

,· '

Deaths

Thursday.Aucust2l.2DD1

Former chief at center with latest Bush showdown

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

To meet

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Homecoming

Aid

from

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Firm

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Club to meet

ltACINE - Tyler J. JohnMIDDLEPORT - OH&lt;on, 17,54342 New Portland
RACINE - George Jacob Neigler, 81, of Racine, died Road, l'ortland, was cited for KAN Coin Club will hold its
unexpectedly 011 Wednesday, Au gmt 22, 2001 at hi1 re&lt;idence. :murc.d dear dtstance by the regular monthly meeting on
He was born in Hartford, West Virginia, on June 6, 1920, son Gallia-Meigs l'ost of the State Monday at 7 p.m., at the Trolof the late Howard D. and Frankie Pickens Neigler.
Highway Patrol following a ley Station in Middleport.
He was a retired union carpenter and a former t•mployee of two -vehicle accident WednclFree and paid drawings will
Pomeroy Cement Dlock Company.
day on County Road 34 be followed by an open aucHe was a veteran of the U.S. Army Air Force duri ng World (Pine Grove).
tion. Refre,hments will be
War II, and a nwmber of the Racine First Baptist Church a11d
Troope rs said Johmon was se rved . New member'i are ·
the Carpenters Union in Pomeroy. He was also a life member westbou nd. 200 feet east of welcome at $10 lor adults and
of American Legion Post No. t&gt;02, Tuppers Plain&lt; Post No. Sutton Township Road 118 $5 for children under 16.
9053, Veterans of Fore i~n Wars, and Post No. 53, Disabled (Amberger) at 7:30a.m. when In formation is available by
A1nerical1 Veterans ·.
he w.1s unable to stop in time writing to th e club at .100
Surviving are his wife, Beulah Marr Neigl er, whom he mar- and struck th e rear of a car Union Ave. , Pomeroy. Ohio
. ried on July 25, 1944 in Gal lipolis; two daughters and so Ill-in- driven by Urandy L. Lauder- 45769 .
law, June and Phillip Miller of Patriot, and Shirlee and Joe milt, 28, 45602 Morningstar
Cappo of Waynesboro, Virginia; a son and daughter-in-law, Road, Racine.
David G. and Tina Ncigler of Racine; and four grandchildre11,
laudernilt was stopped for
Sarah Miller, Billy Miller, Ginny Miller andJason Cappo.
HARRISONVILLE
traffic ahead at the time of the
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sis- crash, according to the report: Harrisonville Senior Citizens
ter, Selma Cross.
Damage to both vehicles Was will meet Aug. 27 at 1 I a.m. at
Services will be held on Friday, August 24, 2001 at 2 p.m . at slight.
the Scipio Fir:ehouse. Blood
the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Riel.
pressures will be tak en.
Rule officiating. Burial will follow at l etart Falls Cemetery.
Potluck dinner will follow. All
Military graveside se rvices will be co ndu cted by Racine Post
seniors are invited to attend. ·
No. 602, American Legion, and Tuppers Plains Post No. Y053
PO MEROY - Units of
oftheVFW
the Meigs Emergency Service
Friends may call at the fUiieral home on Thursday, August 23, answered six calls for assis2001 from 6-9 p.m.
tance on Wednesday. Units
RUTLAND - Hysell Run
responded as follows:
Church will hold homecomCENTRAL DISPATCH ing services on Saturday, with
"I am pleased that th e
1:37 a.m., Powell Street, dinner and special singing,
Emergency, Shelter Grant !Jawne Borden, Holzer Med- . beginning ac 1 p.m.
Program allows th e state ' to ical Center;
PapAl
3:45
a. m., · Butternut
assist those who are committed to· helping Ohio's home- Avenue, Clarence Cogar,
employment opp01;tumt1es less pers 0 ns," said Gov. Bob HMC;
RACINE - Racine Area
for residents of the shelter.
· Taft, after he was asked about
11:38 a.m., Ohio 692. ,, Community Organization
"This funding will definite- the assistance program.
Louise Burbri_dge, O'Bleness will meet on Aug: 28 at 6:30
ly help pay our operating
p.m . All volunteer fair gate
The · Emergency Shelter Memorial Hospital;.
expenses and keep hope alive
3:41 p.m., Coal Street, workers are invited.
Grant Program is funded
for many homeless individuthrough a combi.nation of Michael Fryar, treated.
als," said Stotts.
RACINE
federal McKinney EmerOhio
Department
of
10:.1 0 a.m., Sixth Street,
Development's Office of gency Shelter Grant Program George Neigler, dead on
POMEROY
Meigs
Housing and Community funds, monies appropriated by arrival.
County Veterans Servjce
Partnerships administers the the legislature and federal
RUTLAND
Commission will meet on
Eoiergency · Shelter Grant funds from the Ohio Small
11:38 a.m., Nelson Road, Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Program and fimds are award- Cities Community Develop- Eva Parsons, Jackson General office · at 117 E. Memorial
ed on a formula basis .to non- ment Block grant Program.
Hospital.
'
Drive, Pomeroy.
·'
Meigs ' County Homeless
profit organizations, cities and
counties th at are current for- Shelter is a program of Serenmula grantees.
ity House.
'T m surprised any time a
public entity on a matter as
important as this perhaps
could have done better," he
from PageAl
said Wednesday. "But looking
$922,000 analysis of the state's forward, I suppose we always
AEP - 447.
Federal Mogul - 1
Premier- 9
. history of contracting with can do better and should aspire
Arch Coal - 19).
USB - 25
Rockwell - 16},
minority- and female-owned to do better."
Akzo-44%
Gannett - 627.
Rocky Bools - 6
The study itself has a troubusinesses.
AmTect&gt;SBC- 42),
General Electric - 40l. RD ·Shell - 57
Ashland Inc. :..._ 41),
bl
ed-hi~tory~
. ~·~~
GKNbcY---4'/,
-~~:sears--44'1·---Among-other-findings:- AT&amp;T -19),
Harley DavidsOn - 50
Shoney's - ),
It was conceived after U.S.
-Statistically significant
Bank One- 37
Kmart- 12
Wai·Mart - SO),
disparities exist between the District Judge James Graham
BLI- 11),
Kroger - 26:'.
Wendy's- 29
Bob Evans- 20Y.
Lands End- 37
Worthington - 14),
availability of minority firms ruled in 1998 that the state's
BorgWarner - so\,
Lid. - lSi,
Daily slack reports are
and their use by the state. Dis- minority set-aside program for
Champion - 3 ~.
NSC- 19),
the 4 p.m. closing
parities varied by agency and construction contracts was
Charming Shops - 6 ~
Oak Hm Financial - 16. quotes of lhe previous
City Holding - 11 ~
OVB - 25
day's transactions, pro·
unconstitutional. The program
type of contract.
Col-197.
BBT- 38 ~
vided by Smith Part·
- Minority firms have a had given minority- owned
DuPont - 41 Y.
ners al Advesllnc.
Peoples - 22
better record of receiving pri- companies a certain percentvate sector construction con- .age of state business since
tracts in Ohio than state con- 1980.
The study by D.J. Miller, a
tracts.
August 22, 2001
12,000
- Most agencies kept black-owned company, was
to
determine
Dow Jones
incomplete information ()n supposed
11,000
their history of awarding con- whether the state discriminatIndustrials
ed in the past against minoritracts of all types.
10,000
The study recommends the ties in awarding state contracts.
state adopt uniform standards
10,276.90
9,000
Pet change 1rom pmvliius
for collecting data and keeping
+1.01
records related to contracts.
High
8,000
Low
" The study results ~ re
10,305.13
10,134.50
~
mixed," said Ben Pi sd~ li ,
Record high: 11 ,722.98 '-~-----'--~"---- 7.000
JULY
AUGUST
spo kesman for th e Ohio
Jan. 14,2000
MAY
JUNE
Department of Administrative
1,500
Services. "Numbers show disAugust 22, 2001
crepancies in some ogencies
standard&amp;
but not in others."
1,1100
Poor's500
He refused to conunent'furth er.
1.300
-,:,~.05
D.]. Miller &amp; Associates
1,165.31
refused
1.200
comment, pending the
Pet change tram previous
study 's release Thursday.
+0.70
Told of the report's findings,
1.100
High
Low
1,168.56
1,1 53.34
Rep. Jon Peterson, a Delaware
. I,COO .
Record high: 1,527.46
R epublican who is on a comAUGUST •
JULY
March 24, 2000
MAY
JUNE
mittee overseeing the study,
said the results were surprising.

AP

Outside Hymn Sing On The Knob
When : Saturday August 25th
Where : Freedom Gospel Mission

AMERICAN OUTLAWS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 8:10
MATINEES SAT 6 SUN 1:10 I 3:10

AMERICAN PIE 2 (R)
7:15 '8:30
MATINEES BAT &amp; BUN 1:11 I 3:30

··cHURCH I s lo c:-~ted on Bald - Knob St ivcr sv illc Rd . on
County Ad . 31, in Portland, Ohiou
Time . 5: 00p .m .

'
Delivered (From Portland, OH)
o
Eternal Life ( From Jackson, WV)
Jodi Rife ( From Gallipolis, OH) .
There will be FREE hotdogs &amp; refreshments ...
SO PACK UP YOUR LAWN CHAIRS &amp; COME &lt;PRAISE
THE LORD&gt; ALONG WITH US...
:

t .... _ _ ,,.,.__w
...E_H__
oP....E ~~~~~!!~.~-~·~·--

MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:00 I 3:30

..•

RUSH HOUR 2 (P013)
7:30 &amp; 9:30
MATINEESSAT · SUN 1:301 3:30

THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G)
7:00 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT· SUN 1:00.3:20

PLANET OF THE APES (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30
MATINEES SAT- SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

9:55

~)I*- BltCiylll..lmQISI!i

N, Sbotl1 Slllrtl111 FrlUy
JGM~I

GHOSTS OF MARS ~

7:051 9:30

lllf~l:ell.le,PJnlia

JAY,. !lilT 101 SIIIE ua 7:30, to:OO
(CIItiy1 Kftil !ml\ Jasti~ Lll.llli Pai

BUBBLE BOY

II

,...., 7:50,

~lll;'blal '1m Tqr, Jikeil]lmal

All AGES, All TIMES $4.00

�..
0 ~Jinlon

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

{!®#/

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Thursday, Aupst l:J, 1001

•

.

l.dttrs to th~ M ilar are wknm•. Th•y rlt011lll b• l11J tllln JOO won/1. AU Urtm
n" subjrct to editing and must be signed lUfd inclutN addnll «lld tehrhonl rt,MMMr.
No unsigtud li!ttl!rJ will IH pu.bltJir1d. Utun rltoMI4 bf ilt roM 141111, tulllrt11U.1
inllf'~·. nvt penonalitin.
l'hl' CJPiiJions txpnutd ;,. th't column bt low 11n 1111 COIIJIIIIMI of till 011/o Mill.,
Puh/islii"K C11. 'i rdiluriallmtud, 1111leu Qllterwiu lt ottfl.

NATIONAL VIEW

• Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City, on NATO troops in the
If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the
Balk.Jn, po rt:lon should be pothole-free for at least a few centuries. NATO's wdl-m eaning meddling in Kosovo ... has
pushed nei~;hbo r i n g Macedonia to the brink of civil war.
T he bc·st tha t Macedoni a can reasonably hope today is that a
shaky p~ac e deal is reached, under which· NATO would send
in 3,1 1110 troops to di sarm ethnic Albanian Muslirru ... . The
wor&lt;t-case sc&lt; nario, which appears more likely every day, is
anothn Balkans war.
No om· intended for Kosovo's militants to spread unrest and
weapom to Macedonia when NATO launched its invasion in
1999; the . inten tion was to stop the Serbs from " cleansing"
. Kmovo of ethnic Albanians.
But what is it th ey say about the best-laid plans? NATO
stop ped the Serbs from expelling the Muslilll5, then stood by
dumbfo unded as the Muslims turned around and "cleansed"
muc h of Kosovo of Serbs,Jews and Gypsies . ... .
If peace talks fail, NATO wo uld have to intervene, according
to the all iance's commander during the Kosovo campaign,
because "N ATO cannot accept another war in the Balkans."
Part in ii;rly a war of its own making, the commander might
have adde d.
It is time for U.S. leaders to acknowledge that NATO has
· solved nothing in th e Balkans. It has replaced stability ... with
· an unstable peace that depends on a heavy presence of foreign
8.1/~,,, ,.,

Congress and Bush should direct punishment at Arafat

"or else."

·

On occasion, Bush and Vice President
Cheney have indlcated they sympathize
with Israel's effort to pre-empt terrorist
attacks, even by assassinating militant
leaders, and to punish Arafat's Palestinian
Authority following acts of Violence.
At other times, though, pronouncements by Secretary of State Colin Powell and Bush make it seem that the
administration considers Arafat and
Israel's government equaUy. responsible
for the absence of peace.
It's not clear whether this il a good
cop- bad cop act designed to appease
both Jewish voters in the United States
and oil-rich Persian Gulf Atabs, the
product of a fundamental split within
the administration - or evidence of
confusion. This. week, in the wake of the
latest suicide bombings at a
in
erusalem
and
a
cafe
m
Bush
J

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST

.

Senate hearings in September.
Arafat deserves to be penalized for
releasing from jail leaders of the chief
terrorist groups claiming credit for sui~
cide bombings, Hamas and lslamic Jihad.
Rather than rearresting them, Arafat is in
the process of negotiating with th e ter· ·
rorists to have them join his government. Arafat himself has sent statements
of praise to the famili es of suicide
bombers. Moreover, the Tanzim and
Force 17, two security services affiliated
with Arafat's Fatah party, have been
directly involved in at~acks on Israeli targets.
.
Ai'afat has agreed on numerous c ecasions - the latest in connection with
the peace agreement negotiated earli er
will remain t h ere, no one can
1--'-.,.,+""'..-l·&lt;:ndn lm ;tdc;;~-jti;;~~:~clt:~~j-~~~·;1~iry;di;\~;;.;~a~l~;;;~-J__:j,atJ~ef-i1~peee:n!llj-.-.:de~la~e~l~~~l1~~~~- this~year-by GIA- Director George Tenet
nothing that an
can do if - to crack down on those respons ible
. leave the whoie Balkan mess to Europe's good intentions.
for violence.
there's no will for peace."
Yet he hasn't done a thing beyond
Au contraire. Th,e administration can
begin by saying corjsistently that Arafat is issue occasional condemnations of espefundamentally resp.onsible for the vio- cially egregious acts of terrorism . Meanlence and that sanctions are on the way. \ime, media outrets controlled by the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Among the steps suggested by mem- Palestinian Authority spew a constant
Today is T hursday, Aug. 23, the 235th day of 2001. There are
bers of Congress : are placing Arafat's message of violence against Israelis.
130 days left in the year.
·
security services on the State DepartThe Friday, Aug. 3, sermon given by
Today's Hi ghlight in !%tory:
.
ment's terrorist list, ~downgrading the Sheik Ibrahim Madhi at the Sheik Ijlin
O n Aug. 23, 1927, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and
diplomatic status· of tl\e Palestinian mis- Mosque in Gaza and broadcast on the
Bartolomeo Van zetti were executed in Boston for the murders
sian m Wa~hington, and cutting off non- Palestinian Authority's television station,
Of two men during a 1920 robbery. (Sacco and Vanzetti were
humanitarian aid to the· West Bank and for example, declared, " Blessings to
vindicated in 1977 by Massachusetts Gov. MichaelS. Dukakis.)
Gaza. Such sanctions subiect to presi- · whoever saved a bullet to stick it. in a
On this date:'
dential waiver, are part
ofJ a foreign aid Jews' hea d"·
.
.
In 1754, France's King Louis XVI was born at Versailles.
The sermon contmued, accordmg to a
bill passed by the House and headed for
In 1914,Japan declared war on Germany in World War I.
In 1926, sil ent film star Rudolph Valentino died in New York
at age 31.
In 1'!39, N azi Germany and the Soviet Union signed a· nonaggression treaty.
In 1944, R omani an prime minister lon Antonescu was dismissed by King Michael, paving the way for Romania to abandon the Axis in favor of the Alli es.
In I% 0, Broadway librettist O scar Hammerstein !I died in
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
comparison shot of the two men. Bush
· Doylestown, l'a.
WASHINGTON- George Bush has -Mas in the "heartland" hauling trees
In I &lt;J72, the R epublican national convention, meeting in
pulled a head-fake on the American around like a real American . A bearded
M iam i Ucach , Fla., nominated Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
press corps. Under the cover of a four- Gore spent the time instructing young
· for a seco nd term .
week vacation, he has launched an Democrats on electionee ring techIn 1979. Soviet dancer Alexandc-r Godunov defected while
August media offensive.
mques.
the Bolshoi Ballet was on tour in New York.
In a maneuver worthy ofWashington
What a side-by- side! Bush looked like
In 1982 , Lebanon's parliament elected Christian militia
or MacArthur, the scrappy Texan has a Marlboro commercial. Gore had the
leader Dashir Ge mayd president. (However, Gemayel ~ assasagain outflanked his pursuers and pro- off-putting appearance of some Bolshesinated some three weeks later.)
duced the best TV images of his presi- vik labor organizer.
In 19!!9. in a case that inflamed racial tensions in New York
dency.
Or, worse yet, some gee k teaching kids
C ity,Yusuf H awkins, a black I 6-year-old, was shot dead after he
His speech to the nation during how to be geeks.
and his fri ends were confronted by white youths in the Benprimetime last week won a 70-percent
Ask yourself: If we are going to have
son hu rst sec tion of Brooklyn .
. .
approval rating among .those who clones in the future, do we really want
Ten yi·ar.s ago: In the wake of a failed coup by hard-liners in
watched.
more Al Gores?
the Soviet U nion, President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Russian
But th e most compelling pictures of
What worked for Bush this week,
l're,id em Boris N. Yeltsin acted to strip the Communist Party
August have been his Jimmy Carter-like once again , was the media snobbery of
of ir- power and take contro l of th e army and the KGJ;l.
house- building with Habitat for those in New York and Santa Mo nica
Five years ago: President C linton imposed limits on peddling
Humanity, his Ronald Reagan- like who love lo oking down their noses at a
ciga rettes to chi ldren as he unveiled Food and Drug Adminisbrush- dearing in the Rockies. H is m an they want to believe is Alfred E.
tration rct,.,'1.I Iations declaring nicotine an addictive drug. The
schedule promises more outdoorsy Neuman 's idiot nephew.
·
some day, a jury in India napolis found cigarette companies were
video in the weeks remaining )&gt;efore
Keep thinking that. Keep teaching it at
not responsible for the lung cancer death of a 52-year-old
Labor Day.
C olumbia Journalism School. Keep
lawyer who began smoking at age 5.
Those who denigrate such imagery as sharing the in-joke over the dinner table
One year ago: A Gulf Air Airbus crashed into the Persian· Gulf
"form over function " must have forgot- in Beverly Hills, It only m akes ljfe easier
n&lt;'" Bahrain .. ki lling all 143 people aboard. Negotiators forVerten how this cowboy got his current job. for the White House ballyhoo boys.
rz.o n and more than 35,000 telephone workers reached tenraDuring the month before the two 2000 Every time you lower the bar on this feltive a~ 1'cc m e nt on a new contract, ending an I 8- day sttike. An
presidential candidates stood side- by- low, the easier it becomes for him to
cs tin r;ttcd 51 mill ion viewers tuned in for ihe finale of CBS'
side on TV, the Gallup polls showed the clear it.
reality series "Survivor," in which contestant Richard Hatch
country leaning to Gore. For the two
You know what I . think sells about
won the S I million prize.
weeks afieJWards, the Gallup had Bush Bush ? Humility. Yes, you can quote
Tnd.1y\ Birthdays: Movie direc tor Robe rt Mulligan is 76.
in the lead.
·
C hurchill and say Bush is a " modest man
Actr''" Vcu Miles is 71. Political satirist Mark RusseU· is 69.
Had it not been for Gore 's last- week with much to be modest about," but I
Aurc" 1\.t rbara Ede n is 67. Actor Ronny C ox is 63. Actor
campaign blitz, and Bush's stupid hiding challenge you to say he is as dumb as the
lticlmd Sanders is 6 1. BaUet dancer Patricia McBride is 59.
of an aged DUI charge, the picture we sophisticates.say h ds.
Former Surgeon General Antonia N ovello is 57. C ountry
all go t in that debate could have given
Is he as smart as those Democratic
sin ger R ex All en Jr. is 54. Actress Shell ey Long is 52. Actorthis president a clear-cut victory.
favo rites, Adlai Stevenson and Mike
sint;er Rick Springfield is 52.
Last week, the country got another Dukakis? Maybe. Maybe not.

TODAY IN HISTORY

transcript from the Middle East Media
R esearch Institute, " Whoever ca\1 fight
the Jews w ith his weapons should go out
to the battle; whoever can fight them
with a ma chin e gun, should go out;
whoever can fight th em with .. . his
hands, should go out. Nothing will deter
the Jews except the. color of their filthy
people's blood."
T he fat t is that, even when Arafat was
o&lt;tensibly negotiating peace with Israel,
no effort was made to prepare the Palestinian po pulation to accept less than the
elimination of the Jewish state.
When former Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak offered Arafat more than
90- percent control of the occupied West
Bank, partial governance of Jerusalem
and recognition of ·an· independent
Palestinian State, Arafat rejected the deal
~nd unleashed a wave of violence agai.nst
Israel.
Barak's successor as prime minister,
Ariel Sharon, has adopted no discernable
long-range policy, but instead has offered
to resume negotiations if Arafat will
bring violence to a halt while attacking
targets linked to terrorism.
Sharon evidently hopes there is a finite
number of young men in Palestine willing to blow themselves up and that hardships suffere&lt;Lhy-the-Palestinian popula"
tiori will bring its leaders to reason. ·
But that hope may be a vain one. Terrorism and Israeli reprisals could well
lead to all-out war, which U.S. allies in
the Arab world might feel it necessary to
support or even join, raising the specter
of a break with the United States.
The bottom line is, Bush can't afford
to conclude there's nothing he can do.
At a minimum, he should support legislation to punish Arafat, making it clear .
that hi s administration speaks with one
voic e on who's to blame for Middle East
violence.

(Morton Kotrdracke is execwtive editor '!/
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

'HARDBALL'

George W.s ·'head Jake' produces best image in years

•

'

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
be caught in the middle, and to put
you there at your tender age is very
unfair. Your parents - and many
others - could benefit fro m the following list of"Do's and Don'ts" for
divorcing couples with children that
appeared in my co lumn years ago.
Read on:
First, the DO's:
- Do allow your children to ask

LOCAL EVENTS

KONDRACKE ' S VIEW

President Bush has no coherent policy
on the Middle East crisis, but Congress
is in the process of nudging him toward
one that would begin punishing Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat for failing to
control terrorist violence.
Bush has been calling onArafat to " do
a lot more" to stop terrorism, but
administration policy lacks any sense of ·

Thursda~August23,1001

•

D E AR ABBY: My parents have
been divorced for six years. I am 1 I,
and I have a sister who is 15.
Since our parents divorced, my sister and I fight a lot more, but 1 still
look up to her for everything.
Mom's and Dad's sides of the family
constantly question us to see which
one is better. Without my sister
telling me what to say, I might say
the wrong thmg.
I love my parents, but I hate it
when each of them asks questions
about the other instead of enjoying
our company. It's just not fair. W hat
SICK AND
do you thi nk? TIRED
OF
FIGHTING, .
GREENVILLE, T E XAS
DEAR SICK AND TIRED OF
FIGHTING : I sympathi ze with
. your predicament. No one wants to

Diane ·Kay Hill
Controller

It's time to recognize NATO
has solved nothing in Balkans

._The_na_ ny_se_ntin_ei _ _

•

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Meddling

---=.
BJ the Bend

Page AS

Reseniful daughter is trapped it;l. bickering parents' divorce .

tiON~T
PIG~!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74D-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

PageA4

But when Bush spoke 'to the nation
about stem cells, he admitted right up
front up front that such issues are not
solvable by brainpower alone: Good
people disagree on the subj ect. Nobody's
necessarily right. Nobody 's provably
wrong. We're all in this together, tryin g
to square our religious views with our
medi cal hopes, our deepest human values with our scientific potential.
Had the . president rejected stem-cell
fundin g outright, the decision would
have painted him indelibly with th e religious right. If he'd gon e whol e- hog for
stem-cell research, he would have been
The New York Times' flavor of the
week, but also a man who bro ke a wellknown campaign promise.
Polls show .ne threaded the needle.
Bush has retain ed his high Gallup number (59 percent) for being a president
who "keeps his promises."
But pretty cowboy pictures and
shrewd "values" politics are not enough.
For FOR, it was "Happy D ays are
H ere Again." For JFK, it was "High
Hopes." For Clinton, it w as " Don't Stop
Thinking about Tomorrow."
The silence in the American air, the
absence of any apparent national mission, is what keeps Bush's pictures from
putting some bou~ce in the country's
step.

(Chris Matthews, a natio,ally syndicated
columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, is
hoJt of"Hardba/1" on CNBC and MSN BC
cable channels. The 1999 edition of "Hardball" was published by Touchstone Books.)

••

The Community Calendar Is
published as a tree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
· designed to promote salles or
fund raisers of any type. Items
era printed only as space per·
mlts and cannot be guaranteed
. to be printed a specific num·
.. ber of daya.

PORTLAND - Oulside hymn
sing on the knob, Saturday, at
the Freedom Gospel Mission,
located on Bald-Knob-Stlversville
Road on County Road 31.
Singers, Delivered, Elernal Life,
and Jodi Rife. Fre e refreshments, bring a lawn chai r:
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township Trustees, Saturday 7
a.m. at the township building.

questions· about your divorce. It's
unfair to make them feei like out-siders.
- Do answer all their questions
about yol\r divorce as truthfully as
possible, with out making the other
pare nt the "heavy."
- Do remember that your children need the love of both parents.
- Do · assure your children that
they are not to blame for your
divorce.
- Do encourage your children to
talk freely about their feeli ng.; even if it's painful to you. Bottling
up emotions is even more damaging
to child ren.
- Do have a special place fo r
your children 's toys and belonging.;
du ring visiting time. It will make
th em feel m ore at ho me.

other animals and don't need a lot of
exerci1e.The problem is that my parents hate dogs.
They say 1 can have as many dogs
as I want when I grow up, but 1 can't
wait that long. Almost everyone I
know has a dog. I have $375 , so I can
afford to buy one and pay for its
food and shots. Abby. how can I
change my parents' minds ' DOG - DEPRIVE D IN D E N V ER
D E AR
D O G - D E PRIV E D :
T here is no way I can change your
parents' minds for you. If I could, I
would. However, if you volunteer at
an animal shelter or local veterinarian's clinic, you could fill so me of the
void you are feeling.
Dear Abby is writte11 by Pauline

Phillips and dm1ghrer j ea.111e Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Hudson family
hold reunion
RUTLAND - The I Oth
annu al Hudson reunion was
h eld Aug. 4 at Rutland Park .
Sonny Hudso n, president,
w elc omed th ose attending
and plans were made for .the
nex t · reunion , when and
where to have it. The group
decided on having next year's
reunion at Racine Star Mill
Park, Racine.
Hud•on '• thanked
his
grandsons for work on signs
marking the reunion location. The officers for the next
two years were named and
include Hudson, president;
Donna Eblin, secretary, and
Lisa Eblin, treasurer.
One new birth · was
announced, Caden Goff, son
of Kevin and Lucy Goff. One
marriage, Crystal Eblin,
daughter of Tony and Pat
Ebll' n, to Allen Barcus. Door

THURSDAY •
RACINE - Racine United
POMEROY- United Fund for Methodist Church, mud volleyball
Meigs County, board meeting , game, Saturday, · 2 Ia 5 p.m.
. Thursday, 5 p.m., Meigs County Community invited to participate .
· Annex basement.
RACINE - Racine United
POMEROY - Meigs County Methodist Church, to sponsor
Churches of Christ women's lei- first fifth quarter party of th!!.sea·
. lowshlp; Thursday, OVCA camp son following the Southern foot·
6 ·p.m. Zion will furnish wieners, ball game Saturday. Students
buns and beverage. Pomeroy from junior high up Invited.
will have devotions.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Faith Valley
LETART - Annual Weaver
Tabernacle, 7 p.m. Thursday, reunion, Sunday, 1 p.m. at lhe
· Evangelist J .R. Holslng11r to Marcus Weaver horne on Sas· preach.
safras Road, Letart. Picnic lunch
at 1 p.m. Take a Lawn chair.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
BIDWELL - Poplar Ridge
. hall.
·
Free Will Baptist Church,.off Ohio
554. Sunday, 11 a.m. Rev. Paul
POMEROY - Caring and Elswick lo speak. Carry·ln dinner
prizes .were awarded before
· ~ Sharing Group allhe Senior Citl· at noon. Afternoon service, 2
the dim1er with Hudson giving grace, Denver and Peggy
zens Cenler. Jane Ann Karr p.m. Singers, Earthem Vessels
. Aanestad to apeak on new lech· aned Gloryland Believers.
d
.
d
nology available to hearing
Hu son were g1ven a ro~n
Impaired persons.
CHESTER - Reunion of the . of applause for supplymg
. John L. and Viola Riggs Jeffers
gifts for the reunion.
- fRIDAY - - - -lamlly,--Sunday,.- 1- p.m,--at- the- - - -Attending- were Ken -,~,.-~POMEROY - Fun, Food and Meigs County IKES Farm at
Donna Eblin D anny Kim
Fellowship at God's NET In Chester.
. .
'
'
'
. Pomeroy, 6 to 10t90 p.m., Frlclay
OliVIa, C assandra, . Bru~e
and Saturday night. Games and
COOLVILLE ~ Bethel United
and Dannett Dav1s, Kevm
activities, free refreshments for Methodist Church homecoming,
Hudson, Regina Walls of
teenagers.
Sunday, dinner at 12:30 p.m. serRutland; Sonny and Convice at 1:30 p.m singers, South·
nie Hudson ; Laura and
POMEROY
Pomeroy em Gospelalres. Church located
Rebecca Autherson, Angel
Church of Christ, commuity din- on old Route 7 near Coolville.
Lemley, Tony, Pat and Lisa
. ner, 5:30 p.m. Everyone wei·
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel sing
· come.
Eblin, Kevin and Lois Oiler,
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Middleport
Josh Autherson, Amanda
SATURDAY
Church olthe Nazarene. Singing
Lemley, Sarah Bush, Steve,
POMEROY - Staneart family will be Beverly Atkins and Tammy
Dannett, Ben and Nick
reunion, Saturday, Route 33 Taylor of Rutland. Refreshments.
Hudson of Middleport.
roadside park. 10 a.m. genealo·
gy session with Lloyd Black· . POMEROY - South Bethel
Roger, Jan e, Janelle, Bill
wood, noon potluck. Following Church Children's Day serviCe,
and ,C(dy Hysell, Loretta
.. reunion tour of Chester Court- Sunday, 10:10 a.m. Christian
Rogers, George Hudson,
Comics for Christ to peliorm.
house.
D.J. and Bryan Russell ,
HOCKINGPORT- Music fes·
MONDAY
Lucy and Kaylee and Caden
·tival, bluegrass, counlry and
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Koff, Deloris Wiriebrenner
gospel, in tribute to Kenny Club annual open meeting, Menof Pomeroy; Lewes and Elva
Reynolds at Reynolds Opry day, . 7:30 p.m., Rutland
Hudson ofRacine;Jim and
House· on Ohio 124, Hocking- Methodist Church. Hal Kneen to
Mary Cundiff of Gallipolis;
port, starting at noon. All bands speak on fall car11 of law"·
and musicians welcome. Take shrubs, and perenmals. All garLuther and Peggy Hudson
covered dish and lawn chairs. den club members invited.
of Norton; Bernard Hudson
Inside If it rains.
' Refreshments.
of Lexington, N. C.; James,
Angela and Ryan Eblin of
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ele·
SYRACUSE - Free clothing
Columbus; Dickie Powell,
and food, Saturday, 11 a.m lo 1 mentary open house, Monday, 5
Diane Salvatore, Margaret
· p.m. at the Syracuse Church of to '1:30 p.m. All studenls who will
be attending the school and lheir
· God.
Williams of East I,iverpool.
parenls are invited.
Guests were Craig Cundiff,
Mary Beal, Rev. Doug,
Pam, Derek and Dwight
Cox.
c

Now, the DON'Ts:
-Don't badmouth the other parent to your children, or to anyone
else in their presence.
- Don't send messages to the
other parent throug~ your children .
-Don't ask your children to keep
secrets from your ex-spouse.
-· Don't be overly generous (or
less strict) in an effort to win your
children's approval.
- Don't tell your children what
to think or feel. T hey are entitled to
their own thoughts and feelings .
- Don 't try to pump your children for information about your exspouse. - B EEN THERE IN ST.
LOUIS
D E AR ABBY: I'm only a kid,
but I really need your help. 1 want a
dog. A coll ie. They get along with ·

Rio G rande; Mark, Beverly,
M egh an
and
M atth ew
Moo ney, Vera West, Troy and
Terin Harden, To ni Po rt er,
H ack
Orsbo n,
Darvin
Blo omer, Virginia Bloo m er,
M elvin and Katie Irwin,
Marl ene
and
Ri chard
Howard, Jo hn
H ow ard ,
Kathy, Jenny, and Mikie, all of
Gallipolis; lloyd and Virginia
Fry ofThurman.
Jay and Ernestine Yerian,
Tam, Karen , Dillion, and Jerrica Fry, Jackson, Ralph and

hot dog roast and picnic,
those attending ~ enjoyed
swi mming, visiting, singing
and picture taking.
Attending were Jim and
Jackie R eed, Dou gl a~ and
Sherry Shambl in, Dave,
C herie, M atthew, Caitlin and
Jared W illiamson , Bob bi
N app er, Andrea Warn er,
Jamith a Wilford, C harl otte
H annin g, C harlotte Van

~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
~ua&amp;e, ~ 1tar~ee ";~ea'J., , ~

Nellie
Durst,
Letart,
W.Va.,
Ros
eanna
M anl
ey, Evelee
Wolf, M iddleport; Joe and
Eleanor West, Mary, Kyle,

~~~~~~~~Ronnie

Meter, Bill, Becky, Bethany
and Roger Amberger, Tracy,
Amber and Dylan Davidso n,
Larry and Paula Pickens,
R ick, Brenda, De rr ick and
Brook Bolin, Gerry Lightfoot, Brtia n, Suzie, C hristi
and Darren Will, Neva
Chap man, Br ittany Collins,
M adeline Pai nter, . N ~ n c y
M o rri.s, and Bill , Kathy,
M egan and Madiso n D yer. ·

Griffith

'

Picnic held

NIKE • REEBOK• ASICS
EASTLAND• DEXTER• KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

POMEROY - Bradford
Church of Christ's annual
family picnic was h eld '
recently at the Ohio Valley
Christian assembly.
Douglas Shamblin had
219 N. Second
prayer and devotions, " Win- l.liiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
W in Situation." Following a

n. Shoe Place

992•5627

Middleport
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiLI

NEWS AND NOTES
Councilors
meet

.

C HESTER - Pas t C oun. cilors C lub of th e C hester .
; C oncil N o. 323 , Daughters
of Ameri ca, met at the lod ge
. hall rece ntly, wi th Betty
Youn g and M ary K. H olter
. servin g as hos tesses.
Laura Mae Ni ce, pres i... dent, led th e m eeting, and
. re:od four verses o f Psalm
113.
The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the American flag
were recited in unison .
Members a nswere d roll
call by telling how th ey were
· keeping cool:
Es th er Smith , secretary,
read the minutes of th e July
: meetin g, and Treasurer Jea n
Welsh gave her report.
. Holter thanked th e club
. tor a gift prese nted at the
time o f her .brother's death ,

for sympathy cards and telephone calls received, and fo r
thos e who vi sited at the
fun"eral ho me.
It was reported tha t Bill
Ca rr is still in the hospital
and iha t R onald Osbo rne is
in poor health .
Games we re led by Margaret Amb er ger, ·Gold ie
Frederic k and Ell a Osborn e.
R efreshm ents were served
and poor pr izes were wo n
by N ice, Am berge r, Ell a
O sbo rn e and Goldie Frederick.
Also attendin g were Ruth
Smith , ln zy New ell, T h elma
White and O p ar H o llo n.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Fry reunion
held
VINTON - The families
of Aaron Fry met at Linda
and Ri chard Howard 's
home on Creekview D ~ ive
Aug. I 2 for a re unon..
Lloyd Fry gave gra ce
before th e meal.
N ew officers named for
the next reunion we re Tarn
Fry, presiden t, and Vera
West, secretary- treasurer.
. Door prizes were won by
Scot Wes t, Ernestine Yerian,
and John Howard.
It was voted to hold the
'2002 reunion at the same
place.
The Blu e G rass Band
provided the entertainment
for the afternoon .
Attending were
Scot,
Lorie and Breanna West,
Bidwell; Jeff, Jolene, Brandon, and Krista Rocchi,

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General Manager

Thursday, Aupst l:J, 1001

•

.

l.dttrs to th~ M ilar are wknm•. Th•y rlt011lll b• l11J tllln JOO won/1. AU Urtm
n" subjrct to editing and must be signed lUfd inclutN addnll «lld tehrhonl rt,MMMr.
No unsigtud li!ttl!rJ will IH pu.bltJir1d. Utun rltoMI4 bf ilt roM 141111, tulllrt11U.1
inllf'~·. nvt penonalitin.
l'hl' CJPiiJions txpnutd ;,. th't column bt low 11n 1111 COIIJIIIIMI of till 011/o Mill.,
Puh/islii"K C11. 'i rdiluriallmtud, 1111leu Qllterwiu lt ottfl.

NATIONAL VIEW

• Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City, on NATO troops in the
If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the
Balk.Jn, po rt:lon should be pothole-free for at least a few centuries. NATO's wdl-m eaning meddling in Kosovo ... has
pushed nei~;hbo r i n g Macedonia to the brink of civil war.
T he bc·st tha t Macedoni a can reasonably hope today is that a
shaky p~ac e deal is reached, under which· NATO would send
in 3,1 1110 troops to di sarm ethnic Albanian Muslirru ... . The
wor&lt;t-case sc&lt; nario, which appears more likely every day, is
anothn Balkans war.
No om· intended for Kosovo's militants to spread unrest and
weapom to Macedonia when NATO launched its invasion in
1999; the . inten tion was to stop the Serbs from " cleansing"
. Kmovo of ethnic Albanians.
But what is it th ey say about the best-laid plans? NATO
stop ped the Serbs from expelling the Muslilll5, then stood by
dumbfo unded as the Muslims turned around and "cleansed"
muc h of Kosovo of Serbs,Jews and Gypsies . ... .
If peace talks fail, NATO wo uld have to intervene, according
to the all iance's commander during the Kosovo campaign,
because "N ATO cannot accept another war in the Balkans."
Part in ii;rly a war of its own making, the commander might
have adde d.
It is time for U.S. leaders to acknowledge that NATO has
· solved nothing in th e Balkans. It has replaced stability ... with
· an unstable peace that depends on a heavy presence of foreign
8.1/~,,, ,.,

Congress and Bush should direct punishment at Arafat

"or else."

·

On occasion, Bush and Vice President
Cheney have indlcated they sympathize
with Israel's effort to pre-empt terrorist
attacks, even by assassinating militant
leaders, and to punish Arafat's Palestinian
Authority following acts of Violence.
At other times, though, pronouncements by Secretary of State Colin Powell and Bush make it seem that the
administration considers Arafat and
Israel's government equaUy. responsible
for the absence of peace.
It's not clear whether this il a good
cop- bad cop act designed to appease
both Jewish voters in the United States
and oil-rich Persian Gulf Atabs, the
product of a fundamental split within
the administration - or evidence of
confusion. This. week, in the wake of the
latest suicide bombings at a
in
erusalem
and
a
cafe
m
Bush
J

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST

.

Senate hearings in September.
Arafat deserves to be penalized for
releasing from jail leaders of the chief
terrorist groups claiming credit for sui~
cide bombings, Hamas and lslamic Jihad.
Rather than rearresting them, Arafat is in
the process of negotiating with th e ter· ·
rorists to have them join his government. Arafat himself has sent statements
of praise to the famili es of suicide
bombers. Moreover, the Tanzim and
Force 17, two security services affiliated
with Arafat's Fatah party, have been
directly involved in at~acks on Israeli targets.
.
Ai'afat has agreed on numerous c ecasions - the latest in connection with
the peace agreement negotiated earli er
will remain t h ere, no one can
1--'-.,.,+""'..-l·&lt;:ndn lm ;tdc;;~-jti;;~~:~clt:~~j-~~~·;1~iry;di;\~;;.;~a~l~;;;~-J__:j,atJ~ef-i1~peee:n!llj-.-.:de~la~e~l~~~l1~~~~- this~year-by GIA- Director George Tenet
nothing that an
can do if - to crack down on those respons ible
. leave the whoie Balkan mess to Europe's good intentions.
for violence.
there's no will for peace."
Yet he hasn't done a thing beyond
Au contraire. Th,e administration can
begin by saying corjsistently that Arafat is issue occasional condemnations of espefundamentally resp.onsible for the vio- cially egregious acts of terrorism . Meanlence and that sanctions are on the way. \ime, media outrets controlled by the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Among the steps suggested by mem- Palestinian Authority spew a constant
Today is T hursday, Aug. 23, the 235th day of 2001. There are
bers of Congress : are placing Arafat's message of violence against Israelis.
130 days left in the year.
·
security services on the State DepartThe Friday, Aug. 3, sermon given by
Today's Hi ghlight in !%tory:
.
ment's terrorist list, ~downgrading the Sheik Ibrahim Madhi at the Sheik Ijlin
O n Aug. 23, 1927, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and
diplomatic status· of tl\e Palestinian mis- Mosque in Gaza and broadcast on the
Bartolomeo Van zetti were executed in Boston for the murders
sian m Wa~hington, and cutting off non- Palestinian Authority's television station,
Of two men during a 1920 robbery. (Sacco and Vanzetti were
humanitarian aid to the· West Bank and for example, declared, " Blessings to
vindicated in 1977 by Massachusetts Gov. MichaelS. Dukakis.)
Gaza. Such sanctions subiect to presi- · whoever saved a bullet to stick it. in a
On this date:'
dential waiver, are part
ofJ a foreign aid Jews' hea d"·
.
.
In 1754, France's King Louis XVI was born at Versailles.
The sermon contmued, accordmg to a
bill passed by the House and headed for
In 1914,Japan declared war on Germany in World War I.
In 1926, sil ent film star Rudolph Valentino died in New York
at age 31.
In 1'!39, N azi Germany and the Soviet Union signed a· nonaggression treaty.
In 1944, R omani an prime minister lon Antonescu was dismissed by King Michael, paving the way for Romania to abandon the Axis in favor of the Alli es.
In I% 0, Broadway librettist O scar Hammerstein !I died in
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
comparison shot of the two men. Bush
· Doylestown, l'a.
WASHINGTON- George Bush has -Mas in the "heartland" hauling trees
In I &lt;J72, the R epublican national convention, meeting in
pulled a head-fake on the American around like a real American . A bearded
M iam i Ucach , Fla., nominated Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
press corps. Under the cover of a four- Gore spent the time instructing young
· for a seco nd term .
week vacation, he has launched an Democrats on electionee ring techIn 1979. Soviet dancer Alexandc-r Godunov defected while
August media offensive.
mques.
the Bolshoi Ballet was on tour in New York.
In a maneuver worthy ofWashington
What a side-by- side! Bush looked like
In 1982 , Lebanon's parliament elected Christian militia
or MacArthur, the scrappy Texan has a Marlboro commercial. Gore had the
leader Dashir Ge mayd president. (However, Gemayel ~ assasagain outflanked his pursuers and pro- off-putting appearance of some Bolshesinated some three weeks later.)
duced the best TV images of his presi- vik labor organizer.
In 19!!9. in a case that inflamed racial tensions in New York
dency.
Or, worse yet, some gee k teaching kids
C ity,Yusuf H awkins, a black I 6-year-old, was shot dead after he
His speech to the nation during how to be geeks.
and his fri ends were confronted by white youths in the Benprimetime last week won a 70-percent
Ask yourself: If we are going to have
son hu rst sec tion of Brooklyn .
. .
approval rating among .those who clones in the future, do we really want
Ten yi·ar.s ago: In the wake of a failed coup by hard-liners in
watched.
more Al Gores?
the Soviet U nion, President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Russian
But th e most compelling pictures of
What worked for Bush this week,
l're,id em Boris N. Yeltsin acted to strip the Communist Party
August have been his Jimmy Carter-like once again , was the media snobbery of
of ir- power and take contro l of th e army and the KGJ;l.
house- building with Habitat for those in New York and Santa Mo nica
Five years ago: President C linton imposed limits on peddling
Humanity, his Ronald Reagan- like who love lo oking down their noses at a
ciga rettes to chi ldren as he unveiled Food and Drug Adminisbrush- dearing in the Rockies. H is m an they want to believe is Alfred E.
tration rct,.,'1.I Iations declaring nicotine an addictive drug. The
schedule promises more outdoorsy Neuman 's idiot nephew.
·
some day, a jury in India napolis found cigarette companies were
video in the weeks remaining )&gt;efore
Keep thinking that. Keep teaching it at
not responsible for the lung cancer death of a 52-year-old
Labor Day.
C olumbia Journalism School. Keep
lawyer who began smoking at age 5.
Those who denigrate such imagery as sharing the in-joke over the dinner table
One year ago: A Gulf Air Airbus crashed into the Persian· Gulf
"form over function " must have forgot- in Beverly Hills, It only m akes ljfe easier
n&lt;'" Bahrain .. ki lling all 143 people aboard. Negotiators forVerten how this cowboy got his current job. for the White House ballyhoo boys.
rz.o n and more than 35,000 telephone workers reached tenraDuring the month before the two 2000 Every time you lower the bar on this feltive a~ 1'cc m e nt on a new contract, ending an I 8- day sttike. An
presidential candidates stood side- by- low, the easier it becomes for him to
cs tin r;ttcd 51 mill ion viewers tuned in for ihe finale of CBS'
side on TV, the Gallup polls showed the clear it.
reality series "Survivor," in which contestant Richard Hatch
country leaning to Gore. For the two
You know what I . think sells about
won the S I million prize.
weeks afieJWards, the Gallup had Bush Bush ? Humility. Yes, you can quote
Tnd.1y\ Birthdays: Movie direc tor Robe rt Mulligan is 76.
in the lead.
·
C hurchill and say Bush is a " modest man
Actr''" Vcu Miles is 71. Political satirist Mark RusseU· is 69.
Had it not been for Gore 's last- week with much to be modest about," but I
Aurc" 1\.t rbara Ede n is 67. Actor Ronny C ox is 63. Actor
campaign blitz, and Bush's stupid hiding challenge you to say he is as dumb as the
lticlmd Sanders is 6 1. BaUet dancer Patricia McBride is 59.
of an aged DUI charge, the picture we sophisticates.say h ds.
Former Surgeon General Antonia N ovello is 57. C ountry
all go t in that debate could have given
Is he as smart as those Democratic
sin ger R ex All en Jr. is 54. Actress Shell ey Long is 52. Actorthis president a clear-cut victory.
favo rites, Adlai Stevenson and Mike
sint;er Rick Springfield is 52.
Last week, the country got another Dukakis? Maybe. Maybe not.

TODAY IN HISTORY

transcript from the Middle East Media
R esearch Institute, " Whoever ca\1 fight
the Jews w ith his weapons should go out
to the battle; whoever can fight them
with a ma chin e gun, should go out;
whoever can fight th em with .. . his
hands, should go out. Nothing will deter
the Jews except the. color of their filthy
people's blood."
T he fat t is that, even when Arafat was
o&lt;tensibly negotiating peace with Israel,
no effort was made to prepare the Palestinian po pulation to accept less than the
elimination of the Jewish state.
When former Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak offered Arafat more than
90- percent control of the occupied West
Bank, partial governance of Jerusalem
and recognition of ·an· independent
Palestinian State, Arafat rejected the deal
~nd unleashed a wave of violence agai.nst
Israel.
Barak's successor as prime minister,
Ariel Sharon, has adopted no discernable
long-range policy, but instead has offered
to resume negotiations if Arafat will
bring violence to a halt while attacking
targets linked to terrorism.
Sharon evidently hopes there is a finite
number of young men in Palestine willing to blow themselves up and that hardships suffere&lt;Lhy-the-Palestinian popula"
tiori will bring its leaders to reason. ·
But that hope may be a vain one. Terrorism and Israeli reprisals could well
lead to all-out war, which U.S. allies in
the Arab world might feel it necessary to
support or even join, raising the specter
of a break with the United States.
The bottom line is, Bush can't afford
to conclude there's nothing he can do.
At a minimum, he should support legislation to punish Arafat, making it clear .
that hi s administration speaks with one
voic e on who's to blame for Middle East
violence.

(Morton Kotrdracke is execwtive editor '!/
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

'HARDBALL'

George W.s ·'head Jake' produces best image in years

•

'

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
be caught in the middle, and to put
you there at your tender age is very
unfair. Your parents - and many
others - could benefit fro m the following list of"Do's and Don'ts" for
divorcing couples with children that
appeared in my co lumn years ago.
Read on:
First, the DO's:
- Do allow your children to ask

LOCAL EVENTS

KONDRACKE ' S VIEW

President Bush has no coherent policy
on the Middle East crisis, but Congress
is in the process of nudging him toward
one that would begin punishing Palestinian leader Vasser Arafat for failing to
control terrorist violence.
Bush has been calling onArafat to " do
a lot more" to stop terrorism, but
administration policy lacks any sense of ·

Thursda~August23,1001

•

D E AR ABBY: My parents have
been divorced for six years. I am 1 I,
and I have a sister who is 15.
Since our parents divorced, my sister and I fight a lot more, but 1 still
look up to her for everything.
Mom's and Dad's sides of the family
constantly question us to see which
one is better. Without my sister
telling me what to say, I might say
the wrong thmg.
I love my parents, but I hate it
when each of them asks questions
about the other instead of enjoying
our company. It's just not fair. W hat
SICK AND
do you thi nk? TIRED
OF
FIGHTING, .
GREENVILLE, T E XAS
DEAR SICK AND TIRED OF
FIGHTING : I sympathi ze with
. your predicament. No one wants to

Diane ·Kay Hill
Controller

It's time to recognize NATO
has solved nothing in Balkans

._The_na_ ny_se_ntin_ei _ _

•

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Meddling

---=.
BJ the Bend

Page AS

Reseniful daughter is trapped it;l. bickering parents' divorce .

tiON~T
PIG~!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74D-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

PageA4

But when Bush spoke 'to the nation
about stem cells, he admitted right up
front up front that such issues are not
solvable by brainpower alone: Good
people disagree on the subj ect. Nobody's
necessarily right. Nobody 's provably
wrong. We're all in this together, tryin g
to square our religious views with our
medi cal hopes, our deepest human values with our scientific potential.
Had the . president rejected stem-cell
fundin g outright, the decision would
have painted him indelibly with th e religious right. If he'd gon e whol e- hog for
stem-cell research, he would have been
The New York Times' flavor of the
week, but also a man who bro ke a wellknown campaign promise.
Polls show .ne threaded the needle.
Bush has retain ed his high Gallup number (59 percent) for being a president
who "keeps his promises."
But pretty cowboy pictures and
shrewd "values" politics are not enough.
For FOR, it was "Happy D ays are
H ere Again." For JFK, it was "High
Hopes." For Clinton, it w as " Don't Stop
Thinking about Tomorrow."
The silence in the American air, the
absence of any apparent national mission, is what keeps Bush's pictures from
putting some bou~ce in the country's
step.

(Chris Matthews, a natio,ally syndicated
columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, is
hoJt of"Hardba/1" on CNBC and MSN BC
cable channels. The 1999 edition of "Hardball" was published by Touchstone Books.)

••

The Community Calendar Is
published as a tree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
· designed to promote salles or
fund raisers of any type. Items
era printed only as space per·
mlts and cannot be guaranteed
. to be printed a specific num·
.. ber of daya.

PORTLAND - Oulside hymn
sing on the knob, Saturday, at
the Freedom Gospel Mission,
located on Bald-Knob-Stlversville
Road on County Road 31.
Singers, Delivered, Elernal Life,
and Jodi Rife. Fre e refreshments, bring a lawn chai r:
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township Trustees, Saturday 7
a.m. at the township building.

questions· about your divorce. It's
unfair to make them feei like out-siders.
- Do answer all their questions
about yol\r divorce as truthfully as
possible, with out making the other
pare nt the "heavy."
- Do remember that your children need the love of both parents.
- Do · assure your children that
they are not to blame for your
divorce.
- Do encourage your children to
talk freely about their feeli ng.; even if it's painful to you. Bottling
up emotions is even more damaging
to child ren.
- Do have a special place fo r
your children 's toys and belonging.;
du ring visiting time. It will make
th em feel m ore at ho me.

other animals and don't need a lot of
exerci1e.The problem is that my parents hate dogs.
They say 1 can have as many dogs
as I want when I grow up, but 1 can't
wait that long. Almost everyone I
know has a dog. I have $375 , so I can
afford to buy one and pay for its
food and shots. Abby. how can I
change my parents' minds ' DOG - DEPRIVE D IN D E N V ER
D E AR
D O G - D E PRIV E D :
T here is no way I can change your
parents' minds for you. If I could, I
would. However, if you volunteer at
an animal shelter or local veterinarian's clinic, you could fill so me of the
void you are feeling.
Dear Abby is writte11 by Pauline

Phillips and dm1ghrer j ea.111e Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Hudson family
hold reunion
RUTLAND - The I Oth
annu al Hudson reunion was
h eld Aug. 4 at Rutland Park .
Sonny Hudso n, president,
w elc omed th ose attending
and plans were made for .the
nex t · reunion , when and
where to have it. The group
decided on having next year's
reunion at Racine Star Mill
Park, Racine.
Hud•on '• thanked
his
grandsons for work on signs
marking the reunion location. The officers for the next
two years were named and
include Hudson, president;
Donna Eblin, secretary, and
Lisa Eblin, treasurer.
One new birth · was
announced, Caden Goff, son
of Kevin and Lucy Goff. One
marriage, Crystal Eblin,
daughter of Tony and Pat
Ebll' n, to Allen Barcus. Door

THURSDAY •
RACINE - Racine United
POMEROY- United Fund for Methodist Church, mud volleyball
Meigs County, board meeting , game, Saturday, · 2 Ia 5 p.m.
. Thursday, 5 p.m., Meigs County Community invited to participate .
· Annex basement.
RACINE - Racine United
POMEROY - Meigs County Methodist Church, to sponsor
Churches of Christ women's lei- first fifth quarter party of th!!.sea·
. lowshlp; Thursday, OVCA camp son following the Southern foot·
6 ·p.m. Zion will furnish wieners, ball game Saturday. Students
buns and beverage. Pomeroy from junior high up Invited.
will have devotions.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Faith Valley
LETART - Annual Weaver
Tabernacle, 7 p.m. Thursday, reunion, Sunday, 1 p.m. at lhe
· Evangelist J .R. Holslng11r to Marcus Weaver horne on Sas· preach.
safras Road, Letart. Picnic lunch
at 1 p.m. Take a Lawn chair.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
BIDWELL - Poplar Ridge
. hall.
·
Free Will Baptist Church,.off Ohio
554. Sunday, 11 a.m. Rev. Paul
POMEROY - Caring and Elswick lo speak. Carry·ln dinner
prizes .were awarded before
· ~ Sharing Group allhe Senior Citl· at noon. Afternoon service, 2
the dim1er with Hudson giving grace, Denver and Peggy
zens Cenler. Jane Ann Karr p.m. Singers, Earthem Vessels
. Aanestad to apeak on new lech· aned Gloryland Believers.
d
.
d
nology available to hearing
Hu son were g1ven a ro~n
Impaired persons.
CHESTER - Reunion of the . of applause for supplymg
. John L. and Viola Riggs Jeffers
gifts for the reunion.
- fRIDAY - - - -lamlly,--Sunday,.- 1- p.m,--at- the- - - -Attending- were Ken -,~,.-~POMEROY - Fun, Food and Meigs County IKES Farm at
Donna Eblin D anny Kim
Fellowship at God's NET In Chester.
. .
'
'
'
. Pomeroy, 6 to 10t90 p.m., Frlclay
OliVIa, C assandra, . Bru~e
and Saturday night. Games and
COOLVILLE ~ Bethel United
and Dannett Dav1s, Kevm
activities, free refreshments for Methodist Church homecoming,
Hudson, Regina Walls of
teenagers.
Sunday, dinner at 12:30 p.m. serRutland; Sonny and Convice at 1:30 p.m singers, South·
nie Hudson ; Laura and
POMEROY
Pomeroy em Gospelalres. Church located
Rebecca Autherson, Angel
Church of Christ, commuity din- on old Route 7 near Coolville.
Lemley, Tony, Pat and Lisa
. ner, 5:30 p.m. Everyone wei·
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel sing
· come.
Eblin, Kevin and Lois Oiler,
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Middleport
Josh Autherson, Amanda
SATURDAY
Church olthe Nazarene. Singing
Lemley, Sarah Bush, Steve,
POMEROY - Staneart family will be Beverly Atkins and Tammy
Dannett, Ben and Nick
reunion, Saturday, Route 33 Taylor of Rutland. Refreshments.
Hudson of Middleport.
roadside park. 10 a.m. genealo·
gy session with Lloyd Black· . POMEROY - South Bethel
Roger, Jan e, Janelle, Bill
wood, noon potluck. Following Church Children's Day serviCe,
and ,C(dy Hysell, Loretta
.. reunion tour of Chester Court- Sunday, 10:10 a.m. Christian
Rogers, George Hudson,
Comics for Christ to peliorm.
house.
D.J. and Bryan Russell ,
HOCKINGPORT- Music fes·
MONDAY
Lucy and Kaylee and Caden
·tival, bluegrass, counlry and
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Koff, Deloris Wiriebrenner
gospel, in tribute to Kenny Club annual open meeting, Menof Pomeroy; Lewes and Elva
Reynolds at Reynolds Opry day, . 7:30 p.m., Rutland
Hudson ofRacine;Jim and
House· on Ohio 124, Hocking- Methodist Church. Hal Kneen to
Mary Cundiff of Gallipolis;
port, starting at noon. All bands speak on fall car11 of law"·
and musicians welcome. Take shrubs, and perenmals. All garLuther and Peggy Hudson
covered dish and lawn chairs. den club members invited.
of Norton; Bernard Hudson
Inside If it rains.
' Refreshments.
of Lexington, N. C.; James,
Angela and Ryan Eblin of
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ele·
SYRACUSE - Free clothing
Columbus; Dickie Powell,
and food, Saturday, 11 a.m lo 1 mentary open house, Monday, 5
Diane Salvatore, Margaret
· p.m. at the Syracuse Church of to '1:30 p.m. All studenls who will
be attending the school and lheir
· God.
Williams of East I,iverpool.
parenls are invited.
Guests were Craig Cundiff,
Mary Beal, Rev. Doug,
Pam, Derek and Dwight
Cox.
c

Now, the DON'Ts:
-Don't badmouth the other parent to your children, or to anyone
else in their presence.
- Don't send messages to the
other parent throug~ your children .
-Don't ask your children to keep
secrets from your ex-spouse.
-· Don't be overly generous (or
less strict) in an effort to win your
children's approval.
- Don't tell your children what
to think or feel. T hey are entitled to
their own thoughts and feelings .
- Don 't try to pump your children for information about your exspouse. - B EEN THERE IN ST.
LOUIS
D E AR ABBY: I'm only a kid,
but I really need your help. 1 want a
dog. A coll ie. They get along with ·

Rio G rande; Mark, Beverly,
M egh an
and
M atth ew
Moo ney, Vera West, Troy and
Terin Harden, To ni Po rt er,
H ack
Orsbo n,
Darvin
Blo omer, Virginia Bloo m er,
M elvin and Katie Irwin,
Marl ene
and
Ri chard
Howard, Jo hn
H ow ard ,
Kathy, Jenny, and Mikie, all of
Gallipolis; lloyd and Virginia
Fry ofThurman.
Jay and Ernestine Yerian,
Tam, Karen , Dillion, and Jerrica Fry, Jackson, Ralph and

hot dog roast and picnic,
those attending ~ enjoyed
swi mming, visiting, singing
and picture taking.
Attending were Jim and
Jackie R eed, Dou gl a~ and
Sherry Shambl in, Dave,
C herie, M atthew, Caitlin and
Jared W illiamson , Bob bi
N app er, Andrea Warn er,
Jamith a Wilford, C harl otte
H annin g, C harlotte Van

~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
~ua&amp;e, ~ 1tar~ee ";~ea'J., , ~

Nellie
Durst,
Letart,
W.Va.,
Ros
eanna
M anl
ey, Evelee
Wolf, M iddleport; Joe and
Eleanor West, Mary, Kyle,

~~~~~~~~Ronnie

Meter, Bill, Becky, Bethany
and Roger Amberger, Tracy,
Amber and Dylan Davidso n,
Larry and Paula Pickens,
R ick, Brenda, De rr ick and
Brook Bolin, Gerry Lightfoot, Brtia n, Suzie, C hristi
and Darren Will, Neva
Chap man, Br ittany Collins,
M adeline Pai nter, . N ~ n c y
M o rri.s, and Bill , Kathy,
M egan and Madiso n D yer. ·

Griffith

'

Picnic held

NIKE • REEBOK• ASICS
EASTLAND• DEXTER• KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

POMEROY - Bradford
Church of Christ's annual
family picnic was h eld '
recently at the Ohio Valley
Christian assembly.
Douglas Shamblin had
219 N. Second
prayer and devotions, " Win- l.liiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
W in Situation." Following a

n. Shoe Place

992•5627

Middleport
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiLI

NEWS AND NOTES
Councilors
meet

.

C HESTER - Pas t C oun. cilors C lub of th e C hester .
; C oncil N o. 323 , Daughters
of Ameri ca, met at the lod ge
. hall rece ntly, wi th Betty
Youn g and M ary K. H olter
. servin g as hos tesses.
Laura Mae Ni ce, pres i... dent, led th e m eeting, and
. re:od four verses o f Psalm
113.
The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the American flag
were recited in unison .
Members a nswere d roll
call by telling how th ey were
· keeping cool:
Es th er Smith , secretary,
read the minutes of th e July
: meetin g, and Treasurer Jea n
Welsh gave her report.
. Holter thanked th e club
. tor a gift prese nted at the
time o f her .brother's death ,

for sympathy cards and telephone calls received, and fo r
thos e who vi sited at the
fun"eral ho me.
It was reported tha t Bill
Ca rr is still in the hospital
and iha t R onald Osbo rne is
in poor health .
Games we re led by Margaret Amb er ger, ·Gold ie
Frederic k and Ell a Osborn e.
R efreshm ents were served
and poor pr izes were wo n
by N ice, Am berge r, Ell a
O sbo rn e and Goldie Frederick.
Also attendin g were Ruth
Smith , ln zy New ell, T h elma
White and O p ar H o llo n.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Fry reunion
held
VINTON - The families
of Aaron Fry met at Linda
and Ri chard Howard 's
home on Creekview D ~ ive
Aug. I 2 for a re unon..
Lloyd Fry gave gra ce
before th e meal.
N ew officers named for
the next reunion we re Tarn
Fry, presiden t, and Vera
West, secretary- treasurer.
. Door prizes were won by
Scot Wes t, Ernestine Yerian,
and John Howard.
It was voted to hold the
'2002 reunion at the same
place.
The Blu e G rass Band
provided the entertainment
for the afternoon .
Attending were
Scot,
Lorie and Breanna West,
Bidwell; Jeff, Jolene, Brandon, and Krista Rocchi,

Ask u. Allout

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•

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If'

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�Paae A 6 • The Dailv Sentinel

TIME OU T FOR TIPS

Becky
Baer
ADVICE

•
con trol of thei r emotions , so
they don't do or say something they will regret later.
Pare nts can be selec tive
when find ing a spo rt and
coach th at promot es good
sportsmanship. Parents can
help children choose appropriate sports fi gures as role
models w ho exemplify good
sportsma nship.
Parents can also encourage
fai r co mpetition where partieipants wi ll want to do their
best. C hi ldre n shoul d be
rem inded th at o ne should not
win at any cost. C hea ting and
dishonesty have no place in
th e spo rts arena. A team
sho uld win because it played
well . Following a victory, celebrations should be observed in
gracious ways.
,
If a child di splays poor
sportsmanship, parents should
correct the inappropriate·
behavior. A talk about what
would be appropriate can pur
the child on the right path to
fairness, res pec tfulness and
consideration.

of or yel l at a ch il d fo r making
a mistake. Th ey sho uld commend eve ryone's efforts, no
matter which ream they are
on .
.
Parems should accept th eir
children's abilities and avo id
com parin g t hem to o th er
children. Each child develops
skills at his o r her own ra te.
Parents should enco urage and
support their children to do
well and to try to improve,
based upon their past perfo rmances. They sho uld be careful not to have unrealistic
expec tations and demand too
much of their children .
Parents sho uld respect the
autho rity of the co a' hes and
the officials. If something is
(Becky Baer is Meigs County's
handl ed unfairly,
parents Extensimt agent for family and
should go through the proper comumer sciences a.zd community
channels to resolve the ' itua- development, Ohio State Univcrtion . They sho,uld remain in sity. )

OU announces scholarships to students

Nation • World
Study: '3 strikes' not working
Suspected killer remains at large

Walking in the rain is okay
unless it~ lightning, too

Whai is good sportsmanship? ~
BY BECKY 8AER
Children's organized sports
programs have many benefit&lt;.
T hese include exercise, getting
alo ng with others, and learning new ski lls, how to win and
lose, and sportsmanship. ·
Pare nts can help teach thei r
children th e art of bemg a
good spo rt, whi ch ca n carry
over into the other aspects of
their lives.
13ut too many tim es the part•nts behave imprope rly at
jporting
their
ch ildren's
events. T his conduc t does not
p:romote good sportsmanship,
nor does it se rve as a hea lthy
role model for the child.
What is good sportsmanship? It is defined as the
. behavior where o ne loses
without complaint or wins
witho ut bragging. Oppo nents
are treated with courtesy,
re spect, fairness and consideration .' ,
What can parents do to promote go od spo rtsm anship'
They should be good sports
themselves . They can show
interest in the game, cheer
positively for their children,
and tell them how proud they
are of th eir accomplishments.
Parents should never make fun ·

Thursday, Aug. 23,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Q ues ti o n : A fe w years ago
I was struck by lightning
because I was h olding an
umbrella during· a thunderstorm. After a day in the
hospital , I fully recovered . I
know p eople · di e · from
lightning strikes . H ow
o ften does this happen '
Answer: Whil e ligh tning
st r ikes are very dangerous,
th ey are uncommon . In th e
U nit ed States, about 6 00
peop le are killed each year
by lightn in g strike s and
an o ther 1,800 are inj ured.
To put this in perspec tive, it
may help to rem ember th at
the ri sk of being st ruc k by
lightning is about the same
as the chan ce of winning
big in your state's lotte ry.
(I'll take the lottery, thank
you .)
Lightning injuries usually happen when individuals
are outdoors but fail to
Jeek shelter as the storm
approaches. Frequent locations are the beach or the
golf course.
Not too surprdngly, the
popular vacation scare of
Florida has been ranke d
number one in deaths due ·
to lightning a number of
times. Most of the lightning
victims in the Sunshine
State are visitors, with men
between 19 and 35 being
most frequently involved in
this catastrophe.
Lightning is an electrical

~dicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
common as IS a persisten t
ringing in tile ears. M oro
severe damage to th e brain
produces sympto m s similar
to a stroke. The heart , lungs
and kidn eys m ay also suffer
serious dam age.
The dam age produ ced
by lightnin g m ay not be
totally appa r~ nt during the
first few . hours after the
event. R ecovery

thursday, August 13,1001

•

_fimilp

the path o f leas t resistan ce.
Th at is where the ligh,tning
will strike - as you know
by firsth and experience! .
Meta l condu cts electri city bet ter th an air, · so golf
clubs, umbrell as and other
met al produ c ts t e nd to
attract lightnin g. Ge t under
a per ma nent sh e lter or
'building in a storm; don 't
stand und er your umbrella!
Question : M y
maJor
injury when I was stru ck by
lightnin g was burns. Is this
what usually happe ns?
. Answer : Lightning is an
intense electrical spark
which injures individuals
by heat and by th e electric
current itself. Burns, as you
suffered, are almost always
present. At .times they may
be extensive, but occasionally they are minor. Any
organ can be damaged by
lightning. The particular
organ or organs involved
and the severity of damage
determine the outcome.

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

ti

rom any

of the injuries without any
noticeable effe ct is uncom mon . Most p eople are left
with scars from burns, an
arm whi ch do esn't work
"just right," or more serious problems from injury
to the nervou s and muscle
systems . You are truly lucky
to have "fully recovered."
In Jhe future I'd retommend that you and · my
other readers try prevention. Interrupting your day
on the beach or your golf
game when that little thun-

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new study of California,'s
"three strikes" law says it is cau~ing a rapid aging of the prison .
population with no discernible effect on crime.
Marc Mauer, assistant director ofThe Sentencing Project, a
not-for-profit group based in Washington, said Wednesday the
grpup's study of the 50,000 prisoners convicted under the
seven-year-old law found no link to the state's precipitous
drop in crime over the same period.
At the same time, Mauer said, the state is spending more
money to house a.n aging prison population that is "moving
beyond crime production age."
California Secretary of State Bill Jones, who sponsored . the
bill while a member of the state Assembly, challenged the
study, noting a 41 percent drop in crime that is twice the
national average.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) Authorities say he used toys to lure
Calling tl'(e suspect in a family killing the toddler co his death, suggesting that
spree a " cold-blooded" killer, auchori- he may be more than a methodical
ties began protecting at least a dozen of killer, criminal experts said Wednesday.
his relatives out of fear he may strike . The pattern of slayings - vicious
agam.
stabbings interspersed with deliberate
Nikolay Soltys, 27, is suspected of decision- making - suggest Soltys is
killing his pregnant wife, his 3-year-old delusional, rather than just engaging in
son and four other family members. He crimes of rage or opportunity•. said
remained at large Thursday as a nation- forensic psychologist Barry Rosenfeld,
wide manhunt entered its fourth day.
a professor at Fordham University in
Sacramento County Sheriff Lou New York.
.
Blanas called Soltys a " cold-blooded,
"Once there is a cooling~off period
calculated killer" and warned that any- in between some of the murders, then
one assisting him was " at risk of being it's no longer a spree," Rosenfeld said.
Soltys may now be driving an emerhis next victim." Fourteen family members in the Sacramento area were taken aid green Ford Explorer with a rear
into protective custody.
hatch paint~ a lighter shade of green.

Blish will find renovations
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Oval Office is bare, its furnishings hauled away so the floor could be refinished. Outside,
dropcloths and buckets litter the walkway as crews give the .
White House a fresh coat of paint, a shade called "Whisper

White."

-

With President Bush out of town, squads of painters, chimney inspectors and carpet installers have descended on the
White House. Bush is on a monthlong vacation in Crawford,
Texas, and workers are taking advantage of his absence to
spruce the place up.
Some 40 projects are under way this ·month, a burst of activity that s~ems to go beyond what officials call routine August
maintenance.
"Traditionally, it's the only time the president's away for a
period of time where they could get serious work done." said
Joe Hagin, deputy chief of staff.

Frozen sausage called back
WASHINGTON (AP)- Odom'sTennessee Pride of Little
Rock, Ark., is recalling 4,900 pounds of frozen sausage links
distributed nationwide because they may be contaminated
~ . ~~

.

.

'

~~Peck

then allegedly dashed into a tan one-story bungalow
On Wednesday, authorities charged JoAnne Jones , 53, wh9
behind his mother-in-law's house. A police cruiser that took Jived in the apartment, with second- degree murder in what
up the chase was involved in a four-vehicle crash.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani called a "horrendous and horrific:'

crime.

Man stabs Wai-Mart clerk
WASHINGTON, Utah (AP) -Authorities say a man was
planning to kill as many people as he could when he· walked
into a Wal-Mart store with four kitchen knives and stabbed a
clerk.
A sheriff's deputy patrolling the store's parking lot heard the
911 call about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday and got the man to drop
his weapons. The clerk was hospitalized in fair condition .
Paulson Tsosie, 23, was charged with attempted criminal
homicide and· aggravated assault. Tsosie also was wanted on a
warrant for .auto theft, and authorities said his sister had called
police shortly before the Wal-Mart stabbing saying he had
threatened to kill her.
·
Washington County Sheriff Kirk Smith said Tsosie walked
into the store with four large- bladed kitchen knives and began
stabbing Kimberly Davis, 26, as she was hanging clothing. The
assailant only paused when another employee heard her
scream and ran to try to help her, Smith said.

The products being recalled are 12-pound boxes of Alliant
PRESTIGE
Cooked Pork Sausage Skinless Links, the AgriATHENS _ Ohio Uni - Scholarship; Kyle P. Norris , Racine, Brandy B. To~in , Middleport,' Dill·
culture Department's Food and Safety Inspection Service said
.
h
d h Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Ste· arnold·Cutler Scholarship, Kibble ·
vemty as announce t e fani L. Pickens , Pomeroy, Kibble Foundalion Scholarship; Aazon J.
derstorm rolls in is the realWednesday.
following local students have Foundation Scholarship ·, Kevin A. Vaughan, Rutland, Kibble Founda·
spark which appears to the
Muscles contract very I
I.
d
The sausage was produced on June 20, and each box has a
been aw arded scholarships Porter, Rac ine, Diii -Arnold ~ Cutler lion Scholarship; Julie A. Wandling,
eye to jump from the forcefully with the massive y smart tung to o.
k
production code of "0206c 1L 1171 14117A." The code "EST.
Scholarship, Kibble Foundation Pomeroy, Diii~Arnold·Cutler Schol·
1 d
th
d El
electrical stimulation of
Family Medicine is a wee .for th e 2001-02 school year: Scholarship.
arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
c ou s to e groun · ecly column . To Sllbmit ques6544A"
appears on the label inside the USDA inspection seal.
Grant J. Abboll, Pomeroy, Kibble
Ryan M. Pratt, Pomeroy, Dill- ship; Angela M. White, Shade, Dill·
tricity and lightning take lightning. Muscle damage
if,
No injuries have been reported. Food safety officials sugFoundation Scholarship; Lauren E. Arnold-Cutlet Scholarship, Kibble Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kibble
the path of least resistance. can range from stiffness and lions, write to John C. Wo '
gested people ordering sausage links at restaurants ask if their
Anderson , Pomeroy, Kibble Faun· Foundation Scholarship; John Foundation Scholarship; Joshua D.
Lightning will strike a tree soreness to total destruc- D. 0 ., Ohio Univers.ity ColNEW YORK (AP) - They toil anonymously in the dandation Scholarship; Nicholas T. Avis, Heath D. Proffitt, Long Bottom, Dill- Will, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation
f h h I f
.
·h
/eoe oif Osteopathic Medicine,
meal
contains
the
recalled
product.
Coolville, Dean's Scholarship; Kelli Arnold·Culler Scholarship, Kibble Scholarship; William A. Will,
on top o t e il · i it is tion. T e nervous system is
"
gerous shadows of Jaw enforcement - serving subpoenas and
L'. Bailey, Pomeroy, Dean's Scholar· · Foundation Scholarship; Joshua J. Pomeroy, Diii-Arnold·Cutler Scholcloser thari the tree at the also frequently · injured. Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
eviction notices, collecting monetary judgments, towing away
ship, Oiii·Arnold:Cutler Scholarship, Pullins, Portland, Kibble Foundation arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
bottom of the hill, but the Memo ry Joss about the 45701 . Past columns are
the cars of parking scofilaws.
·
'Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Scholarship; Alisha D. Rojas, Tup.- ship; Brooke A. Williams, Middle~
man on the side of the hill
.jh
In New York City they are called marshals; in other states,
Jason P. Barber, Reedsville, Kibble pars Plains, Advantage Award: Ali- port, Dean's Scholarship, Kibble
even !I around the time of &lt;ivai/able online at www. raWASHINGTON (AP) _ New· York may get a reprieve
Foundation Scholarship; Michael L. son N. Rose , ·Long Bottom, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; William A.
under his metal umbrella is the lightning strike are dio.org lfm.
they operate under other names. Rarely, except perhaps on the
B~rr. Pomeroy, Kibble · Foundation Foundalion Scholarship; Juslln P. Young, Pomeroy, Diii·Arnold·Culler
from a massive blood shortage: The government is considering block where it happens, .does their work attract attention.
Scholarship; Orion J. Barrett, Roush, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Scholarship, James D. Euler Memo·
banning blood imported from Europe that makes up almost a
Langsville, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Leah M. Sanders, tial Scholarship,. Kibble Foundation
third of that city's supply,, but says any such ban would no. t Nobody wr,ites television shows about this kind of Law and
Scholarship; Kristen D. Bond, Syra· Reesville, Diii·Arnold·Culler Schol· Scholarship.
Order.
cuse, DIII·Arnold~Culler Scholar~ arshlp, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
Kibble Foundation Scholarships
begin before the fall of2002.
~.
Thus the :depth of public horror over the grisly death this
· s~lp: Jessica K. Brannon, ship; Dan iel B. Sayre, Racine, Kib· were also awarded to these Ohio
. • VVVVVVo
•
The Food and Drug Administration's timetable comes as the
Reedsville, Kibble Foundation ble Foundation Scholarship; Jan~ University freshmen : Whi!ney B.
,
•
bl db •· ) d dm dn da
h' th
ds week of City Marshal Erskine G. Bryce, who was savagely
Scholarship; Cinda V. Bratton, R ut ~ nifer A. Shrimplin , Pomeroy, Kibble Ashley, Pomeroy; Derrick L. Bolin,
nations top 00 an"s p e ge we es y to 5 1p ousan
beaten, shoved down a flight of stairs, splashed with gasoline
land, Kibble Foundation Scholar· Foundalion Scholarship .
Rulland; Joseph A. Brown,
of units of blood donated in other parts of the country to and set on fire after he tried to evict the occuJlants_pf an apartshiQ; St~cey E. Brewer, Middle~ort
Sbarirron_K._Siavlo~S.)'&lt;acu~a,_Beedsvilla;_Br.andon_B_Br.owning,~--========:::;===========::.::=======~:::::::::::~-~-1----m~.-;;inirnr"Now Yorlts antlcipateO!not'tfill.
Kibble Foundation Scholarsh ip; Diii~Arnold·Culle r Scholarship , Kib~ Reedsville; Kristen L. Chevalier,
r
"Just a week ago, we were starting to get into a rationing mept in Brooklyn.
Joshua M. Broderick, Pomeroy, ble Foundallon Scholarsh ip; Bonn1e Chester; Jeff w. Circle, Long Bot·
D~an's Scolarship (Johnston), Dill· J. Smith, Pomeroy, Diii~Arnold-Cut- tom; Joshua M. Clark, Pomeroy;
plan with our hospitals," said Dr. Robert Jones of the New
Arnold·Culler Scholarship, Kibble ler Scholarship, Kibble Foundation James W. Crow, Pomeroy; Andrew
York Blood Center.
Fpundatioh Scholarship.
· Scholarship; Sabrina D. smith, E. Davis, Pomeroy: Robert M. Day,
h
· • bl d
1 · b
·
·
' g1 t' ht
Brandon M. Buckley, Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Area Silx Health Services, Syracuse; Christopher A. Dodson,
T e nations 00 supp y IS ecommg mcreasm y IS •
Kibble Foundallon Scholarship; Dean's Scholarship, Kibble Founda- Pomeroy (and Presidential Scholars
dipping to crisis levels in .s ome areas over the last year.
Michelle D. Caldwell, Reedsville, lion Scholarship, Mary Pallay Covell award); Clay G. Enslen, ·Racine;
Dean's Scholarship, Dill-Arnold-Cui· Scholarship; Jeremiah G. Smith, Jetemy L. Fisher, Syracuse; Curtis
let Scholarship, Kibble Foundation Langsville, Diii·Arnold·Culler Schol- W. Hanstine, Racine; Ryan N. Hill,
scholarship, Rush Elliott Pre~Pro~ arship, Gordon F. and Nadine Brun- Syracuse. Tony A. Hupp, Racine
ftfssional Scholarship; Cynthia K. ner Scholarshit, Jay Hall Scholar- (and James D. Euler Memorial
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration said
c81dwell, Syracuse, Dean's Schol· ship, Kibble F'oundation Scholar- Scholarship); Jessica A. Janey,
arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar~ ship: James K. Stanley, Pomeroy, Pomeroy (and James D. Euler
Wednesday the time is still not right to hold talks with Iran.
s~lp: Chad M. Clark, Racine, Kibble Kibble Foundatior Schdlarship.
Memorial Scholarship): Joshua L.
"We'll have a dialogue with Iran when it makes sense to
Foundation Scholarship; Carly . A.
Jennifer A. Statcher, Port)eroy, Kehl, Reedsville; Billy J. Kennedy II,
have a dialogue with Iran," State Department deputy
Crow, Racine, Kibble Foundatzon Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Middleport: Andrea C. Krawsczyn,
Scholarship: Adam V, Cumings, Stephanie L. Stewart, Middleport, Pomeroy; Christopher S. Pickens,
spokesman Philip Reeker said.
.
Syracuse, Kibble Foundation Schol· . DIII-Arnold·Cutler Scholarship; Was· Pomeroy (and Founders' Award);
At the same time, he declined to say whether the !raman
atshlp; Heather E. Da1ley, Racme, ley S. Thoene, Pomeroy, Kibble Fallon D. Roush, Racine; Jeffrey A.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) parliament's approve! of all 20 of President Mohammad Kh~ta­
James D. Euler Memorial Scholar· Foundation Scholarship, Presiden1's Shank, Pomeroy (and Valedictorian
s~ip, Kibble Fo1Jndation Scholar- Scholarship; Autumn D. Thomas, Award); Rachel A. Taylor, MiddleAfter
three decades of dogged,
mi's nominees for Cabinet positions was a sign of moderation.
s61p; Corey D. Darst, Pomeroy, Kib- Syracuse, Kibble Foundation Schol· port; Robert J. Taylor, Racine: Jason
"That's a decision for the people and leaders of Iran," he even obstructiortist loyalty to
b!e
Foundatzon
Scholarshzp ; arship; Adrianne L. Tilley, Cheshire, L. Warner, Long Bottom; and Mickey
the conservative cause in
Matthew 0 . Dill, Racine, Kibble Kibble Foundation Scholarship ; L. Williams, Pomeroy.
: &amp;aid.
Foundation Scholarship.
Congress, Sen. Jes!e Helms
' Brant D. Dixon, Pomeroy, Kibble
says the battle must go on
Foundation Scholarship; Chad B.
Dodson, Middleport, Kibble Foundawithout him after 2003.
tiOn Scholarship; Michael W. Duhl,
In a broadcast from WRALST.
LOUIS
(AP)
The
parents
of
three
young
children
Portland, Diii·Arnold-Cutler Scholar·
1
x3
With
Photo
1x2 With Photo
who died after playing unsupervised in a hot car near their TV; where his fiery editorials
slllp, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Stephanie A.
Evans,
helped build support for his
home have been charged with child endangerment.
~eedsville, Ben Manley Scholar·
The
'children
Marcus
Jackson
Jr.,
2,
his
sister
Markeisha,
1972 election to the Senate,
ship, Kib~le Foundation Scholarsjllp: Justin M. Fields, Pomeroy,
I, and their cousin Mark Wagner Jr., 2 -were found uncon- the 79-year-old Republiqti
QIII·Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kib·
scious
in 114-degree heat inside the unlocked c.ar Aug. 12.
confirmed Wednesday that he
ble Foundation Scholarship; William
her
cousin
died
ofhyperthernua
that
day,
and
Markeisha
and
will not seek a sixth term.
'-!. Francis, Reedsville, Kibble Faun·
dation Scholarship; Robert A. Grim,
Marcus died two days later at. a hospital.
Helms quoted a Democrat,
4
Middleport, Kibble Foundation
The
children's
mothers
sisters
Latasha
Goodson
and
the
late Sen. Sam Ervin Jr., in
Scholarship: Marjorie a. Halar,
Latricia Bradford - and Marcus and Markeisha's father, Mar- saying time had taken irs toll.
Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Schol·
a)-ship; Gortney L. Haley, Pomeroy,
cus Jackson, were at the home · at the time, but Jackson and
"I would be 88 ifl ran again
Oountess Eliz Evans Glouchowska,
Bradford
were
both
napping,
police
spokeswoman
Adella
Jones
in
2002 and was elected and
Qiii·Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kib·
said.
.
ble Foundation Scholarship.
lived to finish a sixth term," he
• Chad E. Hanson, Pomeroy, Kib·
said. "This, my family and I
'
rile Foundation Scholarship; Mau·
decided unanimously, I should
reen M. Heines, Pomeroy, Dean's
!jcholarship,
Diii·Arnold-Cutler
not do - and, ladies and genScholarsll •P: Traci M. 'Heines,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - At least 150 intravenous bags tlemen, I shall not."
Pomeroy, K•bble Foundation Schol·
:Tessa Paige Will
of cancer drugs used by chemotherapy ~atients may have been
arship; Autumn B. Hill, Racine, Kib· ·
But Helms also was clear
ble Foundation Scholarship; Sarah
:altered
for
profit
by
a
greedy
pharmaCISt,
federal
prosecutors
Larger Ad Available
that he wouldn't be giving up
~ · Householder, Middleport, Edith A.
said.
his political fights until the day
Wray Scholarship; J.T. Humphreys,
If Needed
Each dilution could count as both a "misbranding" and an his te.r m ends.
Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Monty a. Hunger, Middle·
adulteration under federal law, prosecutors said in a ci~il court
0
"I am by no means
port, Kibble Foundation Scholar~
filing
Wednesday.
All
300
charges
could
trigger
$3
mtlhon
m
liJ,ip; Jody A. Hupp, Racine , Dillannouncing my retirement
Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Jessica
b~ .
.
becaufe a great deal of work
A. Johnson, Middleport, Jewell cut·
But so far, Robert R . Courtney has only been charged with lies ahead of the United States
DEADLINE:
Wednes~ay,
September
5,
2001
ler Scholarship: Kristina M.
a single count of misbranding an_d adulterating a drug.
Kennedy, Pomeroy,' Kibble Founda·
Senate this fall, and next year,
Courtney allegedly told mvestlgators he cut the. strength of
do•• Scholarship; Timothy J. King,
when there will be much sigMiddleport, Diii·Arnold·Cutler Schol·
the expensive cancer drugs Gemzar and Taxol out o( gre~d.
Send
or
bring
your
photo
to:
·
nificant legislation," he said.
~rship , Kibble Foundation Scholar·
Authorities claim diluting the drugs would have saved h1m
Ship.
.
Long before Helms' plans
Craig A. Knight, Racine .. Dill·
hundreds of dollars per dose.
became
public, possible sucArnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kibble
17JOO 8""-J
Foundation Scholarship; Stephanie
cessors had begun exploring
~ · Kopec, Middleport, Kibble Faun·
bids to replace him.
.
dation Scholarship; Jennifer M.
'. A group of Republicans
Lambert, Rutland , Kibble Founda~
Child's Name
RENO, Nev. (AP) -What began as a rou~ne traffic stop
tlon Scholarship; Michael G. Law·
announced this week they
ended hours later with a barricaded suspect bemg tear gassed
son, Rac ine, Diii·Arnold-Cutler .
Greeting
were trying to persuade Eli~­
Scholarship, Kibble . Foundation
a. 13-year police veteran dead of a gunshot wound.
Scholarship; Charles W. Legar,
Reno Police Officer John Bohach was killed Wednesday beth Dole to run for the SenPomeroy, Area Six Health Services; ·
when he tried to assist other officers who had chased the sus- ate seat. The former labor secSteven J. McCullough, Pomeroy,
retary and head of the Red
Kibble Foundation Scholarship;
pect, Larry Peck, into a small bungalow n.ear d?wntown.
Jason N. Mora, Pomeroy, Kibble
Must Be Prepaid • MC &amp; Visa Accepted
Police began pursuing Peck- w~o pohce sa1d was about 50 Cross was born and raised in
Foundation Scholarship; Scott W.
\
years old and had a history of n~nv1o~ent drug arres.ts -. after North Carolina, and watched
Needs, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation
an officer stopped him for erratiC dnvmg on the c~ty s no~th Helms' address in her hometown, Salisbury.
side.

·City marshals toil in danger

I d hortage h"Its NYC

B 00 s

ON THE WE'B· '"""""' myda"llysentl"nel com

White House declines talks

And D·e serve Recognition!

.Reg. 49tt ·ONLY 34tt

Move may end fighting
SKOPJE, Macedonia (AP) - NATO soldiers streamed into
Macedonia on Thursday as part of a mission to help end si~
months of ethnic hostilities, even as the rival sides still have not
agreed on how many weapons the troops sho.uld collect.
The British Royal Engineers who arrived in the capital,
Skopje, were part of an airlift of 3,500 troops taking part in
Operation . Essential Harvest. The new troops joined an
advance focce d abo!Jt 400 soldiers that began arriving Friday.
The main NATO task is to collect weapons surrendered by
the rebels.
,
"The sooner we get on with it the better," said Capt. Keith
Beddoe, who arrived with 91 other Royal Engineers. The
engineers unloaded clheir personal gear and stooE_ to the side
oftlle tarmac, inten y watching the unusually hectic air traf•
fie.
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Vidims' parents face charges

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LONDON (AP) - Pop star George Michael has kept hiS
promise to a Beatles museum in Liverpool and returned the
piano used by John Lennon to record the song "Imagin e."
The Steinway Model Z upright piano was back on display
Thursday at the Beatles Story Museum, one year after Michael
paid $2 million for the 31-year-old instrument at auction,
museum staff said.
·
The piano had been on loa~ to the museum before its
owner decided to sell it. Michael remarked that his new pur~
chase was "not the type of thing that should be in storage'
somewhere or being protected, it should be seen by people."
But after shelling out all that cash, he said he wanted to
record a song with the ·piano for his next album. His publicist
said Thursday it was unclear whether such a recording had'
been made.

sixth tenn

Sunday, September 9, 2001

Hi Val Cigarettes
sl 35 Pacl&lt; • sl3 ~ Carton
Cola Pop·
20 oz. bottle ONLY 69f
Amity Billfolds

Lennon piano ba~k on display

Sen. Jesse
not seek

Put 'Your Special Greeting
In Our "Grandparents
Are Special" Edition

$1

His 1995 Nissan . Altima was found
abandoned Monday:
Investigators said th e reward for
information leading to Soltys' capture
had climbed to $30,000.
Authorities said Soltys has relatives in
New York, North Carolina and possibly
Oregon and Washington siate.
Soltys allegedly stabbed his pregnant
wife, Lyubov, at their home .in a Sacramento suburb on Monday and then
drove 20 minutes to another suburb and
killed four other relatives. ln,vestigarors
said Soltys (allowed up the killings by
driving to his mother's home to ·pick up
his son. He later slashed the boy's thro'\t
and discarded the body in a cardboard
box, investigators said .

Accusations plague pharmacist

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The Daily Sentinel

1
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Ill Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

:

Standoff leaves officer dead

1
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••

••

•

�Paae A 6 • The Dailv Sentinel

TIME OU T FOR TIPS

Becky
Baer
ADVICE

•
con trol of thei r emotions , so
they don't do or say something they will regret later.
Pare nts can be selec tive
when find ing a spo rt and
coach th at promot es good
sportsmanship. Parents can
help children choose appropriate sports fi gures as role
models w ho exemplify good
sportsma nship.
Parents can also encourage
fai r co mpetition where partieipants wi ll want to do their
best. C hi ldre n shoul d be
rem inded th at o ne should not
win at any cost. C hea ting and
dishonesty have no place in
th e spo rts arena. A team
sho uld win because it played
well . Following a victory, celebrations should be observed in
gracious ways.
,
If a child di splays poor
sportsmanship, parents should
correct the inappropriate·
behavior. A talk about what
would be appropriate can pur
the child on the right path to
fairness, res pec tfulness and
consideration.

of or yel l at a ch il d fo r making
a mistake. Th ey sho uld commend eve ryone's efforts, no
matter which ream they are
on .
.
Parems should accept th eir
children's abilities and avo id
com parin g t hem to o th er
children. Each child develops
skills at his o r her own ra te.
Parents should enco urage and
support their children to do
well and to try to improve,
based upon their past perfo rmances. They sho uld be careful not to have unrealistic
expec tations and demand too
much of their children .
Parents sho uld respect the
autho rity of the co a' hes and
the officials. If something is
(Becky Baer is Meigs County's
handl ed unfairly,
parents Extensimt agent for family and
should go through the proper comumer sciences a.zd community
channels to resolve the ' itua- development, Ohio State Univcrtion . They sho,uld remain in sity. )

OU announces scholarships to students

Nation • World
Study: '3 strikes' not working
Suspected killer remains at large

Walking in the rain is okay
unless it~ lightning, too

Whai is good sportsmanship? ~
BY BECKY 8AER
Children's organized sports
programs have many benefit&lt;.
T hese include exercise, getting
alo ng with others, and learning new ski lls, how to win and
lose, and sportsmanship. ·
Pare nts can help teach thei r
children th e art of bemg a
good spo rt, whi ch ca n carry
over into the other aspects of
their lives.
13ut too many tim es the part•nts behave imprope rly at
jporting
their
ch ildren's
events. T his conduc t does not
p:romote good sportsmanship,
nor does it se rve as a hea lthy
role model for the child.
What is good sportsmanship? It is defined as the
. behavior where o ne loses
without complaint or wins
witho ut bragging. Oppo nents
are treated with courtesy,
re spect, fairness and consideration .' ,
What can parents do to promote go od spo rtsm anship'
They should be good sports
themselves . They can show
interest in the game, cheer
positively for their children,
and tell them how proud they
are of th eir accomplishments.
Parents should never make fun ·

Thursday, Aug. 23,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Q ues ti o n : A fe w years ago
I was struck by lightning
because I was h olding an
umbrella during· a thunderstorm. After a day in the
hospital , I fully recovered . I
know p eople · di e · from
lightning strikes . H ow
o ften does this happen '
Answer: Whil e ligh tning
st r ikes are very dangerous,
th ey are uncommon . In th e
U nit ed States, about 6 00
peop le are killed each year
by lightn in g strike s and
an o ther 1,800 are inj ured.
To put this in perspec tive, it
may help to rem ember th at
the ri sk of being st ruc k by
lightning is about the same
as the chan ce of winning
big in your state's lotte ry.
(I'll take the lottery, thank
you .)
Lightning injuries usually happen when individuals
are outdoors but fail to
Jeek shelter as the storm
approaches. Frequent locations are the beach or the
golf course.
Not too surprdngly, the
popular vacation scare of
Florida has been ranke d
number one in deaths due ·
to lightning a number of
times. Most of the lightning
victims in the Sunshine
State are visitors, with men
between 19 and 35 being
most frequently involved in
this catastrophe.
Lightning is an electrical

~dicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
common as IS a persisten t
ringing in tile ears. M oro
severe damage to th e brain
produces sympto m s similar
to a stroke. The heart , lungs
and kidn eys m ay also suffer
serious dam age.
The dam age produ ced
by lightnin g m ay not be
totally appa r~ nt during the
first few . hours after the
event. R ecovery

thursday, August 13,1001

•

_fimilp

the path o f leas t resistan ce.
Th at is where the ligh,tning
will strike - as you know
by firsth and experience! .
Meta l condu cts electri city bet ter th an air, · so golf
clubs, umbrell as and other
met al produ c ts t e nd to
attract lightnin g. Ge t under
a per ma nent sh e lter or
'building in a storm; don 't
stand und er your umbrella!
Question : M y
maJor
injury when I was stru ck by
lightnin g was burns. Is this
what usually happe ns?
. Answer : Lightning is an
intense electrical spark
which injures individuals
by heat and by th e electric
current itself. Burns, as you
suffered, are almost always
present. At .times they may
be extensive, but occasionally they are minor. Any
organ can be damaged by
lightning. The particular
organ or organs involved
and the severity of damage
determine the outcome.

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

ti

rom any

of the injuries without any
noticeable effe ct is uncom mon . Most p eople are left
with scars from burns, an
arm whi ch do esn't work
"just right," or more serious problems from injury
to the nervou s and muscle
systems . You are truly lucky
to have "fully recovered."
In Jhe future I'd retommend that you and · my
other readers try prevention. Interrupting your day
on the beach or your golf
game when that little thun-

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new study of California,'s
"three strikes" law says it is cau~ing a rapid aging of the prison .
population with no discernible effect on crime.
Marc Mauer, assistant director ofThe Sentencing Project, a
not-for-profit group based in Washington, said Wednesday the
grpup's study of the 50,000 prisoners convicted under the
seven-year-old law found no link to the state's precipitous
drop in crime over the same period.
At the same time, Mauer said, the state is spending more
money to house a.n aging prison population that is "moving
beyond crime production age."
California Secretary of State Bill Jones, who sponsored . the
bill while a member of the state Assembly, challenged the
study, noting a 41 percent drop in crime that is twice the
national average.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) Authorities say he used toys to lure
Calling tl'(e suspect in a family killing the toddler co his death, suggesting that
spree a " cold-blooded" killer, auchori- he may be more than a methodical
ties began protecting at least a dozen of killer, criminal experts said Wednesday.
his relatives out of fear he may strike . The pattern of slayings - vicious
agam.
stabbings interspersed with deliberate
Nikolay Soltys, 27, is suspected of decision- making - suggest Soltys is
killing his pregnant wife, his 3-year-old delusional, rather than just engaging in
son and four other family members. He crimes of rage or opportunity•. said
remained at large Thursday as a nation- forensic psychologist Barry Rosenfeld,
wide manhunt entered its fourth day.
a professor at Fordham University in
Sacramento County Sheriff Lou New York.
.
Blanas called Soltys a " cold-blooded,
"Once there is a cooling~off period
calculated killer" and warned that any- in between some of the murders, then
one assisting him was " at risk of being it's no longer a spree," Rosenfeld said.
Soltys may now be driving an emerhis next victim." Fourteen family members in the Sacramento area were taken aid green Ford Explorer with a rear
into protective custody.
hatch paint~ a lighter shade of green.

Blish will find renovations
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Oval Office is bare, its furnishings hauled away so the floor could be refinished. Outside,
dropcloths and buckets litter the walkway as crews give the .
White House a fresh coat of paint, a shade called "Whisper

White."

-

With President Bush out of town, squads of painters, chimney inspectors and carpet installers have descended on the
White House. Bush is on a monthlong vacation in Crawford,
Texas, and workers are taking advantage of his absence to
spruce the place up.
Some 40 projects are under way this ·month, a burst of activity that s~ems to go beyond what officials call routine August
maintenance.
"Traditionally, it's the only time the president's away for a
period of time where they could get serious work done." said
Joe Hagin, deputy chief of staff.

Frozen sausage called back
WASHINGTON (AP)- Odom'sTennessee Pride of Little
Rock, Ark., is recalling 4,900 pounds of frozen sausage links
distributed nationwide because they may be contaminated
~ . ~~

.

.

'

~~Peck

then allegedly dashed into a tan one-story bungalow
On Wednesday, authorities charged JoAnne Jones , 53, wh9
behind his mother-in-law's house. A police cruiser that took Jived in the apartment, with second- degree murder in what
up the chase was involved in a four-vehicle crash.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani called a "horrendous and horrific:'

crime.

Man stabs Wai-Mart clerk
WASHINGTON, Utah (AP) -Authorities say a man was
planning to kill as many people as he could when he· walked
into a Wal-Mart store with four kitchen knives and stabbed a
clerk.
A sheriff's deputy patrolling the store's parking lot heard the
911 call about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday and got the man to drop
his weapons. The clerk was hospitalized in fair condition .
Paulson Tsosie, 23, was charged with attempted criminal
homicide and· aggravated assault. Tsosie also was wanted on a
warrant for .auto theft, and authorities said his sister had called
police shortly before the Wal-Mart stabbing saying he had
threatened to kill her.
·
Washington County Sheriff Kirk Smith said Tsosie walked
into the store with four large- bladed kitchen knives and began
stabbing Kimberly Davis, 26, as she was hanging clothing. The
assailant only paused when another employee heard her
scream and ran to try to help her, Smith said.

The products being recalled are 12-pound boxes of Alliant
PRESTIGE
Cooked Pork Sausage Skinless Links, the AgriATHENS _ Ohio Uni - Scholarship; Kyle P. Norris , Racine, Brandy B. To~in , Middleport,' Dill·
culture Department's Food and Safety Inspection Service said
.
h
d h Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Ste· arnold·Cutler Scholarship, Kibble ·
vemty as announce t e fani L. Pickens , Pomeroy, Kibble Foundalion Scholarship; Aazon J.
derstorm rolls in is the realWednesday.
following local students have Foundation Scholarship ·, Kevin A. Vaughan, Rutland, Kibble Founda·
spark which appears to the
Muscles contract very I
I.
d
The sausage was produced on June 20, and each box has a
been aw arded scholarships Porter, Rac ine, Diii -Arnold ~ Cutler lion Scholarship; Julie A. Wandling,
eye to jump from the forcefully with the massive y smart tung to o.
k
production code of "0206c 1L 1171 14117A." The code "EST.
Scholarship, Kibble Foundation Pomeroy, Diii~Arnold·Cutler Schol·
1 d
th
d El
electrical stimulation of
Family Medicine is a wee .for th e 2001-02 school year: Scholarship.
arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
c ou s to e groun · ecly column . To Sllbmit ques6544A"
appears on the label inside the USDA inspection seal.
Grant J. Abboll, Pomeroy, Kibble
Ryan M. Pratt, Pomeroy, Dill- ship; Angela M. White, Shade, Dill·
tricity and lightning take lightning. Muscle damage
if,
No injuries have been reported. Food safety officials sugFoundation Scholarship; Lauren E. Arnold-Cutlet Scholarship, Kibble Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kibble
the path of least resistance. can range from stiffness and lions, write to John C. Wo '
gested people ordering sausage links at restaurants ask if their
Anderson , Pomeroy, Kibble Faun· Foundation Scholarship; John Foundation Scholarship; Joshua D.
Lightning will strike a tree soreness to total destruc- D. 0 ., Ohio Univers.ity ColNEW YORK (AP) - They toil anonymously in the dandation Scholarship; Nicholas T. Avis, Heath D. Proffitt, Long Bottom, Dill- Will, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation
f h h I f
.
·h
/eoe oif Osteopathic Medicine,
meal
contains
the
recalled
product.
Coolville, Dean's Scholarship; Kelli Arnold·Culler Scholarship, Kibble Scholarship; William A. Will,
on top o t e il · i it is tion. T e nervous system is
"
gerous shadows of Jaw enforcement - serving subpoenas and
L'. Bailey, Pomeroy, Dean's Scholar· · Foundation Scholarship; Joshua J. Pomeroy, Diii-Arnold·Cutler Scholcloser thari the tree at the also frequently · injured. Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
eviction notices, collecting monetary judgments, towing away
ship, Oiii·Arnold:Cutler Scholarship, Pullins, Portland, Kibble Foundation arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
bottom of the hill, but the Memo ry Joss about the 45701 . Past columns are
the cars of parking scofilaws.
·
'Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Scholarship; Alisha D. Rojas, Tup.- ship; Brooke A. Williams, Middle~
man on the side of the hill
.jh
In New York City they are called marshals; in other states,
Jason P. Barber, Reedsville, Kibble pars Plains, Advantage Award: Ali- port, Dean's Scholarship, Kibble
even !I around the time of &lt;ivai/able online at www. raWASHINGTON (AP) _ New· York may get a reprieve
Foundation Scholarship; Michael L. son N. Rose , ·Long Bottom, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; William A.
under his metal umbrella is the lightning strike are dio.org lfm.
they operate under other names. Rarely, except perhaps on the
B~rr. Pomeroy, Kibble · Foundation Foundalion Scholarship; Juslln P. Young, Pomeroy, Diii·Arnold·Culler
from a massive blood shortage: The government is considering block where it happens, .does their work attract attention.
Scholarship; Orion J. Barrett, Roush, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Scholarship, James D. Euler Memo·
banning blood imported from Europe that makes up almost a
Langsville, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Leah M. Sanders, tial Scholarship,. Kibble Foundation
third of that city's supply,, but says any such ban would no. t Nobody wr,ites television shows about this kind of Law and
Scholarship; Kristen D. Bond, Syra· Reesville, Diii·Arnold·Culler Schol· Scholarship.
Order.
cuse, DIII·Arnold~Culler Scholar~ arshlp, Kibble Foundation Scholar·
Kibble Foundation Scholarships
begin before the fall of2002.
~.
Thus the :depth of public horror over the grisly death this
· s~lp: Jessica K. Brannon, ship; Dan iel B. Sayre, Racine, Kib· were also awarded to these Ohio
. • VVVVVVo
•
The Food and Drug Administration's timetable comes as the
Reedsville, Kibble Foundation ble Foundation Scholarship; Jan~ University freshmen : Whi!ney B.
,
•
bl db •· ) d dm dn da
h' th
ds week of City Marshal Erskine G. Bryce, who was savagely
Scholarship; Cinda V. Bratton, R ut ~ nifer A. Shrimplin , Pomeroy, Kibble Ashley, Pomeroy; Derrick L. Bolin,
nations top 00 an"s p e ge we es y to 5 1p ousan
beaten, shoved down a flight of stairs, splashed with gasoline
land, Kibble Foundation Scholar· Foundalion Scholarship .
Rulland; Joseph A. Brown,
of units of blood donated in other parts of the country to and set on fire after he tried to evict the occuJlants_pf an apartshiQ; St~cey E. Brewer, Middle~ort
Sbarirron_K._Siavlo~S.)'&lt;acu~a,_Beedsvilla;_Br.andon_B_Br.owning,~--========:::;===========::.::=======~:::::::::::~-~-1----m~.-;;inirnr"Now Yorlts antlcipateO!not'tfill.
Kibble Foundation Scholarsh ip; Diii~Arnold·Culle r Scholarship , Kib~ Reedsville; Kristen L. Chevalier,
r
"Just a week ago, we were starting to get into a rationing mept in Brooklyn.
Joshua M. Broderick, Pomeroy, ble Foundallon Scholarsh ip; Bonn1e Chester; Jeff w. Circle, Long Bot·
D~an's Scolarship (Johnston), Dill· J. Smith, Pomeroy, Diii~Arnold-Cut- tom; Joshua M. Clark, Pomeroy;
plan with our hospitals," said Dr. Robert Jones of the New
Arnold·Culler Scholarship, Kibble ler Scholarship, Kibble Foundation James W. Crow, Pomeroy; Andrew
York Blood Center.
Fpundatioh Scholarship.
· Scholarship; Sabrina D. smith, E. Davis, Pomeroy: Robert M. Day,
h
· • bl d
1 · b
·
·
' g1 t' ht
Brandon M. Buckley, Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Area Silx Health Services, Syracuse; Christopher A. Dodson,
T e nations 00 supp y IS ecommg mcreasm y IS •
Kibble Foundallon Scholarship; Dean's Scholarship, Kibble Founda- Pomeroy (and Presidential Scholars
dipping to crisis levels in .s ome areas over the last year.
Michelle D. Caldwell, Reedsville, lion Scholarship, Mary Pallay Covell award); Clay G. Enslen, ·Racine;
Dean's Scholarship, Dill-Arnold-Cui· Scholarship; Jeremiah G. Smith, Jetemy L. Fisher, Syracuse; Curtis
let Scholarship, Kibble Foundation Langsville, Diii·Arnold·Culler Schol- W. Hanstine, Racine; Ryan N. Hill,
scholarship, Rush Elliott Pre~Pro~ arship, Gordon F. and Nadine Brun- Syracuse. Tony A. Hupp, Racine
ftfssional Scholarship; Cynthia K. ner Scholarshit, Jay Hall Scholar- (and James D. Euler Memorial
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration said
c81dwell, Syracuse, Dean's Schol· ship, Kibble F'oundation Scholar- Scholarship); Jessica A. Janey,
arship, Kibble Foundation Scholar~ ship: James K. Stanley, Pomeroy, Pomeroy (and James D. Euler
Wednesday the time is still not right to hold talks with Iran.
s~lp: Chad M. Clark, Racine, Kibble Kibble Foundatior Schdlarship.
Memorial Scholarship): Joshua L.
"We'll have a dialogue with Iran when it makes sense to
Foundation Scholarship; Carly . A.
Jennifer A. Statcher, Port)eroy, Kehl, Reedsville; Billy J. Kennedy II,
have a dialogue with Iran," State Department deputy
Crow, Racine, Kibble Foundatzon Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Middleport: Andrea C. Krawsczyn,
Scholarship: Adam V, Cumings, Stephanie L. Stewart, Middleport, Pomeroy; Christopher S. Pickens,
spokesman Philip Reeker said.
.
Syracuse, Kibble Foundation Schol· . DIII-Arnold·Cutler Scholarship; Was· Pomeroy (and Founders' Award);
At the same time, he declined to say whether the !raman
atshlp; Heather E. Da1ley, Racme, ley S. Thoene, Pomeroy, Kibble Fallon D. Roush, Racine; Jeffrey A.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) parliament's approve! of all 20 of President Mohammad Kh~ta­
James D. Euler Memorial Scholar· Foundation Scholarship, Presiden1's Shank, Pomeroy (and Valedictorian
s~ip, Kibble Fo1Jndation Scholar- Scholarship; Autumn D. Thomas, Award); Rachel A. Taylor, MiddleAfter
three decades of dogged,
mi's nominees for Cabinet positions was a sign of moderation.
s61p; Corey D. Darst, Pomeroy, Kib- Syracuse, Kibble Foundation Schol· port; Robert J. Taylor, Racine: Jason
"That's a decision for the people and leaders of Iran," he even obstructiortist loyalty to
b!e
Foundatzon
Scholarshzp ; arship; Adrianne L. Tilley, Cheshire, L. Warner, Long Bottom; and Mickey
the conservative cause in
Matthew 0 . Dill, Racine, Kibble Kibble Foundation Scholarship ; L. Williams, Pomeroy.
: &amp;aid.
Foundation Scholarship.
Congress, Sen. Jes!e Helms
' Brant D. Dixon, Pomeroy, Kibble
says the battle must go on
Foundation Scholarship; Chad B.
Dodson, Middleport, Kibble Foundawithout him after 2003.
tiOn Scholarship; Michael W. Duhl,
In a broadcast from WRALST.
LOUIS
(AP)
The
parents
of
three
young
children
Portland, Diii·Arnold-Cutler Scholar·
1
x3
With
Photo
1x2 With Photo
who died after playing unsupervised in a hot car near their TV; where his fiery editorials
slllp, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Stephanie A.
Evans,
helped build support for his
home have been charged with child endangerment.
~eedsville, Ben Manley Scholar·
The
'children
Marcus
Jackson
Jr.,
2,
his
sister
Markeisha,
1972 election to the Senate,
ship, Kib~le Foundation Scholarsjllp: Justin M. Fields, Pomeroy,
I, and their cousin Mark Wagner Jr., 2 -were found uncon- the 79-year-old Republiqti
QIII·Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kib·
scious
in 114-degree heat inside the unlocked c.ar Aug. 12.
confirmed Wednesday that he
ble Foundation Scholarship; William
her
cousin
died
ofhyperthernua
that
day,
and
Markeisha
and
will not seek a sixth term.
'-!. Francis, Reedsville, Kibble Faun·
dation Scholarship; Robert A. Grim,
Marcus died two days later at. a hospital.
Helms quoted a Democrat,
4
Middleport, Kibble Foundation
The
children's
mothers
sisters
Latasha
Goodson
and
the
late Sen. Sam Ervin Jr., in
Scholarship: Marjorie a. Halar,
Latricia Bradford - and Marcus and Markeisha's father, Mar- saying time had taken irs toll.
Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Schol·
a)-ship; Gortney L. Haley, Pomeroy,
cus Jackson, were at the home · at the time, but Jackson and
"I would be 88 ifl ran again
Oountess Eliz Evans Glouchowska,
Bradford
were
both
napping,
police
spokeswoman
Adella
Jones
in
2002 and was elected and
Qiii·Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kib·
said.
.
ble Foundation Scholarship.
lived to finish a sixth term," he
• Chad E. Hanson, Pomeroy, Kib·
said. "This, my family and I
'
rile Foundation Scholarship; Mau·
decided unanimously, I should
reen M. Heines, Pomeroy, Dean's
!jcholarship,
Diii·Arnold-Cutler
not do - and, ladies and genScholarsll •P: Traci M. 'Heines,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - At least 150 intravenous bags tlemen, I shall not."
Pomeroy, K•bble Foundation Schol·
:Tessa Paige Will
of cancer drugs used by chemotherapy ~atients may have been
arship; Autumn B. Hill, Racine, Kib· ·
But Helms also was clear
ble Foundation Scholarship; Sarah
:altered
for
profit
by
a
greedy
pharmaCISt,
federal
prosecutors
Larger Ad Available
that he wouldn't be giving up
~ · Householder, Middleport, Edith A.
said.
his political fights until the day
Wray Scholarship; J.T. Humphreys,
If Needed
Each dilution could count as both a "misbranding" and an his te.r m ends.
Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Monty a. Hunger, Middle·
adulteration under federal law, prosecutors said in a ci~il court
0
"I am by no means
port, Kibble Foundation Scholar~
filing
Wednesday.
All
300
charges
could
trigger
$3
mtlhon
m
liJ,ip; Jody A. Hupp, Racine , Dillannouncing my retirement
Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Jessica
b~ .
.
becaufe a great deal of work
A. Johnson, Middleport, Jewell cut·
But so far, Robert R . Courtney has only been charged with lies ahead of the United States
DEADLINE:
Wednes~ay,
September
5,
2001
ler Scholarship: Kristina M.
a single count of misbranding an_d adulterating a drug.
Kennedy, Pomeroy,' Kibble Founda·
Senate this fall, and next year,
Courtney allegedly told mvestlgators he cut the. strength of
do•• Scholarship; Timothy J. King,
when there will be much sigMiddleport, Diii·Arnold·Cutler Schol·
the expensive cancer drugs Gemzar and Taxol out o( gre~d.
Send
or
bring
your
photo
to:
·
nificant legislation," he said.
~rship , Kibble Foundation Scholar·
Authorities claim diluting the drugs would have saved h1m
Ship.
.
Long before Helms' plans
Craig A. Knight, Racine .. Dill·
hundreds of dollars per dose.
became
public, possible sucArnold-Cutler Scholarship, Kibble
17JOO 8""-J
Foundation Scholarship; Stephanie
cessors had begun exploring
~ · Kopec, Middleport, Kibble Faun·
bids to replace him.
.
dation Scholarship; Jennifer M.
'. A group of Republicans
Lambert, Rutland , Kibble Founda~
Child's Name
RENO, Nev. (AP) -What began as a rou~ne traffic stop
tlon Scholarship; Michael G. Law·
announced this week they
ended hours later with a barricaded suspect bemg tear gassed
son, Rac ine, Diii·Arnold-Cutler .
Greeting
were trying to persuade Eli~­
Scholarship, Kibble . Foundation
a. 13-year police veteran dead of a gunshot wound.
Scholarship; Charles W. Legar,
Reno Police Officer John Bohach was killed Wednesday beth Dole to run for the SenPomeroy, Area Six Health Services; ·
when he tried to assist other officers who had chased the sus- ate seat. The former labor secSteven J. McCullough, Pomeroy,
retary and head of the Red
Kibble Foundation Scholarship;
pect, Larry Peck, into a small bungalow n.ear d?wntown.
Jason N. Mora, Pomeroy, Kibble
Must Be Prepaid • MC &amp; Visa Accepted
Police began pursuing Peck- w~o pohce sa1d was about 50 Cross was born and raised in
Foundation Scholarship; Scott W.
\
years old and had a history of n~nv1o~ent drug arres.ts -. after North Carolina, and watched
Needs, Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation
an officer stopped him for erratiC dnvmg on the c~ty s no~th Helms' address in her hometown, Salisbury.
side.

·City marshals toil in danger

I d hortage h"Its NYC

B 00 s

ON THE WE'B· '"""""' myda"llysentl"nel com

White House declines talks

And D·e serve Recognition!

.Reg. 49tt ·ONLY 34tt

Move may end fighting
SKOPJE, Macedonia (AP) - NATO soldiers streamed into
Macedonia on Thursday as part of a mission to help end si~
months of ethnic hostilities, even as the rival sides still have not
agreed on how many weapons the troops sho.uld collect.
The British Royal Engineers who arrived in the capital,
Skopje, were part of an airlift of 3,500 troops taking part in
Operation . Essential Harvest. The new troops joined an
advance focce d abo!Jt 400 soldiers that began arriving Friday.
The main NATO task is to collect weapons surrendered by
the rebels.
,
"The sooner we get on with it the better," said Capt. Keith
Beddoe, who arrived with 91 other Royal Engineers. The
engineers unloaded clheir personal gear and stooE_ to the side
oftlle tarmac, inten y watching the unusually hectic air traf•
fie.
·

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LONDON (AP) - Pop star George Michael has kept hiS
promise to a Beatles museum in Liverpool and returned the
piano used by John Lennon to record the song "Imagin e."
The Steinway Model Z upright piano was back on display
Thursday at the Beatles Story Museum, one year after Michael
paid $2 million for the 31-year-old instrument at auction,
museum staff said.
·
The piano had been on loa~ to the museum before its
owner decided to sell it. Michael remarked that his new pur~
chase was "not the type of thing that should be in storage'
somewhere or being protected, it should be seen by people."
But after shelling out all that cash, he said he wanted to
record a song with the ·piano for his next album. His publicist
said Thursday it was unclear whether such a recording had'
been made.

sixth tenn

Sunday, September 9, 2001

Hi Val Cigarettes
sl 35 Pacl&lt; • sl3 ~ Carton
Cola Pop·
20 oz. bottle ONLY 69f
Amity Billfolds

Lennon piano ba~k on display

Sen. Jesse
not seek

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His 1995 Nissan . Altima was found
abandoned Monday:
Investigators said th e reward for
information leading to Soltys' capture
had climbed to $30,000.
Authorities said Soltys has relatives in
New York, North Carolina and possibly
Oregon and Washington siate.
Soltys allegedly stabbed his pregnant
wife, Lyubov, at their home .in a Sacramento suburb on Monday and then
drove 20 minutes to another suburb and
killed four other relatives. ln,vestigarors
said Soltys (allowed up the killings by
driving to his mother's home to ·pick up
his son. He later slashed the boy's thro'\t
and discarded the body in a cardboard
box, investigators said .

Accusations plague pharmacist

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The Daily Sentinel

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Ill Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

:

Standoff leaves officer dead

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••

••

•

�Inside:
Tribe wins late, Page 82
KV Dragway results, Page 82
NFL Camps, Page 82
Diamond Roundup, Page 88

-

-

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Page Bl

~

lhunday, Aupst l:J, 1001

Ma~auders

face strong Gallia
Academy squad on Friday
BY

DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

2001

i
LINCOLN
AMERICAN

MERCURY

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2001

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Reds out-duel Cards, 3-1

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2001

2001

A weekly look at the
region's top football teams,
as voted by .Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. · sports .
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

8TARTI!IG AT...

·SJ0,845

Tum
1. Portsmouth
2. Ironton
3. Jackson
4. Logan

2001

Prev. Votu
48 (3)
43 (1)
40 (1)
34

5. Parkersburg

FORDZX2
TD~.

30

25

6. Gallipolis
7. Wellston

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9. Fort Frye
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7
7

Othel'l ..-Jvlng votu: No
other teains received votes.

To be eligible lor The OVP

10, a lllllm mulll allhar: a.) be
from the Maaon-GalllaMelgWIIcklon - ; b.) be a
local confenlnce member; or
c.) play et 1eaat one game
egalnlllloollf .....

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Athens
Gallia Academy
Jackson
Logan
Marietta
Point Pleasant
River Valley
Warren

•

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11r0m,:

••

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

Friday's Games

White,
Blue
&amp;Green

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

lcles coming

weekend!

Point Pleasant at Ripley
Gallia Academy at Meigs
Ross Southeastern at Riveli
Valley
Wellston at J:jckson
Marietta at Morgan
Logan at New Lexington
. Athens at Nelsonville-York
Warren Local at Belpre

Ifl.';

All

Alexander
0-0
Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0-0
Nelsonville-York 0-0
Vinton County 0-0
Wellston
0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
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Eastern
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Federal Hocking 0-0
Miller
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Southern
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Trimble
0-0
Waterford
0-0

AU
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

Friday's Games
Gallia Academy at Meigs
Eastern at South Gallia
Berne Union at Southern
Wellston at Jackson
South Point at Vinton
County
Linden McKinley at Miller
Trimble at Symmes Valley · ·
.Athens at Nelsonville-York
Waterford at Shenandoah
Alexander at Zane Trace
· Federal Hocking at Fort
Frye
Warren Local at Belpre

•••••
Catch the first word on Friday's prep football action m
the Saturday Sjlorts Extra!
f

Eastern
set for

Rookie pitcher
slams St. Louis
cffense

South
Galli a

. CINCINNNATI (AP)
- The St. Louis Cardinals
have stalled in a most
unlikely place.
Cinergy Field has been .a
vacation spot for visiting
teams all season, a place to
get rejuvenated and headed
in the right direction
again. For the Cardinals, it's
turned into an unexpected
bump in the road.
Left-hander Lance Davis
singled home a run and
shut down th e Cardinals
for. seven innings Wednesday night, leading the ·
Cincinnati Reds to a 3-1
vidocy; '·
The Cardinals fell back
into third place in the · NL

BY BuTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

MERCERVILLE - The
South Gallia Rebels will open
their season with a most difficul t challenge when they face
Eastern Friday.
The Eagles went 9-1 last
year and earned a berth in the
playoffs before losing to
Newark Catholic in the first
round.
Eastern is returning maQy
of it's skilled position players,
including
quarterback
Garrett Karr
and fullback
R.J. Gibbs,
along with a
of
host

the fourth visiting team to ·
lose a pair of games during
a Cinergy series this season.
"When they pitch well,
like they have, they can
beat you," manager Tony
La Russa said.
The R eds usually don't
· do anything well at home,
where they've won only 20
of th eir 65 games. Their
top rookie starter gave
them all they needed for. a
rare home-field win.
Davis singled home the
first run in a modest thre erun second inning off Darryl Kile (13-8), the.n made

Pluse s• Rids. Bl

recetvers.

Meanwhile,
Christman
sophomore
tailback
Dusty Lewis steps in at tailback, stepping in for Rick
C lary, who graduated last year
after a stellar senior season,
rushin g for over 1, 100 yards.
Another sophomore, Jake
Workman, will serve as fullback.
"Their running back run
just like they did last year,"
said Eastern head coac h Scott
Christman. "They run hard.
The get to the ball quick on
defense, and the quarterback
throws the ball real well. They
have a pretty balanced attack
on offense and an aggressive

TIMELY HITINO - Cincinnati 's Ken Griffey Jr. hits an RBI-single in the second inning off St.
Louis Cardinals pitcher Darryl Kile Wednesday. (AP)
·

Browns release lineman Jim Pyne

TVC
Ohio Division

11

Please see J!llelp. Bl.

GROUND ORIENTED - Meigs, pictured in white in a scrimmage last week, will try to move the ball against a strong
GAHS defense . (Dave Harris)

The OVP

~ FORD
RANGER XL

Auto,

POMEROY - Meigs and Gallia Academy will renew their annual rivalry Friday
evening to open the 2001 football season at
Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy:
Friday will mark the 29th meeting between
the two schools, with the Blue Devils holding
a 19-9 edge in the all-time series. Gallia
Academy has won the last three contests.
· Long-time Blue Devil coach Brent Saunders welcomes back 13 .starters from last
years' team that qualified for the state playoffs
with an 8-3 mark. Overall, Saunders is I 0866-2 for the Blue Devils with six SEOAL

titles to his credit.
The Blue Devils will have some holes to
replace, including finding someone to fill th e
shoes of Ohio University Bobca t Ike Simmons and Marshall tight end Jeff Mull ens.
Oth..-r key graduation losses were Dustin
Deckard , John Lawhorn, Clayton Wood and
J.T. Spencer- Howell.
Senior quarterback David Brodeur (5- 11 ,
170) will return under center. for the Blue
Devils. At halfback for GAHS will be 5- 10,
175 pound senior Bobby Jon es, with Ni ck
R eed (5-6, 160) or Ty Simmons (6-0, 180) at

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -Jim Pyne, the
first player taken in the 1999 expansion
draft when the Cleveland Browns
returned to the NFL, was released by ·the
team Wednesday.
Pyne said Browns coach Butch Davis
brought him into his office Monday and
asked him to take a pay cut from $2.2
million per season to $700,000.
"] said, 'Fine, I want to play,"' said
Pyne, who has been sidelined with an
ankle injury during the exhibition sea~
son. "But I rold him I'd only do it ~fin
10 days he would guarantee I'd be on
the team. He wouJdn 't.
"So my agent and I decided to take

the show on the road."
,
Davis said the Browns had tried to
trade P.yne, an eight-year NFL veteran,
· and found no takers.
"He's been a popular player here and
by rdeasing him now, this gives jim a
week to I 0 days to possibly make a team
that could use him," Davis said. "We like
what we have seen from some of the
other guys."
Pyne said that he's been contacted by
several tea111S and ·that he's sorry to leave
Cleveland .
"I enjoyed my time here,'" he said.
Second- ye ar lineman Brad Bedell
srarted the first two exhibition games at

defense. 11

The Rebels, though, enter
the game with many un certainties with the loss of 14
seniors and 25 players on this
season 's team .
"Their numbers look like
their down a littl e bit, so that
probably going to be their
weakness, " said Christman.
"But, if you don't have that
many kids, you coaching your
varsity most of the {ime so
they get more reps in prac.tic e."
Despite the odds favoring
his club, Christman, and his
Eagles, are not overlooking

lefi guard after Pyne was sidelined by an
ankle sprain suffered early in camp. He
1nissed most of last season with a right
knee i1~ u ry.
Davis said upgrading th e offensive line
has been his top priority in his first season a.&lt;an NFL head coach.The Browns'
offense ranked last in the league last season.

Pyne, 29, was the· only li neman to play
every offensive snap of every Browns
game in 1999 after being selected from
Detroit. He started the first two gan1es in
2000, but was hurt in th e second quarter
of a 24-7 victory in Cincinnati on Sept.
10 and missed the res t of the season.

. Please see EacJes, B:Z

•

Denver headhunter·fined ·by NFL ·for hit
DENVER (AP) Eric
Brown's timing appeared to
be impeccable.
Just as Antonio Freeman
wrapped his hands around the·
ball, Brown fl attened him
with an awesome hit that
simultaneously drew gasps
and shouts of wonderment.
As it turned out, Brown's
timing could not have been
much worse.
With the NFL putting
increased emphasis on dan1

gerous plays, the Broncos safety was fined one game's salary
Wednesday for his jaw-twisting hit on Freeman during
Denver's preseason 'game
against the Green Bay Packers.
The fine levied by the NFL
amounts to $24 ,588 - ! 17th of Brown's base salary.
" I don't know any other
way to hit the guy," Brown
said. " If I put my head down,
th e injury m"ight have been

worse to him and to me. I just
don't know what else I could
have done."
Freeman, Green Bay's top
wide receiver, suffered a cont ussion and was sidelined for
the second half of Monday
night's exhibition game. He's
unlikely to play Saturday
against Miami.
·
Because league rules are
clear abottt helmet-to-helmet
hits, Denver coach Mike
Shanahan expected Brown to

be fi ned, but he also planned
to talk to NFL disciplinarian
pene Washington about the
amount.
"In my opinion, there was
no intent at all for Eric to hit
the guy in the head," Shanahan said. "He was trying to
. strip him of the ball, but it
doesn't maic.er what the intent
is. The bottom lin~ is, if you
hit somebody in the helmet,
you're going to get fined ."
San Diego Chargers safety

,,

Rodney Harrison was fined
$40,000 for a helmer-to-he!- ·
met hit on Oakland Raiders
tight end Jeremy Brigham last
Oct. 29. It marked the seventh
time Harrison was disciplined, while Brown is a firsttime offender.
Brown's hit came just
before halftime of Green Bay's
22-7 victory over the Broncos. Freeman was running full

Please see Hit. Bl
r

�Inside:
Tribe wins late, Page 82
KV Dragway results, Page 82
NFL Camps, Page 82
Diamond Roundup, Page 88

-

-

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Page Bl

~

lhunday, Aupst l:J, 1001

Ma~auders

face strong Gallia
Academy squad on Friday
BY

DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

2001

i
LINCOLN
AMERICAN

MERCURY

VILLAGER

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2001

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Reds out-duel Cards, 3-1

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'

2001

2001

A weekly look at the
region's top football teams,
as voted by .Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. · sports .
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

8TARTI!IG AT...

·SJ0,845

Tum
1. Portsmouth
2. Ironton
3. Jackson
4. Logan

2001

Prev. Votu
48 (3)
43 (1)
40 (1)
34

5. Parkersburg

FORDZX2
TD~.

30

25

6. Gallipolis
7. Wellston

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9. Fort Frye
1o. (tie) SE Ross
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8
7
7

Othel'l ..-Jvlng votu: No
other teains received votes.

To be eligible lor The OVP

10, a lllllm mulll allhar: a.) be
from the Maaon-GalllaMelgWIIcklon - ; b.) be a
local confenlnce member; or
c.) play et 1eaat one game
egalnlllloollf .....

Prep
SEOAL
Thun

ID LINCOLN
Mercuryi!

SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENT

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"We Can Help"!!

......... Us First Or We 8oth LOse!

SEQ All

Athens
Gallia Academy
Jackson
Logan
Marietta
Point Pleasant
River Valley
Warren

•

To Choose

11r0m,:

••

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

Friday's Games

White,
Blue
&amp;Green

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

lcles coming

weekend!

Point Pleasant at Ripley
Gallia Academy at Meigs
Ross Southeastern at Riveli
Valley
Wellston at J:jckson
Marietta at Morgan
Logan at New Lexington
. Athens at Nelsonville-York
Warren Local at Belpre

Ifl.';

All

Alexander
0-0
Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0-0
Nelsonville-York 0-0
Vinton County 0-0
Wellston
0-0

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

Thun

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Eastern
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Federal Hocking 0-0
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Southern
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Trimble
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Waterford
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AU
0-0
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Friday's Games
Gallia Academy at Meigs
Eastern at South Gallia
Berne Union at Southern
Wellston at Jackson
South Point at Vinton
County
Linden McKinley at Miller
Trimble at Symmes Valley · ·
.Athens at Nelsonville-York
Waterford at Shenandoah
Alexander at Zane Trace
· Federal Hocking at Fort
Frye
Warren Local at Belpre

•••••
Catch the first word on Friday's prep football action m
the Saturday Sjlorts Extra!
f

Eastern
set for

Rookie pitcher
slams St. Louis
cffense

South
Galli a

. CINCINNNATI (AP)
- The St. Louis Cardinals
have stalled in a most
unlikely place.
Cinergy Field has been .a
vacation spot for visiting
teams all season, a place to
get rejuvenated and headed
in the right direction
again. For the Cardinals, it's
turned into an unexpected
bump in the road.
Left-hander Lance Davis
singled home a run and
shut down th e Cardinals
for. seven innings Wednesday night, leading the ·
Cincinnati Reds to a 3-1
vidocy; '·
The Cardinals fell back
into third place in the · NL

BY BuTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

MERCERVILLE - The
South Gallia Rebels will open
their season with a most difficul t challenge when they face
Eastern Friday.
The Eagles went 9-1 last
year and earned a berth in the
playoffs before losing to
Newark Catholic in the first
round.
Eastern is returning maQy
of it's skilled position players,
including
quarterback
Garrett Karr
and fullback
R.J. Gibbs,
along with a
of
host

the fourth visiting team to ·
lose a pair of games during
a Cinergy series this season.
"When they pitch well,
like they have, they can
beat you," manager Tony
La Russa said.
The R eds usually don't
· do anything well at home,
where they've won only 20
of th eir 65 games. Their
top rookie starter gave
them all they needed for. a
rare home-field win.
Davis singled home the
first run in a modest thre erun second inning off Darryl Kile (13-8), the.n made

Pluse s• Rids. Bl

recetvers.

Meanwhile,
Christman
sophomore
tailback
Dusty Lewis steps in at tailback, stepping in for Rick
C lary, who graduated last year
after a stellar senior season,
rushin g for over 1, 100 yards.
Another sophomore, Jake
Workman, will serve as fullback.
"Their running back run
just like they did last year,"
said Eastern head coac h Scott
Christman. "They run hard.
The get to the ball quick on
defense, and the quarterback
throws the ball real well. They
have a pretty balanced attack
on offense and an aggressive

TIMELY HITINO - Cincinnati 's Ken Griffey Jr. hits an RBI-single in the second inning off St.
Louis Cardinals pitcher Darryl Kile Wednesday. (AP)
·

Browns release lineman Jim Pyne

TVC
Ohio Division

11

Please see J!llelp. Bl.

GROUND ORIENTED - Meigs, pictured in white in a scrimmage last week, will try to move the ball against a strong
GAHS defense . (Dave Harris)

The OVP

~ FORD
RANGER XL

Auto,

POMEROY - Meigs and Gallia Academy will renew their annual rivalry Friday
evening to open the 2001 football season at
Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy:
Friday will mark the 29th meeting between
the two schools, with the Blue Devils holding
a 19-9 edge in the all-time series. Gallia
Academy has won the last three contests.
· Long-time Blue Devil coach Brent Saunders welcomes back 13 .starters from last
years' team that qualified for the state playoffs
with an 8-3 mark. Overall, Saunders is I 0866-2 for the Blue Devils with six SEOAL

titles to his credit.
The Blue Devils will have some holes to
replace, including finding someone to fill th e
shoes of Ohio University Bobca t Ike Simmons and Marshall tight end Jeff Mull ens.
Oth..-r key graduation losses were Dustin
Deckard , John Lawhorn, Clayton Wood and
J.T. Spencer- Howell.
Senior quarterback David Brodeur (5- 11 ,
170) will return under center. for the Blue
Devils. At halfback for GAHS will be 5- 10,
175 pound senior Bobby Jon es, with Ni ck
R eed (5-6, 160) or Ty Simmons (6-0, 180) at

BEREA, Ohio (AP) -Jim Pyne, the
first player taken in the 1999 expansion
draft when the Cleveland Browns
returned to the NFL, was released by ·the
team Wednesday.
Pyne said Browns coach Butch Davis
brought him into his office Monday and
asked him to take a pay cut from $2.2
million per season to $700,000.
"] said, 'Fine, I want to play,"' said
Pyne, who has been sidelined with an
ankle injury during the exhibition sea~
son. "But I rold him I'd only do it ~fin
10 days he would guarantee I'd be on
the team. He wouJdn 't.
"So my agent and I decided to take

the show on the road."
,
Davis said the Browns had tried to
trade P.yne, an eight-year NFL veteran,
· and found no takers.
"He's been a popular player here and
by rdeasing him now, this gives jim a
week to I 0 days to possibly make a team
that could use him," Davis said. "We like
what we have seen from some of the
other guys."
Pyne said that he's been contacted by
several tea111S and ·that he's sorry to leave
Cleveland .
"I enjoyed my time here,'" he said.
Second- ye ar lineman Brad Bedell
srarted the first two exhibition games at

defense. 11

The Rebels, though, enter
the game with many un certainties with the loss of 14
seniors and 25 players on this
season 's team .
"Their numbers look like
their down a littl e bit, so that
probably going to be their
weakness, " said Christman.
"But, if you don't have that
many kids, you coaching your
varsity most of the {ime so
they get more reps in prac.tic e."
Despite the odds favoring
his club, Christman, and his
Eagles, are not overlooking

lefi guard after Pyne was sidelined by an
ankle sprain suffered early in camp. He
1nissed most of last season with a right
knee i1~ u ry.
Davis said upgrading th e offensive line
has been his top priority in his first season a.&lt;an NFL head coach.The Browns'
offense ranked last in the league last season.

Pyne, 29, was the· only li neman to play
every offensive snap of every Browns
game in 1999 after being selected from
Detroit. He started the first two gan1es in
2000, but was hurt in th e second quarter
of a 24-7 victory in Cincinnati on Sept.
10 and missed the res t of the season.

. Please see EacJes, B:Z

•

Denver headhunter·fined ·by NFL ·for hit
DENVER (AP) Eric
Brown's timing appeared to
be impeccable.
Just as Antonio Freeman
wrapped his hands around the·
ball, Brown fl attened him
with an awesome hit that
simultaneously drew gasps
and shouts of wonderment.
As it turned out, Brown's
timing could not have been
much worse.
With the NFL putting
increased emphasis on dan1

gerous plays, the Broncos safety was fined one game's salary
Wednesday for his jaw-twisting hit on Freeman during
Denver's preseason 'game
against the Green Bay Packers.
The fine levied by the NFL
amounts to $24 ,588 - ! 17th of Brown's base salary.
" I don't know any other
way to hit the guy," Brown
said. " If I put my head down,
th e injury m"ight have been

worse to him and to me. I just
don't know what else I could
have done."
Freeman, Green Bay's top
wide receiver, suffered a cont ussion and was sidelined for
the second half of Monday
night's exhibition game. He's
unlikely to play Saturday
against Miami.
·
Because league rules are
clear abottt helmet-to-helmet
hits, Denver coach Mike
Shanahan expected Brown to

be fi ned, but he also planned
to talk to NFL disciplinarian
pene Washington about the
amount.
"In my opinion, there was
no intent at all for Eric to hit
the guy in the head," Shanahan said. "He was trying to
. strip him of the ball, but it
doesn't maic.er what the intent
is. The bottom lin~ is, if you
hit somebody in the helmet,
you're going to get fined ."
San Diego Chargers safety

,,

Rodney Harrison was fined
$40,000 for a helmer-to-he!- ·
met hit on Oakland Raiders
tight end Jeremy Brigham last
Oct. 29. It marked the seventh
time Harrison was disciplined, while Brown is a firsttime offender.
Brown's hit came just
before halftime of Green Bay's
22-7 victory over the Broncos. Freeman was running full

Please see Hit. Bl
r

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aug. 23, 2001: ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

lhome homer gives Tribe win
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) David Riske was the Jan man
left in the Cleveland Indians'
bullpen, so the game was his
ro lose.
The rookie . right-hander
had no intention ofletting his
first career save slip away.
Jim Thome, in an 0-for- 17
slump, led off the 1 hh inning
with his 43rd homer, and
Riske escaped a bases-loaded,
no-outs jam in the bottom
half as the Indians held off the
Oakland
Athletics
5-4
Wednesday night.
" That was the toughest
spot I've ever seen in the
majors," Riske said. "I love to
be in that situation. I love
games like that. That's why
you
play.
Everybody's
pumped up about that win,
but nobody more than me."
Riske hasn't pitched much
in two callups from Triple- A
Buffalo this season, but he
relieved Rich Rodriguez
with a runner on in the 11th.
Riske quickly allowed a single and a walk, loading the
bases.
"He's learning the game
here at the major league level,
and to be able to do what he
did is just great," said Cleveland closer Bob Wickman (40), who pitched I 1-3 scoreless innings. "He showed
'some really amazing 'confidence for a young guy."
Riske got Miguel Tejada to
ground into a 1-2-3 double
play, then issued an intentional wal k that reloaded the
bases .
With a crowd of 40,992
screaming at him, Riske
slipped a called third strike
past Ramon Hernandez on a
high 3-2 fastball.
Manuel watched ·the extra
innings in the clubhouse after

Titans roll out top stars for first time :
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

YESI - Indians pitcher John Rocker ce lebrates after getting
Oakland Athletics' Jason Giambi to ground out to second and
end the eighth Wednesday. (AP)

being ejected in the seventh
for arguing balls and strikes.
Thome, the AL's .home run
leader, hit a 1-2 pitch from
Luis Vizcaino (1 -1) into the
deepest part of the r ight-field
bleachers, increa&gt;ing his
career-best homer total.
Juan Gonzalez tied it with a
two-run homer in the eighth
off A's closer Jason !~ring­
hansen as Cleveland won for
the seventh time in 10 games.
Jermaine Dye hit his 20th
homer for the A's, who fell to
29-11 since the All-Star break
while losing for just the
fourth time in 20 games .
Oakland, which dropped its
second straight one- run decision to Cleveland, wasted a
chance to increase its wild
card lead over Boston, which

lost at Anaheim.
Terrence Long drove in a
run with a bases-loaded
infield single in the ,seventh,
and Jason Giambi scored on a
wild pitch as Oakland went
up 4-2 .
With Roberto Alomar on
second .base and two outs in
't he eighth, lsringhauseri
entered the game and
promptly grooved a fastball to
.Gonzalez, who hit it over the
center-field wall for his 30th
homer.
With his ninth blown save,
lsringhausen · passed Tampa
Bay's Esteban Yan for the
major league lead.
In his sixth start since joining · the Athletics' rotation,
Erik Hiljus retired the first 11
batters he faced.

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who
make
.
this page po~sible.

NFL CAMP NEWS
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The Tennessee
Titans are starting to look like themselves.
All- Pro Eddie George will be at running
back Thursday night instead of Mike Green,
who led NFL Europe in ·rushing last spring.
And All-Pro Samari Rolle wiU stirt at right
cornerback in place ofDainon Sidney for the
first time this preseason when the Titans play
the Pl}ijadelphia Eagles (0-1). .
"!think we have to hold up our end of the
bargain;· Rolle said. "It's a big opportunity
now to see how everyone will do playing
together."
Starters don't play much in exhibitions, but
the Titans (2-0) have missed George on
offense. Their biggest rush so far was a 34yard run off a fake punt. They have averaged
3.3 yards per carry.
The Titans have been bringing George
?long slowly since surgery in February to
repair a tendon connected to his big right
!Oe. He didn't practice until Aug. 7 and has
be.e n in pads only a few times during training
camp.
Rolle was sidelined for the first couple
weeks of camp by a sore hip and only
returned to praatice last week.
"It's important for me to try to get into
some type of rhythm and get into form and
get my football instincts back over the next
two weeks and just totally forget about
surgery, the fact I had it;' George said.
Tennessee coach Jeff Fisher will play his
starters through the first half and a series into
the third quarter, and he plans to give George
12-15 carries in his first action since last January's playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

STEELERS

PITTSB'!JRGH (AP) - The Pittsburgh
Steelers went into training camp as the last
NFL team using the 3-4 - three down line~
men, four linebackers - as their primary
defensive set.
, But nearly two weeks ago, the Steelers
began · spending an increasing amount of
practice time on the 4-3.
It would .seem to be too close to the start.
of the season for gimmickry or subterfuge
intended to throw off an opponent, but coach

Bill Cowher hasn't dropped any hints about ·
how much 4-3, if any, the Steelers might plaY;
"We're tinkering with it, and we might play
a little of it in the preseason," Cowher said.~

BEARS

'

LAKE FOREST, Ill: (AP)- The Chicagq ;
Bears officially gave up on Cade McNown:
their first-round draft pick of tWo years ago:
by sending him to the Miami Dolphins fo(
two low draft picks.
McNown, who had a· 3-12 record as a :
starter, including 1-Blast season, was No.3 in :
Chicago
behind journeymen Sha.ne :
Matthews and Jim Miller.
The Bears on Wednesday received a sixthround draft pick in 2002 and a conditional
seventh-round pick the next year. Miami also :
received a 2002 seventh-round selection.
McNown was the N o 12 overall pick in :
the 1999 draft and was supposed to 'be the :
Bears' quarterback· of the future. But he held :
out of his first training camp and never
seemed to recover after the 11-day impasse ..
The left-hander had ·a 67.7 career pass rating,
. with 281 completions in 515 attempts for :
3,1 1 l yards.

'

•tl,.......ot. _ _

l
/
Jj
~.,j (_j Jj. r J
j _J_,. :J..:..-t..r JJ

. .IV

or •

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

All Tfme1 httern
Busch Gfencl National, Food City 210 _ _.!W!!INS~T~O~N.-,_CU'!'Pc__

Cr•ttam•n Truck, Chevy SUverado 200

12.:30 p.m.· Sunday • ESPN

·

SAINTS
THIBODAUX, La: (AP) -

_....
1.

Pro Bowl
offensive tackle William Roaf signed a threeye.ar, $16.56 million contract extension with :
the New Orleans Saints that should let him :
end his career with his only NFL team.
,
Added to the three years left on Roafs deal, :
the extension keeps him with New Orleans
through 2007.
.
.
.
"! don't know if I'll play all of them;• the .:
31 -year-old Roaf said.
,
.
:
He would make $25.025 million the next ·
six-years, and the deal includes escalators that ::
could add another $2 million if he continues
to be a ·Pro Bowl player.
··
Roaf, drafted by the Saints in the first round :
in 1993, played right tackle as a rookie before :
moving to left tackle. He's been one of the :
dominant players in the NFL at that. position ;
since, starting seven straight Pro Bowls and :
was named to the 1990s All-Decade Team '
·
selected by the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

.. ~i'l

Jeff Gordoo, 3,353

a.

Ric~

Audd. 3,065

3. Dale Jarretl. 2.999
. ._ Stertlrt Meflln, 2,972

Harvlck. 3.543

.lMon. KeiiM. 3,307

Scott Ri&amp;(s. 2,608
Jot Ruttman, 2.007

Greg B1ffle. 3,239

J~tel&lt;.

SPt"que. 2.560

~n~:l,7f3

·

~WAI'-'»,2,«14 .

Bristol races in 2000 . ...
Elliott Sadler pulled a
memorable upset in the race
held at the track earlier this
season .

8 p.m .. Saturday

Notable: Brothers Todd and
Brett Bodine, Jeff and David
Gree'n. and Darrell and
What: Food City 250
Michael Waltrip, have all won
Where: Bristol (Te nn.) Motor
Busch Series races here.
Speedway (.533-mile track),
250 laps/ 133.25 miles
CRAn5MAN TRUCK
When: 8 p.m., Friday
Defendln&amp; champion: Ke111.,
What: Chevy Sil~erado 200

1992 .

']jj!jill:j~~~~~
_ BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Robert
Pressley
,,·

CtJyQibba,.2,072

TOP TEN

.

Winston Cup ·Series

.

.

.

, ly MDnto Dutton

NASCAR.Thls weak

laps/mites
When: 12:30 p.m .. Sunday
Det.ndln&amp; champion:
Dennis Setzer
Qu.. lfylng record: JOO
Ruttman. Dodge.130.57 2
mph, July 14, 2000.
Race record: Greg Biffle.
Rl rd, 95.910 mph, July 18,

1999
Noblble: Former winner ·

Greg Biffle has announced he
will enter this race.

Your'IUm
Lott.. Fnn O...RIIIIIn

Dear NASCAR This Week.
I haven't hea rd anythin~ about
Geo ff Bodine lau:ty. What is he
doing? Hu he recovered after hi~
terrible accident?

Ct cdta Crowder
Fnmklin,l•d.

(1)
(2)
( 3)
( 7)
(4)

Jeff Gordon
Ricky Rudd
Pale Jarrett
StorllnC Marlin
K~vln Harvlck
8. (51 Tony Stewart
7. (6) D. Earnhardt Jr.

Bod week ... lor. him
Feotoat cer until It broko
If It weren't lor bad luck ...
Woll-doaerved victory
Sulftrod tnCJnolallure
Loot o lap In tho plto
Laot throe weoko:
10th, 12th and 12th
8. (8) Bobby Labonte Thor9UJIIIy mediocre 19th
9. (9) Ruoty Wallaca Faded late In tho race
10. (-) Johnny Benson Threeloll'flvea In lour weeki

·

Where: Nazareth ~Pa.)
Speedway (1·mile traclol), 200

••••••••••••

• NASCAR Thi s Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race. Last .
week's rankings are in parentheses.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Quallfyln&amp; record.: Jeff ·
Green. Chevrolet. 124.428
mph, March ·24. 2000
Race record: Harry Gant.
Buick, 92.929 mpll, Apri14,

What: Sharpie 500
Where: Bristol (Tenn.l Motor
Speedway (.533·mile track),
500 laps/266.5 miles
When: Green flag d!Ops at ,

Jelf Greer\. 3,139
rr.wls K'lapll, 2.550,
1. Tony Stewaort. 2. 870
'fllf'l)' Rl!llne~. 2.813
R~ Hendrl~l&lt;.. 2.460
e. 0.. E•nt18ot: Jr., 2,846 Ehon Sawyer, 2.802 'Titd Mu.,...., ::1,451
·1. Bobby L&amp;Ooote, 2.805 Mike McLaughlin. 2.199Terry Coo~. 2,409
.a. Rl.lll)o WIIIIIC$, 2,803&gt; Jimmie JohniOfl, !".780 Dennis S.tzer,·:1',328
1. Joh1111y Berlsoo. 2,788 Ch~;~d Uttte. 2,664
Rid~ Crawford, 2.234

10,

'Notable: wallace swept the

Wallace
Quellf)'ln&amp; record: Steve
Park, Chevrolet. 126.370
mph, March 24.2000
Race record; r.:herUe
Glotzba.- " Chevrolet,

.....

Harvick

101.074 mph, July 11. 1971

Defending champion: Rusty

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

wrtte:

NASCAR T111t otolllo Glllton.2500 E. F\'onlllltl Blvd•
. -··N.C. 21014

•

8 p.m. · Friday·· TNT
Wlnaton Cup, Sharpie 500
7 p.m ... SatUrday . TNT

com~.

Gt•IJ.fffey 8/Jdilft CQI1!idt!ri ~~~~~­
fill/y n'com't'd from rht eraI h.
wlrldt nt'curred 111 a t!'lld ruce ut
Ouyrmw ill F&lt;!hrnan· 10/lf/. 1ft' ;,.
mrl'f'ntly conrpt•1111g fl.'glllnr~· in 1he
'~e(f

B11.•rli

St-rit~.t

Dear N/\SCAR This Week.
To the 100)' last week who stated
she was (!tiling sick of hearing D~l e
Earnhardt Sr:s name memione4 in
~o many uticles: Perhnp ~ ~ h e
· shm1ld carefully read those onicleJ;
8nd :t he Ill~) tome to bc:Ue'l' know
the man thot so many of us knew,
IO\'rd ijlld dearly mi ~~ every day.•
If she doesn' t want to do that.
then she should Sr mply 1urn the
page and keep unn c~ dcd criticism
to her~:~e l f.

FROM lAST WEEK

Eagles
from Page B:Z

Ktlth Chrtllophtr
Clevrland, Ml.u.

• • ~ tUd at ChiCIIIIO, ltlt

when my dad was running
the old late model
sportsman, which Is now
the Busch sertes . Man,
watchi ng him race around
there and seeing him win
many of 1he several big

1 source of IWDtlvltiOII.

btcluH you're almoet
there, or 11 It ••ource·ol
fruttrstlon thlt rou can't
do It e\llfJ week? "Thera
Was no frustration at

au.

• races t hat were 300-

lappers. Th ey were a little
the Winston Cup Series
more than the 250 they run todliy Is better than It was
now" In Busch', but not quite years ago. If we could ru n
the 500 lops we run, so
second today. we could have
th is is a racetra ck l'v'e
won a lot of races years
always liked. I love goln;: up ago. 1think thl:' biggest thlnt
there and ,.e·ve had some · . Is making Winston Cup

•

Reds

.•.

yards m 178 carries.. · Senior
most out of their only oppor- .
"IYson
Lee (6-foot, 170) and
tunity offKile, who had given
senior Brandon Bobb (5-9,
up only two runs in his last
155) will also see time at tailfrom Page 11
four starts. Consecutive sinfrom Page 81
back, Bobb picked up over 100
gles by Jason LaRue, Juan
fullback. Anthony Dey (6- 1, yards in last week's scrimmage
the lead stand up by hold- Castro and Davis brought in
1
70)
will be the wingback and against Roane County.
run.
The
others
the
first
ing a sizzling offense to two
Roush and Lee, however
singles and one unearned run scored when Adam Dunn hit Josh Perry (5-11, 150) will be
Kiskis
have
been battling injuries and
the
split
end
and
Nathan
into a forceout and Ken Grif!n seyen innings.
)(6-3, 200) will be the tight end. are questionable for Friday's
The Cardinals have gotten fey Jr. hit an infield single.
Three
year starter Aaron Bur- game.
Davis got his first biggood pitching and good hitJunior Ross Stewart (5-9,
ting in August, setting up league win against the Cardi- nett (5-8, 200) will anchor the
184) look.. to have the edge at
their surge: They arrived in nals on June 27, holding them line.
fullback
with Roush also
Saunders
feels
that
the
to
one
run
in
eight
innings.
Cincinnati with an I 1-game
winning streak and an offense He ch~nged his approach in defense is the strength of his expecting to see action at that
averaging 5.6 runs per game the rematch and got a similar team, linebacker Clark Saun- spot.
result.
ders will lead the defense along
At tight end, Brandon Ramsthis month, best in the NL.
Kile gave up seven hits in with fellow linebacker Nick burg (5-11, 181 Jr.) and senior
Davis (6-2) made it look
seven
innings, but wound up Merola. Jones was also a big . Darrick Knapp (5-10, 165) are
puny in a game decided by
losing for the first time si nce threat on defense last season fighting for playing time. At slot
two ground balls.
end will be Derrick "Buzzy"
from his free safety spot.
The Reds squeezed the Juiy 12.
Mike Chancey, entering hij Fackler a 5-8, 155 pound
ninth year at the helm of the junior.
The offensive line for Meigs
on me the w hole time while Meigs Marauders, welcomes
the man was down, and they back 15 lettermen from last is wide open with several play7
said there was a smile on my · years' squad that finished with a ers battling for starting posiface;' Brown said.''l'm thinking 6-4 mark overall and a 3-2 tions.
Page 81
On the defensive line like the
. it was a clean hit. I was worried mark in the Tri-Valley ConferB speed when he caught a about · him. I didn't want the ence, The Marauders lost nine offense, it is wide open. Stewart,
pass li:Om Brett Favre and was man to be hurt because of me. sen/ors to graduation, including Roush and Jason Ro~er will be
immediately sen t flying by I went over and talked to him All- TVC .selections Derek . the linebackers.
The defensive ' backs is also
Brovm, whose helmet caused afterwards and he said, 'Good Miller, Adam Bullington, Matt
Stewart and Chris Jeffers. In wide open with Jon Diddle,
Freeman's j aw to snap sharply hit."'
to his left.
Because
Freeman . was Bullington and Stewart, the Lee, Fackler, Knapp ;md Bobb
As trainers attended to Free- attempting to make a catch, he Marauders must replace the top all hattlirig for playing time.
"Our kids are excited to get
man, Brown was beaming as he is considered " defenseless" and two receivers, as the two comcelebrated with teammates.The therefore offlimits to such con- bined to pull in 54 passes for · the season starting, the kids have
behavior drew a yellow flag tact. Once a player has posses- 691 yards. Jeffers was the team's worked very hard and are ready
to play;' Mike Chancey: said.
from Shanahan.
sion of the ball, he is fair game, second leading rusher.
Meigs, however does have "Gallia Academy is an experi"I was not thrilled there was although spearing a ball carrier
some
experience in the back- enced and talented team, we
a celebration when you knock or intentionally hitting him in '
field. Junior quarterback Kyle can't afford to make mistakes
a guy out;' Shanahan said. "To the head is still illegal.
me, if you're excited every time
For his part, an exasperated Hannan returns after starting agairist a good football team like
you make a tackle, that mearu Brown said he will not change the ·final nine games last season. them."
SIDELINERS. NOTES: A
Hannan (5-11, 180) was 51 of
you haven't been making a lot the way he plays.
"There are so many different 114 for 48% and 742 yards and reminder for all Sideliner Club
of tackles. So that's the way we
like to run 'our organization, in . ways that they're trying to say three touchdowns. Kyle threw members: all maroon and gold
a classy way. Hopefully, we'll do we can't hit this guy," he said."! only four interceptions last sea- card members are to go to the
back gate for .admission. Plus
don't understand how we're son.
that from now on."
Behind
H•n~
in
the
backonly
the gold card members
supposed
to
hit
him.
If
we
put
Brown said he was celebrating what he thought was · a our·head down, it's a fine. If we field will be classmate Jeremy will be allowed to park inside
clean hit, and he made a poin~ get him ill' the helmet, it's a fine. Roush. Roush (5-1 0, 193) can the gate, you will be directed
to check on Freeman as he was If the .tlall's overthrown and we play both fullback and tailback; into your proper parking spot
hit them, it's a fine. So how are he was the Marauders leading when you get tO&gt; the game. .
tiken from the field.
rusher last season with 780
"I heard they kept the camera we are supposed to hit them?"

Meigs

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Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

Up to 3400 minutes
·for $39.99.
Plus a free phone.

awfully go~ run s. We've
~ad some 'treat qualifying
runs and some good runs
In the BusCh car, but my

•

fondest memory 1~ going to
be when we finally win us

FEUD Of THE WEEK

NASCAR vs. Mother Nature
· The .Pre ssure Was on for NASCAR to get the Pepsi
'
400 In despite lncleme11t weather. The sari'ctlonlf'JS, body
tlad .scheduled its tona-ewalted announcen;~ent of the
results of Its 'safety IIWestlaatlon for 'fu8sday h1 At18(lta, ·

. and havlni to run the Mlchlaan race on Monday wout(i

'

· have shifted aome attentl::m away from that
announcement and aUruvetdd the lojlet lcs .for many ·
seekln&amp; to cover the anoouneement.

~Aij:AR Thii' WHk~ Monte Dultoni)YII hll

Oflltllon: 'The weather !precast could •••r«•ly nave
· looked War~ on a rain): $!JncpiY'fl"'Dfl\ln8. ttut much' of ,
ule'~.,rth wttther ollp~d·ilY· ~p ,m; nOrth 01 J1116~11ah ,
lntornatl~&gt;r~ol ~~· 'lllo ...'1 woo de~ o·bff,. bu&lt;
. NA:a"CAR.mpniiled to 'reio~1\he hatr.iey PQint befOre the
ltnathY delay.•

'

·

· 1 ..

races today. It you make
· them, you're pretty
compotlt lve. If you finish In

•

............ .
Who's Hot...
. WhdsNot

• HOT: Sterlll)i Marlin
hes a second end ~ first
·In the last three races.

• NOT; Dale Jarrett's last
fo ur finishes : 41st, 12th,

· 31st and 37th.

one of thOse races.~
Men rOu flnl1h 1tcond,

the to p 20, you have done
great, an d whenever you get
a top 10, you have done
something that everyone
would like tQ do.·

::s

c

CD

CD

0"
0"

-· 0''"'
0 c.
m ;.
-- --·
CD

to attend the event, named
in r:nemory ol its creator, T.
Wayne Robertson .
Robertson. the president
of R.J . Reyno lds' Sports
Marketing Enterprises tor 13
yearS, was killed on Jan·.. 14,
1998, in a Louisiana boating
accident.
The Preview Is th e largest
single-day sports Char:ty 1
event in North Caroline. ,
In the 12-year history of
the event, the Winston Cup
Preview has raised more
than $2.2 mrllion for

en

tn
tn
tn

-

)&gt;
Q,

:::r

CD
CD

'""

cha rity.
1 . In 1985. tor the first time. two drivers won
rnore than $1 million. Who were they?
2. WhO hosted the television show "Winners·· on The
Nashville Netwo·rk?
3. WhO Is the only driver to have won the Southern 500
five times?
4'fl'nOJOQJ9)., Gil;!:)' £
U9UU08 t19N ' e 'diJliUM IISH &amp;Q PUG U01113 11 18 'l

IMiiMINW

"

Correction
Last week, "NASCAR
Thi'S Week " lncorrBt:':lly
ldefltifled the winner of
the Oa~ona 500 at age
50 in ttie Tr1ckslde
Tri~Ja !lectlon. The driver
was B ol;)b~ AIJII,pn.

••••••••••
A~OUNDIH!GARAGE

Kyle Petty reaches 600 starts In Winston Cup career
ltfManlll Dutton

most part, 600 llans ju.st mL'!Itn5 I'm
NA$CAFI Thlt\Neek
aboul 20 years older than when 1 JOI
The Pepsi 400 Wit! the lttnq.mark !ltarled 11K'ing."
600th Clllm' stan fur K)'le Pelt)·, who
.
)C
n'lldt it into the f~ld by virtUeofU l6d1RETIJRNINGTHF. FAVOR: 1&lt;£:11
pt!ICC qualifYing cftbrt. Hod Ptnylqual· Schnn.ltr meed ttl llerlin IM~h. ) Rl'te-

11---

Hit

if}'ing nm ~ .007 sccondlsloJWCr. Ill:
wtlllkl have foiled tonmkc the field and
teamm~~te llucklhor Jonct "'IJUid have
bl.'Cll in.
"l giJC!!!l thi1 ts a personal milL&gt;s10111.1
but, 10 be IJJJ.."SS, l ~·,!lee itw; that big
ofadeal," sart!l'ctl)', who made hi~ fi rlit
!RilM in l97Q. "I WIISil't jumpin11 up ~nd
dmin at 100 5\lliU 01' 1300 or SOO, tmd I
probubly won't be JWT!plniJ up and
down a1600 either, I'm aratefulto have
bee!1 In the 5port this lonij. 't:P.'t that is
obout ~II it marb: lange\·ity. For the

. from

''

The level of competition In

• The 13th annual T. Wayne
Robertson NASC.AR Winston
Cup Prei/Jew will be Saturday.
Jan. 19, 2002, at the
Lawrence Joel Veterans
Memorial Coliseum in
WinSton-Salem. N.c;.
All NASCAR Winston Cup
Se ries drivers are scheduled

"'~' Uljilinst his Wir~tup Cupt~:ammlllc,
Johrvty Bcnmh. on Au~. I~- Sdrrudcr
wttl rerumlng lllin'Or. lienron. "i1o co-

CM'IISI~ Berlin lrnCk. took on S..:hruder
~I U\C tmck hi: cwns in Ptrtely, Mo., lft!il '

ytar.

X

ENOIIGH IS t.:!lriOUGH: $rcrling
Marlin is not panicularly fond of ttllrd
comes. "hich me~M he i~ delightl&gt;d
the rwtllhis !!Cason are vver.
'Thu1k MoodiiCSS o,.w've g01 Cll\1)' two
tood course roc~s o ~cor.'' Marlin SllicL

"l'tn SUJ'f Jelt Oortklo wishes ~ OOd cm-elcd for the year.
mote. but he~ probilbly one ofthe·few
:&lt;
~~oho fed, tiW Wll)' right n()IW.''
Nt:W BATTERIES: A Ro11sh

:&lt;

ROADC'ONSTH.U(110N ; While
conHrucfion ~'l'.'W5 \\.()fk on Seal) !'oint
RncC'A'lly'!. SJ5 million modtmitJJlioo
plun. the Sonomll. C11lif.. IUld .~'OUI'SC
will (lJ'Ii!rule rn a makeshift cnnfigurn·
tion fnrtirc rl'Siof tlr ~-eat
To facilitatcn&gt;rl'il~1inn, 1hc ll·tum.
2.52-milt c01uw will .be turned iuto 11
n1nc-ium. t.K3·mile IOVOI.JI. A link
l'!t:l'&gt;\ee\1 tum~ OfiC und 1;inc h.1s tx...:11
built to niJoo,l.. ~unMruction 1~1 continue.
The tempon~ry la},llll will IMI cluh
sports-car rucing, n dri\·ing ~hOOt mul
J'notorc~dc e\'CI1ts.
Drug mcing a~ti\'it it.-s have heen

JndU!trics inYCstigruion I'I."Vtnled lhllt,&lt;tJ
expw..'tt«&lt;. an i111crior mort in a lithium
battery ijflitetlthe
m the &lt;:ockpil of
Robby Gordon~ Chi.'Vrolct lost ....~k
that cost Gordon nshot at vi~1Cll)' in !he
Ulobal Crossin~~~ 1~ Ol.m
n~e battery JlllCks in lhe dnver (.'0!11·
rwtmerns an; mutched via "vibrulion
moums." But in t11t ca:&gt;e of Gordon's
cnr. ~~~ bo~ o~tly 01pcncnced "~
104 ti'IIYC vtbmtion than mnn.al."~«onl ·
rug to Spor1v1sionii Pt-t\1' ~. and
~old to the.other bllncrits. This week,
the 12- ~olt tilhiurn mangllllese llio~ide
battencs were rctllltccd hy normal D
,tklili~~e batlclie!i.

nre

• LH MoColl modo
the lllht 0111 It the
rllht limo, olootlnC to
ahiiiJe two tlrtl
Instead of four on th•
ftnol ptt ttop.
The retult w.. the
flrtt victory Of the
"110n for lterllnl
Mlrlln and the flrat
for Doda• since Nov.

11 0 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 457~9
·Phone 992·1135
l·Moll jmtt@lrognet,ntt
www;perlo.rm•n~UP\llldll.com

20, 1177, when Nell
Bonnett won 1t tM
now-defunot· a.&amp;inlle
0¥11 In Ontario, Ctllf.

Marlin lut won •
Wlntton Cup recti In
11H when he drove
for Lerry McClure.

...

i

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�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aug. 23, 2001: ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

lhome homer gives Tribe win
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) David Riske was the Jan man
left in the Cleveland Indians'
bullpen, so the game was his
ro lose.
The rookie . right-hander
had no intention ofletting his
first career save slip away.
Jim Thome, in an 0-for- 17
slump, led off the 1 hh inning
with his 43rd homer, and
Riske escaped a bases-loaded,
no-outs jam in the bottom
half as the Indians held off the
Oakland
Athletics
5-4
Wednesday night.
" That was the toughest
spot I've ever seen in the
majors," Riske said. "I love to
be in that situation. I love
games like that. That's why
you
play.
Everybody's
pumped up about that win,
but nobody more than me."
Riske hasn't pitched much
in two callups from Triple- A
Buffalo this season, but he
relieved Rich Rodriguez
with a runner on in the 11th.
Riske quickly allowed a single and a walk, loading the
bases.
"He's learning the game
here at the major league level,
and to be able to do what he
did is just great," said Cleveland closer Bob Wickman (40), who pitched I 1-3 scoreless innings. "He showed
'some really amazing 'confidence for a young guy."
Riske got Miguel Tejada to
ground into a 1-2-3 double
play, then issued an intentional wal k that reloaded the
bases .
With a crowd of 40,992
screaming at him, Riske
slipped a called third strike
past Ramon Hernandez on a
high 3-2 fastball.
Manuel watched ·the extra
innings in the clubhouse after

Titans roll out top stars for first time :
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

YESI - Indians pitcher John Rocker ce lebrates after getting
Oakland Athletics' Jason Giambi to ground out to second and
end the eighth Wednesday. (AP)

being ejected in the seventh
for arguing balls and strikes.
Thome, the AL's .home run
leader, hit a 1-2 pitch from
Luis Vizcaino (1 -1) into the
deepest part of the r ight-field
bleachers, increa&gt;ing his
career-best homer total.
Juan Gonzalez tied it with a
two-run homer in the eighth
off A's closer Jason !~ring­
hansen as Cleveland won for
the seventh time in 10 games.
Jermaine Dye hit his 20th
homer for the A's, who fell to
29-11 since the All-Star break
while losing for just the
fourth time in 20 games .
Oakland, which dropped its
second straight one- run decision to Cleveland, wasted a
chance to increase its wild
card lead over Boston, which

lost at Anaheim.
Terrence Long drove in a
run with a bases-loaded
infield single in the ,seventh,
and Jason Giambi scored on a
wild pitch as Oakland went
up 4-2 .
With Roberto Alomar on
second .base and two outs in
't he eighth, lsringhauseri
entered the game and
promptly grooved a fastball to
.Gonzalez, who hit it over the
center-field wall for his 30th
homer.
With his ninth blown save,
lsringhausen · passed Tampa
Bay's Esteban Yan for the
major league lead.
In his sixth start since joining · the Athletics' rotation,
Erik Hiljus retired the first 11
batters he faced.

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who
make
.
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NFL CAMP NEWS
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The Tennessee
Titans are starting to look like themselves.
All- Pro Eddie George will be at running
back Thursday night instead of Mike Green,
who led NFL Europe in ·rushing last spring.
And All-Pro Samari Rolle wiU stirt at right
cornerback in place ofDainon Sidney for the
first time this preseason when the Titans play
the Pl}ijadelphia Eagles (0-1). .
"!think we have to hold up our end of the
bargain;· Rolle said. "It's a big opportunity
now to see how everyone will do playing
together."
Starters don't play much in exhibitions, but
the Titans (2-0) have missed George on
offense. Their biggest rush so far was a 34yard run off a fake punt. They have averaged
3.3 yards per carry.
The Titans have been bringing George
?long slowly since surgery in February to
repair a tendon connected to his big right
!Oe. He didn't practice until Aug. 7 and has
be.e n in pads only a few times during training
camp.
Rolle was sidelined for the first couple
weeks of camp by a sore hip and only
returned to praatice last week.
"It's important for me to try to get into
some type of rhythm and get into form and
get my football instincts back over the next
two weeks and just totally forget about
surgery, the fact I had it;' George said.
Tennessee coach Jeff Fisher will play his
starters through the first half and a series into
the third quarter, and he plans to give George
12-15 carries in his first action since last January's playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

STEELERS

PITTSB'!JRGH (AP) - The Pittsburgh
Steelers went into training camp as the last
NFL team using the 3-4 - three down line~
men, four linebackers - as their primary
defensive set.
, But nearly two weeks ago, the Steelers
began · spending an increasing amount of
practice time on the 4-3.
It would .seem to be too close to the start.
of the season for gimmickry or subterfuge
intended to throw off an opponent, but coach

Bill Cowher hasn't dropped any hints about ·
how much 4-3, if any, the Steelers might plaY;
"We're tinkering with it, and we might play
a little of it in the preseason," Cowher said.~

BEARS

'

LAKE FOREST, Ill: (AP)- The Chicagq ;
Bears officially gave up on Cade McNown:
their first-round draft pick of tWo years ago:
by sending him to the Miami Dolphins fo(
two low draft picks.
McNown, who had a· 3-12 record as a :
starter, including 1-Blast season, was No.3 in :
Chicago
behind journeymen Sha.ne :
Matthews and Jim Miller.
The Bears on Wednesday received a sixthround draft pick in 2002 and a conditional
seventh-round pick the next year. Miami also :
received a 2002 seventh-round selection.
McNown was the N o 12 overall pick in :
the 1999 draft and was supposed to 'be the :
Bears' quarterback· of the future. But he held :
out of his first training camp and never
seemed to recover after the 11-day impasse ..
The left-hander had ·a 67.7 career pass rating,
. with 281 completions in 515 attempts for :
3,1 1 l yards.

'

•tl,.......ot. _ _

l
/
Jj
~.,j (_j Jj. r J
j _J_,. :J..:..-t..r JJ

. .IV

or •

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

All Tfme1 httern
Busch Gfencl National, Food City 210 _ _.!W!!INS~T~O~N.-,_CU'!'Pc__

Cr•ttam•n Truck, Chevy SUverado 200

12.:30 p.m.· Sunday • ESPN

·

SAINTS
THIBODAUX, La: (AP) -

_....
1.

Pro Bowl
offensive tackle William Roaf signed a threeye.ar, $16.56 million contract extension with :
the New Orleans Saints that should let him :
end his career with his only NFL team.
,
Added to the three years left on Roafs deal, :
the extension keeps him with New Orleans
through 2007.
.
.
.
"! don't know if I'll play all of them;• the .:
31 -year-old Roaf said.
,
.
:
He would make $25.025 million the next ·
six-years, and the deal includes escalators that ::
could add another $2 million if he continues
to be a ·Pro Bowl player.
··
Roaf, drafted by the Saints in the first round :
in 1993, played right tackle as a rookie before :
moving to left tackle. He's been one of the :
dominant players in the NFL at that. position ;
since, starting seven straight Pro Bowls and :
was named to the 1990s All-Decade Team '
·
selected by the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

.. ~i'l

Jeff Gordoo, 3,353

a.

Ric~

Audd. 3,065

3. Dale Jarretl. 2.999
. ._ Stertlrt Meflln, 2,972

Harvlck. 3.543

.lMon. KeiiM. 3,307

Scott Ri&amp;(s. 2,608
Jot Ruttman, 2.007

Greg B1ffle. 3,239

J~tel&lt;.

SPt"que. 2.560

~n~:l,7f3

·

~WAI'-'»,2,«14 .

Bristol races in 2000 . ...
Elliott Sadler pulled a
memorable upset in the race
held at the track earlier this
season .

8 p.m .. Saturday

Notable: Brothers Todd and
Brett Bodine, Jeff and David
Gree'n. and Darrell and
What: Food City 250
Michael Waltrip, have all won
Where: Bristol (Te nn.) Motor
Busch Series races here.
Speedway (.533-mile track),
250 laps/ 133.25 miles
CRAn5MAN TRUCK
When: 8 p.m., Friday
Defendln&amp; champion: Ke111.,
What: Chevy Sil~erado 200

1992 .

']jj!jill:j~~~~~
_ BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Robert
Pressley
,,·

CtJyQibba,.2,072

TOP TEN

.

Winston Cup ·Series

.

.

.

, ly MDnto Dutton

NASCAR.Thls weak

laps/mites
When: 12:30 p.m .. Sunday
Det.ndln&amp; champion:
Dennis Setzer
Qu.. lfylng record: JOO
Ruttman. Dodge.130.57 2
mph, July 14, 2000.
Race record: Greg Biffle.
Rl rd, 95.910 mph, July 18,

1999
Noblble: Former winner ·

Greg Biffle has announced he
will enter this race.

Your'IUm
Lott.. Fnn O...RIIIIIn

Dear NASCAR This Week.
I haven't hea rd anythin~ about
Geo ff Bodine lau:ty. What is he
doing? Hu he recovered after hi~
terrible accident?

Ct cdta Crowder
Fnmklin,l•d.

(1)
(2)
( 3)
( 7)
(4)

Jeff Gordon
Ricky Rudd
Pale Jarrett
StorllnC Marlin
K~vln Harvlck
8. (51 Tony Stewart
7. (6) D. Earnhardt Jr.

Bod week ... lor. him
Feotoat cer until It broko
If It weren't lor bad luck ...
Woll-doaerved victory
Sulftrod tnCJnolallure
Loot o lap In tho plto
Laot throe weoko:
10th, 12th and 12th
8. (8) Bobby Labonte Thor9UJIIIy mediocre 19th
9. (9) Ruoty Wallaca Faded late In tho race
10. (-) Johnny Benson Threeloll'flvea In lour weeki

·

Where: Nazareth ~Pa.)
Speedway (1·mile traclol), 200

••••••••••••

• NASCAR Thi s Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race. Last .
week's rankings are in parentheses.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Quallfyln&amp; record.: Jeff ·
Green. Chevrolet. 124.428
mph, March ·24. 2000
Race record: Harry Gant.
Buick, 92.929 mpll, Apri14,

What: Sharpie 500
Where: Bristol (Tenn.l Motor
Speedway (.533·mile track),
500 laps/266.5 miles
When: Green flag d!Ops at ,

Jelf Greer\. 3,139
rr.wls K'lapll, 2.550,
1. Tony Stewaort. 2. 870
'fllf'l)' Rl!llne~. 2.813
R~ Hendrl~l&lt;.. 2.460
e. 0.. E•nt18ot: Jr., 2,846 Ehon Sawyer, 2.802 'Titd Mu.,...., ::1,451
·1. Bobby L&amp;Ooote, 2.805 Mike McLaughlin. 2.199Terry Coo~. 2,409
.a. Rl.lll)o WIIIIIC$, 2,803&gt; Jimmie JohniOfl, !".780 Dennis S.tzer,·:1',328
1. Joh1111y Berlsoo. 2,788 Ch~;~d Uttte. 2,664
Rid~ Crawford, 2.234

10,

'Notable: wallace swept the

Wallace
Quellf)'ln&amp; record: Steve
Park, Chevrolet. 126.370
mph, March 24.2000
Race record; r.:herUe
Glotzba.- " Chevrolet,

.....

Harvick

101.074 mph, July 11. 1971

Defending champion: Rusty

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

wrtte:

NASCAR T111t otolllo Glllton.2500 E. F\'onlllltl Blvd•
. -··N.C. 21014

•

8 p.m. · Friday·· TNT
Wlnaton Cup, Sharpie 500
7 p.m ... SatUrday . TNT

com~.

Gt•IJ.fffey 8/Jdilft CQI1!idt!ri ~~~~~­
fill/y n'com't'd from rht eraI h.
wlrldt nt'curred 111 a t!'lld ruce ut
Ouyrmw ill F&lt;!hrnan· 10/lf/. 1ft' ;,.
mrl'f'ntly conrpt•1111g fl.'glllnr~· in 1he
'~e(f

B11.•rli

St-rit~.t

Dear N/\SCAR This Week.
To the 100)' last week who stated
she was (!tiling sick of hearing D~l e
Earnhardt Sr:s name memione4 in
~o many uticles: Perhnp ~ ~ h e
· shm1ld carefully read those onicleJ;
8nd :t he Ill~) tome to bc:Ue'l' know
the man thot so many of us knew,
IO\'rd ijlld dearly mi ~~ every day.•
If she doesn' t want to do that.
then she should Sr mply 1urn the
page and keep unn c~ dcd criticism
to her~:~e l f.

FROM lAST WEEK

Eagles
from Page B:Z

Ktlth Chrtllophtr
Clevrland, Ml.u.

• • ~ tUd at ChiCIIIIO, ltlt

when my dad was running
the old late model
sportsman, which Is now
the Busch sertes . Man,
watchi ng him race around
there and seeing him win
many of 1he several big

1 source of IWDtlvltiOII.

btcluH you're almoet
there, or 11 It ••ource·ol
fruttrstlon thlt rou can't
do It e\llfJ week? "Thera
Was no frustration at

au.

• races t hat were 300-

lappers. Th ey were a little
the Winston Cup Series
more than the 250 they run todliy Is better than It was
now" In Busch', but not quite years ago. If we could ru n
the 500 lops we run, so
second today. we could have
th is is a racetra ck l'v'e
won a lot of races years
always liked. I love goln;: up ago. 1think thl:' biggest thlnt
there and ,.e·ve had some · . Is making Winston Cup

•

Reds

.•.

yards m 178 carries.. · Senior
most out of their only oppor- .
"IYson
Lee (6-foot, 170) and
tunity offKile, who had given
senior Brandon Bobb (5-9,
up only two runs in his last
155) will also see time at tailfrom Page 11
four starts. Consecutive sinfrom Page 81
back, Bobb picked up over 100
gles by Jason LaRue, Juan
fullback. Anthony Dey (6- 1, yards in last week's scrimmage
the lead stand up by hold- Castro and Davis brought in
1
70)
will be the wingback and against Roane County.
run.
The
others
the
first
ing a sizzling offense to two
Roush and Lee, however
singles and one unearned run scored when Adam Dunn hit Josh Perry (5-11, 150) will be
Kiskis
have
been battling injuries and
the
split
end
and
Nathan
into a forceout and Ken Grif!n seyen innings.
)(6-3, 200) will be the tight end. are questionable for Friday's
The Cardinals have gotten fey Jr. hit an infield single.
Three
year starter Aaron Bur- game.
Davis got his first biggood pitching and good hitJunior Ross Stewart (5-9,
ting in August, setting up league win against the Cardi- nett (5-8, 200) will anchor the
184) look.. to have the edge at
their surge: They arrived in nals on June 27, holding them line.
fullback
with Roush also
Saunders
feels
that
the
to
one
run
in
eight
innings.
Cincinnati with an I 1-game
winning streak and an offense He ch~nged his approach in defense is the strength of his expecting to see action at that
averaging 5.6 runs per game the rematch and got a similar team, linebacker Clark Saun- spot.
result.
ders will lead the defense along
At tight end, Brandon Ramsthis month, best in the NL.
Kile gave up seven hits in with fellow linebacker Nick burg (5-11, 181 Jr.) and senior
Davis (6-2) made it look
seven
innings, but wound up Merola. Jones was also a big . Darrick Knapp (5-10, 165) are
puny in a game decided by
losing for the first time si nce threat on defense last season fighting for playing time. At slot
two ground balls.
end will be Derrick "Buzzy"
from his free safety spot.
The Reds squeezed the Juiy 12.
Mike Chancey, entering hij Fackler a 5-8, 155 pound
ninth year at the helm of the junior.
The offensive line for Meigs
on me the w hole time while Meigs Marauders, welcomes
the man was down, and they back 15 lettermen from last is wide open with several play7
said there was a smile on my · years' squad that finished with a ers battling for starting posiface;' Brown said.''l'm thinking 6-4 mark overall and a 3-2 tions.
Page 81
On the defensive line like the
. it was a clean hit. I was worried mark in the Tri-Valley ConferB speed when he caught a about · him. I didn't want the ence, The Marauders lost nine offense, it is wide open. Stewart,
pass li:Om Brett Favre and was man to be hurt because of me. sen/ors to graduation, including Roush and Jason Ro~er will be
immediately sen t flying by I went over and talked to him All- TVC .selections Derek . the linebackers.
The defensive ' backs is also
Brovm, whose helmet caused afterwards and he said, 'Good Miller, Adam Bullington, Matt
Stewart and Chris Jeffers. In wide open with Jon Diddle,
Freeman's j aw to snap sharply hit."'
to his left.
Because
Freeman . was Bullington and Stewart, the Lee, Fackler, Knapp ;md Bobb
As trainers attended to Free- attempting to make a catch, he Marauders must replace the top all hattlirig for playing time.
"Our kids are excited to get
man, Brown was beaming as he is considered " defenseless" and two receivers, as the two comcelebrated with teammates.The therefore offlimits to such con- bined to pull in 54 passes for · the season starting, the kids have
behavior drew a yellow flag tact. Once a player has posses- 691 yards. Jeffers was the team's worked very hard and are ready
to play;' Mike Chancey: said.
from Shanahan.
sion of the ball, he is fair game, second leading rusher.
Meigs, however does have "Gallia Academy is an experi"I was not thrilled there was although spearing a ball carrier
some
experience in the back- enced and talented team, we
a celebration when you knock or intentionally hitting him in '
field. Junior quarterback Kyle can't afford to make mistakes
a guy out;' Shanahan said. "To the head is still illegal.
me, if you're excited every time
For his part, an exasperated Hannan returns after starting agairist a good football team like
you make a tackle, that mearu Brown said he will not change the ·final nine games last season. them."
SIDELINERS. NOTES: A
Hannan (5-11, 180) was 51 of
you haven't been making a lot the way he plays.
"There are so many different 114 for 48% and 742 yards and reminder for all Sideliner Club
of tackles. So that's the way we
like to run 'our organization, in . ways that they're trying to say three touchdowns. Kyle threw members: all maroon and gold
a classy way. Hopefully, we'll do we can't hit this guy," he said."! only four interceptions last sea- card members are to go to the
back gate for .admission. Plus
don't understand how we're son.
that from now on."
Behind
H•n~
in
the
backonly
the gold card members
supposed
to
hit
him.
If
we
put
Brown said he was celebrating what he thought was · a our·head down, it's a fine. If we field will be classmate Jeremy will be allowed to park inside
clean hit, and he made a poin~ get him ill' the helmet, it's a fine. Roush. Roush (5-1 0, 193) can the gate, you will be directed
to check on Freeman as he was If the .tlall's overthrown and we play both fullback and tailback; into your proper parking spot
hit them, it's a fine. So how are he was the Marauders leading when you get tO&gt; the game. .
tiken from the field.
rusher last season with 780
"I heard they kept the camera we are supposed to hit them?"

Meigs

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

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

Up to 3400 minutes
·for $39.99.
Plus a free phone.

awfully go~ run s. We've
~ad some 'treat qualifying
runs and some good runs
In the BusCh car, but my

•

fondest memory 1~ going to
be when we finally win us

FEUD Of THE WEEK

NASCAR vs. Mother Nature
· The .Pre ssure Was on for NASCAR to get the Pepsi
'
400 In despite lncleme11t weather. The sari'ctlonlf'JS, body
tlad .scheduled its tona-ewalted announcen;~ent of the
results of Its 'safety IIWestlaatlon for 'fu8sday h1 At18(lta, ·

. and havlni to run the Mlchlaan race on Monday wout(i

'

· have shifted aome attentl::m away from that
announcement and aUruvetdd the lojlet lcs .for many ·
seekln&amp; to cover the anoouneement.

~Aij:AR Thii' WHk~ Monte Dultoni)YII hll

Oflltllon: 'The weather !precast could •••r«•ly nave
· looked War~ on a rain): $!JncpiY'fl"'Dfl\ln8. ttut much' of ,
ule'~.,rth wttther ollp~d·ilY· ~p ,m; nOrth 01 J1116~11ah ,
lntornatl~&gt;r~ol ~~· 'lllo ...'1 woo de~ o·bff,. bu&lt;
. NA:a"CAR.mpniiled to 'reio~1\he hatr.iey PQint befOre the
ltnathY delay.•

'

·

· 1 ..

races today. It you make
· them, you're pretty
compotlt lve. If you finish In

•

............ .
Who's Hot...
. WhdsNot

• HOT: Sterlll)i Marlin
hes a second end ~ first
·In the last three races.

• NOT; Dale Jarrett's last
fo ur finishes : 41st, 12th,

· 31st and 37th.

one of thOse races.~
Men rOu flnl1h 1tcond,

the to p 20, you have done
great, an d whenever you get
a top 10, you have done
something that everyone
would like tQ do.·

::s

c

CD

CD

0"
0"

-· 0''"'
0 c.
m ;.
-- --·
CD

to attend the event, named
in r:nemory ol its creator, T.
Wayne Robertson .
Robertson. the president
of R.J . Reyno lds' Sports
Marketing Enterprises tor 13
yearS, was killed on Jan·.. 14,
1998, in a Louisiana boating
accident.
The Preview Is th e largest
single-day sports Char:ty 1
event in North Caroline. ,
In the 12-year history of
the event, the Winston Cup
Preview has raised more
than $2.2 mrllion for

en

tn
tn
tn

-

)&gt;
Q,

:::r

CD
CD

'""

cha rity.
1 . In 1985. tor the first time. two drivers won
rnore than $1 million. Who were they?
2. WhO hosted the television show "Winners·· on The
Nashville Netwo·rk?
3. WhO Is the only driver to have won the Southern 500
five times?
4'fl'nOJOQJ9)., Gil;!:)' £
U9UU08 t19N ' e 'diJliUM IISH &amp;Q PUG U01113 11 18 'l

IMiiMINW

"

Correction
Last week, "NASCAR
Thi'S Week " lncorrBt:':lly
ldefltifled the winner of
the Oa~ona 500 at age
50 in ttie Tr1ckslde
Tri~Ja !lectlon. The driver
was B ol;)b~ AIJII,pn.

••••••••••
A~OUNDIH!GARAGE

Kyle Petty reaches 600 starts In Winston Cup career
ltfManlll Dutton

most part, 600 llans ju.st mL'!Itn5 I'm
NA$CAFI Thlt\Neek
aboul 20 years older than when 1 JOI
The Pepsi 400 Wit! the lttnq.mark !ltarled 11K'ing."
600th Clllm' stan fur K)'le Pelt)·, who
.
)C
n'lldt it into the f~ld by virtUeofU l6d1RETIJRNINGTHF. FAVOR: 1&lt;£:11
pt!ICC qualifYing cftbrt. Hod Ptnylqual· Schnn.ltr meed ttl llerlin IM~h. ) Rl'te-

11---

Hit

if}'ing nm ~ .007 sccondlsloJWCr. Ill:
wtlllkl have foiled tonmkc the field and
teamm~~te llucklhor Jonct "'IJUid have
bl.'Cll in.
"l giJC!!!l thi1 ts a personal milL&gt;s10111.1
but, 10 be IJJJ.."SS, l ~·,!lee itw; that big
ofadeal," sart!l'ctl)', who made hi~ fi rlit
!RilM in l97Q. "I WIISil't jumpin11 up ~nd
dmin at 100 5\lliU 01' 1300 or SOO, tmd I
probubly won't be JWT!plniJ up and
down a1600 either, I'm aratefulto have
bee!1 In the 5port this lonij. 't:P.'t that is
obout ~II it marb: lange\·ity. For the

. from

''

The level of competition In

• The 13th annual T. Wayne
Robertson NASC.AR Winston
Cup Prei/Jew will be Saturday.
Jan. 19, 2002, at the
Lawrence Joel Veterans
Memorial Coliseum in
WinSton-Salem. N.c;.
All NASCAR Winston Cup
Se ries drivers are scheduled

"'~' Uljilinst his Wir~tup Cupt~:ammlllc,
Johrvty Bcnmh. on Au~. I~- Sdrrudcr
wttl rerumlng lllin'Or. lienron. "i1o co-

CM'IISI~ Berlin lrnCk. took on S..:hruder
~I U\C tmck hi: cwns in Ptrtely, Mo., lft!il '

ytar.

X

ENOIIGH IS t.:!lriOUGH: $rcrling
Marlin is not panicularly fond of ttllrd
comes. "hich me~M he i~ delightl&gt;d
the rwtllhis !!Cason are vver.
'Thu1k MoodiiCSS o,.w've g01 Cll\1)' two
tood course roc~s o ~cor.'' Marlin SllicL

"l'tn SUJ'f Jelt Oortklo wishes ~ OOd cm-elcd for the year.
mote. but he~ probilbly one ofthe·few
:&lt;
~~oho fed, tiW Wll)' right n()IW.''
Nt:W BATTERIES: A Ro11sh

:&lt;

ROADC'ONSTH.U(110N ; While
conHrucfion ~'l'.'W5 \\.()fk on Seal) !'oint
RncC'A'lly'!. SJ5 million modtmitJJlioo
plun. the Sonomll. C11lif.. IUld .~'OUI'SC
will (lJ'Ii!rule rn a makeshift cnnfigurn·
tion fnrtirc rl'Siof tlr ~-eat
To facilitatcn&gt;rl'il~1inn, 1hc ll·tum.
2.52-milt c01uw will .be turned iuto 11
n1nc-ium. t.K3·mile IOVOI.JI. A link
l'!t:l'&gt;\ee\1 tum~ OfiC und 1;inc h.1s tx...:11
built to niJoo,l.. ~unMruction 1~1 continue.
The tempon~ry la},llll will IMI cluh
sports-car rucing, n dri\·ing ~hOOt mul
J'notorc~dc e\'CI1ts.
Drug mcing a~ti\'it it.-s have heen

JndU!trics inYCstigruion I'I."Vtnled lhllt,&lt;tJ
expw..'tt«&lt;. an i111crior mort in a lithium
battery ijflitetlthe
m the &lt;:ockpil of
Robby Gordon~ Chi.'Vrolct lost ....~k
that cost Gordon nshot at vi~1Cll)' in !he
Ulobal Crossin~~~ 1~ Ol.m
n~e battery JlllCks in lhe dnver (.'0!11·
rwtmerns an; mutched via "vibrulion
moums." But in t11t ca:&gt;e of Gordon's
cnr. ~~~ bo~ o~tly 01pcncnced "~
104 ti'IIYC vtbmtion than mnn.al."~«onl ·
rug to Spor1v1sionii Pt-t\1' ~. and
~old to the.other bllncrits. This week,
the 12- ~olt tilhiurn mangllllese llio~ide
battencs were rctllltccd hy normal D
,tklili~~e batlclie!i.

nre

• LH MoColl modo
the lllht 0111 It the
rllht limo, olootlnC to
ahiiiJe two tlrtl
Instead of four on th•
ftnol ptt ttop.
The retult w.. the
flrtt victory Of the
"110n for lterllnl
Mlrlln and the flrat
for Doda• since Nov.

11 0 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 457~9
·Phone 992·1135
l·Moll jmtt@lrognet,ntt
www;perlo.rm•n~UP\llldll.com

20, 1177, when Nell
Bonnett won 1t tM
now-defunot· a.&amp;inlle
0¥11 In Ontario, Ctllf.

Marlin lut won •
Wlntton Cup recti In
11H when he drove
for Lerry McClure.

...

i

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••

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���Thursda~Aug.23, 2001

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions a
Remode ling

• NewGaragta
• El.ctrlcal &amp; Plumbing

• Rooftng I Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio 1nd Porch Oecka

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

• New Homes

• Home Repairs

Free Estima1es
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Ele&lt;:lrlcal, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740·949·1521

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagea
•Additions
• Decks

NOTICES
NOTICE Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday,
August
25 ,2001 , at 10 :00
a .m.,' a public sale
wilt be held at 211
West Sacond Street,
Pomeroy, 0 hlo, The
Farmers's Bank and
Savings Company
extended parking tot
(beside Powell 's
Super Valu), to sell
lor cash the following
collateral:
1999 Ford Escort
Z X2
3 F AKP1
130XR195942 ·
Only 11 ,450 miles,

pb,pe,

auto , air,

crulse,power
· sunroof, cd, am-fm
cassette.

BUILDERS INC .
Ntw Homes • VInyl
Sid loa • Ntw Gan~ges
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftng
COMMIRCIAlond REIIDEIITIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

"'••-UC"wtlmt

All 0, I he lo II OW In 9 f!P1111111li1.11JI111111ll111111l1111111l11111111111llltt'l5
tract; Beginning at the
southeast corner of e

GoiYourMM..,.acr...

2-acre lot deed by
Mllllln Harkins to
Harvey A. Maloy, dated
September 14, 1901 ,

Willi A DttU, SHtlalel

BULLETIN BOARD

recorded to Volume

88, Page 195, Meigs
County Deed Records,
In
Section
18 ,
Townahlp 7, Range 15,
O.C.P.; thence ao~lh
to E.C. Ralph's land ;
thence weal 12 chaine
and 80 links to a stone
corner; thence north
to the road; thence In
an easterly direction
along aald road to tho
place of beginning,
contai-ning 19 acres ,

mora

or

less,

Free eatlmat•e,
Insured
Specialize in new

c:onst111dlon,
rtmodelina, plumblna.
elictrical, home main·
tenance, and rtpalr
~porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.

'

Owner
Charles A. Dill

.,._ 992-7445

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

t•ubli c Notic es in Newspape rs.
\'our Right to Know,
Dc lh'e rcd Ri ght to Your Door.
OJm• 1\'rw•PfiM'

KENSINGTON

BISSELL

Howardl.
Writesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St Rt. 7 South

1Sprlnklo
wlth flour

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMM ERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 911.5%
OF DAMIIGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

.,.

Hill's Self
Storage

Babs, I
need Yoox
opil'1ion ....

Sout•

2: .

Svre,
Whats up?

Pau

"

JONES'

1
I
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·.Aum.

"PAY MY BILL!!"
I

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Cellular

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r------------..:.-------~-------'-----..:.-----'·

l INAflNfl&gt; YOU PLAYING

Jeff Warner Ins. :
992-5479

POSflJM SO OFTeN
viOlJLl&gt;
US
T

larvlca, Inc

~~~OOl/~

Q~
~(» '
~ EXPO 200 1 ::t~
@
lnfvnnatlvn t::vntad

Uallas Weber-

BIG NATE

·ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

L..;,.___

r-"""-----.
P/B

r----------------MONUMENtAL LIFE INSURANCE ·co

IIPUWIII 1111

-11.

CONIIE1 ·
CHilD CARE

..........

7111J11Wtu ·
241ft

r-------"1

661-8321

~ ~:_:;~j

11

POOR LOSER! POOR LOSER!

Tire Barn

A.Q ts •

•

K 1532

_____

.

Wut

North

Pu1
11 •

( ..
Pill

'.
Ent

P1u
Pl&amp;N

Openlnetead: • A

What wa s J a m es
Thurb e r
writin g
about he re? " Its minimum t e mp e ratures
arc too low , and its
maximum t e mperatures too high. Its day
is not long enough,
and its night is too
long."
This deal must have
given South a real
thrill . It occurred during the 2000 Bermuda Bowl roundrobin match between
Norway and the
United States.
Gcir
Helgemo.
(East) opened two
diamonds , the Multi,
showing a weak two-

8 VIII
period
oltlmo
· 9 Mal(cocldall)
10 Umo' kin
11 Reuben
bread
I 3 Dlsllgure
18 The oneo

32
34
35
39

Happy
Beglrinars
Lovad
O'Hare
employee
43 Eagle's
nul
45 Actress
Rogere,
47 Father
46 Orlholeft
19 Gap
donllat'o
20 -Expre11
de g.
22 Faatanod 49 Caviar
50- Kippur ·
23 Railroad
locomotive 52 Waller'•
reward
24 Hillary
Clinton's
53 Seine
workplace
olght
25 Frlghtonad 54 Dancer
27 Be wrong
Charlaoe
'1""'11~-m""'!':':".,

.

bid in either major.
•Nick Nickell (South)
overcalled two spades . .
Erik Austberg (West)
· passed. Dick Freeman
(North) raised to four
spades,
and
that
floated back to West .
When 'he started
thinking, Nickell de- ·
vi1cd a plan. Clearly
West was contemplating a five-heart sacrifice ,. which he bid. If
North had doubled,
Nickell planned to remove to five spades.
But when Freeman
passed, denying heart
values,
Nickell
jumped to six spades!
Nickell ruffed the
heart
ace,
drew
trumps in two rounds,
cashed dummy's diamond ace in case East

lost to East's queen,
declarer
claimed.
Dummy's club losers
disappeared on declarer's established diamonds. .
There · is nothing

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Cllobrily Cipher cryptogram• ara created lrom quotatlona by lamoua
PIOflla, p.111 and pra11nt. Each latter In lhe cipher otandalor anolhtr.
Today's Clue:. 0 squa/s J

'X'U
UV

WXNT

KMIT

OBAI'

-

YXUT

BN

JMZO'Y

X

XN

...

(ZXOEXOE;)

Y K X Z,

FBXOE
X'F

YKT

KMIXOE

VB

ETY

M

GTJYBO

JMVOT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "You can taste a word.' - Pearl
Bailey
'You can't lake 11. Bad writing Is a gill."
Oalllenne
·
'

Richard La

m

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p R I P E Z
t--11~.,.;.....;...::,_-l
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WR E N 0
L2~.,--,.-..--..-:--l

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like stopping in game

~~=====::::

one minute, then bidding and making a
slam the next.
Thurber was dis-

14
.
_
.
_
_
,____,__...__,__..__,,

cussing .our planet. He

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,'-:-..,·.-P--.R_A,M,....T..--11=..,":,

I

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fi I think I'll run for a pol,ilical of1ce. my son mused Okay , my
husband replied, but remember,

I~~~ ~~~!r~:':ent is known to leak

c

continued: "The dis- t--r;~&amp;rT,-TI&gt;
7 -r,-...-~ A
V' omp 1ete t he chuc kl e quote d
position of its water
by filling in the miuing words
and earth is distinctly ·
you develop from step No. 3 below.

.__.._....___._...__._.J

unfortunate (the existence of the Mediterranean Sea in the
place where we find it
is perhaps the unhappiest acddent in the
whole firmament).
These factors encourage depression, fear,
war, and lack of vital ity." Iftme, that's depressmg.

•

•'•

Advertise in
this space.for
$100 per
month·

·Friday, Aug. 24 , 2001
It ;lpp ears that the

you're

pres~ nt l y

cour~e

stceriug is the

right one for you du ring this

p.articular time frame, so don' t
do anything r:~sh .:~~bout changing dire c ti o n in the year
ahead .

VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Scpt. 22)
-- You r magnificent f.a cultics

•.•
J

for concentn.tion are fully ope rativ e today, yet your impatience may be ~~~ high gear as

I

'
f
f

•

well. causing your a. chi evcment to be below par. Get a
jump on life by undL"ntanding
the inOuences that'll govern
)'OU in the year ahead. Send
for your Anro-Gnph predicriom by mailing Sl to Amo-

f

'\
.
.',
\

,
'

Graph. c/o thil newspaper,

l
'••

P.O. no, ·167, Wickliffe, Oil
44092-0167. Ue sure to nate
your Zodiac sign.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0&lt;t. 23) •

I

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- Know ing what you want to

'

acquire il not rho problom today . The difficulty is havins
the lack of uis&lt;iplino to wait
until you have 1he funds to
purchase it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Your cnptivoring personality \Viii draw people to
you today, bu1 should you get
fnatrated uver ~nythinr:. your

•~

Sentl'nel

. . ..
..

·•

my's jack. When it

..._Sentinel_,::

r-------..
flEA MUIO

• Q'
• J II

V ulnen~ bte: Nor1h·South

(740) 992-3470

a

...,.

• 10'
¥KI Ot l t 3

Dealer: Eaat

The Farmers Bank containing In aiJ 46
end
Savings acree,more or leas.
Fully lneured
RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Company, Pomeroy,
Parcel No . 2: The
Ohio, reservss 1he following dascrlbed
Drivers Wanted
rlgh1 to bid at 1hls real eat.a1e, In Meigs
Special 18"
aale, and 1o withdraw County, Ohio, In
Township;
31tem Pizza- $11 .50
1he above collateral Salam
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
I
prior to sale. Further, Beginning at the
992·9200
Shade
River
AG
Service
The Farmers Bank southea1t corner of
Hauling &amp;
and
Savings W.O. Golf's land In
Company reserves Section 18, Township
Eagles Club 2171
the right to reject any 7, Range 15, O.C.P.;
or all bids submitted. 'thence running w01t
Further, the above with sold Golf's line,
presents
colla1eral will be sold 13 chains and 16 links
Hauling • Limestone ·
In the condl11on It Is to a post; thence
"Ghostriders Band"
• Gravel Sand •
In, with no express or south to the road
Topsoil
• Fill Dirt
Implied warranties loading from E.C.
Friday
lg
• Mulch
given.
Ralph'a
pa s t
3SS37 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
• Nearly 2000 years experience.
For
lur1her Leonard's; • thence
Bulldozer Services
&amp;
Information, or an eastarly along said
• Works on Sundays.
I•
appointment to see road to the section
Saturday
• Always Available.
collateral before sale line 5 feet south of the
For
more
Information, come to our church site.
contact
s 'hella southwest corner of
p.m. - 12 midnight
Sund~y 9:30- Sunday School;
Buchanan at 992· the land now owned
2136.
Kitchen Open
10:30 • Preaching
by H.W. Cottrill ;
thence north along tho
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve.'7:00
(B) 22, 23, 24, 2001
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
6th Annual
3tc
section
to tho ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
place of line
beginning,
liS, LONG BOnOM, OHIO
ROUTE
containing 20 acres, -----~-28870 Beahan Road
more
or
tess.
P.ubllc
Notice
Public
Notice
Public Notice
Racine, Ohio
Save and except the
·
Melp Couoty Fairp'o&amp;Dis
45n1
coal In and above NOTICE OF PUBLIC
1998·5 under the ·
ELITE MECHANICAL CON'fRACTORS
HEARING No.2
Pooling and Servicing
September lStb &amp; 16th
Sheriff's Sale of Real described property,
740.949·2217
Eatata
previously conveyed
~graement dated ae of
'
The State of Ohio,
tn
Oh lo
Power
DATE OF
Saptemb8r 1, 1998 '
Slztii 5'1110'
f'VI'
"' '
TRAIIE'
. Meigs County
c~ oany.
PUBLICATION:
Plaln1111
to fO' x 30'
Bank One, National
S • oject to all legal
Va.
ltk HardTh SiopA 'lmn t~
Association fkll The
, easements and rights The V,lllage of Ellubath Bartoa, alai
Hours
First Nstlonal-Bank.oLol-record~ _ _ J?.orge&lt;&lt;&gt;y- lnlands....to___Delan.d antl_
-· - - -1:00-AM-, 8:00-PM- -'~-"~7-A:l.d :lfte~enln s.- -1-~=
1·304-675-7824
1-800-250·9077
Chicago, as Trustee,
· SAVE AND
apply to the Ohio
Court of Common
Residential Commtrcial New Construction
by Residential
EXCEPT:
Depart men I
of
Plea•
FundlngCorporatlon,
The
following DevelopJ11en1 lor
MelgsCounty,Ohlo
Sai.S S.nice lnstullatiun
Its Attorney In Fact,
described real estate, funding under the
In purauance of an
Specializina in Shttt Mttal Dudwork
11 Trane" Sales &amp; Senice For
c/o Homecomings
In Meigs County Ohio Community
Order of Sale 1o me
In Salam tow~ ship: Development Block directed from laid •
Financial Ne1work
Galli a, Mlllioni a'nd Meias Countl,.
Plaln1111,
Beginning at the Grant (COBG) Small Court In the above .
Licen'ltd
and IMuitd
WV 005176
vs
Southeast corner of Cities Program, a entltlad action, I will • New Homes
Buddy Wayne Eggers, W.O. Golf's land In federally funded expose to sale at
Jr., etal
Section 1 8, Township program
public auction at the • Garages
•IIIIIDIIIIIIfnll
Defendants
7, Range 15, O.C .P.; administered by the Courthouae
on , Complete
• I.IM&amp;IIIS1J.Iil• Elha..r Will
Case No. OQ-CV·151 thence running west State. Pomeroy Is September 13, 2001 at
1..
In putauance of an with said Golf's line , eligible tor $600,000 10:00 a.m. of said day,
•111111,.. llllnlllrte•IICl$18.15
0Hemodellng
Order of Sale In the 13 chains and 96 links lo r Fiscal Year 2002 I h a
I o II owIng
Stop &amp; Compare
.,.•• $42.115 ............
abovaentlllad action, I to a post ; thence CDBG
funding, dascrlbad real estate:
will ollar lor oale at South to the road providing the Village
Situate In 1he FREE ESTIMATES
•
public auction, at the leading from E.C . meets applicable Townohlp of Olive,
.
740
2
99
1671
Co u rth ou ae,
In Ralph'a past w . K. requirements.
County of Malgo, State
. •
•
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the Leonard's; 1henca
On August 6, 2001 of Ohio, bounded and
,liimJ~ l..---....!!.~~~i!\.!:.!::!.1:.!~--...,...J
above named County, Eaatarly along said the VIllage conduc1ed deecrlbed ae lollowe:
on 20th day of rood to 1he section the first of 2 required
Being In Town 3, ·
Saptamber, 2001, at line 5 lae1 South of the public hearings. Tho Range 11, and Section
10:00, the following Southweot corner of tlrat public hearing 24, and being a part of
•
44087 Wlpple Road
Pomeroy
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
CONTRACTORS, INC.
daecrlbed real aotata, tho land now owned ' Informed cl11zens Lot No. 122, Oliva
eltua1ad In tho County by K.W. Cottrill; about the CDBG Town11llp.
740·992·5344
Box 189
HOURS: Mon · Frl
SoU·I
11271 ""
of Malge and State of thence North along program, how It may
Being on the north ' Racine, Ohio 41n1
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Ohio, and In 1he City the Section line to the be uaed, what aide of the Racine
740-985-3948
of Pomaroy to wit:
place of beginning, activities are eligible, Road, beginning at the
Local 843·5264
Lagal Dllecrlptlon
containing 20 acr11, and other Important oouthtall corner of CONCRETf/BLOCIC/BRICK
Exhibit A
more or le11. Save program
what woe formerly • Footen, Wall•; Step• • M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
To get a current
Flat Work,
Burial and Final .Ellpenses; Cancer &amp;
Sltuetad In the and except the coal In requirement•. Baaed known •• tha Bennatt
weather report,
Townehlp of Salam, and und•r the above on both citizen Input Barton lot, nawownad · Repl.e.meau, • Wolkl Dental, Retirement,
County of Malge and d11crlbad property, and local olllclalo' by C. E. Patty; thence · aad.Drlveo • Steaell •
check the
Pension &amp; 40 IK Roll overs;
pravlouoly conveyed a11e11ment of the 70 degrau 1111 an
State of Ohio:
Crete Free Eotlmatu
Percel
No. 1: to
Ohio
Power VIllage need a, the eald road 5 rode;
Mortgage; Major Medical
SerYin(l
Ohio ond W.V.
Situated In the Company.
Vlllega Ia propoolng thence north 20
• Nursing Home
WVI03171l
Townohlp of Salam,
Subject to all legal to undertska the dagraee Will to the
County ol Melge, end aa11mante and rlghta Pomeroy
Water eouth line of what wae
Stile of
Ohio: otway of record .
Treatment Plant formerly known aetha
Beglnnlg at tha Being tha eama real lmprovemento
T.S. Sheldon land;
northweot corner of a utate deocrlbed In pro1ec1.
1hanaa weoterly along
47-acre lot dllded by deed of record In
The 1econd public the Sheldon oouth
Smith Kant'e helra to Volume 255, Page 827, hearing will be held line, to uld C.E. Patty
George Maloy, In Malga County Oaed on
Thuroday, tot: thence eouth 20
1111.1&amp;1
Section 12, Town1hlp Racorde.
September 8, 2001 at degraeo 1111 along the
ClnllllmdQ
7, Range 15, O.C.P.,
Being the oame real 1:00 PM at the C.E. Petty line to the
l•l~lln 'ltll
thence running aou1h a1tata 81 deocrlbed 81 Pomeroy VIllage Hall. place of beginning
on llld IICIIon line, Parcal No. 2 of recor&lt;l, The purpou 9f lhla containing about 84
1111 fi 5 UIIa
18 chalno and 1911nke In Volume 287, Plig&amp; hearing 11 1o give. rod1, more or leu.
..IIIJII ......
to a •taka: thence eall 759, Dead Record• of cltlzena an adequate Prior lnelrumant
IIEFIEIIIEm
8 chaine and 50 llnko Melga County, Dhla.
opportunity to review rafllrancso: Volume 10
................
to a otaka: thence
Curren1
dud and comment onthe Page31
_.,
north 18 chalno and 50 recorded on 08110n7 VIllage'• propoud Property addr11e:
......... 11'11111.
IInke to a otaka; In Volume 287, Pege COBG Application, 52302 Mount Oliva ldllt. . &amp;".......
thence nor1h 18 759.
Including
the Road
~---·
chalno and 19 llnkoto Property commonly propo1ad actlvltlas Long Bottom Ohio L----...,jl'l.i.lolliiil "
Shuler'• llnu; 1hance known at: 28775 oummarlzed above, 45743
'
weal 5 chaine and 50 Sanford Davll Road before the VIllage A p p ra lu d
at
IInke to the place of Langevllle, Ohl~ submits
· lte $18,000.00
beginning, contelnlng 45741.
application to the Terme ofeale: Caeh
10 acre1, mons or 1111. · Parcel Number: 13• Ohio Department of Sherlll, Malge County
Aloo, the following 00458.000.
Development.
AmyL. Brown·
parcel of land oltulle - Said
Premlau
Citizens
are
Thompoon
In
Section
12, Locetlll:l at 29775 encouraged to attend
Lerner, Sampaon It
Townohlp 7,Range 15; Ssnlard Dsvlo Road 1hlo meeting on
Rothlu11 111111111.1111111111.
O.C.P., and beginning Langavllte, OH 45741 .' Saptembar 6. 2001 at
120 E. Fourth Straet,
-at the noitheaot Said
Pramlu 1 1:00PM to expre11 .
BlhFIOor
corner of 1 tract ol Appraloed et $38,000 their view a and Clnclnnall, Ohio 45202
land deede&lt;;t by A.L. and cannot be aold lor comm~nll on the
(513) 241·3100
lt.li.7
Maloy and wile to Ieos than two-thlrda of VIllage 1 propooed
OH Sup Ct t0070511 .
Mifflin Harklne~ thence 1hatamount.
·.CDBG Application.
(8) 8, 18, 23
, . .1'1 ......
eaot 9 chaine and 54
TERMS OF SALE :
10"10 of appraloed (8)23,2001
llnkotothe
northwaot corner of a value down, remainder ·"'- - - - - - land owned by Dora upon tender of deed
Public Notice
W. Spirea, thence
Laurence B. Land~n _ _ _ _ __;:_:....__
r~~-=-=~~"1
oouth 11 . chain• and 1•0034856)
SHERIFF'S SALE
To get a current TRI-COUDTY
1811nko; thence well9 Attorney lor Plaintiff
Real Eotate
chain• and 34 llnko; 175 s. Third Street,
c 011 Number
weather report ,
TRHOSPORT
thanca nor1h 18 Suite 900
OOCV146
check the
Umest-1
chain a and 19 IJnko 1o Columbue, Ohio 43215
The
c ha1 e
Senlon ....,._..
the
place
ot (614) 228·7272, Ext. Manhattan Bank, ••
multtplellld
beginning, containing 210 •
trustee of IMC Home
Dlscounla
17 acres, more or less. (8) 9, 16, 23, 30, (9) 6
Equl1y Loan Truat,

1118111 Rlvu

1D 1 '

...

• An a

Top • Trim· Removal
Bucllal Satrvlc:a

.Exc:;

s.

•K nt

TREE SERVICE

Eric Blackburn·

" J f2
t A J t
.. Q t 4

... Q

t

.movie
12 Boonaor
apace
Wobeler
lillian
13 Blollk
48"01
14 Large
courHI"
houaa
46 Coolant
15 Plaza Hotel
(2wde.)
51 llovloW
16tlr...
writer
Tyler
55 Dootlnod to
17 Enthuol11t
on unhappy
18 Cry of
end
surprloe
56 Lightly
21 Monloe
57 Large
· and1ruCKI
23 Aug. lime 58 Chirped
26 Exheuot
28 Fregront
DOWN
ointment
1HST
29 Comper•
1m ending lallo2 Ethiopian
30 Salon
title
cancom
31 Comic Coca 3 Mod.
specialty
33 AgeiiU
4 Clock pert
36 Memo
lettare
5 "Under·
1tand?"
37 Do a
(2wde.)
msrethon
8 ~ootball
38 Poemo of
team
praloe
40 AbOmlneble 7 Disney
Wa~d alta
Snowman

6 K J 13

w...

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Sfump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

740-a"Lh-2422 ,

,Mary

' lngrodltnl
44 Guldod
45 Ruulan

7 Cowboy

Tree Service

949·1405
591·5011

PUft

Help Wanted
949-4900

N-12 DOUBlE WAll
PlASTIC
FIRST COME, ·
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGUlARlY $321.00
PER JOINT

Free Estimates

DIPOYSAD
RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS

24'120'

41 Fall plana ·
42 Bloody

ACROSS

1.)

8

P~INT NUMBE~ED L.ETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

II

2

3

I I I I

. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER ·
.

•

•s

,.

!
I I I

SCRAM·Lns ANSWERS

· Region -Sixth- Welch , Gender- EXER(;ISE
Man answering·door to wife, Honey , th.ere's someone here to see you . I think it's the lruant officer from
your EXERCISE class.

'lbur
'Birthday
b~.·ha"vior q&gt;uld drive them
away again.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc . 21) -- Fact-lindi ng
seems to be your specialty to day and you will easily ga tl1er
all the Iaten gos~i p abou t
rybody in quc!aion. What you
c1n't do , however, i~ keep th~:
tittle-tattle to yourself.

c""-

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·
Jan . 19) --This is not an cspc-

ciaUy good day for you to deal
with salesmen, because you 're
far too intrigued with unique
gadgets at this time and could
purchase a b\1nch of junk
you.'U never need.
AQUARIUS O•n . 20-Feb.
19) ·-You're IJifted with an
innau~ abilhy for stick-toitiveneu. However, as your
enthusiasm ebbs and fluw1 today, your pencvcranu to
complete anything will also
vacillate.
PISCES (feb. 20-March 20)
-- Ucforr swingina into action
today. study yonr fl01hes of
inspiration very ~arefully. Under close sc:rutiny Jome majnr
tlaws may become vi1ible .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- - No m:mer how anxiou1

you are to ~c t something impo rtant do n e quickl y t oday,
do n' t attempt to ~1&lt;: co mplish it

all in o ne giant leap, You'll
make more work for yourself
instead .

TAURU S (Apri l 20- MJy
20) -- E ndeavors witl.1 friends
o r associa tes whose goals or
desires are not 111 ha rm ony
with yours have litth: ch:wce
of \'l:ork.ing out rod:JY. It 's not
eno u gh t o w ant t he m "to;
you'll n ot be happ y. , ,

GEMINI (M ay 21-Junc 211)
-- A lot of patien ce 1nigh t be
called for t oda y w hen wo rk. ing Wi[h· peno n~ whose mind s·

just simply don 't work ;u f.nt
.as yours. lt won't hurt you to
repeat instru ctions.
.
CANCEil. Uunc 21 ·July
22) · - Beller 1toy clear of delicate objects thAt ·ca n break
ea1ily. because in spite of
younelf. you may be a trfne
clumsy today. And by all
n1eans don't borrow anything
at this time .
LEO (July 23 -Au~. 22) -Hastily made de cllioan today,
especially thosc that also affect
othco, could have deleterious

resulu . Take ·the time to
gather all the· facu and review
them thomuP:hly ..

'

�Thursda~Aug.23, 2001

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions a
Remode ling

• NewGaragta
• El.ctrlcal &amp; Plumbing

• Rooftng I Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio 1nd Porch Oecka

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

• New Homes

• Home Repairs

Free Estima1es
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Ele&lt;:lrlcal, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740·949·1521

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagea
•Additions
• Decks

NOTICES
NOTICE Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday,
August
25 ,2001 , at 10 :00
a .m.,' a public sale
wilt be held at 211
West Sacond Street,
Pomeroy, 0 hlo, The
Farmers's Bank and
Savings Company
extended parking tot
(beside Powell 's
Super Valu), to sell
lor cash the following
collateral:
1999 Ford Escort
Z X2
3 F AKP1
130XR195942 ·
Only 11 ,450 miles,

pb,pe,

auto , air,

crulse,power
· sunroof, cd, am-fm
cassette.

BUILDERS INC .
Ntw Homes • VInyl
Sid loa • Ntw Gan~ges
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftng
COMMIRCIAlond REIIDEIITIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

"'••-UC"wtlmt

All 0, I he lo II OW In 9 f!P1111111li1.11JI111111ll111111l1111111l11111111111llltt'l5
tract; Beginning at the
southeast corner of e

GoiYourMM..,.acr...

2-acre lot deed by
Mllllln Harkins to
Harvey A. Maloy, dated
September 14, 1901 ,

Willi A DttU, SHtlalel

BULLETIN BOARD

recorded to Volume

88, Page 195, Meigs
County Deed Records,
In
Section
18 ,
Townahlp 7, Range 15,
O.C.P.; thence ao~lh
to E.C. Ralph's land ;
thence weal 12 chaine
and 80 links to a stone
corner; thence north
to the road; thence In
an easterly direction
along aald road to tho
place of beginning,
contai-ning 19 acres ,

mora

or

less,

Free eatlmat•e,
Insured
Specialize in new

c:onst111dlon,
rtmodelina, plumblna.
elictrical, home main·
tenance, and rtpalr
~porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.

'

Owner
Charles A. Dill

.,._ 992-7445

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

t•ubli c Notic es in Newspape rs.
\'our Right to Know,
Dc lh'e rcd Ri ght to Your Door.
OJm• 1\'rw•PfiM'

KENSINGTON

BISSELL

Howardl.
Writesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St Rt. 7 South

1Sprlnklo
wlth flour

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMM ERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 911.5%
OF DAMIIGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

.,.

Hill's Self
Storage

Babs, I
need Yoox
opil'1ion ....

Sout•

2: .

Svre,
Whats up?

Pau

"

JONES'

1
I
I
l

·.Aum.

"PAY MY BILL!!"
I

•

~

I

t

J

•

I

•••

~

0

j

•

Cellular

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

r------------..:.-------~-------'-----..:.-----'·

l INAflNfl&gt; YOU PLAYING

Jeff Warner Ins. :
992-5479

POSflJM SO OFTeN
viOlJLl&gt;
US
T

larvlca, Inc

~~~OOl/~

Q~
~(» '
~ EXPO 200 1 ::t~
@
lnfvnnatlvn t::vntad

Uallas Weber-

BIG NATE

·ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

L..;,.___

r-"""-----.
P/B

r----------------MONUMENtAL LIFE INSURANCE ·co

IIPUWIII 1111

-11.

CONIIE1 ·
CHilD CARE

..........

7111J11Wtu ·
241ft

r-------"1

661-8321

~ ~:_:;~j

11

POOR LOSER! POOR LOSER!

Tire Barn

A.Q ts •

•

K 1532

_____

.

Wut

North

Pu1
11 •

( ..
Pill

'.
Ent

P1u
Pl&amp;N

Openlnetead: • A

What wa s J a m es
Thurb e r
writin g
about he re? " Its minimum t e mp e ratures
arc too low , and its
maximum t e mperatures too high. Its day
is not long enough,
and its night is too
long."
This deal must have
given South a real
thrill . It occurred during the 2000 Bermuda Bowl roundrobin match between
Norway and the
United States.
Gcir
Helgemo.
(East) opened two
diamonds , the Multi,
showing a weak two-

8 VIII
period
oltlmo
· 9 Mal(cocldall)
10 Umo' kin
11 Reuben
bread
I 3 Dlsllgure
18 The oneo

32
34
35
39

Happy
Beglrinars
Lovad
O'Hare
employee
43 Eagle's
nul
45 Actress
Rogere,
47 Father
46 Orlholeft
19 Gap
donllat'o
20 -Expre11
de g.
22 Faatanod 49 Caviar
50- Kippur ·
23 Railroad
locomotive 52 Waller'•
reward
24 Hillary
Clinton's
53 Seine
workplace
olght
25 Frlghtonad 54 Dancer
27 Be wrong
Charlaoe
'1""'11~-m""'!':':".,

.

bid in either major.
•Nick Nickell (South)
overcalled two spades . .
Erik Austberg (West)
· passed. Dick Freeman
(North) raised to four
spades,
and
that
floated back to West .
When 'he started
thinking, Nickell de- ·
vi1cd a plan. Clearly
West was contemplating a five-heart sacrifice ,. which he bid. If
North had doubled,
Nickell planned to remove to five spades.
But when Freeman
passed, denying heart
values,
Nickell
jumped to six spades!
Nickell ruffed the
heart
ace,
drew
trumps in two rounds,
cashed dummy's diamond ace in case East

lost to East's queen,
declarer
claimed.
Dummy's club losers
disappeared on declarer's established diamonds. .
There · is nothing

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Cllobrily Cipher cryptogram• ara created lrom quotatlona by lamoua
PIOflla, p.111 and pra11nt. Each latter In lhe cipher otandalor anolhtr.
Today's Clue:. 0 squa/s J

'X'U
UV

WXNT

KMIT

OBAI'

-

YXUT

BN

JMZO'Y

X

XN

...

(ZXOEXOE;)

Y K X Z,

FBXOE
X'F

YKT

KMIXOE

VB

ETY

M

GTJYBO

JMVOT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "You can taste a word.' - Pearl
Bailey
'You can't lake 11. Bad writing Is a gill."
Oalllenne
·
'

Richard La

m

I
I

p R I P E Z
t--11~.,.;.....;...::,_-l
1

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ll

~~=~~==::::~_,
WR E N 0
L2~.,--,.-..--..-:--l

1

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like stopping in game

~~=====::::

one minute, then bidding and making a
slam the next.
Thurber was dis-

14
.
_
.
_
_
,____,__...__,__..__,,

cussing .our planet. He

I I Is I . .

,'-:-..,·.-P--.R_A,M,....T..--11=..,":,

I

F0

L UEW

fi I think I'll run for a pol,ilical of1ce. my son mused Okay , my
husband replied, but remember,

I~~~ ~~~!r~:':ent is known to leak

c

continued: "The dis- t--r;~&amp;rT,-TI&gt;
7 -r,-...-~ A
V' omp 1ete t he chuc kl e quote d
position of its water
by filling in the miuing words
and earth is distinctly ·
you develop from step No. 3 below.

.__.._....___._...__._.J

unfortunate (the existence of the Mediterranean Sea in the
place where we find it
is perhaps the unhappiest acddent in the
whole firmament).
These factors encourage depression, fear,
war, and lack of vital ity." Iftme, that's depressmg.

•

•'•

Advertise in
this space.for
$100 per
month·

·Friday, Aug. 24 , 2001
It ;lpp ears that the

you're

pres~ nt l y

cour~e

stceriug is the

right one for you du ring this

p.articular time frame, so don' t
do anything r:~sh .:~~bout changing dire c ti o n in the year
ahead .

VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Scpt. 22)
-- You r magnificent f.a cultics

•.•
J

for concentn.tion are fully ope rativ e today, yet your impatience may be ~~~ high gear as

I

'
f
f

•

well. causing your a. chi evcment to be below par. Get a
jump on life by undL"ntanding
the inOuences that'll govern
)'OU in the year ahead. Send
for your Anro-Gnph predicriom by mailing Sl to Amo-

f

'\
.
.',
\

,
'

Graph. c/o thil newspaper,

l
'••

P.O. no, ·167, Wickliffe, Oil
44092-0167. Ue sure to nate
your Zodiac sign.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0&lt;t. 23) •

I

•l ..

- Know ing what you want to

'

acquire il not rho problom today . The difficulty is havins
the lack of uis&lt;iplino to wait
until you have 1he funds to
purchase it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Your cnptivoring personality \Viii draw people to
you today, bu1 should you get
fnatrated uver ~nythinr:. your

•~

Sentl'nel

. . ..
..

·•

my's jack. When it

..._Sentinel_,::

r-------..
flEA MUIO

• Q'
• J II

V ulnen~ bte: Nor1h·South

(740) 992-3470

a

...,.

• 10'
¥KI Ot l t 3

Dealer: Eaat

The Farmers Bank containing In aiJ 46
end
Savings acree,more or leas.
Fully lneured
RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Company, Pomeroy,
Parcel No . 2: The
Ohio, reservss 1he following dascrlbed
Drivers Wanted
rlgh1 to bid at 1hls real eat.a1e, In Meigs
Special 18"
aale, and 1o withdraw County, Ohio, In
Township;
31tem Pizza- $11 .50
1he above collateral Salam
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
I
prior to sale. Further, Beginning at the
992·9200
Shade
River
AG
Service
The Farmers Bank southea1t corner of
Hauling &amp;
and
Savings W.O. Golf's land In
Company reserves Section 18, Township
Eagles Club 2171
the right to reject any 7, Range 15, O.C.P.;
or all bids submitted. 'thence running w01t
Further, the above with sold Golf's line,
presents
colla1eral will be sold 13 chains and 16 links
Hauling • Limestone ·
In the condl11on It Is to a post; thence
"Ghostriders Band"
• Gravel Sand •
In, with no express or south to the road
Topsoil
• Fill Dirt
Implied warranties loading from E.C.
Friday
lg
• Mulch
given.
Ralph'a
pa s t
3SS37 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
• Nearly 2000 years experience.
For
lur1her Leonard's; • thence
Bulldozer Services
&amp;
Information, or an eastarly along said
• Works on Sundays.
I•
appointment to see road to the section
Saturday
• Always Available.
collateral before sale line 5 feet south of the
For
more
Information, come to our church site.
contact
s 'hella southwest corner of
p.m. - 12 midnight
Sund~y 9:30- Sunday School;
Buchanan at 992· the land now owned
2136.
Kitchen Open
10:30 • Preaching
by H.W. Cottrill ;
thence north along tho
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve.'7:00
(B) 22, 23, 24, 2001
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
6th Annual
3tc
section
to tho ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
place of line
beginning,
liS, LONG BOnOM, OHIO
ROUTE
containing 20 acres, -----~-28870 Beahan Road
more
or
tess.
P.ubllc
Notice
Public
Notice
Public Notice
Racine, Ohio
Save and except the
·
Melp Couoty Fairp'o&amp;Dis
45n1
coal In and above NOTICE OF PUBLIC
1998·5 under the ·
ELITE MECHANICAL CON'fRACTORS
HEARING No.2
Pooling and Servicing
September lStb &amp; 16th
Sheriff's Sale of Real described property,
740.949·2217
Eatata
previously conveyed
~graement dated ae of
'
The State of Ohio,
tn
Oh lo
Power
DATE OF
Saptemb8r 1, 1998 '
Slztii 5'1110'
f'VI'
"' '
TRAIIE'
. Meigs County
c~ oany.
PUBLICATION:
Plaln1111
to fO' x 30'
Bank One, National
S • oject to all legal
Va.
ltk HardTh SiopA 'lmn t~
Association fkll The
, easements and rights The V,lllage of Ellubath Bartoa, alai
Hours
First Nstlonal-Bank.oLol-record~ _ _ J?.orge&lt;&lt;&gt;y- lnlands....to___Delan.d antl_
-· - - -1:00-AM-, 8:00-PM- -'~-"~7-A:l.d :lfte~enln s.- -1-~=
1·304-675-7824
1-800-250·9077
Chicago, as Trustee,
· SAVE AND
apply to the Ohio
Court of Common
Residential Commtrcial New Construction
by Residential
EXCEPT:
Depart men I
of
Plea•
FundlngCorporatlon,
The
following DevelopJ11en1 lor
MelgsCounty,Ohlo
Sai.S S.nice lnstullatiun
Its Attorney In Fact,
described real estate, funding under the
In purauance of an
Specializina in Shttt Mttal Dudwork
11 Trane" Sales &amp; Senice For
c/o Homecomings
In Meigs County Ohio Community
Order of Sale 1o me
In Salam tow~ ship: Development Block directed from laid •
Financial Ne1work
Galli a, Mlllioni a'nd Meias Countl,.
Plaln1111,
Beginning at the Grant (COBG) Small Court In the above .
Licen'ltd
and IMuitd
WV 005176
vs
Southeast corner of Cities Program, a entltlad action, I will • New Homes
Buddy Wayne Eggers, W.O. Golf's land In federally funded expose to sale at
Jr., etal
Section 1 8, Township program
public auction at the • Garages
•IIIIIDIIIIIIfnll
Defendants
7, Range 15, O.C .P.; administered by the Courthouae
on , Complete
• I.IM&amp;IIIS1J.Iil• Elha..r Will
Case No. OQ-CV·151 thence running west State. Pomeroy Is September 13, 2001 at
1..
In putauance of an with said Golf's line , eligible tor $600,000 10:00 a.m. of said day,
•111111,.. llllnlllrte•IICl$18.15
0Hemodellng
Order of Sale In the 13 chains and 96 links lo r Fiscal Year 2002 I h a
I o II owIng
Stop &amp; Compare
.,.•• $42.115 ............
abovaentlllad action, I to a post ; thence CDBG
funding, dascrlbad real estate:
will ollar lor oale at South to the road providing the Village
Situate In 1he FREE ESTIMATES
•
public auction, at the leading from E.C . meets applicable Townohlp of Olive,
.
740
2
99
1671
Co u rth ou ae,
In Ralph'a past w . K. requirements.
County of Malgo, State
. •
•
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the Leonard's; 1henca
On August 6, 2001 of Ohio, bounded and
,liimJ~ l..---....!!.~~~i!\.!:.!::!.1:.!~--...,...J
above named County, Eaatarly along said the VIllage conduc1ed deecrlbed ae lollowe:
on 20th day of rood to 1he section the first of 2 required
Being In Town 3, ·
Saptamber, 2001, at line 5 lae1 South of the public hearings. Tho Range 11, and Section
10:00, the following Southweot corner of tlrat public hearing 24, and being a part of
•
44087 Wlpple Road
Pomeroy
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
CONTRACTORS, INC.
daecrlbed real aotata, tho land now owned ' Informed cl11zens Lot No. 122, Oliva
eltua1ad In tho County by K.W. Cottrill; about the CDBG Town11llp.
740·992·5344
Box 189
HOURS: Mon · Frl
SoU·I
11271 ""
of Malge and State of thence North along program, how It may
Being on the north ' Racine, Ohio 41n1
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Ohio, and In 1he City the Section line to the be uaed, what aide of the Racine
740-985-3948
of Pomaroy to wit:
place of beginning, activities are eligible, Road, beginning at the
Local 843·5264
Lagal Dllecrlptlon
containing 20 acr11, and other Important oouthtall corner of CONCRETf/BLOCIC/BRICK
Exhibit A
more or le11. Save program
what woe formerly • Footen, Wall•; Step• • M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
To get a current
Flat Work,
Burial and Final .Ellpenses; Cancer &amp;
Sltuetad In the and except the coal In requirement•. Baaed known •• tha Bennatt
weather report,
Townehlp of Salam, and und•r the above on both citizen Input Barton lot, nawownad · Repl.e.meau, • Wolkl Dental, Retirement,
County of Malge and d11crlbad property, and local olllclalo' by C. E. Patty; thence · aad.Drlveo • Steaell •
check the
Pension &amp; 40 IK Roll overs;
pravlouoly conveyed a11e11ment of the 70 degrau 1111 an
State of Ohio:
Crete Free Eotlmatu
Percel
No. 1: to
Ohio
Power VIllage need a, the eald road 5 rode;
Mortgage; Major Medical
SerYin(l
Ohio ond W.V.
Situated In the Company.
Vlllega Ia propoolng thence north 20
• Nursing Home
WVI03171l
Townohlp of Salam,
Subject to all legal to undertska the dagraee Will to the
County ol Melge, end aa11mante and rlghta Pomeroy
Water eouth line of what wae
Stile of
Ohio: otway of record .
Treatment Plant formerly known aetha
Beglnnlg at tha Being tha eama real lmprovemento
T.S. Sheldon land;
northweot corner of a utate deocrlbed In pro1ec1.
1hanaa weoterly along
47-acre lot dllded by deed of record In
The 1econd public the Sheldon oouth
Smith Kant'e helra to Volume 255, Page 827, hearing will be held line, to uld C.E. Patty
George Maloy, In Malga County Oaed on
Thuroday, tot: thence eouth 20
1111.1&amp;1
Section 12, Town1hlp Racorde.
September 8, 2001 at degraeo 1111 along the
ClnllllmdQ
7, Range 15, O.C.P.,
Being the oame real 1:00 PM at the C.E. Petty line to the
l•l~lln 'ltll
thence running aou1h a1tata 81 deocrlbed 81 Pomeroy VIllage Hall. place of beginning
on llld IICIIon line, Parcal No. 2 of recor&lt;l, The purpou 9f lhla containing about 84
1111 fi 5 UIIa
18 chalno and 1911nke In Volume 287, Plig&amp; hearing 11 1o give. rod1, more or leu.
..IIIJII ......
to a •taka: thence eall 759, Dead Record• of cltlzena an adequate Prior lnelrumant
IIEFIEIIIEm
8 chaine and 50 llnko Melga County, Dhla.
opportunity to review rafllrancso: Volume 10
................
to a otaka: thence
Curren1
dud and comment onthe Page31
_.,
north 18 chalno and 50 recorded on 08110n7 VIllage'• propoud Property addr11e:
......... 11'11111.
IInke to a otaka; In Volume 287, Pege COBG Application, 52302 Mount Oliva ldllt. . &amp;".......
thence nor1h 18 759.
Including
the Road
~---·
chalno and 19 llnkoto Property commonly propo1ad actlvltlas Long Bottom Ohio L----...,jl'l.i.lolliiil "
Shuler'• llnu; 1hance known at: 28775 oummarlzed above, 45743
'
weal 5 chaine and 50 Sanford Davll Road before the VIllage A p p ra lu d
at
IInke to the place of Langevllle, Ohl~ submits
· lte $18,000.00
beginning, contelnlng 45741.
application to the Terme ofeale: Caeh
10 acre1, mons or 1111. · Parcel Number: 13• Ohio Department of Sherlll, Malge County
Aloo, the following 00458.000.
Development.
AmyL. Brown·
parcel of land oltulle - Said
Premlau
Citizens
are
Thompoon
In
Section
12, Locetlll:l at 29775 encouraged to attend
Lerner, Sampaon It
Townohlp 7,Range 15; Ssnlard Dsvlo Road 1hlo meeting on
Rothlu11 111111111.1111111111.
O.C.P., and beginning Langavllte, OH 45741 .' Saptembar 6. 2001 at
120 E. Fourth Straet,
-at the noitheaot Said
Pramlu 1 1:00PM to expre11 .
BlhFIOor
corner of 1 tract ol Appraloed et $38,000 their view a and Clnclnnall, Ohio 45202
land deede&lt;;t by A.L. and cannot be aold lor comm~nll on the
(513) 241·3100
lt.li.7
Maloy and wile to Ieos than two-thlrda of VIllage 1 propooed
OH Sup Ct t0070511 .
Mifflin Harklne~ thence 1hatamount.
·.CDBG Application.
(8) 8, 18, 23
, . .1'1 ......
eaot 9 chaine and 54
TERMS OF SALE :
10"10 of appraloed (8)23,2001
llnkotothe
northwaot corner of a value down, remainder ·"'- - - - - - land owned by Dora upon tender of deed
Public Notice
W. Spirea, thence
Laurence B. Land~n _ _ _ _ __;:_:....__
r~~-=-=~~"1
oouth 11 . chain• and 1•0034856)
SHERIFF'S SALE
To get a current TRI-COUDTY
1811nko; thence well9 Attorney lor Plaintiff
Real Eotate
chain• and 34 llnko; 175 s. Third Street,
c 011 Number
weather report ,
TRHOSPORT
thanca nor1h 18 Suite 900
OOCV146
check the
Umest-1
chain a and 19 IJnko 1o Columbue, Ohio 43215
The
c ha1 e
Senlon ....,._..
the
place
ot (614) 228·7272, Ext. Manhattan Bank, ••
multtplellld
beginning, containing 210 •
trustee of IMC Home
Dlscounla
17 acres, more or less. (8) 9, 16, 23, 30, (9) 6
Equl1y Loan Truat,

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II

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. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER ·
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I I I

SCRAM·Lns ANSWERS

· Region -Sixth- Welch , Gender- EXER(;ISE
Man answering·door to wife, Honey , th.ere's someone here to see you . I think it's the lruant officer from
your EXERCISE class.

'lbur
'Birthday
b~.·ha"vior q&gt;uld drive them
away again.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc . 21) -- Fact-lindi ng
seems to be your specialty to day and you will easily ga tl1er
all the Iaten gos~i p abou t
rybody in quc!aion. What you
c1n't do , however, i~ keep th~:
tittle-tattle to yourself.

c""-

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·
Jan . 19) --This is not an cspc-

ciaUy good day for you to deal
with salesmen, because you 're
far too intrigued with unique
gadgets at this time and could
purchase a b\1nch of junk
you.'U never need.
AQUARIUS O•n . 20-Feb.
19) ·-You're IJifted with an
innau~ abilhy for stick-toitiveneu. However, as your
enthusiasm ebbs and fluw1 today, your pencvcranu to
complete anything will also
vacillate.
PISCES (feb. 20-March 20)
-- Ucforr swingina into action
today. study yonr fl01hes of
inspiration very ~arefully. Under close sc:rutiny Jome majnr
tlaws may become vi1ible .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
- - No m:mer how anxiou1

you are to ~c t something impo rtant do n e quickl y t oday,
do n' t attempt to ~1&lt;: co mplish it

all in o ne giant leap, You'll
make more work for yourself
instead .

TAURU S (Apri l 20- MJy
20) -- E ndeavors witl.1 friends
o r associa tes whose goals or
desires are not 111 ha rm ony
with yours have litth: ch:wce
of \'l:ork.ing out rod:JY. It 's not
eno u gh t o w ant t he m "to;
you'll n ot be happ y. , ,

GEMINI (M ay 21-Junc 211)
-- A lot of patien ce 1nigh t be
called for t oda y w hen wo rk. ing Wi[h· peno n~ whose mind s·

just simply don 't work ;u f.nt
.as yours. lt won't hurt you to
repeat instru ctions.
.
CANCEil. Uunc 21 ·July
22) · - Beller 1toy clear of delicate objects thAt ·ca n break
ea1ily. because in spite of
younelf. you may be a trfne
clumsy today. And by all
n1eans don't borrow anything
at this time .
LEO (July 23 -Au~. 22) -Hastily made de cllioan today,
especially thosc that also affect
othco, could have deleterious

resulu . Take ·the time to
gather all the· facu and review
them thomuP:hly ..

'

�•

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel
·NATIONAL LEAGUE

Thursday, Au1ust 13, 1001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Maddux excels at the
plate and on the mound
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Page B8

-

Eatt

Adanta
Philadelphia
Florida
New Vorl&lt;
Montreal

three-homer
game
this
month.
Sosa, who has 14 homers in
August. has 49, one short of
his NL-Ieading total of last
season. He 'was taken out of
the game after his last at-bat, a
solo homer in the sixth.

Florida 8, Los Angelos 6
Clnelnnetl 3, St. Louie 1

Natlonol LaoguO

w

69

68
60

58

.

L
56
57

Pet.
.552

GB

.544

65
68

.480
.480
.429

1
9

11 ~

15;t.
54 72
Greg Maddux was more
Central
excited by his prowess at the
w L Pet
GB
Houston
72 54 .571
plate than his mastery on the
70 56 .556
2
Chicago
mound.
St. Louis
69 57 .548
3
Milwaukee
16'1.
55 70 .440
Maddux won his 17th game
Cincinnati
50 76 .397
22
and got two hits - including
Pittsburgh
25 ~
46 79 .368
West
the 200th of his career - to
w L Pet OB
help Atlanta avoid its longest
Arizona
73 52 .564
San Francisco 71
55 .563
2~
home losing streak in 11 years
Los Angeles
5~
68 58 .540
with a 6- 3 victory over San
San Diego
11
62 63 .496
20
COloradO
53 72 .424
Diego on Wednesday night.
Tunday't Games
"It's only a big deal to me
Albie Lopez pitched his first
Milwaukee 3, Chicago Cubs l
because I was a bad hitter in NL shutout, and Mark Grace
Pittsburgh 4, Arizona 2
San Francisco 10, Montreal 2
high school and I got DH'd hit a three-run homer in the
Los Angeles 5, Florida 4
for in high school," the four- first inning at Pittsburgh as
SL Loulo11, Cincinnati 6
Houston 8, Philadelphia 2
time Cy Young Award winner Arizona won for the I Oth
N.Y. Mels 5, Colorado 2
said.
San Diego 3, Atlanta 1, 10 innings
time in 11 games.
Wodneodly'o GatMO
Maddux has 201 career hits,
Lopez (3-3) made his third
Chicago Cubs 16, Milwaukee 3
becoming the 62nd pitcher to consecutive strong start, pitchAtlanta 6, San Diego 3
Arizona 6, 'Pittsburgh 0
top 200 and the first since ing a four-hitter for his fourth
Montreal 7, San Francisco 1
Tom Seaver in 1983 to reach career shutout and his first
the mark.
since April 13, when he beat
''I'm the only one who Baltimore 2-0 for Tampa Bay.
cares," Maddux said. "It's no
Pittsburgh
rookie
Joe
big deal."
Beirne) (5-1 0) lost his fourth
Chipper Jones, Brian Jordan straight decision.
and B.J. Surhoff homered for
.
the Braves, who snapped a sixBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
game losing streak at Turner
Hitting a single was the
Field. Atlanta hadn't dropped
hardest part for Bret Boone.
seven straight at home since
Boone homeredt tripled
Javier Vazquez (13-11)
April 12-28, 1990.
and doubled all while
pitched eight strong innings,
In other NL games, it yvas
Seattle
was
scoring
13 times
and Geoff Blum's three-run
Chicago 16, Milwaukee 3;
in the first three innings homer off Shawn Estes (8-8)
Arizona 6, Pittsburgh 0; Monand
the Mariners coasted past
capped a six-run third to lead
treal 7, San Francisco I; Florithe Detroit Tigers 16-1
host Montreal.
da 8, Los Angeles 6; PhiladelWednesday night.
Barry Bonds went 1-for-2
phia 2, Houston 1; Cincinnati
Boone fell short of the
with two walks, scoring the
3,St. Louis !;and New York 2,
cycle, but no matter. At 91Giants' lone run.
Colorado 1.
36, the Mariners matched last
Maddux (17 -7) won his secyear's team record for victoond straight start and 11th in
nes m a season.
his last 13. He allowed three
"A lot of guys had good
runs and three hits in eight
·
games," David Bell said. "That
Kevin Mi ar and Mike
innings before_' leaving after Lowell drove in three runs
made it a.little more enjoyable
Mark Kotsay's leadoff homer
for us."
in the ninth.
apiece as host Florida snapped
Bell went 5-for-5, John
"It's a lot easier to hit me an eight-game losing streak.
Olerud hit a pair of two-run
the fourth time around, you
A.J. Burnett (9-9) all_owed
homers and ·Edgar Martinez
,
M
dd
'd
"A
fr
h
three
1
know.
es
.runs. and four hm
r m
a ux sat .
drove in five runs. lchiro
·
to ksnap a ,ourarm ·commg
ou t o f •h
, e •pen · seven Immngs
.
Suzuki singled twice in a six&lt;.
game osmg strea .
- th ey had some le,nes comrun first inning, and Seattle
ing up that inning. It could
added seven runs in the third
force their guy to play his
at Safeco Field.
hand and make some more
Boone hit his 28th homer
decisions. I would've liked to
~nd drove in three runs, givRobert Person (11-6)
ing him 111 RB!s. Needing a
finish it. Had I gotten Kotsay
allowed two hl.ts 1'n e 1'ght
I -~--·-~·, I might've,"
·
•= - -single-fer- the-eyde,-he-fouleclout and grounded out.
Mike Remlinger got the mnings, and Scott Rolen
drove
in
both
runs
for
host
final three outs to earn his first
Seattle set a season high for
hits (20) and runs in its most
save. The Braves maintained a Philadelphia as the Phillies
lopsided win of the year.
one-game lead over Philadel- snapped a season-high fivegame losing streak.
Olerud and Boone hit
phia in tl\e NL East.
Rolen's two-run single off
consecutive homers, and Bell
Brian Tollberg (6-4) allowed
also connected in the first
five runs and 10 hits in six Wade Miller (13-7) with two
outs
in
the
third
inning
gave
inning
off Jose Lima (4-5).
innings. Tollberg has not
Lima got only two outs in
walked a batter in his last 41 Philadelphia a 2-0 lead.
innings, the longest current
the shortest start of his
streak in the majors - and 31
career. ·
1-3 innings shy of the NL
"Two words: I stink," Lima
record Maddux set this year.
said. "They .got ·me and I
Kevin Appier and two
have no excuses. I made a
relievers combined on a twocouple of b~d pitches in that
hitter, and Desi Relaford hit a
first inning and they got me.
two-run homer to lead New
This is one team you cannot
York
over
visiting
Colorado.
make a mistake against."
Sammy Sosa hit three
Appier (7 -1 0) gave up a
homers and drove in six runs,
Martinez hit
two-run
homer
to
Todd
Helleadoff
double in the first and a
helping Kevin Tapani (9-1 0)
win for the first time in almost ton in the second inning, but
three-run double in the
nothing
else,
striking
out
11 weeks, as Chicago . routed
third.
seven and walking three in
visiting Milwaukee.
Paul Abbott (13-3) won
seven
mn1~gs .
Sosa hit a solo, two-run and
for the 11th time in 12 decithree-run homer, his second
sions. But he injured his

D-backs 6,
Pirates o

Amoricon Loaguo

Philadelphia 2, Houston 1
N.Y. Mets 2, Coforado 1
Thuradly'l Games
SL Loulo (Smith 3-1) 11 Clnclnrwd
(DHMno 8-10), 12:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 8-15) at Chicago
Cubs (Tavarez 8-8), 2:20p.m.
Arizona (Johnson 17-5) at 'Pinsburgh
(McKnight 1-3), 7:05p.m.
San Francisco (LHemandez 11-12) at
Montreal (Ohka Q-2), 7:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Baldwin 1-1) at Aorida
(Dempster 14·10), 7:05p.m.
Housjon (C.Hernandez 1·{)) at Philadel·
phia (Duckworth 2-0), 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (Jennings 0.0) at N.Y. Mets
(Rusch 6-8). 7:10p.m.
San Diego (Lawrence 3-2) at Atlanta
(Millwood 3-5), 7:35p.m.
Frklaly's Games
St. Louis (Morris 16-7) at Chicago Cubs
(Bere 8·71, 3:20p.m.
San Diego (Janes 8-14) at Florida
(Clamant 7-8), 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Reyes 1'"') et Montreal
(Annoo Jr. t-11), 7:.05 p.m.
Houston {Oswalt 1D-2) at Pittsburgh
(J.Andorson 6-14), 7:05p.m.
Arizona (B.Anderson 3-8) at Philadelphia
(Daa/11-4). 7:05p.m.
San Francisco (Rueter 12-8) at N.Y. Mats
(Chen 5-5), 7:1 0p.m.
Los Angeles (Park 11 -9) at Atlanta
(Giavlne tt-6), 7:35p.m.
Colorado (Neagla 7-6) at Milwaukee
· (Wright 9-8), 8:05p.m.

Eoot

New York
Boston

Toronto
Baltimol'e
Tampa Bay
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit ·
Kansas City .
Seattfe
Oakland
Anaheim
Texas

w

l

Pet.

74 53
' 69 56
60 67
53 73
46 81
Central
L
71
55
66 61

.563

w

GB

•

.552
.472
.421
.362

14

20~

28

GB

Pet

.683

.520
.496
73 ' .416
51
76 .402
Welt
L
Pel
9t
36 .716
73 54 .575
67 60 .528
56 71 .441

62
5'2

Thuraday'otlomoo
Toronto (HaHaday 1-1) at Mlnnosor,
(Loose 4·5), 1:05 p.m.
Clevolond (Sobotlllo 1:1-&lt;1) 11 Ooldlnd
(Muldor 1H), 3:35 p.m.
Detroii(Aodman 2-4) at&amp;&gt;anle (Pineiro
2~). 6:35p.m.
Banlmore (Towers 8-7) at Tampo Bay
(Biorlltodl1·3), 7:15p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Hitchcock 2·2) at TelCBI
(Bell 4-2), 6:05 p.m.
Chicago White SolC (Glover :J.1) at
Kansas City (Suppan7-10). 8:05p.m.
Boston (Fossum 1~) al Anaheim (RapQ
5· 10), 10:05 p.m.
Frldly'a Games
Toronto (Carpenter 7-11) at Baltimore
(Johnson 1()-8), 7:05p.m.
·
Chico go White SO• (Buehrle I HI) at
Tampa Bay (Sturlze 8·9). 7:15p.m.
Boston (Nomo 11-5) at Texas (Myette 22), 8:05 p.m.
Minnosola (Millon 11-5) at Kansas City
(Durbin 7-12), 8;05 p.fTI.
Clovolond (Colon 10.1) ot SN1tlo
(Moyer 14-15), 10:05 p.m.
,
Detr&lt;&gt;t (Cornejo 1-1) at Qakland (Hudson
14-ll), 10:05 p.m.
•
N.Y. Yankaes (Pettltte 14-7) at Anahalrfl
(Washburn 11-ll). 10:05 p.m.

5&gt;

a&gt;

63

18;t,
20).

w

GB
18
24
35

Tuesday'• Gamet;
Tempo Bay 8, BaHimore 4
Toronto 7. Mimesora 5
Texas 13, N.Y. Yankees 3
Chicago White Sox 6, Kansas City 1
Boston 8, Anaheim 5
Seatue 4, Detroit 1
Cleveland 2, Oakland 1
Wednesday'• Game•
Tampa Bay 11, Baltimore 10
Minnesota 6, Toronto 3
Texas 6, N.Y. Yankees 1
Chicago While So• 13. Kansas City 12
Anaheim 4, Bostdn 2
Seattle 16, Dolrolt 1
Clevelend 5, Oakland 4, 11 Innings

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Boone, Mariners break loose; Rangers win.

Expos 7,

Giants 1

M r1• ·

a InS 8•

Dod!ers 6

Phillies 1,
Astros 1

•

I

6,

groin and is expected to miss City.
'~\ivins
his next scheduled &lt;tart.
The White Sox trailed 7-2
after the first inning, but
struck for eight runs in the
Rick Reed ma~e his best
·
start for Minnesota, pitching ·
sixth.
SOX
Carlm Beltran hit a two- the slumping Twins ovet
.· Bengie Molina. homered run triple and a grand slam Toronto at the Metrodome.
and went '4-for-4 as Anaheim for the Royals. He came up
Reed gave up one run and
beat visiting Boston.
again in the ninth with a run- four hits in seven innings.
The Angels took the lead in ner on first base, but struck Acquired from the New York
the seventh inning on RBI out.
Mets on July 30, he is 2-2 with
singles by Darin _Erstad and
a 5.81 ERA for the Twins
Garret Anderson. Molina
matched his career high for
hits when he homered in the
eighth.
Darren Oliver shut down
Boston missed a chance to visiting New York for six
Jason 1)'ner singled home
move within three games ·of innings, and Texas clinched
the winning run with two
New York in theAL East. Red the season series against its
outs in the bottom of the
Sox slugger Manny Ramirez recent nemesis.
ninth inning at Tampa Bay.
was sidelined for his third
Yankees shortstop Derek
Tyner got four luts, all in the
straight game because of a Jeter made a wild .throw that
final four innings. The Devil
strained right hamstring
ended his errorless streak at a
Rays rallied to tie a team
career-high 36 games. He also
record with their sixth straight
SOX
·struck out against Danny
home victory,
.
Kolb in a 13-pitch at-bat that
Baltimore took a 10-5 lead,
.
took seven minutes
into the eighth, butTampa Bay
Ray Dur am hit two solo
scored five times, capped by
homers and an RBI double as
Brent Abernathy's two-run
C.hicago __ralli.ed._ at .K"'a'-'n..,sas
£-_ _ _ _ _ __
~-- double.
'
~
-

Blue JaYS 3 ·

An1eiS 4,

Re ·

2

RanEers 8,
Van ees 1

D-Rays 11,

Oriofes 10

White
13,
Ro!als 12 .

·r•.•·•

-..... ..

·~-

...

·-· ·-..
-~ -.-.

'

I

Mets 1.

Rockies 1

Cubs 16,
Brewers 3

a

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Power Sunroof. Automatic Transmission
CD Pla11er, LOADED!

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5

Two Convenient Locations~
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone(304)773-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
•
)

•
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•

.. ,

.,

,,

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