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~--~--

Page B 8 • The Dally SenUnel

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

~

Meigs society news and notes, As
Reds wi.n; Dillon signs with Bengals, 81

Frld.,

Hlp: lOs; Low: 605

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

.•

'

• "----

Details, A3

Thursday

Aucust 1o, 2000

'I

Now Yorlc .........................80
Bolton ............................51
TOI'Onto ........... ..............58
Blitimore ....... .................48
Tampa Bay .................... ... 48

E. .
'

.
I

Toom
W
Allonta ...........................59
New Yorlc ......................... 84
Aorida ..
.....................57
Montraal ..........................50
!'hlladeiphla ................ ...48

L Pel.

«

Q8

.811

47
5e .504
50 ·.459

.5n

4
12
17

83 .432

20

centro~

St. Louls ... ........................81
Cio&lt;inna11 ........................!15
Chicago .......................... 52
- r g h .........................
M~Mauk" ..................... .. 47
· ~OUIIDn .... ......................43
'· ~

-

51
57
80
84

.5'5
.481
8
.464
9
.4211
13
.418 •• 112
70 .381 18 1/2

ee

Franclsco .......... ........83 48 .568
.~9

Atlicna ...........................82 51

2
...... ............... 58 53 .527 41/2

. .. ............ ....... S. !17 .488

•

·..

,.._.,.._

Diogo "' ..................53 80 .489

g
11

' Philodolphia 10, San Diego 4
,.. - I I . ClndMati 4

82 .441 12 1/2
83 .432 13112

Controt
Chicago ..........................67 45 .5811
Ct-nd ........................ 58 52 .527

8
.. ....... ..52 59 .488 t.t 1/2

Oe1rolt ....

Kansas City ....................51 61 .455
16
Mlnneoota ....................... 52 83 .452 16112

w...

Seanta ............ ........ ...... 87 46 .593
Oalcland .......................... 81 50 .550
5
Anaheim .........................sa 55 .518 8 112
Te&gt;&lt;OS ............................... 53 58 .477 12 112
TuMdly'a Gamel
Seattte 12, Chicago White Sox 4, 1st game
Saanie 7, Chicago WMe Sox 5, 2nd game
Detroit .t, Be.llimora 1
Texas 11 , Cleveland 2
N.Y. Yar*- 4, Oakland 3
Tampa Bay 5, Min,_ 0
Torqmo 8, Kansas c~ 1
Anaheim 2. Boston 1
TodiY'• tlamee
Baltimore ( - e a 8-4) at Oalroit (Blair 8·

2), 7:05 p.m.

T~Fiof1da (Dampstlf 10-ll) a1 St. l&lt;xlis
(All.- 10-8), 1:10 p.m.
Pittlburgh (Benson 8·8) at CoiOr•dO

(T-u 7-2), 3:05 p.m.

(Rigdon Q-1) at San Franciaco

. (RUOIW 1-7), 3:35 p.m.

Atlanta (Glavine 14·5) at Cincinnati (Har·
nilch U), 7:05 p.m.
' San Diogo (Witask:l&lt; o-o) .. - p h i a
• (Bollenfield 0· 1), 7:35 p.m.
. N.Y. Meh (Reed 8-2) at Houston (McKnight
• D-0), 8:05 p.m.
Montraal (1/&amp;Zquu U) at Arizona (Johnson
- 15-41), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (U_, I 0·5)111 Los Ang(Brown 10-4), 10:05 p.m.
Thurwcllly"a Gomaa
Colorado (Astacio 9-B) at St. louis
(Staphenoon 12·7], 3:10p.m.
N.Y. Meh (B.J. Jones 8·5) at Houstoo (McK·
·night o-o). 4:05p.m.
San Clogo (Williams 8-4) at Prliladalphia
(Wolf 11-5), 1:35 p.m.

Toronto (Trachaot8· I 0) at Kansas C~ (Sup-

pan H), 8:05p.m.

Saatda (Moyer 1t..,.} at Chicago While Sox
(Slrotka 11-9), 8:05 p.rtJ.
Boston (Fusoro 7-5) at Anaheim (W~o Q.

0), 10:05 p.m.
Tllurodoy'aGamea
Oakland (Muklor 6· 7] at N.Y. Yankoes (Gone
1·10), 12:05 p.m.
Minnoaota . (Maya 8·13) at Tampo Bay

(Stunze 2·2), 12:15 p.m.
Baltimo&lt;e (Penson 8· 7] at Detroit (Sparkl I •
2), 1:05 p.m.
Toronto (Walls 17-4) 111 Kansas City (Mood·
owa f.O), 2:05 p.m.
Saan1e (S818 12-8) 11 ·clllcago WMa Sox
(Parq~ 9-4), 2:05 p.m.

w-'oNattonai-IAMoctaiiOn
Eaatem~

-~

Oelr00 .....:........................13 18 .418

7

Miam ............................... l2 IQ .387
Cl'olltone ..........................8 23 .:158
Indiana ........, ................ .....8 23 .:158

8
12
12

Wwttm ConfetiiiOI
&lt;-Loa Angaiel .................. 26

3 .903

y-Houston .. ..................... .28
y·Saaamenlo .................. 20
y-Phoenbc.. ....................... H~
lJtah ......... ............... .........17
Mlnnoaota ........................ l5
Po&lt;Uond ........................ ... 10

5 .831
11 .846

...

Toam

W L Pet.

11
y·Claveland ...................... 17 14
y-Ortando ........ ................. 18 15
washlng10n ...................... l3 18
x-NewYork ... ......... .......... 20

.B.tS
.548

Ql

12
1.t
18
21

.813
.548
.484
.323

Seattle ............ .. ................ 6 25 .200

x-clinched

2
8
9
11
13
18
22

dM~

y-ctinched playoft berth

lUelcloy'oa-

New York 57, Cleveland .t4

Minnesota 76, Char1otte 87
Los Angeles 80, Saattlo 52
THoy'aGomM
Cleveland at Washington, 7 p.m.
Ortando at Miami, 7 p.m.
Naw York at Oetroil. 7:30 p.m.
Chartone at indiana, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Houston 8 :30p.m .

Los Angel.. 01 Utah. &amp;p.m.
SBittkJ at Saaamento, 10 p.m.
Phoenix at Portland, 10 p.m.

Texas (Perisi"'I 2-3) at Cleveland (Burba 1Q4), 7:05 p.m.
Oakland (Appior tO-t) at N.Y. Yar*oes (Pot·
title 12-8), 7:05 p.m.
" Minnesota (Minon 11-8} at lampe Bay (Wil·
10n 0.0), 7:15p.m.

Floltda 7, St Louis 0
Houo10n I, N.Y. Mots 3
Colorado •• F'inlburgh 1
Mororaal 9, Mzana 3
1.oo ~ 7, Chicago Cubs 5
Sen Frond"" 1, Mllwaukoo 0

-aa

48 .S58
53 .51 • • ,/2
58 .!513 41/2

IIAI!IIALL

Amtrlctn LIICJUI
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Placed LHP
Jarrod Washburn on the 15-day
disabled 1111 . Recalled RHP Ramon
OrtiZ from Edmonton of the PCL.
Auignad OF Edgard Clemente out ·
right to Edmonton. Purchased the
contract of INF Keith Johnson from
Edmonton . Purchased the contract
of 1 B· OF Chris Hatcher .
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Oplloned
INF Gre9 Norton to Charlotte of the
International l.eague.
Recalled
RHP Aaron Myette from Charlotte.
NEW VORK YANKEES - Designat·
td OF Ryan Thompson for assign -

ment.
SEATTLE MARINERS - Claimed C
Chris Widger oft waivers from Mon·
treal. Called up AHP Joel Pineiro
frc:;.m Tacoma of the PCL. Placed
OF Raul Ibanez on the 15-day dis·
abled 1111, retroactive to Aug . 7 .
TORONTO
BLUE
JAVS --S enl
AHP Pete Munro to Tuss to com·
plate the trade for OF Dave Martinez .

.518

3
4

.419

1

FLORIDA MARLINS - Announced
the
resignation
of
Jonathan

Fr.), Stap Hill {6-4, 195 lbs., Fr.),
Kenny lrby (6-3, 215 lbs., Fr.).
Andrew English {6-4, 225 lbs.,
from Page Bl
Fr.), Sean Smith (6-3, 200 lbs.,Jr.)
.and Stephen Galbraith (6-2, 215
have to break in sophomore lbs. , So.).
Byron Leftwich, who succeeds
Spearman is a redshirt freshman
Heismann Trophy finalist Chad from Booneville, Miss., while
Pennington.
Hill, lrby and English are all true
. Pennington set a slew of passing freshmen.
records during his career at MU,
Smith is a junior who has
leaving a gaping hole to fill.
earned one varsity letter with the
Leftwich, an impressive athlete Herd and Galbraith is a highlyat 6-5 and 230 pounds, played in touted sophomore who transjust three games last season, com- ferred to MU from Memphis.
pleting 7 -of-11 passes for 60
The heart of a solid Herd
)"'ids.
defense is intact with six starters
Pruett said that despite the loss returning, led by defensive end
of Pennington and the lack of Jimmy Parker (6-4, 280 lbs., Sr.)
experience the remaining quar- and tackle Paul Toviessi (6-7, 265
. terback candidates possess, he has lbs., Sr.).
_.
coiifidenfThat Leftwich and die---- Also back on defense are lineothers will develop.
' backer Max Yates {6-3, 235 lbs.,
"I feel comfortable about our Jr.), and defensive backs Maurice
quarterback situation:· Pruett Hine&gt; (5-10, 193 lbs., Sr.), Doug
added.
Hodges (5-10, 190 lbs., Sr.) and
-Including Leftwich, Marshall Danny Derricott (5-1 0, 165 lbs.,
has seven quarterbacks on its pre- Sr.).
season roster. They include
Toviessi was MU's fourth-leadChuck Spearman (6-3, 212 lbs., ing tackler in '99 with 73 stops,

including eight for losses and two
sacks.
Hines had five interceptions
and backfield mate Derricott
recorded four picks last season.
Marshall has sold some 13,280
season tickets for 2000. The goal
is to sell 15,500 season tickets this
year.
MU officials said that construction on the stadium will be complete by opening day, which is
Aug. 31 against Southeast Missouri State.
The new construction will add
10,000 seats to the facility,
increasing the capacity to 40,000.
The new seats are being added
as a second deck behind existing
seating in the south end zone. The
closed-in en&lt;! zone ~lwuld giYe
the Herd a definite home field
edge.
Construction is also underway
on what director of athletics
, Lance West called "a memorial
bronze" at the west entrance to
the stadium.
The bronze sculpture is being
erected to commemorate the

EaOI

TMm

w

L Pet.

oa

Herd

Reels
fnHn PageBI
seemed fine a few minutes later,
he W&gt;s taken to Good Samaritan
Hospital for tests.
That's the same hospital that
Reds bench coach Ken Griffey
Sr. was taken to on Sunday after
experiencing ch est pains that

NFL
from PageBl
Porcher said. "Coach Ross has
been very, very su pportive
throughout this whole process . I
told him when I came in how I
really apprec iate how he's been,
especially in the last few weeks."
Porcher - the team's designated fran chise player - signed a
one-year tendef offer last
Wednesday for $4.253 million.
P&lt;Jrcher, who held ou t for six
months , had to accept the tender
for the upcoming season before
negotiations could begin on a
long-term deal.
Broncos
Trevor Pryce could face fines
totaling $554,000 for missing part

NASCAR.
from Page Bl
crashes should be put in the
perspective of the sport.
"We're going to stay right out
of it," said State Poli ce Maj. Mark
Furlone. "We look at it as an
inherent risk of the sport."
Kevin T rip lett, NASCAR
director of operations, said acc i-

turned out to be nothing serious.
"Too much stress around here,"
Cox suggested.
There was more for Cox. Right
fielder Brian Jordan pulled groin
muscles while running out a
grounder in the third inning and
left after aggravating the injury
while chasing a ball in the outfield in the fourth .
In the past three weeks,Jordan
has twisted his knee, sprained his

of training camp if the Broncos
decide to go after a portion of his
$1.1 million signing bonus.
Pryce, an All-Pro defensive
tackle, stayed home over a contract dispute and was fined $5,000
{or each day he missed practice.
The Broncos could fine him
$484.000 more if they choose to
recoup part of the signing bonus
Pryce received in 1997 as a firstround draft choice.
Pry~e. schedul ed
to 1 make
$762,000 this season, is in the
fourth year of a five-year, $4 .9
million contract. He reported to
training camp last Friday after
rejecting a seven-year, $31.5 million offer.
Broncos coac h Mike Shanaha n
said he would not negotiate
unless Pryce showed for practice.
Pryce said he was unaware the
dents at speedways should not be
treated the same as on roads.
"We in no way say we are more
powerful or have more authority
than the local law enforcement,"
Triplett said from his Daytona
Beach, Fla., office. "But it is on a
track at an event we sanction.
These are the differences between
the sport and transportation."
He said NASCAR officials
were cooperative with Loudon
poli ce when they contacted the

National League·

Mariner , exec·utivt vict prealdent,
affective Oct . 1, and namad 101vld
Ginsberg his repla ct mant . Mariner
will continua working 11 an advit ·
e r.
NEW YORK METS--Acllvatod OF
Darryl Hamilton from the t 5-day
disabled list. Designated INF Man
Franco for assignment.
PHILADELPHIA PHtLLtES-Actl ·
vated RHP Wayne Gom.aa from the
15 · day dlaabled list. Optioned AHP
Clift Politte to Scranton of the
International League .
BASKETBALL

•

50 Cent\

tlon

NBA- Named Jim· Young senior
vice president - human retourcta .
CLEVELAND
CAVALIERS-Named
Keith
Smut ass is tant
coach -directOr of player develop menl .
LOS
ANGELES
CLIPPEFIS-Signed F Oarius Mlln. 0 Kayon
Dooling and G Quentin Richardaon .
ORLANDO MAGIC-Ae ·si gnad C
John Amaechi.
VANCOUVER
GRIZZLIES -Signed G Damon Jones .
,OOTIIALL
National Football Lea1u•
ATLANTA FALCONS-Waived CB
Dwayne S1ukes and WA Steve
Vagedea .
CINCINN,TI BENGALS - Agraad
1o terms wi1 h CB Mark Roman on a
four · yaar contract.
DALLAS COWBOYS--Signed TE
Ri c key Brady and DB Hurley Tarv ~
er. Aeleaaed AB Chryl Ch1.1kwuma.
LB Bernard Rusk and TE Brian
Rocha .
DETROIT
LIONS--Signod
OE
Rober1 Porcher to a four-year contract extension .
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Signod
RB Rafael Cooper. Waived S A•·r
Austin.
HOCK!Y
National Hoo'l llty League
D&lt;'LLAS
STARS- Signed
FIW
Jer&amp; Lehtinen to a four · ~alir con·

tract.
EDMONTON
OILERS-S i gned
Centre Todd Marchant to a two year contract .
NEW VORK ISLANDERS-Named
Jason Lagnese manager of med ia
relations and Linda Statkevlcua
premium seat coordinator.

1970 plane crash. It, too, should
be ready by opening day.
A promo for the PBS documentary ·• From Ashes to Glory"
was shown during the press luncheon.
The two-hour feature, which
chronicles Marshall football from
the plane crash of 1970 to the
team's recent achievements, will
air in November on West Virginia
Public Television.
West said that fans will notice
some changes when the new season begins.
Roving vendors will bring
concessions to the fans in the
stands this season.
Also, smoking will no longer be
permitted within the stadium.
New restroom facilities will also
be available.
West said'that the university has
adopted a new re-entry policy for
home games.
Fans will have their hands
stamped inside the stadium. Upon
re-entry, fans must display the
hand stamp and their ticket.

.

track about the crashes.
"We're not aware of anything
we did wrong," Triplett said.
NASCAR has taken steps to
help drivers avoid stuck throttles.
The stock car sanctioning body
has told its Winston Cup teams to
install a stop on the car's throttle
assembly and an on- otT switch on
the steering wheel , withm reac h
of the driver's thumb.
Though tio conclusiOns have
been reached, there has been con-

Hometown Newspaper

MHirliPI"''' · Pr,rnProy Ohro

VnlumP Sl. NumbPr S4

Nallon'al Baallttball Aeaocla ·

ankle and injured his groin.
Jones and Wally Joyner drove in .
"Unbelievable," Jordan said. two runs apiece.
"It's been ..a frustrating year for
The Reds also hurt themselves
me.
with some ragged innings. Dmitri
The same goes for the Reds. Young's error in l~ft set up an
who remained six games behind unearned run in the first, no one
St. Louis in the NL Central after covered seco nd base on a come-.
losing for the sixth time in seven back grounder to Dessens in the
games. Rafael Furcal had three third an d Ashby's squeeze bunt
hits off Elmer Dessens (5-2) scored a run in the fourth.
the leadoff hitter's third straight
"We j ust gave them too many
three-hit game - and Andruw outs," manager Jack McKeon said.

Broncos had that option.
"I hadn't seen that happen to
any other player who held out.
Apparently, it's in every NFL contract," Pryce said. "They said
they're not going to do that. But
they pointed it out to me."
Redskins
Eleven days after the death of
his father, Darrell Green returned
to the Washington Redskins . He
didn't want to come back. "I pray
you haven't been through this,"
Green said Tuesday. "When you 'rc
. with your fa mily and you're
grieving. you're in a hole. There's
nothing outside of that hole. My
pastor called and said 'You've got
to come home.' You have no
energy. vI OU don •t care...
A seven-time Pro Bowl selection, the 40-year-old Green has
always ran ked God first, family

Melp County"s

second and football third.
"To play the game, that doesn't
mean a lot to me," Green said.
"My dad is my dad, and this is just
a JOb."
Giants
Pete Mitchell had surgery on
his left knee Tuesday, and there is
a chance the starting tight end
might be ready to play by the second week of the season.
Mitchell did not tear any ligaments in the knee,.but did stretch
one, D r: Russell Warren told
coac h Jim Fassel after the surgery
at the H os pital for Special
Surgery in New York C ity.
"He did have a bone bruise, but
a 5;1fe target is four weeks," Fassel
!;lid. "He'll be ou t the first game
and maybe we'll have him after
that. The news was about as good
as we could have.''
siderable specu lation that the
crashes at NHIS that killed Petty
and Irwin were the result of stuck
throttles.
Petty. a 19-year-old fourthgeneration race driver, died May
12 in a crash in Turn 3 on the
1.058-mile oval speedway during
a practice for a Busch Grjnd
National race. Irwin, a regular in
the Winston Cup series, was
killed in a crash during practice
on July 7 at nearly the same spot.

Eastem
seek to

profidency

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Auto, V6, Power Moon Roof, Loaded,

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19911080 ES_CORJ lX
#40206
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Sport, 34,484 Miles

1996 COLN TOWN CAR
Signature Series
#A05368
Auto, V8, AC, Leather, Loaded

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1995 CHRYSLER CONCORD
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1994

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BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

FEATURED

ARnsr-

Middleport
native Juanita
Lodwick will be
featured in an
art show and
sale to be held
at the Riverbend Arts
Council during
Saturday's
Honey Bear
Festival. She is
pictured with
some of the
works that will
be offered at
the sale. (Brian
J. Reed photo) ·

of the Fourth Grade 0 PT before
being promoted to the fifth
grade.
The district hopes that a new
$62,000 phonics-based reading
program for elementary' studeQts,
which will be put into place in
the new scho?l yea~, will also h~lf
1mprove reading skills.
~;.
The CIP sets forth three goals
for scores improvement: ro mec:l
2.5 times the total number 4f
standards for the previous year, ~
show 2.5 points growth on
thirds of the indicators not JtG,t
the previous year, and to , sh~
sufficient annual growth to ens~
the district will move to the ne,g,
highest designation as requirec\.: :
The three-year CIP a;ls~
addresses the need for interveiiztion programming to add~
deficiencies for individual stflo.
. •

TUPPERS
PLAINS
Benchmarks have been set and
strategies have been formulated in
attempt to increase Ohio Proficiency Test scores in the Eastern
Local School District.
A final public hearing was held
Wednesday night on the district's
Continuous Improvement Plan.
. The plan is a requirement from
the Ohio Department of Education for those districts whose test
scores and other determining factors , or "standards," placing them
in an "academic watch" or "academic emergency" status.
Eastern, as hav~ the Southern
and Meigs Local school districts,
has formulated the CIP with faculty and administration, parents, a
student representative and members of the community.
dents.
-:•
The plan was reviewed last
"The students in our disti(\ir
night by Rick Edwards, Eastern will master the learning pr&lt;ib;
High School principal and CIP ciency test at or above the stare
coordinator for the district.
designated standard for the pa~:.
That plan calls for the increase ticular grade level," the CIP says;
in mathematics, science and readThe goa!s ·include the develop•
ing scores at die fourth, sixth, ment of an ljeffective" intervenprimarily a still-life artist, and the works that
Will be displayed Saturday will include a numninth and 12th grade levels ..
tion program, strengthming o'f
The OPT alro includes writing the professional development
bel:-of still life paintings in pastel and in pencil.
·
and citizenship !ections, but East- programs and increasing involveThose pencil drawings represent works that
ern students have consisten~ly ment of parents and the commuscored
well on writing portions at nity in the_education of their stu~
to
be
completed
in
were originally intented
all levels.""Edwards said that the dents.
color, bmwhiCnLodwick · likeajusc ilieway C IP team committed to improvthey are.
A student mentoring program,
ing math, science and reading, full use of Federal Title I and
"I'm telling a story in my paintings, and
v. here the most serious problems other programs, use of outside
when the story is told, I stop working," Lods~e·m to lie.
wick said." In those paintings, I felt that I had
sourees for intervention, departEdwards said reading scores, mentalized math and science protold the story."
while they met state goals at som e grams and enrichment programs
Lodwick's paintings, most of which will be
levels, was included as a target will also be implemented by the
shown in distinctive custom frames, will be
area
because of the Fourth Grade district through the three-year
affordably priced - beginning in the $30
Guarantee, a new statewide poli- CIP period.
range, and topping out at $I 00.
cy
which goes into effect this
In addition to her paintings, Lodwick will
"The school campus will serve
year. That guarantee requires stu-also offer original Christmas cards and other
. dents to pass the reading portion
items that she has designed.
PluH -IEiriWn. ..... AJ

twO:-

Native artist to be featured Saturday
Display set in conjunction
With Honey Bear Festival
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

IDDLEPOR:T - An art
show and sale featuring the
works ofJuanita Lodwick, a
Meigs County native now
living in Galveston, Texas,
will be held Saturday in conjunction with
Middleport's Honey Bear Festival.
Lodwick will show about 40 works at the
show and sale, which will be held from 11
a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Arts Council
on South Second Avenue.
The show is sponsored by the Arts CounciL

Lodwick, who Works in pastels and watercolor&gt;, began painting in 1972, and studied in ·
Van Wert -witlt"WeH-Imown ·anist ·Fr.mk Lilijgren (who trdined with world-famous iUustrationist Norman Rockwell before teaching at
an ~rts instintte in New York City) from 198 I
to 1985.
--She now teaches painting in her Galveston
ho me, and actively markets her paintings in
the Galveston area at art shows and in upscale
restaurants.

Like Rockwell and her teacher, Lodwick
consider&gt; herself a realistic painter.
" I am a realistic artist. I'm not a futuristic
painter or an impressionist," she said. "When I
paint a house it looks like a house. A duck is a
duck."
Her works include portraiture and landsca pe paintings, but Lodwick considers het&gt;elf

••" I

~

Board requests 'suitable use' plan for buildinp
.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - If the Village of Middleport can com e up with co ntinued
suitable use for the three Meigs Local
school buildings located there and scheduled to be vacated when the new sc hools
are completed, then the Meigs Local
Board of Education will transfer ow nership to the village.
A resolution to that effect was passed
by unanimous vote at Wednesday night's
board meeting.
The resolution specifi es that the board

and the village must agree as to "continued suitable use" before the buildings can
be transferred , and the Ohio School
Facilities Commission must be in accord.
The new eleme ntar y and middle
school buildings will not go to bid until
spring and will not · be ready for occupancy for two years after that. but the
Middleport Planning Commission is
already exploring how to use the buildings for economic development.
Last week, the commission began the
process by inviting in Don Linder of
Shade, president of the R enaissance

Artisans to demonstrate
each day of county fair
crafiers associa[ion is considering
a craft mall and are looking for a
POMEROY Appalachian building that will accommodate
artisans can be seen every day of not on ly th e mall , but offi ces and
the Meigs County Fair demon- span· fo r business training classes.
strating their crafts at the booth of
Plans have been completed for
the Pomeroy Merchantl Associa- the fi shing tournament on Aug.
tion in the commercial building 20, C hapman sa id. She said merabove the grange hall .
chants are being asked to conAnni e Chapman , president. tnbute small gifts to be given to
announced at Wednesday's meet- the children participating in a
ing at City National Bank that a casting derby. G1fts may be left at
demonsrration schedule is being ·
C hapman Shoes.
completed.
The Stern w heel Festival set for
Wares of the various artisans
Sept 2H 10 30 , and Expo 2000,
will be for sale, along with some
Sept. 16 and 17 were noted, as
items from Pomeroy busim:sses.
were the various holiday promoThe demonstrations ';Viii take
tions planned by the association .
place from 6-8 p.m . ~a ch evening.
It was reported that the local
PIHse see Flllr, Pas• AJ
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

Inspections, for a preliminary evaluation
of the buildings.
Meanwhile, planning . for construction
of the new sch oo ls moved forward at last·
night 's meeting when the board
approved design work presented by representatives of the architectural firms.
Schematic designs of the new elementary and middle schools were shown and
renovation of the Meigs High School
was discussed .
Cost of the total project is
$32,528,765, which includes the elementary school to be built along Ohio

Sentinel
2 Sadlo.-u - 12 Pal•
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124 near Rutland, and the middle school SEOVEC for $18,477.
to be constructed near the high school, as
Student handbook.s for the elementary,
middle and high schools were approved
well as the high school renovation.
The next phase, according to the archi- as submiued, and a contqct W&gt;S renewed
tects. w1ll be the design development · with OnSite LLC to provide drug testing
where plans will becom e more detailed services for the district.
The board also approved a contra.ct
and will include types of materials and
with
Enron Energy Services to provi4.;
fini shes to be used.
During the meeting, the board the "self help natural gas program" for
approved a contract with the Athens- the district for the upcoming school
Meigs Educational Service Center to year; raised lunch prices to $2.25 for
provide services related to special educa- adults; and turned over all vending
tion for this school year in the estimated machines at Meigs Middle School and
amount of $394,908. and to the COGPluH - Bulldlnp, Pap AJ

Stonn results in power outages

Toclay's

!:;al~nda[

'

Bl, ~
A3

lotterie~
OHIO
Pick 3: 6-2- 1; Pick 4: 2-4-4-0
Super Lotto: 1-4-S-7-14-47

Kicker: 0-9-S-0-8-2

\"£VA,
Daily 3: 1- 2-0 Daily 4: 3-!&gt;-6-9

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - Severe thunderstorms that ripped through
M eigs County Wednesday night
created a problem for 1,500 residents left without power until
early Thursday. .
According to Ernie Sisson,
Pomeroy manager for American
Electnc Power, pow~r outages
o c curred all over the Meigs
County area as a result of last
night's storm.
"We had trouble all over the
county last night," said Sisson.
"The severe storm resulted in a
number of downed power lines
and uprooted trees ."
" I've never seen clouds as dark
as those," added Sisson.•"' lt. ~eem s
that they kept rolling in, bringing

PleaH·-

.

Stonn, Pap AJ

POWER OUT - A tree on High Street In Pomeroy uprooti!d during
Wednesday's storm fell across the street into the porch area of a
house taking with all of the utility lines and curtailing traffic until
evening. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
,
.

•
.

•

�--

···-

--- --

.,.--'----

,

· ~-

~ ~ ~- ~-

..
Thursday, August 10, 2000

t

BUCKEYE

Contrador pleads innocent in cas_e linked to Traficant

RIEFS

ently ~unrelated to a thunderstorm whic h rolled off Uke Erie
earlier in !he evening.
Six police boats and two C oast
G\lml boats md a Coast Guard
helicopter from Detroit were
involved in the search . The
searchers were prepared to work
through !he night, Sandy said.

C LEVELAND (AP) ~/\ contractor accused
of lying to a grand j ury ii111etigating U.S. Rep.
James A. Tnlicmt pleaded innocent Wednesday
as a defense attorney said !he contractor and
congressman were "lifelong buddies" with no
criminal conduct in their relationship.
Arthur David Sugar appeared before U.S.
Magistrate Judge David Perelman to deny
charges of peljury before a gnnd jury. obstruct. ingjustice md witness t2rnpering.
Sugar lw uknown this guy (fnlicmt) since
he was I 0 years old," defense lawyer Patrick

DAYTON (AP} - . 1\ federal
jllry has rejected ci.Ums of excessive force and wrongful death
:lgQirut: two D&gt;yton police officers in a 1991 Uul shooting.
~ Norman R. Hughes JL was
shot outside Sam's Food &amp; Bar.
Attorneys for Hughes' mother,
Emma Manson, claimed that a
shootout had ceased a minute
AVON (AP) ~ A man was
before officers Peter J. Bogumill
and Michael A. Thomas arrived charged Wednesday with Wductand !hat a gun was tossed inro a ing a woman who escaped by
car driven by Hughes, an Minno- jumping from a ·car going 60
cent bystander," to make the mph on a highway, police said
Garlin Kinnebrew, 33, ofToleshooting appear justified.
In addition to Hughes of Day- do, appeared in Avon Lake
ton, Bruce Napitr, 18, of Tror- Municipal Coun on abduction,
wwd was killed in !he shooting. gross sexual imposition and
~ehicular
assault
·At the time, police said Bogu- aggravated
charges.
mill and Thomas rode int6 the
Kinnebrew was in the Lorain
middle of a shootout, were shot at
Counl)l
jail Wednesday afternoon
as !hey left their cruiser and
!l'rurned fire. The officers hit at after he did not post S1 ;&gt;&lt;J,OOO
least three of four men who were bond, a court clerk said.
Kinnebrew is accused of
either in or near a white Mustang
Wducting
a 24-year-old woman
parked in the bar's lot, police said
Cleveland home j ust
from
her
- In d®ng arguments ·wednesday in U.S. District Court, attor- before 6 p.m. Tuesday, said Avon
ney Neil Freund, representing the police ChiefJohn Vilagi.
Witnesses told police !hat they
city, told the jury that the officers
saw
the two fighting in a car on
" will never, ever get OYer this," '
just as Manson uwill newr get westbound I ntersute 90 near
Avon. The woman jumped about
over losing a son to gunshots."
Freund argued that there " were 6:20 p.m. from the car onto the
no innocent bystanders~ at the . side of the road. Kinnebrew then
hit a minivan, crossed the tiJedian
scene that night:
• ·Bogumill and Thomas were into !he eastbound lanes md was
~doing their duty and trying to hit by a car.
T he woman was in satisfactory
~lOp the gunplay;' Freund told the
condition
Wednesday at MetroJUry.
H ealth Medical Center in Cleveland with arm and head injuries
and several scrapes and bruises, a
hospital spokesman said.
Kin·nebrew was treated for
· cLEVELAND (AP) ~ The minor injuries, Vilagi said.
~uyahoga
County elections
He would not release any other
~rd. which ran out of ballots details Wednesday of the alleged
and IOSI some votes in the March abduction o r the reldtionship
primary, fired 20 employees between J(jnn ebrew and the
\Yednesday and announced plans wonun.
to demote about 15.
Avon is located about I 0 miles
·, " In
addition , the
board west of Cleveland.
announced the hiring of 14 new-

Woman len ·

from abdudor

The board had previously
fl!'OUnced plms to trim its 123t'!Jember staff to 1OS but decided
••
• a 115-member staff in view of
~e number of employees who
~ handicapped or approachi n~
O;:tirement.
::"We are not laying people off
~~ause we believe !hat they did
flmething wrong," said board
~airman John Hairston. but
~cause ·structural
changes
a:quired a smaller staff
:• :'it was clear that we needed to
~d4ce our staff and increase the
D'illlevels of our employees," said
~rd member Thomas Coyne,
Rlayor of suburban Brook Park.
••
•, In the past two years, fo ur
employees were disciplined when
lallots cast by 385 unregistered
~oters were counted, md 6 ,400
Corers were never notified that
Jieir polling places had been
~oved. In March, some precincts
!!tin out of ballots and lost votes
were found weeks later.

••••
I

•! · Wstrue:•n
..•· bites dog
t

: t=ANTON (AP) ~ A man
s~spected of driving • car with a
s!:,1en license plate struggled 'vith
officers and bit a police dog on
Jie n05e, authorities said.
: T he German &lt;hepherd, Bear,
\!idn't require medical attention
9u t Richard J. Nelson, 40. was
treated at Aultman Hospiul for
mi nor injuries suffered in the
struggle.
Police said N elson Oed on foot
Wednesday and then struck the
Qog on the head and bit him on
~he nose. The arresting officer.
~teve Swank, was injured slightly.
Nelson' was charged with
(eceiving stolen property and
~~"'ulti ng an offi cer, Swank.

Search on for
missing boater
; M ARBLEHEAD (AP) - A
$5-yea r-old man was missing
Wednesday night after falling
from a pleasure boat into Lake
~rie, the Coast G uard said.
: T he man, whose name wasn 't
!-leased, apparently !ell off a 37lOot pleasure boat between Mar~lrhead and Kelley• Island . Coalt
t.uard Lt. llernard Sandv
'rhe
boat had leftI Put- in-Bay on
.
South Bass Island.
Sandy sa1d the mcidcnt appar-

D'Angelo said outside court. "They're lifelong
buddies. There was no hanky panky."
Sugar, president of l:loney C reek Contracting Co. Inc., •was accused laS! mo nth of having
his secretary create fiaudulent billing invoices in
April and May for work done o n Tnficant's
farm in the You ng&lt;rown area.
Sugar is accused of then telling a grand jury
on May 23 the invoices were genuine. He
allegedly ordered the falce invoices after being
questioned by FBI agents about his work on the
T raficant farm. ·

Firefighten battle over
who gets
for rescue

TOlEDO (AP) -The FBI is clurity had been deposited into a
investigating a former United personal bank account.
Way employee who is suspected
Carl Spicocchi, head of the
of stealing nearly $300,000 in Toledo FBI office, confirmed the
donations.
investigation, but did not elabo.
The money ~· most of it from rate.
workplace donations ~ lw not
The alleged theft appears to be
been found, Robert Lucas, presi- the work of j ust one employee,
dent of the United Way · of
Lucas said. Investigators said the
Greater Toledo, said Wednesday. It
worker, whose name has not been
will be repuced by in!urance and
released, lud access to checks that
a gift from KeyBank.
The charity supports 69 agen- were coming into !he charity.
She lud been employed at the
cies that provide programs such as
child care, preschool and adult United Way for about 18 months.
The agency had not conducteducation classes.
ny background checks on the
Lucas said the employee was
e or any of its other ·new
fired after KeyBank discovered emp
that a check made out to the workers,
said.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
family's &lt;lesire to meet the fire fighters who rescued a girl from a
1994 apartment blaze has
prompted a dispute between .
Cincinnati's fire chief and a former colleague over who deserves
credit for saving the young5ter.
Walter Smith and his daughter,
the re-scued Beverly Hector, now
6, went to a city firehouse Sarurday to meet a firefighter idenri-

Gan leader sentenced
to li e in '94 slayin.g
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ 1\ man
who police say for years has led a
gang that terrorized an East Side
neighborhood no longer will
walk those familiar streets wearing his seemingly ever- present
smile.
Ronald Dawson, 33 , was sentenced Wednesday to life in
prison for the shotgun killing of a
man six years ago.
He was arrested exactly six
years after the April 18, 1994,
slaying. Police and witnesses said a
masked Dawson and two other
people burst into "- J&gt;a!!Y at an .
apartment where a drug dealer
lived, and Dawson fired a shotgun
into the face of James McKinney,
24 , a guest.
Five women were wounded.
Judge Dan Hogan followed the
recommendation of a Franklin
C .&gt; unty Conunon Pleas Court
jury in rejecting the death penalry.
Dawson will not be eligible for
parole for at least 43 years, which
includes a three-year sentence for
using a gun and sentences for

Ex-deputy pleads
to dlarge
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ A former deputy in the office of Fairfield Counry Sherjff Gary
DeMastry said he didn't think he
had done anything wrong but
pleaded 'gu ilry to a reduced
charge to "get this behind me."
D avid Peck, a former lieutenant, pleaded guilty Tuesday to
a misdemeanor count of
obstru cting public business in
connectiOn with the on going
public-corruption case involving
DeM astry.
The charge had been reduced
from a felony count of theft in'
office. A special prosecutor also
agreed to dismi ss felony counts of
perjury and filing an in complete
income-tax return for 1997 and a
misdemeanor count of falsifica-

The indictmen.t say&lt; the grand jury '"'
investigating the receipt of bnbt-s and b'TJllllU&lt;"I
by a public o fficial. Whil e the indictment doc'n't name !he official, D 'Angelo has \aid ~ and
repeated in w urt Wednesday ~ that it i1 Traficant, a Democrat represe nting a str ip of northeast Ohio along the Pennsylvania state line.
Traficant has not denied he is the target of
!he probe and has said repeatedl y since January
!hat he expects to be indicted.

FBI investigating suspected
theft from United Way in Toledo
'

Elections board
fires 20

comers.

gang, called the X-Clan, like an
old- time mobster, patrOlling the
stree ts of his poor neighborhood
and u sing violence and intimidation to get what he wanted.
Police . believe the garig is
responsible for more than I 0 slaying5.
Throughout the three- week
trial , Dawson usually was grinning and appeared jovial, greeting
police officers who were set to
testify against him with ' a hearty
" Hello,_boys!"

fied as the principal rescuer. The
father said he wanted to thank Lt.
Harold Wri ght fo r saving the girl.
who was 1 w hen till' fire
occurred.
But others were involved in
Beverly's rescue from a tllirdOoor apartm en t in December
t994,said Dee rfield Township fire
chief Bill Kramer. H e was an
assistant C inci nnati fire chief at
the scene of the five-abrrn lire.

Tough Times Don't Last
Tough People Do

Glendon E. Faulk
LONG BOTTOM - Glendon E. Faulk., 74, Long Bottom, died
Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2000 in C amden Clark Hospital , Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Arrangements wiU be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.

POMEROY ~The following Christian Harmon, Racine; Thomas
Meig5 County residents have Edward Ball, Syracuse; Florence
been selected as potential grand · E. Baker, Middleport; Shari Lee
jurors for the September term of Bobb, Racine; Carol Lee Lemley,
Middleport; Cecil D. Giles, Albany;
the Meigs County Grand Jury:
Ernest
E. Griffin, Long Bottom; Geri
NELSONVILLE - David E. Huddleston, 43 , Nelsonville, died
Lee
Wahori,
Pomeory; Harold E.
Raberta Caldwell, Syracuse;
Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2000 at his residence.
Rose,
Racine;
Kevin Edward
Born Feb. 9, 1957, he was the son of David L. Huddleston and Mary Donald L. Headley, Reedsville; Romine, Pomeroy; Gloria Jean
A. Holter Huddleston of Racine, and was a veteran of the U.S. Air Ronald Mac VanMeter, Pomeroy; Craig~ Middleport; Thereon Arthur
Matthew Lee King, Racine; Goldie
Fo rce.
L. Gilmore, Pomeroy; Janet Lynn Johnson, Racine; Jack L. Bostick,
H e was e mployed as a certified LPN and was also a member of the Howard, Middleport; John S. Jr., Racine; Paul E. Evans, Racine;
Racin e United Methodist Church.
••
Thomas, Pomeroy; Hazel I. Lewis, Archie Carl Rose, Long Bottom;
He was preceded in death by his grandparents.
Rutland; Christi M. Brumfield, Mid- Renee Richard, Pomeroy; Thomas
Surviving in addition to his parents are his former wife, Lori Wager dleport; Isaac M. Mohler, Pomeroy; Wesley Burson, Shade; Dustin Ray
Millhone, Reedsville; M. Thomas
of Illinois; a son, Jesse David Huddleston of Zion, Ill.; a daughter, Dennis L. Facemyer, Jr., MiddleDooley, Middleport; Rosemary
Marie lynn Huddleston of Zion; a brother and sister-in-law, Michael port; Virgie Mae Buckley, Coolville; Pierce, Racine; Melvin L.' Lee ,
Jeanie SUe Weeks, Guysv~le; DloC . (C amellia) Huddleston of Racine; and a niece.
rah Ellen Evans,. Lar;~gsville; Linda Pomeroy; Jean Irene Sandy,
A memorial service will be I p.m. Monday in Letart Falls Cemetery, G. Pickrell, Middleport; Eva Lucille Langsville; Steven D. Craig, Midwith the R ev. Kenny Baker officiating. There will be no visitation or Diehl, Racine; Dencil R. Hudson II, dleport; Chris W. Beer, Racine;
calling hours. Arrangements are by Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy; Gary Ray Canterbury, II, Jonathan Marsh Perrin, Middleport;
Langsville; Hattie Mae Rockhold, Carta F. McKinney, Middleport.
Carin S . Taylor, Middleport;
Portland.
Gina M. Thomas, Pomeroy; Cassie Dawn Rose, Long Bottom;
Jeffrey Todd Welch, Rutland;
POMEROY ~ Miriam Nau, Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, died Charles Cundiff, Pomeroy; Ernest . Charles Emmitt Dailey. Reedsville;
E. Halley, Pomeroy; AnnaL. Dailey,
Wednesday, Aug, 9, 2000 in Rockspring5 Rehabilitation Center. Portland; Frederick C. Johnson, Sherry A. Laudermm, Racine;
Arrangements wil~ be announced by Ewing Funeral Home, Sr. , Shade; Fae K Craig, Pomeroy; James Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy.
Blanche Junaita Smart, Albany; Cindy L. Lambert, Pomeroy;
Jaylene
Ohlinger,
Josephine Lynn Hill, Long Bottom; Wendy
Pomeroy;
Leona
T.A.
Belcher,
David William Fox, Racine; Gary
Pomeroy;
Melinda
R.
Karschnik,
Lee Johnson, Pomeroy; Krista L.
Hired were Debbie Cremeans Sinclair, Pomeroy; Ronald Lee Pomeroy; Thomas E. WMe, Long
as a personal assistant aide to a CJark, Racine; Michelle Dawn · Bottom; Clara A. Baer, Racine;
handicapped child on a personal Ramsburg, Pomeroy; Christi Anne Melissa J. Sm~h. Racine; Leonard
services
contract; Gloria Van- Lisle, Pomeroy; Millard Swartz, H. Koenig, Jr., Pomeroy; Vicki D.
PageAl
Reeth as a tutor for a health Coolville; Opal v. Morris, Racine; Smith, Pomeroy; Laurie A. Barber,
M eigs High School to the cafete- handicapped student at a rate of John David Roush, Racine; Patri- Reedsville; Naomi W. Neville.
cia A. Ervin, Racine; Michael L. Racine; Christopher D. Haning,
na program .
$15 per hour not to exceed five Neutzling, Pomeroy; Grant L. Bor- Albany; Linda L. Haley, Middleport;
An additional custodial position hours a week; Rick Ash as boys ing, Reedsville; Wendell N. Clark, Terry Wayne Wyatt, Middleport;
for the district to be split between junior varsity basketball coach for Racine; Phyllis J . Wooten, · Brenda Jean Haggy, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy Elementary and Meig5 the year; Sean Walton as a French Pomeroy; Kenneth R. Searles, Dallas VICtor Hill, Racine; ChristoHigh School was created, along teacher with board member Scott Middleport; Justin Gray Jeffers, pher Thomas Wever, Syracuse;
with a three -hour cook/ cashier Walton abstaining; and lea Ann Middteport; Rebecca Ann Foley, Mark M. Davis, Middleport; Charles
Paul Gerard, Middleport; Patricia L.
position at Meigs High School King as a kindergarten teacher at Pomeroy.
Christina R. Blackston, Pomeroy; Struble, Syracuse; and John D.
and a full - time computer and Middleport.
Larry C. Powell, Pomeroy; John Schuler, Rutland
network technician position.
Contracts for extended service
Action was taken on personnel were approved for Carl Wolfe,
matters includin g accepting resig- OWA instructor, 20 days, and
nations from Debbie Sebert, a Timothy Simpson , vocational
teacher at Bradbury Elementary; agriculture teacher, an additional
Gary Walker, computer and net- 20 days for a total of 50 days.
work technician; Kim Oliphant as
Attending were Superintendent
·
a substitute teacher and aide; and Bill Buckley, Scott Walton, Wayne
Lisa Averion as a teacher. A year's . Davis, Norman Humphreys, and
Sunset tonight will be at 8:35
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
medical leave of absence was Roger .Abbott, board members,
High pressure building into and sunrise on Friday at 6:40a.m.
granted to Connie Gilkey.
and Matk E. Rhonemus, treasurer. the area should provide partly
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Becoming mostly
cloudy and dry conditions on
clear.
Areas of fog developing,
Friday and through the weekend,
locally dense at times. Lows in the
forecasters said.
tion.)
Temperatures will climb into lower 60s. Northwest wind S. to
Two years ago, Eastern met the mid-80s each day through 10 mph.
eight of the 27 standard• set forth Sunday, th~ National - Weather
Fri-d a}C"Are;rs.. of- dense fog
by the state, and last year met 10. Service said. Lows wiU be in the early, then partly cloudy. Highs 80
PageAl
Superintendent beryl Well said 60s.
to 85.
as the cente r of conununity-wide that preliminary figures released
Friday night...Mostly clear.
The next chance of thunderlearning, where students, family earlier this week indicate that the storms will come on Monday.
Lows around 60.
memb ers and business members district will meet 14 standards on
Extended forecast:
Thunderstorms
developed
can work together toward devel- the next report card, placing it in over most~~-· the tri-county o. n
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs
the "continuous improvement .. Wednesday, . me producing high in the mid 80s.
opin g community literacy."
The greatest need tor improve- designation .
Sunday... Mostly dear. Lows in
winds, hea
rain and hail. The
Edwards said high school math NWS said rainfall amounts the lower 60s and highs in the
ment is in math and science, the
CIP says, with the greatest weak- scores are on the rise, and that 72 ranged from . 50 of an inch to 5 upper.80s.
ness reported on the 12th grade percent of last year's eighth inches.
, Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
level. (Pass ing only the ninth graders passed the science portion
Some areas experienced power in the mid 60s and highs around
grad e test is required fo r gradua- of their test.
90.
outages from downed wires.

David E. Huddleston

Mariam Nau

. Buildings
from

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purchase a car or truck if you can
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vALLEY wEATHER

Drier conditions expected

Eastem
from

Dawson asked the j ury Tuesday
in an un sworn statement, which
la.sted longer than an hour, to
spare his life because he's innocent .
" It's hard for me to put myself
in someth in g that I didn't have
anytlling to do with ," he said .
Authori ties say Dawson led the

Peck's plea was accepted by visiting Judge Richard Markus in
Franklin Cou nty Conun on Pleas
Cou rt instead of Fairfield County because M arku s was hearing
another case in Columbus.

MART
·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publ is hed ever y 8f1crnoon, Monday through
Friday , Il l CaurJ St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

O hio Val ley Pu blishing Company. Seco nd
class postage p11 id at Po muny, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohio
Newspape r Associati on.
pOSTMASTER: Semi addr ess corrections to
The Daily Sentine l. I ll Court 51., Pomeroy,
Ohio

choice

SURSC RIPTION RATES

savmgs
brand .. .

One

One Yea r..

MAIL SU BSCRIPTI ONS
In side Meigs Count)'
IJ Weeks ..............
127.30
26 Weeks . ...................... .. .............. .. 553.82

52 WeckL. ...... ...... -.

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SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP)
- George W. Bush is telling Californians he wiU battle for every
vote he can get in their powerhouse state, dismissing as Democratic wishful thinking the suggestion that he might write it off the
way his father did eight years ago.
Bush's rival turned aUy, Sen. John
McCain, was joining him in Salinas

on Thursday for three days ofWest
Coast campaigning together.
At a railroad depot rally in San
Luis Obispo, Bush scoffed at the
idea he will wind up backing away
from California, rather than spend
the time and money to challenge
AI Gore all fall in a state where the
Democrats hold the advantage.
"Somebody said, 'You know,

Fair

for completion Nov. 27 .
Several members expressed dissatisfaction with the timing of the
project because of its impact on
holiday business. Merchants said
both the street and the sidewalk
will be tOrn up to install the lines.
Wright , a Pomeroy councilman,
agreed that th e timing was bad for
tearing up downtown streets.
C hapmansaid that efforts are
continuing to acquire land at the
corner o f Main and Syc:imot'e
from Rite Aid for a park w hich
would feature the Keystone Arch
from the Wilde rmuth Brewer on
Condor Street.

from PageAl
C hapman said, the parade I?
kick off the C hristmas shopping
seas.;n will come on the Sunday
after Thanksgiving, and that To ney
Dingess has agreed to serve as
chairman again this year.
George Wright said a contract
has been awarded for the installation of new water lines in downtown Pomeroy.
The work, he said , wiU begin
soo n, an d the project is scheduled

Stonn

frQm PageAl
both high wi nds and intense
lightning with them."
Sisson said all main lines in the
coun ty have bee n repaired and that
a total of eight people around the
area arc •till wi thout power.

" We hope to get everything
completely repaired by noo n
today," said Sisson . " AEP crews
have been out all ni ght working
as quickly and safely as possible to
restore service to all customers."
AEP crew s are still assessing the
damage brought on by the storm.
In addition to power outa ge s,
cabl e and telepho ne service were
disrupte d in so me areas.

c,., ,. ,. ,,

•

\

•

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
.

Licenses issued

on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in Meig5
County Probate Court to
Richard Lee Wamsley II, 22, and
Carrie Elaine Williams, 23,
Racine.

12:14 p.m., Sycamore Street,
assisted by Rutland , Robert
Hoskins, treated;
12:27 p.m., BP Station, Mid"
dleport, Donna Easton, treated;
8:27 p.m., Ohio 7, Eric Rubble, St. Joseph's Hospital;
10:40 p.m., Veterans Memorial
POMEROY ~ Foreclosure Hospiul, Gene Hall, Holzer
actions have been filed in Meig5 Medical Cent~r.
MIDDLEPORT
County Common Pleas Court by
12:56 p.m., Ohio 7, motor
Farmers Bank and Saving5 Co.,
Pomeroy, against Jeff N. Stone, vehicle accident, assisted by CenPomeroy, alleging default on a tral Dispatch, Michnei Pierce,
loan agreement in the amount of HMC.
RUTLAND
$2,556.87, and by the Bank of
I I a.m., Broadway Avenue,
New York, doing business as The
Money Store, New York, N.Y., Helen Young, Pleasant Valley Ho,;..
against Dannie Jacks, Pomeroy, pital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
and others , alleging default on a
5:55 p.m., Texas Road, assisted
mortgage agreement in the
by Central Dispatch, Terry Brewamount of$25,218.57.
er,HMC;
8:22 p.m., Ohio 7, Samantha
Layne, St. Joseph's;
I 0:06 p.m. , Dorst Road;
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services Robert McDaniel, Camden•
answered nine calls for assistance Clark Memorial Hospital.

Foreclosures filed

Units log 9 calls

.'

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-35).
Akzo-43\

Gannett -

Rocky Boots- 5),

AmTechJSBC- 41\
Ashland Inc. - 33~.
AT&amp;T- 30lo
Bank One .:... 34 ~.
Bob Evans - 16,.
BorgWarner - 351.
Champion- 2~

Halley Davidson - 44 "·

Sears- 30~~.

Charming Shops - 5l.
City HoldlnQ- n
Federal M&lt;&gt;g_ul - 1O'&gt;
Flrs1ar- 24'•

55l.
General Electric- 55"·

AD Shell - 59\

Kmart-7'1.
Kroger - 21 l.

Shoney's-l.

Wai-Man- 53~

Lands End - 30~.

Wendy's -18\

Ll!l.- 20~

Worthington - 11 l.

16~

Oak HMI Financial-

OVB-26),

Dally S1ock repone are 1he
4 p.m. closl.ng quotes ol
1he previous day's Iran•:

BBT.-26,.
Peoples - 14'·

Premter -

s· ~.

actions,

an

. Aoci&lt;well -

provided

by

Adveot of Gallipolis.

Scramble for Scouting
set Aug. 17 at Cliffside

GALLIPOLIS- The MGM
District Scramble for Scouting
will be Aug. I 7 at 12:30 p.m . at
Cliffside Golf Course. All proceeds will benefit Boy Scouting
in Mason, Gallia and Meigs
counties.
Fees for the event are as follows: sponsorship of tee or
green, S100 (includes one participam fee for - the sponsor) ;
Eagle
sponsorship,
$250
(includes fees for four players
and tee sponsorship); individual
participation in the scramble,
$60 for non-members and SSO
for members .
Those planning on entering a
team in the event are asked to
indicate the names ofthe players
involved, their handicap and
average 18-hole score. There will
be prizes, including two holein- one holes:
Hole Number 4: $5,000 sponsored by Wiseman Insurance
Agency.
Hole Number 13: An automobile valued at $20,000 sponsored
by the new car dealers of Gallia
County ~Turnpike Ford, NorGov. Bush isn 't going to try hard in ris- N orthup Dodge, Smith
California;' he told the crowd at Buick Pontiac GMC and Gene
the end of a day of campaigning Johnson Chevrolet-Oldsmobile .
For more information and
sign - up details, call Cliffside
Golf Course at 446- golf, Tom
Me adows at 304_.675-4424,
Randy Finney at 740- 441 - 6203

740-446~

or John Matthews at
4570 or send registration ~o
MGM District Scramble for
Scouting, 516 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Bush vows to battle for California

Our main concern In 1111 slo rles Is lobe
accunle. If you know or an error in I story,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACC"'EP""I""E"'D

.,,d.

.. ... $105.56

Rlllts O ut sid e MriJl SCount y

ALL PRICES INCLUDE PAD
AND INSTALLATION

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rate changes may be tm pl cml"n tctl b)· ~.: ha n grn g
the dural ton ol· the subscnplron .

carpet fas hions ... ,
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lnnov•tlve
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exciting la minate , ce ramic tile. vinyl and wood , too .
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Prospective grand
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oth'e r lesser convictions.

ti on.

Sa Ve•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-·

Domino's Pizza
992-2124
MONDAY· THURSDAY 10:00 a.m. te) 12:00 p.m.
FRIDAY· SATURDAY 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
SUNDAY 3:00p.m. to12:00 p.m.

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Thursday, August 10, 2000

t

BUCKEYE

Contrador pleads innocent in cas_e linked to Traficant

RIEFS

ently ~unrelated to a thunderstorm whic h rolled off Uke Erie
earlier in !he evening.
Six police boats and two C oast
G\lml boats md a Coast Guard
helicopter from Detroit were
involved in the search . The
searchers were prepared to work
through !he night, Sandy said.

C LEVELAND (AP) ~/\ contractor accused
of lying to a grand j ury ii111etigating U.S. Rep.
James A. Tnlicmt pleaded innocent Wednesday
as a defense attorney said !he contractor and
congressman were "lifelong buddies" with no
criminal conduct in their relationship.
Arthur David Sugar appeared before U.S.
Magistrate Judge David Perelman to deny
charges of peljury before a gnnd jury. obstruct. ingjustice md witness t2rnpering.
Sugar lw uknown this guy (fnlicmt) since
he was I 0 years old," defense lawyer Patrick

DAYTON (AP} - . 1\ federal
jllry has rejected ci.Ums of excessive force and wrongful death
:lgQirut: two D&gt;yton police officers in a 1991 Uul shooting.
~ Norman R. Hughes JL was
shot outside Sam's Food &amp; Bar.
Attorneys for Hughes' mother,
Emma Manson, claimed that a
shootout had ceased a minute
AVON (AP) ~ A man was
before officers Peter J. Bogumill
and Michael A. Thomas arrived charged Wednesday with Wductand !hat a gun was tossed inro a ing a woman who escaped by
car driven by Hughes, an Minno- jumping from a ·car going 60
cent bystander," to make the mph on a highway, police said
Garlin Kinnebrew, 33, ofToleshooting appear justified.
In addition to Hughes of Day- do, appeared in Avon Lake
ton, Bruce Napitr, 18, of Tror- Municipal Coun on abduction,
wwd was killed in !he shooting. gross sexual imposition and
~ehicular
assault
·At the time, police said Bogu- aggravated
charges.
mill and Thomas rode int6 the
Kinnebrew was in the Lorain
middle of a shootout, were shot at
Counl)l
jail Wednesday afternoon
as !hey left their cruiser and
!l'rurned fire. The officers hit at after he did not post S1 ;&gt;&lt;J,OOO
least three of four men who were bond, a court clerk said.
Kinnebrew is accused of
either in or near a white Mustang
Wducting
a 24-year-old woman
parked in the bar's lot, police said
Cleveland home j ust
from
her
- In d®ng arguments ·wednesday in U.S. District Court, attor- before 6 p.m. Tuesday, said Avon
ney Neil Freund, representing the police ChiefJohn Vilagi.
Witnesses told police !hat they
city, told the jury that the officers
saw
the two fighting in a car on
" will never, ever get OYer this," '
just as Manson uwill newr get westbound I ntersute 90 near
Avon. The woman jumped about
over losing a son to gunshots."
Freund argued that there " were 6:20 p.m. from the car onto the
no innocent bystanders~ at the . side of the road. Kinnebrew then
hit a minivan, crossed the tiJedian
scene that night:
• ·Bogumill and Thomas were into !he eastbound lanes md was
~doing their duty and trying to hit by a car.
T he woman was in satisfactory
~lOp the gunplay;' Freund told the
condition
Wednesday at MetroJUry.
H ealth Medical Center in Cleveland with arm and head injuries
and several scrapes and bruises, a
hospital spokesman said.
Kin·nebrew was treated for
· cLEVELAND (AP) ~ The minor injuries, Vilagi said.
~uyahoga
County elections
He would not release any other
~rd. which ran out of ballots details Wednesday of the alleged
and IOSI some votes in the March abduction o r the reldtionship
primary, fired 20 employees between J(jnn ebrew and the
\Yednesday and announced plans wonun.
to demote about 15.
Avon is located about I 0 miles
·, " In
addition , the
board west of Cleveland.
announced the hiring of 14 new-

Woman len ·

from abdudor

The board had previously
fl!'OUnced plms to trim its 123t'!Jember staff to 1OS but decided
••
• a 115-member staff in view of
~e number of employees who
~ handicapped or approachi n~
O;:tirement.
::"We are not laying people off
~~ause we believe !hat they did
flmething wrong," said board
~airman John Hairston. but
~cause ·structural
changes
a:quired a smaller staff
:• :'it was clear that we needed to
~d4ce our staff and increase the
D'illlevels of our employees," said
~rd member Thomas Coyne,
Rlayor of suburban Brook Park.
••
•, In the past two years, fo ur
employees were disciplined when
lallots cast by 385 unregistered
~oters were counted, md 6 ,400
Corers were never notified that
Jieir polling places had been
~oved. In March, some precincts
!!tin out of ballots and lost votes
were found weeks later.

••••
I

•! · Wstrue:•n
..•· bites dog
t

: t=ANTON (AP) ~ A man
s~spected of driving • car with a
s!:,1en license plate struggled 'vith
officers and bit a police dog on
Jie n05e, authorities said.
: T he German &lt;hepherd, Bear,
\!idn't require medical attention
9u t Richard J. Nelson, 40. was
treated at Aultman Hospiul for
mi nor injuries suffered in the
struggle.
Police said N elson Oed on foot
Wednesday and then struck the
Qog on the head and bit him on
~he nose. The arresting officer.
~teve Swank, was injured slightly.
Nelson' was charged with
(eceiving stolen property and
~~"'ulti ng an offi cer, Swank.

Search on for
missing boater
; M ARBLEHEAD (AP) - A
$5-yea r-old man was missing
Wednesday night after falling
from a pleasure boat into Lake
~rie, the Coast G uard said.
: T he man, whose name wasn 't
!-leased, apparently !ell off a 37lOot pleasure boat between Mar~lrhead and Kelley• Island . Coalt
t.uard Lt. llernard Sandv
'rhe
boat had leftI Put- in-Bay on
.
South Bass Island.
Sandy sa1d the mcidcnt appar-

D'Angelo said outside court. "They're lifelong
buddies. There was no hanky panky."
Sugar, president of l:loney C reek Contracting Co. Inc., •was accused laS! mo nth of having
his secretary create fiaudulent billing invoices in
April and May for work done o n Tnficant's
farm in the You ng&lt;rown area.
Sugar is accused of then telling a grand jury
on May 23 the invoices were genuine. He
allegedly ordered the falce invoices after being
questioned by FBI agents about his work on the
T raficant farm. ·

Firefighten battle over
who gets
for rescue

TOlEDO (AP) -The FBI is clurity had been deposited into a
investigating a former United personal bank account.
Way employee who is suspected
Carl Spicocchi, head of the
of stealing nearly $300,000 in Toledo FBI office, confirmed the
donations.
investigation, but did not elabo.
The money ~· most of it from rate.
workplace donations ~ lw not
The alleged theft appears to be
been found, Robert Lucas, presi- the work of j ust one employee,
dent of the United Way · of
Lucas said. Investigators said the
Greater Toledo, said Wednesday. It
worker, whose name has not been
will be repuced by in!urance and
released, lud access to checks that
a gift from KeyBank.
The charity supports 69 agen- were coming into !he charity.
She lud been employed at the
cies that provide programs such as
child care, preschool and adult United Way for about 18 months.
The agency had not conducteducation classes.
ny background checks on the
Lucas said the employee was
e or any of its other ·new
fired after KeyBank discovered emp
that a check made out to the workers,
said.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
family's &lt;lesire to meet the fire fighters who rescued a girl from a
1994 apartment blaze has
prompted a dispute between .
Cincinnati's fire chief and a former colleague over who deserves
credit for saving the young5ter.
Walter Smith and his daughter,
the re-scued Beverly Hector, now
6, went to a city firehouse Sarurday to meet a firefighter idenri-

Gan leader sentenced
to li e in '94 slayin.g
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ 1\ man
who police say for years has led a
gang that terrorized an East Side
neighborhood no longer will
walk those familiar streets wearing his seemingly ever- present
smile.
Ronald Dawson, 33 , was sentenced Wednesday to life in
prison for the shotgun killing of a
man six years ago.
He was arrested exactly six
years after the April 18, 1994,
slaying. Police and witnesses said a
masked Dawson and two other
people burst into "- J&gt;a!!Y at an .
apartment where a drug dealer
lived, and Dawson fired a shotgun
into the face of James McKinney,
24 , a guest.
Five women were wounded.
Judge Dan Hogan followed the
recommendation of a Franklin
C .&gt; unty Conunon Pleas Court
jury in rejecting the death penalry.
Dawson will not be eligible for
parole for at least 43 years, which
includes a three-year sentence for
using a gun and sentences for

Ex-deputy pleads
to dlarge
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ A former deputy in the office of Fairfield Counry Sherjff Gary
DeMastry said he didn't think he
had done anything wrong but
pleaded 'gu ilry to a reduced
charge to "get this behind me."
D avid Peck, a former lieutenant, pleaded guilty Tuesday to
a misdemeanor count of
obstru cting public business in
connectiOn with the on going
public-corruption case involving
DeM astry.
The charge had been reduced
from a felony count of theft in'
office. A special prosecutor also
agreed to dismi ss felony counts of
perjury and filing an in complete
income-tax return for 1997 and a
misdemeanor count of falsifica-

The indictmen.t say&lt; the grand jury '"'
investigating the receipt of bnbt-s and b'TJllllU&lt;"I
by a public o fficial. Whil e the indictment doc'n't name !he official, D 'Angelo has \aid ~ and
repeated in w urt Wednesday ~ that it i1 Traficant, a Democrat represe nting a str ip of northeast Ohio along the Pennsylvania state line.
Traficant has not denied he is the target of
!he probe and has said repeatedl y since January
!hat he expects to be indicted.

FBI investigating suspected
theft from United Way in Toledo
'

Elections board
fires 20

comers.

gang, called the X-Clan, like an
old- time mobster, patrOlling the
stree ts of his poor neighborhood
and u sing violence and intimidation to get what he wanted.
Police . believe the garig is
responsible for more than I 0 slaying5.
Throughout the three- week
trial , Dawson usually was grinning and appeared jovial, greeting
police officers who were set to
testify against him with ' a hearty
" Hello,_boys!"

fied as the principal rescuer. The
father said he wanted to thank Lt.
Harold Wri ght fo r saving the girl.
who was 1 w hen till' fire
occurred.
But others were involved in
Beverly's rescue from a tllirdOoor apartm en t in December
t994,said Dee rfield Township fire
chief Bill Kramer. H e was an
assistant C inci nnati fire chief at
the scene of the five-abrrn lire.

Tough Times Don't Last
Tough People Do

Glendon E. Faulk
LONG BOTTOM - Glendon E. Faulk., 74, Long Bottom, died
Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2000 in C amden Clark Hospital , Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Arrangements wiU be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.

POMEROY ~The following Christian Harmon, Racine; Thomas
Meig5 County residents have Edward Ball, Syracuse; Florence
been selected as potential grand · E. Baker, Middleport; Shari Lee
jurors for the September term of Bobb, Racine; Carol Lee Lemley,
Middleport; Cecil D. Giles, Albany;
the Meigs County Grand Jury:
Ernest
E. Griffin, Long Bottom; Geri
NELSONVILLE - David E. Huddleston, 43 , Nelsonville, died
Lee
Wahori,
Pomeory; Harold E.
Raberta Caldwell, Syracuse;
Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2000 at his residence.
Rose,
Racine;
Kevin Edward
Born Feb. 9, 1957, he was the son of David L. Huddleston and Mary Donald L. Headley, Reedsville; Romine, Pomeroy; Gloria Jean
A. Holter Huddleston of Racine, and was a veteran of the U.S. Air Ronald Mac VanMeter, Pomeroy; Craig~ Middleport; Thereon Arthur
Matthew Lee King, Racine; Goldie
Fo rce.
L. Gilmore, Pomeroy; Janet Lynn Johnson, Racine; Jack L. Bostick,
H e was e mployed as a certified LPN and was also a member of the Howard, Middleport; John S. Jr., Racine; Paul E. Evans, Racine;
Racin e United Methodist Church.
••
Thomas, Pomeroy; Hazel I. Lewis, Archie Carl Rose, Long Bottom;
He was preceded in death by his grandparents.
Rutland; Christi M. Brumfield, Mid- Renee Richard, Pomeroy; Thomas
Surviving in addition to his parents are his former wife, Lori Wager dleport; Isaac M. Mohler, Pomeroy; Wesley Burson, Shade; Dustin Ray
Millhone, Reedsville; M. Thomas
of Illinois; a son, Jesse David Huddleston of Zion, Ill.; a daughter, Dennis L. Facemyer, Jr., MiddleDooley, Middleport; Rosemary
Marie lynn Huddleston of Zion; a brother and sister-in-law, Michael port; Virgie Mae Buckley, Coolville; Pierce, Racine; Melvin L.' Lee ,
Jeanie SUe Weeks, Guysv~le; DloC . (C amellia) Huddleston of Racine; and a niece.
rah Ellen Evans,. Lar;~gsville; Linda Pomeroy; Jean Irene Sandy,
A memorial service will be I p.m. Monday in Letart Falls Cemetery, G. Pickrell, Middleport; Eva Lucille Langsville; Steven D. Craig, Midwith the R ev. Kenny Baker officiating. There will be no visitation or Diehl, Racine; Dencil R. Hudson II, dleport; Chris W. Beer, Racine;
calling hours. Arrangements are by Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy; Gary Ray Canterbury, II, Jonathan Marsh Perrin, Middleport;
Langsville; Hattie Mae Rockhold, Carta F. McKinney, Middleport.
Carin S . Taylor, Middleport;
Portland.
Gina M. Thomas, Pomeroy; Cassie Dawn Rose, Long Bottom;
Jeffrey Todd Welch, Rutland;
POMEROY ~ Miriam Nau, Peach Fork Road, Pomeroy, died Charles Cundiff, Pomeroy; Ernest . Charles Emmitt Dailey. Reedsville;
E. Halley, Pomeroy; AnnaL. Dailey,
Wednesday, Aug, 9, 2000 in Rockspring5 Rehabilitation Center. Portland; Frederick C. Johnson, Sherry A. Laudermm, Racine;
Arrangements wil~ be announced by Ewing Funeral Home, Sr. , Shade; Fae K Craig, Pomeroy; James Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy.
Blanche Junaita Smart, Albany; Cindy L. Lambert, Pomeroy;
Jaylene
Ohlinger,
Josephine Lynn Hill, Long Bottom; Wendy
Pomeroy;
Leona
T.A.
Belcher,
David William Fox, Racine; Gary
Pomeroy;
Melinda
R.
Karschnik,
Lee Johnson, Pomeroy; Krista L.
Hired were Debbie Cremeans Sinclair, Pomeroy; Ronald Lee Pomeroy; Thomas E. WMe, Long
as a personal assistant aide to a CJark, Racine; Michelle Dawn · Bottom; Clara A. Baer, Racine;
handicapped child on a personal Ramsburg, Pomeroy; Christi Anne Melissa J. Sm~h. Racine; Leonard
services
contract; Gloria Van- Lisle, Pomeroy; Millard Swartz, H. Koenig, Jr., Pomeroy; Vicki D.
PageAl
Reeth as a tutor for a health Coolville; Opal v. Morris, Racine; Smith, Pomeroy; Laurie A. Barber,
M eigs High School to the cafete- handicapped student at a rate of John David Roush, Racine; Patri- Reedsville; Naomi W. Neville.
cia A. Ervin, Racine; Michael L. Racine; Christopher D. Haning,
na program .
$15 per hour not to exceed five Neutzling, Pomeroy; Grant L. Bor- Albany; Linda L. Haley, Middleport;
An additional custodial position hours a week; Rick Ash as boys ing, Reedsville; Wendell N. Clark, Terry Wayne Wyatt, Middleport;
for the district to be split between junior varsity basketball coach for Racine; Phyllis J . Wooten, · Brenda Jean Haggy, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy Elementary and Meig5 the year; Sean Walton as a French Pomeroy; Kenneth R. Searles, Dallas VICtor Hill, Racine; ChristoHigh School was created, along teacher with board member Scott Middleport; Justin Gray Jeffers, pher Thomas Wever, Syracuse;
with a three -hour cook/ cashier Walton abstaining; and lea Ann Middteport; Rebecca Ann Foley, Mark M. Davis, Middleport; Charles
Paul Gerard, Middleport; Patricia L.
position at Meigs High School King as a kindergarten teacher at Pomeroy.
Christina R. Blackston, Pomeroy; Struble, Syracuse; and John D.
and a full - time computer and Middleport.
Larry C. Powell, Pomeroy; John Schuler, Rutland
network technician position.
Contracts for extended service
Action was taken on personnel were approved for Carl Wolfe,
matters includin g accepting resig- OWA instructor, 20 days, and
nations from Debbie Sebert, a Timothy Simpson , vocational
teacher at Bradbury Elementary; agriculture teacher, an additional
Gary Walker, computer and net- 20 days for a total of 50 days.
work technician; Kim Oliphant as
Attending were Superintendent
·
a substitute teacher and aide; and Bill Buckley, Scott Walton, Wayne
Lisa Averion as a teacher. A year's . Davis, Norman Humphreys, and
Sunset tonight will be at 8:35
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
medical leave of absence was Roger .Abbott, board members,
High pressure building into and sunrise on Friday at 6:40a.m.
granted to Connie Gilkey.
and Matk E. Rhonemus, treasurer. the area should provide partly
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Becoming mostly
cloudy and dry conditions on
clear.
Areas of fog developing,
Friday and through the weekend,
locally dense at times. Lows in the
forecasters said.
tion.)
Temperatures will climb into lower 60s. Northwest wind S. to
Two years ago, Eastern met the mid-80s each day through 10 mph.
eight of the 27 standard• set forth Sunday, th~ National - Weather
Fri-d a}C"Are;rs.. of- dense fog
by the state, and last year met 10. Service said. Lows wiU be in the early, then partly cloudy. Highs 80
PageAl
Superintendent beryl Well said 60s.
to 85.
as the cente r of conununity-wide that preliminary figures released
Friday night...Mostly clear.
The next chance of thunderlearning, where students, family earlier this week indicate that the storms will come on Monday.
Lows around 60.
memb ers and business members district will meet 14 standards on
Extended forecast:
Thunderstorms
developed
can work together toward devel- the next report card, placing it in over most~~-· the tri-county o. n
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs
the "continuous improvement .. Wednesday, . me producing high in the mid 80s.
opin g community literacy."
The greatest need tor improve- designation .
Sunday... Mostly dear. Lows in
winds, hea
rain and hail. The
Edwards said high school math NWS said rainfall amounts the lower 60s and highs in the
ment is in math and science, the
CIP says, with the greatest weak- scores are on the rise, and that 72 ranged from . 50 of an inch to 5 upper.80s.
ness reported on the 12th grade percent of last year's eighth inches.
, Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
level. (Pass ing only the ninth graders passed the science portion
Some areas experienced power in the mid 60s and highs around
grad e test is required fo r gradua- of their test.
90.
outages from downed wires.

David E. Huddleston

Mariam Nau

. Buildings
from

* Bankruptcy * Charge Off
* Repossessions * Collections
We may be able to help you
purchase a car or truck if you can
answer "Yes" to these questions ...
1, Are you employed?
2. Do you gross at least $1,400 per
month?
3. Have you had any satisfactory past
credit?

If the answer is "YES!"
Call Kenny Frazier at

DON TATE MOTORS
1-800-837-1094 OR 740-992-6614

vALLEY wEATHER

Drier conditions expected

Eastem
from

Dawson asked the j ury Tuesday
in an un sworn statement, which
la.sted longer than an hour, to
spare his life because he's innocent .
" It's hard for me to put myself
in someth in g that I didn't have
anytlling to do with ," he said .
Authori ties say Dawson led the

Peck's plea was accepted by visiting Judge Richard Markus in
Franklin Cou nty Conun on Pleas
Cou rt instead of Fairfield County because M arku s was hearing
another case in Columbus.

MART
·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publ is hed ever y 8f1crnoon, Monday through
Friday , Il l CaurJ St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

O hio Val ley Pu blishing Company. Seco nd
class postage p11 id at Po muny, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohio
Newspape r Associati on.
pOSTMASTER: Semi addr ess corrections to
The Daily Sentine l. I ll Court 51., Pomeroy,
Ohio

choice

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SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP)
- George W. Bush is telling Californians he wiU battle for every
vote he can get in their powerhouse state, dismissing as Democratic wishful thinking the suggestion that he might write it off the
way his father did eight years ago.
Bush's rival turned aUy, Sen. John
McCain, was joining him in Salinas

on Thursday for three days ofWest
Coast campaigning together.
At a railroad depot rally in San
Luis Obispo, Bush scoffed at the
idea he will wind up backing away
from California, rather than spend
the time and money to challenge
AI Gore all fall in a state where the
Democrats hold the advantage.
"Somebody said, 'You know,

Fair

for completion Nov. 27 .
Several members expressed dissatisfaction with the timing of the
project because of its impact on
holiday business. Merchants said
both the street and the sidewalk
will be tOrn up to install the lines.
Wright , a Pomeroy councilman,
agreed that th e timing was bad for
tearing up downtown streets.
C hapmansaid that efforts are
continuing to acquire land at the
corner o f Main and Syc:imot'e
from Rite Aid for a park w hich
would feature the Keystone Arch
from the Wilde rmuth Brewer on
Condor Street.

from PageAl
C hapman said, the parade I?
kick off the C hristmas shopping
seas.;n will come on the Sunday
after Thanksgiving, and that To ney
Dingess has agreed to serve as
chairman again this year.
George Wright said a contract
has been awarded for the installation of new water lines in downtown Pomeroy.
The work, he said , wiU begin
soo n, an d the project is scheduled

Stonn

frQm PageAl
both high wi nds and intense
lightning with them."
Sisson said all main lines in the
coun ty have bee n repaired and that
a total of eight people around the
area arc •till wi thout power.

" We hope to get everything
completely repaired by noo n
today," said Sisson . " AEP crews
have been out all ni ght working
as quickly and safely as possible to
restore service to all customers."
AEP crew s are still assessing the
damage brought on by the storm.
In addition to power outa ge s,
cabl e and telepho ne service were
disrupte d in so me areas.

c,., ,. ,. ,,

•

\

•

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
.

Licenses issued

on Wednesday. Units responded as
follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in Meig5
County Probate Court to
Richard Lee Wamsley II, 22, and
Carrie Elaine Williams, 23,
Racine.

12:14 p.m., Sycamore Street,
assisted by Rutland , Robert
Hoskins, treated;
12:27 p.m., BP Station, Mid"
dleport, Donna Easton, treated;
8:27 p.m., Ohio 7, Eric Rubble, St. Joseph's Hospital;
10:40 p.m., Veterans Memorial
POMEROY ~ Foreclosure Hospiul, Gene Hall, Holzer
actions have been filed in Meig5 Medical Cent~r.
MIDDLEPORT
County Common Pleas Court by
12:56 p.m., Ohio 7, motor
Farmers Bank and Saving5 Co.,
Pomeroy, against Jeff N. Stone, vehicle accident, assisted by CenPomeroy, alleging default on a tral Dispatch, Michnei Pierce,
loan agreement in the amount of HMC.
RUTLAND
$2,556.87, and by the Bank of
I I a.m., Broadway Avenue,
New York, doing business as The
Money Store, New York, N.Y., Helen Young, Pleasant Valley Ho,;..
against Dannie Jacks, Pomeroy, pital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
and others , alleging default on a
5:55 p.m., Texas Road, assisted
mortgage agreement in the
by Central Dispatch, Terry Brewamount of$25,218.57.
er,HMC;
8:22 p.m., Ohio 7, Samantha
Layne, St. Joseph's;
I 0:06 p.m. , Dorst Road;
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services Robert McDaniel, Camden•
answered nine calls for assistance Clark Memorial Hospital.

Foreclosures filed

Units log 9 calls

.'

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-35).
Akzo-43\

Gannett -

Rocky Boots- 5),

AmTechJSBC- 41\
Ashland Inc. - 33~.
AT&amp;T- 30lo
Bank One .:... 34 ~.
Bob Evans - 16,.
BorgWarner - 351.
Champion- 2~

Halley Davidson - 44 "·

Sears- 30~~.

Charming Shops - 5l.
City HoldlnQ- n
Federal M&lt;&gt;g_ul - 1O'&gt;
Flrs1ar- 24'•

55l.
General Electric- 55"·

AD Shell - 59\

Kmart-7'1.
Kroger - 21 l.

Shoney's-l.

Wai-Man- 53~

Lands End - 30~.

Wendy's -18\

Ll!l.- 20~

Worthington - 11 l.

16~

Oak HMI Financial-

OVB-26),

Dally S1ock repone are 1he
4 p.m. closl.ng quotes ol
1he previous day's Iran•:

BBT.-26,.
Peoples - 14'·

Premter -

s· ~.

actions,

an

. Aoci&lt;well -

provided

by

Adveot of Gallipolis.

Scramble for Scouting
set Aug. 17 at Cliffside

GALLIPOLIS- The MGM
District Scramble for Scouting
will be Aug. I 7 at 12:30 p.m . at
Cliffside Golf Course. All proceeds will benefit Boy Scouting
in Mason, Gallia and Meigs
counties.
Fees for the event are as follows: sponsorship of tee or
green, S100 (includes one participam fee for - the sponsor) ;
Eagle
sponsorship,
$250
(includes fees for four players
and tee sponsorship); individual
participation in the scramble,
$60 for non-members and SSO
for members .
Those planning on entering a
team in the event are asked to
indicate the names ofthe players
involved, their handicap and
average 18-hole score. There will
be prizes, including two holein- one holes:
Hole Number 4: $5,000 sponsored by Wiseman Insurance
Agency.
Hole Number 13: An automobile valued at $20,000 sponsored
by the new car dealers of Gallia
County ~Turnpike Ford, NorGov. Bush isn 't going to try hard in ris- N orthup Dodge, Smith
California;' he told the crowd at Buick Pontiac GMC and Gene
the end of a day of campaigning Johnson Chevrolet-Oldsmobile .
For more information and
sign - up details, call Cliffside
Golf Course at 446- golf, Tom
Me adows at 304_.675-4424,
Randy Finney at 740- 441 - 6203

740-446~

or John Matthews at
4570 or send registration ~o
MGM District Scramble for
Scouting, 516 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Bush vows to battle for California

Our main concern In 1111 slo rles Is lobe
accunle. If you know or an error in I story,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACC"'EP""I""E"'D

.,,d.

.. ... $105.56

Rlllts O ut sid e MriJl SCount y

ALL PRICES INCLUDE PAD
AND INSTALLATION

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LIES BENEATH (PG13)
7:00 DAILY

2000
NO PASSES I NO BARGAIN NIGHT

STARTING 8111/00
THE REPLACEMENT (PG13)
BLESS THE CHILD (R)

. . ...................... .. Ji 104.00

gi\•Cn ca rrier ef!C h week.
No subscn ptiun by ma il pcrmi llcd rn areas
where humc carrier ~l'rvicc ~~ avnil~h l e .
Pub I is her rese rve:- the riQ ht 10 adj ust rates
during the suhscri ptinn pe riod. S u h~ criptio n
rate changes may be tm pl cml"n tctl b)· ~.: ha n grn g
the dural ton ol· the subscnplron .

carpet fas hions ... ,
colors .. s tyles ...
lnnov•tlve
performance-rated
wa rrantees l
exciting la minate , ce ramic tile. vinyl and wood , too .
powerful credi t options fo r the budget-con scious.

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Subs'"riht!rs nu t d&lt;:si11 ng to pay the carrier may
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8)' Carrlu or Motor Route

MO

l

Prospective grand
jurors.chosen

oth'e r lesser convictions.

ti on.

Sa Ve•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-·

Domino's Pizza
992-2124
MONDAY· THURSDAY 10:00 a.m. te) 12:00 p.m.
FRIDAY· SATURDAY 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
SUNDAY 3:00p.m. to12:00 p.m.

AUGUST SPEaAL
Large 111tem
Everything Pizza

Only

$899

�•.

,,,.

Page A4

~Th=e~D~a~~·cy~S~en~ti_ne~l________________I~J~ifli()fl

TheDa~~~

Thunday, Aucust 10,1000
•

The Daily Sentinel

~®"JJOO fORt ~'M1t''IU~JrAtW&lt;A""..
--

DEAR ABBY: On ce a year, my
mom. my two sisters and I go away for
an "all -girl" weekend without husbands
and c hildren . We love this tradition and
get along great.
My problem is the past few years we
h ave gone to a casino. My sisters and
mom love to gamble, but I don't enjoy
it as much as they do. I get headaches
when I'm in the casino for any length of
rime, and find myself spending money
just to be around them . I've told them
how I feel about the casino atmosphere,
but it hasn't made a difference.
This year I suggested we go somewhere that doesn't have gambling, but
one o f my sisters insists that this is her
o nly chance to gamble. so she wants to
go somewhere that has a casino. For
so me of us, this getaway weekend is our
o nl y c hance to see each other. If I say I
don't wallt to go, I'll miss out on our

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74G-992-2156 • Fax: 99~·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

Uttm w tJu: «Jitor an wet.come. Tiley sltouiJ H leutlulll 300 words. AU lt111n .,., 1flh}ttt
ro Hl~Utt ollll "''"' H sirnnl "ttd indiUU tuJdnu ••d.fiWplwn• ,.,.btr. No ~~llpH letkn wiU
1w pllblillttd. U11'n slwllkl H ilf 19Ud tust1, atldnssutJ us11n, "ol fNrsoltUIUia.
n. opirllotu exprmtd ittlltt roiiUftlf below
~ONsttiiiU of tlte Oldo \tirllty P•IJiilllbtt
Co. '1,ftiilurilll &amp;u.nl, ,.Jdtu ollttrwis~t 11ottd.
.,

an''"

OUR VIEW

Mission

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Aug. 10, the 223rd day of 2000. There are 143
days left in the year.
Today's H1ghlight in History :
On Aug. 10, 1846, Congress charte red , the Smithsonian Institution , named afrer English scientist James Sinithson, whose bequest of
$500,000 had made it possibl e·.
On this date:
In 1809, Ecu ador struck, its first blow tor independence from
' Spain.
In 1821, Missouri becam e th e 24th sta re.
In 1874, Herbert C lark Hoover, the 3 1st president of the United
States, was born in West l:lranc h , Iowa.
"
In 1944, during World War II, American forces overcame remain: ingJapancse resistance on Guam.
• In 1949, the Natwnal Military Establishment was renamed the
· Department of Defense.
. ~ In 1969, Lena and Rosemary LaBian ca were murdered in their
f. Los Angeles h ome by members of Charles Manson's cult, one day
, after actress Sharon Tat e and fo u r other people were slain .
' In 1975, televiSion pnsonality David Frost an nounced he had
"" purchased the exclusive n glu~ to Interview for"m er President Nixon . '
: In 1977, postal employee David Bcrko,;,itz was arrested in
• Yonkers , NY , acc used of being the Son of Sam gunman responsi'ble for six slayings and sewn wo undings.
1 . In 1988, President Rcaga11 si,;neJ a measure providing S20,1JOO
, payments to Japanese- Ameri ca ns intern ed during World War IL
' In 19Y3, Ruth Bader c:insburg was sworn in as the second female
:justi ce on the US Supreme Court.
; Ten years ago : Washington, IJ C, Mayor Marion Barry was co n•vic ted of a single misdemeanor drug charge and acquitted on anoth : er; the judge declared a mistrial on 12 other counts.
'
! F1ve years agu :Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were cha rged
' With 11 counts in the Oklahom a City bombing (McVeigh was later
· co nvicted of murder and is on f, ~era] death row; Nichols was co n: victed of conspi racy and in'"ol untary manslaughter) . Norma
: McCorvey, Jane R oe of th e 1973 Supreme Co urt decision legaliz!ing abortion. announced she had jOined th e anti -abortion group
: operation R escue.
: O ne year ago: A gunman ope n ed fire at a Jewish community cen:ter in Lo• Angeles, wounding three boys, a teen-age g irl and a
• woman ; hours later, a gunman sho t and killed letter carr ier Joseph
•Jieto; a suspect. w hite supremaost Buford 0 Furrow, fa ces charges
·· n both shootl\']gs.
' Today 's l:lirthdJys: Actor Jeff Corey is H6. Singer AI Alberts (The
:Four Ace•) is 7H. Actress Rhon da Flemi nl( is 77 . Bluegrass singer~ongwriter Jimmy Martin is 73. Singer Jimmy Dean is 72. Singer
~ ddie Fisher is 72. Actress Kate O'Mara is 6 L Singer Bobby Hatfie ld
. (The Righteous Brothers) is 60. Singer Ronnie Spector is 57. Rock
·Singcr-rmmCia~ Ian Anderson Qethro Tull ) i• SJ .

Abigail

Van Buren

Five generations

more than encouragement

TODAY IN HISTORY

weekend.
Keep in mind you needn't spend
every minute with them. Find other
thing; to do that will be of more interest to you -- and then join them for
meals away from the casino.
Alternatively, consider making the
next vacation a short cruise. Some of
the larger ships offer gambling -- and
ADVICE
many other enjoyable activities.
If it's any comfort, I'm with you all
reunion. If I go, I'll be miserable. Any the way. Gambling has never appealed
suggestions? -- MIFFED SIS IN mu ch to me. I prefer a sure thing!
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.
DEAR ABBY: My wife and I
DEAR MIFFED: An official vote is recently discovered that my son and his
in order. State your case clearly, as you girlfriend, "Lois," are sexually active.
have for me. If you're outnumbered and They have been seeing each other about
the gang wants to plan next year's trip to nine months and both of them will be
another casino, ask them to at least make 18 in a few months. When her parents
some compromise on the amount of found out, they called us and the six of
time spent gambling and mixing in us had a discussion at our home .
some other entertainment during the
Lois' father suggested -- and I agreed

-- that they should stay apart for a time
DEAR DAD: I think the youn g
and think about their relationship and woman's parents have overreacted. They
the consequences of sexual activity. At can't keep her under lock and key forthe time, I presumed that they would be ever. They have failed to co nsider that
allowed to see each other again at some their daughter will be 18 in only a few
point.
months and can legally move out of the
Abby, these are basically good kids. house.
Neither experiments with .drugs . Both . Your attitude is a far healthier one for
get good grades and are involved in · all concerned. As much as they might
school activities: They are good people wish to, they can not protect their
who made an error in judgment. I feel daughter from th e realities of life -- and
we must make sure they understand that by age 18, sex is very much a reality to
sex is special and not for just .anyone, nuny people.
and that they need to know the imporTo receive a collection of Abby's
tan ce of safe sex.
most memorable -- and most frequentMy son told me today that Lois' ly requested -- poems and essays, send a
father is considering not le tting h er business-sized, self-addressed envd,Q.p&lt;;., .
leave for college in the fall, and h er plus check or money order for $3.95
mother may quit her job to stay home ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear Abby's
to keep an eye on her during the day. " Keepers," P.O. Box 447, Mount M orWhat do you think? -- SAN FRAN- ris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is includCISCO DAD
ed.)

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

ARCs goals require
Touring the area this week to gauge the success of the Appalachian Regional Commission's mission, US. Sen. George Voinovich of
Ohio said more needs to be done.
Amen .
WhilcVoinovii:h's conUll ent seemed to be directed at the agency,
he tempered his statement with ihe belief the ARC's efforts should
.be encouraged. Hopefully, we can cou nt on the senator's support
when ARC's annual appropriation comes up for approvaL
Voinovich believes the age ncy 's mission in southern Ohio still
needs work, and we will agree with that contention. It also applies
'to surrou nding.Appalachian counties.
This is not !d say ARC hasn't done anything since its creation in
. 1965. Quite the contrary. Without ARC, the region would sti ll be
::mired in the deprivation that relegated it"to near third world status
• :prior to President Johnson's war on poverty initiative.
:: Dut nearly four decades later, Voinovich is correct in saying
"improvement is needed. ARC was established as a facilitator for federal dollars to put in highways, help create jobs.and address quality
of life issues, such as installation of water and sewer systems.
Many goals have been met . But poverty pockets still exist in this
region. It takes distribution of federal dollars to help correct situations, and despite a prevailing meJitahty among congressmen and
senators that ARC represents a form of welfare, it takes that kind of
assistanc e to make things happen.
'
' That's why tours of th e region by Voinovich and other legislators
investigating the effectiveness of ARC are valuable. As governor,
Voinovich was aware that the. agency played a major role in improving the southern end of Ohio. His administration even established
an office to deal with issues in Appalachia.
It's up to him, as one of the state's voices.on Capitol Hill, to be an
advocate for ARC's continuati on and in fulfilling its goals not o nly
in Ohio, buuhroughout Appalachia.
·
.
The hearing; Voinovich conducted in Nelsonville on Tuesday
have armed him with th e facts . It's now time for him to convince
his fellow legislators that maintaining ARC is a wise move when the
bean counters start thinking up new ways to save money.
Then we'U kflO\\' that Washington is more serious about its com: ·m1tment than just bei ng encouraging.

Thunday, Auc. 10, 1000

Sisters, mom hold winning hands for weekend getaway

HU~E

'Esta6{zs/ie{ in 1948

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

~-~~~~~~~-·=·~·=g~------~~P=a~g~e=A=s

!!! J.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

2000 ·race could leave. high road for low soon
PHILADELPHIA -Texas Gov. George W.
Bush 's strong convention closer clears the way
for a substance-rich and rhetorically tough
presidential campaign rhat doesn't have to get
down and dirty, but probably wilL
The key passage in Bush's acceptance speech
Thursday that should set up the issues battle ·
was: "The surplus is not the government's
money The surplus is the people's money."
The central policy question that "the people''·
have to face in thi s election is: What do we want
to do with the anticipated 10-year, $1.5 trillion
surplus?
Bush says, "Now is the time to reform the tax
code and share some of the surplus with the
people." Democrats allege that the tax cuts he
proposes will use up all, or more than all, of the
surplus, leaving nothing remaining for the
"compassionate" initiatives he says he favors .
Democrats, on the other hand, propose to
"share'' much less oftlie nioney with taxpayers
- about two-thirds less - and ."invest" or
"spend" the rest on health and education programs, benefits for seniors, and paying down the
national debt.
This difference has the makings of what
could be an elevated - and tough - election
debate. Doth Bush and Vice President AI Gore
can and will claiin that America's continued
greatness and prosperity lie in following his
path .
They can also battle spiritedly over which
party is responsible for the nation's current
well-being, whether the opposition's taxing and
spending agendas add up. and who has the fairer and more effective formula for progress.
In his acceptance speech, Bush invited a fight
by charging that the Clinton-Gore administration has "coasted through prosperity" and " had
its chance" to lead, but didn't.
Gore has every right to say, "Coasted? The ·
country wasn't prosperous in 1992. It was debtridden and isn't any more.Those who don't feel
better off than they were eight years ago should
vote for another George Bush," etc.
As expected, Bush also laid down ddense,
Social Security reform, education reform and

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
welfare as basic issues on which he wants to
campaib"' and said of President Clmton and
Gore, "they have not led ."
Th ere's mom for a good fight over the
administration's record and whether Gore's pro:posals on those fronts - college aid, family
leave, welfare reform and ·missile defense constitute good policy.
Gore. certainly will make health policy including prescription drugs and patients' rights
- a top issue, and can acc use B4sh and his
Republican allies in Congress of blocking
admimstration initiatives.
Growing naturally and legitimately out of the
issues debate are questions of motive and,
inevitably, character. The Bush-orchestrated
GOP convention was one giant iteration of the
famous remark by Bush's father, former President George Bush, " Message: I care."
The endless parade of black and Hispanic
faces and the repetition of compassionate
rhetoric were meant to show that Bush is, a.s
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge (R) described
·him, "the Founding Father of the new Republican Parry."
I'm convinced on the basis of Bush's record
and proposals that he really does m ea n to create
a "new" GOP on the premise that "the alternative to bureaucracy is not indifference" and
would try to "put conservative values and ideas
into the fight for justice and opportunity."
But Democrat' have every right to question
both Bush's and his party's sincerity. There are
elements of Bush's record and pmgram that jus-

tifir doubt. In Texa&lt;, he oppt&gt;Sed expa ndin~
health insurance for poor ch ildren last year. I k
also is not backing up Ills t:ducatiun n.: f11r1!1"
with much money.
There is even more ground to yucsrion tht..·
Republican Party's dedication to hi s goa ls, As
many commentators pointed out. then.· \~'L' I~ [u·
mon: Afncan- Americans on stage and m V!Lkos
at the GO I' convention than on the convt·m ion
fl oor.
It was fair that the Gore campaign tagged th,·
Philadelphia convention a " masquerade hall" in
which Bush "danced the Texas two-step." hid ..
ing "the reality that Hush is cornpassinnatL' fur
thtt rich and conservative for everyone l'isc.''
· It was surprising that Bush and his vke prt'Sidential candidate, Dick C hent·y, both tri,·d to
tie Gore to Clinton's S&lt;:andals, with C hcnl'y
asking "Does anyone , .. senously bc!i,·v,· th,lt
under Mr. Gore the next fi.)ur Yl.'an; would hl'
any different from the last eight?"
Nearly all o f Bush's and C heney'sjabs at Gur,•
were above the belt, but that one - implying
that Gore is capable of a Monica Lewinskystyle scandal - hit below
My guess is that Gore will use this punch .
among others , as a pretext for saying Republi cans "went nebrative" first, giving Dt·mocrals
permission to savage Bush.
Gore has demonstrated he is not above distorting an opponent's record - as h e lm .in
claiming that, under Bush, Tcxa.s is running a
budget "shortfall;" when there's a surplus.
Gore probably planned to charge, anyway,
that Bush is somehow anti- black, anti-H,isp:lll ic, anti-senior. He ln3dc such fals~ c h ar~o.:·o;;
against hi s primary opponent, former Sc·n. Bill
Bradley (D-N J).
So, the GOP cunve11tio n opened the way for
a nasty campaign that pmhably will ove1whdm
the elevated , feisty debate that the issues
deserve. Defore November, vote" may have
more need for th eir mud boots than their
thinking caps.
1

'!F

(Mort(m Koudrtttke is t'xaur[,,c c,litor
Call, tile ""''-'paprr ,~( C.•pitol Hill .)

n ~~ll

NEW ,YORK - Critics of gove rnment
surpluses believe something rings false in the
offi cial hand-wringing over w hy Americans
can't seem to raise th eir savings 1rate, now near
zero .
Just look at the federal budget surpluses,
they say, observing that hundreds of billions of
dollars beyond immediate needs reside in federal coffers.
In a real sense, those arc savings, bu t th ert:s
a big asterisk beside th em : The J ecision of
how to use those savings is up to elected oili cia ls, not to the families who say th ey have no
savmgs.
With some house holds paying more than 40
percent of incom e in fed eral , state and local
taxes - the self-employed, for example, pay
15.3 percent of thc·ir incomes - budgets can
become strained .
True, taxes aren 't the only obs tacle to saving.
There's the desire on the part of millions not
j ust to do without saving but to spend beyond
their incomes, borrowing to do so.
The rationale for such behavior, at least 111
many cases, is that household a&lt;Sets are steadi-

ly nsing, providing sutlicient collateral to justifY th e spending.Yes, but will that collateral be
there when the stoc-k market fall s, and perhaps
housing prices too ?
Or tfinten·st rates rise? Or tftaxcs continue
to rise, as mexorably they do if li Cit watched
do~ely. They are doin g so now, a co nlicqucn ce
of only limited indexing for inflation.
A study by former Treosury eco nomi sts
Aldona and Gary R obbins shows tiJJt inflation, howc:vt•r minor, drains aw.1y in come
fi·o m cap it~l Sains, div-idend ~ anJ intt·rest,
reducing the abihty tu ' ave.
The big dange r to incomes and sav mgs. th ey
say in their study for th e think rank Institute
fo.r Poli cy Innovation , is not higher interests
rates, whi ch eve ryo ne watches, but sneaky tax
in creases.
&lt;&gt;
By their L'lltimatcs, :1 quarter percentage
point incn:ase in tht· average ta.x rate has
roughly the same impact on th e econo my as a
full percentage point incrt~J "i o.:~ in intl.:rcst r;1tcs.
Th eir analysi s ind1cate s that indi vi du .tl
income taxes, which account for almost half of
all taxes, are now runnin g 9.9 percent ahead of
last year, far faster than the gross domes ti c

produ ct ri se.
. Not all the bbmc can be assigned to Ltxt·s,
not with the way Ameri cans havl' shown tlwy
lik e to spend, but it co ntribut&lt;·s to th e lo w
savings ratt' so often desc rib~·d as myr.;tniou :-:.
It 's hardly a myst ery. 110t wh,·n you &lt; ~e th e
off&lt;et in th e form of those billi o n&lt; held by th e
US Treasury. The my stery more aptl y "I' I' lie&gt;
to how the hu ge pri vatl' debt can be p.ti,l
down safel y.
,
,
An amlysis by Wynne Godky. a sc holar at
tht• Je-rome Lc:vy Economi cs lmtittlll' . r.; hows
tlut ho use hold d,·bt n·achcJ m-.nly 11111 percent of dispos ;.l bk· inromt' in th\.' first 4ll.lrtl'r,
an all-time high .
The assumption I&lt;; th at ri &lt;~in g vr~luc of collateral, especially fm stocks and homes, will
case th e burden of repaying. But tlut 'leaves a
question: How mu ch of it wil1 be: rhnc when
the tim e: comes?
'
It migh t be too much to expert. but perhaps
in the intcnst· h t:.lt of the.· poJi tic 1l cullpai glt
battlts, th e m y,tn y w1 ll br resolved .

.

'

OoJm CwwW·is c1 busi1wss t1Wtl)'Stj(n 771(' Ass ~~~ iatcd Press)

RACINE Southern High
School Athletic Booster&gt;, Thursday. 7
p.m., at the high school.
POMEROY Cleaning and
setup for the Meigs County Fair
flower shows, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
senior fair building on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

!

· After expressi ng her appreciation to t he Auxiliary for the opportunity to attend Girls State, Stivers detailed her experiences during
the week . She said she was of the Federalist party and parti cipated in
caucus m eetings, po liti cal rallies, debates, and elections, as well as
swL· aring- in ceremoni es for the newlY elected officials.·
She desc ribed the program as not only educational, but "inspiring
and motivating." O ne of the most impressional . events for her, she
said. was the assembly where the oath of office was administered to
the el ec ted state officials by Supreme Court Justice Ali ce Robie
Resnick . Another dignitary attending was Gov. Bob Taft.

PORTLAND -

RACINE - Southern Junior
High School cheerleading meeting
for those plarming to participate in
the 2000-01 cheerleading season,
Thursday at 5 p.m. at the junior high.
Parents should attend with students.
POMEROY. -Junior and Rita
White to perform at the Meigs
County Senior Center, Thursday,
5:30 p.m. during congregate meal
there.
FRIDAY, Aug. tl
LONG BOITOM - Hynm
sing featuring Earthen Vessels at the
Faith Full Gospel Church, Friday, 7
p.m

Gospel sing to take place
LANGSVILLE - The 14th annual Gospel Sing at the Carl Gorby
Farm near Langsville will take place Saturday, Aug. 12.
The event will feature The Gabriels, Carleton-Sutton Bluegrass
Gospel Group and the Musser Family Singers.
A potlu ck dinner will be held at 5:30 p.m. and those attending are
to take a covered dish.
Singing will start at ,7 p.m. and will be televised by WJOS- TV

SAnJRDAY, Aug. 12
DANVILLE - Danville Church
of Christ, gospel meeting, Saturday, 7
p.m. and Sunday. 6 p.m. Denver Hill,
speaker.
SUNDAY,Aug.13
POMEROY - M eigs County
Ministerial Association, public song
fest, Sund'l}', 7 p.m. in the grandstand
on Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Rev.
Bob and Joann Robinson to lead service; local churches to provide special
music, singspiration included.

GabrtaiQuartat

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Bible School

Mission on County Road 31, 6 to 8
p.m Thursday through Satun:lay

Circle hosts family picnic
RAC INE - The Sonshine Circle of Dorcas Bethany Church
ei!Joye d a fami ly picn ic at the river campsite of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
McKelvey recently
H azel McKelvey was hostess for the picnic The group enjoyed
pl:tying games, fishing, boat rides, and singing. Donna and Mary Byer
we re 111 charge of the games and Marvin McKelvey took the guests
t(n boJt rides.
It was reported that Mary Cleek, corresponding secretary had
mailed sy mpathy cards to Sarah N eigler, Bernice Theiss, Florenc e
I lceter, Marjorie Hofli1er, Harry Pickens and Mari e Norris. Cards of
encouragement were sent to Mary Stobart, Wilma Ballard, Edison
1\r.tC&lt;'. An n Boso. Marjorie Salser, Libby Willford, Don Hupp, Lizzie

The Community Calendar is pubtree service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space pennits lind
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

lished as a

will be held at the Freedom Gospel

Girl Stater reports to Auxiliary

!

MONDAY,Aug. 14
POMEROY- Calvary Pilgrim
Chapter, State Route 143, Bible
school, Monday through Aug. 18,
6:30 to 8:30 p.m

RACINE - Dorcas/Bethany •
Sonshine Circle, 7 p.m at the church.
Officers to be elected and secret sisters chosen.

WELLSTON -The Annual Ohillco Coal Festival Art Show wiU
be held Sept, 1 and 2 at the WeUsron Public Library.
The show will include professional and amateur categories in phoHeather Ridenour, being held here by her mother, Jenny Ridenour, is
tography, paintings and misceUaneous art forms such as ceramic and
the fifth generation in the family of Josephine Smith, Pomeroy. The
. wood carvings. There will be separate categories for young adults and
five generations, as pictured here, are from the left, Faith Varney,
'youth.
grandmother to Heather being held by her mother, Mrs. Smith, her
The young adult division will include 7-12 graders. Other youth
·great-great-grandmother, and Dan Smith, her great-grandfather. (Concategories are grades 4-6 and K-grade 3. There is no entry fee for the
tributed photo)
young adult or children's division .
There is a $1 entry fee per item for amateur division and a $2
entry fee per item for ihe professional category. There is a limit of
RACINE- Southern High School student Emily Stivers, who four items per person and a size limit of no larger than 24"x30."
All items must be be framed and ready to hang.
e~tte nded the 54th annual Buckeye Girls State under sponsorship of
The best of show cash award is sponsored by the Southern Hills
the American Legion Auxiliary, Post 602, reported on her activities '
Arts
Council. There is a Sharon Davis Stubbe Memorial award to
there at a recent Auxiliary meeting.
honor
one of the founders of the Ohillco Coal Festival Art Show.
Girls State is a week long workshop on ,government in action
spon sored by the Legion Auxiliary at Ashland College. This year There is also a Peoples Choice award and a best of show award, as
mure than a thousand hi gh school girls who will b e seniors this fall well as cash awijrds for the top three wim1ers in eaGh category.
The show will be professionally judged.
:~ ttended the program which is designed to educate the citizens of
Check in times for the show will be Friday, Sept. I .from 4-6 p.m.
to morrow in city, counry and stare government, their functions and
and
Saturday, Sept 2 tram 1-3 p.m.
operation .
For more information, call committee members Barbara M cKinStivers noted that she held the positions of volunteer fireman and
niss
at 740-384-3381 or C indy Kessler at 740-384-2840.
·.dso served on the city board of health.

People aren't savings: so.what's the mystery?
JOHN CUNNIFF

THURSDAY,Aug. 10
MIDDLEPORT
The
Widow's Fellowship will meet Friday, 9:30 a.m. for breakfast at the
Golden Corn!. For those needing
rides, call 992-5666.

wood, Raymond Proffitt, Mildred Parsons, Pauline Wolfe, Martha
Stutler, Doug Circle, Ethel Orr, Ellen Arnott, Gordon West, Ooley
Beegle, Vicki Boso, Nettie Cross, Anna Lee Tucker, David Grindstaff,
Naomi NeviUe, and Dorothy Harden.
Attending the picnic were Esther West, Mabel Brace, Bernice and
Kenneth Theiss, Manha Lou Beegle,Joe and Evelyn Foreman, Milford and Romaine Frederick, Tom and Sheila Theiss, Linda and
Wayne Russell, Dixie Smith, Dale and Kathryn Hart, Edna Knopp,
Janet Theiss, Otmer Knopp, Dick and Lois Sterrett, Ruth Simpson,
. Manley Christy, Thelma Walton, Sally and David Gloeckner, Garry,
Melissa, Brandon, Bryan and Ryan Smith , Letha Proffitt, De Wayne
Stuttler, Hazel McKelvey, Donna and Mary Dyer, Marvin, Eleanor
and Jay McKelvey.
Next meeting will be at 7 p.m. Thursday at the church.

Art show to be held

BUSINESS MIRROR

BY

CALENDAR

sJJe f

( ..

Zip .• ),) '
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· (}ld.!r to .,Ofer. N pun:
I to"'l!fv~awaym
thly.
1 only. Cllnl!ot be d n
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1

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e nerts ry. •. tee (3 $50 Gjh CertiOcides
lhCetllncatesllo~eapp)lfdtonewpurchase
~.d.ent lila.dda!lllii!Jiufnlture.tha'le or
lay&amp;WIIJ' actoun!. Mail to P.O. Box 408, Mason, wv zsz.:O or bring to
Mason f'nmlture lnd Street, Mason, WV. AILentrles must b'e received
by August 3t:"l000.Drawlng September t;lnilo. Wlnoen will be notified
and names posted at .the store. Mason FtirDihire employees and
family member's are Ineligible.

Della Sauer. Pt. Pleasant, wv
Tom Darst - Middleport, OH
.Charlene Lewis, Letart, WV

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'Watch For August Winners In Our
1
September Newspaper Ad.
8/00-1

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Page A4

~Th=e~D~a~~·cy~S~en~ti_ne~l________________I~J~ifli()fl

TheDa~~~

Thunday, Aucust 10,1000
•

The Daily Sentinel

~®"JJOO fORt ~'M1t''IU~JrAtW&lt;A""..
--

DEAR ABBY: On ce a year, my
mom. my two sisters and I go away for
an "all -girl" weekend without husbands
and c hildren . We love this tradition and
get along great.
My problem is the past few years we
h ave gone to a casino. My sisters and
mom love to gamble, but I don't enjoy
it as much as they do. I get headaches
when I'm in the casino for any length of
rime, and find myself spending money
just to be around them . I've told them
how I feel about the casino atmosphere,
but it hasn't made a difference.
This year I suggested we go somewhere that doesn't have gambling, but
one o f my sisters insists that this is her
o nly chance to gamble. so she wants to
go somewhere that has a casino. For
so me of us, this getaway weekend is our
o nl y c hance to see each other. If I say I
don't wallt to go, I'll miss out on our

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74G-992-2156 • Fax: 99~·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager.

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

Uttm w tJu: «Jitor an wet.come. Tiley sltouiJ H leutlulll 300 words. AU lt111n .,., 1flh}ttt
ro Hl~Utt ollll "''"' H sirnnl "ttd indiUU tuJdnu ••d.fiWplwn• ,.,.btr. No ~~llpH letkn wiU
1w pllblillttd. U11'n slwllkl H ilf 19Ud tust1, atldnssutJ us11n, "ol fNrsoltUIUia.
n. opirllotu exprmtd ittlltt roiiUftlf below
~ONsttiiiU of tlte Oldo \tirllty P•IJiilllbtt
Co. '1,ftiilurilll &amp;u.nl, ,.Jdtu ollttrwis~t 11ottd.
.,

an''"

OUR VIEW

Mission

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Aug. 10, the 223rd day of 2000. There are 143
days left in the year.
Today's H1ghlight in History :
On Aug. 10, 1846, Congress charte red , the Smithsonian Institution , named afrer English scientist James Sinithson, whose bequest of
$500,000 had made it possibl e·.
On this date:
In 1809, Ecu ador struck, its first blow tor independence from
' Spain.
In 1821, Missouri becam e th e 24th sta re.
In 1874, Herbert C lark Hoover, the 3 1st president of the United
States, was born in West l:lranc h , Iowa.
"
In 1944, during World War II, American forces overcame remain: ingJapancse resistance on Guam.
• In 1949, the Natwnal Military Establishment was renamed the
· Department of Defense.
. ~ In 1969, Lena and Rosemary LaBian ca were murdered in their
f. Los Angeles h ome by members of Charles Manson's cult, one day
, after actress Sharon Tat e and fo u r other people were slain .
' In 1975, televiSion pnsonality David Frost an nounced he had
"" purchased the exclusive n glu~ to Interview for"m er President Nixon . '
: In 1977, postal employee David Bcrko,;,itz was arrested in
• Yonkers , NY , acc used of being the Son of Sam gunman responsi'ble for six slayings and sewn wo undings.
1 . In 1988, President Rcaga11 si,;neJ a measure providing S20,1JOO
, payments to Japanese- Ameri ca ns intern ed during World War IL
' In 19Y3, Ruth Bader c:insburg was sworn in as the second female
:justi ce on the US Supreme Court.
; Ten years ago : Washington, IJ C, Mayor Marion Barry was co n•vic ted of a single misdemeanor drug charge and acquitted on anoth : er; the judge declared a mistrial on 12 other counts.
'
! F1ve years agu :Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were cha rged
' With 11 counts in the Oklahom a City bombing (McVeigh was later
· co nvicted of murder and is on f, ~era] death row; Nichols was co n: victed of conspi racy and in'"ol untary manslaughter) . Norma
: McCorvey, Jane R oe of th e 1973 Supreme Co urt decision legaliz!ing abortion. announced she had jOined th e anti -abortion group
: operation R escue.
: O ne year ago: A gunman ope n ed fire at a Jewish community cen:ter in Lo• Angeles, wounding three boys, a teen-age g irl and a
• woman ; hours later, a gunman sho t and killed letter carr ier Joseph
•Jieto; a suspect. w hite supremaost Buford 0 Furrow, fa ces charges
·· n both shootl\']gs.
' Today 's l:lirthdJys: Actor Jeff Corey is H6. Singer AI Alberts (The
:Four Ace•) is 7H. Actress Rhon da Flemi nl( is 77 . Bluegrass singer~ongwriter Jimmy Martin is 73. Singer Jimmy Dean is 72. Singer
~ ddie Fisher is 72. Actress Kate O'Mara is 6 L Singer Bobby Hatfie ld
. (The Righteous Brothers) is 60. Singer Ronnie Spector is 57. Rock
·Singcr-rmmCia~ Ian Anderson Qethro Tull ) i• SJ .

Abigail

Van Buren

Five generations

more than encouragement

TODAY IN HISTORY

weekend.
Keep in mind you needn't spend
every minute with them. Find other
thing; to do that will be of more interest to you -- and then join them for
meals away from the casino.
Alternatively, consider making the
next vacation a short cruise. Some of
the larger ships offer gambling -- and
ADVICE
many other enjoyable activities.
If it's any comfort, I'm with you all
reunion. If I go, I'll be miserable. Any the way. Gambling has never appealed
suggestions? -- MIFFED SIS IN mu ch to me. I prefer a sure thing!
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.
DEAR ABBY: My wife and I
DEAR MIFFED: An official vote is recently discovered that my son and his
in order. State your case clearly, as you girlfriend, "Lois," are sexually active.
have for me. If you're outnumbered and They have been seeing each other about
the gang wants to plan next year's trip to nine months and both of them will be
another casino, ask them to at least make 18 in a few months. When her parents
some compromise on the amount of found out, they called us and the six of
time spent gambling and mixing in us had a discussion at our home .
some other entertainment during the
Lois' father suggested -- and I agreed

-- that they should stay apart for a time
DEAR DAD: I think the youn g
and think about their relationship and woman's parents have overreacted. They
the consequences of sexual activity. At can't keep her under lock and key forthe time, I presumed that they would be ever. They have failed to co nsider that
allowed to see each other again at some their daughter will be 18 in only a few
point.
months and can legally move out of the
Abby, these are basically good kids. house.
Neither experiments with .drugs . Both . Your attitude is a far healthier one for
get good grades and are involved in · all concerned. As much as they might
school activities: They are good people wish to, they can not protect their
who made an error in judgment. I feel daughter from th e realities of life -- and
we must make sure they understand that by age 18, sex is very much a reality to
sex is special and not for just .anyone, nuny people.
and that they need to know the imporTo receive a collection of Abby's
tan ce of safe sex.
most memorable -- and most frequentMy son told me today that Lois' ly requested -- poems and essays, send a
father is considering not le tting h er business-sized, self-addressed envd,Q.p&lt;;., .
leave for college in the fall, and h er plus check or money order for $3.95
mother may quit her job to stay home ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear Abby's
to keep an eye on her during the day. " Keepers," P.O. Box 447, Mount M orWhat do you think? -- SAN FRAN- ris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is includCISCO DAD
ed.)

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

ARCs goals require
Touring the area this week to gauge the success of the Appalachian Regional Commission's mission, US. Sen. George Voinovich of
Ohio said more needs to be done.
Amen .
WhilcVoinovii:h's conUll ent seemed to be directed at the agency,
he tempered his statement with ihe belief the ARC's efforts should
.be encouraged. Hopefully, we can cou nt on the senator's support
when ARC's annual appropriation comes up for approvaL
Voinovich believes the age ncy 's mission in southern Ohio still
needs work, and we will agree with that contention. It also applies
'to surrou nding.Appalachian counties.
This is not !d say ARC hasn't done anything since its creation in
. 1965. Quite the contrary. Without ARC, the region would sti ll be
::mired in the deprivation that relegated it"to near third world status
• :prior to President Johnson's war on poverty initiative.
:: Dut nearly four decades later, Voinovich is correct in saying
"improvement is needed. ARC was established as a facilitator for federal dollars to put in highways, help create jobs.and address quality
of life issues, such as installation of water and sewer systems.
Many goals have been met . But poverty pockets still exist in this
region. It takes distribution of federal dollars to help correct situations, and despite a prevailing meJitahty among congressmen and
senators that ARC represents a form of welfare, it takes that kind of
assistanc e to make things happen.
'
' That's why tours of th e region by Voinovich and other legislators
investigating the effectiveness of ARC are valuable. As governor,
Voinovich was aware that the. agency played a major role in improving the southern end of Ohio. His administration even established
an office to deal with issues in Appalachia.
It's up to him, as one of the state's voices.on Capitol Hill, to be an
advocate for ARC's continuati on and in fulfilling its goals not o nly
in Ohio, buuhroughout Appalachia.
·
.
The hearing; Voinovich conducted in Nelsonville on Tuesday
have armed him with th e facts . It's now time for him to convince
his fellow legislators that maintaining ARC is a wise move when the
bean counters start thinking up new ways to save money.
Then we'U kflO\\' that Washington is more serious about its com: ·m1tment than just bei ng encouraging.

Thunday, Auc. 10, 1000

Sisters, mom hold winning hands for weekend getaway

HU~E

'Esta6{zs/ie{ in 1948

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

~-~~~~~~~-·=·~·=g~------~~P=a~g~e=A=s

!!! J.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

2000 ·race could leave. high road for low soon
PHILADELPHIA -Texas Gov. George W.
Bush 's strong convention closer clears the way
for a substance-rich and rhetorically tough
presidential campaign rhat doesn't have to get
down and dirty, but probably wilL
The key passage in Bush's acceptance speech
Thursday that should set up the issues battle ·
was: "The surplus is not the government's
money The surplus is the people's money."
The central policy question that "the people''·
have to face in thi s election is: What do we want
to do with the anticipated 10-year, $1.5 trillion
surplus?
Bush says, "Now is the time to reform the tax
code and share some of the surplus with the
people." Democrats allege that the tax cuts he
proposes will use up all, or more than all, of the
surplus, leaving nothing remaining for the
"compassionate" initiatives he says he favors .
Democrats, on the other hand, propose to
"share'' much less oftlie nioney with taxpayers
- about two-thirds less - and ."invest" or
"spend" the rest on health and education programs, benefits for seniors, and paying down the
national debt.
This difference has the makings of what
could be an elevated - and tough - election
debate. Doth Bush and Vice President AI Gore
can and will claiin that America's continued
greatness and prosperity lie in following his
path .
They can also battle spiritedly over which
party is responsible for the nation's current
well-being, whether the opposition's taxing and
spending agendas add up. and who has the fairer and more effective formula for progress.
In his acceptance speech, Bush invited a fight
by charging that the Clinton-Gore administration has "coasted through prosperity" and " had
its chance" to lead, but didn't.
Gore has every right to say, "Coasted? The ·
country wasn't prosperous in 1992. It was debtridden and isn't any more.Those who don't feel
better off than they were eight years ago should
vote for another George Bush," etc.
As expected, Bush also laid down ddense,
Social Security reform, education reform and

Morton
Kondracke
NEA COLUMNIST
welfare as basic issues on which he wants to
campaib"' and said of President Clmton and
Gore, "they have not led ."
Th ere's mom for a good fight over the
administration's record and whether Gore's pro:posals on those fronts - college aid, family
leave, welfare reform and ·missile defense constitute good policy.
Gore. certainly will make health policy including prescription drugs and patients' rights
- a top issue, and can acc use B4sh and his
Republican allies in Congress of blocking
admimstration initiatives.
Growing naturally and legitimately out of the
issues debate are questions of motive and,
inevitably, character. The Bush-orchestrated
GOP convention was one giant iteration of the
famous remark by Bush's father, former President George Bush, " Message: I care."
The endless parade of black and Hispanic
faces and the repetition of compassionate
rhetoric were meant to show that Bush is, a.s
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge (R) described
·him, "the Founding Father of the new Republican Parry."
I'm convinced on the basis of Bush's record
and proposals that he really does m ea n to create
a "new" GOP on the premise that "the alternative to bureaucracy is not indifference" and
would try to "put conservative values and ideas
into the fight for justice and opportunity."
But Democrat' have every right to question
both Bush's and his party's sincerity. There are
elements of Bush's record and pmgram that jus-

tifir doubt. In Texa&lt;, he oppt&gt;Sed expa ndin~
health insurance for poor ch ildren last year. I k
also is not backing up Ills t:ducatiun n.: f11r1!1"
with much money.
There is even more ground to yucsrion tht..·
Republican Party's dedication to hi s goa ls, As
many commentators pointed out. then.· \~'L' I~ [u·
mon: Afncan- Americans on stage and m V!Lkos
at the GO I' convention than on the convt·m ion
fl oor.
It was fair that the Gore campaign tagged th,·
Philadelphia convention a " masquerade hall" in
which Bush "danced the Texas two-step." hid ..
ing "the reality that Hush is cornpassinnatL' fur
thtt rich and conservative for everyone l'isc.''
· It was surprising that Bush and his vke prt'Sidential candidate, Dick C hent·y, both tri,·d to
tie Gore to Clinton's S&lt;:andals, with C hcnl'y
asking "Does anyone , .. senously bc!i,·v,· th,lt
under Mr. Gore the next fi.)ur Yl.'an; would hl'
any different from the last eight?"
Nearly all o f Bush's and C heney'sjabs at Gur,•
were above the belt, but that one - implying
that Gore is capable of a Monica Lewinskystyle scandal - hit below
My guess is that Gore will use this punch .
among others , as a pretext for saying Republi cans "went nebrative" first, giving Dt·mocrals
permission to savage Bush.
Gore has demonstrated he is not above distorting an opponent's record - as h e lm .in
claiming that, under Bush, Tcxa.s is running a
budget "shortfall;" when there's a surplus.
Gore probably planned to charge, anyway,
that Bush is somehow anti- black, anti-H,isp:lll ic, anti-senior. He ln3dc such fals~ c h ar~o.:·o;;
against hi s primary opponent, former Sc·n. Bill
Bradley (D-N J).
So, the GOP cunve11tio n opened the way for
a nasty campaign that pmhably will ove1whdm
the elevated , feisty debate that the issues
deserve. Defore November, vote" may have
more need for th eir mud boots than their
thinking caps.
1

'!F

(Mort(m Koudrtttke is t'xaur[,,c c,litor
Call, tile ""''-'paprr ,~( C.•pitol Hill .)

n ~~ll

NEW ,YORK - Critics of gove rnment
surpluses believe something rings false in the
offi cial hand-wringing over w hy Americans
can't seem to raise th eir savings 1rate, now near
zero .
Just look at the federal budget surpluses,
they say, observing that hundreds of billions of
dollars beyond immediate needs reside in federal coffers.
In a real sense, those arc savings, bu t th ert:s
a big asterisk beside th em : The J ecision of
how to use those savings is up to elected oili cia ls, not to the families who say th ey have no
savmgs.
With some house holds paying more than 40
percent of incom e in fed eral , state and local
taxes - the self-employed, for example, pay
15.3 percent of thc·ir incomes - budgets can
become strained .
True, taxes aren 't the only obs tacle to saving.
There's the desire on the part of millions not
j ust to do without saving but to spend beyond
their incomes, borrowing to do so.
The rationale for such behavior, at least 111
many cases, is that household a&lt;Sets are steadi-

ly nsing, providing sutlicient collateral to justifY th e spending.Yes, but will that collateral be
there when the stoc-k market fall s, and perhaps
housing prices too ?
Or tfinten·st rates rise? Or tftaxcs continue
to rise, as mexorably they do if li Cit watched
do~ely. They are doin g so now, a co nlicqucn ce
of only limited indexing for inflation.
A study by former Treosury eco nomi sts
Aldona and Gary R obbins shows tiJJt inflation, howc:vt•r minor, drains aw.1y in come
fi·o m cap it~l Sains, div-idend ~ anJ intt·rest,
reducing the abihty tu ' ave.
The big dange r to incomes and sav mgs. th ey
say in their study for th e think rank Institute
fo.r Poli cy Innovation , is not higher interests
rates, whi ch eve ryo ne watches, but sneaky tax
in creases.
&lt;&gt;
By their L'lltimatcs, :1 quarter percentage
point incn:ase in tht· average ta.x rate has
roughly the same impact on th e econo my as a
full percentage point incrt~J "i o.:~ in intl.:rcst r;1tcs.
Th eir analysi s ind1cate s that indi vi du .tl
income taxes, which account for almost half of
all taxes, are now runnin g 9.9 percent ahead of
last year, far faster than the gross domes ti c

produ ct ri se.
. Not all the bbmc can be assigned to Ltxt·s,
not with the way Ameri cans havl' shown tlwy
lik e to spend, but it co ntribut&lt;·s to th e lo w
savings ratt' so often desc rib~·d as myr.;tniou :-:.
It 's hardly a myst ery. 110t wh,·n you &lt; ~e th e
off&lt;et in th e form of those billi o n&lt; held by th e
US Treasury. The my stery more aptl y "I' I' lie&gt;
to how the hu ge pri vatl' debt can be p.ti,l
down safel y.
,
,
An amlysis by Wynne Godky. a sc holar at
tht• Je-rome Lc:vy Economi cs lmtittlll' . r.; hows
tlut ho use hold d,·bt n·achcJ m-.nly 11111 percent of dispos ;.l bk· inromt' in th\.' first 4ll.lrtl'r,
an all-time high .
The assumption I&lt;; th at ri &lt;~in g vr~luc of collateral, especially fm stocks and homes, will
case th e burden of repaying. But tlut 'leaves a
question: How mu ch of it wil1 be: rhnc when
the tim e: comes?
'
It migh t be too much to expert. but perhaps
in the intcnst· h t:.lt of the.· poJi tic 1l cullpai glt
battlts, th e m y,tn y w1 ll br resolved .

.

'

OoJm CwwW·is c1 busi1wss t1Wtl)'Stj(n 771(' Ass ~~~ iatcd Press)

RACINE Southern High
School Athletic Booster&gt;, Thursday. 7
p.m., at the high school.
POMEROY Cleaning and
setup for the Meigs County Fair
flower shows, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
senior fair building on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

!

· After expressi ng her appreciation to t he Auxiliary for the opportunity to attend Girls State, Stivers detailed her experiences during
the week . She said she was of the Federalist party and parti cipated in
caucus m eetings, po liti cal rallies, debates, and elections, as well as
swL· aring- in ceremoni es for the newlY elected officials.·
She desc ribed the program as not only educational, but "inspiring
and motivating." O ne of the most impressional . events for her, she
said. was the assembly where the oath of office was administered to
the el ec ted state officials by Supreme Court Justice Ali ce Robie
Resnick . Another dignitary attending was Gov. Bob Taft.

PORTLAND -

RACINE - Southern Junior
High School cheerleading meeting
for those plarming to participate in
the 2000-01 cheerleading season,
Thursday at 5 p.m. at the junior high.
Parents should attend with students.
POMEROY. -Junior and Rita
White to perform at the Meigs
County Senior Center, Thursday,
5:30 p.m. during congregate meal
there.
FRIDAY, Aug. tl
LONG BOITOM - Hynm
sing featuring Earthen Vessels at the
Faith Full Gospel Church, Friday, 7
p.m

Gospel sing to take place
LANGSVILLE - The 14th annual Gospel Sing at the Carl Gorby
Farm near Langsville will take place Saturday, Aug. 12.
The event will feature The Gabriels, Carleton-Sutton Bluegrass
Gospel Group and the Musser Family Singers.
A potlu ck dinner will be held at 5:30 p.m. and those attending are
to take a covered dish.
Singing will start at ,7 p.m. and will be televised by WJOS- TV

SAnJRDAY, Aug. 12
DANVILLE - Danville Church
of Christ, gospel meeting, Saturday, 7
p.m. and Sunday. 6 p.m. Denver Hill,
speaker.
SUNDAY,Aug.13
POMEROY - M eigs County
Ministerial Association, public song
fest, Sund'l}', 7 p.m. in the grandstand
on Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Rev.
Bob and Joann Robinson to lead service; local churches to provide special
music, singspiration included.

GabrtaiQuartat

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Bible School

Mission on County Road 31, 6 to 8
p.m Thursday through Satun:lay

Circle hosts family picnic
RAC INE - The Sonshine Circle of Dorcas Bethany Church
ei!Joye d a fami ly picn ic at the river campsite of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
McKelvey recently
H azel McKelvey was hostess for the picnic The group enjoyed
pl:tying games, fishing, boat rides, and singing. Donna and Mary Byer
we re 111 charge of the games and Marvin McKelvey took the guests
t(n boJt rides.
It was reported that Mary Cleek, corresponding secretary had
mailed sy mpathy cards to Sarah N eigler, Bernice Theiss, Florenc e
I lceter, Marjorie Hofli1er, Harry Pickens and Mari e Norris. Cards of
encouragement were sent to Mary Stobart, Wilma Ballard, Edison
1\r.tC&lt;'. An n Boso. Marjorie Salser, Libby Willford, Don Hupp, Lizzie

The Community Calendar is pubtree service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed only as space pennits lind
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

lished as a

will be held at the Freedom Gospel

Girl Stater reports to Auxiliary

!

MONDAY,Aug. 14
POMEROY- Calvary Pilgrim
Chapter, State Route 143, Bible
school, Monday through Aug. 18,
6:30 to 8:30 p.m

RACINE - Dorcas/Bethany •
Sonshine Circle, 7 p.m at the church.
Officers to be elected and secret sisters chosen.

WELLSTON -The Annual Ohillco Coal Festival Art Show wiU
be held Sept, 1 and 2 at the WeUsron Public Library.
The show will include professional and amateur categories in phoHeather Ridenour, being held here by her mother, Jenny Ridenour, is
tography, paintings and misceUaneous art forms such as ceramic and
the fifth generation in the family of Josephine Smith, Pomeroy. The
. wood carvings. There will be separate categories for young adults and
five generations, as pictured here, are from the left, Faith Varney,
'youth.
grandmother to Heather being held by her mother, Mrs. Smith, her
The young adult division will include 7-12 graders. Other youth
·great-great-grandmother, and Dan Smith, her great-grandfather. (Concategories are grades 4-6 and K-grade 3. There is no entry fee for the
tributed photo)
young adult or children's division .
There is a $1 entry fee per item for amateur division and a $2
entry fee per item for ihe professional category. There is a limit of
RACINE- Southern High School student Emily Stivers, who four items per person and a size limit of no larger than 24"x30."
All items must be be framed and ready to hang.
e~tte nded the 54th annual Buckeye Girls State under sponsorship of
The best of show cash award is sponsored by the Southern Hills
the American Legion Auxiliary, Post 602, reported on her activities '
Arts
Council. There is a Sharon Davis Stubbe Memorial award to
there at a recent Auxiliary meeting.
honor
one of the founders of the Ohillco Coal Festival Art Show.
Girls State is a week long workshop on ,government in action
spon sored by the Legion Auxiliary at Ashland College. This year There is also a Peoples Choice award and a best of show award, as
mure than a thousand hi gh school girls who will b e seniors this fall well as cash awijrds for the top three wim1ers in eaGh category.
The show will be professionally judged.
:~ ttended the program which is designed to educate the citizens of
Check in times for the show will be Friday, Sept. I .from 4-6 p.m.
to morrow in city, counry and stare government, their functions and
and
Saturday, Sept 2 tram 1-3 p.m.
operation .
For more information, call committee members Barbara M cKinStivers noted that she held the positions of volunteer fireman and
niss
at 740-384-3381 or C indy Kessler at 740-384-2840.
·.dso served on the city board of health.

People aren't savings: so.what's the mystery?
JOHN CUNNIFF

THURSDAY,Aug. 10
MIDDLEPORT
The
Widow's Fellowship will meet Friday, 9:30 a.m. for breakfast at the
Golden Corn!. For those needing
rides, call 992-5666.

wood, Raymond Proffitt, Mildred Parsons, Pauline Wolfe, Martha
Stutler, Doug Circle, Ethel Orr, Ellen Arnott, Gordon West, Ooley
Beegle, Vicki Boso, Nettie Cross, Anna Lee Tucker, David Grindstaff,
Naomi NeviUe, and Dorothy Harden.
Attending the picnic were Esther West, Mabel Brace, Bernice and
Kenneth Theiss, Manha Lou Beegle,Joe and Evelyn Foreman, Milford and Romaine Frederick, Tom and Sheila Theiss, Linda and
Wayne Russell, Dixie Smith, Dale and Kathryn Hart, Edna Knopp,
Janet Theiss, Otmer Knopp, Dick and Lois Sterrett, Ruth Simpson,
. Manley Christy, Thelma Walton, Sally and David Gloeckner, Garry,
Melissa, Brandon, Bryan and Ryan Smith , Letha Proffitt, De Wayne
Stuttler, Hazel McKelvey, Donna and Mary Dyer, Marvin, Eleanor
and Jay McKelvey.
Next meeting will be at 7 p.m. Thursday at the church.

Art show to be held

BUSINESS MIRROR

BY

CALENDAR

sJJe f

( ..

Zip .• ),) '
" t

'i '

· (}ld.!r to .,Ofer. N pun:
I to"'l!fv~awaym
thly.
1 only. Cllnl!ot be d n
I
I
I
1

I
1
I
I

I

e nerts ry. •. tee (3 $50 Gjh CertiOcides
lhCetllncatesllo~eapp)lfdtonewpurchase
~.d.ent lila.dda!lllii!Jiufnlture.tha'le or
lay&amp;WIIJ' actoun!. Mail to P.O. Box 408, Mason, wv zsz.:O or bring to
Mason f'nmlture lnd Street, Mason, WV. AILentrles must b'e received
by August 3t:"l000.Drawlng September t;lnilo. Wlnoen will be notified
and names posted at .the store. Mason FtirDihire employees and
family member's are Ineligible.

Della Sauer. Pt. Pleasant, wv
Tom Darst - Middleport, OH
.Charlene Lewis, Letart, WV

:

.:
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1

1
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I
I
1

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'Watch For August Winners In Our
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September Newspaper Ad.
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L-----------------~
•

�-.
~age

A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~

' ,-.

'

"

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-- --.-·--------.--.-.

-. - - - -

I .

-

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily &amp;oreboard, Page B6
.,

•

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

1hunci11J, Aupst 10, 2000

•

. ..
THURSDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
GSC tryouts Aulo 15

·
• c........ Truoll. , ••• ,.... Auto
Pertll 210

8 WUt: Global CrosslnJ at

8 p .m . • Solurdoy • ESPN2

Tl&gt;o Glen

c-,_

QloNI
81 Tile 81M
• W I - C•~
•r•
·-•

•WIIIft: 12:30 p.m.. Sunday

•Wittte:

watkins Glen (N.Y.)
International (2.45-mlle track)

12:30 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN

• lutch . . - . - l l l l e.OGIII 210

• - 90 laps/ 220.5

•o: Jeff

Noon • ALJC. 19 • ESPN

--··

m=:.ehtl ac ......

Gordon
• Q. .f)ltC rwcont Rusty
WOIIoee, Ford, 121.234 mph,
AUI. 13, 1999
•llleoe reconl: Mark Martin,
Ford,103.030 mph, Aug . 13,

2000 POINTS \UNOINGS

.........,....
~ :.-, . ~·

Dllt,...

a.rm, LltiOf'llll, 3,00!5

l.

--.2.1121

2,$11
01111 lat'Nrdt, 2 .aeo
.. JtfJ'IurWI. 2,714
I.

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.....

-·-

·_...,._
-:IMJ
Kllft !bdl. 2.853

·

--····

TOP TEN

• Weekly rankl..,. by NASCAR This Last week's rankin&amp; IS In parenthesea.

llobbJL8D
.. _
2. (2)
3. (I) Ruotr-4. (3) D. . hm(4) Tony I t e.•• (71 Jtlllurton
7. (8) Jill I I 8. (9) Wlnllurton
1. (1)

Mork Mlrtln

10. 1-1 JenJN-

·
SPEEDWAY.

Ind. -

Who could

araue with the notk&gt;n that, In
the Br;c:kyard 400. ~was Bobby
Labonte 's turn?

E~~~My

year at
Indianapolis Motor Speodwoy,
the Pontiac driver inched closer
to victory lane. In his previous
three starts at Indy, Labonte

had finished OO&lt;:ond (1997),
third (19981 and second

11999).
Justice was served at

Indianapolis Motor Speodwoy
on Saturday. Bobby Labonte
was, to borrow the cliche,
"due:
Sadly, so was Rusty wallace,
and h.-was -Wallaw"s •ad rate to
watch helplessly as Labonte's
Pontiac - the first of that
make to claim this race swept past him on the 146th of
160 laps. The pass ended •
rather testy duel In whlth
Labonte had shadowed

Wallace's car for lap after lap.
Once cleBr, L-abonte swlf"tly

aWIIj.

After makln&amp; the pus In thl

third turn, he and Wallace
bumped at the head of the
front stral&amp;t1t, exltln&amp; tum four.
By tne next time around,

no-. Lal&gt;onte was pert~aps
50

AL41. 9,1999

..C:H IMND IIAT1011AL
• Wlllrl: NAPAonllna.com
250
• -Noon. ALC. 19

• Qllllf11114 ,._,.: Dave

Blanay, Pontiac, 180.054 mph,

•111101 reoonl: Mark Martin,
Ford.169.571 mtlh. Ate. 19.
1995
• - : Martin Is thl on~
twc&gt;tlme winner of this rece.

CMiiiiMAN TIIUCII

•-=

• - . M;c:hlaan Speedway

12-mlle track)
• : 125 lops/250

Ports 200

yards ahead, ano his mlflin
·

.Qwlf)IIC~

July 17, 1999
•R-..-:Jock
Spraaue, Chevrolet, 79.226

Ate· 16.1997

YourTurn
LIIIWI ,_ o.•••n

Irvin arrested
on drug charge

Detr NASCAR This Week,
I am tired of these people with
looiC jawa who claim that Jeff Gordon il wuhcd up.
No driver is any bc"cr than the
car be is &amp;tvefl to dri'IC , Give Jeff I
car that will n1n, and he will out;

PLANO, Texas (AP) - Former
Dallas Cowboys wide receiver
Michael Irvin was arrested on a
misdemeanor drug charge.
Irvin ,was taken into custody on
a charge of possession of le'l than
2 ounces of marijuana, a Class B
misdemeanor, said Plano Police
Department Sgt. Mark Hunt.

race the ben oft he res1.
Oarles 5181111
Boonlborv,Md.

X
Dear NASCAR This Week,
I want to donste 10n1e money to a
NASCAR team that would run a car
tponiOid by donatioos from the
(ana. After the paint job, take a
maaic marker and write as man~
fans' namesu could be squeezed in
on the car. Many, mpy fans would
see their names racina aroLmd the
track and in the winner\ circle!
My bet is there would be a lot of
donationL What do you think7

Tr,..,. to &lt;MIIIIf I I can't_•_

him

It the end, 4.229 - . I I ,
the l.,..st In the non! 'I
history.

WOS

tD-

rookie._,_

Grand Notlonll with "'"
chomplonohlpoln thl Crofts.
man Truck
lAP morlled

!;erie"
HOfnodoy'l oecono

vlctoty

.;~

.,...!"!.•.....,.,. ~ ... _ - . ;.:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~
OYer $4.5 miM6on In wtnntfwl.~..,.

-t

·J

~;}.

-

Rollerl Prosstay, once consldeleo one or

NASpAR'Omorepromlsl"' IOIII'C drlvr!ro, n•
mana&amp;e&lt;~ 10 CIUI&gt;I;c:ata thl ouccen 110

-

ofiiOre&lt;lln the Bu8Ch sarles s1n00 he came
to Wlitlton Cup as a rookie

-

- - - . . . . . , ') thln!l·"'a

1011e Plltlr-COQCI· ... wew 11011' tr\ Sllilftu ..
little l)ll, 1IUt Iller 1111 ~ter...'!e 100
.
f)ertont Dettet. t think ~'I a Dllllm~t.
Dut. then opln, M'l hot 1Niei111 OOIIIII!tnt

In 1995.
n.., -leY~~ HanyGant u as we went:

CIIAITSMAN TIIUCK

-or t1te NO. 33 a...rotet thin owneo t1y

CLERMONT. Ind. - \rloteron
Joe Ruttmon put his Dcdle 011
tho polo and domln11od the

R-

1M Jocltlon. N'4t ~ now owna tttat
taam - II di!Wf II JOI Nemechek- 0110
Pruotay hll rnoveG on. first to thl team
owneo t1y Gil) Bechtel and then to n1o

Power Stroke 200 11

Recenl~

to rile. Tho of yOuna at1W Chief
· lljltn Pomllerton -~~,.. thO ,.. . o bOOil

and point loader Grec Billie.

...:U
11-..L Asheville, N.C.

Amick, not'ntalty I BGN c:ompetttor, collected 1 rumer-up
flnllh In only his IICOftd truck
race of the MIJOn.

..:a1ni

,_1

"*· ""' -

lelldl"' the ltll!l. I'm reol~ • - whl1 R)&gt;eR hll .~ IIIII. H l l ' - the

care more PDOII1111nt M,IY-~ Wt~
_COllin lho lfiOP now,
•!ld wllenMr filet In U...car, 1!'lfti 1lf(i I
~'I t1!0 car we r-ot lltlotA&gt;I or MI!U""YIIte

prubll&gt;ly 110120 _

milt""
••10&lt; to
&amp;•t In the . . ono
Mfl'lint ortJtim ''
exactly ollko. There 111 minOt ....,...,IIUt
or tndiiii\OpCit~. K'l

C....,._,156 starts, 0
to)&gt;llvo llnlshol, 6 top.lO finishes, 0

wins, 4
poles,

lnt -~ w•aettlnC In raoo 0111, ond ·
would be d!f!Otont, li!JIH would
be dllforent ond thl seat would ~ dm,;ent.'
sw~hel

MIIJ'k Martin va. Mllui llld111..r

The Brickyard 400
onty U '-old, ond Morlt Mlrtln
hod • dreftlna peMOt In - Sk-. Aftlr M-'ll'linl
ano Mlchotl WO~'o ChlwOtetbumpod- - ·
Martin ylsldod to WOitrlp as t1te
lho filii tum
at Indy.
.
.
Skinner filled to ontlclpote Morttn'l ~off, IIIII the
resuk was 1 craoh thet loft Martin In l8lt Dlloll· 'I dlcl
somothlrc IO&lt;Ioy 111* 1)111 lael reii-IIIOUI.' Slttltlllt'
sold. Monln
'I'm 1 0 0 - IIUI8 n.,.. an

two-

oonc-.

occident,
and accldonll IIAieAIITitltWHII'Io
_:
____ __

'Accident or not, the crolh no - - . t o Mlllln'lo
llaUI,_ In thO 1101nt race. II net lei&lt; lllciiUCII, M1r11n
would ttwooa no IUCI&lt; 11 on:
-

..

• 111m The ~oc:e finish
wu devastatlrc. but Rusty
Wallace ls still the t.:lrcult'l
hottest-.
• 111m Wol~ Dollof1bach Jr. has

1. How many turns does It take to complete
a lap around Watkins Glen International?
2. Who was the first driver to win 1100.000 In a
season?
3. What did the land on which Bristol Motor Speedway
was bultt used to be?

I

:uozum1 P8&gt;!1! :n

'l

The lrll&amp;ic loss of Adam Petty
and Kenny Irwin made me stop and

••••••••••••

action, if perfected· and modified
for lona drivin&amp; comfort, would
possibly be tbc answer. Let's nope
we don't lose any more or these
b!'lve drivers to engineerinJil flaws.
bymond J. Holtz
Bloornfnaton, Ill.

Just lwt wed.

NASC~R

lmple·

mtttttd lwo nrw safet)l mmsurcos,
mondatl11g tile addilioJt of off-o" ,

or "kiiJ" switcltes, on both the
throttle anrmbty and ,\'fetring
whrel ofall Winsto" Cup cars .

of retailer Sears. has extended
Its sponsorship of the NASCAR
Truck Series that has boasted
Its name since Its Inception In

point runo .

Ma~fic:ld'l, driven-·bl~
by teammate
he .,
SPEEDWAY. Ind. - In the: lndi- RUll y WI IIa(e, ..wvu
""'W n I '
anapolit Motor Speedway prxticc: rachcd the 11mc spot; on the track .
Joe Nemechck \ Chevrold also bare·
sts~ion on the mom ina or Aua. 4,
Jeremy Mt~ficld wu In the wronJ I)' eaupcd an incident. '
Mayneld wu liimihed to the ho•·
pllcc tllhc wrona Ume.
Apparently 11 1 rc1ult of oil pUll with .. • closed head injury."
Dr. Troy Plyner of the hospital 'I
dropped from Chad Linle'lailina
enai~te. Mayfield'l Fon:l atruck the
neurol01ical ·~ff said the. injury
third-tum wall of Indy. And while hil ..ould prr.-cnt him rrom takmapaM
injuric:l were not anve, they did in tiM: Brickyard 400, but Mayfield
bock him out of tht race and put checked "'' or Ihe hoapilal 11 4
hi1 ability to competa In IM neat p.m.
Mlyfield had qualified fourth. buC
ICVCI'Ili'ICCI in doubt.
Kyle Petty. who had fail~ to mike
Ma~field 'l Ford wabbled bcfon:
spinnina completely out of control the lllrlil'lfl fjc:ld, took over 11 driver
and hittina the wallllmost DUll! on
eoune. meant that
the driver's akte. A rcplly, wlli .. not

or.;:~f

hldtodroptotherwoflhefield for
the slart
)C
THE STREAK ENDS: The
lonaest consecutive-statU streak in
NASCAR his1ory ended 11 lndianapoli1 when Terry Laboftte elec::ed
not to compete in the Brickyard 400.
Labonte autfered a concuasion and
a broken riahtlea in a c:ruh at DaytoM on July I, and lin.gertna effecu
or the concua.sion caused dizzinas
wMr1 L-abonte tried 10 ~ice in his
No . .5 Chevrolet. Todd Bodine qualificd the car, and after consultina
with doctors. Labonte elected 10 pau
up Ind y and tbi1 weck'1 race 11

row bepn wilh the Dl)tona SOO in ·
1979.
"'

X

SABCOMAkf.SrTOmCIAL:

Feli11. Sa bates announced his plana
Aua. 4, ofTic:lally affirm ina what
everyone had known. for weeka: He
had,aold 1 m~ty and controllina
interes1ln his team to Chip G1naul .
Gu1ui, the lonpime Indy car
entrepreneur, will al10 switch the
team from Chevrolet: :o Dodae ne11.1
yw, with Sterlina Marlin remain in&amp;
to drive the No. 40 car aDd the driver
oft he other c:ar yet to be determined.
Ganae-area rtpons htd Ganaui
interested in lurin1 Bobby Hamilton

~ w~:~~~reak of 6.55 races in a ~;!~:,m Larry MoCiure\ Chevro-

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The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
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•

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Romanowski faces
felony drug charges

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MASON, Ohio (AP) - Second-see ded Pete Sampras eked
out a rain-delayed 7-6 (3), 7-6 (3)
victory over 19- year- old Taylor
Dent at Tennis Masters SeriesCincin nati.
Hours earli er, top-seeded Andre
Aga~&lt;i was forced to reti re from
his match because of back problems that have hampered him
since a 1ninor car acc ident last
month .
Third-seeded Magnu s Norman
was upset 6- 7 (4), t\- 1, ii -3 by
Slava Dosedal.
In matches that wt·re susp end ed
m·arl y four hours beca use of rain,
No. 4 Gustavo Kucrten . beat
G ianlu ca Pozzi 7-5, 6-3, and N o.
8 Marat Safin beat Francisco
C bvet 7- 6 (7) , 6-3.
No. 13 Fran co Squ ill ari beat Jiri
Novak 6- 3. 6-4 . No. I 5 Tim
Hen man beat Mariano Pucrta 61, 6-2, and N o. 16 Mark
Phillipoussis beat Marcelo Rios
6-7 (3), 6-4,7-6 (4).
In other matches, Max Mirn yi
beat Hi cham Arazi; Arnaud
C lement beat Martin Damm; and
Todd
Martin
beat
Sjeng
Schalken.

Miller signs
with Pacen
INDIANAP O LI S (AP)
Reggie Miller, thg Nl:IA's all - tim e
leader in 3- point m empts and
baskets, sign.td a new contract
With the Indiana Pacers. Terms
were not disclosed by the team .

•

Without Dillon, the Benpls had no
running back with any appreciable N~L
expenence.
·
Dillon already ranks fourth on the Ben_gals' career rushing list with 3,459 yards
over the past three seasons:
As a rookie in 1997, he rushed for 246
yards against Tennessee to break the single-game rookie record of237 yards set by
Cleveland's Jim Brown against the los
Angeles Rams in 1957 .

Hamisch hurls
complete game

.,

Slmpns advances
in rain-SOIIked Masten

• Craftsman, the tool dhllsion

during prac'tice at the team's training
camp in Georgetown, Ky.
Smith started only four games last se'ason because of a foot injury and is still
learning to run the offense.
'

REDS BASEBALL

RALEIGH , N.C. (AP)
NASCAR
p1 o neer
Herb
Thomas, a two-time seri es champion, died of a heart attack at his
home in Sanford. He was 77 .
Thomas won the Grand National
Racing (now Wimton C up)
championship in 195 1 and 1953.
He ranks 12th on the career
victory list with 48 wins in 230
starts.

toe back up. This was crude ud
uncomfortable, but this type of

After Injury, Mayfield's Immediate driving future in doubt :-: cii£WOFtlllll'~
lhowina theacc~nt in vNid detail,
did meal that the car in front of

games and play only in the last six so that
he could become an unrestricted free
agent for next season. That is now moot.
Last week, the Bengals notified Dillon
that he would be ineligible to play in the
first regular season game on Sept. I 0
unless he signed and reported in time for
the Atlanta game, which will be the Bengals' second preseason game. '
The Bengals had also said Dillon would
not be paid for the first regula~ season
game if he did not meet the deadline.
The Bengals need Dillon for an offense
that lost top receiver Darnay Scott to a
broken leg last week and will be run by
second-year quarterback Akili Smith.
Scott broke two bones in his left leg

NASCAR legend Herb
thomas dud at 77

vent this sticking aas pedal from
happening again. I ~all driving a
JO·cart or electric · car, and the
pedal had 1 piVOI in the center. T~
toe pushed up, the heel went up,
and the heel down would push the

AROUND THI GARAGf

8J MOIItt Dtltttll
NASCAR Thll Week

Falcons game, but he is expected 10 join
the team in Atlanta.
Coach Bruce Coslet has not decided
whether Dillon will play against the Falcons.
The Bengals had been increasi ng pressure on Dillon in hQp,es of signing him,
after failing to sign him to a multiyear
deal.
Dillon is the eighth player in NFL history to to p the I, I 00-yard rushing mark
in each of his first three seasons.
He was voted to the Pro Bowl last season after rushing for 1,200 yards, the second-highest total in Bengals history.
A restricted free agent, Dillon had been
threatening to miss the season's first 10

thint of tomdhin&amp;: that miJhl pn::- _

Series through 2005 and wil l
slfinlfecant~ boost the yearly

IIIIMINY

toj)15 finish .

X
Dear NASCAR Th is Week,

1995. The new aareemer~t' wlli
maintain the Craftsman Truck

'WJ8' .&lt;J11P V 't

ftnlshed 21st 01 M)I"'!Je In nlne
ttlnll(ltt races and has not had

llr' /d,fltYOIJy tft'Wr ctlf«Jrl Qtf .

"'I~

11M

cr. No. 77 Jasper E"'lnes Ford Taurus.

ownOd tly Ooul

-~~---·1·m-.

11 thl flllt ~
na~ or""'
year, and t1ttn ne111 year, oil of us h.WW o

~tar under our btl1 With 1ty1n 1~1

-ride.Preutey'l tonuneo ttwooa started

Parle
Ruttmon led 143 of the 200
lops, holdl,. off L~ Am;c:k,
Jamie McMurroy, Mlkl WOIIoee

lias been by o stntaUng team tllot
was aiPW~dy sttGppedfor cash. Since
non,- of r1Jo1t tetiJfl.r htu done well.

,,";1

Sllrt (Feb. 20, 1894; ot Doytono),
POle (none), win (nont)

of

the MISOO.
Jell 1'\trvls ftnllhod oecono.
fullowed br runowoy ~
leader Jeff Green.

Indianapolis

tri~d

a
n11rt1Mr of tim~s ovtr the past
d«tJJ/e. None ofthem /rQ3 btert JIIC·
ttssfol. Otle problem Is diCit every
liml rill cortetptlttJJ bttn ln·td. II
Tlrts connpl has . bten

C INC INNATI (AP) - Holdout running back Corey Dillon has reached verbal agreement with C incinnati on a oneyear contract and hopes to join the Bengals in time for the Friday ,night exhibi~
tion in Atlanta.
·
The Bengals'Web site repo rted the deal
is worth S3 million, more than twice the
$1.3 7 miliion tender offer Dillon had
turned down in June.
" It's great to get Corey in and have him
under contract," said Paul H . Brown, the
Bengals' vice president who handled the
negotiations.
Dillon will not be able t6' reach training
camp in Georgetown, Ky., before the
Bengals depart Thursday to travel to the

GREELEY, Co lo. (AP) Denver Broncos linebacker Bill
Romanowski has been cha rged
with using diet drugs prescribed
for his wife and a friend.
The four felony charges were
announced at the team's training'
camp in a cas~ that dates to 1998.
Romanowski could receive
between two and nine years in
prison if convicted on all four
charges.

Glen Franck

CLERMONT, Ind. - Ron
Homodoy oontlnuod his rookie
181U- dh I.-yIn the
i&lt;roeer 200 11 lndiiNipolll
,
Recelooy Park.
1
HOfnadOI Is, of COUIIO, hardly
the normal

hit .....

.•

,

ld••o Falla, Idaho

- H 8IWIDIUTIOIW.

Dillon signs 1-year, $3 million deal·with Bengals

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soccer Club is in need of coaches for the upcoming season . Interested parties should contact GSC
chairman Wayne Rose at 4464627 .

Tim

Steele, Ford, 111.079 mph ,

•••••••••••••

..

FEUD Of THI WEEK

w•

• DDoelllooooodldlrlo...
llc..........:
Dennis Setzer

200 laps. ·

CIIIIJ- . . 11M lllllftiiiiiC
D8IMIMIIII-MIII'

prefaced

GSC needs coaches

• ,.._, 200 lape/119.2
miles

been shortened from 250 to

FINifr lot tlolrl _... win
Not. atnllll• ·
~ ...... u. ....
Loelftl•a.....-.?
Over~lloll wed 1tJ tu:wuw,...

Next-..,_,_,

.-....:Nashville (Tenn. I
Speedway USA (.596-mlle track I

• Hobble: This race has

Federated Auto

Robert

wrttor Monte Dutton.

· - : 8 p.m.. Soturday

mph,

FROM LAS! WEEK
wtNITOfl CUP

pulled

Cup races on road courses ....
GOf'don started thli"d last year,
first in 1998 and 11th If! 1997.

PROFIIF

JOiri.eMn.:f.lll

11. . . . ~. 1,521-

••

miles
• Deft 'rJ ohrr' a: Dale
Elmnal'dt Jr.

. . . . . . . . . 2.413

'· 'IIWI:I a.rton. 2,614
&amp; ltiiK ..... 2.512
1. Rietw' Rucki, :un

(8)

1995
• Notellle: Gofdon has won
the last three races at watkins
Glen and the last six Winston

..........
_ __
2.122
11.411

.. Rull}' . . . . .. 2,737

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soccer Cl~b is currently holding
signups for its under-14 and
und er-18 teams. Players can
obtain registration forms at the
pawn shop at 324 Second Avenue
in Gallipolis or by calling 4460840. The first practice is set for
Aug. 15.

ON THE SCHEDULE

wtNITONCUP

Page B.1

RED HOT HARNISCH - Reds pitcher Pete Harnisch (38) threw a complete game and hit a home run as
Cincinnati defeated Atlanta 10-6 at Cinergy Field Wednesday. (AP)

(

NASCAR

Canadian carpetbagger guns for win
Although Gordon concedes
WATKINS G LEN. N.Y. (AP) the world's top stock car series
- It's been 27 years' since a car- since M ark Donohu e in 1973. that Fellows is perhaps th e best
petbagger won a Winston Cup Dono bue, who won on the road racer in North America, he
now-defunct ro ad co urse in im't sure th at 's enough . C onsisrace.
R on Fellows could eml th at Riverside, Calif.; died two years tency is difficult to maintain
later, after crashing in a Formula when a team isn 't on the circuit
streak .
every week.
A victory Sunday by th e One car.
Canadian sports car ace , who
Fellow s said it would be
It can affect th e setup and
run s in only one ran: in the "cool" 10. join Donohue in the power of th e race car, and the
se ri es each season, also would record book . " H e's one of my crew led by a Brian Pattie - as
good as it has bee n in Busch and
hal t Jdl" Gordon's unprecedented ·heroes," he said.
North of the bo rder, Fellows is Truck sen es victories- shouldrun of six straight victori es on
n't be able to match Gordon's
a
fan favonte.
road (O Urses and prevent &lt;-f.
T he 40-year-old driver, fifth over-the -wall bunch .
record seventh overall.
""
Fellows is no long shot. Th e last Sunday in an Ameri can Le · "All things being equal , we
driver from Mississaub"' · Onta ri o, Mans Series race at Mosport should have an edge," Gordon
finished seco nd to Gordon last International Ra ceway in Bow- said_"But you never know w hat's
manvill e, Ontario, has won 19 going to happen in a r:Ke."
year.
Fellows, driving a ca r owned
Fellows ha s three wins, two times in Trans Am racing. Donoby
hue'
had
a
record
27
ca
reer
vicWinston C up ace Joe
seconds and a third in his last six
Nem ec h ek, re ali zes Go rdon
NASC AR races includi ng tories.
Fellows has driven his factory- should be better in the pits, so
C raftsman Truck and Busc h
Grand Nati onal events at backed Co rvette to finishes of he'll have to be fast and smart.
second this year in th e 24 l-lours
" I'm going to try to gel some
Watkin s Glen Internati onal.
" H e's the best there is at of Daytona, and II th in Le kind of advantage on the track,"
Watk ins Glen," Gordon said as Mans . Those are the wo rld's pre- he said. "That would make up
he prepare d fo r th e Global mier endurance ra ces, but Fel- the difference."
Many in racing bdi eve road
Crossing, one of onl y two road- lows doesn't fed out of place in
co urses are more diffi cult to
course ever.t ts on the 34-racc a stock car - particularly here.
" It's a high-speed circuit that drive than ovals. If so, why hasn't
Wins ton C up schedule .. " llon
seems to lend itself to my dri - · Fellows ventured into the
Fellows is definitely a threat."
Fellows is hoping to become ving." he said. "It's like Mospo rt,
PluH- NA~ Pllp Bl
the first non-regular to win m the track I grew up on ."

CINCINNATI (AP)
Adanta manager Bobby Cox
tilted his head, purs~d his lips
and marveled.
"You don't see that happen
very often," he said.
He was thinking about Tom
Glavine's meltdown, but he
could just as well have been
referring to Pete Harnisch's
homer or the Cincinnati Reds
winning a series from the
Braves.
It had been a long time since
any of those things had happened.
Harnisch hit his second career
homer, completing a huge
comeback against Glavine, as
~ ,Reds roUed t\) a milestone
' IP-6 victory Wednesday night.
For starters, the Reds took
two- of-three for th eir first winning series against the l:lraves
since September 1996. They'd
lost their last eight series against
Atlanta, leaving them 7-25
against the Braves since 1997 .,
They hardly ever beat the
Braves, let alon e beat them in a
series.
"It feels good to light one up
against the Braves," manager
Jack McKeon said, taking his
first puffs on a postgame cigar.
The way it started, the Reds
didn't think they'd be lighting
any victory cigars this' night .
A severe storm dumped sheets
of rain and hail on the field,
delaying the start by an hour
and 31 minutes. Thunder shook
the suite windows and lightning
lit the sky throughout the game,
drawing repeated oohs from the
31,098 fans and qui ck glances
from the players.
"On the first ball hit to me, as

soon as I caught it it was like -,'ZZZT!" Ken Griffey Jr. said,
mimicking the sound of electricity.
The show on the field was
pretty lively, too.
The Braves surged ahead wid;!
a five-run third inning off Har:
nisch (4-6) , who seemed to be
on his way to a quick ..Ot.
Bobby Bonilla got a standup
two- run triple when Dan.t e
Bichette dove and missed his
liner to right, then scored oii
Harnisch's wild pitch for a 6-~
lead.
" At that point, I'm just trying
to get through five or -$ix
innings, give , the bullpen a
break, throw a couple' of%~
and give the guys a chance to
get back in the game," Harnisch
said.
It seemed like a reasonable
strategy. Hamisch hadn't beat-en
the Braves since 1993 and
Glavine (14-6) has more career.
wins agaimt the Reds than any
other team ~ 2 I.
The left- hander also was on a
roll, having won his last seven
starts. All he had to do for an
eighth was hold a comfortable
lead against a team that had fo:iisix of its last seven games.
Remarkably, he couldn't.
"We just couldn't get them
out tonight," said third baseman
Chipper Jon es, who tripled to
end an 0-for-23 slump that was
the longest of his career. "It's not
very often that we get a five-run
inning and lose. They matched
our big inning with one of their
o\vn ."
Griffey had three hits off

......._ ........,.

.

REDS NOTEBOOK

Reds continue

•

to nurse ailments
C IN C INNATI
(AP)
ing it was a good decision to
Aaf9n Boone wore a visor1 a end his comeback and have the
blue shirt, gray shorts and a o peration.
white sock on his right foot as
"I know I wanted to have it
he bumped along on crutches in done after a certa in point," he
the C incinnati Reds clubhouse . said. " It was better to rehab ir
Wednesday evening.
and get all the swelling o ut of
The third baseman had just the knee before surgery - that
gone through his first limited speeds up the process. So, here
therapy session on his left knee, we go.11
su rgically rebuilt the day before.
Do ctors have told Boone to
" l'n1 tired .'' Boone sai d. " I expect a full recovery by spring
haven't had a good night's sleep trainin g.
for the laSt few nights. I'm grogBarry's feeling better
gy and sore."
Shortstop Barry Larkin was ~
But he was already doing little sore Wednesday. a day afi:er
th erapy, a sign of hi s co mmit- he took batting practice and
ment to making a full comeback fielded grounders on hio
from a torn anterior cr uciate sprained lefr knee.
ligament.
''I'm sore but that 's to bv
Doctors initially thought that expected," he said. " I feel pretty
Boone only slightl y tor&lt; th e lig- good."
.
Larkin sprai ned a ligament . iO
ament on a fidding play july 5.
He tried to come back and play, his knee while sliding into bast
but aggravated the ir~ury and last Friday. He hopes to be ba c~
wound up opting tor surgery.
in the lineup Friday for the start
'
Wh en doctors got a closer of a series in C hicago.
look, they realized he had comPluH- Noell, Pllp If.
pl etdy torn the ligament, mean-

�-.
~age

A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~

' ,-.

'

"

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-- --.-·--------.--.-.

-. - - - -

I .

-

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily &amp;oreboard, Page B6
.,

•

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

1hunci11J, Aupst 10, 2000

•

. ..
THURSDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
GSC tryouts Aulo 15

·
• c........ Truoll. , ••• ,.... Auto
Pertll 210

8 WUt: Global CrosslnJ at

8 p .m . • Solurdoy • ESPN2

Tl&gt;o Glen

c-,_

QloNI
81 Tile 81M
• W I - C•~
•r•
·-•

•WIIIft: 12:30 p.m.. Sunday

•Wittte:

watkins Glen (N.Y.)
International (2.45-mlle track)

12:30 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN

• lutch . . - . - l l l l e.OGIII 210

• - 90 laps/ 220.5

•o: Jeff

Noon • ALJC. 19 • ESPN

--··

m=:.ehtl ac ......

Gordon
• Q. .f)ltC rwcont Rusty
WOIIoee, Ford, 121.234 mph,
AUI. 13, 1999
•llleoe reconl: Mark Martin,
Ford,103.030 mph, Aug . 13,

2000 POINTS \UNOINGS

.........,....
~ :.-, . ~·

Dllt,...

a.rm, LltiOf'llll, 3,00!5

l.

--.2.1121

2,$11
01111 lat'Nrdt, 2 .aeo
.. JtfJ'IurWI. 2,714
I.

a.

.....

-·-

·_...,._
-:IMJ
Kllft !bdl. 2.853

·

--····

TOP TEN

• Weekly rankl..,. by NASCAR This Last week's rankin&amp; IS In parenthesea.

llobbJL8D
.. _
2. (2)
3. (I) Ruotr-4. (3) D. . hm(4) Tony I t e.•• (71 Jtlllurton
7. (8) Jill I I 8. (9) Wlnllurton
1. (1)

Mork Mlrtln

10. 1-1 JenJN-

·
SPEEDWAY.

Ind. -

Who could

araue with the notk&gt;n that, In
the Br;c:kyard 400. ~was Bobby
Labonte 's turn?

E~~~My

year at
Indianapolis Motor Speodwoy,
the Pontiac driver inched closer
to victory lane. In his previous
three starts at Indy, Labonte

had finished OO&lt;:ond (1997),
third (19981 and second

11999).
Justice was served at

Indianapolis Motor Speodwoy
on Saturday. Bobby Labonte
was, to borrow the cliche,
"due:
Sadly, so was Rusty wallace,
and h.-was -Wallaw"s •ad rate to
watch helplessly as Labonte's
Pontiac - the first of that
make to claim this race swept past him on the 146th of
160 laps. The pass ended •
rather testy duel In whlth
Labonte had shadowed

Wallace's car for lap after lap.
Once cleBr, L-abonte swlf"tly

aWIIj.

After makln&amp; the pus In thl

third turn, he and Wallace
bumped at the head of the
front stral&amp;t1t, exltln&amp; tum four.
By tne next time around,

no-. Lal&gt;onte was pert~aps
50

AL41. 9,1999

..C:H IMND IIAT1011AL
• Wlllrl: NAPAonllna.com
250
• -Noon. ALC. 19

• Qllllf11114 ,._,.: Dave

Blanay, Pontiac, 180.054 mph,

•111101 reoonl: Mark Martin,
Ford.169.571 mtlh. Ate. 19.
1995
• - : Martin Is thl on~
twc&gt;tlme winner of this rece.

CMiiiiMAN TIIUCII

•-=

• - . M;c:hlaan Speedway

12-mlle track)
• : 125 lops/250

Ports 200

yards ahead, ano his mlflin
·

.Qwlf)IIC~

July 17, 1999
•R-..-:Jock
Spraaue, Chevrolet, 79.226

Ate· 16.1997

YourTurn
LIIIWI ,_ o.•••n

Irvin arrested
on drug charge

Detr NASCAR This Week,
I am tired of these people with
looiC jawa who claim that Jeff Gordon il wuhcd up.
No driver is any bc"cr than the
car be is &amp;tvefl to dri'IC , Give Jeff I
car that will n1n, and he will out;

PLANO, Texas (AP) - Former
Dallas Cowboys wide receiver
Michael Irvin was arrested on a
misdemeanor drug charge.
Irvin ,was taken into custody on
a charge of possession of le'l than
2 ounces of marijuana, a Class B
misdemeanor, said Plano Police
Department Sgt. Mark Hunt.

race the ben oft he res1.
Oarles 5181111
Boonlborv,Md.

X
Dear NASCAR This Week,
I want to donste 10n1e money to a
NASCAR team that would run a car
tponiOid by donatioos from the
(ana. After the paint job, take a
maaic marker and write as man~
fans' namesu could be squeezed in
on the car. Many, mpy fans would
see their names racina aroLmd the
track and in the winner\ circle!
My bet is there would be a lot of
donationL What do you think7

Tr,..,. to &lt;MIIIIf I I can't_•_

him

It the end, 4.229 - . I I ,
the l.,..st In the non! 'I
history.

WOS

tD-

rookie._,_

Grand Notlonll with "'"
chomplonohlpoln thl Crofts.
man Truck
lAP morlled

!;erie"
HOfnodoy'l oecono

vlctoty

.;~

.,...!"!.•.....,.,. ~ ... _ - . ;.:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~
OYer $4.5 miM6on In wtnntfwl.~..,.

-t

·J

~;}.

-

Rollerl Prosstay, once consldeleo one or

NASpAR'Omorepromlsl"' IOIII'C drlvr!ro, n•
mana&amp;e&lt;~ 10 CIUI&gt;I;c:ata thl ouccen 110

-

ofiiOre&lt;lln the Bu8Ch sarles s1n00 he came
to Wlitlton Cup as a rookie

-

- - - . . . . . , ') thln!l·"'a

1011e Plltlr-COQCI· ... wew 11011' tr\ Sllilftu ..
little l)ll, 1IUt Iller 1111 ~ter...'!e 100
.
f)ertont Dettet. t think ~'I a Dllllm~t.
Dut. then opln, M'l hot 1Niei111 OOIIIII!tnt

In 1995.
n.., -leY~~ HanyGant u as we went:

CIIAITSMAN TIIUCK

-or t1te NO. 33 a...rotet thin owneo t1y

CLERMONT. Ind. - \rloteron
Joe Ruttmon put his Dcdle 011
tho polo and domln11od the

R-

1M Jocltlon. N'4t ~ now owna tttat
taam - II di!Wf II JOI Nemechek- 0110
Pruotay hll rnoveG on. first to thl team
owneo t1y Gil) Bechtel and then to n1o

Power Stroke 200 11

Recenl~

to rile. Tho of yOuna at1W Chief
· lljltn Pomllerton -~~,.. thO ,.. . o bOOil

and point loader Grec Billie.

...:U
11-..L Asheville, N.C.

Amick, not'ntalty I BGN c:ompetttor, collected 1 rumer-up
flnllh In only his IICOftd truck
race of the MIJOn.

..:a1ni

,_1

"*· ""' -

lelldl"' the ltll!l. I'm reol~ • - whl1 R)&gt;eR hll .~ IIIII. H l l ' - the

care more PDOII1111nt M,IY-~ Wt~
_COllin lho lfiOP now,
•!ld wllenMr filet In U...car, 1!'lfti 1lf(i I
~'I t1!0 car we r-ot lltlotA&gt;I or MI!U""YIIte

prubll&gt;ly 110120 _

milt""
••10&lt; to
&amp;•t In the . . ono
Mfl'lint ortJtim ''
exactly ollko. There 111 minOt ....,...,IIUt
or tndiiii\OpCit~. K'l

C....,._,156 starts, 0
to)&gt;llvo llnlshol, 6 top.lO finishes, 0

wins, 4
poles,

lnt -~ w•aettlnC In raoo 0111, ond ·
would be d!f!Otont, li!JIH would
be dllforent ond thl seat would ~ dm,;ent.'
sw~hel

MIIJ'k Martin va. Mllui llld111..r

The Brickyard 400
onty U '-old, ond Morlt Mlrtln
hod • dreftlna peMOt In - Sk-. Aftlr M-'ll'linl
ano Mlchotl WO~'o ChlwOtetbumpod- - ·
Martin ylsldod to WOitrlp as t1te
lho filii tum
at Indy.
.
.
Skinner filled to ontlclpote Morttn'l ~off, IIIII the
resuk was 1 craoh thet loft Martin In l8lt Dlloll· 'I dlcl
somothlrc IO&lt;Ioy 111* 1)111 lael reii-IIIOUI.' Slttltlllt'
sold. Monln
'I'm 1 0 0 - IIUI8 n.,.. an

two-

oonc-.

occident,
and accldonll IIAieAIITitltWHII'Io
_:
____ __

'Accident or not, the crolh no - - . t o Mlllln'lo
llaUI,_ In thO 1101nt race. II net lei&lt; lllciiUCII, M1r11n
would ttwooa no IUCI&lt; 11 on:
-

..

• 111m The ~oc:e finish
wu devastatlrc. but Rusty
Wallace ls still the t.:lrcult'l
hottest-.
• 111m Wol~ Dollof1bach Jr. has

1. How many turns does It take to complete
a lap around Watkins Glen International?
2. Who was the first driver to win 1100.000 In a
season?
3. What did the land on which Bristol Motor Speedway
was bultt used to be?

I

:uozum1 P8&gt;!1! :n

'l

The lrll&amp;ic loss of Adam Petty
and Kenny Irwin made me stop and

••••••••••••

action, if perfected· and modified
for lona drivin&amp; comfort, would
possibly be tbc answer. Let's nope
we don't lose any more or these
b!'lve drivers to engineerinJil flaws.
bymond J. Holtz
Bloornfnaton, Ill.

Just lwt wed.

NASC~R

lmple·

mtttttd lwo nrw safet)l mmsurcos,
mondatl11g tile addilioJt of off-o" ,

or "kiiJ" switcltes, on both the
throttle anrmbty and ,\'fetring
whrel ofall Winsto" Cup cars .

of retailer Sears. has extended
Its sponsorship of the NASCAR
Truck Series that has boasted
Its name since Its Inception In

point runo .

Ma~fic:ld'l, driven-·bl~
by teammate
he .,
SPEEDWAY. Ind. - In the: lndi- RUll y WI IIa(e, ..wvu
""'W n I '
anapolit Motor Speedway prxticc: rachcd the 11mc spot; on the track .
Joe Nemechck \ Chevrold also bare·
sts~ion on the mom ina or Aua. 4,
Jeremy Mt~ficld wu In the wronJ I)' eaupcd an incident. '
Mayneld wu liimihed to the ho•·
pllcc tllhc wrona Ume.
Apparently 11 1 rc1ult of oil pUll with .. • closed head injury."
Dr. Troy Plyner of the hospital 'I
dropped from Chad Linle'lailina
enai~te. Mayfield'l Fon:l atruck the
neurol01ical ·~ff said the. injury
third-tum wall of Indy. And while hil ..ould prr.-cnt him rrom takmapaM
injuric:l were not anve, they did in tiM: Brickyard 400, but Mayfield
bock him out of tht race and put checked "'' or Ihe hoapilal 11 4
hi1 ability to competa In IM neat p.m.
Mlyfield had qualified fourth. buC
ICVCI'Ili'ICCI in doubt.
Kyle Petty. who had fail~ to mike
Ma~field 'l Ford wabbled bcfon:
spinnina completely out of control the lllrlil'lfl fjc:ld, took over 11 driver
and hittina the wallllmost DUll! on
eoune. meant that
the driver's akte. A rcplly, wlli .. not

or.;:~f

hldtodroptotherwoflhefield for
the slart
)C
THE STREAK ENDS: The
lonaest consecutive-statU streak in
NASCAR his1ory ended 11 lndianapoli1 when Terry Laboftte elec::ed
not to compete in the Brickyard 400.
Labonte autfered a concuasion and
a broken riahtlea in a c:ruh at DaytoM on July I, and lin.gertna effecu
or the concua.sion caused dizzinas
wMr1 L-abonte tried 10 ~ice in his
No . .5 Chevrolet. Todd Bodine qualificd the car, and after consultina
with doctors. Labonte elected 10 pau
up Ind y and tbi1 weck'1 race 11

row bepn wilh the Dl)tona SOO in ·
1979.
"'

X

SABCOMAkf.SrTOmCIAL:

Feli11. Sa bates announced his plana
Aua. 4, ofTic:lally affirm ina what
everyone had known. for weeka: He
had,aold 1 m~ty and controllina
interes1ln his team to Chip G1naul .
Gu1ui, the lonpime Indy car
entrepreneur, will al10 switch the
team from Chevrolet: :o Dodae ne11.1
yw, with Sterlina Marlin remain in&amp;
to drive the No. 40 car aDd the driver
oft he other c:ar yet to be determined.
Ganae-area rtpons htd Ganaui
interested in lurin1 Bobby Hamilton

~ w~:~~~reak of 6.55 races in a ~;!~:,m Larry MoCiure\ Chevro-

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The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Matt Haskins
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(740) 992-2196

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Romanowski faces
felony drug charges

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MASON, Ohio (AP) - Second-see ded Pete Sampras eked
out a rain-delayed 7-6 (3), 7-6 (3)
victory over 19- year- old Taylor
Dent at Tennis Masters SeriesCincin nati.
Hours earli er, top-seeded Andre
Aga~&lt;i was forced to reti re from
his match because of back problems that have hampered him
since a 1ninor car acc ident last
month .
Third-seeded Magnu s Norman
was upset 6- 7 (4), t\- 1, ii -3 by
Slava Dosedal.
In matches that wt·re susp end ed
m·arl y four hours beca use of rain,
No. 4 Gustavo Kucrten . beat
G ianlu ca Pozzi 7-5, 6-3, and N o.
8 Marat Safin beat Francisco
C bvet 7- 6 (7) , 6-3.
No. 13 Fran co Squ ill ari beat Jiri
Novak 6- 3. 6-4 . No. I 5 Tim
Hen man beat Mariano Pucrta 61, 6-2, and N o. 16 Mark
Phillipoussis beat Marcelo Rios
6-7 (3), 6-4,7-6 (4).
In other matches, Max Mirn yi
beat Hi cham Arazi; Arnaud
C lement beat Martin Damm; and
Todd
Martin
beat
Sjeng
Schalken.

Miller signs
with Pacen
INDIANAP O LI S (AP)
Reggie Miller, thg Nl:IA's all - tim e
leader in 3- point m empts and
baskets, sign.td a new contract
With the Indiana Pacers. Terms
were not disclosed by the team .

•

Without Dillon, the Benpls had no
running back with any appreciable N~L
expenence.
·
Dillon already ranks fourth on the Ben_gals' career rushing list with 3,459 yards
over the past three seasons:
As a rookie in 1997, he rushed for 246
yards against Tennessee to break the single-game rookie record of237 yards set by
Cleveland's Jim Brown against the los
Angeles Rams in 1957 .

Hamisch hurls
complete game

.,

Slmpns advances
in rain-SOIIked Masten

• Craftsman, the tool dhllsion

during prac'tice at the team's training
camp in Georgetown, Ky.
Smith started only four games last se'ason because of a foot injury and is still
learning to run the offense.
'

REDS BASEBALL

RALEIGH , N.C. (AP)
NASCAR
p1 o neer
Herb
Thomas, a two-time seri es champion, died of a heart attack at his
home in Sanford. He was 77 .
Thomas won the Grand National
Racing (now Wimton C up)
championship in 195 1 and 1953.
He ranks 12th on the career
victory list with 48 wins in 230
starts.

toe back up. This was crude ud
uncomfortable, but this type of

After Injury, Mayfield's Immediate driving future in doubt :-: cii£WOFtlllll'~
lhowina theacc~nt in vNid detail,
did meal that the car in front of

games and play only in the last six so that
he could become an unrestricted free
agent for next season. That is now moot.
Last week, the Bengals notified Dillon
that he would be ineligible to play in the
first regular season game on Sept. I 0
unless he signed and reported in time for
the Atlanta game, which will be the Bengals' second preseason game. '
The Bengals had also said Dillon would
not be paid for the first regula~ season
game if he did not meet the deadline.
The Bengals need Dillon for an offense
that lost top receiver Darnay Scott to a
broken leg last week and will be run by
second-year quarterback Akili Smith.
Scott broke two bones in his left leg

NASCAR legend Herb
thomas dud at 77

vent this sticking aas pedal from
happening again. I ~all driving a
JO·cart or electric · car, and the
pedal had 1 piVOI in the center. T~
toe pushed up, the heel went up,
and the heel down would push the

AROUND THI GARAGf

8J MOIItt Dtltttll
NASCAR Thll Week

Falcons game, but he is expected 10 join
the team in Atlanta.
Coach Bruce Coslet has not decided
whether Dillon will play against the Falcons.
The Bengals had been increasi ng pressure on Dillon in hQp,es of signing him,
after failing to sign him to a multiyear
deal.
Dillon is the eighth player in NFL history to to p the I, I 00-yard rushing mark
in each of his first three seasons.
He was voted to the Pro Bowl last season after rushing for 1,200 yards, the second-highest total in Bengals history.
A restricted free agent, Dillon had been
threatening to miss the season's first 10

thint of tomdhin&amp;: that miJhl pn::- _

Series through 2005 and wil l
slfinlfecant~ boost the yearly

IIIIMINY

toj)15 finish .

X
Dear NASCAR Th is Week,

1995. The new aareemer~t' wlli
maintain the Craftsman Truck

'WJ8' .&lt;J11P V 't

ftnlshed 21st 01 M)I"'!Je In nlne
ttlnll(ltt races and has not had

llr' /d,fltYOIJy tft'Wr ctlf«Jrl Qtf .

"'I~

11M

cr. No. 77 Jasper E"'lnes Ford Taurus.

ownOd tly Ooul

-~~---·1·m-.

11 thl flllt ~
na~ or""'
year, and t1ttn ne111 year, oil of us h.WW o

~tar under our btl1 With 1ty1n 1~1

-ride.Preutey'l tonuneo ttwooa started

Parle
Ruttmon led 143 of the 200
lops, holdl,. off L~ Am;c:k,
Jamie McMurroy, Mlkl WOIIoee

lias been by o stntaUng team tllot
was aiPW~dy sttGppedfor cash. Since
non,- of r1Jo1t tetiJfl.r htu done well.

,,";1

Sllrt (Feb. 20, 1894; ot Doytono),
POle (none), win (nont)

of

the MISOO.
Jell 1'\trvls ftnllhod oecono.
fullowed br runowoy ~
leader Jeff Green.

Indianapolis

tri~d

a
n11rt1Mr of tim~s ovtr the past
d«tJJ/e. None ofthem /rQ3 btert JIIC·
ttssfol. Otle problem Is diCit every
liml rill cortetptlttJJ bttn ln·td. II
Tlrts connpl has . bten

C INC INNATI (AP) - Holdout running back Corey Dillon has reached verbal agreement with C incinnati on a oneyear contract and hopes to join the Bengals in time for the Friday ,night exhibi~
tion in Atlanta.
·
The Bengals'Web site repo rted the deal
is worth S3 million, more than twice the
$1.3 7 miliion tender offer Dillon had
turned down in June.
" It's great to get Corey in and have him
under contract," said Paul H . Brown, the
Bengals' vice president who handled the
negotiations.
Dillon will not be able t6' reach training
camp in Georgetown, Ky., before the
Bengals depart Thursday to travel to the

GREELEY, Co lo. (AP) Denver Broncos linebacker Bill
Romanowski has been cha rged
with using diet drugs prescribed
for his wife and a friend.
The four felony charges were
announced at the team's training'
camp in a cas~ that dates to 1998.
Romanowski could receive
between two and nine years in
prison if convicted on all four
charges.

Glen Franck

CLERMONT, Ind. - Ron
Homodoy oontlnuod his rookie
181U- dh I.-yIn the
i&lt;roeer 200 11 lndiiNipolll
,
Recelooy Park.
1
HOfnadOI Is, of COUIIO, hardly
the normal

hit .....

.•

,

ld••o Falla, Idaho

- H 8IWIDIUTIOIW.

Dillon signs 1-year, $3 million deal·with Bengals

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soccer Club is in need of coaches for the upcoming season . Interested parties should contact GSC
chairman Wayne Rose at 4464627 .

Tim

Steele, Ford, 111.079 mph ,

•••••••••••••

..

FEUD Of THI WEEK

w•

• DDoelllooooodldlrlo...
llc..........:
Dennis Setzer

200 laps. ·

CIIIIJ- . . 11M lllllftiiiiiC
D8IMIMIIII-MIII'

prefaced

GSC needs coaches

• ,.._, 200 lape/119.2
miles

been shortened from 250 to

FINifr lot tlolrl _... win
Not. atnllll• ·
~ ...... u. ....
Loelftl•a.....-.?
Over~lloll wed 1tJ tu:wuw,...

Next-..,_,_,

.-....:Nashville (Tenn. I
Speedway USA (.596-mlle track I

• Hobble: This race has

Federated Auto

Robert

wrttor Monte Dutton.

· - : 8 p.m.. Soturday

mph,

FROM LAS! WEEK
wtNITOfl CUP

pulled

Cup races on road courses ....
GOf'don started thli"d last year,
first in 1998 and 11th If! 1997.

PROFIIF

JOiri.eMn.:f.lll

11. . . . ~. 1,521-

••

miles
• Deft 'rJ ohrr' a: Dale
Elmnal'dt Jr.

. . . . . . . . . 2.413

'· 'IIWI:I a.rton. 2,614
&amp; ltiiK ..... 2.512
1. Rietw' Rucki, :un

(8)

1995
• Notellle: Gofdon has won
the last three races at watkins
Glen and the last six Winston

..........
_ __
2.122
11.411

.. Rull}' . . . . .. 2,737

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Soccer Cl~b is currently holding
signups for its under-14 and
und er-18 teams. Players can
obtain registration forms at the
pawn shop at 324 Second Avenue
in Gallipolis or by calling 4460840. The first practice is set for
Aug. 15.

ON THE SCHEDULE

wtNITONCUP

Page B.1

RED HOT HARNISCH - Reds pitcher Pete Harnisch (38) threw a complete game and hit a home run as
Cincinnati defeated Atlanta 10-6 at Cinergy Field Wednesday. (AP)

(

NASCAR

Canadian carpetbagger guns for win
Although Gordon concedes
WATKINS G LEN. N.Y. (AP) the world's top stock car series
- It's been 27 years' since a car- since M ark Donohu e in 1973. that Fellows is perhaps th e best
petbagger won a Winston Cup Dono bue, who won on the road racer in North America, he
now-defunct ro ad co urse in im't sure th at 's enough . C onsisrace.
R on Fellows could eml th at Riverside, Calif.; died two years tency is difficult to maintain
later, after crashing in a Formula when a team isn 't on the circuit
streak .
every week.
A victory Sunday by th e One car.
Canadian sports car ace , who
Fellow s said it would be
It can affect th e setup and
run s in only one ran: in the "cool" 10. join Donohue in the power of th e race car, and the
se ri es each season, also would record book . " H e's one of my crew led by a Brian Pattie - as
good as it has bee n in Busch and
hal t Jdl" Gordon's unprecedented ·heroes," he said.
North of the bo rder, Fellows is Truck sen es victories- shouldrun of six straight victori es on
n't be able to match Gordon's
a
fan favonte.
road (O Urses and prevent &lt;-f.
T he 40-year-old driver, fifth over-the -wall bunch .
record seventh overall.
""
Fellows is no long shot. Th e last Sunday in an Ameri can Le · "All things being equal , we
driver from Mississaub"' · Onta ri o, Mans Series race at Mosport should have an edge," Gordon
finished seco nd to Gordon last International Ra ceway in Bow- said_"But you never know w hat's
manvill e, Ontario, has won 19 going to happen in a r:Ke."
year.
Fellows, driving a ca r owned
Fellows ha s three wins, two times in Trans Am racing. Donoby
hue'
had
a
record
27
ca
reer
vicWinston C up ace Joe
seconds and a third in his last six
Nem ec h ek, re ali zes Go rdon
NASC AR races includi ng tories.
Fellows has driven his factory- should be better in the pits, so
C raftsman Truck and Busc h
Grand Nati onal events at backed Co rvette to finishes of he'll have to be fast and smart.
second this year in th e 24 l-lours
" I'm going to try to gel some
Watkin s Glen Internati onal.
" H e's the best there is at of Daytona, and II th in Le kind of advantage on the track,"
Watk ins Glen," Gordon said as Mans . Those are the wo rld's pre- he said. "That would make up
he prepare d fo r th e Global mier endurance ra ces, but Fel- the difference."
Many in racing bdi eve road
Crossing, one of onl y two road- lows doesn't fed out of place in
co urses are more diffi cult to
course ever.t ts on the 34-racc a stock car - particularly here.
" It's a high-speed circuit that drive than ovals. If so, why hasn't
Wins ton C up schedule .. " llon
seems to lend itself to my dri - · Fellows ventured into the
Fellows is definitely a threat."
Fellows is hoping to become ving." he said. "It's like Mospo rt,
PluH- NA~ Pllp Bl
the first non-regular to win m the track I grew up on ."

CINCINNATI (AP)
Adanta manager Bobby Cox
tilted his head, purs~d his lips
and marveled.
"You don't see that happen
very often," he said.
He was thinking about Tom
Glavine's meltdown, but he
could just as well have been
referring to Pete Harnisch's
homer or the Cincinnati Reds
winning a series from the
Braves.
It had been a long time since
any of those things had happened.
Harnisch hit his second career
homer, completing a huge
comeback against Glavine, as
~ ,Reds roUed t\) a milestone
' IP-6 victory Wednesday night.
For starters, the Reds took
two- of-three for th eir first winning series against the l:lraves
since September 1996. They'd
lost their last eight series against
Atlanta, leaving them 7-25
against the Braves since 1997 .,
They hardly ever beat the
Braves, let alon e beat them in a
series.
"It feels good to light one up
against the Braves," manager
Jack McKeon said, taking his
first puffs on a postgame cigar.
The way it started, the Reds
didn't think they'd be lighting
any victory cigars this' night .
A severe storm dumped sheets
of rain and hail on the field,
delaying the start by an hour
and 31 minutes. Thunder shook
the suite windows and lightning
lit the sky throughout the game,
drawing repeated oohs from the
31,098 fans and qui ck glances
from the players.
"On the first ball hit to me, as

soon as I caught it it was like -,'ZZZT!" Ken Griffey Jr. said,
mimicking the sound of electricity.
The show on the field was
pretty lively, too.
The Braves surged ahead wid;!
a five-run third inning off Har:
nisch (4-6) , who seemed to be
on his way to a quick ..Ot.
Bobby Bonilla got a standup
two- run triple when Dan.t e
Bichette dove and missed his
liner to right, then scored oii
Harnisch's wild pitch for a 6-~
lead.
" At that point, I'm just trying
to get through five or -$ix
innings, give , the bullpen a
break, throw a couple' of%~
and give the guys a chance to
get back in the game," Harnisch
said.
It seemed like a reasonable
strategy. Hamisch hadn't beat-en
the Braves since 1993 and
Glavine (14-6) has more career.
wins agaimt the Reds than any
other team ~ 2 I.
The left- hander also was on a
roll, having won his last seven
starts. All he had to do for an
eighth was hold a comfortable
lead against a team that had fo:iisix of its last seven games.
Remarkably, he couldn't.
"We just couldn't get them
out tonight," said third baseman
Chipper Jon es, who tripled to
end an 0-for-23 slump that was
the longest of his career. "It's not
very often that we get a five-run
inning and lose. They matched
our big inning with one of their
o\vn ."
Griffey had three hits off

......._ ........,.

.

REDS NOTEBOOK

Reds continue

•

to nurse ailments
C IN C INNATI
(AP)
ing it was a good decision to
Aaf9n Boone wore a visor1 a end his comeback and have the
blue shirt, gray shorts and a o peration.
white sock on his right foot as
"I know I wanted to have it
he bumped along on crutches in done after a certa in point," he
the C incinnati Reds clubhouse . said. " It was better to rehab ir
Wednesday evening.
and get all the swelling o ut of
The third baseman had just the knee before surgery - that
gone through his first limited speeds up the process. So, here
therapy session on his left knee, we go.11
su rgically rebuilt the day before.
Do ctors have told Boone to
" l'n1 tired .'' Boone sai d. " I expect a full recovery by spring
haven't had a good night's sleep trainin g.
for the laSt few nights. I'm grogBarry's feeling better
gy and sore."
Shortstop Barry Larkin was ~
But he was already doing little sore Wednesday. a day afi:er
th erapy, a sign of hi s co mmit- he took batting practice and
ment to making a full comeback fielded grounders on hio
from a torn anterior cr uciate sprained lefr knee.
ligament.
''I'm sore but that 's to bv
Doctors initially thought that expected," he said. " I feel pretty
Boone only slightl y tor&lt; th e lig- good."
.
Larkin sprai ned a ligament . iO
ament on a fidding play july 5.
He tried to come back and play, his knee while sliding into bast
but aggravated the ir~ury and last Friday. He hopes to be ba c~
wound up opting tor surgery.
in the lineup Friday for the start
'
Wh en doctors got a closer of a series in C hicago.
look, they realized he had comPluH- Noell, Pllp If.
pl etdy torn the ligament, mean-

�=

•

'
Thursda~ August 10, 2000

Page B 2 • The Oally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday August 10, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

440

Apartments
for Rent

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

550

Building
Supplies

An que Cha ra $25 each Noahs
A k Bab y Room Items UO
Couch SSO Rec ne $20 Endta
Ille s $30 7401«8-9743

71 o Autoe for Sale
CARS FROM $29/MO mpoundll
RIJ)OI Fte SO Down 24 mol
0199%Fo Lt1"Gt1B0039
3323 )(2 !541

Big Buzz••

NEEO CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 SSOO lmmed a 1 y Tans
•

act

n o Vou

Check ng Ac

coun We Wan vou Bus ne ss
CaH Anyiime

www cash eserve ne
Or Ca Cash Rer.erva

All

Announcement
Glveeway L.oll&amp; Found
Yard SIIH and Wanted
To Do Ada
Mutt Be Paid In Advlnce
TRIBUNE DfAQUNE.
2 00 p m lht day beloN
llle ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edlllon
2 00 p m Frtdly

Auction
and Flea Market

80

o Roue C own cry Ga ipOis
De r.reryT me Da ly 2 12 H s
Sunday 3 12 H s App ox mate

Bowen AuctiDn Servlct
Gary Bowen Auc lonH

the ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Mondly edlllon
1 00 p m Frtday
AEQimA QEADUNE
2 daya before 1111 ad 11
to run by4 30pm
s,turday &amp; Monday
edition- 4 30 ThuNdoy
~to
due

Procto 11 lie Oh o
Flea Market
Jus Acfoss
Hunting on WV
3s B idge
7.0-888-2266

COME
GROW
WITH US

304-453-2587

005

J=st£a ••• aaa

Runs G ea
740)367

Advertise In Classified

Mon hty P o It $700 Also a a
able Cnespeake 2 12 H s Oa 1y
3 Hrs Sunday App ox ma e $800
Pro li anspo a 10n Aeqll ed
Carre mus De bondable Rou es
equ ng li anSf)Of alton must
p ovde Veh c:te Reg s ation
Proof o nsurance and Va icl
D MUS l ~eense
n eres ed n a
Rou e Please ca Jt~ff MuM ns
8D0-885 2834 and ask lo Ex on
s~n Numbe 824 App lea tons
A a lab e a 946 F fth Avenue
The He aid 0 spa ch Attn C
cu a lon Departmen P O Box

7 Days
Yes One Week'
4 Lme Ad - 7 Ttmes

20 7 Hun ngton WV 25720

Potyme A 18nce Zone Seeks
Assooa e 0 ec or

Tnbune
Sent1nel
Reg1ster

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~

lt'sThe
Metgs - Gallia - Mason

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
WANTED
The He aid o spa ch ha s lhe lollowng Aou es a a labte Loca 10n

AUCTON
2 BIQ Sa e Days
E ery Sa 6 PM
Every ues 6 PM
li uckloads 0
New &amp; Used ems
i
F omSeve a Sa es
Se ng To The P u~w:: &amp; Dea e s
Pteee Doze s &amp; Ca se Lo $

SENTINEL QfAQUNE
1 00 p m the dly beiON

888 9 3

3561

140

FULL TIME and
PART·TIME
Opportunities could
be yours with the
11 Communication
Media

- J:"-!"!:1 -~!~II!~ ~f! ~I! - - ~!-:!~ J!~'"-~.!'P!I!

Sa ed
om Pound To Good
Home on y 8 Lab Pups 7 Weeks
740 446-8508

Business
Training

580

PARALEGAL GRADED CURR C
U UM App o ed home s udy
A o dab e S nee 890 FR EE
CATALOG ( 800 826 9228 o
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF
AW P 0 8011 7 0 449 Oep
AM Da las T11 75370- 449

-·

One Letter Per Box~- Allow Box for Space BetwHn Words

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

.
.

I

I

:Name._______________________________________________
, Address•------------------------.....:.-1 City, State, Z l p · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1Phoner________________________________

SPORTS WRITER
If you have a love for

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

HelpWanted

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPE R ENCE AE
QU REO 800 57 0753

New To YouTh 1ft Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A hens
740-592 1142
0 4a y c a h ng and hous, ho d
errrs $ oo bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 oo-s 30

4!I

$98 7 S5 WEEKLY P o ess n g
HUD /FHA Mo gage Re unds No
E11p e ence Requ ed Fo FREE
n a ma on Ca
800 50 6832

E

150

sports we would tke to
talk to you Expenence
preferred Must have
dependable trans
portal on Must have
computer sk lis Full time
posrtton with company
benefts

300
29

Giveaway

EARN YOUR CO LEGE DEGREE
OU CKLY Bache o s Mas e s
Do o a e By Co espond e e
Ba sed Upo P o Educa on A d
Sho S udy Co sa Fa FREE n
o ma on Book e Ph one C AM
BR DGE STATE UN VERS TY
964 83 6

eoo

180

OFFICE CLERK
Ful t me posrt1on 1n
Galhpol s offiCe Must
have good commun cation
sk1lls enJOy meetmg and
work ng wth the pubhc
Company benefits
SALES &amp; MARKEnNG
POSITION
(Inside and Outs de work)
Full and part t me posrt on
We are expand ng our
sales staff Must have
gooo communtcation
sk lis enJOY meeting and
WOrking with the publiC
be creal ve Must have
dependable trans
portal on Fu I t1me
position offers sa ary plus
comm ss on and company
Ilene! ts

OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO
Part of CNHI

Schools
Instruction

Wanted To Do

7p

Yard Sale

POSTAL CBS $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No Expe en e Pa d
T a n g G ea Be ne s Ca 7
Days 800 429- 3660 E• J 566

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD 8 LLS
OVERWHE M NG YOU ? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can
canso da e you b s no one
mon h v payment Reduce n e
es Avo d a e cha ges &amp; Stop
ha assmen L censed Bonded
Non-Prol
800 288 633 E11 5
www goklcoas cc com

Lj)ll~ (1~C!) jtiJ•J!~'­

••fhe
97 Fo d Range 4114 64 000
m 11 new es ale $9 000 740
949 2 36

An ho y and Campa y L d
800-213 8365
www ou ry yme o n

Real Estate
Wanted

Motorcycles

510

NEW BRAND NAM E COMPUT
ERS
A ma s E e yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Down
ow
Mon h y Paymen s
800 6
34 6 E 330

Household
Goods

FR EE COLOR REA ES A E
MAGAZ NE 0 e 300 P o os
M ssou
A ka sa
H me
a d 800 533 0~00

lntertorfE•terior Painting mobile
home mof1. barna pytbulldloga

end tin rgofa E11pa ~need F "
Es ma es Ae e ences (304)895
3981

RENTALS

COL A OWNER
OPERATOR
08 a m e 0 ve s o T ac o

Pu chase

HAVE A LAWSU T?
MONEY NOW? We ad an ce
$ 000 $25 000 Make no pay
men s un se emen
you
ose you owe us no ng Med
a C a ms Fund ng 1 800725

NoS Down W 3 mo

expenence 800-689 5065

cons derat on send
resume and cover letter to
Pub sher
Ohto Valley Publish ng Co
825 Th rdAve
Gall pohs Oh o 45631

7051

230

Professional
Services

P H 0 r: 0 G-A A P H-Y
Wedd ngs

Pets
Sports Team
P o es s ona Ce fe d P o og a

oro

Reasonable ates
Ca o appo me

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

304 675 74 2
304 675 72 9
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Una~ We Wn
888 582 3345

GOODCREDT
BAD CREDT
NOCREDT
e U s Ass s Yo u n Y u Ne w
M g Home Ca Fa P e Apr o a
888 6 3332

F A un n m

TRANSPORTATION

ng Mo o New
A ns G ea

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
C11e No OOCV035
Judge FNd w Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LIS.IIe National Bank u
Truat11 under the Pooling
and Servicing AgrHmant
dated 11-1 99 Sertea 1999-2
c/o Superior Bank FSB
plalnUII va Roy Stover et
al defendant•
Roy Stover whoao laal
known addreoe 11 481
Qeorgu Creek Rd
Qaillpolla OH 45831 and
the
unknown
helra

leg•t•••

exocutora admlnlatratora
IIQUIII and aaalgna tnd
the unknown guordlena ol
minor and or Incompetent
helra ol Roy Stover all
wholl realdancaa oro
unknown and cannot by
reaaonabte diligence be
aacertalned will !Ike notice
that on the 3111 day of
March
2000
La8alle
National Benk 11 TruatH
under the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement dated
6 1 H Sarleo 1999 2 co
Superior Bank FSB llled Ito
Complaint In tho Common
Pla11 Court and the oblect
and demand lor relief ol
which plead ng 11 to
lorecloae tho lien of
plalntllh
mortgage
recorded upon the following
deacrlbod real eattlelo wit
Property Addreaa 206
Butternut Avenue Pomeroy
Oh o 45769 and b4 ng mora
particularly daacrlbed In
plalntllh
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage Book
90 pego 424 olthla County
Recorder a Olllco
All ol the above named
defendants are required to
anewar within twenty eight
(28) daya alter laat
publication which ahall be
publlahed once a WHk lor
alx consecutive weeki or
they may be dtnlad a
hearing In thle caee
LERNER SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
Attornoya lor Pia ntlff
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati OH 45201 5480
(513) 241 3100
(7) 27 (8) 3 10 17 24 31
6TC

LEGAL NOTICE
Saalod propoeall will bt
received at the Offlca ol the
Mayor Municipal Building
Third Stroot Syracuae
Ohio until 4 p m local limo
on Thursday September 7
2000 lor !urn ehlng a
labor
mater ala
and
equipment neceaeary to
complete the project known
aa
Syracuse
Street

$ 49
F ee Sk

4 W de $250 Dow

Pe Man
F ee A
ng 888 928 3426

6 V de 3 o
Bed o m
$800 Down $245 pe Mon h F ee
A &amp; Sk
888 928 3426

New

REAL ESTATE

New 3 BR 2 BA Do b ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Mo
ee De

e

Reaurraclng

and at aald

888 928 3 26

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

we
de
a d

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

time and place publicly
opened and r..d aloud
Contract document• bid
ahaala and apactllcatlona
can bo obtained at aald
office alter Auguat t 4 2000
at $25 00 per aat which
money will be refunded to
lhl UniUCCIIIfUI blddlrl
upon the return of tha
complete aet In good
condition no more than ten
(10) daya alter the bid dote
Checka ahall be mada
payable to the VIllage of
Syracuae Ohio
Thla project Ia • Minority
Buelneaa !nllrprlll (MISE)
Set Aalda Pro)aot Eaoh
bidder muet
eubmll
evidence thltltla a Minority
Buelntae Entarprlae aa
certified by the State Equal
Employment Opportunity
Coordinator
Each btddorla r1&lt;1ulred to
lumlah with Ita propoaal a
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In accordance wllh
Section 153 54 of tho Ohio
Revlaad Code Bid aecurlty
furnlahed In Bond form
shall be laaued by a Surety
Company or Corporation
llcen11d In the State ol Ohio
to provide aald surety
Each propout muat
contain the full nome of the
Party or partlea aubmlttlng
the propoaal and all
peraona lntereeted therein
Each bidder muat 1ubmll
evidence ol Ita experience•
on pro1ecto ol similar alze
and complexity Tho owner
lntendo and requlreo that
thla project ba completod
no later than September 30
2000
A I contnctora and
aubcontractors Involved
wllh thla project will to tho
extent practicable uae Ohio
Producta
materlalo
aervlcea and labor In the
lmplemontat on ol th a
prefect
Additlona y
contractor compliance with
the Equal Employment
Opportunity requlremonll
ol Ohio Admlnlatrativa Code
Chapter 123 the Governor o
Executive Order 94 9 shall
be required
Bidder• muat comply with
tho prevailing wage roltl on
Public Improvement• n
Meigs County and the
V llage ol Syrocuoe Ohio aa
determ ned by the Ohio
Oopartmont ol lnduatrlal
Ralatlone
The Village of Syrocuao
reaerve1 the right to waive
lrrogularlllea and refect any
or all bids
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Sharon Cottrill
Clerk Treasurer
(8) 10 11 2TC

110

Help Wanted

RESPITE CARE
WORKER(S)
NEEDED
Would you be
w1lhngtp care an

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NO

rnd1v1dual(s) wrth
leammg hm1tat1ono
1n thear own home
for a few hours
each month H1gh
School Degree

reqwred (f
Interested contact

Christy

at

I 800 831 2302
Equal Opportunity

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Em

Own A
Compu e Pu
o Wo k $500
I 500 lp o $2000 $6000 FT
wwwe p wo k om
WORK FROM HOM E

I

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Alao Openln'a for Part Tine &amp; Casuals
Contact Salety 6l Recrultlnll 800 113:5 6478
Ext Ill llll 1115 Local740 157S 8479
"Prolaalonal Pay For Proleulon&amp;l Performance~

WANTED Full time employment m your
own hone as a Home Service Worker with
Buckeye Communily services we provide
salary plus benefits and a dally room and
board rate You provide a home guidance
and friendship In a family atmosphere
Requires ability to teach personal living
skill ad a commitment to the growth and
development of an Individual w1lh mental
retardalion Home must be In Meigs
coun~ If Interested contact CeCilia at 1
800 531 2302
Equal Opporlunity
Employer

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal 1s
currently accept1ng resumes
for aPC/Network Spec1ahst Must have
a degree or equivalent expenence In
computer science or related field H1gh
level of technical experience w1th PC
hardware, software, and local area
networks Expenence with wide area
networks 1s preferred Competitive
salary and benefits
Send resume to
Pleasant Volley Hospital,
c/o Personnel,
2520 Volley Dr , Pt Pleasant, WV
25550 or fox to (304) 675-6975

AA/EOE

�=

•

'
Thursda~ August 10, 2000

Page B 2 • The Oally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday August 10, 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

440

Apartments
for Rent

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

550

Building
Supplies

An que Cha ra $25 each Noahs
A k Bab y Room Items UO
Couch SSO Rec ne $20 Endta
Ille s $30 7401«8-9743

71 o Autoe for Sale
CARS FROM $29/MO mpoundll
RIJ)OI Fte SO Down 24 mol
0199%Fo Lt1"Gt1B0039
3323 )(2 !541

Big Buzz••

NEEO CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 SSOO lmmed a 1 y Tans
•

act

n o Vou

Check ng Ac

coun We Wan vou Bus ne ss
CaH Anyiime

www cash eserve ne
Or Ca Cash Rer.erva

All

Announcement
Glveeway L.oll&amp; Found
Yard SIIH and Wanted
To Do Ada
Mutt Be Paid In Advlnce
TRIBUNE DfAQUNE.
2 00 p m lht day beloN
llle ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edlllon
2 00 p m Frtdly

Auction
and Flea Market

80

o Roue C own cry Ga ipOis
De r.reryT me Da ly 2 12 H s
Sunday 3 12 H s App ox mate

Bowen AuctiDn Servlct
Gary Bowen Auc lonH

the ad 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Mondly edlllon
1 00 p m Frtday
AEQimA QEADUNE
2 daya before 1111 ad 11
to run by4 30pm
s,turday &amp; Monday
edition- 4 30 ThuNdoy
~to
due

Procto 11 lie Oh o
Flea Market
Jus Acfoss
Hunting on WV
3s B idge
7.0-888-2266

COME
GROW
WITH US

304-453-2587

005

J=st£a ••• aaa

Runs G ea
740)367

Advertise In Classified

Mon hty P o It $700 Also a a
able Cnespeake 2 12 H s Oa 1y
3 Hrs Sunday App ox ma e $800
Pro li anspo a 10n Aeqll ed
Carre mus De bondable Rou es
equ ng li anSf)Of alton must
p ovde Veh c:te Reg s ation
Proof o nsurance and Va icl
D MUS l ~eense
n eres ed n a
Rou e Please ca Jt~ff MuM ns
8D0-885 2834 and ask lo Ex on
s~n Numbe 824 App lea tons
A a lab e a 946 F fth Avenue
The He aid 0 spa ch Attn C
cu a lon Departmen P O Box

7 Days
Yes One Week'
4 Lme Ad - 7 Ttmes

20 7 Hun ngton WV 25720

Potyme A 18nce Zone Seeks
Assooa e 0 ec or

Tnbune
Sent1nel
Reg1ster

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~

lt'sThe
Metgs - Gallia - Mason

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
WANTED
The He aid o spa ch ha s lhe lollowng Aou es a a labte Loca 10n

AUCTON
2 BIQ Sa e Days
E ery Sa 6 PM
Every ues 6 PM
li uckloads 0
New &amp; Used ems
i
F omSeve a Sa es
Se ng To The P u~w:: &amp; Dea e s
Pteee Doze s &amp; Ca se Lo $

SENTINEL QfAQUNE
1 00 p m the dly beiON

888 9 3

3561

140

FULL TIME and
PART·TIME
Opportunities could
be yours with the
11 Communication
Media

- J:"-!"!:1 -~!~II!~ ~f! ~I! - - ~!-:!~ J!~'"-~.!'P!I!

Sa ed
om Pound To Good
Home on y 8 Lab Pups 7 Weeks
740 446-8508

Business
Training

580

PARALEGAL GRADED CURR C
U UM App o ed home s udy
A o dab e S nee 890 FR EE
CATALOG ( 800 826 9228 o
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF
AW P 0 8011 7 0 449 Oep
AM Da las T11 75370- 449

-·

One Letter Per Box~- Allow Box for Space BetwHn Words

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

.
.

I

I

:Name._______________________________________________
, Address•------------------------.....:.-1 City, State, Z l p · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1Phoner________________________________

SPORTS WRITER
If you have a love for

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

HelpWanted

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPE R ENCE AE
QU REO 800 57 0753

New To YouTh 1ft Shoppe
9 Wes S mson A hens
740-592 1142
0 4a y c a h ng and hous, ho d
errrs $ oo bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day
9 oo-s 30

4!I

$98 7 S5 WEEKLY P o ess n g
HUD /FHA Mo gage Re unds No
E11p e ence Requ ed Fo FREE
n a ma on Ca
800 50 6832

E

150

sports we would tke to
talk to you Expenence
preferred Must have
dependable trans
portal on Must have
computer sk lis Full time
posrtton with company
benefts

300
29

Giveaway

EARN YOUR CO LEGE DEGREE
OU CKLY Bache o s Mas e s
Do o a e By Co espond e e
Ba sed Upo P o Educa on A d
Sho S udy Co sa Fa FREE n
o ma on Book e Ph one C AM
BR DGE STATE UN VERS TY
964 83 6

eoo

180

OFFICE CLERK
Ful t me posrt1on 1n
Galhpol s offiCe Must
have good commun cation
sk1lls enJOy meetmg and
work ng wth the pubhc
Company benefits
SALES &amp; MARKEnNG
POSITION
(Inside and Outs de work)
Full and part t me posrt on
We are expand ng our
sales staff Must have
gooo communtcation
sk lis enJOY meeting and
WOrking with the publiC
be creal ve Must have
dependable trans
portal on Fu I t1me
position offers sa ary plus
comm ss on and company
Ilene! ts

OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO
Part of CNHI

Schools
Instruction

Wanted To Do

7p

Yard Sale

POSTAL CBS $48 323 00 YR
Now H ng No Expe en e Pa d
T a n g G ea Be ne s Ca 7
Days 800 429- 3660 E• J 566

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD 8 LLS
OVERWHE M NG YOU ? FREE
DEBT CONSOL OAT ON can
canso da e you b s no one
mon h v payment Reduce n e
es Avo d a e cha ges &amp; Stop
ha assmen L censed Bonded
Non-Prol
800 288 633 E11 5
www goklcoas cc com

Lj)ll~ (1~C!) jtiJ•J!~'­

••fhe
97 Fo d Range 4114 64 000
m 11 new es ale $9 000 740
949 2 36

An ho y and Campa y L d
800-213 8365
www ou ry yme o n

Real Estate
Wanted

Motorcycles

510

NEW BRAND NAM E COMPUT
ERS
A ma s E e yone Ap
p o ed W h $0 Down
ow
Mon h y Paymen s
800 6
34 6 E 330

Household
Goods

FR EE COLOR REA ES A E
MAGAZ NE 0 e 300 P o os
M ssou
A ka sa
H me
a d 800 533 0~00

lntertorfE•terior Painting mobile
home mof1. barna pytbulldloga

end tin rgofa E11pa ~need F "
Es ma es Ae e ences (304)895
3981

RENTALS

COL A OWNER
OPERATOR
08 a m e 0 ve s o T ac o

Pu chase

HAVE A LAWSU T?
MONEY NOW? We ad an ce
$ 000 $25 000 Make no pay
men s un se emen
you
ose you owe us no ng Med
a C a ms Fund ng 1 800725

NoS Down W 3 mo

expenence 800-689 5065

cons derat on send
resume and cover letter to
Pub sher
Ohto Valley Publish ng Co
825 Th rdAve
Gall pohs Oh o 45631

7051

230

Professional
Services

P H 0 r: 0 G-A A P H-Y
Wedd ngs

Pets
Sports Team
P o es s ona Ce fe d P o og a

oro

Reasonable ates
Ca o appo me

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

304 675 74 2
304 675 72 9
TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Una~ We Wn
888 582 3345

GOODCREDT
BAD CREDT
NOCREDT
e U s Ass s Yo u n Y u Ne w
M g Home Ca Fa P e Apr o a
888 6 3332

F A un n m

TRANSPORTATION

ng Mo o New
A ns G ea

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
C11e No OOCV035
Judge FNd w Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LIS.IIe National Bank u
Truat11 under the Pooling
and Servicing AgrHmant
dated 11-1 99 Sertea 1999-2
c/o Superior Bank FSB
plalnUII va Roy Stover et
al defendant•
Roy Stover whoao laal
known addreoe 11 481
Qeorgu Creek Rd
Qaillpolla OH 45831 and
the
unknown
helra

leg•t•••

exocutora admlnlatratora
IIQUIII and aaalgna tnd
the unknown guordlena ol
minor and or Incompetent
helra ol Roy Stover all
wholl realdancaa oro
unknown and cannot by
reaaonabte diligence be
aacertalned will !Ike notice
that on the 3111 day of
March
2000
La8alle
National Benk 11 TruatH
under the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement dated
6 1 H Sarleo 1999 2 co
Superior Bank FSB llled Ito
Complaint In tho Common
Pla11 Court and the oblect
and demand lor relief ol
which plead ng 11 to
lorecloae tho lien of
plalntllh
mortgage
recorded upon the following
deacrlbod real eattlelo wit
Property Addreaa 206
Butternut Avenue Pomeroy
Oh o 45769 and b4 ng mora
particularly daacrlbed In
plalntllh
mortgage
recorded In Mortgage Book
90 pego 424 olthla County
Recorder a Olllco
All ol the above named
defendants are required to
anewar within twenty eight
(28) daya alter laat
publication which ahall be
publlahed once a WHk lor
alx consecutive weeki or
they may be dtnlad a
hearing In thle caee
LERNER SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
Attornoya lor Pia ntlff
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati OH 45201 5480
(513) 241 3100
(7) 27 (8) 3 10 17 24 31
6TC

LEGAL NOTICE
Saalod propoeall will bt
received at the Offlca ol the
Mayor Municipal Building
Third Stroot Syracuae
Ohio until 4 p m local limo
on Thursday September 7
2000 lor !urn ehlng a
labor
mater ala
and
equipment neceaeary to
complete the project known
aa
Syracuse
Street

$ 49
F ee Sk

4 W de $250 Dow

Pe Man
F ee A
ng 888 928 3426

6 V de 3 o
Bed o m
$800 Down $245 pe Mon h F ee
A &amp; Sk
888 928 3426

New

REAL ESTATE

New 3 BR 2 BA Do b ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Mo
ee De

e

Reaurraclng

and at aald

888 928 3 26

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

we
de
a d

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

time and place publicly
opened and r..d aloud
Contract document• bid
ahaala and apactllcatlona
can bo obtained at aald
office alter Auguat t 4 2000
at $25 00 per aat which
money will be refunded to
lhl UniUCCIIIfUI blddlrl
upon the return of tha
complete aet In good
condition no more than ten
(10) daya alter the bid dote
Checka ahall be mada
payable to the VIllage of
Syracuae Ohio
Thla project Ia • Minority
Buelneaa !nllrprlll (MISE)
Set Aalda Pro)aot Eaoh
bidder muet
eubmll
evidence thltltla a Minority
Buelntae Entarprlae aa
certified by the State Equal
Employment Opportunity
Coordinator
Each btddorla r1&lt;1ulred to
lumlah with Ita propoaal a
Bid Guaranty and Contract
Bond In accordance wllh
Section 153 54 of tho Ohio
Revlaad Code Bid aecurlty
furnlahed In Bond form
shall be laaued by a Surety
Company or Corporation
llcen11d In the State ol Ohio
to provide aald surety
Each propout muat
contain the full nome of the
Party or partlea aubmlttlng
the propoaal and all
peraona lntereeted therein
Each bidder muat 1ubmll
evidence ol Ita experience•
on pro1ecto ol similar alze
and complexity Tho owner
lntendo and requlreo that
thla project ba completod
no later than September 30
2000
A I contnctora and
aubcontractors Involved
wllh thla project will to tho
extent practicable uae Ohio
Producta
materlalo
aervlcea and labor In the
lmplemontat on ol th a
prefect
Additlona y
contractor compliance with
the Equal Employment
Opportunity requlremonll
ol Ohio Admlnlatrativa Code
Chapter 123 the Governor o
Executive Order 94 9 shall
be required
Bidder• muat comply with
tho prevailing wage roltl on
Public Improvement• n
Meigs County and the
V llage ol Syrocuoe Ohio aa
determ ned by the Ohio
Oopartmont ol lnduatrlal
Ralatlone
The Village of Syrocuao
reaerve1 the right to waive
lrrogularlllea and refect any
or all bids
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Sharon Cottrill
Clerk Treasurer
(8) 10 11 2TC

110

Help Wanted

RESPITE CARE
WORKER(S)
NEEDED
Would you be
w1lhngtp care an

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NO

rnd1v1dual(s) wrth
leammg hm1tat1ono
1n thear own home
for a few hours
each month H1gh
School Degree

reqwred (f
Interested contact

Christy

at

I 800 831 2302
Equal Opportunity

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Em

Own A
Compu e Pu
o Wo k $500
I 500 lp o $2000 $6000 FT
wwwe p wo k om
WORK FROM HOM E

I

•

~~ {7~!))_1_1J-:.1Jf~

I

-1

Public Notice

Public Notice

New

•No CancellatiOns
•No Abbrev1attons Please
•Customer Can Renew Free I

In Meaes-Gallaa-Mason"

Bae Buzz

Public Notice

devlae••

Baby s e Needed A e Sep
emt&gt;e 29 20 Hou s Mo e Le ss
Week y Occas on a Satu day In
Ou Home Eo
And 2 Yea Oldi
AI! ancas Requ ed 740 44
9667

S

FREE BEE

Dally Sentinel
111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE

For mterv ew
PO STAL OB S $48 323 00 YA
Now H ng No E11pe e ce Pa d
T a n g G ea Be e s Ca
days 800 429 3660 E11 J 365

_RI~tu•~n Coupon To

JET
AERAT 0~ MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Rebu n S ock
Ca Ron E ans 800.537 9528

lo

r

Gnll Cook Needed
Apply In Person
Grow's Steak House
110

Help Wanted

GASEL
TRANSPORTATION
A Marietta Ohio llued Company

Attention Experienced Dr&amp;vers
"New· Topol the lndllltl')' Pay Packa,e"
Startm' pay aa aa CPM
Home Weekenda

Premium Beneftta
111911·1000 Conv Models
·"'"''"ed Dl~p~otch
Paid Vacation•
88% "No Touch" Frel•ht

GoodMIIea
Alao Openln'a for Part Tine &amp; Casuals
Contact Salety 6l Recrultlnll 800 113:5 6478
Ext Ill llll 1115 Local740 157S 8479
"Prolaalonal Pay For Proleulon&amp;l Performance~

WANTED Full time employment m your
own hone as a Home Service Worker with
Buckeye Communily services we provide
salary plus benefits and a dally room and
board rate You provide a home guidance
and friendship In a family atmosphere
Requires ability to teach personal living
skill ad a commitment to the growth and
development of an Individual w1lh mental
retardalion Home must be In Meigs
coun~ If Interested contact CeCilia at 1
800 531 2302
Equal Opporlunity
Employer

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal 1s
currently accept1ng resumes
for aPC/Network Spec1ahst Must have
a degree or equivalent expenence In
computer science or related field H1gh
level of technical experience w1th PC
hardware, software, and local area
networks Expenence with wide area
networks 1s preferred Competitive
salary and benefits
Send resume to
Pleasant Volley Hospital,
c/o Personnel,
2520 Volley Dr , Pt Pleasant, WV
25550 or fox to (304) 675-6975

AA/EOE

�'

-·· .

-·--

----~ ~-·

~--

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Thursday, August 10, 2001.1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio •

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'"'.'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

DIPOYIII
PIBft

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

"THE MOST TRI,ISTED NAME IN SECURITY"

ADM.._ Tractor &amp;

AT 8:30P.M.

Protect your guns, family heirlooms. coin and card
I
legal papers, investment records, photo
I
cameras. household inventory and
items will be safe.
For more information call

Equipment Parts

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE
"fthead in s~rvic~ ..

SECURITY"

"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

•

' Call 740~985-3831

UDMLDMID

S'r. R'r. 148

Pomeroy

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

7/S3 mo

Watkins
Products

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Advertise
in this
space for
·s150 per
month.

740-949-3027
7118 1 mo. pd.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
- Sales Representative
·~
Larry Schey
J• '~

........ .

r·

East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better
., .

'

i

.,..

'.

~

.' · ·~

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

..

~

"

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires &amp; Detail

740-992-9636

•

Ask for Jim .

painting Inside and out,
canpenter work, rooting,
siding. Have own toots.
Free Estimates

GUARANTEED
Ill CONDITIONING
SERVICE
'(304) 882·2079

740-742-3225

New Haven WV

2 Handymon crew witt do

·'
•

•'

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

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

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

I

FREE ESTIMATES

'

740·992·7599

Before 6 p.m. Leave Message
Aher 6pm- 740-985-4180

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

P/B(0NJRA(JOR~ 1 1N(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIO:S
BOJ!CAT
SERVICES
·..

SMITH'
S
CCJ"STROCTIOn
• New Homes • Remodeling

Realdentlal, Commercia

• Garages
• Sieling ·• -

• Decks
, Roofing

992·2753
;

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES
CarPet. \lln~l Covertnl Bt
floor.TIIe Mill Direct

CARPET

EXPRESS
Phone (304) 674·6100
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasant. WV
Owner Mile Balch
Pager (304) 540-4443

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

Coolville, OH 4!J'TZ3

7411 ••, .....

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
.7 :00 AM • 8 PM
1"1""' 1 mo. ""·

(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

401 5th Street

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sond • Topsoil •
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

N

Standing timbe r large
or small trac k s. Top
prices pai&lt;l also.

High &amp; Drv
Self-Storage

Free Eitlmates

33795 Hiland Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Cull T&amp;R Logboing
aft er 8:00 p1n

740-992-5232

740-992- 5050

6,'21 /00 1 rno pd

(Handy)

JACKIES CHILD CARE

Concrete
Connection
OuaUty Conmte Work
Driveways, Sidewalks,

Patios
Wood and Masonzy

lYms

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015
Toll Free 877-3-'13~70??

1·800·31 1-3391
Free E•timatea
~JIIIf~lors

Wtlcome .

Albany, Ohio

Advertise in this space for
$100 per
month.
HERBALIFE
Independent
Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs_.

740-992-7036
www.herbs4hfestore.com

l&amp;l INSUUTION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Ga rage room

additions, Pole Building,

• Optllngs on allshlhs
• Certlfltd In Meigs &amp;
Alllels COUitlts
•LOKated Eastem Schaal
District &amp; Tuppers Plains
Head Start
·erR &amp; Flrsl Aid
'15 yrs. hptrfence
Call Jackie 1!26 1 mo

985-43?!

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

Call740·992·2155 to place
your classified ad.

• K 10 9 8 6
• K 7 6 3
8 3
8 2

39 P - •

tO -utHul

42 Smuclae

15 Blbllcll

mountlln

20 Strongtltllatlng
23 C.rou01

A 52

on

51 JePineM , _
54~

55 w

voaH

red

56 ThfMolpol

card
57 Center

DOWN

8 Aclr9M0.rr

• Coupd'11 Old the CI'IIWI
12 Vaporouo
13 Seutt - Merlo

34 "FIUII" luthor
35 Popeye, lor
one

11 What drlnkct•
uy
20 Chap
21 Tennll champ

GibsOn

YORE BOAT'S

I JEST GOT A NIBIL&amp;

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

West

Nortb

Pass
Pass

3 NT

2•

lnlurloualy

23 Frenzy

24 Con.IW
25 Pruy'e
27 Mr. Dl1nay

East
Pass
All pass

:

31 Fortunetelljfr

33 Twining ahoot
31 Uncle

40Greekleland
41 lrrl1atea
.
42 BaMbllller'l

""""

A different page

"'"'""'

:

21 --about.
211 P..,lat Peter

Opening lead: • K

LUKEY !!

.

22 SINtch

lilt.

BARNEY

43 Futur9 LLqa:

eum
.
PHILLIP ALDER
44 Old map ·
lnlte.
·
Max Planck, he of the constant
... c....
used in quantum mechanics,
47 Hydrocerbon
autnxe1
claimed, "We have no right to
48 Comedian:
assume that any physical laws 6 -+-1-+-Sehl
•
50 Pollllck IIIII
exist , or if they have existed up lo
52 "I think, :
now, that they will continue to
therefore ~
..
exist in a sj.'Vilar manner in the
53 Roman 1,002
future."
Well , today's deal is similar to
yesterday's. The contract is still
CELEBRITY CIPHER
three no-trump, and West again
by Lula Campos
leads the dub king. The difference
celol&gt;rily Clpller cryptograms ·ore creaewd irom quotallons by !amous pe&lt;&gt;tlle. past and
.......,t. E- -In ... cipher stands ior another.
is that the key heart finesse will be
Today's clue: 0 equals S
taken into the East hand, not into
West's. Should declarer play in a
similar manner, winning trick one
'MSR
LFN
DSTFAL
BFKW
and taking -the heart finesse. or
HWASIFTY
ZGT
MSR
EYK
DZAK.
not?
.
With this layout, at first glance
F
L FN
BVAA
BFKW
AYLLSG. ' declarer stands no chance. If he
wins trick one wilh th e club ace
BZAKYI
LZKKWZR
and takes the losing heart finesse.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A mad .,:lenlist's amalgam or Wallace Beery and
Yogi Bear.•- Sunday Times' Alan Brien, of Waller Matthau.
·
Easl return s hi s remaining club.
and the defender s collect one
heart and four clubs. Yet if South
ducks Irick one, West can switch
. ..
to the spade queen . The defenders
dislodge declarer 's spade ac e.
then Easl gets in wilh the heart
king to fini sh the spades. This
lime, the contract is tw o down.
Does South have any chance'
Yes, he has an atom of a
chan ce .lfis useless to win Irick
one with the club ace. It is equally futile to duck with Ihe four. Bul
what happens if Soulh drops the
. dub jack und er West's king?
,..--...:...._ _ __,::; While exiting a cab. a woman
Won ' t Wesl assume Soulh began
__,ro_T:,...:U:..,.:G_Y;,..,...-ll~ eagerly jumped in . 1 said , "" I
wilh the double lon ace-jack?
s
came all this way to give you this
Won 't he continue wilh another
-L.
-.1.-..J.
l
-..L
.
.....J.~
cab ."" ""Yea."" she snapped . "" and
club 0 And if he does, South grabs
. . - - - - - - - - - -'- ---- -1"
the trick . then takes th e heart
RENDOY
finesse. It loses, but East has no
~-..;,,.;....:;,~:...,.::~:...:,,...8:....,1.,..9~
Complete '"• '"ucklo qu oted
club remaining (or if he did have
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
by frll•nv m the m•ssing words
L.....L.....J'--...L.....I-..L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.
one, the suit would presumably be
splitting safely, 4-3).
Watch for a defense-defl ecting
dece ptive drop.
BY

B11lldo•er &amp; Bucklu"'
Service~

Hou.., &amp;~fra iler Site•
Land plearing &amp;
Grading
Sepiic Systems &amp;
Uriliiie•

FHANK &amp; EARNEST

17401 992·3838

1/ ...-~'M

?·

yiiLI,IN~

TO

LISTfN TO
/ltASON···
i. JUST yiON'T
GIV~ IT Tt-lt
L-AST y/0/ll&gt;.

R_OBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

I

••
•
BORN LOSER
...THE
1.£\ lt\E.. 6t\ YOlJ~
BRU\ U),

7/22/TFN

_

l ( 1'\t-.\'1

...

1\ "llE.£PI~G PilL

r-----

l,t

IH~·
~z~

~~
;r

8·10

""q

YOU KI-IOW Tl-\0~ ~I-\( I
P&lt;Y-£ Tl'fU. "-NY W~INGS ON
I~E eonu::. ?

•~m

I"'L£T'5 U
E.ffEC.T~

.. . P05:'&gt;1!X.E

~IDE...,

MY 00~~:&gt;1~1

RIG NATE

I

PEANllTS
1

LUG'( 'i0\1 RE TilE WORST

OUTFIELDER IN lliE ~1ST®' OF
8A5ESALL! I DON'T KNOW WH'r'
WE KEEP VOU ON TilE TEAM !

D
...,.,6.~

LIFE 15 FULL
OF' M'(STERIES ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

f

!
..... ,l...#-,

)Jf!

I

Sentinel

CLJ

ITHURSDAY

'

er 1nc

49 lmpou eiiK

27 Woe vlctorlou•
30Actora'
employ011 .

L.

••

46 Rel8ted grp.

28 Pollee officer

r

or as ow as

45 "Auctliln" -

Vulnerable: 1\oth
Dealer: South

!

or one mon

1.!;:-~~::&lt;t';~

• AJ 4

tJJ !

•
5

(abbr.)

37 Wide ehOIIIze

32 Debonair

• J 9 8
• A QJ 5

Hou~~~~:~ M-F

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

•
•

4 2
K Q 10 9 7
•

Racine, OH 45771

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
1
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home
"mm~- · 1

lp With Your

IMPROVEMENT

• QJ 3

SouIll

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Blown Insulation

r

East

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO ..
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

992·2772
For All Your Home
Im rovement Needs

West

• 10

1m . 4 11 00

Your

10 5

.. 6 5 3

Mike Hill- Owner

Now Renting

38 S..r'11biiHy

atone

16 ThOM holding
office
17 Soundl of
ourpriH
1t Piece

• K9 76

LEAKtN•,

Dozer work.

01-!0.(10

• 7 4
• AQ

$1895

WAN,.ED

1 F - with

young rr11n
12 Halle
14 O.C:Orotlvo
trinket

Mechanic on Duty- All types of Mechanical work done
011 Changelndud.. lubt&amp; oiiHu~~""
Spec Ia I
che&lt;k. (Orher ~I brond ovoloblei

1•11•1 740•949•2700

ACROSS

8 Computer tvm 40 Deep crlm~

RACINE SERVICE CENTER
'We feature Valvoline Products"

Rutland. Ohio

Truck seats. car seats, headliners.
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vlnyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
bqat covers. carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

HAULinG and
EXCAVATinG

• 4 2

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

~ ll" 9'r.f'IU

Fully Insured

(740) 985-3948

Nttd It done, tift u• • etll
FREE ESTIMATES
Grut Prlc11 on flew Home•

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

FREE ESnMATES

lrl11 Morrlsoo/l•cl••• OW.

·

Case-IH Pam
Dealers.
1000 sr. Ri. 7 Soultl

Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gaRJ'I
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sterburat
Progreaalve top line.
Uc. 1 D0-50 "~"""'

if:,wlcK·s Cl

~E.E.P I

992-5479
.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

BISSELL BUILDERS
. ..
INC. ·

COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI,\l

.AUUL

j

NOTICE

~·

I

-

r

CID'rll

Factory Authorized

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

'Your

'Birthday

you handl e them if tes ted by
hid ay. August II . 2000
It may be ihe ve ry th ings that abrasive peo ple or adverse condi impeded your progress in the pasl tions .
SCORPI O (Oci. 24- No v. 22)
that will bring you success in the
Arrange
your agenda loday so that
l'l'ar ahead . You' ll usc you r ex pe' icnces as stepping stones over you can fee l free to get oul and
mo ve around both mental ly and
lruubled waters.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Being physica ll y. Being anchored Ia one
produ cti ve and doing so methin g spol 100 long could ca use mood worl hwhile today is essential to iness or irritability.
SAG ITIARIUS (Nov. 2.1-0ec.
) our 1\:elings of wel l being . Give
21)
You arc gifted today of taki ng
l'c' nl lu yo ur industri ous urges
insi&lt;·aJ of your playful ones . Get nominal situalions thai appea r to
be of small promise and turn them
,I Jlltllp on li fe by understanding
the· inllu ettcc·s th at' ll gove rn you into so methin g of great value.
App ly yourself in thi s venue.
111 the year ahead. Send for your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
1\ stro-Gra ph prediction s by mail19)
Of utmosl importance to you
ing $2 to Aslro-Gra jilh. c/o lhi s
nc· wspapcr. PO. Box 175H. Mur- today wi ll be lhe freedom to
ray Hill Stati&lt;lll, New Ynrk. NY ft,~nction in an independent manI! I I 'i(l Be \lire 10 slalc you r ner. Don' t let others put you in
pos itions where yo u can 'I call
/.od ia r . ., tg n
VIRCiO (A ug B -Scpi. 22) A yo_ur ow n shots .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19i
ltrc·ak in your rout ines could produce pcn phetal henefils for you Unc haracleri stically today. you
tod ;t\' . ..,D it mii!.hl be wise to start might step out of your role of
the ,; eel-e nd e:; rl y and parli ci patc bei ng a grega rio us and outgoing
tn \U iltl' fnrm nf acti,·it y that pro- type of person a nd instead seek
sec lu sion and iso lation . You need
\ id e.., rcl ~t\atiutl.
I. IH R;\ (Sep.t. 2."\ -0c·t. 2"\) the re st .
.
:\ l!h~ ~ u ~ h you ' re not aj1t 10 invil c
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marc h 20)
~.· h . 1lku g. in g condition . . . ynu cou lll
Muc h progress can be made today
.... l l ll ll l .., l' ~ out· ..,l'lr a .. to how \\'CII
in an e ndeavor ihal has r7cent ly

caplured your fan cy, because
you ' II be abl e Ia see thin gs in a
much more reali sti c and practical
mann er than usual.
ARIES (M arc h 2 1-April 19)
Any one who pays you a comp liment today will go up in your ratings and may even be reve red. It 's
important 10 you to feel you r
efforts are being ac kn owled ged at
this time.
TA URUS !Apri l 20-May 20J
It' s rare th at you don't tak e yo ur

111Vo lvc nwnts ~criou~ly. amJ thus
today pragmat ism wi ll take prece dence ovt r indinations to p l~as~.
Howe ver. you"ll do .so with a
phil osophical ambiance.
GEM INI (Ma y 21-Junc 20)
What make_, you outs1&lt;1ndin g
toda y is th at yo u' ll cxpress )OUr self in a mann e r of mspiratt on to
an oth er wi th whom yo u share a
joint invo lvement. Your pep
prime s all engi nes.

CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Your des ire for compani onship is
likely 10 be very pronoun ced
1oday. but you m!lst be carc::ful to
pick the right sort. A poor choice
would conlribute 10 your malaise.

I I 1 16-

IO .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Fema le- Erase- Moldy - Spor1y- DO MORE

Overhea rd 1n lou nge of b1g offrce bu1ld1ng · '"Th e reward for work well done IS th e opportunttv to DO MORE' "'

AUGUST 10 I.

�'

-·· .

-·--

----~ ~-·

~--

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Thursday, August 10, 2001.1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio •

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'"'.'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

DIPOYIII
PIBft

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

"THE MOST TRI,ISTED NAME IN SECURITY"

ADM.._ Tractor &amp;

AT 8:30P.M.

Protect your guns, family heirlooms. coin and card
I
legal papers, investment records, photo
I
cameras. household inventory and
items will be safe.
For more information call

Equipment Parts

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE
"fthead in s~rvic~ ..

SECURITY"

"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

•

' Call 740~985-3831

UDMLDMID

S'r. R'r. 148

Pomeroy

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

7/S3 mo

Watkins
Products

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

Advertise
in this
space for
·s150 per
month.

740-949-3027
7118 1 mo. pd.

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
- Sales Representative
·~
Larry Schey
J• '~

........ .

r·

East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better
., .

'

i

.,..

'.

~

.' · ·~

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

..

~

"

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires &amp; Detail

740-992-9636

•

Ask for Jim .

painting Inside and out,
canpenter work, rooting,
siding. Have own toots.
Free Estimates

GUARANTEED
Ill CONDITIONING
SERVICE
'(304) 882·2079

740-742-3225

New Haven WV

2 Handymon crew witt do

·'
•

•'

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

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

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

I

FREE ESTIMATES

'

740·992·7599

Before 6 p.m. Leave Message
Aher 6pm- 740-985-4180

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

P/B(0NJRA(JOR~ 1 1N(.
CONCRETE
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIO:S
BOJ!CAT
SERVICES
·..

SMITH'
S
CCJ"STROCTIOn
• New Homes • Remodeling

Realdentlal, Commercia

• Garages
• Sieling ·• -

• Decks
, Roofing

992·2753
;

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES
CarPet. \lln~l Covertnl Bt
floor.TIIe Mill Direct

CARPET

EXPRESS
Phone (304) 674·6100
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasant. WV
Owner Mile Balch
Pager (304) 540-4443

992·1101
7 24 1 mo

Coolville, OH 4!J'TZ3

7411 ••, .....

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
.7 :00 AM • 8 PM
1"1""' 1 mo. ""·

(7 40) 7 42-8888
1-888-521-0916

401 5th Street

Hauling • Limestone •
Gravel• Sond • Topsoil •
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

N

Standing timbe r large
or small trac k s. Top
prices pai&lt;l also.

High &amp; Drv
Self-Storage

Free Eitlmates

33795 Hiland Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Cull T&amp;R Logboing
aft er 8:00 p1n

740-992-5232

740-992- 5050

6,'21 /00 1 rno pd

(Handy)

JACKIES CHILD CARE

Concrete
Connection
OuaUty Conmte Work
Driveways, Sidewalks,

Patios
Wood and Masonzy

lYms

Garages, Porches, Decks
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates
740-742-8015
Toll Free 877-3-'13~70??

1·800·31 1-3391
Free E•timatea
~JIIIf~lors

Wtlcome .

Albany, Ohio

Advertise in this space for
$100 per
month.
HERBALIFE
Independent
Distributor
For all your health,
nutrition and
weight loss needs_.

740-992-7036
www.herbs4hfestore.com

l&amp;l INSUUTION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Ga rage room

additions, Pole Building,

• Optllngs on allshlhs
• Certlfltd In Meigs &amp;
Alllels COUitlts
•LOKated Eastem Schaal
District &amp; Tuppers Plains
Head Start
·erR &amp; Flrsl Aid
'15 yrs. hptrfence
Call Jackie 1!26 1 mo

985-43?!

Tired of staring at the same four
walls, find everything you need
in the Classifieds.

Call740·992·2155 to place
your classified ad.

• K 10 9 8 6
• K 7 6 3
8 3
8 2

39 P - •

tO -utHul

42 Smuclae

15 Blbllcll

mountlln

20 Strongtltllatlng
23 C.rou01

A 52

on

51 JePineM , _
54~

55 w

voaH

red

56 ThfMolpol

card
57 Center

DOWN

8 Aclr9M0.rr

• Coupd'11 Old the CI'IIWI
12 Vaporouo
13 Seutt - Merlo

34 "FIUII" luthor
35 Popeye, lor
one

11 What drlnkct•
uy
20 Chap
21 Tennll champ

GibsOn

YORE BOAT'S

I JEST GOT A NIBIL&amp;

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

West

Nortb

Pass
Pass

3 NT

2•

lnlurloualy

23 Frenzy

24 Con.IW
25 Pruy'e
27 Mr. Dl1nay

East
Pass
All pass

:

31 Fortunetelljfr

33 Twining ahoot
31 Uncle

40Greekleland
41 lrrl1atea
.
42 BaMbllller'l

""""

A different page

"'"'""'

:

21 --about.
211 P..,lat Peter

Opening lead: • K

LUKEY !!

.

22 SINtch

lilt.

BARNEY

43 Futur9 LLqa:

eum
.
PHILLIP ALDER
44 Old map ·
lnlte.
·
Max Planck, he of the constant
... c....
used in quantum mechanics,
47 Hydrocerbon
autnxe1
claimed, "We have no right to
48 Comedian:
assume that any physical laws 6 -+-1-+-Sehl
•
50 Pollllck IIIII
exist , or if they have existed up lo
52 "I think, :
now, that they will continue to
therefore ~
..
exist in a sj.'Vilar manner in the
53 Roman 1,002
future."
Well , today's deal is similar to
yesterday's. The contract is still
CELEBRITY CIPHER
three no-trump, and West again
by Lula Campos
leads the dub king. The difference
celol&gt;rily Clpller cryptograms ·ore creaewd irom quotallons by !amous pe&lt;&gt;tlle. past and
.......,t. E- -In ... cipher stands ior another.
is that the key heart finesse will be
Today's clue: 0 equals S
taken into the East hand, not into
West's. Should declarer play in a
similar manner, winning trick one
'MSR
LFN
DSTFAL
BFKW
and taking -the heart finesse. or
HWASIFTY
ZGT
MSR
EYK
DZAK.
not?
.
With this layout, at first glance
F
L FN
BVAA
BFKW
AYLLSG. ' declarer stands no chance. If he
wins trick one wilh th e club ace
BZAKYI
LZKKWZR
and takes the losing heart finesse.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A mad .,:lenlist's amalgam or Wallace Beery and
Yogi Bear.•- Sunday Times' Alan Brien, of Waller Matthau.
·
Easl return s hi s remaining club.
and the defender s collect one
heart and four clubs. Yet if South
ducks Irick one, West can switch
. ..
to the spade queen . The defenders
dislodge declarer 's spade ac e.
then Easl gets in wilh the heart
king to fini sh the spades. This
lime, the contract is tw o down.
Does South have any chance'
Yes, he has an atom of a
chan ce .lfis useless to win Irick
one with the club ace. It is equally futile to duck with Ihe four. Bul
what happens if Soulh drops the
. dub jack und er West's king?
,..--...:...._ _ __,::; While exiting a cab. a woman
Won ' t Wesl assume Soulh began
__,ro_T:,...:U:..,.:G_Y;,..,...-ll~ eagerly jumped in . 1 said , "" I
wilh the double lon ace-jack?
s
came all this way to give you this
Won 't he continue wilh another
-L.
-.1.-..J.
l
-..L
.
.....J.~
cab ."" ""Yea."" she snapped . "" and
club 0 And if he does, South grabs
. . - - - - - - - - - -'- ---- -1"
the trick . then takes th e heart
RENDOY
finesse. It loses, but East has no
~-..;,,.;....:;,~:...,.::~:...:,,...8:....,1.,..9~
Complete '"• '"ucklo qu oted
club remaining (or if he did have
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
by frll•nv m the m•ssing words
L.....L.....J'--...L.....I-..L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.
one, the suit would presumably be
splitting safely, 4-3).
Watch for a defense-defl ecting
dece ptive drop.
BY

B11lldo•er &amp; Bucklu"'
Service~

Hou.., &amp;~fra iler Site•
Land plearing &amp;
Grading
Sepiic Systems &amp;
Uriliiie•

FHANK &amp; EARNEST

17401 992·3838

1/ ...-~'M

?·

yiiLI,IN~

TO

LISTfN TO
/ltASON···
i. JUST yiON'T
GIV~ IT Tt-lt
L-AST y/0/ll&gt;.

R_OBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

I

••
•
BORN LOSER
...THE
1.£\ lt\E.. 6t\ YOlJ~
BRU\ U),

7/22/TFN

_

l ( 1'\t-.\'1

...

1\ "llE.£PI~G PilL

r-----

l,t

IH~·
~z~

~~
;r

8·10

""q

YOU KI-IOW Tl-\0~ ~I-\( I
P&lt;Y-£ Tl'fU. "-NY W~INGS ON
I~E eonu::. ?

•~m

I"'L£T'5 U
E.ffEC.T~

.. . P05:'&gt;1!X.E

~IDE...,

MY 00~~:&gt;1~1

RIG NATE

I

PEANllTS
1

LUG'( 'i0\1 RE TilE WORST

OUTFIELDER IN lliE ~1ST®' OF
8A5ESALL! I DON'T KNOW WH'r'
WE KEEP VOU ON TilE TEAM !

D
...,.,6.~

LIFE 15 FULL
OF' M'(STERIES ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

f

!
..... ,l...#-,

)Jf!

I

Sentinel

CLJ

ITHURSDAY

'

er 1nc

49 lmpou eiiK

27 Woe vlctorlou•
30Actora'
employ011 .

L.

••

46 Rel8ted grp.

28 Pollee officer

r

or as ow as

45 "Auctliln" -

Vulnerable: 1\oth
Dealer: South

!

or one mon

1.!;:-~~::&lt;t';~

• AJ 4

tJJ !

•
5

(abbr.)

37 Wide ehOIIIze

32 Debonair

• J 9 8
• A QJ 5

Hou~~~~:~ M-F

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

•
•

4 2
K Q 10 9 7
•

Racine, OH 45771

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
1
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
~
Major Medical • Nursing Home
"mm~- · 1

lp With Your

IMPROVEMENT

• QJ 3

SouIll

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264

Blown Insulation

r

East

•

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO ..
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Concrete &amp; Block Work,

992·2772
For All Your Home
Im rovement Needs

West

• 10

1m . 4 11 00

Your

10 5

.. 6 5 3

Mike Hill- Owner

Now Renting

38 S..r'11biiHy

atone

16 ThOM holding
office
17 Soundl of
ourpriH
1t Piece

• K9 76

LEAKtN•,

Dozer work.

01-!0.(10

• 7 4
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Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

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1000 sr. Ri. 7 Soultl

Main St.,
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Paying $80.00
per gaRJ'I
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sterburat
Progreaalve top line.
Uc. 1 D0-50 "~"""'

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LINDA'S
PAINTING

BISSELL BUILDERS
. ..
INC. ·

COMMERCIAL and RBIDENTI,\l

.AUUL

j

NOTICE

~·

I

-

r

CID'rll

Factory Authorized

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

'Your

'Birthday

you handl e them if tes ted by
hid ay. August II . 2000
It may be ihe ve ry th ings that abrasive peo ple or adverse condi impeded your progress in the pasl tions .
SCORPI O (Oci. 24- No v. 22)
that will bring you success in the
Arrange
your agenda loday so that
l'l'ar ahead . You' ll usc you r ex pe' icnces as stepping stones over you can fee l free to get oul and
mo ve around both mental ly and
lruubled waters.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Being physica ll y. Being anchored Ia one
produ cti ve and doing so methin g spol 100 long could ca use mood worl hwhile today is essential to iness or irritability.
SAG ITIARIUS (Nov. 2.1-0ec.
) our 1\:elings of wel l being . Give
21)
You arc gifted today of taki ng
l'c' nl lu yo ur industri ous urges
insi&lt;·aJ of your playful ones . Get nominal situalions thai appea r to
be of small promise and turn them
,I Jlltllp on li fe by understanding
the· inllu ettcc·s th at' ll gove rn you into so methin g of great value.
App ly yourself in thi s venue.
111 the year ahead. Send for your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
1\ stro-Gra ph prediction s by mail19)
Of utmosl importance to you
ing $2 to Aslro-Gra jilh. c/o lhi s
nc· wspapcr. PO. Box 175H. Mur- today wi ll be lhe freedom to
ray Hill Stati&lt;lll, New Ynrk. NY ft,~nction in an independent manI! I I 'i(l Be \lire 10 slalc you r ner. Don' t let others put you in
pos itions where yo u can 'I call
/.od ia r . ., tg n
VIRCiO (A ug B -Scpi. 22) A yo_ur ow n shots .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19i
ltrc·ak in your rout ines could produce pcn phetal henefils for you Unc haracleri stically today. you
tod ;t\' . ..,D it mii!.hl be wise to start might step out of your role of
the ,; eel-e nd e:; rl y and parli ci patc bei ng a grega rio us and outgoing
tn \U iltl' fnrm nf acti,·it y that pro- type of person a nd instead seek
sec lu sion and iso lation . You need
\ id e.., rcl ~t\atiutl.
I. IH R;\ (Sep.t. 2."\ -0c·t. 2"\) the re st .
.
:\ l!h~ ~ u ~ h you ' re not aj1t 10 invil c
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marc h 20)
~.· h . 1lku g. in g condition . . . ynu cou lll
Muc h progress can be made today
.... l l ll ll l .., l' ~ out· ..,l'lr a .. to how \\'CII
in an e ndeavor ihal has r7cent ly

caplured your fan cy, because
you ' II be abl e Ia see thin gs in a
much more reali sti c and practical
mann er than usual.
ARIES (M arc h 2 1-April 19)
Any one who pays you a comp liment today will go up in your ratings and may even be reve red. It 's
important 10 you to feel you r
efforts are being ac kn owled ged at
this time.
TA URUS !Apri l 20-May 20J
It' s rare th at you don't tak e yo ur

111Vo lvc nwnts ~criou~ly. amJ thus
today pragmat ism wi ll take prece dence ovt r indinations to p l~as~.
Howe ver. you"ll do .so with a
phil osophical ambiance.
GEM INI (Ma y 21-Junc 20)
What make_, you outs1&lt;1ndin g
toda y is th at yo u' ll cxpress )OUr self in a mann e r of mspiratt on to
an oth er wi th whom yo u share a
joint invo lvement. Your pep
prime s all engi nes.

CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Your des ire for compani onship is
likely 10 be very pronoun ced
1oday. but you m!lst be carc::ful to
pick the right sort. A poor choice
would conlribute 10 your malaise.

I I 1 16-

IO .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Fema le- Erase- Moldy - Spor1y- DO MORE

Overhea rd 1n lou nge of b1g offrce bu1ld1ng · '"Th e reward for work well done IS th e opportunttv to DO MORE' "'

AUGUST 10 I.

�__...

-·

___/_

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TO·DAY'S SCOREBOARD
,. PRO .EiMt.l
N1tlo1111 L.eegye,

Tampa Boy ....................... 49 63

Eoot

Tea m
Atl anta .
New York .
Rorlda
Montreal ....... ... _
Philadelphia
St. Loui!l...

,W

L Pot.

..... 69 45 .605
..... 65 47 .580

.... .. 58 58 .5011
..... ,.5, 59 484
...... 49 63 .ol38
Control
..... 61 52 .SolO

Cincinnati ......
........... 56 57
.4611
Chicago ....................... 53
Pittsburgh .
........ .. 48 65 .425

eo

18
18

85
13

Seonle ............................87
Oakland ..................... .....61
Anei,.;m ........................ 59
Texas .............................. 53

G8
3
11

.377 18 1/2

71

Woot
San Francisco ........... ..... ..64
Anzona .. .........................62
LosAngal~ ----------- ..........59
Colorado .
. ............. 55
San o;ego ....... .............. 53

"8 .571
52 .544
3
5-I .522 51/2
57 .491
81 .465

9
12

Wldntadey'e Gllma
Florida 5, St. Louts 3
Colorado 4, Pittsburgh 3

San Francisco 9, Milwaukee 3
Cincinnati I 0, Atlanta 6
Ph~adelptlia

3, San Diego 2
N.Y. Mets 12, Houston 5

Montreal 4, Arizona 3
Chicago Cubs 5, l.DS Angeles 4, 10 imir"QS

Todllv'• Gamee
Colorado (Astacio 9-8) at St. Louit
(Stephenson 12-7). 3:10p.m.
NY Mets (B.J. Jones 6-5) at Houston (McKnight 0-0), 4:05p.m.
San Diego (Williams 6-4) at Philadelphia
(Wolf 9-5), 7:35 p.m.

FrldQ'I GemM
Cincinnati (Bell 5-6) at Chicago Cubs
(Tapani 8-8), 3:20p.m.
Colorado (Bohanon 5-8) M Montreal (Her·
manson 8-9), 7:05p.m.
San Diego (Eaton 3·2) at Florida (Burnett 12). 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (Reynoso 9·1) at PittSburgh (Serafi·
ni 1-0) . 7:05p.m.
San Francisco (Gardner 7-5) at N.Y. Mets
(Rusch 7-9), 7:10p.m.
Houston (Eiar1on 12-4) at Philadelphia
(Chen 6-1), 7:35p.m.
Los Angeles (Park 11-8) at Atlama (MIIIWOCXI
7-8), 7:40p.m.
St. Louis (KIIe 13-7) at Milwaukee (D'Amico
7-4), 8:05p.m
American League
Eaot

W

L Pet.

GB

Reds

from Page 81 ·
including a solo homer in the
third. He singled in the fifth,
stopped at second on Bichette's
single to ce nter and then dashed
to third wh e n Andruw Jones
made a halfhea rted lob to the
infield.
Dmitri Young's RBI double
tied it and ended Glavine's pertorrnance. Andruw Jones them
compounded his first mistake by
making another - he let Alex
Ochoa's liner hook past him for a
two-run triple off Stan Belinda.
Finally, Belinda went to a 2-2
count o n Harnisch, who was so
stunned when he hit the next
pitc h to r a 376-foot homer that
he waved his fist and awkwardly
roun ded first base.
" Pete goes ou t and gives you
everything he's got, day in and
day out," Griffey said. "We have
to wo rk on that home run trot ,
though."
H arnisc h had an excuse. His
o nly o ther career ho mer was May
22 last year.
"The home run trot was well
below average; ' Harnisch said. "It
looked like I had seven different

Notes
from Page81
Ta ub e n see moving better
·Catc her Edd 1e Taubensee,
nn th e disabled list with a
hu l ~ing dis c 111 hi s ba c k, is
feeling mu c h b et t e r and
JllOVJng a round much eas ier.
Ta ub e nse e ' had an •njecti o n in hi s b ac k t o ease the
swe lling Jaq Frid oy and
th e
medicine
h as
says
w o rk e d.
" I haven't sw un g a bat or

NASCAR
from Page 81
cJ.\ , c AR full tmJC'

" I'd be intere&lt;tcd in domg
more Winston Cup raci ng, but
you've got to get t he right
uppurtunity to run for a topqu.J!ir y tl'Jtll," he sa ul " A11d rhen
t here \ my age. They're all loo kin g for the ll L'X t Jeff Go rdo n. the
tH.' .\ t

'1o nv Stcw.1 rt."

Htlt ( !IJnl• 111 \\ dl be lot) k.ing at
1-ello" '· frCLJU &lt;n tly. knowmg that
lo r t im on e weeke nd the pnnci-

p;Jl LompctitJOTI m1~ht not be
Rusty Wallace. also a six-ti me
winner on road courses. He is
exci ted by ano ther contest w ith
lh e Canadian.
Gordon says he learns something eve ry t im e they race, and
Fe llows likes to hear that.

··1

hrr ~·'--·

lt,.thlc." hr· \

.tlf u.lih

nP
t~t!

lj1H'" rwn

"1

L lo\11 1~ 111

\\ ,1~ llLlkmg so me

I" (

.c:ll 13 112

Centro!
ChM:ogo .......................... 88 45 .102
Cleveland ...........
.. ... 59 52 .!132
8
0e1ro;1 .............................. 52 eo .-4&amp;115 112
Kansas City ..................... 52 51 ...eo
18
MIM8SOta ....................... 52 8A .4tl 17 1/2

Milwaukee .......... ........... .. 47 67 .412 14 1!2
Houston ......................... 43

BoJtlmore .......... .............. 150 e2 .4-M 12112

it '~;

yc.·,tr, I wao;;

nn him lnd he
snl.lll mistakes,

-

47 .518
51 .5'5
5
5e .513 8 1/2

58 .•7312 112
_ , _ . , .•• Ga.BaH;more 5, Delrolt 2

Cleveland 8, T.... 4
N.Y. Yank-12, Daldand 1
Tampa Boy5, Minnooota 4, 10 lnnlngo

Kanou City 5, TOIOIIIO 3

Chicago Willie Sox 19, Saaftle 3

Bolton • . Anaheim 2
Todlor'oOakland (Mulder 8-7) ll1 N.Y. 'l'ankHI (CorM
t·10}, 12:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Mays e~ 13) at Tampa Bay
(511111Zo 2-2). 12:15 p.m.
Bal11mora (Ponton 8-7) ll1 DalrOO (Splrlcl1·
2). 1:05 p.m.
Toronto (Wells 17-4} 01 Konaao Clly ~
ows 1-0}, 2:05p.m.
SMftle (SOlo 12-6} ll1 Chk:ogo WhHo Sox
(Parque 9-4), 2:05 p.m.

Frkloy'o a a -

Balt;moro (Muulna 7·11) at Konou Clly
(Roict1art 5-6}, 8:05p.m.
Toronto (Escobar 7-12) at Mlnneaota
(Romorc 1-1}, 8:05p.m.
Chicago W1111e Sox (llolchM I 3-4} 11
Boy (Rupo 4-4}, 8:15p.m.
Bostt&gt;n (Aml(o 0-1} at TOllllO (Devil 4-3),
8:35p.m.
Cl.....,nd (Finley i-6) 11 SaaUio (Abboft 74}, 10:05 p.m.
De1ml1 (Noma 4-1 0} 01 OAI&lt;IOnd ( H - 137), 10:05 p.m.
.
N.Y. Yailk001 (Hamondoz 8-6) a1 Anlholm
( _ . 5 - 8 ) , 10:05 p.m.

T-

Now EngllnCL ............U 10
Miami .... ....... ............... 11
D.C.............................8 14

-...-

TOMI
WLTPioGI'GA
NY-NJ ....................... 13 9 2 41 42 35

speeds."
Glavine didn't know how to
explain how he ·gave up eight
runs in four-plus innings, his
worst performance since he gave
up a career-high nine runs in a
10-7 loss to Milwaukee on May
24 last year.
" I know I wasn't on my game,
but I don't think I was as bad as
the score reflects, either," Glavine
said.
Reds Notes: Glavine is 21-9
career against the Reds, including
14-4 in Cincinnati. ... Chipl'er
Jones had more errors (2) than
hits (1-for-13) in ·the series. ...
Final test results found no trace of
cancer in Andres Galarraga's left
thumb, which has a hairline fracture and a cyst. He could be back
in the Braves' lineup Friday. .. .
Pitching coach Leo Mazzone was
released from a hospital, where
tests found nothing wrong. He
fainted during Tuesday's game....
RF Brian Jordan was out of the
lineup, a day after pulling groin
muscles ... _Reds SS Barry Larkin
plans to be back in the lineup
Friday in Chicago, one week after
he strained a knee ligament. ...
Griffey's homer, his 33rd this season, was the 431st of his career.
He's 26th on the career list, with
Andre Dawson ne&gt;Xt at 438.

39

Detroit 68, New Yoril: e3

5 29 35
8 24 38

42

lnd;ana 17. Chorkltto 51

!13

Houston
MIMMOta 64
Utah 89, 1.oo AngSacramenlo 79. SaaUio 46

n.

c.nlnliDivlolon
, . _ Bay .... ............ 13 10 2 41 46 35
Chic:aQo .................... -12 8
~ .................. 10 11

5 41

50

40

5 35 39

43

- - Clly ............... 13
L.ooAngoloo .. ...... ....... 11

Colcndo .................... 11

6

5 44 37

7
11

7 40 39
3 38 33
8 23 28

NFC

l!ool

- Arizona ........................ .. 0 1 o .000 17 31

n

N.Y. CllanllL ...................O I 0 .000
\Yaohlng1on ...................0 1 0 .000
~lph1CI

Aug. II
Clweland at Orlando, 7 p.m.
latunloy, Autio 12
New YDf1c at Walhlnglon, 8 p.m.
8uM8y, Aug. ,

Bon . -..................... 5 12
38
NOTE: Tlno pofl1s fo&lt; a v.&lt;n and one poinl
lor. tio.

I Atlanta

Ortando at Cleveland, 3 p.m.

Sat\lnloy'o a.Tampa Bay at San Jose, • p.m.
New England • - Yori&lt;-New Jeraey, 7:30
p.m.
Cololado at Miemi, 7:30 p.m.
, DC Unllad ol DIOiu, 8:30 p.m.
Kansu ctry at Los Angeles, tO p.m.
-.-oy,Aug. 11
Now Vor1c-N- JorMy at Tampa Bay, 7:30

w..-conloronoo

11
18
18
18
1i

.53i
.500
.438
--

.40«1

8
8
7

lndiMa ............ .................. 9 23 .281
Charlotll ...........................&amp; 24 .250

12

11

w.t.-n Coi1r.¥1ICI
x-LOO Ang- .. ................ 28

4 .875

y . - .. .... .................. 27

a...
.658
.825
.583
.469
.313

5
,.sactamonto .................. 21 11
Y · - .................... ..... 20 12
Otah ................................. 18 14
t.llnnet0t11 .. ...................... 15 17
Porlland .. ......................... 10 22

.............................. 6 28 .188
x-clincnld dlvil6on
y-cllnchod playof """'
Wednlldly"a Glmn
WMhlngtan

eo. c-nc1 46

Mlmlll, Oriando 84, 20T

7
8
10
13

18

17

Rew0r1eans .................. 1 1 0 .500 45

48

o.000
T~··TIImpa Bay at
M;ami, 7 p.m.

43

Bon Fronclsco ................0 2

e

-

81. Loull 11 Tenneuee, 7 p.m.
F~,Aug. II

W L TPta. Pf PA

New EngiOncL ...............2
Boll1lo ........................... 1
N .Y. Jota ...... ................... 1
Miami ............................0
Indianapolis ...................0

o
0
1
1
2

o 1.00
01.00
0.500
0 .000
0 .000

33
21

Plnsburgh .....................2
Baltimore .................... 1
Cl011elend ...................... 1
Jaclcsonvlne ...................1
Tennessee ..................... 1
c;nc;;nn011 ......................o

0
o
0
o
0
1

01 .00
01.00
01 .00
01.00
01 .00
o .ooo

01
18
33

w...

Denver ....... .. ................. 1
SanDiego ...................... l
Soatllo ........................... 1
KonsasC;1y ........ ............o
Oakland .........................0

Bunday'o Gomoo
Bay at Denver, 4 p.m.

llondoy'o Clarno

ArC

22

rtc Jell~ Beltimore, 8 p.m.

o.k1lnd at Oailu, 1 p.m.
8an FraneiiCO at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.

-at F-boll.._.
T•m

20

11 Dotroil, 8:20 p.m.
1011 San Diego, 9 p.m.
8elftle81Artzona, 10 p.m.

Gre.t

C-.t

1

22

New 0r1e1nt at Indianapolis, 8 p.m.
Ctovolond 11 Chicago, 8 p.m.

llondciy, Aug. 14
Sacramemo at Houston, 10 p.m.
ru..y,Aug.IB

•

40

01 .00 31

o

.........,.. o.....

Phoenix at Los Angeles. 5:30 p.m.

3

25

New 'forti: Glants e.t Jacksonville, 8 p.m.

_'o_lo_IA-Iotlon

.. .........

1 0 .000 24

Clnclnnlllll AUama, 7:30p.m.

f'lloerjx at Los Arlgcoes, l'S.t. (If nocasoary)
Sacrllmemo lit Houlton, TBA (H nee T'lry)

,c-..~
17
y-Orlolldo ......................... 16
,.WUhlng1CML. ................ 14
Dotroil .............................. 14
MIIIml ............................... 13

24
12
13

· N.w Engtand at Waehlngton, a p.m.

Sunctoy, Aug. I 3

OB

8

01.00 37
0 01 .00 13
1 0 .000 10

c.rolina 11 PII1Bburgh, 7:30 p.m.
frkloy'o Clamoo

Fridel', Aug. II
Los Angelea at Pnoentx, 9 p.m.
Sctlunloy, Aug. 12
Houston at Sacramento, 4 p.m.

EMWn eont.n~Kll
Toom
w L PeL
a-New York ...................... 20 12 .625

0 0 I .00 20

Corollna .........................0 1 0 .000 14 34

Ortando at Cleveland, TBA (It nac8su.ry)
Washington at New YOOc, Ti!A (W nocouary)

MltYnl 11 Col&amp;.mbus, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago II Dellao, 8:30 p .m.
- C i t y at San JaM, 10 p.m.
Calcndo at LDa Angateo. 10:30 p.m .

46

o

.....................~ o o1.00

St.l.Ouls .... ..................... 1

-,,Aug. IO
Washington at New York, 8 p.m.
-y.Aug.l8

p.m.

..................0 2 0 .000 35

C::hicogo ......................... 1
l ~r-'Bay ...................... 1
. 1'11mpa Bay ..................... l
l ~H ...........................0
1'Minnelota .....................0

F~del'.

31
45

12

20
13

Conht

-PiaJOI!&gt;

Ea•em COitlillttiCe

23

8

DoiiU ............................0 2 0 .000 19 58

PhOeni)( 68, Portland 60

Oollu ........................ 10 12 4 34 43 43
-Divlolon

llojor~uo­

8 33 37

o
0
0
1
1

01 .00
01 .00
0 LOO
o .ooo
0 .000

48
10
28

34
14
20

31
23
28
10
17

10
20
57
13
48
20
13
22
14
10

21
17
20
16
14
31

-Otego II AUanla, 7:30p.m.
T...,..... ot Philad,;pll;a, 7:30p.m.
Baltimore at Carolina, 8 p.m.
New Yonc Gianla at New York Jltt, B p .m.
Arizona II Minnesota, 8:20 p.m.
~~II Ookland, 9 p.m .
• ~urdlly,Aug.ll
Chicago II C•nclnnati, 7:30 p.m.
Wuhlng10n 11 Clevolend, 7:30 p.m.
lncllanapojlo vs. Pinobucgh, 01 Mexico C;1y, 8
p.m.
Bul'llo a1 Sl. l.oulo, 8 p.m.
Joclcaanvlllo atKan... City, 8:30p.m.
OdM at Denver, &amp;a p.m.
Franclaco a1 Soottie, 11 p.m.
luftRV, Aug. 20
1'11mpa Bay 01 Now Englond. 4 p.m.

Monclllr, Aug. 21

Grww1 Boy a1 Miami, 8 p.m.

•

·-

...........

~
."'"".
..

Meigs Cfil.Jnty Fa~r special section inside
Austin leads :Buick Open, Bl

Saturday
High: 80s; Low: sos

Details, A3

Friday·
August 11, lOOO

1~\'JlWISACitqtj$:1

BASEBALL
:
Amerlc•n U1gue
~
1
DETROIT TIGERS- Placed 1B Hal
ris on the 15-day disabled llst. Recalled 180F Dusty Allen from Toledo of the lnterl)ltional League.
•
TAMPA BAY DEIIIL R.t.YS- AcUvaltd
RHP Dave Eiland from the disabled
Optioned LHP Mike Duvall to Durham ot ~
lntematlonal League.
,..
Netlonal League
· ..,
ATLANTA BRAVE ~Namod
Day!Qp
Moore director of international scouting. '·
CINCINNATI REDS-Announclld
Brooks Kieschnick cleared waivers and
accepted an assignment to Louisville at lhe
International League.
•·
HOUSTON ASTROS- Op11oned R~P
Jason Green to New Orleans of the PCL;.
Activated AHP Tony McKnight.
.
MONTREAL EXPOS- Placed LHP Scoh
Downs on the 15-day disabled list.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS- S;gned UiP
Kirk Rueter to three-year contract.
"
BASKETBALL
.
National Baaketball A1eocl1llon . ,
INDIANA PACERS- Re·si{lned G Ro!i\ile
Miller.
:_
LOS .t.NGELES LAKERS-Signed F Naif
Johnson.
FOOTB.t.LL
Natlonel Football LAigue
;·;
CHICAGO BEARS-Roached an In)~
seHiement wilh K Jeff Jaeger.
··
D.t.LLAS COWBOVS-Ctalmtd TE CMt
Smith off waivers.
GREEN BAY PACKERS- Tradtd WR
Robert ScoH to the Denver Broncos tor In
undisclosed future drah pick.
:.
WASHINGTON AEDSKINS- Signed •K
Clay Rush .
"' '
HOCKEY

MOr-

Meigs County's

"'t.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 55

50 cenh

9f'

Nellonel Hockty Llague
CALGARY

FLAMES-Announced the
r81irement of Lanny McDonald, vice prJildent of corporate development Named Br~
McCrimmon a11istant coach.
~
CAROLINA HURRICANES-Sign G TyljH

Moss.

Eastem OKs vendors, personnel for 2000-01
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TU I'I'ERS PLAINS - Th e Eastern
l ocal Board of Educatio n took action in
preparation for the 20\JU-01 sc hool year
. Juring its n::gui:H mee ting Wednesday.
T he school yea r w ill begin Aug. 22,
with an opt ional work day for fac ulty on
Au ". 2 1.
T he fo llowing ven do rs were approved
to prov ide produc ts: Heiner's Bakery tor
baked goods, llrOLt ghton 's tor dairy prod ucts. Mal o nt' \\'an::ho usc for tires a-nd

tllbe s, BP for gaso lin e. diesel and heating
oi l and ·G&amp;M Fuel Co. for oi ls a nd lubn cams .
Arik H orner, Travers llo bi deaux,
Cody 13artoc, Ni ckeya Bartoo and Ph illip
Cooke were approved as students for
open enro ll ment .
Jody H owa rd , elementary sc hoo l principal. and R ick Edwards, high school
prinCipal , submitted student handbooks,
wll!C h were approved.
Howard discusse d min or cha,1gcs in

tar.ial statT members at tht• ~.: l e m l·r t tary
school, to en s ure that t he otl-ILt' is rn o rc

th e sc h t·dul t:s and assignmt·nts of sen e-

T he boa rd accepted t hL· res i ~n at i o n of

rart•full y statfed during the late aftl'rnoon
hours and to guarantee stude nt st·cur ity.
Edwards said that school p&lt;; rsonnel arc
discussing a possible c hange in the time
fi&gt;r e nding the hi gh sc hooL
Edwards &gt;aid that any chan ge made
wou ld be made to bette r coordinate the
load i n ~ of buses at th e end of the day. and
that it would nor affect iiV\tructional
time.

Lea Aun King as seco nd g rade teach e r,

The board approved a service contract
with Athen s-Meig&gt; Ed ucation al Service
Cl' nt n
to
provide:
sc rv tces
at

an d approwd the lmin!; of j o hn R edovia n ;ts hi gh sc h ool guidanre co unsd or on

a half-t im e b asis at per dil'm pay.
( :aroly n KJ.y ( ;i lli b n w;p; hired ::-rs

Sl -1 7,975 .4~.

bus
Jri ve r, ,tnd Cr is Kuhn was approvl'd as a
str bstitu tt' tl'ac h er.
H eatht:r Nt.·A-" was hin:d as a st·l-u n J
g r.u..l l' tl'~H: ht-r on a n n e-yea r co ntract,
pending ce rtl fi c;-rtion .
Dave WL't· k ~ '"-'JS h ire J as a t(..·c hn ology
consultant on a purc h ase :-.nvice LU ll &lt;l

H oward Caldwell, th e distri ct's repreon the governing board o f th e
ESC. met wtth the board to disc uss the
poss1ble construct ion of a central office
for the cen ter, which now operates
offi n•s in both Pomeroy and in Athens.
Caldwe-ll said the center will consider

~et Jtatlve

Please see Eastern, Page Al

tract.

PVH to offer health

f

FLORIOA PANTHERS-Re- algnod LW
Ray Whitney re-signed to a three-year
tract.
..
PHOENIX
COYOTES - Signed
UN
Philippe Audet and 0 Dan Focht to one-~r
contracts.

con.

screenings at fair
volunteer.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

I'OMER.O Y -

A vari ety of

health scn:e n i nh'S all given at no

rost wi ll be offered by Pleasant
Vall ey Hospital at th e Meigs
Co unty Fair.
Th e PVH booth w ill be op en
nightly from 5-9, Monday
throu ~h Friday.
Co ntin u in ~ with tradit io n ,
I' VH will be otferin g nightly
bloo d prl'ssure and pul se oximetry sc rel' nint:;s w hi ch m eas u rl!s
the oxygen carr ied in in the
bloodstream.
13od y fat co nte nt analy sis
sc n,;en ings will be offere d o n
Monday.
On Tuesday, Pleasan t Vall ey
Hmn e Health and Hospice Servicts · w ill be the re t o otTer frt·t·
infornution regarding its ho m t:
hL·alth . hospice and private du ty
se rvi ces and to (h spe ns~ infOrmation on becoming a H osp ice

MISS FRIZZLE
READS - Using
stories about
·the ocean. Miss
Frizzle (Ja net
Hoffm an) reads
to the children
in Jump Start
every morning
as they lounge
on beach towe ls. (Charlene
Hoeflich photos)

..

,

Bv

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P

OMEROY Gelting
kid s
excited
ahou t

learning

and

rc;td y ro stan cl asses
o n Aug. 22 is what
Jump Start is all about.
Til L· pro~ram at Pomeroy Ell'lllt' nt ~l r y Sc hool, funded through
a $)[1,111111 O hi o R ead' grant ,
started rvlouday an d wi ll l'OJ,ltinue

throu !-!: h next Friday.
SJ nct· rhnl'·~ no n.:quircmcnt to

:mend , .1ll th l' chi ld re n tn kindergc~rtL'Il throu~h fo u rt h grade"
wne invitt·d anJ 6H enrolled .
Avera~e d.1il y atti.· nda n ce is abou t
511.
Tlw e mphasis Js un " making

FROM STAFF REPORTS

TUPPERS PLAIN S - US
llep. Ted
Strickland, D-

learnin g fun ," sa id Becky Tr iplett,
who with Sharo n Edm o nds and
David Det·m. wrott' the grant
"Explor in g th e O cl'an" " th e
theme bein g ea rn ed out for tht·
~ : 30 to 11:15 a.m . program .

Lucasv il k. rece ntl y to ured the
f:1 uliti~:~

M L" igs
n evv
Cou nty b usinc s~.

O ur Lldy of
Lo re tto

c hest, to do ing st: it·ncc: cxperi n1e nts. Group proj ects like co m-

Ca tholic
C hurc h
buil d•ng o tr
Strickland
StalL' R ou te
I&gt;H I in Tu ppers Plaim.

pleting puzzles, treas ttrl' hunts,
working on the word wall. cra ft
proj ects and sto ry tell in g are all a
pa rt o f thl· program w h1ch is
design ed to enhan ce n:•admg and
math skills in a mo re tll' xible tim e

Be rlin is a Co lumbu s- hao;cd
colllp&lt;tn y that m ;-r nuh..:tu rt•s_ath -

FILLING HER CHEST - Reading projects reap rewards in t he Jump
Start program . Here Meisha Deiwert works on her ''Reading as a Treasu re " chart.

Improving grounds

letic jl'nl'ys ond ap pare l. and is
ownt•d by Kent Sportmg Goods.
Tht' ti rm m.lkt.'·s j encys for

Calendar
Classitieds
Comics

Editorials
Obituaries

DRIVE HOME IN A CAR OR TRUCK TODAY!!

Sporl5
Weather

A5
B2-4
BS

Al
Bt ; 6

Al

Lotteries
owo
195 UP

RIVER RD.

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

740-446-9800 800-272-5179 '

Pick 3: K-2-S ; Pick 4: .l-6-1)-S
Buckeye 5: S-~1~2.\-J( J--.\7

A total of 127 posts were driven into the grou nd on the parking lot at
the Rock Springs Fairg rounds Thurs day. PDK Construction brought in
its equipment to do the work of sect1on 1ng off the lots were pr,eviously snow fen cing had been used to mark t he parking lanes . The six-foot
posts driven well into the group have holes about eight inches from
the top, thro~gh which cable wil l be strung. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

•

,.

Ohio University. Ohi o Stat~
University, Florida St.lte University. as well as o ther athleti c
o rga ni zati o ns t hro ugh o u t th t:
loca l ~a r e lli te factory.
p rodu ces on avera~e
aro un d I ,nno to 1.2011 sports
garm t•nts ptr wt.•t.::k. opL'ned th~
doors of its 5.0( 10-"q u are foot
t:1C1hty on March 7. ,md e mpl oys
I() peopl e.
T he
whi c h

Acco rding

to

Char k•n L'

Fordyce, manager of the f:~e ili ty,
th e com pany expt'cts to have as
man y
as
20 - 25
:wo rkers
t' lll p loye d ;l rounJ the rim e of
rht.' busm ess' o nt&gt;-ycar anntver-

'iary.
S t ri~ kl a nd

was 111 M eigs
County as part of h i.~ agenda to
visit south eastern O h10 area.

High winds
Wednesday
bro ught down
trees in several
locations a round
the co unty and
Thursday. t he
clea nup began.
This is a scene
behind houses m
the Bradbury
commun ity where
Wallace Russell
resides. (Charlene Hoell ich
photo)

1 Sedions- 11 Pages

Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1-800-272-5179.

Please see PVH, Page Al

Storm damage

Toclay's

Sentinel
Repo • Divorce??
Embarrass.m ent... Your Treated with Respect!

l o~..:ate d

in the formt·r

from completing readin ~ projects
to ge t rewa rds to put in a treaSLJre

Please see Prepared, Page Al

tient s df- nl ~mager n e1 1t diabete s

education.
Th e lf st to determin e blood
sugar j, ::r simplt· finger pric~.
and the results ne known
tt nm edbtely. The program ain1s

of us.

13etlin Inc .. a

A ctivities in c lud e ~.: vc r y thin g.

pe rio d and less stru c tured setting.

Als o o n Tuesday. Nancy 13.
G ra ham and Associates will be
administering fre e sc ree nings
tests for Attention Defi ci t
Hyperaci1vi ty
Disord e r
(ADHD) and for cl ini cal
depressio n. Th e sc reemngs are
otTe red to the public in order to
help peopl e identifY conditions
dut may need trea.tment .
On Wednesday, PV H will be
offering bone demity (osteoporosi s) scn:t'n ings. Afilm on
ShakL·11 Baby Syndrome will be
shown , an d o n T hursday and
Friday, th e fea ture will be outpa-

Strickland gets look
at Meigs factory

Jum Start ets kids
rea y for sc ool year

anything, but I feel a lot
better," he sai·d Wednesday.
"I can still feel it , but I've
played with it like this
before ."
Doctors want to get all of
the pain and stiffness out of
the - back before allowing
him to return .
Taubensee has never been
on the disabled list before
and never experienced anything like the last week.
" I've never really had any
probfem with my back until
this year ," he said. "It bothe red me off and on two or
thr ee times . this summer."

but he cleaned up his act, and the
gap remained the same."
The key to winning is not tire
management , Fellows explained.
Saving the brakes for the en d is
most important on the 11 - turn,
2.45-mile serpentine track .
" That was a limiting factor last
year," he said." I just was not able
to maintain the same kind of
pace throughout the race."
Gordon has always been good
at sa.Jtng tires and brakes, but he
knows nothing is more important than being in front on a road
course, where passing is so difficult .
He wants to make sure Fellows
is in his mirror near the end.
"If a guy like that ever gets in
front of you, it's over," Gordon
said. "You can't pass hitn."
Fellows laughs at the prospect
of one of the greats in the-sport
being worried about an outsider.
" I certain ly hope he remembe rs that o n Sunday," Fellows
so id .

'---

Thursday, August 10,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

New 'lbrk.. .......................51 48 .!180
llol10n ............................. 57 53 .818 4112
Toronk&gt; .... ......................... 59 57 .101 5112

.,._

--

W.VA.
Daily J : 4-b- 1 Daily 4: i-.\- 1- 1

•

•

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