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

Iii
I~
I\

8\
g\

n

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

I~

1\It

8

o-

Frlday'o ~~~­
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.

,.' .
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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
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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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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

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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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Thursday, June 8, 2000

•.

Thursday, June a, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pllge A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

.~:.. ----~~~~~=-----~~~~----------------------------~P~o~m~e:ro~y~,~M!Id~d~le~po~rt~,O~h~l~o--------------------------_2Th~e~O~a~lly~Se~n~t~ln~e~I~·P~a~g~e~A~3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

I

Assistance a~ailable to drought-stricken farmers

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Boy drowns in pool accident .
SPENCER (AP) -A 3-year-old hoy died after he fell into an
above-ground pool in a neighbor's back yard, police said.
Nathan Shelly apparendy died Tuesday of accidental drown··· ing, said Robert Challener of the Cuyahoga County coroner's
office.
The boy's mother called police at 4:12p.m. to report that she
"• was unable t~ find her son. About 15 minutes later, police found
. the hoy floatmg m a pnvate pool. He was taken by helicopter [o
MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, where he was pronounced dead.
Police Chief Dan DeRossett said investigation into Nathan's
death is continuing, but it looks like it was a tragic accident.
"It appears the . boy somehow climbed over a locked fence in
the neighbor's yard and fell into the pool," he said.
Spencer is located about 35 miles southwest of Cleveland.

Fels study changing location
, KETTERING (AP) - The Fels Longitudinal Study, which
· has been keeping tabs on human growth and, s9cial development
.: since 1929, is moving from Yellow Springs to Kettering.
.
The study initially researched growth and development . of
children and then followed them into adulthood. The first of
about 1,200 participants turn 70 this year.
'
Fels research produced the pink and blue charts used by pediatricians to track the weight and height of infants and toddlers.
For the past 25 years, the study has focused primarily on risk factors for cardiovascular disease and body composition.
The study was originally funded by Samuel Fels of the Fels
soap company. It became affiliated with Wright State Medical
· School in 1974 and is moving ro Wright State's building at the
Miami Valley Research Park.
Medical School spokesman Mark Willis said 26 Fels staff
members moved in Feb'ruary, and the last seven will move by the
end of the year, once renovations to the 15-year-old building·are
complete.
The National Institutes of Health has promised $5.5 million
over the next five years to Wright State for Fels research. Scientists from the Division of Human Biology, which runs the study,
are trying to understand how the amount of bone, muscle and
, fat in a person's body predicts the lik~ lihood of osteoporosis,
heart disease and hypertension.

Protective measures taken
...

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: :
:::
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~- ··

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CINCINNATI (AP) Hamilton County officials, who
rejected judges' requests to install metal detectors outside 'c ourtrooms las~ year, have agreed to install bulletpro.o f glass in a
municipal courtroom.
Metal detectors would cost $291,000 a year to operate, compared with the one-time cost of$125,000 for the glass partition
to separate the audience from judges, prosecutors and inmates,
officials said.
"It provides a level of security that the judges want," county
Administrator David Krings told commissioners Wednesday. " At
this point, the judges feel that would be adequate." ·
Court Administrator Michael Walton said the partition, which.
will not extend ·all the way to the ceiling of the 1occasionally
volatile courtroom, should be installed within 90 days.
The courtroom's sound system will have to ·be supplemented
-that's includ!!d in the $125,000 cos~- but the glass shouldn't interfere with the room's air circulation.
Krings said officials considered additional video arraignments
- where the inmates remain in jail and communicate via camera - but could not find sufficient space in the jail.

..

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\

Dying man won't stand trial

COLUMBUS (AP) -A man dying of cancer will not have to
. stand trial in the slaying of his wife, a judge determined Wednes" day.
.
·~
Ronald L. Pettit, 59, is accused of calling his wife, LuAnn, 46,
to
his bedroom in their home and shooting her once in the chest
'
•• last Sept. 28.
Because he is heavily medicated and cannot assist in his
defense, he has been found not competent to stand trial by Judge
, • Dan Hogan of Franklin County Common Pleas Court.
:: . Pettit's attorney has repeatedly asked the court to release Pet·. tit from jail so he can die in a hospice.
Until a decision is made,
''
Pettit remains in the Franklin
'
County jail.
Mrs. Pettit had planned to
·.
seek a divorce, but promised to
stay with him until he died
after terminal cancer was diag·.
cum
Olllt valor ..
nosed, family members said.

·.

..

.:. - The Daily Sentinel
••

~,. "

'• '

n,.
_...Co.

Published tv•rr tlttrnooa. Monday throuab
Fri41J, 111 COurt Sa.• Pomeroy, Ohio, by tiM

·•

Ollla Yllloy Publlohl,. C..mJIIIIy., Pomeroy,
Cilia 4$769, .... 992-2156. cl... pool·
... pold. ,_.,, Ollla.

•

M,._ T1to - l t d p,..., ond 11M Ohio
Ntwlptper Alloc:iatkln.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

fOSTM.U'I'IIb SeiKI acldrcu col"''mfone lO
Tile Daily Sc•llnel, 111 Court 51., Pomeroy,

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Subscribe todny.
992-2156

Ohio 457119.

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ntlliloiJAL HOMI JllANM INCWDIS:

::

::•

CANTON (AP) - The Miller said Sharpton has
Rev. AI Sharpton held been holding city officials
"fruitful" talks with Can"hostage - that he was
ton 's
mayor
Wednesday
going to do some sort of
about combatting racial disdemonstration or action
crimination by police, but
the civil rights activist during the Hall of Fame
refused to call off possible
event unless we agree to
.protests at the Pro Football
his demands. I would
Hall of Fame inductions.
The two agreed to meet like to see Mr. Sharpton,
again on June 22. The induc- after he makes an apolotion ceremony, scheduled for
gy, leave Canton."
July 29, is the one moment
each year when Canton is be foolish to deny that it has
guaranteed to attract nation- ever happened.
al media atten.tion.
Sharpton left his meeting
Sharpton's. New York- with Watkins briefly around
based National Action Net- midday to talk with a couple
work threatened to protest at of white Stark C()unty
the hall what jt perceives as judges. He asked them to
racial profiling, or singling examine their sentencing
out minorities for a'r rest.
and jury selection records to
· "I think they've been very see if there was any bias
fruitful discussions so we've against blacks and other
agreed to continue talking," minorities .
Sharpton said. "We're not
Sharpton's presence m
loo,king for a deal as much as Ca nton drew criticism from
fairness and equity for John Miller, a police detec everyone."
tive and president of ·the
Mayor Richard Watkins , 140-membe r Canton Police
who is white, first met Patrolman's Association .
National Action Network
"We're not pleas~d with
representatives and a medi a- Mr. Sharpton 's activities in
tor f rom the U.S. Justic e
·
D
t
t'
C
.
Canton , He has incited and
ep! ar men s . ommumty made a lot of accusations,"
R e at10ns ServiCe last month
. d
.
h
· sa1. d M 1. 11 er, w h o d en1e
to d1scuss t e concerns. C ·
ff
·
k
Sharpton missed the meeting
an to~ . 0 leers pic
on
b
mmor1t1es.
ecause
bad
weather
M 'll
' d Sh
h
grounded his plane.
I er sal
. arpton . as
After that all-ni ht ses- ?,een holdmg City officials
·
h
.g
hostage that he was
s1on, t e Commumty Rela· .
d
f
tions Service agreed to draft gdomg to ? some sort. 0
emonstrauon or action
a memorandum of under- d .
h
H 11 0 f F
standing based on six points
unng tl e · a
amh.e
.
event un ess we agree to IS
h
f
o agreement t e two s1des d
d I
ld l'k
reached.
eman s.
wou
I e to
Just befo.re the May meet- see Mr. Sharpton' after . he
ing, Watkins called for an makes ;,n apology, leave
. d
d
. .
. Canton.
10 epen ent
C e1.1 C . S cott, a h ot d og
d comm1mon
h
.to
reco~men . ways t edclty vendor who is black, weican improve 1ts recor on
d Sh
, . . Sh
minority h•ues.
co.me . arpton s vmt.
e
w tk'
'd W. d
d , sa1d pohce unJustly accused
t lk a ms sal
. e ~et ay ~ her last year of not having
a s were . meamng u an
a proper vendor's license.
mtense. Ne1ther s1de would
"I th " k · ·· (
· 1
fil
1
go into the specifics of what . g) . 1n It rachla pr~ 1
1
.
d
1n
IS a across t e nauon,
Was d ISCUSSe ,
d . , b d
b
k
"M ay b e we 'll esta bl IS
. h an
1t s . a h - h ut Star
C
f
.
,
sonie models for the rest of hountyd IS t e eart 0 It,
, s e sa1 .
t h e country to emu I ate,
Watkins said. "That would
be beneficial to all of us."
Still, Watkins said he doesn't think city officials needed Sharpton to point out the
area's racial problems.
"We know what our
problems are, we're working
on them, and we're willjng
E.~TABLISHED 1890
·to solve them," he said.
520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy
Watkins said he has no
Ner~r t,he
specific evidence of an incident of ' racial profiling in
Canton, but added it would

It fb~ oohle awayf

• •• 01111trM, Ill or l:Z ma1h bull. Crc:dll will bo
••
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·:

Sharpton talks race
issues with Canton officials

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~PTION JIATES

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natural disasters. This NAP as~istance will tomatoes, Category 1 forage (Kentucky
POMEROY Farmers in Meigs help farmers in Gallia, Lawrence, Meigs and bluegrass and tall fescue grass), orchard
County and other southern •counties in Clinton counties who lost crops due to grass, highbush blueberries, hybrid ~ab­
Ohio are eligible for disaster assistance for severe drought conditions in 1999 ," bage, tart cherries, slicer cucumbers, hybrid
De Wine said.
pumpltins, strawberries, alfalfa and orc)Jard
lost crops due to the 1999 drought.
"This will hopefully begin to offset the mixed foliage, black raspberries, Che,ster
U .S. Sen. Mike De Wine announced ihat
. the U.S. Department of Agriculture has financial damage Ohio farmers experi- blackberries , regular watermelon and sumapproved a Non-Insured Crop Disaster enced at the hand of Mother Nature."
mer cantaloupe.
'
For Meigs County, the USDA approved
Assistance Program. area designation for
County farm service agents have appli•
M eigs, Gallia, Lawrence, and Clinton coun- the following crops for assistance: alfalfa,
cation material and other information
New
H
aven
peaches,
hybrid
sweet
corn,
ties.
"The program is designed to help farm- green beans, golden delicious apples, hot about the program, according to Am~
ers overcome financial losses resulting from peppers, sweet green bell peppers, hybrid Ricketts of DeWine's office.

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such as these takes a partnership,
because resources are so . limited"
' .
'
he said.
Simpson said his agency is now
from Page A1
worlting
closely with government
1 ' '.
affect the conununity," Costanzo offices and federal legislators to
. sa&gt;d. "This 1s not government develop programs for refinancing
. housing.
through guaranteed loan pro. . . "It is people housing, and the grams, and to initiate changes in
d1verse partnerships that are mak- income guidelines to allow workl, . '. jng it pos~ible are proof that these ing families who faU through the
. · are quality homes, built for good bureaucratic cracks to qualify.
' buyers," she added.
In addition to CAA and Rural
representatives,
CAA Executive Director Patri- Development
~ .. : 'cia McCullough said that the other speakers included Patty
need for affordable new homes Hapney of Ohio Valley Bank,
·· for young, working families is which serves as the primary
. . especially great in Gallia and lender, with assistance from Rural
' Meigs counties.
Development and the Federal
;, ' "So many of the homes avail- Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati;
• \lble to first-time homebuyers in Th&lt;;&gt;mas Stevens of Firstar Bank,
1 'this area are so old," McCollough wh1ch has provided lending and a
I. :· said, "that homebuyers find it · grant for appliances for the new
very hard to live in them once homes; County Commissioner
1' · ·they buy them. These homes are Mick Davenport; Doug Harceny,
· ·~ ··perfect for young families and a home inspector for the Ohio
' -:young singles who have the desire Department of Development; and
Jim Clifford and Greg Bailey of
"· · to own their own home."
n· .. · McCullough
said
CAA, Home Creek Enterprises.
through Housing Director Julia
CAA will conduct its next
- .. Houdashelt, has already begun course for homebuyers at the
~ "" "pnsidering other housing pro- agency office ·in Cheshire June
~.- : grams for working people in the 19-23 from 6-9 p.m. The course
., ,. community, including lease-to- is free of charge, but those int~r­
-" . 6Wrt opportunities, and other ested in the course should contact
programs
helping
potential the agency at 992- 6629 to reserve
homebuyers with credit repair a seat.
• · .and other issues that prevent
The course will include a numthem from qualifying for financ- ber of topics relating to home
ownership, including mortgages,
ing.
Such programs are important dosing costs, credit reports and
today, said Bill Simpson, acting home maintenance.
associate adininistrator for the . Speakers will include attorneys,
:. Rural ,Housing Service in Wash- bankers, insurance agents, realtors,
: • lngton, who also attended the extension agents, contractors,
~· open house:
housing auth~rities, ABLE, JTPA
and.
other representatives.
:· "Building and financing homes
•
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,•..,___;__

CAA

Complete Stock

30% orr

Kannath McCullough, R. PH.
Charlaa Rlf11a, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to e p.m.
Sat. a:oo a.m. to ·a p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m~
PRESCRIPTION PH. 882-291515 .
Eaat Main Pomeroy, Ohio
Friendly Service
Open Weak Nlghta

-

______________

Series
from PapAl

ences into an awe-inspiring and
·totally enjoyable musical experi• ence.
This "must see" guitar player
mystifies as weU as entertains all
audiences that come our to see
him perform his live show.
· Remaining Sununer Concert
Series performances are as follows:
• June 23: Tony Tenaglia - A
guitarist that plays '30's and '40s
pop standards who spices up his
repertoire with his ability to
mimic a trumpet with his mouth.
Special guest Chad Dotson, local

POMEROY - At Monday's
regular meeting ofPomeroyVillage
Council, Clerk/Treasurer Kathy
Hysell distrii)uted her financi al
report for the month of May with
~alances as follows: General,
$51,497.91; Safety, $6,478 .06;
Street, $4,337.60; State Highway,
$.548.63; Fire. $64,459.27; Cemet~ry. $8,290.43; Water, $55,324.50;
Sewer, $73,3,86.34; Guaranty
$21, 184.24;
Utility,
Meter,
$12,529.43; Perpetual Care Cemetery, $7, 147.16; Cemetery Endowment, $38,121.59; Police Pension,
$8,970.03 ;
Building
Fund,
($589.71); Recreation, $11 ,1 15.04;
Permissive Tax, $5,293.63; Law
Enforcement, $3,924.1 0.

Dissolution
sought
POMEROY -· An action for
•
dissolution of marriage has been
filed in Common Pleas Court by
Scott M . Dillon and Julie E. Dillon,
both of Pomeroy.
.'

Lawsuit filed
POMEROY - A civil lawsuit
has been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by LaSalle
National Bank, Orangeburg, N.Y.,
against Teresa Garnes, Pomeroy,
alleging default ' on a promissory
note in the amount of$31,976 and
interest.

Marriage license
issued
POMEROY - · A marriage
.license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to William
Owen Garnes, 31, and Carolyn
Jane Buck, 44, both of Pomeroy.

Fugitive to retum
POMEROY -

Charles

and entering, as well as a new

charge of failure to appear.
Ewing was charged in a breaking
and entering case involving Tim
Williams of western Meigs County, but failed to appear for his April
10 senten cing in Common Pleas
Court.
Meigs County Sheriff James M .
Soulsby reported that Ewing will
be return ed to Meigs County
today to answer the charges.

Akzo-41~

· AmTech/SBC - 46~

Ashland Inc.- 34'Y.
AT&amp;T-36lo
Bank One- 34')•
Bob Evans - 14Y(
BctgWamer - 40l.

5.,.

Champion - 2'1.
Charming ShopsCily Holding- 9).
Fed8flli Mogul- 9')•

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections will hold its
monthly meeting on June 13 at 9
a.m., at the board office.

Class set
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Storm
Spotter School, a class for beginners, will be held on June 15 at b
p.m. at the New Haven Public
Library. Information is available by
calling (304) 882-2637 or (304)
882-2482.

Public hearing
· announced

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

POMEROY - .Meigs Local
School District Board of Education will conduct a public hearing
on June 27, 6:30 p.m. for public
review of the district's Continuous
Improvement Plan prior to the
Meigs Local School District regular board meeting.
Meigs Local School District regular board meeting will be held at
7 p.m. in the Meigs Board Office at
320 E. Main St., Pomeroy.

A Syracuse tnan is in serious condition in the intensive care uirit at

Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, WVa., after I!C was
shot during an apparent burglary
attempt.
Steven Chapell was transported
to PleasantVaUey Hospital and then
on to Cabell-Huntington after he
was shot at the Paul Rollins Car
Wash on State Route 2 in Point
Pleasant.
, It is believed that Rollins fired
the shot at Chapell during the
alleged robbery attempt.

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 1 p.m., to be
held at the Fish and Game Clubhouse offTexas Road near Chester.
Signs will be posted. Children
should bring their own tackle and
bait and no minnows may be used.
Children 15 and under may participate.There is no admission charge,
and lunch will be included. Prizes
will be provided.

Firemen's Festival
set

STOCKS

Gannett - 61 ),
General Electric - 51\

H!frley Davidson - 37'1.
K mart - 7'~,
Kroger - 18'/,
Lands End- 34),
Ud. - 23l,
Oak Hill Financial - 15
OVB - 27),
One Valley - 37l.
Peoples - tsl.
Premier - 7lo
Rockwell - 39%

.

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 62'Y•

Sears- 3511" ·
Shoney's -l,

Wai-Mart - 57~
Wendy's - 20~
Worthington- 12 ~
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of

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

Protest ·

School
from PapAl

~--

saxophonist, will also be present.
Haddox, middle school golf
• July 7: The Cowboy Angels coach; Darin Logan, girls' softball
-A ' trio, led by Meigs County's coach; Nathan Hansen, girls'
own John Hurlbut, who "plays reserve softball coach; and Kellie
tribute" to Americana with won- Thomas, girls' middle school volderful rich vocal harmonies and leyball coach and girls' middle
tight rhythms .
school basketball coach.
• July 21: American Gypsy Others hired on supplemental
A band consisting of guitarist contracts Were Jesse Vail, seventh
Neil Jacobs, violinist Arkadiy Gips and eighth grade football coach;
(a recent imigrant from the Daniel Thomas, head baseball
Ukraine), and bassist John Dou- coach; and Jeremy Grimm, reserve
glas. who combine an exciting baseball ·coach.
blend of gypsy, jazz, classical and
Vicki Haley was hired on asupworld folk music into an exhila- plementary contract as head
rating new musical style.
teacher at l:larrisonville ElemenIn case of severe weather, all taty School, and Daniel D. Thomas
f~stivities will be canceled .
. II was employed as elementary
Those interested in becoming a physical education teacher in the
member of the PB&amp;Js can contact district on a one-year contract
Jackie Welker at 992--6524.
effective next fall, pending completion of administrative require-

Reunion planned
POMEROY - Meigs High
School class of 1975 will have a
25th year reunion June 17 at Salisbury Elementary School in
Pomeroy, 1 to 4 p.m. All alumni
and their families are invited to
attend. A $5 donation per adult is
being requested to assist in paying
for the refreshments and custodian.

Hymn sing
LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
sing ' at the Faith Full Gospel
Church will be held Friday at 7
p.m. A men's prayer breakfast will
be held on Saturday at 7:30a.m.

EMS logs 9 calls
POMEROY - Uni'ts of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:
'
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:13 p.m., Butternut Avenue,
Karen Jones, treated.
POMEROY
"4:50p.m., College Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Tammy Bable,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:40 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Dorothy Wyatt, treated.
RACINE
9:07 p.m., County Road 28,
assisted by Central Dispatch, motor
vehicle accident, Carol J. Bush,
Holzer Medical Center.

Library, 7:30 p.m. Tho!e who
believe in what the group stands
for are asked to show their support
by attending.

Last year's winner was B.J. Smith,
who was a state winner and went
on to the national contest.
Officers of
locA( group, Hartson, president, the Rev. Fr. Walter
Heinz, vice president, and Nora
Nitz, secretaty- treasure~.
are
encouraging more participation in
the Right to Life movement in
M eigs County
Regular meetings of the loeal
chapter are held on the third Monday of each month at the Pomeroy

me

lrRIIIG 'IAI.IY
position of keyboarding/work
processing.
Approved during the meeting
was the district's membership with
the Educational Technology Services of Ohio at a cost of 55 cents
per pupil for a total of!\1,245.75.
The seven through 12 mathematics course of study as submitted
by the Athens-Mei gs Educational
Service Center and Meigs Local
teachers was also approved by the
board.
The board also voted to renew
the contract with the Southeastern
Ohio Special Education Regional
Resource Center to provide special education services to the district next year at a cost of
$5,5?2.82.

and evening.

PAGEVILLE - · Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department
will have its annual firemen's festival Saturday. The queen's contest
and crowing will take place at
noon followed by a parade at 1
RUTLAND
p.m.
5:23 a.m., Gaff Road, Kate JarThere will be games and food, rell, HMC;
including homemade ice cream,
4:17 p.m., Salem Street, Tracy
available throughout the afternoon Owensby, HMC.
along with a country story. AfterS'YRACUSE
noon activities will also include a
4:42 p.m., College Street, struckiddie tractor pull at I p.m ., a ture fire,Jeff Bable residence;
horseshoe pitching contest, and a
10:53 p.m., Fourth Street, Sherri
variety of music both afternoon Harris, HMC.

from PapAl

'

AEP-34\

Board to meet

Man involved
in shooting

P

~ LOCAL

Firstar - 25l,

Ewing, 28, of Sandusky, Mich., will
be returned to Meigs County after
being found in Springfield, for sentencing on a charge of breaking

CII~IMA

,._,

446-4524
'', . :·' .' '
FRI 812· THURS 818100
lOX OfFIQ WIU llfllllT

6:30 PM 101 MNIIIG SHOwS
12:30 PM FIJI MAnNIIS
THE HEART IS
7:00DAILY

ments .

VALLEY WEATHER

~

1/Z
PRICE·
~
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drsR
..

; .J. GALLIPOLIS - Don E. Hemsworth, 73, Gallipolis, died Tuesday,
une 6, 2000 m Holzer Medical Center.
·
Born
March
8,
1927
in
Logan,
son
of
the
late
O:L. "Buzz" and Mar•
1
, garet Ellen, Hemswonh, he was the owner and operator of
• Hemsworth s Gulf Station in Gallipolis for 40 years.
· · A U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II, he was a member of the folloWing orgamzat10ns: American Legion Lafayette Post 27, VFW Post
,. 11464, Mormng Dawn Lodge 7, F &amp; AM, Gallipolis, Gallipolis Chap' , _..ter 79, Royal Arch Masons, Moriah Council 32, Royal and Select Masv·. tery~ Rose Commandery 43, Knights Templar, and Aladdin Temple
Shrme of Columbus.
.
. _ He . was the past state commander of the Military Order of the
Cooties.
.;: . He was preceded in death by his wife, Norma Jean Harrison
• )-Iems~".rth, m 1994; and a brother, Ralph Hemsworth.
d SurvJvmg are a son, Tim (Ginger) Hernsworth of Cincinnati· a
aughter, Tammy (Tom) Morgan of ·Edmond, Okla.; four grandchudren;a brother, Glen (Par) Hemsworth of Logan; and a sister, Norma
·· ·(W1lham) Lehman of Logan.
• · · . Se~ices wiU be 11 a.m. Saturday in Willis Funeral Home, Gallipo~·:. hs, wtth MonsJgnorW&gt;Iliam Myers officiating. Burial will be in Pine
• ' Street Cel)letery. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
· Fnday.
. Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home by Morn. mg Dawn Lodge 7, F &amp; AM, on at 8:30p.m. Fciday.

'

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u
;lots
.
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.
Pack
Carton .

·-'''''""""''-'"'""'""'"''"""'l109.7l
n,,,J(J,,J (1( vu t"·
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26 ..........................................- .......$56.61

••
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• 0... 1'50 DI8Jial Chonnelt

W.U.IIIIICIUPTIONI

certain crimes- such as murder
or robbery- while using a gun. ·
Prosecutors said Hanning
should be tried as an a·a ult
because . his accomplice ha\:1 a
gun ..
Ohio law allows people to ·be
charged with crimes commi~ted
by an accomplice even if they
weren't involved in the actual
crime - for example, a person
who drove a friend, to a house to
be burglarized can be charged
with burglary, even if he didn't
•
go i!lside.
John Keelin~~:, Hanning's public defender, appealed his clien.t's
1998 conviction in adult cqurt.
He said the accomplife p~vi­
sion of Ohio law caq:t 'be used
in deciding whether t9 tryjqveniles as adults.
The 1Oth Ohio Dislrict
Court of Appeals overturned the
conviction and returned the.case
to the trial court.
.
The state appealed to .·the
Ohio Supreme Court. During
the appeal, the Franklin Co11nty
juvenile court ruled that Hanning 1hould have been cha,rged
as a juvenile.
He was released from prison
and is now serving a juvenile
sentence. Fiero is serving a
seven-year sentence in the
Noble Correctional Institution
f~t aggravated robbery.
O'Brien said he believed he
was on solid groqnd in arguing
that Hanning should be tried as
an adult because he was an
accomplice to a crime involving
a gun.

Finandal report
Issued

Don E. Hemsworlh

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state can't try juveniles as adults
in serious crimes just ·because
the juvenile was an accomplice
to a crime, the Ohio Supreme
Court ruled Wednesday.
. The ruling by a 6-1 majority
of the court could affect dozens
of offenders serving time on
adult charges in Ohio prisons,
said Franklin County Prosecutor
Ron O'Brien.
The ruling came in the case
of a 17-year old Columbus boy
tried as an adult because his
adult accomplice in a July 1997
robbery at a Friendly's restaurant
carried a gun.
'·' We cannot find that it was
the intent of the General Assembly to attribute' the actions of
adult offenders to' ju.v eniles
when making determinations
regarding )&gt;indi~g juveniles over
to adult court," 'Justice Evelyn
Lundberg Stratton wrote.
Justice Andrew Douglas dissented without explanation.
Derrick Hanning, who was
arrested following the robbery,
carried a plastic BB gun during
the robbery, according to court
documents .
The documents also said
Hanning's adult accompli ce,
Leandreau Fiero, used a 9 mm
pistol.
Hanning was .charged as an
adult under a 1996 law meant to
crack down on . serious juvenile
crime. A portion of that law
requires judge" to automatically
send juveniles who are 16 or 17
to adult court if they commit

• IIJtriMI Home Plan, lnchHII"' 2 Rocolwro

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Court: Youthful accomplices don't
automatically face adult charges

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:Highs will hit 90 Friday
' BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

a.m .

, It's going to be hot and muggy
Weather forecast:
in the tri-county area Friday and
Toniglu ... Mostly dear. Lows
·into the weekend, the National around 60. Light southwest wind.
Weather Service said.
Friday.. . Mostly sunny. Highs
..
A high pressure system will around 90.
produce sunny skies and damp
Friday night ... Clear. Lows m
southerly winds. Temperatures the lower and mid 60s .
Extended forecast:
will be a little higher each day
• and so will the relative humidity.
Saturday... Mostly dear. Highs
Highs on Friday will be around in the upper 80s .
9o degrees. On Saturday, temperSunday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
atures will again approach 90.
. the upper 60s and highs in the
Lows Thursday and Friday mid and upper 80s.
nights wiU be in the 60s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
Sunset tonight will be at 8:59 · in the mid 60s and highs in the
p.m. and sunrise on Friday at 6:03 mid 80s.

Eol.lllt

The board also hired Catherine
Grosvenor-Hart as a tutor for a
health-handicapped student at a
rate of $15 an hour, not to exceed
five hours per week, retroactive to
May 31. The resignation of James
E. Bennett as seventh and eighth
grade football coach was accepted.
In other personnel matters, a
medical leave of absence was
granted to Lisa Averion, retroactive
·to May 8, and maternity leaves
with permission to use sick leave in
conjunction with the maternity
leave, was granted to Pam Dli~t
and Christi Lisle.
The board approved payment of
$1,177 to Sweetman Music to be
paid from the Middle School.Band
Fund and authorized the treasurer
to advertise for bread/ bakery and
milk/ dairy products for next year.
It was voted to eliminate the life
skills position at the Meigs Middle
School and create the teac hing

-

~ Crecni Terms
~ Lay·A·Ways

..=-=

101-S..OnciA...

Mlddloport, Ohla -

(740) 992·2635

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

• •

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---

�- .....

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Thursday, June 8, 2000

•.

Thursday, June a, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pllge A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

.~:.. ----~~~~~=-----~~~~----------------------------~P~o~m~e:ro~y~,~M!Id~d~le~po~rt~,O~h~l~o--------------------------_2Th~e~O~a~lly~Se~n~t~ln~e~I~·P~a~g~e~A~3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

I

Assistance a~ailable to drought-stricken farmers

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Boy drowns in pool accident .
SPENCER (AP) -A 3-year-old hoy died after he fell into an
above-ground pool in a neighbor's back yard, police said.
Nathan Shelly apparendy died Tuesday of accidental drown··· ing, said Robert Challener of the Cuyahoga County coroner's
office.
The boy's mother called police at 4:12p.m. to report that she
"• was unable t~ find her son. About 15 minutes later, police found
. the hoy floatmg m a pnvate pool. He was taken by helicopter [o
MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, where he was pronounced dead.
Police Chief Dan DeRossett said investigation into Nathan's
death is continuing, but it looks like it was a tragic accident.
"It appears the . boy somehow climbed over a locked fence in
the neighbor's yard and fell into the pool," he said.
Spencer is located about 35 miles southwest of Cleveland.

Fels study changing location
, KETTERING (AP) - The Fels Longitudinal Study, which
· has been keeping tabs on human growth and, s9cial development
.: since 1929, is moving from Yellow Springs to Kettering.
.
The study initially researched growth and development . of
children and then followed them into adulthood. The first of
about 1,200 participants turn 70 this year.
'
Fels research produced the pink and blue charts used by pediatricians to track the weight and height of infants and toddlers.
For the past 25 years, the study has focused primarily on risk factors for cardiovascular disease and body composition.
The study was originally funded by Samuel Fels of the Fels
soap company. It became affiliated with Wright State Medical
· School in 1974 and is moving ro Wright State's building at the
Miami Valley Research Park.
Medical School spokesman Mark Willis said 26 Fels staff
members moved in Feb'ruary, and the last seven will move by the
end of the year, once renovations to the 15-year-old building·are
complete.
The National Institutes of Health has promised $5.5 million
over the next five years to Wright State for Fels research. Scientists from the Division of Human Biology, which runs the study,
are trying to understand how the amount of bone, muscle and
, fat in a person's body predicts the lik~ lihood of osteoporosis,
heart disease and hypertension.

Protective measures taken
...

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CINCINNATI (AP) Hamilton County officials, who
rejected judges' requests to install metal detectors outside 'c ourtrooms las~ year, have agreed to install bulletpro.o f glass in a
municipal courtroom.
Metal detectors would cost $291,000 a year to operate, compared with the one-time cost of$125,000 for the glass partition
to separate the audience from judges, prosecutors and inmates,
officials said.
"It provides a level of security that the judges want," county
Administrator David Krings told commissioners Wednesday. " At
this point, the judges feel that would be adequate." ·
Court Administrator Michael Walton said the partition, which.
will not extend ·all the way to the ceiling of the 1occasionally
volatile courtroom, should be installed within 90 days.
The courtroom's sound system will have to ·be supplemented
-that's includ!!d in the $125,000 cos~- but the glass shouldn't interfere with the room's air circulation.
Krings said officials considered additional video arraignments
- where the inmates remain in jail and communicate via camera - but could not find sufficient space in the jail.

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Dying man won't stand trial

COLUMBUS (AP) -A man dying of cancer will not have to
. stand trial in the slaying of his wife, a judge determined Wednes" day.
.
·~
Ronald L. Pettit, 59, is accused of calling his wife, LuAnn, 46,
to
his bedroom in their home and shooting her once in the chest
'
•• last Sept. 28.
Because he is heavily medicated and cannot assist in his
defense, he has been found not competent to stand trial by Judge
, • Dan Hogan of Franklin County Common Pleas Court.
:: . Pettit's attorney has repeatedly asked the court to release Pet·. tit from jail so he can die in a hospice.
Until a decision is made,
''
Pettit remains in the Franklin
'
County jail.
Mrs. Pettit had planned to
·.
seek a divorce, but promised to
stay with him until he died
after terminal cancer was diag·.
cum
Olllt valor ..
nosed, family members said.

·.

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.:. - The Daily Sentinel
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n,.
_...Co.

Published tv•rr tlttrnooa. Monday throuab
Fri41J, 111 COurt Sa.• Pomeroy, Ohio, by tiM

·•

Ollla Yllloy Publlohl,. C..mJIIIIy., Pomeroy,
Cilia 4$769, .... 992-2156. cl... pool·
... pold. ,_.,, Ollla.

•

M,._ T1to - l t d p,..., ond 11M Ohio
Ntwlptper Alloc:iatkln.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

fOSTM.U'I'IIb SeiKI acldrcu col"''mfone lO
Tile Daily Sc•llnel, 111 Court 51., Pomeroy,

•
•

Subscribe todny.
992-2156

Ohio 457119.

•

•
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Ont Ynr ...... """'"''"""-"''"''''""'''' ' '' ' S10o&amp;.OD

.. •

SINGU: COPY I'IIICE
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::

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CANTON (AP) - The Miller said Sharpton has
Rev. AI Sharpton held been holding city officials
"fruitful" talks with Can"hostage - that he was
ton 's
mayor
Wednesday
going to do some sort of
about combatting racial disdemonstration or action
crimination by police, but
the civil rights activist during the Hall of Fame
refused to call off possible
event unless we agree to
.protests at the Pro Football
his demands. I would
Hall of Fame inductions.
The two agreed to meet like to see Mr. Sharpton,
again on June 22. The induc- after he makes an apolotion ceremony, scheduled for
gy, leave Canton."
July 29, is the one moment
each year when Canton is be foolish to deny that it has
guaranteed to attract nation- ever happened.
al media atten.tion.
Sharpton left his meeting
Sharpton's. New York- with Watkins briefly around
based National Action Net- midday to talk with a couple
work threatened to protest at of white Stark C()unty
the hall what jt perceives as judges. He asked them to
racial profiling, or singling examine their sentencing
out minorities for a'r rest.
and jury selection records to
· "I think they've been very see if there was any bias
fruitful discussions so we've against blacks and other
agreed to continue talking," minorities .
Sharpton said. "We're not
Sharpton's presence m
loo,king for a deal as much as Ca nton drew criticism from
fairness and equity for John Miller, a police detec everyone."
tive and president of ·the
Mayor Richard Watkins , 140-membe r Canton Police
who is white, first met Patrolman's Association .
National Action Network
"We're not pleas~d with
representatives and a medi a- Mr. Sharpton 's activities in
tor f rom the U.S. Justic e
·
D
t
t'
C
.
Canton , He has incited and
ep! ar men s . ommumty made a lot of accusations,"
R e at10ns ServiCe last month
. d
.
h
· sa1. d M 1. 11 er, w h o d en1e
to d1scuss t e concerns. C ·
ff
·
k
Sharpton missed the meeting
an to~ . 0 leers pic
on
b
mmor1t1es.
ecause
bad
weather
M 'll
' d Sh
h
grounded his plane.
I er sal
. arpton . as
After that all-ni ht ses- ?,een holdmg City officials
·
h
.g
hostage that he was
s1on, t e Commumty Rela· .
d
f
tions Service agreed to draft gdomg to ? some sort. 0
emonstrauon or action
a memorandum of under- d .
h
H 11 0 f F
standing based on six points
unng tl e · a
amh.e
.
event un ess we agree to IS
h
f
o agreement t e two s1des d
d I
ld l'k
reached.
eman s.
wou
I e to
Just befo.re the May meet- see Mr. Sharpton' after . he
ing, Watkins called for an makes ;,n apology, leave
. d
d
. .
. Canton.
10 epen ent
C e1.1 C . S cott, a h ot d og
d comm1mon
h
.to
reco~men . ways t edclty vendor who is black, weican improve 1ts recor on
d Sh
, . . Sh
minority h•ues.
co.me . arpton s vmt.
e
w tk'
'd W. d
d , sa1d pohce unJustly accused
t lk a ms sal
. e ~et ay ~ her last year of not having
a s were . meamng u an
a proper vendor's license.
mtense. Ne1ther s1de would
"I th " k · ·· (
· 1
fil
1
go into the specifics of what . g) . 1n It rachla pr~ 1
1
.
d
1n
IS a across t e nauon,
Was d ISCUSSe ,
d . , b d
b
k
"M ay b e we 'll esta bl IS
. h an
1t s . a h - h ut Star
C
f
.
,
sonie models for the rest of hountyd IS t e eart 0 It,
, s e sa1 .
t h e country to emu I ate,
Watkins said. "That would
be beneficial to all of us."
Still, Watkins said he doesn't think city officials needed Sharpton to point out the
area's racial problems.
"We know what our
problems are, we're working
on them, and we're willjng
E.~TABLISHED 1890
·to solve them," he said.
520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy
Watkins said he has no
Ner~r t,he
specific evidence of an incident of ' racial profiling in
Canton, but added it would

It fb~ oohle awayf

• •• 01111trM, Ill or l:Z ma1h bull. Crc:dll will bo
••
• .Jlvc:n carrMr eatb *«L

·:

Sharpton talks race
issues with Canton officials

lyCmltror--

0. -..r;,,H ..............................................$2.00
One Mootb .............................................. l1.70

•

.

~PTION JIATES

...
•:

••
•••

natural disasters. This NAP as~istance will tomatoes, Category 1 forage (Kentucky
POMEROY Farmers in Meigs help farmers in Gallia, Lawrence, Meigs and bluegrass and tall fescue grass), orchard
County and other southern •counties in Clinton counties who lost crops due to grass, highbush blueberries, hybrid ~ab­
Ohio are eligible for disaster assistance for severe drought conditions in 1999 ," bage, tart cherries, slicer cucumbers, hybrid
De Wine said.
pumpltins, strawberries, alfalfa and orc)Jard
lost crops due to the 1999 drought.
"This will hopefully begin to offset the mixed foliage, black raspberries, Che,ster
U .S. Sen. Mike De Wine announced ihat
. the U.S. Department of Agriculture has financial damage Ohio farmers experi- blackberries , regular watermelon and sumapproved a Non-Insured Crop Disaster enced at the hand of Mother Nature."
mer cantaloupe.
'
For Meigs County, the USDA approved
Assistance Program. area designation for
County farm service agents have appli•
M eigs, Gallia, Lawrence, and Clinton coun- the following crops for assistance: alfalfa,
cation material and other information
New
H
aven
peaches,
hybrid
sweet
corn,
ties.
"The program is designed to help farm- green beans, golden delicious apples, hot about the program, according to Am~
ers overcome financial losses resulting from peppers, sweet green bell peppers, hybrid Ricketts of DeWine's office.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

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such as these takes a partnership,
because resources are so . limited"
' .
'
he said.
Simpson said his agency is now
from Page A1
worlting
closely with government
1 ' '.
affect the conununity," Costanzo offices and federal legislators to
. sa&gt;d. "This 1s not government develop programs for refinancing
. housing.
through guaranteed loan pro. . . "It is people housing, and the grams, and to initiate changes in
d1verse partnerships that are mak- income guidelines to allow workl, . '. jng it pos~ible are proof that these ing families who faU through the
. · are quality homes, built for good bureaucratic cracks to qualify.
' buyers," she added.
In addition to CAA and Rural
representatives,
CAA Executive Director Patri- Development
~ .. : 'cia McCullough said that the other speakers included Patty
need for affordable new homes Hapney of Ohio Valley Bank,
·· for young, working families is which serves as the primary
. . especially great in Gallia and lender, with assistance from Rural
' Meigs counties.
Development and the Federal
;, ' "So many of the homes avail- Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati;
• \lble to first-time homebuyers in Th&lt;;&gt;mas Stevens of Firstar Bank,
1 'this area are so old," McCollough wh1ch has provided lending and a
I. :· said, "that homebuyers find it · grant for appliances for the new
very hard to live in them once homes; County Commissioner
1' · ·they buy them. These homes are Mick Davenport; Doug Harceny,
· ·~ ··perfect for young families and a home inspector for the Ohio
' -:young singles who have the desire Department of Development; and
Jim Clifford and Greg Bailey of
"· · to own their own home."
n· .. · McCullough
said
CAA, Home Creek Enterprises.
through Housing Director Julia
CAA will conduct its next
- .. Houdashelt, has already begun course for homebuyers at the
~ "" "pnsidering other housing pro- agency office ·in Cheshire June
~.- : grams for working people in the 19-23 from 6-9 p.m. The course
., ,. community, including lease-to- is free of charge, but those int~r­
-" . 6Wrt opportunities, and other ested in the course should contact
programs
helping
potential the agency at 992- 6629 to reserve
homebuyers with credit repair a seat.
• · .and other issues that prevent
The course will include a numthem from qualifying for financ- ber of topics relating to home
ownership, including mortgages,
ing.
Such programs are important dosing costs, credit reports and
today, said Bill Simpson, acting home maintenance.
associate adininistrator for the . Speakers will include attorneys,
:. Rural ,Housing Service in Wash- bankers, insurance agents, realtors,
: • lngton, who also attended the extension agents, contractors,
~· open house:
housing auth~rities, ABLE, JTPA
and.
other representatives.
:· "Building and financing homes
•
••
,•..,___;__

CAA

Complete Stock

30% orr

Kannath McCullough, R. PH.
Charlaa Rlf11a, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to e p.m.
Sat. a:oo a.m. to ·a p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m~
PRESCRIPTION PH. 882-291515 .
Eaat Main Pomeroy, Ohio
Friendly Service
Open Weak Nlghta

-

______________

Series
from PapAl

ences into an awe-inspiring and
·totally enjoyable musical experi• ence.
This "must see" guitar player
mystifies as weU as entertains all
audiences that come our to see
him perform his live show.
· Remaining Sununer Concert
Series performances are as follows:
• June 23: Tony Tenaglia - A
guitarist that plays '30's and '40s
pop standards who spices up his
repertoire with his ability to
mimic a trumpet with his mouth.
Special guest Chad Dotson, local

POMEROY - At Monday's
regular meeting ofPomeroyVillage
Council, Clerk/Treasurer Kathy
Hysell distrii)uted her financi al
report for the month of May with
~alances as follows: General,
$51,497.91; Safety, $6,478 .06;
Street, $4,337.60; State Highway,
$.548.63; Fire. $64,459.27; Cemet~ry. $8,290.43; Water, $55,324.50;
Sewer, $73,3,86.34; Guaranty
$21, 184.24;
Utility,
Meter,
$12,529.43; Perpetual Care Cemetery, $7, 147.16; Cemetery Endowment, $38,121.59; Police Pension,
$8,970.03 ;
Building
Fund,
($589.71); Recreation, $11 ,1 15.04;
Permissive Tax, $5,293.63; Law
Enforcement, $3,924.1 0.

Dissolution
sought
POMEROY -· An action for
•
dissolution of marriage has been
filed in Common Pleas Court by
Scott M . Dillon and Julie E. Dillon,
both of Pomeroy.
.'

Lawsuit filed
POMEROY - A civil lawsuit
has been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by LaSalle
National Bank, Orangeburg, N.Y.,
against Teresa Garnes, Pomeroy,
alleging default ' on a promissory
note in the amount of$31,976 and
interest.

Marriage license
issued
POMEROY - · A marriage
.license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to William
Owen Garnes, 31, and Carolyn
Jane Buck, 44, both of Pomeroy.

Fugitive to retum
POMEROY -

Charles

and entering, as well as a new

charge of failure to appear.
Ewing was charged in a breaking
and entering case involving Tim
Williams of western Meigs County, but failed to appear for his April
10 senten cing in Common Pleas
Court.
Meigs County Sheriff James M .
Soulsby reported that Ewing will
be return ed to Meigs County
today to answer the charges.

Akzo-41~

· AmTech/SBC - 46~

Ashland Inc.- 34'Y.
AT&amp;T-36lo
Bank One- 34')•
Bob Evans - 14Y(
BctgWamer - 40l.

5.,.

Champion - 2'1.
Charming ShopsCily Holding- 9).
Fed8flli Mogul- 9')•

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections will hold its
monthly meeting on June 13 at 9
a.m., at the board office.

Class set
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Storm
Spotter School, a class for beginners, will be held on June 15 at b
p.m. at the New Haven Public
Library. Information is available by
calling (304) 882-2637 or (304)
882-2482.

Public hearing
· announced

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

POMEROY - .Meigs Local
School District Board of Education will conduct a public hearing
on June 27, 6:30 p.m. for public
review of the district's Continuous
Improvement Plan prior to the
Meigs Local School District regular board meeting.
Meigs Local School District regular board meeting will be held at
7 p.m. in the Meigs Board Office at
320 E. Main St., Pomeroy.

A Syracuse tnan is in serious condition in the intensive care uirit at

Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, WVa., after I!C was
shot during an apparent burglary
attempt.
Steven Chapell was transported
to PleasantVaUey Hospital and then
on to Cabell-Huntington after he
was shot at the Paul Rollins Car
Wash on State Route 2 in Point
Pleasant.
, It is believed that Rollins fired
the shot at Chapell during the
alleged robbery attempt.

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 1 p.m., to be
held at the Fish and Game Clubhouse offTexas Road near Chester.
Signs will be posted. Children
should bring their own tackle and
bait and no minnows may be used.
Children 15 and under may participate.There is no admission charge,
and lunch will be included. Prizes
will be provided.

Firemen's Festival
set

STOCKS

Gannett - 61 ),
General Electric - 51\

H!frley Davidson - 37'1.
K mart - 7'~,
Kroger - 18'/,
Lands End- 34),
Ud. - 23l,
Oak Hill Financial - 15
OVB - 27),
One Valley - 37l.
Peoples - tsl.
Premier - 7lo
Rockwell - 39%

.

Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 62'Y•

Sears- 3511" ·
Shoney's -l,

Wai-Mart - 57~
Wendy's - 20~
Worthington- 12 ~
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of

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

Protest ·

School
from PapAl

~--

saxophonist, will also be present.
Haddox, middle school golf
• July 7: The Cowboy Angels coach; Darin Logan, girls' softball
-A ' trio, led by Meigs County's coach; Nathan Hansen, girls'
own John Hurlbut, who "plays reserve softball coach; and Kellie
tribute" to Americana with won- Thomas, girls' middle school volderful rich vocal harmonies and leyball coach and girls' middle
tight rhythms .
school basketball coach.
• July 21: American Gypsy Others hired on supplemental
A band consisting of guitarist contracts Were Jesse Vail, seventh
Neil Jacobs, violinist Arkadiy Gips and eighth grade football coach;
(a recent imigrant from the Daniel Thomas, head baseball
Ukraine), and bassist John Dou- coach; and Jeremy Grimm, reserve
glas. who combine an exciting baseball ·coach.
blend of gypsy, jazz, classical and
Vicki Haley was hired on asupworld folk music into an exhila- plementary contract as head
rating new musical style.
teacher at l:larrisonville ElemenIn case of severe weather, all taty School, and Daniel D. Thomas
f~stivities will be canceled .
. II was employed as elementary
Those interested in becoming a physical education teacher in the
member of the PB&amp;Js can contact district on a one-year contract
Jackie Welker at 992--6524.
effective next fall, pending completion of administrative require-

Reunion planned
POMEROY - Meigs High
School class of 1975 will have a
25th year reunion June 17 at Salisbury Elementary School in
Pomeroy, 1 to 4 p.m. All alumni
and their families are invited to
attend. A $5 donation per adult is
being requested to assist in paying
for the refreshments and custodian.

Hymn sing
LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
sing ' at the Faith Full Gospel
Church will be held Friday at 7
p.m. A men's prayer breakfast will
be held on Saturday at 7:30a.m.

EMS logs 9 calls
POMEROY - Uni'ts of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:
'
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:13 p.m., Butternut Avenue,
Karen Jones, treated.
POMEROY
"4:50p.m., College Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch, Tammy Bable,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:40 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Dorothy Wyatt, treated.
RACINE
9:07 p.m., County Road 28,
assisted by Central Dispatch, motor
vehicle accident, Carol J. Bush,
Holzer Medical Center.

Library, 7:30 p.m. Tho!e who
believe in what the group stands
for are asked to show their support
by attending.

Last year's winner was B.J. Smith,
who was a state winner and went
on to the national contest.
Officers of
locA( group, Hartson, president, the Rev. Fr. Walter
Heinz, vice president, and Nora
Nitz, secretaty- treasure~.
are
encouraging more participation in
the Right to Life movement in
M eigs County
Regular meetings of the loeal
chapter are held on the third Monday of each month at the Pomeroy

me

lrRIIIG 'IAI.IY
position of keyboarding/work
processing.
Approved during the meeting
was the district's membership with
the Educational Technology Services of Ohio at a cost of 55 cents
per pupil for a total of!\1,245.75.
The seven through 12 mathematics course of study as submitted
by the Athens-Mei gs Educational
Service Center and Meigs Local
teachers was also approved by the
board.
The board also voted to renew
the contract with the Southeastern
Ohio Special Education Regional
Resource Center to provide special education services to the district next year at a cost of
$5,5?2.82.

and evening.

PAGEVILLE - · Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department
will have its annual firemen's festival Saturday. The queen's contest
and crowing will take place at
noon followed by a parade at 1
RUTLAND
p.m.
5:23 a.m., Gaff Road, Kate JarThere will be games and food, rell, HMC;
including homemade ice cream,
4:17 p.m., Salem Street, Tracy
available throughout the afternoon Owensby, HMC.
along with a country story. AfterS'YRACUSE
noon activities will also include a
4:42 p.m., College Street, struckiddie tractor pull at I p.m ., a ture fire,Jeff Bable residence;
horseshoe pitching contest, and a
10:53 p.m., Fourth Street, Sherri
variety of music both afternoon Harris, HMC.

from PapAl

'

AEP-34\

Board to meet

Man involved
in shooting

P

~ LOCAL

Firstar - 25l,

Ewing, 28, of Sandusky, Mich., will
be returned to Meigs County after
being found in Springfield, for sentencing on a charge of breaking

CII~IMA

,._,

446-4524
'', . :·' .' '
FRI 812· THURS 818100
lOX OfFIQ WIU llfllllT

6:30 PM 101 MNIIIG SHOwS
12:30 PM FIJI MAnNIIS
THE HEART IS
7:00DAILY

ments .

VALLEY WEATHER

~

1/Z
PRICE·
~
~~~V~i~t~a~nn~i~n~s~---3

..._nt

drsR
..

; .J. GALLIPOLIS - Don E. Hemsworth, 73, Gallipolis, died Tuesday,
une 6, 2000 m Holzer Medical Center.
·
Born
March
8,
1927
in
Logan,
son
of
the
late
O:L. "Buzz" and Mar•
1
, garet Ellen, Hemswonh, he was the owner and operator of
• Hemsworth s Gulf Station in Gallipolis for 40 years.
· · A U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II, he was a member of the folloWing orgamzat10ns: American Legion Lafayette Post 27, VFW Post
,. 11464, Mormng Dawn Lodge 7, F &amp; AM, Gallipolis, Gallipolis Chap' , _..ter 79, Royal Arch Masons, Moriah Council 32, Royal and Select Masv·. tery~ Rose Commandery 43, Knights Templar, and Aladdin Temple
Shrme of Columbus.
.
. _ He . was the past state commander of the Military Order of the
Cooties.
.;: . He was preceded in death by his wife, Norma Jean Harrison
• )-Iems~".rth, m 1994; and a brother, Ralph Hemsworth.
d SurvJvmg are a son, Tim (Ginger) Hernsworth of Cincinnati· a
aughter, Tammy (Tom) Morgan of ·Edmond, Okla.; four grandchudren;a brother, Glen (Par) Hemsworth of Logan; and a sister, Norma
·· ·(W1lham) Lehman of Logan.
• · · . Se~ices wiU be 11 a.m. Saturday in Willis Funeral Home, Gallipo~·:. hs, wtth MonsJgnorW&gt;Iliam Myers officiating. Burial will be in Pine
• ' Street Cel)letery. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
· Fnday.
. Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home by Morn. mg Dawn Lodge 7, F &amp; AM, on at 8:30p.m. Fciday.

'

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u
;lots
.
3
.
Pack
Carton .

·-'''''""""''-'"'""'""'"''"""'l109.7l
n,,,J(J,,J (1( vu t"·
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. 'J1iVal Cigarettes

26 ..........................................- .......$56.61

••
••

::•
••
••
::

• 0... 1'50 DI8Jial Chonnelt

W.U.IIIIICIUPTIONI

certain crimes- such as murder
or robbery- while using a gun. ·
Prosecutors said Hanning
should be tried as an a·a ult
because . his accomplice ha\:1 a
gun ..
Ohio law allows people to ·be
charged with crimes commi~ted
by an accomplice even if they
weren't involved in the actual
crime - for example, a person
who drove a friend, to a house to
be burglarized can be charged
with burglary, even if he didn't
•
go i!lside.
John Keelin~~:, Hanning's public defender, appealed his clien.t's
1998 conviction in adult cqurt.
He said the accomplife p~vi­
sion of Ohio law caq:t 'be used
in deciding whether t9 tryjqveniles as adults.
The 1Oth Ohio Dislrict
Court of Appeals overturned the
conviction and returned the.case
to the trial court.
.
The state appealed to .·the
Ohio Supreme Court. During
the appeal, the Franklin Co11nty
juvenile court ruled that Hanning 1hould have been cha,rged
as a juvenile.
He was released from prison
and is now serving a juvenile
sentence. Fiero is serving a
seven-year sentence in the
Noble Correctional Institution
f~t aggravated robbery.
O'Brien said he believed he
was on solid groqnd in arguing
that Hanning should be tried as
an adult because he was an
accomplice to a crime involving
a gun.

Finandal report
Issued

Don E. Hemsworlh

'• f ' •

t

'

..

• ...

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state can't try juveniles as adults
in serious crimes just ·because
the juvenile was an accomplice
to a crime, the Ohio Supreme
Court ruled Wednesday.
. The ruling by a 6-1 majority
of the court could affect dozens
of offenders serving time on
adult charges in Ohio prisons,
said Franklin County Prosecutor
Ron O'Brien.
The ruling came in the case
of a 17-year old Columbus boy
tried as an adult because his
adult accomplice in a July 1997
robbery at a Friendly's restaurant
carried a gun.
'·' We cannot find that it was
the intent of the General Assembly to attribute' the actions of
adult offenders to' ju.v eniles
when making determinations
regarding )&gt;indi~g juveniles over
to adult court," 'Justice Evelyn
Lundberg Stratton wrote.
Justice Andrew Douglas dissented without explanation.
Derrick Hanning, who was
arrested following the robbery,
carried a plastic BB gun during
the robbery, according to court
documents .
The documents also said
Hanning's adult accompli ce,
Leandreau Fiero, used a 9 mm
pistol.
Hanning was .charged as an
adult under a 1996 law meant to
crack down on . serious juvenile
crime. A portion of that law
requires judge" to automatically
send juveniles who are 16 or 17
to adult court if they commit

• IIJtriMI Home Plan, lnchHII"' 2 Rocolwro

•
•
•
•

• ...

Court: Youthful accomplices don't
automatically face adult charges

.

••

:Highs will hit 90 Friday
' BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

a.m .

, It's going to be hot and muggy
Weather forecast:
in the tri-county area Friday and
Toniglu ... Mostly dear. Lows
·into the weekend, the National around 60. Light southwest wind.
Weather Service said.
Friday.. . Mostly sunny. Highs
..
A high pressure system will around 90.
produce sunny skies and damp
Friday night ... Clear. Lows m
southerly winds. Temperatures the lower and mid 60s .
Extended forecast:
will be a little higher each day
• and so will the relative humidity.
Saturday... Mostly dear. Highs
Highs on Friday will be around in the upper 80s .
9o degrees. On Saturday, temperSunday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
atures will again approach 90.
. the upper 60s and highs in the
Lows Thursday and Friday mid and upper 80s.
nights wiU be in the 60s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
Sunset tonight will be at 8:59 · in the mid 60s and highs in the
p.m. and sunrise on Friday at 6:03 mid 80s.

Eol.lllt

The board also hired Catherine
Grosvenor-Hart as a tutor for a
health-handicapped student at a
rate of $15 an hour, not to exceed
five hours per week, retroactive to
May 31. The resignation of James
E. Bennett as seventh and eighth
grade football coach was accepted.
In other personnel matters, a
medical leave of absence was
granted to Lisa Averion, retroactive
·to May 8, and maternity leaves
with permission to use sick leave in
conjunction with the maternity
leave, was granted to Pam Dli~t
and Christi Lisle.
The board approved payment of
$1,177 to Sweetman Music to be
paid from the Middle School.Band
Fund and authorized the treasurer
to advertise for bread/ bakery and
milk/ dairy products for next year.
It was voted to eliminate the life
skills position at the Meigs Middle
School and create the teac hing

-

~ Crecni Terms
~ Lay·A·Ways

..=-=

101-S..OnciA...

Mlddloport, Ohla -

(740) 992·2635

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

• •

•

4iiLi
---

�•

\

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The Daily Sentinel

n.ursday, June I, 1000

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

SURVIVOR li

•N Sync plays
AOL l(id•s event

'E.sta6fislid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740..992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

POTOMI}C, Md. (AP) - It's good to
be th e dau ghter of an America O nline
president.
Twelve-yea r-old R achel G:olburn's bat
mitzvah Sunday was the talk of the town
·after boy band 'N Sync played a 40minute set and signed autograph s.
Rachel's fath er, David Colburn , is the
president of . business affairs for Dulles,
Va.-based AOL.
AOL spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg
said the band members have a relationship with Colburn, and they did the gig
as a favor. She declin ed to say whether
·the performers were paid.
"It was a really lovely gesture,'' Gold.berg said.
lnside.com, the Web site that first
reported the performance along with
The Washington Post, estimated that a
paid performance would cost at least $1
million. The Post gave a more modest
estimate of $250,000.
"They were very ni ce," said Rachel's
mother, Kathleen Colburn . "But th e
main event was the bat mitzv:th."

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer

Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Unm to the tdiJor rut wtl.comt. Tllt1 tlwMI4 M Wu 111Mt 300 words. !.U ~""' an sab)«t
to ft!Ulns om/'""'' IH ''''"d rurJ ilfrlu.Je addnu Md nllpltoat •w•bcr. N. lllAfiJIItd llttm will
IH publisht d. Untff shoMid IH lit food uurt,llddrtSJU.Il "'"''• ""'JHrwuliJJ.s.
Tile opi11inns uprtued in tltt uJ.um11 bdow are tJu corUtiiJMJ oftltt Olllo '~' Pablishint
Co. '1 tdiloriol bo.rd, urlln1 ulhrrw ~t nmtJ.

'

OUR VIEW

Fired up
Activism may be the key
to meeting veterans' needs

D

uring his stop in Ohio last year, Veterans of Foreign Wars
National Commander John Smart raised an interesting
pomt.
About 30 years ago, the makeup of
Halle our
Capitol Hill leaned heavily tpward veterans ofWorld War ll and the Korean War.
lawmakers
Today, that representation has significandy
•
distanced
shrunk.
'·• themselves so
As a result, Smart argued, the level of
concern and interest in veterans affairs
:
ar rotn a
from lawmakers has also dropped, so much
': segtnent of our so that veterans organizations must resort
;
,. t •
ro lobbying and political activism to
0
11
P P a tOll
ensure benefits and care are maintained.
: that they no
Smart's assertion is food for thought. It
•,. longer recog- also raises the question: Have our lawmakers distanced themselves so fer from a seg: uize the needs ment of our population that rhey no
: '!{veterans?
longer recognize the needs of veterans?
~
If so, shame on them.lflawmakers think
: they can back- burner veterans' needs in hopes that, say, 10 or 15
: years from now these old soldiers won't be around to voice their
~ opinions, they're dead wrong.
• The fact is that while the number of vets from World War II and
~ Korea are falling,Vietnam, Grenada, Desert Storm and Kosovo have
: produced adtlitional survivors of conflict. AU of them are deserving
:: ofrh·e same benefits.
: Only problem is, over the last several years those services have
: taken on less importance in the national budget. This is pretty hard
: to swallow when Veterans Affairs hospitals are still tending to the
: VICtims of war's fury, both physically and mentally.
• An unfortunate attitude that .exists in this country is that veterans
: only want a handout. Hogwash! Nothing could be farther from the
. truth. The older veterans returned home and helped build the foun; dation of prosperity that's existed for decades.
· The veterans of later wars had the same goal: to return home,
: resume thdr place in society, and become constructive members of
: the community. Duty to their country didn't end on the batdefield.
• Is it too much, then, to ask that our government restore funding
• to veterans' programs/ If politicians are not conc~,rned with that
• question, they'd better be prepared to respond as re-election cam: paigns near their climax this fall.
; Sm~rt issued a call for VFW posts to energize themselves politi; cally, ask their legislators questions about the status of veterans' care
: and be prepared to use their vote Nov. 7. A similar message has no
; doubt been made to American Legion, Vietnam Veterans of Ameri: ca and other groups.
Dissatisfaction · with federal, state and local response to veterans'
: needs is becoming more vocal. If these men and women understand
. one thing about their country, it's that the right to choose our elect: ed leaders is one of its principal freedoms.
And they're ready to exercise that right when the time comes.

fi fi

,,

!

TODAY IN HISTORY

RUSHER'S VIEW

Does Mr: Clinton understand the (rule oflaw'?
The decision of the 11th Circuit Court of
Appeals in Atlanta, acquiescing in the ruling
of the Immigration and Natumlization Service that Elian Gonzalez is too young to claini
political asylum and must abide by his father's
decision to take him back to Cuba, is unquestionably a triumph for the C li nton adminis-

William
Rusher

tration.

President Clinton took time out of his trip
to Europe to hail it, and Attorney General
Janet Reno promptly held a press conference
to crow over the result.
But, as so often in this administration, what
you see is not quite the whole story. From the
beginning, the public has been encouraged to
believe that the central figure on the governmem's side of the drama was Ms. Reno. It was
she who was seen pressing the INS to reverse
its original opinion that the issue of who
should have custody of Elian belonged in the
Florida courts.
It was she who so visibly dominated events
thereafter, even traveling to Miami herself to
try to resolve the family dispute. And it was
she, of course, at least in theory, who finally
ordered the famous 5 a.m. assault on the Gonzalez residence, from which Elian was
removed at gunpoint.
So if the public wanted to get mad at anybody on the government's side of the case,
Ms. Reno was the obvious choice. Mr. Clinton confined himself, in public at least, to saying piously that "the rule of law" must be
upheld.
But what "rule of law" was it, precisely, that·
needed so desperately to be upheld? It was the
aforesaid ruling of the INS, which the Gonzalez family challenged in court and appealed to
the 11th Circuit. And how did that come ttJ
be the law of this particular case?

ion of the 11th Circuit makes it plain that the
co urt had li ttl e regard for the wisdom of the
ruling. The court repeatedly noted the tyrannical charac ter of the regime to whi ch Elian
would be return ed, and was tacitly skeptical of
the INS's decision. But, obeying the (highly
co nse rvative) legal prin ciple that decisions of
the exec utive branc h, made within its authority. ought not to be overturned unless there
has been a clear "abuse of discretion,'' the
co urt reluctantly concluded that,.,.the ruling
did not quite add up to such an abuse and
must be obeyed.
In other words, the president and the attorney ge neral are telling us that "the rule- of
law·· must be upheld at all costs , although the
particular ruling they are so eager to uphold
was one that Mr. Clinton himself contrived to
bring about, and that could easily --indeed, in
the implied opinion of the 11th Circuit, more
easily -- have gone th e other way.
The remaining mystery is what Mr. Clinton
is up to here. His overriding aim, clearly, hGS
been to avoid offending Fidel Castro -- even
at the expense of losing Florida to Governor
Bush in November, let alone condemning a
6-year-old boy to a life in Cuba. But what's so
sacred about Castro'
We arc left to conclude that Mr. Clinton has
privately reached some understanding with
tl1 e Cuban dictator, which might be jeopardized if Castro were angered. What the deal
involves is something we probably won't find
out until after Election Day, when means ·o f
retaliation are few.
But it will have precious little to do with
tipholding "the mle of law.''

NEA COLUMNIST
As noted above, the INS had originally had
a very different view. Irs first inclination was
to lee ,the Florida courts decide the qu estion
of custody. But soon th ereafter, somebody
persuaded the INS to change its mind . In
short order, federal agents in Havana twice
questioned Juan Miguel Gonzalez, Elian 's
father, and declared themselves convinced th at
he wanted his son back and that the boy
ought to be returned to Cuba. The INS so
ordered.
What -- or rather who -- changed the
INS's mind?
It simply beggars belief that an issue that
explosive, involving this country's relations
with the Castro regime and the sentiment&lt; of
hundreds of thousands of Cuban-Am erican
voters in Florida and elsewhere, would be left
to the de cision of Janet Reno. For whatever
reason (and we wi ll return to that point later) ,
the decision was made by President Clinton
himself. The attorney general was simply
pushed forward by Mr. Clinton to take th e
heat -- and th e fall, if things went badly.
The INS's coerced ruling quickly beca me
the "rule of law," before wbi ch Mr. Clinton
and Ms. Reno genuflect daily. But the opin-

(Willimn A. Rusher is a Disti11guisl1ed Fellow of
tile Claremolll lnstitllle for tile Study of States-·
mausl•ip ami Political Philosophy.)

'HARDBALL'

Bush envisions reprise of Kennedy-Nixon race•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

WASHINGTON- George W. Bush hints
that his tussle with AI Gore this fall- will
remind both historians and voters of John F.
Kennedy's successful 1960 battle with
Richard M. Nixon .
In the Bush scenario, Vice President Gore
will play the nervous Nixonesque defender,
laying desperate claim to an era of peace and
prosperity. The Texas governor, Bush, will be
the sunny, JFK-like .challenger saying, "Let's
soar higher!"
It's a delightful premise, especially to
reporters.
Think of the suspense: Nixon and Kennedy
were tied at 47 percent in the Gallup PoD
when the fall campaign began. After four dramatic debates, they divided the vote on election night 34,226,731 to 34,108,157.
The other appeal of a Nixon-Kennedy
rematch is the cartoon factor. ,
Wouldn't it be great if AI Gore really did
morph into Dick Nixon the night of the first
debate! Imagine the fun if the vice president
showed up ,looking sick, unshaven and scared
to death! Think of the headlines the next day
if an. authoritative George W. appeared before
us armed with a devastating arsenal of facts
and figures to undermine Gore's claim of

J.fOuldn 't it be great if Al
Gore really did morph into
Dick Nixon the night of the
first debate! Imagine the jim
if the vice president slrowed
up looking sick, unshaven
and scared to death!
deeper experi ence!
•
On a superficial level, there's a case for such
a historic re- run.
Like Jack Kennedy, Bush co mes tram a
charming, well-ofT f.1mily. Like Kenn edy, he
spent his halcyon youthful summers on th e
New England coast. Like Kennedy, he inh erited the social confidence and optimism that
comes with wealth, supportive parents, prep
school and an Ivy League pedigree.
For his part, Gore shares some definite
Nixonian traits. Awkward in public, pleasant
in private, he moves his body and mouth as if
he were his own robo t. Like Ni xon, he is not
lovable as a public figure. Like Ni xon, he has
made his w ay up throu gh th e House to the
Senate to the vice presidency, ea rnin g each

new pla ce by an admixture of sweat equity
and attendance at enough party functions 'to
make th e chicken an endangered species. • '
Like John F. Kennedy, George W. Bush giyes
off th e aura of a man who can take a loss and
be quit e happy with himself in another line of
work, another style of life.
·
Like Nixon , Gore faces two outcomes ihis
November: victory on the course he has ·set
sin ce youth, or defeat and utter humiliation
for havin g choked under pressure.
House leader Di ck Gephardt is one smart
Demo crat who believed early that Bush's
breeziness makes him dangerous to someone
like Gore.
The fact that the former president's son can
walk away from a defeat gives him the latitude
to take ri sks - Social Security reform, big tax
cuts, Strategic Defense , education vouchers.
Go re, mea nwhile, may be so frightened of
defeat and th e attendant ignominy, that he
comes off as a guy like the Dick Nixon of
1960 - desperate , to win the presiden~y
because he can't think of anything else to do.

(CI11·is Matthews, chief of tf1e San Francisco
Exm11incr:&lt;Wtlshi11gton Bureau, is host of "Hatd·
ball " 011 CNBC and MSNBC cable cha.111els. 111e
I 999 editio11 of "Hardball" has been rece11tly published by 1oucl1stvne Books.)

.

"\,

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
I•

825 Third Ave., Gallipolle, Ohio

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

74Q-446·2342

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200

Moln St., Point Ploonnt, W,Vo.
304-176-1333

Page AS
Thursday, June 8, 2000

NAMES IN THE NEWS
Dr. R obert D' Alessandr i, university vice in the San Francisco O pera Ho use with
Downs still
president for health sciences.
Mo nteverdi's "The Coronation of PopDowns,
the
former
cohost
of
the
not slowing down ABC newsmagazine "20/20," said the pea."
She performs widely in Europe fro m

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - At 79,
Hugh Downs has written several books,
taught at Arizona State
Un iversity and written
a cello piece performed by Yo- Yo Ma.
l-Ie's not slowing down
any time soon.
Downs, who
has been certified as
having logged the
greatest number o f
hours on network
Downs
commercial television
by The Guinness Book
of Records, was in Charleston Wednes- r
day for the first international conferen ce
on rural aging, sponsored by West Virginia University and the United Nations.
Growing up on an Ohio f.u m with his
grandparents. gave Downs an early perspective on rural aging. Before Social
Sec urity, "C ompassionate relatives was
about your only hope," he said.
One goal of the conference is to
address the challenge to "keep our elders
active and contributing to society" said

elderly are often forgotten even though
they are valuable assets to the community.
Downs, who made the switch from
radio to TV, is now making a transition to
the Internet with a new Web site dedi cated to covering the executive branch.

Hendricks wins
Spanish art award
OVIEDO, Spain (AP) - American
soprano Barbara Hendricks has won a
prestigious Spanish arts award for her
voice in concert and in advocacy work.
The Prince of Asturias Arts Prize for
2000 went to Hendricks for "knowing
how to use her prodigious voice in
opera, in concerts, in jazz, in popular
niusi c, and at the same time making herself heard in the whole world in defense
of refugees and against xenophobia, antiSemitism and intolerance,'' the prize
committee announced Wednesday.
After studying at the Juilliard School
in New York. Hendricks made her debut

HEALTH
AND FITNESS
with ,daily challenges and
The balancing act dealing
unexpected pressures a soon as posBY JACKE SWicHER
H£AJ..TH EOUCATOR

•

Today is Thursday,June 8, the !60th day of 2000. There are 206 days
. left in the year.
Today's Highlight in. History:
On June 8, A.D. 632, the prophet Mohammed died.
On this date:
In 1845, Andrew Jackson, seventh president of the United States,
died in NashviUe, Tenn .
In 1861, Tennessee seceded from the Union ..
In 1876, author George Sand died in Nohant, France.
In 1915, Secretary of State Willia11,1Jennings Bryan resigned in a disagreement over U.S. handling of the sinking of the Lusitania.
In 1942, Bing Crosby recorded" Adeste Fideles" and "Silent Night"
in Los Angeles for Decca Records.
·
In 1953, the Supreme Court ruled that restaurants in the District of
Columbia could not refuse to serve blacks.
In 1967, 34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israeli forces raided
the Liberty, a Navy ship stationed in the Mediterranean. (Israel called
the attack a tragic mistake.)
In 1968, authorities announced the capture in London ofJames Earl
Ray, suspected assassin of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
In 1978, a jury in Clark t ounty, Nev., ruled the so-called "Mormon
will,'' purportedly written by late billionaire Howard Hughes, was a
forgery.
,
. In 1982, Ronald Reagan became the first U.S. president to address
a joint session of the British Parliament:
Today's Birthday&gt;: Retired Supreme Court Justice Byron White is
83. Former President Suharto oflndonesia is 79. Former lint lady Barbara Bush is 75. Actress Dana Wynter is 70. Comedian Joan Riven is
67, Actress Millicent Martin is 66. Actor James Darren is 64. Actor
Bernie Casey is ti I. Singer Nancy Sinatra is 60. Singer Chuck Negron
(Three Dog Night) is 58. MusiCian Boz Sc.ggs is 56. Actor Don Grady
is 56. Rock musician Mick Box (Uri ah Heep) is 53. Acl'l'eSS Sonia
Braga is 50. Actress Kathy Baker is 50. Country musician Tony Rice is
49. Singer Bo nnir Tyler is 47. Actor Griffin Dunne is 45.

.)'he Daily Sentinel

: MEIGS COUNY HEAIJH Dt=PARTMENT

: Overweight is one of the major
4ealth problems in America today.
.An estimated 32 million adult
.Americans are affected. The over,weight problem is on the increase as
•.Americans eat more and exercise

less.
, , Why should }'QU worry about
our weight? Because, if you are

sible, and a positive outlook on life,
will reap the reward of a sense of
well-being and balance.These good
habits will help in }'OUr quest for a
long, healthy, and productive life.

her home in Switzerland. Her repertoi re
includes more than 20 operas, American
comedies, French melodies and spirituals.
As part of her commitment to social
actiop, she has visited refu gee camps
acrol\ the world and performed in the
former Yugoslavia in support of civilians
affected by the civil war.

Eminem will tour
with two felonies
WARREN, Mich. (AP) - Grammywinning rapper Eminem will be able to
hit the road despite facing two felony
weapons counts.
District Judge Susan Chrzanowski
ordered the musician to give prosec utors his tour schedule when he leaves
the state. He also cannot possess a
weapon as part of his bond .
" If there's any information given to
us that you have any sort of weapon ...
your bond will be revoked and you will

be sit ting in th e county jail,'' Ch rzanows ki
said.
The
st nger
turn ed hi mself in to
police Wednesday and
was arra igned in Warren District Court as a
grou p of yo un g fa ns
waJted o utside.

Emlnem

T he 27 - yea rold Emi nem , w hose
legal name is Marshall Bruce Mathers
Ill, was clurged after a weekend fi ght in
which he all egedly saw another man
kissing hi' wife.
He face' one co un t of carrying a
co ncealed weap on and one count or
assault wi th a deadly weapo n. The first
charge carrit·s a fi ve-year pnson se ntence; the seco nd carries a four-year
sen tence.

" We're confident we will be able to
resolve these 'e ri o us charges and
Eminem will be exonerated,'' defense
attorney Howard Hertz said.
The j udge set Ernj ncm's preliminary
hearing for July I I. Hertz said he would
try to reschedu le it fo r July 6 or 7, when
Eminem will be in Detroit for two conce rts.

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

DO

0

070RS

Oldsmobile.

rq ,.

Recipes
Grilled Herb Mustard Steaks
with Seasoned
Vegetable Kabobs
2 well-trimmed boneless beeftop
loin or rib eye steaks, cut 1 inch
thick
Salt
Herb mustard made of 2 large
cloves garlic, crushed, 2 tsp. water. 2
tbs. Dijon-style mustard, I tsp. dried
basil leaves, 1/2 tsp. pepper, 113 tsp.
dried thyme leaves. Combine ~rlic
and water and microwave on high
30 seconds. Stir in remaining ingredients, and spread onto both sides of
the beef steaks.
Place steaks on grid over medium ash-covered coals. Grill top loin
steaks uncovered 16 to 18 minutes,
rib eye steaks 12 to 14 minutes, for
medium rare turning occasionally.
3. Season steaks with salt, as desired.
Carve steaks crosswise into thick
slices. Makes 4 servings (186 calories, 8 g fat per serving).

. overweight, )'&gt;U are endangering
,·wur overall health. Being overweight greatly increases the risk of
hypertension (high blood pressure),
··lli•l?etes, gall bladder disease, and
. may also increase your risk for some
, kinc!s of cancer.
: · Eating a diet rich in fruits and
, vegetables, cutting down on saturated fats, and eating proper serving
sizes are equally as important, as
. ppysical activity in the balancing act
of personal well-being.
What are the secrets? We some• pme have a hard time believing that
. simple changes made in diet and
, lifestyle, such as a lower fat diet and
walking on a regular basis can make
.. a:powerful difference in our health
. and well-being, but they often do.
Exercise is absolutely essential to
a. healthy, happy life. To get the ben. efits and keep boredom from treep,ing in, alternate your workout
Kabobs
activities. Now ,that warm weather
6 small (3 ounce each) red ·pota~
is here, try light gardening instead of
walking. If you have Access to a toes, halved
swimming pool, try water aerobics,
2 teaspoons minced oregano
.it is easy on the knees and provides leaves
increased toning and muscular bal2 medium yellow squash, cut into
ance.
How ever you choose to l-inch pieces
change your exercise program,
3 tablespoons margarine, melted
remember the rule ,--check with
1 large clove garlic crushed
your doctor fir.;t before starting any
Salt and pepper, as desired .
new exercise program. Take ir slow,
Place potatoes in a microwavechange does not happen over night. safe baking dish. Cover and
: Remember when you are eating micfOWl!ve at high 6 to 7 minutes
to eat slowly, it takes several minutes
or until barely fork tender, rearrangfor the brain to tell the stomach that
ing potatoes after 3 minutes. Alteryou are full. If you are' walking, do
nately thread cooked potatoes and
· not worry if you call not F five
'miles. Maybe you should set ·your squash on six 8-inch skewer.;. Com. goal at two miles for now, and grad- bine margarine, garlic and oregano; ·
brush half of mixture over vegeta. 'u,ally o,mrk up to five miles.
· Ifwalking is not for you,look for bles. Place on grid beside steaks.
Grill kabobs 10 minutes, turning
'··activity that is convenient and fun,
you are more apt to stick with once and bmshing with remaining
' s6mething that }'QU enjoy. Eating a margarine mixture. Season with salt
' balanced diet, exercising regularly, and peppec to L1Ste. Serves 6.
'' .
------------------~--------------

•

310 East Main Street
Ohio

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

t 998 Cadillac

Sedan Deville
V8, Leather, Loaded
Was 120,99900

Now *18,800° 0

t

t 997 Ford Mustang

Monte Carlo

990°

0

00
Now
*12
400
.
'

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t 998 Pontiac

Bonneville

V6, Auto, Air, Loaded, V6, Auto, Air, Tilt,.
Low Miles, Sharp
Cassette, PS, PB
1
Was 13,99900
Was 111,99900

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Now

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The Daily Sentinel

n.ursday, June I, 1000

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

SURVIVOR li

•N Sync plays
AOL l(id•s event

'E.sta6fislid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740..992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

POTOMI}C, Md. (AP) - It's good to
be th e dau ghter of an America O nline
president.
Twelve-yea r-old R achel G:olburn's bat
mitzvah Sunday was the talk of the town
·after boy band 'N Sync played a 40minute set and signed autograph s.
Rachel's fath er, David Colburn , is the
president of . business affairs for Dulles,
Va.-based AOL.
AOL spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg
said the band members have a relationship with Colburn, and they did the gig
as a favor. She declin ed to say whether
·the performers were paid.
"It was a really lovely gesture,'' Gold.berg said.
lnside.com, the Web site that first
reported the performance along with
The Washington Post, estimated that a
paid performance would cost at least $1
million. The Post gave a more modest
estimate of $250,000.
"They were very ni ce," said Rachel's
mother, Kathleen Colburn . "But th e
main event was the bat mitzv:th."

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer

Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Unm to the tdiJor rut wtl.comt. Tllt1 tlwMI4 M Wu 111Mt 300 words. !.U ~""' an sab)«t
to ft!Ulns om/'""'' IH ''''"d rurJ ilfrlu.Je addnu Md nllpltoat •w•bcr. N. lllAfiJIItd llttm will
IH publisht d. Untff shoMid IH lit food uurt,llddrtSJU.Il "'"''• ""'JHrwuliJJ.s.
Tile opi11inns uprtued in tltt uJ.um11 bdow are tJu corUtiiJMJ oftltt Olllo '~' Pablishint
Co. '1 tdiloriol bo.rd, urlln1 ulhrrw ~t nmtJ.

'

OUR VIEW

Fired up
Activism may be the key
to meeting veterans' needs

D

uring his stop in Ohio last year, Veterans of Foreign Wars
National Commander John Smart raised an interesting
pomt.
About 30 years ago, the makeup of
Halle our
Capitol Hill leaned heavily tpward veterans ofWorld War ll and the Korean War.
lawmakers
Today, that representation has significandy
•
distanced
shrunk.
'·• themselves so
As a result, Smart argued, the level of
concern and interest in veterans affairs
:
ar rotn a
from lawmakers has also dropped, so much
': segtnent of our so that veterans organizations must resort
;
,. t •
ro lobbying and political activism to
0
11
P P a tOll
ensure benefits and care are maintained.
: that they no
Smart's assertion is food for thought. It
•,. longer recog- also raises the question: Have our lawmakers distanced themselves so fer from a seg: uize the needs ment of our population that rhey no
: '!{veterans?
longer recognize the needs of veterans?
~
If so, shame on them.lflawmakers think
: they can back- burner veterans' needs in hopes that, say, 10 or 15
: years from now these old soldiers won't be around to voice their
~ opinions, they're dead wrong.
• The fact is that while the number of vets from World War II and
~ Korea are falling,Vietnam, Grenada, Desert Storm and Kosovo have
: produced adtlitional survivors of conflict. AU of them are deserving
:: ofrh·e same benefits.
: Only problem is, over the last several years those services have
: taken on less importance in the national budget. This is pretty hard
: to swallow when Veterans Affairs hospitals are still tending to the
: VICtims of war's fury, both physically and mentally.
• An unfortunate attitude that .exists in this country is that veterans
: only want a handout. Hogwash! Nothing could be farther from the
. truth. The older veterans returned home and helped build the foun; dation of prosperity that's existed for decades.
· The veterans of later wars had the same goal: to return home,
: resume thdr place in society, and become constructive members of
: the community. Duty to their country didn't end on the batdefield.
• Is it too much, then, to ask that our government restore funding
• to veterans' programs/ If politicians are not conc~,rned with that
• question, they'd better be prepared to respond as re-election cam: paigns near their climax this fall.
; Sm~rt issued a call for VFW posts to energize themselves politi; cally, ask their legislators questions about the status of veterans' care
: and be prepared to use their vote Nov. 7. A similar message has no
; doubt been made to American Legion, Vietnam Veterans of Ameri: ca and other groups.
Dissatisfaction · with federal, state and local response to veterans'
: needs is becoming more vocal. If these men and women understand
. one thing about their country, it's that the right to choose our elect: ed leaders is one of its principal freedoms.
And they're ready to exercise that right when the time comes.

fi fi

,,

!

TODAY IN HISTORY

RUSHER'S VIEW

Does Mr: Clinton understand the (rule oflaw'?
The decision of the 11th Circuit Court of
Appeals in Atlanta, acquiescing in the ruling
of the Immigration and Natumlization Service that Elian Gonzalez is too young to claini
political asylum and must abide by his father's
decision to take him back to Cuba, is unquestionably a triumph for the C li nton adminis-

William
Rusher

tration.

President Clinton took time out of his trip
to Europe to hail it, and Attorney General
Janet Reno promptly held a press conference
to crow over the result.
But, as so often in this administration, what
you see is not quite the whole story. From the
beginning, the public has been encouraged to
believe that the central figure on the governmem's side of the drama was Ms. Reno. It was
she who was seen pressing the INS to reverse
its original opinion that the issue of who
should have custody of Elian belonged in the
Florida courts.
It was she who so visibly dominated events
thereafter, even traveling to Miami herself to
try to resolve the family dispute. And it was
she, of course, at least in theory, who finally
ordered the famous 5 a.m. assault on the Gonzalez residence, from which Elian was
removed at gunpoint.
So if the public wanted to get mad at anybody on the government's side of the case,
Ms. Reno was the obvious choice. Mr. Clinton confined himself, in public at least, to saying piously that "the rule of law" must be
upheld.
But what "rule of law" was it, precisely, that·
needed so desperately to be upheld? It was the
aforesaid ruling of the INS, which the Gonzalez family challenged in court and appealed to
the 11th Circuit. And how did that come ttJ
be the law of this particular case?

ion of the 11th Circuit makes it plain that the
co urt had li ttl e regard for the wisdom of the
ruling. The court repeatedly noted the tyrannical charac ter of the regime to whi ch Elian
would be return ed, and was tacitly skeptical of
the INS's decision. But, obeying the (highly
co nse rvative) legal prin ciple that decisions of
the exec utive branc h, made within its authority. ought not to be overturned unless there
has been a clear "abuse of discretion,'' the
co urt reluctantly concluded that,.,.the ruling
did not quite add up to such an abuse and
must be obeyed.
In other words, the president and the attorney ge neral are telling us that "the rule- of
law·· must be upheld at all costs , although the
particular ruling they are so eager to uphold
was one that Mr. Clinton himself contrived to
bring about, and that could easily --indeed, in
the implied opinion of the 11th Circuit, more
easily -- have gone th e other way.
The remaining mystery is what Mr. Clinton
is up to here. His overriding aim, clearly, hGS
been to avoid offending Fidel Castro -- even
at the expense of losing Florida to Governor
Bush in November, let alone condemning a
6-year-old boy to a life in Cuba. But what's so
sacred about Castro'
We arc left to conclude that Mr. Clinton has
privately reached some understanding with
tl1 e Cuban dictator, which might be jeopardized if Castro were angered. What the deal
involves is something we probably won't find
out until after Election Day, when means ·o f
retaliation are few.
But it will have precious little to do with
tipholding "the mle of law.''

NEA COLUMNIST
As noted above, the INS had originally had
a very different view. Irs first inclination was
to lee ,the Florida courts decide the qu estion
of custody. But soon th ereafter, somebody
persuaded the INS to change its mind . In
short order, federal agents in Havana twice
questioned Juan Miguel Gonzalez, Elian 's
father, and declared themselves convinced th at
he wanted his son back and that the boy
ought to be returned to Cuba. The INS so
ordered.
What -- or rather who -- changed the
INS's mind?
It simply beggars belief that an issue that
explosive, involving this country's relations
with the Castro regime and the sentiment&lt; of
hundreds of thousands of Cuban-Am erican
voters in Florida and elsewhere, would be left
to the de cision of Janet Reno. For whatever
reason (and we wi ll return to that point later) ,
the decision was made by President Clinton
himself. The attorney general was simply
pushed forward by Mr. Clinton to take th e
heat -- and th e fall, if things went badly.
The INS's coerced ruling quickly beca me
the "rule of law," before wbi ch Mr. Clinton
and Ms. Reno genuflect daily. But the opin-

(Willimn A. Rusher is a Disti11guisl1ed Fellow of
tile Claremolll lnstitllle for tile Study of States-·
mausl•ip ami Political Philosophy.)

'HARDBALL'

Bush envisions reprise of Kennedy-Nixon race•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

WASHINGTON- George W. Bush hints
that his tussle with AI Gore this fall- will
remind both historians and voters of John F.
Kennedy's successful 1960 battle with
Richard M. Nixon .
In the Bush scenario, Vice President Gore
will play the nervous Nixonesque defender,
laying desperate claim to an era of peace and
prosperity. The Texas governor, Bush, will be
the sunny, JFK-like .challenger saying, "Let's
soar higher!"
It's a delightful premise, especially to
reporters.
Think of the suspense: Nixon and Kennedy
were tied at 47 percent in the Gallup PoD
when the fall campaign began. After four dramatic debates, they divided the vote on election night 34,226,731 to 34,108,157.
The other appeal of a Nixon-Kennedy
rematch is the cartoon factor. ,
Wouldn't it be great if AI Gore really did
morph into Dick Nixon the night of the first
debate! Imagine the fun if the vice president
showed up ,looking sick, unshaven and scared
to death! Think of the headlines the next day
if an. authoritative George W. appeared before
us armed with a devastating arsenal of facts
and figures to undermine Gore's claim of

J.fOuldn 't it be great if Al
Gore really did morph into
Dick Nixon the night of the
first debate! Imagine the jim
if the vice president slrowed
up looking sick, unshaven
and scared to death!
deeper experi ence!
•
On a superficial level, there's a case for such
a historic re- run.
Like Jack Kennedy, Bush co mes tram a
charming, well-ofT f.1mily. Like Kenn edy, he
spent his halcyon youthful summers on th e
New England coast. Like Kennedy, he inh erited the social confidence and optimism that
comes with wealth, supportive parents, prep
school and an Ivy League pedigree.
For his part, Gore shares some definite
Nixonian traits. Awkward in public, pleasant
in private, he moves his body and mouth as if
he were his own robo t. Like Ni xon, he is not
lovable as a public figure. Like Ni xon, he has
made his w ay up throu gh th e House to the
Senate to the vice presidency, ea rnin g each

new pla ce by an admixture of sweat equity
and attendance at enough party functions 'to
make th e chicken an endangered species. • '
Like John F. Kennedy, George W. Bush giyes
off th e aura of a man who can take a loss and
be quit e happy with himself in another line of
work, another style of life.
·
Like Nixon , Gore faces two outcomes ihis
November: victory on the course he has ·set
sin ce youth, or defeat and utter humiliation
for havin g choked under pressure.
House leader Di ck Gephardt is one smart
Demo crat who believed early that Bush's
breeziness makes him dangerous to someone
like Gore.
The fact that the former president's son can
walk away from a defeat gives him the latitude
to take ri sks - Social Security reform, big tax
cuts, Strategic Defense , education vouchers.
Go re, mea nwhile, may be so frightened of
defeat and th e attendant ignominy, that he
comes off as a guy like the Dick Nixon of
1960 - desperate , to win the presiden~y
because he can't think of anything else to do.

(CI11·is Matthews, chief of tf1e San Francisco
Exm11incr:&lt;Wtlshi11gton Bureau, is host of "Hatd·
ball " 011 CNBC and MSNBC cable cha.111els. 111e
I 999 editio11 of "Hardball" has been rece11tly published by 1oucl1stvne Books.)

.

"\,

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
I•

825 Third Ave., Gallipolle, Ohio

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304-176-1333

Page AS
Thursday, June 8, 2000

NAMES IN THE NEWS
Dr. R obert D' Alessandr i, university vice in the San Francisco O pera Ho use with
Downs still
president for health sciences.
Mo nteverdi's "The Coronation of PopDowns,
the
former
cohost
of
the
not slowing down ABC newsmagazine "20/20," said the pea."
She performs widely in Europe fro m

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - At 79,
Hugh Downs has written several books,
taught at Arizona State
Un iversity and written
a cello piece performed by Yo- Yo Ma.
l-Ie's not slowing down
any time soon.
Downs, who
has been certified as
having logged the
greatest number o f
hours on network
Downs
commercial television
by The Guinness Book
of Records, was in Charleston Wednes- r
day for the first international conferen ce
on rural aging, sponsored by West Virginia University and the United Nations.
Growing up on an Ohio f.u m with his
grandparents. gave Downs an early perspective on rural aging. Before Social
Sec urity, "C ompassionate relatives was
about your only hope," he said.
One goal of the conference is to
address the challenge to "keep our elders
active and contributing to society" said

elderly are often forgotten even though
they are valuable assets to the community.
Downs, who made the switch from
radio to TV, is now making a transition to
the Internet with a new Web site dedi cated to covering the executive branch.

Hendricks wins
Spanish art award
OVIEDO, Spain (AP) - American
soprano Barbara Hendricks has won a
prestigious Spanish arts award for her
voice in concert and in advocacy work.
The Prince of Asturias Arts Prize for
2000 went to Hendricks for "knowing
how to use her prodigious voice in
opera, in concerts, in jazz, in popular
niusi c, and at the same time making herself heard in the whole world in defense
of refugees and against xenophobia, antiSemitism and intolerance,'' the prize
committee announced Wednesday.
After studying at the Juilliard School
in New York. Hendricks made her debut

HEALTH
AND FITNESS
with ,daily challenges and
The balancing act dealing
unexpected pressures a soon as posBY JACKE SWicHER
H£AJ..TH EOUCATOR

•

Today is Thursday,June 8, the !60th day of 2000. There are 206 days
. left in the year.
Today's Highlight in. History:
On June 8, A.D. 632, the prophet Mohammed died.
On this date:
In 1845, Andrew Jackson, seventh president of the United States,
died in NashviUe, Tenn .
In 1861, Tennessee seceded from the Union ..
In 1876, author George Sand died in Nohant, France.
In 1915, Secretary of State Willia11,1Jennings Bryan resigned in a disagreement over U.S. handling of the sinking of the Lusitania.
In 1942, Bing Crosby recorded" Adeste Fideles" and "Silent Night"
in Los Angeles for Decca Records.
·
In 1953, the Supreme Court ruled that restaurants in the District of
Columbia could not refuse to serve blacks.
In 1967, 34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israeli forces raided
the Liberty, a Navy ship stationed in the Mediterranean. (Israel called
the attack a tragic mistake.)
In 1968, authorities announced the capture in London ofJames Earl
Ray, suspected assassin of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
In 1978, a jury in Clark t ounty, Nev., ruled the so-called "Mormon
will,'' purportedly written by late billionaire Howard Hughes, was a
forgery.
,
. In 1982, Ronald Reagan became the first U.S. president to address
a joint session of the British Parliament:
Today's Birthday&gt;: Retired Supreme Court Justice Byron White is
83. Former President Suharto oflndonesia is 79. Former lint lady Barbara Bush is 75. Actress Dana Wynter is 70. Comedian Joan Riven is
67, Actress Millicent Martin is 66. Actor James Darren is 64. Actor
Bernie Casey is ti I. Singer Nancy Sinatra is 60. Singer Chuck Negron
(Three Dog Night) is 58. MusiCian Boz Sc.ggs is 56. Actor Don Grady
is 56. Rock musician Mick Box (Uri ah Heep) is 53. Acl'l'eSS Sonia
Braga is 50. Actress Kathy Baker is 50. Country musician Tony Rice is
49. Singer Bo nnir Tyler is 47. Actor Griffin Dunne is 45.

.)'he Daily Sentinel

: MEIGS COUNY HEAIJH Dt=PARTMENT

: Overweight is one of the major
4ealth problems in America today.
.An estimated 32 million adult
.Americans are affected. The over,weight problem is on the increase as
•.Americans eat more and exercise

less.
, , Why should }'QU worry about
our weight? Because, if you are

sible, and a positive outlook on life,
will reap the reward of a sense of
well-being and balance.These good
habits will help in }'OUr quest for a
long, healthy, and productive life.

her home in Switzerland. Her repertoi re
includes more than 20 operas, American
comedies, French melodies and spirituals.
As part of her commitment to social
actiop, she has visited refu gee camps
acrol\ the world and performed in the
former Yugoslavia in support of civilians
affected by the civil war.

Eminem will tour
with two felonies
WARREN, Mich. (AP) - Grammywinning rapper Eminem will be able to
hit the road despite facing two felony
weapons counts.
District Judge Susan Chrzanowski
ordered the musician to give prosec utors his tour schedule when he leaves
the state. He also cannot possess a
weapon as part of his bond .
" If there's any information given to
us that you have any sort of weapon ...
your bond will be revoked and you will

be sit ting in th e county jail,'' Ch rzanows ki
said.
The
st nger
turn ed hi mself in to
police Wednesday and
was arra igned in Warren District Court as a
grou p of yo un g fa ns
waJted o utside.

Emlnem

T he 27 - yea rold Emi nem , w hose
legal name is Marshall Bruce Mathers
Ill, was clurged after a weekend fi ght in
which he all egedly saw another man
kissing hi' wife.
He face' one co un t of carrying a
co ncealed weap on and one count or
assault wi th a deadly weapo n. The first
charge carrit·s a fi ve-year pnson se ntence; the seco nd carries a four-year
sen tence.

" We're confident we will be able to
resolve these 'e ri o us charges and
Eminem will be exonerated,'' defense
attorney Howard Hertz said.
The j udge set Ernj ncm's preliminary
hearing for July I I. Hertz said he would
try to reschedu le it fo r July 6 or 7, when
Eminem will be in Detroit for two conce rts.

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

DO

0

070RS

Oldsmobile.

rq ,.

Recipes
Grilled Herb Mustard Steaks
with Seasoned
Vegetable Kabobs
2 well-trimmed boneless beeftop
loin or rib eye steaks, cut 1 inch
thick
Salt
Herb mustard made of 2 large
cloves garlic, crushed, 2 tsp. water. 2
tbs. Dijon-style mustard, I tsp. dried
basil leaves, 1/2 tsp. pepper, 113 tsp.
dried thyme leaves. Combine ~rlic
and water and microwave on high
30 seconds. Stir in remaining ingredients, and spread onto both sides of
the beef steaks.
Place steaks on grid over medium ash-covered coals. Grill top loin
steaks uncovered 16 to 18 minutes,
rib eye steaks 12 to 14 minutes, for
medium rare turning occasionally.
3. Season steaks with salt, as desired.
Carve steaks crosswise into thick
slices. Makes 4 servings (186 calories, 8 g fat per serving).

. overweight, )'&gt;U are endangering
,·wur overall health. Being overweight greatly increases the risk of
hypertension (high blood pressure),
··lli•l?etes, gall bladder disease, and
. may also increase your risk for some
, kinc!s of cancer.
: · Eating a diet rich in fruits and
, vegetables, cutting down on saturated fats, and eating proper serving
sizes are equally as important, as
. ppysical activity in the balancing act
of personal well-being.
What are the secrets? We some• pme have a hard time believing that
. simple changes made in diet and
, lifestyle, such as a lower fat diet and
walking on a regular basis can make
.. a:powerful difference in our health
. and well-being, but they often do.
Exercise is absolutely essential to
a. healthy, happy life. To get the ben. efits and keep boredom from treep,ing in, alternate your workout
Kabobs
activities. Now ,that warm weather
6 small (3 ounce each) red ·pota~
is here, try light gardening instead of
walking. If you have Access to a toes, halved
swimming pool, try water aerobics,
2 teaspoons minced oregano
.it is easy on the knees and provides leaves
increased toning and muscular bal2 medium yellow squash, cut into
ance.
How ever you choose to l-inch pieces
change your exercise program,
3 tablespoons margarine, melted
remember the rule ,--check with
1 large clove garlic crushed
your doctor fir.;t before starting any
Salt and pepper, as desired .
new exercise program. Take ir slow,
Place potatoes in a microwavechange does not happen over night. safe baking dish. Cover and
: Remember when you are eating micfOWl!ve at high 6 to 7 minutes
to eat slowly, it takes several minutes
or until barely fork tender, rearrangfor the brain to tell the stomach that
ing potatoes after 3 minutes. Alteryou are full. If you are' walking, do
nately thread cooked potatoes and
· not worry if you call not F five
'miles. Maybe you should set ·your squash on six 8-inch skewer.;. Com. goal at two miles for now, and grad- bine margarine, garlic and oregano; ·
brush half of mixture over vegeta. 'u,ally o,mrk up to five miles.
· Ifwalking is not for you,look for bles. Place on grid beside steaks.
Grill kabobs 10 minutes, turning
'··activity that is convenient and fun,
you are more apt to stick with once and bmshing with remaining
' s6mething that }'QU enjoy. Eating a margarine mixture. Season with salt
' balanced diet, exercising regularly, and peppec to L1Ste. Serves 6.
'' .
------------------~--------------

•

310 East Main Street
Ohio

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

t 998 Cadillac

Sedan Deville
V8, Leather, Loaded
Was 120,99900

Now *18,800° 0

t

t 997 Ford Mustang

Monte Carlo

990°

0

00
Now
*12
400
.
'

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t 998 Pontiac

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V6, Auto, Air, Loaded, V6, Auto, Air, Tilt,.
Low Miles, Sharp
Cassette, PS, PB
1
Was 13,99900
Was 111,99900

2 Dr. V6, Auto,
Air&amp; More
Was 18,99500

Now

PCNTIA.C;e

•

Now t10,250 00

i
1-

�RACO honors graduates

RACINE - The Racine Area Conununity
Organization honored five Southern High School
. graduates during its regular monthly meeting
recently held at Star Mill Park.
Presiden t Kathryn Hart presented $500 scholar$hips to recipients Jamie Baker, Kyle Norris, C hris
·: Randolph , and Brandon Wolfe.
· Each student gave a profile of his school years.
Each played on the Southern High School baseball
team which won sectional and district tournament
chaO:pionships to become one of Ohio's "Sweet
16."
Baker will attend the Ohio State University. and
Norris, Randolph and Wolfe will attend Ohio University.
Amber Maynard, who was un able to attend l;he
. presentation will attend the University of Rio
Grande.
'
Funds for the sch"larships were raised by the
&lt;&gt;rganization through yard sales.
Guest Jim Freeman noted that 90 percent of the
2000 class will continue on to college or technical
school.
RACO commended the Southern High School
Cia" of 2000 for its achievements and awards of
$223,000 in scholars hips.
Since 1992, RACO has given $9,500 in scholarships.
Special guests at the dinner and presentations
included Mr. and Mrs. Rick Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
.. Gary Norris,Julie Randolph and Mr. and Mrs. Den, nis Wolfe, the recipients' parents.
In other business, Gary Norm told the organization of the need for volunteers at the Log Jam f«tival in Portland June 16-18. Groups and organiza.tions can volunteer for fund raisers.
The group decided to sponsor a drop-off collection of canned food and non-perishable items on
M ay 27-, and to sponso.r the frog jump during the
Fourth ofJuly celebratio n. Senior division prizes are
$100, $75, and $50. and junior division prizes are
$40, $25 and $10. Rental frogs will also be available.
· The group will also operate a food booth at the eel•ebratiolf.
.
The group purchased six purple and gold banners
· to be displayed at the high school during special

• ""fhursday, June 8, 2000

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS
•

buckeye which is not native to Meigs County, 10an
grow up to 90 feet in height with a diameter of
three feet. The trunk bark is fairly smooth or broken
with large plates. The leaves consist of four to seven
leaflets, although the usual number is five leaflets,
and the fruit has a · smooth husk while the Ohio
· buckeye has a bumpy or spiny husk.
For an officaal nonun_a uon form, contact the
M eigs SWCD at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy OH
45769. The deadline for nonunauons as Sept. 1 and
district personnel and forestry judges wall assagn
points by measunng the c&gt;rcumference, vertical
height, and crown diameter of those tr~es submitted.
i
The winner will receive a $50 savings bond at the
Meigs SWCD Annual Banquet on Oct. 10.
Information about . the B1g Tree Contest and
nomination forms w1ll also be m?.luded m ~he
upcoming Meigs SWCD Newsletter, ConservatiOn
Commentary." To receive Conservation Conunentary by mail, call (740) 992-4282 to be added to the
Me1gs SWCD ma!lmg hst.

Family visits relatives
POMEROY - Jean and Norman Wood of
Pomeroy, and Kenneth Wood of Columbus recently
visited Sue and Steve BrickJes and Jeffery of Germantown, Md. Michael Brickles home of leave
tinm Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas was also home with
his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Wood also visited their son, Kenny
andYong Wood. Carrie, Cathy and Donna and their
t.wo great-grandsons, Tyler and Christian, in Columbus. Michael BrickJes also stopped there enroute to
his home in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Big Bend Cloggers

•••

REEDSVILLE
Revival,
Eden
Uni.ted
Brethren Church, Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday,
I 0 a.m . followed by carryin dinner, secon d service, 2
p .m . Comfort Touch Min istries to ·present chalk artist
Dr. Dean Watson .

THURSDAY, June 8
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 b:30 p.m. at the c hurch .
Members are to take a covered di sh and their own
tableware.

••••

RACINE
Sonshine
Circle,
Dorcas
United
Methodi st Church, 7 p. m .
Thursday at th e c hurch.

BURLINGHAM
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular Burlingham Camp, Modern
meeting, Thursday, 8 p .m. . Woodmen, potluck dinn e r,
b p.m. at th e hall Saturday.
Refreshments .
Fathers will be recogniz ed.
Friends and n eig hbor s wel TUPPERS PLAINS come:
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 will meet on Thursday
TUPPERS PLAINS
at 7:30 p.m . at the post
home. Dinner will be served Eastern Alumni . Association
alumni banquet, Saturday.
at 6:30 p.m.
Social hour at 6 p. m .; din ner at 7 p.m. in air-conditio n ed cafetorium. at Eastern El e-mentary Sc h ool.

•••

.., events.
,

PORTLAND - Charles Jeffrey Harris, son ~f Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Hams of Portland, has been selected to appear in the 2000 edition
of" Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges."
A _2000 graduate of Bob Jones University in Greenville, S.C.,
Hams _was one of 63 stu~etns chosen from the Unive~sity's student
boy. this year on the baSJs of academic standing, campus ladership,
..~erv1ce to the community, and potential for continued success.
Hams graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in Bible. He has
. served as president and vice-presidents of the Miss.ion Prayer Band
as sergeant at arms of Phi Kappa Pi society.
Who's Who recipients are selected from students at more than
'2,300 institutions of higher learning in all 50 states, the District of
Columbia and several foreign nations.

:

FRIDAY; June 9

•••

SUNDAY, June 11 ·

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p .m
meeting. Hall lo cated at
28051 St. Rt. 7, Cheshire .
The Community Calen dar is published as a
free service to non-profit groups wishing to~
announce meetings' at('d
special' events. The catendar is not designed to
promote sales or fun4
raisers of any type. ;
Items are printed ontr
as space permits and.
can not be guaranteed to
be printed a specific'
number of days .

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLK.S.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

MIDDLEPORT - Alison R. Gerlach, daughter of Mike and Debbie Gerlach of Middleport,
graduated from Marshall University on May 6
with a bachelor of arts degree in history."
She graduated summa cum laude and with
university honors. Gerlach also completed her
time as a member of the Society ofYeager Scholars, the top academic scholarship and program at
Marshall. As a member of the Bell X-1 class,
named for General Chuck Yeag~r's sound barrierGerlach
breaking plane, she received a medallion during a
ceremony on May 5.
Gerlach was IJartied a Marshall University Oustanding
Leader/Scholar and a member of"Who's Who of American Colleges and Universities."
During her four years at Marshall, Gerlach was a member of the
ltistory honorary society Phi Alpha Thera and the political science
·honorary Phi Sigma Alpha. She \vas also inducted into Omicron
Delta Kappa, leadership honor fraternity.
·
·· . Gerlach served as both a student advpcate and justice for the
Marshall judiciary program, handling student code of conduct violations. She was also a Yeager Scholar Retreat Week Counselor and
held offices in the Model United N ations Club and PROWL (People Reaching Out with Love). Gerlach plans to attend Washington
;:-:-i~nd Lee School of the Law in the fall on an academic scholarshiip.
.;;') 'he school, in Lexington,Va., is the 20th-ranked law school in the
:..:~nation, according to U.S. News and World Report.

.

·
·
.
AWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS- Kathryn Hart, preS!·
dent of RACO , presented scholarshaps of $500
each to Southern graduates, Jamae Baker, Kyle Nor·
ns, Chns Randolph , and Brandon Wolfe, left to right.
Also rece1vang a scholarship was Amber Maynard.

:·

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Inducted into.society

POMEROY - Audra Harrison, daughter of
Marg and Richard Houdashelt was inducted into
the Chi Sigma Iota· fraternity recendy.
CSI is an organization established for students dealing, with areas concerning other students, who who have leadership provided by students.
She and her husband Robert Harrison
reside on Bailey Run Rd ., Pomeroy, and they
have a son, Wade, who attends Pomeroy ElemenHarrison
tary School.
.;: • · '
.
She is completing an internship at Tri~· : . :€ ounty M ental Health and Counseling and is currently working at
:.&lt;;; ~e Department of Human Services, Children's Services division, in

• Top Soil

• Put Molf,
• COW Manure

&lt;G ~ . bogs
(!11772.. ;oe, ·Ul)

Atten4 graduation

POMEROY - Brenda and Keith' Phalin and
Terry Wyatt recendy traveled to Cincinatti for the
graduation and celeb~tion · of their son, Rob
Wyatt, from medical school.
He has attended the Vniversity of Cincinnati the past four years. Dr. Wyatt has accepted a
residency position at Wilford Hall USAF Medical
Center on LackJand AFB, Texas. He and his wife,
the former Marcy H~f raicne, have moved to
San Antonio, Tex. Others traveling' to attend the
•
Wyatt
ceremony were Tara Wyatt, Adam Wyatt, Nelia .
: .
Seyler, Angie Bass, Betty Reed , Janet and Dennie
~· !'lill, Sonya and Tim Puckett, Bob ~nd Patty Barton, and Natalie and
&lt; ·'Matthew Demoskey.
·

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'

Dean's List announced

MARIETTA - Meredith Crow of Pomeroy, Tricia Davis of
r~omeroy. Michelle Bissell of Rudand, and Brian Bowen of
~footville, were named to the Dean's High Honors List for the
~-::Spring quarter at Marietta College.
.
'f.•:' To be eligible for the high honor list, students must achieve a
:~~grade point average of 3.5 or higher.
:;:.•: Additionally, Brynn Moss of Long Bottom was named to the
•:': Dean's List, having earned a grade point average of 3.0 or higher.

Card shower planned

..

Marietta announces graduates

·.;. MARIETTA - A number of local students were among the
:: ::,graduates from Marietta College during commencement cereinonies on May 7.
~:·: Local students receiving degrees were: Elizabeth Matheny,
;: : ~oolville, B.A., graphic design; Brian Bowen, Coolville, B.A., ele.:: !llentary education; Dorothy Leifheit, Pomeroy, B .S., sports me&lt;li;. : ane; and Ryan Williams, Syracuse, B.A., management and market.:~
.• • mg.

POMEROY ·- The sweet (yellow) buckeye tree
:· is the subject of this year's Meigs County Soil and
:· Water Conservation District Big,Tree Contest.
Each year, the Meigs SWCD selects a 'species for
·::the annual contest. Last year's contest was open for
:. black walnut trees. T he contest was won by Brett
Jones, Racine, who nominated a black walnut tree
· . iocared in Lebanon Township along the Ohio River
· just north of the Ritchie Bridge.
To be considered. the nominated tree must be
• located in M eigs Cou nty. An individual tree can
: only be nominated once, with only the first nomiPOMEROY - Friends are planning a card
; nation being considered.
shower for Krista! Sisson 'Bolin w ho will observe
·
People other than landowners can nominate a her 35th birthday Sunday. Krista!, who is having
: tree, however permission must first be obtained . health problems, and her three children reside with
: from the property owner.
her parents at 42040 Lovers Lane, Pomeroy.
T he sweet buckeye, while similar to the Ohio

• Screw-on close-up lenses.
Close-up filters are often promoted as "close-up lenses." It's true
rhat these accessories let you
shoot close. However, they are not
as sharp as true macro lenses. Usually, screw-on close-up lenses are
sold in sets that offer different
degrees of magnification.
• Close-up Accessories. If
you really ger into close- up photography, you may want to check
out the following accessories.
· A tripod will steady your camera and will help reduce camera
shake, which is exaggerated when
shooting with a close-·up lens (as it
is when shooting with a telephoto lens) .
A ringlight, which mounts
around a lens, can produce shadowless and ratio lighting, if you
get one with four fla sh tubes that
can be turned .on and off independently. Some ringlightsr offer
only one flash tube for shadowless
lighting.

~

ff ' ...

JACKSON - The Fourth Annual Jackson
County Sports Festival 5K Run and Walk will be
held July 4 beginning at 9 a.m. at the Manpower
Park on East Main Street in Jackson .
T he race will run through the stree ts of Jack· son and the entry fee will again be $12. All participating runners will receive Ja c kson County
Sports Festival t-shirts and all proceeds from the
event will go toward the cost of putting on the
holiday's activities.
.

Most of the dose-up pictures of
flowers you have seep were probably taken with a macro lens.
·Want even greater magnification? Extension tubes and bellows, which fit between the lens
and the camera, provide much
larger-than-life images. These
accessories are required only if
you want super close ups.
• Wide-angle lens. Wideangle lenses can be used for closeup photography, with dramatic
results. The advantage of using·
wide-angle lenses (15 mm, 17 nun
or 20 nun) is that they offer good
depth-of-field, from well in front
of to well behind the subject.
However, if you are photographing a ve.r y small subject, it will
look like a pea w hen photographed with a wide-angle lens.
If you want a close-up of a
model train with some ·of the train
setup in the background , try
shooting close with a wide-angle
lens.

.• 'Jo

:·~. ; RIO GRANDE -Three local students were inducted into the
:t~Juo Grande Honor Society. Chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta
:~-;National Honor Society for freshmen during an induction banquet
:. ;~eld rei:endy at the University of Rio Grande.
:;::··~~ Jessica Brannon, daughter of Joy and Paul Brannon of Tuppers
.:;:Plains, Radley Faulk. son of Linda and Chuck Faulk of Pomeroy,
: :; and Jessica Marcum, daughter of Connie and Mike Marcum of
.:.;·Chester, were inducted during the banquet.
::;..~· Dinner was followed by a speaker, Dr. T. Michael Rhodes, and an
'..!:tpduction ceremony. Members must have maintal'r1ed a 3.5 grade
point. average throughout their freslunan year to. be. eligible for
induction.'
1'1.....,..
..

MIDDLEPORT Free
concert by Big Bend C ommunity B and, Stewart-Benn ett M emori al Park, Mill
St .. sponsored by Middleport Communi ty Association, Riverbend Arts Council and Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Am erica n Legion.
Coney dogs and other
refreshment s to b e sold by
Legion Auxiliary.

There will be expanded awards ihis year with
plaques to go to each of the top three male and
female fini shers and nieclals to the top three finishers not winning plaqpes in each age division
for both male and female.
No preregistration is required and registration
may be made the day of the race. There will be a
one-mile fun walk starting immediately following
the SK Run and those participating in the walk
and wishing to receive a t-s hirt may co so for a
cost ofSlO. The event is sponsored by the J ackson
Area Chamber of Commerce .

.Big Tree contest underway

Students honored at banquet

·~... , l

~·

TROPHY WINNERS - The Big Bend Cloggers of
Pomeroy won nine trophies in competition at the
Long's Family Retreat at Lathaum over the week·
end, The group, directed by Vivian and Donnie May,
took four firsts , four seconds, and one third in com·
petitions with teams from across the state. Pictured
with the trophies they won are left to right, front.
Jackie Scart&gt;ery, Amber Fisher, and Erica Haning;
and 'back. Vivian May, Aorence Wood, Brenda Tut·
tie, Carol Scarberry, Mary Brewer and Donnie May. ·
Sheena Morris was also In the competition. In addi·
tlon to competing, the group attended workshop
duriAg their three day' stay.
·

Graduates from Marshall

.'

' t.,.l"" •
·~ ~ . &gt;

Sports Festival set

1

To appear in Whois Who ·

•••

·

When it comes to close-up
: photography, most photographers
: think about using a macro lens.
Certainly, macro lenses are great
for dose-up photographs of small
subjects. But they are not the only
option . Wide-angle lenses and
screw-on close-up lenses can be
used. too.
Here is a quick look at the dif. ferences between these lenses, as
well a.; some other possibilities:
• Macro lens. A macro lens (50
: mm, 60 mm or 100 mm) lets·you
: get life-size images of small sub: jeers on fUm (un like so-called
: "macro zoom lenses" that offer
: only a close focu si ng point).
Macro lenses, howeve r, have a
: shallow depth-of-field, which
: means that even when you are
; shooting at a small f-stop, your
: focu s zone is very narrow. ThiS is
: great if you are photographing a
; flat subject or if you want your
; subje~t or part of your subject to
:· "pop'' out of the background.

COLLEGE NEWS

MONDAY, June 12

RACINE- Whaley family reunion Saturday, Racine
Star Mill Park . Take covered
dish, chairs an d dancing
shoes. There · will be live
music by True Coun try.
Dinner at 1 p.m .

•.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
•

CARPENTER
The
Boelk Family of Virginia
will be singing at the Mt .
Union Baptist Church Sunday at 9:45 a.m . and again .at
6:30 p.m . Th e public is
· invited .

SATURDAY, June 10

CHESH IR E Widows
Fellowship wi ll m ee t in
C h es hire Park for a pot lu c k
picnic at no on Friday. Those
attending are asked .to bring
a covered dish and their
own table service . In case
of rain, th e event wi ll take
place at the C hurch of
C hrist, Middl eport.

Tonya Hunter gave the blessi ng prior to the din. ner, attended by 11 guests and 20 members. David
. ZirkJe led the Pledge to the American Flag to
·· adjourn.
· · The next regular mee ting will be held on June 27
' at Star Mill Park.

·.

Thursday, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Education may determine future world _population
WASHINGTON (AP) It has taken
thousands of years for the population of India
to swell to 1 billion. It may take just 100 years
for India to add another billion.
How successful the Indian government is
in boosting literacy rates and sexual education
among females in the n.e xt several decades will
be critical in determinin~just how quickJy
the population there increases, the author of a
new report on world population says.
Currently, India is home to one-sixth of
the world's 6 billion people. By mid-century,
India's population could reach 1.6 billion
people, helping to swell the world population
to 9 billion, according to the report by the
Population Reference Bureau scheduled for
release Thursday.
By 2050, India could surpass China as the
country with the world's largest population ,
said Carl Haub, one of the report's authors.
The bureau is a Washington-based private,
nonprofit research group.
"At that rate, what we're talking about .is
the very real possibility of India adding 1 bil-

How successful the Indian government is in boosting literacy rata
and sexual education 4mono females
• h
l d d &lt;&gt; J''ll b
tn t e next sever'! eca es wt
e
critical in determining just how
quickly the population there
increases the author of a new report
' ld
1 ti
on wor popu a on says.
lion people in this century. That's unheard of:'
Haub said Wednesday.
Besides India, Haub says population trends
in Africa and Europe will be important in
determining how fast the world's population
grows.
The population of the African continent is
expected to rise from 800 million now to 1.8
billion in 2050, even with a high percentage
of AIDS and HIV-related cases. While Africa
now has 13 percent of the world's population, ·
it has b9 percent.of the world's HIV or AIDS
.
cases.
Europe's population is expected to decrease

from 728 million now to 658 million in 50
years. the report said. It is a decline that statisneal agenc1es for the Europ~an Umon and
Umted Nanons have also predicted because "of
declining birth rates.
The U.S. population is expected to r~e
from 275 million now to 403 million by midcentury, moderate growrh due to an ove~
positive economic forecast and continued
immigration , Haub said.
'
"But as far as global totals go, India is the
country to watch out for," he said.
India surpassed the 1 billion mark in p~pulation in May, and 114 million of them are
under age 4 - a group rhat if counted on its
own would amount to the 11th largest co~ntry in the world.
The Indian government has made slow, but
steady progress in boosting literacy across tbe
country, but educational levels vary widely by
region, said Sun ita Kishor, of the Calverton,
Md .-based research group ORC Macro,
which is conducting a family health survey in
India.

Florida. Oklahoma execute . Eniyme involved in
inmates for murden
onset of Alzheimer's found
STARKE, Fla. (AP) - A man
whose death sentence for a double murder was overturned was
executed by injection Wednesday for another slaying - the
1976 sta~bing death of fellow
prison irtmate.

Bennie Demps, 49, was executed for killing Alfred Sturgis,
who was attacked in his cell. The
dying Sturgis told a prison·guard
that Demps and another inmate
held him down while a third
inmate stabbed him.
In his final statemenr, Demps
proclaimed his innocence and
asked his lawyer for an investigation into what he said was a very
painful procedure. He said it
took almost an hour to prepare
him for execution and claimed
he was cut in the leg and groin.
"This is not an· execution, this
is murder," Demps said. "I am an
innocent man."
Gov. Jeb Bush's spokesman
said paperwork was delayed and
technicians had trouble finding a
vein for the lnjection. An official

at th~ Deparunent 'of Corrections s!id the procedure was carried out properly and Demps
"suffered no undue discomfort."
A few hours later, OkJahoma
executed one of two men convicted of killing a math teacher
in 1985.
Demps said he was being executed because he had avoided
the death penalty earlier. He was
sent to death row for killing two
people who were inspecting a
citrus grove where he had fled
with a stolen safe in 1971. His
sentence was reduced after the .
Supreme Court threw out capital punishment nationwide.
Sturgis was k.illed two months
after the high court in 1976
allowed capital punishment to
resume. Demps was convicted
and again sentenced to death.
"They are trying to execute
me in this case for that case:•
D emps said in an interview
Tuesday. "They have used me as
the poster boy of the death
penalty."

(AP) - An .enzyme suspected
of playing a key role in
Alzheimer's has finally been identified by scientists, an advance that
could give drug companies a
promising target for treating the
mind- wasting disease.
·fhe disease causes the development of deposits that are
thought to k.ill brain cells. The
deposits are crea ted when a long,
string- like protein is cut in two
~pecific places.
Scientists ~elieve a "chemical
scissors" makes one of the cuts,
calling it gamma secretase without ever actually identifying it.
But in today's issue·bfthe journal Nature, scientists at Merck
Research Laboratories in West
Point, Pa., reported that they have
found strong evidence that
gamma secretase is actually presenilin 1.
·
Presenilin ·1 has already been
linked to a rare inherited form of
Al2heimer~ that strikes people in
their 30s and 40s. The new work
suggests it also olavs a role in the

Wildfires
bum in
Southeast,
West
BITHLO, Fla. (AP) - Rain has
provided little help to firefighter;
battling wil~res throughout Florida
as lightning strikes sparked a handful
of new bla:res.
Fire crews also fought lightningcaused bla:res in Arizona and Colorado on Wednesday, while other
wildfires burned in Michigan and

Georgia.

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At least two dozen people were
·ordered to evacuate their homes
near Orlando flames fiom a 100acre fire came within 200 yardS of
. their homes Wednesday.The blaze in
the Bithio section of Orange County destroyed one fire truck, and firefighters who were trapped nearby
had to be rescued by a sheriffs helicopter.
In the northern Florida town of
'W.Udo, a 4,400-acre fire that fire~
fighters had successfully battled
apparently was restarted · by an
arsonist. It was burning in a wooded
area about two miles fiom homes.
.Duane Durgee, deputy director
of field operations for the Florida
Division of Forestry. said a tropical
depression developing in the Gulf of
M exico may affect firefighting
efforts.
"If it brought more rain than
lightning, we would be happy:' he
said. "But right now, the opposite is
happening:•
Nearly 200,000 acrel have
burned in the state since January.
In Arizona, fire crews had a
1'3,600-acre fire northeast of
Williams 75 percent contained:The
fire has been burning since lightning
hit M ay 24.
In the southern half of the state,
lighming sparked several fires in the
Coronado National Forest.
"Everything's just exp·ng:•
s
forest spokeswoman Diane II
said. "It's burning hot. It's going ·
eat up everything in its path. Everything's burning short of the rocks."

more common, noninherited
variety.
Working independently, a team
at Harvard Medical School has
also identified presenilin 1 "' the
enzyme. They will report their
findings in the July issue of the
journal Nature Cell Biology. .
Dr. Dennis Selkoe, a neu'robi ologist on the Harvard team, said
the finding still must be confirmed. But it provides drug complnies a potential target to create
drugs that block
the action of rhe
.
enzyme.
"This is not just pie-in-thesky," Selkoe said. "There is a palpable sense th at knowing what
gamma secre tase is, we should be
able to inhibit it."
The report is the latest development in Alzheimer's research.
Last year, scie ntists reported finding a vaccine that hinders development of brain deposits in mice
and th e discovery pf beta-secretase, rhe 'e nzyme that makes ihe
other cut involved in the forniation of deposits.

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�RACO honors graduates

RACINE - The Racine Area Conununity
Organization honored five Southern High School
. graduates during its regular monthly meeting
recently held at Star Mill Park.
Presiden t Kathryn Hart presented $500 scholar$hips to recipients Jamie Baker, Kyle Norris, C hris
·: Randolph , and Brandon Wolfe.
· Each student gave a profile of his school years.
Each played on the Southern High School baseball
team which won sectional and district tournament
chaO:pionships to become one of Ohio's "Sweet
16."
Baker will attend the Ohio State University. and
Norris, Randolph and Wolfe will attend Ohio University.
Amber Maynard, who was un able to attend l;he
. presentation will attend the University of Rio
Grande.
'
Funds for the sch"larships were raised by the
&lt;&gt;rganization through yard sales.
Guest Jim Freeman noted that 90 percent of the
2000 class will continue on to college or technical
school.
RACO commended the Southern High School
Cia" of 2000 for its achievements and awards of
$223,000 in scholars hips.
Since 1992, RACO has given $9,500 in scholarships.
Special guests at the dinner and presentations
included Mr. and Mrs. Rick Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
.. Gary Norris,Julie Randolph and Mr. and Mrs. Den, nis Wolfe, the recipients' parents.
In other business, Gary Norm told the organization of the need for volunteers at the Log Jam f«tival in Portland June 16-18. Groups and organiza.tions can volunteer for fund raisers.
The group decided to sponsor a drop-off collection of canned food and non-perishable items on
M ay 27-, and to sponso.r the frog jump during the
Fourth ofJuly celebratio n. Senior division prizes are
$100, $75, and $50. and junior division prizes are
$40, $25 and $10. Rental frogs will also be available.
· The group will also operate a food booth at the eel•ebratiolf.
.
The group purchased six purple and gold banners
· to be displayed at the high school during special

• ""fhursday, June 8, 2000

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SOCIETY NEWS
•

buckeye which is not native to Meigs County, 10an
grow up to 90 feet in height with a diameter of
three feet. The trunk bark is fairly smooth or broken
with large plates. The leaves consist of four to seven
leaflets, although the usual number is five leaflets,
and the fruit has a · smooth husk while the Ohio
· buckeye has a bumpy or spiny husk.
For an officaal nonun_a uon form, contact the
M eigs SWCD at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy OH
45769. The deadline for nonunauons as Sept. 1 and
district personnel and forestry judges wall assagn
points by measunng the c&gt;rcumference, vertical
height, and crown diameter of those tr~es submitted.
i
The winner will receive a $50 savings bond at the
Meigs SWCD Annual Banquet on Oct. 10.
Information about . the B1g Tree Contest and
nomination forms w1ll also be m?.luded m ~he
upcoming Meigs SWCD Newsletter, ConservatiOn
Commentary." To receive Conservation Conunentary by mail, call (740) 992-4282 to be added to the
Me1gs SWCD ma!lmg hst.

Family visits relatives
POMEROY - Jean and Norman Wood of
Pomeroy, and Kenneth Wood of Columbus recently
visited Sue and Steve BrickJes and Jeffery of Germantown, Md. Michael Brickles home of leave
tinm Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas was also home with
his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Wood also visited their son, Kenny
andYong Wood. Carrie, Cathy and Donna and their
t.wo great-grandsons, Tyler and Christian, in Columbus. Michael BrickJes also stopped there enroute to
his home in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Big Bend Cloggers

•••

REEDSVILLE
Revival,
Eden
Uni.ted
Brethren Church, Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday,
I 0 a.m . followed by carryin dinner, secon d service, 2
p .m . Comfort Touch Min istries to ·present chalk artist
Dr. Dean Watson .

THURSDAY, June 8
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 b:30 p.m. at the c hurch .
Members are to take a covered di sh and their own
tableware.

••••

RACINE
Sonshine
Circle,
Dorcas
United
Methodi st Church, 7 p. m .
Thursday at th e c hurch.

BURLINGHAM
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular Burlingham Camp, Modern
meeting, Thursday, 8 p .m. . Woodmen, potluck dinn e r,
b p.m. at th e hall Saturday.
Refreshments .
Fathers will be recogniz ed.
Friends and n eig hbor s wel TUPPERS PLAINS come:
Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 will meet on Thursday
TUPPERS PLAINS
at 7:30 p.m . at the post
home. Dinner will be served Eastern Alumni . Association
alumni banquet, Saturday.
at 6:30 p.m.
Social hour at 6 p. m .; din ner at 7 p.m. in air-conditio n ed cafetorium. at Eastern El e-mentary Sc h ool.

•••

.., events.
,

PORTLAND - Charles Jeffrey Harris, son ~f Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Hams of Portland, has been selected to appear in the 2000 edition
of" Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges."
A _2000 graduate of Bob Jones University in Greenville, S.C.,
Hams _was one of 63 stu~etns chosen from the Unive~sity's student
boy. this year on the baSJs of academic standing, campus ladership,
..~erv1ce to the community, and potential for continued success.
Hams graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in Bible. He has
. served as president and vice-presidents of the Miss.ion Prayer Band
as sergeant at arms of Phi Kappa Pi society.
Who's Who recipients are selected from students at more than
'2,300 institutions of higher learning in all 50 states, the District of
Columbia and several foreign nations.

:

FRIDAY; June 9

•••

SUNDAY, June 11 ·

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Monday, 6:30 dinner, 7 p .m
meeting. Hall lo cated at
28051 St. Rt. 7, Cheshire .
The Community Calen dar is published as a
free service to non-profit groups wishing to~
announce meetings' at('d
special' events. The catendar is not designed to
promote sales or fun4
raisers of any type. ;
Items are printed ontr
as space permits and.
can not be guaranteed to
be printed a specific'
number of days .

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLK.S.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

MIDDLEPORT - Alison R. Gerlach, daughter of Mike and Debbie Gerlach of Middleport,
graduated from Marshall University on May 6
with a bachelor of arts degree in history."
She graduated summa cum laude and with
university honors. Gerlach also completed her
time as a member of the Society ofYeager Scholars, the top academic scholarship and program at
Marshall. As a member of the Bell X-1 class,
named for General Chuck Yeag~r's sound barrierGerlach
breaking plane, she received a medallion during a
ceremony on May 5.
Gerlach was IJartied a Marshall University Oustanding
Leader/Scholar and a member of"Who's Who of American Colleges and Universities."
During her four years at Marshall, Gerlach was a member of the
ltistory honorary society Phi Alpha Thera and the political science
·honorary Phi Sigma Alpha. She \vas also inducted into Omicron
Delta Kappa, leadership honor fraternity.
·
·· . Gerlach served as both a student advpcate and justice for the
Marshall judiciary program, handling student code of conduct violations. She was also a Yeager Scholar Retreat Week Counselor and
held offices in the Model United N ations Club and PROWL (People Reaching Out with Love). Gerlach plans to attend Washington
;:-:-i~nd Lee School of the Law in the fall on an academic scholarshiip.
.;;') 'he school, in Lexington,Va., is the 20th-ranked law school in the
:..:~nation, according to U.S. News and World Report.

.

·
·
.
AWARDED SCHOLARSHIPS- Kathryn Hart, preS!·
dent of RACO , presented scholarshaps of $500
each to Southern graduates, Jamae Baker, Kyle Nor·
ns, Chns Randolph , and Brandon Wolfe, left to right.
Also rece1vang a scholarship was Amber Maynard.

:·

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Inducted into.society

POMEROY - Audra Harrison, daughter of
Marg and Richard Houdashelt was inducted into
the Chi Sigma Iota· fraternity recendy.
CSI is an organization established for students dealing, with areas concerning other students, who who have leadership provided by students.
She and her husband Robert Harrison
reside on Bailey Run Rd ., Pomeroy, and they
have a son, Wade, who attends Pomeroy ElemenHarrison
tary School.
.;: • · '
.
She is completing an internship at Tri~· : . :€ ounty M ental Health and Counseling and is currently working at
:.&lt;;; ~e Department of Human Services, Children's Services division, in

• Top Soil

• Put Molf,
• COW Manure

&lt;G ~ . bogs
(!11772.. ;oe, ·Ul)

Atten4 graduation

POMEROY - Brenda and Keith' Phalin and
Terry Wyatt recendy traveled to Cincinatti for the
graduation and celeb~tion · of their son, Rob
Wyatt, from medical school.
He has attended the Vniversity of Cincinnati the past four years. Dr. Wyatt has accepted a
residency position at Wilford Hall USAF Medical
Center on LackJand AFB, Texas. He and his wife,
the former Marcy H~f raicne, have moved to
San Antonio, Tex. Others traveling' to attend the
•
Wyatt
ceremony were Tara Wyatt, Adam Wyatt, Nelia .
: .
Seyler, Angie Bass, Betty Reed , Janet and Dennie
~· !'lill, Sonya and Tim Puckett, Bob ~nd Patty Barton, and Natalie and
&lt; ·'Matthew Demoskey.
·

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Dean's List announced

MARIETTA - Meredith Crow of Pomeroy, Tricia Davis of
r~omeroy. Michelle Bissell of Rudand, and Brian Bowen of
~footville, were named to the Dean's High Honors List for the
~-::Spring quarter at Marietta College.
.
'f.•:' To be eligible for the high honor list, students must achieve a
:~~grade point average of 3.5 or higher.
:;:.•: Additionally, Brynn Moss of Long Bottom was named to the
•:': Dean's List, having earned a grade point average of 3.0 or higher.

Card shower planned

..

Marietta announces graduates

·.;. MARIETTA - A number of local students were among the
:: ::,graduates from Marietta College during commencement cereinonies on May 7.
~:·: Local students receiving degrees were: Elizabeth Matheny,
;: : ~oolville, B.A., graphic design; Brian Bowen, Coolville, B.A., ele.:: !llentary education; Dorothy Leifheit, Pomeroy, B .S., sports me&lt;li;. : ane; and Ryan Williams, Syracuse, B.A., management and market.:~
.• • mg.

POMEROY ·- The sweet (yellow) buckeye tree
:· is the subject of this year's Meigs County Soil and
:· Water Conservation District Big,Tree Contest.
Each year, the Meigs SWCD selects a 'species for
·::the annual contest. Last year's contest was open for
:. black walnut trees. T he contest was won by Brett
Jones, Racine, who nominated a black walnut tree
· . iocared in Lebanon Township along the Ohio River
· just north of the Ritchie Bridge.
To be considered. the nominated tree must be
• located in M eigs Cou nty. An individual tree can
: only be nominated once, with only the first nomiPOMEROY - Friends are planning a card
; nation being considered.
shower for Krista! Sisson 'Bolin w ho will observe
·
People other than landowners can nominate a her 35th birthday Sunday. Krista!, who is having
: tree, however permission must first be obtained . health problems, and her three children reside with
: from the property owner.
her parents at 42040 Lovers Lane, Pomeroy.
T he sweet buckeye, while similar to the Ohio

• Screw-on close-up lenses.
Close-up filters are often promoted as "close-up lenses." It's true
rhat these accessories let you
shoot close. However, they are not
as sharp as true macro lenses. Usually, screw-on close-up lenses are
sold in sets that offer different
degrees of magnification.
• Close-up Accessories. If
you really ger into close- up photography, you may want to check
out the following accessories.
· A tripod will steady your camera and will help reduce camera
shake, which is exaggerated when
shooting with a close-·up lens (as it
is when shooting with a telephoto lens) .
A ringlight, which mounts
around a lens, can produce shadowless and ratio lighting, if you
get one with four fla sh tubes that
can be turned .on and off independently. Some ringlightsr offer
only one flash tube for shadowless
lighting.

~

ff ' ...

JACKSON - The Fourth Annual Jackson
County Sports Festival 5K Run and Walk will be
held July 4 beginning at 9 a.m. at the Manpower
Park on East Main Street in Jackson .
T he race will run through the stree ts of Jack· son and the entry fee will again be $12. All participating runners will receive Ja c kson County
Sports Festival t-shirts and all proceeds from the
event will go toward the cost of putting on the
holiday's activities.
.

Most of the dose-up pictures of
flowers you have seep were probably taken with a macro lens.
·Want even greater magnification? Extension tubes and bellows, which fit between the lens
and the camera, provide much
larger-than-life images. These
accessories are required only if
you want super close ups.
• Wide-angle lens. Wideangle lenses can be used for closeup photography, with dramatic
results. The advantage of using·
wide-angle lenses (15 mm, 17 nun
or 20 nun) is that they offer good
depth-of-field, from well in front
of to well behind the subject.
However, if you are photographing a ve.r y small subject, it will
look like a pea w hen photographed with a wide-angle lens.
If you want a close-up of a
model train with some ·of the train
setup in the background , try
shooting close with a wide-angle
lens.

.• 'Jo

:·~. ; RIO GRANDE -Three local students were inducted into the
:t~Juo Grande Honor Society. Chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta
:~-;National Honor Society for freshmen during an induction banquet
:. ;~eld rei:endy at the University of Rio Grande.
:;::··~~ Jessica Brannon, daughter of Joy and Paul Brannon of Tuppers
.:;:Plains, Radley Faulk. son of Linda and Chuck Faulk of Pomeroy,
: :; and Jessica Marcum, daughter of Connie and Mike Marcum of
.:.;·Chester, were inducted during the banquet.
::;..~· Dinner was followed by a speaker, Dr. T. Michael Rhodes, and an
'..!:tpduction ceremony. Members must have maintal'r1ed a 3.5 grade
point. average throughout their freslunan year to. be. eligible for
induction.'
1'1.....,..
..

MIDDLEPORT Free
concert by Big Bend C ommunity B and, Stewart-Benn ett M emori al Park, Mill
St .. sponsored by Middleport Communi ty Association, Riverbend Arts Council and Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Am erica n Legion.
Coney dogs and other
refreshment s to b e sold by
Legion Auxiliary.

There will be expanded awards ihis year with
plaques to go to each of the top three male and
female fini shers and nieclals to the top three finishers not winning plaqpes in each age division
for both male and female.
No preregistration is required and registration
may be made the day of the race. There will be a
one-mile fun walk starting immediately following
the SK Run and those participating in the walk
and wishing to receive a t-s hirt may co so for a
cost ofSlO. The event is sponsored by the J ackson
Area Chamber of Commerce .

.Big Tree contest underway

Students honored at banquet

·~... , l

~·

TROPHY WINNERS - The Big Bend Cloggers of
Pomeroy won nine trophies in competition at the
Long's Family Retreat at Lathaum over the week·
end, The group, directed by Vivian and Donnie May,
took four firsts , four seconds, and one third in com·
petitions with teams from across the state. Pictured
with the trophies they won are left to right, front.
Jackie Scart&gt;ery, Amber Fisher, and Erica Haning;
and 'back. Vivian May, Aorence Wood, Brenda Tut·
tie, Carol Scarberry, Mary Brewer and Donnie May. ·
Sheena Morris was also In the competition. In addi·
tlon to competing, the group attended workshop
duriAg their three day' stay.
·

Graduates from Marshall

.'

' t.,.l"" •
·~ ~ . &gt;

Sports Festival set

1

To appear in Whois Who ·

•••

·

When it comes to close-up
: photography, most photographers
: think about using a macro lens.
Certainly, macro lenses are great
for dose-up photographs of small
subjects. But they are not the only
option . Wide-angle lenses and
screw-on close-up lenses can be
used. too.
Here is a quick look at the dif. ferences between these lenses, as
well a.; some other possibilities:
• Macro lens. A macro lens (50
: mm, 60 mm or 100 mm) lets·you
: get life-size images of small sub: jeers on fUm (un like so-called
: "macro zoom lenses" that offer
: only a close focu si ng point).
Macro lenses, howeve r, have a
: shallow depth-of-field, which
: means that even when you are
; shooting at a small f-stop, your
: focu s zone is very narrow. ThiS is
: great if you are photographing a
; flat subject or if you want your
; subje~t or part of your subject to
:· "pop'' out of the background.

COLLEGE NEWS

MONDAY, June 12

RACINE- Whaley family reunion Saturday, Racine
Star Mill Park . Take covered
dish, chairs an d dancing
shoes. There · will be live
music by True Coun try.
Dinner at 1 p.m .

•.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
•

CARPENTER
The
Boelk Family of Virginia
will be singing at the Mt .
Union Baptist Church Sunday at 9:45 a.m . and again .at
6:30 p.m . Th e public is
· invited .

SATURDAY, June 10

CHESH IR E Widows
Fellowship wi ll m ee t in
C h es hire Park for a pot lu c k
picnic at no on Friday. Those
attending are asked .to bring
a covered dish and their
own table service . In case
of rain, th e event wi ll take
place at the C hurch of
C hrist, Middl eport.

Tonya Hunter gave the blessi ng prior to the din. ner, attended by 11 guests and 20 members. David
. ZirkJe led the Pledge to the American Flag to
·· adjourn.
· · The next regular mee ting will be held on June 27
' at Star Mill Park.

·.

Thursday, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

..

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Education may determine future world _population
WASHINGTON (AP) It has taken
thousands of years for the population of India
to swell to 1 billion. It may take just 100 years
for India to add another billion.
How successful the Indian government is
in boosting literacy rates and sexual education
among females in the n.e xt several decades will
be critical in determinin~just how quickJy
the population there increases, the author of a
new report on world population says.
Currently, India is home to one-sixth of
the world's 6 billion people. By mid-century,
India's population could reach 1.6 billion
people, helping to swell the world population
to 9 billion, according to the report by the
Population Reference Bureau scheduled for
release Thursday.
By 2050, India could surpass China as the
country with the world's largest population ,
said Carl Haub, one of the report's authors.
The bureau is a Washington-based private,
nonprofit research group.
"At that rate, what we're talking about .is
the very real possibility of India adding 1 bil-

How successful the Indian government is in boosting literacy rata
and sexual education 4mono females
• h
l d d &lt;&gt; J''ll b
tn t e next sever'! eca es wt
e
critical in determining just how
quickly the population there
increases the author of a new report
' ld
1 ti
on wor popu a on says.
lion people in this century. That's unheard of:'
Haub said Wednesday.
Besides India, Haub says population trends
in Africa and Europe will be important in
determining how fast the world's population
grows.
The population of the African continent is
expected to rise from 800 million now to 1.8
billion in 2050, even with a high percentage
of AIDS and HIV-related cases. While Africa
now has 13 percent of the world's population, ·
it has b9 percent.of the world's HIV or AIDS
.
cases.
Europe's population is expected to decrease

from 728 million now to 658 million in 50
years. the report said. It is a decline that statisneal agenc1es for the Europ~an Umon and
Umted Nanons have also predicted because "of
declining birth rates.
The U.S. population is expected to r~e
from 275 million now to 403 million by midcentury, moderate growrh due to an ove~
positive economic forecast and continued
immigration , Haub said.
'
"But as far as global totals go, India is the
country to watch out for," he said.
India surpassed the 1 billion mark in p~pulation in May, and 114 million of them are
under age 4 - a group rhat if counted on its
own would amount to the 11th largest co~ntry in the world.
The Indian government has made slow, but
steady progress in boosting literacy across tbe
country, but educational levels vary widely by
region, said Sun ita Kishor, of the Calverton,
Md .-based research group ORC Macro,
which is conducting a family health survey in
India.

Florida. Oklahoma execute . Eniyme involved in
inmates for murden
onset of Alzheimer's found
STARKE, Fla. (AP) - A man
whose death sentence for a double murder was overturned was
executed by injection Wednesday for another slaying - the
1976 sta~bing death of fellow
prison irtmate.

Bennie Demps, 49, was executed for killing Alfred Sturgis,
who was attacked in his cell. The
dying Sturgis told a prison·guard
that Demps and another inmate
held him down while a third
inmate stabbed him.
In his final statemenr, Demps
proclaimed his innocence and
asked his lawyer for an investigation into what he said was a very
painful procedure. He said it
took almost an hour to prepare
him for execution and claimed
he was cut in the leg and groin.
"This is not an· execution, this
is murder," Demps said. "I am an
innocent man."
Gov. Jeb Bush's spokesman
said paperwork was delayed and
technicians had trouble finding a
vein for the lnjection. An official

at th~ Deparunent 'of Corrections s!id the procedure was carried out properly and Demps
"suffered no undue discomfort."
A few hours later, OkJahoma
executed one of two men convicted of killing a math teacher
in 1985.
Demps said he was being executed because he had avoided
the death penalty earlier. He was
sent to death row for killing two
people who were inspecting a
citrus grove where he had fled
with a stolen safe in 1971. His
sentence was reduced after the .
Supreme Court threw out capital punishment nationwide.
Sturgis was k.illed two months
after the high court in 1976
allowed capital punishment to
resume. Demps was convicted
and again sentenced to death.
"They are trying to execute
me in this case for that case:•
D emps said in an interview
Tuesday. "They have used me as
the poster boy of the death
penalty."

(AP) - An .enzyme suspected
of playing a key role in
Alzheimer's has finally been identified by scientists, an advance that
could give drug companies a
promising target for treating the
mind- wasting disease.
·fhe disease causes the development of deposits that are
thought to k.ill brain cells. The
deposits are crea ted when a long,
string- like protein is cut in two
~pecific places.
Scientists ~elieve a "chemical
scissors" makes one of the cuts,
calling it gamma secretase without ever actually identifying it.
But in today's issue·bfthe journal Nature, scientists at Merck
Research Laboratories in West
Point, Pa., reported that they have
found strong evidence that
gamma secretase is actually presenilin 1.
·
Presenilin ·1 has already been
linked to a rare inherited form of
Al2heimer~ that strikes people in
their 30s and 40s. The new work
suggests it also olavs a role in the

Wildfires
bum in
Southeast,
West
BITHLO, Fla. (AP) - Rain has
provided little help to firefighter;
battling wil~res throughout Florida
as lightning strikes sparked a handful
of new bla:res.
Fire crews also fought lightningcaused bla:res in Arizona and Colorado on Wednesday, while other
wildfires burned in Michigan and

Georgia.

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At least two dozen people were
·ordered to evacuate their homes
near Orlando flames fiom a 100acre fire came within 200 yardS of
. their homes Wednesday.The blaze in
the Bithio section of Orange County destroyed one fire truck, and firefighters who were trapped nearby
had to be rescued by a sheriffs helicopter.
In the northern Florida town of
'W.Udo, a 4,400-acre fire that fire~
fighters had successfully battled
apparently was restarted · by an
arsonist. It was burning in a wooded
area about two miles fiom homes.
.Duane Durgee, deputy director
of field operations for the Florida
Division of Forestry. said a tropical
depression developing in the Gulf of
M exico may affect firefighting
efforts.
"If it brought more rain than
lightning, we would be happy:' he
said. "But right now, the opposite is
happening:•
Nearly 200,000 acrel have
burned in the state since January.
In Arizona, fire crews had a
1'3,600-acre fire northeast of
Williams 75 percent contained:The
fire has been burning since lightning
hit M ay 24.
In the southern half of the state,
lighming sparked several fires in the
Coronado National Forest.
"Everything's just exp·ng:•
s
forest spokeswoman Diane II
said. "It's burning hot. It's going ·
eat up everything in its path. Everything's burning short of the rocks."

more common, noninherited
variety.
Working independently, a team
at Harvard Medical School has
also identified presenilin 1 "' the
enzyme. They will report their
findings in the July issue of the
journal Nature Cell Biology. .
Dr. Dennis Selkoe, a neu'robi ologist on the Harvard team, said
the finding still must be confirmed. But it provides drug complnies a potential target to create
drugs that block
the action of rhe
.
enzyme.
"This is not just pie-in-thesky," Selkoe said. "There is a palpable sense th at knowing what
gamma secre tase is, we should be
able to inhibit it."
The report is the latest development in Alzheimer's research.
Last year, scie ntists reported finding a vaccine that hinders development of brain deposits in mice
and th e discovery pf beta-secretase, rhe 'e nzyme that makes ihe
other cut involved in the forniation of deposits.

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�~A 8 • The O.lly

,•

Sentinel

·i
•et wllll pollee
BOULDER, Cqlo. (AP) - John and
Patsy Ramsey are willing to meet with
police to discuss the December 1996 slaying of their daughter JonBenet, according
to a letter from their lawyer to Police
~hief Mark Beckner.
Beckner received the letter Tuesday. The
couple's Atlanta attorney, Lin Wood, said
W~dnesday that Beckner had requested
the Ramseys' cooperation and the letter
was "consistent with that spirit."
' l-ie would not elaborate.
Wood said last month he would not
allow police to interrogate the Ramseys in
separate interviews or let the couple be
treated as suspects.
. : Police have said the Ramseys remain
!"'der ouspicion in the s1:r2ngulation and
beating death of their 6-year-old daughter,
whose body was found in the basement of
their Boulder home. The Ramseys now
live in Adailta.
Beckner declined to discuss the contents of the letter. He said he plans to reply
this week but would not comment on his
response.

school hurled her baby into the Passaic
Police we interviewed the Ramseys in
June 1998. The couple did not testify
River after she couldn't find a baby sitter,
police said.
before a grand jury, which ended its 13The body of the 16.rnonth-old boy was
month investigation wt fall without reconunending charges.
found Wednesday about 2-1/2 miles
Police and prosecutors decided to
downstream from where his mother said
request a new set of interviews in a cwoshe threw him in, said Boris Moczula, Pas· day meeting in May with FBI forensic lab
saic County's first assistant prosecutor,
experts.
·
The mother, whose name has not been
Patsy Ramsey was Miss West Virginia
released because she is a juvenile, was
1977 and is a native of Parkersburg, WVa.
arraigned Tuesday on charges of juvenile
delinquency. Authorities have not decided
whether to charge the teen as an adult.
Police said that after throwing the baby
into the water, she visited. her boyfriend
for several hours before returning home. It
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Missouri
was unclear whether she told anyone what
company is recalling 60 pounds of sliced
she had done with the child.
ham that may be contaminated with bacThe young mother drove to St. Joseph's
teria that can cause life-threatening infecHospital and Medical Center Sunday
tions.
night to seek treatment and while there
Schnuck Markets of O'fallon, Mo.,
revealed what had happened to her child,
ordered the recall after routine testing
said William Purdy, anoth.er county prosefound Listeria monocytogenes, the Agricutor.
culture Department's food Safety and
Authorities said the baby's father was no
Inspection Service said Wednesday. No .illlonger dating the mother, but was still
nesses have been reported.
involved in his son's life and cared for the
The recalled product, "Hickory Pit
child several times a week while the baby's
PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -A 17-year- mother went to night school.
Smoked Ham with Natural Juices;· comes
in 8:-ounce packages with a sell-by date of old mother who was attending night
The girl's attorney, Anthony Fusco, said

Sliced ham
recall Issued

"06/1 0/00" on the label. Labels inside the
USDA inspection seal say "EST. 13562:'
The ham was produced May 31 and
distributed to retail stores in St. louis and
Columbia, Mo., and Evaruiville,lnd.
listeria can cause fever, severe
headaches, stiffness, nausea and diarrhea.
Healthy people recover quickly, but listeria
can cause serious, sometimes fatal, infections in children, the elderly and people
with weak immune systems, and is especially dange~us for pregnant women. It
can cause misfarriages and stillbirths even
if the mother experiences no symptoms.
The food safety service urges consumers who have purchased the ham to
avoid eating it and return ir to where it was
purchased. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a doctor. ·
Consumers with questions can phone
the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry
Hotline at 1-800-535-4555 from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. EDT Monday through friday.

Mother charged in
· baby's death

.

there is no case ag:Unst her.
. ,
"All they have is a statement that proba-bly isn't admissible, and I'm not so sure that
'
it
she gave a statement .Lu ...t s even true(
Fusco said.
•

OJ. to take

in b1ggest breakup since AT&amp;T

HIGHLIGHTS

•

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
federal judge today ordered
Microsoft Corp. split into two
companies, declaring the software giant "has proved untrustworthy" as he forced the biggest
corporate breakup since AT&amp;T.
Potentially monumental, the
ruling by U.S. ·District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson was
not the last word in a case that
could define the limits of companies operating in a high-tech
economy.
Microsoft has promised an
appeal in the case, which had
been pressed by the Justice
Department and 19 states. The
case could go to the U.S. Court
of Appeals or directly to the
Supreme Court.
"This is the beginning of a
new chapter ' in this case;' · said
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates.
He called the ruling inconsistent
with past court decisiolis and
with the realities of the marketplace.
order
gives
Jackson's
Microsoft four months to devise
a plan for breaking up the company - the time period suggested by the government but the company indicated that
it will ask for a stay.
Until the breakup plan is
implemented, the judge ordered
Microsoft to prestrve the company's structure as it currently
exists, and continue to maintain
all current Microsoft products.
This keeps Microsoft from
changing the company in an
attempt to make the breakup
more difficult.
· · At a news conference, Gates
said the company would continue to build new software during
the appeals process.
Shares of Microsoft finished
regular trading on the Nasdaq
Stock Market up 87.5 cents to
$70.50. In after-hours 1:1'2dirtg,.
shares of Microsoft slipped
higher to $71.188.
Jackson.• who concluded two
months ago that Microsoft had
violated antitrust law, CJrdered
the company to be split into
the5e parts:
- One that would own and
market the Windows operating
system, the ·source of the company's monopoly position.
- A second that would handle all other Microsoft software,
'such as its "Word" program and
Internet browser.
The Justice Department and
17 of the 19 states recommended that the company be broken
into the two pieces.
Attorney General Janet Reno
said the ruling will have a profound impact "not only by promoting competition in the software industry but by reaffirming
the importance of antitrust laws
i!l the software era."
, Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer of New York called the
decision a " pretty scathing
~ssault on Microsoft."
· "Judge Jackson is a cautious
judge," h,e said. "for a cautious
judge to reach this decision, it
says a great · deal about the
¥icrosoft's record of , recent.

"exclusive dealing" that would
restrict the development of
competitors' products.
Microsoft a)so can no longer
control what icons are on the
screen when a user buys a computer. This means tha.t consumers buying a computer fiom
a distributor such as Dell or
Gateway c;ould see a desktop
that looks nothing like the Windows desktop they're accustomed to. The computer manufacturer would have complete
control over the desktop, even .
though the Microsoft Windows
operating system would still run
underneath.
"Microsoft, as it is presently
organized and led, is unwilling
to accept the notion that it
broke the law or accede to an
order amending its conduct;'
Jackson, explaining why he
believed the breakup was necessary.
"Microsoft
has
proved
untrustworthy in the past;' Jackson said, citing its . fail11re to
comply with a court ruling earlier in the 1990s that preceded
the antitrust case.
The judge had ruled April 3
that Microsoft had violated federal antitrust law by using illegal
methods to protect a monopoly
in computer opera~ng systems.
He found the company tried
illegally to expand its aominance into the market for Internet browsen.
Federal antitrust law allows
for cases of broad public importance to go directly to the
Supreme Court, but the justices
do not have to accept the fasttrack system. If Microsoft
appeals directly to 'the Supreme
Court, it can send the appeal to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia, where
it would be handled like virtually all other appeals from U.S.
District Court rulings.
The only previous time the
appellate court was bypassed in
an antitrust lawsuit was the last
case of this magnitude: the
AT&amp;T breakup.
Microsoft ~ontended in a
May 31 court filing that a
breakup would have "significant
and damaging" consequences.
The corporation sought a year
to submit its own breakup plan,
compared with the four months
sought by the government.
As Microsoft was filing the
final legal papers before Jackson's ruling, Gates appear~d ·
Tuesday ar a congressional hearing on 1he !ilture of high technology in the United Statennd
around the world.
In its filing, Microsoft, disdainful of the department's
response to the company's earlier concerns, asked Jackson to
include previously suggested ·
language that would. give a broken-up Microsoft more freedom
to enter into agreements with
software developers and com. purer makers.
"lnste~d of agruing to correct the many defects ilf the
revised proposed final judgment, and thereby minimize the
years." ·
damage that its entry would
Jackson'&lt; ruling forbid&lt; the inflict nn a wide range of panicipant~ in the computer indu~try,
c o111p~ny fr&lt;&gt;lll entering info

•

•

•

Fossils suggest life began in deep-sea hot spring
•

(AP) Researchers have
found what they believe are
fossils 3.2 billion years old,
suggesting that life o n Earth
originated in volcano-heated
ocean depths where sunlight
never entered. ·
"The cradle oflife may have
· been a sulfurous, subterranean
inferno, not unlike a medieval
vision of hell," said Birger
Rasmussen, a paleobiologist at
the University ofWestern Australia who reported the find in
today's issue of the journal
Nature.
The formations, believed to
be single-celled organisms,
were found in Australian rock
and are 600 milli'on years
younger than the earliest
chemical evidence of life on
Earth. But the find pushes
back by some 2. 7 billion years
the fossil evidence of microbes
living around hot springs at
the bottow of the sea.
The torrnations' appear to be
threadlike organisms, measur"
ing a thousandth of a millimeter in diameter and a tenth of
a millimeter long. They would
have gotten their energy . from
chemicals like sulfur, rather
than sunlight, Rasmussen s.a id.
. "Deep beneath the ocean,
hot springs would have been
attractive habitats for primitive
microbes, protected from the
effects of early planetary bombardments, and bathed in a
rich brew of metals and nutrients," Rasmussen said. uSuch
environments could have prpvided a safe setting for life
hundreds of millions of years
before Earth's surface was habitable."
The findings do not settle
the debate about how life

Hope released

from hospital
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
(AP) -A week after he was hospitalized for intestinal bleeding, a fiail
but smiling Bob Hope stood and
~ to cameras Wednesday and
then was sent home.
The 97 -year-old entertainer's
appearance outside Eisenhower
Medical Center had been planned,
but not his discharge. .
Hope decided Wednesday that as
long as he was up and dressed that
he would go home, and his doctor
ag=d, hospital spokeswoman Lea
Goodsell said.
Hope's hand shook and he leaned
on a rail for suppon, but he
attempted a grin. His wife, Dolores,
and Dr. Gary, Annunziata stood
close by as he waved.
Hope didn't say anything as he
left the hospital, but hospital officials
had reported earlier that he was eating well and flirting with his nurse.
"If he knew how old his nurse
was (26-year-old Cheree Combs)
he'd say he has golf balls older than
she is. She's been wonderful;' his
wife joked.
Hope was taken to Eisenhower
Regional Medical Center in critical.
condition with gastrointestinal
bleeding-on J'llae I.B'I·Tuesday. he
was out of bed~ous to go
home.
·

said. "After careful examinl'~
tion, I came to the conclusio'h
that the filaments had to b't
biological."
'
Knoll agreed. The filaments
are regular in size, and in
alignment.
little rainfall.
Besides adding to the pic"After looking at hundreds ture of early life on earth, the
of slides, I noticed some fossils point the way for sci!inunusual structures that con- tists looking for life elsewhere
tained a dense assemblage of in the solar system, Rasmussen
intertwined filaments," he and Knoll said.

The formations appear to be threadlike organisms,
measuring a thousandth of a millimeter in diameter
and a tenth of a millimeter long. They would have .
gotten their energy from chemicals like sNlfur, rather
than sunlight, Rasmussen said.
started on Earth. The microbes
could have migrated from
somewhere else.
But Rasmussen makes a
compelling case that volcanic
rocks out of reach of sunlight
and bathed in boiling water
may well have been the place
it all began, said Andrew
Knoll, a professor of paleobiology at Harvard University.
· "That medieval vision · of
hell is very much the current
theory of biology," Knoll.
Charles Darwin theorized
that life may have started in a
little pond warmed by sunlight. In the 1950s, scientists
demonstrated that a bolt of
lightning through a mixture of
gases thought · to simulate
Earth's early atmosphere produced amino acids, a building
block of life.
· lately, however, biologists
looking for the cradle of life
have concentrated on places
where hot water circulates
through the Earth's crust.
Rasmussen said he stumbled
on the fossils while examining
rock cores, consisting mostly
of quartz and fool's gold, that
had been drilled hundreds of
·yards below the surface. He
was trying to figure out how
much oxygen was in the early
atmosphere.
The spot is known as the
Sulfur Springs deposit, situated
in the Pilbara region of western Australia. Once an ancient
seabed, the region now is
rugged, rocky and hot, with

••Let•s Play Ba11••

Southem
honors
~pring
teams
.
.

RACINE - ' The Southern ' District, while Lyons and LawHigh
School baseball and soft- son were second team All-Disaub
ball teams re cently held their tric;t selections.
spring awards picnic.
Kati ' Cummins was voted
Th e event was sponsored by honorable mention All -District.
· MASON - The Big Bend
the Southern athletic departIhle, Lyons and Lawson were
Football Club Coyotes 'Will open
ment and Southern Athletic AU -District All- Star selections .
their semi-pro football season on
Boosters.
lhl e earned Academic All·' Saturday, June 10, at the Wahama
Southern difector of athletics Ohio and Acade1nic All-TVC
, High School field.
Jay Rees prese /u ed h.ead baseball honors.
, The game against the Ohio
Emily Stivers and Macyn
coach Mi ck Winebrenner with
'Cardinals (Cleveland) will kick
two awards, recognizing Wine- Ervin were also A cademi~ All ,off at 7:30 p.m.
brenner's 200th coathing victo- TVC award recipients.
Cununins and Heather Dailey
ry.
One
,;as
a
letter
of
commenwere
the recipient of this sea:·Meip Co.
dation from Southern Local son's Coach's Award.
. at
School Distr_\ct superintendent
Lyons earned the Hustle
. Jim Lawr~nce on behalf of the Award and led the team with 45
SOUTHSIDE Winners
board of education and the RBI.
were crowned in four classes Sat·entire district.
lhle had the top batting averurday, June 3 at Kanawha Valley
Reserve softball coach Jeremy age (.476) .
Dragway.
Hill handed out the first awards
fallon Roush received the
·.In the Pro Class, Mike Rowe
of the evening.
.
most improved player award.
I'·
(!89 Trans Am) of Beaver, won
He present-ed plaques to team
Tammy Fryar was recognized
with a 5.07 dial-in time, running
members Kacy Ervin, Sarah as the Tornadoes' top defensive
a 5.088 ET at 1~5 .89 mph.
Ball, Brigettfl Barnes , Rachel player.
Jesse Smith of Cottageville,
C hapman, Br~ndi Lane, Carolyn
Freshmen Rachel Chapman
WVa., finished second with his
Bentz, Rachel Marshall, Lindsey and Rachel Barnes earned varsi'83. S-1 0. He dialed-in a 6.22 and
Smith, Stacey· Mills, Stephanie ty letters..
ran 6.216 at 106.9 mph. •
Wilson and Jeri Hill.
Other team members for the
Reserve baseball coach Ryan 2000 season included Kacy
· In the .Modified Class, Johnny
Adkins ('7 4 Duster) of Pomeroy,
Lemley presented awards to Ervin and Stacey Mills.
~on with a 8.30 dial-in time,
members of his ballclub, which
Winebrenner then honored
tullning a 8.314 ET. at · 84.78
finished with .an B-2 record.
members of the sectional and
mph.
.
Team me'!llbers receiving district champion Tornado base· Bill Murphy of Sandyville,
awards included Brice Hill, Matt ball team.
W.Va., finished second with his
Ash, J.P. Harmon, Aaron
Winebrenner presented senior
'74 Mustang. He dialed-in a 7.62
Ohlinger,Josh Baker, Nate Mar- trophies to Josh Davis, Kyle
and ran a 7.653 at 89.64 mph.
tin, Dally Hi~. Brandon Pierce, Norris, Chris Rando[ph, Jamie ·
·Matt
Shain, ~ussell Krider, Tyler Baker, Adam Cumings,J.B. Boso
• In the Pure Street c;:;Iass, CherLittle, Joey ll(!anuel,Justin Allen, and Brandon Wolfe.
Srrawther ('69 Nova) of WinCurt Crouiih, Tommy The1ss
field won with a 11.30 dial-in,
Cumings and Baker earned
and Curtis Neigler.
ru~ning a 11.376 ET at 62.32
, first team All"TVC honors.
Varsity softball coach Scott Davis· was a second team .All1J1ph'.
Wolfe
reco~ized his ballclub,
Marc french of Middleport,
,
District selection. '
which finished 8-12 this season.
finished second with his '71
Cumings and Bal&lt;er were Allcap~ke. He dialed-in a 9.75. and
· The Tornado softball team District All-Stars.
ran a 9.831 at 70.64 mph.
·
finished t$itd in the TVC
Members oLthe district run, Emilly, in the'.!junior Dragster
. l;l,pcking !;:&gt;.,j.~&amp;.ion.
' ' ner,u n team that lost 6-~ to 'state
11\ I ~ I
' I
:clasS\' 'Gliarley Betts II of Hunt- •
•Wolf'e • ~Jf~nted·' senior tro:J · runnerup Berlin-Hiland i!lclud:ington, W.Va., took first with a
phies to Stacy lyons, Kim lhl e, ed Josh Davis, Kyle Norris,
Heather D~ijey, Sarah Brauer C hris Randolph, Jatnie Baker,
.8.()4 dial-in, running a 8.052 at
;78.70 mph.
and Laraine ~awson.
Adam Cumings,J.B. Boso, Brani Second went to Chrissy Miller
lhle and ~yons received their don Wolfe, Brice Hill, Brandon
.of Middleport. She ran \0.915
awards for h'i!lg 'voted first team Hill, Matt Ash, Matt Shain, Matt
'(against a 10.90 dial-in) at 56.76
AII-TVC.
Warner, Chad Hubbard and J.P.
:mph.
!hie was voted first team All- Harmon.

•11Benc1 Football
opens suson Saturday

drivers excel
Klnwha Valley

~

....

..... .._.... .'...
'

· ~If

L

; L£YB Atl

cy

3rd flnnaal
Moantainnr Plant
Class~~ Baseball

&gt;

· Toarnarnent
Starting Wednesday, July
Wahama High School

AWARD WINNERS - Southern honored the 2000 softball team at its recent awards picl)ic. In the top ·
photo, from left to right, Kati Cummins; Stacy Lyons, Kim lhle, Heather Dailey, Fallon Roush and Tammy
Fryar. In the lower photo, Southern seniors are shown with their senior plaques. ~ront row, left to right,
Stacy Lyons, Kim !hie and Heather Dailey. Back row, left to right, Josh Davis, Kyle Norris, Chris RandOlph,
Jamie Baker, Adam Cumings and Brandon Wolfe. Not pictured: J.B. Boso, Sarah Brauer and Laraine Lawson. (Scott Wolfe photos)

•

Ages 13 &amp; 14
Entry Fee $40.00 &amp; 2 Baseballs
"T-Shirts to the Champions
&amp; Runner Ups"
For more information contact
Tim Howard.304-882-3201 or
Lou Thompson 304-882-2247

Hysell, Hanison lead
Rlversldeleape
MASON, W.Va. - Bob Hysell
:of Syracuse, and Dale Harrison of
;Pomeroy, are tied for first place in
'the Riverside Senior Men 's
iLeague. Both have totalled Bt. 5
·
.points.
: Ed Wilson of Point Pleasant, has
!sole possession of third place wit4
:76 points.
· The first league play in June
saw 49 players battling for a possible 13 points.Ten foursomes and
three trios competed on a day
better suited (or Mar'ch than June.
,Players ,.,challenged windy, chilly, ,
; drizZly coriditioi)S.
: 1Wb tearhs lied for first place at
61l (~tor on the day. The foursome of Dale' Harrison, Don
·. fields, Jim Proffit~ and Elmer
:click finished at a dead heat with
Jack Maloney, Dennis Moore and
:Bill Hannum.
: "Closest to the Pin" honors
!went to Charlie Yeager on num :ber seven and Ronda! Browning
1
on fourteen.
: The .4 9 players on Tuesday
:raised the season average to 44.3
·players per week With the addi:tion of two new players, 77 play~
· ers have competed in the 2000
·~~ague season.
: : :rile leading players to date are:
···.'(tie) Bob Hysell and Dale Har::i'is'on - 81.5; 3. Ed Wilson- 76;
:4-.•Dewey Smith ~ 73; 5. Eler:m~n· Knapp 69; 6. Claude
·P.roffitt- 66; 7. Ralph Sayre ii:4; 8. Cuzz Laudermilt - 63.5;
IJ:~ (tie) Don Wilson aild Elmer
"Click - . 62. 11. Mike Bragg ~a-'f.S; 12. Keith Woods - 60.5;
J.:l. Bill Hannum - 60; 14. Peat
:Carnahan - 59.5; 15. (tie) Gary
·M.oore and Dana Wineb.r enner
....:... 58.5; 17.Jerry Arnold - 58;
·113: Andy Anderson - 57 .5; 19.
'Dvn Kay- 57; 20. Shorty Lambert 56.5. 21. (tie) Chet
'fhpJ;IlaS and Bill Winebrenner -.
'S&lt;f; 23. (tie) Earl Johnson and Jtm
Wikoff- 52.5.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Cente
Urgent Care is ROW CMlilable for those unexpected
aliments that occur aftll' hours.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Cclre .HcMrs
Moftdarlrldcay 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends 4 Holidays 1:00 pen to 9:00 pen

Urgent Core Center
88 East Memor.ial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH
992-0060
I

HolZer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

•

I•

•'..

LOS ANGELES (AP) - O.J. Simpson
will take a lie detector test if someone pu
up a $3 million reward to catch. his exwife's killer, defense attorney E Lee Bail&amp;Y
announced on CNN's "Larry King Livo~·
Wednesday night.
.
· ~
If Simpson passes the test, the rewa.if
money would be put in a trust fund ana
paid out for information about the crim~.
If he fails, the letter of credit pledging t1it
money will be dissolved, Bailey said.
: .
The results will be made public eith~r
way.
• •
"It'll be publicly seen, win, lose or dra~·
said the famed defense attorney, who reltresented Simpson at his trial.
.
:
"O.j:s not trying to make OJ. rich. H~s
trying to get enough money out there ~
smoke someone out," Bailey told Ki~
from West Palm Beach, fla.
:

Page Bl
thursday, Ju~:~e 8, 1000

. THuRsDAY'S
.

'

lie.detector test

Point on semi-pro football, Page B2
'MLB:Tribe wins, Page B2
;Ll?cal diamond notes, Page B2
:Daily Scoreboard, Page BB

•
•

••

Jud~e orders Microsoft split

The Daily Sentinel

P~lcyn's

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF
RalliS INS may

Inside:

Thuraday, June 8, .2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,

''

wHite Sox take the broom to the Reds, 4-3
.,

CINCINNATI (AP) - As he sat on
the bench wat~hing him team get swept,
manager JackMcK,eon saw something so
very familiar.
He saw a li eup that blended youth and
veterans and came up with a winning
chernistry. He 'saw a balanced and versatile
offense, a pitching staff that finds ways to
get the big ouss.
In short, he saw a team that reminded
him a lot of hi~ Cincinnati Reds of 1999,
who surprise everyone 'by winning 96
games. That's the ultimate -compliment he
could give the .~hicago White Sox, .
· Han~ Thon-ii's' pirych two-run · ho'me\;.
set up ·:i. 6-4 vi ry Wednesday that completed Chicago's , three-game sweep and

left the Reds in admiration.
"They're playing the exact same way
that we played last year," said McKeon, last
year's NL manager of the year. "They've
got some young guys that they're juggling
around and they're getting good pitch.

mg.

..

It's a little early to concl ude that the
White Sox are the Reds of 1999, but
they've already demonstrated that they're
not the White Sox of. 1999.
They cori1pleted a 7- 2 road trip through
Seattle, Houston and Cincinnati that left
them with the AL's best record at 35-23.
They're 12 games over .500 for the first
time since September 1996 and they're
winning games in all sorts of ways.

In the series opener, their pitching held
on. for a 4-3 win. The offense never let up
in a 17-12 victory Tuesday night. The !text
afternoon, Ken Griffey Jr. hit a three-run
homer to put the Reds ahead, but Thomas
countered with the first. pinch homer of
his career to turn it around.
"There's just a difference between this
team and th e teams of the past," said Jeff
Abbott, who doubled twice and drove in
three runs. "This one knows how to come
back and win, where the teams of the past
.
might have folded."
S.o far, the AL's most surprising team is
showing no inclination to fold.
"I think everybody was asking questions
about the White Sox, like they were about

us last year," Reds first baseman Sean
Casey said. "But they're for real. They're
definitely a team to be reckoned with."
The Reds are wondering if the same
can be said about them .They went 5-7 on
its longest homestand of the season, falling
1 1/2 games behind St. Louis after briefly
taking over first place.
They're no worse off than last seaso n,
when they had an identical mark and were
five games out. It was at this time a year
ago that they came together and made
their .move.
After the White Sox piled up 27 runs on
37 hits in the series, the Reds were asking
the same question about themselves that

PluH He Reds, Pap 88

•·

Pomeroy's Smith
at Jackson

Shaq shines,_...
Reggie .fold$'in Game 1
~~

.

LOS ANGEI;,ES (AP)
Shaquille O'Neit'tl was extremely
goo.d. ·c Reggie ft Miller was
extremely bad. · ,1,
Not much c:Jiit mattered in
Game .1 of the N ~A finals.
O'Neal's ' 43 points and 19
rebounds led t!J Los Angeles
Lakers to a 104-87 victory over
the Indian a Pacers on Wednesday·
night. The Laker.' MVP cenrer
brought the Pac~f.' worst fears
about this series to life, 'shrugging off Ind iana's defense to
dominate the paint as only Shaq
can.
.. 1
"We've basicall " got to go
back to the drawing board and
figure out what to do with· that
phenomenon, No ... .J4," indiana
forward Jalen Rose said .
Meanwhile, Mill , was 1-for16 from the field t the worst

p
SHAQ SANDWICH - Shaqullle O'Neal holds off Mark Jackson (left)
and Rik Smits of Indiana during Gam·e 1 of the NBA Finals. (AP)

playoff game of a career built on
dramati c postseason performances. The Pacers' star guard
missed shots long, short and
sideways on his way to seven
points, a career playoff low.

"He didn't really have any~
thing going on, and that made it
kind of easy for us;' lakers for~
ward Glen Rice said. "I don't
know if he's ever shot that badly

PI••• ' " uken. Pap 88

JACKSON Pomeroy's
Roy Rqush placed third after
Todd Smith captured the late beginning in 11th place. Scott
model title at Jackson County Harper placed fourth aqd Tom
Speed,vay. Smith also won his Livingstone was fifth.
.
heat race and the dash event. .
John Powell of Albany, took
Smith started on the pole in first place in the street stock
the feature event and led every division, taking over with three
lap on the quarter-mile clay laps remaining in the feature
oval, with Glouster's Mitch event. Jamie Adams, Gary Park,
. Brunton and Ralph Withem of Paul McDaniel and Mike Vittoe
Athens close behind.
compjeted the top fivt;.
Brunton rook second place,
Rod Stamper won the 4while Withem was third. Ryan cylinder division after early
Cline of Parkersburg, W.Va. , and leader Earl Reeves was cauDon C lark ofWellston, rounded tioned for a spin and relegated
out the top five.
to the rear. of the field for the
Brandon Smith finished in restart.
sixth place after beginning .in
Reeves placed fourth behind
12th position.
Billy Cruse and Bruch Gray Jr.
Greg Thompson of Ironton Butch Mulholland was fifth.
took the AMRA modified racJackson County Speedway
ing flag. He took over on lap hosts races each Saturday, with
No. 14 in the A-Main, leaving gates open at 5 p.tn. each week.
behind early leader Bradley For more .information, call 286White, who finished second.'
6151..

�~A 8 • The O.lly

,•

Sentinel

·i
•et wllll pollee
BOULDER, Cqlo. (AP) - John and
Patsy Ramsey are willing to meet with
police to discuss the December 1996 slaying of their daughter JonBenet, according
to a letter from their lawyer to Police
~hief Mark Beckner.
Beckner received the letter Tuesday. The
couple's Atlanta attorney, Lin Wood, said
W~dnesday that Beckner had requested
the Ramseys' cooperation and the letter
was "consistent with that spirit."
' l-ie would not elaborate.
Wood said last month he would not
allow police to interrogate the Ramseys in
separate interviews or let the couple be
treated as suspects.
. : Police have said the Ramseys remain
!"'der ouspicion in the s1:r2ngulation and
beating death of their 6-year-old daughter,
whose body was found in the basement of
their Boulder home. The Ramseys now
live in Adailta.
Beckner declined to discuss the contents of the letter. He said he plans to reply
this week but would not comment on his
response.

school hurled her baby into the Passaic
Police we interviewed the Ramseys in
June 1998. The couple did not testify
River after she couldn't find a baby sitter,
police said.
before a grand jury, which ended its 13The body of the 16.rnonth-old boy was
month investigation wt fall without reconunending charges.
found Wednesday about 2-1/2 miles
Police and prosecutors decided to
downstream from where his mother said
request a new set of interviews in a cwoshe threw him in, said Boris Moczula, Pas· day meeting in May with FBI forensic lab
saic County's first assistant prosecutor,
experts.
·
The mother, whose name has not been
Patsy Ramsey was Miss West Virginia
released because she is a juvenile, was
1977 and is a native of Parkersburg, WVa.
arraigned Tuesday on charges of juvenile
delinquency. Authorities have not decided
whether to charge the teen as an adult.
Police said that after throwing the baby
into the water, she visited. her boyfriend
for several hours before returning home. It
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Missouri
was unclear whether she told anyone what
company is recalling 60 pounds of sliced
she had done with the child.
ham that may be contaminated with bacThe young mother drove to St. Joseph's
teria that can cause life-threatening infecHospital and Medical Center Sunday
tions.
night to seek treatment and while there
Schnuck Markets of O'fallon, Mo.,
revealed what had happened to her child,
ordered the recall after routine testing
said William Purdy, anoth.er county prosefound Listeria monocytogenes, the Agricutor.
culture Department's food Safety and
Authorities said the baby's father was no
Inspection Service said Wednesday. No .illlonger dating the mother, but was still
nesses have been reported.
involved in his son's life and cared for the
The recalled product, "Hickory Pit
child several times a week while the baby's
PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -A 17-year- mother went to night school.
Smoked Ham with Natural Juices;· comes
in 8:-ounce packages with a sell-by date of old mother who was attending night
The girl's attorney, Anthony Fusco, said

Sliced ham
recall Issued

"06/1 0/00" on the label. Labels inside the
USDA inspection seal say "EST. 13562:'
The ham was produced May 31 and
distributed to retail stores in St. louis and
Columbia, Mo., and Evaruiville,lnd.
listeria can cause fever, severe
headaches, stiffness, nausea and diarrhea.
Healthy people recover quickly, but listeria
can cause serious, sometimes fatal, infections in children, the elderly and people
with weak immune systems, and is especially dange~us for pregnant women. It
can cause misfarriages and stillbirths even
if the mother experiences no symptoms.
The food safety service urges consumers who have purchased the ham to
avoid eating it and return ir to where it was
purchased. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a doctor. ·
Consumers with questions can phone
the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry
Hotline at 1-800-535-4555 from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. EDT Monday through friday.

Mother charged in
· baby's death

.

there is no case ag:Unst her.
. ,
"All they have is a statement that proba-bly isn't admissible, and I'm not so sure that
'
it
she gave a statement .Lu ...t s even true(
Fusco said.
•

OJ. to take

in b1ggest breakup since AT&amp;T

HIGHLIGHTS

•

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
federal judge today ordered
Microsoft Corp. split into two
companies, declaring the software giant "has proved untrustworthy" as he forced the biggest
corporate breakup since AT&amp;T.
Potentially monumental, the
ruling by U.S. ·District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson was
not the last word in a case that
could define the limits of companies operating in a high-tech
economy.
Microsoft has promised an
appeal in the case, which had
been pressed by the Justice
Department and 19 states. The
case could go to the U.S. Court
of Appeals or directly to the
Supreme Court.
"This is the beginning of a
new chapter ' in this case;' · said
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates.
He called the ruling inconsistent
with past court decisiolis and
with the realities of the marketplace.
order
gives
Jackson's
Microsoft four months to devise
a plan for breaking up the company - the time period suggested by the government but the company indicated that
it will ask for a stay.
Until the breakup plan is
implemented, the judge ordered
Microsoft to prestrve the company's structure as it currently
exists, and continue to maintain
all current Microsoft products.
This keeps Microsoft from
changing the company in an
attempt to make the breakup
more difficult.
· · At a news conference, Gates
said the company would continue to build new software during
the appeals process.
Shares of Microsoft finished
regular trading on the Nasdaq
Stock Market up 87.5 cents to
$70.50. In after-hours 1:1'2dirtg,.
shares of Microsoft slipped
higher to $71.188.
Jackson.• who concluded two
months ago that Microsoft had
violated antitrust law, CJrdered
the company to be split into
the5e parts:
- One that would own and
market the Windows operating
system, the ·source of the company's monopoly position.
- A second that would handle all other Microsoft software,
'such as its "Word" program and
Internet browser.
The Justice Department and
17 of the 19 states recommended that the company be broken
into the two pieces.
Attorney General Janet Reno
said the ruling will have a profound impact "not only by promoting competition in the software industry but by reaffirming
the importance of antitrust laws
i!l the software era."
, Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer of New York called the
decision a " pretty scathing
~ssault on Microsoft."
· "Judge Jackson is a cautious
judge," h,e said. "for a cautious
judge to reach this decision, it
says a great · deal about the
¥icrosoft's record of , recent.

"exclusive dealing" that would
restrict the development of
competitors' products.
Microsoft a)so can no longer
control what icons are on the
screen when a user buys a computer. This means tha.t consumers buying a computer fiom
a distributor such as Dell or
Gateway c;ould see a desktop
that looks nothing like the Windows desktop they're accustomed to. The computer manufacturer would have complete
control over the desktop, even .
though the Microsoft Windows
operating system would still run
underneath.
"Microsoft, as it is presently
organized and led, is unwilling
to accept the notion that it
broke the law or accede to an
order amending its conduct;'
Jackson, explaining why he
believed the breakup was necessary.
"Microsoft
has
proved
untrustworthy in the past;' Jackson said, citing its . fail11re to
comply with a court ruling earlier in the 1990s that preceded
the antitrust case.
The judge had ruled April 3
that Microsoft had violated federal antitrust law by using illegal
methods to protect a monopoly
in computer opera~ng systems.
He found the company tried
illegally to expand its aominance into the market for Internet browsen.
Federal antitrust law allows
for cases of broad public importance to go directly to the
Supreme Court, but the justices
do not have to accept the fasttrack system. If Microsoft
appeals directly to 'the Supreme
Court, it can send the appeal to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia, where
it would be handled like virtually all other appeals from U.S.
District Court rulings.
The only previous time the
appellate court was bypassed in
an antitrust lawsuit was the last
case of this magnitude: the
AT&amp;T breakup.
Microsoft ~ontended in a
May 31 court filing that a
breakup would have "significant
and damaging" consequences.
The corporation sought a year
to submit its own breakup plan,
compared with the four months
sought by the government.
As Microsoft was filing the
final legal papers before Jackson's ruling, Gates appear~d ·
Tuesday ar a congressional hearing on 1he !ilture of high technology in the United Statennd
around the world.
In its filing, Microsoft, disdainful of the department's
response to the company's earlier concerns, asked Jackson to
include previously suggested ·
language that would. give a broken-up Microsoft more freedom
to enter into agreements with
software developers and com. purer makers.
"lnste~d of agruing to correct the many defects ilf the
revised proposed final judgment, and thereby minimize the
years." ·
damage that its entry would
Jackson'&lt; ruling forbid&lt; the inflict nn a wide range of panicipant~ in the computer indu~try,
c o111p~ny fr&lt;&gt;lll entering info

•

•

•

Fossils suggest life began in deep-sea hot spring
•

(AP) Researchers have
found what they believe are
fossils 3.2 billion years old,
suggesting that life o n Earth
originated in volcano-heated
ocean depths where sunlight
never entered. ·
"The cradle oflife may have
· been a sulfurous, subterranean
inferno, not unlike a medieval
vision of hell," said Birger
Rasmussen, a paleobiologist at
the University ofWestern Australia who reported the find in
today's issue of the journal
Nature.
The formations, believed to
be single-celled organisms,
were found in Australian rock
and are 600 milli'on years
younger than the earliest
chemical evidence of life on
Earth. But the find pushes
back by some 2. 7 billion years
the fossil evidence of microbes
living around hot springs at
the bottow of the sea.
The torrnations' appear to be
threadlike organisms, measur"
ing a thousandth of a millimeter in diameter and a tenth of
a millimeter long. They would
have gotten their energy . from
chemicals like sulfur, rather
than sunlight, Rasmussen s.a id.
. "Deep beneath the ocean,
hot springs would have been
attractive habitats for primitive
microbes, protected from the
effects of early planetary bombardments, and bathed in a
rich brew of metals and nutrients," Rasmussen said. uSuch
environments could have prpvided a safe setting for life
hundreds of millions of years
before Earth's surface was habitable."
The findings do not settle
the debate about how life

Hope released

from hospital
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
(AP) -A week after he was hospitalized for intestinal bleeding, a fiail
but smiling Bob Hope stood and
~ to cameras Wednesday and
then was sent home.
The 97 -year-old entertainer's
appearance outside Eisenhower
Medical Center had been planned,
but not his discharge. .
Hope decided Wednesday that as
long as he was up and dressed that
he would go home, and his doctor
ag=d, hospital spokeswoman Lea
Goodsell said.
Hope's hand shook and he leaned
on a rail for suppon, but he
attempted a grin. His wife, Dolores,
and Dr. Gary, Annunziata stood
close by as he waved.
Hope didn't say anything as he
left the hospital, but hospital officials
had reported earlier that he was eating well and flirting with his nurse.
"If he knew how old his nurse
was (26-year-old Cheree Combs)
he'd say he has golf balls older than
she is. She's been wonderful;' his
wife joked.
Hope was taken to Eisenhower
Regional Medical Center in critical.
condition with gastrointestinal
bleeding-on J'llae I.B'I·Tuesday. he
was out of bed~ous to go
home.
·

said. "After careful examinl'~
tion, I came to the conclusio'h
that the filaments had to b't
biological."
'
Knoll agreed. The filaments
are regular in size, and in
alignment.
little rainfall.
Besides adding to the pic"After looking at hundreds ture of early life on earth, the
of slides, I noticed some fossils point the way for sci!inunusual structures that con- tists looking for life elsewhere
tained a dense assemblage of in the solar system, Rasmussen
intertwined filaments," he and Knoll said.

The formations appear to be threadlike organisms,
measuring a thousandth of a millimeter in diameter
and a tenth of a millimeter long. They would have .
gotten their energy from chemicals like sNlfur, rather
than sunlight, Rasmussen said.
started on Earth. The microbes
could have migrated from
somewhere else.
But Rasmussen makes a
compelling case that volcanic
rocks out of reach of sunlight
and bathed in boiling water
may well have been the place
it all began, said Andrew
Knoll, a professor of paleobiology at Harvard University.
· "That medieval vision · of
hell is very much the current
theory of biology," Knoll.
Charles Darwin theorized
that life may have started in a
little pond warmed by sunlight. In the 1950s, scientists
demonstrated that a bolt of
lightning through a mixture of
gases thought · to simulate
Earth's early atmosphere produced amino acids, a building
block of life.
· lately, however, biologists
looking for the cradle of life
have concentrated on places
where hot water circulates
through the Earth's crust.
Rasmussen said he stumbled
on the fossils while examining
rock cores, consisting mostly
of quartz and fool's gold, that
had been drilled hundreds of
·yards below the surface. He
was trying to figure out how
much oxygen was in the early
atmosphere.
The spot is known as the
Sulfur Springs deposit, situated
in the Pilbara region of western Australia. Once an ancient
seabed, the region now is
rugged, rocky and hot, with

••Let•s Play Ba11••

Southem
honors
~pring
teams
.
.

RACINE - ' The Southern ' District, while Lyons and LawHigh
School baseball and soft- son were second team All-Disaub
ball teams re cently held their tric;t selections.
spring awards picnic.
Kati ' Cummins was voted
Th e event was sponsored by honorable mention All -District.
· MASON - The Big Bend
the Southern athletic departIhle, Lyons and Lawson were
Football Club Coyotes 'Will open
ment and Southern Athletic AU -District All- Star selections .
their semi-pro football season on
Boosters.
lhl e earned Academic All·' Saturday, June 10, at the Wahama
Southern difector of athletics Ohio and Acade1nic All-TVC
, High School field.
Jay Rees prese /u ed h.ead baseball honors.
, The game against the Ohio
Emily Stivers and Macyn
coach Mi ck Winebrenner with
'Cardinals (Cleveland) will kick
two awards, recognizing Wine- Ervin were also A cademi~ All ,off at 7:30 p.m.
brenner's 200th coathing victo- TVC award recipients.
Cununins and Heather Dailey
ry.
One
,;as
a
letter
of
commenwere
the recipient of this sea:·Meip Co.
dation from Southern Local son's Coach's Award.
. at
School Distr_\ct superintendent
Lyons earned the Hustle
. Jim Lawr~nce on behalf of the Award and led the team with 45
SOUTHSIDE Winners
board of education and the RBI.
were crowned in four classes Sat·entire district.
lhle had the top batting averurday, June 3 at Kanawha Valley
Reserve softball coach Jeremy age (.476) .
Dragway.
Hill handed out the first awards
fallon Roush received the
·.In the Pro Class, Mike Rowe
of the evening.
.
most improved player award.
I'·
(!89 Trans Am) of Beaver, won
He present-ed plaques to team
Tammy Fryar was recognized
with a 5.07 dial-in time, running
members Kacy Ervin, Sarah as the Tornadoes' top defensive
a 5.088 ET at 1~5 .89 mph.
Ball, Brigettfl Barnes , Rachel player.
Jesse Smith of Cottageville,
C hapman, Br~ndi Lane, Carolyn
Freshmen Rachel Chapman
WVa., finished second with his
Bentz, Rachel Marshall, Lindsey and Rachel Barnes earned varsi'83. S-1 0. He dialed-in a 6.22 and
Smith, Stacey· Mills, Stephanie ty letters..
ran 6.216 at 106.9 mph. •
Wilson and Jeri Hill.
Other team members for the
Reserve baseball coach Ryan 2000 season included Kacy
· In the .Modified Class, Johnny
Adkins ('7 4 Duster) of Pomeroy,
Lemley presented awards to Ervin and Stacey Mills.
~on with a 8.30 dial-in time,
members of his ballclub, which
Winebrenner then honored
tullning a 8.314 ET. at · 84.78
finished with .an B-2 record.
members of the sectional and
mph.
.
Team me'!llbers receiving district champion Tornado base· Bill Murphy of Sandyville,
awards included Brice Hill, Matt ball team.
W.Va., finished second with his
Ash, J.P. Harmon, Aaron
Winebrenner presented senior
'74 Mustang. He dialed-in a 7.62
Ohlinger,Josh Baker, Nate Mar- trophies to Josh Davis, Kyle
and ran a 7.653 at 89.64 mph.
tin, Dally Hi~. Brandon Pierce, Norris, Chris Rando[ph, Jamie ·
·Matt
Shain, ~ussell Krider, Tyler Baker, Adam Cumings,J.B. Boso
• In the Pure Street c;:;Iass, CherLittle, Joey ll(!anuel,Justin Allen, and Brandon Wolfe.
Srrawther ('69 Nova) of WinCurt Crouiih, Tommy The1ss
field won with a 11.30 dial-in,
Cumings and Baker earned
and Curtis Neigler.
ru~ning a 11.376 ET at 62.32
, first team All"TVC honors.
Varsity softball coach Scott Davis· was a second team .All1J1ph'.
Wolfe
reco~ized his ballclub,
Marc french of Middleport,
,
District selection. '
which finished 8-12 this season.
finished second with his '71
Cumings and Bal&lt;er were Allcap~ke. He dialed-in a 9.75. and
· The Tornado softball team District All-Stars.
ran a 9.831 at 70.64 mph.
·
finished t$itd in the TVC
Members oLthe district run, Emilly, in the'.!junior Dragster
. l;l,pcking !;:&gt;.,j.~&amp;.ion.
' ' ner,u n team that lost 6-~ to 'state
11\ I ~ I
' I
:clasS\' 'Gliarley Betts II of Hunt- •
•Wolf'e • ~Jf~nted·' senior tro:J · runnerup Berlin-Hiland i!lclud:ington, W.Va., took first with a
phies to Stacy lyons, Kim lhl e, ed Josh Davis, Kyle Norris,
Heather D~ijey, Sarah Brauer C hris Randolph, Jatnie Baker,
.8.()4 dial-in, running a 8.052 at
;78.70 mph.
and Laraine ~awson.
Adam Cumings,J.B. Boso, Brani Second went to Chrissy Miller
lhle and ~yons received their don Wolfe, Brice Hill, Brandon
.of Middleport. She ran \0.915
awards for h'i!lg 'voted first team Hill, Matt Ash, Matt Shain, Matt
'(against a 10.90 dial-in) at 56.76
AII-TVC.
Warner, Chad Hubbard and J.P.
:mph.
!hie was voted first team All- Harmon.

•11Benc1 Football
opens suson Saturday

drivers excel
Klnwha Valley

~

....

..... .._.... .'...
'

· ~If

L

; L£YB Atl

cy

3rd flnnaal
Moantainnr Plant
Class~~ Baseball

&gt;

· Toarnarnent
Starting Wednesday, July
Wahama High School

AWARD WINNERS - Southern honored the 2000 softball team at its recent awards picl)ic. In the top ·
photo, from left to right, Kati Cummins; Stacy Lyons, Kim lhle, Heather Dailey, Fallon Roush and Tammy
Fryar. In the lower photo, Southern seniors are shown with their senior plaques. ~ront row, left to right,
Stacy Lyons, Kim !hie and Heather Dailey. Back row, left to right, Josh Davis, Kyle Norris, Chris RandOlph,
Jamie Baker, Adam Cumings and Brandon Wolfe. Not pictured: J.B. Boso, Sarah Brauer and Laraine Lawson. (Scott Wolfe photos)

•

Ages 13 &amp; 14
Entry Fee $40.00 &amp; 2 Baseballs
"T-Shirts to the Champions
&amp; Runner Ups"
For more information contact
Tim Howard.304-882-3201 or
Lou Thompson 304-882-2247

Hysell, Hanison lead
Rlversldeleape
MASON, W.Va. - Bob Hysell
:of Syracuse, and Dale Harrison of
;Pomeroy, are tied for first place in
'the Riverside Senior Men 's
iLeague. Both have totalled Bt. 5
·
.points.
: Ed Wilson of Point Pleasant, has
!sole possession of third place wit4
:76 points.
· The first league play in June
saw 49 players battling for a possible 13 points.Ten foursomes and
three trios competed on a day
better suited (or Mar'ch than June.
,Players ,.,challenged windy, chilly, ,
; drizZly coriditioi)S.
: 1Wb tearhs lied for first place at
61l (~tor on the day. The foursome of Dale' Harrison, Don
·. fields, Jim Proffit~ and Elmer
:click finished at a dead heat with
Jack Maloney, Dennis Moore and
:Bill Hannum.
: "Closest to the Pin" honors
!went to Charlie Yeager on num :ber seven and Ronda! Browning
1
on fourteen.
: The .4 9 players on Tuesday
:raised the season average to 44.3
·players per week With the addi:tion of two new players, 77 play~
· ers have competed in the 2000
·~~ague season.
: : :rile leading players to date are:
···.'(tie) Bob Hysell and Dale Har::i'is'on - 81.5; 3. Ed Wilson- 76;
:4-.•Dewey Smith ~ 73; 5. Eler:m~n· Knapp 69; 6. Claude
·P.roffitt- 66; 7. Ralph Sayre ii:4; 8. Cuzz Laudermilt - 63.5;
IJ:~ (tie) Don Wilson aild Elmer
"Click - . 62. 11. Mike Bragg ~a-'f.S; 12. Keith Woods - 60.5;
J.:l. Bill Hannum - 60; 14. Peat
:Carnahan - 59.5; 15. (tie) Gary
·M.oore and Dana Wineb.r enner
....:... 58.5; 17.Jerry Arnold - 58;
·113: Andy Anderson - 57 .5; 19.
'Dvn Kay- 57; 20. Shorty Lambert 56.5. 21. (tie) Chet
'fhpJ;IlaS and Bill Winebrenner -.
'S&lt;f; 23. (tie) Earl Johnson and Jtm
Wikoff- 52.5.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
rgent Care Cente
Urgent Care is ROW CMlilable for those unexpected
aliments that occur aftll' hours.

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Urgent Cclre .HcMrs
Moftdarlrldcay 1 :00 pm to 9:00 pm
Weekends 4 Holidays 1:00 pen to 9:00 pen

Urgent Core Center
88 East Memor.ial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH
992-0060
I

HolZer Clinic ••••.Keeping the Promise!

•

I•

•'..

LOS ANGELES (AP) - O.J. Simpson
will take a lie detector test if someone pu
up a $3 million reward to catch. his exwife's killer, defense attorney E Lee Bail&amp;Y
announced on CNN's "Larry King Livo~·
Wednesday night.
.
· ~
If Simpson passes the test, the rewa.if
money would be put in a trust fund ana
paid out for information about the crim~.
If he fails, the letter of credit pledging t1it
money will be dissolved, Bailey said.
: .
The results will be made public eith~r
way.
• •
"It'll be publicly seen, win, lose or dra~·
said the famed defense attorney, who reltresented Simpson at his trial.
.
:
"O.j:s not trying to make OJ. rich. H~s
trying to get enough money out there ~
smoke someone out," Bailey told Ki~
from West Palm Beach, fla.
:

Page Bl
thursday, Ju~:~e 8, 1000

. THuRsDAY'S
.

'

lie.detector test

Point on semi-pro football, Page B2
'MLB:Tribe wins, Page B2
;Ll?cal diamond notes, Page B2
:Daily Scoreboard, Page BB

•
•

••

Jud~e orders Microsoft split

The Daily Sentinel

P~lcyn's

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF
RalliS INS may

Inside:

Thuraday, June 8, .2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,

''

wHite Sox take the broom to the Reds, 4-3
.,

CINCINNATI (AP) - As he sat on
the bench wat~hing him team get swept,
manager JackMcK,eon saw something so
very familiar.
He saw a li eup that blended youth and
veterans and came up with a winning
chernistry. He 'saw a balanced and versatile
offense, a pitching staff that finds ways to
get the big ouss.
In short, he saw a team that reminded
him a lot of hi~ Cincinnati Reds of 1999,
who surprise everyone 'by winning 96
games. That's the ultimate -compliment he
could give the .~hicago White Sox, .
· Han~ Thon-ii's' pirych two-run · ho'me\;.
set up ·:i. 6-4 vi ry Wednesday that completed Chicago's , three-game sweep and

left the Reds in admiration.
"They're playing the exact same way
that we played last year," said McKeon, last
year's NL manager of the year. "They've
got some young guys that they're juggling
around and they're getting good pitch.

mg.

..

It's a little early to concl ude that the
White Sox are the Reds of 1999, but
they've already demonstrated that they're
not the White Sox of. 1999.
They cori1pleted a 7- 2 road trip through
Seattle, Houston and Cincinnati that left
them with the AL's best record at 35-23.
They're 12 games over .500 for the first
time since September 1996 and they're
winning games in all sorts of ways.

In the series opener, their pitching held
on. for a 4-3 win. The offense never let up
in a 17-12 victory Tuesday night. The !text
afternoon, Ken Griffey Jr. hit a three-run
homer to put the Reds ahead, but Thomas
countered with the first. pinch homer of
his career to turn it around.
"There's just a difference between this
team and th e teams of the past," said Jeff
Abbott, who doubled twice and drove in
three runs. "This one knows how to come
back and win, where the teams of the past
.
might have folded."
S.o far, the AL's most surprising team is
showing no inclination to fold.
"I think everybody was asking questions
about the White Sox, like they were about

us last year," Reds first baseman Sean
Casey said. "But they're for real. They're
definitely a team to be reckoned with."
The Reds are wondering if the same
can be said about them .They went 5-7 on
its longest homestand of the season, falling
1 1/2 games behind St. Louis after briefly
taking over first place.
They're no worse off than last seaso n,
when they had an identical mark and were
five games out. It was at this time a year
ago that they came together and made
their .move.
After the White Sox piled up 27 runs on
37 hits in the series, the Reds were asking
the same question about themselves that

PluH He Reds, Pap 88

•·

Pomeroy's Smith
at Jackson

Shaq shines,_...
Reggie .fold$'in Game 1
~~

.

LOS ANGEI;,ES (AP)
Shaquille O'Neit'tl was extremely
goo.d. ·c Reggie ft Miller was
extremely bad. · ,1,
Not much c:Jiit mattered in
Game .1 of the N ~A finals.
O'Neal's ' 43 points and 19
rebounds led t!J Los Angeles
Lakers to a 104-87 victory over
the Indian a Pacers on Wednesday·
night. The Laker.' MVP cenrer
brought the Pac~f.' worst fears
about this series to life, 'shrugging off Ind iana's defense to
dominate the paint as only Shaq
can.
.. 1
"We've basicall " got to go
back to the drawing board and
figure out what to do with· that
phenomenon, No ... .J4," indiana
forward Jalen Rose said .
Meanwhile, Mill , was 1-for16 from the field t the worst

p
SHAQ SANDWICH - Shaqullle O'Neal holds off Mark Jackson (left)
and Rik Smits of Indiana during Gam·e 1 of the NBA Finals. (AP)

playoff game of a career built on
dramati c postseason performances. The Pacers' star guard
missed shots long, short and
sideways on his way to seven
points, a career playoff low.

"He didn't really have any~
thing going on, and that made it
kind of easy for us;' lakers for~
ward Glen Rice said. "I don't
know if he's ever shot that badly

PI••• ' " uken. Pap 88

JACKSON Pomeroy's
Roy Rqush placed third after
Todd Smith captured the late beginning in 11th place. Scott
model title at Jackson County Harper placed fourth aqd Tom
Speed,vay. Smith also won his Livingstone was fifth.
.
heat race and the dash event. .
John Powell of Albany, took
Smith started on the pole in first place in the street stock
the feature event and led every division, taking over with three
lap on the quarter-mile clay laps remaining in the feature
oval, with Glouster's Mitch event. Jamie Adams, Gary Park,
. Brunton and Ralph Withem of Paul McDaniel and Mike Vittoe
Athens close behind.
compjeted the top fivt;.
Brunton rook second place,
Rod Stamper won the 4while Withem was third. Ryan cylinder division after early
Cline of Parkersburg, W.Va. , and leader Earl Reeves was cauDon C lark ofWellston, rounded tioned for a spin and relegated
out the top five.
to the rear. of the field for the
Brandon Smith finished in restart.
sixth place after beginning .in
Reeves placed fourth behind
12th position.
Billy Cruse and Bruch Gray Jr.
Greg Thompson of Ironton Butch Mulholland was fifth.
took the AMRA modified racJackson County Speedway
ing flag. He took over on lap hosts races each Saturday, with
No. 14 in the A-Main, leaving gates open at 5 p.tn. each week.
behind early leader Bradley For more .information, call 286White, who finished second.'
6151..

�•

Thuraday, June 8, 2000
P~ge

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 8, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

No play or pay tn the semi-pro ranks, baby!
"How much does that pay?"
That's a question frequently asked of
. men who play semi-pro football. If
: they're like the vast majority of players
: on the over 400 sc~Jli-pro teams across
America, they don't get paid.
. They do it because they love to play
· football.
The same can be said for the twenty, some men who are members of the Big
: Bend Coyotes Football Club, who play
' their opening game of the 2000 season
on Saturday, June 10, at 7 p.m. on the
' Wahama High School Field.
They will open up against the Ohio
Cardinals, from South Euclid (a suburb
of Cleveland).
Like the men from the Coyotes, the
' Cardinals do it for love of the game.
, Many people seem ro think that semi: pro players get monetary compensation

for their efforts. To the outsider, the risk
of injury and the work involved in competing are too great to play for free.
You have to remember that some people are as passionate about football as
some people are about baseball and basketball or golf.
The most irritating thing you can say
to a dedicated semi-pro player is, "I
POLCYN 'S POINT
would play if they paid me.''
After a long absence, semi-pro football
returned to the area in 1999 with the ' Big Bend stems from the name of the
Middleport Yellowjackets. That team dis- geographic region of northern Mason
banded after one difficult year and the and Meigs counties.
Big Bend club was started by severn!
"We wanted a regional name so that
players who weren't willing to let foot- nobody .was excluded because of the
ball die off in the region.
name," said Chris Kaufmann, a four-year
The new team features collective man- semi-pro veteran.
agement and a regional name that had
Semi-pro · (although it is more accubeen used by an amateur team in the rarely described ,by the American Foot1970s (the Big Bend Warriors).
ball Association as 'senior amateur') was a

Dan

Polcyn

INTER'LEAGUE BASEBALL
'

When Jamie Brewington last
. won in the major leagues, the
· Arizona Diamondbacks and
· Tampa Bay Devil Rays didn't
· exist, and interleague play was still
a proposal.
"It's been · a long haul and a
tough one, but it was great to get
: back on the ·board;' Brewington
said after Cleveland won 9-5 at
: M1lwaukee on Wednesday night
- his first victory since Sept. 28,
1995.
Brewington (1-0) relieved Paul
Rigdon with the bases loaded in
the first and the score 4-all, then
pitched 2 2-3 hitless innings as
Cleveland extended its winning
streak to five. He was with six
minor league teams since going
6-4 with the Giants in 1995, and
did not pitch the entire 1998 season because of shoulder sur~ry.
Richie Sexson and Russell
Branyan each homered for Cleveland, which completed a threegame sweep.
1\vins 2, Astros 0
Jay Canizaro hit a two-run
homer in the seventh off Shane
Reynolds (5-3), and Joe Mays (37) combined with three relievers
on a six-hitter for the first shutout
at Enron Field. It was the lowestscoring game among. the 31
games played in the ballpark,
which opened this year. Houston
was blanked for the first time in
86 games, the longest active streak
without a shutout in the major
leagues.
Car~als 4, Royals 2
Darryl Kile (9-3) scattered
seven hits and struck out 10
against visiting Kansas Ciry.
•. Miguel Batista (2-5) allowed four
runs - two earned - in five
innings against a lineup missing

three injured regulars: Mark
McGwire (thigh) , Fernando Vina
(hamstring) and Ray Lankford
(hamstring).
Blue Jays 12, Braves 8
Carlos Delgado hit a grand
slam and two-run homer for a
career-high six RBis at Turner
Field, and Kevin Millwood (4-5)
gave up a· career-high nine runs.
Darwin Cu billan (1-0) got his
first major league win despite
allowing three runs in 2 1-3
innings.
.Athletics 10, Padres 4
Jason Giambi, homerless in 50
at-bats since May 21, hit a grand
slam off Matt Clement (5~5), and
a two-run shot as Oakland completed a three-game sweep ofthe
visiting Padres. Giambi's third
slam of the year tied the team
record. Scott Service (1-0)
pitched two.scoreless innings.
Podgers 11, ~ngen 6
·Mark Grudzielanek had three
hits, and Darren Dreifort (4-3)
allowed four runs and nine hits in
seven innings to win for tlje first
time in five starts
Yankees 7, Expos 2
Orlando Hernandez (6-4) ·
allowed four hits in eight innings
·and visiting New York stole a season-high five bases. Bernie
Williams went 2-for-5, including
a two-run single in the fifth off
Carl Pavano (6-3) that put New
York ahead 4-2.
Phillies S, Devil Rays 4
lton Gant hit a tiebreaking
homer off Mark Guthrie (1-1) in
the seventh, just the 55th into t~e
left-field upper deck at Philadel. phia. Chris Brock: (1-4) won his
first game with the Phillies.
Pirates 4, Tigers 3
Luis Sojo (4-for-31) and Kevin
Young (4-for-30) shook off

slumps with home runs against
visiting Detroit to back Todd
Ritchie (4-3). Brian Williams got
his ninth save, retiring Brad Ausmus on a bases-loaded grounder
to end it. Hideo N omo (2-5) lost
for the fourth time in five decisions.
Marlins 6, Red Sox 2
Cliff Floyd homered against
visiting Boston for the third
straight game, connecting for a
thtee-run drive in the third off
Brian Rose (3-3) . Vic Darensbourg (2-0) relieved Brad Penny
following a 2-hour, IS-minute
rain delay and allowed one run
and three hits in four innings.
Angels 10, Giants 9
Darin Erstad hit a pair of tworun homers and singled in the
go-ahead run in the eighth off
Alan Embree (0-2). Visiting San
Francisco rallied from a 9-4
deficit when Jeff Kent and
Armando Rios hit two-run
homers in the seventh off AI
Levine, and J. T. Snow's second
RBI single tied it against Shigetoshi Hasegawa (5- 1) in the
eighth.
Rockies 6, Mariners 1
Tom Goodwin went 4-for-5
with a career-high four steals, and
visiting Colorado swiped seven in
all. Rolando Arrojo (4-4) combined with Gabe White on a fivehitter to beat Jamie Moyer (3•2).
Mets 11, Orioles 3
Edgardo Alfonzo homered in
the first off Scott Erickson (2-3)
at Shea Stadium, then tripled. Pat
Mahomes (2-1) won in relief of
starter Rick Reed.
Cubs 9, Diamondbacks 4
Sammy Sosa and Eric Young hit
solo homers at Wrigley Field to
back Scott Downs (3-1) and send
Arizona to its fifth straight loss.

BY Sc:orr WoiSE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

before being called up as a varsity
starter.

' I
Matt Ash pitched
two reserve
RACINE - Despite a rain
saves,
striking
out
22
batters in
shortened season, the Southern
Tornado reserve baseball team just nine and two-thirds innings
posted a great overall record of9- of work.
2 under coach Ryan Lemley.
Those were in addition to his
varsity
pitching victory at Miller.
Southern defeated Alexander
Ash also batted .350 with a home
8-0,Belpre 11- 1,Waterford 10-4,
Wellston 4-2, Nelsonville-York run and team leading 15 RBI.

........... Wl'tle:

..,.

NAICAIITIIII-k

a...,..., N.C. 21014

•
AIITimHE11tem

13-3, Waterford 23-5, Federal
Hocking 15-3, and Trimble 17-2.
The only losses came to ' Federal Hocking, in an 8-4 game that
broke a 14-game winning streak
dating back to last season, and a
10-6 loss to Meigs.
Brice Hill led the team with a
perfect pitching record of 4-0
with one save and 26 strikeouts,
while batting .700 for the year

Junior Josh Baker batted .389
with ten RBI and had 10 walks,
while junior Matt Shain batted
.333 with 10 RBI.
Sophomore Aaron Ohlinger
batted .571 with eight doubles.
Nate Martin hit . .360 and scored
20 runs to lead lhe team.
Dally Hill hit .450 with a teamhigh six RBI in a game against
Trimble.

Hill had 15 RBI for the yea'r.

' ·
Russell Krider hit .375 and }vas

Joey Manuel was the team's
defensive specialist, while Justin
Allen batted .275 with a good late
season run and a 3-2 pitching
record with 34 strikeouts ovel)l].l.

Eastern defeated Southern 14- 17-12. Eastern had eleven bitt 5. Eastern had; .&amp;ve. h,its~ led...by , Kayla Gibbs .and Misty.-,p..oberts
Kayla Gibbs with two singles, - 3 each,Jessica Dillon-Jess BarBilleejo Welsh a double, Carrie tels, Amanda Yeager, Carrie Cd&gt;w,
Crow and Tiffany Hensley a sin- and Ashley Hager - one' each.
gle each.
Pitching line: Eastern, K~yla
Pitching line: Eastern, Kayla Gibbs - 7 innings, 40 batters, 4
Gibbs - 7 innings, 38 batters, 1 earned nms, 10 hits, 4 strike-~ts.
earned run, 7 hits, 8 strike-outs, 8 5 walks. River Valley, Nickels and
walks, 1 hit batter. Southern, Mills Gibson combo - 7 innings) 47
- 6 innings, 37 batters, 3 earned · batters, 3 earned runs, 11 hit$, 3
runs, 5 hits, 17 walks.
strike-outs, 13 walks, 1 hit batter.
.Eastern defeated Trimble, 23-6.
'
Southern had seven hits led by
Stacey Mills and Brandi Lane Eastern had seven hits Je(!'by ~ess
two each, Bentz- a double, BaD Dillon - a single and a double,
and Ervin, a single each.
Billeejo Welsh - a single ana a
Waterford defeated Eastern 6- triple, Kryst&lt;!l Baker - a doul:&gt;le,
0. Eastern had just one hit - a Tiffany Hensley - a triple, ~nd
Jessica Dillon single.
Kayla Gibbs, a single.
.
Pitching lir{e: Eastern, Kayla
Pitching line: Kayla Gibbs - 5
Gibbs - 7 innings, 34 batters, 1 innings, 26 batters, 1 earned run,
earned run, 3 hits, 5 strike-outs, 8 6 hits, 2 strike-outs, 5 walks. :
walks.
Eastern was coached by Jessica
Eastern defeated River Valley Radford and Stephanie Evans; ·

1. Bobbr L*lrrte. i .IM6

Je;f Green , 2,123

I , 0... Eamhwdt, 1148

.,"""
1!9ch· ' 1,·' 788
".
Mitt t&lt;loi'IMth,

4. • ot~t J..-.1,71K)

-ndl.,.,clulmplon: Dale

!··

Jtrflkdrin,1i733

1.

~R~ : 1,078

RIIICiy LIJcle. 1.659
[)awl(l Gtten, 1,61.1

7. Rusty Wall1108, 1.704

Etton SlfWY8. 1,!587

I . Tony Sttwtrt, 1,641

1/f; )Off CJOi&lt;!oli, ~;eqe·

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rarity, outduellng Mark Martin's
Ford as the laps wound down
In the MBNA Platinum 200.
The victory, Keller's fourth
overall, was hiS first on a
superspeedway, which Is

20oo.

TM only factor that could
ha\le stopped Stewart ~,qs

· defined as a track a mile or
longer. Keller had previously
won twice at Indianapolis

Raceway Park and once at

runnln1 out of fuel , but he was
so fast that he ml&amp;ht have
been able to aet In and out of
tne pits without being passed
by any of the drivers who could
have made It to the end. It

Brlstr:»l •.

MONRO{, wash. - Jack
Sprague managed to drive his
cnevrolet to victor y lane at
Everareen Speedway, l)fincl·

pally due to Randy Tolsma's
decision to pit his 0odle for
fuel at the end of 1he race .
Tolsma dominated the race,
bUt the Truett Series has a rule
that ra&lt;:et mult end under

areen fl &amp;l conditiOns, and
when Brendan Gauahan
crashed with a lap to I{O, the
race wes llltended. Tolsma
pitted, SQraaue did not, and

Tolsma failed by about a truck
lenath to catch Spraeue when

lUSCH ORAND NATIONAL

racln8 resumed .

DOVER, Del. - Chevrolet

•

FEUD OF THI WEEK

'

•

'1

Rlc:k_MMt ~;$te~ P~rk
'

'

,

,.

'

'

'

·

· t'i

~

',

,

&lt;

'

I

NAIOA!I,:tltlo WHk'o - · Dulto~ PHJIII oploloo: ,
•part&lt;' hai.mac:te·more than·'hls thate of 8nimles this ~sr
~~ he tries to duplicate thti\vin$loil Cup success Of hiS •
• teammJte, o• Earnhardt Jr. He has a car capabl8 or
wln~lnl· linita,breakWO\ilh wciuld PUt lot Of ihe
cont.nMtrsyto,ritst.•
c. ' ·.,
:t,
;; ,. ~
'
,''t-t; .• ,...• .

Happy Basketball ~ampers

a

~~

"1

' .'

~..

'

400
Where: Texas Motor Speed-

-

't..

N.C.
Ap:40
Wlfr. Patti

•· Mqnl80~ery Lee il41 I ·
• -~
. ·• No.-44 Hot Wlieolo
"""'laC G(a!'d Prl~ ownM ill'
PottY Enterprlaes

starts,·8 wins, !51 top-five
flnlsheo, 167 101&gt;10 fln!shes,
8 ~leo , $11,928,354 In·

career elimlnp

•'

tt'. ··'

Gordon has two leammo.Jes.
Labonte and Jerry Nadeau. Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s teammDte i.r Steve
Purk. His father, who drives for
Richard Childreu, is ilre owner of
botll can.

Krle PettJ *ow 1111-- MMi'e.,......,. 3.
would kick my butt to know

thiiW8 didn't go to Ctjarlolta, ·
JUst to be total~ hO(le$1 w~h

London, and Mike He~on
called. Let me say t!lls: ,
NASCARdld.Bhlnerediblejob,

,,yqu .•IJ~{ ~Idn't&amp;Q !9~

~~ ~

of calling- 1was out of til(~ j, • Charlofte. Cliartotte ~as a
country- and expla\n!ng It to Winstori Cup race for him end
me. Mike will be my,hero
a Busc:h race. I just couldn't
forever. He did a great jOb. So

had talked about It so mUCh

wheri.wa were In England. I
had to keep It from her for
about 24 tioors. I had to be- I
cause 1just dkfn't want her to

- 1Just couldn't bnng myself

"""'to......'

wllh

to go to Charlotte.
, Why did liOII
CORICiate' In thl au.cll.-.ce?
•Because 1think that's what · ""

-to .

Adam would have want~. to
be .honest with yow ••• so we
sat down~ 1he crew and, ·
the craw decided. We ut ·
dOwn with the ere¥( first ancl
said, 'What do you guys want
·to do? Do you IMI went 10
continue to -race? What do you
want to do? ' thei all PJettY
much wanted to race. ~
kind of toOk a iJDtB·that they

dkln't wan!.to - oil)O&lt;&gt;ct;
elaeln the c• but rnjoeff. So

we went to (Sjxinsor) Sorlr!t
end talkad tQ thefll &amp;!ld1heY .
we,e all tor It, so hefe we' ar~
at Dover. ~ ·

NASCAR Thi! Week

4x4 Mud Bog Races
4x4 Truck PuHs HAMRA Tractor PuHs
· Lumbar Jack Show
Outlaw
Derby'
. 4x4 Tug of War

DOVER. Del . -

NASCAR.

responding to complaintl from Pontiac teams that they are operating at
an aerodynamic disadvantage on the
Winston Cup Series, announced
June I lhat a small change will go
into eiT~I beginning with Sunday 's
Kmart 400 at Michiean.
The Grand Prix will receive a new
rear bumper cover, although the
change ia optional unlil June 28,
when It Will be mandatory for all
Pontiac teams. The Ont r~cc: after
thai date is the Peps i ,400 at Daytona.

De••·

That is un /nll!resting .wssestion
tlult we will ptlnlllonz tD NASCAR

officiuJs when we see them at the
trod.
·
Den NASCAR This Week,
'I can tell you wh y everyone is
· makin&amp; a bi&amp; deal about Dale Earn-

hardt Jr. Thi6 is hili firs t year in
Winston Cup, he's young, he is 1
third-generation driver, and last and
most important, he is winning
n.ces. Wait a whil e. He is not going
10 be in the !pol light forever. Matt
Kenseth is a talented driver. He has
just be~n to dri ve in Winston Cup.
Carla Qultk
Gastonia, N.C.

Note rha t Curia S letter wu.J
muifeJ pdor to Kenseth :~ \.-lctory i r~
the Coca-Cola MJO. We guess her
co111ments au a/read}•beginning 10
come true.

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

• HOT: Tony Stew81't has been
fast every week. and now he
has a victory to show for it.
• NDT1 Jerry Nadeau's only big

z.

• Miller Is holcllng a "Get the
Goods" online auction that will
ra ise fu nds for charitable

1.. WhO has competed In mare consecutive
races than anyone In history?
What famous driver was rookie of the year one year
and champion the next?

causes. The way to enter is
by enterln&amp;; the Web stte

(www.MIIIorfloiThoG-.coml
and bidding on items that
Include honorary pit-crew
packages for races, trips to
tl'le Richard Petty Drlvln&amp;;
Experience and an autographed
hood from Rusty Wallace's
Ford. The auction continues
through Aug . l ;i .

lPJe4UJ93 a1eo 't

week. The WinSton weekend ,
didn't count in the point
standll\iS. Which Is part of tne
reason why he' s 30th.

iaWOQel AJJ~l 'l

SU3MSN1'

.............
AROUND THE GARAGE -

SIIH£

·

NASCAR offers aerodynamics help to Pontiac teams
ly Monto Dutton

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Last week Mark Martin was
· que stkmed about the problem with
atuck throttles. I have a suggeSiion
to this problem. Why not provide
the driver with a seco nd " kill
switch," which would shut down
the entire el ectrica l system, in the
form of the long~ forgotten "Ooo r~
board dimmer switch"?
·
Colvla S. Byrd
Shelbyville, Ind.

bring myself -:- because we

1coUldn't teii,Mo.ntgomery Lee

-Start (Aug. 5, 1979,
at TBIIII(lep). l)(lle (MarCh 2,
1990. at Roc~am) , win .
knOw.
IFeb". 23, 1986, II Rle/IRIOO!I) . •From that day on we've
Uved In our own lltUe worlcl.ll ·•
A!O 'you
bacft? "I tlllnk 80. Tllii'S I · was lncre&lt;llbly hard for Patti ·
tough question to as.k and a
and me to co back to Adam 's
tQUiher: qUestion to answer, t rece stjop. ~·n never know
ICI.fia.
'
. ~hard It Was to,wa.lk •
•Jhe acCICtent happened on
throiJil!l those doors and a Friday..!Oa~hte~ Momthose ears slttk'lf: t,here With
iomary Lee !1!'&lt;1 II'Ore·lil ·
· hls natne on ~. Sncfsee his _ •
L.Ondi&gt;ti. 1 sp8nt so mueh,tlme seats In 1he,car and his ' (
Adam lithe racotracl&lt;.
uniforms and stuff like that.
co1ng to tne racetrock, being
But 11 the "same time, there IS
around the racetrack and
nothlng·Adam loved more than
btlngarour&lt;lracecarothll.l
race cars. &amp;!'&lt;I tl&lt;IIOII around
' fe~ IIIia! re«&lt;ed.to Oi&gt;Orld , ·. his clew and lhe racln~ . •
1
more time With Moiqomery
people.
•
•
,
Lee,and more time &gt;!Kh ·
•Jcan rest assured he

•

Other Events'Include: ·

Notable: Th is race Is being
held as part of TeJ.as Motor
Speedway's tndy Racing

Sabrina Martin
Martln1bura, W.Va.

Austin. SO I had &amp;one to

cNIIIren: ~In 118),

15,1999

Dear NASCAR Thi s Week,
i have always been a Jeff Gordon
fan. Who is Gordon's teammate
now'! I kn ow last year Gordon's
teammate was Terry Labonle. Also,
who iii Earnhardt Jr.'s teammate?
His d1d?

.

Randlornan.

Chevrolet. 132.430 mph, Oct.

Your
Turn
iltttn F.- Ow RtaHn

&lt;ll'lven by hla eon In e Busc6
Gfand National race II D&lt;M!r.
He ai~ taked lllO\II~ ebout
the 10pey ol hiO !•te .,..
Petty failed 10 make the ·
· ~In&amp; ftOid 101 the Winston
Cup race at llcMI&lt; oowna but
oerYed as a relief clriYer for
teammate Jonn Andi'tnl; ...mo·
has iiliroken rlb, durlni
$Undiy's MBNA P)atlnuni

,(- 400~ ' }' '.

10.1999

••••••••••••

PROfiU-

~

·'

0!'1C8, lpln fark driJW.the,lre Of Ji fellOW' dfiV,~, ·.Wtlen ,t~
iace started, I was trying to be perfect'becaua' 1. ~~ no..
1 DoVer lo.· sa.ld Moat after'be!i\a knocked ·out of the MBNA ·
400 almost before It started, "and thot dolmn yellow car (of
Pa~'a) th,at wrecks every other week Cot me this ~ek. •
~

Comlna: up: Pronto Auto Parts

Eamhardt Jr.

C.Hf eUCIItlcl: 576

CRAnSMAN TRUCK IIRIU

became a moot point when a
couple of late accidents
brought out caution flags that
enabled Stewart to replenish
his supply.
Matt K&amp;nseth flnlaMd second, just one week after his
victory at Charlotte.
Datlnl back to the tall of
1999, Stewart tlll won tour
times In a e~n of 23 races.
No .other driver can match that
number o·f wins durlnl the
period In question .

CRAnSMAN TRUCK SERIO

stated Kyle. 1'1. cOver, Kyle ' ..
. drV-10 u\e C~lel formerly

'

way, Justin (1.5-mlle track)
Format: 167 laps, 250 .5
miles
WtHtn: Friday, June 9
Dtf.ncllnc c:hlmplon: Jay
Sauter
Qulllf)oln8 record: Jay Sauter,
Chevrolet. 179.718 mph, June

Race record : Jay SaJ,Jte r,

Speedway (0.4-mlle track)
Format: 300 laps/120 miles
When: Saturday, June 10
O.fendlnl champion: Dale

not been ea8y.
·
~·"
More than he IB a NA5CAR
dr!Yer, Petty Is • proud father,
~ the loss of 1~or-old ·
son Adam In a NBw Hainp. ·
shire P&lt;~lce lresh deve.

dri-ver Jason Keller pulled off a

was positively spectact~lar In
the MBNA PlaUnum 400. leadlnll 242 out of 400 laps to visit
victory lane for ttie first time In

Notable: Tommy Ellis won
seven times here, and Sam Ard
and Jack lnirani each won five.

Comln&amp; up: Textllease
Medique 300
Where: South Boston (Va.)

Kyte Pet\Y'B couraaaous
resiM'Tlptlon of hla career'has.

FROM lAST WEEK

DOVER, Del. -Tony stewart

8, 1996

lUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

NASCAR Tllia -

Almoot o winner evory wHk
StorllnC talon cround
More top.101 than anyone
Aloo otertlnato make mcwo
Ttonomloolon bupbooo
Rare Rouoh an&amp;lna failure
Cloee to wlnnln&amp; opln
Clrcult'o beol quallner
Fodod 81 day wore on
Seaoon' l 12th WlnntT

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES

94 .557 mph, July 24, 1938
Race record: Todd Bodine,
Chevrolet, 70.785 mph, June

I ) ' - """'""

Weeki~

·

Earnhardt Jr.. Chevrolet.

Kanaiey, 1.292
~ T~ltl)a, 1,281

lOP TEN

1 . (1) Bailby Labonto
2 . (3) W•d Burton
3. (I) Dole Eernhordt
•· (7) Dole Jorre«
5. (2) laH Button
6. (4) Mark Mattln
7. (10) Mott Kenteth
8. (8) Ruoty Walloce
9. 18) Dale Eomhatdt Jr.
10. (-) Tony SIOWI!I

Qu ..lfrln&amp; record: Dale

Notlb": Dale Jarrett also
hac! his first Winston Cup
victory here.' ... David Pearson
won a record nine races here.

-

rank lngs by NASCAR This week writer Monte Dutton.
·Last week' s ranklni Is In parentheses.
•

'•

~·

AnCy Houlton, 1 .~&amp;5

Ford, 173.997 mph, June 13,
1999

J-

l\t'lfn Harvlek, 1.873

.

Jack Spt. .ue. 1.614
lll:il.8tm.. 1,~17

Jartett
• QulllfJin&amp; record: ward
Burton, Pontiac, 188.843 mph,
Aua. 20. 1999
Rice MCOfd: Dale Jarrett.

' Ml~t w.IJ.ot, , .•t3
OtnniJ Setzer, 1.431
Ki.lrt Bulctl,l,-43&amp; '
StM GriHom, 1 ,3(17
.108 fMtmln, 1.381

JtiQI'I Kelltr; 1,!17
Ron Hormtdly, 1,&amp;92

'

I. Marl! Mlftln, 1,7 6!5

"

~

Curt Crouch had several timely hits and played good defensJvely all season, while Tommy Tlieiss
and Curtis Neigler batted .250 in
limited action.

WMn: Sunday, June 11

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

• • ~ flli'lot1, ~'""

Eastern jay-vee softball squad wraps up season j
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagle re~,erve , ,softball sq\lad
recently· finished ·a great season.
Eastern won 4 of its last 5 games,
and ended the season second .in
the league with a record of 10-1
overall, 9-1 TV C.
Eastern defeated Alexander 337 after pounding out · 15 hits.
Eastern hitters were led by Kayla
Gibbs - three singles and a double, Jess Bartels-three singles, Ashley Hager - a- single and a double, Tiffany Hensley - two singles, Billeejo Welsh- a triple,Jess
Dillon, Krystal Baker - a single
each, and Carrie Crow- a double.
'
Pitching line: Kayla Gibbs ·4.5 innings, 20 batters, 0 earned
runs, 2 hits, 1 strike-out, 2 walks;
Tiffany Hensley- 112 inning, 9
batters, 0 earned runs, 7 walks,
and 1 hit.

Comlrw: up: Kmart 400
Whert: Michigan Speedway,
Brooklyn (2·mlle track)
FormM: 200 lcaps/400 mlles

--· - •

ON THE SCHEDULE

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES

• Crattaman Truckl, Pronto Auto

p.m.•

'I'fler Little li.it .417 while b~ing
utilized primarily as a design~tcd
hitter, and had three RBI and a
double against Trimble.
;

'

· 2 5 0 0 1 . - -.

Parte 400
'
7:30 p.m. • Friday • ,ESPN2
• Buoeh, TextlltOie Modlque 300
5
Saturday • TNN
• Wlnoton C:up, Kmart 400
1 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

1-0 pitching, While first-)j_ear
player Brandon Pierce hit .ZSO
and scored ten runs while pla)ling
a great defensive game.
'

__ _

.Jf-,u've llfi I i j IU11!"

Tornado jay-vee baseball team ends season

Tribe sweeps away Milwaukee
BY TME ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Dai·ly Sentinel encourages
your support of these area
businesses who make this page
possible.

part of the region in the 1970s as the tri- games in places like Morgantown,
county area sported two teams, the Gal- Buchannon, and even at the state peni'
lia Devil's Disciples and the Meigs War- tentiary In Moundsville.
This year's team is made up of players
riors Qater Big Bend).
Both teams were members of the Ohio who played for several southern bpio
1
:
Valley Amatuer Football League in the and West Virgina high schools.
River Valley, Gallia Academy, Meigs,
70s.
The league also included teams .from Point Pleasant, Wellston, Logan, (the torWashington County, Ohio and Parkers- mer) North Gallia, Eastern, Belpre,Ja£kburg and lasted for several years before son and Southeastern (Ross) and Parkdisbanding. Two players from the tri- ersburg South are represented on the
county area earned league MVP honors squad.
:
The Coyotes are members of the Mjdduring the OVAfL's tenure: C.D. Mcintyre of Meigs and Dan Polcyn (yes, he is Ohio Semi-Pro Football League for !he
2000 season. The league is comprised; of
a relative of mine) of Gallia.
Mcintyre is the local version of" Father eight teams from Ohio, West Virginia ~nd
·
Football," having played high school Michigan.
If you need an early season football ~x,
football in the '60s and semi-pro football
come on out.
in the '70s, eighties and '90s.
If semi-pro games are anything, thefre
The Warriors and Disciples also travelled outside of their league, playing always hard-hitting.

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Bill Elliott has won four Cup 111CC:Ii at
Dover Downs, but none since the

wai Dale Earnhardt Jr., wi t~
$1 ,S.5tl.521, even though he was only

track was paved in concrete in 1995.
Asked what wu the key to winning at Dover, Elli olt sa id, "I don't
really know sinee they 'concreted ' it.
I have11't figured It out yd."

16th In the point standings.
·
The only other drivt r outs ide the
toriO with more thin Sl million in
earninas wa ~ Bill Ellioll, with
$1,3.52,303. The onl y dri ve r in the
top I0 with less lhan $1 milli on was

X

Ricky Rudd at $858,859.

MONEY TALKS: Enteri11g
Dover, the top eiaht drivers in the
Winsron Cup points standinp. and
nim: of the lop 10, had already
eamod more than $1 million this year.
Thankc to his 10ktory in the Dayton• SOO, Dale Jarrett led in money
earnings wilh $3.413,094. A Sl mil·
lion bonWI fQr wi11ning Las Vegas
X
ptJI Jeff Burton close behind at
NO CONCRETE ANSWER: . $3,112,194. Third in money eamings

should win; yo uth shoukl not prevail
in th is instance. Maybe later, but nat
any time !iOOn.
" I am a little surprised that he and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. have ~n iO soon.
I thought it would take longer ro r
both of them Ia win . Matt iJ certainly going to be one to reckon with in
NASCAR for a long time."

X

I

ME AND MY BUDDY: M"k

A LOT OF RACES: Jeff Ham·

Martin looks forward to the day
when he and p rot~gCI Matt Kenseth
can run wheel· to-wheel with each
oth er with a Winston Cup victory
ridlrig on the outcome.
" I think it would be great ih rate
came down to the t'NO of us," said
Mart in. "I do think the old mar)

mond watched Chad LiHie take the
green nac June 4 for Hamm ond's
SOOt h race as a Winston Cup crew
~hief.

Nine active driven h111e competed
in 500 racu, hut Hammond is the
on ly active crew chief to reach that

~•lillluu.coa~

•Grt&amp; Zlpadelll wn
COICtrned lbout the
11
one ml1takt" tlllt kept
preYintl- hfl drlv«.
Ton~

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

stewart, frvm

Ridenour
Supply

wlnntnc l'lcta. TltrH
tim• dUrl., tha MaiOII,
Stewart b.ct come cJOM
to wiMiifC, OniJ to fill

St. At. 248

ollorl., p o r t - of

Chester

OM mlttakt or anotMr.
Zlp....ill't ptt crew IMCit
..,. that ..... ~ ..... ,.

happen on Sunclly, ...,cl
the rHult wa Stew.n•s

ftrat victory of the

uaeon.

level.

•

-'

: IOUTHIIIN UIKIT8ALL CAMP 2000 - Seventy-one youth bBsketball pll)'ers In &amp;radu three throu1h nlnB took part In the recBnt Southern
· H"" School bBSketball camp. The c:emp waB operltl&lt;l by Southern bOya varsity coach J!IY Rete, Tornado verelty pliyere, Beever Eastern. head
· c;oac:h Jeff CaldWell, Rlver Villlay hBBd coach Cart Wolfa, end Recine UMC youth minister Tom Gill, who 11 a former Mr. Ohio Body Builder. Front
: rr:Nt,left to l'lllt, 8reBnne Taylor, Gibby Johnson, BrookB Chldwlll, Taylor ·Lemley, LlndsBy Telford, Katie Woods, Danlill ImbOden, Cody Counts,
: Colby Roeebtrry, Jorden Taylor, Kyle Cunnln~&amp;~~em, JIIH Rltchle , Cyle Rees end Kally Winebrenner. Second row, left to l'lllht, Cody Patterson,
: Wealey Riffle, Nathan M018, CetJe WOlfe, Rac:heel Perklna, John Brauer, Cl\rlltophBr Holter, Bryan Harris, Weston Roberts, Chel$ea PapB,
· Emma Hunter and Ryan Oor'ialdaon. Third row, 18ft to rll&amp;ht. SutCh Mernho!lt, Ryan Chapmen, Eric PIBroe, Nathan Cook, Corey Brlna1er, Tren: ton RoHbtrry, Chrl1 BurkhBmmer, Whitney Riffle , Erin Chepmen, St- Sellers and Corbln Sellers. Fourth row, left to right, Mallory Hill, Allie
: Reel, Darcy Winebrenner, Oerln Teaford, C'tmeron BrlnB&amp;er, Dennla Adklna; Jecob Hunter, J.R. Hupp, Daniel Bookman and Hedley Exsxssoc.
: (Scott Wolfe photo)
.
.

I

''

~' mor1 Information: ·

SR 124 In Portland. Ohio
on thl Ohio kl'ftr
l milts north of
Ravenswood,WV
)ull oW 1·17 at lXII 146

www.loglamconctrtl.com

by:

[I!]
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1·177-LOG~JAMM

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tl~!(l tm(i ter
dlofge by phon1

30042.1717
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(740) 992-2196

985-3308

Place Your Business's Ad here
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1\) I:
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Thuraday, June 8, 2000
P~ge

B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 8, ~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

No play or pay tn the semi-pro ranks, baby!
"How much does that pay?"
That's a question frequently asked of
. men who play semi-pro football. If
: they're like the vast majority of players
: on the over 400 sc~Jli-pro teams across
America, they don't get paid.
. They do it because they love to play
· football.
The same can be said for the twenty, some men who are members of the Big
: Bend Coyotes Football Club, who play
' their opening game of the 2000 season
on Saturday, June 10, at 7 p.m. on the
' Wahama High School Field.
They will open up against the Ohio
Cardinals, from South Euclid (a suburb
of Cleveland).
Like the men from the Coyotes, the
' Cardinals do it for love of the game.
, Many people seem ro think that semi: pro players get monetary compensation

for their efforts. To the outsider, the risk
of injury and the work involved in competing are too great to play for free.
You have to remember that some people are as passionate about football as
some people are about baseball and basketball or golf.
The most irritating thing you can say
to a dedicated semi-pro player is, "I
POLCYN 'S POINT
would play if they paid me.''
After a long absence, semi-pro football
returned to the area in 1999 with the ' Big Bend stems from the name of the
Middleport Yellowjackets. That team dis- geographic region of northern Mason
banded after one difficult year and the and Meigs counties.
Big Bend club was started by severn!
"We wanted a regional name so that
players who weren't willing to let foot- nobody .was excluded because of the
ball die off in the region.
name," said Chris Kaufmann, a four-year
The new team features collective man- semi-pro veteran.
agement and a regional name that had
Semi-pro · (although it is more accubeen used by an amateur team in the rarely described ,by the American Foot1970s (the Big Bend Warriors).
ball Association as 'senior amateur') was a

Dan

Polcyn

INTER'LEAGUE BASEBALL
'

When Jamie Brewington last
. won in the major leagues, the
· Arizona Diamondbacks and
· Tampa Bay Devil Rays didn't
· exist, and interleague play was still
a proposal.
"It's been · a long haul and a
tough one, but it was great to get
: back on the ·board;' Brewington
said after Cleveland won 9-5 at
: M1lwaukee on Wednesday night
- his first victory since Sept. 28,
1995.
Brewington (1-0) relieved Paul
Rigdon with the bases loaded in
the first and the score 4-all, then
pitched 2 2-3 hitless innings as
Cleveland extended its winning
streak to five. He was with six
minor league teams since going
6-4 with the Giants in 1995, and
did not pitch the entire 1998 season because of shoulder sur~ry.
Richie Sexson and Russell
Branyan each homered for Cleveland, which completed a threegame sweep.
1\vins 2, Astros 0
Jay Canizaro hit a two-run
homer in the seventh off Shane
Reynolds (5-3), and Joe Mays (37) combined with three relievers
on a six-hitter for the first shutout
at Enron Field. It was the lowestscoring game among. the 31
games played in the ballpark,
which opened this year. Houston
was blanked for the first time in
86 games, the longest active streak
without a shutout in the major
leagues.
Car~als 4, Royals 2
Darryl Kile (9-3) scattered
seven hits and struck out 10
against visiting Kansas Ciry.
•. Miguel Batista (2-5) allowed four
runs - two earned - in five
innings against a lineup missing

three injured regulars: Mark
McGwire (thigh) , Fernando Vina
(hamstring) and Ray Lankford
(hamstring).
Blue Jays 12, Braves 8
Carlos Delgado hit a grand
slam and two-run homer for a
career-high six RBis at Turner
Field, and Kevin Millwood (4-5)
gave up a· career-high nine runs.
Darwin Cu billan (1-0) got his
first major league win despite
allowing three runs in 2 1-3
innings.
.Athletics 10, Padres 4
Jason Giambi, homerless in 50
at-bats since May 21, hit a grand
slam off Matt Clement (5~5), and
a two-run shot as Oakland completed a three-game sweep ofthe
visiting Padres. Giambi's third
slam of the year tied the team
record. Scott Service (1-0)
pitched two.scoreless innings.
Podgers 11, ~ngen 6
·Mark Grudzielanek had three
hits, and Darren Dreifort (4-3)
allowed four runs and nine hits in
seven innings to win for tlje first
time in five starts
Yankees 7, Expos 2
Orlando Hernandez (6-4) ·
allowed four hits in eight innings
·and visiting New York stole a season-high five bases. Bernie
Williams went 2-for-5, including
a two-run single in the fifth off
Carl Pavano (6-3) that put New
York ahead 4-2.
Phillies S, Devil Rays 4
lton Gant hit a tiebreaking
homer off Mark Guthrie (1-1) in
the seventh, just the 55th into t~e
left-field upper deck at Philadel. phia. Chris Brock: (1-4) won his
first game with the Phillies.
Pirates 4, Tigers 3
Luis Sojo (4-for-31) and Kevin
Young (4-for-30) shook off

slumps with home runs against
visiting Detroit to back Todd
Ritchie (4-3). Brian Williams got
his ninth save, retiring Brad Ausmus on a bases-loaded grounder
to end it. Hideo N omo (2-5) lost
for the fourth time in five decisions.
Marlins 6, Red Sox 2
Cliff Floyd homered against
visiting Boston for the third
straight game, connecting for a
thtee-run drive in the third off
Brian Rose (3-3) . Vic Darensbourg (2-0) relieved Brad Penny
following a 2-hour, IS-minute
rain delay and allowed one run
and three hits in four innings.
Angels 10, Giants 9
Darin Erstad hit a pair of tworun homers and singled in the
go-ahead run in the eighth off
Alan Embree (0-2). Visiting San
Francisco rallied from a 9-4
deficit when Jeff Kent and
Armando Rios hit two-run
homers in the seventh off AI
Levine, and J. T. Snow's second
RBI single tied it against Shigetoshi Hasegawa (5- 1) in the
eighth.
Rockies 6, Mariners 1
Tom Goodwin went 4-for-5
with a career-high four steals, and
visiting Colorado swiped seven in
all. Rolando Arrojo (4-4) combined with Gabe White on a fivehitter to beat Jamie Moyer (3•2).
Mets 11, Orioles 3
Edgardo Alfonzo homered in
the first off Scott Erickson (2-3)
at Shea Stadium, then tripled. Pat
Mahomes (2-1) won in relief of
starter Rick Reed.
Cubs 9, Diamondbacks 4
Sammy Sosa and Eric Young hit
solo homers at Wrigley Field to
back Scott Downs (3-1) and send
Arizona to its fifth straight loss.

BY Sc:orr WoiSE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

before being called up as a varsity
starter.

' I
Matt Ash pitched
two reserve
RACINE - Despite a rain
saves,
striking
out
22
batters in
shortened season, the Southern
Tornado reserve baseball team just nine and two-thirds innings
posted a great overall record of9- of work.
2 under coach Ryan Lemley.
Those were in addition to his
varsity
pitching victory at Miller.
Southern defeated Alexander
Ash also batted .350 with a home
8-0,Belpre 11- 1,Waterford 10-4,
Wellston 4-2, Nelsonville-York run and team leading 15 RBI.

........... Wl'tle:

..,.

NAICAIITIIII-k

a...,..., N.C. 21014

•
AIITimHE11tem

13-3, Waterford 23-5, Federal
Hocking 15-3, and Trimble 17-2.
The only losses came to ' Federal Hocking, in an 8-4 game that
broke a 14-game winning streak
dating back to last season, and a
10-6 loss to Meigs.
Brice Hill led the team with a
perfect pitching record of 4-0
with one save and 26 strikeouts,
while batting .700 for the year

Junior Josh Baker batted .389
with ten RBI and had 10 walks,
while junior Matt Shain batted
.333 with 10 RBI.
Sophomore Aaron Ohlinger
batted .571 with eight doubles.
Nate Martin hit . .360 and scored
20 runs to lead lhe team.
Dally Hill hit .450 with a teamhigh six RBI in a game against
Trimble.

Hill had 15 RBI for the yea'r.

' ·
Russell Krider hit .375 and }vas

Joey Manuel was the team's
defensive specialist, while Justin
Allen batted .275 with a good late
season run and a 3-2 pitching
record with 34 strikeouts ovel)l].l.

Eastern defeated Southern 14- 17-12. Eastern had eleven bitt 5. Eastern had; .&amp;ve. h,its~ led...by , Kayla Gibbs .and Misty.-,p..oberts
Kayla Gibbs with two singles, - 3 each,Jessica Dillon-Jess BarBilleejo Welsh a double, Carrie tels, Amanda Yeager, Carrie Cd&gt;w,
Crow and Tiffany Hensley a sin- and Ashley Hager - one' each.
gle each.
Pitching line: Eastern, K~yla
Pitching line: Eastern, Kayla Gibbs - 7 innings, 40 batters, 4
Gibbs - 7 innings, 38 batters, 1 earned nms, 10 hits, 4 strike-~ts.
earned run, 7 hits, 8 strike-outs, 8 5 walks. River Valley, Nickels and
walks, 1 hit batter. Southern, Mills Gibson combo - 7 innings) 47
- 6 innings, 37 batters, 3 earned · batters, 3 earned runs, 11 hit$, 3
runs, 5 hits, 17 walks.
strike-outs, 13 walks, 1 hit batter.
.Eastern defeated Trimble, 23-6.
'
Southern had seven hits led by
Stacey Mills and Brandi Lane Eastern had seven hits Je(!'by ~ess
two each, Bentz- a double, BaD Dillon - a single and a double,
and Ervin, a single each.
Billeejo Welsh - a single ana a
Waterford defeated Eastern 6- triple, Kryst&lt;!l Baker - a doul:&gt;le,
0. Eastern had just one hit - a Tiffany Hensley - a triple, ~nd
Jessica Dillon single.
Kayla Gibbs, a single.
.
Pitching lir{e: Eastern, Kayla
Pitching line: Kayla Gibbs - 5
Gibbs - 7 innings, 34 batters, 1 innings, 26 batters, 1 earned run,
earned run, 3 hits, 5 strike-outs, 8 6 hits, 2 strike-outs, 5 walks. :
walks.
Eastern was coached by Jessica
Eastern defeated River Valley Radford and Stephanie Evans; ·

1. Bobbr L*lrrte. i .IM6

Je;f Green , 2,123

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Mitt t&lt;loi'IMth,

4. • ot~t J..-.1,71K)

-ndl.,.,clulmplon: Dale

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Jtrflkdrin,1i733

1.

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RIIICiy LIJcle. 1.659
[)awl(l Gtten, 1,61.1

7. Rusty Wall1108, 1.704

Etton SlfWY8. 1,!587

I . Tony Sttwtrt, 1,641

1/f; )Off CJOi&lt;!oli, ~;eqe·

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rarity, outduellng Mark Martin's
Ford as the laps wound down
In the MBNA Platinum 200.
The victory, Keller's fourth
overall, was hiS first on a
superspeedway, which Is

20oo.

TM only factor that could
ha\le stopped Stewart ~,qs

· defined as a track a mile or
longer. Keller had previously
won twice at Indianapolis

Raceway Park and once at

runnln1 out of fuel , but he was
so fast that he ml&amp;ht have
been able to aet In and out of
tne pits without being passed
by any of the drivers who could
have made It to the end. It

Brlstr:»l •.

MONRO{, wash. - Jack
Sprague managed to drive his
cnevrolet to victor y lane at
Everareen Speedway, l)fincl·

pally due to Randy Tolsma's
decision to pit his 0odle for
fuel at the end of 1he race .
Tolsma dominated the race,
bUt the Truett Series has a rule
that ra&lt;:et mult end under

areen fl &amp;l conditiOns, and
when Brendan Gauahan
crashed with a lap to I{O, the
race wes llltended. Tolsma
pitted, SQraaue did not, and

Tolsma failed by about a truck
lenath to catch Spraeue when

lUSCH ORAND NATIONAL

racln8 resumed .

DOVER, Del. - Chevrolet

•

FEUD OF THI WEEK

'

•

'1

Rlc:k_MMt ~;$te~ P~rk
'

'

,

,.

'

'

'

·

· t'i

~

',

,

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'

I

NAIOA!I,:tltlo WHk'o - · Dulto~ PHJIII oploloo: ,
•part&lt;' hai.mac:te·more than·'hls thate of 8nimles this ~sr
~~ he tries to duplicate thti\vin$loil Cup success Of hiS •
• teammJte, o• Earnhardt Jr. He has a car capabl8 or
wln~lnl· linita,breakWO\ilh wciuld PUt lot Of ihe
cont.nMtrsyto,ritst.•
c. ' ·.,
:t,
;; ,. ~
'
,''t-t; .• ,...• .

Happy Basketball ~ampers

a

~~

"1

' .'

~..

'

400
Where: Texas Motor Speed-

-

't..

N.C.
Ap:40
Wlfr. Patti

•· Mqnl80~ery Lee il41 I ·
• -~
. ·• No.-44 Hot Wlieolo
"""'laC G(a!'d Prl~ ownM ill'
PottY Enterprlaes

starts,·8 wins, !51 top-five
flnlsheo, 167 101&gt;10 fln!shes,
8 ~leo , $11,928,354 In·

career elimlnp

•'

tt'. ··'

Gordon has two leammo.Jes.
Labonte and Jerry Nadeau. Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s teammDte i.r Steve
Purk. His father, who drives for
Richard Childreu, is ilre owner of
botll can.

Krle PettJ *ow 1111-- MMi'e.,......,. 3.
would kick my butt to know

thiiW8 didn't go to Ctjarlolta, ·
JUst to be total~ hO(le$1 w~h

London, and Mike He~on
called. Let me say t!lls: ,
NASCARdld.Bhlnerediblejob,

,,yqu .•IJ~{ ~Idn't&amp;Q !9~

~~ ~

of calling- 1was out of til(~ j, • Charlofte. Cliartotte ~as a
country- and expla\n!ng It to Winstori Cup race for him end
me. Mike will be my,hero
a Busc:h race. I just couldn't
forever. He did a great jOb. So

had talked about It so mUCh

wheri.wa were In England. I
had to keep It from her for
about 24 tioors. I had to be- I
cause 1just dkfn't want her to

- 1Just couldn't bnng myself

"""'to......'

wllh

to go to Charlotte.
, Why did liOII
CORICiate' In thl au.cll.-.ce?
•Because 1think that's what · ""

-to .

Adam would have want~. to
be .honest with yow ••• so we
sat down~ 1he crew and, ·
the craw decided. We ut ·
dOwn with the ere¥( first ancl
said, 'What do you guys want
·to do? Do you IMI went 10
continue to -race? What do you
want to do? ' thei all PJettY
much wanted to race. ~
kind of toOk a iJDtB·that they

dkln't wan!.to - oil)O&lt;&gt;ct;
elaeln the c• but rnjoeff. So

we went to (Sjxinsor) Sorlr!t
end talkad tQ thefll &amp;!ld1heY .
we,e all tor It, so hefe we' ar~
at Dover. ~ ·

NASCAR Thi! Week

4x4 Mud Bog Races
4x4 Truck PuHs HAMRA Tractor PuHs
· Lumbar Jack Show
Outlaw
Derby'
. 4x4 Tug of War

DOVER. Del . -

NASCAR.

responding to complaintl from Pontiac teams that they are operating at
an aerodynamic disadvantage on the
Winston Cup Series, announced
June I lhat a small change will go
into eiT~I beginning with Sunday 's
Kmart 400 at Michiean.
The Grand Prix will receive a new
rear bumper cover, although the
change ia optional unlil June 28,
when It Will be mandatory for all
Pontiac teams. The Ont r~cc: after
thai date is the Peps i ,400 at Daytona.

De••·

That is un /nll!resting .wssestion
tlult we will ptlnlllonz tD NASCAR

officiuJs when we see them at the
trod.
·
Den NASCAR This Week,
'I can tell you wh y everyone is
· makin&amp; a bi&amp; deal about Dale Earn-

hardt Jr. Thi6 is hili firs t year in
Winston Cup, he's young, he is 1
third-generation driver, and last and
most important, he is winning
n.ces. Wait a whil e. He is not going
10 be in the !pol light forever. Matt
Kenseth is a talented driver. He has
just be~n to dri ve in Winston Cup.
Carla Qultk
Gastonia, N.C.

Note rha t Curia S letter wu.J
muifeJ pdor to Kenseth :~ \.-lctory i r~
the Coca-Cola MJO. We guess her
co111ments au a/read}•beginning 10
come true.

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

• HOT: Tony Stew81't has been
fast every week. and now he
has a victory to show for it.
• NDT1 Jerry Nadeau's only big

z.

• Miller Is holcllng a "Get the
Goods" online auction that will
ra ise fu nds for charitable

1.. WhO has competed In mare consecutive
races than anyone In history?
What famous driver was rookie of the year one year
and champion the next?

causes. The way to enter is
by enterln&amp;; the Web stte

(www.MIIIorfloiThoG-.coml
and bidding on items that
Include honorary pit-crew
packages for races, trips to
tl'le Richard Petty Drlvln&amp;;
Experience and an autographed
hood from Rusty Wallace's
Ford. The auction continues
through Aug . l ;i .

lPJe4UJ93 a1eo 't

week. The WinSton weekend ,
didn't count in the point
standll\iS. Which Is part of tne
reason why he' s 30th.

iaWOQel AJJ~l 'l

SU3MSN1'

.............
AROUND THE GARAGE -

SIIH£

·

NASCAR offers aerodynamics help to Pontiac teams
ly Monto Dutton

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Last week Mark Martin was
· que stkmed about the problem with
atuck throttles. I have a suggeSiion
to this problem. Why not provide
the driver with a seco nd " kill
switch," which would shut down
the entire el ectrica l system, in the
form of the long~ forgotten "Ooo r~
board dimmer switch"?
·
Colvla S. Byrd
Shelbyville, Ind.

bring myself -:- because we

1coUldn't teii,Mo.ntgomery Lee

-Start (Aug. 5, 1979,
at TBIIII(lep). l)(lle (MarCh 2,
1990. at Roc~am) , win .
knOw.
IFeb". 23, 1986, II Rle/IRIOO!I) . •From that day on we've
Uved In our own lltUe worlcl.ll ·•
A!O 'you
bacft? "I tlllnk 80. Tllii'S I · was lncre&lt;llbly hard for Patti ·
tough question to as.k and a
and me to co back to Adam 's
tQUiher: qUestion to answer, t rece stjop. ~·n never know
ICI.fia.
'
. ~hard It Was to,wa.lk •
•Jhe acCICtent happened on
throiJil!l those doors and a Friday..!Oa~hte~ Momthose ears slttk'lf: t,here With
iomary Lee !1!'&lt;1 II'Ore·lil ·
· hls natne on ~. Sncfsee his _ •
L.Ondi&gt;ti. 1 sp8nt so mueh,tlme seats In 1he,car and his ' (
Adam lithe racotracl&lt;.
uniforms and stuff like that.
co1ng to tne racetrock, being
But 11 the "same time, there IS
around the racetrack and
nothlng·Adam loved more than
btlngarour&lt;lracecarothll.l
race cars. &amp;!'&lt;I tl&lt;IIOII around
' fe~ IIIia! re«&lt;ed.to Oi&gt;Orld , ·. his clew and lhe racln~ . •
1
more time With Moiqomery
people.
•
•
,
Lee,and more time &gt;!Kh ·
•Jcan rest assured he

•

Other Events'Include: ·

Notable: Th is race Is being
held as part of TeJ.as Motor
Speedway's tndy Racing

Sabrina Martin
Martln1bura, W.Va.

Austin. SO I had &amp;one to

cNIIIren: ~In 118),

15,1999

Dear NASCAR Thi s Week,
i have always been a Jeff Gordon
fan. Who is Gordon's teammate
now'! I kn ow last year Gordon's
teammate was Terry Labonle. Also,
who iii Earnhardt Jr.'s teammate?
His d1d?

.

Randlornan.

Chevrolet. 132.430 mph, Oct.

Your
Turn
iltttn F.- Ow RtaHn

&lt;ll'lven by hla eon In e Busc6
Gfand National race II D&lt;M!r.
He ai~ taked lllO\II~ ebout
the 10pey ol hiO !•te .,..
Petty failed 10 make the ·
· ~In&amp; ftOid 101 the Winston
Cup race at llcMI&lt; oowna but
oerYed as a relief clriYer for
teammate Jonn Andi'tnl; ...mo·
has iiliroken rlb, durlni
$Undiy's MBNA P)atlnuni

,(- 400~ ' }' '.

10.1999

••••••••••••

PROfiU-

~

·'

0!'1C8, lpln fark driJW.the,lre Of Ji fellOW' dfiV,~, ·.Wtlen ,t~
iace started, I was trying to be perfect'becaua' 1. ~~ no..
1 DoVer lo.· sa.ld Moat after'be!i\a knocked ·out of the MBNA ·
400 almost before It started, "and thot dolmn yellow car (of
Pa~'a) th,at wrecks every other week Cot me this ~ek. •
~

Comlna: up: Pronto Auto Parts

Eamhardt Jr.

C.Hf eUCIItlcl: 576

CRAnSMAN TRUCK IIRIU

became a moot point when a
couple of late accidents
brought out caution flags that
enabled Stewart to replenish
his supply.
Matt K&amp;nseth flnlaMd second, just one week after his
victory at Charlotte.
Datlnl back to the tall of
1999, Stewart tlll won tour
times In a e~n of 23 races.
No .other driver can match that
number o·f wins durlnl the
period In question .

CRAnSMAN TRUCK SERIO

stated Kyle. 1'1. cOver, Kyle ' ..
. drV-10 u\e C~lel formerly

'

way, Justin (1.5-mlle track)
Format: 167 laps, 250 .5
miles
WtHtn: Friday, June 9
Dtf.ncllnc c:hlmplon: Jay
Sauter
Qulllf)oln8 record: Jay Sauter,
Chevrolet. 179.718 mph, June

Race record : Jay SaJ,Jte r,

Speedway (0.4-mlle track)
Format: 300 laps/120 miles
When: Saturday, June 10
O.fendlnl champion: Dale

not been ea8y.
·
~·"
More than he IB a NA5CAR
dr!Yer, Petty Is • proud father,
~ the loss of 1~or-old ·
son Adam In a NBw Hainp. ·
shire P&lt;~lce lresh deve.

dri-ver Jason Keller pulled off a

was positively spectact~lar In
the MBNA PlaUnum 400. leadlnll 242 out of 400 laps to visit
victory lane for ttie first time In

Notable: Tommy Ellis won
seven times here, and Sam Ard
and Jack lnirani each won five.

Comln&amp; up: Textllease
Medique 300
Where: South Boston (Va.)

Kyte Pet\Y'B couraaaous
resiM'Tlptlon of hla career'has.

FROM lAST WEEK

DOVER, Del. -Tony stewart

8, 1996

lUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

NASCAR Tllia -

Almoot o winner evory wHk
StorllnC talon cround
More top.101 than anyone
Aloo otertlnato make mcwo
Ttonomloolon bupbooo
Rare Rouoh an&amp;lna failure
Cloee to wlnnln&amp; opln
Clrcult'o beol quallner
Fodod 81 day wore on
Seaoon' l 12th WlnntT

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES

94 .557 mph, July 24, 1938
Race record: Todd Bodine,
Chevrolet, 70.785 mph, June

I ) ' - """'""

Weeki~

·

Earnhardt Jr.. Chevrolet.

Kanaiey, 1.292
~ T~ltl)a, 1,281

lOP TEN

1 . (1) Bailby Labonto
2 . (3) W•d Burton
3. (I) Dole Eernhordt
•· (7) Dole Jorre«
5. (2) laH Button
6. (4) Mark Mattln
7. (10) Mott Kenteth
8. (8) Ruoty Walloce
9. 18) Dale Eomhatdt Jr.
10. (-) Tony SIOWI!I

Qu ..lfrln&amp; record: Dale

Notlb": Dale Jarrett also
hac! his first Winston Cup
victory here.' ... David Pearson
won a record nine races here.

-

rank lngs by NASCAR This week writer Monte Dutton.
·Last week' s ranklni Is In parentheses.
•

'•

~·

AnCy Houlton, 1 .~&amp;5

Ford, 173.997 mph, June 13,
1999

J-

l\t'lfn Harvlek, 1.873

.

Jack Spt. .ue. 1.614
lll:il.8tm.. 1,~17

Jartett
• QulllfJin&amp; record: ward
Burton, Pontiac, 188.843 mph,
Aua. 20. 1999
Rice MCOfd: Dale Jarrett.

' Ml~t w.IJ.ot, , .•t3
OtnniJ Setzer, 1.431
Ki.lrt Bulctl,l,-43&amp; '
StM GriHom, 1 ,3(17
.108 fMtmln, 1.381

JtiQI'I Kelltr; 1,!17
Ron Hormtdly, 1,&amp;92

'

I. Marl! Mlftln, 1,7 6!5

"

~

Curt Crouch had several timely hits and played good defensJvely all season, while Tommy Tlieiss
and Curtis Neigler batted .250 in
limited action.

WMn: Sunday, June 11

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

• • ~ flli'lot1, ~'""

Eastern jay-vee softball squad wraps up season j
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagle re~,erve , ,softball sq\lad
recently· finished ·a great season.
Eastern won 4 of its last 5 games,
and ended the season second .in
the league with a record of 10-1
overall, 9-1 TV C.
Eastern defeated Alexander 337 after pounding out · 15 hits.
Eastern hitters were led by Kayla
Gibbs - three singles and a double, Jess Bartels-three singles, Ashley Hager - a- single and a double, Tiffany Hensley - two singles, Billeejo Welsh- a triple,Jess
Dillon, Krystal Baker - a single
each, and Carrie Crow- a double.
'
Pitching line: Kayla Gibbs ·4.5 innings, 20 batters, 0 earned
runs, 2 hits, 1 strike-out, 2 walks;
Tiffany Hensley- 112 inning, 9
batters, 0 earned runs, 7 walks,
and 1 hit.

Comlrw: up: Kmart 400
Whert: Michigan Speedway,
Brooklyn (2·mlle track)
FormM: 200 lcaps/400 mlles

--· - •

ON THE SCHEDULE

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES

• Crattaman Truckl, Pronto Auto

p.m.•

'I'fler Little li.it .417 while b~ing
utilized primarily as a design~tcd
hitter, and had three RBI and a
double against Trimble.
;

'

· 2 5 0 0 1 . - -.

Parte 400
'
7:30 p.m. • Friday • ,ESPN2
• Buoeh, TextlltOie Modlque 300
5
Saturday • TNN
• Wlnoton C:up, Kmart 400
1 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

1-0 pitching, While first-)j_ear
player Brandon Pierce hit .ZSO
and scored ten runs while pla)ling
a great defensive game.
'

__ _

.Jf-,u've llfi I i j IU11!"

Tornado jay-vee baseball team ends season

Tribe sweeps away Milwaukee
BY TME ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Dai·ly Sentinel encourages
your support of these area
businesses who make this page
possible.

part of the region in the 1970s as the tri- games in places like Morgantown,
county area sported two teams, the Gal- Buchannon, and even at the state peni'
lia Devil's Disciples and the Meigs War- tentiary In Moundsville.
This year's team is made up of players
riors Qater Big Bend).
Both teams were members of the Ohio who played for several southern bpio
1
:
Valley Amatuer Football League in the and West Virgina high schools.
River Valley, Gallia Academy, Meigs,
70s.
The league also included teams .from Point Pleasant, Wellston, Logan, (the torWashington County, Ohio and Parkers- mer) North Gallia, Eastern, Belpre,Ja£kburg and lasted for several years before son and Southeastern (Ross) and Parkdisbanding. Two players from the tri- ersburg South are represented on the
county area earned league MVP honors squad.
:
The Coyotes are members of the Mjdduring the OVAfL's tenure: C.D. Mcintyre of Meigs and Dan Polcyn (yes, he is Ohio Semi-Pro Football League for !he
2000 season. The league is comprised; of
a relative of mine) of Gallia.
Mcintyre is the local version of" Father eight teams from Ohio, West Virginia ~nd
·
Football," having played high school Michigan.
If you need an early season football ~x,
football in the '60s and semi-pro football
come on out.
in the '70s, eighties and '90s.
If semi-pro games are anything, thefre
The Warriors and Disciples also travelled outside of their league, playing always hard-hitting.

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Bill Elliott has won four Cup 111CC:Ii at
Dover Downs, but none since the

wai Dale Earnhardt Jr., wi t~
$1 ,S.5tl.521, even though he was only

track was paved in concrete in 1995.
Asked what wu the key to winning at Dover, Elli olt sa id, "I don't
really know sinee they 'concreted ' it.
I have11't figured It out yd."

16th In the point standings.
·
The only other drivt r outs ide the
toriO with more thin Sl million in
earninas wa ~ Bill Ellioll, with
$1,3.52,303. The onl y dri ve r in the
top I0 with less lhan $1 milli on was

X

Ricky Rudd at $858,859.

MONEY TALKS: Enteri11g
Dover, the top eiaht drivers in the
Winsron Cup points standinp. and
nim: of the lop 10, had already
eamod more than $1 million this year.
Thankc to his 10ktory in the Dayton• SOO, Dale Jarrett led in money
earnings wilh $3.413,094. A Sl mil·
lion bonWI fQr wi11ning Las Vegas
X
ptJI Jeff Burton close behind at
NO CONCRETE ANSWER: . $3,112,194. Third in money eamings

should win; yo uth shoukl not prevail
in th is instance. Maybe later, but nat
any time !iOOn.
" I am a little surprised that he and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. have ~n iO soon.
I thought it would take longer ro r
both of them Ia win . Matt iJ certainly going to be one to reckon with in
NASCAR for a long time."

X

I

ME AND MY BUDDY: M"k

A LOT OF RACES: Jeff Ham·

Martin looks forward to the day
when he and p rot~gCI Matt Kenseth
can run wheel· to-wheel with each
oth er with a Winston Cup victory
ridlrig on the outcome.
" I think it would be great ih rate
came down to the t'NO of us," said
Mart in. "I do think the old mar)

mond watched Chad LiHie take the
green nac June 4 for Hamm ond's
SOOt h race as a Winston Cup crew
~hief.

Nine active driven h111e competed
in 500 racu, hut Hammond is the
on ly active crew chief to reach that

~•lillluu.coa~

•Grt&amp; Zlpadelll wn
COICtrned lbout the
11
one ml1takt" tlllt kept
preYintl- hfl drlv«.
Ton~

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

stewart, frvm

Ridenour
Supply

wlnntnc l'lcta. TltrH
tim• dUrl., tha MaiOII,
Stewart b.ct come cJOM
to wiMiifC, OniJ to fill

St. At. 248

ollorl., p o r t - of

Chester

OM mlttakt or anotMr.
Zlp....ill't ptt crew IMCit
..,. that ..... ~ ..... ,.

happen on Sunclly, ...,cl
the rHult wa Stew.n•s

ftrat victory of the

uaeon.

level.

•

-'

: IOUTHIIIN UIKIT8ALL CAMP 2000 - Seventy-one youth bBsketball pll)'ers In &amp;radu three throu1h nlnB took part In the recBnt Southern
· H"" School bBSketball camp. The c:emp waB operltl&lt;l by Southern bOya varsity coach J!IY Rete, Tornado verelty pliyere, Beever Eastern. head
· c;oac:h Jeff CaldWell, Rlver Villlay hBBd coach Cart Wolfa, end Recine UMC youth minister Tom Gill, who 11 a former Mr. Ohio Body Builder. Front
: rr:Nt,left to l'lllt, 8reBnne Taylor, Gibby Johnson, BrookB Chldwlll, Taylor ·Lemley, LlndsBy Telford, Katie Woods, Danlill ImbOden, Cody Counts,
: Colby Roeebtrry, Jorden Taylor, Kyle Cunnln~&amp;~~em, JIIH Rltchle , Cyle Rees end Kally Winebrenner. Second row, left to l'lllht, Cody Patterson,
: Wealey Riffle, Nathan M018, CetJe WOlfe, Rac:heel Perklna, John Brauer, Cl\rlltophBr Holter, Bryan Harris, Weston Roberts, Chel$ea PapB,
· Emma Hunter and Ryan Oor'ialdaon. Third row, 18ft to rll&amp;ht. SutCh Mernho!lt, Ryan Chapmen, Eric PIBroe, Nathan Cook, Corey Brlna1er, Tren: ton RoHbtrry, Chrl1 BurkhBmmer, Whitney Riffle , Erin Chepmen, St- Sellers and Corbln Sellers. Fourth row, left to right, Mallory Hill, Allie
: Reel, Darcy Winebrenner, Oerln Teaford, C'tmeron BrlnB&amp;er, Dennla Adklna; Jecob Hunter, J.R. Hupp, Daniel Bookman and Hedley Exsxssoc.
: (Scott Wolfe photo)
.
.

I

''

~' mor1 Information: ·

SR 124 In Portland. Ohio
on thl Ohio kl'ftr
l milts north of
Ravenswood,WV
)ull oW 1·17 at lXII 146

www.loglamconctrtl.com

by:

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�Thursday, June 8 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

• Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 8, 2000

550

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&amp; VIcinity

Wooden bunk beds $40 00 e ec
s o e $50 00 wo ks good 304
675-8868

530

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY SS ?
No Fee Unt~;~.ss We w n
e8e t!!l2 3345

Antiques

Ro we e P pp es 8 Weeks Old
Fo Sa e 3 lei F
B ooded
Ha e Mo he &amp; Fa he 740 388
9665

570

Musical
Instruments

37 Peop e Needed To Lose Up
To 30 Pounds n The Ne~e 30
Days F ee Samp es 740 44
1982

Cay on Louden a e
up da ed n ce 3 b
6 65

6xBO A C
307 675

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK
'

FED UPW THTHE
RUN AROUND?
wan A New Home w No Has
5 e Ca Fo P e App o a
888 565 0 67

REAL ESTATE
Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
Soe App~ean Shoud Be A Mo
va ed Peop e 0 ented Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 gan zed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab y Some Com
pue Sk s Aequ ed Sa a y And
Bonus P us Bene Package
Send Resume App ca ons To
Acqu s ons F ne Jewe y 15
Second Avenue Ga po s OH
4563

o

Fa~e

To 740-446 2600

310 Homes for Sale
FINANCIAL

210

I 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REP OS
CALL NOW
800 360 4620
EXT B509

Business
Opportunity
6x80 3BR 2B A $268 pe
mo h l ow Down Payme
F ee
A F ee De e y
888 928
3426
New

NOTCE
OH D VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends ha yo u do bu s
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send mo ey h ough he
rna un you ha en es gaed
he otfenrlQ

630

Livestock

740 367

New Doub ew de 3 BR 2B A
$276 pe mon h ow Down Pay
men F ee A F ee De e y
see 928 3426

99 YZ 12 5 New Pas c New
Reeds New P s on &amp; A ngs Ve y
Powerfu B ke looks New F on
Fo ks Ha e Been Compeey Ae
bu Wh ch nc udes New Sea s
And F u d Rea Shock Has Bee
Ae ha ged w h ~ ogen And
Chec ked Fo B eed 0
T es
A e n Ex ce en Cond on Cha n
And Sp ocke s A e l ke New
I BOO 740.446 7375

PUBUC NOTICE
The
following
appllcatlona and/or varlllad
complalnll ware r-Ived
and the following dralt
propoaad or final actlona
were laaued by the Ohio
Environmental Prolectlon
Agency (OEPA) lilt Wllk
Acllona • Include the
adoption modification or
repeal ol ardara (other than
emergency ardara) lhe
IIIUinCI
danlal
modification or revocallon
olllcenaea ptrmHa 111111
varlanc11 or cartlllcatta
and the approval or
dlaapproval of plana and
apaclflcallona
• Draft
Acllona
are wrlllen
atatemanta ol lha Dlraolor
of
Environmental
Protacllon 1 (Diractor a)
Intent with raapact to the
laauanct denial ole of a
permll llctnat order ole
lntortaled poraona may
aubmlt wrttton commonla or
request 1 public meollng
regarding droll actions
Comments or public
maotlng raqu1111 must be
submitted within 30 daya of
notice of tho dratt acllon
Propoaed actions are
written atatemanta of tha
dlrtctora lntenl with
reapact to the leauanca
denial
modification
revocation or renewal of a
ptrmH llcen11 or variance
Wrllten comments and
rtquuta lor a public
muting regarding a
proposed acllon may be
submitted within 30 days ol
notice of the proposed
action An adjudication
haarlng may be held on a
propoaad action If a hearing
request or objection le
received by the OEPA Within
30 daya of laauanca altha
propo~ed acllon Written
commenta requeata for
public meatlnga
and
adjudication
hurlng
requeata mual be aent to
Hoerlng Clerk
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency P 0 Box 1049
Columbua Ohio 43218-1049
(Telephone 814-644 2129)
Final Actions are actions
ol the director which are
alfactlve upon laauanca or a
alated alfactlve dale
Purauant to Ohio Revised
Code Section 3745 04 a
final action may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental Review
Appeals Commlnlon
(ERAC) (Formerly Known
Aa The Bnvlronmanlal
Board 01 Review) by a
peraon who waa a party Ia a
proceeding before the
director by llllng an appnl
within 30 daya of nolle• of
the final action Purauant to
Ohio Revised Coda Section
3745 07 a llnal aQtlon
laoulng
denying
modifying revoking or
renewing a permH llctnll
or variance which Ia not
preceded by a propoaed
action may bt appaalad to
tht ERAC by llllng an
appeal within 30 daya of
laauanca ol tht final action
ERAC appeala must be Iliad
with Environmental Review
Appeala Commlaalon 238
E11l Town Street Room
300 Columbue Ohio 43215
A copy of lho appeal must
bt aerved on the Olractor
within 3 deya alter filing the
appeal with the ERAC
Application lor permit to
Install
Mtlga Counly Transfer
Stetlon

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

32x80 Fa c o y Aepo Ne e
l ved n $49 950
888 69
6777

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page B 5

Public Notice
34871 Rock Sprt110a Road
Pomeroy OH
Facility Olacrlpllon Air
Appllactlon No 08-08199
Application 10&lt;
parmH to lnatllll Mlllrtel
handling II Solkl Walla
Tranaler Stillion and
Roadway• and Park1110
Area
(8)81tc

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
that on Saturday June 10
2000 at 1o 00 • m a public
aala will be hold 11211 Well
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio Tho Farmer a Bank
and Savlnga Company
utended parking lot
(bealda Powell 1 Super
Valu) to tell for caah the
following collateral
1993
Ford
Probe
12VCT22BOP5181912
The Farmero Bank and
Savlnga
Company
Pomeroy Ohio reaervaa lha
right to bid at thla aala and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala
Further The Farmera Bank
and Savlnga Company
IIIIIVII lhl right tq rajacl
any or all blda aubmlttad
Further
the
abova
collateral will be aold In 1111
condiiJon It Ia In with no
uprua or Implied
warranllta given
For further Information
contact Shalla Buchanan at
992 2138
(8)7 8 9 3TC

Advertise y business
eage
\

\

~ror as

was
~ $25 per inch
~~

~

one

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

\)oN 1' Yov 1-fATG IT
w~1&gt;N 6VE~Ts A ~RIVE
P,.l"'t\f 1\1 I&gt;INNER Tlil!~ 7

ALZHEIMER S SUPPORT
GROUP MEETING
Thursday June 8 2000 at
630 p m
SCEN CHILLS NURSING
CENTER
311 Buckndge Rd
(Behind Spr ng Valley C nema)
nGalpols
Spectal Guest Carol HDggue
The Portsmouth Area
Alzhe mer s Assoc1at10n
Everyone Welcome
Please RSVP to Pam Jones
(740) 446 7150

Scenic HillS
The Alzhe mer s Experts

-0-

ET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repawed New &amp; Rebu n Sock
ca Ron E ans 800.537 9528

DR VEAS WANTED OTR RE
GIONAL LOCAL Reach The
Summ 01 You F nanc a Goa s
Wo k Fo A Company Tha Ca es
About You You Fam y And Vou
Fu u e l m ed Open ngs 29
CPM A M es Un oad ng Pay
Pe sona zed D spa ch Home a
en Hoi day Naca lon Pay 40 K
Medea Pes Dena Rde Po
g am 98 o/. No Touch F e gh
Ass gned T 2000 s Ca Summ
T anspo a on BOO 876 0680 0
5 3 564 B945 EOE

B and New 26~e58 Mod u a Home
Sm hs Cusom Cab ne s 3 Bed
ooms 2 Ba hs P ce S45 000
Mus Be Moved Ca 740 388
9622

Fl ge

Farms for Sale

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CAED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPO S
BOO
355 0024 E 6040
AU Yard Sills Muat
Be Paid n Advlnce
DEAQLINE 2 00 p m
the d8y before the ad
Ia o run Sunday
odHon 2 OOpm
Friday Monday edition
9 30 1 m Slturday

NEW L STING
HUNTERSH LL
3 T ac s 0 P me Rec ea one
land o hes USA a d 29
Ac es Fo As ow As $27 900
Land Con ac s A a abe Ca
Now
800 2 3 8~65 An hony
laM Company L d www coun y
tyme com

en o y D s oun P es
On V ny Sk ng Coo s W nd
ows A ho s Wa e Hea e s
fD umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb convbenne
NEW BRAND NAM E CO MPUT
ERS
Amos E e yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Dow
ow
Mon h y Pay men s
BOO 6 7
3476 E• 330

340

Business and
Buildings
SLANO V EW MOTEL
R7Gapos0ho

710 Autos for Sale
CAR S FROM $200 POL CE M
POUN OS Honda s Toyo a s
Che ys Jeeps And Spo U
es Ca Now 800 772 470
EXT 7832

Co eman pop up s eeps 5 good
ond 000 oo 304 576 2B2

s

,

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

WV HUNT NG LAND
30 To 00 Ac e T ac s 0 P
Hun ng land
Sa ng A
$ 6 500 97 Aces Fo $57 000
Can Comb ne F ee Maps and
Con ac Ava abe
aoo 2 3
8365

TRANSPORTATION

Tappan H E c ency 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Co nd on ng
S~s ems F ee 8 Yea Wa any
BBnne s Hea g &amp; Coo ng
800 87? 5967 www o b com be

nan

Fou Un s AdU yRoom Pus
One F oo Home n Two Apa
men s Can Be Con e ed BacM.
ToNceSngeHome

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un ond ana e me gua an ee
oca ele ences u n she d Es
ab 5 ed 975 Ca 24 H s (740
446 0870
soo 287 0576 Aog
esWaepoong

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.
A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!
So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
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Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

EMPLOVMEm
SERVICES
URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
o $45 o 2 o 3
hou s week v Ca Se a Tee 740
592 665

donors ea n $35

110

Help Wanted

Ren 0 Sa e On land Con ac
Home On SA 588 MnueFom
GAHS 4044 59

WAN T A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
Gl' We F ance 0 Oown Pas
C ed P ob ems OK E en
Tu ned Down Be o e Rees abl &amp;h
You C ed

800 659 0359

entine

�Thursday, June 8 2000
Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

• Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 8, 2000

550

Public Notice

Building
Supplies

MERCHANDISE
ANNOU NCEMENTS

005

Personals

STAAT DATING TON GHT
Have Fun Meelng E gbe Sn
g es n You A. ea Ca Fo Mo e
nro mal on 1 BOO RQMA.NCE
Ext 9735

NO DOWN PAYMENT
No Down Paymenl Requ e&lt;l W h
Gove nmen Sponso ed loan
Good C ed 1 And S eady ncome
Requ ed Ca Today Fa Mo e
n o ma on ndependence Mo
gage Se v ces 126 Mad son
Lal&lt;&amp;wood OH 44 07 MB 679
600 645 0036

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
June 9 h o h 9 A M S PM
State Route 325 2 M leS North 01
Roo Grandt McDonald's
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA

Now H ng No Expe ence PaJd
T a n ng G ea Be e s Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 566

140

30 Announcements
GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
be sh p 0 T mesha e WE LL
TAKE T A me as Mos Sue

w-NW

App ances
Recona oned
Watha s D ye s Ranges Re
g a o s 90 Day Gua an ee We
Se New May ag App ances
F ench C y May ag 740 446

1195

Business
Training

cess u Campg ou d And T me
sha e Resa e c ea nghouse Ca
RESORT SA ES NTERNAT ON
AL 800 423 5967 24 Hou s

510

RENTALS

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
FREE FREE

eso sales com

EMS

MONEY PROS

NOW ACCEPT NG AP

PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
NO A.PP

CA ON FEE

~ew

877

230

And Used fu n u e S o e

Ba ow Ho day nn Kana ga 8 g
Sav ngs On New Couches Good
Hosp a Bed 992
2 F Co
b II Runabou Boa Nf:tW Cond

543 8357 EXT 402

Professional
Services

on

C he k Us Ou

740 446

4782
R&amp;D s Used Fu n u e &amp; Ap
p ances G ea Se ec on I? ced

www e commb z ne
A e you connec ed ?

n ca nname

Tq Se

ed PhO og a

nte ne

use waned $350 $800 a week
PT FT u y e undab e dec s on
paCkag e $39
866 365 9365
www make hebucks com

New To YouTh It Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A hens
740 592 642
.Cua y co h ng a d ho seho d
ems $ oo bag sa e e e y
'fh sday Monday h u Sa u da
900530

Come And 8 owse

Co ne Of Aou e 7 &amp; Add son
P ke We Buy Fu n u e 740
367-&lt;&gt;280

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Wooden bunk beds $40 00 e ec
s o e $50 00 wo ks good 304
675-8868

530

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY SS ?
No Fee Unt~;~.ss We w n
e8e t!!l2 3345

Antiques

Ro we e P pp es 8 Weeks Old
Fo Sa e 3 lei F
B ooded
Ha e Mo he &amp; Fa he 740 388
9665

570

Musical
Instruments

37 Peop e Needed To Lose Up
To 30 Pounds n The Ne~e 30
Days F ee Samp es 740 44
1982

Cay on Louden a e
up da ed n ce 3 b
6 65

6xBO A C
307 675

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK
'

FED UPW THTHE
RUN AROUND?
wan A New Home w No Has
5 e Ca Fo P e App o a
888 565 0 67

REAL ESTATE
Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
Soe App~ean Shoud Be A Mo
va ed Peop e 0 ented Pe son
Cand da e Mus Be 0 gan zed
Abe To Manage 0 he s And
Have Sa es Ab y Some Com
pue Sk s Aequ ed Sa a y And
Bonus P us Bene Package
Send Resume App ca ons To
Acqu s ons F ne Jewe y 15
Second Avenue Ga po s OH
4563

o

Fa~e

To 740-446 2600

310 Homes for Sale
FINANCIAL

210

I 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV T BANK REP OS
CALL NOW
800 360 4620
EXT B509

Business
Opportunity
6x80 3BR 2B A $268 pe
mo h l ow Down Payme
F ee
A F ee De e y
888 928
3426
New

NOTCE
OH D VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommends ha yo u do bu s
ness w h peop e you know and
NOT o send mo ey h ough he
rna un you ha en es gaed
he otfenrlQ

630

Livestock

740 367

New Doub ew de 3 BR 2B A
$276 pe mon h ow Down Pay
men F ee A F ee De e y
see 928 3426

99 YZ 12 5 New Pas c New
Reeds New P s on &amp; A ngs Ve y
Powerfu B ke looks New F on
Fo ks Ha e Been Compeey Ae
bu Wh ch nc udes New Sea s
And F u d Rea Shock Has Bee
Ae ha ged w h ~ ogen And
Chec ked Fo B eed 0
T es
A e n Ex ce en Cond on Cha n
And Sp ocke s A e l ke New
I BOO 740.446 7375

PUBUC NOTICE
The
following
appllcatlona and/or varlllad
complalnll ware r-Ived
and the following dralt
propoaad or final actlona
were laaued by the Ohio
Environmental Prolectlon
Agency (OEPA) lilt Wllk
Acllona • Include the
adoption modification or
repeal ol ardara (other than
emergency ardara) lhe
IIIUinCI
danlal
modification or revocallon
olllcenaea ptrmHa 111111
varlanc11 or cartlllcatta
and the approval or
dlaapproval of plana and
apaclflcallona
• Draft
Acllona
are wrlllen
atatemanta ol lha Dlraolor
of
Environmental
Protacllon 1 (Diractor a)
Intent with raapact to the
laauanct denial ole of a
permll llctnat order ole
lntortaled poraona may
aubmlt wrttton commonla or
request 1 public meollng
regarding droll actions
Comments or public
maotlng raqu1111 must be
submitted within 30 daya of
notice of tho dratt acllon
Propoaed actions are
written atatemanta of tha
dlrtctora lntenl with
reapact to the leauanca
denial
modification
revocation or renewal of a
ptrmH llcen11 or variance
Wrllten comments and
rtquuta lor a public
muting regarding a
proposed acllon may be
submitted within 30 days ol
notice of the proposed
action An adjudication
haarlng may be held on a
propoaad action If a hearing
request or objection le
received by the OEPA Within
30 daya of laauanca altha
propo~ed acllon Written
commenta requeata for
public meatlnga
and
adjudication
hurlng
requeata mual be aent to
Hoerlng Clerk
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency P 0 Box 1049
Columbua Ohio 43218-1049
(Telephone 814-644 2129)
Final Actions are actions
ol the director which are
alfactlve upon laauanca or a
alated alfactlve dale
Purauant to Ohio Revised
Code Section 3745 04 a
final action may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental Review
Appeals Commlnlon
(ERAC) (Formerly Known
Aa The Bnvlronmanlal
Board 01 Review) by a
peraon who waa a party Ia a
proceeding before the
director by llllng an appnl
within 30 daya of nolle• of
the final action Purauant to
Ohio Revised Coda Section
3745 07 a llnal aQtlon
laoulng
denying
modifying revoking or
renewing a permH llctnll
or variance which Ia not
preceded by a propoaed
action may bt appaalad to
tht ERAC by llllng an
appeal within 30 daya of
laauanca ol tht final action
ERAC appeala must be Iliad
with Environmental Review
Appeala Commlaalon 238
E11l Town Street Room
300 Columbue Ohio 43215
A copy of lho appeal must
bt aerved on the Olractor
within 3 deya alter filing the
appeal with the ERAC
Application lor permit to
Install
Mtlga Counly Transfer
Stetlon

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

32x80 Fa c o y Aepo Ne e
l ved n $49 950
888 69
6777

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page B 5

Public Notice
34871 Rock Sprt110a Road
Pomeroy OH
Facility Olacrlpllon Air
Appllactlon No 08-08199
Application 10&lt;
parmH to lnatllll Mlllrtel
handling II Solkl Walla
Tranaler Stillion and
Roadway• and Park1110
Area
(8)81tc

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
that on Saturday June 10
2000 at 1o 00 • m a public
aala will be hold 11211 Well
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio Tho Farmer a Bank
and Savlnga Company
utended parking lot
(bealda Powell 1 Super
Valu) to tell for caah the
following collateral
1993
Ford
Probe
12VCT22BOP5181912
The Farmero Bank and
Savlnga
Company
Pomeroy Ohio reaervaa lha
right to bid at thla aala and
to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala
Further The Farmera Bank
and Savlnga Company
IIIIIVII lhl right tq rajacl
any or all blda aubmlttad
Further
the
abova
collateral will be aold In 1111
condiiJon It Ia In with no
uprua or Implied
warranllta given
For further Information
contact Shalla Buchanan at
992 2138
(8)7 8 9 3TC

Advertise y business
eage
\

\

~ror as

was
~ $25 per inch
~~

~

one

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

\)oN 1' Yov 1-fATG IT
w~1&gt;N 6VE~Ts A ~RIVE
P,.l"'t\f 1\1 I&gt;INNER Tlil!~ 7

ALZHEIMER S SUPPORT
GROUP MEETING
Thursday June 8 2000 at
630 p m
SCEN CHILLS NURSING
CENTER
311 Buckndge Rd
(Behind Spr ng Valley C nema)
nGalpols
Spectal Guest Carol HDggue
The Portsmouth Area
Alzhe mer s Assoc1at10n
Everyone Welcome
Please RSVP to Pam Jones
(740) 446 7150

Scenic HillS
The Alzhe mer s Experts

-0-

ET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Repawed New &amp; Rebu n Sock
ca Ron E ans 800.537 9528

DR VEAS WANTED OTR RE
GIONAL LOCAL Reach The
Summ 01 You F nanc a Goa s
Wo k Fo A Company Tha Ca es
About You You Fam y And Vou
Fu u e l m ed Open ngs 29
CPM A M es Un oad ng Pay
Pe sona zed D spa ch Home a
en Hoi day Naca lon Pay 40 K
Medea Pes Dena Rde Po
g am 98 o/. No Touch F e gh
Ass gned T 2000 s Ca Summ
T anspo a on BOO 876 0680 0
5 3 564 B945 EOE

B and New 26~e58 Mod u a Home
Sm hs Cusom Cab ne s 3 Bed
ooms 2 Ba hs P ce S45 000
Mus Be Moved Ca 740 388
9622

Fl ge

Farms for Sale

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0
DOWN NO CAED T NEEDED
GOV T BANK AEPO S
BOO
355 0024 E 6040
AU Yard Sills Muat
Be Paid n Advlnce
DEAQLINE 2 00 p m
the d8y before the ad
Ia o run Sunday
odHon 2 OOpm
Friday Monday edition
9 30 1 m Slturday

NEW L STING
HUNTERSH LL
3 T ac s 0 P me Rec ea one
land o hes USA a d 29
Ac es Fo As ow As $27 900
Land Con ac s A a abe Ca
Now
800 2 3 8~65 An hony
laM Company L d www coun y
tyme com

en o y D s oun P es
On V ny Sk ng Coo s W nd
ows A ho s Wa e Hea e s
fD umb ng &amp; E ec ca Pa s Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Benne s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb convbenne
NEW BRAND NAM E CO MPUT
ERS
Amos E e yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Dow
ow
Mon h y Pay men s
BOO 6 7
3476 E• 330

340

Business and
Buildings
SLANO V EW MOTEL
R7Gapos0ho

710 Autos for Sale
CAR S FROM $200 POL CE M
POUN OS Honda s Toyo a s
Che ys Jeeps And Spo U
es Ca Now 800 772 470
EXT 7832

Co eman pop up s eeps 5 good
ond 000 oo 304 576 2B2

s

,

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

WV HUNT NG LAND
30 To 00 Ac e T ac s 0 P
Hun ng land
Sa ng A
$ 6 500 97 Aces Fo $57 000
Can Comb ne F ee Maps and
Con ac Ava abe
aoo 2 3
8365

TRANSPORTATION

Tappan H E c ency 90 Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Co nd on ng
S~s ems F ee 8 Yea Wa any
BBnne s Hea g &amp; Coo ng
800 87? 5967 www o b com be

nan

Fou Un s AdU yRoom Pus
One F oo Home n Two Apa
men s Can Be Con e ed BacM.
ToNceSngeHome

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un ond ana e me gua an ee
oca ele ences u n she d Es
ab 5 ed 975 Ca 24 H s (740
446 0870
soo 287 0576 Aog
esWaepoong

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.
A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!
So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!
Call 992-2155 now to order convenient home delivery.

EMPLOVMEm
SERVICES
URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
o $45 o 2 o 3
hou s week v Ca Se a Tee 740
592 665

donors ea n $35

110

Help Wanted

Ren 0 Sa e On land Con ac
Home On SA 588 MnueFom
GAHS 4044 59

WAN T A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
Gl' We F ance 0 Oown Pas
C ed P ob ems OK E en
Tu ned Down Be o e Rees abl &amp;h
You C ed

800 659 0359

entine

�Thursday, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

-

The Dally Sentinel • Paae B 7

~~)~LLE~Y~OOOPP~~------~~------------------~~----~~~==~~~====~===·
=
==
·======~~;;~-~~
~
~~~
BRJDGI
NEA Crossword Puzzle
: !r'hursclay, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WEI.•

I

-.1-.-

We.'L.L.~FIN~oUT

SOON E.NCX..JGH!

1

AI

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

I

I"He;II.E/6 HI$

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

Repo • Dlvordecl

WORRYING!!!

PAift

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing
.

Call Now lor lnsttnt AP~Irov•sll

992•2753

992•1101

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/VIII•, OH 45723

741 111.0111

5/U.lOlmo

'

Hours M-F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat. 9am-1pm

• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- Jamaa A. Pickens

Over

'

0

6122 1 mo pd.

C
0
N
C
R

40 yrs experience

E
T
E

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

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

OLD LOCKZ4
CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) 593-6671

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

740-949·7039
"Get in whUe you can, space ill limited"

.....
...

S•nNtRome
C:onstr•ctlon

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

~LIDL
..
'
''

.

740-742-3411
BryanReens

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

www.sunsethome.co

. free Estl ma~es
+
Dailey .
Trucking

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

Dozer work.
Fr•• Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

'I
I

i

IN(.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

C!IMMEROll and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

"Take the poi,. out
of paintingLet' me do it for yo11"

-·lnierlor
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m.'
Leave Message

It
V .

:BARNEY
.

Custom Carpet, Vinyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
11te, All Types of
Hardwood Flooring,
Callll't Binding and
Restretching.
30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG
740-992-7724
PAT YOUNG
740·949-0046

30 Yrs. Exp.
740-378-6349

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

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

Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales• 5 gaL buckets
to 55 gal. drums

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

740·985·4194mo

!5)31/1 mo pd.

1

1

1•
7•

PSI

Land Clearing &amp; :
Grading

Septic Sy11e""' &amp; !
Utililie•
•

(7401 992·3838 '

20 Yrs exptrltll!f

&amp;

I

SON

.

Long Bottom, Ohio
Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;

Commercial~

''

metal studt,'

drywall, suspended ceilings
Mike W. Marcum

vinyl siding

Owner

OK/\'( .. .
UK ...
Tfi.P-..t-.IK~ .

The AppUanca

Now Renting

Man

"

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

"33'795 Hiland R~.
Pomeroy, Ohiq

Ill E. lnd
PomerDJ, Dhlli

740·992-SUt.
41281

411 aJOO 1 me·pd.

mo. ~ -

C.OT
DI&amp;S

ON

THose .

•r

Weeding: Mulchln9;i
Pruning: Edging &gt;!
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden De~
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp:

· IT COULD

ae JUST A

&lt;-~

RUMOR, ~JUT I'D SETTER
HOTTAI&lt;E ANY CHANCE$ ..

740·949-3606

d

CRTRUCTDI

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole .
Buildings,· E;tc.
Free Estimates

hintB"s
Cand~ &amp;Crafts

aau•

State Route 248

New Summer Days
Thur a. Frl10 am • 8 pm
Saturday 10 am • 4 pm
On other daye If we are
home, we are OPEN.

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

Local • 843-11284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement, i/;j
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
-~·
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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Ed ge o f Syracuse

•

•

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;~',

!:

Chester, QH

•
•
•
•

Ettel Rocketa and AcceHurJea
Train• by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Une
• Gorsraveo Tuck
Alhearn
• Model Power
• Atlao
• Ufellne

:•

•if:•

Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·800.750-0750

:
':

•
•, •
Contact
Office For Details
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . &lt;t 4
-.; ............. .. .. .. • • ;6,... ............................... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ~

I

740·742·8015 or
1-877-353-7022 .

Advertise your business

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

• : Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
!~
~ •
Apartment
•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
:
,•
• : Range, Refrigerator, A!C, On-Site Laundry, ' ,
I' , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance I •'
i•
Provided
·
1
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
I:
' ,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
,
Office Hours
:
;:
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm
,
•,

DEPAI,IIIft

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 yeara experience
Free Estlmaatea

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

SR 143 W2-'5:XJ7

35537 St. Rt. 7 Marth

oftha Month

Advertise in· ~
this space for; .
$100 per .
month.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

•hdrtism •Cu41e Rtlill•
•Wol4workilt •Wruth1

call 140·985·3831

~jiAclal ~CAnt

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

~a£

992·2772

740·992·1709

Countty ~~Shop

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\ ~:$2 Spei inch

Phone 992-2155
&lt;

57 llaNct wllh ...

6Q98764

••••
tKQ8753

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Mlfcury
21VI-ng
IOUnd

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DOWN

28 Chemical aulllx

30Thln......,.kt

~ ~l:!rlt

38 - Mountolna

oiEurope

37 -Aviv

West North

Paaa
Paaa

Eul

1..

26

Pus
Paaa

Pus

7e

BY PHILLIP ALDER

8uUdo2er &amp; Backho"
Service•
,
House &amp; Trailer Site•

(7 40) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

VOUR

-·

Another deal

,.no.
"'VUN

LANDSCAP~

The

15 Top polnt8
5I Exit

Openibg lead: • 3

PARKIN6

'

I&amp;L INSUlATION &amp;
COIISTIUCTIOit
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage roo·m
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

School org.

,. llrtllth NIWy

I

QUALITY ;.

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

• 3

Soutlo

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

·, I

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS

• 2

N

BUILDING

'

a~-

Pij;.-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

HOWARD
EXCAVATING C~
''nw'
,g

MARCUM

LINDA'S
PAINTING

East

Q.

l1sured· Praftsslotlal Strvkt

Aher 6 pm- 614-985-4180

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio ·

4119,100 1 mo. pd.

"Ahead In Service"
Nutret1a Western Pride 12% Sweet Feod ........:..........'5.25/SO lb bag
Nutreno 16% Rabbil Pellets...................................'6.9$/SO lb. bog
Nu!ret10 Hunters Pride 21% Dog Faod.....................'6.75/SO lb. bag
Nutret10 16% layer Crumbels ................................ •5.99/SO lb. bag
Nutrena Suotth Fatd ............................................. '6.75/SO lb. bag
Shade River J2% Caffle Feed ................................16.75/100 lb. bag

\

9'ofi!d'

Contrutou Welcome

Ke01 Yo11..g

SHfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE
II
I

I

Free Estimates

Man

Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dtrt

WANTED

i'

1·800·311·3391

.The Appliance

Service

..._R_aclne, Ohio

/?~ 1¥

992·1550

Dump Truck

949·2249

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

BISSELL BUILDERS
..

Wool
• 3 z
• 10 • 8 7 4 2
• J 10 • . 8

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985·3948

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

puppiee

llaundod hrmp ~f!!+~

~~?e-o- 5I Ink
21 Ford or

S:

NewHaven WV

7122/TFN

"We're Back"

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
·ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell

Black &amp; Tan

11

• 4

740-985-4141

740-992·1671

...

17

•AQ978

(304) 882·2079

Now uvailable

ctwec:ter

6 K 10 5
• J 8
t A 2
• K J 10 I 5 4

~

Open for Groo1nlngl
for Your Pel's NNIIs.

s.t.d..... ... '*-'

Nort

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIaS
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES

Poms

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

.

~

4Z I'IOrldt city
44 Tie ... 45 MMiy OL

11 · - te.Dbi"

Sevtb
• A J
•AKQ53

SERVICE

Mystic:

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

41

13 . . . , _

(740) 992-3470

GUAUNTEED
AIR CONDIIIONING

71n nallle

11 Aft

~::::::::::::::-;:::;~;;~;·;~:•:mo:~~-

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

31 IJpfi.r limbe
40 Advlct,

Plln ol
12 ....,.,... -

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC. -.·:

stery • P us, Inc

(740) 742-8888
1·888-521·0916

IZJ

Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM
1"'1100 1 rrio .....

ALDER

ACROSS
1 Stocldnge

14

Hauling • Umestone • :
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

45771 .

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats. headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats , motorcycle seats,
boat covers; carpets, etc. ,
Mon • Frl 8:30 • s:oo

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

74o-949-2804

Racine, Ohio

Uc. II D0-50 11ntltln

A &amp; D Auto Up

Under New OWnershiP

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
~- Sales Representative
~
Larry Schey

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gal¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

PHILLIP

PI.AC.€.!

HILL'S
Jf:,WICK'S • .
SELF STORACE HfiOLI"CJ anCI
29670Baahan
Road
EXCfiVfiTI"Cf

'

AT 8:30P.M.

Maloes Tractor &amp;
Equipllll!nt Puts
Factory Authorir.ed
Cue-IHPuts
Dealen.

Naacl It clone, tlve 11 1 etll
FREE ESTIMATES
· Gratt Prlee• on New Homa1

No Embarrassment. ..
You ' re~ Trllated with Respect!

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

..

50f
..
-"

.;

p r,.

,.

1 .......

In the year ahead, your finan,•..- cial picture could undergo an
; improvement. Chances are that
your usual sources will increase,
and an additional' profitable venture may be in the offing, as well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Stick to attempting to bring meat)ingful matters to conclusions
I. today wh.ere you have a chance
•· for successf"l conclusions, but
leave skillful managing of your
:: social life "ntil another day. Get
a jump on life by understanding
, the influences that'll govern you
in the year ahead. Send for your
\.
Astro-Graph predictions by mail' ing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
iI newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, MurI
'I ray Hill Station, New York, NY
I 0 I 56. Be sure to stfte your
Zodiac sign.
,
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
;
! Just because early indicators
might not be too promising, don't
1 lower your expectations for the
; day. Think positively and proceed
: optimistically. lind you'll turn out
•• lucky.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Make
t all important evaluations and coni siderations yourself today, espe1-.-cially in your commercial affair:;
and you'll fare well. Trying to fol-

.' .

While researching yesterday's
yesteryear column, I came upon
this deal. It was -played at the
Knickerbocker Whist Club in a
75-rubber match between the Culbertsons, Josephine _and Ely, and
George Reith-Howard Schenken
during the fall of 1928. Apparently, taking side bets into
account, the stakes were some 40
cents a point. What is the equivalent today?
How did Josephine (South)
know it was safe to bid seven
clubs over Reith's imaginative
two spades? Was she unlucky to
bid seven hearts, or incorrect?
Ely's one-club opening guaranteed at least two-and-a-half
honor tricks. This evaluation
method (effectively, winners)
drove the average player crazy, a
frustration relieved only by the
arrival of high-card points. So,
Josephine could place her partner
with the king-jack of clubs (one
honor trick), the diamond ace (one
honor trick) and either the spade
king or diamond king (half an
honor trick) . Siae judged his having the king of spades, king-queen •
of diamonds &lt;\nd king-jack of
. clubs as very unlikely. And
remember that Blackwood wasn't
invented until 1933.
Seven clubs by North would
have made in comfort. But Reith
trusted his opponents and sacrificed .
Now Josephine e.rred in essaying seven hearts. As three hearts
on the first round would have
been nonforcing; Ely couldn't
.
.
draw a conclusion about a five.card suit. And given East's bidding, the bad heart break was pre. dictable. She should have bid seven no-trump, which is an instant
claimer.
Seven hearts went two down. If
Josephine had bid seven notrump, the Culbertsons would
have been some $900 better off- or $8,500 today. And Reith·
Schenken won by just 100 points!

T=~~;~v S(t;~Q{}lA-L£t.tr~s
141104

~y

WOlD

GAM I

CLAV I. ,OLLAN

0 four
R•orrang1 l•tt•r• of
octamblod worda
low

to fotm four limp It words I

I

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N0 P I E

'I'm worried about running into

1 1
· ~I=-~~-:;:·~=-==~:.:,:
~~~r:·~-o~~~~bout running into my

f--,r-;.,~~~;l,ri
7 ...debt," one fellow told his pa l. "But

--,~'T~-AT'~--R"TIP_;:E;...I9;.:.N. ,.~~~ 0

1-1
.

L
• ....J.-.1.
. ....1..-L.
. ....L. ....J.
"'!""

·8

PRINT NUMBmo

LETTERS

~uoled

Complete the chuckle
by filling lry the missing words
yov develop from step No. 3 below.

I' 12 I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
I II II I I II

A UNSCRAMBLE FORI
.... ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Verbal- Begot- Heron -Quaker- HAVE TO

"You must live your life so that your friends can defend you ." Granny lectured me "Then " she added
"thev will never HAVE TO."
'
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-lot-·

by Luis C.mpoa

~ Cl!lhlr crymplogr~Xn~omm•.,. aMIId"""' 'IIJ*IIoN I l l ' - JIOCillo, poo1 ond

-'"'· Each
-InClue:
11tc:illl10'
TOday's
V equals W

' A T

0 N 0 I' 8

8PIIRDH
II 8

P0

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N 8 II H I

IH

&amp;POE

U II U

P0

0 Y0 N

H0 0 H

NOIKKE
YT L K U

INO.

Z .O I H 0

8 T

00
lA . INSIIHS.'
THZIN YIIKUO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Every eHuatlon - nay, every moment - Ia ol
lnlfnfla worth; lor lila tht ,.,..,,.... ola whole~.'- Goethe
02000

"'NEA. 1nc.

a

-,

·'four
'Birthday
low what others do could be a big
mistake.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
situation that may have· been
causing you a lot of trouble lately could be turned around today to
your advantage, instead. The solutions will become obvious at this
time.
LIBRA (Sept . . 23-0ct. 23)
Instead of meeting obstacles headon today; it might be wiser to try
to circumvent them. With a little
maneuvering and Lady Luck on
your side, you can get what you
go after.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Discuss with friends today a situation that you feel you can no
longer handle on your own. Their
input will help you reconstruct the
matter to your advantage.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21). Be on your toes today,
because a lucky opportunity
involving your work or career
could present itself. Take advantage of it the moment you recog·
nize the signals.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) You'll be far luckier today
socializing with.friends who are
not directly involved in your pri-

I THURSDAY

JUNE al

mary interests, such as work or
family. Diversions will prove very
beneficial for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don't allow yourself to wander
off into tangents today. Stay on
top of things until they are locked
down, especially with a matter
you believe could make you a
profit.
PISCES (feb. 20-Murch 20) A
pannership arrangement can be
lucky for you today if you know
exactly what you're getting yourself into. Make cet1ain your counterparl can off~r that which you
lack.
ARIES (March 21 ;April 19)
Tenacity is esse.ntial today. so
hang in there if you are involved
in something important where· the .
talks might huve broken down.
Everything could reverse itself.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Although there's a possibility you
could luck out in sames of chance
today, Dame Fortune might withdraw her Sllpport if you get too
outlandish about taking risks.

I

�Thursday, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

-

The Dally Sentinel • Paae B 7

~~)~LLE~Y~OOOPP~~------~~------------------~~----~~~==~~~====~===·
=
==
·======~~;;~-~~
~
~~~
BRJDGI
NEA Crossword Puzzle
: !r'hursclay, June 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WEI.•

I

-.1-.-

We.'L.L.~FIN~oUT

SOON E.NCX..JGH!

1

AI

CREDrr PROBLEMS???

I

I"He;II.E/6 HI$

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

Repo • Dlvordecl

WORRYING!!!

PAift

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing
.

Call Now lor lnsttnt AP~Irov•sll

992•2753

992•1101

1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coo/VIII•, OH 45723

741 111.0111

5/U.lOlmo

'

Hours M-F 9 am - 7 pm
Sat. 9am-1pm

• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawnmower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies
Owner- Jamaa A. Pickens

Over

'

0

6122 1 mo pd.

C
0
N
C
R

40 yrs experience

E
T
E

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

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

OLD LOCKZ4
CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) 593-6671

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

740-949·7039
"Get in whUe you can, space ill limited"

.....
...

S•nNtRome
C:onstr•ctlon

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

~LIDL
..
'
''

.

740-742-3411
BryanReens

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

www.sunsethome.co

. free Estl ma~es
+
Dailey .
Trucking

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

Dozer work.
Fr•• Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

'I
I

i

IN(.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

C!IMMEROll and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

"Take the poi,. out
of paintingLet' me do it for yo11"

-·lnierlor
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m.'
Leave Message

It
V .

:BARNEY
.

Custom Carpet, Vinyl,
Commercial an Ceramic
11te, All Types of
Hardwood Flooring,
Callll't Binding and
Restretching.
30 Yrs. Experience
MIKE YOUNG
740-992-7724
PAT YOUNG
740·949-0046

30 Yrs. Exp.
740-378-6349

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

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

Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylinder repairs, oil
Sales• 5 gaL buckets
to 55 gal. drums

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

740·985·4194mo

!5)31/1 mo pd.

1

1

1•
7•

PSI

Land Clearing &amp; :
Grading

Septic Sy11e""' &amp; !
Utililie•
•

(7401 992·3838 '

20 Yrs exptrltll!f

&amp;

I

SON

.

Long Bottom, Ohio
Residential- decks, kitchens,
bathrooms, custom
remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;

Commercial~

''

metal studt,'

drywall, suspended ceilings
Mike W. Marcum

vinyl siding

Owner

OK/\'( .. .
UK ...
Tfi.P-..t-.IK~ .

The AppUanca

Now Renting

Man

"

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

"33'795 Hiland R~.
Pomeroy, Ohiq

Ill E. lnd
PomerDJ, Dhlli

740·992-SUt.
41281

411 aJOO 1 me·pd.

mo. ~ -

C.OT
DI&amp;S

ON

THose .

•r

Weeding: Mulchln9;i
Pruning: Edging &gt;!
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden De~
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp:

· IT COULD

ae JUST A

&lt;-~

RUMOR, ~JUT I'D SETTER
HOTTAI&lt;E ANY CHANCE$ ..

740·949-3606

d

CRTRUCTDI

Quality Window
Systems, Inc.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-4119 or
1-800-291-5600

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole .
Buildings,· E;tc.
Free Estimates

hintB"s
Cand~ &amp;Crafts

aau•

State Route 248

New Summer Days
Thur a. Frl10 am • 8 pm
Saturday 10 am • 4 pm
On other daye If we are
home, we are OPEN.

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

Local • 843-11284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement, i/;j
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
-~·
,.;

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ONE MONTH'S RENT FREE
Waters Ed ge o f Syracuse

•

•

~

~

l:
;~',

!:

Chester, QH

•
•
•
•

Ettel Rocketa and AcceHurJea
Train• by Lionel &amp; MTH
K-Une
• Gorsraveo Tuck
Alhearn
• Model Power
• Atlao
• Ufellne

:•

•if:•

Phone (740) 992-6419
TOO 1·800.750-0750

:
':

•
•, •
Contact
Office For Details
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . &lt;t 4
-.; ............. .. .. .. • • ;6,... ............................... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ~

I

740·742·8015 or
1-877-353-7022 .

Advertise your business

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

• : Now Taking Applications for 1 Bedroom
!~
~ •
Apartment
•
Seniors, Disabled, Handicapped
:
,•
• : Range, Refrigerator, A!C, On-Site Laundry, ' ,
I' , Community Room, 24 Hour Maintenance I •'
i•
Provided
·
1
Call or Come By Our Office Located at
I:
' ,
2070 State Route 124 in Syracuse
,
Office Hours
:
;:
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm
,
•,

DEPAI,IIIft

Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 yeara experience
Free Estlmaatea

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

SR 143 W2-'5:XJ7

35537 St. Rt. 7 Marth

oftha Month

Advertise in· ~
this space for; .
$100 per .
month.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

•hdrtism •Cu41e Rtlill•
•Wol4workilt •Wruth1

call 140·985·3831

~jiAclal ~CAnt

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

~a£

992·2772

740·992·1709

Countty ~~Shop

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, , ·. r.as low·:_as::':'
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\ ~:$2 Spei inch

Phone 992-2155
&lt;

57 llaNct wllh ...

6Q98764

••••
tKQ8753

=:..

Mlfcury
21VI-ng
IOUnd

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DOWN

28 Chemical aulllx

30Thln......,.kt

~ ~l:!rlt

38 - Mountolna

oiEurope

37 -Aviv

West North

Paaa
Paaa

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1..

26

Pus
Paaa

Pus

7e

BY PHILLIP ALDER

8uUdo2er &amp; Backho"
Service•
,
House &amp; Trailer Site•

(7 40) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

VOUR

-·

Another deal

,.no.
"'VUN

LANDSCAP~

The

15 Top polnt8
5I Exit

Openibg lead: • 3

PARKIN6

'

I&amp;L INSUlATION &amp;
COIISTIUCTIOit
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage roo·m
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

School org.

,. llrtllth NIWy

I

QUALITY ;.

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

• 3

Soutlo

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

·, I

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS

• 2

N

BUILDING

'

a~-

Pij;.-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

HOWARD
EXCAVATING C~
''nw'
,g

MARCUM

LINDA'S
PAINTING

East

Q.

l1sured· Praftsslotlal Strvkt

Aher 6 pm- 614-985-4180

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Albany, Ohio ·

4119,100 1 mo. pd.

"Ahead In Service"
Nutret1a Western Pride 12% Sweet Feod ........:..........'5.25/SO lb bag
Nutreno 16% Rabbil Pellets...................................'6.9$/SO lb. bog
Nu!ret10 Hunters Pride 21% Dog Faod.....................'6.75/SO lb. bag
Nutret10 16% layer Crumbels ................................ •5.99/SO lb. bag
Nutrena Suotth Fatd ............................................. '6.75/SO lb. bag
Shade River J2% Caffle Feed ................................16.75/100 lb. bag

\

9'ofi!d'

Contrutou Welcome

Ke01 Yo11..g

SHfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE
II
I

I

Free Estimates

Man

Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime
Sand and Dtrt

WANTED

i'

1·800·311·3391

.The Appliance

Service

..._R_aclne, Ohio

/?~ 1¥

992·1550

Dump Truck

949·2249

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

BISSELL BUILDERS
..

Wool
• 3 z
• 10 • 8 7 4 2
• J 10 • . 8

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985·3948

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

puppiee

llaundod hrmp ~f!!+~

~~?e-o- 5I Ink
21 Ford or

S:

NewHaven WV

7122/TFN

"We're Back"

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
·ufetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell

Black &amp; Tan

11

• 4

740-985-4141

740-992·1671

...

17

•AQ978

(304) 882·2079

Now uvailable

ctwec:ter

6 K 10 5
• J 8
t A 2
• K J 10 I 5 4

~

Open for Groo1nlngl
for Your Pel's NNIIs.

s.t.d..... ... '*-'

Nort

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVIaS
MASONRY · BOBCAT SERVICES

Poms

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

.

~

4Z I'IOrldt city
44 Tie ... 45 MMiy OL

11 · - te.Dbi"

Sevtb
• A J
•AKQ53

SERVICE

Mystic:

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

41

13 . . . , _

(740) 992-3470

GUAUNTEED
AIR CONDIIIONING

71n nallle

11 Aft

~::::::::::::::-;:::;~;;~;·;~:•:mo:~~-

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

31 IJpfi.r limbe
40 Advlct,

Plln ol
12 ....,.,... -

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC. -.·:

stery • P us, Inc

(740) 742-8888
1·888-521·0916

IZJ

Shop Foreman- Shane Baker

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM
1"'1100 1 rrio .....

ALDER

ACROSS
1 Stocldnge

14

Hauling • Umestone • :
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

45771 .

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats. headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats , motorcycle seats,
boat covers; carpets, etc. ,
Mon • Frl 8:30 • s:oo

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

74o-949-2804

Racine, Ohio

Uc. II D0-50 11ntltln

A &amp; D Auto Up

Under New OWnershiP

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
~- Sales Representative
~
Larry Schey

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gal¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.

PHILLIP

PI.AC.€.!

HILL'S
Jf:,WICK'S • .
SELF STORACE HfiOLI"CJ anCI
29670Baahan
Road
EXCfiVfiTI"Cf

'

AT 8:30P.M.

Maloes Tractor &amp;
Equipllll!nt Puts
Factory Authorir.ed
Cue-IHPuts
Dealen.

Naacl It clone, tlve 11 1 etll
FREE ESTIMATES
· Gratt Prlee• on New Homa1

No Embarrassment. ..
You ' re~ Trllated with Respect!

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

..

50f
..
-"

.;

p r,.

,.

1 .......

In the year ahead, your finan,•..- cial picture could undergo an
; improvement. Chances are that
your usual sources will increase,
and an additional' profitable venture may be in the offing, as well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Stick to attempting to bring meat)ingful matters to conclusions
I. today wh.ere you have a chance
•· for successf"l conclusions, but
leave skillful managing of your
:: social life "ntil another day. Get
a jump on life by understanding
, the influences that'll govern you
in the year ahead. Send for your
\.
Astro-Graph predictions by mail' ing $2 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
iI newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, MurI
'I ray Hill Station, New York, NY
I 0 I 56. Be sure to stfte your
Zodiac sign.
,
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
;
! Just because early indicators
might not be too promising, don't
1 lower your expectations for the
; day. Think positively and proceed
: optimistically. lind you'll turn out
•• lucky.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Make
t all important evaluations and coni siderations yourself today, espe1-.-cially in your commercial affair:;
and you'll fare well. Trying to fol-

.' .

While researching yesterday's
yesteryear column, I came upon
this deal. It was -played at the
Knickerbocker Whist Club in a
75-rubber match between the Culbertsons, Josephine _and Ely, and
George Reith-Howard Schenken
during the fall of 1928. Apparently, taking side bets into
account, the stakes were some 40
cents a point. What is the equivalent today?
How did Josephine (South)
know it was safe to bid seven
clubs over Reith's imaginative
two spades? Was she unlucky to
bid seven hearts, or incorrect?
Ely's one-club opening guaranteed at least two-and-a-half
honor tricks. This evaluation
method (effectively, winners)
drove the average player crazy, a
frustration relieved only by the
arrival of high-card points. So,
Josephine could place her partner
with the king-jack of clubs (one
honor trick), the diamond ace (one
honor trick) and either the spade
king or diamond king (half an
honor trick) . Siae judged his having the king of spades, king-queen •
of diamonds &lt;\nd king-jack of
. clubs as very unlikely. And
remember that Blackwood wasn't
invented until 1933.
Seven clubs by North would
have made in comfort. But Reith
trusted his opponents and sacrificed .
Now Josephine e.rred in essaying seven hearts. As three hearts
on the first round would have
been nonforcing; Ely couldn't
.
.
draw a conclusion about a five.card suit. And given East's bidding, the bad heart break was pre. dictable. She should have bid seven no-trump, which is an instant
claimer.
Seven hearts went two down. If
Josephine had bid seven notrump, the Culbertsons would
have been some $900 better off- or $8,500 today. And Reith·
Schenken won by just 100 points!

T=~~;~v S(t;~Q{}lA-L£t.tr~s
141104

~y

WOlD

GAM I

CLAV I. ,OLLAN

0 four
R•orrang1 l•tt•r• of
octamblod worda
low

to fotm four limp It words I

I

I..

N0 P I E

'I'm worried about running into

1 1
· ~I=-~~-:;:·~=-==~:.:,:
~~~r:·~-o~~~~bout running into my

f--,r-;.,~~~;l,ri
7 ...debt," one fellow told his pa l. "But

--,~'T~-AT'~--R"TIP_;:E;...I9;.:.N. ,.~~~ 0

1-1
.

L
• ....J.-.1.
. ....1..-L.
. ....L. ....J.
"'!""

·8

PRINT NUMBmo

LETTERS

~uoled

Complete the chuckle
by filling lry the missing words
yov develop from step No. 3 below.

I' 12 I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
I II II I I II

A UNSCRAMBLE FORI
.... ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Verbal- Begot- Heron -Quaker- HAVE TO

"You must live your life so that your friends can defend you ." Granny lectured me "Then " she added
"thev will never HAVE TO."
'
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-lot-·

by Luis C.mpoa

~ Cl!lhlr crymplogr~Xn~omm•.,. aMIId"""' 'IIJ*IIoN I l l ' - JIOCillo, poo1 ond

-'"'· Each
-InClue:
11tc:illl10'
TOday's
V equals W

' A T

0 N 0 I' 8

8PIIRDH
II 8

P0

l

N 8 II H I

IH

&amp;POE

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P0

0 Y0 N

H0 0 H

NOIKKE
YT L K U

INO.

Z .O I H 0

8 T

00
lA . INSIIHS.'
THZIN YIIKUO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Every eHuatlon - nay, every moment - Ia ol
lnlfnfla worth; lor lila tht ,.,..,,.... ola whole~.'- Goethe
02000

"'NEA. 1nc.

a

-,

·'four
'Birthday
low what others do could be a big
mistake.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
situation that may have· been
causing you a lot of trouble lately could be turned around today to
your advantage, instead. The solutions will become obvious at this
time.
LIBRA (Sept . . 23-0ct. 23)
Instead of meeting obstacles headon today; it might be wiser to try
to circumvent them. With a little
maneuvering and Lady Luck on
your side, you can get what you
go after.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Discuss with friends today a situation that you feel you can no
longer handle on your own. Their
input will help you reconstruct the
matter to your advantage.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21). Be on your toes today,
because a lucky opportunity
involving your work or career
could present itself. Take advantage of it the moment you recog·
nize the signals.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) You'll be far luckier today
socializing with.friends who are
not directly involved in your pri-

I THURSDAY

JUNE al

mary interests, such as work or
family. Diversions will prove very
beneficial for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don't allow yourself to wander
off into tangents today. Stay on
top of things until they are locked
down, especially with a matter
you believe could make you a
profit.
PISCES (feb. 20-Murch 20) A
pannership arrangement can be
lucky for you today if you know
exactly what you're getting yourself into. Make cet1ain your counterparl can off~r that which you
lack.
ARIES (March 21 ;April 19)
Tenacity is esse.ntial today. so
hang in there if you are involved
in something important where· the .
talks might huve broken down.
Everything could reverse itself.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Although there's a possibility you
could luck out in sames of chance
today, Dame Fortune might withdraw her Sllpport if you get too
outlandish about taking risks.

I

�•

r
Page B 8 "The o.Jiy Santhwl

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thurwday, June 8, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

-I

Dotrvlt ........................ ..... 21 34 .382 12 1/2

PRO

League

EulamDMolon
Toam
W L . Pet. 011
....................... :.... 37 21 .838
Montreal ..........................31 35 .554
s
N"' Yor1&lt; ......................... 32 2e .552
5
f'lo!l&lt;la .............................27 33 .450 ,
f'1llladelpllle ....................22 35 .38e 14 112
CentraiDivlalon
et. Louls.................... .......33 2e .ssa
Cincinnati .....................31 27 .134 1 1/2
Pit18burgh .......................26 31 .455
8
ChlcagQ ..........................26 35 .415 I 1/2
Mj!wa&lt;lkH ...................... .23 38 .380
10
Houotcn .......................... 21 37 .382 11 112
WNI OMolon
Artzona ...........................36 24 .583
Color""a ........................ 31 2S .553 2 112
Lao ~ ..................... 31 2e .553 2 1/2
Son Franct..., .................. 27 211 .482 8 112
Son Dlega ........................25 33 .431 g 1/2

Amook:an

~.ng.,.

Eaatern Olvlalon
W L
TMm
Now Yon. ....................... .. 32 23
8oo1t&gt;n .......... ........ .......... 31 24
TOtonto ............................ 31 30
BaiUmore ........................ 24 32
Tampa Boy .... ................... 21 37

Pel.

~-lo•I.Cindnmt114

Chlclogo Cubs 8, Arizona •
Lot Angeleo I 1, Ttxal8
OOI&lt;I&lt;Ind 10, Son Diego 4
N.Y. YankHI 7, Montteal2
Flot1doe, Booton2

Pittsburgh 4, llo1roi 3
St. Loulo 4, Kanoas Cl1y 2
N.Y. Mell11 , Baltimore 3
Ptolllldllphla 5. Tampa Boy 4
Toromo 12, Attanta B

c-

l,llllwaulloo 1

AnatwMm 10, san Francieco 8
Today'aGa,_
Boltlmont (Jolvuoon Cl-4) a1 N.V. M.,. (A.-

op.m.

floU01on (Holt 3-tl ol Lot l.ngeleo (Park
4), 10:10p.m. Frlday'aGamM
,

1
4

Mont!MI (Tuot&lt;or 0-0) at Toronto (Carpenter

.4211 8 1/2
.382 12 1/2

Central DlvleiOft

Clicago ..........................35 23 .803
Cltveland ...................... .32 23 .112 I 1/2
Kanoas Cl1y .................... 30 28 .517
5
Minnesota ....................... 27 33 -~
8

Lakers
fromPapB1
in a big game."
The Lakers never trailed after
the ga~e's first basket and opened
a IS- point lead in the first quarter. When Indiana finally made it
close in the second half, O'Neal,
who was 21-of-31 from the field,
shot and passed the Lakers to
another cornfort:oble lead and an
easy victory.
Game 2 is Friday night at the
Staples Center.
• O'Neal's performance was
made possible by the Lakers'
adherence to their game plan,
something mat hasn't always been
this talented but mercurial team's
strength .
Los Angeles patiently worked
the ball into O'Neal all night,
while Shaq continually established excellent low-post position
and scored on short shots. He .
made 12 layups and dunks, six
jumpers from inside 12 feet and
three hook shots.
Kobe Bryant had 1-4 quiet
points for the Lakers, while Ron
Harper added 12.
"We executed the game plan
I 0 times better than we have at
any time in this playoff run;· said
Rick Fox, who scqred nine of his
It points in the fourth quarter as
the Lakers pulled away. "This was
a, performance that was due."
. While Shaq was immensely
successful in his first finals game
with the Lakers, 12-year veteran
and California native Miller made
a disastrous finals debut.
He missed all seven of his shots
· in the first half, finally scored on a
weak layup midway through the
third quart,er, and didn't hit
another shot despite numerous
open looks.
His trademark _bravado still
int:oct, Miller almost seemed as
·though he didn't believe what he
had done - or rather, hadn't
done.
"I tell you what, if they continue to give me those looks, they're
going to be in trouble;' he said.
"My first four baskets went in and

Reds
fromPapB1
they did a year ago: When is it
all going to come togedler?
. "This is still a good club;'
McKeon said. "We're just not
clicking on all cylinders yet.
Hopefully, soon."
Both teams have braggingrights series ahead this weekend.
The Reds go to Cleveland to play
their intrast:ote rival; while the
White Sox play the crosstown
; ;val Cubs at Comiskey Park.
"It will be like three World
Series games with 40,000-plus
yelling;' Thomas said. "It's going
to be good this weekend."
Thomas played a key role in
Chicago having a good series in
Cincinnati. In a 2-for-21 slump
when the White Sox arrived, he
broke out by hitting a three-run
homer and driving in four runs to
lead the 17-run avalanche on
Thesday.
He was on the bench getting a
day of rest Wednesday when Griffey hit a three-run homer in the
first offjim Parque (6-2) , the only
big mist:oke of me day by the leftbander.
Manager JetiY Manuel planned

ClnelftMII (Naagla
(II-~). 7:05p.m.

~)

at Cleveland

4·5), 7:05 p.m.

N.Y. Moto (lellor 8·1) at N.Y. Yankooo
(Clem..,. 4-6), 7:05 p.m.
Florkla (Oornpotor 6-3) at Tampa Bay (TraCiloel3.e), 7:15p.m.
Pf111adolphla (Wolf 5-3) at BoWmoro (Aapp
4-3), 7:35p.m.
.
•

.•

.."

27

McGuire oulllghlto Norfolk ollho lnt8(1181ion11

20

(~

Columbut ............. ......&amp; 7 2 17 21
Dal1ao ......................... 5 8 1 18 23

30

(~~). 8:05p.m.

W-Oiv-.
- C i l y ............... 10 I 2 32 27

8

24 20

13

18 21

34

4 13 17

21

L.Nguo.
·
PHILAOELPHI... PHIWES--Activated 3B
Soo11 Rolen from 1ho 15-day disab!Od oel.
Optionoc:l
RHP
St...
SChrenk
to
Sc:ranton/WIIkii~Barre of the lnt«natlonal
Loaguo. Signed RHP Taylor Bucl'llolz. OF
Brandon caraway, 1B Flegineld Gnggo, OF
Anthony H&lt;lnoiOy, LHP TrfiW&lt; Bullod&lt;, and C
Kevin SUllivan.
,
SAN DIEGO PAOAES-Piacoc:l RHP Brian
8oohrlnger ootho 15-day disablod H!l, rotroactllloto June 4. Racalled RHP Domingo Guzman

Piftllbulgh (Schmidt 2-5) at l&lt;ansoo Cl1y
2·5), 8:05p.m.
Mllwaukoo (Wright 1-0) st Minnooota

Cubs (~ !1-4) at Chicago WMe
So• (K ell• 3-5), 8:05 p.m.
Toxu (Aogoro !1-5) ot Colorado (AS!aclc 62), a:05 p.m.
.
Anaheim (Cooper 2·1) al Arizona (Johnson
9-1), 10:05 p.m.
Hwoton (Ootll 1·4) at San Diogo (Spon&lt;:er
2-t) . 10:05 p.m.

Natlonol Hockey League

)f'.,:r-...............

8
....................8

San Jooa ................... ,.3

Stanley Cup Flnalo
(lle-·7)

Tuo&amp;day,llay 30
New Jersey 7, Dallas 3
Thul'lday. June 1
Dallas 2, New JerMy 1
SlltUI'day. June 3
Now Joroay 2, Dallas 1
Monday. June I
New Jersey 3, Dallas 1, New

_,.rMY leada

at

FlnMe

(BNI-ol·7)
WedneMiy, June 7 ·

e o

. fof•tlt.

e

2
8

0

s

·'

2e '

'o!faoa-

a win and one point

-no

Dollao 3. Columwo

.

Ch~o 2, Miami 1&gt; ~

from Lea Vogao oil"- Pacilic CO&amp;!I leogUIO..

Frlday'a Game

,
Tampa Boy at New Yorlo-Now Jersey, 7:30
p.m.

Saturday, JuiiO'IO

_,_...

CLEVELAND INDI~NS--Acllvatoc:l AHP

Paul Rigdon from lll!)l 5~ dloablod lot.
AHP Joto1 'Mijjlrt on tho 15-day dlolbled lilt, retr'OIICIHe10 June 3.

LA. Lakers 1o.l, Indiana 87, LA. Lakers

SEATTLE

lood-1-0

frtdly, June 8
Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m.

...,...Loo _ _

Sundey, Juno 1 I
LA. Lakers at Indiana, 7:30p.m.

EIOitm Dlvlalon

,
Wllclnoocloy, Juno 14
LA. L.akers at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Frlday, Juno 10
LA. L.akersat Indiana, 9 p.m., it necessary
Monday, Junt 1g
Indiana at LA. lak8fl, 9 p.m., If necessary

Toom
WLTPioQFQA
New England ...............e 4 • :i2 22 18

NY-NJ .........................&amp; 8 0 18 18 18
Miami .............. ...... .....4 B 4 18 13 18
D.C.............................3 9 2 11 22 31
ControiDivltlon

FOOTBAU.

NaUonii 'F-11 Leogue
CINCINN.4TI BENGIILS-Waived P Oeone
Horlnek.
GREEN BAY PACKEAS41amoc:l David
Stollen ex8C1111Va dlreclor ol Toam Latrl&gt;oou.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS--Named Tom
Zupancic vice prooidonl ol business develOp-

MAFIINER$-Optionod FIHP
Kevin Hodgoo to TlOOIIIII ol1ho PCic A-lid
INF·OF ChatleJ Glpaon ln:&gt;m Tacoma.
TOAONTQ BLUE JA'i'S-,..~ OF Todd
Gr""" on 1ho 15-day QL Ailcalled C Josh
Phelpo ~om ~lCVIMt oi.Vlf 8ou1hom Loogut.
-~ ~~uo
MILWAUKEE BRI'W!!A5- Placed on lho
FIHPJtl! 0 ' -.!5-dliy 'dlaobl"" Hot,-tive June to\8. . .

NEW YORK MET5'-Sent INF-DF Ryan

SAN FR.6.NCISCO 49ER5-Signed TE
Greg Clat1&lt; to a lflree-year "'"tract, OT Mall
Willig 1o a two-year contrac1 and L8 E Thomaa to a on•yoar contract.
SEATTLI; SEAHAWKs-Raloaoo L8 Mall

Bock.

HOCICI!Y

N - 1 . - y League
COLDR.6.00 ...V...L.ANCHE-Traded G Mao:
Denl&amp; to tho Coklmbuo Blue Jackets lor a ,...
ond·round pick In lflo 2000 draft.
CQLUMBUS . BWE JACKETS--Signed F
David Vytomy and F Martin Spanhoi to two-

yeer contracts.

CHICAGO BLACKH.6.WKS-Signoc:l G Eraomo Saltarelli.

.,
out. Every shot but one felt good.
If they're going to play me like
that, it's only a matter of time."
Light-scoring guard Mark Jackson led Indiana with 18 points,
while Austin Croshere added 16
and Rose and Rik Smits had 12
ap1ece.
The L.A. glitterati turned out
in heavy numbers for the first
finals game in the year-old Staples
Center's history, and the Lakers
put on a performance worthy of
the stage. Los Angeles shot 68
percent in the first quarter to grab
a big lead, then protected it by
hitting 10-of-18 shots in the
fourth quarter.
Los Angeles led 77-71 when
the fourth began, but O'Neal
quickly got an assist on Brian
Shaw's jump shot and then a
rebound dunk.
Even when Shaq began to tire
in the closing minutes, he continued to score with metronomic
regularity. He had a layup with
7:42 to play; a leaner with 6:16
left; another layup with 5:15 left;
an offensive rebound, a layup and
a foul with 4:02 to play.
The capper came with three
minutes left. After Bryant blocked
Miller's final shot attempt, Brian
Shaw spotted O'Neal cutting
toward the hoop and threw an
alley-oop pass.
O'Neal tripped over a defender's leg, righted himself; leaped
awkwardly at the basket - and
somehow slammed the ball
through the hoop with preternatural grace,- giving Los Angeles a
98-81 lead.
O'Neal's heroics covered up a
quiet night by his teammates.
Rice was 1-for-8 from the field
and had just three points, while
Shaw was just 2-of-9 and missed
all four of his 3-point attempts.
Bryant went scoreless in the second quarter and didn't score1in
the fourth until the game was dut
of reach.
But on this night, he didn't
need to contribute. Shaq took
care of everything.
"Tonight in the locker room, I
said, 'Thanks for the night off,
Chief;" Bryant said with a grin.

to use Thomas as a pinch hitter in
just the right spot. With the score
3-2, a runner at first, two outs and
Parque due up in the sixth,
Manuel decided to give Thomas
his first pinch-hit at-bat of the
season against Rob Bell (4-4).
"When you get an opportunity
to rest guys, it creates a dangerous
bench," Manuel said. "It gives you
the opportunity to pick and
choose the matchups you like.
"1 thought he (Bell) had
thrown enough pitches to where
a fresh hitter could put a good.
swing on it. And there's no better
hitter than Frank Thomas."
R.edl Notta: Thomas is 4-for13 career off the bench .... Keith
Foulke pitched the ninth, convetting hio 13th consecutive save
chance. ... Carlos Lee's firstinning single extended his hitting
streak to a career-high nine
games (15-for-34}. ... Parque's
seven strikeouts matched his
career high. ... Griffey has only
two homers and three singles in
his last 35 at-bats, leaving his average at .215. His homer Wednesday was his 414th, tying Darrell
Evans for 27th on the ca~er list.
... Dante Bichette was 0--for-4,
ending his hitting streak at 10
games.

Factory Invoices

pos

our

"NEW'' FORD• LINCOLN• MERCURY
.

~

"

•

...
·.·
·-·
.••.•.
...

Melp County's

\'•''"""' ' ' N"mlwo

..

.

.

You will' know what we paid, ·so you'll NEVER PAY TOO MUCH!

.....•.
..........
•

-

--

-

-

·~

Middleport • Pom"roy, Ohio

!il) Cent&lt;

Freedom
railroad

8Y TONY M. LIAcH

to be

SENTlNoL NEWS STAFF:

OMEROY - Mcif!$
County
Recycling
and Litter Prevention
Program will be participating in the 12th
·~nnual Ohio Riv_er Sweep 2000
'oalJ11ne 17.
·
'·'River Sweep is an annual river• j)ank cleanup effon that extends
. the length of the 0 hio River and
beyond.
: 1.: More than 3,000 miles · of
-~reline, from Pittsburgh, Pa., to
'Cairo, Ill., will be combed by volunteers for trash and various
·debris. This event 'is- the largest
environmental event of its kind
,31\d will encompass six st:otes.
·. ; Jhe purpose of the Riv'er
,S~ep is to draw att ntion ro the
, existing.litter problem and to t:oke
s!Cps to rectify the situation by
Bliysically removing the litter
'through a volunteer effort. It will
al5o enhance die ' witer .quality as ,
~U as wildlife potential.
, · pver the ·. pan 20 years,
' 'iinpmvements made in water
' ~~ality have multed in i~creased
· recreational· use "of the Ohio
'\t-lyer.
.This increase in recreation pro:duces more litter on die river. ballks. Because of this progres,
a yearly cleanup program
the River Sweep· is necessary.
,.,.~..~•·. hoped th~t increased publi~ TtiASH BUSTERS- Kenny Wlsgins, above, prepares to hang a biiQ·;&lt;tif!JQilllo«&lt;.to me river will fuat,er . ,~r that wiiiJemlnd ·Meigs Co~nty residents of the upcomi~g Ohio
.

111.\J..•Mlid·,d·l,e-

At

Kneen will
~trt~et
vqh~ntc:ers at tte ·stage ·
area of the
lot next to the
bOat levee.
·Indiana and ·lllinoi1.
. The ·R.\I.cine' site will headed by
Mel!!$ County ·Recycling and
Litter Prevention program will be Larry and PattY Circle, and will
coordinating clean up sites in meet at the Fe.no Landing Shelter .

..

'

.

honored
BY KRII DoTsoN
OVP NEWS STAFI'

GALLIPOLIS - Sixteen of
America's most historic areas
have been designated •as
National Millennium Trails by
the U.S. Department ofTrampomtion under a collaborative
initiative of the White House
Millennium Council, die
Department of Transport:otion
and the Rails-to-Trails COnservancy, one of which is the
Underground Railroad. ·
"When they announce.d the
UGRR as having received the
millennium trail designation,
people actually stood and gave
it an ovation;' said Cathy Nelso~r, the trail's executive director.

.

"It was very moving because
none of the other trails were
..- given such enthusiastic recognition;' she said.
The Trail's Strategic Planning
Committee, comprised of rep-.
resent:otives, from eight st:otes,
have scheduled a national event
to publicly announce the
River Sweep 2000. The clean-up effort will be June 17. (Tony M.
UGRR Trail for Sept. 22 in
Leach photo)
Gallipolis.
. .
The date commemorates the
House.· In Middleport, the ' gath- Kenny 'Wiggins, · director of · stopping by the Meif!$ CoUJ)~
signing· of 'l.~e Emancipation
l:ring place .~ , 9~ ~h~ ;JJ14- '~ei~Jr\ .R.ec;Y~nd Litter Pre- . Recycling and ~~t!r P]e~~ention
Pro~lamation. \D 186;2, by PresiFreight Depot m Dali1! '15fies vention Program. Thi:.t:e should . Office on the ·~~onl:! floor of the
dent.Abraham: L!~c~lr). . . , .
Park, with Kenny Wiggins .sefV· be between 125 to 150 irtdividu~ M~i!!$ Co.q nty, APqex to obtain
Tlie theme lOr dlr: ~~ Will
als who will be out ' lending ·. a the a'ppropriai~"waiv~r forms. ·
be "2000 Lights of Freedom."
ing as coordinator.
'
T~h ball$ and gloves will be
"We plan to end the event
.The Long Bottom site will be hand to help beautify the Ohio
as
well
as
Meif!$
County."
prov:aded
and
each
volunteer
will
River,
with
over 2000 people holdiitg
supervised by'· the Forked Run
candles as they walk to the river
' Volunteers are desperately receave a !fee T-s~rt .
Sportsmen's Club.
front,"
said Nelson.
Wiggins
said,
and
can
Safety
tips
for
River
Sweep
Valneeded,
"We are really excited about
She is also working with local
Pllelc1 ... S.Mp, ,... AS
dlis year's cleanup effort," said sign up by calling 992-6360 or by
educators to include the
UGRR in their curriculum so
.
.
dley can' use die celebration as
one of their field trips.
Several national dignitaries
plan to attend and this should
attract attention frOm all over
Agreeing to p~cipate "were Bubba's Market Place,
BY CIIARuNI H~CM
die country. S:o why in GallipOBuckeye Farm Market, CCK, Crow's Steak House,
SENTIN~L NEWS STAFF ·
lis?
POMEROY - Wim · tobacco use .being the Kountry Kitchen, Pizza · Works, Racine Pizza
"When they asked me where
largest cause of preventable deaths in America, the Express, Route 7 Pizza Express, Washburn's
I thought this giant celebrarion
Meif!$, County Health Department is coD;tinually Dairyette and Wendy's.
should be held, I immediately
After the event, managers for the most part
involved in wa'ys to discourage smoking.
said Gallipolis," said Nelson.
A Tobacco Risk Reduction Program was put in reported they received good feedback from cusBeside the many UGRR
place at the Health Department earlier this year, tomen, and several expressed an interest in taking
sites, Gallipolis has consistently
with Nancy Aldridge as coordinator. For the first part again next year. Only one indicated negative
celebrated the Emancipation
rime, the agency participated in the annual statewide comments from a customer.
Proclamation for 138 years now
&amp; emphasized by the coordinator, being"exposed
event, "Eat, Breathe, and Dine Smoke Free."
at the John Gee Church, to be
Educating resi'dents not only about the dangers of to secondhand smoke is dangerous to your health."
dellj,cated on the evening of
She
said
.
exposure
can
.
cause
inunediate
adverse
smoking, but of secondhand smoke, and promoting
Sept. 22.
Nelson, from Columbus, and
non-smoking areas in public places, such as rest:ou- effects on nonsmokers by increasing dleir heart rate
and blood pressure, causing eye irritation, headache,
members of Ohio's Friends of
rants, is a part of the risk reduction program.
·
chest discomfort and difficulty in breadling.
FreedOm Society Inc., are the
When Aldridge began contacting restaurants to
"Secondhand smoke is the third leading puse of
designated leaders for the
participate in the "Eat, Breathe, and Dine Smoke
prevent:oble death, killing over 53,000 American
UGRR Trail Initiative because
Free;' she found ·three in the county which already
nonsmokers each year. II' contains over 4,000 chemof their impressive record of
have a no-smoking , policy - Fur Peace Ranch,
ical compounds including ammonia, arsenic,
documenting more than 600
Dairy Queen and ~arpenter Inn.
cyanide, acetone, formaldehyde, and carbon monoxRei.ta~!fll!!'i)thout a policy were invited to
PI , ............. AI
PIPI" ... S•oklnt. .... AS
becon;e· a -'ji~ 'ilf the no-smoking scene for a day.
. .'

Anti-smoking program gets .results.

NO

TODAY- Heather Knlgllt, an·employee
Steak
House In Pomeroy, explains "Eat, Breathe ,and Dine Smoke Free·· to
Jol:ln R. Quails, Who was eating lunch~ at the t'estauranfiiii smoke-free
djlrf. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
'

Mason.·. man iwinsj~ S&amp;O.OOO home
.' ...
' '..

•,.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorce??
No Embarrassment•••Your Tr•ated' with Respect!

II

""'· .i.l!·

..y,
..

'

'

OYP NEWS STAFF

'

...

Sentinel

2 51 ct'loll- II ......

nothing. It's mind boggling. "

•'

- - ---

BZ

M

Objtuerjea

A3

Sporg
Weather
1

BH

Bditorjele

Bl-3. 8

.·

A3

Lotteries
owo .
Plo;k 3: 3-6-1; Pic:k 4: 7-5-7·2
U...l )0 5: 17-18-2(}.22-29

1EVA.
Deily 3: 1~ Deily 4: 4-2-8--2
0 2000 Ohio VaDey Publishins Co.

.

.,.'

AS

Caltpder
Clenjficda
Comics

J•,.. w. utchlllkl, Apple o-.

•

,.

Sweari~g in

Tada(s

",f~u work hard to.get ~omething and
~them someone gwes 1t to you for

might want tO because you just won a house!"'
recalled Litchfield:
"You work hard to get something and diem someone gives it to ~u for nothing. It's mind boggling;' he
said. ~ '
the u.s.
The 31-year old selected die Bonus Room Home,
'~ •J.Ionestly.l usually d1row thlll8li like mat out;' said
a 2,025-square-foot, four bedroom, two bam home to
Ll~thfield.
; 'lie ~e it irito Oakwood's local office at5:30 p.m. be located on a plot of land he already owns. Litch~uriday. which was lucky because die stpre closed at 6 field; a union laborer, works on scaffolding for a living.
He has three children and is expecting another this
alid that WliS the last day of die contest.
·' ~[ was late because I had to go back and get my fall.
"We're building his home now;• said Gary Whitpine pieee;· he said.
·
·
tington,
general manager of Oakwood Homes-Gal--the winning moment came over the phone ,that
everung after corporate had a chance confirm the lipolis. "After he picks out his colors he should be in
his home within six weeks:'
Win.
·
Wheil asked when it finally sank in that he just won
"I can stiH hear Delman (Cheney, from Oakwood)
a
house
Litchfield replied, "Just now."
'Are yo~ sitting down?' and I said no. 'Well, you

Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1·800-272-5179.~.:-"

DRIVE HOME IN A CAR ·o R TRUCK TO

8Y Kills Dcmoll

•. ~QALLIPOLIS- Oakwood Homes 'of Gallipolis
Pfl'S"nt~ a $60,000 home to a ;west Virginia man
Wednesday after he won o~·s special nationwide sweepstakes promotion.
jiunes W. Uichfield, 31, Apple Grove, received the
WiDn,ing Qame piece in me mail after expressing inter~!' in purchasing an Oakwood home.
· , Qver 1 million pieces ·were given out throughout

• I•

'•.

.-

-

HO..town News,.per

mom.

IIABEIIALL

New Jersey at Dallas, 8 p.m., II neciiUry

llondey, Juno 12
Dallao at New Jersey, 8 p.m., Hnecooaory

8

NOTE: 'llw" polnll

'-'~--'--·•.!. ~
. ..-'o"j'-~H...._o_o.._""''""".~=......J
.
I . 14&gt;1:1:~ New~~B ~":.

e-

08

"·

June 9, 2000

." '

21 21

Chicago .. .....................8

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

VMH scholarships awarded, A&amp;
Red Sox blank Tribe; Chancey lauded, 11

•

1 2s 34

W-ay, J..,.21
Indiana It I.A. Lekoro, 9 p.m., H necooaory

1

M l - 2. Houlton o
Colorado e, soame 1

3-4), 7:1

Bolton (Fusaro e- 1) at Allanta (MIJholland

5-5), 7:40p.m.

Oakland (Hudson 6·2) at LOs Angeles
(Perez 4-2), 10:10 p.m.
·
Saanlll' (Halama 6-1) at San Francisco
(Ruorer 2-4), 10:35 p.m.

51. L.oulo .(S1aphanoon 8-1) et Detroi
(Waovar 2·5), 7:05p.m.

.582
.584
.508

Weot DIYIOion
Oolclond .......................... 32 27 .542
Seonlo ............................ 30 2e .5301
112
Anoholm ......................... 31 2e .!52S
1
T._ .......................... .... 30 2e .511 1 112
Wecll tey'a CIMMe

-· -.. -

- --

•

. ,.-----

Marlene
was swom In Tuesday as Meigs County Clerk of
Courts by Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill, followh1II'Mir
appointment to the position by t!le Melp County Republican Central
Committee Monday night. Harrison replaces Lllrry E. Spencer, who
retired last week for health reasons. (Brian J. Reed photo)

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