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Wednesday, June 28, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,Page B 8 ·The Dally Sentinel
0

TODA·Y 'S'· SCOREBOARD 4 OF A.
10:05 p.m.

...

-~

Eaal Olvlalon

T...,

W

L Pet.

Atlanta ...................,. .......48 30
New YO&lt;I! ..........•..............43 31
Montreal .......................... 38 35
Florida .............................38 40
'Phnadelphia ....................32 42
.
C.mral Dilllalon
St. L.oulo ........................... 45 31
Cincinnati ........................ 36 39
Pittsburgh ................ ...... 32 43
Milwaukee .......................31 45

GB
.1505
.581
2
.521 8 112
.487 .
8
.432
13
.592
.480 8 1/2
.427 12 112
.408
14

Tlluroday'o Toronto (CUtillo 4-S) at Tampa Boy (Udle 12). t2:15 p.m.
Minn4oota (Milton 7-2) at Chicago White
Sox (Porque 7-2), 2:05 p.m.
Texaa (Rog'"" 7-5) at Oaldand (Ha&lt;odia 95), 3:3!1 p.m.
Anaheim (Bonentietd ·~· '" seattle (Meclla
4-4). 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Mendoza 7-3) a1 Detro~ (Mile·
kl 2·8), 7:05p.m.
Belllmoro (ErickiiO!\ 3-5) at Bootoo (Wako"eld 2-5) , 7:05p.m.
Cleveland (COlon 7 ·4) at Kansas City
(Durbin 1-3), 8:05p.m.

Clllcago .......................... 30 45 .400 14 1/2
Houston .......................... 27 49

.355

WM!Oivtalon
Arizona ...........................44 32
COloradO ........................40 32
San Franclaoo ..................38 35
Los Angolos ..................... 39 36

.579
.556
2
.521 4 1/2
.520 4 112

san otego ........................ 34
P~burgh

41

.453

9

t/'2

Tueeday'• Game.

e. Chicago Cubs 0

Montre81 6, Atlanta 4
N.Y. Meta 5, Florida 2
Pllltadelphia 7. Milwaukee o
St. Louis 4, Cincinnati 3
San Francisco 12, Colorado 7
Houston 12, Arizona 4
Los Angetas 5, San Diego 4, 1o innings
Todliy'e Game•
Atlanta (Mulholland 7~) at Montreal (Hermanson 8·4), 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs {Ueber 5·5) at Pittsburgh
(Cordova 5-5), 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (H8ntgen 6-6) at Cincinnati

(Dessano 0.0), 7:05 p.m.
Fkl&lt;lda (Penny 4~) at N.Y. Mots (B.J. Jones
2·3), 7:10p.m.
Milwaukee (Snyder 3-2) at Philadelphia
(Ashby 2·7), 7:35p.m.
San Francisco (LHemandez 6·6) at COl·
orado (Bohanon 3-5) , 9:05 p.m.
Houston (Uma 1-11 ) at Arizona (Anderson 72), 10:05 p.m.
Sen Diego (Eaton 1.0) 81 L.Ds Angeles (Park
9-4), 10:05 p.m.

Thur.dllv'• Oime•

St. Louis (An.Benes 7·3) at ClncinMti (VIIlone 7-4), 12:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bere 4-6) al Philadelphia (COg·
gin 1.0), 1:05 p.m.
san F'anclsco (Nathan 4-1) at Colorado
(Yoohll3·7), 3:05 p.m.
, Chicago ?ub8 (Tapani 4-7) at Pittsburgh
(Silva 5·2), 7.05 p.m.
Allanta (Maddux 9·2) at N.Y. Mots (Reed 4·
1), 7:10p.m.
San Diego (Clement 6·7) at Los Angeles
(Dreiton 4-6), 9:10p.m.
Houston (Reynolds 8-4) at Arizona {Johnson
11·2), 10:05 p.m.

Amorlcon Laague
Eaat DIYialon

TNm

W

L Pet.
.545

Toronto . ....
........ 42 35
New Vorl&lt; ..
.~............ 37 34
BaSion ............................37 35
Baltimore ........................ 31 43
Tampa Bay ....................... 31 43
Cent,..l Dlvl1lon
Chicago ............... .. ......... 48 28
Cleveland ...................... ..40 35
Kansa• City .....................35 39
Mlmesota ............ ........... 34 44
Detroll .............................31 42
Wel1 Dlvlalon
Oi!kland ..... ..................... 45 30
Seattle ............................ 44 30
Anaheim ............ ............. 39 37
r.... ..............................34 40
Tuooclay'a Gamw

Nolfonol Laagua LNdera

18

GB

.521
2
.514 2 1/2
.419 9 1/2
.419 91/2

.632
.533 7 1/2
.473
12
.436
15
.425 15 1/2
.600
.595
1/2
.513 6 112
.459 10 112

Tampa Bey, 11, Tororto 1

Clevollrld 12, Kansas City 1
MlnnOOOUI 7, C111cago White Sox •
Ollroit7, N.Y. Yankee&amp; 6, 11 innings·
BaltllllOfe 8, Boston 3, 10 Innings
Oakland 7. Texas 6
Seattle 5, Anaheim 3
Today't G1me1
N.Y. Yankees (Ford 0.0) at De1rol1 (Blair 4·
1), 7:05 p.m.
Bahimore (Johnson ~) at Boston (R.Mar·
11naz 6-4). 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Wells 12·2) at Tampa Bay (Van 45), 7:15p.m.
ClevoiOnd (OaYis o-o or Lorraine 0.0) at
Kansas City (Wilaslek 1-7), 8:05p.m.
Minnesota (Uncoln 0-0) at Chicago White
Sox (Eldred 9-2), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Hill 3·4) 111 Seattle (Moyor 6-2),
10:05 p.m.
Texas (Hailing 7-7) at Oakland (Applor B-3),

BATTIN~olton , Colorado, .378; Vldro,
MomreaJ, .370; Guerrero. Mortreal, .364; Piazza. New Yoftc, .360: Castilto, Flol'lda, . 359 ~
Owen&amp;, San Diego, .3-45; Sheffield, Los Angeles, .345.
RUNS-Helton, Colorado, 73; Edmonds, St.
Louis, 72: Bagwell, Houston, 67; Bonds. San
Franclsco, 65; Alfonzo, New York, 61; Kent,
San Francisco, 81 ; Grudzlelanek, Los Angeles,
59: Sheffield, LOo Angeles, 59.
•
RBI- Ken1, 5an Francisoo, 73; Hetton, COl•
orado, 87; Giles, Pittsburgh, 815; Sosa. Chlca·
go, 66: Sheffield, LOs Angeles, 66; Guerrero,
Montreal, 65; Karros, Los Angeles, 63.
HIT$-Vrdro, Montreal, 102; Guerrero. Montreal, 100; Owens, San Diego, 98: Kent, San
Francisco, 97; Young, Chicago, 96; Helton, Col·
orado, 95: Jones, Atlanta, 94; Grudzielanek,
LOo Angolao, 94.
DOUBLES-Young, Chicago, 26 ; Vldfo,
Montreal, 25; CirillO, Colorado, 25; Green, LDs
Angeles, 25; Alfonzo, New York, 24; Kant, san
FranciscO, 24; Whits, Montreal, 23; Zeite, New
York, 23.
TRIPL.Es-Guerrero, Montreal, 7; Womack,
Arizona, 7; Goodwin, Colorado, 7; Perez, Col·
orado, 6; Walker, Colorado, 6; Reese, Cincinnati, 5; Martin, San Diego, 5; Shumpert, Col·
orado, 5.
HOME AUNS-McGwire, St. Louis, 28;
Bonds, San Franci800, 27; Grtffey Jr, Cincinnati, 25; Sheffield, lOS Angeles, 25; Edmonds,
51. Louis. 22; Karros, l.Ds Angelos, 22: He~on.
COlorado, 21; Guerrero, Montreal, 21 ; Giles,
Pittsburgh, 21: Piazza, Now York, 21 .
STOLEN BASE5-Cloodwln, Colorado, 34;
Cas1111o, Aorlda, 32; Young, Chicago, 25;
Veras, Atlama. 20: Owens, San Diego, 19:
Reese, Cincinnati·, 18; Cedeno, Houston, 17.
PITCHING (10 Doc~lons)--Gravos, Clncln·
nail, ll-1 , .900. 1.81; ALolter, Now York, 9·1,
.900. 3.18; Johnoon, Arizona, 11·2, .84e, 1.60;
Meddux,A11an1a, 9·2, .818, 2.91: Kilo, 51. Louis,
11-4, .733, 4.51; E!l10!, San Francisco, 7·3,
.700. 3.81 ; ACBeneo: 51. Lools, 7,3, .700, 4.44.
STRIKEOUTs-Johnson, Arizona, 164;
Aotaclo, COlorado, 104; Maddux, Atlanta. 102;
Dempster, Aorida. 101; Kilo, St Lools, 100;
Brown, Los Angeles, 98; Benson, Pittsburgh,
96.
SAVES-AIIonsi!CO, Aorida, 22; Hottman,
San Diego, 19; Bentloz, New YO&lt;I!, 1B; Aguilera,
Chicago, 15; veres, St. Louis, 14; Jimenez,
Colorado, 12; Rocker, Atlanta, 12; Nen, San
Francisco, 12; Shaw, Los Angeles, 12

Amertcan LNgut L.aadtrt
BATIING-Garclaparra, Boston, .389;
Erstad, Anaheim, .368; Rodriguez, Texas, .363;
Delgado, Toronto, .358; Martinez, Seattle, .353;
Sweene~. Kansas City, .351; ROdriguez, Sear-

tie, .348.
RUNS-Rodriguez, Seattle, 74; Delgado,
Toromo, 63; Glomb!, Oakland, 59; Durham,
Chicago. 59; Mandell, TOfonto, 59; Glaus, Ana·
helm, 57; Erstad, Anaheim, 56 .
RBI-Martinez, Se8ttle, 77; Gie.nibl, Oak·
land, 74; Sweeney, Kanoos City, 71 : Oolgado,
Toronto, 71: Rodriguez. Seattle, 8D; Willfams,
New Yot1c, 89; Everett, ·Boston, 68.
HIT5-Ers1ad, Anaheim, 121; Rodriguez,
Texas, 103; Sweeney, KanaasCity, 102: Oolga·
do, Toronto, 100; ROdriguez, Seattle, 87; Law·
ton, Minnesota, 94; Wllliams, New York, 90;
Segui, Tel(8S, 90.
DOUBLE5-0iorud, Soottle, 28; Lawton,
Minnesota•. 24; Dye, Kan,.. City, 23; SWeeney,
Kansas City, 23; DeShields, Baltinore, 23:
Rodriguez, Texas, 22: Sagui, Texas, 22.
TRIPLES-Guzman,
Minnesota,
12;
Durham, Chicago, 8; Kennedy, Anaheim, 5;
Nixon, Booton, 5; 7 are11ed wl1h 4.
HOME RUN5-0elgado, Toronto, 27;
Glaus, Anaheim, 23; Everett. Boston, 23;
Thoma, Ckr.teland, 23; Rodriguez, Texaa, 23:
Giambi, Oakland, 21; Anderson, Anaheim, 21';
vauglvl, Anaheim, 21: JUS\ice, Cleveland, 21:

Scranlon (PIIiftlos) ........... 44 32 .678
2
Mllrtlnez,
- MSE~mon.
· 21 .
Rod\eo\or (Oriotao) .... ..... 38 38 .418
I
STOLEN
Kanaas City, 21 ;
10
Mordeol, TO!O!llo. 20; OoShioldo, Bal11mo&lt;e, · SyracUM (l!luoJaya) ........ 33 37 .47t
Ottowa (Expoo) ................28 43 .384 151/2
20; .AJomar, Clevetand, 1rw; lawton, MinnBIOta,
15; Ja1or, New Yor1&lt;, 15; McLemore, Seottle,
Oufham (OeviiRays} ........40 37 .518
- J
15.
Char1otto (WhMoSolC) .......35 38 .473 31/2
PITCHING (10 Oo&lt;;lsiona)- Wells. Tororrto,
Nortdk (Mots) .................. 37 42 -4
t2-2, .1157, 3.55; Htldoon, Ookland, 9-2, .818.
Richmond (Bf1Y111) ..........24 51 .320
15
4.30; Eldred, Chicago, 9-2, .818, 3.84; Baldwin,
w-mOMalon
• Clllcago. 10.3, .788, 3.88: Sole, Saattle, 8-3,
LooisviUo (Rado) .............. 48 32 .sao
.750, 4.32; Martinez, Boston, 9-3, .750, 1.U;
Indianapolis (Browero) .....41 35 .538
4c
Burbo, Cleveland. 8-3, .727, 5.72; Applor, Dale·
Columbus (Yankoeo) ....... 37 ~ .500
7
land, 8-3, .727, 4.05.
STRIKEOUT5-Martlnez, Boston, 140; Rn· , Toledo (Tigers) ........ ......... 31 40 .437 11112
1\Nioclay'a GamM
ley, Clevaland, 103; Nomo, Delre~. 87; " '..1.
Charlotte 12. Butlalo 6
na, Ba~imore , 96; Burba, Cleveland, 93; COlon,
L.oulsviUo 2, Pawtucl&lt;ot I·
1
CIINoland. 80; Wallo, TO&lt;Oflto, 89.
Durham 8 Syracuoe 5
1
SAVEs--Jones, Detroit, 20; lsringhausen,
tndlanapollo 2. NOflolk 2, IIUllp., 11th IMng,
Ookland, 19; Porcivol, Anaheim, 18; Wetteland,
rain
Texas, 18; Koch. Toronto, 17; Lowe, Bos1on,
Ottawa 4, Columbuo 2. 11 lmlngo
17; Rivera, New YOfk, 17.
ROCheO\Or 8, Richmond 7
Scranton/WIIkoo-Borro 4, Tot«» 1
Today'oCI'wiotl:e at Norfolk
Columbus at Louisville
Pawtucket 01 lndianapolio
lllljor~uoRichmond '" syracuoa
Scranton/WIIk... Barre at Rodlea1ar, 2
Eutam Oillllllon
Taam
WLTPtaGFGA
Tolodo at Ottawa
New England ...............7 8 5 28 30 'Z1
Buffalo at Durham
NY·NJ ......... ,...............8 7 1 25 28 28
Thuroclay'aGemM
Mia,.; .........................8 8 4 22 24 'Z1
Buffalo at Durham
D.C.............. ...............4 10 4 18 28 36
Charlotte at Norfolk
C.mnl Dlvlalon
ColumbUs at Louisville
Chicago ......................8 7 3 30 41 35
Pawtucl&lt;ot ot Indianapolis
Tompa Bay ..................9 8 o 27 35 28
Richmond a1 SyriiCUIO
Columbus ...................8 7 4 22 25 30
SCrMton/WIIke&amp;·Ba"e at Rochellar
Dallas .........................&amp; 8 3 21 28 34
Totedo at Ottawa
Waatam Olvlalon
'
KansasCity ............... \1 2 4 37 30 12
LOS Angeles ................7 4 7 28 23 18
COlorado ...... ....... .......7 9
22 23 37
San Jooo .....................4 7
18 23 28
NOTE: Three points for a win and one polm
BASEIAU.
for a lie.
Amortcon......,a
Today'oBALTIMORE ORIOLES-Signed 3B Tripsan Jose at New York-New Jersey, 7:30
per Johnson, RHP Richard Bartlett, C Thoma
p.m.
Art&lt;o, 1B Doug Grodvlg, OF BrandOn LJnleton,
l.Ds ~es at OC United, 7:30 p.m.
RHP Jayme Sparring, C Mlchaol RutHII, C
Tampa
at COlumbus, 7:30 p.m.
Kristopher Wilken, AHP Ayan KH1er, LHP
Dalas at lorado, 8 p.m.
Brian ForyS\ok, OF Thomaa Joyoe, LHP Joal
&amp;trturday'o Gamoa
Crump, SS Shayne Ridley, RHP Aaron Boult,
COlorado at OC United, 3 p.m.
ss Jose Rodriguez and AHP Dan Marehent.
New YOO·New Jersey at l'ampa Bay, 7 p.m.
, BOSTON RED SOX-Placid OF Trot
San Jooo at Columbut, 7:30 p.m.
tl.iixon on the 15-day ~l&amp;ablad lilt. Recalled
Kanoao City at New England, 7:30 p.m.
1B·DH Morgan Burt&lt;hert from Pawtucket ol
Los Angoloo at oanao, 8:30 p.m.
the International League..
CLEVELAND INOIAN8-Actlvotocl RHP
Paul Shuey from the 15-&lt;lay dloabloclllot. 0...
lgnated LHP Alan Newman for autgnmant.
OAKLAND ATHLETIC8-AC11'111ted LHP
Mike Magnanlo from 1ho 15-day diAblocl 111.
Woman'o Nollonot Baakatboll A._latlon
Optioned LHP Rich Sauveur 10 Triple-A Socro·
E..,_conr.ronco
memo of the PCL
Toom
WLPct.GB
National L.aoaue
Cleveland ..........................7 5 .583
LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Waived RHP
Orlando ............................. 7 6 .538 · 1/2
Oral Herohloer. Relnotatad LHP Jon WHIIomo
Dotrolt ................. ...... ...... ..8 6 .500
1
Irani the 80-&lt;lay DL and optlonocl him lo AlbuW81111ngu&gt;n ... ...... ...... ....... .6 6 .500
1
querque ol the PCL
NowYorl&lt;. .......................... 5 7 .418
2
SAN DIEGO PAORE8-Actlva1ocl AHP
Miami .............................. ..4 8 .333
3
Sieve Montgomery from the 15-day disabled
Indiana ..........., ..................3 8 .273 3 1/2
llot Optioned RHP Brandon Kolb to Lao Vegas
Chertotto ...... .................... 2 11 .154 5 1/2
ol\ha PCL
Weltem Conference
HOUSTON ASTR08-Signed draft plcko
Houston .......................... 12 2 .857
Michael Doyna and Morpe Manafield and
l.Do Angelos ........ ............. 10 2 .833
1
aoalgned them to Claso A Mortlnovllle,
Minnesota .........................&amp; 4 .667
3
BASKETIIALL
Phoon~ .............................8
4 .667
3
National lloakatboll Aoooclotfon
Sacramento .. ....................8 5 .615 3 1/2
MIAMI HEAT-Acquired F-C Chrlo
U\8h ..................................8 7 .533 4 1/2
Gatling and a 2000 second-round draft pick
Potttand ............................ 2 8 .200
a from Denver for G Voshon Lenard and F
Seattle .............................. 2 9 .182 81/2
Mark Strickland .
TOd-r'eO.mea
MILWAUKEE BUCKs-Traded F Robert
Phoenix at Now VO&lt;I!, 7:30 p.m.
Traylor and F J.R. Reid to 1ha Clevallll1d
Houston at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Cavaliers and G VInny Del Negro to tht
Miami at Ortando, 7:30p.m.
Golden State Warriors. Cleveland sent 0
l.Do Angoleo at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Bob Sura to Golden State and Golden S\ate
Minnesota at sacramento, 1o p.m.
sent F Jason Caffey and F Bllty Oweno to
Clovetand 111 Portland, 10 p.m.
Milwaukee.
Dot roll at Saatuo, 1o p.m.
NEW JERSEY NETs-Nomod Byron
Tlluraday'o a scon coach.
.,
·.
No games scheduled
FOOTBALL
.
Frldoy'o Garneo
Notional ,Football Looguo
Orlando at Mloml, 1 p.m.
NEW YORK JETS-Waived RB Loon
Phoenix a1 WUhlngton, 7 p.m.
Johnson.
lndlona at New Vorl&lt;, 7:30 p.m.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed DE
Portland at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Jonathon Brown to a two-year contract.
utah at Sacramento, 9 p.m.
SMI FRANCISCO 411ERS- Walved
Minnesota a1 ~eottte, 10 p.m.
DB Ryan Roques.
WASHINGTON REOSKINS-Signod S
Oulney Sanders to a four-year con1r1ct.
Released WR Cory Allon.
HOCKEY
lntomatlonol ~ue
Na11onal Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINS-Signed RW Leo
-Divllllon
Goren.
TNm
WLPct.GB
CHICAGO
BLACKHAWKS-Ro·
Pawtucket (Red Sox) ........45 29 .608
signed 0 Kevin Dean.
Bdlalo (lndians) ...............44 29 .603
1/2

--·

Eastern local honor rolls, AS
Martin No. 1 pick in .NBA Draft, 81

Frld.y
Hlp: lOs; Low: 501

Details, A3

KIND BEAT~
A.NY Di '-

YOVG~N

Melp County's

96 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

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TILT, AM/FM CASS

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93 MERCURY
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TOWN CAR

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ROYALE

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V6, 4 WHEEL DRIVE,
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Jokes, music, magic
· reinforce program
,.,. J'

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY . - . Why did the
,cookie go to the doctor?
Why. because · he was feeling
"crummy, of course.
So began the Mark Wood Fun
Show at the Pomeroy Library on
Wednesday afternoon, one of sevattractions
encouraging
young;ter.; to participate in the
Meigs County District Public
· LiRrary's summer reading program.
·• ;"~o~~ used jokes, music, rope
i:riciCli and balloon animals in a
~gic-J;how fortrult to reinforce
the library's summer reading
theme, "Into Books and Out of
This World."
Through July and August, the
Pomeroy Library .will host a number of special programs - every
Wednesday at 3 p.m.
' ' On July 5, PJ. Weber's Magic
Show will perform on J\lly 12, the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department will supervise the library's
;rOcket launch, and on July 19, chilT,Iren are asked to bring their pets
to a pet show.
- Storyteller Rachel Chadwick
Will.preSent a storyteUing program
on Aug.,21 and a pool party will be
htj!V at J,otidon I;'po) in Syracuse
~· &lt;&gt;Ill!~
A· ' ··· 8.. uvm
"'- '7.- 9 p.m. Ano ther
on
prograin will be announced fo.i
~ ~9
. -· 1f-~ ......v.J:' ··~..
,
Prizes are awarded ' to children
I
who. read at leasr twO hours per
week, and. all four of the systep1's
·libraries will continue story hours
througli the summer.
.
Smry l:iour is held at the Eastern
branch o!l Tue~ys at 2 p.m.,
Racine on Wednesday at 10 a.m.,
Pomeroy on Wednesday at 2 p.m., FUN SHOW- Meredith G11ul,
of Mr. and Mrs. David Gaul, was one of many children who enjoyed
aQd Middlq,ort on Thursday at 2 the Mark Wood Fun Show at thJ~· Pomeroy Ubrary on Wednesday. Wood, of Jackson, used magic tricks, bal·

oral

p;,m.

loon animals and other fun thl(llls to reinforce summer reading. (Brian J. Reed photo)

M~igs

Westfall leads by one at
Evans, who was fourth after the first round,
didn't miss a faitway in shooting 2-under 70.
Evans, Westfall and Johnson will be paired in
the final threesome Wednesday.
"I hit well all day;' said Evans, who birdied
six holes to bring his tournament total to 12.
"The course played long, and it will play
longer when it goes to 7,050 (yards) for the
final round. The pin plac~ments were much
harder."
Six-time West Virginia Amateur champion
Pat Carter. who was in 14th place after shooting 74 in the first round, rallied for a 4-under
68. Carter birdied 'II, 12, 14 and 15 before
bogeying No. 18 to take over fourth place at
142.
"I hit the first 17 greens, and missed the last
one in the dark;' said Carter, among the last to
finish. "I played nearly flawless golf. I had a
number in mind coming in, and I can still
make it with another good round."
Glenville native Chad Westfall had a 1-.
under"? I for fifth place at 143.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Bengals, Hamilton County agree on lease deal
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Hamilton County commissioners
and the Cincinnati Bengals have
agreed to amend the lease. for the
rrew Paul BroWn Stadium, eliminating the requirement that the
county guarantee the sale of at
least 50,000 tickets to each of the
team's first 20 home games.
• Under the otiginal lease, the
(\Ounty had to pay the team th e
difference ifless than 50,000 tickets were sold for each of those
g;tmes. ,
The amendment also will allow
the team to receive all revenues
!'rom the sale of seat bcenses sold

after June 24. The original agreement had allowed the county to
receive revenues from all seat
licenses sold before Aug. 1.
Fans must buy seat licenses in
order to have the right to purchase season tickets.
The seat-license program has
generated more than S26.5 million for the county's stadium construction, the Ben gals said .. More
than 43.000 season . tickets have
been purchased for luxury suites.
club seats and general admission,
the team said.
·
County Commissioner Bob
Bedinghaus announced the lease

changes at a news conference
Tuesday. Commissioners are
expected to formally approve the
changes at a meeting Thursday.
Bengals president Mike Brown
said Thesday that the latest agreement reflects the team's confidence in its season-ticket base.
"And it sets aside concerns that
various people have expressed
about the liability of the county
to subsidize the team's operations," he said.
The team and the county also
said last week that the Bengals
would waive a late. payment fee
required of the county if the sta-

'

dium were not completed.: on
time. The fee would be $2 million
for each preseason game and $4
million for each regular season
game not played in the new stadium.
Commissioners and team officials said they. were confident the
stadium would be completed on
time.
"To the extent that left a sour
taste in people's mouths, . that's
gone away
Bedinghaus said
Tuesday of the late payments and
the ticket guarantee.

now:·

AUTO, V8, A/C,
I.EA'rHEIR.· LOADED
AUTO, 4 CYL, A!C

POMEROY - Detailed architectural plans
for the Meigs Local School District's building
project were ~ewed at this week's meeting o[ .
the Board of Education.
Superintendent Bill Buckley described the
plaru; as another step toward the actual bluepril)ts for the construction of the new elementary school near Rutland, the middle school on
land adjacent to the high school, and renovations at the high school.
Plans, according to Buckley. call for the high
school renovation to begin next summer, con_tinue through the 2001-02 school year and into
the following summer.
The ~uperintendent proposed modular units
PLANS - As the Meigs Local Board of Education moves
be
placed at the rear of the school near the new
closer to beginning building construction and renovation prOjects, plans
from the archltej:t become more detailed. Here Supt. Bill Buckley greenhouse in which classes or departments
reviews detailed plans with board members, from the left, Wayne Davis, could meet when work progresses into their
Norman Humphreys, Scott Walton and John Hood. (Kris Dotson photo) respective areas.

iiiitiEioiG

94fORD
TEMPO

880LDS
CIERA

5 SP, A/C, SPOILER,
RECONSTRUC TITLE

AUTO, V6, A/C

#AOII021

I

#39581

Southem Local board 'OKs
for 2000•01 season
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RACINE - Coaching positions were fiDed, contracts approved and teaching positions· advertised
during Monday's regular meeting of the"Southern
Local Board of Educatiori.
·
·,,The school board approve.;! the following individuals as coaches for 2000-01 :' Lee C 0 dner, high
school cheerleading advisor; Roma Sayre, varsity
high school volleyball coach; Pete Sayre, volunteer
~sistant varsity volleyball coach; Becky Winebrenner, reserve high school volleyball coach; Jonathan
Rees, reserve high school boys basketball coach; and
Tammy Chapman, reserve high school girls basket~all coach.
,
-Gordon Fisher was approved as junior/ senior
prom advisor.
The board also approved Dennie Hill, treasurer,
and Paula Carter, assistant treasurer, to join OASBO;
well as James Lawrence, superintendent, to join

as

Census· near
finish; local
count set
J.

the
upcommg
Coverage
Improvement Follow up proMIDDLEPORT -Th&lt; local gram, we hope to get these peoCensus 2000 office in C hilli- ple included."
cothe has completed 100 perGetting an acc urate count is
cent of the follow-up portion of also a concern for village offithe census, the Village of Mid- cials in Pomeroy and Middledleport will begin its own cen- port, because grant applications
sus next week, and Pomeroy Vil- and other federal programs rely
lage Council will discuss a vil- on population figures derived
lage- wide census at its next from the census.
meeting.
Census forms are already out
More than 96,000 households at the Middleport Public Works
in 15 counties of southern Ohio office. located in village hall .
w&lt;re visited by federal census
Residents in Middleport are
enumerators.
asked to stop at the water
On any given day, several department office to complete
hundred workers were canvassand sign the short form, which
ing the counties. The enumera- asks for a name, address an"d
tion operation which began number of r\sidents at that
April 27 is the largest part of
address.
Census 2000,. and more than
Those residents who do not
I ,200 census workers from fill out the form before July 10
Southern Ohio were involved.
will be visited by a village water
Now that the count has been
department employee. The
completed, Census 2000 has
water office is open from 9 a.m.
begun its Accuracy and Coverto 4 p.m.
age Evaluation Program, a qualPomeroy Mayor John Blaetity assurance operation. Census
tnar said Wednesday that Village
workers are conducting interCouncil will continue disviews wit)l 10 percent of the
cussing a village-wide census at
households, which were ranits July 17 meeting.
domly selected, to ensure previ" I am going to recommend,
ous census workers did an adeagain, that we conduct a census
quate job.
'. .
and that the water ·department's
In the coming weeks, Census
:WOO has other operations meter re aders conduct it," Blaettnar said. "Those men know the
planned to ensure that all resistep- by-s tep house- to - house
dents have been counted.
"We suspect some residents business more than anyone else
have been missed," local census in town."
Please see Census, ,... Al
manager Pat Slagle said. "With
Bv BRIAN

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Local reviews plans for new school

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

First-round co-leader Jamie Whitt of Huntington shot 5-over 77 and fell to seventh place
at 145.
"I missed five fairways by 2 feet," said Whitt,
whose amateur status was returned a day
before the Open. "And on those hoies i got
three bogeys and l;Wo doubles. I ·hit two of
those shots 30 feet and was dead:'
Defending champion John Ross, who was
in third place after the first round, shot a 79
for a two-day total of 148 and is eight ,shots
back. David Lawrence Jr. shot 87 to follow· a
first- round 71, dropping into a four-way tie
for 10th.
A three-hour rain delay separated the first
and second groups. The wind calmed and
greens slowed later, allowing for lower scores.
"The break didn't affect me swingwise, but
I could never gauge the speed of the greens;'
Johnson said. "I just picked my spots where I
could be aggressive."
Sixty-one players made the cut at 158 or
lower.

so Cenh

Funny man serious about reading
.• ..

i

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume s 1, Number 21

GOLF

BRIDGEPORT, WVa. (AP) - Brad Westfall has a one-stroke lead heading into the
final round of the West Virginia Open after a
sizzling S-under 67 Tuesday at the Pete Dye
Golf Club.
Westfall's two-round total of 4-under 140
was just ahead of Barry Evans, the pro at
Berry Hills Country Club in Charleston, and
first round co-leader Brent Johnson.
Westfall had ,six birdies - five on the back
nine.
"I had it "going, I really did;' the Morgantown native said. " I was in the zone and hit
the ball the best I have in a long time."
Westfall, who cost himself a stroke a clay
earlier by signing an incorrect scorecard, said
he felt he could match the course record of 66
if not for some bad breaks.
"I was lucky to make par on six, seven and
eight;' Westfall said. "So my near misses
evened it out."
Johnson shot a l-over 73 despite birdies on
Nos. 14, 16 and 18.

June 29, 2000

BASA for the 2000-200 I school year.
A dental contract with CoreSource through the
SEOVEC dental insurance consortium was
approved for the period from July 1, 2000, to June
30,2001.
'
The board approved a vision insurance ~oritract
with Vision Plus for' the period from July 1, 2000, to
June 30, 2001.The renewal rate is $7.37 for a single,
and S19.48 for a family.
A contract with SEO-SERRC for 2000-01
school year was approved for the amount of
$1,897.10, which is for services provided to 1he
school's special education and gifted programs.
The board approved a resolution requesting a cash
· financial analysis by the state auditor's office to certifY rather Southern Local will have a deficit or not
for the 2000-200 I fiscal year.
PIHHift~,PIIpAJ

Some phases of the renovation will disrupt
use of sections of the ·building, he said, and in
order to keep the project moving without disrupting education, th ere needs to be a place for
relocating classes.
Extensive renovation at the high school will .
include installing air conditioning and sprinklers, replacing asbestos flooring, some interior
design work along with replacing lockers, and
upgrading furnishings,
• As for the new buildings, Buckley said it is
anticipated that the district will be ready to take
both projects to bid in late winter and to begin
actual construction in the spring. The groundwork could begin as early as February, he said.
In other business, the board approved temporary appropriations for the 2000-01 year of
$20,911,321.
It was noted that the amount is anticipated
revenue including special grants received by the

district. It also approved the final revised appropriations for.the 1999-2000, which ends Friday
in the amount of$23,794,891, which represents
what will acrually be spent for operation of the
district during the past year.
Included in tl1e new temporary appropriation
figure are grant awards accepted by the. board
during the meeting.
Those were Title 1 (reading and math) ;of
$817, 102;Title VIB (special education funding);
Title VIR (federal money for the reduction of
class size, hiring new teachers); Drug Free
Schools, $9, 706;Title VI (special education) and
the Dwight D. Eisenhower, $19,197 (math and
science award which goes to teachers for work~
shop expenses, supplies and materials for the
classroom.
'
In personnel matters. the board hired Sharon
K. Hawley as an elementary music teacher;Jen~

,...._Melp,PiiplU

Strickland: Gore wants
Sentinel plant closing probed
Toclay's

2 S1dlons- II Ptlps
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports 1
I
Weather

AS
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A4
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Bt-3. 8
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 0-9-5; Pick 4:0-5-1-3
Super LDito: (&gt;.19-21&gt;-41-4}-.47
Kicker: ~5-2
W,YA,
Daily 3: 5-6-1 Daily 4: 3-6-0-6
0 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

COLUMBUS (AP) U.S.
Congressman Ted Strickland says
Vice President AI Gore has asked
the
Treasury
Department to
the
evaluate
proposed closing of a south. ern Ohio uranium enrichment plant.
Gore
met
with Strickland
and representatives of the
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
Plant during Gore's ca mpaign
appearance in Columbus today.
":the vice president cerrainly
listened to us, he expressed his

concerns, he said he had asked the
Department ofTreasury to evaluate the situation very carefully,"
Strickland said after the 20minute meeting.
Dan Minter, who represents
hundreds of workers at the southern Ohio factocy and also inet
with the vice president, said Gore
called USEC's announceme11't
that it would stop production
"outrageous."
''I'm optimistic we're going to
get the relief we need," said
Minter, president of the Paper,
Allied-Industrial, Chemical and
Energy Workers lnternationa1
Union chapter. "He's vowed tO
•

�.. _!:!~A~2.:.oThe~~O.~IIy!,!Se!!nt~l~ne!!I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;P~o~m~e~ro~y, Middleport, Ohio

June 22, 2000

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - For Charles Bailey's they're used to; they won't get to go to the zoo or
family, paying S50 or more each week at the gas any other entertainment they can't reach on foot.
: P.ump sometimes means that Mom or Dad go to
And forget about saving for that once-in-a-life.lied without any supper.
time vacation: "We had hopes of taking our children
' , · "Gas prices have doubled. My paycheck hasn't," to Disney World before they get " too old;' but I
Bailey, of Jefferson, Ohio, told a House committee don't even think that will ever happen;' Bailey said.
TUesday.
Tuesday's heari.n g by the full Government
• . "There have been many evenings in the last year Reform Committee was one of many by congresthat either mYJelf or my wife goes without a meal sional committees iooking at different aspects , ~o the children have enough," he said. "I never want and in some instances taking a duplicate look at the
any of my children to go to sleep hungry because I same aspects - of the surge in gasoline prices.
,didn't have the means to support them properly."
It also was somewhat of an endurance test for
· The recent spike in gasoline prices put such a Bailey and four others brought in as consumer witsqueeze on that family's already- tight household
nesses to show the real-life implications of a debate
budget that they had to cut grocery spending almost
largely conducted among elected officials, appointin half, said Bailey, who has a full-time job as an
ed officials and corporation executives.
electrician 88 miles from his home.
The hearing started late, delayed by floor votes.
Still, he said he's glad he doesn't have to travel for
Then, those invited to testify had to wait for more
t, .a living, or face a choice between paying creditors
than an hour more while individual members of
1 ~ .and driving to visit a loved one in the hospital.
Congress
read prepared speeches or engaged in
,.;:There are people who have it mu ch worse than my
&lt; family ... people who were barely making it on what stream-of-consciousness musings about what they
_ ¢.ey were being paid before the hike in gasoline, and think may have caused the gasoline price increases.
Four hours after the testimony was supposed to
he said.
;, qow can't pay their bills at
begin,
the five consumers were still in the witness
, , "I am telling the story of millions;' Bailey said.
"Every person in this country feels the effects of the chairs.·
Bailey came prepared, with an inch-thick folder
'ising price of gasoline."
full
of printed copies of email messages he got after
·· Bailey said his family will be moving closer to his
job in North Canton, but spending less on com- local newspapers published articles about his scheduled trip to Washington.
. ihuting won't return life to normal.
Those e-mails will become part of the official
:: ·· The five Bailey children and a cousin who lives
-· with them won't see their grandmother as much as committee record.
,.- )

:

•

of M )ltag Ho e
.APPiia e·'aa,nery
at Ingels Furniture
~

.••

... . ·.

~

•

,J

I \,,. •

!rStephanie M . Nibert of Gallipolis, died Tuesday,June 27, 2000 in Holz:: !,'r Medical Center.
: Surviving in additiod to his pareents are his maternal grandparents,
: john and Helen Rosemary Nibert of Gallipolis; maternal great-grand:!'mothersi Audrey Stewart and Hattie Nibert, both of Gallipolis; pater; nal grandparents, Edward L. and Joann Nibert of Gallipolis, paternal
~great-grandfather, Clarence Bradley ofWesterville; and several aunts
• and uncles.
: : · He was preceded in death by his maternal great-grandfathers, Calvin
:::~i:ewart and Willis Nibert; and his paternal. great- grandmother, Eliza::.p eth Bradley.
:~· . Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Pine Street Cemetery,
:;&lt;;allipolis, with the Rev. Willard Blankenship officiating. There will be
visitation.Arrangements are by Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
;:.W.va.

~ :·shooting deputy
~ ;; LORAIN (AP}
~ ~ounty sheriff's

- A Lorain
deputy was
~ wounded Wednesday night by a
: shotgun-wielding man who
i ia:ter was killed by city police,
~ authorities said.
.
.
~ ; It was the second time m
~ four days that a northeast Ohio
~l~w enforcement officer had
i ~en shot.
~ . Sgt. Shawn Hadaway, 41, was
~ted in serious condition at
~Cleveland MetroHealth Med~G..l Center Thursday morning
~ollowing surgery for a shot~n blast to the chest, accordtirtg to a nursing supervisor
~who declined to give her
~me.

i:. Hadaway, a 20-year veteran,

.,

;'!.as wounded as he and two
~her deputies responded to a
w;;omplaint about a neighborIJi"irod dispute and shots b~ing
)ired in Sheffield Township,
~heriff Martin Mahony said.
. • As the trio approached the
residence through back yards, a
Iii.an stepped out of a wooded
ire a ·and fired one shot that hit
f.ladaway, who was not wearil)g
a: bulletproof veJt, Mahony
s:lid.
, The man fled but soon was
confronted by two Lorain
P.olice officers responding to a
&lt;;all for assistance. He was
ordered to drop his weapon ,
but chambered a round in rhe
s}Jotgun and pointed it at the
officers, said. Lorain police Lt.
Rich Resendez.
: The officers had no choice
ljut to fire, Resend"2 said.
: The suspect was not identi-

lied immediately.

Victim's family
reaches accord
LEBANON (~P} - Warren
County officials have struck a
tentative deal with the family of a
womart who was killed by an exboyfriend after he was released
from jail on a holiday furlough.
As part of the proposed agreement, the county would pay ·an
undisclosed sum to the relatives
o{ Suzie Thompson and erect a
monument to victims of domestic violence in her name, county
Commissioner Larry Crisenbery
said Wednesday.
The agreement also calls for a
review of the sheriff's jail procedures, said Thompson's brother,
Jean-Jacques Desfosses of Mason.
"One of the positive things is
that there will be change in the .
system;• said Desfosses.
Thompson, 42, was gunned
down in her South Lebanon
home on Dec. I by her exboyfriend, William Chapman.
Chapman, a two-time convicted
felon, then turned the gun on
himself and committed suicide.
Authorities later discovered
that Chapman sh~ukl nc;it have
been granted a furlough because
he also was being held on a parole
violation.
.
Thompson's family threatened
a wrongful-death suit, saying the
county had erred and did nothing
to protect Thompson.
Desfosses would not disclose
details of the proposed settlement, and Crisenbery said he did
not know how mu ch money was
"involved.
Neither Warren County Prose-

.~

~~=

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

POMEROY
10:19 p.m. , Memorial Drive,
auto fire, Amber Perkins, no
injuries.
RUTLAND
II :08 a.m ., Strange Run,
Dorothy Bolin, HMC;
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup12:33 p.m., Hampton Hollow
pers Plains Volunteer Fire Depart- Road, assisted by Pomeroy,
ment will have its annual fund Matthew Bailey, HMC;
drive on July 8. The support of
6:07 p.m., Grant Street, assisted
the commu nity is needed.
by Pomeroy as First Responder,
Hazel Van Cooney, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1:48 p.m ., SR 243, assisted by
POMEROY - There will be
Central Dispatch, Greg Hibbs,
no meeting of Drew Webster Post
HMC.
39 Tuesda)l because of the July 4
holiday.

Fund drive to be
held

Meeting off

EMS units
~og 9 calls
POMEROY - Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assista nce
o n Wednesday. U nits responded as
follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

Meeting slated

1:59 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Pomeroy,
CARPENTER - Columbia Naomi Belles, Pleasant Valley
Township Trustees will meet on Hospital;
6:53 a.m. , Forest Run, M argret
Monday at the firehouse at 7:30
Vost,
PVH;
p.m.
10:29 a.m., State Route 7,
Randall Gabbs, Holzer Medical
Center;
4:50 p.m., Racine, Elizabeth
RACINE - Theiss reunion
will be held at Star Mill Park, · Salser, treated.

Reunion set

.•••

Dinner on tap

RACINE - A baked steak
dinner will be held Saturday at 5
p.m. at the Mount Moriah
C hurch of God, Racine. The SS
cost will include dessert, coffee or
tea.

Pickup time
RAC INE - Due to the July 4
holiday, trash will be picked upon
Wednesday instead ofTuesday.

Meet July 3
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday
at 7:30 at the Syracuse Village
Hall.

..•
.. ..

1:1.., ·~.

i"' ·;.

Census

t_" ...

from PapAl

'.

'

~

,i """"

'.

~.

, ~.

••
l::Blaettnar said that those

meter
~ g;aders ·would cover their own
r '
• routes for the census effort, and
~ $ince almost every house in town
a water meter, the residences
~ ~hich need to be counted would
~i: easy to track.

:bas
r••

"I want to count every head in
this village," Blaettnar said, noting
that he understands that some
council members object either to
the census itself or to the way it
would be conducted.
Meanwhile, the census office in
Chillicothe asks that residents
who have not completed a census
questionnaire or been visited by a
census enumerator to call the
local office at 1- 888-325-7733 .

;

Ban lifted

•
•
•

•

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Sewer District has lifted the ban on sewer service in the
service area of the community.
Connections are now' being
accepted for residenlial and commercial establishments.

Special speaker
REEDSVILLE - Frank Jo;;es
will be the speaker at a 7 p:in.
Sunday service at the Reedsville
United Methodist C hurch.

Boosters plan
meeting
POMEROY - Meigs Bahd
Boosters will met Monday at 7:(30
p.m in the band room at Me~gs
High School. Plans will be made
for band camp, working at concessions, and the fair booth. All
band parents are urged to attend.

Dance to be held
TUPPERS PLAINS - A p~~­
lic square dance with clogging
and line dancing and slow daRcing will be held at the Tuppers
Plains VFW, Post 9053, Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. True Counlry
Band will provide the music :i1ld
Clifford Longenette will be the
caller.
'

•

Meigs

:

from PapAl
nifer Jones as a high school special
education teacher; Cathy Simpson,
to assist t~e high school librarian in
cataloging materials; and John
Davidson and Brad Knotts as substitute custodians.
Hired on supplemental contracts
were Kelly Barnett, high school
cheerleader advisor; and Jim
Oliphant, quiz team advisor. David
Ramsey was employed to tutor a

health handicapped student at the
· rate of $15 an hour not to exceed
five hours a week, retroactive to
June 16.
The resignations of Beverly
Jones as kindergarten teacher at the
·. Pomeroy Elementary School was
accepted, as were resignations fiom
Becky Cotterill, high school newspaper advisor; Scot Gheen, head
teacher at Bradbury; and Chris
Stout, boys varsity basketball
coach.
In other business the board
voted:
• to approve the Continuous

Improvement Plan presented at the
meeting;
,
o to pay the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center $2,480 to
provide stipends to teachers to
score the writing competency
based education test for the district;
• to renew the contract with
Medical Claims Services for the
2001 fiscal year to administer the
district's health insurance program;
and to renew the vision insurance
with Vision Plus for the next fiscal
year;
• to renew membership with

.

Coalition of Rural and Appalaehlan Schools for next year adt a cost
of$300;
• to approve student activioes
budgets;
• to pay $2,178 fiom Tech Ptep
Funds to Baum Lumber; $1,9.80
fiom the general fund to Kennedy
Electric; and $3,480 from Drug
Free Schools to Sue Romuno.
Board members attending were
Scott Walton, Wayne Davis, Norman Humphreys, and John Hood,
along with Cindy J. Rhonernu~.
treasurer.

!··

..~·~~..
:The Daily Sentinel
e ..
t

..

(USPS ll3·9~)
Ohk» Vallty Publishing Co.

c ·Published every

af't~rn oon, Mor~day through
"friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley !'ublishing Company., Pomeroy,
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eroy, Ohio.

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cutor Tim Oliver nor Steve
LaForge, an attorney hired to
defend the county, would discuss
the agreement until it is finalized.
Desfosses said any money
would be used to establish a fund
for Thompson's three sons, ages
20, 18 and 15.
Thompson's slaying led to a
public outcry against a long tradition of holiday furloughs for
county inmates, anti most judges
in the county have stopped the
practice.

Subscribers not desirins to pay the carrier may
remlt ln advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basi~. Credit will be
givca carrier eacb week,

The board revised a five-year
forecast as recommended by Dennie Hill, treasurer, and approved
from PapAl
that Ruth Shain, the superintenThe board also approved the dent's secretary, receive the same
math course of study for grades 7- benefits as. the other classified
12, which was developed by a employees effective July I, 2000.
The board approved an agreecommittee of Meigs Co01~ty
teachers under the guidance of the ment between Ohio State University and Southern High School for
Athen-Meigs ESC.
1•
Barbara Beegle and Charisse the Early English Composition
Knight represented Southerp Assessment Program for the 20000 I school year.
Local on the committee.
The program was started this
The posting of a full-time el~'­
mentary principal's position was past year and provides professional
approved by the board. The poSi- development opportunities for
tion's salary range falls between high school English teachers.
Attending Monday's meeting
$40,000-$48,000.
The board approved a tempo- was board members Bob Collins,
ra!Y budget for the 2000-01 Ron Cammarata, Dave Kucsma,
school year in the amount of Doug Little and Marty Morarity.

Grant aims to
retrain workers

Reader Serv1ces
· Our main concern In all storle1 Is to be
kalnte. tr you know of an error In 1 story,
~all ..e newsroom at (740) 992·21!15. We will
chtck your lnformatloa and make a
anftctlon lfwamlled.
Newa Departments
'ne main number is 992-215.5. Department
U1n11oaa are:

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Gore
fromPageA1
continue to look into it, and we'll
work with his staff to find the
best path forward."
The plant's operator, the United States Enrichment Corporation , last week announced plans
to cease produc tion at the Piketon plant, eliminating about
1,400 jobs.
Piketon is about 70 miles south
of Columbus.
Minter has said the plant would
have enough work to continue
production if the government
allows it to create a uranium
stockpile.
USEC says it is stopping pro·
duction at the plant because there
are not enotigh buyers of
enriched uranium.

Minter said he emphasized to
€;ore that stopping production at
the plant will have repercussions
beyond the economic impact on
southern Ohio, including domestic energy production and
national security issues.
Strickland, a Democrat representing Ohio's Sixth District, presented Gore with a letter outlining several proposals to deal with
the closing.
They include:
o Reversing the privatization of
USEC, a former government
operation allowed to become a
. private company.
o Removing USEC as the
executive agent of the Russian
Enriched
Uranium
Highly
Agreement.
o Urging the Treasury Department to seek an if\iunction
against USEC to stop it from
shutting down .

~1~12~P~rzw:ii·ci!t:i;e::z;-::::::.:C=::='l?e~a~n:g-a~n~c~e~L=~=eprrz;::::::Jscll
Craft. master Sofa &amp; Chair

~ Credit Terms
~ Lay·A·Ways

CIC

Mon., Tues., Wed , Fri. 9-5:30
Thurs. 9-12; Sat. 9-2:30

-

1/2 Price

Reg. '1,41900 Now Only *70950

.
i1...

.,.. •
'I

~
'

,.--

~·

J

106 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

(740) 992·2835

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

''

1/2 Price

Reg. •2,049 Now Only $1,024

. ...

..
I'

Flexsteel Sofa
Mauve. Beige. Blue Floral 1/2

50

Price

Reg. •1-,299 Now Only s649
00

,,

cran. master Sofa; Chair &amp; Ottoman

tri-county area is expected to provide near-petfect weather on Friday and into the weekend.
The National Weather Service
predicted mostly sunny skies and
temperatun;s in the 70s for Friday.
Temperatures will warm slowly
on the weekend, with highs Saturday around 80 and Sunday in the
mid to upper' 80s .

Overnight lows will be in the
50s. Sunset tonight will be at 9:05
and sunrise on Friday at 6:07 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Lows in
the mid 50s. Light northwest wind.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Friday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs in

the lowet 80s.
,
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs in the mid 8~.

STOCKS

50

Akzo - 40~

AmTech/SBC - 44l'o
Ashland Inc. - 35'~

AT&amp;T-32~

Bank One - 28~
Bob Evans- 15'·
BorgWarner - 37
Champion- 3i.
Charming Shops - 4"·
Chy Holding - 6')•
Federal Mogul - 9'1.
Flrstar - 22l'o
Gannett - 58'·
General Electric- 50~
Ha~ey Davidson - 38'·
Kmart - 6'!.
Kroger - 20~
Lands End - 35 'Y.
Ltd. -

21 71•

Oak Hill Financial - 13).
OVB-27~

One Valley - 33),

Peoples -

14~4

Premier- ftl.
Rockwell - 33l'o
Rocky Boals - 5:1
AD Shell - 61 Y
.
Sears - 33'!.
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart- 55'l.
Wendy's - 17'!.
Worthington - 10'i.
Daily sloe!&lt; reports are the 4 p.m. closing
quoles of the previous day·s transactions.

Curio Cabinet~

Caldwell Corner Gun Cabinet
Oak. Holds t 2 Guns, Bottom Storage

Reg. 129900 to 185900

1/2 Price

Save~~%

Reg. sl,SSS Now Only '94400
Reg. $].,41900 Now Only •70950
Riverside Entertainment Center
Cherry. Holds Up to 35" TV 1/2 Price

Now

7:00 l11:30 DIALY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00l 3:30

\t"-

112 Price

00

Maple Bedroom Suite
Bed. Chest. Dresser. Mirror. Nlte Stand
00

..

. ~-\ ,.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High pre~'ure building over the

1

Publisher reserves the ria:huo adjust rates du t·
ina the Subscription period. Subscription rate
changes may be implemented by changing the
~urat ion of th~ subscription.
MAIL SUBSCRII'fiONS
lnlide Mel1• Coual)'
13Wooks................................... .............. $l7.30
U Wooks ••..•..•••......... ................ ......... ..... S53.82
$2 Wook.o ••.•••••••.••..•••.•••.•••.•••..•••..•••.••..•• $105.56
~
Rita Outt~e Melli Count.Y
13 \Veekl ................................................. $29.25
26 Wtcks ....... .......................................... $56.68
52 Wccks ........... ......................... ........... SI09.72

Near-perfect weather slated Friday:

AEP - 31 ~•

No subscrlpti~n by mail permitted in areas .
where home carrier service is available .

~

VALLEY WEATHER

$9,1-35 ~819~.

Southem

By Carrier or Motor Route

I

. LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet on Monday at
5 p.m. at the township office
building.

~·~.
--·~·-----------------------------------------------

in Ohio racist," Capretta said.
The Justice Department's numbers don't reflect citations against
non-residents who are ticketed ·
while visiting the city, he said.
"In a deck of cards, you have
26 black cards and 26 red cards;'
Capretta said. "You take out all the
·hearts on red cards, that leaves you
with 13 red cards and 26 black
cards. You have 66 percent black
cards.
"That's not a full deck. And
obviously the DOJ isn't playing
' wit~ a full deck:'
Last Oct. 21, the federal government filed its original lawsuit ·
.against the city and the police
department. It accused officers of
abusing civil rights by filing false
charges, using excessive force and
·
conducting illegal search~s.
Wednesday's amended lawsuit
was filed two daYJ after the city
announced a new plan aimed at
preventing discriminatory behavior by officers.

TOLEDO (AP) -A $2 million
federal gtant will be used to retrain
northw~tern Ohio workers who
have lost jobs in the manufacturing
sector.
The Private Industry Collaborative, which will receive and disburse
the funds, plans to teach new skills
to about 350 laid-off workers. That
is to occur over the next two years
so they can get jobs at pay rates
comparable to the jobs they lost.
The collaborative covers Deli' Fulton, Henry, Lucas,
ance, Erie,
Ottawa,
Sandusky,
Seneca,
Williams, and Wood counties, but
not Putnam County. That's where
Philips Components said this
month it will move 1,500 jobs to
Mexico over the next three years.
About S1 million is available for
use by June 2001, and another $1
million is available until June 2002.
The program will train workers
in industrial machinery, fabricated
metals, and information technology. · officials said. Also, dislocated
workers could be trained to be
semi-truck dri'lers and railroad
conductors.

I

:1-no

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

~ :.Man killed after

Travis Leo Nibert

!t; -GALLIPOLIS - Travis Leo Nibert, infant son of Edward Lee and

'

~=

Trustees to meet

i ... ,. •

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

Jack 1 Uvely

•• .
.....

l, .

"We are hopeful today's filing
will ultimately result in fundamental changes in Columbh s
police practices which have fostered this pattern of racially disc,riminatory conduct;' said Bill
Lann Lee, acting assistant attorney
general. "Our goal· is to ensure
that .all citizens are treated equally
under the Jaw:· ·
~ · Timothy Mangan, an assistant
city attorney, said Justice Department figures are skewed and
should show that about one ticket
~'t!t four is issued to a black driver.

I

Racine, Sunday, with a I p.m.
potluck dinner.

: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Jack). Lively, 68, Point Pleasant, died
RACINE - Ohio University
: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,College of Osteopathic Medicine
~ Born April 17, 1932 in Kanawha County, W.Va., son of the late Childhood Immunization Pro: Joseph and Heidi Lively, he was a laborer for the city of Point Pleasant gram (CHIP)' a mobile health
t and the West Virginia Department ofTransportation.
..
program, will be providing free
1o
H
a1
immunization for all area children
"•
e was so preceded in death by his wife, Shirley Heib Lively; a
"' daughter, Charlotte Cobb; a granddaughter; and two sisters and three from birth through 18 years of
: brothers.
·
age July 12, at the Racine Pizza
: Survivin&amp; are four sons, Ronnie (Elaine) Lively of Point Pleasant, Express from 3- 4 p.m .
: Johnny (Kathy) Lively and Randy (Laura) Lively, both of Gallipolis,
The Hepatitis B vaccine is a
: and Chuck (Judy) Lively of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; six daughters, Con- three-shot series that is adminis•" me
· (C urtts
· ) Nich ols of Leon, W.Va. , C hr istine (George) Kearns of tered over a minimum of four
: Mason, W.Va. , Kay (Kenny) Bailey and Kathy (Pete) Boyles, both of mo~ths and i_s now required upon
; G:illipolis, Charlene (Mike) Sawyer of North Carolina, and Belinda a c~d entenng e1ther pre-school
~ (Bob} McChutchin of Buffalo, W.Va.; 14 grandchildren. and three • or kindergarten. . .
.
: great-grandchildren; and a brother, Jimmy Lively of St. Albans, W.Va.
b~ v~~cellahi~~Cln~ IS alson~-­
~ Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Deal Funeral Home, Point a •·.
e c . s s ot . rec--,- 15
~ Pleasant, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in reqUired for tmmumzattons. ·
ZLetart Evergreen Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call at the funeral
~-!_lome from 6-8 p.m. Friday.

:Federal government accuses
_Columbus of racial profiling

-· ~d.

Immunizations
scheduled

~

••

an:·

"The city attorney's office will
defend the allegations, and we're
looking at it to now to see where
we go from here;' Mangan said.
"We don't agree with their use of
the numbers."
Police ChiefJames Jackson said
the department does not instruct
or conduct racial profiling. He
called the latest allegation unfair
and said the Justice Department
will have to prove it.
"I don't see how they can possibly do that;' Jackson said.
The city's police union also
denies·profiling takes place.
"They don't know when they
stop a speeder whether that person is black, white, purple or pink.
They stop on the violation," said
Bill Capretta, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Capital
City Lodge No. 9.
"I am appalled and I am highly
insulted and I'm mad that the
Department of Justice called the
divisiort of police in Columbus
racist. They just called 1 ,800 cops

~

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

f•

budget to afford to drive to work

COLUMBUS (AP) - Blacks
' from 1994 to 1999 were almost
three times as likely as whites in
.;·the city to be the subject of traffic
' "&lt;stops in which one or more tick·::ets were issued, a federal com.: ·plaint alleges.
The U.S. Department ofJustice
on Wednesday added a racial pro, filing complaint to its lawsuit
-·accusing Columbus police officers
.''of civil rights violations, officials

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~

-Father describes cutting food
j

~

;._:Thursday, June 22, 2000

00
00
Now
Only
$~09
~
so9~
s599so
•

•

�.. _!:!~A~2.:.oThe~~O.~IIy!,!Se!!nt~l~ne!!I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;P~o~m~e~ro~y, Middleport, Ohio

June 22, 2000

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - For Charles Bailey's they're used to; they won't get to go to the zoo or
family, paying S50 or more each week at the gas any other entertainment they can't reach on foot.
: P.ump sometimes means that Mom or Dad go to
And forget about saving for that once-in-a-life.lied without any supper.
time vacation: "We had hopes of taking our children
' , · "Gas prices have doubled. My paycheck hasn't," to Disney World before they get " too old;' but I
Bailey, of Jefferson, Ohio, told a House committee don't even think that will ever happen;' Bailey said.
TUesday.
Tuesday's heari.n g by the full Government
• . "There have been many evenings in the last year Reform Committee was one of many by congresthat either mYJelf or my wife goes without a meal sional committees iooking at different aspects , ~o the children have enough," he said. "I never want and in some instances taking a duplicate look at the
any of my children to go to sleep hungry because I same aspects - of the surge in gasoline prices.
,didn't have the means to support them properly."
It also was somewhat of an endurance test for
· The recent spike in gasoline prices put such a Bailey and four others brought in as consumer witsqueeze on that family's already- tight household
nesses to show the real-life implications of a debate
budget that they had to cut grocery spending almost
largely conducted among elected officials, appointin half, said Bailey, who has a full-time job as an
ed officials and corporation executives.
electrician 88 miles from his home.
The hearing started late, delayed by floor votes.
Still, he said he's glad he doesn't have to travel for
Then, those invited to testify had to wait for more
t, .a living, or face a choice between paying creditors
than an hour more while individual members of
1 ~ .and driving to visit a loved one in the hospital.
Congress
read prepared speeches or engaged in
,.;:There are people who have it mu ch worse than my
&lt; family ... people who were barely making it on what stream-of-consciousness musings about what they
_ ¢.ey were being paid before the hike in gasoline, and think may have caused the gasoline price increases.
Four hours after the testimony was supposed to
he said.
;, qow can't pay their bills at
begin,
the five consumers were still in the witness
, , "I am telling the story of millions;' Bailey said.
"Every person in this country feels the effects of the chairs.·
Bailey came prepared, with an inch-thick folder
'ising price of gasoline."
full
of printed copies of email messages he got after
·· Bailey said his family will be moving closer to his
job in North Canton, but spending less on com- local newspapers published articles about his scheduled trip to Washington.
. ihuting won't return life to normal.
Those e-mails will become part of the official
:: ·· The five Bailey children and a cousin who lives
-· with them won't see their grandmother as much as committee record.
,.- )

:

•

of M )ltag Ho e
.APPiia e·'aa,nery
at Ingels Furniture
~

.••

... . ·.

~

•

,J

I \,,. •

!rStephanie M . Nibert of Gallipolis, died Tuesday,June 27, 2000 in Holz:: !,'r Medical Center.
: Surviving in additiod to his pareents are his maternal grandparents,
: john and Helen Rosemary Nibert of Gallipolis; maternal great-grand:!'mothersi Audrey Stewart and Hattie Nibert, both of Gallipolis; pater; nal grandparents, Edward L. and Joann Nibert of Gallipolis, paternal
~great-grandfather, Clarence Bradley ofWesterville; and several aunts
• and uncles.
: : · He was preceded in death by his maternal great-grandfathers, Calvin
:::~i:ewart and Willis Nibert; and his paternal. great- grandmother, Eliza::.p eth Bradley.
:~· . Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Pine Street Cemetery,
:;&lt;;allipolis, with the Rev. Willard Blankenship officiating. There will be
visitation.Arrangements are by Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
;:.W.va.

~ :·shooting deputy
~ ;; LORAIN (AP}
~ ~ounty sheriff's

- A Lorain
deputy was
~ wounded Wednesday night by a
: shotgun-wielding man who
i ia:ter was killed by city police,
~ authorities said.
.
.
~ ; It was the second time m
~ four days that a northeast Ohio
~l~w enforcement officer had
i ~en shot.
~ . Sgt. Shawn Hadaway, 41, was
~ted in serious condition at
~Cleveland MetroHealth Med~G..l Center Thursday morning
~ollowing surgery for a shot~n blast to the chest, accordtirtg to a nursing supervisor
~who declined to give her
~me.

i:. Hadaway, a 20-year veteran,

.,

;'!.as wounded as he and two
~her deputies responded to a
w;;omplaint about a neighborIJi"irod dispute and shots b~ing
)ired in Sheffield Township,
~heriff Martin Mahony said.
. • As the trio approached the
residence through back yards, a
Iii.an stepped out of a wooded
ire a ·and fired one shot that hit
f.ladaway, who was not wearil)g
a: bulletproof veJt, Mahony
s:lid.
, The man fled but soon was
confronted by two Lorain
P.olice officers responding to a
&lt;;all for assistance. He was
ordered to drop his weapon ,
but chambered a round in rhe
s}Jotgun and pointed it at the
officers, said. Lorain police Lt.
Rich Resendez.
: The officers had no choice
ljut to fire, Resend"2 said.
: The suspect was not identi-

lied immediately.

Victim's family
reaches accord
LEBANON (~P} - Warren
County officials have struck a
tentative deal with the family of a
womart who was killed by an exboyfriend after he was released
from jail on a holiday furlough.
As part of the proposed agreement, the county would pay ·an
undisclosed sum to the relatives
o{ Suzie Thompson and erect a
monument to victims of domestic violence in her name, county
Commissioner Larry Crisenbery
said Wednesday.
The agreement also calls for a
review of the sheriff's jail procedures, said Thompson's brother,
Jean-Jacques Desfosses of Mason.
"One of the positive things is
that there will be change in the .
system;• said Desfosses.
Thompson, 42, was gunned
down in her South Lebanon
home on Dec. I by her exboyfriend, William Chapman.
Chapman, a two-time convicted
felon, then turned the gun on
himself and committed suicide.
Authorities later discovered
that Chapman sh~ukl nc;it have
been granted a furlough because
he also was being held on a parole
violation.
.
Thompson's family threatened
a wrongful-death suit, saying the
county had erred and did nothing
to protect Thompson.
Desfosses would not disclose
details of the proposed settlement, and Crisenbery said he did
not know how mu ch money was
"involved.
Neither Warren County Prose-

.~

~~=

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

POMEROY
10:19 p.m. , Memorial Drive,
auto fire, Amber Perkins, no
injuries.
RUTLAND
II :08 a.m ., Strange Run,
Dorothy Bolin, HMC;
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tup12:33 p.m., Hampton Hollow
pers Plains Volunteer Fire Depart- Road, assisted by Pomeroy,
ment will have its annual fund Matthew Bailey, HMC;
drive on July 8. The support of
6:07 p.m., Grant Street, assisted
the commu nity is needed.
by Pomeroy as First Responder,
Hazel Van Cooney, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
1:48 p.m ., SR 243, assisted by
POMEROY - There will be
Central Dispatch, Greg Hibbs,
no meeting of Drew Webster Post
HMC.
39 Tuesda)l because of the July 4
holiday.

Fund drive to be
held

Meeting off

EMS units
~og 9 calls
POMEROY - Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assista nce
o n Wednesday. U nits responded as
follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

Meeting slated

1:59 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, assisted by Pomeroy,
CARPENTER - Columbia Naomi Belles, Pleasant Valley
Township Trustees will meet on Hospital;
6:53 a.m. , Forest Run, M argret
Monday at the firehouse at 7:30
Vost,
PVH;
p.m.
10:29 a.m., State Route 7,
Randall Gabbs, Holzer Medical
Center;
4:50 p.m., Racine, Elizabeth
RACINE - Theiss reunion
will be held at Star Mill Park, · Salser, treated.

Reunion set

.•••

Dinner on tap

RACINE - A baked steak
dinner will be held Saturday at 5
p.m. at the Mount Moriah
C hurch of God, Racine. The SS
cost will include dessert, coffee or
tea.

Pickup time
RAC INE - Due to the July 4
holiday, trash will be picked upon
Wednesday instead ofTuesday.

Meet July 3
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday
at 7:30 at the Syracuse Village
Hall.

..•
.. ..

1:1.., ·~.

i"' ·;.

Census

t_" ...

from PapAl

'.

'

~

,i """"

'.

~.

, ~.

••
l::Blaettnar said that those

meter
~ g;aders ·would cover their own
r '
• routes for the census effort, and
~ $ince almost every house in town
a water meter, the residences
~ ~hich need to be counted would
~i: easy to track.

:bas
r••

"I want to count every head in
this village," Blaettnar said, noting
that he understands that some
council members object either to
the census itself or to the way it
would be conducted.
Meanwhile, the census office in
Chillicothe asks that residents
who have not completed a census
questionnaire or been visited by a
census enumerator to call the
local office at 1- 888-325-7733 .

;

Ban lifted

•
•
•

•

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Sewer District has lifted the ban on sewer service in the
service area of the community.
Connections are now' being
accepted for residenlial and commercial establishments.

Special speaker
REEDSVILLE - Frank Jo;;es
will be the speaker at a 7 p:in.
Sunday service at the Reedsville
United Methodist C hurch.

Boosters plan
meeting
POMEROY - Meigs Bahd
Boosters will met Monday at 7:(30
p.m in the band room at Me~gs
High School. Plans will be made
for band camp, working at concessions, and the fair booth. All
band parents are urged to attend.

Dance to be held
TUPPERS PLAINS - A p~~­
lic square dance with clogging
and line dancing and slow daRcing will be held at the Tuppers
Plains VFW, Post 9053, Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. True Counlry
Band will provide the music :i1ld
Clifford Longenette will be the
caller.
'

•

Meigs

:

from PapAl
nifer Jones as a high school special
education teacher; Cathy Simpson,
to assist t~e high school librarian in
cataloging materials; and John
Davidson and Brad Knotts as substitute custodians.
Hired on supplemental contracts
were Kelly Barnett, high school
cheerleader advisor; and Jim
Oliphant, quiz team advisor. David
Ramsey was employed to tutor a

health handicapped student at the
· rate of $15 an hour not to exceed
five hours a week, retroactive to
June 16.
The resignations of Beverly
Jones as kindergarten teacher at the
·. Pomeroy Elementary School was
accepted, as were resignations fiom
Becky Cotterill, high school newspaper advisor; Scot Gheen, head
teacher at Bradbury; and Chris
Stout, boys varsity basketball
coach.
In other business the board
voted:
• to approve the Continuous

Improvement Plan presented at the
meeting;
,
o to pay the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center $2,480 to
provide stipends to teachers to
score the writing competency
based education test for the district;
• to renew the contract with
Medical Claims Services for the
2001 fiscal year to administer the
district's health insurance program;
and to renew the vision insurance
with Vision Plus for the next fiscal
year;
• to renew membership with

.

Coalition of Rural and Appalaehlan Schools for next year adt a cost
of$300;
• to approve student activioes
budgets;
• to pay $2,178 fiom Tech Ptep
Funds to Baum Lumber; $1,9.80
fiom the general fund to Kennedy
Electric; and $3,480 from Drug
Free Schools to Sue Romuno.
Board members attending were
Scott Walton, Wayne Davis, Norman Humphreys, and John Hood,
along with Cindy J. Rhonernu~.
treasurer.

!··

..~·~~..
:The Daily Sentinel
e ..
t

..

(USPS ll3·9~)
Ohk» Vallty Publishing Co.

c ·Published every

af't~rn oon, Mor~day through
"friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley !'ublishing Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4.5769, ~h. 992·2156. Second class post·
age paid ''l
eroy, Ohio.

Associ ated Pre is, and the Ohio

Mtmbtn

Newspapef A~ iatio n.

POSTMASTER: Se nd address corrections to
·The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St ., Pomeroy.

Ohlo4l769.
SUBSCRII'fiON RATES
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SINGLE COPY PRICE
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cutor Tim Oliver nor Steve
LaForge, an attorney hired to
defend the county, would discuss
the agreement until it is finalized.
Desfosses said any money
would be used to establish a fund
for Thompson's three sons, ages
20, 18 and 15.
Thompson's slaying led to a
public outcry against a long tradition of holiday furloughs for
county inmates, anti most judges
in the county have stopped the
practice.

Subscribers not desirins to pay the carrier may
remlt ln advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basi~. Credit will be
givca carrier eacb week,

The board revised a five-year
forecast as recommended by Dennie Hill, treasurer, and approved
from PapAl
that Ruth Shain, the superintenThe board also approved the dent's secretary, receive the same
math course of study for grades 7- benefits as. the other classified
12, which was developed by a employees effective July I, 2000.
The board approved an agreecommittee of Meigs Co01~ty
teachers under the guidance of the ment between Ohio State University and Southern High School for
Athen-Meigs ESC.
1•
Barbara Beegle and Charisse the Early English Composition
Knight represented Southerp Assessment Program for the 20000 I school year.
Local on the committee.
The program was started this
The posting of a full-time el~'­
mentary principal's position was past year and provides professional
approved by the board. The poSi- development opportunities for
tion's salary range falls between high school English teachers.
Attending Monday's meeting
$40,000-$48,000.
The board approved a tempo- was board members Bob Collins,
ra!Y budget for the 2000-01 Ron Cammarata, Dave Kucsma,
school year in the amount of Doug Little and Marty Morarity.

Grant aims to
retrain workers

Reader Serv1ces
· Our main concern In all storle1 Is to be
kalnte. tr you know of an error In 1 story,
~all ..e newsroom at (740) 992·21!15. We will
chtck your lnformatloa and make a
anftctlon lfwamlled.
Newa Departments
'ne main number is 992-215.5. Department
U1n11oaa are:

GeHnl Manaaer............................Eir.t. 1101
News................................................. Ext. U02

..................................................... or Ext. l106
Other Services
Ad•ertlllng...................................... ExL 1l04
ctrculaUon......................- ............... Exl. 1103
Claulfttd.Adt .................................. E:d . llOO

Gore
fromPageA1
continue to look into it, and we'll
work with his staff to find the
best path forward."
The plant's operator, the United States Enrichment Corporation , last week announced plans
to cease produc tion at the Piketon plant, eliminating about
1,400 jobs.
Piketon is about 70 miles south
of Columbus.
Minter has said the plant would
have enough work to continue
production if the government
allows it to create a uranium
stockpile.
USEC says it is stopping pro·
duction at the plant because there
are not enotigh buyers of
enriched uranium.

Minter said he emphasized to
€;ore that stopping production at
the plant will have repercussions
beyond the economic impact on
southern Ohio, including domestic energy production and
national security issues.
Strickland, a Democrat representing Ohio's Sixth District, presented Gore with a letter outlining several proposals to deal with
the closing.
They include:
o Reversing the privatization of
USEC, a former government
operation allowed to become a
. private company.
o Removing USEC as the
executive agent of the Russian
Enriched
Uranium
Highly
Agreement.
o Urging the Treasury Department to seek an if\iunction
against USEC to stop it from
shutting down .

~1~12~P~rzw:ii·ci!t:i;e::z;-::::::.:C=::='l?e~a~n:g-a~n~c~e~L=~=eprrz;::::::Jscll
Craft. master Sofa &amp; Chair

~ Credit Terms
~ Lay·A·Ways

CIC

Mon., Tues., Wed , Fri. 9-5:30
Thurs. 9-12; Sat. 9-2:30

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Reg. '1,41900 Now Only *70950

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i1...

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Middleport, Ohio 45760

(740) 992·2835

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

''

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cran. master Sofa; Chair &amp; Ottoman

tri-county area is expected to provide near-petfect weather on Friday and into the weekend.
The National Weather Service
predicted mostly sunny skies and
temperatun;s in the 70s for Friday.
Temperatures will warm slowly
on the weekend, with highs Saturday around 80 and Sunday in the
mid to upper' 80s .

Overnight lows will be in the
50s. Sunset tonight will be at 9:05
and sunrise on Friday at 6:07 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Lows in
the mid 50s. Light northwest wind.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Friday night. .. Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs in

the lowet 80s.
,
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
near 60 and highs in the mid 8~.

STOCKS

50

Akzo - 40~

AmTech/SBC - 44l'o
Ashland Inc. - 35'~

AT&amp;T-32~

Bank One - 28~
Bob Evans- 15'·
BorgWarner - 37
Champion- 3i.
Charming Shops - 4"·
Chy Holding - 6')•
Federal Mogul - 9'1.
Flrstar - 22l'o
Gannett - 58'·
General Electric- 50~
Ha~ey Davidson - 38'·
Kmart - 6'!.
Kroger - 20~
Lands End - 35 'Y.
Ltd. -

21 71•

Oak Hill Financial - 13).
OVB-27~

One Valley - 33),

Peoples -

14~4

Premier- ftl.
Rockwell - 33l'o
Rocky Boals - 5:1
AD Shell - 61 Y
.
Sears - 33'!.
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart- 55'l.
Wendy's - 17'!.
Worthington - 10'i.
Daily sloe!&lt; reports are the 4 p.m. closing
quoles of the previous day·s transactions.

Curio Cabinet~

Caldwell Corner Gun Cabinet
Oak. Holds t 2 Guns, Bottom Storage

Reg. 129900 to 185900

1/2 Price

Save~~%

Reg. sl,SSS Now Only '94400
Reg. $].,41900 Now Only •70950
Riverside Entertainment Center
Cherry. Holds Up to 35" TV 1/2 Price

Now

7:00 l11:30 DIALY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00l 3:30

\t"-

112 Price

00

Maple Bedroom Suite
Bed. Chest. Dresser. Mirror. Nlte Stand
00

..

. ~-\ ,.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High pre~'ure building over the

1

Publisher reserves the ria:huo adjust rates du t·
ina the Subscription period. Subscription rate
changes may be implemented by changing the
~urat ion of th~ subscription.
MAIL SUBSCRII'fiONS
lnlide Mel1• Coual)'
13Wooks................................... .............. $l7.30
U Wooks ••..•..•••......... ................ ......... ..... S53.82
$2 Wook.o ••.•••••••.••..•••.•••.•••.•••..•••..•••.••..•• $105.56
~
Rita Outt~e Melli Count.Y
13 \Veekl ................................................. $29.25
26 Wtcks ....... .......................................... $56.68
52 Wccks ........... ......................... ........... SI09.72

Near-perfect weather slated Friday:

AEP - 31 ~•

No subscrlpti~n by mail permitted in areas .
where home carrier service is available .

~

VALLEY WEATHER

$9,1-35 ~819~.

Southem

By Carrier or Motor Route

I

. LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet on Monday at
5 p.m. at the township office
building.

~·~.
--·~·-----------------------------------------------

in Ohio racist," Capretta said.
The Justice Department's numbers don't reflect citations against
non-residents who are ticketed ·
while visiting the city, he said.
"In a deck of cards, you have
26 black cards and 26 red cards;'
Capretta said. "You take out all the
·hearts on red cards, that leaves you
with 13 red cards and 26 black
cards. You have 66 percent black
cards.
"That's not a full deck. And
obviously the DOJ isn't playing
' wit~ a full deck:'
Last Oct. 21, the federal government filed its original lawsuit ·
.against the city and the police
department. It accused officers of
abusing civil rights by filing false
charges, using excessive force and
·
conducting illegal search~s.
Wednesday's amended lawsuit
was filed two daYJ after the city
announced a new plan aimed at
preventing discriminatory behavior by officers.

TOLEDO (AP) -A $2 million
federal gtant will be used to retrain
northw~tern Ohio workers who
have lost jobs in the manufacturing
sector.
The Private Industry Collaborative, which will receive and disburse
the funds, plans to teach new skills
to about 350 laid-off workers. That
is to occur over the next two years
so they can get jobs at pay rates
comparable to the jobs they lost.
The collaborative covers Deli' Fulton, Henry, Lucas,
ance, Erie,
Ottawa,
Sandusky,
Seneca,
Williams, and Wood counties, but
not Putnam County. That's where
Philips Components said this
month it will move 1,500 jobs to
Mexico over the next three years.
About S1 million is available for
use by June 2001, and another $1
million is available until June 2002.
The program will train workers
in industrial machinery, fabricated
metals, and information technology. · officials said. Also, dislocated
workers could be trained to be
semi-truck dri'lers and railroad
conductors.

I

:1-no

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

~ :.Man killed after

Travis Leo Nibert

!t; -GALLIPOLIS - Travis Leo Nibert, infant son of Edward Lee and

'

~=

Trustees to meet

i ... ,. •

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

Jack 1 Uvely

•• .
.....

l, .

"We are hopeful today's filing
will ultimately result in fundamental changes in Columbh s
police practices which have fostered this pattern of racially disc,riminatory conduct;' said Bill
Lann Lee, acting assistant attorney
general. "Our goal· is to ensure
that .all citizens are treated equally
under the Jaw:· ·
~ · Timothy Mangan, an assistant
city attorney, said Justice Department figures are skewed and
should show that about one ticket
~'t!t four is issued to a black driver.

I

Racine, Sunday, with a I p.m.
potluck dinner.

: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Jack). Lively, 68, Point Pleasant, died
RACINE - Ohio University
: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,College of Osteopathic Medicine
~ Born April 17, 1932 in Kanawha County, W.Va., son of the late Childhood Immunization Pro: Joseph and Heidi Lively, he was a laborer for the city of Point Pleasant gram (CHIP)' a mobile health
t and the West Virginia Department ofTransportation.
..
program, will be providing free
1o
H
a1
immunization for all area children
"•
e was so preceded in death by his wife, Shirley Heib Lively; a
"' daughter, Charlotte Cobb; a granddaughter; and two sisters and three from birth through 18 years of
: brothers.
·
age July 12, at the Racine Pizza
: Survivin&amp; are four sons, Ronnie (Elaine) Lively of Point Pleasant, Express from 3- 4 p.m .
: Johnny (Kathy) Lively and Randy (Laura) Lively, both of Gallipolis,
The Hepatitis B vaccine is a
: and Chuck (Judy) Lively of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; six daughters, Con- three-shot series that is adminis•" me
· (C urtts
· ) Nich ols of Leon, W.Va. , C hr istine (George) Kearns of tered over a minimum of four
: Mason, W.Va. , Kay (Kenny) Bailey and Kathy (Pete) Boyles, both of mo~ths and i_s now required upon
; G:illipolis, Charlene (Mike) Sawyer of North Carolina, and Belinda a c~d entenng e1ther pre-school
~ (Bob} McChutchin of Buffalo, W.Va.; 14 grandchildren. and three • or kindergarten. . .
.
: great-grandchildren; and a brother, Jimmy Lively of St. Albans, W.Va.
b~ v~~cellahi~~Cln~ IS alson~-­
~ Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Deal Funeral Home, Point a •·.
e c . s s ot . rec--,- 15
~ Pleasant, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in reqUired for tmmumzattons. ·
ZLetart Evergreen Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call at the funeral
~-!_lome from 6-8 p.m. Friday.

:Federal government accuses
_Columbus of racial profiling

-· ~d.

Immunizations
scheduled

~

••

an:·

"The city attorney's office will
defend the allegations, and we're
looking at it to now to see where
we go from here;' Mangan said.
"We don't agree with their use of
the numbers."
Police ChiefJames Jackson said
the department does not instruct
or conduct racial profiling. He
called the latest allegation unfair
and said the Justice Department
will have to prove it.
"I don't see how they can possibly do that;' Jackson said.
The city's police union also
denies·profiling takes place.
"They don't know when they
stop a speeder whether that person is black, white, purple or pink.
They stop on the violation," said
Bill Capretta, president of the Fraternal Order of Police, Capital
City Lodge No. 9.
"I am appalled and I am highly
insulted and I'm mad that the
Department of Justice called the
divisiort of police in Columbus
racist. They just called 1 ,800 cops

~

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

f•

budget to afford to drive to work

COLUMBUS (AP) - Blacks
' from 1994 to 1999 were almost
three times as likely as whites in
.;·the city to be the subject of traffic
' "&lt;stops in which one or more tick·::ets were issued, a federal com.: ·plaint alleges.
The U.S. Department ofJustice
on Wednesday added a racial pro, filing complaint to its lawsuit
-·accusing Columbus police officers
.''of civil rights violations, officials

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~

-Father describes cutting food
j

~

;._:Thursday, June 22, 2000

00
00
Now
Only
$~09
~
so9~
s599so
•

•

�-~_Th_e_o_ai..::..Iy_se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _....:0=P-Inion

PageA4
'lbursdey, June 21, 2000

IJ the

:l. . _he_D_ai....;;ly_S_e_n_ti_ne_I_ _ _ _ _ _

"JH~N IN

'E.st®flslilll in 1948

.'
' .
....

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 982-2157

2000 IT
BECAME

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlet W. Govey
Publlaher

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advartlalng Dl~or

· • Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

n,

. U"m

Diana Kay Hill

Controller

THE GREAT
MALL OF
CHINA.

9
TACO
BEl~

14&gt; 1111 HUor tw WII«HHtl.
JluJid4 M Uu tAa JotJ WDI'U. AU U1t1n llll't subjfd
lo ~~ alfll 11tJUI H •lf"M eM UttiU1 ~ ud lfl.}llw,.. 111tMHr. Nu
U1t1n w;U
H ruhlllhd. Llturr sMMW hill-, - lilt., , . . . , . , , fll•u, 1101 ,.,.o~•·
1'111 opi.JiiDIU upntsH. lit 1Jt1 ('iJiulfUI b1JDw •rt tJrl telftllllll.t ofiJu (JIIIo .WU.1 Pflblisfrillf

·- •

Co. 's ftiilorial &amp;o.nl, .,,.,.

,.,.,,,..,s

'

od,,,.,, lfflllfl.

OUR VIEW
'

.

"

Need

Dear Ann Landers: Recently, I was
diagnosed w ith breast cance r. I had a
normal mammogram and doctor's
examination, but four months later,
through self-examination, I felt a small
lump that turned out to be cancerous.
Please tell your readers it · is not
enough to have regular mammograms,
.ahhough they are very important. Most
women discover lumps themselves
through self-examination . If a woman
does not know how to perform this test
herself, her doctor can show her, or she
can get information at the public
·
library.
I always assumed I would not know
the difference between a dangerous
lump and the usual oddities 'in my
breasts, but I was wrong. Once I became
accustomed to the contours of my
breasts, 1 immediately recognized when
something was different.
Early detection and treatment gave
me the best chances of survivaL I hope
by writing to you, some women will

Report reveals known fact:
..
ARC is a big help
•
,.

·"A

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED P/lESS

! Today isThursday,June 29, the 181st day of2000.There are 185 days
: lett in the year.
; -~ Today's Highlight in. History:
·· -: On June 29, 1970, the United States ended a rwo-month military
' cilrensive into Cambodia.
I : On this date:
; ;jn 1767, the British Parliament approved the Townshend Revenue
: A:~ts, which imposed import duties on certain goods shipped to Amer: i~~· Colonists bitterly'protested the Acts, which were repealed in 1770.
~ ~·In 1776, the Virginia state constitution was adopted, and Patrick
~ ijenry made governor.
• ' In 1941 , Polish statesman, pianist and composer Ignace Jan
~aderewski died in New York at age 80.
~ j n 1946, British authorities arrested more than 2, 700 Jews in Pales:tirJe in an attempt to stamp out alleged terrorism.
.: In 1949, the govermi)ent of South Africa enacted a ban against
; ra0ally-mixed marriages.
·
; ; In 1954, the Atomic Energy Commission voted against re-instating
: ~· J Raben Opp~nheimer's access to classified information.
• - In 1966, the Unittd States bombed fuel storage facilities near the
l ~pnh Vietrtamese cities of Hanoi ,and Haiphong. ·
·: jn 1967, Jerusalem wu reunified as Israel remOiied bar~ica®s sepa.~g the Old City fi:om the Israeli sector.
· In 1972, the Supreme Coun ruled that the death penalty, as it wu
, being meted out, could constitute "cruel and unusual punishment."
•(The ruling prompted states to revise their capital punishment laws.)
. : In 1988, the Supreme Coun upheld, 7-1, the independent counsel

!

ltw.
:: Today's Birthdays: Actress Ruth Warrick is 85. Movie producer
~bert Evans is 70. Songwriter L. RusseU Brown is 60. Actor Gary
~ is 56. Singer Little Eva is 55. Comedian Richard Lewis is 53.
· 11:ctor Fred Grandy it 52. R ock musician Jan Paice (Deep Purple) is
it!. R ock singer Colin Hay {Men At Work) is 47.Acrress Maria Con; ~ta Alonso is 43. Singer Evelyn "Champagne" King is 40. Actress
~aron lawrence is 39. Actress Amanda Donohoe is 38.

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
begin doing regular self-examination,
because it could save their lives. M .M .,Who Speaks from Experience
Dear M .M.: You have wr·itten a letter that could mean the difference
between life and death. Thank yo11,
thank you, thank you. I hope every
woman who reads this will pay attention to your simple suggestion.
Dear Ann Landers: I must respond
to the woman who is divorced and living with her ex "for the sake of the children," even though he yells at her a lot.

My husband and I didn't divorce, but we
should have. I stayed because I told
myself that raising my childfen with a
bad example of a father was better than
no father at all. I was wrong.
He yelled at me a lot, to'o. Now, our
sons are grown and have no respect for
their wives. They learned it at home. If
we had girls instead, they would have
learned that they were supposed to be
knocked around, and to accept it. ·
That woman should ask herself if that
is the life she wants her children to have
when they are grown. She would do
herself and her children a much bigger
favor by getting them out of that environment as soon aJ possible. She should
let her children know everyone deserves
respect and that no one has to settle for
abusive treatment;
Please print my letter for the sake of
every woman who is stuck in a relationship with a man who shows her no
respect. Thanks for letting me express
myself. I've been meaning to write for a

COLLEGE NEWS

' ·' .

report rel~ased Wednesday has shown, without a doubt , the
• ·
Appalachian Regional Commission has played a significant
·. ·
role in improving the economic picture in the 13 states it
· · !erves, including Ohio and West Virginia.
A frequent target ofWashington budget
cutters,
ARC has lent a hand to numerous
· The money has
communities
for the past three decades.
· gone to put in
It has assisted in everything from job
: .".new businesses, creation to qualit)' of life issues. It has been
a catalyst for progress in an area that cries
- : creating jobs
out for development.
· where there
At least one lawmaker on Capitol Hill
were none
has likened ARC to a pork barrel project,
only
on a massive scale. This legislator
bifore. This is
thinks Appalachia has gotten enough fed, . difinitely not eral
fW1ding through ARC since its crepork.
ation 35 years ago.
But if skeptics would care to examine
•the report, they'll see ARC has helped turn poverty pockets . into
· · useful, taxpaying, productive areaJ. That doesn't fit the traditional
.label of pork barrel.
·
·· Money funneled into the region through ARC has helped build
- industrial parks, access roads, and water ·and sewer systems, and
- · assisted business incubators that provide infrastructure and technical
· ·assistance to start-up companies. The m\)ney haJ gone to put in new
"businesses, creating jobs where there were none before.
· This is definitely not pork.
· . · The agency's impact is well-known in southern Ohio and West
. ·· Virginia. When putting together financing packages for public
.. ·works improvements, local governments are in 'contact with ARC
· from the start.
· · · "ARC investments in infrastructure often play a pivotal role in
•helping communities meet basic infrastructure needs," said West Virginia Gov. Cecil H. Underwood, who serves aJ ARC States' cochairman.
Federal Co-Chairman Jesse L. White Jr. added the majority of the
l\gency's investments "are going to distressed and transitional coun?es, which are operating below national economic norms and
where the needs are greatest."
There are still a number of such counties in the region. ARC represents a chance for them to realize their goals to improve their
communities and the lives of their citizens.
•. Fortunately, our congressme'! and senators recognize ARC's
Importance. Every one of them knows what it means to their constituents. They will work to keep federal dollars flowing through
ARC until there is a day when Appalachia no longer feels the need
: for such assistance.
: That day might ~e a long time coming, but it's a goal we see more
i .~mmunities trying to reach.
: ' Don't call it a handout, because it's not. The region has waited a
i long time for its chance .to advance, and it needs all the help it can
~ get. Denying Appalachia that opportunity WOI!Id only prolong the
~ tragedy that's dogged the area for decades.

June 21, 2000

Reader stresses the importance of breast examination

The Daily Sentinel
...

Page~S

Named to dean's list
SYRACUSE -Jay Patrick McKelvey of Syracuse has been named to the Dean's List at Miami
University in Oxford.
Miami students on the dean's list earned a
grade point average of 3.5 or better.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

June polls reveal Gore is losing more ground
Whether he's playing the populist or New
Democrat, whether he's going negative or positive, the polling news just keeps getting worse
for Vice President AI Gore.
In five national poDs released over the past
two weeks, Texas Gov. George W. Bush's lead
over Gore averaged 8.3 points, up from 5
points in April and May.
In results released last week, the Voter.com
Battleground survey showed Bush's lead at 12
points, up from 6 in May and 4 in March. The
NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed Bush
leading by 8 points in June, compared with 5 in
April. In March, Gore was ahead by 3 points.
The week before, the Zogby poll showed
Bush up by nearly 8 points, compared to 1 in
May. The Los Angeles Times showed Bush up
by 10 percent, compared to 8 in May: Only the
Washington Post/ ABC News poll sho~ed a 1point narrowing of Bush's lead, from 5 points
to 4.
The new polls do not take into account
Gore's "prosperity tour," the death penalty controversy in Texas or the gasoline price spike, but
it's difficult to see how any of this will improve
Gore's position .
And a Justice Deparmtent investigator's 'recommendation that a special counsel be
appointed to probe Gore's 1996 fund raising
could be .a serious threat even ifAttorney General Janet Reno again refuses to make the
appointment.
Politically speaking, the recommendation
links Gore anew to ethical lapses that give President Clinton a personal disapproval rating of
64 percent in the Battleground poll.
Meanwhile, Gore's "prosperity tour" is
designed to accomplish important and necessary tasks: tie the vice president to the country's
current robust economy and bolster hjs standing with the Democratic base.
The problem is that news stories about Gore
constantly seem to emphasize process - his
various theme shifts, personal makeovers and
changes 'in campaign management.

.URG announces dean's list

skewed heavily toward lower-income Americans.
The major theme of Gore's "prosperity tour"
i&lt; positive- that "discipline has been essentlal
to the prosperity we have today" and that he
wants "to make this election about the big
choices we have to make to secure prosperity
and progress."
If anyone is listening, these are·messages Gore
needs to pound home. Right now, according-to
the Battleground survey. voters believe by a
NEA COLUMNIST
margin of 47 to 35 percent that Bush is better
able to keep the country prosperous.
Somehow, Gore has got to make his long
Gore did well in tapping cool-headed Com- experience in national office a decisive factor
merce S'eeretary Bil)'Daley \o replace abrasive for voters. He leads Bush in this category by 50
ex-Rep. Tony Coelho (D-Calif) as his cam- to 38 percent in the Battleground survey and
pai~ manager, but the switch got more atten- by 40 to 31 percent in the NBC/Wall Street
tion than Gore~s message.
Journal poll.
The new polls indicate Gore still has work to
But t~ll NBC poll indicated that experience
do in consolidating the Democratic base. In the is currently the third most important quality
Battleground survey, Bush has the support of voters are looking for in a president - and
93 percent of Republicans, but Gore only has Bush holds huge leads in the first two: trustthe support of 79 percent of Democrats.
worthiness and leadership ability.
Voters in union households and women are
In both polls, Bush holds a 12-point lead
split almost evenly between Gore and Bush, over Gore on the question of who can be trustand self-identified "Reagan Demcrcrats" favor ed to do the right thing. Asked which candiBush by 54 to 36 percent. Gore leads among date has stronger leadership qualities, Bush
Hispanics by 53 to 41 percent, but he is scor- leads by 55 to 30 percent in the Battleground
ing about 10 percent below the usual perfor- survey and 46 to 25 percent in the NBC/Wall
mance for a Democrat.
Street Journal poll.
To solidifY the base, Gore has been sounding
Bush presumably bolstered his leadetship
populist themes oflate, blaming oil companies lead by calmly handling the Gary Graham
for the increase in gasoline prices and drug death penalty controversy in Texas, even if there
companies for the high cost of medicine.
was reason to think the convicted killer
Democrats are trying to tie Bush, a former deserved a reprieve because his trial lawyer repoil man with industry contributors, to gas resented him badly.
prices. But the link isn't clear, and the price
The constant refrain of the Gore campaign is
spike is just as easily pinned on Clinton-Gore that voters- especially Democrats -are busy
energy and environmental policy.
with summer concerns and are not focused on
Gore also has beerl making populist propos- politics. But at the mome~t, Gore shows no
. als. When he announced his estate-tax-reduc- signs he knows how to give them a wake-up
tion proposal, he said the Republican alterna- call.
tive would "give a massive taX break to the
wealthiest Americans." His other tax cuts and
(Morton Kondracke is executive edit~r of Rbll
his "retirement savings t&gt;lus" proposal . are Call,.the newspaper cf Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

.

'HARDBALL'

This is a year for a dramatic presidential choice
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
One leader JVOuld steer 21st-century
NANTUCKET, Mass. - This little Atlantic
America in the direction personal
island offers a clear, off-shore prospect on this
enterprise and self-reliance. The other
fall's election.
JVOuld ~ro~ to me a Clintonesque
Cut through the fog of detail and petulance
and you discover a stark difference between JVOrd, the economic role ofgovernment.
George W. Bush and Albert Gore.
One leader would steer 21st- century Ameri- individuals are freed fi:om government control
ca in the direction of personal enterprise and and taxation to make their marks, follow their
self-reliance. The other would grow, to use a dreants. The other promises a government that
Clintonesque word, the economic role of gov- educates us in youth, guards us, comforts and
ernment.
guarantees our security in old age.
In both cases, the program the man pushes
On Social Security, Bush wants to introduce
reflects the life he has led.
a measure of private •enterprise with a bit of
Bush has spent his life as a Texan taking risk. Workers could choose to invest a portion
chances. He \fied first in the oil business, tried of their payroll tax in private invesrments.
second and successfully in the baseball business.
Gore would keep the syste~ basically as it is
Except for the Air National Guard, he's never now.We get taxed while we work, receive benbeen on a government payroll.
efits when we retire. Lower-income workers
Gore has lived his life in Washington. After would be offered a second entitlement: three
Viemam he reported on politicians, then quick- doDars of taxpayer money for every dollar they
ly became one of them, scaling the constitu- save toward retirement.
tional ladder of House to Senate to Vice PresiThe two men's positions on Social Security
dency. It was the same ladder Richard Nixon reflect their life philosophies. Bush would free
climbed during Gore's youth , the same rival payroll dollars for private investment. Gore
Jack Kennedy might have taken had he won would go the other direction, creating a second
that improbable try for VP in '56.
government program that collects, transfers and
Now in middle age, Bush and Gore are offer- redistributes more tax dollars fi:om current
ingAmericans a future that celebmtes their own workers to low-income retirees.
separate careers. One proposes a country where
Connect the dot• and we notice that Bush

cif

wants a big tax cut. Gore needs to keep taxes
high to pay for such government benefits as free
drugS for retirees and that extra three dollars for
every dollar someone saves.
On education, Bush backs vouchers to allow
parents the subsidized choice to enroll their
children in parochial or other private schools.
Gore would put all public backing behind public schools alone.
On crime, Bush comes from the state that
fights crime with capital punishment and laws
that let men and women carry concealed
weapons. Gore may be the most ,zealous gun
controller ever to run for president. Again, one
likes self-reliance and personal responsibilitYThe other pushes the power of government to
protect us.
:
On the environment, the choice is also clear.
Bush seems comfortable with big business.
G,on; agrees with Theodore Roosevelt: if anyone. IS gomg to protect this country's bounty, it's
not going to be the boys in the boardroom. ·
So, in addition to being the year of Kathy's
and my 20th wedding anniversary - we came
back here where it all started to celebrate! 2000 is also the year of a true, dramatic presidential choice for the country.

(Chris Matthews, chief cf tlw Sa&gt;1 Frandsco ExamWashington Bureau, is host cf "Hardball" an
CNBC and MSNBC cable channels.)

i&gt;~er's

RIO GRANDE - The following students
were named to the dean's honor list for the spring
quarter at the University of Rio Grande: Brian M.
Allen, Syracuse; Betheney A. Bay, Reedsville; Mary
.E. Blair, Pomeroy; Christy D. Drake, Racine;
.Shannon Enright, Rutland; Maria D. Frecker,
.Racine; Danielle E . Grueser, Pomeroy; Whitney
C. Haptonstall, Pomeroy; Lori B. Hill, Racine; Lisa
K. Honaker, Middleport; Kimberly D. Janey,
langsville; Jennifer R. Lawrence, Syracuse; Mark
F. Lewis, Pomeroy; Andrea M. McDonald,

Langsville; Jeannette L McDonald, Langsville;
Vicki L. Morrison, Middleport; Adam W. Roush,
Racine; Brandy M. Start, Pomeroy; Beverly D.
Stewart, Rutland; Teresa Varoam, Rutland; Kyle A.
Wickline, Racine; Melissa A. Wilfong, Middleport;
Jaqueline A. Wolf, Middleport; and Linda K.
Young, Middleport.
Those students earned a grade point average of
3.75 to 4.0.
The following students were named to tht
Dean's Honor List, having earned a grade point
average of 3.5 to 3.75: Lacy M. Banks, Pomeroy;
Jessica K. Brannon, Reedsville; Jennifer J. Cummins, Racine; Debra D. Dillon, Reedsville; Steven
J. McCullough, Pomeroy; Tara L Michael, Racine;
Michelle L. Miller, Middleport; Ella M . Moore,
Vinton; Martha R. Otto, Long Bottom;Alyson N.
Patterson, Pomeroy; Cynthia J. Sandy, Langsville;
Kelly L Smith, Racine; Michael W. Walker,
Pomeroy; Teresa L Williams, Pomeroy; Janelle L.
Yonker, Pomeroy.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
•

••• •

THURSDAY, June 29

RACINE - Southern High
School A-thletic Boosters,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the high
·school.

•••

FRIDAY, June 30
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center/Chillicothe will provide health care
enrollment Friday, 10 a.m. to
noon, and 1 to 2 p.m. at the
Veterans Service Office at 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
West Virginia residents welcome.' Proof of military service
Jequired at enrollment.

•••

SATURDAY,July 1
RACINE -

Star Grange

778, regular session, Saturday,
potluck supper, 6 :30 p.m. with
regular meeting at 8 p.m.
Inspection and election of officers. Members to take donations for food bank.
HARRISIONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F.&amp;A.M., Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
degree work. Refreshments.

and drinks provided.

•••

MONDAY, July 3
RUTLAND Rutland
Township 'J;rustees, Monday, 5
p.m for annual budget hearing
followed by regular meeting.

The Community Calendar
is publi1hed as a free
service to non-profit
SUNDAY, July 2
groups wishing to
LONG BOTTOM - Dave
announce meetings and
Dailey to speak, 7 p.m. Sunday
special events. The
adt the Long Bottom United ·
calendar is not designed to
Methodist Church.
promote IBies or fund
raisers of any type. Item•
RACINE - Annual Lenard
are printed only as space
Susan Jane
Roush
and
permits and cannot be
reunion, Sunday, Star Mill
Park, Racine. Dinner, 12:30 guaranteed to be printed a
p.m. take covered dish, meat
specific number of days. ·

•••

Adolescents of all ages
will get a bang out of Evolva
BY LARRY

There's a fine, fluid user interface and a suitably arcane set of keyboard commands and
Male adolescence is never cured, it only goes shortcuts, which is part of the fun of these
into remission.
things. And, obligatory in today's market,
And if you'd like yours to experience .a there's also multiplayer capability left
resurgence, consider Evolva, a shoot' em-up for untested, in this case, because a real adolescent
PCs from Interplay Entertainment, of Irvine, would have spotted my 50-something lack of
Calif.
skill in a second. · ·
The premise is str~ight from the save-theInterplay, which has taken some shots here
world fantasy that competes for attention with for software that didn't install or run properly,
the "Yes!Yes! she moaned" fantasy ~n a 15-year- gets a nod on this one, which installed and ran
old male's brain cells : A world-gobbling parasite exactly as advertised. But there's no Mac verthreatens to destroy all life, and you must con- sion apparent, which rates a hiss.
Be warned that this isn't some tiny applicatrol four genohunters to combat it.
, Genohunters · are warriors that can mutate tion : It wants 450 megabytes of hard disk space
. on the spot, absorbing the DNA of their (all that wonderful art and animation . doesn't
.defeated enemies. They can, for example, come in a few bytes) . But when you've fin~lly
become fire breathing if they kill a fire -breath- mastered it; the uninstall utility does a nice
ing enemy. ·
,1
clean job.
.
Other system requirements: Pentium II at
All this is done with animated gore and vio.lence, but it's in the comic book style and tone 233 megahertz or equivalent, 32 megabytes of
of KAPLOW! andKERBLAM! and not partic- RAM and a 3D video accelerator with at least
8 megabytes of memory, Windows 95-98 and
ularly offensive.
And ju~t like some comic book illustration is DirectX 6.1.
You can try a demo version at the Web site
. treasured today as art, Evolva's artists and animators deserve to take a bow. The landscapes (http:// www.interplay.com) or ' buy the softthey evoke are 'alien and compelling, the ani- ware for $44.81 - ~n odd price that, the commation cinematic in quality. Even if shooting pany says, reflects true price reductions. It's also
things isn't your bag, the artwork alone is widely available at retaiL
worth a look.
'
Questions and comments are welcome. Mail
But if art is something you don't plan to
to
Larry Blasko, AP, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New
appreciate for another 30 years or so, there are
t&gt;lenty of things to be killed, which is what York, NY 10020-1666. Or e-mail via the Internet to lblasko(at)ap.org.
earns the software its Teen rating.
BLASKO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•••

'

long time. - S.T. , Jacksonville, Fla .
their various activities, and I am running
Dear Jacksonville: You have writ- out of exc uses to say no. I don't want to
ten a letter that deserves the attention of hurt his feelings, but I am seriously conall women, especially those who are tol- cerned. Any suggestions' - Nervous
erating abuse. If there are children in the and Ano nymous
home, they will grow up to behave
Dear N. and A. : Enlist the help of
toward their mates the way they saw your dad's doctor. Inform him of the
their parents behave. You can count on situation and your concern. Insist Dad
it. This goes for verbal abuse, as well. So, go in fo r " a physical ," and let the doctor
watcn it, Folks. You are "giving lessons" lower the boom. When the word co mes
and setting an example, whether you from "on high ," he'll know he has no
know it or not.
choice.
Dear Ann Landers: My 82-yearIs ·life passing yo u by? Want to
old father is in reasonably good health, improve your social skills? Write for
but his driving skills have deteriorated Ann Landers' new booklet, " How 'co
noticeably. He often drives me and my Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
children to various places, but we no Send a self-addressed, long, business-siZe
longer feel comfortable riding with envelope and a check or money order
him.
for $4.25 (this includes postage and
Dad has never been involved in a handling) to: Friends, c/o Ann Landers,
traffic accident in the 50 years he has P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 been driving. Other family members say 0562. (In Canada, send $5. 15.) To fi nd
we are overreacting, but I am not will- out more about Ann Landers and read
ing to risk my children's lives to find her past columns, visit the C reators Synout. Dad still offers to drive the kids to dicate web page at www.creators.com.

Eastem honor roll announced
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
names of students named to
the Honor Roll for the fourth
nine-weeks grading period in
the Eastern Local School District have been announced.

Eastem

Elementary

ber, Jeremy Basham , Hallie
A/B,
Grade · Nine:
Brooks, Brian Castor, Brian Mirand a Buckl ey, C arrie
Crites, Brandon Goeglein, Crow, Sonya Frederi~_ k ,
Autumn Hauber, Bryce Beth
Gr e gory, Nichole
Honaker, Jessica Hupp , Honaker , Thoma s Sim Joshua Marcinko, David mons, Chris Wilson ; Grade
Maxson, Ashley McCaman, 10: Tammy Biss ell, Jennifer
Jesse Nutter, Shawn Reed, Buckley, Tina DeLaCruz ,
Brittany Roush , Brittney Garrett Karr, Chris Lyons,
Rucker, Tiffany Smith, Janet Ridenour, Danielle
Ashley, James Will, Charles Rucker, Sta cie Waison , Jon
Wilson, Amanda Windon; Will; Grade 1l: Juli BaiGrade
Seven: Jennifer ley, Amber Baker, Justin
Armes, Christopher Car- Brewer, Brandon Brown roll, Jon Dillard, Carrie ing, Kristen Chevalier, Josh
Elberfeld, Andrew Francis, Clark, Sarah Clifford, John
Ross
Holter,
Jessica Cooke,
Kevin
Keaton,
Howard, Dusty Murphy, Nathan
G.
Marcinko,
Ashton
Well,
Chelsea Amanda Northrup, Marsha
Young;
Grade
Eight: Persons, Matt Simpson;
Emily Brock, Kyle Con- Grade 12: Jessica Enklin ;
Rachael
Elliott, ringer, Robin Barringer,
Nathan Grubb, Brittany Matt Boyles, Josh Broder Hauber,
Ryan
Kidder, ick, Sarah Frank, Kim GodJessie Sargent, Philip Simp- win, Mendy Guess, Jessica
son, Andrea Warner.
Kimes,
Scott
Needs, ·
Brooke Nichols , Hilary ·
Peal,
David
Rankin, :
Christy Riley, Alison Rose, ·
Cassie Rose, Leah Sanden,
A.ll A'1, Grade Nine: Aaron Schaekel, Sarah SexNone; Grade 10: Bradley ton, Barbara Smith, Eric
Brannon, Ben Holter, Sara Smith, Leah Well, Amanda
Mansfield,
Kimberly Wheeler, Josh Will.

All A's, Grade Four:
Lindsey
Grate,
Kelsey
Holter,
Kyle· Rawson,
Nicholas Schultz, Morgan
Werry:
Grade
Five:
Nathaniel McGrath, Trista
Simmons,
Erin
Weber,
Derek Weber; Grade Six:
Christopher
Davis,
Nicholas Kuhn, Herbert
Mcintyre, Brooke Parker,
Derek Roush, Sara Wiggins; Grade Seven: Kenneth Amsbary, Brittany
Barnett,
Derek
Baum,
Cody Dill, Jennifer Hayman, Katie Hoxsie, Jessica
Kehl, Bryan Minear, Jaime
Reel, Darren Scarbrough,
Casey
Smith,
Morgan
Weber,
Krista
White;
Grade
Eight:
Jessica
Boyles, Alyssa Holter, Kasundra Lodwick, Jonathan
Owen, Tia Pratt, Rebecca Marcinko;
Grade
11:
Taylor.
Amber Church, Wes Crow,
A/B,
Grade
Four: Josh lhle, Josh Kehl, Joey
Kathryn
Bland, Mega.n Taylor; Grade 12: Jason
Broderick, Daniel Buckley, Barber, Matt
Caldwell,
Alexander
Burroughs, Molly Heines, Chasatie
Nathan
Carroll, Joshua Hollon, Jessica Pore, Steve
Collins, Rayn Davis, Kyle Weeks.
Edwards, Natasha Knapp,
Jarold
Kuhn,
Kara
Osborne, Hanna Pratt, Sara
Wachter, and Nikita Young;
Grade Five: Jessica Amos,
Stephanie Baker, Brittany
Bissell,
Sarah
Boston,
1,
.~·
Samantha Brown, Justin
Browning, Danielle Carroll,
Kimberly
Castor,
Kayla Collins, Ryan L.
'
~.
".~.r
' , J·· · ·~,
Davis, Linsee Davis, Evan
Dunn, Raven Etheridge,
Codey Gerlach, Georgana
Koblentz,
Tyler
Lee,
William Owen, Derek Putman, Cory Shaffer, Amber
Willbarger.
Grade Six: Patricia Bar-

Elstem

High School

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MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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IJ the

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OUR VIEW
'

.

"

Need

Dear Ann Landers: Recently, I was
diagnosed w ith breast cance r. I had a
normal mammogram and doctor's
examination, but four months later,
through self-examination, I felt a small
lump that turned out to be cancerous.
Please tell your readers it · is not
enough to have regular mammograms,
.ahhough they are very important. Most
women discover lumps themselves
through self-examination . If a woman
does not know how to perform this test
herself, her doctor can show her, or she
can get information at the public
·
library.
I always assumed I would not know
the difference between a dangerous
lump and the usual oddities 'in my
breasts, but I was wrong. Once I became
accustomed to the contours of my
breasts, 1 immediately recognized when
something was different.
Early detection and treatment gave
me the best chances of survivaL I hope
by writing to you, some women will

Report reveals known fact:
..
ARC is a big help
•
,.

·"A

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED P/lESS

! Today isThursday,June 29, the 181st day of2000.There are 185 days
: lett in the year.
; -~ Today's Highlight in. History:
·· -: On June 29, 1970, the United States ended a rwo-month military
' cilrensive into Cambodia.
I : On this date:
; ;jn 1767, the British Parliament approved the Townshend Revenue
: A:~ts, which imposed import duties on certain goods shipped to Amer: i~~· Colonists bitterly'protested the Acts, which were repealed in 1770.
~ ~·In 1776, the Virginia state constitution was adopted, and Patrick
~ ijenry made governor.
• ' In 1941 , Polish statesman, pianist and composer Ignace Jan
~aderewski died in New York at age 80.
~ j n 1946, British authorities arrested more than 2, 700 Jews in Pales:tirJe in an attempt to stamp out alleged terrorism.
.: In 1949, the govermi)ent of South Africa enacted a ban against
; ra0ally-mixed marriages.
·
; ; In 1954, the Atomic Energy Commission voted against re-instating
: ~· J Raben Opp~nheimer's access to classified information.
• - In 1966, the Unittd States bombed fuel storage facilities near the
l ~pnh Vietrtamese cities of Hanoi ,and Haiphong. ·
·: jn 1967, Jerusalem wu reunified as Israel remOiied bar~ica®s sepa.~g the Old City fi:om the Israeli sector.
· In 1972, the Supreme Coun ruled that the death penalty, as it wu
, being meted out, could constitute "cruel and unusual punishment."
•(The ruling prompted states to revise their capital punishment laws.)
. : In 1988, the Supreme Coun upheld, 7-1, the independent counsel

!

ltw.
:: Today's Birthdays: Actress Ruth Warrick is 85. Movie producer
~bert Evans is 70. Songwriter L. RusseU Brown is 60. Actor Gary
~ is 56. Singer Little Eva is 55. Comedian Richard Lewis is 53.
· 11:ctor Fred Grandy it 52. R ock musician Jan Paice (Deep Purple) is
it!. R ock singer Colin Hay {Men At Work) is 47.Acrress Maria Con; ~ta Alonso is 43. Singer Evelyn "Champagne" King is 40. Actress
~aron lawrence is 39. Actress Amanda Donohoe is 38.

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
begin doing regular self-examination,
because it could save their lives. M .M .,Who Speaks from Experience
Dear M .M.: You have wr·itten a letter that could mean the difference
between life and death. Thank yo11,
thank you, thank you. I hope every
woman who reads this will pay attention to your simple suggestion.
Dear Ann Landers: I must respond
to the woman who is divorced and living with her ex "for the sake of the children," even though he yells at her a lot.

My husband and I didn't divorce, but we
should have. I stayed because I told
myself that raising my childfen with a
bad example of a father was better than
no father at all. I was wrong.
He yelled at me a lot, to'o. Now, our
sons are grown and have no respect for
their wives. They learned it at home. If
we had girls instead, they would have
learned that they were supposed to be
knocked around, and to accept it. ·
That woman should ask herself if that
is the life she wants her children to have
when they are grown. She would do
herself and her children a much bigger
favor by getting them out of that environment as soon aJ possible. She should
let her children know everyone deserves
respect and that no one has to settle for
abusive treatment;
Please print my letter for the sake of
every woman who is stuck in a relationship with a man who shows her no
respect. Thanks for letting me express
myself. I've been meaning to write for a

COLLEGE NEWS

' ·' .

report rel~ased Wednesday has shown, without a doubt , the
• ·
Appalachian Regional Commission has played a significant
·. ·
role in improving the economic picture in the 13 states it
· · !erves, including Ohio and West Virginia.
A frequent target ofWashington budget
cutters,
ARC has lent a hand to numerous
· The money has
communities
for the past three decades.
· gone to put in
It has assisted in everything from job
: .".new businesses, creation to qualit)' of life issues. It has been
a catalyst for progress in an area that cries
- : creating jobs
out for development.
· where there
At least one lawmaker on Capitol Hill
were none
has likened ARC to a pork barrel project,
only
on a massive scale. This legislator
bifore. This is
thinks Appalachia has gotten enough fed, . difinitely not eral
fW1ding through ARC since its crepork.
ation 35 years ago.
But if skeptics would care to examine
•the report, they'll see ARC has helped turn poverty pockets . into
· · useful, taxpaying, productive areaJ. That doesn't fit the traditional
.label of pork barrel.
·
·· Money funneled into the region through ARC has helped build
- industrial parks, access roads, and water ·and sewer systems, and
- · assisted business incubators that provide infrastructure and technical
· ·assistance to start-up companies. The m\)ney haJ gone to put in new
"businesses, creating jobs where there were none before.
· This is definitely not pork.
· . · The agency's impact is well-known in southern Ohio and West
. ·· Virginia. When putting together financing packages for public
.. ·works improvements, local governments are in 'contact with ARC
· from the start.
· · · "ARC investments in infrastructure often play a pivotal role in
•helping communities meet basic infrastructure needs," said West Virginia Gov. Cecil H. Underwood, who serves aJ ARC States' cochairman.
Federal Co-Chairman Jesse L. White Jr. added the majority of the
l\gency's investments "are going to distressed and transitional coun?es, which are operating below national economic norms and
where the needs are greatest."
There are still a number of such counties in the region. ARC represents a chance for them to realize their goals to improve their
communities and the lives of their citizens.
•. Fortunately, our congressme'! and senators recognize ARC's
Importance. Every one of them knows what it means to their constituents. They will work to keep federal dollars flowing through
ARC until there is a day when Appalachia no longer feels the need
: for such assistance.
: That day might ~e a long time coming, but it's a goal we see more
i .~mmunities trying to reach.
: ' Don't call it a handout, because it's not. The region has waited a
i long time for its chance .to advance, and it needs all the help it can
~ get. Denying Appalachia that opportunity WOI!Id only prolong the
~ tragedy that's dogged the area for decades.

June 21, 2000

Reader stresses the importance of breast examination

The Daily Sentinel
...

Page~S

Named to dean's list
SYRACUSE -Jay Patrick McKelvey of Syracuse has been named to the Dean's List at Miami
University in Oxford.
Miami students on the dean's list earned a
grade point average of 3.5 or better.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

June polls reveal Gore is losing more ground
Whether he's playing the populist or New
Democrat, whether he's going negative or positive, the polling news just keeps getting worse
for Vice President AI Gore.
In five national poDs released over the past
two weeks, Texas Gov. George W. Bush's lead
over Gore averaged 8.3 points, up from 5
points in April and May.
In results released last week, the Voter.com
Battleground survey showed Bush's lead at 12
points, up from 6 in May and 4 in March. The
NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed Bush
leading by 8 points in June, compared with 5 in
April. In March, Gore was ahead by 3 points.
The week before, the Zogby poll showed
Bush up by nearly 8 points, compared to 1 in
May. The Los Angeles Times showed Bush up
by 10 percent, compared to 8 in May: Only the
Washington Post/ ABC News poll sho~ed a 1point narrowing of Bush's lead, from 5 points
to 4.
The new polls do not take into account
Gore's "prosperity tour," the death penalty controversy in Texas or the gasoline price spike, but
it's difficult to see how any of this will improve
Gore's position .
And a Justice Deparmtent investigator's 'recommendation that a special counsel be
appointed to probe Gore's 1996 fund raising
could be .a serious threat even ifAttorney General Janet Reno again refuses to make the
appointment.
Politically speaking, the recommendation
links Gore anew to ethical lapses that give President Clinton a personal disapproval rating of
64 percent in the Battleground poll.
Meanwhile, Gore's "prosperity tour" is
designed to accomplish important and necessary tasks: tie the vice president to the country's
current robust economy and bolster hjs standing with the Democratic base.
The problem is that news stories about Gore
constantly seem to emphasize process - his
various theme shifts, personal makeovers and
changes 'in campaign management.

.URG announces dean's list

skewed heavily toward lower-income Americans.
The major theme of Gore's "prosperity tour"
i&lt; positive- that "discipline has been essentlal
to the prosperity we have today" and that he
wants "to make this election about the big
choices we have to make to secure prosperity
and progress."
If anyone is listening, these are·messages Gore
needs to pound home. Right now, according-to
the Battleground survey. voters believe by a
NEA COLUMNIST
margin of 47 to 35 percent that Bush is better
able to keep the country prosperous.
Somehow, Gore has got to make his long
Gore did well in tapping cool-headed Com- experience in national office a decisive factor
merce S'eeretary Bil)'Daley \o replace abrasive for voters. He leads Bush in this category by 50
ex-Rep. Tony Coelho (D-Calif) as his cam- to 38 percent in the Battleground survey and
pai~ manager, but the switch got more atten- by 40 to 31 percent in the NBC/Wall Street
tion than Gore~s message.
Journal poll.
The new polls indicate Gore still has work to
But t~ll NBC poll indicated that experience
do in consolidating the Democratic base. In the is currently the third most important quality
Battleground survey, Bush has the support of voters are looking for in a president - and
93 percent of Republicans, but Gore only has Bush holds huge leads in the first two: trustthe support of 79 percent of Democrats.
worthiness and leadership ability.
Voters in union households and women are
In both polls, Bush holds a 12-point lead
split almost evenly between Gore and Bush, over Gore on the question of who can be trustand self-identified "Reagan Demcrcrats" favor ed to do the right thing. Asked which candiBush by 54 to 36 percent. Gore leads among date has stronger leadership qualities, Bush
Hispanics by 53 to 41 percent, but he is scor- leads by 55 to 30 percent in the Battleground
ing about 10 percent below the usual perfor- survey and 46 to 25 percent in the NBC/Wall
mance for a Democrat.
Street Journal poll.
To solidifY the base, Gore has been sounding
Bush presumably bolstered his leadetship
populist themes oflate, blaming oil companies lead by calmly handling the Gary Graham
for the increase in gasoline prices and drug death penalty controversy in Texas, even if there
companies for the high cost of medicine.
was reason to think the convicted killer
Democrats are trying to tie Bush, a former deserved a reprieve because his trial lawyer repoil man with industry contributors, to gas resented him badly.
prices. But the link isn't clear, and the price
The constant refrain of the Gore campaign is
spike is just as easily pinned on Clinton-Gore that voters- especially Democrats -are busy
energy and environmental policy.
with summer concerns and are not focused on
Gore also has beerl making populist propos- politics. But at the mome~t, Gore shows no
. als. When he announced his estate-tax-reduc- signs he knows how to give them a wake-up
tion proposal, he said the Republican alterna- call.
tive would "give a massive taX break to the
wealthiest Americans." His other tax cuts and
(Morton Kondracke is executive edit~r of Rbll
his "retirement savings t&gt;lus" proposal . are Call,.the newspaper cf Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

.

'HARDBALL'

This is a year for a dramatic presidential choice
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
One leader JVOuld steer 21st-century
NANTUCKET, Mass. - This little Atlantic
America in the direction personal
island offers a clear, off-shore prospect on this
enterprise and self-reliance. The other
fall's election.
JVOuld ~ro~ to me a Clintonesque
Cut through the fog of detail and petulance
and you discover a stark difference between JVOrd, the economic role ofgovernment.
George W. Bush and Albert Gore.
One leader would steer 21st- century Ameri- individuals are freed fi:om government control
ca in the direction of personal enterprise and and taxation to make their marks, follow their
self-reliance. The other would grow, to use a dreants. The other promises a government that
Clintonesque word, the economic role of gov- educates us in youth, guards us, comforts and
ernment.
guarantees our security in old age.
In both cases, the program the man pushes
On Social Security, Bush wants to introduce
reflects the life he has led.
a measure of private •enterprise with a bit of
Bush has spent his life as a Texan taking risk. Workers could choose to invest a portion
chances. He \fied first in the oil business, tried of their payroll tax in private invesrments.
second and successfully in the baseball business.
Gore would keep the syste~ basically as it is
Except for the Air National Guard, he's never now.We get taxed while we work, receive benbeen on a government payroll.
efits when we retire. Lower-income workers
Gore has lived his life in Washington. After would be offered a second entitlement: three
Viemam he reported on politicians, then quick- doDars of taxpayer money for every dollar they
ly became one of them, scaling the constitu- save toward retirement.
tional ladder of House to Senate to Vice PresiThe two men's positions on Social Security
dency. It was the same ladder Richard Nixon reflect their life philosophies. Bush would free
climbed during Gore's youth , the same rival payroll dollars for private investment. Gore
Jack Kennedy might have taken had he won would go the other direction, creating a second
that improbable try for VP in '56.
government program that collects, transfers and
Now in middle age, Bush and Gore are offer- redistributes more tax dollars fi:om current
ingAmericans a future that celebmtes their own workers to low-income retirees.
separate careers. One proposes a country where
Connect the dot• and we notice that Bush

cif

wants a big tax cut. Gore needs to keep taxes
high to pay for such government benefits as free
drugS for retirees and that extra three dollars for
every dollar someone saves.
On education, Bush backs vouchers to allow
parents the subsidized choice to enroll their
children in parochial or other private schools.
Gore would put all public backing behind public schools alone.
On crime, Bush comes from the state that
fights crime with capital punishment and laws
that let men and women carry concealed
weapons. Gore may be the most ,zealous gun
controller ever to run for president. Again, one
likes self-reliance and personal responsibilitYThe other pushes the power of government to
protect us.
:
On the environment, the choice is also clear.
Bush seems comfortable with big business.
G,on; agrees with Theodore Roosevelt: if anyone. IS gomg to protect this country's bounty, it's
not going to be the boys in the boardroom. ·
So, in addition to being the year of Kathy's
and my 20th wedding anniversary - we came
back here where it all started to celebrate! 2000 is also the year of a true, dramatic presidential choice for the country.

(Chris Matthews, chief cf tlw Sa&gt;1 Frandsco ExamWashington Bureau, is host cf "Hardball" an
CNBC and MSNBC cable channels.)

i&gt;~er's

RIO GRANDE - The following students
were named to the dean's honor list for the spring
quarter at the University of Rio Grande: Brian M.
Allen, Syracuse; Betheney A. Bay, Reedsville; Mary
.E. Blair, Pomeroy; Christy D. Drake, Racine;
.Shannon Enright, Rutland; Maria D. Frecker,
.Racine; Danielle E . Grueser, Pomeroy; Whitney
C. Haptonstall, Pomeroy; Lori B. Hill, Racine; Lisa
K. Honaker, Middleport; Kimberly D. Janey,
langsville; Jennifer R. Lawrence, Syracuse; Mark
F. Lewis, Pomeroy; Andrea M. McDonald,

Langsville; Jeannette L McDonald, Langsville;
Vicki L. Morrison, Middleport; Adam W. Roush,
Racine; Brandy M. Start, Pomeroy; Beverly D.
Stewart, Rutland; Teresa Varoam, Rutland; Kyle A.
Wickline, Racine; Melissa A. Wilfong, Middleport;
Jaqueline A. Wolf, Middleport; and Linda K.
Young, Middleport.
Those students earned a grade point average of
3.75 to 4.0.
The following students were named to tht
Dean's Honor List, having earned a grade point
average of 3.5 to 3.75: Lacy M. Banks, Pomeroy;
Jessica K. Brannon, Reedsville; Jennifer J. Cummins, Racine; Debra D. Dillon, Reedsville; Steven
J. McCullough, Pomeroy; Tara L Michael, Racine;
Michelle L. Miller, Middleport; Ella M . Moore,
Vinton; Martha R. Otto, Long Bottom;Alyson N.
Patterson, Pomeroy; Cynthia J. Sandy, Langsville;
Kelly L Smith, Racine; Michael W. Walker,
Pomeroy; Teresa L Williams, Pomeroy; Janelle L.
Yonker, Pomeroy.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
•

••• •

THURSDAY, June 29

RACINE - Southern High
School A-thletic Boosters,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the high
·school.

•••

FRIDAY, June 30
POMEROY Veterans
Affairs Medical Center/Chillicothe will provide health care
enrollment Friday, 10 a.m. to
noon, and 1 to 2 p.m. at the
Veterans Service Office at 117
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
West Virginia residents welcome.' Proof of military service
Jequired at enrollment.

•••

SATURDAY,July 1
RACINE -

Star Grange

778, regular session, Saturday,
potluck supper, 6 :30 p.m. with
regular meeting at 8 p.m.
Inspection and election of officers. Members to take donations for food bank.
HARRISIONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F.&amp;A.M., Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
degree work. Refreshments.

and drinks provided.

•••

MONDAY, July 3
RUTLAND Rutland
Township 'J;rustees, Monday, 5
p.m for annual budget hearing
followed by regular meeting.

The Community Calendar
is publi1hed as a free
service to non-profit
SUNDAY, July 2
groups wishing to
LONG BOTTOM - Dave
announce meetings and
Dailey to speak, 7 p.m. Sunday
special events. The
adt the Long Bottom United ·
calendar is not designed to
Methodist Church.
promote IBies or fund
raisers of any type. Item•
RACINE - Annual Lenard
are printed only as space
Susan Jane
Roush
and
permits and cannot be
reunion, Sunday, Star Mill
Park, Racine. Dinner, 12:30 guaranteed to be printed a
p.m. take covered dish, meat
specific number of days. ·

•••

Adolescents of all ages
will get a bang out of Evolva
BY LARRY

There's a fine, fluid user interface and a suitably arcane set of keyboard commands and
Male adolescence is never cured, it only goes shortcuts, which is part of the fun of these
into remission.
things. And, obligatory in today's market,
And if you'd like yours to experience .a there's also multiplayer capability left
resurgence, consider Evolva, a shoot' em-up for untested, in this case, because a real adolescent
PCs from Interplay Entertainment, of Irvine, would have spotted my 50-something lack of
Calif.
skill in a second. · ·
The premise is str~ight from the save-theInterplay, which has taken some shots here
world fantasy that competes for attention with for software that didn't install or run properly,
the "Yes!Yes! she moaned" fantasy ~n a 15-year- gets a nod on this one, which installed and ran
old male's brain cells : A world-gobbling parasite exactly as advertised. But there's no Mac verthreatens to destroy all life, and you must con- sion apparent, which rates a hiss.
Be warned that this isn't some tiny applicatrol four genohunters to combat it.
, Genohunters · are warriors that can mutate tion : It wants 450 megabytes of hard disk space
. on the spot, absorbing the DNA of their (all that wonderful art and animation . doesn't
.defeated enemies. They can, for example, come in a few bytes) . But when you've fin~lly
become fire breathing if they kill a fire -breath- mastered it; the uninstall utility does a nice
ing enemy. ·
,1
clean job.
.
Other system requirements: Pentium II at
All this is done with animated gore and vio.lence, but it's in the comic book style and tone 233 megahertz or equivalent, 32 megabytes of
of KAPLOW! andKERBLAM! and not partic- RAM and a 3D video accelerator with at least
8 megabytes of memory, Windows 95-98 and
ularly offensive.
And ju~t like some comic book illustration is DirectX 6.1.
You can try a demo version at the Web site
. treasured today as art, Evolva's artists and animators deserve to take a bow. The landscapes (http:// www.interplay.com) or ' buy the softthey evoke are 'alien and compelling, the ani- ware for $44.81 - ~n odd price that, the commation cinematic in quality. Even if shooting pany says, reflects true price reductions. It's also
things isn't your bag, the artwork alone is widely available at retaiL
worth a look.
'
Questions and comments are welcome. Mail
But if art is something you don't plan to
to
Larry Blasko, AP, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New
appreciate for another 30 years or so, there are
t&gt;lenty of things to be killed, which is what York, NY 10020-1666. Or e-mail via the Internet to lblasko(at)ap.org.
earns the software its Teen rating.
BLASKO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•••

'

long time. - S.T. , Jacksonville, Fla .
their various activities, and I am running
Dear Jacksonville: You have writ- out of exc uses to say no. I don't want to
ten a letter that deserves the attention of hurt his feelings, but I am seriously conall women, especially those who are tol- cerned. Any suggestions' - Nervous
erating abuse. If there are children in the and Ano nymous
home, they will grow up to behave
Dear N. and A. : Enlist the help of
toward their mates the way they saw your dad's doctor. Inform him of the
their parents behave. You can count on situation and your concern. Insist Dad
it. This goes for verbal abuse, as well. So, go in fo r " a physical ," and let the doctor
watcn it, Folks. You are "giving lessons" lower the boom. When the word co mes
and setting an example, whether you from "on high ," he'll know he has no
know it or not.
choice.
Dear Ann Landers: My 82-yearIs ·life passing yo u by? Want to
old father is in reasonably good health, improve your social skills? Write for
but his driving skills have deteriorated Ann Landers' new booklet, " How 'co
noticeably. He often drives me and my Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely."
children to various places, but we no Send a self-addressed, long, business-siZe
longer feel comfortable riding with envelope and a check or money order
him.
for $4.25 (this includes postage and
Dad has never been involved in a handling) to: Friends, c/o Ann Landers,
traffic accident in the 50 years he has P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 been driving. Other family members say 0562. (In Canada, send $5. 15.) To fi nd
we are overreacting, but I am not will- out more about Ann Landers and read
ing to risk my children's lives to find her past columns, visit the C reators Synout. Dad still offers to drive the kids to dicate web page at www.creators.com.

Eastem honor roll announced
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
names of students named to
the Honor Roll for the fourth
nine-weeks grading period in
the Eastern Local School District have been announced.

Eastem

Elementary

ber, Jeremy Basham , Hallie
A/B,
Grade · Nine:
Brooks, Brian Castor, Brian Mirand a Buckl ey, C arrie
Crites, Brandon Goeglein, Crow, Sonya Frederi~_ k ,
Autumn Hauber, Bryce Beth
Gr e gory, Nichole
Honaker, Jessica Hupp , Honaker , Thoma s Sim Joshua Marcinko, David mons, Chris Wilson ; Grade
Maxson, Ashley McCaman, 10: Tammy Biss ell, Jennifer
Jesse Nutter, Shawn Reed, Buckley, Tina DeLaCruz ,
Brittany Roush , Brittney Garrett Karr, Chris Lyons,
Rucker, Tiffany Smith, Janet Ridenour, Danielle
Ashley, James Will, Charles Rucker, Sta cie Waison , Jon
Wilson, Amanda Windon; Will; Grade 1l: Juli BaiGrade
Seven: Jennifer ley, Amber Baker, Justin
Armes, Christopher Car- Brewer, Brandon Brown roll, Jon Dillard, Carrie ing, Kristen Chevalier, Josh
Elberfeld, Andrew Francis, Clark, Sarah Clifford, John
Ross
Holter,
Jessica Cooke,
Kevin
Keaton,
Howard, Dusty Murphy, Nathan
G.
Marcinko,
Ashton
Well,
Chelsea Amanda Northrup, Marsha
Young;
Grade
Eight: Persons, Matt Simpson;
Emily Brock, Kyle Con- Grade 12: Jessica Enklin ;
Rachael
Elliott, ringer, Robin Barringer,
Nathan Grubb, Brittany Matt Boyles, Josh Broder Hauber,
Ryan
Kidder, ick, Sarah Frank, Kim GodJessie Sargent, Philip Simp- win, Mendy Guess, Jessica
son, Andrea Warner.
Kimes,
Scott
Needs, ·
Brooke Nichols , Hilary ·
Peal,
David
Rankin, :
Christy Riley, Alison Rose, ·
Cassie Rose, Leah Sanden,
A.ll A'1, Grade Nine: Aaron Schaekel, Sarah SexNone; Grade 10: Bradley ton, Barbara Smith, Eric
Brannon, Ben Holter, Sara Smith, Leah Well, Amanda
Mansfield,
Kimberly Wheeler, Josh Will.

All A's, Grade Four:
Lindsey
Grate,
Kelsey
Holter,
Kyle· Rawson,
Nicholas Schultz, Morgan
Werry:
Grade
Five:
Nathaniel McGrath, Trista
Simmons,
Erin
Weber,
Derek Weber; Grade Six:
Christopher
Davis,
Nicholas Kuhn, Herbert
Mcintyre, Brooke Parker,
Derek Roush, Sara Wiggins; Grade Seven: Kenneth Amsbary, Brittany
Barnett,
Derek
Baum,
Cody Dill, Jennifer Hayman, Katie Hoxsie, Jessica
Kehl, Bryan Minear, Jaime
Reel, Darren Scarbrough,
Casey
Smith,
Morgan
Weber,
Krista
White;
Grade
Eight:
Jessica
Boyles, Alyssa Holter, Kasundra Lodwick, Jonathan
Owen, Tia Pratt, Rebecca Marcinko;
Grade
11:
Taylor.
Amber Church, Wes Crow,
A/B,
Grade
Four: Josh lhle, Josh Kehl, Joey
Kathryn
Bland, Mega.n Taylor; Grade 12: Jason
Broderick, Daniel Buckley, Barber, Matt
Caldwell,
Alexander
Burroughs, Molly Heines, Chasatie
Nathan
Carroll, Joshua Hollon, Jessica Pore, Steve
Collins, Rayn Davis, Kyle Weeks.
Edwards, Natasha Knapp,
Jarold
Kuhn,
Kara
Osborne, Hanna Pratt, Sara
Wachter, and Nikita Young;
Grade Five: Jessica Amos,
Stephanie Baker, Brittany
Bissell,
Sarah
Boston,
1,
.~·
Samantha Brown, Justin
Browning, Danielle Carroll,
Kimberly
Castor,
Kayla Collins, Ryan L.
'
~.
".~.r
' , J·· · ·~,
Davis, Linsee Davis, Evan
Dunn, Raven Etheridge,
Codey Gerlach, Georgana
Koblentz,
Tyler
Lee,
William Owen, Derek Putman, Cory Shaffer, Amber
Willbarger.
Grade Six: Patricia Bar-

Elstem

High School

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�• Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 22, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

"ahama
High
School·alumni
dinner
held
.
'

, •;The 2000 Wahama H igh School
'·Alumni Dinner was held on May 27 in
, .1\le high .chool cafeteria. The cafeteria
·, wasd ecorated in the school colors of red
arid white. Pictures of the old Wahama
High School and a list of the principals
, ~ere on display.
• · Jim Stewart gave the welcome with
: ~ori e Clarke Walburn giving the
: invOcation. Following the ham dinner,
: prepared by the WHS band boosters, a
: program on the principals was given .
; Don Fogleso ng, principal from 1945: 47, told those·attending how he was For, rest Bachtel's best friend and admired
: him.The guest speaker was Kitty Bachtel
• Dallas of Augora Hills, Calif She com: men ted on her father's love of family, stu: dents, teach ers and Wahama H igh
· School: She was presented with a
: Wahama mug.
, Marjorie Clarke Walburn read a letter
; from Kitty Clarke Hubbard. She was to
; have been the other guest speaker as
: niece of Alice Clarke Harris, a long-time
· Wahama teacher. She mentioned the
: excellent education she received at
: Wahama and good examples to follow
; through the years.
, Ronnie Flowers gave a tribute to
; James Diehl, former teacher ·and later
: principal in Ohio. He expressed Diehl
· had always motivated him to do his best
. and he did.
Marjorie Clarke Walburn gave a trib·
; ute to Clyde Foley, principal from 1947
: to 1970. She told of Foley helping her
; adjust as a first junior high student who
: came from a one room school.
. Jim Stewart introduced two former
I teachers, Paul "Doug" Nease and son,
: Richard Nease of Chester.They were the
: only father-son duo of teachers Wahama
: ever had. Paul Nease taught shop, weld; ing and automechanics as well as being
: the school's first driver's education
: teacher. Richard Nease taught high
: school English and directed plays. Their
: wife and mother, Alice Smith Nease, was
: a long-time music teacher at Wahama
: and wrote the fight song. Her mother,
• Aorence Smith, wrote the alma mater.
.' Scholarship chairman Marjorie Clarke
• Walburn announced the 2000 winner of
: the $500 Marie C. Roush Scholarship
: was Charles Joshua Reed. Pat Roush
: Noel read a thank you letter of tribute to
; Marie C. Roush. Reed was unable to
; attend due to previous commitments.

T he chairman presented the $500
alumna scholarship to Curtis Blessing
and the Class of 1955 scholarship to
Kacyndra Johnson. The winners were
guests of the alumni.
Last year, an honorary Wahaman
Award was given to Linda Noel McKinney and she was presented with a plaque
for her work. The Wahama Elite had two
members attending, Evelyn Proffitt and
Sarah Foster. They were presented with
totebags from rhe alumni.
A Wahama throw was the door prize
,won by Juanita Capehart Abbott. Gift
certificates were won by Wally Stewart,
Alera Weaver, Susie Hall, Carol Proffitt,
Jim Proffitt and John Layne.
Marjorie Clarke Walburn introduced
the 2000 Outstanding Wahaman Phil
Goodnite, principaL She gave testimonies
of teachers and students who revere
Goodnite. Jim Stewart presented Goodnile with a plaque from the alumni.
"Under Construction" a barbershop
quartet entertained the group and the
evening concluded with John Layne
leading the Alma Mater.
Attending were: 1927- Evelyn Proffitt,
Mason ; 1929- Sarah Foster, Mason;
1931- Donald Foglesong, Mason; 1933Mildred Fry, New Haven; 1934- Alice
Miller, New Haven; 1936- Barbara
McDaniel, Masoh and Surrilla Gilland,
New. Haven; 1937- Clara Capehart,
Letart; 1938- Alfreda Merideth, Belpre,
Ohio; 1939- Jim Hart and guest Sandra,
Hurricane, Raymond Grinstead and
guest Donna Fowler, Mason. Ida Diehl,
Pomeroy, Ohio, and Lila Zerklt, Mason;
1940- Mary .Thabet, Mason, Hazel
Smith, Mason, Geraldine Gibbs and guest
Carl Gibbs, New Haven, Ada Mae Wolfe
and guest Jackis Davis, Richmond, Ind.,
June VanMatre, Mason, Milton Rae and
guest Mary, Dothan, Ala., Opal Rollins
Williams, Belpre, Ohio, and Mary Workman, New Haven; 1942- Ralph Gibbs
and guesr Dorothy Gibbs, New Haven;
1943- Ben Sayre, Hillard, Ohio, Anna
Belle Hudnall, New Haven, Dorothy
Dawson and guest Burrell, New Haven;
1945- Ralph Sayre and guest Grace
Sayre, Parkersburg; Loretta Haynes,
Letart, Lorna Johnson, West Columbia,
Nao.mi Hudson Yeager, Lellart, Hester
Weaver, New Haven, Floyd Capehart,
Moundsville, Luther Tucker, Mason- and
Joyce Carson, West Columllia; J,946Chades Yeager :'nd guest La Vern, M:rson,

WMS ALUMNI- Don Foglesong, former teacher and coach at Wahama High School,
introduced Kitty Dallas of California, guest speaker at the recent Wahama High
School Alumni Association Dinner. She Is the daughter of Forrest Bechtel, former
teacher and coach at WHS for whom the football field Is named. Diagnosed with
Parllinson's Dise·ase, Bachtel continued his interest in education by designing a
headpiece to allow him to read although he lost all muscle control with the illness.
Pictured during the alumni event are, from left, Foglesong, Dallas, WHS Alumni President Jim Stewart and Mrs. James (Ida) Diehl.

Pete Burris and Betty Burris, New
Haven, Betty Rice, Marion, Ill., Wallace
Stewart and guest Viola, Lexington, Ky. ,
and Orpha Fields, New Haven;
1947- Willis Dudding, Flagler Beach,
Fla. , Dorothy Sayre, Hillard, Ohio,
Robert Barton and guest Bonnie; Middleport, Sarah Gibbs, New Haven, Enid
Layne Adams and guest Carroll Adams,
New Haven; 1948- Exalee Fry Wolfe,
Middleport,
Evelyn
Weirick,
Ravenswood, Francis Young, Dunbar,
Barbara Zerkle; New Haven, Attarah
Dewhurst, Letart, Kathleen Roush, New
Haven, Danny Yonker, Mason, James
Sprouse and guest Cherly Sprouse, Long
Bottom; Dale Sayre, Hillard, Ohio and
Avalee Hanshaw, Vienna;
1949- Rosanna Fry Manley, Racine;
1950- Robert Stewart and guest; Gladys,
Mason, Vernon Smith and guest Janet,
New Haven, Arlene Sayre Grimm and
guest George, Letart, Barbara Hoffinan
Gerlach, Mt. Alto, Gerald Kelly, Pomeroy,
Dorothy Stone James, New Haven, Lewis
Gilland, Mason, Charlotte Yonker,
Mason, Velma Clark and guest Lowell
Grimm, Letart, Irma Gilland, Mason,
Billy June Hayes, New Haven, Juanita
Abbott and guest Almeda Powell, Point
Pleasant, Pat Smith Wilson, Reedsville,

Ohio, Vernon Roush, Mason, Jim Layne
and guest Pat Layne, N ew Haven, Donald Kay and guest Shirley, New Haven,
Faye Tucker R,ussell and guest Donald
Russell, Mason, Margie Cartwright and .
guest Charles Cartwright, Mason, Jakcie
Fox and guest Betty, Clifton, Mary ].
Capehart, Moundsville, Bill Cook and
guest Rosemary, Pomeroy, Aleta Snyder
Weaver, New Haven, Joanna Varian
Council, Langsville, Ohio, Red Tucker,
Mason, Paula Van Meter Camp and guest
Cindy Johnson;
1951- .Wyllis Davis, New Haven,
Charles Roush, New Haven, Rose Ross
Corliss, Pomeroy, Eleanor Weaver Davis,
New Haven; 1953- Ben Roush , Letart;
1954- Jim Stewart, Chester, Ohio, Phyllis
Scott and guest Jerry, New Haven,
Robert Harless and guest Peggy Harless,
Mason, Ronnie Flowers and guest Barbara, Elk Grove Village, IlL, Mary Fowler,
Point Pleasant and Ruth Lieving Roush,
Letart; 1955- Bob Roush, Mason, Gary
Miller, New Haven, .Shirley Tucker,
Mason, Geraldine Mattox Roush, New
Haven, Jim Proffitt, Mason, Carol Proffitt, Mason, Marjorie Clark Walburn and
guest Dale, Middlbport, Peggy .Edwards,
Mason, Patricia Roush Noel and guest
Lindsey, Pomeroy, Susie Cartwright Hall

and guest Susa'n, Middleport and Carol
Workman, Mason;
1956- Braunda Ballou, East Douglas,
Ma.; 1958- John Layne, Witon, Conn.,
Gary Roush and guest Teresa, Mason, .
Agnes
Roush, Mason, Marilyn
Foglesong Johnson, Snellville, Ga. and
James Johnson, Snellville, Ga.; 1959Donnie VanMatre, Point Pleasant, Donald
Embleton and guest Patricia, Americus,
Ga., Bill Foglesong, Hochessin, Dele.,
Doris Elliott Coffee,Vinton, Ohio; 1960Sue Miller, New Haven, Sally Roush
Ebersbach, Syracuse, Ohio, Delores
Long, Middleport, Delores Reitmire
Johnson, Letart, James Maynard and guest
Patricia, Mason, Zorra Jones Johnson,
Pomeroy, David E. Roush and guest
Polly, Rockford , lll.,Wilmarine Hill,West
Columbia; 1961- David H . Zirkle,
Racine; 1962- Ann Hayes Zirkle, Racine
and Eddie VanMatre, Mason;
1963- Amy Roush, New Haven, and
Elizabeth Ohlinger, New Haven; 1965Dana Lewis, Clifton, Reginald Hart,
Hurricane, Judith Duncan McWhorter,
Point Pleasant, Mary Foster Hendricks,
Mason, Patricia Thompson Johnson,
Letart, and Glen Johnson, Letart; 1966Nancy Proffitt, Mason, Phil Goodnite
and guest Barbara, Point Pleasant; 1967Jennifer Zerkle Hart, Hurricane; 1968Gary Green and guest Penny, Wellston;
1969- Juanita Friend, Cottageville; 1970Sally Yeauger Ross and guest Ralph,
Mason, Nancy Roush Woodard arid
guest Linda . McKinney, New Haven,
Cinda Foglesong, Kingsport, Tenn., and
Barry Haynes, Letart;
1973- Vernon Roush Jr. and guest
Gayle of Gallipolis and Pmy Riley
Roush, Mason; 1975- Martha Jones
Sayre, Evans, Charles Hoffinan, Letart,
and Melissa Hoffinan, Letart; 1978- Greg
Blessing, Letart; 1979- Mandy Blessing,
Letart; 1985- Valerie Poindester, Cross
Lanes, Stephanie Salser Mann and guest
James, Huber Heights, Ohio, and Wendy
Harbour Miller, Lebanon, Ohio; 1986Sherry Gerlach .Williamson; 1989- Jerry
Mullins; 1990- Robert Ash, Lawrenceburg, Ind. and Maria Ash, Lawrenceburg,
Ind.; and 2000- Curtis· Ryan Blessing,
Charles Joshua Reed, Robert Anthony
Barnitz and Michelle Peterson. Guests
included George and Kitty Bachtel Dallas, Joe Bachtel, Carol Bachtel Tannehill
and Dr. Harry Keig.

'• -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~··~----------------------------------~------I

!Garden
!create a

e ·buffet can
garden party

'

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Restaurateur Pino Luganp says dining outFive Bean Salad with Scallions
; doors is like having a .date with nature, taking'
and Horseradfsh Vinaigrette
:it easy with style.
1 cup dry chick-peas
: His menu: Fried Zucchini and Zucchini
i Blossoms, Pole~;~ Ia with Wild Mushrooms and
1 cup dry cannellini {whi~e kidney beans)
: Spinach, Black Olive and Zucchini Tart,
1 cup dry borlotti {cranberry or Roman
: Roasted Root Vegetables, Farrotto with beans)
; Morel Mushrooms, Ravoli Filled with Pappa
1 cup dry black- eyed peas
: at':Pomodoro and Black Cabbage, Five-Bean
1 cup dry green lentils
l S7.:Iad with Scallions and Horseradish Vinai1 cup dry barley
1~tette and Garden Vegetable Panzanella.
1 carrot, peeled
: {l':ecipes for the salad and panzanella follow.)
1 stalk celery, rinsed
· Panzanella, by the way, is a Tuscan word
1 whole onion, peeled
~ indicating that a salad requires the use of
1 bouquet garni (1 spring rosemary, 2
' bread cube's and vegetables . If the bread is not
'
:completely
stale, dry the cubes by putting whole peeled cloves garlic, 2 sprigs thyme, all
tthem in a 300 F oven for a few minutes, but wrapped and tied in cheesecloth)
2 1/2 teaspoons salt
:don't let them brown.
'
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, plus
Garden Vegetable Panzanella .
113 cup for dressing .
'
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
;' • 6 slices stale Tuscan-style bread, crusts
1 teaspoon freshly grated horseradish
:removed, cut into 112-inch cubes
2 bunches fresh scallions, rinsed and cut
: 6 ripe tomatoes, cut into small wedges
into
1 /2-inch slices {white and light green
t
112 red bell pepper, cut lengthwise into
portions only)
/ 2-inch strips
112 yellow bell pepper, cut lengthwise
Freshly ground black pepper .to taste
:into 1/2-inch strips
In separate pots or bowls, soak the ehick: jl ounces mushrooms (choose your favorite; peas, cannellini, borlotti and black-eyed peas
:anything from button mushrooms to shiitake) in plenty of water overnight. Soak the lentils
;cut into 1 I 4- inch slices
and barley 'sepani.t ely for 2 hours.
: 2 stalks celery, cut into 1/4~inch slices
Fill a big pot two-thirds full with. water.
: 6 scallions, white and green parts, cut diagAdd the carrot, celery, onion and the bouquet
{)nally into 1/2- inch lengths
garni and put on high heat. When the water
: 6 baby carrots, peeled and left whole, with
comes to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer .
:an ionch of green stem still attached
for 20 minutes. Stir in the borlotti and chick' Salt and freshly groun,d pepper to taste
peas, then in tO-minute intervals, the canI I 4 cup red wine vinegar
nellini, th e black- eyed peas, the ·barley; and
1/ 2 cup extra virgin olive oil
' 12 leaves fresh basil, torn roughly by hand finally, the lentils. Add 2 teaspoons of the salt .
. Place all vegetables - tomatoes, bell pep- Simmer until the beans are cooked but not
p ets, mushrooms , celery, scallions carrots mushy; about 20 minutes mole. Strain the
l n a bowl .and set aside.
beans through a colander, pick out and dis: Make a vinaigrette in a small bowl by dis- card the vegetables and the bouquet garni,
~ olving a teaspoon of salt in the vinegar, then and spread the beans out to cool on a ~beet
J;"dding th'e olive oil slowly, whisking continu- pan . Drizzle 2 tablespoons of olive oil over
;in.y to emulsify.
them and stir to coar.
;~• .Pour th e vinaigrette over the vegetables
In a bowl , dissolve the remaining salt in the
·ana to ss well to coat evenly. Sprinkle dry
red wine vinegar with a whisk. Add the gratbread cubes lightl y with water by dippi ng and
fli c k.ing your fin gers over them once or twice, ' ed horseradish and the 1 /3-cup olive oil and
~ nd: add th em to th e salad · bowl along with beat with a whisk until the dressing is emulthe 'basiL Toss again. Season with salt and pep- sified.
In a large bowl, mix the be,ans with the
fe r.
.
.
.
·
. Taste 11. If you th1 nk 1t needs something, vi naigrette and the scallions. Finish the ·salad
make some more vinajgrett e.
by grinding plenty of black .pepper over it.
: '1\.1alces 12 servi ngs.
Makes 6 servin.gs.

\t

•

Mega pixel mania hits consumer digital cameras
'

FOR IW SPECIAL FEATURES

All the digital camera manufacturers seem to have got
involved in a race to offer cameras
with more and more pixels, or
picture elements.
I realized this recently "!alking
down New York City's Fifth
Avenue. In one discount store
window !'saw dozens of compact
and lightweight digital cameras,
all with brightly-colored sigt)S
touting the number of pixels.
It was megapixel mania, with
many cameras offering two and
three million pixels. Most were
under $1,000, and some were
priced closer to $500.
Megapixel {meaning millions
of pixels) is, the buzz word in the
world of digital cameras. It is also
one of the first things you should
look for when coQsidering a digital camera.
As the number of pixels
increases, so do price and image
quality, in most cases. I say in
most cases. because the camera's
lens and recording chip also play

a role in image quality.
But how many pixels do you
really need?
If you simply want to put picturss on. the Web or e-mail your
digital photos to friends, you
don't even need a 1-megapixel
camera. Your pictures will look
gdod on computer monitors.
However, when they are printed ·
on desktop Inkjet or Bubblejet
printers, they will look very
grainy.
' If making 5-by-7 -inch and 8by-10-inch prints at home is your
goal, then you want to look at a
2- or 3-megapixel camera. These
cameras offer diferent. imagerecording settings, usualiy: good,
better and best. The best setting is
best for prints, and the good setting can be used for e-mailing or
posting pictures on the Web.
Another consideration when
~hoosing a digital camera is the
range of the zooni lens. As the
range increases, the price often
increases. In addition, check to

see if accessory Wide-angle and
telephoto lenses can be used on a
particular model. These lenses not
6nly expand the camera's zoo.it
range, but your creative possibilities, as well.
Connecting your camera to
your computer is another consideration. There are several choices
for picture transfer. Universal Serial Bus cables, which require ?USB port on a computer, offer
fast transfer of digital files fiom
camera to computer.
.
Memory card readers (computer mouse-size devices which
hook up to a computer with
USB or serial cables) also offer
fast and easy picture transfer.
If your computer has a slot for
a memory card, memory stick ot
standard 3.5-inch disk, that's an
easy way to download your pic~
!tires. Simply pop your card, stick
or disk into the slot, and within
seconds the pictures are in your
computer.

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Thursday, June 22, 2000
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page /lor7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-

·:Justices n1le 5·4 that Boy Scouts can ban
: WASHINGTON (AP) - The Boy
Scouts can bar homosexuals from serving
as troop leaders, the Supreme Court said
Wednesday in a 5-4 decision on free-association rights that may also let the 6.2million-member organization reject gay
~ as members.
.
Forcing the Scouts to accept gay troop
leaders would VIolate the organization's

~.:Heat

has

Requiring the organization to have a viding character-building programs for
right of "expressive association" under the
Constitution's First Amendment, the jus- gay scoutmaster would force it "to send a youth."
But the New Jersey assistant scoutmastices ruled on the last day of their 1999- message, both to the youth members and
Boy
Scouts
accepts
the
world,
that
the
ter
ousted when the organization learned
2000 term.
"The Boy Scouts asserts that homosex- homosexual conguct as a legitimate form he is gay expressed dismay at the ruling.
" I'm definitely saddened by the deciual conduct is inconsistent with the values ofbehavior;• the chiefjustice said.
"We're very pleased," said Scouts sim1;' said James Dale. "People don't join
it seeks to instill;' ChiefJustice William H .
spokesman Gregg Shields. "It's going to the Boy Scouts because they're antl-l&lt;r.IV.
Rehnquist wrote for the court. .
allow us to continue our mission of pro- People join the
Scouts because

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Federal Reserve declared a ceasefire in its battle against inflation,
deciding that another interestrate increase is unnecessary right
now. But some economists expect
the Fed to resume the attack as
early as August.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan
and his colleagues opted to leave
short-rerm · interest
rates
unchanged Wednesday, pointing
!O tentative signs that U.S. eco!JOmic growth is slowing.
At the same time, the Fed hinted that further rate increases
~ould be possible should inflation
pressuret worsen. "Tiil: rislis ccmiinue to be weighted mainly '
tOward conditions that may generate heightened 'inf)ation pressures in the foreseeable future;'
the Fed said in a stateq:~e11t.
' And, while the Fed did say that
ipcreased productivity gains had
~ept price pressures from being a
s;erious 'problem , thus , far, it. did
qote that underlyi'ng inflation
rates were now "rising slightly .
·
faster than a year ago."
: Against that backdrop, many
economists said they continue to
believe it's likely the Fed will raise
rates by- a quarter-point or even a
half-poini at its next scheduled
meeting on Aug. 22. That's
because those analysts don't foresee the economy slowing enough
19 keep inflation in check. Some
forecast another quarter-point
iJ;~crease after the election.

,,

-~

want acceptance, they want commuruty.
T he ruling did not specifically give the
Scouts permission to bar homosexual
bo~ from membership, but its langu~ge
left room for that interpretation.
· ·
"I think it suggests that they can" ~an
homose~CUal boys from being Scou~; ~d
Evan WolfSon, Dale's lawyer. "
·· :

Sale starts today
Ends Sunday. July 9
Closed Tues. July 4th

.· Energy Dept.
. WASHINGTON {AP)
, With searing temperatures across
,much of the cou·ntry and conc~rn
. about electricity distribution
.Jines, . the Energy Department is
warning of a strong likelihood of
. power ou rages this summer, especially in the West and Northeast.
"We're concerned about the
reliability of the electricity grid;'
.,Energy .Secretary Bill Richardson
.told a House Commerce Committee hearing Wednesday.
Sweltering heat across much of
the West has prompted emergency calls this week in Califor.nia for people to reduce p·ower
· ,use amid warning that otherwise
there could be rolling blackouts.
:Earlier this month power prob. lems and high demand caused an
:'outage in the San Francisco area.
· Richardson said the concern
became more acute because of
) roblems with electric generators
'in the Pacific Northwest and with
. some loss of power in New Eng· land because of problems at the
:'Seabrook nuclear plants in New
Hampshire.
.,,. The situation has improved
··with.the expected cooler weather
1n New England, Richardson said
-but "there could be some rolling
·.blackouts" in the Pacific Northwest and in California because of
high demand.
_ California and other parts of
have suffered
1the•..Sauthwest
under a 100-deg~e heat wave
-Vibiql} " 1w, inci:Jlased electricity
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states, including the Northwest,
have limited the amount of electricity available to California utilities. ..
Both the Pacific Northwest and
~alifornia "remain very vulnera~le to power outages" during .
._p eak ~emand periods, said
.Richardson, adding the regions
were "barely able to avoid"
brownouts this 'past week.

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�• Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 22, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

"ahama
High
School·alumni
dinner
held
.
'

, •;The 2000 Wahama H igh School
'·Alumni Dinner was held on May 27 in
, .1\le high .chool cafeteria. The cafeteria
·, wasd ecorated in the school colors of red
arid white. Pictures of the old Wahama
High School and a list of the principals
, ~ere on display.
• · Jim Stewart gave the welcome with
: ~ori e Clarke Walburn giving the
: invOcation. Following the ham dinner,
: prepared by the WHS band boosters, a
: program on the principals was given .
; Don Fogleso ng, principal from 1945: 47, told those·attending how he was For, rest Bachtel's best friend and admired
: him.The guest speaker was Kitty Bachtel
• Dallas of Augora Hills, Calif She com: men ted on her father's love of family, stu: dents, teach ers and Wahama H igh
· School: She was presented with a
: Wahama mug.
, Marjorie Clarke Walburn read a letter
; from Kitty Clarke Hubbard. She was to
; have been the other guest speaker as
: niece of Alice Clarke Harris, a long-time
· Wahama teacher. She mentioned the
: excellent education she received at
: Wahama and good examples to follow
; through the years.
, Ronnie Flowers gave a tribute to
; James Diehl, former teacher ·and later
: principal in Ohio. He expressed Diehl
· had always motivated him to do his best
. and he did.
Marjorie Clarke Walburn gave a trib·
; ute to Clyde Foley, principal from 1947
: to 1970. She told of Foley helping her
; adjust as a first junior high student who
: came from a one room school.
. Jim Stewart introduced two former
I teachers, Paul "Doug" Nease and son,
: Richard Nease of Chester.They were the
: only father-son duo of teachers Wahama
: ever had. Paul Nease taught shop, weld; ing and automechanics as well as being
: the school's first driver's education
: teacher. Richard Nease taught high
: school English and directed plays. Their
: wife and mother, Alice Smith Nease, was
: a long-time music teacher at Wahama
: and wrote the fight song. Her mother,
• Aorence Smith, wrote the alma mater.
.' Scholarship chairman Marjorie Clarke
• Walburn announced the 2000 winner of
: the $500 Marie C. Roush Scholarship
: was Charles Joshua Reed. Pat Roush
: Noel read a thank you letter of tribute to
; Marie C. Roush. Reed was unable to
; attend due to previous commitments.

T he chairman presented the $500
alumna scholarship to Curtis Blessing
and the Class of 1955 scholarship to
Kacyndra Johnson. The winners were
guests of the alumni.
Last year, an honorary Wahaman
Award was given to Linda Noel McKinney and she was presented with a plaque
for her work. The Wahama Elite had two
members attending, Evelyn Proffitt and
Sarah Foster. They were presented with
totebags from rhe alumni.
A Wahama throw was the door prize
,won by Juanita Capehart Abbott. Gift
certificates were won by Wally Stewart,
Alera Weaver, Susie Hall, Carol Proffitt,
Jim Proffitt and John Layne.
Marjorie Clarke Walburn introduced
the 2000 Outstanding Wahaman Phil
Goodnite, principaL She gave testimonies
of teachers and students who revere
Goodnite. Jim Stewart presented Goodnile with a plaque from the alumni.
"Under Construction" a barbershop
quartet entertained the group and the
evening concluded with John Layne
leading the Alma Mater.
Attending were: 1927- Evelyn Proffitt,
Mason ; 1929- Sarah Foster, Mason;
1931- Donald Foglesong, Mason; 1933Mildred Fry, New Haven; 1934- Alice
Miller, New Haven; 1936- Barbara
McDaniel, Masoh and Surrilla Gilland,
New. Haven; 1937- Clara Capehart,
Letart; 1938- Alfreda Merideth, Belpre,
Ohio; 1939- Jim Hart and guest Sandra,
Hurricane, Raymond Grinstead and
guest Donna Fowler, Mason. Ida Diehl,
Pomeroy, Ohio, and Lila Zerklt, Mason;
1940- Mary .Thabet, Mason, Hazel
Smith, Mason, Geraldine Gibbs and guest
Carl Gibbs, New Haven, Ada Mae Wolfe
and guest Jackis Davis, Richmond, Ind.,
June VanMatre, Mason, Milton Rae and
guest Mary, Dothan, Ala., Opal Rollins
Williams, Belpre, Ohio, and Mary Workman, New Haven; 1942- Ralph Gibbs
and guesr Dorothy Gibbs, New Haven;
1943- Ben Sayre, Hillard, Ohio, Anna
Belle Hudnall, New Haven, Dorothy
Dawson and guest Burrell, New Haven;
1945- Ralph Sayre and guest Grace
Sayre, Parkersburg; Loretta Haynes,
Letart, Lorna Johnson, West Columbia,
Nao.mi Hudson Yeager, Lellart, Hester
Weaver, New Haven, Floyd Capehart,
Moundsville, Luther Tucker, Mason- and
Joyce Carson, West Columllia; J,946Chades Yeager :'nd guest La Vern, M:rson,

WMS ALUMNI- Don Foglesong, former teacher and coach at Wahama High School,
introduced Kitty Dallas of California, guest speaker at the recent Wahama High
School Alumni Association Dinner. She Is the daughter of Forrest Bechtel, former
teacher and coach at WHS for whom the football field Is named. Diagnosed with
Parllinson's Dise·ase, Bachtel continued his interest in education by designing a
headpiece to allow him to read although he lost all muscle control with the illness.
Pictured during the alumni event are, from left, Foglesong, Dallas, WHS Alumni President Jim Stewart and Mrs. James (Ida) Diehl.

Pete Burris and Betty Burris, New
Haven, Betty Rice, Marion, Ill., Wallace
Stewart and guest Viola, Lexington, Ky. ,
and Orpha Fields, New Haven;
1947- Willis Dudding, Flagler Beach,
Fla. , Dorothy Sayre, Hillard, Ohio,
Robert Barton and guest Bonnie; Middleport, Sarah Gibbs, New Haven, Enid
Layne Adams and guest Carroll Adams,
New Haven; 1948- Exalee Fry Wolfe,
Middleport,
Evelyn
Weirick,
Ravenswood, Francis Young, Dunbar,
Barbara Zerkle; New Haven, Attarah
Dewhurst, Letart, Kathleen Roush, New
Haven, Danny Yonker, Mason, James
Sprouse and guest Cherly Sprouse, Long
Bottom; Dale Sayre, Hillard, Ohio and
Avalee Hanshaw, Vienna;
1949- Rosanna Fry Manley, Racine;
1950- Robert Stewart and guest; Gladys,
Mason, Vernon Smith and guest Janet,
New Haven, Arlene Sayre Grimm and
guest George, Letart, Barbara Hoffinan
Gerlach, Mt. Alto, Gerald Kelly, Pomeroy,
Dorothy Stone James, New Haven, Lewis
Gilland, Mason, Charlotte Yonker,
Mason, Velma Clark and guest Lowell
Grimm, Letart, Irma Gilland, Mason,
Billy June Hayes, New Haven, Juanita
Abbott and guest Almeda Powell, Point
Pleasant, Pat Smith Wilson, Reedsville,

Ohio, Vernon Roush, Mason, Jim Layne
and guest Pat Layne, N ew Haven, Donald Kay and guest Shirley, New Haven,
Faye Tucker R,ussell and guest Donald
Russell, Mason, Margie Cartwright and .
guest Charles Cartwright, Mason, Jakcie
Fox and guest Betty, Clifton, Mary ].
Capehart, Moundsville, Bill Cook and
guest Rosemary, Pomeroy, Aleta Snyder
Weaver, New Haven, Joanna Varian
Council, Langsville, Ohio, Red Tucker,
Mason, Paula Van Meter Camp and guest
Cindy Johnson;
1951- .Wyllis Davis, New Haven,
Charles Roush, New Haven, Rose Ross
Corliss, Pomeroy, Eleanor Weaver Davis,
New Haven; 1953- Ben Roush , Letart;
1954- Jim Stewart, Chester, Ohio, Phyllis
Scott and guest Jerry, New Haven,
Robert Harless and guest Peggy Harless,
Mason, Ronnie Flowers and guest Barbara, Elk Grove Village, IlL, Mary Fowler,
Point Pleasant and Ruth Lieving Roush,
Letart; 1955- Bob Roush, Mason, Gary
Miller, New Haven, .Shirley Tucker,
Mason, Geraldine Mattox Roush, New
Haven, Jim Proffitt, Mason, Carol Proffitt, Mason, Marjorie Clark Walburn and
guest Dale, Middlbport, Peggy .Edwards,
Mason, Patricia Roush Noel and guest
Lindsey, Pomeroy, Susie Cartwright Hall

and guest Susa'n, Middleport and Carol
Workman, Mason;
1956- Braunda Ballou, East Douglas,
Ma.; 1958- John Layne, Witon, Conn.,
Gary Roush and guest Teresa, Mason, .
Agnes
Roush, Mason, Marilyn
Foglesong Johnson, Snellville, Ga. and
James Johnson, Snellville, Ga.; 1959Donnie VanMatre, Point Pleasant, Donald
Embleton and guest Patricia, Americus,
Ga., Bill Foglesong, Hochessin, Dele.,
Doris Elliott Coffee,Vinton, Ohio; 1960Sue Miller, New Haven, Sally Roush
Ebersbach, Syracuse, Ohio, Delores
Long, Middleport, Delores Reitmire
Johnson, Letart, James Maynard and guest
Patricia, Mason, Zorra Jones Johnson,
Pomeroy, David E. Roush and guest
Polly, Rockford , lll.,Wilmarine Hill,West
Columbia; 1961- David H . Zirkle,
Racine; 1962- Ann Hayes Zirkle, Racine
and Eddie VanMatre, Mason;
1963- Amy Roush, New Haven, and
Elizabeth Ohlinger, New Haven; 1965Dana Lewis, Clifton, Reginald Hart,
Hurricane, Judith Duncan McWhorter,
Point Pleasant, Mary Foster Hendricks,
Mason, Patricia Thompson Johnson,
Letart, and Glen Johnson, Letart; 1966Nancy Proffitt, Mason, Phil Goodnite
and guest Barbara, Point Pleasant; 1967Jennifer Zerkle Hart, Hurricane; 1968Gary Green and guest Penny, Wellston;
1969- Juanita Friend, Cottageville; 1970Sally Yeauger Ross and guest Ralph,
Mason, Nancy Roush Woodard arid
guest Linda . McKinney, New Haven,
Cinda Foglesong, Kingsport, Tenn., and
Barry Haynes, Letart;
1973- Vernon Roush Jr. and guest
Gayle of Gallipolis and Pmy Riley
Roush, Mason; 1975- Martha Jones
Sayre, Evans, Charles Hoffinan, Letart,
and Melissa Hoffinan, Letart; 1978- Greg
Blessing, Letart; 1979- Mandy Blessing,
Letart; 1985- Valerie Poindester, Cross
Lanes, Stephanie Salser Mann and guest
James, Huber Heights, Ohio, and Wendy
Harbour Miller, Lebanon, Ohio; 1986Sherry Gerlach .Williamson; 1989- Jerry
Mullins; 1990- Robert Ash, Lawrenceburg, Ind. and Maria Ash, Lawrenceburg,
Ind.; and 2000- Curtis· Ryan Blessing,
Charles Joshua Reed, Robert Anthony
Barnitz and Michelle Peterson. Guests
included George and Kitty Bachtel Dallas, Joe Bachtel, Carol Bachtel Tannehill
and Dr. Harry Keig.

'• -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~··~----------------------------------~------I

!Garden
!create a

e ·buffet can
garden party

'

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Restaurateur Pino Luganp says dining outFive Bean Salad with Scallions
; doors is like having a .date with nature, taking'
and Horseradfsh Vinaigrette
:it easy with style.
1 cup dry chick-peas
: His menu: Fried Zucchini and Zucchini
i Blossoms, Pole~;~ Ia with Wild Mushrooms and
1 cup dry cannellini {whi~e kidney beans)
: Spinach, Black Olive and Zucchini Tart,
1 cup dry borlotti {cranberry or Roman
: Roasted Root Vegetables, Farrotto with beans)
; Morel Mushrooms, Ravoli Filled with Pappa
1 cup dry black- eyed peas
: at':Pomodoro and Black Cabbage, Five-Bean
1 cup dry green lentils
l S7.:Iad with Scallions and Horseradish Vinai1 cup dry barley
1~tette and Garden Vegetable Panzanella.
1 carrot, peeled
: {l':ecipes for the salad and panzanella follow.)
1 stalk celery, rinsed
· Panzanella, by the way, is a Tuscan word
1 whole onion, peeled
~ indicating that a salad requires the use of
1 bouquet garni (1 spring rosemary, 2
' bread cube's and vegetables . If the bread is not
'
:completely
stale, dry the cubes by putting whole peeled cloves garlic, 2 sprigs thyme, all
tthem in a 300 F oven for a few minutes, but wrapped and tied in cheesecloth)
2 1/2 teaspoons salt
:don't let them brown.
'
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, plus
Garden Vegetable Panzanella .
113 cup for dressing .
'
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
;' • 6 slices stale Tuscan-style bread, crusts
1 teaspoon freshly grated horseradish
:removed, cut into 112-inch cubes
2 bunches fresh scallions, rinsed and cut
: 6 ripe tomatoes, cut into small wedges
into
1 /2-inch slices {white and light green
t
112 red bell pepper, cut lengthwise into
portions only)
/ 2-inch strips
112 yellow bell pepper, cut lengthwise
Freshly ground black pepper .to taste
:into 1/2-inch strips
In separate pots or bowls, soak the ehick: jl ounces mushrooms (choose your favorite; peas, cannellini, borlotti and black-eyed peas
:anything from button mushrooms to shiitake) in plenty of water overnight. Soak the lentils
;cut into 1 I 4- inch slices
and barley 'sepani.t ely for 2 hours.
: 2 stalks celery, cut into 1/4~inch slices
Fill a big pot two-thirds full with. water.
: 6 scallions, white and green parts, cut diagAdd the carrot, celery, onion and the bouquet
{)nally into 1/2- inch lengths
garni and put on high heat. When the water
: 6 baby carrots, peeled and left whole, with
comes to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer .
:an ionch of green stem still attached
for 20 minutes. Stir in the borlotti and chick' Salt and freshly groun,d pepper to taste
peas, then in tO-minute intervals, the canI I 4 cup red wine vinegar
nellini, th e black- eyed peas, the ·barley; and
1/ 2 cup extra virgin olive oil
' 12 leaves fresh basil, torn roughly by hand finally, the lentils. Add 2 teaspoons of the salt .
. Place all vegetables - tomatoes, bell pep- Simmer until the beans are cooked but not
p ets, mushrooms , celery, scallions carrots mushy; about 20 minutes mole. Strain the
l n a bowl .and set aside.
beans through a colander, pick out and dis: Make a vinaigrette in a small bowl by dis- card the vegetables and the bouquet garni,
~ olving a teaspoon of salt in the vinegar, then and spread the beans out to cool on a ~beet
J;"dding th'e olive oil slowly, whisking continu- pan . Drizzle 2 tablespoons of olive oil over
;in.y to emulsify.
them and stir to coar.
;~• .Pour th e vinaigrette over the vegetables
In a bowl , dissolve the remaining salt in the
·ana to ss well to coat evenly. Sprinkle dry
red wine vinegar with a whisk. Add the gratbread cubes lightl y with water by dippi ng and
fli c k.ing your fin gers over them once or twice, ' ed horseradish and the 1 /3-cup olive oil and
~ nd: add th em to th e salad · bowl along with beat with a whisk until the dressing is emulthe 'basiL Toss again. Season with salt and pep- sified.
In a large bowl, mix the be,ans with the
fe r.
.
.
.
·
. Taste 11. If you th1 nk 1t needs something, vi naigrette and the scallions. Finish the ·salad
make some more vinajgrett e.
by grinding plenty of black .pepper over it.
: '1\.1alces 12 servi ngs.
Makes 6 servin.gs.

\t

•

Mega pixel mania hits consumer digital cameras
'

FOR IW SPECIAL FEATURES

All the digital camera manufacturers seem to have got
involved in a race to offer cameras
with more and more pixels, or
picture elements.
I realized this recently "!alking
down New York City's Fifth
Avenue. In one discount store
window !'saw dozens of compact
and lightweight digital cameras,
all with brightly-colored sigt)S
touting the number of pixels.
It was megapixel mania, with
many cameras offering two and
three million pixels. Most were
under $1,000, and some were
priced closer to $500.
Megapixel {meaning millions
of pixels) is, the buzz word in the
world of digital cameras. It is also
one of the first things you should
look for when coQsidering a digital camera.
As the number of pixels
increases, so do price and image
quality, in most cases. I say in
most cases. because the camera's
lens and recording chip also play

a role in image quality.
But how many pixels do you
really need?
If you simply want to put picturss on. the Web or e-mail your
digital photos to friends, you
don't even need a 1-megapixel
camera. Your pictures will look
gdod on computer monitors.
However, when they are printed ·
on desktop Inkjet or Bubblejet
printers, they will look very
grainy.
' If making 5-by-7 -inch and 8by-10-inch prints at home is your
goal, then you want to look at a
2- or 3-megapixel camera. These
cameras offer diferent. imagerecording settings, usualiy: good,
better and best. The best setting is
best for prints, and the good setting can be used for e-mailing or
posting pictures on the Web.
Another consideration when
~hoosing a digital camera is the
range of the zooni lens. As the
range increases, the price often
increases. In addition, check to

see if accessory Wide-angle and
telephoto lenses can be used on a
particular model. These lenses not
6nly expand the camera's zoo.it
range, but your creative possibilities, as well.
Connecting your camera to
your computer is another consideration. There are several choices
for picture transfer. Universal Serial Bus cables, which require ?USB port on a computer, offer
fast transfer of digital files fiom
camera to computer.
.
Memory card readers (computer mouse-size devices which
hook up to a computer with
USB or serial cables) also offer
fast and easy picture transfer.
If your computer has a slot for
a memory card, memory stick ot
standard 3.5-inch disk, that's an
easy way to download your pic~
!tires. Simply pop your card, stick
or disk into the slot, and within
seconds the pictures are in your
computer.

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"

Thursday, June 22, 2000
•

The Dally Sentinel • Page /lor7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-

·:Justices n1le 5·4 that Boy Scouts can ban
: WASHINGTON (AP) - The Boy
Scouts can bar homosexuals from serving
as troop leaders, the Supreme Court said
Wednesday in a 5-4 decision on free-association rights that may also let the 6.2million-member organization reject gay
~ as members.
.
Forcing the Scouts to accept gay troop
leaders would VIolate the organization's

~.:Heat

has

Requiring the organization to have a viding character-building programs for
right of "expressive association" under the
Constitution's First Amendment, the jus- gay scoutmaster would force it "to send a youth."
But the New Jersey assistant scoutmastices ruled on the last day of their 1999- message, both to the youth members and
Boy
Scouts
accepts
the
world,
that
the
ter
ousted when the organization learned
2000 term.
"The Boy Scouts asserts that homosex- homosexual conguct as a legitimate form he is gay expressed dismay at the ruling.
" I'm definitely saddened by the deciual conduct is inconsistent with the values ofbehavior;• the chiefjustice said.
"We're very pleased," said Scouts sim1;' said James Dale. "People don't join
it seeks to instill;' ChiefJustice William H .
spokesman Gregg Shields. "It's going to the Boy Scouts because they're antl-l&lt;r.IV.
Rehnquist wrote for the court. .
allow us to continue our mission of pro- People join the
Scouts because

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Federal Reserve declared a ceasefire in its battle against inflation,
deciding that another interestrate increase is unnecessary right
now. But some economists expect
the Fed to resume the attack as
early as August.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan
and his colleagues opted to leave
short-rerm · interest
rates
unchanged Wednesday, pointing
!O tentative signs that U.S. eco!JOmic growth is slowing.
At the same time, the Fed hinted that further rate increases
~ould be possible should inflation
pressuret worsen. "Tiil: rislis ccmiinue to be weighted mainly '
tOward conditions that may generate heightened 'inf)ation pressures in the foreseeable future;'
the Fed said in a stateq:~e11t.
' And, while the Fed did say that
ipcreased productivity gains had
~ept price pressures from being a
s;erious 'problem , thus , far, it. did
qote that underlyi'ng inflation
rates were now "rising slightly .
·
faster than a year ago."
: Against that backdrop, many
economists said they continue to
believe it's likely the Fed will raise
rates by- a quarter-point or even a
half-poini at its next scheduled
meeting on Aug. 22. That's
because those analysts don't foresee the economy slowing enough
19 keep inflation in check. Some
forecast another quarter-point
iJ;~crease after the election.

,,

-~

want acceptance, they want commuruty.
T he ruling did not specifically give the
Scouts permission to bar homosexual
bo~ from membership, but its langu~ge
left room for that interpretation.
· ·
"I think it suggests that they can" ~an
homose~CUal boys from being Scou~; ~d
Evan WolfSon, Dale's lawyer. "
·· :

Sale starts today
Ends Sunday. July 9
Closed Tues. July 4th

.· Energy Dept.
. WASHINGTON {AP)
, With searing temperatures across
,much of the cou·ntry and conc~rn
. about electricity distribution
.Jines, . the Energy Department is
warning of a strong likelihood of
. power ou rages this summer, especially in the West and Northeast.
"We're concerned about the
reliability of the electricity grid;'
.,Energy .Secretary Bill Richardson
.told a House Commerce Committee hearing Wednesday.
Sweltering heat across much of
the West has prompted emergency calls this week in Califor.nia for people to reduce p·ower
· ,use amid warning that otherwise
there could be rolling blackouts.
:Earlier this month power prob. lems and high demand caused an
:'outage in the San Francisco area.
· Richardson said the concern
became more acute because of
) roblems with electric generators
'in the Pacific Northwest and with
. some loss of power in New Eng· land because of problems at the
:'Seabrook nuclear plants in New
Hampshire.
.,,. The situation has improved
··with.the expected cooler weather
1n New England, Richardson said
-but "there could be some rolling
·.blackouts" in the Pacific Northwest and in California because of
high demand.
_ California and other parts of
have suffered
1the•..Sauthwest
under a 100-deg~e heat wave
-Vibiql} " 1w, inci:Jlased electricity
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states, including the Northwest,
have limited the amount of electricity available to California utilities. ..
Both the Pacific Northwest and
~alifornia "remain very vulnera~le to power outages" during .
._p eak ~emand periods, said
.Richardson, adding the regions
were "barely able to avoid"
brownouts this 'past week.

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�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·. NATIONAL BRIEFS
..
Town gaeets film premiere

: ~ANVERS, Mass. (AP) - Proud to see the New England pre•nuere of"The Perfect Storm" and mindful that it pays tribute to
local men who died, loyal fans lined up to see the film - and the
actors starring in it.
• Former "ER" star George Clooney and rapper-turned-actor
Mark Wahlberg attended Wednesday night's showing..
• "What we thought was that if we did it right, we could come
b:ick and say with any luck we .served their story," said Clooney.
' The movie, based on the best•selling book by Sebastian .Junger,
'tells the story of the ill-fared " Andrea Gail" and its crew, who were
fast in a feroci9us storm that struck the North Atlantic in Octoli&gt;er
1991.
' "It was very dif5cult. It was, you know, like a white-knuckle,
, h&lt;;&gt;lding on," said Rusty Shatford, the brother of crewman Bobby
Sharford, who is played by Wahlberg. "I wanted it to end, but I did'.n 't want it to end. I was happy with the outcome."
" It's a tragedy," said Mary Anne Shatford, Bobby Shatford's sister.
"I hope everyone remembers that."
Wahlberg, a Boston ·native, said he was mindful of the sensitive
nature of the srory about the Gloucester-based crew.
" · "It's a very sensitive subject," Wahlberg said. "This is not some•thing that happened a century ago. It happened a decade ago."

Providlan settles complaints
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Providian National Bank has
agreed to pay about $300 million to consumers nationwide to settle allegations that it unfairly charged credit card customers.
· The settlement was announced jointly on Wednesday by the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in Washington and the
San Francisco district attorney's office. The settlement resulted from
yearlong investigations of Providian's business practices by both
agencies.
The government agencies have been investigating allegations that
Providian bullied customers into buying products and gouged cardholders with exorbitant fees to boost its profits.
In one -program, Providian allegedly charged higher rates than
promised for customers who transferred balances from their other
credit cards. The company also allegedly failed to inform consumers
about limitations on the coverage from. a credit protection program
it marketed.
"When a bank engages in unfair or deceptive marketing practices, it damages its most precious asset - the trust and confidence
of its customers," said Comptroller of the Currency John D. Hawke
Jr. "We will not tolerate abuses that breach that trust through unfair
and deceptive practices."
Providian, which did· not admit any wrongdoing, will also pay a
$5.5 million fine to the city and county of San Francisco as part of
.the serdement.
The announcement comes a day after San Francisco District
Attorney Terence Hallinan filed suit against Providian in Superior
Court. It claimed the company made false and misleading statements to customers and engaged in "deceptive and unlawful" business practices.
·
Shailesh Mehta, Providian's chairman and chief executive, said in
a statement that Providian was pleased to bring this issqe to a close
and had already made changes "that have greatly enhanced our customer satisfaction and quality con~rol programs."

Some parochial aid approved
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government can provide comput!-rs for religious schools, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday in a
decision that significantly narrowed the constitutionally required
separation of religion and government.
, The 6-3 ruling was praised by supporters of private school tuition
vouchers - government initiatives to help parents of children who
dp not attend public schools.
· The justices said a Louisiana parish can distribute money for
instructional equipment - · including computers, books, maps, and
6Jm strip projectors - to private schools as long as it's done in a ·
':!fcular, neutral and nonideological" way.
';"We believe the majority of the court has signaled that school
vouchers are constituti9nal;' said Matthew Berry, a lawyer with the
Institute for Justice. He defended, among other programs being
challenged in lower courts, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's statewide plan
to give parents of poor children money for private schooling.
·· "Removing the constitutional cloud from school choice will
encourage .m ore legislatures to support such programs;• Berry said.

GOP pushes marriage tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Republican bill cutting income
taxes by $248 billion over 10 years for all married couples, including the 25 million who now pay more than they would if single,
was approved Wednesday by the Senate Finance Committee.
' GOP sponsors described the measure, more expansive than a
S182 billion version passed by the House, as the centerpiece of their
election-year tax cut strategy. Republican leaders intend to bring
the bill to the Senate floor in July.
"This bill is fair, this bill is responsible and this bill is pro-family,"
said Sen. William Roth, R-Del., chairman of the Finance CoiOOl.ittee. "It is time that we divorce the marriage penalty from the tax
code once and for all."
After previously issuing veto threats, President Clinton now says
.~he budget svrplus is projected to be large enough that he could
sign the bill into law - but only if Congress also sends him an
a~ceptable Medicare prescription drug bill. Republicans are inviting
a, co_nfiontation with the White House if they insist on sending the
president the tax cut as a stand-alone bill.
f it would be· better if we could all agree on a marriage penalty
bill and prescription drugs;• said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont. "I'm
no&amp; sure it's going to happen."

•

Tobacco front split widens

iMIAMI (AP) -The split in a once-united front on smoking and
health has widened wirh testimony fiom the last of five tobacco
executives whose companies are fighting punitive damages in a
landmark smokets'lawsuit.
Martin Orlowsky, the chief executive of Lorillard Tobacco Co.,
said publicly for the first time that his company, the fourth-largest
cigazette maker, believes smoking is addictive and causes lung can.
c« and ' other diseases\
·
His testimony on Wednesday was similar to that of Brown &amp;
Williarnson Tobacco Corp. CEO Nicholas Brookes but does not go
as far u Liggett Group Inc. owner Bennett LeBow.
About 300,000 to 700,000 Aorida smokers are seeking a multibiJiion.dollar verdict against the nation's five biggest cigarette rnaken for decades of industry misconduct in the first smokers' classaction case to go to trial.
The jury alre&gt;dy has ruled the industry conspired to make a de•dly product and awarded $12.7 million in compensatory damages to
three smokers. Orlowsky was to resume his testimony Thursday.
•

.

•
'

Inside:

Thursday, June 22, 2000

WNBA: Rockers fall to Fire, Page B2
Daily Scoreboard, Page B2 ·
Rahal: New king of CART, Page BB
Auto Racing Notebook, Page B8

'Partial-birth abortion' ban struck down
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme 3 vote, the court's last major ruling on aborCourt dramatically limited states' power to tion. Nothing in Wednesday's decision sugban so-called partial-birth abortions Wednes- gested the court's vote split on the core aborday, a 5-4 ruling that immediately escalated tion issue had changed.
the bitter, decades-old debate over women's
Abortion-rights advocates expressed more
right to end thei): pregnancies.
relief than joy.
Closing out its 1999-2000 term with some
Janet Benshoof, whose Center for Reproof the most divisive rulings in years , the court ductive Law and Policy represented the
struck down Nebraska's partial-birth abor- Nebraska doctor who challenged his state's
tion law as an "undue burden" on women's law, said the close vote "demonstrates ·that. the
rights.
right to choose is a fragile one."
Thirty other states have similar laws, but
Planned Parenthood added: "While it
the justices disagreed on just how their ruling looks like a victory, thia is 1 beginning_: not
ultimarely will affect those other laws. More the end. Anti-choice state legislatures and
litigation seemed certain.
g(&gt;vernors across the country will use this rulJames Bopp, a lawyer for the National ing as a blueprint for drafting new bans on
Right to Life Committee, called the decision abortion procedures."
"a radical expansion of the abortion right."
· President Clinton issued a statement at the
Clarke Forsythe of Americans United for Life White House pledging to veto any similar
added: "It's the most extreme decision on legislation that widely restricts late-term
abortion ever issued by the Supreme Court." abortions. "A woman's right to choose must
The court first legalized abortion nation- include the right to choose a medical procewide in its famous Roe v. Wade ruling, the ldure that will not endanger her life or
1973 landmark based on women's constitu- health," Clinton said. "Thday's decision recogtional rights.
nizes this principle and marks an important
Those rights were upheld in 1992 by a 6- victory for a woman's freedom of choice:•

In other decisions, the court said:
-Gave states greater leeway to restrict
anti-abortion demonstrators outside clinics.
The ruling upheld a Colorado limit on "sidewalk counseling."
-The Boy Scouts can ban homosexuals
from serving as troop leaders. By extension,
the ruling in a New Jersey case could let the
Scouts exclude as well young boys who say
they are gay.
·-Significandy lowered the figurative wall
of separation between church and state by
ruling in a Louisiana case that taxpayer
money can be used to buy computers and
other instructional materials for religious
schools.
The emotional abortion issue already had
become entwined with this year's presidential
election because Republican George W. Bush
supports bans on partial-birth abortions and
Democrat AI Gore opposes them.
President Clinton !aid the nation's next
president is likely to replace rwo to four
Supreme Court justices. "Depending on who
they are;• he . said, abortion righ'\are "very
much in the balance." .

Republican George W. Bush
and Democrat AI G•;ue unveiled
proposals to assist the disabled and
conserve energy during same-day
visits to Ohio, a key state in the
presidential campaign.
In Cleveland on Wednesday.
Bush unveiled. a $145 million, fiveyear initiative to stimulate the
development of new transportation plans for the disabled Bush's
plan would, among other things,
provide matching funds for local
groups to purchase specially
equipped vans.
"People from all walks of life
should have access to the American dream; people from all walks of
life can be productive citizens," said
Bush, Texas governor and the presumptive GOP presidential nomin~.
~ ......... ~· ..
"~"'
Bush spent the bulk of his time
in a-Jand Wednesday ' raising

mon~

Fmt; BusJ:t visited to the Shaker
Heights home of Cleveland
Browns owner and billionaire
banker AI Lerner, where an estimated S1 million was r.lised for the
Republican National Committee.
Bush then attended an Ohio
Republican Party reception at the
Ritz Carlton Hotel in downtown

Medicare
J:!rescription
drug question
moves to Senate
WASHINGTON (AP)
Republicans are hailing their
House-passed prescription drug
bill as a historic new Medicare
benefit, but its prospects are iffy in
the Senate and President Clinton
has threatened a veto to force
major changes in a measure
Democrats claim is an electionyear scam.
"This plan is sound, it is in
Medicare, it is an entitlement
program and it is a guaranteed
benefit;' Rep. Bill Thomas\ RCalif., a chief architect of the
GOP plan, said Wednesday night
as the measure cleared the House
in close, mostly party-line vote,

BY 1'111 AllociATID PIIEIS
Cleveland, which was expected to
An Ohio law that would proraise more than $250,000.
hibit partial-birth abortions should
In Columbus, Gore proposed
not be affected by a U.S. Supreme
energy tax credits of as much as
Court decision overturning a
$6,000 for the pun:hase of electric
Nebraska law that banned the
cars and $2,00) for energy-efficient new homes.
method, the author of Ohio's
The Democrats' expected prespending law said Wednesday.
idential . nominee estimated the
Opponents of the Ohio law
cost at $48 billion aver 10 ~
have said they will sue in federal
Gore spoke from a house being
court to block the statute's
built by Joshua Homes, a local
enforcement before it takes effect
builder that designs and constructs
Aug.17.
energy-efficient homes. G&lt;m said.
"If you can't get approval of our
he would propose incentives that
new law, I don't know what you
would encourage consumers to
can do to satisfy the courts;' said
purchase more energy-efficient
state Rep. Jerry Luebbers, Dand environmentally sound prodCinciMati, who sponsored Ohio's
ucts.
partial-birth abortion ban.
The vice president also told a
, The Ohio law says physicians
downtown
conference
on
· who perform the procedure could
empowerment zones that the
be charged with partial-birth
administration would help !Wiralinfanticide, a second-degree felony
ize distressed collUllUnities and
c~ng up to. eight years in
i spur ·economic ~ · .
priJiln.
'
.
"Local communitieS know
P'artial-birth abortion is. not a
whljt works best for them. but they
medical term. Doctors call the '
fleed resQutcCS:' Gore told an audimethod dilation and extraction, or
torium packed with about 50Q
D&amp;X, because' it involves partially
people. "1he goal. ..is not to stranextracting a fetus, legs first,
gle_communities with tons of new
through the birth canal, cutting
red tape and government bureauthe lkUll and chaining ia contents.
cracies. The goal is to provide tax
A more common procedure is
breaks and incentives to attract pridilation· and evacuation, or D&amp;E,
. vate.investments and create jobs." ·
in which an arm or leg of a live

.'
'

'THuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Woods takes Senior
Leapelead

fetus may be pulled into the birth
canal during the abortion operation.
The Supreme Court said the
Nebraska law imposed an "undue
burden" on the rights of women
to end their pregnancies. The
court said Nebraska's law, while
purportedly aimed only at the
D&amp;X method, could crim.inalize
the D&amp;E ·method as weD.
Ohio's law targets only the dilation and extraction or partial-birth
method and allows its use by doctors when necessary to save the
mother's life or prevent irreversible
long-term health damage, Lueb.;
hers said. Nebraska's law contained
no health exception.
Ohio's law also exempts
women obtaining partial-birth
abortions from prosecution.
Luebben authored a partialbirth abortion ban in 1995 that
was enacted, b t didn't take effect
because of appeals. It was ~
out last year as unconstitutional in
federal court.
Cincinnati lawyer Alphonse
Gerhardstein, who successfully
challenged that ban, said he needs
to review the Supreme Court's
Wednesday ruling before discussing how it might alfect Ohio's
law.

Sampras moves

on at Wimbledon
' WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Top-seeded Pete Sampras
managed a 7-6 (9), 3"6, 6-3, 6-4
victory over Karol Kucera at
Wimbledon, then was taken to a
hospital for an MRI and treatment on his inflamed left foot.
No. 9 Thomas Enqvist also
won, but losers on the men's side
include-d No. 3 Magnus Norman,
No. 6 Cedric Pioline and No. 11
Richard . Krajicek, the 1996
champion.
'
On the women's side, Anna
Kournikova lost 6-3, 6-4 to
Anne-Gaelle Sidot. No. 4 Conchita Martinez, the 1994 champion, was eliminated by Sonya
Jeyaseelait. No. I Martina Hingis
a1,1d No. 11 Anke Huber
advanced, as did the Williams sisters.
. ,Eighth-seeded Serena Williams
beat Yvette Basting 6-1 , 6-0 in 35
minutes, winning the second set
n . just 11 minutes. Venus
~illiams, seeded fiftn, dispatched
A:i Sugiyama 6-1, 6-4.
·· Nine-time Wimbledon singles
champilln Martina Navratilova,
playing her first match at the All
England Club since 1996, teamed
with Mariaan de Swardt for a
doubles victory. They beat
Lubomira Bacheva and Amanda
Hopmans 6-3, 6-7 (7), 6-3.
Jeff Tarango, who stnrmed off
the court in midmatch at Wimbledon five years ago and was
banned fiom the tournament for
a year, created another stir after a
3-6, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2, 12"10 loss to
Paul Goldstein. Tarango drew
boos when he refused to shake
hands with his opponent, and he
later accused Goldstein of faking
an injury.
·Anna Smashnova beat Katalin
Marosi-Aracama 6-2, 5-7., 6- 2 but
beaned a spectator with a ball
she became angry at her
opponent's husband.
Krajicek lost 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, 7-6
(3) to Wayne Ferreira. Pioline lost
6"3, 6-3, 2-6, 3-6, 6-4 to qualifier
Vladimir Voltchkov.

Come On Over to Bob's
For the list in Summertime Eatinq
Select the Bnt T•ti~, Freshest Produce in Town•••

At Reasonable Prices

a

217-214.

Delldous

Hon•Grown

. SweetCom

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STOP BY 108'5 MARKET

WJ.IOM, WY TODAYII

Second Street • Mason, wv

• 713--5721

~
'

I

I

•

- - -·- ·--

"

-----------------~--·~·~--------------------------

MASON, W.Va . Keith
Woods regained the lead in the
2000 Senior Men's League with
100.5 points to hold a one point
lead over Bob Hysell of Syracuse
and Dale Harrison of Pomeroy
on Tuesday.
Harrison and Hysell have each
missed a week of play, creating a
logjam of eight players within I 0
'points of the league lead.
A total Of 48 players played
througlr misty conditions for the
12 potential points. Woods captured the 12 along with his teammates Mike Bragg, Lawrence
Scarberry and Milt Maxwell, who
!~ot a 60 - 10 under - for the
winning tally.
Second place went to Bill Yoho,
Dave Baumgartner, Andy Anderson, and Ralph Sayre at 61 - nine
under.
Three teams tied for third at 63
- seven under.
'Closest to the Pin' honors
went to Yoho on seven and
Woods on 17.
. Tuesday's play marked the
halfWay point in the 2000 season.
Jim Fisher and Steve Safford
made their debuts to push the
number of players to 80.
Each week has averaged 46.6
·players.
League leaders are: 1. Woods 100.5; 2. (tie) Hysell and Harrison
c 99.5; 4. Ralph Sayre - 97.5; 5.
Mike Bragg - . 92.5; 6. Herman
Knapp - 92; 7. (tie) Bill Wine·brenner and Dewey Smith - 91;
9. (tie) Claude Proffitt and Peat
Carna~ - F
Andy ~nder­
sol) :.W :83 ~ S: · 12." Gary ·Moore 82.5; 13. (tie) Bill Hannum, Don .
Wilson and Elmer Click - 82; 16.
Dana Winebrenner - 81; 17. Ed
Wilson - 79.5; 18. Shorty Lambert - 79; 19. Milt Maxwell 75.5; 20. Charley Georgi.

p,

~.:;,= ~~.:.~' ...~

House
Speaker
Dennis
Hastert, R-Ill., said he had
received assurances from Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, RMiss, that "they are going to take
it up;' and added that his door
was open for negotiations with
Democrats.
"We've always said we're willing to sit down with the president;• Hastert said.
Meanwhile, Senate Finan.c e
Committee Chairman William
Roth, R-Del., said his panel was
working behind closed doors on
bipartisan Me.dicare legislation he
would like to begin action on in
July, after Congress returns from
its Independence Day break.
Cormpitiee Democrat Sen. Jay
Rockefeller of West Virginia said
he wasn't confident that the result
would be a viable bill, however.
"Are we going to have a better
ch;)nce of compromise after the
July Fourth recess? I very much
doubt it;' Rockefeller said.

Page 81
1hund.y, June 21, 2000

Bush, Gore visits to Ohio Author of Ohio law hopes it
focus on new proposals will withstand court scrutiny._
BY TIE Assoam~~ PREss

The Daily Sentinel

.,

Gordon hopes rebound continues at Daytona
! 1(/

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jeff Gordon knows nothing laslS''forever
- not even the boos.
.,
For years, they were aimed atT·he Kid in
part for winning far too often. Nbw, there
is a lowering of the sound that once
drowned out the pre-race introductions
after: "In the No. 24 DuPont &lt;':hevrolet

.

Gordon hears more applause, something
he jokingly calls "the sympathy 'vOte."
" It's so funny how it works:" he said.
"When somebody dominates they•say 'We
need somebody else.' When nobody dominates they say,' Hey, we need somebody to
dominate."'
'•' f'
Few have dominated NASCAR rhey

way he has since 1995. Gordon has led the
The victory took some of the pressure
Winston Cup circuit in victories an off - for now.
"I think everybody said, ' If they can't
unprecedented five straight times win it on a road course, there 's something
including a record-tying 13 in 1998.
When he races Saturday night in the wrong with them," ' Gordon said. "We
Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speed- were able to pull it off."
way, it will be as a two-time winner. Even
That pressure - especially if Gordon
a victory in the race that ends the first half fails to win in the next four races - will
of the season would leave him far off the be back when the circuit moves in August
pace of his average of nearly 10 in the last to the road cour.;e in Watkins Glen, N .Y.
five years.
But new crew chief Robbie Loomis isn't
One of his wins this year came Sunday worried.
.
at Sears Point Raceway in Sonoma, Calif.
"The pressure has been there since
It was his sixth straight on road courses, Decernber when I walked into Hendrick
extending his own record and matching Motorsports," he said. "One lhing I knew
Rusty Wallace and Bobby Allison for the coming into it, I had the grearest driver
most on serpentine tracks.
out there. If I give him the car, I know we

can get the job done."
Because he is lOth in points, there is the
perception that Gordon isn't doing well .
Yet his four victories in the last 23 races is
surpassed only by Tony Stewart's run_ of
four in hi s last 19.
Gordon must live with talk that at 28
he's now just another good driver, that he
hasn't been the same since crew chief Ray
Evernham left in September to start his
own team next year. Together, they won
throe series championships, and Evernham
called the shots for the first 47 of Gordon 's
51 career victories.
"Nothing lasts forever," Gordon said.

Pluse see Gordon. Pip 81

I

Reds rally
to top cards
CINCINNATI (AP)
Manager Tony La Russa
thought Pat Hentgen was starting to fade. He also thought his
bullpen could hold a lead.
No one knows if he was right
about the first part. He figured
wrong on the second one.
Benito Santiago homered and
Sean Casey doubled with the
bases loaded as the Cincinnati
Reds scored seven runs off St.
Louis' bullpen and rallied to
beat the Cardinals 7-3 Wednesday night.
Struggling Cincinnati overcame a 3c0 deficit once La
Russa decided to pinch-hit for
starter Pat Hentgen in the sixth.
. Hentgen, who has a (endency
,. to fade i the middle! illnil\k'!,
had given up only two hits at
that point.
"He did an excellent job;'
Santiago said. ''I'm glad they got
him out of the game."
The Reds hope their comeback against Alan Benes (1 - l)
gets them out of their monthlong slump and finally gets
them headed back in the Cardinals' direction.
Since moving into a halfgame lead in the NL Central on
Julie 4, the Reds have lost 15 of
21, falling way behind St. Louis.
As their four-game series
approached, the Reds said they
needed to win at least three of
them.
By winning two of the first
three, the Reds have moved to 7
1/2 games back and started feeling better abour themselves.
Although they trail the Cardinals by a big margin, they've
YEAH, BA8YI - Cincinnati's ~an Casey celebrates his bases-loaded double Wednesday against St. won four of six against them
this season.
Louis ..The Reds, powered by ch\ey's hit and a Bemto Santiago homer, defeated the Cards, 7-3. (AP)

.. .

PIHIHI see Reds. P11p 82

fare well . :
in 2000 NBA Draft

Martin with :
No.1 pick

... II '

hits."
Benes gave up a single to
Dante Bichette with two outs
in the sixth, hit Casey on an 02 pitch, then gave up a run; -

0

Nets take
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The
Los Angeles Clippers made
themselves better, the Orlando
Magic cleared cap space and the
New Jersey Nets hung on to
their No. I pick, a teary-eyed
Kenyon Martin.
It was a night of surprises at
the NBA draft, with a total of ·
nine trades, and a couple more
expected to be completed
Thursday.
The Clippers walked away
with · Darius Miles, Corey
Maggette, Derek Strong, Keyon
Dooling, Quentin Richardson
arid Sean Rooks iri one of the
most
dramatic
draft-day
makeovers in league history.
"It was a wonderful day," gen7
era! manager Elgin Baylor said.
"We got a bunch of young, talented playhs and a few veterans.
I think we're very talented and
very athletic and pretty deep at
ever)' position. The good part is,
we're going to have a lot of these
'players at least five years.''
Orlando started the night with
three lottery picks, bur traded

"We match up pretty well
against these guys," Casey said.
"They've got a pretty decent
lead right now. We've just got to
ke ep plugging away."
The 37,861 fans sensed rheir
desperation. One banner from
the upper deck read : "W!;:
STILL BELIEVE." Another on
the facing of the middle deck
said: "It AIN'T OYER ..."
When Ray Lankford homered leading off the sixth to make
it 2-0 and the pitcher's spot
came up with two outs and a
runner on third, La Russ~
decided that Hentgen 's appearance was over.
Hentgen was coming off his
worst start of the sezon eight rllrit in ' 4 '2-3 'frtniilgs and was starting to get his
pitches up, in La Rossa's estimation.
Pinch hitter Larry Sutton
walked and ·Edgar Renteria's
infield single drove in a run for
a 3-0 lead that made La Russa's
decision look good for the
moment.
"I thought we had a chanc~
to add a run or two," La Russ~
explained. ''It looked to me like
a couple of balls they hit in the:
fifth were up a little bit. As
we 've seen this year, you'd
rather make the move before
than after.
"I wa.• confident our bullpen
could shut them out for four
innings, but they got the clutch

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kenyon Martin was crying,
Scoonie Penn was celebrating
and Jason Collier's dogs were
barking. Ohio's new NBA contingent found several ways to
welcome their new fortunes.
Martin, who broke his leg late
last season but still was the consensus college player of the year,
cried when he was selected by
New Jersey with the No. 1 pick
in Wednesday night's NBA

Draft.

1 ~ NBA commissioner David Stern (right) congratulates
Kenyon Martin of the University of ~inci~nati, who was selected first
in the 2000 NBA Draft Wednesday m Minneapolis. {AP)

HE'S

tl{ o( them along with
tte and Strong - to get
i)nillion under the salary cap.
Magic can now make an
ered run at free agents
Grant Hill and Tim Duncan, and
if they sign both, they'll still have
another $2.5 million to throw at
·
another free agent.

Orlando also has eight firstround picks stockpiled the next
four years. And if Hill and-or
Duncan -decide nor 10 come,
maximum salary deals can be
offered to other free a"gents such
as Eddie Jm.'es, Tracy McGrady
PIHMIH Draft. Pep 82

"It was unreal," Martin said of
his outpouring of emotion. "I
invested so much over the last
few months with me getting
hurt and my family seeing me
struggle. lt was like a relief."
Penn, the diminutive point
guard who helped lead Ohio
State to a Final Four in 1999
and a share of the Big Ten regular-seaso n title this year, figured
to go sometime in th e second
round. He had to wait until the
second to last pick of the draft,
when Atlanta selected him at
No. 57.
Penn watched the draft at his

mother's house in Salem, Mass.,
but wasn't available to comment
early Thursday morning.
" He's busy right now," said a
woman who answered the
phone, barely audible over the
din.
Collier, a former Ohio Mr.
Basketball . from Springfield
Catholic Central High School,
watched the draft at his parents'
Springfield home with about 60
people and three constantlybarking dogs.
It got loud when he was
picked by Milwaukee at No. 15,
and even louder when his agent
called to tell him he was traded
to Houston.
Collier, a 7 -footer with a
feathery outside shot, is looking
forward to working on his
inside game with Rocket• center Hakeem Olajuwon.
"I kind of hope he stays
around and plays for a couple
more years. And even if he doesn't, I hope he stays around and
helps the big guys out," Collier

PIMM -Ohio, Pllp Bl
,\

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·. NATIONAL BRIEFS
..
Town gaeets film premiere

: ~ANVERS, Mass. (AP) - Proud to see the New England pre•nuere of"The Perfect Storm" and mindful that it pays tribute to
local men who died, loyal fans lined up to see the film - and the
actors starring in it.
• Former "ER" star George Clooney and rapper-turned-actor
Mark Wahlberg attended Wednesday night's showing..
• "What we thought was that if we did it right, we could come
b:ick and say with any luck we .served their story," said Clooney.
' The movie, based on the best•selling book by Sebastian .Junger,
'tells the story of the ill-fared " Andrea Gail" and its crew, who were
fast in a feroci9us storm that struck the North Atlantic in Octoli&gt;er
1991.
' "It was very dif5cult. It was, you know, like a white-knuckle,
, h&lt;;&gt;lding on," said Rusty Shatford, the brother of crewman Bobby
Sharford, who is played by Wahlberg. "I wanted it to end, but I did'.n 't want it to end. I was happy with the outcome."
" It's a tragedy," said Mary Anne Shatford, Bobby Shatford's sister.
"I hope everyone remembers that."
Wahlberg, a Boston ·native, said he was mindful of the sensitive
nature of the srory about the Gloucester-based crew.
" · "It's a very sensitive subject," Wahlberg said. "This is not some•thing that happened a century ago. It happened a decade ago."

Providlan settles complaints
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Providian National Bank has
agreed to pay about $300 million to consumers nationwide to settle allegations that it unfairly charged credit card customers.
· The settlement was announced jointly on Wednesday by the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in Washington and the
San Francisco district attorney's office. The settlement resulted from
yearlong investigations of Providian's business practices by both
agencies.
The government agencies have been investigating allegations that
Providian bullied customers into buying products and gouged cardholders with exorbitant fees to boost its profits.
In one -program, Providian allegedly charged higher rates than
promised for customers who transferred balances from their other
credit cards. The company also allegedly failed to inform consumers
about limitations on the coverage from. a credit protection program
it marketed.
"When a bank engages in unfair or deceptive marketing practices, it damages its most precious asset - the trust and confidence
of its customers," said Comptroller of the Currency John D. Hawke
Jr. "We will not tolerate abuses that breach that trust through unfair
and deceptive practices."
Providian, which did· not admit any wrongdoing, will also pay a
$5.5 million fine to the city and county of San Francisco as part of
.the serdement.
The announcement comes a day after San Francisco District
Attorney Terence Hallinan filed suit against Providian in Superior
Court. It claimed the company made false and misleading statements to customers and engaged in "deceptive and unlawful" business practices.
·
Shailesh Mehta, Providian's chairman and chief executive, said in
a statement that Providian was pleased to bring this issqe to a close
and had already made changes "that have greatly enhanced our customer satisfaction and quality con~rol programs."

Some parochial aid approved
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government can provide comput!-rs for religious schools, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday in a
decision that significantly narrowed the constitutionally required
separation of religion and government.
, The 6-3 ruling was praised by supporters of private school tuition
vouchers - government initiatives to help parents of children who
dp not attend public schools.
· The justices said a Louisiana parish can distribute money for
instructional equipment - · including computers, books, maps, and
6Jm strip projectors - to private schools as long as it's done in a ·
':!fcular, neutral and nonideological" way.
';"We believe the majority of the court has signaled that school
vouchers are constituti9nal;' said Matthew Berry, a lawyer with the
Institute for Justice. He defended, among other programs being
challenged in lower courts, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's statewide plan
to give parents of poor children money for private schooling.
·· "Removing the constitutional cloud from school choice will
encourage .m ore legislatures to support such programs;• Berry said.

GOP pushes marriage tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Republican bill cutting income
taxes by $248 billion over 10 years for all married couples, including the 25 million who now pay more than they would if single,
was approved Wednesday by the Senate Finance Committee.
' GOP sponsors described the measure, more expansive than a
S182 billion version passed by the House, as the centerpiece of their
election-year tax cut strategy. Republican leaders intend to bring
the bill to the Senate floor in July.
"This bill is fair, this bill is responsible and this bill is pro-family,"
said Sen. William Roth, R-Del., chairman of the Finance CoiOOl.ittee. "It is time that we divorce the marriage penalty from the tax
code once and for all."
After previously issuing veto threats, President Clinton now says
.~he budget svrplus is projected to be large enough that he could
sign the bill into law - but only if Congress also sends him an
a~ceptable Medicare prescription drug bill. Republicans are inviting
a, co_nfiontation with the White House if they insist on sending the
president the tax cut as a stand-alone bill.
f it would be· better if we could all agree on a marriage penalty
bill and prescription drugs;• said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont. "I'm
no&amp; sure it's going to happen."

•

Tobacco front split widens

iMIAMI (AP) -The split in a once-united front on smoking and
health has widened wirh testimony fiom the last of five tobacco
executives whose companies are fighting punitive damages in a
landmark smokets'lawsuit.
Martin Orlowsky, the chief executive of Lorillard Tobacco Co.,
said publicly for the first time that his company, the fourth-largest
cigazette maker, believes smoking is addictive and causes lung can.
c« and ' other diseases\
·
His testimony on Wednesday was similar to that of Brown &amp;
Williarnson Tobacco Corp. CEO Nicholas Brookes but does not go
as far u Liggett Group Inc. owner Bennett LeBow.
About 300,000 to 700,000 Aorida smokers are seeking a multibiJiion.dollar verdict against the nation's five biggest cigarette rnaken for decades of industry misconduct in the first smokers' classaction case to go to trial.
The jury alre&gt;dy has ruled the industry conspired to make a de•dly product and awarded $12.7 million in compensatory damages to
three smokers. Orlowsky was to resume his testimony Thursday.
•

.

•
'

Inside:

Thursday, June 22, 2000

WNBA: Rockers fall to Fire, Page B2
Daily Scoreboard, Page B2 ·
Rahal: New king of CART, Page BB
Auto Racing Notebook, Page B8

'Partial-birth abortion' ban struck down
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme 3 vote, the court's last major ruling on aborCourt dramatically limited states' power to tion. Nothing in Wednesday's decision sugban so-called partial-birth abortions Wednes- gested the court's vote split on the core aborday, a 5-4 ruling that immediately escalated tion issue had changed.
the bitter, decades-old debate over women's
Abortion-rights advocates expressed more
right to end thei): pregnancies.
relief than joy.
Closing out its 1999-2000 term with some
Janet Benshoof, whose Center for Reproof the most divisive rulings in years , the court ductive Law and Policy represented the
struck down Nebraska's partial-birth abor- Nebraska doctor who challenged his state's
tion law as an "undue burden" on women's law, said the close vote "demonstrates ·that. the
rights.
right to choose is a fragile one."
Thirty other states have similar laws, but
Planned Parenthood added: "While it
the justices disagreed on just how their ruling looks like a victory, thia is 1 beginning_: not
ultimarely will affect those other laws. More the end. Anti-choice state legislatures and
litigation seemed certain.
g(&gt;vernors across the country will use this rulJames Bopp, a lawyer for the National ing as a blueprint for drafting new bans on
Right to Life Committee, called the decision abortion procedures."
"a radical expansion of the abortion right."
· President Clinton issued a statement at the
Clarke Forsythe of Americans United for Life White House pledging to veto any similar
added: "It's the most extreme decision on legislation that widely restricts late-term
abortion ever issued by the Supreme Court." abortions. "A woman's right to choose must
The court first legalized abortion nation- include the right to choose a medical procewide in its famous Roe v. Wade ruling, the ldure that will not endanger her life or
1973 landmark based on women's constitu- health," Clinton said. "Thday's decision recogtional rights.
nizes this principle and marks an important
Those rights were upheld in 1992 by a 6- victory for a woman's freedom of choice:•

In other decisions, the court said:
-Gave states greater leeway to restrict
anti-abortion demonstrators outside clinics.
The ruling upheld a Colorado limit on "sidewalk counseling."
-The Boy Scouts can ban homosexuals
from serving as troop leaders. By extension,
the ruling in a New Jersey case could let the
Scouts exclude as well young boys who say
they are gay.
·-Significandy lowered the figurative wall
of separation between church and state by
ruling in a Louisiana case that taxpayer
money can be used to buy computers and
other instructional materials for religious
schools.
The emotional abortion issue already had
become entwined with this year's presidential
election because Republican George W. Bush
supports bans on partial-birth abortions and
Democrat AI Gore opposes them.
President Clinton !aid the nation's next
president is likely to replace rwo to four
Supreme Court justices. "Depending on who
they are;• he . said, abortion righ'\are "very
much in the balance." .

Republican George W. Bush
and Democrat AI G•;ue unveiled
proposals to assist the disabled and
conserve energy during same-day
visits to Ohio, a key state in the
presidential campaign.
In Cleveland on Wednesday.
Bush unveiled. a $145 million, fiveyear initiative to stimulate the
development of new transportation plans for the disabled Bush's
plan would, among other things,
provide matching funds for local
groups to purchase specially
equipped vans.
"People from all walks of life
should have access to the American dream; people from all walks of
life can be productive citizens," said
Bush, Texas governor and the presumptive GOP presidential nomin~.
~ ......... ~· ..
"~"'
Bush spent the bulk of his time
in a-Jand Wednesday ' raising

mon~

Fmt; BusJ:t visited to the Shaker
Heights home of Cleveland
Browns owner and billionaire
banker AI Lerner, where an estimated S1 million was r.lised for the
Republican National Committee.
Bush then attended an Ohio
Republican Party reception at the
Ritz Carlton Hotel in downtown

Medicare
J:!rescription
drug question
moves to Senate
WASHINGTON (AP)
Republicans are hailing their
House-passed prescription drug
bill as a historic new Medicare
benefit, but its prospects are iffy in
the Senate and President Clinton
has threatened a veto to force
major changes in a measure
Democrats claim is an electionyear scam.
"This plan is sound, it is in
Medicare, it is an entitlement
program and it is a guaranteed
benefit;' Rep. Bill Thomas\ RCalif., a chief architect of the
GOP plan, said Wednesday night
as the measure cleared the House
in close, mostly party-line vote,

BY 1'111 AllociATID PIIEIS
Cleveland, which was expected to
An Ohio law that would proraise more than $250,000.
hibit partial-birth abortions should
In Columbus, Gore proposed
not be affected by a U.S. Supreme
energy tax credits of as much as
Court decision overturning a
$6,000 for the pun:hase of electric
Nebraska law that banned the
cars and $2,00) for energy-efficient new homes.
method, the author of Ohio's
The Democrats' expected prespending law said Wednesday.
idential . nominee estimated the
Opponents of the Ohio law
cost at $48 billion aver 10 ~
have said they will sue in federal
Gore spoke from a house being
court to block the statute's
built by Joshua Homes, a local
enforcement before it takes effect
builder that designs and constructs
Aug.17.
energy-efficient homes. G&lt;m said.
"If you can't get approval of our
he would propose incentives that
new law, I don't know what you
would encourage consumers to
can do to satisfy the courts;' said
purchase more energy-efficient
state Rep. Jerry Luebbers, Dand environmentally sound prodCinciMati, who sponsored Ohio's
ucts.
partial-birth abortion ban.
The vice president also told a
, The Ohio law says physicians
downtown
conference
on
· who perform the procedure could
empowerment zones that the
be charged with partial-birth
administration would help !Wiralinfanticide, a second-degree felony
ize distressed collUllUnities and
c~ng up to. eight years in
i spur ·economic ~ · .
priJiln.
'
.
"Local communitieS know
P'artial-birth abortion is. not a
whljt works best for them. but they
medical term. Doctors call the '
fleed resQutcCS:' Gore told an audimethod dilation and extraction, or
torium packed with about 50Q
D&amp;X, because' it involves partially
people. "1he goal. ..is not to stranextracting a fetus, legs first,
gle_communities with tons of new
through the birth canal, cutting
red tape and government bureauthe lkUll and chaining ia contents.
cracies. The goal is to provide tax
A more common procedure is
breaks and incentives to attract pridilation· and evacuation, or D&amp;E,
. vate.investments and create jobs." ·
in which an arm or leg of a live

.'
'

'THuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Woods takes Senior
Leapelead

fetus may be pulled into the birth
canal during the abortion operation.
The Supreme Court said the
Nebraska law imposed an "undue
burden" on the rights of women
to end their pregnancies. The
court said Nebraska's law, while
purportedly aimed only at the
D&amp;X method, could crim.inalize
the D&amp;E ·method as weD.
Ohio's law targets only the dilation and extraction or partial-birth
method and allows its use by doctors when necessary to save the
mother's life or prevent irreversible
long-term health damage, Lueb.;
hers said. Nebraska's law contained
no health exception.
Ohio's law also exempts
women obtaining partial-birth
abortions from prosecution.
Luebben authored a partialbirth abortion ban in 1995 that
was enacted, b t didn't take effect
because of appeals. It was ~
out last year as unconstitutional in
federal court.
Cincinnati lawyer Alphonse
Gerhardstein, who successfully
challenged that ban, said he needs
to review the Supreme Court's
Wednesday ruling before discussing how it might alfect Ohio's
law.

Sampras moves

on at Wimbledon
' WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Top-seeded Pete Sampras
managed a 7-6 (9), 3"6, 6-3, 6-4
victory over Karol Kucera at
Wimbledon, then was taken to a
hospital for an MRI and treatment on his inflamed left foot.
No. 9 Thomas Enqvist also
won, but losers on the men's side
include-d No. 3 Magnus Norman,
No. 6 Cedric Pioline and No. 11
Richard . Krajicek, the 1996
champion.
'
On the women's side, Anna
Kournikova lost 6-3, 6-4 to
Anne-Gaelle Sidot. No. 4 Conchita Martinez, the 1994 champion, was eliminated by Sonya
Jeyaseelait. No. I Martina Hingis
a1,1d No. 11 Anke Huber
advanced, as did the Williams sisters.
. ,Eighth-seeded Serena Williams
beat Yvette Basting 6-1 , 6-0 in 35
minutes, winning the second set
n . just 11 minutes. Venus
~illiams, seeded fiftn, dispatched
A:i Sugiyama 6-1, 6-4.
·· Nine-time Wimbledon singles
champilln Martina Navratilova,
playing her first match at the All
England Club since 1996, teamed
with Mariaan de Swardt for a
doubles victory. They beat
Lubomira Bacheva and Amanda
Hopmans 6-3, 6-7 (7), 6-3.
Jeff Tarango, who stnrmed off
the court in midmatch at Wimbledon five years ago and was
banned fiom the tournament for
a year, created another stir after a
3-6, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2, 12"10 loss to
Paul Goldstein. Tarango drew
boos when he refused to shake
hands with his opponent, and he
later accused Goldstein of faking
an injury.
·Anna Smashnova beat Katalin
Marosi-Aracama 6-2, 5-7., 6- 2 but
beaned a spectator with a ball
she became angry at her
opponent's husband.
Krajicek lost 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, 7-6
(3) to Wayne Ferreira. Pioline lost
6"3, 6-3, 2-6, 3-6, 6-4 to qualifier
Vladimir Voltchkov.

Come On Over to Bob's
For the list in Summertime Eatinq
Select the Bnt T•ti~, Freshest Produce in Town•••

At Reasonable Prices

a

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Delldous

Hon•Grown

. SweetCom

...•.

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STOP BY 108'5 MARKET

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Second Street • Mason, wv

• 713--5721

~
'

I

I

•

- - -·- ·--

"

-----------------~--·~·~--------------------------

MASON, W.Va . Keith
Woods regained the lead in the
2000 Senior Men's League with
100.5 points to hold a one point
lead over Bob Hysell of Syracuse
and Dale Harrison of Pomeroy
on Tuesday.
Harrison and Hysell have each
missed a week of play, creating a
logjam of eight players within I 0
'points of the league lead.
A total Of 48 players played
througlr misty conditions for the
12 potential points. Woods captured the 12 along with his teammates Mike Bragg, Lawrence
Scarberry and Milt Maxwell, who
!~ot a 60 - 10 under - for the
winning tally.
Second place went to Bill Yoho,
Dave Baumgartner, Andy Anderson, and Ralph Sayre at 61 - nine
under.
Three teams tied for third at 63
- seven under.
'Closest to the Pin' honors
went to Yoho on seven and
Woods on 17.
. Tuesday's play marked the
halfWay point in the 2000 season.
Jim Fisher and Steve Safford
made their debuts to push the
number of players to 80.
Each week has averaged 46.6
·players.
League leaders are: 1. Woods 100.5; 2. (tie) Hysell and Harrison
c 99.5; 4. Ralph Sayre - 97.5; 5.
Mike Bragg - . 92.5; 6. Herman
Knapp - 92; 7. (tie) Bill Wine·brenner and Dewey Smith - 91;
9. (tie) Claude Proffitt and Peat
Carna~ - F
Andy ~nder­
sol) :.W :83 ~ S: · 12." Gary ·Moore 82.5; 13. (tie) Bill Hannum, Don .
Wilson and Elmer Click - 82; 16.
Dana Winebrenner - 81; 17. Ed
Wilson - 79.5; 18. Shorty Lambert - 79; 19. Milt Maxwell 75.5; 20. Charley Georgi.

p,

~.:;,= ~~.:.~' ...~

House
Speaker
Dennis
Hastert, R-Ill., said he had
received assurances from Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, RMiss, that "they are going to take
it up;' and added that his door
was open for negotiations with
Democrats.
"We've always said we're willing to sit down with the president;• Hastert said.
Meanwhile, Senate Finan.c e
Committee Chairman William
Roth, R-Del., said his panel was
working behind closed doors on
bipartisan Me.dicare legislation he
would like to begin action on in
July, after Congress returns from
its Independence Day break.
Cormpitiee Democrat Sen. Jay
Rockefeller of West Virginia said
he wasn't confident that the result
would be a viable bill, however.
"Are we going to have a better
ch;)nce of compromise after the
July Fourth recess? I very much
doubt it;' Rockefeller said.

Page 81
1hund.y, June 21, 2000

Bush, Gore visits to Ohio Author of Ohio law hopes it
focus on new proposals will withstand court scrutiny._
BY TIE Assoam~~ PREss

The Daily Sentinel

.,

Gordon hopes rebound continues at Daytona
! 1(/

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jeff Gordon knows nothing laslS''forever
- not even the boos.
.,
For years, they were aimed atT·he Kid in
part for winning far too often. Nbw, there
is a lowering of the sound that once
drowned out the pre-race introductions
after: "In the No. 24 DuPont &lt;':hevrolet

.

Gordon hears more applause, something
he jokingly calls "the sympathy 'vOte."
" It's so funny how it works:" he said.
"When somebody dominates they•say 'We
need somebody else.' When nobody dominates they say,' Hey, we need somebody to
dominate."'
'•' f'
Few have dominated NASCAR rhey

way he has since 1995. Gordon has led the
The victory took some of the pressure
Winston Cup circuit in victories an off - for now.
"I think everybody said, ' If they can't
unprecedented five straight times win it on a road course, there 's something
including a record-tying 13 in 1998.
When he races Saturday night in the wrong with them," ' Gordon said. "We
Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speed- were able to pull it off."
way, it will be as a two-time winner. Even
That pressure - especially if Gordon
a victory in the race that ends the first half fails to win in the next four races - will
of the season would leave him far off the be back when the circuit moves in August
pace of his average of nearly 10 in the last to the road cour.;e in Watkins Glen, N .Y.
five years.
But new crew chief Robbie Loomis isn't
One of his wins this year came Sunday worried.
.
at Sears Point Raceway in Sonoma, Calif.
"The pressure has been there since
It was his sixth straight on road courses, Decernber when I walked into Hendrick
extending his own record and matching Motorsports," he said. "One lhing I knew
Rusty Wallace and Bobby Allison for the coming into it, I had the grearest driver
most on serpentine tracks.
out there. If I give him the car, I know we

can get the job done."
Because he is lOth in points, there is the
perception that Gordon isn't doing well .
Yet his four victories in the last 23 races is
surpassed only by Tony Stewart's run_ of
four in hi s last 19.
Gordon must live with talk that at 28
he's now just another good driver, that he
hasn't been the same since crew chief Ray
Evernham left in September to start his
own team next year. Together, they won
throe series championships, and Evernham
called the shots for the first 47 of Gordon 's
51 career victories.
"Nothing lasts forever," Gordon said.

Pluse see Gordon. Pip 81

I

Reds rally
to top cards
CINCINNATI (AP)
Manager Tony La Russa
thought Pat Hentgen was starting to fade. He also thought his
bullpen could hold a lead.
No one knows if he was right
about the first part. He figured
wrong on the second one.
Benito Santiago homered and
Sean Casey doubled with the
bases loaded as the Cincinnati
Reds scored seven runs off St.
Louis' bullpen and rallied to
beat the Cardinals 7-3 Wednesday night.
Struggling Cincinnati overcame a 3c0 deficit once La
Russa decided to pinch-hit for
starter Pat Hentgen in the sixth.
. Hentgen, who has a (endency
,. to fade i the middle! illnil\k'!,
had given up only two hits at
that point.
"He did an excellent job;'
Santiago said. ''I'm glad they got
him out of the game."
The Reds hope their comeback against Alan Benes (1 - l)
gets them out of their monthlong slump and finally gets
them headed back in the Cardinals' direction.
Since moving into a halfgame lead in the NL Central on
Julie 4, the Reds have lost 15 of
21, falling way behind St. Louis.
As their four-game series
approached, the Reds said they
needed to win at least three of
them.
By winning two of the first
three, the Reds have moved to 7
1/2 games back and started feeling better abour themselves.
Although they trail the Cardinals by a big margin, they've
YEAH, BA8YI - Cincinnati's ~an Casey celebrates his bases-loaded double Wednesday against St. won four of six against them
this season.
Louis ..The Reds, powered by ch\ey's hit and a Bemto Santiago homer, defeated the Cards, 7-3. (AP)

.. .

PIHIHI see Reds. P11p 82

fare well . :
in 2000 NBA Draft

Martin with :
No.1 pick

... II '

hits."
Benes gave up a single to
Dante Bichette with two outs
in the sixth, hit Casey on an 02 pitch, then gave up a run; -

0

Nets take
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The
Los Angeles Clippers made
themselves better, the Orlando
Magic cleared cap space and the
New Jersey Nets hung on to
their No. I pick, a teary-eyed
Kenyon Martin.
It was a night of surprises at
the NBA draft, with a total of ·
nine trades, and a couple more
expected to be completed
Thursday.
The Clippers walked away
with · Darius Miles, Corey
Maggette, Derek Strong, Keyon
Dooling, Quentin Richardson
arid Sean Rooks iri one of the
most
dramatic
draft-day
makeovers in league history.
"It was a wonderful day," gen7
era! manager Elgin Baylor said.
"We got a bunch of young, talented playhs and a few veterans.
I think we're very talented and
very athletic and pretty deep at
ever)' position. The good part is,
we're going to have a lot of these
'players at least five years.''
Orlando started the night with
three lottery picks, bur traded

"We match up pretty well
against these guys," Casey said.
"They've got a pretty decent
lead right now. We've just got to
ke ep plugging away."
The 37,861 fans sensed rheir
desperation. One banner from
the upper deck read : "W!;:
STILL BELIEVE." Another on
the facing of the middle deck
said: "It AIN'T OYER ..."
When Ray Lankford homered leading off the sixth to make
it 2-0 and the pitcher's spot
came up with two outs and a
runner on third, La Russ~
decided that Hentgen 's appearance was over.
Hentgen was coming off his
worst start of the sezon eight rllrit in ' 4 '2-3 'frtniilgs and was starting to get his
pitches up, in La Rossa's estimation.
Pinch hitter Larry Sutton
walked and ·Edgar Renteria's
infield single drove in a run for
a 3-0 lead that made La Russa's
decision look good for the
moment.
"I thought we had a chanc~
to add a run or two," La Russ~
explained. ''It looked to me like
a couple of balls they hit in the:
fifth were up a little bit. As
we 've seen this year, you'd
rather make the move before
than after.
"I wa.• confident our bullpen
could shut them out for four
innings, but they got the clutch

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kenyon Martin was crying,
Scoonie Penn was celebrating
and Jason Collier's dogs were
barking. Ohio's new NBA contingent found several ways to
welcome their new fortunes.
Martin, who broke his leg late
last season but still was the consensus college player of the year,
cried when he was selected by
New Jersey with the No. 1 pick
in Wednesday night's NBA

Draft.

1 ~ NBA commissioner David Stern (right) congratulates
Kenyon Martin of the University of ~inci~nati, who was selected first
in the 2000 NBA Draft Wednesday m Minneapolis. {AP)

HE'S

tl{ o( them along with
tte and Strong - to get
i)nillion under the salary cap.
Magic can now make an
ered run at free agents
Grant Hill and Tim Duncan, and
if they sign both, they'll still have
another $2.5 million to throw at
·
another free agent.

Orlando also has eight firstround picks stockpiled the next
four years. And if Hill and-or
Duncan -decide nor 10 come,
maximum salary deals can be
offered to other free a"gents such
as Eddie Jm.'es, Tracy McGrady
PIHMIH Draft. Pep 82

"It was unreal," Martin said of
his outpouring of emotion. "I
invested so much over the last
few months with me getting
hurt and my family seeing me
struggle. lt was like a relief."
Penn, the diminutive point
guard who helped lead Ohio
State to a Final Four in 1999
and a share of the Big Ten regular-seaso n title this year, figured
to go sometime in th e second
round. He had to wait until the
second to last pick of the draft,
when Atlanta selected him at
No. 57.
Penn watched the draft at his

mother's house in Salem, Mass.,
but wasn't available to comment
early Thursday morning.
" He's busy right now," said a
woman who answered the
phone, barely audible over the
din.
Collier, a former Ohio Mr.
Basketball . from Springfield
Catholic Central High School,
watched the draft at his parents'
Springfield home with about 60
people and three constantlybarking dogs.
It got loud when he was
picked by Milwaukee at No. 15,
and even louder when his agent
called to tell him he was traded
to Houston.
Collier, a 7 -footer with a
feathery outside shot, is looking
forward to working on his
inside game with Rocket• center Hakeem Olajuwon.
"I kind of hope he stays
around and plays for a couple
more years. And even if he doesn't, I hope he stays around and
helps the big guys out," Collier

PIMM -Ohio, Pllp Bl
,\

�Page B 2 • The .O.IIy Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 29, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

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2-3), 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (E.rlckoon 3-5) 11 lloolon (Wale•
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Clevoland (COlan 7-4) at Kan- Cily
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• Pittsburgh (Banoon e-5) •• Phlladllphla
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• Atllnta (Mituuoad 5-e) at N.Y. Metl (Hamp.
'on 7-!1), 7:10p.m.
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•(Wrtgll14-1), 1:011 p.m.
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,('lb.,N 3-7), 3:05p.m.
Cullo (Tapanl 4-7) o1 P1111bo!gh
·(Silva 5-2), 7:0!1 p.m.
.
• -(Maddux 11-2) m N.Y. (ANd 4'1), 7:10~m
.
: \1011
( C -· e-7) at 1.00 ~~~
,(llrelfan oH • a:to p.m.

'i •.

' ''

•

"'.~'!f·"~

'

'

,,

'

,!#;~

.;

•

Major IAoguo-

Eoolom-

TMm
WLTPioGFGA
NY-NJ ......................... &amp; 7 2 28 28 28
New England ............... 7 e 5 28 30 27
Miami .......... ...............8 8 4 22 24 27
D.C.............................4 11 4 18 29 33
c-wDMolon
TlmpaBay ................10 8 0 30 37 28
Chicago ..................... .0 7 3 30 41 35
Columbus .................. .8 8 4 22 28 32
Dalu ....................... ..8 10 3 21 28 35

W _ I m Dlvlllon

Kanaa1City ............... 11 2 4 37 30 12
Loo Ana- ................8 4 7 31 25 10
Cotorado ....................8 ' 1 25 24 37
San JoH .....................4 7 7 10 23 28
NOTE: Three poinlo
a win and one poinl
lor alto.

ro.

Wod-.y'aOomM

san JoH o, Now York·Naw Jarsoy o, lie
Loo Anael• 2, DC Urilld 1
Tampa Bay 2, Colu.- 1
Colorado 1, Ddol 0
' Baturdey'a-

Colorado o1 DC Unked, 3 p.m.
~
Now.York-Now Joraey o1 Tilmpa Bay, 7 p.m.
san- .. Columbuo, 7:30p.m.
Loo Ang- 11 Dalloo, 8:30 p.m.
'IIMocloy, July 4
New England II Miami, 4:30 p.m.
DC UMed o1 Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Chicago 11 Colorado, o p.m.
Kantu CIIY II San JoH, a p.m.
COiumlluo o1 Loa Ang-. 10:30 p.m.

al San Diogo (Toll·

~ 2-0), 10:05 p.m.
' Loo Angeleo (&amp;own e-2) o1 San Francllco
;(Orllz4-7), 10:3! p.m.

l!aatDMIIon

w

'room

L Pot. 08
3! .551
Now York .... ..................... 37 38 .514
3
......................... ... 37 38 .507 31/2
JlOI1ItnO!e ........................32 43 .427 81/2
~ Bay ....................... 31 44 .413101/2
,
Cenlnll Dlvlllon
Chlcogo ....................... ...48 28 .838
Clo\lo{ond ..................... ...40 38 .528 81/2
11-- City .....................38 38 .480 12
J)llroll ............................. 32 42 .432 15 1/2
, . _ ....................... 34 45 .430
18
•
-Divlolon
Oolcland ..........................45 31 .592
............................. 31 .15117 . 1/2
.........................40 37 .518 51/2
.... .. .........................35 40 .467 . 11/2
.
Wednnsrtye GlmM
Dtlrol113, N.Y. - - 8
Toran10 5, Timpe Boy 2
CIIY 8, Clellwland 1
-~ - 7 . 11lnnlngo
'Chlcogo Sox t, Min"""""' 3
t ....-5. Ooldllnd 3
Anlholm3,Sollle2

:rDiiiito ............................43

T-n-

• Toronlo (Celllllo4-5) mTampa Bay (UdOt 1·
2), 12:15 p.m.
' Milo- (Millon 7-2) Ill Chicago WNte
J!lox (Wel1o 4-8), 2:05 p.m.

NBA
fnNnPapB1
and Jalen Rose.
: The Nets took a look at all the
:trade offers they received and
;decided to reject them and select
•Martin, the consensus college
~layer of the year from Cincinnati. Martin broke down in tears
he was selected.
: Stromile Swift of LSU went
:second to Vancouver, and Miles
l!3ve commissioner David Stem a
"'-ug and a pat on the back of the
:head after going thiid to the

as

~lippers.

• The Chicago Bulls had six of
the first 34 picks and made one
trade, sending the seventh pick,
:rexas center Chris Mihm, to
J,:leveland for the eighth pick,
Michigan guard Jamal Crawford,
&gt;nd cash.
'I Dallas
made four trades, includ•
'
ing getting msno Sbte's Court~ey Alexander with Orlando's
13th pick. The Mavericks also
acquired John Wallace and Flori4a forward Donnell Harvey fiom
~e Knicks and veteran guard
f.ric Muidock from the Clippers.

Ponllm 1 1 - . 8:30p.m.
Utah 11 - - · g p.m.
Mlnnooola at Saanlo, 10 p.m.

frldoV .. a.meo

Mlnneocla (Fledmon 4-3) 11 Clov&amp;land
~2-1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. YlnkOaa (onn.loy 3-2) II Tampa Bay
(Fiakoo 2-4), 7:15p.m.
Tot&lt;&gt;nlo (Hill-y 3-4) Ill Balllmoro (TBA),
7:38p.m.
D«roll (Woover 4-8) al Kansas Cily
(Rok:hol1 3-4), 8:05 p.m.
Bolton (Pic:llll&lt;lo 2.()) al Chicago While Sox
(Parque 7·2). 8:115 p.m.
.
Saallle (Halama 7-3) II TolCIII (Aoglfl 7·5),
8:35p.m.
Oaldand (M- 5·2) 11-m (COOper 2·
2), 10:0!1 p.m.

Chlcogo Cullo 5, Pl11oburgtl 4
-.r,Mon1rool4
~

-atWoohlrQtt&gt;n, 7p.m.
,,_,.at Now YtHtc. 7:30p.m.

T..,

!oOiom-

W l Pot.

Orlando ............................. 8
Clevll!and ...... .................... 7
001ro11 ............................... 7

8 .571
8 .538
e .538

HotiiiOn .......................... 13
LooAng- ....... ..............11
Sacramonla ......................0
MIM8001a .........................8
Phoenbc ............................. 8

.848
1
.843 31/2
.815
4
.815
4

W-Con2 .887

UUth ..................................8
Pc1lland .................... ........3
-

2
5
5
5

7 .533

(Joll !kJnon)
March 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hamplon,
Ga. (Dole Earnhardt)
Mllroh 18 - Mall.com 400, Dao1ing10n, S.C.
(Wan:l Bu11Dn)
Maroh 28 - Food Cily 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(RUIIyWellace)
April 2 - OlrocTV 500, Fort Worth, T8X81.
(Dale~ Jr.)
'
April 8 - Goodv'• 1100, Martlr-.vnlt. va.
(Man! Manln)
AprN 18- OloHsrd 500, Talladega, Ala. (Jot!
Gordon)
Apnl 30 - NAPA Aulo Parts 500, .Fonlana,
Celli. (Joramy Maytleld)

May e - Pon1loc ·exc11omen1 400, R~h·
monel, VII. (Dalo Eamhordl Jo.)
May 28 - COCo·COio 500, Concord, N.C.
(Mill~)

June 4 - MBNA Plallrun 400, Cover. Del.
(!l&gt;ny Stowart)
Juno 11 - Kma~ 400, Brooklyn, M~h. (Tony
SI8War1)
June 18 - Pocono !100, Long Pond, Pa.
(J"""'Y Mayfield)
June25 - Save Maft/KIIgan 350k, Sono·
ma, Col~. (Joff Gonion)
JUly 1 - Ptpal 400, Daylona Baoch, Fla.
JUy 0- Jlfly Luba 300, LoUdon, N.H.
JUy 23- Pannoylvanlo 500, Long Pond.
Aug. 5 - Btlckylrd 400, lndtanepollo.
Aug. 13- Global Crooalng al The Glen,

'Nalklno Cllon, N.Y.
Aug. 20- Papal 400; Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 28- goraclng.oom 500, Brl810~ Tenn.
Sop!. 3 - Soulhern 500, Darllnglon, S.C. .
Sop!. 0- ChiiVfOIII Monle Clrlo 400, Rich·

mond, VI.

Sept 17- Now Hampohjre 300, Loudon.
Sap!. 24- MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 1 - NAPlll AuloCare 500, MertinaYIIOt,

Va.
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quallly 500, Conconl,
N.C.
Oct. 15- Wlnllon 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct 22 - Pop Sacrel 400,
Roc:l&lt;lngham, N.C.
NOY. 5· - ~.. Plr1llllu18 Lubo
500k, Avondale, Arll.
Nov. 12.,. P..,.,1400, Homell!aad, Fla.
Nov. 10- NAP4500, Hamplon, Ga.
..
-llandlngo

1. ~=·2,400.
2. Dalt
• 2,333.
3. Dale Jarrott, 2,271.
4. Word Bullon, 2,188.

1/2
1/2
1
1 1/2
31/2
4
8

.308
.250
.143

.500
.462

Tho NASCAFI Winston Cup .a.odule, win"""'In par-..,, and driwr poimllandlngs:
FOb. 20 - Daylona 500, Dayklna Beach,
Fla. (Dole Jarrott)
FOb. 27 - Din Lube/Kmart 400, Ro&lt;klng·
ham, N.C. (Bobby ~e)
March 5 - COI1droci.&lt;Om 400, Las Vogaa.

GB

e 8
Naw York .............. .............e 7
Mlarri ........................ ........ 4 g
Indiana .............................. 3 9
Clatonil .. .... ................... :.2 12
Wuhlng!Cn ... ................... .

~on C u p -

5. Joll Burlon, 2. 134.
e. Rlc:lcy RUdd, 2, 130.
7. Mll1c Martin, 2,123.
8. Tony Stewart, 2,115.
8. RuiiY wallace, 2,088.
10. Jeff GoniOn 2,058.
11. Millo Skinner, 1,8011.
12. Tarry lAbonte, 1,878.
13. Mall Ka'\aMtl, 1....
14. Dale Eamhordl Jr., 1,78e.
15, 811 EJIIoll, 1,715.
18. Jaramy Meylllld, 1,710.
17. Slorllng Marfil, 1,708.

5

8 .273
8
.............................. 2 10 .187 81/2

Wod=.. Qomeo

NewYork82,

88

Hout10nn.~tteee

••

Orlando 81, Miami 53
Loo Mg- 82,1ndlana 73
Sacl8n1onlo 82, MlnnMola74
Portland 80, Clovolond 88
Dalru~ 82, Seottla 78
FrktoV'o Gomeo
Orlando al Miami, 1 p.m.

The selection of Swift sbrted a
string in which the next 10 picks
were all underclassmen. A record
18 underclassmen were selected
in the first round, and four foreign centers were picked consecutively late in the first round.
After Miles went third, Chicago
took Iowa State forward Marcus
Fizer fourth. Mike Miller of
Florida went fifth to Orlando, and
Cincinnati guard DerMarr Johnson went sixth to Adanb.
Next came Mihm and Crawford, who were swapped for each
other.
The trade left the Bulls without
a center, although they picked up
7-1 Croat Dalibor Bagaric at No.
24.
.The selection of Joel Pryzbilla
by the Houston Rockets with the
ninth pick brought boos from the
crowd ·at the Target Center still
upset that the 7-1 sophomore
center who.played locally at Minnesob quit the team late in the
season. Houston later traded
Pryzbilla to Milwaukee for the
15th pick, Georgia Tech center
Jason Collier, and a future No. 1.
Dooling went lOth and UCLA
power forward Jerome Moiso
went at No. 11 to Boston.

I

.

18. s.... Pn, ',875.
1U. Kan 8ch,_, 1.8&amp;7.
II) .. Ched Ullle, 1,822. .
21. -!Ohril!l'a.rioon, 1,818.
22. John Andretti, 1,584.
23. Joo N-.1.510.
24. f'raaalay, 1,484.
25. Jimmy Spencor,1,487.
28. t.lchaolwa~. 1,407.
27. Kwln Lopago, 1,404.
28. Kenny IIWin, 1,338.

With the next two picks, the
Mavericks took Syracuse forward
Etan Thomas and Alexander, who
led the nation in scoring with a
24.8 average.
The Detroit Pistons selected
Michigan State guard Mateen
Cleaves with the 14th pick, keeping the captain of the national
champions in-state.
At No. 16, 21-year-old
Hidayet Turkoglu of Isbnbul,
Thrkey, went to Sacramento.
Seattle took Oklahoma State
swingman Desmond Mason, the
Clippers got Richardson, Charlotte took Kentucky center
Jamaal Magliore, and Philadelphia took Hofstra guard Speedy
Claxton at No. 20.
Toronto selected Michigan
State forward Morris Peterson at
No. 21 despite needing a point
guard.
. The Knicks grabbed Harvey,
20, and later traded him and Wallace to Dallas for point guard
Erick Strickland and the final
pick of the second round,
Cincinnati's Pete Mickeal. The
Utah Jazz followed by bking 19year-old DeShawn Stevenson of
Washington Union H.S. in Fresno, Calif.

29. Bobby Hamilton, 1,319.
30. Jerry Nadeau, 1,312.
31 . Kenny Wallace , 1,248
32. E11io11 Sadler, 1,178.
33. Dave Blanay,1 .113.
34. Stacy ~ton . 1,088.
35. Kyle Patly, 1,051 .
38. Wally Dallenbach, 958.
37. Bren Bodine, 847.
38. Scon Pruen, 899.
30. Robby Gordon, 872.
40. Darrell Wallrlp, 830.

BASEBALL

Amlrtcan LMaue

BALTIMORE ORIOLES-~Iaoed 3B Cal
Rip+cen on the 1~y disabled ·ust. Recalled 38
Ryan Minor frool Rochester of the lnlomational
League. Assigned AHP Darren Holmes to
Rochester.
. CLEVELAND INDIANS-Recalled AHP
Kane Dav~ lrom BYffalo ol lhe lnl•netional
League. Optioned RHP Paul Rigdon to Buflolo.
Senl RHP Jaime Navarro oulright 10 llullalo.
KANSAS CITY AOYAL5-Sent C Brian
Johnson and RHP Miguel Balllla oulrlght lo
Omana of the PCL .Recalled RHP Doug
Boclrtler and C Jooge Fablegas ~om Omaha.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed RHP
Flamlro Mendoza on the 15-day dllll&gt;lad llsl
retroactive to June 25.
No1Jonll LMguo
COLORADO FIOCKIES-Promoted 3B S8m
s - from AIIMMIIo ol !he Soulh Atiantlc
L•gue to Salem of the Carolina League.
'LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Placed RHP
Jeff Shaw on the 15-day disabled ll&amp;t, retroac~
live 10 June 27. Recalled RHP Jamie Arnokl
lrom Albuquerque o11he PCL
PHILADELPHIA PHIWES-Ac:qulred I..HP
Ed VOsberg frool 1he COioredo Flockloo ror a
mlno• league player 1o be named and assigned
him to Scranton;WIIkes·Barre of the lnttn-.·
lionel league.
ST. LCUIS CARDINALS-Traded FIHP Dar·
ren Holmes to Baltimore for fulure considerations.

BASKETBALL
NlllonolllalkllboH Aoooolollon
CHICAGO BUUS-Traded the rlghlo IO C
Chria Mlhm 10 Cleveland lor 1lle rlghls lo G
Jamal Crawford and caah.
,
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Traded a turura
flrst·tomd draft pick and cash. to Or1ando for
1lle rlgll1a to G Counney Alexand11. Tllldld F
Sean Roo1cl to 1he Loo Angeloo Cllppera
G
Eric Murdock. Traded· llle rlghiA lo F Dan
Langhllo Houllon lor lhe nghla to F Eduanlo
Najera and a fiAure aecond-round draftik.
HOUSTON ROCI&lt;ETS-TIIIdadllle . hiAio
C Joel f'mt&gt;lll810 Mllweukao tor !he ng 1o c
Juon Coller and a tulure filii-round draft p[ck.
LOS ANGELGS LAKEFIS-W.Ived F A.C.
Green. Traded 1WO tulura second-round draft
plcko 10 lhe San Antonio Spors lor lhe rlghls lo
G Corey Hlghlowlf.
NEW JllRSEY NETS-Announced lha
rellramam o1 F Jayeon Williams. Named Tim
W.lah lralnO&lt;.
.
NEW YORK KNICKS-Traded F John W.l·
lace and 1ha rlghls to F Donnell Harvey 10 lho
Dlllao Mever~kslor G Erick Slrlckland and the
rlghiA to F Pate Mlckaal.
ORLANDO MAGIC-Traded F Corey
Maggllte, F Derek Strong, !he rlghlo 1o G
Ko10fl Dooling and cash 10 lhe Los Angeles
Clippers
a lulure flr11·round draft pick.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS-Traded lho
rigll1s1o Cl Joslp Sasar to lho Boslon Cellk:a lor
two fu1ure second-found draft pid&lt;a.
FOOTBALL
Nallonal F001boll LMguo
SAN DIEGO CHARGEAS-~ooed to terms

ro.

ro.

with LB Deon Humphrey on a on•rear contract.
HOCKEY

•

•

•

•

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

Portland ·rocks Cleveland
PORUAND, Ore. (AP) - It
was just a matter of time before
Alisa Burras cracked the Portland
Fire's sbrting lineup. ·
Now the only qu estion is when
she'll be back en the bench.
Burras and Sophia Witherspoon each scored 22 points as
the Fire beat the Cleveland
Rockers 80-69 on Wednesday
night.
"Just on paper, I would have
guessed right from the start Alisa
would have been our starter at
the post position," Portland coach
Lirida Hargrove said. "Tonight
Alisa made a statement for a starting position.''
Merlakia Jones scored 16 points
for the Rockers (7-6), the firstplace team in the east who trailed
by as many as 32 points.
Burras, normally the first player
off the Fire's bench, scored· a
career high and added seven
rebounds in starting her first

••
season. Sbrting ~­

game of the
ward Vanessa Nygaard played li¢ited minutes due to a lower hr.¢k
"strain.
;:
Portland shot 73 perteift in ):he
first five minutes to take a 2J. ~ 7
lead. Witherspoon scored ; 12
points during the · stretch ~ild
Burras added seven, overpo~­
ing the Rockers en mute co: )8
·
•:
first-half points.
After a sloppy 16-point loss in
Sacramento Sunday, Hargrove
was happy with that kind of plBy
right from the start.
;:
"I w:~s upset with them after
the Sacramento game becau1e
that was the first game we diliiQ't
have the effort level we needed to
win," Hargrove said. "We h)~g
our hat on that, and we did :it
tonight."
;.
And that sbrted with Burds,
who quieted offensively in ~~e
second half but made a presence
on the boards and on defense.: ;

AUnm..r.or•m

• C18111mM Truck, Dlell•d 200
2:30p.m. • Saturday • CBS
• Wlnlton Cup, P~l 400
8 p.m. • Salurday • CBS

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

•

innings since being called :Up.
"Against Casey, I went to 0-2 al)d
made a misbke and clipped him.
I made a terrible pitch : to
(Boone). Santiago W:IS the s~e
thing - I left a ball up for ~"
Casey's bases-loaded double·dff
Mike Mathews drove in tlir¢e
more in the seventh and put ti,e
Reds in position for an invigorating win.
.
Long reliever Elmer Dessens,
making his first start in two years,
gave up three runs in 5 2~3
innings . Dennys Reyes (2-1) ·
struck out four of the five batters
he faced, and Scott Sullivan
pitched two perfect innings \O
finish it off.
,
· "I think losing to them hea9to-head would be bad right now:•
Casey said. "That's going to be : a
big game tomorrow, to win this

,

.,
1. 42)

La-•
Dale Earnhardt

-~, 41)
f

Bobby

Ohio

Ia•

.

e.

Riding

;

•'
•\'

'.

..'

•
·~

•

.,.;.,
.,...

upon tllutflnlsh, I.e., 10 points for
flrst. down to one point for lOth.
• Banus polniS art awarded
thru times during a setJSon. Aftt:r
race Nos. 10, 10 and 30, 10 poinl.r
arw a'l'ounled to the rookie
candidate who accumulated the
most Win.i'tnn Cup chilmplonship
points. Tile bonus points
incrementally decrease by ont
point until one bonus point is
awtlrd•d to tht JOth ltfllte.tt rookie
on the basis~ championship
paints during that serment.
•An Dddltlottal awcmJ is mode
after the final race ofthe sUIJlln,
bas~ on tlfe fi1Jol point standings,
will! the same Incremental
dtcrt4tt In points QWQrr/ed 4J

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y.- Grq
Bllfte won for 111e third week In
e row, captunna !he Bull)' Hilt
Vineyards 150 In his Jack
Roush--owned Ford.

abo11c

, • Discretionary points, bond
o" muting ofa NASCARappolmed p4tltl.

• HOT• Dale Jllrott'a ...,raca
finish In the last seven races Is
4.86. The 1999 Wlnaton Cup
champiOn won the season
Ojl8nlr81011)1011a.
• 1111T1 Will~ DaiOtnbach Jr. .Is
atiiiiCOkii"C for his flrst top-15
flnial'l.

1

••••••••••••

·

-·~y

FanTipa ·

•will Jeff Gordon
race for peanuts?

actua l ~

Yes, but tt's net what you
lhlnk.
.
In lhe 8nckyard 400,
Gordon's Chevrolet will carry a
•Peanuts• paint acheme to
hOnOr tne work of .tne rate
CharOts M. Schulz, who penned
the comic strip.

.-

SIIHJ,;

-lllloltioa.-

AROUND THE GARAGE

Walllco'Jqualiftin&amp; enaine. AIMIIi
tile e11remcly interes~ed parties were
Ju:k RoUih, Dou&amp; Yalea, Llrry
SONOMA, Calif. - N,SCAR McClure and anyone elso who might
eon,tlnues to uphold ill de ftcto pof. be lntertllcd in the ~eerecs to Walicy in repud to innavltion by Win- ltce'spower.
.
ston Cup teams, that being, •Jf you
Wallace, orew chief Robm Pl::mtry somcthinJ new, it bener nor berton and owner Roecf Pcnsko we!ll
W'Ork.."
reportedly furious.'
Apparently miffed with the eue at
X
which R111ty Wallace won the pole
111ECOO'OFSTARDOM: 'Mill
for the StvcMart/Kraa:cn 350,
NASCU officllll took the unusual did the drematit Poeono SOO \'ictory
step ofundressina Wallace's en&amp;ine do for Jeremy Mayfield\ camr'1 So
r", it's toll the 31·Year-old driver two
inpublic.
·
....-..~ lfiSWerina machines.
Who stid NASCAR doean't .-4'_...,
...... g,.o,,. ..........
Mayf1eld'a aentle 11p of Dale
believe Ia opennCSI'J
On Saturday afternoon, official• Earnhinlt\ Chevrolet on the final
invited every engine builder in the ·rum hat JiVen the OWensboro, Ky.,
praac area to a public teardown of na1ivc unpm:edenled visibility.
By~

DuftOI'I 1
NASCAR This week

I

I

I

I Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy !.
L--------~~~L~DJ~! ________ J

fielded a Ford for Jeff GordOn In the Buach
series?
2. Whet two tracks will jotn the Winston Cup Series In
2001?
.
a. WhO won the first cup race ever 1'\ekl at sears Point
Aaceway?
ppn~ .1&gt;101~ ·r :·1u
'U~IIOf pue ' 'UWM 'AM:t HIUI)t 'I :t!AIQ IIUI '"'

NASCAR. publicly·tears apart Wallace's qualifying engine

· I
1

.1. What current Winston Cup owner once

••••••••••••

'

Limit 1 per Customer per
prescription

......

•) . •

•· •Any lop-!OfinLrh by a rookie

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Quality prescription Servjce
at Competitive Prices.

.

1.1 a...utdtd specfjic points based

V.lllct.Hot.-

$5
00
.
,
1. Up to
•
off any prescription

NabiiM: No one has ever
won thl! race twice ... Biffle
and Jack Sprague are the only
active former winners.

Raybestos Rookie of the Year
paints are awarded as follows,
ba..ted llpott each mokte candidateS
best 17TPcej1nislu!s:
• One point awan/edfor each
qutJiifylna attempt.
• Ten points ID llightstflnishtng
rookie ct~ndidate, ntne for nut
"'l lighut, etc., to on~ point for lOth
/lttlshing roolrli candidate In each

••••••••••••

We honor most third party :
prescription ·plans.·Your Swisher
.&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck &amp;
Ken are here to fill . yout
'
'
prescription needs.

R•• rnord: Gre&amp; Blffte.
Ford, 106.714 mph, July3,

Would you please tell how the
Rookie of the Year points work?
1know that where they finish in
a race is how they receive point• lh• fifll rec:eivina 12, the sec::ond
rcceivina: I0,. the third reccivina
nine, and 10 on. I have been trylna
to keep up with Dale E1mhardt Jr.
and Mttt Keaseth in the points, but
it's just not addina up. Do they
receive extra poinh for leadinc or
winning the race?
Thanks for your help.
Belli G•lhrfe
Was•lnaton, N.C.

WATKINS Gl'tN, N.Y. .:.., Road
racer Ron Fellows climbed Into
the Chevrolet normally driven
by Joe Nemeche,k and won the .
Lyool 200. Another roed racer.
Butch Leltr:lnger, finished
second, end BGN reculat l&lt;evln
Harvlck was an Impressive
lhlrd .

The SaveMari{Kraaen 350
marked Gordon's sixth
consecutive win on the
serpenune, undulating tracks
that make up only two of the
season's 34 events. He hat
won the last three races at
10.turn, 1.949-mlle sears Point
Aacoway.
Mired In the deepest slump
since his rookie year - one
victory In his previous 21 races

2,1999

Yout-1\lm
LtHtn rn. Ow l111d1n

throu_.. a lot this year, and It's
nice to come out here to what I
call hOme (he, was bOrn In
nearby VallejO). ~ Gordon saki.
•To come out here with all the
friends and family, and to do It
out here Is re~Uy special.•

stopped.

..

-~~~ clloM91on: Grea
BMfle
QuollfYiol rocord: Grea
BMfle, Ford, 121.102 mph , July

• •••••••••••

ltj~~~t~~~~~

VJho'aNot

I

Saars DieHard 200
When: Saturday, July 1

·we·ve certainly been

he Is ready to dominate the
entire wtnston Cup Series
a&amp;aln, but he certainly proved
h&amp; Is ready to ooniinate the
road courses.
Then aaatn, he never

Mere: The MUwaukee Mile,
West AUla, WIS. (1·mlle track)
FDIIMt: 200 lapsf200 mites

1999
CRAntMAN TRUCK

feetlna the l)fessure.

304-372-3888

I

Whit: sears DieHard 250
Whtn: Sunday, July 2
Where: The Milwaukee Mile,
West Allis, Wis. (1·mlle track)
Format: 250 laps/250 miles
Dtfendlnl chempiOn: Casey

- GordOn came to Sears Point

race I
Gordon may not have PJoved

;

COUPON

BUSCH QIIAND NATIONAL

FROM lAST WEEII

~~

I

Earnhatdt and Jeff Gordon have
each won this race twice ....
Sterunc Merlin and Eernnardt
have each won two poles.

2000 WINSTON CUP SCHEDUlE

Jerrr libbee

n9t

"E::~~!J? ~':de~t

Quite a road course showing ·
Made best of 11, as usual
Up front every week
If only he had been healthy
He's a two-time winner
Flipped In quallfylni
Sport' a newesl slar?
Starting to rustle again
Poles alone don't do It
Not bad for his flrst visit

3, 4I) · Dale Jlrr.ct
4. 44) TDII)' llonrt
&amp;. H Jell Gordon
B. 43) Word lurton
7. 48) Jeremy Mtt~ld
47) Mark ~•tin
1. 48) Rulty Wallace
10. 410) Dale Eamllardt Jr.

r---~----------------------~

son, Martin's teammate, · and said. "The skills are there, but I
Redd, who predicted he'd be
Penn's · Ohio State backcourt need to get bigger. That's some- selected in the first round, was
mate, guard Michael Redd.
thing I'm working on every taken in the ·second, 43rd over.
'
PapB1
Pete day.''
Cincinnati
forward
all, by Milwauke.e.
.
Mickeal. was selected by the DalBulk is something Martin has
Redd gave up his final year. of
:' osaid of Olajuwon.
las Mavericks with the final pick plenty of. At(i-foot-9 and a solid eligibility to make. himself eligi• ;collier, who sbrted at Indiana of the draft.
230 pounds, he can score from ble for the draft. Some .couts
~ut transferred to Georgia 'l'ech
Johnson, who left the Bearcats inside or outside and defend fancied him a first-round pick,
~~cause of conflicts with coach after his freshman season, was guards as easily as forwards.
but his stock slipped because of
iOb Knight, said he wanted to taken by Atlanta with the sixth
Martin averased 18.9 points, · his inconsistent outside shot.
+i&amp;cch the draft with the people pick in the first round, higher 9.7 rebounds and 3.45 blocks a "When he went to the NBA it
#o helpe~·m through hiJ than some/ expected.
pme last season and should fit wasn't about money, it was to
l)imultuoua c
ae career.
"There's a lot of thinp I .can in well alonpide forward Keith ·attain a dream. And the dream
• !"I wante
end time with do that I didn't get ·a chance to Van Horn and point guard was attained tonight," Redd's
only my family and friends, ahow · at Cincinnati playing Stephen Marbury, the corner- father, James Recld, said early
Jl9t I wanted it to be a COIJU!1u- behind Kenyon;• said Johnson, stones of the Nets franchise.
morning
when
Thursday
d~ china for everyone that who averaaed 12.6 points per
"He's a guy we won't 'have to reached at his Columbua home.
II•'P" me throuah my career at pme.
baby and set him ready in two , The elder Redd · said his. son
c:;:eorp. '!Cch and Indiana back
Johnson can play on the or three yean;• sajd coach Byron wun't available to spea~ with
td Catholic Central," Collier perimeter, but his wiry, 200- Scott. "He's been there for four the media, but was excited to be
slid.
~d frame means he needs to yean of college. Thla guy is a setting a chance to compete for
: Other playen with Ohio conman, and we're just going to a spot on the Bucks' roster and
uCtions telected were Cincinsome- throw him in the fire and go to back up shooting guard Ray
riall twinpnan. DerMarr John- thinathey need to work on," he along with him."
Allen .

Whit: Pepsi 400
Wllon: Saturday, Ju~ 1
Wllere: Oaytona lmernatlonal
Speedw.ay, Daytona Beach, Aa.,
(2.5-mlle track)
Format: 160 laps/400 miles
Dolonollnc ...........,, Dale
Jarrett
QUIItfJIIII record: Sterling
Marlin, Chevrol81, 203.8SS .
mph, July 3, 1986
RICt record: Bobby Allison,
Mercury, 173.473 mph, July 4,

Alwood
Q•tlfYinc .-d: Casey
Atwood , Chevrolat, 121.421
mph, July 3, 1999
Rect record: Mike Wallace,
Chevrolal, 100.999 mph, July
2, 1994
Notallllt: Atwood, BuckshOt
Jones and Randy LaJoie are the
active former winners •

Dear NASCAR This Week,

Last week's rankine Is In parentheses.

.SONOMA, Calif. - Fifteen
·races Into the Winston Cup
schedule, and three-time
champion Jeff Gordon was
SlrUIIIIIIn&amp;.
What a great time for a road

Admission:
Adults: 12 &amp; up: $8.00
. Yo11th: 5 to .ll: $5.00
4 &amp; under: FREE
Best Dressed Cowboy &amp; Cowgirl Contest
(5 &amp; under only) .

Net8blt: Bill ElliOtt, Dele ·

TOP TfN

WINSTON CUP

Jackson County Fairvounds
Ripley, West Virgmia
July 1, 2000 ·@7:00pm

1980

WINSTON CliP

• weekly ranklnls by NASCAR This week writer Monte Dutton.

'T'
·&lt; I
~.our ·- ·

.....

ON THE SCHEDULE

PHOfltf

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF PROFESSIONAL BULL RIDERS

,.

BuiCit GrMd Natlonol, Dl-'llrd 250

•

2 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

I

scoring single to Aaron 'Boone.
That brought up Santiago, who
was in such a deep slump - 5for-42 - that he decided to grab
. a te;unmate's bat to c~ange his
luck.
"I've beim usiqg the same bat
for so long and I just put it away
and grabbed a different bat:' he
said. "I can't use a bat with my
name on it; I was hitting line drives at people with my bat."
Benes went to a 1-2 count
before lc;aving a fastball over the
plate. Santiago pulled it for a
three-run homer, his first since
May 30.
"All of it's frustrating," said
. "
Benes, who had allowed only two senes.
runs in his
14 2-3

.

·

.'
.~

Reds
from Pap II

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

'

WNBA

Notlon,lllOekey Lllogue
LOS ANGELES KINGs-Exercised !heir
option on C Bob Colkum.
MINNESOTA WILD-Sionad F WM I'Valz.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Placed LW
Krla King.on wolll8fl Wednesday.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-ROt-algned FfN
Joe 5acco lo a IWO·yaar conlracl. Slgnld FfN
Joe Murphy to a one-vear contract.

Next came four foreign big
men: Bagaric to the Bulls, 7foot-2 Iakovos Tsakalidis of
Greece to Phoenix, 7-foot
Mamadou N'Diaye of Auburn
by way of Senegal to Denver and
7-foot Primoz Brezec of Slovenia to Indiana.
. Erick Barkley of St. John's
went 28th to Portland, and the
NBA champion Los Angeles
Lakers took Stanford forward
Mark Madsen with the final pick
ofthe first round.
The Bulls got Connecticut
guard Khalid El-Amin and center Jake VoskuW with two of
their three second-round picks.
Oklahoma forward Eduardo
Najera of Mexico who was taken'
by Houston at No. 38 and then
traded to Dallas for the No. 31 ·
pick, Vanderbilt forward Dan
Langhi.
Duke · guard Chris Carrawell
dropped to the Spurs at No. 41 ,
and Nigerian center Olumide
Oyedeji fell to No. 42 and was
picked by Seattle.
Auburn's Chris Porter dropped
ro No. 55 and was taken by
Golden State, and Ohio State's
Scoonie Penn went at No. 57 to
Atlanta.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

992-2155

Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

___ ...

St. At. 248

-----'
I
t
--""'........ --

Chester

·--!A·-

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
•

··461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

See us for Your Stihl"

"Man, I've blown up two answer· t
X
In&amp; ~chines and &lt;!'mJ workinaon a
WEARING A NIW HA'n Jimmy
lhlrd, Mayfield said A lot of(mcs- Spence mpettd Sean Polat •
1
Ia~) came from friends and ftom both a ~:Or IDd : ur ownar, but
f'lmtly, bua I aot a ton of meuqes
tbe
from~le!don'tcvenknow.They ~ ~=~stt.e No. 26 Ford
\me Jusl: excttcd. I an't ~them.
Ta~l c&lt;HJWDed by Travis Carter
I was pretty excited my~elf. .
nd Carl H
He wu a1so owner of
Mayfield's onliae chat seuton on 1 ..__ ~~·..-..-..~t by Robcn
1,
NASCAROnllne(www.nucu.com} anot, .. , '"':" ... ~-""""'....
June20drevfmorelhan6I,OOO "hits." Yates en11nc, th~l ~~ dnven by
nearly 10 timet thcUJUII rcspohle.
rotd·rtee tee Boris S.ld,
"It's just nlcll! that so many people
X
are happy for us. This Mobil One
HIS sMILING I'ACt:: liJIIdep ' ..... olilo)f IIGirllit .
tetm has been throuah itt hl&amp;fts and
has issued. 1k com·
lows this yetr, but we •ve atuc k Supen--'way
r--.
~
topcher tnd we've 'M)rkcd lotleth- mmontive Pole Dty lie et tn
rrlllllo•
..._ . . - ··
.
k
1
Darrell
Waltrip's
name
for
Oct
1),
er," Mayfic.ld said. "'I Ihtn peop c
· U we Ire. ,...
doys.SOO.
before tbe n1nnina of the
are u happy to aee us w1n
WIIIIIOR
... OK. almost u happy."

985-3308

...

:;:

fI

z

0

~

CD

co
1\)

f

II

:s

Cl.

1\) !'to
I

co
1\)
U'l

g

•

-E!:

1:
Cl.

I

Cl

'8

I

,;l
0

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'1',

•'

�Page B 2 • The .O.IIy Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 29, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

---

w l
·............................47 30
:'l'ort&lt; .... ....................... 31
•Mon1r011 ..........................38 38
·Fioridl .............................38 41
·PIIiiodtlphla ....................33 42
'
c-... Dtvlelon
Loull ....... ....................-46 32
37 311
.P11111ugh ..................... .. 32 44
C11ll:.go ..........................31 45
....... ,... ..........., ...........31 ~
·..... .................... .27 50

:Sl
.c- . .... . . . . . . . . .

---

:Arizona
......:.....................a
'
·~

............ ........... ..41

'l.oo ~ .....................40
Froncllci&gt; ..................38
,Son Ologo ... .....................34

;s.n

'1\'ecfn

a

32
32
38
38
42

rtrt• GlrMe

Pet.

08

.810
.15117
2
.514 7 1/2
.481
10
.440
13

T - ~ 4-5) Ill Olldlnd (H,_ 11-5),
3:38p.m.
(Ballanlleld 4-8) I l l - (Meche
4-4), 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yank- IP"'tiile 7-4) II Oo1roil (MIIckl
2-3), 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (E.rlckoon 3-5) 11 lloolon (Wale•
2·5), 7:05 p.m.
Clevoland (COlan 7-4) at Kan- Cily
(Durtin 1.:!), 8:05p.m•

.15114
.487 7 1/2
.421 12 1/2
.408131/2
.403
,.
.351
18

.sa.

.15112
2
.5211 41/2
.514 5 1/2
.447 10 1/2

•

-e.

. c'*'-

•

-~R~e.4)atArizDna(Jolnon

•11-2), 10:115 p.m.
•
Fotdly'o
: Florida (Smllh 0.1) 11 Momtool (Vazquez 6·
,4), 7:05 p.m.
• Pittsburgh (Banoon e-5) •• Phlladllphla
•(Woll7-4), ~:0!1 p.m.
• Atllnta (Mituuoad 5-e) at N.Y. Metl (Hamp.
'on 7-!1), 7:10p.m.
: Chlcogo Clbo (Downo 3-2) "' Milwaukee
•(Wrtgll14-1), 1:011 p.m.
I
(Hoi13-S) o1 St. UJuls (AnkJele-3),
'8:10p.m.
' Clrdnno11 (Harrioch 0-4) m Arizona (Morgan

o-

~- 1h.J::r

~ e.&amp;)

,

'

7, Sl L.oulo 3

N.Y. Mtlle,Flo!ldae
Philldtlphio 8, MllwiUkM 7
Hout10n 2
• Loo Ana- 5, san Diego 4
COicndo 17, San Frondooo13
TaMy'o' St Looil 1 M - 7-3) o1 Clnclnned (VIr•lcllo7-4), 12:3! p.m.
' . MilwoukM (llero "-ll) o1 Phllodolphlo (Cog·
'gin 1.()), •,:,~~
, Son F
(Nalhon 4-1) al COiorldo
,('lb.,N 3-7), 3:05p.m.
Cullo (Tapanl 4-7) o1 P1111bo!gh
·(Silva 5-2), 7:0!1 p.m.
.
• -(Maddux 11-2) m N.Y. (ANd 4'1), 7:10~m
.
: \1011
( C -· e-7) at 1.00 ~~~
,(llrelfan oH • a:to p.m.

'i •.

' ''

•

"'.~'!f·"~

'

'

,,

'

,!#;~

.;

•

Major IAoguo-

Eoolom-

TMm
WLTPioGFGA
NY-NJ ......................... &amp; 7 2 28 28 28
New England ............... 7 e 5 28 30 27
Miami .......... ...............8 8 4 22 24 27
D.C.............................4 11 4 18 29 33
c-wDMolon
TlmpaBay ................10 8 0 30 37 28
Chicago ..................... .0 7 3 30 41 35
Columbus .................. .8 8 4 22 28 32
Dalu ....................... ..8 10 3 21 28 35

W _ I m Dlvlllon

Kanaa1City ............... 11 2 4 37 30 12
Loo Ana- ................8 4 7 31 25 10
Cotorado ....................8 ' 1 25 24 37
San JoH .....................4 7 7 10 23 28
NOTE: Three poinlo
a win and one poinl
lor alto.

ro.

Wod-.y'aOomM

san JoH o, Now York·Naw Jarsoy o, lie
Loo Anael• 2, DC Urilld 1
Tampa Bay 2, Colu.- 1
Colorado 1, Ddol 0
' Baturdey'a-

Colorado o1 DC Unked, 3 p.m.
~
Now.York-Now Joraey o1 Tilmpa Bay, 7 p.m.
san- .. Columbuo, 7:30p.m.
Loo Ang- 11 Dalloo, 8:30 p.m.
'IIMocloy, July 4
New England II Miami, 4:30 p.m.
DC UMed o1 Tampa Bay, 7 p.m.
Chicago 11 Colorado, o p.m.
Kantu CIIY II San JoH, a p.m.
COiumlluo o1 Loa Ang-. 10:30 p.m.

al San Diogo (Toll·

~ 2-0), 10:05 p.m.
' Loo Angeleo (&amp;own e-2) o1 San Francllco
;(Orllz4-7), 10:3! p.m.

l!aatDMIIon

w

'room

L Pot. 08
3! .551
Now York .... ..................... 37 38 .514
3
......................... ... 37 38 .507 31/2
JlOI1ItnO!e ........................32 43 .427 81/2
~ Bay ....................... 31 44 .413101/2
,
Cenlnll Dlvlllon
Chlcogo ....................... ...48 28 .838
Clo\lo{ond ..................... ...40 38 .528 81/2
11-- City .....................38 38 .480 12
J)llroll ............................. 32 42 .432 15 1/2
, . _ ....................... 34 45 .430
18
•
-Divlolon
Oolcland ..........................45 31 .592
............................. 31 .15117 . 1/2
.........................40 37 .518 51/2
.... .. .........................35 40 .467 . 11/2
.
Wednnsrtye GlmM
Dtlrol113, N.Y. - - 8
Toran10 5, Timpe Boy 2
CIIY 8, Clellwland 1
-~ - 7 . 11lnnlngo
'Chlcogo Sox t, Min"""""' 3
t ....-5. Ooldllnd 3
Anlholm3,Sollle2

:rDiiiito ............................43

T-n-

• Toronlo (Celllllo4-5) mTampa Bay (UdOt 1·
2), 12:15 p.m.
' Milo- (Millon 7-2) Ill Chicago WNte
J!lox (Wel1o 4-8), 2:05 p.m.

NBA
fnNnPapB1
and Jalen Rose.
: The Nets took a look at all the
:trade offers they received and
;decided to reject them and select
•Martin, the consensus college
~layer of the year from Cincinnati. Martin broke down in tears
he was selected.
: Stromile Swift of LSU went
:second to Vancouver, and Miles
l!3ve commissioner David Stem a
"'-ug and a pat on the back of the
:head after going thiid to the

as

~lippers.

• The Chicago Bulls had six of
the first 34 picks and made one
trade, sending the seventh pick,
:rexas center Chris Mihm, to
J,:leveland for the eighth pick,
Michigan guard Jamal Crawford,
&gt;nd cash.
'I Dallas
made four trades, includ•
'
ing getting msno Sbte's Court~ey Alexander with Orlando's
13th pick. The Mavericks also
acquired John Wallace and Flori4a forward Donnell Harvey fiom
~e Knicks and veteran guard
f.ric Muidock from the Clippers.

Ponllm 1 1 - . 8:30p.m.
Utah 11 - - · g p.m.
Mlnnooola at Saanlo, 10 p.m.

frldoV .. a.meo

Mlnneocla (Fledmon 4-3) 11 Clov&amp;land
~2-1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. YlnkOaa (onn.loy 3-2) II Tampa Bay
(Fiakoo 2-4), 7:15p.m.
Tot&lt;&gt;nlo (Hill-y 3-4) Ill Balllmoro (TBA),
7:38p.m.
D«roll (Woover 4-8) al Kansas Cily
(Rok:hol1 3-4), 8:05 p.m.
Bolton (Pic:llll&lt;lo 2.()) al Chicago While Sox
(Parque 7·2). 8:115 p.m.
.
Saallle (Halama 7-3) II TolCIII (Aoglfl 7·5),
8:35p.m.
Oaldand (M- 5·2) 11-m (COOper 2·
2), 10:0!1 p.m.

Chlcogo Cullo 5, Pl11oburgtl 4
-.r,Mon1rool4
~

-atWoohlrQtt&gt;n, 7p.m.
,,_,.at Now YtHtc. 7:30p.m.

T..,

!oOiom-

W l Pot.

Orlando ............................. 8
Clevll!and ...... .................... 7
001ro11 ............................... 7

8 .571
8 .538
e .538

HotiiiOn .......................... 13
LooAng- ....... ..............11
Sacramonla ......................0
MIM8001a .........................8
Phoenbc ............................. 8

.848
1
.843 31/2
.815
4
.815
4

W-Con2 .887

UUth ..................................8
Pc1lland .................... ........3
-

2
5
5
5

7 .533

(Joll !kJnon)
March 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hamplon,
Ga. (Dole Earnhardt)
Mllroh 18 - Mall.com 400, Dao1ing10n, S.C.
(Wan:l Bu11Dn)
Maroh 28 - Food Cily 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(RUIIyWellace)
April 2 - OlrocTV 500, Fort Worth, T8X81.
(Dale~ Jr.)
'
April 8 - Goodv'• 1100, Martlr-.vnlt. va.
(Man! Manln)
AprN 18- OloHsrd 500, Talladega, Ala. (Jot!
Gordon)
Apnl 30 - NAPA Aulo Parts 500, .Fonlana,
Celli. (Joramy Maytleld)

May e - Pon1loc ·exc11omen1 400, R~h·
monel, VII. (Dalo Eamhordl Jo.)
May 28 - COCo·COio 500, Concord, N.C.
(Mill~)

June 4 - MBNA Plallrun 400, Cover. Del.
(!l&gt;ny Stowart)
Juno 11 - Kma~ 400, Brooklyn, M~h. (Tony
SI8War1)
June 18 - Pocono !100, Long Pond, Pa.
(J"""'Y Mayfield)
June25 - Save Maft/KIIgan 350k, Sono·
ma, Col~. (Joff Gonion)
JUly 1 - Ptpal 400, Daylona Baoch, Fla.
JUy 0- Jlfly Luba 300, LoUdon, N.H.
JUy 23- Pannoylvanlo 500, Long Pond.
Aug. 5 - Btlckylrd 400, lndtanepollo.
Aug. 13- Global Crooalng al The Glen,

'Nalklno Cllon, N.Y.
Aug. 20- Papal 400; Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 28- goraclng.oom 500, Brl810~ Tenn.
Sop!. 3 - Soulhern 500, Darllnglon, S.C. .
Sop!. 0- ChiiVfOIII Monle Clrlo 400, Rich·

mond, VI.

Sept 17- Now Hampohjre 300, Loudon.
Sap!. 24- MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 1 - NAPlll AuloCare 500, MertinaYIIOt,

Va.
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quallly 500, Conconl,
N.C.
Oct. 15- Wlnllon 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct 22 - Pop Sacrel 400,
Roc:l&lt;lngham, N.C.
NOY. 5· - ~.. Plr1llllu18 Lubo
500k, Avondale, Arll.
Nov. 12.,. P..,.,1400, Homell!aad, Fla.
Nov. 10- NAP4500, Hamplon, Ga.
..
-llandlngo

1. ~=·2,400.
2. Dalt
• 2,333.
3. Dale Jarrott, 2,271.
4. Word Bullon, 2,188.

1/2
1/2
1
1 1/2
31/2
4
8

.308
.250
.143

.500
.462

Tho NASCAFI Winston Cup .a.odule, win"""'In par-..,, and driwr poimllandlngs:
FOb. 20 - Daylona 500, Dayklna Beach,
Fla. (Dole Jarrott)
FOb. 27 - Din Lube/Kmart 400, Ro&lt;klng·
ham, N.C. (Bobby ~e)
March 5 - COI1droci.&lt;Om 400, Las Vogaa.

GB

e 8
Naw York .............. .............e 7
Mlarri ........................ ........ 4 g
Indiana .............................. 3 9
Clatonil .. .... ................... :.2 12
Wuhlng!Cn ... ................... .

~on C u p -

5. Joll Burlon, 2. 134.
e. Rlc:lcy RUdd, 2, 130.
7. Mll1c Martin, 2,123.
8. Tony Stewart, 2,115.
8. RuiiY wallace, 2,088.
10. Jeff GoniOn 2,058.
11. Millo Skinner, 1,8011.
12. Tarry lAbonte, 1,878.
13. Mall Ka'\aMtl, 1....
14. Dale Eamhordl Jr., 1,78e.
15, 811 EJIIoll, 1,715.
18. Jaramy Meylllld, 1,710.
17. Slorllng Marfil, 1,708.

5

8 .273
8
.............................. 2 10 .187 81/2

Wod=.. Qomeo

NewYork82,

88

Hout10nn.~tteee

••

Orlando 81, Miami 53
Loo Mg- 82,1ndlana 73
Sacl8n1onlo 82, MlnnMola74
Portland 80, Clovolond 88
Dalru~ 82, Seottla 78
FrktoV'o Gomeo
Orlando al Miami, 1 p.m.

The selection of Swift sbrted a
string in which the next 10 picks
were all underclassmen. A record
18 underclassmen were selected
in the first round, and four foreign centers were picked consecutively late in the first round.
After Miles went third, Chicago
took Iowa State forward Marcus
Fizer fourth. Mike Miller of
Florida went fifth to Orlando, and
Cincinnati guard DerMarr Johnson went sixth to Adanb.
Next came Mihm and Crawford, who were swapped for each
other.
The trade left the Bulls without
a center, although they picked up
7-1 Croat Dalibor Bagaric at No.
24.
.The selection of Joel Pryzbilla
by the Houston Rockets with the
ninth pick brought boos from the
crowd ·at the Target Center still
upset that the 7-1 sophomore
center who.played locally at Minnesob quit the team late in the
season. Houston later traded
Pryzbilla to Milwaukee for the
15th pick, Georgia Tech center
Jason Collier, and a future No. 1.
Dooling went lOth and UCLA
power forward Jerome Moiso
went at No. 11 to Boston.

I

.

18. s.... Pn, ',875.
1U. Kan 8ch,_, 1.8&amp;7.
II) .. Ched Ullle, 1,822. .
21. -!Ohril!l'a.rioon, 1,818.
22. John Andretti, 1,584.
23. Joo N-.1.510.
24. f'raaalay, 1,484.
25. Jimmy Spencor,1,487.
28. t.lchaolwa~. 1,407.
27. Kwln Lopago, 1,404.
28. Kenny IIWin, 1,338.

With the next two picks, the
Mavericks took Syracuse forward
Etan Thomas and Alexander, who
led the nation in scoring with a
24.8 average.
The Detroit Pistons selected
Michigan State guard Mateen
Cleaves with the 14th pick, keeping the captain of the national
champions in-state.
At No. 16, 21-year-old
Hidayet Turkoglu of Isbnbul,
Thrkey, went to Sacramento.
Seattle took Oklahoma State
swingman Desmond Mason, the
Clippers got Richardson, Charlotte took Kentucky center
Jamaal Magliore, and Philadelphia took Hofstra guard Speedy
Claxton at No. 20.
Toronto selected Michigan
State forward Morris Peterson at
No. 21 despite needing a point
guard.
. The Knicks grabbed Harvey,
20, and later traded him and Wallace to Dallas for point guard
Erick Strickland and the final
pick of the second round,
Cincinnati's Pete Mickeal. The
Utah Jazz followed by bking 19year-old DeShawn Stevenson of
Washington Union H.S. in Fresno, Calif.

29. Bobby Hamilton, 1,319.
30. Jerry Nadeau, 1,312.
31 . Kenny Wallace , 1,248
32. E11io11 Sadler, 1,178.
33. Dave Blanay,1 .113.
34. Stacy ~ton . 1,088.
35. Kyle Patly, 1,051 .
38. Wally Dallenbach, 958.
37. Bren Bodine, 847.
38. Scon Pruen, 899.
30. Robby Gordon, 872.
40. Darrell Wallrlp, 830.

BASEBALL

Amlrtcan LMaue

BALTIMORE ORIOLES-~Iaoed 3B Cal
Rip+cen on the 1~y disabled ·ust. Recalled 38
Ryan Minor frool Rochester of the lnlomational
League. Assigned AHP Darren Holmes to
Rochester.
. CLEVELAND INDIANS-Recalled AHP
Kane Dav~ lrom BYffalo ol lhe lnl•netional
League. Optioned RHP Paul Rigdon to Buflolo.
Senl RHP Jaime Navarro oulright 10 llullalo.
KANSAS CITY AOYAL5-Sent C Brian
Johnson and RHP Miguel Balllla oulrlght lo
Omana of the PCL .Recalled RHP Doug
Boclrtler and C Jooge Fablegas ~om Omaha.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed RHP
Flamlro Mendoza on the 15-day dllll&gt;lad llsl
retroactive to June 25.
No1Jonll LMguo
COLORADO FIOCKIES-Promoted 3B S8m
s - from AIIMMIIo ol !he Soulh Atiantlc
L•gue to Salem of the Carolina League.
'LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Placed RHP
Jeff Shaw on the 15-day disabled ll&amp;t, retroac~
live 10 June 27. Recalled RHP Jamie Arnokl
lrom Albuquerque o11he PCL
PHILADELPHIA PHIWES-Ac:qulred I..HP
Ed VOsberg frool 1he COioredo Flockloo ror a
mlno• league player 1o be named and assigned
him to Scranton;WIIkes·Barre of the lnttn-.·
lionel league.
ST. LCUIS CARDINALS-Traded FIHP Dar·
ren Holmes to Baltimore for fulure considerations.

BASKETBALL
NlllonolllalkllboH Aoooolollon
CHICAGO BUUS-Traded the rlghlo IO C
Chria Mlhm 10 Cleveland lor 1lle rlghls lo G
Jamal Crawford and caah.
,
DALLAS MAVERICKS-Traded a turura
flrst·tomd draft pick and cash. to Or1ando for
1lle rlgll1a to G Counney Alexand11. Tllldld F
Sean Roo1cl to 1he Loo Angeloo Cllppera
G
Eric Murdock. Traded· llle rlghiA lo F Dan
Langhllo Houllon lor lhe nghla to F Eduanlo
Najera and a fiAure aecond-round draftik.
HOUSTON ROCI&lt;ETS-TIIIdadllle . hiAio
C Joel f'mt&gt;lll810 Mllweukao tor !he ng 1o c
Juon Coller and a tulure filii-round draft p[ck.
LOS ANGELGS LAKEFIS-W.Ived F A.C.
Green. Traded 1WO tulura second-round draft
plcko 10 lhe San Antonio Spors lor lhe rlghls lo
G Corey Hlghlowlf.
NEW JllRSEY NETS-Announced lha
rellramam o1 F Jayeon Williams. Named Tim
W.lah lralnO&lt;.
.
NEW YORK KNICKS-Traded F John W.l·
lace and 1ha rlghls to F Donnell Harvey 10 lho
Dlllao Mever~kslor G Erick Slrlckland and the
rlghiA to F Pate Mlckaal.
ORLANDO MAGIC-Traded F Corey
Maggllte, F Derek Strong, !he rlghlo 1o G
Ko10fl Dooling and cash 10 lhe Los Angeles
Clippers
a lulure flr11·round draft pick.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS-Traded lho
rigll1s1o Cl Joslp Sasar to lho Boslon Cellk:a lor
two fu1ure second-found draft pid&lt;a.
FOOTBALL
Nallonal F001boll LMguo
SAN DIEGO CHARGEAS-~ooed to terms

ro.

ro.

with LB Deon Humphrey on a on•rear contract.
HOCKEY

•

•

•

•

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

Portland ·rocks Cleveland
PORUAND, Ore. (AP) - It
was just a matter of time before
Alisa Burras cracked the Portland
Fire's sbrting lineup. ·
Now the only qu estion is when
she'll be back en the bench.
Burras and Sophia Witherspoon each scored 22 points as
the Fire beat the Cleveland
Rockers 80-69 on Wednesday
night.
"Just on paper, I would have
guessed right from the start Alisa
would have been our starter at
the post position," Portland coach
Lirida Hargrove said. "Tonight
Alisa made a statement for a starting position.''
Merlakia Jones scored 16 points
for the Rockers (7-6), the firstplace team in the east who trailed
by as many as 32 points.
Burras, normally the first player
off the Fire's bench, scored· a
career high and added seven
rebounds in starting her first

••
season. Sbrting ~­

game of the
ward Vanessa Nygaard played li¢ited minutes due to a lower hr.¢k
"strain.
;:
Portland shot 73 perteift in ):he
first five minutes to take a 2J. ~ 7
lead. Witherspoon scored ; 12
points during the · stretch ~ild
Burras added seven, overpo~­
ing the Rockers en mute co: )8
·
•:
first-half points.
After a sloppy 16-point loss in
Sacramento Sunday, Hargrove
was happy with that kind of plBy
right from the start.
;:
"I w:~s upset with them after
the Sacramento game becau1e
that was the first game we diliiQ't
have the effort level we needed to
win," Hargrove said. "We h)~g
our hat on that, and we did :it
tonight."
;.
And that sbrted with Burds,
who quieted offensively in ~~e
second half but made a presence
on the boards and on defense.: ;

AUnm..r.or•m

• C18111mM Truck, Dlell•d 200
2:30p.m. • Saturday • CBS
• Wlnlton Cup, P~l 400
8 p.m. • Salurday • CBS

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

•

innings since being called :Up.
"Against Casey, I went to 0-2 al)d
made a misbke and clipped him.
I made a terrible pitch : to
(Boone). Santiago W:IS the s~e
thing - I left a ball up for ~"
Casey's bases-loaded double·dff
Mike Mathews drove in tlir¢e
more in the seventh and put ti,e
Reds in position for an invigorating win.
.
Long reliever Elmer Dessens,
making his first start in two years,
gave up three runs in 5 2~3
innings . Dennys Reyes (2-1) ·
struck out four of the five batters
he faced, and Scott Sullivan
pitched two perfect innings \O
finish it off.
,
· "I think losing to them hea9to-head would be bad right now:•
Casey said. "That's going to be : a
big game tomorrow, to win this

,

.,
1. 42)

La-•
Dale Earnhardt

-~, 41)
f

Bobby

Ohio

Ia•

.

e.

Riding

;

•'
•\'

'.

..'

•
·~

•

.,.;.,
.,...

upon tllutflnlsh, I.e., 10 points for
flrst. down to one point for lOth.
• Banus polniS art awarded
thru times during a setJSon. Aftt:r
race Nos. 10, 10 and 30, 10 poinl.r
arw a'l'ounled to the rookie
candidate who accumulated the
most Win.i'tnn Cup chilmplonship
points. Tile bonus points
incrementally decrease by ont
point until one bonus point is
awtlrd•d to tht JOth ltfllte.tt rookie
on the basis~ championship
paints during that serment.
•An Dddltlottal awcmJ is mode
after the final race ofthe sUIJlln,
bas~ on tlfe fi1Jol point standings,
will! the same Incremental
dtcrt4tt In points QWQrr/ed 4J

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y.- Grq
Bllfte won for 111e third week In
e row, captunna !he Bull)' Hilt
Vineyards 150 In his Jack
Roush--owned Ford.

abo11c

, • Discretionary points, bond
o" muting ofa NASCARappolmed p4tltl.

• HOT• Dale Jllrott'a ...,raca
finish In the last seven races Is
4.86. The 1999 Wlnaton Cup
champiOn won the season
Ojl8nlr81011)1011a.
• 1111T1 Will~ DaiOtnbach Jr. .Is
atiiiiCOkii"C for his flrst top-15
flnial'l.

1

••••••••••••

·

-·~y

FanTipa ·

•will Jeff Gordon
race for peanuts?

actua l ~

Yes, but tt's net what you
lhlnk.
.
In lhe 8nckyard 400,
Gordon's Chevrolet will carry a
•Peanuts• paint acheme to
hOnOr tne work of .tne rate
CharOts M. Schulz, who penned
the comic strip.

.-

SIIHJ,;

-lllloltioa.-

AROUND THE GARAGE

Walllco'Jqualiftin&amp; enaine. AIMIIi
tile e11remcly interes~ed parties were
Ju:k RoUih, Dou&amp; Yalea, Llrry
SONOMA, Calif. - N,SCAR McClure and anyone elso who might
eon,tlnues to uphold ill de ftcto pof. be lntertllcd in the ~eerecs to Walicy in repud to innavltion by Win- ltce'spower.
.
ston Cup teams, that being, •Jf you
Wallace, orew chief Robm Pl::mtry somcthinJ new, it bener nor berton and owner Roecf Pcnsko we!ll
W'Ork.."
reportedly furious.'
Apparently miffed with the eue at
X
which R111ty Wallace won the pole
111ECOO'OFSTARDOM: 'Mill
for the StvcMart/Kraa:cn 350,
NASCU officllll took the unusual did the drematit Poeono SOO \'ictory
step ofundressina Wallace's en&amp;ine do for Jeremy Mayfield\ camr'1 So
r", it's toll the 31·Year-old driver two
inpublic.
·
....-..~ lfiSWerina machines.
Who stid NASCAR doean't .-4'_...,
...... g,.o,,. ..........
Mayf1eld'a aentle 11p of Dale
believe Ia opennCSI'J
On Saturday afternoon, official• Earnhinlt\ Chevrolet on the final
invited every engine builder in the ·rum hat JiVen the OWensboro, Ky.,
praac area to a public teardown of na1ivc unpm:edenled visibility.
By~

DuftOI'I 1
NASCAR This week

I

I

I

I Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy !.
L--------~~~L~DJ~! ________ J

fielded a Ford for Jeff GordOn In the Buach
series?
2. Whet two tracks will jotn the Winston Cup Series In
2001?
.
a. WhO won the first cup race ever 1'\ekl at sears Point
Aaceway?
ppn~ .1&gt;101~ ·r :·1u
'U~IIOf pue ' 'UWM 'AM:t HIUI)t 'I :t!AIQ IIUI '"'

NASCAR. publicly·tears apart Wallace's qualifying engine

· I
1

.1. What current Winston Cup owner once

••••••••••••

'

Limit 1 per Customer per
prescription

......

•) . •

•· •Any lop-!OfinLrh by a rookie

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

Quality prescription Servjce
at Competitive Prices.

.

1.1 a...utdtd specfjic points based

V.lllct.Hot.-

$5
00
.
,
1. Up to
•
off any prescription

NabiiM: No one has ever
won thl! race twice ... Biffle
and Jack Sprague are the only
active former winners.

Raybestos Rookie of the Year
paints are awarded as follows,
ba..ted llpott each mokte candidateS
best 17TPcej1nislu!s:
• One point awan/edfor each
qutJiifylna attempt.
• Ten points ID llightstflnishtng
rookie ct~ndidate, ntne for nut
"'l lighut, etc., to on~ point for lOth
/lttlshing roolrli candidate In each

••••••••••••

We honor most third party :
prescription ·plans.·Your Swisher
.&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck &amp;
Ken are here to fill . yout
'
'
prescription needs.

R•• rnord: Gre&amp; Blffte.
Ford, 106.714 mph, July3,

Would you please tell how the
Rookie of the Year points work?
1know that where they finish in
a race is how they receive point• lh• fifll rec:eivina 12, the sec::ond
rcceivina: I0,. the third reccivina
nine, and 10 on. I have been trylna
to keep up with Dale E1mhardt Jr.
and Mttt Keaseth in the points, but
it's just not addina up. Do they
receive extra poinh for leadinc or
winning the race?
Thanks for your help.
Belli G•lhrfe
Was•lnaton, N.C.

WATKINS Gl'tN, N.Y. .:.., Road
racer Ron Fellows climbed Into
the Chevrolet normally driven
by Joe Nemeche,k and won the .
Lyool 200. Another roed racer.
Butch Leltr:lnger, finished
second, end BGN reculat l&lt;evln
Harvlck was an Impressive
lhlrd .

The SaveMari{Kraaen 350
marked Gordon's sixth
consecutive win on the
serpenune, undulating tracks
that make up only two of the
season's 34 events. He hat
won the last three races at
10.turn, 1.949-mlle sears Point
Aacoway.
Mired In the deepest slump
since his rookie year - one
victory In his previous 21 races

2,1999

Yout-1\lm
LtHtn rn. Ow l111d1n

throu_.. a lot this year, and It's
nice to come out here to what I
call hOme (he, was bOrn In
nearby VallejO). ~ Gordon saki.
•To come out here with all the
friends and family, and to do It
out here Is re~Uy special.•

stopped.

..

-~~~ clloM91on: Grea
BMfle
QuollfYiol rocord: Grea
BMfle, Ford, 121.102 mph , July

• •••••••••••

ltj~~~t~~~~~

VJho'aNot

I

Saars DieHard 200
When: Saturday, July 1

·we·ve certainly been

he Is ready to dominate the
entire wtnston Cup Series
a&amp;aln, but he certainly proved
h&amp; Is ready to ooniinate the
road courses.
Then aaatn, he never

Mere: The MUwaukee Mile,
West AUla, WIS. (1·mlle track)
FDIIMt: 200 lapsf200 mites

1999
CRAntMAN TRUCK

feetlna the l)fessure.

304-372-3888

I

Whit: sears DieHard 250
Whtn: Sunday, July 2
Where: The Milwaukee Mile,
West Allis, Wis. (1·mlle track)
Format: 250 laps/250 miles
Dtfendlnl chempiOn: Casey

- GordOn came to Sears Point

race I
Gordon may not have PJoved

;

COUPON

BUSCH QIIAND NATIONAL

FROM lAST WEEII

~~

I

Earnhatdt and Jeff Gordon have
each won this race twice ....
Sterunc Merlin and Eernnardt
have each won two poles.

2000 WINSTON CUP SCHEDUlE

Jerrr libbee

n9t

"E::~~!J? ~':de~t

Quite a road course showing ·
Made best of 11, as usual
Up front every week
If only he had been healthy
He's a two-time winner
Flipped In quallfylni
Sport' a newesl slar?
Starting to rustle again
Poles alone don't do It
Not bad for his flrst visit

3, 4I) · Dale Jlrr.ct
4. 44) TDII)' llonrt
&amp;. H Jell Gordon
B. 43) Word lurton
7. 48) Jeremy Mtt~ld
47) Mark ~•tin
1. 48) Rulty Wallace
10. 410) Dale Eamllardt Jr.

r---~----------------------~

son, Martin's teammate, · and said. "The skills are there, but I
Redd, who predicted he'd be
Penn's · Ohio State backcourt need to get bigger. That's some- selected in the first round, was
mate, guard Michael Redd.
thing I'm working on every taken in the ·second, 43rd over.
'
PapB1
Pete day.''
Cincinnati
forward
all, by Milwauke.e.
.
Mickeal. was selected by the DalBulk is something Martin has
Redd gave up his final year. of
:' osaid of Olajuwon.
las Mavericks with the final pick plenty of. At(i-foot-9 and a solid eligibility to make. himself eligi• ;collier, who sbrted at Indiana of the draft.
230 pounds, he can score from ble for the draft. Some .couts
~ut transferred to Georgia 'l'ech
Johnson, who left the Bearcats inside or outside and defend fancied him a first-round pick,
~~cause of conflicts with coach after his freshman season, was guards as easily as forwards.
but his stock slipped because of
iOb Knight, said he wanted to taken by Atlanta with the sixth
Martin averased 18.9 points, · his inconsistent outside shot.
+i&amp;cch the draft with the people pick in the first round, higher 9.7 rebounds and 3.45 blocks a "When he went to the NBA it
#o helpe~·m through hiJ than some/ expected.
pme last season and should fit wasn't about money, it was to
l)imultuoua c
ae career.
"There's a lot of thinp I .can in well alonpide forward Keith ·attain a dream. And the dream
• !"I wante
end time with do that I didn't get ·a chance to Van Horn and point guard was attained tonight," Redd's
only my family and friends, ahow · at Cincinnati playing Stephen Marbury, the corner- father, James Recld, said early
Jl9t I wanted it to be a COIJU!1u- behind Kenyon;• said Johnson, stones of the Nets franchise.
morning
when
Thursday
d~ china for everyone that who averaaed 12.6 points per
"He's a guy we won't 'have to reached at his Columbua home.
II•'P" me throuah my career at pme.
baby and set him ready in two , The elder Redd · said his. son
c:;:eorp. '!Cch and Indiana back
Johnson can play on the or three yean;• sajd coach Byron wun't available to spea~ with
td Catholic Central," Collier perimeter, but his wiry, 200- Scott. "He's been there for four the media, but was excited to be
slid.
~d frame means he needs to yean of college. Thla guy is a setting a chance to compete for
: Other playen with Ohio conman, and we're just going to a spot on the Bucks' roster and
uCtions telected were Cincinsome- throw him in the fire and go to back up shooting guard Ray
riall twinpnan. DerMarr John- thinathey need to work on," he along with him."
Allen .

Whit: Pepsi 400
Wllon: Saturday, Ju~ 1
Wllere: Oaytona lmernatlonal
Speedw.ay, Daytona Beach, Aa.,
(2.5-mlle track)
Format: 160 laps/400 miles
Dolonollnc ...........,, Dale
Jarrett
QUIItfJIIII record: Sterling
Marlin, Chevrol81, 203.8SS .
mph, July 3, 1986
RICt record: Bobby Allison,
Mercury, 173.473 mph, July 4,

Alwood
Q•tlfYinc .-d: Casey
Atwood , Chevrolat, 121.421
mph, July 3, 1999
Rect record: Mike Wallace,
Chevrolal, 100.999 mph, July
2, 1994
Notallllt: Atwood, BuckshOt
Jones and Randy LaJoie are the
active former winners •

Dear NASCAR This Week,

Last week's rankine Is In parentheses.

.SONOMA, Calif. - Fifteen
·races Into the Winston Cup
schedule, and three-time
champion Jeff Gordon was
SlrUIIIIIIn&amp;.
What a great time for a road

Admission:
Adults: 12 &amp; up: $8.00
. Yo11th: 5 to .ll: $5.00
4 &amp; under: FREE
Best Dressed Cowboy &amp; Cowgirl Contest
(5 &amp; under only) .

Net8blt: Bill ElliOtt, Dele ·

TOP TfN

WINSTON CUP

Jackson County Fairvounds
Ripley, West Virgmia
July 1, 2000 ·@7:00pm

1980

WINSTON CliP

• weekly ranklnls by NASCAR This week writer Monte Dutton.

'T'
·&lt; I
~.our ·- ·

.....

ON THE SCHEDULE

PHOfltf

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF PROFESSIONAL BULL RIDERS

,.

BuiCit GrMd Natlonol, Dl-'llrd 250

•

2 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

I

scoring single to Aaron 'Boone.
That brought up Santiago, who
was in such a deep slump - 5for-42 - that he decided to grab
. a te;unmate's bat to c~ange his
luck.
"I've beim usiqg the same bat
for so long and I just put it away
and grabbed a different bat:' he
said. "I can't use a bat with my
name on it; I was hitting line drives at people with my bat."
Benes went to a 1-2 count
before lc;aving a fastball over the
plate. Santiago pulled it for a
three-run homer, his first since
May 30.
"All of it's frustrating," said
. "
Benes, who had allowed only two senes.
runs in his
14 2-3

.

·

.'
.~

Reds
from Pap II

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

'

WNBA

Notlon,lllOekey Lllogue
LOS ANGELES KINGs-Exercised !heir
option on C Bob Colkum.
MINNESOTA WILD-Sionad F WM I'Valz.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Placed LW
Krla King.on wolll8fl Wednesday.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-ROt-algned FfN
Joe 5acco lo a IWO·yaar conlracl. Slgnld FfN
Joe Murphy to a one-vear contract.

Next came four foreign big
men: Bagaric to the Bulls, 7foot-2 Iakovos Tsakalidis of
Greece to Phoenix, 7-foot
Mamadou N'Diaye of Auburn
by way of Senegal to Denver and
7-foot Primoz Brezec of Slovenia to Indiana.
. Erick Barkley of St. John's
went 28th to Portland, and the
NBA champion Los Angeles
Lakers took Stanford forward
Mark Madsen with the final pick
ofthe first round.
The Bulls got Connecticut
guard Khalid El-Amin and center Jake VoskuW with two of
their three second-round picks.
Oklahoma forward Eduardo
Najera of Mexico who was taken'
by Houston at No. 38 and then
traded to Dallas for the No. 31 ·
pick, Vanderbilt forward Dan
Langhi.
Duke · guard Chris Carrawell
dropped to the Spurs at No. 41 ,
and Nigerian center Olumide
Oyedeji fell to No. 42 and was
picked by Seattle.
Auburn's Chris Porter dropped
ro No. 55 and was taken by
Golden State, and Ohio State's
Scoonie Penn went at No. 57 to
Atlanta.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196

992-2155

Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

___ ...

St. At. 248

-----'
I
t
--""'........ --

Chester

·--!A·-

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
•

··461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

See us for Your Stihl"

"Man, I've blown up two answer· t
X
In&amp; ~chines and &lt;!'mJ workinaon a
WEARING A NIW HA'n Jimmy
lhlrd, Mayfield said A lot of(mcs- Spence mpettd Sean Polat •
1
Ia~) came from friends and ftom both a ~:Or IDd : ur ownar, but
f'lmtly, bua I aot a ton of meuqes
tbe
from~le!don'tcvenknow.They ~ ~=~stt.e No. 26 Ford
\me Jusl: excttcd. I an't ~them.
Ta~l c&lt;HJWDed by Travis Carter
I was pretty excited my~elf. .
nd Carl H
He wu a1so owner of
Mayfield's onliae chat seuton on 1 ..__ ~~·..-..-..~t by Robcn
1,
NASCAROnllne(www.nucu.com} anot, .. , '"':" ... ~-""""'....
June20drevfmorelhan6I,OOO "hits." Yates en11nc, th~l ~~ dnven by
nearly 10 timet thcUJUII rcspohle.
rotd·rtee tee Boris S.ld,
"It's just nlcll! that so many people
X
are happy for us. This Mobil One
HIS sMILING I'ACt:: liJIIdep ' ..... olilo)f IIGirllit .
tetm has been throuah itt hl&amp;fts and
has issued. 1k com·
lows this yetr, but we •ve atuc k Supen--'way
r--.
~
topcher tnd we've 'M)rkcd lotleth- mmontive Pole Dty lie et tn
rrlllllo•
..._ . . - ··
.
k
1
Darrell
Waltrip's
name
for
Oct
1),
er," Mayfic.ld said. "'I Ihtn peop c
· U we Ire. ,...
doys.SOO.
before tbe n1nnina of the
are u happy to aee us w1n
WIIIIIOR
... OK. almost u happy."

985-3308

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�&lt; P8Qe B 4 • The

O.lly Sentinel

2000
440

Apartment•
for Rent

540 Ml•celleneoue
Merchandlae

540 Mlecelleneou•
MerchandiM

630

LIYIItoclcl

005

70

230

Yard Sale
61.1. Won!M To Do Adlllutt

Pt PINNnl

Pe,.onal1

Ruby
)1ft Z9
)1ft 11 19110
God took a ray from

Bo Pllkl n AdviTR BUNE DUQUNE 2 COp m
1110 dey btfol'l 1110 td

&amp; VIcinity

ALL ,.._I Ado Mutt
liPoid n A t .. IIUNE DltDI !HI 2:00 p m
tilt dey - t i l t tel
ltlorunluncllylllondty
- . . 200p.m Fildey
•NTINEL D'tD' W'
00 p.m. t i l t . , - tilt ...
a to run. 8undty l - ,
- . . 1 CO p.m. Fildey

Profe111on11
Service•

1

the 1hlnln1 IUD
A moonbeam

o run Sundey &amp;llonclly

td on 2 cop m Fltdoy

SENT NEL OfAPL!NI!

CO p m lht doy bti.X. 1110 td
o run Sunclly I Monday

t

.

REO STEA Qf&amp;QLINE
2 dtyo .,.,.,,.. tilt Ill

-....... .,.,.

I Cllyt

A.Heas 25 Yea s 0 d
~till&amp; 2 Yea 5 EMpt ~ I
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health naurance A a abe
Work We With he PubliC

I 90 p m Tllurtdoy

"'

dW 10 IIOI/tleyo.

td

• to "'" by 4 :10 p m.
SO urdly a llondly td~ on
4 30 p m Thllltdly
0..~ IWIUII/IICI fo ciNIIII/fl
dw ro ho rllyo

BOTH POSIT ONS

Ito run by 4 :10 p m
Sttunlay l Mclt*y adltlan

-lho

on 1 cop m Frldoy
REO ITER DfADUNE

td

P-11-().T~A

P-H-Y

'Wtddlngl
PillS
Sports Toamt
P'oe&amp;Sona Ct

edP ooga

pha
Reasonable a es
Ca lor appo n men
304)8 5o 4 2
30&gt;1)875-7279
TURNED DOWN ON

SOC AL SECUR TY ISS ?
NoFetUnessWeWn
888 S82 3345

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donos aan$35
$4510 2o 3
ho s weak Ca Se a Tee 40
592665

REAL ESTATE

IJ rNI-IId'ltltil ng ill
WI '*"•~ It tubtlet to
tilt F - Ftir HOUIIng AlA
ol1118&amp;wlllchmalcll~ ltgel
to adVtttlle any p~wferenct

Now Ilk ng ordtra fD IIIII Spr "9
F 11 Ofdtr'l w Qua an " Btl &amp;
Ea 11
P an 1
Otwhu 1
Farmt 30&gt;118k-37&gt;ICIIIQ5-37fi

mllatlon or dltcrim 1111 on
bued on act colo t glon
1111 fam 1 1

a us o na anal

make any ouch pro o onca

ntWI-

It on

1

tmUe of you

110

710 Au toe lor Sale

Help Wanted

CARS FROM $200 POL CE II
POUNDS Honda I Toyo I I

Thil
wl not
knoWingly ICctpl
odve111aomtntl for Nltltalo
wh ell 1 n viOiaUon o tilt

Cha yo

u ca

Ext 7132

aw ou Oldora.,. htrwby
nlormod he a &lt;Mtltng1
adVon old n lhllniWIJIIIMII

Now

eoo

72

no

IPieEisant Valley Hospiitall

NURSE
$ SIGN.QN BONUS $

are aval able on an equal

310 Hom11 lor Sale

PINIInl Velley
Hoepltal currently haa
lull lime end part time
oppottunltlle available
lor RN applicants All
epecleltln accepted

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Bank

AU. Announcemen ldl MUll
Bt PI d n Advtnot

JolnOU Femlyof
l'fofaNJonalt to bt tilt
I'MOU at lor community hllllll

a o run Sunclly lllonclly
Old on 2 00 p.m Prldey
SENTINEL Pf 4 QUNf
1 COpm.lhedeybtlarwlheod

ttrVtca ntlda

IR BUNE Qf&amp;QLINE 2 0D p.m
he dey bolaN he Old

Plaattllllllmlt 111111111 Ia
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

• to run Suncley A Moftdly
edHion CO p.m Fildey
REG STER Qf&amp;QLINE
2 dayt llolal'l ht tel
• ro run by 4 30p m

YouTh 1ft Shoppo
9 Was S maon Altlens
40-592 &amp;12
Qua y o h ng and ho seho d

LEOALADVERTISEUENT
tltulltd In tht townah p of
The • - of Ohio llelp Slllem County ollltlga IIICI
County M Purauont to lilt IIIII of OhiO and In
oommond of ond ordo of Sect on 24 Town 7 Ronge
M • 11- from tht Court 15 of the Oh o Compeny •
of Common Pltoo o1 •• d purohue ond more
county onel to me dlracteel r,•rtlculorly d"crlbtd ••
In the lOtion of
ollowo
Nllllonol City Uortgogo Co
aeglnn ng
ol
tho
VI LH I! lurnom II ol
touthooot corner of tho
Cilia No IICVU
touthwttt quorter of oold
I Jomtt loulaby lltlgt ttotlon 24 thence 1 dtg
County 8hertl1 1h1ll oflt 20 1111 along the m d
for Mt. II publlo euctton to ttctlon lnt 501 fttt to 1
bt htlcl II tht Utlgt County poll which 1 the touthttll
Courthoutt In tho C ty of como ol on ea equore rod
Pomero~ County of lltlgl
treat of lond deocr bed In
end Stott of Ohio on dttd ecordtd In vo 220
Augull4 2000 btalnn ng ot Pill 807 of the Deed
10 00 a m of aalcJ dl)l tile Recorcte ot Melgt County
follow no dtecrlbtd Iondo Oh a thence north 13 dtg
anelt-mentt to Wll
40 W 217 feet • ong the
LEGAL DEIORIPT ON oouth nt of tht ttld H
I'OR PA!M 818 LOCATED tquoro ad troot of ltnd to
AT 30552 IT RT 321 the oenterllno of &amp;tote
VINTON OH 45HI
Routt 325 11 It ox 111 on
The lo owing 111 ottalt Ftbrutry
11178 thence
----11----:.......;;
110 Help Wanted

C/O PERSONNEL

a AS B L
TransRortatlon

A Martella 0 10 Based Company
*ATTENTION EXPERIENCED BASED
DRIVERS•
••New Top of the Industry Pay Package**
•Start ng Pay $30 $34 CPM
Prenuum Benefits •1999 2000 Conv Models
• Asstgned DISpatch • Patd Vacattons
•99% No Touch Fretght •Good Miles
• Also Operungs for Part Time &amp; Casuals
• Contact Safety &amp; Recrutmgs 800 333 84 79
Ext lll 112 113 Local 740 373 64 79
•Profess onal Pay For Professtonal
Performance*

40

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ROGER PARTLOW LORI
LAFFEAT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown tpouae I any of
LOR LAFFERTY LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spauoe II any of
LORI JAMES whooe aet
place of residence lo known
ao 32755 State Route 33
Pomeroy OH 45768 but
whooe p tllnt ploce of
otldonce a unknown wll
take notlct thlt on February
14 2000 @ 11 23 p Ill
CONSECO BANK NC llltd
Itt Compla nt In Cllt f;!o
oo-cv 015 In the Court of
Common P au Malga
County Oh a elleglng tbat
the Defendant (a) ROGER
PARTLOW
LOR
LAFFERT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown Spoute I any of
LORI LAFFERTY LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spoutt I any of
LORI JAMES havt o c a m
to have an lnltrttl n the
Hltltall dttcltbacl bt OW

I

1 1~-tlilll"- )'(.11 t&gt; G"NJcY 1i/N;
VID!!OS fR MY qT ALoT -tlo~

AMOE

lr 'fou I&gt; JIIST 5N~ If
" '!'TW 7-F'r~&lt;P...

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
FINANCIAL

9 Q0-5 30

210

Giveaway

Business
Opportunity

'l'ht 191-rte

EMI'L 0Yfv1ENT
SERV ICES

2dayt

ttorunby4 :IOpm
SO urdly l Monclay Old~ on
4 30 p m Thurtdoy

Dtad nouubjecr ro •hlrrrgf
duo to holltllyl

11 0

Help Wanted

HUNTERS H LL

3liacso P meAecea ona
La d 29 A es Fo As Low As
$2 coo Land Con ac s Aa
ab e Ca Now 800 2 3 83$5
A.n ho
Land Company To

JANITROL HEATING AND

v

COOL NG EQU PIIENT

www ou rytyme com

&gt;68 Loat and Found

NSTALLED
Yo

RENTALS

ALL L.oe I Found Ade M•
Bo PI d In AdvlnCI
TR BUNE Df*QUNE 2 00 p m
the dey ... tilt Old
It o run. Sunclly llloi\CIIV
od ion 2:00 p m Friday
SENT NEL DEApt,M.
t:CO p m tilt day - . t i l t 011
It o run Sumlty lllonday
od ion
00 p 01 Fildey
REGISTER DMQUNE
2 rllyo - . ht Old
• orunby4:10p01
...., urdly &amp; Monclly odltlon
430 p m Thurtdoy

MERCHANDI SE

510

Houaehold
Goode

ose
6308

Don Cs Us We So h
F ee Es ma es 40 446
800 29 -Q098

JET

AEAA ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n n s ock
Ca Ro E ans 800 53 9528

DMIM- •1111/001 ro .,__,.

duoroh-yo

790

!'- .-:':1

Campe,. &amp;
Motor Homaa

189 wnntbogo llll\1 o 38 ooo
M 11 G1n1 1 o Fu nact Good
Condltton S o &amp;eo 711).44 -04&gt;10

FARM SUPPLIE ';
&amp; liVE STOCK

I.IIYIMelllgl

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR

Now

H

110

4x70 w 21 h •xpondo Ulll 00
1 mon dop a o n he Comp
COnlfl' 1111 304 175-&amp;117

ng No Expo anct Pod

140

Home
Improvement&amp;

IAIIIIINT
WATINPIIOO,INO
Uncond ona 1 ma g a an 11
LOCI lit tnCtl IU nfohtd Et
llblllhed 975 CaD 24 Hrt (140

Tan ng Cl u Bane a Ca 1
Daya Boo-429 3880 Ext J 315

Buelneea
Trelnlng

141 os1o
til WI

eoo 287

arpn&gt;Oflng

oa1e

' :;·:&gt;,_·','}ii:;-o

BUllETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Dental Hygienist
Part t me STM axpar enca
required Submit Reaume to
230 Upper River RD
Gallipolis OH 46631

'&gt; I HV IU ',

~·a

Pentlcostal
Inside Yard Sale
Old New Lots of Mise
803 S 3rd Middleport

6/30 7/1 7/3
997 Ford Range XLT Ex..ndad

Cob 4X4 Low m leage Exotltn
Cond on $ 1 900 740)411
3809

Ice Cream :;oc1a1
Bashan Firehouse
CR28
Frl June 3oth 5 00 ???
Sponsored Bashan

no

Yard Sale
540 Mlacellaneoua
Merchandlae
&amp;I,Yenl-ltlllkt Itt At:M~•

Now 8x80 3BA 2BA $288 po

,.• • a•,.-

.............. a.....,
1111 doy -~~~~ ...

....... ZOOp.m.PrNor

l:~ay TownhouH Juno 30111 Juty
ii 9 ?1 Kklt woment 1 Men•

Clitl1lng And -

-

E"' II HoU!Iy Wage
P eau ca
he Fo ow
Numbl F« Mot'l nfol'ma lon
aoo-ta3-247t
lldlnllon483
EOE

ltH.

Excepting I om tht abevt
deter bed 11 eattlt tht
No Four Four A Clo ton o
llmeatont coa
w th
eppurtenent mining r ghtt
wh ch hevt htrllalora bttn
conveyed to tht Ohio Power
Compeny by dttel ecorcltd
In Vo 214 Poge 217 of the
Deed of Rtco de of Melge
County Ohio
Except ng 1 tutmtntt
end rlghtt ot wey of ecorct
The above d11c lbed
property to further known 11
located at 30552 Slota
Route 325 V nton Oh o

co~~prolotdal$7500000

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Now

ems $ oo bag 11 1 1 e v
lh sda Monday h u 81 u day

0

Jamta M Souloby She 11
Charita J Pa mtr Attorney
~~oo Chagr n Blvd Suite
Poppe P ke Oh o 44 24
&amp;-29 7-11 7 3 3TC

PT PLEASANT WI/ 21880
OR Fo\X TO (:104) 175-ell75

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

IOUihwell....)! IIOng lilt
cenlt ne of eaJd ~.~late
Routt 325 HI fell lei: tho
point whtrt lht ctnttrDno
of Stolt Route :i25
lnltrltetl tht south 11114 of
Stet on 24 thence 11111
a ong tht south lint oi)IIIICI
Section 24 111 o fell to tile
place of beglnnttlg
conttlnlng 7 25 aCf111 me •

cuh a ctrt I td check clue
on tht doy of ttlt balance
due upon confirmation of
lht 1111 by Mt gt County
Court of Common PIHI tho
deed will bt aaued upon
the baance baing pad 'lind
on lal u • to do to the
purchua
oha I ]lo
adjudged n contempt of

:11211 VALLEY DRIVE

St urdly I Momlty Old~ on
4 30 p m. Thundll'
O..dl IIU IUII/KI IV.,..,.
duo ro ho ~~My•

mon h low Down Paymen F ••
A F ea Do o y ,&amp;88 921
342&lt;3
New Doub ew de 3 BR 2BA
$2 6 pe mon h ow Oown Pay
men FeeA FeeDe ey
668 928 342&lt;3

Fac o y Repo Ne e
$49 950
888 69

982 Mack 35 Ton

ow Boy
$3 000 CAT 2 5 Tack Hoe
$43 coo 74().64a-o42&lt;l

NEW BAAND NAME OOMPUT
ER S
Amos E e v;one Ap
poedWhSOOown
ow
Mon h y Payme I
BOO 6 7
3478 E 330

B5

Tt mo of the Sale Ten
.---------===============~--------~14~
percent of tho h ghtll bid

0

IOPI And Spo U

opportunity baalt
S 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV'T !BANK AEPOS
CALL NOW
800 380 4620
EXT 8509

the three lri one
And made the aweet

TnANSPORlATION

or g n o any n1on11on to

mltl on o d ecrtm

a ttarbeam too
Wove then 101ether

TobaccoPilntl

Page

Public Notice

Public Notice

AESIO£NTIAL HOME OWHIIII

ANNOUNCEMENT ",

The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

Fn Sat Man
Lots of mce clothing
toys curta1ns etc
Dale and Linda
Teaford Restdence
Bennger R1dge
Portland OH

=
-

rear -t•

altutttd In tho County of
Mtlge Stet• of Ohio and
btlng a port of Sactlon No
8 town 2 Range 13 of the
Ohio com!'.any a Pu chaoe
and bounatd 11 lollowa
Beginning on tho Wtot tide
of tho rood ltod ng trom
Pomeroy to Atheno ·~ a
point dletant too feet
Southerly from Jhe
Southtttl corn~r
o
tract
lately owned
etar
Jtroltmon th
runn ng
eouth on the I nt of aald
Road 50 IHt thonco ~11
up tho hill to what woe
lormorly Monttgue 1 L:lno
thonca w th tald lint Nodh
50 fill thence down tht hill
to tho place of btglnn ng
being tht tome premlotl
convoyed by Noll t Kin' and
Dana Kar to Ph II p
Kre aelmtlor by deed
recorded n Vo 84 page
178 ond 177 oltht rtcarclt
of DHdo In tho RtcDrclor a
Olftce Mo go County Ohio
Tho Polltloner further
tlltgtt that by eaaon of
dolault of the Defendant (a)
In tile payment of a
prom ttory nota tcoorcllng
to Ht ttnor tht oonCIHione o
I 1 concurrent mortgage
dttel 111von to oocure liN
poyment of oold note ,.,11
conveying the promla-e
d11c lbtd havo bun
broken and tht oame hal
become tbtolute
Tht Petitioner prayt lhll
the Defendant (t) neaftd
tbovt bt required to
tntWtr tnd ..t ur UJtf
lnttroll In H d rea -~~
or be Ia ava barred tram
1111rtlng tha aame Ia
fartOIOeUrt of aa)d
morllllllt tht lllllrtllallng..of
eny Jlent and tht "Ia 'Of
eafd real ettatt end .u.e
proottdt ol aeld •• t
appllld to tht pay11111nt of
Pllltlonere olalm In tht
proper order of 111 priority
and for tuoh othtr ond
lurthtr rtl Ill 11 It luat ond
equitable
Tht Doftndont (1) nomod
above ora requlrolf to
antwer on or btfo • tha
17111 day of Augutt, 2000
ly Dlnnle Reimer Co.
L.ll.tll

Conttco Ftnencut
Dlnn t RtlmtY
Attorney 11 Llw
Attomoy to
Plolntlfi.Pttnlontr
11 0 Box 11611
Twlnoburv Oh 44087
(330) 4211-4201
(I) 1&amp; 22 21 (7) I 13 20

ltc

Public

Notice

PUIUCNOTCE
Thlt Ia to noUfy tho genere
public that the 2000-2000
budget lor the V logo of
Rutlond Rutllnel Ohio w
bt IVIIIIblt for publ C
review and comment f qm
June 21, 2000 unt Jufy 10
2000 II tht Rut and v lilt

ofllce.

(1)27 ,2l,2t 30

(7)2,3,11 87 ItO tc

•

�&lt; P8Qe B 4 • The

O.lly Sentinel

2000
440

Apartment•
for Rent

540 Ml•celleneoue
Merchandlae

540 Mlecelleneou•
MerchandiM

630

LIYIItoclcl

005

70

230

Yard Sale
61.1. Won!M To Do Adlllutt

Pt PINNnl

Pe,.onal1

Ruby
)1ft Z9
)1ft 11 19110
God took a ray from

Bo Pllkl n AdviTR BUNE DUQUNE 2 COp m
1110 dey btfol'l 1110 td

&amp; VIcinity

ALL ,.._I Ado Mutt
liPoid n A t .. IIUNE DltDI !HI 2:00 p m
tilt dey - t i l t tel
ltlorunluncllylllondty
- . . 200p.m Fildey
•NTINEL D'tD' W'
00 p.m. t i l t . , - tilt ...
a to run. 8undty l - ,
- . . 1 CO p.m. Fildey

Profe111on11
Service•

1

the 1hlnln1 IUD
A moonbeam

o run Sundey &amp;llonclly

td on 2 cop m Fltdoy

SENT NEL OfAPL!NI!

CO p m lht doy bti.X. 1110 td
o run Sunclly I Monday

t

.

REO STEA Qf&amp;QLINE
2 dtyo .,.,.,,.. tilt Ill

-....... .,.,.

I Cllyt

A.Heas 25 Yea s 0 d
~till&amp; 2 Yea 5 EMpt ~ I
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health naurance A a abe
Work We With he PubliC

I 90 p m Tllurtdoy

"'

dW 10 IIOI/tleyo.

td

• to "'" by 4 :10 p m.
SO urdly a llondly td~ on
4 30 p m Thllltdly
0..~ IWIUII/IICI fo ciNIIII/fl
dw ro ho rllyo

BOTH POSIT ONS

Ito run by 4 :10 p m
Sttunlay l Mclt*y adltlan

-lho

on 1 cop m Frldoy
REO ITER DfADUNE

td

P-11-().T~A

P-H-Y

'Wtddlngl
PillS
Sports Toamt
P'oe&amp;Sona Ct

edP ooga

pha
Reasonable a es
Ca lor appo n men
304)8 5o 4 2
30&gt;1)875-7279
TURNED DOWN ON

SOC AL SECUR TY ISS ?
NoFetUnessWeWn
888 S82 3345

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donos aan$35
$4510 2o 3
ho s weak Ca Se a Tee 40
592665

REAL ESTATE

IJ rNI-IId'ltltil ng ill
WI '*"•~ It tubtlet to
tilt F - Ftir HOUIIng AlA
ol1118&amp;wlllchmalcll~ ltgel
to adVtttlle any p~wferenct

Now Ilk ng ordtra fD IIIII Spr "9
F 11 Ofdtr'l w Qua an " Btl &amp;
Ea 11
P an 1
Otwhu 1
Farmt 30&gt;118k-37&gt;ICIIIQ5-37fi

mllatlon or dltcrim 1111 on
bued on act colo t glon
1111 fam 1 1

a us o na anal

make any ouch pro o onca

ntWI-

It on

1

tmUe of you

110

710 Au toe lor Sale

Help Wanted

CARS FROM $200 POL CE II
POUNDS Honda I Toyo I I

Thil
wl not
knoWingly ICctpl
odve111aomtntl for Nltltalo
wh ell 1 n viOiaUon o tilt

Cha yo

u ca

Ext 7132

aw ou Oldora.,. htrwby
nlormod he a &lt;Mtltng1
adVon old n lhllniWIJIIIMII

Now

eoo

72

no

IPieEisant Valley Hospiitall

NURSE
$ SIGN.QN BONUS $

are aval able on an equal

310 Hom11 lor Sale

PINIInl Velley
Hoepltal currently haa
lull lime end part time
oppottunltlle available
lor RN applicants All
epecleltln accepted

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Bank

AU. Announcemen ldl MUll
Bt PI d n Advtnot

JolnOU Femlyof
l'fofaNJonalt to bt tilt
I'MOU at lor community hllllll

a o run Sunclly lllonclly
Old on 2 00 p.m Prldey
SENTINEL Pf 4 QUNf
1 COpm.lhedeybtlarwlheod

ttrVtca ntlda

IR BUNE Qf&amp;QLINE 2 0D p.m
he dey bolaN he Old

Plaattllllllmlt 111111111 Ia
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

• to run Suncley A Moftdly
edHion CO p.m Fildey
REG STER Qf&amp;QLINE
2 dayt llolal'l ht tel
• ro run by 4 30p m

YouTh 1ft Shoppo
9 Was S maon Altlens
40-592 &amp;12
Qua y o h ng and ho seho d

LEOALADVERTISEUENT
tltulltd In tht townah p of
The • - of Ohio llelp Slllem County ollltlga IIICI
County M Purauont to lilt IIIII of OhiO and In
oommond of ond ordo of Sect on 24 Town 7 Ronge
M • 11- from tht Court 15 of the Oh o Compeny •
of Common Pltoo o1 •• d purohue ond more
county onel to me dlracteel r,•rtlculorly d"crlbtd ••
In the lOtion of
ollowo
Nllllonol City Uortgogo Co
aeglnn ng
ol
tho
VI LH I! lurnom II ol
touthooot corner of tho
Cilia No IICVU
touthwttt quorter of oold
I Jomtt loulaby lltlgt ttotlon 24 thence 1 dtg
County 8hertl1 1h1ll oflt 20 1111 along the m d
for Mt. II publlo euctton to ttctlon lnt 501 fttt to 1
bt htlcl II tht Utlgt County poll which 1 the touthttll
Courthoutt In tho C ty of como ol on ea equore rod
Pomero~ County of lltlgl
treat of lond deocr bed In
end Stott of Ohio on dttd ecordtd In vo 220
Augull4 2000 btalnn ng ot Pill 807 of the Deed
10 00 a m of aalcJ dl)l tile Recorcte ot Melgt County
follow no dtecrlbtd Iondo Oh a thence north 13 dtg
anelt-mentt to Wll
40 W 217 feet • ong the
LEGAL DEIORIPT ON oouth nt of tht ttld H
I'OR PA!M 818 LOCATED tquoro ad troot of ltnd to
AT 30552 IT RT 321 the oenterllno of &amp;tote
VINTON OH 45HI
Routt 325 11 It ox 111 on
The lo owing 111 ottalt Ftbrutry
11178 thence
----11----:.......;;
110 Help Wanted

C/O PERSONNEL

a AS B L
TransRortatlon

A Martella 0 10 Based Company
*ATTENTION EXPERIENCED BASED
DRIVERS•
••New Top of the Industry Pay Package**
•Start ng Pay $30 $34 CPM
Prenuum Benefits •1999 2000 Conv Models
• Asstgned DISpatch • Patd Vacattons
•99% No Touch Fretght •Good Miles
• Also Operungs for Part Time &amp; Casuals
• Contact Safety &amp; Recrutmgs 800 333 84 79
Ext lll 112 113 Local 740 373 64 79
•Profess onal Pay For Professtonal
Performance*

40

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ROGER PARTLOW LORI
LAFFEAT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown tpouae I any of
LOR LAFFERTY LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spauoe II any of
LORI JAMES whooe aet
place of residence lo known
ao 32755 State Route 33
Pomeroy OH 45768 but
whooe p tllnt ploce of
otldonce a unknown wll
take notlct thlt on February
14 2000 @ 11 23 p Ill
CONSECO BANK NC llltd
Itt Compla nt In Cllt f;!o
oo-cv 015 In the Court of
Common P au Malga
County Oh a elleglng tbat
the Defendant (a) ROGER
PARTLOW
LOR
LAFFERT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown Spoute I any of
LORI LAFFERTY LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spoutt I any of
LORI JAMES havt o c a m
to have an lnltrttl n the
Hltltall dttcltbacl bt OW

I

1 1~-tlilll"- )'(.11 t&gt; G"NJcY 1i/N;
VID!!OS fR MY qT ALoT -tlo~

AMOE

lr 'fou I&gt; JIIST 5N~ If
" '!'TW 7-F'r~&lt;P...

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
FINANCIAL

9 Q0-5 30

210

Giveaway

Business
Opportunity

'l'ht 191-rte

EMI'L 0Yfv1ENT
SERV ICES

2dayt

ttorunby4 :IOpm
SO urdly l Monclay Old~ on
4 30 p m Thurtdoy

Dtad nouubjecr ro •hlrrrgf
duo to holltllyl

11 0

Help Wanted

HUNTERS H LL

3liacso P meAecea ona
La d 29 A es Fo As Low As
$2 coo Land Con ac s Aa
ab e Ca Now 800 2 3 83$5
A.n ho
Land Company To

JANITROL HEATING AND

v

COOL NG EQU PIIENT

www ou rytyme com

&gt;68 Loat and Found

NSTALLED
Yo

RENTALS

ALL L.oe I Found Ade M•
Bo PI d In AdvlnCI
TR BUNE Df*QUNE 2 00 p m
the dey ... tilt Old
It o run. Sunclly llloi\CIIV
od ion 2:00 p m Friday
SENT NEL DEApt,M.
t:CO p m tilt day - . t i l t 011
It o run Sumlty lllonday
od ion
00 p 01 Fildey
REGISTER DMQUNE
2 rllyo - . ht Old
• orunby4:10p01
...., urdly &amp; Monclly odltlon
430 p m Thurtdoy

MERCHANDI SE

510

Houaehold
Goode

ose
6308

Don Cs Us We So h
F ee Es ma es 40 446
800 29 -Q098

JET

AEAA ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n n s ock
Ca Ro E ans 800 53 9528

DMIM- •1111/001 ro .,__,.

duoroh-yo

790

!'- .-:':1

Campe,. &amp;
Motor Homaa

189 wnntbogo llll\1 o 38 ooo
M 11 G1n1 1 o Fu nact Good
Condltton S o &amp;eo 711).44 -04&gt;10

FARM SUPPLIE ';
&amp; liVE STOCK

I.IIYIMelllgl

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR

Now

H

110

4x70 w 21 h •xpondo Ulll 00
1 mon dop a o n he Comp
COnlfl' 1111 304 175-&amp;117

ng No Expo anct Pod

140

Home
Improvement&amp;

IAIIIIINT
WATINPIIOO,INO
Uncond ona 1 ma g a an 11
LOCI lit tnCtl IU nfohtd Et
llblllhed 975 CaD 24 Hrt (140

Tan ng Cl u Bane a Ca 1
Daya Boo-429 3880 Ext J 315

Buelneea
Trelnlng

141 os1o
til WI

eoo 287

arpn&gt;Oflng

oa1e

' :;·:&gt;,_·','}ii:;-o

BUllETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Dental Hygienist
Part t me STM axpar enca
required Submit Reaume to
230 Upper River RD
Gallipolis OH 46631

'&gt; I HV IU ',

~·a

Pentlcostal
Inside Yard Sale
Old New Lots of Mise
803 S 3rd Middleport

6/30 7/1 7/3
997 Ford Range XLT Ex..ndad

Cob 4X4 Low m leage Exotltn
Cond on $ 1 900 740)411
3809

Ice Cream :;oc1a1
Bashan Firehouse
CR28
Frl June 3oth 5 00 ???
Sponsored Bashan

no

Yard Sale
540 Mlacellaneoua
Merchandlae
&amp;I,Yenl-ltlllkt Itt At:M~•

Now 8x80 3BA 2BA $288 po

,.• • a•,.-

.............. a.....,
1111 doy -~~~~ ...

....... ZOOp.m.PrNor

l:~ay TownhouH Juno 30111 Juty
ii 9 ?1 Kklt woment 1 Men•

Clitl1lng And -

-

E"' II HoU!Iy Wage
P eau ca
he Fo ow
Numbl F« Mot'l nfol'ma lon
aoo-ta3-247t
lldlnllon483
EOE

ltH.

Excepting I om tht abevt
deter bed 11 eattlt tht
No Four Four A Clo ton o
llmeatont coa
w th
eppurtenent mining r ghtt
wh ch hevt htrllalora bttn
conveyed to tht Ohio Power
Compeny by dttel ecorcltd
In Vo 214 Poge 217 of the
Deed of Rtco de of Melge
County Ohio
Except ng 1 tutmtntt
end rlghtt ot wey of ecorct
The above d11c lbed
property to further known 11
located at 30552 Slota
Route 325 V nton Oh o

co~~prolotdal$7500000

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Now

ems $ oo bag 11 1 1 e v
lh sda Monday h u 81 u day

0

Jamta M Souloby She 11
Charita J Pa mtr Attorney
~~oo Chagr n Blvd Suite
Poppe P ke Oh o 44 24
&amp;-29 7-11 7 3 3TC

PT PLEASANT WI/ 21880
OR Fo\X TO (:104) 175-ell75

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

IOUihwell....)! IIOng lilt
cenlt ne of eaJd ~.~late
Routt 325 HI fell lei: tho
point whtrt lht ctnttrDno
of Stolt Route :i25
lnltrltetl tht south 11114 of
Stet on 24 thence 11111
a ong tht south lint oi)IIIICI
Section 24 111 o fell to tile
place of beglnnttlg
conttlnlng 7 25 aCf111 me •

cuh a ctrt I td check clue
on tht doy of ttlt balance
due upon confirmation of
lht 1111 by Mt gt County
Court of Common PIHI tho
deed will bt aaued upon
the baance baing pad 'lind
on lal u • to do to the
purchua
oha I ]lo
adjudged n contempt of

:11211 VALLEY DRIVE

St urdly I Momlty Old~ on
4 30 p m. Thundll'
O..dl IIU IUII/KI IV.,..,.
duo ro ho ~~My•

mon h low Down Paymen F ••
A F ea Do o y ,&amp;88 921
342&lt;3
New Doub ew de 3 BR 2BA
$2 6 pe mon h ow Oown Pay
men FeeA FeeDe ey
668 928 342&lt;3

Fac o y Repo Ne e
$49 950
888 69

982 Mack 35 Ton

ow Boy
$3 000 CAT 2 5 Tack Hoe
$43 coo 74().64a-o42&lt;l

NEW BAAND NAME OOMPUT
ER S
Amos E e v;one Ap
poedWhSOOown
ow
Mon h y Payme I
BOO 6 7
3478 E 330

B5

Tt mo of the Sale Ten
.---------===============~--------~14~
percent of tho h ghtll bid

0

IOPI And Spo U

opportunity baalt
S 0 DOWN HOMES NO CRED T
NEEDED GOV'T !BANK AEPOS
CALL NOW
800 380 4620
EXT 8509

the three lri one
And made the aweet

TnANSPORlATION

or g n o any n1on11on to

mltl on o d ecrtm

a ttarbeam too
Wove then 101ether

TobaccoPilntl

Page

Public Notice

Public Notice

AESIO£NTIAL HOME OWHIIII

ANNOUNCEMENT ",

The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

Fn Sat Man
Lots of mce clothing
toys curta1ns etc
Dale and Linda
Teaford Restdence
Bennger R1dge
Portland OH

=
-

rear -t•

altutttd In tho County of
Mtlge Stet• of Ohio and
btlng a port of Sactlon No
8 town 2 Range 13 of the
Ohio com!'.any a Pu chaoe
and bounatd 11 lollowa
Beginning on tho Wtot tide
of tho rood ltod ng trom
Pomeroy to Atheno ·~ a
point dletant too feet
Southerly from Jhe
Southtttl corn~r
o
tract
lately owned
etar
Jtroltmon th
runn ng
eouth on the I nt of aald
Road 50 IHt thonco ~11
up tho hill to what woe
lormorly Monttgue 1 L:lno
thonca w th tald lint Nodh
50 fill thence down tht hill
to tho place of btglnn ng
being tht tome premlotl
convoyed by Noll t Kin' and
Dana Kar to Ph II p
Kre aelmtlor by deed
recorded n Vo 84 page
178 ond 177 oltht rtcarclt
of DHdo In tho RtcDrclor a
Olftce Mo go County Ohio
Tho Polltloner further
tlltgtt that by eaaon of
dolault of the Defendant (a)
In tile payment of a
prom ttory nota tcoorcllng
to Ht ttnor tht oonCIHione o
I 1 concurrent mortgage
dttel 111von to oocure liN
poyment of oold note ,.,11
conveying the promla-e
d11c lbtd havo bun
broken and tht oame hal
become tbtolute
Tht Petitioner prayt lhll
the Defendant (t) neaftd
tbovt bt required to
tntWtr tnd ..t ur UJtf
lnttroll In H d rea -~~
or be Ia ava barred tram
1111rtlng tha aame Ia
fartOIOeUrt of aa)d
morllllllt tht lllllrtllallng..of
eny Jlent and tht "Ia 'Of
eafd real ettatt end .u.e
proottdt ol aeld •• t
appllld to tht pay11111nt of
Pllltlonere olalm In tht
proper order of 111 priority
and for tuoh othtr ond
lurthtr rtl Ill 11 It luat ond
equitable
Tht Doftndont (1) nomod
above ora requlrolf to
antwer on or btfo • tha
17111 day of Augutt, 2000
ly Dlnnle Reimer Co.
L.ll.tll

Conttco Ftnencut
Dlnn t RtlmtY
Attorney 11 Llw
Attomoy to
Plolntlfi.Pttnlontr
11 0 Box 11611
Twlnoburv Oh 44087
(330) 4211-4201
(I) 1&amp; 22 21 (7) I 13 20

ltc

Public

Notice

PUIUCNOTCE
Thlt Ia to noUfy tho genere
public that the 2000-2000
budget lor the V logo of
Rutlond Rutllnel Ohio w
bt IVIIIIblt for publ C
review and comment f qm
June 21, 2000 unt Jufy 10
2000 II tht Rut and v lilt

ofllce.

(1)27 ,2l,2t 30

(7)2,3,11 87 ItO tc

•

�_~:"_f}r,g. a e •The Dally Sentinel

J»omeroy, Mlddle~rt, O~lo

. Thureday, June 21, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • PIIP~ 7

NEA

BRIDGE

1Aclat
Chwtton 7 Complain
12EM:h

ALDER

HfiCIUnG anG
EXCfiVfiTinG
Hauling • Umesfont • ·
Gravel• Sond I. Topsoil •

,. Pec:ull•
21 -Haute

42 O!May
~H';''P.;f~
~ "The Briclgl or r.
Sin LYII-'

'5

lilt.

51 Egg dllh

17 T1l8l th)ng'o

• If 52
East

Welt

.(740) 992-3470

•At 78S
t K4

• 73

DOWN

...nch
21-hlgh

• 9 4 2
"Q J B
•• 3
• Q J 10 8 4

• 10 I 6 5

1 Shout a!
IIYghllr

30 - - ..,•11

'

Sou!II

Aatonllhld

se T•rllll
57 Deceived
se .Storelodder

28 - Mounllllnl
oiEY211YJieol

• Q J 10 1 2,

Fill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldoz• Services

55

23UKUme

'

us aoldllro

::~~)

,. Gukled

• " 1
•X

·~

_, - Avtv

13-Erlc 14lloclcuH
15

...

Puzzle

MAICMKI
'·-rtMI1
40 Join

ACROSS

PHU.LIP

CrOIIWOrd

2 ClolrHio "''I·

31 Conlllmlllllll
(the 1lr)

3 Plrl of RSVP
4Urne-

33C:...t
31 Quote
37Compeupl

5 Group a! light
I Roqulnod

.

•KQJ
• 10 5 4 2

tAtl5

AAK

Vulnerable: East-West

Desler: South

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'
. , Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Boalll
!NT

PAW It We

East State Street
tA11hents, Ohio 45701
"

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Phone (740) 593-6671
"

' , ~.

6129/mo.

..

. ... Advertise in
.t his space for
s100 per
month.

..aum.·

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

Dozer work.

Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after '8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

Now Rentillg

,,,,

.....

2 •"•

g

Brdldo""r &amp; Baelc/we
Se,U,il•
HoWle &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;

33795 Hiland Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Grading

740-992-5232

Septic Syttenu &amp;
UtiliiU.~

8/21/00 1 mo. pd.

1740) 992·3131

ROIEiiT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
· • Garages
New Construction &amp;
•Complete
Remodeling - Kitchen
Remodeling
Cabinets Vinyl SidingStop &amp; Compare
Roofs - Decks - Gatrue:s I
FREE
Free Estimates

Construction

ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

HARIWEIJ ~

9 o-~1·!f/#e
Pai·p tmg

STORAGE

· "YoN 'w trlttl tht rut...
now try tlu! but"

S'L RL 7
10 X 10 $It O

Interior ~ Exterior
Residential .,.·eommerical
·.' Calffor

10 X 20 $60

FREE ESTIMATES

992-1717

1740) 192·9085
(Mobile) 740-53!J.0163
Insured

7/22/TFN

LINDA'S
PAINTING

We Service All M8kes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers
'

can rellfttl 1 debtor al flnlnt ll l oblgatl0n1 1nd atr~~nge 1 ftllr clletl'lbutlon of
...... emong creditors. A pereon going throutlh blnkruptcy m.y rttatn
certain pr'Opllrty, knvwn •• Ntxempt" property, lor hl1 or her Plf'IOMIUH,
Thll may lnotuc111 e~r, 1 hOuH, o!Othel,lftd hOuMhOid fDOd&amp; You 1h0Uic:l
diNCt any qUMtlon• regilding ~ptcy to 1n 1110rney befOre piOOMdlng.

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
81211001

T&amp;l)

VOUR

MYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
'
Hy•aullc
Hose repairs,
cylllder repairs, od
Salts· 5 pl. buckets
lo 55 gal drums

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

; 740·915·4194
1

Quality Drlvewaye,
PltiOI, SldiWIIkl.
215 yeare experience
Frn Eetlniaatn

740.742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

P/ B(QNTRACfORI, JH(.
Oi)NCREr£

MASONRY
BACKHOE SEJlVJa.S
BOBCAT SERVICES
RHidentlll, COmmercii
FII!E EanMATES

Fully lneured
lrlllllrriiiii/IIMIM, OW.
~

.:.

(7 40) 985 -3948

'

-~. S"fiDE

IUVER fiG SERVICE

"Ahead In Service"
....,_ Wllfwn l'rldt 12" SWNI Ft~cL................'5.25/50 II bog
lllh•·' '" labltit hllm....................................'6.95/50 II. bog
ltunMB 1\ide 21" Dog faod.....................16.75/50 II. bog
.... 16" layll Crvmhek...............................}5.99/50 ... bog
..... 5crlkh flld ............................................. 16.75/50 ... bog
~ h 12" Callie flld ................................ '6.75/1 00 •. bog

Call740·985·3131
St. lt. 7.,.

•

: ~~-:--..l..~...l~~.:::J

:

r.;~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~----------------------~
''

· "Take the pain out
of painti'YfLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6 p.m. Leave MI!Ssage
Aher 6pm- 614-985-4180

1

Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

.'
•

Free Estimate•

Mike Sharp
740·949·:5606

1"'1-10, IT':\ jU:,I "'-~I DC
D1~ . '10U

Kl-PW, TO

PUT 1'~E WI'.DO~ \

.
'

'

2 Yi miles out of
C::hester on SR 248

I
•'•
,'•

QUALITY
LANDSCAPE

•

(740) 592-5025 Athene

BY PIIILLIP ALDER
• Francis Bacon wrote in 1620,
" There are and can be only two
ways of searching into and discovering truth. The one flies from
the senses and particulars .to the
most general axioms ... this way
is now in fashion. The other
derives axioms from the senses
and particulars, rising by a gradual and unbroken ascent, so that
it arrives at the most general
axioms last of all. This is the true
way, but as yet untried." Do you
agree, and has it been tried by
now?
·
Although five diamonds makes
here and three no-trump should
fail, I believe North's response •is
best. Nine tricks are more likely
to be readily available than II ,
West leads a founh-highest
heart six to dummy's bare king.
The key play is East's. From
the Rule of Eleven, East knows
that South has only one heart
above. the six. (Six, the value of
the card led, from II is five/ So,
there are five hearts higher' than
the six in the dummy, Easys hand
and declarer's c·ombined. East
can"~ see four - of them .). And
South's card must De either the
nine or 10. From 10-9-7-6, West
would have led the 10, not the six.
So, East should play the queen.
This single stroke serves two purposes: lt tells partner about the
queen and jack, allowing him to
underlead the ace on the next
round, and it unblocks the suit.
Declarer will take the losing
diamond finesse, whereupon the
defenders can run four heart tricks
---but only if East unblocked iiui'
queen at trick one.
F.)nally, note that West knows
the queen cannot be a singleton,
because that would give South six
hearts. Then he would have
opened one heart, not one notrump.

•

'I•

IIIE.Ind
.......,,Ohio
6'161

mo pd.

I 1WILLIS' .
IVSEAMLESS
·· .GUnERS
/J"~~~#d

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Conlr1clors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Advertise in
.this s,pace for
s100 per
month.·
P8l
C.IRUCTDI
Remodeling,
Roofing New
. Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

. F,..Iatlm.tea
.740.192·1709

"L INSULATION I
CONITIUCDON
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

"We're Back"

The

Country Cantlie Shop .

219E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used App!iances't

g!JOChtl ~nt
of the Month

Parts- All Makes

Ken You"8
· M51mopd.

•
•
er 1se. our s1ness
.

WJ.IILE
A&amp;OI.!T
IT. WE Si-IOULD DECIDE IF
'• WE'RE
TO KILL A BEAR
'

FOR

OR A MOOSE ..

~--~--~~·~~----~

NOTICE

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

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

'

·••

. by Lule Campos

I

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I·

Colobrity Ciphor ~ ""'C!Nted lrom qUOiatiom by lamouo poopie, pu1 and

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LYP
YL

· Eoc:11-ln tho clpheratonda for anott.r.
Tod.ty's ctw: M equals w

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PREVIOUS SOLUTI()tl: "Reality II ~

don' move- todly

·

'

•

I

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'',·.r

.

:;

llllrcase going neither up nor down: wjtj
llwaya.lo today.• - Octavlo Paz
•:

..

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
•
·

UNSCRAM8t.E FOR
ANSWER

I I I

SCIAIMETS ANSWERS

•:'

Nodule - Frown - Hoist- Waggle - GOING to DO
Iwas~' ing to start my own business. An elderly neigh', :

bor told e that you can't build a reputation on what you :
are GOI G to DO.
. __ j

'. ~~~~--------~----------~~~

'Your
'Birthday

.,

l1

•
er me

·~ ·-

•

.

.

...

t ·

nered dealing with matters where called for today if you've been
, Friday, June 30, 2000
yC~ur mental.prowess is called for functioning under stressful con'' A second source of income to
master negative situations.
ditions all week. It may be more
• might fall in your lap in the year
:' ahead that may not take up much . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) essential than frivolous.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
; of your time and be one you'll Unso;&gt;licited advi.ee is rarely wise
enjoy doing. It could end up to offer, but today you could find Happily, two important matters
• equaling your present earnings. · yourself witne~sing someone can be finalized and eliminated to
.:
CANCER (June 21-July 22) floundering who is in need 'of con, your satisfaction today. Not only
: Even if you can't be at the helm structive suggestions. Don't stand· will this give you a sigh of relief
but open up valuable time for othl of a situation in which you're helplessly by.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) er things.
: presently involved, you'll still be
Only
·if each participant in a joint
ARIES (March 21-Apri 1 19)
quite effective functioning as the
power behind that which propels endeavor has something of -sub- Because your mental faculties are
the progress. Get a jump on life by stance to offer each other can an apt to be a bit keener than usual
understanding · the influences . enterprise 'succeed. If this isn't ' . tod~y, tt could make you both.a
that'll govern you in the year present, be careful not to gei , cuno~s and s~eedy Ieamer, eager
to .~am ~nd 1mpart knowledge.
, ahead. Send for your Astro·Graph,, involved.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Decl. UtJhze th1s well. .
' predictions by mailing $2 to
21)
It's important to be your own , T"}URlJ~ (Apr~ I 20-May 2~)
, Astto-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
i P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- person and make decisions for Personal gam ts po~s1 ble today af
yourself, but it is equally as . you kec:p ~ur :wtts .about rou .
1 tion, New York, NY 10156. Be . important
today to keep, an open concermng hat 1s gomg on ngh~
~ sure to state your Zodiac sign.
mind
so
you'll
be able to adapt to un.der your nose. Be profil con
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Why
better
thinking.
sc10us . and conduct yourself
waste time today with groups or
i cliques that make you feel uncom· . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. accordmgly.
19) Make certain you have good
! fortsblc? Try to spend your day
(May 21-June 20)
I with those whom you find enjoy- lines of communication open to TheGEMINI
you are today, the
! able and don'ttake themselves or persons over whom you are in . more busier
competently
you're apt to
charge' today. This is especially
• life too seriously,
handle y.our affairs. In fact, you'll
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) true when involved in any critical
be
capable of juggling several
Don't try to dod11e any chat· assignment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) endeavors simultaneously without
: lenges today, because substantial
l personal satisfaction can be gar· A recreational break might be dropping any pieces.

·j

Quahty Window

· WJ.lV DON'T '(()U DISCUSS
IT, AND TAKE A VOTE?

'

FREE ESTIMATES '

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

·

,.

COMMERCIAl ond IESIDEHIIAL

2 Handyman crew wtlJ do
yard work, palnUng lnslde
and ou~ carpenter work,
roofing, siding. Have own
tooli. Free Estimate&amp; .

PEAN,UTS

I

• Roofing

740·992·7599

.

I

JJJ

WINDOWS

lllJT "'QJR TWill' . I'IEETINI'&gt;S C::OtiFLICT· WITH
1'\Y ACCOU~ING CLASS .
I'M AFRI'JI&gt; I CAN'T.

i

'

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

New Homes • Vinyl
Sldlng • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
•.Room- Add~lons

..

C.EE. I 'M SOI'J!."I', NATE ...

.,

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

REPLACEMENT

.

\

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

IISSILL IUILDIIS
INC.

'

New Summer Dayt
Thur &amp; Fr110am- 8 pm
Saturday 10 am- 4 pm .
On other days If we lrt
home, we are OPEN.

The Appliance
· Man

m-2772
For All Your Home
lmorovemant Needs

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

-~

Sale

992~1550

Eaal
AUpau

It won't go

•

•

Norlll
SNT

OpeniDRlead: • 8

.

Cellular
::Jeff Warner . Ins.
992-5479

BANKRUPTCY

MAIL 11

••

EICIYITIN&amp; CO.

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

GOT

Wnl
Pan

•

j

•

�_~:"_f}r,g. a e •The Dally Sentinel

J»omeroy, Mlddle~rt, O~lo

. Thureday, June 21, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • PIIP~ 7

NEA

BRIDGE

1Aclat
Chwtton 7 Complain
12EM:h

ALDER

HfiCIUnG anG
EXCfiVfiTinG
Hauling • Umesfont • ·
Gravel• Sond I. Topsoil •

,. Pec:ull•
21 -Haute

42 O!May
~H';''P.;f~
~ "The Briclgl or r.
Sin LYII-'

'5

lilt.

51 Egg dllh

17 T1l8l th)ng'o

• If 52
East

Welt

.(740) 992-3470

•At 78S
t K4

• 73

DOWN

...nch
21-hlgh

• 9 4 2
"Q J B
•• 3
• Q J 10 8 4

• 10 I 6 5

1 Shout a!
IIYghllr

30 - - ..,•11

'

Sou!II

Aatonllhld

se T•rllll
57 Deceived
se .Storelodder

28 - Mounllllnl
oiEY211YJieol

• Q J 10 1 2,

Fill Dirt • Mukh •
Bulldoz• Services

55

23UKUme

'

us aoldllro

::~~)

,. Gukled

• " 1
•X

·~

_, - Avtv

13-Erlc 14lloclcuH
15

...

Puzzle

MAICMKI
'·-rtMI1
40 Join

ACROSS

PHU.LIP

CrOIIWOrd

2 ClolrHio "''I·

31 Conlllmlllllll
(the 1lr)

3 Plrl of RSVP
4Urne-

33C:...t
31 Quote
37Compeupl

5 Group a! light
I Roqulnod

.

•KQJ
• 10 5 4 2

tAtl5

AAK

Vulnerable: East-West

Desler: South

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'
. , Sales Representative
Larry Schey

Boalll
!NT

PAW It We

East State Street
tA11hents, Ohio 45701
"

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Phone (740) 593-6671
"

' , ~.

6129/mo.

..

. ... Advertise in
.t his space for
s100 per
month.

..aum.·

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

Dozer work.

Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after '8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

Now Rentillg

,,,,

.....

2 •"•

g

Brdldo""r &amp; Baelc/we
Se,U,il•
HoWle &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;

33795 Hiland Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Grading

740-992-5232

Septic Syttenu &amp;
UtiliiU.~

8/21/00 1 mo. pd.

1740) 992·3131

ROIEiiT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
· • Garages
New Construction &amp;
•Complete
Remodeling - Kitchen
Remodeling
Cabinets Vinyl SidingStop &amp; Compare
Roofs - Decks - Gatrue:s I
FREE
Free Estimates

Construction

ESTIMATES
740.992-1671

HARIWEIJ ~

9 o-~1·!f/#e
Pai·p tmg

STORAGE

· "YoN 'w trlttl tht rut...
now try tlu! but"

S'L RL 7
10 X 10 $It O

Interior ~ Exterior
Residential .,.·eommerical
·.' Calffor

10 X 20 $60

FREE ESTIMATES

992-1717

1740) 192·9085
(Mobile) 740-53!J.0163
Insured

7/22/TFN

LINDA'S
PAINTING

We Service All M8kes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers
'

can rellfttl 1 debtor al flnlnt ll l oblgatl0n1 1nd atr~~nge 1 ftllr clletl'lbutlon of
...... emong creditors. A pereon going throutlh blnkruptcy m.y rttatn
certain pr'Opllrty, knvwn •• Ntxempt" property, lor hl1 or her Plf'IOMIUH,
Thll may lnotuc111 e~r, 1 hOuH, o!Othel,lftd hOuMhOid fDOd&amp; You 1h0Uic:l
diNCt any qUMtlon• regilding ~ptcy to 1n 1110rney befOre piOOMdlng.

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney
81211001

T&amp;l)

VOUR

MYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
'
Hy•aullc
Hose repairs,
cylllder repairs, od
Salts· 5 pl. buckets
lo 55 gal drums

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

; 740·915·4194
1

Quality Drlvewaye,
PltiOI, SldiWIIkl.
215 yeare experience
Frn Eetlniaatn

740.742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

P/ B(QNTRACfORI, JH(.
Oi)NCREr£

MASONRY
BACKHOE SEJlVJa.S
BOBCAT SERVICES
RHidentlll, COmmercii
FII!E EanMATES

Fully lneured
lrlllllrriiiii/IIMIM, OW.
~

.:.

(7 40) 985 -3948

'

-~. S"fiDE

IUVER fiG SERVICE

"Ahead In Service"
....,_ Wllfwn l'rldt 12" SWNI Ft~cL................'5.25/50 II bog
lllh•·' '" labltit hllm....................................'6.95/50 II. bog
ltunMB 1\ide 21" Dog faod.....................16.75/50 II. bog
.... 16" layll Crvmhek...............................}5.99/50 ... bog
..... 5crlkh flld ............................................. 16.75/50 ... bog
~ h 12" Callie flld ................................ '6.75/1 00 •. bog

Call740·985·3131
St. lt. 7.,.

•

: ~~-:--..l..~...l~~.:::J

:

r.;~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~----------------------~
''

· "Take the pain out
of painti'YfLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6 p.m. Leave MI!Ssage
Aher 6pm- 614-985-4180

1

Weeding: Mulching:
Pruning: Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls: Wooden Decks

.'
•

Free Estimate•

Mike Sharp
740·949·:5606

1"'1-10, IT':\ jU:,I "'-~I DC
D1~ . '10U

Kl-PW, TO

PUT 1'~E WI'.DO~ \

.
'

'

2 Yi miles out of
C::hester on SR 248

I
•'•
,'•

QUALITY
LANDSCAPE

•

(740) 592-5025 Athene

BY PIIILLIP ALDER
• Francis Bacon wrote in 1620,
" There are and can be only two
ways of searching into and discovering truth. The one flies from
the senses and particulars .to the
most general axioms ... this way
is now in fashion. The other
derives axioms from the senses
and particulars, rising by a gradual and unbroken ascent, so that
it arrives at the most general
axioms last of all. This is the true
way, but as yet untried." Do you
agree, and has it been tried by
now?
·
Although five diamonds makes
here and three no-trump should
fail, I believe North's response •is
best. Nine tricks are more likely
to be readily available than II ,
West leads a founh-highest
heart six to dummy's bare king.
The key play is East's. From
the Rule of Eleven, East knows
that South has only one heart
above. the six. (Six, the value of
the card led, from II is five/ So,
there are five hearts higher' than
the six in the dummy, Easys hand
and declarer's c·ombined. East
can"~ see four - of them .). And
South's card must De either the
nine or 10. From 10-9-7-6, West
would have led the 10, not the six.
So, East should play the queen.
This single stroke serves two purposes: lt tells partner about the
queen and jack, allowing him to
underlead the ace on the next
round, and it unblocks the suit.
Declarer will take the losing
diamond finesse, whereupon the
defenders can run four heart tricks
---but only if East unblocked iiui'
queen at trick one.
F.)nally, note that West knows
the queen cannot be a singleton,
because that would give South six
hearts. Then he would have
opened one heart, not one notrump.

•

'I•

IIIE.Ind
.......,,Ohio
6'161

mo pd.

I 1WILLIS' .
IVSEAMLESS
·· .GUnERS
/J"~~~#d

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Conlr1clors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

Advertise in
.this s,pace for
s100 per
month.·
P8l
C.IRUCTDI
Remodeling,
Roofing New
. Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

. F,..Iatlm.tea
.740.192·1709

"L INSULATION I
CONITIUCDON
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

"We're Back"

The

Country Cantlie Shop .

219E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used App!iances't

g!JOChtl ~nt
of the Month

Parts- All Makes

Ken You"8
· M51mopd.

•
•
er 1se. our s1ness
.

WJ.IILE
A&amp;OI.!T
IT. WE Si-IOULD DECIDE IF
'• WE'RE
TO KILL A BEAR
'

FOR

OR A MOOSE ..

~--~--~~·~~----~

NOTICE

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

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

'

·••

. by Lule Campos

I

~

I·

Colobrity Ciphor ~ ""'C!Nted lrom qUOiatiom by lamouo poopie, pu1 and

-

'0

CJNW

LYP
YL

· Eoc:11-ln tho clpheratonda for anott.r.
Tod.ty's ctw: M equals w

MJVEWT

ZCOPZ8

BWJPD ,

UPJZOZATW,

MJFZ

•

DYRW

ZCOD

DVANWFI:JP . ' -

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'
•'

WJPZC

JFT,

YAZ

Z Y

V W J N -

NOFXWFZ

N J F
U Y U"()
PREVIOUS SOLUTI()tl: "Reality II ~

don' move- todly

·

'

•

I

-...'
'',·.r

.

:;

llllrcase going neither up nor down: wjtj
llwaya.lo today.• - Octavlo Paz
•:

..

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
•
·

UNSCRAM8t.E FOR
ANSWER

I I I

SCIAIMETS ANSWERS

•:'

Nodule - Frown - Hoist- Waggle - GOING to DO
Iwas~' ing to start my own business. An elderly neigh', :

bor told e that you can't build a reputation on what you :
are GOI G to DO.
. __ j

'. ~~~~--------~----------~~~

'Your
'Birthday

.,

l1

•
er me

·~ ·-

•

.

.

...

t ·

nered dealing with matters where called for today if you've been
, Friday, June 30, 2000
yC~ur mental.prowess is called for functioning under stressful con'' A second source of income to
master negative situations.
ditions all week. It may be more
• might fall in your lap in the year
:' ahead that may not take up much . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) essential than frivolous.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
; of your time and be one you'll Unso;&gt;licited advi.ee is rarely wise
enjoy doing. It could end up to offer, but today you could find Happily, two important matters
• equaling your present earnings. · yourself witne~sing someone can be finalized and eliminated to
.:
CANCER (June 21-July 22) floundering who is in need 'of con, your satisfaction today. Not only
: Even if you can't be at the helm structive suggestions. Don't stand· will this give you a sigh of relief
but open up valuable time for othl of a situation in which you're helplessly by.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) er things.
: presently involved, you'll still be
Only
·if each participant in a joint
ARIES (March 21-Apri 1 19)
quite effective functioning as the
power behind that which propels endeavor has something of -sub- Because your mental faculties are
the progress. Get a jump on life by stance to offer each other can an apt to be a bit keener than usual
understanding · the influences . enterprise 'succeed. If this isn't ' . tod~y, tt could make you both.a
that'll govern you in the year present, be careful not to gei , cuno~s and s~eedy Ieamer, eager
to .~am ~nd 1mpart knowledge.
, ahead. Send for your Astro·Graph,, involved.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Decl. UtJhze th1s well. .
' predictions by mailing $2 to
21)
It's important to be your own , T"}URlJ~ (Apr~ I 20-May 2~)
, Astto-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
i P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta- person and make decisions for Personal gam ts po~s1 ble today af
yourself, but it is equally as . you kec:p ~ur :wtts .about rou .
1 tion, New York, NY 10156. Be . important
today to keep, an open concermng hat 1s gomg on ngh~
~ sure to state your Zodiac sign.
mind
so
you'll
be able to adapt to un.der your nose. Be profil con
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Why
better
thinking.
sc10us . and conduct yourself
waste time today with groups or
i cliques that make you feel uncom· . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. accordmgly.
19) Make certain you have good
! fortsblc? Try to spend your day
(May 21-June 20)
I with those whom you find enjoy- lines of communication open to TheGEMINI
you are today, the
! able and don'ttake themselves or persons over whom you are in . more busier
competently
you're apt to
charge' today. This is especially
• life too seriously,
handle y.our affairs. In fact, you'll
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) true when involved in any critical
be
capable of juggling several
Don't try to dod11e any chat· assignment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) endeavors simultaneously without
: lenges today, because substantial
l personal satisfaction can be gar· A recreational break might be dropping any pieces.

·j

Quahty Window

· WJ.lV DON'T '(()U DISCUSS
IT, AND TAKE A VOTE?

'

FREE ESTIMATES '

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

·

,.

COMMERCIAl ond IESIDEHIIAL

2 Handyman crew wtlJ do
yard work, palnUng lnslde
and ou~ carpenter work,
roofing, siding. Have own
tooli. Free Estimate&amp; .

PEAN,UTS

I

• Roofing

740·992·7599

.

I

JJJ

WINDOWS

lllJT "'QJR TWill' . I'IEETINI'&gt;S C::OtiFLICT· WITH
1'\Y ACCOU~ING CLASS .
I'M AFRI'JI&gt; I CAN'T.

i

'

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

New Homes • Vinyl
Sldlng • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
•.Room- Add~lons

..

C.EE. I 'M SOI'J!."I', NATE ...

.,

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

REPLACEMENT

.

\

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

IISSILL IUILDIIS
INC.

'

New Summer Dayt
Thur &amp; Fr110am- 8 pm
Saturday 10 am- 4 pm .
On other days If we lrt
home, we are OPEN.

The Appliance
· Man

m-2772
For All Your Home
lmorovemant Needs

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

-~

Sale

992~1550

Eaal
AUpau

It won't go

•

•

Norlll
SNT

OpeniDRlead: • 8

.

Cellular
::Jeff Warner . Ins.
992-5479

BANKRUPTCY

MAIL 11

••

EICIYITIN&amp; CO.

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

GOT

Wnl
Pan

•

j

•

�·-

.,.__ .. ._...

·~..

.

•

-· . ..

"

Thursdlly, June a, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pege B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.Rahal makes transition from track t4 CARl boardroOm
.

BY TltE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· :Two yean ago, Bobby Rahal was driving a race car. Now, he's driving CART.
. The three-time series champion who
won the 1986 Indianapolis 500 became
interim president and CEO after Andrew
Craig resigned under fire june 16. Rahal
immediately began a whirlwind tour.
"I've been on airplanes more than I've
been on the ground," said Rahal, who
quit racing after the 1998 season to concentrate on running his two-car team. ·
Since replacing Craig, the CART chief
since 1994, Rahal has been meeting with
key operatives. Included was Howard
lUtz, president of ABC Sports, whom
Rahal deems of major importance to
CART's future.
CART is suffering from declining TV
ratings, poor attendance at some venues,
a 4-year-old war with the IRL and the
staggering growth of NASCAR in the
last decade.
"Now I have a more precise idea of the

amount of work a CEO has to do ... promoter issues, team issues, sporting issues,
commercial issues;· Rahal said. "I knew it
was out there before I came on board,
but I just didn't know the full volume of
it:'
Rahal was one of Craig's strongest critics, often questioning the direction
CART was taking. Some of Rahal's fellow team owners are confident he will
attack the problems.
"I think Bobby is going to contribute
massively, because he has such a core
understanding of the business;· said Cal
Wells Ill.
Derrick Walker also thinks Rahal is the
right man for the job•
" I'd expect to see a very positive effect,
getting everybody back on track, not
only internally, but also the motor
groups, the manufacturers, sponsors and
the community of racing that has
become somewhat fragmented over the
last few years;' Walker said.

CART, which went public two years
ago. also has brought in marketing specialist Pat Leahy liom Target and former
vice president of operations for Mercedes
Hal Whiteford as its president of racing.
After Craig's resignation, the board also
selected Jim Hardymon, former chairman ofTextron, Inc. , as its chairman.
Bruce McCaw, another team owner
and board member, says personnel
changes have moved CART in the right
direction.
"I think there's an opportunity now to
pull people together," McCaw said. "This
is a business where everybody becomes
an instant expert on everything from
marketing to rules, and I think that
Bobby perhaps can provide some ,real
strong leadership."
One of the first moves by the balding,
mustachioed, 47-year old Rahal was a
phone call to Tony George, president of
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and
fo11nder of the IRL.

Rahal called it "purely a social call," but
one that tft"Geoqre know that CART
remains open to some sort of accommodation that would bring the two aides
together, adeut for the Indy' 500.
"I wu ju'l:volunteering:· Rahal said. "I
always havelno· matter what my position,
a willingnea,to co~unicate and try to
solve an isSl!e that's on everybody's mind
all the time~ I
He said QttRT will keep an open period in its 2apl. schedule to allow its teams
to race at t'il'd'y in what now is an IRL
event.
Chip Ganassi'a team went last month,
with defending CART champion Juan
Montoya winning the nee and teammate
jimmy Vasser filiishing seventh. Now,
other CART teams are expected to follow Ganassi'a lead- but without risking
the future of their own series.
"By keeping our schedule open, we
can at least participate at Indy. and that
truly is the race ·that is important to our

sponsors:' Rahal said. "But that issue is
not ours to solve in a lot of respects.
"Our biggest issue is building openwheel racing, making investments in our
merchandising, activating our sponsors to
do more on behalf of their involvement
in the sport."
He thinks that will help attendance
and TV numbers.
"I think that's job one;' he said.
As committed as Rahal is to his new
job, he's not ready to remove the interim
tag.
"It's kind of like I have an action sheet
where I've written down all these projects or things I have to do;' he said. "I'm
ticking them off slowly as we go through
them all.
"But thinking about making this permanent, that's not even on the action
sheet yet:'

Kyle Petty will take the place of .
his late son, Adam, in the Sprint
Chevrolet for the rest of the
NASCAR Busch Series season.
"We've worked very closely
with Sprint to reach the right
decision," Petty said Tuesday. "I
want to drive the car, and they
want ·me to drive."
Adam was killed in a practice
session at New Hampshire International Speedway on May 12.
He was 19.
Kyle will see double duty this
weekend, driving the Petty
Enterprises' No. 44 pontiac in the
Winston Cup race Saturday night
in Dayton'a Beach, Fla., and Busch
carSundayinWestAllis,Wis.ASA
driver Scott Hansen will qualify
the No. 45 Busch car while Petty
·completes his driving duties in
Daytona.
Bi.ftle's run at the record
. Greg Biffie is chasing an
unprecedented fourth straight
NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series victory in Saturday's Sears
DieHard 200 in West Allis, Wis.
"I think we're ready to do it,"
said Biffie, the defending champion on The Milwaukee Mile.
"When you win like this everyone expects you to go out and
\vin every race. Of course, that's
what we would like to do, too."
The Roush Racing driver has
won four of the last five events to
take a 54-point lead over Jack
Sprague in the season standings.
Biffle set a series record last year
with nine victories.

Gordon

.
•

from Pap II
, While it lasted, though, it was
• great.
;. . Gordon was Rookie of the Year
· in 1993. Two years later, he won
his first championship at 24, the
second-youngest to claim the
.$tock car racing's elite prize.
Now, Gordon isn't among the
' favorites in every race.
: · , "It's been a character-building
. year for me;' he said. "It's amazing
how much harder you work
. ,when you're running lOth or
·12th."
~ . In 1998, when he won his third
~ championship
while
tying
Richard Petty's record for most
• victories in a season, Gordon had
26 'top-five finishes in 33 races.
His victory in Sonoma and an
earlier one in Talladega, Ala., are
two of only three top-fives this
· year.
• At the height of his run, Gor; ~on was chidingly called Wonder
Boy by fans who resented his
9uick rise in the tradition-laden
· sport.
- Although he was easily the
most recognizable star on the cir. • j:uit' thanks in part to a
• squeaky clean image promoted by

.

June 30, 1000

Factory Invoices

Hometown Newspaper

our

"NEW'' FORD• LINCOLN• MERCURY
You will know what we paid, so you'll NEVER PAY TOO MUCH!

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 24

so Cents

Fireworks
:safety
.stressed
•

Petty to drive late
son's car for rest
of.2000 season.
Mike Skinner (1996) and Ron
Hornaday (1997) are the only
other series drivers to win three
consecutive races.
NHRA cuts deal
with ESPN
The NHRA and ESPN have
reached a five-year TV agreement
and multimedia partnership that
will put the NHRA Drag Racing
series on ESPN and ESPN2
through 2005.
The Streaker
Rusty Wallace will make his
SOOth consecutive NASCAR
Winston Cup start Saturday night
in the Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
Wallace, 43, who began the
streak in the 1984 Daytona 500,
has 50 career victories.
Wallace will be looking to
extend his lead in poles with his
seventh this year and third in a
row. No other driver has more
than two poles this season.
Double duty
Truck series regular Andy
Houston will drive Team Sabco's
No. 82 Chevrolet in Sunday's
Busch race at the Milwaukee
Mile.
"I love racing anything that has
wheels on it and take advantage
of any chance I get;• said Houston, the son of former Busch star
Tonuny Houston.
Andy has three victories in
three full seasons on the Craftsman Truck Series. He'll drive the
No. 60 Chevrolet in Saturday's
Milwaukee truck race.

Details, A3

Friday

teams and increasingly important to our

AUTO RACING NOTES

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

News of local servicemen, As
Reds lose; 4 share Hartford lead, 11

s.tu~

Hfth: 10.; LGw: 50S

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY -The upcoming
Fourth of July holiday has many
Meigs County residents rushing
to stores to purchase smoke
bombs, botde rockets, Roman
candles, and various other types
of fireworks in preparation for the . ,
celebration of our nation's indePendence.
However, bright lights and loud
explosions that fireworks emit
can easily divert one's attention
away from the possibiliry of
injury or death.
State Fire Marshal Robert R .
Rielage warns all Ohioans to be
aware of the inherent dangers of
fireworks and to avoid discharging fireworks in Ohio, which is
against state law.
Rielage cited the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission's 1998 statistics as an illustration of just how dangerous fireworks can be. ·
Fireworks injhries sent 8,500
people to hospital emergency
rooms across the country that
year, the last for which statistics
are available.
About 56 percent of the
injuries were burns to the hands, ''
eyes and face. Children under the
~ge of 15 comprised 40 percent
o£..the Yi~QW. .. '.t ,
" ~
• FirewoYks, ' in ' alfS' fotm,
potentially dangerous. Even
sparklers, wJ:tich are ,popular
among children ~nd considered
harmless by 'most people, can
reach temperatures above 1,200
degrees Fahrenheit. ·
The Ohio Department of
Commerce's Division of State
Fire Marshal, in conjunction with
local fire and enforcement offi.:
clals, administen Ohio's fireworks
FI~IIE\IIKiiiiKS FAN -Josh Parker, Pomeroy, visited Kroger with his mother and grandmother Thursday after·
laws.
· Over the last year, the State Fire noon to look over the store's selection of fireworks that are on sale for the upcoming Fourth of July hoi·
!day. Parents must be cautious when l!!ttlng children play with fireworks because of possible Injuries that
can occur. (Tony M. Leach photo)
.
Plu~ ... hflty,' ..... AJ

am

DHS readies
for July 1
merger date
Stqff staying busy
reducing caseload
BY BRIAN . J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT While
the caseload of clients receiving
cash assistance has been reduced
dramatically, staff at the Meigs
County Department of Human
Services must now concentrate
on finding resolutions to those
cases which remain as an Octoher deadline approaches.
In the meantime, DHS, which
will become the Department of
Job and Family Services effective Sanirday, prepares for a
change in scope.
The name change reflects a
statewide merger of the DHS
and Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. That merger will
shift the focus of the county .
departments from providing traditional welfare benefits to
assisting the unemployed and
underemployed in finding job
opportunities.
As a condition of Ohio Works
First, Ohio's answer to federallymandated welfare reform legislation, those receiving cash assistance in October 1997 were
limited to a 36-month eligibility timeline.
Those who have received
uninterrupted cash assistance
since that time now face their
lifetime limit on cash benefits.
.When the reform plans
kicked in, the Meigs DHS
reported 846 cash assistance
cases. Now, according to Barbara

·zo

Chapman of the Meigs DHS,
cash assistance cases face the
October deadline, and another
51 face a second deadline : in
early 2001.
Staff at DHS have been working closely with those clients to
ensure that all steps to ensure
self-sufficiency have been taken .
After the client has reached
his 36-month ·limit, he might be
eligible for another 24 morttb
period of cash assistance·,
although a 24-month ineligibility period applies, and additional benefits are only granted in
cases of extreme family emer~
gency.
Chapman said that some of
those clients have been approved
for benefits through Social
Security's SSI Disability program, and the staff is working
cl.~sely to ~ee that whatevi:~
assiStance nught apply to the
remaining cases is available.
While receiving cash assistance, clients must either be
employed, be involved in job
training, or participate in the
~p~ent's Community Woric :
Experience program, which is ·
similar to the Ge(leral Relief
ahd General Assistance programS
of years past.
Meigs DHS has become
increasingly involved in job creation and economic development as a solution to the need
for welfare benefits, funneling
hundreds of thousands of doUars
in Prevention, Retention and
Contingency funds into ceonomic development efforts in

PluM.,. DNS, Pllp AJ •

'

2000 Gall

is ~er Recreation Festival opens Saturclaj

IIYKmNKiu.Y

The festival begins Saturday at 9 a.m.
on this .project."
Donations and sponsorship from busi- with opening ceremonies, followed at
GALLIPOLIS - Maintaining its tra- nesses and individuals makes the festival 9:30 a.m. by the baby and tot sparkler
dition of something for everyone, the admission-free. Bl:rine Said community contest.
35th Gallipolis River Recreation Festival support has been gratifyfrtg.
Other highlights of the day include
kicks off its four-day stand in the City
"Businesses and &lt;rfganizatlohs that have H9vercrafts from . noon-S . p.m., Chip
Park on Saturday.
, ' donated have been very generous this Bryant from 11-11:45 a.m.and 6:15-7
The River Recreation Comrni~ee, year," she said. "We aJ&gt;pTate it and the p.m., Perfection on Wheels BMX bike
working under the. auspices of the Gallia COf11IDUnity is urged to isupport those show from noon-12:20 p.m., 4:30- 4:50
County Chamber of Commerce, has bUsinesses.''
p.m. and 5:40-6 p.m., and the youth talprepared a full slate of activity, liom ·the
As final' preparations in ·the park were ent show from 2:30-4:30 p.m.
opening ceremony to the concluding made today, Blaine said the festival's
The festival queens parade will be 7
fireworks show on july 4 at 10 p.m.
biggest need was volunteeu, and encour- p.m., and the queen contest is set for 8
. "This year's f~tival offers more for all," aged anyone with time to 'spare to con
p.m. on the main stage. This year's queen
said Committee Chairman Carol Blaine. tact organizen about worJ,ing.
..candidates are Amber Davison, Erica
"We started planning a year ago, and we:
"If you have some time 'to contribute, Moody, Dezra Wrikeman, Christina ·
had an exceptional committee working it would be helpful;' she said.
Weaver, Amy Hall and Jennifer Lucas.
QVP NEWS EDITOR

the' mainstream media and lucrative endorsement contracts with
high-profile sponsors like Pepsi
- he was booed with enthusiasm.
Gordon wouldn't mind hearing
a little more noise, but isn't
depressed by the seeming silence.
He understands much more
about losing than most could
imagine.
"A lot of people forget I've
been racing since I was S years
old;' he said. "I've lost more races
than I've won." ·
Win or lose, Gordon is still
wildly popular. His car attracts the
biggest crowds in the pits on race
days. Fans clamor for his autograph.
"I love him!" exclaimed Cindi
Garrett, wearing her No. 24 cap
last weekend at the Save Mart
350k. "I don't care if he doesn't
win every race. He's always up
there and that never changes."
But, Gordon - who discounts
last season as a good one because
he had seven bad races - realizes
his profile is somewhat lower
with th~ emergence of Tony
Stewart and Dale Earnhardt, Jr.
"You have four outstanding
y•an like we had, then when you·
don't, you're not measuring up in
some people's minds," Gordon
said.

At 9 p.m., Shenandoah takes the main
stage.
Saturday also features a number of
"Kids Day" activities, ranging from the
Holzer Clinic Baby Olympics to roller
blade races sponsored by 0.0. Mcintyre
Park District.
Sunday celebrates faith, starting with
gospel music sponsored by Gallia County Ministerial Association from 9-11
a.m., followed by a service in the park. A
number of gospel singers and groups are
scheduled throughout the day; and a
youth campfire coordinated by the ministerial association is set for 9-11 p.m .
New Wave Riden-PWC Action Jet
Ski Show will be held at 7 p.m., and

Mason Counry Steel Drum Band will
perform on the main stage at 9 p.m. ·
Highlights of Monday's events include
New Wave Riders, noon- 12:45 p.m.,
2:30-3: IS p.m . and 8:45-9:30 p.m.; ·
magician John Slicer from 5-5:45 p.m.;
.
and a firecracker contest at 6 p.m.
Entertainment indudes The Posse at
8:30 p.m. and We Don't at 9:30. Youth
activities are also planned throughout the
day.
Tuesday's main events will be the
annual Fourth of July parade at 6 p.m:,
and the fireworks show at 10 p.m.
-·
New Wave Riders will perform from
noon-12:45 p.m. and 2:30-3:1 5 p.m.;
while Stillwater takes the stage at 8 P·llL

''

Waterworks
PfOINSS .
PDK Construction began
Installing guardrails for the new
Waterworks Park that Is to be
located along East Main Street
in Pomeroy. The park project will
offer sct)nlc views of the Ohio
River with picnic tables, Shelters, '
• grills for cooking outside and
playground e:qUipment for the
public to enjoy. 'Ji,e construction
of a new sheltar hQUBB, alao to
· be located within the park, Is
scheduled to begin sometime
·next week. Plans for the park
were recently returned by the
state so that project completion
can get under WflY. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

.

WOUB-TV plans 4-week outage

TociWs

'

I .

Sentinel
Paps

Z S1dlanl-l&amp;
C!!lend&amp;r
Claajjficdt
Comic•
Eclitoriala

AS
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Ohituarin

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BZ

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 7-S.I; Pick 4:2-0-3-2
Bl•l ,. 5: S-9-19-23-30

W.VA.
Daily 3: 0-9-8 Daily 4: 1+5-4
0 2000 Ohio Vallqr PubliahiniJ Co.

Bv BRIAN J, Ruo
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

tion OU Public Television to expand its services," said David Wiseman, director of
ATHENS- Regular viewers of"Sesame engineering.
Street,"" Antiques Roadshow," "Masterpiece
The Federal Communications CommisTheater," "Nova" and other pu,blic televi- sion has mandated the conversion to digital
sion programs may have to do without their television for all public and conunercial
favorite shows for a period this summer, or television stations.
watch them on a station other than WOUB.
The station will return to the ·'r on Aug.
·
The local PBS station at Ohio University 2
~
will sign off the air on July 2 and will be
' At that time, WOUB-TV will have a
the air for approximately four weeks, so that c1eaner an d c1earer channel 20 reception .
a new digital transmitter can be installed.
W
The university has been planning the digOUC-TV 44 in Cambridge, which
ira! conversion process since 1990, and the serves the northern part of the coverage
area, will not be affected.
,
conversion wi ll change the way television
programming is broadcast, according to a · Funding necessary to accomplish th:e
news release issued by the OU Telecommu- conversion comes from a grant from the
nications Center.
Federal Public Telecommunications FaciliWOUB-TV broadcasts on the Charter ties Program, from the Ohio Educational
Communications cable service on Channel Telecommunications Network Comrnis25.
sions and from OU.
"Ohio University Public Television apol"In addition to rep"'acing worn and obso,.... . . . . woua. .... AJ .
lete equipment, this installation will posi-

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