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                  <text>Southern High school page, A7
Marauder girls roll past Jackson, Bl

Hip: 101; Low~:I

TO DAY'S SCOREBOARD
Southern 8, Melga 3
Me1gs .
............... 100 200 0 •
3·7·5
Southern ................... 121 400 Ill •
8-12-2
BltledM
Southern: Boso (W) and Cumi~s
Meigs: Stanley (L.), Davis and Stewan

Anaheim (Hill 2·3) at Baltimore (MussiM 12), 3:05 p.m.
.
CLEVELAND (Finley 3-0)a1Toron1o (Wells 4·
1), 7:05p.m.
Teu.s (Loaiza 1-1) at Tampa Bay (Van 1-1).
7:15 p.m
OeUoit (Nomo 1· 1) at Minnesota (M1non 2-Q),
8:05p.m.

NL standings
Eletern Division

Eastern 5, Belpre 3

Belpre ....................... 20~ 000 0""
Eastern .................... 103 100 x -=

Batttrlta

Eastern: Chris Lyons (W), Putman 4th and
Faulk
Moray
and HMdebrande

Eastern 10, River Valley B
River Valley ...............003 000
Eastern ..................... 100 61 2

8atterlet

5..
x=

8-7-4
10-4-3

Eastern: Bailey ~WJ and Calaway
River Valley: Ba1rd (L), Moll ohan (3rd), Russell (4th ) and L awson aM Hollenba ugh

OHSAA poll

Atlanta ...
.. ....... 20 6 .769
NewYork .
.. ........ t6 12 .571
Montreal ......................... 14 11 .560
Florida ...........
.. ..... 14 14 500
Phllar1elphia ...................... 7 18 .280

St . Louis ........................... 17
CINCINNATI ..................... 13
Houston ......................... 10
Pltl$burgh ......... ........ .... .... 10
Chicago ............................ 11
MUwaukee ..........................9
........ 17
....... 14
....... 13
.. .. 12
......... 12

9 654
12 539
14 .481
13 480
15 444

1·N . Canton Hoover (5) ..
.. ............ 103
2-MassiUon Jackson (3)
.................. .. 86
3-Celina (1) ....
... .. ..... ..
.. 79
4-Pickering ton (1) ... .... ...... .. ............... 75
H1H1ard Darby (1)
75
6 Wapakone ta (1) .....
44
7-You. Boardman
...............
.. 40
8 Springfield South
....... . .. . .... .. . ... 37
9-Cin. Sycamore ......
.. ............ 29
1O-Del1ance...
.. ....... 23 .

Division II
Ium

f1l.

1-La Grange Keyston e (6) .................. ..... 76
2·PORTSMOUTH WEST (1) .................. 65
3·Akron Hoban ......................................... 57
4-Springlield Kenton Ridge.. .......
... 54
5-Cuya. Falls Wa lsh Jesuit ...................... 32
6-Akron St. Vincent -St. Mary ..................... 30
7-Akron Manchester .... ............................. .;2:8
8-llma Ba th .. ... . ...... .... .. .... .... .. ......... ... .19
9-Poland Seminary .... ........ .... .....................16
1 0-Hebron Lakewood ( 1) .......................... 10

Division Ill
Ium

f1l.

1-Arehbold (6) ......... ................................95
2-Columbiana (1) ................................ ......... 76
3-Convoy Crestvi ew.....................................64
4-WATERFORO ........ ... ......... .............................61
C reston Norwayne ...... ............ ..................... 61
6-Richwood N. Union (2) ..... ... .................... 31
7-Strasburg -Franklln (2) .......... ............. ........ 25
8-N. Robinson Col. Crawford ................ .... ... 24
9-Sherwood Falrview ......... ..................... .. ... 22
Southington Chalker ............................... ..... 22

3'•

6',

6',
7

a

Nonhtm Division

BuHalo (lndians) ............... 17
Pawtucket (Red Sox) ...... 12
Scranton {Pt1i111es} ........ 12
Syracuse (Blue Jays~ ......... 9
Rocheste r (O rioles) .... ...... .B
Onawa (Expos) ... .. ....... 6

South Atlantic
League standings

AL standings
Eas1ern Divlalon
yt l.

New York ...................... 17 8
Baltimore. .. .................. 15 10
Boston...
.. .................... 13 10
Toronto ............ ,............ .... 14 14
Tampa Bay .........................9 16

w.
.680

lil

.600
.565

2
3

.500

4~

.360

8

.630
~g .565

... 13 14 .48 1
.. .... 11 16 .407
. ........... ... 7 18 .290

Weatern Dlvlalon

Sealtle ....................... 14
Anah elm ......... .................. 13
Oakland . ........................ 13
Te ~ea s ... .
.. .............. 10

10
14
14
15

.5B3
.481
.481
.400

8
9
11
12
12
14
16

South•rn Oivlalon
COLUMBUS (lndians) ..... 16 10
Asheville (Rocl&lt;ios) ........... 13 12
Char., SC (Devil Rays) .... .13 12
Savamah (Rangers) .... ... 12 13
Macon (Braves) .......... .. .... 11 14
Columbia (Mats) ............... 11 15
Augusra (AedSox) ............. 9 16

Central Dlvl8fon

-................. : ~~

l.

2~ a

2~'l

4'2

Tuesday's scores

Tonight's games
0). 7:05p.m
Detroit (Weaver 0·3) at Boston (Schourek 1·
2). 7:05p.m
Texas (Clark 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Gooden 2·
0), 7:15 p.m.
Oakland (Hereclla 2-2) at Kansas City (Suppan 1-2) , 8:05 p.m
SeatHe (Tomko 1-1) at Minnesota (Radke 2·
3). 8:05p.m.
Toronto (Escobar 2·3) at Chicago White Sox
(Baldwin 4-0l. 8:05 p.m.

Thursday's games

Denver Easfs King
signs with Dayton
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) Sta n King, a 6-foot-4 guard
w ho ave raged 14 points and
1O.S rebo unds last season at
East High School in Denver,
Colo. , has signed a national letter of intent with Dayton.
King also averaged four steals
and four assists.
" His flexibility will enable
him to compete for significant
playin g time," said Dayton
coach O liver Purnell. "H e's definitely a 2-3 wing and we' ll
look at him at the point."

Pittsburgh settles

lawsuit with .Stanley

I

~

PITTSBURGH (AP) •
The University o( Pittsburgh . .
settl ed a lawsmt by a paralyzed
football player, but the amount . .
the player will be paid remained
in di spu te.
LJwye rs for D emale Stanley
.&lt;aid he will ge t S3 1 millio n, but ~
the uni versity pu t the sum at
about $5 milli o n.
Stanley sa id the university
and football coaches, including .
Joh nny M.1jors, were negligent
dunt ll': ,11 1 indoor practic:e fo ur
\'l'&lt;tr'l ·:~ go \Vhl'l1 t b~: pbyc.:: r hit a
I j,,,dckcl n mcrctc wJ li headfir st.

11/1)

·I

I
I

l______~ ,

a

.667
8 '. 652

COLUMBUS (Vankees) ... 10 12 .455
Toledo (Tigers) ...................
14 .364

a

'
5
7

Tuesday's scores
Buffalo 8, Norfolk 7

DH: Rochester 2, Charlotte O: Charlene 5.
Roches1er 2
DH· Indianapolis 4, COLUMBUS 1: Indianapolis 4, COLUMBUS 3
'
Durham 6. Ottawa 0
Pawtucket 5, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 2
Richmond 7, Syracuse 6
Toledo 10. Louls11llle 6
Buffalo at Norfoik
Charlolte at Aoch.ester
COLUMBUS a\ Indianapolis
Durham at Ottawa
Scran\oruWIIkes-Ba rre at Pa\Niucket
Syracuse at Richmond
Tole do at Louisville

Thursday's games
Buffalo at Norfolk
Charlotte at Rochester
Durham at Ottawa
louisville at Indianapolis ·

w.

.667
.654
.542
.520
.500
.4 17

.333

3

3~

4
6

8

NBA first-round
playoff slate
Tuesday's scores
Penland 85, Minnesota 77 : Portland wins
series 3·1
Phoenix 89, San Antonio 78; Phoenix wins
series 3-1
.
Sacramento 101 , L.A. Lakers 88 : series tied
2·2

.615
.520
.520
.480
.440
.423
.360

Tonight's game
Utah a1 Sea ttle, 9 p.m.

Thursday's game
Milwaukee at Indiana, a p.m.

Am.,lcen le"9U1
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Oo51gna1ed INF Koi1h
Johnson for asslanment.
'
KANSAS CfrY ROYALS: Named David
Glass chairman ol the board. Placid Ruth
Glass. Dan Glass. Donald Glass, Dayna Martz.
Hef1( Robinson and Julia Irene Kauffman on the
board. Named Robinson chtef operating officer
and Dan Glass president.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Named Soon
Kelyman general manager of St. Petersburg of
the FSL.
N•tlon•I Lt•gue
CHICAGO CUBS: Optioned OF Roose,velt ·
Brown to Iowa of the Pacific Coas t League.
MONTREAL EXPOS : Recalled AHP Jeremy
PoWell from Ottawa of the International League.
Optioned INF Andy Powell to onawa .
PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Acttvated RHP
Jason Schmidt from the 15-day diSabled !ist.
Optioned RHP Brad Clontz to Nashville of the
PCL.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Placed 38 Feman·
do Talis on the 15-day disabled liat. Recalled
1B-OF Larry Sutton fro m Memphis of the PCL.

ea,ketball

Football
National Football Ltagut

HOUSTON : Named Joel Patten college
scout.
.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Named Bill
Kuharich director ol pro personnel.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Signed WR Bert
Emanuel to a one-year contrBct.
Canadlan Football Leagut
CALG ARY STAMPEOERS: Signed RB
Antonio Warren
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS: Signed CB
Lee Wiggins .
NEW

Soccer
Molor Looguo Soccor
YORK-NEW

JERSEY

MET·

ROSTARS: Waived 0 Mohammad Khakpour.

College
KANSAS STATE: Suspended junior P·OF
Kelvin Day and sophomore P Luke Robertson
!rom the baseball team Indefinitely lor violating
tea m rules.
KENTUCKY STATE: Named Wlns1on Bennell men's basketball coach.
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN Named Bre11
Rosenberger women's soccer coach.
RUTGERS: Announced basketball F Shawn
Hampton transferred to the school from VIrginia
Commonwealth and wilt be eligible tor the 200102 season.
.
SALISBURY STATE: Named S1eve Holmes
men's basketball coach.
SOUTHERN METHODIST: Relns1e1ed
junior G Jeryl Sasser and junior G Renaldo Bratton to Jhe men's basketball team.
TEXAS: Announced men's basketball junior
G Lawrence Williams left the team and will
transfer.
TEXAS LUTHERAN: Announced !he retire·
ment of Jim Shuler, men's basketball coach.
VALDOSTA STATE: Named Kiley Hill
women's basketbal( coach.
WESTERN OREGON: Named Tim HillS
women's basketball coach.

'

~o cenH

Building .
dedicated
to Hartinger

II"; Oillllii'I'-

.DEATH - Drink·
ing and driving
is a surefire
way to a short
life. In a skit at
the " None for
Under 21"
assembly at
Meigs High
School, Jake
BirChfield and
Michelle
Kennedy show
the result of
their drinking
and driving - a
tombstone
marking the
grave of their
friend , Kerry.
(Charlene Hoefl ich photo)

Debbie Pickens Lowery
Southern High Schpol
Class of 1979
·

Special recognition to graduates of:
*1950 -1975 -1990*
$7.00 p.e r photo or $12/couple
Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pop1eroy, OH 45769
Name_______________________
School._____________________
Year______________~--------Nickname~~~~------­
Deadline Friday; May 19-4 p.m.

FROM' STAFF REPORTS

Teens urged to make prom promise
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

staged the "Day of the Dead" with 21 students
being tapped to play dead. They gave up talking for the day to convey a sense of loss to
their friends.
Skits at the assembly included " A Doy
N amed Kyle." presented by Jake Birchfield;
"Turn_,Around ," a commentary pn turning
away from drugs; and "Rumor lja It," a s.rc;JJ:y
abou' judging bthers. ,
~ ,
,, '
' H ealth Recovery's pre'ventio~ sp ~oia,list ·
Brian Wilson talked to the students about
how to handle peer pressure, to build selfesteem, and reach potentiaL
He said that everybody "gets what they
give" and students who are out there tearing
down others will get that treatment in return.
The "!-don't-care attitude" results in missing out on good relationships and damaging
those who might be looking to you as a role
m odeL .
Wilson called on students to define for
themselves who they are, to be selective with
w hom they "hang o ut and the cliques they
belong to" and to embrace the challenge to

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P

OMEROY- Drinking and driving
or riding with someone who has
been drinking is flirting with danger,
even death.
.
That was th e message of the Meigs High
School 'feen lnstitut.e (TI) in· a "None for
Under 21" assembly program last week. This
being prom week, Tl used the assembly progtam to remind their classmates about what
can happen on a party night when caution is
cast to the winds:
Tlmembers presented skits- one a drinking scene which led t&lt;:&gt; a fatality followed by a
visit to the grave site where they faced the ·
reality and finality of death.
"It takes only one accident to alter the lives
of many," said Mony . Wood, M eigs DARE
officer, one of the speakers.
He encouraged students to take the "prom
promise" that they won't drink and drive, "not
just on prom night but all other nights."
T he Meigs prom is Saturday night, and all
this week Teen Institu te students, along with

Julie Wandling, their advisor and program specialist for Health Recovery · Services, have
been in the lobby encouraging students to
make that "promise."
To further emphasize the dangers of drinking and driving, Tl members Wednesday

Please see Promise, Pep .U

PETERSON AIR FORC E
BASE, Colo. -Air Force Space
Command last week honored
retired Gen. James V. Hartinger
by ren aming Building One
headquarters the Hartinger
Building, in tribute to AFSPC 's
first commander.
Hartinger, a native of Middleport, was the commander in
chief of rhe North American
Aerospace Defense Command
from 1980 to 1984.
He led the way to the estab.Jishment of space as a separate
Air !'orce operational command
and contributed to the design of
the building that now bears his
name.
"We are h ere today to honor
a great airman, a true visionary,
a warrior; and commander, a
leader," said Gen. Ed Eberhart,
APSPC commander, as he
presided over the dedication
ceremony.
"Long after Gen. Hartinger is
gone, long after we are gone,
generations of airmen w ill pass
in and out of this building and
we hope to spark their· vision,
.~$park dteil: ~Qmrnillnent, their
ene.r gy by the e~ple set by
Gen. James V: · H artinger," he
said.
H artinger's wife, Mickey,
spoke on behalf of tht; H artinger
family.
"The dedication of this building is truly an .~10nor and it's a
wonderful tribute to my husband," she said.
The dedication included an
unveiling of the building's new
sign and a presentation of a
replica of the new sign to
Hartinger's family.
Hartinger
was unable to attend the ceremony due to a prolonged illness.

Hartinger, born and reared in
Middl eport, graduated fro m
Middleport High School in
1943, was drafted into the US.
Army that summer.
Coming up thro ugh th e
ranks, he was appointed to West
Point Academy, graduating in
1949 with a commissio n as a
second lieutenant . in the Air
Force.
He was there when Korea
callec;l, and he flew P-84 Thunderbirds. He answered a call to
Vietruu'n, /JyJng F-4C pbf!!'l- .
totns. As a comman&lt;f pilot, he
accrued more than 5,000 llying
hours, then Went on to be the
·fi rst person ever to receive the
Master Space Badge.
His awards included the
Defense Distinguished Service
Medal, D istinguished Service
Medal w ith oak le:if cluster,
Legion of Merit with oak leaf
cluster, Distin guished Flying
Cross, and Air M edal with eight
oak leaf clusters; Air Force
Commendation Medal, Combat
Readiness Medal and the
R epublic of Korea Order of
PIHH 1H Honor, hp Al

ettomey plans free.Buckeye law seminar
• FROM STAFF REPORTS

Larry Boyer
Gallla Acadamy High School
Class of 1959

Newspaper

ROAD TO

Women'a National l••kttblll A"oclatlon
WASHINGTON MYSTICS: Anndunc8d F
Valerie Still will sit oul the se8son lor personal
reasons.

A special section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"
.
Remember your spouse, child,
gtandparent, friend, couples, etc.

1 To be published
1 Friday,
1 May 26, 2000
1 in The Daily
1 Sentinel
·I

II

Louisvllle(Reds) ..... ........ 16
Indianapolis (Brewers) .. ... 15

Hometo~n

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volumt' 50, Number 234

Tonlght'a gamea

Remember
When?

Bal ti more 7, Anaheim 6
N .Y Yankees 4, CLEVELAND 2
Texas 8, Ta mpa Bay 1
Detroit 7. Boston 6 ( 12}
Toronto 4. Chlcego White SoiC 1
Sea1tle 5, Minnesota 4
Kansas Ci ty 8. Oakland 7 ( 10)

N.Y. Yankees (Cone 1-2) at CLEVELAND
(Burba 3·1). 7:05p.m
·
Anahe1m (O rtiz 1-2) at Baltimore (Johnso n 0·

.269

6',
9
12

Syracuse at Richmond

Savannah 13, &lt;Cape Fear 0
Delmarva 10. CHARLESTON, WV 1

I

·.385

SCranton/Wilkes-Barre at Pa\Niucket

Tuesday's scares
2
4
6
9

.773
.476

4

4 ',
7
8 ',
9

Tonight's games

Plnsburgh (Cordova 1·2) at St. Louis
(Stephenson 3·0), 1:10 p.m.
Houston (Eiarton 0-0) at Chicago C ub s
(Valdes 0·0), 2:20p.m.
CINCINNATI (Harnisch 0·3) at Philadelphia
(Per&amp;Qn 1·1), 3:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Reed 3-0) a1 San Francisco
-{Rueter 2-1 ). 3:35p.m.
Arizona (Reynoso 1-3) at Milwaukee (Stull1 2), 8:05 p.m.

w

.739
.57 1
.545
.429
14 .364
13 .316

Melp County's

Baseball

Weat,m Dlvlalon

Thursday's games

Piedmont (PhillieS) ........... 16
Hickory {P1rates) .............. 11
Hagers lown~Biue Jays) .. 13
Greensboro Yankees) ..... 13
Capo Fear (I xpos) .......... 12
Delmarva (Orioles) ..... .. ... to
CHAR, WV (Royels) .........9

6
9
10
12

Tuelday'l ecor" ·

Philadelphia 4, P~1llbu11Jh :J.Ol: Plttoburgh
leads series 2·1
San Jose 2. Dallas t: Dallas leada series 2-1

===""

w.

l.

Southern Dtvlaion
Durham (Devil Rays) ....... 17 5
Charlene (White Sox) ... 10 11
Norlolk (Mats) .................. 10 16
Richmond (Braves) ............ 7 19

Today's games

Northtm Dlvltlon

w

Ium

May 4,1000
•

NHL conference
semifinal slate

Toronto at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Detroit, 7 p.m.

International
League standings

3

4 ',
4' ,
5 ',

Houston (Hall 1·3) at thicago Cubs (Lieber
2·2). 2:20 p.m.
Montreal (lrabu 1-2) at Colorado (Astado 2·
2), 3:05 p.m.
CINCINNATI {Parris 1·3) at Philadelphia
(Byrd 0·2). 7:05p.m
N.Y. Mets (Hampton 2- 4) at San Francisco
(Ortiz 2-3) , 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Daal 0·2) at Milwaukee {Estrada 00) , 8:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Benson 1-3) at St. Louis (Hentgen J.2), 6:10p.m.
Atla nta (Macdu)l( 4-0 ) a1 Los Angeles (Perez
2·1 1, 10:05 p.m.
Florida (Penny 3·2) at Sa.n Diego (Meadows
H), 10:05 p.m

Ium

Cape Fear at Savannah
Delmarva at CHARLESTON , WV
Greensbo ro at Hictliory
.
Hagerstown at Chal1eston , SC
Augusta at Pi8dmont-comp. of susp. game
Augusta at Piedmont
Capital City at Asheville
COtUMBUS at Macon
Cape Fear at Savannah
Delmarva at CHARLESTON , WV
Greensboro at Hickory
Hagerstown at Charleston , SC
Augusta at Piedmont
C~ ital City at A.shevit!e
COLUMBUS at Macon, 2

CINCINNATI 7, Philadelphia 0
Ch1cago Cubs 11. Houston 1
Arizona 5, Milwaukee 1
Pillsburgh 10, St. Louis 7
Colorado 12. Montreal 6
San Dieoo B. Florida 3
San Francisco 7, N .Y. Mets 1
Atlanta 5, Los Angeles 3

f1l.

Minnesota .....
De!rolt ..

.654
.520
.400
.400
17 .393
17 346
9
12
15
15

Tonight'• games

Thursday's games

7
12',

Wtlttrn a.vialon

Arizona......
Los Angeles .. ..
Colorado ......... ..
San Francisco.
San Otego .......

Division I

Kansas City .

5
5',

Tuesday's scores

IHm

gr~o~t.\No

lil

Central Division

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a state
panel ol coaches ra tes Ohio high school s6ltball
teams 10 the tourth of sev en polls for The Associated Press (by O hio High School Athletic AssoCiation divls1ons. w1th firs t-place votes in parentheses)

IIAm

W L M

Ium
3·7·1
5-7-1

Hickory 2, Greensboro 1
Hagerstown 4, Chal1eston , SC 3
Augus1a 2. Pledmon12 (4 lnnlngNusp.)
Ashevllo 10, Capl1al Ci1y 4
Macon 13, COLUMBUS 3

Details, A3

Thursday

MIDDLEPORT - ''You and the
Law," a free seminar about Ohio lai(V, will
be hosted by Prosecnting Attorney John
Lentes at the University of Rio Grande's
Meigs Center, beginning Monday.
A different subj ect will be addressed at
eac h o f four sessions, and the public is
invited to attend any or all of the sesstons.
On M onday, ~entes will discuss "Yo u
and the Courts," including. information

· about ho';.v the court system works, with about how to protect the family and peremphasis!on divorce and dissolution, vis- sonal assets through wills, trusts, powers
itation, child support issues and criminal of attorney and guardianships.
and'juvellile matters.
· "You and Your Business M atters" will
"You ahd Your Land" will be present- be the topic on M ay 18. Lentes will di;ed on M:iy 11 , with information about . cuss how contrac ts are made and
how the~w regulates real estate..Topics enforced, as well as consumer protection
will · inch;~,de land sales, landlord/ tenant issues, the O hio Lemon Law and creditor
issues, fence and boundary lin ~ issues and issues.
prop~aintenance.
Lentes said the programs have been
On MJy 16, Lentes will discuss "You designed to address questions and issues
and ~our Family," including information about which most· members ofthe pub-

'

lie have questions.
Lentes said that his office receives
many calls from the public about these
issues.
While his office does not represent the
public on legal matters such as these, he
presents the informative sessions on a
regular basis to inform the public of their
r ights and responsibilities with respect to
the law, as well as provisions that the law
makes for specific issues.
Lentes said that sessions are strictly for

Bugz

Budweiser Clydesdales
Today"s .
on·display at Point May 8 Sentinel

Lady bugs, army
ants, houseflies and
fruit flies, like those
pictured here , are
the stars of "Bugz,"
a musical play to be
presented by second
graders at Eastern
Elementary School
Friday at 2 p.m. Stu·
dents performed in
dress rehearsal for
other students on
Wednesday~ pu~
lie is invited to
attend Friday's free
performance . (Brian
J. Reed photo)

2 SlttiNs -11 .P aps

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POINT PLEASANt W.Va. - The
King's team is coming.
The famed Budwei.ser C lydesdales
wiD be visiting Point Pleasant on May
8, courtesy of Point Distributing Co.
T he eight-horse hitch, pulling a
bright-red Dudw~iser wagqn, will be at
the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge for the
general public to view from 5-7 p.m .
The C lydesdales ·have been representatives of Anheuser-Busch for more
than 65 years. The company has six
Clydesdale tearru;, five that travel and
one stationary.
Jf Budweiser Clydesdale must be a
gelding at least 4 years old, must stand
72 inches (or six feet) at the shoulder
when fully inature, weigh · between ,

I ,800 and 2,300 pounds, be bay in
color, have four white stocking feet, a
blaze of white on the face, and a black
mane and tail ..
Each hitch horse consumes as much
as 20 to zs ·~quarts of feed, 50 to 60
pounds of hay and 30 gallons of water
p er day.
Each horse wears a haroess and coUar
that weighs 130 pounds and the entire
set of eight is valued at more than
$70,000. The harness is handcrafted
fro m brass and leather. Pure linen
thread is used for stitchjng.
The official home of the Budweiser
C lydesdales is a brick and stained-glass
stable built in 1885 on the 100-acre
Anheuser-Busch brewery complex in

AS
B4-6

'

CQID1CS

B7

A4
A3

Sn?rts

El.-2. 8

. wffitte:

. A3

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 9- 8-8; Pick. 4: J-1 -6-1
~ lct:to: 7-n-28-33-37-39
Kid«&lt;: Z-4-7-J.0-7

w ·YA·
Illi1¥ 3:

inforn1ation's sake, and that Ctttzens
sho uld conta.ct their own private attorney for advice on specific problems.
The presentations,' which will be held
from 6-8 p.m., will include handout
materials and sample forms.
R egistration for the sessions is not
required, but seating is limited, and
Lentes suggests that those wishing to
attend a particular session call his office at
992-6371, or the Meigs Center at 9923383.

7- 1-3 Dilly 4: 2-5-3-2

0 2000 O hio Valley Publishing Co.

Please see HOI'HI, Pep Al

i
•I

�Peat A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Students seek end to harassment
NORTH OLMSTED (AP) - A group of suburban Cleveland
studeniS has 21ked the school board to stop alleged harrassment of
homosexual students by ci2sm12tes.
.
The 40-member Spectrum student group plans to present evidence of iw'assment of students who are g:~y or perceived as g:~y at
the board's June I meeting.
Ryan Wallr.er, 15, a freshman, said teachers have failed to stop
harusment anll narite-&lt;alling directed at g:~y students. "The teachen are afraid to stand up and say it's wrong to use that language," he
said.
The school board said students must document harassment so
appropriate disciplinary action could be taken.
Assistant Superintendent Doug Sebring said the key to enforcing
the policy is informing administrators when harassment occurs.
"Our current policy encompasses and protects against all sexual
harassment," Sebring said. "We do not want these kids to feel they
are in a hostile environment.

Base may set new airlift unit
DAYTON (AP)- Support exists at the Pentagon for maintaining an operational unit a.t Wright-Patterson Air Force Base after the
C-141s that make up the b2Se's airlift wing are retired, area business
leaden have been told.
Wright-Patterson is home to the 445th Airlift Wing of the Air
Force Reserve, which flies the C - 141 Starlifter. The Starlifter is a
long-range cargo and troop carrier that is scheduled to be eliminated from the Air Force inventory by 2006.
"There is a lot of a groundswell of support for keeping planes at
Wright-Pat;' Brig. Gen. Robert Duignan, deputy to the chief of the
Air Force Reserve, said Wednesday. "We may have another reserve
·• unit there, or we may bring an active duty wing in to fly planes out
ofWright-Pat."
Duignan spoke to the Miami Valley Economic Development
Coalition during that group's annual lobbying trip to Washington.
The need to replace the 445th with something similar has. become
a priority for the group since an economic analysis revealed that the
reserve wing contributes $200 million a year to the local economy.
Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio, said Duignan's remarks were the most
encouraging he had heard on the prospects for Wright-Patterson
avoiding a net loss as a result·of the C-14 I fleet retirement.
·

State shootings gather
KENT (AP) -

The 30th
anniversary of the Vietnam War-era
shooting! at ~nt State University
was marked with a candlelight vigil
Thursday where four students were
kiUed by the Ohio National Guard.
Also Thursday. the nine students
who were wounded in the shooting! that stunned the nation and
galvanized the anti-war movement
were to, be reunited for the lint
time on ~nt State's campus.
"They're my blood brothen,"
said Alan Canfora; one of the students. "We all shed the blood here
and lived to teD the story:'
The shootings occurred following days of student protests and the
burning of the campus Army
ROTC building. The National
Guard was sent in to q11ell the students.
About midday; May 4, 1970,
Guardsmen fired at least 6 I shots in
a 13-second bunt, hitting protesten, bystanders and students walking
to class at adistance. Some Guardsmen said they felt their lives were in
danger.
Mary Sima, a senior from Solon,
was among hundreds of students
who participated in the vigil that
beg:~n Wednesday night. She said it
was "a chance to look inside myself
and think about peace for every-

body:•
After marching around the campus, students maintained the
overnight vigil at the parkipg lot
where the four students were

killed. More than 100 people
signed up for the half-hour vigil
shifts.
Kent State sociology professor
Jerry M . Lewis sai~ the commempration would be emotional
because the wounded 'students
were meeting with the mothers of
three slain students.
This year marks the fiist time
since 1970 that all the .wounded
students have been on campus
· together.
·
"It'll be very emotional this yeat.;.
particularly around the mothef!.
Can you imagine what they went
through?" asked Lewis, who was
just 20 yards from Sandy Scheuer
when she was killed by the gunfire.
Also killed were Jeffery Miller, Aliison Krause and William Schroeder.
At least one ·Of the survivors said
he was unhappy about plans to play
a taped speech by Mumia AbuJamal as part of a several speeches
marking the commemoration.
Abu-Jaffial is on death row in
Pennsylvania for killing pollee officer Daniel Faulkner in 1981. AbuJamal has repeatedly said he's innocent, and his supporters say he was
targeted for political reasons and
framed.
Robby Stamps, who was shot in
· the lower back, said he is afurid that
the 3 1/2-minute speech will shift
th~ focus of tl).e commemoration
away from events at Kent State,
about .30 miles southeast .ofCleveland.

Suspect kills seH with chalnsaw
MAYFIELD HEIGHTS (AP) -A man suspected of stabbing his
girlfriend slashed his throat with a chainsaw when confronted by
police and died.
Timothy Rarick, 28, who lived in this Cleveland suburb, killed
himself in front of officers who went to investigate the stabbing
'IIlesday morning, according to Lt. John O'Donnell.
The couple had been arguing and had an "on-again, off-again
. domestic situation," O'Donnell laid. "Why it went to this point, we
· don't know"
: The man. g:~ve officen no hint that he was going to harm hini: self, but abrupdy started hacking at his neck with the chainsaw,
· O'Donnell said.
. The officen were offered counseling.
The stabbing victim, Barbara Ash, 41, also of Mayfield Heights,
: W2S in stable condition Wednesday at Hillcrest Hospital.

Mlln will be retumecl to Ohio
FREMON!. (~P) - A man accused of killing two carryout
workers and lnJurmg a bar employee could be returned to Ohio
·from Texas this week.
John Robinson, 22, of Sandusky, waived his right to fight extradition on Wednesday in Houston. Dawn Dennis, 18, of Sandusky,
who was traveling with Robinson also agreed to be returned. She
was arrested on charges of obstruction of justice.
Sandusky County SherifF David Gangwer said he expects the two
will be brought back to Fremont 2S early as Thursday.
•
Robinsen and Dennis were captured Monday night at a Houston
motel after a weeklong nationwide search.
·

Subscribe today.
992-2156 '

HiVal

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Russell Stover Candy
1 Pound

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Prince Matchabelli Spr~y Colognes

ssoo
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It will feel more like August
than May across the tri-county
area this weekend, the National
Weather Service said. It will be
dry and hot.
Fair skies with temperatures in
, the 80s are forecast for Friday and
; '· through the weekend.
: . · Overnight lows will be around
· 60 degrees. .
The NWS said the unseasonable warm conditions are the
result of a high pressu re system
that's drawing southerly winds
, jnto the region.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:30
.;
' and sunrise on Friday at 6:27a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows ' in the lower 60s.
~ - Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
!=hance of rain 40 percent.
· Friday... Partly · cloudy.
A

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AEP - 34l.

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Akzo - 39lo

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AmTech/SBC - 41 ,,
Ashland Inc. - 35
AT&amp;T :- 39'1.
BankOne-30~
Bob Evans - 12),
BorgWamer - 40
Champion -3
Charming Shops - 5'/o
City Holding- 13~
'Feeeral ~ul - 12'·
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All of the me&lt;;lals are on permanent display in Hartinger Building. The display also inCludes
photographs and significant
memorabilia representative of his
life and achievements.
Hartinger and his wife, the for-

Ow ••I• c•nra .. 111 atorita Ia to be
I f ' " bow of~· tnW Ill • story,
nil dtt HWII'OO. 11 (7. .) 992·2155. We wUI
du!Ck. 1••r l1for111Uoa aad m1ke •
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Fmanclng Available 42123 Statt !l{J. 7 • 'Tuppers Pl4ins, O!H
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RUTLAND - Rutland Alumn i Association will have it annual
reunion on May 27,6 p.m. at the Rutl and Civic Center. Cost is $15 a
person. Money for tickets may be sent to the Rutland Alumni Associati&lt;~,n• P.O. Box 125, Rutland, Ohio 45775. ,

Grange to meet
SALEM CENTER- Meigs County Pomona Grange 46 will meet
Friday, 7JO p.m. at the Hemlock Grange' Hall .
.
The subordinate, junior, youth and young adult baki ng co ntests will
be judged.

Shenandoah to headline Gallia's River Rec
Sltl'llandoalt is lmowr1 for its No. 1
records "Church 1m Cumberland
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia County Chamber of Commerce's 2000 River Recreation Fes- Road," "Sunday in tltt South," "Ne:tt
tival promises to be tliled to the brim with old to You Next to Me," and cltart-toppt'r
favorites and new exciting additions.
and Gramrny-win11ing song "SomeThis year's theni.e is "Kids -'The Success of
where In The Vicinity of the Heart. "
our Past- the Key to our Future.' "The festi-

There will also be "Perfection on Wheels
BMX Bike Show" at noon Saturday.
"We are fortunate this year to be able to give
people a sneak preview of some of the events;'
Blaine said.
"People can take peak at the BMX show at
www.perfectiononwheels.com and at the jet ski
show at www.pwcaction. com."
val will be over four days this year, July 1-4.
Sunday will center around Christian enter"Another change that we hope people will
"Our biggest accomplishment this year has tainment, including a performance from
appreciate is that we moved the parade to Tues- been tO bring 'river' activities to River Rec," Released, and there will be a .church service
day evening;· $aid Carol Blaine, River Rec Blaine said.
provided by the Ministerial Association in the
Committee chairwoman.
This year there will be jet ski races and shows, park from 11 a.m. to noon.
"We thought that it is important to have a Hover Craft demonstrations, and sternwheeler
"Tom Hopkins is in charge of Kid's Day and
Fourth ofJuly parade on July 4th, as well as to rides,
has really worked hard to make it jam-packed
hopefully give the participants a break from the
with
fun ;' Blaine .said.
The sternwhecler is out of Huntington and
heat."
River Rec conunittee members include Ray
will give onechour rides daily at 1 p.m., 3 p.m.,
They also are hoping to tap the fireworks 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.
McKinniss, Ryan Snuth, Sherry Maxwell, Carla
crowd for a show of support and to help allevi"The prices are unbelievably reasonable, and Swisher, Rhonda CoJC. Tom Hopkins, Ron
ate some of the traffic problems.
we hope it will give everyone a chance to expe- Hudson, Jay Moore, Melissa Keaton, Mark
Kid's Day will be opening day, beginning at 9 rience something new and exciting on our Danner, Joe Woodall, T.J. Pasquale, Connie
a.m., with the featured entertainment's show at beautiful Ohio River;' she said.
Robinson, Brent Eastman, Brent Bostic, Dina
9 p.m.This year's main stage perf\)rmer will be
Adults can ride for S5 and children for $3. Eblin, Mary Ann Young, Pastor Raafat Zaki and
country group Shenandoah.
. There will be a special fireworks cruise on Tues- MarJean Kennedy.
Shenandoah is known for its No. 1 records day evening.
More information \viii be forthcoming over
"Church on Cumberland Road;' "Sunday in ·
"The HOYer Craft is not just a watercraft, and the next two months. Bb,ine reminqs everyone
the .South;' "Next to You Next to Me," and we will be haVe 12 cruising the waters, water~ the festival is a · totally vi:&gt;lunteer endeavor that
chart-topper and Grammy~winning song front and parlo
relies solely on the COI11Jlli!My~ linanciallllp"Somewhere In TheVicinity of the Heart."
Other new addi.tions inc!ude'tbejet ski shows port.
'
•
After a two-year hiatus following the depar- and races.
If anyone is interested in donating to River
ture of lead singer Marty Raybon in 1997, the
"The one guy stands on his head and per- Rec or in signing up early for the parade,
group is back and "better than ever;' accm:ding forms many more tricks, as well as coordinating he/she can call the Gallia County Chamber of
to Nashville buzz.
a race for the crowd;' Blaine said.
Commerce at 446-0596.

area:·.

. .

change and grow, to impact the
lives of others in a positive way,
and to be the best they can be in
every way.

35mrn· t~

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we get a very strong patients' bill tion. "We want to see action in the when dealing with managed care
of rights ready for a vote very conference this month and we are organizations and other health
soon."
prepared to activate our entire plans.'
Shalala, Labor ~cretary Alexis membership and the patients v;e
Herman and John Podesta, White serve to get that message to CapiHouse chief of staff, met for an tol Hill and anybody else who will
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hour-long strategy session at the listen."
White House today and expressed ' The conference committee has
frustration that Congress has been been working for more than I 0
working on 1 the issue for three weeks to combine House- and
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Senate-passed versions of a bill
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mer Mickey Christian of Mullens, W.Va., reside in Colorado
Springs, Colo. He has three children, Jinuner, Kristen and Mike,
and seven grandchildren.
Over the years, Hartinger never
· forgot his hometOWf.l nor did his
hometown forget him . He
returned frequendy to visit relatives and friends and the village
responded to his accomplishments and loyalty by naming a
community park and a street in
Middleport for him.
"Never underestimate your
influence - for goc.d nr bad,"
said Wilson. "Stand tall in the face
of peer pressure.
"Decide for yourself what's
·
right or wrong.
"Let others know you don't
take drugs or drink. Let your light
. ..
shme.

and countless designs. We
101 oma Will OI'IN AT
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can provide the memoriaJ

thai's right for you. Come
talk to our counselors. We'll
help you select a memorial be
cherished.

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DREAMED OF AFFIICIA

. Phone 740·992·2588
Vinton 740-388.-8603
Gallipolik 740-446·0852

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Air-cushioned suspension and
thick rubber flooring in the trailers ease the rigors of traveling.
Hitch drivers undergo a rigorous training period before they
are given the 40-pound reins,
which with the tension of the
reins , equal 75 pounds.
Dalmatians have traveled with
the hitch since the 1950s. In the
early days of brewing, Dalmations
were bred and. trained to protect
the horses and' guard the wagon
when the driver went inside to
make deliveries.
The black-a nd-white spotted
dogs were swift enought to keep
·up with the wagons, and their
light-colored bodies :ind markings made them easier to see during the twilight hours. Today, the
Dalmatians are perched atop the
wagon, seated next to the driver.

.Subscribtrs nol dcsirin&amp; to pay !he earder may
remit In adVInce din:ct to The Dally Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 m011th buis. Credit will be
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WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton plans to meet witli
House and Senate negotiators on
Monday to find out what is preventing them from writing a bill
to regulate health plans. Advocates
pledged today to step up their lobbying efforts next week.
"There have been enough
delays;' Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala said.
"At the meeting, we hope to find
out what the final issues are and
what we can do to make sure that

Qhio 45769, Ph. 992·21S6. Second class p:lSI·
ap paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.

3HAci.Sim

9..99

RAC INE - R acine United Methodist Women's annual motherdaughter banquet, May 13, 6:30 p.m. at tl~c Racine Methodist C hurch .
Last day to make reservations is Sunda y. Call Martha Dudding, 9492764 or Lee Lee, 949-2454 .

Clinton administration plans new push for health care

Friday, 111 Cour1 Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishina Company., Pomeroy,

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Wai-Mart - 53l.

the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Rockwell- 38'1'.

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O.kt Valle)' P1bllthlq Co.
Published cvef')' afternoon, Monday throuah

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Banquet set

OVP NEWS STAFF

Dally stock reports are ,the

n.

St. Louis.
The building is one of three
lo_cated on the brewery grounds
that are registered as historic
Qndmarks by the federal governlltent.
. Ten horses, the noted red,
white and gold beer wagon and
?ther essential equipment are
transported in three 50-foot trac' tor trailers·, which weigh 24 tons
when fully loaded . .
i, : Cameras in the trailers (with
- monitors in the cabs) enable the
! ·4fiver to keep a watch(ul eye on ·
die cargo during transport. The
team stops each night at local stables so the Clydesdales can rest.

Shoney's - '}.

4 p.m. closing quotes of

Premier-7~

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POMEROY
9:21 p.m., Main Street, Denver Parsons, treat ed;
9:44p.m., Christopher Lee, Veterans M emonal H ospttal.
RUTLAND
10:09 a.m., State R oute 143, assisted by Central Dispatch , William
Polley, refused treatment.

BY KRIS DOTSON

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Oak Hill Financial OVB-29l.
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Peoples - 1

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EMS units answer 6 calls

Gannett - 62l.
General Electric - 158~
HMey Davidson - 4Q Y.
Kmart-el.
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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed
in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Darla Marie Zuspan,
chance of showers and thunder~
·
storms in th e afternoon. Highs in Pomeroy, and William Todd Zuspan, Middleport.
Divorce actions have been filed in the court by Jack Williams, Syrathe mid 80s. Chance of rain 30
cuse, against Judith A. Williams, Pomeroy, and by Sherri D. Dillon,
percent.
Friday night.. .A chance of Long Bottom, against Daniel T. Dillon, Columbus.
showers and thunderstorms until
midnight.. .Otherwise
partly
cloudy. Lows near 60.
POMEROY - A personal injury suit has been filed ·in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Shirley Stobart, Racine, and others,
Extended forecast:
against
Derek E. Smith, Racine, and .others, asking judgment in excess
. Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunder- of$25,000.
A judgment suit has been filed by Paccar Financial Corp.. Cincinstorms in the afternoon and
evening. Continued warm. Highs nati, against Dwight HiD, Racine, in the amount of $21 ,919.45, alleging default on a loan agreement.
in the mid 80s.
Sunday... Partly . cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon and
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Services answered
evening. Lows near 60 and highs
six calls for assistance on Wednesday. Units responded as follows:
in the mid 80s.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Monday... Partly cloudy. A
4:40 p.m., Brick Street, assisted by Rutland, Sharon Boggs, Holzer
chance of showers and thunderMedical
Center;
storms in the afternoon and
p.m.,
Beech Street, Arlene Gibson, HMC;
6:09
evening. Lows near 60 and highs
8:19 p.m. , Landaker Road, Christina Priest, O'Bieness M emorial
in the lower 80s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cigare~tes

SJ25 Pack $1

Jury rules against
United Dairy Farmers

Victorian Tea
House Cu~ed
Cedar Roof With
Double· Glider

Summer makes early.arrival

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAtFOLKS.'

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Attorneys disagreed Wednesday as to the
significance of a federal jury's latest
verdict that a convenience store
chain fostered a racially hostile
work environment and discriminated ag:~inst black workers.
A U.S. District Court jury of
seven whites and one black awarded a total ofS104,000 on Thesday
to three former United Dairy
Farmen employees who sued the
company claiming discrimination
because they are black.
"We were surprised in the iense
that this is the third jury in 18
months to review claims of racial
harassment at that store and the
lint two juries complet~ly vindicated' the company;• Bi:ian Gillan,
UDF chief operating officer and
legal counsel, said Wednesday. "I
am confident that we will ultimately be vindicated on appeaJ.;•
But Reginald Cooke, an attorney representing the
employees, said the verdict is
crippling to the company ""''~
larger monetary award would have
been because a discrimination
decision labels UDE
"God be gl0 ry for what has
been done;• Cooke said. "These
cases · deal with a principle of
which our country was founded
on - that all persons should be
treated equal:'
Gillan took some comfort in
the verdict. ·
He said only three of the original seven plaintiffS won judg-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY WEATHER

Survivors of Kent

Killer gets IHe sentence
CLEVELAND (AP) - A jury spared the life of a killer, instead
recommending life in prison without parole for a murder during a
robbery last June.
The jury that convicted Ralph Arnold Jr., 19,last week of aggravated murder had recommended life without parole for him
Wednesday 11ight. Judge Daniel Gaul of Cuyahog:~ County Common Pleas Court followed the recommendation.
Atnold of Cleveland was convicted in the June 12 shooting death
of Marcus Thomas, 19, of Cleveland, during a robbery. Jurors could
have reconunended the death penalty.
Arnold also is charged with aggravated murder and is awaiting
' trial for the May 28,1999, robbery and slaying of Lester Colvin. The
· jury could not be told of that pending case· during Arnold's trial.
· When Gaul sentenced him, Arnold said that life in prison 'w ithout parole was no kind of consideration, and that after his appeal"in
three to four yean, I'll be back."

. .Thureday, May 4, 2000

•

Thureday, May 4, 2000

Pomeroy, MiddlepOrt, Ohio

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•lOR

:The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
1'11und11J, May 4, 1000

:T~h_e_D_a__,il;._y_se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ly the

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

Dear Ann Landers: My husband's
ex-wife makes our lives mise rable regularly by usi ng visitation priyileges as a
weapon to punish him for the divorce.
Please do all blended famili es a favor, and
print. these guidelines for appropriate
behaVior between ex-spouses and their
.families.
l. Your children 's father is no longer
your husband. This means he is no longer
responsible for mowing your lawn , fixing
your car, or doing any other household
chores. Please stop expecting him to be
available for any of the above. .
' 2. Do not make the children feel
guilty for spending time with their father
by telling them "how much you miss
them." When you do this, you suggest
they are disloyal for being away from
you. This makes them feel sad and confused. ·
: 3. When you deny visitation, you are
.In contempt of court, regardless of the

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Cherlen.e Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lawla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advartlalng Director

Diane Key Hill
Controller

Lnttrs w tlrt tdiwr an wtko,.,. Tlrty 1lund~ &amp;t l1n IA11.n 300 wofd1. AU t.um err utbJ'rrr
10 tdiling 1111d nuut IH liflll!.rlllnl inclMII• tulilra111nd Mltpl&amp;oM aiiiHr. No llll.r if'fld lllllt'$ wU/
H puhlidrrtL Utt~n rltot~.ld '-• br rood~MH, Ml/nslilfl '"'"'• tWI JHnOIUIIitits.
Tire opl~tuins tlfpm•H itt tlu tol""'" klow ,,., tltt eom11tt111 oj lltt Oldo V.thy PII611Jiting
Ca. 'r ttlilaritJI bodrd, •n/«11 otlurwlsr. ttoiH.

OUR VIEW:
•

Our right
Observation reminds us
of importance of reading

•

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
reason. No excuse is good enough.
4 . When you try to use us as baby sitters and we are unavailable, do not ;tell
your children that we "don't want them."
This does not hurt us , but it is devastating to the kids.
5. Screaming obscenities and calling u~
names may make you feel better, but it
sets a poor example for your children,
aqd it frightens them. Control yoursel(
6. Do not undermine the stepmother's
authority with your child w)len she is

responsible for h is care. If the child refus- without a college degree." I have a differes to listen to me, it impedes my abiliry ent story to tell.
to keep him safe from harm.
I am a 54-year-old divorcee who had
7. Do not ask that child support be not worked in 30 years. I. too, was in a
paid in cash. We do not pay any bills in position where I had to start over. With
cash, especially those for which we need fingers crossed , and a giant leap offaith, I
a record as proof of payment.
went back to college at age 51, took rwo
8. Child-support money is intended classes each semester, and am now a
for the benefit of the children, not for senior, majoring in psychology, and planyou. When you spend it on yourself, we ning to go to graduate school.
. know it. You aren't fooling anyone.
Most state universities provide an
Thanks, Ann; for letting me unload. I excellent education , and it doesn't cost
feel better now. - Tired of Abuse in San much if you are a resident of the state.
Jose, Calif.
California has a fine higher education
Dear San Jose: You've made some system. Being in your 50s is not too old
excellent points, and I thank you. Some- to be in a classroom. Professors love havthing tells me a great many ex-wives are ing students with life experience.
going to receive clippingS of this column
Please tell " Fairh" and everyone else
in the mail.
contemplating finishing college that they
Dear Ann Landers: This is for are not too old to go back to school. I
"Keeping the Faith in California," who attend a prestigious university, will gradlost his job when he was 57 years old and uate with honors, and am not the oldest
said, "I am too. old to start at the bottom student here. I am looking forward to a

School
districts on
both sides of
the Ohio
River IJave
implemented
classes and
·instruction in
reading.

THURSDAY, May 4

•

THIRTYSOMETHING

.TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, May 4, the 125th day of2000. There are 241
:days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
·. On May 4, 1970, National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war
.:,protesters at Kenr State University, Ohio, killing four students and
' :wounding nine others.
On this date:
: In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on present-day
·Manhattan Island.
: In 1776, Rhode Island declared its freedom from England, two
inonrhs before the Declaration of Independence was adopted.
. In 1886, at Haymarket Square .in Chicago, a labor demonstration
Tor an eight-hour work day turned into a riot when a bomb
.exploded.
: In 1927, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was
founded.
: In 1932, mobster AI Capone, convicted of income-tax evasion,
entered the federal penitentiary in Adanta . .
.: In 1942, the Battle of the Coral Sea, the first naval clash fought
'entirely with carrier aircraft, began during World War II.
. In 1~45, during World War II, German forces in the Netherlands,
benmark and northwest Germany agreed to surrender.
. In 1961, a group of"Preedom Riders" left Washington for New
Drleans to challenge racial segregation in interstate buses and bus
.terminals.
: In 1980, Marshal Josip Droz Tiro, president of Yugoslavia, died
three days before his 88th birthday.
· In 1994, Israeli Prime MinisterYitthak Rabin and PLO leader
Vasser Arafat signed a historic accord on Palestinian autonomy that
"$ranted self~rule in the Gaza StriP, and Jericho.
.
· Today's Birthdays: Egypnan Pres1dcnt Hosru Mubarak, " 72. Jazz
.musician Maynard Ferguson is 72. Optra singer Roberta Peters is
~O . Jazz musician Roil Carter is 63. Rock musician Dick Dale is 63 .
5inger Tyrone Davis is 62. Singer-songwriter Nick Ashford is 58.
:Actor Paul Gleason is 56. Pop singer Peggy Santiglia (The Angels)
ls 56. Country singer Stella Parton is 51 . Actor-turned-clergyman
t{illy Hicks is 50. Singer Jackie Jackson (The Jacksons) is 49. Country singer Randy Travis is 41. Actress ~ary McDonough 1s 39.
Rock musician Mike Dirnt (Green Day) IS 28.

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172 , OES, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Middleport
Masonic Temple.

Getting someone with Flair to be prez
Ah, yes! Politics is in the air. (I know, I know.
Some of you are probably thinking, "so ll1a!~
what that smell is.")
Whether it's a local race or the grandest race
of them all, the presidency, just about everyone
has something to say about politics. It's the second-most wonderful time of the year.
That said, it can get awful old real fast for
folks who don 't have a sense of humor about
politics. After all,.this is America.
Only in America could a former bodyguardturned-professional
wrestler-turned-actorturned-mayor become governor of Minnesota
running on a third-parry· ticker.
Jesse "The Body"Ventura, a former member
of the Reform Party, in his words "shocked the
world" with his victory over Republican Norm
Coleman and . Democrat Hubert Humphrey
Ill.
It's not really tlwt shocking, Mr. Body. Heck,
maybe' it's just what the doctor ordered for a
countty plagued by one scandal after another.
Ventura's feat got me to thinking. Why not
replace all politicians with wrestlers? It certainly would make government more entertaining.
And think of the pay-per-view potential for
televised debates.
Ric Flair - whooooooooo! - would be
president in this new. world order. Instead of
vetoing flawed legislation, the Nature Boy
could slap the Figure Four on the lawmakers
who sponsored the lousy bill.
Stone Cold Steve Austin would be the prototype for the new, higher-profil e vi c~ president.
When Flair is out negotiating treaties and such,
Austin could ke.ep Congress in line - and
that's the bottom line! ·
.
In addition, no country would dare try to
assassinate Flair with Austin's Stone Cold Stunner next in line. .
Even with these two in charge, they would
need some able-bodied lieutenant to fill the
cabinet and other important posts. So, here we

R. Shawn
Lewi~ ;
3

MY VIEW

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

POMEROY :..... Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, Chillicothe, will provide health
care enrollment Friday, 10 am.
to noon and 1 to 2 p.m. at the
Veterans Service Office at 117
Memorial Drive, · Pomeroy.
Proof of military service is
required.

Silent reading Is a part of Right to Read programs going on In Meigs County this week. Here. Alex Patter·
' sOn, a' third grader at pomeroy Elementary, gets comfortable In a corner for reading her selection, "How
to Say No to Drugs: (Charlene Ho~fllch photo)
·
.

'

NEWS SH .O RTS
Bv THE AssociA'TED PRESS
The first public escalator was
designed by Charles D. Seeberger
and built by the Otis Elevator Co.
for use at the 1900 Paris Exposition.
A vintage crop of humorous
iong hits was produced in 1923.
They included: "Yes, We Have No
Bananas;"'Barney Google;"'l Love
Me;· and "Old KingTut."
,
The U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum opened in Washington,
D.C.,onApril21, 1993.The museum documents the events begin-

BIRTH
•

unscrupulous campaign of propaganda tl'!ic
history records in America."
.
The unbridled growth of saloons and brew;.
eries after the Civil War led to the founding of
the National Prohibition Parry and the Anu;Saloon League, which · were successful in
enacting Prohibition in 1920,.
If Prohibition returns, it won't be by constitutional amendment as it was the last time. .It
will be, Dodge predicts, because people ar_e
getting the message Prohibitionists have be.en
NEA COLUMNIST ' preaching for 130 years -- namely, that alcohol is a health hazard and a menace to society,
resulting in broken homes and untimely
The Chicago di strict where AI Capone set up deaths.
his bootlegging empire in the 1920s has gone
Dodge says, "The liquor industry would
dry, as have 13 percent of the other voting dis- have you believe that Prohibition was a time
tricts in Chicago.
.
when people were getting killed by bootlegProhibition, which was in effect between gers all the .time. But those who lived then
1920 and 1933, got dubbed "the noble exper- remember it as a time when they never saw
iment that failed," but there are many who say anybody drunk on the streets, and the man of
that it was not a noble failure but a success the house wasn 't staggering , home each
that was undone by a massive propaganda night."
·
·
campaign.
The Prohibition Parry has a Web site at
They say the strategy was to blame every- www.prohibition.org. You
;tlso . reach
thing - - (rom unemployment and the Depres- them by .w riting to the Prohibition Party
sion to moral laxity and crime -- Of) Prohibi- National Headquarters, P.O. Box 2635, Den·
tion .
ver, CO 80201, or by calling (305) 572-0646.
Fletcher Dobyns, who expoundS this thesis
in his 1940 book "The Amazing Story of
(George It Plagenz is a Newspaper Enterpri~e
R epeal ," called it "the greatest and most Association colunmist.).

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT..

FRIDAY, May 5

George R.
Plagenz

can

825 Third Ave., Qolllpollo, Ohio
7-23-12

ning in 1933 and continuing
through World War II. The permanent exhibition is not recommended for children under the age of 11.
The Concorde began the first
scheduled supersonic commercial
service in 1976.

· 2110 Moln at., l'olnl Ploooont, W.Vo.
'

30W71i-1333

.

•

•
I

JoNph Conner Wolfe

New arrival
, RACINE -- Joseph and Betty
Ann Wolfe announce the birth of
'a son, Joseph· Conner Wolf~.
· Conner was born at Holzer
Medical Center on March 6,
weighing seven ·pounds and 12
ounces. He was 21 inches long.
Mr. and ·Mrs. Wolfe have •r.wo
other sons, Kody and Tristen
Wolfe.
· Paternal grandparents are Wilson and Anna Wolfe of Racine.
Maternal grandparents are Joseph
and Alberta Loftis of Pomeroy.

,,

The musical "Fiddler on the
Roof,' opened in New York City
on Sept. 22, 1964, with a cast headed by Zero Mastel and ran for
almost eight years. Mastel portrayed a milkman, father of five
daughters. At one point during the
Broadway run. Bette Midler played
one of the dauehters.

May 11 and 18, Meigs County District Library, Main
Street , Pomeroy. Sessions,
children through 12 from 1 to
4 p.m . ; teenage rs , 6 p. m. to 9
p.m. Topics to include selfesteem, dis cipline, health and
nutrition, problem solving,
study skills, communication,
decision making, understanding child development.
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees, regular
session, Friday, township
garage, 7:30 p.m .
SATURDAY, May 6

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM ., Saturday, 7:30 p.m .
degree work, refre shm ents.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Fish and Ga me Association, regular me e ting, club
house off Texas Road, Saturday.

TUESDAY, May 9
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m at the
town hall.

REEDSVILLE - Revival
services, Reedsville United
Methodist Church, Friday and
Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday, covered dish dinner, 4t~O p.~.;
service, 6:30p.m. Phillip Scarberry,
evangelist;' special
singers, Debbie Powell, Friday; Scarberry Family, Saturday; Laura Guthrie, Sunday.
•

POMEROY
Zion
Church of Christ , Har. risonville Road, motherdaughter banquet Friday, 6:30
dinner, program to follow.
Parent
POMEROY
Training Course, Friday; also

YILLDW FLAB Y.IBD S.ILI
Middlepori··Pomeroy
MIDDLEPQRT

Dodge, the Prohibitio~ candidate
Having been unsuccessful in his four .previous b1ds for th e U.S. presidency, Earl Dodge
isn't going to give up his day job when he
runs again in November for the highest office
in the land.
H~ is catching up with Norman Thomas., a
co-founder of the American Civil Liberties
Union, who ran . for president six times
between 1928 and 1948 on the Socialist Party
ticket.
Dodge is a 67-year-old Baptist who lives in
Denver, where he operates a thriving mailorder business specializing in political memorabilia sllch as campaign buttons and posters.
Dodge, a candidate on th e Prohibition Party
ticket and national chairmap of th e Prohibition Party, received a puny 1,293 votes in
1996, compared to Bill Clinton's 47.4 million.
One of the problems for the Prohibition
Parry is that states require so many signatures
on petitions in order for candidates to be listed on the presidential ballot. Dodge expects
to be on the ballot in only four or five states
in November.
·
But Dodge and the Prohibition Parry are
not discouraged .They confidently believe that
prohibition is coming back. They point out
rhar 40 percent of today's Americans identify
themselves as alcohol abstainers -- up from 28
percent in 1978. . •
More good news for the Prohibitionists:

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW 9053,
Ladies Auxiliary, Thursday,
7:30p.m.

(IRS) . Let them decide it in the squal:l'd cir~le
in fume of millions of paying voters.
·
• Secretary of Commerce: The loser of th~
above.
• Secretary of Transportation: Rufus :~·
"Freight Train" Jones could revive the railroa~
industry.
.
• Secretary of Education: Former wrestler;turn ed-manager-turned-announcer Bobby
"The Brain" Heenan is a bit obnoxious, but
when you're "The Brain," you must know it all.
• Secretaries of Housing and Urban Development: This job is too big for one person to hanc
die. Call in the Minnesota Wrecking Crew, 0\e,
Gene and Arn Anderson, to tear down th.e
slums and replace them with new condomifil~

go:
• Secretary of Deferue: This person need$ to
send a loud-and-clear message to the world:
•
Mess with us and we're going to layeth the urns.
•
Secretary
of
the
Marines:
~gt . Slaughter ait)l
smacketh down .
There's only one choice to protect the mil- his assistant, Cpl. Don Kernodle. These tWo
lions .,..- and millions - of American citizens: proved they can handle foreign adversaries. ·
Remember the Iron Sheik and the Koloffs?
The Rock.
Slaughter and Kernodle sent them packing. ·
He is, after all, the people's champion.
• Secretary of the Navy: Ricky Steamboat.
• Secretary of State: Taking a page fiom Pres• Secretary of the Air force: America needs
ident Clinton's book, a woman would fit nicesomeone
with serious air time. Jimmy "Super
ly here. I know the perfect fit, an old Carolina
Fly" Snuka is the right man for the job. Second
girl and friend of the family.
in
command? Michael "Freebird" Haynes.
The Fabulous Moolah would bring peace to
• Secretary of Culture: This new position
the Middle East in a hurry.
If the Israelis and Palestinians weren't able to could be filled by the ultimate hipster, Jinuny
hash out their differences, Moolah could drop "Boogie-Woogie Man"Valiant.
• Secretary of .Patriotism: Another new posileaders on both sides with her pile driver.
tion
that only one person can fill - flag-wav• Secretary of the Interior:We need a Native
American here who really appreciates the value ing "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan.
I'd also like to find places for Chyna (first lady,
of God's green earth.
ChiefWahoo McQanid is the logical choice. maybe?), "Rowdy" Roddy Piper, Jake "The
Wahoo would give The Chop to anyone who . Snake" Roberts, "Superstar" Billy Graham and
threatens the environment. The Chief would "Blackjack'' Mulligan - to name a few.
have George "The Animal" Steele and "GorilDrop me a line with your suggestions, if you
la" Monsoon as advocates for our furry friends. smell what the editor is cooking.
·
• Secretary of the Treasury: We need a money
Whooooooooo!
maker here. It's a ross-us between The Million(R. Shawn L£tvis is managi&lt;~g editor cf Ohio U,[.
Dollar Man Ted DiBiase and Irving R. Schyster ley Publishing Co.)

new career with renewed enthusiasm for
life .You ca n print my name. I' m proud of
my decision. - Joanna H ilgenberg,
Wellesley College, Belmont, Mass., Class
of 200 1.
Dear Joanna: You have every righ r to
be proud. At 54, you are at Wellesley! It ·
doesn't get any better than that. T hank
you for an inspiring can- do letter tl}at is
sure to encourage others.
Have trouble sleeping at night and
don't want to get involved in a novel'" A
Collection of My Favorite Gems of the
Day" is the perfec t bed-s tand mate. Se nd
a self-addressed, long, b usiness-size envelope and a check or money order for
$5.25 (this incl udes postage and han dling) to: Collection, c/ o Ann Landers,
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, !II. 60611 -0562
(in Canada, $6.25) . To fin d o ut more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, vis.it the Creators Syndicate
web page at www.crea tors.co m.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Right to

.,

This week, Americans' right to read is celebrated, as it should
·be.
Reading is a part of life you shouldn't expect to consider a
right. In fact, it ought to be a very natural ingredient in human existence.
But as schools and children commemorate the week with activities, we
are reminded how many people cannot
read or write. And in a country with
educa.tional facilities and a standard of
living that are among the best in' the
world, this is terrible.
Not that the issue is being ignored.
There are literacy improvement programs galore. School districts on both
sides of the Ohio River have implemented classes and instruction in reading.
: Many take advantage of the programs, but the fact they still
: exist tells us something.
.
: But until the literacy rate here is improved, the need for
: these programs will still be there. We applaud the literacy
: efforts, both for children and adults. The information age that
: is upon us demands that its users have reading skills.
; Funding for literacy has \;leen one of the better investments
~of time and money we have seen in the schools.
':' Programs addressing the problems of those who have diffi- ·
:culry with reading are nothing if not ~eneficial.
: They allow children a smoother tran~itio~back into the
:curriculum. For adults, improving skills ~ basic literacy
:education translates into career opportunities.
: But one of the most effective means of getting off to the
;right start with reading is in the home.
·
: If reading is not a prioriry there, we recommend that it
;should be, especially if children are of school age. Reading to
;a child instills an interest in learning more about the world,
-and fosters a natural curiosiry kids take back to the classroom.
: That's one reason why schools and literacy programs are in
:need of volunteers to help children with reading. It's a worth::While activiry that we encourage.
·.
· And there is no better time for people to become involved
'j n the push for literacy than now, when the right to read ·.one of the most vital .to our exist~!}Ce - is appreciated the
·most.

thursday, May 4, 1000

Reader submits guidelines for dvility between ex-spouses

'£.sta6tr.sfui In 1948

Charlel W. Govay
Publlahar

Bend

Page AS

232 North 2nd St.
290 North 2nd St.
207 South 2nd St.
648112 so. 2nd st: .
667 South 2nd St.
810 South 2rid St.
241 South 3rd. St. ·
349 South 3rd St.
577 South 3rd St.
764 South 3rd St.
803 South 3rd St.
918 South 3rd St.
165 North 4th St.
412 South 4th St.
552 South 4th St.
553 South 4th St.
442 South 6th St.
142 Gen Hartinger
398 Gen Hartinger
727 Broadway St.
770 Sycamore St.
60 Riverview St .
584 Uncoln St.
4 Peach Circle
489 Palmer St.
810 Maple St.
398 Grant St.
342 Beech St.
457 Beech St.
257 Main St.
545 Main St.
319 Pearl St.

May 5th &amp; 6th All Day
I

POMERQY

132 Butternut
112 Memorial Dr.
326 East Main St.
554 West Main St.
1716 Chester Rd.
4721!2 E. Main St.

--·--

---,

. RiVER

�''

-

·'

.
::•

TO Gl'aduate WVU

Older members will adopt Cloverbuds to teach about horses. A
~·
a•
training video was shown on horse trnining and grooming at the
RACINE - Diana Bissell wiU graduate from West Virginiua Uni- ' March meeting.
versity on May 14 with a Master of · Brenda DeQuasie, reporter
Science degree in speech and !anBackyard Critters
guage pathology.
The Backyard Critters 4-H Club met at the Rocksprings United
She will graduate suma cum Methodist Church on April 2 with 11 members and two advisors prelaude with a grade point average of sent. The group planned an April nursing home visit. The group will
3.9 She has also completed 350 sell candles, with candles to be available two weeks before Mother's
hours of externship.
Day.
Bissell has been employed by
Hog projects and photography were discussed. Ashley Eblin talked
the Wood County school system in about bones and their names. An Easter Egg hunt by Matt Wandling
West Virginia for the past eight was enjoyed, and refreshments were served.
yeats and will continue to work
The next meeting will be held on May 7 with Brittany Dailey to
there.
bring refreshments.
She is rhe daughter of GerSarah Stobart, reporter
ald and Shirley Simpson of Racine,
God's Country Kidz
and lives at Bashan with her husThe God's Countty Kidz 4-H Club met on March 20 at the
;
band, Todd, and their four children: Carmel United Methodist Church with eight members and two advi~.Andrew, Brady, Haley and Ty.
sors present. The election of officers was held: Derek Roush, president;
L~:: ·
Blseell
An open reception will be Andrew Bissell, vice president; Sarah Hubbard, secretary; Mandy
!:-=;:
held in her honor on May 20 at Roush, treasurer; Zach Carson, news reporter; Dustyn Johnson, recre~:=R:oyal Oak Resort, from 6:30 to 11 p.m. Doug Flint from U.S. 107 will ation leader; Ryan Beegle, health officer; and Brady Bissell, safety offir.':be the DJ. .
cer. Renee Carson and Sheryl Roush are the advisors.
.
T he Learning and Exploring Awesome Projects (LEAP) activity for
:1\:'the meeting was Discovery 4-H. Members wrote about themselves
:):... .
. 5C 0
lp
and their favorite things. Members enjoyed playing bingo, by callil1g
"'".:~RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande has presented "4-H" when they won. Derek Roush, Mandy Roush and Andrew Bis~atthew D. Boyles of Tuppers Plains with the Trustee Scholarship, sell won prizes.
·
~..:ruch coven partial tuition for the recipient.
The advisors served refreshments.
~: Boyles is a senior at Eastern High School, the son of Joe and LauZach Carson, reporter
~it Boyles, and plans to major in business management.
Mustangs
3:~: "The university is very pleased to offer this special award to Boyles,"
The Mustangs 4-H club recently held their April meeting at the
....,said Admissions Director Mark Abell. "He displays many qualities that home of advisor Pam Milhoan. Members were quizzed on the parts of
we want to see in a Trustee Scholarship recipient, and we are happy the horse and the different breeds. Pen Pal horses were selected by
' that he has elected study at the University of Rio Grande."
members. Each month the members will report about their horses. A
bake sale at Kroger was scheduled for May 6.
''
The group discussed several activities for the summer, including a
weekend horsemanship camp for horseless members. Enrollment is
open through May for the club, which is for horseless members.
The meeting concluded with a cookout and a community beautiPOMEROY - Meigs County 4-H clubs recently reported the
fication project. Members attending were Joey Nottingham, Josh Notactivities at their recent meetings.
tingham and Rachael Buckley.
Lakeside Leaders
The Lakeside Leaders 4-H Club held its first meeting at the Long
Bottom Community Building with six members and three advisors in
·
attendance.
. The group discussed activities for the year. They included project
, s~lectio n, a trip to Cintin nati, a camping trip and a bake sale. Roger
t hadwell and Ryan Wachter were selected as representative and alter.. n~ te for the 4-H Committee. The Chadwells and Fitches served
· refreshments.
; ·· · At the March meeting, members were reminded about their project
·' work. The King~s Island and Cincinnati Reds trip was set for Aug. 4-

». ·

ReceiVeS URG

Thui'MIIy, Mlly 4, 2000

Try a 'prescriptio~ •

SOCIETY NEWS

~

·~

Thursday, May'4, 2000

Pomeroy, Mlddlepc&gt;rt, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

h 1ars h"

dog' fOr whatever a1ls you
(AP) Chronic health problems
may benefit from a "prescription
dog;' suggests the May issue of
Mcn's Health. Stanley Coren,
Ph.D. and author of "Why We
Love the Dogs W,e Do," offers
these doggy prescriptions.
Depression/loneliness:
Best
breeds:
Papillons,
Pekinese and cocker spaniel.
Worst breeds: Greyhound and
Afghan hound.

E·.

Diagnosis: "Most any dog is
good for this. But there are some
that are slighdy better companions than others due to their
degree of sociability." High
Stress:
Best breeds: French bulldog
and King Charles spaniel.
Worst breeds: Any puppy; it's
better to buy a housebroken,
. slightly more subdued !-yearold to 2-year-old dog.

I

f·

•Convenient
•Safe
•Flexible

,,,
•"
.
~

•••
;:: STAR CHAPTER AWARD -

Courtney Haines. receivers her Star Chap.
::· ter FFA award from Tom Wolfe, president of Home National Bank. ADAMS ACHIEVEMENT - ·Josh Larsen received the Travis Adams
t Haines was presented ,with a plaque, a watch, and will receive her Achievement award from Peoples Bank representative Marilyn Wolfe.
!:" state FFA degree in May.
.
· Larsen was also presented a $50 savings bond.
~··
••

· .:

SOuthem FFA .

best music sites that I have found. It con tains music that you · also have movies, DVD and an online auction.
can download along with music you can. upload for other peopie to hear. There are over 100 unsigned artists that you can
, .•
,
vote· on to be featured O'n th eir weekly TV show.
~:~
BY AMY WILSO"
Mtv.com i~ another great music si te. You can find virtually
..
f:-' RACINE - The presentation of awards highlighted the any liand or artist on this site. They also have chat rooms, shop,
BY SHAUNA MANUEL
,, •
:; 'i'nnual Racine-Southern FFA banquet held recently ~t the ping and television listings .
:,school.
.
Currently, the big event on this site is the "Wanna be a VJ 3"
RACINE - Since summer is right around the corner, a few
"·~
The officers worked hard to prepare for the event, and the contest. You c:in monitor the prog ress and get any information of th e students at Sou.t hern High School were intervieWed
,k~banquet was a success because of the sponsors, Southern High on all the big events that are going o n.
about their plans for summer vacation 2000.
'
~:. school teachers/staff, and .the hare\ work of the f'FA students.·
If you play video games, there are several sites that you can
T hese students were aske'd where th ey had plans to go, how
,..;; Awards presented were Greenhand degc:ee , chapter degree, visit. For Nintendo games, the best place to visit is long they usually spend on vacatio n, who do they usually go' on
"~ Travis Adams, achievement award, scholarship, public speaking, nintendo.com. This site has news on upco ming games, eve nts vacation with , where they would vacation if they could travel
:·~ proficiency awards, class awards, officer book awards, and 0 on- and plenty of cheat co des . There is also a page to order things anywhere in th e world, and possibly th e most important qu~s­
:· test awards.
such as strategy guides and other Nintendo products .
tion of them all, why do th ey go on vacation.
: : The Greenhand award was given to those first members who
Zdtv.com/gamespot is the bes t spot for any gaming sys tem .
Most of the students' replies to where they had plans ta go
: .: started an SEA (supervised agricultural experience), learned They follow all systems and PC titles. You can find cheats, . this summer was Myrtle Bea ch . While others chose places like
~ : and understand the FFA creed, colors, motto, and salute, and strategies, previews and reviews of almost every game. They also Florida and Washington, Myrtle Beach was th e overall pick .:,:
; : understand the rules and regulations of FFA.
possess a chat room that is full of game experts.
Dream vacation spots included places like Cancun, th'e Flori,:
Those who received the Greenhand were Travis Hatt, Riel\
Heat. net is an online gaming page. If a player ow ns a multi- da Keys, Spain, Chicago, England, Paris , Daytona Beach, Alaba~ : Naistettler, John Hunnell, Natasha Tackett, Alan Moore, Shar- player game like Quake Ill or Unreal Tournament , they can link ma, Disney World and Miami.
:: lene Chapell, Jason Imboden, Amy R . Wilson, Tiffany Keyes , up with heat .net's server and play other individuals. ;T his is a
The majority of students in~erviewed at SHS said that they
would be traveling with their parents. Others said that
.. :~ Steve Cremeans and James freeman . •
re:illy good· way to take out your anger or frustrations:
;t The chapter degree went to those seconq or third year memFor a good laugh, you can always stop by newgrounas.com . wou!CI rather · go wi!h frlen,d~ and 10me with aunts, unclef pr
· .. ,
·
:: ben that have received the Greenhand ·degree, have earned at This site is ,o ne that is not meant for the faint of lieart. Parents grani:lparenta. ·
Mo,st 'students replied that they usually spend about one
:. least $150 by their own effort, or at least worked ft?r 50 hours should be cautious because it is rather vulgar, but it is very
week on vacation . .It would appear that fhey tend to go on their
~ : in a SAE project.
· funny.
·
,
They also have to be able to demonstrate five parliamentary
Newground.s.com is a site that contains other sites. There are v.acations around June or July. Many students will agree iltat
1:
spending more than a week on vacation is entirely too long. ·
j; procedure abilities, and have participated in at least three chap- all kinds of other things to do on this site so · check it out.
The studenra gave many reasons why they like to go on vaca; ter activities.
·
The beit site to get a free e-mail account is at hotmail.com:
:
Those who received this award are Jenny Schaefer, Kevin It is very simple to get one. Most everyone that uses the net has ti~tn. One was to get away, another was to spend time with fam;. Holter, Matt johnson, Jan Wise, Mandy Schaefer, T.J. Moore, an account here. There is only one problem with having a hot- ily. They alao liked the idea of seeing different things, meeting
::: Dally Hill, '!Yier Johnaon, jessica Hysell, Lori Sayre, Amy M. · mail account. If you try to send an attachment to something new people and having fun. But overall, the most likely reason
~:~·Wilson, Chris Yeauger, Robert Forester and Tom Ware. The Star that is rather large; it will not let you send anything over tOOOk. everybody takes 11 vacation is to set all of their troubles aiiae
and just sit back and .relax.
:''
;- ·Greenhand award went to Lori Sayre. The Star chapter award Other· than this simple problem, the site is a very good one.
; went to Courtney Haines.
Yahoo. com is one of the most used search engines. Yahoo's
I' This year we had a special award, the Travis Adams Award. darabase. has practically everything. Yahoo also has free e-mail
l This award was in honor of former FFA member Travis Adams, and chat rooms.
i:. who is now deceased. Josh Larsen .re.c~ived this award for his
~sp.n . com is the best sports site. it has all the latest sc~res and
•.: 'improvement in his grades, FFA actavltles and work stu,dy.
statuhcs on all games played that day. It also has prevaews on
Awards for outstanding SJ\Es, were also presented·. Lori Sayre upc'oming days. This site offers a guide to ESPN and ESPN2 for
!; received an award for fruit and ve·getable as well as accounting: 1.1pcoming shows.
' •'
~: Jeremy Hill for placement floriculture; Jimmy Alley for entreAmazon .com is the best site to buy merchandise. If you are
Subscribe today.
.,,preneur floriculture; D.J. Smith for wildlife management; Amy buying a book tltey have re~iews of what people think of that
· M. Wilson for agricultural processing; and·Josh Larsen for sales book. If you- plan on purchasmg a CD, there are sound b1tes you
992-2156
, can listen, to to help you decide if you want to buy or not. They
and service.
• Public speaking awards were given out to those students who
: participated in the contest. T.J. Moore received a gold rating
: and third place in the District 10 FFA extemporaneous cont~st.
;.Alan Moore received a silver rating in the creed cont~st . ,Lori
: Sayre received a silver rating in th~ beginning prepared conteit ,
· The parliamentary procedure team was recognized for. it out.
~ standing job this year. The team placed third In district, and
: received a gold rating.
'
: The members that participated in the soil and forestry con: tests, received FFA T-shirts. The · students that made the honor
; roll at least one nine weeks' period received a scholarship
·: award . .
~ · Each year, the chapter welcomes new members to the FFA.
· Those special people that he,lped the FFA · in so many .ways
become honorary members . Chosen this year were Mr: and ·
,• '
,, Mrs. Richard Moore, Jessica Sayre and Chris Hamm.
, Officers in charge -of the banquet were Lori Sayre, president;
:: Sandy Smith, vice president; Amy M , Wilson, reporter; T.J.
' Moore, seUetary; Alan Moore, treasurer; Chris .Proffitt, s~ntipel;
Chfis Yeauger, advisor; and Kacy Ervin, historian .
, Guest speaker for the evening was Janice Bailey, our District
'
: 1.0 president . She spoke 'about how different types of people .,
..
, should be willing to help one another with any and all prob- ·
·!ems they might have .
.
' Dan Smith auctioned off the extra rolls and ham, to help
Racine 949·221 0
· : build up the FFA fund.
·
Syracuse 992·6333
~
The banquet ended with the installation of the new 2000-01
: FFA officers . The officers are as follows: Lori Sayre·, president;
: T.J. Moore, vice president; Amy M. Wilson, reporter ; Kacy
; Ervin, secret.ary; Alan Moore, treasurer; Josh Larsen, sentinel;
: and Chris Yeauger, student advisor.
l
..

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992-2156 .

Hours: 8 AM to 5 PM
t .

Students describe plans
for summer vacation trips

~

t¥Y

-~==~==========~==~

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

,,
VEGETABLE PRODUCTION - Dan Smith, auctioneer, presents . Lori
Sayre with an award for her work in vegetable production . She 'w as
one of the top three contenders at the state level. She also was presented with the Star Greenhand award sponsored by Farmers Bank.

h0 ldS 8WIreiS banqUet
·

•''
o•

l:

.

Outdoors: Gear

trail running shoes.
with a seamless toe box and
By The Associated Press
Before you get away from it all,
- . The Expo24 Mid Unisex unlined leather uppers. The com~ you 'U probably visit the markettechnical boot ($99.95) from pany also offers its Spirit ($139),
: place:
Nordica has a Bridgestone outsole
:
- Even litde adventurers need construction to cope with wet, featuring the integral rand system
l real outdoors clothes, such as cold and extreme conditions. It (IRS), which means the sole, rand,
arch and slingshot rand come from
I Molehill's Wind Pro full-zip jacket
features Outlast Temperature Regl J$79-$89), a windproof, watera one-piece mold instead of layulating material.
resistant topper with a suede-like
- If your path is vertical, you ered strips. There is a form-fitting
1I velour finish. It has plenty of pock- want
a climbing shoe. The heel cup and two V-shaped Velcro
' ets and Supplex reinforcements at
I
Equinox ($129) by Boreal is a rock straps that 'Y'"P and block the· foot
1 stress points.
l
A hike is no reason to leave shoe designed for the wider foot, during free climbs and bouldering.
. the litdest one behind. The Expe' dition ($260) from Kelty's K.I.D.
Carrier System line lets you carty
; child and cargo - up to a total
: weight of 60 pounds, including the
' carrier - practically anywhere. It
I has adjustable suspension and
i padded waistbelt for parent, safety
harness and sun/rain hood for the
, child, among other features.
1'- • - The Fissure backpack ($50)
: from Timberland features a strip of
1 reflective tape for safety on the
~ trnil. Material is extra heavy-duty
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
; 1680 denier ballistic nylon backed ·
•THE DAILY SENTINEL
• with PVC for waterproofing, and
j one of the outer pockets is an
• POINT PLEASANT
I organizer.
1
REGISTER
Also from Timberland is a
I line of trail shoes which the co mIF YOUR BUSINESS IS INTERESTED
pany says reduces in-shoe temperIN PARTICIPATING IN THIS SPECIAL
ature by four degrees. ComSECTION CALL:
~ forTemp will be found in limited
: etlitions of hiking boots and
L Mountain Athletics by Timberland

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' 6:

HOLIDAY DINNER - Overbrook Nursing Center recently hosted a fa mily night dinner on April 20, 2000, in honor of the Easter holiday. Each table was decorated with potted tulips, hyacinths and Easter
Lilies which were given as gifts to each family. The meal was prepared
by the dietary department and served by the management core.
After dinner the Faith Believers gospel singers provided entertainment.

.'

PAY BY MAIL OPTION

Overbrook hosts family night

..

.: 111e Dai Selltinel @ Southem High School

PAY

4-H news

, . The club will camp at Forked Run State Park June 22-25. A bake
. ~:Ue will be held on May 27 from 8 a.m..to noon at Ketchum's and a
·se'cond bake sale will be held on July 1 from 8 to noon at the Cool
,Spot.
-·' The Webers arid Whites served refreshments.
.· ·' Roger Chadwell, reporter
. .Silver Spurs
.
.' ~ .The Silver Spurs 4-H Club held its fint meeting at the Lone Oak
.,' .f irm wi,th six memben and one advisor in attendance. Project books
·arid fund raisers were discussed and a video about horse training were
iQcluded on the program.
; ' _ At their March meeting, the group planned a capdy sale, and mem·; b~rs were assigned to committees. T he members named the parts of a
' horse and watched another video about horse training.
. Terri Carsey and Ashley Robie served refreshments.
·,. · Ashley Robie, reporter
' '. Alfred Livestock
;:·' ·. The Alfred Livestock Club mr.t recently.at the Tuppers Plains Fire.1fi9use with eight members and one advisor present. Quality assurance,
- livestock identification and weigh-in and 4-H judging ~lares and locations were discuss,ed. Dates for hog and market lamb sales were discussed.
- - Mark Guess, reporter
YouQg Riders
The Young Riders met on Feb. 24 at the Pomeroy Library, with 12
members and two advisors present. Jessica Janey was chose as the representative to the 4-H committee. New members Chelsea Dilcher and
Hannah WiUiams were welcomed. Members were told about Equine
Affaire to be held in April.

The Deily Sentinel • Peg• A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS,:':

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Thursday, May 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

:Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

NL: Dodgers end Braves' strea/e, Page B2
·
AL: Yanks sweep Tribe, Page B2
NBA playoff beat, Page B8
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8

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Baseball
Wadnasday'a gamea
. ·LOJilan 11, Gallia Academy 0
Pd1nt Pleasant 6, River Valley 1
Trimble 6, Eastern 5
Meigs 4, Miller 3

In Merchandl8t
every month

Today'e gamea
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama,

4:30

Southern at Ravenswood , 5:00
Frlday'a games
Sectional Tournaments
River Valley at Crooksville, 5:00

Out Sells Marlboro 10-1

Softball
Wednesday's games
Ironton St. Joe 9,-South Gallia 4
Trimble at Eastern, no report

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Meigs 18,-Jackson 7
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Wellston 2, Gallia Academy 0
Federal Hocking 7, River Valley 2.

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South Gallia at Southern, 5:00
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg
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Tennis
Wednesday's matches
Marietta 4, Gallia Academy 1
Wahama at Ravenswood , no
report
Today'e metches
Ravenswood al Point Pleasant,
4:30

Wahama at Parkersburg South,

5:00

Friday's matches
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 4:00

Havana

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Hannan at Gazette Relays, TBA

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Martinez suspended
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BOSTON (AP) - Red Sox
pitcher Pedro Martinez · was suspended for five games and fined
an undisclosed amount for hitting
Cleveland's Roberto Al11mar with
a pitch last Sunday after being
warned not to retaliate for a hit
batsman.
Martin ez, the 1999 AL Cy
Young winner, immediately
appealed the ruling from Frank
Robinson, baseball's vice president of on-field operations.
Indians pitcher. Charles Nagy
was also fined, but not suspended,
for liitting Boston's Jose Offerman . moments before Martinez
beaned Alomar.

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CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS -Topseeded Meigs jumped out to
an 1 I -0 lead after two innings,
and then held off Jackson to
po~t an 18-7 win over the
Ironladies in the Division II
sectional tourJ!ament Wednesday at Meigs High School.
The Lady Marauders (16-2)
advance to the sectional champio~hip next Wednesday at
home against Vinton County.
The Vikings defeated Alexander 16-7 yest~rday.
Meigs plated nine runs in
the t\rst inning, on three Jackson errors, three walks and a
double and a single by
Stephanie Wigal and singles off
the bats ofAbby Harris, Mindy
Chancey, Bethany Boyles and
Shannon Price to plate the
runs.
In the · second inning,
Brooke Williams singled, Abby
Harris followed with a double
deep in the gap in left~cent er­
field and a,. pair of fielders
chmces .to plate the runs.
Jackson came back in the
top of the third inning to score
three rt1ns without the benefit
of a base hit. Two walks and
two maroon ·and gold errors
and a fielde~s choice plated the
runs.
Jackson scored two more in
the third i'rihing to pull to
within 11-5. But Meigs scored
three in the fourth inning,
Amy Hysell walked and Boyles

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ST. LOU IS (AP) - Second
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with the St. Louis Cardinals.

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. Crew defeats Unltld
WASHINGTON (AP)
Richie Willial)ls' own goal in the
88th minute gave Columbus a 21 victory ov.ir D.C. United on
~ednesday night, the Crew's first
ever victory in Washi ngton.
Williams ·accidentally head~d
the ball past goalkeeper Mark
Simpson afte~ a throw-in.
Columbus, which lost its first
13 matches in Washington,
improved to 3-4-1. United
dropl_led to 1-5-1.
The Crew opened the scoring
in the 52nd minute when Robert
Warzycha bent a direct free kick
around the United wall.
Talley tied it in the 57th minute
O!J. a header off Jai~e Moreno's
crossing pass.

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.STAND AND DELIVER - Tangy Laduermilt of Meigs improved her record to 11·1 after the Marauders
defeated Jackson 18·7 in Division II sectional tournament play Wednesday. (Dave Harris photo)

TorYlcats':, ho(~ off Eagle hame..run rall¥
..... .

EAST MEIGS - With help of Eagle
errors, Trimble broke a four-game Eastern·
winning streak Wednesday in TVC baseball
action at Eastern. The Tomcats prevailed 65.
Trimble hitters included Phil Faires with
a single. Justin Guinther also had a single.
Adam Jago had a double.
Shawn Gillespie added , a single. Jessie
Brunton had two singles.
·
.
Adam Faires had a single and a double.
Alex Shust had a single.
Eastern hitters were led by Chris Lyons,
who clubbed a home run, and Ben Holter,
who homered and had a single.
'
Cacy Faulk had a triple. Josh Will had two
singles. Jimmie Putman clubbed two singles.
Trimble (12-9) scored in the , second
when Brunton singled and stole second.
Bobby Trace walked, and Shust singled
home a run to give the Tomcats a 1-0 lead.

Rose:·ll'm

the one
who died'
Pete Rose, angry that baseball won't let him attend
anniversary celebrations for
the 1975 Cincinnati Reds and
1980 Philadelphia Phillies,
feels like Charlie Leper, not
Charlie Hustle. '
Baseball's career hits leader
says the commissioner's office,
which invited him to the allcentury ' team celebration at
last year's World Series, won't
even return his agent's telephone calls.
"When they want something or need something,
they're very corpial," Rose said
Wednesday. "Ot~er than that,
they treat ypu '' ltke you have
leprosy: We've learned to live
with it, not that ~t's right ." ·
Rose agreed to a lifetime
ban from baseb:dl in August
1989 following 'an investigation of his gambling.
He 'said he feels like a nonpersol)..
"Everybody from the team
in '75 is going to be there but
me," he said. "I guess I'm the
one who died."

Cliris Lyons and Ben Holter
each homered for the Eagles
Trimble scored another in the second
when Justin Guinther reached on an error,
and Gillespie singled him home to exten~
the lead to 2-0.
Eastern scored two runs when Holter hit
a solo home run over the left centerfield
·
fence.
Josh Will singled ·and stole second, ;md
Jimmie Putman singled him homelto tie the
score ai 2-2.
Trimble scored three in the fourth when
Adam Faires singled, Shust walked, and Phil
Falres reached on an error to score a run.
With runners at second and third,
Guinther singled to score a run and Gillespie reached on another error to score
another run and Trimble Jed S-2.
Eastern (1 0-7, TVC 8-7) tied it up in the

.

fifth. Holter led off with a si ngle.
Cacy · Faulk hit a RBI triple, and Chris
Lyons hit a two-run home run over the left
centerfield fence to knot the score at S-5.
Trimble scored the winning run w hen
Brunton w~s hit by a pitch, stole second
and scored on a tWo-out double by
Adam Faires.
Easter~ went down on three strikeouts
in -the seventh.
Jo sh Will suffered the loss. He pitched
a co mplete game with two strikeouts,
two hit batte rs and eight walks.
Will gave up only three earned runs.
Phil Faires got the win with I 0 strikeouts and a walk.
Eastern is idle unti l sectional tournament pl;rys begins Monday.
The Eagles play the winner of the
Mille r- Waterford game, which is scheduled for today.

'f

...._-Reds, Pllp 81

a wild pitch .
But once again the Marauders
ROCK SPRI NGS - A jacob answered that with a run of
Smith sacrifice fly with one out their own in the bottom of the
in the seventh inning to give inning.
Meigs a 4-3 .win over Miller in
Skip Dodson singled, stole
TVC baseball action Wednesday. second and third and scored the
The Falcons opened up a one tying run on a fielders choice off
run lead in the top of the first the bat ofJeff Brown.
inning. Nelson singled and
Andy Davis led off the sevmoved up on a Meigs error.
enth inning for Meigs be drawTwo straight ground outs ing a walk.
.
scored the run for the 1-0 lead.
Zack Bolin pinch ran for
. Meigs came back in the bot- Davis and stole second and
tom of the second.
moved to third on a passed ball.
Matt Stewart singled and stole
Jacob Smith then fought off a
second and third. H e later rwo strike pitch 'and hit a sacri~
scored on a sacrifice fly off the fice fly to right as Bolin jogged
bat of Derick Johnson .
home with the winning run. ·
The Falcons took a 2-1 in the
J65h Lynch picked up the win
third inning.
in relief ofTommy Roush, who
With one out Humphrey pitched a good game.
reached on a Marauders error,
The two combined to give up
moved up on a passed ball and sl.x hits, walk nobody and strike
scored on a single by Nelson.
out one.
Meigs once again came back
Matt SteWart, Johnson and
to tie the game at two in the Dodson had the Marauder hits;
bottom of the inning.
all single.
Kyle Smiddie walked, stole
Bolyard was the losing pitchsecond and moved · up on a er.
passed ball.
He gave up three hits, walked
Smiddie then scored on a sac- five and struck out three.
rifice fly by Jeff Brown.
Nelson had three 'singles to
Miller regained a 3-2 lead in lead Miller.
the fifth.
Mei~ (7 -11) begins sectional
BREATHING ,EASY - Zack llolln of Meigs crosses the plate with the
Turner singled moved to third tournament play next Thursday
whining run In the Marauders' 4-3 victory over Miller Wednesday. on a Meigs error and scored on
at Gallia Academy:
(Dave Harris photo)
BY DAVE HARRIS

SENTINE~

CORRESPONDENT

.(

I

'

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
After his best outing since the
first half of last season, Paul Byrd
got a few things off his chest.
Byrd (1-2) allowed three hits in
seven mnings, leading · the
Philadelphia Phillies to a 5-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on
Wednesday night.
"I like Philadelphia. I like the
fans . I like the media, but it is a
negative city," Byrd said. " I don't
think we're babies and you hJve
to walk · around and put powder
on us. But if it's going to be
snowballing, while you're down,
let me spit on you real quick .
That's not a good thing."
Bobby Abreu gave Byrd aU the
offense he would need with a
two-run doubl e as the struggling
Phillies snapped a four-game losing streak. It 'was Philadelphia's
second win in 11 games. ·
Byrd, who lowered his ERA
from 10.19 to 7.66, struck out
four, walked one and allowed one
run. Eddie Taubensee got the
only hits off Byrd, including a
seventh-inning homer.
,
But Byrd had other th!ngs on
his mind.
"I love the Philly fans. I've
always thought they're on' my
· side. My gripe is not about that.
I'm not saying you should love a
loser all the · time. As a team, we
can't fall prey to that. We can't
become negative because we're
off to a bad start and the odds are
•
,
H
aga1nst us.
The Phillies, expected to contend this season, are off to an 8- 18
start.
"In this locker room, we've had
'"so"ihe peepfe""~ l:liistrated over 'the
negativity around here and that's
not good," Byrd said. "It's important to have a winning attitude in
sports. I'm not trying to start a
war. I'm not saying you have to
love a loser, either. This is how I
feel."
Byrd lefr the game with a
strained right groin that he attrib,
uted to a new pitching motion.
He d.oesn 't believe th~ injury is
serious. Wayne Gomes allowed arr
unearned run over the final two
inniil!;'.
Byrd has struggled since last ·
year's AU-Star break. He was 4-9
since with a 6.45 ERA .entering
Wednesday's game. He went 11-5
with a 3.94 ERA befo~e tbe
break and was picked as an AllStar for the first time in his career.

Smith's sac fly carries .Meigs past Miller

'

(

.

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Save$5.00

his best
for Reds

OM HARRIS

Ple•se see Melp, Pille 81
Track &amp; Field
Friday'• gamea
Meigs at Rio, 5:00
River Valley at Rio, 5:00
Gallia Academy at Gazette ,,
Relays, 5:00
,.
-.. ·Paint PIEfasant at Gazette Relays,
5:00
'
Hannan at Gazette Relays, 5:0&lt;)

Byrd saves

igs pounds Jackson

HIGHLIGHTS

MONTCLAIR
$16.50 6:tan

..

•

�•

I •

•

I

Thu~. May 4, 2000
~ P-ee 8 2 • The Dlllly S.ntinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL LEAGUE
'

'

The last team to win 16 in a row was Kansas Ciry
in 1977. The Braves had been 14-0 since John
Rocker returned from a two-week suspension.
Rockies 16, Expos 7
Todd Helton went 5-for- 5 and Colorado set a
team record with 24 hits in a romp at Coors Field.
The Rockies, who sct;~red 72 runs in a six- game
homestand against Montreal and New York, led 164 after five innings.
All nine Colorado starters had an RBI. Helton set
:i career high for hits and Jeff Cirillo went 4-for-4
and scored three times.
,
The Rockies' previous record for hits was 21 ,
done four times.
Giants 8, Mets 5, 11 innings
Jeff Kent's three-run homer in the 11th inning
gave San Francisco its third straight win over New
York.
The Giants have won three in a row at Pacific Bell
Park after starting out 1-7 in their new stadium.
Marvin Benard singled to open the 11th against
lUrk Wendell and Barry Bonds walked on four
pitches. Kent followed with a drive into the left-field
seats.
Mets starter Mike Hampton, who began the day
8-0 lifetime against the Giants, gave up five runs on
six hits and six walks in 5 1-3 innings. He has walked
36 in 38 2-3 innings this year. ·
Pirates 8, Cardinal• 2
Kris Benson survived four walks in the first inning
and Pittsburgh won at Busch Stadium.
Benson (2-3) became the 6rst Pirates starter with
two victories. He overcame seven walks in seven

For once, the Atlanta Braves watched someone
· else shake hands after the final out.
The Braves' franchise- record 15-game winning
streak ended Wednesday night as Los Angeles defeat. ed Greg Maddux 6-4 at Dodger Stad\um.
"Losing is something you don't like, but 15 out of
16 isn't bad:' Atlanta trulnager Bobby Cox said.
• "We'll take that anytime."
' The streak wa! the longest in the National League
since the New York Giants won ·16 straight in 1951.
Minnesota won 15 in a row in 1991.
"It's been a good run:• Braves third baseman
: Chipper Jones said. "We need to go back home and
· start a new streak and not let this loss snowball on

'

The Daily Sentinel encourages
your support of these area
businesses who make this page
possible.

Braves' streak ends at Chavez
Ravine; Helton leads :Rockies' outburst
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: us."
Atlanta had not lost since a 6-3 defeat on April 15
: at Milwaukee. Off today, the Braves play Philadel: phia on Friday night at Turner field, where they
; have not l.ost since April 7. ·
. The longest winning streak in major league histo; ry is 26 '-,all at home - by the 1916 Giants. That ·
~ team managed by John McGraw also won 17
· straight - all on the road - that seasop, yet finished
: fourth in the NL at 86-66.
. Shawn Green and Todd Hollandsworth each
; homered and had three hits for the Dodge~. Mad: dux (4-1) gave up nine hits in a complete game.
. "I made a couple of mistakes and it seemed they
• hit every one out," he said.
' Said winning pitcher Carlos Perez: "I told my
. mother this morning that if I beat Greg Maddux, I
: would be the happiest man around:'

innings.
Brian Giles and Kevin Youn g homered on consecutive pitches in the Pittsburgh sixth. St. Louis center
fielder Jim Edmonds crashed into the wall to rob Wil
Cordero of a home run in the seventh, but had the
wind knocked out of him and left after the inning.
Cuba 4, Astros 3
Jon Li eber beat Houston for the second time in a
week and Chicago won at Wrigley field.
Lieber,.who pitched a complete game against the
Astros last Thu~day, lasted 7 2-3 innings. Rid;
Aguilera struck out Ken Caminiti with two runners
on base to end ir.
Eric Young homered to lead off the Cubs first.
Brewers 4, Diamondbacks 1
Horacio Estrada. called up from Triple-A before
the game, pitched seven strong innings in his first

major league start.
.
Estrada, who made four relief appearances :for
Milwaukee last year, gave up three hits and walked
three.
Geoff Jenkins hit his 11th home run and ~an
Berry also connected for the Brewers. r
.·
Arizona lost for only the fifth time in 14 road
games .
Padres 3, Marlins 1
Brian Meadows, traded from florida to San Diego
last November for reliever Dan Miceli, came within
two outs of his first career shutout.
Meadows exited after giving up a home run to
Cliff floyd, and Trevor Hoffman closed for his fifth
save.

..,
a

THIS MOTHER'S DAY

WITH HANDS-FREE:

SAFETY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l

,

Red Sox 4, Tigers 2

: Jose Offerman and Trot Nixon hit consecutive
; doubles to break an eighth-inning tie at fenway
• Park.
' Offerman snapped an 0-for-15 slump with a dou; ble that eluded first baseman Tony Clark when it
; took a bad hop off the bag. Right fielder WendeD
: Magee also had trouble: a fan appeared to throw a
: beverage at him as he went to the wall to field the
: baD.
. Derek Lowe (2-0) pitched two perfect innings.
·
: JeffWeaver (0-4) took the loss.

.

Ranpn 5, Devil Ray• 1 •

· Royce Clayton homered off DWight Gooden (2: 1) and Mark Clark
. pitched six scoreless innings for

.

; . "He did what he did bst year;• Taubensee sold.
:"He was miXing pitches. He came (rQQ1 .different
:angles. That's what made him so successfi,JI."
' The Phillies took a 2-0 lead offSceve Parris (1-4)
;in the fourth with help' from Cincinnati's defense.
: Abreu led off with a walk and Scott Rolen singled
ito put runners on first and third.
: Both runn~rs scored when second baseman Pokey
;Reese made an errant throw to shortstop Gookie
; Dawkins on Rico Brogna's grounder.
• It was the fifth error for Reese, who won a Gold
:Glove 'last season after committing just seven errors.
; Byrd started a two-rian fifth with a willk. He

... ~ ilutioft, 1.310

1,328

L J,efl GOi"ciO!!. 1.21$ ·

Ron HOtnaal)l. 1.241
~ Gnibb, 1,182
OIIMd Gr.. o, l.l-45
_i£ltgn, ~r 1,112

I. RYJIY wallace, 1,:271
:LO. RICII)' ~. '1,251

JIISM Keller, 1,111
M.vin ~ . 1,082

Saturda1. May 6
Dorstt6W chanpfon: Dale

......

Jarrett
Fonnlt: 400 laps/300 miles
Qulllfylnc record: Jeff
Gordon, Chevrolet. 126.499 ·
mph, May 13, 1999
Raot record: Rusty Wallace,

;,.

Mlllt WIIIIOt, 1.oo&amp;

' AM'/ Hol.l\l«&lt;l.-

JP~,Q

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
Whet: Hardee's 250

Where: Richmond
International Raceway(. 75-mlle
track)

advanced to second on a one-out· single by Ron
Gant, and Abreu made it 4-0 wirh a double off the
left-field wall.
·
Taubensee, who doubled in the second and singled in the fifth, made it 4-1 with a two-out solo
homer to right in the seventh.
Ken Griffey Jr. went 0-for-4 as his average feU to
.200. After Cincinnati cut it to 5-2 in the eighth,
Griffey 'grounded into an inning-ending double
play with runners at the corners.
"If! knew, we wouldn't be talking about it, would
we?" Griffey said.jlbout his struggles.
"He's the best player in the National League, but
I have a 7-in-10 ch;mce. of getting hiru ont, 8-in-10
in this case because he's hitting .200.. so I figured I'd
throw him a strike:' Gomes said about the doubleplay grounder.
'

(

CRA"SMAN TRUCK SERIES

Martin

WHt:: Ram Tougn 200
Where; Gateway International

Format: 250 lllj)S/ 187 ,5
miles

Qullfylnc record: Jason
Keller. Chevrolet. 124.907 mph,

Raceway 11.25-mlle track),
Madison, 111.
When: Sunclay, May 1

May 14.1999
Race'R.cord: Kenny Wallace.
Ford. 104.928 mpn, ·s.pt. B.

Bltne

Dofonolnl ch-'"": Grea

1995
Noblbtt: Roush Racing dri'Jers
Mark Martin and Jeff Burton
ha'le won the last two S!l'ing
events here.

StM Gltleom. 871
Kurt Butch , 872

""'

. 3 . (4)

0&gt;
=1:1::
'-

7. (B) DIIO JorroU

co

8. (7) Jolf Gordon
9.
Jeremy Moyllotd
10. ( 10) Tony Stowart

()

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turn twO whtre th ~y exit. etc.

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

• Over the next few weeks.
NASCAR will assign Melling
Racing (and driver Sta cy
Compton) a new number tor the
2001 season . Owner Ma111:
Melling gave up the current No.
9 so that Bill Elliott can use
that number again in 2001,
when he drives a Dodge
Intrepid for Ray Evernham.
A drawing will be held from
among fans whO guess the new
number at the team 's Web site
(www.MsUI.....ifte.COM),
where complete rules may also

aoln&amp;.'
Too lorig, as it turned ·out, but
Kenseth did manage .to finish
third behind Mayfield and
Bobby Labonte. who regained
the POint lead.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
-

FONTANA, Calif. - Kenseth

did manage to win the Auto
Club 300, extending the
mastery of Winston Cup
regular$ In the secondary
series.
Drlvlna: a Che~rolet, Kenscth
slipped past brothers WBrd and .
Jeft Burton when Ward hli the
wall. and Jeff. following close~.
had to slow down to avoid the
crash .
Kenseth became the second
driver to win more than one
BGN race this season. HIS
mentor, Mjlrk MBftin, who did
not compete at Callfornla
Speedway, was the flret.

i&lt;"t'

'

'

•

'

'

.

~

'

cOr&gt;n..oiod

Mayfield's cor at tellediCO. ·Till '""'m1nc body
• 1111 t08m;a ~nntna c:Or at Collforntt, oaylna llwo\tld nat ,
ove~ti.u~:~·the v~ory but that the roof ~IP,t wa1 tqo' tow. . ·
,,, '
' .'·' ..
; ':.))
NASCAR lllll-'s flllonlt oUtton .... !IIi~: .
' this litmt fat~~ petty. Evon·NASCAR ol!lclalalldmlttld 1111
probtom may "''" occurred because Moylletd Jumped all : ' ·

!on-,_,.

tne co,ect a:uess will recetve a
trip to a driving school (from

',

www.rHifCicltooll.cam), and

ffUO Of THI WIEK

:1,

bo fOund.-

••

'

'

••••••••••••

'lit 1Gk1illle......

•HGr:I!Obey U!bOnte re&amp;alned
thO r&gt;olnt lead.

1. What Js.the shortest distance ew,.r run In
a Winston Cup (then Grand National) point
race?
•
2. What Is the shortest track evet' to host a Winston Cup
(then Grand National) event?

)

•NOTI Terry Labonte finished a

·euw 8 JO LHJU-GUO 'AeMPQadS (·A' N) d!III"Z
.,t :z96t 'tZ: I!Jdy UO '' O'N 'WiltS-tJO\SUIM
Ut Wn JP8\S lieJ!) ueUIM0818 '991JW ,LZ: 'Y

dtsappolntirc 33rd et California
Spee&lt;INay.

IIIIMINY

••••••••••••

another will serve as an honer
rary pit-crew member for the
team in the Aug. 20 race at
MICh lgan · Speedwa~. Winners
will be announced at the track
.on June 9. .
• During May. Amoco stations
will offer 1:64 scale replicas of
the cars driven In Winston Cup
by Dave Blaney, In the Workl of
Outlaws b~ Dale Blaney and In
the NHRA by Allen Johnson.
The miniature ears will be
a11allable at Arrioco stations
for $1.29 each .
• The grand-p.rlze winner In the
Aqua VeNa Heart Poundi"l
Sweepstakes will receive a twoday trip to the Richard Pett~
Driv ing Experience, along with e
three-dayjfour·nlght trip to
Charlotte, N.C., and $250 In
spending mone~. Emrles must
be postmarked by oec. 30.
2000. To enter, complete an
official entry form (available at
your local relaller) or hand print
your name. address and
telephone nUmber on a 3-tly-5lnch card and mall to: Aqua
VelVa Hean Pounding Sweep.
stakes, P.O. Box 7073, Clinton,
fA 52736-7073. Entries arellmf
ted to one per person per day,
·mailed In separate envelol)es.

Correction
Last week's Top Ten shOuld
hBwt had Terry labonte at nine

. and Ton~ Stewart at 10 .

Parrott joins Dale Jarrett with lifetime contract at Robert Yates Racing X~OF .
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Callfom• Speedway.
Irwindale opened in 1998 to r1ve
rcviewa, and Stewart naccd in a
FONTANA. Calif. - Todd Pon1&gt;ll midsn 111ee a1 the paved Ind. Jut
oow has a lifetime can111ct at Robert November. Earlier thiJ year, he
Yatcm Racing:. Driver Dale Jarrett announc:ed he wu &amp;illlnJ up h!•
short-track drivin&amp; stints but made
already hid one.
· "Robert told me il meant that lf an eltception when l.rwindlle marI ever left, he would kill me." saki ketin&amp; vic:e president Pat Panermn
called him m:en11y.
Jarrett.
Stewart started 17th and finished
'"Thll'l the same contntt:t Todd's
seventh.
.got now,.. crac:ked )'ites.

127

f19

'199

'99

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

'•'

1

been noted. dead, could not be
reached for comment

Jerry libbee

'

OPEN
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Alva&amp;e 10mething with it."
He started 41st and fin ished 36th.

X
SO WHY DID HE BRING IT7
Kenny Waltaee calif the Chevrolet
' he brought to Fontana his "jinlt tu."
The ur has had ita en~ine blow in
bothofilspreviounppeartncesthis
year. in Atlanta and Darllng:ton.

"The ~arwould run good, but lhen
. both titMt, about three-quarter~ of
the way through the 111ce, Jhe oil
X
X
would run hot and It'd knock" tho
BOYS WILL BE BOYS: Tony
WELL.PILGRJM:StertinaMar- bearinp out,* said Wall ate. "The oil
SICW111 raced the on the niaht before · lin's No. 40 Chevrolet, otherwise aystem has been completely rethe NAPA SOO in th e Super Late sponsored by Coon t1eht, has the worked. It's like a new c:ar, so Vt'C'II
Model Qivision at Irwindale Speed· late actor John Wayne'! likcnns pn see whal happcna.
way, the srate-of-the-an 5hor1 track the huod. Appanmtly il it a one-race
"This car ha. really killed our
located only abOut lO miles rrom deal, ahhough Wayne, who is,u has season 10 far, so now maybe we tan

.

899

Prob&lt;Jbly the bel·t ansWf"r is thm
drivers rt/er to 1he turns th is wa)'.
turn one being where they enter,

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short run.·At the end there, It
took me a long time to get

Jeremy MIYI!eld IIIII ~
~lrW "· NASC~
,
.' ; ,
It 'w asn't enouah that NA!CAR h~s atlll' noi'teveeled whtt ;
ft 1nteildil to e10 abOut 1M alrtpd 1u1&gt;i lddttiWI fOund 1n ·
·,

•••n

Dear NASCAR' This W~k .
Why is it broadcasters call the ·
turns I, 2, 3, 4 on a pure oval track?
There are no atraights in these turns
like Indy!
Jatk Weuel

Only d~vor wHh 6 top-flves
Finished 17th
Brothora In tho top flvo
Faded to otlht lflor loldfll&amp;
Finished 1 quiet ninth
Bltf d1y novor miiO~IIIzod
Had bHn due tOr a while
What't wHh tho qulllfyln&amp;?

roce lna~lon, an~ no me""• or iowerinc thO Pf1 quHill !lit
roceta dtoco,.red , this ~lten hunt. t&lt;i·~···~d.' · ~

1OK·and 1·41 Gold .Chains
lOK or l4K
Gold Special
Prices Only

·

Rice record: Greg Biffle, Ford,
111.853 mon. Aug. 20 . 1999

lltttn Ft. 0.

'·

Bock out front In points
Hod ofl.wHk In C:ollfomla

OYif th, roof' ot the car In victory 1n: If the car pesMd ,.._
\
'
•'
'
'
.

Choose From 25 Styles
1 to 7 Stones

$12

FONTANA, Calif.- Jerem~

Mayfield became the ~eason's
10th different winner, but a
greater Cinderella story failed
to materialize.
. Rookie Matt Kenseth doml·
nated the Cia~ but made a
!lllstake consistent with his
experience at the end of the
NAPA Auto Parts 500, It was
the same mistake Ma)ttleld 's
teammate. vetet'an Rusty
wauace, made et Martinsville:
Kensett'! surrendered track
position by changing four tires,
not two. on his final Pit stop.
The decision burled him among
also-rans, while Mayfield 's
decision to change two put his
car out front.
·At the start of tile day, I told
Robbie (Reiser, the crew chief)
to change four tires every
time,· said Kenseth. "Later on,
I should have retnought my
positkm.
"I don't have the experience
to tell the difference betWeen

Aug. 19, 1999

Your1Um

Scott Pruett

OrfC Blftlt1Lpr ··):!
Rlcll Crawford, 752

FROM lAST WHK

THE WINSTON CUP SIRlES

~
.r:.

or wear it with the included holster. 117 - 1 2£~0

l&lt;llf Burton

4. (3) Dolo Elrnhardt
&amp;. (B) Word Burton
8. (I) Rusty W1llace

Fonnat: 160 laps/200 miles
Quallfyfnl record: Stacy
Compr:on, Dodge, 133.093 mph,

••••••••••••

... A-.eeo

TOP TIN

1. (2) llobbr Labonte
2. (1) Mork Marlin

Metp

.

track)
Wl!on:

1999 races here last year and
took a lead In the standlniS he
would never relinQuish.

Wl!on: Fnday, May 5

-...nnc-...: Marl&lt;

• Weekly ranklngs by NASCAR This week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's ranking Is In parentheses.

•

,

~Indy \.iiOII,

1

1 I. Dele Ellrm•dt. 1.384
.. Pale Jln'ttt, 1.305
J. Ji.remy hl~ld, 1,300

•

reached on a jackson error to add to tile Meigs run ,
total.
• .
Lsuderrnilt (11-t) picked up the Win, HyseU
pitched the last innirig. The two combined to give
fromP'Ipl1
up eisht hits, walk three and strike out four.
.
Harris and Wigal had a double lind tWo singles
sinaled, Shannon Price scored both runs with a
each to lead Meip.
·
sinsle, Price later scored on a passed ball.
Price, BOyles and Chancey ~ach had a pair of sinJackson scored two more runs in the sixth innins.
and Laudermllt, and Williams each had a single.
ale•
' Meip closed out the scorin1 in the sixth innin1 to
Griffith was the losing pitcher with help from
close out the scoring.
The two gave up 14 hits, walked six and
Snyder.
With two outa Wigal and Lsudermilt both sinaled, Williams walked, and Abby Harrit followed struck out one.
Hodge had a ·double and a single for Jackson,
with a single.
Lsmbe1t
had a pair of singles.
Chancey scored iwo runt with a sinale and Hysell
•

400
Where: Richmond
InternatiOnal Raceway (.75-mlle

Ford, 108.499 mph , March 2.
1997
Notllble: Winston Cup champion Jarrett won the first of tour

.

Texas.·
The loss was the fourth straight for the Devil
Rays, who fell to 3-8 at home and have dropped
eight straight to the Rangers at Tropicana field.
Clark (3-2) allowed six hits in six-plus innings.
John Wetteland got five outs to earn his 299th career
save.
Angels 6, Orioles 5
Mo Vaughn and Garret Anderson homered in a
three-run sixth inning that powered Anaheim. Matt
Walbeck and Benji Gil also connected for the
Angels, who had lost nine straight and 14 of 15 to
Baltimore.
Albert Belle and BJ. Surhoff hit sofo homers for
the Orioles. ·
Ramon Ortiz (2-2) was the winner and Troy Percival got his seventh save. Jason Johnson (0-1) took
the loss.
White Sox 7, Blue Jays 3
Jose Valentin, Frank Thomas and Paul Konerko hit
consecutive home~ in the sixth inning and host
Chicago ended a three-game skid.
Mark Johnson also homered in. sixth, with his
two-run shot breaking a 2-2 tie. Valentin homered
. in the first, and the long baD display made it easy for
James Baldwin (5-0).
Kefvim Escobar (2-4) took the loss.
'1\vins 5, Mariners 4, 10 innings
Cristian Guzman hit a sacrifice fly off Jose Mesa
(1-2) in the 10th inning and host Minnesota
stopped a five-game losing streak.
Jacque Jones went 3-for-3 with a walk and Corey
Koskie homered for the Twins.
Eddie Guardado (2-1) got the win.
Athletics 14, Royals 5
Terrence Long, Jeremy Giambi and Eric Chavez
homered as the Athletics set an Oakland record with
10 hits in the seventh inning.
The A's sent 13 men to the plate against Jay Witasick and Jason Rakers in the eight-run seventh.
Giambi and Ben Grieve each had two hits and one
RBI in the inning for the A's, who have won five of
their last six on the road.
Gil Heredia (3-2) allowed two runs in 6 1-3
innings for the win. Jeff Suppan (1-3) took the loss.

Reds
...........

. . . ........

. ~,..

1. Bobby I..JbQnt•. 1.!518
J_,r Grato, 1,4-43
J. Milt! M.-tln. 1A8e
• ,.. iooN, 1'.404
I. WM:I Burton, 1,•t'•3
Mete Kentttll, 1,310

·vanks sweep Tribe at the Jake
. With help from two assists by Mar~ Whiten, the
: New York Yankees completed a three-game sweep at
:Jacobs Field.
Whiten, making his first start of the season in cen: ter field, misplayed Shane Spencer's triple and
: dropped Ricky Ledee's RBI double in the ninth
: inning as the Yankees scored twi~e fo~ a 6-5 victory
; over the Cleveland Indians on Wednesday night:
, Injuries to All-Star Kenny Lofton and Jacob Cruz
; have left the Indians with few options in center, and
; Whiten was only out there because manager Char' lie Manuel decided to give Jolbert Cabrera a night
: off.
The Yankees, like they did all series, took advan: tage and improved to 24-9 all-time at the Jake.
: But the wins didn't come easy. New York needed
: a weird, ninth-inning double play to win the open' er of the series and· hung on in the second game
: before rallying from a 5-1, seventh-inning deficit in
: the finale.
Spencet, who homered earlier, keyed the come: back with his first career triple, a straightaway shot
: over Whiten's head. Scott Brosius tied it at 5 with an
: RBI single and scored when Ledee drove in the go; ahead run with a shot to center that Whiten ran
; down on the warning track but couldn't hold on to.
. • Jason Grimsley (1-0) pitched two scoreless innings
: and Mariano Rivera worked the ninth for his lOth
: save and third of the series.

C....,. up: Pontiac Excltemerit

2000 WINSTON (Up SCHEDUlE

·

•

ON THE SCHEDULE

THE WINSTON C:UP SERIES

Butch Orend Nlltlon11, Hlr-·s 210

a Trocki, R1m Touah 200 by Popol
1:30 p.m. • Sunda~ • ESPN

AM·ERICAN LEAGUE

.

·

All T1mH E11tem

7:30p.m . • Friday • ESPN2
a Winston Cup, Pontloc E•cltement 400
7: ~0 p.m . • Saturday• ESPN

SAY IT
·'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

FORTY-NtNEVEARS\OUNC:

Wallace thinlts thole who tile
California Speedway's mimilarity to
Michigan Speedway are &amp;really
oversimplifying maltera.
''To say California's like Michlpn
is totall y llliiUndmtood," said Wal·
lace. "This tra ck ha ~ very flat
corners ( 14 degrees). Michigan,
however. is banked (18 degnes) in
the comers."

Dale. Earnhardt lumed 49 on Saturday, April 2,9. h was one year a~o
that Earnhardt, after winning at Talladega, uid that, if he did not run
well al Californ ia Speedway, it was
his fault, not the team's.
X
Since then, Earnhardt has won
VABBA-DABRA·DOO! Robby
three raees and had 25 top-! 0 finishes in 34races. He led the 1999 Cali- Gordon's Ford carried a Flinlstones
fornia l'lte unlll runninc out or fuel paint scllcme here, owing to spon·
on the final lap, thus l011ing: a lap and sorship from Universal Studios and
Horger King.
finish ina 12th.
The neon-orange paint hyped the

X

IT'S NOT THE SAME: Kenny

Ptttr ...,

JEFF
WARNER
lnaurance Agency

,..... ..c.,.._,

11110, . ..

ICtlonlllnllnc -lllin

113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45789
Olllce: 992-5479

frontiNASCARP!fon ...to.... tllo

TolodtCI_IOII_

·-or

tten to win tbo _ . , .
MorftOid's-

to S-1'0 NAMP.UIOOIICI-

the!ltrical relea seof"The l'lintslones
in Viva.kock Vega!i" on April 28 .

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentin.el .for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

...

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�Thursday May 4 2000

P-oe B 4 The O.lly Sentinel

May4 2000
Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio
440

APIIrlmenta

for Rent

540 Miscellaneous

560

The Dally Senti nel

Pets for Sale

Public Notice

Merchandlae

PUIUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday May 6
2000 at 10 00 am a Pllblle
aale will be ho d II 211 WOOl
Second Street Poma oy
Ohio The Farma a Bank
and Sav nga Company
extended lot (baa do
P . - a Supo Valu) to 11
for caah tht fo low ng
collatoral
18M FORD RANGER 4X4
1FTCR11UXRPB51846
1870 CHEVROLET C10
TRUCK CE 402129442
The l'arma a Bank and
Sav ngt
Company
Pomero~ Dhlo ourvoo tho
right to bid at th t 11 a and
to withdraw the abpve
collateral pr o to •• o
Funher The Fa mora Bank
and Sav ngo Company
roeorvea tho ght to eject
any o 111 b do aubmlttad
Furtha
tho
above
collateral w be eo d n the
cond I oh It Ia In with no
expruo o
mp ltd
war onlloa g vtn
For further Info mal on
contact Sho a Buchanan at
992 2136
(5)3 4 5 3TC

4'&gt;.10 Foirmont !Rented 01 Prieo
nc ude.J Po h S o age Ba n
A.l!P an ts New Wastut 10 ye

sa 100 1..,...

-o

36

2 3 bed
'2 2566

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personal a

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

70

Yard Sale
Pomeroy
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
1J real ettoto ldYII1IIIng In
he F - Felt Hous ng Act
o tea whld1 mlll&lt;eo ~ Mllgll

Nlw 4 W de 3B A 2BA 12 3
PI Mon
Low dow Payme
F •• A
ee De e v 888
928-3426

Nmlta ion or dlacnm na ion
based on race colo e lglon
sex am a sta us or na lonal

N'w 6 80 3BA 2BA $268 pe
mon h ow Down Pa me
F ee
A F eo Do o
688 928
3426

thloflOWIIIIPOI'ill~ 10

oodven .. -.nypralerenCI

REPORTER

Orig

o

any ntention o

make any such pre e ence
mnat on or d acrtm nation
This newspaper w not

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

New Ooub ew de 3 BR 2BA
pe mo h ow Dow Pa
111•n F eeA F ee De e y
888 928 3426
J2 ~6

knowingly acoot~t
advert sem• 1 for real "

ate

whld1 s n lola ion of the
law Our rooderl are honlby
ntonnedlha a dWell ngo
adVortlae&lt;l n tho
are ava !able on an equa
oppoftt.nlty baslo

nawo-

AERAT ON MOTORS

Aepa red New &amp; Reb
ca Ro E a s

n S ock

800.53 9528

Ohm Valley
Publtshmg Co
A en on Pub she
825 Third A e
Ga po s Oh o 45631

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
H

LOOK NG FOR LAND?
rlQ Rec ea a B lding
-800-2 3 8385
AN HONY LAND CO LTD

MERCHANDISE

fo ow ng Roa Eotato to
wit
Situate n tho Townoh p of
Saltm County of Me go and
Sl.ltt of Ohio
T oct Ono
Bo ng In
Sa om Townah p Mo ga
County Ohio In Sect on 13
Town 13 Ronge 15 Ohio
Company-a purchuo
Beginning
ot
tho
oouthwoat corner of 1 1 16
ac e t act now owned by
0 on Davia be ng the
no thea1t co ner of the

Danv llo School ot thence
In o aoutho ly d ractlon
obout 1 rodo end 12 feet
tot he center of the Danv •
Salem Contar Townoh p

road

th•nc•

In

a

to George Sp ngelon
ra cordod In Vo
Pego 523 Molga Ca llft t~
Dead Recordo
Be ng t he same
•••••• conveyldto Harry w
Klufl and Mary W Klull bf
John c Steinbeck and Mory
C Sta nbock by dood
ocordld n DHd book 8(
Pago 455 of th e Malga
County Dead Roco de
Pe manen Pa eel No 15
) 087-QOO
Locatad at Route 1 Box
2 M dd aport Ohio 45760
Sa d p openy haa baan
app a aed 11 $15 000 00 and
cannot oo I fa oaa than
two-lh de of appro aement
Thla app I 111 II balld
upon a vlouol napoctlon of
that pan of the p em aea tQ
which acceaa waa lid y
ava able Tho app a •• a
aaauma no eapon11b lily
fa and g ve no weight to

••t

no thweotarty d ract on
lo low ng tho canta line of
11 d rood tract thanoa In o
no lhautorty d roct on
lot owing Allee Smith 1
th H acre tract thence In a
no thoutarly d oct on unknown legal matte •
lo ow ng Allco Sm th a aaot nclud ng but not mltad to
line 12 rodo and 12 faot concoa ed o atanl doflct1
thence n and 111t1 y and or the presence of
d eel on aboutalx roda and harmfu a tax c chemica a
I ve feet to the p ace of pollutanll or
bag nn ng
Te ma of 1111
Ten
Pormonent Parcel No 13 Percent ( 0%) day of •• e
00391-QOO
ba anco w th n 30 daya
James M Soulaby She Iff
Locatld
11
31110
Rod
Hill
Public Notice
of
Me ga County Ohio
Road Langavl a Oh o
Stephan D M 01 Atto ney
SHERIFFS SALE
45741
8 West Monument Avenue
Bank One Financial
Sold p oporty hao baon
S.rv ce1 Inc va
eppraloed at $15 000 00 end Dayton Oh o 45402
Robon t Lomban Jr 11 a
connot 1111 lor looo then 3T 5(4)(11)(18)
(5)41 83TC
Me ga County Common two-thlrdo of appreloamant
Pleaa CaH No 911-CV-082
Th o app alaal o booed
In pu auanca of an order upon a v aual napec:tlon or
Public Notice
aaued f om Common P ••• that pan of tho pram 101 to
Court with n ond fo the wh ch accaaa wao raod ly
County of Mega State of IVIIIIble The oppra II 8
SHERIFF S SALE OF REAL
Ohio on the 8th dty of aoouma no raaponalbllty
ESTATE
Decombor 1999 and to me fo and g vo no wo ght to
Gano
a
Codo
11881
d rected I wll offer fo aale unknown legal mattan
Revlald
Codo
2329.26
11 Publ c Auct on n the Including but notllm ted to
THE STATE OF OHIO
Malga County Courthouae concaolad or lattnt dafacta
MEIGS COUNTY
Second Stroot Pomeroy and or the preaence of C TV LOAN FINANCIAL
Ohio on Wodntadoy the harmful or toxic cham ca 1
SERV CES INC Pia nl II
15th day of June 2000 11 pollul.lnll or gaaoa
VI
10 00 am of aa d day tho
Torma of aolo
Tan HARRY PICKENS
JR at II
Po cent (10%) day of aa e
Defendant
bolance w thin 30 daye
n purouanca of an 0 dat
In Memory
Jamaa M Soulaby She If of Sa
a n the abovo enl1111d
of Mllga County Oh o
act
on
I w offer for oolo 11
n Lovtng Memory of
Stephen D Mlloo Attorney
pub
c
auction
In PorMroy
18 Will Monument Avenue
DORES ARNOLD
Ohio n tho above namad
Dayton Ohio 45402
County on F day tho 8th
who pas ed away on
3T 5(4)(11)(18)
day of June 2000 1.1 10 0
(5)411183TC
May 4 1998
a m
the
following
deac lbad
eal oolala
God ooked a ound his
Public Notice
alluate n the County of
garden
Me go and State of Oh o
He found an empty p a e
SHERIFF S SALE
and n the C ty of Pome oy
He knew you we e
IU1~1lt1d Stat.. of America
to-wit
M Pearman al a
S tuatad n the County of
suffering
County Common
Mo go n the Stale of Oh o
He knew the road was
Plaaa caae No 99-CV.012
and In the Townah p of
In pursuance of an o de
Sallabury
rough
eaued from the Common
Baing
n Sal abu y
He closed your weary eyes
Pleae Coun w thin and fo
Townah p Me ga County
He called you home tha
the County of Mo ga Slate OhiO and atualtd n Range
Oh o on the 5th day of 13 Town 2 Section 26 Oh o
n gbt
2000 and to me Companya
Purchue
Sadly m ssed by wile
I will offer fo ule Beginning on the nonh a da
M ld ed Ch dren Mary at
Auction In tho of Unll&gt;n Avenue Road at
Me ga
Courthouot
the aouthtaat corner ol
Pa cy Jane and Bobby and
Street Pomeroy
Thomaa Eb n a 3 oc e at
,;.======fam=l=e~sl June
Oh o on
Frldty
8th ol
of thence nonh 8 dog " " 1S
:1000
II 10 the
30 ...,
uat 301 foal along
II d di!JI tho following RHI
Thomas Eblin a aaat line
6
"
Ealale to-wit
::..:..::;::..:;:::.::.:.;;:.~....::;:.;;._
thence nonh 68 degreaa 4~
une I 1 fJ7&lt;&gt;·
Sltualld In the Vlllga of mlnutao aoat 130 fool to tho
apnl I 3 2000
I~:~:~:~~ In the County of road leading up tht hill:
11
and the State of thence along the weal tide
In Lolling :Memory
of aold road noflh 25
Knc•wn aa and bag nn ng degroea 30 m nutta oaat
of:My '13 o fie
on the aaat aida of tho roed 107 leal than co aouth fl
lood ng from Middleport to dogreeo 30 mlnutoo weal
'DO:NV!£/D 'f.
Rutland Ohio on the New 138.2 feel !honea aouth 27
YOS'T: ]'R
H 11 Road altha nonh line of degreea 48 mlnutaa aaa~
Ph II p Jones land thence 134 7 foal thence oouth 8
13U13
nonh &amp;-1 4 well 3 chains degreoa oaal 41 8 fttl to
and 58 I nka to a llake at oald Un on Avenue Road
Ralph Spooner a south line thence aoulh 82 deg aaa
7 cha na and 95 I nka to a weal 268 5 laot along the
Yeste day I tfiougfit of
alike thence eoulh 2 weal north aida of aald Union
you and my fieart s6ed 7 cha ne and 71 I nka to tho Avenue
Rood to tho place of
north ne of 11 d Phillip beginning containing 1 54
a tea fo rlie me nones
Jonee land thence north acrea more !" leu
fiaw nllt been gotte
72 weol 8 chaine end 22
Coal 011 Gao and other
nka to tht plact or mlnerala are reeervad and
tfiat al ays ve e o
beg nn ng conlllnlng 3 89 not aold w th the lghl to
dea I w sfi every li ng
IC ea
e1erv1 to m ne amove
Sev ng and excepting tho and develop aame wllh
could of been opped n reaervatlona
made by V H
njury to aurfKI
time because J d dn t
Horton In hie dold doled
Parco 114.01 50
Janu1ry 8 1884 excepting
Said premlaeo Locatld 11
ant lings o fiange I aleo
one half acre aold by 31760 Un on Avenue
ltll.e tfiem JUSt fie way
Martha Ruaeel to Lucinda PorMroy Oh o 457811
Dodaan off tho ooutheaat
Sa d p em aoo Appraltliey were now you not
corner of the premlaoa al $15 004l;_00 and cannot ba
be ng fie e eems so
herein deacrlbad the name oold for 1011 than two-th da
being
conveyed by P F of that amount
st a 19e '13ut eally
Ezlec and wile to w A
TERMS OF SALE 10% of
tfi ng liave not bee
Hamlin truatte by dttd appralaad value down lhl
May25th 1877
real due w lh n 30 daya of
lo you al ays n my
Alao exoepllng out of tho the dati of Confirmation
n nd Someday we VIII
above deiCrlbod premltoa Jamoa M Souloby
ona and one fourth 1011 Sher II Meigs County Ohio
be toge lie aga n a
aold by Eva Snyder and 3T (5)4
of a o lie ttme
18 3TC
Me I Snyder hor huabond (5)4

l

a••••

J

Someone Specwl

' TRANSPORTATION

C~LL

NORA DONOHEW AT
304 895-3445

CEN UA 2 SH PLE REA JY

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TY ISS ?
No Fee Un ess WeW n
888 582 3345

FINANCIAL

Jo

Low alw·ays,
You one and only

"''''I

'Dawn .:M
Sssy

REA L ESTATE

810

Home
Improvements

NEW BANK REPO ONLY G
LEFT Owe Fna
304 36 295

ng A a abe

EMPLOYME NT
SER VICES
BANK REPOS ONLY 1411 00
DOWN I
ASSUME LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS W LL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOME
EASY F NANC NG AVA LA&amp;LE
30475HIH

SE RVI CES

810

Home
Improvements

For Mo t

Rockspnngs UMC
Bake Sale
at Gods Net Pomeroy
Sat 10 am

fo ma 100 Cal 800

43 8 64Hra 8 30 AM S PM

\

I

t

I
I

�•

Pllge Be • ~ Dally Sentinel

,..

~

_...,.'

..•

.

.... .

Thursday, May 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•
~ Thursday, May~· 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

~7

.~~ALLIL~ESYOO~OPp---------------------------~==~~==~====~======================~'=
BRIDGI

No Credit • Slow Credit· Blnkruptcy
Repo • Olvorded ·

JONES'

WORRYIID!!!
No l:mbari'IIAIMI\t...
You're Treated with Reapectl

Equlp....,n1 Pam

Factory Authori.-1
c--IHPIUta
Dealf:n.

(7 40) 367 -0266
I ·800·950·3359

,.....,....

11100 St. Rt 7 Soulh

QuaUt)'1 Vlriet)', Low PriCietl • That's Us!

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .941! each
Mornlnl Star Rd. CR JO

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
· Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates

740.992·1709
•121100 1 mo

750 East State Street
I1Athen,s,.Ohio 45701

OI.D LOCKZ4
CfiMPGitOO"D

Phone (740) 593-6671

46909 SR 124

6/29/mo.

Vegetable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Geraniums, ,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted

"Get in while you can, apace ia limited"

s--·

':t:le'l• It •I&gt; " ?t-eel- /H

S&lt;tte
AMD K6·2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6.4 Gig hard Drive, 17" Monitor .26
DPI., CO-Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Network
Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color Printer Windows 98 Se.:;ond Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month FREE Frognet Internet
Access! $899.00

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances

l

Parts- All Makes

99,2·1.550
The Appliance
Man

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
871-2487 or 448-1428

Ken You"B'
&lt;4/1i/OO 1 mo. pd.

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways • Tennis Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

WIN,ID
Standing timber.Jarge
·or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Dozer work.

ROBERT BISSELl.
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

'

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

740-992-1871

frn Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

Now Renting

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

I&amp;L IIISUlATIOII &amp;
COIISTRUCJIOII

140·992·S2J2

7/22ffFN

Vinyi Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutlers &amp;
Downspout, .Garage room

.t/281 mo. pd.

~~~!~n~·:~::
******************
"I"
* Concrete
Block

**
**
**

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

UpgrAdes
HO Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Located beside The Grill
740-992·1135

I

Cell Phone 674-3311

Shrubs

Open Daily 9·5
Sun 12·5

Co~r~plfter PerforlfiAnce

"We're Back"

Decks, Boat Docks;
&amp;
Work,

$300.00 COVlll'lll
$500.00 Starburet

to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM

CIJ.ASSUIF81EDSI

tbalppllanca
Man
We Service All Makes
•
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

.........,ltlda
1111.1..
~11100

IN~.

,.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages .
• Replacement Windows
'
• Room Additions
·Roofing
'
COMME~CIAL and RE51DEIIT1AL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992•7599
(NO SUNDAY.CALLS)

.

•

Blown lo&amp;ulation
992·2772

ForAIIYourHome
lm rovement Needs

Shade River

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

R•piGHMft.

.... Body "''"
All replacement
parts

Free Delivery
740-7 42-950 l
'Toll Free

''n

*""'
HtpDpr

Ag. Service

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb. HI
Sortn!l Seeds 8 Fertilizer

Hou.., &amp; '1\-ailer Sites ·: ,
Land Clearing &amp; '
Grading
Septic

SumetBome

BAUM
LUMBER
State Route 248 Clle1ter. OH
•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•Trains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

(740)992·3131

I

'

I

•'

•
I

•
•'

:· ~CHIEf,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
SERviCES

C()

iOU t&lt;:.Ef&gt;.L.I ZE: l ~

001', ( No\
1\W~ OF lf\"1 1

'(~;.&lt;;,,If\'(

~~E~~~~D

:

Mike Sharp

740·992•7945

740-949-3608

{'&lt;..· ~'(Of'\«.1~

'

m '&lt;t.f'.JCr

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Medica~e

Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial., .. ,
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~-

·

JJ/

200etl-

"Take the pain out
of paintinsLet me do it for you"

23 Haod to
manege
'
24 Becltetor'aor

992-3490

OUR TEACMER WANTS U5 TO

I'LL JUST SAV WE WERE

OUTOF'TOWNAND I DIDN'T
TIME TO WRIT£: ANVTIIIN6 ..

•
•'

•

'

•
•
•

I

-;.·'

S·

~ -='

Friday, May 5, 2000

'''•

Alllllureoru appear 10 be makinJ a meJor adjustment in ,their
lives in the year ahead. Chanc;:es
are youn is Qne that'll rcflec:l
favorably on your financial
wherewithal.
• TAURUS (April lO.May 20)
Be1uty and esthetic• an: extteme·
ly lmporWtl in lhe tclecdon of .
your purchaseo 1oday. The problem arises when yOII apond
beyond fOUr 11111111 for nonellen•
sloll,.mt. Od a jump on life by
undentandlnJ the inftuencea
thll'll aovem you In lhe yW
ahead. Send for your Aslro-Oreph
pR!di&lt;llont by moltina Sl to
AttnMiroph, cJo thlt newtpoper,
P.O. Box 1758, Mumoy Hill Station, New Yortt. NY 101,6. Be
' "" to stilt y011r Zodiac •Ian.
OEMIHI (May ll·luno :Ill)
Mo.. al•• and tab ritoy bo noceuary today when II eomoo to
R!ladons whh o1hers . tr you
expect mo.. from them than
y011're wllllnato pUI 0\lt, y011'1l bo
oudly dl11ppolnted .

;
t

per inch
one

~

su· from the Classffledsl

•' .
••
•

•

•

•
'I;
••

(

34 und ...... •

Allpaa.a

lhlt

:

two

•

comprl- .

Opening lead: t J

.

311 Type ol ca~~~ :
43 Sliorthend ,
'
45 Patron
47 Abaul (2 wda.)
48Col-.of

Watching students play, I see b-+--1-•n•cdc• •.
bridge in the real world.lt isn't all
411 w- pill·
Mount Olympus. Take, for exam50 Plld tdhle!l;
52 Actor
.• .
ple, this deal. Why did South open
·RobbiM 1' •
one club? How should she have J...-+--+-1--+-lfa~to ·i•
poet • • '.
played in four spades after West J.r++-+-f114 Qermen :;
leads the diamond jack?
article
••·
South opened one club because L-...L....J.....I.-L...
;"f.•
she had a heart in with her diamonds .. honest! .. and thought
CELEBRITY CIPHER
,~
she had 4-4-2-3 distributipn.
by Luis campoa
•
North's do11ble was negative,
~ Cil&gt;her ~ ... aoolodlrom quolatlono bl' fii!IOUI """""· pu1 ond ,:;
•
- ' · EJ\CI\
ciplllf
ono!ltat'.
showing exactly four spades. (A
Todly'J c/UII: G &amp;qull/ro C
••
one-spade response after the overcall guarantees at least five .) 'F'Y V
GWIOXZA
NWOB
UZFXPZ
South. did well not Io pass, converting it into a penalty double. VOE UP UZFXP GZA·FO·AWIZ·SPPz : :
Ron Klinger, the Australian
••
NWOBN.
XMVX'N
UMVX
UP
EW.'
.:
expert. teacher and author,
••
devised the Rules of Six and Four. UFRRFP
OPRNWO
.•• .
For a low-level penalty double,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "SIMp opana wllttln ua an Inn for Phantoms. In
add the number of trumps you momtng WI aweep out !he lhadowl.' - Guion Baehelard
:,
•
hold to the level at which your
opponent has overcalled. If the
WOlD
answer is six or more, you have
OAMI
•
enough trumps to consider going
•
after a penalty. Then, add 'the
•
QRaorronga
number of exp~cted winners in
four
their suit to th level ~ which
low to form
,I;..
your ·opponent overcalled. If the
I MD DA E
answer is four or more,.y,ou have
,
enough t'rump winner,s to gci for a
penalty. So, thi s South hand sat-'
isfies ttie Rule of Six, but not the
ABETA
Rule of Four; no good.
4
North's jump to game was
aggressive but understandable.
Arter winning with· dummy's
In a written
to a
sumA N C K K ~o ·mons:
diamond queen, declarer should
"I would
to serve, but
duck a trump. If East 'returns a
. 5.,
~~
/ first you will have to make ar•
diamond.- South discards a club
;::::::::::::::·:•~raDgements to • - - - my • - • •
loser. Whatever West does now.
HALBEC
declarer d.raws . trumps .with the
i
0
I
f--T
.,,..,
..:,1;..8::...;.1
:....:;l...::....r-1
-G)
Complete
tho
chuckle
quo!ed
spade ace and cruises home, using
by fltllng In tho milling words . '
_ ,
•
•
•
• '
•
dummy's diamond winners. If at
'---'-..L-....1.-L-.-'-_. you dovolop from ttep No. 3 below.
trick three East switches to a club,
1
A PRINT NUMBERED
South finesses the jack (West
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
surely holds the club ace for his
•·
• UNSCRiiMBLE FORI
· bidding) and is firmly in control.
.
ANSWER
I I I •

..
:.

j'

I

I

..
.•.

,,

CANCER (Iurie 21-July 2l) A
failure to Jet bya:oncs be byaones
in your deallnas With ~;o-won.e~
or ll.~soclates today won't help you
w:hirve whul you need IO &amp;el
accompli,;hed. Move on from 1he
past.
LEO !July 2J·AUJ. 221· In
order to uppease an asKoc:ialll:
todmy ~ou mi11M be uked t.o
,soc:ial,lu wilh a per&gt;on you'd
rather l1nore. For the "ke pfhar·
mony. llrive to be friendly. It
won't kill you. .
•.
VIRGO CA•I· 23-Sept. 22) Be
especlolly ca,.(ul to whOm you
brottd&lt;a" yoor ..r..r pis today.
a ..... chonce t&lt;imeonc
whO Is jellooo or you mlahtii)IIO
hamper or Impede y011r plllls .
LIBRA(!lept. 23.0.:t. 23il'le·
concel•ed nociont;c-iolly 11111·
ll:ivt ones. on how thina• will
wort out today could trip YOII up.
Don't let an uninformed l11111i·
nlllon worlt aaalnll you. Be pot•

ThO,..,

Ill ...

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-!';ov. 22)
lnlllld 01' rocutlnl.., Hif·-·
Ina deal!... lodoy, loot&lt; for WI)IIO
aenerote ·aonct will and reopecl
11om yo&lt;!t
tc.p your
pertonal material wontaln check.
$AOI1TARIUS !No•. 23-Dec.

.,,..!-.

· 21) Jusl because olhers may not
be in complete accord with ~our
ideas today is no reason to belteve
it'l a rtHettiOr\ on you J'l"r'SORII·

I

ty. They have valid ·~so'1s for
disagreejnJ.
CAPRICORN ,Dec . 22-Jan .
'19) The nteds of someone you•
like may 1u1 hard at your heart
ltrinp today. It's ob.yto sacrifice
on their behalf if necessary, but
don'1 ove,.•tond your&lt;etrbeyond
your ca~ililic~ .
AQUARIUS (Jan :ZO.Feb. 191
Reo\ o"ured. you'll lind .what
you "' tooklna for 1r you roou•
aolely on the flaWs of friends.
However. be aware that they will
bcsln scruUnizin&amp; you moq
cl011ely in n=tum .
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201
!I'll be your own raulllr you a~t
yourulf In way over our head 1n
a competitive development today.
Btrore chllllenalnJ. make cenain
you are nor overmatched en~

have odequate bBCk ~up.

ARIES 1Man:h 2l·Aprll 191
l'llohlna beyond the. llmlll in
Older lo Dke 1 point toda~ could
. jeoponllzo a valued relationship .
boit'1 lei •10 tomproml~e lhe
lmponance or rrlendohlp•. .

'

I' j~

~ns~u

Shrank- Crumb·

.

.

r 1· 1 1'. I' I' I . :

I 1· lmyl I

Sen·tinel

••

I

., s
·.·.a
····
·'·..,

32 c.n--•Y

Pass

To get a current weather
report, check the

,,.

-~ ~.

41

1

27Lion'allome ,

I

· Trade-In's Welcome
Your last stop car shop

' : • • •&gt;·

Obi.

·

25Woode~

Eaal

I

Across from Super-America In lower Pomeroy

Before 6 p.m. Leave Message
Aker 6pm· 614-985-4180

1•

2•

North

m~ater'a

I' 1 I I

For the best deals in the area
for Pre-owned cars &amp; trucks

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Weal

.

22 Faucial ten.onl

I

RIVERVIEW
MOTORS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

South
1 • (IJ
1.

""' ... ...,.

18 E1111 dl... · •·
111 Pfpn
-·

-.

Local-~5264

•'''

I

10Jepe-lllh

:·

P-where:

the:

•

Free Estimates

petllgiiW.Y

7T-

11 Btg13

.

'
!
: THE BORN LOSF.R
I

, tllN.uo.ti'l:fr.HittGS.J "'i-,J'~-o.--'

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: Mulching•
Pruning:Edglng
Planting and Retaining
Walls

8 Study of plllnta
(abbr.)

-In . . -lor

I

' .

A.prll Slto.,ero Bring
May Flowertl/

8 Curved linea

8 Narrow-er

37 Mad. apacllltty
38 Sloth
40 undmoaaure

BY PHILLIP ALDER

j

Bryan Reeves
www.sunsethome.c

'

1 .Jbyru1 cry
2 Wh"eHouoa
In IIIII Ia
3 Spoonbender
o.ller
4 Artlll'a apart·
ment, maybe
5 Connection

From real world

j

740-742-3411

•

385emaator

LodVIr
DPWN

no!-

:

New Construct.ion &amp;
Remodeling • Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

. •.

lrialrum~~nt

33 Etu, lor one

58

35 Medeateep ,

;• ~FRA~NK&amp;EAR~N~E~ST~~--------------------~~~-·-·....................~

Utililiee

Advertise

QUALITY LANDSCAPE

welcome

Shop, home...

&amp;

.BANKRUPT£Y

Construetlon

y

•&amp;76532
• Q83

58 Whole

57 G - martc.c

continenti :

•

\

rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates

SyotelrUI

I

THIN SPMHEnll I

!'

411 ;,oo 1 mo Dd.

Size • JD 550 G
Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

LOWEE%Y'S
BODACIOUS
DIIT· It

.~ervice•

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
FREE ESTIMATES... FUIJ.Y INSURED N

· Dozer For Hire

I

IT

BuUdoaer &amp; Boclchoe; .

M
A

. Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

$6.75/50 lb. . . .

I CALL

..

n

.......

R

• J 6

long .......,
lloh
48 RR depot
48 P'-ln
proximity
51 Trtecr
55 Sea nymph

• KJ 7

4110{00 1 mo Dd

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

East
aQJ

I K 9 7
• K Q 10 9 8 2

12 wda./
28Bibtlca29 Oedtpua30 Roolodge
31 Vecctne

IIUnM deitlre "

,.,..,..,..,,.,..,..

• 10

Joseph Jacks
740.992·2068 .

N

Weat

I A63 2
•A7543

ESSA\' ON I'RA't'IN6 ..

New Roofa • Repalra
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
Fraa Eatlmates

28TVho1H

•AKQ94
• 9 65 4

South

•

&amp; 6-

R
E
T
E

~opy SHUTS 71-fE

:BARNEY

YELLOW FLAG
**
YARD SALE
*
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT '*
* P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.·
ENDTOEND
*
* MAY 5 ALL DAY *. ~ .CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIQS
***************** c MASONRY BOBCAT SEIVIQS s
.

I Holt SoME.

'

1 mo pd.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

...

·'•

Ani- 10 Prevloua PUDlo

hkery buya

Dealer: South

Qoalit Residential &amp;Commercial Service
BISSELL BUILDERS'

05-04.00

I 10 I 54

14 ,Young cow
15 Jelly baoa
18 Sprontoh ount
17 Poyche parts
18 S1rtlnge
21 Olonow
23Heremroom

Mao - -tung

Vulnerable: Neither

RUOuGI!Iy

Emergency Beeper: 540-1141

.

North

740-742·8015 or
1·877·353-7022

Phone: 304-529-2566 Fax: 304-5 29-2567
Toll Free: 877-457-8904 Lo&lt;:al773-5011

'

t

Entry Doors
Patio Doors

2425 Eighth Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703

949·2249
Racine, Ohio

13B~um

'

I A 10 2

Electrical Contractor WV003114

Dump Truck
Service
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dirt

promtMIIC&amp;

12 Oextaroua

• J

Pritchard Electric Company, Inc.

Dailey
Trucking

women

.

'''·

HECK UP'l£

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates '

1 Men and

7f'enon.ol

Your
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

41
42
44
45

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

.

'"'"'" 1 mo. Del.

Spring Season

740-949-7039

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o·

Syracuaa.
Now Open For

Camping· Fishing - Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Bait.&amp; Tackle

..AUliil.

Paying seq.oo
par&amp;•'¥

992-5776
Racine

Hauling • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servi(es
(740) 992·3470

45771

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

""'.i .......

f'c

Racine, Ohio

Progreealve top line.
Uc. It 0()..50 nntllfn

PSI
CONSTRUOION

Radne,Ohlo
l-740-949-2115

t!:sWICI('S •
. SELF STORAGE HAOUNCJ ami '
29870 Baehan
. Road
EXCAVfiTING

Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH

. AB MU... Tnctor &amp;

Coolvlllf, OH 4$723

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

· HILL'S

Pomeroy Eagl. .
Club Bingo On

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

.Nomad - Teapot · BATHROOM

'I

',

'•

"If your teacher asks why you are late to scnool,' the :: . :
mom told her son, "just say you have three sisters and
onlv one BATHROOM."
-:;-

�.-

-

..

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•

., • ''·

I

•

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thur.aday, May 4, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

SuperSonics silence Jazz 104-93, tie first-round series at 2-l
SEATTLE (AP) - For a team
led by grizzled veter:ms with so
much playoff experience, the Utah
Jazz lost their composure like a
bunch of rookies.
After trailing by 17 points in
the third quarter, the Jazz got
within two in· the fourth quarter
before self-destructing in the final
minutes against the Seattle SuperSonics on Wednesday night.
As the result, the Sanies won

104-93, tying their first-round
playoff series with Utah at 2-2.
Game ' will be played Friday
night in Salt bke City with the
winner to open a second-round
Western Conference series Sunday in Pordan·d .
Tonight, Milwaukee is at Indiana for the deciding Game 5 of
their first-round Eastern Conference sebes.
"We couldn't match their

The Sonics got anotl:u;r outintensity;' Jazz coach Jerry Sloan the final 3:40.
said
(
Sloan and Karl Malone were standing perform~nce from Gary
Or the way Seattle rea~d to both ejected in the final two min- Payton, wh~ had his first career
playoff triple-double with a career
pressure wtth the game on....:tlJ utes.
•
line.
Who would have thought the playoff-high 35 points, 10
The Jazz left Salt Lake Ci • Jazz, of all teams, would lose their rebounds and 11 assists. And Utah
had trouble detepding young
with a 2-0 lead and could have · poise?
ended ihe series in Seattle.
"I never like a deciding game, Rashard Lewis, _who had 20
But they threw too many tem- but that's what ~e have," Malone points , and Vin Baker, with 18.
"If we play like tlhis again Friper tantrums at the end of Game said.
4 and ended up being whistled for
"We're still breathing," Seattle day night, we'll he OK," Payton
said . "Everybody'. Is playing well
SIX technicals,. including four in coach Paul Westphal said.

for" us. It'; a lot easier when everybody is playing well."
Westphal, whose rotation off
tlhe bench has been criticized this
season, used eight players with
Seattle's starters supplying 95 of its
points.
· Byron Russell led the Jazz -wifh
26 points , while Malone had 23
points and 14 rebounds. For the
second consecutive game, Malone
found himself in foul trouble.

American Legion aids schools, A2
Eagles .continue
to
soar,
Bl
..

.
s.turclay
H!p: lOs: Low: 101

Details, A3

••

,

Meigs County's
-

Volum e ~o . Numb&lt;'r

-·- -

Hometown Newspaper

-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

ns

so

Arrai

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
·'

SNnle al Ullh, 8 p.m.
Sacramento all. A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Trimble 6, Eastern 5
Tnmble .................. ....011 300 1,.

6·9·1

Eastern .....................002 030 0 •
Bltterlft
Trimble: Faires (W) and Guinther

5-8-4

va.

Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 200. Dover. Del.
All Pro Bumper to Bumper 300,
Concorcl , N.C
Oct. 21 - Rockingham 200, Rock1ngham.
N .C.

Wednesday's scores

· Meigs 4, Miller 3
Miuer .............. ........... 101 010 0•
Meigs
........ .... 011 · 010 1 z

3·7·2
4·3·5

BatterIn

Sept. 2 - Dura Lube 200, Oartlngton , S .C.
Sept. 8 - Autollte Platinum 250, Richmond,
Oct. 7 -

NHL conference
semifinal slate

Eastern: Will (L) and Faulk

Aug. 19- napaonUne.com 250, Brooklyn,
Mich.
Aug. 25- Food City 250, Bnstol. Tenn.

Toronto 3. New Jersey 2; series tied 2·2
CoiOf'ado 3, Detroit 2·0T;Colorado leads

Oct 29 - Sam's Town 250, Millington.
Tenn .
·
Nov. 4 - Outback Steakhouse 200. Avon·
dale, Ariz.

Nov. ~ 1 -holwheefs.oom 300, Homestead,
Fta.

Driver atandlnga
1. Je ff Green 1 ,443.

2. Todd Bodine, 1,404,
3. Man Kenseth, 1,370.

4. Randy La~o . 1,328.
5. Ron Hornaday, 1,241.
6. Kevin Grubb, 1, 162.
7. Oav1d Green, 1, 145.
8. Elton Sawyer, 1,1 12.
9. Jason Keifer, 1,111 ,
10. Ke\lin Harvlck, 1,092.
11. Hank PaOI;e r, Jr.. 1,056.

12. PhR Parsons, 1,007.
13. Jeff Purvis, 981 .
14. Jay Sauter, 976.
15. Ton~ Raines, 975.

18. Diet&lt; Trickle, 946.
11. Casey AlWOOd, 940
18. Mart&lt; Martin, 905.

19. BuckShot Jones, 889.

20. Mark Green, 793.
21 . Mike Dillon, 875

22. Jeff Burton, 845.
23. Lyndon Anilck, 830.
24 . Jimmie Johnson, 829

25. Hul S1r1ckMn, 822.

27. Mike McLaughlin, 812.
28. Blaise Alexander, 802 .
29. Bo:bt&gt;Y tlamllton Jr., 796.
30. Kenny Wallace, 778
3, . Jason Leffler, 755.
32. Kenny Irwin, 749.
33. Tim Fedewa, 732.
34.

Chad Chaffin. 716.

35. Joe Neml!lchek, 101 .
36, P.J. Jones, 539.

37 . Mike Borkowski, 467.
38. Jason Jarrett, 450.

39. Michael Waltrip, 427
40. Wayne Grubb , 41 3.

28. Adam Petty, 813. -.r

series 3-1

Meigs: Roush, lyncn (W) (7) and Stewart

Tonight's game

Miller: Bolyard (L) and Tumer

Philadelphia al Plilsburgn. 7•30 p.m.
Frlday'a games
Detroit at Colora®, e p.m.

Dallas at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.

Meigs 18, Jackson 7

o ..

Jackson ...... .............. 003 202
Melgs ........................ 920 304

7·8-6

Saturday'a games

18·14-1

x•

latteriH

(W), Hysell and Harris
Gnffllhs (L), Snyder (5) aM Lamben

Nl!lw Jersey at Toronto. 1:30 p.m.

'

Laudem&gt;~

Wlnaton Cup slate
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule, win·
ne" In Plren!Mses, and driver point standings:
Feb. 20 - Oaytona 500, Oaytona Beach,

Fla. (Dale Jaffett)
' Feb. 27 -

AL standings
E.oatom Dlolalon

W L M

Ium

New Yortc ...... :........ ~ ........ t8 8 .692
Boston .............................. 14 10 .583
Baltlmore .......................... 15 11
Toronto ............................. 14 15 .4113

.m

Tamga Bay ........ ,................ 9

17 .346

Control Dtvlalan

Chicago ............................ 18 10 .&amp;13
CLEVELAND .................. 13 11 .542
Kansas City ..................... 13 15 .4114
,

10

Calli. (Jeremy Mayfield)
May 6 -

Wettern DlvlekJn

t,lay 28 - Coca.Cola eoo, Concord, N.C .
June 11 - Kmart -400, Brook~n. Mich.
Juno 18- Pocono 500, ~Pond. Pa.

.1'1..

June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400, Oo\ler, DeL

1'1

n

June 25 -

Wednelday•s acorea

July 1 - Pepsi400, 0ay1ona Beach, Fla.

NY. Yankees 6, CLEVELAND 5

July V- Now England 300, Loudon, N.H.
July 23- Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
Aug. 5 - 9rlckyatd -400, Indianapolis.
Aug. 13 - GlObal C10111ng at Tha Glen.
Olon, N.Y.
Aug. :zb- Popsl-400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. :ze - goracln~,com 500, Brtatol, Tenn.
$aPt. 3 ~. Soulhem 500, Danlnglon, S.C.

Tems 5, Tampa Bay 1
Anaheim 6, Baltll1l0fe 5
Chicago Whke So&lt; 7, Toromo 3
Minnesota 5, SeaHie 4 (10)

-In·

Oakland 14, Kansas City 5
Today'a 1181MB

Anaheim (Hill 2-3) at lattimor• (Musstna 1-

21. 3;05 p.m.

CLEVELAND (Finley 3.Q) at Toronto (Wells
4·1), 7•05 p.m.
Te~Cas

Save Mart/Kragen 350k, Sono·

ma. Celli.

Boston 4 , Detroit 2

7:1 5p.m.

Pontiac Excitement 400, Rich·

monct •. va.

11 .560
14 .500
14 .500
15 ,~23

Seattle ........ .. .................... 14
A:naheim .. ...... ......... :......... 14
Oaktand ........................... 1...
Texas ................................ 11

(Jell GordOn)
April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana,

{Loaiza 1-1) at TaMlH! Bay (Van 1-1),

Detroil (MIICI&lt;I 0.5) at MIM&amp;&amp;Ota (Millon 2.Q),

8:05p.m .

·

Stf)t. 1 - Ctte\lrolet Monte Carto 400, Rich·
monel, Va.
,.
Sept. 17- Nl!lw Hampshire 300, Loudon.
Sept 24- MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 1 _; NAPA AutoCare 500, Martinsville,

Va .

. OCt.

N.C.

8 - UAW·GM Quality 500. Concord,

Oct. 15- Winston 500, Talladega, Ala .
Oct. 22 - POll Secret Microwave 400,

Friday's game•

at Toronto ~ Roc~/:,t~m:..N8ieckor Aulo Part&amp;IDura lube
,
500k A ndal Arl
Baltimore (Erickson 0·0) at N.Y. 't'lhkH1 ·
No\1~ 2 _8Pen~ion 4 oo. ,Homestead, F.la.
(Hernandez 4· 1), 7:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nagy

P

PliiMe- Prlyu, Pqe A:S

1-4)

,,

our

"NEW" FORD• UNCOLN• MERCURY VEHICLE
You will know what we paid, so you'll NEvER PAY TOO MUCH!
READS PROCLAMATION -Janet Howard, presi·
dent of the Meigs County Board of County Commissioners, read the board's proclamation of Thursday
as Meigs County Day of Prayer during ttie commun~
ty prayer seJvice helq on the courthouse steP!!.
~l"
. . ..... ,, '.' ,.,..
...
~ MUSIC -:- S~nts of Carleton Sch,!X&gt;I In
Syracuse performed a medley of Inspiration"!! ~s
during Jhu1Sday's Meigs Cowlty Day of Prayer ser·
vide, held at~ Meigs County Courthouse. The chi~
dren ,sang' !11d repeated the lyrics rJf the songs In
American Sign Language. (Bri!l1 J. Reed photos)
'

.

.

-

.

v

-

•

~-

ments

BY BRIAN J. REED
Lentes said the three are charged
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
wi th breaking into the old Park
POMEROY - Arraignments Street School in Middleport,
have begun in the cases of seven now used as a village storage
men indicted last week by the building, and attempting to steal
Meigs County grand jury.
a number or bicycles which
The indictments and report of were stored there.
grand jury were filed in Meigs
The charges against the three
County Common Pleas Court men are fifth-degree felonies.
and involve three cases of breakShaver's trial! was set for July
ing and entering, a rape case, 18, and his bond was set at
and other offenses .
$50,000, with 10 percent cash
Indicted were Donald Shaver, allowed. He is charged with a
Gallipolis, on a charge of fifth-degree felony.
domestic violence; Gary T.
Lentes said Shaver is an
Rydenbark, Charles L. Stewart, alleged multiple domestic viaand Richard M. Warne~ke II, all lence offender, having been preof Middleport, ·each for breaking viously jailed on similar charges.
Lentes said that a search warand entering; Jeffrey W.
Ohlinger, Pomeroy, having a rant relating to a drug investigaweapon under disability: Ronald tion led officers to find a
W Vance, Pomeroy, rape : and weapon in Ohlinger's Pomeroy
John R . Williams, also kn&lt;Jwn as home. Ohlinger, 43, is a suspectJohnny Ward, Pomeroy, corrup- ed drug abuser; lentes' office
tion of a minor and gross sexual said, arid the charge of having
imposition.
weapons under a disability
Appearing before Judge Fred relates to his· drug dependency
w·Crow III earlier this week, or suspected drug dependency.
Stewart, Rydenbark and WarThe charge against him is a
necke· were declared indigent, fifth-degree felony.
and were appointed counsel
The rap e charge against Vance, .
through the public defender's a first-degree felony, and the
office.
' gross sexual imposition charge, a
Steven L Story will represer)t third-degree •felony, involve 8~ydenba~k. g_d Pat and 11 year-old .female victims,
tetfitJSI\,~~
•~III&gt;J. I :J.-·qt 3 .,
Each ~ere , released on , of gross sexual ,imposition and
$10,000 personal recognizance corruption of a minor against
bonds, and trials were set for Ward, third and fifth-degree
July 11 .
felonies, allegeclly involve Ward's
· Prosecuting Attorney JohQ young stepdaughter.

.

Factory Invoices

(&lt;'nt s

held or
grand jury

FROM STAFF REPORTS
OMEROY - Prayer for the nation,
state, coun ty and local communities
in Meigs County, and songs of praise
· filled the air around the Meigs County CourthouseThursday afternoon, as
resi&lt;,lents from throughout the community joined
for Meigs County's Day of Prayer.
·
Yesterday was the National Day of Prayer,
made official by a presidential declaration. This is
the eighth year that a local rommittee has organized the prayer event, which concentrates on
prayen for local elected officials, schools and
families.
Kathleen Fryar served as the coordinator for
this year's event, which started with a four-day .
Bible reading marathon on the Pomeroy parking
lot. E¥ents began with a p,rayer breakfast at Trinity Church, for local officials and event co
ittee memben.
Steve Beha of the
. Meigs County Day of "

I (

ie

Mlnnesota ..................... ... 12 16 .421
Detrolt ... .... .. ......... ...... ........ 7 19 .289

Dura LubeiKmart 400, Rocking -

ham, N.C. (Bobby Labonte)
Mlreh 5 - Carsdlrect.com 400, Las Vegas.
(Jell Burton)
Maren 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,
Gil. (Dolo Earnhardt)
3 :' ,,..rd
•"'-Mln:h
19- Mall.com ~00. Darllnglon, S.C.
Burton)
• Mlrch 28 - Food City 500, Bnslol, Tenn.
5~. (Rusty
Walacal
a'
-~ 2 - OlrecTV 500, For1 Worth, Tl!lxas .
(Dole Earnhardt Jr.)
April v - GOOdy's 500, Martinsville, va.
(Mortc Martin)
Aor1l 18 - DieHard 500, Talladega. Ala.

May 5, 2000

.'

.,.~....

Clay 2·4) , 7:05p.m.

Tampa Bay (Eiland 1·0) at Boston (A. Martinez 1·2), 7:05p .m.
Oakland (Mulder 1·0) at Texas (011\ler 0-2),

s.os p.m.

Chicago White Sox (Eldred 2..0) ill Kansas ·

City (Rosado 2·2). 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Nome ,_ , ) at Minnesota (&amp;lrgman 2·
1).
p .m .

8•05

Anaheim (Bouentield 2·3) at Seanle (Sele 2·
u. 10:05 p.m
•

.

.

NL standings
Eastern Olvlskm

WL

!urn

................. 20

Atlanta

7

fJ:L

.741

NewYork ....... ............ . 16 13 .552
..... 14 12 .538

Montreal
Fl or1da
Philadelphia ..

.. 14 15 .483
..8 18 .308 .

St l OUtS ......

Cenrrat Division
.. .. 17 10

CINCINNATI

.. ........... . 13 13

Pittsburgh ............ ....... 11
Ch•cago .......................... 12
Houston ..
.. ....... .........10
Milwaukee
......... 10

15
17
16

11

.630

.500
.423
.414
.385
.370

lill.
5

5\
7

n'.
3',
5' •
6
6~

7

Western Divlalon
Arizona .......... .................. 17 ,0 .030
L.osAn9:1es ..................... tS 12 .556
Colora

.......................... 1~

14-

.500

San Frandsco .................. 13 13 .500

San Olego .....;.....;............ 13 15 .4e4
Wtdntaclay•a acoraa
Chicago Cubs 4, Houlton 3
COlOrado 16, Momreat7

• Philadelphia 5, CINCINNATI 2

• Milwaukee 4, 'Artzona 1
.. San FrarlCisOO 8. N.Y. Mats 5 (11)
PiHst&gt;u~ 8, Sl. Lou~ 2
San Diogo 3, Florida 1
·: Los Angeles 6, Atlanla 4

Nov. 19 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.

Orl\ler ltendlngt

1. Bobby Labonte, 1,518.

2. Mark Manin, 1,496.
3. Ward Bunon, 1,443
4. ,.letf Burton. 1,396.
5. Dale Eaml'larclt, 1 ,384.
6. Oall!l Jarrel11,305.
7. Jeff Gordon, 1 ,279.
8. Rusty Walace, 1,271 .
9. Ricky Rudd , 1,251.
10. Mike Skinner. 1,194.
11 . Tony Stewart, 1,183.
12. Tarry Labonte, 1,182.
13. Sll EIIIOt1, 1,162.
, .. _Jeremv Mayfield, 1,149.

~.·

~arlin,

•.

.

.

.

.•.

~

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&gt; •

KENT (AP) - A survivor of the
Ii Was rung 15 times: once for each of
Kent State University shootings in 1970 the four students killed and nine
said that after 30 years, he~s still looking wounded at Kent State and for two stufor an explanation of what Jed to the dents killed at Jackson State University
iri Mississippi 10 days later.
gunfire that killed four .people.
"We don't know why this happerted
The 30th anniversary commemorato us .We don't know who said 'Shoot'· tion also included a candlelight march
We don't know when they said it or ' that began on the eve of the anniversary
why," said Joseph Lewis, 48, now a city and ended with a vigil at the parking lot
worker in Oregon.
where Allison Krause, Sandy Scheuer,
Lewis and eight others wounded dur- Je£fery. Miller and William Schroeder
ing the si)oorings gath~.d on the Kent ·were killed.
campus Thursday for their first reunion
'Also Thursday, Pennsylvania death
since then.
row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal gave a
"Real healing can only come with three-minute taped speech during the '
the trutlh;' said Alan Canfora, who was ceremonies. He had spoken .by tape five
shot in the left· wrist. "WhO gave the days earlier during graduation at Antiorder to shoot at Kent State? Once we och· University in Yellow Springs, east of
have that information, we can have Dayton.
healing."
Abu-Jamal maintains he was innocent
A bell tolled at 12:24 p.m., the exact in the death of Philadelphia police offitime ~he National Guard opened fire cer .Daniel Faulkner in 1981 , and his
May 4, 1970, on Vietnam War protesteFS supporters ·say he was framed for politiat the northeast Ohio university.
cal reasons.

15. Chad Lillle, 1.098.
1e. Man~... - . 1,096.
17. Sterll~

Kent State survivor looks for ~answers

1,050.

18. Ken SChrader, 1,042. .
19. Johooy Benson, 1.034.
20. John Andrelli, 999.
21 . Steve Park, 995.
22. Oale Earnhardt Jr., 976.
23. Jimmy Spencer, 956.
24, Raben Pressley, 924.

25. Bobby Hamlllon, 908.
27. Michael WaHrip. 888.
28. Ken~ Irwin, 858.
29. Ke~n lepege, 851.
30. Jerry Nadeau, 804.
31 . Kyle Petty. ns.
32. Dave Blaney. 884.
33. Slacy Compton, 675.
34, Kenny Waliace, 881 .
35. Darrel wanr1p. 632.
36. E11ioft Sadler, 117.
37. RollbloGotOon, 598.
36. Bran llodlfle, 548.
39. Rick Mall, 526.
40. Wally OaHOnbaclr, 523.
26. Joe Nemechek, 900.

,.

BuachGrand

Oratqry winner$

O·l ) 11 ArizOflll (R. ·

Johnson 6..0), IO:OS p.m
~ Houston (Re~nolds -4.0) at Los Angete1
(..Orellort 1-1). 10:10
A . Colorado {Voshl 1·2) at San Francl.co

r.m.

.,.alhan 1.Q), 10•35 p.m.

WI&amp;.

Tonight's ~me
Milwaukee at lf\l]lana, 8 p.m.

Col&lt;&gt;

Frld,y's gamea

•I

.

Jufy 18- Nazareth 200, Naureth Pa.
Juty 22 - NAPA ·A utoCtfl 250, ~ounta ln,

.

Jvty 2i- Cerau ta~ Auto Parta 300, MeOfaon. II.
Aug" 4 - Krager 200. C}lfmom. Ind.

(

Bl-4
B5

Edkoriele

M

Oltit'"ri"

A3

Wtatbtr

...

Ia
on na,

May •27 - Carqutlt Auto Parta -300, Con·
cord, N'.C.
Juno 3 - MBNA Platinum 200. Dover, Del.
10 - Tertl~~tase Medque 300, SOu11'1

Wtdn.adlly'l acore

AS

. Comic•

C111I" ·
,.,.,." • - """""' ""'
'
(Ma1t Kaniolh) •
May 5- Hardee'&amp; 250, Rk:llmond, Va.
Mly 13 - SuiiCh 200, Loudon, N.H.

Sl!latlfe 104, Utah 93; serlel tied 2·2

..

·1bdafS

Clanlfleda ·

AQt1t 1,5- Touei"IS1one Energy 300, Tallade·

!.-1..,• .• -·~. MynJe BelCh,

~

Calendar

(Ra~~~ulie City 320, Naahville, Tenn.

ga, Ala. (Joe Nemachek)
.a.....w 2"
•·•- Cl"" 300 f

,...

Sentinel
2 Steib• -12 Pl. .

Ttxu. (Malt Martlri)

__ ... _}.. lotteries
,

·owo
Pick 3: 3-4-8; Pick~: 1-2..()..()
Buc:b)-8 5: 18-21-2:&gt;.24-35

Erin Roach, Racirle, center, was the the top wlnnt:tr In the Meigs County
Right to Ufe oratory contest held recently at the Pomeroy ·Li.brary. Last
week, she participated In the state competition with her oration on abor·
tlon. Second place winner In the local contest was Chris Proffitt of Racine.
Here, Fa1111 Hayman, contest cCHJhalrman, presents plaques to the winners. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

'

Candidates for prom king and queen at Meigs High School were announc;ed tOday.
Fromleft are, front, Justin Roush, Grant Abbott, Bethany Boyles, Stephanie Kopec,
Brooks Williams, Tiffany Halfhill, Heather Ferrell and Charla Burge; back, Kyle Smlddle, Jon Haggerty, John Kopczinky and Steve Beha. Theme for the prom to be held
Saturday night Is 'Tonight's the Night" using a color scheme of blue and white. The
public Is Invited to view the decorations from 5:3().6:30 p.m. An after·prom party will
be held at the Life Center In Middleport, midnight to 3
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

a.m.

'

&amp; ..

22 0
- §.~· 61~;!- (Hitcncock.

.

'

iJU

National atandll)ge
aides O.Q), 2:20 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Hemlscll 0·3) al Philadelphia
NASCAR 1111.., Grand NaUonal SChedule,
(Person 1·1), 3:05p.m.
.. N.Y. Mels (Reed 3-0) al San Franclaco wlmtllln pora-. end drtvor point lland:
lnga:
(Rueter 2·1/, 3•35 p.m.
FOO. 111- NAPA Aulo Palla 300, Oay1ona
Arizona Reynoso 1· 3) at Milwauk81!1 (Stull1 ·
Buell, Fla. (Man KonHth)
·
2), 8:05 p.m.
Ftl&gt;. 2e - AIITol 200, Rockingham, N.C.
Friday's games
(Mark Mlnlnl '
- Pi1tsbur~h (Rilchle 1-1) at Chicago Cuba (Jtll~~ - Sam's Town 300. Las Vegas
~a~~~~ ~~tS rL!~:-~.iJ) ~~ Fiorlda (Sanenez 3March 11 - Aaron't 312, Hampton , Ga.
O). 7•05 p.m.
(MI~~rtl1nl
nCom 200 Da"l""'on S C
St louis (Andy Benes 2·1) 11 CINCINNATI
· -·~· a-~
' "'"' ' ..
ll.lllone 2·1), 7•05 p.m.
(Mallt - )
·
· Philadelphia (WOlf 1-2) at AUanta (Gia~nt 5Mlroll 25 - Cheez~t 250. Bristol, Tam
(lilll1inll Mallin}
0""' 7 '40 p.m.
~ 1 - Albenson·s 300, Fort Worth,
Mo~trea! {Vaz!l~J8t 2.0) at MitwlukN (Strt

'JVIeigs prom candidates

v

Abu-Jamal spoke about what he said
were government-backed killings during war, civil rights protests and prison
riots.
·
"I(ent State teaches that a so-called
free society Will slaughter students who·
are exercising their alleged constitutional right of demonstrating for peace
and give awards to the killers and do so
with impunity;' he s~d.
By the rime, Abu-Jamal's speech was
played, the crowd had dwindled from
about 4,000 people to per.haps 1,000.
However, his speech 'drew one of the
loudest ovations of tlhe daY,·
Four students protestitig the speech
held up signs saying, "'Say no to cop
killers and yes to justice."
''There's just a tiine atid place for
that. This isn't it,'' said Andrew Muck, a
2&lt;J-year-old sophomore. "Originally, it
was a day of mourning an~ now they've

Today' a game•
Pittsburgh {Cordova 1-2) at St. loula
tepl"lenson 3.0), 1:10 p.m.
Houston (Etarton 0·0) at Chicago Cuba

'

W:VA.
Daily 3: 4-3-7 Qaily.4: 0..5-6-0
C 2000 otuo Vall ey

l'ublish.iut~:

Co.

to swallow: Flavors make
icine more palatable for kids
BY

KRtS

DOTSON

OVP NEWS STAFF
I
GALLIPOLIS - "But I don't want to take my
medicine! It tastes yilcky!" ·
Does this'se\lrid familiar? It does_to many parents
and ,to Jllany p~armadsts. · :
But tlhere is hope, at least at Kroger in Gallipolis.
. Going to the pharmacy is now like going to
Baskil).Robbins because your medicine can come in
one of'42 flavors
. tlhanks to 'FiavoRx Inc.
"We've been flavoring medicines for about a
month now," ·safd Michelle Gregory, Gallipolis
Kroger pharmaey manager. "'I think it's wonderful
because it helps with compliance, especially with
young children."
Gregory can flavor over-the-counter drugs as
well.
Gone are the days of children sitting there with a
fever of 104 degrees refusing to take their Tylenol,
antibiotic, or cough medicine.

This service is also used by many adults.
'"I flavor several chalky tasting laxatives. One lady
likes pina colada flavor," said Gregory.
The bottom line is, why suffer through a bottle of
nasty tasting medicine when for only three dollars
you can almojt look forward to each dos~?
The history of the idea of flavoring medicine is
clo~e to what you might expect.
A father of two children was exasperated by the
struggle it took to get his daughters to take their
medicine "'sometimes to the extent of crying, spitting it out and vomiting,'' according to Kenneth
Kramm, FlavoRx Inc..
Kr:unm worked at family pharmacy (his father
was a pharmacist for 40 years) and decided to experiment with concentrated flavorings to disguise the
taste of medicines.
His daughter began taking her medicine without

a

PI•M ... ,_lty, ..... AS

'

•

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'

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25114">
              <text>May 4, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
