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•

•

•

• Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
,,

8 8 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
llaniMy'• o.m.
Toronto B, Baltii'T'IOI'e .&amp;
Detroit 5, Tampa Bay"· 10 innings
Boston 11 , Mlnneoota 8
Chicago While Sox 1•, Kansas City 10

NMionoii.Mg""
Eul Dlvlolon
W L Pel............ !50 33 .eo2
vonc ......................... 46 35 .5118

Ttem
Alloria .......

Gil

a
Florida ................ ..... .... .... 43 41 .512 7112
Momreol ..........................39 40 .494
flllil!'delpnia . 'cer.iNj' ~ .~7
5I. Louil ........................... 49
ClnciMali ······· ................ 40
PlftoOurVh .....
.35
Milwaukee ....................:!&lt;

Chlcogo
Houston ..

33
42
41
49
......... .. 33 49
. ............ .. 28 154
WOOIDivlolon

9
12

597
. p•
.427
14
.4.W 15 112

.402
.3141

I6
21

. Ariz&lt;lnlo· ................... ........ 48
~ado

~5 .578
........................ 45 35 .563 1 112

san Francisoo .................. 42 38 .525 4 1/2
L.oo Angelos .......... .......... 41 40 .!506
6
San Dlego ........................ 37 45 .451 10 1/2
Moncloy'oChlcogo Cubs 3, Fttlsllurgh 0
Cincinnati 3. Alizona 2
Florida 2, N.V. Mels 0
Montreol1 7, A11ar118 1
Philadelp!lia 5, MilWaukee 3
, ~o 3. san Diogo 1
Clnly gameo SCheduled

Tuucl.y'a Glmee
Philadalpnla 7, Milwaukee 4

San FranciiCO 4 , Colorado 1

2

San Frandsoo 3, Colcqdo o
Todoy'aQa,..
Pittsburgh (Benson 7-t) at Chicago Cubs
(Downs 3-2), 2:20 P~
Colorado (Astac' 7-5) at San Francisco
(Nal110n 4-2), 3:35 p.m.
N.V. Mels (Hamp10n 7-5) a1 Florida (Smhh 0·.
1), 7:05p.m.

Cincinnati (Harnisch 1-4) at St Louis (Hemgon H). 7:05 p.m .
Arizona (Figueroa 0-1) at Houston
(Reynolds 6-5), 7:35 p.m.
MomreaJ (Vazquez 6-4) a1 4tlan18 (Millwood
5~). 7:40 p.m.
Phiiadolp!lia CN&lt;JW 7-5) a1 Milwaukee (Wrigh1
4-t), 8:o5p-.m.
- ··
Los AAgolos (Dre&lt;lort .. 7) at san Diego (Totberg 2.0), 10:05 p.m.
Thurtldey"a O.mee
Momreal (MJoiYlson 3-3) at 4tian1a (Mad·
dux 11-3), 1:10 p.m.
Colorado (Arrojo 5-6) at San Francisco
"'
(Ortiz 4-8), 3:35p.m.
Los Angeles (Brown 7·2l a1 San Diego
(Meadows 7·5l, 5:05p.m.
Phllldelp/lil (8ynl2-8) at Milwaukee (D'Am·
ico 3-4), 8:05 p.m.
Arizona (Roynooo 5-S) at Houston (Holt 3·
9), 8:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Fernandez 2-2) at
Louis
(Anklel6-3), 8:t0 p.m.

St:

.t.merlcan Loag,.
EutDMolon

TMm

W

.

L Pet.

Toronto ............. ............... 45 39
New Voric ......................... 40 37
Boston ............................ 40 39
Bllhimora .... ....................36 "5
Tampa Bay.........
.... 32 49
C.ntqJ DIYIIIon
Chicago ....................... 53 30
Clevelano ........................ 42 39
Kansas City .................... 38 43
Dotroi1 ........ ... ................. 37 43
Minnesota .. .............. ....... 37 48

w•.a: DlvlekJn

!:( 538
.5t9
.506
.44W
.395

GB
t 1/2

2 112
7 1/2
11 1/2

.639
.518
.4119

10
1•
.463 " 1/2
.435
17

Saa111e .......................... ..48 33 .593
Oakland .................... ....... 46 36 .581 2 1/2

Anaheim ......................... 43 40 .518
Texas ................ .............. 39 •2 .481

~-

-y··o

,

.

Baltimore 7, N.Y. Yankees e
CIIY8Iand 9. Toronto 4
Detroit 11. Tampa Bay o
Boston 14. Minnesola 4
Kansas City 10, Chicago White Sox 1

Texas 10. Oakland 1
Anaheim ~Seattle 6

~··~ ·

- ioronto (Halladay
-3-5) at Clev81and (Brower
..
2·2l, 7 05 p.m.
Baltimore (Rapp 5-5) at N.V. Yanke8s (Patti11ell'•) . 7:05p.m.
Detto~ (NaavOJ 5-S) at Tampa Bay (Relw 2·
•). 7:15p.m.

Olicago White Sox (Parque 8-2) at Kansas
City (Rolchert 3-5), 8:05 p.m.
Boston (Fassero 6-3) at Minnesota (Redman !5-3), 8:05p.m.
...
Oakland (Mukler 5-3) a1 Texas (RogOJs 6-5),
8:35p.m.
SeottJo (Halama Hl 81 Anaheim (COOper 321 , 10:05 p.m.

llluNdly'a Gamu

St. l.Duls 14, Cindnnati 3 •
Plnoburgh 10 , Chicago Cubs 4
Aonda9, NV. Mets8
Atlanta 7. Montreal 3
Arizona 10, Houston 4
san Diogo 7, Los Angelos

Texas 8, Oakland 3 ~
Seattle El, Anaheim e
Clnly games ochodulad

6
9

Batlimore (Ponson 5-4) at N.Y. Yankees
(Grimsley 3-2). t2:05 p.m.
Toronto (CetpantBt 6·7) at Clevelllnd (Bwba
8 -3), 7:05p.m.
Boston (Crawford 0-1) a1 Minnesota (Radke
5·9), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (PADDon 5·2) at Anaheim (Washburn
4-2), 10:05 p.m.
NoUona1LAogua ~

BA'n"INQ...-.tielton, Colorado, .390; Vldro.
Montreal, .373; Guerrero, Montreal, .383; Piaz-

za, •New

York, .357; castillO, Florida, .356;
tc:ern, San Francisco, .354: Cirillo, COlorado,

.3&lt;3.
AUN~etton. COlorado, 81 ; Edmonds, St.

louis, 77; Bagwell, Houston, 72; Jones,
Atlanta. 69; Bonds, San Ffancisco, 68; Kent,
San Francisco,.67; Cirillo, Colorado, SO.
RBI-Kent, San Francisco , 80; Piazza, New
York, 71 ; Sheffield, Los Angeles. 71: GueJrero.
Montreal, 70; He/1on, Colorado, 69; SOsti,
Chicago, 69; Giles, PittSburgh, 68; McGwlre,

St. LOuis, 88.

STAJKEOUT&amp;-Johnson, Arizona, 185;
Aa1aclo, Colorado, 115; Kilo, St. Louis, 110;
Oempoter, Florida , 109; Maddux, 4tlanta. 106;
Beoes, St. Louis, t06; Leiter. N.-.York , HM.
SAVES--Aifonseca. Flonda, 26; Hortman,
5an Diego, 21 : Benitez, New York, 18; Aguilera,
0\k:s.go, 17; Veres, St. louis, t6; Jimenez,
COOrado, 15: Nen, San Frandsco, 15.

·Great American .,.~

Kansas City 0, San Jose 0. OT
Los Angelos 1. Columbuso

' TCICYy'IGama

from Page 11
runs, I'm happy."
The Cardinals have won 16
of21, extending their NL Central lead over the Reds to nine
games. The Reds have lost 18

p.m.
Los Angeles at Miami, • :30 p.m.

•

BATTING-Garciaparra, Boston , .369;
Erstad, Anaheim, .375; Rodriguez, Texas, .361 ;
Delgado, Toronto, .355; Martinez. Seame, .352:
Sweeney, Kansas City, .347; Rodriguez, Seat·

tle,A~S-AOdrigu'az. s~~n1e,

Oe~Mdo.

82;
TOronto, 70; Durham , Chicago, 67; Mond85i,
Toronto,~ ;

Thomas, Chicago, 64; Erstad, Anaheim, 63; Damon, Kansas City, 63.
ABI-Martinez, Seanle, 86; Giambi. Oak land, n; Willlams, New York, n: Sweeney,
Kansas C;ry, 76; Rodriguez. Seanle, 74; DelgadO. Toronto, 74; ROdriguez. Texas, 74.
HITS-Erstad, Anaheim, 133; Rodriguez,
Texas, 1t3; Sweeney, Kansas City, 111 ; Delgado, Toronto, 108; Rodriguez, 5eattle, 105;t..aw-·
ton, Minnesota, 102; Williams, New Yorlli. 102.
DOUIIl.ES-011lnJd, Saa111e. 30; LaWion.
Minnes6&amp;, 26; Garaaparra, Boston. 25; Segui,
Texas, 25; DeShiek:ls, Baltimore. 25; Sweeney.
Kansas City, 24; Oye, Kansas City, 23; Higginson, Detroit, 23; Rodriguez. Texas, 23.
TRIPLES-Guzman,
Minnesota,
12;
Durham, Chtcego, 7; Kennedy, Anaheim, 5;
Nixon, Bo5ton. 5; Valentin, Chicago, 5; 8 are
tied with 4.
HOME RUNS-Oelgado, Toronto. 26:
Rodr~uez, .Texa1, 25; Thomas. Ghicago, 25:
Batista, Toronto, 24; Anderson. Anaheim, 24;
Everen, Boston, 24; Giaus, Ana~eim, 23;
ThQme, Cleveland. 23: Martinez, seante, 23.
STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas City. 22;
Mondesi , Toronto, 21 : DeShields. Baltimore,
21 : Aloma.r, Cleveland, 21; l.Bwt_on, Minnesota,
17; Jeter, New York, 16; Mclemore, Seat\le,
16.
'
PITCHING (10 Decisions)---Wolls. Toromo,
14-2, .875, 3.41 ; Hudson. Oakland. 10-2, .833, •
4.18; Eldred, Chicago. 10-2, .833, 4.55; Parque, Chk:ago, 8-2, .800, 3.86; Baldwin, Chicago. 11-3, .786, 3.79; Sele, SMttle, 10-3, .769,
4.2 1; Martinez, Boston, 9-3, .750, 1.44.
STA1KEOUTs-Martlnez, BoSton, 140; Finley, Cleveland, 109; Nomo, Detroit, 104; Mussina, Battimore, 100; Burba, Cleveland, 100;
Coldn, Cleveland, 99; Wells, Toronlo. 97.
SAVES-Jones, Detroit, 24; Wetteland,
Texas, 21; Percival, Anaheim, 20; lsringhausen.
Qakland, 19: Koch, TorQrltQ, 18; Lowe, Boston, ·
18; Rivera. New York, 18.

PRO

Meigs County's

Dougherty.
Los Angeles (9-5 - 7) improved ro a
le-ag-ue-beH 8-0-1 when scoring
first .
"Offensively, it was muc~ better,"
Los Angeles coac h Sigi Schmid
said."[ think we were unfortunate
that we didn't get three or four
goals ."
'
Columbus c oach Tom Fitzger a rd
said his team played poorly in the

--~--

Ellwtern Cont.-.nce •
Toom
W L
Ot1ando ........................... t 0 6
Cleveland ..........................a 1
washington .. ... ...... ........ B 1
Detroit ·-·
........ 7 8
NBW York ................. ....... 7 8
Miami .....
.....................5 10

Indiana

Pet.

..t87 2 1f1
.438
3
.333 • h'2

..................... 3 12 .200

'·e 112

Chartotte ..........................2 13 .133 7 1/2
Weetem Confer.ce

Houston ..........................15

2 .882

LosAngeles .....................13 2 .867
1
Sacramento .....................11
5 .888 3 112
Minnesota .. ~....................10 5 .087
4
Phoenbc ........................... .. 9 6 .eoo
5
Utah ..................................9 8 .529
Portland ............................4 10 .28e g 112
Seattle ....................... :......2 13 .133
12
T.-y'oQomaa
Portland at New York, 7:3{tp.m.
Miami at Chartone, 7:30p.m.
Seanle at MiMeaota, a·p.m:
Los Angeles at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

e

ThuMCiar.. o.mee
Indiana at Or1ando, 7:30p.m.

from Page B1
Reserves for both AI,. and NL
teams were to lie named
Wednesday. _
The rest of 'the NL stariing
lineup has Mark McGwire of St.
Louis (2,347,317) at first, Barry
Larkin
of
Cincinnati
(1,593,696) at shortstop, Chip per Jon es of Atlanta (1,553,944)
at
.third,
and
Griffey
(2,188.169) , San Fran cisco 's
Barry Bonds (2,015,590) and
Chicago's
Sammy
Sosa
(I ,800,444) in the outfield .
"It took me a lot of time to
make the All-Star team," Sosa
.aid . "I remember a few years

MAC

from Page 11
''There is a certain amounc of
prestige if yo u. play in _the top
cla!Sification, and there is certainly a potential financial gain in
that you are i9 a position to make.
television appearances, do well

AUTO, A/C, PW, PL,
CRUISE, TILT

AUTO, V6r A/Cr AM/FM
CASS, LEATHER,
ALUMINUM WHEELS

139991

ONLY

ONLY

IA05601

$f2~9&lt;J5" .$f81995"

BASEBALL
Amerlun L••a.u•
BOSTON REO SOX-Signed OF
Bernard Gilkey. Designated OF Curtia
Pride tor assignment. "Recalled LHP Tim
Young from Pawtucket of the International league . Optioned INF Wilton
Veras to Paw1ucket.
TORONTO BLUE JAVS-Aetlvatad C
Oarrin . Fletcher from the 15· day disabled li st. Designated C Charll~ Greene
for assignment.

National Ltaguit
NEW VORK METS-Rocollod LHP
Bobby M. Jones from Norfolk of the
International League. Optioned AHP Jlfn
Mann to Norfolk .
·
PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Activated
OF Adrian Brown from 1he 15-day dll·
abled Ust. Sent INF Abraham Nunn to
Nas hville of tha PCl.
ST. LOUIS CARD1NALS-4cllvoted
28 Fernando Vina from the 15adey· dll·
abled list. Placed INF Placido Polanco
on the' 15-day disabled list.
HOCKEY

National Hockey L11gue
COLUMBUS

BLUE

JACKETS-

Signed G Ron Tugnutt Jo a four-year

contract .
_
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Signed F
Gary Roberts and F Shayne Corson to
multiyear contracts.

99 FORD
MUSTANG
CONUERTIBLE

Aqueduct on Ap!il 29 .

99 DODGE
DURANGO
AUTO, 4 WHEEL
DRIVE, A/C, SLT PKG

AUTO, V6, AM/FM CD,
PWR EQUIP,
GREEN/WHITE

ONLY

IIA03051

1139280

5

$f .

Well construction to reinforce water supply
Report indicates
·scife and adequate
supply
BY TONY M. LEACH

98 -HONDA
ODESSEY

T·TOPS, AUTO, V6,
A/C, LOADED

AUTO, A/C, PWR
WINDOWS, PWR
LOCKS, CRUISE, TILT

~~I

IIA00651

ONLY.

$·-~-~~-__.-~-~--·

won Dunston., the second batter in the first, reached on a
fielding error by first baseman
Sea n Casey.
"They're a good team, they're
in fir st place for a reason, and
sometimes the ball bounces
their way," Villone said. ''I'm .
going to battle, that's all I can
do. "

AUTO, V6, MOONROOF,
LOADED, LOW MILES

ery if he didn 't go."
were the Yankees' Bernie
Also elected to the AL lineup Williams
(1,568,209), Dye
were Oakland's Jason Giambi (I ,486,448) and Cleveland's
(1,229,295) at first, C leveland 's Manny Ramirez (1,232,335) .
Roberto Alomar (2 ,615,501) at
Williams and Giambi will be
!eco nd and Seattle's Al ex first-time sta rters.
Rodriguez (1,654,852) at short " It 's great to see Griffey go ,to
stop.
th e o ther leagu~ and have
"Every year, getting to go to Bernie lead," said Joe Torre of
the All - Star game is like a dream the Yankees, the AL manager.
come true, whether it's your
In the closest voting for a
first one or not," Al omar said.
. start in g spo t , Boston's Carl
Baltimore third b.aseman Cal Everett was ·fourth at 1,202,637,
Rip ken (2, 169,993) was picked just 29,698 behind Ramirez,
for the All - Star garlle for th e who is o n the DL with a
18th time, the 16th as a starter, strai ned hamstring.
but he is on the disabled lis.t
Rip ken gets a $100,000 bonus
with a bad ba ck . Cl eveland's for his election, while Alomar,
Travis Fryman (824,402) w as Dye, Giam bi , ,Griffey, Kent,
second, followed . by Anaheim's M cG wire, Piazza, Ramirez and
Troy Glau s (8 12,538).
Alex and Ivan Rodriguez get
Elected to the AL outfield $50,000 each.

and advance to a bowl game,"
Pope said.
"On the other hand, moving.
down would likely mean a loss of
those revenues, and possibly diffic ulty scheduling oppo nents from
the higher classification," he said.
The proposal is exp'ected to be
voted on in October by the
NCAA Management Counc il ,
then pa l'ed on to the school

presidents and chancellors on the
NCAA board of directors, who
have the final say on any changes.
That board of directors could
implement the change for the
200 1 season, startin g the clock on
a 'seven-"year timetahl to full y
implement the new standard .
Schools would have four years to
establish their a ttendance average, then an additional three

years to make the standard.
" This is a ways down the road,
but it is nor going to go away," •
MAC commissioner Ri ck Chryst
said. "We're not the target of this,
bu t 1 ~ is something we're very
cogn itint of. We know we've got
ro work ounails off and get our
attendan'ce\ numbers up." ·

.

P

$1-1~

96 DQ_DG.,E
RAM 1500
LONG BED, AUTO, V8,

IIA02142

SLT,4X4
IIA04981

AUTO, V6, A/C, 4 WD,
LOADED
#A05381

94FORD
E-150
RAISED ROOF,
CONVERSION PKG,
AUTO, V8, LOW MILES
#Ao2n1

,~

93 FORD
F-250

in Cmil!n n n Pk;J.; Co urt n n

Mo nday fur

" Th~ -~~vat~__r

93 HONDA
ACCORD

"t.' tH e nung:

on

chargt'S" o f brt'J.king and ente r-

in g and grand thdi: .
Soulsby, Lt. M a ny Wood and
Deputy Bil l G ilk ey were . in the
Co mmon Pl t'a~ Co urtroom for
J pk:1 l1cJr in!; in th t'" case o f
Ronald Vance· when Murphy
appeared. on hi s own , to enter
hi s pl eas. Soulsby said .
"' Mr. Murph y\ ct~t: was
heard tlnt .md Judgt· Cro\\' sc.:.· ntt:' nccd him to two ye,ln on the
B &amp; E cha rge·." Sou"by " id in .1
\t;;l~C llH;' Ilt

lfl_. _ l ~&gt; m noy 1 ~

WELL SITE -· Pomeroy Village Admi!)istrator John Anderson inspects the newly constructed water well
located in Syracuse. The new well will help improve water quality for the residents of Pomeroy. (Tony M.
Leach photo 1

on Wnlne'lday. "At

.1hat tnnc, Wood and (;i iko.y
placed rhe ha ndr utfs o n th e·
frnnr of Murphy and both ofli cer~ cscortl'd hi111 o ur nf the
courrroolll . to t he .;;t,lin tC::l" the
'\L'Co nd fh)or. w here .r vlurphy\
tllL&gt;r.h q ~md . .s .un \\'e.n.: st:tlldin g."
"Mr. · .~l urphy be·l'an to cry
:m d " '.IIH L·d to t.d k to his mo th n J nd dcp uti L·'I too k hi r11 to thL'
courr hn u.;;e d oor. i4tTt1'1'1 th e
'liLk\Y,lik tl·om th e r.:mr.tJll"e w
thL· 'lhni.ft\ o tlicc.'· Su ul, bv
.lLkfL-d.
At th ,n tilllL'. Souhby s~ id ,
J\1urphy twga n to rt""' i '~L
" I )eptllle'&gt; f!: ra bbed Murphy

DanlBI .Murphy
by th e chain on the handc uffs
and pullecj just a little. Lt. Wood
held onto th e cuffs and Gilkey
walked behind and exited the
door," the sheriff said.
" Murphy swung his vm
arou nd and began running
down the steps of the sheriff's
oftice,. Lt. Wood and Gilkey
chased him across East Second
Sm'l'r and- -dowii- Mai n "Street
toward Don Tate Chevrolet," he
adJeJ.
Deputios continued th eir pursuit of Murphy until Gilkey
stopped a pass ing motorisr and
rhey, wgether, -chased Murphy
to the auto dealership, where
Murphy J Umped a feqce, still
\ovearing the handcu tTs, and ran
11110 the woods behmd llob
Roberts Field.
SL'vcral officers were on thl·
'n· nc fi-o m . the shcrifr s office,
Po meroy Po li ce Departme nt ,

Please see Escape, Page A3

Law limits release ,()f Ohioans' personal infonnation
C:OLU MUUS (AI') - Fed up with
j Jillllll...'d \\"lt h junk nuil ? A
llC.:\V law protecting Ohio,llls· priv.Ky
' ho uld 'i·c:du cl' hulk lll .li lin hrs by p n :Vt'nting tilL· o;ratl· ti·om se lling driver'\' license
info rnuri o n tv markett""rs.
nuilhoxl'~

bw bnn~rs {)hin inro co mpliaJ KL'
'"irh kdna l pnv.u.: y bws n1eant to
rL·.,tnlt th e distnbution of ln t()rlllati on
ThL·

ONLY

$

l'OMFROY - An ,·scaped
convict \Vho tled tl-om Meigs
Cu untv
o; h critr\
deputit·~
Tl' lll ,Iill ~ .lt . large.·. a11 d Sher;flj atnL'&gt;; M. Soul"by Ius rt'ka\ed
more dl'tli I-;, ,thout I );mid M urphy's e~c.tpc .tnd th L· co minuing
~L'arc h til!. Ill! 11 .
Mu rph y ot' l:ligky Ridge
ll..oad, Lonf!: llo tcom, appeared

type· of health risk, acc-ording to
Village
Administrator
John
Anderson . w ho oversees the
oper::~tion of Pomero-y's watt'"rl'o\.t!ld
se\.ve rage systems.

Please see Water, Page A3

94
CHEUROLET
s~ 1·0 BLAZER

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

suppli ed by ground w~er th at is
pumped from three wells located
in Syracuse, w hich. utili ze the
Oh io River Aquifer. There arc
back- up ·water connections with
the vt ll ages of Middleport an d
Syr:~c u S&lt;' , :~lr hou gh neith er of
tht·~c Conn ections was used m
l lJ0l).
Drinking water can reasonably
be exp,·cted to to nt,ain at least a
sm all amount of variou s co ntaminams. Th e pre~e n ce of these contaminants does nor- necessarily

quite sat i&lt;fa ctory," ·said V 1llaf(&lt;'
Administra tor John Andnson.
"()ur water purifi cati on "Ystem is
work in g as well as expected ."
C.o maminant" rhar co uld po ssibl y be present 111 arc•a water suppli t.·~ tndude microbial c.:o lltallli nants, such ,Is viruses. an d bactt.:ria,
•

Murphy still
at large
after.escape
' l

indicatt· tltat the water poses any

L--.....;.....;;..__;;.,.,____,

98 CHRYSLER
SEBRING

OMEROY The
Vil lage of Pom eroy
rekast'li
it s water
department\
1999
Drink ing Wat er Co n&gt;umer Contiden ce R eport la&lt;t
week tOr th e public to cxami lll',
indicating cl sa (t' watt.•r supply.
That supply will be· further
enhanced by a fourth wel l now
U1Jdt•r construction.
Th ,· 1,cport bndly explain&lt; the
&lt;l tl.llity o f J&gt;om eroy\ dnn~111~
watL'r and th t: number of c.qntaminants , if anv,
were found.
• that
J
The Pomeroy water system is

·98 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

HORSE RACING
NEW VORK STATE RACING AND
WAGERING BOARD- Suspended jock· ,
ey Heberto Castillo Jr. tor 10 days for
ca reless rid i ng• in the ninth race 11

so Cents

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Detroit at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

ago I had a lot of good numbers
to go to All-Star game and they
never took me: Now, the last
couple of years I've been up
there and l can appreciate it
mote now because I've b een
working so hard for that."
Griffey was elected to his II th
All-Star game , his first in the
NL. M cGwire was picked for
t he 12t h time, his eighth as a
starter. Larkin was selected for
the lith time.
Bo.bby Cox of the Braves, the
NL manager, is expected to pi ck
several of his players. McGwire'
demanded St. Loll'is teammate
Jim Edmonds, fifth in the outfield voting, be se lected.
"I would almost think of not
going if he's no t on it ," MeGwire said . " It would be a mock-

..

99 BUICK
REGAL GRAND
SPORT

99 PONTIAC
GRAND AM "

Seattle at Houston, 8:30 p.m.

Washington at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 28

QB

.825
.533 1 112
.533 1 112

first hal f.
"In the second half we made , a
few substitutions, se~med to get
back in the game a little bit, we
just couldn't get the equalizer," he·
said.
'
Th e game was played before an
MLS -season record crowd of 53,844
at !he Rose Bowl, beating the mark
of 53,126, set eadier Tuesday night
at Colorado.
·'

lineup healthy for the firsr rime
in more than two months. Second baseman Fernando Vina,
acrivared from the disabled list
befo&lt;e the game, didn't start ,
but played the ninth.
Villone lasted only twothirds of an inning, allowing six
runs and five hits . Only one
run was earned because Sha-

Hometown Newspaper

WOmen'a
National auutNII
Au: cllltion
'
-

·oNLY

MLB

July 6, 2000

•

s.lurday'a-

New Yortc-New Jersey at Kansas City, 1:30

Early.goal by Galaxy dooms Crew _
in Los Angeles

Reds

Details, A3

Dallas at NeW Yotk·New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.

. _ MAJOK -LEAGUE - SOCCE-R

of 27 since June 4, when they
led the Central by a half-game.
"It doesn't matter if it 's the
Padres or the Phillies," ;nanager
Jack M cKeon sa id. " lf'you get
well-pitched games you beat
thern, if you don 't get wellpitched games you ca n't bea t
them ."
St. Loui s had its openmg-day

lbursday

News of Jocal college·students, As
Hubbard tourney action begins, 81

Friday

High: 80s; Low: 50s

DC United at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Columbus at Chicago, 8 p.m.
San Jose at Cok:Jrado, 8 p.m.

HITs-VIdro, Montreal, 113; Helton, Col·
orado, 110; Kent. San Francisco, 109; Guerrero, Montreal, 107;, Jones, Atlanta, 105;
Young, Chicago, t 03; Grudz!ela!lek, Los Angela•. 102.
DOUBLES-Vidro, Montreal, 28; CirillO, ColoradO, 28; Halton, Colol'&amp;(jo, 27; Young, Chica·
go, 28: Kent, San Francisco, 26; Green, Los
Angeles, 25; Allonzo, New Vonc, 24; Wilko, .
Montreal, 24; Zeile, New York, 24.
Mljor I,NguaTRIPLES-Guerrero, Montreal, 7; womaetc.
Arizona, 7; Goodwin, COIOI'ado, 7; Perez, COlEalllem Olvlolon
orado, 6; Shum~. Coforado, 6; i\'alker, ColTeam
WLTPtoGFGA
orado, 6; Reese, Cincinnati, 5; Lansing, ColNV·NJ ........................9 7 2 29 30 26
orado, 5; Martin, San Diego, 5.
New England ............... 7 7 5 26 31 29
Miami ................ ........ .7 B 4 25 26 28
HOME AUNS-McGwire, St. Louis; } ~;
D.C .............................4 · 12 5 17 30 42
Bonds, San Francisoo, 28; Sheffield, l.Ds "'ng&amp;les, 27; Griffey Jr, Cincinnati, 26; Edmonds, St.
COntnll Dlvlalon
Tampa Bay ...........:.... 11 9 o 33 40 31
Louis, 24; Piazza. New York, 24; Finley, Ari·
zona, 24.
'
Chicago .....................9 8 3 30 42 37
Columbus ........ ........ 7 9 4 25 28 34
STOLEN BASES-Castillo, Florida, 35;
Dallas .
............ 1 10 3 24 32 37
Goodwin, Colorado, 35; Young, Chicago, 26;
W•etern Dlvlelon
Veras, Allanta, 24; Reese, Cincinnati. 19;
Kansas City ............... 11 2 5 38 30 12
Owens, San Diego, 19; Glanville, Philadelphia.
Los Angeles ................ 9 5 7 34 28 23
17; Cedeno, Houston, 17.
PITCHING (1 0 Decisions)-leiter. New ·Colorado ....................9 9 2 29 27 39
San Jos-&amp; ...... .' ..............4 8 8 20 24 30
York, 10.1 , .909, 3.04; Gr&amp;ves, Cincinnati, 9·1,
NOTE: Three points for a win and one point
.900, 1.89; Johnson, Arizona, 13-2, .867, t.n;
tor a tie.
Maddux, A11anta, 10-3, .769, 3.32; Benes, St.
l\l~'aGomeo
Louis, &amp;.3, .750, 4.32; Anderson , Arizona, 8-3,
Miami 2. New England 1
.727, 4.40; Elarton, Houston, 7-3, .700, 6.17:
Tampa Bay 3, DC United 0
Estes, San Francisco, 7-3, .700, 3.70.
COloradO 2, ChiCago 1, OT

PASADENA,
Calif.
(AP)
Mauricio Cienfuegos' goal in the
fourth minute gave the Los Angeles
Galaxy a 1-0 victory over the
Columbus Crew on Tuesday night .
Luis Hernandez . set up the game's
lone score, passing to Cienfuegos,
who sprinted past Columbus midfielder John DeBrito . Cienfuegos
then put a shot from the top of
penalty area past goalkeeper Mark

.

I

.

.

•

''

co llected by lllotor ve hicle bu rea us.
ThL· Ln \· lllL".llh that "whL· n WL' go in
and gi\'L" information to the government
t(H· ollL' purpl)'IC, ;H l r a '~ t they have the
rc'~pL·ct to 111.~111ta in rlut int()_
rlll:1tion in
nm tid~..· no:.: c:· '\a id j;.llll L'' Moye r t)f th e
Buckeye Pr ivacy Coa lition . Th e group
lobbit·' for" righter restri ctions o n th e

~OVLTnmcnt co lkcno n of p cr~o n J l info ruuti on.
Th e state uscJ to H'ljllil'l' tlut pt·o pk
who didn't' w;m r thL'i r pn 'lmUI inf0rm;l rion -;ol d to sign a fOrm.
Now, th ~..· st.1t c .1'\su m cs 110 OllL' \\':lilt~
hi s or her mfornution ~o ld .md n:qum:"
pL·oplt' to "o pt in " hdOrt• t he llltOr mation is rck ~l ,L' d by signing .l f~lrlll.
Sincl' the l.tw took d fcct bst IllOi lth ,
''T here's only .1 h.111dful o( peopk who·
haw o pt~..· d in ," ~a id Susa r1 Watikc r, &lt;~
'ipokcswo nun fo r the Bureau of M o tor
Vehicles .
The '\tate earned about $ 1~ ·milhon
annually from tlu• '\ale of dri ve r,' lice nse

inform :H i on .

J,Yhat 's no longer up for
sale is a person's name,
address, age, ltair color,
lteigltt, wcigltt and gender,
Watiker said.

h L' lght. \\'e igiH .tnd ~l'tJdn. \V.tn kn ..,,li d .
Sudt lnli.Jnn .mon t·ould hL' mt'flll tn ,1

Lkpartm cm 'ltnrL' nurkL' Ull~ Llo rhc.., . tD
pl'l&gt;pk of ,, n·rt.t-11 1 \ Jtc \\ ho l1n· 111 .1 L"l'l" tall l p,lrt D( rhc .,[.It t .. \\i,HlktT .,,\ld.
Th e l.1w. urq.6 n,dl: " fHHI'-OI"t''-1 by R.ql.
Pan·ina ( :i.I IJ C ~ ·.. 1 ( :n lll!llJ .li J R ~..·~luhlli. ·. nl.
doe'i ll\lt .dll·l t .1 Lllll lll l\1!!1~ b. n1 011

Of th ;1t, .tbout $..1 mil lion c.m1e tl·nm
nL_Irh·tin g co mpani l'S. Th e l'l""' t LamL·
ti·o m thn'l" rcsc.lrt·h finlls who o nly usL·
th t' infornl .ttion t;_1r C&lt;ll llpi li ng tTports..
An t•xccpt ion in tl~· 1.1\V .tl lows th ..: sU tl'
-~ t o .t'I..H!timlL' sellin g inti:wnutlotl. to such
com pan lL'"·
What's no longn up f(J r s.t lc j, a p ~r­
SOll's nam e, addrL·'~'~ . age. b :tir colo r,

n.:lt-~1:-.ing .1 dri nT·~ ph olllg r.t]' h. Suc 1 ~d
SL"Cllnty lllllllbn. tc.:kplHllll' lllllllh~..-r .11 h l
lll l'liJ r.tJ 1. 1!

dJ\,IhJill"\ lld~)]']ll,lliOIJ.

Exn·pt lull . , 111 thl· 1.1\\ .tl lm,. pPlin·
dcp.ntmcnt'l tn rctricn· infiH·nutinn li.,L·d
in at.:r id cm im V"\lg.ltiLlll".
()nc nfthl· rr.''l'.Jrdl linn., who t".\11 .,uJI
buy t he lllf~ll· m .Hillll. 1-l.L. [1,,Jk ol
])~..·troit . lobbied · llll'tl n·t·"t"ully t11 he

.dlmn·d w rc- ~L."Il people's information i:o
.1uto p.lrt' ro mpJ111L'S tr'ymg: to market
~'rodun .. Jll ,Jdt.' fo r. spt:c ifi c mo tnr vehicko,; .

· l~ hl·,~..·

.n-~..·

'pec ifi ca!!y tail ored for
'\o ll1L·nnc \\'ho m ay or may not have an
intl're·s t. hut probab ly 'w ill hecause they
h.11·c th.1t kn1d o( velucle," ;aid Tom
( ;rL'l' ll , ,r ( :olumbus lobbyist, who n:pre~t"JHcd Polk. "'Tht: :1rgument we made is
it'thq· dlln'l like it , they ca n just throw it
.1w.1y lr \ nor a tt'lt'lnarkctt•r 's c&lt;~ H to min g
hl't\\"cc n f1 .tmi H .at d111nt'r tim e,"
fV1oyt·r o( th e pnvacy coalition saiJ
hL··d like to SL't' l)Hio Jo mort· to protect
pri\".H'Y Tl1 i~ Jncludr.;.·s the dimina ti o u of

Please see Privacy, Page A3

DIESEL, 4WD

HURRY!
WON~T LAST LONG
~

AUTO, A/C, CRUISE,
TILT, AM/FM CASS
#A04087

IIA05071

Attom~ys_ .arrested

·on contempt charges
that ~tory cbimcd .1
n mtl JCt of in tnt'st in t hr.· c.l:-.t.
,Jtturn ey was arrested Wc.:.·dnc sd1.1Y
which '· !ll ad~..· it un ct hi r.1l for him
.1n d dtargell wtt h co ntem pt ll( .. to .lp pl:;~r" at r. h ~ ~~ llt t.'IKi n v; h ~.: arco urt, ~1d a C hi llicothe .1ttorncy 111 g.
"PL· nt last night in t he lt0 '\'1
At'ter he \\as ,Jrre'I Lni and
Coun ty Jai l o n the same clurgc, brought tn tht· L"ourtroom. Stt)ry
alter ho th lc1ikJ to .1ppear :11 ,, w;ls permitt t• d . to w ithdnw ,l\
'ICn tcnci ng hca ri1'1g 111 Ml· t g~ E\ving\ anurney.
Cou nty Common Pk·;ts Court .
Crow sc nt e nLT d Story to rhree
Co mmon Pleas Jud~e' Fred W. d.1ys 111 pi I. w inc h wa11 '\ u sp~: nde d
(row Ill ordncd Stcve' n L. Story upon Story's p.1yment o f .1 $2511
of Pomeroy and James T Bo l ~_c r tine fo r contempt of court. 1-k
of Shill iro.tlll· arrt·srcd on bench w.1s rc..:lc.rscd on p.1ymcnt of a
warrant\ for conte m pt after th l'y
$ 1.11011 c"'h bond.
fJilcd to appea r ;}r a ~eiHr.' t K II Jg
Mcanwh1le. Uolgn wao; J ITl'lltni
hea ring for Charle&gt; I~ Ew in g, l.t'IL night in Russ Cou nty. and
who w.ts chargt'd in Crow\ court 'Pt'llt th e nig:ht in th e Ro, . .
with two cou nts of burglary.
A journ;~l ent ry filed in Ewin j.;\ 'Pie•se see Arrested, Page A3
FROM STAFF REPORTS

l'OM E IHW -

'\

'

•

A l'o mnoy

L l"l' in dtca t e~

". . . - - - - - - - - ,
Today's

Methodists leadin crusade
Sentinel
they_hope will en Ohio· Lottery
sectiOns16 Pages

1

Calendar
Classi6eds
Comics
Editorials
, Obi tuari.s
Sports
Weather

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
A3
B 1-3. 8
A3

Lotteries
.OWQ

Pick J: ()-()-~; Pick 4: 4: 1-5-6
Supe&lt; Lotto: 1 -1&gt;-:1 1 -.J(~ .\7-411
Kicker: 1&gt;--l-H-1\-.2...\

W,VA.
Daily 3: 1-.l-6 Daily 4: 2-'/ .. (,.. ~

•

CO LUM BUS (AI') - Me·t hp.l"" h.l\·c he·!(ull .1 ll tHl ~~~~- HHL'l' " ()Jl thL· ~l.l.f1Cl'~ of CJ.nd id:ltes ti:Jr JJl
they hope wi ll k.Jt! tn rhc dl\lll . lllthn~ nf- .. u tt· lt ·~ J .,I.li i\' L' .. c. H'\ nn g.un bli ng.
thL· () hi u Lottt·rv \\·ahin two t\1 t hrt·L· ,.L
..ll.....)
1'\w Rt'\". Tom Crc\". "t•xccutivc director of t hL'
N .l tHlll,il l ·o.liitHl ll Ag.1ino.a Lega lized c: ~unbling.
!lL'W'\papL'r rL·.portcd.
T he Mcthudi•as. in cnllJtl lKtlnn \\"lth thL· \)Inn r.dkd .1 loltn\·. \t ii Lk. ",1 ... huwdown.' '
l 1t..~· Ld~.1r. h~..·'s c.-ontl.den t that th e findin gs
Cnu nn l o t Churc h~.· ....trc rt.. lliy l!l llL'Ip lic\-clnp
ll'gJ'I Iati o n that would ll'L'.ltt' .111 ll,hit' JWllLknt (ollt - \\1luld 'liPJ"'(lrt th L' lottq·y oppositi on'syie\v.
.. rhr t r uth j.,, it\ not goo d t'COilOrlliCS, it 's not
mi ,sJo n to stud y the lottl'ry\ ctl~·t'l"\. thL· H.. t·\·. .Jolm
Edga r told The Co lu lllbus Di'lp:lt(h t~lr a Thur . . dJy g()th i puhlit' pnhl'v, .llhl a·, not good for th e q u;.d ir\· t)f l rtl·." Crl'\' ,,tid .
11rory.
AlrL·.rdy undl''l: \\ ".1) h :m dli:1rt ro ~~top H ouse ,Uill •
T hc•bi l}li)&lt;.cly will he ltJtrndn .-L·t,l in Squcmh~,: r .
&lt;•
~
.\ . Th .ir wouid .!I low Ohio ro join a multi&lt;tatc ·
"We b~,: l i\:vc.· that \~ ·h en "thr l'L''I lllt' o f th ~tt· t"Oll1L.
ha ck .. .th .H will prov1dc thl' ddinlll g Jl 1fi.)rr1LltlOll lottl'n . ·~. Hi lL', m whh·h plnyt'n. fr~1 111 c;ever;rl stat es
w n•.twaken thl' citl7t'll' of rhi.., .. ur~· Ill 1ht• ' ')!;lllli - hu) tH ~ L' h. ~..·n.,unng .1 huge Jackpot.
c1mp :-~ign

~ ·. tm harm ~

done by t11 L' lnn cry.. l iHi nuke .t pu.,h.
b .l ~l'd on infl) l' lll.ltinn from rl 1.lt 'ltlhh-. to h.t\"L' th e
Ohio Lottery n·pe'Jlcd." F..l g,lr s.11cl.
The ramp .n~n .1l ~o will he prt' j '. lnn ~ Jn tm· lll.l -

I d~ .tr ... 11d IIIHI"l' Bi ll (1-L\ \nm'r \VIil kgto.;lativc
.l pprt)\".11
" \X.'t' ,hl'hl'\"L' th.lt \\'l' h.J\'t· r.tiscd public aware-

Please see Lottery, Page A3

�/

•

Thursday, July 8,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • Tha Dally Sentinel

/"BUC-KEYE BRIEFS
House fire kills 5-year-old
WESTERVIl-LE (AP) - A 5-year-old boy who had been left
alone at home was seed s~reaming for help from a se~ond story
window in his burning town house but firefighters ~ouldn't rea~h
him in time to save him.
Firefighters on Wednesday found the body ofWilliam Lee Welch
.
.
in an upstairs ·bedroom.
The town house in this Columbus suburb was fully engulfed in
flames when firefighten arrived, Westerville Fire Chief Pete Wilms
said.
Firefighters worked franti~ally to =ue the boy, Battalion Chief ·
Rick Landis said. Medics tried to break into the ba~k of the apartment, then tried to get in another way.
"It's aliNays a tough day when you lose SQIUeone "in a fire,"' Landis said.
Firefighters said the boy had ~reamed from a window for help
to a relative who lives across the street. Neighbors .said the boy's
great~grandmother lives there.
Wilms said the boy had been alone in the apartment at the time
of the fire and that his mother was at a store. ·
·
A neighbor said the mother, Angel Marie Torr, 22, was paged at
the store and told the apartment was on fire.
lhe cause of the fire has not been determined.
Wilms said there had been a fire at the same address on March ·
10, but wouldn't release specifics. He said he didn't"want to impede

K

ST. MARYS (AP) -A 10-year-old girl had her arm ripped off
at the shoulder when it became tangled in a rope connected to a
rubber tube that fell from a boat into Grand Lake St. Marys.
The accident happened about 7:40 p.m. Wednesday when Holly
Marie Maxwell of New Knoxville tried to prevent a tube from
falling into the lake while the boat headed toward sho!", said
Auglaize County sheriff',s deputy Mike Vorhees.
As the girl grabbed the rope, the force of the tube dragging en
the water ripped her lefi arm off,Vorhee5 said. The boat was traveling about 30 mph, he said.
Maxwell was taken by helicopter to Children's Hospital in
Columbus where she was listed in fair condition early Thursday.
"It was one of those freak things,"Vorhees said.
Authorities spent ab?ut five hours Wednesday looking for the
severed arm in 6 feet ofmurky water .located about 600 yards from
shore, Vorhees said. They planned to continue looking for the arm
Thursday morning using heat-sensing equipment and a cadaversniffing dog.
St. Marys is located about 60 miles northwest of Dayton.

-

-

The demand for more houses, office! and
stores in a highly populated, heavily urbanized
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER '
For the first time in at least 20 years, the state like Ohio is making niral property more
average price of farm.land in ·Ohio exceeds valuable, Lines said.
·"Somebody else besides farmers is interestthat of all the other Corn Belt states.
The steady development of houses and ed in owning this land, and the farm commushopping centers in rura.l Ohio eventually nity has to come to grips with this.'~ he ~id.
pushed the state into the top spot, an agricul- "The agricultural community m Ohio IS m a
state of denial. They are still saying, 'This is my
ture expert said Wednesday.
" In the past, farmland was owned by farm- world, stay away from me, don't bother me."'
Cecil Boes, who farms 1,300 acres near
ers for agriculrura.l purposes," said Allan Lines,
an agricultura.l economist at Ohio State Uni- Findlay, said the increasing value of Ohio
'
versity. "What we're seeing now is we have all farm.land is both a blessi11g and a curse.
"If you 're retiring and you want to sell your
these other interests there in owning a piece
land, it's a good thing," Boes said. "For a
of the real estate."
According to the U.S: Department of Agri- farmer who wants to stay in the business and
culture, the average price for an acre of farm- increase his acres, it's not really a good thing.
land in Ohio is $2,380, up 1.3 percent from We're looking at higher costs of acquiring that
1999. That compares with $2,320 per acre in land."
In 1994, Boes sold 100 acres of farm.land
Illinois, the previom leader among states in
that
was n~xt to an industrial park because the
the Corn Belt.
Lines said it is the first time Ohio farm.land price being offered was too high to resist. He
has been more expensive than that in Illinois used 1he money to buy 500 acres of farm.land
.
since at least 1980. Ohio also leads Indiana, in another area.
Jeff
Sharp,
a
rural
sociologist
with
Ohio
Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, 1\e said.

EIY •JAMES HANNAH

State, told the Dayton Daily News he knows
of farmers in centra.l Ohio's Licking County
who have sold their farm.land to Columbus
developers and used the profits to buy farms
farther away from the big cities. That drive!"
prices there as well, he said.
J
Vine~ Squillace, executive vice presidertt of
the Ohio Home Builders Association, said ·rh~
increase in land values is good news and d~
not mean farm.land is at risk of being gobbled!
up by developers.
"We still continue to be a big agricultura.l
state," he said.
.
Squilla~e also said the higher price offarmland will nor likely tempt farmers to seij 1·~.
be~ause
personal circumstances
are the main
•
.
, •I
factor.
· ·
"The driving force for · farmers to seli ;;
what their rurure plans are,'' he_said. "Proba?.ty~
if they can t find anyone else m the family ,to
farm it, taey sell it."
· ..
Squillace also said the increased value .Pt.
the farms would enable farmers to borl')w
more money to buy equipment and impr;~:ivq
their operations.
. &gt;I

up

.

lnve~gators

say rest of
teiTace should be tom ·down

· ·' I

·Judge wants to know how former ···
investment firm boss will repay de~~

CINCINNATI (AP) -A fedConcern. about the wall led
PORT CLINTON (AP) eral judge has ordered the former
The remaining section of a ter- authorties to close the area
owner of Ben Mar Investments ·
race that collapsed at a Lake Erie around the terrace and a road .
Inc., whose 1995 collapse cost its
island winery should be torn below the wall on Middle Bass
investors more than $12 million,
down because it is not safe, Island. The winery has been
has been ordered to show how he
closed indefinitely.
investigators said Wednesday.
will repay investori for his share
Investigators could not say
An unstable wall supporting
of the loss.
the remaining terrace area at the whether the wall was weakened
Lawyers for Benjamin Schmidt
Lonz Winery could collapse at by the collapse or if it had been
have ·unti.l Aug. 7 to file a repayany time, Ottawa County Sher- unstable before the accident.
ment plan with U.S. District
Engine'ers who initially
iff Craig Emahiser said WednesJudge Sandra -l3eckwith. Last
examined the wreckage said
day.
month, the judge adopted conAbout one-third of the 40- they believe the collapse was
elusions of the Securities and
foot long terrace crumbled Sat- triggered by a structura.l probExchange Commission that
urday, dropping revelers 20 feet lem and not an overload of pe~
Schmidt violated securities laws
into an old wine cellar. One pie. Authorities have not said
in withdrawing nearly $1.9 milman was killed and at least 75 whether the original structure
lion between the time the investwas built . poorly or if it had
people were injured.
ment firm was founded in FebruFive of those injured filed a deteriorated.
ary 1992 and its collapse in
FREMONT (AP) - A motor home struck the back of a car
A steel beam pulled from the
lawsuit against the winery's
March 1995.
Wednesday on the Ohio Turnpike, causing a nine-vehic!'e pileup
owners Wednesday in Ottawa area showed signs of deterioraThe judge said Schmidt, who
that killed two people, the State Highway Patrol said.
County Common Pleas Court. . tion , Emahiser said. But he
owned Ben Mar, should repay the
The accident happened about 3:10 p.m. in the westbound lanes
The class-action lawsuit was added it was too early to determoney to defrauded . investors.
of the turnpike, about five miles west of Fremont, said Lt. William
eptered on behalf o~ everyone mine "whether the beam was to
Schmidt doesn't have any money
Voelker of the patrol's Milan post.
.
blame.
who was injurea. It asked for a
. .. with . which to .repay them, his
lffiled were Robm-satlti, 48, of BreclCsville; and liis 7-rear-Ola ·- jury to dete~nrine the damages
A county building inspector
lawyer said.
daughter, Susan, the patrol said early Thursday. Sarka's wife,Julia, was
was
examining
the
entire
buildSEC investigators said lawyers ,
and said the plaintiffs should be
in fair condition early Thorsday at Medical College of Ohio Hosentitled to at least $25,000.ing Wednesday to · decide
warned Schmidt at least three
pital in Toledo, a hospital spokeswoman said.
times
that his unregistered investwhether:,
the
rest
of
the
building
The lawsuit alsO' claimed
Also injured was Thomasina Traver, 74, of Perrysburg, who was in
ment firm was illegal. Despite
winery employees knew the ter- should be reopened.
serious condition at St. Vincent Hospital in Toledo. Sheldon Levinthose warnings, Ben Mar Investrace floor had started to crack
Paramount Distilleries has
son, 53, af Ausrung, N.Y., and his son, whose name and age were
ments . signed up 309 · neW
indicale&lt;rthey are willing to tear
before the accident.
not aVllilable, were treated and released from Fremont Memorial
investors
and took in $17.1 milthe
terrace,
Emahi1er
said.
down
Messages 1eeking comment
Hospital in Fremont.
lion from investors after the
from the winery'• ownen, Para- "They have been cooperatins ·
Voelker .said more people were hurt in the crash, but he did not
warnings in December 1993,
mount Distilleries Inc. of Cleve- fully," he said.
know how many.
~
February 1"994 and May 1994, the
Investigaton have removed
land, were nor returned WedncsThe Jut car that was hit was carryins the Sarkf. family, Voelker
SEC
said in documentl llled in
., day.
from the i1land chunks of ~on­
said. He did not know how the accident happened.
federal
court.
The plalntiffi' attorney• atkcd crete and pieces lteelsupportl
Most of the firm's investon
that plans to demolish the ter- that arc to be examined, laid
were in the Cincinnati area and
race be stopped so tpat evidence Bob Bratton., a deputy chief
northern Kentucky. Schmidt has
with
the.1heriff'1
department.
h not destroyed.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Tllfl asked education, community and businestleaden throushout the state Wednesday to suae11
solutions to Ohio's school fundipg system that the Ohio Supreme
Court has declared unconstitutional.
Tall sent letters to leaders of more than 40 organizations to gath·
er a wide range of solutions to what the court says are the system's
WQu]d be in a traditional class.
:J'By eliminating the six weeks
WORTHINGTON (AP) seven problem areas. The ideas collected are due by the end of the
of
gee-to-know each other time,
Elementary
school
teachers
are
But
both
supporters
and
critmonth and will"be shared with all groups involved in the school
trying a yariation of the one- ics say that because of those there is more time· for instrucfunding debate.
room schoolhouse by sticking drawbacks, parents always have tion," Morris said.
"Education is the most important issue facing Ohio right now,
with their students through two the option of putting their chi!- '
Teachers already know each
and I'm casting a wide net to gather as many ideas as possible," Taft
or three grade levels.
child, as well as each child's
dren in a traditional class.
said. "I believe that only by working together can we fashion a
Educators
say
the
teaching
lea rning style, ability and comSeveral
groups
of
reachers
at
responsible and responsive solution to this challenge."
called
looping
~
method
Bates' school have used looping petency. Likewise, students
The Supreme Court has ruled 4-3 against the stale twice in the
~rovides
a
stable
learning
envifor the past four years. When Iris already are comfortable with the
last 3-1/2 years. In the latest decision in May, the court said Ohio's .
ronment in the critical years of Morris moves her class from first teacher and know the teacher's
school funding system still relies too much on local property t;~xes,
development by allowing stu- grade to second ,grade, Kathy teaching style, expectations and
leading to a disparity between rich and poor districts.
dents to have the same teacher.
Schmidt takes over at first grade. rules.
"Teachers increasingly are
The two say they are able to
That's whar Jonathan Katz, 8,
trying looping as they become use class time more produ~tively of Worthington, liked abo ut
aware of the benefits to stu- in the second year because they having Morris as a teacher for
CLEVELAND (AP) - A grand jury on Wednesday indicted a
dents," said Sylvia Seidel, direcman accused of killing a city police officer on 14 counts. including
right into teaching.
tor of the National Education
a murder charge that carries the death penalty.
··
Association's Teacher Education
A Cuyahoga County grand jury indicted Quisi Bryan, 29, in the
Initiative.
June 25 shooting death of Officer Waxne Leon.
Schools nationwide, indudThe charges include aggravated murder with a death penalty
ing
some in Attleboro. Mass.,
specification, attempted murder, felonious assault, improperly disColorado Springs, Colo., and
charging a firearm, carrying a concealed weapon and umpering
Sa?ramenro;
Calif., have reportwith evidence'.
ed -pasitive looping re sults.
Bryan, a parole violator accused of shootillg Leon during a traffic
· Some Ohio dis\ric&amp;s, inclu d'=
stop at a gas station, is being held without bond. He is expectea 'to
ing
Worthington and East
be arraigned within the next week, County Prosecutor William
Cleveland, also are trying the
Mason's office said.
practice.
"Kids need a lot of stability in
the younger grad es as they
develop mentally. Change lS very
WOODVILLE (AP) - A mortar device shooting fireworks fell
disruptive." said Ri ch Bate&lt;,
over during a July Fourth show, firing projectiles into a crowd of
principal at Worrnington Park
Oak pedestal
about 2.000 people. Eleven people were injured.
Elementary in this middl e-class
table
"It could (have) been a lot of worse," Mayor Jan Busdeker said
Columbus
suburb,
"This
is
a
''lay
,
Wednesday.
42 X 42 X 60
to make sure kids have some
It was unclear how many projectiles were fired int~ the crowd
continuity in those years ."
4 oa·k arrowback
Tuesday night . said .Bill Teets, spokesman for the State Fire Marshal's
Edu cators say they recognize
office.,
.
that as with any teac hing
chairs
Busdeker said he sa;_.. three rockets skim across the ground and
method, looping has some
into the crowd,
potential drawbacks.
The fir~ mar$hal 's office said the mortar device, which resembled
A teacher's style of teaching
a roman candle;· was a tube about 3 feet long that came packageq
nught•
no1 work. with a given
with projectiles.
srudeht, a personality clash
The force of the firing caused some of the proj ectiles to come
between a student and reacher
loose and fire along the ground, Teets said.
might be prolonged, and stuTwo people were taken to hospit&lt;tls where they were treated for
dents
might not be exposed to as
~ burns and released, Busdeker said. The others were treated at the
many adult ~iewpoints as they
scene. "

Tumpike uash leaves 2 dead

or

Taft I••••• Clll for ld111

The judge said Schmidt, ''
who owned Ben Mar,
should repay the money
to defrauded investors.
Schmidt doesn't have any
money with whlch
to repay them,
his lawyer said.

or

said he was the biggest victim
the firm's collapse.
.' .
The SEC says Schmidt, noW
living in St. Petersburg, Fia;;
invested $1.4 million in Ben Mar
and withdrew $2.4 miltiorl'
Defense lawyer Edward McTigu_€
says Schmidt invested and wit~.!
drew about $1.6 million.
· -· ~
The SEC says that Schn\idt
used some of the money he with~
drew from Ben Mar to buy a
northern Kentucky home and'':i
Mercedes and to pay ~ountry
club and condominium fees ana.
other personal expenses.
SEC investigators md former
Ben Mar president Mark Gatch
Withdrew about $2 million of the
firm's funds. Gatch, formerly of
suburban Cincinnati, is servillg a
five-year federaq'inion term fot
fraud in the case.
·..:
About 365 individuals and
investor groups invested a totalef
$19.5 iniUion in Ben Mar lnvett·
menta, the SEC said. lnveatota
may ultimately recover 30 cenli
- through other eatel pending
in federal courts - on each loll
dollar, lawycn said.
.· ,.,
' ;. 1

Teachers try reviving old method to improve student achievemen(

Suspect indicted in officer's death

Fireworks mishap injures

•

11

Iif

"I was really happy about it
because I knew everySod~
our class and I , knew. her,"
said.
However, he will start rhi
grade in the fall with a ne~
' '1
teac her.
"It will b~ weird, but I'll !:le
fine. And I'll still see her (Mot
ris) around ," he said.
1
Educators say looping aUo"\'{5
them to build the kind of clo:je
student-teacher relationship
can't be fostered in only
year. And it brings parents
that relationship,

•

•

...
...

Cart E. Klaiber

,,
' '
POMEROY - A number of
· J,ONG BOTTOM - Carl E. Klaiber, 60, Long Bottom, died
juveniles have been charged in
WW.nesday, July 5, 2000 at Charleston Area Medical Center,
Meigs County Juvenile Court for
Charleston, WVa., after an extended illness.
·
their involvement in a number of
, S!:rvices will be 2 p.m. Saturday in Fisher Funera.l Home in
theft and vandalism cases.
-P.~eroy. Officiating will be the Rev. James Keesee, and burial wiU fol~
According to Sheriff Junes M.
l:o~: m Beech Grove Cemetetjt Friends may call on Friday from 2-4
'"soulsby, two juveniles are c h~rged
P:m.•and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
,
in the vandalism at Southern
High School reported last week.
' '.
Two other juveniles fac~ charges
upon the admini stration of a
. 'jPOMEROY -Austin W Phillips , 89, Pomeroy, died Wednesday,
polygraph
test.
~u y 5, 2000 at his residence.
Two other juveni les have been
, Born Oct. 1, 1910, he was the son of the late William and Dora
charged with the theft of a fourR:app Phillips, and was employed by the Meigs Local School District
wheeler from a N ew Hope Road
~sa bus driver/custodian.
home.
. ·:·l-ie was a member of the Racine First Baptist Church, and was a vetAn investigation conducted by
eran of the US. Army irfWorldWar II.
the
Meigs and Mason County.
' 'He was also preceded in death by his wife, Maxine Wilson Phillips;
WVa. , sheriff's departments
'n infant son, William Joseph Phillips; and two sisters, Helena Paniels
resulted in finding the foura_nd Orella Hysell.
·"Surviving are four sons and daughters-in-law, Virgil and Gina wheeler on a Mason County
Phillips, Larry and Brenessa Phillips, Terry arid Marie Phillips. and road. The vehicle was impoundRandy and Lisa Phillips, all of Pomeroy; two daughters and a so'n-in- ed, and the rider of the vehicle
,]aw, Sue and Ed Boney ofWesterville, and Debbie Phillips Little of and another juvenile admitted to
Pomeroy; a brother, Dayton Phillips of Pomeroy; and ·several meces and the theft.
The y0uths were charged with
nephews.
grand
theft and with trespassing,
, Services will be 10 a.m. Saturday in Ewing Funeral Home in
after
they
admitted to hiding out
l]liperoy. Officiating will be the Rev. Rick Rule. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home at Camp Kiashuta near Chester.
They appeared in court on
from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
Monday.
Another juvenile has been
charged with the theft of radios
from the Southern Local bus

..

Austin W. Phillips

Obitua

WEST COLUMBIA, WVa. - Jerry C. Ferguson, 60, of West
died on Tuesday; july 4, 2000 at his residen,ce.
He was a retired construction worker (bulldozer operator) . He was
the son of the late Charles and Eula Tate Ferguson, and was abo pre~eded in death by two brothers, james and William Ferguson.
·,. Sprviving are a daughter, Tammy Watkins of Rutland; a brother.
B-ussell Ferguson of Orlando, Florida; five sisters. Jeau and Ralph
5,ayre, Alice and Herman Knapp, Sandy and Charles Hargraves. and
c;Iarice Wallace, all of New Haven. West Virginia, and Vivian Frye of
Mason, West Virginia; two grandsons, Joshua Stone and David Watkins;
~: granddaughter, Michelle Watkins; and two very special friends, Walt
~pp and Floyd Fitchpatrick.
, There will be no visitation and the family will observe a private buriaL New Haven Funera.l Home is in charge of arrangements.

~plumbia,

\i.

'

. I,

"These are people that
opposed the lottery when it was
put in," he said. "The real issue is,
,,
they don't want the lottery, periAI
od.
ness to the degree that there is
"There's a strong but consis·jBII"no Irkelihood-that the L-egis~-tent-minority - of- Ohioam·-that ·
lature is going to enact such a feel that way. God bless them.
pad piece of public policy," he They're allowed to their opinsaid.
ion," Mottley said
.But Rep. J Donald Mottley,
Edgar and other anti- lottery
1ponsor of the bill, said it is far opponents have said the lottery
· from dead.
the profits of which fund
,_.. Jhe bill has had one hearing Ohio schools - already relies
in the House Finance and too much on sales to the ptlor
Appropriations Committee, and and minorities.
furrh
hearings are expected
The state Education Departl~ter in the year, ' the West Car- ment received $696 million from
rollton Republican said.
the lot~ry last year, or about 6
Mottley said the opposition percent of, the department"s
isf.'r anything new.
annual budget. '

I ottery
from Page

'

H

EMS units
log 9 calls

: The Daily Sentinel
{USPS lll·%0)
. ,
OMo V•lley PublbhlnK Co.
~Ublished C\'ery afternm.m , Mo nd ay through
friday, Ill Co urt St., Pomeroy, Oh io, by th e
Ohio Valley Publi shing Co mpany , Porm:w,r.
Ohio 4.5769, Ph. 992-21 56. Sec ond class post·
,age paid at Pomeroy, Ohin.

on Wednesday, Units responded as
follows :
, CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:18a .m.; Meigs Mine 2, Bob
Donnally, Holzer Medical .Center;

9:31 a.m., Holzer Clinic, Cynthia Call, HMC;

Mtmber: The A~ sociatcd Pre ss, and the Ohio
Ncwspapr.r Associat ion.
POSTMASTER: Send addre ss correclions to
the Daily Scnlincl, Ill Co urt St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4S769.

~ '·.
SUBSC RIPTION RATES
,
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ............
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One Month .............
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0ne Year..
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..

SINGLE ctwv o;KICE

. ..... 50 Cents

'Nb.

subscription by mail permitt ed 1n llrcus
1s available

whc.re home carrier sc rvic~
•

~ublisher re serves the right to ndjusr rar es dur- ,
in g the subscri ption period . Subscripr ion ralc
changes m~y be ifnplemcntcd by c ha~g rng the
duntipn of the suh,;criplion.

..
).3

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Mel~! County

Weeks...

. .... S ~ V O

20 Week s ..
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~ .'i.l . t\2
52 Wcch ..
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... ,
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4.1'Wceks... ............... ........................... S:!Q.25
~Weeks .............................................. S.i 6.6R
~1-!'!!C!k S ..:-...... ··''" ,,..,,,.,.·............ ~ .. ,...S \[JIJ.72'

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Reader Services

'

"' bur main collcern In all stories Is to be
afcunte. If you know of an error In 1 .~tory,
cah the newsroom at (740) 992· 2155. We will
check your lnfunn11tlon and make a
cornctlun lfwarnnttd .
~
N'tn .Pe~rHntnls _ _
1
main number Is 992-~1.5.5 . Department
flnslon• are:
' enl M1n1~r............................ Ex.t. 1101
. . .... . ..; ••; ,J, ,;; ,; .••;;;; ... ;-..,.m,runmlu l!;xl, 11-0 l
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••
Other Ston-lns
jertlsinB ·· -';~ .......... ......... :............. Exl. 110--1
ulallon....................................... Exl. IIOJ
slnedAds .................................. Exl . 1100

. ..

which may come trom sewage
treatment plants, septic systems,
agricultural livestock operations
and wildlife; inorg:mic contaminants, such as salts or metals, which
can be naturally-occuring or result .
fron1 urban storm runoff, industri al or domestic wastewater dis-

charges, oil and g-Js production.
,.
mining qr farming; .
Pesticides and he~bi c idcs, which
may come from a .variety of
sources such as agriculture, storm
water runoff and residential uses;
organic chemical contanUnants,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

nlinusc ul~

in size and in signitic:J nt

in regard to health matters.
Durin g 1999, the Po meroy

. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Auxiliary will
hold a regular meeting tonight at
7:30 p.m.

To hold VBS
MIDDLEPORT -Ash· Street
Church in Middleport will hold
Vacation Bible School July 10-14
from 6:30 to 9 p.m. each evening,
for those age three through grade
six. "jesus- No Ordinary Man"
is the theme.

Lic:ense issued
POMEROY - A marriage
.license has been issued m Meigs
County Probate Court to Brian
James Hoffman, 23, Long Bono
and Jennifer Rochelle Lawrence.
22, Syracuse.

Clarification.
MIDDLEPORT Thiry
Di;:ffi'e Milliron of Middleport is
not the Diane Milliron allegedly
involved in a theft ring recently
investigated by local law enforcement officials.

GOP picnic set
MIDDLEPORT -!he Meigs
Coun ty Rcp~tbh c an Party will
host a free picnic on Saturday
fro m 5-9 p.m ., at Dave Diles Park
in Middl eport. Free food and
entertainment are planned, and
the public is invited .

Grange to meet
RACINE - Meigs County
Pomona Grange will hold a regular meeting on Friday at 7:30

Escape
from Page AI

resisting arrest.

Arrested
Page

MORE LOCAL. NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

0 ~.

6~.'
32 ~

Approval was also obtained from
Protecti o n

Privacy

Agency to drill a fourth produ ction well .

loans, will replace o ne o f the existin g w ater w att·r \vdls that con -

tait'-led high traces of iron and
tnanganesc.
" There is. 'Still so inc \Vork to do

like surgin g and test pump tng ...
said Amlt:rson . " But the acw :1l

drilling po rtion of the project ,is
co mplcre.""

from Page AI
t ht•

bar code and magneti c strip

o n t hc

dr iver's lic en se. and doin g

away wirh the database the state
m:tJ ilt:t i n ~; o t~

Clrivt'r·!i li censes.

"' A lot of people out there,
with ~ood justifi cation , Jre wary
of rhis tec hn ology."" Moyer saod.

" TIH.' n.' is ·no urgent IH..~c d fo r
the new well," :1ddcd Anderson .
"How ever, when 1t is timshcd , the
'po fn e roy •s water..•

for

additi onal

mam

W.'\tcr D epartllll'IH LQntinu ed ro
i· u ~ tal1 rl· pbce nH.'t lt w:ti c r m ;l J!lS ,
and w ith th e aid of g ratltS. ~.:om ­

n.:pl~c ~ m 4.: n t-; , ~ xp.ln ~ion of th&lt;.'
s.yst e n~ sen ·icc : t rca ;1 nd a !l L' \V
treatm ent pla11t an: ;1bo schl'duk d

pleted a program of valve replacement.

to be completed someti me in the
future.

SPR ING VAllEY CIN EMA
446 • 4524

uUoi&lt;UJII ''"I

1

7

t/tt4JA&lt;~&gt;&lt;I•Jit&lt;l

FRI 6/30/00 • THURS 7/6100

BOX Ofii&lt;E WILL OPEN AT ·
6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MATINEES

SHAFT (R)
7:20 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN i:20 &amp; 3:20
THE PATRIOT (R)
7;00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00
CHICKEN RUN (t:l)
7:20 &amp; 9:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:00
BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
7:15 &amp;9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15
THE PERFECT STORM (PG13)
7:00 ·9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT
N 1:00.3:30
THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY

well will definitely help improve
upon the ove ra ll quality of
Plans

POMEROY- Pomeroy Blues
and Jazz Society will be presenting The Cowboy Angels at the
Riverfront Amphitheater Friday
evening during its Summer Concert Series.
·
The Cowboy Angels are a trio,
lead by Meigs County's own John
Hurlbut, who "' play tribute" to
Americana with rich vocal h~r­
monies and tight. rhythms.
A.lso on the agenda will be arti-·
san Terri Haynes of A.lways and
Forever gift shop, who will be
demonstrating ·how to paint on
home accessories as well as personalizing various items.
Items that are for sale at her
booth can be personalized during
the presentation .
The Summer Concert Festivities will start at 6:30 p.m. with
music beginning at 8 p.m.
Several downtown businesses
will remain open till tlie time of
the concert.

"He was facing two years in
court officers and the canine unit
near W.·Light and variable wind.
[rom the Athe~ Co.unty S he~ iff's , pri~gn and now b~ coyld be fac Friday. .. Mostly sunny. Hig~s iry
ing several more years if he's
Department.
the lower and mid 80s.
A search of several homes, busi- found guilty of these latest
Friday night ... Clear. Lows in the
nesses · and other buildings was charges," Soulsby said.
mid 50s.
Murphy is 6-foot-1, and weighs
conducted, but Murphy remains
Extended forecast:
at large.
·
185 pounds. He has brown hair
Saturday. .. Partly cloudy. Highs
'"Anyone who help&lt; Murphy and green eyes.
in the upp er 80s.
Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid and upper 60s and highs in
required for his release, Soulsby
the lower 90s.
said.
Monday... Partly cloudy. A
Meanwli11e, Ewing's ;entencing
cha nce of showers and thunderwas contifil,ed until July 17, so
from
AI
storms in the afternoon and
that new counsel can be present.
evening. Lows in the upper 60s and Cminty Jail, according to Sheriff Pat Story was appointed to repre-'
highs in the lower 90s,
sent Ewing at that hearing. ·
James M. Soulsby.
Ewing was released on a $1,000
Bolger will likely be returned
to Meigs County today to answer personal recognizance bond.
Story was not available today to
his contempt charge. He was
unable to post bond in Ross comment on Wednesday's pro. County, because cas h bond was ceedings .

'2

EnvironmcntJ I

PB&amp;Js to hold
concert

wtll be criminally charged;'
Soulsby sa\d.
He is charged with felony
escape, theft (handcuffs) and

C~y

Anderson said th e new well.
whi ch is bcmg 1\mded through

discovered in the sa mples were

POMEROY - An action for
foreclosure has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Conseco Finance Servicing Corp., Tempe, Ariz., against
Virgil B. Hudson, Pomeroy, and
othefs, alleging default on a
mortgage in the amount of
$20,933.84.

~.

production, and ca n also come
from gas stntions, urban storm
runoff and septj c systen1s; ;m d
r:tdioactivc cont;urtin;mt s. wh lC·h
can be naturally occ urr in g o r be
the result of oil and gas produ ctinn
and nl.ining auiviti e-s.
Over the..· last fivl' ycp r~. v:-trio us

\\;l'tT

Auxiliary to meet

7

including syntheti c and volatile
organics, which arc byprodu cts of
industrial processes and petroleum

· Those co ntamin :m t~ that

Foreclosure filed

years, 11arwus samSubscribe today. 992-2156
l'les Of water were
collected for the
LOCAL STOC.KS
Location and idcnti- ..
Rocky Boots- s Y,.
- 3Ql,
Gannetl- sal.
_fication of 102 d~f- AEP
AD Shell - 6 1),
General Electric - 49'),
Akzo - 42
Sears-33'}.,
Harley Davidson - 39 ~..
AmTech/SBC- 451,
fereut corttamiuants, Ashland Inc . - 351.
Shoney"s - 1l.
Kmart- 6'a
Wai·Man - 57
AT&amp;T - 33),
Kroger - 21 ·~~~~
most of whicll were Bank One - 29 ~'e
Wendy's - 17~.
Lands End - 34 1..
Worthington - 1
Ltd. - 21
Bob Evans - 151.
Oak Hill Financial - 13,,.
11ot detected iu
BorgWarner - 36 .,,.
Daily s)ock reports are the
QYB-26
Champion - 4l.
4 p.m, closing quotes of
One Valley - 33
Charm ing Shops - 5
P01neroy 's water
the previous day's transPeoples- t4l,
Holding - 7
actions, provided • by
Premier
F~detal
Mogul
9
'),
supply.
Rockwell ---..:..
Advesi of Gal lipolis .
Fii-star - 21
the

samples of water were collected
for the location and identificati on
of 102 diflc rent contaminants,
n1ost of which we re not dett..·ctc Lf
in Pomeroy's w~tcr suppl y.

Republicans
to meet

Sunny skies prevail Friday

'

from Page AI

DAY meeting $at

-JIALLEY W,EATHE&amp; -

--Mostly sunny-slcies and tcmperarures in the mid 80s are expected
again on Friday as the tri-county
area remains under the influence of
a high pressure system.
Skies will remain dry through
the weekend bur tempera!l.tres will
become progressively warmer. By
Sunday. highs will approach 90.
Lows Thu rsday and Friday
nights will be 55-65.
Sunset tomght will be at 9:03
and sunrise on Friday at 6: Hi a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Partly cloqdy. Lows

p.m. at the Star Grange Hall. Fifth
Degree will be exemplified for
inspection, and the election of
officers will be held.

POMEROY - Th e second
annual reuni on of the Lovett
Family will be held on Sunday at
1 p.m. at the Zion Church of
CHESHIRE
Disabled
Christ on State Route 143.
At;;erican Veterans, Cheshire, will
DescendanL&lt; of Daniel Loven hold a dinn er and meeting on
and phoebe West jncJ ude the
Monday. Dinner will be served at
·famili es Bush, Boyd, Goldsberry.
6:30 p.m ., with the meeting to
Gunl!oe, Jenkins, Winners, Slack
follow at 7 p.m.
and Smith. Anyone · related is
invited to attend. Someone from
each descendant line will be
invited to talk about their line of
the family at a special time during
the afternoon .
ROCK SPRINGS- Regular
Those attending should bring meeting of the Meigs County
pictures and documenh. Copying
Republican Executive Commitequipment will be available.
tee will be held on Monday at
Information is available from
7:30 p.m. at the Rocksprings
Kathryn Johnson at 992-5 I 95.
Fairgrounds.

ed by Syracuse, Patty Miller,
PleaSant Valley Hospital ;
9:44 p.m ., Holzer Medical
Ce nter C linic, June Rogers,
HMC.
POMEROY
1:31 a.m., Collins Road, structure fire. Mary Seans residence ;
6:58 a.m ., Rocksprings R ehabilitation Center, assisted by Central Dispatch, Jack Lance, O"Bleness Memorial HospitaL
5:35 p.m., Pleasant Ridge,
Martha Whitich, possible electrical fire;
REEDSVILLE
2:32 a.m. , Mount Olive Road,
Tammy Baker, Camden-Clark
Memorial HospitaL

answered nine calls for assistan ce

Over the last five

Water

LOCAL N ·EWS BRIEFS
1:10 p.m ., Meigs Mine 3, assistLovett reunion
ed by Rutland , Rudy Stewart,
HM C;
planned
5:46 p.m .. Cherry Street, assist-

POMEROY -· Units of the
Meigs
emergency
Services

"

S~ribers not del!iring to pa)' th e _c arrier t;l8 Y
ftglit in advance direct to The D~tl y Sentmel
~N three , siK or 12 month b ~s i s . Credit will be
JN~n carrier each week .

•

garage. He awaits a hearing m

juvenile court as welL

Jeny Ferguson

•

'

Youths cited in
inddents

. ...

QM_ly ...

$32·995

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

fl!ul'sday, July 8, 2000

.

Ohio farmland most 'expensive in Com Belt

on the investigation."

Girl loses ann in accident

20d8"

COM I'A NY

&amp; BULWINKLE (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9:10 DAILY

b

lill!ll .\ 111'/! 18 9 U.

~Lrut St
l 'u mt • ro~'
, , '' liLt• ~1. · ~"11 l lrii!p
Phon t:! 740 · 992-~ 5 88

:iZO \\'

"

Vinton 740·388-8603
Gnllipoli s 740 ·446·0852

MATINEES SAT UN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

ME, MYSELF &amp; IRENE (R)
7:00 &amp; 9;30 DIALY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

Kim Raver of Third Wmd1 is
tlucnl in bnth French und Ger -

man. She learned the latter language from her mother.

�•'

.· The Daily Sentinel

---

J

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing
P~bllsher

'

'

Charlene Hoelllch
General Manager

Thunday, Jply 6, 1000

'
DEAR ABBY: I have started this letto p of he r class, and everyone expected a
ter to you a hundre d times , but h ave
bright future fo r her. Instead, she lived
n ever b een able to finish it_ I hop e you
through failed co unseling, broken m arwill print it .
riages, and he r career cra she d all
Wh e n I was 16, m y m other had a baby
because of a tragic accident that wasn't
- my o nly siste r. M o m was almost 40
h er fault, Sh e just couldn't fo rgive h erand ·my bro t~er-was 12. After we adjustself
. e-d to the shock , my sister bec ame the j oy
At our 20~h .high-sc hoo l reuni on , a
former classmate asked me, " H ey, whatof o ur life. H er smile could banish .the
ADVICE
. ~loo mi es , and she was a treasure to Us all .
ever happen ed to that girl who killed
, . that·kid?" I respon-de d , "That girl was our
Sadly, less- than ~" years later (only
class se cretary and my best fri end, and
three weeks after my high· school gradu- consta nt reminder of the tra gedy.
Abby, peo ple drive through our that kid was my sister."
ation). m y best friend - w ho lived nex t
Please re mind your readers that no car
door - ac &lt;identally b ac ke d her car ove r nei ghborhood far too fasL I want to run
my sister, killing h er instantly. M y little after them and shout, " Don 't you know needs a heavy foo t on the gas while navsister had escaped from our back yard yo u could never stop at this sp eed if a igating a residential area, And for good
without o ur family's knowledge, It was child ran in front o f your ca r? D o n 't you measure, b efore starting a car, walk the
the worst day of my life. and worse still · kn ow that if yo u kill a child, there will be '· long way around to the driver's door so
yo u can ch eck b ehind the vehicle. Investfor my friend, My parents did their b est two deaths' Your life will be over, too."
My
fa
mily
recovered
from
my
sister's
ing a few extra seconds for safety may
to comfort he r, but h er large fa mily
de
ath
,
but
my
friend
never
did
_
The
accisave a precious child's life - and your
· included h e r o wn b:.by sister who was
de
nt
ruined
h
er
life.
She
had
be
en
at
the
own as well , ~ :LONELY SISTER IN
nearly the same age as mine and was a

THiS MQRtJit-IG!

•

!Anus lD tll~ Milsr tuW WkoMtf. TII'J llwMhl ft l.nlluvt JOO ,.orrJs. Alllriten GIY Jltbj«t
edili1t11
b• riprd MdlndiUir IUUf'fu fmd lrhphonr
No 1msi6Ned lrnrn will
&amp;t p•bli.rlud. Uuen Jlao~l4 H i1t good hultf, fU/dnssl111 isnm, 1tol tHnoll«lltin.

111

'*"'"""'·

ami,...,

Tlt4' opillio11s urrnsftl ill 1#11 r:ollllflll Nlow .,.. tltr COIUIIIIIIS of 1111 0/do VGlltJ 1'11bli&amp;Jrillg
Co.'s t diiOriiJIIHHuwl. ""'"' otlw... or IIDIH.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Dear.God

•

am1/p
·edicine

High court's ruling on
prayer goes overboard

John C. Wolf, D.O.

• The lntelllgencer, Wl~eelillg, WV&lt;t. , o11prayer at .football games:
The Supreme C ourt's extreme decision regarding pre-football
game prayers boils down to an assertion that if any student utter&lt; a
prayer at a sc hool event, th en the school is de emed to have "established .rehgion" and must take steps to stop
it. 11t comes as little surprise, then, that in
some p arts of the country the Court's
decision has sparked open defiance.
As The Associ ated Press repom, at least
one Louisiana high school official already
•
. says pre-game prayers will go forward as
long as studen1s want th em - unless there
is locar objection to th e long-standmg
prac tice. " To inake some allegation that this is an infringement of
, church and state is an extreme reach ." says Pat Luke, principal of
South Te rrebonne High School."! don't believe that. this nation is
.one nation under nothing; it 's one nacion under God ."
- Such reactip n calls to mind last year's graduation season, during
which the assembled crowd of thousands at a Mary land high sc hool
- spon'tane ously broke into The Lord's Prayer after a court declared
that a-student could not be allowed to lead a prayer_
.: • By overreac hing, thl' Court may well undermine-its own "uthor. ' ity, The law may be the law - the Court is not a legislature, even
_ if it som etimes behaves like one - · but when the law is ridiculous,
Ameri cans have a habit of thumbing th eir noses at it. Or in th is case
clasping their hands in prayer. The national 55 mile-an -hour speed
limit was eliminated principally because hardly anyone obeyed it.
Prohibitio n similarly fell victim to popular will . ...

A look at
what U.S.
netvspapers
are saymg

• TheJ»ost l[lnd Courltt C/igrlmon, S.C. , on lugh g•s prices:
Gasoline pri ces are at record highs for recent years, and politicians
·are blaming each other for the problem _ But a oclose look at the
record suggests that som~ of the blame should fall on the present
admim stratio n.
That is th e v1 ew of, among others, the nonpartisan Congression - al R esearch Service . But President Clinton decl a~ed recently that
. " there is n o ec onomic explanation I can think of for the ru'n -up in
prices ," H e promised t hat the government will aggressively investigate the possibility of collusion by oil companies, ...
Altho ugh the administration hopes to deflect blame for h igh
gasoline prices to the oil companies, there is reason to suspec t that
it does not th ink high energy prices are altogether a bad thing since
- they enco urage adnllnistratiorl goals of ener'gy conservation and the
.reeluctio n of gree nhouse gases.

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
-,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today 1s Thursday, July 6, the I 88th day of 2000, There are 178
days left in the year.
To day 's H 1ghlight in H1sto ry:
On July 6, 1944, 169 people ~.i ed in a fi re that bi-oke out in the .
m ain tent of the Ringlin g Bros, and llarnum and llailey Circus m
H artfo rd, C onn.
O n thi~ date:
In 1535 , Sir Th o m as M ore was executed in England for treason ,
, In 1777, during the American Revol ution , llr it is h forces captured
Fo rt' Ti conderoga,
·
'
In 1885, French scie ntist Lo_uis Paste ur successfull y tested an antirob ies vaccine on a boy wh o had been bitten l:(y an mfected dog,
. In 19 17 ; during World War I, Arab fo rces led by T.E_ Lawre nce,
"Law re nce o f Arabia," captured the port of Aqaba from th e Turk.,
In IY23, th e Umo n of Sov1et Socialist R epubli cs was formed .
In I 945, President Truman sign ed an exec utive order establishing
th e Medal of Freed o m .
In I YS7, Alth ea G ibson became the fi rst black tennis player to w in
· , Wimbledo n singles title , She d efeated fell ow American Darl ene
: H ard (r -,1, 6-2.
' In 1% 7, t h e Biafran Wa&lt; erupted . (Th e war, w hi ch lasted 2 1/ 2
: years, claim ed so me 600,0 011 hves ,) ·
· In I •JH9, the U.S. Army destroyed its last Persh in g 1-A mi ssiks at
_·' " amr11umtion plant in Karnack. Texas, under terms o f the I 987
: ln ttrlll cdiatc-range N uclear Fo rces Tr~aty.
, In I Y'JH, singing cowboy star R oy ltogers d1 e d m Appl e Valley,
: C: alif. ,It a ~e H6.
·.
· Ten years ago: N ATO leaders conc luded two d ays o f mcetinb" in
: Londm1, ple dging to sharpl y redu ce bo th nuclear and conve nt1 on:d
· d e ft' T I ~t:'&gt; 111 E uro pe.
F1ve years ago : Th e prosecuti o n rested at the O J Simpso n murd er trial in Lm Ange les.
On e year ago . Eh ud Barak too k o ffi ce as prim e n~ini ster nf Isra el ,
p lc dgin!( to 1eek peace w ith neighbor ing Arab co u n tri es,
Today's Birt hdays: Fo rm er first lady N ancy R eagan 1s 79 , Acto r
' William Sc h allert is 7H. Talk sh o',N hm t M e rv G riffin is 75 . Actre;s
J rn et Le1gh " 7J_ Actor D o nal Do t;n clly is li'J. Si n ge r-ac tre&lt;l D ell a
R eese " (,f) , Actor Ned Ueatty is n3 . Singer Gen e C hand kr IS 6.1 . '
C o untr y singer Jeannie Seely is 60. Texas Gor_ G eo rge W. Bu sh is
'i 4. Acwr~ di rec t o r Sylvester Stall on e is 54. Actor Fred Dryer is 54.
Acto r Bu rt Ward IS 54 . Ac tress Nath ali e llaye is 52 . A ctor Geoffrey
Ru sh i s 4 9, A c tre&gt;~ Sho;lley H ack is 4H. Acto r G rant Goodeve is 4H .

.·

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine.

THE WRITER'S ART

It's still ·ajee country, right?
Nudity in a p·ublic park is disorde rl y condu ct,
As the Sup reme Court shut down its term
Th e C o mrim tion says th.n '' no law" may
last w eek. Justi ce· Jo hn Paul Stevens had th e
abridge freedo m of 'P~ c·ch or oi the press , bm
better o f a close arg ument o n free sp ~e(h . H e
th e Con stitutio n doesn 't 111L.'an wh at it says.
and his fi ve co lleague'\ gra ~ ped a key pmnt
Colo rado's effort to re~ul.1t e bullh orn bulth at eluded thre e di ss c·nt el-s:. In thi s field o f
lies .at m edical facili tie" m oveJ Jmtices Scalia
First A1n endment j urisprUdt'nct', '' pbce" can
and
Kenn edy to paroxysms of d1 o;;.se nr. Scaha
make a vast differe nce .
m sistcd that the law is a rcgu b ti o n of " conIn Hill v, Colorad o. rh e high court had ro
tent."
whi ch plainly it i' not. Under the law,
deCide 1f J Colorad o law regubting an ti- aborpro po n e nts and opponent~ of abortion afe
tion protests violates the Fi rst Atnendment .
treated
wi th eq ual equ animity. They have th e
This is the di sputed provision:
UFS
COLUMNIST
satne ri ght to pi cket, to preach &lt;111d to p ublic
" No perso n shall kn owingly ~ pro ac h
·
L: izc their vie, vs.
another person \v itl1i l1 eight fe~t o i su ch perKenn edy acc used th e court 's majority of
so n ~· unless such o th er person conse nts, tOr th e
for us to . provide care in a scary situation anyapprovin
g a law ' \ vhich bars a p r iva te citizen
purpose of passing a leaflet or handbill to, o r way."
.from
passing
a me ssage, in ,\ peaceful mann er
fl. volunteer who escorts patients into and
eng~gin g in oral protest. edu cJtion o r counseling with such o ther perso n Ill the public out of a cl inic testified that th e protesters "are and o n a profound moral issue, to a fellow cit1
way or sidewalk within a radius of I 00 fe et fl ashing thetr bloody ictus signs, They are izen on a publi c sidewalk _" Nonsense Beyond
from any entrance doo r to a health care facil- yelling, 'Yo u are k illin g your baby; They are the m o dest limitatio ns laid down in the
talking about fetuses and babi es being dis- statute. ,demonstrators may pass the ir m essages
ity."
Three opponents n f allorfi on c hall enged memoered, a rms and legs lo rn off. A n1oth er wherever they pl ease, It is not much o f an
the law as unconstitutional on its fac e, but and her daughter&lt;were surro unded and yelled imp ediment to counsel o r to educate at a distan ce of eight fee t. Schoo lte achers and
C olorado's Suprem e C o urt upheld it as a con- · at and sc reamed at."
preachers
do it all the tim e.
At other places, such confro ntational speech
stitutionally valid regulation of the "time,
I
ask
forgiven
ess fo r a perso nal word. M y
place and manner" of speech. In that tri- would fall wh o lly wi thin the broad ambit o f
chotomy, "place" beco mes a dominant ele- iree speech. Ordinaril y we have no co nstitu- who le p ro fessio nal life has been b o und up in
tio nal right to be shielded from offensive tht&gt; cori.s titutional provisio ns ensu ring fre e
mt"m. The statute was nm aimed at the roughand- tumble speech of coal ,mines o r f.1 cto ri es spee ch, If vulgarity otrends us. we are free to speech and free press , For nearly 60 years, as
or football stad iums, Colorado 's law was discard a magazin e or turn o tT t he T V As a fre e reporter, editor and columnist , I have done
aimed at confron tatio nal speech at hospitals or soc iety, we are commmed t o fn:e :md robust my best to prese rve th ese indi spensable righ ts .
debate, bu t the Fi"rst Amendment is not an Bu t rh e years have ta ught me that o th er rights
clinics.
By their excesses of advocacy, oppo n ents o f abso lme guarantee of a right to say an yth ing , are impo rtant also. I ca nn ot draw th e b o undaries o f a right to privacy. but I kno w thjt
abortion have brought su ch regulatio ns o n anywhere, anytime.
Th ere is nothin g at all nove l in that ele- boundaries are th ere. and I kno w ir wh en I see
th emse lves. Co urt re cords abo und w ith eye.
mentary
proposition. We 11\JY forbid sound the m abused . Conrrary to Scolia'• do ur fo rewitn ess testimo ny of tho..· abuse hL· a p~,;.· d upo n
bod in gs , this is still a fre e co um ry, It's li kely to
women who seek to end th e1r unwelco me tru cks at 2 o'cl oc k m th e mo rnin g , We may
regulate th; place m ent of billboards and polit- stay th at \YJy.
pr~gnancies . A nursc- practitiorwr t ~s tifi e d that
so m e pro testers "yell ~ thrust signs in fac es, and ical posters. We may co nfin e porn ogr aph ers to
Uam es L. Kilpatrick is distri!mtcd by u w·;wrsal '
generally try to upset the patient as much as pigsti es and keep airport ev:mgeli' ts o ff to 0\l l'
side.
Nudity
on
stage
is
prot
ected
ex
pression·.
Prt·ss
Spulicau·.)
poss1bk wh1ch makes•it much more difficult

James
Kilpatrick

'HARDBALL '

Gore guilty of McCarthyism
Clrarlie McCartll)'ism . That 's till'

8Y CHRIS MATTHEWS

WA SHINGTON - Al Gore is g uil ty of a game Gore i.&lt; plariug, but with dead
n ew form o f M cC arth yism C harlie
- saiousuess. Faced with h(l!IUie.~a­
M cC arthyisnL
·
Unl ike the red- baiting Wi sconsinite of the til!es in tl1e polls, he ca1111ot ~flord to
earl y I'J5il•. Go re h a&gt; hi s' spoke&gt;mon sp eak th e
be Srell or'/reard bad:_mcllllhill.t: tir e
-naughty words. Con fronted by report ers, he
Miler side. So l1e gc·ts st1!tlcrs like
acb as if th e aide were "peaki ng tOr him self
Chris Lehauc to speak what Ir e
Th e ploy is remimscenr of rh e !a re , g reat
k1cows to "l•e tl1 e 111rspcaka/Jic•.
vcntriloqu i"t Edg;l r lk rg~ n . w hose du mmy
C harh e M cCarthy wo uld ma ke all th e w ildl y
mi"c hL.:vo.u '\ w1sccra( ko::. w hile Bt'rgen him,.elf
C ore\ Buddlw•t templ e fi.mdr aisin g. )1
took on a Stun ne d loo k ~f lllll lKt: llC t'.
The ru nni ng gdg Wtl" that th e d i ~ tin gu i ~ h c d · Specter. who knmvs th e po ison lnadt"d m
Bergen wo uld ncvt.·r '\;\Y such awful wo rds. th e charge, \ Vrltt.'"i t,ht• vice prt:"\ tdcnr dl" mandO nly a dummy like C h.1rlie M cC.ut hy would ing th :l t th e " McCa rth yi sJn" slu r bt: fe tractt'1J
In rt· ~ po n sc. -;pokcsm an Leha ne co nttlltl l' ~ to
~ay "'uch rernble rhm ~;s.
C h arh c M cCarth VI&lt;nL Th at's t h e ~a n w bl udgL" o n Specter wi th t he c1'la rgl' of
Core io: . pl;tying. byk-··i\'fl'th dead o: . c.::r i ou ~n\:~s. McC ,n thyi sm. M ark Fab iani. C o n:\ c o m ll lll F;ICed w ith high n cg:ltJ Vt'\ in th e p o ll ~, Ill~ nicatJo n-. di rect"or, rc ll ' re po rt ers tlut the
can no t .ltl()rd to he ,;,~;: e n or h c:1rd h,ld- l't: nmy lv,lni;l 'il'tl.lto r '\ hou ld n't ex ptT t .m
ITIOLJthi ug the o the r 'i Jdc. St) lw get-; ~ t a tll· rs :~ p o l nh'Y"
like C hris Lchall L' to o::. pc:1k \\.'h:lt he k nnwo: . to ~ Hi ~ ufll cia l "s pokL·m un " and '\· ommutll C:l tin no; dirL'ct ur" havmg &lt;.; po ke n , &lt;._;ore h t.m ~d~
h eth e unspe.1 kabk.
Le hane acc uses Senator Arle n Spe cter n t- rcm;11 ns sile nt.
!-hiving gotte n no respo nse tu Ill';; ti r"i r lcttt.: r,
i&gt;ennsylvani a of" McC:.lrthyitc t;lctin " tO r call lil g Attorney G t: ncral J.m t..' t R ·L' Jl l)
te o: . ti fy Spe cter now w rites lhc V"icL· presiden t :1 SL~ ...·w hy ,;, he h;1 o: . 11or ho norl'd hn ro p investigawr\ onJ . He notes th Jt Gore ;, -;ti ll u~ mg '\u rro(a ll tOr :m it\ dcpL' nLk nt co un ,o...·l to prohe g:ltes" to m.lkt• th e " M cC.Irthyism " c h ar~c .

to

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
74G-446 -2J42

" If yo u inrend to

L'O !Itl llllL'

yo ur charact er

a~sa ss in ati on of m ~.:,

I th in k yo u o u ght to be
man cn o u gh,"to say it yo unelf."
Gore co ntinu ed to pl.ay Ed gar 13 erge n to h is

spo kesma11 's C harli e M cC arthy. " I thi nk C h ris
do es a great job. fm goi ng lo let him sp eak
for him self"
Anyon e w ho knmvo::. C orl' and wa tch es h ls
campaig n kn ows th e n r h absurdity of th3t
re ni:1rk .
C:o rc''\ 'i taH' people 'peak wh at Gore w~m rs
the m t o -;p eak or tht'y no lo nger rt· m :~ i n Gore
~tafl peoJ) Ie. Se nat e ~ urrngate; arc hel d to th~
sa m ~· '\t r ict -com pli:ttKt: by the -J ady " tnl kmg
po mts.
Whe n Go rl' w.m r"' so m ethin g ~ai d th at no
~c n :\tn r wo uld o::.ay about a roileagu l', it's th C
spo kc'\111 :111 's job to say it .
·
. s~..· nJ for Spc..' dl'r pro lllJ Se 'i to brin g th e·
" M cC arthyism " c harge up t hl' next tim e th e
vi ce p re:~ i de m co mt·s up to the Senate to
brea k a tie vot e. f-k " ill hop es ro h ear. Al
(; o re 's we rds from AI Core.
H e'd h;we better ltK k waitin g fo r the late
Edgar 13ergt'n to show u p - with o r w ith o ut
C harli e M cC, arthy

'

.

(C!.ris Mlittlwrcs, d11£{ P( rl1c Sm; Fra tt(iH&lt;'
Ex(m1iw·r:1· 1·1-()shi ll,l!f,,,_, B l ll'l\ 111 , is f ltlSf i;[ "Hard·
lo.rll " '"' C.\ 'HC '""I .HS N HC mblr rlullll wls.)

11l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156

200 Main St., Poln1 Pleannt,
304-6 7 5·1 333

W
.V•·I

Physicians should
do more to educate
about gun scifety .

improve the se dismal sta'tistics.
I think there are several areas
in which we physi cians can
help redu ce th e ri sks of firearm
. rel at e d d eaths and I don 't
think any o( them involve the
c urrent " feeding frenzy " ofl egQuestion; · I am sadde ne d , 1slat1on proposed by the anti ~
angered and enra ged by the gun
politici ans . What
it
amount of gun violence that involves is e duc ation _ Physioccurs in our country, The cians should t e ll their patients
tragic death o f the Florida who o wn a firearm to keep it
tea cher, Barry Grunow, is an se c ure d in a lo c ked ca binet.
example. My doctor doesn't when tt is not in u se. This is not "
know if l have guns in my
to sir11_pl)' _ p~ote c t children it!
hCUJ'se.- ~or not b ooau se he has
the hom e,
never said anything. to me
but also to reduce th e risk of
about them . Shouldn't he and
theft and subsequ e nt use m
all' .doctor s take a more ac tive
c
rimes . It is- best if the weapon
role in addressing the serio us
risks that firearm s pose to our is additionally made inoperable,
if practi cal, to further reduce
health?
,
Answer; Firearms do cer- tile risk of accident . As an
tainly pose a significant ri sk to example, the bolt from a rifle
· our collec tive health . lrr 1997, shoul&lt;l l&gt;e-~rfo'fe d- rna different
the most recent year for which locked cabinet from the rest of
the Centers of Disease Control the weapon . In addition, the
and Prevention have statistics ammunition shoul-d not be ·
available, there were 32,436 stored with the gun ,
firearm-related deaths in the
Most gun-r elated lllJUf!es
US That averages out to about don't result from accidental dis89 death s every day. Certainly charge of a weapon , In stead,
th e death of teacher B ~ rry
these injuries are inflicted as
Gnmo\V was tragic, but so were
p art of the commission of a
th e other d eaths. I think it is
· c rime . The most important preimportant. to ·k ee11 this se nseless
loss of li fe in p e rsp ective w ith ve n tive m easure for thi s type of
oth e r preventable cau se s of. violen ce is vigorous prosecu tion of all those co mmitting
death. There
c
rimes with firearms, I th ink
are more than 40 ,000 de ath s
each year from motor vehicle stiff senten ces for first offenders
w hen
accidents and al so 20,000 each ~ reg ardl es; of age year from influ e nza .
no inJury oc curs, and life in
We physi cians alm o st never pri son fo r seco nd o ffenders or
address moto r vehicle safety, any time th e re is per sonal
sea tb clt use, o r firearm sa fe ty injury wo uld drasti call y redu ce
durin g u sual adult health - care th e pro bl em s with firearm viovi sits, alth o ugh we : may ask lence.
J&gt;""'
about medi cally relat e d prevenObvio u sly, th e re are many
tive m ea sure s su ch as immu so c ial, cultu ral, economic and
ni zation ~. Th e re arc a number legal ISSUes invo lved in "guno f rea so n s thi s is so, but the
related v iolen ce. The ultimJte
m os t i1np o rtan c is that the
suc cess o f any po tential so lumaj or ity o f u s will die o f di sea se - m o st hke ly stro ke, h eart tion is d e p e ndent on takin g all
attac k or ca n c er - rath er than of these factors into cons id erafro m gunsh o t wourrd s or auto - ti o n . Per so nally; I' m conv inc ed '
that a so luti o n can be found to
m o bil e acc id e nt s.
Certa inly, all of u s wo uld this e pidem ic if we Js c itizen s
lik e to e l imin at e ac c ide nt al tal k to on e ;mo th er and , if our
d ea ths from fi rear ms as we ll as prosec u to rs and legislato rs w ill
purposeful murde rs . W e physi- d e bat e thi s 1ss uc wirh our
Cians co u ld ta·ke a mo re J(: tive re sultin g to t h e em o ti o nally
role in ed u cat in g o \li" pationts ch arged and h q~ hl y pol ari zing
abou t th e se h ealth mks, M J ny, rh e to ri c o i th e " mu st h ave" and
and I ho p e most, p e di atn cia ns . '' ca n 't h ave " zeal o ts.
talk ab o ut fi re ar m s in th e h o m e
wh en t hey sp eak with p J rents
"Fami1y Medicine" is a
abOLit sa fe t y issu es fo r th e ir
weekly column : To submit
c h ildre n . Thi s IS imp o r ta nt
questions, write to John C .
bec ause ind iv id uals age 1 5 - ~ 4
Wolf, D.O., Ohio University
have a substanti all y g rL· ~ t c~ r isk
College 6f Osteopathic
o f being k ill e d by t his fo rm of
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
v io len c e . An d , yo un g b lack
Athe ns , Ohio 45701. Past'
m en have a te n-fold i n c r e ~ se d
columns are available
risk wh e n co mp are d to th e
onliQe at
ge ne ral popu lat 1o tL Obv iously,
www.fbradio. o rg / fm .
lo ts of ch an ges are n eed ed tp

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

situ atio n ?

C HESAP EAKE.VA
PS If you pr int this, I will clip it and
anonymously mail it to a co u ple of
neighbo rs - mo th ers w ho sho ul d knbw
better than to race around our neighborhood,

Abby

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor .
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Thursday, July 6, 1000

Toddler's death.ends another life as well

Co.

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Director

ly the Bend

.,;._~h_e_D_a.....;ily~s_e_nt_in_e_l·_ _ _ _ _

Page AS

--../'

..

I..UGK! 6aS PRiceS
JuST car-1e DOWt.J

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

Charles W. Govey

Page A4
HeY, aRe YOU i~

,'Esta6(i.W.tf in 1948

•

•

Opinion

'

•

'

H O M ER

IN

SAN

DIEGO

DEAR HOMER: Yo ur fr iends are
used to a mo re casual kind of hospi,taliry
th an you are used to exte nding. As long
;s their bac ksid e&gt; are cove red , ! see noth- ·
DEAR LONELY SISTER: I' m in g 'wr;ong with th eir sitting on th e
printing your letter for all to see, Yo ur counter. H owever, sin ce it offends you,
m essage is o ne I hope every drive r will request that you r guests seat th emselves
take to h ea rt.
w here you prefe r. (An altern ative would
DEAR ABBY: M y partner and I,
~e to sp ray t he counter with bl eac h
who are in o ur 50s, have two te rrifi c
be fore th ey arr ive ·.-·only kiddin g')
fri e nds who are in their 30s. Th ey are
Good adv1 ce fo r everyo ne - teens
generous, con sidt!rate·and polite, bu t have
a habit that drives us CrJZY. Whe never t o senio rs - is in " The Anger in All of
they visit, we usually wind up in the U s and H ow to Deal With lc" To order,
kitchen whe re th ey sit th etr backsi des on send a bu siness-size, self- addressed enve'the counter to talk and visic The re are lo pe, plus c heck o r mon ey order for
chairs and barstools in the area, P roper $3.95 ($4.50 in C anada) to: Dear Abby,
Ange r Bookl et, PO Box 447 , Mount
seating should not b e a problem .
Are we be ing old - fashioned or is this M orri s, IL 6 1054-044 7 . (Postage is
impolite ? If so, how do we co rrect the i nclud~d. )

SOCIETY NEWS

Graduates with degaee
RAC INE - Mat]b rie Holter Duncan of Olive Hill, Ky_, recently
graduated from Rowan County Community College with a degree
in medical technology with an "A" average . She also re ceive d an
award in typing, She is a 1966 graduate of Southern High SchooL
Attending her graduation were her husband, Blaine, her da ughter,
laura Foard and sons.Jamie and Nick , Columbus, her aunt,June Ashley of Rlcine and Gerald C rawfo rd o f Letart Falls .
She has accepted employment at a local hospitaL

Receives scholarship
MARIETTA - John Davidson of Pomeroy received the annual
ln5trumentation Society of Ameri ca scholarship at Washington State
Community College,
The endowed scholarship was one of 10 awarded to students majori-ng in selected Associate of Science or Associate of Applied Science
d egre e programs,

Named to·dean'slist
NELSONVILLE - The name of Lisa Russell of Pomeroy was
omitted from the list of students named to the Dean's list at Hocking College for the spring term .

·-·· Named to Akron list
SYRACUSE - Beanna M. Lisle of Syracuse was named to the
,; Dean's LJSt at the University of Akron for the spring semester, "'
Students na,me&lt;j to the dean's list received a grade point average of
3.25 or b erter o'n a 4 _0 scale,
·
.

GCC achievement list
GAIIIPOL1S - - GallipolisCare~ College has ;l~~d a list of s~­
dents named to the achievement list fonpring quarter.
Students who achleved a perfect 4.0 grade point average were Belinda Bailey, Brad Bevan, Shannon Boggess, Kennie Brown, Melissa Cain,
Sharon Carman,Jane Clagg, Elaine Clickenger,Tina Crews,Joanna Davis,
PaulJ Gauze, Kimberly Haley, Angela Harness,JillJohnson, Robtrt Kimmel, Amy McGuire, Sara Morris, Angela Thonus and Terri Whitman.
Students achieving a GPA of 3. 5 or better were Christina Bainter,Jetlnifer Bias, Holly Cleland, Erika Denney, Ruthie Freeman, Sandra Goa,!,
Kelly Hager, Regina Harris, Missy Hively, Angela Jackson,Trenda Jordan,
Jennifer Sowers, Linda Stover. Hollie Thomas, Lori Williams, and Shirley
')XI right .
Students who achieved a grade point average of 3.0 or better were
Sheila Atha, Sarah Bali,Angela Barnhart, Diana Bennett, Beth Casto, Bernice Desgrange. Christine Drennen, April Fisher, Melody Graham, Karina Higginbotham, Brandy J Johnson,William Lambert, Susan Lookadoo,
Ashli Montgomery, Paula Nolan, Heather Patterson, Christina S11runs,
BuffY Smith , Megan Spradling, Lisa Spurlock, Brandy Stanley, Traey Stegar, Allison Streetman, Stephanie Thacke&lt;, M artha rW heeler; Ronald
White, and Deidre Wilson.

Curler Scholarship; Renee E. Stewart, Pomeroy, D ill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship; Wesley S, Thoene, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship, President5 Scholarship,Valedictorian Scholarship ; Autunm D Thomas, Syr.1cuse,
Dill- Arnold-Curler Scholarship; joshua nWill, Po meroy, Dill- Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Brooke A. Williams, Pomeroy. Dill-Amold-C urler Scholarship; Michael LWilliamson, Pomeroy, Provosts Freshman Sch ob c;hip,
The local upperclao;.s scholarship rL'Cipient5 are as follows: TrJvJSJAbbott,
Pomeroy, Dill-Arno ld-Cutler Scholarship; Brandon M. Buckley, Pomeroy,
Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship; Jennifer E Caldwell , Coolville, Deans
Schola rship; Michelle D Caldwell, Reedsville, Dill- Arnold- C4rler Scholarship. Rush Elliott Pre-Professional Scholarship;
C ynthia K. Caldwell , Syr.1cuse, Dill-Arnold- Curler S~ola~&gt;hip. Jan1es D Euler Memorial
Scholarship; Chad M _Clark, Rlcine, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship; Ryan
S. Crisp, Langsville, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship;Traci D. Crow, Pomeroy,
Dill- Arnold-Curler &amp;holarship; Corey D. Darst, Pomeroy, Dill-ArnoldCutler Scholarship; Matthew 0. Dill, Rlcine, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship ; Michael W Duhl, Portland, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship.The Creed
Janes Scholarship; Stephanie A. Evans, R eedsville, Ben Manley Sci)olarship;
Dill- Arnold-Curler Scholmhip; Michael B_ Frankowiak, Middleport, DillArnold-Curler Scholarship; Tara M , Grueser, Pomeroy, Deans Scholarship,
Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Mary !'allay Covell Scholarship.
Sarah E. Grueser, Shade, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship ; Cbrmey L
Haley. Pomeroy. Carlotta C. Greer Scholarship, Deans Scholarship, DillArnold-C urler Schola('Ship; &lt;::bad E, Hanson,Yo1n~!9)'. Dill-fl.rndd-.Cutler
scholarship; Brent w Hanson, Pomeroy, Dill--Arnold-Curler Scholarship;
Audra M , Harrison, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;Traci M_
H eines, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Sarah ' E. Householder.
Middleport, Edith A .Wray Scholar.hip;Jody R. Hupp, Rlcine, Dill-ArnoldC utler Scholarship; Paul W Ihle, Rlcine, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;
Jessica R .Johnson, Middleport, Jewell Curler Scholarship;
Curtis A
Johnson, Shade, C. Paul/Beth K. Stocker Scholarship, Deans Scholmhip;
Kristina M. Kennedy, Pomeroy, Dill- Arnold:Cutl_er Sch.&lt;'Jlarship; Timothy _
J King, Mi'ildleport,--IJill-Arnold~Cutler Scholarship; Craig A Knight,
Rlcine, Dill- Arnold- Curler Scholarship.
Jennifer M. Lambert, Rutland, Dill-Arnqld-Curler Scholarship; Jyl A.
Mathews, Rlcine, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;Amy J. Northup, Rlcine, '
Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Clean R. Pratt, Pomeroy, Djll-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;John Heath D. Proffitt, long Bottom, Advantage Award, DillArnold-Curler Scholarship;Jeremy P. Rlymond, Portland, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Franco D. Romuno, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship;Arny S. Smith, Po;neroy. Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;
Sabrina D. Smith, Pomeroy. Deans Schola"hip, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship;William A. Will, Pomeroy. Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scnolarship;
William A.Young, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship,

,, \

GCC announces ,graduates

~\.

Prices Good

'
GALLIPOLIS -Spring ~000 graduates of G allip oli s C areer C ol lege included Sarah Ball, asso ciated of applied business in medical
offi ce administration; Sharon C annan, associate of appl ied business in
lOVER SUGAR. fREE
medical offic e administration ; Mi chelle C ough enour, associat e of
CANDIES
applied business in medical , office administration; Buffy Smith, associate of applied bu sin ess in business administration;Tracy Stegar, asso25
49
ciate of applied business in busin e~s administratio n, dipl oma in junior
accounting; M artha Wheeler, d ipl om a in junior accounting; and
09
Ronald White, associate of aj1plied business in accounting and asso- t-------------+--;:~_.::....:..::.;~-..::.-----1
c iate of applied business in busin ess administration ..

HI-VAL

CIGtlR.ETTES
$1 Pack
$1_ 245 Carton

COLD

ou awards scholarships

·zo

s

Reg.

3.5oz.
$1
$1

PoP

ATHENS - Ohio University recently announced the nam es aim; tresh~
~z B~TTLF C'
Cassettes Reg. '9"
man and 'upperdass scholarship recipients for the 200-01 academic year.
'-' •
'-'
~
Only $799
The local freshman scholarship recipients are as follows: Jason P. Barber,
Rcedsville, Dill~Amold c urler Scholatship:Joshua M. Broden ck. l'o1neroy.
,
CD's Reg. ~16..
Dill- Arnold-Cucler Scholarship;Jacqu elyl1 L Buck, Pomeroy, Dill-ArnoldOnly $)359
C urler Scholarship; Amos. S, Cottrill, Coolvill e, Athens R oL1ry/ L1wrencc r---..---------+---::--=-~-...:_..:;
-&lt;J
Worstell Schola rship. Athens County Manasseh C urler Scholarship.
I
Dick/Margaret Campbell ScholarshiP: Eleanor Gifforo Memorial ScholarLLit
ship, Valt'&lt;lictorian Sc holarship; Carly A. C row, Rlcine, D ill-Arnold-Cu rler
SPEOAL CREAM fOR.
Scholarship;AdamV C uming;. S)'Clcuse, Dill-Arnold- Curler Sc holac;hip;
ARTHRITIS
Patrick J. Ef\vin , Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship ; Manh~w J.
ou
Green, Coolville, James H Butt M em orial Scholarship: Magoric ~alar,
p01 },eroy, Dill-Arnold-C urler Schola~&gt;hip: Maureen M _ Heines, Pomeroy.
Dill~f\molct-Cutler Scholm hip-Yaledi ctorian Scholarship,
89
Autumn B. Hill , Racine, Dill- Arnold-Curler Scholar&gt;hip : Kimberly M .
lhle. Racine, Dill -Arnold-Cutler Scholarship; Step hanie N. Kopec, Middlepo rt , ' Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship; Scott W N eeds, Pomeroy, D illArnold-C utler Sc holar&gt;hip; Kyle P. N orris, Racine, Dill-Arnold-Curler
Sch ob rship; L1ura A_Payne, Rutland, Dave Diles Scholarship; R yan M . Pratt ,
Kenneth McCullough, A . PH .
Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Cuder Scholarship: Joshua J Pulli ns , Portla nd .
Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
MOf1 . thru Fri . 8 : 00 a.m. to 9 p . m .
D ill-Arnold-Cutler Sc holarship, T he Creed Janes Schob rsltip: .
Sat. 8 : 00 a.rn , to 6 p . m .
Ai1son N Rose, Long Bottom , Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;Justin I'
Sunday 1 O : oo a . rn, to 4 -:oop.m.
R o ush . Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold~Cud er Scholarship : LCJI1 M . Sand ers.
PRESCRIPTION PH . 992 - 2955
R eedsville, Dill-Arnold-Curler Scholarship;Jennifer A . Shrimplin. Pomeroy,
oEast Main Pomeroy, Ohio
D ill-Arnold-Cutler Scho larship; Barbara J Smith, R eedsville, DiU- ArnoldFriendly Service
N
C urler Scholarship;Jeremiah G. Sntith, Langsville, Dill-Arnold-C urler Sc h&lt;ll. arship. Valcdictor,ian Scholarsh ip; James K. Stanley, Pomeroy, Dill- Arnold· L..________.;...________________J

Only ·s ge
WF

nv· '

COMPLtT[ STOCK

J/·2- PrJ•Ce

I

____

R11

3"Z.
Reg. $698
0
$4

�•

•
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

fl9 A 8 • TM Dally Sentinel

SOCIETY NEWS

•••

Krider family .reunites

· Poster contest observed

Regis Philbin brings· 'Millionaire' look to the masses
NEW YORK (AP) - Former doll did for kids."
M en relate to clothes that take
Cosmopolitan editor Helen ·
That's no accident. " Wha t the guesswork o'!t of getting
Gurley Brown once joked that it made this so exciting is that dressed.
took an act of Congress to get Regis had the abiliry to not only
"You ca n't go wrong even if
men out of the basic white shirt introduce fashion to mass Amer- yo u waoted to," said Elina
ica," said Lee Terrill, president of Kazap , public relations director
and regulation tie.
Turns out, it is quiz-show Van Heusen, "but give it an . of Macy's East. "It's like gift-givhost Regis Philbin, a newly acceptability and a comfort level. ing 101."
minted menswear purveyor, who We are getting calls from all over · Launched at her Herald
is legislating this summer's hot America and Canada because Square store as $77,50 boxed
new look, a cotton men's dress people feel like they -know him." sets, the shirts, about $40 to $45,
shirt with the same-color glossy
The trend "might prove that and ties, about $38 to $42, will
necktie, both in solids, in black, men are less influenced' by Cash- be rolled out at department and
tan, blue or green.
ion designers and runway pre- specialry shops nationwide midThe ratings powerhouse sentations than the industry July.
attracted a crowd that snaked out would like to believe," said
The look has legs, said trend
the door and on to the sidewalk Karen Alberg, editor of MR, a analyst Tom Julian of Fallon
at Mac.y's Herald Square during menswear trade magazine. "Tele- advertising agency. " As I have
the recent launch of the Regis vision and music and sports traveled around the country, (I
by The Van Heusen Company today are far more important to see that) it should continue
label.
the typical American man ."
strong as a trend for the fall as
Kenneth Cole, Richard Tyler, Indiana · Pacers· basketball - well as r ile holiday season: The
Hugo Boss and Joseph Abboud coach Larry Bird wore a beige shirt-and-tie market has been
have sent the monochromatic shirt-and-tie combo during this quiet through the end of the ·
look down the runways. And a season's NBA finals. Apd the host '90s, and now the renewed intersquadron
of
Hollywood's and two commentators on est is a direct result from R egis"
hottest, from Tom Cruise to Tom CNBC's "Squawk Box" gave the
The shirt-and-tie combo just
Hanks, have worn it on the red Regis look a recent tryout on might reinject the $56 biUion-acarpet. But it t.ook Philbin, host the early morning finan~ial news year menswear industry with a
of ABC's "Who Wants to Be ~. program.
,
turn ~ay frpm casual ~Friday
--Millionaire-," to oring Ytro 'tKe - ~· vanHeusen projects retail cl~tlling, Alberg said.
'
masses.
sales of$50 million for the Regis
"It looks like th e re is a resur"You'U probably see (the line this year. "We found that gence in dressing up," she said,
Regis look) in middle America despite the fact this look is not noting recent increases in sales of
in droves only because, remem- fashion-forward or new, a lot of suits and ties. "Executives are
ber, his 'Millionaire' show is the America Jeally didn:c relate to it frustrated with how shlumpy the
top-rated show. across America; ·ot wasn't awate of it," Terrill said. whole casual thing has gotten.
The "dark tonal look where Now there's somew hat of a 1
it's a phenomenon and it's on
several nights a week. Now that's the tie almost blends into the backlash to all this casual dresswhat I call penetrating a mar- shirt" was launched on runways ing in the workplace."
·
ket," said Mike Cannon, men's about two years ago, Alberg sa id.
"It's ·a rebirth," Cannon said.
fashion editor at Towp &amp; Coun- It became popular at the higher "Six months ago, people were
rry magazine, who expects the end, thanks to Calvu1 Klein , saying, 'Th e' tie is dead . The t:iiRegis-label ensemble to saturate Giorgio Arm.ani and . other lored shirt is dead. The suit is
Kiwanis Clubs across the heart- prominent designers.
dead.' If Regis has piqued even
land, even if it doesn't show up at
"But the typical middl e- 100 people's interest in more sarsocial-page soirees.
America .consumer always asso- torial dressing, God love him."
"Regis Philbin is cool to a lot ciated ties with bright red or yelCannon, rece ntly named to
of guys - real men, not style- low; that power-tie look of bold the International Best-Dressed
setters:' said Cannon. "I think his stripes that contrast to the shirt," Poll, added, " It's not my favorite
universal appeal will penetrate she said. "This monochromati c look by any means. But I'd much
the country niu ch like the Far- look was the exact antithesis, so rather see a man in a tone-onrah Fawcett hairstyle and the it never caught on at the middle tone Regis shirt and tie than in a
pashmina (shawl)
did for leveL"
generic polo shirt and Capri
women,
and
the
Cabbage
Patch
Now
it
has
a
bnght
future.
pants and sandals.''
..

..

Gallipolis, Saturday, 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS The
Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire
Department will have its atmual
fund drive on July 8. The support
of the community is needed.

ALFRED - Orange Township
trustees, budget m eeting, Thursday, 7:30p.m., followed by a regular meeting, at the home of
Clerk Osie Follrod.

RACINE -2~ nd annual
reuni.on of the Charles W. and
Fannie Lee Wolfe Beaver family,
Star Mill Park.Take a covered dish
for the dinner to be served at
noon.

POMEROY - Families who
signed up for su mmer food at the
Meigs United Cooper..tive Parish
can pick up food Thursday or
Friday from 9 a.m. to noon.
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees, regular meting, Thursday, 6 p.m. at the township hall on Rocksprings Road.

•••

FRIDAY,July 7
POMEROY - Fun, Food and
Fellowship proje ct at God's
Neighborhood Escape for Teens,
Friday. Nutritional foods, free, for
snacking at the center; non-Violent games, computer programs,
cards in center's game room
located on Main Street in
Pomeroy. Pool tables also available. Cent.e r open both Friday
and Saturday nights, 6 to 10 p.m.
APPLE GROVE Dan ce
and potluck meal, Friday, at th e
B&amp;J . Red Barn at Apple Grove,
Route 338 above gravel pits. True
County will provide the music.
There is no admission charge.

•••

SATURDAY,July 8
GALLIPOLIS -The W,ll coxens from Alabama, at the Church
of God of Prophecy, White Road ,

•••

BURLINGHAM ~ Burlingham M odern Woodmen , annual
picnic, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, northbound park near Darwm. To be
honored, Connie Smith, Rosalie
Johnson and Ann Colbu rn . Take a
covered dish and lawn chain
. POMEROY - The second
annual reunion uf the Lovett
Famil y will be held on Suuday at
I p.m . at the Zion Churc h of
C hrist on State Route 143.
Descendant&lt; of Daniel Lovett and
Phoebe We&gt;t include the families
Bush , Boyd, Goldsberry, G unnoe,
Jenkins , Winners, Slack, and
Smith. Anyone related is invited
to attend. Someone from each
descendant line will be invited to
talk about their line of the family
at a special time during the afternoon. Those attending should
bring pictures and documents.
Copying equipment will be available. Information is available from
Kathryn John son at 992-5195.
RACINE -

•••

POMEROY - The Meigs
Co unty Ohio Bicentennial Committee, Monday, 4:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Count}' Museum. Nicole
M oretti &lt;;&gt;f the 0 hio Bicentennial
Commission will be a guest.
GALLIPOLIS - Kids for die
Kingdom, Bible school, Church
of God of Prophecy, White Road,
Gallipolis, July 10- 14 6:30 to 8:45
p.m. Classes for nursery to adult,
ROCKSPRINGS Meigs
Counry Republican Executive
Committee, 7:30 p.m., Rockspr ings Fairgrounds.

Five things never to do in an interview
FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

The seven toughest intervi ew questions and
the five things never to do in an interview arc
revealed by . huma[l_ resources execytive Sallie
Mars in the July issue of Marie Cla ire ma gazine.
According to Mars, the five thin gs never to
do ory an intervi ew are: con1plain about· how
diffi cult it was to find th o ofl!cc; forget to bring
your resume; fidget with your clothing; ask
about salary during the first interview; and forget to thank the interviewer before leaving.
- -~Man, ~ senior ' vice presi dent of humau
res(lurces at McCann-Erickson Worldw1de , says
the seven tough es t interview questions are:
-What salary are you looking for' "Never
lie about your present salary," Mars says .."lfyou
feel you're currently underpaid and therefore
are looking for a sizable increase, explain that. "
-iWhat are your greatest strengths ? Pick relevant strengths. Avoid generic respon ses like

overcome this, and finish by giving a strength.
-Where do you see yourself in five years?
Cite a realistic position. This is usually a title
th at is two or three steps ahead of the job t.hat
you are seeking. Never--mention an '!mealistic
goal.
·
-Why do yo·u want to le ave your current
job? Remam posi tive. Bein g overly negative is
unprofessional.
-W h at is an exam pl e of a time you failed?
Di scuss a tim e when you learned from a mistake .
~Do you have any questions fo.r me? Offer "
at least two questions that are coinpany::-focus.e d- to show that you have pre pared for the inierVlew.

.. I'm a hard worker."
-What is your greatest weakness' Be hon est
and state a concrete weakn ess. Explain how you

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..What•s The
,,Big Buzz" ~

BY HARPER'S BAZAAR MAGAZINE

Advertise In Classified

FOR M' SPECIAL FEATURES

Forget polished, prom -queen elegance .
The new wave of glamour, e pi to m ized by
hipsters Chloe Sevigny and Cate Bla nch ett ,
c ombines the elega nc e of retro, the ease of
sportswear and the fierceness of rap, acco rd ing to the Jul y iSsue of Harper's Bazaar mag-

azine.
"It's just a bit undone," said designer Narcisco Rodrigu ez of the new mood. " An ything forced or false isn 't glamorous right
now; that studi ed perfection feels so passe."
Sevigny, one of the stars of "Boys Don't
Cry," is the poster of this pew mind-set. She
wore a vintage chiffo n cock tail dress paired
with brown sti letto boots to the spring
o pening of the New York City Ballet . For
t he A ca demy Awards sh ow in Los Angeles,
she wore a simple Yves Saint Laurent halter
dress.
"The time has come to move beyond a
kind of head 7 to-toe perfection that prevailed
i n the '_80s and ' 90s," :-vrites fash10n JOurn'a l,jl[ Wi'riiam Middleton in · the magazine .
"Glamour has become at once strong&lt;&gt;r and
rrtore relaxed."
Middleton cites several catalysts for thiS
movement, including the casual revolution
of the past 10 years, which started· with casu-

7 Days
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4 Line Ad . 7 Times

'

al Fridays and e nded Wi th Goldman Sac iJ s
ab9lilh1ng the suit , and th e conspicuous ly
cool consumption of rapper's Missy Elliot,
Mary J . Blige and Lil' Kim.
Howeve r, the most influential factor, Mid dleton says, is the economy. The United
States is current ly • nj oyi n g th e longen eco n omic expansion In the hi sto r y of the Western world, and 1t ha s resulted in real cha n ges
in the societ y that fa shion refl ec ts.
Ult1mately. Middleton says th1 s new mood
"represents the triumph of individuality in
fas h ion."
Several years ago, the most ongwal pieces
from de signers began sel li ng surprisi n gly
well. as custon1ers showed a strong des ire to
break free of muted minimalis1n ·to make
bo ld er fashwn statements.
Now a refreshing premium ha s been
placed on former glam ant1-valu cs l ike
"i nt elligence, openness and a lack of pretensioO." As a co nsequence, designers atld con sumers are fac ing a new c hallenge at its
ess en ce : H ow to look good without looking
like you tried too hard .
" Everything that looks like one made an
effort to achieve it is not glamorou s," say&lt;
designer Karl Lagerfeld . " It should look easy
even if it wasn't.''

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In Mei!!s·Gallia·Mason ..

After [Qur , J: olle~gu.es excused
themselves from the case, a recently"appointed judge says he has not
decided whether to preside over President Clinton's disbarment
trial.
The other judges- all Democrats- cited dist~nt political connections to Clinton in exercising their options to pass on the case.
The lot fell Wednesday to Pulaski County Circuit Judge Leon Johnson, appoiilled June 2 by a Republican governor to fill the term of
a judge ousted by the state Supreme Court.
- - -"laonTinlnk' l have to make a aecision right away:' -he 'said,
Clinton's case was assigned to Johnson afier Judge Chris Piazza
stepped aside. Piazza said Clinton, as governor, had once nam~d him
to a panel that hammered out state ethics laws.
The lawsuit tiled June 29 by the Supreme Court Committee on
Profe11ional Conduct says Clinton il unfit to bo a lawyvr because of
his deceptive teltimony In the Paula Jonea sexual harmment case
about hil relationship with former White House intern Monica
Lewinsky.
The committee based its lawsuit on complaints filed by U.S. Dis·
trictjudge Susan Webber Wright, who presided over the Jones case,
and by the Atla11ta-based Southeastern Legal Foundation. Wright
alao cited Clinton for contempt and fined him $90,000.
The president has said the Arkamas committee was acting too
harshly and his lawyer, David Kendall, has said he would fight "vigorously."
, .
Johnson, a Little Rock lawyer, was appointed until the end of the
year. Any decision on Clinton's disbarment at the county .court level
likely ~ould be appealed to the state Supreme Court.

UTILE_ R.QCK, Ark. (AP) -

PROVIDENCE, R .I. (AP) - An oil barge spill ed more than
9,000 gallons of its cargo into an ecologically sensitive area of Narragansett . Bay on W"ednesday. raising conce\ns about _damage to
shore birds and fragile habitats.
The Coast Guard be lieves the spill was caused when the barge,
heading to a power plan t in Somerset, Mass., collided with the tug
boat that was towing it.
The 460-foot barge was carrying more than 10 nullion gallons of .
oil. It was ruptured about two miles from Prudence Island, home to
the Narragansett Bay Estuarine Sanctu':iry.
"This is one of the most valu able areas in Narragansett Bay for
marine life," said Joh n Torgan of the environmental grpup Save The
Bay. "This is a very serious spill ."
_
· Officials said most of ·the sp ill was co ntained, though oil had
washed ashore by afternoon . Five swans found covered with oil
were not expected to survive ,.1Coast Guard o ffi cials said.
The Coast Guard plann ed to corral the oil along the shoreline
during the night and begin cleaning it up Thursday. ·

illlllllllllllllllllllllllllll
1

Judge undecided in Clinton case

Spill threatens bay life

One Letter Per Box. Allow Box for Space Between Words.

I

•

NEW YORK (AP) -The FBI has raised national security concerns about a Japanese company's attempt to acquire a U.S. Internet
service provider, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.
The agency registered concerns with the Treasury Department
about Tokyo-based Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp.'s
planned purchase ofVerio Inc. of Englewood, Colo. , the Journal
said, citing lawyers and government officials familiar with the mat-..
ter.
NTT has offered $5.5 billion for Verio, which links to th e Web
more than 20 percent of the cpm.panies on Standard &amp; Poor's 500stock index.
~
An NTT spokesman told the Journal a pending U.S. government
review of the deal is a response to FBI and Justice Department concerns that law-enforcement agencies maintain access to Verio's
Internet structure to obtain wiretaps and serve subpoenas for information:
In telecommunications deals , th e FBI has asked for assurances
that ,only U.S. facilities be used to handle U.S. traffic . The FBI has
insisted the companies employ U.S. citizens to handle wiretapping
activities.

PROVIDENCE, R.L (AP) -Two years after a student was sent
home from school for wearing a rock band T-shirt with the numerals 666, a state Education ' Department official ruled Wedn esday that
the school was wrong to do so.
Robert Parker, 18, was a sophomore at Westerly High School
when school officials sent him home and ordered him never to wear
the T-shirt to sc hool again, saying it posed a threat to school order.
He graduated last month.
"
·
On Wedn esday, Heari ng Officer Paul Pontarelli ruled that Parker
had -not · caused any di&lt;ruption w~rranti'ng being- ~xcl uded fron)
school.
He ordered any mention of punishment related to the T-shjrt ~
bear ing the numerals some believe refer to Satan and th e hame of
the now-defunct rock band- expunged from Parker's educational record.
The decision shows th at "schools can't simply say there is a disruption wirho111 ba cking it up with concrete &lt;&gt;vidence( '"ld"Steve n
BrQwn, executive director of th e American Civil Liberties Union of
Rhode Island

]=Jt££ ••• 8££

lbe ~ew glamo.ur

6

I

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I
I

,I

,.

"

the house, showing off the Infrared cameras in
the bedrooms and the chickens in the enclosed
backyard.
Footage of the orjginal Dutch vmion of" Big
Brother" served as background- and padding.
House rule5 (so \0 speak) for the series were.
covered: Every two weeks, the housernates will
nominate two colleagues for expulsion, and TV
viewers will vote out one of them by a phone
pbll. Then~ from. the three remaining players, the ·
audience will chaose the winner ~ who will be
SSOO,OOO richer.
And, for the first time, the 10 contenders
were announced and profiled:
- Jamie, a beaury queen who works for a
Seattle dot-com company. She expects to miss
her daily lattes.
- George, a jolly roofer from Rockford, m.
Says what he'll miss most is his family and his
23rd wedding anniversary.
- Eddie, a hunky lad from Conunack, N.Y.,
who lost his'left leg to cancer. A wheelchair basketball star and a student at the University of

Members OK dues increase
to fight ballot measures
CHICAGO (AP) -Teachers
agreed to increase their union
dues to help fight private school
voucher plans, which are often
bac ked by wealthy interests
pushing for changes in state laws.
"We have to help our state
affiliates defeat vouchers and
other ·ballot initiatives and to
overcome the legislative crises
that would undermine public
education,'' said Bob Chase, president of the 2.5 million-member
National Education Association,
which holding its annual meeting here,
About
10,000
delegates
approved a five-year, $5-permem.ber annual dues increase $3 of which would be used to
fight upcoming ballot measures
including pro- voucher plans
being considered in Michigan
and California. The dues also
could be used to press for other
NEA policies on state ballots.
Addressing another controversial topic, the union signaled
that it would not stand in the
way of union locals that pursue
bonus pay for teachers or loc;als
that have a bonus pay system
imposed upon them:
- A resolution approved-on the
matter did not endorse such a
plan, but it moved the union
closer than it ha1 ever come
toward 'backing merit pay for
tcachen.
Still, the NEA ipecifically 1aid
no compcnution pPckage 1hould
replace pay baaed on s~niority,
nor aubject a teacher'• pay to the
whims of a principal. The union
also refused to -embrace a propoaal to base pay on how well silldents perform on teats.
The union remains opposed
to spending public funds on private school educations for poor
children. But in those states,

voucher plans are backed by
powerful forces , C hase said.
In California, Silicon Valley
billionaire Tim Draper is backing
a Nov. 7 measure that would pernut state money to go to vouchers for priyate schools. In Michigan, Amway Corp. founder
Richard DeVos Sr. and his wife,
Helen, have contributed at least
S I million to help pass a proposal to provide about $3,150 of
state money per child toward
private school tuition.
"That's an enormous. amount
of money," Chase said.
The dues increase is expected
to raise about $10 million per
year. Annual dues are now $114
and were already scheduled to
increase to $118 per year. The
increase, which takes effect this
fall, will , bring the cost per
teacher to S123.
. Jhe. remaini!)g . :ti2_ of the
increase will pay for state and
national media campaigns promoting the value ·of public education.
The dues increase comes in
the wake of criticism from a conservative legal group, which
argues that the -NEA reporu- to
the IRS that it spends no union
duel on politics but yet spent
millions of doUm to help elect
"pro.educatian candidate!," produce political training guides and
gather tePchen' votinll record!.
Cha1e 1aid Wedne1day the
due1 plan is legal: no candidate!
are helped with the money, he
said.
Edithe Fulton, vice president
of the New Jen;ey Education
Asmciation, said funds for political campaigns are raised voluntarily. "We work to the letter of
the law," she said. "It's painfuUy
den~cratic but we do it"

Texas, he vows, ''I'm not gonna quit. I have the
stanuna."
- Josh , described as a ladies' ma n and a cole
lege student who says he plans to bring to .tlri:
house a pair of wo~k gloves and a box of condoms.
,t !
. - Cassandra, a New Yorker who works ao"..
communications spe cialist at the Unit&lt;'!]
Nations and wonders how she will maintain ·J.e~
dTe!Jdlocks without a scyLst's assistance.
.. ..
- Jordan, a buffed blonde who is a writer ..
and a danc&lt;:r at a "gentleman's club."
.. ,,.
-Curtis, a New York-based law clerk to ?.
federal judge. He's a self-described Christib'n
who says he's ready for romance at the house :~
- Karen, a Columbus, Ind .. mother of foiii·
and wife of 22 years. Looks forward to a little
time for herself, even with nine strangers: " IIi!
only be taking care of myself."
""
- Brittany, who works at a drug company
she describes as very conse rvative, then afi L'f
work installs her · nose ring and goes out dan emg.

...

,

Teachers' union steps
toward performance pay

CHICAGO (AP) ~ The nation's vulnerable to the growing attacks,,ov
largest teacher.' union took a step districts, school board&lt; and our ep::,
closer Wednesday to ending it&gt; a cen- nues."
tury-old resistance to paying teacher;
Edithe Fulton . . vin' president "I
for performance, instead of just the New Jersey Education Associ:;..
senio,rity. But tl1e union refused to cion, who has taught elemennii''
embrace a proposal to base pay on school for 34 year.;, sa1d rl1e poli•'l
how well student&gt; perforn1 on test&gt;.
undcrnunes attempts by union l()G(),
The National Education Associa- to bargain Wlth school boanls.
-'"
tion, in crafting changes to its bargain"School boards can look across the
ing policy, signaled that it "'uuld no table and say look what your natiorJ.il ·
longer stand in the way of union organization has done:· she cdffJL
,;
locals that pur;ue a "l;xmus" pay plained.
approach or have one imposed upon
The new NEA policy was ado}'~L
them.
· ed on voice vote by the 10,000 deJ~c
Still, the NEA did not endor.e g&lt;Jtes attending the confcre;1ce. · ,r 1
such a change as national policy and
While it does, not endor;e rrpl~~~
specifically said no compensation ing seniority scales ',Vith any S)'tcm uf
package should replace pay based on bonus pay. the resolution &lt;.1y; [f,'~
seniority, nor sul'&gt;ject a teacher to d1e natJunal organization 1vill give teduii ~
]"
whims of a principal in detenruning cal assistance to a local that ~i~'
compensation.
"bonus" plans imposed on them .hY
"We will continue, to oppose legislatures or school boards. A 1 ~-il
merit pay based upon subjective eval- would not be kept from unposilig
uations," saia NEA PresideriCBol:i such -a pLm on itself as part
~
Chase, who has been both praised and gaining with school boanls.
··: ;
vilified for str=ing a "new unionism"
Union members, who supporiJ~
that urges collaboration with man- the policy change, s.'lid the siurt
agement on improving schools.
towani some form of bonus v:',Y
- While Chase said no assistance structure was inevitable.
: ;·;
would be provided by the national
"We could no ' longer engage
union to locals who initiate such the Culture of reti1sal," said An~,il
plan.i, he added "We do not have
Giunta, an eleii1entary schoofteach;~­
prohibition, They an: free agenl:l."
who leads the Denver atliliate of tlii·
'
During houn of emotional · NEA. "Tea~ hers ~~'~' terribly urufci:
debate, •orne teachen bitterly paid. People are ~ed&lt;ing any Woly
opp01ed the changes, iii'(IUing it will teadwr •ompenll!tion can 15~
be the beginning of the end for a pay. improved."
·
. '"
.
l
'
'
be
I
.,,I.
Sh
faNeniotity pali•-y that dares back to
e lill!( 11 1&lt; ttc'l' to 1ave teacn
the 1920!, the eadiL':It }'L'llrl of the el'!l involved in cmtb11g the pliU)l
public eduClltian l}'ltem. The oppo- in.nead of fi¢lting rl1em .
. ·'
nent.\ aryued bamt~ ba.led on stuTeacher cash inrc•mive1 h :iV~
dent perfurm:mce or a ~•'judglnem grown in popularity around til~
are dlvisive and unfair to reachcn cmmtry a.• b(lSiness !c•adc•J1i and poUfi::
with the most-troublo.'d student'!.
cL1ns fr&lt;'t)Uc•ndy call for higher s£:)1i';
"Who will want to teach the poor d.1rds in prim1ry education. Varim.ii
student5? the students who don't incentive plans have been proposed
speak English as well?" said Barbara New York City and in C.'llifontia,giv:
Kerr, a member of the Calif9rnia ing teachers higher s.'llaries or boniiS'
~
"'
.-,,
Teachers Association. "This makes us L'S 10r
pcuonnancc.

-oro'I'J

iq

a

u;

E iscopal ·church mulls

a liance with Lutherans
DENVER (AP) - Episcopal
C hurch members are conside ring an alliance with the cou ntry's
largest Lutheran denomination, a •
move leaders said would be a big
step fOrward for C hristians. - ~
Pamela Chinnis, president of
the House of Depi1tics, and
Frank Griswold, presidm g Episcopal bishop, said th ey want the
vote taken soon during the 10day 73rd General Conven tion,
which ·began Weduesday.
The plan mu st be approved by
the church's t\vo-chamber legislative body. o ne composcru 9f
about 300 bishops and the other
co mposed of about 800 priests
and lay members.
If approved, the Episcopal ~nd
Evangelical Lutheran ch urches
would recOgnize and share each
other·s sacraments and clergy and
cooperate in nt.bsionary projects

and other vemures. The ch urches
would have a Combi ned 7.5 milho n members, including the 2.4
million Episcopalians.
"] think if it's approved, it
would be very significant to the
ecun"'enical conunu nity," Griswold said.
The ch urches have been discussing an alliance for about 30
years, said Episcopal Church
spokesman Jim Solheim.
I

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The Dally Sentinel • Page /lc.~

Big Brothe~: In the house and on the air

NEWYORK (AP) -Well, they're all moved
in and the tape is rolling.
· CBS' "Big Brothet" premiered fednesday by
showing the arrival of 10 stra n ~rs the . night
befor~ who will share a house (an~·~S TV cam.eras) for the next three months. · ·
·
" Houseguests, are you ready?" asked host
Julie Chen, as the contestants gathered at the
threshold of the 1 ,800-square~foot home built at
a Los Angeles-area studio lor.
They stepped into the house, where the
dozens of cameras and microphones will track
their cohabitation on national TV and the Internet.
Then, disappointingly, fadeout. With no time
for preliminary squabbles ~nd hanky-panky, the
hour was a mostly breathless buildup I!' the
series to come, which CBS will air five nights a
week (Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and
Saturday).
Chen, who by day is the news reader for
CBS"'Early Show,'' did a perky to-an'd-fro with
al)other host, ian O'Malley, who gave a tour of

State overtums school's action

It's The
Meigs - Gallia - Mason

NEW DIMENSIONS

· FBI concems shroud deal

'

Theiss re union ,

BY 1MARIE CLAIRE MAGAZINE

WASHINGTON (AP) - A coalition of American Muslims
renewed its call for a worldwide boycott against Burger King on
Wednesday, nearly a year after first objecting to the fast-food c hain 's
opening of a restaurant in a Jewish West Bank settlement.
The coalition ended its initial boycott thteats last August after
Burger King ordered its Israeli franchisee to remove the company's
name from the restaurant. But as recently as this week, the outlet in
the Maaleh Adumim mall still displayed the company logo and staff,
weuing Burger 19.~ uniforms
. , still sold the company's trademarked products suf'"'as the Whopper.
·
. "We urge people of conscience to reject Burger King, its products and its regrettable embracement of an occupation the international community has declared illegal," said Khalid .Turaani, executive director of American Muslims for Jerusalem, one of more than
a dozen Muslim advocacy and re£igious groups calling for a boycott.
Burger King spokeswoman Chtistine Boesch wouldn't comment
on the coalition's latest announcement. saying her company's final
comment was a statement issued June 20 that said Burger King and
the Israeli franchisee, Rikamor, Ltd., had been unable to reach an
·agreement and were seeking international arbitration.
Miami-based Burger King, owned by Britain's Diageo PLC, has
said it had bee n misled by Rikamor into believing that the Maaleh
. Adurnim. branch was inside Israel, and not on disputed land. Burger King accused Rikamor of breach of contract ·and ortfered it to
remove the company's corporate insignia from the Maaleh Adumim
branch.
'
Initially, Rikamor said it would comply, noting that the restaurant
Wouldn't have to shut down .
o

POMEROY - Hillside Baptist Church, o ld-fashioned tent
meeting starting July 9-14,7 p.m.
The theme is "Airborne ", with
special quest speakers D-r. Charles
McNeely from Pontiac, Mich.,
Rev. Ron H odge from Crab
O rchard , W.Va. and Eric Tharp
from Holyoke, Mass.

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

..,

Muslims call for BK boycott

MONDAY,July 10

SUNDAY, July 9

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Star Mill Park, Racine, Sunday, I
p.m . potluck.

THURSDAY,July_6

•

•

Thursday, July 8, 2000

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

isbury Elementary schools were asked to participate. The effort was to help make children and parSYRACUSE -The sons and daughter. ofRay- ents aware that, of the approximately 14 million
·mond and Freda Krider, gathered at the home of injuries that o ccur ann't'lly, nearly 90 percent of
them could be prevented through education and
Marvin and Clara Krider of Syracuse recently.
Visiting the family during their stay were Alta awareness.
The children were provided a list of 10 stops
Dill of Reedsville; Russell and Katherine Krider of
Arlington; Martha Bruch, Mt. Vernon ; Elsie that promoted safery, which they could use in their
Raines, Ft. Myers, Fla .; Mi'lnie Pecora Block, Lady posters. The safety steps included seat belt use on
Lake, Fla.; and John Krider and his friend, Kathy, every car ride, use of bicycle helmets when bicyPomeroy,
cling, children under 10 never crossing the street
Other fanlily members joining the get-together alone, supervision of children near water, working
o,yere John,J r. and Janet Krider, and their son, Russ, smoke detectors on every level in the home with
daughters and Mikayla and Ashley; Robert and a battery check ever month, hot water heaters set
Freda Larkins and Roberta Hill and son, Justin, all at not more chan 120 degrees, guns stored locked
of Long Bottom; Warren and Connie Connolly, and unlocked, protecti on ofchildren against falls,
apd grandson, Dylan, Reedsville; Tina R ockhold medications and cleaners are stored locked away,
and daughter, Taylynn, Reedsville; Cleo Smith, aqd emergency numbers are posted near all teleTuppers Plains; Peggy Tippi, daughter Kim apd pho nes and first aid equipment.
son, Michael, Syracuse; and Billy Cornell, Racine.
Dr. Douglas Hunter, Sheriff James M, Soulsby
, The last family gathering was in 1987.
and Judge Fred W. Crow III chose a winner from
each of the classes, and winners r~ceived nearly
$300 in gift certificates purchased from funds
raised by the squad.
· POMEROY - In conjunction with National
All of the children who participated were eligiEMS week, the Pomeroy volunteer emergency ble to win one o 12 mountain bikes or one of200
squad, in conjunction wfth the Department of bike helmets to be donated by the sute division of
Public Safety, Division of EMS, conducted a poster EMS. The winners of the bikes will be featured
contest to promote preventable childhood injuries. with their posters in a 2001 calendar, to be distribThrough the assistance of their teachers, the stu - uted across the state to promote preventable childdents in grades four and five at Pomeroy and Sal- hood injuries.

•

Thursday, July 6, 2000

••

"T he theolog~an s have discussed it and say tl1ere is very little that separates us and ·w hy
don't we move into a full , for mal
relatiOl)Ship," Sol!'&gt;eim sa id. .
Episcopalians approved the
proposal at their 1997 conventio n: but rhe measure f.1ilcd ro
ge t the requ ired rwo-thirds vote
at the Lutheran · assembly the
same year. Last year, Lutherans
narrO\yly approved a rewritten
Vt'f51011.

Gnswold said "full communion" would allow rhe churches
to share resou rces and enrich
each other by sharing traditions.
" It invites us to yield some of
ourselves and th e uniqueness of
our tr.1dition. and to make some
adj ust ments m ou-r tradition fOr
the sake of umry," he said .
Lutherans may have problems
agreemg with the Episcopalian
method. of ordaming bishops
through the "histone episcopate." Each Episcopal bishop is
installed by a laymg- on of hands
by three predecessor bishops
from a line .believed to extend
back to Christ 's apostles.
Lutherans don·c reqt1ire such
histori c pmcession . Opponents
have likened the Episcopalian
ordinatio;, to a Glstc system .

.

- -Once r.ou dec•de to become a runr;er . your

lot~

IS sealed Ar1d once

Air

lmara

you pull on o pm r at A1r lmara runn1ng shoes. you con rest assurt&gt;d
you have the shoes to keep

go1 ng The A1r lmara 1S spec,tJcally

des,gned lor a woman 's toot W1th a Lorge YOiume A1r·Sole ur·111
•n the 'heel, .,..Jm en's onolom.colly correc t sockhner and med.al

supPOrt. !here'!:! no reo!iOn you con '! p~l 1n mde oller m1le m comlorl

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(
.Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

Thursday, Julf'6, 2000

POMEROY The fol lowing lan.d tran sfe rs were
recently reported by Meigs
County Recorder Judith ·A .
K1ng :
James
E.
M c Ken zie,
deceased, to Reva F. McKon zie, affidav1t, Bedfo rd ;
Ray E. Wellman , to Bmn
K. Smeck, Linda J. Smeck,
deed, Letart;
Jeseph McCloud, Sidney
McCloud, to Mi c helle Stahl,
deed, Middleport;
Sherwood Collier, Beulah
Mae Collier, Ben Mullins ,
D ebo rah lois Mullins, to
Wetze I T. Bailey, Jr., deed,
Salem;
: J ay Hall 1 Jr., Trust, to Hall
·Grandchildren Trust , deed,
Olive ;
Cass Cleland, to Tuppers
Plains Chester Water Distn ct, nght of way, Bedford;
George K . Church, Theresa Church, to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, right
of way, Olive;
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy
Ervin, to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, right
of way, Sutton ;
Geraldllle M. Gross, · to
Tuppers
Plains
Chester
Water District, right of way,
Sutton;
Bernice M . Bailey, Robert
A. Ba1ley, M1 chael A. Ba~iey,
to Tuppers Plains · Chester
•Water District, rig t of way,
Chester;
Shannon H. Mille ; Lori
A. Miller, to Tuppers Plains
'Chester Water Distric , right
of way, Olive;
Keith A. Cook, Cecelia L.
Cook,
Tuppers
Plains
C heste r Water District, right ·
of way, Olive;
Theodore D. Connolly,
Marj o rie L. Connolly, to
Tuppers
Plams
Chester
Water District, Olive;
Norman Hysell. Patricia
Hysell , to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water D1strict, right
of way, Chester;
Ca rolyn Sue Matheny,
Th o m as L. Matheny, to
Lawrence Cecil
Harper,
____deed , Orange; , . -~
Myrtle Tufts , Elmer Tufts,
' to Donna L. Daniels, Lawanna S. Ortiz, deed , Middleport;
George A . Hoffman, Joan
A. Hoffman, Vicki L. Owens,
pavid, B. Owens , to George
A. Hoffman, Joan A . Hoff)nan, deed, Middleport;
:· James R. Priddy, James R .
~riddy, Sr., R11h A. Priddy, to
Rand y S. Smith, s·hannon L.
Smith, deed, Sali sb~ry;
·• Glen R. BISSell, Melissa
~issell, rff Ritc hi e A . Coe,
R.honda J.
Coe,
deed,
Chester ;
Bill y R. Goble, Judith M .
Goble, to Russell C. Tin~ham, Janice L. Tinkham,
deed , Pomeroy;
' Charles Wheeler, Martha
i&lt;:. Wheeler, to Russell C.
Tinkham,Jan1ce L. Tinkham,
deed, Pomeroy;
: Rutland Volunte e r Fire
Department, to State of
Phi , eed, Rutland;
Rober E. Buck, ,to State
of Ohio, d d·, Letart;
Christopher R . Stout, Jes1! sica M . Stout, to Wilda M.
WiSeman , deed , Syracuse;
Darrell F. DaviS, Ma ggie
E. Casto,to George qavis,
deed, Leban o n ;
Robert L. Behm , Wanda J.
Behm , to Lavern Jordan,
Mary Jord an, deed, Columbia ;
.
· M1chelle Hutton, to Tony
Hutton, deed, Rutland ;
Paulin e Bowland, to Village o f Rutland, de.ed, Rutland;
Edward R . C hapman, Sr.,
Ruth
C. C ha pma n, to
Edward R. Cha pman , Sr, .
Ruth C. Chap man , deed ,
Syrac u se;
Edwa rd R . C hapman, Sr.,
Ru-th
C. Cha pman, to
Edward R. Chap m a n_, Sr.,
Ruth C. C hapman , deed,
Syracuse;
: Beneficul Ohio Incorpo.h ted, B eneficia l Mo rtgage
Company, to Brenton T
(:line, d_e ed, Midaleport;
• R.obert E. Homan, Jackie
Homan, Jackie ; Lynn
1-loman, to Lavern Korda~.

t.

Mary Jorden , deed, Columbia; .
Essie Hi c ks , Susan Hic ks,
to Leading Creek Conservan cy District, nght of way,
Rutland:
Brent J Fin law, -Pain&lt;: !a L.
Finlaw, to Lea ding C reek
ISonservancy DIStnct, nght
of way, Scipio;
Kenneth
E.
Chaney,
Dorothy A . Chaney, to Ohio
Bell Telephone Company,
Ameritech Ohw Incorporated, easement, Chester;
Juamta
D.
"Bachtel,
decea~d. to Carol J. Bachre
TanneJ\.ill, ce rtificate, Middleport;
Jeffery. A . Roach , Jeffery
Alan Roach, Pamela Roach,
to Cec1lia Mac Goett, deed,
Salisbury;
Valerie K . Patterson , to
Thomas J. Buckle.y, deed,
Chester;
Valeeta
Ga~l
Rowe,
deceased, to Jeffery F. Rowe,
afidavit;
Jerry F. Rowe , to Thomas
F. Cummins, Jennifer R.
WASHINGTON (AP) - As retreat "to start drawing the conCummins, deed, Sutton;
Israel and the Palestinians jockey tours of the long-awaited pea~e"
Micliael D. Coup, Debra
for position for next week's sum- that has eluded the two sides for a
L. ' Coup, to Secretary of
mit, political problems arc piling half-century.
Housing, deed, M1ddleport;
up for Prime Minister Ehud
In announcing his risky move
Paul, M. Darnell, Jr., Linda
Barak while the "Palestinians arc at -the Wh1te House, Clinton
D. Darriell, -to Jeffery S. Dartaking a tough line in their allowed that ·staging a summit llliS
nell, deed, Salisbury;
demands.
1ts perils. But he said if Barak and
Charles S. Robinette,
Barak's inclination to make Arafar " do nor seize this moment,
Frances M. Robinette, Donconcessions on West Bank land, 1f they cannot make progress
ald L. Robinette, to ChristoJerusalem and Jewish settlers now, there will be more hostility
pher M. Poling, Courtney L.
prompted two parnes to pull out and more bitterness, perhaps even
Poling, deed, Scip10;
of his government Wednesday, more vwlence."
Garry HuddlestOn, Angela
weakening his already shaky rule
Clinton also registered his supand impmging on ills room to port for Palestinians "aspirations;·
Huddleston, to Garry Huddleston, deed. Lebanon;
maneuver at Camp David, Md.
for deterrruning their own future
But the Palestinians, sensmg on their own land - a thinly
Evelyn Stowe, deceased, to
the chance for a successfu l sum- veiled message to Israel to give
Marth M. Duddmg, affidavit,
mit under President Clinton\ ground.
Syracuse;
Barak ts so mclined, prepared
supervmon, are warrung Israel
. Clay V. Tuttle, deceased , to
that giving up only part of the to give up far more land than
Flora Marie Gibson, certtflland for a state would nor be even his peace- minded mentor,
cate,'M iddleporr;
1
enough.
the late Prune Minister Yitzhak
Bnan Williamson, Charles
Yasse~
Arafar
has
his
eye
on
Rabin,
was prepared to do as he
Brian Williamson, Kathie
Lee Williamson, to - Kathie - ·-virtually all of- the West-- Bank.' . secretly began the Israeli withGaza and east Jerusalem. "If the drawal from the West Bank and
Lee Williamson, Charles
Israelis think that by g~ving parts Gaza in 1993.
Brian Williamson, deed,
of the land to declare the PalesSeeing what was likely to
Rutland ;
tinian
state
in
,
then
I
don
't
think
unfold,
two part1es in Barak's rulDallas D. Jarrell , !'o Kimthis would bring pea ce to the ing coalition said they would quit
berly Jarrell , deed, Sutton;
area:·
chief Palestmtan negotiator the government - and deprive
Elizabeth
A.
Me e han,
James .. A.- Meehan,- te -Eliza - - ~ed Qurcia sa id-Wednesday. - the.p•ime-minister of the wnsen- "Rather, 1t would b.; the flame sus he needs to make peace.
beth A . Meehan, James A.
that would explode the muaNaran Sharansky's 1mmigrants
Meehan, deed, Orange;
tion."
party
and the National Religious
Facemyer Lumber ComFacing a deadlock and a nud- Party sa1d they could not remain
pany, to Meigs Local School
September deadline. Clinton said now"that Barak appeared ready to
Distnct, deed, Rutland;
Wednesday he ~as sununomng make generous territorial concesLind~ D. Milliron, Melvin
Barak and Arafat\ to ills Matyland sions.
Milliron,
to
Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Salisbury;
George Kendall 'church,
Theresa M. Church , to
Columbus Southern Power,
easeme!lt, Olive;
WASHINGTON (AP)
something that never happened
Carolyn D. Bissell, Dwight
H1spanic and black Amencans before."
R. Bissell, to Columbm
will suffer disproportwnately 1f
The five other groups are the
Southern Power, easement,
t he United States adopts a U.N . A. Philip Randolph Jnslltute, the
Olive;
treaty to reduce greenhouse Larin American Management
Kevin Vanmatre, Ann Van gases: says a repoft commis- Associatwn, the Nanonal Black
matre, to Columbus Southsion
ed by six minority groups Chamber of Commerce, the
ern Power, easement, Bedand paid for by the coalmdustry. National Institute for Latino
ford / Chester;
The report says the treaty Development and the U.S. HisTerry
E.
·Albri ght,
would diminish the earnings of panic Chamber of Commerce.
Rurhanna L. Albright, to
25 nulhon black and Hispanic
An environmental activist
Columbus Southern Power,
workers
m
the
Umred
States
by
the group Ozone Action
w1th
easement, Bedford;
I
0
percent
and
throw
864,000
md the six groups had "sold
Edward &lt;'
Chaney,
to
bla
cks
and
511,000
Hi
span1cs
out" to the interests of big busiCo lumbus Southern Power,
out of work . Consultants lmed ness.
easement, Bedford;
"I think it does a disservice to
by the groups arrived at those
Don Rose, to Col umbu s
numbers after rev1ewing seve'ral the enti re community and the
Southern Power, easement,
s&gt;1d, Fehcta Dav1s
government and private ISsue,
earlier
Sutton;
studies, economic proJ eC tions, Gilmore, whQ is black: She said
Ron
Quillen, · Joyce
and demographic figures .
11\inoriries shou ld support the
Quil len,
to
Columbus
The
$40
,000
study
was
treaty because they are the most
Southern Power, easement,
underwritten
by
a
coal
industry
affected
by asthma and other illSutton;
group,
the
Center
fOr
Energy
nesses that have been linked to
Jeffery W. Tracy, Amber B.
and
Economi
c
Development.
air
pollution .
Bennett , Tracy B . Amber. to
The
treaty,
if
rat1fied,
would
The pact, signed in 1997 in
Merlin H . Tra c y, Melva L,
mandate
redu
ctions
in
carb
on
Kyoto,
Japan , see ks a 5 percent
Trocy, d ee d, Salisbury ;
dwxide
emissions
from
burning
red
uctiOn,
between 2008 and
Bruner Land Company, to
fossil fu els, prm cipally 01 l and 2012, from 1990 levels of greenLyn C. Robinette, de ed ,
coal.
hou se gases.
Columb1a;
.. Some seen1 to forget the
The minority groups contend
Jam es A . Williams , Sh1rley
harsh
lessons
that
we
lea
rn
ed
m
companies
wtll cut costs to meet
_W illiams. Nan cy C. White,
the
1970s
when
an
inadequate
emi ssiOns sta ndards by reducing
Thoma s V. Williams, Judy
energy
policy
resulted
in
ecosa
lar tes and benefits on positions
Wdl!am's,
William
E.
nomic
devastation
for
m
il
l1on
s
pnmarily held by minonties and
Williams Ill, to Paul E. Kloe s
Within
th
e
black
and
HISpa
niC
moving·
facton es to countries
Liv1ng Trust, deed, Sutton;
·
co
mmunities,"
said
O
sc
ar
not bound by the same environPaul E. Kloe s L1ving Trust,
Sanchez,
execut1ve
d!fecro
r
of
mental mn dards.
to Edward W. Stines, Jodte C.
the
Labo~
Co
un
cil
for
Latin
Only 14 nations, all of .them
Stmes, deed, Sutton;
Ameri
can
Ad
vance
ment,
wh1ch
.
develo
p1ng countnes, have r_allSamuel A . Gtbbs, Gloria J.
re
presellts
1.5
million
Hi
spamc
fi
ed
the
treaty. It mu st be adoptGibbs, to United Compames
members
of
the
AFLCIO.
ed by 55 natiOns - including
L e nding, deed, Village of
He
de
fe
nd
ed
th
e
financtal
md ust rialized
nations
that
Hobson ;
arrangement with th e indust r y accO'u nt for the produ cr,ion of 55
Ke n_neth A . Gamble, to
Orga ruzatwn.
percent of the world's greenNeda B. Mit c hell, affidavit ,
'.' We had, the group s he re · hoiiSe gase&lt; before it can
Orange;
a
'
s
tory
to
tell
and
we
found
had
,
becom
e
lega
lly
binding.
'
Harold
Circle,
Lora
a
way
of
do111g
lt,"
he
sa
id.
"
We
Senate lead ers have sa1d r'&lt;e,y
Rebecca Circle, to l vau nna
fou
nd
a
sponsor.
...
It's
not
P. Neigler, Ke nn et h R. Nei will not cons1der ratifying the
un common It 's nor ltk e 1t's Kyoto protocol until the costs of
gler, deed, Sutto n .

Palestinians take hard .
line ·as·summit nears

completely comfo rtable, it could raiS e
rates .
The economy IS st1ll ex hibmn g som e
strength, accordmg to Wednesday's rep o rt.
The Index of Co in cident Indicators, which
gauges current economic ac tiv1ty, rose 0.2
percent in M ay, boosted by strength in
industrial production and perso nal in co m e.
And the IndeX&gt; of Lagging Indi cators also
climbed' 0 .2 per•cm, a, ga m fuel ed by
mcreases m outstandmg commercia l and
industrial loan s. prime rates and changes in
labor cos ts.
The three mdexes are used toge th er as a
barometer of overall econmmc tre'nds. The
leading indi ca tors index attempts to forecast the shorrcrerm economic o utl ook, th e
coincident index assesses current economt c
activity and th e lagging index reflec ts
changes that have already occurred.

HIGHLIGHTS

minorit~es,

complying Wlth it are addressed
and there is measurable participation by developing natwns.
Vice President AI Gore, one
of the agreement's framers, h as
said he would support its implementation if elected president.
Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush has called
the pact "ineffective" and would
let 1t fall by the wayside.
A six-mmute v1deo created
by th e minority groups shows a
smihng· Gore three separate
times.
Neverthe less,
Harry
Alford of the National Black
Chamber of Commerce said,
"We're not telling anyone how
tO vote." ·
Negotiations for the Kyoto
pact are scheduled to conclude
in November at a meeting 1n the
Netherlands.

study says

On the N et:
Ce nter for. Energy and E conomi c
D evelopm e nt ·
http: //www.ceedm•t.org
A . Philip Rando lph Institute.
http :/ / www.apri hq.org
Labor Co un cil for Lar in
An1ertca n
Adv:~n~c m ~: nt.
http ://www.lclaa .org
latm Amen c.m Mana ge ment
A ssos~ar ion :
http :/ / lamausa.com
Nallot!al Black C hamber of
Co1nmerce:
http :// www.nanona lbcc.org/ in
dcx asp
NatiOnal Institute for Latino
Development:
http :// WWWllild CO lli
U .S. H !Spam c C ha mb er of
Contmerr e:
htrp :ll www.ushcc .com
Ozone
Act ion .
http :// www ozo nc.org

,--------------------

'
The Middleport Clinic
•

D

788 North 2nd Stred
Middleport, OH 45760 ..

lt'ttl' f .1s soon as pos~;1ble.

Pastor Ron's football
training camp
MASON , W.Va ~ Pastor R on
Ur.lll ch of th e F.11th lhpmt
Ch11rch, Mason , W. Va , wil l host
.13tbk study a~d a football training
ca mp 011 SJturday, July H, from 9
a.m. tri I p.m rill the cl1llrch
g ro unds.
The I(Jotball po rtmn IS o tfered
tn loc.d yo un g lll L' !l who pl.m to
play l(&gt;otb.tll 111 the fall. It .w1ll be
gt".lrt·d towa rd ~ dd~· n s1ve players
who !uve no r attetH.lt·d a major
l'.t lllp

th iS

IhL'Sl' SC"IOIIS Will be led by
Ro11 llr.lllch II , ddc·nSive lin e
ceach foF Glass AAA Musselman Htgh Sc hool. Uran ch IS a 1998
gradu:ttc o f Sh,· p.~rd Co ll eg''
where he pjJycd tmddk gu.ud
and w.1, tMI1lt'd a GTE Acad~mlt
AII- Amenc.u1.
~

[~e p;iiilGIIIUILb:. I&gt; " $5..p&lt;.CU~ liUI "­

Jy tilt' day of c.unp. Cn nta~·t P ,l"i tor Branc h at 311 ~ - 7/.1-5429 o r
773-fd 51.

Mary Hope Memorial

Tourney set for July 19
ATHENS - The stx th :n\nu ~ l
M .1rv Hop t' JV1cinu JJ ,l1 Wom~...-n 's
Golf"-rou rll.Hllt'llt ,, . ; ciu.- dulcd. for
Jul y I ~ .•1t tfll' Atlll'm C:ountrv
C lub.
All proct.·eds fi·mn th1 s ye.1r's
eve nt will go to hL·ndit t hL·
App:1LtL hun Commumi y Ho"plcl'

The tiL· ld ' ' open to (14 g-o lfer".
Till· l..' llfr\' tl·e l'&gt; $55.
"li1 rl'gtstcr . .-,111 7~11 - 'i'l2-l!•'i'i

All-Star snubs,
no shows
NEW YU IU&lt; (AI' ) ~· llmtL&gt;n
ace l'l'dru M .trtin ,·z 11 as ldr o tr
th~.· A IIH.· nc'.ll l L ~..·. 1 g u c Ali - St.1 r
te J JIL .lpp. lrL'lHiy at dw req uest o f
th,· 1~ ,-d '&gt;&lt;&gt;x .
Mdrtl!l i.:'Z , the MVP ofl.tst ,year·. ,
ga mL' .It Fcn\\'ay Park , 1~ on the
d1sablt..·d li st w1r h :1 ~ tra li H.'d muscl e on h1 s kft '\ tdL· but 'Js re.H.Iy to
be aruvat&lt;'d .llt LT the ,All - Star
break .
·
H e Ius s.ud he \\'D uld be ready
to p1trh tn Tuc•"lny's All - Stnr
galliL' .It Atlant.1\ l urnn hcl~l. but
he w,,, nm lttcd fi-om rhc Al ro., ter .Jttcr Red Sox JJJ,mager Juny
Wdh .ltll' 'poke \\'lth Joe Torre of
till' Y.mkL'L'\, the ll L IIMgt'r of thl'
A L ll'.llll
M.ll tlllL' Z ,, !lO t 011 t hL· AL\ .l l 01,\ll ro"i tl'r, hut he will hc inrro dli( n l .1-. 1f Ill' \\t'J'L' .111 Al l-St.1r
;-tnd wdl •lit on t h ~..· AL bench dur tng til e g, llli L'

,

•••••
'

Mc1g\ County o,;pmt-. l ll'\\r,
to tiJL' S.c nt111 L' I ,It ()9~ -21 57
( : otlt .l l t -.port-. cd1t0r Andrew
C.1rtLT .11 1!'!1- S2K7.e,t. 2 1.
1~ . 1 x

, Ple•se see Hubbard, Page 12

SU illlll lT.

th . .· N L (L', \1 11 Thl' Nl'\\' 'r'tll·k
Y.lnkc·,·s .md C:levcl.u1d ln d1.11 1'
h,1\e fmn pi.J;ns e.Kh u n thl· AL
(t.' ,1111 •

'·

Hubbard
loved the •
game well
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

SYRACUSE ~ It doesn't
seem posstble, but 1t has been
nearly twenty years since ·cancer
cblmed th e hfe of C lyde William
Hubbard, whose memory and
love for the game of lmle league
· baseball lives on in th e form of
th e llill Hubbard Memonal Little
L~ague Tour~ament m Jus hom etown of Syracuse.
Last mght, th e 23rd annual
Hubbard to urnam ent began With
support from the Syrac use Volunteer Fire Department. whiCh now
ovet sees lt!'J operatJun .
Althou~;h the Hubbard tournalll ent ongmatcd in name circa
197H , th e tournam ent originally
began as the Kyger Cree k Little
Leagu e Tournament back m
1959.
The tou rnament 's founder?
ll tll Hubbard .
Back m 1~59. th e Kyger Creek
Pl?nt Employees C lub, under the
mtluence of Bill Hubbard, starred
the Kyger C~eek little Leag\Je
tournament, wh1ch ran yearly
from 1959 to 1977 .
In 1978, the tournament was
moved to Syracuse, where tt has
continued to the present day
In the meantime, another
Kyger Cree k dfort resumed, g1v1qg area teams two Chances for a
pnze crown m the httle league
ranks.
As a livmg t11bute to Hubbard,
the Hubbard tournam ent pro ~ta m reads, "Without lm love for
the gomc' ·of ba.eball, his dcd~ea­
tton to the game and hts wtsh for
all you nf,'Sters to get the chan ce to
enJ OY th e game as he dtd. dm
tournament would not be around
today.
"Not onljl--lcvas- ht&gt; &lt;&lt;cspmmble-----f(H' brmging this rournam ent to
S}·racust", but ht' also was vr:r/''
!IILILh 111volved in running and
lliJIIIt.unlnf&gt; the ball field o n
\Vh1 Lh tht'\ tnurnanH,'nt .is pL1ycd.
"ll dI wa&gt; .1Iso very hclpfu I ro
thl.' Sy1 an1se Volunt ee r F1rt'
Dcp:u tllll'llt ol wlnrh he was a
lllL'IllbL·r. The: dedtcltion of th1 s
tourn.m1cm ts aw.ty of rememhr:mcc from th e Lkpartment, the
tm\ n. thl' '"umy. and all the people who loved C lyde W1lham
Hubbard"
Hubb.u·d's kgal )' was cuntmued th rough lm sons, Jim and Jeff,
whu wn~.· both :-;lar playt.Ts at
Sn uth ,·r n Htr;h School.

GAME-TYING RUN- Ry11n Chapman of Racme scores tfle tying run against Point Pleasant Home MEdICal m Wednesday's opening game of the Hubbard tournament. (Scott Wolfe p~oto)

.

The-:'other' Parrott alms for success
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bt ;-td Parrotr ha '&gt; .1 ch.11 1U.' w bt· '&gt; Oill l'tl nng
.--- nH)J:~. tll;lill3udCfY\ Son ,md 'io dLJ'~ yo unger

.

brother.
A memb er of o ne of thL· tno., t 'uccessful
t:mnhe; of mechan ics 111 N ASCA R hi &lt;tory.
P.1rrott will c.1ll th~..· shot' for the first tune
on Sund.ty. as crl'\v cln ef ti.)r old go - ~arrm g
budd ) ~Lott l'tuctt.
Parrott too k durge o f Pr uett's c 1r on
Momby .md '" prl'p.1nn g 1t fo r rhl' New
Engl.llld .1~1() ,Jt Ne\v H.1mp•dure lntcnu tlonal Speedway 111 'Loudon .
It \V,lS .1 tough decJsJon fo r P.Jrrott.lc.tvtng;
fami lv. succl'ss and d1 t' relatiVt' ulmfilrt ill'
felt \~urk 1ng fi.&gt;r TL&gt;dd, Ut'W d11ef on thL·
Robert Yare&lt; Ran nr; Ford ofWmston (:up
dw np1on I l cde Jarre tt.
"for t\..Vo broth ers to v. .·ork to~L· thcr 111
rh1 s hw.mess and surct'ed ltk~,.· \Vl' did . ~r's 1l
bkssmg." ;.;a id Br.Jd, who worked on J.In-ctt's

team tOr 4 1/ 2 years. "l3ut now it's t1me for pit..kcd the nght tL':-11 11 .
m e t q [;"o ut and ~ec Jil call use _whatT()cJd .~__cl'J.'
tuert. :vlll _(;\I O\Yiu:r_C.d WelL, UL are .
taught me to win 011 my o\Vnt
nnv to stot:k car r.tun g. WL·I Is \\',\, co mid So ~:lr, wint}ll1g se ems to run 111 the f:1mi- ercd some th111 g of ,l c.t,rpetb,t~ge r when h ~.:.·
ly. Todd succe nled followmg the path oflm negotiated ,l\~·'Y R ic ky R udd\ l"n [!;tlllll'
t~1ther, L3uddy, one of the g reatest crew
o,;po no;ors h l p from Tide l.1s..t Yl'Jr to furm l11 11
ch ll{li Ill htstory .md 11 ow team m ~m ..lger f(Jr
fl rs t NASCA R rc,\1 11.
the Rou'h R anng ClrS ofii!Ctrk Martin .md
And, ,\S \VIth pl.lctiL'.Illy ciii Y l] ,·dg lll lf:
JdT Burton .
team. WdJS .111d P ~udl ,Jn· -.tr u ~~lln ~
. H1 s eldest son has hdpcd kadJtrr0tt to 19 !J&gt; Pnu.:tt IS J lJth Ill lite o,t.111dmg.., ,111 d YL't tu
\'Il to n es over four- plus seasons. That part
ti111sh :1 rJc e 111 the top I() Wells tigurc-, lll rprob.tb!y c m't b,· duphc.Jtcd by Brad, 11or ing 1'.1rrott mu ld b,· the lir&lt;t 'lcp toward
wdl ht.' gc,r ,1 L'hJ IICL' ro m.Jtch th e dr,una nf l ~·gllm l . h.: y c~m.l co lnp e tlti\'L'Ill'\\
the first Jjrrctt- t'. .tn ott tOra y.
FinJm g a Ul'W clnef w.t-. ,Jbout Jliul'll
1
They won th t.• 1 )96 I hytona 500, and Jlr- mon: th ,ul mph s .111 d rpms. l'ructt lll'ISt'i.
n:tt bllNiOI!lt'd into sur, then a ch.unp lOII.
" It\; a tough tl nnM to do ," he s;~t d . " ()nL' ,
" Brad has learned :l lot .md done .1 lOt for to find J l rL"w chi ef With that ~ un of L'xpeuur r.tLl' team. JnJ I thmk it's lw~ tmJe."ToJd n encl' .md those kmd of crcden tbl -. An ;l
s.ud " l~k 's wanting to makL· h1s 0\\'11 C.JIJs. two, to be ,tpk tu lllll'gr.llL' ln1 11 \\ 1th nur
H1.• \ wan tin g ro nuh· dl' L' l~lon ' in the pit\." pmgr.un ."
But thLT I.' are HliL' StJons .tbout wht'ther l1c
Please see NASCAR, Page 88

·u,n·

Please see Tribute, Page Bl

Dunston homer powers Cards past Reds

Church
softball
continues

\I . l UUI'i (AI' ) 111111d • h1 \

lU ll

Ne\'L'I'

~ JIJlL' - \\ 11111111 ~ hOillL'

l )un~tOil 'nil h.Ht'"

\h .l\\ 0 11

p!lldl - illt t lll~

..

t;ALLII'OLIS - Week No.
6 t&gt;fth,· Gallia Cou nty C hurrh
Softball Leagu e S&lt;'aso n fe.lnued kL·y matl lmp~ betwc:l'n
C ,lllt poli s Christ1an and F,11th
B.tpl"l.
and
Middl eport
Ch urch of Chnst .tg;aiiJSt Fcllowslup \,: hapc·l.
In' ae t1 on at F;llth U.tpt~&lt; t\
ti,·ld. F.1ith toqk o n (;,ilhpolil
C lm m.m. In th•· wo1m·n·,
game. C:C:C:. used .1 20- n111
powcr ofl't- n&lt;~c: to p1 Lk up tilL'
] ll 4 VJCtorv overF.1ith . GCC
was led by Km T,1wncy who
lud •thrcc hnme run..;
l nt hl· nH.:11\ ga m t". GCC:
rL'llJ.IitJL'd LrnddC.\t~..·d ·w ith ·.l
I 1-::l. ~)ctory owr F.mh. C:CC:
\\,,, kd D.lrrL" II Sh.1w wh L1 \\'.1\
..J - f(H- -1 With"' [\\'P h OiliL'rS, .111d
Kurt D.11ky \\lho W ,l \ 2- t\H·-.1
w1t h 1hret' RIll
In .1 los1ng ~tlUrt, F,u th w ,J,
led hy Isaac S3U IIdcr.s w h n h.1 d
.1 humc run , and lirL'IIt S.nmdcr..; ..w ho \\'.l' 2-flw-J
In .l['tiOII cit OUMPn tidL!;.
Li\'lll g \X 1:H1.T tnoJ.. 011 hr,t
B.'1pri~ t . In the \\ un ....·n\ g .lllll'.
fll·-.t Bapt 1-.t p 11 lnf up tlw \'ll -

w~.: dn nd,l\

lll ~l n

" l'l.l ylng
hcttl't tlun pill &lt;, h-

l'Wr~ ll.1\ 1'

lmnn g . 11LI YIII).! L'\l' l~ oth L·r d,t\'
I ~ hdtl' l "

I Ju!J -.W II 1~ J -tnr 17 111 th L:
plnl·h .llld .1 2(11 hitter l)thcr'' l ~ L' T\\ () of lhe pmch hih .HL'
hllllli.T ', !JP\\1,.'\I,.T,

~

··Tiut \ 'urp11,1ng." I )un -.ron
-..ud " l ' 1n Jll't ll ) lll~ to Jo th e
hc"t I i.'.lll I \\ .l,n't lthl km g t'm·, .1
ho111 1.' lllll ··
rhl• ( • Irtllll. d\ \\\ lll t!JL· fjp\(
l\\o !-!- II I lL' \ 1.lf ( hL· 'L'I'Il'\ ro o p en
111 - ~,lllll.'

,\

k ,hl

'l.'ltH1d -

tl\l'l

pl.i i, 1.' C' 1111. 1n n,1t1 111 the N I
&lt;. ·L'IItr.d. tht'lr tirq duuhk - d lgJ t
k .td -. tt h.t' Se pt. 21. I 1HlX .
-1 h l') \ ·c \\nll 17 nl .:!2, \\ l11k thl'

Rl·d..; 11.1\l' dn'PJWll 1tJ
" \.'(k
"L'

)!;ll o11!

l Il l

1} 1)

() t

2:--!

.111l l p\.1y .1-. h,1rd

lll.ltt l'l

\\hl)

,J,

\\l',I'L'

Lll1ll~: · -..nd P,ll I ktlt~L'il. who
tlll'l'\\ \L'\L'fl ' tn lllg i n11111 ~' " W,_•
Jll'l !-!11 tlll t .11 1d )lt.1\

nnw h,trd

llllll ilg'.

HO"'E RUN - Sean Casey of Cincmnat i belts a
Louis during the Cardinals' 4-3 win over the Reds

Piease see Softball. Page B2

'

rh . .· R t.·d-.

du e ro 1llness. GritTcy. in a 2-for.:!.'. -.lulll p, tlt t'd out Ill th e mnth
11 1 his tir-;r pnl Lh-hH .tppearan ct"

St.·p t. 24. JlJY2.
" M y stomac h hurt." Gnffey

\l lkl'

"l kn o\\ my rok ,lJld I ,JtCl'}lt
_u ," I J1 11btnn '11d.. Jtt -.:r :-. n .l ppin ~
.1 't'VL'IH h - lnmn ~ ti e 11 1 rlw St
Lolli ' &lt;. '. Jrd111.d ~ -t-.1 \ ' H lor y
0\ LT till' ( :llll'lllll .l fl Ited, llll

'•

•
.'

Thursday, July 6, 1000

SYRACUSE, Oh10
Stormy ski,·s parted 111 late
aftc:rnoun, Js a warm su mmer
sum hine grt't:'ted a large crow d
lor the open mg nigh t of th e
23rd Annual Bill Hubbard
Memo nal Little League Tournamt'nt at K111g Field in Syracuse Mum cipal Park Wednes. day night.
,
Three games and right cu m·
.petition pushed the linale mto
th e wee ho urs of th e mght as
Racme-Southnn. th e Middleport Brave&lt;. and Gree n all
daimt:"d wms m the tirst mght
of play.
In th e opemng game,
Ra cine-Southern . de c ked in
the purple and go ld co lor&lt;of
their high sc hoo l co untc:rpans,
blitzed Point Plea&lt;a nr Hom e
Me&lt;hcal, 10-H .
The WHil L' was much closer
tlun 1t looked. hmwwr. as
Po111t Pl ua\\ant nude .1 tOurth
mmn~ run tha{ cutthe sco rt.' ro
9-H. Point Pl easant went up 1(1 in the first ~vhen Jared Casey
smgled and scored 011 ..1.11 error
despite th e fact that Southern
st.lfter
Patrick
J o hnson
fann cdtwo batter&lt; th e first
111111 ng.
The Tonudoes tied the
game in the seco nt.i. when
R yan C hapman smgled .md
sco n.:d on a Jacob H untcr sing le. Johnson then mowed
down the bottom of the
Home Medir,tl order w1rh

SYRACUSE ~ On S.1turday,
July 2'1, .1ll l(mlt cr member&lt; of
the H1t~ .md Missc.:s Se mor Girls
Softb.ill team and rl1 e1r f.1mih e&lt;
will have an all d.1y reum on at the
S}rJLUst' ball field and poll .
The park IS reserved ·for the day
and a free pass to SWI III w1ll be
proviJ,·d hy thi· ream. The team
was mg.umcd m I '!6n by Kenny
WtggiiiS a11d con t!nyed fo r 23
years th rough th e 19!&gt;!&gt; s~aso n . It
i&lt; beh,·ved to be the first girls
slow p11ch sottb,ill tea m 111 Meib"
Co unty.
•
Th en.: wen.· ovt-r 125 g1rls on
th e tt':l lll ~, and if you have any
addre).SL'"i wt· would appren att'
your ph one call at 7411-YY2-5111 12.
so th ,a t·.u:h player ca n rece1ve a

(l)

Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welcome

•.

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Hits and Misses
reunion set for July 19

F1\c AtLunc~ Br,l\'L'" Wt: t\.''11 .11 1H.' d

IPPOintmeiiS:
[1401992-4226

Page 81

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

As summer heats up, nation
faces possible power outages

G·lobal warming treaty wil~ hurt U.S.

•

Hubbard toomey begins

THURSDAY'S

On the Net:
The Conference Boa rd 's Busmcss Cycle
Indicators : http :/ / www.tcb-indtcator&gt;.org

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ A Resoun:es conmuttee.
New Hampshire nuclear power
Bur even if Congress acts, it wtll
plant is out ofbusiness for a few days, come too late to ease power supply
and folks throughout New England concerns this su:mner.
are asked to conserve electricity
Power problems already have surA blistering hear w.we and prob- faced m New England and CaliJor~
!ems at a power station hundreds of nia and "could be an onunous s1gn"
miles away ·fon:e electricity distribu- of things to come vnrh the hottest
tors in California to scramble.
months of the sununer just ahead,
With growing demand for elec- said Energy Secretary Dill Richandtricity and a power industry in the son, who has toured the country for
midst ofa rocky transi!=ion, customers a series of electncity reliability meerare facing another summer of tight ings in recent months.
elictricity supplies ~ and poSSible
"The view (at these meetmgs)
rolling blackouts in some parts of the was unanimou&lt;. lf we don 'r work
country.
together and fix the problem, we'll
Federnl officials and the power all end up sitting in the dark,"
industry blame some of the problems Richandson said Wecjnesday H e said
on the lack of adequate transmission he was particularly cqncerned about
lines, antiquated switching systems ~potential power outages m the
and uncertainty about the direction
outhwest, Califonua and parts of
the industry lS gomg, including the
he Northeast. although other areas
ould be affected If there are unexquickening pace of deregulation.
Next week Congress will con,Jd- peered breakdowns at power plants
er legislation .aimed. at speeding up _or an unusual hear wave.
the restructuring of the $220 billion
Spurred on by the growmg econelectric utility industry, including omy and increased reliance on comprovisions that would llllpose new puters and other electrical devices,
requirements to help ellSurc rcliabil- electricity demand has been mcrcasity. The Senate last week approved a ing about 2 percent a year, while
bill that would establish a new orga- generaoon capacity has lagged. The
nization - that would monitor and --·safery · Cll slllo·n between · expected
demand U(lder normal circumenforce reliability rules.
"The existing. scheme of volun- stances and maXImum clectnuty
tary compliance with voluntaty gcner.:u)on ha1 beeb narrowmg and
industry reliability rules lS s1mply no now is k-ss than 14 percent of capaclonger adequate;' says Sen. Frank 1ty, according to mdustry figures. Not
Murkowski, R-Alaska, chairman of long ago it wa.&lt; nearly 25 percent,
the Senate Energy and Natural sa~d a seruor DOE affinal.

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball JIOies, Page 82
Wi111bledor~ 11otebook, Page 83
Tilla de Fr1111ce lriglrl(~hrs, Pa~e BJ
WNBA capsules, Page B8

Meigs recorder posts Leading indicators ·of future economic activity decline
.. .
recent land transfers ·
NEW YORK (AP) An important
The report, which was shghrly a]jove
measure of future econ01mc activity fell analysts' expectations, was the latest in a
slightly in May, the latest indication that a series of economic data to suggest that the
succession of mrerest-rare h1kes has slowed economy, while still growmg, 1s slowmg
I
the U.S. economy.
'·
down.
~The Index of Leading Economic Indi ca"Primarily, it's further confirmation that
tors declined by 0.1 percent, primanly the economy is moderating," md David
because of a pullback in manufacturin g and Orr, c hief economist at First Unioll- Corp.
a decline in stoc k pnces, th e Conference "The brakes are being tapped ." .
Board said Wedn esday. The 1ndex held
Concerns about too-rapid expansion
ste':! dy in April, ac co rding to revised figures , and fears of inparion have prompted rh~ ­
after mcreasmg by 0 .' 1 percent 1n Marc h .
Federal Reserve to raise interest rates ,Jx
The index, which attempts to forecast times in the past year. The central bank left
economic trends rhree to six months ahead, rates unc hanged at its most recent meetmg
stands at 106. It stood at 100 m 1996, its 'last week but left the door open to the pos-.
base year.
s1b1lity of another rate hike when it meets
"The bottom line is that the economy is Aug. 22. ,
.
still growing. It 's not as fast as 11 was, but 1t's
"At this point it's not really a question of
still growing," sa~d Ken Goldstein, an econ- if the economy is slowing down.We've seen
omist for the Conference Board, a private enough that indeed it is happemng," said
mdustry group.
Kathleen Srephansen, senior economist at
On Wall Street, the blu e-c hip Dow aver- Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette Securities
age finished down 77 at 10 ,484 Wednesday, Corp. "The question is whether the Fed has
and the Nasdaq composite index fell 129 to aclueved a balance between pri~e stability
close at 3,863 .
and sustaining growth .... If the Fed is nor

.

1thmu Kl'n
lnH:up 'l l .ltt.h

,,mi · .dh~ 1

t hL· ~(111 1 e, aUtlm~

he

expected to pl.1y 111 th e sc..·ries
tin.1k 011 Thursday.
Gn tl~·y\ repLi cL·m ent in the
No .1 slot. Ill - homer npn
_M1 . . h.IL·I Tu cker, st ru~.·k out
tW I LL' .l!ld ground ed out tw.in·.
Tb,· other .half . of the st,Jr
m.Jtchu p. M:1rk McGwlfe, was
11- flJl - 2 "'th .1 p.ur of walks.
l-kmgl'll (7-6) wa'\ •Hewing 111
the dugout .1 ftc:r giving up a
g.l !llt.'- tylllg two -run h o m er to
Se.111 C.J'-t'Y WJth two o uts in the
tnp n( the seventh Then Dun Sill II broke the tie on a 2-2 p1tch
ti·on 1 l'"te Harnisch ( 1-5).
" I \\',Is JUSt mad at mysdf
bcc.nJ.;,L· I lud ,1 tw~J - run lt'ad
.111d I g.t\'L' up .1 two- run bomb.
.llld tlut 's not good pttLhin g,''
Hent gcll ~ud "That'i\ not w hat a
\ \ ' 11111 1 11~ pnr hc r dot·s that late m
the g.lllll'. ,m d that's what madt.•
lilt' qi fi-u,tr.Ht'li."
I kl H !!:L' H .tnJ manager Tony
I .1 RuS&gt;cl .absolwd lelt tiddcr
R.1y L.111kto rd of any bl.!n1&lt;' in
the R,·d1' comeback . L.mkturd
·lf'~'L',11 t.'d to turn the wrong way

\ \ l' l'l' \\

(;1 dli.:~ j 1.. .1 l . ll ~'

Please see Rfds, Page 'B l

�~----

•

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel -

NATIONAL LEAGUE
I

A

-

,.l!'u~ay, July 6, 2000

"Qnc~

you hit the t~iple, that's the hardest thing
to
do,
and
you know you have the chance," Gonza.At this rate, baseball will have more .cyclists than
lez said.
· that tour in France.
Travis
Lee,
Steve
Finley
and
Damian
Miller
had
- Luis Gonzalez became the first Arizona player to
. hit for the cycle, going on the Tour de En ron against three hits each for Arizona, which outhit the'Astros
\ his former team Wednesday night as the Diamond- 16-I!J.
Mike Morgan (4-2) won despite allowing two
backs beat the Houston Astros 12-9.
"To know that only 200-some guys have done it runs and three hits in two innings.
Expos 6, Braves 5
in history makes it special," Gonzalez said. .
Kevin Millwood (5-7) gave up run-scoring singles
Gonzalez, who went 4-for-6, was the '229th player to hit for the cycle in major league history, and to Randell White and Vladimir Guerrero as Monthe fifth this season. Mike· Lansing of Colorado treal broke out of a seven't h-inning tie at Turne-r
Oune 18 vs. Arizona), Jose Valentin of the Chicago Field. Millwood allowed five runs and 10 hits in 6 2·
White Sox (April 27 vs. Baltimore),Jason Kendall of 3 innings.
Javier Vazquez (7 -4) won for the first time since
Pittsburgh (May 19 vs. St. Louis) and Eric Chavez of
Oaloland Oune 21 vs. Baltimore) also clid iHhis sea- beating Cincinnati on June I, allowing three runs,
six hits and four walks in six-plus innings.
son.
Dodgers 7, Padres 5
The most cycles ever in one season was eight in
Todd Hundley hit a tying three-run homer in the
1933, accorcling to the Elias Sports Bureau, baseball's
sixth and Eric Karros had a go-ahead, two-run sliot
statistician.
Gonzalez doubled in the first inning, si!\gled in in the eighth off Mat\ Whiteside (2-2) as Los Angethe third, tripled in the eighth and h~mered in the les rallied from a 5-0 deficit at Sari Diego.
Starter Darren Dreifort started the Dodgers'
ninth off Butch Henry.

.

comeback with a solo homer in the fifth, b11t didn't
get the decision. Antonio Osuna (1-4) pitched two
scoreless innings and Mike Fetters got his second
save.
Pirates 9, Cubs 6
Wil Cordero had two homers and a· career-high
six RBis at Wrigley Field. He started with a threerun homer in the third off Scott Downs (3-3): then
;~dded a two-run single in rhe fourtli and a solo
homer in the sixth off Steve Rain.
Jimmy Anderson (2-5) won for the first time in
nine starts since April 15 against the Mets, allowing
four runs - three earned - five hits and three
walks in five innings.
Downs (3-3) gave up seven .runs a,nd eight hits in
four innings as the Cubs lost for the 12th time in 16
games.
Mets 11, Marlins 2
Mike Hampton (8~5) had went 3-for-4 with an
RBI and won for the sixth time in seven decisions,
allowing two runs - one earned - and three hits
in six innings.
.
~
Derek Bell hit a three-run homer for the second

I

'

Junior Circuit action heats up as T~xas,
.Boston,
Cleveland and New York win
.
'

and Ed Sprague, Nomar Garciaparra and Frye
If the playoffS .started Thursday, none o( the- had two each.
:AL teams who made it last year would be
"It's nice to score 30 runs in three games,"
;playing to get to the World Series.
Spr.~gue said. "We've 'been swinging the bat
: But Texas, Boston, Cleveland and the New well." '
:York Yankees can't be wrinen off just yet.
John Wasdin (1-3) gave up one hit in 4 1-3
:Each of the recent AL powerhouses continued innings of relief fo-r his first win of the season.
;offensive surges Wednesday night.
Indians 15, Blue Jays 7
· The Rangers completed a threll-game
Russell Bra!lyan's three-run homer high:sweep of Oakland with a 9-4 win; the Red lighted a six-run fifth inning for Cleveland,
:sox won their third straight in a four-game the five-time AL Central winners.
'series at Minnesota, 11-8; the Indians domiBranyan's third homer in two games put the
; n~tedAL East-leading Toronto for the second Indians up 8-7 and sent them to their first
;straight night, 15-7; and the Yankees doubled ' three-game winning streak since June 5-7.
·Baltimore 12-6.
Cleveland has won two straight following
:- Texas converted a first-inning fielding error _,manager Charlie Manuel's decision to redec-by Oakland starter Mark Mulder into seven ()rate the clu\&gt;hol!se. The_l!!dians have s_cored
• · :unearned runs to back Kenny Rogers (9-5), 24 runs on 25 hits in two games.
:who won his sixth straight game.
Jamie Brewington (2-0) pitched 2 2-3 hit: Each Texas starter had at least one' hit. The less innings.
;Rangers finished with 17, three each by
Cleveland scored four runs in the fourth, six
:Rafael Palmeiro, David egui and Mike in the fifth !- four off Paul Quantrill (0-4) ;Lamb, and scored 27 runs in the three-game and five more in the seventh for its highest
-- sweep.•
---; - -- • run total since May[ I ~ - · - . ·
Despite five. straight victories over Oakland
"Everybody says Cleveland is struggling,"
since last week, the two-time defending AL Toronto starter Roy Halladay said. "-5ome:West champion Rangers remain in last place. times it takes getting a lot of hits like those to
· :The Athletics have lost seven of eight to fall get you going. It did tonight."
,out of the division lead.
Yankees 12, Orioles 6
Red Sox 11, '!Wins 8
Andy Pe!!i!!e (9-_4) took shutout into the
Jeff Frye hit his first home run in more than seventh inning for his second straight strong
a year, and· seldom-used Scott Hatteberg had a start as the two-time World Series champions
three-run homer for Boston, last yeaN-wild avoided their longest home losing streak in 11
card. .
years.
"
· Boslon's offense- ranked lOth or 11th in
Despite being nine games under .500 since
the American League in most major cate- May 9, the Yankees are only a half-game
gories - awoke in a big way. In the first three behind Totonto in the AL East.
games against the Twins, the Red Sox have
"It's strange," Yankees manager Joe Tor"'
scored 36 runs and hit 10 home runs.
said. "The way we've been playing with the
"It was spread all the way up and down the wins and losses over the last month and a half,
lineup," Boston manager Jimy Williams said. "I we have no right to be that close to first place.
always felt we .have good hi!!ers on this team." What y;e have to do it take advantage of it."
Every Boston starter had at least one hit,
·Scott Brosius hit a three-run homer in the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

a

second and an RBI single in a six-ru n sixth as
New York took a I 0-0 lead.
Devil _Rays 4, Tigers 1
Ozzie Guillen snapped a sixth-inping tie
with a, two-run homer as Tampa ~ay · won at
hom~ and stopped Detroit's season-high, fivegame winning streak.
Bryan Rekar (3-4) allowe~ seven hits in 6
1-3 iljnings for his first win in six starts since
June I. Roberto Hernandez got his 12th save.
Guillen's homer, off Jeff Weaver (5-7),
snapped a 1-1 tie and ruined the Tigers' bid to
sweep consecutive three-game series for the
first time since April 1990.
White Sox 6, Royals l
In Kansas City, Herbert Perry hit a two-run
h.Qmer. ill ,.the 13th inning and Mark Johnson
followed with a solo shot 'for Chicago off
Doug Bochtler (0-1).
Kelly Wunsch (3-2) pitched two •shutout
innings for the. win.
Rey Sanchez went 4~for-7 for Kansas City.
__Kansas C ity !ed 3-2 before _Paul -Konerko
homered in the eighth off Dan Reichert, who
allowed eight hits in a career-high eight
mmngs.
Dave McCarty had RBI doubles in the
fourth and six th innings for the Royals.
·'
Mariners 6, Angels 4
Alex Rodriguez hit two homers and David
Bell added a three- run shot for the Mariners,
who extended their AL West lead to ~ 112
games over Oakland and seven over the host
Angels.
John Halama (8-4) allowed four run s two earned- and nine hits in 5 2-3 innings,
striking out s1x with one walk.
Kazuhiro Sasaki got three outs for his 18th
save in 20 chances.
Brian Cooper (3-3) was -chased during a
four-run fifth that included Rodriguez's 24th
homer and Bell's sixth.

\..

Hubbard

theeventual winners.
With three runs in, C hapman
came on to fan two and walk one
as Home Medical cut the score to
Page 81
9-8.
three strikeouts.
Southern then broke it open in
Southern came back with four the fifth with four big hits from
runs to take a 5-1 lead. Darin Teaford, Marnhout, Everi!! and
Teaford walked, Butch Marnhout Pape. C hapman then retired the
singled, Chapman sirrgled, TraviS side in the last two innings to
Everitt singled and eventually secure the win. ·
scored on a 6-3 ground out and a
Johnson got the win with nine
passed ball.
strikeouts and six walks. He gave
Southern's leaping was erased up threehits. Chapman had four
in the bottom of the inning when strike outs and one walk in gainBrandon Warner s1ngled, Travis ing the save.
Bonecutter and Edward Johnson
Kenny Durham, Edward Johneach walked and Chtis Cook son, and Jared Casey combined in
smacked a two- runsingle.
th~ loss for Point.
Another walk and passed ball
In the second game of the
brought home Johnson to make night, Green, who filled- in for a
the score 5- 4.
departing Bidwell team, defeat~d
Johnson settled down to again Pomeroy, 10-4.
strike out the side, posting eight
Green, one of Gallia County's
strikeouts in just_three innings of top teams, scored two runs in the
work .
first inning when Greg Russell
Southern went up 9-4 in" the and Mathew Mooney each sinfourth inning. Jacob Hunter and gled and scored on a Randy
Josh Pape walked and reached on Saunders Single.
Pomeroy took a 3-2 lead in the
a h!t pitch, then Teaford walked
with one out to load the bases. bonom half the inning when
Munhout singled home two and Bradley Ramsburg, Brad Soulsby,
two more came in on Point Daylon Jenkins and Clayton
Blaekston each singled. Their
Pleasant errors.
Despite striking out another hard-hitting knocked Russell out
batter, Johnson suffered some o( the box without an out and
control problems in the Point Jackie Glassburn came on to
' rourth as he yielded the way to extinguish the fire. ·
Green regained the lead in the
-Chapman after getting' three and
a third quality inning. in for second inning when 'JYler Potter

from

I

straight game and went 3-for-6 with three runs
scored at Miami.
· ·
Chuck Smith (0-2), a 30-yeat-old rookie, allowed
five runs - two earned - and eight hits in five
' •"

Giants 4, Rockies 2
Rich Aurilia hit a two-run homer and Ma~in
Benard added a solo shot as Colorado lost its 11th
straight at San Francisco.
· ·
Joe Nathan (5-2) became the third straight Gia~~·
pitcher to sh ut down Colorado, allowmg two tim's
and six hits in eight inning.. Felix Rodriguez
pitched the ninth for his second save.
·,
Stan Belinda (1-2) came in to start the seven'th
and failed to get an out while allowing three rutis
and three hits.
Phillies 5, Brewers 2
Mike Lieberthal hit a three-run homer off Jamey
Wright (4-2) in a four-Tun fifth at County Stadium.
Randy Wolf (8-5) allowed one run and five hits in
seven innings, striking out seVen as Philadelphia
won its season-high fifth straight. Wayne Gomes gtic
the final out for his seventh save.
· '

'

Circa 1970 this writer had a
special memory of the tournament as a player. Racine pitcher
-].F. Young hurled a no-hitter onljl
to get beat 2-1 in a heartbreakmg
·
Son Jim pitched four no-hitters performance.
Memories such as this live q,
in one season at Southern, and
this year grandson Chad Hubbard the minds of 1uany youngsters in
was a crucial part of the Southern the immediate Tri-county area
Tornadoes' success.
and beyonp.

Tribute

AMERICAN LEAGUE

was hit with a pitch, Wesley Jackson walked. Greg Russell reached
on an error and Mooneyhad an
RBI single to make the score; 4-

3.
A 'single run, fabricated from a
pair of Jackie Glassbum and Potter singles, gave Green a S-3 pad
before Pomeroy's Anthony Shamblin was hit by apitch and ~cored
on an Andy Garnes single to cut
the gap to 5-4.
Green then stretched its lead
going down the home stretch and
coasted to the win. Davis and

Jenkins combined in the Pomeroy
loss, 'fhile Glassburn got the win
ih relief of Russell .
Robiuson got the save in relief
as the duo combined for 13
Strikeouts.
The final game of the night was
quite a thriller as Middleport's
Astros broke from a 2- 2 tie to
clai_m an exciting 7-4 win over
Point Pleasant Nationwide.
Nationwide took a 1-0 lead in
the bottom of the first inning
when James Casto singled and
scored on a Johnny Wamsley sin.
gle.
·- Middleport took a 2-1 lead
when 'JYler Wayland singled and
scored when Travis Butcher
reached on an error. Butcher then
scored on · a passed ball to give
Middleport the lead:
Nationwide tied -the score in
the second. when Jacob Wroten
walked and scored on a ground

•

out by Brent Hereford.
The tie didn't last long.
Middleport took a 6-2 lead in
the top of the third when David
Poole and Wayland each singled,
Joel Lynch walked and Butcher
pulled the trigger on a three run
triple.
He then came home on a
passed ball , the score h-2 .
Point didn 't lose its spark as it
again tightened the score to 6-4.
Casto singled and Richie Wyant
doubled him home. Wyant then
scored on a passed ball.
Point's , Bobby Errett made a
great catch in center field that
could have led to a big second
innirig by Middleport. At this
point, the Middleport pitching
got tough.
Tim Dexter shut the door on a
fourth inning threat from Point,
then reliever Eric VanMeter came
on to stnkeout five of the six bat- ·
tets he faced in the last two
innings.
Dexter took the win and VanMeter the save. Together they
fanned eleven.
Despite pitching well, Justin
Cullen and Johnny Wamsley suffered the loss.
Action continues tonight as
Rio Grande takes on Point Pleasant Hardware at 6 p.m.: &lt;;:hester
meets New Haven at 7:15, and
Bidwell I meets the Middleport
Reds in the 8:30 nightcap.

from Pap II

Softball
fromPapBI
victory to remain undefeated
with Fellowship Chapel. "
In the men'sgame, First rolled
to the 21 -7 victory over Living
Water. First used a great defensive effort by Morgan Sullivan,
· and Jason Bryan reached base in
all three at bats.
Also in action at OOMPD
fields, Rodney Methodist took
on the Nazarene Church.
In the men's game, Rodney
pi€ ked -up it~-second victory in
arow with a 18-5 win over the
Nazarene Church.
Rodney was led by some great
defensive play _at shortstop by

'

Mike Hemphill, at second bai-:
by Bradley Cauclill, and in left
field by Eric Whitt.
'
Also Ed Caudill was 5-for- 5
with two runs scored, and Dale
'Whitt was 5-for-5 with three
runs scored.
In action at· the Vinton Park
fields, Fellowship C hapel took
on the Middleport Church · tlf
Christ.
In the women's game, -Fello""ship picked up the forfeit win to
remain undefeated on the season.
· In the men's game, Middlephr't
picked up its third victory in a
row wirh · a 20~5 victory avet
Fellowship.
-- · •
With the win, Middleport
remains close in the race for ·c.,;,
regular season crown. ·
'

Reds

fromPapBI
- the baner before Casey's
homer, and Dante Bichette's fly
ball fell for a double at the
warning track.
"That's a pretty tough ball to
start going back on," La Russa
said . "You don't get a good
read."
Hentgen matched his longest
outing of the season, allowing
three runs on five hits.
In his previ,pus start, also
against the Reds, he allowed two
hits in five scoreless innings.
Jn h'is second start since comin g otT the disabled li st for a sore
rotator cuff, Harnisch allowed
four runs - two earned - on
five hits in seven innings. He
wanted one pitch back.
" It was just tou gh coming on
the heels of Casey's home run,"
Harnisch said. "It was such a big

'

swing and to put us right back
pown again, it deflated every~
body."
-·
J.D. Drew also homered as th~
Cardinals played without J.im
Edmonds, at home with stomach
flu .
'
Edmonds' replacement in the
outfield, Thomas Howard, had
an RBI sin gle in the first.
,
Drew homered for the seco.ri4
straight start, and Edgar Rente~
ria added a sacrifice fly in a tworun fifth as the Cardinals took,
3-1 lead.
Matt Morris worked tl)e
eighth and Dave Veres got two
outs for his 19th save in .21
chances.
·
Chris Stynes, who repla~e4
the injured Aaron Boone at third
base after two innings, als'?
homered for the Reds.
Boone hyperextended hi;
righf knee when he bumped
into Barry Larkin as the short~
stop caught a soft liner by Hep't+
gen to end the second.
·

a

.tO face up$tart Voltchkov in Friday's semifinals
, WIMBLEDON, E~gland (AP) -VladimirVoltchkov wears borrowed shorts and. donated shoes. He learned to play te nnis outside
:a car factory in Minsk. He has a world ranking of 247 _
. Oh, and by the way, Voltchkov is one match away f~om the final
at Wimbledon .
· Pete Samp~as is there. So is Andre Agassi and .P atrick Rafter.
. But Vb:dimir Voltchkov?
,, - The 22'- year- old Voltchkov, from the former S_oviet republi c of
Belacus, made history by becoming the lowest-ranked player ever
~0 reach the semifinals at Wimbledon and the first qualifier to make
\pe men's final four since John McEnroe in 197_7 _
.. Now Voltchkov gets to face the top-seeded Sampras, the grasscourt master chasing his seventh Wimbledon title and record 13th
, C~and Slam championship: Agassi will play Rafter in Friday's other
,,semifinal.
'
The women's semifinals were' set for Thursday, featuring the allsister showdown, between Venus and Serena Williams _ Defending
&lt;;pam pion Lindsay Davenport plays unseeded 17 - year-old Jelena
bokic in the other match.
;. : '.' It's like a &lt;;lream," Vojtchkov &gt;aid aft~r beating Byron Black m
,straight sets in Wednesday's quart-ers. "When I think about playing
,the semifinals at Wimbledon against Pete, probably the greatest
player ever, there is nothing more you can really wish for."
Voltchkov is no stranger ro success at the All England Club, havIng won the Wimbledon junior title in 1996. But he hadn't done
.much since, laboring mostly on the lower-tier challenger circuit
-and playing for Belarus in Davis Cup.
' Voltchkov hadn't playe~ a single senior-level tournament all year
·-Until advancmg through· the qualifying rounds to make it into the
·Wimbledon draw. .
"I guess it's pretty simple," he said. "The surface suits my game
•perfectly. I like to hit the ball flat. I like to have the ball pretty low."
1 While Sampras and other top players get paid milhons in cloth-

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"It gal'e me som~ inspiratio11. Today I felt like I
was in a 1~reat arena ott Court 1. It's J!Oing to
.feel probablr be_tter l(' .!!o on Ceutre Co11rt
against Pete. But I'm a I itt/(• bit scared of
that."
Vladimir YoKohkov

ing and shoe endorsements, Vohchkov has to scrounge for some1
thing to wear.
On Wednesday, he wore shorts and a shin from ri'val sportswear
companies. The shorts were borrowed from Russian player Marat
Safin.
"I guess the shorts and tops did their JOb pretty well." he said.
Last wcek,Voltchkov wore shoes donated by one company. A rival
footwear firm ptQVided two pairs for Wednesday's match.
''I'll give him some hardcourt shoes," Sampras md jokingly. ''I
won 't give him any grass"court shoes."
Voltchkov has been staying in a rented apartment with fellow
Belarussian Max Mirnyi, with Voltchkov's father doing rhe cooking. He's been to see the movie "Gladiator" four times during the
to.u rnamcnt.
" It gave me some inspiration,"Voltchkov said. "Today I felt like I
was in a great arena on Court 1. It's going to feel probably better
to go on Centre Court against Pete. But I'm a little bit scared of
that."
Voltchkov's earnings through the end of last year totaled
$174,733 . By reaching the se mis here, he's guaranteed $180,000. He
would double that in the improbable event he beats -Sampras, and

walk away with a cool $720,000 if he should somehow win the
tournament.
"I just hope to go out there and play weU,"Voltchkov said. "If it's
good enough to make 'ompetition for (Sampras), I'll be really
happy."
• Sampras isn't taking him lighrly.
"He's proven to be a great player," Sampras sa1d . "He's going to
be very confident, with nothing to lose. Everybody is a threat and
anything can happen."
•
Sampras has made it to the semis without fa cing a seeded player.
If he beats Voltchkov, he'll be the· first to rea ch the final without
meeting a seed since John McEnroe in \98 i, th e year he beat Bjorn
Borg for the ti tie.
Sampras looked sluggish Wednesday in h11 6- 4 , 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-4
win over Jan - Michael Gambill, whom he pmsed as "the future of
American ten"nis."
Sampras, who has been receiving treaunent for tendinitis above
his left ankle and skipping practice betwecr&gt; matches, was downbeat.
"It's definitely been a tough week," he said. "You go through an
emotional roller-coaster with your good days and your bad days. It's
not an ideal situation for me."
Agassi and Rafter have shown the best form so far. Agassi beat
Rafter's Australian compatriot, Mark Philippoussis, 7-6 (4), 6-3,64 in their quarterfinal, and Rafter downed Alexander Popp 6-3, 62,7-6 (1).
'
Agassi beat Rafter, a classic serve-and-volleyer, in their semifinals
at Wimbledon a year ago. This time, Rafter, a two-time U.S. Open
champion, hopes he can turn the tables.
"You hope Andre has one of his bad days," Rafter said. "He's
playing good tennis to beat Mark . ... I'm going to have to step that
notch up again . There's no wea-kness in Andre at alL"

1.'" .

:Armstrong

Get Your Vacation Pak while

'third in race

:standings
VITRE, France (AP) -With a
'ljUarter of the Tour de France virtually over, the race is looking
good for past winners Lance
'Armstrong, Marco Pantani and
Jal) Ullrich.
.• · The three men won the 1999,
l\198 and 1997 ·tours, and despite
failing to win a stage this year,
-t)ley are sitting just behind the
Jeaders, confident as the race starts
·-l9, head south toward thcnmufltains.
, /l.rmstrong, who rides for the
JJ.S. Postal Service, is undoubtedly in the best position of the
thre_e, with few question marks
hanging over his form and,fitness-.
_ The 28-year-old Texan ,i,s third
it) the overall standings, 14 secorjds behind France's Laurent Jalabert, who has held the leader's
:yellow jersey fon two days. His
y~p says he's holding back until
'rhe Pyrenees mountains, where
_he hopes to take control of the •
face.
-- · Ullrich, a 26- year- old rider for
peutsche 'felekom, should also ·
thrive in .the mountains. As so
often before, he has hat! weight
problems coming into the race,
ano a ciash diet has raised questions about his stamina . But the
G~rman has lllade it to the podipm all three times he has taken
part in the Tour de France.
He's curren tly 12th, 57 seconds
behind Jalabert.
· the most unpredictable of the
'three is Pantani. who is languishing in 79th place, 5 minutes, 26
seconds behind Jalabert. But
given the 30-ycar-old Italian's
p'rowcss in the mountain stages,
few are "counting him out. His
rivals know from experience that
he could wipe away a deficit with
one trademark burst on the high

fj~~dfirst mountain st:ge is on

Sponsored By:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

WIMBLEDON 2000
.

luis Gonzalez hits for cycle -against Houston:
' BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pomeroy, Mlddl~port, Ohio

--

Thursday, July 6, 2000

itP11day in the Pyrenees. Later,
~- head to the Alps. ·
:: ln the meantime, the stage is set
::f'D!;sprint specialists.
1
li"'Qn Wednesday, Germany's
~reel Wust took the spotl•ght.
: In a sprint finish· _in the
:medieval town of Vitre m Brit: tany, the Festina (ider narrowly
:beat compatriot Eri'k Zabel of
:Deutsche Telekom.
; Wust won by mches after a la te
i burst. He clocked a time of 4
Ihours, 19 minutes , 5 st conds.
:Italy's Stefano Zanini of the
: Mapei team was third.
: Armstrong finished in 25th
' place and trimmed 10 seconds off
:Jalaberr's advantage, but remain ed
:in third. He is now 14 seconds
!bfhind the Frenchm an.
: Jalabert, wearing yellow for the
;first time in five years, was 59th,
:but . r~ tained the yellow Jersey
j goin~ ' into ~hurs da y's Sla f(c .
iSpam s D av1d Canada of O nce 1s
:second.
: Today's stage covered 123 miks
Jrom Vitre to Tours.

.

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�Pomeroy Middleport OhiQ

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio
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es

Glveal!lay

All G ~eewey A.dt Muet
Be Paid n Advance
TR~UNE DEAQLINE 2 00 p m
he day berore the ad
II 0 run Sunday
&amp; Monday ed lon
2 00pmFiday
SENT NEL DEADLINE
1 OOpm hedaybeore head
1 to run Sundey &amp; Monday
ed lion
00 p m Friday
REG STEA DEADLINE
2 Clayt tii!fOre tna ed'
etorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Mond~ eel on
4 30 p m Thursdly

BOTH POSIT ONS
A leas 25Veas0d
A leas 2 Years Expenen e

95

Public Notice

Good MVA

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Weeky Pay
Heah saceAalable
Wo k We W h The Pli:l c
Fa Mo e n o ma on Ca 800
437 8 64 Hs 8 30AM 5PM

Help Wanted

11 0

:&gt; Bed ooms 2 Sa h
Loaded Ju $699
Wo
as Oa
40 446 3093

l

PUBLIC NOTICE
The VI age of Middleport
will hold a public hearing
lor
the
year
2001
~rellmlnary budget an July
10 2000 at 7 30 p m In

ose
6308

council chambere The
propoaad budget
a
currenlly avallabla lor
public lntpocllon In the
office
of
the
Cleri((Treaaurer
~:jj:"T,:;;,:;;:-~r;;;~;=-::~ l
Bryan Swann
7
Clirli!Traaauror
(7)6 102tc

JET
AEAAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu n S ck
Ca Ron E a s

800 53 9528

O..d ner subjctct 10 chlnge
due oliO

d~r

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT

T ME

FROM

HOME

Public Notice

BOO 5 0 53

ALL Waned To Do Ads Mus

Lost and Found

A.I..L Los

PART

NO EXPE A ENCE AE

OU RED

60

94

In Memory of

days-"" ad

40

9

ln. Memory

1 orunby430pm

1.EGAL NOTICE
The budget lo the year
200f can be viewed at tho
Commloa one a
011 ce
Me ga County Coun Houao
from 7 7 00 thru 7 21 00
between the hours of 8 30
am and430am
(7)6 132tC

Be Pa d n Advance
TR BUNE DEADliNE 2 00 p m
the day be o e he ad
s o un S nday l!,; Monday
ed on 200pm F day
SENT NE DEADLINE
00 p m he day befo e the ad
1 to un Sunday &amp; Monday
eel on 1 OOpm F day

&amp; Found Ads Mue

Be Paid n Advance
TR BUNE QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
he day before the ad
110 run Sunday &amp; Mondly

edt on 200pm F day
SEN NEL OEAQL!NE
1 OOpm hedaybeore head
1 to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edt on 1 OOpm F day

REG STER DEADLINE
2 days beta e the ad
1 o unby430pm
sa u day &amp; Monday ed t on
4 30 p m Thursday
Dead nes sub ec o change
due o flO days

REG STEA QEAQLINE
2 day• betore he ad
1 o unby4 30pm
Saturday &amp; Monday ed t on

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Th a Ia to notify tho genera
public that tho 2000 2001
budget lor tho v llage or
Rutland Rulland Ohio wll
be ava !able !or public
rtvlew and comment f om
June 26 2000 unt July 10
2000 at the Rut and v !ago
office
(6)27 28 29 30
(7)2 3 56 79101c

230
New
m
A

4 30 p m Thursday

DeBd nes sub ect o cMnge

6 80 3BR 2BA $268 pe
ow Dow Payme
ee
F ee De e
888 928
h

3426

Que o ho dsya

New Daub ew de 3 BR 2BA
$2 6pe m nh t.pw D w Pay
me
F ee A F ee De e
868 928 3426

Public Notice
ed PhO og a

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e $200
26

o
URN EO DOWN ON

SOC AL SECUR TY ISS
ATTENT ON
Ea n On ne ncome

$500 $7 500 !Mo h
www pcpays com

610 Farm Equipment

PUBLIC NOnCE
The
fo ow ng
applications and or verlf ad
complaints were received
and tho following dralt

proposed or f na actions
were ltaued by the Ohio
Environmental Protect on
Agency (OEPA) laat week
Acllont
Include tile
adoption modll cation or
repea of ordert (other then
emergency orders) the
luuanco
denial

REAL ESTATE
SLAND V EW MOTEL
Rt7Gapoa0ho

-0·

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

'
§
J!
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Public Notice

Public Notice

mod flcetlon or revocation Aa The Environmental
Board Of Review) by a
varlancea or cartlllcatea porton who waa a party to a
and the approval or proceeding belare the
d 11pprova1 ol plano and d rector by filing an appaa
epee llcatlono
Draft whh n 30 daya al notice of
Actions
1re written the f nal action Pursuant to
etatomonta ol lhe Director Ohio Revlaed Code Section
of
Environment•
3745 07 a final action
Protection a (Director o) taulng
denying
Intent with rtoptct to the modifying revok ng or
l1auance denla etc of a renew ng a permit license
permit llcen.. order etc or var anca which Is not
lnterealed persona may p ecodad by a proposed
eubmlt wr tten comments or act on may be appealed to
requeal a pub lc meeting the ERAC by Ill ng an
regarding dralt aetlona appeal with n 30 days or
Commenta or public ssuance of the tlnal action
meet ng requeata muet be ERAC appeala muat be flied
aubmiHed wllhln 30 days ol w th Environments Rev ew
notlco or the dralt act on Appeals Comm oa on 236
Propoaed actlono ora East Town Street Room
written atattmenta of the 300 Columbua Ohio 43216
director •
lnteltl
with A copy of the appeal muat
reopect lo the lsauance ba eerved on the Director
dania
modlllcat on within 3 !llya after f ling tho
revocation or renewal of a appeal with tho ERAC
permit llcenaa or variance
F nal Issuance of renawa
Written comments and of NPDES Perm t
requeals for a public
Southern Oh a Coal Co
meeting regarding a
General Office Build ng
propoeu TCIIon may be
Rt 3 o.n St Rt 689
Albany OH
aubm tted wllhln 30 days or
notice of tho proposed
Issue Date 08 01 2000
Receiving Waters
action An adjudlcat on
hearing may be held on a
Bruah Fo k Run
propattd action If a hearing
Fac lily Oloc lptlon
requaot or objection Ia
ndustrlal Sewage
reco ved by the OEPA within
Permit No 0 M00003'DD
30 daya of laauance of the This f nal action not
propoaed action Written preceded by proposed
commtnta raquasta for acllon and Is appea able to
pub c meetings
and ERAC
adlud cat on
hearing County Meigs
Southern Oh a Coal Co
requests muat ba sent to
Hearing
C ark
Ohio
Meigs Mine 2
Environmental Protection 3 Miles SE of Point Rock on
51 At 669
Agency P 0 Box 1049
Polnl Rock Oh
Columbus Ohio 43216-1049
saue Date 08 01 2000
(Telephone 614 644 2129)
Receiving Waters
Final Act one are act one
Ogden Run
of lho dlrocto which are
effective upon esuance o a
Facility Descrlpllon
coal Washer
otated elfect vo date
Purauant to On o Rev aod
Pe mit No 0 L00028 DO
Coda Section 3745 04 a This final act on not
flna
action may be preceded by proposed
appealed
to
the act on and Is appealable to
Env ronmental Rev ew ERAC
Appeala
Comm 11 an
Southern Ohio Coo Co
(ERAC) (Formerly Known
Meigs M ne 3
of llcaneae permits leases

110

Public Notice

Public Notice

SR 124 3 mlloo E of
W lkeavllle
Langsville Oh
IIIUO Ooto 08 01 2000
Race v ng Watera
Parker Run
Facility Daacrlptlon
CoaiWsohar
Permll No 0 L00027"ED
This f no ! oct on not
l'recedod by propoaed
action and s appealable to
ERAC
(7)6

oouth on Ina line of told
Road 50 feet thence Wtot
up lhe hill to whal wu
formerly Montague a Llna
thence with told line North
50 foot thence down tht hill
to the place or beginning
being tho aame premluo
conveyed by Nellie Karr and
Dana Kerr to Phillip
Kre oelmeler by dood
recorded In Vo 94 page
176 and 177 of the recorda
of Oeede In the Recorder •
Office Mega Call!lty Ohio
The ~etllloner further
alleges that by re. .on or
default ol tho Defendant (I)
In the payment of a
promissory note according
lo Ia tenor the conditione o
f a concurrent mortgage
&lt;In&lt;! given lo tecure the
payment of aald note and
convey ng the preml•••
described have bttn
broken and the aame hea
become aboolute
Tho Petit anor prays lhal
the Defendant (o) named
abJJ\18 be required to
answer and eet up their
ntereat In aa d real estate
o be forever barred from
asserting tha same for
foreclosure
of
said
mortgage the marshaling ol
any I ens and the sale of
sa d r~ta aatate and the
p ocaeds of said sale
applied to lhe payment ol
Pelltloner 1 claim In tho
proper order ol Ito prior ty
and lor ouch other and
further re ef as Ia Just end
equ table
Tho Oelendant (o) named
above are required to
answer on or before the
17th day ol August 2000
By Donn a Relmar Co
LPA
Conseco Finane a
Dennie Re me
Attorney at Law
Attorney for
P a nt ff Petitioner
PO Box968
Twinsburg Oh 44087
(330) 425-4201
(6) 15 22 29 (7) 6 13 20
6 tc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOnCE
ROGER PARTLOW LORI
LAFFERTY JOHN DOE
Unknown spouse If any of
LORI LAFFERTY
LORI
~AMES 11nH JOHN D'Oli
Unknown Spouse t any of
LORI JAMES whoso laot
place of rea dance s known
aa 32755 State Route 33
Pomeroy OH 45769 but
whose present place of
residence s unknown will
take not co that on February
14 2000 @ 11 23 p m
CONSECO BANK INC I ad
lla Complaint n Caae No
00 CV 015 In tho Court ol
Common Pleas Meigs
County Ohio al og ng that
tho Defendant (s) ROGER
PARTLOW
L0 RI
LAFFER~
JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LORI LAFFERTY LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LORI JAMES have or claim
to have an Interest In lho
eal eatale dooc lbad below
The fo owing rea estate
situated n tho County of
Me gs State of Oh o and
be ng a part of Sactlon No
8 town 2 Range 13 al the
Oh o company a Pu chase
and bounded as fo ows
Boglnn ng on tho West side
or the road lead ng trom
Pome oy to Athens at a
po nt distant 100 fool
Southerly
I om
the
Southeast carne of a tract
lately owned by Peter
Jero eman thence running

Help Wanted

RN/LPN &amp; STNA
The 8ehav1oral Health Unrt (Inner
Reflections) and Skilled Nursrng Fatthty
(SNFI at Veterans memonal Hosp1tal
have 1mmed1ate opemngs for part lime
and full t1me or Per D1em Reg1stered
Nurses LICensed Pract1cal Nurses State
Tested Nursrng Assistants Genatr1c
and/ or Psych Exper1ence preferred
Those mterested please contact Human
Resources at 740 992 2104 ext 201 to
arrange mtervJews

FINANCIAL

let Your MeSial• Acrou
With ADallr Sentl..l

BULLETIN BOARD

'I" coluMn
Inch weelnlar•
11
110

CAlL

Home Deco at ng Open House
Sat ,Ju y 8 (8 am lo 6 pm)
G eat Red ucl ons Doo Pr zes
Glo aOie
31645 St Rt 325 Langsv lie Oh

740 742 2076

AL2HE MER S FACT #6
WANTED Buckeye Commun ty Services has
a part t me post on ava lab e n Me1gs County
33 hr/wk 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon seep over
requ ed Post on requ res teach ng personal
and commun ty sk lis to nd v duals w th mental
retardation The work env ronment s nformal
and reward ng The requ rements are h gh
schoo d plomaJGED va d d ver s I cense
three years good dr v ng exper ence and
adequate automob e nsurance cove age
B C S offers comprehens ve trarn1ng n the
f eld of MA/DD Interested appl cants need to
spec fy pos lion of nterest and send resume to
P 0 Box 604 Jackson Oh 45640 0604 All
appl cat ons must be post marked by 7 11 /00
Equal Opp01;tun ty Employer

Safe Retu n s a spec a p og am
tha ass s s n the sale re u n
home of nd v dua s w lh
Alzhe me s d sease who wanda
and become os t s sponsored
by he Nat on a A zhe me s
Assoc at on Reg st al on forms
can be abla ned by ca ng Seen c
H I s Nu s ng Cente
Ask to Ke ly Bryant o Pam
Jones (740) 446 7150
Mo e quest ons? Ca the
Alzhe me s p oless dna s at
Seen c H Is Nu s ng Cente fo
mo e nlo mal on
(740) 446 7150
Seen c H Is
The A zhe me s Experts

�•

'

r•.q r

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

' Thursday, July 6, 2000·
.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

-

The Dally Sentinel • Page B

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

SMITH'S COrtSTROCTIOrt

Home lmprovamenta done by
'

.

CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING

• New Homee
• Garages
• Siding

204 N. 2nd Ave.
Middlpport, OH 45760
Rentals
Apts, Home Trailers,
· Janitorial-Maid Residential or Commercial
Maintenance
Residential or Commercial
Home Repairs
Interior &amp; Exterior
Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
·
We work Man-Sat 9 • 5 pm
end w11 do accept emergency calls
Cll fer Ritts 1-740·992-4514 1-74CI-742-7403 Evenings

IUIUIIIEED
Ill COIIDinONING
SEIVICE
(304) 112·2079
N-Haven WV

Need It ,done, gtvl

o•H

ut •

Equipment Parts
Fac;tory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-187-GIII

51171001

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

A

SALES
thtli BIB a.lllftts. am Pay
and tha ~ family orllintld work
awtroniilliit In today's automotlvl
•
IndustryI

WI hiVI

. Call or stOp In and SH-Mikl 5EFQilll.
Brian Ross, or Brad Sang and bl;gln a
I'EWilrdlng carEEr as an
Automotlva Sill&amp; Prof&amp;slonal

f '"
Phone (740) 593-6671

·a D Auto

TODAY!
6/l9/mo.

(740) 7 42-8888
1-:888-521-0.9 16

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

Delivery
J74Q} _94~_:~264

.ALUB
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

WAN ED

Now Renting

Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid also.
Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Ca ll T &amp; R Logging
a h er 8:00pm
740-992 -5050
(Rand y)

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

West
•

tJc

South ·
• 4

Serlic Sytlernt &amp;
Ulililie•

612 1100 1 mo. pet

(740)992-3131

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.JEST IN TIME II .

ON YORE WAY IN--

HERE COMES
ELVINEY!!

Insured

992-5479

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
-GUTTERS

1811-3881

.

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

BANKRUPTCY

218 E. lnll

0111 retlen • "-btor of flntncltl obllgltlont tnd amntt 1 fllr tllltrlbt.rllon ot
IIHUI among crtellton. A l)triOn golnglhrough INiniU'Upley mty retlln

•.

Pomeroy, Ohio

!llof!U

1-800-311-3391
Free Estimates

Contrtctou

~elco111e

Albany, Ohio

- 61151 mo !)d.

CMtlilrt Pf'OPMIY, knOWn 11 "1x..,pt.. ~. tor ltlt or tier pereorial uu.
ThltiiNIY IRclude 1 c.r, 1 houM, clothee, and I'IOONhold good&amp;. You thould

dl• enr queatton. Ngtrdlng bllnkruptcr to tn tttorney btf~n proc.Ming.

!Fu~Mry ~

BLIND SPOT
- .

~(,1&lt;,.,.1/E~Ii'E , l fi~O YOU GUILl'(~

Tf\1\1'3'" T~IJt:7:1\YOF J-.61'\CL''i"

1.

JU~TICt: 1

"

(Factory Outlt~t) ..
All vqtical bUnd• are

William Safranek, Attorney

True~

6121/00 1 mo pd.

POPlAR LOGS WANTID

446-4995

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL

8" in diameter to

Hydroullc Hose repairs,
cyRnder repairs, oil
Sales· S gal. buckets
to SS gal. drums
2 ·y. miles out of

27", 18' long,
$35/ ton,
6/10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
roadside rest on
right

Chester on SR 248

740·985~~l~10 .,

TIM DEEM
CONSTRUCfiON
Roofing, Siding,
Windows, Decks, .
Porches, Room Add,
Garages, Pole
Building, Kitchens,
Baths
WV Uc WV0282120

i'rqq Otime~tes
7/6 T mo

"'

985-4465
7/ti\mopd

P/B CONTRACJOR~, INC.
CONCR.ffi
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercia
fREE ESTIMATES

Fully Insured

lrfo• ·Morrlna/locl••· Ohio
(7 40) 985-3948

sw1119

" Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25·3-3 $3.25/20 lbs
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bsg
35537 St. Rt. 7 Nort'h

Pomeroy
7/5 3

mo

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your guns, lamily heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
I:~~~~ntalcameras . household Inventory ana
It
items will be safe .
For more information call

Downspout, Garage room

additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

· BlUM LUMBER
ft',R'r.248
CHESTER

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

B&amp;.T TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

Racine, .Ohio
has flat dump log
service
Great Rates· Great

NOTICE

2 Handyman crew .ohjll d ---.
yard work, painting tnslde
and out, carpenler work,
roofing, siding. Have own

· lools. Fr~e Esllmates
740-7:11- 11

' Senilce
"You call we
haul"

or one mon
...

740·949·2610
740·591·6304

•

r

38 Hetpf~l
:
40 Loom bar
1
41 "-did you 1
say?"
.",
42 First-rate
(2 wds.)
43 Facet

;

I

· 1

I:

-·
I
'

· Friday, Jul y 7, 2000
: In the year ahead, so me signif·
!cant changes could occur that
~ill produce beneficial, peripher·
al ·benefits. Interestingly, none of
ihese shifts are likely to be initialed by you.
: CANCER (J une 21-July 22)
Express your art istic and creati ve
talents today in ways that co uld
beautify your suqoundings. 'Others will appreciate your handiwork as much as you' ll enjoy
them. Get a jump on life by understanding the innuences that'll
govern you in the year ahead.
~e nd for your Astro-Gr!lph predictions by mailing $2 to Astro·
Graph, c/o thi s newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 101 56. Be sure to
state your Zod iac sign .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A conversalion you have today with
someone you met recently could
cause you to undergo a cunst111c·
tive change of opinion regarding
this person. You ' ll have much to
share together in th e future.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
This is an excellent tirfle to go
s~opping- for alii hose little 1tems .
you've been wanting. Chances are

you' ll find eve rything you've
bee n looking for.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.'-0ct. ,Dl
What makes you such a popular
perso n today is the positi ve way
youlrt::al everyone you encounter.

no matter who' they are or where
th ey come · from . People will
appreoiate. your friend Iiness .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)
Think good thoughts today, and
good things will automatically
happen for you. By being hopeful
and expectant, you' II magnetically attract to you the best that' s out
there.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
2 1) Someone you mee t · today
may tum out to be a fri end in
more ways lhan one. She or he
could become an excellent business co ntact, as well as a social
one.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan .
19) Even though you're noted for
being a hi'gh. achieve r for lh.i ngs
that are personally important to
you, today you might·utili ze these
attributes on behalf of someone
else .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Some exctllng
last-minute
change s col)id be in the offing

I

I
'

I

-

'l

.'

today, so try to kee p your pbns as
nexible as pnssible . They may
include people with who m you
truly enjoy spending time .
PISCES (Fe b 2Q-March 20)
Should you find yourse lf with
so meo ne who is ha ving a hard
time workin g out a critica l ~ llua ­
t ion, a ~s u me an a s~e 11 i Vt.' role

today and lwip" !hi s perso n out
with hi s or her dilt.&gt;mrna .
ARIES (March ·21-Apn l 19)
The l e astlikel ~ thmg for yo u to do
'1.\'ould

b~

to le t

an ot h ~ r

mak e an

importani dec i&lt;1on for you. Ye t
toda) so mt.•one in your mid st
mi ght do a bett er job at that than
. you.
TA URUS (April 20-May 20)
Do as much meaningful work of
import ance that yo u can todav,
because you' re now in a highiy
productive &lt;:yc k . An ind11 .striou s
performan ce will giw you great
sati sfacti on.
GEMIN I (May 21-June i O)
What will stimulate your thinking
and bri ng out the best in you··
today is· t&lt;i be with optimi stiC
friends who can generate and
store enoug h assurance in you to
last you the entire weeke nd .

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS '

To get a current weather
report, check the

Cattle - Taupe - H1ker- Pot/en· OPEN IT

Sentinel

I have an elderly aunt who is always lalktng. My uncle
says it's because it takes more energy to shut a mouth
than to OPEN IT

!THURSDAY

or as ow as
•
er 1nc

,

'.

Blown Insulation

992·2772
For All Your Home
'Improvement Needs

31 Went by car

37 Future bkl.

.'..

Concrete &amp; Block Work,

IJJI

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

s

..&gt;.,
When you are in no-trump,
'
45 Tightrope _ _; '
there is a general guideline that
• 46 Sheltered
you should play on the suit confrom the wl""-1
047 Actor
,
taini~ g th e greatest number of
Brucecards to establish the tricks you
49 Serlea o1
need. That 's often right, but you
games
50
Nautical rope
should still count your winners
52 Between Co n.
carefully and look at all four suits,
end Mex.
53 Kingnot just one.
In this deal, how would you try
to make three no-trump? West
CELEBRITY CIPHER
leads a heart to your king .
by Luis Campos
North's second-round jump to
Celebrity C1&gt;her cryptograms are created frpm (luotatlons by famous people, past and
present. Each taner In the cipher stands for another.
three diamonds was invitational,
Today's clue: -I equals L
showing I 0-12 points. South did
well to go for the nine-trick game.
'PTRNe
VNAL
UNDDXK
NR
CD
. .:.:--.
In five diamonds, South should
II
lose two di amonds and one club.
NDRTIA
OHAL
AH
ALX
BHHF
CDU ' I
In no-trump. always count your
:
top tricks first. Here, there are six :
MNHINDNRA. ' SNIOXKA
F.
'
three spades, two hearts and one
r- WElL, YOU OUGf\1 I( !&lt;.NON 1.""'
1•
ILXRAXKAHD
club. So, three more tricks are
1•
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
'A
stumble
may
prevent
a
tall."
Thomas
Fuller
needed . Clearly, they could come
'Better to trip wllh the feel than with the tongue."- Zeno of Cilium
from the suil with the greatest
'I
number of cards, diamonds. How1HA1 DAILY d.fiii'O ,i\.,. .( _ f) 'C ~C:,
. s• WORD
.ever, if you play on diamonds, PUZZLER
\J'!::)
J.'Q'U
l)'J..
&lt;.!:I
P(J~
&gt;;!. GAMI
· you will surely fail The defendc
Iatto4 ~~ WY J. 'iioi.li.N
1•
erswnre stabli sh ani! run tlie hea-n ·
JI •'
Rearrange !etten· of the
suit first
four scrambled words' be.
Instead. you must try to collect
-low to form tour simple words.
:;" j
four club tricks. which requires
NECTSH
finding East with Jhe king supJ
ported by one or Jwo more clubs.
II
II looks tempting 10 play off dum',
my 's spade winne rs, tak e the club •
•I
E RA PP
·•
fin esse. and colllinue clubs. Howeve r, with this layout ihat should
.··"~ I
lead to defeal. When in with the
I
club king, East will ca.sh two
I've
come
to
believe
that
poltttS I XTE
spade tri cks . then the defenders
.f
hsr-.r---.--...--.--l",.":
cal campaigns are like stock car
can take two diamond tricks as
.
16 I . 1races. No one is really watching
•
well.
L-.l..__,I-...L-1---l.., until someone ---- -·· .
-l
You should lead a low club
from hand at trick two. Win the
URGHOC
•
l---,1...=-..:,1;-=:.,1,:.:_~~....::_.,17.----l O Comple1e the chuck le quo1ed
heart return, cash dummy's spade
-.J.L..J.L..J.L..I.-.L.
---1.
by
fillmg
in
the
missmg
words
L.
tricks, and pl ay a club, finessing
'r'OU deve lop from step No. 3 below .
I
the queen when the king doesn't
·'!
•
. I CAN NEVER REMEMBER
$ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
•. I
appear from E;ast. Here, everyIN
THESE
SQUARES
TUAT ROUND·UEADEI7
•
thing is for the best in the best of
KID'S NAME ..
-. •
all possible worlds.
•

Decks, Boat Docks,

Medi care Supplement; Life Insurance ; Burl!!!
and Final Expenses; College, Rel irement.
Emerge,ny Funds; Mortgage; .
•
Major Med ical • Nursing Home
~~·

740·992·7599

Pass

P~ss

Pass

Fewer tricks

IS

- ·. _ Box 189

• 'New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

TELL EVER'r"TUIN6!
NAME NAMES!

•

Gutlers &amp;

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

BISSEll BUILDERS
INC.

Call740-985-3831

SOOK, DON'T HOLO 6ACK ..

Replacement Windows,

Loccff 843-5264

";\hll.a!i ill.S~rllic!l"

IF '&lt;00 RE 601N6 TO

WRITE A ''KtSS-AND-TE).L ''

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,

Middleport, Ohio 45760

HADE RIVER AD SERVICE

1

• Gnod\o9
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Seamless

3•

I

. 'tr\111

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

Pass

I

UAilUP'OLIS, OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• &lt;&gt;en~ova\

I

East

I f

'

• ioP

Pass

I

----~ ·. ~

TREE SERVICE

T&amp;D

2e

Pass

North

.•

. -,
parts
.1
26 Early part of ·
1he day
27 Fervent
appeal
·
29 Whlolle
.1
sound
'
30-E.:ude
\.,:

I I' I

•
I 4~ Third Avt. GallljMIIs

Senior Citizen
Discount

JINES'

Passle

JIHers

25 Hookllko

0

"'~

. For Information re11ardlng
Bankruptcy contact:

proxlml1y

24

T~...,..._

• Vertical&amp; • Wood
• Minia • Etc

6/1 .5 1 mo pd .

wlndlng
machine
23 Ploi:eln

lt:··

\"P~~IP:.Y ~

UPTO 70% OFF

Ken Y11ur'8'

22 Throed-

''

made to order at our
location

992·1550
The Appliance
Man

~~-'*7

-f

A CRARY.

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

West

It

Opening lead: •

ME A
DRY ONE ll
FETCH

1\il ~ I":&gt; ,.,_

aAppUanca
Man

'

DOWN

I

' I&gt;C&gt; U\1\R,C:£.\)

"We're Back"

56 Waver

57 Triangular ult

Bv I'HILLIP ALDER

Advertise
in this
space for ·
$50 per
month.

After 6 pm- 614-985-4180

South

3 NT

Grading-

740-992-S232

51 Uselees

54 Hook - 55 Loan aherk

eAQ632
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

BuUd11•er &amp; Backh""
Ser11ice1
Hou.. &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;

33795 Hiland Rd.'
Pomeroy, Ohio

44 Peer Gynt'a
Answer to Prevlou1 Puzz..
mother
45 Smoll compact r.;r.-r:;:,-;=r;::;r:r
heap
48 lHta

41 Exllled

tQJ973

til

tmwiTop

AC:ROSS
'
1 -Jean King
7 Impede
13 Shuna
14 Not ready lor
eating
15 Moat rocenl
16 CIOIOd up
lightly
17 Tint
18 Noah'a ahlp
20 Zodiac algn
21 Crafty peraon?
25 Countleae
28 Fonda or
Ustlnov
32 Actor Nick 33 PR campaign
34 Angtor'a basket
35 Egg-shaped
36 Silly
37 Smell French
bagpipe
39 Boutlgue
Items

•AK

Hmdlps

Before 6 p.m. leove Message

(740) 991-9083
(Mobile) 740·339-016:5

K 2

• J 9

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

" Take the pain out
of paintirtgLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

East
eJ9763
• 10 7 6
t A4
e K 10 8

10 8 5

•Q98532

1mo. 4li 00

Call for

7122/TFN

• 10 8 6 5
• 7 s 4

.

1

07·06-00

eAKQ2
• J 4

ROBOTMAN

Advert.
ise in
.
this space for
s10.0 per
month.

1•·1

f(You 've tried the rtst ...
IIDW try tht btJt"
Interior . . . Exterior
Residential - Con1merical

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

.

North

t

9 o-lt-R/#. ·
Painting •

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

ALDER

Hauling • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt ., Multh •
Bulldozer Servi1es
(740) 992-3470, :

11211001 mo. ltd.

Over 40 yrs experience

Pickup and

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling· Kitchen
Cabinets Viny I SidingRoofs • Decks - Galfag:es I
Free Estimates

.Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1O'
to 10' x 30'
· Hours
7:00AM -.8 PM

Truck seats, car seats, headliners .
truck tarps, c onvertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat 'covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 • s:oo

Most Makes and
Models

JunsetBome
Consh'uetion

HILL'S
tf:,~CK'S.
SELF STORAGE HfiOLI"G and
29.670 8ashan
Road
EXCAVATI"Q

Up o stery • P us, Inc

Parts and Service

Advertise in
this space for
s100 p~r
month. ·

Pomeroy Eagl41s
Club Bingo On
•
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
'
Pomeroy, OH
Peying.$80.00
Pllr 0111)11
$300.00 Coverall
$500.01! Sl!!r!IY!II
Progressive .top line.
Lie. II D0-50 11110/lfn

Rutland, Ohio

Thl Ohio Vallly's automotlva ~ II
continually looking for aggrti&amp;slw and
motlvatsd p&amp;aplli to till sallis posltlon!L

.-:.......

(740) 592·5025 Athens

Pllft

AD M"k- Tractor Iii:

FREE EST I MATES
Ore1t Prle11 on New Hom11
992-2753
992-1101
~'

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

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

• Remodeling.
• Decks
• Roofing

DEPDYIAG

...

'
I
I

I

.l
l

'

�•

.•:•

.

".

•
''
.:-Page
B 8 • The Dally Sentinel
"

..•
\

Mapp paces .
Charlotte
to w1n
.
~,.•over Miami
~

#

.

-·

'•

I

s..m. IPAbboH H) al Anaheim (WUI1IIUm

4-2), 10:05 p.m.

Frtdoy'oGamoo

Eaet Dlvl..on

THm

.:
r

NASCAR
from
Page II

In many ways, Parrott
seel"s like a natural to
. hook up with Pruett. They
: became friends in 1982,
~ when P r uett was rac1ng
~- go-karts . They
kept in
~ touch, and Pruetr leaned
i'on Parrott for advice when
;; he raced as a CART repre: ·sentative in IROC compe"
: titian .
-:~ "He was a familiar face,"
t Pruett said .
So, Parrott is trading a

racing association with his
. family for another with an
old friend. He's le aving
one of the best teams in
the business for on·e with
no past and a shaky future .
Moving on isn't easy.
"Very hard , plain and
simpl_e," he said of the
decision . " But being a Parrott, I've learned over the
years that there is pressure
and you have to handle it.
"I've got to look at it
like , it's not a matter of if I
can get the job_ &gt;lone. lt:S
- Just a matter of when I'm
going to get it done."

W

L Pel.

· Atlanto ....................... ,,..50 34
New Yorl&lt;.. .............. .... ..-.. 47 35
Aorida .......... .................. .43 42
Montreal ........................ .. 40 40
Philadelphia .................... 38 44
Central Dlvl•lon
st. Louis ... ... ..... ...............50 33
Cincinnati
.......... 40 43
Pittsburgh .
. ... ..38 47
Milwaukee ....................... 34 50
Chicago ....... ...... .... .... ..33 50

Minn esota to end a nine-game
' CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP)
Rhonda Mapp scored 20 points losing streak.
Ch:aisse Sampson added 11
- including the I,OOOth point of
her career - as the Charlotte points for the Storm (3-13).
:Sting won their first home game Kristin Folk! and Keitha Dicker:Of the season Wednesday night, son each scored 15 points for the
lynx (10-6). ,
i76-70 over Miami.
. Sparks 76, Monarchs 61
• Charlotte · (3- 13) ende d a
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
•'wNBA-record nine-game home
~osing streak and a five-game - Mwadi Mabika scored 23
points and Delisha Milton had
:Overall losing streak.
: Shalonda Enis added 16 points 20 as los Angeles won its 10th
·
!for the Sting. Katrina Colleton straight game.
. The winning streak is the sec~had 14 points for Miami (5-11).
ond longest in WNBA history
·~
IJb~rtY 6Z, Fire 45
:, NEW YORK (AP) - Vickie behind Houston's 15-game run in '
Johnson and Becky Hammon 1998.
·scored 15 points apiece as New · lisa leslie added 10 points and
nine rebounds to help the Sparks
: York beat expansion Pordand.
: Tari Phillips added 12 points (14- 2) move within a half-game
; and 10 rebounds to help the Lib- of first-place Houston in the
~rty (8-9) snap a two-game losing Western Conference. ·
Yolanda Griffith had 19 points
; streak. Sophia Witherspoon led
: the Fire (4-11 ) with nine points. and nine rebounds for the Monarchs (11-6), who lost for the first
St!)rm 67, Lynx 60
:
time in eight games this season at
: MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
: Robin Threatt scored a season- Arco Arena.
; high 24 points as Seatde beat

,

.

TODAY'S SCOREBOAR.D

WNBA

'

Thursday, July 6, 2000

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

GB

.595
.573
2
506 7 112
.500
8
.463
11
.602
.482

tO
14
.405 16 112
.397
17
Houston ... ....................... 28 55 .337
22
Welt Dlvlllan
Arizona. ..... . ... ...... .. ...&lt;49 35 .583
Colorado .................. ....... 45 36 .556 2 1/2
6an Francisco .................. 43 38 .531 4 112
LOsAngetes ............... ...... 42 40 .512
6
San Oieg0 ........................37 46 .446 H 1/2
Wedn..csay·e Games
Pittsburgh 9, Chicago Cubs 6
San Francisco 4, Colorado 2
N.Y. Mets 1 t, Florida 2
St LOuis 4. Cincinnati 3
Arizona , 2, Houston 9
Montreal 6, Atlanta 5
Philadelphia 5, Milwaukee 2
Los;Angeles 7, San Diego 5
Today"1 O.JMI
Momreal (MJohnson 3-3) at Atlanta (6urkett
6-3) , 1:10 p.m.
Colorado (Arrojo 5·6) at San Francisco
(Or!i&lt; 4-S) , 3:~ ~ p,1]1.
los Angeles (Brown 7· 2) at San Diego
(MeadOws 7·5). 5 :05 p.m.
'
. Philadelphia (Byrd 2 -6) at Milwaukee (D'Am·
ico 3-4), 8:05p.m.
Arizona (Guzman 0-0) at Houston (Holt 3-9),
8:05p.m.
.
Cincinnati (Fernandez 2-2) at St LoUIS
(Ankiele-3), 8:10p.m.
Friday'• Games
Chicago \Nhite Sox at Chicago Cubs, 3:20
p.m.
Atlanta at Boston, 7:05 p.m.
TOfontO at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay a1 Florida, 7:05p.m.
Minnesota at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
N;Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.
Battimore at Philadelphia, 7:35p.m.
Cleveland at Cindnnali, 7:35 p.m.
Detroit at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco at St. Louis, 8;10 p.m.
Sao Otego at Texas. 8:35p.m.
Uls Angeles at Seanle, 10:05 p.m.
Arizona at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Colorado at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m

.434

American League
Esat Dlvlalon

W

Teem

l

Toronto ............................ 45 40
New York ........................41 37
Boston ................ .... .. ..... 41 39
Baltimore ........................38 46
Tampa Bay ...... .............. .. .33 49
Ctntrel Dlvlelon
Chicago .............. .. .......... 54 30
Clwelan&lt;l .. .... ... .... .. .. . ..a 39

Pel
.529

GB

.526
.513

1/2
I 1/2

.427 7 ,,2
.402 10 1/2

Chicago WMe Sox at Chl&lt;:agO Cubl, 3:20
p.m.
Atlanta at Boston, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Aorida. 7:05p.m.
M innesota at PinsDurgl'l, 7:05 p .m.

N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets. 7:10p.m.
Baltimore at Philadelptia, 7:35 p.m.
ClevelaOO at Cincinnati, 7:35p.m.
Detroit at M!lwaukee. 8:05p.m.
Kansas City at Houston, 8:05p.m.

Contnol Dlvtllon
8
8

31
37

34

Dallas ............ ............. 7 11 3 24 33 39
w-.m Dlvlalon
Kansas Cily ............... 11 2 5 ~ 30 12
LosAngolos ................9 5 7 34 28 23
Colorado ....................9 9 .2 2!1 27. 30
San Jose .....................4 8 8 20- 2• 30
NOTE: Three points for a win and one poim
for a tie,
Wldnlldoy'o Q..,.
New York-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1

Slturday'l 01mu

New Yoo1c-New Jersey at Kansas City, 1:30
p.m.
Los Angeles at Miami. &lt;4:30 p.m.
DC United at Dallas, 8 p.m.
COlumbus at Chicago, 8 p.m.
San Jose at ColOrado, 9 p.m.

The NASCAR Winston Cup schedule, winners in parentheSes, and driver point standings:

Fob . 20 - Daytona 1500, Daytona Beach,
Fla. (Dale Jaffoll)

..

Gordon)

·1

Pbnix ............................. 9

1 1/2

1 112
2 1/2
2 112
5
61/2
7
112
•

4 1/2
6 .800
.5

Utah ..............................·.... 9 8 .529
6
Po~land ........ ................ ....4 11 .267
10
Seattle .............................. 3 13 .188 11112

WednMday'e Gamee
10

15
Kansas City ................... .. 39 44 .463
Detroit ............................. 37 44 .457 15 1/2
18
Minnesota ............... ........ 37 49 .430

New Yortc 62, Portland 45
Charlotte 76, Miami 70
Seattle 67, Minnesala 60
Los Angeles 76, sacramemo 61

Today'e Gem.

Weat Olvlalan

Seattle ................. .......... 49 33 .598
Oakland ................... .. ... 4e 37 .554 3 1/2
Anaheim ......................... 43 41 .512
7
Texas . . .................... ..40 42 .488
9
Tod1y'e Gemes
_ Baltimore (~anson 5·4) at N.Y. Yankees
{Yarnall O..Q), 12:05 p.m.
.
Toronto (Carpenter 6·7} at Cleveland (Burba
B-3), 7:05p.m.
Boston (Crawfofd 0-1) at Minnesota (Radke
5-0), 8:05p.m.

Indiana at Ortand.o, 7:30p.m.
Seattle at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Detroit at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Washington at LOs Angeles , 10:30 p.m
Frkley"e clamea
CIOYOiand II Mllllill; 7 p:tll. .
New Yor!l; at Minnesota, B p.m.
Charlotte at Houston, 9 p.m.
Detro~ at Utah, 9 p.m .
"\.
Sacramento~ Portland, 10 p.m.

(Tony Stowan)

June, 1 - Kmar1400, Brooklyn, Mich . (Tony

Stewan)

June HI - Pocono 500, long Pond, Pa .
(Jeremy Mayfield)

J_!Jne 25 - ~· MlU1jKragen 350k , Sono;
rna, CeiW. (Jo" Gordon)
July 1 - Pepsi -400, Daytona Beach, Aa .
(Jelf Bunon)
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N.H.""
July 23 - Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
Aug . 5- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug . 13 - GlObal Crossing at The Glen,
watkins Glen. N.V.
Aug . 20 - Pepsi -«.10, 8100klyn, Mich.
Aug . 28- goracing.com 500, Bristol, Tenn.
~1. 3 - SoUihem 1500, Da~inglon, S.C .
Sept. 9 - ChfM'olet Monte Carta 400, Rich-

me nt.
MI LWAUKEE
BREWER SOptioned AHP Allen L·evrau lt to
Tri p le A Indianapolis . Recalled
LHP R ay King from Ind i ana p olis .
BASKETBALL

Netlonal Beekttball Associa tion
1
CH ICAGO BULLS - Named B . J .
Arm s tr o ng special assistant t o
ge neral manager .
LOS ANGELE S L AKERS - Signed
F Mark M a d se n .

NAPA AutoCara 500, Martinsville,

Va.

Oct. 8 - UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord,
Oct. 15 - Winston 500, Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,

FOOTBALL
National Football L•ague
) INDIANAPOLI S C OLTS - Si gn e d
DT J osh William s. OG Matt John son and DB R odregis Brooks . R es ig ned LB J e ff Brad~ . Waived LB
Rodne~ Smith .
SAN
FRANCI SCO
49ERS S i gned PK Joseph Tuthill .
"TENNESEE TITANS - Agreed t o
terms wi t h S Ar ic Morris, DL
Aobaire Sm i th and OL We s Shiv ·
ers .

(

Rod&lt;ingham. N.C.
,
Nov. 5 - Checker Auto PartS/Dura Lu~
500k, Avondale, Ariz .
Nov. 12 - Pennzoll400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 19 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.
.
Drtnr Stondlngo
1. !lobby Labonle, 2,527.
2 1 ~Dale Earnhardt, 2,475.
3) 0ale Jarrett, 2,451 .
41'-ward Bunon, 2,347.
5. Jeff Burton, 2,314.
6. Rld&lt;y Rudd, 2,285.
7. 1.1ar1&lt; Martin, 2,283.
a. Tony Stewart, 2,270.
9. Rusty Wallace, 2,254.
10. Jot! Gordon 2,193.
11 . Mike Skinner, 2,044.
12, MattKe~. 1,967.
13. Tony Labonle, 1,916.
14. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 1,884.
15.'Ster1ing Marlin, 1,796.
1e. Bill 81iott, 1 ,769.
17. Ken SChrader, 1,751 .
1e. Johnny B_
enson, 1,745.
19. Jeremy Mayfield, 1,744.
20. Steve Park, 1.739.
i1l~had Li1!1J,_t. 73Z.
22. John Andrettl, t ,705.
23. Joe Nemachak, t ,640.
24. Raben Pressley", 1,806.
25. Jimmy Spencer, 1,554.

211. -

~-

TRAN$AcriO.NS- I

BOSTON RED SOX - A cti vated
LHP Jert Fassero f1om t h e 1 5-day
d i sab l ed lis t. Placed DH M i ke
Stanley on the 15 -day d 1Sat&gt;ted
II st .
SEATTLE MARINERS - Optioned
RHP Gil M ec he t o Tacoma o f t he
PCL. Recalled IN F carlos Guill'en
from Tac oma .
Natlon•l ,Leegu•
ATLANTA BRAVE S - Sig ned RHP
Scott Kamieniackl
HOUSTON
ASTROS - Wa i ved
RHP M ike Madd uK . R eca lled AHP
Wade Mi l ler fr om New Or le ans of
t he PCL .
LOS
ANGE LES
DODGERS Called up OF Mike .M etcal fe !rom
Albuqu er qu e o f t~e PC L. Desig~al­
ed OF S hawn Gilbert tor SSS I Qn -

.

NC.
GB

HOCKEY
Natlonel Hock•y Laegua
NH L- Named And~ Va n He lleme nd dire c t or of of f iciating .
ANAH E IM
MI G HTY
DUCKS Signed F Ji m C ummins .
CA L GARY FLAM ES - S igned D
Brad W erenka .
COLUMBUS B LU E JA CKE TS Named D ave King coac h .
EDMONTON OILERS - Sign ed D
Sco t t Fergus o n .
LOS
ANG E LE S
KINGS - Ae ·
signed D J e re Karalahti to a m ult i year c ontract.
OTTAWA SENATORS- Signed G
~a-t- hie u G he ui na rd -t-o a multiy-ea-r
co ntract.
PH I LADE L PHIA FLYERS - N a m ed
Bil l Ba r ber assistant coac h . ·

1,ol58.

27, t.I!CilMI-.. 1.·--·--

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~"

of 49 numbers. Each wager still costs S1. On drawing

night, we'll draw 6 numbers from a field of 49 , plus a Bonus

~ -=

Owrtll oUs It will Ill~ prilt

lin 4~1

I in 8~6

Ball from the remaining field of 43 . If your 6 numbers match
the 6 winni ng numbers you win the Super Lotto Plus jackpot!
The Bonus Ball does not affect the 6/6 wager.

But let's say you match 5-of-6 numb ers, and that one of your remaining

•

'

numbers matches the Bonus BalL You automatically win more money.
In this case. 5/6 plus t he Bonus Ball wins you $10,000. Now let's say
you've matched 5/6 but your remaining number does not match the
Bonus ·BalL You still win $1,500. Take a look at the chart

www.ohiolotiery.com

th at e-xplains the new and improved prize structyfe.
Plus, you can still play the Kicker too! That's. the

at
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

•

new Super Lotto Plus. Now with more ways to win.

Lottery playf!r-1 8re , uhject 1o Olno
Commisslo~

Volume

s 1. Number 19

July 7, 2000

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 Cents

BASEBALL

Sept. 17 - New Hampshire 300, Loudon.

E11tern Con..,..nce
Toam
, W L Pel.
O~ando ...... .................... 10
6 .825
Cleveland ... ..................... &amp; 7 .533
Washington .. ......... ............ 8 7 .533
Now Yor1&lt; ........................... &amp; 9 ,471
Delron ............................... 7 a .4e7
Miami ................................5 11 .313
Indiana ..............................3 12 .200
Charlotte ................ ...... ..... 3 13 .188
W.11em ConfeNnee
Houston ............ .... ...... .... 15
2 .882
Los Angelos .... .. ............. 14
2 .875
Sacramento ..................... 11
6 .IW7
Minnesota ...................... . 10 8 .825

I
•
en 1ne

•

•

Friday

Amerlcln League

April 30 - NAPA Auto Parts soo; Fontana,
CeiW. (Joromy Mayfield)
Mliy e - Pontiac Excitement 400, Rich1!1011G, va. (Dole Earnhardt Jr.)
May, 28 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N .C .
(!AaHKonoolh)
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.

'OCt. 1 -

. · Meigs society notes, AS
Hubbard tourney; Reds win, Bl

-

mond, va.

Women's Nstlonel BaakMball Auocldon

•

34 . KylePetty,1,124
35. Stacy Comp1on. 1.11 4.
36. Wally Oallenbach , 1,058.
37. Bien Bodine, 947 .
38. Darrell WaltriP. 917
39. Scott Pruen. 892.
·40. Robby Gordon, 872 .

'S ept 24 - MBN,t.com 400, Dover, Del.

.643
.524

0 33 40
3 30 42
4 25 28

I
e

Details, A3

33 . Dave Blaney, 1,204.

va.

•
WLTPIIGFGA
NY·NJ ....................... 10 7 2 32 32 27
New Englend ........ .. ..... 7 7 5 2e 31 28
Miami ......................... 7 8 4 25 28 28
D.C.
. ..........4 12 5 17 30 42
0

31 . Kenny wanace. 1,354.
32 . Elliott Sadl9':. 1,288.

March 10 - Mall.com 400. Darlington, S.C.
(Ward El&lt;JliOn)
March 26 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(RuS1y wallace)
April 2 - DirecTV 500, Fort Wor1h. Texas.
(Dale Eamhardl Jr.)
Apt'il 0 - Goody's 500, Mat1insville,
(Mar1&lt; Manln)
Aprii18 - DioHord 1500, Talladoga.Aia. (Jeft

e..tem Dlvl•lon

Chicago ............. .........9
Columbus ....... ............ 7

30. Bobby Hamilton, 1,374.

NASCAA Wlnaton Cup SoriH

Cia. (Dale Earnhardl)

Mljor LIIIIJUI s -

TampaBay ..:............. 11

~~ ~· ~aNG

Feb. 27 - Dura l.tJbe/KJ'NU1 ..00, Rocking ham , N.C. (Bobby Labonte)
MarCh 5 - Carsdirect.com 400, Las Vegas
(Jell Bunon)
.
Marcn 12 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,

· San Diego at Texas, 8:35 p.m.
Lo• Angolos a1 Soa~lo, J0:95 p.m .
Ari.:~na at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
CoiOfadO at ~heim, t 0:05 p.m.

Toom

28. Kem~ Irwin. 1,440.
28. Jerry N~deau , 1,&lt;&amp;30.

Satur.dey

Hlch: lOs; Low: &amp;os

regul.ltions.

\ ~104

and

P\~ao:.e p(&lt;~y re:; pon ~ • bly.

Hill Coun~ grant receives state funding
Meigs County sponsor
ifguidebook project
BY BRIAN

J,

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - A grant proposal,
sponso red by the Meigs County Commissioners and submitted by Ohio's Hill
Country Heritage Area, designed to promote tourisn1 as a m eans of economic

development, has bee n approved ht th e tion of cu ltural reso urc es for tourism and
state level.
other economic opportu nities .
M eigs County Co mnussiuners reportThe Oh io Hill Co untry proJ eCt was
od Thursday that the Ohio Department one of five programs to n:"n:ivi1ig fundof Developmon~ award ed $22 ,0011 to the ing for plannin g, development and mar$110,000 project th ro ugh the Ohio Her- . keting activities destgn ed to max1mize
Itage Area Program.
th e econom ic tmpacr of touri sm
Th e Ohio Heritage Area Program is throu ghout th e state.
administered by th e Ohio Department of
Meibos Co unty was cho sen as the sponDevelopment's Division of Travel and so r for the proj ect becau se o f its ctTorts,
Tourisnt, and designates communities as already under way. in usin g the region's
heritage areas to encourage the preserva- history to attract tourists, according to

Celeste:
DeWine
too quiet
on gas

Michael Mullen, director of the 3 1cuunty h enta~e area in Sou thern Ohi o.
Mu lle n mer wit h the co mmiss i one r~
last mOii th to set' k their coopl:' rJ.tion in
pursuin g th~.-· gra nt , w h1c h will be ust:d tu

pu blish a fu ll-color b'llidc·boo k, which
wil l b&lt;· so ld through tradi ti onal retail
outlets.
The guidc·bou k will includ e a mllnb,•r
of ··rrads" w ah hi o;.ror1c -;ignifi ca ncc,
emphas1zmg "-rea l and authentic sites,' '
suc h as t he Serpent Mound 111 western

NOH.TON (AP) - A e&lt;i mp any has reached
. an agreem e nt to converr a former limesto ne
min e into :1 compressed-air powe r plant that
eve ntu olly cou ld produ ce twice the electricity
prov1ded by the l'erry Nuclear Powe r Pl ant.
The power plant envisio ned by Norton
En ergy Storage wotdd ·be only th e third of its
kind in th e world. The H ousto n- based company plans to spend abo ut S1 billion ove r the
next 111 years ro dev.:lop the 2,200-fo.obkl:.p
min e that has been idle si nce 1976 in this tow n
about I0 mifes south o f Akron.
" It's a pretty si~n i ticant plant," sa id Kim
Wi ss man, exec uti ve director of the O hio

have done mOre to scrutinize

Wisco nsin Denwcrat, askin g

th e FTC - an office under the
authority of the Pcmocratic
C linton · administrati on - to
look into th e merger

Please see Grant Page A~

Abandoned
·mine Will be
power ·plant

SPECIAL OLYMPICS

COLUMBUS
(AP)
R epubli can Sen . Mike De Wine
' hasn't fought hard enough to
·keep gas prices in lin e but has
accepted thousands in campaign
donations lium oil companies ,
Democrati c challenger Ted
Celeste said Thursgay. .
Celeste said De Wine should
the merger of oil companies as
chairman of Senate Antitrust,
'Business Rights and Competi~
tion Subcommittee.
"He's been asleep at the
switch," Celeste told reporters at
a. 11ews conference outsi&lt;i~ a.
Columbus BP station, where ·
unleaded regular was s~Uing for
$1, 59 a gallon .. less than two
weeks ago, the price was more
than $2 a gallon at some stations.
De Wine's ca1i1pa1gn denied
the accusation, saying Ohio's
senior senator asked the Federal
Trade Commission two years
ago to exan1ine the merger of
oil giants BP and Amoco and its
effect on prices and services .
Celeste, the younger brother
of former two- term Democratic Gov. Ri chard Celeste, said
DeWine should have used his
influ ence to investigate the
spike in prices, which the industry has blamed on supply cuts
by oil-producing countries.
H e said DeWine's predecessor, Democrat Howard Metzenbaum, used his position to fight
big corporati ons.
"Somebody n ee ds to be
there who's an advocate for the
consumer," Celeste said. "The
people want someone ' who's
prepared to respond to their
issues and not to th e special
in terests."
Celeste released campaign
financ e figures
filed
by ·
DeWin e's campaigns si nce 1989
that found De Wine had accepted more than S109,000 in contributions !Tom political action
committees controlled by oilrelated busin esses. Celeste's owp
reports filed this year showed
th e only PAC money in hi s
campa1gn was $15,0110 from
unions.
H e said th e oil co mpani es
should be acco untable for their
prices and questioned w hether
tho hi gh pri ces wore necessary.
"Let's take a look at their
books. Let's take a look at what
. they've been do ing," Celeste
said.
De Wine
camp11ign
spokc-sn1an Ben Piscitelli said
th e senato r had sought a thor-.
ough study of the BP-Amoco
merger.
DeWi ne's
offi ce
released two letters signed by
De Wine and Sen . Herb Kohl, a

O hi o, and. Mull en said , th e tluffington
Island , C hester Cour1house and_ other
.,; ites relating to th t&gt; Civ1l War found in
M e i h~"S Cou my.
Mull en o;; aid tha t the comm iss iOners'
dTorts to pr0111Ute he ritage crafts
through an Appalac hi an Rc~ional Commi ssion grJnt has indic at~ d that commiss iun~r~ h::JVe already b ~gun to capitalize
on the heritage touri sm pnnciple.

"

STAMP PRESENTATION - Syracuse Postmaster Bonnie
Brown, far right, presents Celebrate the Century Stamps to
Carleton School and Meigs Industries student athletes Bill

that Norton Energy is expected to file
this m o nth .
Norton Energy wants to usc th!;' 338 million
cuhic foot mine as a res~rv9 ir _!9.2_tore energy.
·The co n1p a ny -~vo uld fill the min e with compres-sed -a ir at night when electricity rates are
cheapest. During pea k ho urs, the compressed
.tir wou ld be released thro ugh an dectricity
produ c in g turbine.
The electricity would be so ld to surroundlllg com munities and other sta tes.
· Th e company fina lized the deal wi th city
otlicials Thursday after I ', yea rs of negotia ti ons. U nder the agn."emem. Norton Energy
will sel l the property to the city (o r S1 in
exchangt' fo r a long-term lea se to store compressed ai r in th e mm e.
13ill Hitchcoc k, pre&lt;ide nt and ch1ef executive
oiTtcer of Norton Energy. sa1d the com pany
plans to ha,ve th e fi rst t u rbine~ ru nning by
20113.
The co mp any will mvc:st S 150. million mi tiall y to !;Ct th e project 1tarted. Its plan is ro
produ ce JIJ7 mt'!(,t.wam o f el ectricity t noug-h t u power of nry o f 7.5.000 homes ''_
by21 111.l.
Uy 2025, output would mcrease to 2,700
megawatts. Th ar'o;; tWlCt' a" large as th e PerrY
plant, which produces an average nf 1, 100
megawatts per day.
Th e proJect shou ld produ ce more than 200
co mtruct ion jobs nver rhL' nexr tl ve yrars and
c'i per manL'IIt JObs b\' ~110 .\ l.ml Joyce Miller,
l\.q!Jona l Marketin g ~1\an.tgc r of Norton
Em:rgy Storage.
Norto n Energy. ba cke d by fi ve of the
nanon 's lafg:t&gt;~ t f" 11L'ri;,').' invcs ror groups, said it
has ~mJ i ed rlw world's two orl1er compn.·ssed-

White . Bradley Donaldson and Maurice Smith. Also pictured
is Steve Beha, adm inistrator of Carleton School and Meigs
Industri es. (Tony M. Leach photo!

Athletes honored by Post Office
FROM STAFF REPORTS

YRACUSE
The
Syracuse Post Office
presented the Special
Olympics Celebrate
the Century stamps, which
are part of the 1990s collection, to eight athletes of Meigs
Co unty's Special Olynipics
summer team on Thursday.
To mark the occasion of the ending
of one centu ry and the beginning of
another, th e US. Postal Service is
hel ping lead the nation in recognizing

Ju Meigs County, more thau

White.
In · Meigs Co unty, more· than 611
children and adults h.tw participatt·d
in the Spec ial Olympi cs, m mp c tin~ 111
both track and fidd evenrs. as wd l a~
basketball and softball.
Local Special Olympics p;e&gt;gra nt&gt;
arc spunsort· d by C:c1 rleto n Schoo l and
Meit,TS lndusrri t'".
T he SpcTial O lympic&lt; seek- to pm·
vide yt·ar- J'nu nd spurtli · rrall l lllg" .md
compt'titi nn f(x c hil ~i n:' n .md adu lrr.,
with mental rctardatlotl 111 hopes of
g:iving them oppor.tuniti~s to dt:vdop
physical titnt·"s ,\lid Jc:m onstrat l:

60 childre11 cmd adults ha11e
par ti ci paled itr tile Speci a1
Olympics.
special events, people, places an d 1115tori c achievements by issuing these
celebratory stamp1 for th e publi c to
enJOy.
The e1ght athl ete\ who compnse
th e Mei gs County Special Olympics
su mm~r tea nl are: Mamie C:adt'. Laura
Clark , Bradley Donildson, Kenny
N apper, R obert Singer, Mauri ce
Smith , C hristopher Tac ket t and llill

courdgt'.

Piease see Power, Pa~:e Al

Blood donor

Eastern board approves
supplemental contracts

Today's

Sentinel
Sections-

16 Pages

2
FROM STAFF REPORTS

l'U I' PER S i'LA INS - A
numb t· r of stlpplcmc ntd co.Jch i n ~ co ntract' WL·r~· ,\\v;trdt•d ~ hn· ­
mg

.1

~p~·c i .d

llli.'L'ting of tilL'

Eastern L&lt;Kal Board uf Educa t io n on \\.'L·dnl·~dJy.

:rhc tC1Ilnwing were cm ploycd
on s uppl~lll L' IHal co ntra cr.s: Pau l

13ran non . van1 ty vo ll ey ball:
Debbie Weber, JUnior high yol leyball : Jc' &lt;sl(a Brannon , volun~ t c.cr j11nior , hi f~ h vo ll e.y hall:
Albcrt • Grd~ n. ju111Ur

Ameri can Re d Cross workers
i Sellers
Debb ie Melton he lp
prepare Steve Lane, Middleport, for a b.lood domition as th e Ameri can
Red Cross Bloodmobile visited the Fam ily Life Center qt t he Middleport Church of Christ Thurs day afte rnoon. The Fourth of July holiday
and usual summer shortages have prompted th e Red Cross to promote summer blood donations. (Tony M. Leach photo )

•

!·ugh foo t-

bal l; Davtd H a\\'tho rtl t'. a!m"tant
JUnior high fo&lt;.;') th .dl ; I :-l !llar
Lyo n ~ 11. volu nt t'L' r jumor hi~h
foothall :
Lc:orurd

jun io r

h i~h

M y~.-· r s.

vo lun tL-~·r

I(H&gt;th.t ll:

l'o~ tn d.

Ncwl.md . .t"'il\tam y.u'i it\' f()otLu ll: Bn an B owe n . ,,,,lst.mr v.n-

.;ity

I~Hltb.t!L

Bry;in l )urst, vo lfoo{ball : lhlllly -

lll'li'l'i.' r ,, ..,~l"it ,mt

Thnn l.l\, vn l ll iH t't'l' ;\1\S l'lt ,ITl t
ti&gt;otball: ,tnd JE . Kirkp.ttr ick ,
volu nten ~lS'i i ..;t;mt footb. dl.
T hl' h tl.lnl .ll so emp loye d
Ca rolyn Haye'i a" a junior high
teachn. :md Pau l Br.\m lu n .ts
distri(t lll.lilltL'll,\IKL' .. t.1fr. both
u n ont' - Vt'a r

cmlrr;~(( ~.

T h ~· h\);lrd .lcc~.-·ptc d th e . rco,;i -

~atiun of Mo ll y )t:wcu . L'kl ll t'l l -

tar y :-.L hool pn11npal. du e to
mlwr cmplnynlL' nt . ·
ALivcrti·dn g was .tpp rovcd tiJr
a l n~h ~clll) t)l gui d.tnn.~ cli un -

Please see Eastern. Page Al

•

Calendar
Classificds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
A3
Bl-3. 8

LoHeries
OHIO
Pick J : h-S-S; Pick 4: +-2-0-5
Bnckeyt' :l: J.:!,'\.._\). .\(~:\7
0

W.VA.
Daily 3: .\ - 1-4 Daily 4:

7-~-2-8

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