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                  <text>••

.••
,...,. ... The O.lly Sentinel

Mondlly, June12,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TODAY'S SCOREBOA·RD Kmart.400
........................ :!$ 34 .433 11/2

-

Tampa Bay....................... 23 38 .3n
c-..Dtvlolon
~ .......................... 37

-OMolon

._,

W L Pet.

G8

.838
.551

5

.542

I

~Yolk ::: ::: : :: : ~

MDnlr""' ..........................32 27
............................ .211 35
Phllodolptia ....................23 37
c.ntni!DMolon
St. Louls ...........................:w 211
Clnclnnotl ................._..M 21
PiltabtJrgh .......................27 33
Chleago .......................... 26 37
Milwaukee .......... .............25 37

.444
~2
.383 15 112
.548

.526 11/2
.4fi0

e

.013 8 1/2

.403

Houston .......................... 22 .a .365

9
12

WoatDMolon

Mzona ..................... ,, .... 37 25 .15e7
Colctado .................... .....34
loo AngeiH ..................... 33
San Froncisco ..................26
San Olego .... ......... .... ....... 27

25
27
31
34

.57e 1 1/2
.550
3
.475 7 1/2
.443 9 1/2

S11111&lt;14oy'aCt..lland I, ClnciMOII S

24 .807

c~ "'-""..,_......34 21 .m
KanouCily ..................... 32 29 .525
... .................... :!$ 35 .444
Detro~ ..................... :....... 23 35 .397 12

2
5
10
112

-OMolon

Oakland .......... ................ 34 21 .1148
............. ............... 32 27 .542
t/2
2
Analleim ......... ...............32 30 .511
To... ................ .............. 30 3t .492 3 t/2
.
TOdoy'oGamoa
Toronto (CUtillo 1-5) at Detro~ (Noma 2·5),
7:De p.m.
Chicago WhHo Sox (EI- &amp;-2) II Clov ..
land CRifldon 1-G), 7:05 p.m.
Booton (Rooe 3'3) at N.Y. Yankooa (Hemandez 8-4), 7:05p.m.
SOOttlo (Moyer 3'2) ol Kan,.. Cky (Batista
2·5), 8:05p.m.
.
Oaldancl (Het'adia 8-3) a1 Minnesota (Milton
5·1), 8:05p.m.

Tu-y'o Clamoo

Boston (P.Mardnez 9·2) at N.Y. Yankees
(Mendcza 5-3), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Andr.,.. HI at Detroit (Blair 2·1).

N.Y. Yankoot 13, N.Y. Moll 5
CNcago WMe Sole 4, Chlcogo Cuba 3

7:05p.m.

Montrool 11, Tororno 2

land (ColOn 8-3), 7:011 p.m.

Anohelm10.Artzona3
Seanle 5, San Francisco 2
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 1
Delroll 1o, St Louis 1
Balllmore 11, Phlladelpllla 4
Milwaukee 5, Mlmesota 3
A11onta I, Boston 0
COiot'ldo 12, Texas IS
KaMas City 2, Pittlburgh t. 12 innlnga
l.&lt;&gt;o Angelu 7, Oakland 2
san Diego 13, Houston 3

12

Chicago Whlto Sox (Porquo &amp;-2) a1 c1....
Anaheim (Etherton 0-1) at Tampa Bay

(R-r 2·3) , 7:15 p.m.
Toua (l&lt;loling 7·4) at Balli'"""' (EHckaoo 2·
3), 7:35 p.m.
Seottte (Mocha 1-4) a1 Kansas City (Lo&gt;cton
0.0), ·8:05p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 3·2) at Minnesota (Mays 3·
7), 8:05 p.m.

Sunday'• Chmee
St. Louis 7. Ootron 3
Toronto 8, Montreal 3
Boston 5, Atlanta 3

Tampa Bay 7, Florida 6
Baltimore 7. Philadelphia 2
Milwaukee 5, Minnesota 3
Chicago Cubs e. Chicago WMe So• 5-

Cinolnnoll7, Clovlland

Ployoll Glonco

By The"-lllttd ,,...
FINIII
(IIM1-ol•7)
WedM ..Iy, Jun• 7
L.A. L.akers 104, lndle.na ar

s, 131nnlngo

Pittsburgh to, Kansas City e, 1o Innings
Colorado 9, Teqs e
Oakland e. LOs Angeles o
Anzona 3, Anaheim 2
SaeHie 9, San FrllflCisco 2

San Diego 4, Houston 1
N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees, ppd., rain

F~doy,Junel

LA. Lakers 111 , Indiana 104
Sundoy, Juno 11
Indiana tOO, LA. l.akers 9t, LA. l.akers
IMd aeries 2·1

Wedn..Uy,June14

Todoy'o Gomoo

L.A..Laker• at Indiana, 9 p.m.
Friday, Juno11
LA. l.akers at Indiana. 9 p.m.
Mondly, June 11
Indiana at LA. Lakero. 9 p.m.. d neceosary
WeclnMday, Jun• 2t

Allaroo (Millwood 4-5) at Pmsburgh (Anchia
4-3), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Penny 3-6) at Philadelphia (Polllte
·
0.0), 7:35p.m. ·
Montreal (Vazquez 6·2) at Milwaukee (Bore
3-5), 8:05p.m.
St Louis (An.Benes 5·3) at
Oiago
(Ciem«rt 5-5), t0:05 p.m.
Mzona (Anderson 5-t) at Los Angelos
(OJeilort 4-3), t0:10 p.m.
Clf)Cinnoll Chfl 4-4) a1 8an Froncllco
(Na!Mn 2·1), 10:15 p.m.

Indiana at LA. Lakera, e p.m•• if necessary

san

St.

Tuoadlly'o Gomoo

san

Louis (KIIe 9-3) at
otego (\.Qpez 0·
2), 5:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Burk&amp;H 4-3) at Pittsburgh (Anderson
t -4). 7:0S p.m.
Florida (Smith 0.0) at Philadelphia (Person
5·2), 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Reed 3-t) at Chicago Cubs
(Tapani 4-6), 8:05p.m.
Montraai(Pavano e-3) at Mllwaukoo (Wright
t •1), 6:05 p.m.
Houston (Reynods 5·3) at Coklnldc (Atrojo
4·4), 9:05 p.m.
Arizona (Mo&lt;gan 1-0) at Los Angelos (Pari&lt;
7-4), 10:1 0 p.m.
,
Clnctnnoll (F......,..u 2-G) a1 son Froncloco (~M),10:15 p.m.
AmertcaniLNguo

EaolemDivtolon
Toom
W L Pet. GB
Now VOrl&lt; .........................33 24 .579
............................33 :!e .!1&amp;9
1
TORlriO .......................... :.33 31 .111 31/2

$38,200.
14. (3) Joff Gordon, Chavrolol, 193,
$47,250.
15. (40) Jimmy Sponcor, Ford, 193,
$41,650.
18. (20) Ken Schrader, Pontlac, t93,
$30,375 .
17. (23) lolaH Konsetn, Ford, 193, $37,650.
18, (5) .Joo - · ChavrOiot, 193,
$37,315.
.
19. (11) SooltPnJotl, Ford, 193, $26,000.
20. ~30) Mike Skimer, Chevrolet, 193,
$41 ,085.
21 . (12) Kevin Lapage, Ford, 193, $38,3e5.
22. (1 5) Michael Waltrip, ChevrOiat, t 93,
$36,t50.
23. (32) Jerry Nadeau, Chevrolet, 193,
$35.890.
2•. (11) Johnny Benson , I=Jontiac, 193,
$27,870.
25. (17) Dave Blaney, Pontiac, 193,
$24,t20.
26. (37) Torry Labonte, Chevrolet, t93,
$4t,960.
27. (21) Elliott SOdter, Ford, 193, $36,200.
26. (25) Robby Gorden, Ford, 193, $23,840.
29. (14) Stave Park, Chevrolet, 193,
$34,905.
30. (29) Rick Mast, Pontiac, t92, $35,2.0.
31 . (34) Kenny WOIIaee, ChevrOlet, 192,
$23,5t0.
32. (38) Chad Little, Ford, t 92, $34,4.0.
33. (43) Ed Barrlor, Ford, 192, $23,335.
34. (24) WOit)' Dallenbach Jr.. Ford, t92,
$28,265.
35. (1 B) Kenny Irwin, Chevrolet, 10:1,
S33,e95.
36. (42) Bratt Bodine, Ford, t 91, $23,150.
37. (~7) Mike Bliss; Pontiac, 19t , $23,090.
36. (38) G-ey Bodine, Chavrolel, 190,
acc&lt;lont. $30,090.
39. (35) KytePatly, Ponllac.1e7, engine laD·
ure, $30,855.
.0. (1 8) Mart&lt; Martin, Ford, t63, $40,920.
41. (22) Joromy Mayfield. Ford, 176, engine
fuilure, $40,885.
42. (33) Stacy Compton. Ford, 143,
$22,650.
43. (4t) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolst, t6, ·
accident, $30,815.
Rec• NoteboOk
Time of Race: 2 hrs., 41 mlns., 45 sees.
Margin of VICIOI'y: Under caUIIon.
Avorago Spaid: 143.826 mph.
Load Changes: 19 among 11 drivers.
cautiorn;: 41or 20 laps.
' Lap Laadero: Rudel 1, B.Labonte 2-8, Rudd
7·13, B.LabOnte 1&lt;4·19, Wallace 20-22, Rudd
23·54, M!l)'lield 55:55, Stewart 88-68, J.Gor·
don 69-70, Lepage 71-72, Mayfield 73·112,
B.Labonte113-118, Andrettl119; Mayfield t2o153, JarreH t54·t56, B.Labonte 157·178,
J.Burton 179, Prasstay 1110-164, Stowa• 185194.
Pdnt Standings: B.LabOnte 2,116, D.Eamhard1 2.018, w.Burton 2.014, Jarrett t ,955,
J.Surton ·1,865, Wallace 1,855, Stawan 1,821,
Rudd 1,813, Martin t,79B, J.Gordon t,732.

;

~om

the NASCAFI Winston Cup Series Kmart
400 at Mich~n Spaldway wllh flnllhlng pos&gt;
non, starting position (In parentheses), driver,
type of car, laps complated, raason o.. (W anY)

and money won:
1. (28) Tony Stewart. Pontiac, 194,
$123,800,
2. (9) Dale Earnhardt. Chevrolet, 194,
$80,575.
3. (1) Bobby Labonte. Pontiac, 194,
$79,175.
4. (26) Dale Jarrert, Ford, 194, $71,215.
5. (31) Robon Praastey, Ford, 194,$51,000:
e. (13) ward Burton, Pontiac, 194, $55,e75.
7. (4) Rusty wallace, Ford, 194, $49,625.
8. (B) Bill Ell~ Ford, 194, $44,750.
9. (10) Jam Androttl, Pontiac. 194, $50,200.
10. (39) Stoning Martin, ChavrOiat, 194,
$48,100.
11. (7) Jell Bunon, Ford, 194, $54,750.
12.. (2) Ricky Fludd, Ford, 194, $41,050.
13. (I) DOlo Jr, ~; 193,

BASEBALL
Amerlctln LAgue

BOSTON REO SOX-Activatad 26 Jose

Offerman from the 15-day disabled list.
PaWiuc~et

at the

NEW YORK YANKEES- Signed

FIHP

Optioned RHP Dan Smith to

International League.
Dwight

.

and held a lead of nearly
seven seconds over Janet!, who
dominated this race in winning a
from Pap 11
year earlier.
But his troubles began when all
was doing it. I didn't really like the leaders pitted under caution
seeing him back there at the end." after the can restarted. Mayfield
But Earnhardt, who barely held was sent to the rear of the longest
off Labonte ar the end - with ·. lin~ for the gleen-flag restart as a
the two bumping as they drove pe~ty for having one of his
side-by-side through the fourth Wofn •tires boance off a crewman
turn on the last green-flag lap opto pit road ,d.uring his stop.
also seemed happy with 'the t Mayfield's FCfrd, which restarted
abbreviated finish.
13th, got all ' the way to sixth
"We still ,weren't quite as good before.\his enpne_blew, bringing
as the 18 or the 20 at the end;' out another caution on-lap 176.
said Earnhardt, who moved put ? '"SOmething.l just broke," the
Ward Burton into second place in disappointed Mayfield Said. "We
the season standings, trailing know who had the best car here
Labonte by 98 points after 14 of again."
'
34 races.
• Meanwhile, Labonte, who won
Burton, who finished sixth, here last August, had taken charge
right behind Pressley, fell to thitd, aftei .taking thf lead from Jarrett
.four . points behind seveQ-time on lap 157. He built a lead of
series champion Earnhardt.
more than two secbnds over
Before the first rain came, it was Stewart before ~ayfiej4's engine
Jeremy Mayfield who loo~ed like .: blew.
·
the man to beat.
The leaders pitted On lap 178,
Mayfield led 85 of the first I 51 . during the caution, and Labonte

NS

NASCAR-I&lt;. .rt4CO Rooulto
BllOOKLYN, Mich. (AP) - AesuHI Sunday

'
laps

Gooden to a minor league contract

TEXAS RANGERS-Ileolgnated OF Jason
1or assignment.
TORONTO B~UE JAYs-Signed RHP
Dustin McGowan, RHP Michael Smith and SS
Me~

William Rivera.
Nai,_IL.Nguo
MONTREAL EXP05-Piaced RHP T.J
Tucl&lt;er on tho 15-day disabled list. Recalled
LHP David Mor,a from Ottawa of the International Laague. ranalerred LHP MaH Blank

from the 15- to 60-day CL

./

J

''FREE''

Medicare
Medicaid

Health.Insurance
For
This program covers the
Meigs County payment of your Medicare .
Aged and Disabled Part B premium .and the coinsurances(s) and deductibles
you are required to make as
part
of the
Medicare
Program.

Call Today!

Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (called SLMB):

1-800-992-2608
Or

a1
Melp County's

More.~

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - An appeal for help
from the Meigs County commissioners
in operating th e London Pool in Syracuse came Monday during the boatd's
regular meeting.
Councilman Bill Roush and Robert
Wingett, grants administrator, met with
commissioners to request "manpower
assistance" in operation of the pool.
"We have . a dilemma with regard to
our pool, and our dilemma is ' your
dilemma," Wingett said. "We are. faced
'with the lack of funds to make it work."
Wingett said that last year; the com-

."

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'' ·'• Free~~~ whelp you fipd chil~.~ · :,:
• Information on choosing quality child care l
• Help on guidance-and disciplin~ questions. ~.1
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f!

BY BRIAN J. REED
NEWS STAFF

•

~ ¥QAD-Ihe Q,Q,~~- for .Ohio ~~Jan D~eJ~e!ll , ~

., ttte:.·v~iGgi;~i{~;;Mij~+~
• '

afford
fiieworks 'and pay r#ses
police officers? ·
The question was , discuss.e d during Monday's reg- ,
ular council m~eting, an!l.
the answer was appar(ntly,
"yes."
.
·
.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
cast a tie-breaking vote in
favor of. paying $5,000 for ,
·the anriuaf fireworks display,
after Councilmen Roger
Manley and Bob Pooler ·
voted . 'against !he expenditure, Councilors Kathy Scott
and Stephen Houc~ins voted
in favor.
· "It's · too late in the game
to change our minds,"
. lannarelli said, noting plans
for the' fireworks have been
·under 'flay since early this
year.
.
Police Chief Bruce Swift
•
met with council a month
·ago ·to discuss the relatively
!ovii salaries paid to hi$ offi- c~rs, and has said the village .
. will continue to lose 'qualified officers unless wages are
increased.
Last night, Poo1er made
reference to the wages paid
ro officers in other nearby

• ) 1' ;*)"

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or by the

l'rogram ref~~~rses . :· ~hio·: .~~paftfil~ij~~J't JH~.'
you for the part o~ ~~. Part . &amp;'Family Servic~s thrQugh;
B premiu~ ~~~ -~~~ 'J ~ave 1: •• i~ ~~unty M~~~~,' ·.
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already patd whicl} · -' went ": ,Sern,ces (CMS,) . .
toward home he~th ;, :Care. II-.''· J...:· , . ·"' ·
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reimbursement check -once a
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year. The income limits. are A: ..t\ge 65
higher than QI-1--Medicaid.
. Q:r)Vhat services. are covered:·.
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Qualified Workini . nisables . ;, .
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This program pays for ·yo\lr ryou: · .
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'
Medicare · Part A- premium
Doctor Visits
.:
only. QWDI
can help you if
Hospital Care
.
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Immunizations
you have.· lost eligibiijty for
. '
Substance·At;'use
Title ll disability '·· benefi~s
..
Prescriptions
due to earnings. ·
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Vision ·
'I·
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Dental
Mental Health
This

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Pl1111 ·-

Cllulidl, ..... AS

on ~otme~
.,
The~ were Daniel Belcher, &amp;ggess, Breane
· Buc~ Sheryl L. Ca=n,DavidR. ~llimworth,
Jason E. cCiunts, R oben L. Diddle, Benjamin L. Gangwer; Reatha L. Klein, Robert A Klein, Melinda S. Laudermilt,Jennifer Mankin, Charles W McKinney,AnUnda S. Miracle, Jacquelyn M. Payne. TonyJ. Powell,Melissa D. Priddy, Tommy Pugh, Fred C. Rider, Wendy J.
Sizemore, Rick J. Smith and Shelley J. Welch. ·
Recognized and presented certificates fur hours
completed in the program were Mary Bunch, 500
hours; Sandra Darst, 400 hours; Sharon Buckley,
Ronald Grimm, and Fred C. Rider,.200 hours; and

REVIEw SAMPLE- Mike Mullen of Ohio's Hill Country Heritage Area reviews a tourism guidebook from _North Carolina

which will serve as a sample for a book to 1;&gt;e marked by Ohio' s hill counties. Meigs County Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton and Mick Davenport ar'!l also pletured. (Bri~n J. Reed photo)

'

Commissioners to ·spOnsor guidebook
.

.

. BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Director of heritage area
Michael Mullen is pursuing a
POMEROY-· 'MelgsCminty commissioners will sponsor a Hill Country · $110,000 grant to develop and
Heritage Area guidebook to be proposed
print the guidebook,
in a grant application by Ohio's Hill
which Wtrdd be sold
Country Heritage Area.
through retail outlets.
Michael Mullen, director of the heritage area, met with the commission!'fS
Monday to review a similar project created and' sold by a region in western North
Carolina.
: Mullen is pursuing a $110,000 gr.mt to
develop ar.d print the guidd&gt;ook, which ·
would be sold through retail outlets. The
grant application requires a government
sponsor, and Meigs County was asked to
sponsor the project because of its efforts
to promote heritage entrepreneurship
and tourism.
.
Mullen lll;lde specific reference to a .
crafters . brochure recently developed by

j

'

P l - . - GED, Pllp .U

the commissioners through a grant from
the Appalachian Regional Conimission,
designed to promote area, heritage crafis.
This "grassroots" elfort to promote the
area economy takes ~t;age of the
increasing importance ofitourism.to local
economy.
.
·~smokestack chasing is not all it's
cracked up to be;' Mnlleri said. "Ohio's
Heritage Areas are a good way to promote a sustunable economic development while -promoting a community's

assets.''
The guidebook would promote seven

"trails" fur tourists in the Appalachian
region of Ohio, and would emphasize
~'real and authentic" sites, such as the Serpent Mound in western Ohio, and
Mullen said, the Buffington Island,
Chester Courthouse · and other Civil
War-era attractions.in M eigs County and
the surrounding counties. The program
would include 31 of Ohio's 88 counties.
The grant application does not require
a cash committnent from the county; and,
,if approved, the guidebooks would generate revenue to fund Mullen's prognms.
The first phase of the project would
involve 25,000 copies of the thematic
guidebook, although Muhen noted the
North Carolina book has undergone a
number of printings.
The book would be available through
retail outlets, such as Barnes and Noble
and Amazon.com. The North Carolina
book sells for $11.95.

THE GRADUATES - Receiving GED diplomas
were left to right, front, Jem)ifer Mankin, Minia R.
Boggess, Wendy Sizemore and Mellnd"' laudermilt, and back, Daniel Belcher, Charles McKinney,
Fred Rider and Robert Klein. Several others were
· unable to attend because of work or school
schedules. (CharleneHoeflich photo)

'

'

992-2117

'

This type of Medicaid pays
only for your Medicare Part
B premium.

Meigs County
Department o(
Job &amp; Family
Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, OH

Governor: New court won't
solve school-fundirtg problem
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob July. :
.
· Tali doesn't believe the Ohio
The governor's office will
Supreme Court would' recon- also establish .a Web site to take
sider its sc!tpol-funcling deci- comments from education
sion even if its makeup was groups and 'others about possichanged by the Nov. 7 election, ble solutions.
The Supreme Court has
nor would that be an appropriate solution to the state's ruled 4-3 against the state twice
school-funding · problems, the in the last 3~ years. In the latest
decision, the court said Ohio~
governor said.
funding
system still relies too
"The decision is there, the
· decision is a reality;' Tali said. much ·on local property taxes,
"This election isn ~ going to leading tli a disparity betWeen
rich and poor districts.
make that case go ~"
The Ohio Republii:an Party
Taft spoke at a lunch for
has
tatgeted the Nov. 7 re-elecStatehouse reporters where he
armounced he would lead a tion bid of Supreme Court Jusseries of field trips across Ohio tice Alice Robie Resnick, who
to discuss solution&lt; to the fund- wrote' the court'! decision last
ing dilemma with educators month that· said the state's
and citiiens. The first trip will school-funding system is still
be to southeast Ohio in mid- uncodstitutional.

I

Qualified Individuals
Medicaid (cal1ed Q0-1): .

1

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

45760

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Other.~.

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POMEROY -"These instructors have. given me
the courage, the confidence and the support 1 needed
to get my diploma.And thank you for being here at my
graduation;' said a beaming Minia R. Boggess as she
accepted her GED certificate Monday night.
Boggess was one of 22 Meigs County Adult Basic
and Literacy Education srudents awarded a general
equivalency diploma at the annual recognition dinner
in the Meigs High School cafeteria under sponsorship
of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.
. Seveml students..spoke as they accepted certificates
from their,iiJslructo"• and p~es 'from Bernard Fultz

•

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.
'•
Qualified Individuals '·- .2 .A:: M~dicaid requires a
..
Medicaid (called QI~2) fY
-~j.di~ability, de~ermina~on

••

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

CUSS tOn

'

Please see Pool, Pille .U

BY CWJUNE Ho&amp;uat

Police wages
.also topic of dis-

for a nat of providers In your community.- :1

Commissioners Jeffrey Thornton an'd
Mick Davenport pledged to in..,estigate
the possibility of obtaining funds through
the Prevention, Retention and Contingency program at the Department of
Jobs and Family Services (formerly the
Department of Human Services), or
summer youth employment funds. available through the Workforce Investment
Act program (formerly JTPA) .
Thornton, however, said no funds
would likely be available through local
county revenues to assist with the pool's
operation.

GED certificates
awarded to 22 I
ABLE students I.
i• .

CALL: l :-.800-577-:22.76 ·-~
•

cost. The $5,000 would cover half of the
payroll cost involved in operating the
pool, which costs the village about
$28,000 in salaries, chemicals and other
expenses.
"This pool serves not only the people
of Syracuse, but a lot of people in the

surro unding communities," he said.
"London Pool accomodates people in all
income categories, many of them of low
and moderate income. Families with
higher incomes often have private pools.
"The county has a real obligation to
recreation."
Wingett noted no county funds are
being spent on recreation programs, and
said the commissioners provided about
$5,000 to the pool's operation until two
years ago, when the commissioners
determined funding of village-run parks
and pools was inappropriate based upon
an opinion from the state auditor.

·fireworks ~

,•

'

Wingett said an estimated shortfall of
$10,000 this year might threaten the
pool's operation next year, if the county
is not willing to shoulder a part of the

Wingett said an estimated
shorifall of $10,000 this year
might threatm the pool's
operation next year, if the county
is not willing to shoulder
a part of the cost.

.debates

COAD Child ca&amp; Resource Network is a FREE
Community
service
that ofTen:
.
.
. ' . .'

.

rmsstoners gave a "strong indication"
they would assume part of the payroll
cost associated with the pool's operation.
The men asked the commissioners pay
for two lifeguards and the pool manager
for the season, at an estimated cost of
$5,000.
"We understand that you can't make a
direct payment to the pool, but we hope
that you can help us with the manpower
.
"
ISSUe.

-M'port
.Council

••

'LOOKING fOR CHILD CARE?

:h·

'

so Cents

Commissionen hear appeal for London Pool

.

'
1
w·
H
. e p tt . .
.
·
E.
·
,
.Q: W,bo dete~~es whether
Medtcare. , xpenses .:. I ·am disabled? · ·
·
I

Hometown Newsp•per

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volu me 5 1, Nu mber 11

Monday, · .:June ·~ 12 · Star
Boun
·Entertainment will have Benefit Karaoktf
from PapB1
" I thought that was the only ' 9 to 12 at Jimmy's Sports Bar I~
chance I had," Alomar said. "But I
Pomeroy. Eric Thorla has ·brain cancef
·
should have kept it."
and . needs ·''help with his,' tr~atmenf
After an intentional walk,
Boone hit his single down the '
expens~as. Th~re .will be, . ~ ,$~ ..fjQ. ~ov•,~
left-field line and the Reds won
for just the fourth time in 1 1~ • )charge at th~ door for donations~ A'n~

•

June 13, 2000

A&amp;

aJii!

Reds

games.
Manny Aybar, (1-2), Cincinnati's fifth pitcher, worked two
innings for the win.
Richie Sexson homered and
Kenny Lofton reached base six of
seven times for the Indians.
The Indians stranded 14 runners and left the bases load_ed ,in i
the bottom of the' . 1Oth :.vhen
Omar Vizquel hit into an inningending double play. Vizquel went
0-for-7 and left 12 runners oh ·
base, six in scoring position.
Cleveland also wasted a great
performance by starter ' c~uck
Finley, who took a one-h1t
shutout into the eighth.
.
Finley · had retired 18 of 19
entering the eighth when Boone
do~bled and Chris Stynes ~ing).ed.' ·

Tuesday

•

••

I

Qpalified
•
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Details, A3

~

~

Help With
Medicare Expenses

slipped to -sixth after his crew h
trouble removing a lug nut on tit
right rear tire.
:
"I felt like we had the best cit
before the caution came otlt
when Mayfield's car blew uJI:'
Labonte said. "You can look at lt
two ways. I feel like we we.f
lucky to get back to third."
"
After that: Stewart, who has n.S.
career victories; 't ook charge. !
On the restart, Pressley, wliO
got the lead by taking only tWh
tires on his qnal pit stop, sta~
low on - the track and Ste~
charged past, pulling Jarrett
Earnhardt along.
. Ste~rtjoins rookietDale Ear
hardt Jr. as the only drivers wiQi
two victories
this . season. He ::S
.
also the first driver tq win two 111
a row since he managed the fe:t
late last season in Phoenix, Ariil,
and Homestead, Fla.
::
Stewart, who averaged 143.9:1t
mph-in tile race, sai4 winning~
straight "is either impressive !f
lucky. The fact is we won. Thai's
"
.
.J I
all we care ab out. ·
·'"'

,l

,

Souvenir flag inside today
Eastern science fair participants,

~=~
HIJh: lOS: tow: 601

•

"••
·•'
.

••

-'

~-

Meigs cheer champs

Today's .

Sentinel
S.elll'h'll-

2

· The Meigs seventhgrade cheerle!lders
recently competed in
the U.S.A. Cheerieading
Federation where they
won first place. They
also received a trophy
for best tumbling and.
'jumps. The. group qualified to compete by winning in the Regional
USACF competition at .
Rio.Grande College. Tak•
lng part were left to
right, front. Katie ReedJ
co-capUlin; Sarah Wilks.
captain; Casey Manly. :
Peggy Duff, co-captain,
Michelle Neece, and
AShley Baylor, and back,
Clera Sisson, Jerry
Bentley, and Amanda
Hoyt. They were
coached by Crls Kelly.

12 ,..... .

Calendar
C!anlfieda

A5

BH

Comic•

BS

M
A3

Editprjils
. Obituaries
Sports
Wutber .

81.6
A3

lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-1-5

PICk 4: 3-0-1-7

WVA,
o.ily 3: 7-9-7 "

o.n, 4: 4-1-8-2

I

0 2000 O hio Valley Publbhing Co.

.f. .. .

.'t

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�Tu•llday, June 13, 2000 ·

Pom•roy, Mlddl•port, Ohio

Pag• A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, June 13, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\1

l
l
I

Woman appears in court on falsification charge

B.UCKEYE BRIEFS
lhird person dies from April fire

FROM STAFF REPORTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A man who was critically burned
while trying to save his children from an April 4 house ·fire here has
died.
Garey Humphrey, 41 , died Sunday at Ohio State University Medical C enter.
His daughters, Keshia Renee Hu,mphrey, 12, and MicheUe Lynn
· Humphrey, 3, died shortly after the fire in their !lome.
Humphrey never left the burn unit at the medical center, where
doctors amputated both his hands and placed him in a coma in an ·
attempt to save his life. He likely never regained consciousness, a hospital spokeswoman said.
His son Michael Humphrey, 4, is listed in fair condition at Children's Hospital, a nursing supervisor said. He is expected to be
released soon, friends said. Gary Humphrey Jr., 6, was released from
Children's Hospital last month and is undergoing therapy.
Humphrey was a cook at an Ohio State University dormitory.
After the fire, Ohio State gave his family S20,000 that was raised by
selling tickets to the football team's spring game at Crew Stadium.
The fire was ignited by a spark from an extension cord.

Prisoner captured after he escapes
WESTLAKE (AP) - A prisoner who slipped unnoticed from a
hospital was captured several hours later after police found him hiding on his back porch.
Police were investigating how Richard Gheta, 47, ofWestlak.e, was
able to sneak away at St. John Westshore Hospital on Sunday night.
. "We had a job to do, and ·we didn't do it;' said police Capt. Guy
Turner.
Westlake police had arrested Gheta at 6 p.m. Saturday and charged
him with disorderly conduct for intoxication and misidentification,
Turner said. When Ghera tried to fight with the officers, they tacked
on an additional charge of resisting arrest.
Gheta complained of chest pains about 9 p.m. Saturday and was
admitted to the hospital. At 8:20 p.m. Sunday, a nurse found his bed
empty.
•
1
After reviewing the hospital's closed-circuit TV video, police discovered that Gheta's girlfriend, Cheryl McKendrick, 43, entered the
hospital carrying a bag two hours before the escape and left without ·
it. Turner said he believes she carried in the clothes Gheta wore in his
escape.

Wildlife division acquires 1,200 aa

es

AKRON (AP) - The Ohio Division ofWildlife plans to open up
more than 1,2q&lt;l acres of newly acquired land to public use later this
year.
The land to be added to the division's District Three, based in
Akron, will open this fall, spokesman Jeff Herrick said Monday.
He said 800 acres will be added to the Brush Creek Wildlife Area
in ~efferson County. The division hopes to have parking access and
boundary lines in place by fall.
Carroll County don~ted 300 acres about 3 miles northwest of Carrollton to the division. About 120 new acres of wetlands will open up
just south of Killbuck in Holmes County.
Hunting and fishing license fees paid most of the land purchases,
Herrick said,
Even with the additional public land, Ohio remains "land poor;•
Hcrti.ck said. The state ranks 47th in the nation in public land available for recreation.

Coast Guard says cuts won't hurt
MARBLEHEAD (AP) - The financial crisis in the Coast Guard's
budget should not hurt Lake Erie rescue stations, officials said.
"We're going to respond to every sean:h, we're going to respond to.
every rescue caU, and we're going to respond to every law emon:ement requen:• gid Lt. Chris Murray of the Coast Guard's Cleveland
office.
Petry Officer Patricia Baca of the Coast Guard's Marblehead station
said it appears the Coast Guard will cut other areas and leave search
and rescue operations such as Marblehead alone.
"Until I hear differently from group comniand, we're running;• .
Baca 'said.
·
Congress fully funded the $4.2 billion budget for the Coast Guard
requested by President Clinton for the current fiscal year. But that
budget clid not inClude. money for military pay increases and other
personnel benefits approved in aseparate Defense Department bill.
The Coast Guard has identified a $225 million shortfall for this fiscal year, including some $71 million in immediate obligations,
according to subcommittee figures.
Admiral James M. Loy told a U.S. House Transportation panel on
the Coast Guard last week ·that budget constraiitts have made it
Lnpossible for the Guard to fully carry out its mission. ·
•' ,
.
.

POMEROY D eborah Shockey of
Shade was released on a $5,000 personal
recogn izance bond after appearing in Meigs
County Court on charges 'of falsification
and obstructing justice.
The charges are in connec tion w ith her
role in .the alleged cover- up of the death of
her nephew in a June 2 motor-vehicle accident.
Dallas Castle, 10, died at the scene of an
atcident on Jones Road in Bedford Township after falling from a trailer loaded with
hay.

His brother, Dakota Castle, 8, was transported to Children's Hospital in Columbus
and was later released with,injuries also sustained in a fall from the trailer.
. Shockey allegedly said she was drivipg the
pickup truck pulling the trailer at the time
of the accident, but Jaw enforcement officials believe, and an eyewitness has said, that

URG graduates 397 seniors
in 124th commencement
"Soon, you will have
more food in your refrig~
erator than .beer, your
grocery list will be longer
than macaroni and cheese
and Ho-Hos, and dressing up no longer means
jeans with a sweater. "

BY MIWSSIA RIJSSEU
OVP NEWS STAFF

aq ·

Mountain Dew to sponsor music :
festival Camp Buzz, June 16-18
all over the Midwest ar.e.
Outdoor Pedro from
e;x:pected ro attend the two.all-night even t.
festival to host day"Weandreally
thank our sponsors because they allow us to
18 touring bands for
put on th e best possi ble show
the growing base of Camp

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College celebrated its !24th commencement Sunday afternoon
PEDRO Camp Bu zz
on the College Green, gradutoday
that Moun!"
announces
ating 397 students.
tain Dew soft drinks has
The Rev. Charles Hill, a
agreed to sponsor the out1962 graduate, led graduates in
CoiiHn Marahall
do or festival, June 16-18 · in
prayer and u rged them to
Pedro, Ohio. Mountain Dew
embrace change in an address
work for your existence. Thank
is
the main stage sponsor progiven earlier in th e day at the
them for .their love and guidviding funding for a deluxe
Founder's Day ceremonies.
ance."
professional stage and ·roof to
"Love listens ... to people in
Marshall chall enged the
showcase the wide range of
need," the retired Methocjist
group to "take their place in a
.musical talent booked at this
Springfield District su perinworld that needs a lot of
year's Camp Buzz event.
•
tendent said.
work.''
The festival will feature two
"Love listens to every person . H ave tolerance when
"Vote, care about your com. headline acts on both Friday •
faced with· human need and munity and work for the good
and Saturday nights among
difference."
of others. Now go out there
the 18 original tourinR bands
Colleen Marshall, news co- and change your world."
playing the festival. On Friday
anchor at WCMH -TV 4,
President Barry M. Dorsey
evening, seven bands will play
Columbus, was keynote speak- presented both speakers with
including
headliner
Rio
Grande
souvenirs
in
spePhoenix
Rising
recording
er for this year's exercises.
artists The Big Wu , from Min Marshall received the 1999 · cia! recognition of their conStonewall Media Award, and tribution s to Rio Grande's
neapolis, MN.
.
the Associated Press recog- class of 2000. · Dorsey also
Saturday night will feature
nized her two times in 1998 echoed the need for change in
Ray's Music Exchange, an
improvisational jazz-fusion
for co-anchoring the newscast higher education by moving
voted Best Newscast and co- toward educating more adults,
act from Cincinnati and
Umphrey's McGee, a hot jam
anchoring Best . Spot News while simultaneously respondband ·from Chicago. Musi c
Coverage of the Alva Camp- ing to the needs of traditional
will start at noon and play· all
bell escape.
students.
night. The festival offers free
" My words here today do
"Yogi Berra is often quoted
primitive camping, unique
not set th e stage for your as hav ing said , ' When you
interactive art projects and a
future," .Marshall said. "Yo u come to a fork in .the . road,
large vendor village. An indehave already done that with take it.' Craduates, yo~ ~)ave
.
your har!l wo~
, • , "''. come today, tiJ a .fq~k m you,r · p~ndent film-screening · tent
will show a variety of shorts
Marshall also joked about personal ro.ad o(l1fe,lt doesn.~
and
animations. M!lsic lovers
the "gradual·. cl!.al)ge in matter w?lch fork you take,
lifestyle" students may soon Dorsey md.
notice.
"I hope that your college
"Soon, you will have mqre education and experiences will
food In your refrigerator· than help you take. the way that
beer, your grocery, list will be leads to contmued · personal
longer than macaroni and growth and development, as
cheese and Ho-jios; and dress- well as success and satisfacing up no longer means jeans tion.''
with a sweater."
Marshall urged graduates to
appreciate aU 'that their par- .
ents, grandparents and other
friends and family members
have done for them.
''Reconnect with your past,''
she said. "Reconnect with the
people who laid the ground-

Buzz fans ," sa id Ryan "Bu zz'
Bussey, founder and eve nt.
coordinator. · " This
year's
event raises the bar in everyaspect of the festival ~ talent, :
venue and att. We are excit":

e d...

The music festival will be
h eld at Walter Maulkey
Recreation Park, 1 mile west
of Route 93 on County Roacl·
25 in Pedro. This 84-acre pric·
vate park situated on top of~ ·
small •. grassy mountaintop ,.
features beautiful views of the .
surrounding Wayne National.
Forest. Directions are avail- .
able at www.campbuzz.com.
or by calling (513) 751-5346.
Tic kets are $17.50 in
advance . Day of show tickets'
are $20, and all include free'
camping.
Camp Buzz, In c., based in
Cincinnati, produces and promotes music festival events to
showcase emerging artists in a
fun and affordable outdoor
environment. Camp Buzz uses
the Internet and new. digital
music technology to enable
artists to reach consumers
directly to . ~uild awaren~.ss,
•I'~ exp~nd , tho;ir ,fan, ~:~·~~e,,
Contact them ar the above
website.
. .

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

EXTD! EXTD!

(OMING FRIDAY, JULY 1, iOOO
The Daily Sentinel

:• Franklin County engineer dead at 78

: ,COLUMBUS (AP) - John Circle, Franklin County engineer
~ince 1981, has died at age 78.
• He died Sunday· at his home in· suburban Worthington. No cause
~f death was aVailable.
. Circle supervised the design and replacement of the Broad Street
bridge downtown that was completed in 1992. He also was recogruzed as Urban Engineer of the Year in 1996 by the National Associ- .
aeon of County Engineers.
; Before becoming the county engineer, Circle owned Circle Engitleering &amp; Surveying and served as part-time city engineer for the
t ity of Marysville.
: He is survived by his wife, Charlotte, two daughters, one son and
ei~~;ht grandchildren.
·
'

The charges are itt connection with
her role in the alleged cover-11p of
the death of her nephew in a June 2
motor-vehicle accident.

her son, Jeremy Shoc~ey, 26, was actuaUy the
driver of the vehicle.
Jeremy Shockey appeared in County
Court on Tuesday, charged with aggravated
vehicular homicide and involuntary
manslaughter, second and third- degree
felQnies , and failure to control, driving
under s,uspension, leaving the scene of
accident and a seat belt violation.
He remain! in' the Meigs County Jail in
. lieu of $50,000 bond. · ·
Both were accompanied in court last week ·
by Athens attorney Herman Carson.

Baby Edition
The Daily Sentinel Baby Edition is a .
.
Special Edition filled with
·
photographs of local kids • @.98S ·
newborn to four years old. The
BABY EDITION will appear in the
July 7th issue. .Be sure your child,
· grandchild or relative is included.

....-t buy-.DI..cTV
Syatem &amp; .ubecrtbe

to 10 I:AL CttOICW
progzenHnlng.

On top ol our aroot lOTAl CHOICE'poclcap.
onjoy more ttoon 50 FREE additional

channels for 2 months, incluclinr
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'

LONG BOTTOM - Lona Emmajean Cozart, 58, of Long Bottom ,
di.ed June 12, 2000, at Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Facility in Pomeroy after·an extended illness.
· She was the- daughter of the late Ocran J. Dailey and Gussie Umstead
Dailey and was a retired nurse's aide who had been employed by Arcadia
Nursing Home ..
She was also a member of the Stiversville Community C hu rch.
Along with her parents, she was prec ~ded in death by two sisters, C hloris Taylor and Betty Triplett; and one brother, Leonard Dailey.
She is survived by her husband,Virgil L. Cozart of Long Bottom; three
daughters and sons-in-law, Tammy and Bill Long of Portland, Tina and
Larry Sampson of Long Bottom, Amanda and Larry Young ofThppers
Pllins; three brothers and sisten-in-law, Chalmers and Mary Dailey of
Portland, Lonnie and Joan Dailey of Portland, David and Debbie Dailey
of Reedsville; a sister, Aorence Deeter of Portland; and five grandchildren.
Graveside services will be at 6 p.m . Thursday in Sand Hill Cemetery,
Long Bottom, with Pastor Steve Reed officiating. There will be no calling hours.
nized the accomplishments of their
students.
Instructors offered in four· locaPapAl
tions, the Middleport Public Library
basement, the Pomeroy JTPNCM
Amber Atkins, Ora B:wo, Minia R. office, the Racine United Methodist
Boggess, Breane Buckingham, Elisha Church, _and the Tuppers Plains
L Dickens, Rosanne Harris, Jennifer ACCESS Head Start Center, are Lois
Mankin, P.un Moore, Melissa D. Ihle, Mert Kerns, Pat Neece, Susan
Priddy and Sharon Roseberry.
King. Meryl Houdashelt, andAvonell
Among the students who spoke
Evans.
whel) recognized was Ora B:wo,
Carol Brewer, ABLE coordinator,
described as one of the ''older" sruextended thanks and presented cerdents in the progr:un by her instructificates to those who support and
tor. Bass, in comments marked with
humor, told of feeling "threatened" · assist in the program. along with the
when she first started the program, meo:hants who contributed numerbut then found out she was "one ous door prizes.
Speaking for the Rotary Club, the
smart cookie ... well maybe except
for the math:' Her advice to the Rev: FL Walter Heinz congratulated
ctowd: "Remember, you are never the graduates and spoke of the pleasure which Rotary receives fiom
too old to go back to school:'
Stories of struggles to attend and being a part ofhonoring people who
determination to succeed were relat- have had the "courage to come back
ed by the instructOrs as they recog- and do this:'

GED

from

lncludln&amp; STAP.Z!",

from,.A1

-"

788 North Znd Stlett

Ingels E;lectronlcs ·

Radio Shack Deale.106 Nor;h Ave. Middleport, OH

740-992-2815

Sll 5th Sl. New Haven, WV .

Middleport, OK 4S76o

304-881.·3666
H011n:

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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A contract with the Prosecuting Attorney's office was also
approved in the amount of
$27,000 for full-time investigative
services for the DJFS.
The con tracts are all for one
year.
• Also at Swisher's request, the
board approved training for Welfare to Work programs in the
amount of$15 ,500, with Success
Technologies Corp., Indianapolis,
Ind.
• A number of day care service
agency contracts were also
· approved.
• Th e board also approved the
payment of bills in the amount of
$198,205.39.

Marriage
license issued

p.m. June 21 at Racine Village Hall.

Flag Day
observance
A Aag Day observance will be
held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
Overbrook Center. The Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post ·of Mason, W.Va.
will conduct a traclitional ceremony
concluding with a 21-gun salute. ·

SHANGHAI NOON (PO 13)
7:110 &amp; 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20

LOCAL STOCKS

Champlon-3
Charming Shops City Holding - Tl.

5'•

Fedel&amp;l Mogul- 10~
Fi'ota( - 25

OVB - 27),
· One Valley - 36l.
Peoples - 15
Premier - 7'1.
AockweH - 38'/•

•

Daly stock repotts are the ·
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's Irons·
actions,
provided by.
Advest of Gallipolis.

VALLEY WEATHER
EXpect a thunderstorm or two
The summertime traditio n of
Wednesday... Partly su nny. .. Very
afternoon thunderstorms may warm and humid with a chance
make an early return to the tri- of afternoon thund erstorms.
county region this week, forecast- Highs around 90.
ers said Tuesday.
Extended forecast
The National Weather Service
Wednesday night ... A chance of
predicts hot, muggy days through showers and thunderstorms. Lows
Friday, with a chance of an after- in the 60s.
noon thunderstorm each day.
Thutsday.. .A cha nce of showers
Forecast
and thunderstorms. Highs in the
Today.,.Partly cloudy with a
80s.
·
c hance of mainly aft ernoon
Friday... A chance of thundershowers and thunderstorms.
storms.
Lows in the 60s. Highs in
Highs in the 80s.
Tonight... Partly cloi1dy with a the 80s.
Sarurday.. .A chance of thunderchance of showers and thllndcr.,tonns mai11l y bcfon• midu q.~h t. ' tonns . Low' in the 60s. Highs in
lo wt•r XO"i.

l .oW\ fro111 th~· 111id r,fl".

•

•
I

se rvices. ·

LOCAL BRIEFS

Open door set

:~lfnrruttil·.

. . . . . I "~INIIIIrill" ...... .rKfl . . . .,. ~fllllld ~~::~a•
. . . . . . . . OIIfiiii'M . . . . . . . . IIf._Jie.......... ......

A $175,000 co ntract was
app roved between the DJFS and
the M eigs Co unty C hamber of
Commerce
and
Eco no mic
Development office, fo r the provisio n of economic development
and tou rism se rvices, to be funded through the Temporary Assistance to Needy Fa milies program. The contract provides for a
continuati on of se rvices now in
place.
The
commiSSIO ners
also
approved a $62,753 .48 contract
with the Meigs County Council
on Aging for chore service, home
health aid and transpo rtation services, a $8,1153 .75 contract with
the Galh a/ M eigs Co mmunity
Actio n Agency fo r transportation ,
and a $7,200 co ntract with
ACCESS to Human Resource
Develo pment for substance abuse

,. The Daily Sentinel

'

Mon., Tues., Wed·., A Fri. 9-5:30
Thun. 9-12 Sat. 9-2:30

Accepting New Patients - J'alll-lns Welcome

Send to:

Th e commissio ners pledged a
respo nse to the request sometime
next wee k.
In other business:
• The commissioners officially
approved six· projects fo r fundin g
through the Conununity Development Block Grarit formula
program, following a fin al public
/hearing on the projects conducted by Grants Administrator Jean
TrusseU.
The following projects were
approved: $29 ,000, with a $2,500
local match, to Salem Township,
for construction at the firehouse;
Village of Middleport, $29,000,
with a $10,324 match, for paving
of Mill Street; Scipio Township,
$12,000, with no local match, for
fire equipment; 529,000, with a
$28 ,233 loan as local match,
Bashan Volunteer Fire Department, for fire equipment; Meigs
County Council on Aging,
$35,000, with a $4,186, for
equipment for the home-delivered meals program; and Chester
Township, $15,000, with a S5,200
match, for paving of Scout Camp
Road.
The board set aside $10,000 for
grants
administration,
and
$10,000 for fa ir housing projects.
• The commissioners approved
a number of contracts at the
request of Michael Swisher,
director of the Department of
Jobs and Family Services.

{

Nutnorks

PICTURES MUll IE Ill IY FlltAY
JUliE tJ, tOOO. PICTUREI Clll IE
PICICEt UP lnER JULv'toTI, 1000

from Page AI

Council

PAYMENT WITH PICTURE)

OfNr ...... .,., ... .000.

RAC INE - Don Richard "Dick" Starkey, 62 , of Racine and Port
C linto n, and formerly ofWooster, passed away at 3:40 a.m. Monday,
Jun e 12, 2000, in Holzer Med ical Center, Gallipo lis, following a prolo nged iUness.
·
Born June 4, 1938, in Columbus, he was the son of D ella M .
Sc hwartzwalder Starkey of Syracuse, and the late Donald Harold
Starkey, who passed away in 1972.
Dick was a 1965 graduate of r))e Ohio State Highway Patrol Academy, where he was the class speaker. Upon his graduation, he was comInissioned as a trooper and assigned to Post 85 at Wooster, where he
spent his entire patrol career. He enjoyed a long career in law enforcement, In 1969, he was honored with the superintendent's citation of
merit by · the Ohio State Highway Patrol for his courageous efforts
during the major tlooding in Wayne County. in which he assisted in
saving 21 lives.
·
After serving in the patrol, he ran for the Wayne Counry Sheriff. He
served as court bailiff and chief adult probation officer for tl:w Wayne
County Court of Common Pleas. He co-owned and operated Homestead Veal Inc. from 19Z8-1985. Always an avid outdoorsman, he
owned and operated hunting preserves, Statwick Pheasant Farm in
Wooster and The Great Lakes Hunting Preserve in Port Clinton, as
well as Rip-A-Lip Fishing Charters in Port Clinton. For the past several years he has spent summers in Port Clinton and Winters in
Racine.
He was a United States Coast Guard licensed captain , c.ertified scuba
diver, a master mason of West Salem Lodge 398, Free and Accepted
Masons of Ohio, as well as a former member of the Wooster Elks
Lodge, Wayne Counry Democrat Party and the Ohio Veal Growers
Association. He had served six years in the Ohio National Guard.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his long-time friend and
companion, Emelie Pride of Racine; two daughters and sons-in-law,
Sandra Marie and. David Vaught of Wooster, and Jennifer Lynn and
Sam Augspurger, Boca Raton, Fla.; a son and daughter-in-law, Michael
Richard and Andrea Starkey ofWooster; three grandchildren, Victoria
and Allison Augspurger and Shawn Vaught.
Also surviving are aunts Alice Flanagan an\) Anna Grace Oiler, both
of Syracuse; and cousins James Oiler, Sam Flanagan and Patry Brown.
Funeral 'Services w ill be at 1 p.m. Thursday, June 15, 2000, in Cr~­
meens Funeral Home, 128 Elm St., Racine. Officiating will be Brother William Hoback. Interment will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Active casketbearers will be Sam Flanagan, Mike Zelms, Jim BiU
Oiler, David Vaught, Donald Schaffer and Shawn Vaugnt.
Memorial contributions in Dick's name can be made to the American Cancer Society, 1.749 Cleveland Road, Wooster, Ohio 44691.

Pool

POMEROY - A marriage license
has been issued in Meigoo County Promust be arranged for future dis- be available at the public works Middleport deserve to have bate Court to Jared Michael Ryder,
plays,, so as not ·to affect other office in village hall. Door- to- them ," she said.
25, New Marshfield, and Melissa
door canvassing will be perShe suggested a planning : Dawn Darnell, 19, Pomeroy.
village services.
Scott suggested corporate formed only for those house- committee made up of village
sponsorship be solicited for the holds which do not respond to council members and residents
the census mailing.
be formed to address possible
communities. In Pomeroy, for display.
Council approved the census uses.
e)lample, a starting patrolman is
In other business, council
RACINE - State Rep. John
Clerk Bryan Swann reminded Carey, R-Wellston, will conduct an
paid $8.20 per hour, while approved the first reading of a to ensure the U.S. Census gets
Middleport pays $6. 78, and proposed ordinaf)ce increasing an accurate count of village res- council members the village open door session fiom 2:30 to 3:30
will lose considerable. revenue
While Middleport's benefit the fee charged to customers idents.
lanqarelli sugge,~ed, 'council _ ooce employees in the buildings
package · tpight • be considered whose water service is disc on•
members' make plans' to tour ·begin working in lhe buildings,
more attractive, it was agreed netted due to non-payment.
by council that the pay scale
Customers whose water is ·the Meigs Middle School - · outside of the village limits.
lannarelli said tepain at Genmust be restructured.
disconnected must now pay a the 'one- time Middleport High
School
and
the
Middleport
era!
Hartinger Park are con tin· A number of officers have left $20 reco.n nection fee, but under.
the Middleport force for other the new ordinance, that fee Elementary School, to become uing. Those repairs are being
familiar with the buildings .
funded by a NatureWorks grant
positions - several of them t'o would be increased to $45.
The buildings will be vacant through the Ohio Department
Pomei:oy.
Iannarelli cited the time
"Are we going to have patrol- involved in dispatching village in 2002 once construction is of Natural Resources. New
men and no .fireworks, or fire- workers to .remove and then complete on a new consolidat- playground equipment has been
works and no patrolmen," Pool- reconnect water meters, ~nd ed elementary school and a new installed, picnic shelters have
been repaired, and Iannarelli
er said . "It's coming down to said that most of the disconnec- middle school.
The village is interested in sa id, tennis courts were just
that, and it's coming fast.
tion cases are habitual ones.
The proposed ordinance was purchasing both buildings for recently repaired. New lighting
· '' Unless we start cutting
;bmehere in the general fund, . recommended by the Board of the s~ke of preservation and and other improvements are still
possible use as public facilities, being planned.
;.ve won't be able to pay them." Public Affairs.
lannarelli reported Village
;·. Although the fireworks bill to
Iannarelli said public works lannarelli said, ·
Council
is
particularly
interAttorney
· Linda Warner is
:Hamburg
Fireworks
was . employees will begin conduet~pproved, council members did · .ing the village-run census on ested in using the elementary reviewing a proposed ordinance
&gt;gree other plans for financing· July 1. with an Aug. 10 target bu ilding, constructed in rhe late which would prohibit street1950s, as a new village hall and level residences in the down.. :
~.
'
.
1date for completion.
··~ .. ~ ~."··~.~
~.
::
The very simple survey will jail facility, and lannarelli said town business district.
, J,... '. . . . . .
'"· · ~·~· ....•
&gt;
All AGI S, All liMI S S4 1111
The proposed ordinance was
.'
only track ihe numbe r of occu- the high school might be divid.·
pants in each dwelling in the ed and used as a community recommended by the Middlevillage. Information about the cen ter or to hou se leased office port Community Development
Authority as a means of pre'
census will be included on the space.
"1 beli eve that th e people in venting residences in store(IJSP121J.fto)
water bill, and census forms will
Olllo VoDer h-Ill C..
fronts.
Publiahod every aftcmoOa, Molday throuah
"
Fddly. 1.11 CoUll St., Pomoroy, Olllo, by lilt
Council also:
Ohio V.lley Publllllln&amp; Corapany., Pomeroy,
'
• Discussed a number of
Cillo 45769, Ph. P9l·2156. Socond clou pot!•
IJO. piid II Pomei'0)' OhiO.
equipment maintenance issues;
- . Tbo-11111 Pna, ood 11w·Ohlo
• Appr9ved the mayor's report
Ncw1p1pcr AlloclltJon.
AEP-35'Gannett - 60''•
Rocky Boots - 5).
of fees and fines collected in
•Sectlonuls
Mio-40l.
General Electric - 49~
RD Shell - 63,.
POSTMASTIRo Send ldd1111 -lo•• 10
May, in the amount f$4,009.37;
•Rocker
Recliner
AmTech!SBC
46),
Har1ey
Davk:lsan
37,~.
Sears
-34
: The Dan,. Sentinel, l I1 Court St., Pomeroy,
• Approved the payment of •Queen and Twin Sleepen
Ashland Inc. - 36
Kma~ - Tl.
Shonay's -'~.
• Cillo 45769.
AT&amp;T - 34
Kroger - 18l.
Wai ·Ma~ - sv.
bills in
the amount of •Double Redlnlna Sofas
SUIISCRirrtON IIAT!Il
Bank One - 32l'.
Lands End - 29l.
Wendy's - 19).
$51,819.85, with 108 entries.
'
8y Center o r - .....
Bob Evans -14~
Ud. - 22~
Worthington - 12'1.
: Oae - k............................ ...................... $%.00
BorgWamer
38'Oak
Hill
Financial
15~
• 011 Montb ................. :............... ............... $8.70

. Complete the fonn below and
enclose a sna~shot or.wallet sized
picture plus .a 6.00 charge for each
photograph. . more than one child
1s 1n the _p1cture, enclose an additional·$2.00 per child. (ENCLOSE

HBO" &amp; SHOWTIME.

Don Richard ·oick' Starkey

LonaCozart

1

• OYor 25 FREE
Specialty Sports .
Notwort&lt;s, lr&gt;&lt;ludint
FO&lt; Spora Wortd,
Tho Golf Chonnol,
NIIA.com TV &amp; _ ,
20 ilop.no~ Spora

The Middleport Clinic

bituaries

•••

' •Double Reclining
Loveseats

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio has scheduled a local
public hearing In Cases No. 99·
1729-EL· ETP and 99-1730-El·
ETP In the Matter of the
Application of Columbus

~~~~hern

tg:::,Com!0a~~aanny~

respectively, for Approval of its
Electric Restructuring Transition
Pian. The hearing is scheduled
to provide interested members of
the public an oppo'rtunity to
testify in the proceeding . The
local hearing will be held on
Thursday, June 22, 2000 at 7 p.m.
at the Ohio Public Utilities
Comm ission , 180 East Broad
Street, 11th Floor, Room 11·A,
Columbus , Ohio.
Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio , 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215·3793 , the PUCO website
at
·
or
1·
800·686· 7826 .

•Double Rocking,
Reclining Loveseats

I

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l'

It

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II

�Page A~

-~Th_e_D_ai~ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________()~~~~~~C)II
·T he Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
. Genet'lll Manager

KIDS,

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

GET INSIDE
FOR SOME

Diane Key Hill
· Controller

Larry Boyer
Advartlllng Director

· F~ESH

Utwn to Ill• HitOI' Ul lfllkfHfll. TII•J rhor~ld IJj lm dta11 100 wonlr. All ldl1n an r11.b}eet
fD Milllll tmd '""''be •lfn~ll aM inelllll• lllldrtu 1111d kl1plto111
lmm will
Jt pu6Jis/t.d. Lriftn slruMfd b1 i11 grXHl IMII, aJd,..UiiiJ lfii41S1 not PfNOtudJ&amp;s,
Tltt OJJilfloiiS IXJif'USed in lit I COIMmlf bt/9w CN tltt COIISIIIIIU oft•l 0/tio "*1111 hblfl1lilf1
Co. .. ldJiorl4l btNtrrl, fiNinl ()/h•rwiJI 110I1d.

'""""'·No""'""'"

.'

AIR!

.,

OUR VIEW

Lack of leadership keeps
school funding a sore point
School funding ginia both share.

Being on the
same playing
field, as they
call it, is for
now all a
matter of
who can
afford it.

decision was first issued.
Ohio's high court justices appear to have found acceptable, for
now, the Legislature's attempts at bringing poorer school districts
more in line with wealthier ones.
Those attempts have mostly been in throwing money at the problem. It's a stopgap, but not a solution.
That money is certainly welcome to school systems struggling
with a low property tax base. But one wonders how much of the
budget can be allotted to these equalization efforts, and for how
long.
·
West Virginia's quandary is different. It doesn't have the money to
bring rural, low-income counties up to snuff with those undergo. ing economic expansion, such as Putnam and in the Eastern Panhandle.
That's why the original legal decision supporting equalization,
issued in 1982, is dormant.
Actually, saying the issue is about equalization is a misnomer. It's
really about taxation.
Both states allow the funding of school operatiol).s through property tax revenue. It creates inequities between a well-off county
with numerous electives for students to pursue, and those with no
options trying to educate the young in crumbling buildings.
Being on the same playing field, as they call it, is for now all a
matter of who can afford it.
A perfect solution may never be found. But lack of leadership and initiative - by legislators in Columbus and Charleston has
been one of the factors that's kept these inequities on the front
burner.
If politics could be put aside, allowing for a rational examination
of available options, then perhaps some progress could be seen.
Until then, the imbalance between rich and poor will remain a rift
that divides our people.
, Ignoring the problem will only let the rift become larger. And
since it affects our most precious resource - our young people the future may be placed in serious question.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today isTuesday;June 13, the 165th day of2000.There are 201 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 13, 1900, China's Boxer Rebellion targeting foreigners as
weD as Chinese Christians, erupted into full-scale violence.
On this date:
In 1886, King Ludwig II of Bavaria drowned in hle Starnberg.
In 1888, Congress created the Department of Labor.
In 1898, the Yukon Territory of Canada was organized.
In 1927, aviator Charles Lindbergh was hobored with a ticker-'JR1"
parade in New York City.
.
In 1942, President Roosevelt created the Office of War .Information, and appointed radio news commentator Elmer Davis to head it.
· In 1944, Germany began launching flying-bomb attacks against
Britain during World War II.
In 1966, the Supreme Court issued its landmark "Miranda" deciMon, ruling ·that police had to inform suspects of their constitutional
rights before questioning them.
In 1967, President Johnson nominated Solicitor-General Thurgood
Marshall as the first black justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
In 1971 , The New York Times began publishing the Pentagon
Papers, a secre~ srudy of America's involvement in Vietnam.
In 1977,James Earl Ray. the convicted assassin of civil rights leader
J?r. Martin Luther King Jr., was recaptured following his escape three
days earlier from a Tennessee prison .
To&lt;4y's Birthdays: TV host Ralph Edwards is 87. Singer Bobby
Freeman is 60.Actor Malcolm McDoweUis 57. Singer Dennis Locorriere (Dr. Hook) i.&lt;' 51. Actor Richard Thomas is 49. Actor Jonathan .
Hogan is 49. Actor SteUan Skarsgard is 49. Comedian Tim Allen is 47.
Actress Ally Sheedy is 38. R&amp;B singer Deniece Pearson (Five Star) is
32. Actor Jamie Walters is 31. Actor Ethan Embry is 22. Aetress Sarah
Schaub is 17. Act=s Alhley Olsen is 14. Actress Mary-lUte Olsen is
14.
· Thought for Today: "Of all fomu of caution, caution in lml! is perhaps the most fatal to true happiness." - Bertrand Russell , English
mathematician and ~hilosophcr (1872-1970) .
.
I

Daughters want to· put an end to con man's stay at Dad's house
, Dear Ann Landers: My sister and I
qeed your help. Our 68-year-old alcoliolic father has not been doing well
since Mom died four years ago. Neither
l)f us live near him, but we try to keep
i}'l touch. In the last four years, Dad has
~efriended some real lowlifes, and we
~restarting . to get concerned.
· The first man was a paying boarder.
tn the six months he lived with Dad, he
turned the house into ·a drug haven. In
oider to get rid of the guy. Dad had to
~all the police. The second man never
~aid rent. He passed out on the sofa one
day, and Dad let him stay. A few weeks
later, a new "friend" talked Dad into
lending him $7,500. He left town the
next day, and we never heard from the
guy again.
The current roommate is "Clyde:' a
42-year-old man who has been living
with Dad rent-free for almost a year.
Clyde claims to have hurt his back, and
says he cannot work. Meanwhile, Clydt;

AJiln

Landers
ADVICE
has filled Dad's garage and shed with his
beat-up welding equipment that no one
ever uses. Dad's car is parked outside, ·
since there's no room in the garage .
Last month, Dad suffered a heart
attack, and my sister and I flew in to be
with him. We found out that Clyde told
the doctqrs he was Dad's stepson so he
would be allowed into his room as a visitor. The rule was "family members
only." Clyde brought Dad's checkbook
to the hospital, and asked him to write a

'

'

check for spending money. I was NOW.
appalled.
Dear Ann Lan4ers: Our twin girls
The dqctors tell us Dad's heart is fail- are now 18 months old. They are
ing, and that he also has prostate cancer. adorable, and have been t~lking in senMeanwhile, Clyde is still living in Dad's tences for four months. We have been
house, running up his grocery bill, and dressing the girls alike, which is quite an
using the telephone to make long-dis- attention-getter. I know you are a rwin,
tance calls. Dad refuses to sign a power and wonder how it was in your growof attorney, so my sister and I have no ing- up years. I'm sure all parents who
authority to 'throw Clyde out. Dad are raising rwins will be inrerested in
insists he is in his right mind, and that what you have to say. - A Double
Blessing, or Double Trouble?
no one can tell him what to do.
We are convinced Clyde is a con
Dear Double: Growing up a twin
man, and are worried sick. Is there any- was fun, but we received entirely too
thing we can do about this galling situ- much attention. We also had very blue
ation? - Daughters in Turmoil
eyes and very black hair, a startling comDear Daughters: Your father needs bination. Mama dressed us alike, so, of
help, and it's up to you to see that he course, we stood out Vl(herever we went.
gets it. Report his bizarre behavior to She was an accomplished seamstress, and
his doctor, and document Clyde's we had some wonderful-looking outfits.
exploitative shenanigans. This con man We also had two older sisters who doted
needs to be reined in, and you two are on us, so we were spoiled rotten. Natuthe only ones who can see that it's dorie. rally, we got into a great deal of allisMove swiftly. Your dad n.eeds help chief, because what one didn't think of,

.rior motive.True friends share and co~fide in
each other.
fricmdships for adults may increase after

appointments. Perhaps taking a class or working,on a project together will help a friendship develop.
It takes time for a new friendship to gtow.
: A familiar children's song says "make new children leave horne and are on their own.
. friends, but keep the old: one is silver and the Daily parenting responsibilities may be less- As both people get to know each other, their
other gold." .
. ened. Opportunities for friendship may interests, values. and experiences will become
Friends .really are treasures ~ as treasured as . appear through work or community. Retire- woven into the friendship. Keep trying to
gold and silver. Some friends become almost ment may affect friendships, however, because develop the friendship, even if it feels uncompart of the family, often because of the length many friendships are work related. This would fortable at times.
It may be necessary to reach out and try
of time of that friendship. Others enter late in be especially true if retirement brings a move
life l)ut become (reasured for the role they to a new conununjty. These friendships can be new things to meet new people. Put the effort
play, even though the time of tha,t friendship maintained through phone caDs, letters or vis- into .finding places where potential friends
its. But it does take effort to keep up a long- .may congregate. That could include the
may be short.
library, .college, chun;h, civic groups, volunteer
. Everyone needs friends: The need for distance relationship.
.
friends does not diminisll with age. In fact,
Relationships with adult children are opporrunities, organizations for people with
friendship provides inurnacy, fun, new experi- important but do not replace companionship similar interests. or at work.
Having others help with inttoductions or
ences, and reinforcement of self-worth, with other adults. A close friend can help
whether a person is married or sil).gle, with or relieve the depression and loneliness that may social activities may be helpful and more
comfortable. Having another· person along
without children, or young or old.
come with retirement or widowhood.
, Friendships are often based. on common
Starting and continuing friendships take can break down the barriers and make everyinterests or doing things together. Friends can work, however. Both parties must be able to one feel more comfortable. If that isn't possi·
be the same age, younger, or older. They can . give the time and effort necessary if the ble, however, try it alorie. Smile, offer a handshake, introduce yourself first, and talk about
be the same sex or the opposite sex. The key friendship is to develop.
to building a friendship is developing trust in
Friendships develop as individ':'a!s share an interest or hobby. Before you know it, you
each other and f~eling that each person is val- themselves and their life experiences. Be open wiD be on your way to a long and lasting relaued for himself or herself, not for some ulte- to sharing feelings, memories, dreams, and dis- tionship.
.BY BECKY IIAER

MEIGS COUNlY EXTENSION .AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES/
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

PERKINS' VIEW

Missile defense procedure·is a moral imperative:~
'~j

I

American forces in Japan were placed on alert
this week as Beijing prepared a test-firing of its
Dongfeng-31 intercontinental ballistic missile.
The Chinese nuke has a range of 5,000 miles,
which brings San Diego and other prime military and industrial targets on the West Coast
well within striking distance.
There was no official word from Beijing
about the test-firing. However, a spokeswoman
for Chin~'s Foreign Ministry did take time this
week to reite.rate the Communists' opposition
NEA COLUMNIST
to plans by the United States for a national missile defense system (which would protect this
country's population from the Dongfi:ng 31 against incoming missiles, .the thinking went,
and other hostile nukes).
the certainty of massive retaliation wauld deter
"This will n&amp; only affect th~· rluclear disa·r~ - either sLpeq)ower from launching a first strike.
mament process and shake the foundation stone
This doctrine, codified by the ABM treaty,
of nuclear non-proliferation," said Zhang was known as "mutually assured destruction,"
Qiyue, "it will also directly trigger a new arms with the apt acronym MAD.
race, including an arms race in space."
Today, the premise under which the ABM
China asserts that U.S. deployment of a mis- treaty was conceived is no longer operative. The
sile defense system would violate the 1972 United States enjoys quite civil - if not alto. Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty and thereby foment gether warm- relations with the former Soviglobal destabilization. A similar argument has et republics, including Russia and Ukraine,
been made by Moscow, as reiterated by Russian which inherited most of the former superpowpresident Vladimir Putin during his recent sum- er's nuclear arsenal.
The biggest threat of a nuclear strike against
mit meeting with Bill Clinton.
But China was. not a parry to the 28-year-old the United States or Russia comes not from
ABM treaty, so it has no grounds to invoke it. each other, not even from China, but from a
And while Russia has · more standing than rogue state like North Korea or Iran or Iraq that
China, the fact is the treaty was between the might not be as circumspect about firing off ari
United States and the Soviet Union, which no ICBM as long-time nuclear nations. ·
longer appears on the Rand-McNally, having
Indeed, in congre~estimony back in
been consigned to the dustbin of history way February, Robert Walpole, a national intelliback in 1991.
gence officer for strategic and nuclear programs,
The ABM treaty is a relic of the Cold War told 'lawmakers that the "progress of countries
eia, predicated on the idea, correct at the time, toward acquiring longer-range ballistic missiles
that the United States and Soviet Union posed has been dramatically demonstrated over the
the greatest nuclear threat to e:ich other.
past 18 months."
.
So long as neither nation developed a defense
North Korea tested its Taepo Dong-1, which

Joseph
PerKins

has the capability of delivering a small biological or chemical weapon to the United States. ItS'
Taepo Dong-2, which may be tested this year,'
can deliver a nuclear payload.
'
Iran tested its Shahab-3, a medium-range baJ'-'
listie missile that could enable it to strike Turkey:
It is busily developing its next generation of
missiles, the Shahab-4 and Shahab-5, which will·
enable Teheran to reach out and touch the'
United States.
Iraq has been impeded, somewhat, by United:
Nations controls imposed following the Persian
Gulf War. Nevertheless, Teheran continues to:
develop missiles. According to Walpole, I~
could test ICBMs capaqle of delivering pfi-?
loads of se\ieraNtltbdred lillbgrams to the Unit,
ed States in the next five to 10 years.
So how have Pyongyang, Baghdad, Tehratt
and other Yankee-hating spots managed td
acquire the nuclear and missile technol&lt;&gt;!ll5
enabling them to develop warheads that will, il\
the all-too-near furure, enable them to black:&gt;
mail or even attack the United States?
~
With the knowing and willful assistance o(
Moscow and -Beijing, which dare to accuse th~
United States ofjeopardizing global security b)i
proposing tq move forward .with . a missil~
defense system.
·'
The United States has a right, has a moral
imperative, to protect its citizens from a rogu~
missile attaciC: by a hostile nation.
.,
. The Russkies and the Communists may n~t
like it. But it is their exports of nuclear and mis-!
sile technology ro client states like North
Korea, Iran and Iraq that require the Uniteil
States to deploy a missile defense system as soon
as possible.
:•

.

a~seph Perkins is a col11mnist for The San Dieg~

Union- Tr{bame.)

:

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TODAY · IN HISTORY

TUesday,Junell,lOOO

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

it's a problem leaders in Ohio and West VirNo easy solution has been presented to
either state, which is why the equalization
of resources sought by those who have
gone to court ov,er the issue won't be seen
soon.
Ohio's split over funding came to light
again last month when the state Supreme
Court upheld the original DeRolph vs.
Ohio ruling that the method of funding
schools was unconstitutional.
West Virginia, forced last week to take
over operation oftincoln County schools,
has wrestled with the problem for nearly
rwo decades since the so-called Recht

_rh_e_D_a.....;ily;....._Se_nt_in_e_l_ _ _ _ _

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

'E.sta6fislid in 1948

Charles W. Govey
Publlahsr

ly the Belld

Page AS

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

....

Privatization of Social Security ·ponde~ed
WASHINGTON - 1Wo basic Social
Security privatization proposals are .being .
floated by politicians and economists. First,
there's the proposal thai the government
invest in the stock market a portion of what
each individual pays in Social Security taxes.
The second proposal is to allow individuals
to direct such stock-market investments
themselves.
B~th proposals are flawed, but one of
them is salvageable.
Among the flaws is the partial abandonment of the idea that Social Security is an
intergenerational transfer tax, which means
that the working generation's taxes are paying for the retirements of the retired generation. The idea of each person contributing
to his or her own retirement is nor inherently bad,. but to end the present ·ptogram
could be messy. Perhaps the best solution
here would be for the government to fund
current retirees out of general tax funds,
while allowing current workers to commence accumulating money for their ow.n
retirements.
o
Next, the idea of government-decided
investments is obviously a formula for fail ure. Wayne Angell, a former mernber of the
Federal Reserve and economist at Bear
Stearns critidzed the idea: "Once .t he 'government becomes involved (in investing in
the private financial market), there are difficult temptations. If you can't invest in an
industry because it doesn't meet a social test,

•

Jack
Anderson
&amp; Douglas
Cohn
UFS COLUMNISTS

''

control or direct investment decisions.
The solution to this is to remove the sub&lt;;
jective nature of such decisions. This can be
accomplished by openi11g virtually all pub'~
licly traded instruments to Social Securit)'
investing. Under this plan, up to 25 percent
of Social Security taxes could be . directed
into stocks, bonds or commodities - yes;
even commodities. The essence of the con~
cept ·s to allow people freedom of invest.
ment choice within the broadest possible
.•
parameters.
Therefore, any security authorized for
tradins on a nation~lly recognized·
exchange should be included.
·,
These would include, but not be limite&lt;t
to, l~e New York Stock Excha~ge, th~'
American. Stock Exchange, NASDAQ; :
NASDAQ Small Cap, OTCBB (Over-the~
Counter Bulletin Board), the Ci1icago Boar~,
ofTrade, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange;
and the various regional exchanges.
.;
Would there be risk?Yes. But it would be
a risk of 25 percent of the Social SecuritY
taxes.
":l
That's an acceptable level. This concept of
partial privatization would provide a cornbi;nation of security and risk that· could satisfy.
most privatization advo~;,ates without under• , .
mining the essential need for retirement
safery.
"

u.s:

then that enlarges the role of the government dictating to the ·private economy to a
degree that many of us would find unacceptable."
And Alan Greenspan has raised further.
doubts , saying, "There is really no strong
evidence to suggest any positive aspects of
moving SoCial Security fun~s into equities."
Greenspan fears that the Federal government would inevitably allow political considerations rather than economic return to
color its investment decisions.. This would
not create the kind of returns either individuals or the government wants.
Yet another concern of economists is that
the government's investment would inflate
stock values.
Our primary concern about privatization
has always stemmed from the concern that
ljack Anderson and Douglas Colm are distri~­
the government would in some manner uted by Uulted Features Syndicate.)

••

COMMUNI'IY
CALENDAR
1UF.SDAY,June 13
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department immunization
clinic Tuesday, 9 to II a.m and 1 to
3 p.m. at the health department, 112 .
E. Memorial Dr. Parents/legal
guan:lians must accompany children

Take shot recon:ls.Donations accepted burno one denied shots.
EAST MEIGS -Eastern High
School Band Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. band room

CHESTER - Chester Township Board qf'I'rust.ees,regular meting
Tuesday. 7 p.m rown hall.

.I'

School Athletic Boosters, \Mxlnesday.
7 p.m. at school.
RACINE - Revival services
will be held Wednesday through Saturday at the Full Gospel Church of
the Living Savior, 7 p.m. each
evening. Ralph Savage ofColurnl:us
will be the guest speaker. On Saturday
evening a potluck dinner will be held
at 6 p.m. Singers: Hal!le Sellers, the
Free Gospel Singers and Larry Jones.
PastorJesse Morm invites public.
POMEROY -American Red
C[()$ Bloodmobile, Mei~ County
Multipurpose Senior Center,
Wednesday, I to 6 p.m

WEDNESDAY,June 14
SA1URDAY,June 17
TUPPERS PLAINS Big
POMEROY
Return
Bend Farm Antique Oub, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at the Fairgrounds Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR,
annual picnic, Satutday, Chester Acad~
office.
emy. 1 p.m. Meat and beverages proRACINE ~ Southern High vided.

__ t«.

~ -~H· a~iie;o-ur:1iaa-in-your-winiow:Wednesda)':1uiie-i~4.-f"las-oa_)'
.

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'

the other did. Example: One day, we
found a pair of scissors and cut all the
fringe off'the living room rug.
If you are dressing your twin daughters alike, please stop it. Encourage individuality. Don't make showpieces out of
your twins. And no blanket praise or
punishment, please. Each twin should
get whatever she has coming. Twins can
be a double blessing OR double trouble. Good lu ck. You are going to need it.
Lonesome? Take charge of your life
and turn it around. Write for Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to Make
Friends and Stop Being Lonely." Send a
self-addressed, long, business-size enve- '
lope and a check or money order for
$4.25 {this includes postage and han dling) to: Friends, c/ o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11 562, Chicago, Ill .. 60611-0562.
{In Canada, send $5 .15.) To find out
more about Ann Landers and read her
past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

�••
•

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P1lge A 6 • The Dilly Sentinel

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Tuesday, JuM 13, 2000·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

SOCIETY
. . NEWS
Church plans family dinner
The Alfred United Methodist Church plans to have a family
dinner on July 16 after church.
On May 27, the fifth birthday of Garret Ritchie was celebrated at the home of his parents, Ken and Lisa Ritchie, with a cookout attended by family and friends.
On May 28, a graduation party honoring Kirt Spencer was
given by his parents, Dan and Shelia Spencer.
Mike and Jessica Weber, Gallipolis, visited Brenda and Gary
Johnson while Mattie Pullins was visited by Bernice Midkiff of
Salem Center and Bill and Fay Pullins, local.
During the Memorial Day weekend, Nellie Parker received
telephone calls from her sons, Eric Parker, Livermore, Cal., and
Edward Parker, Arlington, Wash.

Vacation Bible Sdlool planned
POMEROY -Vacation Bible School will be held at the Hillside Baptist Church June 26 through June 30 with Noah 's Ark,
constructed in 1998 by church members and members of the
Power in the Blood Ministry, being the center of the school
activities.
Classes will be held for children age three through Grade 12
and the studies will feature the life and times of Noah and his
ark.
.
Activities will be held from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. each day.
The church will be using buses to pick up children and take
them home each evening. The buses will run in Middleport,
Pomeroy, Darwin, Letart Falls, Racine, and Mason, W.Va. areas.
Registration for Bible school to ensure a place for each child
will take place through June 24 by contacting the church at 9926768.

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POMEROY - Flag Day was the thetne for a program conducted by Lecturer Vicki Smith at the recent meeting of Star
Grange 778 .
Readings included "Fly This Flag Proudly" by Larry Montgomery; "My Father" by Martha Bartley; and "Just Whistle" by
Smith.
Contests on Old Glory, Money Problem and Money Quiz
were ·participated in by tho~e attending. A skit, "the Tater Family," was performed by . Rick Macomber, Avanel Holliday, Maxine
Dyer, Linda Montgomery, Bonnie Rife, Dan Evans and Smith.
Plans were co mpleted to serve refreshments for Meigs Coun- ·
ty's Pomona Grange Meeting to be held at the Star Grange .o n
Friday, July 7 . '
At the previous meeting, Janis Macomber, deaf chairman,
introduced a representative from Belhone Hearing Center in
Gallipolis who presented a program on hearing aids and discussed discount programs for Grange members.
Star Grange 778 will host the Ohio State Grange District 3
Talent Contest on Saturday beginning at 12:30 p.m. Contestants
will be from Meigs and Gallia Counties.
.
Star Grange 77 8 will also meet on Saturday for its fun night
activities. The evening will begin with a potluck supper at 6:30
p.m.
The public is invi~ed to attend all events.

•
Who of Professionals .
The award is given to successful individuals who excel in
a specific profession. As principal, receiving the awud indicates that Johnston uses her
expertise in preparing programs
which challenge students to
reach their potential, mentally,
.
physically, and socially.
The . award indicates that
as a veteral) teacher, she uses her
education and experience to
serve as 'principal and chief
administrator. She is a member
of Delta Kappa Gamma Society,
Ohio Association of Elementary
Administrators,
Liaison,
OAESA. '
.

JohMton

Receives award

Sdence Fair partidpants

Taking part in 'the annual junior high science fair at Eastern Ele-'
mentary School were left to right, front, Chris Connolly, Alyssa
Holter, Denise West, Becky Taylor, Tla Pratt, and Jonathan
Owen ; and back, Jennifer Hayman, Cassie Nutter, Krystln Young,
Morgan Weber, Brittany Hauber, Chrissie Gregory, and Jessica
Bakel. Judges were John Taylor, Ginger Siders and Jarred
Spencer. Steve Weber was the coordinator.

READYING THE ARK- Pastor James R. A&lt;;ree, Sr. checks over
the model of Noah's Ark in preparation for the Hillside Baptist
Church's Bible school program which will center on Noah and
the Ark.

Daily &amp;oreboard, Page B6

••.

Flag Day theme of Grange proaram

lnduded In Who's Who
POMEROY - Cindy Johnston, principal of Pomeroy El~­
mentary School, has been selected in the International Who's

Members of the applied chemistry .class at Meigs High ·ScMol
were awarded a certificate of appreciation for their school-wide
recycling program this year, and were nominated for an award In
the "Youth Recycling Division' ofthe Take Pride In Ohio contest,
sponsored annually by the Keep America Beautiful program. Tne
certificate was' presented foJ the class' voluntary contribution
toward protecting and preserving natural resources, by collectIng and recycling over 10 tons of mixed office paper, cata·
logues, cardboard an,d other ite'ms. The Meigs County Recycling
and Litter Prevention program also presented a plaque. Pictured
are, front, Brandy Graham, Josh ·Youngblood and Holly Hannan;
· center, Abby H!!rris, Sandi Gilkey, Jennifer Fife, and ..Amber Vining; and back, Linda Smith, teacher, Britni Bevans, Ben
Mitchell, B.J. Kennedy, Adam Bullington, Michael Stacy, Susan
Tobin and Principal Dennis Eichinger.
"

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

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Page 81
TU1.-Iay. June 11, lOGO

TuEsDAY'S

·HIGHLIGHTS
•••' Younc retires
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP)
- Steve Young announced his
retirement, ending a 15-year NFL
can;er highlighted by 13 seasons
with the San Francisco 49ers, the
team he quar1 terbacked to a
Super
1995
Bowl title.
Young was a
seven-time Pro
Bowler
and
two-time
league MVP.
He leaves . as
the
NfL's
Youn&amp;
highest-rated
\
passer.
"Do I want to keep , playing? ,
Absolutely," Young said after '
announCing his retirement Mon- ,
day, enQing a 15-year NFL career &gt;!
highlighted by 13 seasons with :
.the San Francisco 49ers, the team
he took to a 1995 Super Bowl.;.,
title.
"But is it the right tinie 'to
retire? Yes. I don't want people td l
'think I'm forlorn about this. On'
the way here with my family, alf
of us were laughing. This is a celi?
ebration for me."
.
.'
Young, 38, whose plans to leave
football became known late l~t
week, made one final· trip to the
locker room at the 49ers' Santa
Clara headquarters to formalize
his retirement in front of an audiJ:nce offamily, friends, teanunates
and coaches.
, 1
: He played his final game iast
Sept. 27 in Arizona, where a '\(iolent hit left him with his fourth .
concussion in three ~ars.

·Tour of Southeast Ohio
raat beslns ibursday

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G:ALLJPOLIS - The Tour of
Southeast Ohio pro bicycle race
makes a stop in Gallia and Meigs
ounties this week. ·
The tour kicks off with a 68mile leg through Gallia, Meigs
and Vinton counties.
The race is scheduled to begin
at 5 p.m. Thursday ~t the Gallipolis Ciry Park.
The route includes jaunts.
through Rodney, Bidwell, Vinton,
Salem Cente.r and Wilkesville,
where the race will conclude. .
The tour begins with a short
race scheduled for 5 p.m.Wednesday at Raccoon Creek Counry
Park in Gallia County:
This year's tour includes races
in Hocking and Ross counties
later this week.

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CWS: Seminoles
top Texas
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - . Florida State 1taved off elimination at
the College World Series with a
6-2 victory. over Texas, sending
the Longhorns home after two
· straight losses.
.
Also,.LSU beat Southern California 10-4 to snap the Trojans'
16-game Winning streak. .
The Tigers are on!O,_ victory .
from advancing to the CWS
championship game for the fifth
time.

OSU assistant paes
to William a Mary

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. WILLIAMSBURG,Va.
(AP)Rick Boyages, an assistant coach
at Ohio State the last \hree .years, ·
was hired as the basketball coach
at William &amp; Mary. He replaces
Charlie Woollum, who retired in
May.

Kypr ereiak ~mey
·slpupunderway

CHESHIRE - Area • Little
League coaches are reminded that
the cutoff date for the Kyger
Creek Litde League tournament
is June 15. Question concerning
the event may be directed to
Mark Werry, 992-6118.

I

CLEVELAND (AP) - For historical
purposes, fet the record show that as of
June 12, 2000, the AL Central is no longer
the exclusive properry of the Cleveland
Indians.
The Chicago White Sox are·for real.
Frank Thomas hit a two-run homer and
Ray Durham had three RBis Monday
night as first-place Chicago opened a
three~game lead in the division over
~ Cleveland with an 8-7 win over the' Indians.
"I don't think we're getting cocky;' said
White·Sox pitcher Cal Eldred. "I think we
go home at night realizing that this feam
has the abiliry to win."

Chicago has won 10 of 12 and Monday
began a stretch of 14 games where it will
play the five-time · defending Central
champion Indians seven times, and the
World Series champion New York Yankees
seven IJI.Ore.

If anyone needed more proof the White
Sox are legitimate, Monday's game was the
clincher. And if a season can turn on a
game in mid-June, this might be the one.
Chicago outhit, outpitched, outplayed
and outlasted the Indians, who haven't
been in second place this late in the year
since 1994.
"We need to keep pushing;• said Wl)ite
Sox manager Jerry Manuel. "If P.eople

don't believe, fine. But we have to stay driven if we're going to have a chance and
stay competitive for the long haul."
Russell Branyan homered twice, and
Travis Fryman, Kenny Lofton· and Jim
Thome connected for the Indians, who
have been in first place just 17 days this
season after being there for 360 of a possible 362 days the past two years.
"Three games back is not a whole lot,"
Indians manager Charlie Manuel said. ·
"But we want to keep the margin close."
Trailing 8-3 in the seventh, the Indians
closed to 8-7 in the ninth on Thome's ·
home run: but Keith Foulke got Sandy
Alomar Jr. to hit into a game-ending dou-

ble play. · ·
The Indians, who lett 14 runners on
base Sunday, stranded seven more in the
final three innings and went 1-for-9 with
men in scoring position .
" We hit five home runs and all we
needed was one single to win the game,"
Charlie Manuel said.
Eldred (7 -2) pitched six effective
innings for the White Sox, who hadn't
been in first place during a visit to Jacobs
Field since July 21, 1994. And the way
Chicago is playing, it seems the White Sox
are enJoymg the view from atop the
standings.

San Fran

whips Reds
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Dusty Baker got the game ball
for becoming \he winningest
manager in the 43-year history
of the San Francisco Giants. He
also made sure Joe Nathan's
effort in helping him reach the
milestone didn't go unrecognized.
Mter San Francisco's 10-3
win over the Cincinnati Reds
on Monday night, Baker presented his lineup card to
Nathan, who allowed one run
in eight innings and hit his first
major league homer.
"I was just happy to go out
there and go eight strong
innings and get Dusty his win;'
said Nathan (3-1) .
.
Marvin Benard' atlded ·a tworun homer, and Bobby Estalei:Ja
, and Ellis Burks hit solo shots in
Baker's 587th career victory, the
most by a San Francisco manager, one ahead of Roger Craig.
Baker is 587-541 in eight seasons with the Giants.
"It hasn't sunk in yet," said
Baker. "We won the game,
which was the main thing. Joe
Nathan had a heck of a night.
He threw the ball well and hit
his 6rst major league home run.
It was almost a_perfectly played
game.
"What's ironic is the win
came ori June 12, the month I
was born and 12 is my number.
I'm just grateful for all the players I've had. Without them, I
couldn't have done anything."
Burks said Baker brings out
the best in his players .
" It's definitely an honor for
him to be the guy that breaks
GOING FOR TWO - Ken Griffey )r. attempts to stretch a single into a double during the first Inning of the record;' said Burks, who had
three hits and three RBis. " It's
Monday's game against the Giants at Pacific Bell Park in San Francisco. (AP)

US OPEN

Pebble's·different, Open's the same
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) ball up and down."
-The ·last .time Matt Gogel was
The second hole, a generous
walking the fairways of Pebble par-5 that routinely yielded
Beach, he watched a seven.- birdies in the past three U.S.
stroke lead disappear on the back Opens at Pebble Beach, is now
nine as Tiger Woods stormed to playing as a 484-yard par-4.
·
his sixth straight PGA Tour vicRough that Was supposed to
be a nuisance has become nasty,
tory.
That wasn't even on Gogel's leveled off at 4 inches and capamind Monday.
ble of making balls sink to the
"This might not even be the bottom. If that wasn't enough,
same golf course:• · Gogel said Nicklaus winced when he saw
after a practice rou'nd on a workers watering the rough late
breezy, sunny day that featured in the day.
thick rough, tight fairways and
"It's long, it's guarly, it's thick,"
hard, fast greens.
Nicklaus said. "I thought they
Pebble Beach takes on a new might take water off so we could
look when the U.S. Open comes have half a chance' to play a reato t9wn, and not just because sonable shot."
·
Toinmy Smothers is not around
Compounding matters are the
to do yocyo tricks.
greens, which . already were
· They call the U.S. Open the · rolling at 11 on the Stimpmerer.
toughest test in golf for a reason. They never got beyond 11 all
"This is the kirid of golf week at Pinehurst No. 2 in last
course, the way it's set up, where year's U.S. Open.
you have to put the ball on the
Who knows what awaits when
fairway and put the ball on the the shots actually count on
green," Jack Nicklaus .said after · Thursday.
his practice round Monday. ~' If
"It all depends on the weathyou do that .... well, you're not er;' said two-time Masters chamgoing to do that. It's going to be pion Jose Maria Olazabal. "If the
a difficult golf course to get the · wind blows, the conditions will

be quite severe. You don't need a
really strong wind here to make
a difference."
The rough - and the small
greens - take care of the rest.
The USGA ·talked all year
about how the rough would be
minimal, similar to the 3 inches
at Pinehurst No. 2 for last year's
championship. But three weeks
ago, USGA director of rules and
competition Tom Meeks was
tossing balls into the high grass
· and noticed too many of them
sitting up, as if on tees, because of
the dense Rye grass.
By adding an extra: inch, the .
ball will sink deeper into the
grass and make the players think
twice about trying to reach the
green.
"You're going to see different
options;' he said. "The last thing
we want is to have them hitting
sand wedge out of rhc rough.
Sometimes, that's all they can do.
.But we want to see them have
more than one option to play
·
the shot."
The best option is to not miss

PI liM ... us Open, ..... ...
I

(

..

White Sox edge Tribe; continue hot streak

special for him but it's special
for us as players, too."
Baker, a two-time NL manager of the year, now ranks fourth
on the Giants all-time list, trailing John McGraw (2,604), Bill
Terry (823) and Leo Durocher
(637), who managed the Giants
while they. were based in New
York. ·
"Sixty-6ve more wins would
be great this year:· Baker added.
" I accomplished something
tonight but now it's time for the
team to accomplish something."
, Rob Bell (4-5) allowed five
runs and four hits in four
innings, losing for the third time
in four decisions. He walked a
career-high six and .s truck out
none as the Reds lost fur the ,
·
sixth time in seven gikes.
"This team somehow has our
pitchers figured out;: Cincinnati's Eddie Taubensee said. "We
always seem !O catch them
when they're hot."
Nathan benefited from solid
defensive work that included ·
double plays in the fourth and
sixth innings. The Reds' only ·
run off him came on Dmitri
Young's RBI single in the
fourth . Taubensee and Chris
Srynes drove in ninth-inning ·
runs off Alan Embree.
·
"The name of the game is
pitching and we were not getting any of it," Reds manager
Jack McKeon said. "You hope ·
someone can come up and give ·
you six or seven good innings.
Hopefully, it's (Tuesday) ."
Estalella got San Francisco
going when he connected for
his seventh homer with two

PIIIH-Reds,hpB6

Bad boy Moss

..•

kicked Off plane
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Randy Moss was kicked off
anairplane Monday night after a
confrontation with a flight
attendant over the storage of
carry-on luggage.
The Pittsburgh-bound US
Airways flight had taxied across
the tarmac but returned to the
gate at Yeager Airport so that
Moss could be removed. The
matter was turned over to the
Federal Aviation Administration
and the FBI.
The confrontation "was all
verbal. Nothing physical," said
assistant airport director Dave
Sweeney.
A statement released by Moss'
agent, Dante diTrapano, called
the incident "very unfortunate"
and said it was "blown way out
of proportion."
The statement said Moss
boarded the plane with the same
luggage he routinely carries on
board.
A flight attendant told Moss
the bag -was too. big and had to
be taken to the airline's check-in
counter. Instead, Moss removed

some clothes and placed them in
the overhead compartment,
then placed his bag underneath
his first-class seat, the statement
said.
The {light attendant apparently complained to the captain
that Moss had not followed her
instructions, and the captain
asked Moss to leave the plane.
The 'Minnesota Vikings wide
receiver and former Marshall
all-American was not immediately available for comment.
M~s, a native of nearby Rand,
l~fi the airport after giving a
statemer1t to police.
A telephone message lett with
a spokesman for US Airways
wasn't immediately returned.
The. incident' was the lead
story on all three of Charleston's
11 p.m. television newscasts
Monday night.
Moss hasn't exacdy been the
darling of his home state in
recent years. He has been a target of contempt ever since he
criticized West Virginia in several 1998 interviews, saying he.
was happy to leave the state.

�•

P~ 8

2 • The Dally Sentinel

June 13 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Mil Mlacellaneou•
Merchandlae

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

580

:t::•

v

STATE OF OHIO
DEPAATIIENT OF
COMMERCE
STATE FIRE MAIIBHALL
CITAnON
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Seek ng Manage Fo Jewe y
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dlte ol recotpt o1 thlo e11ot10n
you do

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the clUng~ ~ In Ita
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opproprlatt ltgol octiOn 11
outhorlzed by tho Ohio
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1989 W nnobogo Luha o 39 000 Wltn111 my olgnaturt at
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tide hiNol In 1111 fallOwing
SE I!VI CES
mannM
X by Cortlftld Ul Mall
No.(7000 DDO 11017 13741114)
810
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11r. Jllwllllr M llllr
lmprov1manta
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1'tgllrcllng lhlo onotlon ~
IAIIMENT
Mfoheel 0 Krill Chill Ol
WATERPROO, NQ
..-ohnlcal 8ervloeo eeoe
Unc:ond on1 t me gua an 11
'llllllng ROid Reynoldlburg,
Loca • • encea fu nfanad Ea
ob ahod 97e Ca 24 Hrt 1•0 Ohlo43018. " ' - (114)721-

790

NOTCE

80

720 Truck• for Slit

SO

Down Nl 1 S!50K Wo k 7 H s

Candy VEND NG A I n A ea
To F 01 677 494 8895 24
HI

wwwotdrNotloom

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21&lt;150 WI 2 SL oua c 10 lUI&gt;
woo 1 1 w box 1850 740 117

""
•

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qua y and ~ Poma &amp;VI lab e to
lilt 740 114t 3o4 8

580

Cindy

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Trto1111'11'

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The llllgo LAICII Boord ol
Educotllln wlahoa to .-Iva
bldo for tho following
Brood Bakery
and
Mllk/Dolry producta
All bide ohall be roctlvld
In ond bid optclflcollone
moy ba obtolnod from
TREASURER S OFFICE 320
E Main StrHt Pomoroy OH
45789 on or J&gt;tfart 1 00
PM Wldntodoy Juno 21

MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF
EDUCATION
PO Bol272
Pomeroy Ohio 45789
PH (7411)!192:8850
(8) 13 20 2TC

An 80-yaar sentence Is not so bad - with
good behavior you can be out by Christmas

e

110

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital

$ Increased Pay Scale $
CNA Applicants

Advertise your
message
$8 00 column Inch weekdays
$10 00 column Inch Sundays

110

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST

Thl Nurelng and Rehabilitation Canter hal
positions available for full time
employment Must be WV Certified
Join Our Fom ly of profeeolonola to bo tho rooourcelor
community heo th oerv co nelda
Pluoe aubmlt roaumolo
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASANT WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 675:6975
AA/EOE

e

Pleasant Valley Hospital

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST/MLT
Pleasant Valley Hospital has a full time oppOrtunity
If you meet the following qualifications
1
Associates degree In Applied Sciences or related
field plus eligibility for ASCP certification
Current wv license
Excellent
Salary
Holidays
Hospitalization
"acatlon
Dental
Ufe Insurance
v
Retirement Long Term Disability
Join Our Family of professionals to be the reaourc•
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Ploaoa aubmlt reaumoto
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
a o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASANT WV 25550

AA/EOE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====~~=====O:R:F:AX=T~0~(~304~)~6:711-6=9:7:5====~

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1 888-698 929 Coda 1023

Campara &amp;
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441 oa1o
800 287
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330

to

,.,_,... a.te ol Ohio to

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

TRENCHING &amp;BACKHOE SEfiV.
ICES/ FREE EST MATES 304
1112 2383.

FINANCIAL

21 o

888

510

Professional
Services

Ha e Sa es Ab y Some Com
pue Sk s Aequ ed Sa a 'i And
Bonus P us Bene It P$:kage

yo e We come Co hes M s

and d ye hookup Nea Kma
$3251 mo You pay gas &amp; e ee c
(7•o ••s 822 740)•4s 42 1
ca befo e Bam or afte 9pm

REPO Sf.LE

V SA

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

I

Sma
sea oon House AJC Gas
hea Cook ng and wa ., Base

ccordlng to the type of bid

gorago

m I' Hwtlhlnll*tydo!Y8:
the
following
structu,.
lo-.becorrective
...,..lrod
torn clown domollllhod or
motorlolo romovld arid all
dongoroua condltlono bo
1'1111tdlod
n- aectlona ol tho Ohio
Rtvl. . d Codo (ORC)
portalnlng portlcularty to the
luullnco o"'l procoulng of
thla altatlon together with
............... forth below:
TAKE NOTICE llult If you do
nat mt.ct tho • .,..,_ af 1111
condiUon(e) oat forth herein
11 ORDERED the CITING
AI1IHORITV moy
ttok
ENFORCEMENT pureuant 1D
h ORC Sllcllan 3737A1(D)
You ... further notlflod tat
you .,. tntltlld to on appNI
hltrlng to tho Ohio Boord of
Building Appeolo 8808
Tulllng Rood Reynaldoburg
Ohla 43068 If you requoot
ouch hlarlng within thirty (30)
doy11 after rocolpt of thla
citation Your ~ requoat
llhllllnciUdt t h o - fOr the
oppeal and relltf oought. A
copy Of thll citation lhall ...
allllcllod to your 1'8qutll At
ouch hlarlng you moy appNr
In per.on ar by your ottornev
and you may preaent the
ovldenci and exomlne
Wltnlllll tor lnd lgllnot you
To ,.qutet M appNI httrlng
lind • wrm.n rtqUHt, along
with a chick or money ardor

DOWNTOWN BUSiNESS
SPACE OR OFFICE

FREE DEBT CON SO OAT ON
App ca on W Se ce Reduce
Paymen s To 65
CASH N
CENT VE OFFER Ca
800
328 as oExt 29

II A R K E D

~L.EARLY

-11...

320 Mobile Home•
EARN A LEGA). COLLEGE DE
GREE OU CKLY Bache o a
Mas e 6 Doc o a e By Co e
apon0tf'l9a Baaed Upoo P o Ed
uca on C
Ahd Sho Siudy Co se
Fo FREE n o ma on Book e
Phone CAMBR OGE STATE
UN VEAS TY 800 964 83 6

(MOO)

T111 111111 Locll Boord of
Educotlon re11rv11 tho
right to reliCt 1ny tnd oil
blda ond the oubtnlnlng ol
any bid oholl lmpoot no
lloblllty or abllgetlon upon
thl1111d Boord
All envolopea mutt ba

Fruth Pharmacy IS seekmg a phannacistl
Exctoolvt ICCumulltlon of m this area Fruth Pharmacy mamtams
lllmlllllblt l...ld It llorod In
open -lntr8. ExcMolw hrgh ranking by natrona! drugstore an&lt;JI
accumulltlon ol combuotlblo b
mat.rtol o.cuv. .., usmess pu blIcatlons F rut h assists you
aondiUo,. Include lmpropor
h
db k
d
ac up an
noxlble cord• ond open m your practice Wit goo
llxtu!M. lmprapor lnolalllotlon support We offer excellent benefits
of chimney flue plpo
lmpropor lnatollotlon of and a competitive salary Send your
hoatlng apporotuo on the
Un..,. -~~~ resume to
;;.,...,_,
WHEREFORE pureuant to
Fruth Inc
:C:~;:'2~ :_~h'::
Route 1 Box 332
1
0
Revlaed Coda ond OAC
Section 1301 7 1 05 (FM
Pomt peasant WV 2555
1D5.Q)OFC you ore horoby
ORDERED to obato lho
ca11 Ladd re Burdette or Jerry
vlolallon(e) Ill forth by liking at
1 3 0 4 _6 7 5 1612 o r E m a Jl
oportnlt:.i' ond

800 6 7

RES DENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Are You Comec ed
nene Useswa ted

-

cc
Tim Thompoon
Dlvlol01111l Ltgol Counoiol
FMII'MI G. Knill, IJinMI CNof:
Chit Echlrd, Aoolallnt CNof:
Tom Boker Fire Solely
lner tor Sell Jrvllar: FtabM
Long Fl,. a.t.ty lnttl• ...
Middleport Fire Dope~
Flit

On tho 28th ol Morch 2000
A-rt Long C.rtlftod Fire
Sillily lnopoctor Certlftclte
IS-233-0815 did lnapoct tho
pt"'*ty IOCIIod II 15$0 Page
SlrMt, MlddllpQrt, OhiO 45'110. 2000
Sold pt apetty .. olio ~
or moy be lurlhor dncrlblll
u Don GMry Go111g1 with one
oportmont obovo garage
IM853«103
Ao o reault ol ouch
oxarnlnotlan ar lnopctlon 1
CATEGORICAL finding hal
boon made •• lndiAtod and
thoiobo pu-to Sllcllan
3737 43 ond 3737 51 Ohio
Rovlood Codo
It lo
PROPOSED that a civil
ponolty, If ony be -IIICI
ogalnol you lor uch ouch
&gt;1aiatlan Hindlcalod
X Said property conalall af
1 building or alhor IINcture
which wao fqund to be
11poclally lloblo to fire or
ondongoro lift or olhor
property by reaoon ol wont ar
repair ago and dolopltatld
condition dolocllv8 ei1Cb1C81
wiring and equipment
dofoctlvo chlmnop goo
connection• or heat ng
...,.,...... aralhor.....,
CMI penolty $1 000 DO I

30 Announcements
be sh p 0

-n

Knownllh--.
ogont, '"""'fM"' ar ap alai ol
tho pt .....ty dUCIond being rooponalblo lor
compliance with tho OHIO
FIRE CODE 11 It rolotoo
thol'lllo _
.. hotwby given
1D tho pormna wholeoro lnocrlbtd obovo 11

os1e

~og

11410

810

83

Public Notlcs

Public Notice

Public Notice

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Improvement•

Med ca Savings
Up to 80%1
DENTAL • VISION • FIX DRUGS
~·- .JI DOCTOR • VETERINAR AN
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FOO 4(X3.9(!4 8081 DOC 037S01

t.anmt302
DISTRIBlJTOFIS NEEDED!

�TuMCiay, June 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

, . B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnsl • Pa!Je 8 5

8RIDOI:

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
•

1 CR!!~.!!~!~!Jw!!??
·

......

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.

Repo • Dlvorded

WOIRYIII!!!
No
...
Embarr~&amp;ament

You're Treated wHh Rnpectl

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

CooM"•· OH otl6723

7411 151-GIII

Over

..

740-949·7039
"Get in whik you can, 11pace il limited"

.AWB

NOTICE

I

I
~

2 Handyman crew WID do
yard work, painting Inside
and out carpenler work,
roofing, siding. Have own
tools. Free Esttmates

.AultB's
Cand~ &amp;Crafts
•F•dttltm •Ca•41t Rtflllt
•Wtt4rtrki•l •Wrtttht

:R 143 gg;,..5:fj7

I

WAN.,ED
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also .

Dozer work.
Frn btlmateli
;

I

Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050

(Randy)

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Used Appliances
Parts· All Makes

10 X 20 $60

ESTIMATES

992-1717

WHAT

DO YOU

llepla•

-

WANT

?

Se,.,ice•

.

,,.., ·

House &amp; Trailer Site•
· Land Clearing &amp; ·
Grading

,

Seplic Sy•t•"" &amp;
UtUitie•

(7401 992·3131

.

20 Yn IXpetllllt

BUILDING
Long Bottom, Ohio

'·

;

.,

'¥

'
.'....·=
.JI&gt;
••~
.•

•
•

Commercial- metal studs,·
drywall, suspended ceilin~:
Mike
Marcum '
Owner
.,

·~

: ·· t JU::.I 1\00II.LO UP 1'1\'i

w.

Ken Youns
&lt;l/11100 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTALLATIONS

"Take !he pain oul
of pa inrilllJLer ,.. do i1 /fir you:'

Exterior

FREE ESTIMATES

Cutr1etou Weletllt

(740) 192·1083
(Mabile) 740-J!t-cll&amp;l

Albany, Ohio

Insured

&amp; CONSTRUCTION
Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painting •Plumbing
Free Estimates

Hpdraulk Hase repairs,
cpllnder repairs, on
Sales· 5 gal. liuckets
to 55 gol. dnms

MIKE YOUNG
740-"2-7724
PAT YOUNG
740·949-G046

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR 248

P8l

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
COJtSTIUCnON

~ew

Rest retching.

30.Yrs. Experience

.

ctnSTRUCTDII

leave Message
Aher 6 pm- 614·985·4180

......

! Y...IE\..LIIE. 01~ \0 MY TIJ ...

• Model Power

• AIIM

• Ufeline

'

U\"-"'NE.l.".&gt; "\ 1'1\'{ ~~~0EKTIP:) 1.

Etc.

Free Estimates

'

S_elf~Storag~j

.. BIG NATE

33795 Hiland Rd;_:
~

Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5212 :
'

I

THAT~

4/19100 1 mo pd.

!'OINT~

A~L

A

QUALITY :; ..

C.INI\ 1 WE

I&lt;.N0-.1 yQO'II;E

·· Weeding: Mulching::·':
Pruning: Edging ; ,
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks·

Free Estimates

S'{ TilE WAY .. I DON'T
SUPPOSE YOU I-lAVE AN't'TJ.IIN6
1Arouurlv FOR SUPPER, DO YOU?

Mike Sharp
740·949-3606

us1ness·

timber (2 wdo.)

56 Soothe

popper

23 Phyalcal
atrength
28 Slop working,

57 Norrato1

DOWN
1 Fouceta

like a binary

2 Sacred bird of
the NUt

27 Obaerve
30 On the train
32 Singer/act,...

and

ending
Sandro-

6 Atrlcen native

downo

13 Decade

eloquently
8 Ballet oklrt
· 8 Copycat
11 19441nvaolon
date

5 AciOWIO

"Cyan" ond

37 -

lgree
uporlatlve

4

walk

38

7 Speak

3 ewlthouto

Wllllama
34-MM
35Takea alow

number
18 Actor Sparka
20 Detective •
Charlle21 Feature of
many malls
22 Snuggle
23 ''The Gift of
the-"
241n the 10me
place (abbr.) .
25 Auctioneer's
word

12 Sutlerlngo

Pass
Pass

Ail pass

1..-+-+ -+-+-1--f

27 "Scat!"
28 Lampreys
29 Author

This ·was the second board
Anne Chat~am and I played in
. Hobe Sound, Fla., last April.
What is your analysis of the auction? What do you think happened
at the other four tables? (!We had
six tables, but played only five
rvunds .)
South was right to open two
clubs, strong, artificial and forcing . But he should have rebid two
no-trump, ~escribing a balanced
23-24 points. He shouldn't have
worried,about the doubleton diamond. True, occasionally that will
prove to be a fatal flaw, but in a
matchpoint duplicate, no-trump
rules. You head toward game in a
minor only when sure no-trump is
unplayable. Also, the two-ndtrump rebid makes partner's life
so much easier.
North should have raised to
four clubs. The jump to five
ought to deny any first- or secondround control.
For once, I found a successful
opening lead in the diamond
queen. After that, South had to
lose'one spade and one diamond .
· At one table, South was in six
clubs (2 CLUBS-2 DIAMONDS3 CLUBS-4 CLUBS-5 CLUBS-6
CLUBS 1!-Pass). ~est , a friendly
opponent, led her fourth-highest
spade five! So, the slam made for
a top.
At two other tables, the contract was five clubs, and these
Wests avoided the spade lead.
At the final table, South rebid
my recommended two no-lrump,
which was raised to game. Here,
West did very well to lead a diamond, not a spade, Leading away
from a king is often best, but
when it is around to a big balanced hand, it is very dangerous. ·
South should have been happy
with her I 0 top tricks, but risked
the spade finesse, so was held to
nine. Therefore, there were four
plus-400 results, and one plus920.

Gardner

31 Relleo (on)
33 Walked
38 Madrid Mra. .
40 Rocky
Mountain

park
41 Actllko o
beaver
42 Hoover or

Aswan, e.g.
43 Muolcll
lnotrumenl
44 •eyol"
48 Poet
Sandburg
47-ln•guy
410btalno
50 Pa~a aummer
52 Waver
·

53 Map abbr.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebflty Clphet' cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Todsy's clue: P sq&lt;JS!s W
'JC

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URGHGKUDK.
PREVIOUS SO~UTION : "II you want to strive lor grealness , yoo should ·
patlem yourse.Malter great people.'- (Redskin linebacker) ~aVar Arrington •.

'::~:t:~·· s~~4\l~-lt£trs·
CL.\Y I . POII.AH
Rearrange lollort of
. 0 four ttrombltd words

WOlD
DAMI

l~lto4 ~r

low 10 lorm .lour "mplo words.1

NEK}EY

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My teenager doesn't waste
3 I I .:, time looking for something to eat.
I
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by f1Jimg In the m•sslng word1
you . develop from step No.3 below.

$

PRINI NUMBERED lHIERS IN
IHESE SQUARES
'
f) UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE IEIIERS
10 GEl ANSWER

SCRAM-lnS ANSWERS
Citron- Ledge- Their- Admire- RIGHT TIME
I don't worry about getting wrinkles too early in life. In

Sentinel

,I

.' ·,'

eOJMXC

OYYVDHG

To get a current weather
report, check the

~

my way of thinking they will come at exactly the RIGMT
TIME.

!TUESDAY

JUNE 131

'Your ·
'Birthday
••

•
•

Hupp, Agent .

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

I,

..

Medic!U'e Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
. and F!nal Expc:nses; College, Retirement
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage; ,
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-"""""'-·

JJJ

...

REPLACEMENT
'
WINDOWS

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Garages
' • Replacement Windows
I
• Room Acidhions~
'
• Rocflng

Tii'\E A
IS -"'&gt;KED!

S.IN&lt;O~E

fAAIN I'-C !
.I I

For All Your Home
lmcrovement Needs

BISSELL IUILDEIS
INC.

Hi

'IOU DO•fT S.EE
RAISIN(, 1'\V HAND

LANDSCAPE.,

MONUMENTAL UFE·INSURANCE CO.

'

, Tlt.'(ING TO
ANSWEK EVEitY
WHAT! SING~E QUESTlON!
YOU'VE IW1E ~

l&gt;OINC.

8112·2772

740-992·1709

Rocky R.

'

MUST YOU
KEEP OOII't&lt;'&gt;

,,

'

•

per~nc

I'
' '

-'.

'
'

FREE ESTIMATES

• Atheam

"'i ~OW 1-\1\IJE. 1\U~O~t.D:) Of ..,.

High &amp;Dry .!

•

colli1£acw. tnlll51DD111Al

State Route 246
Chester, OH
• Eotet Roekelo and Acceooorieol
• Trodnl by lJo...,l ol: MTH
• K•Une
• G~~rp"av,.. Traek

~E.W

~

•

Ill I. lad
........,. Olda

740·985·4194

5/3111 mo pel.

&lt;

BIDILI-ID

.

•.

Now Renting :

We Service All Makes
Washers- DryerS'
Ranges- Refrige~ators
Freezers- Dish Washers

Vinyl Siding. Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garaae Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Building~.

Interior·
FREE ESTIMATES
Belore 6p.m. •

Tha lppllanaa
Man

T&amp;D
HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL ·

JACKS ROOFING

Custom Carpet, VInyl,
CommerclaiiD ,Ceramic
11le, All 'I} pes of
Hardwood Mooring,
Carpet Bl•dln' and

"You've tried the rrst ...
now try tltt best"
Residential - Commerlcal
Call for

Free £stimates

Man

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.

19 Rotate
20 Pungent

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Bulldooer &amp; Backhoe . ,
-

compoaltlono

55 Decoy of

Plan can backfire

HOWARD
EXCAVAIIIIG CO,.,.:I
•tT•

Pass
2•
5•

40Co!Mout
42 Moroe-cocte
•lgnal•
45 A Bobbaey
twin
411 Smoker'o
emoke, for
ohort
49 Leoaened
51 Scratch
54 Muolcal

Opening lead: • Q

::'::::::::-;:::;~~~~·m;:':~:~~:

Residential· de&lt;:ks, kitchens,
bathrooms. custom
remodeling, handicap access
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
vinyl siding

Now available
Black &amp; Tan puppieo

Pass
Pass
Pass

L.........

I

• j 6 3
• I~ 9 4 3
t K 10 8 5
• Q 10

West · North East

S·
Q

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
E FREE .ESTIMATES.. ,FULLY INSURED N
T
Bi'lan Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R•
E
(740) 985-3948
y •

JJ"

East

6K 9 75 2
.. 8 7 5
• Q J 7 3
• 4

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

~ .•

740.985-4141

"o·~t-~l'•
Pamtmg
ln~erior ~

9"un.., W' 9"o/ftl
1·800-311·3391

The Appliance

New.Summer Pays
Thur &amp; Frl10 ain • 8 pm
Sllturday 10 em • 4 pm .
On other days If Wlll'l
home, we 11'1 OPEN.

tty, Oltlt

FREE

I

992·1550

Specllll Scant
of the Month
Salle

,

• Bathi!!g • Ears
• Nails • }'lea Baths
All Breedo

lOX Hl $·10

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

Courrt:ry Candl8 Shop

35537 St. Rt.7 kill

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp;Compare

"We're Back"

The

Call740·985·3831

C
R

West

•AKJ9S

M:

·-

, 4 Lllce cherrleo
beard
16 JFK alght
17 Year (Sp.)

• 6 4

••

740·742·8015 or
1-877-353-7022

"Ahead In Service"
11utrn Wtsttm l'ridt 12" Swttl Feed...................15.25/SO lb bag
llulr1111 16!' RabLit Pellm........... :........................'6.95/SO IL bag
llul!nlluniiiS Pride 21" OGg Food.....................'6.75/SO IL bag
11unna 16!' layw &lt;mnllek .................................'S."/50 lb. bat
11u1nna 5aallh Feed ...........................................'6.75/SO lb. bag
Shade 11i¥tr 12" Cattle Feed................................'6.75/1 110 ill. bag

CONCRm BACKHOE SERVKES
MASONRY BOBCA'11 SERVIaS

Open Fer Groo•lnl
For Your Pet's NNds.

1 UMd•
atopwatch

for plea

• A Q8
•AKQ

'I

Quality Drlvewaya,
Patios, Sldawalka.
25 years experlencs
Frse Eatlmaatea

SttfiDE RIVER fiG SERVICE

C
ON

39 Not rigid

15 Small chin

Soulb

'

P/8 ONTRACTORS, INC.

MARCUM &amp; SON

7122/TFN

'

Replacement Windo~s
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell
•
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Estimates 740-378-6349

mo.

l1111rtd· Profaslottal strvlce

Mystic
Poms ,

S L In: 7

• Garages

740-992·1671

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins. ·
992·5479

~

HARIWEIL
STORAGE

• New Homcts ·

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

40 yrs experience

1

month.

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUCTIOII

.Sansd
Constraelfon

1 1

GUARANTEED
2,000 sf. Modern Brick
AIR CONDITIONIIG
Professional Office/Retail Space
SERVICE
(3041 112·2079
For Lease. Prime Location on
NewHavsn WV
Pomeroy By-Pass.
Advertise In
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
this space for
Warehouse Available.
$25 per
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404

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

IOISIII

oo-so ,,...,. .

~

OLD LOCKZ4
CAMPGROUnD

Phone (740) 593-6671

Hours
7:00 Af,' • 8 PM

M·IS-00

• 10 4
• J 6 2
t A9 2
•8 7 632

Hauling • Umeslone •
Gravel• Sand • Taps011
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Servkes

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 1cr x 30'

(740) 742-8888
li!!iJill 1·888-521-0916 •

51221 mo pd.

North

45771

Truck seats: car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, .convertible &amp; Vinyl tops,
Four w)l.eelet seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets. etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

' "'")~ .....

75o East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

' I

ACROSS
8 SmaiiMOOunt
10 MlalrMied
1 2 Unexpectedly

2M108tlahan
Road
/
Racine, Ohio

Rutland, Ohio

Hours M-F 9 am • 7 pm
Sat.9am·1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Senlce
• Lawnmower &amp; weednter repair &amp; supplies
Owner· Jamea A. Picken•
Shop Foreman- Shant Baker

r-

Uc. I

HILL'S
SELF SJORAIE

A &amp; D Auto Up o atery • P us; Inc

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

740-949-2804

Thursday•
AT6:30 P.M.
Mlln.St.,
Pomaroy,OH
Paylngl80.00
per 111"1'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stlrbu!'lt
Progl'lnlve top llna.

AD Mu- Tractor &amp;
Equipment Plllttl
Factory Authorized
c-.-mPam
Dealers.

yoder Ntw OwntrtbiR

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Pomeroy Eagle•
Club Bingo On ' '

AI

PHILLIP
ALDER

740·t92·7599

QuaUty Window
- Systems, Inc.

.

l

'

.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

.

Advertise In
Pomeroy, Ohio
thla apace for .
992-4119"0r (
$25 per
1-800-291-5600.,
month.

'

one

'

~ Wednesday, June 14, 2000
~ A better than average year
l;::ould be in the offing for ·you as
)he months unfold. It will be due
Jo your ability to make the most
J &gt;f circumstances and events hap:pening around you.
:: GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
~ot only is your judgment keen
')oday, but you'll make decisions
:With an eye on what's the kindest
:Way to handle things. This com·
. ·~imilion makes you a winner.
)'Gemini, treat yourself to a birth·
~ay gift, Send for your Astro·
«lreph predictions for the year
~hea~ by mailing $2 and S~SE to
~stro-Graph c/o this newspaper.
:P.O. Box 1738, Murray Hill Sta:tlon, New York, NY 10156. Be
:sure to »late your Zodiac sign..
: .CANCER (June 21-July 22)
:While your peers are still trying to
~define the source of a dilemma,
;you'll be making all the right
~oves to rectify the situation and
;bring pence back into the work
: place. ·
~ LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Cir~cumstances today could bring

I

you even closer together with · 19) Being in the right place at the
someone who you already have right time will help events take a
stroug bonds. This relationship is fortunate tum for you today. Don't
destined t~ be a good one for you . be complacent as to what is takVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If ing place.
·
.you
considerate of the feelings
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
and concerns of those with whom You can be extremely resourceful
you work side-by•side, the pro- when necessity calls for it as
ductivity of all will be increased. · today's events might prove. It'll
L BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Intu- be your ingenuity that will give
·
ilion,' not wishful thinking, could you an edge.
be your best ally today when dealPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
ing with others. Play your hunch· Two progressive contacts could
es as to what their needs are, al)d be credited for ushering in an
excellent opportunity for a proyou' II come out a winner:
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) motion that is not necessarily
Some ,sort of profit is possible b~-ing offered to others .
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
todaf throu11h valuable knowl· ·
It'll
be in advice or thoughts that
edje,;you pick up on while with an
are
quite foreign to you that
Individual who holds a l'lsponsl·
ble position. You mi1ht want to · you'll be the most fortunate today.
Fortunately. you're not afraid to
· share the info with othen.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23.· 0ec. .stray Into virgin territory. ·
TAURUS (April 20· May 20)
. 21) Information passed onto you
today by another can be turned to Through the good graces of
your advantage. It'll all come someone in a high placet u prob·
about because you know when to lemuticul situation could be
stop talking and when to start lis- changed today in a manner that
would afford you new financial
tening.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jun. growth.

are

1

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••'

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••
•

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Pllge 8 6 ~ Tht Dally SentiMI

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

.•

dez &amp;-4), 7:05 p.m.
Toro/110 (Andrtwa t-1) at cetton (BIIIr 2·t),
7:05p.m.
~~~ LMO&lt;-.......;.................=.,J
~ego Wlll1l Box (Perque •21 ot c,.,..
land (Colon 11-3), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Etherlon 0·1) at Tampa Boy
(Reltor2-3). 7:15p.m.
,_
W L Pet.
Q8
(Heling H) at Baltimo&lt;e (Erlckaon 2·
- . ....... .....................40 22 .ecs
- . Ttxat
7:35 p.m.
- - .........................:w 27 .557 5 1/2 3). S•nte
(Mocne 1-&lt;) at Kansaa City (~
Monlrool ..........................32 28 .533
1
0.()),
8:05p.m
.
....................... :.....28 35 .4S3
12
Oakland
(Mulder
3-2) at Mlmeooto (Map 3Ptitodolphla ....................23 35 .an 1e 112
7). 8:06 p.m.
w.dntiCIIIy'tCltmM
st Louts ..........~.~~ .kM
Bolton (P.Martinez 9·2J at N.Y. Yankees
Clnctnnatl ......................3:1 :111 .1111 2112
(Clemens 4-e), t :05 p.m.
-Piftsburgn ....................... 27 :w .443
7
Seattle (Halama 8-2) 111 Kanoao City (SupCN&lt;ago .......................... 28 37 .'13
9
pan 2-6), 2:05p.m.
Milwaultoe .............,... ,...... 28 37 .413
9
(carpemer 5·5) at Detroh f!Neaver
H""ton ..........................22 40 .355 121/2 3-6)Toronto
, 7:05p.m.
-Divltlon
Chlcogc&gt; Whht Sox (Willi H) II Ctov•
Arizona ...........................38 28 -~
land (B,_ 1.()), 7:05p.m.
Colorado .........................:w 28 .571
2
Anaheim (Cooper 2·2) at Tampa Bay (Lopez
L.ooAngelos ........... ..........33 28 .541
4
2-4) , 7:15p.m.
san Francisco ..................29 31 .413 1 112
Texas (Rogel$ 5·5) at Ba~lmo&lt;e (Rapp ._4),
~ Oiogo ...... .. ................27 3/l .435 10 1/2
7:35p.m.
llondly't Cltmte
Oakland (Hudson· e-21 at Minne101a
Atlanll 10, Pit1aburgh 8
(Bargman._.),8:05p.m.

~undey:

Optioned AHP Eric -v.rto Edmot110n o! tho
f'CL

.

•

,Meigs County land transfers, A2
Chester High School alumni banquet,

Cloudy

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CLEVELAND INCIANS-olgreed to terms
with AHP Kyle Evant, INF Joe lnglott, RHP
992-2156
Tom Canale, C Joll Haut, 01' Ryan CI!Urch,
OF Nathan Janowicz, RHP Luke Flold, UiP
llnmdon Matheny, RHP Ryan LAtaon, AHP
•
Stevt FugarlnO, INF Jlameo Pietro, RHP .Jolvi
.
)
Utman, RHP St.,. Fitch, INF 0omon Katz,
RHP _ , Siw•, OF Eric Crollor and RHP
Meeks wouldn't predict a win"If after Thursday we've got 2
Ron Colvard.
'
CETROIT TIGERS-Aclivatld 18 Tony
ning score.
l
guys at 4 under, we're not goi!ll
Clll1l ~om ""' 15-day dloabted 1111. OptloNid C
The lowest winning score in to change the course on· Friday,!'
Javier CArdona to TOiado o! ""' International
League. Traded OF Karim Garda to the Baltl·
Open history at Pebble Beach he: said." And if the low score is
flam
PllpB1
more 0001• tor future consideration.
was 282 by Tom Watson in 1982. over, we're not going to do an~
SEATTL£ MARINER~ RHP Brott
Tomko on the 15-day dloabled 111~ rwoactlvo
fairways and greens, which is The lowest score in relation to · thing to change that, either." 2, ..
to J1,1nt 7.
par in Open history anywhere is
The•wind, however, can have J •
TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed to 1erma with no small task.
RHP Matt Melaanhelm"f, 3B Edwin Encama·
" I don't . know who's leading S-under 272 by Lee Janzen and mind of its own. And that's o~
cion, RHP Ruben Feliciano. RHP Kalth Stamler
the PGA Tour in ·greens in regu- Nicklaus.
1 aspect of Pebble Beach that neV4l'
and OF Frank Ssnsonettl.
TORONTO BLUE JAY$-Signld RHP lation, but whatever that average
In
1992
at
Pebble
-Beach,
Gil seems to change.
"-'
CUstln McGowan, RHP Michael Smhh and SS
Morgan got to 12 und~r in /);he
Open Notes: Paul Lawr' "
W~llam Rivera.
· is, it's going to be dOwn after this
NIUonolL.ooguo
week,"
Meeks
said.
"These
greeps
!bird
round
before
a
collapse
withdrew
from the U.S. Ope
PITTSBURGH PIRATE$-Pioced AHP
• MllwotA&lt;ee 8 , Montrool 1
are
so
small.
Someone
who
hits
he
had
a
77-81
on
the
weekend
because of a groin· injury, becom,~
Arizona 4, Los Anglin 2
. Jason Schmidt on the 1S-day disabled list.
Son F-.... 10, Cincinnati 3
Rocalled RHP Bronson Arrr1yo !rom Nalhvlllo 10 or 12 greens, they should and finished at 5-over 293.
ing
the first reigning Britisli ,
' St. L.oult 7, Sen OilljO 3
1 o!111e PCL
Florida 5, Philadelpt;a 2
Meeks only promised co'l.,$.is- Open champion in 34 yean tf&gt;
'-"""""""'-~-'---''----ST. LOUIS CAAtiiNALS-Sklnad AHPJoan come up with a pretty good
Tocloy'tNatlonii-N ""-10Uon
AxaiOon. AHP Nathaniel Meza, [NF Juatin Hile- round."
tency
- at least on his part.
not play the U.S. Open.
:
St. Louis (IIIIa 9·3) 11 san Diego (Lopez 0·
man and INF William Schmln. Alalgned Axel·
2), 5:05 p.m.
son
and
Meza
to
New
Jersey
of
the
New
York·
••
Playoff l!orles Glome
Atlama (Burun ._3) at Pittsburgh v.ncatson
fl
Penn Lea~ua, and Hileman and Schmln to
Final•
1-4), 7:05p.m.
Johnson CitY ol the Appalachian Loague.
(l!oll-ol-7)
~loricla (Sml!h o-o) at Pnlladetphla (Person
SAN Dl EGO PAC&gt;RE$-Signld 2B L.oe
w.dnaaday,
June
7
5·2), 7:35 p.m.
McCool, RHP Juatln Gemnano, 1BJohn WOOd·
L.A.
Lalun
104,
Indiana
87
N.Y, Mets (Reed 3·1) a1 Chicago Cubo
ward, RHP Charles Lawton, 1B Jarran
Frtdey, June 1
(Tapani..O), 8:05 p.m.
Roonleko, OF David.Day, 3B Joson Funmanlak,
LA L.okera11t, Indiana 104
Montreal (Pavano 6·3) at Mltwaukee
RHP Edgardo LAureenc, OF Kevin Reeaa,
Sundoy,
J..,.11
(Woodard 1-4), 8:05p.m.
·
RHP Dennlo Chapman, C Michael Bitt..-, OF
Indiana
100,
L:A.
Lakera
91
,
LA.
L.okera
Houslon (Reynold&amp; 5-31 111 Colorado (Atrojo
Claiborne Daniela, AHP Juslin Wllllama and C
lead sarles 2· t
4-4), 9:05p.m.
Andre
Gomez.
fnHnr.aeB1
Wldntldoy, Juno14
Arizona (Morgan 1-0) at Los Angeles (Parte
FOOTBALL
L. A. Lalun at Indiana, 9 p.m.
H), 10:10 p.m.
Notional Footl&gt;all L.oogue
Frldsy, June 18
Clnolnnllll (Fomondlz 2.0) 111 san fron·
outs in the second.
INDIANAPOUS
COLTS-Named Bob Tot·
LA Lakws at Indiana, 9 p.m.
ciiCO (Ortiz U), 10:11 p.m.
'
peni'll
executive
v1&lt;e
presldent,
Pete
Word
Monct.y, JuM 11
-noodoy'tGvk:e presldent of lldmlnlatratlon and
Bell issued consecutive walks' to'
Indiana at LA. Lakera, 9 p.m.. Hnecessary executive
N.Y. Mels ·(Hampton 8·5) at Chicago Cuba
Ray Compton senior vice preeldont of oaleo
Wednuct.y, June 21
(Ueber 5-4), 2:20p.m.
Bill Mueller and Barry Bmids
end
mertcotll'l!.
Indiana at LA. l.llkers, 9 p.m., it necessary
Clnolnnou (Noogie 5'1 ) ot Sen Froncloco
PHilADELPHIA
EAGL£8-Signed
KR·AB
before Kent doubled, scoring
(Rueter 3-1), 3:35 p.m.
Brian Mttchell.
Atlama (Maddux 8·1) at Plnoburgh (Schmid!
Mueller. Center fielder Ken GrifSAN
FRANCISCO
49ERS-Announcod
the
Women'• National BlakelbAII AUaclallon
2-6), 7:05p.m.
retirement
ol
QB
Stove
Young.
·
fey Jr.'s relayed throw got 'Bonds
l'loricla (Oemps1er 8-4) at Philadelphia (Wolf
HOCKEY
Eutern Conference
8-3), 7:35 p.m.
at
the plate.
NOUonal Haokoy L.oog~o
Team
W L Pot. GB
Montreal (Johnson 2.0) at Milwaukee
•'
Cleveland ..........................5 1 .833
ANAHEIM MIGHTY CUCKS-Acqulred D
(Woodord 1-1), 8:05p.m.
Patrlclc:
Traverse
from
the
Ottawa
Senators
tor
Woshlng1on
.......................
3
2
.600
1
112
Burks
led
off
the
fourth
with
Houston ·(Hoh 3-7) at Colorado (Astaclo 8·
Orlando ........................... ..4 3 .571 1 112 DJoal Kwlatl&lt;owa~. Trod eel Fm Ed Ward to the his seventh homer of the season •
2), 9:05 p.m.
Yortc ...........................3 4 .429 2 112 New Jeroey DevHs for a 2001 seventh-round
Arizona (Johnaon 10·1) at Loo Angela&amp; New
Catron ...............................2 3 .400 2 112 dra" pick.
(Perez 4-2), 10:05 p.m.
and, after .Estalella walked and
Indiana ............... ,.. } ..........2 4 .333
3
ATL.ANTATHRASHERS-Traded F·D Steve
St. Louis (Stepllenoon 8·2) at Sen Otego
Miami ................................ 1 4 .200 3 112 Stalos to the New Jersey oevus tor a 2000 stole second on a disputed play,
!Spencer 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
CharlOtte ........................... 1
5 .167
"'
nlnth·round dra" pick.
Benard homered for·a 5-1 lead.
WMtem Conference
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Named
Houston ............................7 • 1 .815
Harry Coder human reaourc11 manager,
AmorlclnL.oogue
~urks added a run-scoring
r,
LosAI'I!eles .......................4 1 .600 1 1/2 Broolcs Jortlan director ol group oaleo and Jim
Minnesota ....................... ..4 2 .867
2 Rankin team services coordinator. Ac:qulr&amp;d F double in the fifth and an RBI
•
Eastwn Dlvlalon
Phoenix .............................3 2 .600 2 112
TMm
W L Pot. G8
Jan C810Un and a 2000 nlnth·round draft pick
Sacramento ......................3 3 .600
3 lrom the San Jose Sharks lor MIX&amp; consldora· siqgle in the sixth. Snow's twO·
New Vorl&lt; ......................... 33 24 .579
'
UUih ..................................3 4 .429 3 112
Booton ............................ 33 28 .559
1
tione.
run double also came in the sixth.
4
Toronto ............................:w 31 .523
3 Porllond ............................ 1 3 .250
CAUAS STAAS-Trlld~ GManny Flfnan·
5 dez and D Brad W&lt;owich to the Minnesota
Bahimore ........................ 26 34 .433 8 112 Seattle .............................. t 5 . 187
Mondly'a Olmea
Tampa Bay ....................... 23 38 .3n 12
Wild lor a 2000 third-round and a 2002 lourlh· . Red• Notes: The six walks by
l
Charlotte 78, Cetro~ 87
C.ntrll Dlvlalon
round draft picks. Sign~ G Chad Alban ·to a Bell .were the most in a game- by
Clenland 13, Indian~~ 70
(:hicago ..........................38 24 .813
one-year contract.
Houston 107, Utah 85 Tuesday's Gamea
Clevelond .......................:W 28 .1187
3
'
.
LOS ANGELES ~NGS-Signed LW Tomas a R eds pitcher this season.
Detroit at Miami, 7 p.m.
Kansas City .................... 32 30 .533
8
Vlasak.
Washington at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Mlnneaota ....................... 29 35 .453 10
Reds RF Dante Bichette was
MINNESOTA WILD-Acqt.ired DJO.ndy Sut·
Orlando at Utah, 9 p.m.
p.Mro~ ............................. 23 3/l .390 13 t/2
ton, a 2000 ·seventh-round draft pick and a
not
in the st;~rting lineup after · ·
Phoenix at Portland, 10 p.m.
,
Woll DlviiiOn
2001 third-round draft pick !rom the San Jose
Los Angeles at Seattle, to p.m.
Beanie ..... .......................33 21 .550
Shart&lt;s lor a 2001 eighth-round draft pick and leaving Sunday's 'game against the
w.dnoocloy'o Gome
Oakland ..........................:w 29 .540
1
future conslderarlona.
Portland at Pnoenlx. 10 p.m.
JO.naheim ......................... 32 30 .518 2112
NASHVILLE PREDATORs-Traded F Indians with a mild sprain in his
T•'"'• ..............................30 :\1 .492
4
F!atrick Cote to the Edmonton Qilera for a 2000
left ankle. He's day to day.
Mondly't Qo,...
filth-round
draft
pick. Re-signed LW P111rlk !&lt;jell·
Bos1on at N.Y. Yankees, ppd ., rain
berg.
·
The Reds failed to homer for
Toronto 4,Cetro~2
NEW
JERSEV
DEVILS-Traded F Krzysztol
Clllolgo WhHI SOli, Clewlllnd 7
.the first time in 13 games.
Oliwa to the COlumbus Blue Jadcetl for a 2001
BASEBALL
MinnesoUI 7, Oakland 2
third-round
draft
pick and Mure considerations.
AIMrlcon
L.oog...
'
. Seattle 5, Kanaaa C1tf 3
PHilADEI..PHtAFLYEAS-AcQulrld CMart&lt;
Taubensee got his first RBI in
o\NAHEIM ANOEI..S-Actlv81ed AHP Mall&lt;
T--,'oCltmte
Pll1kovsak 1Tom lho 15-day dlaabtld 111. Jlan-.oiJom tho Cl1lcogo.lllllctlholwlw.
Botton (RoM 3-3) 111 N.V. Yankooo (Hernan·
25
games since May 3.
'

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•
Tueact.y, JUM 13, 2000 :

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

US Open

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Num ber 12

',u C•·nt'

Settlement
reached in
•
gnevance

~ PIO HOOPS

...

·Reds

••Let•s

lrd flnriaal
Mountaineer Plant
Classic Baseball
Tournament

Dangerous cars
will be repaired

Starting Wednesday, July
Wahama High School

Ages l.3 &amp; 14
Entry Fee $40.00 &amp; 2 Baseballs
"T-Shirts to the Champions
&amp;Runner Ups"
For more infonnation contact
Tim Howard 304-882-3201 or
Lou Thompson 304-882-2247.

1

PllOGRAM
- Mike Swi.sher and Jane Banks of the Meigs County Department ·of Human Services, and Brenda Barnhart,,Teresa
Carr, Danette Hudson, who will work in the summer program at Mid-Valley Christian School, discuss plans for the four-week program which will
begin July 5. (Brian J. Reed photo)
. .

~;;;;;~.;:_.;,;;;,j!;:,fe.~tygs \emP-ha.~i.~~~-~ in .su~mer;~sc~ooL

.

'.' FREE''

.Qualified
' '
Beneficiaries
(called QMB):

Medicare
·Medicaid

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

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

insurances(s) and deductibles
you are required to make as
part
of the
Medicare
Program.
Specified
Low-Income
Medicare
Beneficiaries
Medicaid (called SLMB):

M ore.•.

..

.

BY BRIAN J, REED '
SENTIN~L NEWS STAFF
•

Help With
Medicare Expenses

IDDLEPORT

Colt1lllonly asked

Intensive work on
reading and math
skills, combined, with
lessons in family values, will make
up .a special 'summer learning program at. the· Mid-Valley Christian
Sthool, funded by the Meigs Coun-ty Department of Human Services
and county commissioners. 1

..

Help With
Qu,e stions:
•
·
E
Q: Who determines whether
d
Me lCare Xpenses . I am disabled? .
.

•

tl

,.

~Q~u~alifi!!!!'0!3el:.!!d~I~ni!!:diuvt.u''d!.l:lu!.l!lial~s--=-~2 A: Medic;d requires·a
Medicaid (called QI-2):
.
disability determination
' .:
by thelsocial Security
"
Administration or by the
This program rei~burses
Ohio Departmen,t of Job
you for the part of th~ Part 8c Fanluy Services through
......
B premium that you). have its CcJpnty Medical
.already paid whic~ went
Se~fes (C~S).
..
toward home health ' care.
. •
v. u·
wm · receive
• · a Q: Whatfls
the age when I
•'
x•0
.
.
·
•
.
.
am cons1dered "Aged"?
-..''.'
reimbursement check once ·a
· .,
,,
-·
year. The income limits . are A: Age 65
..&lt;'
higher than QI-1 Medicaid.
•
Q: What services are covered ,,.,.•
,..'
by ¥edicaid?
Qualified Workin1 Disables
.
...'•
·. Individual (called QWDI);
A: Any' of ~ese services are "
·
covered if they are .
me'!ically necessary·for
This program pays for your
you;
• ..
Medicare Part A premium
',. Doctor Visits
'
.
'.
,,
only. QWDI·can help you if
··· Hospital Care
·'
you have . lost eligibility for
lnununizations
•
"
~ubstance Abuse
Tit~e II disability benefits
"
Prescriptions
"
due to earnings.
Vision
•
Dental
(Mental Health
Other...
'

'

'.
u

'I

~

. The 'prJ&gt;gtam is :r par.t of.the co~nty'!' efforts
to "break the cycle .of dependency" on the
welfaresystem. Inthe caseofthis program;the
efforts . are in reinforcing the· most basic of
lr.arning skills, so youngsters can develop the
strong foundation needed to complete 12
years of school, and attend college or land a
job.
·
. The school,. affiliated with ·the Rejoicing
Lit"e Church, has received $23,000 under the
. ter-ms of a one-year contract with the DHS.
The sufD1Der program is part of a tutoring
pfOgram which began during the 1999-2000
. sa\lool
year. · · ·...
&lt;f&lt;,
!

,..._,

~

, Michael Swisher, director of the Mei~
County DHS, said the county commissioners
and the DHS have $1'.1 million for this'and
other pr9jects, through the . Preventimi,
Retention and Contingency/Development
Reserve program.'
PRC is part of the state's Ohio Works First
welfare reform plan, which places a 36-month
lifetime limit on cash welfare benefits.' ' •
.· The commissioners have draman'c new discretion in spending this PRC money, and
have boosted " creativity'' in a number of their
p.rograms. In addition to the Mid-~alley proPlu~ ... School, Pllp AJ

.

Meip·Cham~~-

.

'

· on Fur Peace Ranch .ac6~ilies

·r-'7--:;:;;ii;;Zb::;;::&amp;;i;T'"''

Qualified IndiViduals Medicaid (called Q.~-1):
.-.
•

'

I

1

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

'M

'

~

•

BY BRIAN J, REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby, the
Meigs County coinmissioners
and the local 'Ohio Patrolmen's
Benevolent Association have
reached at least a temporary settlement of a grievance filed earlier this year.
The grievance was filed
against Soulsby in February after
members of the deputies' union
requested first that three, and
then six, new patrol cars be purchased to replace six others considered unsafe by deputies.
Soulsby ·deferred the request
to the commissioners, who are
· r&lt;:liponsible for appropriating the
funds ne.ce~~ry. to purchase the
cruiser's, but Kevin Dugan, pres·idept of the local .union, said-at
that time the deppties' issues
·were with die •commissioners,
rathe~ than the sheriff. At ·the

time the grievance was filed
Dugan said that th e commissioners were " unresponsive" to

the union's request.
In particular, those issues cen'tered around the safety of those
cars which predate a small fleet
of cars purchased with a bank
loan in 1998.
Those cars in question have
anywhere between 125,000 and
175,000 miles on them, and
deputies have expressed, through
meetings between the commissioners and Dugan, that they
thi nk the cars are not road-worthy.
The parries met for an arbitration meeting Tuesday to discuss
' the grievance, and agreed to
postpone the arbitration in light
of th e agreement.
According to a joint statement
released by the three parties, 'it
was agreed that vehi cles with
safety issues will be repaired and
certified as safe on a priority
basis .
A committee established by
PIMH- p1oence, Ptlp A:s

'

Ruling·questions Ohio state
auditor's special investigations
COLUMBUS (AP) - Special investigations into misspent
public funds have been a regular
feature of state Auditor Jim
Petro's five years in office, but a
federal court ruling has cast
doubt on the practice.
The Ohio state auditor does
not have the authority to conduct SJ?ecial investigations of
public agencies, according to the
ruling that could affect five years
of investigations that uncovered
$17 million in misspending.
Petro said Tuesday the ruling
would allow for "fraud and
abuse of tax dollars."
"This ·'o'ffice has historically
completed special audits to document where · tax doll'ars I;tave
been stolen or misspent," he said
in a statement. "No court. has
ever challenged the authority to
conduct. a sgeci,al audit."
The state ·will appeal the ruling in which U.S. District Judge
George Smith in Columbus said
the auditor's authority to conduct audits is limited to regular,

biennial audits of public entities.
Ohio law doesn't contain any
provision that permits "special
audits," the ruling said.
State Attorney General Betty
Montgomery believes the auditor has authority to recover
puhlic money whether through
a special audit or a regularly
scheduled audit, spokesman
Todd Boyer said Tuesday.
, If Petro needs authority to do
· special audits, th e Legislature
should provide it, House Speaker.Jo Ann Davidson said Tuesday.
"I do believe we need to have
our state auditor in a position to
do special audits if they're
required," she said.
Current
special
audits,
including one of Ohio's college
program for state prisoners, will
continue pending an appeal ,
Petro spo~eswoman Kim Norris
said.
Petro has conducted several
special audits while in office,
often holding news co nferences
to announce his findin gs .

'

#

This type ·o f Medicat"d pays·
only fo~ your Medicare Part
B prermum.

.

and guests the opportunity to additio~~ 'cabin~' ~~~· the growing
·,·. '
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF. .
create a responsible and respon- needs of the camp.
MlpE&gt;LEPORT -Tpe·Meigs
Kaukonen expressed her appresive musical community through
County Chamber of Commerce
ciation for the Chamber's support
various workshops and classes.
listened to represc;matives .o f The
Jorma Kaukonen is a former and informed those in attendance
Fur Peace Ranch discuss upcorn.-.
guitarist for the 1960s rock-and- that the Fur Peace Ranch is preing events at it~ Darwin location
roll band Jefferson Airplane and a pared to offer many exciting
during Tuesday's · general memmember of the Rock and Roll activities over the next several
bership meeting. ·
· .
months.
Hall of Fame.
The Fur Peace Ranch's Vanessa
"We are about customer serThe guitar caml? ~onsists of a
~~ukonen, John _,H\Irlb~t ~nd
year-round restaurant,' .concert vice,u said Kaukonen, "and -we
Roman Warmke was the · guest
· hall and a fully functional 32- want those who participate in our
speak;ers al the meeting, which
channel recording studio, as well workshops and classes to e!ljoy
'(l'a~· held at Overbrook Nursing
Vane.Sa Kaukonen
as 16 double-occupancy cabins themselves as much as they possiCenrer in Middleport.
·'
'
' I'
'
on site for student and guest bly can.
yonceJVed in 1989 by Jorma
"We would also like to invite
and :Vanessa Kaukonen, The Fur the rolling foothills of Meigs and housing.
everyone to come out to the
Plans are currently under way
Pea~e Ra~ch is a ·seasonal music is dedicated to creating an atmosin~tructional facility that rests in phere that allows bo.th students to build an amphitheater and PIMH see Chamber, Pllp AJ

ljly TONYM. WCH

&lt;

I

June 14, 1000

A&amp;

~ouse Republica·n$ moving
ahead ·with M~di~re prdposal ,
.

WASHINGTON (AP) '- government-subsidized
and
House Republicans are pushing approved prescription drug insurforward with plans for legislation ance policies to Medicare benefim~nt to J"ake it easier and cheap- ciaries.
er
the elderly to get prescription
"We believe the privare sector
drugs, trying to get ahead ofPresican do a great job," Thomas said,
dent Clinton on what is bound to
but "P\e government will be there
be ~ major election-year issue.
.
. , ''HopefuUy, the White House; .if necessary.''
Republicans .. · bighlighted
. '(Vii) work with us and not against
Oemoq;rtic
endorsements for their·.
us as we walk d6wn this path," said
House Ways and Means Commit~ plan fiom ·Reps. fU]pli Hall, Dtee Chairman Bill Archer, R-Thxas. Texas, and Collin Peterson,. D- •
Committee action on le~lation Minn. Most congressional Dell)occould COI)le as early as next week, rats and President Clinton were
Archer said at a hearing Tuesday.
·critical.
· At the hearing, Rep. Bill
Clinton said Tuesday the
Thomas, R -Calif., the chief architect, provided details about a bill Republican plan "claims to help
· Republicans are developing that everybody but is a false hope for
W!JUld enlist private insurers to sell most."

w

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•

. Today's

Sentinel

l Sedloils -11 Pllpl
~~~~OdiE

Cla11ifird1

A~

BH

~gmi~;;a

D~

Edilgdals

M

Ol!ituuie1
SR!.!EU ·

A3

W~athe[

IU-J,H
AJ

Lotteries
owo

Pick 3: 0-1-7
Pick 4: 3-1-6-5

'WVA,
Daily 3: (H)..8
Daily 4: 0-0-4-0
C 2000 Ohio Valley Publi1hing Co.

·some Like It Hot,' ,.ool$ie' top American
Film Institute's list of 100 funniest movies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Something about men in
women's clothing obviously tickles people's funny
bones: "Some Like It Hot" and "Tootsie" came 'in at
Nos. 1 and 2 on the American Film Institute's list of
th e 100 funniest American movies.
"Some Like It Hot," Billy Wilder's 1959 classic
starring Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn
Monroe, topped the list announced Tuesday on a
CBS .television special. Lemmon and Curtis .play
musicians who witness a mob massacre and dress up
. as women to hide out with an all-girl band.
Sydney Pollack's "Tootsie," starring Dustin Hoffman as a down-and-out actor who finds soap-opera
success masquerading as a woman, came in second,
as determined.by about 1,800 actors, directors, stu·
dio executives, critics and others in the movie industry.
Voters chose their funniest movies from a list of
500 nominees compiled by the institute .
The rest of the top 10, in order, were: Stahley
Kubrick's "Dr. Strangelove," Woody Allen's "Annie

Hall," the Marx Brothers"'Duck Soup," Mel Brooks'
"Blazing Saddles;' Robert Altman's "MASH;' Frank
Capra's "It Happened One Night," Mike Nichols'
"The Graduate" and Jim Abrahams, David Zucker
and Jerry Zucker's "Airplane!"
Brooks also had 11th place with "The Producers"
and 13th place with "Young Frankenstein." ·
It was the institUte's third annual list. Two years
ago, the gt'9up released the I 00 best American films,
topped by "Citizen Kane," and last year th e institute
ranked the top 50 screen legends, led by Humphrey
Bogan and Katharine Hepburn.
·
"This time out, funny films leapt to the fore," said
Bob Gazzale, producer of the institute's TV special.
"These films make us laugh, th ey got us throl!gh the
Great Depression, but they really haven't gotten the
recognition they deserve."
Allen was the director with the most films inchided, with "Annie Hall" and four others: "Manhattan"
at No. 46, "Take the Money and Run" at No. 66,"
"Ba11anas" at No. 69 and "Sleeper" at No. 80.
•

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