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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
.r\stros 8, 1\rrins l
three-run homer on the fourth
Jeff Bagwell. broke out of a 1- inning and Edgar Martinez folfor-15 slump with a two-run lowed with a solo shot, his 18th
homer, giving him 1,000. RB!s.
homer.
~Pip81
Craig Biggio Jingled to lead off
Aaron Sele (6-2} allowed one
the sixth inning against Brad unearned run and five hits in
.hamstring attempting to field a Ra~'-e
· ·
· hi s 10urt
&lt;
h
""' (3-7)
- and Bagw-"
"" "'"ollow•d
• seven mmngs
to wm
ball.The Cardinals said he is·day 10 with his 14th homer of the season straight decision.
day.
for a 4-2 lead. Radke dropped to
Athletics 3, Padres l (10) ,
Jermaine Dye tied • team 8-3 in interleague play.
John Jaha hit a run-scoring sinScott Elanon (4-1} allowed two gle in the 1Oth offTrevor Hoffman
record by homering in his fourth
straight game, connecting off Pat runs and eight hiu in seven for host Oakland.
Hentgen (4-6} . St. Louis has lost innings at Enron Field.
Jason Isringhausen (3-2) retired
,
five of six.
Devil""-ys
Philli'es
•
·ph'!
· on an mnmg-en
· ·
d.mg
""'
5
,
1 N evm
Red Sox 3, Marlins 2
Vinny Castilla hit a two-run double play in the top half for the
At Miami , former Marlin Carl single off Jason Boyd (0-1) with wm.
Everett hit a solo home run in the two outs in the 12 th inning atVe'tGiants s, Angels 4 (11)
ninth off Ricky Bones &lt;1-1) as erans Stadium.
Barry Bonds hit his major
Boston rallkiedftoh stop its lon gest
Mark Guthrie (1-0) pitched league-leading 24th home run
1osmg mea 0 t e season at 6V&lt;. two inniQgs of hitless relief, and with two outs in the 11th off
Orioles 4• Mets l
Rick White pitched the 12th for Shigetoshi Hasegawa (4-1), giving
Albert Belle had three hits and
fi
.,..
S F
·
h
d ·
drove in two runs off Mike his mt save. ,ampa Bay's bullpen an ranctsco t e roa wm.
didn't allow a hit in five innings,
Bonds 13th homer in his last 17
Hampton
(6-S)
as
visiting
Balti'and
con1pleted
a
five-ht'tter.
· ts ove r·
b k
fi
games heIpe d th e G•tan
.
1
more ro e a Ive-game osmg
Pirates 5, Tigers l
streak.
. come a blown save by Robb Nen,
At Pittsburgh , Francisco Cor- who couldn't hold a 4-2 lead in
Jason· Tyner, playiitg his first dova (4-4) rook a shutout into the the ninth .
game in the big leagues, was 2- · eighth inning to win his third Cubs 4, Diamondbacks 3 (10)
for-3 for New York, including an consecutive start. He aUowed one
Jeff Reed hit a two-run, twoRBI single off Mike Mussina (2- run and six hits in seven-plus out double off Matt Mantei (1-1)
3).
innings after sitting through a rain 111 a three-run lOth inning as
Indians 8, Brewers 4
Chicago rallied at Wrigley F1dd.
delay of 2 !)ours, 1 minute.
David Justice had a pair of Wil Cordero had three hits,
Arizona took a 2-1 lead in the
home .runs and four R.Bi s to back Including his ninth home run, as top of the l Oth on an RBI double
Dave Burba (6-1 ), who allowed Dave Mlicki (2-7) lost his second by Jay Bdl. It was the seventh
three runs and seven hits in six
straight one-run game the Diaconsecutive start.
innings at Milwaukee.
Mariners 6, Rockies l
mondbacks have played on the
At Seattle, Alex Rodriguez hit a road, and they've lost all but one.

MLB

Reds
fromPipBl
Dmitri Young had an RBI double
,off Kelly Wunsch and Benito Santiago drove in another run with a
groundout off Bobby Howry.
· Keith Foulke pitched the last
iwo mnings, giving up a solo
homer in the ninth to Sean Casey,
~s he converted his 12th consecu}ive s.ave chance.
· : The White Sox got their fi nal
.run in the ninth when Paul Kon-

Sanders
from Pap II
He · even quipped he may "introduce 12 men defensively" when
the lineups are announced.
Other players feel the same
way. In passing situations, no team

erko had a pinch RBI single off to 2-for-21. ... Konerko and Reyes
Dennys Reyes. The grounder up came to the Reds together from
the middle went off the glove of Los Angeles in the 1998 trade for
shortstop Barry Larkin, who was closer Jeff Shaw, and Konerko was
trying to start a double play.
traded to the White Sox later that
"1 was thinking as 1 was run- year.. .. Durham led off the first
ning to first, 'What are the odds interleague game at Cinergy Field
Larkin doesn't come up with it? in 1997 with a homer. This time.
Maybe 1-in-25" 1 was definitely he tripled .... Reds RHP Osvaldo
thimkful," Konerko said. "That's Fernandez will miss his next
usually a routine play for him."
scheduled start in Cleveland
Notes: Frank Thomas, who sat because of a sore elbow, jammed
out Sunday after playing the first when he hit a line drive Sunday....
54 games, was back in the lineup Ken Griffey Jr. was 2-for-4 with a
at first. He went 0-for-2 with a pair of strikeouts, leaving his averpair of walks, extending his slump · age at .216.

will be able to match the Redskins corner-for-corner-for-corner.
· Turner said Sanders also will
return punts, but downplayed th&lt;
possibility of Sanders lining up at
receiver, as he occasionally did
with the Cowboys.
Sanders, selocted to eight Pro

Bowls, has at times been the most
dominant defensive player in the
game. As a speedy cornerback
with dogged man-to-man skills,
he can take away half the field
from an offense. He was the NFL
Defensive Player of the Year with
San Francisco in 1994, even
though he didn't join the 49ers

•

Tueaday, June e. 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD .:
AmerlcanLMgue

Jam

Eottom DIYIIIon
l! L 1!!;1.

Boston .....•..............•......... 30 23 .568
New York .............. ........... 30 23 .566
Toronto ............................. 30 29 .508

Baldmoro.......................... 2~ 31 .&gt;438
Tampa Bay ............ :.......... 20 36 .357

Control DIYiolon
c
33 23
cr~fL..IN'o·:: :::::::::::::::::3o 23

~:~:o~IY · ::::::::::::::::~ ~
Delroit.............................. 20 33
Wutom Dlvlolon
~:·:::: ::::: :::: :::::::::::~ ~~
Oakland ...........................30 27
Anaoom ....................... ... 29 28
Notional LHgua
Eottom Dlwlolon
Jum

.589
.566
.536

.&gt;431
.377

St. Louis ...

3

• 7

tt ~

n

3
9
11\

Wtdneadly'a giiMI

.537
.536
.528
.509

1!!;1.

l! L
Atlanta
..............................
3B 20 .843
Mor&lt;roal .................. .........31 23 .574
26 .544
New Y
·························...31
Aorkloork........................
26 32 .4&lt;18
Philadelphia ..................... 2t 34 .382

CINCINNATI

AI

(Politte 0.0), 7:35 p.m.
ToroniO (CIItllo 1-5) al AllonUl (Giavlnll 7-2),
7
'~rfl~ (lloynooo &gt;4,-4) II Chicago Cubs
[TI!&gt;In13-e), 8:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Finley 4-4) 11 Milwaukee (Snyder G-1), 8:05p.m. ·
Minnolola (Millon 5-1) II HO&lt;JIIoo (lima 1·7),
8:05p.m.
Klnaas Cl!y (FuueU ~ -2) at St. Loul, (Andy
Benes ol-3), 8:10p.m.
· ,
Lot Angoitl ((lagno &lt;i-3) 11 ToJW (Ciartc 33), 8:35 p.m.
Coio&lt;ado (Sohonon 2-3) at Soomo (Tomko 3·
2), 10:05 p.m.
son Diego (Lopez o-1) at Oakland (HerIIdia
7-31, 10:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Gardner 4·2) at Anaheim
(Emerton 0-1), tO:o5 p.m.

Central Clvlelon
.................... 3t 25 .554
...... ... 31 26 .544

Pittsburgh ........ ................. 25 30 455
Mi1waukee ....... .................23 34 .404

Chicago ......................... ..23 35 .397
Haus1on .... . .................. ... 21 35 .375

(AL wo. NL)
Whlto So• (Parquo

'•

1\

Ill

4

5~ •

11
14' •

7:05p.m.
Baltimore (Johnson

3-41, 7:t0 p.m.

5',

a•,
9
10

w..ttrn

Dlvlalon
Arizona .. .......................... .35 22 .814
Colorado .......................... 30 24 .556
Los Angeles ..................... 29 25 .537
San Francisco .................. 27 27 .500
San Diego . .. .................. 25 31 .4&lt;16

Chicago
5-2) at CINCINNATI (Boll 4·3), 12:35 p.m.
Arl.zona (Andorson 5.0 • at Chicago Cuba
(00wns2-1), 2:2op.m.
Lot Angelo&amp; (Driofort 3-3) at Texas (HOlling 73), 3:05p.m.
San Diego (Clement 5-4) at Oakland (Mulder
3-2), 3:35p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Hemandjll 5-4) at Montreal
(Pavano 6-21, 7:05 p.m. _,
Boston (~oso 3-2) al FlOrida (Penny 3·6),
7:05p.m.
Deiroll (Nomo 2-4) at Pllt!burgh (RIIChlo 3-3),

3',

•••
6',
9',

Monday's acoret

IAL vo. NL)

Montrea l 6, N.Y. Ya nkees 4 ·
Boston 3, Florida 2
Pittsburgh 5, Detroit 1
Baltimore 4, N.Y. Mets 2
Tampa Bay 5, Philadelphia 3 (12)
Chicago White Sox 4, CINCINNATI 3
Toro nto 9, Atlanta 3
Chicago Cubs 4, Arizona 3 (10)
CLEVELAND 8, Milwaukee 4
Houston 8, ~inneaota 2
Kansas CUy 7, St. Louis 4

TaKas 2, Los Angeles 0
Seanle 8, Colorado 2
Oakland 3, San Diego 2 (tO)
San Francisco 5, Anahelin 4 (11}

Tonlghl'o gamu
(Alva. NL)
N.Y. Yankees (Stanton 1..() or Lilly o-o) at

0~)

at N.Y. Mets (Rusch

·

until Sept. 15.
But he wasn't his old self last
year due to injury. He missed the
fi rst two games with an ailing toe
and was bothered by hamstring,
knee and ankle problems as the .
year went along. He was selected
to the Pro Bowl, bJ.it did not play
because of knee surgery.

sacramento .................,.,... 1

utah .......................... .........1
SN!lle................................O

2 .333
2 .333
3 .000

2~

'

•'

MOndey•aecoret

&gt;

Melp County's

Minnesota 88, Detroit 88
Indiana 80, Miami 59

Tonlghro gamn
Phoonbc at U1ah, 9 p.m.
Porttand at Los Angoteo, 10:30 p.m.

~

Sacramento at Houston, 8:30p.m.

•'

·,'

·,

Wedntldlfl GlmH
Houston at washington, 1 p.m.
Orlando at CLEVELAND, 1 p.m.
Now York at Dotrott. 7:30 p.m.
Seattle at PhOenlx, 10 p.m.

Mondey.'e ICOI'e

·

Qualified
Medicare
Beneficiaries Medicaid
(called QMR);

Health Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare
Aged and Disabled ~art B premium and the. co.

tnsurances(s) and deducttbles
you are required to make as
part of the Medicare
Program.

Call Today!
1-800-992-2608
·
Or
992-2117
Meigs County
Department of
Job &amp;: Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH
45760
I

Specified Low-Income
Medicare Beneficiaries
Medicaid (called SLMB);
· This type of Medicaid pays
only for your Medicare Part ·
B premium.
Qualified fndividuals - 1
Medicaid ((;alled QO~t);

7:40p.m.
CLEVELAND (Wright 3·4) at Milwaukee
(Bore 3-4), 6:05p.m.
.
Minnesota (Mays 2· 7) at Houston (Reynokts
.5-2), 8:05p.m.
Kansas City (Batista 2-4) at St. Louis (Klle a3). a:tO p.m.
Colorado (Arro)o 3-4) at Sea«&lt;e (Moyer 3-1),
10:05 p.m.

.

San Francisco {Oniz 3-8) a~ Anaheim (Bot-

lenfleld4-5), 10:05 p.m.

This program provides ·the
same benefits as SLMB;
however,
the
income
standards are higher than
those allowed for SLMB.

.

Meigs begins
considering
911 service

.••
tea_~s

Soturdoy'o gamo

·,
_

at Dallas. 8 p.m.: if necessary,

.

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Signed RHP Biian
:~
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Placad 2B CarfO&amp;

· Febles on the tS·day disabled list. Caii&amp;Cl up INF
Ray Holbert trom Omaha ol the Pacific CO@!I!it

....,

TEXAS RANGERS: Recalled RHP Ryan

ATLANTA BRAVES: Optioned LHP John
Racalled IIHP Jason ~arquls lrorn Rlchmona,
FLORIDA MARLINS: Sent RHP Vladlinlr
Nunez to Calgary of the Pacific Coast League.
Activaled OF 'Mark Smith from the t5-day disabled list.
•
-·
NEW YORK METS: Recalled OF Jason

Wodnoaday
l.n&lt;llana at L.A. Lakell. 9 p.n't.
Friday ·
~p . m.

Tyner from Norlolk of the international League.
Designated INF.QF Ryan McGuire fo r asstgnment.

WNBii atandlngo

Elalem conference

~.%. .................... , ~ ~

CLEVELAND ............ ,........ 2
lndtana ............................... 2
Weshlngton ........................ 2

1 .667
1 .667
1 .667

Houston .............................. 3

1 .750·

Ill
!'r

~
h

1
i ~.
2

2!'r.

·-

,
Balkotball'
Notlonot Blolco!boll Alooclotlon
CHARLOTTE HORNETS:. Pmmotlld dlrectO&lt;'

ol scouting Jeff Bower to assistant general man·
agar and advance scout Stephen Silas to assis· ·
tant coach.

Footbltl
Nodonol Footboll Loaguo

GREEN BAY PACKERS: Released TE Mart&lt;
NEW YORK GIANTS: Released MLB Corey
Widmer.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Re-signed LB

Chmura and LB George Koonce.

Michael Hamihon.to a one-year contract.

He said Monday he-had recov- · forbid him from playing baseball
ered and that he's "going to play as agam.
long'as Darrell plays." •
Sanders is unlikely to play the
The surgery also hampered entire seven years of the contract,
Sanders' attempt to play baseball but the Redskins had to make it a
with the Cincinnati Reds this long one so it would meet his •
y,ear. He was assigned o a minor, d&lt;mandS and still fit under the · .
league team,'but left the club May salary cap.
11 . The new corttract does not

·Commonly asked
Questions:

More ...
Help With
•
.
.
Q; Who determines whether
M e d_I care Expenses .I am disabled? .. .

.;..,IDIT41ftli DAY 'CAMPERS' - Local elementary students enjoy participating In actl,vlties presented during the Meigs County Historical

Medicaid (called QI-2):

disability determination
:by the Social Security
.'A dministration or by the
Ohio Department of Job
~ Family Services through
~ts County Medical
'" Services (CMS). ,
'Wh .
;,
Q:
at ts the
age when I
.
. am constdered "Aged"?

This program reimburses
you for the part ~f the · Part
B pt!emium that you have
already paid · which went
toward home health care.
'·
-v:o
u
wt'll
.
It
r ece1ve
a
,
retmbursement check once a
year. The income limits · are A; Age 65
.
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
Q; What services are covered '
by Medicaid?
'·
••
Qualified Working Disables
·
..•
Individual (called QWDI):
~;Any of these services are
•
~· covered if they are
medically necessary for
This program pays for your
you:
Medicare Part A premium
Doctor Visits
only. QWDI can help you if
Hospital Care
Immunizations
you have lost eligibility for
Substance Abuse
Title II disability benefits
Prescriptions
due to earnings.
Vision
. .
Dental
Mental Health
Other...

Society's Heritage Day Camp; he!d at the Meigs County Museum June
5 and 6. (Tony M. leach photo)

Handing down·our heritage
..

.'

'"' ' '

.

.,

'

"c4iJdl:;p ,wJfo, have co~pleted, the~ s.;-co!14•
:'J_i)dtl children pdftiripdte "'third
and fourth grades ,were involved in' tlie
program, where they selected historical
~ in 'Heritage 'Day 'Camp' camp
topics to research, using· the Gounty pictorial
.

'

and historical books.as guides, and then .:Vrot~
short
reports about their selected topics.
BY ·ToNY M. LEACH
They also constructed a model or produ~ed
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
a
'drawing
to go along with their report for
OMEROY - Heritage Day camp
exhibi.t on Heritage Sunday.
- a program aimed at educating
"The children :ire really excited about the
children about the importance of activities," said Patty Cook, a trustee for the
activities and events of the early Meigs County Historical Society. " It is good
.
1900s --, was held Monday and for them to learn some history, and they're
Tuesday at the Meigs Museum, under spon- having fun while doing it."
sorihip of the Meigs County Historical SociC hildren played croquet and marbles,
f '
'
ety.
.
learned to square-dance, rmde their own pl~y
. •

~QO-!'u~a~H~fi~te::.=d~I~n!..l!dd~ivui!..l!dd!..l!du!.!!a~ls~-:.__.!!,.2 .A; ·;M edicaid requires a

th e 91 1 issue, and have met
with (Padgett) about the
money that's available," Howard
said .
"We know that there are
funds out there for us, but we
don't know how mu ch or what
the sc hedule is for requesting it .
"We definitely have to start
with a plan before we can really know what needs to be
done," she added .
William Stanton , who has
met with commissioners about
911 servic e in the past, is working with the counties without ·.
911, to help them begin the
process of planning for sue h a

commissioners have met with

service.

SENTINEL NEWS

Williams and RHP Tyler Green.

League

J. REED

STAFF
POMEROY Working
with the Governor's Office of
Appalachia, Meigs County officials have begun consideration
of911 service before the end of
2000.
The Office of Appalachia has
pledged funds for research,
equipm ent and start-up costs
from state and federal
sou rces - for 10 Ohio coun~ies now operating without the
911 service, including Meigs.
Janet Howard, president of
the Meigs Counry Commissioners, said she and the other

BY BRIAN

•

Rocker to Richmond of the lntemauona' League.

Thll wHk'l elate

Indiana al L.A. Llkers,

BIMblll

American L•eau•

so Cents

•
• •

.~o~~~ and painted-pi &lt;lures on sl~te. They also
painted "summer boxes,'' which 'are "knick. knack" boxes m~de ff'\!jn pla,s~er of Paris, and
ltelpea make a ctrcus manonette.
The "campers" also prepared biscuits for a
strawberry shortcake dessert, squeezed lemons
for lemonade, made cookies ahd had homemade ice cream.
Certificates will be presented during a short
awards assembly set for 2 p.m. Sunday, during
the Heritage Day observance.
The annual Heritage Sunday dinner will be
Friday at 7 p.m. Cost is $10 per person and
reservations are due by Wednesday. For reser'va!ions or inforrmtion, call the museum at
. 992-3810.

Joy Padgett, director of the
Office
of
Governor's
Appalachia to evaluate the
counry's preparedness for such a
system.
Now, vario us volunteer fire
departme nts and emergency
squads are dispatched from various communities through the
Meigs. County Emergency Services office in Pomeroy, which
also operates a paid Medic
squad and provides medical
transport servic.es.
The shetiff's department and
various village police depart.
ments dispatch their own officers wheh calls are made to
their respective offices.
That would have to change
und er a 911 system, Howard
said, and "this co uld end up

He was quoted in the
Columbus Dispatch earlier this
week as estimating th e cost of
eq uipment needed for 91 1 service at between $70,000 and
$200,000 .
.
However, he has said, Meigs
County's existi ng EMS faciliry
may have some of the necessary
equipment already in place.
Operating 9 11 service once
equipme nt is in place is another hurdle for smaller counties,
and it is unlikely that assistance
from a higher government
source wou ld be available to
fund the system's operation.
Padgett has said that she
would like to see 911 servi ce in
all of Ohio's 88 counties by
2002, not only because of the
life-saving record of the 91 1
being an issu e."
system s, but also because such a
All the same, commissioners system in a community makes
are beginning to consider the that community more attractive
feasibiliry of such a system, as to industry and other business.
well as the equipment and perEMS Admini'strator Gene
sonnel needs that a 9 11 setup . Lyons was out of t~wn Wednesday, and unavailable to comwould require.
"We have begun disc ussing ment on the 91 1 proposal.

• I

Middleport. Community·Association planning summer activities
.

BY BRIAN J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
-MIDDLEPORT Plans for the
Fourth ofJuly celebration and other sum. mertime events were discussed when the
Mlildleport Community Association met
tupsday.
.
.
-Association President Myron Duffield
anpounced a schedule of tentative events
(ot the Fourth, and asked that association
!Jlembers consider potential candidates for
pa10de marsh'al.
~ .I). number of possible inarshals were discu~ed, and Duffield agreed to make con(.ags with those candidates and confirm a

Shockey · - ·
·~harges·-·in·
BY BRiAN J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY -A Shade man
appeared in Meigs County Court ·
Tuesday to answer charges relating to the death of a 10 year-old
boy Friday, and the man's mother
is . expected to appear today for
bet: alleged role in the incident.
Jeremy Shockey, · 26, Jones
Road, appeared before Judge ·
Patrick H. O'Brien on charges
fil~d Tuesday morning. He is
acc·used of aggravated vehicular
homicide
and
invqluntary
manslaughter, second and thirddegree felonies, and failure to
wntrol, driving under suspension, leaving the scene 0f a11 accid~nt and a seat belt violation.

.,, ..
'

. .

'•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 1

Glynn !rom Oklahoma of the Pacific Coast
League. Signed RHP Chad Hawkins. Opltof!OO
OF Scott Podsednlk to Tulsa of the Te~s
League.
.a
Netlanai'LIIIUI
.(

NBA Flnalt

!'"

.

Newspaper

'

S1enley Cup finale ·
New Jersey 3, Dallas 1, New Jei'Hy
serlos3· t
Thurtdly's geme
Callas at New Jersey, 8 p.m.

Hometown

.,'

,,

''FREE''

.•.

1l

CLEVELAND 69, Chlu1otte 53
Orlando 75, saoramen10 68

Ne~ Jersey

June 7, :ZOOO

1'4

,,

Help With
Medicare Expenses

.-

Tampa ~ay (Lopez 2-4) at Philadelphia (Person S-2). 7.35 p.m.
Toronto (Munro 1-l) at Atlanta (Millwood 4·4),

Monlreal (Vazquez 8·1), 7:05p.m.
Boston (R.Manlnez 4-3) at F1onda (5anchoz Delrolt. ............................... t 1 .500
4·4), 7:05p.m.
Miaml ................................. 1 2 .333
Detroit (Blair 2·1 ) at PittSburgh (Anderson 1· New Yortc ........................... 1 t3 .250
3). 7:05p.m.
Charlotte .............................0 3 .000
Balllmore (Enckson 2-2) at N.Y. MoiS (Reed
3-t), 7:10p.m.
· Wftttrn Conftrence
Chloago .White So&lt; (Eldred 5·2) at CINCIN- Los Angeies ....................... 2 o 1.000
NATI (VIIIone 6-2), 7:35p.m.
Phoenix ............................. 2 o 1.000
Tampa Bay (Aekar 2·3) at Philadelphia

1
1

Wednesday

•

•.

•
2 .500
Portland .............................1 · 1 .500

MIIYlOsoll ..........................2

Details, A3

-

.

=-~--..,.....,.,.....,,.....

.Helpful advice for balding folks, A&amp;
Reds drop slugfest to White Sox, Bl

·:
Jhuncl.y
HIJh: lOS: Low: lOS

marshal prior to the next meeting.
plans have been finalized for the fireworks
Richard Russell agreed to serve as the display, sponsored annually by the village.
coordin~tor for the July 4 festivities in .
The fireworks will be set off from the
hio
Duffield's absence. Duffield said the Mason County, WVa., side of tli
parade, entertainment and other events River again this year, she said; and the viischeduled would be overseen by a num- !age is irl the process of obtaining ne
ber of volunteers.
sary permits and·preparing the site.
The celebration will begin with a ·. The association also discussed the annuparade at 6' p.m., followed by musical al porch and entryway· flow~r contest,
· entertainment and a program at Dave which it sponsors annually. Gift certificates
Dii.S Pari&lt;. Tim' and Edie King, and will be awarded on July 4 to the first, secRoscoe Wise will serve as parade judges, ond and third place winners in the decoand six categories will be selected for .rating contest.
prizes.
Judging will inc)ude live flowers and
· Mayor S;mdy lannarelli reported that plants only, and- those Middleport rest-

rson

I qash
O'Brien set Sh '
's bond at
$50,000, concu i~nt on all
charges, with 10 percent cash
allowed.
·..
Shockey was acifompanied in
court by Athens attorney Her•
man A. Carson.
Shockey is accused of driving a
pickup truck, pulling a trailer
loaded with hay bales, · frt,m
which Dallas Castle, ·10, and his
brother, Dakota, 8, fell Friday
evening.
Dallas Castle was pronounced
dead at the scene by Coroner Dr.
Douglas Hunter, and Dakota has
been released from Children's
Hospital in Columbus, where he

Piela ... AppHn. Pap AS

. Toclay's

Sentinel
,_.ps

2 Sa diNs~ 18
Calendar
Classified•
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports ,
Weatber ·

A6

BH
;87
A3
Bl-3, 8
A3

Lotteries
QWO .
Pick 3: 4- 1-5; Piclt 4: 3-8-1-8
~

5: 14-18-29-32-36

'W.VA,
Daily 3: 4- 1-7 Daily 4: 4-5--3-9
C 2000 Ohio Vall~ Publishing Co.

dents wishing to be considered in the
contest must register at
Middleport
Department Store no later than June 30.
The association, Riverbend Arts Counil and Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, will sponsor a concert in
Stewart-Bennett Memorial Park on Friday evening.
Big Bend CommJlnity Band .will perform at the newly-restored All Wars
Memorial, and the Legion AuJ&lt;iliary wiU
serve coney hot dogs and other summertime refreshments.
Duffield said he hopes that· monthly
events, including entertaihment and food,

can be arranged for July and August, as
well, in an attempt to increase activity at
the park.
Duffield also reported that plans have
begun for the Second Annual Honey Bear
Festival, to be held on Aug. 12 from noon6 p.m.
Susan Baker of Ohio River Bear Co.
suggested that promotion of the stuffed
bear contest be increased for this year,
since the attraction was popular at last
year's festival .
Members discussed a number of developments in the downtown business district and merchant concerns.

Columbus news anchor will

address 'Rio Grande graduates
· FROM STAFF REPORTS
RIO GRANDE - WCMHTY news anchor · Colleen Marshall will address 399 graduates of
the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Communiry
College during commencement
exercises Sunday at 2 p.m. on the
college green.
Marsltall currently anchors
Hill.
' News Channel 4 on the Columbus station at 5:30 p.m. with ment speaker, particularly in view
Mike Jackson, and at 4, 6 and 11 .of her alma · mater, Point Park
p.m. with Cabot Rea.
College in Pittsburgh - a college
"She is an outstanding news now on the roster of competitor;
anchor in Columbus,'' said Dr. that Rio Grande plays in the
Bar,.Y M. Dorsey, Rio Grande's American Mideast Conference."
president. "We are ery fortunate
Marshall came to WCMH as a
to have her as our commence- general assignment reporter in

November 1984 and was promoted to anchor of News Channel 4's weekend news in January
1987.
She has worked as a weekend
reporter at WTRF-TV and as an
anchor/ reporter at WWVA
Radio, both in Wheeling, W.Va.
Previous experience includes
news director, anchor and
reporter at WEIR Radio in Weirton, W.Va., and managing editor
an d producer at KQV Radio in
Pittsburgh.
Marshall received the 1999
Stonewall Media Award for h~r
series on transgendered people

. PleaHIHURG,PIIpAS
.

�•••

STATE
BRIEFS
Cruiser strikes.
_..pedestrian
C OLUMBUS (AP) - A city
police cruiser responding to a
call without its flashing lights or
siren operating struck and killed
·a pedestrWt on a south side
stteet early Wednesday morning.
· The dead man was identified
' as Earl Darden, 38, of Colum·, , bus.
Police said the cruiser, driven
· by Officer Todd 'Schiff, was
.. responding to a call of a possible
car breakin at about I :30 a.m.
· ' and was rraveling at the posted
· speed limit of 45 mph.
Darden was not in a crosswalk
' when he tried to cross South
· High Street at Williams Road,
· police said.
•

Student sues

for lnJultes
TROY (AP) - A Piqua
High School student and his
family are seeking more than $2
million for injuries suffered
while working in the school's
'
gyRUlaStum.
A law.uit filed on behalf of
Aaron Meiring states that he
was excused from class May 27,
, 1998, to do work as part of a
' , school program. He was told to
mop bleachers and fell from a
height of more than 10 feet,
according to the lawsuit.
The law.uit claims that school
officials should have known that
Meiting had problems with
seizures and that his medication
. was not always effective. It also
.. claims school personnel should
have known Meiring was of
. • below average intellect and had
. · attention and behavioral prob. · !ems, including difficulty following instructions and trouble
, processing information given
' him.
'

.,,

,j

cancer Society missing $6.9 . million;~official charged
'' .

DUBLIN (AP) - An American Cancer about embezzling from the cancer society. · T he money was sent M ay •j(J, a bat~k
Society official had a bank wire $6.9 milIt also says that o n Saturoay, she found a offi~ial told the FB I.
.
lion of the charity's money to an account lette r from her husband, telling her he had
Stx days after the money waSJ'W~red in Austria, then told his wife he was never paid all of their debts with the stolen the day the FBI ca me to the society s office
coming home because of the theft , a court money. It gave her instructions how to find - investigators learned that Wian\ was not
complaint alleges.
him.
authorized to make wire transfers land that
An arrest warrant was issued for Dan
Harvey Schwartz, the society's vice pres- he had lied about mo ney going for grants,
.
'7•' '
Wiant, who oversaw computer and finan- ident of market development in Ohio, said the complaint said.
cial operations at the American Cancer the "alleged embezzlement" took · place
The nussmg money IS ~mong funds
Society's Ohio division , according to during a transaction late last week at the ratsed by about 97,000 O hio volunteers
group 's Ohio d ivisio n o ffi ce in this t~rough chan table events, co~nnltlnorattve
Wiant's attorney, Kevin Durkin.
"When I talked to him, he· to ld me he Columbus suburb.
,
postage stamps and other actiVItieS' to supwas en route back to Columbus;· said
Schwartz said the society was contacted port cancer research , public education and
Durkin, who did not know wh ere his about this by two FBI agents.
cancer prevention programs.
'''
client was Tuesday night. " I told him I didThe FBI said that in a letter to a local
· FBI agents said they don 't kn oW' where
n't care where he was coming from , just Fifth Third Bank, Wiant said the money the money '' now.
that I wanted him to get back here."
was to be sent . to a beneficiary called
"We arc pretty comfortable in saying we
The complaint in U.S. District Court "Dane, Forrest, H awkins," to be distributed are co~fident we a~ going to recover these
say~ Wiant·called his wife Friday to tell her as research grants.
funds, Schwartz sa1d.

.

-

.

.

u;:' J

The' American Cancer Society is

~~y

ins~ red to cover the pomble losses, he satd.
It w~ll not tnterrupt ~ny of. the serv1ces
we prov1de to cancer paneqts. . .. .
The annual budget for the O h!O·dtVISIOn
of the Ame_n~an Cancer Soc tety IS more
than $15 mliho~ .
,
• ,
" I heard o~ce that t~ere s no car,that s
ever made that couldn t be srol~~ · Mid
Do n McClure, the o.rg~~tzatt.on s cl'uef
executtve officer m Ohto. I thmk thar we
have very good safeguards m place, artd 1f
someone is intending to take advantage of
an organizatio n like ours, that they w tll.
"We were surp;,ise~, we were shoc~ed ,
we were out raged, he sa1d. .
.
" It was discovered almost tmmedlately;•
M~Ciure said. "We.. are taking ·affirma}ive
acnon to prosec ute.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Commur.tties statewide•• dent of the Ohio Emergency Management
can't become prepared for terrorist attacks with- 1, Agency Assqciation,.
•
out more financial support from state and federal1
" But in order for. us to be prepa red for •any
governments, emergency management officials~ incident, we need suppo rt fron; the state in ·the
told Lt. Gov. Maureen O'Connor on 'Tuesday.
'11 form of func;ling for training and equipt'nent~ he
Nearly 1,000 fire, police and health officials :. said.
·•
from Ohio's 88 counties closed a tW.o -day. terror- ~ O ' &lt;;:onnor said funding must start at a locall~vel
ism conference by highlighting their top concern,:~ and the state w ill award th e federal gran~ to
needing money to' comprehensively plan for A counties that are committed to using their own
attacks involving biological, chemical or nuclear . resources first.
_
weapons.
.
"We're charging the individual counties and
The state will incorporate suggestions from tho:.. "!,larger cities to come up with disa!ter pla.• ns, ·19 be
conference, sponsored by the Ohio Emergencyj :wrepared, to allocate their resources, to cike ad•anManagement Agency, into the Ohio's anti-terror- '! rage of training offered and th en implerhent that
ism strategic plan.
.
" JWithin th~ir own communities,'' she sai~,.
.
The U.S. Justice Department ·this year gave ) I With little equipment and no training, emergrants to the state's six largest counties to prepar~ gency agencies in northwest Ohio's Hardin
for terrorism. Additional . grants will go to the rr Cgunty, like those in many other rura~areas , aren't
state, which then will disperse the ·moneY. more , ·l nywhere dose to being ready f&lt;?r an attack,.$aid
evenly throughout Ohio; said J.R. Thomas, presi- .:,.&lt;James Steele, the cqurty's emergen~}' coordinator.

August 1997, according to court
documents.
Shannon Smith, a lawyer representing Steele, said being involun-,
tarily committed to a hospital does
not establish a person's "dangerousness" for the purpose of being
given drugs against his will.
"There's no doubt that a basic
civil right is to refuse medication,
for wharever reason;· Smith said.
Norman Aubin, representing the
health boaro, argued the state
should be able to. forcibly medicate
patients short of a legal finding ~f
the person's incompetence.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A person
should be declared legally incompetent and a danger to himself or
others before the state can force
him to take medication against his
will, a lawyer told the Ohio
Supreme Court Tuesday.
· The court heard the case of Jeffrey Steele, a Hamilton County
man who appealed a 1997 request
by the Hamilton County Community Mental Health Board to
forcibly give him psychotropi&gt; or
mind-altering drugs.
Steele was judged mentally ill
and involuntarily hospitalized in

. ,·

Communities voice m~cems about-terrorism

Court debates forced
medication of mentally ill

BOB'S MARKET It GREENHOUSES,
INC.
.
.

AMM014M~f8 Sptct,~~tf'r S'VrM 8 To Cffl£r•tf Tkfir

Pollmrnan won't
bedlerpd

~~~~~~~~,~~~~
· ~~--~--~

CLEVELAND (AP)
Criminal cha~ges will not be
filed against a policeman
·· accused of kicking and hitting
two robbery 1111pec11 after a
• : televised high-speed chase,
. • prosecutors said.
Instead, city Prosecutor Lau. r:en Mocne ~ecommended that
pollee Chief Martin Plaak pur- ·
: .sue admll!latrative charae•
aplntt Patrobnan Kevin Kelly.
Mayor Michael P... White
ordcr:ed 1111 iJMitigation after a
•... TV new~ videotape appeared to
thow ollicen hitting the 1111pects after they led police on a
high-speed chase May 1.
"There are no winners in this
investigation," White said Thesday. "It is clear that many citi., zens were alarmed by the activ. . ity that rook place that May
· · morning- and that it is a tarnished stain that regardless of
• , the outcome will be hard to
•·; er:tse
from
Clevelanders'
minds:'
Bob Beck, pteaident of the
' • · Cleveland Police Patrolman's
• Association, said the union will
•. · "vigorously" fight any.adminis' . - rrative charges.
Kelly came under scrutiny
_ . after city officials identified him
as the officer who appeared to
'. kick and hit Derile Baskin Jr.,
21, and hit Ma~;ros Wilson, 18,
who was handcuffed.
Another officer, whom police
have not identified, appeared to
hit Wilson while he Jay on the
ground.
••

'~ WednlldiY, June 7, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

: Page A 2 • The o.lly Sentinel

'

:

. '

~

All Bedding Plants and 10· Hanging Baskets

s

Now

Just

lOSES

1rees ·&amp;Shrubs

Regular

11498

-

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4" ~poHed
)

Regular

$199

.

s

•

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LOCAL STOCKS

AEP-34'•

~-82\

AmTach/SBC- 45!.

Qlnentl Electric - 51'·
Ha1ty Cavldson - 37).

Akzo-40,_
Ashland Inc.- 34"·

K111111- 7'•
Kroger- 18~
Landa End - 31\

AT&amp;T- 38l.
Blink Ona - 34~
Bob Evana -1~.

Champion - 2"1.
Charming Sh~- 5'·

OVB-27~

One Vlllty- 37').

City HOlding - 9'1.
Fodaial Mogul- 9'i•
. Flnrtar- 25'·

Ptoplea-15~
Premlef-7~

Floci&lt;MII - 41'•

· WIII-Mert- 58~
Wtndy'a - 20io
WOIIIllngton - 12lo
Dally stock raporta are tha
4 p.m. cloalng quotas of
tha previOut day'a trans·
actlont, provided by
Advest of Galllpolla.

.Corzine's record-breaking
spending
a target for GOP
.
.

.

Dl¥.orces,
dissolUtions filed

.
POMEROY - Actt ons fo r ·
divorce have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Co urt by
Clifford Longenette, Reedsville,
against Jeanna F. Longenette, Lake
City, Fla.; Mary Freeland, Shade,
against Rkhard 0 . Fre eland,
address unreported; and R oqu elle
R . Thompson, Pomeroy, against
Deangelo L. Thompson, Pomeroy.
Dissolution actions have been
granted to Samantha VanMeter
and John L. VanMeter Jr. ; Sherri
D. Dillon and Daniel T. Dillon;
and Lewis A. Meek and Debra L.
Meek.
Divorces have been granted in
the court to Mary K. Oliver from
James E. Oliver; N. Marlene Barrett, from Keith W. Barrett; Brenda Gay Swann from Bryan K.
. Swann; Sandra R. Carnahan from
James A. Carnahan, and Carl R.
Alley from Stella L. Alley.
A dissolution action filed by
David Michael Rhodes and
Norma Lea Rhodes has been dismissed.

Units log calls
POMEROY - Units of thP
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Tuesday. Units responded as
follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:37 a.m., State Route 124,
Kim McKenzie, treated;
8:38 p.m., Palmer Street,
Dorothy McClain, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
8:24 a.m ., Welchtown Hill,
Beatrica Williamson, HMC;
10 a.m., SR 338, assisted by
Racine as First Responder, Tom
Boso, Jackson General Hospital;
2:39 p.m., Holzer Clinic, James
.
Bailey, HMC.

' ' · TRENTON, N.J. (AP) race. And in a reprise of a razorImmediately after winning his first thin victory twO yean ago, moderelection, Jon Corzine wanted to ate GOP Rep. Ma~ge Roukema,
talk about issues like Social Securi- the longest-serving woman in
ty and education. But looming Congress, narrowly defeated a
over his Senate campaign was the consemtive challenger.
record-shattering $33 million the . Six states held primaries Tuesday,
forf11er investment hanker spent including the last, presidential prijust to win the D.emocratic nomi- maries in five of them. But the
nation.
Cqrzine-Fiorio showdown drew
With vote totals in Tuesday's pri- · the m~t attention.
RACINE
maries still being tallied early today,
When the relatively unknown
9:30 p.m., Apple Grove, Sally
Corzine's GOP opponent, Rep. Corzine announced he was runSavage,
jackson General Hospital.
Bob Franks, fir:ed off the first salvo, ning for the Senate seat being
REEDSVILLE
calling all that money extravagant. vacated by retiring three-term
I
0:30
a.m., Pine tree Drive,
Corzine spent about $140 per Democrat Frank Lautenberg, polls
Y\)te.
showed l!!m behind Florio 2- 1. Elmer Crist, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital;
~If he has such little regard for But by last month, alter Corzine
his own money, what ~gml. ~ blitzed the .airWaves with a $2 mil- . 9:02 p.m., Eden Ridge Road,
lie have .for yours, and }'pur ciUJ- lion~per~week ad camp~gn and
dren's, and your parents'?" Franks pouted hundreds of thousands of
said.
.
. dollars into state and local DemocCorzine, easily defeated former ratic organizations that endorsed
Gov. Jiin Florio in ~e Democratic him, polls showed him ahead by
primary, tefused to talk about !he double-digits;
Florio, seeking a comeback after · WASHINGTON (AP) - In a
money spent - or about what
vo~
dumped him in 1993 at the memo kept secret for 2~ years, ·
he'll put into the fall election.
"Make no mistalce. I want to end of one term because he raised FBI Director Louis Freeh warned
invest in Amfrica;• Corzine told taxes by $2.8 billion, called that the Justice Department was
supporters. "That is what this cam- Corzine a "tlueat to democracy" ignoring "reliable evidence': that
and accused him of buying the conflicted with Al Gore's
paign will be about."
accounts ofhis fund-raising activWith 95 percent .of precinc~ election.
reporting, Corzine had 239,291
Ori Thesday, still complaining, he ities.
· Freeh urged appointment of an
votes, or 58 percent, whil~ Florio said he would nevertheless support
Corzine
~nst
Franks.
independent
counsel to investihad 172,564 votes, or 42 percent.
Corzine's primary spending gate Democratic fund raising in
On the GOP side, Franks edged
shattered
the previous U.S. record the November 1997. memo to
out a win in a very close four-way
for a Senate campaign - $30 mil- Attorney General Janet Reno,
lion spent by Republican Michael written by staff at his request.
Huflington in his losing 1994 bid
"In the face of compelling evifor office iQ California.
dence that the vice ' president was
The former Goldman Sachs a very active, sophisticated fundchief executive raised $2.5 million raiser who knew exactly what he
for the campaign. The rest came was doing, his own exculpatory
R1IN JIJ.Ht)
from his own pocket.
statements must not be given
Olllo VdOJ PIIM " I C..
undue weight;' the Freeh memo
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1/4 mile North Pomeroy M•son Bridge 240fr astern' Ave. (Across from

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~;. Phone (740) 446·1711

Olllo 4576!1.

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flam Pace AI
&gt;

I

and her work on AIDS causes, a
1999 Emmy fl&gt;.l' her special report
on Ellis Island, and a 1999 Emmy
nomination for , her report "New
Appalachia Trail"
The · Associated Press recognized Marshall twice in 1998 for
co-anchoring the newscast voted
best newcast and co-anchoring
best spot news cover:tge of the
· Alva CampbeU escape.
Special community recognition
includes a 1988 Capital Area
Humane Society con•umer
reporting award, and one from St.
Vincent DePaul Humanitarian
for her reports on hunger.
She has been active in the com-

Appears
fftMIPipA1

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ata~nM. lfJ• .... If u tn'll' II • ...,.•

'1111 -

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ROCky Boola - 5.._
ADShall-83).
Saara - 35\
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Ud. -23
Oak Hill Financial- 15

~amer- 40l'.

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S~9 ~=

ST. BERNARD (AP) - A
billboard advertising company is
suing 'this Cincinnati subUrb to
•
• challenge an ordinance that it
says violates its rights by forcing
•
• it to remove billboards.
Narron Outdoor Advertising
•
Inc. sayJ in its lawsuit that St.
•
• .' Bernard's ordinance would classify as "public nuisances" the
company's billbo:m:ls, some of
which ~re in place before the
•
•• ordinance was enacted in June
1998. Norton operates nine
billboards in St. Bernaro, sewn
of which are visible from Inter•
•
state 75.
•
••
The company is asking U.S.
: • District Judge Herman Weber
•• ro block the city from enforcing
the ordinance.
·

:~: :

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G 1/2" poHed

nts

'

;:.:
•:
:;'·

or

~ots
sunshine ~nd southerly . Tonight ... Clear. Lows around
wmds.will warm things up across 50. Light and vuiable wind.
Thursday... Mostly sunny. H ighs
the tn-county area on Thursday
and mto the weekend.
in the lower and mid 80s.
· · &gt; :rempe~tures will reach the
Thursday night ... Clear. Lows
·rrud-80s m the area, the National near 60.
· ·:Weather Service said. Tlie warm·.ing ttend will continue· on Friday,
Exttncled forecaat:
· .with highs ~pproaehing 90.
Friday...Partly cloudy. Highs in
· Lows Wednesday night will be the upper 80s.
in the 50s. Thursday night, temSaturday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows
peratures may not drop below 60 in the mid 60s and highs in the
degrees, forecasters said.
upper 80s.
. ·. Sunset tonight will be -a t 8:59
Sun!lay...Partly cloudy. Lows in
·P:m. and sunrise on Thursday at the mid 60s and highs in the mid
6:03a.m.
80s.

Price

each

Including:
·NEW GuinEa Hyblrd ImpatiEns
·DahUas -GEraniums·

Bllltoardflna
sues·suburb

W•ther forecall :

BY THE ASSOCtAT£0 PRESS

Fddof, Ill Coon St., - . . , , Cillo, b)' ,..
Ohio v.tl., Publltlll.. Cooii'UI'•• ht11tr"'',
Olllo 4578, Ph. t92·2U6. Stcood c'-o... pold .........,. Ololo.

6 '1/2" potted

PI

. Warm:-up starts on Thursday

~

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

•I'll-.

Now Just

99

::: VALLEY .W EATHER

The Daily Sentinel

JV

51898

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

rwo accidents investigated by the
RUTLAND
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart.
8:54 p.m., Middleport ·Park, ment.
Gregory M usser, Pleasant Valley
According to Sheriff James
Hospital.
Soulsby, Sarah J. Doty of U.S. 33,
Shade, had stopped in preparation
to making a left hand turn into
her driveway, w hen Carol Wilson,
T he Plains, attempted to go
around her, striking the right side
REEDSVILLE - Charges of of the Doty vehicle.
burglary have been 6led against
In another accident, Joy B. BarDelbert Putman Jr.. R eedsville, rett of Ravenswood was charged
and a juvenile, according to Meigs with failure to maintain assured
County SheriffJames Soulsby.
clear distance after she struck the
Soulsby reported that Nora rear of a car driven by Ashley
Casto returned to her home on Davis of Racine.
Sellers Ridge Road, Reedsville,
Davis had stopped in prepa raon Monday to find the windows tion for making a left hand turn
knocked out in a bedroom, and into the C itgo station in R acine.
two shotguns and a BB gun missmg.
&gt;..,.
Putman and the juvenile were
picked up by officials; questioned
and charged. Putman is confined
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastro the Meigs County jail pending
ern Local School District has
a court hearing.
announced a bus schedule for students attending summer sessions
at Eastern Elementary School.
The bus will pick up children
at the old Chester Elementary
POMEROY Charges of School, at 7:30 a.m. , followed by
tampering with evidence and Reed's Country Store at 7:50
preparation of drugs for sale have a.m ., and the bus garage in Tupbeen filed against two Lincoln pers Plains at 8:05 a.m .
Heights, Pomeroy, residents, both
Parents with questions abo ut
of whom are jaile~ pending hear- the route or the summer program
ings in Meigs County Court.
can call the district office at 667James Soulsby, Meigs County 6079.
sheriff, reported that Alfred
Robinson and Christina A. Mayle
were pulled over on US. 33
Monday eyening because the
vehicle lacked front tags.
POMEROY - Meigs County
The report noted that Robinson threw two bags of marijuana American Heart Association will
out of the car window. In a search hold a dance on Saturday at
of the vehicle, more marijuana Royal Oak Resort from 8- 11
was found. The incident remains p.m. Music will be provided by
unde'r investigation. Two juveniles George Hall.
uwe invite everyone to join in
in the vehicle were rdeased to.
the
festivities," said Dr. Wilma
their parents, according to the
Mansfield, AHA president. "The
report.
Mayle was also charged with no event will provide an entertaining
evening to the public for both
front tags.
dancers and non-dancers."
Tickets are SIS each and S25
for couples. Soft drinks and
snacks will be provided by
Kroger. Legal beverages are perSHADE - 'Mino-r damage was mitted on a carry-in basis.Tickets
incurred to vehicles involved in will be available at the door, and

R obert Gibbs, treated.

Charged with
. burglary

Bus routes
announced

Arrested on
drug charges

Fund-raising
dance set

Recent acddents
.investigated
''

information is available from
Denver and Nora Rice at 9923759, or John Redovian at 9927866.
Contributions may be sent to
Joan Wolfe, AHA treasurer, P.O.
Box 296, Racine , Ohio 45771.

Alumni banquet
set Saturday
'

TUPPER S PLAINS - Eastern Alumni Association will hol d
its alumni banquet on Saturday.
Social hour will begi n at 6 p.m .,
and di nner at 7 p.m. in the airconditioned cafetorium at Eastern Elementary Sc hool.
T ickets are SI O, and can be
purchased at Taz's M arath on,
C hester TNT Pit Sto p. Summerfield 's R estaurant, Reed's Co un try Store, Coo l Spo t, Quali ty Furniture Plus, Tuppers Plains Little
John's Citgo, or from alumni o ffi cers at 985-41 08 or 985-4263.

MHS reunion

planned

POMEROY Meigs High
School cl ass of 1975 will have a
25th year reunio n Saturday at the
Salisbury El ementary School jn
Po meroy, 1-4 p.m .
All alumni and their famili es
are invited to attend. A SS &lt;lonation per adult is being requested
to assist in paying for the refresh- '
ments and custodian.

Fishing Derby
planned
CHESTER - Meigs County
Fish and Game's annual fishing
derby for local children will be
held on Saturday, beginning at 8
a.m., and ending at I p.m ., to be
held at the Fish and Game ·Clubhouse off Texas Road near
Chester. '
Signs will be posted. Children
should bring their ow n tackl e and
bait and no minnows may be
used. Children 15 and under may
participate. The re is no admission
charge, and lunch will be included.
Prizes will be provided.

Freeh memo warned Justice of Gore contradictions

•,

"Bob'• Market Wllhll to ••,,... their gratitude for you~ ratronage over the yurt.
All Bob'• rehll 1tore1 are ltooked dally with plant• frelh from the greenhouse.
And now you oan enjoy apiohoular ••~lnga on these fjeah, healthy plants!

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ollllr-

111.1114
--lld.IIU
liN

--·lid.

was transported following the
accident. The children were
Shockey's cou•ins.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes said Monday thal, at the 5cene of the accident, Shockey's mother, Deborah
Shockey, 44, reported that she had

munity as co-host of the Easter
Seal &lt;;:elebration, emcee of the
· Just Say No march and rally, coemcee of AIDS Walk Columbus,
DARE
graduation
speaker,
YMCA Capital Campaign boaro
member, Crittendon Family Services board member, and as a volunteer in her daughter's crassroom each week.
Rio Gr:tnde wili also observe
its a'nnual Founders Day service at
10 a.m. Sunday in John W. Berry
Fine and Performing Arts Center.
Speaker will be the Rev. Charles
W. Hill.
Dorsey said it "is so appropriate
to have R~v. Hill as our speaker in
the year 2000," noting that Hill's
support of Rio Grande dates back
to his days as a student from 1958
to 1962.
1\vo years into his retirement

said.
Justice Department officials said
the FBI's legal analysis was flawed.
T.he dispute, and numerous others
among campaign finance investigators, were laid bare in 61 FBI
and Justice documents released
Tuesday by a House committee.
With Gore campaigning for
president .and first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton running for the
Senate, Republicans in · both
Houses of Congress on Tuesday
investigated why no independent
counsel for fund- raising was
sought.
Freeh's memo preceded· a better-known, and more scrutinized,
memo by the chief prosecutor in
the case, Charles LaBella, who
accused his Justice superiors ·of
from active ministry, Hill served
churches in the West Ohio Conference of the United Methodist
Church.
His churches included Rodney
Circuit, Derby Circuit, South
Bloomfield Circuit,Jeffersonville,
Hilliard and Maple Grove in
Columbus.
He became superintendent of
the Springfield District in 1992
and served in that capacity until
his retirement in 1998'.
The Springfield district covers
94 congregations, 76 pastors and
about 20,000 members. The district includes Clark, Champaign,
Logan, Union and Madison
counties.
The class of 2000 will be recognized for special achievements,
both academic and athletic, during the Foundei'S Day service.

contorting their investigation to top-down investigation starting
avoid triggering an independent with President Clinton and a
counsel.
"core group" of aides . under the
Both Freeh and LaBella have theory that "most of the alleged
testified in Congress to disagree- campaign abuses flowed directly
ing vigorously with Reno 's deci- or indirectly from the all-out
sion not to request appointment efforts by the White House and
of independent investigators. The DNC (Democratic National
f!CW documents are the first with
Committee) to raise money."
details of their suspicions about
In his 94-page merna, LaBella
Gore's truthfulness.
also said the Republican Party
Freeh and LaBella demanded " had its fair share of abuses,"
an independent counsel to scour including funneling S2 million in
a wide range of accusations, from foreign money into the RepubliWhite House coffees for donors can National Committee in a sinto millions of dollars in foreign gle hidden transaction that may
contributions. to the Democratic have been illegal.
Party.
"The RNC accomplished
"Can you blame the American what it took the DNC over 100
people or many in Congress for White House coffees to accombeing cynical?" asked House plish;' LaBella wrote.
Government Reform Committee
LaBella said an independent
chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind.
counsel also should consider what
But Rep. John Conyers, D- Mrs. Clinton knew about foreign
Mich., the senior Democrat on money brought in by fund-raisers
,the House Judiciary Committee, Johnny Chung and Charlie Trie.
called the LaBella memo "perhaps
Reno has repeatedly said she
the worst piece oflegal analysis to based he r decisio ns on the law
ever come out of the Justice and the facts and didn 't fed presDepartment."
sured to protec t Clinton.
Frech argued that the Justice
Department's preoccupation with
bit players should be replaced by a

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

been driving the truck at the time on an outstanding warrant from
of the accident, but at least one Athens County. He remained in
eyewitness has come forward say- jail this motning in lieu of bail.
ing that her son was, indeed, driThe case remains under investiving the truck.
gation.· Lentes said Monday that
She has been charged with fal- law enforcement officials believe
sification and obstruction of jus- Jeremy Shockey had been drinktice, a first-degree misdemeanor ing and driving at the time of the
and a fifth-degree felony, respec- accident, as evidenced by an open
tively, and was expected to appear beer bottle found in· the truck,
before O'Brien this morning.
and an admission by Shockey that
Jeremy Shockey was originally ·he had "at least 18 beers" after the
placed in the Meigs County Jail accide11t took place .

•

�•••

STATE
BRIEFS
Cruiser strikes.
_..pedestrian
C OLUMBUS (AP) - A city
police cruiser responding to a
call without its flashing lights or
siren operating struck and killed
·a pedestrWt on a south side
stteet early Wednesday morning.
· The dead man was identified
' as Earl Darden, 38, of Colum·, , bus.
Police said the cruiser, driven
· by Officer Todd 'Schiff, was
.. responding to a call of a possible
car breakin at about I :30 a.m.
· ' and was rraveling at the posted
· speed limit of 45 mph.
Darden was not in a crosswalk
' when he tried to cross South
· High Street at Williams Road,
· police said.
•

Student sues

for lnJultes
TROY (AP) - A Piqua
High School student and his
family are seeking more than $2
million for injuries suffered
while working in the school's
'
gyRUlaStum.
A law.uit filed on behalf of
Aaron Meiring states that he
was excused from class May 27,
, 1998, to do work as part of a
' , school program. He was told to
mop bleachers and fell from a
height of more than 10 feet,
according to the lawsuit.
The law.uit claims that school
officials should have known that
Meiting had problems with
seizures and that his medication
. was not always effective. It also
.. claims school personnel should
have known Meiring was of
. • below average intellect and had
. · attention and behavioral prob. · !ems, including difficulty following instructions and trouble
, processing information given
' him.
'

.,,

,j

cancer Society missing $6.9 . million;~official charged
'' .

DUBLIN (AP) - An American Cancer about embezzling from the cancer society. · T he money was sent M ay •j(J, a bat~k
Society official had a bank wire $6.9 milIt also says that o n Saturoay, she found a offi~ial told the FB I.
.
lion of the charity's money to an account lette r from her husband, telling her he had
Stx days after the money waSJ'W~red in Austria, then told his wife he was never paid all of their debts with the stolen the day the FBI ca me to the society s office
coming home because of the theft , a court money. It gave her instructions how to find - investigators learned that Wian\ was not
complaint alleges.
him.
authorized to make wire transfers land that
An arrest warrant was issued for Dan
Harvey Schwartz, the society's vice pres- he had lied about mo ney going for grants,
.
'7•' '
Wiant, who oversaw computer and finan- ident of market development in Ohio, said the complaint said.
cial operations at the American Cancer the "alleged embezzlement" took · place
The nussmg money IS ~mong funds
Society's Ohio division , according to during a transaction late last week at the ratsed by about 97,000 O hio volunteers
group 's Ohio d ivisio n o ffi ce in this t~rough chan table events, co~nnltlnorattve
Wiant's attorney, Kevin Durkin.
"When I talked to him, he· to ld me he Columbus suburb.
,
postage stamps and other actiVItieS' to supwas en route back to Columbus;· said
Schwartz said the society was contacted port cancer research , public education and
Durkin, who did not know wh ere his about this by two FBI agents.
cancer prevention programs.
'''
client was Tuesday night. " I told him I didThe FBI said that in a letter to a local
· FBI agents said they don 't kn oW' where
n't care where he was coming from , just Fifth Third Bank, Wiant said the money the money '' now.
that I wanted him to get back here."
was to be sent . to a beneficiary called
"We arc pretty comfortable in saying we
The complaint in U.S. District Court "Dane, Forrest, H awkins," to be distributed are co~fident we a~ going to recover these
say~ Wiant·called his wife Friday to tell her as research grants.
funds, Schwartz sa1d.

.

-

.

.

u;:' J

The' American Cancer Society is

~~y

ins~ red to cover the pomble losses, he satd.
It w~ll not tnterrupt ~ny of. the serv1ces
we prov1de to cancer paneqts. . .. .
The annual budget for the O h!O·dtVISIOn
of the Ame_n~an Cancer Soc tety IS more
than $15 mliho~ .
,
• ,
" I heard o~ce that t~ere s no car,that s
ever made that couldn t be srol~~ · Mid
Do n McClure, the o.rg~~tzatt.on s cl'uef
executtve officer m Ohto. I thmk thar we
have very good safeguards m place, artd 1f
someone is intending to take advantage of
an organizatio n like ours, that they w tll.
"We were surp;,ise~, we were shoc~ed ,
we were out raged, he sa1d. .
.
" It was discovered almost tmmedlately;•
M~Ciure said. "We.. are taking ·affirma}ive
acnon to prosec ute.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Commur.tties statewide•• dent of the Ohio Emergency Management
can't become prepared for terrorist attacks with- 1, Agency Assqciation,.
•
out more financial support from state and federal1
" But in order for. us to be prepa red for •any
governments, emergency management officials~ incident, we need suppo rt fron; the state in ·the
told Lt. Gov. Maureen O'Connor on 'Tuesday.
'11 form of func;ling for training and equipt'nent~ he
Nearly 1,000 fire, police and health officials :. said.
·•
from Ohio's 88 counties closed a tW.o -day. terror- ~ O ' &lt;;:onnor said funding must start at a locall~vel
ism conference by highlighting their top concern,:~ and the state w ill award th e federal gran~ to
needing money to' comprehensively plan for A counties that are committed to using their own
attacks involving biological, chemical or nuclear . resources first.
_
weapons.
.
"We're charging the individual counties and
The state will incorporate suggestions from tho:.. "!,larger cities to come up with disa!ter pla.• ns, ·19 be
conference, sponsored by the Ohio Emergencyj :wrepared, to allocate their resources, to cike ad•anManagement Agency, into the Ohio's anti-terror- '! rage of training offered and th en implerhent that
ism strategic plan.
.
" JWithin th~ir own communities,'' she sai~,.
.
The U.S. Justice Department ·this year gave ) I With little equipment and no training, emergrants to the state's six largest counties to prepar~ gency agencies in northwest Ohio's Hardin
for terrorism. Additional . grants will go to the rr Cgunty, like those in many other rura~areas , aren't
state, which then will disperse the ·moneY. more , ·l nywhere dose to being ready f&lt;?r an attack,.$aid
evenly throughout Ohio; said J.R. Thomas, presi- .:,.&lt;James Steele, the cqurty's emergen~}' coordinator.

August 1997, according to court
documents.
Shannon Smith, a lawyer representing Steele, said being involun-,
tarily committed to a hospital does
not establish a person's "dangerousness" for the purpose of being
given drugs against his will.
"There's no doubt that a basic
civil right is to refuse medication,
for wharever reason;· Smith said.
Norman Aubin, representing the
health boaro, argued the state
should be able to. forcibly medicate
patients short of a legal finding ~f
the person's incompetence.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A person
should be declared legally incompetent and a danger to himself or
others before the state can force
him to take medication against his
will, a lawyer told the Ohio
Supreme Court Tuesday.
· The court heard the case of Jeffrey Steele, a Hamilton County
man who appealed a 1997 request
by the Hamilton County Community Mental Health Board to
forcibly give him psychotropi&gt; or
mind-altering drugs.
Steele was judged mentally ill
and involuntarily hospitalized in

. ,·

Communities voice m~cems about-terrorism

Court debates forced
medication of mentally ill

BOB'S MARKET It GREENHOUSES,
INC.
.
.

AMM014M~f8 Sptct,~~tf'r S'VrM 8 To Cffl£r•tf Tkfir

Pollmrnan won't
bedlerpd

~~~~~~~~,~~~~
· ~~--~--~

CLEVELAND (AP)
Criminal cha~ges will not be
filed against a policeman
·· accused of kicking and hitting
two robbery 1111pec11 after a
• : televised high-speed chase,
. • prosecutors said.
Instead, city Prosecutor Lau. r:en Mocne ~ecommended that
pollee Chief Martin Plaak pur- ·
: .sue admll!latrative charae•
aplntt Patrobnan Kevin Kelly.
Mayor Michael P... White
ordcr:ed 1111 iJMitigation after a
•... TV new~ videotape appeared to
thow ollicen hitting the 1111pects after they led police on a
high-speed chase May 1.
"There are no winners in this
investigation," White said Thesday. "It is clear that many citi., zens were alarmed by the activ. . ity that rook place that May
· · morning- and that it is a tarnished stain that regardless of
• , the outcome will be hard to
•·; er:tse
from
Clevelanders'
minds:'
Bob Beck, pteaident of the
' • · Cleveland Police Patrolman's
• Association, said the union will
•. · "vigorously" fight any.adminis' . - rrative charges.
Kelly came under scrutiny
_ . after city officials identified him
as the officer who appeared to
'. kick and hit Derile Baskin Jr.,
21, and hit Ma~;ros Wilson, 18,
who was handcuffed.
Another officer, whom police
have not identified, appeared to
hit Wilson while he Jay on the
ground.
••

'~ WednlldiY, June 7, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

: Page A 2 • The o.lly Sentinel

'

:

. '

~

All Bedding Plants and 10· Hanging Baskets

s

Now

Just

lOSES

1rees ·&amp;Shrubs

Regular

11498

-

aa

88 2~~r $
4" ~poHed
)

Regular

$199

.

s

•

. .Regular ss~

' ....._

M

'"\ \

..

•.,

No'W Just.

Sl9e!ch

"-·'\-~......... - "'1'-'
-, .......·\,.-

\.

•

I

\
\.

LOCAL STOCKS

AEP-34'•

~-82\

AmTach/SBC- 45!.

Qlnentl Electric - 51'·
Ha1ty Cavldson - 37).

Akzo-40,_
Ashland Inc.- 34"·

K111111- 7'•
Kroger- 18~
Landa End - 31\

AT&amp;T- 38l.
Blink Ona - 34~
Bob Evana -1~.

Champion - 2"1.
Charming Sh~- 5'·

OVB-27~

One Vlllty- 37').

City HOlding - 9'1.
Fodaial Mogul- 9'i•
. Flnrtar- 25'·

Ptoplea-15~
Premlef-7~

Floci&lt;MII - 41'•

· WIII-Mert- 58~
Wtndy'a - 20io
WOIIIllngton - 12lo
Dally stock raporta are tha
4 p.m. cloalng quotas of
tha previOut day'a trans·
actlont, provided by
Advest of Galllpolla.

.Corzine's record-breaking
spending
a target for GOP
.
.

.

Dl¥.orces,
dissolUtions filed

.
POMEROY - Actt ons fo r ·
divorce have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Co urt by
Clifford Longenette, Reedsville,
against Jeanna F. Longenette, Lake
City, Fla.; Mary Freeland, Shade,
against Rkhard 0 . Fre eland,
address unreported; and R oqu elle
R . Thompson, Pomeroy, against
Deangelo L. Thompson, Pomeroy.
Dissolution actions have been
granted to Samantha VanMeter
and John L. VanMeter Jr. ; Sherri
D. Dillon and Daniel T. Dillon;
and Lewis A. Meek and Debra L.
Meek.
Divorces have been granted in
the court to Mary K. Oliver from
James E. Oliver; N. Marlene Barrett, from Keith W. Barrett; Brenda Gay Swann from Bryan K.
. Swann; Sandra R. Carnahan from
James A. Carnahan, and Carl R.
Alley from Stella L. Alley.
A dissolution action filed by
David Michael Rhodes and
Norma Lea Rhodes has been dismissed.

Units log calls
POMEROY - Units of thP
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Tuesday. Units responded as
follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:37 a.m., State Route 124,
Kim McKenzie, treated;
8:38 p.m., Palmer Street,
Dorothy McClain, Holzer Medical Center.
POMEROY
8:24 a.m ., Welchtown Hill,
Beatrica Williamson, HMC;
10 a.m., SR 338, assisted by
Racine as First Responder, Tom
Boso, Jackson General Hospital;
2:39 p.m., Holzer Clinic, James
.
Bailey, HMC.

' ' · TRENTON, N.J. (AP) race. And in a reprise of a razorImmediately after winning his first thin victory twO yean ago, moderelection, Jon Corzine wanted to ate GOP Rep. Ma~ge Roukema,
talk about issues like Social Securi- the longest-serving woman in
ty and education. But looming Congress, narrowly defeated a
over his Senate campaign was the consemtive challenger.
record-shattering $33 million the . Six states held primaries Tuesday,
forf11er investment hanker spent including the last, presidential prijust to win the D.emocratic nomi- maries in five of them. But the
nation.
Cqrzine-Fiorio showdown drew
With vote totals in Tuesday's pri- · the m~t attention.
RACINE
maries still being tallied early today,
When the relatively unknown
9:30 p.m., Apple Grove, Sally
Corzine's GOP opponent, Rep. Corzine announced he was runSavage,
jackson General Hospital.
Bob Franks, fir:ed off the first salvo, ning for the Senate seat being
REEDSVILLE
calling all that money extravagant. vacated by retiring three-term
I
0:30
a.m., Pine tree Drive,
Corzine spent about $140 per Democrat Frank Lautenberg, polls
Y\)te.
showed l!!m behind Florio 2- 1. Elmer Crist, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital;
~If he has such little regard for But by last month, alter Corzine
his own money, what ~gml. ~ blitzed the .airWaves with a $2 mil- . 9:02 p.m., Eden Ridge Road,
lie have .for yours, and }'pur ciUJ- lion~per~week ad camp~gn and
dren's, and your parents'?" Franks pouted hundreds of thousands of
said.
.
. dollars into state and local DemocCorzine, easily defeated former ratic organizations that endorsed
Gov. Jiin Florio in ~e Democratic him, polls showed him ahead by
primary, tefused to talk about !he double-digits;
Florio, seeking a comeback after · WASHINGTON (AP) - In a
money spent - or about what
vo~
dumped him in 1993 at the memo kept secret for 2~ years, ·
he'll put into the fall election.
"Make no mistalce. I want to end of one term because he raised FBI Director Louis Freeh warned
invest in Amfrica;• Corzine told taxes by $2.8 billion, called that the Justice Department was
supporters. "That is what this cam- Corzine a "tlueat to democracy" ignoring "reliable evidence': that
and accused him of buying the conflicted with Al Gore's
paign will be about."
accounts ofhis fund-raising activWith 95 percent .of precinc~ election.
reporting, Corzine had 239,291
Ori Thesday, still complaining, he ities.
· Freeh urged appointment of an
votes, or 58 percent, whil~ Florio said he would nevertheless support
Corzine
~nst
Franks.
independent
counsel to investihad 172,564 votes, or 42 percent.
Corzine's primary spending gate Democratic fund raising in
On the GOP side, Franks edged
shattered
the previous U.S. record the November 1997. memo to
out a win in a very close four-way
for a Senate campaign - $30 mil- Attorney General Janet Reno,
lion spent by Republican Michael written by staff at his request.
Huflington in his losing 1994 bid
"In the face of compelling evifor office iQ California.
dence that the vice ' president was
The former Goldman Sachs a very active, sophisticated fundchief executive raised $2.5 million raiser who knew exactly what he
for the campaign. The rest came was doing, his own exculpatory
R1IN JIJ.Ht)
from his own pocket.
statements must not be given
Olllo VdOJ PIIM " I C..
undue weight;' the Freeh memo
..blllill&lt;l ....,
Mondoflbroolll

.. - ~·.
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flam Pace AI
&gt;

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and her work on AIDS causes, a
1999 Emmy fl&gt;.l' her special report
on Ellis Island, and a 1999 Emmy
nomination for , her report "New
Appalachia Trail"
The · Associated Press recognized Marshall twice in 1998 for
co-anchoring the newscast voted
best newcast and co-anchoring
best spot news cover:tge of the
· Alva CampbeU escape.
Special community recognition
includes a 1988 Capital Area
Humane Society con•umer
reporting award, and one from St.
Vincent DePaul Humanitarian
for her reports on hunger.
She has been active in the com-

Appears
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ST. BERNARD (AP) - A
billboard advertising company is
suing 'this Cincinnati subUrb to
•
• challenge an ordinance that it
says violates its rights by forcing
•
• it to remove billboards.
Narron Outdoor Advertising
•
Inc. sayJ in its lawsuit that St.
•
• .' Bernard's ordinance would classify as "public nuisances" the
company's billbo:m:ls, some of
which ~re in place before the
•
•• ordinance was enacted in June
1998. Norton operates nine
billboards in St. Bernaro, sewn
of which are visible from Inter•
•
state 75.
•
••
The company is asking U.S.
: • District Judge Herman Weber
•• ro block the city from enforcing
the ordinance.
·

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sunshine ~nd southerly . Tonight ... Clear. Lows around
wmds.will warm things up across 50. Light and vuiable wind.
Thursday... Mostly sunny. H ighs
the tn-county area on Thursday
and mto the weekend.
in the lower and mid 80s.
· · &gt; :rempe~tures will reach the
Thursday night ... Clear. Lows
·rrud-80s m the area, the National near 60.
· ·:Weather Service said. Tlie warm·.ing ttend will continue· on Friday,
Exttncled forecaat:
· .with highs ~pproaehing 90.
Friday...Partly cloudy. Highs in
· Lows Wednesday night will be the upper 80s.
in the 50s. Thursday night, temSaturday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows
peratures may not drop below 60 in the mid 60s and highs in the
degrees, forecasters said.
upper 80s.
. ·. Sunset tonight will be -a t 8:59
Sun!lay...Partly cloudy. Lows in
·P:m. and sunrise on Thursday at the mid 60s and highs in the mid
6:03a.m.
80s.

Price

each

Including:
·NEW GuinEa Hyblrd ImpatiEns
·DahUas -GEraniums·

Bllltoardflna
sues·suburb

W•ther forecall :

BY THE ASSOCtAT£0 PRESS

Fddof, Ill Coon St., - . . , , Cillo, b)' ,..
Ohio v.tl., Publltlll.. Cooii'UI'•• ht11tr"'',
Olllo 4578, Ph. t92·2U6. Stcood c'-o... pold .........,. Ololo.

6 '1/2" potted

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~

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

•I'll-.

Now Just

99

::: VALLEY .W EATHER

The Daily Sentinel

JV

51898

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

rwo accidents investigated by the
RUTLAND
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart.
8:54 p.m., Middleport ·Park, ment.
Gregory M usser, Pleasant Valley
According to Sheriff James
Hospital.
Soulsby, Sarah J. Doty of U.S. 33,
Shade, had stopped in preparation
to making a left hand turn into
her driveway, w hen Carol Wilson,
T he Plains, attempted to go
around her, striking the right side
REEDSVILLE - Charges of of the Doty vehicle.
burglary have been 6led against
In another accident, Joy B. BarDelbert Putman Jr.. R eedsville, rett of Ravenswood was charged
and a juvenile, according to Meigs with failure to maintain assured
County SheriffJames Soulsby.
clear distance after she struck the
Soulsby reported that Nora rear of a car driven by Ashley
Casto returned to her home on Davis of Racine.
Sellers Ridge Road, Reedsville,
Davis had stopped in prepa raon Monday to find the windows tion for making a left hand turn
knocked out in a bedroom, and into the C itgo station in R acine.
two shotguns and a BB gun missmg.
&gt;..,.
Putman and the juvenile were
picked up by officials; questioned
and charged. Putman is confined
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastro the Meigs County jail pending
ern Local School District has
a court hearing.
announced a bus schedule for students attending summer sessions
at Eastern Elementary School.
The bus will pick up children
at the old Chester Elementary
POMEROY Charges of School, at 7:30 a.m. , followed by
tampering with evidence and Reed's Country Store at 7:50
preparation of drugs for sale have a.m ., and the bus garage in Tupbeen filed against two Lincoln pers Plains at 8:05 a.m .
Heights, Pomeroy, residents, both
Parents with questions abo ut
of whom are jaile~ pending hear- the route or the summer program
ings in Meigs County Court.
can call the district office at 667James Soulsby, Meigs County 6079.
sheriff, reported that Alfred
Robinson and Christina A. Mayle
were pulled over on US. 33
Monday eyening because the
vehicle lacked front tags.
POMEROY - Meigs County
The report noted that Robinson threw two bags of marijuana American Heart Association will
out of the car window. In a search hold a dance on Saturday at
of the vehicle, more marijuana Royal Oak Resort from 8- 11
was found. The incident remains p.m. Music will be provided by
unde'r investigation. Two juveniles George Hall.
uwe invite everyone to join in
in the vehicle were rdeased to.
the
festivities," said Dr. Wilma
their parents, according to the
Mansfield, AHA president. "The
report.
Mayle was also charged with no event will provide an entertaining
evening to the public for both
front tags.
dancers and non-dancers."
Tickets are SIS each and S25
for couples. Soft drinks and
snacks will be provided by
Kroger. Legal beverages are perSHADE - 'Mino-r damage was mitted on a carry-in basis.Tickets
incurred to vehicles involved in will be available at the door, and

R obert Gibbs, treated.

Charged with
. burglary

Bus routes
announced

Arrested on
drug charges

Fund-raising
dance set

Recent acddents
.investigated
''

information is available from
Denver and Nora Rice at 9923759, or John Redovian at 9927866.
Contributions may be sent to
Joan Wolfe, AHA treasurer, P.O.
Box 296, Racine , Ohio 45771.

Alumni banquet
set Saturday
'

TUPPER S PLAINS - Eastern Alumni Association will hol d
its alumni banquet on Saturday.
Social hour will begi n at 6 p.m .,
and di nner at 7 p.m. in the airconditioned cafetorium at Eastern Elementary Sc hool.
T ickets are SI O, and can be
purchased at Taz's M arath on,
C hester TNT Pit Sto p. Summerfield 's R estaurant, Reed's Co un try Store, Coo l Spo t, Quali ty Furniture Plus, Tuppers Plains Little
John's Citgo, or from alumni o ffi cers at 985-41 08 or 985-4263.

MHS reunion

planned

POMEROY Meigs High
School cl ass of 1975 will have a
25th year reunio n Saturday at the
Salisbury El ementary School jn
Po meroy, 1-4 p.m .
All alumni and their famili es
are invited to attend. A SS &lt;lonation per adult is being requested
to assist in paying for the refresh- '
ments and custodian.

Fishing Derby
planned
CHESTER - Meigs County
Fish and Game's annual fishing
derby for local children will be
held on Saturday, beginning at 8
a.m., and ending at I p.m ., to be
held at the Fish and Game ·Clubhouse off Texas Road near
Chester. '
Signs will be posted. Children
should bring their ow n tackl e and
bait and no minnows may be
used. Children 15 and under may
participate. The re is no admission
charge, and lunch will be included.
Prizes will be provided.

Freeh memo warned Justice of Gore contradictions

•,

"Bob'• Market Wllhll to ••,,... their gratitude for you~ ratronage over the yurt.
All Bob'• rehll 1tore1 are ltooked dally with plant• frelh from the greenhouse.
And now you oan enjoy apiohoular ••~lnga on these fjeah, healthy plants!

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ollllr-

111.1114
--lld.IIU
liN

--·lid.

was transported following the
accident. The children were
Shockey's cou•ins.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes said Monday thal, at the 5cene of the accident, Shockey's mother, Deborah
Shockey, 44, reported that she had

munity as co-host of the Easter
Seal &lt;;:elebration, emcee of the
· Just Say No march and rally, coemcee of AIDS Walk Columbus,
DARE
graduation
speaker,
YMCA Capital Campaign boaro
member, Crittendon Family Services board member, and as a volunteer in her daughter's crassroom each week.
Rio Gr:tnde wili also observe
its a'nnual Founders Day service at
10 a.m. Sunday in John W. Berry
Fine and Performing Arts Center.
Speaker will be the Rev. Charles
W. Hill.
Dorsey said it "is so appropriate
to have R~v. Hill as our speaker in
the year 2000," noting that Hill's
support of Rio Grande dates back
to his days as a student from 1958
to 1962.
1\vo years into his retirement

said.
Justice Department officials said
the FBI's legal analysis was flawed.
T.he dispute, and numerous others
among campaign finance investigators, were laid bare in 61 FBI
and Justice documents released
Tuesday by a House committee.
With Gore campaigning for
president .and first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton running for the
Senate, Republicans in · both
Houses of Congress on Tuesday
investigated why no independent
counsel for fund- raising was
sought.
Freeh's memo preceded· a better-known, and more scrutinized,
memo by the chief prosecutor in
the case, Charles LaBella, who
accused his Justice superiors ·of
from active ministry, Hill served
churches in the West Ohio Conference of the United Methodist
Church.
His churches included Rodney
Circuit, Derby Circuit, South
Bloomfield Circuit,Jeffersonville,
Hilliard and Maple Grove in
Columbus.
He became superintendent of
the Springfield District in 1992
and served in that capacity until
his retirement in 1998'.
The Springfield district covers
94 congregations, 76 pastors and
about 20,000 members. The district includes Clark, Champaign,
Logan, Union and Madison
counties.
The class of 2000 will be recognized for special achievements,
both academic and athletic, during the Foundei'S Day service.

contorting their investigation to top-down investigation starting
avoid triggering an independent with President Clinton and a
counsel.
"core group" of aides . under the
Both Freeh and LaBella have theory that "most of the alleged
testified in Congress to disagree- campaign abuses flowed directly
ing vigorously with Reno 's deci- or indirectly from the all-out
sion not to request appointment efforts by the White House and
of independent investigators. The DNC (Democratic National
f!CW documents are the first with
Committee) to raise money."
details of their suspicions about
In his 94-page merna, LaBella
Gore's truthfulness.
also said the Republican Party
Freeh and LaBella demanded " had its fair share of abuses,"
an independent counsel to scour including funneling S2 million in
a wide range of accusations, from foreign money into the RepubliWhite House coffees for donors can National Committee in a sinto millions of dollars in foreign gle hidden transaction that may
contributions. to the Democratic have been illegal.
Party.
"The RNC accomplished
"Can you blame the American what it took the DNC over 100
people or many in Congress for White House coffees to accombeing cynical?" asked House plish;' LaBella wrote.
Government Reform Committee
LaBella said an independent
chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind.
counsel also should consider what
But Rep. John Conyers, D- Mrs. Clinton knew about foreign
Mich., the senior Democrat on money brought in by fund-raisers
,the House Judiciary Committee, Johnny Chung and Charlie Trie.
called the LaBella memo "perhaps
Reno has repeatedly said she
the worst piece oflegal analysis to based he r decisio ns on the law
ever come out of the Justice and the facts and didn 't fed presDepartment."
sured to protec t Clinton.
Frech argued that the Justice
Department's preoccupation with
bit players should be replaced by a

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

been driving the truck at the time on an outstanding warrant from
of the accident, but at least one Athens County. He remained in
eyewitness has come forward say- jail this motning in lieu of bail.
ing that her son was, indeed, driThe case remains under investiving the truck.
gation.· Lentes said Monday that
She has been charged with fal- law enforcement officials believe
sification and obstruction of jus- Jeremy Shockey had been drinktice, a first-degree misdemeanor ing and driving at the time of the
and a fifth-degree felony, respec- accident, as evidenced by an open
tively, and was expected to appear beer bottle found in· the truck,
before O'Brien this morning.
and an admission by Shockey that
Jeremy Shockey was originally ·he had "at least 18 beers" after the
placed in the Meigs County Jail accide11t took place .

•

�•

Page A4.

Ion

The Daily S~ntinel

Wednetlday, June 7, 2000

~ATION

Wednesday, June 7, 2 •

:;BRIEFS
...

The Daily Sentinel

••

'£Jta6(isfuti in 1948

• Questions raised
about pill resbtctlons

,.r.

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

+

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lawla
Managing .Editor

L.arry Boyer
Advertising Director

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utttn 1o th~ ~diJnr •r~ w.tlcmflr. TJuy d1011ld lw Jlu llum JOO worv&amp;. Allltlltrl crt INiijur
to MIUilfJ aM must bt sig11M a11d l~tclwdt adJrtSJ and telt1lfoflt ""Mbf.r. No liiUiJifttlldttn wiU
IH publislud. Uttrn sllould lit in f ood Wit, tuldnssing Usuts , "01 ptnoMIIII'ts.
TAr opinivns u pnsud in tlfl r91um" bdowan tl11 oonsnutu of tilt Oltin ~'tlllty PltbiUitiltt
Co. 'r tditorill/ board, Ulfltu Olll t rwUt notHL

·.• -

OUR VIEW

••

.

~

'

''·'.

Legacy

'•

~

-'••
~

.,
''

Calm appraisal of Clinton
won't be coming soon

'•
''••

••

''•

W

•

I

ith seven months remaining in office, President Clinton's
.,'
pl ac e in history is already the topic of pundits and
•
columnists. Th eir vi ewpoint, of course, is colored by
their po liti cal persuasion, just as every American who cares will be
• so influenced.
'•
Sadly, the issue of" character" has dogged
'·~
ol' Bill since his first run for the presiden-

Rigltt now,
;:
the man
t00
.. tnsptres
~
1nany emo~
•
•
'(""-trons ln peo: pie, with lit~ }le neutrality
~ • in between.
''·

cy, and for a generation or so to come, it
probably will be the defining feature of his
t~
•
· •
two tern1s.
Never mind the concerns'about avoiding the draft, Whitewater and actions during his governorship of Arkansas. Paula
Jones and Monica Lewinsky (no. we're not
forgetting Gennifer Flowers and the other
"himbo eruptions") will shoot into mind
first.
So wi)l his statement on the Lewinsky
•
affair, no matter how much hair-splitting
~
lingers about whether he told the truth.
:
Actually. a cool analysis of Bill Clinton's legacy won 't be seen for
: decades to come. Right now, the man inspires too many emotions
: in people, with little neutrality in between.
'
But the history of evaluating our presidents shows us that with
~ passage of time, passions subside and scholars interpret the good and
• bad about a certain president.
1
~
Some will always remain great- Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln,
.i" etc.
:
Some have never escaped a negative connotation. Warren G.
• Harding, Ohio's last contribution to the White House, is an exam:. pie. He wasn't considered anything special when he was president,
; and the Teapot Dome scandal that erupted following his death in
: office didn't help matters.
• . Other leaders have been ripe for re-evaluation. Presiding over a
• prosperous time in our history, Dwight D. Eisenhower was thought
~ of as a great wartime general, but a dud as president.
~
Now, 30 years after his passing, historians are coming to appreci~ ate what he did in office. Eisenhower never felt the need to thump
~ his chest over his accomplishments; he was more interested in get~ ting the job done.
•
And Jimmy Carter is more popular now than he ever was when
~"' he occupied the Oval Office.
~
But Clinton will fall into the same category as Richard Nixon.
~ The personalities of both men, and the scandals that stained their
~ presidencies, tend to override rational judgment of what they've
• done.
: ; . History tells us Nixon did good things while in office. All of it,
.: however, is obscured by the shadow ofWatergate and his distinction
, as the only president to resign from office.
~
Whatever Clinton did, it too will be marked by the fact he was
~ impeached.
•
Time may heal aU wounds, as the saying goes, but it's also the one
~ factor that allows future generations to soberly gauge a leader's place
.; ;n history.
·
~ Bill Clinton's role will be judged more objectively at a later date;
~ noW is not the time to do so.

t,

~

--------------------------------~----------

..

•,)

~ TODAY

'I

IN HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l. '•

f

r

Today is Wednesday, June 7, the !59th day of 2000. There are 207
~ days )eft in the year.
:; Today's Highlight in History:
~ On june 7,1776, Richard Henry Lee ofVirginia proposed to the
·:-&lt;::ontinental Congress a resolution calling for a Declaration oflnde~
', pendence.
',• On this date:
~
In 1654, Louis the XIV was crowned l(jng of France in Rheims.
~ In 1769, frontiersman Daniel Boone first began to explore the
·: present- day Bluegrass State.
;: In 1848, French postimpressionist painter Paul Gauguin was born
., in Paris.
:, In 1864, Abraham Lincoln was nominated for another term as
'· president at his party's convention in Baltimore.
~ In 1929, the sovereign state ofVatican City came into existence as
:: copies of the Lateran Treaty were exchanged in Rome.
.
:: In 1939, l(jng George VI and Queen Elizabeth arrived at Niagara
;:--Falls, N .Y. , from Canada on the first visit to the United States by a
~ reigning British monarch .
.
~ In 1948, the C ommunist• completed their takeover of Czecho~ slovakia with the resignation o f President Eduard Benes.
'' In 1967, author-critic Dorothy Parker, famed for her caustic wit,
0: died in New York. ·
In 1981 , Israeli military plan es destroyed a nuclear power plant in
~ Iraq , a fac ility the Israelis charged could have been used to m ake
l. nud ear weapons.
In 1998, in a crim e that shocked the nation, james Byrd Jr., a 49~ year-old black ·man, was chained to a pi ckup truck and dragged to
" his death in Jasp er, Texas. (Two white men were senrenced to d eath
for the crime, a third to life in pri•on.)

t

..

WASHINGTON (AP) '!lie government is considering
for use of the abortion pill
Il,U-486 that could restrict
a9_eess to that early-abortion
option, 'Planned Parenthood's
director said Thesday.
q he Food and Drug Adminisfration said in Februaty it
wi)uld approve sale of RU-486,
al$o known as mifepristone,
ot~ce some final , but undisclosed, requirements were met.
The pill's sponsor, t6e nonprofit Population Council, last
week told abortion providers
tlii; FDA is proposing some
cQrbs on the pill's use, said Glor~ Feldt, national president of
Planned Parenthood.
: "We are deeply concerned
thAt FDA is considering restricti~ns that in my view would
vV;tually assure that very few
d(lctors would ever make
lllifepristone available," Feldt
said Tuesday Planned Parenth\)Od is a family planning group
" tli!at favors abortion rights.
lihe said the biggest concern
is an FDA proposal that physicians allowed to administer RU486 must be part of a registry,
which she · said would deter
doctors worried about antiabortion violence from offering
the pill.
,
Feldt said the FDA also is
con1idering long-term health
tracking of at least some RU486 recipients, something she
called unnecessary because half
a · million European women
have used the pill successfully
Mnce 1988.

)

.

- ...-....

THIRTYSOMETHING

Tourism: lf we hype it, they will come
Smokestacks, as much as we appreciate them,
aren't the only places jobs come fiom.
That was the message hammered home
Monday at City Park in Gallipolis. The occasion
was the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce's annual " Lunch with Our Legislators," a
program designed to give local folks a forum
with their elected leaders.
Monday's speakers shared a message vital to
the tri-county region's fi1ture: Tourism is comirlg to Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties. Now,
not later, is the time to get ready, folks .
So why would anyone want to come here?
There are A LOT of reasons; the region's history, for one. Many major episodes in our ~arion's
history were played out in our backyards fio~ the Rev?luflio~U~ 'W:U: to the Ci~ ~ tQ
the Undergrouna Railroad. ;
Folks love to visit historic sites, even the most
obscure. Take Rocky Mounr, N.C., for example.
Although Washington indeed slept near the
eastern Nor~h Carolina city, there weren't any
major battles fought there. But folks still visit.
That's because legend has it British General
Cornwallis watered his horse in a puddle collected in a large, moonscaped rock imide the
city limits. .
Don't laugh. I spent a year-and-a-half at the
Rocky Mount Telegram, and visitors frequently called or stopped by, seeking directions to
"The Rock." At first, I thought they were talking a~out North Carolina M9tor Speedway in
Rockingham, N.C., but I quickly learned the
local legend.
·
The tri-county region also has its share of
local legends, including Tu-Endie-Wei Park.
Local historians say Point Pleasant, not ConC9rd, Mass., was the site of the first shot fired in

R. Shawn
Lewis
MY VIEW
the Revolutionary War. That being the case, if I
were a Revolutionary War buff, I'd gladly plop
dow11 S5 for a guided tour of the , park. ,
•
And thus the st.;:, J ·flow of reven'u e generated by tourism begins ...
After I left the park, I'd be hungry. I'd stop off
a local eatery and grab a bite ($10). There, some
friendly locals would share tales of other local
legends and · hot spots. Intrigued, i'd ask for
directions or, preferably. buy a imp or guidebook ($5).
On my way to the next site, I'd notice my
tank was running low. So, I'd stop off at a local
gas station and fill up. While paying for my gas
($20), I'd buy a few impulse items or souvenirs
($1 0) to take home to friends and relatives ..
I'd arrive 'at my destination eager to learn
more. A tour guide would explain my options.
For S10, he'd ~ay, I could have a native walk
with the guide and explain the local history. For
$5, l could tour the site alone.
Being a tourist, I'd plop down $10 because I
don't know anything about the area. The tour
would last a couple of hours and, before I realized it, the day would be almost gone. I'd look

•

for a local hotel, motel or, better yet, bed and
breakfast.
·
.
Afier I found a room ($50), I'd be hungry
again. I'd ask the clerk for a good place to ea~,
and off I'd go. Once I had a fuU stomach ($20);
I'd be eager for some entertainment. I'd find , a
dinner theater or an outdoor drama to attend
($20).
•
Following this scenario, in one day in the tricounty region, I would spend at least $1s0,
snac~s not included. Multiply that figure by 100
visitors a month (a VERY conservative figure)
and you've got 51,5,000. Across a year, that's
S180,000 for local coffers.
And that's just from history buffS alonF.
Throw in farm lovers, river fans and festival
. ~on, a'\(i it's easx.to see ?te,~onsid~r,f!le ups}~~
to tdurism .
How do we get our hands on this money?
Teamwork, dedication and intensity.
')
first, our three counties need to work toget.h ~
er to develop tl;.ree-, four- and seven-day toU!"
of the region. Once we get tourists here, ~
. need to keep them here for a few days.
,~
Second, local residents need to know the his,- ,
tory of their own region. They need to be ablt;
to give accurate directions and historical,
accounts. Tourists are turned off1mmediately if
local folks don't know what's goiing on around
them.
.·
Third, flood the Internet, travel magazines
and other outlets with information on the tri,
county region. Twenty-first century travelers a~
information addicts. If they don't know the tri~
county exists, they won't visit.
,
The bottom line is this: If we hype it, people
will come. And they'll bring their wallets.
.·

(R. Shawn Lewis is managing editor

of Ohio

U!lley Publishi11g Co.)

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

So why not impose a tax on junk food?

..

.

•.

Qbesity kills nearly as many people as tob~c­
co and far more than alcohol, s0 why not tax fat
and sugar in foods to discourage consumption
and help finance health education?
·
Too complicated and too intrusive, say Clinton administr.ttion officials. Also, given the failed
1998 effort to hike tobacco taxes, a "fat tax"
probably wouldn't be politically popular.
But the idea has a lot to recommend it, especially the small tax proposed this week by the
Center for Science in the Public Interest to
finance nutrition education.
In a newspaper ad during the administration's
two-day National Nutrition Summit, CSP I
called for increasing the nutrition and fitness
budget of the Centers for Disease Control &amp;om
$6.5 million a year to $30 million and for
increasing the National Cancer Institute's campaign to get people to eat fruits and vegetables ·
fiom $1 million a year to $1 5 million.
Those government public relations efforts
currently have to eompete with billions of dollars in advertising by fast-food restaurants and
soft-drink manufacturers who encourage pqople to eat fatty, sugary foods.
'
The results are evident on almost any street
corner, shopJ&gt;ing center or office - 55 percent
of American adults are overweight and 33 percent are obese (dangerously fat). Even 10 percent of all children are overweight.
·At the nation's first White House Conference
on nutrition in 1969, the top item was hunger.
Now, as Health and Human Services Secretary
Donna Shalala remarked at the conference this
week, "Except for a few isolated pockets, we've
succeeded in onding hunger in America."
.
But, she said, " we have a .serious weight prob-

minutes a day of exercise to keep fit.
'
So, what about taxes? Asked about this at
nutrition conference, Shalala joked that there'
would be ,no "Twinkie Tax" under Presidelit'
Clinton, a famous consumer ofjunk food.
·:·
Seriously, junk- food taxes "would not tie·
consistent with what we are trying to do, which
is to promote balance and appropriate levels of
cortsumption. Some fat in your diet is good:'
Similarly, Agriculture Secr~;tary Dan Glickman said, ''I'd be reluctant for government to;&gt;
say which fQods are good and which are bad:·
We tax cigarettes because they are dangero~·
when used correctly How do you determine
when food is used incorrectly? Should we haVe
sugar police?"
'
The government's preferred option is to pui)..
lish and publicize, as it did again this week;
. dietary guidelines based on the latest scientific
findings on weight and nutrition.
The problem, as Glickman pointed out, is that
"we haven't conununicated the guidelines well:
We'd like the resources to do that."
·
The nonprofit CSPI says that a one-cent tax
per 12 ounces of soft drink could raise $1.5 billion a year and one cent per pound on cancjy
would raise $300 million. ·
·
'
Taxing fa.t might be administratively difficult;
although nutrition reporting requirements for
packaged foods might
it feasible. "F~t .
police" testing fast-food restaurants and applyc',
ing a "cholesterol tax" :wouldn't be impossible.'
But politically speaking, it might be. With ·:a·
majority of the American people overweight, it
might be dangerous for a politician to try to taJ! ·
the stuff that made them fat, even ifit also might 'kiU them.

tile·

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
lem.. . an epidemic of obesity:' The percentage
of adults defined as obese has increased 50 percent in 20 years, she said, and obesity among
children has doubled.
According to Shalala, four of the country's
leading. killer diseases - heart disease, some
cancers, diabetes and stroke - are linked to di et
and lack of physical activity, leading to about
300,000 deaths a year.
·
·
Smoking kills 400,000 people a year. Alcohol
abuse kills about 100,000, including those from
auto accidents. Gun violence and accidents kill
33,000, and drug abuse kills 65,000 fiom overdoses and spreading diseases like AIDS.
Yet the amount of attention and political
energy devoted to obesity pales in comparison
to the other problems.
Taxes are society's favorite·means of curtailing
tobacco and alcohol use, alvng with regulation,
which is the favored method of controlling
guns and drugs .
Regulation clearly won 't work for junk foods
and soft drinks. And the government can't
require people to do the recommended 30

make

'

..

Crowds celebrate opening of D-Day museum
NEW ORLEANS (AP.) - World War II
veterans looke d back to 56 years ago and
others paused to honor them Tuesday as
crowds cel ebrated the op ening of the
National D-Day Museum.
Retired Sgt. C harles H . Porbes wore his
medak Arnold Smith's reunion baseball cap
and "World War II veteran" tag were all that
marked his military se rvice.
Both came early to the Superdome to
watch fellow veterans parade past with a flyover by 54 military planes as the museum
officially opened o n the 56th anniversary of

the invasion to liberate Europe from Nazi
terror.
"I got up extra early this morning. Five
o' clock:' said Porbes, who survived three
can1paigns in New Guinea and one in ·the
Philippines and now lives in eastern N ew
Orleans.
Porbes shared memories of his servi ce
with Vietnam veterans Olden Ledet and Jim
Breland, who carried a small flag and a sign
reading, "Thanks to World War II veterans."
" It was so hot in the hold that we slept on
deck . They didn't have to blow reveille -

..'

''

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I•

EVAPORATED

.
Lit
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cars dangerous

I

historian said.
In the from row at the o pen ing were eigh t
Medal of H onor winners. backed by hundreds of dignitaries. ele cted officials and veterans who paid homage m those who feU.
· "We are the heirs of your sac rifi ce and we
ca n o nly stand h ere in awe of your courage;•
Defense Secretary William Cohen said.
Director Steven Sp1dberg said , " We stand
in front of something I wish existed in every
city in thi s country. something our children
must visit and teachers should fac ilitate fiom
now into forever."

STORE HOURS
Monday t•r•
Sunday

Leavins kids In

.."~ASHINGTON (AP) - A
child left in a family car for just
ri)oments can suffoca~e on a hot
dll)' or knock it into gear with
~c results, says a group seeking to 111ake it illegal in every
state to leave children unattend~d in vehicles.
. "I know how deadly one
minute can be;· said Michele
Struttmann of Missouri, cof'opnder of the advocacy group
Kids 'n Cars.
·
, Struttniann's 2-year-old son,
Harrison, was killed and she was
&lt;;riticaUy injured two years ago
when toddlers aged 2 ~nd 3
~re left alone in a running van
~' their parents stood outside
rO)king. One child shifted the
van into gear and ran down
Sthmmann and her son as they
sat on a park bench.
"What does it take for people to wake up and understand
tqat leaving kids alone in a car is
a tragedy waiting to happen?"
she asked.

they j ust turned that hose on us;• he sai d.
Smith, 79 , o fPecola, Okla., said he had five
combat stars in the Philippines and got credit for shooting down nine Japanese planes,
At the museum . fo under Stephen
Ambrose looked tired from several days of
events but wore the blazing smile of someone who had seen his dream come true.
" It's just wonderful to see the babyboomer generation and their children going
up to the veterans and thanking them fo r
what they did and to see the veterans discussing the war with them;' the 04-year-bld

P0 WEL L 'S

Firms eye guidelines
for 'Net transactions
. WASHINGTON (AP) Seven leading Internet and electronic commerce companies
proposed guidelines Tuesday to
protect consumers who make .
purchases online and help them
...!solve disputes with merchants.
The Electronic Commerce
ar\d Consumer Protection
Group, which includes America
Online, AT&amp;T, Dell, IBM,
Microsoft, Network Solutions
and Time Warner, proposed the
new guidelines at the start of a
!Wo-day Federal Trade Comiffission workshop on online
business.
· "Consumers should be
empowered to deal only with
reputable merchants, under
terms that make them comfortaole and with assurance that disagreements will be promptly
and reasonably resolved;' said
R,oger Cochetti, a spokesman
for the group and a senior vice
president at Network Solutions.
· The guidelines were released
after nine months of negotiations among the companies and
consumer groups.
Under the proposal, merchants should provide consumers with all the terms and
conditions of their purchase,
including the price; additional
fees like shipping; warranty
information; and ways to con- '
t;l&lt;;t the company. Merchants
stiould also give consumers an
qpportunity to review their
purchases before they make a
fi.llal decision to buy

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BANKROLL
This Week
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�•

Page A4.

Ion

The Daily S~ntinel

Wednetlday, June 7, 2000

~ATION

Wednesday, June 7, 2 •

:;BRIEFS
...

The Daily Sentinel

••

'£Jta6(isfuti in 1948

• Questions raised
about pill resbtctlons

,.r.

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

+

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

R. Shawn Lawla
Managing .Editor

L.arry Boyer
Advertising Director

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utttn 1o th~ ~diJnr •r~ w.tlcmflr. TJuy d1011ld lw Jlu llum JOO worv&amp;. Allltlltrl crt INiijur
to MIUilfJ aM must bt sig11M a11d l~tclwdt adJrtSJ and telt1lfoflt ""Mbf.r. No liiUiJifttlldttn wiU
IH publislud. Uttrn sllould lit in f ood Wit, tuldnssing Usuts , "01 ptnoMIIII'ts.
TAr opinivns u pnsud in tlfl r91um" bdowan tl11 oonsnutu of tilt Oltin ~'tlllty PltbiUitiltt
Co. 'r tditorill/ board, Ulfltu Olll t rwUt notHL

·.• -

OUR VIEW

••

.

~

'

''·'.

Legacy

'•

~

-'••
~

.,
''

Calm appraisal of Clinton
won't be coming soon

'•
''••

••

''•

W

•

I

ith seven months remaining in office, President Clinton's
.,'
pl ac e in history is already the topic of pundits and
•
columnists. Th eir vi ewpoint, of course, is colored by
their po liti cal persuasion, just as every American who cares will be
• so influenced.
'•
Sadly, the issue of" character" has dogged
'·~
ol' Bill since his first run for the presiden-

Rigltt now,
;:
the man
t00
.. tnsptres
~
1nany emo~
•
•
'(""-trons ln peo: pie, with lit~ }le neutrality
~ • in between.
''·

cy, and for a generation or so to come, it
probably will be the defining feature of his
t~
•
· •
two tern1s.
Never mind the concerns'about avoiding the draft, Whitewater and actions during his governorship of Arkansas. Paula
Jones and Monica Lewinsky (no. we're not
forgetting Gennifer Flowers and the other
"himbo eruptions") will shoot into mind
first.
So wi)l his statement on the Lewinsky
•
affair, no matter how much hair-splitting
~
lingers about whether he told the truth.
:
Actually. a cool analysis of Bill Clinton's legacy won 't be seen for
: decades to come. Right now, the man inspires too many emotions
: in people, with little neutrality in between.
'
But the history of evaluating our presidents shows us that with
~ passage of time, passions subside and scholars interpret the good and
• bad about a certain president.
1
~
Some will always remain great- Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln,
.i" etc.
:
Some have never escaped a negative connotation. Warren G.
• Harding, Ohio's last contribution to the White House, is an exam:. pie. He wasn't considered anything special when he was president,
; and the Teapot Dome scandal that erupted following his death in
: office didn't help matters.
• . Other leaders have been ripe for re-evaluation. Presiding over a
• prosperous time in our history, Dwight D. Eisenhower was thought
~ of as a great wartime general, but a dud as president.
~
Now, 30 years after his passing, historians are coming to appreci~ ate what he did in office. Eisenhower never felt the need to thump
~ his chest over his accomplishments; he was more interested in get~ ting the job done.
•
And Jimmy Carter is more popular now than he ever was when
~"' he occupied the Oval Office.
~
But Clinton will fall into the same category as Richard Nixon.
~ The personalities of both men, and the scandals that stained their
~ presidencies, tend to override rational judgment of what they've
• done.
: ; . History tells us Nixon did good things while in office. All of it,
.: however, is obscured by the shadow ofWatergate and his distinction
, as the only president to resign from office.
~
Whatever Clinton did, it too will be marked by the fact he was
~ impeached.
•
Time may heal aU wounds, as the saying goes, but it's also the one
~ factor that allows future generations to soberly gauge a leader's place
.; ;n history.
·
~ Bill Clinton's role will be judged more objectively at a later date;
~ noW is not the time to do so.

t,

~

--------------------------------~----------

..

•,)

~ TODAY

'I

IN HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l. '•

f

r

Today is Wednesday, June 7, the !59th day of 2000. There are 207
~ days )eft in the year.
:; Today's Highlight in History:
~ On june 7,1776, Richard Henry Lee ofVirginia proposed to the
·:-&lt;::ontinental Congress a resolution calling for a Declaration oflnde~
', pendence.
',• On this date:
~
In 1654, Louis the XIV was crowned l(jng of France in Rheims.
~ In 1769, frontiersman Daniel Boone first began to explore the
·: present- day Bluegrass State.
;: In 1848, French postimpressionist painter Paul Gauguin was born
., in Paris.
:, In 1864, Abraham Lincoln was nominated for another term as
'· president at his party's convention in Baltimore.
~ In 1929, the sovereign state ofVatican City came into existence as
:: copies of the Lateran Treaty were exchanged in Rome.
.
:: In 1939, l(jng George VI and Queen Elizabeth arrived at Niagara
;:--Falls, N .Y. , from Canada on the first visit to the United States by a
~ reigning British monarch .
.
~ In 1948, the C ommunist• completed their takeover of Czecho~ slovakia with the resignation o f President Eduard Benes.
'' In 1967, author-critic Dorothy Parker, famed for her caustic wit,
0: died in New York. ·
In 1981 , Israeli military plan es destroyed a nuclear power plant in
~ Iraq , a fac ility the Israelis charged could have been used to m ake
l. nud ear weapons.
In 1998, in a crim e that shocked the nation, james Byrd Jr., a 49~ year-old black ·man, was chained to a pi ckup truck and dragged to
" his death in Jasp er, Texas. (Two white men were senrenced to d eath
for the crime, a third to life in pri•on.)

t

..

WASHINGTON (AP) '!lie government is considering
for use of the abortion pill
Il,U-486 that could restrict
a9_eess to that early-abortion
option, 'Planned Parenthood's
director said Thesday.
q he Food and Drug Adminisfration said in Februaty it
wi)uld approve sale of RU-486,
al$o known as mifepristone,
ot~ce some final , but undisclosed, requirements were met.
The pill's sponsor, t6e nonprofit Population Council, last
week told abortion providers
tlii; FDA is proposing some
cQrbs on the pill's use, said Glor~ Feldt, national president of
Planned Parenthood.
: "We are deeply concerned
thAt FDA is considering restricti~ns that in my view would
vV;tually assure that very few
d(lctors would ever make
lllifepristone available," Feldt
said Tuesday Planned Parenth\)Od is a family planning group
" tli!at favors abortion rights.
lihe said the biggest concern
is an FDA proposal that physicians allowed to administer RU486 must be part of a registry,
which she · said would deter
doctors worried about antiabortion violence from offering
the pill.
,
Feldt said the FDA also is
con1idering long-term health
tracking of at least some RU486 recipients, something she
called unnecessary because half
a · million European women
have used the pill successfully
Mnce 1988.

)

.

- ...-....

THIRTYSOMETHING

Tourism: lf we hype it, they will come
Smokestacks, as much as we appreciate them,
aren't the only places jobs come fiom.
That was the message hammered home
Monday at City Park in Gallipolis. The occasion
was the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce's annual " Lunch with Our Legislators," a
program designed to give local folks a forum
with their elected leaders.
Monday's speakers shared a message vital to
the tri-county region's fi1ture: Tourism is comirlg to Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties. Now,
not later, is the time to get ready, folks .
So why would anyone want to come here?
There are A LOT of reasons; the region's history, for one. Many major episodes in our ~arion's
history were played out in our backyards fio~ the Rev?luflio~U~ 'W:U: to the Ci~ ~ tQ
the Undergrouna Railroad. ;
Folks love to visit historic sites, even the most
obscure. Take Rocky Mounr, N.C., for example.
Although Washington indeed slept near the
eastern Nor~h Carolina city, there weren't any
major battles fought there. But folks still visit.
That's because legend has it British General
Cornwallis watered his horse in a puddle collected in a large, moonscaped rock imide the
city limits. .
Don't laugh. I spent a year-and-a-half at the
Rocky Mount Telegram, and visitors frequently called or stopped by, seeking directions to
"The Rock." At first, I thought they were talking a~out North Carolina M9tor Speedway in
Rockingham, N.C., but I quickly learned the
local legend.
·
The tri-county region also has its share of
local legends, including Tu-Endie-Wei Park.
Local historians say Point Pleasant, not ConC9rd, Mass., was the site of the first shot fired in

R. Shawn
Lewis
MY VIEW
the Revolutionary War. That being the case, if I
were a Revolutionary War buff, I'd gladly plop
dow11 S5 for a guided tour of the , park. ,
•
And thus the st.;:, J ·flow of reven'u e generated by tourism begins ...
After I left the park, I'd be hungry. I'd stop off
a local eatery and grab a bite ($10). There, some
friendly locals would share tales of other local
legends and · hot spots. Intrigued, i'd ask for
directions or, preferably. buy a imp or guidebook ($5).
On my way to the next site, I'd notice my
tank was running low. So, I'd stop off at a local
gas station and fill up. While paying for my gas
($20), I'd buy a few impulse items or souvenirs
($1 0) to take home to friends and relatives ..
I'd arrive 'at my destination eager to learn
more. A tour guide would explain my options.
For S10, he'd ~ay, I could have a native walk
with the guide and explain the local history. For
$5, l could tour the site alone.
Being a tourist, I'd plop down $10 because I
don't know anything about the area. The tour
would last a couple of hours and, before I realized it, the day would be almost gone. I'd look

•

for a local hotel, motel or, better yet, bed and
breakfast.
·
.
Afier I found a room ($50), I'd be hungry
again. I'd ask the clerk for a good place to ea~,
and off I'd go. Once I had a fuU stomach ($20);
I'd be eager for some entertainment. I'd find , a
dinner theater or an outdoor drama to attend
($20).
•
Following this scenario, in one day in the tricounty region, I would spend at least $1s0,
snac~s not included. Multiply that figure by 100
visitors a month (a VERY conservative figure)
and you've got 51,5,000. Across a year, that's
S180,000 for local coffers.
And that's just from history buffS alonF.
Throw in farm lovers, river fans and festival
. ~on, a'\(i it's easx.to see ?te,~onsid~r,f!le ups}~~
to tdurism .
How do we get our hands on this money?
Teamwork, dedication and intensity.
')
first, our three counties need to work toget.h ~
er to develop tl;.ree-, four- and seven-day toU!"
of the region. Once we get tourists here, ~
. need to keep them here for a few days.
,~
Second, local residents need to know the his,- ,
tory of their own region. They need to be ablt;
to give accurate directions and historical,
accounts. Tourists are turned off1mmediately if
local folks don't know what's goiing on around
them.
.·
Third, flood the Internet, travel magazines
and other outlets with information on the tri,
county region. Twenty-first century travelers a~
information addicts. If they don't know the tri~
county exists, they won't visit.
,
The bottom line is this: If we hype it, people
will come. And they'll bring their wallets.
.·

(R. Shawn Lewis is managing editor

of Ohio

U!lley Publishi11g Co.)

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

So why not impose a tax on junk food?

..

.

•.

Qbesity kills nearly as many people as tob~c­
co and far more than alcohol, s0 why not tax fat
and sugar in foods to discourage consumption
and help finance health education?
·
Too complicated and too intrusive, say Clinton administr.ttion officials. Also, given the failed
1998 effort to hike tobacco taxes, a "fat tax"
probably wouldn't be politically popular.
But the idea has a lot to recommend it, especially the small tax proposed this week by the
Center for Science in the Public Interest to
finance nutrition education.
In a newspaper ad during the administration's
two-day National Nutrition Summit, CSP I
called for increasing the nutrition and fitness
budget of the Centers for Disease Control &amp;om
$6.5 million a year to $30 million and for
increasing the National Cancer Institute's campaign to get people to eat fruits and vegetables ·
fiom $1 million a year to $1 5 million.
Those government public relations efforts
currently have to eompete with billions of dollars in advertising by fast-food restaurants and
soft-drink manufacturers who encourage pqople to eat fatty, sugary foods.
'
The results are evident on almost any street
corner, shopJ&gt;ing center or office - 55 percent
of American adults are overweight and 33 percent are obese (dangerously fat). Even 10 percent of all children are overweight.
·At the nation's first White House Conference
on nutrition in 1969, the top item was hunger.
Now, as Health and Human Services Secretary
Donna Shalala remarked at the conference this
week, "Except for a few isolated pockets, we've
succeeded in onding hunger in America."
.
But, she said, " we have a .serious weight prob-

minutes a day of exercise to keep fit.
'
So, what about taxes? Asked about this at
nutrition conference, Shalala joked that there'
would be ,no "Twinkie Tax" under Presidelit'
Clinton, a famous consumer ofjunk food.
·:·
Seriously, junk- food taxes "would not tie·
consistent with what we are trying to do, which
is to promote balance and appropriate levels of
cortsumption. Some fat in your diet is good:'
Similarly, Agriculture Secr~;tary Dan Glickman said, ''I'd be reluctant for government to;&gt;
say which fQods are good and which are bad:·
We tax cigarettes because they are dangero~·
when used correctly How do you determine
when food is used incorrectly? Should we haVe
sugar police?"
'
The government's preferred option is to pui)..
lish and publicize, as it did again this week;
. dietary guidelines based on the latest scientific
findings on weight and nutrition.
The problem, as Glickman pointed out, is that
"we haven't conununicated the guidelines well:
We'd like the resources to do that."
·
The nonprofit CSPI says that a one-cent tax
per 12 ounces of soft drink could raise $1.5 billion a year and one cent per pound on cancjy
would raise $300 million. ·
·
'
Taxing fa.t might be administratively difficult;
although nutrition reporting requirements for
packaged foods might
it feasible. "F~t .
police" testing fast-food restaurants and applyc',
ing a "cholesterol tax" :wouldn't be impossible.'
But politically speaking, it might be. With ·:a·
majority of the American people overweight, it
might be dangerous for a politician to try to taJ! ·
the stuff that made them fat, even ifit also might 'kiU them.

tile·

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
lem.. . an epidemic of obesity:' The percentage
of adults defined as obese has increased 50 percent in 20 years, she said, and obesity among
children has doubled.
According to Shalala, four of the country's
leading. killer diseases - heart disease, some
cancers, diabetes and stroke - are linked to di et
and lack of physical activity, leading to about
300,000 deaths a year.
·
·
Smoking kills 400,000 people a year. Alcohol
abuse kills about 100,000, including those from
auto accidents. Gun violence and accidents kill
33,000, and drug abuse kills 65,000 fiom overdoses and spreading diseases like AIDS.
Yet the amount of attention and political
energy devoted to obesity pales in comparison
to the other problems.
Taxes are society's favorite·means of curtailing
tobacco and alcohol use, alvng with regulation,
which is the favored method of controlling
guns and drugs .
Regulation clearly won 't work for junk foods
and soft drinks. And the government can't
require people to do the recommended 30

make

'

..

Crowds celebrate opening of D-Day museum
NEW ORLEANS (AP.) - World War II
veterans looke d back to 56 years ago and
others paused to honor them Tuesday as
crowds cel ebrated the op ening of the
National D-Day Museum.
Retired Sgt. C harles H . Porbes wore his
medak Arnold Smith's reunion baseball cap
and "World War II veteran" tag were all that
marked his military se rvice.
Both came early to the Superdome to
watch fellow veterans parade past with a flyover by 54 military planes as the museum
officially opened o n the 56th anniversary of

the invasion to liberate Europe from Nazi
terror.
"I got up extra early this morning. Five
o' clock:' said Porbes, who survived three
can1paigns in New Guinea and one in ·the
Philippines and now lives in eastern N ew
Orleans.
Porbes shared memories of his servi ce
with Vietnam veterans Olden Ledet and Jim
Breland, who carried a small flag and a sign
reading, "Thanks to World War II veterans."
" It was so hot in the hold that we slept on
deck . They didn't have to blow reveille -

..'

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cars dangerous

I

historian said.
In the from row at the o pen ing were eigh t
Medal of H onor winners. backed by hundreds of dignitaries. ele cted officials and veterans who paid homage m those who feU.
· "We are the heirs of your sac rifi ce and we
ca n o nly stand h ere in awe of your courage;•
Defense Secretary William Cohen said.
Director Steven Sp1dberg said , " We stand
in front of something I wish existed in every
city in thi s country. something our children
must visit and teachers should fac ilitate fiom
now into forever."

STORE HOURS
Monday t•r•
Sunday

Leavins kids In

.."~ASHINGTON (AP) - A
child left in a family car for just
ri)oments can suffoca~e on a hot
dll)' or knock it into gear with
~c results, says a group seeking to 111ake it illegal in every
state to leave children unattend~d in vehicles.
. "I know how deadly one
minute can be;· said Michele
Struttmann of Missouri, cof'opnder of the advocacy group
Kids 'n Cars.
·
, Struttniann's 2-year-old son,
Harrison, was killed and she was
&lt;;riticaUy injured two years ago
when toddlers aged 2 ~nd 3
~re left alone in a running van
~' their parents stood outside
rO)king. One child shifted the
van into gear and ran down
Sthmmann and her son as they
sat on a park bench.
"What does it take for people to wake up and understand
tqat leaving kids alone in a car is
a tragedy waiting to happen?"
she asked.

they j ust turned that hose on us;• he sai d.
Smith, 79 , o fPecola, Okla., said he had five
combat stars in the Philippines and got credit for shooting down nine Japanese planes,
At the museum . fo under Stephen
Ambrose looked tired from several days of
events but wore the blazing smile of someone who had seen his dream come true.
" It's just wonderful to see the babyboomer generation and their children going
up to the veterans and thanking them fo r
what they did and to see the veterans discussing the war with them;' the 04-year-bld

P0 WEL L 'S

Firms eye guidelines
for 'Net transactions
. WASHINGTON (AP) Seven leading Internet and electronic commerce companies
proposed guidelines Tuesday to
protect consumers who make .
purchases online and help them
...!solve disputes with merchants.
The Electronic Commerce
ar\d Consumer Protection
Group, which includes America
Online, AT&amp;T, Dell, IBM,
Microsoft, Network Solutions
and Time Warner, proposed the
new guidelines at the start of a
!Wo-day Federal Trade Comiffission workshop on online
business.
· "Consumers should be
empowered to deal only with
reputable merchants, under
terms that make them comfortaole and with assurance that disagreements will be promptly
and reasonably resolved;' said
R,oger Cochetti, a spokesman
for the group and a senior vice
president at Network Solutions.
· The guidelines were released
after nine months of negotiations among the companies and
consumer groups.
Under the proposal, merchants should provide consumers with all the terms and
conditions of their purchase,
including the price; additional
fees like shipping; warranty
information; and ways to con- '
t;l&lt;;t the company. Merchants
stiould also give consumers an
qpportunity to review their
purchases before they make a
fi.llal decision to buy

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Page A&amp;
June 7, 2000

l#ight-loss marketing hits above and below the belt
DEAR ABBY: My mother, who lives
in California, recently received a page torn
from a newspaper with a handwritten note
attached that said, "Jenny, try it. It works!"
lt was a full-page ad for a weight-loss
product.
My husband's "Aunt Ethel;' who lives in
Ohio, got the same thing with her name
handwritten on it. Neither of the notes
had a signature.
Both my mother and Aunt Ethel
thought it was an attack from an acquaintance or family member who didn't have
the courage to sign a name. They were
deeply hurt.
Luckily, when we heard that rhey both
got the exact !arne ad, we figured out that
·it was a sleazy marketing scam.
Abby, please inform your readers about
this advertising technique. I'm sure many

I

'
I

.

with that kind of advertising. One of my
staff, who has a weight problem to contend with, has received the same ad on
more than one occasion. However,
because of a co\umn I wrote on this same
subject a few years ago, shefrecognized the
marketing tactic for what it was and tossed
it immediately.We suspect that some of the
plus-sized clothing companies that market
ADVICE
their clothing through catalog; sell their
customer lists.
R eaders, should you receive one of these
other people have been hurt by ir,and they
ads,
don't j ump to the conclusion that
should be made aware that the ads have
not been sent by an insensitive "friend." It's someone is chastising you for your weight.
terrible that a company would hurt some- And, if the product seems too good to be
one to promote its product. This type of true, it probably is. Don't fall for false
marketing should be exposed for what it advertising.
DEAR ABBY: I have been seeing this
is. - CONCERNED IN CHESAgirl for ahnost six months, and she means
PEAKE,VA.
DEAR CONCERNED: I'm familiar the world to me, but I get so upset when

Abigail

Van Buren

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Community Calendar
is published as a ftee service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed tu promote
sales or fund-raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

•••

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE -Scipio Township Trustee meeting, Wednesday,
6:30 p.m . Pageville town hall.

•••

THURSDAY
POMEROY Rita and
Junior White will play at the
Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, 5:30 p.m.

•••

MIDDLEPORT Eleanor
Circle of Heath Methodist
Church will have its annual picnic Thursday, at 6:30 p.m . at the

church. Members are to take a
covered d'ish and their own
tableware.

•••

RAC INE - Sonshine Circle,
Dorcas
United
Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. Thursday at the
church.

•••

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, regular meeting,
Thursday, 8 p.m . Refreshments.

•••

ljdl!y and Saturday, 7 p.m. Sun-

~y. lb a.m. followed by carry-in
d1nner, second service, 2 p.m.
Comfort Touch Ministries to
present chalk artist Dr. Dean
Watson .

•••

SATURDAY
RACINE ·- Whaley family
reunion Saturday, Racine Star
J\: .· 1 Park. Take covered dish.
chairs and dancing shoes. There
will be live music byTrue Country. Dinner at 1. p.m.

•••

FRIDAY
CHESHIRE - W idows Fe!-·
BURLINGHAM - Burlinglowship will meet in Cheshire ham Camp, Modern Woodmen,
Park for a pot luck picnic at potluck dinner, 6 p.m. at the hall
noon Friday. Those attending are Saturday. Fathers will be recogasked to bring a covered dish and nized. Friends and neighbors
their own table service. In case of welcome.
rain , the event will take place at
the Church of Christ, Middleport.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
REEDSVILLE Revival , meeting. Hall located at 28051
Eden United Brethren Church, St. Rt. 7, Cheshire.

•••

•••

'

'

SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

:I

Youth program
set Friday
POMEROY - Area teens are
; invited to join iri the "Friday's
· Fun Food and Fellowship" project
: at God's Neighborhood Escape
: for Teens Friday
: Nutritional foods will be avail; able free: of charge for snacking
• while teens are at the center. Teens
·can play non-violent games, com" puter programs, and cards free of
, • · charge in the center's game room
• which is located on Main Stteet
. ; in Pomeroy. Pool tables are available for teens to use.
•
• ·The center is op~n from 6 p.m.
to 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights.

OU graduation
set for S.turclay

•
:
•

!
,
•
:
;
I

,'

ATHENS - Helen Thomas,
· former United Press International
· White House bureau chief, will
· address the morning and after· noon Ohio University commencement programs to take
: place in the 13,000 seat Convoca; tion Center Saturday.
. A reporter for UP! trom 1943
· until her resignation last month,
.; Thomas has served as a visiting
: professional for the E.W Scripps
School ofjournalism and is a past
winner of the Carr VanAnda
Award, the school's highest honor.
Graduating seniors from the
colleges of busine,.., comrnunica: tion, fine arts and health and
· human service will receive diplO"
mas at the morning session, while
graduates of the Honors Tutorial
College and the colleges of arts
and sciences, education, engineer• ing, and U niversiry College will
' attend the afternoon program .
Thomas will speak at both the
, 10 a.m. and 2:30p.m. ceremonies.
Master and PH.D. candidates will
participate in ceremonies at 10
·• a.m. Friday with Surrendser K.
Jain, professor of mathematics, to
• speak. College of Osteopathic
• Medicine's conunencen1ent was
! .held June 3 in Templeton- Black: burn Alumni Memorial Auditorium.

•
'

Grange plans
for inspection
POMEROY Plans for
inspection to be held on July 6
were discussed when the Hemlock Grange met recently at the
grange hall.
A potluck dinner will precede
the meeting. Pnctice for inspection will be held . on July 3 at 7
p.m at the hall.
· · ·
Rosalie Story presided at the
meeting with the Grange making
donations Friendly Hills, . the
Youth Leadership Fund, the Deaf
Fund, and Kelley Farm.
Roy Grueser ga\'~ a report on
farmers who are selling their
farms and the propo~d increase
in the price of stamps by the Post
Office. He noted that the National Gcmge opposes any increase in
price on stamps.
Several grangers were recognized for having June birthdays. A
thank 'ynu note was read from the
Smith family, and reported ill
were Hilbert Quivey and Bob
Brewer.
The literary program was presented by Story with readings
being given by Vada Hazelton,
Barbara Fry and Sylvia Midkiff
Rowers were given to all the
fathers attending in observance of
Father's Day. A reading "Because
You're Special" by Story concluded the program.

Alumni plans
finalized
TUPPERS PLAINS - Officers and committee chairmen of
the Eastern Alurimi Association
met recently to finalize plans for
the 2000 banquet to be held at
the Eastern .Elementary cafetorium on Friday at 6 p.m., with a
social hour preceded in the dinner
at 7 p.m.
The event will include catered
homemade chicken and noodle
dinners, tours of the. school campus, entertainment, a memorabilia
. update and review, as well as a
business meeting and other topics.
The highli.ght of the evening's
festivities will be the award of the
scholarship to a 2000 graduate.
The cost is $10 per person, and
'are available at Taz's Marathon,
Francis Aorist, Chester TNT Pit
·Stop, Summerfield's, Reed's
' Country Store, Cool Spot, Qualiry Furniture Plus, Tuppers Plains
Little John's Citgo, and from
alumni officers by calling 9854108 or 985-4362.
Those present agreed that the
funds for the association are in
need of replenishing, and the
chances of dissolving the organization is great. The need is great
for physical and monetary support
from all of the alumni who want
to know about their school.

plans we make fall through.
The other night I suggested going to a
movie, and later when I called to see if she
wanted to go, she said she was just going to
hang out at home and take it easy.! understand why and everything, but for some
reason this .extreme anger builds up inside
me , and I end up being silent, and she
knows I'm upset.The same thing happens
if she gets called in to work - she's a server, and if she gets offered a good shift (Friday or Saturday), then she's going to take it
unless we have some major plans.
I totally understand why she needs to do
this stuff (she's a part- time student as well) ,
but it still doesn't prevent me from getting
angry. I really care for this girl, and 1 don't
want to do anything to hurt her in any
way, but I can't seem to conttol these feelings.They subside after about half an hour,

edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

we

higll-resotutlon. higtl-quallty JPEG files.
• AdvantiJ&lt;Wpe photographs are discouraged due to their ~nlque sizes,
whicl1 do not translate well to newspaper columns. Advant1x-type nega-

tives are not accepted.
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• Please be sure ail subjects in photographs are cle1111V lelentified on
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is available without prescription.
Its major drawback is that it doesn't cure the underlying condition.
When you stop using it, hair loss
resumes.
There are other medicines that
are being evaluated in research
programs for women with pattern alopecia, but these are not
available yet. One of these is the
drug finesteride that has proven
of benefit for men, but it can
cause birth defects. Therefore, it
can't be used by women of reproductive age.
You should also be aware of the
influence of other drugs on this
condition. For instance, women
who take birth control pills
should be on "estrogen dominant" pills, and older women on
hormone replacement therapy
should take the lowest dose of
progestin. This minimizes the
level of the hormones that tend
to promote hair loss. Talk to }'Qur
family doctor or dermatologist.
He or she can advise you about
these treatment choices.
aohn c. J.#lf is an associate pro·

Jessor family medicine at Ohio Uni·
ve;sity~ College of Osteopathic Med·
icine.)

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
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992-2156

Family Practice Physician

Aria L. McVicker

,

WASHINGTON (AP) with Kennedy on the bill and
~, bemocrats said they may bypass helping to recruit Senate
,, ,-House-Senate negotiations on a Republicans, is looking at
- patients' bill of rights and intro- ' including GOP-favored tax pro'" ,Puce as early as today a J:&gt;iparti- vmons.
,~an bill on the Senate floor. .
Possibilities include tax deduc, .' ;, The move is being led by Sen. tions for people who purchase .
~::.,EdwatdKennedy, D-Mass ., a key their own insurance and modest
-·A nember of the committee that expansion of a medical savings
;, .~as been working for more than account pilot program that lets
_ three months to combine bills self-employed people save tax-, yassed by the House and Senate free money to PaY doctor bills,
, : aimed at strengthening the hand said John Stone, Norwood's
· of patients in dealing with spokesman.
~- .HMOs and other health plans.
Conimittee R epublicans criti.. ;, With talks stalled and time cized the Democrats' plan to cir- : JUnning out before the summer cumvent their own efforts to
,,· ,recess, Kennedy and other reach a compromise; . which
Democrats are ready to take would go tjl. both houses of
alternative · steps to get a bill, Congress for a vote and then to
· aides said.
President Clinton for signing.
As early as today, Kennedy
"Moving to the floor right
•.•may offer le~slation - fash- now would be an ac t of
· ioned after the bipartisan House extremely poor .faith;' said Gayle
bill favored by the White House Osterberg, speaking for Sen.
~nd some Republicans - as an. Don Nickles, R-Okla., €ommit~mendment to a defense au tho- ·. tee ch:jirman."Ifwe are going to
t ization bill now on the floor.
have a bipartisan agreement then
! The new .bill would guarantee folks should be supportive of the
tasic protections for all 161 mil- conference and have some
~on Americans in private health patience:•
'
plans, establish a process for
Kennedy •is still open to a
t ppealing HMO decisions and committee· agreement on a bill,
.,xpand patients' rights to sue Manley said. ·
~heir health plans if they were
The Senate passed a GOP&amp;armed by decisions not to backed patients' rights bill last
cover care.
year that would provide many of
. ' Committee Republicans cast the same protections as the pro. doubt on whether the bill could posed legislation, but would not
-.·:.pass and accused Democrats of expand lawsuit rights and applies
, .. . trying to foil efforts to reach to fewer people.
,., ,bipartisan agreement so they
Another . patients' rights bill
· ' could tell voters this fall that passed last fall would h~ve to be
.. ~epublicans wouldn't support · reintroduced and voted on ·again
· , · patient protections.
.
in the House, where Republi.;. , Kennedy ~nd his allies believe cans are divided on the issue.
. , .. . re"election pressures will bring
Some, siding with Democrats,
, . enough GOP support, because · say all Americans should get fed: · some senators will want their era! protections arid health plans
, : :. ~ampaigns to address patients' should be held liable for negli.,. .frustrations with managed _care gence. '
_ .. ~rganizations.
Many Senate Republicans,
· "We are optimistic we cari do however, believe patient protec. ~ ;[; sq;• said Jim Manley, Kennedy's tions should be left up to states
,.::Js!'okesman . A vote on . the and contend that employers will
, .-!pfen""..bill could come. Within ,d rop worj(er health benefits
'.', :::;..~ ~eks, he said.
rather ~ , face expensive law-.•..,: Aide~ 5i'id Rep. Charlie Nor- suits, adding to the 44 million
(t • ;.vood, R-Ga., who is working
uninsured Americans.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new virus tar- cate this in America," said Vincent Gullotto,
F-Secure, Network Associates, and Kaspersky
geting a Spanish-b~d cell phone network director of the AVERT. antivirus center for Lab, an antivirus company based in Russia,
foreshadows a growing threat to the cell Santa Clara, Calif-based Network Associates. reported receiving reports ofrimofonica infecphones, pagers and handheld computers " It won't be hard."
tions. In one case, a single corporate user inadbecoming ubiquitous worldwide, security
Secuiity expem say the Spanish virus may be vertently sent out 500 copies of it.
the leading edge of attacks on other handheld
experts say.
The antivirus firms obtained a copy of the
T he virus, similar to the Love Letter virus that devices like Palm Pilots and Microsoft Pocket malicious code and created a software solution
recently clogged network computers, was writ- PC computers.
to stop its spread.
ten to attack phones on the Telefonica cellular
"Virus writers are starting to target handln addition to replicating itself, it also inserts a
network, three leading antivirus firms said Tues- helds and mobile phones," said Mikko Hyppn- dangerous Trojan· horse program into rhe user's
day
nen, chief scientist for the Finnish-based F- computer. That program wipes out the user's
The virus, which the companies say hit at Secure antivirus company. "That's what's signif- hard drive as well as the basic configuration setleast one large Spanish company, is called "Tim~ icant about this virus."
tings that tell the computer what kind of hardofonica." In Spanjsh, "timo" means "prank." The
According to F-Secure, the Ti.mofonica virus ' ware is installed.
virus can also seriously damage an infected is spread in a traditional manner- as an e-mail
Vincente Coil, a representative in Spain for
computer. I
attachment. When a recipient opens the infect- Kaspersky Labs, said the recent spate of virus
Yet Teleforuca, owner of Spain's largest cell ed attachment, the virus plus a message critical attacks using e-mail attachment• made users
phone network, said it had received no reports ofTelefonica is sent to each e-mail address in his more vigilant, and that should help stem the
·
of problems. "We have no complaint from any or her address book.
spread ofTimofonica.
customer about it," said spokesman Ed Holland.
T he twist is this virus also sends a text mes"The paranoia of !LOVEYOU made people
Experts say the virus could be modijied to hit sage to a randomly selected cell phone on Tele- not trusr attachments," Coil said:
any cell phone that can get pages through an e- fonica's network each time it spreads.
But Gullotto said as the operating systems for
mail address. A large number of messages could
" It doesn't infect the phones themselves, but handheld deilices become more sophjsti cated to
clog the network.
they get prank messages;• Hypponen said. The · allow the creation of miniature automation
"I've asked the researchers to be extremely virus sends as many messages to phones as there programs known as macros, the ·potential to
aware that someone will probably try to repli- are contacts in the infected user's address book. wreak havoc will grow.

~(6~,

·Dr. Aria McVIcker, completed her
Residency at Doctors Hospital,
Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board CertifJed by the American
Osteopathic Board of
Family Physicians.
I

To Schedule an Appointment!
call (7 40) 446-5137
•

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
Holzer Clinic •••~••Keeping the Promise!
www.llolurcllnlc.com

D
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could rule as
as today on
~ ::Microsoft breakup

U.S.D.A. Select
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SEATTLE (AP) -With final feasibility of complying with
';arguments in hand, a judge over- many of the provisions as draft.I seeing the histqdc Microsoft ed."
In Washington, Justice D~part­
Corp. antitrult case may be ready
ment
spokeswoman Gina T:llam·' •to rule on whether to split the
dismissed
Microsoft's
computer software giant into two ona
"The
filing
rehashes
response.
separate companies.
old arguments,
On Tuesday, Microsoft attor- Microsoft's
neys filed a fresh response to the ignores the extensive violations
Justice Department's breakup found by the court, denies the
_ plan. The company's filing - a need for serious relief and grossly .
distorts our proposed remedy;·
:_:;;ru.y . earlier · tha11 expected /1cleared the way for the U .S. Dis- she said.
Microsoft had been due to fil~
1 ;"'trictJudge T.homas Penfield Jack: ~on, who sits in Washington; · the brief !O&amp;y. But company
spokesman Jim.Cullinan said the
; ~.C., to rule at any time.
• ~ As his company was taking care "cosmetic" filing by the govern~of the last-minute legal work, ment made it easier to reply
· :•Microsoft
Chairman Bill Gates quickly
~
Jackson had been set to rule on
• ~;was in Washington, D.C., appear: : ing at a congressional hearing on the case- including whether to
! · the future of high technology in split the company into twb par\5
last week, but the Justice
; , the United States and around the pepartment asked for more time
:~ world.
In its p.!ing, Microsoft, disdain- so it could address clarifications
; ~ful of the department's response brought up by the company.
In Monday's court filing, the
J e to the compafJ;fs earlier con: ~cerns, asked J~ckson to. include Justice · Department agreed to
i , previously · suggested language grammatical and semantic
: ~that would give a broken-up changes, but refused to concede
i ~ Microsoft more freedom to enter to the company on major points
; ~~ into agreements with software such· as giving Microsoft addi1•: developers and computer makers. tional time to nail down details
, ;:, "Instead of agreeing to correct on how the breakup should
·'[~the many defects in the revised occur, or more freedom in licens· ,• proposed final judgment, and ing and marketing its products.
The department and 17 states
' :: thereby minimize the damage
I ;~ that its entry would inflict on a have pushed to have Microsoft
• •• d
f
. .
. h
broken into two separate compaI .,lwi e range o partiCipants m t e
( tZcomputer industry, the govern- nies - one to market and pro' ~ ment has agreed to only a few duce Windows, and the other to
: ~ cosmetic changes;' Microsoft's handle Microsoft Office . and
other applications software, along
t ~ lawyers wrote.
: ~ In ihe brief, Microsoft also said with the Internet. Explorer Web
: ~ the Justice Department was, in its browser.
!~ recent filing, "confirming that In a ruling that shook the com: :·~c ertain provisions are more pany, the industry and the fin~li­
• • extreme than they might appear cial markets, Jackson held April 3
: N at first hlush" and "blithely ignor- that Microsoft engaged in anti~!fing
1ubstantial
problems competitive conduct in violation
: SiM.f&amp;lSoft identified regarding the of antitrust laws.

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Aria L. McVicker, DO

· Pomerpy,, Middleport, Ohio

!

'Is Now Accepting New Patients
At
!!

We want yo~r photos!
The Sentinel welcomes your photOgraphs: Here are a few guidelines for
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but by then I have already upset her.
Do ynu know of anything I can do to
control my feelings - maybe count to
100 before I say something?- ANGRY
IN O'ITAWA
DEAR ANGRY: Actions are controllable; feelings less so. Learning to understand ynur feelings would be a step in the
right direction, because your anger comes
&amp;om hurt. Some sessions with a psychologist to probe into why you take normal
changes of plans so personally might provide insight. Most people react with disappointment to such occurrences, not with
extreme anger.
In the meantime, instead of counting to
100. remind yourself that people run away
from those who pout, sulk and make others uncomfortable by applying the silent
treatment.

There ai:e some subtle differences between men and women
in the common h air loss patterns
that come - almost universally
- with advancing age. Men usu ally have recession . of their hairlines at the forehead, while
women typically do not. Both
have a decrease in the number of
hairs on the top of the head while
simultaneously having a much
smaller decrease in the hair count
on the sides and back of the head.
Men also have a. substantially
greater chance of losing all hair
from the top of the head rather
than the just ewerj,encing, as· is
typical of women ; a general
"thinning" . throughout that
region of the head. So it's unlikely that you'll end up looking like
your grandfather.
Since your doctor didn't offer
you much help, I'd suggest tliat
you see a dermatologist. He or
she will probably 'want to do
some blood tests to be sure that
you don't have one of the conditions like iron deficiency anemia
that requires specific treatment. If
you have the common inherited
disorder that I've talked about,
doctors will then call your condition "pattern alopecia."
Currently, there is only one
medicine that works safely for
this disorder - minoxidil applied
to the scalp every day. This works
to maintain the present hair
count in mos~ women (and men),
and some even grow more hair. It

Weclne•day, June 7, ~

rights bill looming

Thinning hair .not always a sign of baldness
. It( JOHN C. WOLF, D.O.
Question: I'm a 36-year-old
woman, and I'm worried about
becoming as bald as my ~randfa­
ther. My hair is definitely thinner
than it was a few years ago. My
doctor wasn't very helpful when I
explained my · concerns to him.
Do you have any suggestions
about how I can determine ifl'm
going to go bald, and if so, what I
can do to prevent it?
Answer: Hair serves several
important, but not essential , functions. It provides important insulation for the head, as bald-headed old men like myself are
reminded every time we go outside in the winter without a hat.
Hair's role in temperature control
is importa]!V-: but seldom critical- as part of your body's overall efforts to keep its various regulatory processes "on track."
Hair's most important role,
then, is in its contribution to selfimage. Hairstyle, when considered in reference to society, is an
important clue to how you view
yourself and how you want to
interac.tt with others. This·is much
like the' impact on our interpersonal interactions made by the
style and color of clothing we
choose to wear. Consequently, the
loss of hair has impact upon one's
self-image. Since this change is
not planned, it is generally viewed
as undesirable.
Both men and women lose hair
for a number of reasons. The most
common culprits are anemia, low
thyroid levels, infections of the
scalp, hormonal disorders involving estrogens and androgens,
autoimmune diseases and a serious illness of any cause. The vast
majority of male and female hair
loss, however, can be directly
traced to your heredity. If your
parents and grandparenls had thin
hair or bald heads, you probably
will too. Consequently, your family photo alhum is a helpful tool
in predictin~ your risk. . •

.·',.·----------~----~~~:-----------------------~------------------------~~~;!~::~~~~~~----------------------~----------~~~_;~~--~--~~-­
networks
:!~Bipartisan patients' Virus could be used to cripple cell _

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_T_he_D_ai...;;·ly_s_e_n_ti_n_el_'__. ~._ _ _ _

Page A&amp;
June 7, 2000

l#ight-loss marketing hits above and below the belt
DEAR ABBY: My mother, who lives
in California, recently received a page torn
from a newspaper with a handwritten note
attached that said, "Jenny, try it. It works!"
lt was a full-page ad for a weight-loss
product.
My husband's "Aunt Ethel;' who lives in
Ohio, got the same thing with her name
handwritten on it. Neither of the notes
had a signature.
Both my mother and Aunt Ethel
thought it was an attack from an acquaintance or family member who didn't have
the courage to sign a name. They were
deeply hurt.
Luckily, when we heard that rhey both
got the exact !arne ad, we figured out that
·it was a sleazy marketing scam.
Abby, please inform your readers about
this advertising technique. I'm sure many

I

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with that kind of advertising. One of my
staff, who has a weight problem to contend with, has received the same ad on
more than one occasion. However,
because of a co\umn I wrote on this same
subject a few years ago, shefrecognized the
marketing tactic for what it was and tossed
it immediately.We suspect that some of the
plus-sized clothing companies that market
ADVICE
their clothing through catalog; sell their
customer lists.
R eaders, should you receive one of these
other people have been hurt by ir,and they
ads,
don't j ump to the conclusion that
should be made aware that the ads have
not been sent by an insensitive "friend." It's someone is chastising you for your weight.
terrible that a company would hurt some- And, if the product seems too good to be
one to promote its product. This type of true, it probably is. Don't fall for false
marketing should be exposed for what it advertising.
DEAR ABBY: I have been seeing this
is. - CONCERNED IN CHESAgirl for ahnost six months, and she means
PEAKE,VA.
DEAR CONCERNED: I'm familiar the world to me, but I get so upset when

Abigail

Van Buren

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
The Community Calendar
is published as a ftee service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed tu promote
sales or fund-raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

•••

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE -Scipio Township Trustee meeting, Wednesday,
6:30 p.m . Pageville town hall.

•••

THURSDAY
POMEROY Rita and
Junior White will play at the
Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, 5:30 p.m.

•••

MIDDLEPORT Eleanor
Circle of Heath Methodist
Church will have its annual picnic Thursday, at 6:30 p.m . at the

church. Members are to take a
covered d'ish and their own
tableware.

•••

RAC INE - Sonshine Circle,
Dorcas
United
Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. Thursday at the
church.

•••

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, regular meeting,
Thursday, 8 p.m . Refreshments.

•••

ljdl!y and Saturday, 7 p.m. Sun-

~y. lb a.m. followed by carry-in
d1nner, second service, 2 p.m.
Comfort Touch Ministries to
present chalk artist Dr. Dean
Watson .

•••

SATURDAY
RACINE ·- Whaley family
reunion Saturday, Racine Star
J\: .· 1 Park. Take covered dish.
chairs and dancing shoes. There
will be live music byTrue Country. Dinner at 1. p.m.

•••

FRIDAY
CHESHIRE - W idows Fe!-·
BURLINGHAM - Burlinglowship will meet in Cheshire ham Camp, Modern Woodmen,
Park for a pot luck picnic at potluck dinner, 6 p.m. at the hall
noon Friday. Those attending are Saturday. Fathers will be recogasked to bring a covered dish and nized. Friends and neighbors
their own table service. In case of welcome.
rain , the event will take place at
the Church of Christ, Middleport.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p.m
REEDSVILLE Revival , meeting. Hall located at 28051
Eden United Brethren Church, St. Rt. 7, Cheshire.

•••

•••

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SOCIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

:I

Youth program
set Friday
POMEROY - Area teens are
; invited to join iri the "Friday's
· Fun Food and Fellowship" project
: at God's Neighborhood Escape
: for Teens Friday
: Nutritional foods will be avail; able free: of charge for snacking
• while teens are at the center. Teens
·can play non-violent games, com" puter programs, and cards free of
, • · charge in the center's game room
• which is located on Main Stteet
. ; in Pomeroy. Pool tables are available for teens to use.
•
• ·The center is op~n from 6 p.m.
to 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights.

OU graduation
set for S.turclay

•
:
•

!
,
•
:
;
I

,'

ATHENS - Helen Thomas,
· former United Press International
· White House bureau chief, will
· address the morning and after· noon Ohio University commencement programs to take
: place in the 13,000 seat Convoca; tion Center Saturday.
. A reporter for UP! trom 1943
· until her resignation last month,
.; Thomas has served as a visiting
: professional for the E.W Scripps
School ofjournalism and is a past
winner of the Carr VanAnda
Award, the school's highest honor.
Graduating seniors from the
colleges of busine,.., comrnunica: tion, fine arts and health and
· human service will receive diplO"
mas at the morning session, while
graduates of the Honors Tutorial
College and the colleges of arts
and sciences, education, engineer• ing, and U niversiry College will
' attend the afternoon program .
Thomas will speak at both the
, 10 a.m. and 2:30p.m. ceremonies.
Master and PH.D. candidates will
participate in ceremonies at 10
·• a.m. Friday with Surrendser K.
Jain, professor of mathematics, to
• speak. College of Osteopathic
• Medicine's conunencen1ent was
! .held June 3 in Templeton- Black: burn Alumni Memorial Auditorium.

•
'

Grange plans
for inspection
POMEROY Plans for
inspection to be held on July 6
were discussed when the Hemlock Grange met recently at the
grange hall.
A potluck dinner will precede
the meeting. Pnctice for inspection will be held . on July 3 at 7
p.m at the hall.
· · ·
Rosalie Story presided at the
meeting with the Grange making
donations Friendly Hills, . the
Youth Leadership Fund, the Deaf
Fund, and Kelley Farm.
Roy Grueser ga\'~ a report on
farmers who are selling their
farms and the propo~d increase
in the price of stamps by the Post
Office. He noted that the National Gcmge opposes any increase in
price on stamps.
Several grangers were recognized for having June birthdays. A
thank 'ynu note was read from the
Smith family, and reported ill
were Hilbert Quivey and Bob
Brewer.
The literary program was presented by Story with readings
being given by Vada Hazelton,
Barbara Fry and Sylvia Midkiff
Rowers were given to all the
fathers attending in observance of
Father's Day. A reading "Because
You're Special" by Story concluded the program.

Alumni plans
finalized
TUPPERS PLAINS - Officers and committee chairmen of
the Eastern Alurimi Association
met recently to finalize plans for
the 2000 banquet to be held at
the Eastern .Elementary cafetorium on Friday at 6 p.m., with a
social hour preceded in the dinner
at 7 p.m.
The event will include catered
homemade chicken and noodle
dinners, tours of the. school campus, entertainment, a memorabilia
. update and review, as well as a
business meeting and other topics.
The highli.ght of the evening's
festivities will be the award of the
scholarship to a 2000 graduate.
The cost is $10 per person, and
'are available at Taz's Marathon,
Francis Aorist, Chester TNT Pit
·Stop, Summerfield's, Reed's
' Country Store, Cool Spot, Qualiry Furniture Plus, Tuppers Plains
Little John's Citgo, and from
alumni officers by calling 9854108 or 985-4362.
Those present agreed that the
funds for the association are in
need of replenishing, and the
chances of dissolving the organization is great. The need is great
for physical and monetary support
from all of the alumni who want
to know about their school.

plans we make fall through.
The other night I suggested going to a
movie, and later when I called to see if she
wanted to go, she said she was just going to
hang out at home and take it easy.! understand why and everything, but for some
reason this .extreme anger builds up inside
me , and I end up being silent, and she
knows I'm upset.The same thing happens
if she gets called in to work - she's a server, and if she gets offered a good shift (Friday or Saturday), then she's going to take it
unless we have some major plans.
I totally understand why she needs to do
this stuff (she's a part- time student as well) ,
but it still doesn't prevent me from getting
angry. I really care for this girl, and 1 don't
want to do anything to hurt her in any
way, but I can't seem to conttol these feelings.They subside after about half an hour,

edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

we

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• AdvantiJ&lt;Wpe photographs are discouraged due to their ~nlque sizes,
whicl1 do not translate well to newspaper columns. Advant1x-type nega-

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• Please be sure ail subjects in photographs are cle1111V lelentified on
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is available without prescription.
Its major drawback is that it doesn't cure the underlying condition.
When you stop using it, hair loss
resumes.
There are other medicines that
are being evaluated in research
programs for women with pattern alopecia, but these are not
available yet. One of these is the
drug finesteride that has proven
of benefit for men, but it can
cause birth defects. Therefore, it
can't be used by women of reproductive age.
You should also be aware of the
influence of other drugs on this
condition. For instance, women
who take birth control pills
should be on "estrogen dominant" pills, and older women on
hormone replacement therapy
should take the lowest dose of
progestin. This minimizes the
level of the hormones that tend
to promote hair loss. Talk to }'Qur
family doctor or dermatologist.
He or she can advise you about
these treatment choices.
aohn c. J.#lf is an associate pro·

Jessor family medicine at Ohio Uni·
ve;sity~ College of Osteopathic Med·
icine.)

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

Family Practice Physician

Aria L. McVicker

,

WASHINGTON (AP) with Kennedy on the bill and
~, bemocrats said they may bypass helping to recruit Senate
,, ,-House-Senate negotiations on a Republicans, is looking at
- patients' bill of rights and intro- ' including GOP-favored tax pro'" ,Puce as early as today a J:&gt;iparti- vmons.
,~an bill on the Senate floor. .
Possibilities include tax deduc, .' ;, The move is being led by Sen. tions for people who purchase .
~::.,EdwatdKennedy, D-Mass ., a key their own insurance and modest
-·A nember of the committee that expansion of a medical savings
;, .~as been working for more than account pilot program that lets
_ three months to combine bills self-employed people save tax-, yassed by the House and Senate free money to PaY doctor bills,
, : aimed at strengthening the hand said John Stone, Norwood's
· of patients in dealing with spokesman.
~- .HMOs and other health plans.
Conimittee R epublicans criti.. ;, With talks stalled and time cized the Democrats' plan to cir- : JUnning out before the summer cumvent their own efforts to
,,· ,recess, Kennedy and other reach a compromise; . which
Democrats are ready to take would go tjl. both houses of
alternative · steps to get a bill, Congress for a vote and then to
· aides said.
President Clinton for signing.
As early as today, Kennedy
"Moving to the floor right
•.•may offer le~slation - fash- now would be an ac t of
· ioned after the bipartisan House extremely poor .faith;' said Gayle
bill favored by the White House Osterberg, speaking for Sen.
~nd some Republicans - as an. Don Nickles, R-Okla., €ommit~mendment to a defense au tho- ·. tee ch:jirman."Ifwe are going to
t ization bill now on the floor.
have a bipartisan agreement then
! The new .bill would guarantee folks should be supportive of the
tasic protections for all 161 mil- conference and have some
~on Americans in private health patience:•
'
plans, establish a process for
Kennedy •is still open to a
t ppealing HMO decisions and committee· agreement on a bill,
.,xpand patients' rights to sue Manley said. ·
~heir health plans if they were
The Senate passed a GOP&amp;armed by decisions not to backed patients' rights bill last
cover care.
year that would provide many of
. ' Committee Republicans cast the same protections as the pro. doubt on whether the bill could posed legislation, but would not
-.·:.pass and accused Democrats of expand lawsuit rights and applies
, .. . trying to foil efforts to reach to fewer people.
,., ,bipartisan agreement so they
Another . patients' rights bill
· ' could tell voters this fall that passed last fall would h~ve to be
.. ~epublicans wouldn't support · reintroduced and voted on ·again
· , · patient protections.
.
in the House, where Republi.;. , Kennedy ~nd his allies believe cans are divided on the issue.
. , .. . re"election pressures will bring
Some, siding with Democrats,
, . enough GOP support, because · say all Americans should get fed: · some senators will want their era! protections arid health plans
, : :. ~ampaigns to address patients' should be held liable for negli.,. .frustrations with managed _care gence. '
_ .. ~rganizations.
Many Senate Republicans,
· "We are optimistic we cari do however, believe patient protec. ~ ;[; sq;• said Jim Manley, Kennedy's tions should be left up to states
,.::Js!'okesman . A vote on . the and contend that employers will
, .-!pfen""..bill could come. Within ,d rop worj(er health benefits
'.', :::;..~ ~eks, he said.
rather ~ , face expensive law-.•..,: Aide~ 5i'id Rep. Charlie Nor- suits, adding to the 44 million
(t • ;.vood, R-Ga., who is working
uninsured Americans.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new virus tar- cate this in America," said Vincent Gullotto,
F-Secure, Network Associates, and Kaspersky
geting a Spanish-b~d cell phone network director of the AVERT. antivirus center for Lab, an antivirus company based in Russia,
foreshadows a growing threat to the cell Santa Clara, Calif-based Network Associates. reported receiving reports ofrimofonica infecphones, pagers and handheld computers " It won't be hard."
tions. In one case, a single corporate user inadbecoming ubiquitous worldwide, security
Secuiity expem say the Spanish virus may be vertently sent out 500 copies of it.
the leading edge of attacks on other handheld
experts say.
The antivirus firms obtained a copy of the
T he virus, similar to the Love Letter virus that devices like Palm Pilots and Microsoft Pocket malicious code and created a software solution
recently clogged network computers, was writ- PC computers.
to stop its spread.
ten to attack phones on the Telefonica cellular
"Virus writers are starting to target handln addition to replicating itself, it also inserts a
network, three leading antivirus firms said Tues- helds and mobile phones," said Mikko Hyppn- dangerous Trojan· horse program into rhe user's
day
nen, chief scientist for the Finnish-based F- computer. That program wipes out the user's
The virus, which the companies say hit at Secure antivirus company. "That's what's signif- hard drive as well as the basic configuration setleast one large Spanish company, is called "Tim~ icant about this virus."
tings that tell the computer what kind of hardofonica." In Spanjsh, "timo" means "prank." The
According to F-Secure, the Ti.mofonica virus ' ware is installed.
virus can also seriously damage an infected is spread in a traditional manner- as an e-mail
Vincente Coil, a representative in Spain for
computer. I
attachment. When a recipient opens the infect- Kaspersky Labs, said the recent spate of virus
Yet Teleforuca, owner of Spain's largest cell ed attachment, the virus plus a message critical attacks using e-mail attachment• made users
phone network, said it had received no reports ofTelefonica is sent to each e-mail address in his more vigilant, and that should help stem the
·
of problems. "We have no complaint from any or her address book.
spread ofTimofonica.
customer about it," said spokesman Ed Holland.
T he twist is this virus also sends a text mes"The paranoia of !LOVEYOU made people
Experts say the virus could be modijied to hit sage to a randomly selected cell phone on Tele- not trusr attachments," Coil said:
any cell phone that can get pages through an e- fonica's network each time it spreads.
But Gullotto said as the operating systems for
mail address. A large number of messages could
" It doesn't infect the phones themselves, but handheld deilices become more sophjsti cated to
clog the network.
they get prank messages;• Hypponen said. The · allow the creation of miniature automation
"I've asked the researchers to be extremely virus sends as many messages to phones as there programs known as macros, the ·potential to
aware that someone will probably try to repli- are contacts in the infected user's address book. wreak havoc will grow.

~(6~,

·Dr. Aria McVIcker, completed her
Residency at Doctors Hospital,
Columbus, OH. Dr. McVicker is
Board CertifJed by the American
Osteopathic Board of
Family Physicians.
I

To Schedule an Appointment!
call (7 40) 446-5137
•

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis, OH
Holzer Clinic •••~••Keeping the Promise!
www.llolurcllnlc.com

D
Sold in 3 lb. Rec\osable bag

5\b.Bag
food\and

Tenderbest
&amp;one\ess, Skinless • ·

Granulated ·Sugar

Breast f·t\ets

\.b.
·
addi!IO!III purch...
Umlt one with 110.00 or moe

....:_

.

"

could rule as
as today on
~ ::Microsoft breakup

U.S.D.A. Select
Tenderbest
Top Boneless

..
·•.

SEATTLE (AP) -With final feasibility of complying with
';arguments in hand, a judge over- many of the provisions as draft.I seeing the histqdc Microsoft ed."
In Washington, Justice D~part­
Corp. antitrult case may be ready
ment
spokeswoman Gina T:llam·' •to rule on whether to split the
dismissed
Microsoft's
computer software giant into two ona
"The
filing
rehashes
response.
separate companies.
old arguments,
On Tuesday, Microsoft attor- Microsoft's
neys filed a fresh response to the ignores the extensive violations
Justice Department's breakup found by the court, denies the
_ plan. The company's filing - a need for serious relief and grossly .
distorts our proposed remedy;·
:_:;;ru.y . earlier · tha11 expected /1cleared the way for the U .S. Dis- she said.
Microsoft had been due to fil~
1 ;"'trictJudge T.homas Penfield Jack: ~on, who sits in Washington; · the brief !O&amp;y. But company
spokesman Jim.Cullinan said the
; ~.C., to rule at any time.
• ~ As his company was taking care "cosmetic" filing by the govern~of the last-minute legal work, ment made it easier to reply
· :•Microsoft
Chairman Bill Gates quickly
~
Jackson had been set to rule on
• ~;was in Washington, D.C., appear: : ing at a congressional hearing on the case- including whether to
! · the future of high technology in split the company into twb par\5
last week, but the Justice
; , the United States and around the pepartment asked for more time
:~ world.
In its p.!ing, Microsoft, disdain- so it could address clarifications
; ~ful of the department's response brought up by the company.
In Monday's court filing, the
J e to the compafJ;fs earlier con: ~cerns, asked J~ckson to. include Justice · Department agreed to
i , previously · suggested language grammatical and semantic
: ~that would give a broken-up changes, but refused to concede
i ~ Microsoft more freedom to enter to the company on major points
; ~~ into agreements with software such· as giving Microsoft addi1•: developers and computer makers. tional time to nail down details
, ;:, "Instead of agreeing to correct on how the breakup should
·'[~the many defects in the revised occur, or more freedom in licens· ,• proposed final judgment, and ing and marketing its products.
The department and 17 states
' :: thereby minimize the damage
I ;~ that its entry would inflict on a have pushed to have Microsoft
• •• d
f
. .
. h
broken into two separate compaI .,lwi e range o partiCipants m t e
( tZcomputer industry, the govern- nies - one to market and pro' ~ ment has agreed to only a few duce Windows, and the other to
: ~ cosmetic changes;' Microsoft's handle Microsoft Office . and
other applications software, along
t ~ lawyers wrote.
: ~ In ihe brief, Microsoft also said with the Internet. Explorer Web
: ~ the Justice Department was, in its browser.
!~ recent filing, "confirming that In a ruling that shook the com: :·~c ertain provisions are more pany, the industry and the fin~li­
• • extreme than they might appear cial markets, Jackson held April 3
: N at first hlush" and "blithely ignor- that Microsoft engaged in anti~!fing
1ubstantial
problems competitive conduct in violation
: SiM.f&amp;lSoft identified regarding the of antitrust laws.

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We want yo~r photos!
The Sentinel welcomes your photOgraphs: Here are a few guidelines for
submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are in focus .and have
gOOd contrast. Negatl~s also are &lt;~Ctepted; howe~~er, please Include a
print along with the negative.
·
• Black-and-white photographs are accepted, provided they are in focus
and have good contrast. Negatl~es also are accepted; however, please
incluele a· print along with the negative.
·
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provieled they are in focus and
have good contrast.
• Submitted photos shOuld be no smaller than standard wallet size and
no larger than 8 x 10.
• PolariO&lt;J.type photos are discouraged sinCe the)' do not reproduce
well on newsprint.
·
• When submitting digital phOtos, be sure the Images are saved as

but by then I have already upset her.
Do ynu know of anything I can do to
control my feelings - maybe count to
100 before I say something?- ANGRY
IN O'ITAWA
DEAR ANGRY: Actions are controllable; feelings less so. Learning to understand ynur feelings would be a step in the
right direction, because your anger comes
&amp;om hurt. Some sessions with a psychologist to probe into why you take normal
changes of plans so personally might provide insight. Most people react with disappointment to such occurrences, not with
extreme anger.
In the meantime, instead of counting to
100. remind yourself that people run away
from those who pout, sulk and make others uncomfortable by applying the silent
treatment.

There ai:e some subtle differences between men and women
in the common h air loss patterns
that come - almost universally
- with advancing age. Men usu ally have recession . of their hairlines at the forehead, while
women typically do not. Both
have a decrease in the number of
hairs on the top of the head while
simultaneously having a much
smaller decrease in the hair count
on the sides and back of the head.
Men also have a. substantially
greater chance of losing all hair
from the top of the head rather
than the just ewerj,encing, as· is
typical of women ; a general
"thinning" . throughout that
region of the head. So it's unlikely that you'll end up looking like
your grandfather.
Since your doctor didn't offer
you much help, I'd suggest tliat
you see a dermatologist. He or
she will probably 'want to do
some blood tests to be sure that
you don't have one of the conditions like iron deficiency anemia
that requires specific treatment. If
you have the common inherited
disorder that I've talked about,
doctors will then call your condition "pattern alopecia."
Currently, there is only one
medicine that works safely for
this disorder - minoxidil applied
to the scalp every day. This works
to maintain the present hair
count in mos~ women (and men),
and some even grow more hair. It

Weclne•day, June 7, ~

rights bill looming

Thinning hair .not always a sign of baldness
. It( JOHN C. WOLF, D.O.
Question: I'm a 36-year-old
woman, and I'm worried about
becoming as bald as my ~randfa­
ther. My hair is definitely thinner
than it was a few years ago. My
doctor wasn't very helpful when I
explained my · concerns to him.
Do you have any suggestions
about how I can determine ifl'm
going to go bald, and if so, what I
can do to prevent it?
Answer: Hair serves several
important, but not essential , functions. It provides important insulation for the head, as bald-headed old men like myself are
reminded every time we go outside in the winter without a hat.
Hair's role in temperature control
is importa]!V-: but seldom critical- as part of your body's overall efforts to keep its various regulatory processes "on track."
Hair's most important role,
then, is in its contribution to selfimage. Hairstyle, when considered in reference to society, is an
important clue to how you view
yourself and how you want to
interac.tt with others. This·is much
like the' impact on our interpersonal interactions made by the
style and color of clothing we
choose to wear. Consequently, the
loss of hair has impact upon one's
self-image. Since this change is
not planned, it is generally viewed
as undesirable.
Both men and women lose hair
for a number of reasons. The most
common culprits are anemia, low
thyroid levels, infections of the
scalp, hormonal disorders involving estrogens and androgens,
autoimmune diseases and a serious illness of any cause. The vast
majority of male and female hair
loss, however, can be directly
traced to your heredity. If your
parents and grandparenls had thin
hair or bald heads, you probably
will too. Consequently, your family photo alhum is a helpful tool
in predictin~ your risk. . •

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:!~Bipartisan patients' Virus could be used to cripple cell _

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�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

.P omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednnday, June 7, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

MLB interleague action, Page B2
Reds Notebook: Deion gone, Page B2
NFL: Lewis trial continues, Page B3

Page 81
Wednesd.y, June 7, 2000

WEDNESDAY'S

lliGI-ll.IGHTS
MASON - The Big Bend
Football Club Coyotes will open
their semi-pro football reason on
Saturday, June I 0, at the Wahama
High School field.
.. T.he game against the Ohio
Cardinals (Cleveland) will kick
off at 7:30 p.m.

·Southern ptd meeting
set for 'lhursday

SIFE COMPETITORS ..:.... Members of University of Rio Grande's Students in Free Enterprise team that participated in recent internation-

RACINE All Southerq
High School students interested
in playing football this fall are
invited to a meeting T hursday at
5 ·p.m.
The meeting, for students in
s_e.venth through 12th grades, will
be held at the Southern gymnasiwith new varsity football
coach Rusty Richards conducting the meeting.
For more infu"rmation, contact
the high school office or athletics
director,Jay Rees. ·

al competition were, from left, Shanna Grant, Betty Jones, Janet Forshey, Trevor Egnor, Amy Woolsey and Gaurav Kathpal. .

'

size since 1996;' said Carol Smith, advisor. ership Conference,June 18-23.
OVP NEWS STAFF
"Some of the teams presented international
The conference is a one-week introduction
10 GRANDE - University projects, which really held a lot of weight with to business economics and the benefits of
of Rio Grande/ Rio Grande the judges," added Janet Forshey, SIFE mem- American Free Enterprise offered to high
Community College's Stu- ber.
school students throughout the state. Particidents In Free Enterprise (SIFE)
. "They're changing the format for next year," pants will earn three college credit hours .
came back from its inderna- said Smith. " Next year there will be regionals,
This particular project rated very high with
tional competition with "great scores and feel- then nationals in Kan5as City, then they will be the international judges.
ing that they represented their school well," but having the winners from nationals compete at
SIFE will also offer "Computer. Capers on
did not place.
internationals to be held in England."
Campus," a three-week children's computer
Co mpetition began in the spring with more
As a result of the career fair, two Rio Grande class for three different skill levels, and will be
than 400 teams comp eting in 19 U.S. cities and SIFE members received internship opportuni~ . sponsoring the Independence Day speech.
10 other cou ntries.
ties.
This year's speech will be given by a River
The 2000 Hallmark Cards SIFE InternationWhat SIFE plans to do differendy next year Valley High School student who in turn will
al Exposition and Career Opportunity Fair centers around expanding the scope of their receive S1 50 and a scholarship to the AFELC
held in Kansas City, Mo., May 21-23 featured projects to be more international.
conference.
• ~
·•
149 teams.
But this takes serious cotpo!3te financial
The SIFE team. is. saying gopdbye to two
More than 2000 students participated from · backing.
' · ·
''
~,.
graduating sehion -Janet Forshey, who will
Australia, Brazil, Canada, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico,
"One team received a local corporate dona- be wo rking for Sherwin Williams in its manPoland, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine, the United tion of $50,ooo:• s~j&lt;! SIFE member Beth agement trainee program, and Beth BaleJ, who
Sta tes ;md Uzbekistan. They were judged by a Bales. " We are demiYgraphlcally handicapped will attend University ofToledo's school of law
pa nel of m ore than 700 of the nation's business compared to some of the huge schools in big on a full tuition scholarship.
and conununity leaders.
cities that we had to compete against."
The group is losing .!another to a school
"The competition was fierce this year. The
The team is now focusing on its next project, transfer, but will gain six new members and
organ.ization has grown a lot; it's doubled in the 27th American Fre,e Enterprise and Lead- retain six others.

•

. Rockies t.ke VI. Tech
~: QB with Hth pick

.

. DENVER (AP) - Michael
Vick, the Virginia Tech quarterback who finished third in last
year's Heisman Trophy voting,
"""1l the Colorado Rockies' 30th
round selection in the second day ·
of baseball's amateur draft.
. Vick has rot played organized
baseball · · since about the eighth
g(ade.
'

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

. u '.....-_...
:' .. ~:7,;~"
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) Kentucky. . basketball recruit
Michael Southall pleaded guilty
to drug charges under a diversion
agreement that could salvage his
chance at joining the Wildcats.
Southall received a six- month
stayed jail sentence and two years
probation.

Meigs recorder posts recent land transferS
POMEROY - The following
land transfers · were recently
reported by Meigs County
R ecorder Judith A. King:
"H azel Nottin gham, to Gallia
County Ru ral Water Association,
righJ of way, Salem;
Doris McKinney, Raymond
McKi nney, to Gallia C ounty
R ural Water Association, right of
way, Salem;
Eugene Anspach, Judy Anspach,
to Gallia County Rural Water
Association, right of way, Salisbury;
Nelson L. N ewell, Trenda . L.
Newell, to Gallia County Rural
Water Association, right of way,
Salisbury;
Charlotte Newell, to Gallia
County Rural Water Association ,
right of way, Salisbury;
H obson C hristian Fellows, to
Gallia Cou nty Rucil Water Association. right of way, Salisbury;
H erbert K. Wayan , Vera E.
Wayan, to Gallia C ounty Rural
Water Ass(&gt;ciati on, right of way,
Salem;
Robe rt Goodall, Betty Goodall,
· to 'Gallia County Rural Wa_ter
Association, right of way, Salisbu ry;
G ary Keith Callahan, Pamela
Callahan. to Galli County Rural
Water Association, right of way,
Salisbury;
·
Harry Bennett, Martha Bennett,
to Galli a County Rural Water
Association, righ t of way, Salem;•
Jay Hall, Jr., Trust, to Gallia
County Rural Water Association,

•

right of way, Salisbury;
Mildred Lambert, to · Gerald
Mohler, deed, Rutland;
Sarah Daisy Catherine Carter, to
Roger Alan Carter, deed, Olive;
fl.nn L. Rife, James A. Rife, to
Wesleyan Bible Holiness, 'deed,
Middleport;
William Gillilan, Susan Joyce
Gillilan, to Thomas J. Buckley,
Valeri K. Patterson, deed, Chester;
Fred B. Hill, Annalu Hill, to
Glenn M . Arnold, Penny S.
Arnold, sked, Scipio;
.
G.elnn M. Arnold, Penny S.
Arnold, to Adam ]. Sheets, Jaclyn
D. Swartz, deed, Scipio ;
Barbara M. Pierce, Clarence
Thomaf Wolfe, Rosalie Wolfe, to
Clarence Thomas Wolfe, Rosalie
Wolfe, deed, Letart Antiquity;
Rita C. Trapasso, Raymond Trapasso, to Michael Trapasso, Peggy
L. Trapasso, deed, Olive;
Clara Kauff, deceased, to Ernest
W Kauff, certificate, Middleport;
William Ernest Kauff, deceased,
to Vio1et Jeffers, certificate, Middleport;
Violet Jeffers, Larry Jeffers, to
Candy Burkhamer, Ronnie
Eugene Burkhamer, deed, Middleport;
John D. Grimes,John Grimes, to
Kevin R . Marcinko, Belinda D.
Marcinko, deed, Orange;
Vance D.Wilbur, Betty ).Wilbur,
to R ita Jane Deangelo, deed,
Columbia;
Larry H. Farley, Louise Farley, to
Heather Nicole Savoy, deed ,
C hester;

Lyle Baker, Sharon Baker, to
James A. Pickens, Tamra C. Pickens, deed, Racine;
Maljorie Smith, Brenda Roush ,
Milton Roush, Donna Hatfield,
Mary Shephard, Ronald Shephard, Wallace Hatfield, to Majorie
Smith, Brenda Roush, Donna
Hatfield, Mary Shephard, deed,
Bedford;
Lowell D. Chevalier, Bonnie Sue
Chevalier, to Olivia McCormick,
Cole Hunter McCormick, deed,
S~sbury;

James E. Ditty,Jr.,Jenny L. Ditty,
to Douglas Lavender, Theresa
Lynn Lavender, deed, Middleport;
Denver A. Hale, Elizabeth D.
Hale, to Elbert Lee Williams, Jr.,
deed, Salem;
Ernest A. Wingett, deceased, to
Charles E Chancy, Donald C.
· Shaffer, deed, Sutton;
Mrytle Abels, deceased, to Virginia Pickens, certificate, Sutton;
Virginia Pickens, to James Alan
Pickens, Tamara Pickens, deed,
Sutton;
Joyce E. Jacks, Joyce L. Jacks, to
John R . Krider,Janet Krider, deed,
Middleport;
Eddie Halim, to Tjung Liat
Khiu , deed, Bedford;
Maljorie Lou Ferrell, deceased,
to Trina Davis, certificate, Sutton;
Magorie Lou Ferrell, deceased,
to James Ferrell. certifica te, Syracuse;
Arlene Ruth Swisher, deceased,
to Harley R odell Swisher, affidavit;
Arlene Ruth Swisher, deceased,

Vlkes
slpl Plup .
.

to Harley Rodell Swisher, Melvin
Rodell Swisher, affidavit, Salisbury;
Melvin Rodell Swisher, Sherry
L. Swisher, to Harley Rodell
Swisher, deed, Salisbury;
Harley Rodell Swisher, Roberta
Swisher; to Melvin Rodell Swisher, Sherry L Swisher, deed, Salisbury;
Helen E. Blackston, deceased, to
Harold H. BlackSton, affidavit, Salisbury;
James D. Eynon, deceased, Donald Eynon, deceased, to Wilma E
Eynon, certificate, Orange;
David A. Davis, Shelby J. Davis,
to Columbus Southern Power,
right of W.y, Rudand;
Tim Curfinan,' Roscoe Mills,
Sandra J. Mills, Brenda K. Curfman, · to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Sutton;
Brenda Kiser, David E. Kiser, to
Columbus Southern ·Power, right
of way, Sutton;
Edward T. Baer, Patricia D. Baer,
to Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Patrick D. Wood, Audrey E.
Wood, to Lori Ann Wood Outter,
deed, Chester;
Harold H. Blackston, to Douglas
T. Howard, Audrey T. Howard,.
deed, Salisbury;
Robert Hamons, to Buckeye
Rural Electric Company, right of
way, Columbia;
James Eddie Darst, Jr., Annie
Marie Darst, to Buckeye Rural
Electric Company, right of way,
Columbia.

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)
-:'The Minnesota Vikings signed
lineba~ker Bryce Paup, who had
.17· 112 sacks in 1995, when he
voted NFL defensive player
of the year with Buffalo. Paup, a
;10-year veteran and four- time
Pro Bowler, was released last
week by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

:W..

:. ··J,Ions• Bitch InJured
. : DETROIT (AP) Detroit
Lions quarterback Charlie Batch
will be sidelined for about three
months after fracturing a bone in
ius,-right knee during noncontact
drills Monday.

u.s.. Ireland battle
lo1·1*FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)
Ante Razov score4 in ·the 68th
niinute as the United States survived a nor'easter and a 22minute power outage to tie Ireland 1-1 in the U.S. Cup, an exhibition tune-up for next month's
World Cup qualifying.

Mlln~uden to host

hoop amp

.

'

ROCK SPR,ING The
Meigs boys ba.~ketball camp will
be held on Monday June 12~ 16,
from 9 am until noon at Meigs
High School's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
The camp is for kids entering
grades 3 through 9. Cost of the
camp is .$40 and includes five day
·of instruction of basketball fundamentals, camp t-shitt and various
priies.
f'!&gt;r more infoqnation contact
Chris Stout at , 992-6600
or 992... '*' ...

The Daily Sentinel

MORE LOCAL NEWS..MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ··

2158.

Subscribe today. 992-2156
•

'

•

Pacers begin finals battle tonight in LA

LOS ANGFU!S (AP) - Rik Smits
wasn't afraid to say w hat all of the Indiana
Pacers must be thinking.
" I'd much ~refer to play against Portland," Smits s~id. "Not that the Trail Blazers aren't a great team, but it would make
my job a lot easie r."
Smits' job, w hich he shares with all his
teammates, is stopping Shaquille O ' N eal.
With his mix of size, speed and strength,
the Los Angeles Lakers' MVP center
shreds most conventional defensive
schemes and .~ nerally makes players like
Smits wondet': why they took up basketball in the fi r,r place.
In the NUA Finals, beginning tonight at

Staples Center, the Pacers u-n dertake the
task at which the entire league failed this
season. Most recendy, the Blazers tr ied
everything from pre-emptive fouls to constant, oppressive double-teams in an effort
to slow Shaq. T hey still lost the Western
Conference finals in seven games.
To hear the Pacers, the series sometimes
seems like a matchup of Goli ath vs. 12
Davids. Such is the truly massive presence
O'Neal has taken on during this season,
when he finally acquired a· quality supporting cast and led Los Angeles to th e
league's best record.
"You know Shaq is going to get his
points no matter what you do, because

he's the M VP," Indiana guard Jalen Rose
said. "The key to the series is going to be
our team defense. W hen Shaq gets the ball
doVI{n low and he's looking to pass it out,
we have to prevent people from getting
dpen shots. T hat's all you can really do."
If that's the case, the series could depend
on which team 's o utside shoo te rs perform
bet1;er. Los An geles assistant coach Tex
W inter noted that without Shaq, the
series is essentially a marchup of two
jump-shooting teams wh o prefer the
perimeter game to post play.
And therein might lie Indiana's key to
success. N obody gives the Pacers any
chance to stop O'N eal, but l ndiana is a

team capable of o utscoring anyon e.
With the right mix of an aggressive
offense, judicious fouls on 0 ' Neal and
stro ng defense against hi s Lakers team mates, the Pacers think they'll have a shot
at outshooting Los Angeles.
"People d&lt;fu't remember we're a pretty
good ream on offense," point gu ard Mark
Jackson said. "I didn't get all th ose assists
this year by throwi ng th e ball in the
stands. We hit o ur shots, and we think we
can shoot with anybody."
R eggie Miller, Indiana's sharpshooting
veteran guard chasing what might be his
last chance at a titl e, will be particularly

Pluse see NBA. Pare Bl

um,

SIFE team nets 'great scores' at competition
BY KRIS DOTSON

Lak~rs,

.... J

•

•
•

.-

H.t

~

CINC INNATI (AP)
When Aaron Boone took a
called third strike to end it, the
Chicago White Sox shuffied to
the infield, formed a line and
barely raised their hands for
high-fives.
It was that ki nd of a game.
The White Sox scored 17
runs, yet had to get th eir closer
up in the bullpen in the ninth.
Their 17-12 victory over the
Cincinnati R eds on Tu esday
night had more the feel of a
Sunday morning softball game.
"We cam e · out swin ging
today and we needed every single run , .too," catch er Brook
Fordyce said. "To be ho nest,
during the last two innings we
were jqst right there looking to
get the fast out."
·
'
It didn 't come until 29 runs,
31 hits and three hours and 44
minutes after the first pitch. The
White Sox became the first
team in 15 years to score 17
runs against Cincinnati, but let
· the R eds score II' times in the
last three innings.
11
1t was a crazy win ," said
Frank Thomas, wh o homered ,
drove in four runs and scored
four times. " No one gave in.
They're in first place and they
definitely showed the fight ."
The R eds aren 't in first anymore. They fell · a h alf-game
behind St. Louis in the NL
Central and assured th at th eir
longest homestand of the season
won.'t be a winning· one.T hey're
5-6 with one game.
"We're still right there," said
Dante Bichette, whose ninthinning grand slam provided the
800-YAHI- Chicago's Frank Thomas (right) crosses home plate at Clnergy Aeld after hitting a home run fi nal runs. " We need to put a
good month or a couple of..,
last night against the Reds' Ron Vlllone. Thomas drove in tour runs. (AP)

weeks toge ther."
C hicago has put togeth er two
good months and then so me.
T he victory Tuesday was their
sixth in seven gam es, pushing
them to new heigh ts.
They improved the AL's best
record to 34- 23, move d 11
games over .500 for the first
time since September 1996 and
extended their stay atop the
Central to a 50th day.
Even though th ey wast ed
much of a 13- 1 lead in the final
three innings and had to get
closer Keith Fo ulke war ming
up in th e ninth, m anager Jerry
Manuel thou ght the White Sox
took an oth er step in thei r
development as a co ntender.
" l do n't think w e gave up too
many at-bats, even late in the
game," Manuel said. "That's a
sign of our young hitters matur.
mg.
Th ~y quickly too k care of
Ron Villone (6-3) , who gave up
seven runs in 1 1-3 innings.
Thomas' three-run homer on a
two-strike pitch in th e second
made it 7-0.
The left-bander has · b een
pounded twice in six .days, giving up 5 hits and 15 runs in 513 innings.
Thomas s~ored C hicago's sec.
ond run and reached a m ilestone. With the I ,OOOth run of
his career, he becam e the sixth
active player to sco re that m any
and have 300 ho mers, 1,000
RBis and 1,000 walks.The others are Mark McGwire, Barry
Bonds, Cal Ripken, Fred
McGriff and Harold Baines;
" I haven't been kee ping up,"

..

Plean sH Reds, Pip 82

.,

'

NFL NOTEBOOK

K-C Raceway
NeW deal keeps Rice with 49ers resumes season
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
Young, 38, missed the last 13
- Jerry Rice's new deal with games of the season after a head
the 49ers gives him the chance blow left him with his fourth
to finish his career in San Fran- concussion in three years. He is
cisco, and the NFL's career considering whether ~o retire or
receiving leadet says that's some- continue playing with the 49ers
thing money can't buy.
or possibly move to another
While questions continue to team.Young's decision is expectswirl over the future of Steve ed before Saturday.
Young, the 37-,Year- old Rice on
" I don't know what Steve is
Tuesday' signe'll; a restructured going to do right now, but it's
five-year, ince,.t ive- laden $31 going to be hard not to see him
million contrac~that enabled the throwing a football back there:·
.payroll-stressed ' 49ers to save Rice said. "Anything can hap$1.2 million .against the salary pen. It's in his hands: I would
cap.
love to have Steve back."
General manager Bill Walsh
Rice, a 12-time Pro Bowler,
insisted that Rice ·replace so.me remained San Francisco's leading
of his base salary with incentives receiver in 1999 with 67 catches
to alleviate what had been a for 830 yards and five TDs. H e
$5.49 million cap impact.
said he can't help wondering
"I feel real good about this sit- how he's managed to secure his
uation," Rice sai~ . "It ·was give stay with 'the 49ers while Young's
and take. 1. think the most future hangs in the balance. And
important thing is that I got my while other 49ers greats such as
wish. This is where I wanted to Joe Montana, Roger Craig and
fmish my career.".3\,
Ronnie Lott went elsew.here to
That is a goal tin t could elude play out their careers.
Young, who c&lt;;&gt;mbined with
" It makes me feel real special,
Rice to form the · NFL's most because I have always looked at
prolific touchdown_pass tandem. this as a business:· Rice said. "It
'
"

happened to Joe and Ronnie
and all those guys. I said to
myself, 'Why should I be an
exception?' I think it shows a lot,
what the 49ers did. I am going
to do everything possible to just
go out and be a positive this
year, no negativity, and just have

fu n...

Rice said the new deal would
pt:ebably be his last and he
intends to make the most of the
playing time he has lett before
hanging it up in a year or two.
" I can see that corning," Rice
said. " It is something we all have
to fa ce, but it is difficult to deal
with. I know it is coming down
the road, but I feel like I can still
be productive and I am going to
do everything possible to do
that."
Long the go-to guy in San
Francisco's offense, Rice added
he'll embrace his new role as
~entor to the younger receivers
on
team in the midst of an
ov~rhaul after going 4- 12 last

a

season.

'

Ple•n 1H Rice. Pip B:S

.

II

J

'

'

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Likewise, Jason M ontgomery
ofJackson, becam e the sixth different winner in the Late Model
division, and two new winners
- respectively Skip Watterrrian
and R odney VanOver- graced
: victory lane in the Modified and
Street Stock divisio ns.

C HILLIC OTHE - After a
rain-out last week, th e hardcharging Hobby Stoc ks and
Modifieds join the Super sprints
and Late M odels on the K-C
racmg card fo r the seco nd
VanOver's win b roke a 10- '
Always Coca-Cola sprin t car
series paying $2,000 to the ~~ n ­ race win streak by Frankfort resident C onrad N ewman .
ner.
Many o ut-of- towners are
Drivers from 15 states have
expected to compete as a tune- competed at the speedway this
up for the June 17 "The Night year, and many of the Midwest's
the STARS Com e Out" finest are again expected for Satanniversary special,
urday.
Neithe r the World of O utlaw's
K- C R aceway is located just
support series nor the All- Stars south of Chillicothe off SR 23
are running this Saturday night, on Blain Highway.
prompting several calls from dr iN ext week, all fo ur classes
vers in each of th ose sanctions.
com·p ete
m
the
Big
. Produ cing the sixth different Brothers/ Big Sisters Night.
winner in seven nights of racing, ·
Gates open at 4:30p.m. Warnthe competition at K-C R aceway was again reflec ted two ups are at 6;30 p. m . and racing
weeks ago by newcomer Kevin b~gins at 7;30 p.m .
Huntley of Bloomington, Ind.,
For more inform ation, call Kw ho sco red a dramatic victory C R aceway at 740-663-4 141 , or
over north ern Ohio ace Scott o n th e web at www.kcr:aceMiller.
way.com.

I.

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

.P omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednnday, June 7, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

MLB interleague action, Page B2
Reds Notebook: Deion gone, Page B2
NFL: Lewis trial continues, Page B3

Page 81
Wednesd.y, June 7, 2000

WEDNESDAY'S

lliGI-ll.IGHTS
MASON - The Big Bend
Football Club Coyotes will open
their semi-pro football reason on
Saturday, June I 0, at the Wahama
High School field.
.. T.he game against the Ohio
Cardinals (Cleveland) will kick
off at 7:30 p.m.

·Southern ptd meeting
set for 'lhursday

SIFE COMPETITORS ..:.... Members of University of Rio Grande's Students in Free Enterprise team that participated in recent internation-

RACINE All Southerq
High School students interested
in playing football this fall are
invited to a meeting T hursday at
5 ·p.m.
The meeting, for students in
s_e.venth through 12th grades, will
be held at the Southern gymnasiwith new varsity football
coach Rusty Richards conducting the meeting.
For more infu"rmation, contact
the high school office or athletics
director,Jay Rees. ·

al competition were, from left, Shanna Grant, Betty Jones, Janet Forshey, Trevor Egnor, Amy Woolsey and Gaurav Kathpal. .

'

size since 1996;' said Carol Smith, advisor. ership Conference,June 18-23.
OVP NEWS STAFF
"Some of the teams presented international
The conference is a one-week introduction
10 GRANDE - University projects, which really held a lot of weight with to business economics and the benefits of
of Rio Grande/ Rio Grande the judges," added Janet Forshey, SIFE mem- American Free Enterprise offered to high
Community College's Stu- ber.
school students throughout the state. Particidents In Free Enterprise (SIFE)
. "They're changing the format for next year," pants will earn three college credit hours .
came back from its inderna- said Smith. " Next year there will be regionals,
This particular project rated very high with
tional competition with "great scores and feel- then nationals in Kan5as City, then they will be the international judges.
ing that they represented their school well," but having the winners from nationals compete at
SIFE will also offer "Computer. Capers on
did not place.
internationals to be held in England."
Campus," a three-week children's computer
Co mpetition began in the spring with more
As a result of the career fair, two Rio Grande class for three different skill levels, and will be
than 400 teams comp eting in 19 U.S. cities and SIFE members received internship opportuni~ . sponsoring the Independence Day speech.
10 other cou ntries.
ties.
This year's speech will be given by a River
The 2000 Hallmark Cards SIFE InternationWhat SIFE plans to do differendy next year Valley High School student who in turn will
al Exposition and Career Opportunity Fair centers around expanding the scope of their receive S1 50 and a scholarship to the AFELC
held in Kansas City, Mo., May 21-23 featured projects to be more international.
conference.
• ~
·•
149 teams.
But this takes serious cotpo!3te financial
The SIFE team. is. saying gopdbye to two
More than 2000 students participated from · backing.
' · ·
''
~,.
graduating sehion -Janet Forshey, who will
Australia, Brazil, Canada, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico,
"One team received a local corporate dona- be wo rking for Sherwin Williams in its manPoland, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine, the United tion of $50,ooo:• s~j&lt;! SIFE member Beth agement trainee program, and Beth BaleJ, who
Sta tes ;md Uzbekistan. They were judged by a Bales. " We are demiYgraphlcally handicapped will attend University ofToledo's school of law
pa nel of m ore than 700 of the nation's business compared to some of the huge schools in big on a full tuition scholarship.
and conununity leaders.
cities that we had to compete against."
The group is losing .!another to a school
"The competition was fierce this year. The
The team is now focusing on its next project, transfer, but will gain six new members and
organ.ization has grown a lot; it's doubled in the 27th American Fre,e Enterprise and Lead- retain six others.

•

. Rockies t.ke VI. Tech
~: QB with Hth pick

.

. DENVER (AP) - Michael
Vick, the Virginia Tech quarterback who finished third in last
year's Heisman Trophy voting,
"""1l the Colorado Rockies' 30th
round selection in the second day ·
of baseball's amateur draft.
. Vick has rot played organized
baseball · · since about the eighth
g(ade.
'

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

. u '.....-_...
:' .. ~:7,;~"
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) Kentucky. . basketball recruit
Michael Southall pleaded guilty
to drug charges under a diversion
agreement that could salvage his
chance at joining the Wildcats.
Southall received a six- month
stayed jail sentence and two years
probation.

Meigs recorder posts recent land transferS
POMEROY - The following
land transfers · were recently
reported by Meigs County
R ecorder Judith A. King:
"H azel Nottin gham, to Gallia
County Ru ral Water Association,
righJ of way, Salem;
Doris McKinney, Raymond
McKi nney, to Gallia C ounty
R ural Water Association, right of
way, Salem;
Eugene Anspach, Judy Anspach,
to Gallia County Rural Water
Association, right of way, Salisbury;
Nelson L. N ewell, Trenda . L.
Newell, to Gallia County Rural
Water Association, right of way,
Salisbury;
Charlotte Newell, to Gallia
County Rural Water Association ,
right of way, Salisbury;
H obson C hristian Fellows, to
Gallia Cou nty Rucil Water Association. right of way, Salisbury;
H erbert K. Wayan , Vera E.
Wayan, to Gallia C ounty Rural
Water Ass(&gt;ciati on, right of way,
Salem;
Robe rt Goodall, Betty Goodall,
· to 'Gallia County Rural Wa_ter
Association, right of way, Salisbu ry;
G ary Keith Callahan, Pamela
Callahan. to Galli County Rural
Water Association, right of way,
Salisbury;
·
Harry Bennett, Martha Bennett,
to Galli a County Rural Water
Association, righ t of way, Salem;•
Jay Hall, Jr., Trust, to Gallia
County Rural Water Association,

•

right of way, Salisbury;
Mildred Lambert, to · Gerald
Mohler, deed, Rutland;
Sarah Daisy Catherine Carter, to
Roger Alan Carter, deed, Olive;
fl.nn L. Rife, James A. Rife, to
Wesleyan Bible Holiness, 'deed,
Middleport;
William Gillilan, Susan Joyce
Gillilan, to Thomas J. Buckley,
Valeri K. Patterson, deed, Chester;
Fred B. Hill, Annalu Hill, to
Glenn M . Arnold, Penny S.
Arnold, sked, Scipio;
.
G.elnn M. Arnold, Penny S.
Arnold, to Adam ]. Sheets, Jaclyn
D. Swartz, deed, Scipio ;
Barbara M. Pierce, Clarence
Thomaf Wolfe, Rosalie Wolfe, to
Clarence Thomas Wolfe, Rosalie
Wolfe, deed, Letart Antiquity;
Rita C. Trapasso, Raymond Trapasso, to Michael Trapasso, Peggy
L. Trapasso, deed, Olive;
Clara Kauff, deceased, to Ernest
W Kauff, certificate, Middleport;
William Ernest Kauff, deceased,
to Vio1et Jeffers, certificate, Middleport;
Violet Jeffers, Larry Jeffers, to
Candy Burkhamer, Ronnie
Eugene Burkhamer, deed, Middleport;
John D. Grimes,John Grimes, to
Kevin R . Marcinko, Belinda D.
Marcinko, deed, Orange;
Vance D.Wilbur, Betty ).Wilbur,
to R ita Jane Deangelo, deed,
Columbia;
Larry H. Farley, Louise Farley, to
Heather Nicole Savoy, deed ,
C hester;

Lyle Baker, Sharon Baker, to
James A. Pickens, Tamra C. Pickens, deed, Racine;
Maljorie Smith, Brenda Roush ,
Milton Roush, Donna Hatfield,
Mary Shephard, Ronald Shephard, Wallace Hatfield, to Majorie
Smith, Brenda Roush, Donna
Hatfield, Mary Shephard, deed,
Bedford;
Lowell D. Chevalier, Bonnie Sue
Chevalier, to Olivia McCormick,
Cole Hunter McCormick, deed,
S~sbury;

James E. Ditty,Jr.,Jenny L. Ditty,
to Douglas Lavender, Theresa
Lynn Lavender, deed, Middleport;
Denver A. Hale, Elizabeth D.
Hale, to Elbert Lee Williams, Jr.,
deed, Salem;
Ernest A. Wingett, deceased, to
Charles E Chancy, Donald C.
· Shaffer, deed, Sutton;
Mrytle Abels, deceased, to Virginia Pickens, certificate, Sutton;
Virginia Pickens, to James Alan
Pickens, Tamara Pickens, deed,
Sutton;
Joyce E. Jacks, Joyce L. Jacks, to
John R . Krider,Janet Krider, deed,
Middleport;
Eddie Halim, to Tjung Liat
Khiu , deed, Bedford;
Maljorie Lou Ferrell, deceased,
to Trina Davis, certificate, Sutton;
Magorie Lou Ferrell, deceased,
to James Ferrell. certifica te, Syracuse;
Arlene Ruth Swisher, deceased,
to Harley R odell Swisher, affidavit;
Arlene Ruth Swisher, deceased,

Vlkes
slpl Plup .
.

to Harley Rodell Swisher, Melvin
Rodell Swisher, affidavit, Salisbury;
Melvin Rodell Swisher, Sherry
L. Swisher, to Harley Rodell
Swisher, deed, Salisbury;
Harley Rodell Swisher, Roberta
Swisher; to Melvin Rodell Swisher, Sherry L Swisher, deed, Salisbury;
Helen E. Blackston, deceased, to
Harold H. BlackSton, affidavit, Salisbury;
James D. Eynon, deceased, Donald Eynon, deceased, to Wilma E
Eynon, certificate, Orange;
David A. Davis, Shelby J. Davis,
to Columbus Southern Power,
right of W.y, Rudand;
Tim Curfinan,' Roscoe Mills,
Sandra J. Mills, Brenda K. Curfman, · to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Sutton;
Brenda Kiser, David E. Kiser, to
Columbus Southern ·Power, right
of way, Sutton;
Edward T. Baer, Patricia D. Baer,
to Columbus Southern Power,
right of way, Chester;
Patrick D. Wood, Audrey E.
Wood, to Lori Ann Wood Outter,
deed, Chester;
Harold H. Blackston, to Douglas
T. Howard, Audrey T. Howard,.
deed, Salisbury;
Robert Hamons, to Buckeye
Rural Electric Company, right of
way, Columbia;
James Eddie Darst, Jr., Annie
Marie Darst, to Buckeye Rural
Electric Company, right of way,
Columbia.

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP)
-:'The Minnesota Vikings signed
lineba~ker Bryce Paup, who had
.17· 112 sacks in 1995, when he
voted NFL defensive player
of the year with Buffalo. Paup, a
;10-year veteran and four- time
Pro Bowler, was released last
week by the Jacksonville Jaguars.

:W..

:. ··J,Ions• Bitch InJured
. : DETROIT (AP) Detroit
Lions quarterback Charlie Batch
will be sidelined for about three
months after fracturing a bone in
ius,-right knee during noncontact
drills Monday.

u.s.. Ireland battle
lo1·1*FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)
Ante Razov score4 in ·the 68th
niinute as the United States survived a nor'easter and a 22minute power outage to tie Ireland 1-1 in the U.S. Cup, an exhibition tune-up for next month's
World Cup qualifying.

Mlln~uden to host

hoop amp

.

'

ROCK SPR,ING The
Meigs boys ba.~ketball camp will
be held on Monday June 12~ 16,
from 9 am until noon at Meigs
High School's Larry R . Morrison
Gymnasium.
The camp is for kids entering
grades 3 through 9. Cost of the
camp is .$40 and includes five day
·of instruction of basketball fundamentals, camp t-shitt and various
priies.
f'!&gt;r more infoqnation contact
Chris Stout at , 992-6600
or 992... '*' ...

The Daily Sentinel

MORE LOCAL NEWS..MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ··

2158.

Subscribe today. 992-2156
•

'

•

Pacers begin finals battle tonight in LA

LOS ANGFU!S (AP) - Rik Smits
wasn't afraid to say w hat all of the Indiana
Pacers must be thinking.
" I'd much ~refer to play against Portland," Smits s~id. "Not that the Trail Blazers aren't a great team, but it would make
my job a lot easie r."
Smits' job, w hich he shares with all his
teammates, is stopping Shaquille O ' N eal.
With his mix of size, speed and strength,
the Los Angeles Lakers' MVP center
shreds most conventional defensive
schemes and .~ nerally makes players like
Smits wondet': why they took up basketball in the fi r,r place.
In the NUA Finals, beginning tonight at

Staples Center, the Pacers u-n dertake the
task at which the entire league failed this
season. Most recendy, the Blazers tr ied
everything from pre-emptive fouls to constant, oppressive double-teams in an effort
to slow Shaq. T hey still lost the Western
Conference finals in seven games.
To hear the Pacers, the series sometimes
seems like a matchup of Goli ath vs. 12
Davids. Such is the truly massive presence
O'Neal has taken on during this season,
when he finally acquired a· quality supporting cast and led Los Angeles to th e
league's best record.
"You know Shaq is going to get his
points no matter what you do, because

he's the M VP," Indiana guard Jalen Rose
said. "The key to the series is going to be
our team defense. W hen Shaq gets the ball
doVI{n low and he's looking to pass it out,
we have to prevent people from getting
dpen shots. T hat's all you can really do."
If that's the case, the series could depend
on which team 's o utside shoo te rs perform
bet1;er. Los An geles assistant coach Tex
W inter noted that without Shaq, the
series is essentially a marchup of two
jump-shooting teams wh o prefer the
perimeter game to post play.
And therein might lie Indiana's key to
success. N obody gives the Pacers any
chance to stop O'N eal, but l ndiana is a

team capable of o utscoring anyon e.
With the right mix of an aggressive
offense, judicious fouls on 0 ' Neal and
stro ng defense against hi s Lakers team mates, the Pacers think they'll have a shot
at outshooting Los Angeles.
"People d&lt;fu't remember we're a pretty
good ream on offense," point gu ard Mark
Jackson said. "I didn't get all th ose assists
this year by throwi ng th e ball in the
stands. We hit o ur shots, and we think we
can shoot with anybody."
R eggie Miller, Indiana's sharpshooting
veteran guard chasing what might be his
last chance at a titl e, will be particularly

Pluse see NBA. Pare Bl

um,

SIFE team nets 'great scores' at competition
BY KRIS DOTSON

Lak~rs,

.... J

•

•
•

.-

H.t

~

CINC INNATI (AP)
When Aaron Boone took a
called third strike to end it, the
Chicago White Sox shuffied to
the infield, formed a line and
barely raised their hands for
high-fives.
It was that ki nd of a game.
The White Sox scored 17
runs, yet had to get th eir closer
up in the bullpen in the ninth.
Their 17-12 victory over the
Cincinnati R eds on Tu esday
night had more the feel of a
Sunday morning softball game.
"We cam e · out swin ging
today and we needed every single run , .too," catch er Brook
Fordyce said. "To be ho nest,
during the last two innings we
were jqst right there looking to
get the fast out."
·
'
It didn 't come until 29 runs,
31 hits and three hours and 44
minutes after the first pitch. The
White Sox became the first
team in 15 years to score 17
runs against Cincinnati, but let
· the R eds score II' times in the
last three innings.
11
1t was a crazy win ," said
Frank Thomas, wh o homered ,
drove in four runs and scored
four times. " No one gave in.
They're in first place and they
definitely showed the fight ."
The R eds aren 't in first anymore. They fell · a h alf-game
behind St. Louis in the NL
Central and assured th at th eir
longest homestand of the season
won.'t be a winning· one.T hey're
5-6 with one game.
"We're still right there," said
Dante Bichette, whose ninthinning grand slam provided the
800-YAHI- Chicago's Frank Thomas (right) crosses home plate at Clnergy Aeld after hitting a home run fi nal runs. " We need to put a
good month or a couple of..,
last night against the Reds' Ron Vlllone. Thomas drove in tour runs. (AP)

weeks toge ther."
C hicago has put togeth er two
good months and then so me.
T he victory Tuesday was their
sixth in seven gam es, pushing
them to new heigh ts.
They improved the AL's best
record to 34- 23, move d 11
games over .500 for the first
time since September 1996 and
extended their stay atop the
Central to a 50th day.
Even though th ey wast ed
much of a 13- 1 lead in the final
three innings and had to get
closer Keith Fo ulke war ming
up in th e ninth, m anager Jerry
Manuel thou ght the White Sox
took an oth er step in thei r
development as a co ntender.
" l do n't think w e gave up too
many at-bats, even late in the
game," Manuel said. "That's a
sign of our young hitters matur.
mg.
Th ~y quickly too k care of
Ron Villone (6-3) , who gave up
seven runs in 1 1-3 innings.
Thomas' three-run homer on a
two-strike pitch in th e second
made it 7-0.
The left-bander has · b een
pounded twice in six .days, giving up 5 hits and 15 runs in 513 innings.
Thomas s~ored C hicago's sec.
ond run and reached a m ilestone. With the I ,OOOth run of
his career, he becam e the sixth
active player to sco re that m any
and have 300 ho mers, 1,000
RBis and 1,000 walks.The others are Mark McGwire, Barry
Bonds, Cal Ripken, Fred
McGriff and Harold Baines;
" I haven't been kee ping up,"

..

Plean sH Reds, Pip 82

.,

'

NFL NOTEBOOK

K-C Raceway
NeW deal keeps Rice with 49ers resumes season
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
Young, 38, missed the last 13
- Jerry Rice's new deal with games of the season after a head
the 49ers gives him the chance blow left him with his fourth
to finish his career in San Fran- concussion in three years. He is
cisco, and the NFL's career considering whether ~o retire or
receiving leadet says that's some- continue playing with the 49ers
thing money can't buy.
or possibly move to another
While questions continue to team.Young's decision is expectswirl over the future of Steve ed before Saturday.
Young, the 37-,Year- old Rice on
" I don't know what Steve is
Tuesday' signe'll; a restructured going to do right now, but it's
five-year, ince,.t ive- laden $31 going to be hard not to see him
million contrac~that enabled the throwing a football back there:·
.payroll-stressed ' 49ers to save Rice said. "Anything can hap$1.2 million .against the salary pen. It's in his hands: I would
cap.
love to have Steve back."
General manager Bill Walsh
Rice, a 12-time Pro Bowler,
insisted that Rice ·replace so.me remained San Francisco's leading
of his base salary with incentives receiver in 1999 with 67 catches
to alleviate what had been a for 830 yards and five TDs. H e
$5.49 million cap impact.
said he can't help wondering
"I feel real good about this sit- how he's managed to secure his
uation," Rice sai~ . "It ·was give stay with 'the 49ers while Young's
and take. 1. think the most future hangs in the balance. And
important thing is that I got my while other 49ers greats such as
wish. This is where I wanted to Joe Montana, Roger Craig and
fmish my career.".3\,
Ronnie Lott went elsew.here to
That is a goal tin t could elude play out their careers.
Young, who c&lt;;&gt;mbined with
" It makes me feel real special,
Rice to form the · NFL's most because I have always looked at
prolific touchdown_pass tandem. this as a business:· Rice said. "It
'
"

happened to Joe and Ronnie
and all those guys. I said to
myself, 'Why should I be an
exception?' I think it shows a lot,
what the 49ers did. I am going
to do everything possible to just
go out and be a positive this
year, no negativity, and just have

fu n...

Rice said the new deal would
pt:ebably be his last and he
intends to make the most of the
playing time he has lett before
hanging it up in a year or two.
" I can see that corning," Rice
said. " It is something we all have
to fa ce, but it is difficult to deal
with. I know it is coming down
the road, but I feel like I can still
be productive and I am going to
do everything possible to do
that."
Long the go-to guy in San
Francisco's offense, Rice added
he'll embrace his new role as
~entor to the younger receivers
on
team in the midst of an
ov~rhaul after going 4- 12 last

a

season.

'

Ple•n 1H Rice. Pip B:S

.

II

J

'

'

Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Likewise, Jason M ontgomery
ofJackson, becam e the sixth different winner in the Late Model
division, and two new winners
- respectively Skip Watterrrian
and R odney VanOver- graced
: victory lane in the Modified and
Street Stock divisio ns.

C HILLIC OTHE - After a
rain-out last week, th e hardcharging Hobby Stoc ks and
Modifieds join the Super sprints
and Late M odels on the K-C
racmg card fo r the seco nd
VanOver's win b roke a 10- '
Always Coca-Cola sprin t car
series paying $2,000 to the ~~ n ­ race win streak by Frankfort resident C onrad N ewman .
ner.
Many o ut-of- towners are
Drivers from 15 states have
expected to compete as a tune- competed at the speedway this
up for the June 17 "The Night year, and many of the Midwest's
the STARS Com e Out" finest are again expected for Satanniversary special,
urday.
Neithe r the World of O utlaw's
K- C R aceway is located just
support series nor the All- Stars south of Chillicothe off SR 23
are running this Saturday night, on Blain Highway.
prompting several calls from dr iN ext week, all fo ur classes
vers in each of th ose sanctions.
com·p ete
m
the
Big
. Produ cing the sixth different Brothers/ Big Sisters Night.
winner in seven nights of racing, ·
Gates open at 4:30p.m. Warnthe competition at K-C R aceway was again reflec ted two ups are at 6;30 p. m . and racing
weeks ago by newcomer Kevin b~gins at 7;30 p.m .
Huntley of Bloomington, Ind.,
For more inform ation, call Kw ho sco red a dramatic victory C R aceway at 740-663-4 141 , or
over north ern Ohio ace Scott o n th e web at www.kcr:aceMiller.
way.com.

I.

�Page B 2 • The Dtllly Sentinel

•

Wednuday, June 7, 4HIDO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·' Wednaaday, June 7, 2000

Pomeroy, MiddlePOrt, Ohio

RAY LEWIS TRIAL

INTERLEAGUE BASEBALL

One day after cutting a deal, Lewis testifies against cohorts

Drew homers twice as Cardinals win Wittlout·McEiwire;
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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With Mark M,cGwire out, J.D. Drew rediscovered his power.
' Drew homered twice and Larry Sutton, called up earlier in the day
' .to replace McGwire at first base, hit a go-ahead sacrifice Oy as the St.
· Louis Cardinals rallied· from a four-run deficit Tuesday night to beat
' 'the !Unsas City Royals 5-4.
"If it goes out, it goes our," Drew said."! ain't up there tryfng to be
~ · a McGwire or anything. I know my ,role is to get on base and let guys
drive me in."
· Drew, who hadn't homered since May 8, raised his season total to
eight with a solo shot in the fourth and a two- run drive in the fifth.
· McGwire, who missed his 12th game of the season, hurt his thigh
Monday, the same day Fernando Vina injured his hamstring. Ray
' . Lankford injured his hamstring Saturday- and all three aren't expected back before Friday at the earliest.
"You have injuries, but everybody deals with injuries," Drew said.
"The guys stepped up and did good."
In other games it was Minnesota 3, Houston 1; Anaheim 6, San
. . Francisco 5; the New York Yankees 8, Montreal 1; Boston 4, Florida 3;
' ., ' Detroit 2, Pittsburgh 1; Cleveland 4, Milwaukee 2; Tampa Bay 5,
: ·; Philadelphia 3 in 10 innings; the Chicago White Sox 17, Cincinnati
· .: 12; Atlanta 7, Toronto 6; Los Angeles '7, Texas 1; Seattle 4, Colorado 1;
:':. and Oakland 5, San Diego 4. Baltimore's game at the New York Mets
:. • was postponed by rain until Thursday, and in the NL it was Chicago
· '- 4, Arizona 1.
: ~ ~. At St. Louis, Andy Benes (5-3) allowed four runs in the third, then
·..; retired 12 in a row later in the game as the Cardinals won for only the
.::, second time In seven games. Jay Witasick (1 - 5) was the loser.
'· ·
'!Wins 3, Astros 1
. Jose Lima (1-8) took a two-hitter into the eighth inning, then lost
·. :: his eighth consecutive decision as Mi!lnesota rallied on Cristian Guz-

man's RBI grounder, Matt Lawton's run-scoring double and Dayid
Oniz's RBI single. Johan Santana (1-2) got his first major league win,
allowing three hits in five innings of relief. For only the second time
in 30 games at Enron Field, there were no homers.
Angels 6, Giants 5
Darin Entad and Mo Vaughn hit ninth-inning singles offRobb Nen
(0-2) as Anaheim overcame Barry Bonds' majo~ league-leading 25 th
homer. Marvin Benard's RBI double offTroy Percival (4-2) gave the
Giants a 5-4 lead in the top half.
Yankees 8, Expos 1
Bernie Williams homered offJavier Vazquez (6-2) and drove in four
runs at Montreal, and emergency starter Jason Grimsley (2-1) co mbined with two relievers on a three-hitter, ending the Expos' seasonhigh six-game winning streak.
Red Sox 4; Marlins 3
Ramon Martinez (5-3) improved to 8-1 against Florida and Nomar
Garciaparra had three RBis to lead visiting Boston . Derek Lowe,
Boston's sixth pitcher, got three outs for his 12th save. Jesus Sanchez
(4-5) gave up four runs and eight hits in five innings.
Tigers 2, Pirates 1
Deivi Cruz homered and Juan Gonzalez had an RBI single for visiting Detroit. CJ. Nitkowski (3-7) got the last two outs in the fifth and
Todd Jones got his 17th save. Jimmy Anderson (1 -4) allowed one run
and three hits in seven innings.
Indians 4, Brewers 2
David Justice hit his 250th home run, a three-run drive in the first
off John Snyder (0-2), and Chuck Finley (5-4) pitched a seven-hitter
as visiting Cleveland won its fourth straight.
Devil Rays 50Phillies 3
. Mike DiFelice hit a go-ahead, two-run double off Jeff Brantley (11) in the 1Oth at Philadelphia as Tampa Bay streiched a winning streak

ATLANTA (AP) - One day after a deal with
prosecutors to drop murde~ charges against him,·
Ray Lewis told a jury his friend showed him a knife
after a fatal street brawl and demonstrated using it.
The Baltimore R.avens linebacker told the jury he
demanded an explanation from Joseph Sweeting
. after the fight ended. Sweeting showed him a knife,
~de punching motions with it and said, "Every
tune they hit me, I hit them," lewis testified Thes. .day.
• . Lewis said the Jan. 31 fight, which took place outside an Atlanta club after a post-Super Bowl parry
and left two men dead, was over so quickly he
couldn't teU if Sweeting or defendant Reginald
Oakley stabbed the two men.
·
On cross-examination from s-ting's lawyer,
Lewis said the knife was not bloody and Sweeting
had no blood on him when they returned to their
hotel. Lewis testified that Oakley, whom Lewis had
met only a few times, told him he didn't stab anyone.
Sweeting and Oakley are charged with murder,
felony mu,J;der and aggravated assault in the st.abbings ofJacinth Baker and Richard Lollar.They face

to thre.e for the first time this year. Roberto H ernandez (2-2) allowed
Kevin Sefcik's game-tying single in the ninth, and Rick White pitched
a perfect 10th for his second save.
&gt;,
Braves 7, Blue Jays 6 .
·•
R afael Furcal hit the winning double in the ninth as Atlanta rallied
from a 5-2 deficit.There were 18 walks, 10 by visiting Toronto, inclWding two with the bases-loaded. Mike Remlinger (2- 1) picked up :the
·
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win with a scoreless ninth.
·
Dodgers 7, Rangers 1
·"
Rookie Eric Gagne (1-3) allowed five hits in six shutout innings.1nd
. struck out seven· in his second ca reer win . Mark Clark (3-4) gave up
four runs and seven hits in 4 1-3.·Scarborough Green thought he had
his first major lear'e homer in ihe fifth at Arlington, but plate ·umpire
Marvin Hudson:overruled and correctly called the ball fou l.
·Mariners 4, Rockies 1
·' .::·
Brett Tomko (4-2) allowed one run and five hits in five innings at
Seattle,'improvid~'to 7-0 in interleague play John Olerud drove in •tWo
runs and Kazuhiro Sasaki pitched the ninth for his ninth save: Tadd
Helton went 1-fdr-3 for Colorado, lowering his major league-leading
average to ·.408. Brian Bohanon (2-4) gave up four runs and' seven·hits
in (,ix innings.
...
Athletics 5, Padres 4
Matt Stairs hit ~ grand slam in the first off Rodrigo Lopez (0-2) at
Oakland, and Gil Heredia (8-3) 1 gave up four runs- three t!arneitand five hits in seven- plus innings. Jason lsringhausen got his 14th save.
Cubs 4, Diamondbacks 1
' Kevin Tapani (4-6) pitched a five-hitter at Wrigley Field, sending
Arizona to its first four-game skid since last June 20-23. Rookie Au gie
Ojeda hit an RBI triple . to spark a three-run fifth off Armando
Reynoso (4-5).
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REDS NOTES

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Thomas said. "I read about it four dayl ago and
haven't scored in a while:'
On this night, evety White Sox player had a
chance to score. Every sllirter had at least one hit as
Chlcaso pUed up a Nuon-hlah 19. Even •career Cal
Eldrwd ·(6·2) sot In on the otl'enM, reachln1 bue
three tlmtl and 1corin1 three run1.
"Tiut Jut dmt I nn the butt llkt that probably In h!Jh 'tchool:' Eldred llld;"lt wateo lonrr•so
I don't remember too w.U."
.
It w11 13-1 when he left In the -nth, but tht
1\tdl w.ct Ju•t pnlnrr 11arced. Thty b.cced around
(or five runt In tlut HWIIth and tlutn madl It an
adventure In the ninth.
TreWnlll7-6, their flnt tlwjla'ytn reached ll(tly.
Blchette'l tllhth career pan slam off Jnu• Pena
cut it to 17-12 and sot Foulke th:owinl hard In tlut
~. bullpen.
.
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"I've had a lot of practice in those pme1," said
=~ Bichette, referrinJ to his yean in Colorado. "What

ner. She was taken to a hospital for·six stitches on the left
side of her forehead.
Griffey met her in a waiting area out5ide the clubhouse.
No RBI Eddie
Catcher Eddie Taubensee Jed the. team in barring in May
with a .316 average. Despite that, he drove in 'only one
run.
Strange? It gets even stranger.
Taubensee hasn't driven in a run in his his last 22 games,
a span of 79 at-bats, since May 3, when he hit a solo·
homer for his only RBI of the month.
It's the longest RBI dry spell of his career and it's hard
to explain, given his hot hitting in May.
"I had nothing to show . for it:~ he said,:' I was 'hittil)g
good, but I didrl't do anything. It was weird!' .
'
Taubenseee went 1-for-3Tuesday night in a 17-12. loss
to the Chicago White Sox. He has only one hit in' his last
19 at-bats with runners in scoring position and is in a 3for-25 slump overall.
.
"Eddie runs in streaks;' manager Jack McKeon said. "He
gets hot for two weeks and just dean's everybody's clocks.
He'U be all right."
Draft day revisited .
The Reds chose 52 players, including 34 pitche~. in the
two-day dra(t that concluded Tuesday.
1
The second-day selections, by round, name, position, age
and school:
;!1, Matthew Moyer, RHP, 20, Shelton State Community College; 22, Clint Collins, RHP, 21, South Carolina; 23,
Stephen Smitherman, OF, 21 , Arkansas-Little Rock; 24,
Todd Stone, C, 22, Southeastern Oklahoma State; 25,
Joshua Tomsu, RHP, 20, Southwest Texa$ State; 26, Brandon Culp, RHP, 22, JacksonviUe State; 27, Ryan Smith,
OF, 22, Texas-San Antonio; 28, Jason Moates, RHP, 21,

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:,...::· bis first day as a member of the
,.., &lt; Richmond Braves.
.
~~; • But if and when the controver~~al reliever does join the Triple A
~· •cJub, his future teammates said
, • he'll ·be welcomed as ju$t another
: , ,player. ·
: ~ · Rocker, assigned to the Inter;
national League team by the
l Atlanta Braves on Monday, has
three days to report.
I • Speculation was that he would
· join the .t eam in Toledo, Ohio, on
1
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Wednesday night, where the
:
Braves were to begin a three;
game series.
'
Even the team wasn't sure
when Rocker would arrive .
S
"They said maybe Toledo,
J maybe tonight," pitching coach

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Ohio to give citizens an opportuni!Y'·to review and comment on the Countfs
proposed CDBG FY' 2000 Formula.;~nocation projects.
. · '
Based on both citizen input and lQcal officials' assessment of the
needs, the County is proposing to ljbdertake the following CDBG activities
Fiscal Year 2000:
·.,~
, ,
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection Fadlities .a nd Equipment: Salem Towns~lp
Trustees
w·
.
·
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Construction of fire Facility
·,· ''.
·.~

CDBG Funding: $29,000
Other Funds: $2,500.00 • (Salom To,wnship Trustees)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements: Middleport Vlllaae • Mill Street
CDBG Fundlna: $29,000
.·
Other Fundal $10,324.00 · ~ (Middleport VIllage)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AR£.\ LMI ·
'·
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection Facilities and Equipment: Scipio Township
Purchase of Fire Protection Vehicle
:'g ..··• ,, .. •,
CDBO Funding: $12,000
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Other Funds: None
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NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
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NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING

Bichette'a arand slam eKtended his hitting streak
to 10 rpmet.

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On tap of our gn!ot 'TOT'AI. CHOIC~pac:kap.

d&lt;lsta State;
IJ1
30, Ronald Hayward,' OF, 19, Bishop State Community
College; 31, Daniel Touchet, RHP, 18, Palm Beach Lakes
High (West Palm Beach, Fla.); 32, Nathan CullweD, C, 21, Wayland Baptist; 33, Gerritt Simpson, RHP, 20, Conners State Junior College; 34,
.· .
1
Roderick Allen, 3B, 17, Desert Vista · High
The Meigs County Commissioners jotend to apply to the Ohio Department
(Phoenix, Ariz.) ; 35, Andrew Murray, SS, 18,
Development, for funding under the FlY' 2000 Community Development Brdck
John 'JYier High ('JYler, Texas); 36, Roy Dickerson, LHP, 18, T.C. Roberson High (AshviUe,
Gra~t . (CDBG) Formula Allocatiod Program, a (e9erally' fundeq progr~·m
N.C.); 37, Sean Patt~rson, 1B, 18, Cascade High
adm1mstered by the State. Meigs Coupty is eligible for up to $169,000 of Fiscal
(Everett, Wash.); 38, Jason Johns, RHP, 18,
CalaUen High' (Corpus Chrisri,Texas) ; 39, Bren-· Year 2000 CDBG funding, pr-ovided the County meets applicable recjuih;ments.
don Davis, RHP, 20, Richland Junior CoUege On April 17, 2000, the County conducted its first public hearing to.:tnf'o~m
(Richardson, Texas);
citizens about the CDBG program,.,bpw it may be used, what activities are
. 40, Michael Wagnon, RHP, 18, Calalien High
c
(Corpus Christi); 41, Hermank Rogers, RHP, eligible, and other important programrrequirements.
18, Athens High (Athens, Texas); 42, Eric
A second public hearing will be ~Mid on June 12, 2000 at 10:00 a.m: at the
Mitc~ell, C, 21, Geor~e Washington ; 43,
Mei~s County Commissioners offi&lt;:.e, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Michael Laesch, RHP, 22,lowa State; 44, Bryan

you do is try to get the most positives you can out
of them. We came back and scored lot of runs.
Other than that, .we didn't get a whole lot out of it."
Pena retired the next three batters, getting Boone
on a called third strike to finally end a game that had
seemed over a long time ago.
"l was juS! sitti.n g there waiting (or the final out,"
Eldred uid. "Things didn't neceuarily go the way
we wanted, but we did what we needed."
R.eda Not111 The last tea!f! to score 17 against.
Cincinnati wa1 Atlanta, which won 17-9 on May 1,
t 985 In the 11me 1tadlum,
· Tht Whitt Sox vainly aiJUed for an lnttrt"enmce
call when Ktn Orlfl'tyjr.low.red hli rlrrht shoulder
Into 1tcond baHmtn Ray Durham'• mldlectlon and
a!llrctd to wrap his arms uound hlaltp to bruk up
a double play In tht tlrat.
.
The R.tda lopped 1 million In att•ndance on the
32nd date for which tlckt11 Wire 1old, matchlnrr the
club record of 1993 for fastest to the mark. They
dldn 'I nU tlckell for their makeup of an openln11
~

Anderson, SS, 21, Southwest Texas State; 'W5. Eric Spadt,
2B, 21, Penn State; 46, Christopher Schrg'der, RHP, 21,
Oklahoma City College; 47 ,Eddie Sparks, 21, East Tennessee State; 4S, John Garcia, RHP, 18, Uva)de High (La
Pryor, 'Thx;as); 49, Brandon Pyles, RHP. ~~' Kennendale
High . (Kennendale, Texas); 50, )ude Auzei,1pe. RHP, 18,
·
Humble High (Humble, Texas).
· New 'ballpark costs on the ..rise
Cost estimates for the R~ds' new ballpar~ :Ue rising even
as plans remain on the drawing board. TiJJcitab is $250.4
1
million - so far.
'.
Construction managers have spent the pl~'t three weeks
pricing thousands of individual parts a.ncl,, hav~ . added
about $6 million to their January esti"1fltf,..T~al &lt;\orsn't
include 84 items tl-jat 'weren't priced be'cause'Ciesigns, awn 't
complete, and does not include legal fee~ and,.rrofit for 'the
constructio'/! manager, project manager and architect.
Arnold Rosenberg, an executive for project manager
Parsons Brinckerhoff, said Tuesday his firm..has not decided how much of a contingency fund the county should
carry into 'the project. That fund, inten~eu to handle
unexpected costs, could be $8 million or rrl2 re - also not
.J •
in this cost estimate.
Construction managers and Reds officiai'i \vill spend the
next three or four weeks calculating the' ' cost of those
unpriced items and looking for ways to whittle down the
10
bottom •une.
.
Hamilton County Commissioner Tom' _r:.leyer said it's
too early to say if the final bill wiU bust \~~ budget. ·
"We don't have enough information hen\ to deterniine
if we should be dismayed or elated," Neyet $aid. "There a.re
a lot of open .questions in this document. That's not good
or bad, it's just typical of this stage of the"wocess:'
Rosenberg said his company wiU tak~ :.steps to guard
against cost overruns that have plagued co~siruction of the
Bengals' new football stadium, schedu!ed'ib opeh Aug. 19.

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veteran guard chasing what
'might be his last chance at a
~
title, will be particularly
:
important.
; f ' · " Miller made his reputation ·
= on frenetic playoff per(or; .. · .mances, and the Pacers' East' ;. ern
Conference
playoff'
: · : gpponents found out he can
i ·. ,; still unleash a barrage of
l · .jumpen as well as anyone in
: ··. the game.
: ; ~ ."We hope they overlook
: · ·us," said Miller, who ' led
~ · indiana to its first NBA
! .. finals by burying the New
: York Knicks under a wave of
3 •pointers in the conference
; , finals.
·~·- "We're not coming here to
'· ·lay down. We're coming in
: ; : here to shock the world."
' . The Pacers' roster of shoot;·.: 'e'rs also includes Rose, who
: 1 • complements · his
slashing
1irives t.o the basket with
jumpers; Travis Best and
: Jackson , who can both hit
: · · ftom outside; and big men
: , Smits, Austin Croshere and
: · . Sam Perkins, all accom-.
l · plished outside shooters from
· varying distal)ces.
,I . · . "You d on ' t get to t h'1s
; point by being a one- or
: ' · two-man team," Rose said .
: "You need a whole bunch of
· .. g)lys with the same kind of
1'. focus. We can all contribute
l offensively, right down the
•• roster. Not many t~ams can
match that."
•1
During the Pacers' best
.: stretches of the regular s~a­
son, th'ey killed their ~ppo­
: nents with dozens of open
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by telling his party to keep their mouths shut and
then giving a false statement to poli ce.
As a result, Lewis will serve 12 months on probation under Georgia's first offender law His record
could be cleared if he successfully compleres his sentence. During probation, he must remain employed'
and not use drugs or alcohoL Lewis will also pay
one-third of the prosecution's court costs and could
be fined. He won't be suspended by the NFL.
Lewis, the leading tackler in the NFL last year, has
a four-year, $26 million contract with the Ravens . .
Lewis plans to rejoin the club at a voluntary minicamp next we'ek, Garland said.
" It's over for R ay Lewis. That's the last court
appearance he'll have in Atlanta," Garland said.

don't really know."
With Richmond, Rocker wiU
be reunited with former manager
Randy Ingle .and several former
teammates, including Mark
DeRosa, who has played with
Rocker in the minors, instructional leagues and during a brief
callup to Atlanta this season.
Ingle was not available before
the game.
"In the clubhouse he's a great
guy;• DeRosa said. "I've known
him for about four years now. I
really didn't pal around with him
outside the clubhouse, but he
treated me with re$pect and I've
gOt no bad words tO say about
hi m."
DeRosa said he thinks his

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around. I am just fortunate I am
going to be part ofit ihis year and
hopefully next year. I look for. ward to just going out and playfnHnPIIp81
ing hard- nosed foorpall, trying to
"This t.e am \lasicaUy is in a set a good example for the
rebuilding stage," Rice said, "It younger guys. I am glad to get it
shows the character of the 49ers done."
to keep some of the veterans

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Rice

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got him into trouble with basebaD, walked 25 batters in 18 1-3
innings for Atlanta.
He must spend at least 10 days
in the minors unless he's traded.
Braves pitcher Joe Winkelsas
said it's time for the controversy
to end.
"I think everybody should just
leave the guy alone," Winkelsas
said. "Did he bring it on himself&gt;
Yes he did. Is he in the public eye?
Yes, he is. ·

"But when are we going to let
it die?"
Alvarez worked with Rocker
some in spring training and has
seen him pitch several times on
television this season, but said he
won't really be able to begin
addressing Rocker's problems
until the two have a chance to
talk.
"Maybe he's trying too hard,"
Alvarez said. "He's still throwing
hard, so he's nor backing off any.
Maybe he's just trying too hard to
make the perfect pitch."

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shots in assistant coach Rick
Carlisle's jump-shot-friendly
offense . Such marksmanship
will be necessary for Indiana
to surprise the Lakers.
"They have a lot of
weapons on their team . They
bave a lot of great shooters,"
O'Neal said. "Reggie's not
the type of guy that you really could stop. He's real
aggressive."
While Indiana has been
tested in nearly a decade of'
playoff appearances, the Lakers are essentially making
tbeir first run with this particular cast wearing purple
an.i gold.
If teamwork is as important
as Bird claims, the . Pacers
have another edge.
The Lakers' roster is a
mishmash of judicious drafts,
trades and free-agent signings.
The Lakers don't have the
years of experience together
mos! teams need before
advancing to the finals .
A.C. Green is the only
player on the roster with
more than four years of L.A.
experience, and Green had
been away for six seasons
before returning last fall .
He is the only link to the
past glories of Magic and
Ka-reem, but he doesn '.t give
them much relevance to the
task facing the Lakers now.
"I t d oesn ' t seem Iike very .
long since I waSin the finals ·
with this organization, but it
really has been," said Green,
who was on the last Los
Angeles team to get this far,
in 1991. "This is a whole different show now. The game is
different."

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ers, gays and minorities behind
them, and that the struggling lefthanded closer would probably
have a short stay here.
"Yeah, he screwed up, but he's a
good man," DeRosa said. "HopefuUy he can come down ·here and
straighten himself out physically
and mentally and hopefully go on
to bigger and better things. I'm
sure he 'II be out of here in no
time."
Rocker, whose demotion came

BLUE LUSTER
CARPET

a no-show on first day with Richmond b~llclub

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CINCINNATI (AP) - Deion Sanders' nameplate was
: :~ removed from his dressing cubicle Tuesday. His Cincinnati
:.:· Reds jersey was tucked away.
.... , A day after the outfielder/cornerback announced he
' was going to play only football this year, t~e Reds began
writing him out of their plans - for now.
. . Manager Jim Bowden said that Sanders will soon be
:- . moved from the team's disabled list to a restricted list,
'· keeping the Reds' rights to Sonders should he decide to
• • try baseball again.
"There are some administrative complications that have
to be resolved prior to that:' he said.
Until Tuesday, the Reds had kept Sanders' jersey hanging in his cubicle and his nameplate above it. Thoso;, were
' gone, along with Sanders' photo outside the clubhouse.
So ended Sanders' latest flirtation with basebaU, a fourmonth stay during which he neither hit nor got back to
the big leagues.
Sanders, 32, left the Reds to play footbaU full-time in
1997. He signed a minor-league contract with the R~ds
last January and talked about resuming his two-sport status.
Three big problems arose. Four days after he signed the
contract, he had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee to
fix a football injury. That meant he wouldn't be able to run
when spring training began.
.
His chances were further diminished when the Reds
got Ken Griffey Jr. in a trade with Seattle on Feb. 10, giving them one of the game's best cenrerfielders.
Finally, Sanders got back his speed but not his batting
stroke. After working out with the Reds at the start of the
season, he went on a minor league rehabilitation assignmern and batted only .200 against Triple-A pitching.
Stuck in the minors, Sanders got the club's permission
to return home to DaUas on May 11. Bowden held out a
glimmer of hope that he would play baseball this year and
kept Sanders on the· disabled list, which meant he would
keep getting a baseball salary.
Sanders had $300,000 base salary that would have
jumped to $600,000 if he joined the major league team.
When he signed his contract with the . Redskins on
Monday, Sanders said he would play only football this
year. He didn't rule out basebaU in the future.
Sanders said he turned Bowden down last ~elt when
the general manager caUed looking for a replacement for
outfielder Alex Ochoa, who went on the disabled list fol~
lowing an appendectomy.
"! don't have any comment on that:' Bowden said Tuesday.
Junior repays injured girl
Before Tuesday's game, Ken Griffey Jr. autographed a bat
and four hats for Christine Lindner, the 10-year-old girl
who was hit on the forehead when ·a bat slipped from his
hands on Sunday.
The girl is the granddaughter of Reds owner Carl Lind-

past Lewis' limousine and then turned around and
came back. Oakley jumped out of the limousine,
and one of the victims, Jacinth Baker, smacked him
in the head with a champagne bottle.
"Honestly, all hell broke loose from that point; '
Lewis said.
Sweeting tried to help Oakley, but never made it
because two large men attacked him and dragged
him behind a tree, Lewis said. T hen he saw Sweeting regain his footing and start throwing punches
and fighting back.
Lewis said he saw Oakley and another member of
Lewis' group, Carlos Stafford, fighting with Baker.
He said Oakley punched Baker four or five times in
the chest while Stafford was kicking him.
"That was a frantic fight ," Lewis said. "They was
really going at it."
In his opening statements, prosecutor Paul
Howard told jurors that bothlvictims were stabbed
several times in the chest. He told jurors that the
killers held their knives in their fists Jnd delivered
the death blows in a punching motion, so witnesses
could not see the weapons.
Lewis, 25, admitted obstructing th e investigation

~: :· RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Mike Alvarez said before Tuesday teammates at Richmond have put a day after he threatened the
:i~: John Rocker was a no-show on night's game · with Norfolk. "We Rocker's comments . on foreign- reporter whose story originally

·:'.t '

.: Deion's jersey, nameplate removed from clubh~se

'

up to life in prison if convicted .
Murder and assault charges against Lewis were
dropped Monday after he pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and agreed to testify about what he
saw during a brawl.
"I never did anything;· Lewis said after leaving
court. "I was nothing in this whole case but a witness the whole time. And what !just said today is to
prove to the world that I've always bee n a witness."
Lewis te$tified that he was not involved in the
fight at aU.
When aske&lt;! whether Lewis' testimony was going
to hurt the remaining defendants, Lewis' lawyer Ed
Garland said, "I think it both hurt and helped them
... It was a mixed bag."
Lewi$ testified that he left the Cobalt nightclub
with his friends around 4 a.m., when Oakley got
into an argument with a group of men. Lewis said
he tried to break up the argument by taking Oakley
back to his rented limousine.
"Reginald was the aggressor at ·the time that I was
walking up;' Lewis said. "He was really hostile
toward the other two guys."
A few moments later, the group of men walked

MLB NOTEBOOK

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

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

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DAY
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FATHER'S
NAME)

FATHER'S

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

YOUR FATHER'S NAME

SUSAN

HAPPY
DAY
LOVE,'
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

SUSAN

.

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.'

�Page B 2 • The Dtllly Sentinel

•

Wednuday, June 7, 4HIDO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·' Wednaaday, June 7, 2000

Pomeroy, MiddlePOrt, Ohio

RAY LEWIS TRIAL

INTERLEAGUE BASEBALL

One day after cutting a deal, Lewis testifies against cohorts

Drew homers twice as Cardinals win Wittlout·McEiwire;
•

.'1

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With Mark M,cGwire out, J.D. Drew rediscovered his power.
' Drew homered twice and Larry Sutton, called up earlier in the day
' .to replace McGwire at first base, hit a go-ahead sacrifice Oy as the St.
· Louis Cardinals rallied· from a four-run deficit Tuesday night to beat
' 'the !Unsas City Royals 5-4.
"If it goes out, it goes our," Drew said."! ain't up there tryfng to be
~ · a McGwire or anything. I know my ,role is to get on base and let guys
drive me in."
· Drew, who hadn't homered since May 8, raised his season total to
eight with a solo shot in the fourth and a two- run drive in the fifth.
· McGwire, who missed his 12th game of the season, hurt his thigh
Monday, the same day Fernando Vina injured his hamstring. Ray
' . Lankford injured his hamstring Saturday- and all three aren't expected back before Friday at the earliest.
"You have injuries, but everybody deals with injuries," Drew said.
"The guys stepped up and did good."
In other games it was Minnesota 3, Houston 1; Anaheim 6, San
. . Francisco 5; the New York Yankees 8, Montreal 1; Boston 4, Florida 3;
' ., ' Detroit 2, Pittsburgh 1; Cleveland 4, Milwaukee 2; Tampa Bay 5,
: ·; Philadelphia 3 in 10 innings; the Chicago White Sox 17, Cincinnati
· .: 12; Atlanta 7, Toronto 6; Los Angeles '7, Texas 1; Seattle 4, Colorado 1;
:':. and Oakland 5, San Diego 4. Baltimore's game at the New York Mets
:. • was postponed by rain until Thursday, and in the NL it was Chicago
· '- 4, Arizona 1.
: ~ ~. At St. Louis, Andy Benes (5-3) allowed four runs in the third, then
·..; retired 12 in a row later in the game as the Cardinals won for only the
.::, second time In seven games. Jay Witasick (1 - 5) was the loser.
'· ·
'!Wins 3, Astros 1
. Jose Lima (1-8) took a two-hitter into the eighth inning, then lost
·. :: his eighth consecutive decision as Mi!lnesota rallied on Cristian Guz-

man's RBI grounder, Matt Lawton's run-scoring double and Dayid
Oniz's RBI single. Johan Santana (1-2) got his first major league win,
allowing three hits in five innings of relief. For only the second time
in 30 games at Enron Field, there were no homers.
Angels 6, Giants 5
Darin Entad and Mo Vaughn hit ninth-inning singles offRobb Nen
(0-2) as Anaheim overcame Barry Bonds' majo~ league-leading 25 th
homer. Marvin Benard's RBI double offTroy Percival (4-2) gave the
Giants a 5-4 lead in the top half.
Yankees 8, Expos 1
Bernie Williams homered offJavier Vazquez (6-2) and drove in four
runs at Montreal, and emergency starter Jason Grimsley (2-1) co mbined with two relievers on a three-hitter, ending the Expos' seasonhigh six-game winning streak.
Red Sox 4; Marlins 3
Ramon Martinez (5-3) improved to 8-1 against Florida and Nomar
Garciaparra had three RBis to lead visiting Boston . Derek Lowe,
Boston's sixth pitcher, got three outs for his 12th save. Jesus Sanchez
(4-5) gave up four runs and eight hits in five innings.
Tigers 2, Pirates 1
Deivi Cruz homered and Juan Gonzalez had an RBI single for visiting Detroit. CJ. Nitkowski (3-7) got the last two outs in the fifth and
Todd Jones got his 17th save. Jimmy Anderson (1 -4) allowed one run
and three hits in seven innings.
Indians 4, Brewers 2
David Justice hit his 250th home run, a three-run drive in the first
off John Snyder (0-2), and Chuck Finley (5-4) pitched a seven-hitter
as visiting Cleveland won its fourth straight.
Devil Rays 50Phillies 3
. Mike DiFelice hit a go-ahead, two-run double off Jeff Brantley (11) in the 1Oth at Philadelphia as Tampa Bay streiched a winning streak

ATLANTA (AP) - One day after a deal with
prosecutors to drop murde~ charges against him,·
Ray Lewis told a jury his friend showed him a knife
after a fatal street brawl and demonstrated using it.
The Baltimore R.avens linebacker told the jury he
demanded an explanation from Joseph Sweeting
. after the fight ended. Sweeting showed him a knife,
~de punching motions with it and said, "Every
tune they hit me, I hit them," lewis testified Thes. .day.
• . Lewis said the Jan. 31 fight, which took place outside an Atlanta club after a post-Super Bowl parry
and left two men dead, was over so quickly he
couldn't teU if Sweeting or defendant Reginald
Oakley stabbed the two men.
·
On cross-examination from s-ting's lawyer,
Lewis said the knife was not bloody and Sweeting
had no blood on him when they returned to their
hotel. Lewis testified that Oakley, whom Lewis had
met only a few times, told him he didn't stab anyone.
Sweeting and Oakley are charged with murder,
felony mu,J;der and aggravated assault in the st.abbings ofJacinth Baker and Richard Lollar.They face

to thre.e for the first time this year. Roberto H ernandez (2-2) allowed
Kevin Sefcik's game-tying single in the ninth, and Rick White pitched
a perfect 10th for his second save.
&gt;,
Braves 7, Blue Jays 6 .
·•
R afael Furcal hit the winning double in the ninth as Atlanta rallied
from a 5-2 deficit.There were 18 walks, 10 by visiting Toronto, inclWding two with the bases-loaded. Mike Remlinger (2- 1) picked up :the
·
•:
win with a scoreless ninth.
·
Dodgers 7, Rangers 1
·"
Rookie Eric Gagne (1-3) allowed five hits in six shutout innings.1nd
. struck out seven· in his second ca reer win . Mark Clark (3-4) gave up
four runs and seven hits in 4 1-3.·Scarborough Green thought he had
his first major lear'e homer in ihe fifth at Arlington, but plate ·umpire
Marvin Hudson:overruled and correctly called the ball fou l.
·Mariners 4, Rockies 1
·' .::·
Brett Tomko (4-2) allowed one run and five hits in five innings at
Seattle,'improvid~'to 7-0 in interleague play John Olerud drove in •tWo
runs and Kazuhiro Sasaki pitched the ninth for his ninth save: Tadd
Helton went 1-fdr-3 for Colorado, lowering his major league-leading
average to ·.408. Brian Bohanon (2-4) gave up four runs and' seven·hits
in (,ix innings.
...
Athletics 5, Padres 4
Matt Stairs hit ~ grand slam in the first off Rodrigo Lopez (0-2) at
Oakland, and Gil Heredia (8-3) 1 gave up four runs- three t!arneitand five hits in seven- plus innings. Jason lsringhausen got his 14th save.
Cubs 4, Diamondbacks 1
' Kevin Tapani (4-6) pitched a five-hitter at Wrigley Field, sending
Arizona to its first four-game skid since last June 20-23. Rookie Au gie
Ojeda hit an RBI triple . to spark a three-run fifth off Armando
Reynoso (4-5).
·
·
. ) [ . .

REDS NOTES

-

~J~ocker

........ .
lii::1' .. 1 ~ .

a

Reds

.'

'.
I

fromPap81

Thomas said. "I read about it four dayl ago and
haven't scored in a while:'
On this night, evety White Sox player had a
chance to score. Every sllirter had at least one hit as
Chlcaso pUed up a Nuon-hlah 19. Even •career Cal
Eldrwd ·(6·2) sot In on the otl'enM, reachln1 bue
three tlmtl and 1corin1 three run1.
"Tiut Jut dmt I nn the butt llkt that probably In h!Jh 'tchool:' Eldred llld;"lt wateo lonrr•so
I don't remember too w.U."
.
It w11 13-1 when he left In the -nth, but tht
1\tdl w.ct Ju•t pnlnrr 11arced. Thty b.cced around
(or five runt In tlut HWIIth and tlutn madl It an
adventure In the ninth.
TreWnlll7-6, their flnt tlwjla'ytn reached ll(tly.
Blchette'l tllhth career pan slam off Jnu• Pena
cut it to 17-12 and sot Foulke th:owinl hard In tlut
~. bullpen.
.
::
"I've had a lot of practice in those pme1," said
=~ Bichette, referrinJ to his yean in Colorado. "What

ner. She was taken to a hospital for·six stitches on the left
side of her forehead.
Griffey met her in a waiting area out5ide the clubhouse.
No RBI Eddie
Catcher Eddie Taubensee Jed the. team in barring in May
with a .316 average. Despite that, he drove in 'only one
run.
Strange? It gets even stranger.
Taubensee hasn't driven in a run in his his last 22 games,
a span of 79 at-bats, since May 3, when he hit a solo·
homer for his only RBI of the month.
It's the longest RBI dry spell of his career and it's hard
to explain, given his hot hitting in May.
"I had nothing to show . for it:~ he said,:' I was 'hittil)g
good, but I didrl't do anything. It was weird!' .
'
Taubenseee went 1-for-3Tuesday night in a 17-12. loss
to the Chicago White Sox. He has only one hit in' his last
19 at-bats with runners in scoring position and is in a 3for-25 slump overall.
.
"Eddie runs in streaks;' manager Jack McKeon said. "He
gets hot for two weeks and just dean's everybody's clocks.
He'U be all right."
Draft day revisited .
The Reds chose 52 players, including 34 pitche~. in the
two-day dra(t that concluded Tuesday.
1
The second-day selections, by round, name, position, age
and school:
;!1, Matthew Moyer, RHP, 20, Shelton State Community College; 22, Clint Collins, RHP, 21, South Carolina; 23,
Stephen Smitherman, OF, 21 , Arkansas-Little Rock; 24,
Todd Stone, C, 22, Southeastern Oklahoma State; 25,
Joshua Tomsu, RHP, 20, Southwest Texa$ State; 26, Brandon Culp, RHP, 22, JacksonviUe State; 27, Ryan Smith,
OF, 22, Texas-San Antonio; 28, Jason Moates, RHP, 21,

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:,...::· bis first day as a member of the
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.
~~; • But if and when the controver~~al reliever does join the Triple A
~· •cJub, his future teammates said
, • he'll ·be welcomed as ju$t another
: , ,player. ·
: ~ · Rocker, assigned to the Inter;
national League team by the
l Atlanta Braves on Monday, has
three days to report.
I • Speculation was that he would
· join the .t eam in Toledo, Ohio, on
1
:
Wednesday night, where the
:
Braves were to begin a three;
game series.
'
Even the team wasn't sure
when Rocker would arrive .
S
"They said maybe Toledo,
J maybe tonight," pitching coach

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Ohio to give citizens an opportuni!Y'·to review and comment on the Countfs
proposed CDBG FY' 2000 Formula.;~nocation projects.
. · '
Based on both citizen input and lQcal officials' assessment of the
needs, the County is proposing to ljbdertake the following CDBG activities
Fiscal Year 2000:
·.,~
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ACTIVITY: Fire Protection Fadlities .a nd Equipment: Salem Towns~lp
Trustees
w·
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Construction of fire Facility
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CDBG Funding: $29,000
Other Funds: $2,500.00 • (Salom To,wnship Trustees)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
ACTIVITY: Street Improvements: Middleport Vlllaae • Mill Street
CDBG Fundlna: $29,000
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Other Fundal $10,324.00 · ~ (Middleport VIllage)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: AR£.\ LMI ·
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Purchase of Fire Protection Vehicle
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Bichette'a arand slam eKtended his hitting streak
to 10 rpmet.

.

On tap of our gn!ot 'TOT'AI. CHOIC~pac:kap.

d&lt;lsta State;
IJ1
30, Ronald Hayward,' OF, 19, Bishop State Community
College; 31, Daniel Touchet, RHP, 18, Palm Beach Lakes
High (West Palm Beach, Fla.); 32, Nathan CullweD, C, 21, Wayland Baptist; 33, Gerritt Simpson, RHP, 20, Conners State Junior College; 34,
.· .
1
Roderick Allen, 3B, 17, Desert Vista · High
The Meigs County Commissioners jotend to apply to the Ohio Department
(Phoenix, Ariz.) ; 35, Andrew Murray, SS, 18,
Development, for funding under the FlY' 2000 Community Development Brdck
John 'JYier High ('JYler, Texas); 36, Roy Dickerson, LHP, 18, T.C. Roberson High (AshviUe,
Gra~t . (CDBG) Formula Allocatiod Program, a (e9erally' fundeq progr~·m
N.C.); 37, Sean Patt~rson, 1B, 18, Cascade High
adm1mstered by the State. Meigs Coupty is eligible for up to $169,000 of Fiscal
(Everett, Wash.); 38, Jason Johns, RHP, 18,
CalaUen High' (Corpus Chrisri,Texas) ; 39, Bren-· Year 2000 CDBG funding, pr-ovided the County meets applicable recjuih;ments.
don Davis, RHP, 20, Richland Junior CoUege On April 17, 2000, the County conducted its first public hearing to.:tnf'o~m
(Richardson, Texas);
citizens about the CDBG program,.,bpw it may be used, what activities are
. 40, Michael Wagnon, RHP, 18, Calalien High
c
(Corpus Christi); 41, Hermank Rogers, RHP, eligible, and other important programrrequirements.
18, Athens High (Athens, Texas); 42, Eric
A second public hearing will be ~Mid on June 12, 2000 at 10:00 a.m: at the
Mitc~ell, C, 21, Geor~e Washington ; 43,
Mei~s County Commissioners offi&lt;:.e, Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Michael Laesch, RHP, 22,lowa State; 44, Bryan

you do is try to get the most positives you can out
of them. We came back and scored lot of runs.
Other than that, .we didn't get a whole lot out of it."
Pena retired the next three batters, getting Boone
on a called third strike to finally end a game that had
seemed over a long time ago.
"l was juS! sitti.n g there waiting (or the final out,"
Eldred uid. "Things didn't neceuarily go the way
we wanted, but we did what we needed."
R.eda Not111 The last tea!f! to score 17 against.
Cincinnati wa1 Atlanta, which won 17-9 on May 1,
t 985 In the 11me 1tadlum,
· Tht Whitt Sox vainly aiJUed for an lnttrt"enmce
call when Ktn Orlfl'tyjr.low.red hli rlrrht shoulder
Into 1tcond baHmtn Ray Durham'• mldlectlon and
a!llrctd to wrap his arms uound hlaltp to bruk up
a double play In tht tlrat.
.
The R.tda lopped 1 million In att•ndance on the
32nd date for which tlckt11 Wire 1old, matchlnrr the
club record of 1993 for fastest to the mark. They
dldn 'I nU tlckell for their makeup of an openln11
~

Anderson, SS, 21, Southwest Texas State; 'W5. Eric Spadt,
2B, 21, Penn State; 46, Christopher Schrg'der, RHP, 21,
Oklahoma City College; 47 ,Eddie Sparks, 21, East Tennessee State; 4S, John Garcia, RHP, 18, Uva)de High (La
Pryor, 'Thx;as); 49, Brandon Pyles, RHP. ~~' Kennendale
High . (Kennendale, Texas); 50, )ude Auzei,1pe. RHP, 18,
·
Humble High (Humble, Texas).
· New 'ballpark costs on the ..rise
Cost estimates for the R~ds' new ballpar~ :Ue rising even
as plans remain on the drawing board. TiJJcitab is $250.4
1
million - so far.
'.
Construction managers have spent the pl~'t three weeks
pricing thousands of individual parts a.ncl,, hav~ . added
about $6 million to their January esti"1fltf,..T~al &lt;\orsn't
include 84 items tl-jat 'weren't priced be'cause'Ciesigns, awn 't
complete, and does not include legal fee~ and,.rrofit for 'the
constructio'/! manager, project manager and architect.
Arnold Rosenberg, an executive for project manager
Parsons Brinckerhoff, said Tuesday his firm..has not decided how much of a contingency fund the county should
carry into 'the project. That fund, inten~eu to handle
unexpected costs, could be $8 million or rrl2 re - also not
.J •
in this cost estimate.
Construction managers and Reds officiai'i \vill spend the
next three or four weeks calculating the' ' cost of those
unpriced items and looking for ways to whittle down the
10
bottom •une.
.
Hamilton County Commissioner Tom' _r:.leyer said it's
too early to say if the final bill wiU bust \~~ budget. ·
"We don't have enough information hen\ to deterniine
if we should be dismayed or elated," Neyet $aid. "There a.re
a lot of open .questions in this document. That's not good
or bad, it's just typical of this stage of the"wocess:'
Rosenberg said his company wiU tak~ :.steps to guard
against cost overruns that have plagued co~siruction of the
Bengals' new football stadium, schedu!ed'ib opeh Aug. 19.

...

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'~

veteran guard chasing what
'might be his last chance at a
~
title, will be particularly
:
important.
; f ' · " Miller made his reputation ·
= on frenetic playoff per(or; .. · .mances, and the Pacers' East' ;. ern
Conference
playoff'
: · : gpponents found out he can
i ·. ,; still unleash a barrage of
l · .jumpen as well as anyone in
: ··. the game.
: ; ~ ."We hope they overlook
: · ·us," said Miller, who ' led
~ · indiana to its first NBA
! .. finals by burying the New
: York Knicks under a wave of
3 •pointers in the conference
; , finals.
·~·- "We're not coming here to
'· ·lay down. We're coming in
: ; : here to shock the world."
' . The Pacers' roster of shoot;·.: 'e'rs also includes Rose, who
: 1 • complements · his
slashing
1irives t.o the basket with
jumpers; Travis Best and
: Jackson , who can both hit
: · · ftom outside; and big men
: , Smits, Austin Croshere and
: · . Sam Perkins, all accom-.
l · plished outside shooters from
· varying distal)ces.
,I . · . "You d on ' t get to t h'1s
; point by being a one- or
: ' · two-man team," Rose said .
: "You need a whole bunch of
· .. g)lys with the same kind of
1'. focus. We can all contribute
l offensively, right down the
•• roster. Not many t~ams can
match that."
•1
During the Pacers' best
.: stretches of the regular s~a­
son, th'ey killed their ~ppo­
: nents with dozens of open
•

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'I

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'. j

by telling his party to keep their mouths shut and
then giving a false statement to poli ce.
As a result, Lewis will serve 12 months on probation under Georgia's first offender law His record
could be cleared if he successfully compleres his sentence. During probation, he must remain employed'
and not use drugs or alcohoL Lewis will also pay
one-third of the prosecution's court costs and could
be fined. He won't be suspended by the NFL.
Lewis, the leading tackler in the NFL last year, has
a four-year, $26 million contract with the Ravens . .
Lewis plans to rejoin the club at a voluntary minicamp next we'ek, Garland said.
" It's over for R ay Lewis. That's the last court
appearance he'll have in Atlanta," Garland said.

don't really know."
With Richmond, Rocker wiU
be reunited with former manager
Randy Ingle .and several former
teammates, including Mark
DeRosa, who has played with
Rocker in the minors, instructional leagues and during a brief
callup to Atlanta this season.
Ingle was not available before
the game.
"In the clubhouse he's a great
guy;• DeRosa said. "I've known
him for about four years now. I
really didn't pal around with him
outside the clubhouse, but he
treated me with re$pect and I've
gOt no bad words tO say about
hi m."
DeRosa said he thinks his

"

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••
•i
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around. I am just fortunate I am
going to be part ofit ihis year and
hopefully next year. I look for. ward to just going out and playfnHnPIIp81
ing hard- nosed foorpall, trying to
"This t.e am \lasicaUy is in a set a good example for the
rebuilding stage," Rice said, "It younger guys. I am glad to get it
shows the character of the 49ers done."
to keep some of the veterans

., .

Rice

.

" I

got him into trouble with basebaD, walked 25 batters in 18 1-3
innings for Atlanta.
He must spend at least 10 days
in the minors unless he's traded.
Braves pitcher Joe Winkelsas
said it's time for the controversy
to end.
"I think everybody should just
leave the guy alone," Winkelsas
said. "Did he bring it on himself&gt;
Yes he did. Is he in the public eye?
Yes, he is. ·

"But when are we going to let
it die?"
Alvarez worked with Rocker
some in spring training and has
seen him pitch several times on
television this season, but said he
won't really be able to begin
addressing Rocker's problems
until the two have a chance to
talk.
"Maybe he's trying too hard,"
Alvarez said. "He's still throwing
hard, so he's nor backing off any.
Maybe he's just trying too hard to
make the perfect pitch."

CLEANERS
AND SHAMPOO

,

AVAILABLE!
PICKENS
H~ARE
ASON,
W.VA.

Let Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone Very
Special With AFather's Day Thank You Tribute
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 16th!

.

shots in assistant coach Rick
Carlisle's jump-shot-friendly
offense . Such marksmanship
will be necessary for Indiana
to surprise the Lakers.
"They have a lot of
weapons on their team . They
bave a lot of great shooters,"
O'Neal said. "Reggie's not
the type of guy that you really could stop. He's real
aggressive."
While Indiana has been
tested in nearly a decade of'
playoff appearances, the Lakers are essentially making
tbeir first run with this particular cast wearing purple
an.i gold.
If teamwork is as important
as Bird claims, the . Pacers
have another edge.
The Lakers' roster is a
mishmash of judicious drafts,
trades and free-agent signings.
The Lakers don't have the
years of experience together
mos! teams need before
advancing to the finals .
A.C. Green is the only
player on the roster with
more than four years of L.A.
experience, and Green had
been away for six seasons
before returning last fall .
He is the only link to the
past glories of Magic and
Ka-reem, but he doesn '.t give
them much relevance to the
task facing the Lakers now.
"I t d oesn ' t seem Iike very .
long since I waSin the finals ·
with this organization, but it
really has been," said Green,
who was on the last Los
Angeles team to get this far,
in 1991. "This is a whole different show now. The game is
different."

••
••
I

ers, gays and minorities behind
them, and that the struggling lefthanded closer would probably
have a short stay here.
"Yeah, he screwed up, but he's a
good man," DeRosa said. "HopefuUy he can come down ·here and
straighten himself out physically
and mentally and hopefully go on
to bigger and better things. I'm
sure he 'II be out of here in no
time."
Rocker, whose demotion came

BLUE LUSTER
CARPET

a no-show on first day with Richmond b~llclub

!:t

. '

CINCINNATI (AP) - Deion Sanders' nameplate was
: :~ removed from his dressing cubicle Tuesday. His Cincinnati
:.:· Reds jersey was tucked away.
.... , A day after the outfielder/cornerback announced he
' was going to play only football this year, t~e Reds began
writing him out of their plans - for now.
. . Manager Jim Bowden said that Sanders will soon be
:- . moved from the team's disabled list to a restricted list,
'· keeping the Reds' rights to Sonders should he decide to
• • try baseball again.
"There are some administrative complications that have
to be resolved prior to that:' he said.
Until Tuesday, the Reds had kept Sanders' jersey hanging in his cubicle and his nameplate above it. Thoso;, were
' gone, along with Sanders' photo outside the clubhouse.
So ended Sanders' latest flirtation with basebaU, a fourmonth stay during which he neither hit nor got back to
the big leagues.
Sanders, 32, left the Reds to play footbaU full-time in
1997. He signed a minor-league contract with the R~ds
last January and talked about resuming his two-sport status.
Three big problems arose. Four days after he signed the
contract, he had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee to
fix a football injury. That meant he wouldn't be able to run
when spring training began.
.
His chances were further diminished when the Reds
got Ken Griffey Jr. in a trade with Seattle on Feb. 10, giving them one of the game's best cenrerfielders.
Finally, Sanders got back his speed but not his batting
stroke. After working out with the Reds at the start of the
season, he went on a minor league rehabilitation assignmern and batted only .200 against Triple-A pitching.
Stuck in the minors, Sanders got the club's permission
to return home to DaUas on May 11. Bowden held out a
glimmer of hope that he would play baseball this year and
kept Sanders on the· disabled list, which meant he would
keep getting a baseball salary.
Sanders had $300,000 base salary that would have
jumped to $600,000 if he joined the major league team.
When he signed his contract with the . Redskins on
Monday, Sanders said he would play only football this
year. He didn't rule out basebaU in the future.
Sanders said he turned Bowden down last ~elt when
the general manager caUed looking for a replacement for
outfielder Alex Ochoa, who went on the disabled list fol~
lowing an appendectomy.
"! don't have any comment on that:' Bowden said Tuesday.
Junior repays injured girl
Before Tuesday's game, Ken Griffey Jr. autographed a bat
and four hats for Christine Lindner, the 10-year-old girl
who was hit on the forehead when ·a bat slipped from his
hands on Sunday.
The girl is the granddaughter of Reds owner Carl Lind-

past Lewis' limousine and then turned around and
came back. Oakley jumped out of the limousine,
and one of the victims, Jacinth Baker, smacked him
in the head with a champagne bottle.
"Honestly, all hell broke loose from that point; '
Lewis said.
Sweeting tried to help Oakley, but never made it
because two large men attacked him and dragged
him behind a tree, Lewis said. T hen he saw Sweeting regain his footing and start throwing punches
and fighting back.
Lewis said he saw Oakley and another member of
Lewis' group, Carlos Stafford, fighting with Baker.
He said Oakley punched Baker four or five times in
the chest while Stafford was kicking him.
"That was a frantic fight ," Lewis said. "They was
really going at it."
In his opening statements, prosecutor Paul
Howard told jurors that bothlvictims were stabbed
several times in the chest. He told jurors that the
killers held their knives in their fists Jnd delivered
the death blows in a punching motion, so witnesses
could not see the weapons.
Lewis, 25, admitted obstructing th e investigation

~: :· RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Mike Alvarez said before Tuesday teammates at Richmond have put a day after he threatened the
:i~: John Rocker was a no-show on night's game · with Norfolk. "We Rocker's comments . on foreign- reporter whose story originally

·:'.t '

.: Deion's jersey, nameplate removed from clubh~se

'

up to life in prison if convicted .
Murder and assault charges against Lewis were
dropped Monday after he pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and agreed to testify about what he
saw during a brawl.
"I never did anything;· Lewis said after leaving
court. "I was nothing in this whole case but a witness the whole time. And what !just said today is to
prove to the world that I've always bee n a witness."
Lewis te$tified that he was not involved in the
fight at aU.
When aske&lt;! whether Lewis' testimony was going
to hurt the remaining defendants, Lewis' lawyer Ed
Garland said, "I think it both hurt and helped them
... It was a mixed bag."
Lewi$ testified that he left the Cobalt nightclub
with his friends around 4 a.m., when Oakley got
into an argument with a group of men. Lewis said
he tried to break up the argument by taking Oakley
back to his rented limousine.
"Reginald was the aggressor at ·the time that I was
walking up;' Lewis said. "He was really hostile
toward the other two guys."
A few moments later, the group of men walked

MLB NOTEBOOK

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

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

HAPPY

PICTURE

FATHER'S

DAY
(YOUR
FATHER'S
NAME)

FATHER'S

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

YOUR FATHER'S NAME

SUSAN

HAPPY
DAY
LOVE,'
JOHN, JOE, &amp;

SUSAN

.

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FATHER'S N A M E - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
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.'

�••

./'

Wednelday, June 7, 2000

510

HouMhold

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
71 0

4Old AKC ChOC- ~
$2!0 Call (304)675-5636.

1998 GEO Ti acller blaclc wl1h
gay Interior 5 910 milea tr m
package CIO a r cruise 4 door

Auto• for Salt

.,ft

••

PAY BY MAIL OPTION

Appllanee.a
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Washers Drwe a Ranges Aelrtgratora 80 Day Gua ant111 We
Sel New Maytag Appllancu

005

CL~ MS PROCESSOR $20 $40

Pomeroy

Partonals

H Po ent a P ocess ng C a ma
s Easy T a n ng P av ded
MUST Own PC CALL NOW 1
BB8 565 5197 EXT 642

Middleport

STAAT
DATING TON GHT
HaYe Fun Meet ng E g be S n

&amp; VIcinity

gas n Vou A ea Ca Fo Mo e
no ma on 1 80 0 ROMAN&lt;;:E

All Y•rd $1111 Nuat Be Peld In
Ad'411lCt o..dllnt 1 OOpm the
d1y before the ad 11 to run
Sundey &amp; Mondey edit on
1 OOpm Frldoy

Ext 9735

30

Lady Needs Someone To Or ve

He To G oce y &amp; Doctors 01 ce
Shop A L ttlo 740.245-9393

Business
Training

Gal pcll1 Career College
Ca ..,. Close To Horne!
Ca TOday 740.446-4367
800-214-0452
Reg 190-05- 2748

Jackson Count es s Seek ng A
Qua ted Pe son To P ov de
coun&amp; ng n he Jackson o f ce
Counse o w w o k W lh A
Age G oup s Know edge 0
Chem ca Dependency Requ ed
Bach e o s Oeg ee CCDC LISW
And o LPCC P efe ed Send
Resume By June 20 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve St eet Ga po
s Oh o 4563 0 FAX 740 446
BO 4 EOE MIFIH

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be ah p 0 T mesha e? WE LL
TAKE IT Ame cas Mos Sue
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sha e Resa e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SALES NTEANAT ON
AL
800 423 5967 24 Hou s

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H ng No Expe ence Pa d
Tan ng G eat Benet ts Call 7
0"'1" 800 429-3660 Ex J 566

140

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Agen cy La.ca ed In Ga a And

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150

Schools
Instruction

M llennlum Teleaervlcea
s p eased to announce he

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newcaee w h us
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IN SEARCH OF BEVO
ESPN C ass c s P oduc ng A
Oocumenta y On The L fe Of
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aOespn com
New To You Tht' ft SMppe
9 West St mson A hens
7-40 592 1842
Qua y c oth ng and househo d
ems S 00 bag sa e
Thu sday Monday h u Sa1:~rd,ay
900530

I

and Flea Market

230

-

a

DRIVERS WANTED OTR RE
GION AL LOCAL Roac h The
Su mm 1 or You F nanc a Goa s
Wo k Fo A Company The Ca es
About You You Fam y And You
Fu u e L m ted Open ng s 29
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70

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Cay on Louden a e
up da ad n ce 3 b
8 65

Gallipolis

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t
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

AIJ. Yerd Salel MUll

Bo Pt d In Advtnct
QEAQLINE 2 00 p rn
lht day befo,. the ld

F• day 91n Sa Oth 9 5 437
Ch e y R dgerd Someth ng ro
O'jeryone

110

Se nd Resu me Appl ca ons To
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Second Avenue Gall po s OH
45631 0 Fax To 740 446 2600

HelpWanted

saoo a

ASSEMBLY AT HDMEII C ails
Toys Jawa y Wood Sewing
Typ ng Groat Pay CALL I 80Q795.0380 Ext 1201 124 H ol
Pomeroy

I

Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

-

tlidonce

au LDER V"o un ee P () ec:
Ve y Low Income Gov 1 Loan
Have Fundi Fo LAM And Ma •
ala L tt • ht a 720 Sq F
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Qat ipolo Oaly l;;bune 12Hh•d
Avenul Gaii!&gt;OIIS 0H 4563

lmmed ate Open ng Fo V c m
Advoca e to wo 11: w lh Women
and Ch d en n a Res dent a Set
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Even ng Hou 1 The Idea Can
didate W Hava a M n mum o an
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dOnos ean$351o$45 o 2o 3
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592 665

~~::;;~.~May

Send Resumes o
PO Boll 454 Gal po

POSIT ON VACANCY
P vate Non P o 0 gan zat on
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nus P ocedu u G aa Oppor
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Rep tl CLA 506 c: 0 Ga po 1
081 y 'Ti !bunt 125 Th
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Ge11ip01i0 OH 4563

a

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Fu nace In Ga Ipol s 740 446
2003 740 44&amp;1409

Apartments
for Rent

$$BAD CAEO T7 Gel Cash
Leana To $5 000 Deb Conso
dat on To $200 000 C eel I Ca ds
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80
SFAEE CASH NOW$ F om
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10ns0 Do ara ToHepMnmze
The Taxes W te lmmed ate 'I
W ndfa s 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
0017

GOV T POSTAL JOBS
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F ea Ca For A&lt;!~ lea lon Ex:am
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CST)

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800
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340

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BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
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D ve I om $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; moves Call 740 4•6
2566 Equa Housing Opponun 1y

~

570

Instruments
CONSOLE PIANO Res po ns be
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see 1oca ty cal 1 800 288 6218

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Claude W ntora {7401245 5 21

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90 000 m es AJC Powe Eve y
th ng 3 8 ,Magnum $8 000 F ml
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610

998 Chevy extend B cab 4X4
5 sp Loaded 40 000 m les
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6PM

v8

Look ng To Buy A New Home ?
Don t Have Land? We Oo Hu ry
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young sma type lnte sted
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s ock

640

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7 40

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974 Honda 360 st ee b ke
mt as $400 00 :l04 675 8868

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1981 Yamaha 650 Fa ng new
es A ways ga aged ow ned
si nce 1982 $ soo 1740)682
9032

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Cal Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

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$1 600 740 446 7375

v

t 996 Kawasak

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LAND
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abe $660 Down Call Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO
TO BOO 213 8365

l

790

damage uns $4 250 740 992
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1998 Yam4ha 350 Wa

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1999 Yamaha YZF 600 A 2000

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oond $1000 00 304 578 282

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038

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135 ooo Mile s A um nu m A ms
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a

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a

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BASEMENT
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tabt Shed 975 Col 24 H s (740
446 0870
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e s Wate p oofng

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Kawasak Je ma e new 6.50cc
eng ne le ss than 5 h 29

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740 256 972

mph una je pu mp d lve sys em
w r811e se 3 passenge dry boat
nc udes t a e $2800 304 67 5
7323

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accep1 ng appl cat ona lo 1 BR
HUD subs d zed apt fa 1 der y
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EOH
3041675 8879

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V age G een Apanments 2
bed ooms tota l elect c: app lane
es fu n shed laundry room tee 1
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3711 TOO 1 888 233 6694 Equal
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PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia haraby glvan
that on Saturday June 10
2000 al10 00 am a public
aala Will 1M held 11211 Wall
Second Sl'"t Pomeroy
Ohio The Farmer a Bank
and Savlnga Company
extended parking lot
(baalda Powell a Super
V.lu) to aall lor caah lha
!allowing calloleral
1883
Ford
Probe
12VCT22BOP5181812
Tha Farmara Bank and
Savlnga
Company
Pomeroy Ohio raaarvn the
right to bid at thla aala and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala
Further The FanMra Bank
and Savlnga Company
IIIIIYII thl right to rafael
any or an blda aubmlttecl
Further
tha
above
callateral Will be tOld In lha
condition 11 Ia In with no
axpraaa
or Implied
warranllaa giVen
For further lnlormlllon
contact Shalla Buchanon at
982 2136
(6)7 8 9 3TC

800

7 170 m las ed &amp; wh Ia sa dd e
bags &amp; w ndshed mno 1e sde

Huge lnvento y D scount P Ices
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owa Anch o s Water Heaters
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naces &amp; Heat Pump&amp; Benne s
Mob o Homo Supp y 740 446
9416 www orw corrubennen

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INSTALLED
f You Don t Call Us We So 11
Lou Fee Estimates 740 446
6308 HI00-29Hl098

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
Almost Eve yone Ap
p ovad W h $0 Downl Low
Monthly Payments
800 617
347&amp;Ex1 330

Advertise your business

1997 b ac~ Chevy S 10 Sops do
Extended Cab 3 doo
oad ed
25 000 m es very sha p fu a
ngs 11
oo 7409492045o
740 949 2203

Prob ama? Need Tuned? Ca the
plano Dr 740 446 4525

Sew ng MaCh ne Cab ne K mba
A 81 Console P a no Oak Bed
oom Su te Full Oueen Man ass
Box Spr ngs Caslo Keyboa d
E11ce else Blc)'cte 740.446-3903

La ge Lo Beau fu Fl ve V ew
Fo Appo nlmen To See Ancf Ad
d ona n o ma on Con act The
Owne 740 669 3407

1988 Chevy S 10 350 350 u
bo Fo d 9 nch Po&amp; 8Y&amp; y hlng
s eb u t $2300 OBO 304 675
1038
1988 Fo d F 250 $1500 OBO 93
Taurus $ 700 080 86 E cam no
good cond on $4 000 f m 740
992 5532

Musical

s

Fu naces 0 Fu naces 12 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Condition ng
Systems Free 6 Yea Pa s &amp; La
bo Wa anly Benne s Heat ng &amp;
Cool ng
1 800 87 2 5967
www or'w'b comlbennen

ISLAND V EW MOTEL
R1 7 Galllpollo Onlo

NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment Aequ ed w h
Gove nmen Sponso ed Loan
Good C ed And S ea dy Income
Aequ ed Ca Today Fo Mo e
nto ma on Independence Mo
gage Se v ces 126 1 Mad son
Lakewood OH 441 07 MB 679 1
800 945 0036

Rottwe ler Puppies 8 Weeks 0 d
Fo Sale 3 Lelt Fu I B ooded
Have Moher &amp; Fa he 740 388

Tobacco 5 cks 740

r~a

•Flexible

$8 00 column Inch weekdays
$10 00 column tnch Sundays

1979 Ha I Ton Dodge 4 WO 8
L I 35 T as $2500 Fou 14
T es 5 R ms $70 (30 41895

COMPUTER BLOWOUT Com
paq H~ IBM Dlsktops Laptop&amp;
Ecommarce Webs tas A most
Eve yone Approvedlll Make
SUS On Tho Weblll No Money
Down F ee Color Pr nter 1 888
479-2345 www ejump-start com

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

a

•Safe
Advertise your
message

Baby Bed Mattress 2 lnran Ca
Sea s 2 Baby Sw ng s E~~:ce ant
Cond tlonl Baby St aile 740 4460805

Love Seat Cream and Mauve and
Palo Blue Flo e Sl lpo $150 00
17401-44l! 7929

N ce B ck Home 3 Bed oo ms 3
Ba hs 1 s o y w h F 11 shed
Basement Ca por
ng ouM
Poo Oak K che n Cab nels Con
ven en Loca on au e Ne ghbor
hoo d 1105 Teodo a Avenue
Ga po s Owne Needs To Se
Ask ng $ 19 000 740-446 81

lm

3408

Miscellaneous

G ubb s P ano tuning &amp;

Money to Loan

$$$ NEED CASH? ? WE Pay
Cas h Fo Rema n ng Payments
On P op e ty Sod Mo gages
Annu t es Sell aments mme
date Qu o es
Nobo dy Bea &amp;
Ou P cea Na ona Cont act
Buye • 800 490 073 Ext 10
www na IOnaiContracrouyers com

sell Riverine Antiques
124 East Man on SA 124 E Po
meroy 740 992 2528 o 740 992
539 Russ Moo e owne

Gold 30 E ectr c Cook Stove
w th Match ng Hoo&lt;l S75 oo (7401
441.0712

Two bed oom mobile home no
740.992-5656

SS Aulo Loans Pe sona Loans
Deb Conso dati on Mo tgages
And ~e nanc ng C ed P ob ems
OK Consume s F nanc a 1 800
247 5 25 E)(l 1 34 Vod OH KS
&amp;WI

Help W•nted Ea n up to $375
week y assemo ng MED CAL 0
CAROS a home
lmmed ate
open ngs you a ea Ca I 1
(520~505-441 441 ox D 093

A e you connected? nte ne
user wanted $350
wee k
PT FT ully relundab e dec son
package S39 1 888 365 &amp;36 5
www maklthebuckl :com

1.:.:::::::.:.:;::;,::;.::::.:,:.;______ ~

740 387

NEW LISTING
HUNTERS HILL
3 T ac s 0 P me Rec eat ona
Land To uc hes USA Land 29
Ac es Fo As Low As $27 900!
Land Con ac s Ava abe Ca
Now
800 2 3 8365 Antho ny
Land Company L d www coun y
yme com

220
Help wanted Aclu t Ca e Home
9am.-7pm ah f &amp; 7pm 9am sh II
ca 740.992 5023

1350 $850/week
1 888 216 1331
www e-commbiz net

leS 740 446 4313

Farms for Sale

3202

Ine net use swan ad

3 ram y June 9 h o h 9an1 1
App e G ova Do cas Rd 41h
house on
gh off At t24
aometh ng for ave ~ne Paul

EAAN $90 000 YEARLY Aapa
ng NOT Rep ac ng ong C acks
In W ndsh e ds F ee VIdeo
800 826 8523 US
Canada
www g assmechan x com

TEACHERS AETIAEESI FULLER
BRUSH Needs Men Women
Who Want To Supplement The
ncome F ex be Hours Un m ed
ncoma Ca Now 1 800 340

A e You Connected?

Be ween Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bed oo m mobile hom11

AT&amp;T MC1
SPRINT Wna s
Tho BIG SECRET?• Make BIG
$$1 ALL C ASH FREE no
800 997 9888 Ext
55 124 H s

Sta
Yo u Bus ness Today
P me Shopping Cen e Space
Ava abe A Alfo dab e Rat e
Sp ng va ey P aza ca 74G-446
010

Pos a Jobs $48 323 00 V Now
H ng No Expe ence Pad
T a n ng G ea Benet Is Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

r

New Doub ew de ~ BR 2BA
$276 pe mon h Low Down Pay
men Fee A Free Devey 1
B88 928 3426

WV HUNTING LAND
30 To DO Ace Tac1s 0 1 P me
Sta ng At
Hunt ng Land
$16500 97AcesFo $57000
Can Comb ne F ee Maps Land
800 2 3
Con ac Ava abe
8365

GOV T PO STAL JOBS Up To
$1 8 35 Hou Fu Benet s No Ex
pe ence Aequ ed F ee App ca
an And Into ma on 1 888 726
9083 Exrens on 701 7 A~ 7
~M CST)

CAREER OPPORTUN TV
MED CAL BILLERS Ea n Up To
$45K /Y Fu Tra t&gt;ng PC Aeq'd
888-660.6693 Ext 4402

12• 60 MoD e Home Two Beef
ooms l oca ed Bah nd Fo~~; e
P zza Sandh II Roa d $37!S Per
Month Includes Wata Sewer
Ca 304 675 3423

New 6x80 3B A 2BA $268 po
mon h Low Down Paymen F ea
A F ee Del ve y
888 928
3426

Business

FULLER BAUSH CO Is Look ng
Fo Peop e Who Would L ke To
Sa The Own Bus ness Wo k
ng F om Home NO NVEST
MENT Noodod L m ted Time
On y Call 800 682 7270 ema I lu
erettOaol com

$987 85 WEEKLYI Process ng
HUD FHA Mor gage Re unds No
Expe ence Requ ed Fo FREE
Info mat on Call 1 800 50 6832
Ext 1300

for Rant

New 4 W de 38A 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Pay men I :.::.::.::::.~::..:::...:..::.~~:....___,.
F ee A F ee De l ve y 1 88 8
928 3426

Full T me o Part Time Exper
enced Ca pet lnsta ler Highest
Pay Pe Yd and Incant ves Of
le ed Appl y Ca pe Exp ess
407 B 6th St ee P P
wv
13041674-6100 1 AM-6PM

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPEA ENCE AE
OU RED 800 757 0753

Mobile Homes

2 Bedroom All E ectr c Mobile
Home No Pets $375/Mo + U I

12

000 WEEKLYI Ma ng 400
Brochu est Satisfac on Gua
an eedl Pos tage &amp; Supp 11s P o
v dad Ru sh Sell Add essed
Stamped En'w'elopel GICO OEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Stan Immediately

420

the offe ng
Seek ng Ma age Fo Jewe y
Slo e App can Shou d Be A Mo
vated Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Ca nd dale Must Be 0 gan zed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab ty Some Com
pu e Sk s Req u ed Salary And
Bonus P us Bene 1Package

Antiques

1982

6x80 A C
307 675

INOTCEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ec ommends that yo u do b us
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money h ough he
ma un yo u have nve s gated

er Tra n ng No E11pe ence Need
ed Ea n Up To $32 000 s Y
W Fu I Bene t ts Ca Today
877 230 6002 Sunday F day 9
AM Tp 5 PM PAM &lt;ran spo
www otrctrlve s com

530
Bu~ o

MySI c Pomt anv b eed dog
g oom ng ava able Also show
qua lty and pe Poms ava able o
lale 74o-94!1-3418

Merchandise

Opportunity

OJ

Wooden bunk beds S40 00 e ec
stov!l $50 oo works good 304
675 6868

540

$2~$300 740 992 21B7

210

Be ow Hoi day nn Kanauga 8 g

37 Poop o Needed To Los e Up
To 30 Pounds In The Ne• 30
Daya Fee Samples 740 44 1

Take Ove Payments New 3 Bed
ooms 2 Ba h Home $333 &amp;
Mo e n 740 446 3570

FINANCIAL

UV/MO

Ca 740 446 7398

New And U&amp;ed Fu nlrure S o e

Homes for Sale

GOOD CREDIT
BAOCAEDT
NO CREDIT
Le t Us A ss s You n You New
M g Home Ca Fo P e App ova l
1 888 565 0 67

OWN A COM PUTER• PUT T
TO WOAK $850 $3 500 Mo P
F FREE De a Is Log Onto http:/
www hbn co m Access Code
5298

at ga a o s

waaho $100 D yer $100 Eltc
t c Range $95 Atllgo otor $95
A Cond one $95 Gas Range
L ko Now $195 Wosho &amp; Dryo
Set $205 Each 1 Yea Wa anty
Skaggs App aneta 76 VIne
Staat Gal pols 740 446 7398
1 888-818.()128

n Camp Con ey S225 a
clop 304 675 3230

74().4.16-3916

B and New 261C58 Modu a Home
Sm t.h s Cue om CatHneta 3 Bed
oo ms 2 Bath s P ce $45 DOD
Must Be Moved Ca 140 388
9622

FROM

pounds Repos Fee SO Down 1'24
Mas 0199. Fa Lstngs 1800
3 9 3323 X2156

APPLIANCES

2 b
mon

3 sea ooms 1 Bath Home 1819
Chestnut Stree Gall po s 73 Ctt
da St ee 3 Bedrooms 1 Ba 1'\
Both Ava abe On 0 Abou 6 1
oo Deposit Aelerances Ca

FED UP WITH THE
RUN AROUND?
Want A New Home W h No Has
sle Ca Fo P e App ova
BB8 565 0 67

Nursing Asalatante A e Yo u
Ene ge c Mo va ed And Ca
ng? We 0 e An Exc 1ng Ca ee
Oppo tun tv In Sub Acu e Sk ed
Al') d n e med ate Ca e App y n
Pe so n A Seen c H s Nu s ng
Cen e 31 Buck dge Ref 8 d
we Ohio

USED

Watha s dryers

Savlnge On Naw Couches Good
Hospna Bad 1992 17 12 F Co
b a Runabout Boat New Cond
ton Check Us Outl 740 44e
4782

2114 Mon oe Ave 3 br lui base
ment CIA &amp; hoot $400 00 + dop
304-675-3230

Reasonao e a es
Ca o appo n men
304 675 7472
304 675 7279

llOQ-753-4421
Same Day Dec s on
DRIVERS TAKE HOM E MORE
BE HOME MORE Ave age 999
Wage Was $45 255 www oeh
anspo com

GOOD

Ease n Avenue Gallpo Is S375/
Deposit Re e ences Rt
qu ed No Pa s 740 446 2282
Cal 9 am 4 pm Please a1k ro
Geg o Boo

;.;,;..;::.:.::;.________ 1 Mo

2 38A S3 5 Lincoln Avenue
Homestead Rea y Ask o Nan
cy 1304)675 5540

E)(ce e 1Bene Is We Tia n
You To o 111e A Truck and He p
You Ea n a Va uable C ass A
COL Wh ch Could Mean L fet me
Job Secu ty No Experience
Needed ns an Jab P acement
Emp oye s Wa ng In L ne Fo
You 00 F nanc ng f Qua fed
nc ud ng Mea sf l odg ng
Amerl Max Ash and Ky
Loca 606 928 1 43
To Fee 7 days (8001865 7284

CARS

1 866-118-0128

Services

phe

3407

Ja/l&lt;IOn Avenue {3041675-7383

y na Strea

Professional

P HOT.Q.G A A P H-Y
Wedd ngs
Pes
Spo sTeams
P oless ona Ce
ed Photog

•Convenient

Far Sa 1 Recond toned wash
e 1 dryers and et lge ators

Thompaona App lance

•

angea Skaggs A.pp ancas 76

2 Bed oom House 2 Ba. hs 1924

$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CAED T
NEEDED GOV T /BANK REPOS
CALL NOW 1 600 36 0 4620
EXT 8509

• Ragona
• Dedica ad
• Fa bed
• Teams
• S ngeOTR
• G eat Pay
• Supe Ti ucks
• F end y People
DGBY
We re The Beat!
• secuevou Fuue
• Un que Company
• Respec
• Dgnity
• Have Some Fun

Auction

FREE FREEit MONEY PAOB
LEMS ? NOW ACCEPTIN G AP
PL CATIONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPLICATION FEE
877
543-8357 EXT 40:1,

310
We VI Got tAll

91

1 3 Bedrooms Fo eclosed
Home• From S 99/Mo '% Down
For L sl nga &amp; Payment Data It
llOQ-3 9 3323 Ext 1709

FREE DEBT CONSOLI OAT ON
App ca on w Se v ce Reduce
Payments To 6511f. CASH N
CENT VE OFFEA Ca
800
32B8510Ex 29

REAL ESTATE

D rve s

40

410 Housas for Rant

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSt?
No Fee Uness We W n
8B8 5B2 3345

DGBY

Ia to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p.m
F~doy Manday edition
D30om Sltunlly

~;Sch City Maytag 740 446

RENTALS

ANN OUNCEMENTS

·Z PAY

Buy from the Classlfieds!

ha dtop m nor
I ont damage
asking S8 450 740-992 1508

Ant quo Both Tub fo Sat (740)
386-1413

•

Shop st hotrlf...

560 Pets for Sale
Goode

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Space for Rent

Mob It Home Lot Wll Take 12
4 6 W des $125 Month 1100
Capos I Refe Jencea 740 446
0 75

1995 Chevy Cava e
5 sp
69 000 m es Red 4 door looks
runs great $4200 13041675-5628

580

Pat• for Sale

18 wk old St Bernard $100
304-675-1871 Aller6pm

L v ngston s Basement Wa e
Proof ng all basemen t epa s
done
ee est ma u
I tel me
gua an ee 12y s on job expe
once {3041895-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

oo

Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

entine

�••

./'

Wednelday, June 7, 2000

510

HouMhold

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
71 0

4Old AKC ChOC- ~
$2!0 Call (304)675-5636.

1998 GEO Ti acller blaclc wl1h
gay Interior 5 910 milea tr m
package CIO a r cruise 4 door

Auto• for Salt

.,ft

••

PAY BY MAIL OPTION

Appllanee.a
Retond t oned
Washers Drwe a Ranges Aelrtgratora 80 Day Gua ant111 We
Sel New Maytag Appllancu

005

CL~ MS PROCESSOR $20 $40

Pomeroy

Partonals

H Po ent a P ocess ng C a ma
s Easy T a n ng P av ded
MUST Own PC CALL NOW 1
BB8 565 5197 EXT 642

Middleport

STAAT
DATING TON GHT
HaYe Fun Meet ng E g be S n

&amp; VIcinity

gas n Vou A ea Ca Fo Mo e
no ma on 1 80 0 ROMAN&lt;;:E

All Y•rd $1111 Nuat Be Peld In
Ad'411lCt o..dllnt 1 OOpm the
d1y before the ad 11 to run
Sundey &amp; Mondey edit on
1 OOpm Frldoy

Ext 9735

30

Lady Needs Someone To Or ve

He To G oce y &amp; Doctors 01 ce
Shop A L ttlo 740.245-9393

Business
Training

Gal pcll1 Career College
Ca ..,. Close To Horne!
Ca TOday 740.446-4367
800-214-0452
Reg 190-05- 2748

Jackson Count es s Seek ng A
Qua ted Pe son To P ov de
coun&amp; ng n he Jackson o f ce
Counse o w w o k W lh A
Age G oup s Know edge 0
Chem ca Dependency Requ ed
Bach e o s Oeg ee CCDC LISW
And o LPCC P efe ed Send
Resume By June 20 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve St eet Ga po
s Oh o 4563 0 FAX 740 446
BO 4 EOE MIFIH

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be ah p 0 T mesha e? WE LL
TAKE IT Ame cas Mos Sue
cessfu Campg ound .l.nd T me
sha e Resa e C ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SALES NTEANAT ON
AL
800 423 5967 24 Hou s

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H ng No Expe ence Pa d
Tan ng G eat Benet ts Call 7
0"'1" 800 429-3660 Ex J 566

140

Counse o Pas on An Outpa
en A co ho Ancl 0 r.e o ug
Agen cy La.ca ed In Ga a And

Announcements

150

Schools
Instruction

M llennlum Teleaervlcea
s p eased to announce he

EAAN A LEGAL CO LEGE DE
GAEE QUICKLY Bachelo s
Maste s Doc o a e By Co e
spondence Based Upon P tO Ed
uca on And Sho S udy Cou se
Fo FREE In o mal on Book el
Phone CAMBA IOGE STATE
UN VEAS TV 80Q-964 83 6

Grand open ng o s new We
ston ca ng cente
We a e now salt ng up
n ervlew appo n men s fo
outbound elese v ce po$1 ons
No experience necessary
Ea n up o $15/h
w h qua e I)' sa ary evlews
Managemen oppo unites ava
abe 401KJMed caiiOen ai/Pald
vaca Ions ava abe 3 sh s eta y
F ex ble sched u ng S a you
newcaee w h us
Ca 1 eoo 929 5753

IN SEARCH OF BEVO
ESPN C ass c s P oduc ng A
Oocumenta y On The L fe Of
Bevo F anc s n e ts ed In Ac
qu ng A ch va Mae al F m
Pho os Ca s P og ams) Please
Ca 1 V n Can name a A 860 766
444 Or Ema v n canna me
aOespn com
New To You Tht' ft SMppe
9 West St mson A hens
7-40 592 1842
Qua y c oth ng and househo d
ems S 00 bag sa e
Thu sday Monday h u Sa1:~rd,ay
900530

I

and Flea Market

230

-

a

DRIVERS WANTED OTR RE
GION AL LOCAL Roac h The
Su mm 1 or You F nanc a Goa s
Wo k Fo A Company The Ca es
About You You Fam y And You
Fu u e L m ted Open ng s 29
CPM AI M le• Unloading Pay
Pe sonal zed D spa ch Home 0
en Hoi day Naca on Pay 401 K
Medea P es Den a Ade P o
g am 98e..: No Touch F t1 gh
Ass gned 'f. 2000 s Call Su mm
T anspo ta on BOO 876 0680 0
5 3 564 8945 EOE

REPOSALE
Neve L ved n No Money Down
Sa e o e $5 ooo Ca
888
565 0 67

70

0 vers 2 Week Pa d Truck 0

Cay on Louden a e
up da ad n ce 3 b
8 65

Gallipolis

&amp; Vicinity

t
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

AIJ. Yerd Salel MUll

Bo Pt d In Advtnct
QEAQLINE 2 00 p rn
lht day befo,. the ld

F• day 91n Sa Oth 9 5 437
Ch e y R dgerd Someth ng ro
O'jeryone

110

Se nd Resu me Appl ca ons To
Acqu s ons Fine Jewe y 5
Second Avenue Gall po s OH
45631 0 Fax To 740 446 2600

HelpWanted

saoo a

ASSEMBLY AT HDMEII C ails
Toys Jawa y Wood Sewing
Typ ng Groat Pay CALL I 80Q795.0380 Ext 1201 124 H ol
Pomeroy

I

Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

-

tlidonce

au LDER V"o un ee P () ec:
Ve y Low Income Gov 1 Loan
Have Fundi Fo LAM And Ma •
ala L tt • ht a 720 Sq F
Home Send To CLA ~oe c o
Qat ipolo Oaly l;;bune 12Hh•d
Avenul Gaii!&gt;OIIS 0H 4563

lmmed ate Open ng Fo V c m
Advoca e to wo 11: w lh Women
and Ch d en n a Res dent a Set
1ng Fu Time Post on w th SOme
Even ng Hou 1 The Idea Can
didate W Hava a M n mum o an
Aaaoc ate&amp; Oeg ee W lh Cou s
es n a Soc a Servce Fed and
Have E)(pe ence Wo k ng W h
Poop e In C 1 s tnte ested Ap

URGENTLY NEEDED p asm a
dOnos ean$351o$45 o 2o 3
I'IOU s week y ca Sea Tee 740.
592 665

~~::;;~.~May

Send Resumes o
PO Boll 454 Gal po

POSIT ON VACANCY
P vate Non P o 0 gan zat on
Hes "n lmmed 1\ e Open ng Fo
An Admna a va 0 eco Mua
9e Computer L te ate Ab a To
~~~~ Pubt c &amp; Have Wo k ng
Know edge 01 Accounting Busl
nus P ocedu u G aa Oppor
1unlry Fo R gh Pe son To Dem
on1 1 t Tht Ab t u
Mue
Have Management Expe ence
Long Te m Cl'll tng ng Pos t on
So"'&gt;' /Sa~s Nogot abo Sind
Rep tl CLA 506 c: 0 Ga po 1
081 y 'Ti !bunt 125 Th
Avenue
Ge11ip01i0 OH 4563

a

2 Bed ooms A
Natural Gas
Fu nace In Ga Ipol s 740 446
2003 740 44&amp;1409

Apartments
for Rent

$$BAD CAEO T7 Gel Cash
Leana To $5 000 Deb Conso
dat on To $200 000 C eel I Ca ds
Mo gages Rei nan a ng And
Au o Loa ns Ava abe Me d an
C ed t Cop 1 800 4715 9 Ext
80
SFAEE CASH NOW$ F om
Weallhy Faml es Unload ng M I
10ns0 Do ara ToHepMnmze
The Taxes W te lmmed ate 'I
W ndfa s 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
0017

GOV T POSTAL JOBS
Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng For 2000
F ea Ca For A&lt;!~ lea lon Ex:am
na on Info ma on Fade at H e
Fu Btne ts 1 800 59B 4504 Ex
tons on 515 {8 AM 6 PM
CST)

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CAEO T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDEO CORRECT AEMDVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUOGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1
800 422 1!198

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MM K Tecnno ogy
W I Finan ce wth 0 Down Past
C ad t Problema No Problem Ca
Tot Free 1 877 293-4082
AMANA While Others we •
Thfnk ng Abou Qua ty Amanna
Wat Set ng The S andarde Fo
Healing And Coo ng Free Eat
matO&amp; 740 448 6308 1 800
291 0098

HOME FORECLOSU RES $ 0
DOWN NO CREDIT NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPOS
800
355 0024 Ex 8040

340

Business and
Buildings

2 Bed ooms 1 bath 2 m ea out
Sta e Route 588 at County Side
Apa monts (740) 448-9487

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
D ve I om $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; moves Call 740 4•6
2566 Equa Housing Opponun 1y

~

570

Instruments
CONSOLE PIANO Res po ns be
Party Wanted To Make Low
Monlhty Payments On P a no See
Localy Cal 1 80Q-268 6218
FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO
esponslbla pari)' wa nted to make
ow mon hly payments on p ano
see 1oca ty cal 1 800 288 6218

580

Fruits

Fou Un s And u 1y Room P us
On e F oo Home ( n Two Apa
men s Can Be Conve &amp;d Back
ToNceSngeHome

&amp;

Vegetables

Strawberries P ck You Own Ca I
Claude W ntora {7401245 5 21

992 Dodge Oakota K ng Cab
90 000 m es AJC Powe Eve y
th ng 3 8 ,Magnum $8 000 F ml
(740) 992 5719

610

998 Chevy extend B cab 4X4
5 sp Loaded 40 000 m les
$ 6 000 m {3041773 5244 ala
6PM

v8

Look ng To Buy A New Home ?
Don t Have Land? We Oo Hu ry
On y 0 Lo s Le 304 736 7295

M sub sh 20500 Tracto 4 Cy
I nde 0 ese 4 Foot 8 ush Hog
And Blade $4 500 740 446
0399

ANGUS AND CHIANGUS Bulls
P ced Rea sonab y Slate Ru n
Fa ms Jackson 740 286 5395

Livestock

A~ ng Horses {740 386-8358

Wanted o Buy Angus Bul good
young sma type lnte sted
par11os only 1740)441 1182

s ock

640

Hay

7 40

Motorcycles

974 Honda 360 st ee b ke
mt as $400 00 :l04 675 8868

6000

1981 Yamaha 650 Fa ng new
es A ways ga aged ow ned
si nce 1982 $ soo 1740)682
9032

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa red New &amp; Aabu 11 n S ock
Cal Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

&amp; Grain

1991 YZ 125 New P astlc New
Reeds New P ston &amp; R ngs Very
Powe fu l Bike Looks New F on
Fo ks Have Been Comp ate Ae
bu It Wh ch Includes New Seals
And F u d Rea Shock Has Been
Recha gad W th Nitrogen And
Checked Fo Bleed Of T es
A e In E11ce11en Cond t on Cha n
And Sp ockets A e L ke New
$1 600 740 446 7375

v

t 996 Kawasak

Vu can

LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Seve a Loca ons n Ga a &amp;
Me gs Count es 5 Ac es As Low
As $6 600 Land Con ae Ava
abe $660 Down Call Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO
TO BOO 213 8365

l

790

damage uns $4 250 740 992
1508
Ca

•

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Call Today... Swttch To Offtee Pay
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992-2155
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11

Campers

&amp;

Motor Homes

1998 Yam4ha 350 Wa

ex as asking $3 000 or

·0·

payments 740 949 2529

TRAN SPO RTATION

1999 Yamaha YZF 600 A 2000

m es 6 speed nc udes 5 y wa

71 0

Autos for Sale

ranty show com cond ton 740
985 3929 304 423-5173

CAAS FROM $200 POLICE M
POUNDS Honda s Toyo as
Che'w'ys Jeeps And Spo Ut
t es Call Now 80 0 772 7470
EXT 7B32

ab"

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

750

Tap~an H Eff c ency 90°. Gas

Boals

&amp;

Motors

for Sale

1985 Olcls To onada 64K Goocf
Condition $800 74o-397 2 11

Coleman pop up seep s 5 good
oond $1000 00 304 578 282

1985 1i ans Am 305 HO 5 Speed
CO P aye 3 12 Speakers New
Pa s Ask ng $2 750 740 245
038

SERVICES

1987 Dodge Day ona App o•
135 ooo Mile s A um nu m A ms
Good Wo k Ca $600 740 2455605

Tobacco Bed
47

a

For sa

a

810

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncon d 1 ona etlme gua antee
Loca efe ences u n s hed Es
tabt Shed 975 Col 24 H s (740
446 0870
BO O 267 0576 Aog
e s Wate p oofng

s ng e Bedroom Effie ency Apt

Kawasak Je ma e new 6.50cc
eng ne le ss than 5 h 29

Ut tes nc uded 740 446 8677
740 256 972

mph una je pu mp d lve sys em
w r811e se 3 passenge dry boat
nc udes t a e $2800 304 67 5
7323

Avellablt Now Tw n Towera now
accep1 ng appl cat ona lo 1 BR
HUD subs d zed apt fa 1 der y
and
nand capped
EOH
3041675 8879

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V age G een Apanments 2
bed ooms tota l elect c: app lane
es fu n shed laundry room tee 1
es snd cose o &amp;&lt;!hoot appl ca
ons ava abe at olf ce 740 992
3711 TOO 1 888 233 6694 Equal
Housing Opportun ty
.J

Th s newspaper wI not
know ngly accept
advert sements fo eal es a1a
wh ch s n vkHa on of he
law Our raaders a e he eby
Informed hat a dwe ngs
advert sed n th s newspaper
a e ava latMe on an equal
opportunnv basiS

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia haraby glvan
that on Saturday June 10
2000 al10 00 am a public
aala Will 1M held 11211 Wall
Second Sl'"t Pomeroy
Ohio The Farmer a Bank
and Savlnga Company
extended parking lot
(baalda Powell a Super
V.lu) to aall lor caah lha
!allowing calloleral
1883
Ford
Probe
12VCT22BOP5181812
Tha Farmara Bank and
Savlnga
Company
Pomeroy Ohio raaarvn the
right to bid at thla aala and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala
Further The FanMra Bank
and Savlnga Company
IIIIIYII thl right to rafael
any or an blda aubmlttecl
Further
tha
above
callateral Will be tOld In lha
condition 11 Ia In with no
axpraaa
or Implied
warranllaa giVen
For further lnlormlllon
contact Shalla Buchanon at
982 2136
(6)7 8 9 3TC

800

7 170 m las ed &amp; wh Ia sa dd e
bags &amp; w ndshed mno 1e sde

Huge lnvento y D scount P Ices
On V nyl Ski ling Doo s Wind
owa Anch o s Water Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Electrtea Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pump&amp; Benne s
Mob o Homo Supp y 740 446
9416 www orw corrubennen

2.*

460

Home

Public Notice

Sha ed Bathroom $ 50 A Month

All real &amp;!tate am&gt;ert! ng In
n !I newspaper s subject to
he Fede al Far Hous ng Act
ol 1968 wh ch makes t egat
to advert se any p efe ence
lm lal on o d sc r mlna lon
based on race colo e g on
sa)( lam al status o nat anal
orlg n o an~ intent on to
make any such prefe ence
m taiiDn or d scr mlna1on

per inch

Phone 992·2155

SOCIAL SECURITY D SABtLITY
Claim Den ad? We Specie ze In
Appeal&amp; And Hea ngs FREE
CONSULTATION Bonol Team
Se vices Inc Tol Fee 1 888
838-4052
LAND NEAR RIO
0 SR 35 5 Aces Gea Home
S es Land Con ac Ava lable
F ee Maps 1 800 2 3-8365

The Daily Sentinel

Farm Equipment

630

PAATEANITY ISSUES? CALL
DNA LABAATORY SE AV CES
At 1 877 974-7,i99 Results n 51
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Resu lts W th nte eat Free F
nanclng Aval
n tL nA

Receive A Bill For Your Paper
Directlv From

995 Dodge Noon DOHC 5 Sp
AC 4 Weel Osc 72000 mlea
$4 000 OBO Co 740 367 0024

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

JANtTAOL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
f You Don t Call Us We So 11
Lou Fee Estimates 740 446
6308 HI00-29Hl098

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
Almost Eve yone Ap
p ovad W h $0 Downl Low
Monthly Payments
800 617
347&amp;Ex1 330

Advertise your business

1997 b ac~ Chevy S 10 Sops do
Extended Cab 3 doo
oad ed
25 000 m es very sha p fu a
ngs 11
oo 7409492045o
740 949 2203

Prob ama? Need Tuned? Ca the
plano Dr 740 446 4525

Sew ng MaCh ne Cab ne K mba
A 81 Console P a no Oak Bed
oom Su te Full Oueen Man ass
Box Spr ngs Caslo Keyboa d
E11ce else Blc)'cte 740.446-3903

La ge Lo Beau fu Fl ve V ew
Fo Appo nlmen To See Ancf Ad
d ona n o ma on Con act The
Owne 740 669 3407

1988 Chevy S 10 350 350 u
bo Fo d 9 nch Po&amp; 8Y&amp; y hlng
s eb u t $2300 OBO 304 675
1038
1988 Fo d F 250 $1500 OBO 93
Taurus $ 700 080 86 E cam no
good cond on $4 000 f m 740
992 5532

Musical

s

Fu naces 0 Fu naces 12 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Condition ng
Systems Free 6 Yea Pa s &amp; La
bo Wa anly Benne s Heat ng &amp;
Cool ng
1 800 87 2 5967
www or'w'b comlbennen

ISLAND V EW MOTEL
R1 7 Galllpollo Onlo

NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment Aequ ed w h
Gove nmen Sponso ed Loan
Good C ed And S ea dy Income
Aequ ed Ca Today Fo Mo e
nto ma on Independence Mo
gage Se v ces 126 1 Mad son
Lakewood OH 441 07 MB 679 1
800 945 0036

Rottwe ler Puppies 8 Weeks 0 d
Fo Sale 3 Lelt Fu I B ooded
Have Moher &amp; Fa he 740 388

Tobacco 5 cks 740

r~a

•Flexible

$8 00 column Inch weekdays
$10 00 column tnch Sundays

1979 Ha I Ton Dodge 4 WO 8
L I 35 T as $2500 Fou 14
T es 5 R ms $70 (30 41895

COMPUTER BLOWOUT Com
paq H~ IBM Dlsktops Laptop&amp;
Ecommarce Webs tas A most
Eve yone Approvedlll Make
SUS On Tho Weblll No Money
Down F ee Color Pr nter 1 888
479-2345 www ejump-start com

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

a

•Safe
Advertise your
message

Baby Bed Mattress 2 lnran Ca
Sea s 2 Baby Sw ng s E~~:ce ant
Cond tlonl Baby St aile 740 4460805

Love Seat Cream and Mauve and
Palo Blue Flo e Sl lpo $150 00
17401-44l! 7929

N ce B ck Home 3 Bed oo ms 3
Ba hs 1 s o y w h F 11 shed
Basement Ca por
ng ouM
Poo Oak K che n Cab nels Con
ven en Loca on au e Ne ghbor
hoo d 1105 Teodo a Avenue
Ga po s Owne Needs To Se
Ask ng $ 19 000 740-446 81

lm

3408

Miscellaneous

G ubb s P ano tuning &amp;

Money to Loan

$$$ NEED CASH? ? WE Pay
Cas h Fo Rema n ng Payments
On P op e ty Sod Mo gages
Annu t es Sell aments mme
date Qu o es
Nobo dy Bea &amp;
Ou P cea Na ona Cont act
Buye • 800 490 073 Ext 10
www na IOnaiContracrouyers com

sell Riverine Antiques
124 East Man on SA 124 E Po
meroy 740 992 2528 o 740 992
539 Russ Moo e owne

Gold 30 E ectr c Cook Stove
w th Match ng Hoo&lt;l S75 oo (7401
441.0712

Two bed oom mobile home no
740.992-5656

SS Aulo Loans Pe sona Loans
Deb Conso dati on Mo tgages
And ~e nanc ng C ed P ob ems
OK Consume s F nanc a 1 800
247 5 25 E)(l 1 34 Vod OH KS
&amp;WI

Help W•nted Ea n up to $375
week y assemo ng MED CAL 0
CAROS a home
lmmed ate
open ngs you a ea Ca I 1
(520~505-441 441 ox D 093

A e you connected? nte ne
user wanted $350
wee k
PT FT ully relundab e dec son
package S39 1 888 365 &amp;36 5
www maklthebuckl :com

1.:.:::::::.:.:;::;,::;.::::.:,:.;______ ~

740 387

NEW LISTING
HUNTERS HILL
3 T ac s 0 P me Rec eat ona
Land To uc hes USA Land 29
Ac es Fo As Low As $27 900!
Land Con ac s Ava abe Ca
Now
800 2 3 8365 Antho ny
Land Company L d www coun y
yme com

220
Help wanted Aclu t Ca e Home
9am.-7pm ah f &amp; 7pm 9am sh II
ca 740.992 5023

1350 $850/week
1 888 216 1331
www e-commbiz net

leS 740 446 4313

Farms for Sale

3202

Ine net use swan ad

3 ram y June 9 h o h 9an1 1
App e G ova Do cas Rd 41h
house on
gh off At t24
aometh ng for ave ~ne Paul

EAAN $90 000 YEARLY Aapa
ng NOT Rep ac ng ong C acks
In W ndsh e ds F ee VIdeo
800 826 8523 US
Canada
www g assmechan x com

TEACHERS AETIAEESI FULLER
BRUSH Needs Men Women
Who Want To Supplement The
ncome F ex be Hours Un m ed
ncoma Ca Now 1 800 340

A e You Connected?

Be ween Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bed oo m mobile hom11

AT&amp;T MC1
SPRINT Wna s
Tho BIG SECRET?• Make BIG
$$1 ALL C ASH FREE no
800 997 9888 Ext
55 124 H s

Sta
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P me Shopping Cen e Space
Ava abe A Alfo dab e Rat e
Sp ng va ey P aza ca 74G-446
010

Pos a Jobs $48 323 00 V Now
H ng No Expe ence Pad
T a n ng G ea Benet Is Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

r

New Doub ew de ~ BR 2BA
$276 pe mon h Low Down Pay
men Fee A Free Devey 1
B88 928 3426

WV HUNTING LAND
30 To DO Ace Tac1s 0 1 P me
Sta ng At
Hunt ng Land
$16500 97AcesFo $57000
Can Comb ne F ee Maps Land
800 2 3
Con ac Ava abe
8365

GOV T PO STAL JOBS Up To
$1 8 35 Hou Fu Benet s No Ex
pe ence Aequ ed F ee App ca
an And Into ma on 1 888 726
9083 Exrens on 701 7 A~ 7
~M CST)

CAREER OPPORTUN TV
MED CAL BILLERS Ea n Up To
$45K /Y Fu Tra t&gt;ng PC Aeq'd
888-660.6693 Ext 4402

12• 60 MoD e Home Two Beef
ooms l oca ed Bah nd Fo~~; e
P zza Sandh II Roa d $37!S Per
Month Includes Wata Sewer
Ca 304 675 3423

New 6x80 3B A 2BA $268 po
mon h Low Down Paymen F ea
A F ee Del ve y
888 928
3426

Business

FULLER BAUSH CO Is Look ng
Fo Peop e Who Would L ke To
Sa The Own Bus ness Wo k
ng F om Home NO NVEST
MENT Noodod L m ted Time
On y Call 800 682 7270 ema I lu
erettOaol com

$987 85 WEEKLYI Process ng
HUD FHA Mor gage Re unds No
Expe ence Requ ed Fo FREE
Info mat on Call 1 800 50 6832
Ext 1300

for Rant

New 4 W de 38A 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Pay men I :.::.::.::::.~::..:::...:..::.~~:....___,.
F ee A F ee De l ve y 1 88 8
928 3426

Full T me o Part Time Exper
enced Ca pet lnsta ler Highest
Pay Pe Yd and Incant ves Of
le ed Appl y Ca pe Exp ess
407 B 6th St ee P P
wv
13041674-6100 1 AM-6PM

1505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPEA ENCE AE
OU RED 800 757 0753

Mobile Homes

2 Bedroom All E ectr c Mobile
Home No Pets $375/Mo + U I

12

000 WEEKLYI Ma ng 400
Brochu est Satisfac on Gua
an eedl Pos tage &amp; Supp 11s P o
v dad Ru sh Sell Add essed
Stamped En'w'elopel GICO OEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Stan Immediately

420

the offe ng
Seek ng Ma age Fo Jewe y
Slo e App can Shou d Be A Mo
vated Peop e 0 en ed Pe son
Ca nd dale Must Be 0 gan zed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab ty Some Com
pu e Sk s Req u ed Salary And
Bonus P us Bene 1Package

Antiques

1982

6x80 A C
307 675

INOTCEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ec ommends that yo u do b us
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money h ough he
ma un yo u have nve s gated

er Tra n ng No E11pe ence Need
ed Ea n Up To $32 000 s Y
W Fu I Bene t ts Ca Today
877 230 6002 Sunday F day 9
AM Tp 5 PM PAM &lt;ran spo
www otrctrlve s com

530
Bu~ o

MySI c Pomt anv b eed dog
g oom ng ava able Also show
qua lty and pe Poms ava able o
lale 74o-94!1-3418

Merchandise

Opportunity

OJ

Wooden bunk beds S40 00 e ec
stov!l $50 oo works good 304
675 6868

540

$2~$300 740 992 21B7

210

Be ow Hoi day nn Kanauga 8 g

37 Poop o Needed To Los e Up
To 30 Pounds In The Ne• 30
Daya Fee Samples 740 44 1

Take Ove Payments New 3 Bed
ooms 2 Ba h Home $333 &amp;
Mo e n 740 446 3570

FINANCIAL

UV/MO

Ca 740 446 7398

New And U&amp;ed Fu nlrure S o e

Homes for Sale

GOOD CREDIT
BAOCAEDT
NO CREDIT
Le t Us A ss s You n You New
M g Home Ca Fo P e App ova l
1 888 565 0 67

OWN A COM PUTER• PUT T
TO WOAK $850 $3 500 Mo P
F FREE De a Is Log Onto http:/
www hbn co m Access Code
5298

at ga a o s

waaho $100 D yer $100 Eltc
t c Range $95 Atllgo otor $95
A Cond one $95 Gas Range
L ko Now $195 Wosho &amp; Dryo
Set $205 Each 1 Yea Wa anty
Skaggs App aneta 76 VIne
Staat Gal pols 740 446 7398
1 888-818.()128

n Camp Con ey S225 a
clop 304 675 3230

74().4.16-3916

B and New 261C58 Modu a Home
Sm t.h s Cue om CatHneta 3 Bed
oo ms 2 Bath s P ce $45 DOD
Must Be Moved Ca 140 388
9622

FROM

pounds Repos Fee SO Down 1'24
Mas 0199. Fa Lstngs 1800
3 9 3323 X2156

APPLIANCES

2 b
mon

3 sea ooms 1 Bath Home 1819
Chestnut Stree Gall po s 73 Ctt
da St ee 3 Bedrooms 1 Ba 1'\
Both Ava abe On 0 Abou 6 1
oo Deposit Aelerances Ca

FED UP WITH THE
RUN AROUND?
Want A New Home W h No Has
sle Ca Fo P e App ova
BB8 565 0 67

Nursing Asalatante A e Yo u
Ene ge c Mo va ed And Ca
ng? We 0 e An Exc 1ng Ca ee
Oppo tun tv In Sub Acu e Sk ed
Al') d n e med ate Ca e App y n
Pe so n A Seen c H s Nu s ng
Cen e 31 Buck dge Ref 8 d
we Ohio

USED

Watha s dryers

Savlnge On Naw Couches Good
Hospna Bad 1992 17 12 F Co
b a Runabout Boat New Cond
ton Check Us Outl 740 44e
4782

2114 Mon oe Ave 3 br lui base
ment CIA &amp; hoot $400 00 + dop
304-675-3230

Reasonao e a es
Ca o appo n men
304 675 7472
304 675 7279

llOQ-753-4421
Same Day Dec s on
DRIVERS TAKE HOM E MORE
BE HOME MORE Ave age 999
Wage Was $45 255 www oeh
anspo com

GOOD

Ease n Avenue Gallpo Is S375/
Deposit Re e ences Rt
qu ed No Pa s 740 446 2282
Cal 9 am 4 pm Please a1k ro
Geg o Boo

;.;,;..;::.:.::;.________ 1 Mo

2 38A S3 5 Lincoln Avenue
Homestead Rea y Ask o Nan
cy 1304)675 5540

E)(ce e 1Bene Is We Tia n
You To o 111e A Truck and He p
You Ea n a Va uable C ass A
COL Wh ch Could Mean L fet me
Job Secu ty No Experience
Needed ns an Jab P acement
Emp oye s Wa ng In L ne Fo
You 00 F nanc ng f Qua fed
nc ud ng Mea sf l odg ng
Amerl Max Ash and Ky
Loca 606 928 1 43
To Fee 7 days (8001865 7284

CARS

1 866-118-0128

Services

phe

3407

Ja/l&lt;IOn Avenue {3041675-7383

y na Strea

Professional

P HOT.Q.G A A P H-Y
Wedd ngs
Pes
Spo sTeams
P oless ona Ce
ed Photog

•Convenient

Far Sa 1 Recond toned wash
e 1 dryers and et lge ators

Thompaona App lance

•

angea Skaggs A.pp ancas 76

2 Bed oom House 2 Ba. hs 1924

$ 0 DOWN HOMES NO CAED T
NEEDED GOV T /BANK REPOS
CALL NOW 1 600 36 0 4620
EXT 8509

• Ragona
• Dedica ad
• Fa bed
• Teams
• S ngeOTR
• G eat Pay
• Supe Ti ucks
• F end y People
DGBY
We re The Beat!
• secuevou Fuue
• Un que Company
• Respec
• Dgnity
• Have Some Fun

Auction

FREE FREEit MONEY PAOB
LEMS ? NOW ACCEPTIN G AP
PL CATIONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPLICATION FEE
877
543-8357 EXT 40:1,

310
We VI Got tAll

91

1 3 Bedrooms Fo eclosed
Home• From S 99/Mo '% Down
For L sl nga &amp; Payment Data It
llOQ-3 9 3323 Ext 1709

FREE DEBT CONSOLI OAT ON
App ca on w Se v ce Reduce
Payments To 6511f. CASH N
CENT VE OFFEA Ca
800
32B8510Ex 29

REAL ESTATE

D rve s

40

410 Housas for Rant

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSt?
No Fee Uness We W n
8B8 5B2 3345

DGBY

Ia to run Sunday
edition 2 00 p.m
F~doy Manday edition
D30om Sltunlly

~;Sch City Maytag 740 446

RENTALS

ANN OUNCEMENTS

·Z PAY

Buy from the Classlfieds!

ha dtop m nor
I ont damage
asking S8 450 740-992 1508

Ant quo Both Tub fo Sat (740)
386-1413

•

Shop st hotrlf...

560 Pets for Sale
Goode

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Space for Rent

Mob It Home Lot Wll Take 12
4 6 W des $125 Month 1100
Capos I Refe Jencea 740 446
0 75

1995 Chevy Cava e
5 sp
69 000 m es Red 4 door looks
runs great $4200 13041675-5628

580

Pat• for Sale

18 wk old St Bernard $100
304-675-1871 Aller6pm

L v ngston s Basement Wa e
Proof ng all basemen t epa s
done
ee est ma u
I tel me
gua an ee 12y s on job expe
once {3041895-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

oo

Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

entine

�Juna7·, 2000

Wednesday, June 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page S 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle ·

BRIDGE
PHILLIP

;

.1 CRIDrf PROBLEMS???

J I

DBPOYIAI
. PARft

SMITH•s COnSTRUCTIOn

•

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
~'po Dlvonted

• New Homea
· • Garagea
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraaament...

• Remodeling
• Deck•
• Roofing

AR Mahe. Tt;ac:tor lc
Equipment Part~!
Fac:tory Authorized
c..e.JHPUb
Dealeno.

Need It done, ilve 11 • oall
.

,You're Treated with Reapectl
Call Now tor lnatant~~!!!!.::....

'

FREE ESTIMATES
Cre1t Prieta on New Hontel
4

992·2753

Pomeroy Eagles
Cl'ub Bingo On
Thursdaya
AT8:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiiJIII
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progreulve top line.
Uc.lt oo-so 1111t111•

1000 St. /ft. 7 South
Coolvlll•, OH 46713

74GIIJ.&lt;DIU .

992·1101517/001""

ALDER

HILL'S
' ; SELF STORAGE
'
•

'

Hauling • Umestont •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•

.

• 5.

---

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners.
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl top$,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers. carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat.9am - 1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

140.949-2804

"

0122 1 mo

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROO"D

750 Easl Slate Slreel Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701 •

"A Better

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

2.000 Sf. Modern Brick
.Professional Office/Retail Space
For·Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953
- 992-6810 • 992-5404
. ..

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping· Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Billt &amp; Tackle

6/29/mo.

7 40-949-7039
"Get in while you can, apace

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

"We're Back"
219E.2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances

Ken

after 8:00

pm

740-992-5050
(Ra~dy)
1

m .4 1

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS ·
'

740·992·7724

PAT YOUNG

25AI'IIbrlggecl - 1
27 Group o1

1 ECit..y
2 p,..tdenl

21 R-···31 W'- Gar. lo
32 GeneUc llbbr.

3 ltabNw God ·
4 One- -111111
5 Devil•' org.

33 COZy room

I Mo'-'"•

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291-5600

•fll4rtlun •Ctdlt Rtflllt
•Wtulllrlci!S •Wrtailll

9'ir2.::.007

"Ahead In Service"
Nutrn Western Pride 12% SWiel Feed...................'S.•25/SO lb bog
Nutnna 16% Rabbit PelleiL-.................................'6.95/50 lb. bag
Nutrn Hunltn Pride 21" Dog Food.....................'6.75/50 lb. bag
Nutrnl6" layer (rumbek................................. 15.99/50 lb. bag
llutrn5ullllb Feed .............................................'6.75/50 lb. bag
SW. Ri'llr 12% Cattle Feed ................................'6JS/I 00 lb. bag

(NO SUNQAY CALLS)

'

T

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

E

{740) 985-3948

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take lh!! pain out
ofpoinri'¥5•
Let me ilo it for you" '

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

before 6p.m. •
Leave Message
After 6pm- 614-985-4180

A

s

South
1•!

y:

SERVICE

...
.

SERMONS,

SLEEP ll

: FRANK&amp;

Utililiea

•

'

(7401 992•3131

I

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'.

&amp; SON

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'
••

,

BUILDING

\

'·'

740-985-4141
remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

Tha AppDanca
.Man

Now Renting

We Service.All Makes

Serf-Storag~

~2

"i'lit:. 60TIE~ omu:.
E:AA\L":&gt; TPAHl-10

740·985·4194
1
1 mo

5/31/1 mo pd.

Wilt\00~

1

High &amp; Dry!

Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

I I

33795 Hiland Rd.'
Pomeroy, Ohio

'I

740-992-5212

Ill I. lad
Po. .oy. Obi•

4/281

mo. pd.

t
THEF.E
· 15 .

.

Weeding: Mulching::.:
Pruning:· Edging . ':
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Deeks

(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

....... ~:.':O'P.:W:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.................. ~
it' . . . . . . . ~::- .............................................. ~ ........... .

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Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
Range. Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry,
Community Room, 241-iour Maintenance
Provided
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
2070 Slate Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am ~ 3 pm
Phone (740) 992-6419 .
TOO 1o800-7S0.0750
Contact Office For Details
................................................
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Because you're likely to·break
t off old, unprqductive patterns in
the year ahead. as well as disen~
I gage yourself from t~oublesorrte
~ acquaintances, an excellent ·tran~ sition is in store for you.
\ GEMINI (MJ!Y_ .ZI -June 20)
~ Generally, when others refus6 to
~ cooperate with us, it'~ due to the
': example we establish. Watch for
; these signals today, and make
; adjustments accordingly. Know
:. where to look for romance and
I you'll find it. The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveals
l which signs are rpmantically per1feet for you. Mail $2.7S to Match~ maker, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O.
1BoK I'?S8, Murray Hill Slatlon,
! New York, NY 10156.
l CANCBR (Juno 2l·July 22)
Sometimes It's. W:l1er to kee.,p yo.ur
mouth 1hut, and this could be one
of those time•. Be open and frank
when you. muat, · but only with
· l thole who won'l condemn you for
your bluntness.
, . ,.
lEO.(July 23-Aul. 22) Yo.u 11
: be the one who end• up sufferln1
: If you attempt to mnnlpulate oth•
·: ers today to,serve your own ends.
·' Be considerate of Jhe desires and
: needs of others.
! VIRGO (Aug. 2~-Sept. 22)

l

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Now Taking Applications
Apartmentfor 1 Bedroom

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Waters Edge of Syracu8e
.

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All pus

Here's 'another comment by
George Bernard S~aw : "It is difficult, if not impossible, for most
people to think otherwise than in
the fashion of their own period."
Yes, it is hard, if not impossible, for us to relate to, say, people
who lived in the Middle Ages. For
one thing, what did they do of an
evening without bridge?
It is also true that bridge players employ methods currently
popular. This deal occurred during
the 1935 match · between
ORearrange
lttton of. tho
Josephine and 'Ely Culbertson,
four sera mblod WOlds be·
low to form four simple words.
· and Dorothy and P. Hal Sims in
New York City. That was two
8 RA L EV
years after Easley Blackwood had
2
1
',
invented his ace-asking convention. But the splinter bid wasn't
· devised by Dorothy Hayden (now
GE T 0 B
Truscott) untill964. And methods
,:
for showing a void in answer to
1 1 1 13
::
fourhn o-tru mp where developed
~~:=:;;:::~~:;:;:~
muc 1ater. 8II 11, t erewere ways
0 H R E N ,., "You must uveyouriife so that 'I'
around thes,e problems.
~ I I Is I ·~your friends can defend you ." ; :
Then, psychic bidding was in
=-~-::;~·~-=-~'('~Granr]yiecturedme "Then ,"
·;
vogue-- and probably in Vogue,
r
"' she added, "they will
:;
if the magazine existed then ,
K R QA E u
never---- -- "
.
:;
.because this .match generated
G Comple1e lhe ch uckle qvoled :~l·
.~normous media attention. Yet .
L..,.;.J........I-.L......l........l--~y fill ing In tho missing words
.
when Dorothy opened one club, • ; . . 'i' !fiiiJ.ffBi~~f.le'ffiiiSyoliv'ldlevpel-op'J'F-romVII•_PJ4N_ol
. 3rbler'lowl
. ...
Hal '(the P wasfor Philip) didn't
"l
know ~ow (O determine if his
,1
· partner had the spade ace, not the
1
diat'imnd ace. So, he jumped
• ':o~
I
straight to seven.
SCRAfMETS ANSWERS
~
A trump wa~ the standard lead
JockeyRouse
UnweCJ
-Nutmeg
GROWS
.
~
against a grand slam in those days
"Wh1ie
a~ending
a
recital
I
overheard
someone
say
,
1
-- arid still is recommended by
You cant define talent Al l you do is plant the garden .~
many even now. Dorothy won
and it GROWS I''
.
• !'
with her jack, 111ffed a low dia.
!
mond in the dummy, drew trumps,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
~ .JI
returned to the spade ace, and
by Lula Cempoe
.
·
cashed her top diamond~. When
Coloblfty
C/pl1er
cryptegrarna
...
"
"
"
'
.
.
by
famooo
pooplo,
po~atond
the queen• dropped, the heart
- '· E.ch loltorln 1t1o clpht&lt; ltlndl lot onolhor.
";
Today'sclue:Jequsls U
.
,
finesse wasn't needed.
{
Hal's postmortem comment?
'KZKHS
XRNJTNRDE
ETS,
"My angel! ... My sweet!" How"
ever, the Culbertsons won the
K zK Ha
ADA KEN
RX
DW
I 50-rubber match by 16,130
B 'DHNP; . W D H
REWRERNK
RN
RX
points.

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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE

~{

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'1'0U RE
SURE?

WOULP l-IE HEAR AN'r'THIN6
LIKE THAT?

740·949·360.• :

"

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T~AT'S RlolCULOLIS! W~ERE

Mike Sharp :.

20 Y.rs.

.

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7 6!

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Free E•timatea ·:

INSURANCE CO . .

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local-843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
.
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~

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••

FOOt..

LANDSCAPE.;

JINES'

•

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions. Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation
•
992-2772
For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

North

I' .

•

J&amp;L IIISULATIOII &amp;
COISJRUCTIOII

10Pottaro·-•

,;

1....,,..,_

QUALITY :

•f'eeno"''

•·II·

1...

4/IS/00 1 mopd.

·'TOP

Pass

I

'

Commercial· metal studs.
drywall, suspended ceilings
Mike w. Marcum
Owner

bathroOms, custom

We•l

I

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Long Bottom, Ohio
Residential- decks, kitchens,

•

20 Yrs exptrl11~ ,

MARCUM

I Sbleton pert
II Mil. lr\111.

BY PtiiLLII' ALDER

i
;·

Septic Sy1te"" &amp;

lns•ed- PrtlnslollaiStrvkt

7 TUrned white

Inventing games

PARSON

Sen&gt;ice•

Houoe &amp; 'fl'l!iler Sites:
Land Clearing &amp; _
Grading

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month .

fiiiiOIIn

TRY ONe OF YORe

Bulldo•er &amp; Bocldooe;

NewHaven WV

-n:l•

I

Opening lead: • 2

j

(304) 882~2079

i

1 CAN'T GIT
TATeR TO

HOWARD ,
EXCAVATING co;,
''r. &amp;tdl.,
•••wa• Q

GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING

DOWN

competitor

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

R

4/24100 1. mo

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNrrED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

i~

• Garva"eo Traek
• Model Power
• IJleline

740·9f2·7599

Y. miles out of
Chester on SR 248

MONUMENT~L LIFE

Sl. Rt. 7 Nortll
Puurey,
._35537
____________
.:;..OW.
_ _. ~~

• Eoteo Roekell IIIHI AeeeHOrieo

•

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

740·992·1709

I\JntB'5
Cand~ &amp;Crafts

• Tralno by IJonel &amp; MTH

Room Additions
• Rqoflng
!
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL
!
FREE ESTIMATES
i

Hydraulc Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, on
Sales· 5 gal. buckets .
to 55 gal. dnms

.6/5/00 1 mo. od.

Chester, OH

; • Repla¢ernimt '!VIndowa

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Slqlng • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, !;tc.
,,.. l!stlmates

Systems, Inc.

State Route 248

New Hon)es • VInyl
Siding • New Garages

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

CONITRUCTDII

Q~ality Window

Call 740·985·3831

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

PSI .

~ 143

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

M

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N•

R
E

57 p,_upy

24 Vogue"

South
• A 9 7
• J 10 5 4
tAKJ42
6J

~NOW,

74G-949..Q046 .

SHADE RIVER AG SIRVICE

• K-Line
• Athearn
• Ada

Yow~g

Custom C•rpet, VInyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, AU Types of
Hlll'llwood Floorlna,
Carpet Blndlna•nd
Re•tretehlng.
30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG ·

Sand and Dirt

Call T&amp;R Logging

;'

Contractors Weletme
Albany, Ohio

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAlLATIONS

Service
Limestone. Gravel
Agricultural Lime

Dozer work.
FrM EstiMates

'

BOBCAT SERVICES

11elgrdMftta

~mp&lt;omptu)

•KQ6432
• 8 7
• Q 10 8
• 1.0 4

• K 9 3

.

Dump Truck

Standing timber large
or small tracks . Top
prices paid also.

E-mail - mmy•ticpomlt@AOL.com

992- 1717

Free Estimate•

4/lVfOO 1 mo. pd.

table Prices D.R. Bissell
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Esti rnates 740-378-6349

WAN.,ED

•Nailo •flea Bath•
AJI Breeds .
740-949-:U1.6

10 X 20 $60

'

c

• Bathi~ • Ears

I 0 X 10 $·Hl

1·800·311·3391

The Appliance
Man

~ICi&gt;ntractor

949·2249 '
Racine, o•lo

s·L IU . 7

~Ff' ~ofltt

992·1550

Replacement Win,rtnw
Certainteed, Sbnington
Lifetime Warranty

'

S'IORAGE

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS .
GUTTERS

Parts- Ali Makes

Dalley
Trucking

Mystic
Poms
Open For GrOt»•lngl
Fll' Your PeJ'Ill...a.

7/22fl'FN

'·

I

HAR f\Xll.:f .L

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates

.ALLLiL

u limited"

llOBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Spnset Bome
Construction

I·• I

MASONRY

N

ddgol)
23 Ad -

Eut

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

~ . CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES

54 em.ct.
55 Mecle w.rm
5I Some writing

• J 10 8
• 7 2

A &amp; D Au•o p ·o atery ·Pus, Inc

Actor
.U
R'- In
Kind of tube
DHlgner
Glorglo-

West
t97653

Under Nqr Ownarthlp

e2

.A K Q 9 8 6 .5 3

BuUdozer Services
(740) 992·3470

41
47
41
51

t:z.

• AQ

Fill Dirt• Mulch •

43 1111...
4S G = =

15 TM elnllh
11 flat In Kllool
17 Pelceloed
11
,.!gilt
20 - t t c i l
hMII"'
21 Killed the

Nort

=="

I TV'• - Gumbel 40 PerU!Inlng to
7 Gowlclnn
Uloppl...
41 llcNMn 3

,....
14 Rock mau

ttfiOLINQ and
EXCAVfiTINQ

29870 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM·8 PM

~

ACROSS

'.
I
I

•
•

To get a current weather
repo!'l, check the

Sentinel

:..:c.
LJ~~~~!~~-~
-- ~-=
· ~~-d~
/;._-~)

NPK

HKMHKXKENTNRZK

·~~~~

.

.

is not ,!!. day' for the weak- you're likely to be judg~d by the
hearted or wishy-washy types to . company you keep. It Will bc;.prutry to make their mar.k. If you dent to select cqmpamons wtsely
hope to achieve your objectives, and choose only those who would
be prepared to pull out all the. enhance your tn;tage.
stops.
PISCES ~Feb . 20-March 20) .
LIBRA (Se,pl. 23-0ct. 23) Be Emouonahzmg probl e ~s co~ld
careful that you doO't end up the cause :you to behave m a. sel~­
target of. hostility today from two defeatmg manner today. Mamtam
' dissenting factions if you try to control of yourself by focusmg 1n
on thoughts dutstde of yourself.
intervene and make peace. It
might be an exercise in futility ..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ·22)
Prematurely · tryipg to alter or
ARIES (March 21-April 19) A
adjust something in which you're
involved could make matters poor attitude toduy could ·cause
worse today, not belter. Poor tim· everyone to shy awuy froni you.
ina will be atthe core of your loss. so if you insisl upon looking ut
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. ~very\hing from u ne1Jative point
21) Only Ihose diin1• that take of view. bo: prepared •to stund
Into conillderatlon everybody'• ulon~ .
· needs will work today. Let your
~:redo be, "What's 10od for the
'
TAURUS CApri I 20·Mll)' 20) If
mllorlty I• 10od for me."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. you huven' t mun11a.od your
. 19) To be on the 11fe aide today, l'llSOUNCS With , Jrel\t Cllre lately,
It's best to count only on your11elf: there o good chnnce ~ou coulq
People who are usually supponlve find yourself immersed in red ink
. of your .plans or pro1rams miiJhi
.assume an adversarial . stance, with some heavier demands
instead.
placed upon your purse today.
· AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
This is one of those day~ when

,,

T

BPDC. K
KNKHERNS.'tDKNPK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "W•r ls a conl8gion .• - Fronldln D. ROOMVelt
"War II cruelly and you cannot rellne n.•- Wlllam Tecumseh Sherlnan

'Birthday
~;#.

DW

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�Juna7·, 2000

Wednesday, June 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page S 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle ·

BRIDGE
PHILLIP

;

.1 CRIDrf PROBLEMS???

J I

DBPOYIAI
. PARft

SMITH•s COnSTRUCTIOn

•

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
~'po Dlvonted

• New Homea
· • Garagea
• Siding

WORRYING!!!
No Embarraaament...

• Remodeling
• Deck•
• Roofing

AR Mahe. Tt;ac:tor lc
Equipment Part~!
Fac:tory Authorized
c..e.JHPUb
Dealeno.

Need It done, ilve 11 • oall
.

,You're Treated with Reapectl
Call Now tor lnatant~~!!!!.::....

'

FREE ESTIMATES
Cre1t Prieta on New Hontel
4

992·2753

Pomeroy Eagles
Cl'ub Bingo On
Thursdaya
AT8:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaiiJIII
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progreulve top line.
Uc.lt oo-so 1111t111•

1000 St. /ft. 7 South
Coolvlll•, OH 46713

74GIIJ.&lt;DIU .

992·1101517/001""

ALDER

HILL'S
' ; SELF STORAGE
'
•

'

Hauling • Umestont •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•

.

• 5.

---

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats. car seats, headliners.
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl top$,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers. carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat.9am - 1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

140.949-2804

"

0122 1 mo

OLD LOCKZ4
CfiMPGROO"D

750 Easl Slate Slreel Phone (740) 593-6671
Athens, Ohio 45701 •

"A Better

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

2.000 Sf. Modern Brick
.Professional Office/Retail Space
For·Lease. Prime Location on
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehouse Available.
992-7953
- 992-6810 • 992-5404
. ..

46909 SR 124
Racine
Camping· Fishing • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • Seasonal
Convenience Store/ Billt &amp; Tackle

6/29/mo.

7 40-949-7039
"Get in while you can, apace

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

"We're Back"
219E.2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances

Ken

after 8:00

pm

740-992-5050
(Ra~dy)
1

m .4 1

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS ·
'

740·992·7724

PAT YOUNG

25AI'IIbrlggecl - 1
27 Group o1

1 ECit..y
2 p,..tdenl

21 R-···31 W'- Gar. lo
32 GeneUc llbbr.

3 ltabNw God ·
4 One- -111111
5 Devil•' org.

33 COZy room

I Mo'-'"•

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119or
1-800-291-5600

•fll4rtlun •Ctdlt Rtflllt
•Wtulllrlci!S •Wrtailll

9'ir2.::.007

"Ahead In Service"
Nutrn Western Pride 12% SWiel Feed...................'S.•25/SO lb bog
Nutnna 16% Rabbit PelleiL-.................................'6.95/50 lb. bag
Nutrn Hunltn Pride 21" Dog Food.....................'6.75/50 lb. bag
Nutrnl6" layer (rumbek................................. 15.99/50 lb. bag
llutrn5ullllb Feed .............................................'6.75/50 lb. bag
SW. Ri'llr 12% Cattle Feed ................................'6JS/I 00 lb. bag

(NO SUNQAY CALLS)

'

T

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

E

{740) 985-3948

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take lh!! pain out
ofpoinri'¥5•
Let me ilo it for you" '

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

before 6p.m. •
Leave Message
After 6pm- 614-985-4180

A

s

South
1•!

y:

SERVICE

...
.

SERMONS,

SLEEP ll

: FRANK&amp;

Utililiea

•

'

(7401 992•3131

I

•

'.

&amp; SON

r

'
••

,

BUILDING

\

'·'

740-985-4141
remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

Tha AppDanca
.Man

Now Renting

We Service.All Makes

Serf-Storag~

~2

"i'lit:. 60TIE~ omu:.
E:AA\L":&gt; TPAHl-10

740·985·4194
1
1 mo

5/31/1 mo pd.

Wilt\00~

1

High &amp; Dry!

Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

I I

33795 Hiland Rd.'
Pomeroy, Ohio

'I

740-992-5212

Ill I. lad
Po. .oy. Obi•

4/281

mo. pd.

t
THEF.E
· 15 .

.

Weeding: Mulching::.:
Pruning:· Edging . ':
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Deeks

(740) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

....... ~:.':O'P.:W:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~.................. ~
it' . . . . . . . ~::- .............................................. ~ ........... .

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Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
Range. Refrigerator, A/C, On-Site Laundry,
Community Room, 241-iour Maintenance
Provided
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
2070 Slate Route 124 in Syracuse
Office Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am ~ 3 pm
Phone (740) 992-6419 .
TOO 1o800-7S0.0750
Contact Office For Details
................................................
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Because you're likely to·break
t off old, unprqductive patterns in
the year ahead. as well as disen~
I gage yourself from t~oublesorrte
~ acquaintances, an excellent ·tran~ sition is in store for you.
\ GEMINI (MJ!Y_ .ZI -June 20)
~ Generally, when others refus6 to
~ cooperate with us, it'~ due to the
': example we establish. Watch for
; these signals today, and make
; adjustments accordingly. Know
:. where to look for romance and
I you'll find it. The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveals
l which signs are rpmantically per1feet for you. Mail $2.7S to Match~ maker, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O.
1BoK I'?S8, Murray Hill Slatlon,
! New York, NY 10156.
l CANCBR (Juno 2l·July 22)
Sometimes It's. W:l1er to kee.,p yo.ur
mouth 1hut, and this could be one
of those time•. Be open and frank
when you. muat, · but only with
· l thole who won'l condemn you for
your bluntness.
, . ,.
lEO.(July 23-Aul. 22) Yo.u 11
: be the one who end• up sufferln1
: If you attempt to mnnlpulate oth•
·: ers today to,serve your own ends.
·' Be considerate of Jhe desires and
: needs of others.
! VIRGO (Aug. 2~-Sept. 22)

l

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Now Taking Applications
Apartmentfor 1 Bedroom

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Waters Edge of Syracu8e
.

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All pus

Here's 'another comment by
George Bernard S~aw : "It is difficult, if not impossible, for most
people to think otherwise than in
the fashion of their own period."
Yes, it is hard, if not impossible, for us to relate to, say, people
who lived in the Middle Ages. For
one thing, what did they do of an
evening without bridge?
It is also true that bridge players employ methods currently
popular. This deal occurred during
the 1935 match · between
ORearrange
lttton of. tho
Josephine and 'Ely Culbertson,
four sera mblod WOlds be·
low to form four simple words.
· and Dorothy and P. Hal Sims in
New York City. That was two
8 RA L EV
years after Easley Blackwood had
2
1
',
invented his ace-asking convention. But the splinter bid wasn't
· devised by Dorothy Hayden (now
GE T 0 B
Truscott) untill964. And methods
,:
for showing a void in answer to
1 1 1 13
::
fourhn o-tru mp where developed
~~:=:;;:::~~:;:;:~
muc 1ater. 8II 11, t erewere ways
0 H R E N ,., "You must uveyouriife so that 'I'
around thes,e problems.
~ I I Is I ·~your friends can defend you ." ; :
Then, psychic bidding was in
=-~-::;~·~-=-~'('~Granr]yiecturedme "Then ,"
·;
vogue-- and probably in Vogue,
r
"' she added, "they will
:;
if the magazine existed then ,
K R QA E u
never---- -- "
.
:;
.because this .match generated
G Comple1e lhe ch uckle qvoled :~l·
.~normous media attention. Yet .
L..,.;.J........I-.L......l........l--~y fill ing In tho missing words
.
when Dorothy opened one club, • ; . . 'i' !fiiiJ.ffBi~~f.le'ffiiiSyoliv'ldlevpel-op'J'F-romVII•_PJ4N_ol
. 3rbler'lowl
. ...
Hal '(the P wasfor Philip) didn't
"l
know ~ow (O determine if his
,1
· partner had the spade ace, not the
1
diat'imnd ace. So, he jumped
• ':o~
I
straight to seven.
SCRAfMETS ANSWERS
~
A trump wa~ the standard lead
JockeyRouse
UnweCJ
-Nutmeg
GROWS
.
~
against a grand slam in those days
"Wh1ie
a~ending
a
recital
I
overheard
someone
say
,
1
-- arid still is recommended by
You cant define talent Al l you do is plant the garden .~
many even now. Dorothy won
and it GROWS I''
.
• !'
with her jack, 111ffed a low dia.
!
mond in the dummy, drew trumps,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
~ .JI
returned to the spade ace, and
by Lula Cempoe
.
·
cashed her top diamond~. When
Coloblfty
C/pl1er
cryptegrarna
...
"
"
"
'
.
.
by
famooo
pooplo,
po~atond
the queen• dropped, the heart
- '· E.ch loltorln 1t1o clpht&lt; ltlndl lot onolhor.
";
Today'sclue:Jequsls U
.
,
finesse wasn't needed.
{
Hal's postmortem comment?
'KZKHS
XRNJTNRDE
ETS,
"My angel! ... My sweet!" How"
ever, the Culbertsons won the
K zK Ha
ADA KEN
RX
DW
I 50-rubber match by 16,130
B 'DHNP; . W D H
REWRERNK
RN
RX
points.

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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE

~{

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'1'0U RE
SURE?

WOULP l-IE HEAR AN'r'THIN6
LIKE THAT?

740·949·360.• :

"

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.~

T~AT'S RlolCULOLIS! W~ERE

Mike Sharp :.

20 Y.rs.

.

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7 6!

j'

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I

I 16 I

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Free E•timatea ·:

INSURANCE CO . .

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local-843-5264
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
.
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
~

~~
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LANDSCAPE.;

JINES'

•

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions. Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation
•
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For All Your Home
Improvement Needs

North

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COISJRUCTIOII

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QUALITY :

•f'eeno"''

•·II·

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4/IS/00 1 mopd.

·'TOP

Pass

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Commercial· metal studs.
drywall, suspended ceilings
Mike w. Marcum
Owner

bathroOms, custom

We•l

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Long Bottom, Ohio
Residential- decks, kitchens,

•

20 Yrs exptrl11~ ,

MARCUM

I Sbleton pert
II Mil. lr\111.

BY PtiiLLII' ALDER

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lns•ed- PrtlnslollaiStrvkt

7 TUrned white

Inventing games

PARSON

Sen&gt;ice•

Houoe &amp; 'fl'l!iler Sites:
Land Clearing &amp; _
Grading

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month .

fiiiiOIIn

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EXCAVATING co;,
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GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING

DOWN

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Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

R

4/24100 1. mo

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNrrED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

i~

• Garva"eo Traek
• Model Power
• IJleline

740·9f2·7599

Y. miles out of
Chester on SR 248

MONUMENT~L LIFE

Sl. Rt. 7 Nortll
Puurey,
._35537
____________
.:;..OW.
_ _. ~~

• Eoteo Roekell IIIHI AeeeHOrieo

•

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

740·992·1709

I\JntB'5
Cand~ &amp;Crafts

• Tralno by IJonel &amp; MTH

Room Additions
• Rqoflng
!
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL
!
FREE ESTIMATES
i

Hydraulc Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, on
Sales· 5 gal. buckets .
to 55 gal. dnms

.6/5/00 1 mo. od.

Chester, OH

; • Repla¢ernimt '!VIndowa

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Slqlng • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, !;tc.
,,.. l!stlmates

Systems, Inc.

State Route 248

New Hon)es • VInyl
Siding • New Garages

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

CONITRUCTDII

Q~ality Window

Call 740·985·3831

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

PSI .

~ 143

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

M

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
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FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N•

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57 p,_upy

24 Vogue"

South
• A 9 7
• J 10 5 4
tAKJ42
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74G-949..Q046 .

SHADE RIVER AG SIRVICE

• K-Line
• Athearn
• Ada

Yow~g

Custom C•rpet, VInyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
Tile, AU Types of
Hlll'llwood Floorlna,
Carpet Blndlna•nd
Re•tretehlng.
30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG ·

Sand and Dirt

Call T&amp;R Logging

;'

Contractors Weletme
Albany, Ohio

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAlLATIONS

Service
Limestone. Gravel
Agricultural Lime

Dozer work.
FrM EstiMates

'

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11elgrdMftta

~mp&lt;omptu)

•KQ6432
• 8 7
• Q 10 8
• 1.0 4

• K 9 3

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Dump Truck

Standing timber large
or small tracks . Top
prices paid also.

E-mail - mmy•ticpomlt@AOL.com

992- 1717

Free Estimate•

4/lVfOO 1 mo. pd.

table Prices D.R. Bissell
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Esti rnates 740-378-6349

WAN.,ED

•Nailo •flea Bath•
AJI Breeds .
740-949-:U1.6

10 X 20 $60

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I 0 X 10 $·Hl

1·800·311·3391

The Appliance
Man

~ICi&gt;ntractor

949·2249 '
Racine, o•lo

s·L IU . 7

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992·1550

Replacement Win,rtnw
Certainteed, Sbnington
Lifetime Warranty

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WILLIS'
SEAMLESS .
GUTTERS

Parts- Ali Makes

Dalley
Trucking

Mystic
Poms
Open For GrOt»•lngl
Fll' Your PeJ'Ill...a.

7/22fl'FN

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•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitchen
Cabinets Vinyl SidingRoofs - Decks - Garages
Free Estimates

.ALLLiL

u limited"

llOBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Spnset Bome
Construction

I·• I

MASONRY

N

ddgol)
23 Ad -

Eut

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

~ . CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES

54 em.ct.
55 Mecle w.rm
5I Some writing

• J 10 8
• 7 2

A &amp; D Au•o p ·o atery ·Pus, Inc

Actor
.U
R'- In
Kind of tube
DHlgner
Glorglo-

West
t97653

Under Nqr Ownarthlp

e2

.A K Q 9 8 6 .5 3

BuUdozer Services
(740) 992·3470

41
47
41
51

t:z.

• AQ

Fill Dirt• Mulch •

43 1111...
4S G = =

15 TM elnllh
11 flat In Kllool
17 Pelceloed
11
,.!gilt
20 - t t c i l
hMII"'
21 Killed the

Nort

=="

I TV'• - Gumbel 40 PerU!Inlng to
7 Gowlclnn
Uloppl...
41 llcNMn 3

,....
14 Rock mau

ttfiOLINQ and
EXCAVfiTINQ

29870 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM·8 PM

~

ACROSS

'.
I
I

•
•

To get a current weather
repo!'l, check the

Sentinel

:..:c.
LJ~~~~!~~-~
-- ~-=
· ~~-d~
/;._-~)

NPK

HKMHKXKENTNRZK

·~~~~

.

.

is not ,!!. day' for the weak- you're likely to be judg~d by the
hearted or wishy-washy types to . company you keep. It Will bc;.prutry to make their mar.k. If you dent to select cqmpamons wtsely
hope to achieve your objectives, and choose only those who would
be prepared to pull out all the. enhance your tn;tage.
stops.
PISCES ~Feb . 20-March 20) .
LIBRA (Se,pl. 23-0ct. 23) Be Emouonahzmg probl e ~s co~ld
careful that you doO't end up the cause :you to behave m a. sel~­
target of. hostility today from two defeatmg manner today. Mamtam
' dissenting factions if you try to control of yourself by focusmg 1n
on thoughts dutstde of yourself.
intervene and make peace. It
might be an exercise in futility ..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ·22)
Prematurely · tryipg to alter or
ARIES (March 21-April 19) A
adjust something in which you're
involved could make matters poor attitude toduy could ·cause
worse today, not belter. Poor tim· everyone to shy awuy froni you.
ina will be atthe core of your loss. so if you insisl upon looking ut
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. ~very\hing from u ne1Jative point
21) Only Ihose diin1• that take of view. bo: prepared •to stund
Into conillderatlon everybody'• ulon~ .
· needs will work today. Let your
~:redo be, "What's 10od for the
'
TAURUS CApri I 20·Mll)' 20) If
mllorlty I• 10od for me."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. you huven' t mun11a.od your
. 19) To be on the 11fe aide today, l'llSOUNCS With , Jrel\t Cllre lately,
It's best to count only on your11elf: there o good chnnce ~ou coulq
People who are usually supponlve find yourself immersed in red ink
. of your .plans or pro1rams miiJhi
.assume an adversarial . stance, with some heavier demands
instead.
placed upon your purse today.
· AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
This is one of those day~ when

,,

T

BPDC. K
KNKHERNS.'tDKNPK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "W•r ls a conl8gion .• - Fronldln D. ROOMVelt
"War II cruelly and you cannot rellne n.•- Wlllam Tecumseh Sherlnan

'Birthday
~;#.

DW

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Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Weclneedlly, June 7, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PRO iisfiA!'
AmeriCen Le:Pcue
Eastern OIVta on

wL

Jam

I'm.

Bo tQfl ............................ 31 23 .574
Nll_W Yorl&lt; ..................... 31 23 .574
Townto ............................. 30 30 .500
Ba6timore.......................... 24 31 .436
TaMpa Bay ...................... 21 36 .368

•

Central Division
ChlcafL .......... .. ................34 23
CLEv LAND ......... .. .... 31 23
Kansa s City . ... . ....... 30 27 .
M innesota ....................... 26 33
Detroit ....................
..... 21 33

Gl
4

7'!.

,~

.596
.57.4

I '•

.5?6
.441

.389

4
9

, 1 ~-•

Western Dlvlalon

SeJlttle ......
Oakland ... .....
Texas
Anahe1m..

. ..... 30 25
27
.. 30 27
..... 30 28

.......... ...... 31
National

.

.545
.534
.526

I

.517

1'.

L I'm.

!ill

.564
544

5
6
12
15',

Lu~ue

Eastern Divis on

w

tum
At!anla .
Montreal ...

N9Vo' York. ..
Florida
Phila delphia

.37 20
.. 31 24
31 26
.......... .. 26 33
.... 21 35

.649

.441
.375

Central Olvlelon

Sl Louts
CINCINNATI

.....

Pill sburgh ..

Chtcago.
Milwau kee

Hof.lston ..

.32
.31
... 25
24
23
.... .21

26 .552
26 544
31 .446
35 407
35 397
36 .368

'
6
a',
9

6',

Sa n Diego .

9',

3',
3',

439

Tuesday's score•
(AL vo. NLI
N Y_Yankees B, Montreal 1
Boston 4, Florida 3

Detr oit 2. PiUsburgh 1
Ba1t1more at N.Y Mets,'ppd .. rain
Ch1cago White Sox 17, CI NCINNATI1 2
Tam pa Bay 5, Philadelphia 3 (10)
NL: Chicago Cubs 4, Arizona 1
CLEVELAND 4 . Milwaukee 2
Minnesota 3. Houston 1
St . Louis 5, Kansas City 4

Atl anta 7, Toronto 6
Los Angeles 7, Texas 1
Sea ttle 4, Colorado 1

Oakland 5, San Diego 4

Thursd•y's games
lnterleague: Baltimore (Johnson 0-4) at N.Y.
Mats (Rusch 3-4), 7:10 p.'m.
NL: Houston (HOlt 3-6) at Los Angeles (Park
6·4). 10:10 p.m
AL leadar•

10',

Western Olvlslan
Ar1zona
.35 23 603
Colorado ................... 30 25 .545
Los Ang eles ................... 30 25 .545
San Franc1sco ................. 27 28 .491

. ..... .. .25 32

Todoy'oga,..
(ALva. NLI
Chicago White Sox (Parquo 5-21 at CINCIN·
N"TI (Bell 4·31, I ~:35 p.m.
NL: Aritona (Andtrsoo 5-01 at Chicago Cubs
(Downs 2·1 1. 2:20p.m.
Los Angeles (OreltoR 3-3) at Texas (Helling 7SI. 3:05p.m.
San Diego (Clement 5·• 1at Oakland (Mulder
3-21, 3:35p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Hemandel 5-4) at Montreal
(Pavano 6·2), 7:05p.m.
Boston (Rose 3-2) at Florida (Penny 3-6).
7:05 p.m.
Detroit (Noma 2-4) at Pinsburgh (Ritchie 3·3),
7:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Batista 2-4) at St. Louis (Kite 83). 7:05p.m.
Baltlmore (Erickson 2-2) at N .Y. Mats (Reed
3·1), 7:10p.m.
Tampa Bay (Lopez 2·4) at Philadelphia (Per·
son 5·2), 7:35 p.m.
Toronto (Munro 1·1) at Atlanta (MillwOOd 4-4),
7:40p.m.
CLEVELAND (Rigdon 1·0) at Milwaukee
(Bare 3-4), 8:05p.m.
Minnesota (Mays 2·7) at Houston (Reynolds
5·2), 8:05p.m.
Colorado (Arrojo 3·4) at Seattle (Moyer 3-1),
10:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Ortiz 3-6) at Anaheim (Bottenfield 4-5). 10:05 p.m.

BATIING· Erstad, Anaheim, .384; E. Martinez, Seattle, .384; I. Rodri~uez , Texas , .374;
M.J. Sweeney, Kansas Clly, .352; Randa ,
Kansas City. .341 : Lawton. Minnesota, .336: C.
Delgado, Toronto, .336.
RUNS: A. Rodriguez. Seattle. 58; C. Delga ·
do, Toronto, 48; Mondesi, Toronto, 47; Glaus,
Anaheim, 46; Damon, Kansas City, 45; trstad,
Anaheim, 44 ~ Salmon, Ana heim. 43; 1
Rodriguez, Texas, 43.
RBI: E. MartineZ. Seat11e, 63: M.J. Sween,y,
Kansas City, 58; C. Everett, Boston, 56; JaSOO
Giambl, Oakland, 52; C. Delgado. Toronto, 52:
Dye, Kansas City, 51; A. Rodnguez, Seattle, 51;
M. Vaughn, Anaheim. 51 .
HITS: Erstact, Anaheim, 96; M.J. Sweeney,
Kansas City, 80; I. Rodriguez, Texas. 80 ; Lawton,· Minnesota. 74; C. Delgado, Toronto, 74;
Randa, Kansas City, 72: G. Williams, Ta01&gt;a
Bay, 72; M. Vaughn, An aheim, 72.
. DOUBLES : Lawton, Minnesota, 21; Glaus,
Anaheim. 20; Dye, Kansas City, 18; M.J,
Sweeney, Kansas City, 18; Olerud, Seanle , 18;
C. Delgado, Toronto, 17; I. Rodriguez, TeKas,

17; Segul, Texas, 17; Belle, Bahimoft, 17.
STOLEN BASES: L Cootlllo, Florida, 25;
TRIPLE~C
. Guzman, Min~esota , 7: GoOOwln, Colorado. 22; e.o. You~&gt;,~, Chlclgo,
Oul'l\ltn, C
, 6; T, Hunter, MIMI&amp;Ota, 4 ; 21 ; Cedeno, Houston, 17; Oltens, San Dieao,
16; Reese, Ctnool'\lti, 15; Q. Veta&amp;, AtlantA, fs.
J.A. Valentin, c ·
, 4; 13 are tied with 3.
PITCHING (8 declolonll: Qraveo, Clncinnoti,
HOME RUNS: • Delaado, Torooto, 20; C.
Everett, Boston, 20; I. FfOdriOuez, Texas, 19; 8·0, 1.000, 1.79: R.D. Jomaon, Arizona, &amp;-1 ,
Oy il, Ken&amp;as Cit.,-, 18; M. Vauglln, Anaheim, 18; .900, 1.41 ; Stephenson, St. Lbuls, 8·1, .889,
E. Martinez, Seattle, 18; Jason Glambi. Oak· 4.00: G. Maddux, Atlanta, 7·1 , .875, 2.71;
· Glavlne, Atlanta, 7-2, .na, 3.73; Vozquot, MQfl·
land, 11 ; RPalmeim, Texas, 17.
STOLEN BASES: Damon, Kansas City, 17; treal, 6·2, .750, 3.37; Pavano, Montreal, 6--2.
Mondesl, Toro(lto, 17; DeShields, Baftimore, 16; .750, 3.05; Astaclo, COlOradO, 6·2, .750, 4.n .
STRIKEOUTS: R.O. Johnoon, Aritontl, 131;
R. Alomar, Cleveland, 12; AKennedy, Anaheim.
11 : Febles, Kansas City, 11 : Lawr.on, Minnesota, Astac:lo, Colorado, 84; Ueber, ChicagO, 80;
11 ; Jeter, New Yol1c, 11: Mclemore, Seattle, 11 . Dempster, Florida, 78; Benson, Pittsburgh, 7.t;
PITCHING (8 dacioloosl : Baldwin, Chicago, Person, Philadelphia, 74; KHe, St. LO\MI, 74; G.
9· 1, .900. J.07; D. Wallo, Toronto. 10·2..8JJ. Maddux, Atlanta, 74.
SAVES: Alfonsaca, Florida, 17: Benitez, New
3.45; P. Martinel, Boston, 8-2, .800, 1.05; Hud-son, Oakland, 6·2, .750, 4.70; Colon, Cleveland, YOOc. 15; Hoffman, San Diego, 13; Shaw, loa
6·2, .750, 4.23; Sole, Saattle, 6·2, .750, 3.89; Angeles, 11 ; Aguilera, Chicago, 11 ; J. Jimenez,
Colorado. 10:. Radler, Atlanta. 10; Veres, St.
Eldred, Chloago, 6·2, .750. 4.16.
STRIKEOUTS : P. Martinez. Boston, 104; C. Louis, 10,
Fini•y, Cleveland, 87; Clemens, New Vork, 77;
SOuth Atlantic Lugu. stlndingl ·
Burba, Cleveland, 73; Mussina , Baltimore, 68;
D. Wells. Toronto, 67: Hudson, Oakland. 66:
Northern Dlvlolon
Nomo, Detroit, 66.
rum
~ I'm.
a
SAVES: T.B. Jones, Detroit, 17; Wetteland, P;edmont (Phlllleol .......... 39 20 .681
5'•
T11xas, t6; Percival, Anaheim, 15; lsringhausen, Hickory (P1rates) .. ............ 34 26 .567
Oakland.' 14; M. Rivera. New York. 14: Foulke, Delmarva (Orloles) .......... 32 27 .542
7
Chk:ago, 12 ; D. Lowe, Boston. 12; Karsay. Cape Fear( Expos) ........... 32 28 ._533
7'•
Cleveland , 12.
Greensboro (Yankees) ..... 31 29 .517
8 ~.
Hagerstown (BiueJays) ... 28 31 .475
11
NL leadere
Char!~ston, WV(Aoyals) .. 17 4~ .288
-22

w

1 BATIING: Helton, Coloraclo, .4 08 : V. Guerrero, Montreal, .380; L. Castillo, FIOI"ida, .367;
Vidro, Monlreal, .363; Edmonds, St. Louis, .35.9;
Piazza, New Yock, .358; Alfonzo. New York.
.345.
RUN S: Helton. Colorado, 57; Edmonds, St.
Louts, 56; Bonds, San Francisco, 54; Bagwell,
Houston, 51 ; S. Finley, Arizona, 48: Green. Los
Angeles, 47: Kent. San Francisco. 47.
RBI : _
Helton, _Colorado. 57; Giles, PiHsbu"rgh,
54 ; S. Fmley, An zona, 54 ; S. Sosa. Chicago, 53:
Kent, San Francisco, 52; Karros, Los Angeles,
52; Hidalgo , Houston. 51 ·
HITS: V. Guerrero. Montreal, 79; Helton, Colorado, 78; Vieiro, Montreal, 74; Owens, San
Diego, 73; E.O. Young, Chicago, 73; Giles, Pitts·
burgh, 72 ; Kent. San Francisco, 71 : S. Sosa ..
Chicago, 71.
DOUBLES : E.O. Young, Chicago, 22; Alfo('t·
zo, New Vork, 20; Green, los Angeles, 20; A.B.
White, Montreal, 20; Vidro, Montreal, 19: Kent.
San Francisco, "19: Helton, Colora do. 18; Cirillo,
Colorado, 18.
TRIPLES : Goodwin, Colorado, 7; Reese,
Cincinnati, 4; N. Perez. Colorado , 4; Cedeno.
Houston, 4; Womack , Arizona , 4; Vina, St.
Louis, 4; A. Martin, San Diego, 4; Biggio; Houston, 4.
HOME RUNS: Boncls, San Francisco. 25;
McGwi re, St. Louis, 21; S. Finley, Arizona, 20;
Hidalgo, Houston, 18; Helton, Colorado, 17: V.
Guerrero, Montreal. 17; Edmonds. St. Louis, 17:
S. Sosa, Chicago, 17; Sheffield. Los Angeles,

17.

.
Southern Dhllllon
Asheville (Rockies) .......... ~~ 26
Augusta (AedSox) ...... ..... 32 28
COLUMBUS (lnd;ans) ..... 32 2B
Macon (Braves) .............. .30 30
Charleston, sqoRays) ... 28 30
Savannah (Rangers) ....... 26 33
Capital Clty(Mets1 ........ .... 22 37

..551
.533
.533

1

1

.500

3

.483
.441
.373

6',

In!--lht--tdl. .

l!! .L 1!1;1,
lliillito (lndlattal ...............33 :!0 ' .823

P a - (RodSo•) ........31
SCr1n1oo (Phllllool ........... 33
SyrliCUoo (lllueJoval ........25
Rocheltar (Orlolos1 ......... 24
onawa (E&gt;ip001 ................ 21

.596
.589
.500
.444
.412

louthofnDivtolon
Ourllllm (Drw11Riyll ........ 32 2•
Not!oU&lt; (M..,I ................ r~1 29
Cltlrloftl (WhHoSox) .. .....25 28
Rlo!Vnond {Btavn) ......... ~ ~ 43

.57t
.517
.480
.258

Wootom Dlvllion
l.oulovlllo (Rodll .............. 33 25
lndlllnapolls (Brewersl ..... 32 25
COLUMBUS (Yonklll) ...28 29
Toledo (TIOers) .................22 30

.569
.581
.• 23
.423

Dltrolt ................................I
Mlarn .......... ....................... •
Now
1
ChArlolto ................... .........o

von. ...........................

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Houston .............................4
F'tloenl• .: ..... ........ ...............2

MlnnettOia ........... ............. ..2
Utah ...................................2
Portllnd ............................. I
Saot'lmtniO ....................... 1

Seattie ... .............................o

I .BOO
t .687
2 .500
2 .500
2 • .333
3 .250

3

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Indiana at L.A. LakeJt, "9 p.m.

.ooo

E11tern Canterwnce

BaakltboiT
Notlonot Bllk-II.Aiooclatlon
NBA:
vice president of
II
will assume
basketball

Iii
'It

1,1.

~

OHSBCA names 2000 All-Ohio baseball teams
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here
, are the 2000 All-Ohio high school baseball teams as voted by the Ohio High
School Baseball Coaches Associa tion:
Division 1-tlrat team
P- Man Lqrenzo, Uniontown Lake: Jeff Kennard,
Cenlervllle. C- John Johnson, Tot. Woodward. 18-Tim
Stacey. Solon . 28-Brian Meyer, North Royalton. 36-~ Marc Franz, Defiance. S$--Dan Lunsford, Mans. Madison. OF- Phil Bojc, Euclid; .Michael Ferris, Cin. Colerain; ,
.. Brian Hirsch, Solon. DH-Jimmy Williams, Mans. Madl·
son.
·
Player of the Year: Daniel Lunsford, Mans. Madi·
son.
Coach of the Year: Tlm Saunders , Dublin Coffman.
Saeond team
P-Greg McKenzie, Madison; Michael Myers, Dublin
Scioto. C-Ciay Desantis, Westerville Nor1h. 18-Travls
Batey, Celina . 28- Todd Helllne, Mass. Washington.
3B-Chad Marceric, MS.ss. Washington. 55-Christian

Sna11ety, Oellanc:e. OF-Jason 06Satnik, Ma';'tield Village Mayfield; Eric Heminger, Hilliard Davidson; Brandon
O'Brien. Mans. Madison. DH-Dan Donatelli, Mayfield
Village Mayfield.
Honorable mtntlon
Dan Bachman, Cln. Elder; John Redmond, Jackson;
Aaron Brown , Cln. Ek!er: Man _
sammon. You. Boardman;
Josh Baughman, Perrysburg; Matt Echan, Seton; Malt
Rositano, Lorain Admiral King ; Brian Elke11izth, Lodi
Cloverleaf.
Division IMirat ttam
P-Todd Brown, Washington CH: Zac;k McKinney.
lakewood. C-Jon Slaughter, TiDP City Tippecanoe.
18-0avld Snapp, Lewistown tncll8n Lake. 28-Jason
Keeling, Col. Watterson. 38-Shawn Wright, Carrollton.
SS- Man Bartlorst, llpp Cny llppecanoe. OF-BI)'Ce
Bectnarc:yzk, lakewood; Steve Ceravetl, 0011er; Brandon
Cornell, Col. Watterson. DH-Steve Snyder, Avon Lake.
Pl•ytr of tht Yt•r: Steve Caravatl. Do11er.
Coach of the v..r: Don Thorp, Hebron lakewoOd.
Second team

P-Matt Vein 1 Steubenville; Luke Howard; Springboro. C-Oan Ruth, Galion. 1B-Jost'l Betts, Vandalfa
Butler. 28-2-Nick Ferrelli, Vandalia Butler. 38-Srian 0111,
Lexington. SS-Keith Widing, Chesterland W. Geauga.
OF- Riel&lt; Hurst, Tallamdge; Scott Power, Carrollton;
Ken Williams, St. Marys Memorial. OH-Ben Fulton.
Bellefontaine.
Honorable mention
Rodney Bre wer, Bryan; Tony Ebersole, Bryan: Brett
Myers, onawa-Glandorf; John Ross, Avon L.:ake ; Dan
Zahler, Chestertanct W. Geauga; Adam Cox, Vanclalla
Butler; Zac Janicek, Avon lake; Ryan lucas, npp City
Tippecanoe; Brady Stelnlck. Canton Cent. Cath.
Division llt-li"ret team
P- JOSH NEWMAN , WHEELERSBURG; Aaron
Walker, Easr Palestine. C- Lul&lt;e Speck, Pemberville
Eastwood. 18-Paul Werling, Cok:twater. 28-Justin Hill,
Granville. 38--Mike Cresc;enze, Mass. Tuslaw. S$Josh Pr,les, Plain City Jonathan Alder. OF-Matt Foster,
Granvll e; Josh Stephen. Gnad. Indian Valley; Troy Temple, Rockford Par'kway. DH- Kyle Blachuta, Bloomdale

Ell)lWood.
PlaY« of tho YNr. Kyle Blacl"&lt;lta, Bloomdale Elm·
wood.
Cooch of 11M! Yur. Gaty Nissen, Genoa Araa. .....
,
·
S.Cond ...m
P-chad tahna, W. Lafayette RidGewood; Brent
Ewing, WeUston. C--Darak Stanfield, corumblana. 18-Adam Smith, Columbus Grov0. 211-Joll Lowo, Bale·
fontaine BenJamin Logan. 38-John Franl&lt;a, Bufll&gt;n
Berlcshlre. SS-Ryan Aammen·, ColciWiter. OF;....
DUSTIN ADKINS, LUCASVILLE VALLEY; Adam Brokaw,
Bellvllla Clear Fork; Bill Thomao, Now London. DHMike Breyman, Alllca Seneca E.
Honorable mon11on
...
DEREK ADKINS, LUCASVIlLE VALLEY; Ben TJJU8,
Mlnlord; Bill Mulla, Columbiana; Adem Srnlth, Columbus
Grove; JASON GREEN, MINFORD.
.

OMolon IV.ftrat IHm
p-chad Petty, Southington Chalker; NoH Schmitt,
St. Hel)l)'. C-Adam Morgan, Southington Chalker. IllBrad Pettigrew, Newark Cath. 211-PHIL FAIRES.

,.' .
'

"

.

Meigs County'•

3

..,.,.

WNBA otandlngo

1 .667
1 .667
1 .667

'

Hometown Newspaper

GLOUSTER TRIMBLE. JB-Bob Heitkamp, Ft. Recov·
ery. 55-Ryan Bamett, Mowrvotown Whiteoak. OFJustin Bennington , Leoob.urg Faltfleld: Chad Reineke,
Dot Ayersvlle; Kendall Sc!ltablch, Ba~ln Hiland. OHBrent BohmBn, St. Henry.
Ptayor of the Yur: Chad Potty, Southington Chalk·
er.
COKh ol the Yoar. Todd Karsko, F.alrport Hatlllr&gt;,r.
locond IHm
P--Mitch leMastn, "Tamnto; David G~""'-n, 11pp
CitY BtlheT. ~THONY OWENS, WILLOW WOOD
SYMMES VALLEY. 18-0uaUn Alspach, N. Robinoon
Col. Crawfo!ll. 2B-Brant Koesters, St.Henty. 38--0an
Cannon, Leesburg Faltfleld . Ss-Mat Plunkett, Bethel. .
OF- Mike Ruplnsk)', Warren Kennedy: Ryan Steven· . ,
1100, Sidney Fal~awn; John Zlmlcker, Falrpon H.otbor
Ha!lllng. DH-Oave Jamieson, onawa HHis.
Honon~ble mention
Ben Dennison. N. lewisburg Triad; Bracl Lemon, S.
Charleston Southeastern; Tom Ptqke~ng . Newark Calh.;
Mike Wa!ll, Fairport Hotbor H.o!lllr&gt;,r; John HaUield,
Crealllno.
·

50 Cen~ .

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

lfolume 51. Number a

New school

to be built
along Rt 124

B11eb1ll

lndlana at LA. Lakera, 9 p.ijt.

~ ~ .~

•I

2~

Amllf'lctn LNgu.
,
KANSAS CI'TY ROYALS: Slg1ed LHP Mike
Stodollca .
.
TEXAS RANGERS: Optklned , RHP Ryan
Glynn to Oklahoma of the Pa cifi~ Coast League.
Recalled RHP Jonathan JohnsOn lrom Okla·
homa.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Signed OF Miguel
Negron, AHP David Abbott, RHP Jerrod Payne,
RHP Cha~eo Chullr, 3B Shawn Fagan , LHP
Josh McMillan, RHP Andres McCu,loch and
RHP Lanny Panen. Placed RHP Pete Munro
and OF Oewayfl,8 Wise on the 15·dey disabled
list. Activated IJ-IP Lance Painter and INF
Homer Bush from the I S·day disabled list.
Nltionll L•GUI
ARIZOtlA DIAMONDBACKS: Agreed to
terms with OF Joshua Kroeger. A.HP Brandon
Webb and RHP B~an Bruney.
·
PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Reassigned first·
base coach Joe Jones and thlrd·base coach
Jack Und and offered them other positions with·
In the organization. Named Tommy Sandt first
base coach, Trent Jewen third base coach,
Riehl• Hebn8r manager an!ii Dave Clack hitting
coach for Nashville of the Pacfflc Coast league.
Recalled INF Abraham Nunez fmm Nastwllle.
.
Oesiftlt.Ated
1B Ivan Cruz for assignment. .

10',

June 8, 2000

'

Tontaht'l gamn
Houston at Wa5llington, 7 p,m.
!)r1and0 at CLEVEI.AND, 1 p.m.
New Yo,k at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
f1eattie at Phoenix, 10 p.m..

\

4

~ndo

2\

.Thursday

~y·...-

5~

Tonillht'l.fiiMI
Norfolk at COLU!.tBUS
Rlchrrood It Toledo

................. ............
CLEVELAND ........'.. ........... 2
Indiana ...............................2
Wa9hlngton ........................2

2

Houston 78, Sacramento 70
Utah 78, PhoeniX 61
Loa Angeles 70, Porttend 57

te\

NBioFinlio

Thurtder'a g1m11
Hagerstown at Celmarva
Cape Fear at Hickory
Piedmont at Charleston, WV
Augusta at Asheville
Capital Ci~ at Charleston, SC
COLUMB S at Savannah

1

1\

w-.eon01 .000

TOMdoy'o 1110100

Tonlgllt'o

I .500

2 .333
3 .250
3 .000

LnaAnge~p ........ ............. ..3

3
5\

Toleclo at Syracuse, cCd., rain
Dumam at Pawt.UCk"et, pPd., rain
Indianapolis 5, Butralo 3
Indianapolis 10, Burfalo 3
No~Qik 5, Rlchrrood 2
COlUMBUS 8, Ottawa 2
Rochester •. Cha~otte 2
Lou Iaviiie 10, ScrantO.VWIII:es·Birre 4

Tuetda~ ·· ecor11
Delmarva 6, Hagerstown 3
Cape Fear 9, Hickory 2
Piedmont 2. Charleston, WV 1
Asheville 3, Augusta 2
Capital City 8, Cha rleston, SC 7
SavannAh 5, COLUMBUS 4
Macon 6, Greensboro 2

Tonlght'l g1mt1
Hagerstown at CelmaiVa '
Hickory at Cape Fear
Piedmont at Charleston, WV, 2
Augusta at Asheville
Capital City at Charleston, SC
COLUMBUS at Savannah
Macon at Greensboro

21
23
25
30
30

' Hllh:tos:~:&amp;os

Details, A3

Mooonot~m

r-

Drought assistance·available, A1
Southern honors spring athletes, 11

Frld.y

.

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Anaheim 6, San Frandsco 5

.

EACH CROSS REPRESENTS
1oo LIVES LOST
THRt'UGH ABORTIONS

IL ~t

Jun e 12 through June 30.
Hired on two-year contracts
POMEROY - Location for as assistant princ ipals at the
Meigs Local's new elementary meeting were Kristin Acree and
school was settled Wednesday Scot Ghe en, pending comptenight when the board of educa- tion of all stat e and local
tion voted to purchase 100 acres requirem ents.
along State Route 124 just east
Acree will work with . Princiof Rutland.
pal C indy Johnston in , the
Cost of the land owned by Pomeroy, ·Salisbury and HarFacemyer Lumber Co. ts risonvill e schools, while Gheen
$160,000.
will work with Principal Rusty
Decision abo ut the land pur- Bookman in the Middleport,
chase was another step in prepa- Bradbury, Rutland and Salem
ration for finalizing plans for Center schools.
co nstruction of the sc hool, . Both principals and assistant
which Sup erintendent Bill principals wi ll work at some
Bu ckley has said will begin in time during the year ·in each of
CEMmRY OF INNOCENCE - Each of the 40 crosses represent 100 Walter Heinz, left, and AI Hartson were joined by Faith Hayman to
the spring.
the buildings to becom e familbabies aborted each day in the U.S. Right to Life officers, the Rev. check out the new "cemetery. " (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
The action to proceed with ia;ized with all programs, Buckthe land purchase was approved ley reported.
by unanimous vote of the board
One of the primary. responsimembers following a lengthy bihties of the assistant principals
executive session.
will be to oversee special edu caLast month, the board viewed tion in the various buildings, h&lt;;
the architects' scbematic draw- pointed out .
by Fra~k Herald, Jim Moore and Gordon highway is a reminder to motorists of the
ings prepared by SSOE Studi os
The contracts ofJohnston and
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Winebrenner constructed the crosses, Don tremendous loss taking place in this country,"
ofToledo and SEM Partners Inc. Bookman were extend ed by the
of Westerville. The architects board to 222 days, or 11 months
OMEROY Rows of small and Tina Geary painted the sign, and Hershel commen t ed Haymai].
.
white crosses adorning a hill over- White installed the sign and crosses.
She noted that· che organization will have a
discussed how the two-winged, at the appropriate step on the
. looking State ·Route J i&amp;.t~e ~au­ ;, 'Faith Haytnai).:WQO has been active in the booth at the Meigs County Fair, where they
900-foot building in a curved revised administrative sala ry
. rei Cliff area 'ate 'a ren'u"lt(jer~of the cli_apt.e r sine~ its' inception five years ago, will be handing out literature clearly stating i~ts- 1-"'d"'es,.,ign;,
. .,.J,wreoe.u..Id_..~..t!"'o'*n.lto...,thllle!Qiosilote. . -~h~~~le,.;.·-.-...
1110
" hundreds ofbabies lost by ab9~tion noud that "cemeteries" .are .going up. around position that "abortion - i,j
ace~bti: ·
0 n"Supplementa con·
"
ing the executive action was the tracts for the 2000-0 I year w~re
in the U.S. each. year. ·
the country to 10all attention to the problem of under ·any c1rcumstances.
· young pee p]e ab out ab ornon
· ts· a
hiring of' Mark Rhonemus as Kent ·Howell, ass istant band
Established by the Meigs, Co11n~ ;,.c;;hapter ab6~tion.
.~ , t
Ed ucatmg
treasurer for the district., replac- director; Carson Crow, seventh
or'th e 'Right to Lif~ as ''a' t"estimony of con"We have to make people aware of how roIe o f t he chapter an d eac h year· an oratory
·
1
d
ing Cindy Rhonemus who sub - and eighth grade football coach;
cern, the display is called the "Cemetery of many abortions are being done each day and contest is staged here as a part a natwna e umitted her resignation last
Innocence."
·
the need to st&lt;;&gt;p the slaughter," said Hayman. cation program.
Jesse Vail , middle school track
month, effective July 1.
She. said the purpose of the Right to Life
Each of the ·40 crolses represents 100 babies
Erin R oach was the 2000 winner an d parcoac h; Don Dixon, assistant
Salary set for the new treasurlpst daily through abortion in the United organization is to make people aware of abor- ticipated in the state competition held m
er was 551 ,500 _He will work as · middle school track coach; Jan
and. the damage it does.
States, according to AI Hartson, chapter presiPlease see Protest. Paie A3
assistant to the treasurer from · Please see School, Pap A3
seeing these tiny crosses alon g the
'de'::lt. Space for the :·cemetery" was donated
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

rtemetery' serves as silent protest

'

.Housing program unveiled at open house
1111
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coalition of private, non-profit and government cooperation," said Jones. "The commitment of these groups in helping to bring
SYRACUSE - T he term "open house"
affordable
housing to 10 low-income families
took on a very literal meaning Wedn esday as
in Galha and Meigs counties, who probably
Gallia- Meigs Community Action Agency and ·
could
not have purchased a home otherwise."
a numb er of other agencies celebrated
CAA stressed that hom es will be purchased
National Homeownership Week in Syracuse.
by
working singles and young fanii lies, who
The celebration cente red around a threeare often unabl e to qualifY for traditional
bedroom home now under construction for a CAA officials at the home.
Several potential homeowners, who have home loans, or who might have difficulty in
participant In the agency's homeowners assistance program, which will see the construe- . completed a homebuyers education course, raising the down payment and closing costs
that those traditional loans usually require.
tion of 10 new single-family hom es in Meigs were also on hand.
Carol Costanzo of the Marietta office of
The
unique
partnership
of
all
agencies
and
and Gallia counties.
Rural
Development said co ncerns of neighT hose homes, being built by Homecreek businesses in~olved , which will allow for a ·
Enterprises of Pomeroy, will be sold to quali- redu ced interest, fixed-rate mortgage plan, as bors that the Syracuse homes fall under the
fying homeown ers who meet income and well as reduced closing costs and no down :'government housing" stigma will be surprised at the quality of the homes and the
payme nt, was emphasized.
credit eligibility requirements.
,
Linda Jones, Ohio director of Rural Devel- buyers.
Representatives of USDA Rural Develop"People
have
said
that
this
is
'government
ment, Ohio Department of Development, . opment, said that terms of th e program would
Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati, not be possible without the partnerships housing; and that they fear it will adversely
Ohio Valley Bank and Firstar Bank, aU partic- which have been forged.
"This project is the result of an impressive
ipant' in the progratn, joined builders and
· Bv BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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• •Super Lotto: 1-3-16-24-41-47

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0 2000 Ohio V:&amp;l.ley P11b!ithirig Co.

'

Those homes, being built by
Homecreek Enterprises of Pomeroy,
1vill be sold to q11alifying
homeowners wllo meet income and
credit eligibility req11irements.

Local blues society to 'jazz' up Friday evenings
Pomeroy attorney Christopher
Tenoglia, who are dedicated to
POMEROY Ind ividu als the nurturing of live music along
who enjoy the upbeat sou.n d of a with the artists who perform it.
spontaneo us jazz rhythm "or the
"We are eager to create an·
slow, mournful howl of a "blues upscale atmosphere during · these
guitar, can now do so at t~e performances," said Jackie 'Welker,
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz .Society's "and hope that eac h evenin g
Summer Concert Series, which series will be an' event' that focuski cks off this Friday at 6;30 p.m.
es on music, as well as quality arts
This appreciation . society, and crafts, for those in attepch is known as PB&amp;J, was dance."
"The Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
fo nded Feb. .24, imd is committe to the sponsorship and pro- . Society would just like to invite ·
tion of live blues and jazz aU those who are interested to
music that will take place at ~orne out and stroll along the
Pomeroy's Riverfront Amphithe- beautiful Ohio River and enjoy
the many cultural activities that
ater.· ·
T he founding members of will be taking place,'' added WelkPB&amp;J consists of local business- et.
Each free performance is open
men Jackie Welker, Mike Lindskold and Steve Hawk, and to the public and will include

BY ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~

'

...

food and . drink concessions as
well as local arts and crafts.
''I'm looking forward to these
wonderful events beginning and
am extremely pleased with the
excitement that it has created,"
said Pomeroy Mayor John Blaettnar." Anytime that you get minifestivals like this to occur, the
spirit of M eigs' County's residents
seem to soar."
Festivities will begin at 6:30
p.m.· with concert performances
starting at B p.m.
T he first entertainer to take the
stage for PB&amp;j's Summer Con•
cert Series wlll be guitar phenomenon Bill Dutcher.
Dutcher melds a fusion of a
variety of musical styles and infl u-

Piease see series. Pip AJ

BENDING STEEL - Guitarist Bill Dutcher, above , will opE)n up
Pomeroy Blues and Jau Society's Summer Concert Series Friday at
Pomeroy's Riverside Amphitheater. (Contributed photo) ·

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