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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

HI...: lOs; l.ow: 601

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS..

Details, A3

Subscribe today.

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 .

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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."

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. Today's

Sentinel

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

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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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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Deily Senti..,..

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Taft to discuss school funding

' a series of field
Gov. Bob Taft recently announced the he will lead
trips across Ohio to discuss solutions for Ohio's scltool funding
problems with educators and citiZens. The first of the trips will be
in mid-July in Southeastern Ohio.
Taft also will issue a call for comment from education groups and
interested parties. A website will be created to receive ideas and provide information on the school funding issue.
"There's been a lot of debate about ·school funding on CapitC?l
Square, but this .,issue' won't'~ Sl&gt;lved by staring in Columbds, w~ . ',
nttd to hearifi~~.l¥nd froiJI.,clj\c~rs -and citizen~ in the wmmu- :
nities where ·Ohioans live, work :tnd attend school." said Taft.
Taft will conduct a series of field trips throughout the summer
and into fall. Members of the education community. taxpayers and
community leaders. will be invited to discus the issues laid out by
the court in its latest ruling and present their ideas on school funding. Taft hopes to engage in a dialogue about the best ways to help
provide a thorough and efficient system of p11blic education for
Ohio children.
The new website, available by mid -:July, will provide ·information
on this school funding debate and will'allow ~irtually every Ohioan
to submit their ideas on improving the way our state funds public
educatio n. Ideas. wiU also be accepted through he mail.
"Education is the most important issue facing our state right now,
y~t school funding is very difficult to understand. I want to try to
help bring more people into the debate and give them a vehicle to
submit their ideas and express their opinions." said Taft. "We can
only benefit from receiving more ideas. Certainly the quality of the
education we give our children and the quality of the environment
in which they receive it deserves this level of effort."

March of Dimes taking applications
The Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes is currently
accepting applications for its 2001 Community Grants Program.
Grants are awarded to community programs directly related to the
March of Dimes mission of improving the health of babies by preventing birth defects and infant mortality. Funding priorities
include preconception health, programs the seek to prevent birth
d~ fec ts,low birth weight and infant mortality, programs that support
infant health in the first year of life, and professional education projects that focus on any of these issues.
Grants are intended to be "start-up" or useed" money to provide
for and stimulate the development or expansion of services and programs. The Community Grants are funded through a variety of special events held throughout the year in the 26 county area served by
the Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes, including G"allia and Meigs.
Letters of intent and program abstracts are due by 4 p.m.,July 21,
2000. Grant applications are due by 4 p.m., October 6, 2000: Funding for the awarded grants will be available January 2001.
Anyone interested in obtaining a Request for Proposal for the
2001 Community Grants should contact Nancy Cunningham at
the Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes at (614) 4865243 or 1-800-686-2569.

Ohio Special Olympics to host games
Special Olympics Ohio ·will host th~ 2000 State Sun'lnier Games
on June 23-25, on the campus ofThe Ohio State University and
Thomas WorthiniJ!On High School. TheR pmes will feat11re over
2,500 children and adults with mental retardation who wiU come
to Columbu1 for the chance to demonttrate their abllitiea and tal·
ents and compote with their peen ..
This three-day weekend will fntuN athi•~•·.. ~I'IHntl!IJ 12~
local orpnlutlont from 74 of Ohloi 88 ·cauntlll. Gallil' County
wiD b• ltndlniJ l5 athlltfl to the. comptlldon.
,. . ..

.,•
Wednndly, June 14, aooa

EPA slates $70,000 for proJeds
Ohio EPA has $70,000 available to awatd for environmental projects in southern and central Ohio, and is accepting proposals now,
through July 15, 2000. The funds are available through the state's
enforcement settlement with Rumpke Sanitary Landfill pertaining
to a slope failure at the Cincinnati Hughes Road site in 1996. The
settlement requires Rumpke to provide $70,000 annually for five
years starting in 1998 for environmentaUy beneficial projects rather ·
than paying a larger fine. This provides an opportunity for positive
environmental actions. in the communities that wei"!' impacted by
tl\e violation, including Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Proposals will be considered from non-profit groups and local
governments. Ohio EPA may give preference to environmental
projects 'that involve community-based partnerships; groups that
will provide additional funding or in-kind services; or local governments with limited resources to conduct corrective actions or final
closure ot solid waste landfills where there are no outstanding
enforcement' issues.
Additional criteria for proposol. consideratidn will be estimated
cost; amount of funding requested; environmental benefit; technical
feasibility; timeframe for implementation ond completion; and com·
pliance with all federal and state ~lations.
Since there is no formal application form, interested parties are
encouraged to contac~ Ohio EPA for details on proposal requirements. Contact Bruce McCoy through mail, e-mail, or telephone at
Ohio EPA, Division of Solid and Infectious Waste Management,
P.O.
Dox
1049,
Col umbus ,
OH
43216-1049,
bruce.mccoy@epa.state.oh.us, or (614)728-5345. ln(ormation
about the program along with several examples of past proposals
a)so can be obtained from Ohio EPA's Web site
(http:/ /www.epa.state.oh.us/dsiwn/pages/ doc_prog. html) . Proposals must be postmarked no loter than July 15, 2000. Recipients wiU
be announced by October 2000.
(

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Meigs County land transfers posted
POMEROY -The following land transfers were recently reported by Meigs Counry Recorder Judith A. King:
Barbara J. Harper, deceased, to Lawrence
Cecil Harper, Carolyn Sue Matheny.- certificate, Orange;
Judith A. Burke, yharles Brien Burke, to
Burke Family Trust, deed, Columbia;
.
Charles Brien Burke, Judith A. Durke,
•Burke l,'amily Trust, deed, Columbia;
' Ernest L. Greene, deceased, to Dorothy C.
Greene, affidavit, Pomeroy;
Marjor ie H. Drake, Hope Drake, to Daniel
G. Drake, Ruby D. Drake, deed , Olive;
Robert A . McMurray, to Michael Howard,
Christina Howard, deed, Scipio;
Russell. Spencer, Edward· Spencer, Russell
E. Spencer, to Regina L. Spencer Cooper,
deed, Chester;
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Keith A. Bentz, to
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Keith A. Bentz, deed,
Sutton;
Frank Herald, Jr., to Robert A. Kuhn,
Frances I. Kuhn, deed, Orange;
Clarence J. Fairchild, Carol A. Fairchild, to
Stephen f. Baloy,Joyce C. Rouse, deed, Bedford ;
Bruner Land Company Inc., to Robert A.
Bell, deed, Columbia;
Virginia E. Scott, deceased, to Anthony T.

a

.

Lifeguard shortage leaves
. Police say suspect's diaries :_~;~~;
many Ohio beaclies unattended chronicle telephone harassme~~
COLUMBUS (AP) - With guards return · to jobs summer
low unemployment and compe- after summer, said B.J. Fisher,
tition from city pools and water director of the American Lifeparks, lifeguard shortages at guard Association.
Ohio's 76 parks have left oneBeaches can't offer the conve' fourth of the beach~ unattended. nience and easier working condiAs the season -for outdoor . tions that pools can, he said. Lifeswimming -arrives, .-the · state is guards at state beaches are faced
looking to fiU 6o vacant positions. with such conditions as rocky
"Those numbers don't seem and muddy waters and require
to be getting bettet, even though more extensive training, Fisher
we are trying a number of stratesaid.
gies:' said Dan West, chief of
Darrell Ault, director of aquatOhio parks.
ics for the city of cblumbus, said
The state has been trying difmany teens don't want to work
ferent techniques since 1995 to
or are lured by competition offerrecruit lifeguards.
They include increased pay, . ing higher pay and benefits, such
better chances for promotions, as the fast-food industry.
Although · the number of
compensation for certification
cou~ .and adye~g, . on the anl\ual Ji(egl!ard certifications
Internet, at local univer'lities and ' notionwide li~s remained at
190,000 for. the past three yean,
in newspapen, West said.
local
chaptert have wen short· Ohio ia not alan~.
Beachca aci'OII the nation are apl, !lid Amcricmn Red Croll
lookina for help becauw few Ufa- spokc•won111n Kelly Alexander.

ship. ·
·
Mullins told police he had ma:de
about 100 s11ch calls over the yet!li,
Dwyer said• .. ""
The journals are filled with
handwritten daily entri~ spanning
34 y.ears; and some have pockets
stuffed with newspaper clippings,
Dwyer said.
·
·
__, ,
Mullins told, police he ·~ 1!9.1
"some kind of odd pleasure" from
m:.aking the calls, said Dwyer. ; · ·~1'
Mullins could not be rea9~
for comment Wednesday. ~
would not reveal an exact ad~9
for the suspect, and there wasono
Hamilton telephone listing;}~·
him.
:·~
The investigation · in this city
about 35 miles north ofCinciiuilii
started May 15 ~~en a faJ]liW
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School
fromPageAl

Tim Tanthorey
'.COOLVILLE -Tim Tanthorey, 39, Coolville, died on Tuesday, june
13;.2000 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,WVa.
.; funeral services will be at 11 a.'m. Friday at White Funeral Home in
Coolville, with burial to follow in Coolville Cemetery.
',friends may call Thursday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.

·~:~chamber

gram, the commissioners and
DHS have made funds available
to the county's sc hools for proficiency ski Us intervention, and to a
number of other agencies.
Participatio.n in Mid- Valley's
sc hool-year tutoring program is
limited to students enrolled there,
but the sun1mer program is open
to any children in grades K-12 . lt
will include two hours of instruction for four weeks, beginning
July 5.
Five staff members have · been
hired, and the school's regular
Christian-based curriculum will
be used, said Brenda Barnhart,
school administrator.
That curriculum emphasizes
family values and Christian-based
themes, and those lessons are an
important part of the county's
efforts to teach self-sufficiency to
young&gt;ters.
" While the program is not
faith- based, it is very muc h
morals-based, and we think that's
an importanr part of breaking the
dependency on welfare;' Swisher
said. "We're very proud of what
Brenda and th e staff here have
done."

Barnhart, meanwhile, said Tuesday that the &lt;:ounty's inclusion of
her students has been both beneficial to the students and encouraging to the school's administration.
'Tm glad to see everyone
working together," Barnhart said.
" It's good to be included. Often,
we're excluded beca use we're a
Christian sc hool.
" The best thing about it is that
there are no strings attached.
We're allowed to use our own
people and our own materi als,
and teach the material in our own
way.
Barnhart said she hope s the
sunm1ertime program is as effective and as popular as the schoolyear program has been.
Not only have skills levels
increased among the school's 20
students, but the stude nts loved
the work, Barnhart said.
While the program is free, registration is required, and those
children whose families meet the
200 percein of poverty guidelines
associated with PRC programs
wiU be given priority.
Registration sessions will be at
the school, located in downtown
Middleport across from the
Rejoicing Life C hurch, on Jun e
20 and June 22 from 7 to 8:30
p.m.

Attendance down in 1999,
but rock hall stays in the black
CLEVELAND J AP) - The
Rock and Roll HaU of Fame and
Museum attracted fewer visitor. in
1999 but stayed in the black by
cu tting back on spending.
The pop music shrine brought
in 512,100 visitors in 1999, a 7
percent drop from 550,400 in
1998, the rock hall said Tuesday as
it released its annual report.
More than I million people
visited the pyramid on Lake Erie
in the year after it opened in 1995.
However, that was following a
long campaign by C leveland residents to have the rock haU located
here and the building itself was a
novelty.
The 1999 attendance figures
are in keeping with the numbers
predicted by Terry Stewart, the
rock hall's chief executive officer
and president, a few months ago.
Stewart said Tuesday the rock
hall had "another good year" and
its attendance appears to be leveling out. That was forecast by feasibility studies for the museum, he
said.
" Now the focus is on maintaining that attendance, developing
our fund-raising efforts and even-

tuaUy trying to market it (attendance) back uphiU ," Stewart said.
Stewart has made fund raising a
priority for the rock hall because
he believes that - just like o ther
cultural institutions - the museum must raise n1oney from o utside
sou rces to stay solvent and devdop
its programs.
"The main thin g is to. ensure
we've got enough exciting things
going on to give reasons for people to come here in the fi rst place,
and then repeat their eXperience,"
he said.
The rock hall earned $625,200
last year, up from $263,500 in
1998.
Its operating income, an iinportant measure of the rock haU's ability to fund programs and exhibits,
increased to $484,000 in 1999, up
from $219,200 the year before.
However, the increa§e came
because the rock hall reduced
spending by $3.2 million while
operating revenues dropped $2.9
million to about $14.1 million.
Stewart said the rock hall had
made actoss the board spending
cuts in its operations without
hurting programs.

. ing to the Meigs County area
because of the new Athens-Darwin U.S. Route 33 project, which
PageAl
will
begin sometime next year.
I ' • .
.
The project is expected to cost
tahch and experience our dinner $90 million and will essentially
~'nd concert series. It will be an run parallel to the existing roadevening of fine dining and great way,
connec ting
four-lane
mtisic that all will enjoy."
stretches of 33 to the north and
'' 'Hurlbut, ranch manager, and south.
Warmke, marketing director,
Gina Pines, director of the Unicommended the Meigs County
ver.ity of Rio Grande's Meigs
area on ·its hospitality and
Center, and Dr. Barry Dorsey,
promised a cooperation with
president of the University of Rio
lcrcitl businesses, not competition.
Grande, announced plans to offer
Both individuals said they are
excited about working with the a second degree program through
the URG's · Meigs Center. The
people of Meigs County and
l!ope many will visit the ranch twocyear Office Technology
degree would benefit those who
aJ:K! enjoy all that it has to offer.
The Fur Peace Ranch will pre- would like to work in an office
sent Mediterranean Night on atmosphere and is available in a
Saturday beginning at 6 p.m. medical assistant format or legal ·
Mediterranean foods and live assistant format.
Karin Johnson, tourism cjirecmusic, which will be performed
tor,
informed the membership of
jazz great Ron Scott, will
~ke for an evening that one will the popularity of Meigs County
advertisements in various ·publisurely never-forget, they said.
Economic
Development cations and the success of the
•lilirector Perry Varnadoe reported· recently published craft booklet,
WASHINGTON (AP) -"Stop!" shouted turned down a wrong taxiway leading toward oping technology to avoid runway incidents.
,be is in contact with several busi- which showcases local area arti- the friglltened air traffic controller as a giant a runway where a FedEx plane was taking off. They urged the agency to speed up that effort
nesses that are interested in locat- sans and crafrmakers.
Boeing 747 that had just landed headed into
As it became clear from radio conversations and to:
the path of ,another jumbo jet preparing to that the United flight wasn't where it ought to
-Require that a pilot get a specific clear.,, ["' .
take off from the Chicago runway.
be, the air traffic controller, also blinded by fog, ance before crossing each runway. Currently
Tragedy was avoided as the second plane ordered it to halt. She then cleared a US Air- that clearance is implied when a pilot is told to
...., .
climbed quickly, but the incident was closely ways flight to take off, but that pilot refused to proceed to the takeoff point, or a multiple
clearance may be given to cross several runstudied
Tuesday as the National Transportation go until he was sure where everybody was.
Gannett -' 62!.
Roeky Boots - 51.
(\!:P-35\
RO Shell - 64 ,,
Safety Board issued recommendation&lt; for
EventuaUy, after .all movement at the airport ways.
Ab:o - 40'}.
General Electric- 51!.
Harley Davidson- 3t~~~~
Sears - 34 'I•
AmTaci1/SBC- 47'4
avoiding such close calls.
was halted, the United pilot was able to read
-Prohibit planes waiting to take off from
K mart -77!.
Shoney's - '~• .
Ashland Inc. - 36~
was
with
the
passengers
and
crew
runway
signs
to
determine
where
he
was
and
idling
on an active runway at night or in conLuck
Kroger- 19
Wlli·Mart - 55
AT&amp;T-33
Wendy's
19'l.
Lands
End
32\
8arik One - 32\
aboard the two planes, observed NTSB Chair- could then taxi to a safe location so operations ditions where they might not be visible to
Worthington - 12
S!tb Evans - 15).
Ltd . -.22
man Jim Hall, "but relying on luck doesn't could resume.
incoming planes.
jlorgWllrner - 38),
Oak HHI Flnanelal- 15~ ·
OVB-27),
Daily stock reports are the make good public policy."
dhamplon The Chicago case occurred April i. 1999,
- Adopt the English language phraseology
4 p.m. closing quotes of
One Valley- 36'1.
Q\lllming Shops Hall noted that more than 320 runway when an Air China International 747 cargo
-QIIy Holding- 6'),
the previous day's trans· close calls were reported nationwide last year, plane with a crew of eight aboard landed and reconmlended for ground operations by the
Paoplaa-15
actions,
provided by
Premier - 7~.
Federal Mogul - 1ol.
International Civil Aviation Organization, and
a number that has been rising over the years as turned onto the wrong taxiway. It then began
Advesl of Gallipolis.
Rockwell - 37'l'.
Flrs1ar - 25~
.: ·,
to cross a runway just as a Korean Air 7 47 with direct controllers to speak clearly and slowly,
airport traffic increases.
' ; ... .
The Chicago case and another in Provi- 357 passengers and 22 crew members started especially when dealing with foreign planes.
dence, R .I., in which planes on the ground ..,, td take o'ft".
.
The United States already follows most
become lost in the fog were studied before the ,. ·' The unexpected appearance of the Chinese ICAO terminology but there aCC:some differ•
board issued its recommendations.
jet on the runway prompted the controller to , ences _that may confus~ pilots from other
Those now go to the Federal Aviation shout "Stop!" just seconds before the planes countnes. For exarr&gt;ple, ,fan Amencan conAdministration, which has already launched its would have collided. It was too late for that, troller wants a plane to go to a runway and
C· .
own effort to reduce su~h incidents and plans but the Korean pilot was able to lift off early stop until given further directions, the pilot
SANDUSKY (AP) - A baby steps of Dolinsky's mobile home a national runway safety smiuniqune 26-2(l.
and veer sharply to the left, avoiding disaster.
will be told to "taxi and hold short" or "posisitter offered additional details in northern Ohio.
In the Providence case last Dec. 6, United , In their recommendations, board members tion and hold short." The ICAO direction
Detective Robert Lippert said Airlines Flight 1448 became lost in the fog and criticized the FAA for slow progress in devel- would be "line up and wait:'
dur!ng an in~rview about the
dea!h of an 18-month-old girl in Tuesday that, initially, Dolinsky
her-care, in Erie County sheriff's said Belinda fell from the third
step onto a concrete driveway at
detective testified Tuesday.
Samantha Dolinsky, 31, is the bottom of the steps. then
accused of killing Be)inda Boyd went unconscious.
However, Lippert said Dolinby shaking her in May 1999.
transmitted without his permis- companies:• Smith, of Brookline,
pointed questioning.
Dolinsky faces charges of murder, sky added specific details in a
WASHINGTON . (AP)
involuntary manslaughter and third interview after the girl died. Some Internet advertising compa"If local shops did things like sion to DoubleClick. He found Mass., told senators. "It's almost
child endangering.
When asked if anything else nies are watching every click and this, we'd be outraged;' said Sen. that all kinds of information like they have put hidden microDefense lawyers maintain that could have _caused the girl's drag that computer users make at Richard Bryan, D-Nev.
entered into Web forms can then phones in our homes and our
the girl diecl from injuries she injuries, Dolinsky recounted "like home or in the office, and the
Both Bernstein and the indus- be passed on, by the Web site to an offices and they are listening to
received falling ·down the back a revelation" that the girl fell sev- Senate is considering doing ~ome­ try executives testified about the advertising network.
what we do all day long."
eral other times during that day, thing to stop it.
New York-based DoubleClick
formation of the Network AdverThe problem can get serious
Lippert said in Erie County
Jodie Bernstein, director of the . rising Initiative, a plan for self-reg- said the transmission of personal
when Internet users register with
Common Pleas Court.
Bureau of Consumer Protection ulation to head off congressional data is inadvertent and that the
'
'
"It was the first time I heard at the Federal Trade Commission, action. While such an ~greement company is not using the infor- the sites or fiU out a form when
they seck information or shop for
about some of those specific showed senators at a hearingTues- may not come for several weeks, mation to target consumers.
details;' Lippert said.
"We don't save it, or keep it at products.That data is automaticalday how Web sites and advertising they said there is still no guarantee
(IJSPUI3-)
Also called to the stand was companies track users through that the organization's members all. It won't ever be involved in ly sent to various outside parties,
ObloVIIIo7hblolllqCo.
Publl111ed ever)' afttmoon, Monday throuah
Stella Miron, Cuyahoga County cookies - small text files stored - some of the leading Internet how we deliver ads;' said Jules often companies like DouFriday, 111 COurt S1., Pamci'D)', Ohio, by the
deputy coroner.
advertising companies - will be Polonetsky, DoubleClick's privacy bleClick that place Internet ads
and read on a user's hard drive.
Ohio Volle1 Mil..... ComJOI"''·• Pomen&gt;,,
Ohio 4!769, Ph. 992-21$6. Se,.,nd •lalf poll·
all
of
the
injuries
Miron
said
Through these files , usually able to agree on a plan that's officer.
and track how many people see
... paid II Pomero)', Olllo.
Belinda suffered could "absolute- containing an identification num- amenable to the FTC.
Other well-koown sites like them. The user doesn't have to
M•~ The AUoclated Pru~, tnd lhl Ohio
ly not" have , been caused by just ber, ad companies see where cusRichard Smith, a retired pro- Alta Vista, Rea!Networks and even click on the ad for informaN~per Atloclallon.
falling down.
gramnler
and business executive Travelocity have passed along pertomers travel on the Internet and
POn'MASTIR1 Send lddraa ccmcc:lionl 10
tion to be se nt.
'De Dally ScnUnel, Ill Coun St ., Pomeroy,
who has turned to securiry and sonally identifying information to
govern what ads ~hey see.
Smith called the problem "data
Ohio 4!769.
Members of the Senate Com- privacy consulting, testified how DoubleClick, Smith said.
liiJI5CRIPriON IATU
"The data collection systems spillage." He and other experts
merce Com1nittee were especiaUy even he w~s surprised that so
By Can1tr or Motor Rou&amp;e
One \Ycall: ..................................................$2.00
concerned .about personal infor- much data is sent to ad networks. that the Internet ad companies are said that in many cases, Web sites
One """''h ................................................ $8.10
Smith tried to learn more currently running are getting per- don't even know they're forwardmation being used in profiling,
One Year ... ........... ................................. $104.00
Page AI
and testimony from ad companies about diabetes on a popular Web sonal and ·sensitive information ing the personal data .
SINGLECOPYPIUCE .
Dtlly ............................. ....................... $0 Cenu
repaired and certified as safe on DoubleClick and Engage did little health site, entering 'his e-mail that almost everyone will agree is
'
to assuage their concerns in the address and "diabetes:• and it was none of the business of these
Sublerlben 1101 deslrina to pay the e~tricr ma)'
a priority basis.
rtmllln advance direct 10 'nle Dally Scnlincl
A committee established by
oaa tbrt:c. six or 12 monlh buill. Credit will be
aJven carrier each week.
the parties will then review the
safety
and maintenance proceNo ubKdpliOD by mall r,rmlu~ In treaa
where home carrier ICIYk:l a avalltblc.
dures on a regular basis, the
!
statement
said.
·Publlshci' rachocathc riahlto adj111t ralel dur•
·lftJ lhlaubacriptlon peilod. Subterlpelon rate
Soulsby said Monday that six
·ctllftlll may be Implemented·by dl•nal•l the
cars
were recently "red-tagged"
"durllion ofd.C al.lbscripdon.
,
and taken out of se rvice after a
MAILSUISCRII'TIONS
mid 60s .
mechanic at C&amp;A Auto in
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
:
Iaside Mellt Coantr
·l)W.eb .......................................... .......S27.30
Pomeroy deemed them un safe.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy with
Forecasters say the rai n is com'26 We&lt;b ........................................... "....S$3.12
"!l We&lt;b .............................. ................ SI0!.!6
That left the department with ing to the tri-county region scattered showers and thunder~
a.ta O.lddt Mtltl C..•IJ
five cars on the road.
and staying for a while.
storms. Highs from the mid 80s.
·ll We&lt;b ................................................. l2l&gt;.l.!
16 v.lceb .................................................S$6.68
"This really takes coverage
The National Weather Service
Extended forecast
' l We&lt;b ..........................._.. ................ SI09.72
away from the citizens of Meigs expects scattered showers and
Thursday night... A chance of
Reddet Setvtct•s
County," Soulsby said, "a nd thunderstorms beginning Thur.- thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
that's unfortunate. We will now day aod . lasting through the
Frjday. .. A chance of showers
be forced to prioritize the calls weekend, with highs in the 80s
and thunderstorms. Highs 80 to
that come in, and we'll have to and lows in the 60s.
85.
eliminate or strictly limit rou Forecast
Saturday.. .A chance of showers
tine patrols around the county."
Today... lncreasing clouds this
Soulsby indicated Tuesday afternoon. A c hance of thunder- 'and thunderstorms. Lows in the
that he was "satisfied at this storms this evening. Highs near 60s. Highs 80 to 85.
Sunday... A chan ce of showers
point," and that the agreement 90.
, as reached would likely chillithunderstorms. Lows 60 to
and
Tonight ... Showers and thunnate his .concerns
derstorms likely. Lows from th e 65 . Highs near 80.

from

W.

HAMILTON (AP) - A man
charged with telephone harassment kept more than 230 diaries
chronicling the crimes, authorities
said.
Larry Mullins, 53, of Hamilton,
used the journals to keep track of
traffic deaths, Ojissing persons and
other .. news-making tragedies.
Then he telephoned the victims'
relatives aro11nd the anniversaries
of the events and claimed to have
new · information, , said Butler
County Sheriff's Maj. Anthony
Dwyer.
"The crime that he's committing is not that serious ... but the
emotional impact it has on the victims is pretty severe;' Dwyer said.
Mullins has been charged with
telephone. harassment in Butler
•te'jll!ma- re~M"tl'f'"il! "l~rin~
County's Morl!ailTO\Y~flll$"
scheduled to appear in Area I machin'e message from a man wl'lo
Court on Thunclay. He alto !1 fac· !lid he needed to talk to a 13·"~
ina: charp~ in a limilar cue in old girl whose mother had belli
Clermont Councy'l Miami 'lbwn· · lcilled In a ear wtcck In May 1990.

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The Oai.ly Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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. Henry E . Cleland, Jr., Kathleen M. CleWolfe, Christina K. Wolfe, deed, Middleport;
Steve L. Stewart, Kelly Leigh Stewart, land, to Christine A. Martin, deed, Pomeroy;
Kelly Leigh Stewart, to Steve L. Stewart,
Roger L. Jeffers, Japet M. Jeffers, to
Kelly Leigh. Stewart, deed, Rutland;
Roman Catholic Diocese, deed, Salisbuiyf. i
Steve L. Stewart, Kelly Lee Stewart, to
Max Knopp, Jill Knopp, to Jerry Powell,
James B. Wolfe, deed, Rutland/Salisbury;
Margaret Powell, easement, Sutton .
" '
Alfred ,0. Roush, to Karen J. Vanmatre,
The following land transfers were recordWilberV:Vanmatre, deed, Pomeroy;
ed at the Mason County Clerk's office. _ .•
Robert W Mahr, deceased, to Freda C.
Bruce A. Wallace, Inc., A West ,Virginia
Mahr, affidavit, Scipio;
Corp., Grantor; Janet M. Vanclief, !:&gt;rantee.
Freda Mae Vaninwagen, deceased, to Parcel Hannan District, Consdieration Value:
Ernest Vaninwagen , affidavit, Scipio;
o\
$98,000
Athens Landmark Inc., to Meigs County
Judith Ann Kay, f/k/a Judith Ann Eads
Community, agreement;
and Charles E. Kay, Grantor; Pavid R. I?•~!
John S. Codner, Beverly L. Codner, to and Donna J. Deal, Grantee. Parcel L~w,~
Dolly R. Warden, deed, Racine;
District, Consideration Value: $55,000
.. , .
J!Jhn S. Codner, Beverly L. Codner, to
Ronald G. Mayes and Kelli R . May~~
Arminta Mindy K. Hill, deed, Racine;
Grantor; Virginia Ruth Jacabs, Grantee. ·Lot
Ada M. Bibbee, deceased, to Gerald
No. 20, Section 1, Meadowhill, Robins.Qn
Bibbee, certificate, Olive;
Richard A. Hagerty, Dorothy Hagerty, to District, Consideration Value! $8,500 . · ,•·,
M aljorie S. Patterson, Grantor; Carol .l\1
Terry R. Gregory, Barbara L. Gregory, deed,
Patt~rson,
Grantee. Town of HendersQn;
Salem;
Rodney Davis, Roger Davis, Kay Davis, . District of Clendenin, Consideration Valuv;
'J"' nI
Rosalie Hood, to Randall A. Storms, Sherri $1 500.
Alicia
A
.
Cale,
f/k/a
Alicia
A.
Grimm
ancl
L. Storms, deed, Rutland;
Ronald K. Furguson, to Michael A. Mat- Ronald P. Cale, Grantor; John M. Bea:vel\
Grantee. Lot No. 86, Meadowland Estaft
tea, deed, Salisbury;
·
Subdivision,
Robinson District, Consi~t!llo
Mary L. Hudson, to Owen E . Wiseman,
tion Value: 82,000.
·
deed, Rutland;

· AU of the athltttl have quallfitd for chit ewnl by eompellna In
Sprln11 Oamta In tholr lllptctlve 11111. Tht athlttaa will vie for top
honon In tho •porta or athlttlCI (track lc fttiO), l!iUitlQii bocce,

bowUPIJ, cycllns.IYJ1lnJitlct, pllWtrllftln,,roUtnkallna ~ardtdc and
tp..d), aocctr, ten nil and volloyb.U,
.·
Compt.lltlon 11 tlated to btlin at 2/.m. on Pdday, Juno 23 at
Thomaa WorthlnJIIon Hll!h Sehaal an th1 Wo1t Campul o( Th1
Ohio State Unlvulity. Comp1titlon wW continuo th10111h Friday
~enlna and run 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sat\lrday and 7:30 a.m. to
noon an Sundiy it vuiaut venue~ an the campu1 of Tho Ohio
State Univenity and Thoma• Worthington High School.
Opening Ceremonies will begin at 6:45 p.m. on )11ne ~3 in St.
John Arena. The Ceremonies will incl11de Jive entertainment, a
parade of athletes, the culmination of the Law Enforcement Tareh
Run ond Fireworks.
.
Approximately 3,000 volunteers will donate their ti111e and
resources to make this event a success.Volunteers'will serve as venue
managers, officials and event sraff to conduct the athletic competitions. Service organizations such as the Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts,
YMCA groups and various civic and corporate empl\)yee associations will serve as volunteers dl)ring the weekend. :
Sponsors for the Summer Games include th~ Free" &amp; Accepted
Masons of Ohio, Civilian of OhiO, AMVETS, The Law Enforcement Torch Run and Security Link by Ameritech.
All events are free and open to the public.

VVedneada~June14,2000

..

Safety Board makes recommendations for runways
.

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LOCAL STOCKS

2,. 5'·

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~ete(:tive ·saY.s baby sitter·

.offered details in baby death

Some Web sites send customer info to ad companies

The Daily Sentinel

Grievance
from

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VALLEY ·WEATHE ·R
Here comes the rain·again

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Deily Senti..,..

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Taft to discuss school funding

' a series of field
Gov. Bob Taft recently announced the he will lead
trips across Ohio to discuss solutions for Ohio's scltool funding
problems with educators and citiZens. The first of the trips will be
in mid-July in Southeastern Ohio.
Taft also will issue a call for comment from education groups and
interested parties. A website will be created to receive ideas and provide information on the school funding issue.
"There's been a lot of debate about ·school funding on CapitC?l
Square, but this .,issue' won't'~ Sl&gt;lved by staring in Columbds, w~ . ',
nttd to hearifi~~.l¥nd froiJI.,clj\c~rs -and citizen~ in the wmmu- :
nities where ·Ohioans live, work :tnd attend school." said Taft.
Taft will conduct a series of field trips throughout the summer
and into fall. Members of the education community. taxpayers and
community leaders. will be invited to discus the issues laid out by
the court in its latest ruling and present their ideas on school funding. Taft hopes to engage in a dialogue about the best ways to help
provide a thorough and efficient system of p11blic education for
Ohio children.
The new website, available by mid -:July, will provide ·information
on this school funding debate and will'allow ~irtually every Ohioan
to submit their ideas on improving the way our state funds public
educatio n. Ideas. wiU also be accepted through he mail.
"Education is the most important issue facing our state right now,
y~t school funding is very difficult to understand. I want to try to
help bring more people into the debate and give them a vehicle to
submit their ideas and express their opinions." said Taft. "We can
only benefit from receiving more ideas. Certainly the quality of the
education we give our children and the quality of the environment
in which they receive it deserves this level of effort."

March of Dimes taking applications
The Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes is currently
accepting applications for its 2001 Community Grants Program.
Grants are awarded to community programs directly related to the
March of Dimes mission of improving the health of babies by preventing birth defects and infant mortality. Funding priorities
include preconception health, programs the seek to prevent birth
d~ fec ts,low birth weight and infant mortality, programs that support
infant health in the first year of life, and professional education projects that focus on any of these issues.
Grants are intended to be "start-up" or useed" money to provide
for and stimulate the development or expansion of services and programs. The Community Grants are funded through a variety of special events held throughout the year in the 26 county area served by
the Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes, including G"allia and Meigs.
Letters of intent and program abstracts are due by 4 p.m.,July 21,
2000. Grant applications are due by 4 p.m., October 6, 2000: Funding for the awarded grants will be available January 2001.
Anyone interested in obtaining a Request for Proposal for the
2001 Community Grants should contact Nancy Cunningham at
the Central Ohio Division of the March of Dimes at (614) 4865243 or 1-800-686-2569.

Ohio Special Olympics to host games
Special Olympics Ohio ·will host th~ 2000 State Sun'lnier Games
on June 23-25, on the campus ofThe Ohio State University and
Thomas WorthiniJ!On High School. TheR pmes will feat11re over
2,500 children and adults with mental retardation who wiU come
to Columbu1 for the chance to demonttrate their abllitiea and tal·
ents and compote with their peen ..
This three-day weekend will fntuN athi•~•·.. ~I'IHntl!IJ 12~
local orpnlutlont from 74 of Ohloi 88 ·cauntlll. Gallil' County
wiD b• ltndlniJ l5 athlltfl to the. comptlldon.
,. . ..

.,•
Wednndly, June 14, aooa

EPA slates $70,000 for proJeds
Ohio EPA has $70,000 available to awatd for environmental projects in southern and central Ohio, and is accepting proposals now,
through July 15, 2000. The funds are available through the state's
enforcement settlement with Rumpke Sanitary Landfill pertaining
to a slope failure at the Cincinnati Hughes Road site in 1996. The
settlement requires Rumpke to provide $70,000 annually for five
years starting in 1998 for environmentaUy beneficial projects rather ·
than paying a larger fine. This provides an opportunity for positive
environmental actions. in the communities that wei"!' impacted by
tl\e violation, including Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Proposals will be considered from non-profit groups and local
governments. Ohio EPA may give preference to environmental
projects 'that involve community-based partnerships; groups that
will provide additional funding or in-kind services; or local governments with limited resources to conduct corrective actions or final
closure ot solid waste landfills where there are no outstanding
enforcement' issues.
Additional criteria for proposol. consideratidn will be estimated
cost; amount of funding requested; environmental benefit; technical
feasibility; timeframe for implementation ond completion; and com·
pliance with all federal and state ~lations.
Since there is no formal application form, interested parties are
encouraged to contac~ Ohio EPA for details on proposal requirements. Contact Bruce McCoy through mail, e-mail, or telephone at
Ohio EPA, Division of Solid and Infectious Waste Management,
P.O.
Dox
1049,
Col umbus ,
OH
43216-1049,
bruce.mccoy@epa.state.oh.us, or (614)728-5345. ln(ormation
about the program along with several examples of past proposals
a)so can be obtained from Ohio EPA's Web site
(http:/ /www.epa.state.oh.us/dsiwn/pages/ doc_prog. html) . Proposals must be postmarked no loter than July 15, 2000. Recipients wiU
be announced by October 2000.
(

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Meigs County land transfers posted
POMEROY -The following land transfers were recently reported by Meigs Counry Recorder Judith A. King:
Barbara J. Harper, deceased, to Lawrence
Cecil Harper, Carolyn Sue Matheny.- certificate, Orange;
Judith A. Burke, yharles Brien Burke, to
Burke Family Trust, deed, Columbia;
.
Charles Brien Burke, Judith A. Durke,
•Burke l,'amily Trust, deed, Columbia;
' Ernest L. Greene, deceased, to Dorothy C.
Greene, affidavit, Pomeroy;
Marjor ie H. Drake, Hope Drake, to Daniel
G. Drake, Ruby D. Drake, deed , Olive;
Robert A . McMurray, to Michael Howard,
Christina Howard, deed, Scipio;
Russell. Spencer, Edward· Spencer, Russell
E. Spencer, to Regina L. Spencer Cooper,
deed, Chester;
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Keith A. Bentz, to
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Keith A. Bentz, deed,
Sutton;
Frank Herald, Jr., to Robert A. Kuhn,
Frances I. Kuhn, deed, Orange;
Clarence J. Fairchild, Carol A. Fairchild, to
Stephen f. Baloy,Joyce C. Rouse, deed, Bedford ;
Bruner Land Company Inc., to Robert A.
Bell, deed, Columbia;
Virginia E. Scott, deceased, to Anthony T.

a

.

Lifeguard shortage leaves
. Police say suspect's diaries :_~;~~;
many Ohio beaclies unattended chronicle telephone harassme~~
COLUMBUS (AP) - With guards return · to jobs summer
low unemployment and compe- after summer, said B.J. Fisher,
tition from city pools and water director of the American Lifeparks, lifeguard shortages at guard Association.
Ohio's 76 parks have left oneBeaches can't offer the conve' fourth of the beach~ unattended. nience and easier working condiAs the season -for outdoor . tions that pools can, he said. Lifeswimming -arrives, .-the · state is guards at state beaches are faced
looking to fiU 6o vacant positions. with such conditions as rocky
"Those numbers don't seem and muddy waters and require
to be getting bettet, even though more extensive training, Fisher
we are trying a number of stratesaid.
gies:' said Dan West, chief of
Darrell Ault, director of aquatOhio parks.
ics for the city of cblumbus, said
The state has been trying difmany teens don't want to work
ferent techniques since 1995 to
or are lured by competition offerrecruit lifeguards.
They include increased pay, . ing higher pay and benefits, such
better chances for promotions, as the fast-food industry.
Although · the number of
compensation for certification
cou~ .and adye~g, . on the anl\ual Ji(egl!ard certifications
Internet, at local univer'lities and ' notionwide li~s remained at
190,000 for. the past three yean,
in newspapen, West said.
local
chaptert have wen short· Ohio ia not alan~.
Beachca aci'OII the nation are apl, !lid Amcricmn Red Croll
lookina for help becauw few Ufa- spokc•won111n Kelly Alexander.

ship. ·
·
Mullins told police he had ma:de
about 100 s11ch calls over the yet!li,
Dwyer said• .. ""
The journals are filled with
handwritten daily entri~ spanning
34 y.ears; and some have pockets
stuffed with newspaper clippings,
Dwyer said.
·
·
__, ,
Mullins told, police he ·~ 1!9.1
"some kind of odd pleasure" from
m:.aking the calls, said Dwyer. ; · ·~1'
Mullins could not be rea9~
for comment Wednesday. ~
would not reveal an exact ad~9
for the suspect, and there wasono
Hamilton telephone listing;}~·
him.
:·~
The investigation · in this city
about 35 miles north ofCinciiuilii
started May 15 ~~en a faJ]liW
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Jumbo SzeCalifomia
Cantabupe

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Bars #1 Sliced
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1ilso Jn Our jYieat Department

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School
fromPageAl

Tim Tanthorey
'.COOLVILLE -Tim Tanthorey, 39, Coolville, died on Tuesday, june
13;.2000 at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,WVa.
.; funeral services will be at 11 a.'m. Friday at White Funeral Home in
Coolville, with burial to follow in Coolville Cemetery.
',friends may call Thursday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.

·~:~chamber

gram, the commissioners and
DHS have made funds available
to the county's sc hools for proficiency ski Us intervention, and to a
number of other agencies.
Participatio.n in Mid- Valley's
sc hool-year tutoring program is
limited to students enrolled there,
but the sun1mer program is open
to any children in grades K-12 . lt
will include two hours of instruction for four weeks, beginning
July 5.
Five staff members have · been
hired, and the school's regular
Christian-based curriculum will
be used, said Brenda Barnhart,
school administrator.
That curriculum emphasizes
family values and Christian-based
themes, and those lessons are an
important part of the county's
efforts to teach self-sufficiency to
young&gt;ters.
" While the program is not
faith- based, it is very muc h
morals-based, and we think that's
an importanr part of breaking the
dependency on welfare;' Swisher
said. "We're very proud of what
Brenda and th e staff here have
done."

Barnhart, meanwhile, said Tuesday that the &lt;:ounty's inclusion of
her students has been both beneficial to the students and encouraging to the school's administration.
'Tm glad to see everyone
working together," Barnhart said.
" It's good to be included. Often,
we're excluded beca use we're a
Christian sc hool.
" The best thing about it is that
there are no strings attached.
We're allowed to use our own
people and our own materi als,
and teach the material in our own
way.
Barnhart said she hope s the
sunm1ertime program is as effective and as popular as the schoolyear program has been.
Not only have skills levels
increased among the school's 20
students, but the stude nts loved
the work, Barnhart said.
While the program is free, registration is required, and those
children whose families meet the
200 percein of poverty guidelines
associated with PRC programs
wiU be given priority.
Registration sessions will be at
the school, located in downtown
Middleport across from the
Rejoicing Life C hurch, on Jun e
20 and June 22 from 7 to 8:30
p.m.

Attendance down in 1999,
but rock hall stays in the black
CLEVELAND J AP) - The
Rock and Roll HaU of Fame and
Museum attracted fewer visitor. in
1999 but stayed in the black by
cu tting back on spending.
The pop music shrine brought
in 512,100 visitors in 1999, a 7
percent drop from 550,400 in
1998, the rock hall said Tuesday as
it released its annual report.
More than I million people
visited the pyramid on Lake Erie
in the year after it opened in 1995.
However, that was following a
long campaign by C leveland residents to have the rock haU located
here and the building itself was a
novelty.
The 1999 attendance figures
are in keeping with the numbers
predicted by Terry Stewart, the
rock hall's chief executive officer
and president, a few months ago.
Stewart said Tuesday the rock
hall had "another good year" and
its attendance appears to be leveling out. That was forecast by feasibility studies for the museum, he
said.
" Now the focus is on maintaining that attendance, developing
our fund-raising efforts and even-

tuaUy trying to market it (attendance) back uphiU ," Stewart said.
Stewart has made fund raising a
priority for the rock hall because
he believes that - just like o ther
cultural institutions - the museum must raise n1oney from o utside
sou rces to stay solvent and devdop
its programs.
"The main thin g is to. ensure
we've got enough exciting things
going on to give reasons for people to come here in the fi rst place,
and then repeat their eXperience,"
he said.
The rock hall earned $625,200
last year, up from $263,500 in
1998.
Its operating income, an iinportant measure of the rock haU's ability to fund programs and exhibits,
increased to $484,000 in 1999, up
from $219,200 the year before.
However, the increa§e came
because the rock hall reduced
spending by $3.2 million while
operating revenues dropped $2.9
million to about $14.1 million.
Stewart said the rock hall had
made actoss the board spending
cuts in its operations without
hurting programs.

. ing to the Meigs County area
because of the new Athens-Darwin U.S. Route 33 project, which
PageAl
will
begin sometime next year.
I ' • .
.
The project is expected to cost
tahch and experience our dinner $90 million and will essentially
~'nd concert series. It will be an run parallel to the existing roadevening of fine dining and great way,
connec ting
four-lane
mtisic that all will enjoy."
stretches of 33 to the north and
'' 'Hurlbut, ranch manager, and south.
Warmke, marketing director,
Gina Pines, director of the Unicommended the Meigs County
ver.ity of Rio Grande's Meigs
area on ·its hospitality and
Center, and Dr. Barry Dorsey,
promised a cooperation with
president of the University of Rio
lcrcitl businesses, not competition.
Grande, announced plans to offer
Both individuals said they are
excited about working with the a second degree program through
the URG's · Meigs Center. The
people of Meigs County and
l!ope many will visit the ranch twocyear Office Technology
degree would benefit those who
aJ:K! enjoy all that it has to offer.
The Fur Peace Ranch will pre- would like to work in an office
sent Mediterranean Night on atmosphere and is available in a
Saturday beginning at 6 p.m. medical assistant format or legal ·
Mediterranean foods and live assistant format.
Karin Johnson, tourism cjirecmusic, which will be performed
tor,
informed the membership of
jazz great Ron Scott, will
~ke for an evening that one will the popularity of Meigs County
advertisements in various ·publisurely never-forget, they said.
Economic
Development cations and the success of the
•lilirector Perry Varnadoe reported· recently published craft booklet,
WASHINGTON (AP) -"Stop!" shouted turned down a wrong taxiway leading toward oping technology to avoid runway incidents.
,be is in contact with several busi- which showcases local area arti- the friglltened air traffic controller as a giant a runway where a FedEx plane was taking off. They urged the agency to speed up that effort
nesses that are interested in locat- sans and crafrmakers.
Boeing 747 that had just landed headed into
As it became clear from radio conversations and to:
the path of ,another jumbo jet preparing to that the United flight wasn't where it ought to
-Require that a pilot get a specific clear.,, ["' .
take off from the Chicago runway.
be, the air traffic controller, also blinded by fog, ance before crossing each runway. Currently
Tragedy was avoided as the second plane ordered it to halt. She then cleared a US Air- that clearance is implied when a pilot is told to
...., .
climbed quickly, but the incident was closely ways flight to take off, but that pilot refused to proceed to the takeoff point, or a multiple
clearance may be given to cross several runstudied
Tuesday as the National Transportation go until he was sure where everybody was.
Gannett -' 62!.
Roeky Boots - 51.
(\!:P-35\
RO Shell - 64 ,,
Safety Board issued recommendation&lt; for
EventuaUy, after .all movement at the airport ways.
Ab:o - 40'}.
General Electric- 51!.
Harley Davidson- 3t~~~~
Sears - 34 'I•
AmTaci1/SBC- 47'4
avoiding such close calls.
was halted, the United pilot was able to read
-Prohibit planes waiting to take off from
K mart -77!.
Shoney's - '~• .
Ashland Inc. - 36~
was
with
the
passengers
and
crew
runway
signs
to
determine
where
he
was
and
idling
on an active runway at night or in conLuck
Kroger- 19
Wlli·Mart - 55
AT&amp;T-33
Wendy's
19'l.
Lands
End
32\
8arik One - 32\
aboard the two planes, observed NTSB Chair- could then taxi to a safe location so operations ditions where they might not be visible to
Worthington - 12
S!tb Evans - 15).
Ltd . -.22
man Jim Hall, "but relying on luck doesn't could resume.
incoming planes.
jlorgWllrner - 38),
Oak HHI Flnanelal- 15~ ·
OVB-27),
Daily stock reports are the make good public policy."
dhamplon The Chicago case occurred April i. 1999,
- Adopt the English language phraseology
4 p.m. closing quotes of
One Valley- 36'1.
Q\lllming Shops Hall noted that more than 320 runway when an Air China International 747 cargo
-QIIy Holding- 6'),
the previous day's trans· close calls were reported nationwide last year, plane with a crew of eight aboard landed and reconmlended for ground operations by the
Paoplaa-15
actions,
provided by
Premier - 7~.
Federal Mogul - 1ol.
International Civil Aviation Organization, and
a number that has been rising over the years as turned onto the wrong taxiway. It then began
Advesl of Gallipolis.
Rockwell - 37'l'.
Flrs1ar - 25~
.: ·,
to cross a runway just as a Korean Air 7 47 with direct controllers to speak clearly and slowly,
airport traffic increases.
' ; ... .
The Chicago case and another in Provi- 357 passengers and 22 crew members started especially when dealing with foreign planes.
dence, R .I., in which planes on the ground ..,, td take o'ft".
.
The United States already follows most
become lost in the fog were studied before the ,. ·' The unexpected appearance of the Chinese ICAO terminology but there aCC:some differ•
board issued its recommendations.
jet on the runway prompted the controller to , ences _that may confus~ pilots from other
Those now go to the Federal Aviation shout "Stop!" just seconds before the planes countnes. For exarr&gt;ple, ,fan Amencan conAdministration, which has already launched its would have collided. It was too late for that, troller wants a plane to go to a runway and
C· .
own effort to reduce su~h incidents and plans but the Korean pilot was able to lift off early stop until given further directions, the pilot
SANDUSKY (AP) - A baby steps of Dolinsky's mobile home a national runway safety smiuniqune 26-2(l.
and veer sharply to the left, avoiding disaster.
will be told to "taxi and hold short" or "posisitter offered additional details in northern Ohio.
In the Providence case last Dec. 6, United , In their recommendations, board members tion and hold short." The ICAO direction
Detective Robert Lippert said Airlines Flight 1448 became lost in the fog and criticized the FAA for slow progress in devel- would be "line up and wait:'
dur!ng an in~rview about the
dea!h of an 18-month-old girl in Tuesday that, initially, Dolinsky
her-care, in Erie County sheriff's said Belinda fell from the third
step onto a concrete driveway at
detective testified Tuesday.
Samantha Dolinsky, 31, is the bottom of the steps. then
accused of killing Be)inda Boyd went unconscious.
However, Lippert said Dolinby shaking her in May 1999.
transmitted without his permis- companies:• Smith, of Brookline,
pointed questioning.
Dolinsky faces charges of murder, sky added specific details in a
WASHINGTON . (AP)
involuntary manslaughter and third interview after the girl died. Some Internet advertising compa"If local shops did things like sion to DoubleClick. He found Mass., told senators. "It's almost
child endangering.
When asked if anything else nies are watching every click and this, we'd be outraged;' said Sen. that all kinds of information like they have put hidden microDefense lawyers maintain that could have _caused the girl's drag that computer users make at Richard Bryan, D-Nev.
entered into Web forms can then phones in our homes and our
the girl diecl from injuries she injuries, Dolinsky recounted "like home or in the office, and the
Both Bernstein and the indus- be passed on, by the Web site to an offices and they are listening to
received falling ·down the back a revelation" that the girl fell sev- Senate is considering doing ~ome­ try executives testified about the advertising network.
what we do all day long."
eral other times during that day, thing to stop it.
New York-based DoubleClick
formation of the Network AdverThe problem can get serious
Lippert said in Erie County
Jodie Bernstein, director of the . rising Initiative, a plan for self-reg- said the transmission of personal
when Internet users register with
Common Pleas Court.
Bureau of Consumer Protection ulation to head off congressional data is inadvertent and that the
'
'
"It was the first time I heard at the Federal Trade Commission, action. While such an ~greement company is not using the infor- the sites or fiU out a form when
they seck information or shop for
about some of those specific showed senators at a hearingTues- may not come for several weeks, mation to target consumers.
details;' Lippert said.
"We don't save it, or keep it at products.That data is automaticalday how Web sites and advertising they said there is still no guarantee
(IJSPUI3-)
Also called to the stand was companies track users through that the organization's members all. It won't ever be involved in ly sent to various outside parties,
ObloVIIIo7hblolllqCo.
Publl111ed ever)' afttmoon, Monday throuah
Stella Miron, Cuyahoga County cookies - small text files stored - some of the leading Internet how we deliver ads;' said Jules often companies like DouFriday, 111 COurt S1., Pamci'D)', Ohio, by the
deputy coroner.
advertising companies - will be Polonetsky, DoubleClick's privacy bleClick that place Internet ads
and read on a user's hard drive.
Ohio Volle1 Mil..... ComJOI"''·• Pomen&gt;,,
Ohio 4!769, Ph. 992-21$6. Se,.,nd •lalf poll·
all
of
the
injuries
Miron
said
Through these files , usually able to agree on a plan that's officer.
and track how many people see
... paid II Pomero)', Olllo.
Belinda suffered could "absolute- containing an identification num- amenable to the FTC.
Other well-koown sites like them. The user doesn't have to
M•~ The AUoclated Pru~, tnd lhl Ohio
ly not" have , been caused by just ber, ad companies see where cusRichard Smith, a retired pro- Alta Vista, Rea!Networks and even click on the ad for informaN~per Atloclallon.
falling down.
gramnler
and business executive Travelocity have passed along pertomers travel on the Internet and
POn'MASTIR1 Send lddraa ccmcc:lionl 10
tion to be se nt.
'De Dally ScnUnel, Ill Coun St ., Pomeroy,
who has turned to securiry and sonally identifying information to
govern what ads ~hey see.
Smith called the problem "data
Ohio 4!769.
Members of the Senate Com- privacy consulting, testified how DoubleClick, Smith said.
liiJI5CRIPriON IATU
"The data collection systems spillage." He and other experts
merce Com1nittee were especiaUy even he w~s surprised that so
By Can1tr or Motor Rou&amp;e
One \Ycall: ..................................................$2.00
concerned .about personal infor- much data is sent to ad networks. that the Internet ad companies are said that in many cases, Web sites
One """''h ................................................ $8.10
Smith tried to learn more currently running are getting per- don't even know they're forwardmation being used in profiling,
One Year ... ........... ................................. $104.00
Page AI
and testimony from ad companies about diabetes on a popular Web sonal and ·sensitive information ing the personal data .
SINGLECOPYPIUCE .
Dtlly ............................. ....................... $0 Cenu
repaired and certified as safe on DoubleClick and Engage did little health site, entering 'his e-mail that almost everyone will agree is
'
to assuage their concerns in the address and "diabetes:• and it was none of the business of these
Sublerlben 1101 deslrina to pay the e~tricr ma)'
a priority basis.
rtmllln advance direct 10 'nle Dally Scnlincl
A committee established by
oaa tbrt:c. six or 12 monlh buill. Credit will be
aJven carrier each week.
the parties will then review the
safety
and maintenance proceNo ubKdpliOD by mall r,rmlu~ In treaa
where home carrier ICIYk:l a avalltblc.
dures on a regular basis, the
!
statement
said.
·Publlshci' rachocathc riahlto adj111t ralel dur•
·lftJ lhlaubacriptlon peilod. Subterlpelon rate
Soulsby said Monday that six
·ctllftlll may be Implemented·by dl•nal•l the
cars
were recently "red-tagged"
"durllion ofd.C al.lbscripdon.
,
and taken out of se rvice after a
MAILSUISCRII'TIONS
mid 60s .
mechanic at C&amp;A Auto in
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
:
Iaside Mellt Coantr
·l)W.eb .......................................... .......S27.30
Pomeroy deemed them un safe.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy with
Forecasters say the rai n is com'26 We&lt;b ........................................... "....S$3.12
"!l We&lt;b .............................. ................ SI0!.!6
That left the department with ing to the tri-county region scattered showers and thunder~
a.ta O.lddt Mtltl C..•IJ
five cars on the road.
and staying for a while.
storms. Highs from the mid 80s.
·ll We&lt;b ................................................. l2l&gt;.l.!
16 v.lceb .................................................S$6.68
"This really takes coverage
The National Weather Service
Extended forecast
' l We&lt;b ..........................._.. ................ SI09.72
away from the citizens of Meigs expects scattered showers and
Thursday night... A chance of
Reddet Setvtct•s
County," Soulsby said, "a nd thunderstorms beginning Thur.- thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
that's unfortunate. We will now day aod . lasting through the
Frjday. .. A chance of showers
be forced to prioritize the calls weekend, with highs in the 80s
and thunderstorms. Highs 80 to
that come in, and we'll have to and lows in the 60s.
85.
eliminate or strictly limit rou Forecast
Saturday.. .A chance of showers
tine patrols around the county."
Today... lncreasing clouds this
Soulsby indicated Tuesday afternoon. A c hance of thunder- 'and thunderstorms. Lows in the
that he was "satisfied at this storms this evening. Highs near 60s. Highs 80 to 85.
Sunday... A chan ce of showers
point," and that the agreement 90.
, as reached would likely chillithunderstorms. Lows 60 to
and
Tonight ... Showers and thunnate his .concerns
derstorms likely. Lows from th e 65 . Highs near 80.

from

W.

HAMILTON (AP) - A man
charged with telephone harassment kept more than 230 diaries
chronicling the crimes, authorities
said.
Larry Mullins, 53, of Hamilton,
used the journals to keep track of
traffic deaths, Ojissing persons and
other .. news-making tragedies.
Then he telephoned the victims'
relatives aro11nd the anniversaries
of the events and claimed to have
new · information, , said Butler
County Sheriff's Maj. Anthony
Dwyer.
"The crime that he's committing is not that serious ... but the
emotional impact it has on the victims is pretty severe;' Dwyer said.
Mullins has been charged with
telephone. harassment in Butler
•te'jll!ma- re~M"tl'f'"il! "l~rin~
County's Morl!ailTO\Y~flll$"
scheduled to appear in Area I machin'e message from a man wl'lo
Court on Thunclay. He alto !1 fac· !lid he needed to talk to a 13·"~
ina: charp~ in a limilar cue in old girl whose mother had belli
Clermont Councy'l Miami 'lbwn· · lcilled In a ear wtcck In May 1990.

'!Hdii

-

••

The Oai.ly Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

0

•'

. Henry E . Cleland, Jr., Kathleen M. CleWolfe, Christina K. Wolfe, deed, Middleport;
Steve L. Stewart, Kelly Leigh Stewart, land, to Christine A. Martin, deed, Pomeroy;
Kelly Leigh Stewart, to Steve L. Stewart,
Roger L. Jeffers, Japet M. Jeffers, to
Kelly Leigh. Stewart, deed, Rutland;
Roman Catholic Diocese, deed, Salisbuiyf. i
Steve L. Stewart, Kelly Lee Stewart, to
Max Knopp, Jill Knopp, to Jerry Powell,
James B. Wolfe, deed, Rutland/Salisbury;
Margaret Powell, easement, Sutton .
" '
Alfred ,0. Roush, to Karen J. Vanmatre,
The following land transfers were recordWilberV:Vanmatre, deed, Pomeroy;
ed at the Mason County Clerk's office. _ .•
Robert W Mahr, deceased, to Freda C.
Bruce A. Wallace, Inc., A West ,Virginia
Mahr, affidavit, Scipio;
Corp., Grantor; Janet M. Vanclief, !:&gt;rantee.
Freda Mae Vaninwagen, deceased, to Parcel Hannan District, Consdieration Value:
Ernest Vaninwagen , affidavit, Scipio;
o\
$98,000
Athens Landmark Inc., to Meigs County
Judith Ann Kay, f/k/a Judith Ann Eads
Community, agreement;
and Charles E. Kay, Grantor; Pavid R. I?•~!
John S. Codner, Beverly L. Codner, to and Donna J. Deal, Grantee. Parcel L~w,~
Dolly R. Warden, deed, Racine;
District, Consideration Value: $55,000
.. , .
J!Jhn S. Codner, Beverly L. Codner, to
Ronald G. Mayes and Kelli R . May~~
Arminta Mindy K. Hill, deed, Racine;
Grantor; Virginia Ruth Jacabs, Grantee. ·Lot
Ada M. Bibbee, deceased, to Gerald
No. 20, Section 1, Meadowhill, Robins.Qn
Bibbee, certificate, Olive;
Richard A. Hagerty, Dorothy Hagerty, to District, Consideration Value! $8,500 . · ,•·,
M aljorie S. Patterson, Grantor; Carol .l\1
Terry R. Gregory, Barbara L. Gregory, deed,
Patt~rson,
Grantee. Town of HendersQn;
Salem;
Rodney Davis, Roger Davis, Kay Davis, . District of Clendenin, Consideration Valuv;
'J"' nI
Rosalie Hood, to Randall A. Storms, Sherri $1 500.
Alicia
A
.
Cale,
f/k/a
Alicia
A.
Grimm
ancl
L. Storms, deed, Rutland;
Ronald K. Furguson, to Michael A. Mat- Ronald P. Cale, Grantor; John M. Bea:vel\
Grantee. Lot No. 86, Meadowland Estaft
tea, deed, Salisbury;
·
Subdivision,
Robinson District, Consi~t!llo
Mary L. Hudson, to Owen E . Wiseman,
tion Value: 82,000.
·
deed, Rutland;

· AU of the athltttl have quallfitd for chit ewnl by eompellna In
Sprln11 Oamta In tholr lllptctlve 11111. Tht athlttaa will vie for top
honon In tho •porta or athlttlCI (track lc fttiO), l!iUitlQii bocce,

bowUPIJ, cycllns.IYJ1lnJitlct, pllWtrllftln,,roUtnkallna ~ardtdc and
tp..d), aocctr, ten nil and volloyb.U,
.·
Compt.lltlon 11 tlated to btlin at 2/.m. on Pdday, Juno 23 at
Thomaa WorthlnJIIon Hll!h Sehaal an th1 Wo1t Campul o( Th1
Ohio State Unlvulity. Comp1titlon wW continuo th10111h Friday
~enlna and run 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sat\lrday and 7:30 a.m. to
noon an Sundiy it vuiaut venue~ an the campu1 of Tho Ohio
State Univenity and Thoma• Worthington High School.
Opening Ceremonies will begin at 6:45 p.m. on )11ne ~3 in St.
John Arena. The Ceremonies will incl11de Jive entertainment, a
parade of athletes, the culmination of the Law Enforcement Tareh
Run ond Fireworks.
.
Approximately 3,000 volunteers will donate their ti111e and
resources to make this event a success.Volunteers'will serve as venue
managers, officials and event sraff to conduct the athletic competitions. Service organizations such as the Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts,
YMCA groups and various civic and corporate empl\)yee associations will serve as volunteers dl)ring the weekend. :
Sponsors for the Summer Games include th~ Free" &amp; Accepted
Masons of Ohio, Civilian of OhiO, AMVETS, The Law Enforcement Torch Run and Security Link by Ameritech.
All events are free and open to the public.

VVedneada~June14,2000

..

Safety Board makes recommendations for runways
.

...

LOCAL STOCKS

2,. 5'·

'

~ete(:tive ·saY.s baby sitter·

.offered details in baby death

Some Web sites send customer info to ad companies

The Daily Sentinel

Grievance
from

'

.

VALLEY ·WEATHE ·R
Here comes the rain·again

. '•

••

•

'

�~!h_e_D_a....;ily;...._,Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _·l y the

Page A4

0. . . P-inion

Wednesday, June 14, l._

._rh_e_
·o_ai...;;.ly_Se_n_tin_e_l_ _____,_ _ _ _ _

Generel

Men~ger

HOO~YOUR

FATHER&amp;!
FE£LSEEIN6
Gk&gt;ANDMA$

~rry

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
Diane Key Hill

Boyer

Advenlelng Director

s~nt in

RED R'OING

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

· Dear Readers: The following was
by Judson Barefoot of Raleigh,
N .C., and it is perfect for today, Flag Day.
1he author is unknown: A Cut Above
: I am your Flag. I have been kicked,
trampled, burned, and shot full of holes. I
IUve fought battles r but I prefer the
~ntroubled air of a world at peace.
• I am your Flag. I represent the free dom of humanity, and I shall fly high,
thundering in silence for the whole
world to hear: My gentle rqstling in the
b:reeze sounds out the warning to all
~ho would buty me forever that below
stands a population dedicated to liberty.
: For those who have perished for my
right to freedom of flight , for those who
Will die, and indeed, for those who will
live, I stand as a symbol of freedom-loving people.
. I have been carried into battle in fara':"'"y lands, always for the cause of free-

.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Charlea W. Govey
Publlahlf'

ABAD

Controller

IDEA.

Lltttn 10 lltt fdilor.,. wllt:Diftt, TlltJ llw•U H 1#11 tltu JIJO wonh. All lfMtn .,. tU}m
10 t4ilinl 4NlllflllliH ,q,.ld fl1141fttldt IMUrtu 1M ulf,UM adlbtr. No flllllpH '-tt.n •ill
1H p~tb&amp;ltftL Utttn •M..Jd .. ill r«Mt.ulf, 11Mr.nhl1 luJUJ, INJIIfrtiHIIIIJtlfl·
n. opildcuu ,..,,..,.~ill a.. t:oiMJIUt ..,,.. au til• ~,..,....
0/Uo VlliiJ hMilllbtt
Co. 't Hlilorlal bool'fl, .,.,.., ollt•rwl.tt MIMI.

,of,.,

OUR VIEW

Lefs do it

.•

:TODAY IN HISTORY
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Today is Wednesday.June 14, the 166th day of2000.There are 200
Qays left in the year. This is Aag Day.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress in Philadelphia
adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag.
: On this date:
: In 1775, the U.S. Army was founded.
: In 1846, a group of U.S. settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the
Republic of California.
; In 1922, Warren G. Harding became the first president heard on
(adio, as Baltimore station WEAR broadcast his speech dedicating
Q\e Francis Scott Key memorial at Fort Mclienry.
• In 1940, German troops entered Paris.
; In 1940, at Auschwitz. in German-occupied Poland, the Nazis
t!pened their concentration camp.
: In 1943, the Supreme Court ruled schoolchildren could not be
~ompelled to salute the U.S. flag if it conflicted with their religious
BeliefS.
.~ In 1954, President Eisenhower signed an order adding the words .
: under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.
• In 1967, the space probe Mariner 5 was laun~hed from Cape
Kennedy on a flight that took it past Venus.
: In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to. British troops on the
4isputed Falkland Islands.
: In 1985, the 17-day hijack ordeal ofTWA Aight 847 began as
iwo Lebanese Shiite Muslim extremists seized the jetliner shortly
~r takeoff from Athens, Greece.
~ Ten years ago: The Supreme Court, 6-3, upheld police checkpoints that examine drivers for signs of intOXication.
.
Five years ago: Stephen Yokich was elected president of the United Auto Workers at the union's triennial cormmrion in Anaheim,
Calif

.

•

ADVICE
dom. I am bloodstained, torn, and many
times wearied and saddened by the thousands who have paid the supreme sacrifice. Do not let it all be for nothing. Tell
me the brave have all died for a worthwhile cause. Be proud of what I represent, and display me for all to see.
Whether you call me "Old Glory;'
" Stars and Stripes" or "Star- Spangled
Banner;· I shall fly forever as a symbol of
your freedom, as I did for your ancestors,

complete with a map. Apparently, she
didn't realize that there are police who
can read Spanish, roo.What do you think
of this? - Laurie in Utah
Dear Laurie: I think the Madame is
muy brilliance and will probably rake in
mucho dinero - once she gets out of
the slammer. There will always be a market for her wares, and nothing is going to
change that.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funn y to the poignantly insightful . Send a self-addressed, long, businesssize envelope and a chec k or money
order for $5.25 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers,
PO. Box 11562, C hi cago, Ill. 606110562. (In Canada, send S6 .25.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

time to find some fun, safe
activities for our teen-agers

: if

Ann
Landers

phone · calls, the beautiful letters? My
newest booklet, " How We Met," is a collection of sentimental love stories that
have appeared in my column over the
past few years. It will make a lovely keepsake or a memorable gift for.that special
someone in your life. For a copy. please
send a self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a chec k or money order for
$5.50 (this includes postage and handling) to: How We Met, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562 . C hicago. Ill.
60611-0562 (In Canada, $6.50).
Dear Ann Landen: Here's one for
your stupid crooks file, a bit different
than the ones you usually print:
Police learned about a ho use of prostitution in Salt Lake City because the
owner decided to advertise. She printed
up some fliers in Spanish that described
the nature of her business, the price for
sex ($35) and the location of the house,

and as I shall for your heirs.
I am YOUR Flag.
Dear Readers: This year marks the
21st anniversary of the first National
Pause for the Pledge of Allegian ce. Please
take a few moments at 7 p.m., Eastern
T ime (that's 6 p.m. in C hicagt&gt;, 5 p.m. in
Denver, 4 p.m . in L.A., and 2 p.m. in
Honolulu) to recite the Pledge. The
words, written in 1892 by Francis Bellamy, are: "I pledge allegiance to the Flag
of the United States of America and to
the Republic for which it stands, one
nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
If you have an Ametican flag, remember to display it starting today through
July 4th. If you do not own a flag, now
would be a good time to buy one.
Dear Readers: Remember all those
things that brought you and your loved
one together? The slighlly goofy. endless
I

It~

"There is nothing to do in Point Pleasant."
"There is nothing to do in Gallipolis."
"There is nothing to do in Pomeroy."
.. • "There is nothing to do in (fill in the blank)."
: At least that's the unofficial belief held by many tri-county teen~agers . And, for the most part, they're right. There's not a whole lot
~for residents in the 13- 18 age group to do.
:
Most adolescents would like to see a
Uiluldn 't it
teen center where they could have music,
. be great for
dance and get something to eat. They say
it doesn't have to be fancy; a warehouse
: economic growth type facility would do.
the tri-county
They want more sports facilities like
area became the batting cages, miniature golf and indoor
teen center of basketball courts.
Most of all, they want some place to
so~thern Ohio
hang out with their friends.
·
and western U'est
We can hear the complaints now Virginia?
teens are noisy, they leave a men, etc. If
that logic is to be followed, we'd never
·have a college ballgame or NASCAR race.
'. · Of course, teens are noisy. They laugh, they get excited, they're
·ljving life in a wonderful way. And, yes, a few do leave botlles and
'~!ins around the region, but so do adults who should know better.
~ • We hope some local entrepreneurs come up 'IVith the cash and
.~uild some of these facilities in the tri-county region. There is
:,noney to be made. Teens have more disposable income. than any·
one except senior citizens. It's a shame so much of it goes to Huntlngton, Athens and other areas.
: Until such facilities are built, however, we hope teens give the
·places and things that are already in existence another chance. We
:~;specially hope more teens give our downtowns a tty.
: Wouldn't it be great for economic growth if the tri-county area
. ~ecame the teen center of southern Ohio and western West VirSinia? Indeed, our economic livelihood depends on retaining the
youngsters who grow up here and attracting fresh young blood.
.• We 'd like to see inline skate shops, alternative clothing stores and
more eating establishments in our downtowns. Teen doijars could
bring all those in and more.
; Let's bridge the generation gap and do something for our young·$ters.
.
' Teen-agers have a real need to be with their peers. The teen years
;re marked by social exchange, and today's teens face things daily
ihat most adults could only imagine while they were growing up.
: Talking with friends is sometimes their only way of coping. We
need to guide them in many ways, but in many ways, we need to
illow them to find their own path.
: There is something wrong when the highlight. of an evening is
jitting in a car talking. We can provide more for them. While teens
}viTI always want to cruise and show off their cars and see and be
seen, there has to be more to their lives.
: Let's get our communities behind them and try to do something.
We do owe it to them.
; After all, they are the one's who could turn the economic tide for
(his region.

Wednesday, June 14,2000

Ann pays tribute to the patriotism on Flag Day

The Daily Sentinel
'£stiiD{i.s/iei in 1948

Bend

Page AS

.

•••

public.

WEDNESDAY, June 14
Big
; TUPPERS PLAINS Bend Farm Antique Club,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at the Fairgrounds office.

...

-

RACiNE - Southern High
School
Athletic
Boosters,
Wednesday, 7 ·p.m. at school.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Bitten by law
Dear Editor:
I have been bitten by a law I didn't know
existed.
This law is Section 207, 42 USC 407', the
right of any person to any future payment
under !his title shall not be transferable or
assignable, at law or in ·equity, and none of the
monies paid or payable or rights existing
under this title shall be subject to execution
levy, attachment, garnishment or other legal
process, or to the operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.
I urge all citizens who do business with
people on fixed incomes of certain types to
punue this law an~ ~he~with adminbtering,
agencies to see lfow they •c ould be affected.
Ralph G. Brown
Crown City

A little extreme
Dear ·Editor:
I feel compelled to encourage you to report
on the. profiling of students by the federal
government.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms has a new computer system that
thinks it can tell if your child is a potentially
violent threat to his or her classmates in
school.
The BATF has teamed up with a computer
company to develop a system to profile young
students, and the program is called "Mosaic
2000." .
It uses a series of carefully worded questions
to evaluate the possible threat of violence
from individual students. Two of the questions
for them to .answer are: 1). Do you have the
availability 'of getting a gun? and 2.) do you
have friends with gun access?
A New York Times newspaper article
quotes an Ohio school administrator who
asserts that the computerized system will help
with documentation of the schools' ·handling
of a. troubled student so that doubting parents
could no longer challenge an administrator's
judgment as too ~ubjective .
Since FBI crime reports show that school
violence is actually on the decline, mos[ reasonable people might see that computer profiling of students (based on software originally designed for the Secret Service to evaluate
potential assassins) is a little extreme.
You can find this information in the Spring
2000 issue of Shield, the Law Enforcement
Alliance of America's magazine on Page 17,
and you can contact the LEM at Law
Enforcement Alliance of America, 7700 Leesburg Pike, Suite 421 , Fall$ Church,Va. 22043.
Phone 1-703-847-2677,fax 1- 703-556-6485.
Roger D. Edwards Jr.
Leon, W.Va.

Tell me why
Dear Editor:
I was out of town and came back to read a
write-up in the Sunday paper about how
great Guiding Hand School is. ·
I have a grandson who has attended the
school for six years.
·
He is handicapped, unable to walk, but is
very intelligent. Yes, he can say his ABCs and
count, but cannot put any of this on paper. So
tell me why! We all feel he should be able to
write all of this on paper.

His stepdad worked with him for two hours
and had him spelling his first and last name. So
what is going on in this school? The ones that
are capable of learning should have one-onone help or tutors to work with th em outside
of ihe classroom, where there was a lot of disruption.
Seems like every time I visit the school , he
is on the floor playing with toys. T hey ca n do
this at home.
I picked him up at school on May 5 bmuse
his mother was at work.
A student was asked to go to the playground and get him for me. Is thi s student
job, to take care of another student?
When I went out t&lt;l get him , he was
brought to me in a wheelchair. His knees
werf nw from ·crawling on blacktop in 80degree weather. I was told that they had hil11
in the grass, and decided he wanted to crawl
on the blacktop.
. So does this tell you how good th e school
u?
Where are the teachers and aides? Who is
taking care of our children?
Where was the staff that was su pposed to be
watching our children?
. This is neglect.
I'm really very unhappy with the school.
How are our handicapped children to make it
on their own?
I feel the state and cou nty are paying a high
price for babysitting.
Barbara Angel Chambers
Gallia Coun ty

a

Thanks to EMS ·

them. A simple thank you or a handshake wiJI
let them know how much you appreciate.
every one of them. Please support your local
EMS.
.
If they were not there, who would com~
when you need help?
:·.
Bill Prater
Gallia Coun~
'

of

.

\ .

Making it possible

·;'

Dear Editor:
l
Vinton village mayor and council would
like to take this opportunity to thank the fo!lowing individuals, groups and organizatiops
fQr t~eir recent suppor;t and assistance during
Glean-Up Day in th~aiJC on May' . . .
Those deserving of our expression ofthan~s
and gratitude arc Rowdy Rascals 4-H Club
and advisor Stephanie Alexander; Boy Sco~t
, T~oop 2l4membersJustinVarney andJere~­
ah Gilbert, and Scoutmaster Gene Holcom~;
C ub Scout Pack 214 member BJ, Gilbert a~d
' den leader for the pack, Gary Gilbert; Courtn,ey Gilbert; Erin Gilbert; Happy Hippy Hauling, Random Acts of Kindness Fund and
owner Clyde King; Annie McCarley; Lori
Bullion; and Flem Meade.
We would also like to express our thanks to
the 1\eep Gallia Beautiful organization for
sponsoring the countywide dean-up, and
supporting o ur efforts to have a hub locall~
within the village on the same day.
And finally, we would like to thank th~
State Highway Department for providing
safety vests, gloves and trash bags.
.
Donna Lynn DeWi~t
Vinton

,

.

.,

Support Parkinson's group
Pear Editor:
..
Dave Purdy, national award winner, is COlnT
ing to town!
You remember Dave; he:s the guy whQ
heads up the Parkinson's support groups ill
central and southern Ohio. Dave knows what
it's all about since he was diagnosed with P.D:
in 1978 at the age of37: (Parkinson's is a pro,
grcssivc m0vement disorder.)
Dave's philosophy is " Life does go on." He's
living proof that It is possible. Since taking an
early retirement, he has lectured both natiOIJ.rJ
ally and internationally to groups of pharma; ,
cists, doctors and other medical people, anc;l •
others who are interested in PD.
..
Dave also · works tirelessly to create and ..
maintain support groups k11owing that educ~·:
cion and sharing with others is important in..
maintaining qu&lt;,Jiity of life.
:,
In his spare time Dave writes articles for .
newsletters and journals. He's always there to .
encourage others.
.
· We're pro ud to say Dave received the Side"
ney Dorros Award June 9 at Columbus, Ohiq, '
This is a national honor with nominations·
coming from all states. The date is significant
in that it is Mi chael J. Fox's birthday.
. ,
Dave and his wife Della will be speakers at.,
the local su pport group at 2 p.m. Friday. The~~ ·,
topic: Accepting and Understanding 01!1' ,
Parkinson's Disease. Meetings are held in t~r;,
library of Grace United Methodist Church; •
600 Second Ave. , Gallipolis, and are free an4·:
open 10 all who have an interest in Parkin- .
son's.
','
.
' ]
Juanite Woolf ,
Gallipolis' ,
(7 40) 446-08Q8 .

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·21511

'

•

•••

SATURDAY,June 17
RACINE The Racine
Board of Public Affairs, Friday,
10:30 a.m. at the Municipal

POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR:
annual picnic, Saturday, Chester

Academy, 1 p.m. Meat and beverages provided . .

will be from Meigs and Gallia
Counties. Public invited.

Star
SALEM CENTER Grange 778, to host Ohio State
Grange District 3 Talent Contest,
Saturday, 12:30 p.m. Contestants

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778, Saturday, fun night
activities, to begin with potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m .

THURSDAY,june 15
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted
Masons, work in the fellowcraft
degree.

All This Week

We accept Visa, o•~cover
and MasterCard

DOUBLE

•••

Manufacturer's

FRIDAY,June 16

COUPONS

POMEROY - The Meigs
County arthritis support group,
Friday. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in
the conference room, Mejgs
County Senior Citizen's Center.
Activity options to be discussed.

.

200 Mlln St., Point PIHunt, W.Vo.j
304-e7&amp;-1333

.•

amilp
edicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Al•ociate Profeuot
·of Family Medicine

,..

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

•••

Building.

,

Dear Editor:
May 14-20 was Nati onal EMS Week, a
week celebrated every yea r to honor the men
and women who respond to the needs of th e
sick and injured in our commun ities.
Some volunteer their time while others arc
part of a county or municipal system, paid for
their efforts. Regardless of th e circumstances
or rewards, they are always there to rare for
and comfort their neighbors in a time of
need. We owe them a hu ge amount of gratitude.
Here at Holzer Medical Center, we celebrate each year with a cookotlt to honor th ese
professionals.
This year was no exception. On May 18, we
held our annual party and had an overwhelming turnout.
Attending were Gallia Co unty EMS, Meigs
County EMS, SEOEMS District EMS, Life
Ambulance, Point Pleasant EMS; Vint on
County EMS, MedFlight MIC U, MedFli ght
air crew, nurses, physicians and members of
administration from HM C.
Many people from these agenci es and th eir
families were here to celebrate with us. Good
food, good conversation and a chance to catch
up with old friends was served in ge nerous
portions.
A special thanks goes to those who do nated
door prizes for this event. This year we had
several donations from the community, as well
as services that are EMS and hospital based .
They are Wai-Mart of Gallipolis, K mart of
Gallipolis, Snouffer's Fire and Safety of Gallipolis, HealthNet A erotne~i cal Service of
Cabell Huntington Hospital, M edFlight Services of Ohio, and of course, the staff and
administration of HMC for their ~ngoin g
support each year.
The EMTs and paramedics in yo ur community are there for yo u whenever you nee d

125 Third Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio
740-448·2342

RACINE - Revival services
~ be held Wednesday through
Saturday at the Full Gospel
Church of the Living Savior, 7
p.m. each evening. Ralph Savage
Columbus will be the guest
speaker. On Saturday evening a
potluck dinner will be held at 6
p.m. Singers: Hattie Sellen, the
Free Gospel Singers and Larry
Jones. Pastor Jesse Morris invites

POMEROY
American
Red Cross Bloodmobile, Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior
Center, Wednesday, 1 to 6 p.m.

Anyone with arthritis or with
someone in the family with the
diseases, urged to attend.

24 Pack Rundle

Foodland
KID8 Size

CharmIn
Bath Tissue

-=·=~ s

White Bread

88

on
••lllhlo
I', 1M

s

Life without agallbladder
reminds you to eat healthy

· Queation: What does the gall- learn that 80 percent of the popubladder do, and what problems• lation ultimately develops these
should I expect if I must have stones. Most of us, however, are
mine removed?
fortunate and.our gallstones never
Answer: I'll describe the gall- cause any problem$. On the other•
bladder's location and role in good hand, about 500,000 people each
liealth first. The gallbladder is a year do have sufficient pain that
muscular, sack-like structure they must have their gallbladders
attached to the liver, which is removed.
located in the right upper part of
You shouldn't panic if your
the abdomen under the lower ribs doctor recommends that you join
on that side. Confused? You this large group of "gallbladderthought the lungs were the organs less" individuals. The immediate
protected by the ribs, didn't you? 'lr risks of surgery ate relatively
Well, they are. However, the nbs sriJall, and I'm sure that he or she
also form a bony cage that pro- will explain these to you and your
tee~ the liver. The diaphra~ sep- family. The . long-term conseantes the lungs, which are m. t~e · quences, fortunately, are also
chest, from the liver, which IS m rather small.The liver continues to
the abdomen,
make bile, just as you would
· The liver Is one of the most assume. However now it continuimpo~nt organs of the body. It is ally drips the bil; into the duodea ventable chenucal facto~ !hat num instead ofbeing stored in the
converts the foods and medicmes gallbladder until a high-fat meal is
we consume into substances the eaten.
bOdy can use. The liver also recyEating a high-fat meal after
c)es various by-products of the having the gallbladder removed
body's chemical reactions into
can overwhelm the amount of
other usable compounds or waste
bile that is available to assist in its
products. It is in this role as a recydigestion. Consequendy, a stomcling center that the liver proachache and or diarrhea ensues.
duces the substance called bile.
These complications are signifiBile is made from cholesterol, cercantly less frequent and less .
tain fat-like substances, pigments
intense than the discomfort that .
that are the residue of recycled
made it . necessary to have the
blood cells, and other composurgery in the first place.
nents. The liver produces bile
My patients who have had
· rather slowly, and then stores it
their gallbladders removed rarely
within the gallbladder.
complain
about their decision.
· Bile is used in the emulsification, digestion and absorption of The amount of discomfort associfoods, particularly fats. The gall- ated with eating a high-fat meal is
bladder collects bile as the liver minimal' and usually is viewed
pibduces it. Then, when it is called simply ·as a reminder to eat a
for to help digest that burger and healthy diet rather than an
fries you had for lunch, it is infringement upon their lifestyles.
"squirted" into the digestive tract
"Family Medicine" is a
at ·a point just "downstream" from
weekly
column. To submit
the stomach in an atea called the
questions, write to John C.
duodenum.'!ypically this addition
Wolf,
D.O., Ohio University
o'f bile begins about 30 minutes
College of Osteopathic Medi·
after eating a high-fat meal.
.At times the bile can become cine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
so concentrated that stones form Ohio 45701. Past columns are
~ithin it, thereby creating gall- available online at www.thradio.org/fm.
~lones . You might be surprised to

An~ size package

Tenderbest
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New York StriP.Steak

s

..

Father' sDa
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s

99

Lb.

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oacoratea.

cake for Dad

Ssturay,
~~17

")Nc:xx"a to 4

I'V'II'I~

And Up

Family Pack
Western Style

Asst.

Crisco
Oil

Pork Ribs ·

$ 59

Lb.

48 oz. bottle

Asst.
Prego Pasta
Sauce

Fresh Baked
Apple or
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Broughton
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20/o Milk

Z/$227·28~

SJ:!!
Asst.

Flavo~

Asst. Varieties

Rocky Top

Soft Drinks

Mueller's
Pasta

Sunny Delight

' 99084~

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Wernerve1he

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to limit

end1renot

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Ripe

Tomatoes

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Garden Fresh
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Prlcee elllctlv8 thru 581. June 17 2000

or

(

�~!h_e_D_a....;ily;...._,Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _·l y the

Page A4

0. . . P-inion

Wednesday, June 14, l._

._rh_e_
·o_ai...;;.ly_Se_n_tin_e_l_ _____,_ _ _ _ _

Generel

Men~ger

HOO~YOUR

FATHER&amp;!
FE£LSEEIN6
Gk&gt;ANDMA$

~rry

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
Diane Key Hill

Boyer

Advenlelng Director

s~nt in

RED R'OING

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

· Dear Readers: The following was
by Judson Barefoot of Raleigh,
N .C., and it is perfect for today, Flag Day.
1he author is unknown: A Cut Above
: I am your Flag. I have been kicked,
trampled, burned, and shot full of holes. I
IUve fought battles r but I prefer the
~ntroubled air of a world at peace.
• I am your Flag. I represent the free dom of humanity, and I shall fly high,
thundering in silence for the whole
world to hear: My gentle rqstling in the
b:reeze sounds out the warning to all
~ho would buty me forever that below
stands a population dedicated to liberty.
: For those who have perished for my
right to freedom of flight , for those who
Will die, and indeed, for those who will
live, I stand as a symbol of freedom-loving people.
. I have been carried into battle in fara':"'"y lands, always for the cause of free-

.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Charlea W. Govey
Publlahlf'

ABAD

Controller

IDEA.

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10 t4ilinl 4NlllflllliH ,q,.ld fl1141fttldt IMUrtu 1M ulf,UM adlbtr. No flllllpH '-tt.n •ill
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,of,.,

OUR VIEW

Lefs do it

.•

:TODAY IN HISTORY
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Today is Wednesday.June 14, the 166th day of2000.There are 200
Qays left in the year. This is Aag Day.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On June 14, 1777, the Continental Congress in Philadelphia
adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag.
: On this date:
: In 1775, the U.S. Army was founded.
: In 1846, a group of U.S. settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the
Republic of California.
; In 1922, Warren G. Harding became the first president heard on
(adio, as Baltimore station WEAR broadcast his speech dedicating
Q\e Francis Scott Key memorial at Fort Mclienry.
• In 1940, German troops entered Paris.
; In 1940, at Auschwitz. in German-occupied Poland, the Nazis
t!pened their concentration camp.
: In 1943, the Supreme Court ruled schoolchildren could not be
~ompelled to salute the U.S. flag if it conflicted with their religious
BeliefS.
.~ In 1954, President Eisenhower signed an order adding the words .
: under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.
• In 1967, the space probe Mariner 5 was laun~hed from Cape
Kennedy on a flight that took it past Venus.
: In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to. British troops on the
4isputed Falkland Islands.
: In 1985, the 17-day hijack ordeal ofTWA Aight 847 began as
iwo Lebanese Shiite Muslim extremists seized the jetliner shortly
~r takeoff from Athens, Greece.
~ Ten years ago: The Supreme Court, 6-3, upheld police checkpoints that examine drivers for signs of intOXication.
.
Five years ago: Stephen Yokich was elected president of the United Auto Workers at the union's triennial cormmrion in Anaheim,
Calif

.

•

ADVICE
dom. I am bloodstained, torn, and many
times wearied and saddened by the thousands who have paid the supreme sacrifice. Do not let it all be for nothing. Tell
me the brave have all died for a worthwhile cause. Be proud of what I represent, and display me for all to see.
Whether you call me "Old Glory;'
" Stars and Stripes" or "Star- Spangled
Banner;· I shall fly forever as a symbol of
your freedom, as I did for your ancestors,

complete with a map. Apparently, she
didn't realize that there are police who
can read Spanish, roo.What do you think
of this? - Laurie in Utah
Dear Laurie: I think the Madame is
muy brilliance and will probably rake in
mucho dinero - once she gets out of
the slammer. There will always be a market for her wares, and nothing is going to
change that.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets and
Doozies," has everything from the outrageously funn y to the poignantly insightful . Send a self-addressed, long, businesssize envelope and a chec k or money
order for $5.25 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Nuggets, c/o Ann Landers,
PO. Box 11562, C hi cago, Ill. 606110562. (In Canada, send S6 .25.) To find
out more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

time to find some fun, safe
activities for our teen-agers

: if

Ann
Landers

phone · calls, the beautiful letters? My
newest booklet, " How We Met," is a collection of sentimental love stories that
have appeared in my column over the
past few years. It will make a lovely keepsake or a memorable gift for.that special
someone in your life. For a copy. please
send a self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a chec k or money order for
$5.50 (this includes postage and handling) to: How We Met, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11 562 . C hicago. Ill.
60611-0562 (In Canada, $6.50).
Dear Ann Landen: Here's one for
your stupid crooks file, a bit different
than the ones you usually print:
Police learned about a ho use of prostitution in Salt Lake City because the
owner decided to advertise. She printed
up some fliers in Spanish that described
the nature of her business, the price for
sex ($35) and the location of the house,

and as I shall for your heirs.
I am YOUR Flag.
Dear Readers: This year marks the
21st anniversary of the first National
Pause for the Pledge of Allegian ce. Please
take a few moments at 7 p.m., Eastern
T ime (that's 6 p.m. in C hicagt&gt;, 5 p.m. in
Denver, 4 p.m . in L.A., and 2 p.m. in
Honolulu) to recite the Pledge. The
words, written in 1892 by Francis Bellamy, are: "I pledge allegiance to the Flag
of the United States of America and to
the Republic for which it stands, one
nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."
If you have an Ametican flag, remember to display it starting today through
July 4th. If you do not own a flag, now
would be a good time to buy one.
Dear Readers: Remember all those
things that brought you and your loved
one together? The slighlly goofy. endless
I

It~

"There is nothing to do in Point Pleasant."
"There is nothing to do in Gallipolis."
"There is nothing to do in Pomeroy."
.. • "There is nothing to do in (fill in the blank)."
: At least that's the unofficial belief held by many tri-county teen~agers . And, for the most part, they're right. There's not a whole lot
~for residents in the 13- 18 age group to do.
:
Most adolescents would like to see a
Uiluldn 't it
teen center where they could have music,
. be great for
dance and get something to eat. They say
it doesn't have to be fancy; a warehouse
: economic growth type facility would do.
the tri-county
They want more sports facilities like
area became the batting cages, miniature golf and indoor
teen center of basketball courts.
Most of all, they want some place to
so~thern Ohio
hang out with their friends.
·
and western U'est
We can hear the complaints now Virginia?
teens are noisy, they leave a men, etc. If
that logic is to be followed, we'd never
·have a college ballgame or NASCAR race.
'. · Of course, teens are noisy. They laugh, they get excited, they're
·ljving life in a wonderful way. And, yes, a few do leave botlles and
'~!ins around the region, but so do adults who should know better.
~ • We hope some local entrepreneurs come up 'IVith the cash and
.~uild some of these facilities in the tri-county region. There is
:,noney to be made. Teens have more disposable income. than any·
one except senior citizens. It's a shame so much of it goes to Huntlngton, Athens and other areas.
: Until such facilities are built, however, we hope teens give the
·places and things that are already in existence another chance. We
:~;specially hope more teens give our downtowns a tty.
: Wouldn't it be great for economic growth if the tri-county area
. ~ecame the teen center of southern Ohio and western West VirSinia? Indeed, our economic livelihood depends on retaining the
youngsters who grow up here and attracting fresh young blood.
.• We 'd like to see inline skate shops, alternative clothing stores and
more eating establishments in our downtowns. Teen doijars could
bring all those in and more.
; Let's bridge the generation gap and do something for our young·$ters.
.
' Teen-agers have a real need to be with their peers. The teen years
;re marked by social exchange, and today's teens face things daily
ihat most adults could only imagine while they were growing up.
: Talking with friends is sometimes their only way of coping. We
need to guide them in many ways, but in many ways, we need to
illow them to find their own path.
: There is something wrong when the highlight. of an evening is
jitting in a car talking. We can provide more for them. While teens
}viTI always want to cruise and show off their cars and see and be
seen, there has to be more to their lives.
: Let's get our communities behind them and try to do something.
We do owe it to them.
; After all, they are the one's who could turn the economic tide for
(his region.

Wednesday, June 14,2000

Ann pays tribute to the patriotism on Flag Day

The Daily Sentinel
'£stiiD{i.s/iei in 1948

Bend

Page AS

.

•••

public.

WEDNESDAY, June 14
Big
; TUPPERS PLAINS Bend Farm Antique Club,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m at the Fairgrounds office.

...

-

RACiNE - Southern High
School
Athletic
Boosters,
Wednesday, 7 ·p.m. at school.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Bitten by law
Dear Editor:
I have been bitten by a law I didn't know
existed.
This law is Section 207, 42 USC 407', the
right of any person to any future payment
under !his title shall not be transferable or
assignable, at law or in ·equity, and none of the
monies paid or payable or rights existing
under this title shall be subject to execution
levy, attachment, garnishment or other legal
process, or to the operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.
I urge all citizens who do business with
people on fixed incomes of certain types to
punue this law an~ ~he~with adminbtering,
agencies to see lfow they •c ould be affected.
Ralph G. Brown
Crown City

A little extreme
Dear ·Editor:
I feel compelled to encourage you to report
on the. profiling of students by the federal
government.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms has a new computer system that
thinks it can tell if your child is a potentially
violent threat to his or her classmates in
school.
The BATF has teamed up with a computer
company to develop a system to profile young
students, and the program is called "Mosaic
2000." .
It uses a series of carefully worded questions
to evaluate the possible threat of violence
from individual students. Two of the questions
for them to .answer are: 1). Do you have the
availability 'of getting a gun? and 2.) do you
have friends with gun access?
A New York Times newspaper article
quotes an Ohio school administrator who
asserts that the computerized system will help
with documentation of the schools' ·handling
of a. troubled student so that doubting parents
could no longer challenge an administrator's
judgment as too ~ubjective .
Since FBI crime reports show that school
violence is actually on the decline, mos[ reasonable people might see that computer profiling of students (based on software originally designed for the Secret Service to evaluate
potential assassins) is a little extreme.
You can find this information in the Spring
2000 issue of Shield, the Law Enforcement
Alliance of America's magazine on Page 17,
and you can contact the LEM at Law
Enforcement Alliance of America, 7700 Leesburg Pike, Suite 421 , Fall$ Church,Va. 22043.
Phone 1-703-847-2677,fax 1- 703-556-6485.
Roger D. Edwards Jr.
Leon, W.Va.

Tell me why
Dear Editor:
I was out of town and came back to read a
write-up in the Sunday paper about how
great Guiding Hand School is. ·
I have a grandson who has attended the
school for six years.
·
He is handicapped, unable to walk, but is
very intelligent. Yes, he can say his ABCs and
count, but cannot put any of this on paper. So
tell me why! We all feel he should be able to
write all of this on paper.

His stepdad worked with him for two hours
and had him spelling his first and last name. So
what is going on in this school? The ones that
are capable of learning should have one-onone help or tutors to work with th em outside
of ihe classroom, where there was a lot of disruption.
Seems like every time I visit the school , he
is on the floor playing with toys. T hey ca n do
this at home.
I picked him up at school on May 5 bmuse
his mother was at work.
A student was asked to go to the playground and get him for me. Is thi s student
job, to take care of another student?
When I went out t&lt;l get him , he was
brought to me in a wheelchair. His knees
werf nw from ·crawling on blacktop in 80degree weather. I was told that they had hil11
in the grass, and decided he wanted to crawl
on the blacktop.
. So does this tell you how good th e school
u?
Where are the teachers and aides? Who is
taking care of our children?
Where was the staff that was su pposed to be
watching our children?
. This is neglect.
I'm really very unhappy with the school.
How are our handicapped children to make it
on their own?
I feel the state and cou nty are paying a high
price for babysitting.
Barbara Angel Chambers
Gallia Coun ty

a

Thanks to EMS ·

them. A simple thank you or a handshake wiJI
let them know how much you appreciate.
every one of them. Please support your local
EMS.
.
If they were not there, who would com~
when you need help?
:·.
Bill Prater
Gallia Coun~
'

of

.

\ .

Making it possible

·;'

Dear Editor:
l
Vinton village mayor and council would
like to take this opportunity to thank the fo!lowing individuals, groups and organizatiops
fQr t~eir recent suppor;t and assistance during
Glean-Up Day in th~aiJC on May' . . .
Those deserving of our expression ofthan~s
and gratitude arc Rowdy Rascals 4-H Club
and advisor Stephanie Alexander; Boy Sco~t
, T~oop 2l4membersJustinVarney andJere~­
ah Gilbert, and Scoutmaster Gene Holcom~;
C ub Scout Pack 214 member BJ, Gilbert a~d
' den leader for the pack, Gary Gilbert; Courtn,ey Gilbert; Erin Gilbert; Happy Hippy Hauling, Random Acts of Kindness Fund and
owner Clyde King; Annie McCarley; Lori
Bullion; and Flem Meade.
We would also like to express our thanks to
the 1\eep Gallia Beautiful organization for
sponsoring the countywide dean-up, and
supporting o ur efforts to have a hub locall~
within the village on the same day.
And finally, we would like to thank th~
State Highway Department for providing
safety vests, gloves and trash bags.
.
Donna Lynn DeWi~t
Vinton

,

.

.,

Support Parkinson's group
Pear Editor:
..
Dave Purdy, national award winner, is COlnT
ing to town!
You remember Dave; he:s the guy whQ
heads up the Parkinson's support groups ill
central and southern Ohio. Dave knows what
it's all about since he was diagnosed with P.D:
in 1978 at the age of37: (Parkinson's is a pro,
grcssivc m0vement disorder.)
Dave's philosophy is " Life does go on." He's
living proof that It is possible. Since taking an
early retirement, he has lectured both natiOIJ.rJ
ally and internationally to groups of pharma; ,
cists, doctors and other medical people, anc;l •
others who are interested in PD.
..
Dave also · works tirelessly to create and ..
maintain support groups k11owing that educ~·:
cion and sharing with others is important in..
maintaining qu&lt;,Jiity of life.
:,
In his spare time Dave writes articles for .
newsletters and journals. He's always there to .
encourage others.
.
· We're pro ud to say Dave received the Side"
ney Dorros Award June 9 at Columbus, Ohiq, '
This is a national honor with nominations·
coming from all states. The date is significant
in that it is Mi chael J. Fox's birthday.
. ,
Dave and his wife Della will be speakers at.,
the local su pport group at 2 p.m. Friday. The~~ ·,
topic: Accepting and Understanding 01!1' ,
Parkinson's Disease. Meetings are held in t~r;,
library of Grace United Methodist Church; •
600 Second Ave. , Gallipolis, and are free an4·:
open 10 all who have an interest in Parkin- .
son's.
','
.
' ]
Juanite Woolf ,
Gallipolis' ,
(7 40) 446-08Q8 .

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·21511

'

•

•••

SATURDAY,June 17
RACINE The Racine
Board of Public Affairs, Friday,
10:30 a.m. at the Municipal

POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR:
annual picnic, Saturday, Chester

Academy, 1 p.m. Meat and beverages provided . .

will be from Meigs and Gallia
Counties. Public invited.

Star
SALEM CENTER Grange 778, to host Ohio State
Grange District 3 Talent Contest,
Saturday, 12:30 p.m. Contestants

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778, Saturday, fun night
activities, to begin with potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m .

THURSDAY,june 15
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, Free and Accepted
Masons, work in the fellowcraft
degree.

All This Week

We accept Visa, o•~cover
and MasterCard

DOUBLE

•••

Manufacturer's

FRIDAY,June 16

COUPONS

POMEROY - The Meigs
County arthritis support group,
Friday. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in
the conference room, Mejgs
County Senior Citizen's Center.
Activity options to be discussed.

.

200 Mlln St., Point PIHunt, W.Vo.j
304-e7&amp;-1333

.•

amilp
edicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Al•ociate Profeuot
·of Family Medicine

,..

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

•••

Building.

,

Dear Editor:
May 14-20 was Nati onal EMS Week, a
week celebrated every yea r to honor the men
and women who respond to the needs of th e
sick and injured in our commun ities.
Some volunteer their time while others arc
part of a county or municipal system, paid for
their efforts. Regardless of th e circumstances
or rewards, they are always there to rare for
and comfort their neighbors in a time of
need. We owe them a hu ge amount of gratitude.
Here at Holzer Medical Center, we celebrate each year with a cookotlt to honor th ese
professionals.
This year was no exception. On May 18, we
held our annual party and had an overwhelming turnout.
Attending were Gallia Co unty EMS, Meigs
County EMS, SEOEMS District EMS, Life
Ambulance, Point Pleasant EMS; Vint on
County EMS, MedFlight MIC U, MedFli ght
air crew, nurses, physicians and members of
administration from HM C.
Many people from these agenci es and th eir
families were here to celebrate with us. Good
food, good conversation and a chance to catch
up with old friends was served in ge nerous
portions.
A special thanks goes to those who do nated
door prizes for this event. This year we had
several donations from the community, as well
as services that are EMS and hospital based .
They are Wai-Mart of Gallipolis, K mart of
Gallipolis, Snouffer's Fire and Safety of Gallipolis, HealthNet A erotne~i cal Service of
Cabell Huntington Hospital, M edFlight Services of Ohio, and of course, the staff and
administration of HMC for their ~ngoin g
support each year.
The EMTs and paramedics in yo ur community are there for yo u whenever you nee d

125 Third Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio
740-448·2342

RACINE - Revival services
~ be held Wednesday through
Saturday at the Full Gospel
Church of the Living Savior, 7
p.m. each evening. Ralph Savage
Columbus will be the guest
speaker. On Saturday evening a
potluck dinner will be held at 6
p.m. Singers: Hattie Sellen, the
Free Gospel Singers and Larry
Jones. Pastor Jesse Morris invites

POMEROY
American
Red Cross Bloodmobile, Meigs
County Multipurpose Senior
Center, Wednesday, 1 to 6 p.m.

Anyone with arthritis or with
someone in the family with the
diseases, urged to attend.

24 Pack Rundle

Foodland
KID8 Size

CharmIn
Bath Tissue

-=·=~ s

White Bread

88

on
••lllhlo
I', 1M

s

Life without agallbladder
reminds you to eat healthy

· Queation: What does the gall- learn that 80 percent of the popubladder do, and what problems• lation ultimately develops these
should I expect if I must have stones. Most of us, however, are
mine removed?
fortunate and.our gallstones never
Answer: I'll describe the gall- cause any problem$. On the other•
bladder's location and role in good hand, about 500,000 people each
liealth first. The gallbladder is a year do have sufficient pain that
muscular, sack-like structure they must have their gallbladders
attached to the liver, which is removed.
located in the right upper part of
You shouldn't panic if your
the abdomen under the lower ribs doctor recommends that you join
on that side. Confused? You this large group of "gallbladderthought the lungs were the organs less" individuals. The immediate
protected by the ribs, didn't you? 'lr risks of surgery ate relatively
Well, they are. However, the nbs sriJall, and I'm sure that he or she
also form a bony cage that pro- will explain these to you and your
tee~ the liver. The diaphra~ sep- family. The . long-term conseantes the lungs, which are m. t~e · quences, fortunately, are also
chest, from the liver, which IS m rather small.The liver continues to
the abdomen,
make bile, just as you would
· The liver Is one of the most assume. However now it continuimpo~nt organs of the body. It is ally drips the bil; into the duodea ventable chenucal facto~ !hat num instead ofbeing stored in the
converts the foods and medicmes gallbladder until a high-fat meal is
we consume into substances the eaten.
bOdy can use. The liver also recyEating a high-fat meal after
c)es various by-products of the having the gallbladder removed
body's chemical reactions into
can overwhelm the amount of
other usable compounds or waste
bile that is available to assist in its
products. It is in this role as a recydigestion. Consequendy, a stomcling center that the liver proachache and or diarrhea ensues.
duces the substance called bile.
These complications are signifiBile is made from cholesterol, cercantly less frequent and less .
tain fat-like substances, pigments
intense than the discomfort that .
that are the residue of recycled
made it . necessary to have the
blood cells, and other composurgery in the first place.
nents. The liver produces bile
My patients who have had
· rather slowly, and then stores it
their gallbladders removed rarely
within the gallbladder.
complain
about their decision.
· Bile is used in the emulsification, digestion and absorption of The amount of discomfort associfoods, particularly fats. The gall- ated with eating a high-fat meal is
bladder collects bile as the liver minimal' and usually is viewed
pibduces it. Then, when it is called simply ·as a reminder to eat a
for to help digest that burger and healthy diet rather than an
fries you had for lunch, it is infringement upon their lifestyles.
"squirted" into the digestive tract
"Family Medicine" is a
at ·a point just "downstream" from
weekly
column. To submit
the stomach in an atea called the
questions, write to John C.
duodenum.'!ypically this addition
Wolf,
D.O., Ohio University
o'f bile begins about 30 minutes
College of Osteopathic Medi·
after eating a high-fat meal.
.At times the bile can become cine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
so concentrated that stones form Ohio 45701. Past columns are
~ithin it, thereby creating gall- available online at www.thradio.org/fm.
~lones . You might be surprised to

An~ size package

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Father' sDa
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Western Style

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Asst.
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Fresh Baked
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Asst. Varieties

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Soft Drinks

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to limit

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Tomatoes

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Garden Fresh
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Z/SJ:1~~

Prlcee elllctlv8 thru 581. June 17 2000

or

(

�•.

.hoe A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(

: Wednesday, June 14, 2000

NATIONAL BRIEFS

SOCIETY .NEWS
•

Birth announced

RUTLAND - Dina and Michael Cleland announce the birth of
a &lt;laughter, Kali Jo Cleland on June 2 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.

Butterfly garden discussed
POMEROY - A program o n how to plant to attract butterflies
was given by Joy Bentley at a recent lun cheon meeting of the Wildwood Garden C lub held at the Lunch Line.
Bentley gave a list of favorite plants to attract butterflies because
of their bright color. She said a butterfly garden will provide the
food for both the caterpillars and adult butterflies. Black-eyed
Susans, butterfly bush , asters, butterfly weed, beebalm, hollyhocks.
zinnias, and marigolds were listed among the fl owers which provide
the nectar for butterflies.
Sarah Roush extended thanks to area g reenhouses for con tributi~g flowers for planting around signs and the flag pole at the Syra cuse pool. They were Hubbards, Harris Farms, Kare n's Greenhouse,
Donna Nease and sue's Greenhouse.
The arrangement of the month was done by Evelyn Hollon who
used miniature pink roses, coral bells, corkscrew willow, and
arborvitae in a glass pitcher. Chris Chapman had a bouquet of colored roses on display.
For roll call members brought a favori te recipe for exchange The
tour of the garden of Pat Lane at C utler, regional director of the
OAGC, was. discussed and member talked about the plant and
perennials they purchased there.
·
Hollon noted that now is the time to clip dead blooms from roses
and peonies and said that roses need to be dusted for insec ts and fertilized and that iris should now be divided.
Devotions were given by Chapman who used "Drinking From
My Saucer" as h er theme.

Reunion planned
POMEROY - A reunion of the Meigs High School class of 1980
· . will be held Saturday in the high school cafeteria from 4 to 10 p.m.
· The event will be a catered buffet dinner with evening music by

~

" Maximum Overdrive." T here will be door prizes and souvenirs.
Cost for the evening is $20 a person or $35 a couple. Those attending are asked to take photographs or o ther memorabilia for display.
The addresses of several in the class are unknown and anyone
with information or addresses are asked to contact Lori Pullins
Miller. In th e group are David Barnhouse, Richard Basham, Ricky
Birchfield, Alan Cummings, Regina Dorst, Debbie Falcone, Donna
Freem,on, Mark Hood,Vi cki Hood, Tim Hysell, Linda Lou J acks, Lisa
Jones, W illiam Sam Miller, Marc Moore, Lynne Mowery Peyton,
Harold Butch Pettit, Rick Rider,John Russell, Jimmie Snider, Gena
Snowden, Paul Sturgeon, Lynetta Whittington, arid William
Williams.

Eastem hosts nutrition camps for kids
EAST MEIGS - Third and fourth graders at Eastern Elementary
School lea rned about the importance of eating their fruits and vegetables during nutrition camps for kids conducted by the Expanded
Food and Nutrition Edu cation Program of the Extension SerVice.
The studen ts were told that what they eat plays a part in how well
they feel and influences their future health. Preparing foods was a
part of th e program with emphasis on safe use of sharp cutlery.
Tips on setting.an attractive table were given and the importance
of good inanners was discussed. Food guide pyramid place mats
were made by the children who enjoyed a fruit tasting party and·
puppet show on nutrition.
Safety in the kitchen, proper hand washing, and the need for eating breakfast were emphasized by Sharon Smith, nutrition education
and camp coordinator, who was assisted with the programming by
Hal Kneen and Becky Baer, extension agents, and Linda King, family nutrition specialist.
R etired Senior Volunteers assisted by preparing informational
packets for the children to take hc.me, laminating place mats, and
arranging and cleaning up after lunch and snac.ks. In the group were
Jean Nease, Carolyn Grueser, Gladys Cumings, Betty Longenette,
Mary King, Helen Bodimer, Marcia Arnold, and Frankie HunneL

N~ EXPERIENCE - How to prepare food for serving was a new
experience for many Eastern third graders . Here Linda King, family
nutrition specialist, supervises as the. children clean carrots and slice
cucumbers for a vegetable tray.

Chester High·school alumni banq.uet and dance attract 140 guests

I

CHESTER - Approximately
140 Chester High School alumni
and guests attended the recent
annual banquet and dance held in
the Eastern Elementary School
cafetorium.
2000 Eastern gra!fuate Josh
Will was presented with the
Chester High School Alumni
Scholarship during the banquet.
School colors of blue and
white were carried out in the
table decorations. Table flower
arrangements were provided by
the Chester Garden Club.
Harold Newell, president of
Josh Will
the Alumni Association, extended
a welcome to those attending, grandson of Chester High School
followed by the ·group singing of alumni, the late William and
"God Bless America." lnvocalion Juanita Will, and Delores Epple
was given by John Riebel, Sr., Holter and David Holter. He
preceding the steak dinner, pre- plans to attend Ohio University.
An anractive wooden cabine·t
pared by the school's cooks and
designed
and made by Roger
served by the Pioneer 4-H Club.
During the business meeting, Keller for storing old framed class
the Chester High School Alumni pictures was on display. The cabiScholarship was presented by net will be placed in the Eastern
Newell to Josh Will. He is the branch of the Meigs County Dis-

trict Public Library, located at the
elementary school.
Hanging baskets of flowers
were presented to Howard
Knight, oldest male alumnus, and
Thelma Biddle Hayes, oldest
female alumnae, Roger Epple,
Port St. Lucie, Fla., who traveled
the longest distance and Wanda
Dlllon Hemrick, for the first time
to attend.
Officers elected to serve as
officers for the nel(t year were:
Roger Keller, president; George
Holter, 'first vice 1&gt;resjdent;
Kathryn Smith Windon, second
vice president; Maxine Pickens
Whitehead, secretary; Frances
Miller Reed, assistant secretary;
Grace Pickens Weber, treasurer;
and Vivian Buckley Humphrey,
assistant treasurer.
Following the business meeting, alumni and guests enjoyed
dancing to music by the Millers
of Parkersburg, WVa.
Alumni anending, by graduation year, were: Boward Knight,

1925; Thelma Biddle Hayes and .
Erma Reed Cleland, 1930; Irene
Summerfield Parker, ahd Nellie
Michael Parker, 1931; Bill Matlack, Josephine Ritchie, and Elsie
Woode Hines, 1934; Harry Lee
Bailey, Owen Damewood, Lloyd
Dean, · Marie Ferrell Hauck,
Samuel Michael, Mildred Summerfield Caldwell, and Ronald
Osborne, 1935; Richard Coleman, Esther Frecker, Mary Virginia Mora Kau~z. and Edson
Parker, 1936; Lester Sponagel and
Alfred Wolfe, 1937.
Victor Bahr, 1938; Bob Dean,
Jack Sorden, and Rexai' Summerfield, 1939; Lila Bahr . Winters,
Howard Bailey, Bill Hannum,
Helen Marcinko Henry, Gladys
Pickens Meredith, Gertrude Stalnaker Tracy, and Wilma White
Ballard, 1'940; Paul Baer, Eloise
Buckley Lodwickr Richard Fick,
Dorothy Hawk, John Lodwick,
Bill Meredi.th, Homer and
Howard . Parker, 1941; Vivian
Buckley
Humphrey, : 1942;
·~

FBI probes missing nudear secrets

~

PREPARING VEGETABLES - These third graders practiced use of
their newly acquired cutlery skills as they prepared vegetables for
lunch. Helen Bodlmer, one of the Retired Senior Volunteers, super·
vised the group.

Charles Humphrey, Opal Van- Mary Heilman Gillilan, 1950;'
Meter Eichinger, Ruth WolfKarr, Chester
Buckley,
Howar~
1943; Betty Genheimer Dean, Larkins, Harold Newell, Forrest
(
George Holter, Harry Holter, Rhodes, 1951.
Starling Massar, Betty Nelspn
1944; Jack Eiselstein, Frances
Miller Reed, Donald Mora, Max- Newell, Joe Ritchie, Jim Stout,
ine Pickens Whitehead, Helen 1952; James Ridenour, Emma
Sprague Wolf, Marlene Wolf Ritchie Rhodes, Virgil Windon,
Thompson, 1945.
1953; Nara Wolfe Hartman, 1954.;
Betty Dean Chevalier, Horace Roger Keller and Ralph Trussell,
Karr, Eileen Ritchie Kuhn, Glen 1955; Roger Epple, Dallas Marks,
Stout, 1946; Delores Epple John Riebel, Sr., Rosemary Ros~
Holter, Dorothy Holter Karr, Keller and Gene Riggs, 1956; and
Dayton Spencer, Mary Kathryn George Morrison and Kaihryrt
Thttle Rose, Cleo Weber Smith, Smith Windon, 1957.
'
'
Robert Wood, 1947; Grover
Honor classes at the event
White and Howard Wolfe, 1948; were 1925, 1930, 1935, 1940,'
Phyllis Lawrence Glasgo and Jean 1945, 1950, and-1955.
PoGler Sexon, 1949: Nola Epple
Brown, Wanda Dillon Hamrick,

.

'

2

$50,000 annual salary, aiong with
high property taxes, the article

SEATTLE (AP) ....:.. Microsoft Corp. has won a preliminary victory as it jockeys for position with the Justice Department in the
appeal of the software giant's antitrust case.
The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Tuesday that a full com. plement of its judges would hear Microsoft's appeal at the first ·
opportunity. The court has been sympathetic to the company in
previous rulings.
The company had asked the appeals court to stay U.S. District
}udge Thomas Penfield Jackson's order requiring not only the
breakup of the company, but also a number of restrictions on its
business practices that are to take effect Sept. 6.
'·
' The company said a· breakup "imposes harsh and unsustainable
burdens on Microsoft, the software industry and the public."
•· Microsoft also accused Jackson of committing "an array of seri- .
ous substantive and procedural errors that infected virtually every
aspect" of the trial and sentencing in district court.
. .
· Jackson last week ordered the company split into .two and
imposed the business restrictions after finding that Microi.oft abused
~ts monopoly over personal computer opeciqng syst~ms to harm

~ 0 'tl}ij~~;:~:~~&amp;;n:~1~l unti!'ap~~~ are 6nilhed, but the

bulineu rettrictiont will go Into effect unless a higher court i!f~nts
the company the atay It aceka.

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says.

Jnd._,
·J•d•rs meet
.lo talk .tomato

H~lzer

Meigs Clinic
.r-Bent Care Center
.

· ·., '-'rg&amp;l'rt Cart is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours.
~

.

.

Holzer Me•gs Qlnlc
Urgent Care Hours
Monday-Friday 1:00 pm ·to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:oo pm to 9:00 pm

Urgent Care Center
'

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Pomeroy;·OH
992-0060
Holzer Clinie ••••..Keeping the Promise!

: SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
;._ It was only fitring that the
~own nicknamed "Sacra-tomato"
.hould play host to SOd industry
. leaders for the World Congress
:On the Processing Tomato.
·
Sacramento has been a hub of
tomato production since the
. 1940$, s'aid Rici)ard L. Orzalli,
.• 'director
,. of -procurement for the
Campbell Soup Co. and fo~mer
president of th~ World Congress.
. California grows more than
90 percent of tomatoes used for
processing in the United States
: and nearly half the tomatoes
• processed worldwide, Orzalli
: said. Tomatoes grown for use in
: tomato-based products are
: firme.r and stand up to mechani4al,. harvesting better than other
1 tomatoes.
, : The state produces so many
: tomatoes that more than a million will roll off trucks, smackiflg
: roadways and unlucky motorists,
: in this year's harvests alone, he
. said. The next harvest starts in
July.
··
.
"With tlie deep soil, plentiful
i water and climate, we have the
, perfect growing conditions for
: tomatoes," Orzalli said.
: And members of the World ,
' Cl)ngress of the Processing
·• Tomato hope to tempt more
.
. .
' consumers mto eatmg more
: tomatoe.s by touting their nutri1tiona! benefits.
: Though the industry can't
(claim tomatoes can definitely
I' prevent cancer, stu d"
'
tes that pomt
; to increased tomato consump; tion as a potential way to reduce
:cancer rates was a prominent
;topic. at, the four-day event that
· 'dosed Thesday.

.

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within 30 days, one year probation, driving
under suspension; H erbert Bare, Jr.,
Langsville, $100 suspended, one year probation , restraining order, criminal trespass;
Shawn Gilmore, Pomeroy, S23 and costs,
speed; Joseph Vining, Pomeroy, $200 and
costs, $100 and seven days jail suspended
upon proof of a valid drivers license within
90 days, one year probation, driving under
FRA suspension, $27 and costs, speed . .
Cynthia V. Stanley, Pomeroy, costs only, fol lowing too closely; David A. Park, Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, scat belt violation; Chester
Mason, Belpre, costs , six months jail suspended to 30 days, one year probation , theft;
Robert W James, Middleport, costs, I 0 days
jail suspended to two, one year probation;
Roy A. Eblin, Syracuse, costs, six months jail
suspended to two days, two years probation,
aggravated m enacing, costs, 90 jails jail suspended to two, two years probatio n, resisting
arrest, $~0 and costs, disorderly conduct;
Mary Bare, Langsville. $100 bond concurrent
com, six months jail suspended upon the
condition that the child has no more un excused absences, contributing; Joshua Dickens ,
Pomeroy, S15 and costs, seat belt violation.
Kevin Slater, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, reckless operation, $50 and costs, unsafe vehicle;
Roy L. Pierce, RaCine, $200 and costs, seven
days jail and $100 suspended upon proof of a
valid drivers license within 90 days, one year
probation , no operators license, costs only,
unsafe vehicle; William I. Lehew, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, disorderly while intoxicated;
Donald R . Dailey, Portland, $75 and costs,
possession of marijuana, $75 and costs, 10
days jail suspended, one year probation, possession of drug paraphernalia.
Roland E. Landaker, Langsville, $200 and
costs, five days jail and $100 suspended upon
proof of a valid license within 90 days, one
year probation, •driving under FRA suspension, $25 and costs, seat belt violation;John L.
Stumbo, Pomeroy, $850 and costs •. one .year
license suspension, 30 days jail JUspended to

I 0 days, two years probation, driving under
the influence,S100 and costs. 30 days jail su~
pended to 10, fWO years probation, driviirg
under FRA suspension , $50 and com, reckless operation, costs, six months jail suspended to I 0 days, two years probation, driving
without the owners consent; Danny J. Merinar, Ravenswood, W.Va., $200 and costs, UV'e
days jail and $100 suspended upon proof of-a
valid drivers license witliin 90 days, one ye!_r
probation, driving under suspension, S25 ah~
costs, seat belt violation , costs o nly, left :9f
center.
,
James E. Randolph, Racine, $850 anp
costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10, one year
license suspemio n, one year probation, 90 clay
vehicl e immobilization , driving under tll.e
influen ce; Harley E. McDonald, Middlepofl,
$2'7 and costs, speed; Michael D. Blessing,
R eedsville, $150 and costs, three days jail 3,!1d
$75 suspended upon proof of a valid drivel'S
license withi n 90 days. one year probation, no
ope rators license, $25 and costs, seat belt violation; Paula Gaster, Middleport, costs, tWO
years probation , 30 days jail suspended to ·1~
days, 60 days in- home treatment. disorder!¥
conduct.
Penny Evans, Middleport, $25 and co~s,
restitution, I 0 days j ail suspended, passing ba~
checks, $25 and costs, restitution, five days ,iail
suspended, passing had checks; Kevin D. Dalton, Albany, $850 and costs, 10 days jail suspended to three, 90 day license suspension ,
one year probati on, dri:;ing under the infiuence,$150 and costs, 10 days jail suspended ~0
three and $75 suspended upon proof of a
valid drivers lii:ense within 90 days, one year
ptobation , $25 and costs, seat belt violation;
John E Canter, Ra cine. $850 and· costs, 0
days j ai l suspended to three, three days j:til
and $550 suspended up on completion . df
RT.P school, one year probation, six month
license suspension; drivin g under the in~uem:e.
• j

2

·..-

Five-year survival rate is challenged as a measure of cancer success
•

• J

CHICAGO (AP) -The five- of five-year survival from 1950 to
year survival rate -:- t~e standard 1995, then looked at deaths and the
measurement of a cancer treat- incidence of the disease. In some
ment's success - may be mislead- cancers, more people are living five
ing because people are being diag- years after being ·diagnosed, but
1 nosed earlier and therefore living
more people are also developing
longer with detected cancer before the disease and more people are
they die, a. ~d,y,p~. , . , . . .
ultimately dying from it.
The findings, published m.
For ·example, the five-year surWedn~'s Journal of. the Aineri- viva! rate for prostate cancer has
can Medical A110clation, are based lncrcued from 43 percent In 1954
on i National Caneer ln~titueo to 93 percent in 1995. However,
eft'ort to collect and analyze cancer the mortality rate - tho number or
data In the t)nlttcl: Scatte.
The flw.year turvival rate It cho
number of ctnctr patltnll who art
ttllllllw Sw y.an after dlaano•l•,
Tho analyal1 looktcl at the 20
nwJor cfptt of cancer 1nd tht ram

patients per 1,000 who die from tier, he said.
For example, if a man is diag.
the disease - has gone up I 0 percent.
nosed with prostate cancer at :75
Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, lead and dies at 78, the five -year survival
author of the study, said the increase rate is 0; if another man is diagin the survival rates is mosdy influ- nosed at 73 and dies at 78, the tak
enced by earlier diagnoses of can- is 100 percent. Both men may have
cer, not' advances in treatment.
developed cancer at the same tiJm..
·The survival rate is computed but one was diagnosed earlier
fiom the time• of diagnosis, so it appeared to· have a bettct five-ye~r
pppean people are living .longer, 1urvival rate, even though the rha
when In reality many of them are result - the age of death :,_ ~
only learnlna th~ haw cnneer oar- the 111mo,
. .: :

;nid

.(

'' ::;;;!~

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.

POMEROY Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick H . O'Brien processed a number of cases last week.
Fined were: Duane A. Johnson , Middleport, $25 and costs, seat belt violation; Melissa J. Haning, Albany, $20 and costs, failure to
control; Tiffany L. Cox, Fairfield, $30 and
costs, speed; Amanda D. Maynard, Long Bottom, $30 arid co.sts, failure to control; Kenneth R . Leesburg, Bidwell, $30 and costs ,
speed; Deborah J. Reuter, Carroll, $30 and
costs, speed; Scott C . Jardin e, Marietta, $25
and costs, seat belt violation, $30 and costs,
speed; Teresa M . Riley, Wellston, $30 and
costs, speed;Jerry M .Johnson,Jr., Racine, $30
and costs, speed; Jonathan C. Clurson, Pleasant Grove, Ut., $30 and costs, speed; C hristopher T. Clark, Lancaster, $30 and costs, speed;
Janice L. Powley, Washington , W.Va. , $30 and
costs, speed;James J. Jo nes, H e nderson, W.Va.,
$15 and costs, seat belt violation; Jason L.
Mitchell, Parkl!rsburg, WYa., $30 and costs,
speed; David A. M cCluney, Oak Hill, W.Va. ,
$30 and costs; speed.
Helen L. Cooper, Bloomingdale, $30 and
costs, speed; Faye A. Steinmetz, Pomeroy, $20
and costs, left of center; Brandee M. Gilmore,
Middleport, $30 and costs, failure to control;
Marc S. Queen, Gallipolis, $30 and costs,
speed; Ellis E. Myers, Langsville, $20 and
costs, assured clear distance; Ed W. Smith,
Long Bottom, $30 and costs, stop sign; Lisa
R. Daniels, Proctorville,.$30 and costs, speed;
Sandra K. Young, Rutland , $30 and costs,
speed; John B. Dobosz, New York, N .Y., $30
anli costs, speed; Darin D. Roach, Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, seat belr violation, $15 and
costs, seat belt violation passenger side; Jerry
D. Lawson, Portland, S15 and costs, seat belt
violation.
Henty M. Hoppe, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
·speed; Walter Knapp, Rutland, disorderly
when intoxicated; Karen E. Honacher,.
Pomeroy, $23 and costs, speed; Lisa A. Cook,
pomeroy, $200 and costs, three days jail and
I too suspended upon proof of a valid license

•

Include•
Vesetable,
Roll &amp; Butter

of 8.5 percent, based on a

" · Microsoft accuses judge of errors

Meigs County co~rt cases processed

•

I

I

:· WASHINGTON (AP) - The disappearance of nuclear secrets
iio~ a va~t at the Los Alamos weapons lab has prompted a criminal mvesttgatton and unleashed another torrent of criticism about
security at the Energy Department, leaving the Clinton administra.on scrambling to contain the political fallout.
The fBI, which was brought into the case when the Energy
;bepartment learned on June 1 of the disappearance of the nuclear
secrets from the New Mexico facility, was conducting a criminal
:probe. The investigation was expected to focus on some two-dozen
:individuals who had free access to the highly secured vault where
;two computer hard drives that contained the nuclear files were
;ltept. ,
: Polygraph tests were expected to begin to be administered to
.some of the Los Alamos scientists :.vithin days, Energy Department
officials said.
· Senate Republican leaders, meanwhile, said they planned to act
today on the nomination ofJohn A. Gordon, the deputy CIA director, to head a new semi-independent nuclear weapons agency. Gor,don's nomination, held up for months over a disagreement on how
:.much power the agency should have within the Energy Depart"ment, is now· expected to get swift approval.
~ But the new disclosure that two computer hard drives were miss:iJlg at Los Alamos was likely to give Repubhcans plenty of ammu:pition to .criticize the Clinton administration's national !fCurity
..record. And while Energy Secretary Bill Richardson emerged large)y unscathed last from the Wen Ho Lee case, ..y)tich also involved
intissing nuclear secrets, this time Richardson is expected to be a
~rime target. ·
;.: "This incident occurred on his watch. He'll have to be made
)accountable;' said Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senate
:Armed Services Conunittee.
•., A summer of investigations into another Los Alamos security flap
~s not what Ric~ardson, the most prominent Hispanic in the
administration, had expected as he hopes to remain in contention as
~ potential vice presidential running mate to AI Gore.

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.hoe A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(

: Wednesday, June 14, 2000

NATIONAL BRIEFS

SOCIETY .NEWS
•

Birth announced

RUTLAND - Dina and Michael Cleland announce the birth of
a &lt;laughter, Kali Jo Cleland on June 2 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.

Butterfly garden discussed
POMEROY - A program o n how to plant to attract butterflies
was given by Joy Bentley at a recent lun cheon meeting of the Wildwood Garden C lub held at the Lunch Line.
Bentley gave a list of favorite plants to attract butterflies because
of their bright color. She said a butterfly garden will provide the
food for both the caterpillars and adult butterflies. Black-eyed
Susans, butterfly bush , asters, butterfly weed, beebalm, hollyhocks.
zinnias, and marigolds were listed among the fl owers which provide
the nectar for butterflies.
Sarah Roush extended thanks to area g reenhouses for con tributi~g flowers for planting around signs and the flag pole at the Syra cuse pool. They were Hubbards, Harris Farms, Kare n's Greenhouse,
Donna Nease and sue's Greenhouse.
The arrangement of the month was done by Evelyn Hollon who
used miniature pink roses, coral bells, corkscrew willow, and
arborvitae in a glass pitcher. Chris Chapman had a bouquet of colored roses on display.
For roll call members brought a favori te recipe for exchange The
tour of the garden of Pat Lane at C utler, regional director of the
OAGC, was. discussed and member talked about the plant and
perennials they purchased there.
·
Hollon noted that now is the time to clip dead blooms from roses
and peonies and said that roses need to be dusted for insec ts and fertilized and that iris should now be divided.
Devotions were given by Chapman who used "Drinking From
My Saucer" as h er theme.

Reunion planned
POMEROY - A reunion of the Meigs High School class of 1980
· . will be held Saturday in the high school cafeteria from 4 to 10 p.m.
· The event will be a catered buffet dinner with evening music by

~

" Maximum Overdrive." T here will be door prizes and souvenirs.
Cost for the evening is $20 a person or $35 a couple. Those attending are asked to take photographs or o ther memorabilia for display.
The addresses of several in the class are unknown and anyone
with information or addresses are asked to contact Lori Pullins
Miller. In th e group are David Barnhouse, Richard Basham, Ricky
Birchfield, Alan Cummings, Regina Dorst, Debbie Falcone, Donna
Freem,on, Mark Hood,Vi cki Hood, Tim Hysell, Linda Lou J acks, Lisa
Jones, W illiam Sam Miller, Marc Moore, Lynne Mowery Peyton,
Harold Butch Pettit, Rick Rider,John Russell, Jimmie Snider, Gena
Snowden, Paul Sturgeon, Lynetta Whittington, arid William
Williams.

Eastem hosts nutrition camps for kids
EAST MEIGS - Third and fourth graders at Eastern Elementary
School lea rned about the importance of eating their fruits and vegetables during nutrition camps for kids conducted by the Expanded
Food and Nutrition Edu cation Program of the Extension SerVice.
The studen ts were told that what they eat plays a part in how well
they feel and influences their future health. Preparing foods was a
part of th e program with emphasis on safe use of sharp cutlery.
Tips on setting.an attractive table were given and the importance
of good inanners was discussed. Food guide pyramid place mats
were made by the children who enjoyed a fruit tasting party and·
puppet show on nutrition.
Safety in the kitchen, proper hand washing, and the need for eating breakfast were emphasized by Sharon Smith, nutrition education
and camp coordinator, who was assisted with the programming by
Hal Kneen and Becky Baer, extension agents, and Linda King, family nutrition specialist.
R etired Senior Volunteers assisted by preparing informational
packets for the children to take hc.me, laminating place mats, and
arranging and cleaning up after lunch and snac.ks. In the group were
Jean Nease, Carolyn Grueser, Gladys Cumings, Betty Longenette,
Mary King, Helen Bodimer, Marcia Arnold, and Frankie HunneL

N~ EXPERIENCE - How to prepare food for serving was a new
experience for many Eastern third graders . Here Linda King, family
nutrition specialist, supervises as the. children clean carrots and slice
cucumbers for a vegetable tray.

Chester High·school alumni banq.uet and dance attract 140 guests

I

CHESTER - Approximately
140 Chester High School alumni
and guests attended the recent
annual banquet and dance held in
the Eastern Elementary School
cafetorium.
2000 Eastern gra!fuate Josh
Will was presented with the
Chester High School Alumni
Scholarship during the banquet.
School colors of blue and
white were carried out in the
table decorations. Table flower
arrangements were provided by
the Chester Garden Club.
Harold Newell, president of
Josh Will
the Alumni Association, extended
a welcome to those attending, grandson of Chester High School
followed by the ·group singing of alumni, the late William and
"God Bless America." lnvocalion Juanita Will, and Delores Epple
was given by John Riebel, Sr., Holter and David Holter. He
preceding the steak dinner, pre- plans to attend Ohio University.
An anractive wooden cabine·t
pared by the school's cooks and
designed
and made by Roger
served by the Pioneer 4-H Club.
During the business meeting, Keller for storing old framed class
the Chester High School Alumni pictures was on display. The cabiScholarship was presented by net will be placed in the Eastern
Newell to Josh Will. He is the branch of the Meigs County Dis-

trict Public Library, located at the
elementary school.
Hanging baskets of flowers
were presented to Howard
Knight, oldest male alumnus, and
Thelma Biddle Hayes, oldest
female alumnae, Roger Epple,
Port St. Lucie, Fla., who traveled
the longest distance and Wanda
Dlllon Hemrick, for the first time
to attend.
Officers elected to serve as
officers for the nel(t year were:
Roger Keller, president; George
Holter, 'first vice 1&gt;resjdent;
Kathryn Smith Windon, second
vice president; Maxine Pickens
Whitehead, secretary; Frances
Miller Reed, assistant secretary;
Grace Pickens Weber, treasurer;
and Vivian Buckley Humphrey,
assistant treasurer.
Following the business meeting, alumni and guests enjoyed
dancing to music by the Millers
of Parkersburg, WVa.
Alumni anending, by graduation year, were: Boward Knight,

1925; Thelma Biddle Hayes and .
Erma Reed Cleland, 1930; Irene
Summerfield Parker, ahd Nellie
Michael Parker, 1931; Bill Matlack, Josephine Ritchie, and Elsie
Woode Hines, 1934; Harry Lee
Bailey, Owen Damewood, Lloyd
Dean, · Marie Ferrell Hauck,
Samuel Michael, Mildred Summerfield Caldwell, and Ronald
Osborne, 1935; Richard Coleman, Esther Frecker, Mary Virginia Mora Kau~z. and Edson
Parker, 1936; Lester Sponagel and
Alfred Wolfe, 1937.
Victor Bahr, 1938; Bob Dean,
Jack Sorden, and Rexai' Summerfield, 1939; Lila Bahr . Winters,
Howard Bailey, Bill Hannum,
Helen Marcinko Henry, Gladys
Pickens Meredith, Gertrude Stalnaker Tracy, and Wilma White
Ballard, 1'940; Paul Baer, Eloise
Buckley Lodwickr Richard Fick,
Dorothy Hawk, John Lodwick,
Bill Meredi.th, Homer and
Howard . Parker, 1941; Vivian
Buckley
Humphrey, : 1942;
·~

FBI probes missing nudear secrets

~

PREPARING VEGETABLES - These third graders practiced use of
their newly acquired cutlery skills as they prepared vegetables for
lunch. Helen Bodlmer, one of the Retired Senior Volunteers, super·
vised the group.

Charles Humphrey, Opal Van- Mary Heilman Gillilan, 1950;'
Meter Eichinger, Ruth WolfKarr, Chester
Buckley,
Howar~
1943; Betty Genheimer Dean, Larkins, Harold Newell, Forrest
(
George Holter, Harry Holter, Rhodes, 1951.
Starling Massar, Betty Nelspn
1944; Jack Eiselstein, Frances
Miller Reed, Donald Mora, Max- Newell, Joe Ritchie, Jim Stout,
ine Pickens Whitehead, Helen 1952; James Ridenour, Emma
Sprague Wolf, Marlene Wolf Ritchie Rhodes, Virgil Windon,
Thompson, 1945.
1953; Nara Wolfe Hartman, 1954.;
Betty Dean Chevalier, Horace Roger Keller and Ralph Trussell,
Karr, Eileen Ritchie Kuhn, Glen 1955; Roger Epple, Dallas Marks,
Stout, 1946; Delores Epple John Riebel, Sr., Rosemary Ros~
Holter, Dorothy Holter Karr, Keller and Gene Riggs, 1956; and
Dayton Spencer, Mary Kathryn George Morrison and Kaihryrt
Thttle Rose, Cleo Weber Smith, Smith Windon, 1957.
'
'
Robert Wood, 1947; Grover
Honor classes at the event
White and Howard Wolfe, 1948; were 1925, 1930, 1935, 1940,'
Phyllis Lawrence Glasgo and Jean 1945, 1950, and-1955.
PoGler Sexon, 1949: Nola Epple
Brown, Wanda Dillon Hamrick,

.

'

2

$50,000 annual salary, aiong with
high property taxes, the article

SEATTLE (AP) ....:.. Microsoft Corp. has won a preliminary victory as it jockeys for position with the Justice Department in the
appeal of the software giant's antitrust case.
The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Tuesday that a full com. plement of its judges would hear Microsoft's appeal at the first ·
opportunity. The court has been sympathetic to the company in
previous rulings.
The company had asked the appeals court to stay U.S. District
}udge Thomas Penfield Jackson's order requiring not only the
breakup of the company, but also a number of restrictions on its
business practices that are to take effect Sept. 6.
'·
' The company said a· breakup "imposes harsh and unsustainable
burdens on Microsoft, the software industry and the public."
•· Microsoft also accused Jackson of committing "an array of seri- .
ous substantive and procedural errors that infected virtually every
aspect" of the trial and sentencing in district court.
. .
· Jackson last week ordered the company split into .two and
imposed the business restrictions after finding that Microi.oft abused
~ts monopoly over personal computer opeciqng syst~ms to harm

~ 0 'tl}ij~~;:~:~~&amp;;n:~1~l unti!'ap~~~ are 6nilhed, but the

bulineu rettrictiont will go Into effect unless a higher court i!f~nts
the company the atay It aceka.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE 'LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today•.'
992·2156 !·

IRING. DAD IN FOR A
STEAI .DINNERI
ST RT 33 MASON, WV 1·304·773·531 0

says.

Jnd._,
·J•d•rs meet
.lo talk .tomato

H~lzer

Meigs Clinic
.r-Bent Care Center
.

· ·., '-'rg&amp;l'rt Cart is now available for those unexpected
ailments that occur after hours.
~

.

.

Holzer Me•gs Qlnlc
Urgent Care Hours
Monday-Friday 1:00 pm ·to 9:00 pm
Weekends a Holidays 1:oo pm to 9:00 pm

Urgent Care Center
'

88 Ea$t Memorial Dr;·
Pomeroy;·OH
992-0060
Holzer Clinie ••••..Keeping the Promise!

: SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
;._ It was only fitring that the
~own nicknamed "Sacra-tomato"
.hould play host to SOd industry
. leaders for the World Congress
:On the Processing Tomato.
·
Sacramento has been a hub of
tomato production since the
. 1940$, s'aid Rici)ard L. Orzalli,
.• 'director
,. of -procurement for the
Campbell Soup Co. and fo~mer
president of th~ World Congress.
. California grows more than
90 percent of tomatoes used for
processing in the United States
: and nearly half the tomatoes
• processed worldwide, Orzalli
: said. Tomatoes grown for use in
: tomato-based products are
: firme.r and stand up to mechani4al,. harvesting better than other
1 tomatoes.
, : The state produces so many
: tomatoes that more than a million will roll off trucks, smackiflg
: roadways and unlucky motorists,
: in this year's harvests alone, he
. said. The next harvest starts in
July.
··
.
"With tlie deep soil, plentiful
i water and climate, we have the
, perfect growing conditions for
: tomatoes," Orzalli said.
: And members of the World ,
' Cl)ngress of the Processing
·• Tomato hope to tempt more
.
. .
' consumers mto eatmg more
: tomatoe.s by touting their nutri1tiona! benefits.
: Though the industry can't
(claim tomatoes can definitely
I' prevent cancer, stu d"
'
tes that pomt
; to increased tomato consump; tion as a potential way to reduce
:cancer rates was a prominent
;topic. at, the four-day event that
· 'dosed Thesday.

.

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within 30 days, one year probation, driving
under suspension; H erbert Bare, Jr.,
Langsville, $100 suspended, one year probation , restraining order, criminal trespass;
Shawn Gilmore, Pomeroy, S23 and costs,
speed; Joseph Vining, Pomeroy, $200 and
costs, $100 and seven days jail suspended
upon proof of a valid drivers license within
90 days, one year probation, driving under
FRA suspension, $27 and costs, speed . .
Cynthia V. Stanley, Pomeroy, costs only, fol lowing too closely; David A. Park, Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, scat belt violation; Chester
Mason, Belpre, costs , six months jail suspended to 30 days, one year probation , theft;
Robert W James, Middleport, costs, I 0 days
jail suspended to two, one year probation;
Roy A. Eblin, Syracuse, costs, six months jail
suspended to two days, two years probation,
aggravated m enacing, costs, 90 jails jail suspended to two, two years probatio n, resisting
arrest, $~0 and costs, disorderly conduct;
Mary Bare, Langsville. $100 bond concurrent
com, six months jail suspended upon the
condition that the child has no more un excused absences, contributing; Joshua Dickens ,
Pomeroy, S15 and costs, seat belt violation.
Kevin Slater, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, reckless operation, $50 and costs, unsafe vehicle;
Roy L. Pierce, RaCine, $200 and costs, seven
days jail and $100 suspended upon proof of a
valid drivers license within 90 days, one year
probation , no operators license, costs only,
unsafe vehicle; William I. Lehew, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, disorderly while intoxicated;
Donald R . Dailey, Portland, $75 and costs,
possession of marijuana, $75 and costs, 10
days jail suspended, one year probation, possession of drug paraphernalia.
Roland E. Landaker, Langsville, $200 and
costs, five days jail and $100 suspended upon
proof of a valid license within 90 days, one
year probation, •driving under FRA suspension, $25 and costs, seat belt violation;John L.
Stumbo, Pomeroy, $850 and costs •. one .year
license suspension, 30 days jail JUspended to

I 0 days, two years probation, driving under
the influence,S100 and costs. 30 days jail su~
pended to 10, fWO years probation, driviirg
under FRA suspension , $50 and com, reckless operation, costs, six months jail suspended to I 0 days, two years probation, driving
without the owners consent; Danny J. Merinar, Ravenswood, W.Va., $200 and costs, UV'e
days jail and $100 suspended upon proof of-a
valid drivers license witliin 90 days, one ye!_r
probation, driving under suspension, S25 ah~
costs, seat belt violation , costs o nly, left :9f
center.
,
James E. Randolph, Racine, $850 anp
costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10, one year
license suspemio n, one year probation, 90 clay
vehicl e immobilization , driving under tll.e
influen ce; Harley E. McDonald, Middlepofl,
$2'7 and costs, speed; Michael D. Blessing,
R eedsville, $150 and costs, three days jail 3,!1d
$75 suspended upon proof of a valid drivel'S
license withi n 90 days. one year probation, no
ope rators license, $25 and costs, seat belt violation; Paula Gaster, Middleport, costs, tWO
years probation , 30 days jail suspended to ·1~
days, 60 days in- home treatment. disorder!¥
conduct.
Penny Evans, Middleport, $25 and co~s,
restitution, I 0 days j ail suspended, passing ba~
checks, $25 and costs, restitution, five days ,iail
suspended, passing had checks; Kevin D. Dalton, Albany, $850 and costs, 10 days jail suspended to three, 90 day license suspension ,
one year probati on, dri:;ing under the infiuence,$150 and costs, 10 days jail suspended ~0
three and $75 suspended upon proof of a
valid drivers lii:ense within 90 days, one year
ptobation , $25 and costs, seat belt violation;
John E Canter, Ra cine. $850 and· costs, 0
days j ai l suspended to three, three days j:til
and $550 suspended up on completion . df
RT.P school, one year probation, six month
license suspension; drivin g under the in~uem:e.
• j

2

·..-

Five-year survival rate is challenged as a measure of cancer success
•

• J

CHICAGO (AP) -The five- of five-year survival from 1950 to
year survival rate -:- t~e standard 1995, then looked at deaths and the
measurement of a cancer treat- incidence of the disease. In some
ment's success - may be mislead- cancers, more people are living five
ing because people are being diag- years after being ·diagnosed, but
1 nosed earlier and therefore living
more people are also developing
longer with detected cancer before the disease and more people are
they die, a. ~d,y,p~. , . , . . .
ultimately dying from it.
The findings, published m.
For ·example, the five-year surWedn~'s Journal of. the Aineri- viva! rate for prostate cancer has
can Medical A110clation, are based lncrcued from 43 percent In 1954
on i National Caneer ln~titueo to 93 percent in 1995. However,
eft'ort to collect and analyze cancer the mortality rate - tho number or
data In the t)nlttcl: Scatte.
The flw.year turvival rate It cho
number of ctnctr patltnll who art
ttllllllw Sw y.an after dlaano•l•,
Tho analyal1 looktcl at the 20
nwJor cfptt of cancer 1nd tht ram

patients per 1,000 who die from tier, he said.
For example, if a man is diag.
the disease - has gone up I 0 percent.
nosed with prostate cancer at :75
Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, lead and dies at 78, the five -year survival
author of the study, said the increase rate is 0; if another man is diagin the survival rates is mosdy influ- nosed at 73 and dies at 78, the tak
enced by earlier diagnoses of can- is 100 percent. Both men may have
cer, not' advances in treatment.
developed cancer at the same tiJm..
·The survival rate is computed but one was diagnosed earlier
fiom the time• of diagnosis, so it appeared to· have a bettct five-ye~r
pppean people are living .longer, 1urvival rate, even though the rha
when In reality many of them are result - the age of death :,_ ~
only learnlna th~ haw cnneer oar- the 111mo,
. .: :

;nid

.(

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.

POMEROY Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick H . O'Brien processed a number of cases last week.
Fined were: Duane A. Johnson , Middleport, $25 and costs, seat belt violation; Melissa J. Haning, Albany, $20 and costs, failure to
control; Tiffany L. Cox, Fairfield, $30 and
costs, speed; Amanda D. Maynard, Long Bottom, $30 arid co.sts, failure to control; Kenneth R . Leesburg, Bidwell, $30 and costs ,
speed; Deborah J. Reuter, Carroll, $30 and
costs, speed; Scott C . Jardin e, Marietta, $25
and costs, seat belt violation, $30 and costs,
speed; Teresa M . Riley, Wellston, $30 and
costs, speed;Jerry M .Johnson,Jr., Racine, $30
and costs, speed; Jonathan C. Clurson, Pleasant Grove, Ut., $30 and costs, speed; C hristopher T. Clark, Lancaster, $30 and costs, speed;
Janice L. Powley, Washington , W.Va. , $30 and
costs, speed;James J. Jo nes, H e nderson, W.Va.,
$15 and costs, seat belt violation; Jason L.
Mitchell, Parkl!rsburg, WYa., $30 and costs,
speed; David A. M cCluney, Oak Hill, W.Va. ,
$30 and costs; speed.
Helen L. Cooper, Bloomingdale, $30 and
costs, speed; Faye A. Steinmetz, Pomeroy, $20
and costs, left of center; Brandee M. Gilmore,
Middleport, $30 and costs, failure to control;
Marc S. Queen, Gallipolis, $30 and costs,
speed; Ellis E. Myers, Langsville, $20 and
costs, assured clear distance; Ed W. Smith,
Long Bottom, $30 and costs, stop sign; Lisa
R. Daniels, Proctorville,.$30 and costs, speed;
Sandra K. Young, Rutland , $30 and costs,
speed; John B. Dobosz, New York, N .Y., $30
anli costs, speed; Darin D. Roach, Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, seat belr violation, $15 and
costs, seat belt violation passenger side; Jerry
D. Lawson, Portland, S15 and costs, seat belt
violation.
Henty M. Hoppe, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
·speed; Walter Knapp, Rutland, disorderly
when intoxicated; Karen E. Honacher,.
Pomeroy, $23 and costs, speed; Lisa A. Cook,
pomeroy, $200 and costs, three days jail and
I too suspended upon proof of a valid license

•

Include•
Vesetable,
Roll &amp; Butter

of 8.5 percent, based on a

" · Microsoft accuses judge of errors

Meigs County co~rt cases processed

•

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I

:· WASHINGTON (AP) - The disappearance of nuclear secrets
iio~ a va~t at the Los Alamos weapons lab has prompted a criminal mvesttgatton and unleashed another torrent of criticism about
security at the Energy Department, leaving the Clinton administra.on scrambling to contain the political fallout.
The fBI, which was brought into the case when the Energy
;bepartment learned on June 1 of the disappearance of the nuclear
secrets from the New Mexico facility, was conducting a criminal
:probe. The investigation was expected to focus on some two-dozen
:individuals who had free access to the highly secured vault where
;two computer hard drives that contained the nuclear files were
;ltept. ,
: Polygraph tests were expected to begin to be administered to
.some of the Los Alamos scientists :.vithin days, Energy Department
officials said.
· Senate Republican leaders, meanwhile, said they planned to act
today on the nomination ofJohn A. Gordon, the deputy CIA director, to head a new semi-independent nuclear weapons agency. Gor,don's nomination, held up for months over a disagreement on how
:.much power the agency should have within the Energy Depart"ment, is now· expected to get swift approval.
~ But the new disclosure that two computer hard drives were miss:iJlg at Los Alamos was likely to give Repubhcans plenty of ammu:pition to .criticize the Clinton administration's national !fCurity
..record. And while Energy Secretary Bill Richardson emerged large)y unscathed last from the Wen Ho Lee case, ..y)tich also involved
intissing nuclear secrets, this time Richardson is expected to be a
~rime target. ·
;.: "This incident occurred on his watch. He'll have to be made
)accountable;' said Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senate
:Armed Services Conunittee.
•., A summer of investigations into another Los Alamos security flap
~s not what Ric~ardson, the most prominent Hispanic in the
administration, had expected as he hopes to remain in contention as
~ potential vice presidential running mate to AI Gore.

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�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June 14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Virginia
candidate promises ·more money for health care providers
lawmaker
wins
GOP
•
pnmary
(AP) Overcorrung a deeppoe keted opponent who poured
nearly $1 millio n into his campaign, a Virginia state legislator
· narrowly won the R epublican
nomination for an open House
seat.
With all precincts reponing
eady Wednesday,Jo Ann Davis, a
member of the House of Delegates, won the five-candidate
race with 14,263 votes, or 35
percent. Paul Jost, who had the
backing of GOP Gov. Jim
Gilmore and spent three times
the total of his opponents, got
12, 155 votes, or 30 percent.
Davis, who would become
the first woman fiom Virginia in
Congress if she wins this fall, will
go up against former Fredericksburg mayor Lawrence Davies, a
D emocrat. Both seek to replace
retiring nine-term GOP Rep.
Herbert H . Bateman.
T he Virginia race was a highlight of elections in five states,
including primaries in Maine,
North Dakota, and South Carolina, and a runoff in Arkansas.
Another bitter fight in Virginia brought a razor-thin victory to Eric Cantor, a member of
the state House of Delegates.
With all precincts reporting,
Cantor had 20,902 votes, or just
over 50 pen:ent, while state Sen.
Steve M artin had 20,637 votes,
just under 50 pen:ent.
A recount seemed assured.
".1 spoke to Eric Cantor and
in that conversation I let him
know that I offered my congratulations pending that recount;'
Martin told cheering supporters.
Cantor, who also had
Gilmore's endorsement, had
questioned Martin's votes on
legislative pay and expenses.
Martin raised issues about C antor's family\; dealings in real
estate.
Cantor will face school superintendent Warren Stewart,
whom Democrats norrunated at
the last minute on Monday in
the race to fill the seat of GOP
Rep. Thomas J. Bliley, who is
retiring after 20 years.
The biggest seats up for election Tuesday went unchallenged.
No primary opponents emerged
for two-term Democratic Sen.
Charles Robb ofVirginia, freshman GOP Sen. Olympia Snowe
of Maine and Democratic Sen.
Kent Conrad of North Dakota,
who is seeking a third full term.
Even North Dakota's seat for
governor, open bb:ause Republican Ed Schafer' chose not to
seek a third term, went without
a primary fight.
: A crowded South Carolina
t:~ce went to a runoff, with state
R ep. Henry Brown raking 44
percent of the vote. His nearest
opponent; former state transportation chairman H.B. "Buck"
Limehouse, got 33 percent, after
Limehouse outspent Brown by
nearly 3-L
The seat, in a coastal district, is
heid by G()P Rep. Mark Sanford, who is sticking to a campaign pledge to serve just three
terms. Democrat Andy Brack, a
former rep,ortet' and spokesman
· for Democratic Sen. Ernest
Hollings, was ·unopposed in the
primary.
And in a Soutl\ Carolina primary that will essentially determine the general election winner, first- term GOP Rep. James
DeMint easily defeated Frank
Raddish. Democrats did .not run
a candidate in the heavily GOP
district.
North . Dakota 's treasurer
apparently . survived an attempt
to abolish her job, with a majority voting to keep the state post.
The proposal to eliminate it had
drawn criticism fiom state treasurers around the nation.
R eturns from six western
counties showed a mixed
, resi&gt;onse to a proposal to set
docks ahead tO Central time and
j oin the eastern part of the state.
1\.vo counties endorsed the plan,
w hile results were pending fiom
the others. Whatever the vote, ·
county and federal officials must
agree on any change. Several
other counties aren't considering
a move fiom M ountain time.

CLARKS SUMMIT, Pa. (AP) - Scouring the Midwest fo r votes, Vice President
AI Gore is promising more money for
health care providers and ·a quick fix for
elderly Americans in need o f prescription
drug coverage.
The Democratic presidential ca ndidate
was re- pac kagin g his health care initiatives
in this battleground state as part o f a threeweek " progress and prosperity tou r." The
trip which began Tuesday in N ew York is
'
· ·
'
designed to give Gore some credtt fo r the
nation 's roarin g economy.
"Are you better off than yo u were eight

years ago? For most Americans, I believe
the answer is o bvious;' Gore said in his
scene-se tting address in N ew York." America has done well. But I'm here today to
tell you:You ain't seen nothing yet."
Fo r the next th ree weeks, Gore will
foc us eac h day on a different aspect of hi s
economic agenda. The topic Wednesday
was health care.
The vice president has already proposed
expandin g a fed e ral health care program
·
·
·
for chtldren, aUowmg people to buy mto
·
the Medt·care program ear1y. d e d.tcatmg
Medicare surpluses to the entitlement pro-

gram and improving · prescription drug
In the health care portion of his Tuesday :
coverage for the elderly.
address, Gore said, "To those who say we .
His advisers •. speaking on condition of can't cure cancer, ease the pain of disease, ·
anonymity, satd Gore was proposmg and give new health and hope to America's .
Wednesday to : .
.
h
w, 'll h
- U se a portion of proJected federal childreq, I say: J ust watc us. e
arness :
surplus to increase funding to health care all the wonders of scienc·e and discovery. :
provi&lt;lers, such as hospitals, nursing ho?tes, We' ll b uild an America where health is '
home health programs and rural health never again decided by w~alth ."
agencies that had their funds cuts under
Afterward , in an interview with T he
the 1998 balanced budget agreement.
A
. d p
G
.d
..
resst've"
· · d
· · ssoctate
ress, ore sa t an agg
- Put the prescnptlon rug program m
. .
. .
.
.ll
h bo .
1 by 2002 , movmg
· t h e tlmeta
·
bl e up by adnuru•tratlon
t- ,
pace
.
. mqu try. WI. . get to t . e
four years.
tom o fsoanng gas pnces Ill the Mtdwest.

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Inside:
NL: Caminiti leads Astros, Page B2
AL: BoSox, ChiSox rolling, Page B2
Rocker~ back, Page B2
(!n the Fringe, Page BB

$139
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R1 s •.•.••••.••..•~.•.••••

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Dr. J plucls for help

in surch for son
. SANFO R D, f la . (AP) - Julius
•Erving pleaded for help in finding hi s 19- year-old' son, who has
a history of drug problems and
has been rrussing since M ay 28.
A $25,000 reward was offered
for the safe return of Cory M arvin Erving, who was last seen by
his farruly when he went to a
j:.a~e Mary shopping mall, about
20 miles from Orlando.
Erving spoke at a nationally
televised news · conference with
his wife and their three other
a(!ult children .

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UNLV.,...sup
,to violations
LAS VEGAS ' (AP) - UNLV
has acknowledged violations
involving Lamar Odom, but contends they took · place after the
basketball star was rc;leased fiom
his national letter of intent in
1997.
The claim was made in a
response to the NCAA; which
. began an inguiry March 10 into
Odom, who now plays for the
Los Ang~les Glippers.

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••

a
worse. Players from both
·teams and fans at Pacific Bell
Park watched in hush ed silence
as Ortiz's pitch . ran in on
Boone, crashing into his face.
, "I was just trying to go il)side
with a fastball, but my release
was wrong and it just got away
frOm me,'~ OrtiZ said. "I und~r­
stand he broke his nose. Obviously, it hurt and I ho pe that's all
there is to it."
.
Boorte · said · he remembers
being unable to !let out of th e
way, getting hit and la~ng on
the ground.
'
"It was a scary feeling, but
' when I opened. my eyes an\! I
could see everything was normal, I felt a lot better," he said.
There was a sense of relief for'
· both sides over Boone being
back on his feet, bui the game's
outcome was :is tough for the
Reds as it was uplifting for the
Giants.
Down 2-1 in th e bo ttom of
BRUISED AND CONFUSED- Cincinnati's Aaron Boone Is helped off the field after being hit in the head
the ninth, the Giants rallied on
with a pitch In last night's game at San Francisco. (AP)

NBA FINALS

~ Detroit's Weslbiook

.·

5.

f.or."'~J:q-••..,Jc)i~ilj
' ~iMI '€1 -'ins

two-out RBI singles by Barry
Bo nds and Jeff Kent.
The rally began with a oneo ut walk to Bo bby Estalell a by
Danny Graves (8-1 ), who blew
a save and lost for the first time
this season.

Marvin Benard followed with
a sin gle, and; after Bill Muell er
fli ed out , Bonds hi t a sharp
grounder to right, scoring
Estal ella with the tying ru n .
Kent followed with the
game-winn er up th e middle.
"A vi ctory is a victory,
. whether it's by 10 runs or one,"
Kent said. ult was j ust nice not
to have to go into extra innings.
We can go home and sleep in
~e. Th piill it out in the ninih
inning is great. It 's a' bi g emotio'nal boost for us to come back
against a qualiry close r."
R eds
reli ever
Scott
Williamson said G raves' streak
had to end sometime.
"H e's done such a great j ob
for us. We know nine times out
of 10, probably more than that,
he's going to take care o f it,"
Williamson said . "That was just
a fluke. Next time, he'll bail m
out."
R ol)b Nen (1-2) got the wiri,
striking out bo th batters he
·faced to break a pe..Sonal ninegame losing streak.
But the frightful beaning is
what stuck in many players'
minds.
"You never want to see a'
player, any player, go down like
that," Williamson said . "We all
had butterflies in o ur stomachs.
But our prayers were answered.
H e's back in the clubhouse with
us and he's going to be all
right."

•

SINGLE ROLL

SHEDD'S SPR~-D

~....
,-RM-OU_R...._.....---S-TO_K_E-LY_'_S-.---P-ILLSBURY

"I don 't think it's too bad. It
cracked the bridge of my nose,"
said Boone, who· returned to
the clubhouse after a trip to the
hospital for a round of X - rays
and tests. " HopefuJJy, I'll be able
again by this weekend."
.few hours earlier,

&lt;

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
'Jhe Tennessee Titans agreed to a
t~tee - ye~r .contract extension
with coach Jeff Fisher, who led
the franchise to its first Super
Bowl appearance in 40 years last
season.

BRAWNY
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SAN FRANCISC O (AP) .-.
Aaron Boone considers himself
lucky. He can deal w ith th e broken nose.
Boone was injured when he
was struck in the face by Ru ss
Ortiz's seventh-inning fastball
Tuesday night, as the San Francisco Giants rallied in th e ninth
to beat the C incinnati R eds :3-

Genlry joins

•

Pluse see US Open. Pille Bl

Reds, 3-l

TORONTO (AP) The
Toronto R aptors fired coach
Butch Carter, who led th e team
to its fi rst playoffberth last season.

•

stands.
" It's pretty close," Woods said . " I know
he has probably two mo re majors, or
maybe three, whatever it is. It 's been pretty good and that's pretry remarkable."
Just as remarkable as the career of Nicklaus has been the play of Woods, whose
dorrunance over the past year included
winning his second major title at last year's
PGA Championship.
Longeviry, though , will be th e key to
Woods' chan ces of catching N icklaus,
w hos e major titl es stretch 24 years from
the 1962 Open to the 1986 Masters.

Giants edge

Ralptors sack carter

(ASST F!-AV)

1

$ 29

won 11 of his last 20 tour events, including Nicklaus' Memorial two weeks ago.
T he seaside links is not o nly the course
\\'here Nicklaus says he would play if h e
only had one round of golfleft, but is also
a favo rite ofWoods. Tiger first played here
as a 13-year-old who couldn't believe
how long the course seemed.
An O pen w in wo uld give Woo ds three
major titles in his first four years as a pro,
j ust one shy of th e four Nicklaus held after
fo ur years on the PGA Tour.
N icklaus might not be aware of it, .but
Woods certainly is. Woods used to keep a
list on his bedroom wall of N icklaus'
accomplishments, and he knows where he

DALLAS (AP) - Derek Harper resign ed afier four months as
the Dallas Maveri~ks' vice president of business relations.

4
·
$ &amp;9

.

1961 U.S. Amateu r ancl another in the
1972 U.S. Open .
lfWoods is to eventually pass Nicklaus,
he might find Pebble Beach j ust as inviting to his chances of winning his 6rst
O pen and his third maj or championship.
N ot that N icklaus, playing in his 44th
O pen, will be standing by, keeping count.
"Poor T iger. I mean, the first time he
wins a tournament, 'OK, Tiger, o nly 19
more to go;" Nicklaus said. " Poor kid has
that sitting in front of him every day."
Woods , of course, is favore d to win his
fi rst O pen, and it would b e fitting if it
came at Pebble Beach. H e's on a run reminiscent of Nicklaus at his best, winning

...

·'·

;:;"D~gs ;.:.~:~~~- 1.9

U.S.D.I BONELESS BEEF ENGLISH

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Jack
Nicklaus doesn't hear the footsteps, even
as he prepares for what is likely his last
U.S. Open on a course that has loved him
almost as much as he loves it.
Nicklaus has never been much at looking back and reflecting on his time in the
game. A nd he's not about to start peeking
. over his shoulder and wondering w hether
T iger Woods can someday threat en his
record of 18 major champio nships.
"Do I keep track of his vs. rrune?" N icklaus asked. " No."
Arguably the greatest golfer in modern
history, Nicklaus helpe d cem ent his
stature with a win at Pebble Beach in the

·Harper quits in Dallas

39 oz.

Vfednesday.Junel4.lOOO

Nicklaus walking to his own beat at U.S. Open

· ATLANTA (AP)
Alvin
Gentry, a former head coach of
the Miami Heat and Detroit Pistons, was added to new Atlanta
H awks coach Lon Kruger's staff.

FOLGERS
COFFEE

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The Daily Sentinel

..

arrested

FARMINGTON
HILLS,
Mich. (AP) -· Lions cornerback
~nt Westbrook was arrested on
! ··drunken driving charge· after
~ljce said his car drifted across
tlii·ee lanes, then stopped in the
cllddle of the road.

--_--....... .Sampras wins
...
....... . In London ·
-....:•

-;..,.•

• •

-~·

• •
~ :()NOON (AP) - Pete SamIt~ rallied fiom a set down to
b~ Arvind Parmar 6-7 (8) , 6- 4,

;.;:5:at

the Queen's Club .grass~tt tournament. Also, Bol?
Bryan stunned eighth-seededTim
Hellman 7-6 (2) , 6-4.
., Earlier, Marat Safin reco.rded
tb'e first grass- court \ti ctory of his
,~ree r when he edged Julien
Boulter 7- 5, 5-7, 6-3 to ~each the
third round.
. Also advancing w as Mark
Ph ilippo ussis, who
downed
Way ne Arthurs 6-3, 7- 5. Michael
J,l9 dra moved into th e third
round when .(\ndre Sa retired
· with, a right wrist injury while
ttai)ing 6- 1, 3-0. David Wheaton
advanced with a . 6-3, 6-2 win
over Andt:ts Vinciguerra.
f 41

.Pacers hope to even series with win
thf9ws he attempts? .
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Sam Perkins has been arounp
And even if all three of. those
. long enough to know when the fears are realized, will that be
wind is shifting. Midway enough to stop the Lakers from
through the NBA finals, he taking a commanding 3- 1 lead
thinks the breeze is at the Indi- in the series?
" This team has dealt with a lot
ana Pacers' backs.
"In the playoffi, momentum is o f distractions this year," forward
everything," the 15-year veteran Robert Horry said. "The stuff
said. "Hopefully, we're starting to that's going on now i• just more ·
feel that momentum. We're like a of the same. We're not worried.
We still have Phil on the bench,
race car. We're speeding up."
Fresh off a 100-91 victory and we still have the big guy in
over the Los Angeles Lakers in the middle."
None of these distractions faze
Game 3 on Sunday, Indiana can
tie the best-of-seven series with the Pacers, woo have recovered a
a victory in Game 4 tonight at weaith of confidence after .two
losses in · Los Angeles last week.
Conseco Fieldhouse.
While the refreshed, relaxed . While speaking to reporters on
Pacers are talking like they have Tuesday, Jalen Rose repeatedly
aU the answers, the Lakers are used phrases like "When we tie
struggling with several unpleas- . the series" and " When it's 2-2."
Wait a second,Jalen. Don 't you
ant questions.
Will Glen Rice get benched .mean "if" the Pacers win Game
again by coach Phil Jackson, fur- 4?
ther infuriating Los Angeles'
"It's wh en," Rose said.
third-leading scorer?
" I've been waiting for the
Will Kobe Bryant's sprained opportunity to play for a chamleft ankle prevent him from play- . pionship in the NBA since I was
ing at fuU ·speed?
in middle school. Now !hat
Will O ' N eal continue to brick we've got that chance, we're not
n ear~y two ·Of every three free just going to let it go."
··v •
•''·

The Pacers want to seize that
opportunity by putting extra
pressure on Bryant, who planned
to play after rrussing all but 7 1/2
minutes of the last two games.
Los Angeles' star guard was walking easily on his sprained ankle,
but as Jackson said earlier, the
joint won't be fuJJy healed until
the offieason.
While Bryant's ankle likely is
strong enough for him to play
and contribute on offense, he
could be limited in his defensive
movement.
"I just have to focus on more
angles and position as opposed
to using my athleticism most of
the time," Bryant said. ''I'll probably be lirruted when I come
back. So wh at? I've just got to
find a way to get around it.
We 've dealt with adversity all
season long. We'll deal with it
. "
agam.
Bryant's physical health might
be Jess troublesome to the Lakers
than Ri ce's mental state. On
Tu esday,
Rice
remained
embroiled in a clash with Jackson, a controversy further fueled

.PIHH SH NIA. Pllp N

Smith, Holtz
address gambling
WASHINGTON (AP) we 're goin g to win.' She never
Kentucky basketball coach gambled in her life," he said. " I
Tubby Smith and South Caroli- have peo ple come into my
na football coach Lou Holtz office and say, 'Tubby, you're just
urged Congress to end legal not winning by eno ugh.' I see it
betting on amateur sports, say- all over."
ing it has helped create a world
But lawmakers and gambling
th e
where point spreads matter as interests from Nevada much as wins and losses.
only •tate offering legal betting
In testimony Tuesday before on sports - say the criticism is
the House Judiciary C omrillt- rrusdirected .
tee, the coaches said players are
"I do no t beli eve a bill bantempted to throw games or ning college sports gambling in
shave points so the final score is N evada will eliminate o r signifc
icantly reduce gambling on colwithin the spread.
Holtz, who coached Notre lege sports," said Bobby SiUer, a
Dame to the national champi- Nevada Gaming Control Board
onship in 1988, said he has had member and fo rm er FBI agent
teams cheered and booed for who investigated gambl ers.
· winning.
T he amou nt of legal sports
"The difference was the point betting in N evada is $2.3 billion
spread;' h e said.
a year, with about $650 million
Smith, who coached Ken- on college sports. Illegal sports
tucky to a national champ i- gambling has been estimated at
onship in 1998 , said point $80 billion- $380 billio n a year.
spreads have become part o f the
R ep. Jim Gibbons, R - N ev.,
sports landscape.
argued there is no evidence that
" It hits home because I . legal gamblin g in his state is "in
remember my ·wife one day say- any way responsible for the illeing, 'Tubby, we should be OK
tonight because the lin e says
Please- Cillmblln~o Pllp ..

·'

"

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June 14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Virginia
candidate promises ·more money for health care providers
lawmaker
wins
GOP
•
pnmary
(AP) Overcorrung a deeppoe keted opponent who poured
nearly $1 millio n into his campaign, a Virginia state legislator
· narrowly won the R epublican
nomination for an open House
seat.
With all precincts reponing
eady Wednesday,Jo Ann Davis, a
member of the House of Delegates, won the five-candidate
race with 14,263 votes, or 35
percent. Paul Jost, who had the
backing of GOP Gov. Jim
Gilmore and spent three times
the total of his opponents, got
12, 155 votes, or 30 percent.
Davis, who would become
the first woman fiom Virginia in
Congress if she wins this fall, will
go up against former Fredericksburg mayor Lawrence Davies, a
D emocrat. Both seek to replace
retiring nine-term GOP Rep.
Herbert H . Bateman.
T he Virginia race was a highlight of elections in five states,
including primaries in Maine,
North Dakota, and South Carolina, and a runoff in Arkansas.
Another bitter fight in Virginia brought a razor-thin victory to Eric Cantor, a member of
the state House of Delegates.
With all precincts reporting,
Cantor had 20,902 votes, or just
over 50 pen:ent, while state Sen.
Steve M artin had 20,637 votes,
just under 50 pen:ent.
A recount seemed assured.
".1 spoke to Eric Cantor and
in that conversation I let him
know that I offered my congratulations pending that recount;'
Martin told cheering supporters.
Cantor, who also had
Gilmore's endorsement, had
questioned Martin's votes on
legislative pay and expenses.
Martin raised issues about C antor's family\; dealings in real
estate.
Cantor will face school superintendent Warren Stewart,
whom Democrats norrunated at
the last minute on Monday in
the race to fill the seat of GOP
Rep. Thomas J. Bliley, who is
retiring after 20 years.
The biggest seats up for election Tuesday went unchallenged.
No primary opponents emerged
for two-term Democratic Sen.
Charles Robb ofVirginia, freshman GOP Sen. Olympia Snowe
of Maine and Democratic Sen.
Kent Conrad of North Dakota,
who is seeking a third full term.
Even North Dakota's seat for
governor, open bb:ause Republican Ed Schafer' chose not to
seek a third term, went without
a primary fight.
: A crowded South Carolina
t:~ce went to a runoff, with state
R ep. Henry Brown raking 44
percent of the vote. His nearest
opponent; former state transportation chairman H.B. "Buck"
Limehouse, got 33 percent, after
Limehouse outspent Brown by
nearly 3-L
The seat, in a coastal district, is
heid by G()P Rep. Mark Sanford, who is sticking to a campaign pledge to serve just three
terms. Democrat Andy Brack, a
former rep,ortet' and spokesman
· for Democratic Sen. Ernest
Hollings, was ·unopposed in the
primary.
And in a Soutl\ Carolina primary that will essentially determine the general election winner, first- term GOP Rep. James
DeMint easily defeated Frank
Raddish. Democrats did .not run
a candidate in the heavily GOP
district.
North . Dakota 's treasurer
apparently . survived an attempt
to abolish her job, with a majority voting to keep the state post.
The proposal to eliminate it had
drawn criticism fiom state treasurers around the nation.
R eturns from six western
counties showed a mixed
, resi&gt;onse to a proposal to set
docks ahead tO Central time and
j oin the eastern part of the state.
1\.vo counties endorsed the plan,
w hile results were pending fiom
the others. Whatever the vote, ·
county and federal officials must
agree on any change. Several
other counties aren't considering
a move fiom M ountain time.

CLARKS SUMMIT, Pa. (AP) - Scouring the Midwest fo r votes, Vice President
AI Gore is promising more money for
health care providers and ·a quick fix for
elderly Americans in need o f prescription
drug coverage.
The Democratic presidential ca ndidate
was re- pac kagin g his health care initiatives
in this battleground state as part o f a threeweek " progress and prosperity tou r." The
trip which began Tuesday in N ew York is
'
· ·
'
designed to give Gore some credtt fo r the
nation 's roarin g economy.
"Are you better off than yo u were eight

years ago? For most Americans, I believe
the answer is o bvious;' Gore said in his
scene-se tting address in N ew York." America has done well. But I'm here today to
tell you:You ain't seen nothing yet."
Fo r the next th ree weeks, Gore will
foc us eac h day on a different aspect of hi s
economic agenda. The topic Wednesday
was health care.
The vice president has already proposed
expandin g a fed e ral health care program
·
·
·
for chtldren, aUowmg people to buy mto
·
the Medt·care program ear1y. d e d.tcatmg
Medicare surpluses to the entitlement pro-

gram and improving · prescription drug
In the health care portion of his Tuesday :
coverage for the elderly.
address, Gore said, "To those who say we .
His advisers •. speaking on condition of can't cure cancer, ease the pain of disease, ·
anonymity, satd Gore was proposmg and give new health and hope to America's .
Wednesday to : .
.
h
w, 'll h
- U se a portion of proJected federal childreq, I say: J ust watc us. e
arness :
surplus to increase funding to health care all the wonders of scienc·e and discovery. :
provi&lt;lers, such as hospitals, nursing ho?tes, We' ll b uild an America where health is '
home health programs and rural health never again decided by w~alth ."
agencies that had their funds cuts under
Afterward , in an interview with T he
the 1998 balanced budget agreement.
A
. d p
G
.d
..
resst've"
· · d
· · ssoctate
ress, ore sa t an agg
- Put the prescnptlon rug program m
. .
. .
.
.ll
h bo .
1 by 2002 , movmg
· t h e tlmeta
·
bl e up by adnuru•tratlon
t- ,
pace
.
. mqu try. WI. . get to t . e
four years.
tom o fsoanng gas pnces Ill the Mtdwest.

P0 WEL L 'S

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Inside:
NL: Caminiti leads Astros, Page B2
AL: BoSox, ChiSox rolling, Page B2
Rocker~ back, Page B2
(!n the Fringe, Page BB

$139
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WEDNESDAY'S

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Dr. J plucls for help

in surch for son
. SANFO R D, f la . (AP) - Julius
•Erving pleaded for help in finding hi s 19- year-old' son, who has
a history of drug problems and
has been rrussing since M ay 28.
A $25,000 reward was offered
for the safe return of Cory M arvin Erving, who was last seen by
his farruly when he went to a
j:.a~e Mary shopping mall, about
20 miles from Orlando.
Erving spoke at a nationally
televised news · conference with
his wife and their three other
a(!ult children .

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,to violations
LAS VEGAS ' (AP) - UNLV
has acknowledged violations
involving Lamar Odom, but contends they took · place after the
basketball star was rc;leased fiom
his national letter of intent in
1997.
The claim was made in a
response to the NCAA; which
. began an inguiry March 10 into
Odom, who now plays for the
Los Ang~les Glippers.

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••

a
worse. Players from both
·teams and fans at Pacific Bell
Park watched in hush ed silence
as Ortiz's pitch . ran in on
Boone, crashing into his face.
, "I was just trying to go il)side
with a fastball, but my release
was wrong and it just got away
frOm me,'~ OrtiZ said. "I und~r­
stand he broke his nose. Obviously, it hurt and I ho pe that's all
there is to it."
.
Boorte · said · he remembers
being unable to !let out of th e
way, getting hit and la~ng on
the ground.
'
"It was a scary feeling, but
' when I opened. my eyes an\! I
could see everything was normal, I felt a lot better," he said.
There was a sense of relief for'
· both sides over Boone being
back on his feet, bui the game's
outcome was :is tough for the
Reds as it was uplifting for the
Giants.
Down 2-1 in th e bo ttom of
BRUISED AND CONFUSED- Cincinnati's Aaron Boone Is helped off the field after being hit in the head
the ninth, the Giants rallied on
with a pitch In last night's game at San Francisco. (AP)

NBA FINALS

~ Detroit's Weslbiook

.·

5.

f.or."'~J:q-••..,Jc)i~ilj
' ~iMI '€1 -'ins

two-out RBI singles by Barry
Bo nds and Jeff Kent.
The rally began with a oneo ut walk to Bo bby Estalell a by
Danny Graves (8-1 ), who blew
a save and lost for the first time
this season.

Marvin Benard followed with
a sin gle, and; after Bill Muell er
fli ed out , Bonds hi t a sharp
grounder to right, scoring
Estal ella with the tying ru n .
Kent followed with the
game-winn er up th e middle.
"A vi ctory is a victory,
. whether it's by 10 runs or one,"
Kent said. ult was j ust nice not
to have to go into extra innings.
We can go home and sleep in
~e. Th piill it out in the ninih
inning is great. It 's a' bi g emotio'nal boost for us to come back
against a qualiry close r."
R eds
reli ever
Scott
Williamson said G raves' streak
had to end sometime.
"H e's done such a great j ob
for us. We know nine times out
of 10, probably more than that,
he's going to take care o f it,"
Williamson said . "That was just
a fluke. Next time, he'll bail m
out."
R ol)b Nen (1-2) got the wiri,
striking out bo th batters he
·faced to break a pe..Sonal ninegame losing streak.
But the frightful beaning is
what stuck in many players'
minds.
"You never want to see a'
player, any player, go down like
that," Williamson said . "We all
had butterflies in o ur stomachs.
But our prayers were answered.
H e's back in the clubhouse with
us and he's going to be all
right."

•

SINGLE ROLL

SHEDD'S SPR~-D

~....
,-RM-OU_R...._.....---S-TO_K_E-LY_'_S-.---P-ILLSBURY

"I don 't think it's too bad. It
cracked the bridge of my nose,"
said Boone, who· returned to
the clubhouse after a trip to the
hospital for a round of X - rays
and tests. " HopefuJJy, I'll be able
again by this weekend."
.few hours earlier,

&lt;

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
'Jhe Tennessee Titans agreed to a
t~tee - ye~r .contract extension
with coach Jeff Fisher, who led
the franchise to its first Super
Bowl appearance in 40 years last
season.

BRAWNY
PAPER
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101ba.

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Fishel's cOntract

2·15 oz.

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GEN #1

SAN FRANCISC O (AP) .-.
Aaron Boone considers himself
lucky. He can deal w ith th e broken nose.
Boone was injured when he
was struck in the face by Ru ss
Ortiz's seventh-inning fastball
Tuesday night, as the San Francisco Giants rallied in th e ninth
to beat the C incinnati R eds :3-

Genlry joins

•

Pluse see US Open. Pille Bl

Reds, 3-l

TORONTO (AP) The
Toronto R aptors fired coach
Butch Carter, who led th e team
to its fi rst playoffberth last season.

•

stands.
" It's pretty close," Woods said . " I know
he has probably two mo re majors, or
maybe three, whatever it is. It 's been pretty good and that's pretry remarkable."
Just as remarkable as the career of Nicklaus has been the play of Woods, whose
dorrunance over the past year included
winning his second major title at last year's
PGA Championship.
Longeviry, though , will be th e key to
Woods' chan ces of catching N icklaus,
w hos e major titl es stretch 24 years from
the 1962 Open to the 1986 Masters.

Giants edge

Ralptors sack carter

(ASST F!-AV)

1

$ 29

won 11 of his last 20 tour events, including Nicklaus' Memorial two weeks ago.
T he seaside links is not o nly the course
\\'here Nicklaus says he would play if h e
only had one round of golfleft, but is also
a favo rite ofWoods. Tiger first played here
as a 13-year-old who couldn't believe
how long the course seemed.
An O pen w in wo uld give Woo ds three
major titles in his first four years as a pro,
j ust one shy of th e four Nicklaus held after
fo ur years on the PGA Tour.
N icklaus might not be aware of it, .but
Woods certainly is. Woods used to keep a
list on his bedroom wall of N icklaus'
accomplishments, and he knows where he

DALLAS (AP) - Derek Harper resign ed afier four months as
the Dallas Maveri~ks' vice president of business relations.

4
·
$ &amp;9

.

1961 U.S. Amateu r ancl another in the
1972 U.S. Open .
lfWoods is to eventually pass Nicklaus,
he might find Pebble Beach j ust as inviting to his chances of winning his 6rst
O pen and his third maj or championship.
N ot that N icklaus, playing in his 44th
O pen, will be standing by, keeping count.
"Poor T iger. I mean, the first time he
wins a tournament, 'OK, Tiger, o nly 19
more to go;" Nicklaus said. " Poor kid has
that sitting in front of him every day."
Woods , of course, is favore d to win his
fi rst O pen, and it would b e fitting if it
came at Pebble Beach. H e's on a run reminiscent of Nicklaus at his best, winning

...

·'·

;:;"D~gs ;.:.~:~~~- 1.9

U.S.D.I BONELESS BEEF ENGLISH

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Jack
Nicklaus doesn't hear the footsteps, even
as he prepares for what is likely his last
U.S. Open on a course that has loved him
almost as much as he loves it.
Nicklaus has never been much at looking back and reflecting on his time in the
game. A nd he's not about to start peeking
. over his shoulder and wondering w hether
T iger Woods can someday threat en his
record of 18 major champio nships.
"Do I keep track of his vs. rrune?" N icklaus asked. " No."
Arguably the greatest golfer in modern
history, Nicklaus helpe d cem ent his
stature with a win at Pebble Beach in the

·Harper quits in Dallas

39 oz.

Vfednesday.Junel4.lOOO

Nicklaus walking to his own beat at U.S. Open

· ATLANTA (AP)
Alvin
Gentry, a former head coach of
the Miami Heat and Detroit Pistons, was added to new Atlanta
H awks coach Lon Kruger's staff.

FOLGERS
COFFEE

Page Bl

•

c
BONELESS PORK COUNTRY STYLE

The Daily Sentinel

..

arrested

FARMINGTON
HILLS,
Mich. (AP) -· Lions cornerback
~nt Westbrook was arrested on
! ··drunken driving charge· after
~ljce said his car drifted across
tlii·ee lanes, then stopped in the
cllddle of the road.

--_--....... .Sampras wins
...
....... . In London ·
-....:•

-;..,.•

• •

-~·

• •
~ :()NOON (AP) - Pete SamIt~ rallied fiom a set down to
b~ Arvind Parmar 6-7 (8) , 6- 4,

;.;:5:at

the Queen's Club .grass~tt tournament. Also, Bol?
Bryan stunned eighth-seededTim
Hellman 7-6 (2) , 6-4.
., Earlier, Marat Safin reco.rded
tb'e first grass- court \ti ctory of his
,~ree r when he edged Julien
Boulter 7- 5, 5-7, 6-3 to ~each the
third round.
. Also advancing w as Mark
Ph ilippo ussis, who
downed
Way ne Arthurs 6-3, 7- 5. Michael
J,l9 dra moved into th e third
round when .(\ndre Sa retired
· with, a right wrist injury while
ttai)ing 6- 1, 3-0. David Wheaton
advanced with a . 6-3, 6-2 win
over Andt:ts Vinciguerra.
f 41

.Pacers hope to even series with win
thf9ws he attempts? .
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Sam Perkins has been arounp
And even if all three of. those
. long enough to know when the fears are realized, will that be
wind is shifting. Midway enough to stop the Lakers from
through the NBA finals, he taking a commanding 3- 1 lead
thinks the breeze is at the Indi- in the series?
" This team has dealt with a lot
ana Pacers' backs.
"In the playoffi, momentum is o f distractions this year," forward
everything," the 15-year veteran Robert Horry said. "The stuff
said. "Hopefully, we're starting to that's going on now i• just more ·
feel that momentum. We're like a of the same. We're not worried.
We still have Phil on the bench,
race car. We're speeding up."
Fresh off a 100-91 victory and we still have the big guy in
over the Los Angeles Lakers in the middle."
None of these distractions faze
Game 3 on Sunday, Indiana can
tie the best-of-seven series with the Pacers, woo have recovered a
a victory in Game 4 tonight at weaith of confidence after .two
losses in · Los Angeles last week.
Conseco Fieldhouse.
While the refreshed, relaxed . While speaking to reporters on
Pacers are talking like they have Tuesday, Jalen Rose repeatedly
aU the answers, the Lakers are used phrases like "When we tie
struggling with several unpleas- . the series" and " When it's 2-2."
Wait a second,Jalen. Don 't you
ant questions.
Will Glen Rice get benched .mean "if" the Pacers win Game
again by coach Phil Jackson, fur- 4?
ther infuriating Los Angeles'
"It's wh en," Rose said.
third-leading scorer?
" I've been waiting for the
Will Kobe Bryant's sprained opportunity to play for a chamleft ankle prevent him from play- . pionship in the NBA since I was
ing at fuU ·speed?
in middle school. Now !hat
Will O ' N eal continue to brick we've got that chance, we're not
n ear~y two ·Of every three free just going to let it go."
··v •
•''·

The Pacers want to seize that
opportunity by putting extra
pressure on Bryant, who planned
to play after rrussing all but 7 1/2
minutes of the last two games.
Los Angeles' star guard was walking easily on his sprained ankle,
but as Jackson said earlier, the
joint won't be fuJJy healed until
the offieason.
While Bryant's ankle likely is
strong enough for him to play
and contribute on offense, he
could be limited in his defensive
movement.
"I just have to focus on more
angles and position as opposed
to using my athleticism most of
the time," Bryant said. ''I'll probably be lirruted when I come
back. So wh at? I've just got to
find a way to get around it.
We 've dealt with adversity all
season long. We'll deal with it
. "
agam.
Bryant's physical health might
be Jess troublesome to the Lakers
than Ri ce's mental state. On
Tu esday,
Rice
remained
embroiled in a clash with Jackson, a controversy further fueled

.PIHH SH NIA. Pllp N

Smith, Holtz
address gambling
WASHINGTON (AP) we 're goin g to win.' She never
Kentucky basketball coach gambled in her life," he said. " I
Tubby Smith and South Caroli- have peo ple come into my
na football coach Lou Holtz office and say, 'Tubby, you're just
urged Congress to end legal not winning by eno ugh.' I see it
betting on amateur sports, say- all over."
ing it has helped create a world
But lawmakers and gambling
th e
where point spreads matter as interests from Nevada much as wins and losses.
only •tate offering legal betting
In testimony Tuesday before on sports - say the criticism is
the House Judiciary C omrillt- rrusdirected .
tee, the coaches said players are
"I do no t beli eve a bill bantempted to throw games or ning college sports gambling in
shave points so the final score is N evada will eliminate o r signifc
icantly reduce gambling on colwithin the spread.
Holtz, who coached Notre lege sports," said Bobby SiUer, a
Dame to the national champi- Nevada Gaming Control Board
onship in 1988, said he has had member and fo rm er FBI agent
teams cheered and booed for who investigated gambl ers.
· winning.
T he amou nt of legal sports
"The difference was the point betting in N evada is $2.3 billion
spread;' h e said.
a year, with about $650 million
Smith, who coached Ken- on college sports. Illegal sports
tucky to a national champ i- gambling has been estimated at
onship in 1998 , said point $80 billion- $380 billio n a year.
spreads have become part o f the
R ep. Jim Gibbons, R - N ev.,
sports landscape.
argued there is no evidence that
" It hits home because I . legal gamblin g in his state is "in
remember my ·wife one day say- any way responsible for the illeing, 'Tubby, we should be OK
tonight because the lin e says
Please- Cillmblln~o Pllp ..

·'

"

�•
...
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednelday,June14,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June14, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Caminiti homers, drives in three as Astros rip Rockies, 6-3:
THE ~SOCIATED PRESS
really believe that. Rock bottom was San Diego. I
The Houston Astros got things straightened out think there was just a karma or an aura today that I
· off the field, then got hack to winning on it.
haven't felt in a lpng time."
After a 25-•ninute pregame meeting before TuesManager Larry Dierker also got an inspirational
day night's game. the Astros beat the Colorado phone can from the team chaplain, who reminded
Rockies 6-3.
him that Tuesday was the one-year anniversary of his
The underachieving Astros' frustration came to a life-threatening seizure.
"He said he thought maybe we could look at this
head Sunday when rookie catcher Mitch Meluskey
punched teammate Matt Mieske in the eye during as a turning point and maybe we will get it going
batting practice before Houston's loss in San Diego. like we did last year when we won 90 games,"
After winning the NL Central the last three sea- Dierker said. "It was a call to lift me up."
sons, Houston has the worst record in the majors.
Tom Goodwin had three hits and stole two bases
"This isn't the first time that membe., of the same for the Rockies, who had their four-game winning
team got into a fight. That in itself wasn't alarming," streak snapped. Colorado also lost for the first time
said general manager Gerry Hunsicker, who called in nine games at Coors Field.
.. the meeting. "But the fact that it happened out in
Cardinals 8, Padres 3
public, at that point it became a real embarrassment
At San Diego, Darryl Kile became the maJO~&gt;
to the team and to the organization."
third 10-game winner, thanks in part to Eli MarThe meeting was one of several for Astros this rero's three-run homer, and St. Louis beat the Padres
. year, but the results were mostly disappointing until for the fifth straight time.
Tuesday.
Kile (10-3) allowed three runs- two earnedKen Ca1niniti homered and drove in three runs, and nine hits in seven innings. He already has two
and Shane Reynolds (6-3) won for the fi~&gt;t time in more wins than last year, when he was 8-13 in his
six starts since May 10 for Houston.
second season in Colorado. Kile, who won his third
Houston, which lost 12 of 13 on the road, built a straight start, struck out three and walked three.
5- 1 lead against Rolando Arrojo (4-5).
Marrero and J.D. Drew both homered off rookie
Reynolds gave up one run and eight hits in six Rodrigo Lopez (0-3), who remained winless in six
innings, walked three and struck out five.
starts after giving up six runs and 12 hits, a seasonBilly Wagner pitched the ninth for his sixth save in high for a Padres pitcher.
.
13 chances.
Dave Veres pitched the final 1 1-3 innings for his
" I believe we hit rock bottom;' Caminiti said. "I 11th save in 14 opportunities.

'

Pirates 7, Braves 6, 10 inn.
Wil Cordero led off the bottom of the lOth with
his lOth homer as Pittsburgh rallied from a threerun ninth-inning deficit.
Cordero hit a 3-2 pitch from Don Wengert (0-1)
into the left-field seats as Pittsburgh got its loth
come-from-behind win.
Jose Silva (5-2) pitched the lOth for the win .
Pittsburgh tied the score b-b with three runs in
the ninth against Mike Remlinger, who had been
perfect in six save opportunities.
Andruw Jones hit his third homer in two days,
and Brian Jordan added a two-run shot for Atlanta.
Kevin Young had three RBis. giving him nine in
two games against the Braves.
Phillies 4, Marlins 3
At Philadelphia, Scott Rolen's two-run single
broke a tie and Ron Gant homered and drove in
two runs as the Phillies spoiled Chuck Smith's majo~
league debut.
Gant tied it with an RBI single offJoe Strong (01) · before ·Rolen 's bases-loaded single against
Armando AlmanZa provided the final margin.
Wayne Gomes (3-4) pitched 1 1-3 innings. Jeff
Brantley allowed a pinch-hit home run by Derrek
Lee leading off the ninth before dosing for his sixth
save in as many chances.
Cubs 4, Mets 3
At Wrigley Field, Cubs pinch-runner · Damon
Buford scored the winner from second on a throwing error by shortstop Kurt Abbott in the eighth

inning.
.
·•
Felix Heredia (3-1) won with a perfect eig!)t~,
while Rick Aguilera got his 13th save in 17 opp_ottunities. .
·_.
John Franco (2-2) took the loss.
..
Dodgers 6, Diamondbacks 1
' '
Eric Karras set a Los Angeles record with : IUs
229th home run, and Chan Ho Park pitched a fiwhitter at home.
·'
Gary Sheffield hit a two-run homer, his 18th, )lnd
Park (8-4) threw his fifth complete game in ·121
career starts and fi~&gt;t of the season.
:'
Arizona's loss was its first in five meetings this season with the Dodge~&gt; .
Mike Morgan (1 - 1), making his second star.t of
the season, allowed four runs and eight hits in 4 23 innings.
Expos 9, Brewers 4
Vladimir Guerrero's two-run single keyed a
seven-run third inning for Montreal at Milwauk.e~.
The game was de.layed by rain for 2 hours, 12 nli~utes at the start.
.
The Expos jumped to an 8-0 lead ~fter thiee
innings against Steve Woodard (1-5).Jose Vidro had
a two-run double in the third and a solo homer jn
the ninth.
Carl Pavano (7 -3) allowed seven hits and thii!e
walks in five scoreless innings.
Raul Casanova hit his first career grand slam ~n
the eighth inning.

,, '

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Boston Red Sox tightened up the AL East
race, while the Chicago White Sox have opened up
some room in the Central.
On a night when the top two teams in·the East
·and Central squared off, Boston beat the New York
Yankees 5-3 Tuesday to move into a vir.tual tie in the
East. Chicago beat the Cleveland Indians 4-3 in 10·
innings to take a four-game lead in the Central.
Ray Durham homered in the top of the lOth and
the White Sox survived a scary bottom half as they
:opened their largest lead in the division since May
28, 1994, when they also led by four.
"We have a sense of how to win;• White Sox
manager J~rry Manuel said. "Now the game itself is
more important than individual num~rs. The focus
is on winning."
·
, • At Yankee Stadium, Jason Varitek homered into
i :the upper de.ck off ,Orlando Hernandez (6-5) and
~:four Red Sox relievers shut down New York on one
::hit for 6 2-3 innings.
,
:: "A lot of different people contributed;' Red Sox
::manager Jimy Williams said.
' · With one out in the lOth, Durham hit a 1-0 pitch
t !from Justin Speier (0-1) for his 1lth homer and

..:.
:~

third in three games.
Bill Simas (1-1) got two outs for the win and Bob
Howry got three outs for his second save.
An error by Durham helped the Indians, who
stranded 10 runners, put the tying run at second in
the lOth. But Howry got .pinch-hitter Russell
Branyan to hit into a game-ending double play.
It was the second straight night t~e Indians hit
into a game-ending double play with the potential
winning run on.
"Right now, they have the advantage;• Cleveland
shortstop OmarVizqUel said.~We ·are tpe ones chasing them. It's about time we open. our. eyes and look
in the mirror."
. .•
Carl Everett delivered a triple, double and single
as the Red Sox won for the eighth time in their last
nine regular-sea~on games against New York.
. Boston starter Brian Rose .lasted only · 2 1-3
innings, and left with the bases loaded and the score
tied at 3.
Reliever · Hipolito Pichardo (1-0) got Shane
· Spencer to ground il!to a double play, and ·the Yankees never got a runner past second b~e tile rest of
the way.
· .,, \ . ,
Rich Garces wdrked ~o scorel~ss innings, Rhea!

Cormier pitched a perfect eighth and Derek Lowe
dosed for his 15th save.
"Our job was just to maintain the game, which
we did," Garces said. "That's what we're supposed to
d0...
Tigers 16, Blue Jays 3
Bobby Higginson highlighted a rare Detroit
power surge with a pair of three-run homers and
seven RBis at Comerica Park.
Juan Gonzalez and Brad Ausmus also homered for
the Tigers, whose 59 homers rank next 'to .last in the
AL.
.
.
Willie Blair (3-1) got the win and Clayton
Andrews (1-2) allowed six runs in 1 1-3 innings.
Angels 5, Devil Rays 3
Seth Etherton won his fi~&gt;t major league game
and Mo Vaughn hit his first homer this month for.
visiting Anaheim.
·
Etherton (1 -1) allowed two runs and five hits over
five innings in his fourth career siart.
Vaughn's _two-run horner - his 19th of the season and first since May 28 - put the Angels up 42 in the third inning against Bryan Reka~ (2-4).
Orioles 3, Rangers 2
B.J. Surhoff and Charles Johnson homered, and

"J

Scott Erickson (3-3) overcame eight walks as hO'It
Baltimore extended Texas'losing streak to a seasi!Jihigh six games. .
,
Rick Helling (7 -5) lost his fourth straight start: !Qr
last-place Texas.
·., ~
Athletics 6, Twins 5
Migoel Tejada, Eric Chavez and Ramon Herqandez each had three hits to lead Oakland at ·the
Metrodome.
The ~ottom third of Oakland's lineup c'ombinad
for nine hits, four runs and three RBls to lead :,the
Athletics. ·
Oakland rookie Mark Mulder (4-2) allowed
runs in six innings for the win. Jason lsringhausep
pitched the ninth for his 16th save.
·
Mariners 7, Royals 0, 5 1/2 inn.
Gil Meche (2-4) carne off the DL and , allowed
· ohe hi.t in five innings to lead ))eattle to ~ -~~n-sh&lt;tMened win at Kansas City.
, ,' · ''
•.,
The game, halted as the Royals came to
bottom of tl1e sixth inning, 'was called
of 1 hour, 26 minutes.

twP

(Coopenta-

Toom

Elotom Dl'llolon

w

,AI. . . ..............................0
Now 'I'Drk .........................34
-~ ..........................33
Florida ............................. 28

~

~ct.

08

23 .635
28 .548
28 .541
3e .448

5 112
6
12
Philadolphio .................... 24 38 .387 16 112
Central Dtvtllan
St Louls ...........................36 28 .563
Clnclnnotl ;.......... -.-......32 31 .aGI 31/2
. !'ittSbu'ljh .......................28 34 .452
7
'Chjcago .......................... 27 37 .422
9
Mltwaui&lt;M ............ ........... 26 38 .40e
10
Hous10n ..........................23 ..o .365 12 112
W. . Divlalon
tMtona ...........................38 26 .594
• C'!'&lt;'!adO ......................... 34 26 .5e7
' ..,.Angel...................... 114 28 .548
Son F18r&lt;l1100.................. 30 31 .492 6
San Dlago ........................ 27 36 .429 10

-·. ··

Tueadey'a Gamu

2
3

112
112

St Louis 8, San Diogo 3
Pittsburgh 7, Atlanta 6, ro Innings
"' Pl&gt;lladolphla 4, Florida 3
Chicago Cubs 4, N.V.M01s 3
Houo10n 6, Colonlllo 3

l.o$ Angeles e. Arizona 1

Montreal 9, Milwaukee 4

San P'ranciiiCO 3, Clnclnnltl 2
1,

•

Tocs.y"e Geme•
N.Y. Meta (Hampton 6-5) at Chicago Cubs

tbowns 3-1), 2:20p.m.
(Ruotor 3-4), 3:31 p.m.
Atlanta !Maddux 8-1) a1 Pittsbu'ljh (Ander,1100 1-\), 7:05p.m.
1 • Florida (Dempster 8-4) ot Philadelphia (WoH
~) . 7:35 p.m.
, , · .Montreal ~Johnson 2-0) at Milwaukee
('Migh11·1), 8.05 p.m.
Houston (Hol1 3-7) at Colorado (Astaclo 6·
2,1. 8:05p.m.
• Arizona (Johnson 10-1) at l.os Angeles
(Perez 4-2), 10:05 p.m.
. !It LouiS (S1ophonson 8-2) 01 San Diogo
(Spencer 2-1), 10:05 p.m.
' l Cincinnati (Neagle 5-1) It S.n Francltoo

Thurodoy'l GoiMI
Houston at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
Allama at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m.

loom
W L
Now Yolk ......................... 33 25
Bos1on .......,.................... 34 28
Toromo ............................34 32
Baltimore ........................ 27 34
Tampa Bay .. :.................... 23 38
Control Dlvlllon
Cticago .............. :...........39 24
Clwelond .......................34 %7
: Ka!UOS Ci1y .....................32 31
MlJlnesota .. ..................... 29 36
Detroit .............................24 38
Wtlt Olvltlon
Seal11e ............................34 27
' El~kland .......................... 35 29
Anaheim ....... ............ :..... 33 30
Te)(as ........... ............. ......30 32

Pet.

OB

.see
,5e7
.515
.443
.37t
.819

3
7 1/2
12

.S&amp;7

4

.508
7
.448
11
.400 1311/2

7:35p.m.

~klancl

(Hudson 6·2)

(Be!gman 4-4), 8:05p.m.

at Minnesota

Thurodoy'l
Chicago White
So)( atN.v.·
Yankees, 7:05

p.m..

Anaheim at Tarnpa Bay, 7; 15 p.m.
Texas at Baltimore. 7:35 p.m.
National L.Ngue L..dara
BATIING--Hetton, Colorad o, .392; Vidro,
Montreal, .372; Piazza , New vane, .364 ; vGuer·
rero, Montreal, .362; Edmonds , St. L.Duis, .350;
Owens, San Diego, .347; Goodwin, Colorado,

.345.

AUN5-Edmonds, St. Louis, 62; ,Helton,
COiotado, 60; Bonds, San Francisco, 57; Bag·
well , Houston, 53; Kent , S&amp;n Frencisco, 51;
Atfonzo. New York, 50; Grudzlelanek, Los
Angeles, 50.
.
RBI-Giles, PittSburgh, 60;,Kent, San Francisco, 80: SSosa, Chicago, 58; Hollon, Colorado, 57; Karros, Los Angeles, 56; VGuerrero,
Mon1real, 55; SFinley, Arizona, 54.
HIT9-Vidro , Montreal, 86; VGuorr ero ,
¥ontreal, 84; Hetton, Colorado, 83; Owens,
San Diego, 82; EOYoung, Chicago, 82 ;
A.Jonea, Allan1a, 80; Kent. San Francisco. 79.
OOUBLES-Vidro, Montreal, 213: Green, Los
Angeles, 23; EOV~ng , Chicago, 23; Cirillo ,
Colorado, 21 ; RBWhite. Montreal. 21 ; Alfonzo ,
New Yonc, 20: Kent, San Francisco, 20.
TRIPLES-Goodwin, ColoradO, 7 ; Womack ,
Arizona, 5; Shumpert, Colorado, 5; Reese,
Cincinnati. 4; NPerez, Colorado, 4; Cedeno,
Houston, 4; Grudzlelanek, LOs Angekls, 4;
Vlna, St. Louis, 4; AManln, San Diego, 4: Big·
glo, Houston, 4.
HOME RUNS-Bonds, san Francisco, 25;
McGwire, St. Louis, 23; SFinley, Arizona, 20;
VGuerrero, Montreal, 19; Giles, Pittsburgh, 19;
ssosa, Chicago, 19; 5 are tied with 18.
STOLEN BASES-Goodwt... Colotado. 29:
LC.sUIIo, Florida, 26 ; EOYoung, Chicago, 23;
QVeras, Atlanta, 18; Reese, Cincinnati, 17;
Cedeno, Houston , 17; Owens,.San Diego, 17.
PITCHING (8 Declolono)- RDJohnson, Arl·
zona, 10· 1, .909, 1.42; Graves, Cincinnati, 8·1,
.889, 2.05; GMaddU)(, Atlanta, 8-1, .889, 2.a9;
AL.att.., New Yolk, 7-1 , .875, 3.18;.S1ephi&gt;nson.
St. Louis, 8-2, .800, 4.15; Glavlne, At1anta, 7·2,
.778, 3.64; Kite, St. Louis, 10·3, .769, 4.39.
STAIKEOUTS-RDJohnson, Arizona, 139;
Astacio, Colorado, 94; Kile, St. Louis, 87; Person, Philadelphia, ~5; Dempster, Florida, a3;
GMaddU)(, Atlanta, 82; Benson, Pittsburgh , 80;
Ueber, Chicago, 80. •
.•
SAVE.s-Atfonseca, Florida. 19; Benitez,

.547 1/2
.524
2
.484' 41/2

Tueldty'l Glmn

Todty'1G1mn
Boston (P.Maninez· 9·2) at N.Y. Yankees

'1Ciomeni14-6), 1:05 p.m.
,, . ,Seattle (HIIIama 6·21 at Kan,.s City
pen 2-5), 2:05 p.m.

(Sup·

4.98; DWells, Toronto, 10·2, .833 , 3.48;
PMartinez, Boston, 9-2, ·.et a, .95; Sele, Seat·

lie, 7-2, .778, 3.83; Eldrad, Chicago, 7-2, .778,

4.19; 5 are tied with 750.
STAIKEOUTS-PMartlnez, Boston, 114;
CFinley, Cleveland, 89; Nomo. Detroit, 81;
Clemens, New Yont, 81 ; DWells, Toronto, 78;
Burba, Cleveland, 75; Hudson, Oakland , 74;
Mussina, Baltimofe, 74 .
SAVES- TBJones, Detroit, 18; lsring·
hausen, Oakland, 16; Perc:ival , Anaheim, 18;
Wetteland, Texas, 16: Foulke, Ch icago, 15;
OLowe, Boston, 15; MRivera, New York, 14;
Karsay, Cleveland, 14.

PROHOOPS
Natlonlll Buketball

·1

Aa~lltlon

Playoff Serlea Glanc:1
Flnela
(Boi1-&lt;&gt;1·1J
Wltdn..a,, June 7
L.A. Lakers 104, Indiana 87

FrldOy, Juno g

LA. Lakers 111, lnd1ana 104
Sunday, Junt 11
Ind iana 100, L.A. Lakers 91, L.A. Lakers
lead series 2-1

Wedneaday, Junt14

LA. Lakers at Indiana, 9 p.m.

Women'• National Baaketball Aaaoclatlon
.

Eaatem Conlerenca

3
3
4

W L ~ct.
1 .833

QB

Cltwland ....·.....................!5:

Orlando ............................. 5 3 .625

U1ah ..................................3 5 .375

1

1

2
2
2
3

4

Seattle .............................. 2 s .2M 4 1/2
Por11and .... .. ............. .........1 4 .200 4 1/2
Tueaday'a 01me1
Miaml74, Detroit 61
Washington 57, New York se
o~ando aa, Utah 80
Phoenix 75, f'onland 69
Seattle 69, Los Angol., 59, OT

BALTIMORE ORIOLES-T1ade&lt;l RHP Al
Reyes 1o 1he Los Atf,jelos DodgOfs lor RHP
Atan Mills and cash.
BOSTON RED SO~-Optione&lt;1 RHP Rob

New Englend ...............7 4 4 25 25 18

Miami ......................... 5 e 4 19 17
NY·NJ .....................6 1 ·o 18 19
D.C.............................3 9 3 12 22
Central Dlvlolon
Cnicago ......................8 7 1 25 36

20

21
31
31

Tampa Bay ... ... ............8 6 0 24 30 20
COlumbus .................!5 1 3 18 22 2ll
Dallas ......................... 5 8 2 17 24 31
Wealem DlvlelOn
Kansas Clty ............... 10 1 3
Los Angeles ................ 6 3 6
Colorado .................... 7 a 0
San Jose ..................... 3 1 4

33 27
24 20
21 22
13 17

8
14
34
24

NOTE: Three points tor a win and one point
for a tie.
Saturday'a Gem..
Dall•• 1, Columbus t. tie
New England 3, San Jose 0
Miami 4, Chicago 2
Kansas City o, D.C. o, tie , game halted at
halftime, llghtlf"{J failure
Colorado 1, Los Angeles 0, OT
Saturday, June 17
New England at New York-New Jersey, 2
p.m.
Kansas City at Dallas, 4:30p.m.
DC United at Chtcago. 8 p.m.
Columbu'a 11 Colorado, g p.m.
Tampa Bay at Los Angeles 9:30p.m
Miami at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Wednaaday, Junt 21
Miami at Tampa Bay. 7:30p.m.
DC United at New York-New Jersey, 7:30

p.m.

Dallas at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
New England at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Chicago a1 Los Angeles, 10;30 p.m.

W

Team

L Pel.

Piedmon1 (Phlllies} ....... , 44

23 .657

Hickory (Pirates) ........... 36
Delmarva (Orioles) ........ 35
Greensboro (Yankees) .. 34

3~

W

L Pet.

Stanifer to Pawtucket of the International
League. Activated RHP Rod Beck from the diS·

GB

PaWiuckm (RedSox) ..... 37 23 .617
BuHalo (Indians) ............ 36 23 .610 112
ScraniOn (Philll..)......... 37 25 .597
I
Syracuse (BiueJays) ..... 28 30 .464
V
Rochester (Orioles)..... . 28 32 .487
9
onawa (Expos)......... 22 35 .388 i3 1/2
Southam Dlvlalon
Durhom (DeviiRays1...... 114 29 :540
No~olk IM01sl ............... 34 32 .515
1 1/2
CharlOtte (WhiteSox) ..... 28 32 .467 4 1/2
Richmond (Bravaol ....... 18 45 .285 15
W~ttern OMalon
Louisville (Reds)
· 38 28
Indianapolis (Brewers) .. 3S 28
Columbus (Yankees)..... 29 32
Toledo {T19ers) .............. 24 34

.594

.&amp;56

2 112

.475
.414

7 112
11

Tueaday'a Oemea
Buffalo 6 , lnd~napolis 4
ScrantorvWitkes-Barre 2. Charlotte 1, 8
innings, 1st game
Charlotte 5, Scranton/Wilkes·Barre 0, 2M
game
Columbus 5, Norfolk t
',.ouisvllle 4, Syracuse 3
ROChester 2, Dnawa 1
PaWiucket 9, Durham 6
Richmond 6, Toledo 2.

Today'a GIITIII

Buffalo at Indianapolis
Charlotte at ScrantorvWitkes·Barre
Columbus at Norfolk
Louisville at Syracuse
Ottawa at Rochester
Pawtucket at Durham
Toledo at Richmond
Thursday'• Gam..
Buffalo at Indianapolis
Charlotte at SctantorvWilkes·Barre
Columbus at Norfolk
Louisville at syracuse
Ottawa at RocheStm
Pawtucket at Durham
TOledO at Aic:hi'nOnd

7

HagerS1own (BiueJays) . 31 35 .470 121/2
Charleston, WV(Royals) 20 47 .299
24
Southern Dlvlllon
Columbus (Indians) ....... 38
Augusta (AeciSmc) ......... 36

29 .567
31 .5;l7

2

Charleston, SC(DRays) 33
Macon (Braves) ............. 33

32 .508
34 .493

4
5

Asheville (Rockies) ....... 33 32 .508

4

Savannah (Rangers) ..... 30 36 .455 7 112
Capi1a1City(MOIS) ......... 25 41 .379121/2
Tualday'a Gamta
Capital City 9, Delmarva 6
Savannah 3, Gre9flsb0ro 2
Columbus 5, HiCkory 2
Piedmont 6, Macon 2
Cape Fear 5, As~eville 2
1

Today'• Gam••
No games scheduled

Thurlday'l Oamtt

LHP Tom
Manln on the 15-day disal:lled list Recalled
RHP Wiltie Martinez from Buffalo of the InternatiOnal League. Agreed to terms with INF
Corey Smith, LHP Derek Thompson ancl 1B
Sean S'NUdlow.
TEXAS RANGERS- Signed 38 Edwin
Encarnacion, P Keith Stamler, OF Frank San·
sonettl and P Ruben Feliciano.
Nttlonal L.ttgue
HOUSTON ASTRO s-Signed LHP Ralph
Hicks, AHP Craig Petulla. AHP Damon Vee, OF
Ertc Lee and OF Paul Lockhart.

LOS ANGELES OOOGER&amp;--Rocallad AHP

Ofel Hershlser 11om San Bernardino of the caJ.
ifomia League. Sent AHP Eric Gagne to Albu·
quifque of the PCL
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Acquired AHP
Matt Parter and C Etiezer Atfonzo from the St.
Louis Cardinals to complete an earliBf trade.
MONtR EAL
EXPOS-Recalled
INF
Michael Barrett from Ottawa o11he International League. Optloned INF Trace Coquillette to

Ottawa.

NEW VORK MET S--Ass~ ned AHP Bobby
J . Jones to Nortolk o1th e International League.
Called up LHP Bobby M. Jones from Nor1olk.
Signed LHP Michael Cox, LHP Chad Ellion,
RHP Chad Bowen, AHP David Byard, SS
Anthony Coyne, 16 Jonn Raffo , and 36 Timothy Flannigan.

PHILADELPHIA PHILUES--signed RHP

Youngbauer, RHP Jim May1ield , LHPTodd Meldahl, 38 Travis Chapman, LHP David Hoffman,
SS Julio Campos, LHP Jamie Bennett, RHP
Chad Sadowski, SS Mel Anderson, AHP Doug
Stasio, RHP Bra dley Sleele, LHP Kevin Dono·
van, 2B Preston Underdown, RHP Dan Adams
and RHP Andrew Elskamp.
ST. LOU IS CARDINALS-----Agreed to tBfmS
wilh OF Shaun Boyd.

BASKETBALL

.364
4
.333 4 112

Nmlonel Basketball Aaaocll.tlon
ATLANTA HAWKS-Named Alvin Gentry
assistant coach.
PHOENIX SUNs-Re-signed Frank Johnson, Phil Weber. and Jim Boylan, assistant
ooaches, to three-year contracts.
I'OATLAND TRAIL BLAZER&amp;--S0!\1 2000
second-round draf1 pick to the Detroit Pistons to
complete the Bonzi Wells trade.

.571

coach.

Frontltr LNgue

,

QB

oblod list
CLEVELAND INDiANs-Placed

Man Riett"1maier, C Felix Ortega, ss Scon

E1at Dlvlalon
W L ~ct.
London ..............................6 3 .727

Teom

.537
8
31 .530 8 112
33 .507
10

Augusta 9, Hagerstown i5
Charlestoo, WV 1, Charleston, SC 0

Noothom Dlvlllon

Tum

E•atern OIVIIIon
WLTPIIOFGA

Cape Fear(Expos) ......... 37 30 .552

Indiana .. ............................ 2 4 .333
Miami .... .. .......................... 2 4 .333
Charlene ... ........................ 1 5 .167
Weatern Conftrtnce
Houston ........................... 7 1 .875
L.Ds Angeles ............ ........... 4 2 .667
MinneS01a ..... ..:................ .4 2 .667
Ph09fliX ............................. 4 2 .667
Sacramento ...................... 3 3 .500

SeaHie, 68; MJSweeney.

Malor IAIISJUe Soecar

BASEBALL
Amtttetn L..gua

lnttrMtlonal L.Mgut

Northtrn Dlvlalon

3
3

~BI-EMartlnez,

PROSGCaR

South Atlantic LIIQIJI

5 .375
4 .333

Kansas City, 63; · CDelgedo, Toronto, 63;
JaGia~l, ·oakland, 61; CEveren, ~ston, 60;
AAodr~ue~, Seattle, 57; IAodriguez, TSxas , 55.
HIT
rstad, Anah"'m, 103; !Rodriguez,
Texas, 90; MJSweeney, Kansas City, 89; Lawton, Minnesota, 84; COelgado, Toronto, 83;

gamo
Savannah at Charteston, SC

THm

TRANsACTIONS

Columbus at Green$boro
Macon at Augusta
Savannah at Charleston, SC, comp. of susp.

WldnHday, Jun. 21

New vonc ........................... 3
Detroit ................ :.............. 2

Toronto, 55; Glaus, .Anaheim, 51; Mondesi,
Tcwomo, 51; Damon, Kansas City, 50; IAodrlguez, TeKBs, 48; Durham, Chicago, 47.

Thufldoy'o Glmoo
Washington at tndklna, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Minnesota, e p.m.
Miami at Houston, 8:30p.m.
CNukltta at Utah, 9 p.m.
Sacramento at SBattle , 10 p.m.

Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m., If necessary

Veres, St. Louis, 11: Shaw, LosAngoles,11 .

MJSweenoy, Kansas City, .355; COelgado,

Ohot1os1on. WV 11 Hiclcoty

c.p. Fear at f ' i Ashovil1o 11 Delmarva
Cooltal Ci1y at Hagerl10wn

IMINOR •I~GUES l

2 .667

BATTING-Erstad , Anaheim , .380; IRo·
driguez, TeK.as, .378; EMartinez. Seattle, .374;

ToctiY'oa.no
a1 Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Friday, June 1e
L.A. Laker&amp; at indiana, 9 p.m.
Monday, Junt 18
Indiana at L.A. t.akers, Qp.m., if necessary

Washington ....... ................ 4

RUNS--ARodriguez,Seattle, 62; CDelgodo,

Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
ChlciQO ·Whitt Sox 4, Clwtl•nd 3, 10
l·Jnnlng• ·
,., ·.•seattle 7, Kansas City 0, 5 1/2 Innings, rain
"' ' Oakland 6, MinneSota 5

12.
PITCHING (8 Oilcisions}-Baldwin, Chtca go, 9-1, .900, 3.28: Burba, Clevoland, 7-1, .875,

Toom

Toront9, .349; Lawton, Minnesota, .346: AAodrlguez, Seattle, .342.

... , Detroit 16, Tqronto 3
" Anaheim 5, Tampa Bay 3
~· ,(~Banimore 3, Texas 2

, TRIPLE5-CGuztnan,
Minnes01a, 9;
Durham, Chicago, 6; THunter, Minnesota. 4;
TNixon. Boston, 4; JAValentin. Chicago, 4;
TMartlnez, New Yort, 4: Altcea, TeKBs, 4.
HOME RUNS-CDelglldo, Toronto, 24 ;
CEvBfBtl, Boston, 21 ; IRQdriguez. Texas. 21 :
JaGlambl, Oakland, 19;· MVaughn, Anaheim,
19; EManinez, Seattle, 19; Glaus, Anaheim. 18;
Dye, Kansas City, 18; APatmeiro, Texas, 1 e.
STOLEN BASES- OeShiekls, Baltimore,
20 ; Mondesl, Toronto, 18; Damon, Kansas City,
17; RAlOmar, Cleveland, 18; LaW! on, Minnesota. 15; Mclemore, Seattle, 14; Jeter, NewYor1&lt; ,

New ¥611\, 15; HoHijl&amp;n, Sen Diego, 14; Aguil·

era, ChiCago, 1 3; JJimenez, Colorado, 11;

Amtrlctn LHg:Ut Ltldera

.557

Portlend

Chillicothe ... ......................8· 4
c;=anton ..............................5 e
Johnstown ........................4 7
Richmond ......................... 4 8
Weat Dlvlalon
Coote County ......................8 6
Evansville ......................... 6 s

GB

.687

1/2

.455

3

.545

RlverCity ... ........................ 7 6 .538
Spri"(Jfiold .........................6 6 .500

DuboiS County ................... 4

a .333

112

TORONTO RAPTOAS--Firod Bu1ch Carter
FOOTBALL

1
3

ARIZONA CARDINALS-Signed DL Jabari
lssa to a lhree-year contract.

1/2

National Football LAague

BUFFALO BILLS-Signed WR Scon Pingel.
D.ETROIT LIONS-S\jnO(j QB Stoney Case

Tutaday'a aamta
Cook County 3, Evansville 2, ,6 mnings
Chitllcothe 4, Springfield 1
London 7, Johnstown 1
Richmond 5, Canton 4, 11 Innings
River City e, Dubois County 3
Todl'f'l Cllmtl
COok COunty at Evansville
Springfield at Chillicothe
London 8.t Johnstown
Canton at Richmond
Dubois County at River City
Thuraday'a Gamta
Cook County 81 Evansville

Sprlngfiold al Chillieo1he

to a one -year contract.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Agreed to terms
with TE Troy Drayton on a one-year contract.
Waived TE Melvin Pearsall.
' MIAMI DOLPHINS-Agreed to terms witn G
Kevin Oonnalley and CB Terren ce Shaw on
one-year contracts.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed CB Dexter
McCieon to a one-year contraC1 and OL Steve
Everitt to a two-year contract. Released P Mike
O'Neal.
SAN 01 EGO CHARGERS-Agreed 10 terms
with T Ben Coleman on a one-year contract.

...

SAN FRANCISCO 49ER&amp;--Signod OB Rick

London at Jonnstown
9Bnton at Rict\mond

Mirer.

"

'

\

\

THE ROCKER CHRONICLES

i~Braves recall ,Rocker afte(.his:. .
\~,.short stint in the minor' leagues
1;

lHgut

Eo-n Dlvlolon

:sosox cut deficit in East, ChiSox increase lead in Central

5-5) •• Dolroi1 (Weavet. ARodriguoz, seame, n ; Mllaughn, Anaheim,
n.
(WIIIo S.S} 11 Cl....
OOUBt.Es-Law1on, Minnesoto, 23; Glaus,
land (llroww 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim, 21 ; Dye , Kansas City, 20;
Anaheim (Coope&lt; 2-2) at Tampa Bay (Lopez MJSweeney, Kansas City, 20 ; COelqado,
2-4),.7:15 p.m.
Toronto, 19; IRodr~uez , Texas, 19: DeShields,
To""' tRog,.s 5-51 •• BattimOre (Rapp .,..,, Baltimore, 19.
TOIOOto

3-5), T.05 p.m.
Clllcogo Whllo Sox

American League

AMERICAN · LEAGUE

BY

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

•!~~.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------~----------------------------------------------------~----------~----·--

'NATIONAL LEAGUE

BY

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

RICHMOND,Va. (AP) - His
earned
the
:;rock star run at Richmond is
return trip to
:;,over.
•
the big leagues
: • As John Rocker prepares to
with his pitch::rejoin the Atlanta Braves in Pittsing, and that
; ~urgh . even he can't help but
he thanked the
::wonder how he'U be received by
. Braves .
for
~ :lhe same teammates who were
helping him
::thrilled to see him go.
during his 6.: Rocker was called up by the ·
day.stay.
-;Braves on Tuesday night, :ippar· Rocker·
"I
don't
'-ently to replace Rudy Seanez on
think anybody
.:the rostet after the reliever felt likes to be sent down, ... certain::tightness in his right arm.
ly not from the maJor leagues to
: "I don't know if it was because Triple-A," Alvarez said. "But he
.:Rudy got hurt," Richmond ' did exactly what I expected he
:pitching coach Mike Alvarez said would do, which was to go Ol!t
;;tfter at,mouncing the recall. there and pitch like the closer
: 'They didn't give us details."
that he is."
: The call-up comes just eight
The injury to Seanez allowed
-days after the Braves assigned the Atlanta to recall Rocker sooner
:.truggling left-handed closer to than the 10-day minim11m that
ltichmond, ostensibly to work would have otherwise applied.
And it brought to an abrupt
on his command, but most co!rtainly also because his teammates end the rock star-like treatment
:had seen enough of his erratic shown him by teammates and
"'ehavior.
fans at Triple-A ballparks.
: News . of the recall also folAn expectant crowd of 6,459,
-4owed Rocker's third, and · least double what Richmond normal~mpressive, outing for the Triple- ly draws for a Tuesday night
:A Braves.
game, turned out for Rocker's
. : He allowed two hits and a run first appearance in the city since
l n an inning against Toledo and 1998.
; .
failed to ltl·ike out a batter after
Alm&lt;&gt;'lt all of them waited out
;wiliflins six in two _prior inninp. a 2 112-hour rain delay to see
: Rocker did not speak with him.
uporten alter th' game. tpend·
Teammattl tald befonhand
~na mol'l' than an hour In the that Rocur fit rl~t In and was
. cJubhOUit Whilt ltadjum tteuri• a d•lillht,
.
ly worked to Glnr rtporl'" fl'om
"Ho'• Jll•t ono of tht lillY••"
Jho. cunnol ouuidt the ftr vta' · plcchtr1'1m P1111h .Hid btforo lh~
l11~k r room.
~mo. "I havtn'l htard ono noaa·
Whon ho ome r~d. ht pod Qff tiVP rhini 11111 of hit mcnlth , I
with 1 ftmalt ~ompanio11 .
think h 'I JQl hi• mind rl11ht."
IJul Alvaru ~aid Roc kor
Dmin l:lbtfl a11ro~d 1nd uld

'

I

Rocker has been a welcome
addition beca~se of his ability to
·close out games for Richmond,
which h~d w,on. just 1';1 of 45
games.
"When he steps on that
mound, there's so much intimidatiOI! that he brings with him,"
Ebert said. "The two times that
he's come in, he's just dominated ."
Recker's arrival in the dugout
in the bottom of the seventh
inning caused a stir that built to
a JQar.
The distraction was such
that many fans missed Toby
Rumfield's bases-loaded single
to right that gave Rich'm ond a
3-1 lead, and the ensuing play
at the plate to end the inning.
And they went near-delirious when he sprinted to the
\Jullpen· gate to start the ninth
and made his trademark dash
in from the outfield.
Most in the crowd were
standing and cheering wildly.
making a smattering of boos
barely audible.
It was a hero's welcome, one
tempered only moderately by
consecutive · singles by Billy
McMillon and ·Gabe Alvarez
to !tart the inning.
Two long fly ball• brought
M~M!IIon home before Chrlt
Wakeland bo~nccd into a
11am~·ondin11

foruo"t .
Then, II wn on to Pttu.
bur11h for 1\oekor; tho oxlled
rolltvor who ean only hopa
the flm-placo Bravot will bo
u happy to 101 him u ho h lo
tot thom.

'

More injury woes for Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) -. The
Indians are down another pitcher
and now they don't have any leftbanders in th~ir bullpen.
Tom Martin, who appeared in
21 games this season, was placed
· on the 15-day disabled list oil
Tuesday with tendinitis in his left
shoulder, giving ·cleveland seven
pitchers on the DL.
Martin's sore shoulder made
him unavailable to pitch in two
games last weekend against
Cincinnati. He pitched a scoreless
inning in Monday night's loss to
th~ Chicago White Sox.
Martin was the Indians' only
remaining lefty reliever after
Ricardo Rincon had elbow
surgery and went on the 60-day
DL. Rincon is not expected !lack
unli) August.
To take Martin's spot, the Indians recalled rightLhander Willie
Martinez from Triple-A Buffalo.
Martinez, 22, was 4-2 with a 6.11
ERcA in 11 starts at Buffalo. He
went 1-0 with a 3.18 ERA in his
last two starts for the Bisons.
Indi a~•
manager
Charlie
'Manuel said Martin underwent
an MRI but did not have the
results. Manuel said the Indians
trainers
thatleast
Martin
would betold
out him
for at
two
weeks.
Because of all the roster moves
they've had to ma~e because of
injurie,, the Indians are running
out of option&amp; on some players,
making it difficult for them to
add players to their 40-man rostcr.
.
Manuel said the team II "tryln11
to 11ct one (leti·handor) a• won 11

pottlblo."
One move tho lndl~n! hm
tolked nbcut but ar11 rolue1ont IP
m11ko lA brlnBin&amp; up 19-ym· old
Iotty C. C. SoGnthlo trom Doubl@·
A Akron. Sobathla h the toe
plt~hlnR pr-o1pect In Clew land 1

organization.
"I talk about C.C. every day,"
Manuel said. "I look at him as a
very special talent. A guy like him
comes along every 10 years. But
he's 19 and young and I wouldn't
want to bring C. C. up here and
hurt him. I've seen guys come up
and ruin their caree~&gt;."
Manuel said some of Cleveland's scouts think Sabathia's stuff
is good enough for the big
leagues now.
With · Martin's additions, the
Indians have nine players on the
DL.
-The team was also awaiting
word on Jaret Wright, who is
sidelined with inflammation in
his right shoulder. Wright was in
California to get a secon~ opinion on his shoulder from Dr.
Lewis Yocum, the Angels team
orthopedist.
Manuel said right fielder
Manny Ramirez will likely go to
either Akron or Buffalo before
being activated from the DL.
Fif1een·year·old Tina MaJor!·
no (Alice in Wonderland) has a
black belt in Tang Soo Do. She
had her fi~&gt;t film role at the age

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�•
...
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednelday,June14,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June14, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Caminiti homers, drives in three as Astros rip Rockies, 6-3:
THE ~SOCIATED PRESS
really believe that. Rock bottom was San Diego. I
The Houston Astros got things straightened out think there was just a karma or an aura today that I
· off the field, then got hack to winning on it.
haven't felt in a lpng time."
After a 25-•ninute pregame meeting before TuesManager Larry Dierker also got an inspirational
day night's game. the Astros beat the Colorado phone can from the team chaplain, who reminded
Rockies 6-3.
him that Tuesday was the one-year anniversary of his
The underachieving Astros' frustration came to a life-threatening seizure.
"He said he thought maybe we could look at this
head Sunday when rookie catcher Mitch Meluskey
punched teammate Matt Mieske in the eye during as a turning point and maybe we will get it going
batting practice before Houston's loss in San Diego. like we did last year when we won 90 games,"
After winning the NL Central the last three sea- Dierker said. "It was a call to lift me up."
sons, Houston has the worst record in the majors.
Tom Goodwin had three hits and stole two bases
"This isn't the first time that membe., of the same for the Rockies, who had their four-game winning
team got into a fight. That in itself wasn't alarming," streak snapped. Colorado also lost for the first time
said general manager Gerry Hunsicker, who called in nine games at Coors Field.
.. the meeting. "But the fact that it happened out in
Cardinals 8, Padres 3
public, at that point it became a real embarrassment
At San Diego, Darryl Kile became the maJO~&gt;
to the team and to the organization."
third 10-game winner, thanks in part to Eli MarThe meeting was one of several for Astros this rero's three-run homer, and St. Louis beat the Padres
. year, but the results were mostly disappointing until for the fifth straight time.
Tuesday.
Kile (10-3) allowed three runs- two earnedKen Ca1niniti homered and drove in three runs, and nine hits in seven innings. He already has two
and Shane Reynolds (6-3) won for the fi~&gt;t time in more wins than last year, when he was 8-13 in his
six starts since May 10 for Houston.
second season in Colorado. Kile, who won his third
Houston, which lost 12 of 13 on the road, built a straight start, struck out three and walked three.
5- 1 lead against Rolando Arrojo (4-5).
Marrero and J.D. Drew both homered off rookie
Reynolds gave up one run and eight hits in six Rodrigo Lopez (0-3), who remained winless in six
innings, walked three and struck out five.
starts after giving up six runs and 12 hits, a seasonBilly Wagner pitched the ninth for his sixth save in high for a Padres pitcher.
.
13 chances.
Dave Veres pitched the final 1 1-3 innings for his
" I believe we hit rock bottom;' Caminiti said. "I 11th save in 14 opportunities.

'

Pirates 7, Braves 6, 10 inn.
Wil Cordero led off the bottom of the lOth with
his lOth homer as Pittsburgh rallied from a threerun ninth-inning deficit.
Cordero hit a 3-2 pitch from Don Wengert (0-1)
into the left-field seats as Pittsburgh got its loth
come-from-behind win.
Jose Silva (5-2) pitched the lOth for the win .
Pittsburgh tied the score b-b with three runs in
the ninth against Mike Remlinger, who had been
perfect in six save opportunities.
Andruw Jones hit his third homer in two days,
and Brian Jordan added a two-run shot for Atlanta.
Kevin Young had three RBis. giving him nine in
two games against the Braves.
Phillies 4, Marlins 3
At Philadelphia, Scott Rolen's two-run single
broke a tie and Ron Gant homered and drove in
two runs as the Phillies spoiled Chuck Smith's majo~
league debut.
Gant tied it with an RBI single offJoe Strong (01) · before ·Rolen 's bases-loaded single against
Armando AlmanZa provided the final margin.
Wayne Gomes (3-4) pitched 1 1-3 innings. Jeff
Brantley allowed a pinch-hit home run by Derrek
Lee leading off the ninth before dosing for his sixth
save in as many chances.
Cubs 4, Mets 3
At Wrigley Field, Cubs pinch-runner · Damon
Buford scored the winner from second on a throwing error by shortstop Kurt Abbott in the eighth

inning.
.
·•
Felix Heredia (3-1) won with a perfect eig!)t~,
while Rick Aguilera got his 13th save in 17 opp_ottunities. .
·_.
John Franco (2-2) took the loss.
..
Dodgers 6, Diamondbacks 1
' '
Eric Karras set a Los Angeles record with : IUs
229th home run, and Chan Ho Park pitched a fiwhitter at home.
·'
Gary Sheffield hit a two-run homer, his 18th, )lnd
Park (8-4) threw his fifth complete game in ·121
career starts and fi~&gt;t of the season.
:'
Arizona's loss was its first in five meetings this season with the Dodge~&gt; .
Mike Morgan (1 - 1), making his second star.t of
the season, allowed four runs and eight hits in 4 23 innings.
Expos 9, Brewers 4
Vladimir Guerrero's two-run single keyed a
seven-run third inning for Montreal at Milwauk.e~.
The game was de.layed by rain for 2 hours, 12 nli~utes at the start.
.
The Expos jumped to an 8-0 lead ~fter thiee
innings against Steve Woodard (1-5).Jose Vidro had
a two-run double in the third and a solo homer jn
the ninth.
Carl Pavano (7 -3) allowed seven hits and thii!e
walks in five scoreless innings.
Raul Casanova hit his first career grand slam ~n
the eighth inning.

,, '

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Boston Red Sox tightened up the AL East
race, while the Chicago White Sox have opened up
some room in the Central.
On a night when the top two teams in·the East
·and Central squared off, Boston beat the New York
Yankees 5-3 Tuesday to move into a vir.tual tie in the
East. Chicago beat the Cleveland Indians 4-3 in 10·
innings to take a four-game lead in the Central.
Ray Durham homered in the top of the lOth and
the White Sox survived a scary bottom half as they
:opened their largest lead in the division since May
28, 1994, when they also led by four.
"We have a sense of how to win;• White Sox
manager J~rry Manuel said. "Now the game itself is
more important than individual num~rs. The focus
is on winning."
·
, • At Yankee Stadium, Jason Varitek homered into
i :the upper de.ck off ,Orlando Hernandez (6-5) and
~:four Red Sox relievers shut down New York on one
::hit for 6 2-3 innings.
,
:: "A lot of different people contributed;' Red Sox
::manager Jimy Williams said.
' · With one out in the lOth, Durham hit a 1-0 pitch
t !from Justin Speier (0-1) for his 1lth homer and

..:.
:~

third in three games.
Bill Simas (1-1) got two outs for the win and Bob
Howry got three outs for his second save.
An error by Durham helped the Indians, who
stranded 10 runners, put the tying run at second in
the lOth. But Howry got .pinch-hitter Russell
Branyan to hit into a game-ending double play.
It was the second straight night t~e Indians hit
into a game-ending double play with the potential
winning run on.
"Right now, they have the advantage;• Cleveland
shortstop OmarVizqUel said.~We ·are tpe ones chasing them. It's about time we open. our. eyes and look
in the mirror."
. .•
Carl Everett delivered a triple, double and single
as the Red Sox won for the eighth time in their last
nine regular-sea~on games against New York.
. Boston starter Brian Rose .lasted only · 2 1-3
innings, and left with the bases loaded and the score
tied at 3.
Reliever · Hipolito Pichardo (1-0) got Shane
· Spencer to ground il!to a double play, and ·the Yankees never got a runner past second b~e tile rest of
the way.
· .,, \ . ,
Rich Garces wdrked ~o scorel~ss innings, Rhea!

Cormier pitched a perfect eighth and Derek Lowe
dosed for his 15th save.
"Our job was just to maintain the game, which
we did," Garces said. "That's what we're supposed to
d0...
Tigers 16, Blue Jays 3
Bobby Higginson highlighted a rare Detroit
power surge with a pair of three-run homers and
seven RBis at Comerica Park.
Juan Gonzalez and Brad Ausmus also homered for
the Tigers, whose 59 homers rank next 'to .last in the
AL.
.
.
Willie Blair (3-1) got the win and Clayton
Andrews (1-2) allowed six runs in 1 1-3 innings.
Angels 5, Devil Rays 3
Seth Etherton won his fi~&gt;t major league game
and Mo Vaughn hit his first homer this month for.
visiting Anaheim.
·
Etherton (1 -1) allowed two runs and five hits over
five innings in his fourth career siart.
Vaughn's _two-run horner - his 19th of the season and first since May 28 - put the Angels up 42 in the third inning against Bryan Reka~ (2-4).
Orioles 3, Rangers 2
B.J. Surhoff and Charles Johnson homered, and

"J

Scott Erickson (3-3) overcame eight walks as hO'It
Baltimore extended Texas'losing streak to a seasi!Jihigh six games. .
,
Rick Helling (7 -5) lost his fourth straight start: !Qr
last-place Texas.
·., ~
Athletics 6, Twins 5
Migoel Tejada, Eric Chavez and Ramon Herqandez each had three hits to lead Oakland at ·the
Metrodome.
The ~ottom third of Oakland's lineup c'ombinad
for nine hits, four runs and three RBls to lead :,the
Athletics. ·
Oakland rookie Mark Mulder (4-2) allowed
runs in six innings for the win. Jason lsringhausep
pitched the ninth for his 16th save.
·
Mariners 7, Royals 0, 5 1/2 inn.
Gil Meche (2-4) carne off the DL and , allowed
· ohe hi.t in five innings to lead ))eattle to ~ -~~n-sh&lt;tMened win at Kansas City.
, ,' · ''
•.,
The game, halted as the Royals came to
bottom of tl1e sixth inning, 'was called
of 1 hour, 26 minutes.

twP

(Coopenta-

Toom

Elotom Dl'llolon

w

,AI. . . ..............................0
Now 'I'Drk .........................34
-~ ..........................33
Florida ............................. 28

~

~ct.

08

23 .635
28 .548
28 .541
3e .448

5 112
6
12
Philadolphio .................... 24 38 .387 16 112
Central Dtvtllan
St Louls ...........................36 28 .563
Clnclnnotl ;.......... -.-......32 31 .aGI 31/2
. !'ittSbu'ljh .......................28 34 .452
7
'Chjcago .......................... 27 37 .422
9
Mltwaui&lt;M ............ ........... 26 38 .40e
10
Hous10n ..........................23 ..o .365 12 112
W. . Divlalon
tMtona ...........................38 26 .594
• C'!'&lt;'!adO ......................... 34 26 .5e7
' ..,.Angel...................... 114 28 .548
Son F18r&lt;l1100.................. 30 31 .492 6
San Dlago ........................ 27 36 .429 10

-·. ··

Tueadey'a Gamu

2
3

112
112

St Louis 8, San Diogo 3
Pittsburgh 7, Atlanta 6, ro Innings
"' Pl&gt;lladolphla 4, Florida 3
Chicago Cubs 4, N.V.M01s 3
Houo10n 6, Colonlllo 3

l.o$ Angeles e. Arizona 1

Montreal 9, Milwaukee 4

San P'ranciiiCO 3, Clnclnnltl 2
1,

•

Tocs.y"e Geme•
N.Y. Meta (Hampton 6-5) at Chicago Cubs

tbowns 3-1), 2:20p.m.
(Ruotor 3-4), 3:31 p.m.
Atlanta !Maddux 8-1) a1 Pittsbu'ljh (Ander,1100 1-\), 7:05p.m.
1 • Florida (Dempster 8-4) ot Philadelphia (WoH
~) . 7:35 p.m.
, , · .Montreal ~Johnson 2-0) at Milwaukee
('Migh11·1), 8.05 p.m.
Houston (Hol1 3-7) at Colorado (Astaclo 6·
2,1. 8:05p.m.
• Arizona (Johnson 10-1) at l.os Angeles
(Perez 4-2), 10:05 p.m.
. !It LouiS (S1ophonson 8-2) 01 San Diogo
(Spencer 2-1), 10:05 p.m.
' l Cincinnati (Neagle 5-1) It S.n Francltoo

Thurodoy'l GoiMI
Houston at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
Allama at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m.

loom
W L
Now Yolk ......................... 33 25
Bos1on .......,.................... 34 28
Toromo ............................34 32
Baltimore ........................ 27 34
Tampa Bay .. :.................... 23 38
Control Dlvlllon
Cticago .............. :...........39 24
Clwelond .......................34 %7
: Ka!UOS Ci1y .....................32 31
MlJlnesota .. ..................... 29 36
Detroit .............................24 38
Wtlt Olvltlon
Seal11e ............................34 27
' El~kland .......................... 35 29
Anaheim ....... ............ :..... 33 30
Te)(as ........... ............. ......30 32

Pet.

OB

.see
,5e7
.515
.443
.37t
.819

3
7 1/2
12

.S&amp;7

4

.508
7
.448
11
.400 1311/2

7:35p.m.

~klancl

(Hudson 6·2)

(Be!gman 4-4), 8:05p.m.

at Minnesota

Thurodoy'l
Chicago White
So)( atN.v.·
Yankees, 7:05

p.m..

Anaheim at Tarnpa Bay, 7; 15 p.m.
Texas at Baltimore. 7:35 p.m.
National L.Ngue L..dara
BATIING--Hetton, Colorad o, .392; Vidro,
Montreal, .372; Piazza , New vane, .364 ; vGuer·
rero, Montreal, .362; Edmonds , St. L.Duis, .350;
Owens, San Diego, .347; Goodwin, Colorado,

.345.

AUN5-Edmonds, St. Louis, 62; ,Helton,
COiotado, 60; Bonds, San Francisco, 57; Bag·
well , Houston, 53; Kent , S&amp;n Frencisco, 51;
Atfonzo. New York, 50; Grudzlelanek, Los
Angeles, 50.
.
RBI-Giles, PittSburgh, 60;,Kent, San Francisco, 80: SSosa, Chicago, 58; Hollon, Colorado, 57; Karros, Los Angeles, 56; VGuerrero,
Mon1real, 55; SFinley, Arizona, 54.
HIT9-Vidro , Montreal, 86; VGuorr ero ,
¥ontreal, 84; Hetton, Colorado, 83; Owens,
San Diego, 82; EOYoung, Chicago, 82 ;
A.Jonea, Allan1a, 80; Kent. San Francisco. 79.
OOUBLES-Vidro, Montreal, 213: Green, Los
Angeles, 23; EOV~ng , Chicago, 23; Cirillo ,
Colorado, 21 ; RBWhite. Montreal. 21 ; Alfonzo ,
New Yonc, 20: Kent, San Francisco, 20.
TRIPLES-Goodwin, ColoradO, 7 ; Womack ,
Arizona, 5; Shumpert, Colorado, 5; Reese,
Cincinnati. 4; NPerez, Colorado, 4; Cedeno,
Houston, 4; Grudzlelanek, LOs Angekls, 4;
Vlna, St. Louis, 4; AManln, San Diego, 4: Big·
glo, Houston, 4.
HOME RUNS-Bonds, san Francisco, 25;
McGwire, St. Louis, 23; SFinley, Arizona, 20;
VGuerrero, Montreal, 19; Giles, Pittsburgh, 19;
ssosa, Chicago, 19; 5 are tied with 18.
STOLEN BASES-Goodwt... Colotado. 29:
LC.sUIIo, Florida, 26 ; EOYoung, Chicago, 23;
QVeras, Atlanta, 18; Reese, Cincinnati, 17;
Cedeno, Houston , 17; Owens,.San Diego, 17.
PITCHING (8 Declolono)- RDJohnson, Arl·
zona, 10· 1, .909, 1.42; Graves, Cincinnati, 8·1,
.889, 2.05; GMaddU)(, Atlanta, 8-1, .889, 2.a9;
AL.att.., New Yolk, 7-1 , .875, 3.18;.S1ephi&gt;nson.
St. Louis, 8-2, .800, 4.15; Glavlne, At1anta, 7·2,
.778, 3.64; Kite, St. Louis, 10·3, .769, 4.39.
STAIKEOUTS-RDJohnson, Arizona, 139;
Astacio, Colorado, 94; Kile, St. Louis, 87; Person, Philadelphia, ~5; Dempster, Florida, a3;
GMaddU)(, Atlanta, 82; Benson, Pittsburgh , 80;
Ueber, Chicago, 80. •
.•
SAVE.s-Atfonseca, Florida. 19; Benitez,

.547 1/2
.524
2
.484' 41/2

Tueldty'l Glmn

Todty'1G1mn
Boston (P.Maninez· 9·2) at N.Y. Yankees

'1Ciomeni14-6), 1:05 p.m.
,, . ,Seattle (HIIIama 6·21 at Kan,.s City
pen 2-5), 2:05 p.m.

(Sup·

4.98; DWells, Toronto, 10·2, .833 , 3.48;
PMartinez, Boston, 9-2, ·.et a, .95; Sele, Seat·

lie, 7-2, .778, 3.83; Eldrad, Chicago, 7-2, .778,

4.19; 5 are tied with 750.
STAIKEOUTS-PMartlnez, Boston, 114;
CFinley, Cleveland, 89; Nomo. Detroit, 81;
Clemens, New Yont, 81 ; DWells, Toronto, 78;
Burba, Cleveland, 75; Hudson, Oakland , 74;
Mussina, Baltimofe, 74 .
SAVES- TBJones, Detroit, 18; lsring·
hausen, Oakland, 16; Perc:ival , Anaheim, 18;
Wetteland, Texas, 16: Foulke, Ch icago, 15;
OLowe, Boston, 15; MRivera, New York, 14;
Karsay, Cleveland, 14.

PROHOOPS
Natlonlll Buketball

·1

Aa~lltlon

Playoff Serlea Glanc:1
Flnela
(Boi1-&lt;&gt;1·1J
Wltdn..a,, June 7
L.A. Lakers 104, Indiana 87

FrldOy, Juno g

LA. Lakers 111, lnd1ana 104
Sunday, Junt 11
Ind iana 100, L.A. Lakers 91, L.A. Lakers
lead series 2-1

Wedneaday, Junt14

LA. Lakers at Indiana, 9 p.m.

Women'• National Baaketball Aaaoclatlon
.

Eaatem Conlerenca

3
3
4

W L ~ct.
1 .833

QB

Cltwland ....·.....................!5:

Orlando ............................. 5 3 .625

U1ah ..................................3 5 .375

1

1

2
2
2
3

4

Seattle .............................. 2 s .2M 4 1/2
Por11and .... .. ............. .........1 4 .200 4 1/2
Tueaday'a 01me1
Miaml74, Detroit 61
Washington 57, New York se
o~ando aa, Utah 80
Phoenix 75, f'onland 69
Seattle 69, Los Angol., 59, OT

BALTIMORE ORIOLES-T1ade&lt;l RHP Al
Reyes 1o 1he Los Atf,jelos DodgOfs lor RHP
Atan Mills and cash.
BOSTON RED SO~-Optione&lt;1 RHP Rob

New Englend ...............7 4 4 25 25 18

Miami ......................... 5 e 4 19 17
NY·NJ .....................6 1 ·o 18 19
D.C.............................3 9 3 12 22
Central Dlvlolon
Cnicago ......................8 7 1 25 36

20

21
31
31

Tampa Bay ... ... ............8 6 0 24 30 20
COlumbus .................!5 1 3 18 22 2ll
Dallas ......................... 5 8 2 17 24 31
Wealem DlvlelOn
Kansas Clty ............... 10 1 3
Los Angeles ................ 6 3 6
Colorado .................... 7 a 0
San Jose ..................... 3 1 4

33 27
24 20
21 22
13 17

8
14
34
24

NOTE: Three points tor a win and one point
for a tie.
Saturday'a Gem..
Dall•• 1, Columbus t. tie
New England 3, San Jose 0
Miami 4, Chicago 2
Kansas City o, D.C. o, tie , game halted at
halftime, llghtlf"{J failure
Colorado 1, Los Angeles 0, OT
Saturday, June 17
New England at New York-New Jersey, 2
p.m.
Kansas City at Dallas, 4:30p.m.
DC United at Chtcago. 8 p.m.
Columbu'a 11 Colorado, g p.m.
Tampa Bay at Los Angeles 9:30p.m
Miami at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Wednaaday, Junt 21
Miami at Tampa Bay. 7:30p.m.
DC United at New York-New Jersey, 7:30

p.m.

Dallas at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
New England at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Chicago a1 Los Angeles, 10;30 p.m.

W

Team

L Pel.

Piedmon1 (Phlllies} ....... , 44

23 .657

Hickory (Pirates) ........... 36
Delmarva (Orioles) ........ 35
Greensboro (Yankees) .. 34

3~

W

L Pet.

Stanifer to Pawtucket of the International
League. Activated RHP Rod Beck from the diS·

GB

PaWiuckm (RedSox) ..... 37 23 .617
BuHalo (Indians) ............ 36 23 .610 112
ScraniOn (Philll..)......... 37 25 .597
I
Syracuse (BiueJays) ..... 28 30 .464
V
Rochester (Orioles)..... . 28 32 .487
9
onawa (Expos)......... 22 35 .388 i3 1/2
Southam Dlvlalon
Durhom (DeviiRays1...... 114 29 :540
No~olk IM01sl ............... 34 32 .515
1 1/2
CharlOtte (WhiteSox) ..... 28 32 .467 4 1/2
Richmond (Bravaol ....... 18 45 .285 15
W~ttern OMalon
Louisville (Reds)
· 38 28
Indianapolis (Brewers) .. 3S 28
Columbus (Yankees)..... 29 32
Toledo {T19ers) .............. 24 34

.594

.&amp;56

2 112

.475
.414

7 112
11

Tueaday'a Oemea
Buffalo 6 , lnd~napolis 4
ScrantorvWitkes-Barre 2. Charlotte 1, 8
innings, 1st game
Charlotte 5, Scranton/Wilkes·Barre 0, 2M
game
Columbus 5, Norfolk t
',.ouisvllle 4, Syracuse 3
ROChester 2, Dnawa 1
PaWiucket 9, Durham 6
Richmond 6, Toledo 2.

Today'a GIITIII

Buffalo at Indianapolis
Charlotte at ScrantorvWitkes·Barre
Columbus at Norfolk
Louisville at Syracuse
Ottawa at Rochester
Pawtucket at Durham
Toledo at Richmond
Thursday'• Gam..
Buffalo at Indianapolis
Charlotte at SctantorvWilkes·Barre
Columbus at Norfolk
Louisville at syracuse
Ottawa at RocheStm
Pawtucket at Durham
TOledO at Aic:hi'nOnd

7

HagerS1own (BiueJays) . 31 35 .470 121/2
Charleston, WV(Royals) 20 47 .299
24
Southern Dlvlllon
Columbus (Indians) ....... 38
Augusta (AeciSmc) ......... 36

29 .567
31 .5;l7

2

Charleston, SC(DRays) 33
Macon (Braves) ............. 33

32 .508
34 .493

4
5

Asheville (Rockies) ....... 33 32 .508

4

Savannah (Rangers) ..... 30 36 .455 7 112
Capi1a1City(MOIS) ......... 25 41 .379121/2
Tualday'a Gamta
Capital City 9, Delmarva 6
Savannah 3, Gre9flsb0ro 2
Columbus 5, HiCkory 2
Piedmont 6, Macon 2
Cape Fear 5, As~eville 2
1

Today'• Gam••
No games scheduled

Thurlday'l Oamtt

LHP Tom
Manln on the 15-day disal:lled list Recalled
RHP Wiltie Martinez from Buffalo of the InternatiOnal League. Agreed to terms with INF
Corey Smith, LHP Derek Thompson ancl 1B
Sean S'NUdlow.
TEXAS RANGERS- Signed 38 Edwin
Encarnacion, P Keith Stamler, OF Frank San·
sonettl and P Ruben Feliciano.
Nttlonal L.ttgue
HOUSTON ASTRO s-Signed LHP Ralph
Hicks, AHP Craig Petulla. AHP Damon Vee, OF
Ertc Lee and OF Paul Lockhart.

LOS ANGELES OOOGER&amp;--Rocallad AHP

Ofel Hershlser 11om San Bernardino of the caJ.
ifomia League. Sent AHP Eric Gagne to Albu·
quifque of the PCL
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Acquired AHP
Matt Parter and C Etiezer Atfonzo from the St.
Louis Cardinals to complete an earliBf trade.
MONtR EAL
EXPOS-Recalled
INF
Michael Barrett from Ottawa o11he International League. Optloned INF Trace Coquillette to

Ottawa.

NEW VORK MET S--Ass~ ned AHP Bobby
J . Jones to Nortolk o1th e International League.
Called up LHP Bobby M. Jones from Nor1olk.
Signed LHP Michael Cox, LHP Chad Ellion,
RHP Chad Bowen, AHP David Byard, SS
Anthony Coyne, 16 Jonn Raffo , and 36 Timothy Flannigan.

PHILADELPHIA PHILUES--signed RHP

Youngbauer, RHP Jim May1ield , LHPTodd Meldahl, 38 Travis Chapman, LHP David Hoffman,
SS Julio Campos, LHP Jamie Bennett, RHP
Chad Sadowski, SS Mel Anderson, AHP Doug
Stasio, RHP Bra dley Sleele, LHP Kevin Dono·
van, 2B Preston Underdown, RHP Dan Adams
and RHP Andrew Elskamp.
ST. LOU IS CARDINALS-----Agreed to tBfmS
wilh OF Shaun Boyd.

BASKETBALL

.364
4
.333 4 112

Nmlonel Basketball Aaaocll.tlon
ATLANTA HAWKS-Named Alvin Gentry
assistant coach.
PHOENIX SUNs-Re-signed Frank Johnson, Phil Weber. and Jim Boylan, assistant
ooaches, to three-year contracts.
I'OATLAND TRAIL BLAZER&amp;--S0!\1 2000
second-round draf1 pick to the Detroit Pistons to
complete the Bonzi Wells trade.

.571

coach.

Frontltr LNgue

,

QB

oblod list
CLEVELAND INDiANs-Placed

Man Riett"1maier, C Felix Ortega, ss Scon

E1at Dlvlalon
W L ~ct.
London ..............................6 3 .727

Teom

.537
8
31 .530 8 112
33 .507
10

Augusta 9, Hagerstown i5
Charlestoo, WV 1, Charleston, SC 0

Noothom Dlvlllon

Tum

E•atern OIVIIIon
WLTPIIOFGA

Cape Fear(Expos) ......... 37 30 .552

Indiana .. ............................ 2 4 .333
Miami .... .. .......................... 2 4 .333
Charlene ... ........................ 1 5 .167
Weatern Conftrtnce
Houston ........................... 7 1 .875
L.Ds Angeles ............ ........... 4 2 .667
MinneS01a ..... ..:................ .4 2 .667
Ph09fliX ............................. 4 2 .667
Sacramento ...................... 3 3 .500

SeaHie, 68; MJSweeney.

Malor IAIISJUe Soecar

BASEBALL
Amtttetn L..gua

lnttrMtlonal L.Mgut

Northtrn Dlvlalon

3
3

~BI-EMartlnez,

PROSGCaR

South Atlantic LIIQIJI

5 .375
4 .333

Kansas City, 63; · CDelgedo, Toronto, 63;
JaGia~l, ·oakland, 61; CEveren, ~ston, 60;
AAodr~ue~, Seattle, 57; IAodriguez, TSxas , 55.
HIT
rstad, Anah"'m, 103; !Rodriguez,
Texas, 90; MJSweeney, Kansas City, 89; Lawton, Minnesota, 84; COelgado, Toronto, 83;

gamo
Savannah at Charteston, SC

THm

TRANsACTIONS

Columbus at Green$boro
Macon at Augusta
Savannah at Charleston, SC, comp. of susp.

WldnHday, Jun. 21

New vonc ........................... 3
Detroit ................ :.............. 2

Toronto, 55; Glaus, .Anaheim, 51; Mondesi,
Tcwomo, 51; Damon, Kansas City, 50; IAodrlguez, TeKBs, 48; Durham, Chicago, 47.

Thufldoy'o Glmoo
Washington at tndklna, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Minnesota, e p.m.
Miami at Houston, 8:30p.m.
CNukltta at Utah, 9 p.m.
Sacramento at SBattle , 10 p.m.

Indiana at L.A. Lakers, 9 p.m., If necessary

Veres, St. Louis, 11: Shaw, LosAngoles,11 .

MJSweenoy, Kansas City, .355; COelgado,

Ohot1os1on. WV 11 Hiclcoty

c.p. Fear at f ' i Ashovil1o 11 Delmarva
Cooltal Ci1y at Hagerl10wn

IMINOR •I~GUES l

2 .667

BATTING-Erstad , Anaheim , .380; IRo·
driguez, TeK.as, .378; EMartinez. Seattle, .374;

ToctiY'oa.no
a1 Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Friday, June 1e
L.A. Laker&amp; at indiana, 9 p.m.
Monday, Junt 18
Indiana at L.A. t.akers, Qp.m., if necessary

Washington ....... ................ 4

RUNS--ARodriguez,Seattle, 62; CDelgodo,

Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
ChlciQO ·Whitt Sox 4, Clwtl•nd 3, 10
l·Jnnlng• ·
,., ·.•seattle 7, Kansas City 0, 5 1/2 Innings, rain
"' ' Oakland 6, MinneSota 5

12.
PITCHING (8 Oilcisions}-Baldwin, Chtca go, 9-1, .900, 3.28: Burba, Clevoland, 7-1, .875,

Toom

Toront9, .349; Lawton, Minnesota, .346: AAodrlguez, Seattle, .342.

... , Detroit 16, Tqronto 3
" Anaheim 5, Tampa Bay 3
~· ,(~Banimore 3, Texas 2

, TRIPLE5-CGuztnan,
Minnes01a, 9;
Durham, Chicago, 6; THunter, Minnesota. 4;
TNixon. Boston, 4; JAValentin. Chicago, 4;
TMartlnez, New Yort, 4: Altcea, TeKBs, 4.
HOME RUNS-CDelglldo, Toronto, 24 ;
CEvBfBtl, Boston, 21 ; IRQdriguez. Texas. 21 :
JaGlambl, Oakland, 19;· MVaughn, Anaheim,
19; EManinez, Seattle, 19; Glaus, Anaheim. 18;
Dye, Kansas City, 18; APatmeiro, Texas, 1 e.
STOLEN BASES- OeShiekls, Baltimore,
20 ; Mondesl, Toronto, 18; Damon, Kansas City,
17; RAlOmar, Cleveland, 18; LaW! on, Minnesota. 15; Mclemore, Seattle, 14; Jeter, NewYor1&lt; ,

New ¥611\, 15; HoHijl&amp;n, Sen Diego, 14; Aguil·

era, ChiCago, 1 3; JJimenez, Colorado, 11;

Amtrlctn LHg:Ut Ltldera

.557

Portlend

Chillicothe ... ......................8· 4
c;=anton ..............................5 e
Johnstown ........................4 7
Richmond ......................... 4 8
Weat Dlvlalon
Coote County ......................8 6
Evansville ......................... 6 s

GB

.687

1/2

.455

3

.545

RlverCity ... ........................ 7 6 .538
Spri"(Jfiold .........................6 6 .500

DuboiS County ................... 4

a .333

112

TORONTO RAPTOAS--Firod Bu1ch Carter
FOOTBALL

1
3

ARIZONA CARDINALS-Signed DL Jabari
lssa to a lhree-year contract.

1/2

National Football LAague

BUFFALO BILLS-Signed WR Scon Pingel.
D.ETROIT LIONS-S\jnO(j QB Stoney Case

Tutaday'a aamta
Cook County 3, Evansville 2, ,6 mnings
Chitllcothe 4, Springfield 1
London 7, Johnstown 1
Richmond 5, Canton 4, 11 Innings
River City e, Dubois County 3
Todl'f'l Cllmtl
COok COunty at Evansville
Springfield at Chillicothe
London 8.t Johnstown
Canton at Richmond
Dubois County at River City
Thuraday'a Gamta
Cook County 81 Evansville

Sprlngfiold al Chillieo1he

to a one -year contract.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Agreed to terms
with TE Troy Drayton on a one-year contract.
Waived TE Melvin Pearsall.
' MIAMI DOLPHINS-Agreed to terms witn G
Kevin Oonnalley and CB Terren ce Shaw on
one-year contracts.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed CB Dexter
McCieon to a one-year contraC1 and OL Steve
Everitt to a two-year contract. Released P Mike
O'Neal.
SAN 01 EGO CHARGERS-Agreed 10 terms
with T Ben Coleman on a one-year contract.

...

SAN FRANCISCO 49ER&amp;--Signod OB Rick

London at Jonnstown
9Bnton at Rict\mond

Mirer.

"

'

\

\

THE ROCKER CHRONICLES

i~Braves recall ,Rocker afte(.his:. .
\~,.short stint in the minor' leagues
1;

lHgut

Eo-n Dlvlolon

:sosox cut deficit in East, ChiSox increase lead in Central

5-5) •• Dolroi1 (Weavet. ARodriguoz, seame, n ; Mllaughn, Anaheim,
n.
(WIIIo S.S} 11 Cl....
OOUBt.Es-Law1on, Minnesoto, 23; Glaus,
land (llroww 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim, 21 ; Dye , Kansas City, 20;
Anaheim (Coope&lt; 2-2) at Tampa Bay (Lopez MJSweeney, Kansas City, 20 ; COelqado,
2-4),.7:15 p.m.
Toronto, 19; IRodr~uez , Texas, 19: DeShields,
To""' tRog,.s 5-51 •• BattimOre (Rapp .,..,, Baltimore, 19.
TOIOOto

3-5), T.05 p.m.
Clllcogo Whllo Sox

American League

AMERICAN · LEAGUE

BY

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

•!~~.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------~----------------------------------------------------~----------~----·--

'NATIONAL LEAGUE

BY

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

RICHMOND,Va. (AP) - His
earned
the
:;rock star run at Richmond is
return trip to
:;,over.
•
the big leagues
: • As John Rocker prepares to
with his pitch::rejoin the Atlanta Braves in Pittsing, and that
; ~urgh . even he can't help but
he thanked the
::wonder how he'U be received by
. Braves .
for
~ :lhe same teammates who were
helping him
::thrilled to see him go.
during his 6.: Rocker was called up by the ·
day.stay.
-;Braves on Tuesday night, :ippar· Rocker·
"I
don't
'-ently to replace Rudy Seanez on
think anybody
.:the rostet after the reliever felt likes to be sent down, ... certain::tightness in his right arm.
ly not from the maJor leagues to
: "I don't know if it was because Triple-A," Alvarez said. "But he
.:Rudy got hurt," Richmond ' did exactly what I expected he
:pitching coach Mike Alvarez said would do, which was to go Ol!t
;;tfter at,mouncing the recall. there and pitch like the closer
: 'They didn't give us details."
that he is."
: The call-up comes just eight
The injury to Seanez allowed
-days after the Braves assigned the Atlanta to recall Rocker sooner
:.truggling left-handed closer to than the 10-day minim11m that
ltichmond, ostensibly to work would have otherwise applied.
And it brought to an abrupt
on his command, but most co!rtainly also because his teammates end the rock star-like treatment
:had seen enough of his erratic shown him by teammates and
"'ehavior.
fans at Triple-A ballparks.
: News . of the recall also folAn expectant crowd of 6,459,
-4owed Rocker's third, and · least double what Richmond normal~mpressive, outing for the Triple- ly draws for a Tuesday night
:A Braves.
game, turned out for Rocker's
. : He allowed two hits and a run first appearance in the city since
l n an inning against Toledo and 1998.
; .
failed to ltl·ike out a batter after
Alm&lt;&gt;'lt all of them waited out
;wiliflins six in two _prior inninp. a 2 112-hour rain delay to see
: Rocker did not speak with him.
uporten alter th' game. tpend·
Teammattl tald befonhand
~na mol'l' than an hour In the that Rocur fit rl~t In and was
. cJubhOUit Whilt ltadjum tteuri• a d•lillht,
.
ly worked to Glnr rtporl'" fl'om
"Ho'• Jll•t ono of tht lillY••"
Jho. cunnol ouuidt the ftr vta' · plcchtr1'1m P1111h .Hid btforo lh~
l11~k r room.
~mo. "I havtn'l htard ono noaa·
Whon ho ome r~d. ht pod Qff tiVP rhini 11111 of hit mcnlth , I
with 1 ftmalt ~ompanio11 .
think h 'I JQl hi• mind rl11ht."
IJul Alvaru ~aid Roc kor
Dmin l:lbtfl a11ro~d 1nd uld

'

I

Rocker has been a welcome
addition beca~se of his ability to
·close out games for Richmond,
which h~d w,on. just 1';1 of 45
games.
"When he steps on that
mound, there's so much intimidatiOI! that he brings with him,"
Ebert said. "The two times that
he's come in, he's just dominated ."
Recker's arrival in the dugout
in the bottom of the seventh
inning caused a stir that built to
a JQar.
The distraction was such
that many fans missed Toby
Rumfield's bases-loaded single
to right that gave Rich'm ond a
3-1 lead, and the ensuing play
at the plate to end the inning.
And they went near-delirious when he sprinted to the
\Jullpen· gate to start the ninth
and made his trademark dash
in from the outfield.
Most in the crowd were
standing and cheering wildly.
making a smattering of boos
barely audible.
It was a hero's welcome, one
tempered only moderately by
consecutive · singles by Billy
McMillon and ·Gabe Alvarez
to !tart the inning.
Two long fly ball• brought
M~M!IIon home before Chrlt
Wakeland bo~nccd into a
11am~·ondin11

foruo"t .
Then, II wn on to Pttu.
bur11h for 1\oekor; tho oxlled
rolltvor who ean only hopa
the flm-placo Bravot will bo
u happy to 101 him u ho h lo
tot thom.

'

More injury woes for Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) -. The
Indians are down another pitcher
and now they don't have any leftbanders in th~ir bullpen.
Tom Martin, who appeared in
21 games this season, was placed
· on the 15-day disabled list oil
Tuesday with tendinitis in his left
shoulder, giving ·cleveland seven
pitchers on the DL.
Martin's sore shoulder made
him unavailable to pitch in two
games last weekend against
Cincinnati. He pitched a scoreless
inning in Monday night's loss to
th~ Chicago White Sox.
Martin was the Indians' only
remaining lefty reliever after
Ricardo Rincon had elbow
surgery and went on the 60-day
DL. Rincon is not expected !lack
unli) August.
To take Martin's spot, the Indians recalled rightLhander Willie
Martinez from Triple-A Buffalo.
Martinez, 22, was 4-2 with a 6.11
ERcA in 11 starts at Buffalo. He
went 1-0 with a 3.18 ERA in his
last two starts for the Bisons.
Indi a~•
manager
Charlie
'Manuel said Martin underwent
an MRI but did not have the
results. Manuel said the Indians
trainers
thatleast
Martin
would betold
out him
for at
two
weeks.
Because of all the roster moves
they've had to ma~e because of
injurie,, the Indians are running
out of option&amp; on some players,
making it difficult for them to
add players to their 40-man rostcr.
.
Manuel said the team II "tryln11
to 11ct one (leti·handor) a• won 11

pottlblo."
One move tho lndl~n! hm
tolked nbcut but ar11 rolue1ont IP
m11ko lA brlnBin&amp; up 19-ym· old
Iotty C. C. SoGnthlo trom Doubl@·
A Akron. Sobathla h the toe
plt~hlnR pr-o1pect In Clew land 1

organization.
"I talk about C.C. every day,"
Manuel said. "I look at him as a
very special talent. A guy like him
comes along every 10 years. But
he's 19 and young and I wouldn't
want to bring C. C. up here and
hurt him. I've seen guys come up
and ruin their caree~&gt;."
Manuel said some of Cleveland's scouts think Sabathia's stuff
is good enough for the big
leagues now.
With · Martin's additions, the
Indians have nine players on the
DL.
-The team was also awaiting
word on Jaret Wright, who is
sidelined with inflammation in
his right shoulder. Wright was in
California to get a secon~ opinion on his shoulder from Dr.
Lewis Yocum, the Angels team
orthopedist.
Manuel said right fielder
Manny Ramirez will likely go to
either Akron or Buffalo before
being activated from the DL.
Fif1een·year·old Tina MaJor!·
no (Alice in Wonderland) has a
black belt in Tang Soo Do. She
had her fi~&gt;t film role at the age

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'

�•
'

Pllge a 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednelday, June 14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

5

The Dally Sentinel • Page B

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ductlon P1ckaglng &amp; D atr but on
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tr Trtln
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od Eorn Up To 132 0001 111 Yr
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no

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Oukt C aanara Pt P11111n1
Ml't Pick up App cat ont bet
_,IAM3PM

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Mad Cll lnau Inca litllng Ault
tanct NhCt&lt;l tmmtd attty Uti
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lfctnlt~
oee Oh o &amp; W11 Vlrg lno 3&lt;l4
n:l-5715 Or 304 n:J-5047

Send r:.nume App cat ons To
A c ~ u 1 1ons F ne Jewe y
.5
Second Avanu• Qa lipol s OH
•583 Or Fa• To 740 406 2500

•

I

I

ordinarily

change

w1th age

But a

Alzheimer s

CARS FAOM $28/MO lm
poundt IR1po1 Fee so Down /24
Moo 0199% Fo L111101 1800
3 93323 X2 58

change

person

disease

drastically

bec:omingl

extremely
auspicious or fearful they
become eldremely difficult
live with More questions?
the Alzheimer s

Btllld Coro From 1600 Spo 1
Luxu y &amp; Economy Cars Ttuck a
...,. s Ut ty &amp; More Fo Cu rent
L 11 ngs
800 31 5048
X 1ol40

at Scenic Hills Nursing r.Ar,tArll 'l&gt;""
for more Information
(740) 446 7150
Scenic Hills
'The Alzheimer s Experts

Spec1al N1te Out

FREE FREEII MONEY PAOB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PLICATIONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CATION FEE
B77
543 8357 EXT 402

Proleaslonal
Services

PH 0 T.QG-R A-PH Y
'Wedd ngs
Pes
Spars Teams
P ofesslonal Ce Ill ed ~ho og a
pher
Reason~e ates
Ca t for appo ntment
(304)675-7472
3041675-7279
TAENCHINO IBACKHOE SERV
ICES/ FREE ESTIMATES 304
882 2383
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eBB

Dance 8 30 til
Also play1ng Fri

FED UP WITH THE
RUN AROUND?
Wan A New Hom e W h No Has
s e? Ca Fa P e App ova
BIB 565 0 67

$18 000
6PM

REAL ESTATE

$ 0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED GOY T /BANK REPOS
CALL NOW 1 800 380 4620
EXT 8509
0 Walnut C&lt; SondH II Road
3BR 2900 q f1 3 ca ga ego 2
yeara o d Oualty h oughout
$ 75K i 3D•J875 551 ant 5PM
o eave menage
3 Bad oom B ek Home Ooub e
Ga ago Lo go Lo F nlshed
Basement Ma ntenanca F ee
740 448 8329

580

Vans

&amp;4

e os

WDs

979 Chavy Sho 1 Sed 4 WO
Aebu 5 0 H 0 4 Speed Trans
Ste eo Many new Pa Is $3 000
Ca l (740) 367 0024

991 Ford Convo lion von Mark
Ill new res dua gas anks ke
now$6900 3()4675-1731

Yi\1'"

AMANA Wh le 0 he o
Th nk ng Abou t Qual ty Amaona
Was Se I ng The Standards For
Heat ng And Cool ng F ee Eall
ma es 740 446 6308 1 800
29 &lt;&gt;09B
-

New 6x80 3B A 2BA $268 pe
month Low Down ~aymen F ee
A
F ee De 11e y
866 92 6
3426

Trt

County

VocatiOnal

open

AMOATHLON &amp; PENTIUM 11~(0
Down FlnaQC ngl 550 aoo MHII!)
0 30GB HO All Cfed I ~
com e REOU REMENTS Bank
Accou n $1 800 Month Groes
COMPUTER BROKERS INC!' I
800 887 3924

New Daub ew de 3 BR 2BA
$276 pe month Low Dow Pay
me nt F ee A F ee De ve y
888 928 3426
Fac o y Aep o

Ne e
888 69

COMPUTER BLOWOUT Com
paq HP IBM Des&lt;tops laPIOPS
Ecomme ce Webs tes Almo.a
Eve yone App ovedl
Make
SSII On The Webll No Mo~oy
Oown F ee Co or P n e 1 818
479 2345 www ejump-stert com I..J

8777

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610 Farm Equipment
CAT 215
R Modo
$18 000
3&amp; Ton

BactthOe $43 000 1983
Mack 350 8 Speed
04H Cat $44 000 1987
Drop Deck low Boy
S f8 ooo 1986 Jeep Wagoneer
S1 800 4!1' Tot Tra o $ 800 40
~111 Extsnlled ] I lo $3 BOO A40
Oltch Witch $6 500 2 000 Gallon
Fl,ie Tank W h E actr c Pump
$ i. 200 550 Gallon Fue Tank
W lh Gas Moto $700 2 ooo
'Gallon Water Tank SBOO Mise
Jack Hamme s And 0 I s Tan
alent And Leva a M sc Too s t
Va d Cone e e Bucket Mis e
Steel Beams Lock Well D
P.'l'a• $900 Pate Tamp Thai F Is
CAT 416 Hoe $3 800 Sem U
G ueman 14 Boa 740.643-2916

Sale Tobacco St cks 740
•45 512
DOWNTOWN APARTMENT
FOA RENT
F Sl Ftoo Idea 1o a Sen o Pe
sons {740 446-9539

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Aobu ft In
Ca Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528:

stat:Jc

WV HUNTING LAND
30 To 100 Ac e T acts 01 P me
Hun ng land
Sa ng A
$ 6 500 97 Ac os Fo $57 ooo
Can Comb ne F ee Maps Land
Con ac Ava ab e 800 2 3
8365

&amp; Acreage

Ke11mo 1 stackable wa1h1r dr}liJI
Ike new $850 74Q-892.S285

.ill:

G

LAND NEAR RIO
Off SA- 35 5+ Aces G eat Home
S es Land Coni act Ava lab e
Fres Maps 1 600 213 8365

JANITROI. HEATING ANO
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
I Yov Don I C11/ Us We Bolh
Lose F ee EsUma 111 740 448
6308 1 Boo-291 0098

ac Ovs v ng 1 alld 2 bed oom

apa tments a V age Mano an~
Ave 6 de Apa menls n Mldd a
po F om $273 1336 Ca l 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo
untes

METAL BUILDINGS Doll You
Dealership Not Work For ~u?
We Have Comp•t I Ye P Cll I
NO Oooloroh p FM111 Col! For A
FrU Brochu I E~ Dorado lull~
lng Syotomo 1-.219-o1300
WANT A COMPUTER? But !llo
Cash? No Cred 1 OK Slow Cr,dll
OK 0 Down Llplops AYI abfJ
Fleestabllsh Your CrtdiU Of_l
Now t 800 247 3618

Mltsublsh 2050D Traclo 4 Cy
I nde 0 ese 4 Foot Brush Hog
f\nd B ada $4 500 740 448

ASS9
~

ound ba e 4 x5
1000 bs net o w ne w ap bale
command Ike new t4 900
fitSson 175hayleddo $1900
Ceulz P T 0 s do led de A lalla
Raka $1 000 304 937 20 B
H

644

Huge lnvenlo y 0 acount P cti
On V nyl Sk rllng Doo s W na
OWl Ancho I Wlflr Ht111r1
Plumbing &amp; Eloc1rlca P1 11 '~"r
na cta &amp; Hear Pump• Bennetts
Mob It Homo Supp y 740 44f
94 6 www orvb corTVbtnnttt

LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Seve a loca ons n Ga a &amp;
Me gs Cctvn es 5 Ac e&amp; As Low
As $6 600 Land Con ac Ava
abe $660 Down Ca Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO
LTD 1 800 2 3 8365

MOMPRENEURS Ma &lt;el
5
Theme Pa t as &amp; 5000 Party
Supp es Th u Co o Cata og And
Own Pe 1onallzed WebS e Wo k
F om Home Fo 5 M nu e Ova
v ew Ca 888 855 0607 The n
Ca I Debb e AI 888 290 2782
www SOOpartycon au tan conV
10623

'11 0

Autos for Sale

CiRS FROM $200 POLICE IM
POUNDS Honda a Toyo as
Chovyo Jeepo ~nd Sport Ul
Uot Ca NoW 800 772 1•10
El!CT 7B32

994 Toyo1a 4 WD K ng Cab 5
spaed 4Cyl nde NewTres Ex
tra Clean 74D-441--o709

ays,

Space for Rent

DOWNTOWN BUS NESS
SPACE OR OFFICE
Fo Le~ts e Th ee Rooms c aan
&amp; N~o To V ew (7 40 446 9539

w..

2000-2001

school

ng 1sh

certtflcat10n

SkillS

IS

(0

based

expeueoCe

7

ay contract

and
be
on

WOr k

hourS per day On a 182ComprehenSIVe benefitS

ackage mcludes Sick Leave, Perso

R

ellrement

app~y

and

Insurance

by June 23 to

Roger Porter, Director
Trt-County JVS
15676 State Route 691
Nelsonvalle, OH 45764

991 YZ 125 New P AStle New
Aeads New P ston &amp; A ngs Ve y
Powerful B ke Looks New Front
Fo ks Have Been Comp etely Re
bu t Wh ch ncludea New Seal&amp;
And Flu d Rear Shock Haa Been
Recharged w th Nitrogen And
Checked For Bleed Off Tires
Are n Exce tnt Condit on Chan
And Sp ockets A a L ke New
$1 800 740 448 7375

€:) Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

WIIUIIIft ']red Smith,
Sr
011 hla tOOth
bll"thd"ff
']111M14,~000

A mllllo11 tllltaa
_ , . ~teeded lfOII,

Public Notice

A miiUo11 tima
-'veer/ad
9f .CO'VE COM/II ha11a

Trullltl will hold 1 public

j 987 Dodge Ooytona Approx

13~ 000 Mil II A um num R mo
GQod Wo k Co 1800 740 24!

great

1992 0 ds Cutau Clora S
~p 500 M oo Loaded Groat
Sttapo $4 400 740.4411-4196

liVed flO",

!lou 11a111r would
died
life WI loved !ION
dearlfl,
911 death - love
flO" JJtlll
911 OIU' hearta f/011
hold 11 p/CJca,
't'hCJt 110 0111 aiMi ca11
have

911

lid Twp lid 1193
(8) 14 16 18 3 tc

fill
9t bi'OQ OIU' ltiCirta

to IOIIfiOU,

8Ht fiOH fl/d IIOt fO
Cllolll

']or pCII"t of,. -Itt

wltlt

fiOH

'l'lta d"ff god COole

fiOHitO-

Hddlnf~... A

n,.., ~-

&amp;y WOJ&gt;

81/yJ., II&lt; Clmlltd S.CIJOtl

SCid/fl mi•Hd
Wife, fJaCJtr/ce EINII
Smith, OCJuglttara,
Shlrl•fl Smith di
fJaula 't'CIIIIor,

Fruth Pharmacy IS seekmg a pharmacist
thts area Fruth Pharmacy mamtams
htgh rankmg by natiOnal drugstore and
busmess publicatiOns Fruth asststs you
m your practice wtth good backup and
support We offer excellent benefits
and a compettttve salary Send your
resume to
Fruth Inc,
Route 1 Box 332
Pomt Pleasant WV 25550
or call Ladd1e Burdette or Jerry Kelley
at 1-304-675-1612 or E-matl:
ladddteb@fruthpharmacy.com

e

g,..,.,_']_
']oh11, }VItlll'k di

Pleaaant Valley HoepHal haa a lull time opportunity
If you meet the following quallflcltlone
Aaaoclllll degm In Applied Sclencea or rellltd
field plua eligibility for ASCP certlllcatlon
Current WV llctnae

Public Sale and Auction

(,\1:\LI ·. IlOIII:
\1 CTIO\

be WV Certified

Join Our F1mlly of proteul01111lelo be the reeourcelor
oommunlty hulth urvlce IlNde

PLIAIANT VAUJ!Y HOSPITAL
C/o PIIISONNI!L
2120 VALLI!Y DRIVE
PT
WV25550
011 FAX
17HI78

2000 Ha wt Davidson Sponatan
200 Custom Lots of Extras
(7401 448 1749 Alttr 5 00 pm o
Leave maaaagt

750

8 112 Fl Soja Ou1boord Ro Fin
shed Inter or Runt Great $1!00
1304)875-8755

loh I ndlr 8 hp mercury w tro or
ueld very I ll I $3 500 304 875
1731

Home

5

P I - eubmlt rotume to

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNEL
28:10 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASAN1: WV 25550
011 FAX TO (304117HII7S

miles West of Gallipolis

BASEMENT
WATEIIPROO"NO
Uncond ona tetlmt guarantee
Local rettrenctl fu nr1hed El
tablllhld 1i75 Co 24 H • (7401
448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Flog
e 1 Woll prool 110

840

Electrical and

Goodbar

commissioned

Lovlnll Memory
Hope M Eblin
on this 2nd Anniversary
or your passlnll
June 14 2000
The emptiness grows
more &amp; more every day
Heaven no\\ has the
11reat~st Angel of all
Your presence Is felt
evervda~
your love
Your
strength
and
wisdom Is what keeps
our family going on
Hoplc you ~re so
missed &amp; loved and
needed
here
And
always will be We
thank God for the years
we did have to share
our life with you
SadlY missed by
Madeline Pendleton
Edith Darton
M rUe Grover
In

28 Ft Camper Good Cond on
Loaded $85 00 Also Replace
ment W ndowt
a
s Zll
(304)875 4004

&amp; Conatr-uct on
New Construction &amp; Remade
D ywa
S d ng Rools Add
ons Pant ng e1c 304)674
4623 0 (3041874 0155

35

At

C

HI

Clopay

door

sections

Genie

and

openers

auctioneer

to

has

sell

over

1 0 000 Able

and

Shoff

several

Approximately

1/2

garage

100

Possible Position Available:
Applied Math Instructor

garage

states

commercial

AA/EOE

been

Haas
In

h

p

door

n

garage doors

will be offered In this auction

one sided

doors w/sunburst glass tops track
300

hardware

x

12

14

hanging
8x7 9x7
16

18

metal

16x7

springs

and

door

10x8 10x10

wide commerc1al

12
and

other size doors available

For a different

size

added

or

auction

style
call

door to

be

1 614 837 4710

to

Don t

this
Miss

Terms cash or check with S S

musl

Math

have

considered

School

posttton

term

Ohto

for

Htgh

educattonal

and

schedule

IS

7

182-day

contract

eneftts

package

ts

per

the

School
to

be

based

on

exputence

hours

an

Apphcanls

certtftcatton
Salary

may

for

tnstructor

school

Malhemaltcs

Work

day

on

a

Comprehensive
mcludes

S1ck

As Is
Leave,

number I D

Personal

and Insurance

1 0% BUYERS PREMIUM will be charged

Days

Rettremenf

Please apply by June

23 to

TAX w1ll be charged unless you have

Roger Porter, D1rector
Tri-County JVS
15676 State Route 691
Nelsonvtlle, OH 45764

vendors number All doors must be
removed 2 hrs after completion of auct1on

OWNER SHOFF DOOR CO
AUCTIONEER JACK GOODBAR

•
I

open

2000 2001

Prev1ew 2 Hrs before Auct1on

&amp; Sold

Vocattonal

an

pphed

This Sale Bnng a Truck or Trailer Open for
All Sales F1nal

County

have

steel and Insulated doors several Insulated
trim

Excellent
Holldaya
Hoapltallzatlon
Dental
Ufe lnaurance
Long Term OlaabllltY

Join Our Femlly of prolelllonala to bathe reaource
for community heaHh 11rvlce netde

Gallipolis Ohio (act1vlty Bu1ld1ng)

Jack

Improvement•

tU9 24 F1 Jayco Eog • Travel
Trailer Hilt AC l kt N IW
$ 1 750 7-«l 2•5 8118

J ms D ywa

~M

Jr Fa1r Grounds

In Memory
810

Campsl'l &amp;
Motor Homea

Home
Improvement•

Salary
Veclllon
Retirement

across from Holzer Hospital

989 W nnobogo Losho o 39 000
M 11 Gentrato Furnace Qood
Cond IOn 110 eoo 740.441 0440
Leave Millage

810

TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 5 30
LOCATED Al: Gallla Co

Take

Boata &amp; Motor~
for S.la

Pleasant Valley Hospital

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST/MLT

']OHplt Sift/til

The Nursing and Rehabilitation Center hae
Muet

..

1in

firllltddaughtarCIItdfl fJCIMora,

$ Increased Pay Scale $
CNA Applicants

SE RVI CF: S

'993 Pon BC G and Am se
18000 M es Back 2 Doo s A
C u se Sun oo Rebu T tie
$2800 740 ..~ 7 40

aooo

muting on Juno 11
1t 6 30 PM II the EMS
Building bahlnd VMH Tho
purpoee ol thlo moetlng Ia
to diiCUII tho !loading
eltultlon wlth rnldonta and
land ownor1 on Shady Cova

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST

The Sellebury Townehlp

poeltlona avalllble for full-time

7110

5808 ano 4 30pm

-1 10

B•.,,.mall, 'tim,

employment

199,. 8111 traclclr tadpole 14 ft

runs
1tts&amp; 1 r11
1200 OBO 31)4 175 8893

460

J

dUCa(IOO

ase

1989 Su doD trailer &amp; cover
vt y good cond 1on $2000 c11
740 992 5437

SOC AL SECURITY D SABILlTY
C a m Den td? We Special zt l'h
Appea s And Hea ngs FAE&amp;
CONSULTATION Se ne Team
Se v ces nc To F ee
8Q•
836 4052

Fo l ease 0 Sa e 5 Yea 0 a
2 ooo SQ F 3 Be d ooms 2
Ba hs Ene gy Ef c en Home
~Jea C s de Go C ub $685 Mo
740 1146 2957

the

IS

TRANSPORTATION

1

STEEL BUILOINGS 1 New Mu~
se 30•40 x 2 was • o 200 Now
$6 990 40x60x14 \Nas $16 40Q
Now $10 971 ~Ox OOx B
$27 590 Now $19 990 60x200x18
Was $58 760 Now $39 980 1
800 406 5 26

an

Com m u n 1ca tt ons

COmputer

ll~l~m;uuJe

989 Oay1ono ES lots ol now

NEW BRAND NAME COMP~
ER S
A most Evt yont A
P oved W th $0 Down! l
Mon hly Payments
800 8
3478 Ext 330

oo

J E

Condition 26 ooo M leo Runs
G aa AM FM Cauette Powe
S eer ng ~owe W ndaws &amp;
Locks AI T I AndCuso Fac
to A um num Wttee s New T es
&amp; Bakos Now Front Brake Ro
to s Front End Jus All}ned
Ask ng $8 00 0 (0 Reasonable
Olor) 740 448 4548 II No Answe
PloeseLeaveMo...

o•

for

of

PlNH aubmlt reeume to

MOilLE HOME OWNERS

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Con Have Land7 We Do Hu 'I
on y oLos Lon 304 736 1295

c

h

may

Applicants must have OhiO High

1993 S 10 BozerTahoe Package

~o

Farms for Sale

m

School

pos1t1on

CHECICTHE
WANT ADS FIRST!

911

Communications Instructor

4 3 I. te Vo tee V 6 Exce lent

v

In Memory

English/ Applied

nstructor for

New 4 W de 3BA 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Paymen
F ee A F ee De ve y
666
928 3426

350 Loti

So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!

1111 am

on

,.__,.,," hsh/ Apphe d

BADCREDT
NO CREDIT!
le Us Ass st You In You New
M g Home Ca Fa P e App ova
1 88B 565 0 16~

HOME FORECLOSURES $ o
DOWN NO CRE011 NEEDED
GOV T SANK A EPOS 1 800
355 0024 Ex B040

House &amp; Lot 3 Bed ao ms 2
Ba hs Newly Remodeled S tua ed
On 5 9 Ac es Loca ted Nea Pa
I ot $ 000 Down WAC Co~
!act Oav~ At 1 600 333 69 0

730

GOOD CREDIT

pi

Th s nawapape w I not
knoiNingly accept
advert sements for re111 estata
which oln vlola~on ol1ho
law Ou readers•• he eby
nfo mod 1ho1a dwellngo
adve~ ted In 1hla newopape
are ava !able on an equa
opportunl1y bltlo

Mystic Poms any b eed dog
groom ng ava !able Also show
-quall1y and pe1 Foms ava abla lor
&lt;sa a 740.949-3418

m (304)773-5244 alte

an

NEW LISTING
HUNTERS HILL
3 T ac s 0 1 P me Ra e eat ona
Land Touches USA Land 29
Ac es Fo As Low As $27 900
Land Con ac s Av a ~be Ca
Now
800 2 3 8365 An hony
Land Company L d www coun v
Iyme com

9

12 30

998 Chevy extend a ca b 4X4
5 sp Loaded 40 ooo mlas

Days F ae Samples 7-tO 4'+1
1982

330

iJ

v8

37 Peop e Needed To Lose t.Jp
To 30 Pounds n The Next 30

li11ed In $49 950

to the

only t1me this year

Des&lt; op compu1er windows
under warranty 3 Compaq P e
sa o mon o prln e keyboarif &amp;
mouse $800 740-742 2050

All rea estate advertising n
this newapape 1 sub ect to
1he Fodera Fal Hou~ng Act
or 1968 wh ch makes It II ega
to advert u any preference
1m tat on o dlscrlm nat on
bated on race co o el glon
ae~~: tamil al status or national
o lg n o any ntent on to
make anv such p eference
m tat on o d scrim nat on

Band

40 s

Music from the

Neve L ved n No Money Down

32~eBO

A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
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Pnme R1b Dinner

Sidemen
Sa e 0 e $5 000 Ca
565 0 67

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Moose Members and Guests

REPO SALE

I

I

93 Chevy 1ructt $4 250 89 Tom
po$100 00080 304 875-8872

GOOO USEO APPLIANC~S
We she 6 d ye s efr ge ators
anges Slcaggs App aneta 76
V no 51 oe Cell 740 446 7398
68B8 BOI26

R&amp;D s Used Fun ture &amp; ~ P
p ances G ea Sa eel on P ce d
To Se
Coms And Browse
Co ne 01 Flou e 1 &amp; Add son
P ke we Buy Fu n tu e r.lO
367 0280

RENTALS

•!5631

Peoples

FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
Appl ca on W Se v ce Red uce
Paymen s To 65% CASH IN
CENT VE OFFER Ca I BOO
328 es1o E~t 29

310 Homee for Sale

01110

1n

Saturday June 17th

Business

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ecommends that you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT o send money h ough the
ma un you. have n'vasl gated
hi olfe ng

Changes

40x60X12 Wu $17 500 Now
S10 871
5Dx1 0Dx 6
was
$3 600 Now $19 990 70x150x18
Was $59 990 Now $39 990
eo•200x16 Was $94 500 Now
$59 990 1 800 406-5128

-

SSSINTERNETISS Launch You
Own G Obal n e ne Busi ness
Fo On~ $100 001 Includes 2 15
mg Web S tes Tu n Key Money
Mak ng System FREE Tta n ng
800.251 8095 (24 Hr M11sage)

Building

-0·

ALZHEIMER S FACT 115

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREOIT BANKRUPTCY
LAYVSU TS
JUDGEMENT S
AAA RAT NG 90 180 OAYS 1
8:10 422 598

230

GOY T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 2• Hou HI ng Fo 2000
Free Cal For App lea on /Exam
nation Into mat on Fede a HI e
Full Bone! o 1 800 598 4504 Ex
tnoon 1518 (8 AM 6 PM
CST)

550

1999 Sunllre Call after 5PM
(31M 675-6335

June Dinner/Dance

VISA MASTERCARD UNSE
CURED GUARANTEED UP TO
$2 500 00 BAD NO CREDIT
CRED T RESTORATION SYS
TEM LEGITIMATE CORPORA
TON MEMBER US CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE CMA INOAEP
BOO 7 1 6404 EXT 31

Wanted To Oo Moun s Tee
Se v ee Bucket Tru ck Se vlee
Top 11 m Remova Stump Grind
ng Fu y lnsu ad F ee Es 1
mates B dwell Ohio 1 BOO 838
9568 0 740 388 9648

for Rent

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F nance o Down! Past
Crodl1 Prob oms OK I Evon 11
Tu ned Down Befort Aeeatab an
You c ad 111 Boo-859 0359

1995 Chev oltt Corsica tii.CI ant
cond 1 on 49 000 m u $5200
740-992 2080

~tao! Bu dingo Naw Mus1 So

Schools
Instruction

Mlecellaneous

Mobile Homes

S eve 1 888 98 2

FINANCIAL HELR
Lowe Mon tly Payments
$2 000 $500 000
Good 0 Bad C ed
Avoid Bank uptcy
88B 308-6098

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE OU CKLY Bache lo s
Mas e s Doc o a e By Co e
sponde x:e Based Upon P o Ed
ucat on And SM S udy Cou se
Fo FREE nfo mat on Bookie
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 B3 6

420

Walor lnt Spocll 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Po 100
200 PSI
137 DO Por 100 All Sra10 Com
.,.1010n F 111ngs n S1ock
~ N IYANS ENTERPRISE&amp;
Jackson OhiO 1 aoo-537 9528

1995 Buick Skylo k ~ doo au
omatic euaettl 1 r 58 000
m tes excellent cond t on $6000
080 740-992 3693

2228

Gall polla Career College
(Caree s C ose To Home)
Ca l Today 740-446 43e7
800 21 4 0452
Reg 190 05-1274B
150

Ca

Mobile Homes
for Sale

n95

Opportunity

2 Fam v Ya d Sate 5155 Co a
M II Road 151h 161h 7 h Fun
lure Too s F ah ng S utt Much
Muctl Mo 1!1

80

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H r ng Fo 2000
Fee Ca Fo App ca t on EJCam
na on nlo mat on Fade al H e
Fu Benet s BOO 598 4504 Ex
tensont55 8AM S~M
CST !

NOT CE 2 handyman crew w 1
do ya d wo k pant ng nslde and
out ca pente wa k root ng s d
lng Have own too s F ee est
ma es 740 742 3225

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
WANTED

Sma
Bedroon House A1C Gas
hea Cook ng and wa e Ba se
menV a c s o age a ea washe
and Cl ye hook up Nea Kma t
$:325 mo You pay gas &amp; e ec c
(7 401446 822 7401446 42 7
ca be ora 8am or a e 9pm

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $8 9 HR
Fede a Banet 18 Pa k Range s
Secu ty Ma ntenance No Exp
For Some Fo In o Ca
800
391 5856 Ex 4299

Competitive Salary And Excel ant
Fr nge Bener ts Fo lmmed ate
Con a de at on Forward Resume
And Le11o 01 nlores1 To HRS
Human Resources PO BoK 724
Alhlnt Ohio 45701 EOE

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

l

Houaehold

Wanted Above G ound Swim
m no Poo Mus be n good con
Cl ton A deck would b• a pus
1 304~75 ol832

1994 CoroiCI 70 000 M II V-41
Aulomollc S3 795 1991 Co avan
LOidld Cod .VC $1 885 1&amp;93
Co,ollor 11 895 COOK MO
TORS 740-418-0103

�•
'

Pllge a 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednelday, June 14, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

5

The Dally Sentinel • Page B

Mltcell1neous
Merthandl18

'.:foppon HI EH cloncy 90% Gu
/tlrnaeea 0 Fu nacta 2 Saer
jl!)t1 Pump l A Cond t on ng
~s tem s Frlt 8 Vu Wa ran y
ra.nneltt Heat ng &amp; Cooling 1
)eo 872 5967 www orvb corn/ben-

ANNOUNCEMENT S

80

Auction

110

and Flea Merkel

Per~onala

005

START DATING TON GHTI
Have Fun Meet ng Ellglb 1 S n
gles n Vour A 11 Ca I For More
In o ma on 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

STEEL BUILDINGS 4 On y 2
25X30 2 50K140 Must Move!
Selling Fo Balance Free Oti lv
ory 1 &amp;oo-462 7930 X 49

GOY T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$1835 Hou Ful BeMI 1s No Ex
pt ance Required F aa Appllca
ton A.nd no mat on 888 726
80.S3 E•tans on 701 7 AM 1
PM CSTI

Wedemeyt a Aueuon Serv ea
Galllpolla Ohio 740-379 2720

90

"'"

Help Wanted

Wanted to Buy

UR G ENTLY NEEDED

R ve Pa k Mob le Home Com
mun 'I Pome oy Spaces at •1~0
pi month ott ce space for en
$35 0 po monlh $350 dtpooll
740 ~9-2093 or 614 878-1881

p as ma

dono s ea n $35 o $45 for 2 01 3
r.ou s week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 e651
30

MERCHANDI SE

Announcement•
510

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mom
benn p o T m11P'I1 e?
LL
TAKE T .Amt ca 1 Mol Sue

we

Gooda

eeaa ut Campg ound And T me
aha 1 Reule Clea nghoult Cal
RESORT SALES NTERNATION
AL 800 •23 5887 24 Hou 1

App ances
Aecond toned
Wuhe 1 o ye a Rangel ~If
g e o s 90 Oay Gua an ee We
Sal New Maytag Appllan c:ea
F ench C y May ag 740 u6

EMPlOYMFNT
SFRVICfS

www aso salta com

110

Help Wanted

Loea Truck ng Company Seek ng
Qua Wed COL D va s Fu I Par1
T me Good Pay Benel ts And
Hems Evan ngs Ca 740 288
1063

S3 000 WEEKLY! Moiling 400

Brochu eal Sa afac ton Gua
an ttdl Posage &amp; Suppl 11 P o
v did Ruth St t Addresud
Stamped Envelope GICO DEPT
5 Box 438 ANTIOCH TN
370 1 1~38 Start lmmodlo ely

CIIOOII
S500

wo th of coupons BOD
205 8499 IX 615

N SEARCH OF BEVO
ESPN C ass c Is P oduc ng A
Ooc:umentary On The Life Of
Bevo F anc s Interested In Ac
qu lng Arch va Ma e a (F lm
Pho os ca a P ograma) Please
Ca V n Cannameta At 860 786
444 0 Ema I v n canname

MAKE MONEY Wo k F om
Home Ola but ng WebCa ds Fo
ln1t ntt Company! We Pay SO 50
~tr WebCard Payc l'le c~es Ma ad
F days 1 888 520 8588

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING ,OR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EKPER ENCE
OU RED &amp;oo-757-0753

Mental Hllhh Pol tiona

$9B7 B5 WEEKLY! Procou ng
HUO FHA Mo gage Refunds No
Expo once Requ od Fo FREE
Into mat on Cal 1 800 50 6832
Ex 1300

Hea 1'1 Recove y Serv cas A
CuIng Edge Subs ance Abuse
And Mental Heat h Age ncy Serv
lng Athens Hocking V n on And
Mt g&amp; Count ea a hpand ng
Se vices And Prog ams The Fo
tow ng Poa Ions A 8 AvaWable

afhspn com

New To YouTh 1ft Slloppe

9 West St mson A hens
740-592 1842
Qua ty c oth ng and household
tams $ 00 bag aale every
Thu sday Monday th u Satu day
9 oo-5 30

t

j

40

Giveaway

2 House Cats Male &amp; Female
Spade &amp; Neute ed Front De
cawed Evenings 740-2!56 11122

Dropped At Pound Not Wanted
M xed Rot We e Longha td
To Good Home 74Q-446,..8508

•

Fema e B aek Latl 2 3 Years o d
Ve y F end y To Good Home
740 245-926
Female Pup Part Ge man
Shepherd 740.446-2351
F ee Cocker Span el N11d1 A
GOOd Home 74o-«6-744&lt;1

K ttono big gen11e walch dog
~ mala 1 yr m x 740 742 2237

.Pallets To GIYIIWIV 111 Come
1st Serve Beh nd Ga po 11 Do y
Tribune 825 Th rd ~venue Galli
' Jpollo
NO PHONE CALLS
, PLEASE!

Found near Me Dona d a on F I
Clay b ue metal framed g aaua
con taet Vernon M chell 7,.0
387 7452

. ~--~~~~~~­
• Smal G ay &amp; Black Pood e Dog
~ wiRed Collar Found In Park
• Or ve Area In ~I P easant
• (3041675-11728

:JO

Yard Sale

Clln clan• FIT Post ons P ov d
lng Oppo tunily For nnovat ve
C n cal Work W th Ch d en
Adolescen s Adulll And Fa
ml oa St ong Ab lily To Co labo
rate W h Commun ty P ofesa on
ala Euen al Cand dates Mus
Have A M n mum 01 PC PCC
LSW LISW Or Be L cansed E g
ble W h Tho OCSWB

~com me ce Cl home Ea n n
come ont nt $350 $850 wk
888 450 8900 www 4prospe I
tynel

Posta Jobs $48 323 00 'Y Now
H r ng No Expe lenct Pad
Tra n ng G eat Benefits Cal 7
Oays 800 429-3860 Ext J 385

Clinic Slt1 Manager F T Pos
ton Ova sees Adm n s rat ve
Funcl ons Fo C n c Also An
Oppo IUn
To P ov de D ec
Cl n ca Sa v ces S ong Leade
lh p Team Bu 1!1 ng And Cl n ca
Sk Is Requ ed S1 ong Ab 1y To
Col abo ate With Commun ty P o
tess onals Needed Due To Ex en
1 ve Coni ac S.rv ce Alf a Ions
f Vou A a lnteres ad n P og am
Expans on And Be ng C eat ve
You Need To Pursue Th s Oppo
lunlty LPCC LISW P ele ed 0
Ab I ty To Obta n ndependent L
&lt;eniiU oW lh OCSWB

A e You Connected? lnte net us
e 1 wanted $350 $850/wtek
www waoest omhome com

v

Are You COMIC od?
In e ne Use a wanted
S360 S850/woek
1 88B 2111-1331
www e-commb z net
ASSEMILY AT HOME II C a a
Toys Jewel y Wood Sew ng
TYping G aat Pay CALL BOO
795-0380 Ex1 1201 (2• H 11
AVON! AI Areas! To Buy o St l
Sh ley Speare 304-875-1429
CLAIMS PROCESSOR! $20 $40
Hr Paten al Proeeaa ng Cams
Ia Easy T a nlng P ov dod
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI
888 !565 5 97 E)(t 542

Millennium TeltHrYicea
1 p eased to announce the
Grand open ng ot a new We
slon caN ng center
We are now Htt ng up
Interview a~ ntments for
OU1bound IIIIHrvlce poston&amp;
No oxperlonce noce...ry
Earn up to S1!11hr
wl h qua~orly Htary reviews
M1nagement opportunities aval
lblo 40tM.Iodlcai/Donlal/Pald
vaqatlons ava table 3 sh fta da y
Fllx lliO IChodul 110 Star1 you
new career With us
Cll1 100-929-5753
lor an appoln ment
We ook lorwa d to mooUng youl

Coame o og st Netdld Gau
an eed Wagaa Ve 111 Comm s
son Paid Vacat ons Free CEU
Hours Ful &amp; Pa 1 T mo Help
N- 740-406-7267
Counaelor Past on - An Outpa
rlant A cohol And Othar Drug
Agency Loca!od In Galllo And
Jackson Countltl a Seek ng A
Ouolllled Po oon To P ov do
count lnO In the Jackson office
Counsa o WI Work W lh All
Ago G OUPI Knowledge 01
Chomlca Dependency Roqu red
eachtlo • Oog· eo eeoc "sw
.And or LPCC P ele red Send
Reaume By Juna 20 2000 To
FACTS •5 0 lve S1roll Gall pols Oh o •5631 Or FAX 740 448
8014 EOE M/FIH
DEDICATED RUN A L IN NE
WI Home Week y 32c Mile &amp;
Stop Pay No Touch Frelgh Other
Opportun I es Availab'- For Solo
Teams And Ownar Ops H
8 othe 1 Trantpo taUon Inc
800-25B-44!56

POSTAL JOBS $4B 323 00 YR
Now H ng No Expe ence Pad
T a n ng G eat Bene s Ca 7
Days BOO 429-3860 E" J 566
140

Business
Training

320
BUS NESS OWNERS!! Tu n
Your lnvo ces n o Cash A so
Non Pe fo mlng lnvo cas Any
No es

170

FINANCIAL
210

Tho He a d Olopa ch Has The
Fo low ng Routes Aval able
Location Of Route C own C y
Gal !pot~
Dollvo yTme Cally 212 H a
Sunc~ay 3 112 Hra
App ox ma e Month y Profl $700
Tranopo tafton Requwod
Carr 11 Must Ba Bondab 11
Rou 11 Raqu lng Transpo tat on
Must P ov de Veh cle Reg stra
tlon Proof Of Insurance And
Val d Dr ver s License
lnte
ea1td In A Route Pleasa Cal Je
Mul no 1 BOO 888 2B34 And A&amp;k
Fo Extension Number 824
Appllcallono Avalablo At
1MB Fifth Avenue
Tho Hlrlld DIIIPOtch
Aan Circulation Departmen
~0 eo. 2017
Hunungton
25720

Suppllee

Fo Sale Ae ca nd tlonad WIAh
e s d yo o and ol lgoralo s
Thompsons Appl ance 3407
Jao&lt;son Avenue (304)675 7388

A1J. Ylrd -

Mull
Bo Pold In Advonco
QEAQb!NE 2 00 p.m
""' dey bifoq1ho ld
11 to run. Sunct.y
odR!on 2 DO p m
F~dly llondly-

-.Lilli

Opora1orl

lOOal CofTI)any lllk ng d "" 1
lor Company 1rue1&lt;1

Good Benalko

G30om~

221

Also NMC!ttl

0 0 slo loca agon1 bul~ng
domlc le pu ng vans flats and
steps Pull Yours or Ou a
F nanc ally oound Company

wv

Now Accepting Appllcallons for
Exptrlanced COL 0 ver For A
Pot I on Which W II Have Vou
Home Every Night lnauranea 11
AVI ltbll PIOall Apply In Ptr
lOR AI G1n1 I Atlule Se VICI
&amp;7 Hubbord Avenue Ga !!polls

MI.AHOITAfl INWAY"

Attut!rt•
June 16th Friday June 17 Satur
day 8 5 58 Sun vanty or vt
Clo hos Sholl HouHhold 11m1
Htmp~MOro

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Vorl! loin Mutt h Pold In
Advonce DIICIIIM I OOpm 1he
day l:»tfort tht at:l 11 to run
lundey I Mondoy edition

, DC1prn 'rldor

urgo ylrd ••~ Doreoo Momod
11 Church 8 R 124 ou1oldo
~IC Ill CIOih 110, 111ml
dlthll poll I pano canning ,
)llro Ole Frldly H I SIIUidoy 8'
12
Auction
and Fl18 Merkel

B II Moodlapaugh Auctioneering
buy 11 lltltU contlgnmtn t
ouctlon Thurodays lpm Mladlo
port 0" 0 &amp; WV L Ctnll 740
"2 9701 740 M9-2tl23

23 yro olago a 1 yr OTA oxp
Good driving ICOrd
Coli Pol •
1425

,_:zz

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! $0
Down Nets $!50K Work 7 Hr&amp;
Candy VEND NG Ate In A ea
:roll Free 1 877 494 8695 24
Ha
EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepa
ng NOT Replac ng Long C acks
n W ndsh aid&amp; Free V deo 1
800 626 B523 us Canada
www glassmechan x com

OR VERS
Cannon ExpreSS
99% Dr vor No Touch Frolghl
Slar1 AI 3•c Ml 15 V + hp
33l Ml • Yr 32C M 13 Y 31C
Ml 12 V 30c Ml/1 Yr 2111 Ml
te MOl 1 vr 28C Ml 18 Mol Ot
Lilt T ainu Or I Mo Exp
1350 Wk Ply Rtlll Eve y I
Monlt'\1 lonua•• A der P og am
PI d VlOli!Onl lnl Avoll
www cannonaxprtll com Call
For Dlll1111 IIOC)ol.l!-8390

POSTAL JOBS TO $14 45/HR +
Fu I Fide a Btntl II NO Expe
one. Fo Exom lnlo Call 800
391 !56!56 EX! 4298
PIIODUCTIDN DEPARTMENT
WI HIYI Optnlngt In Ou P 0
ductlon P1ckaglng &amp; D atr but on
Aiel
• Muol Be Dependable
• Alllott 18 Ytlfl 01 Age
• CINn D lYing Rocord
• MICIIInlcl Apti1Udl Holplu
• Muoth ~lo bit W lh
Regard To Wori&lt; Hou 1
• MUll Bo Ablo To Uft 50 Lb1

DAIYEAS TAME HOME MORE
IE HOME MOREl A..rago 1Ht
Wog1 W11 J .. 211 """ roohl
~lnoport.com

Drive 1 2 Wnk Pa d Truck Drlv
tr Trtln
No Expt tnet Nttd
od Eorn Up To 132 0001 111 Yr
w Full Bontr 11 Ca TOGoy 1
177 230 1002 Sunday 'rldoy g
AM To5PM PAM Tr1n1po1
.,_ otrdrlvoro com

no

HOW TO BUY A BUSINESS
W TH NO MONEY DOWN
MAKE YOUR FORTUNE WITH
ZERO CASH ORDER YOUR
COMPLETE PACKAGE ANO
START TODAY ONLY $99 V SA
&amp; MASTERCARD ACCEPTED
24 HRS 7 OAYS WEEK CALL
1 877-481 8235 TOLL FREE
MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 H
Med c1 B ng So wa e Company
Nttdl Peop 1 To Process Med
eel C a ma F om Home T aln ng
P OV did MUI Own Computer 1
500 434 56 8 Ex 887

Applv Bttwten 7 to A M Man
doy Th u F !clay To Don Cotomon
A1 The Gall/prj 1 Daffy II bvno 0
Sind Your "••ume To Hit AI en
rlol'l elo Ga pols Oa v T bune
825 Thl d Avenue Gal pol • OH

Oukt C aanara Pt P11111n1
Ml't Pick up App cat ont bet
_,IAM3PM

AotaiMtnoga

EARN S35 000 TO SSO 000 /VR
Mad Cll lnau Inca litllng Ault
tanct NhCt&lt;l tmmtd attty Uti
You Home Compurar For Great
Po tnt at Annual tncomt Cell
Now! I00-291..ea:l [)opt. lOll

Silk ng Manager Fo Jewe y
Sto 1 App coni Should Bo A Mo
t vlted Ptop 1 0 en ed Pe son
Ctnd di ll Mutt Be 0 gan zed
Ab 1 To Manage Othe s And
MIYI Salu Ab IV Some Com
put Sk 1Rtqu td SaayAnd
Bonul Plu1 Benefi Pat&lt;ogo

FtJck Pearson Auet on Comptny
ful me 1uct ante c:omg 1 t
auct on
11rv ee
lfctnlt~
oee Oh o &amp; W11 Vlrg lno 3&lt;l4
n:l-5715 Or 304 n:J-5047

Send r:.nume App cat ons To
A c ~ u 1 1ons F ne Jewe y
.5
Second Avanu• Qa lipol s OH
•583 Or Fa• To 740 406 2500

•

I

I

ordinarily

change

w1th age

But a

Alzheimer s

CARS FAOM $28/MO lm
poundt IR1po1 Fee so Down /24
Moo 0199% Fo L111101 1800
3 93323 X2 58

change

person

disease

drastically

bec:omingl

extremely
auspicious or fearful they
become eldremely difficult
live with More questions?
the Alzheimer s

Btllld Coro From 1600 Spo 1
Luxu y &amp; Economy Cars Ttuck a
...,. s Ut ty &amp; More Fo Cu rent
L 11 ngs
800 31 5048
X 1ol40

at Scenic Hills Nursing r.Ar,tArll 'l&gt;""
for more Information
(740) 446 7150
Scenic Hills
'The Alzheimer s Experts

Spec1al N1te Out

FREE FREEII MONEY PAOB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PLICATIONS $3 000 AND UP
NO APPL CATION FEE
B77
543 8357 EXT 402

Proleaslonal
Services

PH 0 T.QG-R A-PH Y
'Wedd ngs
Pes
Spars Teams
P ofesslonal Ce Ill ed ~ho og a
pher
Reason~e ates
Ca t for appo ntment
(304)675-7472
3041675-7279
TAENCHINO IBACKHOE SERV
ICES/ FREE ESTIMATES 304
882 2383
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Un ass We W nl
B88 582 3345

only $600
630tll800pm
Make your reservations
The popular

eBB

Dance 8 30 til
Also play1ng Fri

FED UP WITH THE
RUN AROUND?
Wan A New Hom e W h No Has
s e? Ca Fa P e App ova
BIB 565 0 67

$18 000
6PM

REAL ESTATE

$ 0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED GOY T /BANK REPOS
CALL NOW 1 800 380 4620
EXT 8509
0 Walnut C&lt; SondH II Road
3BR 2900 q f1 3 ca ga ego 2
yeara o d Oualty h oughout
$ 75K i 3D•J875 551 ant 5PM
o eave menage
3 Bad oom B ek Home Ooub e
Ga ago Lo go Lo F nlshed
Basement Ma ntenanca F ee
740 448 8329

580

Vans

&amp;4

e os

WDs

979 Chavy Sho 1 Sed 4 WO
Aebu 5 0 H 0 4 Speed Trans
Ste eo Many new Pa Is $3 000
Ca l (740) 367 0024

991 Ford Convo lion von Mark
Ill new res dua gas anks ke
now$6900 3()4675-1731

Yi\1'"

AMANA Wh le 0 he o
Th nk ng Abou t Qual ty Amaona
Was Se I ng The Standards For
Heat ng And Cool ng F ee Eall
ma es 740 446 6308 1 800
29 &lt;&gt;09B
-

New 6x80 3B A 2BA $268 pe
month Low Down ~aymen F ee
A
F ee De 11e y
866 92 6
3426

Trt

County

VocatiOnal

open

AMOATHLON &amp; PENTIUM 11~(0
Down FlnaQC ngl 550 aoo MHII!)
0 30GB HO All Cfed I ~
com e REOU REMENTS Bank
Accou n $1 800 Month Groes
COMPUTER BROKERS INC!' I
800 887 3924

New Daub ew de 3 BR 2BA
$276 pe month Low Dow Pay
me nt F ee A F ee De ve y
888 928 3426
Fac o y Aep o

Ne e
888 69

COMPUTER BLOWOUT Com
paq HP IBM Des&lt;tops laPIOPS
Ecomme ce Webs tes Almo.a
Eve yone App ovedl
Make
SSII On The Webll No Mo~oy
Oown F ee Co or P n e 1 818
479 2345 www ejump-stert com I..J

8777

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610 Farm Equipment
CAT 215
R Modo
$18 000
3&amp; Ton

BactthOe $43 000 1983
Mack 350 8 Speed
04H Cat $44 000 1987
Drop Deck low Boy
S f8 ooo 1986 Jeep Wagoneer
S1 800 4!1' Tot Tra o $ 800 40
~111 Extsnlled ] I lo $3 BOO A40
Oltch Witch $6 500 2 000 Gallon
Fl,ie Tank W h E actr c Pump
$ i. 200 550 Gallon Fue Tank
W lh Gas Moto $700 2 ooo
'Gallon Water Tank SBOO Mise
Jack Hamme s And 0 I s Tan
alent And Leva a M sc Too s t
Va d Cone e e Bucket Mis e
Steel Beams Lock Well D
P.'l'a• $900 Pate Tamp Thai F Is
CAT 416 Hoe $3 800 Sem U
G ueman 14 Boa 740.643-2916

Sale Tobacco St cks 740
•45 512
DOWNTOWN APARTMENT
FOA RENT
F Sl Ftoo Idea 1o a Sen o Pe
sons {740 446-9539

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Aobu ft In
Ca Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528:

stat:Jc

WV HUNTING LAND
30 To 100 Ac e T acts 01 P me
Hun ng land
Sa ng A
$ 6 500 97 Ac os Fo $57 ooo
Can Comb ne F ee Maps Land
Con ac Ava ab e 800 2 3
8365

&amp; Acreage

Ke11mo 1 stackable wa1h1r dr}liJI
Ike new $850 74Q-892.S285

.ill:

G

LAND NEAR RIO
Off SA- 35 5+ Aces G eat Home
S es Land Coni act Ava lab e
Fres Maps 1 600 213 8365

JANITROI. HEATING ANO
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
I Yov Don I C11/ Us We Bolh
Lose F ee EsUma 111 740 448
6308 1 Boo-291 0098

ac Ovs v ng 1 alld 2 bed oom

apa tments a V age Mano an~
Ave 6 de Apa menls n Mldd a
po F om $273 1336 Ca l 740
992 5064 Equa Hous ng Oppo
untes

METAL BUILDINGS Doll You
Dealership Not Work For ~u?
We Have Comp•t I Ye P Cll I
NO Oooloroh p FM111 Col! For A
FrU Brochu I E~ Dorado lull~
lng Syotomo 1-.219-o1300
WANT A COMPUTER? But !llo
Cash? No Cred 1 OK Slow Cr,dll
OK 0 Down Llplops AYI abfJ
Fleestabllsh Your CrtdiU Of_l
Now t 800 247 3618

Mltsublsh 2050D Traclo 4 Cy
I nde 0 ese 4 Foot Brush Hog
f\nd B ada $4 500 740 448

ASS9
~

ound ba e 4 x5
1000 bs net o w ne w ap bale
command Ike new t4 900
fitSson 175hayleddo $1900
Ceulz P T 0 s do led de A lalla
Raka $1 000 304 937 20 B
H

644

Huge lnvenlo y 0 acount P cti
On V nyl Sk rllng Doo s W na
OWl Ancho I Wlflr Ht111r1
Plumbing &amp; Eloc1rlca P1 11 '~"r
na cta &amp; Hear Pump• Bennetts
Mob It Homo Supp y 740 44f
94 6 www orvb corTVbtnnttt

LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Seve a loca ons n Ga a &amp;
Me gs Cctvn es 5 Ac e&amp; As Low
As $6 600 Land Con ac Ava
abe $660 Down Ca Fo F ee
Maps ANTHONY LAND CO
LTD 1 800 2 3 8365

MOMPRENEURS Ma &lt;el
5
Theme Pa t as &amp; 5000 Party
Supp es Th u Co o Cata og And
Own Pe 1onallzed WebS e Wo k
F om Home Fo 5 M nu e Ova
v ew Ca 888 855 0607 The n
Ca I Debb e AI 888 290 2782
www SOOpartycon au tan conV
10623

'11 0

Autos for Sale

CiRS FROM $200 POLICE IM
POUNDS Honda a Toyo as
Chovyo Jeepo ~nd Sport Ul
Uot Ca NoW 800 772 1•10
El!CT 7B32

994 Toyo1a 4 WD K ng Cab 5
spaed 4Cyl nde NewTres Ex
tra Clean 74D-441--o709

ays,

Space for Rent

DOWNTOWN BUS NESS
SPACE OR OFFICE
Fo Le~ts e Th ee Rooms c aan
&amp; N~o To V ew (7 40 446 9539

w..

2000-2001

school

ng 1sh

certtflcat10n

SkillS

IS

(0

based

expeueoCe

7

ay contract

and
be
on

WOr k

hourS per day On a 182ComprehenSIVe benefitS

ackage mcludes Sick Leave, Perso

R

ellrement

app~y

and

Insurance

by June 23 to

Roger Porter, Director
Trt-County JVS
15676 State Route 691
Nelsonvalle, OH 45764

991 YZ 125 New P AStle New
Aeads New P ston &amp; A ngs Ve y
Powerful B ke Looks New Front
Fo ks Have Been Comp etely Re
bu t Wh ch ncludea New Seal&amp;
And Flu d Rear Shock Haa Been
Recharged w th Nitrogen And
Checked For Bleed Off Tires
Are n Exce tnt Condit on Chan
And Sp ockets A a L ke New
$1 800 740 448 7375

€:) Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal

WIIUIIIft ']red Smith,
Sr
011 hla tOOth
bll"thd"ff
']111M14,~000

A mllllo11 tllltaa
_ , . ~teeded lfOII,

Public Notice

A miiUo11 tima
-'veer/ad
9f .CO'VE COM/II ha11a

Trullltl will hold 1 public

j 987 Dodge Ooytona Approx

13~ 000 Mil II A um num R mo
GQod Wo k Co 1800 740 24!

great

1992 0 ds Cutau Clora S
~p 500 M oo Loaded Groat
Sttapo $4 400 740.4411-4196

liVed flO",

!lou 11a111r would
died
life WI loved !ION
dearlfl,
911 death - love
flO" JJtlll
911 OIU' hearta f/011
hold 11 p/CJca,
't'hCJt 110 0111 aiMi ca11
have

911

lid Twp lid 1193
(8) 14 16 18 3 tc

fill
9t bi'OQ OIU' ltiCirta

to IOIIfiOU,

8Ht fiOH fl/d IIOt fO
Cllolll

']or pCII"t of,. -Itt

wltlt

fiOH

'l'lta d"ff god COole

fiOHitO-

Hddlnf~... A

n,.., ~-

&amp;y WOJ&gt;

81/yJ., II&lt; Clmlltd S.CIJOtl

SCid/fl mi•Hd
Wife, fJaCJtr/ce EINII
Smith, OCJuglttara,
Shlrl•fl Smith di
fJaula 't'CIIIIor,

Fruth Pharmacy IS seekmg a pharmacist
thts area Fruth Pharmacy mamtams
htgh rankmg by natiOnal drugstore and
busmess publicatiOns Fruth asststs you
m your practice wtth good backup and
support We offer excellent benefits
and a compettttve salary Send your
resume to
Fruth Inc,
Route 1 Box 332
Pomt Pleasant WV 25550
or call Ladd1e Burdette or Jerry Kelley
at 1-304-675-1612 or E-matl:
ladddteb@fruthpharmacy.com

e

g,..,.,_']_
']oh11, }VItlll'k di

Pleaaant Valley HoepHal haa a lull time opportunity
If you meet the following quallflcltlone
Aaaoclllll degm In Applied Sclencea or rellltd
field plua eligibility for ASCP certlllcatlon
Current WV llctnae

Public Sale and Auction

(,\1:\LI ·. IlOIII:
\1 CTIO\

be WV Certified

Join Our F1mlly of proteul01111lelo be the reeourcelor
oommunlty hulth urvlce IlNde

PLIAIANT VAUJ!Y HOSPITAL
C/o PIIISONNI!L
2120 VALLI!Y DRIVE
PT
WV25550
011 FAX
17HI78

2000 Ha wt Davidson Sponatan
200 Custom Lots of Extras
(7401 448 1749 Alttr 5 00 pm o
Leave maaaagt

750

8 112 Fl Soja Ou1boord Ro Fin
shed Inter or Runt Great $1!00
1304)875-8755

loh I ndlr 8 hp mercury w tro or
ueld very I ll I $3 500 304 875
1731

Home

5

P I - eubmlt rotume to

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNEL
28:10 VALLEY DRIVE
PT PLEASAN1: WV 25550
011 FAX TO (304117HII7S

miles West of Gallipolis

BASEMENT
WATEIIPROO"NO
Uncond ona tetlmt guarantee
Local rettrenctl fu nr1hed El
tablllhld 1i75 Co 24 H • (7401
448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Flog
e 1 Woll prool 110

840

Electrical and

Goodbar

commissioned

Lovlnll Memory
Hope M Eblin
on this 2nd Anniversary
or your passlnll
June 14 2000
The emptiness grows
more &amp; more every day
Heaven no\\ has the
11reat~st Angel of all
Your presence Is felt
evervda~
your love
Your
strength
and
wisdom Is what keeps
our family going on
Hoplc you ~re so
missed &amp; loved and
needed
here
And
always will be We
thank God for the years
we did have to share
our life with you
SadlY missed by
Madeline Pendleton
Edith Darton
M rUe Grover
In

28 Ft Camper Good Cond on
Loaded $85 00 Also Replace
ment W ndowt
a
s Zll
(304)875 4004

&amp; Conatr-uct on
New Construction &amp; Remade
D ywa
S d ng Rools Add
ons Pant ng e1c 304)674
4623 0 (3041874 0155

35

At

C

HI

Clopay

door

sections

Genie

and

openers

auctioneer

to

has

sell

over

1 0 000 Able

and

Shoff

several

Approximately

1/2

garage

100

Possible Position Available:
Applied Math Instructor

garage

states

commercial

AA/EOE

been

Haas
In

h

p

door

n

garage doors

will be offered In this auction

one sided

doors w/sunburst glass tops track
300

hardware

x

12

14

hanging
8x7 9x7
16

18

metal

16x7

springs

and

door

10x8 10x10

wide commerc1al

12
and

other size doors available

For a different

size

added

or

auction

style
call

door to

be

1 614 837 4710

to

Don t

this
Miss

Terms cash or check with S S

musl

Math

have

considered

School

posttton

term

Ohto

for

Htgh

educattonal

and

schedule

IS

7

182-day

contract

eneftts

package

ts

per

the

School
to

be

based

on

exputence

hours

an

Apphcanls

certtftcatton
Salary

may

for

tnstructor

school

Malhemaltcs

Work

day

on

a

Comprehensive
mcludes

S1ck

As Is
Leave,

number I D

Personal

and Insurance

1 0% BUYERS PREMIUM will be charged

Days

Rettremenf

Please apply by June

23 to

TAX w1ll be charged unless you have

Roger Porter, D1rector
Tri-County JVS
15676 State Route 691
Nelsonvtlle, OH 45764

vendors number All doors must be
removed 2 hrs after completion of auct1on

OWNER SHOFF DOOR CO
AUCTIONEER JACK GOODBAR

•
I

open

2000 2001

Prev1ew 2 Hrs before Auct1on

&amp; Sold

Vocattonal

an

pphed

This Sale Bnng a Truck or Trailer Open for
All Sales F1nal

County

have

steel and Insulated doors several Insulated
trim

Excellent
Holldaya
Hoapltallzatlon
Dental
Ufe lnaurance
Long Term OlaabllltY

Join Our Femlly of prolelllonala to bathe reaource
for community heaHh 11rvlce netde

Gallipolis Ohio (act1vlty Bu1ld1ng)

Jack

Improvement•

tU9 24 F1 Jayco Eog • Travel
Trailer Hilt AC l kt N IW
$ 1 750 7-«l 2•5 8118

J ms D ywa

~M

Jr Fa1r Grounds

In Memory
810

Campsl'l &amp;
Motor Homea

Home
Improvement•

Salary
Veclllon
Retirement

across from Holzer Hospital

989 W nnobogo Losho o 39 000
M 11 Gentrato Furnace Qood
Cond IOn 110 eoo 740.441 0440
Leave Millage

810

TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 5 30
LOCATED Al: Gallla Co

Take

Boata &amp; Motor~
for S.la

Pleasant Valley Hospital

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST/MLT

']OHplt Sift/til

The Nursing and Rehabilitation Center hae
Muet

..

1in

firllltddaughtarCIItdfl fJCIMora,

$ Increased Pay Scale $
CNA Applicants

SE RVI CF: S

'993 Pon BC G and Am se
18000 M es Back 2 Doo s A
C u se Sun oo Rebu T tie
$2800 740 ..~ 7 40

aooo

muting on Juno 11
1t 6 30 PM II the EMS
Building bahlnd VMH Tho
purpoee ol thlo moetlng Ia
to diiCUII tho !loading
eltultlon wlth rnldonta and
land ownor1 on Shady Cova

Help Wanted

PHARMACIST

The Sellebury Townehlp

poeltlona avalllble for full-time

7110

5808 ano 4 30pm

-1 10

B•.,,.mall, 'tim,

employment

199,. 8111 traclclr tadpole 14 ft

runs
1tts&amp; 1 r11
1200 OBO 31)4 175 8893

460

J

dUCa(IOO

ase

1989 Su doD trailer &amp; cover
vt y good cond 1on $2000 c11
740 992 5437

SOC AL SECURITY D SABILlTY
C a m Den td? We Special zt l'h
Appea s And Hea ngs FAE&amp;
CONSULTATION Se ne Team
Se v ces nc To F ee
8Q•
836 4052

Fo l ease 0 Sa e 5 Yea 0 a
2 ooo SQ F 3 Be d ooms 2
Ba hs Ene gy Ef c en Home
~Jea C s de Go C ub $685 Mo
740 1146 2957

the

IS

TRANSPORTATION

1

STEEL BUILOINGS 1 New Mu~
se 30•40 x 2 was • o 200 Now
$6 990 40x60x14 \Nas $16 40Q
Now $10 971 ~Ox OOx B
$27 590 Now $19 990 60x200x18
Was $58 760 Now $39 980 1
800 406 5 26

an

Com m u n 1ca tt ons

COmputer

ll~l~m;uuJe

989 Oay1ono ES lots ol now

NEW BRAND NAME COMP~
ER S
A most Evt yont A
P oved W th $0 Down! l
Mon hly Payments
800 8
3478 Ext 330

oo

J E

Condition 26 ooo M leo Runs
G aa AM FM Cauette Powe
S eer ng ~owe W ndaws &amp;
Locks AI T I AndCuso Fac
to A um num Wttee s New T es
&amp; Bakos Now Front Brake Ro
to s Front End Jus All}ned
Ask ng $8 00 0 (0 Reasonable
Olor) 740 448 4548 II No Answe
PloeseLeaveMo...

o•

for

of

PlNH aubmlt reeume to

MOilLE HOME OWNERS

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Con Have Land7 We Do Hu 'I
on y oLos Lon 304 736 1295

c

h

may

Applicants must have OhiO High

1993 S 10 BozerTahoe Package

~o

Farms for Sale

m

School

pos1t1on

CHECICTHE
WANT ADS FIRST!

911

Communications Instructor

4 3 I. te Vo tee V 6 Exce lent

v

In Memory

English/ Applied

nstructor for

New 4 W de 3BA 2BA $2 3
Pe Mon h Low down Paymen
F ee A F ee De ve y
666
928 3426

350 Loti

So don't get "board." Open up the Daily Sentinel
today, and discover true convenience at your finger
tips! It will save you time and money!

1111 am

on

,.__,.,," hsh/ Apphe d

BADCREDT
NO CREDIT!
le Us Ass st You In You New
M g Home Ca Fa P e App ova
1 88B 565 0 16~

HOME FORECLOSURES $ o
DOWN NO CRE011 NEEDED
GOV T SANK A EPOS 1 800
355 0024 Ex B040

House &amp; Lot 3 Bed ao ms 2
Ba hs Newly Remodeled S tua ed
On 5 9 Ac es Loca ted Nea Pa
I ot $ 000 Down WAC Co~
!act Oav~ At 1 600 333 69 0

730

GOOD CREDIT

pi

Th s nawapape w I not
knoiNingly accept
advert sements for re111 estata
which oln vlola~on ol1ho
law Ou readers•• he eby
nfo mod 1ho1a dwellngo
adve~ ted In 1hla newopape
are ava !able on an equa
opportunl1y bltlo

Mystic Poms any b eed dog
groom ng ava !able Also show
-quall1y and pe1 Foms ava abla lor
&lt;sa a 740.949-3418

m (304)773-5244 alte

an

NEW LISTING
HUNTERS HILL
3 T ac s 0 1 P me Ra e eat ona
Land Touches USA Land 29
Ac es Fo As Low As $27 900
Land Con ac s Av a ~be Ca
Now
800 2 3 8365 An hony
Land Company L d www coun v
Iyme com

9

12 30

998 Chevy extend a ca b 4X4
5 sp Loaded 40 ooo mlas

Days F ae Samples 7-tO 4'+1
1982

330

iJ

v8

37 Peop e Needed To Lose t.Jp
To 30 Pounds n The Next 30

li11ed In $49 950

to the

only t1me this year

Des&lt; op compu1er windows
under warranty 3 Compaq P e
sa o mon o prln e keyboarif &amp;
mouse $800 740-742 2050

All rea estate advertising n
this newapape 1 sub ect to
1he Fodera Fal Hou~ng Act
or 1968 wh ch makes It II ega
to advert u any preference
1m tat on o dlscrlm nat on
bated on race co o el glon
ae~~: tamil al status or national
o lg n o any ntent on to
make anv such p eference
m tat on o d scrim nat on

Band

40 s

Music from the

Neve L ved n No Money Down

32~eBO

A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
information on sales, and money-saving coupons which
you can clip and carry with you. Of course, you also
get complete coverage of the latest news, sports,
weather, entertainment, and much more!

Pnme R1b Dinner

Sidemen
Sa e 0 e $5 000 Ca
565 0 67

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
shopping needs, at your fingertips.

Moose Members and Guests

REPO SALE

I

I

93 Chevy 1ructt $4 250 89 Tom
po$100 00080 304 875-8872

GOOO USEO APPLIANC~S
We she 6 d ye s efr ge ators
anges Slcaggs App aneta 76
V no 51 oe Cell 740 446 7398
68B8 BOI26

R&amp;D s Used Fun ture &amp; ~ P
p ances G ea Sa eel on P ce d
To Se
Coms And Browse
Co ne 01 Flou e 1 &amp; Add son
P ke we Buy Fu n tu e r.lO
367 0280

RENTALS

•!5631

Peoples

FREE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON
Appl ca on W Se v ce Red uce
Paymen s To 65% CASH IN
CENT VE OFFER Ca I BOO
328 es1o E~t 29

310 Homee for Sale

01110

1n

Saturday June 17th

Business

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ecommends that you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT o send money h ough the
ma un you. have n'vasl gated
hi olfe ng

Changes

40x60X12 Wu $17 500 Now
S10 871
5Dx1 0Dx 6
was
$3 600 Now $19 990 70x150x18
Was $59 990 Now $39 990
eo•200x16 Was $94 500 Now
$59 990 1 800 406-5128

-

SSSINTERNETISS Launch You
Own G Obal n e ne Busi ness
Fo On~ $100 001 Includes 2 15
mg Web S tes Tu n Key Money
Mak ng System FREE Tta n ng
800.251 8095 (24 Hr M11sage)

Building

-0·

ALZHEIMER S FACT 115

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREOIT BANKRUPTCY
LAYVSU TS
JUDGEMENT S
AAA RAT NG 90 180 OAYS 1
8:10 422 598

230

GOY T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 2• Hou HI ng Fo 2000
Free Cal For App lea on /Exam
nation Into mat on Fede a HI e
Full Bone! o 1 800 598 4504 Ex
tnoon 1518 (8 AM 6 PM
CST)

550

1999 Sunllre Call after 5PM
(31M 675-6335

June Dinner/Dance

VISA MASTERCARD UNSE
CURED GUARANTEED UP TO
$2 500 00 BAD NO CREDIT
CRED T RESTORATION SYS
TEM LEGITIMATE CORPORA
TON MEMBER US CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE CMA INOAEP
BOO 7 1 6404 EXT 31

Wanted To Oo Moun s Tee
Se v ee Bucket Tru ck Se vlee
Top 11 m Remova Stump Grind
ng Fu y lnsu ad F ee Es 1
mates B dwell Ohio 1 BOO 838
9568 0 740 388 9648

for Rent

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
GY We F nance o Down! Past
Crodl1 Prob oms OK I Evon 11
Tu ned Down Befort Aeeatab an
You c ad 111 Boo-859 0359

1995 Chev oltt Corsica tii.CI ant
cond 1 on 49 000 m u $5200
740-992 2080

~tao! Bu dingo Naw Mus1 So

Schools
Instruction

Mlecellaneous

Mobile Homes

S eve 1 888 98 2

FINANCIAL HELR
Lowe Mon tly Payments
$2 000 $500 000
Good 0 Bad C ed
Avoid Bank uptcy
88B 308-6098

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE OU CKLY Bache lo s
Mas e s Doc o a e By Co e
sponde x:e Based Upon P o Ed
ucat on And SM S udy Cou se
Fo FREE nfo mat on Bookie
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 B3 6

420

Walor lnt Spocll 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Po 100
200 PSI
137 DO Por 100 All Sra10 Com
.,.1010n F 111ngs n S1ock
~ N IYANS ENTERPRISE&amp;
Jackson OhiO 1 aoo-537 9528

1995 Buick Skylo k ~ doo au
omatic euaettl 1 r 58 000
m tes excellent cond t on $6000
080 740-992 3693

2228

Gall polla Career College
(Caree s C ose To Home)
Ca l Today 740-446 43e7
800 21 4 0452
Reg 190 05-1274B
150

Ca

Mobile Homes
for Sale

n95

Opportunity

2 Fam v Ya d Sate 5155 Co a
M II Road 151h 161h 7 h Fun
lure Too s F ah ng S utt Much
Muctl Mo 1!1

80

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H r ng Fo 2000
Fee Ca Fo App ca t on EJCam
na on nlo mat on Fade al H e
Fu Benet s BOO 598 4504 Ex
tensont55 8AM S~M
CST !

NOT CE 2 handyman crew w 1
do ya d wo k pant ng nslde and
out ca pente wa k root ng s d
lng Have own too s F ee est
ma es 740 742 3225

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
WANTED

Sma
Bedroon House A1C Gas
hea Cook ng and wa e Ba se
menV a c s o age a ea washe
and Cl ye hook up Nea Kma t
$:325 mo You pay gas &amp; e ec c
(7 401446 822 7401446 42 7
ca be ora 8am or a e 9pm

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $8 9 HR
Fede a Banet 18 Pa k Range s
Secu ty Ma ntenance No Exp
For Some Fo In o Ca
800
391 5856 Ex 4299

Competitive Salary And Excel ant
Fr nge Bener ts Fo lmmed ate
Con a de at on Forward Resume
And Le11o 01 nlores1 To HRS
Human Resources PO BoK 724
Alhlnt Ohio 45701 EOE

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

l

Houaehold

Wanted Above G ound Swim
m no Poo Mus be n good con
Cl ton A deck would b• a pus
1 304~75 ol832

1994 CoroiCI 70 000 M II V-41
Aulomollc S3 795 1991 Co avan
LOidld Cod .VC $1 885 1&amp;93
Co,ollor 11 895 COOK MO
TORS 740-418-0103

�Wednesday, June14,2000

P-ee a e · The Dally Sentlnei

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

::ALLEYOOP

Undtr Ntw Owntrthlp

SMit"•s COHSTROCTIO"

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

• Ntw Homea
• Garages
• Siding

Houra M·F 11 am - 7 pm
Sat.llam-1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawamower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies ,
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Bakar

740-949·2804
GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING

SERVICE
(304) 112·2079
NewHaven WV

Need It dent, give us • o1ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Or11t Prices •n New Homes

992•2753

&amp;/22 1 mo

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
. month.

111100 1 mo

leader Is continually looking for
aggressive and motivated people
'to fill sales positions.
We have the Best Benefits, Best
Pay and the Besttamlly oriented
work environment In today's
automotive Industry!

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

992•11 01 ,

SALES
The Ohio Valley's automotive

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'"'"' Sales Representative
"
-~

• Remodeling
• Deck•
• Roofing

catl or stop ln and see ...Mlke
Sergent, Brian Ross, or Brad Sang
and begin a rewarding career as ~
Phone (740) 593-6671
Automotive Sales Professional
TODAY!
6/291mo.

~JURNPIK~
195 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446·9800 I 1·800-272-5119

ROB~RT

BISSELL
. CONSTRUCTION

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

..liLllR

tools. Free Esumates
•

hintB's
Candbs &amp;Crafts
•Ft•4raims •Cu41t Rtfllls
•Wtfllwerkl•t •Wrutht
9( '143 992-'5557

WAI,.ID
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Dozer work.
frea Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 ptn
740-992-5050
(Randy)
-~; ~·

.,

"We're Back"
'

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

992·1550

The Appliance
Man
Ken Young
·

4119100 t mo. pd.

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAllATIONS
Custom C•rpet, VInyl,
Commen:lal an Ceramic
Tile, Alll)pes of
Hardwood Floorla1,
Carpet Binding and '
Restretchlna.
30 Yrs. Experience
MillE YOUNG

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECDON

740·992-7724
PAT YOUNG

Quality Drlvewaya,
Pat!oa, SldewiJIIka.
25 yeara experience
Free Eatlmaatea

PI
C.UUCTIIIII
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, !=tc.

The

QJ~ Cantll6 Shop

,,.. E•tlm•t. .

SjlACIIII ScAnt

740-992-1709

ofthA Month
SIIIA
New Summer Days
Thur &amp; Frl10 am ·II pm
Saturday 1oam • 4 pm .
On other day~ II we are
home, we are OPEN.

8/!'.IM 1 mo. od.

11~-

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

1·800·311-3391

FllEE

Contrac!ert Welcome
Albany, Ohio

lnterio1 - Exterior
Residential - Commerical
Call for
ESTI~TES

1740) 112-9013
IMoblle) 740-Jlt-0113
lasured

c

T&amp;D
HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL

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

Hydrauhc Hose repairs,
cyhnder repairs, oR
Sales· Sgal. buckett
to 55 gill•..,...., , ·

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

2 Jlllrilles out of
Chester on SR 248
740•985~4194

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise In
thla apace for
$25per
month.

• Traino by Lionel &amp; MTH

East
• Q 10 6
• A9

s~

I

R,

~ BARNEY

Y.

17401992•3131

MARCUM

'

•

LINDA'S
PAINTING

20 Yrt experletKe :

&amp; SON

theAppDance

me

Aher 6pm· 614-985-4180 ·

•• •
.......

OHIO 48131• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• 'fr\11\
S\uli\P

(740) 367·0266
1-800·9S0·33S9
11N•

BIG NATE ·

740-992·5~!2 :.
41281 mo. ~·

QUALITY ; .
LANDScAPE:
Weeding: Mulching: .:
Pruning: Edging ·•
Planting and Relaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

Free Estimate11 '

• Gt\1\4\t\9

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

ro w~T~ ~~ ~~t&gt;Y o~a!

33795 Hiland Rd ~
Pomeroy, Ohio •

llll.lnd
......_.,,Dida

TREE SERVICE

Mike Sharp :
740·949·:1606 :
'

•

us1ness

..

!'.--SO_i_F-TI-I_E_O_LV_M_P_IC~&amp;-AM_E_5...,......,

Wi-10 TOLD 't'OU THAT THE .

' .TJ.lE'{'lL NEED PARI(IN&amp; SPACE,
RIGHT? AND WE CAN SELL ,

OLVMI1!C 6AME5 ARE 60iN6

i'
I

'
I

' •' ...

..'

...,

WINDOWS

'.

'

one
I

I

(worthies• ~­
person) ·•

so Small

whirlpool .:;
54 Important .,

52 "Puppet" e~
tl~ period!

.•

~.

~·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

::·

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people
st and .' ·
present. Each letter in the clpt'.Gr stands lor another.
' pa
.•

Today's clue: F equals G

ECZG

'J

VWFVWX

XDHX

;_,

,,

DHSW

J

'

ANX

ECW

ZJMW

XE

ZEeW

.',

MEV

'

&lt;0

PO

RENCXVO.'-

RHYX .

CHXDHC

.. '

DHZW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My family would hardly approve of my marrying a :
politician."- Actress Joan Fontaine_.to Adlai Stevenson.
,:
:~

WOlD
GAM I

.

·,

I

•

u N L A wT
.

· ''

'

-•

8

e

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
ro GET ANSWER

To get a current weather
report, check the

Keenly· Baron -Jerky · Uplift . FRONT

Sentinel

My teenager doesn't waste time looking for something to eat His method is to get the food from the fridge
that is in the FRONT.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IL

W:-:::E::D7:':NE=::S~D":":'AY~-..;.._------J-U-NE_1......
4

•

·'Your

•

'Birthday

· today, it might not be so perilous
: Thursday, June 15, 2000
: A number of encouraging for you to take a social chance on
;changes could be in the offing for a good friend or loved one.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
•you in the year ahead. An impor: tant one might involve a troubled you've been searching for your
:relationship that you'd like to identity or what you stand for, go
back to your·beginnings today to
: rejuvenate.
find
your answers. The source lies
; GEMINI (May 21-June . 20)
: All decisions should be done with at the core.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) It
; forethought involved, but when it
: comes to one today that is ma:r be time to step in and redo or
~extremely imponant because of 'redirect so111ething that hasn't
• far reaching effects, take double been running too smoothly lately
time to consider all ·alternatives. into what you know it could be.
Know where to lock for romance · Don't just view events from the
and you '11 find it. The Astro- . sidelines.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
Graph Matchmaker instantly
· reveals which signs are romanti- certain type of opponunity for
cally perfect for you. Mail $2.75 ma~erial gain has been around you
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspti- for quile a while, bui for some
reason, you haven't taken advan·
~ per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hi11
ttlge of it . Oct on it today.
:station, New York. NY 10156.
SAOI'l'TARIUS (Nov. 2l·Occ.
; CANCER (June 21·JU ly 22)
t Con•ldcr ~litho lldv~nlilpM borate 21) 'You' vo sot 1111 the neeeMMIII')'
i you rojocl do in&amp; 11 tuMk )'uu m11y wherewithal to occompll1h 11 per~Imply not want tg dll . You'll . l(lnlll I'CIIIiMiie @0111, ~0 don't be
h 1111ntto 1hoot for it. Aim )'o\lr
~ ehonao your mind rctll quickly
I wh n you rcAIIzo what lti cum· urrow1 1qu11ro on )'llUr t11rgct
today.
·
l plotlon will dg for you .
CAPRICORN (Dile . 22·Jnn.
1
!..EO (July 2:1-Aull. 22)
19)
Being th~ pruct.lcul Cuprlcom
~ ~lthou&amp;h I may ngt l!g so fnr "~
to tell you 10 luke flnnnclul rl~k~ that you I\I'll, logtc111 cone luslons

,.,

•

26 Green Gables
, girl
28 In a short
lime
29 - contend•lie
30 Coagulate
31 Deep
yearnings :
37 Plna - (drink)
38 Valle
41 Scary
,
42 Gets older .
43 Remedy ·
44 Leo. for one
45 Take apan 47 Many, (2 wds.)
48Move
.'
49 - -do-well-~

r:-1

·------

REPLACEMENT

TO 8E IN NEEDLES?

-

·1

1192-2772

as·

I 6UE55 50, SPII&lt;E ..'. SOT

I ARE i;lELD J.lERE IN NEEDLES.

,

account

lead: • 7

Assuming you use the bid,
what do your partner and you
think constitutes a weak-two
opening?
Young Turks believe it :&gt;ohow s
13 cards, some of which are in the
named
snit.
Middle-aged
Mesopotamians require either any
six-card suit regardless of quality
or a good five-carder. Old
Ottomans insist on a decent sixcard suit containing two of the top
three, or three of the top five honors. I fall somewhere between the
MM and 00 camps. Those YTs
should go tq the craps table in a
casino.
Still, whatever you feel a weak
two requires, it is important to be
consistent. In Monday's column,
a player opened two hearts with
king-queen-jack-seventh. Well, on
the last deal of the round, he
opened two spades with today's
South hand. How is partner supposed to know what to do if the
suit goes from king-queen-jackseventh to jack-empty-sixth?
Defending against two spades,
!led the club seven. Declarer won
with dummy's ace and ca!led,f.orthe spade king. My partner, Anne
Chatham , won with the ace and
returned a club. South ruffing and
leading a second round of trumps.
After winning with the spade I 0.
I forced declarer again in clubs.
Now South bravely played another trump, but luckily I found the
ace-and-another-heart switch , so
we took three spades and three
hearts for one down.
Not unreasonably, the deal was
passed out at one table. One pair
got to four spades (I didn't dare
ask how!), three down. One pair
made two spades. And two Norths
were allowed to play in two diamonds, one winning eight and the
other an incredible I0' tricks.
Be consistent with your pre·
empts.

co

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

' \.

""l

High &amp;Dry:.
Sw.lf·Sto rag~

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

JilES'' · .

P"'Tr\E P~ ['IJ( OCC.IOCD

Now Renting

Senior Citizen
·Discount

UAII.Lif'OLJ~,

.

740-985-4141
'
Residential- decks, kitchens, Co~mercial- metal studs, · ·'
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mlka W. Marcum ·
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
Owner
vinyl siding

"Take lhe pain out
of painlinsLet
do it for you"
· Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. • ·
Leove Message

True"

Tt4f FOIJ~ Of IJ$
Me A~L FO~ IT
IIJT, ON'Cf MAIN,
t4f OPP06f.f.

BUILDING
Long Bottom, Ohio

money of

BY PHILLII' ALDER

Septic Sytlenu &amp;

U1ilitiea

Portuguese· ·

Be consistent

Hou"" &amp; Trailer Site• :
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

month.

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

992-4119 or
l-800-291-5600

. WIDE OPEN?

SOUVE~URS, OKA'I'?

\

·

WHO LEFT MY DOOR

........
Ser11ice1

AK 5

11 Princely Italian 19 - out
family
(stretch)
12 Brlllsh
21 Be present ·
machine gun
22 Ruins
•
23 Wrlter'a enc~ •
24 YP's superior
25 Old

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
South West North East
Pass
2•
~ass
Pass Pass

Bulldoaer &amp; Backhoe·

·sso·per

J&amp;L IIIIIULAIIOIII &amp;
COIIImUCIIOIII

Pomeroy, Ohio

t

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.:
''nw' ""' t!f:

lnwttl- Profnslolal Strvkt

Now available
Black ,&amp; Tan puppieo

1

Quahty Yrmdow
Systems, Inc.

•J75432
• 10 7 3

ACROSS
42 Lega~old org.
441 Tell Joles
1 Did eome
47 Skin problem
houHCieanlng 51 Type of plg
7 Flows out
53 Depended
13 Property
55 WOR away
14 Actor Borgnlno 56 Preased
15 Ellello
57 Spenlsh title
16 Conceive
58 Quick lunch
17 Wont to the
place
bottom
18 BHr barrel
DOWN·
20 Eve's garden
21 Awry
1 Bad marks
23 "Jeck- could 2 GoVI. Iarm
eat no fat"
agenc7.
27 Tendency to
3 Stupe
make mlotakes 4 Small astener
32' "-we aU?"
5 French season
·· 33 Chameleon
6 OTilce
. 34 Pari• river
furniture
35 Punctuation
7 - counter
mark
(radiation
36 Perfume ·
Instrument)
39 Tangles
8 Type of bean
40 Waohlngton
9 Large knife
political couple 10- over heels

.. 5

RESIDENTIAL COMMEI(CIAL
0l
.R
E FREE ESTIMATES... FULLY INSURED N '

Advertise
in this
space for

A 9 8

South

A;

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

•

• K J 52
• J 6 3
.. Q 9 4

• 7 4
•Kt08762

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Rocm Additions
• Rocflng
COMMERCIAL end RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

State Route 248
Chester, 01-1
• Ee1eo Roekelo and AcceMOrieo

+QI0982
• A J 3

•

-4/19f00 1 mo pet.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

6/311 1 mo pel.

N

Mystic

10 X 20 $60

now try the &amp;ut"

• Q8 6 4

/

• _Bathi~ • Ears
•Naile •Flea Baths
All Breed•

"You'w tritd tht rtJt.,

• K

M:•

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVICES

Open Fer Grot~~lll
Fer Your Pll't ••••·

992-1717

•

•

Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
•
(740) 992-3470.

•

Poms

lOX IOMO

,o-lt·Ril.
p . . •
· amtmg

Free E1timate1 .

~

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For LeaSe. Prime Locatiqn on
. Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehquse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404

STORAGE
ST. RL :

Hauling • Limestone • ·

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC. :

(740) 742-8888
T
1-888-521-0916 , . , E

HARIWFLI ,

EXCfiVATI"CI

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

BISSELL IUILDEIS
IIC.

r-y, OW.

• Lifeline

Uc.IIIJ0.50

HfiOLI"CI

28870 Beahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· BPM

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pergl'¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Pr011r•alva top ·une.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

· ; SELF STORAGE

A &amp; D Auto Up o atery • P us, Inc

,PJ

Call740·985·3831

• Adoo

7411 , ....

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
N~•

"Ahead In Service"
Nutr1110 West1111 !'ride 12" Sweet Fttd...................'5.25/50 lb baQ
Nutr1110 16" Rabbit Pelleii ....................................16.9S/50 II. bag
llutr1110 Hunters Pride 21" Dog Food .....................'6.7S/50 II. bag
11utr~~~a16" !.Dyer Crumbels .................................15.99/50 II. bog
llutrwSaakh Feed .............................................16.7S/50 ll..bag
ShD Riv• 12\ Canle Fttd................................ '6.7S/1 00 lb. bog

• Garv•~e• Track
• Model Power

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/vii,., OH 467Z3

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Local 843·5264

SHADE RIVER .fiG SERVICE

• K-Line
• Allseam

AT 11;30 P.M.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
9"u-.tu.,. ~ 9lof'lil

740·949-0046

74D-742·8015 or
1•877-353-7022

35537 St.tt. 7 llri

ADM.-. Tractor &amp;
Eqaipmenl Pare.
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pare. .
Dealen.

7/22/TFN

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Estirnates 740~378-6349
NOFICE

ESTIMATES

740-992-1671

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

2 Handyman crew will do
yard work, painting Inside
and out, carp enter work,
roofing, sldlng. Have own

• New Homee
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

DIPOYIII
Pllft

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

...

are always part of'your make-up.
However, today· sciine of your
hunches or instincts could be an
added asset . Blend the two.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Through friend s and contacts
you've acquired over a long period of time, a major interest of
yours could be advanced today.
·Don't be afraid to discuss the
issue with them.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
New life can be breathed into a
project today that might have
appeared to be lying. dormant of
late . This 111ay involve an endeav·
or related to your work or career.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) If
you bdiew you have to sit in
judgment of som~on~ today. make
sure you first pluce yourself in this
person's shoes .. 1'ol~runce und
undershmdilljl. not ril!ldity, will
win you 11 friend .
TAURUS tAprll 20· Muy 201
Don't let one m(lr~ d11y 110 by
without mukin!J thPNil IWC ~~~ m·y
ch11nge K that you feel would bo
mure produoliVe ,In qn orrM!!e·
mont yv11 hnv~ w1th unmher. Do
~o

'••
•

•

•
•

••
•

toduy.

-.l'

'

,.

�Wednesday, June14,2000

P-ee a e · The Dally Sentlnei

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

::ALLEYOOP

Undtr Ntw Owntrthlp

SMit"•s COHSTROCTIO"

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

• Ntw Homea
• Garages
• Siding

Houra M·F 11 am - 7 pm
Sat.llam-1 pm
• Pick up &amp; delivery Service
• Lawamower &amp; weedeater repair &amp; supplies ,
Owner- James A. Pickens
Shop Foreman- Shane Bakar

740-949·2804
GUAUNTEED
All CONDITIONING

SERVICE
(304) 112·2079
NewHaven WV

Need It dent, give us • o1ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Or11t Prices •n New Homes

992•2753

&amp;/22 1 mo

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
. month.

111100 1 mo

leader Is continually looking for
aggressive and motivated people
'to fill sales positions.
We have the Best Benefits, Best
Pay and the Besttamlly oriented
work environment In today's
automotive Industry!

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

992•11 01 ,

SALES
The Ohio Valley's automotive

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'"'"' Sales Representative
"
-~

• Remodeling
• Deck•
• Roofing

catl or stop ln and see ...Mlke
Sergent, Brian Ross, or Brad Sang
and begin a rewarding career as ~
Phone (740) 593-6671
Automotive Sales Professional
TODAY!
6/291mo.

~JURNPIK~
195 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446·9800 I 1·800-272-5119

ROB~RT

BISSELL
. CONSTRUCTION

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

..liLllR

tools. Free Esumates
•

hintB's
Candbs &amp;Crafts
•Ft•4raims •Cu41t Rtfllls
•Wtfllwerkl•t •Wrutht
9( '143 992-'5557

WAI,.ID
Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.

Dozer work.
frea Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00 ptn
740-992-5050
(Randy)
-~; ~·

.,

"We're Back"
'

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

992·1550

The Appliance
Man
Ken Young
·

4119100 t mo. pd.

YOUNG'S CARPET
INSTAllATIONS
Custom C•rpet, VInyl,
Commen:lal an Ceramic
Tile, Alll)pes of
Hardwood Floorla1,
Carpet Binding and '
Restretchlna.
30 Yrs. Experience
MillE YOUNG

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECDON

740·992-7724
PAT YOUNG

Quality Drlvewaya,
Pat!oa, SldewiJIIka.
25 yeara experience
Free Eatlmaatea

PI
C.UUCTIIIII
Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, !=tc.

The

QJ~ Cantll6 Shop

,,.. E•tlm•t. .

SjlACIIII ScAnt

740-992-1709

ofthA Month
SIIIA
New Summer Days
Thur &amp; Frl10 am ·II pm
Saturday 1oam • 4 pm .
On other day~ II we are
home, we are OPEN.

8/!'.IM 1 mo. od.

11~-

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

1·800·311-3391

FllEE

Contrac!ert Welcome
Albany, Ohio

lnterio1 - Exterior
Residential - Commerical
Call for
ESTI~TES

1740) 112-9013
IMoblle) 740-Jlt-0113
lasured

c

T&amp;D
HYDRAUUCS &amp; OIL

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

Hydrauhc Hose repairs,
cyhnder repairs, oR
Sales· Sgal. buckett
to 55 gill•..,...., , ·

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

2 Jlllrilles out of
Chester on SR 248
740•985~4194

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise In
thla apace for
$25per
month.

• Traino by Lionel &amp; MTH

East
• Q 10 6
• A9

s~

I

R,

~ BARNEY

Y.

17401992•3131

MARCUM

'

•

LINDA'S
PAINTING

20 Yrt experletKe :

&amp; SON

theAppDance

me

Aher 6pm· 614-985-4180 ·

•• •
.......

OHIO 48131• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• 'fr\11\
S\uli\P

(740) 367·0266
1-800·9S0·33S9
11N•

BIG NATE ·

740-992·5~!2 :.
41281 mo. ~·

QUALITY ; .
LANDScAPE:
Weeding: Mulching: .:
Pruning: Edging ·•
Planting and Relaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

Free Estimate11 '

• Gt\1\4\t\9

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

ro w~T~ ~~ ~~t&gt;Y o~a!

33795 Hiland Rd ~
Pomeroy, Ohio •

llll.lnd
......_.,,Dida

TREE SERVICE

Mike Sharp :
740·949·:1606 :
'

•

us1ness

..

!'.--SO_i_F-TI-I_E_O_LV_M_P_IC~&amp;-AM_E_5...,......,

Wi-10 TOLD 't'OU THAT THE .

' .TJ.lE'{'lL NEED PARI(IN&amp; SPACE,
RIGHT? AND WE CAN SELL ,

OLVMI1!C 6AME5 ARE 60iN6

i'
I

'
I

' •' ...

..'

...,

WINDOWS

'.

'

one
I

I

(worthies• ~­
person) ·•

so Small

whirlpool .:;
54 Important .,

52 "Puppet" e~
tl~ period!

.•

~.

~·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

::·

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people
st and .' ·
present. Each letter in the clpt'.Gr stands lor another.
' pa
.•

Today's clue: F equals G

ECZG

'J

VWFVWX

XDHX

;_,

,,

DHSW

J

'

ANX

ECW

ZJMW

XE

ZEeW

.',

MEV

'

&lt;0

PO

RENCXVO.'-

RHYX .

CHXDHC

.. '

DHZW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My family would hardly approve of my marrying a :
politician."- Actress Joan Fontaine_.to Adlai Stevenson.
,:
:~

WOlD
GAM I

.

·,

I

•

u N L A wT
.

· ''

'

-•

8

e

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
ro GET ANSWER

To get a current weather
report, check the

Keenly· Baron -Jerky · Uplift . FRONT

Sentinel

My teenager doesn't waste time looking for something to eat His method is to get the food from the fridge
that is in the FRONT.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IL

W:-:::E::D7:':NE=::S~D":":'AY~-..;.._------J-U-NE_1......
4

•

·'Your

•

'Birthday

· today, it might not be so perilous
: Thursday, June 15, 2000
: A number of encouraging for you to take a social chance on
;changes could be in the offing for a good friend or loved one.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
•you in the year ahead. An impor: tant one might involve a troubled you've been searching for your
:relationship that you'd like to identity or what you stand for, go
back to your·beginnings today to
: rejuvenate.
find
your answers. The source lies
; GEMINI (May 21-June . 20)
: All decisions should be done with at the core.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) It
; forethought involved, but when it
: comes to one today that is ma:r be time to step in and redo or
~extremely imponant because of 'redirect so111ething that hasn't
• far reaching effects, take double been running too smoothly lately
time to consider all ·alternatives. into what you know it could be.
Know where to lock for romance · Don't just view events from the
and you '11 find it. The Astro- . sidelines.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
Graph Matchmaker instantly
· reveals which signs are romanti- certain type of opponunity for
cally perfect for you. Mail $2.75 ma~erial gain has been around you
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspti- for quile a while, bui for some
reason, you haven't taken advan·
~ per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hi11
ttlge of it . Oct on it today.
:station, New York. NY 10156.
SAOI'l'TARIUS (Nov. 2l·Occ.
; CANCER (June 21·JU ly 22)
t Con•ldcr ~litho lldv~nlilpM borate 21) 'You' vo sot 1111 the neeeMMIII')'
i you rojocl do in&amp; 11 tuMk )'uu m11y wherewithal to occompll1h 11 per~Imply not want tg dll . You'll . l(lnlll I'CIIIiMiie @0111, ~0 don't be
h 1111ntto 1hoot for it. Aim )'o\lr
~ ehonao your mind rctll quickly
I wh n you rcAIIzo what lti cum· urrow1 1qu11ro on )'llUr t11rgct
today.
·
l plotlon will dg for you .
CAPRICORN (Dile . 22·Jnn.
1
!..EO (July 2:1-Aull. 22)
19)
Being th~ pruct.lcul Cuprlcom
~ ~lthou&amp;h I may ngt l!g so fnr "~
to tell you 10 luke flnnnclul rl~k~ that you I\I'll, logtc111 cone luslons

,.,

•

26 Green Gables
, girl
28 In a short
lime
29 - contend•lie
30 Coagulate
31 Deep
yearnings :
37 Plna - (drink)
38 Valle
41 Scary
,
42 Gets older .
43 Remedy ·
44 Leo. for one
45 Take apan 47 Many, (2 wds.)
48Move
.'
49 - -do-well-~

r:-1

·------

REPLACEMENT

TO 8E IN NEEDLES?

-

·1

1192-2772

as·

I 6UE55 50, SPII&lt;E ..'. SOT

I ARE i;lELD J.lERE IN NEEDLES.

,

account

lead: • 7

Assuming you use the bid,
what do your partner and you
think constitutes a weak-two
opening?
Young Turks believe it :&gt;ohow s
13 cards, some of which are in the
named
snit.
Middle-aged
Mesopotamians require either any
six-card suit regardless of quality
or a good five-carder. Old
Ottomans insist on a decent sixcard suit containing two of the top
three, or three of the top five honors. I fall somewhere between the
MM and 00 camps. Those YTs
should go tq the craps table in a
casino.
Still, whatever you feel a weak
two requires, it is important to be
consistent. In Monday's column,
a player opened two hearts with
king-queen-jack-seventh. Well, on
the last deal of the round, he
opened two spades with today's
South hand. How is partner supposed to know what to do if the
suit goes from king-queen-jackseventh to jack-empty-sixth?
Defending against two spades,
!led the club seven. Declarer won
with dummy's ace and ca!led,f.orthe spade king. My partner, Anne
Chatham , won with the ace and
returned a club. South ruffing and
leading a second round of trumps.
After winning with the spade I 0.
I forced declarer again in clubs.
Now South bravely played another trump, but luckily I found the
ace-and-another-heart switch , so
we took three spades and three
hearts for one down.
Not unreasonably, the deal was
passed out at one table. One pair
got to four spades (I didn't dare
ask how!), three down. One pair
made two spades. And two Norths
were allowed to play in two diamonds, one winning eight and the
other an incredible I0' tricks.
Be consistent with your pre·
empts.

co

For All Your Home
lmorovement Needs

' \.

""l

High &amp;Dry:.
Sw.lf·Sto rag~

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

JilES'' · .

P"'Tr\E P~ ['IJ( OCC.IOCD

Now Renting

Senior Citizen
·Discount

UAII.Lif'OLJ~,

.

740-985-4141
'
Residential- decks, kitchens, Co~mercial- metal studs, · ·'
bathrooms, custom
drywall, suspended ceilings
remodeling, handicap access
Mlka W. Marcum ·
kitchens &amp; baths, wood &amp;
Owner
vinyl siding

"Take lhe pain out
of painlinsLet
do it for you"
· Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. • ·
Leove Message

True"

Tt4f FOIJ~ Of IJ$
Me A~L FO~ IT
IIJT, ON'Cf MAIN,
t4f OPP06f.f.

BUILDING
Long Bottom, Ohio

money of

BY PHILLII' ALDER

Septic Sytlenu &amp;

U1ilitiea

Portuguese· ·

Be consistent

Hou"" &amp; Trailer Site• :
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

month.

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

992-4119 or
l-800-291-5600

. WIDE OPEN?

SOUVE~URS, OKA'I'?

\

·

WHO LEFT MY DOOR

........
Ser11ice1

AK 5

11 Princely Italian 19 - out
family
(stretch)
12 Brlllsh
21 Be present ·
machine gun
22 Ruins
•
23 Wrlter'a enc~ •
24 YP's superior
25 Old

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
South West North East
Pass
2•
~ass
Pass Pass

Bulldoaer &amp; Backhoe·

·sso·per

J&amp;L IIIIIULAIIOIII &amp;
COIIImUCIIOIII

Pomeroy, Ohio

t

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.:
''nw' ""' t!f:

lnwttl- Profnslolal Strvkt

Now available
Black ,&amp; Tan puppieo

1

Quahty Yrmdow
Systems, Inc.

•J75432
• 10 7 3

ACROSS
42 Lega~old org.
441 Tell Joles
1 Did eome
47 Skin problem
houHCieanlng 51 Type of plg
7 Flows out
53 Depended
13 Property
55 WOR away
14 Actor Borgnlno 56 Preased
15 Ellello
57 Spenlsh title
16 Conceive
58 Quick lunch
17 Wont to the
place
bottom
18 BHr barrel
DOWN·
20 Eve's garden
21 Awry
1 Bad marks
23 "Jeck- could 2 GoVI. Iarm
eat no fat"
agenc7.
27 Tendency to
3 Stupe
make mlotakes 4 Small astener
32' "-we aU?"
5 French season
·· 33 Chameleon
6 OTilce
. 34 Pari• river
furniture
35 Punctuation
7 - counter
mark
(radiation
36 Perfume ·
Instrument)
39 Tangles
8 Type of bean
40 Waohlngton
9 Large knife
political couple 10- over heels

.. 5

RESIDENTIAL COMMEI(CIAL
0l
.R
E FREE ESTIMATES... FULLY INSURED N '

Advertise
in this
space for

A 9 8

South

A;

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

•

• K J 52
• J 6 3
.. Q 9 4

• 7 4
•Kt08762

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Rocm Additions
• Rocflng
COMMERCIAL end RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

State Route 248
Chester, 01-1
• Ee1eo Roekelo and AcceMOrieo

+QI0982
• A J 3

•

-4/19f00 1 mo pet.

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

6/311 1 mo pel.

N

Mystic

10 X 20 $60

now try the &amp;ut"

• Q8 6 4

/

• _Bathi~ • Ears
•Naile •Flea Baths
All Breed•

"You'w tritd tht rtJt.,

• K

M:•

CONCRETE BACKHOE SERVICES
MASONRY BOBCAT SERVICES

Open Fer Grot~~lll
Fer Your Pll't ••••·

992-1717

•

•

Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
•
(740) 992-3470.

•

Poms

lOX IOMO

,o-lt·Ril.
p . . •
· amtmg

Free E1timate1 .

~

2,000 sf. Modern Brick
Professional Office/Retail Space
For LeaSe. Prime Locatiqn on
. Pomeroy By-Pass.
Also 600 sf. of Seperate Secure
Warehquse Available.
992-7953-992-6810-992-5404

STORAGE
ST. RL :

Hauling • Limestone • ·

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC. :

(740) 742-8888
T
1-888-521-0916 , . , E

HARIWFLI ,

EXCfiVATI"CI

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

BISSELL IUILDEIS
IIC.

r-y, OW.

• Lifeline

Uc.IIIJ0.50

HfiOLI"CI

28870 Beahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· BPM

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pergl'¥
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Pr011r•alva top ·une.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

· ; SELF STORAGE

A &amp; D Auto Up o atery • P us, Inc

,PJ

Call740·985·3831

• Adoo

7411 , ....

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
N~•

"Ahead In Service"
Nutr1110 West1111 !'ride 12" Sweet Fttd...................'5.25/50 lb baQ
Nutr1110 16" Rabbit Pelleii ....................................16.9S/50 II. bag
llutr1110 Hunters Pride 21" Dog Food .....................'6.7S/50 II. bag
11utr~~~a16" !.Dyer Crumbels .................................15.99/50 II. bog
llutrwSaakh Feed .............................................16.7S/50 ll..bag
ShD Riv• 12\ Canle Fttd................................ '6.7S/1 00 lb. bog

• Garv•~e• Track
• Model Power

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/vii,., OH 467Z3

BRIDGE

HILL'S

Local 843·5264

SHADE RIVER .fiG SERVICE

• K-Line
• Allseam

AT 11;30 P.M.

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
9"u-.tu.,. ~ 9lof'lil

740·949-0046

74D-742·8015 or
1•877-353-7022

35537 St.tt. 7 llri

ADM.-. Tractor &amp;
Eqaipmenl Pare.
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pare. .
Dealen.

7/22/TFN

Replacement Windows
Certainteed, Simington
Lifetime Warranty
Local Contractor
Prices D.R. Bissell
30 Yrs. Exp.
Free Estirnates 740~378-6349
NOFICE

ESTIMATES

740-992-1671

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

2 Handyman crew will do
yard work, painting Inside
and out, carp enter work,
roofing, sldlng. Have own

• New Homee
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

DIPOYIII
Pllft

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

...

are always part of'your make-up.
However, today· sciine of your
hunches or instincts could be an
added asset . Blend the two.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Through friend s and contacts
you've acquired over a long period of time, a major interest of
yours could be advanced today.
·Don't be afraid to discuss the
issue with them.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
New life can be breathed into a
project today that might have
appeared to be lying. dormant of
late . This 111ay involve an endeav·
or related to your work or career.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) If
you bdiew you have to sit in
judgment of som~on~ today. make
sure you first pluce yourself in this
person's shoes .. 1'ol~runce und
undershmdilljl. not ril!ldity, will
win you 11 friend .
TAURUS tAprll 20· Muy 201
Don't let one m(lr~ d11y 110 by
without mukin!J thPNil IWC ~~~ m·y
ch11nge K that you feel would bo
mure produoliVe ,In qn orrM!!e·
mont yv11 hnv~ w1th unmher. Do
~o

'••
•

•

•
•

••
•

toduy.

-.l'

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�•

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

US OPEN GOLF

NBA
from

PageB1

l:iy comments from R ice's wife
allegin g that Jackson is biased
against her husband because he
failed to trade R ice for Scottie
Pippen .
.. Wh en th ~ r(' 's fru stratio n , you
try to kee p it in the community.

By t w hen it ss·eps out, you haw
to do some dam.1ge co ntrol." Lakers forwa rd I'l.:ick Fox said. " And
' Ve're d ealin g wi th th at n ow,

h1&gt;re.''
B ut th e Ri ce bro uhaha may be
f9 rgotten if O' N eal dominates
Game 4 the way he did the se ries'
fi'rst .two ga mes. O ' N eal followed
a 43-point pe rfor mance in Ga me
, wi th a 40-point outing two
nights later. He had 33 points, but
also another terrible night on the
foul lin e, o n Sunday in lndi-

·.Gambling
fromPageB1
illegal sports wagering that
plagu es our nation 's college cam.
puses."
R ep. Shelley Be rkley, D- N ev.,
said elimin atin g legal bets in
N evada won't solve the problem
any mo re. than "s uggestin g that
o utlawing aspirin would stop th e
sale of illegal drugs."
The H ouse bill, sponsored by

US Open
fromPipB1
Nic klaus has p layed in 156
nJJjo r s, a n d was ru nne r- u p 19
' times and in the top 10 a total

of71 tim es .
"Jack Ius o bv ious ly sc·t the
bar (lp pre tty high for cwryonr
to try to c hase ,lfter," Woods
sai d. ••And to win a:i man y
m ajins as hL· Iu s a nd th l· re co rd
h e . l11ts in d1L' major dumpio'nship s is wr y rcmarbbk"
' At the age of (JII , Ni ckl .lll&lt;
isn 't cxpcct~:d to b~..·

.1

fa r tnr

111

sou thcrlv brl'CZl' be hind him.
"Can '1 reJC h it ' Ye&gt;h.'' Woods said Tuesd,&gt;y.
'' I ,1\111 osr wt·nr fo r 1t yc~tcrday. but I w;ts
und t•rnt' ~Hh rlw ~cL mHI lirrlc rret.'. If you ha ve
th~..·

right \\'in .. L you can gt..·t rhae. Thl· north

wmd. nnt luw 110 c h :m c~..·.''
Wit!~ ( ()th.lition s h.t rd and fJst in June , rhnc

might hL· .1 f~,.· \, . pb~'&lt;.: r s who .m.: will ing to gi\\.'
it a try. but 1nH man y. And thJt l,.' ) llllin :lt t.'~ t h ~..·
risk- rt·w.m:i th.u .tcco m p.m il'S most par-.Js.
Th t' byup is n o bHg:Hn .

. A bunkc'r runs do\\' 11 the left si c!~ of the
ho le for the tin.ll I SO y&gt;rds, ;md a tree that
looms r q;ht of the green pu ts ,1 grt!atcr prl· mill\11

on posmon .

'' You h.1vc tn bL· \ 't"l')' Conscious of whc rl'
you hi t it,'' ll.wid Duval said.
Still. must of the time the th ird shot is a
wedge o r a short iro n to ant of the larger
g reen on Pebbl e Be;1ch . Tht' m ost den tanding

closing holes in cha mpionship golf should
demand m uch mor~ than that.
·
For unforgettable holes , look no fa rther
than the 18th green at Pebble Beac h.
" It's spectacubr,'' Watson said. "T he beam y
of thi s place is not surpassed by hardly any
other pl ace in the world."
Looking for dra ma' Go back anoth er hole,
to the par-3 17th, where Jack Nickl aus hi t the
flag with hi s ! - iron to cli nch the 1972 U. S.
Open, an d w here Watson chipped in for
birdie 10 years later to deny Nicklaus an
unprecede nted fi fth U. S. O pen title.
Unforge ttabl e fim shes are rare on th e 18th
at Pebble Beach in a major championship.
Nicklaus made a bogey on the 18th in
! 972, but he had a fou r-stroke lead and threepu tted fro m 20 fee t. Watson made birdie, but

ana polis.
O' N eal has t:t ke n 58 free
throws in di e series, making j ust
22. It's a wea kn e~&lt; as big. as the
man himsel f. and it 's one of the
few areas of soft un de rbelly on
the Lakcrs - other than their
ever-fl uctu ating mc: ntal St;'lte.
T he Pacers said they expect to
foul O'Neal w1th regularity, as

plays with you r head a li ttl e bit."
Still , he said th e relations h ip
between himself and Jackson was
no t a "bad" one, while Jac kson
said the two have had a good rela tio nship all year.
But R ice's wife sees it differently. In an arti cle publ ished l tiCSday in the l os An geles T imc·s, sh e

so w ho pays for it? Glen d oes."
Ri ce's wife, C hristina Fernandez R ice, said sh e co unsele d her
husband to kee p quiet ab out the
situation - until she tho u ght it
was hurting the tea m.
" H ow many · players would
haw staye d as qtiiet for as lo ng as
Gle n has? But fin ally, when the

da m1ed R ice was be m g used .1s

th ey. did in the se ri es' b st two

paw n by Jackson in h is dc•ali ngs

team is affec ted , you h:w e to say
som eth ing," sh e said . " N ow if it

ga mes. Sha q said that 's fmc with
him.
" It's just vital that I go up to the
line and ma ke them like I did in
the first, seco nd and th ird (pbyoff) series," O 'Neal sa iq. " If we
want to win tht· \vho le thi ng , I
hav~ to step up and do it. And 1
will."
·•
Several
·Lake rs,
including
O' N eal, ba cked up Jackson's
statement that the R ice controve rsy is " not a distraction to us.
T hat's nothing to us."
Rice didn't agree. admit ting "it

w ith [ akers ow ncr Jerry Buss an d
tea m pn:sident Jerry w. :st.
"Jackson has n cvL· r \\ ..lil te d
G le n , \1t~'s al w;.1ys w;m u..'d sm lh.~-

R eps. Lindsey Grnham, R -S.C.,
and Tim R oemer, D- ln d., would
ban all gambling on amateu r athletic events, such as college sports
and the Olympics.
T h e Senate Commerce Co~I­
mittee alrea dy approved a similar
bill and a vote in the fu ll Senate
could come this week, as an
amendment to the defense authorization bill.
" I simply think that we sho uld
not gamble with the integri ty of
o\Jr colleges or the future of o ur
college athletes," said Sc· n. Sam

•

:1

. body li ke Scottie Pippen. and thi s

"'"' me, I would haw alrea dy
bee n La tr~ ll Sprc:wdl II ."
Asked about his wile's w mments, R ic~ said he a gre~d \Vith
t hem .

" Definitely. Why twt?" h e said.
' G ame 5 will be Friday night in
a trade."she sa id."T his isJacksmi's· India napoli s ' before the se n es
\vay of showi1,1g t he peopl e o n shi fts back to l os A1i ge les, if nectop of him w ho is in control. It's essary, fo r Ga nll" 6 on M o nday
·crazy.
night and Game 7 next Wednes1
" It's &gt;ll a mind ga me. It's all day night.
:~ bo ut control. Jac kso n did not get
his way wi th the general manager
or the owner &gt;bout trading Glen,
is h is \Vay of gettin g b aLk at m anageme nt for not lettin g him m ake

Brow nback, R - Kan ., who spo nsored the bill with Sen. Jo hn
M cCain , R - Ariz. ''Our youn g
athletes deserve legal p rotection
from the seedy influ ences of gambling."
Scandals at North western an d
Arizona State, among others in
recent yea rs, spurred legislative
action to close the· door on legal
gambling on amateur athletics.
"Clearly w hat yo u 've rea d
abont over th e last decade is just
the tip of the iceberg," said Jam es
D elaney, comm issioner of t he Big

Ten Conference.
College o fficials acknowledge
gambling is a problem on campuses, wh ether it's students placing bets o r takin g them.
''These are the kinds of things·
that worry us g reatly b'ecause of
the threa t they pose to the
integrity of our programs," said
Pen n State President G raham
Spani er.
(Editor's note: The bill numbers
are H.R . 3 575 and S. 2267)

~

sonie- p rl·tcy go o d rounds and
I've shot some pr~..·try g o o d

pla m• .&gt;cc idc·llt last Octo ber

Jll '\ t kind of
lll:lkC' S VO l! b~,.· } il'\"L..' th ,lt \'&lt;H I ,TL'
'
'
h~..·n di n g in t h ~..· righ t J.ir~..· ~..· rinn ."
Th.lt pi..:c ..· nf I H.' W~ lll.t~· lhlt
b~..· g rc t.·tl·d wJt b c ntiHl ~ l .l ~ lll by
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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 11

so (••nh

eMerchants diseuss Friday night programs
.

BY CHARLENE

tfoEFucH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Appalac hian artists
demonstrating their skills ·and displaying
· their finishe&lt;~ products will be offered as
an enhancement to the Friday night con' cert programs taking place in downtown
· e omeroy.
' :· Ways to draw more people into
j :Pom~toy for the fesrjviti.es were discussed
, ~dnesday · when th~ Pomeroy Mer. cp;lnts A;519ciation met ~~ Farmers Bank.
· It was decided artisans will be invited
to shqw h&lt;;JW they make the products
they sell in the two hours preceding per.

-

.

formances at 8 p.m .
Terri Haynes of Always and Forever
volunteered to schedule the artists or
craftsmen who Will set up on the stage.
At the same time, stores will remain op en
and there w ill be sidewalk exhibits in
place until time for the concerts to
begin.
It was noted arrangements have already
been made to sell refreshments from
booth on the parking lot.
The merchants role will be to enhance
activities already planned in the hope of
making it a " fun Friday" for visitors. ,
The next scheduled con~ert by the

a

Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society will feaiure TonyTenoglia, guitarist. H e will perform June 23. O ther perform ances
sch eduled by the Blues and Jazz Society
include the C owboy Angels, a trio with a
tribute to Americana, on July 7, and
American Gypsy, a guitarist, violinist, and
bassist doing classical, j azz, and rock
music on July 21.
John Musser, president of Po meroy
Council, and active in amphitheater
entertainment, reported other summer
programs will include a gospel concert, a
prog ram by Middleport C hu rch of
Christ, and a prayer vigil.

He announced the Sternwheel Festival
th eme, "Rivenfest 2000, R ally by the
River.'' T he festival will be Sept. 28-30.
Musser said efforts are being made to
eliminate the "flea market atmosphere"
and move into higher,'quality displays by
Meigs Counry artistS and craftsmen.
M ore activities for children will also be
in clu ded, along with more daytime
entertainment, he said.
The n ext planning sessio n was
announced for 5:30 p.m . Wednesday at
Pomeroy Village Hall. Anyo ne interested
is invited to attend.
Also discusse d was p rogress on moving

the Keystone Arch from the old Wildermuth Brewery to downtown Pomeroy
on a lot at the corner of Sycamore and
M ain. H e said Rite Aid has been contacted abo ut using a small portion of !and
it own ons the corner which is adjacent '
to village-owned p roperty.
A second application for funding for a
pedestrian path from N ye Avenue to
M cDonald 's along the river was filed earli er this month with the Ohio Department of Transportation by Musser. H e
said the decision on grant applications
will be made in the fall. Total cost for

Pin•• ... Merchentl, Pip AI
. ~.------~~----~------------------------------------------------~---------------­
··~!-Open Bass
.Gibbs to begin 21 st year
•.

'

:[Tournament
at'June24
; .

on New Haven Council

'

--:-d"" '

~ :'

BY MICHILI CAlkER

:;: • :

OVP NEWS STAFF

•

Bv MICHELE CA111ER
OVP NEWS STAFF

N EW HAVEN, W.Va. - On
. July 1, Sarah Gibbs will begin
serving her 21st year on New
Haven Town Council .
The top council vote-getter
in last week'selection smiles at
the thought of serving her .c omr;·
munity again.
· " I thank God and the people
of New Haven;• Gibbs said.
"They have been good to me."
G ibbs believes her interest in
politics comes from her father,
William Kelly, who serv~d as
· . ~ mayor pf Hartford and Syracuse,
.fcji, ~h~ .~1·~ . ""''"'·l•'l
Ohio. · ··
·
~5;~(] ..a.m. ; there will be •'a
During her tenure, Gibbs has
fuandatocy
pre-tournament
,
r · •. . l
served with four different tnaymeeting , at .Point · Pleasant
.
ors, David Russell, Ronnie
Foodlahd. There will be a
Zerkle, Kelvin Honaker and
police escort for all anglers as
with Grayson Williamson,
twice
they trailer their boats to the ·
and with numerous council
down.t own, on-stage weigh-in
members.
and award presentation at
"I could write a book some
Fourth Street.
day.
I have served with a lot of
•. There will be no registration
good people," she said.
i( the ramp the day of the
Through council, Gibbs has
event. There will be no regisworked on nume~us projects in ·
nations accepted after the 50the
Bend Area community,
~0at fieid is full. QualifYing
NEW HISTORY- Yolume 3 of the Meigs County History BQOk will be published In 2001 and family, orgaincluding the AD W.'Va. City
teams will be notified by mail
nization and busll'ltiss ~istories are now bel.;tg accepted. Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County
Program, development of the
f!r phone. All other entry fees .
Historical Society, Is chairman of the ·project. The book will b!l of t~e same size, style and color as the. (1retown library as well as the Bend
wiU be returned.
·
vlous two publications. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
1
.. · '
A'q!a
Community Center and
A $! 0 lunlcer will be collectthe W.Va. Make It Shine proed the morning of the event,
gram.
She also remembers the
and there will be a 50/50
move to the current town hall
drawing. Proof of insurance
BY
CIIARLEHE
HOIFUCH
"Thi~ is another chance for those who missed getfrom
the former fire station,
must accompany the entry or
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
ting an article in Volumes 1 or 2 to tell their family
which is now the Firehouse
be presented at the ramp.
POMEROY - '' .... and departing leave behind story. "
·
Cafe.
Limited spaces are still availus, footprints in the sands of time." from The Psalm
"We have all worked togethShe emphasized that only new information on
-: ~!e. To register, contact Trail of
of life by Henry Wapsworth Longfellow.
er,,
No one person could do it
someone not included in the earlier volumes will be
· Dreams, P.O. Box 13225,
More "footprints" (;If families, organizations and accepted. Deadline for submissions is Sept. 30.
all."
Charleston, W.Va. 25360; or
is
what
,
the
·
Meigs
County
Historical
businesses
She looks forward to her year1
Material can include information about almost
call 766-6842.
·
Satiety hopes to re~ord in its third hardbound herly
trips to the W.Va. Municipal
anything a family membermight wantto tell future
/ 'while the adults are out on
itage book.
League meetings.
~ ·
generations about their ancestry.
· ' the river, a fishing tournarp.ent
· Volwne 1 was published· in . 1979, Volume 2 in
. "I met Senator Bob Dittmar
As for photographs she suggested originals not be
for the youth, ages 7" 14, will
1987, and Volume 3 will be published in 2001 , under
when he was mayor of
submitted Qut that glossy copies (not computer
take place at Krodel Lake from
the direction of Margaret Parker, president, working
Ravenswood,
and many others
scans, diskettes, negatives or f, ded prints) be includ10· a.m. to 1 p.m. Participants
with a committee of 20 residents.
throughout the years. It is fun
mwt provide their own fishing
"Residents, former .residents and those with roots ed.Times will be announced when photographs can
watching what they move on to
sear. Bait will be provided by
in Meigs County ·are 'invited to submit family be brought to the M eigs County Museum for copyafter being mayors of communiMike's Tackle Shop of Bar~
household stories of 500 wonls or less and one pho- ing.
ties."
~Qursville, sponsor of . ~he
In addition to family histories, additional articles
tography to be printed in the book, free of charge,"
Born in Middleport, Ohio,
Parker said.
·
,.. . . . . . look, ,... AJ
Gibbs lived in Syracuse before
!;::POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
~ Area anglers can test their
~ck June 24 in the Point
~easant Sternwhe.el Regatta's.
· ~p en Bass Tournament on th
.e
~hio ,River and Crooked
".l::reek.
'.;~The event, with a $5,000
;payout, will run from 6:30a.m .
~til 4 p.m. Point Distributing
.andWBYG Big County 99 are
·$ponsoring the event.
:; ," Fifty boats will be fielded in
· ~e event with~ Sl 10 en~

~,

'

Third Meigs history book available in 2001

·r .• - ......,.,...AI

~..h.· a th

Natural helpen

=...,..:.J

Gibbs

moving
to
Harrford and
later to New
H aven. Her
mother, M ary
Rockwell
Kelly, a cousin
to artist Norm an Rockwell, was a
grade sch ool
teacher until

age 72 .
An avid reader, Gibbs said her
mother used to tell her when
she 'could not find her, that she
knew she was somewhere with a
book. That love for books continues today as she works parttime .at the N ew Haven Library.
For about 33 years, Gibbs
worked at the Philip Sporn
Plant · and Foote Mineral. She
also was a teacher's aide with the
county school system. The
Waharna High School graduate
attended Marshall for one year,
but did not go back after finding
ajob.
"I have never m issed a
Wahama alumni dinner," she
said proudly.
In addition to her work at the
library and on council, Gibqs
serVes as superintendent of First
C hurch of God, president of the
Nehaclima Garden Club · and
secretary of the Mason County
Association of Retired School
Employees.
In her spare time, Gibbs likes
to travel throughout the Mountain State and wants to go to
Hawaii.
Gibbs lives with her sister,
Betty Kelly, who is a retired
sc hool te acher and her son
George Gibbs, who works RSO
at Amos Power Plant. Her
daughter, Marilyn Pierce, of
New Haven, is· a teacher at New
H aven Elementary School.
The councilwoman smiles as
she speaks of h er two grand-

•

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111-a.s
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Lotteries

. 1 ~ i tk th osl.' ih u u ght s a n d n m lL' Iltr.H l' Oil thl' ··' Cit .tl! c..•ngl' .lt

just difti(u ll soJ n ctim cs
tn th in k about Jn sr \'(' ar and
1\'h,H tonk place an d reca ll :lll
thl' e\·l·nts," Mic k..·lson said.

State lawmakers meet today
Sentinel to address school-funding decision
Today's

. 2 Sa diDO•- II P8pl

the I Xth lHlk to \\'h ,IC k
Lu ll ~ int o t h l' lh.'" t..' .lll in .t 'tr i h u t ~.·
ro t h ~..· Lac ~.: h :-t m p ion .
T h en th c·y wi ll try to put

20 or ·"f) \'.trd s ~ ho rto n :. nlllt'

g reens "' 1 h.n·c uphill c hip ,

Melp County's

11

l1.1nd .

.111J fn •l like 1 c.1n !(et rhme

.

•

ha ngs o \·cr th is to u'h~;1m c nt ,
w it h p layers ga th L• rin g Wc dn es-

ciuy g-- n.: ..." ll~ tl1.1t wi ll h~..· rnu gh
to hit ifth . :· wind dt,..__•,n 'r l, )o\\'
.111d t~ lmo..,t impn!'\ ~ ibiL· tn gl' t
on if it do L· ~.
··1 ,,·ill rry t 11 proh .1bly ]~.,·.n· L'
It

• r,..

..

! 992 winn e r Tom Kite arc also yea r w hen Payne Stewa rt sank
a 15-fu ot put t to win at Pineo n h and.
. T h ey w il l fa ce a co u rsc t hat hm st . " Th ere's p robably go in g
has changed sin e!..' d 1c bst to bL• a botH six or seve n g re~ n s
Open, with a n ewly rede signed w h L· re I won 't eve n t ry to hit
par-3 5th lwk and .1 par of 7 1 th l' m . if you ca n im agin e th at."
aftt'r th l· ~l'Cnnd h ok W:IS
tr.in1mcd from:--~ p.lr-5 to' .1 p ;H-

'

'. '.

'

ge ttin g better.
" ! am play in g pretty goo d
ri ght n ow," Woo ds said Tuesday
befo re a pra ctice round on the
picturesque cou rse th ;! t straddles rugged cliffs agai nst the
Pacific Ocean . ''I' ve played

the I ?85 Op en:
NH: kbu 'i won th~..· tir~ r ()p ~..· n
,1n o th t&gt; r ~..·xt: mp t• .on . At th t.: age · at Pl•b blc lh •.1, h 111 I '!7:! . w hd c·
of 2-t, thOLlgh, Woods is on ly 19H2 Wl!llll' T Tom \X./c~r,ntl .1nd
what will be lm L!St Open
unless the US G A gr.mts hnn

l1i s 'H1 Opc..·n \'ic tory was esse ntially in the bag
:1s soon as he hit the I Hth g:n.'l'l1 - 3-\vood
off the· tc'&lt;', 7-iron layup, 9-iron to 15 feet .
Dittn for Tom Kite, who took a two-stroh•
k"d into the dosing hole in I 'J92, hit the 18th
g reen with ;1 wcdg~o: &lt;HH.l two-putted for par.
Riveting stu fr.
W hy nor return rhc I Hth to a par- -t' The
USGA ;1ln::1dy convcrtt•d t h t• par- 5 seco nd
hole to .1 -tH.f-yard par--+ . although that was
predicated by the loss of ' tree down the lcfr
side that .dte rcd the nature of the hole.
There is more histo rv beh ind making the
I Hth a par-4.
According to .. Pebble Beach Golf Li nks:
The Official Histpry,'' the 1~ t h was origina lly
a 325-yard hole that drew sharp cr iticism
fro m th e C&gt;lifornia G olf AssoCiatio n foll owing th e I no state a m:~te ur as a "woefull y poor ..
fi nishi ng hole."
.• ·
Arthu r R ose Vmcent, a we althy am ateur,
deter m ined that enou gh fill could be laid over
the rocks behind the 17th tee to build a new
tee, wh ic h added 35 ya rds to the hole.
T hat still didn't co,nple tcly satisfy th e CGA,
so Pebble Beach chairman Sa mu el M orse
invited Fowler in 192 1 to devise a solution.
Fowle r move d enough di rt to push the green
back 170 y.1rds. T he I Hth hole became a parS by th e summer of '22.
An d that's w here it remains today - the
final stop on the most spectacular fini shing
ho le in golf, even if it remains the most anticlimactic.
Perh aps that will change this yea r. The n, the
most famo us finishing hole in golf might be
remembered in U. S. Open history ,for more
than the breathtaking view it provides.

June 15, lOOO

.. .•'....

Closing hole at Pebble Beach
is spectacular, but not always
demanding on players
PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (AP) - Of all the
changes made to Pebbk· Beach in the 81 years
si nce it first op1med for pby; none WJS more
drastic than W Herbert Fowkr extending the
most f.1mous closing hok in golf by I 70 ya rds
.&gt;nd mak111g it a par-5 .
Perlups it's time to change back.
For sheer bea uty. tht· 5.15-yard I Hth hok at
Pebble Beach IS un matched.
From stan to finish , the hole runs along thl.'
rugged coast of Carmd Bay. waves eitht:r gently lappi ng at the shore or pounding the rocks
hard enough to spray salt wate r across the f.l irway.
For degr,·c· of diffi culty, it ca n leave a lot to
be desired.
"You can hit 3-iron, 5-iroiJ, 9-iron. How
hard is that?" Paul Azinger said. "It's not that
ha rd of a hole - as lo ng as you're two shots
ah ead."
Playe rs must dec ide how much o f the .Pacific Ocean - if any - they want tO carry off
the tee to a fa irway that bends slightly ro the
left and is marked by two trees in the middle.
Every now and then, the trees can be a
problem .
" I remem ber Payne Stewart hitting an iron
at the Crosby. I thin k it's a 2-iron," Tom Warsop recalled . "And I said, 'That's the wrong
club.' And he knoc ks it right up th ~ base of
the tree. Very unluc ky."
T he second shot - and this is th e p roblem
with the par-5 as a finishing hole - is almost
:dwa.vs a la:vup
Tiger Woods reached the green in two during the 1997 Pebble Beach N atio nal Pro-Am ,
but only because he was able to place the ball
in the fi rst cut of rough and had a slightly

Details, A3

...

lhu

DofA picnic planned, As
Stewart remembered at U.S. Open, 11

Wednesday, June 14, 2000

OIUO
Several! Melli Middle and High School student&amp;
In "Natural Helpers•
Retreat 2QOO" recently at the OhiO Valley Chr1ettan Assambly. "Natural Helpers• Is a
.national proaram. adopted by Health Recovery Services, that helps train students to
listen to the problems of their peers while attempting to unveil solutions through
mediation, The proaram was Implemented by Judge Robert Buck In hopes of dacrsa•
' In&amp; Juvenile crlm" and was funded by Health Recovery Services of Meigs County and
·the Juvenile Probation Court. (Tony Leach photo)
.

Pick 3: 3-1-5; Pick 4: 6+5-&lt;l
Super I.-: 1~1 2-27-29-37
Kidoot: ().3.1-'1-5-{J

W:VA•

o.ily 3: ~9-3 Doily 4: o..\4-4-7
C 2000 Ohio Va!icy Publishing Co.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Parma city schools
have plenty of needs that $1.6 million would
cover, but that money - in a state- mandated rainy day fund - is stricdy off limits.
· State lawmakers were to meet Thursday to
debate ways to fix, Ohio's school- funding
system . Unfunded mandates programs
th at districts are required to implement
without extra money to pay for thetn - are
, o ne of several issues they rnust resolve.
. Many school treasurers say these unfunded mandates tie needy districts' h ands.
" Instead of creating more funds to spend
on instruction, it's subtracting money from
instruction," said Parma treasurer Daniel
Wilson.
The Joint C o mmittee on Education
Funding ,a nd Accountability will conduct
hearings through the summer, then recomm end possible solutions to Ohio's school
funding problems to the Legislature.

The state Supreme Court on May 11
ruled that lawmakers had not complied with
a !997 court decision that found the state
funding formula did not provide e~ry child
with a '"thorough and effi cient" education, as
required by th e Ohio Constitution.
The court said the state relied too heavily
on local property taxes, creating disparities
among school districts . The. court also criticized the state's. school loan system , the formula for basic aid in poorer districts and
unfunded mandates .
Most complaints about unfunded mandates involve the rainy day fund, said Paul
Ma.rshall, an Ohio Educ~tion D epartment
spokesman. The state requires that districts
maintain 5 percent of their. revenue in 'a
reserve fund in case of financial emergencies.
Districts can't access the money without
state approval .

'

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