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I

•
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
I~1.PRO ."BASE···;:.' ~ I

WNBA

Phbenix outduels Lynx, 64·54
PHOENIX (AP) Lisa
Harri son scored a careerhigh 22 p oints to lead the
Phoenix M~rcury ove r the
Minn~s o ta Lynx 64~54 Tues~
day night.
The Mercury took a 2
1 /2~ga me lead over th e Lynx
10 th e
rae~ fo r the final
Western Conference playoff
spot.
'
Bra ndy
Reed
had
12
points, and Jennifer Gillem
and Tonn Edwards had nine
each as rh e Mercury (12 -6)

won their third straight.
Katie Smith, 1he WNBA 's
No . 2 sco rer, s_co red 19 of
her 24 pOints in the second,
but couldn't prevent the
Lynx (10-9) from losing
tpeir season-hig h fourth in a
row.
Fire 80, Sparks 77
Sophia With ers poon scored
29
points
and
Vanessa
Nygaard hit two free throws
with 6. 5 secon ds left as the
Portland Fire e nded the Los
Angeles Sparks' 12-game

Notlonoii..Ngl»
Eut Dlvlolon

winning streak, 80-77.
The expansion Fire (6-12),
who have won two in a row
for the first time this season,
took the Lead for good with
a 15~2 run while Lisa Le slie ,
Los /u\geles' leading scorer
and rebounder, was on the
bench with five fo ul s.
The Forum crowd of 4 .4 16
was the lowest in the Sparks'
(16-3) four-ye~r hist o ry.
The previous low of 4.639
was set June 6, als o against
Portland .

T•m

W L Pet.

G8

.591
.558
.51 1
.500
.453

3
7
B
12

Atlanta ...........................52 36
N- Yoo ........................48 38
Florida ... ..........................45 ~
Montreal .... ............ .. ... .....42 42
Philadelphia .............. .... ..39 47
C.nt,.l Dtvlllon
St. LOuis......
..... .. .....51 36
Cincinnati ____ ...................43 44
Pitlsburgh .. ..... ..............38 48
Mijwaukee ..... ....... ..........37 51
Chk:ago .........................35 51
Houston ..... ................... ..30 57
Wellt Olvltton
Arizona ...........................51 37
San Franctsco ................ ..46 39

Colorado ...... ........

....45 40

Los Angeles ................ _44 42
San Diego .... .................38 49

EaM Dlvlalon
W L
New York ................. ......45 38
Toronto ............... .............48 41
Boston ..................... ...•...43 41
BaltirTIOfe ........................38 48
Tampa Bay .... ...... .............:J.Ie 51
C.mrol Dlvtolon
Chicago ..........................55 32
CleveJand ...........
.44 42
Kansas City ..
.39 46
Detroit .... ...... ......... . ......38 46
Minnesota .................. ... 38 52
Wnt Dlvl1lon
Seattle ................... ...... 51 ~
Oakland ... ..
....... ..48 38
Anaheim ........................47 41
Texas .............................42 43

r ..m

Hubbard
from Page 81
affairs, but Middleport did
threaten with runners Ooe Kimes
and Austin Dunfee) at second and
third . However, Middleport
couldn't bring them home,
M eanwhile, Federal scored
three more in the second inning,

MLB
from Page81
he came to the big leagues,"
Cox said.
Jones did his besi- to make the
51,323 fans forget that Cal Ripken , Manny Ramirez and Greg
Maddux also ~re sidelined.
Jones became the 13th player to
hit a home run in his own park ·a t
an All-Star game, connecting off
Baldwin in the third. He also singled twice, one of them off starter
David Wells.
The last time the All-Stars visit~
ed Atlan ta m 1972, Hank Aaron
also homered for the hometown
Braves. Aaron threw out the ceremonial first ball this time md
received a warm welcome.
The biggest ovation, by far,
went to Andres Galarraga. The
Braves first baseman, who missed
last season while rcconring frum

•

.58fi
.494
8
....2 12 1/2
.420 14 1/2
.407 15 1/2
.345
21

{P.Martinez 9-3), 7:0S p.m.
Montreal (VaZquez 7·4) at Tampa Bay
(Rekar ,_.),7:15p.m.
AtlarU. (Millwood S..S) at Battimore (Mussina
6-7) , 7:35p.m.
Mitwaukee (Wright 4-2) at Kansas Ctty
(S1ein 0-1). 8:05p.m.
Chicago CubS ('Valdes 1·2) at Minll8SOta
{Radke 5-tO). 8:05p.m.
St. Louis (An.Benes 9·3) al Chlcago While
Sox (Sirotka 8-S) , 8 :05 p.m.
Ctncinnati (Neagle 8·2) at Colorado (Astacio
7·51. 9:05p.m.
Texas (Heling 10-7) at Arizona {Anderson 8·
3). 10:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Hill 5-5) at Los Angeles (Dfetfort
4·7), 10:10 p.m.
Oakland (Mukter 5-4) at San Francisco
(N111118n 5·2), 10:15 p.m.
·

.580
.541 3 112
529 4 1!2
.512
6
.437 12 1!2

Mik e Tonis and ass•gnect him to
Charleston, wast V•rg1n1a of the South
At lantic League.
FOOTBALL
NaUan•l Faotblll Laague
ARIZONA CAADINALS - Wa1ved DT
Eric Swann
CLEVELAND BROWNS - Agreed to
terms with OB Spergon Wy nn on a !our·
year contract .
DALLAS COWB OYS - Announ ced the
ret1rement of WR M1chae1 ffv1n .
GREEN BAY PACKERS- Acquired FB
Marv1n Powell from New Orleans for TE
Lawrence Hart .
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Agreed to
terms with TE Jason Dunn to a one.year
con tract
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS- Agreed to
terms with AB Chad Morton , FB Terrelle
Smi1t) and TE Austin Wheatty on three·
year contracts. Signed OB Jake Del·
hOmme and DT Robert N e wk~rk to one·
year conlra ct.
NEW YORK JETS - S1gned WA Yat1l
Green .
OAKLAND
RAIDERS - S1gned
TE
Mondrie t Fulcher .
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES- Signea DE
JOhn Frank to a three-year contract .
PITTSBURGH
STEELERSAnnoun ced the retirement of NT Joel
Steed.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS- Signed
OB Joe Hamilton to a three .year contract. Agreed to terms with LB Nate Webster on a three -year contract.
TENNE SSEE
TITANS - Agreed
to
terms with RB Mtke Green . S1gned LB
Pete r Sirmon .
HOCKEY
National Hocke_y League
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS - Named
Terry Simpson assistant coach and , M1ke
Babcock coach of the Cinc 1nnati Ducks
of th e AHL .
BOSTON BRUINS - Signed 0 Jamo
Kultanen . D Pavel Kotar ik and F Eric
Manlow
·
CHICAGO
BLACKH AWK S- Named
Nick Beverley ass1stant general ~anag­

Mato&lt;LAoguoSocc.r

EatM'n Dlvlalon
W L T Plo GF CIA
NY·NJ 11 .....................7 2 35 33 Z7
New England............... 7 7 5 26 31 29

T-..

~

and three each in the third and
fourth to bring home the merryrule win.
Fede~ pitching gave up five
hits, four walks, and had eight
strikeouts. Kimes and Dunfee
combined for nine walks, six hits
and five strikeouts for Middleport.
,
Federal hitters included Torrence with a single, Barnhart with
a single, Willis with a single, Smith

•

Wednesday, July 12, 2000

Pomerov. Middleport, Ohio

with two singles, Austin Stack had
a single, and Cory McCune also
had a single.
Middleport hitters were Austin
Dunfee with a double, Josh
Kimes had two singles, Justin Bell
had a single, and Steven Hudson
had a single.
Racine plays the Middleport
Astros tonight at 6:30 p.m. with
the Rio Grande-Federal Hocking
game following at 7:45 p.m.

Pet.

G8

,542
.539
.512 2 1/2
.442 8 1f2
.400
12

.632
.512 10 112
.&lt;159
15
..a52 15 1!2
.422 18 1!2
.593
.558
3
.534
5
.494 8 1(2

T-oy .. Gomo
Am8fican League 6, National League 3

Thurocloy'o Gomeo
Seanle (Garcia 2-1) a1 san Diego (Tollberg
2·0). 5:05p.m.
· Houston (Reynolds 6·5) at Detroit {Moehler
5·5). 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Ritchie S-5) at Cleveland (Burba
8·4), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Schilling 4·5) at Toronto (Car·
pentet' 7·7), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Penny 4-7) Bt N.Y. Vankees (Hernandez 8-6), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Bobby J . Jones 3-:4) dt Boston

Miami .........................7 9
D.C .............................4 13

4
5

25 29
17 30

33
45

40
45
27
25

39
37

Centnll Dlvlalan
Tarrc&gt;a Bay11 .............. 9 o 33
Chic:ego 10 ..................8 3 33
Dallas ........................8 11 3
Columbus ................... 7 10 4

31
38
36
29

Western otvlalon
KansasCity11 ............. 3 538
Los Angeles10 ...... ...... 5 7 37
Colorado .................... 9 10 2
San Jose .....................5 8 8
NOTE: Three points for a win
for a tie.

3013
28 26
29 27 40
23 25 30
and one point

Todoy'o Gameo

Tampa Bay 81 DC United, 7:3(J"p.m.
New England at COlumbus, 7:30p.m.
&amp;a~u.u.,.·o

aomoo

New York-New Jersey at New England 3:30
p.m.
Kansas c~ at _Columbus, 4:30p.m.
Dallas 81: MiarrH, 7:30p.m .
Tampa Bay at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Colorado at San Jose, 10 p.m.
DC Unhed at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

ec.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS- Nam ed
Newell Brown assoc1ate 'coach. Signed F
Serge Aubin to a two-year contract .
MINN ESOTA
WILD- S1gned
RW
Christian M atte to a one-year contracl.
NASHVILLE
PREDATORS - Signed
LW Sean Hagg e;rty and G Chris Mason .
NEW JERSEY DEVILS - Signed D
Jose! Boumed1enne .

cancer surgery, got a standing third when Brown walked three
ovation when he was introduced, batters, including Carl Everett
and later rewarded his rooters with the bases loaded. Jones tied
BASEBALL
with a single
it with his opposite-field homer
Am•rlc:•n League
"Probably no words to explain in the bottom half
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Signed C
how happy, how excited I a'm
An error by Barry Larkin set up
feeling," Galarraga said.
Jeter's two-run single in the
~Andruw · Jone.- of-the Braves
fourth. Playtng"ln ills truro AIJc · -~
IVI..ike Goss took
Fiard nip
also did well, delivering an RBI Star game and making his first
across the start~finish line on· the
single.
start, Jeter had never gotten a hit
last lap, destroying his car. Goss
· Still, with a record seven starters in these affairs - he had struck
was only mildy shaken up.
PageBl
unable to play:' Maddux hurt and out in his previous two at~bats.
~onrad Newman had been
1999 AU-Star MVP Pedro Mar~
The AL tacked on three runs in
accident ended his final drive.
"king of the hill" for five years,
tinez not even on the roster the ninth offTrevor Hoffman on
Mo Beeler, Willoughby, Craig but it appears Jerry VanOver is
because of an· injury, this summer Lawton's RBI single, Magglio Gibson, Whitney Sr. and Brent building his own dynasty with his
showcase was minm some sizzle.
Ordonez's sacrifice fly and Darin Steele rounded out the top 10. ' second straight win and third vicThe seven missing starters were Erstad's RBI grou nder, a ball misBrad Graves put his Ford-pow- tory of the year.
batting a combined .301 with played by second baseman Jose ered No. 10 out front and pointSecond- place finisher Ga ry
160 home rum this season and Vidro for an error.
ed it toward the checkered flag. Park came off the tail to finish
had totaled 66 AII~Star appearAn error by Nomar Garciaparra holding off strong challe{lges second, sandwiched between first
ances.
set up Steve Finley's RBI single from lUck French ,Jamie Lawson, and third by another VanOver,
Johnson threw only eight · off Mariano Rivera in the bottom Bobby Kitchen and Mike Long. A who came home third.
pitches in working a perfect first of the ninth. Garciaparra , Jeter's late- race caution · era~ed Grave~'
Rounding out the top 10 were
inning. Then again, he threw 121 replacement, became the first huge lead and, as his No. 10 Duane Ackley in fourth , Larry
Sunday while striking out 13 as shortstop to make two errors 111 appeared to fade, he wrestled the Jones, Neely, 13i)] Jenn_~. JinJmy
Arizona beat Oa~~nd.
an AU- Star game. · ·
riuchine home for his first win Curtis, Speedy Tilton and Terry
The Al took a 1-0 lead in the
ever.
Anderson.

·a

~-~ Racing

K-C will race fotir division&gt;
this Saturday, but due to a bog race
in north ern Ohio. the four-cy linders will replace the sprints on
the racing card.
Local interest ha s sparked the
addition o f the fou r-cyli nder
class, which will be run on a trial
basis.
"T he spr int cars will take one
week off only," said Eleanor
Karshner, K-C Raceway promoter. "We will be running them
each and every Saturd Jy mght J'i
scheduled the remamder of the
season.
"Con li ng July 29. is ou r 'p nnt
car spectact&gt;hr 'The Free dom 40 ,' .
and we arc really looking forword
to a super night of racing."

from

College nev,vs and notes, As
Astros to meet Fed Hock in Hubbard, Bl

Friday

High: 80s; Low: &amp;os

Details, A3

a1.
Meigs County's

a Bonus Ball that turns sma ll cash prizes into bigger ones! The

•

Artisans
to display
at Meigs
Co. Fair

Plus adds up ,.to a great new game.

How To Play:

000000

110.000

111111~

5/6

00000

11.\011

U\% ol

la/6 ~lllonlllllll

00000

1\00

IHIIW

11110

~.\'N, ol ''I"

la/6

0000

With Super Lotto Plus you select or let Auto Lotto choose 6

)/6 plus Bonus IIIII

0000

·OUt of 49 numbers. Each wager sti ll costs $1. On drawing

)/6

000

' 1\

night. we'll draw 6 numbers fro~ a field of 49. plus a Bonus

"I"

IIOill'

nonr

Monthlv Drowirt~

I in 4~1

I in 8~6

Ball from the remaining field of 43. If yo4r 6 numbers match

Faorgnt'rs
will b~..· .tbk ro w~u c h ~1rti~am at
work .lt tht.· M l· i~rs Counry Fair
thi \

-

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during tire

meeting

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pl.lll; by tluo

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work "LTiL'" 0 11
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Th e h.!\:-, tourn.lln L·nt ru be
hdd 11 1 Pom noy on Atlg. 211 t\
0 11 tr.H.·k. Clup111an reported .
The· .. R .11iv .tt the River" 'lernw!lt'L'i t~·..;riv;J] i -. "\t' t t(Jr rlw l.t ' t
\\"l'L"kL' tH..I I ll SeptcJnbl'r.
In ()nobrr. ( : hn~nnao; pro ,Jlti\' ttie"

will begin

011 TIJ,ItJbg:iv it lg \\"l"L'kcnd.

Pl.HJ\ .ti'L' JJ,o lwing m ~Kk· tOr
.1 \l'l'OI1d holid.ty hotllt' rour in
J kLl'llll1l'r
.m d fOr Sl'Vt'f:i \

.

numbers matches the Bo nus Ball. You automatically win more money.
In this case. 5/6 plus the Bonus Ball wins you .$10,000. Now let's say

FROM STAFF REPORTS

I'&lt; IM U(&lt; &gt;Y -

·you 've matched 5/6 but your remaining number does not match t he
'

Bonus Ball. You still win $1.500. Take a Look at the chart

comL·sts.

Athens attorney Herman -Carson, representing Jeremy Shockey. addressed the court during a sentencing hearing Wednesday for Sl1ockey and his
· mother,
Deborah
, far right.- The -two were
sentenced
'-'· .
.
--· ·- - by. ,Judg~
. .
'SHOCKEYS SENTENCED -

-~~

-·

www.ohiolottery.co m

that explains t he new and improved prize structure.
Plus, you can still play the Kicker too! That's the
new Super Lotto Plus. Now with more ways to win.

l otte"i

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Commi~~mn r eg u latl o~~-

Pl,.,l\0, pl.l·, ''"·I'"

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Me1gs Coun ty\ qu .d 1ty .irtJ\ ;111\ h,Jvc ukc11 tht•
lir'-l '-fl'fl"\ tl L't"L'~S :1ry to Drg.ln iZl·
.111d morL· dh·divcly promote
th L· tr w.1,1.:C~. throu~h k .tJcrsh1p
111. 1dc .t\·. ~ il. ihiL· hy ,\;1 Appab t· h i.Jn
lt q~ IOII , d ( :omnliv•ion gr.mr.
Mc mhn..; Li nd putl'lltl ;ll lll t'l ll bcr" of till· ML·tg-~ ( :m1n ty Arti \,111\. A . . ,uti.tti nn, t~nlllnl
last
wn·k .lt rhc Cht•,tn Courthouse,
.ut· itl\"itnl t (J di o;;pl.1y their prodlid\ .11
FriLby\ JlCli11LTny Blu es
and

J.17 7

Slh·ict )1

Ct)llt"L'rt

(See

relilted story.)
Tlll\ nHJ.pLT.II1\'l' rtli.Jrt tu prollltltt' high -L' lld App.ll.ldli.ll l Lraft
prodttch i' the tir"t npportu111ty

••

Patrick H. O'Brien following testim ony from a State Highway
Patrol trooper and the parents of the 10 year-old boy killed
in a June accident Also pictured is Deborah Shockey's attorn~J W!I !tam G.rimm. (lilsian J. Reed photo.).

morion til ed by Proo;ecm in g Arrornt.'y John Lcntc s.
H1s HHHher. Ikbor;dJ Shockey, was sentenced to a

Please se~ Shoekeys, Pace -AJ

··

Rock legend and Pomeroy
neighbor to perform Friday
Kaukonen hits amphitheater
in PB&amp;J Concert Series
BY TONY

M.

LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POJ\1EIU)Y Meigs County\ mos t t~unou s
rock ~ md rn lkr. _lonna Kau kom:n. wdl he pLTt~nm ­
iiJ~ ~~ rare so lo pcrt(Jrlll :lll LT Fr iJ.1y l'VL'111 ng at the
ltivnfront Amphithe,ltcr :1 ~ p,lrt of tht· Pom eroy
Blu e-. and Jazz So ciL'ty\ Summn Concert Sn ics.
Fur Pc,tcc RatKh . Kaukon cn"s ML·igs County [;lll t.lr Calllp, will co - ,ponso r tomorrow 's nJilCLTI.
Kaukonul , .1 fo rn1n guitarist ti.1r the popul.1r
I%1 1' rock .md roll b.md jctkrso11 Airpl.111e a11d a
tllc'1llbe r of the Rock .llld R ttll H .dl of F.tme. " ·"
hL'ctl pn f4. nmin~; .md TlTord111g music fi:1r mnrl' tlun
J tl yc.1n with k ge 11dary artiw~ "uch as Jan i-; Joplin .
Jt:rry Carc ta atH.l_lin1i Hendnx.
!11 I Y71 1, while ,~.p l with JelTersoll Atrpl:~t &gt;c• . .Jorllu
a11d baS&gt;"t j.1ck Ct\a dy formed th e band Hot T11 tu.

Artisans Association
to debut Friday

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

.

originall y .1 c hargt: of aggravated vt:hicular
il omicidt:, and the c harge of leavin g the scene of an
accide nt was ongi nal1y charged as leaving tht· sce ne
of J f:tt:ll cra'\11 . Uut both counts \·\"en: rt·duccd on a

f\1nrlt :J rtts

d l.nlt"' . rhnn1gh their costumed
grct·tcro; prog:ram. will hl' particip.l rin~ in bot h rlw Butlington
hl.lllc1 .md C:hc'Sil'r Sl,de Davs
tl·-.ri, ·itiL·'i this \\"l'L'kt·ml.

C lm' ~rm.1 s

Mun icipa l Court o n unn: lateJ charges.
He· was tlnt·d $41Hl a11d costs. pbct'd on a year's
probation anJ ordered to &lt;eek drug and alcohol
counseling:. HL: was finl:'d -S25 and cos(s on a seat belt
vio latio n ..md ordered to pay court costs on a charge
o f t~n lure to comrol.
'Thl' ne!;ltgcllt homi ci d e ,charge against Shockey

K .lll k UilL'Il

projects
dis~:usset/

~c nt L" IllT handed down rece ntly in Athens Co unty

pnl(lnn mg at

and fall

J. REED

POM Ell..OY - An emotiona l plc,1 fur leniency
from th e parc nt'i of a child killed in 3 farm accident
in lkdtord Township. an d detail&lt; about the acciden t
~trH..l dll~ law t•nforn·nlC)H inveo;tigatm n of it. prcccdt.•d thl· sen tc::-ncing ot- a Shade man and h1 s Fttorl\er on
Wednesday.
Jeremy Shockey, 26. and his mother. Deborah
Shoch·y. 44 . ,\,ere se ntenced, re'ipL·ctivdy, for his role
in the accidental dt•ath of Debora h Shockey\
nephe\y, Dallas Castl e, on June 2, anJ th e ~r ensuing
nusn:prcsentatio n to law enforce m en t o fficers of
what happened .
Meit,'S County Co urt Judge Patrick H. O'l.lrien
'&lt;'ntl'llced Jeremy Shockey to six months in pi I on
c harges o f leaving the scene of an accidc1Jt, 1~cgli ge nt
h01 ni cidc Jn d driving under susp ensio n. and su spended th e semcn ce to 60 da ys in Jail.
Hi ~ jail time will be served concurrently with a

J)uring Wcdnco;;(i.Jy's mct·ting:
uf th L' I_,OillL'roy Mt·rchants
A""uu.mon, pbnli \wre made
t~n· 'iertin~ up ,1 buorh at t he f tir.
Au!'. 14- 1'J, whnc· eve ry
cvcn i u~ tlum f•-H. Mc:ihrs arti\,U l'- wi ll ~.kmon..,tr.lt.c: how they
lll.tke tilL'. products they selL
The boorh at the ( tir was onc
of '\t.'VL'ral late '\ummcr and fall
pn:~JL'Clli discus'\ed during the
mn·ring cun Juctcd by Annie
Ch~p tlUn . presid ent.
Fricby
night\ concert
Tlrr booth 111
rhc
at tire fair amphitheater
was one of w irh gmt 3r
Sl'r•era/ late lq;end Jornu

.111d tilL' tr.tditlntul p.tLH.k· ~m d ·
open lllHJ\L' celcbLttion " ·ill be

The Bonus Ball does not affect the 6/6 wager.

BY BRIAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

\ 'L\IT.

m ntHIJJ ,d

the 6 winning numbers you win the Super Lotto Plus jackpot!

Victim 5family,
defense attorneys
ask for leniency

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I'OMEROY

Wright to nuh· ~Oillt.: conran~.
lr wa~ rl·portcd tlut mcr-

5/6 plusllonuslllll

Shockeys sentenced in chii,J's death

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

progranl \lT~Il'\ 'lpotl'mrcd b\' the
'
"'
'
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July 13, 2000

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Today's

2 Sections - 12 Pages

Ca lendar
Classitieds

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Cotuics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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�Tf!ursday, July 13, 2000

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
J)river found guilty in inddent
DELAWARE (AP) -A Columb'us man has been convicted of
felonious assault for running another driver off of 1- 71 during a
road r.~ge incident last year.
Robert Henning, 42, said he would appeal the verdict rettJrned
Wednesd ay by a Delaware County Common Pleas Court jury.
Henning was accused of instigating a high-speed chase on southbound ·i-71 near Delaware o n March 29, 1999 that ended when a
state trooper handcuffed him and took him to jail.
Henning claimed the other driver, Claudine DeGennaro of Mentor, W.s the real aggressor.
But the arrestin'g officer, State Highway Patrol Trooper Timothy
Keds, sa1d Henning was to blame.
Henning, a salesman, was returning home from a job si [e in
Mansfield that evening. DeGennaro was traveling to Ci ncinnati to
audit a store for her employer, Jo-Ann Fabric &amp; Crafts.
Henning apparently became enraged when DeGennaro, driving
in the left lane, didn't switch lanes fast enough. He pursued her,
forcing her off the road at one point. T he chase continued onto
Routes 36/ 37 when the woman sudde nly exited th ere to elude
him, DeGennaro and the trooper testified .
" We ho pe (the conviction) will be used to send a message toothers that this behavior won't be tolerated in this county or in o ther
counties," Assistant Prosecutor Rosemary Rupert said.
" I've lost my faith in the State Highway Patrol," Henning said as
he left the courthouse. " In my opinion, the officer lied."
Sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 14.

-

Foot fetish yields prison tenn
COLUMBUS (AP) -A man has been sentenced to five years in
prison and could be labeled a sexual predator for fondling feet.
Leste r DeBoard, 36, of Columbus, lured an 11-year-old girl to a
secluded part of a library where he had her do gymnastics exercises and asked to trace her foot.
He told police he's aroused by feet.
DeBoard now faces two charges of disorderly conduct for tracing
the feet of two girls in a li brary in Pickeri ngton in Fairfield County
. DeBoard pleaded -guilty to gross sexual imposition in May.
Prosecutors said he approached the girl Feb. 14 in a library in suburban Worthingto n . H e told her he was designing a shoe and asked
to trace her foot . While doing so, he touched her foot and ankle.
.. Franklin Counry Commo n Pie as Judge Michael Watson said he
would nile later on whether to declare DeBoard a sexual predator,
·w,ho must register with local police when he's o ut of prison, or as a
.
lesser sex offender.

Teen could be tried as an aduH
C INC INNAT I (AP) - Prosecutors say the !&amp;-year-old driver of
a vehicle in which two passengers died in a June 9 crash should be
tried as an adult for aggravated veh icula r hominde.
At a hearing Wednesday in Hamilton Counry Juvenile Court,
prosecutors called the actions of the suburban Delhi Township girl
reckless. She is no t bei"ng Identified because she is a juvenile.
. Pro~ecutors allege that the crash occurred when the girl lost control of her Jeep while " hill-hopping" west of Ci ncinnati. The teen
drove at speeds approaching 60 mph, causing the Jeep to go airborne as it went over hills, said assistant prosecutor Tricia
l andthorn .
. A conviction in adult court could send the girl to prison for close
to 10 years. In the j uvenile system, she could remain in custody only
until she is 21 .
Pro.1_ecutor Mike Allen said the severiry of the accident and the
_ ac~io n~ . ()f the driver j ustify his decisi~n to ..s«k a tr_i~ in adult cou~t,
· 'ili1s was not a no rmal , 1rresponS1ble act of drtvmg," Allen said.
"You have two people dead. You have eight people injured."
Judge Sylvia Hendon sch~duled a hearing for July 25 to determine whether the girl should be sent to adult court.
· . Ten passengers an d the driver had crowded into the Jeep, a)} but
the driver without seatbelts, prmecutors said. Anna. Destefano and
Kelli Ridenour, both 13, were killed in the crash and five other
.!eens were inJured .
Prosec utors said th e driver told the other teens they were in for
an excitmg ride and told them to brace the mselves by putting their
hands on the ceili ng of the Jeep: On the secon d pass down the hill,
th e vehicle skidded across t he road, stru ck a utility pole and rolled
oyer seve ral times, prosecutors said.

Poll: consumer confidence high
C INC IN NAT I (AP) - Ohio consumers are more optimistic
about the future than at any tune in the past 19 years, according to
an Ohio Poll released Th ursday.
Seven of I 0 Qhioans surveyed sa id now is a good time to make a
major hou sehold purchase, th e poll found. The poll did not ask the
reason fo r the respondents' optimism.
The poll was sponsored by the Universiry of Ci ncinnati and was
conducted by the univerSity's Inst itute for Policy R esea rch . Questions were pose d by telephone to a r.~ ndom sa mple of 839 adults
st;ttewide.
..
:The poll ha s a margin of erro r of plus or minus 3 percentage
pomts.

Wright plane replica dedicated
DAYTON (AP) - A replica of a 191 1 Wrig ht airplane is being
ptepared for an atte mp t to re- enac t Am erica's first transcontinental
fi (ght.
·Th e project is an effort to draw attentio n to Dayton's plans for
celeb rating the 10(Jrh ann iversary of powered flight .
Th e W nght brothers inve nted the airplane in Dayton and later
n~anufacturl'd ;:u rp lancs here and ran a fl yi ng sc hool. One of their
stud,·nts, Calbrairh Perry R odge rs. made the coast- to-coast flight in
1911 111 a Wri g9t MAde·! F.X .
.
:On Wt•dn csday, a re pl ica of the c raft w:1s chr isten ed the " Vin Fizz"
r~ pro mote a grape drink 111;1de h: the fl ig-hr'o; "ponsor, the Armo ur
Me:It Pa cki ng Co.
. ·.. w~ plan t&lt;~. Wic thi s 11\Ud t• l to recapture that sp irit of adve nture
and diScovery that marked the dawn o f aviation , sai d Madeline
~seli . cxec ut.ivc ~ir~c tur uf I nventing Flight, the con1mittee promotmg D ayton s avJalJun heritage.
.
The orga nizatmn h ired Dana Smith, a retired aviation mechanics
sc h6ol owner in Limeri ck, Ma ine, to bui ld the replica. Smith, an
aviation lmtory bull w ho built and fl ew an earlier Wri ght airplane
replica, will attempt the coast-to-coast fl ight in 2002.
.
-The repli ca will be o n display at the Un ited States Air and Trade
Show o n Jul y 22 -2.&gt; in Dayto n, aud later at the Experime ntal AircrJfi A 'i&lt;;O( I.Itlon \ .tfltlliJI (0 11\/(..' ntion Ill o~ hkosh , Wis.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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992-2156

•

Thursday, July 13,- 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

-

COLUMBUS (AP) -A group of Democr.~tic state lawmakers is calling for a mor.~torium
o n executions in Ohio and a ~arlong study of
whether the death penalty is applied fairly.
The 16 legislators are cosponsoring a bill
introduced in the H ouse last month that wo~ld
require Gov. Bob Taft and legislative leaders to
appoint a capital puniSiunent review comnussion to do the study.
The main sponsor, Rep. Shirley Smith of
Cleveland, planned to talk Friday with prisoners on Ohio's death row. which she says houses
some in~es who have been wrongfully convicted.
"There seem to be some very bad flaws in
our system.'' Smith told The Columbus Dispatch for a story Thursday. "We need to reexamine all cases on appeal. especially those
where DNA could be used to prove ~meone's
innocence."
~
Death row at the Mansfield Correctional
Institution houses about 200 convicted killers

The main sponsor, Rrp. Shirley
Smith of Cleveland, planned to talk
Friday with prisoners on Ohio's
death row, which she says houses
some inmates who have been
wrongfully convicted.
awaiting electrocution or lethal injection.
Only one executio n has been carried out in
Ohio since 1963, that of Wilford Berry of
Cleveland, w ho was put to death in February
1999 after being allowed to drop his appeals.
Taft said he doesn 't know anyrhing about
Smith's bill and has no plans to suspend death
sentences because no studies have shown significant errors in O hio 's death-penalry system, said
spokeswoman Mary Anne Sharkey.
"He believes we have su!Jicient safeguards
with the appeals process and the parole board,
and the governor reviews each case," Sharkey
said.

Re~rt:

Ohioans
due.for income tax cut
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state will be able to provide a
.
temporary mcome-tax
cut o f upI
to 6.5 percent on returns to be
filed next year, The Columbus
Dispatch reported Thursday.
"While we are not certain of
how much of a tax cut it will be,
it will be healthy, - larger than
the one this year," said Tim Keen,
assistant state budget director.
The strong performance of
sales and personal-Income taxes
are·being credited for the expected tax break.
The newspaper's story said:
-The state finished the fiscal
year June 30 with $500 million ,
or 2.6 percent, more in revenue
than expected.
Expenditures were $325
million less than anticipated during fiscal 2000, but much of that
money is committed to programs
and will be spent in fiscal 200 I,
which began July 1.
- This year's tax cut of 3.9
percent was based on a surplus o(
about $300 million, meaning a
$500 million surplus would generate a tax cur of '6 .5 percent.
Keen said the bulk of the $500
million would be given back in
the form ofa tax cut.
Keen said tax collections for ·
fiscal 2000, which _ended June
30, were ahead of schedule by
$437.4 million, or 2.9 percent.
Leading the collections were
the personal income tax, which
provided $.315 million, or 4.6
percent, more than expected. The

Smith's bill doesn\ have a chance of passing
without the support of majoriry Republican
leaders. And, so far, they have been lukewarm to
the idea of a moratorium on executions.
But Snuth' said if her legislatipn is blocked,
she will launch a petition drive to put the'
moratorium on the ballot, possibly in November.
" I have gotten calls from all over the state on
this issue," she said.
Rep. R ay Miller, D-Cohnnbus, one of the _
co-sponsors of the mor.~torium bill, said, "Historically, we've found there are too many innocent people on death row and too many people
put to death wrongly."
Miller said he also is troubled by the fact that
those on death row are almost exclusively poor
and disproportionately black.
"Before you kill somebody, there ought to
be a very thorough legal analysis," he said.
"More can be done than is being done now."

Court denies death row inmate's
request to give up appeals
COLUMBUS (AP) - A death
row inmate apparently seeking to
be executed failed to end 1 his
death penalty appeals on the state
level, according to an Ohio
Supreme Court ruling Wednesday.
August Cassano, sentenced to
death in 1999 for killing a prison
cellmate by stabbing him 76
times, had asked the court to
withdraw rhe appeals guaranteed
unde r Ohio law in death penalry
cases. '
Cassano made his request in a
handwritten letter to the court
on April 12 . "I know what I am
doing and I am in my right
mind," he wrote ... , had a fair
trial."
His lawyer David Doughten,

Gene Henson

Jeffley L Folmer

GALLIPOLIS . - Gene Henson, 71. Alexa ndria , Ohio, formerly of
Calha County, died Wednesday, July 12. 2000 in Mount Carmel West
Medical Center, Colu mbus.
Born May 21 , I 929 in Addison Township, Gallia County, son of the late
Samuel and Mildred Vance Henson , he was reti red from Setterlin Construction Co., Columbus: ami was a 40-year member of Local 200,
Brotherhood of Carpenters.
He wos a U.S. Army veter:m .
Survivmg Jre his wifc, Jean Kent H enson, Whom he married Oct. 23,
1953 in Middleport; a brother, Arthur (Patricia) Henson of Addison; two
Sisters, Clara Lou (William) Shaver of Easley, S.C., and Georgia (Harold)
Porter of Gallipolis: two sisters-in-law, Juanita Henson of C heshire, and
Vi f!,oi nia Henson of Addison; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
H e was also preceded 1n death by two brothers, R obert "Henson, and
Ius twin broth,·r,Jack Henson.
Gr.~veside s.erv i~ps will be 11 a. m . Friday in Reynolds Cemetery at
Addi son, with the R ev. Rick Barcus officiating. There will be no visitation . Arrangements arc by C remeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
In li~:u of tlowers, memonal contributions may be, tnadc to o ne's
t:JVorite charity or to any organization th.11 promotes the welfare of animals.
A flag prcsenr.1tion at the graveside will be conducted by VFW Post
4464 and American leg~on lafayette Post 27.

POMEROY - Jeffrey L. Folmer, 50, of Pomeroy, died on
Wednesday. July 12, 2000 at Holzer M edical Center in Gallipolis.
Born on April 24, 1950 in Mason, West Virginia, he was the son
ofWill iam Folmer of Pomeroy, and the late Charlotte Devol Folmer.
He was a veteran of the United States Navy and was employed as
a long wall operator for the Southern Ohio Coal Company, Mine
·
2, for over 26 years .
He was also a membe r of the United Mine Workers Loca l 1886
and attended Syracuse Church of the Nazare ne .
Along with his moth e r, he was preceded in &amp;ath by a bro th er-inlaw, Burdell Johnson .
H e is survived by his )3'ife, Sandra Jo h nson FolmeF of Pomeroy;
two sons, Jarrod (Michelle) Folmer and C had Folmer, both of
Pomeroy; a granddaughter, Nicole Folmer of Po meroy: his father,
Willia m Fo lmer of Pomeroy; two sisters, Jenne th (Dave) Freeman of
Washington, D.C., and Judith Oim) Durham of Pennsylvan ia; , a
father-in-law and mother-in-law, Emerson and l eota J o hnson of
Portland; three brothers-in-law, Ray (Kathy) Johnson of Racine , and
Ronnie Johnson and Johnnie Johnson, both of Portland; and several nephews.
Services will be 1 p.m . Saturday, July 15. 2000 in Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. William Stires, and
bur ial will follow in Long Bottom Cemetery.
Friends may call o n Friday, July 14, 2000, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at~,e fun eral home.

Anna Grace Oiler
THURMAN - Anna Grace Oiler, 81,80Wayne Lane, Thurman, formerly of Syrac use, died Wednesday, July 12,2000 in Holzer Senior Care
Center.
Born Dec. 22. 1918 in Syracuse, daughter of the late William and M ary
Mogaline "Magg1e" Cook Diddle, sh e retired as a cook from the Southern Local Sc hool· District, with 30 years of service.
She was .1 member of Syracuse Presbyterian Church, and " form er
member of the Daughters of America.
Survivin g arc a daughter, Mary Ann " Pat" (Daryl) Brown of Mine r.~!
Wells, W.Va.; a son, Jomes Wtlliam (Maggie) O iler of Thurman; three
grandchildren , two step grandchildren and six grea t-gr.~ ndchildren ; two
sisters, Alice Flanagan and Della Starkey, both of Syr.~cu se; and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine,
with the R ev. Marc Sumtt .and the Rev. Kris R obinson officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the
fimera l home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Memorial con tributions can be made to Trinity Baptist C hurch, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, or Syr.~cu se Presbyterian C hu rch , Syracuse, Ohio
45779.

Most death row inmates
are in Mansfield, but
Cassano was transferred
because he had committed
a violent crime in prison,
said Joe Andrews,
spokesman for the Ohio
Department of
Rehabilitation··
and Correction.

sales tax ran $208.7 million, or
3.7 percent, ahead of predictions.
The sales tax on automobiles
performed especially well in
June, yielding 8.1 percent more
than expected.
Lagging was the corporate net
income tax , finishing the year
below projections by S105 million, or 9.8 percent.
.
On the spending ~ide , Keen
said about half the $325 million
1999.
in underspending was in primary
Most d eath row inmates are in
and secondary education and in
Mansfield, but Cassano was transwelfare. He said much of that
ferred because he had committed
money already is committed !o
a violent crime in prison, said Joe
progra1111 and will be spent. The
Andrews, spokesman for the
extra welfare money will be used
Ohio Department of Rehabilitafor support .e rvices to help pe~
tion and Correction. There are
who asked the court to reject his
pie get jobs, he said.
client's request, told the court 199 inmates on Ohio's death row.
And in a meino to state agenCassano has made It clear in
that Cassano "apparently wishes
cies about preparing their new
to become a volunteer" and be court papers that he would rather
budget requests, budget Director
executed.
be executed than spend his .life at
Thomas Johnson cautioned that
Doughten said Wednesday he the super-maximum prison, said
there will be "serious budget
agreed with the court's decision John Spon, a Richland Counry
constraints."
to reject Cassano's request. He . assistant prosecutor who proseKeen said the conservative
said sociery's interest in seeing cured Cassano in the stabbing
view must be ta~en because ecothat a defendant's death sentence case.
nomic forecasters are predicting
is properly reviewed ourweighs
Spon said his office won't
slower growth. Also, the state
an individual offender's right to stand in Cassano's way. "We think
might have to spend more
give up that review.
his wish should be granted:' he .
money on schools because of the
Cassano was serving a life sen- said.
Ohio _ Supreme_ Courrs ~cent _
renee in Mansfield CorreGtional- - Cassano 's request- has- similari"
school-funding ruling.
_ Institution for shooting a bar- ties to rwo recent death row
. "We don't know what's going
tender to death during a robbery cases. Kevin Scudder, sentenced
to go on, but it's likely we're
when he stabbed cellmate Walter to die for the rape and murder of
going to spend more money (on
.Hardy in 1997.
a 14-year-old Columbus girl, is
schools)," Keen said.
He was transferred to the awaiting a determination on
state's ~uper-rnaximum secudty whether he's mentally competent
Gov. Bob Taft has said he
pmon m Youngstown followmg to request . that his appeals be
opposes a tax increase to solve
his
death penalty sentence in dropped.
the school-funding problem.

(US I'S 2U- 9601
l'u h lt ~h~U cvc rv Hflc r n oa n , ' Montl~ y throug h
· Fmlay, 111 (.mat St. . l'omcrny. Oh to, tly th e
Uhtu \'alley Pu blt~htng Company., l'omcmy,

O hin ~ 5709 . l'h 9Y :!-~ 156 Sco.:ond ci a ~~ [JU~I­

Annu ally for sys tems
wit h elec tri ca l or mechanical
com ponents.
- Every five years fo r systems in operation for les s than
20 years.
- E very three years for sys'ems in operation for 20 yea rs
or m o re or at intervals th e
st ate's Publi c H eal th Co un ci l
determines necessary fo r th e
publi c hea lth.
" Peopl e are not goi ng to be
real ha pp y." sa id Kurt Ander son, e nvi ro nm e nta l d ivis ion
e mpl oyee at th e Au gla ize
Cou nty H ea lth Depart m en t .
Ma rv in Se lh ors~ is t h e loca l
h ea lth department's enviro nm e ntal specia list.
"We know the re are a lot of

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Shop

: 290 Nortti Second

J\lt&gt;mlwr: ·r he th s&lt;IC tat..:d I'H:ss, and the Uhm
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J'OSTMASTER: Send addrcs.~ cnrrccthlns t1l
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NEIDTO

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Reader Services

5.Jngla~ .

Our m:1i11 ~.:onrcrn In Hll slnrll•s •~ tn tw
or illll.' r rur in II slury,
l'u lllht' nt· ~\ruum ui i7JO l 992 · 2 1 ~~ . wl' wi ll

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Complete
Stock of·

Middleport, Ohio 45760.:

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Ohio.

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!Ladies Summer Apparel!
! 00

:• t:~ p~ill ~ I l'u run\1 ~'·

people on fixed and / or limited
Health
Commissioner
incomes, and there is no provi- Charlotte Parsons said the bill
sion in thi s bill for low- inter- would force homeowners to
es t loans," S elhorst said. repla ce a septic system "only if
" That 's the thing I'm not real it's ca using a nuisance - and
happy with."
it ·puts th e burd en on the
He said the proposed law · board of health to define 'nuicould require on-sire inspec- sa nce.' "
tions of more tha n 9,000 priThe amount of the fees to
vate septic systems in Auglaize be paid by home,o wners for
County alone .
th e inspections is not spelled
Th e purpose of the bill is to out in the bill. Each county
keep the state's streains ·and health board would se t its own
o ther bodies of water free of fee schedule to ·cover actual
pollution, Selhorst sa id.
costs.

~-----------------,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms
co uld return to the tri-counry
area on Friday, and may continue
on Sat~~rday.
Rain clouds will spread into the
area Friday afternoon, the
National Weather Service said .
Highs will be in the 80s following overnight lows in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:01
and sunrise on Friday at 6: 15a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms early, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 60s. Light and variable
wind. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A chance
of showers and thunderstorms in

Artists
from Page AI
members .
The association will provide a
catalyst for a number of crafters'
guilds, smaller. ,groups of artists
dedi cated to a single type of
product, according to Justin Diddle, who serves as the administrator cif the ARC grant program:

•

Ohio Vallt') l~1hllsh i nK Co.

l'hl•,k )"llllr inru r rnaliun and makP a
rn r rt•cliun ir llllrnmtt·d.
,
~t·w\ lh·pn rHu l'IJh
.lht' tlwiunumhcr b 991-2155. Ucp11rtm ~· n1
l'\h'n\ iun • un: :

.•

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l'l•"'r."' ''''• .............................. E•t

11~

POMEROY - Meigs County
SheriffJames M . Sou lsby reported
the arrest on Wedn esday of Kevin
Bush, 19, Tuppers Plains, on a
benc h warrant for fa ilure to
appear and failure to comply with
a H ealth R ecovery Services
order.
Mark Wolsh, 3 1, Alban y. was
arrested for disorderly conduct by
in wxication. fo ll owing the investigation of a domestlC vtolen ce
complaint in Carpenter. Both
were housed in the Meigs Counry Jail. ·

EMS runs
.POMEROY Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
o n Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

Summit
from Page AI

Shockeys _
from Page AI
suspended 30-day sentence, placed
oii a year-long perio d of probation
and fined $200 and costs on the
falsification charge.
She was also ordered to perform
80 hours of conununity seryice. In
exc han ge for her guilty plea, a
c harge of obstruction of justice was
dismissed .
Trooper Robert Jacks of the
Gallia-Me igs Post of the State
Highway Patrol sa id Jere my
Shoc key was drivin g a pi ckup
truck pul ling a homemade hay
wogon o n a grayel road in Bedford
Townsh ip when hay from t he
wagon fell from the truck bed,
along with Dallas Castle, 10, and
his brother Dakota, 8.
Dallas Castle died at the scene of
the accide nt, and Dakota Castle
was treated and released from
C hildren's Hospital in Columbus a
day later.
· Shockey's mother told Jocks and
other law enforcement agents that
she was . drivi ng the truck at the
time, later saying she lied because
J eremy Shockey was subject to
arrest on a warrant from Athens
Cou nty, :md bee t u se hC' was dri• I
vmg without a drive r s icense.
Immcdiatdy Jftcr the accident. it
was reported that Shockey was suspt&gt;cted of driving whik intoxicated, becaust.' an )"
'"pen beer can was
fnuud inside the tru ck.
H owever. testimony on Wcdncsday revealed that he drank :tt kasr
1Mbeers after the accident, and wa~

Trooper Robert Jacks of tfw
Galfia-Mei_gs Post c1· tile
State H((/hwar Pa~rol said
JeremJ' Shockey was driping
a pickup tr11ck p11fling a
homemmle hay wago11 1111 a
,I[Yallfl road in Be4ji1rd
Towmhip wftm lla}' jrom
the wagon .fell from tire
truck bed, along witfr Dallas Castle, 10, mrd his

CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :34 a.m .. Rock Springs Road ,
assisted by Pomeroy. Jeff Folmer,
Hol zer Medi cal C er :.:r:
10:43 a. m .. State Route 124,
assisted by Syrac use, Larry Powell ,
HM C;
5:20 p.m .. Holze r Clinic ,
Dorothy Stone, St: Mary's Hospital ;
7:30 p.m .. SR 124. assisted by
Rutland, Robert Damron. Pleasant Valley H ospital;
9: 16 p.m ., West Main Street,
Vincent Laudermilt, treated.
POMEROY
6:08 p.m ., Wolfe Pen Road,
Peggy Spradlin , HMC.
RACINE
n:2H p.m., H1 gh Street, ElSie
Routih , treate d ; . ,
9:35 p.m ., Dewitts Run , Dalton
Hoffman , rre~n~d.
RUTLAND
5:2H p.m ., Broadway Avenue ,
Walte r Rou sh , HM C.

the needs of sma ll bu sinesses and
community public health programs.
Mar y Bryant opera tes two
Ironton h omes for mentally
retarded and elderly adults, and
N ellie Book operates a simiiJr
home in C hillicothe.
They sa1d they need funding
from the state to cover costs of
their care and to pay employees
more than n1inimum wage. Their
group h omes are state-certified
and save taxpayers money by
keepi ng the reSidents out of more
expensive nursing hom es, they
said.
Susan Isaac is chairwo man of
the Ohio Appabchian Task Force,
w hic h advises Taft's Office of
Appala c hia . She sa id she was
encouraged that Taft and Patton
came to listen. Isaac said she is
concern ed, however, about misgu ided po li cy decisio ns made in
Washington .
She said o ne suc h decision
raised th e t raining requirements
for professionals allO\ved. to provide federally funded health care
services in Appabchia. But Isaac
said the local programs could not ·
afford to employ those professio nals and rarely had easy access
to them an yway.
"Those people don 't live in
this cou n ry;' said Isaac, who lives
near Athens and covers Ohio's 29
Appab chian coun.ties.
West Virginia Gov. Cecil
Underwood· was invited to
Wedn esday's m eetin g, but did not
attend because of a scheduling
confli ct.
Appalachia includes parts of
Mississippi, Alaba ma, Georgia,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, West
Virginia, Virginia, Pen nsylvania,
Maryland and New York state.

to c·stablish operations in Pikeville
and Hazard, Ky.
" It 's goi ng to take that cxtraordmary effort for us to ....sell ·the
point that the Appalachia of today
the afternoon. Highs in the mid is not the Appa lachia of the
1930s," Patton said.
80s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
"We've got to market it
Friday night... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and aggressively," Tali said.
Taft said he promoted sou thern
thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
O
hio's Appalachian region during
60s.
his .recent trade ·mission to Japan .
Extended forecast:
He
said O hio is investing in
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunder- improving hi ghways in the hilly
storms in th e afternoon and region in hopes of ove rcoming
evening. Highs in the lower and job losses. These includ e th e
planned closing of the uranium
mid 80s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy. A enrichment plant nea r Piketon,
chance of showers and thunder- which will cost 1,400 jobs.
Taft aide T.J. Justice said the
storms in the afternoo n and
evening. lows in the lower 60s stote is also considering 'whether
to use some of its highway infraand highs in the mid so." .""Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows stru cture money to work with
in the lower 60s and highs in th e local govcrnn1ents to i1nprove
Int ernet Jccess.
·
lower 90s.
:the Appalachian . Regional
Comm ission sponsqred the meeting as the fifth in a series. Th e
Jac k Welker, a member of the goal is to address problems in the
PB&amp;J Society, met with members 11 1 poorest co unties in the 406of the association last week ! 0 county, 13-state Appala chian
encourage their participation , ~nd region .
to explam the Importance of high
The bulk of the distressed
'l1Jalgy_ products to the succes~ou nti-es are -in West Virginia ·eastand reputation of PB&amp;J's events.
e rn Kentucky and sou ~hcrn
That empham on quality m Ohio. They lag well behind the
workmanship and final product nation in e mployme nt and
Wlll be a pnmary concern of th e incom e.The commission has proAssomtlon , wh1ch Wlll conSider vided $7 .8 b illio n since its 1965
qualiry standards at thelr next inception for highways, wa ter and
meetmg on Aug. 1.
sewer proj ects and other programs in Appalac hia.
Several in the audience said
parents of the VIC!lm, pled for tiiey arc concern ed that sta te and
le niency in both cases, acknowl- federal oflicials aren 't addressin g
edging that their son's death was
accidental.
The boys asked to ride on the
hay wagon (although not on the
hay bales themselves, as was previRocky Boots- s':,
AE P - 32\
Gannett - 58' "
ously repo rted) and she rele nted.
General Electric - 53'1•
fjD Shell - 61'l.
Akzo - 43
The McDonalds asked that i10 AmTechiS BC - 44').
Harley Davidson - 41
Sears - 37
penalties be leveled, but O' Brien. Ashland Inc. - 36:1,
Kmart - B
Shoney's - '' ..
Kroger - 22
Wai-MM -61
AT&amp;T
31
''1
oe
who said that he, too, believed the
Lands End - 36~18
Bank O ne - 30 \',.
Wendy'~ - 19~"'
death of their son to be acciden t.11. Bob Evans - 1Sl.
Worth tngton - 10 ~111
Ltd. - 23 ~.
Oak Hill Financial - 151,
cited a need fo r. consisten cy in sen- BorgWarner - 37
OVB -267.
Daily stock reports are the
Champion
4
'
t
e
tencing the Shockeys.
BBT - 26',.
4 p.m. closing quotes of
Charmtng Shops - 6
"While I believe this to be an City Holding - 6 71e
Peop les - 14 i~
th e previous day's tran sPremier - 6/1
actions,
provided
by
accident, I have the obligation to Federal Mogul - 9 ~.
Rockwell - 33 ~:
Advest of Gallipolis.
Firstar - 22~ ..
be consistent in my sentences, and
it's illegal to drive witho ut a
license," O'Bn en saig.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
0 1..0 HOU a J5 WUd
H erman Carson of Athens rep446·4524 11M JACI(S0 t4 PIKt
resented Jeremy Shockey. who
FAt 7f7100 • THURS 7/13/00
BOX OFfla Will OPEN AT
appeared Wednesday on furlou f(h
6:30
PM FOR MNING SHOWS
Subscribe today. 992-215()
from the Athens C:nunty Jail ,.
12:30 PM FOR MATINEES
where he is servmg a six -momh
sentence on fail ure to appear, a
charge unrelated to ·rhe June acc ident.
THE PATRIOT (R)
. It was the failure to appc·ar
7:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00
charge against Jeremy Shockey
w h.ich prompted his mother to say
CHICKEN RUN (G)
7:20 &amp; 9:00 DAILY
she was dnving the truck. their
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp;
atto rneys sa1d.

Rain makes return on Friday

Jorma

The Daily Sentinel

Arrests made

VALLEY WEATHER

o peration for hungry patrons.
Area crafters will also be positioned along the Pomeroy parkfrom Page A1
ing lot displaying their wares for
aU to see.
Pomeroy," said Welker. "We can't
"The Po meroy Blues and Jazz
believe that a musician of his Society would like to invite all
Statu re
wo uld
grace
o ur who are interested to come out
amphith eater and perfor m his and experience this big concert
music. This is simply incredible."
event as well as the vario us cul"This is also a very rare occur- rural activities that will be taking
ren ee because Jorma is playing place," said Welker.
solo and the whole experience is
Downtown businesses will stay
free to the public;· added Welker. open from 6 p.m . till time of the
"j_orma co nsiders M eigs _Co unn'..- concert . _ ___ -~_
hi s home. H e is excited, as is the
PB&amp;JS, foun\'l ed Feb. 24, is
public. abo ut this special perfor- committed to the sponsorship
mance."
'
and promotion of live blues and
Along w~th the concert, various j azz music. .
art de monstratio ns w1ll take place
The summer conce rt series has
on the stage from 6-8 p.m. and been a highlight of riverfront life
several food booths will be in this summe r.

Ohio's septic tank owners may face new rules
WAPAKONETA (AP )
Tougher require me nts m ay be
on the way for Ohioans w ho
rely on private sewage disposa l
sys tem s.
Pendin g state legislation
would requ ire up g rade s of septic sys tems for many home owners and require periodic
assessments o f h o me se ptic systems. to be paid for by homeowners.
H omeowners whose sewage
disposal sys tems an; d ee med
inad eq u ate would be required
to up g rade those sys te ms to
m ee t st ate guidelines.
Rules proposed In the hill
would req·ui re ba sic system
assessments · of
h o u se hold
sewage disposal systems:

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Lawmakers call for moratorium on executions

L-~!ti~~~~~~!~~i~~-J
•

•

•

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

LOCAL STOCKS

bmtlw· Dakota, 8.

found passed out at his residence
when Ja cks began his investigation.
An unrelated eyewitn ess pointed
to Jeremy Shockey as the drive r of
the tru ck, and his mother admitted
a day· later that she had li ed about
d riving the truck.
Her attorney said that Debor.~h
Shockey took the blame for the
accident out of " maternal instinct."
"She did this out of personal
gui lt," Athens attorney William
Grimm sa1d. "She felt it was a case
of' I told you to drive, so 1 was the
driver."'
It was her ·dishonesry with the
investigating agencies that resulted
in charges being filed against her,
according ro Lentes.
.. When we believed that M rs.
Shockey WJS the driver. we agreed
~ .. ,-1h Trooper Jacks that crintinal
vv
charges were probabl y not appro·
b
h
bl
·th •
prtate, \1[ t e pro COl CJJllC W I
·
t h e co nsptracy
Q f Sil CJ1( e an1 ong :
members of the fanlily. and with,
Mrs. Shockey's lying to the patrol I
oftlcer." Lentcs said.
.
Tom and Julie McDonald, the·.

7

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

ME ,
E.Hi4t~u~ut·o 1890

520 W. Main St

14

- Pom eroy

P;~~~ 11 7~~:99~~ ~5 88

Vinton 740-388-8603

DISNEY'S "THE KID"
STARRING BRUCE WILLIS

&amp;

::::::::::~........~------------~------~~~~-=~~~~-=~.:~~~~G=a~ll~i:o:li;•:7;4:0·~4~46~·:0:85:2::;::.~~:!~~!:~~~~:!~~~~~~~~~~:=~~~~~

I
Charles Riffle,
Ph.
Mon. lhru Fri. 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.; 5at. 6 am -6 pm
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Ia 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E Main
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh .
Week
'till9

•

Mattress Save Big Sale!
fREE

fREE-Removal fREE Set-UP
'-

�Tf!ursday, July 13, 2000

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
J)river found guilty in inddent
DELAWARE (AP) -A Columb'us man has been convicted of
felonious assault for running another driver off of 1- 71 during a
road r.~ge incident last year.
Robert Henning, 42, said he would appeal the verdict rettJrned
Wednesd ay by a Delaware County Common Pleas Court jury.
Henning was accused of instigating a high-speed chase on southbound ·i-71 near Delaware o n March 29, 1999 that ended when a
state trooper handcuffed him and took him to jail.
Henning claimed the other driver, Claudine DeGennaro of Mentor, W.s the real aggressor.
But the arrestin'g officer, State Highway Patrol Trooper Timothy
Keds, sa1d Henning was to blame.
Henning, a salesman, was returning home from a job si [e in
Mansfield that evening. DeGennaro was traveling to Ci ncinnati to
audit a store for her employer, Jo-Ann Fabric &amp; Crafts.
Henning apparently became enraged when DeGennaro, driving
in the left lane, didn't switch lanes fast enough. He pursued her,
forcing her off the road at one point. T he chase continued onto
Routes 36/ 37 when the woman sudde nly exited th ere to elude
him, DeGennaro and the trooper testified .
" We ho pe (the conviction) will be used to send a message toothers that this behavior won't be tolerated in this county or in o ther
counties," Assistant Prosecutor Rosemary Rupert said.
" I've lost my faith in the State Highway Patrol," Henning said as
he left the courthouse. " In my opinion, the officer lied."
Sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 14.

-

Foot fetish yields prison tenn
COLUMBUS (AP) -A man has been sentenced to five years in
prison and could be labeled a sexual predator for fondling feet.
Leste r DeBoard, 36, of Columbus, lured an 11-year-old girl to a
secluded part of a library where he had her do gymnastics exercises and asked to trace her foot.
He told police he's aroused by feet.
DeBoard now faces two charges of disorderly conduct for tracing
the feet of two girls in a li brary in Pickeri ngton in Fairfield County
. DeBoard pleaded -guilty to gross sexual imposition in May.
Prosecutors said he approached the girl Feb. 14 in a library in suburban Worthingto n . H e told her he was designing a shoe and asked
to trace her foot . While doing so, he touched her foot and ankle.
.. Franklin Counry Commo n Pie as Judge Michael Watson said he
would nile later on whether to declare DeBoard a sexual predator,
·w,ho must register with local police when he's o ut of prison, or as a
.
lesser sex offender.

Teen could be tried as an aduH
C INC INNAT I (AP) - Prosecutors say the !&amp;-year-old driver of
a vehicle in which two passengers died in a June 9 crash should be
tried as an adult for aggravated veh icula r hominde.
At a hearing Wednesday in Hamilton Counry Juvenile Court,
prosecutors called the actions of the suburban Delhi Township girl
reckless. She is no t bei"ng Identified because she is a juvenile.
. Pro~ecutors allege that the crash occurred when the girl lost control of her Jeep while " hill-hopping" west of Ci ncinnati. The teen
drove at speeds approaching 60 mph, causing the Jeep to go airborne as it went over hills, said assistant prosecutor Tricia
l andthorn .
. A conviction in adult court could send the girl to prison for close
to 10 years. In the j uvenile system, she could remain in custody only
until she is 21 .
Pro.1_ecutor Mike Allen said the severiry of the accident and the
_ ac~io n~ . ()f the driver j ustify his decisi~n to ..s«k a tr_i~ in adult cou~t,
· 'ili1s was not a no rmal , 1rresponS1ble act of drtvmg," Allen said.
"You have two people dead. You have eight people injured."
Judge Sylvia Hendon sch~duled a hearing for July 25 to determine whether the girl should be sent to adult court.
· . Ten passengers an d the driver had crowded into the Jeep, a)} but
the driver without seatbelts, prmecutors said. Anna. Destefano and
Kelli Ridenour, both 13, were killed in the crash and five other
.!eens were inJured .
Prosec utors said th e driver told the other teens they were in for
an excitmg ride and told them to brace the mselves by putting their
hands on the ceili ng of the Jeep: On the secon d pass down the hill,
th e vehicle skidded across t he road, stru ck a utility pole and rolled
oyer seve ral times, prosecutors said.

Poll: consumer confidence high
C INC IN NAT I (AP) - Ohio consumers are more optimistic
about the future than at any tune in the past 19 years, according to
an Ohio Poll released Th ursday.
Seven of I 0 Qhioans surveyed sa id now is a good time to make a
major hou sehold purchase, th e poll found. The poll did not ask the
reason fo r the respondents' optimism.
The poll was sponsored by the Universiry of Ci ncinnati and was
conducted by the univerSity's Inst itute for Policy R esea rch . Questions were pose d by telephone to a r.~ ndom sa mple of 839 adults
st;ttewide.
..
:The poll ha s a margin of erro r of plus or minus 3 percentage
pomts.

Wright plane replica dedicated
DAYTON (AP) - A replica of a 191 1 Wrig ht airplane is being
ptepared for an atte mp t to re- enac t Am erica's first transcontinental
fi (ght.
·Th e project is an effort to draw attentio n to Dayton's plans for
celeb rating the 10(Jrh ann iversary of powered flight .
Th e W nght brothers inve nted the airplane in Dayton and later
n~anufacturl'd ;:u rp lancs here and ran a fl yi ng sc hool. One of their
stud,·nts, Calbrairh Perry R odge rs. made the coast- to-coast flight in
1911 111 a Wri g9t MAde·! F.X .
.
:On Wt•dn csday, a re pl ica of the c raft w:1s chr isten ed the " Vin Fizz"
r~ pro mote a grape drink 111;1de h: the fl ig-hr'o; "ponsor, the Armo ur
Me:It Pa cki ng Co.
. ·.. w~ plan t&lt;~. Wic thi s 11\Ud t• l to recapture that sp irit of adve nture
and diScovery that marked the dawn o f aviation , sai d Madeline
~seli . cxec ut.ivc ~ir~c tur uf I nventing Flight, the con1mittee promotmg D ayton s avJalJun heritage.
.
The orga nizatmn h ired Dana Smith, a retired aviation mechanics
sc h6ol owner in Limeri ck, Ma ine, to bui ld the replica. Smith, an
aviation lmtory bull w ho built and fl ew an earlier Wri ght airplane
replica, will attempt the coast-to-coast fl ight in 2002.
.
-The repli ca will be o n display at the Un ited States Air and Trade
Show o n Jul y 22 -2.&gt; in Dayto n, aud later at the Experime ntal AircrJfi A 'i&lt;;O( I.Itlon \ .tfltlliJI (0 11\/(..' ntion Ill o~ hkosh , Wis.

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•

Thursday, July 13,- 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

-

COLUMBUS (AP) -A group of Democr.~tic state lawmakers is calling for a mor.~torium
o n executions in Ohio and a ~arlong study of
whether the death penalty is applied fairly.
The 16 legislators are cosponsoring a bill
introduced in the H ouse last month that wo~ld
require Gov. Bob Taft and legislative leaders to
appoint a capital puniSiunent review comnussion to do the study.
The main sponsor, Rep. Shirley Smith of
Cleveland, planned to talk Friday with prisoners on Ohio's death row. which she says houses
some in~es who have been wrongfully convicted.
"There seem to be some very bad flaws in
our system.'' Smith told The Columbus Dispatch for a story Thursday. "We need to reexamine all cases on appeal. especially those
where DNA could be used to prove ~meone's
innocence."
~
Death row at the Mansfield Correctional
Institution houses about 200 convicted killers

The main sponsor, Rrp. Shirley
Smith of Cleveland, planned to talk
Friday with prisoners on Ohio's
death row, which she says houses
some inmates who have been
wrongfully convicted.
awaiting electrocution or lethal injection.
Only one executio n has been carried out in
Ohio since 1963, that of Wilford Berry of
Cleveland, w ho was put to death in February
1999 after being allowed to drop his appeals.
Taft said he doesn 't know anyrhing about
Smith's bill and has no plans to suspend death
sentences because no studies have shown significant errors in O hio 's death-penalry system, said
spokeswoman Mary Anne Sharkey.
"He believes we have su!Jicient safeguards
with the appeals process and the parole board,
and the governor reviews each case," Sharkey
said.

Re~rt:

Ohioans
due.for income tax cut
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
state will be able to provide a
.
temporary mcome-tax
cut o f upI
to 6.5 percent on returns to be
filed next year, The Columbus
Dispatch reported Thursday.
"While we are not certain of
how much of a tax cut it will be,
it will be healthy, - larger than
the one this year," said Tim Keen,
assistant state budget director.
The strong performance of
sales and personal-Income taxes
are·being credited for the expected tax break.
The newspaper's story said:
-The state finished the fiscal
year June 30 with $500 million ,
or 2.6 percent, more in revenue
than expected.
Expenditures were $325
million less than anticipated during fiscal 2000, but much of that
money is committed to programs
and will be spent in fiscal 200 I,
which began July 1.
- This year's tax cut of 3.9
percent was based on a surplus o(
about $300 million, meaning a
$500 million surplus would generate a tax cur of '6 .5 percent.
Keen said the bulk of the $500
million would be given back in
the form ofa tax cut.
Keen said tax collections for ·
fiscal 2000, which _ended June
30, were ahead of schedule by
$437.4 million, or 2.9 percent.
Leading the collections were
the personal income tax, which
provided $.315 million, or 4.6
percent, more than expected. The

Smith's bill doesn\ have a chance of passing
without the support of majoriry Republican
leaders. And, so far, they have been lukewarm to
the idea of a moratorium on executions.
But Snuth' said if her legislatipn is blocked,
she will launch a petition drive to put the'
moratorium on the ballot, possibly in November.
" I have gotten calls from all over the state on
this issue," she said.
Rep. R ay Miller, D-Cohnnbus, one of the _
co-sponsors of the mor.~torium bill, said, "Historically, we've found there are too many innocent people on death row and too many people
put to death wrongly."
Miller said he also is troubled by the fact that
those on death row are almost exclusively poor
and disproportionately black.
"Before you kill somebody, there ought to
be a very thorough legal analysis," he said.
"More can be done than is being done now."

Court denies death row inmate's
request to give up appeals
COLUMBUS (AP) - A death
row inmate apparently seeking to
be executed failed to end 1 his
death penalty appeals on the state
level, according to an Ohio
Supreme Court ruling Wednesday.
August Cassano, sentenced to
death in 1999 for killing a prison
cellmate by stabbing him 76
times, had asked the court to
withdraw rhe appeals guaranteed
unde r Ohio law in death penalry
cases. '
Cassano made his request in a
handwritten letter to the court
on April 12 . "I know what I am
doing and I am in my right
mind," he wrote ... , had a fair
trial."
His lawyer David Doughten,

Gene Henson

Jeffley L Folmer

GALLIPOLIS . - Gene Henson, 71. Alexa ndria , Ohio, formerly of
Calha County, died Wednesday, July 12. 2000 in Mount Carmel West
Medical Center, Colu mbus.
Born May 21 , I 929 in Addison Township, Gallia County, son of the late
Samuel and Mildred Vance Henson , he was reti red from Setterlin Construction Co., Columbus: ami was a 40-year member of Local 200,
Brotherhood of Carpenters.
He wos a U.S. Army veter:m .
Survivmg Jre his wifc, Jean Kent H enson, Whom he married Oct. 23,
1953 in Middleport; a brother, Arthur (Patricia) Henson of Addison; two
Sisters, Clara Lou (William) Shaver of Easley, S.C., and Georgia (Harold)
Porter of Gallipolis: two sisters-in-law, Juanita Henson of C heshire, and
Vi f!,oi nia Henson of Addison; and several nieces, nephews and cousins.
H e was also preceded 1n death by two brothers, R obert "Henson, and
Ius twin broth,·r,Jack Henson.
Gr.~veside s.erv i~ps will be 11 a. m . Friday in Reynolds Cemetery at
Addi son, with the R ev. Rick Barcus officiating. There will be no visitation . Arrangements arc by C remeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
In li~:u of tlowers, memonal contributions may be, tnadc to o ne's
t:JVorite charity or to any organization th.11 promotes the welfare of animals.
A flag prcsenr.1tion at the graveside will be conducted by VFW Post
4464 and American leg~on lafayette Post 27.

POMEROY - Jeffrey L. Folmer, 50, of Pomeroy, died on
Wednesday. July 12, 2000 at Holzer M edical Center in Gallipolis.
Born on April 24, 1950 in Mason, West Virginia, he was the son
ofWill iam Folmer of Pomeroy, and the late Charlotte Devol Folmer.
He was a veteran of the United States Navy and was employed as
a long wall operator for the Southern Ohio Coal Company, Mine
·
2, for over 26 years .
He was also a membe r of the United Mine Workers Loca l 1886
and attended Syracuse Church of the Nazare ne .
Along with his moth e r, he was preceded in &amp;ath by a bro th er-inlaw, Burdell Johnson .
H e is survived by his )3'ife, Sandra Jo h nson FolmeF of Pomeroy;
two sons, Jarrod (Michelle) Folmer and C had Folmer, both of
Pomeroy; a granddaughter, Nicole Folmer of Po meroy: his father,
Willia m Fo lmer of Pomeroy; two sisters, Jenne th (Dave) Freeman of
Washington, D.C., and Judith Oim) Durham of Pennsylvan ia; , a
father-in-law and mother-in-law, Emerson and l eota J o hnson of
Portland; three brothers-in-law, Ray (Kathy) Johnson of Racine , and
Ronnie Johnson and Johnnie Johnson, both of Portland; and several nephews.
Services will be 1 p.m . Saturday, July 15. 2000 in Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. William Stires, and
bur ial will follow in Long Bottom Cemetery.
Friends may call o n Friday, July 14, 2000, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at~,e fun eral home.

Anna Grace Oiler
THURMAN - Anna Grace Oiler, 81,80Wayne Lane, Thurman, formerly of Syrac use, died Wednesday, July 12,2000 in Holzer Senior Care
Center.
Born Dec. 22. 1918 in Syracuse, daughter of the late William and M ary
Mogaline "Magg1e" Cook Diddle, sh e retired as a cook from the Southern Local Sc hool· District, with 30 years of service.
She was .1 member of Syracuse Presbyterian Church, and " form er
member of the Daughters of America.
Survivin g arc a daughter, Mary Ann " Pat" (Daryl) Brown of Mine r.~!
Wells, W.Va.; a son, Jomes Wtlliam (Maggie) O iler of Thurman; three
grandchildren , two step grandchildren and six grea t-gr.~ ndchildren ; two
sisters, Alice Flanagan and Della Starkey, both of Syr.~cu se; and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine,
with the R ev. Marc Sumtt .and the Rev. Kris R obinson officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the
fimera l home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Memorial con tributions can be made to Trinity Baptist C hurch, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, or Syr.~cu se Presbyterian C hu rch , Syracuse, Ohio
45779.

Most death row inmates
are in Mansfield, but
Cassano was transferred
because he had committed
a violent crime in prison,
said Joe Andrews,
spokesman for the Ohio
Department of
Rehabilitation··
and Correction.

sales tax ran $208.7 million, or
3.7 percent, ahead of predictions.
The sales tax on automobiles
performed especially well in
June, yielding 8.1 percent more
than expected.
Lagging was the corporate net
income tax , finishing the year
below projections by S105 million, or 9.8 percent.
.
On the spending ~ide , Keen
said about half the $325 million
1999.
in underspending was in primary
Most d eath row inmates are in
and secondary education and in
Mansfield, but Cassano was transwelfare. He said much of that
ferred because he had committed
money already is committed !o
a violent crime in prison, said Joe
progra1111 and will be spent. The
Andrews, spokesman for the
extra welfare money will be used
Ohio Department of Rehabilitafor support .e rvices to help pe~
tion and Correction. There are
who asked the court to reject his
pie get jobs, he said.
client's request, told the court 199 inmates on Ohio's death row.
And in a meino to state agenCassano has made It clear in
that Cassano "apparently wishes
cies about preparing their new
to become a volunteer" and be court papers that he would rather
budget requests, budget Director
executed.
be executed than spend his .life at
Thomas Johnson cautioned that
Doughten said Wednesday he the super-maximum prison, said
there will be "serious budget
agreed with the court's decision John Spon, a Richland Counry
constraints."
to reject Cassano's request. He . assistant prosecutor who proseKeen said the conservative
said sociery's interest in seeing cured Cassano in the stabbing
view must be ta~en because ecothat a defendant's death sentence case.
nomic forecasters are predicting
is properly reviewed ourweighs
Spon said his office won't
slower growth. Also, the state
an individual offender's right to stand in Cassano's way. "We think
might have to spend more
give up that review.
his wish should be granted:' he .
money on schools because of the
Cassano was serving a life sen- said.
Ohio _ Supreme_ Courrs ~cent _
renee in Mansfield CorreGtional- - Cassano 's request- has- similari"
school-funding ruling.
_ Institution for shooting a bar- ties to rwo recent death row
. "We don't know what's going
tender to death during a robbery cases. Kevin Scudder, sentenced
to go on, but it's likely we're
when he stabbed cellmate Walter to die for the rape and murder of
going to spend more money (on
.Hardy in 1997.
a 14-year-old Columbus girl, is
schools)," Keen said.
He was transferred to the awaiting a determination on
state's ~uper-rnaximum secudty whether he's mentally competent
Gov. Bob Taft has said he
pmon m Youngstown followmg to request . that his appeals be
opposes a tax increase to solve
his
death penalty sentence in dropped.
the school-funding problem.

(US I'S 2U- 9601
l'u h lt ~h~U cvc rv Hflc r n oa n , ' Montl~ y throug h
· Fmlay, 111 (.mat St. . l'omcrny. Oh to, tly th e
Uhtu \'alley Pu blt~htng Company., l'omcmy,

O hin ~ 5709 . l'h 9Y :!-~ 156 Sco.:ond ci a ~~ [JU~I­

Annu ally for sys tems
wit h elec tri ca l or mechanical
com ponents.
- Every five years fo r systems in operation for les s than
20 years.
- E very three years for sys'ems in operation for 20 yea rs
or m o re or at intervals th e
st ate's Publi c H eal th Co un ci l
determines necessary fo r th e
publi c hea lth.
" Peopl e are not goi ng to be
real ha pp y." sa id Kurt Ander son, e nvi ro nm e nta l d ivis ion
e mpl oyee at th e Au gla ize
Cou nty H ea lth Depart m en t .
Ma rv in Se lh ors~ is t h e loca l
h ea lth department's enviro nm e ntal specia list.
"We know the re are a lot of

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people on fixed and / or limited
Health
Commissioner
incomes, and there is no provi- Charlotte Parsons said the bill
sion in thi s bill for low- inter- would force homeowners to
es t loans," S elhorst said. repla ce a septic system "only if
" That 's the thing I'm not real it's ca using a nuisance - and
happy with."
it ·puts th e burd en on the
He said the proposed law · board of health to define 'nuicould require on-sire inspec- sa nce.' "
tions of more tha n 9,000 priThe amount of the fees to
vate septic systems in Auglaize be paid by home,o wners for
County alone .
th e inspections is not spelled
Th e purpose of the bill is to out in the bill. Each county
keep the state's streains ·and health board would se t its own
o ther bodies of water free of fee schedule to ·cover actual
pollution, Selhorst sa id.
costs.

~-----------------,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms
co uld return to the tri-counry
area on Friday, and may continue
on Sat~~rday.
Rain clouds will spread into the
area Friday afternoon, the
National Weather Service said .
Highs will be in the 80s following overnight lows in the 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:01
and sunrise on Friday at 6: 15a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms early, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 60s. Light and variable
wind. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A chance
of showers and thunderstorms in

Artists
from Page AI
members .
The association will provide a
catalyst for a number of crafters'
guilds, smaller. ,groups of artists
dedi cated to a single type of
product, according to Justin Diddle, who serves as the administrator cif the ARC grant program:

•

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11~

POMEROY - Meigs County
SheriffJames M . Sou lsby reported
the arrest on Wedn esday of Kevin
Bush, 19, Tuppers Plains, on a
benc h warrant for fa ilure to
appear and failure to comply with
a H ealth R ecovery Services
order.
Mark Wolsh, 3 1, Alban y. was
arrested for disorderly conduct by
in wxication. fo ll owing the investigation of a domestlC vtolen ce
complaint in Carpenter. Both
were housed in the Meigs Counry Jail. ·

EMS runs
.POMEROY Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Services
answered nine calls for assistance
o n Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

Summit
from Page AI

Shockeys _
from Page AI
suspended 30-day sentence, placed
oii a year-long perio d of probation
and fined $200 and costs on the
falsification charge.
She was also ordered to perform
80 hours of conununity seryice. In
exc han ge for her guilty plea, a
c harge of obstruction of justice was
dismissed .
Trooper Robert Jacks of the
Gallia-Me igs Post of the State
Highway Patrol sa id Jere my
Shoc key was drivin g a pi ckup
truck pul ling a homemade hay
wogon o n a grayel road in Bedford
Townsh ip when hay from t he
wagon fell from the truck bed,
along with Dallas Castle, 10, and
his brother Dakota, 8.
Dallas Castle died at the scene of
the accide nt, and Dakota Castle
was treated and released from
C hildren's Hospital in Columbus a
day later.
· Shockey's mother told Jocks and
other law enforcement agents that
she was . drivi ng the truck at the
time, later saying she lied because
J eremy Shockey was subject to
arrest on a warrant from Athens
Cou nty, :md bee t u se hC' was dri• I
vmg without a drive r s icense.
Immcdiatdy Jftcr the accident. it
was reported that Shockey was suspt&gt;cted of driving whik intoxicated, becaust.' an )"
'"pen beer can was
fnuud inside the tru ck.
H owever. testimony on Wcdncsday revealed that he drank :tt kasr
1Mbeers after the accident, and wa~

Trooper Robert Jacks of tfw
Galfia-Mei_gs Post c1· tile
State H((/hwar Pa~rol said
JeremJ' Shockey was driping
a pickup tr11ck p11fling a
homemmle hay wago11 1111 a
,I[Yallfl road in Be4ji1rd
Towmhip wftm lla}' jrom
the wagon .fell from tire
truck bed, along witfr Dallas Castle, 10, mrd his

CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :34 a.m .. Rock Springs Road ,
assisted by Pomeroy. Jeff Folmer,
Hol zer Medi cal C er :.:r:
10:43 a. m .. State Route 124,
assisted by Syrac use, Larry Powell ,
HM C;
5:20 p.m .. Holze r Clinic ,
Dorothy Stone, St: Mary's Hospital ;
7:30 p.m .. SR 124. assisted by
Rutland, Robert Damron. Pleasant Valley H ospital;
9: 16 p.m ., West Main Street,
Vincent Laudermilt, treated.
POMEROY
6:08 p.m ., Wolfe Pen Road,
Peggy Spradlin , HMC.
RACINE
n:2H p.m., H1 gh Street, ElSie
Routih , treate d ; . ,
9:35 p.m ., Dewitts Run , Dalton
Hoffman , rre~n~d.
RUTLAND
5:2H p.m ., Broadway Avenue ,
Walte r Rou sh , HM C.

the needs of sma ll bu sinesses and
community public health programs.
Mar y Bryant opera tes two
Ironton h omes for mentally
retarded and elderly adults, and
N ellie Book operates a simiiJr
home in C hillicothe.
They sa1d they need funding
from the state to cover costs of
their care and to pay employees
more than n1inimum wage. Their
group h omes are state-certified
and save taxpayers money by
keepi ng the reSidents out of more
expensive nursing hom es, they
said.
Susan Isaac is chairwo man of
the Ohio Appabchian Task Force,
w hic h advises Taft's Office of
Appala c hia . She sa id she was
encouraged that Taft and Patton
came to listen. Isaac said she is
concern ed, however, about misgu ided po li cy decisio ns made in
Washington .
She said o ne suc h decision
raised th e t raining requirements
for professionals allO\ved. to provide federally funded health care
services in Appabchia. But Isaac
said the local programs could not ·
afford to employ those professio nals and rarely had easy access
to them an yway.
"Those people don 't live in
this cou n ry;' said Isaac, who lives
near Athens and covers Ohio's 29
Appab chian coun.ties.
West Virginia Gov. Cecil
Underwood· was invited to
Wedn esday's m eetin g, but did not
attend because of a scheduling
confli ct.
Appalachia includes parts of
Mississippi, Alaba ma, Georgia,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, West
Virginia, Virginia, Pen nsylvania,
Maryland and New York state.

to c·stablish operations in Pikeville
and Hazard, Ky.
" It 's goi ng to take that cxtraordmary effort for us to ....sell ·the
point that the Appalachia of today
the afternoon. Highs in the mid is not the Appa lachia of the
1930s," Patton said.
80s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
"We've got to market it
Friday night... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and aggressively," Tali said.
Taft said he promoted sou thern
thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
O
hio's Appalachian region during
60s.
his .recent trade ·mission to Japan .
Extended forecast:
He
said O hio is investing in
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunder- improving hi ghways in the hilly
storms in th e afternoon and region in hopes of ove rcoming
evening. Highs in the lower and job losses. These includ e th e
planned closing of the uranium
mid 80s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy. A enrichment plant nea r Piketon,
chance of showers and thunder- which will cost 1,400 jobs.
Taft aide T.J. Justice said the
storms in the afternoo n and
evening. lows in the lower 60s stote is also considering 'whether
to use some of its highway infraand highs in the mid so." .""Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows stru cture money to work with
in the lower 60s and highs in th e local govcrnn1ents to i1nprove
Int ernet Jccess.
·
lower 90s.
:the Appalachian . Regional
Comm ission sponsqred the meeting as the fifth in a series. Th e
Jac k Welker, a member of the goal is to address problems in the
PB&amp;J Society, met with members 11 1 poorest co unties in the 406of the association last week ! 0 county, 13-state Appala chian
encourage their participation , ~nd region .
to explam the Importance of high
The bulk of the distressed
'l1Jalgy_ products to the succes~ou nti-es are -in West Virginia ·eastand reputation of PB&amp;J's events.
e rn Kentucky and sou ~hcrn
That empham on quality m Ohio. They lag well behind the
workmanship and final product nation in e mployme nt and
Wlll be a pnmary concern of th e incom e.The commission has proAssomtlon , wh1ch Wlll conSider vided $7 .8 b illio n since its 1965
qualiry standards at thelr next inception for highways, wa ter and
meetmg on Aug. 1.
sewer proj ects and other programs in Appalac hia.
Several in the audience said
parents of the VIC!lm, pled for tiiey arc concern ed that sta te and
le niency in both cases, acknowl- federal oflicials aren 't addressin g
edging that their son's death was
accidental.
The boys asked to ride on the
hay wagon (although not on the
hay bales themselves, as was previRocky Boots- s':,
AE P - 32\
Gannett - 58' "
ously repo rted) and she rele nted.
General Electric - 53'1•
fjD Shell - 61'l.
Akzo - 43
The McDonalds asked that i10 AmTechiS BC - 44').
Harley Davidson - 41
Sears - 37
penalties be leveled, but O' Brien. Ashland Inc. - 36:1,
Kmart - B
Shoney's - '' ..
Kroger - 22
Wai-MM -61
AT&amp;T
31
''1
oe
who said that he, too, believed the
Lands End - 36~18
Bank O ne - 30 \',.
Wendy'~ - 19~"'
death of their son to be acciden t.11. Bob Evans - 1Sl.
Worth tngton - 10 ~111
Ltd. - 23 ~.
Oak Hill Financial - 151,
cited a need fo r. consisten cy in sen- BorgWarner - 37
OVB -267.
Daily stock reports are the
Champion
4
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t
e
tencing the Shockeys.
BBT - 26',.
4 p.m. closing quotes of
Charmtng Shops - 6
"While I believe this to be an City Holding - 6 71e
Peop les - 14 i~
th e previous day's tran sPremier - 6/1
actions,
provided
by
accident, I have the obligation to Federal Mogul - 9 ~.
Rockwell - 33 ~:
Advest of Gallipolis.
Firstar - 22~ ..
be consistent in my sentences, and
it's illegal to drive witho ut a
license," O'Bn en saig.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
0 1..0 HOU a J5 WUd
H erman Carson of Athens rep446·4524 11M JACI(S0 t4 PIKt
resented Jeremy Shockey. who
FAt 7f7100 • THURS 7/13/00
BOX OFfla Will OPEN AT
appeared Wednesday on furlou f(h
6:30
PM FOR MNING SHOWS
Subscribe today. 992-215()
from the Athens C:nunty Jail ,.
12:30 PM FOR MATINEES
where he is servmg a six -momh
sentence on fail ure to appear, a
charge unrelated to ·rhe June acc ident.
THE PATRIOT (R)
. It was the failure to appc·ar
7:00 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00
charge against Jeremy Shockey
w h.ich prompted his mother to say
CHICKEN RUN (G)
7:20 &amp; 9:00 DAILY
she was dnving the truck. their
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp;
atto rneys sa1d.

Rain makes return on Friday

Jorma

The Daily Sentinel

Arrests made

VALLEY WEATHER

o peration for hungry patrons.
Area crafters will also be positioned along the Pomeroy parkfrom Page A1
ing lot displaying their wares for
aU to see.
Pomeroy," said Welker. "We can't
"The Po meroy Blues and Jazz
believe that a musician of his Society would like to invite all
Statu re
wo uld
grace
o ur who are interested to come out
amphith eater and perfor m his and experience this big concert
music. This is simply incredible."
event as well as the vario us cul"This is also a very rare occur- rural activities that will be taking
ren ee because Jorma is playing place," said Welker.
solo and the whole experience is
Downtown businesses will stay
free to the public;· added Welker. open from 6 p.m . till time of the
"j_orma co nsiders M eigs _Co unn'..- concert . _ ___ -~_
hi s home. H e is excited, as is the
PB&amp;JS, foun\'l ed Feb. 24, is
public. abo ut this special perfor- committed to the sponsorship
mance."
'
and promotion of live blues and
Along w~th the concert, various j azz music. .
art de monstratio ns w1ll take place
The summer conce rt series has
on the stage from 6-8 p.m. and been a highlight of riverfront life
several food booths will be in this summe r.

Ohio's septic tank owners may face new rules
WAPAKONETA (AP )
Tougher require me nts m ay be
on the way for Ohioans w ho
rely on private sewage disposa l
sys tem s.
Pendin g state legislation
would requ ire up g rade s of septic sys tems for many home owners and require periodic
assessments o f h o me se ptic systems. to be paid for by homeowners.
H omeowners whose sewage
disposal sys tems an; d ee med
inad eq u ate would be required
to up g rade those sys te ms to
m ee t st ate guidelines.
Rules proposed In the hill
would req·ui re ba sic system
assessments · of
h o u se hold
sewage disposal systems:

LOCAL BRIEFS

Obituaries

Lawmakers call for moratorium on executions

L-~!ti~~~~~~!~~i~~-J
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The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

LOCAL STOCKS

bmtlw· Dakota, 8.

found passed out at his residence
when Ja cks began his investigation.
An unrelated eyewitn ess pointed
to Jeremy Shockey as the drive r of
the tru ck, and his mother admitted
a day· later that she had li ed about
d riving the truck.
Her attorney said that Debor.~h
Shockey took the blame for the
accident out of " maternal instinct."
"She did this out of personal
gui lt," Athens attorney William
Grimm sa1d. "She felt it was a case
of' I told you to drive, so 1 was the
driver."'
It was her ·dishonesry with the
investigating agencies that resulted
in charges being filed against her,
according ro Lentes.
.. When we believed that M rs.
Shockey WJS the driver. we agreed
~ .. ,-1h Trooper Jacks that crintinal
vv
charges were probabl y not appro·
b
h
bl
·th •
prtate, \1[ t e pro COl CJJllC W I
·
t h e co nsptracy
Q f Sil CJ1( e an1 ong :
members of the fanlily. and with,
Mrs. Shockey's lying to the patrol I
oftlcer." Lentcs said.
.
Tom and Julie McDonald, the·.

7

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

ME ,
E.Hi4t~u~ut·o 1890

520 W. Main St

14

- Pom eroy

P;~~~ 11 7~~:99~~ ~5 88

Vinton 740-388-8603

DISNEY'S "THE KID"
STARRING BRUCE WILLIS

&amp;

::::::::::~........~------------~------~~~~-=~~~~-=~.:~~~~G=a~ll~i:o:li;•:7;4:0·~4~46~·:0:85:2::;::.~~:!~~!:~~~~:!~~~~~~~~~~:=~~~~~

I
Charles Riffle,
Ph.
Mon. lhru Fri. 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.; 5at. 6 am -6 pm
Sunday 10:00 a.m. Ia 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E Main
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh .
Week
'till9

•

Mattress Save Big Sale!
fREE

fREE-Removal fREE Set-UP
'-

�'

.

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Bend

,PageA4

Page As
_T_h_e_D
__a_il~y_S_e_n_t_in_e_l______________Rv
~Jr-~~~~·~~~~~----~-------------Th_u_n_d~~·-Ju~ly_l~~-lo
__
oo·

Thursday, July 11,1000

The

Da~ly

Sentinel

'Esta6[isliea in 1948

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charlene Hoelllch
General Manager

R Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

*%!?#.'

I SPILLED

· Ohio Valley ~ublishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

After discovering grandchild is not really theirs, couple needs advice
•

WrNE ON
MY TIE!

Dear ·Ann Landers: Four years ago,
my son 's wife gave birth to a beautiful
baby boy. The couple later divorced, but
we remained close to the child. A few
months ago, my son asked for a DNA
test on his son. He obviously suspected
the boy was not his, and the results indicated that he was right This lovely child
is not our grandson after all.
We would like to know how to handle this without hurting the boy. My exdaughter-in-law would like us out of her
life, since we are no longer related to the
child. He still calls us " Poppa and Nana,"
and thinks my son is. his father. We
would like to detach from him with the
least amount of emotional pain for
everyone -concerned. Please tell us what
to do. -Heartbroken in Ontario, Canada
Dear Heartbroken: Since you have
been in the child's life for .four years and,
I am sure, provided hini with love and ,
affection, it is going to be hard on the

I'LL

CALL
9·1·1

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Letters 10 tlit ttlilar an wtl.::mnt. ThtJ ~-qtJuiJ M lrn tlr.u11 31111 ,..,JtYL~. All ltnn·'i art swbj«l
tdilin&amp; a ltd musf H signed and inc:l11dt llddrru and relrplwnt tumrbrr. No un.~ignrd Mtrn ,..jiJ
b• puNisltrd. Unm sltoullllu in good tllSit. llddrrssint issurs. not Pfi'SCHialitJrs.

lo

Till' upi11i01u rxpuntd ill tht mlu.m11 btlnw arr tlr.r rrJIIU' tU&amp;U af llat Ohio 1-Bllt'J t•ubli.f hing

Co. ~f edilorial board, llnlns uthrrwiu nl.llrd.

OUR VIEW

Save it
Electric conservation requests
ensure enough power for all

Celebrates birthday
'
'•

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KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Gore~

•,,

people have air conditioners or centra l systems in their homes All

ceutical con1panies are heJvily rcspomible for

through the 1990s, utilities posted rt-cord amounts of usage during
extended hot spells. Conservation requests weren 't uncommon.
Addition ally, (NN intorms us that the de mands of a g rowing
economy have taken their toll . More homes and busin esse'i :~re

improved U:S. health and life expectancy. the
mdustry's uwn pulls indicatt' t hat tht' companit&gt;s
aren 't popular.
On a favorabi lity scale of zero to Ill, a survey
mnductcd in February tor the Pharmaceutical
RL-search and ManufJ.cturmg Association found
that the public rated drug companies at 5.2, only
slightly ahead of health insurance companies, at
4. I' and managed care pmvidcrs. 1 (L
Gore is taking adv.mtab'"t' of this reality, pummcbng drug compani es \\ith populist rhetoric tO
promote Ius Ml·dicare pre'&gt;Lriprion Jnrg benefit.
Hc'!:i been hitting HMO.:; and insur..111Ce compa-

4

year, but the amount of power generation hasn 't kept up.
CNN reported usage levels arc expetted to be up by another 2
percent this summer.

Deregulation and the resulting opening up of t he marketplace h:1 s
helped co ngest existing power lines as service tran sac tions in creast·
between states ;md regiom.
Rog&lt;tftl;aie, president of an electric mdustry co multin g tirm ,
summed, up the probl em nea tly whe n he recently told Co ngress
"we're runnin g a 1930s distribution system (ti'1at) ._.. needs to be
upgraded," '
·-,OK, so now we know what the problem is. M ee ting dem and is
up to th e utiliti es. co- qps and ot her supplie rs . In the interim, until
electric generation is increased. we have to do our p art.
That's why energy effi CJency tips have been handed down eac h
summer. So far th1 s yea r, no req uesrs ro cur usage have bL·cn i ss L~ed , ·
which means our Iocll ~ uppbns are aLle tu meet thL· denund .
But if an extended heat wave dnws us all insids· and supply is
strained . comply wnh req uests tOr co n st•rvation. A little di s'"comtOrt
can be toleratt'l.ll t's \"-rhen we lost· that 'iOUrl·l' o f comfort that th .lll t-,~
' get d'1cey.
In the long run, conserving enerh'Y now ensures there's e nough
for all of us later.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Th ursday;July 1.1. the 105th day of 2000.Th ere arc 17 I days
left in the year.
Today's Highhght 111 History:
On July 13 , 1960,Jo hn F Ke nn edy won the Dem ocratic presidential nomjnation at h i.., p .lrty's convemi on in Los Angeles.
On this date:
In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governin g the Northwest
Territory.
In 1793. Fren ch revo luti onary writer Jean Paul Marat was stabbed
to death in his bath by C harlotte Cor•b y.
In 1863, deadly rio ting a;,'ain&lt;t th e Ctvil War military draft nupted
in New York C ity.
In 187B, th e Treaty of Llerhn ,l ntcnded the term s of th e Treaty of San
Stefano, whtch had ended the Ru&lt;so- Turkish War of 1877-7H.
In 1l)(17, !""'..lee-reb ted rioting that claimed 27 livt·s bro kt' out in
Newark , NJ
In I 1174, th C Sc ru tL' \Vaterg:n c Cn mmittl'e prupo~cd s\veeping
reform s in an etTort to p reve nt ;m othn Watng.l(c scmdal.
lp 1977, a blac kout L1sting 2.1 hou rs hit the New York C t&lt;y area.
In 1Y7H, Lee b cocca WJ~ lin.:J dS pn.''l ldcnr of Ford M o to r Co. by
chairman H enry Ford IL
In Jl)79. a 45-hour siege by Pdk'\tinian gu e rnlb ~ began &lt;lt th e
Eb'Y]'tian Embassy Ill An b ra. Turkey.
In 1985, Live Aid , d n international roc k co nn: rt 111 Lo ndon ,
Philadelph ia. M oscow and Sydney. took place to raN money ti&gt;r
AtTica's star vi11f; people.
Tt:Tl' Yt'J r'\ agn: Sov iet Pre'IHkl lt fv\1khail S. Corhachcv cl o~cd thl·
CornllllJili'lt Party\ 2Hth cu ngre'i'i by '\,lying he wo uld \vekomc Wt· ~ t ­
ern aid w ithout po liti cal 'lfn n ~~Fivc yt•ar'l ago: IJre'il(k llt Clintnn dcnOLll'lCL'd a mil it.try ba·K· - closing
list fo r the d ~lnl :t~l' it would do to C&lt;tlit(Jrni J JnJ Tcx;1-.. but the n
:tpprovc:d the pack:l.~L' \.;. : hik pronm ing to .;;aw job.., 111 tho'&gt;t' ~ tclte s. JLJ "it
six days :1ftl'f '\ pan:· 'i hutrk· Atl.lll ti'&gt; rl·turn t·d,· thc -;hurtle Ui'icovery
rni'ision. About 250(! wo rk er'\ at 1ktroi t '~
bla.;;ted otT on .1 ni ne-tb v
'

.

daily newspaper'i went on "'t~1kc .
One yea r ago: Angel M :1 mrino R c~c ndiz , o; uo;pcctcd o f being th e
" railroad killer.'' 'illrrende rc d in El Pa'lo; T~.·xa'&gt; . In Te hr.ln, pohcc 'fi red
"tea r gas to dispL' I"'\l' I! 1,( J( )(! dc!IJOIIStrator'l on the sixth day of pmko;t~
agai~st (ranian harJ- Iint' r'\. The Amn ican L~.·agUL' wo n thl· All -Star

ga me fo r the th ird straight time, dde;tting; the Nat ional Leaf,'ll&lt;' 4- 1 ,11
Boston ·, Fenwoy i'ark ,

•'
••

... .

right to the same privi lq;e if they're paying th e brlL
•
The reason s for electric shortages aren't hard to fathom. More

equipped with computers and electric devi ces.
Th e increase 111 el ec tri c dem and h as grown abou t 2 pt'rcent p er

•.

drug proposatconstitutes ·(bad medicine)

Vi,ce President AI Gore's attacks o n dmg companics may be good policies, but they are bad
medicine. It 's up to Tex&gt;s Gov. George W Bush to
say so, but so far he hasn't
Even though mcdicin..:s produced by pha.rma-

expect to achieve a certain comforr level , then everyone ha s the

Ann
Landers

SOCIETY NEWS

Along with an increast: in th e heat, more dis c u ss ion is being heard

about how th e national electric mpply may not be up to meeting
all of our energy demands.
There may be times when we'll have to decrease our usage to
keep local system s from f.1iling, espec ially dunng periodic _heat
waves we-Juve irnhe Ohio Valley.
•
Consumers, looking at how much they pay for electric, may find
such a request ludicrous. But the truth is, if we all don 't want to end
up in the dark. we may have to comply or mk failure of the system.
It's a case of w&gt;tching ou t for our friends and neighbo rs. If we

old, college-educated male. I have never in a family where nudity was frowned
seen a letter in your column with my upon, but your problem is nothing to be
overly concerned about.
complaint , and wonder why.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
H ere is my pro,b lem: I recently started
to take swimming lessons. I undress in married for 11 years to a terrific guy.
the locker room, but always disrobe in a "Chad" is a devoted husband and woncurtained booth. I see males who choose -derful father. He is also a hard worker
to walk around nude, and it bothers me. and a kind, loving person. One thing
They get u ndrcssed in the aisles, even about him disturbs me , though - he is
ADVICE
though there are curtained booths avail- not very good-looking.
able.
I realize this makes me seem shallow,
boy as well as on you if you should sudI keep my swim trunks on before and but I can't help it Chad has a nice build,
denly disappear.
'
after class. but I seem to be the only one but his face , isn't attractive. He is not
I suggest that you get some profes- who does this. I refuse to. use the show- ugly, by any me~ns :'but he is not handsional counseling to find out how to ers or the sauna if it means being naked some, or even cute- just average-lookmake the separation with as little trauma with a group of men . Is there something ing. When I first started dating him, I
as possible if it becomes necessary. Now wrong with me, or are these males exhi- loved his personality, and thought he
is a time for your former daughter-in- bitionists? Please enlighte n me, - Anti- would become more appealing to me,
law to prove whether or not she is a Buff in Buffalo, NY
but it hasn't happened. In fact, his looks
classy lady, willing to put her son's welDear Anti-Buff: I would not go so have started to bother me a lot. I analyze
fare ahead of her desire to be punitive. I far as to say there is something " wrong" his face all the time to see if there is
hope she comes through for you and her with you, but most males would not be some partioular feature I dislike, but I
son.
uncomfortable under the circumstances can't find one.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 26 - year- you describe, You were probably raised
Why am I so obsessed with his looks,

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST

how th1s problt·m is corrt'Cted is a crucial nutter

the reason l-IMOs give for dropping o ut of
Medicare. fOrcing 1.4 milli o n SL't~JOrs to tind llt'W
coverage.
HC FA 's ac.hninjstr~ltiu n of collh'TL'\~ional ru~tcutting directives 111 thl' B.d~u JCcd Jiudgl't An of
1997 also ha:-:. drivl'n llt .uty hmplt,d'l .111d lllll"'&gt; lllg
hunll""'l mto h;mkruprcy. llt'Cl.''\~tr:Hi l lg cnrrt'tlive

11ies, roo.
Gort' accuses drug companies ot." pncL·-gou g111g.. and says ht' will make drtlb'"S cht'.tpt-r ti:n dction by Congress.
*it·nior citizens. l=-l r:: char-ges- tho\t dr·u g-cor npanie:or----(n he;lri tl ~lkf6fi.' flll'..;. Hou.;;e -Cli!J ll l h:rc~
o ppose hi111 - and donate to Rt=publicans - in Committee, w itlll'SSt'S chargnl th:~t H C F~ t:tkt·s
o rder to keep th ei r pruJuc~ overprin·d and their up to four vcars to approvl.' covt:r;wr.:.· and rL·nn '
C'l
bu rscnu:nt kvels tOr new mL·dic.1l tec hno log it·-;
Profit'5 hi·5171l.

What Gore doesn't say - and 13ush should is that th e D emocrat's pian would put the tc deral
govcrnrnent in charge of drug pricing :l.nd coverage decisions, almost CtTttinly inhibiting; lite-savtug nlt·dical researc I1 and innovatio n .
There are no diret·t prin· contmls in the
M ~:dicart· plan tiwurcJ by Gun:, tht· Cbmon
.!c..l mimstnrion and mmt COngrcs~ion ,d I )emoc1-;1t'i. Theoretically, a priV,ltL.. company in each
rcbrion would nebrotiate price rcdu~·tiuns with
drug companies o n behalf of senio rs.
But that's the theory bt:hind Medi care. too. The
reality is that th e federal Hl-alth Care Financing
Adnunistration the ,1gency that OVt'r.iees
M edicare - now rigidly decides how !lluch th e
gowrnmem \vill pay for medical procedures and
hospital stTVl&lt;.:e .. The ~'lme thing '&gt;Urely wo\lld
h,lppell wuh drug;.
HCFA's over-regulatio n and underpayment i ~

lions in hospital stays, surgical bills and lost pro- .,
Juctivity.
,.
cl i1berculosis, puho and the flu have ceased to ··
lw killer diseases thanks to US drug developmcnr. Rhl·umatic fever, stomach ulcers and
l1ypcrtcnston ,m..· less deaLlly And hoPt' tOr curing
s,JJJcer. AII)S ami Alzheimer\ shsease !tes with
pharmaCL'Lltict! investment. So does exploitation
ofhum.lll ~·IJOlll&lt;' dtscoveries.
Dru~; co.mpany pmfit margins may indeed be
"tou ht [.\lt" ctml drug prices ti1r the one-third of c~l
o;eninr'i Lit" ki ng insur:1ncc covcrag~.· sun.·ly a~. But

aficr they've been d c.m:d by the food and Drug
Administr:ltion. ,
WhL'Il Medicare rbi11 1:-. ,til· Lktlil·d. t il l'~· tl·:-.n fit'lL it takes an awragt· ut" 7:-13 t 1ay~ to pnlCl'\S :111
appe·al . H(.' FA retj rapt• 11,1s 1L'(1 llUll)" t 1nt"to l"i ro
rdi.ISl' to n-e;tt Medic;n"t' parienrs. HCFA rovL'f'l
up to ~i x month ~ ot· ho-;pln· Gll"l' ~&lt;.1r dyi ng
pati ents, but may cur them ofrifthcy livt_; longn.
This record sug_IJ;l'St:; that the ph:IJ"lll .\Cl'Utic.tl
industry is right to fear tlut HC FA int·vit.Ibl y will
set prices so low tlut th e indti Stl). wiiJJJOt be abk
to aftOrd to do th e rest·~~n: h it tah·s to Lk·vclop
new drugs. Thesl· co~t on avtTage $500 'million
each to bring to markL·t. l)nly orJ t' in 6ve tln1h~
that undergo human teo.;tin g actually n:a dw~ the
market.
Those that do make it have prndttL·ed :!sto unding results, raising litl· t'xpect:mq tmm 71I tL_) 7()
over the past .35 years and ';lVing hundrnl~ ot bil -

to r the hdth of the world - litcr.tlly.
us compalllt'S pmduce about half of the
tn~~or 11 ew medicines dcvdopcd in the world. No
disease cure~ .trc being discovnt'd in C anacb or
Mt·:xin&gt;. co urrtri c-; that DL·mucr-.:1ts lionize for
tlH·ir gon.TIItlll'llt-contmlled low drug pnces.
Tlll'rc "'n:a'\on to dnubr that ~ 1 House- passed
lt ~.·pllbli c.l ll .dtcrn :ttivr to Gon:'s plan '"vill work.
_ln. . rc;~d .u.fp1u\·iJin~ lx ndl ts to SHliors~ it-\vtmld ~-_._
-.uU-.JdizL' il l~lii";II JCe co rnpaniL':\ rh;Jr o tll·r drug
hl'ndlr.s. T ht' insurance indmtry says companies
\\'o n't participatt'.
Bur .1 th ird alternativl'

l.'Xist~. propo~ni by

Sens.

jc&gt;hn lln:.tu' (I l- La. ) and IIIII Fri5t (R - Tenn.) ,
\\"hich nffl•r-. lwndlts din.•ctly to . ; eniors aud opens
the way t()r v:trious cnmp:lll lL'S to rompett' for
tlll.·ir hu~in c~~ .md tll·,goti;Jtl' with drug firms on
pncc~. :dl With lllo rc governmem nv~r; i ght than
the ( ;( )p plan .
Br~.·a u x - Fri-.t i ~ the altanatin· Ewon..-d by Uush.
But do you know abnut it? Bu~h 1s responding to
Co re'~ .nt ad-.'1 on' the drl1g in dmrry by ac(,:"using
C·; ore of reim·enring hi1 11Sdf as a populist.
\Xt' hat Bulih llt.'L'lh to do i~ wage an aggressive
l';unr11ig11 on bd ulf nt" the nation's h ealth , point111g out the daugtT'i in (;&lt;)rt''s plan and the benetito.; of Ins own Unpopular as th ey are. drug comp~lll lt'S r. m't hght the govcrnnlt'nt on their own.

(:\.lorton

f\(l/Jdrd( kf

i.i

r'Xtr lllil •{' ~ ·diror

t?( Rull

Cc~H,

tJ:c llt11'Sfl17/)t T t_l( ( :11Jliftlf J-liJJ.)

'HARDBALL'
'

Mexican election may have parallels with US. race
BY CHRIS

talk about refor m, 'lomcbody \vho 1s llL'\V, pl·o- Cnvnnor ( ;corg-e ~'. 13m h. Wl' see a striking
WASHINGTON - If Mcxi ca n- Antc·ricans pk are go in g ,to take a c hanu::·
comr.1st not o nly to otbt~ r R ep ubli can ~ but cer.:.
vnre like M exicans, George- W. Uush is th e" next
Bu stan~antt', who co-c hairs the &lt;.. ~alit{ mtia
t:1inly to the b a lcr'ihl.p we 'vr had in Washingpresident .
cl mpalt,'ll o~· Vi c e Prc'i!de llt (;on.', .lr!-,TilL'" rh at
ton.
M exic.HlS have jusl ch:ctl'd Vm ceml.' fo x, tilt' major R t•publit-an problem :u noug L.ttino
" I rc.11ly would hkr tu invire Cruz to come to
lccJJer of the N atliJnal Arti nn i'arry (I'AN), end- vote rs is th e party\ im age, highly prono llllLTd
Tc .'Cl~ and vi,it th e bu rdn, wh~.· rl' we've had
rng a 7 1-yerl r reign o f power by the Institution - · umlcr the govnnor"hip of Pete \Vilsun . \ll. hei11g
I(IO _()OCI Il l'\\" rc'iJLkms (with) WJtt"r and wasteal R evo lu tio nary Party (J&gt;RI ).
h o'lti k to th e MexJCil li- AmcricJn cotmlllll llfV.
\\,ltl'l" l 10uk - u p~. I rhin k it goes without saying
T he PAN pbttorm re,Jds lik e pms· !lush G&lt;..)IJ c mdidates L' tllp loyed '' wedge -hk c i'i'illl"
\\ hl'll ym1 louk at ,my inHn igrant co mmunity
R epubli ca n. It L' lllphasizc.-·s g rl:att'r bu ~ 1nc-;~ po litico;" and pre'ie llted th c m st·h·c., :1, :mytlun g
u\·cr th e rou r"L" of tlw.; naoon \ h1story, its hope
lll Vl'\(I JIL' IIt. l iH HL' lll l" l' ll[ l\"t'S tO lllVl'&lt;;tJl!e!H ,
bw lnc]u,l\/L'. He rL'Il·rrL·J ~ J1L'Cl tic.tlly to PropDtough l ; ~w ;mJ o rder to creak ~~ hcttn invest- -;ition 1X7, which Lk li iL·d h ealth .md nluc.trion i'i in o ur cl.t ~~ruo m s :tnd opportunity in o ur
n ~:t rkctpL1 L" l' ."
lllL'Ilt enviro m.nt: nt , 'lt ro n ~l'f l'llucatio n to crt'Jtl" b c: 1 1t'tlt~ ro childrl'll u( tho -.~· who l'll tlTL'd thi'l
The l.ttest JJ.trional poll has Cor&lt;' at 47 pcr.1 h...:tter-t·ducatL'd workforn-. and mort· L' nt rL·co untry ille-gally.
p rcn c· ur~h ip
Bmu mantL' ~a y'i that Latino voter' dbcnvnL·d cc m .unong lll ~p :mil· voters - who iodudc
Jf Ameri c an ~ wnb roots in M l' xico vme for that ".dl the Jisc u''lon (R L· publi c:lll "') wnc luv- th o'&gt;l' Americ tll '&gt; With roots in Mex·ico, Puerto . . ,
thme principk':\ here, it '~ good nL'WS fo r th e ing , about fw1il y v; du e~. thl'Y wn en't n~rluLk:d H. ico, C uh1 :1nd other Latin countr ies - and
Bu ~ h Jl 45 pnccnt . lfthJt rough spht cor1tinues
lt l.'puhli cam. who ·.., ub~c nbe to th e ':HilL' prio r- m md10w 111 ,111v of th cu .''
th
roubh Lhe tlr'it week in Nove mbn. thL· presiH i e~ ..md IHJ n ews fur tht· Democrat-.. who
" Th erl'\ tm t ;l \\.dlOk lnr o f difllTt'll Cl' when
dl'n tial election herL' wr ll rcpeat thL· messagl.' of
r nnt.lllll l' ro &lt;;ell t lw ,u.l va lltagc-. of 'ltm11g gov yo u CIHltpat"L' \X.-' iho! J :111d 13u 'i l)." lh! st;l lll.lt ltL'
em m~nr pro gr;um over th e rt 'l k ' o f 'L· lfco llCi udl''&gt;, ·' no 111.1ttn how clurlll lll g or h\)\\ th l' h.tlloting to Lli l' south : th L· vorer-;' desire for
.. (" h ;Ill f';L' ."
rdiance.
·
:-~tl":tbk .1 nun he i'l.''
'' I think that th e vott'l"'l 111 M ~.·x i co votL'd f()l"
Tony ( ;&lt;~rza. l(:x,l'i r;1i l nud t'OIIIIll i'i\l Oil t.'r .tnd
change." Californi,t Li dltt'n,ult (;ove-rrwr ( :ru l ,, Bu . . h ally. nHl- r'l ,, view rh .n 'lee' M c.xic.lii (Cln·i~ .HaufH'ws, rhilft:{rltc S1111 frdll tiStt1 FxmllBmtamante argue". " I don 't know that th ey Am ericam looktng tOr the. ~ame c\"ono nJi c and ) na :,· J, j,(h"flill~ltl/1 H11rfillf, . is ltosr oj' ''1-irmlhall " Ofl
'
'
m·ce~~aril y apprnvt•d all rlt e p olitic~ tlt at .ll"l' .;ur~oci.1l pbtf( ) rll~ .t 'i tl tl' \\'lll lllllg p.! rl)" qfYi nrclltl.'
CXI!C ''"'I ,\/Sl\'lJ C raM · rlt,lltllt'l.&lt;. '/111' 1999
m undln g chat part-y.
J=ox . " I th ink in th l' U111tl:d St cltl'\. thl· l ft.,p.ll llL· cdr fl t'll ~:f ''/ frtrrfh, J{/" IHI.I f111Nisltnl l!)l .J.",udutiliW
· " I thit~k th.at anybody wilD co1r16 in tr:y111g to pop ubtio_n t\ luok 111g tor c h.1ngL'. An d witl1 lhll,•.i.)
MATTHEWS

.

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio
74Qc~46 c2342

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992-2156

200 Main St.,

I

P~lnt ~leaeant, W.Va.l

30H75c1333

• •

POMEROY
Nathana·el
Wayne Hoover, son of David and
Dhronda Hoover of Pomeroy, celebrated his second birthday on July
1 with a Toy Story tbemed party at
his parents' home.
In addition to his parents
others attending were his grandfather, Herbert Hoover, great-grandmother, Vena Meadows; Jackie,
Ricky and Corrie Hoover, Monica
Dickson, Mike Meadows, Joyce
and Don Reynolds, Steve, Mike
and Jr. Hoover, Tonya Hess, Bryan
and Andy Burt, James, Kristin and
t..:.:.~::....a.=....;....;.______;__, Layne Acree, Mike and Lynn
Nathanael Hoover
Wright, Mandi Sheets and Chad
Roberts; Wayne and Rhonda
Wigal. Sending gifts were his grandparents, Betty and Ronnie Robertson, Tracy, Frankie, Preston and Corey HudnalL

Lovett family reunion held
POMEROY - Descendants of Danjel and Phoebe Love.tt's son,
William Lovett, held their !econd annual reunion recendy at the Zion
Church of Christ on Route 143 near Pomeroy.
The blessing for the potluck lunch was given by Charles W. Busch,
a descendent of Delliah Lovett Group and individual pictures were
taken during the afternoon ~nd there was a displ~y table of pictures
, and family histories for those attending to enjoy, On the wall was a
large descendent chart prepared by Kay Slack on which family memhighlighted their names. · -· ·
Dorothy Schott presided at me business meeting with officers elected being Schott, president; Kathryn Johnson, vice president, and Slack,
secretary.
A moment of silent prayer was observed for Virginia Kiser and a
niece and nephew of Dorothy Schotts, who died during th!' past year.
The newest descendent was John Orville Slack IV who was born the
morning of the day of the reunion.
Part of the afternoon was set aside for a per5on from each line to
talk about an ancestor. Those speaking were Sue Bolin, a descendant of
Phoebe Lovett: John Slack, a descendant of Mary Catherine Lovett
Slack: Dorothy Schott and Presley Winner, descendants of Delilah
Lovett: Charles Mineard;a descendant of Hiram Lovett: Marlin Lovett,
a descendant of Orange West Lovett.
A collection was taken and door prizes were given to Sue Bolin,
Tony Bolin, David Brewer, Charles Mineard, John Slack and Marlin
Lovett. There were also handouts of red hearts with Lovett Reunion
and the date inscribed and pencils bearing the Lovett name. Each family was given a copy of the article from the 1999 reunion.
The reunion for 2001 will be held on July 14 at the Zion Church
of Christ. The day ended with everyone having a piece of cake made
by Schott on which she had all the Lovett ancestors-names inscribed
inside red hearts. Some of those attending left to go visit the Mo rse
Chapel Cemetery where Lovett family members are buried.
Attending the reunion were Marlin and Cheryl Lovett, Presley and
Ethel Winner Charles and Norma Bush, Dorothy Schott, Tony and
Sue Bolin, John and Vivian Slack, Roger and Kay Slack, Harley and
Kathryn Johnson, Charles Mineard and David Brewer.

COLLEGE NEWS
Receives lodge
scholarship

was named to t)le dean's li st for
spring quarter at Wright State
University in Dayton.
Students named to the dean's
list must take 12 or more credit
hours and achieve a grade point
ave rage of 3.4 or better.
·
-

OSU names
honor roll
Joshua Will , right, a graduate
of Eastern High School, has bee n
awarded a sc holarship by the
Shade River Lodge #453
F&amp;AM. He plans to attend Ohio
University to pursue a degree in
business. He is the son of Daniel
and Julia Will of Pomeroy. Dou
Harris presented the sc holarship.

Named to
dean's list
Bridget M .Vaughan , Langsville,

RACI NE - Jesse C layton Little of Racine was named to the
Ohio State Univemty Honor
Roll for the spring quarter. hav•
ing earned a grade point average
of 3.5 or better.

Graduate OSU
Ryan
D aniel
Buckley,
Pomeroy. received a BS in civil
engineering and Alison Marie
Perine , Reedsville, a B.S. in architecture during corumen cent
exercises at the Ohio State Universtty.
The ceremony was held o n
Jun e 9.

Ann' I want to stop feeling this way and
accept him as he is. because he deserves
to be cherished. Pl ease help me. Council Bluffs, Iowa
,Dear Council Bluffs: Aft er 11 years
of marriage, you are suddenly bothered
by the fact that your husband isn't very
good-looking? Somelhing else about
him is bothering you , and I suggest you
see a psychologist and get to the real
problem. It's not his looks, Dear.
" A Collection of M y Favo nte Gems
of the Day" is the perfect little gift for
that special som eo ne who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a c heck o r
money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handlin g) to: Collection,
c/o Ann Landers, P. O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60(&gt; 11 -0562 (in C anada,
$6.25). To find out more about Ann Lan ders and read her past columns, visit the
Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.cOin.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Russell graduates
LONG BOTTOM - Julie Ann
Russell recently graduated from
Ohio University's master of physical therapy program, She is currently employed with the Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Julie and her husband,
Michael, reside at Long Bottom.
She is the daughter ofTommy and
Sally Hill of Racine .

Julie Russell

Birth announcement
POMEROY - Casey and Julie Booth of Pomeroy announce the
birth of a son, Alexander Keldon, born June 1 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point E'leasant. He.weighted.sevep p_ounds, !3 ounces. _c -·
Maternal .. grandparents are Victor and Katherine Young of Pomeroy,
and maternal great-grandparents are Bill and Nancy Roby of Indiana
'
and Mary Young of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Doug and Rhonda Grover of Middleport
and W. E. Booth of Florida. Paternal great-grandparents are Jack Hendrick and Jerrie Hendrick, both of Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Booth have a daughter, Lauren_, two.

•••

THURSDAY,July 13
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the post
home, 6:30 p.m.
RACINE - Sonshine Circle, Dorcas-Bethany United
Methodist Church, 6 p.m
Thursday at the McKelvey river
camp near Portland. Ham, beverages and table service provided. Take covered dish. Spouses
and friends invited. ·
POMEROY
M eigs
County Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors, special meeting, Thursday at non, SWCD office, to
consider log jam removal applications and personnel matters.
POMEROY - Faith Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey
Run Road, weekend revival,
Thursday through Sunday, 7
p.m. Elder Robert Hal}. Point
Pleasant, W.Va., speaker,
POMEROY - Senior Citizens Center program, 10:30
a.m. Thursday regarding cancer
screenings and Medicare coverage. Julie Leonard, beneficiary
education manager from the
Medicare office in Columbus
to speak. Program sponsored by
Meigs County Cancer Initiative.

Course completed

SYRACUSE Syracuse
Village Council, regular meeting, •7 p.m. Thursday.

These prosp ec tive homebuyers recently completed the Gallia/ Meigs Community Action Agency's Homeowner Education
Co urse . The program is designed to help homebuyers of any
income le vel determine for themselves what they can afford
and sho uld offer for a home. Participants are, front, Jodi
George, Barba'ra Mohler, Missy Stelitano, and Vickie Meade;
back, Thomas Stephens of FIRSTAR Bank. Todd -Butts , Beth
H en r y, Kathy Juhasz, Julia Houdashelt of Gallia/Meigs CAA,
who taught t he course , and Roger Nicod e mus of Randal
Home s.

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, regu lar meeting,
Thursday, 8 ~ -IlL
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge #453, regular sta ted
meeting, 8 p.m. , refreshments .
POMEROY Junior and Rita
White to sing, Meigs County
Senior Center. Thursday, 5:30
p.m.

•••

FRIDAY, July 14

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS,

MIDDLEPORT - Widows'
Fellowship potluck luncheon ,
Friday
noon,
Middleport
Church of Christ .

• ••

SATURDAY,July 14
MIDDLEPORT Ladies
for the Lord, I 0 a.m. Saturday.
Ash Street Church, Middle~
port. All women welcome.
Red Brush
. BASHAN Church. weekend meeting. Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. to speak.
NEW HAVEN - Revival
New
Haven
Methodi st'
Church, "Singing Echoes of
Cleveland, Tenn., Saturday 7
p.m.

•••

SUNDAY, July 15
RACINE - Charles A. and '
Alma Hinzman Snyder family
reunion, Sunday, 12 :30 p.m.
Star,Mill Park, Raoine.
POMEROY
Cozart
reunion, Royal Oak Park, 11
a.m. to 7 p.m Sunday. Take covered dish . Family and friends
welcome.
BARLOW Arthur and· ·
Effie Watson reunion, Sunday;
Barlow Fairgrounds. Take a
covered dish for dinner at 12:30
p.m. All family and friends
invited ,
EAST M E IG S - Va cation·
Bible School with theme "SonZone Discovery C e nte r", Sunday through July 20, 0:30 to
8: 45 p.m. at the South 13etliel
C hmch. Ciasss•s for all ages
inciudm g adults.

•••

MONDAY,July 16
POMEROY - First Southern Baptist Church , adventure·
week Bibl e sc hool. Mond ay
through July 21. 0:30 to ~ p.m .
Ages 3 and up. Transpo rtation
ca ll 9Y2 - 6779 o r 99~-6328.

Subscribe today.
992-2156
"

Mukesh

'
The Middleport Clinic

D

788 North 2nd Street ·
Middleport, OH 45760

bPolntments:
"0401 992-4226
Accepting New Patients- Walk-Ins WelCome
- - -----·--------~

Blood Drive PVH Wei/ness Center
Thursday, July 73, 2000
Noon to 6 p.m.

+FREE T-Shirts To All Donors

+ Door Prizes

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Volley Hospilol
Auxiliary
&amp;
American Red Cross

�'

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Bend

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Page As
_T_h_e_D
__a_il~y_S_e_n_t_in_e_l______________Rv
~Jr-~~~~·~~~~~----~-------------Th_u_n_d~~·-Ju~ly_l~~-lo
__
oo·

Thursday, July 11,1000

The

Da~ly

Sentinel

'Esta6[isliea in 1948

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Charlene Hoelllch
General Manager

R Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

*%!?#.'

I SPILLED

· Ohio Valley ~ublishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

After discovering grandchild is not really theirs, couple needs advice
•

WrNE ON
MY TIE!

Dear ·Ann Landers: Four years ago,
my son 's wife gave birth to a beautiful
baby boy. The couple later divorced, but
we remained close to the child. A few
months ago, my son asked for a DNA
test on his son. He obviously suspected
the boy was not his, and the results indicated that he was right This lovely child
is not our grandson after all.
We would like to know how to handle this without hurting the boy. My exdaughter-in-law would like us out of her
life, since we are no longer related to the
child. He still calls us " Poppa and Nana,"
and thinks my son is. his father. We
would like to detach from him with the
least amount of emotional pain for
everyone -concerned. Please tell us what
to do. -Heartbroken in Ontario, Canada
Dear Heartbroken: Since you have
been in the child's life for .four years and,
I am sure, provided hini with love and ,
affection, it is going to be hard on the

I'LL

CALL
9·1·1

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Letters 10 tlit ttlilar an wtl.::mnt. ThtJ ~-qtJuiJ M lrn tlr.u11 31111 ,..,JtYL~. All ltnn·'i art swbj«l
tdilin&amp; a ltd musf H signed and inc:l11dt llddrru and relrplwnt tumrbrr. No un.~ignrd Mtrn ,..jiJ
b• puNisltrd. Unm sltoullllu in good tllSit. llddrrssint issurs. not Pfi'SCHialitJrs.

lo

Till' upi11i01u rxpuntd ill tht mlu.m11 btlnw arr tlr.r rrJIIU' tU&amp;U af llat Ohio 1-Bllt'J t•ubli.f hing

Co. ~f edilorial board, llnlns uthrrwiu nl.llrd.

OUR VIEW

Save it
Electric conservation requests
ensure enough power for all

Celebrates birthday
'
'•

'

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Gore~

•,,

people have air conditioners or centra l systems in their homes All

ceutical con1panies are heJvily rcspomible for

through the 1990s, utilities posted rt-cord amounts of usage during
extended hot spells. Conservation requests weren 't uncommon.
Addition ally, (NN intorms us that the de mands of a g rowing
economy have taken their toll . More homes and busin esse'i :~re

improved U:S. health and life expectancy. the
mdustry's uwn pulls indicatt' t hat tht' companit&gt;s
aren 't popular.
On a favorabi lity scale of zero to Ill, a survey
mnductcd in February tor the Pharmaceutical
RL-search and ManufJ.cturmg Association found
that the public rated drug companies at 5.2, only
slightly ahead of health insurance companies, at
4. I' and managed care pmvidcrs. 1 (L
Gore is taking adv.mtab'"t' of this reality, pummcbng drug compani es \\ith populist rhetoric tO
promote Ius Ml·dicare pre'&gt;Lriprion Jnrg benefit.
Hc'!:i been hitting HMO.:; and insur..111Ce compa-

4

year, but the amount of power generation hasn 't kept up.
CNN reported usage levels arc expetted to be up by another 2
percent this summer.

Deregulation and the resulting opening up of t he marketplace h:1 s
helped co ngest existing power lines as service tran sac tions in creast·
between states ;md regiom.
Rog&lt;tftl;aie, president of an electric mdustry co multin g tirm ,
summed, up the probl em nea tly whe n he recently told Co ngress
"we're runnin g a 1930s distribution system (ti'1at) ._.. needs to be
upgraded," '
·-,OK, so now we know what the problem is. M ee ting dem and is
up to th e utiliti es. co- qps and ot her supplie rs . In the interim, until
electric generation is increased. we have to do our p art.
That's why energy effi CJency tips have been handed down eac h
summer. So far th1 s yea r, no req uesrs ro cur usage have bL·cn i ss L~ed , ·
which means our Iocll ~ uppbns are aLle tu meet thL· denund .
But if an extended heat wave dnws us all insids· and supply is
strained . comply wnh req uests tOr co n st•rvation. A little di s'"comtOrt
can be toleratt'l.ll t's \"-rhen we lost· that 'iOUrl·l' o f comfort that th .lll t-,~
' get d'1cey.
In the long run, conserving enerh'Y now ensures there's e nough
for all of us later.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Th ursday;July 1.1. the 105th day of 2000.Th ere arc 17 I days
left in the year.
Today's Highhght 111 History:
On July 13 , 1960,Jo hn F Ke nn edy won the Dem ocratic presidential nomjnation at h i.., p .lrty's convemi on in Los Angeles.
On this date:
In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governin g the Northwest
Territory.
In 1793. Fren ch revo luti onary writer Jean Paul Marat was stabbed
to death in his bath by C harlotte Cor•b y.
In 1863, deadly rio ting a;,'ain&lt;t th e Ctvil War military draft nupted
in New York C ity.
In 187B, th e Treaty of Llerhn ,l ntcnded the term s of th e Treaty of San
Stefano, whtch had ended the Ru&lt;so- Turkish War of 1877-7H.
In 1l)(17, !""'..lee-reb ted rioting that claimed 27 livt·s bro kt' out in
Newark , NJ
In I 1174, th C Sc ru tL' \Vaterg:n c Cn mmittl'e prupo~cd s\veeping
reform s in an etTort to p reve nt ;m othn Watng.l(c scmdal.
lp 1977, a blac kout L1sting 2.1 hou rs hit the New York C t&lt;y area.
In 1Y7H, Lee b cocca WJ~ lin.:J dS pn.''l ldcnr of Ford M o to r Co. by
chairman H enry Ford IL
In Jl)79. a 45-hour siege by Pdk'\tinian gu e rnlb ~ began &lt;lt th e
Eb'Y]'tian Embassy Ill An b ra. Turkey.
In 1985, Live Aid , d n international roc k co nn: rt 111 Lo ndon ,
Philadelph ia. M oscow and Sydney. took place to raN money ti&gt;r
AtTica's star vi11f; people.
Tt:Tl' Yt'J r'\ agn: Sov iet Pre'IHkl lt fv\1khail S. Corhachcv cl o~cd thl·
CornllllJili'lt Party\ 2Hth cu ngre'i'i by '\,lying he wo uld \vekomc Wt· ~ t ­
ern aid w ithout po liti cal 'lfn n ~~Fivc yt•ar'l ago: IJre'il(k llt Clintnn dcnOLll'lCL'd a mil it.try ba·K· - closing
list fo r the d ~lnl :t~l' it would do to C&lt;tlit(Jrni J JnJ Tcx;1-.. but the n
:tpprovc:d the pack:l.~L' \.;. : hik pronm ing to .;;aw job.., 111 tho'&gt;t' ~ tclte s. JLJ "it
six days :1ftl'f '\ pan:· 'i hutrk· Atl.lll ti'&gt; rl·turn t·d,· thc -;hurtle Ui'icovery
rni'ision. About 250(! wo rk er'\ at 1ktroi t '~
bla.;;ted otT on .1 ni ne-tb v
'

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daily newspaper'i went on "'t~1kc .
One yea r ago: Angel M :1 mrino R c~c ndiz , o; uo;pcctcd o f being th e
" railroad killer.'' 'illrrende rc d in El Pa'lo; T~.·xa'&gt; . In Te hr.ln, pohcc 'fi red
"tea r gas to dispL' I"'\l' I! 1,( J( )(! dc!IJOIIStrator'l on the sixth day of pmko;t~
agai~st (ranian harJ- Iint' r'\. The Amn ican L~.·agUL' wo n thl· All -Star

ga me fo r the th ird straight time, dde;tting; the Nat ional Leaf,'ll&lt;' 4- 1 ,11
Boston ·, Fenwoy i'ark ,

•'
••

... .

right to the same privi lq;e if they're paying th e brlL
•
The reason s for electric shortages aren't hard to fathom. More

equipped with computers and electric devi ces.
Th e increase 111 el ec tri c dem and h as grown abou t 2 pt'rcent p er

•.

drug proposatconstitutes ·(bad medicine)

Vi,ce President AI Gore's attacks o n dmg companics may be good policies, but they are bad
medicine. It 's up to Tex&gt;s Gov. George W Bush to
say so, but so far he hasn't
Even though mcdicin..:s produced by pha.rma-

expect to achieve a certain comforr level , then everyone ha s the

Ann
Landers

SOCIETY NEWS

Along with an increast: in th e heat, more dis c u ss ion is being heard

about how th e national electric mpply may not be up to meeting
all of our energy demands.
There may be times when we'll have to decrease our usage to
keep local system s from f.1iling, espec ially dunng periodic _heat
waves we-Juve irnhe Ohio Valley.
•
Consumers, looking at how much they pay for electric, may find
such a request ludicrous. But the truth is, if we all don 't want to end
up in the dark. we may have to comply or mk failure of the system.
It's a case of w&gt;tching ou t for our friends and neighbo rs. If we

old, college-educated male. I have never in a family where nudity was frowned
seen a letter in your column with my upon, but your problem is nothing to be
overly concerned about.
complaint , and wonder why.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
H ere is my pro,b lem: I recently started
to take swimming lessons. I undress in married for 11 years to a terrific guy.
the locker room, but always disrobe in a "Chad" is a devoted husband and woncurtained booth. I see males who choose -derful father. He is also a hard worker
to walk around nude, and it bothers me. and a kind, loving person. One thing
They get u ndrcssed in the aisles, even about him disturbs me , though - he is
ADVICE
though there are curtained booths avail- not very good-looking.
able.
I realize this makes me seem shallow,
boy as well as on you if you should sudI keep my swim trunks on before and but I can't help it Chad has a nice build,
denly disappear.
'
after class. but I seem to be the only one but his face , isn't attractive. He is not
I suggest that you get some profes- who does this. I refuse to. use the show- ugly, by any me~ns :'but he is not handsional counseling to find out how to ers or the sauna if it means being naked some, or even cute- just average-lookmake the separation with as little trauma with a group of men . Is there something ing. When I first started dating him, I
as possible if it becomes necessary. Now wrong with me, or are these males exhi- loved his personality, and thought he
is a time for your former daughter-in- bitionists? Please enlighte n me, - Anti- would become more appealing to me,
law to prove whether or not she is a Buff in Buffalo, NY
but it hasn't happened. In fact, his looks
classy lady, willing to put her son's welDear Anti-Buff: I would not go so have started to bother me a lot. I analyze
fare ahead of her desire to be punitive. I far as to say there is something " wrong" his face all the time to see if there is
hope she comes through for you and her with you, but most males would not be some partioular feature I dislike, but I
son.
uncomfortable under the circumstances can't find one.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 26 - year- you describe, You were probably raised
Why am I so obsessed with his looks,

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST

how th1s problt·m is corrt'Cted is a crucial nutter

the reason l-IMOs give for dropping o ut of
Medicare. fOrcing 1.4 milli o n SL't~JOrs to tind llt'W
coverage.
HC FA 's ac.hninjstr~ltiu n of collh'TL'\~ional ru~tcutting directives 111 thl' B.d~u JCcd Jiudgl't An of
1997 also ha:-:. drivl'n llt .uty hmplt,d'l .111d lllll"'&gt; lllg
hunll""'l mto h;mkruprcy. llt'Cl.''\~tr:Hi l lg cnrrt'tlive

11ies, roo.
Gort' accuses drug companies ot." pncL·-gou g111g.. and says ht' will make drtlb'"S cht'.tpt-r ti:n dction by Congress.
*it·nior citizens. l=-l r:: char-ges- tho\t dr·u g-cor npanie:or----(n he;lri tl ~lkf6fi.' flll'..;. Hou.;;e -Cli!J ll l h:rc~
o ppose hi111 - and donate to Rt=publicans - in Committee, w itlll'SSt'S chargnl th:~t H C F~ t:tkt·s
o rder to keep th ei r pruJuc~ overprin·d and their up to four vcars to approvl.' covt:r;wr.:.· and rL·nn '
C'l
bu rscnu:nt kvels tOr new mL·dic.1l tec hno log it·-;
Profit'5 hi·5171l.

What Gore doesn't say - and 13ush should is that th e D emocrat's pian would put the tc deral
govcrnrnent in charge of drug pricing :l.nd coverage decisions, almost CtTttinly inhibiting; lite-savtug nlt·dical researc I1 and innovatio n .
There are no diret·t prin· contmls in the
M ~:dicart· plan tiwurcJ by Gun:, tht· Cbmon
.!c..l mimstnrion and mmt COngrcs~ion ,d I )emoc1-;1t'i. Theoretically, a priV,ltL.. company in each
rcbrion would nebrotiate price rcdu~·tiuns with
drug companies o n behalf of senio rs.
But that's the theory bt:hind Medi care. too. The
reality is that th e federal Hl-alth Care Financing
Adnunistration the ,1gency that OVt'r.iees
M edicare - now rigidly decides how !lluch th e
gowrnmem \vill pay for medical procedures and
hospital stTVl&lt;.:e .. The ~'lme thing '&gt;Urely wo\lld
h,lppell wuh drug;.
HCFA's over-regulatio n and underpayment i ~

lions in hospital stays, surgical bills and lost pro- .,
Juctivity.
,.
cl i1berculosis, puho and the flu have ceased to ··
lw killer diseases thanks to US drug developmcnr. Rhl·umatic fever, stomach ulcers and
l1ypcrtcnston ,m..· less deaLlly And hoPt' tOr curing
s,JJJcer. AII)S ami Alzheimer\ shsease !tes with
pharmaCL'Lltict! investment. So does exploitation
ofhum.lll ~·IJOlll&lt;' dtscoveries.
Dru~; co.mpany pmfit margins may indeed be
"tou ht [.\lt" ctml drug prices ti1r the one-third of c~l
o;eninr'i Lit" ki ng insur:1ncc covcrag~.· sun.·ly a~. But

aficr they've been d c.m:d by the food and Drug
Administr:ltion. ,
WhL'Il Medicare rbi11 1:-. ,til· Lktlil·d. t il l'~· tl·:-.n fit'lL it takes an awragt· ut" 7:-13 t 1ay~ to pnlCl'\S :111
appe·al . H(.' FA retj rapt• 11,1s 1L'(1 llUll)" t 1nt"to l"i ro
rdi.ISl' to n-e;tt Medic;n"t' parienrs. HCFA rovL'f'l
up to ~i x month ~ ot· ho-;pln· Gll"l' ~&lt;.1r dyi ng
pati ents, but may cur them ofrifthcy livt_; longn.
This record sug_IJ;l'St:; that the ph:IJ"lll .\Cl'Utic.tl
industry is right to fear tlut HC FA int·vit.Ibl y will
set prices so low tlut th e indti Stl). wiiJJJOt be abk
to aftOrd to do th e rest·~~n: h it tah·s to Lk·vclop
new drugs. Thesl· co~t on avtTage $500 'million
each to bring to markL·t. l)nly orJ t' in 6ve tln1h~
that undergo human teo.;tin g actually n:a dw~ the
market.
Those that do make it have prndttL·ed :!sto unding results, raising litl· t'xpect:mq tmm 71I tL_) 7()
over the past .35 years and ';lVing hundrnl~ ot bil -

to r the hdth of the world - litcr.tlly.
us compalllt'S pmduce about half of the
tn~~or 11 ew medicines dcvdopcd in the world. No
disease cure~ .trc being discovnt'd in C anacb or
Mt·:xin&gt;. co urrtri c-; that DL·mucr-.:1ts lionize for
tlH·ir gon.TIItlll'llt-contmlled low drug pnces.
Tlll'rc "'n:a'\on to dnubr that ~ 1 House- passed
lt ~.·pllbli c.l ll .dtcrn :ttivr to Gon:'s plan '"vill work.
_ln. . rc;~d .u.fp1u\·iJin~ lx ndl ts to SHliors~ it-\vtmld ~-_._
-.uU-.JdizL' il l~lii";II JCe co rnpaniL':\ rh;Jr o tll·r drug
hl'ndlr.s. T ht' insurance indmtry says companies
\\'o n't participatt'.
Bur .1 th ird alternativl'

l.'Xist~. propo~ni by

Sens.

jc&gt;hn lln:.tu' (I l- La. ) and IIIII Fri5t (R - Tenn.) ,
\\"hich nffl•r-. lwndlts din.•ctly to . ; eniors aud opens
the way t()r v:trious cnmp:lll lL'S to rompett' for
tlll.·ir hu~in c~~ .md tll·,goti;Jtl' with drug firms on
pncc~. :dl With lllo rc governmem nv~r; i ght than
the ( ;( )p plan .
Br~.·a u x - Fri-.t i ~ the altanatin· Ewon..-d by Uush.
But do you know abnut it? Bu~h 1s responding to
Co re'~ .nt ad-.'1 on' the drl1g in dmrry by ac(,:"using
C·; ore of reim·enring hi1 11Sdf as a populist.
\Xt' hat Bulih llt.'L'lh to do i~ wage an aggressive
l';unr11ig11 on bd ulf nt" the nation's h ealth , point111g out the daugtT'i in (;&lt;)rt''s plan and the benetito.; of Ins own Unpopular as th ey are. drug comp~lll lt'S r. m't hght the govcrnnlt'nt on their own.

(:\.lorton

f\(l/Jdrd( kf

i.i

r'Xtr lllil •{' ~ ·diror

t?( Rull

Cc~H,

tJ:c llt11'Sfl17/)t T t_l( ( :11Jliftlf J-liJJ.)

'HARDBALL'
'

Mexican election may have parallels with US. race
BY CHRIS

talk about refor m, 'lomcbody \vho 1s llL'\V, pl·o- Cnvnnor ( ;corg-e ~'. 13m h. Wl' see a striking
WASHINGTON - If Mcxi ca n- Antc·ricans pk are go in g ,to take a c hanu::·
comr.1st not o nly to otbt~ r R ep ubli can ~ but cer.:.
vnre like M exicans, George- W. Uush is th e" next
Bu stan~antt', who co-c hairs the &lt;.. ~alit{ mtia
t:1inly to the b a lcr'ihl.p we 'vr had in Washingpresident .
cl mpalt,'ll o~· Vi c e Prc'i!de llt (;on.', .lr!-,TilL'" rh at
ton.
M exic.HlS have jusl ch:ctl'd Vm ceml.' fo x, tilt' major R t•publit-an problem :u noug L.ttino
" I rc.11ly would hkr tu invire Cruz to come to
lccJJer of the N atliJnal Arti nn i'arry (I'AN), end- vote rs is th e party\ im age, highly prono llllLTd
Tc .'Cl~ and vi,it th e bu rdn, wh~.· rl' we've had
rng a 7 1-yerl r reign o f power by the Institution - · umlcr the govnnor"hip of Pete \Vilsun . \ll. hei11g
I(IO _()OCI Il l'\\" rc'iJLkms (with) WJtt"r and wasteal R evo lu tio nary Party (J&gt;RI ).
h o'lti k to th e MexJCil li- AmcricJn cotmlllll llfV.
\\,ltl'l" l 10uk - u p~. I rhin k it goes without saying
T he PAN pbttorm re,Jds lik e pms· !lush G&lt;..)IJ c mdidates L' tllp loyed '' wedge -hk c i'i'illl"
\\ hl'll ym1 louk at ,my inHn igrant co mmunity
R epubli ca n. It L' lllphasizc.-·s g rl:att'r bu ~ 1nc-;~ po litico;" and pre'ie llted th c m st·h·c., :1, :mytlun g
u\·cr th e rou r"L" of tlw.; naoon \ h1story, its hope
lll Vl'\(I JIL' IIt. l iH HL' lll l" l' ll[ l\"t'S tO lllVl'&lt;;tJl!e!H ,
bw lnc]u,l\/L'. He rL'Il·rrL·J ~ J1L'Cl tic.tlly to PropDtough l ; ~w ;mJ o rder to creak ~~ hcttn invest- -;ition 1X7, which Lk li iL·d h ealth .md nluc.trion i'i in o ur cl.t ~~ruo m s :tnd opportunity in o ur
n ~:t rkctpL1 L" l' ."
lllL'Ilt enviro m.nt: nt , 'lt ro n ~l'f l'llucatio n to crt'Jtl" b c: 1 1t'tlt~ ro childrl'll u( tho -.~· who l'll tlTL'd thi'l
The l.ttest JJ.trional poll has Cor&lt;' at 47 pcr.1 h...:tter-t·ducatL'd workforn-. and mort· L' nt rL·co untry ille-gally.
p rcn c· ur~h ip
Bmu mantL' ~a y'i that Latino voter' dbcnvnL·d cc m .unong lll ~p :mil· voters - who iodudc
Jf Ameri c an ~ wnb roots in M l' xico vme for that ".dl the Jisc u''lon (R L· publi c:lll "') wnc luv- th o'&gt;l' Americ tll '&gt; With roots in Mex·ico, Puerto . . ,
thme principk':\ here, it '~ good nL'WS fo r th e ing , about fw1il y v; du e~. thl'Y wn en't n~rluLk:d H. ico, C uh1 :1nd other Latin countr ies - and
Bu ~ h Jl 45 pnccnt . lfthJt rough spht cor1tinues
lt l.'puhli cam. who ·.., ub~c nbe to th e ':HilL' prio r- m md10w 111 ,111v of th cu .''
th
roubh Lhe tlr'it week in Nove mbn. thL· presiH i e~ ..md IHJ n ews fur tht· Democrat-.. who
" Th erl'\ tm t ;l \\.dlOk lnr o f difllTt'll Cl' when
dl'n tial election herL' wr ll rcpeat thL· messagl.' of
r nnt.lllll l' ro &lt;;ell t lw ,u.l va lltagc-. of 'ltm11g gov yo u CIHltpat"L' \X.-' iho! J :111d 13u 'i l)." lh! st;l lll.lt ltL'
em m~nr pro gr;um over th e rt 'l k ' o f 'L· lfco llCi udl''&gt;, ·' no 111.1ttn how clurlll lll g or h\)\\ th l' h.tlloting to Lli l' south : th L· vorer-;' desire for
.. (" h ;Ill f';L' ."
rdiance.
·
:-~tl":tbk .1 nun he i'l.''
'' I think that th e vott'l"'l 111 M ~.·x i co votL'd f()l"
Tony ( ;&lt;~rza. l(:x,l'i r;1i l nud t'OIIIIll i'i\l Oil t.'r .tnd
change." Californi,t Li dltt'n,ult (;ove-rrwr ( :ru l ,, Bu . . h ally. nHl- r'l ,, view rh .n 'lee' M c.xic.lii (Cln·i~ .HaufH'ws, rhilft:{rltc S1111 frdll tiStt1 FxmllBmtamante argue". " I don 't know that th ey Am ericam looktng tOr the. ~ame c\"ono nJi c and ) na :,· J, j,(h"flill~ltl/1 H11rfillf, . is ltosr oj' ''1-irmlhall " Ofl
'
'
m·ce~~aril y apprnvt•d all rlt e p olitic~ tlt at .ll"l' .;ur~oci.1l pbtf( ) rll~ .t 'i tl tl' \\'lll lllllg p.! rl)" qfYi nrclltl.'
CXI!C ''"'I ,\/Sl\'lJ C raM · rlt,lltllt'l.&lt;. '/111' 1999
m undln g chat part-y.
J=ox . " I th ink in th l' U111tl:d St cltl'\. thl· l ft.,p.ll llL· cdr fl t'll ~:f ''/ frtrrfh, J{/" IHI.I f111Nisltnl l!)l .J.",udutiliW
· " I thit~k th.at anybody wilD co1r16 in tr:y111g to pop ubtio_n t\ luok 111g tor c h.1ngL'. An d witl1 lhll,•.i.)
MATTHEWS

.

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio
74Qc~46 c2342

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992-2156

200 Main St.,

I

P~lnt ~leaeant, W.Va.l

30H75c1333

• •

POMEROY
Nathana·el
Wayne Hoover, son of David and
Dhronda Hoover of Pomeroy, celebrated his second birthday on July
1 with a Toy Story tbemed party at
his parents' home.
In addition to his parents
others attending were his grandfather, Herbert Hoover, great-grandmother, Vena Meadows; Jackie,
Ricky and Corrie Hoover, Monica
Dickson, Mike Meadows, Joyce
and Don Reynolds, Steve, Mike
and Jr. Hoover, Tonya Hess, Bryan
and Andy Burt, James, Kristin and
t..:.:.~::....a.=....;....;.______;__, Layne Acree, Mike and Lynn
Nathanael Hoover
Wright, Mandi Sheets and Chad
Roberts; Wayne and Rhonda
Wigal. Sending gifts were his grandparents, Betty and Ronnie Robertson, Tracy, Frankie, Preston and Corey HudnalL

Lovett family reunion held
POMEROY - Descendants of Danjel and Phoebe Love.tt's son,
William Lovett, held their !econd annual reunion recendy at the Zion
Church of Christ on Route 143 near Pomeroy.
The blessing for the potluck lunch was given by Charles W. Busch,
a descendent of Delliah Lovett Group and individual pictures were
taken during the afternoon ~nd there was a displ~y table of pictures
, and family histories for those attending to enjoy, On the wall was a
large descendent chart prepared by Kay Slack on which family memhighlighted their names. · -· ·
Dorothy Schott presided at me business meeting with officers elected being Schott, president; Kathryn Johnson, vice president, and Slack,
secretary.
A moment of silent prayer was observed for Virginia Kiser and a
niece and nephew of Dorothy Schotts, who died during th!' past year.
The newest descendent was John Orville Slack IV who was born the
morning of the day of the reunion.
Part of the afternoon was set aside for a per5on from each line to
talk about an ancestor. Those speaking were Sue Bolin, a descendant of
Phoebe Lovett: John Slack, a descendant of Mary Catherine Lovett
Slack: Dorothy Schott and Presley Winner, descendants of Delilah
Lovett: Charles Mineard;a descendant of Hiram Lovett: Marlin Lovett,
a descendant of Orange West Lovett.
A collection was taken and door prizes were given to Sue Bolin,
Tony Bolin, David Brewer, Charles Mineard, John Slack and Marlin
Lovett. There were also handouts of red hearts with Lovett Reunion
and the date inscribed and pencils bearing the Lovett name. Each family was given a copy of the article from the 1999 reunion.
The reunion for 2001 will be held on July 14 at the Zion Church
of Christ. The day ended with everyone having a piece of cake made
by Schott on which she had all the Lovett ancestors-names inscribed
inside red hearts. Some of those attending left to go visit the Mo rse
Chapel Cemetery where Lovett family members are buried.
Attending the reunion were Marlin and Cheryl Lovett, Presley and
Ethel Winner Charles and Norma Bush, Dorothy Schott, Tony and
Sue Bolin, John and Vivian Slack, Roger and Kay Slack, Harley and
Kathryn Johnson, Charles Mineard and David Brewer.

COLLEGE NEWS
Receives lodge
scholarship

was named to t)le dean's li st for
spring quarter at Wright State
University in Dayton.
Students named to the dean's
list must take 12 or more credit
hours and achieve a grade point
ave rage of 3.4 or better.
·
-

OSU names
honor roll
Joshua Will , right, a graduate
of Eastern High School, has bee n
awarded a sc holarship by the
Shade River Lodge #453
F&amp;AM. He plans to attend Ohio
University to pursue a degree in
business. He is the son of Daniel
and Julia Will of Pomeroy. Dou
Harris presented the sc holarship.

Named to
dean's list
Bridget M .Vaughan , Langsville,

RACI NE - Jesse C layton Little of Racine was named to the
Ohio State Univemty Honor
Roll for the spring quarter. hav•
ing earned a grade point average
of 3.5 or better.

Graduate OSU
Ryan
D aniel
Buckley,
Pomeroy. received a BS in civil
engineering and Alison Marie
Perine , Reedsville, a B.S. in architecture during corumen cent
exercises at the Ohio State Universtty.
The ceremony was held o n
Jun e 9.

Ann' I want to stop feeling this way and
accept him as he is. because he deserves
to be cherished. Pl ease help me. Council Bluffs, Iowa
,Dear Council Bluffs: Aft er 11 years
of marriage, you are suddenly bothered
by the fact that your husband isn't very
good-looking? Somelhing else about
him is bothering you , and I suggest you
see a psychologist and get to the real
problem. It's not his looks, Dear.
" A Collection of M y Favo nte Gems
of the Day" is the perfect little gift for
that special som eo ne who is impossible
to buy for. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a c heck o r
money order for $5.25 (this includes
postage and handlin g) to: Collection,
c/o Ann Landers, P. O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60(&gt; 11 -0562 (in C anada,
$6.25). To find out more about Ann Lan ders and read her past columns, visit the
Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.cOin.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Russell graduates
LONG BOTTOM - Julie Ann
Russell recently graduated from
Ohio University's master of physical therapy program, She is currently employed with the Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Julie and her husband,
Michael, reside at Long Bottom.
She is the daughter ofTommy and
Sally Hill of Racine .

Julie Russell

Birth announcement
POMEROY - Casey and Julie Booth of Pomeroy announce the
birth of a son, Alexander Keldon, born June 1 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point E'leasant. He.weighted.sevep p_ounds, !3 ounces. _c -·
Maternal .. grandparents are Victor and Katherine Young of Pomeroy,
and maternal great-grandparents are Bill and Nancy Roby of Indiana
'
and Mary Young of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Doug and Rhonda Grover of Middleport
and W. E. Booth of Florida. Paternal great-grandparents are Jack Hendrick and Jerrie Hendrick, both of Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Booth have a daughter, Lauren_, two.

•••

THURSDAY,July 13
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the post
home, 6:30 p.m.
RACINE - Sonshine Circle, Dorcas-Bethany United
Methodist Church, 6 p.m
Thursday at the McKelvey river
camp near Portland. Ham, beverages and table service provided. Take covered dish. Spouses
and friends invited. ·
POMEROY
M eigs
County Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors, special meeting, Thursday at non, SWCD office, to
consider log jam removal applications and personnel matters.
POMEROY - Faith Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey
Run Road, weekend revival,
Thursday through Sunday, 7
p.m. Elder Robert Hal}. Point
Pleasant, W.Va., speaker,
POMEROY - Senior Citizens Center program, 10:30
a.m. Thursday regarding cancer
screenings and Medicare coverage. Julie Leonard, beneficiary
education manager from the
Medicare office in Columbus
to speak. Program sponsored by
Meigs County Cancer Initiative.

Course completed

SYRACUSE Syracuse
Village Council, regular meeting, •7 p.m. Thursday.

These prosp ec tive homebuyers recently completed the Gallia/ Meigs Community Action Agency's Homeowner Education
Co urse . The program is designed to help homebuyers of any
income le vel determine for themselves what they can afford
and sho uld offer for a home. Participants are, front, Jodi
George, Barba'ra Mohler, Missy Stelitano, and Vickie Meade;
back, Thomas Stephens of FIRSTAR Bank. Todd -Butts , Beth
H en r y, Kathy Juhasz, Julia Houdashelt of Gallia/Meigs CAA,
who taught t he course , and Roger Nicod e mus of Randal
Home s.

CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, regu lar meeting,
Thursday, 8 ~ -IlL
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge #453, regular sta ted
meeting, 8 p.m. , refreshments .
POMEROY Junior and Rita
White to sing, Meigs County
Senior Center. Thursday, 5:30
p.m.

•••

FRIDAY, July 14

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS,

MIDDLEPORT - Widows'
Fellowship potluck luncheon ,
Friday
noon,
Middleport
Church of Christ .

• ••

SATURDAY,July 14
MIDDLEPORT Ladies
for the Lord, I 0 a.m. Saturday.
Ash Street Church, Middle~
port. All women welcome.
Red Brush
. BASHAN Church. weekend meeting. Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. to speak.
NEW HAVEN - Revival
New
Haven
Methodi st'
Church, "Singing Echoes of
Cleveland, Tenn., Saturday 7
p.m.

•••

SUNDAY, July 15
RACINE - Charles A. and '
Alma Hinzman Snyder family
reunion, Sunday, 12 :30 p.m.
Star,Mill Park, Raoine.
POMEROY
Cozart
reunion, Royal Oak Park, 11
a.m. to 7 p.m Sunday. Take covered dish . Family and friends
welcome.
BARLOW Arthur and· ·
Effie Watson reunion, Sunday;
Barlow Fairgrounds. Take a
covered dish for dinner at 12:30
p.m. All family and friends
invited ,
EAST M E IG S - Va cation·
Bible School with theme "SonZone Discovery C e nte r", Sunday through July 20, 0:30 to
8: 45 p.m. at the South 13etliel
C hmch. Ciasss•s for all ages
inciudm g adults.

•••

MONDAY,July 16
POMEROY - First Southern Baptist Church , adventure·
week Bibl e sc hool. Mond ay
through July 21. 0:30 to ~ p.m .
Ages 3 and up. Transpo rtation
ca ll 9Y2 - 6779 o r 99~-6328.

Subscribe today.
992-2156
"

Mukesh

'
The Middleport Clinic

D

788 North 2nd Street ·
Middleport, OH 45760

bPolntments:
"0401 992-4226
Accepting New Patients- Walk-Ins WelCome
- - -----·--------~

Blood Drive PVH Wei/ness Center
Thursday, July 73, 2000
Noon to 6 p.m.

+FREE T-Shirts To All Donors

+ Door Prizes

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Volley Hospilol
Auxiliary
&amp;
American Red Cross

�•

•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentlner

Thursday, July 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Auto Racing Notebook, Page B6
Daily Scoreboa~d, Page B6
-

Page 81
thursday, July 1:S, 1000
f

I,

THURSDAY'S

Reds trade Neagle (and season) to Yankees

HIGHLIGHTS
•

Pennington signs
5-year deal with Jets
NEW YORK -

ffi

C INC INNAT I (AP) - Two WL'eks the ~.ca~un and had njet:t t'd :1 h elow- m.lrafter th ey traded t&lt;&gt;r David Justice to put h ·t ofrcr from th e Reds , wht&gt; dec ided to
some thump in their lineup. the New York ·trade hnn rather than lo~c hun tu frt't'
Yankees snagged left- hander n,nny Nea- agency.
gle, one of th e top starting pitche" availReds general man ager Jim Bowd c.·n .;;aid
able as the trade deadline 1wars.
seven clubs were im t• rc..;ted in Neagle,
Cincinnati sent Neagle, their top Martt'r. who was ~-2 with a 3.5:! ERA in IH starts
to the Yankees on Wednesday as part of a this season.
six-p layer deal rlolt· essentially ends the
"There was not a dt::t l out th ere 111 our
R.eds' chances of coptending and opi nion that was close to what wL· bOt
stre11gtht'm New York's. !
from the Yankees," Bow den said. "We did Th e Yankc·es also got· f;futfi elder Mike n't wa nt to ge t into th e situati on where if
Frank whik giving up minor league tlmd we waited tOr two weeks from now, we
baseman Drew Henson, outfiddc.:.·r J.H:kson couldn't get the Van h'es' deal because th ey
M ehan ami pit chers llri'IIJ Reith and Ed watJt t•J to go 111 a ditTe rent J irtTtlon ."
Yarnal l.
T he· dea l, announ ced by tile Reds at a
Neaglt.: i:an bccmw: a' 1 free agent :1ti:er nnvs conference a day after the All-Star

ESI'N is

n·porring that for m t'r Marshall

LINCOLN

Umversity qu :Jrterback
PCrmmgron has fO il1 t.' to
w1th the New York Jets on
yL'ar contract wlncll wi!!

Chad
terms
a five;11low

hun to rl·port tu lrainmg camp.

The deal, which was to be
this m o rnin g, is wo rt h
$6 . }5H~ mi lli.on dolLm over its
~Jgtwd

duranon. Performan ce and play-

lllg tim e bonuses could push the
deal .to S23 nulli o n.
The deal includes a $4.1 million signing bonus and another
$ 1.0 mil lio n if he takes 35 percent
of the _ream\ o;;nap'\ in any ~eason
hetWt't'll th L· signi n g and the 20 ~ 13

gamt' , ~:1ve tht• Yankee . . · litr ugglin g pitch ing ~ta tTanuther startn ti:&gt;r the &lt;.,c.Ton d lulf
of the st:ason but ~tnpped Nnv York '.;;
farm system of some top pru.;pc.·rr:... . ·
lr al so prl'.;;cnted the Yankee'\, with basc b•ll's only $11111 million payroll, with
anothl'r big salary and a player. who
beco me..; a free &lt;Jg~:nt after this season.
Neagle's curre nt &lt;alary is $4 .75 million.
Three Jays after the Reds told Ke·n
Griffey Jr. to sit out th e All-Star ~amc
because they wanted his so re kn ee bt•ttcr
for a second-ha lf pennanr run , they e'\sc:ntially gavl' up on their season.
They trail the Sr. Louis C~nli nals hy
c1ghr games in the NL Central.
It's similar to 1998. when they traded

"l''"

C hi cago

lin t·backer

ll•cia••....lJ rlaclwr, the-ninth--pick-in
rh c dro fc
··•

$30WORTH OF
GAS GIVEN AWAY
EVERY HOUR ON
SAT. JULY 15TH

The R L·d.;; are on target to. set a fra11chise
rl·co rJ fur Jncndancl- aft er \Vinning 96
game·&lt; in 1·\IIJ'J and trading for GrifTey.T he
conse tl\U '\ pick to wm the N L Centra l is
now C\~l' llt!all y c onced1ng~
"We're c:onccrn..:J about how it 's going
to be tak en by the fans, by the players and
by the mc.·Jia.'' Bmvdt' n said. " You want to
rraJt· for morL· J)enny N t'agl e~. you do11't
wa t~t to ,rradc D~:nny Neagle. But it's a

hmm e"'·

Please see Trade, Page B&amp;

Astros, Fed
Hock in final

T he quartnback \ bonus packof $(&gt;. 1 mill ion is worth more
tlun the $5.5 m illion packaf;e
to

C.i~L·v.

\)

sca~o n.

~ivcn

tup \(artn 1&gt;an· Uurba to Cleveland on
thL· t'Vt.; \)f the "c.'a.;;o n upt·ni.·r as part of a
parka~c fo r top Indian• prospect Scan

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

T he jets enter. camP w ith o ut

SY RACUSE - The stage is
now set fur the final ac t of the
23rd Annual Bi ll H ubbard
Memor ial Littk League Tournam ent , fo ll ow ing a pair of
tough contem Wednesday.
The M iddkport Astros won
th e Bartle of M eit," Co unty,
defeatin g 1mgh boring Racin e
Southern iu thc.· c:vt,-ning's first

any unsigned players.
l'enmngton was the 1Hrh pl ayer
sele cted overall in Ap nl's NFL
draft. Hc· was the la st of th e Jets'
four first-rOund pi cks to cume to
term s on a co nt ract.

Begay, Goosen share
Loch Lomond lead

br:ll11C.

G LASGOW. Scotland (A P) Not:th U ~.:gay. \Vi n nc r of two

. Federal Hocking guaranteed
its slot in tonigh t's cha mpionsh i p game wah a com t·tfo m- bch lnd victory over lli o
Gnnde in the nightcap.
Middleport Astros 13,

straight tou rnarw.:·nts in the United State'S, shot a 6-u nder-par 65

tilr a share of th e first-round lead
Jr rh l' l.och Lomond in ternational w ith- ll.GtiefGm&gt;&lt;&lt;!-n, Tom Lehman was one shor
back .H (,(,. alon,.; with I Y-ye arold · Ad ~1 m Sn)tt, playi ng lf l his
fOurth tou rnament as a pro. and
Stephe· n Allan.The Loch Lomo nd
;, th l.' \a-;t .f\lropem event .be fort'
.. nL'Xf w,·ck's Br iti&lt;li ""O pen at St
A11d rews.

Racine Southern 5

Beleaguered ottey wins
at Sardinia meet

2000 Mustang GT
1999 Explorer XLT

1998 Windstar -®
1999 Buick Regal
1999 Durango

1998 Contour
1998 F-150 4x4

1999 Cavalier

1998 Continental
1998 Taurus

1997 lntreped
1997 Transport
1999 Mountaineer
1996 Explorer Limited 1998 F-150 4x2
'

1998 Honda Odessey
1997 Corolla
1997 Dakota 4x4

r-----------------,
DIESEL OIL:

CHANGE
$
30
L-----------------~

ASTRONOMICAL - Middleport's Matt Imboden pitched four innings and recorded six strikeouts as the
Astros defeated Rac ine 13·5 to reach t he Hubbard Tournament championship. (Andrew Carter photo)

Crewuushes
Revolution

1998 Chevy 15.00 4x4 S.C

1998 Firebird -®
1997 F-150 4x2

1999 Neon RT
1999 Taurus -®

1996 Town Car

NUOitO, S:.rdini a (A I')
N lll L' J ay&lt;; after ht·in g cleared of
,1ccusa uun " tl1.1( shr used .;;t ~roJ d -;,
MtTlc:nr Uttt·y rt·tun lc..'d to co m ~
~x·titlo n ;l!ld won . 1 I 00- m t·tn
r..ILT in :l n:gional lll l't't.
T he· 41 l-ycar- old tiw~ t imc
() Jymp iJr J. compctin~ agai nst
rL"gionaJ· runner;.;. wo n in a slow
llllll' of 11 .-1:2 "'L'Con d s in chi llv
\\L',l thn. TilL· J.un.licm spritHL'I'
\\·,1;.; .1 dotrbk o;Jivn mc..·Jal.isr ~11 thl' .
1 IJ l)(l C;amc'i .

1997 Monte Carlo
1996 Sable

1t J - 1. \VL'"I cJo.,c.·d th e ~conng 111
til L· KlJth minutc..· ntr .1 p.Ni froin
RoLmd l\ ~uikr.L
I! \\',1.., dl&lt;.' tir.;r two -~ o . d ~.tlllt'
t'o r \'Vht
rhe ( ~ rc\\' (X- IIl- ..J ) 1110\"L'd OllL'
pnint .1hc.1d of IhiJ.J.., into rhird
pLaT 111 d JL' M.uor L ~·dgllL' SorLlT
Ccntr.d I )j, -1.,1011. NL·w Eng l.md
(7-H-:1) t"i.' lll.tinnl 'ilTtH id in ,t!J~·
E.l'&gt;L

195 UPPER RIVER RD.

740-446-9800 800-272-5179

HOURS:
MON.- FRI. 9-7;
SAT. 9-5

The C re·\\· b l 14 - II 111 to t.d
.., Jltlt\ .1r1d H-~ in . ; hot\ on g~ul.
NLW F. ngl.1 11d go.Ji kc·,·per Jl'IT
C.tuwy 1nadc.· f()~lr '&gt;:1\'t'"· wl11k
M.1rk I hHlghnty of Columbm
h.1d to \ (Op jll'&gt;l llll l' \hDt.

1

LJER EA. Ohio (AI')
()rl:l.lldo . lhown, recovenng
fro m . :m inj ury to hi'\ righ t eye
inflicted by .1 rL·fcrL'L' \ fl ag. W;t'\
placed on the physically nnabl c.;-.
to pt-rforlll hst by the Clel'eland
Urown:-; nn \X/cdnL· . ;day.
Brown, ,I r.- tout-7. 3511-pound
ofTemive t.ll.,; kk, \\"J'\ injured durin g a D ec . l'J g .ml t' .1gainst Jack~;o nvi lltwlw n rdl·rL''-' Jdl
Trip! crr e ,1ccidcnt.1 ll y hit him
with a pcn ,Jity thg weighr L· d
\\" II h til k
Brown ,!Jovnl Tnpktte to t ill'
ground ,l.., lw ktt tht· tit·ld.
The lin e ll l.lll "!,lid L1ter hi,
n ..'.lCtloll
C.llllt'
ollt l)f tl·ar
hcL"amL' hi.., l~1ther w.1"1 hhndcd hy
glaucOJJ Ja .
ThL· k .l glll' 11llti;J\Iy "'ll"'pt' lltkd
Brn\\'n inddinJtdy. hu t !Jft,L·d lill'
pc.·n,tlt y in Lll l' rcbru.uyTripkttL'
Juo;; 11ot hcc..·n rcprim:mdcd .
"T hi-. i.., :111 emotional time tl)r
Leu\,." t"o.\t 'h C hri ~ Pallna o.; tid , ·
referring 10 the playl'f'..; tll l'k . ll:lllll'.

"Tim. t\ the tir~t training camp
he wi ll no t 1.1kc p.trt in \ 111d it j..,

rt·achl'J on a tit'kler's cho ice,
th en 'cort·d 011 a passed ball .

JR. l-lupp scored Ra cine\
tln ,JI run in th e bottom of the
sixth. He si ngled to right field
and then '\cored wh en Papc
ripped an Rill sin r;le to right
field.
De·xtn &lt;Carted f( &gt;r Middlepnrt. go ing two innint,rs wi th a
..; trih·~.nJt .md ;r \va lk. 1-1 ~ tPVe
Please see Hubbard, Page 86

NAS C AR

Brown
sidelined
for season

C() I.. UM IJUS. Uh io (A I')
I ) .1!ltl.' \X/,J ..,hill~tn n .md Bri ;lll
\X/c..· . . r "cnrni t \\"o go.d-. .1p il'n· .I'
{ ~ o h1111h\l\ dd~·.ncd Nt'\\' 'England 4-1 \'\ll'd!lt''\d.ly nighr for the
{ :rc" ·\ . , j:'\th qr~nght vicrory o\'l'f
the H.. nuhn ion . Colulllbu~ · j, 15 ~
,) rn thL· .~rri~,..·;.., bc..'t\\'t'i.' ll th t' tt:ams.
\X/.1-;; hlll~ton. who h~l ' 1J go.1ls
t(,r the "L\1'\D il , s\· ort•d twin· within "' i:x 1i1inutt''\. Hi s first goal LJ lll l'
in rhL' -L'n-d rninlltL' on :111 a""i"t
from ltobcrt Warzycha and he·
Jll :ldL· Jt 1- 0 11 1 tht· 4lJt h 'nlmure.
WlthjdrCu lllllll!;h:lJll aSS!Stl!lg . Jt
\\ ',l' hi . , ~lwrth two -goal gamt: of
tht• \l'd\0 11 .
· WL·..,t 'cored 111''- tlfth go,tl in the
7-J rh minute front Jnhn Wi lm ,1r
l'ere'7. A pc 11alt\· kick by John
H .1 rkl·~ in th e HjJth minutL' made

Middl eport tallied fi ve runs in
the top of the tirst in ning 1.' t1
route to a 13- 5 w in. Th e Astros
score d HI rum in the fir~t three
in nings to bui ld an .;;even-run
~ush i on. then benefited from
so lid pit ching down the stretch
to seal th e victory.
Matt lmbodc·n led ofT the
game with a walk fl)r Middk po rt . Consccurivc baschits by
Aaron Fife, Enc V:mM cter,
I )&lt;Jvid Pool e. Tv ler Wayl.llld and
Joel Lynch pu "'hnl rtlll 'i aero-;.;; ,I s
the A"'trtJ'i hlll lt .1 .J-0 .!dv.Jnta~L' .
R .tcint· pu lkd ha ck OllL' nlll
in tht· ho1nc h.1lf of th~;.· tir~t
\.vhen Jos h PalK rt·aclh: d OIJ .1
ficlda 's choict' and movL·d to
· -;eco nd thJnk" to a &lt;;acrifice by
Travis Evert' rr . P:1pe .;;tole third
and \cort·d o n ,1 p.tsscd b.tll to
r ut the g;lp to :1 - 1.
l\1iJdlt..·p ort ..llidcd ;l!lothc..·r
run i 11 the ~cro 11d with Imbo den scoring on .111 error. l·k ~o t
,J[){) ~Ird with a -.in glc , 11mvcd rn
\L'rtHid Oil .I J'.l'i"l'd b.J'JI ,IJld

score front second on the erro r
to boost the Astros' lead to 6- 1.
Racine kep t pace by manu facturing a nm in its half of th e
second . Butch Marnh ou t singled. stole secon d and third, and
scored on Ryan Chap man 's sacrifi ce to trim the deficit to 6-2.
However, the Astros exploded
again m the third, scor ing four
run s to pad their lead to 10-2.
Travis Butcher, D ustin Vanln wage n, Dexter and Fife all
scored for Middlepo r t in the
third.
Fife and Lynch each had a hit
in the inning for the Astro s.
who score d two runs with two
ours.
, Racine came back w ith o ne
run in the botto m of the third
inning. cutting the deli cit to 10.l. Jacob H u nter walked. stole
seco nd an d third, and scored on
an error tha t all owed Darin
"Teaford tfi reach base.
Middleport m unded out its
"coring in the fourt h. sco nn g
three runs. Fife.Van ln wagen an d
Dexter each crossed the plate
for th e A&lt;rros to extc•nd the lead
to 13-."1.
Nick Buck scored Raci ne\
lon e run in th e fourrh inn ing to
trin1 the f(ap to 13-4. He

Kenny Irwin·laid
to rest in Indiana
INDIANAI'ULIS (AI') H undred . . of llltHirnc rli p :-~ch· d
,1 church \X.Ic..·dll l''tl.l\' to r~:.·nl C lll ­
ber NASCAR dri\·c. · r Kenny
lnvin . whmc grea t p.b'\ ion in
lit{· .1i&lt;o brought his de.nh.
\rw111. ,)(), n.t~hl'd IntO ,1 CO ll -

lTe te \\-,I ll .llld died of cl uu;.;hcd
FALLEN WARRIOR - Cleveland offensive tackle Orlando Brown was
placed on the physically uraqle to perform list by the Browns
Wednesday due to hi s ongoing eye problems . (AP)
'

ditlin1it I~)J"

t.dk .1nd he
.1rc Li ning ."
'

111111.

\Y./t..· JuJ .1 !li LT
wlut \\'l'

Uth.l cr\t.l! ll.i o;;

.

,

A rc.1 111 otll cul •w d Brown .
" prl'li..·rrL·d nor to t:1lk wirh th e
ln t·d i.J about hi ~ "'ltuation .1r d11 ~
tlllll'_..
Tilt· e i~ht-yc.·.1 r otll·Thin· t,Jlk le .1 ppcarc..·d UP,'\et as hL· kft th e
L)pcning day o l,c.Jmp t(lr rookiL''I.

lw: un iform .md
~ h ons ,md w,J&lt;., on thL·· t;idcliliL'' ,,..,
dt..: fi..-11~ivc c..' till ( :ounnc.•y BrmVn .
th e No. I pi ck in the NFL. anJ
othn rook II,' " we nt through hght
B n&gt;\\'11 \.\'tH\'

drill&lt; .
Bnm 11.., prt·,i dc..·m ( :.nm cn
Pnli n · ....tid dl t' dl.' ch ion on
Bnm ."n \\-,1.., 111.1~k i11 .Ill dl() rt tn
lwlp rhc rcluhdrrarion prncc .......
" Hl'·.., .; nil ,J nwmlwr of rlw
tt'.llll ,!lld I\ L" llliiH L'd 011 th ~·
,tnin· I"L)' tn:· Pohry . , ,JJJ . " 1-k
will p.lrttli)Utc..' in tl'.llll lll l'L'tlllg..,, hut 1101 in .Ktu.tl phy,icd
fH .l&lt;.'ti L't..'.
'' V·/c will be .1hlt- to lllOilltor
lli111 d.1d y .m d hi, . . p l rlt' will he

Please see Brown, Page 86

' kull Friday whik· practici11g
for th~~

Enghnd .1(Hl .1~t
lnrl'rn .Hi&lt;lnal
Spl'l'dw.ly in 1 nudon. N.H .
Til L· Rl'y. l'c tn Bo,worrh
Nl'\\"

Nt'\\'

l-1 .11llp~ hir t·

rc.'l"OU lllt"d

,I rnT ill

1.

011\'1.'1'",1 -

tior l w ith 1n\ 111 111 \\·hr c h hL·
....tid the dr n·cr t ll]d hin1. "Ym1
know wh .IL, I'd dn\'L' t()r ti·L't'.
I'd r:IL"L' for ti·L'L'
'' TI1.1r\ my p.1\\lon . rJur \ 111y
p .!'-;\ 1011.

·· Hl· died domg wh ,Jt hl'
.lh .. ol ut~.· l y ln n· d : · Lhl'&gt;\\·nrth
\,l id .
At k .l-.:t 5110 }h:o pk .Htt·ntk d
tlw o.; crvi cc..· .It Ahurlc..Llnt Lift·
C hurch , ~ip illin ~ out nt" th e
'&gt;,lllntt.lry imo .1 gy mrt\"'HI\11 tn
w.ltr h 01 1 c..·]o.,L'\ 1-l' irn llr rch•\'1-

~ 1011.

T IH' d nve r"'i ..,j..,tt:r. Ku rne
Jn,·in. choked back sobs :lS she
rc,H.l .1 poem witb li nt:s includin g. "Dnn't g:r ieve fof 111e
lwc.lti\L' now I'm fret• ."
,A., ,-u.ko rnhu-re recou nt ed
lrw1n\ hfe 11 1 picturl's from
childhood to h1.., rt-ren t racmg
1\ lJ(l"(.'&gt;;.-,,

lrwm, who w ai\ living in
C h ;~rlo t tc. N .C .. was born anLl
" 'hoolcd 111 lndi :J nJpolis and
lc.l rllt'd 10 r&lt;Kl' hL· re ;1" well.
lrw111 w,1.., Jll"t \1 :-\ whc..•n he
t' rllnrd hi . , lir't L .1r race Jll
q u .1rte r - m1 d !-{l' ts,
pint -s i z eJ
race ca r ~; thH spi n around
tr.1cks ,lt 411 mph.
He
lw,·,,m e
the
1991)
N.nional
M1dgl't
SL·ries
Ui,llllplon. ,llld 111 1'!'17 , ,his
only i"llll ''"a" "' with the
N I\~CAR Cralism"" Tru ck
SL·riq. h c \\' ,1-.: n,tmt• d R ooka:·
L\f th e Year.
Irwin was the Win ston Cup
roo ki e oftht· yc.lr in 1998.

�•

•

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentlner

Thursday, July 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Auto Racing Notebook, Page B6
Daily Scoreboa~d, Page B6
-

Page 81
thursday, July 1:S, 1000
f

I,

THURSDAY'S

Reds trade Neagle (and season) to Yankees

HIGHLIGHTS
•

Pennington signs
5-year deal with Jets
NEW YORK -

ffi

C INC INNAT I (AP) - Two WL'eks the ~.ca~un and had njet:t t'd :1 h elow- m.lrafter th ey traded t&lt;&gt;r David Justice to put h ·t ofrcr from th e Reds , wht&gt; dec ided to
some thump in their lineup. the New York ·trade hnn rather than lo~c hun tu frt't'
Yankees snagged left- hander n,nny Nea- agency.
gle, one of th e top starting pitche" availReds general man ager Jim Bowd c.·n .;;aid
able as the trade deadline 1wars.
seven clubs were im t• rc..;ted in Neagle,
Cincinnati sent Neagle, their top Martt'r. who was ~-2 with a 3.5:! ERA in IH starts
to the Yankees on Wednesday as part of a this season.
six-p layer deal rlolt· essentially ends the
"There was not a dt::t l out th ere 111 our
R.eds' chances of coptending and opi nion that was close to what wL· bOt
stre11gtht'm New York's. !
from the Yankees," Bow den said. "We did Th e Yankc·es also got· f;futfi elder Mike n't wa nt to ge t into th e situati on where if
Frank whik giving up minor league tlmd we waited tOr two weeks from now, we
baseman Drew Henson, outfiddc.:.·r J.H:kson couldn't get the Van h'es' deal because th ey
M ehan ami pit chers llri'IIJ Reith and Ed watJt t•J to go 111 a ditTe rent J irtTtlon ."
Yarnal l.
T he· dea l, announ ced by tile Reds at a
Neaglt.: i:an bccmw: a' 1 free agent :1ti:er nnvs conference a day after the All-Star

ESI'N is

n·porring that for m t'r Marshall

LINCOLN

Umversity qu :Jrterback
PCrmmgron has fO il1 t.' to
w1th the New York Jets on
yL'ar contract wlncll wi!!

Chad
terms
a five;11low

hun to rl·port tu lrainmg camp.

The deal, which was to be
this m o rnin g, is wo rt h
$6 . }5H~ mi lli.on dolLm over its
~Jgtwd

duranon. Performan ce and play-

lllg tim e bonuses could push the
deal .to S23 nulli o n.
The deal includes a $4.1 million signing bonus and another
$ 1.0 mil lio n if he takes 35 percent
of the _ream\ o;;nap'\ in any ~eason
hetWt't'll th L· signi n g and the 20 ~ 13

gamt' , ~:1ve tht• Yankee . . · litr ugglin g pitch ing ~ta tTanuther startn ti:&gt;r the &lt;.,c.Ton d lulf
of the st:ason but ~tnpped Nnv York '.;;
farm system of some top pru.;pc.·rr:... . ·
lr al so prl'.;;cnted the Yankee'\, with basc b•ll's only $11111 million payroll, with
anothl'r big salary and a player. who
beco me..; a free &lt;Jg~:nt after this season.
Neagle's curre nt &lt;alary is $4 .75 million.
Three Jays after the Reds told Ke·n
Griffey Jr. to sit out th e All-Star ~amc
because they wanted his so re kn ee bt•ttcr
for a second-ha lf pennanr run , they e'\sc:ntially gavl' up on their season.
They trail the Sr. Louis C~nli nals hy
c1ghr games in the NL Central.
It's similar to 1998. when they traded

"l''"

C hi cago

lin t·backer

ll•cia••....lJ rlaclwr, the-ninth--pick-in
rh c dro fc
··•

$30WORTH OF
GAS GIVEN AWAY
EVERY HOUR ON
SAT. JULY 15TH

The R L·d.;; are on target to. set a fra11chise
rl·co rJ fur Jncndancl- aft er \Vinning 96
game·&lt; in 1·\IIJ'J and trading for GrifTey.T he
conse tl\U '\ pick to wm the N L Centra l is
now C\~l' llt!all y c onced1ng~
"We're c:onccrn..:J about how it 's going
to be tak en by the fans, by the players and
by the mc.·Jia.'' Bmvdt' n said. " You want to
rraJt· for morL· J)enny N t'agl e~. you do11't
wa t~t to ,rradc D~:nny Neagle. But it's a

hmm e"'·

Please see Trade, Page B&amp;

Astros, Fed
Hock in final

T he quartnback \ bonus packof $(&gt;. 1 mill ion is worth more
tlun the $5.5 m illion packaf;e
to

C.i~L·v.

\)

sca~o n.

~ivcn

tup \(artn 1&gt;an· Uurba to Cleveland on
thL· t'Vt.; \)f the "c.'a.;;o n upt·ni.·r as part of a
parka~c fo r top Indian• prospect Scan

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

T he jets enter. camP w ith o ut

SY RACUSE - The stage is
now set fur the final ac t of the
23rd Annual Bi ll H ubbard
Memor ial Littk League Tournam ent , fo ll ow ing a pair of
tough contem Wednesday.
The M iddkport Astros won
th e Bartle of M eit," Co unty,
defeatin g 1mgh boring Racin e
Southern iu thc.· c:vt,-ning's first

any unsigned players.
l'enmngton was the 1Hrh pl ayer
sele cted overall in Ap nl's NFL
draft. Hc· was the la st of th e Jets'
four first-rOund pi cks to cume to
term s on a co nt ract.

Begay, Goosen share
Loch Lomond lead

br:ll11C.

G LASGOW. Scotland (A P) Not:th U ~.:gay. \Vi n nc r of two

. Federal Hocking guaranteed
its slot in tonigh t's cha mpionsh i p game wah a com t·tfo m- bch lnd victory over lli o
Gnnde in the nightcap.
Middleport Astros 13,

straight tou rnarw.:·nts in the United State'S, shot a 6-u nder-par 65

tilr a share of th e first-round lead
Jr rh l' l.och Lomond in ternational w ith- ll.GtiefGm&gt;&lt;&lt;!-n, Tom Lehman was one shor
back .H (,(,. alon,.; with I Y-ye arold · Ad ~1 m Sn)tt, playi ng lf l his
fOurth tou rnament as a pro. and
Stephe· n Allan.The Loch Lomo nd
;, th l.' \a-;t .f\lropem event .be fort'
.. nL'Xf w,·ck's Br iti&lt;li ""O pen at St
A11d rews.

Racine Southern 5

Beleaguered ottey wins
at Sardinia meet

2000 Mustang GT
1999 Explorer XLT

1998 Windstar -®
1999 Buick Regal
1999 Durango

1998 Contour
1998 F-150 4x4

1999 Cavalier

1998 Continental
1998 Taurus

1997 lntreped
1997 Transport
1999 Mountaineer
1996 Explorer Limited 1998 F-150 4x2
'

1998 Honda Odessey
1997 Corolla
1997 Dakota 4x4

r-----------------,
DIESEL OIL:

CHANGE
$
30
L-----------------~

ASTRONOMICAL - Middleport's Matt Imboden pitched four innings and recorded six strikeouts as the
Astros defeated Rac ine 13·5 to reach t he Hubbard Tournament championship. (Andrew Carter photo)

Crewuushes
Revolution

1998 Chevy 15.00 4x4 S.C

1998 Firebird -®
1997 F-150 4x2

1999 Neon RT
1999 Taurus -®

1996 Town Car

NUOitO, S:.rdini a (A I')
N lll L' J ay&lt;; after ht·in g cleared of
,1ccusa uun " tl1.1( shr used .;;t ~roJ d -;,
MtTlc:nr Uttt·y rt·tun lc..'d to co m ~
~x·titlo n ;l!ld won . 1 I 00- m t·tn
r..ILT in :l n:gional lll l't't.
T he· 41 l-ycar- old tiw~ t imc
() Jymp iJr J. compctin~ agai nst
rL"gionaJ· runner;.;. wo n in a slow
llllll' of 11 .-1:2 "'L'Con d s in chi llv
\\L',l thn. TilL· J.un.licm spritHL'I'
\\·,1;.; .1 dotrbk o;Jivn mc..·Jal.isr ~11 thl' .
1 IJ l)(l C;amc'i .

1997 Monte Carlo
1996 Sable

1t J - 1. \VL'"I cJo.,c.·d th e ~conng 111
til L· KlJth minutc..· ntr .1 p.Ni froin
RoLmd l\ ~uikr.L
I! \\',1.., dl&lt;.' tir.;r two -~ o . d ~.tlllt'
t'o r \'Vht
rhe ( ~ rc\\' (X- IIl- ..J ) 1110\"L'd OllL'
pnint .1hc.1d of IhiJ.J.., into rhird
pLaT 111 d JL' M.uor L ~·dgllL' SorLlT
Ccntr.d I )j, -1.,1011. NL·w Eng l.md
(7-H-:1) t"i.' lll.tinnl 'ilTtH id in ,t!J~·
E.l'&gt;L

195 UPPER RIVER RD.

740-446-9800 800-272-5179

HOURS:
MON.- FRI. 9-7;
SAT. 9-5

The C re·\\· b l 14 - II 111 to t.d
.., Jltlt\ .1r1d H-~ in . ; hot\ on g~ul.
NLW F. ngl.1 11d go.Ji kc·,·per Jl'IT
C.tuwy 1nadc.· f()~lr '&gt;:1\'t'"· wl11k
M.1rk I hHlghnty of Columbm
h.1d to \ (Op jll'&gt;l llll l' \hDt.

1

LJER EA. Ohio (AI')
()rl:l.lldo . lhown, recovenng
fro m . :m inj ury to hi'\ righ t eye
inflicted by .1 rL·fcrL'L' \ fl ag. W;t'\
placed on the physically nnabl c.;-.
to pt-rforlll hst by the Clel'eland
Urown:-; nn \X/cdnL· . ;day.
Brown, ,I r.- tout-7. 3511-pound
ofTemive t.ll.,; kk, \\"J'\ injured durin g a D ec . l'J g .ml t' .1gainst Jack~;o nvi lltwlw n rdl·rL''-' Jdl
Trip! crr e ,1ccidcnt.1 ll y hit him
with a pcn ,Jity thg weighr L· d
\\" II h til k
Brown ,!Jovnl Tnpktte to t ill'
ground ,l.., lw ktt tht· tit·ld.
The lin e ll l.lll "!,lid L1ter hi,
n ..'.lCtloll
C.llllt'
ollt l)f tl·ar
hcL"amL' hi.., l~1ther w.1"1 hhndcd hy
glaucOJJ Ja .
ThL· k .l glll' 11llti;J\Iy "'ll"'pt' lltkd
Brn\\'n inddinJtdy. hu t !Jft,L·d lill'
pc.·n,tlt y in Lll l' rcbru.uyTripkttL'
Juo;; 11ot hcc..·n rcprim:mdcd .
"T hi-. i.., :111 emotional time tl)r
Leu\,." t"o.\t 'h C hri ~ Pallna o.; tid , ·
referring 10 the playl'f'..; tll l'k . ll:lllll'.

"Tim. t\ the tir~t training camp
he wi ll no t 1.1kc p.trt in \ 111d it j..,

rt·achl'J on a tit'kler's cho ice,
th en 'cort·d 011 a passed ball .

JR. l-lupp scored Ra cine\
tln ,JI run in th e bottom of the
sixth. He si ngled to right field
and then '\cored wh en Papc
ripped an Rill sin r;le to right
field.
De·xtn &lt;Carted f( &gt;r Middlepnrt. go ing two innint,rs wi th a
..; trih·~.nJt .md ;r \va lk. 1-1 ~ tPVe
Please see Hubbard, Page 86

NAS C AR

Brown
sidelined
for season

C() I.. UM IJUS. Uh io (A I')
I ) .1!ltl.' \X/,J ..,hill~tn n .md Bri ;lll
\X/c..· . . r "cnrni t \\"o go.d-. .1p il'n· .I'
{ ~ o h1111h\l\ dd~·.ncd Nt'\\' 'England 4-1 \'\ll'd!lt''\d.ly nighr for the
{ :rc" ·\ . , j:'\th qr~nght vicrory o\'l'f
the H.. nuhn ion . Colulllbu~ · j, 15 ~
,) rn thL· .~rri~,..·;.., bc..'t\\'t'i.' ll th t' tt:ams.
\X/.1-;; hlll~ton. who h~l ' 1J go.1ls
t(,r the "L\1'\D il , s\· ort•d twin· within "' i:x 1i1inutt''\. Hi s first goal LJ lll l'
in rhL' -L'n-d rninlltL' on :111 a""i"t
from ltobcrt Warzycha and he·
Jll :ldL· Jt 1- 0 11 1 tht· 4lJt h 'nlmure.
WlthjdrCu lllllll!;h:lJll aSS!Stl!lg . Jt
\\ ',l' hi . , ~lwrth two -goal gamt: of
tht• \l'd\0 11 .
· WL·..,t 'cored 111''- tlfth go,tl in the
7-J rh minute front Jnhn Wi lm ,1r
l'ere'7. A pc 11alt\· kick by John
H .1 rkl·~ in th e HjJth minutL' made

Middl eport tallied fi ve runs in
the top of the tirst in ning 1.' t1
route to a 13- 5 w in. Th e Astros
score d HI rum in the fir~t three
in nings to bui ld an .;;even-run
~ush i on. then benefited from
so lid pit ching down the stretch
to seal th e victory.
Matt lmbodc·n led ofT the
game with a walk fl)r Middk po rt . Consccurivc baschits by
Aaron Fife, Enc V:mM cter,
I )&lt;Jvid Pool e. Tv ler Wayl.llld and
Joel Lynch pu "'hnl rtlll 'i aero-;.;; ,I s
the A"'trtJ'i hlll lt .1 .J-0 .!dv.Jnta~L' .
R .tcint· pu lkd ha ck OllL' nlll
in tht· ho1nc h.1lf of th~;.· tir~t
\.vhen Jos h PalK rt·aclh: d OIJ .1
ficlda 's choict' and movL·d to
· -;eco nd thJnk" to a &lt;;acrifice by
Travis Evert' rr . P:1pe .;;tole third
and \cort·d o n ,1 p.tsscd b.tll to
r ut the g;lp to :1 - 1.
l\1iJdlt..·p ort ..llidcd ;l!lothc..·r
run i 11 the ~cro 11d with Imbo den scoring on .111 error. l·k ~o t
,J[){) ~Ird with a -.in glc , 11mvcd rn
\L'rtHid Oil .I J'.l'i"l'd b.J'JI ,IJld

score front second on the erro r
to boost the Astros' lead to 6- 1.
Racine kep t pace by manu facturing a nm in its half of th e
second . Butch Marnh ou t singled. stole secon d and third, and
scored on Ryan Chap man 's sacrifi ce to trim the deficit to 6-2.
However, the Astros exploded
again m the third, scor ing four
run s to pad their lead to 10-2.
Travis Butcher, D ustin Vanln wage n, Dexter and Fife all
scored for Middlepo r t in the
third.
Fife and Lynch each had a hit
in the inning for the Astro s.
who score d two runs with two
ours.
, Racine came back w ith o ne
run in the botto m of the third
inning. cutting the deli cit to 10.l. Jacob H u nter walked. stole
seco nd an d third, and scored on
an error tha t all owed Darin
"Teaford tfi reach base.
Middleport m unded out its
"coring in the fourt h. sco nn g
three runs. Fife.Van ln wagen an d
Dexter each crossed the plate
for th e A&lt;rros to extc•nd the lead
to 13-."1.
Nick Buck scored Raci ne\
lon e run in th e fourrh inn ing to
trin1 the f(ap to 13-4. He

Kenny Irwin·laid
to rest in Indiana
INDIANAI'ULIS (AI') H undred . . of llltHirnc rli p :-~ch· d
,1 church \X.Ic..·dll l''tl.l\' to r~:.·nl C lll ­
ber NASCAR dri\·c. · r Kenny
lnvin . whmc grea t p.b'\ ion in
lit{· .1i&lt;o brought his de.nh.
\rw111. ,)(), n.t~hl'd IntO ,1 CO ll -

lTe te \\-,I ll .llld died of cl uu;.;hcd
FALLEN WARRIOR - Cleveland offensive tackle Orlando Brown was
placed on the physically uraqle to perform list by the Browns
Wednesday due to hi s ongoing eye problems . (AP)
'

ditlin1it I~)J"

t.dk .1nd he
.1rc Li ning ."
'

111111.

\Y./t..· JuJ .1 !li LT
wlut \\'l'

Uth.l cr\t.l! ll.i o;;

.

,

A rc.1 111 otll cul •w d Brown .
" prl'li..·rrL·d nor to t:1lk wirh th e
ln t·d i.J about hi ~ "'ltuation .1r d11 ~
tlllll'_..
Tilt· e i~ht-yc.·.1 r otll·Thin· t,Jlk le .1 ppcarc..·d UP,'\et as hL· kft th e
L)pcning day o l,c.Jmp t(lr rookiL''I.

lw: un iform .md
~ h ons ,md w,J&lt;., on thL·· t;idcliliL'' ,,..,
dt..: fi..-11~ivc c..' till ( :ounnc.•y BrmVn .
th e No. I pi ck in the NFL. anJ
othn rook II,' " we nt through hght
B n&gt;\\'11 \.\'tH\'

drill&lt; .
Bnm 11.., prt·,i dc..·m ( :.nm cn
Pnli n · ....tid dl t' dl.' ch ion on
Bnm ."n \\-,1.., 111.1~k i11 .Ill dl() rt tn
lwlp rhc rcluhdrrarion prncc .......
" Hl'·.., .; nil ,J nwmlwr of rlw
tt'.llll ,!lld I\ L" llliiH L'd 011 th ~·
,tnin· I"L)' tn:· Pohry . , ,JJJ . " 1-k
will p.lrttli)Utc..' in tl'.llll lll l'L'tlllg..,, hut 1101 in .Ktu.tl phy,icd
fH .l&lt;.'ti L't..'.
'' V·/c will be .1hlt- to lllOilltor
lli111 d.1d y .m d hi, . . p l rlt' will he

Please see Brown, Page 86

' kull Friday whik· practici11g
for th~~

Enghnd .1(Hl .1~t
lnrl'rn .Hi&lt;lnal
Spl'l'dw.ly in 1 nudon. N.H .
Til L· Rl'y. l'c tn Bo,worrh
Nl'\\"

Nt'\\'

l-1 .11llp~ hir t·

rc.'l"OU lllt"d

,I rnT ill

1.

011\'1.'1'",1 -

tior l w ith 1n\ 111 111 \\·hr c h hL·
....tid the dr n·cr t ll]d hin1. "Ym1
know wh .IL, I'd dn\'L' t()r ti·L't'.
I'd r:IL"L' for ti·L'L'
'' TI1.1r\ my p.1\\lon . rJur \ 111y
p .!'-;\ 1011.

·· Hl· died domg wh ,Jt hl'
.lh .. ol ut~.· l y ln n· d : · Lhl'&gt;\\·nrth
\,l id .
At k .l-.:t 5110 }h:o pk .Htt·ntk d
tlw o.; crvi cc..· .It Ahurlc..Llnt Lift·
C hurch , ~ip illin ~ out nt" th e
'&gt;,lllntt.lry imo .1 gy mrt\"'HI\11 tn
w.ltr h 01 1 c..·]o.,L'\ 1-l' irn llr rch•\'1-

~ 1011.

T IH' d nve r"'i ..,j..,tt:r. Ku rne
Jn,·in. choked back sobs :lS she
rc,H.l .1 poem witb li nt:s includin g. "Dnn't g:r ieve fof 111e
lwc.lti\L' now I'm fret• ."
,A., ,-u.ko rnhu-re recou nt ed
lrw1n\ hfe 11 1 picturl's from
childhood to h1.., rt-ren t racmg
1\ lJ(l"(.'&gt;;.-,,

lrwm, who w ai\ living in
C h ;~rlo t tc. N .C .. was born anLl
" 'hoolcd 111 lndi :J nJpolis and
lc.l rllt'd 10 r&lt;Kl' hL· re ;1" well.
lrw111 w,1.., Jll"t \1 :-\ whc..•n he
t' rllnrd hi . , lir't L .1r race Jll
q u .1rte r - m1 d !-{l' ts,
pint -s i z eJ
race ca r ~; thH spi n around
tr.1cks ,lt 411 mph.
He
lw,·,,m e
the
1991)
N.nional
M1dgl't
SL·ries
Ui,llllplon. ,llld 111 1'!'17 , ,his
only i"llll ''"a" "' with the
N I\~CAR Cralism"" Tru ck
SL·riq. h c \\' ,1-.: n,tmt• d R ooka:·
L\f th e Year.
Irwin was the Win ston Cup
roo ki e oftht· yc.lr in 1998.

�2000
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio
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800 292 0

REAL ESTATE

Yard Sale
W

Powe Washe Home IT a

e s A so Pa

Mow G ass 40
0 Lea e

446 o 5 Ask Fo Ao
Message

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportumty

GALLIPOLIS QAilY TRIBUNE

AU Yard S3 es Mus
Be Pad n.Ad an e
DEADLI ~E 2 00 p

m

Public Not1ce

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL 1\ TICE
ROGER PARTLOW LOR
LAFFERT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown spouse If any of
LORI LAFFERTY
LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LOR JAMES whoso last
place or residence s known
as 32755 State Roule 33
Pome oy OH 45769 bul
whose present place of
residence Is unknown w
take notice that on February
t4 2000 @ t1 23 pm
CONSECO BANK NC f ed
Ita Comp a nt In Case No
00 CV015 n he Cou I of
Common P eas Me gs

JAMES
and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any or
LOR JAMES have o cia m
to have an nte est In the
ea estate described below
The follow ng ea estate
s tuated n the County of
Me gs State ol Oh o and
be ng a pa I of Section No
B town 2 Range 3 of the
Oh o company s Pu chase
and bounded as follows
Bog nnlng on tho West side
of tha oad eed ng f om
Pomeroy to Athens at a
pont d stant 100 feet
Souther y
f om
the
Southeast co ne of a t act
south on the na of said
Rood 50 feet thence West
up the h I to what was
fo me y Montague s Line
thence with sa d I ne North
50 feet thence down the h
to the place ol beg nnlng
being the same prem ses
convoyed by Nollie Karr and
Dana Ka r to Ph lp
K e solmale
by deed
aco dod n Vo 94 page
late y owned by Pete
Jeroteman thence unn ng
176 and 177 ol tho roco ds
of Deeds In the Reco de a
Olllce Ma gs County Ohio
Tijo Petit onor furthe
al ages that by reason of
defau t ol the Defendant (s)
n the payment ol a
p omlaaory note accord ng
to ta tenor tha conditions o
r a concu ant mo tgage
deed given to aecu • the
payment of aald note and

convey ng the premises
dose bod
have been
b oken and the same has
become abso uta
The Pet t one prays that
the Defendant (s) named
above be requ ad to
answer and set up thel
inte est n said real estate
o be forever ba red from
asse t ng the same fo
fo ec osu a
of
said
mortgage the me aha ng ol
any lens and the sa e of
sa d ea es ate and the
p oceeds of sa d sa e
applied to the payment ol
Petit oner s claim In the
p ope o de of Its p orlty
and for such othe and
1u the e ef as Is Just and
equltab e
The Defendant s named
above a e equ red to
answer on or before the
7th day of August 2000
By Denn s Re me Co
LP A
Conseco F nanolal
Oenn a Reimer
A«o nay at Law
Alto nay fo
P a nt tf Pet one
PO Box 968
Tw nsbu g Oh 440B7
(3301 425 4201
(6) 5 22 29 (7 6 13 20

County Ohio al eg ng that

the day bt!fore he ad
s o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

the Defendant (s) ROGER
L 0 RI
PARTLOW
LAFFERTY JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LOR LAFFERTY
LORI

SERVICES

CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALES GN

810

Home
Improvements

PubliC Not ce

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
ndoa

ee

E•

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho budget fo tho yea
2001 can be v ewed at the
Comm ss ones
Off ce
Me gs County Court House
lrom 7 7 00 th u 7 21 00
between the hou s of 8 30
am and430am
(7) 6 13 2 tc

Public NOtiCe
PUBL C NOTICE
A Pub c hoe ng fo the
Sutton Townoh p Budget lor
year 2001 wll be held Fr at
6PM at Sy acuse VI oge
Ha
(7) 3

nc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTENT ON
CONTRACTORS
So obury Townoh p w 11
be tak ng ooalod b da on
Hazard M t gal on Pro1ect to
be dona In Salisbury
Townoh p Work will consist
of elevation ot homat above
I ood ova Bids w
bo
opansd at regular Township
M'oetlng he d at So sbury
Townsh p
Hal
In
Rocksprings on Thursday
August 3 at 6 00 p m For
scope ol wo k ca (740)
992 6839
(7) 12 13 14 26 27 28 STC

Pomeroy
Mldqlaport
&amp; Vicinity

I

\

61c

Got Your Menage Acrou
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_...

1" calumn Inch w..kdays
10" colv•n Inch Suaday

1

1

OUR

AT9922155

�2000
Page 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio
440

Apartments
for Rent

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Tappa

H E

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng

005

Sy s ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y

Be ne s Hea ng &amp; Coo ng
BOO 8 2 59 6 www orvb comlbe

Personals

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sha e Aesa e C ea ngtlouse ca
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a~ g o Clers o t1 s Sp ng
F s 0 de s w~ G a a ee Bes &amp;
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Pa s
Dewh s
Fa ms 304 895 3 40 895 3 89

Now

BUS NESS OWNERS!
You n
es no Cash
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es

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FREE FREE MONEY PROS
LEMS NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 AND UP
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8
543 835 EXT 402

e

es

4 30 p m Thursday
Dead net subject fO change
dllfJ lo ho Wys

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

BOTH POSITIONS

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Lost and Found

on

Tl"' a newapape w not
know ng y accept

Be Pa d In Advance
TR DUNE OFAQL!NE 2 00 p m

60

dscrlmna

11 0

Help Wanted

MERCHANDISE

Atleas 25 Yea s o d
A eas 2 Yea s Expe ence
Good MVR
Weeky Pay
Hea th niU ance. A a.lable

A

Wok We Wth The Pub
Fo Mo e n o ma on Ca

BOO

437B764 Hrs 830AM 5PM

App can s Mus Subm A
e e 0 n e es Ar,(t Resume
c ud ng The Names And Ad
d asses 0 Th ee Ae e e ces On
0 Beo eJ y
2000To
Ms P y ijs Maso

SPHR

0 ec o 0 Huma Aeso ces
A o G ande OH 45674
ema pmaso @ edu

EEO AA E11J!Iow_
SECRETARY I
OFFtcE OF

ed Pho og a

CAREER ACVIS NG
RESOURCE SERVICES

740·446·2342
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS 7
NoFeeU esswewn
-688 582 3345

STEEL BU LD NGS

NEVER PUT UP
40x48 WAS $8080
NOW 552 2 SOX90WAS
S 6 670 W LL SELL $9980
800 292 0

REAL ESTATE

Yard Sale
W

Powe Washe Home IT a

e s A so Pa

Mow G ass 40
0 Lea e

446 o 5 Ask Fo Ao
Message

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportumty

GALLIPOLIS QAilY TRIBUNE

AU Yard S3 es Mus
Be Pad n.Ad an e
DEADLI ~E 2 00 p

m

Public Not1ce

Public Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL 1\ TICE
ROGER PARTLOW LOR
LAFFERT'l JOHN DOE
Unknown spouse If any of
LORI LAFFERTY
LORI
JAMES and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LOR JAMES whoso last
place or residence s known
as 32755 State Roule 33
Pome oy OH 45769 bul
whose present place of
residence Is unknown w
take notice that on February
t4 2000 @ t1 23 pm
CONSECO BANK NC f ed
Ita Comp a nt In Case No
00 CV015 n he Cou I of
Common P eas Me gs

JAMES
and JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any or
LOR JAMES have o cia m
to have an nte est In the
ea estate described below
The follow ng ea estate
s tuated n the County of
Me gs State ol Oh o and
be ng a pa I of Section No
B town 2 Range 3 of the
Oh o company s Pu chase
and bounded as follows
Bog nnlng on tho West side
of tha oad eed ng f om
Pomeroy to Athens at a
pont d stant 100 feet
Souther y
f om
the
Southeast co ne of a t act
south on the na of said
Rood 50 feet thence West
up the h I to what was
fo me y Montague s Line
thence with sa d I ne North
50 feet thence down the h
to the place ol beg nnlng
being the same prem ses
convoyed by Nollie Karr and
Dana Ka r to Ph lp
K e solmale
by deed
aco dod n Vo 94 page
late y owned by Pete
Jeroteman thence unn ng
176 and 177 ol tho roco ds
of Deeds In the Reco de a
Olllce Ma gs County Ohio
Tijo Petit onor furthe
al ages that by reason of
defau t ol the Defendant (s)
n the payment ol a
p omlaaory note accord ng
to ta tenor tha conditions o
r a concu ant mo tgage
deed given to aecu • the
payment of aald note and

convey ng the premises
dose bod
have been
b oken and the same has
become abso uta
The Pet t one prays that
the Defendant (s) named
above be requ ad to
answer and set up thel
inte est n said real estate
o be forever ba red from
asse t ng the same fo
fo ec osu a
of
said
mortgage the me aha ng ol
any lens and the sa e of
sa d ea es ate and the
p oceeds of sa d sa e
applied to the payment ol
Petit oner s claim In the
p ope o de of Its p orlty
and for such othe and
1u the e ef as Is Just and
equltab e
The Defendant s named
above a e equ red to
answer on or before the
7th day of August 2000
By Denn s Re me Co
LP A
Conseco F nanolal
Oenn a Reimer
A«o nay at Law
Alto nay fo
P a nt tf Pet one
PO Box 968
Tw nsbu g Oh 440B7
(3301 425 4201
(6) 5 22 29 (7 6 13 20

County Ohio al eg ng that

the day bt!fore he ad
s o un Sunday &amp; Monday
ed on 200pm F day
ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

the Defendant (s) ROGER
L 0 RI
PARTLOW
LAFFERTY JOHN DOE
Unknown Spouse f any of
LOR LAFFERTY
LORI

SERVICES

CAN GET A FREE
YARD SALES GN

810

Home
Improvements

PubliC Not ce

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
ndoa

ee

E•

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho budget fo tho yea
2001 can be v ewed at the
Comm ss ones
Off ce
Me gs County Court House
lrom 7 7 00 th u 7 21 00
between the hou s of 8 30
am and430am
(7) 6 13 2 tc

Public NOtiCe
PUBL C NOTICE
A Pub c hoe ng fo the
Sutton Townoh p Budget lor
year 2001 wll be held Fr at
6PM at Sy acuse VI oge
Ha
(7) 3

nc

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTENT ON
CONTRACTORS
So obury Townoh p w 11
be tak ng ooalod b da on
Hazard M t gal on Pro1ect to
be dona In Salisbury
Townoh p Work will consist
of elevation ot homat above
I ood ova Bids w
bo
opansd at regular Township
M'oetlng he d at So sbury
Townsh p
Hal
In
Rocksprings on Thursday
August 3 at 6 00 p m For
scope ol wo k ca (740)
992 6839
(7) 12 13 14 26 27 28 STC

Pomeroy
Mldqlaport
&amp; Vicinity

I

\

61c

Got Your Menage Acrou
With A Dallr Soatlnol

BULLETIN BOARD

_...

1" calumn Inch w..kdays
10" colv•n Inch Suaday

1

1

OUR

AT9922155

�.,

Pomeroy, Mlddleoort, Ohio

•

Thursday, July 13, 2000 ~

Thursday, July 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

OOP
BRIDGE

SMITtt'S CONSTRUCTION

Home Improvements done by

CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING
204 N. 2nd Ave.
' Rentals
Janitorial-Maid
Maintenance
Home Repairs

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

Middleport, OH 45760
Apts, Home Trailers,
Residential or Commercial
Residential or Commercial
Interior &amp; Exterior

992-2753

CaR for Rates 1-740-992-4514 1-740-742-7403 Eveniii!JS

NewHaven WV

Adyertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

WI haVE thl 8gi BlinEftts, i§t Pay
and th1 Blist family orkintal work

Call or stop In and SH..MIIai S&amp;rg&amp;nt.
Blrlan RIISs, or Brad Sang and bligln a
rswardlng cal'llt' as an
Automotlv&amp; Sakis ProfEssional

~

.
Phone (740) 593-6671

TODAYI

"

6/29/mo.

'

Yto 111-G•a

Tru c k seats; car seat s. h eadliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; Vinyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcyc l~ seat s.
boat covers, carp ets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 ,••• ,

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
...

Parts and Service.
Most Makes and
Models
PICk!Jp and
Delivery

Advertise in
this space for
$100_per
month.

I

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
C&lt;H&gt;Ivlllfl, OH 45723

IndustryI

.... ....

"A Better

.

Envtronm•nt In taday·s automotlv&amp;

Larry S c h ey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Case-IH Parts
· Dea1ers.

Ruiland , Ohio

continually looking for aggruslvli and ·
motlvatal p&amp;Opl&amp; to fill Ala positions.

···· Sale s Re pre sen tativ e

Factory A11thorized

(740) 949-2804

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

Free

Estlma~es

Ca ll T&amp; R Logging
a ft e r 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Rand y)

740-992-5232
6/21 /00 1 mo pd .

Interior- Exterior

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(740)991-908]
(Mobile) nD-]]!J-016]
Insured

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain 01•t
of pa intingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6 p.m. leave Message
After 6 pm· 6!4-985-4180

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GU.TIERS.

Man

992-5479

IIB-3181

\

BANKRUPTCY
c:1n ~~~~~• • debtor ol flnanc111 obllgallonl 1nd errange a fllr dletrlbutlon of
IIMII 1mong t Ndltort. A peraon going through blnlnuptcy m•v retain
certeln property, known 11 "uempl" pro~!'IY.t!..Ol hja or her_ ~aon11 usa. -'

Thli rnay-iliCIUcli 1 car. iliOuae, Ctolhll, andhou11hokl goods. YOu shOuld
direct any quea110n1 raglrcHng·bankruptcy to an attornay batoN procMdlng.

~

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ran ges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

w· .'Fof!!it
1-800-311·3391

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

Contractors Welcome

_

··- . _

____6l15 1 mo p~.

!Fut~~

Free Estinwles
Albany, Ohio

-

"We're Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
. Used Appliances
.
Parts- All Makes

992-1SSO
The Appliance
Man

Haulipg • Umestane •

command

West

South

Pass

t•

3•
3•

·

~

I&gt;ON'T
tMVf ANY
.'

POLITICAL.
OPINION!' ••
MY TV 1$

~

BltO~fN.

4 . . .,

-

.

• , • • \I"IP..Vf5 7-1~

... ,..

,..

Guaranteed Work
References Available

~'(OJ

lr-\PL'&lt;ING tA,'( OPIN\01\1
OOC::'-*1\ C.OO~T 1'01!:.
t-U.K f&gt;,.\ ~OCJI... -z
--.._.-/

All -vertical blinds aremad e to order at our
location
UP TO 70 o/• OFF
• Verticals • Wood
• Min..is • Etc
""

L'LL 1-\1\IJE YOO llKJW, l Cf\~11..'(
LOT Of W(I(,\-\T

~

(&gt;..

__.-.._../

~I'ID\1\E: 00\Cf 1

'You Cfo.U'( (&gt;..LOT Of WC:IG&lt;\T...,
(&gt;.,ro.JI\I'V \o-H\E:itEIJC.IZ
'(OU GO 1

BIG NATE

446•4995

POPLAR LOGS WANTED

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylncler repairs, oil.
Sales· 5 gal. buckels
to 55 gal. drums

a·· in diame te r to

"fHE
Kt OS l;t.&gt;. VE
WANDERED

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR248

740-985·4194

27", 18' long,

$35/ton,
6/ 10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
· roadside rest on
right

7 40/985-4465
7!61mopd

519100 1 mood

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

P/B (ONTRA(JOR~,IN(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMAT{'S
Fully Insured

lrltln Merrlaow/Raclne, Ohio

(7 40) 985-3948

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE
"fttvzaa in .&gt;er'Villll"
" Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3-3

$3.25/20 lbs

16-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag
Pomeroy
7/5

J mo

SECURITY

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, fam ily heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items w1ll be safe.
For more intormat,on call

BAOMLUMBER
1"1'. IT. 248
CHESTER

PEANUTS

Pear

Sweetheart.

Remember our

Free

evening in Paris?

HERBALIFE
Independent
-Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs.

992-2772

Medicare Supplement; Life Ins uran ce; Buri al
and Final Expe nses; College, Ret irement.
Emerge ny Funds; Mortgage;
7'rt!lnun6nto.
Major Medical • Nursing Home
"H!!!~_J,

LJJ

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

If this column could be written
beyond its nonnal boundaries, I
could have described the play of
this contract yesterday. ·Instead,
we have the same -layout rotated
through 180 degrees.
If you look only at the NorthSouth hands, four spades is a better contracnHan three no-·trump.
West led the heart six. secondhighest from a weak suit. Afler
winnin g with the jack, East
switched to a trump . How should
declarer have cont~nued?
North's three heart s was aversion of fourth-suit forcing, saying
that she had enough to continue
the auction but didn't have anything better to do at that moment.
She was hoping_ that South could
co nvert to three no-trump, but
when South repeated her spade
suit , North opted for ganie in the
5-2 fit. (Note th at five clubs
would probably fail , declarer losing tw o· hea rts and a club .)
In four spades. after a heart to
the jack arid a spade sw itch ,
dec larer drew trumps, then
guessed to take the club finesse .
Howeve 1;. East won with th e
queen and casheJ two heart tri cks
for one down.
Better is to win tri ck two in
.hand, th en immedi ately to tak~ a
minor-suit finesse while there 's
still a trump in the dummy with
which to ruff the. third heart if th e
defenders return to that suit. (I
prefer th e diam ond finesse
becau se there are fewer cards in
the suit. and one has the chance to
cas h th e club ace before taking
that fin ~sse.) If the firsf finesse
loses. draw trumps and take the
other finesse for your contract.
Here, your 10 tricks are five
spades, two diamonds and three
clubs.

or·as ow as
•
er IRC

Racine, Ohio

SERVICE
Great R~ttas- Great

Service
" You call we haul"

740-949-2610
740-591-6304

b--+--+-+-

Ttu.T DAILY
.. PUULU

O four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

ti-le
be·

low to form four simple words .

FUSEAN
1

.,
2

1 I

I I 1

.

ART ET

I' I I" I

was always call 1ng
I:; momMy forsisteradv1ce
about her new

THI PC

Is

16 1

I ;, baby Mom says the hardest part

'-·--''---L--.1.
. .....J.--'.\' of ra 1s1ng a baby , 1s 1earn1ng to- -

r-:--:''""'.:"-:-,--:--c,.,...:."="ith e - - . , . . .

I
I .I I e

I I
7

.

.

18

.

.

.

Complete the chuckle Quoted

by filling in the mJssmg words
'---'--'--J.........L...-L.--l you develop from step No. 3 below.

@

.

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

e.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWER's ·

i:Jodice- Six th - Grope- Tremor - OTHER SIDE

"Ciilz ens should kn ow." the e lderly s tatesman Illformed his aud1ence. "c ampa 1gns are l1ke clea n1ng win dows . The dtrt is always on the OTHER SIDE ··

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are cr~ted !rom quotations by famous people, past and
present Each loner tn the Cipher stands for another

Today's clue: E equals G

'ZLHB

HB

VHJU'e
EVOZZGt
THBUK,

ZLU

LOIEKF
GJ

PKZHBZ,
TPI,

EVGKF'e

•

.'
'

you for ass i stan c~. If your last
efforts wen t unackn owledged.
don' t expec t anythin g d ifferent
this tim e.
P($CES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Just be one" of the grollp today
in ~te aU of moan in g ahout what
you r pub shuu iJ or sholiiJ nut be
doing Ei ch er graciou sly lt'i.l\'L' the
s~l.! n e o r tolerate lh c way t hin g .'-~
antnes~ .
are.
SCORPI O (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
ARIES (March 21-April I'll
You'd better have all th e fa.cts a t
Sdect your amb itions realisti cal your di sposal and be ready to ly today. not .on wishful think ing.
back yourself up if you present Your efforts will be fn r nau ght if
yourself as an authority on any- you urt emp l to go aft er ..;o meth i ng
thing today. You wilt be chal - you' re il l-equi.pped to ach1 eve.
lenged.
TAUR US (Apri l 20-May 20)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . Oth ers can be swayed to your
21) Sometimes yo~ can be far too poi nts of view today, but only
generous for your own good, and th rough friendl y discussions an d
this mi ght be one of th ose days . not forcefu l edits. The latter will
Be careful about makin g an y be met with an abrasive response.
financial outlays to so meone who
GEM I;..J I (May 21-June 20)
is a poor risk.
Generally, there are both advan CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) One-on-onr dealing s you' tages and di sadvantages when
have today co uld have poor· teamin g Up with another for a·
resu lts if either of you is impatient material purpose. Focus on what' s
or intolerant. The results can good about the joint endeavor and
become li big so urce of irritation. not on what's undesirable.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe b. 19)
Someone you 've previous ly
he lped might once again come to

ZLUI

ZLU

UZUKIHZF,

NUPOZF ' a

BVPRU. " -

ZLGTPB
CGVJU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Succeed we must. at all cosl being a dead millionaire at fifty. ~- Louis Kronenberger
C :2000 by NEA, Inc.

even if it means

13

JULY 13l

'Birthday

Saturday, July 15, 2000
You will function bes t in the
year ahea&lt;! in ventures or endeavors where you are ·permitted to
operate in an independent manner.
Try to in volve yo ur.~elf i1i just
such types of endeavors.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Try to find a co mpromi se with
your male today should you be at
odds over how·so mething should
or should not be handled. It matters not what the issue is, onl y
how well you work together. Trying to patch up a broken TOmance?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can
he!p you understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mail
$2,7S to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY
I 0156.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)
Ctrances are you'll have no problem de aling with your personal
chores or dutie s today. But you
could have hu ge difficultie s
licce ptlng tasks imposed upon
you by others.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se pt. 22) Be
your own person at all times
t()da y, not one who is easily
manipulated by your peers. Don't

.

" B EKR A M

'Your

or onemon

B&amp;.T TRUCKING
FLAT-DUMP-LOG

Pass

All pass

!THURSDAY

Decks, Boat Docks,

Concrclc &amp; Block Work, ·

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

.'

Pass
Pass

2•
3e
t•

Pass

Sentinel

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

t t

To get a current weather
report, check the

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Easl

additions, Pole Building,

www. herbs41i festo re.c01 n

740-992·7599

all wet.

Vinyl Sidmg, Roofing,

For All Your Home
lm r.ovement Needs

FREE ESTIMATES

rain, and you got

Because I had
the umbrella .

Replaceme nt Windows,
'Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspo ut, Garage ruom

Blown Insulation

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Wind ~ws
• Room Additions
• Roofing

We walked in the

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

.740-992-7036

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

•

stu~~'~
• Gtl"ol119
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

BISSELL BUILDERS
. INC.

Call 740-985-3831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

JINES'
(740)367·0266
1-800·950·3359

Pass
Pass
· Pass
Pass

North

BY PHILLIP ALDER

_.. ,

Phone 740•69H400 ·

Wesl

Different contract

II

William Safranek, Attorney

T&amp;D

32lat•down
34 Abduct
35 Sleep nolsea
36 Languaufffx
37 Irritate

Opening lead: • 6

OFF!

6121100 1 mo pd .

9 8 4

(a motor)

27 Numbero pro
30 Meeting
program

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: East

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
(740) 592-5025 Athens

.--J 10 9 7
• Q 6

DOWN

-'

Plumbing - ElectricalPainting
Ray Milard
,
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
:
Albany, OH 45710
f: ~

.

• 8 6 4
e A K J 8

• 6

I44 Third Ave. Galllpohs

6115 1 rno.pd.

Ul Rl""r lri France
20 Detecta
23 Happen agoln
28 Warm up

.• J

(Factory Outlat)

Ken Young

tAQ853
• A K 10 7
East

• 10 7 5

(7401992·3131

&amp; Assoclam

57 River In Italy

(2 wda.)

ending

•AKQ97

Seplic S y.tenu &amp;

Mllard

t7 Comparative

07 13-oo

South

BuUdo•er &amp; Baekhoe. ··-·
Service•
Hou~~t &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Urililieo

18 PIICtl

.. Q 3

• 5 3 2
• 9 6 4 2
t K 4 2
• 5 3 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING co.: ::
Bagflne

54 Command•

55 Exploalve
56 Covered with
molature

North
• J 10

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil• -.
'•
Fill Dirt • M'ulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

IJp ztentaag

" 51 Looka fixedly

15 Army

BLIND SPOT

SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED. WATER·GA
. ELECTR•C LINES. BASE MENT-FOOTERS. MOBILE HOME
: SET UPS. ROAD BUILDING-LAND (!LEAAING . HORIZONTAL
(UNC&gt;E":fiDAg BORING. CREEK 8 FIELD DRAINING-PONDS

49 Colllure

14 Prim and -

A CRAFTY. ·

IICKHOI• DOZING •IND tOADIII• TRUCKING~ IRINCHING

46 Weep

EXCfiVfiTI"Ci

•

'l'haAppUanca

39 Cowlland'a
knot
1 Right-hand
40 Pried
page ol a book 42 Legend
8 - ond groan
45 Mia' matea

12 Bullet

O l mo. t\ '11 100

Residential - Commcrical

7/22/TFN

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pome roy, Ohi.o

ACROSS

10Sick

Advertise· in
this space for
$100 per
month.
High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

uYou-'ve tri~d th~ r~st ...
now try tht bt st"

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

,,.,..,, mo. od.

Standing timb er luge
or smallll·a.:ks. Top
pl"ices pai&lt;t also.

Painting •

'
·New Homes

·

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM

Now Renting

Dozer work.

PHILLIP
ALDER

HILL'S
~WICK'S.
SELF STORACE HfiCJUrtCi and

WANTED

9o·lt·R/~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740·992-1671

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaDJI'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. II oo-50 n1111t1n

A &amp; D Auto Up olstery • Plus, Inc

Th&amp; Oh!cf Vii111E\I'S it!uWmotlvl ludlr Is

Steve Riffle

.:.....

5/l7/DO&gt;mo

SALES

Stop In And See

1

992·1101

PIRft
An Makes Tractor &amp;
Pruil&gt;ment Parts

Need It done, gl•e ua 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Creat Prle11 on New Hom11

Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
We work Mon-Sat 9 - 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calls

GUIUNlEED
AIR CONDniONING
SERVICE
(304) 112·2079

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

DEPOYSIG

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

NEA Crossword Puzzle

y
to pre." llre to do so methin g
yoll do not believe would serve
your b.:sl interests.
Ll BR A ISe pt. 2.1-0ct. 2.\) One
of the wo rst things you could do
today is bring outside problems to
th e dinner table and take thin gs
out 011 the famil y. It "s not fair. and
it will onl y ca use further un pleas-

league Baseball . A11an1a Bra~Jes a! Baltimore Orioles (LJve) (CC)

�.,

Pomeroy, Mlddleoort, Ohio

•

Thursday, July 13, 2000 ~

Thursday, July 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

OOP
BRIDGE

SMITtt'S CONSTRUCTION

Home Improvements done by

CHRISTY'S FAMILY LIVING
204 N. 2nd Ave.
' Rentals
Janitorial-Maid
Maintenance
Home Repairs

• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

Middleport, OH 45760
Apts, Home Trailers,
Residential or Commercial
Residential or Commercial
Interior &amp; Exterior

992-2753

CaR for Rates 1-740-992-4514 1-740-742-7403 Eveniii!JS

NewHaven WV

Adyertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

WI haVE thl 8gi BlinEftts, i§t Pay
and th1 Blist family orkintal work

Call or stop In and SH..MIIai S&amp;rg&amp;nt.
Blrlan RIISs, or Brad Sang and bligln a
rswardlng cal'llt' as an
Automotlv&amp; Sakis ProfEssional

~

.
Phone (740) 593-6671

TODAYI

"

6/29/mo.

'

Yto 111-G•a

Tru c k seats; car seat s. h eadliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; Vinyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcyc l~ seat s.
boat covers, carp ets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 ,••• ,

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
...

Parts and Service.
Most Makes and
Models
PICk!Jp and
Delivery

Advertise in
this space for
$100_per
month.

I

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
C&lt;H&gt;Ivlllfl, OH 45723

IndustryI

.... ....

"A Better

.

Envtronm•nt In taday·s automotlv&amp;

Larry S c h ey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Case-IH Parts
· Dea1ers.

Ruiland , Ohio

continually looking for aggruslvli and ·
motlvatal p&amp;Opl&amp; to fill Ala positions.

···· Sale s Re pre sen tativ e

Factory A11thorized

(740) 949-2804

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

Free

Estlma~es

Ca ll T&amp; R Logging
a ft e r 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Rand y)

740-992-5232
6/21 /00 1 mo pd .

Interior- Exterior

Call for
FREE ESTIMATES

(740)991-908]
(Mobile) nD-]]!J-016]
Insured

LINDA'S
PAINTING
"Take the pain 01•t
of pa intingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Before 6 p.m. leave Message
After 6 pm· 6!4-985-4180

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GU.TIERS.

Man

992-5479

IIB-3181

\

BANKRUPTCY
c:1n ~~~~~• • debtor ol flnanc111 obllgallonl 1nd errange a fllr dletrlbutlon of
IIMII 1mong t Ndltort. A peraon going through blnlnuptcy m•v retain
certeln property, known 11 "uempl" pro~!'IY.t!..Ol hja or her_ ~aon11 usa. -'

Thli rnay-iliCIUcli 1 car. iliOuae, Ctolhll, andhou11hokl goods. YOu shOuld
direct any quea110n1 raglrcHng·bankruptcy to an attornay batoN procMdlng.

~

We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ran ges- Refrigerators
Freezers- Dish Washers

w· .'Fof!!it
1-800-311·3391

219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

Contractors Welcome

_

··- . _

____6l15 1 mo p~.

!Fut~~

Free Estinwles
Albany, Ohio

-

"We're Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
. Used Appliances
.
Parts- All Makes

992-1SSO
The Appliance
Man

Haulipg • Umestane •

command

West

South

Pass

t•

3•
3•

·

~

I&gt;ON'T
tMVf ANY
.'

POLITICAL.
OPINION!' ••
MY TV 1$

~

BltO~fN.

4 . . .,

-

.

• , • • \I"IP..Vf5 7-1~

... ,..

,..

Guaranteed Work
References Available

~'(OJ

lr-\PL'&lt;ING tA,'( OPIN\01\1
OOC::'-*1\ C.OO~T 1'01!:.
t-U.K f&gt;,.\ ~OCJI... -z
--.._.-/

All -vertical blinds aremad e to order at our
location
UP TO 70 o/• OFF
• Verticals • Wood
• Min..is • Etc
""

L'LL 1-\1\IJE YOO llKJW, l Cf\~11..'(
LOT Of W(I(,\-\T

~

(&gt;..

__.-.._../

~I'ID\1\E: 00\Cf 1

'You Cfo.U'( (&gt;..LOT Of WC:IG&lt;\T...,
(&gt;.,ro.JI\I'V \o-H\E:itEIJC.IZ
'(OU GO 1

BIG NATE

446•4995

POPLAR LOGS WANTED

HYDRAULICS &amp; OIL
Hydraulic Hose repairs,
cylncler repairs, oil.
Sales· 5 gal. buckels
to 55 gal. drums

a·· in diame te r to

"fHE
Kt OS l;t.&gt;. VE
WANDERED

2 Y, miles out of
Chester on SR248

740-985·4194

27", 18' long,

$35/ton,
6/ 10 of mile north
ofSR 7 above
· roadside rest on
right

7 40/985-4465
7!61mopd

519100 1 mood

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

P/B (ONTRA(JOR~,IN(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMAT{'S
Fully Insured

lrltln Merrlaow/Raclne, Ohio

(7 40) 985-3948

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE
"fttvzaa in .&gt;er'Villll"
" Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield
25-3-3

$3.25/20 lbs

16-8-8 180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag
Pomeroy
7/5

J mo

SECURITY

PRODUCTS

Protect your guns, fam ily heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records, photo
albums, cameras, household inventory and
sentimental items w1ll be safe.
For more intormat,on call

BAOMLUMBER
1"1'. IT. 248
CHESTER

PEANUTS

Pear

Sweetheart.

Remember our

Free

evening in Paris?

HERBALIFE
Independent
-Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs.

992-2772

Medicare Supplement; Life Ins uran ce; Buri al
and Final Expe nses; College, Ret irement.
Emerge ny Funds; Mortgage;
7'rt!lnun6nto.
Major Medical • Nursing Home
"H!!!~_J,

LJJ

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

If this column could be written
beyond its nonnal boundaries, I
could have described the play of
this contract yesterday. ·Instead,
we have the same -layout rotated
through 180 degrees.
If you look only at the NorthSouth hands, four spades is a better contracnHan three no-·trump.
West led the heart six. secondhighest from a weak suit. Afler
winnin g with the jack, East
switched to a trump . How should
declarer have cont~nued?
North's three heart s was aversion of fourth-suit forcing, saying
that she had enough to continue
the auction but didn't have anything better to do at that moment.
She was hoping_ that South could
co nvert to three no-trump, but
when South repeated her spade
suit , North opted for ganie in the
5-2 fit. (Note th at five clubs
would probably fail , declarer losing tw o· hea rts and a club .)
In four spades. after a heart to
the jack arid a spade sw itch ,
dec larer drew trumps, then
guessed to take the club finesse .
Howeve 1;. East won with th e
queen and casheJ two heart tri cks
for one down.
Better is to win tri ck two in
.hand, th en immedi ately to tak~ a
minor-suit finesse while there 's
still a trump in the dummy with
which to ruff the. third heart if th e
defenders return to that suit. (I
prefer th e diam ond finesse
becau se there are fewer cards in
the suit. and one has the chance to
cas h th e club ace before taking
that fin ~sse.) If the firsf finesse
loses. draw trumps and take the
other finesse for your contract.
Here, your 10 tricks are five
spades, two diamonds and three
clubs.

or·as ow as
•
er IRC

Racine, Ohio

SERVICE
Great R~ttas- Great

Service
" You call we haul"

740-949-2610
740-591-6304

b--+--+-+-

Ttu.T DAILY
.. PUULU

O four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

ti-le
be·

low to form four simple words .

FUSEAN
1

.,
2

1 I

I I 1

.

ART ET

I' I I" I

was always call 1ng
I:; momMy forsisteradv1ce
about her new

THI PC

Is

16 1

I ;, baby Mom says the hardest part

'-·--''---L--.1.
. .....J.--'.\' of ra 1s1ng a baby , 1s 1earn1ng to- -

r-:--:''""'.:"-:-,--:--c,.,...:."="ith e - - . , . . .

I
I .I I e

I I
7

.

.

18

.

.

.

Complete the chuckle Quoted

by filling in the mJssmg words
'---'--'--J.........L...-L.--l you develop from step No. 3 below.

@

.

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

e.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWER's ·

i:Jodice- Six th - Grope- Tremor - OTHER SIDE

"Ciilz ens should kn ow." the e lderly s tatesman Illformed his aud1ence. "c ampa 1gns are l1ke clea n1ng win dows . The dtrt is always on the OTHER SIDE ··

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are cr~ted !rom quotations by famous people, past and
present Each loner tn the Cipher stands for another

Today's clue: E equals G

'ZLHB

HB

VHJU'e
EVOZZGt
THBUK,

ZLU

LOIEKF
GJ

PKZHBZ,
TPI,

EVGKF'e

•

.'
'

you for ass i stan c~. If your last
efforts wen t unackn owledged.
don' t expec t anythin g d ifferent
this tim e.
P($CES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Just be one" of the grollp today
in ~te aU of moan in g ahout what
you r pub shuu iJ or sholiiJ nut be
doing Ei ch er graciou sly lt'i.l\'L' the
s~l.! n e o r tolerate lh c way t hin g .'-~
antnes~ .
are.
SCORPI O (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
ARIES (March 21-April I'll
You'd better have all th e fa.cts a t
Sdect your amb itions realisti cal your di sposal and be ready to ly today. not .on wishful think ing.
back yourself up if you present Your efforts will be fn r nau ght if
yourself as an authority on any- you urt emp l to go aft er ..;o meth i ng
thing today. You wilt be chal - you' re il l-equi.pped to ach1 eve.
lenged.
TAUR US (Apri l 20-May 20)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . Oth ers can be swayed to your
21) Sometimes yo~ can be far too poi nts of view today, but only
generous for your own good, and th rough friendl y discussions an d
this mi ght be one of th ose days . not forcefu l edits. The latter will
Be careful about makin g an y be met with an abrasive response.
financial outlays to so meone who
GEM I;..J I (May 21-June 20)
is a poor risk.
Generally, there are both advan CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) One-on-onr dealing s you' tages and di sadvantages when
have today co uld have poor· teamin g Up with another for a·
resu lts if either of you is impatient material purpose. Focus on what' s
or intolerant. The results can good about the joint endeavor and
become li big so urce of irritation. not on what's undesirable.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fe b. 19)
Someone you 've previous ly
he lped might once again come to

ZLUI

ZLU

UZUKIHZF,

NUPOZF ' a

BVPRU. " -

ZLGTPB
CGVJU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Succeed we must. at all cosl being a dead millionaire at fifty. ~- Louis Kronenberger
C :2000 by NEA, Inc.

even if it means

13

JULY 13l

'Birthday

Saturday, July 15, 2000
You will function bes t in the
year ahea&lt;! in ventures or endeavors where you are ·permitted to
operate in an independent manner.
Try to in volve yo ur.~elf i1i just
such types of endeavors.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Try to find a co mpromi se with
your male today should you be at
odds over how·so mething should
or should not be handled. It matters not what the issue is, onl y
how well you work together. Trying to patch up a broken TOmance?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can
he!p you understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mail
$2,7S to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY
I 0156.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)
Ctrances are you'll have no problem de aling with your personal
chores or dutie s today. But you
could have hu ge difficultie s
licce ptlng tasks imposed upon
you by others.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se pt. 22) Be
your own person at all times
t()da y, not one who is easily
manipulated by your peers. Don't

.

" B EKR A M

'Your

or onemon

B&amp;.T TRUCKING
FLAT-DUMP-LOG

Pass

All pass

!THURSDAY

Decks, Boat Docks,

Concrclc &amp; Block Work, ·

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

.'

Pass
Pass

2•
3e
t•

Pass

Sentinel

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

t t

To get a current weather
report, check the

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Easl

additions, Pole Building,

www. herbs41i festo re.c01 n

740-992·7599

all wet.

Vinyl Sidmg, Roofing,

For All Your Home
lm r.ovement Needs

FREE ESTIMATES

rain, and you got

Because I had
the umbrella .

Replaceme nt Windows,
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Downspo ut, Garage ruom

Blown Insulation

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Wind ~ws
• Room Additions
• Roofing

We walked in the

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

.740-992-7036

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

•

stu~~'~
• Gtl"ol119
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

BISSELL BUILDERS
. INC.

Call 740-985-3831
35537 St. Rt. 7 North

JINES'
(740)367·0266
1-800·950·3359

Pass
Pass
· Pass
Pass

North

BY PHILLIP ALDER

_.. ,

Phone 740•69H400 ·

Wesl

Different contract

II

William Safranek, Attorney

T&amp;D

32lat•down
34 Abduct
35 Sleep nolsea
36 Languaufffx
37 Irritate

Opening lead: • 6

OFF!

6121100 1 mo pd .

9 8 4

(a motor)

27 Numbero pro
30 Meeting
program

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: East

For Information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
(740) 592-5025 Athens

.--J 10 9 7
• Q 6

DOWN

-'

Plumbing - ElectricalPainting
Ray Milard
,
42994 Rt. 2, Carsey Rd
:
Albany, OH 45710
f: ~

.

• 8 6 4
e A K J 8

• 6

I44 Third Ave. Galllpohs

6115 1 rno.pd.

Ul Rl""r lri France
20 Detecta
23 Happen agoln
28 Warm up

.• J

(Factory Outlat)

Ken Young

tAQ853
• A K 10 7
East

• 10 7 5

(7401992·3131

&amp; Assoclam

57 River In Italy

(2 wda.)

ending

•AKQ97

Seplic S y.tenu &amp;

Mllard

t7 Comparative

07 13-oo

South

BuUdo•er &amp; Baekhoe. ··-·
Service•
Hou~~t &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Urililieo

18 PIICtl

.. Q 3

• 5 3 2
• 9 6 4 2
t K 4 2
• 5 3 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING co.: ::
Bagflne

54 Command•

55 Exploalve
56 Covered with
molature

North
• J 10

Gravel• Sand • Topsoil• -.
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Fill Dirt • M'ulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

IJp ztentaag

" 51 Looka fixedly

15 Army

BLIND SPOT

SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTALLED. WATER·GA
. ELECTR•C LINES. BASE MENT-FOOTERS. MOBILE HOME
: SET UPS. ROAD BUILDING-LAND (!LEAAING . HORIZONTAL
(UNC&gt;E":fiDAg BORING. CREEK 8 FIELD DRAINING-PONDS

49 Colllure

14 Prim and -

A CRAFTY. ·

IICKHOI• DOZING •IND tOADIII• TRUCKING~ IRINCHING

46 Weep

EXCfiVfiTI"Ci

•

'l'haAppUanca

39 Cowlland'a
knot
1 Right-hand
40 Pried
page ol a book 42 Legend
8 - ond groan
45 Mia' matea

12 Bullet

O l mo. t\ '11 100

Residential - Commcrical

7/22/TFN

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pome roy, Ohi.o

ACROSS

10Sick

Advertise· in
this space for
$100 per
month.
High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

uYou-'ve tri~d th~ r~st ...
now try tht bt st"

• Garages
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Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

,,.,..,, mo. od.

Standing timb er luge
or smallll·a.:ks. Top
pl"ices pai&lt;t also.

Painting •

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·New Homes

·

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8 PM

Now Renting

Dozer work.

PHILLIP
ALDER

HILL'S
~WICK'S.
SELF STORACE HfiCJUrtCi and

WANTED

9o·lt·R/~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

740·992-1671

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomaroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaDJI'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Uc. II oo-50 n1111t1n

A &amp; D Auto Up olstery • Plus, Inc

Th&amp; Oh!cf Vii111E\I'S it!uWmotlvl ludlr Is

Steve Riffle

.:.....

5/l7/DO&gt;mo

SALES

Stop In And See

1

992·1101

PIRft
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Pruil&gt;ment Parts

Need It done, gl•e ua 1 call
FREE ESTIMATES
Creat Prle11 on New Hom11

Call for estimates 9-5 pm Mon-Frl
We work Mon-Sat 9 - 5 pm
and we do accept emergency calls

GUIUNlEED
AIR CONDniONING
SERVICE
(304) 112·2079

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

DEPOYSIG

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

NEA Crossword Puzzle

y
to pre." llre to do so methin g
yoll do not believe would serve
your b.:sl interests.
Ll BR A ISe pt. 2.1-0ct. 2.\) One
of the wo rst things you could do
today is bring outside problems to
th e dinner table and take thin gs
out 011 the famil y. It "s not fair. and
it will onl y ca use further un pleas-

league Baseball . A11an1a Bra~Jes a! Baltimore Orioles (LJve) (CC)

�\

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

AUTO RACING NOTEBOOK
'

Benson works hard
to
,.
improve, even on his days off
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Johnny Benson isn't afraid to get dirty on his
week off.
Taking advantage of the break in the' Winston
Cup schedule, Benson will spend the weekend racing on· two Missouri dirt ,tracks.
"Dirt racing is what racing is all about," Benson
said.
He will race Friday night in Sedalia and Sarurday
night in Peavley on NASCAR rival Ken Schrader's
track. Benson will drive a car owned by James !nee,
his Winston Cup crew chief.
"This is going to be fun just hanging with James
and the guys on his dirt ream," Benson said. "Plus,
this gets Schrader off my back about me coming out
to his track.
''I'm sure all those guys at the dirt track are going
to love to compare themselves to a Winston Cup
driver, so I imagine it's going to be some pretty
tough racing."
Benson went in the opposite direction during an
off week in April, traveling to England to. watch
Formula One's British Grand Prix.
"I doubt I'll see too many Ferraris or McLarens
this weekend," Benson said.
Runaway Green
N AS CAR Busch Series leader Jeff Green takes a
record 388-point lead over Todd Bodine into Sunc
day's Econo Lodge 200 on Nazareth Speedway's
unique mile tri-oval.
" Nazareth is a pretty tric-ky track because of the
different-sh&lt;)ped corners and elevation changes,"
Green said. "You have ro drive each corner differently, and it's tough to do well if you don't have
experience there.' ~

Hubbard·
from Page 81
up two hits and two runs.
Imboden pitched four innings
in relief. H e recorded six strikeouts and five walks. He gave up
three runs on four hits.
Patrick Johnson pitched 2 2/ 3
innings for Racine, recording
four strikeouts and four walks. He
gave up I 0 runs on eight hits.
Marnhout threw 1/3 inning in
relief.
Chapman finished the final
three innings with three strikeouts and one walk. He gave up
three runs on three hits.

Federal Hocking 9, Rio

Grande 3
Federal Hocking rallied from a
two-run deficit to defeat Rio
" ~crande 9-3mthe mgntcap of the
championship semifinals . Jerad
Willis earned the victory in relief
for Federal Hocking, pitching five
innings of one-hit baseball.
Rio Grande starter Josh Wright
retired six of the first seven batters
he faced, sinking out five as Rio
built an early advantage.
After being retired in order in
the first, Rio Grande scored two
runs in the second to take a 2-0
lead. Luke Haislop walked to lead
off the inning. Wright followed
with a double through the right

· Thursday, July 13, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Green, coming off a victory July 2 in West Allis ,
Wis., has won four races this year, including three of
the last four. He also has 10 straight top-10 fin;shcs.
Green is trying mate h his brother, David, as the
only Busch Series drivers to win consecutive poles
at Nazareth. David Green started first in 1995 and
!996.

Reeves returns
Stevie Reeves, the two-time USAC midget
champion and former NASCAR Busch series driver, will make his second Indy Racing league start
Saturday in ·the Midas 500 Classic.
The 33-year-old Reeves will drive for Logan
Racing at Atlanta Motor Speedway. He finished
I Oth in his first IRL start, in the 1998 race at Lowe's
Motor Speedway.
"I grew up about three blocks from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway," Reeves said. "My lifelong goal is to run the Indy 500. I've wanted to run
Indy cars my whole life."
Reeves has driven m two NASCAR truck series
races this year. and also has served as a spouer for
Winston Cup driver Steve Park.

Treble signs new deal
NHRA motorcycle racer Craig Treble has signed
a sponsorship deal with Mateo Tools through the
200 I season.
"We paid our dues, and I'm glad someone
noticed," said Treble, sixth in the Pro Stock Motorcycle standings. " We've worked very hard to get to
the point we're at and, up until now, we've don e it
without the support of a major sponsor."
M ateo Tools supp orts more than a dozen NHRA
teams.

side.
consecutive batters over j threeHaislop scored when Tyler irfmng span.
Wright broke up Willis' string
Porter reached base on a fielder's
choice. Wright later scored on an of Ks with a walk in the sixth.
error.
However, Willis struck out the
Federal Hocking took adva n- final two R10 Grande batters to
rage of five walks and a hit bats- end the game.
man to mount its comeback in
Federal Hocking added two
the third inning. Cory M cCune, runs in the fourth and fifth ,
Tyler Chadwell and Brandon respecti~ely, and chipped in
Barnhart each drew a walk and another run in the sixth to round
Kyler Torrence was hit by a pitch out its victory.
Willis struck out 12 batters and
to kickstart the Fed Hock rally.
Barnhart was credited with an walked just two in 4 1/3 innings
RBI when he walked.
of work. He surrendered o ne run
Willis helped his own cause on one hit.
with an RBI double to right cenBarnhart went I 2/ 3 innmgs
. ter field that drove in two runs. with five strikeou ts 'and three
Federal Hocking pushed fou r walks. He gave up two runs on
runs across before Rio Grande one hit.
Wright recorded six strikeouts
could record an out. Kenny Dye r,
who came on in relief ofWright, and three walks in two innings for
struck out two batters and Rio Grande. He gave up four
induced a pop-up to the ijrst_base _ fll!!L;lndJ:&gt;~ hit.
side toget out of the inning.
· · Dyer went 1 2/3 mmngs,
Rio Grande put together its recording four strikeouts and six
own rally in the bottom of the walks. He gave up three runs on
third, scoring one run to cut the three hits.
gap to 4-3. Joey Hager, wh~ was
Hager pitched 1/3 of an inning
responsible for an unassisted triple and had one strikeout. Luke HaisplayTuesday, drew a lead- off walk lop threw two innings with four
and moved to third on a steal and strikeouts and three walks. He
passed ball. Hager scored when gave up three runs on one hit
Wright drove a two-out single
Rio Grande will face Ra ci ne in
through the right side.
the consolation game toni ght at
However, Willis struck out 6:30p.m.
three of the five Rio batters he
The
championship
game
faced in the third to stymie the between Middleport and Federal
comeback. Willis struck out eight Hocking is slated for 7:45 p.m .

future he plays major league b~se­
ball, I thmk in the end this is a
real good deal for the Reds. If he
does play football, I still thmk it's
a good deal considering the or-

Trade
from Page B1
Frank, 25, played in 28 games
for the Reds in 1998, hitting
.225, and has been at Triple-A
sin ce.
Henson was the key to the deal
from the Reds' perspective. H enson, hi tting .287 for Double-A
Norwich, hasn't decided whether
to try to play maJor league baseball or pursue a career in the
NFL.
He's expected to he the startin g •
quarterbac k ar Michigan this year.
"Henson is rhe wild card in ·the
deal ," Bowden said. " If in the

curnscan ces."

Mehan , 20, hit .252 with nine
homers in 81 games at Norwich
this season. Reith , 22, went 9-4
with a 2. 18 ERA for Class A
Tampa.
Yarnall, 24, was 2~ l with a 4.56
ERA · in I 0 starts for the Yankees
this season.
The Yankees are gettmg a
pitcher who missed the first half
of last season with a weak pitching shoulder, then was Ci ncinnati's most dependable starter
down the stretch.

He's been heal thy and effcc tiw
again this season, striking out 88
and walking 50 in 117 2-3
l illllng.l.

The Reds got him after the
1998 season in a trade that se nt
second baseman Brei Boone to
Atlanta .
On June 29, the Yankees traded
outfi elder Ricky Ledee and two
players to be n amed to the Indi-

TODAY'·S SCOREBOARD
EutDtvlllon
W L Pet.
.. ........ 52 38 .591
New YOfk
........... 48 38 .568
Florida ..... _.. ... ... ... ........... 45 43 .511
Montreal ........................ ,42 42 .!500
Pniladelphia .................... 39 47 .453

TMm
Atlanta .

c.nt,.l Dlvlalon
51. Louis ........................... 51 36
Cincinna1i
.. 43 44
Pinsburgh ...................... 38 C8
Milwaukee ....... .. ............. 37 5.1
Chicago .
.. ....... 35 51
Houston .......... ................ 30 57
Welt DIYialon
Arizona .........
.. 51 37
San Francisco .. . ......... 46 39
.. 45 4()
Colorado .. .... ..
Los Angeles ...... .
.44 42
San Diego ..
..... 38 ~

G8

3
7

8
12

.588
.494
.... 2 12
.420 14
..0715
.305

8
1/2
1/2
1/2
21

.580
.541 3
.52S 4
.512
.43712

1/2
1/2
8
1/2

--ni.Aooguo
W

L Pet.

GB

New Vorl&lt; ....................... 45 38 .542

Toronto ..........................48 41
Boston ............................ 43 41
Banimore ........................ 38 48
Tampa Bay
......... 34 51
C.ntl'lll Dlvleion
Chicago .......................... 55 32
Clevoland ...
.. ...... 44 42
Kansas City ....... .............. 39 o48
Do1roi1 .............. ............... 38 48
Minnesota ....... .... ....... ..... 38 52
WHt Dlvt.lon
Seattfe ............................ 51 35

.538
.512 2 112
.442 8 112
.«XX
12

Oakland .......................... 48 38

.558

.032
.512 10 112
.458
15
.452 15 1/2
.422 18 1/2
.593
3

Details, A3

WR Anton io Harrison .

••

SEATTLE
SEAHAW-KS - Signed
WR Jus.lin Arm our and G. Da niel
Collins .
HOCKEY
National Hockey le•gue
BUFFALO SABRES - Re - signed F
Rob Ray ' o a one -year contract .
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS- Signed
0 Arne Ram holt . Named Joe Vannel li director of pro scouting .
DALLAS STARS- Signed F Shaun
Van Allen and G Rick Tabaracci t o
two -year cont ra ct s and D Sam 1
Helenius to a o ne-year con tr act
Re-signed G Mik e Bales t o a oneyear contract
NEW YORK RANGER S- Name d
Ron Low coach and Ted Green and
Walt Ky le ass 1stant coaches
OTTAWA SENATO R S $1gned D
Ric ard Parsson and C Todd Whila to
mult i year contracts
PHOENIX
COYOTES - Named
Mar c Potvin coach ol Sp r 1ngfield of
the AH L.

Cases of br4rglary, rape
also among charges
BY BRIAN

Brown
from Page Bl.
lifted by bein g W&gt;th hiS team ma tes."
Unlike injured rese rve , a playe r on PUP is not o ut for the
seaso n . H e tan re turn at any
time once the team detern1ines
he is physically fit.

said . "Right now, he can do cardiovascu lar work , but no liftJog ."
Policy said that while the
team antic1pat es th at Drow n
eventually will be able to play.
th e club rnusr also co nsider
what keeping hin1 on rhe roster
mean s to the sa la ry ca p .
Brown signed a six-year, $27
milliOn free-age n t contract
br.:fon: las t seaso n.

&amp; Ends Tahle of Keds • $15 f

992-2156

SHO·
E
PLACE
N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport

.us

Please see Indicted, Page AJ

OVP NEWS STAFF

(;ALLII'OLI S - ACCEss ·!"
Human Rc :o~t\ Ul\'i.' 1)t'\"e lop ml'!lt
Ius brought .1 full-t illlt' chi ld
p s~'c hiarn ~ r ru 1t' ( ;alli:l-Jackson- [\ik i ~rs prug r.1111.
lk Lil y Spctie joinnl the
lll t'llt;J] ht":J!rh rean1 rhrL'l' \\'L'l'k"
.1go and Ju.., .dr~..· ,~~..iy begun
working wirh clit:m:-..
ACCESS 1;.; :1 c~..·rrificd ro mmurnty m~:nt a l he alth' u:ntn
throu~h th t· Ohio D (.· p .Ht1 11 t'nt
uf rv1cnt.II Ht·.dth .u1d i~ a pri \ ·at c
tiOll-p rnti r .tgency 1t ~
focl\ SL' S uuin\v. on L" hildrcn ..1dn-

·the various

summertime
water activities.
such as boat·
ing, sw1mmmg
. and Jet skiing.

.

River recreation really reels in visitors
Pomeroy tourists
using Ohio River
for travel
BY TONY M.

lEACH
SENTINEL .NEWS STAFF

OMEROY
POJlleroy's loc:tt iotl
altmgside
the
· watcr~ . ofthl' ()hio
Ri vn provid t·s :1
uniqu e opport\.1111 ty
for ;IqtLH 1c
touri•a " .111d travelers ~e archin g
t(Jt- the t r.mquility of Amt-rican ;l,
:l"- \\'t'll .a... :1 V:lSt &lt;
Jrray of summn-

•

........................ This Weeki

" '1\ll'y h \Vl' L' llh l'r IH.'VLT paid t/JiJd Sllppurt or h.m.: igno.n.·d .my p,t\t order., to
p.ty.
Mo !-~t of the dcfcnJam '&gt;
nnt ;.;u b.Jr..' ct
to direct payro ll dL"Liunion, I L' llrl' '- 'l.n cl ,
bL' C ILI\t,: of the \ f.',\\O il . tl or \po r.1di c
naturc of t h ~..·1r \vurk.
M.\11\. of rhcm .1rl' d.ty bborer' \\"ho
h,t\\' br..·r..· n ordned to ~,_· ..,ubli~l l ~ pt.'cial
h,utk .ltTt1 Ulll.., l"ur the ir ch ild -'i upport
obligatiun ;.;, but have nnr.
'' Wh .Itc vcr probktns tlur .1 hu;.;Lnnd

BY KRIS DoTsoN

ON THE
WATERFRONT
- It is a longestabl&gt; sll ed fact
that v&gt;sitors
often travel to
Pomero/s
waterfront from
surroundmg
areas so that
they can take
advantage of

Ill

tllllllhLT

,llld .trl'

rh t• l n 11llllllllity\ ima ~l­
.\, .1 tn uri . . t ;.;top, .md are feeding
thl· inL".J! lTOIIOI1ly.
,.
It i" .1' \on~-l'~rabli~hcd t:1n rh .1t
v 1.., n ur.., lJiil.;l trav~l to Pomeroy's

FF

The
•

Lindt·n S.A IIm an ..W. Dayton. Michael
ll..iclurd Fau lk ner ..1H. Sardina, Rex A.
Ho over. 47, Gallipolis, Motthew Dillard.
41. Falmomh. Ky., and Anthony Wayne
Smith. 34. Cheshire. were all charged
\\"ith criminal non-su pp o rt of depen-

in d1l· l-' ·'~t. bm ,,nd tlu r
rlii ~ \\'L'l'k \ tl:lony in ~..li c tm r..·nt, an: part of
.1 l·oncr..·m r.ttcd drun. r.n l1n rlun .m
.tcntmliLitlO!l of mJi\·idu.tl (,1\l''i.
In ordn to qu.1 ht)· :1'1 .1 tit[h - dcg rl'L'
tl•l ony t . I ~L' ti.)r 11011-\ Uppo n, ddl:nd ,mt ~
must h.1n· .tlkgcd lv 1111\SC'd h,llf of rlt eir
p .1y nh' llf \ within .1 yt'.lr \ tilllL', \\' hik· luving till' &lt;lhilll y to p:1y. citht.'r by working
or bc ing ahll' to hJ\'1.' workt'J.
"All of thr..'\L' pt•op le h.wl' j ob~. :md
h,l\"L' hcen ordt-rr..·d to p:ty chi!J support
111 ,l!l ongin ,1l l"lv il ca. . c." Lenrc&lt;; ~. uJ .
JHm-p.lY11ll'llt

Child p~ychiatrist
brings setvices,
to Meigs, Gallia

ht) O\tlng

DS.

formed at tht· M~:ig'i Co unty
Department of Job and Family Sen·tee,.
Th ~u task forct&gt;, JnadL· up of L l.:'nh:~. anJ
DJn To bin · and Do nna Uoyd of till'
Me1g; County Child Support Enforn·mcnt Agency, is cn n,.iJe ring way.;; ro
mcrease the collection of child support
o rd ered by the t:ourt. as wdl a~ a,, j,r
rh ost~ in nt'cd of child su pp o n ordn~
socol1ection ca n begin.
Lemes said that J rtlllnbc r uf"dl',1dbcat
dads" from Meigs Cou nty have hn·n '\l'ntence d on crimi nal c h:1rgL's rdat111g to

\\'l'c.:'k .

SUMMER FUN - Sayward Ryder of Athens. traveled to Pomeroy's
riverfront Wednesday afternoon to enjoy the warm weather and to
spend a few hours with friends jet skiing up and down the Ohio River.
They are part of a growing number of river travelers whD include
Pomeroy in their itnerary. (Tony M. Leach photos)

. , urroundi ng
.trl':lS so th ;tt th L'Y ca n ta ke advan tage uf the vario us SLI!lllllt'rtimc
\V3tl'r ac tivitie s, 'il1 Ch as bo:uing.
swimn1in·b and j et ski i n ~ .
l'o111LTOY Mayor John ll laL'ttliar
\\·;nnti·ont

from

Board of health suspends
Pomeroy sanitation firm
1ng t•.trh L'r rhi , \\'l'L-k. Jlfcr rh l·
I'()ME I ~&lt; lY A l'olllnoy health ~k p ,lrtllll'llt r~..· n·ivl'd _.1
,,\t lit.ltlOll flrm h .1 ~ been ~~~~pe nd ­
number of co111plaints ti-ulll R.utcd li·wn rnn du t." ttng bu;.; mr..·ss and LIIld arl'&lt;l n.:sitk n cs.
lt.., owner f lee;,; fdony niminal
Lcnte~ \aid .1hout 21 I rL·sidcnts
ch.ugt' li ~t c!1lll\111!2: fro 111 the havl' l'o mpl.1in c d rh,H ?. u ~ p an
.lliL·~-'Sd nnp rn p c r ' ~lum p i n g: o( l' ith L-r ~tn rnl w,t&lt;.;tc ti·om th e toi \\',1\0[ L' .
]l't.., in 11 11prllJ1l' 1" r nnuin ers. or
fL lllk Zmp.111 nf J&gt;omnov Ita~ l' tllpticd the l:u:ilitiL'' on opl'11
hL't' ll l hH)..~ni \\"l th tlnc..· t~·lon y ~rou n d 111 1\ nnc H ullow .111J
coumo, ofopL'I l du ntping in Ml.:'l~"
nthn nv .1 rhy :1\Y,IS.
Co unty ( \ nu·t .tnd hi" hminc ~..,.
O ttl' .11 v. t 'ubjl'rt to .dkgcd
Mudt·rn S,J nit.I rinn . h .1 ~ hl'L·n su.., - improp ~..' r l lu_lllplll g w.1~ d.mgcrpcmk d ti·n tn opl·r.tti n g hu.., ill l'"" mt , Jv c J o..,~.,· to I l·,nlin~ C rl'l'k.
.
" t(Jr .'\I l d..1v~
l)l'lldlllg
rhl' 1 tl Vl''ln~.t•
•
• 1
L clltL ~ . , ,1\d
tion l)l. ho\\' thL· hu . , jn L"'" di . , po'l''
In .Jdd tt ion to Ll\\" "r..' W ;l~l'
11f \\' ,t"i l ' llu tJI ~mr t.1bk toiil't~ .
lll .ltl'ri.tl ti·nm th e roilct~ . Lent L'"
M l' lg" ( :num y l'ro\ LT llllllg
~.1id thL· tn.ltni .tl llumpt.:d in a
Attorney .Jnhn Lctlt L'~ o; ,ud the
numbl'r of lo c.Jtloll\ includL}i
nn m ty Bo.trLl of I k.1lth &gt;; l t~pr..· nd­
Please see Sewage, Page A3
l'd rill' tir111 \ npl'rat1~Jn .1t .1 m eetFROM STAFF REPORTS

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
.The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today

REED

fore ~

allegedly mvolved in a I 'I'JH burglary
W!.:n: also indudr..·J in those returned this

POMEROY - Five c.tse' of alleged
non-paym~..·nt nf child "upp orr wl'rl'
includL·d in 11 indictments t'iS UL'Li by thl'
dJt"lts.
~1 ..·is'"" Co unty gr.HH.I jury .llld til e- d in
Pro sec utor John LL'Ilf t'" sai d Thursday
Mt.: i~~ Co unty Com111on Plea ~ Court o n .
rhat the child support cases came as the
Wl'd nc'\day.
Tlw ind iLtlll~,_'lltS of thrl't: 111 en result of the effort s of a child support task

I,

''This gives us five or six
weeks to make a final determination, but our ultimate goa l is
to have his ta·lent on the field
for us this year or even next
year," Policy said.
Palmer said Brown has an
appointment with another eye
doctor this ·week .
"If he conles in from' tlie doctor and says he IS cleared to go.
he practices right away." Palmer

J.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

111 LTt',\,illt:

...,

so Cents

Child support case~ included in indictments

tilltl' l':\l' it t'l ll t'llt.
Th( 1"i.' rJ\'l'rho uJ td vi~ litH~ ,l1T

..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number J5

s
wee

The Yankees had a tentative
deal for Detroit's Juan Gonzalez
fall throu gh because they couldn 't
agree to a co ntract with the omfi elder and their bid for Sammy
Sosa &lt;;nded when they couldn't
agree on· players with the Chica ~
go Cubs.

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

Anaheim ........................ 47 41 .534
5
Texas ..............................42 43 .49-4 8 1/2
TuoMo)''o Gomo
American League 6, National Leagu, 3
Tod•y'a Gamee
Seattle (Garcia 2·1) a1 San Diogo (T.,-g
2-0). 5:05 p.m.
Hous10n (Reynolds 6·5) a1 Do1roi1 (Moohler
5 ·5), 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Ritchie 5-5) at Clewland (Burba
8-4 ), 7:05p.m .
Philadelphia (Scllilllng 4·5) a1 Toronto (Car·
penter 7-1), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Penny 4-7) at N.Y. Yankees (Hernandez 8--6), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Bobby J. Jones 3-4) at Boston
(P.Martinez 9-3), 7:05p.m.
Montreal {Vazquez 7-4) at Tampa Bay
(Rolcar 3-4), 7:15p.m.
Atlanta (Millwood 5-8) a1 Baltimore (Mussina
6-7), 7:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Wrtght • · 2) at Kansas City
(S1oln 0-1), 8:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Valdes 1·2) at Minnesota
(Radko 5-10), 8:05 p.m.
St. llluis- (An.Benes 9-3) at Chicago White
Sox (Sirotka 8-6), 8:05 p.m.
Cinc:lnna11 (Neagle 6·2) a1 ~ado (AB18c:lo
7-SJ, 9:05p.m.
Texas (Holling 10·7) a1 Arizona (Anderson 8·
3). 10:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Hill 5·5) a1 Los Angelea (Dreifort
4-7). 10:10 p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 5-4) at San Francisco
(Nolhan 5·2), 10:15 p.m.
Fl1day'a G•mea
Houston at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
BASEBALL
Pittsburgh at Cleveland. 7:05 p.m.
American League
Philaclelphia at Toronto, 7:05 p.m.
NEW YORK YANKEES- Piocoo OF
Florida at N.Y. Yanlolees, 7:05p.m.
. Shane Spencer on the 60 · day disN.Y. Mots at Boston, 7:05 p.m.
abled list. Optioned Rl;-lP Darrell
Montreal at Tampa Ba.y, 7:15p.m.
Einertson to Columbus of the InterAtlanta at Baltimore, 7:35 p.m.
national league .
Milwaukee at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
N•tlonal League
Ch1cago CubS at Minnesota, 9:05p.m.
CINCINNATI REDS-Traded LHP
St. Louis at Chicago White SoK, 8:05 p.m.
Denny Neagle and OF Mike Frank to
Cincinnati at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
the New York Yankees for 3B Drew
Texas at Arizona, 10:05 p.m.
Seattle at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Henson , OF Jackson Malian, RHP
Brian R!Pilt\ and LHP Ed Yarnall.
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco, 10:35 p.m.
Placed 3B Aaron Boone on the 1 5day d is abled . Called up AHP Larry
Luebbers and INF Mike Bell from
Louisville
of
the
International
League .
NEW YORK METS - Signed RHP
• Wlnaton Cup S•rlea
Wijlie Banks and AHP Oscar Henriquez and t~~s ·
them to Norfolk
The NASCAA Winston Cup schedule,
of the Intern
e.
winners in parentheses, and driver
PH ILAD E~~j~~;_ciilf-~1~;5,~~,~~-=-pol nt- st andln-g-r.ed RHP A
Feb . 20 - o ·a ytona 500 , Daytona
LHP Bruce
Beach, Fla. (Dale Jarrett)
lng . Transferred LHP Scott Aldred
Feb . 27 - Dura Lube/Kmart 400 , from the 15 · to the 60-day disabled
Rockingham, N.C. (Bobby Labonte)
I i st.
March 5 - Carsdirect .com 400, Lu
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Claimed
Vegas . (Jell Burton}
AHP Todd Erdos off waivers from
March 12 - Cracker Barrel 500 , the New York Yankees .
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt)
BJ'oSKETBALL
March 19 - Mall.com 400, DarlingNetlonal Beakatball Aaaoclatlon
ton, S.C. (Ward Burton}
Al"CANTA HAWKS- Named Chris
March 26 - Food City soo. Bristol , Grant assistant director of scouting .
Tenn. (Rusty Wallace)
DALLAS
MAVERICKS - Named
April 2 - OirecTV 500 , Fort Worth ,
Rolando Blackman assistant coach.
Texas (Dale Earnhardt Jr.)FOOTBALL
Ap ril 9 - Goody's s·oo, Martinsville ,
National Football Leagua
Va . (Mark Martin)
CLEVELAND
BROWNS-Placed
Ap ril 16 - Di eHard 500, Talladega , OT Orlando Brown , Ol Noel LaMonAla . (Jeff Gordon)
tagne and WR Jeff Klopf on the
Ap ril 30 - NAf'A Auto Parts 500 ,
physically unable to perform l i st .
Fontana , Cal i! . (Jeremy Mayfi eld)
Signed P Jon Ballantyne, DB Corey
May 6 - Pontiac Excitement 400 , Ivy and s Tony Maranto .
Ric hmond , Va . (Dale Earnhardt Jr .)
DENVER BRONCOS- Signed WR
. May 28 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord,
Muneer Moore .
N.C. (Matt Kenssth)
MINNESOTA
VIKINGS - Signed ·
June 4 MBNA Platinum 400 , WR Troy Walters to a three - year
contract.
Do\ler, 0~1 (Tony Stewart)
June 11 - Kmarl 400, Brooklyn,
NeW
ENGLAND
PATRIOTS Mich . (Tony Stewart)
Signed OT Adrian Klemm, OT Greg
June 19 - Pocono 500, Long Pond ,
Roblnaon·Randall, DT Jeff Marriott,
Pa . (Jeremy Mayfield)
DT David Nugent, DE Casey Tisdale
and OT Brent Warren .
June 25 - Save Mart/ Kragen 35011:,
Sonom a, Calif . (Jett Gordon)
NEW
YORK
JETS - Named
Stephen Nicholas consultant to the
July 1 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach ,
Fla (Jeff Burton)
medical department.

ans Justice . ·

July 14. 2.0 00

SAN FRANCISCO 49ER S- S igned

July Sl - New England 300, Loudon ,
N.H. (Tony Stewart)
July 23.- Pennsyl~;~an i a 500, Long
Pond.
Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400 , Indianapo lis .
Aug. 13 - Global Cross ing at The
Glen, Watkins Glen, N .Y.
Aug . 20 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn ,
Mic h .
Aug. 28 - goracing .c: om 500, Br istol, Tenn.
·
Sept . 3 - Southern 500, Oarlingtetn ,
S.C.
' Sept . 9 - Chevrolet Mon1e Carlo
400, Rich mond , Va .
Sept. 17 - New Hampshire 300 ,
Loudon.
Sept . 24 - MBNA .com 400, Dover.
Del.
Oct . 1 - NAPA AutoCare 500 , Mar llnaville, ft va .
Oct . 8 - UAW·GM Quality 500, Concord, N.C .
Oct t 5 - Winston 500, Talladega,
Ala.
. Oct . 22 Pop Secret Microwave
Rockingham, N .C.
Nov. 5 - Checker Auto Paris/Dura
Lu~e 5QOtr:. Avondale, Ariz .
Nov. 12- Pennzoil 400, Homestead,
·
Fla.
Nov. 19- NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga .
Driver Standing•
1. Bobby Labonte, 2,670 .
2. Dale Earnhardt, 2.825.
3. Dale Jarrett, 2,1!102 .
... : Ward Bur1on, 2,456 .
·5. Tony Stewart, 2,455 .
8. Mark Martin, 2,453 .
1. JeH Burton, 2,449 .
8. Ricky Rudd. 2·.219 .
9. Rusty Wallace, 2,377.
if D. Jeff Gordom, 2,348 .
11. Mike Skinner, 2,090 .
12. Matt Kenseth, 2,073.
13. Terry Labonte, 1.952.
1.4 . Dale Earnhardt Jr., 1,944 .
15. Jeremy Mayfield, 1 ,891.
16. Sterling Marlin . 1,884 .
17. Johnny Benson , 1,866 .
18. Bill Elliott, 1,860 .
19. Ken Schrader, 1,845 .
20. Steve Park, 1,818.
21 . John Nemechek, 1,815.
2~. Chad Llt11o , 1, 774 .
23 . John Andretti, 1, 753.
24. Robert Pressley, 1,655 .
25. Jerry Nadeau . 1,595.
28. Jimmy Spencer, 1, 594 .
27. Kevin Lepage, 1,526.
28. Michael Waltrtip, 1 ,502 .
29. Bobby Hamilton, 1,471 .
30. Kenny Irwin, 1,440.
31 . Kenny Wallace, 1,439.
32. Elliott Sadler, 1,403 .
33. Dave Blaney, t ,265.
3-4. Stacy Compton, 1, 190 .
35. Wally Dallenbach Jr ., 1, 140.
38. Kyle Pony, 1,124.
37. Bran Bodine, 1,050.
38. Daru'll Waltrip, 981 .
39. Scott Pruett, 965 .
40. Alck Mast, 934 .

•oo,

Eaar Dlvlalon

TNm

.Friday

Bradford Church plans picnic; A&amp;
Fed Hock wins Hubbard crown, Bl

Saturday

High: 80s: Low: 60S

.

sa1 J that hL· and his wife, Eleanor.
often m eet many vi'iltO rs and
tourists as they c;.•njoy walks along
the pro111enade nl'ar th e nvt· r.
~&lt; on st·vcral occasions, my wife
and 1 luvl' mer individuals who

haw docked rhl' lr Vl'"!~e\-; aloun
dH· riverfront." sa id BLtl'H tl :lr."
.. T hest· indivJdu ,tls h,l\'L' ,ti\\" JY~
co mnwntcd about how ck·.t n our
vill:-tgt: loo ks and how it i&lt;&gt; rill'
most pi cturesque ,trL".l alnng: thl·
whol e n vcr."
"We 'vL' even dirL·creJ a tl·w
hungry bo aters to ~O lll L' of our
area's )n ea l rl'sr;nJr.IIlt s." .Jd d ..·d
lllaetm ar.
Pomeroy VillagL' Coun ci I !1:1 ~
di scuS&lt;t·ul a propo'&gt;c d \\·,likin g
path prujert that wnuld L'Xtl' tld
from Md )onald's 011 WL· ~ t M:nn
Street. along rhc Ohio Ri\·c r, ro
N yt' A\ielll1l', ti.H loc.t!" ,\!ld \ 1'1 tors a!ik t' io e nj oy.
T he pad1 \Vould b~..· nefir ri lL' t·ir izt' ll' of l,otnt-roy a' well :l"bo.ltl'l"\. \\I Ill co uld ll..,(.' th e p.tlh
tl1r .1 ~ ,\ lkparttll"l' fro 111 litL' Ir
w.ltl'rrr.ltl- tu uh· i1 1 rhc .., i ~hr...
.md ;.; ounds nf the vill .l~t'.
Pl:l t l ~ · have .1lso bcl'1t .lllrlwriLt:d

by

COl! ll Ci \

t&lt;J

l"Ollllt rllt.'t .I I"C!llO\'-

Please see River, Page A3

" Tht:n: Ius been a l ong-~t.tnd ­
ing llr..'cd for ti.dl-tillK' L"hil ll .111d
adOk·,ccm po;yc hi.trry ..,tT\'tl'l'\ ttl
our arc.1..1nd becJu s~..· of rhat, \\'r..'
\Vt:Tl' .~blr ro .lttri1Ct a bo ilrd enti tled p~y c hu rns r like .J)r_Lil y." -;a id
I lr. J Edw.trd Ulack. rhiL·f clime" I
officer. pwrholo~ist / LPCC li&gt;r
ACCESS.
" I )r_ Lily," :ts shc h c tlkd "'·"
horrt ,u1d r.mcd in R o m .tll l.t ,tnd
went rn ntt•dic::ll -;c hool in
Bu ch.Irt'St.
She grad uat n l 11 1 l \)I.) I .u1d
l';l!ll\' to rhc U.S. in 1t)IJ2 with
hn hu ;.; b.lnd D.m, also a phy-.il n ,m. Bot h did then· resid r..· nn L''
:lt ()hio St.ltt' Unl\'l'rsiry.
Sht· co mplctt·d .1 two - yl·.tr
Chdd ,IIJd Adolncl'Tlt 1'\v c!H .ttn ·
Fd lol.\' ~hi p :tllLI rl'l'L'ntly p.mL·d
Ct'llLT.Ii P~yc hi .ttry Bo.1rlk
"A re ,J..,OII to cekb r,Jtc:· ";ml
Spctic.
She pl.11t' ttl t.Jkc· hn Child
.111d Adolt...,L.l' IH
1'"\T in .lt r\'
ho,lnh nL·:\t \\' .tr
Why Soutlw,J..,tl'l"n (.)bin ,u1d
AC:CESS'
.. rht \ j, .Ill .l!"L'.I \\herr..· I ( ,Ill
111akt: ,1 dit1l·rr..'JHT... c x pl ilith
Spetie. "1 t' lljL'Y \\·orki ng wi!l1
funilic'i .llld lln·l' chdd re11 ."

Dr. Lily Spetie

T he Ohi n I ) r..T ,l rttlll'llt of
Mem.!l 1-k.drh pur hl'r 111 n }]l t:td \\'1th the Sout lwrn ( :on-.;nrtiunl tln C hild n,'n (who rl·prL'- ·
~r..' llt tin· bo:1rd rq.!:iOil\) ,111d th ..·y
kilL'\\" of till' l ll't'd ill \tHliiiL'. hl
O hio.
" And rhrn.- w.1~ .1 t-:ovd tl r~"
Spcnl' ,\lld l~l.i l"k . I~l"L'L'd.
CurrL'Il tly. Sp ..·ril· \\ '\ 1l" k" 1n .1ll
rhrn .' l"O lllltio..·..,. Sh~.,-·.., 1n _I.H: bnn ·
o n /Vl pn d.1ys. Middlq1nn on
Tlll'\t i.J v~.
.1ud
\Xh·dn c,d,t\"'i
.
t hrou ~ h Fndays .t r L' ;.;p ent in hn
(;,d!ia o tlicc.
" I .1111 vny llllll- h in ~~ t vu r \If
.111d look t(H·w.Ird t u workn1g
with orho..·r llll'thc.d j'!"t 1tl.-~'i i on .t l ..,
.111d ~ n,·i c L· pln\·Hk r.., 111 the
.Irl'.l. .. , fi L' ~. 11d . "I .1111 ,1 ..,t run~
bl'lll'\'(.'1" 111 \ t' .lltl \\\)l'k ()\11"
kids d l''\LT\\' th,tr."
c
"ACCESS Luu ld n't ntl~-r P"Y (h i:ltr y \LT\-Il'l'" hd(Jre. \O I Jr.
Lih·\ .!ddirion wdl hl' .1 \\"ondcr-

.

ful

L'X p :ltl"-iO!l

of

t!J l'

hL·,J[t \1 ~L'I"\ in·~ nt)~TL' d

l ll L' Ilt.l\

fll"l'\ "1P ll"- -

h: · ""'! Ill.,, fc.
lr \\':h .1 2-YL' Jr prtll"t'.'" rn gl· r

SpcttL·. \\ hit" h ith·lutkd ~l'ttin~
th e .trl'.l Lkt lan..-d a m ,tll p tn\'l'l
\ hon.lbc by dll' tt·dcr.tl go\·enl -

Please see Dr. Lily. Page Al

School Facilities Commission approves
Sentinel. constryction projects for 36 districts
Today's

1 Sections- 16 Pages
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

AS
B4-6
B7
A4

AJ
Bl-2, 8

Weathe(

A3

COl UM ll US (AI' )
l ite·
l )I no Sr hu nl F.Jo,_·ilin..._·, C o mmi~ ­
"ion on Thur ~d.ty .1pprnvl'll 111\ Jn'
th ,Ill $HOI ! 11 1i\lin t1 i11 ..,t, ltl' lllOill'Y
t~n "llmol nm"-tr u ct i ~llt prnJL"t.'h.
in Lhtdlll!! $7 (' tllllll o tl to hL·lp
rc loc1tt' "-L"hooh 1n.l\-1 .1riun '... ltt\·L·r
V.dky d1..,triu . whLTl' .1 r. uK n sctrL·
h .l\ t"nlll'tTtll'd t'lt1 7L'! h

OHIO

Thc et)ll\llli..;sinn' .1ppn1\'t'd . ~f1
pn.JjLTt&gt;; 111 .11\.TIH· dt,lriCh. h m\-l'\·(.'1'. ~' 1i l gcr rill' tllt )lll'Y dilly ~~ - ril l'\'
r.lh(.' th L· r..·quirl'll .lllHlt!llf ()f lnt ".ll

Pick 3; 2-7--t; Pick 4: ll-2- 1-7

lll ,ILChlll g lll llll\'Y·

Lotteries
Buckeye 5: 1-.i- l •k !l -::!.i'

W.VA.
Daily 3:

I - H ~4

Daily 4: .1-7-K- K

If 1\.in·rV.dk- y prmlu~· l.. , u\ $2
lllil l'ion J~)L.t! ,Ju re th L· di~tTict wdl
fl·pl.tCL' it\ h1gh ~l"h~1PI .md midtlk
,. ._- hool. T ill'\' \\'L'l"l' huilr nn .111·
Army dq~~ lt . . it ~..·. lll". tr ti(.']d , l"L )1Jl.l min.Itcd \\" Hit , !tt'llllt ·. d :- ' li "J'L' l tn l
1&gt;_1)

R.1wrV.tl k•,· ,d,n
p\.111" tn Jdd t \\'tl tiL' \\' ckllll..'lll.ln ·
"-&gt; dJoo], w trh th ..· ,l ,ltl'·., hL·lp.
r!lt' \hqnd h. l"- .1 $ l l)_(1 nullion
()fl-.ll l.., lll g c,l llL.t' r

k,-, till rh..· N'o\· 7 h.11lot. SihHild It
P~'~'. tll l' d1'-trtd wdl rh cni .J I...c $ 111
tndiJo tl it h.h l"L'l' L' I\ \' d Ill ji_·,kr.J\
tlll11lL')' 1 ~1r ~L"huo l U1!l,rrud1Ut1 ,111d
ri ll· I'L'' t 111 tlrllL' r .,r.Hl' ...n urn·.., rn
h11tld tile 'L" ho,)J.., . Sup ..·rltlt"l'ndL' llt
Thom.1~ Sludc .,,l id
AntHill'!' $5 11ltllt on 111 l~· d n. tl
lllOil ~·y \\" 1\l hdp huJ!d .1 Ill'\\" tr.hl
.md hL· u..,cd ti.1r ulhn ~'ll.J_ll'd'. Il l·
....11d . Vutn.., pn..'\'1\Hl'-ly h.wc rurn~·\ l
~ h&gt;\\' 11 pLn 1' tn build t'ill· cknll'n t.try \dll)uk Sh.td c.: dil tJk -. n nn'
wdl hL· m nrc lth•ly to .1pprow .1.
\ · ~'lllplt· tt' pl.t1 1. with tlw 'i l.lk 11t' lp
.drL', tlh- 1 oJntnlHc\r.

" lh · p.l ll-...\~] 1)~ 1( thh \\.1\ . lh!ll~
fundin ~ ~\HI· rn·.., ti\11\l ' I lt l'. k~kr.tl
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.Iilli $ l. i 11 . ~ i llJi]H1tl l\1yOll ll ~....,t~1\\'1l

,l'h\1nk h()rh rontt1J~L'lll ~ 11 1 tlw
p- 1 ""-·I~L- o t' ]tll-.11 k\-il'' SprHJ g-t!t" ld
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          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25293">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25292">
              <text>July 13, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1330">
      <name>diddle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="933">
      <name>folmer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="138">
      <name>henson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1398">
      <name>oiler</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
