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Bengals
lromPIIpB1
year and has lost seven in a row
by overcoming Marcus
Robinson's two tou.:hdown
catches that fashioned the 14-0
deficit.
The first game at the 65,600seat s~dium was played before a
less-than-capacity crowd as the
Bengals sold only 56,180 tickets.
Fans were grumbling when the
Bears (2-1) scored on their fim
two possessions.
Robinson, who was the Bean'
leading receiver last year but
missed the first two preseason
games with an abdominal strain,
scored the first two times he
touched the ball. He got 1 5 yards
behind the secondary for a 45yard scoring catch from Cade
McNown, who rolled left to

PGA
hmPageB1
"If! would have won, it would

have been a dream come true."
Tied with Woods going to the
72nd hole, May holed an 18-foot
birdie pun from the fringe that
put Woods in a perilous situation
- a 6-foot birdie putt to get into
the playoff. It curled in on the left
side, Woods punching his fist and
letting out a roar.
Woods took a one-stroke lead
on the first playoff hole, No. 16,
but not until after May showed
he wasn't going away, hitting a
70-yard chip from the rough that
stopped inches from the cup.
Woods tracked his 25-foot birdie
putt, trotting after it and pointing
at the ball as it dropped for birdie.
Both players made impressive
par saves on the 17th, setting the
stage for even more drama on the
18th.
Woods hit his drive well to the
left and into a sycamore. tree. It
dropped onto a cart path, bouncing so high it hit the tree again
before rolling down the path
onto some trampled dirt. He hit
his approach into the left rough,
and his third shot into a bunker.
But May failed to capitalize. He
hit across rhe fairway into more
rough, and his approach caught
the ridge on the horseshoeshaped 18th, green, some 40 feet
a~y.

After Woods hit out of the
bunker to 2 feet, May's only hope
was to make a putt that was as
long as his chances.
It almost went in.
But this year - this game belongs to Woods. He closed with
a 67, his 15th consecutive round

TODAY'S SCOR·EBOARD

avoid a cornerback blitz and saw
the Bengals' breakdown.
On the Bears' next possession,
Robinson took a short screen and
outran the secondary for another
45-yard score.
While Robinson had a banner
return, Bengals running back
Corey Dillon was ineffective in
his first game since ending a
holdout. He carried seven times
for 16 yards and dropped a pass in
the first quarter.
" At first, I had butterflies
because I've been away from the
game for a few months," Dillon
said. "I took some licks and things
started to feel a little more natural.''
Smith and Warrick led a 21. point spurt tha~ put the Bengals
ahead to stay.
Warrick, the Bengals' top draft
pick, went 14 yards on a reverse
for his first touchdown and the
first against the Bears in presea-

son. Warrick jumped into the
front row of fans in celebration.
Smith then threw an 11-yard
touchdown pass to uncovered
tight end Tony McGee and a 3yard scoring pass to third-round
pick Ron Dugans - Warrick's
teammate at Florida State- for a
2 1-14 lead.
Smith was 13-of-14 for 139
yards during the three drives and
pounded his chest repeatedly after
throwing his first touchdown
passes of the preseason.
Smith completed 21 of 29 for
184 yards without an interce ption
as he played all but 12 seconds of
the first three quarters - another
indication of how badly C incinnati wanted to win.
· McNown played the first two
series of the third qu arter and
completed 12 of 18 for 177 yards
with one interception overall.

at par or better in the majors. He
has had at least a share of the lead
- in 11 of the last 12 rounds in the
majors, unprecedented domination .
Thomas Bjorn ofDenmark had
a 68 and finished third, five
strokes back at 13-under 275. He
was among five other players who
looked like they might have a
chance to claim the Wanamaker
Trophy when Woods stumbled
early.
Two-time Masters champion
Jose Maria Olazabal (69) and
Australians Stuart Appleby (69)
and Greg Chalmers (70) were
another stroke back.
May and Woods came from rhe.
same junior golf section in
Southern California, although the
31-year-old May was a star as
Woods was just getting started.
Few could have guessed their
paths would mmeday cross at Valhalla, with a major championship
at stake.
Woods has won 26 times
around the world, 22 of those on
the PGA Tour. May's only victory
came last year in the British Masters on the European tour,
although he.showed his mettle by
holding back Colin Montgomerie and Lee Westwood,
Europe's best two players.
. Ar Valhalla, the back nine
turned into match play, a format
the PGA Championship ditched
in 195!l. It more than held its
own against some of the greatest
duels ever.
It was the best player in the
game against a player few had
even heard of until this week.
While Ernie Els, Phil Mickelson
and Davis Love III failed to
mount a challenge, May seem'ed
to relish it.
He outplayed Woods for the

first half of an incredible backN.Y. Melt 8, Los Angeleo B
nine duel and looked as if he had
San Diego 5. Montreal 4
a chance to finish him off on the
T-y·aoPhiladetptlia (WoH 9-8) at Cincinnati (Har15th with a possible three-stroke nisch
4-6) , 7:35 p.m.
lead with three holes left.
Chicago Cubs [Tapanl 8-81 a1 Houlton (Eiar13-4), 8:05p.m.
What followed, however, was tonPittsburgh
(Benson 8·10) at St. Louis
72-71-88-73- 282
Paul "'ing"'
vintage Woods, whose legend (Stephenson 13·7). 8:10p.m.
74·72-66-68- 282
~t'J!'O Sandelln
A11anta (Burtcett 8 ·5) a1 Colorado (Bohanon
72-71-70-89 - 282
grows with every major. '
~•Jones
7-tl), 9:05p.m.
72-72-69-70 - 283
SIIIQ KanclaJI
Milwaukee (S~yder 3-8) at Arizona
He knocked in a 12-foot putt
(Reynoso 10·7), 10.05 p.m.
to save par, and May pulled a 4N.Y. Mets (Rusch 8-10) at San Diego
foot birdie putt, keeping his lead (Williams 7·5), 10:05 p.m.
Montreal (Hermanson 8·11) at Lot Angeles
WNIIA Playoll Glance
at one stroke. It was the first sign (Valdes 2-6), 10:10 p.m.
ConteNnca Flnala
FIOric:ta
(DempS1er
11·8)
at
san
Francisco
all day that May was starting to (Gardner 8-8), 10:15 p.m.
(Bell-ol-3)
Ea.tem Conference
feel the Sunday strain of trying to
Tueoday'a Gamn
nuradav, Aug. n
N.Y. Mels at San Diego, 5:05 p.m.
win a major.
Cl~elancl 56, New York 43
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 7:35 p.m.
Sundl'f, Aug. 20
Chfcago Cubs at Houston, 8:05p.m.
May badly missed the next two
N&amp;w''Vork 51 , Cleveland 45, series tied t -1
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 8:10 p.m.
fairways, but managed to gut it
Monday, Aug. 21
Atlan1a at Colorado, 9:0! p.m.
Cleveland
at
New
'York, 8 p.m .
Milwaukee
a1
AriZona,
10:05
p
.m.
out and save par both times.
•
Montreal at Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m.
Woods, sensing he had got_ a
We.tem Coi'ltwence
Florida at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Thuloday, Aug. 17
break with May's short miss on
Houston n , LOS Angeles 56
Sunday, Aug. 20
the 15th, hammered his drive 335
Amoncan L.Nguo
Houston
L.os Angeles 68, Houston wins
yards on No. 17. He pumped his
E111
series 2.0
W L Pet.
OB
fist when he saw the flight of the T11m
New Vorl&lt; .....••..............••..87 53 .558
CM!m~lonahlp SeriH
ball aiming for the center of the Boston ....................... .....64 eo .533
3
(lllltoOI-3)
....... ...
.....64 61 .512 5 1/2
Aug. 2•. 21, 27
fairway, where it settled 94 yards Toronto
Baltimore .............. .... ..... 54 69 .438 1. 1/2
short of the pin . His sand wedge Tampa Bay .......................53 69 .434 15
Central
spun back 4 feet for birdie.
Chicago ......................... 74 50 .597
For the first time since the 11th Cleveland ............ .. ..........M 5e .533
8
Detroit .............................eo 62 .492
13
hole, he was tied with M ay.
Kansas City.......
. ... 58 65 .472 1!5 1/2
Saturday'• Game•
Both players reached the green Minnesota .......................58 70 .444 1G
Clnolnnati 24, Chicago 20
Wool
WaShington 24, Cleveland o
on the par-S 18th in two, but Seanle ......... ...................69 ss .558
lndianapolle 24, Pittsburgh 23
2
May's long eagle putt raced by the Oakland ..........................66 58 .541
Buffalo 31, St. Louis 27
Anaheim .. .......................64 eo .516
5
JACkSOnville 28, Kansas City 22
hole some 18 feet on the fringe. Texas ............ ..................58 66 ..SO 12
Denv0&lt; 36, Dallas 23
s.turday'•
Gllmee
Down to his last chance, the putt
Seatt11 25, San Francisco 21
N.Y. Yankees 9, Anaheim 1
Sundlly'a Game
·broke two directions and fell into
Boston 9, Texas 0
Tampa Bay 31 , New EnQiand, 21
Cleveland 10. Seattle 4
the cup on its last revolution .
Today'a Clama
Minn810ta 5, Toronto 1
Green· Bay at Miami, 8 p.m.
Detroit 4, Oakland 3
Woods' turn .
·
Thureclay, Aug. 24
Chicago White Sox 7, Tampa Bay 0
His 6-foot birdie putt caught
Atlanta at Jactc:son\lille, 7:30 p.m.
Kansas City 7, Baltimore 0
Buffab at Philadelphia, a p .m .
Sunday'• Gamee
the left side and gently fell into
Caroflnaat ·New England, 8 p.m . .
Cleveland 12, Seattle 4
the cup, and Woods let out a
Minnesota at Indianapolis, B p.m.
Toron.o 6, Minnesota 3
St. LOUis at Dallas, 8:20p.m.
2, Kansas City 1
shout before slagping hands with -· Baniinore
s..ttto arOiklan!l, 9-pJr. - OaiUBM ~. DmMft 4, 1I ii'lnii'igs--Frtday, Aug. 25
his caddie. It was on ro the playAnaheim 5, N .Y. Yankees 4
Detroit at Cincinnati, 7:30p.m .
Tampa
Bay
12,
Chicago
White
So~~:
11
off, with momentum on· Woods'
Kanns City at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
Texas 6, BoS1on 2
BaltimOre at New Yortc Giants, 8 p.m.
side.
Todliy'e GamM
Miami at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Texas (Sikorski 1-0) at N.Y. Yankees (HBfIt wasn't easy, but he delivered.
Pltt~h at Waahlnglont 8 p ;m.
nandez 6· t0). 1:05 p.m.
"This w.as one memorable battle,"Woods said. " He matched nw
birdie for birdie, shot for shot.
That's as good as it gets."

Oakland (Mukier 7·8) 111 Detroit (Weaver 810), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Schoenewels 6..fl) at Boslon
(Am&gt;i!.&gt; 2-1 ), 7:05 p.m.

Kan111 City (MeadOWs 2-0) a1 Banimore

fromPageB1

times.
It was great entertainment for
the sun-drenched fans, yet the
race may have hinged on pit strat-

Tampa Bay (S1urtzo 4-2) a1 Chicago WMe
W L Pet. OB
- Sox (Porque 10.4) , 8:05p.m.
Atlanta ........ , .................. 75 48 .610
TUMdey'a Gllmea
New York ........................ 74 50 .597 1 1/2
SMttl• at Detroit, 1:05 p.m .
Florida ...
. .... ..............&amp;, 82 .4De
14
Daklond at C-and. 7:05 p.m.
Montreal ......................... 52 68 .433 21 1/2
Kansas City at Toronto, 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia .................... 51 71 .418 231/2
TekU at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Cenlrlll
._ \
Anaheim at Boston, 7:05p.m .
St. Louis.....
.... 68 55 .5!3
Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 8:05p.m.
Cincinnati ....... ................. 60 62 .492 7 1/2
ChiCago ................. ......... 54 68 .443 13 1/2
Milwaukee ..................... 52 71 .423
18
Pit1sburgh .... , ..................51 71 .418 16 1/2
Houston ..........................50 74 .403 18 1/2
Wilt
San Francisco .............. .... 70 52 .57•
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Final scores and
Arizona ........................... 70 53 .580
1/2
LOS Angeles ............... ...... 62 ' 60 .508
8
oamings Sunday at the S5 million 82nd PGA
CoiO(ado . ..... .. . ....... ...... 62 82 .500
Championthlp on the 7,167-yard, par-72 val9
San Diego ....... .. ....... .......59 65 .476
12
halla Gon Club course {x-won three-hole playI

.,

egy
this weekend at all. He was racing hard and it looked like he just
got real loose.
"I saw the 20 car wiggle and it
looked like it got real sideways."
The race went on for 41 laps
while Gordon 's crew installed
new brakes. He rejoined the race
while the leaders still had 119 laps
to go, but comp leted only 141
laps before retiring the car.
Xerry Earnhardt, making his
first Winston Cup start, hit the
wall on the fourth turn of his
sixth lap, bringing out the first of
the race's eight caution flags.
"The car was running real
loose," he said. "We were just trying to stay out of trouble and
bring it in on the first caution.
But another car got underneath
me on turn 3 and rook away my
air. I thought I could hang on to
it, but I spun out and hit the
wall."
Still, it was just the start of a soso day for all three Earnhardts in
this race. Dale Jr., despite ;carting
first, spun onto the infield grass
while swerving to avoid Robby
Gordon on lap 177 and finished
J 1st. Their father, The Intimidator
himself, finished sixth after taking
a provisional to start 37rh.
Bill Elliott, on lap 124, wen t
into the wall at the exit of the
second turn with a cut right tire.
That caution period led to a mass
pit stop, with Rudd leadin g Jeff
Burton. Wallace was back in front
when they all came out and the
caution was lifted.
Rudd and Wallace raced hard
around the banked 2-mile speedway for the next few laps. swaping
the lead back md forth slveral

Wallace went in with 30 laps to
go and took on fuel plus four
new tires, all in 16.1 seconds. The
others waited until lap 173 to
make their final pit stop. Rudd,
who went in with that group,
took on only two new tires both on rhe right side of th e car.
Wallace, who won at Bristol,
Tenn. in May and the second
Pocono race in July, was running
third behind Rudd and Labonte
when the spin by Earnhardt Jr.
and Robby Gordon brought the
cau tion flag o ut on lap 177. The
difference was rhat Wallace had
the four new tires while rhe others had taken on just two.
"I didn't think I was going to
carch those guys," Wallace said.
"But the caution flag came out
and they were sitting on two tires.
They gambled, but we went for
four and .... when they dropped
that (restart) fl ag, the Miller Lite
Ford took off like a bullet."
There were 21 lead changes
among eight drivers and 12 of the
43 cars failed to finish .T here were
38 laps run under the eight cautions.
P1pal 400 Rnulta
BROOK~YN,

Mich. (AP) -

Aes:uns Sundsy

of the Pep11400 NASCAA Winston Cup Series
race 1.11 M1ctugan Speedway, wi1h finish1ng po11i·
lion, starting posi1ion in parentheses. driver.
type of car, laps completed, re9SQn out. if any,

and money won·

1. (10) ~usty Wallace, Ford, 200. $110,460.
2 . (4} A lc~e y Au&lt;Sd , Ford , 200 , $94,530,

3. (5) Bobby Labonte. Pontiac, 200,
S73,430.
4. (2) Date Jarrett Ford , 200. $70,27!5.
5. (23) Johnny Benson, Pontiac, 200,
$44.7-$0.

B. (37) Dale Earnhardt, Chevrolet 200,

$51 ' 190.
7. (39) J1mmy Spencer, FOI'd, 200, $50,365.
8 . (28) Man Kef'1Seth , Ford, 200, $42,490.
9. (9) Ward Burton, Pontiac, 200. $49,540.
tO . {24) Jeff Burton, Ford , 200. S80.090
11. (7) Mark Manin, Ford, 200, $ot.4,515.

oil):

S11turday'1 Qamw
Cincinnati 7, Pinsburgh 1
LOs Angeles 4 , N.Y. Mets 1
San Francisco 12, Atlanta 3
Houston 10. Milwaukee 8
Colorado 1o. Florida 3
51. Louis 6, Philedel!)t'!la 3
Alizona 11 , Ctricago Cuba 3
San Diego 4, Montreal3, 11 innings

66-67· 70-67 - 270
72-88·66.68 - 270
72-86-67-68 - 275
Jose M. Olazabal 78-68-83-60 - 276
70-69-66-69 - 276
· ~-Appleby
reg Chatmerl
71-89·66· 70 - 276
ranklin Langham 72-71-65-69 - 277
Notah llogly Ill
72-66·70-70- 278
ee.ee-70-75 - 279
Soot! Dunlap
Davtl Love Ill
68-69-72-70 - 279
PhH Mickelson
70.70..fl9· 70 - 279
TomWillon
76· 7().65-68 - 27G
Fred Funk
89-88·7·-68 - 279
Mk:noo; Clartc II
73-70-87·70- 280
Chrlo DIMarco
73· 7Q-6G-68 - 280
LleWH1wood
72-72·69-67- 280
Stewan Clnk
72-71-70-87- 280
Tom Kit•
70·72-69·70- 281
Robert Allonby
73-71 -68-69 - 281
Ango; C.brora
72·71-7.1-EI7 - 281
J.P. Hayee
89-68·68·76 - 281
Lee J•nzen
75·70·70-88- 281

•·Tiger WOOds

~=Bjorn
!

SIINiay'o Gameo
Pittsburgh 7, Cinclma1i 3
Pl&gt;ladelphia
St. Louis
Colorado 13, Rorida 4
Milwaukee 8, Houston 5
Atlanta B, Sen Francisco 5
Arizona 5, Chk:ago Cubs 4

e.

o

1•.

$36,865.
17. (11) Scon Pruett, Ford, 200, $25,11 5.
18. (30) Kevin Lepage, Ford, 200,$35,715
19. (12) Ken Schrader, Pontiac. 200.
$27.415.
20. (33) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 200,
$45,015.
21 . (18) Michael wanrip, Chevrolet , 200,
$35,665.
22. (36) Chad Linle, Ford, 200. $34.665.
23. (25) Joe N'emechek, Chevrolet, 200,
$34,440.
•
24. (22) Da\1&amp; Blane y, Pontiac, 200 ,
$23.040
25. (20) Wally Oallenbach Jr., Ford, 200.

$25,090
26. (40) Ted Musgrave . Chevroiet, 199,
$34 ,190
27. (29) John Andretti . Pontiac, t99 ,
$40,615.
28_ (31) Mike Bliss, Pontiac, 199,$22,565.
29. {3) Rick Mast, Pontiac, 199, $.23,240 .
30. (34) Kenny Wallace, Chevrolet, 199,
$33,915.
31 . (1) Dale Eamtlarctt Jr., Chevrolet 199,
$37.730.
32. (3e) Robert Pressley, Ford, 188, engine
failure , S25, 180.
33. {15) Steve Park, Chevrolet, 179, engine
failure, $32,630.
34. (43 ) Robby Gordon, Ford, 177, accident ,
$22,080.
35. (35) Andy Houston, Ford, 156, engine
failure. S22,030.
36 . (HI) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 141, han·
dllng , $42,205.
37. {13) Ricky Craven. Chevrolel , 124, han·
dling , $21 ,980
38. {17) Bill Elliott, Ford, 123, accident,
$29,905.
39. (28) Hut StriCklin, Ford, 101, accident,
$22,3115.
40. (32) Elllon Sadler, Ford. 63, accident,

"

q,~

..I

.

TIRES
We will meet or beat any
competitor's advertised
price on the same tire.

BASEBALL
American Lugu•
ANAHEIM ANGEL S- Reca lled AHP
Brian Cooper from Edmonton ol the PCL
Activated RHP AI Lev ine f rom the 15 -day
di!labled lis t. Sent iN F KMh Johnson and
RHP Eric Weaver to Edmonton.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS - Ac1 iv ated
INF Bobby Smith !rom the 15-day d iS·
abled l is1.
Optioned
OF
Quinton
McCracken t o Durham of the International League .
TEXAS RANGERS - Agre ed to terms
with C Bill Haselma n o n a two -year contracl el(tension.
National League
AR IZONA OIAMON.DBACKS - Piac ed
1 B Erubiel Duraz o on th e 1 5-day d•sabled
list . Recalled 1B·OF AleK Cabrera from
Tucson of the PCL .
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Promot ed Brad
Sloan to spec ial assistant to the genera l
manag er.
BASKETBALL
N•tlonal Baabt ball Association
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES- Signed G
Mahmoud Abd ui·Rauf .
FOOTBALL
National Footb•ll L••gue
ARIZONA CARD INAL S- Waived RB
Keith Brown , CB Renard Colt, P Greg
Debolt. OE Terrell Jurineack, OB Sean
Keenan , FB Matt Keller. WR John Shoemaker, T Robert Skapura and G David
Walden .
ATLANTA FALCONS- Waiv ed CB Derrick Gardner, RB Byron Hanspard, DT
Ben Huff. LB Whit Marshall, G Everett
Mciver, TE Rod Monroe, RB Ken Oxen dine , FB J eff Paulk, CB Reggie Doster, T
Ozell Powell, DE Doug Miller an d G
Jamie Wu .
CAROLINA PANTHERS - Waived OL
Rob Bohlinger, WR Michael Dean, LB
Donta Jones, OG Allen Mogridge, DB
Ke\lin Monroe, AB Derek O'Neal and LB
Jaso n Parmer. Placed DB Tony Booth, OL
Robert Dani el , S Dean Grant and WA Jim
Turner on injured reserve .
MINNESOTA VIK INGS - Placed OL
Mike Malano on injured reserve . Waived
DE Keith Council, WR Chris Thom &lt;:~s, TE
Carlester Crumpl er, K Andy Cros land, LB
Olrick Johnson, CB Ca rlos Jones and FB
Anto ine Yo un g.
'NEW YORK GIANTS- Wa ived CB Fred
Lewis, RB Omar Bacon. 08 Bill Burke,
DE La11ell Ellis, DE Cedric Pittman. DL
Carl Hansen, DT Faiva Talaea i, G John
Kuzora, TE Mark Thomas, WR Anthony
Tu c ker, WR Jeremv Watkins and S B.J.
W illia ms . Placed LB Ohani Jones on
injured re ser11e and LB Vernon Stric kland
on th e wai..,. ed· lnjured list . Signed TE
Brody Heffner: Liddiard .
,
NEW YORK JETS- Waived CB Otis
Smilh, LB Casey Dailey, LB Kelvin
Moses, LB Brent Naccara, OT tan Rafferty, WR Fred Coleman. DT Richard Sea ls
ana FB Mike Slack
ST. LOUIS RAMS --Waived OB Corte
McGuffey. DE Barry Mitchell , TE Alex
Hass . LB Bert Berry, RB D'Andre Hardeman and CB Darwin Brown .
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Reteased WR
Jus tin Armour, 08 Kevin Feterik, WR Ben
Clampitt , WR Ri cky- Garrett, OT·Tim Co n lev. G Oonta Kendrick , LB Carlos Timmons, and CB Omar Evans . Pla ced CB
Fred Vinson and C Aot&gt;bie Tobeck on th e
physically unable to perform list. Placed
TE Ruf us French on mj ured reserve .
TENNE SSEE TITANS - Wa i\led P-K
Tony Umholtz, LB Jamie Heiner. OL
Jason McDonald , DE Jesse Warren and
DE Sam Sherrod .
COLLEGE
ARIZ ONA-Announced
RB
Leon
Callen has left the football team because
of academi c dilficult 1e s .
E-VERGREEN
STATE- N-amed- BillLa sh women's voll eyball coach.
NEW ORLEANS - Named Jimmy Headrick director of gol f, Paul Crespo men 's
golf coac h and Jo hn Muller women's golf
coach .
NOR THWESTER N STAT E- Na med Ty
Singleton softball coach .

URNPIKE

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Quick Lube
eneral® G4~ Multi·Point
~~~~~~m

s

Inspection

SeMcess
Chec~ a/'il adjuSt cameer and toe.
Additional parts and Jailor rnay be

...

required on some velt*
Oft--~

~ntf*llldlltor fa! INks •Cheek

ltoles, clltrp ll1d btiii•Pressurt
test system fa! INks •Drtln radiltor
•Includes up to 1gallon of C001111

... ...........

szzss

I I 95 •lnspectbra~e~Etionmalerial, t.l ipel

S

Sarvlce lncludaa up to 5
qu•rt• ol Motorcraft oil
1nd new Motorcr•H oil
IIIIer, Dleaal vahlolae
may ba extra .

Wheel Alignment Cooling System
•

Tire Rotation and
Brake Inspection

operation,rotors,drum~ hoses and
connect~IIS ·lnsped parlting brake lo1
damage and properoperalion •Rolale
and in•""' 41ii!S damage and propel
'r"'
,
operation •Rotate and ln!pl(t 41i~s
•Oualrear wllel vehldes extrL
'fnU!ailllur,C..S~!non

Winter Maintenance Automalic Transmission
Package

•aaa&amp; •&amp;495
Oil Change

•
Meigs (ounty's

Pomeroy
considers
emergency
training

so

cents

Revealing tape
may contain
clues in death

BY TONY M, LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Pomeroy
Vill age Coun ci l co nsidered
impleme.· ntin g an emergen cy
training course for po lice officers Monday durin g its regular
meeting.
Council m et with Pomeroy
Police Chief Jeffrey Mill er to
di scuss thc participation of
poli ce officers in an emerge ncy "First Responder 11 trainil~g co urse, w hi ch is deslb'lled
to assist accident victims beforeparamedics can arrive on the
scene.
Mill er s"id the course would
benefit th e officers as well as
:Pmneroy citizens.
"After being on the scene of
many accidents, officers j ust
want to do their part to cnsurc.the safety of those who have
been Ill t hose acuJents,"
Miller sa id.
Mayor John Blaettn"r said he
'ltpporrs the proposal.
"1 bcliew th at the residents
of Pomeroy wo uld feel much
safer knowin g that o ur oflicers
are qualified to assist them o n
the scen e." said Blaettnar. "Tht
Implementation of this cou rse
would be beneficial, indeed ...
Th ~ course would involve
40 hours of emergency t~1in­
ing plus a two-hour test that
eacli officer must pass in order
co be certifi ed.
- Th 1.1--'-0St ot::. . the-t-o ur.'i~­
wou ld total $'!50 for the entire
.department.
Installation of first aid kits
inside al1 police cruisers wa11
also co nsidered by council and
Mill er.
"We don 't want to chan ge
our cruise rs. into squ"ds., " ~ai d
Miller. "We would just like to
have so me suppli es available to
us so that we could help victims before the squad arrives. "
Counci l considered whether
enough mon ey co uld be gen er:u ed d1rough city fund s to
implement such a program and
if the poli ce department couki
possibly wait until more funding could be obtained at a later
date.
Co uncilman Vi ctor Young
lll sa id he believes the course
is a necessity and that the
appropr.tate funds should be
made avai lable for the officer's
training immediately.
"This is not an iss ue of buying a 11e\V lllOWef Or replacing
a broken door," said Young.
"We are talking about the lives
of Pomeroy's citizens, \:vhich, I

Pluse see Pollee, P111e A3

Hearing in murder
case set next week
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -- A 25- minute
audiotape is expected to reveal
details about last Friday's death of
a 2-year-old Long Bottom boy.
Meanwhile, the man accused of
shaking the child to death was
arraigned Monday.
Tony M. Gillilan, 32, of Rainbow Ridge Road, remains in the
Meigs County Jail in lieu of two
SI million bonds set by Co unty
Co urt Judge Patrick H . O'Urien.
Two aggravated murder charges
were fil ed against Gillilan shortly
after last Friday's death ofTho mas
Mathew Parker II. A preliminary
hearing, at which evidence will
be presented, was se t for Aug. 28
in O'Brien's court.
Gillilan appeared in court last
Friday on felonious assault
charges relating to the child's
injury. O'Brien dismissed those
charges Monday at the request of
the prosecuting attorney, in light
of the filing of aggravated murder
charges. .
·
Prosecutor John Lenres said in
court
Monday char a neurologist
ARRAIGNED MONDAY- Meigs County Sheriff's deputies lead Tony Gilhlan from the Meigs County Jail to
the County Courthouse. where he was arraigned on two counts of aggravated murder yesterday. He is will testifY at next week's prelimaccused of the shaking death of a 2-year-old Long Bottom boy last week . (Brian J. Reed photo)
inary hearing that Parker died as

the result of Shaken Baby Syndrome, and that a 25-mi nutt·
audiotape of the offense also will
be entered into evidence.
Lentes sai d the audiotape is th e
product of a strategically placed
voice-activated tape recorder
which the victim's mother.
Amber Well, placed in the homt·
she shared with Gillilan prior lo
her leaving the child in Gillilan's
care.
"The mother was concerned
about the safety of the child,"
Lentes said, when asked how and
why a recording was made.
The child was taken to Holzer
Clini c on Wednesday and was
later transpNted by medical helicopter to Cabell-Huntin gton
Hospital , where he died Friday
after being removed for life support equipment.
Gillilan, who has been found
indigent, will be represented by
Pomeroy attorney Steve n L~
Story, who was assigned to
Gillilan's case on Friday.
Lentes said two' charges were
filed as a mauer of course. O ne:..-:-.
charge addresses the issue of pre-·
m edita.t ion, while the second
addres.~es the fact the victim is
under 13.
Gillilan's case will likely be
considered at the next session nf
th e Meigs County G rand Jury.
scheduled for Sept. 8.

Commissioners authorize permanent MR/DD levy
and learning centers.
Project costs, including site
development, are projected to
total S1,200,000, wh~ would
extend over a five-year period.
Some $300,000 of that cost would
be provided by a capital construction grant through the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabili-

BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meif,&gt;s Co unty
Commissio ners approved th e
place ment of a 1.6 mill cont inuing
levy on the Nov. 7 ballot for the
C arleton School and Meigs
Industries durin g their regular
meeting M onday.
The pro posed levy, if passed in
Novemb er, would allow the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities to expa nd the current
leve l of 'ervices at the 'chool, as
well as help fimd a capital conS[rtlction project that Executive
Director Steve Beha said is needed due to increased enrollment in
school-age and adult programs.
The ~a pital constructio n project
would entail two phase&gt; of construction which would be added
on to the existing faci li ty.
The t!rst ph ase would add 4,200
square feet to the Adult Services
Program for various habilitation

LEVY APPROVAL - The Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities received the approval of commissioners to
place a 1.6 mill continuing levy on the November ballot. Pictured are, front
row from left, Jessica Gray, Jennifer Gray, Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
Commissioner Janet Howard; back row, from left, Sandra Distelhorst, exec·utive of Carleton School, and Meigs Industries Steve Beha, and Commissioner Mick Davenport. (Tony M. Leach photo)
activiti es and the ren ovation of
production fa cilities.
Phase Two would add another

4,21111 square feet to the school for
the addition of a cafeteri a and the
renovation of the facil ity's kitchen

ties .
The levy would also allow for
the replacement of five buses for
the school during the next 10
years.
"It has been the past and present
support of both Meigs County
citizens and tht: commissioners
chat has enabled us to provide the
necessary services to meet the
needs of both children and adults
With mental retardation and other
developmental
disabilities
throughout the area," Beha said.
"lr is this continued support that
will allow us to continue making a

Fair likely to have /record year' after final tally
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

$25 of any internal automatic
transmission repair.
'ftt\iai\II!MCIIIION'I OP#r hiMIIh

THE FAIR REVIEW -

Quality,,...
Cue
.....

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 62

.Change up to 5quarts of aU1omatic
ransmission/transaxle fluid 1nspecl
nd lubricale linka1e conlrols (whe1e
applicable) ·Road lest

11e.

-

August 22, 2000

PRO FOOIBALL ·· J

~-...,....,c.-_,om,

$211,1H30.
41 . (19) Tony Slewart, Poni18C, 36, accident,
$41 .250.
42. (42) Brett Bod1ne, Ford, 23, engi'"le lailure, $21 ,840.
-43. (27) Kerry Earnhardt, Chevrolet, 5, acci·
dent, S21 ,830.
Rae• StatlsUcs
T1me of race: 3 hours, 1 minute.
Margin of 11idory: 2.971 seconds.
A\IE!fage speed: 132.597 mph.
Lead changes: 21 among 8 drivers.
Caution periods: 9 for 38 laps.
Lap leaders: Dale Earnhardt Jr. grid-13,
Bobby l8:bon1e 14-26, Rusty Wallace 27·49,
Labonte 50, Wa llace 51 ·62, Jerf Burton 83-65,
Tad Musgrave 66, Labonte 67·71 , Wallace 72·
88, Ricky Rudd 97· 103, John A.ndretti 104,
Rudd 105-1 09, Wallace 110..118, Audd 117125. Wallace 126· 158, Audd 159-160, Wa llace
161, Rudd 162-173, Bunon 174· 175, Kev1n
Lepage
Rudd 177-183, Wallace t84 -200.
Poim leaders: Bobby Labol'lte 3,335. Dale
Jarrett 3,224, Dale Earnhardt 2,099, Jeff B~non
3,083, ~u1ty Wallace :2,983, Tony Stewan
2.885, Ak:kv Rueld 2,883, Ward Burton 2,849.
Mar11 Martin 2.826, Jeff Got-don 2,731
1

Details, A3

(MustJna 7· 13), 7:35 p.m.

Elll

12. (e) Jerry Nadeau, Ctlevrolt~, 200.
$39,815.
13. (6) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford. 200, $37,915.
14. (41) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolet, 200,
$39,215.
15. (21) Ster1ing Marlin, Chevrolet, 200,
$40.165.
16. (14) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet, 200,

Tuesday

More Meigs County Fair scenes, As
Historical night for Reds, Larkin, 81

Wednesday
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Tennessee at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Denver at San Francisco , 9 p.m.
Arizona a1 San Diego, 10 p.m.
S•turday, Aug. 2t
Cleve&amp;and at Green Bay, 5 p.m.

Tum

Years-

NASCAR

Monday, August 21, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

Gathering in the secretary's office on the fair·
grounds Sunday afternoon to review money and attendance figures
from the fair were board members. left to right. seated Mike Parker,
Ed Holter, pres ident. Brian Windon, and Jim Watson; and back, Hal
Kneim. extension agriculture agent, Dan Smith, Debbie Watson, secretary. and Karen We rry. (Charlene Hoeflich photo )

•

POMEROY - "This was ,,
record year for the fair" said Ed
H olter, president of the Meigs
County Agricultural Societ y.
when members gathered in the
board office Sunday afternoon to
review figures from the 2000 fair.
With the $104,269 from gate
receipts and season tickets sold at
. the ga tes, added to the money
received from season and mcm ber&lt;hip nckets sold m business es
before and during the fair, this
year's total proceeds .1n: expected
to he the hi ghest in many years
- m aybe the high est ever.
Over the past five years the fig ures which can be compared to
thf' S I 04 ,26\J this yea r. have

rangt·d from :1 low of SH I ,588 to
a high of $ 1113,312.
Saturday st·t a one-day record
for tlw f.1ir with S27,Y66 in gate
receipts on ly. That translates into
4. 666 people paying admission
that day. That figure does not
inclu de the kids who were admi tted fr&lt;·e until noon. the youth
with 4-H or other passes, and the
3,925 who purchased season and
membership tickets.
Ovt'ra ll money and attendance
figurts fOr the wee~ also were
atrected by " second kids day this
ycar and senior c1tizcns day whe n
an yo nl' over 55 got in free .
Fair board member&lt; credited
Saturday's high figures to th e
demo derby. wh ich thi s year
attrac red 1() 1 dr1ver;, comp,lrl'd
1

to 51 last year. "The demo derby
always pulls in the people," said
one board member.
It was noted that by 6:30 p.m.
every parking place on the fairgrounds was filled and cars were
"being run in one ga[e and out
another." Clark 'Baker and his
crew from Middleport United
Pentecostal C hurch were complimented for their usual exemplary
job of handling the traffic.
As wtth any fair, the weather
plays a big role in fair attendance.
"It co uldn't have been better ...
neither too hor nor roo cold , with
the p nc rain coming at a time
when the crowd was already on
the grounds," said board member
Jim Watson.

Pluse see Fair, Pace A3

•'

difference in the lives of those
with developmental disabilities,"
Beha said, "and -to help those with
disabilities to be contributing, productive and responsible members
of their conmmnities. tl
Th e theme for the levy campaign is "Say Yes to Jennifer, 11
foc11sing upon the many programs
and services which have been provided for Jennifer Gray, a 16- yearold student with cerebral palsy
who has been part of the Carleton
SchoC'I and Meigs Industries programs since preschool.
Beha said the county"'ide levy
would generate about $361.000
per year and would provide local
dollars co be util ized as marching
fl:mds, so as to generate various
additional state and federal funds.
In other business, the cornmissioners met with Jan et Ambrose to
diScuss a possible opening in the
Meigs County Human Society's
staff.

Toclay's

Sentinel

::a Sections- 1::1 Pages
Ci!l~n!lar

A5

(;lanifi~lb

B2-~

C2mi!:1 .
Edit2rials
Qbillliltill5
Sl!2flS

B~

Ws:Mber

M
AJ
Bl, !i
AJ

Lotteries
QHIO
Pick '3: 1-7-U; Pick 4: 3- 5-0-5
Buckeye 5: 1-K-1:\-31 -35

-

WYA,
Daily 3: 2-4-R Daily 4: 7-3-1-4

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Sentine~

Page A 2 • The Dally

'

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
C INCINNATI (AP) - A man accused ofbeaung and bmng a
child while baby-Sitting April 4 is facing an aggravated murder
charge.
R o dney Whtppl e, 27, was tndtcted Monday afte r, prosecutors
matched bite m arks on the b oy to Whtpple's teeth If cotwtcted,
he co uld be sentenced to death .
" It IS ne arly 1mposs•hle to com prehend an yo ne domg this to a
c hild," Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen satd .
The victim , IS-mo nth-old Shandon Brown, was the son of
Whipple's girlfnend.
Whtpple told pohce he had left the c htld on a bed for a few
mmutes while he used th e bathroom He sa td that when he
ret urned , the child was not breathtng.
He then called Shandon's grandmother, who called the 9 11
e me rge ncy number Shandon was pronounced dead t he next dar
at Cht[dren'~ Hospttal Modtcal Cen ter
Allen sa td an autopsy revealed seve ral nuernal lllJ Ltrl e&gt;, includmg bmn damage and two broken arms
H e satd th e exam also found bne marks on the boy's back. Duttng thl· p.lst ft'w mo nths, de tectives have rned to ubtam de n tal
records and bttt: :&gt;iJmplc:s fron1 sevt'ral pl'op le w ho h .ui c nnt:~ c t
" ·nh the chtld
T he only matc h was to Whtppk Allen satd.
Wluppl ~ alrc.uiy w .t'\ 111 pli o n a n unn: ! at~.·J 111.1ttcr. H \: ~~
c harged \\'lth parttctp:ttmg 1n a drtvt•-by shomm g Jul y 2(, l'rn.;;l"&lt;.:Lttors s.11d Whtppk .md t\\O o thc..·r 111 1;' 11 ope nl"d fi n: on tlul'l' m~n
011 .1 pun h . All thrL'C: wc:n: wo un ded.

Group wants to save stream
SO LON (AP) - A conservancy group ts workmg o n ratStng S3
mdlwn so H ca n buy 72 acres o f mostly wooded land to s.1n:~ .1
rare breedmg stream fo r brook tro ut
The C hagnn Rtver Land Conservancy stgned an agre&lt;ment
Aug. II to buy the land after restdents peutwn ed the cay and the
Cleveland Metroparks to buy the land. They wanted to blo ck &gt;
developer who planned to build 35 to 40 homes there .
Supporters of the stream must rat se the money by Nov. I or th e
deal could fall through, satd Rtchard Cochran, who h eads th e
co nservancy group.
Coc hran already has rocetved an oral offer of $1 niilli o n from
the C leveland Metroparks. The park dmnct wo uld own most o f
the land , whtch would be adde d to the South Chagrm Reservation .

The conservancy took on the proJect because 1ts members ro cogmzed the tmportance of the stream, whtch ts a tributary of the
C hagrm River, a water source the group IS dedi cated to preservtng, Coc hran satd .
The stream ts the only one 111 C uyahoga County whe re broo k
trout live and reproduce. Cochran said a development could
tmpatr water quahty and hurt the trout.
'"Any trout stream ts unusual, espectally a reproductng on e."
Coc hran said " That's why a 's worth n ."

Warehouse not registered for tires
C ANTON (AP) City health officials said a warehouse
destroyed by ftre last week was not registered for tire storage.
About 7 ,500 tires went up tn flames early Fnday at U sed Tnes
In c. hoU!s before the my Health Department was to tnspect rhe
\varehousc .
Ftre offictals continue to mvestiga te the ca use of the fire, whtch
they ruled to be susptcious.
He alth offi cials last mspec ted the warehouse Jul y 12 when th ey
dcternuned It was not regtstered for ttre stor.tgc, said Jun Ad.un s,
l'nvu on mental health daector for the department
l ee Kmg Ferguso n Jr., owner of Used Ttres, was told to regi ste r the wa rehouse for tm: storage and rearnnge the tnt: pt1i!s so
they w&lt;re smaller than 2,500 squ are feet . Adams s"td. Th e ptk s
.1ls o had to be separat&lt;d by 30-foot mles , he satd.
Atte mpts to reach Ferguson at hi s busm~ss wen:- un~lh ce~o:. ful
L'.uly Tu~sday because no o ne .tnswt·red the pho ne
Hc.tlth offictals arc tJVt.! rseetng cleanup of the site D:tmagL' to
t he butlding and eqt: ipment was esttmatod at $500,000 .

E. coli infections rise to 26
MEDINA (AP) - Th e number of peo ple tn fe ctcd wi th the E.
co h bactena lll north east Ohto has men to 26, acco rdmg to t he
Ohio Department of H ealth .
Ft ve new cases of the potcnually deadly E. co h 0 15 7 H7 tnfecnon we re co nfirm ed over the \Veckend. Of th ose, fo ur were in
M edina County, which has the most reported cases ,It 14. The
othe r new case was reported 111 C uya hoga Co unty, whtch now
ha s five cases
l ora m Co unty remamed at three cJSes wh tle Wayne and l ake
co un ties had two cases eac h . The vtctuns range m age fro m 1 to
~4

E coli ca n ca use bloody diarrh ea, severe abdo nunal crampm g
and, m the worst cases, kidney fatlure. It ca n be sp read through
conta nun ated food or dnnktng water, co ntact w nh cattl e nu nurc
or through person- to- perso n contact
Attentwn has focused on the Medtn a Co unty Fatr, 25 nules
southwest of C levela nd, as the source of the cont aminatto n
Ea rly spec ulanon ha s fo cused o n dtre ct contac t wt th annnals o r
ammal feces as the most hkely source of co nraminauon , accord lftg to doctors who have treated and m te rvtewed some o f the
patten !I.
Tests show that the M ed tna Clry water that 11 ptp ed to the fatrgm unds di d not cause the co nta nunatl o n, satd health d epa rtm en t
spokes man Jay Ca rey.

Toledo area in line for help
TOLEDO (AI') - Fe dera l asmtan ce has b~en g ranted for
Lul.IS CoutHy r~.·s tpc:nts J n d bus1ness owners \\hn sutTcrt·d tloud
~.Lun ag c: 111 't'\C:re sto rm ~ J u ly 2fJ-A ug. 2 . Prc ~ H.icnc C lt mon
.l tl nou nceJ Mmt ~;,. b y
d1 ~.1 ster dc:cl.Jr:t tton .Hu hcHIZl'~

th1.· me of

f~.·dL't.l l

tun ds to help meet rc..· covcr y ne e ds
AtJ co uld u11..· ludl· lo\\-mterc: st loan s, Jn dJ vJ du .l l .111d l 1n11l y
g J.lllh. dt \,\'i tc..' l hou slll g .111d ux refunds. The..· lntc..·nul R l' \'l'lltl l'
l)nnct.• 1llow&lt;; n:rt,\ 111 los~;t.•s to be dcduLtn l un (c:d a .ll ll homc..:
ux rc: turn o;
Uffi(1,1ls luv..: l'Stmut~.·d d.tnugl· of ,\t k.1st S7 =) mdh o n
lkWay nc..· D .1c..k. lll .Jna gn of the Tolc..-do's c..kp.lrtm ct tt of tH.'tg h bo rhuotk h,l&lt;ii . , ,ttd .m .l ~"L'S'i lllL' l lt sh o\\ L'd f1."\ tL' ' I dL'Ih L'" '&gt;ll\t.llll l'd
lll.llnr tlnod d .Illl .tgc..· ]J I IL''i llkncc..·o; -;mt.ll ll l.' d ll ll llOt d .lln .tgl' . .ll!d
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Cl\\lll'd

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t.ll l'l' d

lll\liC th .tn

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fo propc..'l'(\ '

( UL,I~ ( ~ DUll!\ . \\l[h !11 0~[ of1r (lllll fllll g .lt .1 jll\c..'tllk

.

.

wh it 11 ~&gt;. und l'r t. on~tnlt'uon
W.Hl'r poun.:d lllto t hi.· b.lSl' lllC!lt of thL' unfitH~ Ill·d budd 1n g
dunnt; th~o: storm ..llld tts \Vcight bu ckkd th e..· tlno r Ll( th l' 'i tnl i.'-

111 \ r!Cl..' CL' IH L'r.

[Un:

Tuesda~August22,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Attomey blames another defeQdant for killings
•

Babysitter charged in death

I he: m;IJor

Tuesda~August22,2000

STEUBENVILLE (AP) - The mor ney
for a man charged wtth abducting and ktlhng
two FranciSca n Umvemty ofSteube nvtlle studetm ts blanung another defendant for the
slaymgs.
'
Nathan H ernn g. 19. of Steubenvtlle. and
Terrell Yarbrough , 19, of Pmsburgh. could face
the death pe nalty tf convtcted of aggrJvated
murder in the deaths of Bnan Muha, IS, of
the Columbus suburb of Westervtlle, and
Aa ron l and, 20, of Phtl adelphia.
Prosecu tors say the studen ts wt're dnvt"n
mto an area of western Pennsylvama about 15
nules east of Steubenvtlle, taken into some
woods and shot with a .44-caliber gun May
on 3 1, 1999.The bodies were fo und four days
later along U.S. 22 m Wa&gt;hmgton Cou nty,
Pe nn sylvan ia.
Hcmng's tnal began Mo nday in Jeffer&gt;on
Cou nty Comm o n Pleas Court H1s atto rn ~:.·y,
'

Davtd Doughten. satd that hts chen! drove a
C he\'Y Blaze r to Ptttsburgh whtle Yarbrough
forC&lt;·d the students to perform o ral sex on
each o ther.
Doughten satd that H ernng was at the
sce ne when Yarbrough shot the students m the
head on a roadside hill .md that hiS client later
satd to pohce, "" I ca n't beheve thts happened.
Am I gmng to be 111 trouble'"
H oweve r, a Pmsburgh woman whose
BMW was stolen later on May 3 1, allegedly
by H ernng and Yarbro ugh. testified that Hernng had a gun and was angry and agitated.
The man w11 h hn11 tned to calm Hernng
down and told hun not to shoot her, Barbara
Vey satd.
" I was afraul that he (Hemng) was high
and therefore w ry dJngerous." she satd.
D o ug htt'n s.ud forL'mic evidl·nce would
show tlut blood from [hl' Vlcnms was fo und

on Yarbrough but not on Herr in g.
·•There's no t gom g to be ,\ lot of di~putl'
abo ut the evidence," D oughten s.tt d " Bu t we
have a far different concluston based ou th"'
evide nce."

Do ughten satd m opemng statl'ments d ut
H e rrmg went along Wtt h thL' bn.•.1k- 111
because he adnured Yarbrough . He also sa td
Herrmg dtd not ktll th e stu dents.
Doughten said Yarbrough dectdcd to break
in to the house because someone carha had
thrown a beer can 'outside as Yarbrou gh was
walkin g by.
Jefferso n County Prosecuto r Stephen Stern
told th e JUrors th,H He rnng is J USt .1s re sponsible fo r the slarmgs as tf. he h.1d pull ed the
trigger.
H e sa id 1 1 .4-l-caltb,· r bull ets. :tlou g m th
Muha 's bank an d ~..n:Jlt c.m.\:.,, \\c..'fl' fou nd at
Hernng\ h om e

Film's barn burning could ·Group asks commission
to increase penalties
lead to new state policy
CO LUMBUS (AI') - A dtspute over a scene 111 an ::tenon film
has led state offictals to pmpoSt"
that open burmng fo t fum and
vtdeo producn ons be .1llmvcJ to
1,1ke place· wlth Oh10 Envtrontnental
Pro tec tion
Agenc y
.tpproval.
" We do n't want [O take any
chances ," s::ud Steve Cover, du-ector
of the Ohm Ftlm Conmusston , an
agency that promotes the state as a
filmlocallo n . "Filmmakers shouldn't get here and find out they ca n't
do the scenes they want to shoot."
Granville's fire departme nt
refused to approve a barn burnmg
last year during the filnung of "A
Better Way To Die," an upcoming
HBO moVle starrmg lou Dtamond Phillips and Andre Braugher.
"They wanted us to bend the
law aRd call 11 a trammg exerme
for our firefighters," satd J?n
Packard, Granville's former asmtant
fire chief "I wouldn't lie for them··
Packard's refusal to bend extstmg law led to calls to state offictals
from associates of the film's director, Scott Wtpcr, a native of

( ;r:m\"llll', .1 v1Uagt' :1.bour: 30 mtles

of Colu mbus.
They asked Gov Bob T.1lt -

c..'.l S[

or

o thers With authonty - co t'lc.tr
the roJdblock.
"A lot went down bct\vcc:n my
pmducer.; and a ton of people."
W tper satd
EPA offic1.1ls eve ntually gr.mted
.1 pertlllt that mvolved other fire
deparcm~nK

Packard's former colleagu es m
Granville haven't forgotten the diSpu te.
"I know people thmk bending
the rules was a small pnce to pay
for aU the money that production
spent in the county," said Dudley
Wright, village fire chtef "But if n's
so tmport:mt to burn a barn down,
the pohncians should change the
law."
Pac kard has quit the fire department .
'"I'm tired of talking about it,"
she satd. "It's a time of my life I
wo uld rather forget."
Wtper's movte 11 scheduled to
be shown Sept. 29 on HBO. He
dow nplays the dtspute .

CO LUMBUS (AP) - The
AssoCia tiOn
of
R e ttred Perso ns on Monday
Jsked Ohio re g ulators to
tncn•ase the penalties thl'}'
unpo sed on Amen tec h , the
st .1 te 's largest lo cal phone co mpJny, for failing to meet servtce
standards, from $8.7 milho n to
S250 nullion.
The AARP, an advocacy
group for people 50 or older,
satd Atilerit&lt;eh has fatled to hve
up to agreements reached wtth
the Pubhc Utthnes ComnmSl&lt;ln of Ohio for the past stx
years .
On July 20, the PUCO
ordered Ameritech to spend
$8 7 tmlhon to satisfY customer
complatnts and gave the company 18 months to improve servtce or face another S122 mtllton 111 penalues.
Parttes to the case had unul
Monday to request a rehearing
on the matter, PUCO spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro said.
Ameritech, which said PUCO
rules were too vague to enforce,
also filed for a reheanng, Gtanforcaro satd.
Amcn ca n

Smce I '!'! 4. th,· l' UCO h."
Alll L'l' ltl't h to p,l\' .1t
least S616.111lll 111 pcn.ll[lc s m
credits be cHl Co~L' of comp b11HS
abo ut Sl.' l VICl', :l( tOfdlllg tO
agenty records.
The AAR.l' &lt;.nd the l'U C O
faded t o accoun t fo r \'IO!.ltl nm.
of crt'dtt stand:trds. t:11 lurL' to
mfor m cu~to mcrs of tht:u n ghts
under mamrenan ce pl ;m ~. nol.J Ilons of PU CO gtudellll cS covre q11 1 r~d

enng fatr consum e r pr:.~cttccs

and o ther vwlauo ns. the g roup
sa1d tn a n ew s rl'l easc..•
It asked the commJsswn to
levy penalttes " well 111 excess of
$250 milhon "
""Unless the PU CO forces
Amcntec h to bear th e COI1'\l'quences of tts vtolations of minImum qu ahty of servtrc st,m dards , Am erttec h wtll be co n tent to pay fine s and dt s nus ~ t he
pro blems as the cost of dmn g
bust ness," the AARP sat d
AmerH ec h
sp okeswoma n
Blau Klem dcclmcd to co m m ent. She sat d the C luca gobased comp any had nut see n
AARP 's apph catlon for a
re h earing.

Two-state dispute
going before
Supreme Court

OFFICIAL COURT NOTICE '
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, FLORENCE DIVISION
IN RE AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN LITIGATION:
C.A. NO. 4:96-3527-12, CA NO. 4:97-2635-12, C.A. NO. 4:99-2712-12

COLUMBUS (AI' ) Both
s1 de s 111 an .tlmost two -yc.t r-o ld
c ustody dtsp utc bl·twccn co upk· ~
from Ohio and K~.: nt\l cky wcrL'
headed to th&lt;' Oht o Suprem,·
Court.
The court o n Mond.1y .tgrccd
to allow an oth er l.twye r to argw:
the Oht o co up le 's c.tSe. The
arguments we re plann ed for
Tu es day.
The co urt had ba rrc•J the
attorney of R1 ch.1rd and C heryl
Ase nte of G trard fro m appca rm g
before JUStices Tu esday beca use
th e attorney had m iSsed a li lmg
dead hn e. Th e JU stices had
pl an ned tO rCVIC\V Ju s \\TIUCil

ATTENTION
CUSTOMERS OF LOCAL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
OTHER THAN:

arguments

The co ur t sa td Monday that
R o'ic mary Po meroy. an attorne y
wtth Gra ~~ roots C lttz c ns for
Clu ldren. ,1 no nprofi t chtldre n's
advocacy g rou p, ts all owed to
spea k fo r th e O ht oans
·
The Ase tites have asked the
court ro ru le t ha t O h10 h as
JUnsdJ cu o n over [h ei r art cmpr t o
adopt 3- yea r- o ld Ju , tln , whose
btologtca l parents 111 Kentucky
agreed to h1 s Jdoption, th e n
change d th etr tmnds
Th e A ~ cnh:s. w ho prcvtou sly

adop tt•d

boY \ brother.
Jost•ph. now 4, .Hglll' tha t Ju ~ tJil
Lil' ~l'T\L' ~ ,\ h L' ,\Il ll t'; to dctcJ lllllll'
tl1e

\\Jut'~&lt; I ll 1 11 ~ hL·~t lllt l' r L•q

lnpp t' ll.

th L·

SuprL' l11L' ( :o c~rr lllll \ t rulL·

dur

Fo1

dut

tn

Olno lu ~ pln.,d!Lt \0 \1
Th L

1\~c..'lltl'~

K L' IJ tt,, k \

t lll 11

the

.1ppc.1l'
K L· 1\tl\(

h .I\ L

,,, ke d

\.n llt t

1~1

O\'L I -

.1ho o t dL'I'L' d t h L'lli tn
r turn thL' Lhtid to 111 , bH Jlo gll.d
~ .li'L'Ilt . . . l~L'gi ll . l JV 1otHl' tiJ id J crn

\ \ ' \\'\\ , Sl O!lL't ~t .lt l'

oh liS I

TO RECEIVE A MORE DETAILED OFRCIAL COURT NOTICE
AND OFRCIAL CLAIM FORM,
CALL THE AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN
CLAIMS RESPONSE HOTLINE AT

1-800-245-3082
OR CONTACT THE
"AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN CLASS SETTLEMENT'
WEBSITE AT

&lt;http:/fatt.fsiwebs.netfcalling_plan_settlement&gt;
PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING IMPORTANT DATES:

111~. \\ hi Lh

On th e N,·t
Ol11o
Supr1.'l11L'

Nevada Bell
Pacific Bell
Southwestern Bell
Sprint
SNET
US West
And any other local telephone companies
not included in the list of Designated !COs
attached as Exhibit 1 to the Official Court Notice.
~ All such customers who switched from another long-distance
telephone company to AT&amp;T as their primary residential longdistance company between September 1, 1994 and March 10, 2000 in
response to solicitations offering an AT&amp;T optional calling plan or
promotion, and who did not receive the full monetary benefits of the
rates and discounts of the offered plan or promotion.
Your rights may be affected by a proposed class action settlement
under which AT&amp;T has agreed to award an AT&amp;T prepaid card for up
to 200 minutes of domestic long-distance calling to qualifying class
members who did not receive the full monetary rates and discounts
they were offered.

.1

b · .1 ud gc ·~ tu l-

l1 ortllllg. o f C:o\ 111 ~to 1'1 .

Ameritech
Bell Atlantic
Bell South
Cincinnati Bell
GTE

K\

October 16, 2000
Deadline to Comment, Object, or Opt Out

November 3, 2000
Fairness Hearing
Claim Deadline

ODOT plan~ Ravenswood Connector meeting

5

FROM STAFF REPORTS

William Young
NEW HAVEN, WVa. - Wtlliam Harmon "BtU" Young, 78, New
H aven, died Monday, Aug. 21, 2000, at his residence, fo llowing an
extended tllness.
He was burn on Sept. 21, 1921 in West Columbia, so n of the late
Wtlltam and Etta H offman Young. He was a retired 26-year employee
of the Cold R oll department at Katser Alummum Corp., was a member of the United Steelwo rkers of Amen ca Local 5668, attended West
Columbt a Uruted Methodtst C hu rvh , and was a veteran of the U.S.
Army durmg Wo rld War II.
He ts survtved by hi s wtfe, Vivian Geraldine Young of New Haven ;
two daughters and sons- tn-law, Barbara Lou and Fred Pnddy of Rutland , Oh to, and Bettie Sue and Warner Roush of letart; a son and
da ughter- m-l.1w, James Wtlliam and Kay Youn g of New Haven ; two
sisters,- Mt1dred flnunlcy of Patriot, Ohio, and Voneda Powell of
M ason ; etght grandchildren, five g reat grandchtldren; and severalmeces
and nephews.
·
BeSides hts parents, he was preceded m death by hts mter, Dons
Eads, and th ree brothers: Lester, George and Jame s Young.
Funera l se rvtces wtll be held on Thursday, Aug. 24,2000 at 1 p.m . at
Fogelso ng Funeral Home 111 Mason with Rev. Jack Mayes officiating.
Bunal wtll foll ow at Umon Ceme tery in New Haven .
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Mcmo na l contnbuttons may b e made to the Ameri can Cancer
Soctcty.

POMEROY Representatives of the
Ohio Department of Transportation, District
I 0, will host a meeting Wednesday to gather
mput from residents relatmg to mamtaming
traffic on existmg county and townshtp roads
during construction of the Ravenswood
Connector.
The meetmg will be at Royal Oak Resort
from 6 to 8 p.m .
The Connector Is to be butlt in three parts,
and traffic flow along aU three parts will be
discussed on Wednesday night.
The meeting is open to the pubhc, but
ODOT officials say the meeting is primarily

for those reSidents who hve-alon g the township and county roads to be affected by the
construction, for township trustees from the
alfected areas, and for local service agcnctes
such as EMS and area fire departments.
ODOT also hopes to see all three sch ool dtstric ts in M eigs County re presented at the
meeting, as weU as th e county engm eer's and
county cotnnusstont:rs' offices, accordmg: to
Distn ct 10 Deputy Dtrector George Collms
Colhns satd that Wedn esday's meetmg wtll
be the first time ODOT and residents begm
discussing the constru ction process "iU affect
day to day acttvities m th e wo rk areas.
"We have our ideas about how to m amtam

traffic," Co llins satd, "but area rc·stdc nts might
have better ideas.
" We want this to bt· an 111formattonal sesston for everyom•. mtlttdmg ODOT. Local
res1dems know bcq the..· ' PeCJfic traffic Issues
m th etr co mmuntttC"&gt; "

The first part of tl1 c project. from the
Ritchtc Bndge back to State R o ute 124 near
Ra cme, ts expt•n ed to ,e ll hcfo re the end of
Ju ne, 200 1, wuh t Ull ~ tructJon to begin soon
after.
T he second .md thml parts could also sell
later m 2001 tf money b&lt;·cu me s avatlable. If
no t, they wtll sell 111 21102 and 2003 , respectively, ColltllS s~id .

Democrats wam classes will be crowded

WASHINGTON (AP) - Thanks to new for resisting government proposals to help hire performanc e, also rose to • record half-miihon
school construction, portable trailers won't be more teachers and build more schools.
students.
needed to house excess pupils this fall at
The education spendmg debate, now taking
The department report . based on state and
Dorothy Eisenberg Elementary School in Las center stage 111 the prestdenttal campaign, natto nal data , also prc•dtcted sc hool growth
Vegas.
comes as renewal of maJor federal programs through the next ce nt ury Olfietals satd thar by
Principal Ken Ligon will have 730 children remains bogged down in Congress.
2100, th e natio n's sc hoo ls wtll have to find
"Our children deserve no less," C linton satd. room for 94 mill wn &gt;tude tlts - Jlmost double
m Eisenberg's 35 regular classrooms this yearmsread of I ,200 he would had to find room for "We need to build new schools and modernize the current nu mber of school-age children,
without the new cla.ssroolllS built elsewhere in existing ones."
ages 5 to 17 .
the Clark County system.
Renewing Its fight for smaller class siZes and
These numbns will g row, o fficials say,
"Addmg new schools has really made a dif- new school construction, the adnumstratton because Of tncrc:tsmg llllllliJ;ranon :1.nd a secference;' said Ligon, who's spent fout years in reported Monday that 53 million pubh c and ond baby boom, " htc h wtU co me two generathe nation's fastest- growing school district. "It private pupils will enter kindergarten through tions after the reco rd num be r of bi rths in the
has alleviated the crowding. It has enhanced the 12th grade this fall, up from 52.8 million last nuddl e of the 20th cc· ntury.
Califorma, Texas .1ml N,w Yot k expect to
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS
showers likely and a chance of education of the children. That's why we keep year. The new figure is considered a record
buildmg
them."
,
the
Educallon
Department
had
lowenroU
th e mos t cht ldre n th l'i year, but Nevada,
because
The N att onal Weather Service thundersto rms. Lows in the mid
That's also what the Clinton admimstrntion ered its estimate of last year's enrollm ent to Arizona and Flon da lwve posted the highest
says sh owe15 wtll ltn ger mto 60s .
rates of student growth over the last decade. Las
wants
the rest of the nation to do, as fall enroll- 52.8 million from 52 : nullion .
Wedne sday as a front sltdes
Wednesday.. Beconung partly
Cbllege enrollment for faU 2000 also set a Vegas alo ne has st·en sc hool e nrollment double
throu gh t he trt-county region
sunny in the afternoon. Showers ments in America's schools are expected to
record
of 15.1 million.
reach
53
million,
a
fifth
consecutive
record
.
to 200,000 smcc 1990. State-by-state figures
Lows tomght Wlll be m the mid likely and a chance of thunderEnrollments for charter schools, spenally are unavailable for th e centu ry projections.
Predicting overflow school enrollments into
to uppe r 60s. Hi ghs Wednesday storms. Htghs agatn in the nud
the
next
century,
President
Clinton
and
chartered
public schools that get freedom from
"We nee d to figure out where we will put
80s . .
wtll range to the mtd 80s.
Democrats used the ann\tal projection of fall standard rules and regulattons in exchange for these child ren ," Edu ca tion Sec retary Richard
High pressure in the n) idExtended forecast
enrollment
to blast congressional Republicans better test scores and other increase d student Riley said.
Atlantic provided dry weather
Wednesday night .. .Decreasing
overn ight. A few ht gh cl o uds cloudiness. Lows in the low and
dnfted across the regwn , With m1d 60s.
some .patchy fog developing durThursday.. Partly cloudy. Highs
m g the early mo rnmg. Tempera- in the mid 80s.
tures were cooler than normal.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Mornmg
Early m or nm g rcadmgs w ere m lows from the upper 50s to lower
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Corey confrontation. We like to sit down , 15, of Peralum.1, Calif., satd he Scouts' S:J.n Francisco Bay area
60s. Hi ghs from the upper 70s to Brunson wants her 4-year-old son shake hands and discuss a solution started the group several years ago office, ch:J. ntmg and toting stgns
the 50s in mo&lt;t areas
Forecast
mid 80s.
after hts father was removed as a s.1ying "' Blatant Btgo ts" and "True
·
to join the Boy Scouts m a few that's mutually beneficial."
Saturday... Partly cloudy. lows years - but only if the orgamzaToday... S11nny this mormng
Despite the public pressure, the Scout leader for supporting gay leaders teach love and tolerance,
wtth mcre asmg cl ouds tlus after- from the nud 50s to lower 60s. tion alters its anti-gay stance.
not hate and b1go try."
Boys Scouts weren't budging from nghrs .
noon. H1 ghs m the m1d 80s
Htghs agam from the upper 70s
'T m no t he n.: to be disrespect"Scoutmasters are people to
"This judgmental attitude and their position on gays.
Tomght Mostly clo udy wtth to mid 80s.
look
up
to.
What's
wrong
wtth
till
to the l.loy Scouts of Amenca.
Gregg Shields, spokesman for
discrimination is going on, and I
don't think this is right;' she said."l The National Council of the Boy being influenced by a gay manl But we can't be •silent:' said Jan
reject the notion that this is a pri- Scouts of America, said homosex- Someone's sexuality has nothing to Tyler. a l.lay Are!t C ub Scout
cussed various street repair p£5- vate organization. lt couldn't sur- uality runs counter to the oath do wtth his character or per.;onali- leader. " Gays and lesbtans are in
every mche 111 ou r soc1ety. and to
requiring Scouts to be " morally ty," Cozza said.
jeers and burned-out structures vivBe without ~ubdlicsbupptort:d•
exclude
them based on sexual onCozza,
who
said
neither
he
nor
.
runson JOme a ou a ozen str.ugh t."
--~thro\!ghopt the Yl 11~ge.
- . - - marchers-MofldayWI!ol!elJ'Jefeli ..e
ntatiOn
~ ~- IllillcroUs~· "We recognize t he fightsof all - his father is gay, leTt the Boy Scouts
- from Page
CounCilman George Wnght 55 ,000-signarure petition 10 the people to hold opimons different about SIX months ago after becomstated that he was very pleased Boy Scours of America headquar- than ours," he said. "We stress that mg an Eagle Scout.
w1th the ctty workers rate of
. [ ·
Dall S"mil r we are a private organization and
belteve, is top prionty"
Not all support Cozza's efforts.
.
h
ters m rvmg, near
as. 1 a
1
1
Coun c tl decided to deliberate progress comp eung . e vast rallies were planned in front of Boy that no one is forced "to be a Boy
Nick Henderson, a Boy Scout
on the tssue fu rther and to reach number of street repam located S
ffi
· 36 ·11· · 21 Scout. People who share our val- leader in Dallas, said he thinks
d p
cout o ces m
Cl es 111
an agrcetncn t at the n i council aroun omcroy.
states.
ues and beliefs are welcome to homosexuality is a . sin and supfrom PapAl
.."
m ceung .
Council agreed to hold the
Protester.; said they were looking JOtn.
ports the scouting policy.
Council also approved Miller's next meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 5, for a conversation and not a con"We don't want them in a posiIn June, the Supreme Court
As for how the board fared
request for seven pairs of Kevlar 2000, because of the Labor Day frontation over the organization's agreed, ruling 5-4 that the group tion of leadership," he said. "We're
lina nu.tll y. that's sttll to be detergl oves and Hepatttis shots for all holiday.
policy barring homosexuals from was allowed to bar homosexuals.
not against gay people; JUst their mi'nl'd M ort• money was taken
Present, in addi tion to Bluet- its ranks.
ac uve po hce officers. The gloves
lifestyle.
Would they be a bad mflu - 111 , bur coH" 111 Sl'veral areas Scouting For All, a nonprofit
and shots wou ld help pohce offi- tnar, Young and Wright, were
"We're disappomted," Dave organization, helped organize and ence on a scout troop' Absolutely." tncl udt l),\!: l'llt L·rtammt'nt - were
cers fron 1 contractmg any diseases Counctlmen Larry Wehrung, Rice, a former Scout leader who coordinate
In San Leandro, Calif., about 20 htghn
the
nationwide
w hile they conduct thetr searches
Bryan Shank, Davtd Ballard, John marched in Irving. "We don't like protests. Its founder, Steven Cozza, people walked outstde the Boy
Thl· tHi tlllH: r of carmval ndes
In othe r bu siness, council dis- Musser, and Clerk Kathy Hysell .
bruu!,(ht 111 hy Bates Bros. AmuJ em cnt Co \\;tS up tins y~ar With
the JUngle _pm .llld super shde
ba&lt;.:k .t trcr lll.lll)' yc.trs, and FantaThe Daily Sentinel
sy FJ I!" ..1 new ndc, bemg intro(USPS 213·960)
dl tc eel lu 1\l c· l)," tJir!loers. The
10:33 a.m, State Route 338, Mark Co mpson,Jackso n General H os- bo ,wJ n t c tn bc r ~ c red ited the
Ohio Valley Publlohlng Co.
Pub li shed t~e r y nfttr noon, Monday th rouah
pital. ,
qu .dtt\ ul the uudway to the
f'tr da) , Ill Cou rt St , Pome roy, Oh10, by the
I
RUTLAND
in trc.t . . c 111 .H tl' ndan ce. They
MIDDLEPORT - A "co nc ert of prayer" for the new school year
Ohru Valle)' l'uhhs hrng Cnmpa ny Secon d
4:00
p.m.,
Bailey
Run
R
oad,
Paultne
Ttllis,
HM
C.
d .rss po~ t ag c par d al Pome roy, Ohto
llOtL·d t r·ut ~)Jl S.tttll day because of
wtU be held at Mtddleport Church of Christ, Ftfth and Main, tonight
Member: The Aswmtcd PtcH. and the Oh10
tht· hu)!;l' L ft)\\ d on the gro\J nds,
at 7 School administrators, teachers, staff", students and thetr fanultes
Ne,.,spapcr A.liSOC rllron
lhc 11dn ~cpl go1r1~ pas t the u sual
POSTMASTER: Senti a dOre~~ co n cct ro ns to
are invtted to jo m in the prayer session, which wiU tnclude all schools
The Datly Senllncl. 1J l Cou rt St Pomeroy.
clmnlt:;
ttll\l'
m Meigs and Mason counties.
Uh to 4'i 761)
POMEROYMarrtage
hcenses
have
been
ISsued
tn
M
etgs
Cou
nOu t"tLk l'nnl· e~'\Jnnt, were up
SU HSC RIPTIOS RATES
ty Probate Court to Dean Vanc e Hill, 40, Ra et ne, and Sarah Ehzab ~ th I S rn 2f' Pl't\ l,.'n t. dt~.· co nunercial
B) Ca rrtr r ur ~1olu r Rnule
One Week .. .
$2 00
Wallbrown,21 , Racme; Donald Allen Pro ffitt, 18, and Samantha Marie blllldu tL," "'""' full. .md food and
Une Month
. .. . . . . . .
. . $8 70
..................... 110400
Un( Year .
RAC INE - Organizational meeting of the band boosters will e Hysell, 18, Racine; Roger C alvtn Snuth. J r. . 27, Pomeroy, and Pen ny g.1!11 L' llnt)th Ppt'J.ttors repo rted
S INGLE COPY PRIC E
Lou Klein, 27, Pomeroy; Adam James Sheets , 23, Pomeroy, and Ja clyn ~ood 'i::tll· ~
held at Southern Htgh School tonight at 7. Anyone interested in sup/)Jrl)
. 50 Cents
11
Swartz,
23, Pome roy; and Jonathan Edward Sarge nt , 26 , Pomeroy, and
0\ c..·r.dl tt ''.1' ,l grcar f atr," said
pornng the band lS invtted to attend.
Suh~cnhcr~ no t dcmmg 1o pay tt\e ea rner may
Robyn Ann Stout, 27, Pomeroy.
remrt m ~t.lvanc~ dr relt to The Dar l ~ Senti nel
H oltL't. "lH) -.uht!:l'"tL·d that now
o n a rhr e ~. s rx o r 12 nmrnll hosr~ Crcdrl wrll Ire
the b,),IJd h.t~ to '&gt;t.lrt dunking
gt\CII lolf! ICI C•llh &gt;I Cd
ahoul 2n~' I
Nn ~uh•ur ptro n h)· m.rrt rumi tl ~d rn n rea ~
\\ here horne c3 nr ~r ~Cf \ KC •~ ava rl-:lhlc
POMEROY - An old fashioned tent meeting held by area holmess
Puhlr shcr r c5 t:f\ c~ rhc rr~ht tu aiJJus l ra tes
RACINE - Dallas S. M oodi spaugh , Pomeroy, and a JU Vemle were
churches is unde r way at the corner of Route 1 and Union Avenue in
d urrng rh c ,uh~u,p l! nn pcrrnd Suhsurptron
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
charged
wtth drivin g u nde r FRA suspension and expi red tags, and
OLOROUTE J5 WEST
ur, ~h,urgc" rna~ he rmp lcmcnted hy t•hangmg
Po meroy. It will co nttm1 e throu gh Sunday at 7 p.m. each mght, and 10
446•4524 121MJACK SO"' P'IK.E
pos.session
of
nurijuana,
res
pect
J
v~
\
y,
d
unn
g
a
routine
traffic
stop
on
th L Uurill r•lll of \he ~ul1~urp ti o n
a. m. o n Su nday. Su nday there wtll also be a singsptratio n at 2:30p.m.
FRI B 18 00 · THURS 6124100
Tht• eva ngeliSt IS the R ev. Donald Adams and the Don Quales Fanuly Monday
BOX Off!&lt;£ Will OPEN AI
1\1 &lt;\IL SUBSC IUP'TIO NS
Accordmg
to Shenfl' JauleS M.
ln sldt l\ldgs l'n unty
6:30
PM fOR EVENINGSHOWS
art' the sm gc rs.
11 Week.'
S27 '0
Soulsby, the juvemle , 17, was
12:30 PM fOR MATINEES
:;!(, Week~
S~J 82
searched by deputi es and man HOLLOW MAN (R)
)2 Wl·!j\.~
SIOS %
7 15 &amp; 9.30 DAILY .
JUana was found Ill hiS pocket He
Kutl'S Ouhrdr Ml'i~~ Cn rrnt y
IJ W~;d;,
S29 ::O'i
was released to the custody of hls
POMEROY - Units of the Metgs Emergen cy Se rviC es answered
~(, V.n• k,
S'i6 68
grandmother.
MoodtSpaugh wtll
7 1S&amp;9150AlLV
13 call s for assistance o n Monday Un its responded as fo llows
S:! Week.\ .
.$!09 72
appear
m
Cou
n
ty
Court
on
MATINEES SAT "SUN 1 15 &amp; 3:
CENTRAL DI-SPATCH
Wednesday.
SPACE COW
JPG13)
Reader Services
2:2 1 a.m .. Lmwln H etghts, Sam Williams, Pl easant Valley H osplfal;

VALLEY WEATHER

Showers to linger longer

Rallies protest Scouts' policy on gays - We can't be silent'

PoliceAl

Fair

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Concert of prayer planned

Marriage licenses issued

Boosters to meet

Revival under way

Stop results in charges

7

EMS units log 13 calls

7 00 &amp; 9 .30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT SU N 1 00 &amp; 3:30

&lt;)·47 a.m ., Langsv1lle, asSisted by Rutland. Damel Lewis, Holzer
Our ma in t·onr Hn In all s t o rl r~ I ~ to hf
anurll lt' 1r )OU know or a n error In 11 ~ t ory,
ull lh l' nr wunom al (NO) 992·21SS . \\' t
will { her·k ytJ u r h1rurmulinn a nd ma ke a
cnrrTrllu n wurrnnted .

tr

New s IJ t pllrfnwnh
The main num lwr ts 992 ·2 15S. Department
ult: nslons arc :
:Gt• nrru l Man~tlo!er .......................... Ext . 11 01
Ni!~ S .......................... [,.; t .

11 02

t: :t~ t .

11 06

........ .......................... or

December 31, 2000
Cnut t

'

The Daily Sentinel .· Page A 3

O thCI' Sen ke~
AdH'I 1i ~inK .... . . . . ..
. ...... [)11. 1104
• Cin: uhrtlun ..... ... ... .. . . ........ t. xl. 1103
Cla ssified Ad 'i,, ............................. t :xt . 1100

M edt cal C&lt;·nter:
12:42 p.m , Second Srree t. Martha Batley. refused t reatment ,
12.50 p.m., M1ddlcport , Trent R osslfer, tre.tted.
2:20p.m, Flood Road, Aaron Deva ul t, dead on arnv~l;
3:52p.m ., State Route 7, M aite Buc\&lt;.ingham, treated ;
8:07 p.m ., Mulbet ry Ave nue, Wtlbur Burke, HM C.
POMEROY
12·41 p.m ., Second Street, Brandy Bailey, refused treatmenr;
12 :50 p.m . Overbrook Nurstng Center, Lester Dodson, HMC;
8.32 p.m., W&lt;·st Man1 Street. Tma H ysell , HMC.
REEDSVILLE
6 30 a.m .. Success Road. R obert H eadley, treated;

No stocks today
Due to techni cal dtfficultlcs, we
were unabl e to pubhsh M o nday's
closmg stock quotes today. We
hope to rectti)' the problem for
Wedn esday's edmon.
Tennis stars Venus and Se rena
Williams come from a family of
fi ve girl s Their sisters are

Yetunde. lsha and Ly ndrea

2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7.10&amp; 9.10 DAILY
I

THE REPLACEME NTS (PG -13
7 00 &amp; 9 .30 DAllY
THE CELL (R)
7 00 &amp; 9 ·30 DAILY

MATIN EES SAT 'SU N 1:00 &amp; 3.30

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Sentine~

Page A 2 • The Dally

'

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
C INCINNATI (AP) - A man accused ofbeaung and bmng a
child while baby-Sitting April 4 is facing an aggravated murder
charge.
R o dney Whtppl e, 27, was tndtcted Monday afte r, prosecutors
matched bite m arks on the b oy to Whtpple's teeth If cotwtcted,
he co uld be sentenced to death .
" It IS ne arly 1mposs•hle to com prehend an yo ne domg this to a
c hild," Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen satd .
The victim , IS-mo nth-old Shandon Brown, was the son of
Whipple's girlfnend.
Whtpple told pohce he had left the c htld on a bed for a few
mmutes while he used th e bathroom He sa td that when he
ret urned , the child was not breathtng.
He then called Shandon's grandmother, who called the 9 11
e me rge ncy number Shandon was pronounced dead t he next dar
at Cht[dren'~ Hospttal Modtcal Cen ter
Allen sa td an autopsy revealed seve ral nuernal lllJ Ltrl e&gt;, includmg bmn damage and two broken arms
H e satd th e exam also found bne marks on the boy's back. Duttng thl· p.lst ft'w mo nths, de tectives have rned to ubtam de n tal
records and bttt: :&gt;iJmplc:s fron1 sevt'ral pl'op le w ho h .ui c nnt:~ c t
" ·nh the chtld
T he only matc h was to Whtppk Allen satd.
Wluppl ~ alrc.uiy w .t'\ 111 pli o n a n unn: ! at~.·J 111.1ttcr. H \: ~~
c harged \\'lth parttctp:ttmg 1n a drtvt•-by shomm g Jul y 2(, l'rn.;;l"&lt;.:Lttors s.11d Whtppk .md t\\O o thc..·r 111 1;' 11 ope nl"d fi n: on tlul'l' m~n
011 .1 pun h . All thrL'C: wc:n: wo un ded.

Group wants to save stream
SO LON (AP) - A conservancy group ts workmg o n ratStng S3
mdlwn so H ca n buy 72 acres o f mostly wooded land to s.1n:~ .1
rare breedmg stream fo r brook tro ut
The C hagnn Rtver Land Conservancy stgned an agre&lt;ment
Aug. II to buy the land after restdents peutwn ed the cay and the
Cleveland Metroparks to buy the land. They wanted to blo ck &gt;
developer who planned to build 35 to 40 homes there .
Supporters of the stream must rat se the money by Nov. I or th e
deal could fall through, satd Rtchard Cochran, who h eads th e
co nservancy group.
Coc hran already has rocetved an oral offer of $1 niilli o n from
the C leveland Metroparks. The park dmnct wo uld own most o f
the land , whtch would be adde d to the South Chagrm Reservation .

The conservancy took on the proJect because 1ts members ro cogmzed the tmportance of the stream, whtch ts a tributary of the
C hagrm River, a water source the group IS dedi cated to preservtng, Coc hran satd .
The stream ts the only one 111 C uyahoga County whe re broo k
trout live and reproduce. Cochran said a development could
tmpatr water quahty and hurt the trout.
'"Any trout stream ts unusual, espectally a reproductng on e."
Coc hran said " That's why a 's worth n ."

Warehouse not registered for tires
C ANTON (AP) City health officials said a warehouse
destroyed by ftre last week was not registered for tire storage.
About 7 ,500 tires went up tn flames early Fnday at U sed Tnes
In c. hoU!s before the my Health Department was to tnspect rhe
\varehousc .
Ftre offictals continue to mvestiga te the ca use of the fire, whtch
they ruled to be susptcious.
He alth offi cials last mspec ted the warehouse Jul y 12 when th ey
dcternuned It was not regtstered for ttre stor.tgc, said Jun Ad.un s,
l'nvu on mental health daector for the department
l ee Kmg Ferguso n Jr., owner of Used Ttres, was told to regi ste r the wa rehouse for tm: storage and rearnnge the tnt: pt1i!s so
they w&lt;re smaller than 2,500 squ are feet . Adams s"td. Th e ptk s
.1ls o had to be separat&lt;d by 30-foot mles , he satd.
Atte mpts to reach Ferguson at hi s busm~ss wen:- un~lh ce~o:. ful
L'.uly Tu~sday because no o ne .tnswt·red the pho ne
Hc.tlth offictals arc tJVt.! rseetng cleanup of the site D:tmagL' to
t he butlding and eqt: ipment was esttmatod at $500,000 .

E. coli infections rise to 26
MEDINA (AP) - Th e number of peo ple tn fe ctcd wi th the E.
co h bactena lll north east Ohto has men to 26, acco rdmg to t he
Ohio Department of H ealth .
Ft ve new cases of the potcnually deadly E. co h 0 15 7 H7 tnfecnon we re co nfirm ed over the \Veckend. Of th ose, fo ur were in
M edina County, which has the most reported cases ,It 14. The
othe r new case was reported 111 C uya hoga Co unty, whtch now
ha s five cases
l ora m Co unty remamed at three cJSes wh tle Wayne and l ake
co un ties had two cases eac h . The vtctuns range m age fro m 1 to
~4

E coli ca n ca use bloody diarrh ea, severe abdo nunal crampm g
and, m the worst cases, kidney fatlure. It ca n be sp read through
conta nun ated food or dnnktng water, co ntact w nh cattl e nu nurc
or through person- to- perso n contact
Attentwn has focused on the Medtn a Co unty Fatr, 25 nules
southwest of C levela nd, as the source of the cont aminatto n
Ea rly spec ulanon ha s fo cused o n dtre ct contac t wt th annnals o r
ammal feces as the most hkely source of co nraminauon , accord lftg to doctors who have treated and m te rvtewed some o f the
patten !I.
Tests show that the M ed tna Clry water that 11 ptp ed to the fatrgm unds di d not cause the co nta nunatl o n, satd health d epa rtm en t
spokes man Jay Ca rey.

Toledo area in line for help
TOLEDO (AI') - Fe dera l asmtan ce has b~en g ranted for
Lul.IS CoutHy r~.·s tpc:nts J n d bus1ness owners \\hn sutTcrt·d tloud
~.Lun ag c: 111 't'\C:re sto rm ~ J u ly 2fJ-A ug. 2 . Prc ~ H.icnc C lt mon
.l tl nou nceJ Mmt ~;,. b y
d1 ~.1 ster dc:cl.Jr:t tton .Hu hcHIZl'~

th1.· me of

f~.·dL't.l l

tun ds to help meet rc..· covcr y ne e ds
AtJ co uld u11..· ludl· lo\\-mterc: st loan s, Jn dJ vJ du .l l .111d l 1n11l y
g J.lllh. dt \,\'i tc..' l hou slll g .111d ux refunds. The..· lntc..·nul R l' \'l'lltl l'
l)nnct.• 1llow&lt;; n:rt,\ 111 los~;t.•s to be dcduLtn l un (c:d a .ll ll homc..:
ux rc: turn o;
Uffi(1,1ls luv..: l'Stmut~.·d d.tnugl· of ,\t k.1st S7 =) mdh o n
lkWay nc..· D .1c..k. lll .Jna gn of the Tolc..-do's c..kp.lrtm ct tt of tH.'tg h bo rhuotk h,l&lt;ii . , ,ttd .m .l ~"L'S'i lllL' l lt sh o\\ L'd f1."\ tL' ' I dL'Ih L'" '&gt;ll\t.llll l'd
lll.llnr tlnod d .Illl .tgc..· ]J I IL''i llkncc..·o; -;mt.ll ll l.' d ll ll llOt d .lln .tgl' . .ll!d
~IJi)

\\ l' l'l'

,\trl,.'(. tL'o,l

r\\lOd d,\111.\t;:t.'
Cl\\lll'd

\J\.

t.ll l'l' d

lll\liC th .tn

5) ( 1/),f)( l() LLt !l).l gi..

fo propc..'l'(\ '

( UL,I~ ( ~ DUll!\ . \\l[h !11 0~[ of1r (lllll fllll g .lt .1 jll\c..'tllk

.

.

wh it 11 ~&gt;. und l'r t. on~tnlt'uon
W.Hl'r poun.:d lllto t hi.· b.lSl' lllC!lt of thL' unfitH~ Ill·d budd 1n g
dunnt; th~o: storm ..llld tts \Vcight bu ckkd th e..· tlno r Ll( th l' 'i tnl i.'-

111 \ r!Cl..' CL' IH L'r.

[Un:

Tuesda~August22,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Attomey blames another defeQdant for killings
•

Babysitter charged in death

I he: m;IJor

Tuesda~August22,2000

STEUBENVILLE (AP) - The mor ney
for a man charged wtth abducting and ktlhng
two FranciSca n Umvemty ofSteube nvtlle studetm ts blanung another defendant for the
slaymgs.
'
Nathan H ernn g. 19. of Steubenvtlle. and
Terrell Yarbrough , 19, of Pmsburgh. could face
the death pe nalty tf convtcted of aggrJvated
murder in the deaths of Bnan Muha, IS, of
the Columbus suburb of Westervtlle, and
Aa ron l and, 20, of Phtl adelphia.
Prosecu tors say the studen ts wt're dnvt"n
mto an area of western Pennsylvama about 15
nules east of Steubenvtlle, taken into some
woods and shot with a .44-caliber gun May
on 3 1, 1999.The bodies were fo und four days
later along U.S. 22 m Wa&gt;hmgton Cou nty,
Pe nn sylvan ia.
Hcmng's tnal began Mo nday in Jeffer&gt;on
Cou nty Comm o n Pleas Court H1s atto rn ~:.·y,
'

Davtd Doughten. satd that hts chen! drove a
C he\'Y Blaze r to Ptttsburgh whtle Yarbrough
forC&lt;·d the students to perform o ral sex on
each o ther.
Doughten satd that H ernng was at the
sce ne when Yarbrough shot the students m the
head on a roadside hill .md that hiS client later
satd to pohce, "" I ca n't beheve thts happened.
Am I gmng to be 111 trouble'"
H oweve r, a Pmsburgh woman whose
BMW was stolen later on May 3 1, allegedly
by H ernng and Yarbro ugh. testified that Hernng had a gun and was angry and agitated.
The man w11 h hn11 tned to calm Hernng
down and told hun not to shoot her, Barbara
Vey satd.
" I was afraul that he (Hemng) was high
and therefore w ry dJngerous." she satd.
D o ug htt'n s.ud forL'mic evidl·nce would
show tlut blood from [hl' Vlcnms was fo und

on Yarbrough but not on Herr in g.
·•There's no t gom g to be ,\ lot of di~putl'
abo ut the evidence," D oughten s.tt d " Bu t we
have a far different concluston based ou th"'
evide nce."

Do ughten satd m opemng statl'ments d ut
H e rrmg went along Wtt h thL' bn.•.1k- 111
because he adnured Yarbrough . He also sa td
Herrmg dtd not ktll th e stu dents.
Doughten said Yarbrough dectdcd to break
in to the house because someone carha had
thrown a beer can 'outside as Yarbrou gh was
walkin g by.
Jefferso n County Prosecuto r Stephen Stern
told th e JUrors th,H He rnng is J USt .1s re sponsible fo r the slarmgs as tf. he h.1d pull ed the
trigger.
H e sa id 1 1 .4-l-caltb,· r bull ets. :tlou g m th
Muha 's bank an d ~..n:Jlt c.m.\:.,, \\c..'fl' fou nd at
Hernng\ h om e

Film's barn burning could ·Group asks commission
to increase penalties
lead to new state policy
CO LUMBUS (AI') - A dtspute over a scene 111 an ::tenon film
has led state offictals to pmpoSt"
that open burmng fo t fum and
vtdeo producn ons be .1llmvcJ to
1,1ke place· wlth Oh10 Envtrontnental
Pro tec tion
Agenc y
.tpproval.
" We do n't want [O take any
chances ," s::ud Steve Cover, du-ector
of the Ohm Ftlm Conmusston , an
agency that promotes the state as a
filmlocallo n . "Filmmakers shouldn't get here and find out they ca n't
do the scenes they want to shoot."
Granville's fire departme nt
refused to approve a barn burnmg
last year during the filnung of "A
Better Way To Die," an upcoming
HBO moVle starrmg lou Dtamond Phillips and Andre Braugher.
"They wanted us to bend the
law aRd call 11 a trammg exerme
for our firefighters," satd J?n
Packard, Granville's former asmtant
fire chief "I wouldn't lie for them··
Packard's refusal to bend extstmg law led to calls to state offictals
from associates of the film's director, Scott Wtpcr, a native of

( ;r:m\"llll', .1 v1Uagt' :1.bour: 30 mtles

of Colu mbus.
They asked Gov Bob T.1lt -

c..'.l S[

or

o thers With authonty - co t'lc.tr
the roJdblock.
"A lot went down bct\vcc:n my
pmducer.; and a ton of people."
W tper satd
EPA offic1.1ls eve ntually gr.mted
.1 pertlllt that mvolved other fire
deparcm~nK

Packard's former colleagu es m
Granville haven't forgotten the diSpu te.
"I know people thmk bending
the rules was a small pnce to pay
for aU the money that production
spent in the county," said Dudley
Wright, village fire chtef "But if n's
so tmport:mt to burn a barn down,
the pohncians should change the
law."
Pac kard has quit the fire department .
'"I'm tired of talking about it,"
she satd. "It's a time of my life I
wo uld rather forget."
Wtper's movte 11 scheduled to
be shown Sept. 29 on HBO. He
dow nplays the dtspute .

CO LUMBUS (AP) - The
AssoCia tiOn
of
R e ttred Perso ns on Monday
Jsked Ohio re g ulators to
tncn•ase the penalties thl'}'
unpo sed on Amen tec h , the
st .1 te 's largest lo cal phone co mpJny, for failing to meet servtce
standards, from $8.7 milho n to
S250 nullion.
The AARP, an advocacy
group for people 50 or older,
satd Atilerit&lt;eh has fatled to hve
up to agreements reached wtth
the Pubhc Utthnes ComnmSl&lt;ln of Ohio for the past stx
years .
On July 20, the PUCO
ordered Ameritech to spend
$8 7 tmlhon to satisfY customer
complatnts and gave the company 18 months to improve servtce or face another S122 mtllton 111 penalues.
Parttes to the case had unul
Monday to request a rehearing
on the matter, PUCO spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro said.
Ameritech, which said PUCO
rules were too vague to enforce,
also filed for a reheanng, Gtanforcaro satd.
Amcn ca n

Smce I '!'! 4. th,· l' UCO h."
Alll L'l' ltl't h to p,l\' .1t
least S616.111lll 111 pcn.ll[lc s m
credits be cHl Co~L' of comp b11HS
abo ut Sl.' l VICl', :l( tOfdlllg tO
agenty records.
The AAR.l' &lt;.nd the l'U C O
faded t o accoun t fo r \'IO!.ltl nm.
of crt'dtt stand:trds. t:11 lurL' to
mfor m cu~to mcrs of tht:u n ghts
under mamrenan ce pl ;m ~. nol.J Ilons of PU CO gtudellll cS covre q11 1 r~d

enng fatr consum e r pr:.~cttccs

and o ther vwlauo ns. the g roup
sa1d tn a n ew s rl'l easc..•
It asked the commJsswn to
levy penalttes " well 111 excess of
$250 milhon "
""Unless the PU CO forces
Amcntec h to bear th e COI1'\l'quences of tts vtolations of minImum qu ahty of servtrc st,m dards , Am erttec h wtll be co n tent to pay fine s and dt s nus ~ t he
pro blems as the cost of dmn g
bust ness," the AARP sat d
AmerH ec h
sp okeswoma n
Blau Klem dcclmcd to co m m ent. She sat d the C luca gobased comp any had nut see n
AARP 's apph catlon for a
re h earing.

Two-state dispute
going before
Supreme Court

OFFICIAL COURT NOTICE '
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, FLORENCE DIVISION
IN RE AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN LITIGATION:
C.A. NO. 4:96-3527-12, CA NO. 4:97-2635-12, C.A. NO. 4:99-2712-12

COLUMBUS (AI' ) Both
s1 de s 111 an .tlmost two -yc.t r-o ld
c ustody dtsp utc bl·twccn co upk· ~
from Ohio and K~.: nt\l cky wcrL'
headed to th&lt;' Oht o Suprem,·
Court.
The court o n Mond.1y .tgrccd
to allow an oth er l.twye r to argw:
the Oht o co up le 's c.tSe. The
arguments we re plann ed for
Tu es day.
The co urt had ba rrc•J the
attorney of R1 ch.1rd and C heryl
Ase nte of G trard fro m appca rm g
before JUStices Tu esday beca use
th e attorney had m iSsed a li lmg
dead hn e. Th e JU stices had
pl an ned tO rCVIC\V Ju s \\TIUCil

ATTENTION
CUSTOMERS OF LOCAL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
OTHER THAN:

arguments

The co ur t sa td Monday that
R o'ic mary Po meroy. an attorne y
wtth Gra ~~ roots C lttz c ns for
Clu ldren. ,1 no nprofi t chtldre n's
advocacy g rou p, ts all owed to
spea k fo r th e O ht oans
·
The Ase tites have asked the
court ro ru le t ha t O h10 h as
JUnsdJ cu o n over [h ei r art cmpr t o
adopt 3- yea r- o ld Ju , tln , whose
btologtca l parents 111 Kentucky
agreed to h1 s Jdoption, th e n
change d th etr tmnds
Th e A ~ cnh:s. w ho prcvtou sly

adop tt•d

boY \ brother.
Jost•ph. now 4, .Hglll' tha t Ju ~ tJil
Lil' ~l'T\L' ~ ,\ h L' ,\Il ll t'; to dctcJ lllllll'
tl1e

\\Jut'~&lt; I ll 1 11 ~ hL·~t lllt l' r L•q

lnpp t' ll.

th L·

SuprL' l11L' ( :o c~rr lllll \ t rulL·

dur

Fo1

dut

tn

Olno lu ~ pln.,d!Lt \0 \1
Th L

1\~c..'lltl'~

K L' IJ tt,, k \

t lll 11

the

.1ppc.1l'
K L· 1\tl\(

h .I\ L

,,, ke d

\.n llt t

1~1

O\'L I -

.1ho o t dL'I'L' d t h L'lli tn
r turn thL' Lhtid to 111 , bH Jlo gll.d
~ .li'L'Ilt . . . l~L'gi ll . l JV 1otHl' tiJ id J crn

\ \ ' \\'\\ , Sl O!lL't ~t .lt l'

oh liS I

TO RECEIVE A MORE DETAILED OFRCIAL COURT NOTICE
AND OFRCIAL CLAIM FORM,
CALL THE AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN
CLAIMS RESPONSE HOTLINE AT

1-800-245-3082
OR CONTACT THE
"AT&amp;T OPTIONAL CALLING PLAN CLASS SETTLEMENT'
WEBSITE AT

&lt;http:/fatt.fsiwebs.netfcalling_plan_settlement&gt;
PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING IMPORTANT DATES:

111~. \\ hi Lh

On th e N,·t
Ol11o
Supr1.'l11L'

Nevada Bell
Pacific Bell
Southwestern Bell
Sprint
SNET
US West
And any other local telephone companies
not included in the list of Designated !COs
attached as Exhibit 1 to the Official Court Notice.
~ All such customers who switched from another long-distance
telephone company to AT&amp;T as their primary residential longdistance company between September 1, 1994 and March 10, 2000 in
response to solicitations offering an AT&amp;T optional calling plan or
promotion, and who did not receive the full monetary benefits of the
rates and discounts of the offered plan or promotion.
Your rights may be affected by a proposed class action settlement
under which AT&amp;T has agreed to award an AT&amp;T prepaid card for up
to 200 minutes of domestic long-distance calling to qualifying class
members who did not receive the full monetary rates and discounts
they were offered.

.1

b · .1 ud gc ·~ tu l-

l1 ortllllg. o f C:o\ 111 ~to 1'1 .

Ameritech
Bell Atlantic
Bell South
Cincinnati Bell
GTE

K\

October 16, 2000
Deadline to Comment, Object, or Opt Out

November 3, 2000
Fairness Hearing
Claim Deadline

ODOT plan~ Ravenswood Connector meeting

5

FROM STAFF REPORTS

William Young
NEW HAVEN, WVa. - Wtlliam Harmon "BtU" Young, 78, New
H aven, died Monday, Aug. 21, 2000, at his residence, fo llowing an
extended tllness.
He was burn on Sept. 21, 1921 in West Columbia, so n of the late
Wtlltam and Etta H offman Young. He was a retired 26-year employee
of the Cold R oll department at Katser Alummum Corp., was a member of the United Steelwo rkers of Amen ca Local 5668, attended West
Columbt a Uruted Methodtst C hu rvh , and was a veteran of the U.S.
Army durmg Wo rld War II.
He ts survtved by hi s wtfe, Vivian Geraldine Young of New Haven ;
two daughters and sons- tn-law, Barbara Lou and Fred Pnddy of Rutland , Oh to, and Bettie Sue and Warner Roush of letart; a son and
da ughter- m-l.1w, James Wtlliam and Kay Youn g of New Haven ; two
sisters,- Mt1dred flnunlcy of Patriot, Ohio, and Voneda Powell of
M ason ; etght grandchildren, five g reat grandchtldren; and severalmeces
and nephews.
·
BeSides hts parents, he was preceded m death by hts mter, Dons
Eads, and th ree brothers: Lester, George and Jame s Young.
Funera l se rvtces wtll be held on Thursday, Aug. 24,2000 at 1 p.m . at
Fogelso ng Funeral Home 111 Mason with Rev. Jack Mayes officiating.
Bunal wtll foll ow at Umon Ceme tery in New Haven .
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Mcmo na l contnbuttons may b e made to the Ameri can Cancer
Soctcty.

POMEROY Representatives of the
Ohio Department of Transportation, District
I 0, will host a meeting Wednesday to gather
mput from residents relatmg to mamtaming
traffic on existmg county and townshtp roads
during construction of the Ravenswood
Connector.
The meetmg will be at Royal Oak Resort
from 6 to 8 p.m .
The Connector Is to be butlt in three parts,
and traffic flow along aU three parts will be
discussed on Wednesday night.
The meeting is open to the pubhc, but
ODOT officials say the meeting is primarily

for those reSidents who hve-alon g the township and county roads to be affected by the
construction, for township trustees from the
alfected areas, and for local service agcnctes
such as EMS and area fire departments.
ODOT also hopes to see all three sch ool dtstric ts in M eigs County re presented at the
meeting, as weU as th e county engm eer's and
county cotnnusstont:rs' offices, accordmg: to
Distn ct 10 Deputy Dtrector George Collms
Colhns satd that Wedn esday's meetmg wtll
be the first time ODOT and residents begm
discussing the constru ction process "iU affect
day to day acttvities m th e wo rk areas.
"We have our ideas about how to m amtam

traffic," Co llins satd, "but area rc·stdc nts might
have better ideas.
" We want this to bt· an 111formattonal sesston for everyom•. mtlttdmg ODOT. Local
res1dems know bcq the..· ' PeCJfic traffic Issues
m th etr co mmuntttC"&gt; "

The first part of tl1 c project. from the
Ritchtc Bndge back to State R o ute 124 near
Ra cme, ts expt•n ed to ,e ll hcfo re the end of
Ju ne, 200 1, wuh t Ull ~ tructJon to begin soon
after.
T he second .md thml parts could also sell
later m 2001 tf money b&lt;·cu me s avatlable. If
no t, they wtll sell 111 21102 and 2003 , respectively, ColltllS s~id .

Democrats wam classes will be crowded

WASHINGTON (AP) - Thanks to new for resisting government proposals to help hire performanc e, also rose to • record half-miihon
school construction, portable trailers won't be more teachers and build more schools.
students.
needed to house excess pupils this fall at
The education spendmg debate, now taking
The department report . based on state and
Dorothy Eisenberg Elementary School in Las center stage 111 the prestdenttal campaign, natto nal data , also prc•dtcted sc hool growth
Vegas.
comes as renewal of maJor federal programs through the next ce nt ury Olfietals satd thar by
Principal Ken Ligon will have 730 children remains bogged down in Congress.
2100, th e natio n's sc hoo ls wtll have to find
"Our children deserve no less," C linton satd. room for 94 mill wn &gt;tude tlts - Jlmost double
m Eisenberg's 35 regular classrooms this yearmsread of I ,200 he would had to find room for "We need to build new schools and modernize the current nu mber of school-age children,
without the new cla.ssroolllS built elsewhere in existing ones."
ages 5 to 17 .
the Clark County system.
Renewing Its fight for smaller class siZes and
These numbns will g row, o fficials say,
"Addmg new schools has really made a dif- new school construction, the adnumstratton because Of tncrc:tsmg llllllliJ;ranon :1.nd a secference;' said Ligon, who's spent fout years in reported Monday that 53 million pubh c and ond baby boom, " htc h wtU co me two generathe nation's fastest- growing school district. "It private pupils will enter kindergarten through tions after the reco rd num be r of bi rths in the
has alleviated the crowding. It has enhanced the 12th grade this fall, up from 52.8 million last nuddl e of the 20th cc· ntury.
Califorma, Texas .1ml N,w Yot k expect to
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS
showers likely and a chance of education of the children. That's why we keep year. The new figure is considered a record
buildmg
them."
,
the
Educallon
Department
had
lowenroU
th e mos t cht ldre n th l'i year, but Nevada,
because
The N att onal Weather Service thundersto rms. Lows in the mid
That's also what the Clinton admimstrntion ered its estimate of last year's enrollm ent to Arizona and Flon da lwve posted the highest
says sh owe15 wtll ltn ger mto 60s .
rates of student growth over the last decade. Las
wants
the rest of the nation to do, as fall enroll- 52.8 million from 52 : nullion .
Wedne sday as a front sltdes
Wednesday.. Beconung partly
Cbllege enrollment for faU 2000 also set a Vegas alo ne has st·en sc hool e nrollment double
throu gh t he trt-county region
sunny in the afternoon. Showers ments in America's schools are expected to
record
of 15.1 million.
reach
53
million,
a
fifth
consecutive
record
.
to 200,000 smcc 1990. State-by-state figures
Lows tomght Wlll be m the mid likely and a chance of thunderEnrollments for charter schools, spenally are unavailable for th e centu ry projections.
Predicting overflow school enrollments into
to uppe r 60s. Hi ghs Wednesday storms. Htghs agatn in the nud
the
next
century,
President
Clinton
and
chartered
public schools that get freedom from
"We nee d to figure out where we will put
80s . .
wtll range to the mtd 80s.
Democrats used the ann\tal projection of fall standard rules and regulattons in exchange for these child ren ," Edu ca tion Sec retary Richard
High pressure in the n) idExtended forecast
enrollment
to blast congressional Republicans better test scores and other increase d student Riley said.
Atlantic provided dry weather
Wednesday night .. .Decreasing
overn ight. A few ht gh cl o uds cloudiness. Lows in the low and
dnfted across the regwn , With m1d 60s.
some .patchy fog developing durThursday.. Partly cloudy. Highs
m g the early mo rnmg. Tempera- in the mid 80s.
tures were cooler than normal.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Mornmg
Early m or nm g rcadmgs w ere m lows from the upper 50s to lower
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Corey confrontation. We like to sit down , 15, of Peralum.1, Calif., satd he Scouts' S:J.n Francisco Bay area
60s. Hi ghs from the upper 70s to Brunson wants her 4-year-old son shake hands and discuss a solution started the group several years ago office, ch:J. ntmg and toting stgns
the 50s in mo&lt;t areas
Forecast
mid 80s.
after hts father was removed as a s.1ying "' Blatant Btgo ts" and "True
·
to join the Boy Scouts m a few that's mutually beneficial."
Saturday... Partly cloudy. lows years - but only if the orgamzaToday... S11nny this mormng
Despite the public pressure, the Scout leader for supporting gay leaders teach love and tolerance,
wtth mcre asmg cl ouds tlus after- from the nud 50s to lower 60s. tion alters its anti-gay stance.
not hate and b1go try."
Boys Scouts weren't budging from nghrs .
noon. H1 ghs m the m1d 80s
Htghs agam from the upper 70s
'T m no t he n.: to be disrespect"Scoutmasters are people to
"This judgmental attitude and their position on gays.
Tomght Mostly clo udy wtth to mid 80s.
look
up
to.
What's
wrong
wtth
till
to the l.loy Scouts of Amenca.
Gregg Shields, spokesman for
discrimination is going on, and I
don't think this is right;' she said."l The National Council of the Boy being influenced by a gay manl But we can't be •silent:' said Jan
reject the notion that this is a pri- Scouts of America, said homosex- Someone's sexuality has nothing to Tyler. a l.lay Are!t C ub Scout
cussed various street repair p£5- vate organization. lt couldn't sur- uality runs counter to the oath do wtth his character or per.;onali- leader. " Gays and lesbtans are in
every mche 111 ou r soc1ety. and to
requiring Scouts to be " morally ty," Cozza said.
jeers and burned-out structures vivBe without ~ubdlicsbupptort:d•
exclude
them based on sexual onCozza,
who
said
neither
he
nor
.
runson JOme a ou a ozen str.ugh t."
--~thro\!ghopt the Yl 11~ge.
- . - - marchers-MofldayWI!ol!elJ'Jefeli ..e
ntatiOn
~ ~- IllillcroUs~· "We recognize t he fightsof all - his father is gay, leTt the Boy Scouts
- from Page
CounCilman George Wnght 55 ,000-signarure petition 10 the people to hold opimons different about SIX months ago after becomstated that he was very pleased Boy Scours of America headquar- than ours," he said. "We stress that mg an Eagle Scout.
w1th the ctty workers rate of
. [ ·
Dall S"mil r we are a private organization and
belteve, is top prionty"
Not all support Cozza's efforts.
.
h
ters m rvmg, near
as. 1 a
1
1
Coun c tl decided to deliberate progress comp eung . e vast rallies were planned in front of Boy that no one is forced "to be a Boy
Nick Henderson, a Boy Scout
on the tssue fu rther and to reach number of street repam located S
ffi
· 36 ·11· · 21 Scout. People who share our val- leader in Dallas, said he thinks
d p
cout o ces m
Cl es 111
an agrcetncn t at the n i council aroun omcroy.
states.
ues and beliefs are welcome to homosexuality is a . sin and supfrom PapAl
.."
m ceung .
Council agreed to hold the
Protester.; said they were looking JOtn.
ports the scouting policy.
Council also approved Miller's next meeting on Tuesday, Sept. 5, for a conversation and not a con"We don't want them in a posiIn June, the Supreme Court
As for how the board fared
request for seven pairs of Kevlar 2000, because of the Labor Day frontation over the organization's agreed, ruling 5-4 that the group tion of leadership," he said. "We're
lina nu.tll y. that's sttll to be detergl oves and Hepatttis shots for all holiday.
policy barring homosexuals from was allowed to bar homosexuals.
not against gay people; JUst their mi'nl'd M ort• money was taken
Present, in addi tion to Bluet- its ranks.
ac uve po hce officers. The gloves
lifestyle.
Would they be a bad mflu - 111 , bur coH" 111 Sl'veral areas Scouting For All, a nonprofit
and shots wou ld help pohce offi- tnar, Young and Wright, were
"We're disappomted," Dave organization, helped organize and ence on a scout troop' Absolutely." tncl udt l),\!: l'llt L·rtammt'nt - were
cers fron 1 contractmg any diseases Counctlmen Larry Wehrung, Rice, a former Scout leader who coordinate
In San Leandro, Calif., about 20 htghn
the
nationwide
w hile they conduct thetr searches
Bryan Shank, Davtd Ballard, John marched in Irving. "We don't like protests. Its founder, Steven Cozza, people walked outstde the Boy
Thl· tHi tlllH: r of carmval ndes
In othe r bu siness, council dis- Musser, and Clerk Kathy Hysell .
bruu!,(ht 111 hy Bates Bros. AmuJ em cnt Co \\;tS up tins y~ar With
the JUngle _pm .llld super shde
ba&lt;.:k .t trcr lll.lll)' yc.trs, and FantaThe Daily Sentinel
sy FJ I!" ..1 new ndc, bemg intro(USPS 213·960)
dl tc eel lu 1\l c· l)," tJir!loers. The
10:33 a.m, State Route 338, Mark Co mpson,Jackso n General H os- bo ,wJ n t c tn bc r ~ c red ited the
Ohio Valley Publlohlng Co.
Pub li shed t~e r y nfttr noon, Monday th rouah
pital. ,
qu .dtt\ ul the uudway to the
f'tr da) , Ill Cou rt St , Pome roy, Oh10, by the
I
RUTLAND
in trc.t . . c 111 .H tl' ndan ce. They
MIDDLEPORT - A "co nc ert of prayer" for the new school year
Ohru Valle)' l'uhhs hrng Cnmpa ny Secon d
4:00
p.m.,
Bailey
Run
R
oad,
Paultne
Ttllis,
HM
C.
d .rss po~ t ag c par d al Pome roy, Ohto
llOtL·d t r·ut ~)Jl S.tttll day because of
wtU be held at Mtddleport Church of Christ, Ftfth and Main, tonight
Member: The Aswmtcd PtcH. and the Oh10
tht· hu)!;l' L ft)\\ d on the gro\J nds,
at 7 School administrators, teachers, staff", students and thetr fanultes
Ne,.,spapcr A.liSOC rllron
lhc 11dn ~cpl go1r1~ pas t the u sual
POSTMASTER: Senti a dOre~~ co n cct ro ns to
are invtted to jo m in the prayer session, which wiU tnclude all schools
The Datly Senllncl. 1J l Cou rt St Pomeroy.
clmnlt:;
ttll\l'
m Meigs and Mason counties.
Uh to 4'i 761)
POMEROYMarrtage
hcenses
have
been
ISsued
tn
M
etgs
Cou
nOu t"tLk l'nnl· e~'\Jnnt, were up
SU HSC RIPTIOS RATES
ty Probate Court to Dean Vanc e Hill, 40, Ra et ne, and Sarah Ehzab ~ th I S rn 2f' Pl't\ l,.'n t. dt~.· co nunercial
B) Ca rrtr r ur ~1olu r Rnule
One Week .. .
$2 00
Wallbrown,21 , Racme; Donald Allen Pro ffitt, 18, and Samantha Marie blllldu tL," "'""' full. .md food and
Une Month
. .. . . . . . .
. . $8 70
..................... 110400
Un( Year .
RAC INE - Organizational meeting of the band boosters will e Hysell, 18, Racine; Roger C alvtn Snuth. J r. . 27, Pomeroy, and Pen ny g.1!11 L' llnt)th Ppt'J.ttors repo rted
S INGLE COPY PRIC E
Lou Klein, 27, Pomeroy; Adam James Sheets , 23, Pomeroy, and Ja clyn ~ood 'i::tll· ~
held at Southern Htgh School tonight at 7. Anyone interested in sup/)Jrl)
. 50 Cents
11
Swartz,
23, Pome roy; and Jonathan Edward Sarge nt , 26 , Pomeroy, and
0\ c..·r.dl tt ''.1' ,l grcar f atr," said
pornng the band lS invtted to attend.
Suh~cnhcr~ no t dcmmg 1o pay tt\e ea rner may
Robyn Ann Stout, 27, Pomeroy.
remrt m ~t.lvanc~ dr relt to The Dar l ~ Senti nel
H oltL't. "lH) -.uht!:l'"tL·d that now
o n a rhr e ~. s rx o r 12 nmrnll hosr~ Crcdrl wrll Ire
the b,),IJd h.t~ to '&gt;t.lrt dunking
gt\CII lolf! ICI C•llh &gt;I Cd
ahoul 2n~' I
Nn ~uh•ur ptro n h)· m.rrt rumi tl ~d rn n rea ~
\\ here horne c3 nr ~r ~Cf \ KC •~ ava rl-:lhlc
POMEROY - An old fashioned tent meeting held by area holmess
Puhlr shcr r c5 t:f\ c~ rhc rr~ht tu aiJJus l ra tes
RACINE - Dallas S. M oodi spaugh , Pomeroy, and a JU Vemle were
churches is unde r way at the corner of Route 1 and Union Avenue in
d urrng rh c ,uh~u,p l! nn pcrrnd Suhsurptron
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
charged
wtth drivin g u nde r FRA suspension and expi red tags, and
OLOROUTE J5 WEST
ur, ~h,urgc" rna~ he rmp lcmcnted hy t•hangmg
Po meroy. It will co nttm1 e throu gh Sunday at 7 p.m. each mght, and 10
446•4524 121MJACK SO"' P'IK.E
pos.session
of
nurijuana,
res
pect
J
v~
\
y,
d
unn
g
a
routine
traffic
stop
on
th L Uurill r•lll of \he ~ul1~urp ti o n
a. m. o n Su nday. Su nday there wtll also be a singsptratio n at 2:30p.m.
FRI B 18 00 · THURS 6124100
Tht• eva ngeliSt IS the R ev. Donald Adams and the Don Quales Fanuly Monday
BOX Off!&lt;£ Will OPEN AI
1\1 &lt;\IL SUBSC IUP'TIO NS
Accordmg
to Shenfl' JauleS M.
ln sldt l\ldgs l'n unty
6:30
PM fOR EVENINGSHOWS
art' the sm gc rs.
11 Week.'
S27 '0
Soulsby, the juvemle , 17, was
12:30 PM fOR MATINEES
:;!(, Week~
S~J 82
searched by deputi es and man HOLLOW MAN (R)
)2 Wl·!j\.~
SIOS %
7 15 &amp; 9.30 DAILY .
JUana was found Ill hiS pocket He
Kutl'S Ouhrdr Ml'i~~ Cn rrnt y
IJ W~;d;,
S29 ::O'i
was released to the custody of hls
POMEROY - Units of the Metgs Emergen cy Se rviC es answered
~(, V.n• k,
S'i6 68
grandmother.
MoodtSpaugh wtll
7 1S&amp;9150AlLV
13 call s for assistance o n Monday Un its responded as fo llows
S:! Week.\ .
.$!09 72
appear
m
Cou
n
ty
Court
on
MATINEES SAT "SUN 1 15 &amp; 3:
CENTRAL DI-SPATCH
Wednesday.
SPACE COW
JPG13)
Reader Services
2:2 1 a.m .. Lmwln H etghts, Sam Williams, Pl easant Valley H osplfal;

VALLEY WEATHER

Showers to linger longer

Rallies protest Scouts' policy on gays - We can't be silent'

PoliceAl

Fair

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Concert of prayer planned

Marriage licenses issued

Boosters to meet

Revival under way

Stop results in charges

7

EMS units log 13 calls

7 00 &amp; 9 .30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT SU N 1 00 &amp; 3:30

&lt;)·47 a.m ., Langsv1lle, asSisted by Rutland. Damel Lewis, Holzer
Our ma in t·onr Hn In all s t o rl r~ I ~ to hf
anurll lt' 1r )OU know or a n error In 11 ~ t ory,
ull lh l' nr wunom al (NO) 992·21SS . \\' t
will { her·k ytJ u r h1rurmulinn a nd ma ke a
cnrrTrllu n wurrnnted .

tr

New s IJ t pllrfnwnh
The main num lwr ts 992 ·2 15S. Department
ult: nslons arc :
:Gt• nrru l Man~tlo!er .......................... Ext . 11 01
Ni!~ S .......................... [,.; t .

11 02

t: :t~ t .

11 06

........ .......................... or

December 31, 2000
Cnut t

'

The Daily Sentinel .· Page A 3

O thCI' Sen ke~
AdH'I 1i ~inK .... . . . . ..
. ...... [)11. 1104
• Cin: uhrtlun ..... ... ... .. . . ........ t. xl. 1103
Cla ssified Ad 'i,, ............................. t :xt . 1100

M edt cal C&lt;·nter:
12:42 p.m , Second Srree t. Martha Batley. refused t reatment ,
12.50 p.m., M1ddlcport , Trent R osslfer, tre.tted.
2:20p.m, Flood Road, Aaron Deva ul t, dead on arnv~l;
3:52p.m ., State Route 7, M aite Buc\&lt;.ingham, treated ;
8:07 p.m ., Mulbet ry Ave nue, Wtlbur Burke, HM C.
POMEROY
12·41 p.m ., Second Street, Brandy Bailey, refused treatmenr;
12 :50 p.m . Overbrook Nurstng Center, Lester Dodson, HMC;
8.32 p.m., W&lt;·st Man1 Street. Tma H ysell , HMC.
REEDSVILLE
6 30 a.m .. Success Road. R obert H eadley, treated;

No stocks today
Due to techni cal dtfficultlcs, we
were unabl e to pubhsh M o nday's
closmg stock quotes today. We
hope to rectti)' the problem for
Wedn esday's edmon.
Tennis stars Venus and Se rena
Williams come from a family of
fi ve girl s Their sisters are

Yetunde. lsha and Ly ndrea

2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7.10&amp; 9.10 DAILY
I

THE REPLACEME NTS (PG -13
7 00 &amp; 9 .30 DAllY
THE CELL (R)
7 00 &amp; 9 ·30 DAILY

MATIN EES SAT 'SU N 1:00 &amp; 3.30

�_rh_e_o_ai-:.Iy_s_en_ti_ne_I_ _ _ _ _ _

..;._~f-=)plnion

1Uesday, Aupst 11, 1000

The Daily Sentinel
ARE YOU
REFERRING To

£stllbllslid Ia 1941
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74~992-2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

6E"O~EW:-

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Dear Ann Landers: Now that I am
on matcrmty leave, I fin ally have time to
'''rite abo ut my co mmuting expencnce
wh 1le I was pregnant
I took the tr,lHl to work eve ry day, a
ride wlw h took abum 40 minutes By
the time I waddled o nto the tram in the
mormng, most of the seats were taken
I ht· commu te rs were mostl)' m en and
wo m t.·n wc.1nng neat bu smcss atnrc and
l.ur y111g bt JL'fcases It was obv10us I was
n:ry plt::gn,mt , bur rarel y was I offered .1
'l".lt. Mu ~t people pretended not to ~e e
ll ll' They dD,ed th'e ~r eyes or h1 d beh1nd
thc1r 11L'\np.lper~.
·
An y pn.:gn:tnt wu m.m W ill tell you tt 1\
,ltflitulr to kel..'p hn b.d.uH.c w hen shl. ' I'
l .ll"l \" 111 g .1l l that '-'XtL1 \\"t.:lght. Nor o nly
rh.n. b l H hL'r l~·cr sw.._· JI, ,md thl' .l l.hhtJo n,!1 \Vl'Jg]H C.l llSl'S b:-tck p .lll1 , \\" h !Lh J~
1)-igr.'' .HL'd b,y o; r.tndm g
l )n the ft.-,, occ.t~ l oll' \\"hen I w.1~
\llkrc.._l .1 Sl',lt, It \\ ,1.., llL'\"L'r o ne tl t" tlw-.e
~L' Ilti...' J I )C n" " lw stood up -- 111 f.1ct.

~hlerOiuse.nel

5EOR6EP.?

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Adver11slng Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

'

Ullin rum~ t tUror en wekDIIIt. TII•J sltOMI41H ,_., t11111f JOO wonls. ttU ltiUn tin stl•ftcl
IO tditiltf IUtd MIIJI/H 116Mt111Nl utcfwk tliMh'fll tllfd kkpllottt 1114MIH1'. No MIUjzMd In/In will
H p111Hisht d. IA '"n sho.ud be In fOOil UU#, tllllltYstillf hsws, lfOI !MI'IOftiiiJM•.
Tilt 0fH11iont upnsud 111 th• "''""'" lwlow tUV tht conuru•s of tilt OIUo V.U,.J hblJsJUnr
('!' 's •lliwtWI baord, 11nllu •lfhtrwult noted.

OUR VIEW

Renewal
Schools should build on past
suaess, look to future
A new &lt;chool year begms 111 the tn-county thiS week and next
Students ami teachers return to th eir bUildings prepared to make
this academic year more successful than the last
Classrooms and textbooks arc ready for use. By tmd -afi:ernoon ,
whistles and commands are heard from high school playmg fields as
football and fall sporrs prepare to laun ch their season.
And although the daytime h1ghs may tell us otherwise, it 's the end
of summer. Time to get down to the serious business of ed ucating
our youth .
Accomplishing this goal over the past few years has grown more
difficult due to demands placed o n the S&lt;:hools. In Oh10, summer
classes were held to help prepare students for passage of proficiency
exams. In West Vng1ma, at least one county school district is under
state control with the possibility of more to come.
Concerns over American education faDing behind other countries
have prompted h1gger expectations. Complaints of " dumbing
down " curnculum are common .
The response has been to bring our educational standards up. In
areas where reso urces are !united, such as ours, this has been done
through innovative methods - and hard work by teachers and
admimstraton. With g rants, schools in our area are boostmg hteracy
and other topics targeted for improvement.
With some money m hand, ingenuity has worked wonders m
improving student perfotmance.The role parents play 10 theiT ch1ld's
education is becoming greater, especially 10 reading.
This dedication IS critical if our kids are to be competitive. It's the
primary reason w hy computers and other forms of technology are
being brought into the classroom . It's not because they're expected
to know about computers if th ey leave the area. In the future, they
must be familiar With tec hn ology even 1f they choo&lt;e to remain
here.
The begmnmg of sc hool should be a re-dedication to what has
been done before, and a basis for building new paths in educatiOn.
Many ideas come from teachers, staff and parents.Their initiative has
made the process more exciting and mteresting for s tuden~s .
Keep those ideas co m10g, and maintain the conmutment to making schools m the tn-county unique m th eir approacb to fhe classroom exper ience. The diVIdend from such an investment of time
and wo rk arc graduates who can co mpete with the best.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Aug 22, the 235 th day of 2000. There are 131
days left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 22, 1 4~5. England's Kmg Ri chard Ill was bJied m th e
Battle of Boswo rth f ield, ending th e War of the R oses.
On thiS date:
In 1762,Ann Frankhn became th e fi rst female editor of an Am erIcan newspaper, th e N ewport, R L " M ercury"
In 1775. England's King George Ill proclaim ed th e Amencan
colo nies in a state of open rebelli o n
In 1787 ,Inve ntor John fitch demo nmatcd his steamboat o n the
Delaware River to delegates of the Co ntm ental Congre ss
In 1846, the United States an nexe d N ew Mexico
In 1~5 1 , the &lt;c hoo ner " Am eri ca" o utraced th e " Aurora" off the
Enghsh coost to win a trophy t hat be came known as the Amen ca's
C u~
In 1902, PreSi dent Th eodore R oosevelt became the first U.S.
chi ef executive to nde In an automobile, 10 Hartford, Co nn
l11 1&lt;J50, Alth ea G1bson became th e first bbc k te nm s player to be
accepted 10 competitiO n fo r the nati o nal champ1onslup.
In 1956, PreSident EISe nh ower an d Vi ce President Nixon were
nomi nated for second terms m otlice by the R epubli can nati o nal
conve nu o n 1n San Francisco.
In 1968. Po pe Paul VI am vcd 10 ll ogota, Co lo mbia , for th e start
of the fi "t papal VISit to Latin Amen ca.
In 1989, Black Panth er co- fou nder Hu ey I~ Newton was shot to
death 1n Oakland. Cahf. ·
Ten years ago: President Bush Signed an mder calling up reserviSts
to bo lster th e U. S military bu ildup In the Persian Gu lf
five years ago: Co ngressman Mel Reynolds, D- IlL , was convic ted m C hi cago of sexual m iSco nduct involvmg an underage campaign vo lunteer. Reynold, was se nten ced to five years in pnson; he
was later co nvi cted of lying to obta m loa ns and of illegally stphoning ca mpaign money for personal use, and sentenced to SIX and ahalf years m fed e ral prison
One year ago: H urn ca ne " Bret'' rumbled ashore on t he Texas
Gulf Coast with wmds over 100 mph.A C hina Airlines jet burst In to
flames at Hong Kong's new airport, k1lhng three people and IIIJUring more than 200. Art dealer Leo Oastelh d1ed 10 N ew York at age

l) J.
Today's Birthdays: Nazi-e ra filmmaker Lem R1efenstahl is 98
Blues smger Jo hn Lee H ooker is 83 . Author Ray Bradbury IS 80.
Heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley IS 80. General H . Norman
Schwarzkopf IS 66. ABC newsman Morton Dean is liS. Baseball
Hall-of-Famer Carl Yastrzemsk1 is. 6 1. Actress Valene Harper is liO
Football coac h Bill Parcells is 59. Singer Kathy Leunon (The
Lennon Smers) IS SR. CBS newsman Steve Kroft is 55 .

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 22, 1000

Reader says} {(Give pregnant women·a seat!"

~~l£R.
J

6Et1RGE H., OR

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PageA4

'

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
they were usually the o nes who pushed
past m e to grab the last seat lnv,m ably,
tll osc w ho gave up their sca ts wcrL·
wo men , co nstru ction workl'rs or yo un g
kids \\ ho looked like g.mg members
On ce, c1 \\onun w h u W.l ~ ~ t .mdmg IH.' Xr
t o me sa td Ill a loud \"OIL"l.' to :1 busmt.:so.,man seared 111 front of hn, " I th111k th n
pre gnant wOJuan needs you r sea t 111 nrc
tlun you do " Hts fJ t: L' turn l'd l"l.·d . ,\lld he·
rduct:1 11tly stood up.
Pl'oplc s,ty chl\'.liry IS no t tk .td . but I
l ,ltl tell \Oll It ts 111 \ "L'l"\' poor hc,1lth

U nfortun .rtely, th ose who need to read
thiS letter probabl y have then eyes locked
onto the tina ncJJI pages o f the newspaper
whil e they Ignore the pregmpt . diSabled
and elderly -- San Fran osco Commuter
Dear Commuters Everywhere (I
don't believe San FranciSco has an excluSIVe on thiS scou rge) Surely you have
wtvc s. ~1 s t crs, dau g ht ers o r parents
Wo uldn 't you want someon e to g tve hi s
or her seat o n a tram o r bus to you r pregnant o r el de rl y rebt1ve' Well , then, be a
mensch, and gl-"t up.
Dear Ann Landers: ''D ISrespected In
NYC " \\rotc to com pla m that her
fa tlwr-I n-law as'ilm lcd she was nmmn g a
hotel JUSt fo r h11n I tho ught for one
p,ti iH.-stnc kt.'ll

Jll Ollll' nt

tlut m y own

f.It hL' I-I Il -Ll\\ ha d been rL·surreL tcd fro m
bdl.
I, tno \\"JS J yo un g bndt.• when m y
f.t thcr-1 11 -Lt\\ b~.:g.m to .t pp&lt;:.u for \"JSlts
bc..·tween hi&lt;;, ro.1J tnp s 'J,k lll' \ 'L' r kn l'\\"
when hl' wo uld .li"TI \'L' or when he

planned to leave We had a smaD ho me,
and It was diffi cult to accommoda te hi m
aud hiS demands Hi s needs mcl uded
three squ are meals a day, com plete dommance uf alJ co nversations. and my husband's undivided attentiOn .
I suffe red m Silence for many years
beca use It d1d no good to complam .
Wh en I had a child, thiS In se nSitive
g randfather pa1d no attentio n to hun , and
never once pte ked him up o r bothered to
lea rn illS name . (H e called lum "Boy.")
The day finally came when he passed
away No one shed a rear.
My fat her- In- law donunated ou r hves
H ow ang:I y I was al mysdf for nut makm g my ncl·ds k nown :mJ dem.tndJJl g
that my hu sb:md support my postttun . I
hopl' " D ts.rcspt'Cted" st:mJs ha gro und
and tL'Ils hl'r husb.llld ro eith l.'r shape up
0 1 _Jom h as fath er o n Iu s trJVl' ls. Wlwn a.
spou st.· Culs to bl." sup put t tn ·. It changes
ho\\ you t~·c l abo ut hun 0 1 he1 I h.wt.•
bt'l'n therl' . .1 11d u ·., .l llll st.·rabt...· pbco..· to

PVH announces Foundation Award winners
FROM STAFF REPORTS

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Advice for Al: look to the future, forget Clinton
LOS ANGELES - Is the presidennal election about Bill C linton ? Or IS it about America's future' 1t ought to be about the future . But
let's face 11, it is partly about C linton.The question is: How much?
Americans have what Republi can acnviS! Jeff
Bell calls a "bifurcated" view of the outgomg
preSident - they approve of his job performance, but they deeply disapprove of his character.
The latest bipartisan Vuter.com Battleground
survey confirms that by 60 percent to 37 percent, voters approve of the way C lmton IS doing
Ills JOb - and by 62 percent to 28 percent they
disapprove of Clinton "as a person."
Republicans want to tie Vice President AI
Gore as closely as possible to Clinton the person, while Gore desperately wants to be liuked
to the adminisrranon's job performance and
change the subject from Clinton's perso nal lfl'-

mg;.
At the R epublican N; tional Convention,
both vice presidential nominee DICk C heney
and presidential nomm ee George W.l:lush endlessly referred to "Clinton-Core," as though
Gore's first name IS Clmton.
And they endlessly prormsed that they would
"restore honor and dignity" to tl1e White
House. Bush deni ed he was making any reference to the Momca Lewmsky scandalm doing
so. Everyone km•w he was being di ~1n ge nuou s
- nearly Clintonesque.
No o ne believes for a seco ud that Core
would behave as C hnton did in th e Lewinsky
case - bemg unf:Iithli.1l to his w1fe with a
White House mtern and lymg aboll! It both
publicly and under o.1th. But Republic,ms hope
that the scandal 's odor clings permanently to
Gore no matter how often he ch.mgcs his
clotlung.
Bush kt•pt the b'&lt;lllle gou1g .IS the Democratic convt:ntion open ed hne by c:J.Ihng on Gore
to say how he differs from C lmto n either personall y or 111 policy
M o reover. every nm e Ch nto n ,1ppca rs m
publi c, th e mc·d1.1 helps ti c Clin to n to Gore,
const..'l ntly rev1s it1ng Clmton's dual image as a

ning mate was at least partly deSign ed to exorcise the C linto n ghost
Asked to what extent he expected Clinton to
be an ISsue thmugh November, Gore campaign
manager Bill Daley asked me, "You don't exprct
1t to go away, do you '"
Somehow, Gore has got to change the subJect - away from Clinton, away tium persunahty .md on to "the future." The majonty of
poDs show that, on most ISsues, the public sides
with Gore.
NEA COLUMNIST
On the issue that Bush hunself defined as
central to the campaign- what to do with th e
political genius .md personal reprobate - plu s S2 tnlhon federal budget surplus - ,111 LA
the conrras~ betWeen Chnto n"s easy charm and Times poll thiS week showed that by fiw to
Gore's dunkiness.
o ne, voters prefer Gore's approach of p.1ym g
The reaction of many Democrats to Clin- down the natio nal debt and bolstermg retireton's valedictory speech here Monday night was ment programs, as opposed to Bush's tax cut.
that it was good that 1t rmed a h1gh mark for
When both candidates' views on Son.II
Gore's Thursday night acceptance speech .
Security were dc-,;cnbcd, SS perce nt of voters
C hnton did Gore no great f.wors With the preferred Gore's plan and only 32 percent prespctch. He spent 80 percent of it recoumm g ferred !:lush\ Gore enjoyed .1 double-,digit le.1d
the successes nf hiS adnumstratio n and Just 10 on health care and lesser lead, o n protectmg
percent linking Gore to them, giving no vivid Medicare and keepmg the economy pmspei examples that would change the pubhc's per- o us.
ception of Gore as m erely C linto n's SidekiCk.
The two candJd3tt's were essenti ally even o n
A Los Angeles Times poll showed that, m oth er issues - abortion puhcy, !,''Un m mrol,
sum , Chntqn- Gore hnkage is working the Supreme Cou rt appointments and edutation.
Republicans' way. Asked w hat they diS,Ippnwe
So, Gore's t&lt;tsk IS. to m:-.ke the coun try t\Jcus
abo ut Gore, 29 percen t of voters mentioned his on a chmce of "two futures" - o ne (IllS) 111
C linto n connection .md I H percent called lum whi ch th e frm t of th e coumry's prosperity "
"not trustworthy."
used for investmellt m better health and edu c.JR epublicans haven't own begun to explOit tion for the nauo n, and another (Bush\ ) 111
Gore's own ethical problems. nombly his pmic- whKh it's given to those who .tlreildy .m: wdlipation m 1996 fund- raiSing ITret,'liiarities and off.
IllS awkward expbnat1on of them.
Stmu ltm~o us l y. t ;ore must try to turn b;tLk
If and when th e go mg gets mugh - rt·port- on llu sh the all eg.rtiOII tlw Dt• mocrats .1re p.lTedly, when (;on: bcgms raising tht· i ~s ut" of tJs,l n, negative campaigners.
Uush 's appearance at arc h-conse rvative, Bob
Republi cans .1rc, aftt•r .111, trymg to tar ( ;urc
Jo nes UniverSity tim ye,Jr - R epubh r.IIls plan persun,JII y With a brush called '"Chnton." Gure s
to trot out C linton's famou:, 1lJY.1 ,1ss uranrc that ptubkm Is trymg to tigure o ur how to makl'
h1s would be "the m ost cthit"al adm iiJistr:ltJo n 111 that acq Js.ttJon w itho ut sccnnn g to n• pu du t~.·
An1 t' n c~ n htstory" to throw at Go1c.
h1s politi c.tl bcnc.·f;tctor. Gore h.1d best ronu•IJ Meantitne, Gore demonstrates that he i-; anx- tratc on th e future.
ious to be o ut ofChnton's sh.1dow. (;ore· adviSers admJt candidly th.lt IllS sel ection of stl .ught(i\ttM ttm KP11dmcke i.'i l'.\"Ct fUll 'f.' cditN «"!l /{,11/
arrow Sen .Joe Lieberman, D-Collll., as his run- Call, the 1/ell ~f'' 'l"' ' of C:opllo/ Hl/1 .)
·.,

Morton
Kondracke

I' U IN r PLEASANT - The l'k.JSa ntValkv H o~p tt.ll H e.1lth FoundJtlon ' ' prcp .u111 g
fo r th L' futu 1c uf ht'Jithc.lrl' by supp orting
~.:d u l:l tlo n rod.1v.
The Plc.l,.ln t V•lley H mplt.JI H e,il th Foun d.Hton. :l 11nn-profit cor pO!atJon, cs t.tbhshcd
rhe Ple.ISant Valley Sc ho lars E ndowment
l' und Ill 1988 Wit h do nat io ns from loca l
bu» n esses a nd mJividual s who pledged
nllll e thJn S300,000 dunng a yea r-lo ng
fundrat s1ng c un pa1gn.
Today, the fund ha s g rown d rasti cally in
pnnupal Inte rest from the fund goes towa rd
scholarship' and grant- In - ai d loa ns for stu del1ts lll.lJOnng 111 .1 he althcare- rdated field
.tt ,J W t.·st V1rg mta or O luo m stttutJoh of
h1ghcr lear mn g.
T im ye ar's awards total over $40,000.
T he sc ho lars hip prog ram wa s lllStituted to
develop new :md ex1stmg ht.:alrh ca rc se rvi ces
Ill t h e tn - co unty area . and ass1sr Pleasant ValIcy H ospr tal m Its effort s to m aunam a nd
Improve up o n the qu ahty of h ealthcare &gt;e r\" ! Ccs 111 the co mmumt y. Th e ultimate objec"'" of th e PVH Health Foundation IS to
enco u rage sc holars to return to the communny a n d utili ze then sktlls u1 the local area.
Th e 20 00 sc holars mclude JeSSica Blam,
M.JSon Co un ty, Nursmg (Umversity of Rio
Crand e), Keith e n Bran ch, Mason County,
i' lnrm acy (O h10 Northern Umve rmy) ;
Chm ta llrumficld, Maso n Cl) unty, Phym-a!
Th erapy (We st V u gm1a Un iverSity), Jessica
c.~ l c, M .lSOil Co unty, Li ce nse d Practi ca l
N urse (BH cke ye Hill C.1reer Ce nttr); Mm1
Rle C lupman, Ma so n County. Nu rs mg (St
Muy' s Sc hoo l of N tmmg), Steve n D orsey,
Ma so n County. Med iCi ne (M.mhall Umver~
&lt;~ tv Scl1ool o f M c·d 1nn e); Jenmfer Du ncan ,
M~ so 11 Co unty. NurSin g (M.mhall Umvem ry); Mi c helle Endicott. M .1&lt;n n Co unty, M edICIIle (West V1rg nm Sc hoo l of Osteopathic
Med1c n1e). Amv Jo Ferguson M cD o nal d,
G.lili.I Cou nty, Nur\111[; (Coll ege of We st
V~rginiO );

Uru ce Jackso n, M .1so n C ounty, Nurstn g
(M .us hall UmvcrSit)'), St.J cy Jo nes Adkms ,
IY\a son Cou nt y, N um ng (Marsh all Un1verSI-

2000 FOUNDATION SCHOLARS - The Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation recently
announced 1ts 2000 scholars that included
front row, left to right, Carrie Lockhart, Christa
Brumfield, Staci Lee and Melody McCleese.
Back row, left to right , Amanda Stapleton,
Taleah Sm1th, Mic helle Endicott, Je nnife r Duncan , Jenmfer MUllins, Sarah Sweeney, Wesley
Lieving, Brandon Wolfe, Brent Ro ll1 ns and
Michael R. Lieving, chairman of the Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tal Hea lth Foundation .
ty); Valene Karr, Meigs Co unty, Rad10logy
(Was hin gton State Co mmUiuty Coll ege Man e tta Memon al H ospital), Stao Lee,
Mason County, Nursmg (Ma rshall Un ive rSI ty), Wesley Lrcvmg, Mason Co unty, Medi Cine (West Virginia School of O ste opathi c
Medicme) ; Ca rri e Lo ckhart, Maso n County,
Med1cme (Marsh all Un1vem ty Sc ho o l o f
Medi Cin e); C our t ney Marklnm . Mason
C ounty, M e di cin e (West Virg1111;1 U m vcrstty
Sc hoo l of Mc•dJc in e); Jenn ifer Mull"" · G.! Ilia Co unty, Massa ge Th e rapv (H oc kin g
Techmcal Colle~e), llre nt Le e Roliim ,
Mason Co unty, Phar macy (Oiu o Nor rhem
Umvermy); Ca ndace Sayrl' Miller. M.JSon
Coun ty, H osp ital Adm iniStr.Hi on (Mars hall
Umwmty): Taleah Smith. M aso n Co ullt ).
Phys1cal Th er.1py Asmt.m t (S h.nvnc·e St.I te
Un ivcr&lt;I ty); Aman da Stop let on. c; ,,IILl
Co unty, Nurs1ng (Un lvt• rsHy of R1o
C ra nde). Kim be rly Sturgeon, Ma so n Coun ty, Nursmg (fairmont State Co ll ege). Sarah
Swee ney. Galh.l Co un ty, Numng (M arshall
Univemty) . Amy Ta-bor, Mason Co unty,
Numng (M ars hall Unl\'crSity); Sa ra h Tab o r,
M aso n County, Numn g (Marshall U mverSI -

Dairy sweepstakes results
HEIFER GIVEAWAY
- Audrionna Pul lms
rece1ved a dairy
he1 fer through the
Farmers Bank and
Sav1ngs Ca.'s annual Dairy He rter Giveaway, held in canjuctlDn w1th Fnday's
·-1-.d-"1'''1. Jun ior Fair Dairy
Sweepstakes. Bank
President Paul Reed
ma kes the presentation. Ross Holte r
won an m-club giveaway s pon sored by
the 4-H Club (Brian
J. Reed photo)

RYAN'S VIEW

By not watching the time, there's plenty of it .

-~

BY JO,IIN Rv,IIN

number the hours Ill, th e day Tlwy h,lvc no tium th eir v!lbgt· b~.:yuud O II L' honzon to ,1 v1l- ·
It wa~o; ,I Sllllple ljll CStJO il . v./e ,lskcd our Maa- word for m1nutes or seconds
lagc· hcyond till' oppoSHL' horizon - .1 &lt;.by's
&lt;ai b'IIIde, Jackson. how old he was H" answer,·
'"So what do people do when they 11eed to Journt·y - tu pwc.: url' Ol ll' t:n 'i hcc.:·p fi.lt rhc · ·
It tur11 eJ o ut. wo uld le.1d w. to tno~rnze the meet someon l' ::~t .1 CL'I"tai n wnc?" \H' .t~ ked
lllJ I1 \ wi fe, .1 t ro~ Lhu nn ,JI ~ 1fi · 'r .1 woman who
most radJL.ll and subtk dttf~: rcrH.:t.• bt.:twt.:cn lus Jackson. He was lcadmg us on .t long htkc .tcrnss
ha" jll'it givr,: n birth . l )nee hollH.', th t·y wou!J
culture .md uurs: ttmc.
.
t h e.:.~ plams of thL· M a.t~.11 M.1r.1 ti1un mn t~.o· n tc d
tu rn ,JJ"OllJld and w,!l k h;~r k lu th e dJ'it,lllt vill.i ~ll.·
Tr.JVd the globe .md yo u 'II set• people who camp
to dc!J V-.T ,\lOW ,J\ p. ty iH L'Ill ,llllilc:tlll"JI thr Sl': w~:a r unf;umh.u dothes, pr~K tice un fitm 1har cus" You point to .1 pl.llc' 111 the ' ky and ,,1y
ond shn.:' l\ w lu &lt;. h th l'y had ho rrowcd to kL·c p
toms , spc.tk unfJ.n11h ar words. But because you 'llm eer when th e li tlll I' th ~..Tt'.'' l w ~. u d
t he tJt 'ht.:~.: p lom p.my.
~
G rt•c nw tch Mean Tunl' .md nme zones art· uni If tht· od1er perso 11 Tl ll'it,Ikn prr..'t" l'r..·ly whl"I L'
Wt..· shook m1r heads ar rhl' till h.' tlus 11 1,111 .111 d
versally anep red, no mattn how di ~co tm ectcd you were pomtmg, then wlw '
'on
would \pt.:nU w,J ik mg h.ll"k .md fo rth .l L nJ'I\
we nught le d 10 people 111 li &gt;reign lands, at least
" You walt," ht' s,ud. " 1 he or her pcP•nn eve nthe Jnul.ltt' pl,un~o . Thl'y ~oe e m c d .\S if ti·u11 1
we can agree un what day and hour It IS
tu ally will come."
Bu t the M.tasai , .md many other Africam.
We pressed hn11 . Then.: h:td to be tiH.'.l'illl t.'- ,uJothL·r .l~t·. hl'fl.&gt;rt.' Wl' hq.~an hv lllg b)' th t·
do n't ordt.·r tim l' except m the most gcner,d ments, I.Jbt'ls, subsets Thne h.1d to bt-, .1fier clock, C:Jl h ti l k rl'llll!ldmg us that tmtt.' ~~ l"llll sense They don't recnnl biTth dates, and they thouo;Jnds of yl'al"'i of Maar..a1 cvolutwn. ;1 m1 ltL' ning out. Wt' 'n: .1fftnd ro lmc Jt, w:-~s tc.:.· 1t Tnm:
don 't co unt yt•ars. So Jackson didn 't know how orderly and prt·usc.· strut"tutl' to thc.: tr Jive .... Sn SCL'" IH S ,JJways of th t• l'SSt' lll"l'
o ld he was, t h ou~h he guessed he was 33 or 34
Yet somehow the Maasa1. who pay almmt no
OK, we asked, wh,1t about Lllllrr h :-.c.·rvK~.:."\?
I thought about !10" we mark births no t JUSt llon 't they start .1t .1 -p.Irtlcular til Ill'' i'eople attc.:.'lltlon to t mlt', "iL'L'lll to have an Jbundanl L' uf
1t:
•
by the day but by the hour ami nnnute, as "'" C,\ ll 't Sllllp) y W ,ll t Until C:Vl,.T)'Oilt:' ,IJ rJVl'S .
do deaths We talk about s.w mg time, buymg
" 'rim 's true," jackso11 said .
We w.Jikt·d ,md talked so much with j,ll kson
rin1e, finding tlll H:', makmg ti me, kecpmg time.
So how do you kn ow when to lihow up?
that WL' LhJn 't return ro c.1111 p unti l latt· .lftnWe talk of nme flyi ng by, or runnmg out, or
"When the he lls rmg."
noon So tl1.11 d.1y on the Ma1", we had lum h .It
111archmg o n. We talk of t11n e as tf It's something
Then: an: n 't l'V\:11 11311ll''i tf.1r the d.tys of the 4:311.
- as 1f we behevc It IS all we really have So we wt·e k 111 the Maas.11 rulturc, orlwr th:1n market
MaylR· thl' n ght time for soJJH::t hlJlg 1s ~o1 111 parse it into tiny p1eccs, 111casunng and sortmg, day and churc h day
ply the ti me it happt·ns
spending it care fully so as always to du thmgs at
'"Every day," JJckson explauJed, ""a day."
Ot'a" R}'flll i~ rl rtllllmNi~ t _(t1r til(' Sar~ htlllri~n&gt;
exactly the " nght" time.
As we ralked , we ca lllt' ,lf•.: m-;lii a man wtth h1s C:hronicft'. Send rmmm•ttf.l /tl l1rr 111 (•irr (1/flti\ II CW \The Maasdl keep' no calendars. They don 't teen-age son and two shn·p. They lud walked
fNlper vr Sl'lld hfr c-m.,il llf.Jt'tllll")'mJCf!N~•"l' .om .)

•

ty). ltac hcl Waug h, G.1ll1a C ounty, Nu rsm g
(U m verSitV ofR1o G rande); Melody We aver
M cC le ese, Galh.1 County, Nms1 ng (Marsh all
Umwmty ) aut! Brandon Wolfe . Meigs
Co unty. Pharma cy (Oh10 Northe rn Umvermy)
11
The people of the tri -cou nty co mmumty are indeed fo rtun ate to have qu aht y
healthca re available close to hom e A skilled
workforce of men and women dedicated to
providm g th at ca re is esse nti al to mamtJIIlm g the h1gh leve l of med1ql services we
have co me to rely upon," said Michael Lieving, chairman of th e Pl easa nt Valley H osp ital
H eal t h FoundatiOn
Sm ce makmg Its first awards in 1989, t he
Pl easa nt Valley Hospital Healt h FoundatiOn
has p rov ided 102 stude nts from Mason, Calha and M e1gs counties With finanCial asmtauce toward th eir educatwn in healthcare
rel ated fi eld s of study Among those students,
th e Fo undati o n has awarded about $282,000
m sc h ularslups and grant- m -aid loans, reprcse ntm g the mterest ctarned o n the pnnc1pal
111 the Sc hola rs Endow ment Fund .
E h g 1brlity requ&gt;re ments mclude resid e ncy 111 M ason Co unty, Calha Coun ty o r
M e1gs Cou nty; a diploma from an ac cre dIted h1 g h sc hool or p ossemon o f a G ED ;
g rades and tt•st scores suffici e ntly hi g h for
.uJmJ s~ HJII to ,1 11 ac c redited college (factors
suc h ,JS GPA, rank 111 h1gh sc hool class and
scorl· ~ on co ll l.'gc ~ ntrance tes ts Will be
co im de red 111 th e appli ca ti o n proc ess);
an.· cpt.lnL t.' fo 1 .1 dmJ Ss 1o n at an acc rc dtred
In st ltut ton of l11g hc: r t.·ducatton tn c-tthcr
West V!rgJnl:t or Oh ao. decla ratiOn o f a
m aJor f1dd u f st ud y In a healthcare fidel
(mu st sho" p1 nof o f .l Ccep t a n ce 111to a
qu .lil fic-d prog:r.1 111 nf studv) ,\11d m ust bt.·
c ua rentlv L' llrolk·d 111 a qu:thfi ed pro gr:tm
of st u d ). No p t l'plo g Ltlll !lt Udt.'nts .tH-' l.:h g tble fo r fumhng.
For tnfo rmatl on o r an a.p plt ca.t ion. co nt.JCt, G eo rgiann.l S Tiih s. Federal &amp;- St.ltt'
l'rog r.um . Plca ,,I nt V.Iile y H ospita l. 303675- 43 40. Ex t. 723 4, 01 Wilt &lt; Pl eas.uHVallcy Health Foundation. Inc. , 2520 Vall ey
Driw, Point Pl eHa nt . WVa 25S 50.

SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS- W1nners of Friday' s Dairy Sweepstakes
we re, front, Ray mond Colwell, Chn srophe r Colwell a nd Stephen Yos t,
and bac k, Ross Holter. Ka ra Osborne, Rachel Elliott, Adam Wo lfe , Carson Yost 4-H Adv1sors Ed Holte r a nd Mike Patker make th e presentati ons to the dairy cl ub membe rs, who were JU dged on barn and a ni mal cleanl&gt;ness. project work, and an 1nterv1ew (Bnan J Reed photo)

Pet show winners
\\ '1111 )CI" lll till•!\

(', I ut

~x.·t ~hr"\

k1~ ( ' tl\111-

\\\"It' l'l\
, Lh". k·ri t{' nd 11. Fr.u\Ll.., "'II nth
u!l.! ( .lllln ho.-.;t LLtw\ l ~x·t
h1Ltt\

·\llll"-'1 Hlttlo.:.'&gt;tnll Ulll -, , ~"!\·

h.."J

dt~

",.umtd ,\ \d _JI ht.-.;t

II ·d:!Jt.(X-.;t

h\11 ,U!d llll1'&lt;t llii\NI -

. ~ jX't llll' " 11ll ll'l'- ,Ut' pit UIH,'\.\

L1n:lL' hh"' Ml'~"' CPt Ul~
-\~ 1k1p1 I Mf\ ·clkul!! d~c· ""
tl\tdl pt.'1 ,1\,:ud \\a' A111brr
1\L,ck-:on "1d1 h~..·r {,_X~·· ]~· ­
n~ ,lll\' rvt I-'-··'l h ph{)(()'.)
\ \lcl l

r------.,.........-----.-===:":"":J

be. -- Sadde r and WISer m Washmb'ton
State
Dear Washington: I can tell you, as a
close observer of troubled hvcs for many
yea rs, that the maJOr re .. so ns fo r d1vo rce
are money, sex and otht'" r fam il y mem bers Yo ur hu sbal1d needs to understand
that he sho uld put you first 10 hiS life. If
he sti ll has n't lea rned that lesson, I
strongly reco mme nd JOint counseling.
Is hfe passmg you by' Wan t to improve
your sooal skill s' Wnte for An n Landers'
new booklet, " H ow to Make Fnends and
Stop Be m g Lon el y" . Se nd a selfaddressed, long. bu sm ess-stzt' L.' nvdope
and :1 check or monl')' order fo r $4.25
(th ts mdudt.•s · po:!&gt;tagt.' ~ .uHl h andling) to ·
Fncnds, c I o A 1111 L.mders, P.0. Box
11:;r,2, C hi c.1go. Ill. f,IIC.II -II:;c,2 (In
Ca na.cb, st.." nd S) 15. ) 1&lt;) fi nd out more
.1bout Ann l _.llldt.."rs ,md ll',\J ht.·r p.1s t
colulllm, VISit th l· C ae:ttor-. Syndt c.lt t:
"l'b p:1gl· .1t \\ \\"WtrL'.ttors.J..o! Jl

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

TUESDAY, August 22
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Schools open Tu esday
Open house sc heduled for
M o nday, 5.30 to 7 p.m. for tom ,
of th e sc hool.
RAC I NE
Southern
Junior H1gh Boosters, Tuesday,
6· 30 p m . at the school Parents
of 7th and 8th graders urged to
attend.
RACINE Racin e Area
Commumty Orgamzatmn , 6:30
p.m Tuesday at Star Mill Park
Potlu ck
ATHENS - So uthern Co nso rtium for C hildren, I 0 a.m .
Tuesday at the offi ces located at
R044 Diary Lane , Athens

•••

WEDNESDAY, August 23
GALLIPOLIS - Commum ty Diabetic faiT sp onsored by
Mt•&lt;h Home Health Agen cy In c
to be held Wcdn e&gt; day. at tht·
Nazarene C hurch of Ga llipoli s,
0 .t m to j p m H l'a lthca re professiO nals sc heduled to speak on
va n om dt.lbt·nc to pics. edu c.tnon ,ll llt e rJ turc ,n·.ul.tble.

to ha \'l' Lln·otton s; Progra m on

antiqu es by Sabr.1 Ash. M embe rs
to take antiques for diSp lay. MISswtury tcpot ton the G ntons.

•••

FRIDAY, August 25

TUESDAY. AUGUST 29
Delivery Will Be:

Pomeroy - R&amp;G Feed &amp; SUPPlY
12:15- 1:15 P.m. Phone 740-992·2164
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30
Bidwell - Brown's TrustworthY Hardware

•••

SATURDAY, August 26
PO MEROY - R t· um on of
descendants of Jod and Lydia ·
StancJrt, SaturdJy. noon , Route
33 roadSide park, north . Tho&gt;e
:lttc:n d mg me to uk:c n cov~:red
diSh alon g with pi ctures and hiSw ry fo r d1&gt;play

•••

SUNDAY, August 27
RUTLAND
R utland
Flt t•n dly
C~.l!d e n t.:n.
-l-Oth
,1nnn·c rsary open
lll t:'\.'t lll g.
Wed11 esd.ly, 7·311 p m .It the
Rutbnd VIllage fireh ouse Speu.ll prese ntati ons, programs, and
door pnzes . Rl'fn:shments wtll
bl· se rved Past and prese nt

membe rs and friends mvttcd
PO MEROY O ut doo r
dr.una, " Noah and the Ark ",
mghtly through Saturday at 1hc
H il lSide
Ba ptiSt
Ch urch
amphi theater loca ted off R oute
7 on Route 1-+3 n ear Pomt'roy.
t•very mght at 7.30 p.m. Spo nso red by the church .1nd the
Po\ver 111 th e Blood num stry N o
clurge Co ncl.'sSJ Oil st:111d 111
o pcr.lt Jo n Take lawn ch.urs
·More 1nfor nuu o n Cl ll Dr James
Acree. 992-6768

•••

THURSDAY, August 24
POME ROY - Me' b" County C hu rc ht'' of Chmt W0men's.
Fellowsh ip , T hurschy. 7 p m
Zion C hu rc h ofChnst Ruti.lnd

LETART W VA - Annu.1l
Wea\'t·r rcu1uo n. Sunday, 1 p m .
,\t the home o f M:1rc us .md D o r.1
Wt:.lVt'l,

Lt' tart, ~./. V ;L T .lkl:' cov-

ered dJSh and ch.ur.

•••

MONDAY, August 28
MIDDLEPORT OhK.m
Co in Club, Monday, 7 p m . at
Tro lley Ho use 111 Mid&lt;)kport,
behm d Dairy Queen To feature
diSplay o t pJper mo ney. Au cti o n .
and reftt•sh mc-nts.
The Community
Calendar is published as a
free 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 permits and
cannot be guaranteed to
be printed a specific
number of days.

'
The Middleport Clinic

D

788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760'

APPolmments:
040) 992-4228

2:00 . 3:00P.m. Phone 740-446-8828 ·

GalliPolis • QualitY farm &amp; fleet

..

POMEROY - Fnday, 6 p.m .
at General Hartmgc r Park. M1d~
dleport, the Ladies for the Lord
will host eve nt fo r children. Free
sc hool supplies will be given :
followmg a service and sin gmg .
Parents n1ust accompany thetr
children. Hot dogs and bevera~es will be served. All actiVIlles
. Will be completed before th e
sc hool supphes are given out .
For more mforman on contact·
Betty J ohnson 441 - 1415 or Jan
Sw1gge r, 9920-6667 .

ukesh
FISH FOR P.OND STOCKING

.

Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welcome

4:00-5:00 P.m. Phone 740·441-1221

•

�_rh_e_o_ai-:.Iy_s_en_ti_ne_I_ _ _ _ _ _

..;._~f-=)plnion

1Uesday, Aupst 11, 1000

The Daily Sentinel
ARE YOU
REFERRING To

£stllbllslid Ia 1941
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74~992-2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

6E"O~EW:-

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Dear Ann Landers: Now that I am
on matcrmty leave, I fin ally have time to
'''rite abo ut my co mmuting expencnce
wh 1le I was pregnant
I took the tr,lHl to work eve ry day, a
ride wlw h took abum 40 minutes By
the time I waddled o nto the tram in the
mormng, most of the seats were taken
I ht· commu te rs were mostl)' m en and
wo m t.·n wc.1nng neat bu smcss atnrc and
l.ur y111g bt JL'fcases It was obv10us I was
n:ry plt::gn,mt , bur rarel y was I offered .1
'l".lt. Mu ~t people pretended not to ~e e
ll ll' They dD,ed th'e ~r eyes or h1 d beh1nd
thc1r 11L'\np.lper~.
·
An y pn.:gn:tnt wu m.m W ill tell you tt 1\
,ltflitulr to kel..'p hn b.d.uH.c w hen shl. ' I'
l .ll"l \" 111 g .1l l that '-'XtL1 \\"t.:lght. Nor o nly
rh.n. b l H hL'r l~·cr sw.._· JI, ,md thl' .l l.hhtJo n,!1 \Vl'Jg]H C.l llSl'S b:-tck p .lll1 , \\" h !Lh J~
1)-igr.'' .HL'd b,y o; r.tndm g
l )n the ft.-,, occ.t~ l oll' \\"hen I w.1~
\llkrc.._l .1 Sl',lt, It \\ ,1.., llL'\"L'r o ne tl t" tlw-.e
~L' Ilti...' J I )C n" " lw stood up -- 111 f.1ct.

~hlerOiuse.nel

5EOR6EP.?

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Adver11slng Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

'

Ullin rum~ t tUror en wekDIIIt. TII•J sltOMI41H ,_., t11111f JOO wonls. ttU ltiUn tin stl•ftcl
IO tditiltf IUtd MIIJI/H 116Mt111Nl utcfwk tliMh'fll tllfd kkpllottt 1114MIH1'. No MIUjzMd In/In will
H p111Hisht d. IA '"n sho.ud be In fOOil UU#, tllllltYstillf hsws, lfOI !MI'IOftiiiJM•.
Tilt 0fH11iont upnsud 111 th• "''""'" lwlow tUV tht conuru•s of tilt OIUo V.U,.J hblJsJUnr
('!' 's •lliwtWI baord, 11nllu •lfhtrwult noted.

OUR VIEW

Renewal
Schools should build on past
suaess, look to future
A new &lt;chool year begms 111 the tn-county thiS week and next
Students ami teachers return to th eir bUildings prepared to make
this academic year more successful than the last
Classrooms and textbooks arc ready for use. By tmd -afi:ernoon ,
whistles and commands are heard from high school playmg fields as
football and fall sporrs prepare to laun ch their season.
And although the daytime h1ghs may tell us otherwise, it 's the end
of summer. Time to get down to the serious business of ed ucating
our youth .
Accomplishing this goal over the past few years has grown more
difficult due to demands placed o n the S&lt;:hools. In Oh10, summer
classes were held to help prepare students for passage of proficiency
exams. In West Vng1ma, at least one county school district is under
state control with the possibility of more to come.
Concerns over American education faDing behind other countries
have prompted h1gger expectations. Complaints of " dumbing
down " curnculum are common .
The response has been to bring our educational standards up. In
areas where reso urces are !united, such as ours, this has been done
through innovative methods - and hard work by teachers and
admimstraton. With g rants, schools in our area are boostmg hteracy
and other topics targeted for improvement.
With some money m hand, ingenuity has worked wonders m
improving student perfotmance.The role parents play 10 theiT ch1ld's
education is becoming greater, especially 10 reading.
This dedication IS critical if our kids are to be competitive. It's the
primary reason w hy computers and other forms of technology are
being brought into the classroom . It's not because they're expected
to know about computers if th ey leave the area. In the future, they
must be familiar With tec hn ology even 1f they choo&lt;e to remain
here.
The begmnmg of sc hool should be a re-dedication to what has
been done before, and a basis for building new paths in educatiOn.
Many ideas come from teachers, staff and parents.Their initiative has
made the process more exciting and mteresting for s tuden~s .
Keep those ideas co m10g, and maintain the conmutment to making schools m the tn-county unique m th eir approacb to fhe classroom exper ience. The diVIdend from such an investment of time
and wo rk arc graduates who can co mpete with the best.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Aug 22, the 235 th day of 2000. There are 131
days left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 22, 1 4~5. England's Kmg Ri chard Ill was bJied m th e
Battle of Boswo rth f ield, ending th e War of the R oses.
On thiS date:
In 1762,Ann Frankhn became th e fi rst female editor of an Am erIcan newspaper, th e N ewport, R L " M ercury"
In 1775. England's King George Ill proclaim ed th e Amencan
colo nies in a state of open rebelli o n
In 1787 ,Inve ntor John fitch demo nmatcd his steamboat o n the
Delaware River to delegates of the Co ntm ental Congre ss
In 1846, the United States an nexe d N ew Mexico
In 1~5 1 , the &lt;c hoo ner " Am eri ca" o utraced th e " Aurora" off the
Enghsh coost to win a trophy t hat be came known as the Amen ca's
C u~
In 1902, PreSi dent Th eodore R oosevelt became the first U.S.
chi ef executive to nde In an automobile, 10 Hartford, Co nn
l11 1&lt;J50, Alth ea G1bson became th e first bbc k te nm s player to be
accepted 10 competitiO n fo r the nati o nal champ1onslup.
In 1956, PreSident EISe nh ower an d Vi ce President Nixon were
nomi nated for second terms m otlice by the R epubli can nati o nal
conve nu o n 1n San Francisco.
In 1968. Po pe Paul VI am vcd 10 ll ogota, Co lo mbia , for th e start
of the fi "t papal VISit to Latin Amen ca.
In 1989, Black Panth er co- fou nder Hu ey I~ Newton was shot to
death 1n Oakland. Cahf. ·
Ten years ago: President Bush Signed an mder calling up reserviSts
to bo lster th e U. S military bu ildup In the Persian Gu lf
five years ago: Co ngressman Mel Reynolds, D- IlL , was convic ted m C hi cago of sexual m iSco nduct involvmg an underage campaign vo lunteer. Reynold, was se nten ced to five years in pnson; he
was later co nvi cted of lying to obta m loa ns and of illegally stphoning ca mpaign money for personal use, and sentenced to SIX and ahalf years m fed e ral prison
One year ago: H urn ca ne " Bret'' rumbled ashore on t he Texas
Gulf Coast with wmds over 100 mph.A C hina Airlines jet burst In to
flames at Hong Kong's new airport, k1lhng three people and IIIJUring more than 200. Art dealer Leo Oastelh d1ed 10 N ew York at age

l) J.
Today's Birthdays: Nazi-e ra filmmaker Lem R1efenstahl is 98
Blues smger Jo hn Lee H ooker is 83 . Author Ray Bradbury IS 80.
Heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley IS 80. General H . Norman
Schwarzkopf IS 66. ABC newsman Morton Dean is liS. Baseball
Hall-of-Famer Carl Yastrzemsk1 is. 6 1. Actress Valene Harper is liO
Football coac h Bill Parcells is 59. Singer Kathy Leunon (The
Lennon Smers) IS SR. CBS newsman Steve Kroft is 55 .

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 22, 1000

Reader says} {(Give pregnant women·a seat!"

~~l£R.
J

6Et1RGE H., OR

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PageA4

'

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
they were usually the o nes who pushed
past m e to grab the last seat lnv,m ably,
tll osc w ho gave up their sca ts wcrL·
wo men , co nstru ction workl'rs or yo un g
kids \\ ho looked like g.mg members
On ce, c1 \\onun w h u W.l ~ ~ t .mdmg IH.' Xr
t o me sa td Ill a loud \"OIL"l.' to :1 busmt.:so.,man seared 111 front of hn, " I th111k th n
pre gnant wOJuan needs you r sea t 111 nrc
tlun you do " Hts fJ t: L' turn l'd l"l.·d . ,\lld he·
rduct:1 11tly stood up.
Pl'oplc s,ty chl\'.liry IS no t tk .td . but I
l ,ltl tell \Oll It ts 111 \ "L'l"\' poor hc,1lth

U nfortun .rtely, th ose who need to read
thiS letter probabl y have then eyes locked
onto the tina ncJJI pages o f the newspaper
whil e they Ignore the pregmpt . diSabled
and elderly -- San Fran osco Commuter
Dear Commuters Everywhere (I
don't believe San FranciSco has an excluSIVe on thiS scou rge) Surely you have
wtvc s. ~1 s t crs, dau g ht ers o r parents
Wo uldn 't you want someon e to g tve hi s
or her seat o n a tram o r bus to you r pregnant o r el de rl y rebt1ve' Well , then, be a
mensch, and gl-"t up.
Dear Ann Landers: ''D ISrespected In
NYC " \\rotc to com pla m that her
fa tlwr-I n-law as'ilm lcd she was nmmn g a
hotel JUSt fo r h11n I tho ught for one
p,ti iH.-stnc kt.'ll

Jll Ollll' nt

tlut m y own

f.It hL' I-I Il -Ll\\ ha d been rL·surreL tcd fro m
bdl.
I, tno \\"JS J yo un g bndt.• when m y
f.t thcr-1 11 -Lt\\ b~.:g.m to .t pp&lt;:.u for \"JSlts
bc..·tween hi&lt;;, ro.1J tnp s 'J,k lll' \ 'L' r kn l'\\"
when hl' wo uld .li"TI \'L' or when he

planned to leave We had a smaD ho me,
and It was diffi cult to accommoda te hi m
aud hiS demands Hi s needs mcl uded
three squ are meals a day, com plete dommance uf alJ co nversations. and my husband's undivided attentiOn .
I suffe red m Silence for many years
beca use It d1d no good to complam .
Wh en I had a child, thiS In se nSitive
g randfather pa1d no attentio n to hun , and
never once pte ked him up o r bothered to
lea rn illS name . (H e called lum "Boy.")
The day finally came when he passed
away No one shed a rear.
My fat her- In- law donunated ou r hves
H ow ang:I y I was al mysdf for nut makm g my ncl·ds k nown :mJ dem.tndJJl g
that my hu sb:md support my postttun . I
hopl' " D ts.rcspt'Cted" st:mJs ha gro und
and tL'Ils hl'r husb.llld ro eith l.'r shape up
0 1 _Jom h as fath er o n Iu s trJVl' ls. Wlwn a.
spou st.· Culs to bl." sup put t tn ·. It changes
ho\\ you t~·c l abo ut hun 0 1 he1 I h.wt.•
bt'l'n therl' . .1 11d u ·., .l llll st.·rabt...· pbco..· to

PVH announces Foundation Award winners
FROM STAFF REPORTS

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Advice for Al: look to the future, forget Clinton
LOS ANGELES - Is the presidennal election about Bill C linton ? Or IS it about America's future' 1t ought to be about the future . But
let's face 11, it is partly about C linton.The question is: How much?
Americans have what Republi can acnviS! Jeff
Bell calls a "bifurcated" view of the outgomg
preSident - they approve of his job performance, but they deeply disapprove of his character.
The latest bipartisan Vuter.com Battleground
survey confirms that by 60 percent to 37 percent, voters approve of the way C lmton IS doing
Ills JOb - and by 62 percent to 28 percent they
disapprove of Clinton "as a person."
Republicans want to tie Vice President AI
Gore as closely as possible to Clinton the person, while Gore desperately wants to be liuked
to the adminisrranon's job performance and
change the subject from Clinton's perso nal lfl'-

mg;.
At the R epublican N; tional Convention,
both vice presidential nominee DICk C heney
and presidential nomm ee George W.l:lush endlessly referred to "Clinton-Core," as though
Gore's first name IS Clmton.
And they endlessly prormsed that they would
"restore honor and dignity" to tl1e White
House. Bush deni ed he was making any reference to the Momca Lewmsky scandalm doing
so. Everyone km•w he was being di ~1n ge nuou s
- nearly Clintonesque.
No o ne believes for a seco ud that Core
would behave as C hnton did in th e Lewinsky
case - bemg unf:Iithli.1l to his w1fe with a
White House mtern and lymg aboll! It both
publicly and under o.1th. But Republic,ms hope
that the scandal 's odor clings permanently to
Gore no matter how often he ch.mgcs his
clotlung.
Bush kt•pt the b'&lt;lllle gou1g .IS the Democratic convt:ntion open ed hne by c:J.Ihng on Gore
to say how he differs from C lmto n either personall y or 111 policy
M o reover. every nm e Ch nto n ,1ppca rs m
publi c, th e mc·d1.1 helps ti c Clin to n to Gore,
const..'l ntly rev1s it1ng Clmton's dual image as a

ning mate was at least partly deSign ed to exorcise the C linto n ghost
Asked to what extent he expected Clinton to
be an ISsue thmugh November, Gore campaign
manager Bill Daley asked me, "You don't exprct
1t to go away, do you '"
Somehow, Gore has got to change the subJect - away from Clinton, away tium persunahty .md on to "the future." The majonty of
poDs show that, on most ISsues, the public sides
with Gore.
NEA COLUMNIST
On the issue that Bush hunself defined as
central to the campaign- what to do with th e
political genius .md personal reprobate - plu s S2 tnlhon federal budget surplus - ,111 LA
the conrras~ betWeen Chnto n"s easy charm and Times poll thiS week showed that by fiw to
Gore's dunkiness.
o ne, voters prefer Gore's approach of p.1ym g
The reaction of many Democrats to Clin- down the natio nal debt and bolstermg retireton's valedictory speech here Monday night was ment programs, as opposed to Bush's tax cut.
that it was good that 1t rmed a h1gh mark for
When both candidates' views on Son.II
Gore's Thursday night acceptance speech .
Security were dc-,;cnbcd, SS perce nt of voters
C hnton did Gore no great f.wors With the preferred Gore's plan and only 32 percent prespctch. He spent 80 percent of it recoumm g ferred !:lush\ Gore enjoyed .1 double-,digit le.1d
the successes nf hiS adnumstratio n and Just 10 on health care and lesser lead, o n protectmg
percent linking Gore to them, giving no vivid Medicare and keepmg the economy pmspei examples that would change the pubhc's per- o us.
ception of Gore as m erely C linto n's SidekiCk.
The two candJd3tt's were essenti ally even o n
A Los Angeles Times poll showed that, m oth er issues - abortion puhcy, !,''Un m mrol,
sum , Chntqn- Gore hnkage is working the Supreme Cou rt appointments and edutation.
Republicans' way. Asked w hat they diS,Ippnwe
So, Gore's t&lt;tsk IS. to m:-.ke the coun try t\Jcus
abo ut Gore, 29 percen t of voters mentioned his on a chmce of "two futures" - o ne (IllS) 111
C linto n connection .md I H percent called lum whi ch th e frm t of th e coumry's prosperity "
"not trustworthy."
used for investmellt m better health and edu c.JR epublicans haven't own begun to explOit tion for the nauo n, and another (Bush\ ) 111
Gore's own ethical problems. nombly his pmic- whKh it's given to those who .tlreildy .m: wdlipation m 1996 fund- raiSing ITret,'liiarities and off.
IllS awkward expbnat1on of them.
Stmu ltm~o us l y. t ;ore must try to turn b;tLk
If and when th e go mg gets mugh - rt·port- on llu sh the all eg.rtiOII tlw Dt• mocrats .1re p.lTedly, when (;on: bcgms raising tht· i ~s ut" of tJs,l n, negative campaigners.
Uush 's appearance at arc h-conse rvative, Bob
Republi cans .1rc, aftt•r .111, trymg to tar ( ;urc
Jo nes UniverSity tim ye,Jr - R epubh r.IIls plan persun,JII y With a brush called '"Chnton." Gure s
to trot out C linton's famou:, 1lJY.1 ,1ss uranrc that ptubkm Is trymg to tigure o ur how to makl'
h1s would be "the m ost cthit"al adm iiJistr:ltJo n 111 that acq Js.ttJon w itho ut sccnnn g to n• pu du t~.·
An1 t' n c~ n htstory" to throw at Go1c.
h1s politi c.tl bcnc.·f;tctor. Gore h.1d best ronu•IJ Meantitne, Gore demonstrates that he i-; anx- tratc on th e future.
ious to be o ut ofChnton's sh.1dow. (;ore· adviSers admJt candidly th.lt IllS sel ection of stl .ught(i\ttM ttm KP11dmcke i.'i l'.\"Ct fUll 'f.' cditN «"!l /{,11/
arrow Sen .Joe Lieberman, D-Collll., as his run- Call, the 1/ell ~f'' 'l"' ' of C:opllo/ Hl/1 .)
·.,

Morton
Kondracke

I' U IN r PLEASANT - The l'k.JSa ntValkv H o~p tt.ll H e.1lth FoundJtlon ' ' prcp .u111 g
fo r th L' futu 1c uf ht'Jithc.lrl' by supp orting
~.:d u l:l tlo n rod.1v.
The Plc.l,.ln t V•lley H mplt.JI H e,il th Foun d.Hton. :l 11nn-profit cor pO!atJon, cs t.tbhshcd
rhe Ple.ISant Valley Sc ho lars E ndowment
l' und Ill 1988 Wit h do nat io ns from loca l
bu» n esses a nd mJividual s who pledged
nllll e thJn S300,000 dunng a yea r-lo ng
fundrat s1ng c un pa1gn.
Today, the fund ha s g rown d rasti cally in
pnnupal Inte rest from the fund goes towa rd
scholarship' and grant- In - ai d loa ns for stu del1ts lll.lJOnng 111 .1 he althcare- rdated field
.tt ,J W t.·st V1rg mta or O luo m stttutJoh of
h1ghcr lear mn g.
T im ye ar's awards total over $40,000.
T he sc ho lars hip prog ram wa s lllStituted to
develop new :md ex1stmg ht.:alrh ca rc se rvi ces
Ill t h e tn - co unty area . and ass1sr Pleasant ValIcy H ospr tal m Its effort s to m aunam a nd
Improve up o n the qu ahty of h ealthcare &gt;e r\" ! Ccs 111 the co mmumt y. Th e ultimate objec"'" of th e PVH Health Foundation IS to
enco u rage sc holars to return to the communny a n d utili ze then sktlls u1 the local area.
Th e 20 00 sc holars mclude JeSSica Blam,
M.JSon Co un ty, Nursmg (Umversity of Rio
Crand e), Keith e n Bran ch, Mason County,
i' lnrm acy (O h10 Northern Umve rmy) ;
Chm ta llrumficld, Maso n Cl) unty, Phym-a!
Th erapy (We st V u gm1a Un iverSity), Jessica
c.~ l c, M .lSOil Co unty, Li ce nse d Practi ca l
N urse (BH cke ye Hill C.1reer Ce nttr); Mm1
Rle C lupman, Ma so n County. Nu rs mg (St
Muy' s Sc hoo l of N tmmg), Steve n D orsey,
Ma so n County. Med iCi ne (M.mhall Umver~
&lt;~ tv Scl1ool o f M c·d 1nn e); Jenmfer Du ncan ,
M~ so 11 Co unty. NurSin g (M.mhall Umvem ry); Mi c helle Endicott. M .1&lt;n n Co unty, M edICIIle (West V1rg nm Sc hoo l of Osteopathic
Med1c n1e). Amv Jo Ferguson M cD o nal d,
G.lili.I Cou nty, Nur\111[; (Coll ege of We st
V~rginiO );

Uru ce Jackso n, M .1so n C ounty, Nurstn g
(M .us hall UmvcrSit)'), St.J cy Jo nes Adkms ,
IY\a son Cou nt y, N um ng (Marsh all Un1verSI-

2000 FOUNDATION SCHOLARS - The Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation recently
announced 1ts 2000 scholars that included
front row, left to right, Carrie Lockhart, Christa
Brumfield, Staci Lee and Melody McCleese.
Back row, left to right , Amanda Stapleton,
Taleah Sm1th, Mic helle Endicott, Je nnife r Duncan , Jenmfer MUllins, Sarah Sweeney, Wesley
Lieving, Brandon Wolfe, Brent Ro ll1 ns and
Michael R. Lieving, chairman of the Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tal Hea lth Foundation .
ty); Valene Karr, Meigs Co unty, Rad10logy
(Was hin gton State Co mmUiuty Coll ege Man e tta Memon al H ospital), Stao Lee,
Mason County, Nursmg (Ma rshall Un ive rSI ty), Wesley Lrcvmg, Mason Co unty, Medi Cine (West Virginia School of O ste opathi c
Medicme) ; Ca rri e Lo ckhart, Maso n County,
Med1cme (Marsh all Un1vem ty Sc ho o l o f
Medi Cin e); C our t ney Marklnm . Mason
C ounty, M e di cin e (West Virg1111;1 U m vcrstty
Sc hoo l of Mc•dJc in e); Jenn ifer Mull"" · G.! Ilia Co unty, Massa ge Th e rapv (H oc kin g
Techmcal Colle~e), llre nt Le e Roliim ,
Mason Co unty, Phar macy (Oiu o Nor rhem
Umvermy); Ca ndace Sayrl' Miller. M.JSon
Coun ty, H osp ital Adm iniStr.Hi on (Mars hall
Umwmty): Taleah Smith. M aso n Co ullt ).
Phys1cal Th er.1py Asmt.m t (S h.nvnc·e St.I te
Un ivcr&lt;I ty); Aman da Stop let on. c; ,,IILl
Co unty, Nurs1ng (Un lvt• rsHy of R1o
C ra nde). Kim be rly Sturgeon, Ma so n Coun ty, Nursmg (fairmont State Co ll ege). Sarah
Swee ney. Galh.l Co un ty, Numng (M arshall
Univemty) . Amy Ta-bor, Mason Co unty,
Numng (M ars hall Unl\'crSity); Sa ra h Tab o r,
M aso n County, Numn g (Marshall U mverSI -

Dairy sweepstakes results
HEIFER GIVEAWAY
- Audrionna Pul lms
rece1ved a dairy
he1 fer through the
Farmers Bank and
Sav1ngs Ca.'s annual Dairy He rter Giveaway, held in canjuctlDn w1th Fnday's
·-1-.d-"1'''1. Jun ior Fair Dairy
Sweepstakes. Bank
President Paul Reed
ma kes the presentation. Ross Holte r
won an m-club giveaway s pon sored by
the 4-H Club (Brian
J. Reed photo)

RYAN'S VIEW

By not watching the time, there's plenty of it .

-~

BY JO,IIN Rv,IIN

number the hours Ill, th e day Tlwy h,lvc no tium th eir v!lbgt· b~.:yuud O II L' honzon to ,1 v1l- ·
It wa~o; ,I Sllllple ljll CStJO il . v./e ,lskcd our Maa- word for m1nutes or seconds
lagc· hcyond till' oppoSHL' horizon - .1 &lt;.by's
&lt;ai b'IIIde, Jackson. how old he was H" answer,·
'"So what do people do when they 11eed to Journt·y - tu pwc.: url' Ol ll' t:n 'i hcc.:·p fi.lt rhc · ·
It tur11 eJ o ut. wo uld le.1d w. to tno~rnze the meet someon l' ::~t .1 CL'I"tai n wnc?" \H' .t~ ked
lllJ I1 \ wi fe, .1 t ro~ Lhu nn ,JI ~ 1fi · 'r .1 woman who
most radJL.ll and subtk dttf~: rcrH.:t.• bt.:twt.:cn lus Jackson. He was lcadmg us on .t long htkc .tcrnss
ha" jll'it givr,: n birth . l )nee hollH.', th t·y wou!J
culture .md uurs: ttmc.
.
t h e.:.~ plams of thL· M a.t~.11 M.1r.1 ti1un mn t~.o· n tc d
tu rn ,JJ"OllJld and w,!l k h;~r k lu th e dJ'it,lllt vill.i ~ll.·
Tr.JVd the globe .md yo u 'II set• people who camp
to dc!J V-.T ,\lOW ,J\ p. ty iH L'Ill ,llllilc:tlll"JI thr Sl': w~:a r unf;umh.u dothes, pr~K tice un fitm 1har cus" You point to .1 pl.llc' 111 the ' ky and ,,1y
ond shn.:' l\ w lu &lt;. h th l'y had ho rrowcd to kL·c p
toms , spc.tk unfJ.n11h ar words. But because you 'llm eer when th e li tlll I' th ~..Tt'.'' l w ~. u d
t he tJt 'ht.:~.: p lom p.my.
~
G rt•c nw tch Mean Tunl' .md nme zones art· uni If tht· od1er perso 11 Tl ll'it,Ikn prr..'t" l'r..·ly whl"I L'
Wt..· shook m1r heads ar rhl' till h.' tlus 11 1,111 .111 d
versally anep red, no mattn how di ~co tm ectcd you were pomtmg, then wlw '
'on
would \pt.:nU w,J ik mg h.ll"k .md fo rth .l L nJ'I\
we nught le d 10 people 111 li &gt;reign lands, at least
" You walt," ht' s,ud. " 1 he or her pcP•nn eve nthe Jnul.ltt' pl,un~o . Thl'y ~oe e m c d .\S if ti·u11 1
we can agree un what day and hour It IS
tu ally will come."
Bu t the M.tasai , .md many other Africam.
We pressed hn11 . Then.: h:td to be tiH.'.l'illl t.'- ,uJothL·r .l~t·. hl'fl.&gt;rt.' Wl' hq.~an hv lllg b)' th t·
do n't ordt.·r tim l' except m the most gcner,d ments, I.Jbt'ls, subsets Thne h.1d to bt-, .1fier clock, C:Jl h ti l k rl'llll!ldmg us that tmtt.' ~~ l"llll sense They don't recnnl biTth dates, and they thouo;Jnds of yl'al"'i of Maar..a1 cvolutwn. ;1 m1 ltL' ning out. Wt' 'n: .1fftnd ro lmc Jt, w:-~s tc.:.· 1t Tnm:
don 't co unt yt•ars. So Jackson didn 't know how orderly and prt·usc.· strut"tutl' to thc.: tr Jive .... Sn SCL'" IH S ,JJways of th t• l'SSt' lll"l'
o ld he was, t h ou~h he guessed he was 33 or 34
Yet somehow the Maasa1. who pay almmt no
OK, we asked, wh,1t about Lllllrr h :-.c.·rvK~.:."\?
I thought about !10" we mark births no t JUSt llon 't they start .1t .1 -p.Irtlcular til Ill'' i'eople attc.:.'lltlon to t mlt', "iL'L'lll to have an Jbundanl L' uf
1t:
•
by the day but by the hour ami nnnute, as "'" C,\ ll 't Sllllp) y W ,ll t Until C:Vl,.T)'Oilt:' ,IJ rJVl'S .
do deaths We talk about s.w mg time, buymg
" 'rim 's true," jackso11 said .
We w.Jikt·d ,md talked so much with j,ll kson
rin1e, finding tlll H:', makmg ti me, kecpmg time.
So how do you kn ow when to lihow up?
that WL' LhJn 't return ro c.1111 p unti l latt· .lftnWe talk of nme flyi ng by, or runnmg out, or
"When the he lls rmg."
noon So tl1.11 d.1y on the Ma1", we had lum h .It
111archmg o n. We talk of t11n e as tf It's something
Then: an: n 't l'V\:11 11311ll''i tf.1r the d.tys of the 4:311.
- as 1f we behevc It IS all we really have So we wt·e k 111 the Maas.11 rulturc, orlwr th:1n market
MaylR· thl' n ght time for soJJH::t hlJlg 1s ~o1 111 parse it into tiny p1eccs, 111casunng and sortmg, day and churc h day
ply the ti me it happt·ns
spending it care fully so as always to du thmgs at
'"Every day," JJckson explauJed, ""a day."
Ot'a" R}'flll i~ rl rtllllmNi~ t _(t1r til(' Sar~ htlllri~n&gt;
exactly the " nght" time.
As we ralked , we ca lllt' ,lf•.: m-;lii a man wtth h1s C:hronicft'. Send rmmm•ttf.l /tl l1rr 111 (•irr (1/flti\ II CW \The Maasdl keep' no calendars. They don 't teen-age son and two shn·p. They lud walked
fNlper vr Sl'lld hfr c-m.,il llf.Jt'tllll")'mJCf!N~•"l' .om .)

•

ty). ltac hcl Waug h, G.1ll1a C ounty, Nu rsm g
(U m verSitV ofR1o G rande); Melody We aver
M cC le ese, Galh.1 County, Nms1 ng (Marsh all
Umwmty ) aut! Brandon Wolfe . Meigs
Co unty. Pharma cy (Oh10 Northe rn Umvermy)
11
The people of the tri -cou nty co mmumty are indeed fo rtun ate to have qu aht y
healthca re available close to hom e A skilled
workforce of men and women dedicated to
providm g th at ca re is esse nti al to mamtJIIlm g the h1gh leve l of med1ql services we
have co me to rely upon," said Michael Lieving, chairman of th e Pl easa nt Valley H osp ital
H eal t h FoundatiOn
Sm ce makmg Its first awards in 1989, t he
Pl easa nt Valley Hospital Healt h FoundatiOn
has p rov ided 102 stude nts from Mason, Calha and M e1gs counties With finanCial asmtauce toward th eir educatwn in healthcare
rel ated fi eld s of study Among those students,
th e Fo undati o n has awarded about $282,000
m sc h ularslups and grant- m -aid loans, reprcse ntm g the mterest ctarned o n the pnnc1pal
111 the Sc hola rs Endow ment Fund .
E h g 1brlity requ&gt;re ments mclude resid e ncy 111 M ason Co unty, Calha Coun ty o r
M e1gs Cou nty; a diploma from an ac cre dIted h1 g h sc hool or p ossemon o f a G ED ;
g rades and tt•st scores suffici e ntly hi g h for
.uJmJ s~ HJII to ,1 11 ac c redited college (factors
suc h ,JS GPA, rank 111 h1gh sc hool class and
scorl· ~ on co ll l.'gc ~ ntrance tes ts Will be
co im de red 111 th e appli ca ti o n proc ess);
an.· cpt.lnL t.' fo 1 .1 dmJ Ss 1o n at an acc rc dtred
In st ltut ton of l11g hc: r t.·ducatton tn c-tthcr
West V!rgJnl:t or Oh ao. decla ratiOn o f a
m aJor f1dd u f st ud y In a healthcare fidel
(mu st sho" p1 nof o f .l Ccep t a n ce 111to a
qu .lil fic-d prog:r.1 111 nf studv) ,\11d m ust bt.·
c ua rentlv L' llrolk·d 111 a qu:thfi ed pro gr:tm
of st u d ). No p t l'plo g Ltlll !lt Udt.'nts .tH-' l.:h g tble fo r fumhng.
For tnfo rmatl on o r an a.p plt ca.t ion. co nt.JCt, G eo rgiann.l S Tiih s. Federal &amp;- St.ltt'
l'rog r.um . Plca ,,I nt V.Iile y H ospita l. 303675- 43 40. Ex t. 723 4, 01 Wilt &lt; Pl eas.uHVallcy Health Foundation. Inc. , 2520 Vall ey
Driw, Point Pl eHa nt . WVa 25S 50.

SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS- W1nners of Friday' s Dairy Sweepstakes
we re, front, Ray mond Colwell, Chn srophe r Colwell a nd Stephen Yos t,
and bac k, Ross Holter. Ka ra Osborne, Rachel Elliott, Adam Wo lfe , Carson Yost 4-H Adv1sors Ed Holte r a nd Mike Patker make th e presentati ons to the dairy cl ub membe rs, who were JU dged on barn and a ni mal cleanl&gt;ness. project work, and an 1nterv1ew (Bnan J Reed photo)

Pet show winners
\\ '1111 )CI" lll till•!\

(', I ut

~x.·t ~hr"\

k1~ ( ' tl\111-

\\\"It' l'l\
, Lh". k·ri t{' nd 11. Fr.u\Ll.., "'II nth
u!l.! ( .lllln ho.-.;t LLtw\ l ~x·t
h1Ltt\

·\llll"-'1 Hlttlo.:.'&gt;tnll Ulll -, , ~"!\·

h.."J

dt~

",.umtd ,\ \d _JI ht.-.;t

II ·d:!Jt.(X-.;t

h\11 ,U!d llll1'&lt;t llii\NI -

. ~ jX't llll' " 11ll ll'l'- ,Ut' pit UIH,'\.\

L1n:lL' hh"' Ml'~"' CPt Ul~
-\~ 1k1p1 I Mf\ ·clkul!! d~c· ""
tl\tdl pt.'1 ,1\,:ud \\a' A111brr
1\L,ck-:on "1d1 h~..·r {,_X~·· ]~· ­
n~ ,lll\' rvt I-'-··'l h ph{)(()'.)
\ \lcl l

r------.,.........-----.-===:":"":J

be. -- Sadde r and WISer m Washmb'ton
State
Dear Washington: I can tell you, as a
close observer of troubled hvcs for many
yea rs, that the maJOr re .. so ns fo r d1vo rce
are money, sex and otht'" r fam il y mem bers Yo ur hu sbal1d needs to understand
that he sho uld put you first 10 hiS life. If
he sti ll has n't lea rned that lesson, I
strongly reco mme nd JOint counseling.
Is hfe passmg you by' Wan t to improve
your sooal skill s' Wnte for An n Landers'
new booklet, " H ow to Make Fnends and
Stop Be m g Lon el y" . Se nd a selfaddressed, long. bu sm ess-stzt' L.' nvdope
and :1 check or monl')' order fo r $4.25
(th ts mdudt.•s · po:!&gt;tagt.' ~ .uHl h andling) to ·
Fncnds, c I o A 1111 L.mders, P.0. Box
11:;r,2, C hi c.1go. Ill. f,IIC.II -II:;c,2 (In
Ca na.cb, st.." nd S) 15. ) 1&lt;) fi nd out more
.1bout Ann l _.llldt.."rs ,md ll',\J ht.·r p.1s t
colulllm, VISit th l· C ae:ttor-. Syndt c.lt t:
"l'b p:1gl· .1t \\ \\"WtrL'.ttors.J..o! Jl

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

TUESDAY, August 22
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Schools open Tu esday
Open house sc heduled for
M o nday, 5.30 to 7 p.m. for tom ,
of th e sc hool.
RAC I NE
Southern
Junior H1gh Boosters, Tuesday,
6· 30 p m . at the school Parents
of 7th and 8th graders urged to
attend.
RACINE Racin e Area
Commumty Orgamzatmn , 6:30
p.m Tuesday at Star Mill Park
Potlu ck
ATHENS - So uthern Co nso rtium for C hildren, I 0 a.m .
Tuesday at the offi ces located at
R044 Diary Lane , Athens

•••

WEDNESDAY, August 23
GALLIPOLIS - Commum ty Diabetic faiT sp onsored by
Mt•&lt;h Home Health Agen cy In c
to be held Wcdn e&gt; day. at tht·
Nazarene C hurch of Ga llipoli s,
0 .t m to j p m H l'a lthca re professiO nals sc heduled to speak on
va n om dt.lbt·nc to pics. edu c.tnon ,ll llt e rJ turc ,n·.ul.tble.

to ha \'l' Lln·otton s; Progra m on

antiqu es by Sabr.1 Ash. M embe rs
to take antiques for diSp lay. MISswtury tcpot ton the G ntons.

•••

FRIDAY, August 25

TUESDAY. AUGUST 29
Delivery Will Be:

Pomeroy - R&amp;G Feed &amp; SUPPlY
12:15- 1:15 P.m. Phone 740-992·2164
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30
Bidwell - Brown's TrustworthY Hardware

•••

SATURDAY, August 26
PO MEROY - R t· um on of
descendants of Jod and Lydia ·
StancJrt, SaturdJy. noon , Route
33 roadSide park, north . Tho&gt;e
:lttc:n d mg me to uk:c n cov~:red
diSh alon g with pi ctures and hiSw ry fo r d1&gt;play

•••

SUNDAY, August 27
RUTLAND
R utland
Flt t•n dly
C~.l!d e n t.:n.
-l-Oth
,1nnn·c rsary open
lll t:'\.'t lll g.
Wed11 esd.ly, 7·311 p m .It the
Rutbnd VIllage fireh ouse Speu.ll prese ntati ons, programs, and
door pnzes . Rl'fn:shments wtll
bl· se rved Past and prese nt

membe rs and friends mvttcd
PO MEROY O ut doo r
dr.una, " Noah and the Ark ",
mghtly through Saturday at 1hc
H il lSide
Ba ptiSt
Ch urch
amphi theater loca ted off R oute
7 on Route 1-+3 n ear Pomt'roy.
t•very mght at 7.30 p.m. Spo nso red by the church .1nd the
Po\ver 111 th e Blood num stry N o
clurge Co ncl.'sSJ Oil st:111d 111
o pcr.lt Jo n Take lawn ch.urs
·More 1nfor nuu o n Cl ll Dr James
Acree. 992-6768

•••

THURSDAY, August 24
POME ROY - Me' b" County C hu rc ht'' of Chmt W0men's.
Fellowsh ip , T hurschy. 7 p m
Zion C hu rc h ofChnst Ruti.lnd

LETART W VA - Annu.1l
Wea\'t·r rcu1uo n. Sunday, 1 p m .
,\t the home o f M:1rc us .md D o r.1
Wt:.lVt'l,

Lt' tart, ~./. V ;L T .lkl:' cov-

ered dJSh and ch.ur.

•••

MONDAY, August 28
MIDDLEPORT OhK.m
Co in Club, Monday, 7 p m . at
Tro lley Ho use 111 Mid&lt;)kport,
behm d Dairy Queen To feature
diSplay o t pJper mo ney. Au cti o n .
and reftt•sh mc-nts.
The Community
Calendar is published as a
free 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 permits and
cannot be guaranteed to
be printed a specific
number of days.

'
The Middleport Clinic

D

788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760'

APPolmments:
040) 992-4228

2:00 . 3:00P.m. Phone 740-446-8828 ·

GalliPolis • QualitY farm &amp; fleet

..

POMEROY - Fnday, 6 p.m .
at General Hartmgc r Park. M1d~
dleport, the Ladies for the Lord
will host eve nt fo r children. Free
sc hool supplies will be given :
followmg a service and sin gmg .
Parents n1ust accompany thetr
children. Hot dogs and bevera~es will be served. All actiVIlles
. Will be completed before th e
sc hool supphes are given out .
For more mforman on contact·
Betty J ohnson 441 - 1415 or Jan
Sw1gge r, 9920-6667 .

ukesh
FISH FOR P.OND STOCKING

.

Accepting New Patients - Walk-Ins Welcome

4:00-5:00 P.m. Phone 740·441-1221

•

�_,

~

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Airport dosed after luggage found

Zoo celebrates panda's birthday
SAN DIEGO (AP) -They hned up e.&gt;rly and stayed late. Hua
111 fore" . to _(..s;kb.r.l.tt'_ the history:::.making bJby gra nt panda's first birthday.
,
Hund"'ds of zoo-goer; lined up before the park's 7:30 a.m . openmg Monday, hopu&gt;g to be among the first to wish the 60-pound bundle of bbck-and- wh1tc joy a happy birthday.
"Wt·'v,;: b~en watching her on the lmernet , Jnd we'\'&lt;.' VtSHL.'d so
many mnes, she tcds a httle like• .1 p.trt of the bnuly no\\'." smi Jim
Hdniak, who showed' up w rth Ius wrfc. Sue, and their 10- war-old
daughter, Kelley.
As th~ first surviving Ailuropocb mt:Luwkuca burn 111 thl:.' Unucd
States. H u.1 Ml'i Ius attracted tht..· attention of .1dnun.-rs .md snt.'ntlsts
.1like.
June B:rker. 7?, and her 3?-year-old daughter Joanna . .&gt;mvcd :rt the
zoo at ~ a. m ., and quickly made their way to the panda enclosurt'.
"Wr 'vl:.' !ieeri the panda before, but we wanted to comt.' today .tnd
cxpenence all the festivines," Joa nna Baker said. " l wish she knew JUSt
how much everyone wants to celebrate her birthday."
Early in the mornmg, keepers presented Hua Mei with a special
cake made of bamboo tiu zen 1n ice and a group of chlldren from
Mexico sang a Spanish birthday so ng.
"She interacted with her birthday cake." said Kathy Hawk , the zoo's
senior giant panda keeper, "even throwmg it o n the ground a few
times. just like a typical chtld."

Mei-nucs wt:n: out

MP3.com reaches settlement
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The onlme music storage company
MP3 .com reached a settlement with Sony Music Entertainment, the
fourth such settlement wrth plainuffs in a ,.lawsuit claiming its business
violates copyright law.
Under terms announced late M onday, San Diego-based MP3 .com
will pay an undisclosed amount to Sony for past violations and enter
into a non-exclusive North American lice nsQ for use of Sony's song.;
in the company's MyMP3 .com listening service.
MP3.com previously reached settlements wrth Warner Music
Group, BMG and EMI. It is still negotiating with Universal Music
Group.
The settlement comes one week before both Stdes m the lawsuit are
due back in court. A federal judge has ruled that a trial IS still necessary to decide whether MP3.com wrllfu lly mfringed on copyrights of
major record companies by lettrug people sto re copied son[;' on its
computers. The case is set to resume Aug. 2R.
"This settlement affirms and upholds the nght of copyright owners
to be paid for the use of their works on the Internet," AI Smith, senior
vice pr~side nt .1t Sony Mu sic Emenammt..'nt, sa id in ;l release.
Earher thi s year. MP3 .com sa1d it has rese rved S I j(imilli on to pav
for !~:gal SL'ttll'mcnts with mus1 c companies .md music pubhshns

Fans pony up extra bucks
PORTLAND. M .&gt; inc (AI') - Steplwn King. who rcle.~&lt;,·d tlw secnnJ mst.lllmcnt of his online SI..TLtl nm·d 011 i\1o nd.ty. 1s com td ~..· rm g
nuking fmurt..• inst;t llmt..•ms longl'i" - .md IliOn.' t..'Xpt..' llSIVt'.
He .tlso is thinking .tbout o ffcnng .1 bonus w futhful n:.1dcrs: gtnng
.1\\",1\" ch~..· fin.tl tnst.tllmt..·m . Tilt..• ftr'lt n\·o 111\t,Jllmt..·nts h.t\ "L' L't..'t..'ll ltl.llk

.t\·.ui.1blc fo r .1 S I \·olum.try t.: ontnbutJon .
Although 7(~ pt..'fl"t..'nt of n: .ldc..~ r~ who dm' n h ud~..·d tl~t..' J I1St.tllm~..·nt'
h,,, ..... p.nd ti.Jr tht.'lll- !!lightly mnn.· tlun tht. · .mwunt l&lt;mg .;,nL_f ,,.,}uld
be lll'l,.' ckJ t~) lO iltltUh..' th~-.· s~..· rJ c ' - h~..· \\nrr: i~..·, th.u mrcrc'r 111 ·· rlw
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H~..· lll;t"y: llt.lkl.' ~ome of th ~. · J11ko\t,tllmc llt~ .1" long ,J, J:l,()OO wo rd.., .111d
r hJI'ge S2 . ~0 t..'.H.· h. D ~..·F11ippo , ,ud ThL' ti rM 11\ '1 1 dhncnr \\",1\ 5.000
words

•

'

.

'.

' Tuesda~August22,2000

It filed a lawsuit in U.S . IJi strict Co urt in
the resources of Ford Motor Company · are
Washington,
D. C.
directed to resolve thiS situation," Ford CEO ·
A Ford spokesman said M o nday that the
Jac Nasser said in a TV ad that ran during
range of the recall was sufficient and the cotnABC's " Monday Night Football."
Bndgesrone / Firestone has recalled some panies were " m ovin g heaven and earth'' to
6.5 nullron P235/7SRIS ATX and ATX II replace tires.
Martin Ingli s, vice president for Ford
tires as well as · I 5-inch WilderneS! AT tires
made at a plant in Decatur, Ill. The National North America, said the plaut slumlown
Highway Traffic Safety Administration is would cut about 25,000 vchrcles from Ford's
15,000 Range" and I 0,000
mvestigating 62 deaths and more than I 00 production Explorers/ Moun tarneers .
rnjuries that co uld be linked to those tires .
The Center for Auto Safety, which successNot all of those whiclcs would have used
15-i
nch tires the size currently und er
fu lly pushed for recalls of the ForQ Pinto and
14.5 milhon Firestone 500 tires in the I ?70s, scrutiny- but Inglis said the re was no way to
schedule production w it hout them .Th,· 6,000
contends 12 million m o re Firestone tires all ATX, ATX II and Wilderness ATs still on workns at the shu tdown phnts Wlli stil l get
the ro;rd- should be recalled.
paid.

DETROIT (AP) - Ford says it will shut
HOUSTON (AP) - Dow Chemical Co. plans to fire about 40
down truck plants in three states so it can canemployees for allegedly vrolatmg the company's e-mail policy by cirnibalize 70,000 tires mtcndcd for new vehi culating violent or sexually explictt matenal.
cles and usc them as replacements for the
Dow say. the firing:; follow a rei/lew of 6,000 e-mat! accounts conFirestone m odels bemg recalled .
ducted after a worker complained about offenSive e-mail. A similar
The unprece dented move by the nation's
review this year at Dow 's headquartm in Midland, M !Ch., led to 50
No.2 automaker catne even as a safer,.' advofiring:;.
cacy group filed a lawsuir to force BridgeOther employees at the plant in Freeport, south of H ouston, face
ston e/Firestone In c. and Ford Motor Co. to
suspenstons or reprimands, Dow spokeswoman Kanina Blanchard told
widen the recall .
the l;louston C hronicle in Tuesday's editions.
Plants in St. Paul, Minn .; Edison, NJ; and
A uruon official termed the firing:; a "witch hunt."
Hazelwood , Mo., will close from Aug. 2H to
"One perso n was harassed, so they downloaded everybody's e-mail,"
Sept. 8 so that the tires used on Ford Explorsaid Charlie Smgletary, business manager for International Union of
.
er/ Mercury Mountauu:er sport uuh ty ve hi Operating Engineers Local 564. "I think they wamed to make this
cles and Ford Ranger pKkups ca n be sen t to
worse than it is. I think they wanted to terminate people."
He said most of the material was off-color jokes. nude ptcturcs and , Ford and Li ncol n / Mercury dealers.
"Yo u have my person.&gt;I gu arantee that all of
photos of car wrecks. Some of the employees were unaw.ue of Dow's
policies, while others didn't take them scnously, he .1dded.

LAKE CITY, S.C. (AP)- Investigators trying to determine why an
Amtr.lk train derailed on its way to Florida have focused their initial
attention on a str~et sweeper.
Nine cars of the Silver Meteor, tr.lveling from N ew York to Jacksonville, Fla., derailed early Monday, sending more than 40 people to
hospitals.
Highway Patrol 1st Sgt. Jo Nell said about I 5 nunutes before the
train passed, a street sweeper from Southco Sweepmg &amp; Maintenance
had jumped a curb and hit the mcks, damaging the rails.
"We do know there was a sweeper operating," said Jay Kivowrtz,
investigator in charge for the National Transpottation Safety Board.
"We cannot say at this time that was the cause of this accident."
Two sleeping cars, four coach cars, a dining car, a lounge and a crew
dorm jumped the tracks, Amtrak said. A wheel of the engine also left
the rails. Two other cars did not derail .
.
Most of the injuries were "little bumps and bruises," Nell satd.
There were 218 passenger&gt; and 15 crew members on board, Amtrak
said. At least 46 were taken to hospitals for treatment. All those treated
had been released by Monday night, hospital spokeswomen saidc

.

Ford halting production at three plants/

Dow to fire about 40 employees

Investigators probe derailment

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

WEST TISBURY, Mass . (AI') - A suspicio us piece ofluggagc th.n
prompted officials to evacuate and close M arth.1's Vrneyard Atrpun
cont.unl..'d an imitation bon1b, a state .pohn· spokcsJJMn s;ud
'' It was mock cxplosi\\.'S that lookc..~d ve ry n:al." st.ltc.· poht·t· SY:,rt. T 1111
White &lt;aid Tu~sday.
Whitt..' said thl" mock bo 1nb \vas tht..· typ~ usl"J by Jtrport st..·curity
for trainiqg ;md testing. An invt..'stigation w.ts unda way tn try and
dt:tcrmlnt: why 1t turned up in rhc rerminll Monday nighr.
A st.&gt;te pohce bomb squad was called to the sc ene shortly after the
luggage was discovered in the terminal area about 6 p.m .. Wlute satd.
Officers took an imtial X-ray, then waited for mort: soplustlcated
equipment to arrive from the mainland.
The airport was closed, then reopened about 2 a.m.
Emergency personnel from across the island were on standby at the
a1rport, where only the co nu11Uni c~ tion s center remained staffed The
ct:nter handles emergency communications for the entire island.

'

More improvements
in welfare needed
WASI-JINGTON (A I') - The
nan on\ welfare systt..•m w.ls dr:lmattcally improved by th e congressional ovcrha ul four yt..'&lt;l rs ago.

bu t po or pt·opJc entering th t. ·
work fo rce need hdp with dnld
care, transportation .1nd traini ng,
say top corporate CEOs.
In a report released Tuesd:1y on
the fourth an mversary of the wdfare changes being signed mtn
law by President Clinton , the
bus111ess exec urtves say tlut fo rmer welfare recipients have made
"good. producttve employees."
Job retention rates for those
workers meet and often exceed
those for employees who haven't
been on welfare, accordmg to the
report.
But the CEOs say that government programs are still needed to
help welfare recipients get jobs,
citing child care and transportation as the " biggest obstacles 10
work.''
"Lawmakers should sustam o r,
ideally, increase resou rces for a
range of programs that help for-

Record lows
hit parts of
Nortneasf

tne

mer wdf.1re re cipients stay on the
job," rhe n•pon says. " Partnership
comp;uw.:.'S ca ll for mcrease d
empham on chtld care .md transport.tri on ai d, as they are consistentl y the two brggest challenges
f.K ing new workers."
The report recommends Congress in crease tax credits and
ch ild-care g rants to cover tnore
working parents and also subsidize transportation and housing
costs so welfare recipients can get
ro ' work n1ore eas1ly or Inove
closer to their jobs.
The 1996 welfare law encouraged reciptents to enter the work
force by placing a time limit on
benefits, allowing more recrpients
to work while strll receiving benefits and offering incentives to
employers to hrre welfare recipients.
The corporate executives who
signed the report mclude CEOs
of United Airlines, Sprint, Cttig roup, Tune Warner, Bank of
America, Burger King, Monsanto,
United Parc el Service and IBM.

nukin g 'now

111

Au g u ~t.

lt "s

llt' .trl y l"O[d t..' ll OLJgh .
"" It\ hL't..'ll 111 thL' low -lOs .tn d
Llppn Jl I;, Oil thL• lllOliiH.IIIl.""
s.ud Atm Ph .1lon . .1 'pokL''-

111

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lor K tll111 ~ton

Llln F.trm cr. ~..· o-O\\" llL'I' of
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t. ln ltl.l. N .Y. ,.tiJ rhl' rthll
\\ ,;,ldl\.'1" i' h·L'plllg \ 01"11 ,lJld
other , .L·~~~ r.1blc s frnm npc111n g
··corn nct..· d~ hot. mu ggy
nighr&lt;' ,It~..· , .nd . ·· Pcopk gro\\ 1ng tom .lto~..· . . Ill rhc g.lrdt..· n~ .ut..·
h .n·111~ truubl~.· . l:\Tryotll' 1\
_Jo,nbn g up on g reen tom.Hot..''"

PHOENIX (AP) - Se11.John
M cCam was rt'sting .lt lwmL'
after cancer surgery with son11.:
good llL'WS .
Th,·
melanottta
from hJs temple .md upper
arm
didn 't
spread,
his
doctors said
Pathologists completed
th e
final review of the tissues around
the cancers Monday and found
no sign the skm cancer had
spread, satd Todd Harris. a
McCain spokesman.
If the cancer ha~ reached Ol)e
or more of the lymph nodes,
treatment would have been
more complicated and less likely
to cure the cancer, experts had
said.
McCain, 63, was released
from the Mayo Clinic Hospital
and was resting comfortably at
his Phoenix home, a statement
released by his Senate office s:ud .
Doctors found the m elanoma
after M cCam left the Repubhcan National Convention to

h.1\·l:

bHllJ~IL''o

Bc.:tht..· ~d.l

N ..1\·.d

W.1 ~h 111 g ron n11

~1 L' Ifllrlll t'd

.lt

H mpit.l l !li:.'Jr

Aug. -L
Th t. · fonncr (;( 1P pn:..,idcnti.tl
(,UH.i Jd,Hc Ulldt..T\\t..'llt IH t H I.' than
fin:' hours of ~u rg~.·ry on S.1turd.1y
to rcilWVL' the mel.mnm.t. 1-k
also l1.1d ;1 md.mmtu l"l' lllO\ "C d
from his shoulder m 199.\
Mcbnonu is usu:1lly cmst..·d
by expo sure to the sun . People
wit h flir skin h.wt· :1 h1ghe r risk
of sk1n c.HlCL'r. McC.Hn spent
hours in rhe l1.1rsh Art z OI"&amp;l sun
cam p:ugm ng for Congress m
1982 anJ subsc·que11t year&gt;.
Mc Ca m's fn e nds ha\'c sard lw
IS religious abou t wt:aring SPF
45 su nblock when outdoors and
about seei ng his doctor th ree or
four tin1es a year to check for
new le sions.
M cCain ca n celed about a
dozen ca mpaign events w ith
GOP congress10nal ca ndidates
since learning o f the skin cancer
diagnosis. Spokeswoman N ancy
lws said M cC am h ope&gt; to
retu rn to ca mpargmn g by Labor
Day.
Repubhcan preSidential n o minee George W. Bush satd he was
"grateful for the good news."

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6
NFL Camp Notebook, Page B6

Page Bl
'IUesd.y, Aupst ll, 1000

TuEsDAY'S

HIGHiJGHTS
Banks paces
Meigs linksmen
PARKERBSURG, WVa.
Me1gs freshman Jeremy Banks led
the scoring fur the Meig.; golf
tea m in the recent Parkersburg
Country Club Invitational.
Danks ' round of eightover par,
80 placed lmn in 25th place in
the 140 player field .
Cabell Midland won the 28
team tournament with a team
score of 3 11. T he Meig.; team
score was 348.
In additio n to Banks' 80, Carson Midkiff shot an 86, Ni ck
Dettwiller an 8Y, Thad l:lutilgardner an 9.1 and Andy Davis an I OS.

Dolphins upend punchless Packers, 17-14
MIAMI (AP) - With one preseason
game remamin g, Mike Sherman is now
co ncerned.
Green Day 's offense struggl ed to move
the ball. The defe nse gave up big plays all
game. And special teams collapsed in the
waning seconds, allowing the Miami Dolphins to come away with a 17 - 14 exhibition win Monday night .
"Anytime we lose a football game, it
concerns me," Sherman said. ''I'm not
worried, but l' m concerned. l' m concerned we didn 't move the football, and
we didn't play exceptionally well ."
There was some good news, though .
The Packers did not add anyone to their
already-long injury li st, and quarterback

Brett Favre's return is imminent.
Favre sat out Monday's gmre with lingering tendinitis in his throwing arm but
expected to practic e Wednesday.
Wtthout Favre - as well as running
ba cks Dorsey Levens (knee) and Ahman
Green (knee) - th e Packers (I -2) struggled to m ove th e ball fo r nnicll Of the
night .
Matt Hasselbeck, subbing for Favre, was
5-of- I 2 for 72 ya rds against Miami's firstteam defense. H erbert Goodman gained
91 yards on 13 carnes - _all in the second
half.
"1 feel sorry for the fans who had to
watch that," receive.r Antonio Freeman
said. "Take away two plays offensively and

we did nothing .... You can call it preseaso n, you can call it whatever you want.
But for a team that 's talking about winning the NFC Central , we lack a lot of
excitement."
Despite giving up 352 yards, fumbling
three times and throwing an interception,
Green Bay still had a chance to win .
Danny Wuerffel led th e Packers to two
fourth-quarter touchdowns- scoring on
an option play to Herbert Goodman and
a long pass to Donald Driver. Green Bay
led I 4- I 0 before Dolphins rookie Ben
Kelly returned a pun.t 73 yards with less
than a minute to play, setting up a 2-yard
scoring pass from Mike Qumn to Deon
Dyer.

}l

NBA: Huge deal
goes south
NEW YORK (AP) - Patri ck.
Ewing and Glen H..ice were
involved in a mammoth fourteam trade discussed by th e
Knicks, Lakers , SuperSonics and
Pistons that appears to have collapsed.
The dea l: wluch would have
been the largest in NBA history,
would have se nt Ewing to Seattle,
Ri ce and Vin Baker to the
Kn icks, and Christian Laettner
and C hris Dudley to the Lakers.
The Piston&lt; would have gotten
several lesser cahber players, draft
picks and cash .
Although
ESPN.com had
reported M onday that th e deal
had been agreed to, by lat e Mon day night it looked dead . The
N ew York T nnes and C BS.Sportslin e both said th e Pistons had
.pulled out.

banned from Olympics

m ilts of coastline

stretching from

Mobil~

to

Gulf Shoru an~ Orange Btach
includt sugirv • whlt~ buchu
C~ogr•phlc

ai some of th.e world's most

beautiful

shorelln~ .

@alL

1.800.745.7263
www . gulfshor~s . com

LONDON (AI') Linford
C hristie, th e 1992 Olympic •100meter champi o n, m ay have run
out of options to go to the Sydney Olympics as a coac h.
,
The IAAF offi ciall y branded
th e Barcelona Olympics sprint
champion a drug cheater and
banne J h1111 fo r two year s.
C hristie. now R'tired, tested poSItive -for the banned steroid nandrulone while running for fun I 8
months ago.
He lm dem ed knowmgly tak ing any bann ed substances and
was cleared by UK Athletics, but
the IAAF arb1tration panel said
the federat1on was wrong to t1 nd
him not gu ilty.
Now 40, Ch rist ie no longer
competes, but tht· b ,Jn cou ld
hamper hi s n~:.·w rol e as a coach in
Sydney. Th e Briti sh Olympic
Association likely w1 ll stick to its
harJ !me on drug cheaters J ud
n.·fus~: him a cn:denti .ll t{Jr rh t·
g311IC~.

Hot action at Little

League World Series
WILLlAMSI'OitT, Pa. (AI')Jay l'onCJano pitc hed a two-h itter
ami DLJStin C:orl hit a two-run
homer :IS V111couve r beat Uella tre,
Texas, 5-11 rn the Ltttle Leag;u e
World Ser it·s.
Earlier in th e day, Julian Van dervelde\ two - run homer keyed
Davt'nport to &lt;~ 5-0 victory over
wi11less Got1Stow n.
•
ltuben M avarez pitc hed a twohittt•r as Maraca 1bo, Venezuela,
eve ned its record at 1- 1 with a .10 will ove r Dhahran. Saudi Arclbia.
And Tokyo improved to 2-0 and all but mathematical ly
cl m chnl a &lt;pot in th e pool final
- by h.mging on tOr a Y-H vJctory over Toront&lt; J.

Fall Sports Preview
out lhursday
MEICS COU NTY - Wa tc h
fo r the IJatly Se ntm t·l's 2111!0 Fall
Sports !'review. wh ich will be
md&lt;ided in the Thursday edrtion!

•

The Packers questioned the rulm~.
arguing that Kelly had stepped out of
bounds near midfield. But officials did not
overturn the call.
"We thought he stepped on the lin e,"
Sherman sai d. " I had one of the officials
tell me that he thought he stepped on the
line and that he thought it would be
reversed."
Eugene M cCaslin knocked Kelly out at
the 2, and Quinn found Dyer in the end
zone on the following play with 25 seconds left.
The Dolphins (2-1) - with as many
questions on offense as the Packers have

PluMseeMNF,PqeB6

Big night
for Redlegs

British track coach

hal ltd by N.trion.tl

BOSTON (AP) - Summ er "
g1ving people th e· col d shouldn
111 the Northeast.
Record or ncAr-record low
rcmp cr:l[ures h .t\'l' bl·cn rt..·ported
tn c iti es .1 cross t h t. • regio n ,
spurri ng some people co di g
into their fall wardrobe~ early
and turn the heat on.
Bruce Avery was surprised to
get nearly a dozen ca ll s from
cus tomers Monday ask ing to
have heattn g system s install ed.
H e got only one ca ll about atr
co nditiomn g.
"Typi ca lly, people don't start
thinkin g abo ut that until they
h ave to, tn September," said
Avery, president of Avery Serv ices Inc. 111 Westbrook, Mame .
"( don't doubt that it was so
cl11lly this mor ning that it got
people th inkin g a month early
about win ter."
The m e rcu ry dropp ed to 43
111 Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on M onday
morning, tying a record low for
the dat~ set in 1908 . At Bradley
lnterllational Airport near H artford, Conn., the temperature ha
45, matchmg a reco rd low set in
1984. Elnma , N.Y. , hit a
Ha tewide low of 37 degrees
t•a rl y Monday. And low temperatures across northern New
England hovered m 40s over the
weekend.
In Vermont. th e early-mornlll g dull had e mpl oyees at
Kill111 gto n Resort JOking aboul

McCain declared cancer-free

Inside:

GOOD JOB, BARRYI- Barry Larkin of Cincinnati salutes the fans after recording his 2,000th hit Monday
at Cinergy Field against Philadelphia. Larkin 's milestone hit was a double . (AP)

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

CINCINNATI (AI') - For have at least 2,000 hits, I 70
the third time in less than a homers and 350 stolen bases.
month, Barry Larkin stood He's the fourth player with
alone and waved to a crowd 2,000 hits for Cincinnati, joinchanting his name.
ing Pete Rose (3,358) , Dave
The Cincinnati R eds got Concepcion (~ .326) and Johnny
extended ovations m late July Bench (2,048) .
when he blocked a tra!ie to the
"That's a lot of hits," Philhes
Mets and again when he agreed manager Terry Francona said.
to a three-year contract exten- " What's so funny though is they
ston.
didn't know who was going to
Ovation No. 3 acknowledged be better, him or Kurt Stillwell.
a milestone. Larkin doubled for It 's amazing how thin[;' work
hi s 2,000th career hit Monday out."
night during a 7- 4 vrctory over
The Reds traded Stillwell and
the Philadelphia Phillies and stuck wrth Larkin in th e I 980s,
stood at second base as the one of their better moves.
crowd chanted his name.
" He's been with the dub a
"The fans have been great this long tim e and he's had a lot oi
year as far as support," Larkin hits," manager Jack McKeon
said, "On different occasions said. ''I'd have to play 40 or 50
here they've been very loud and years to get 2,000 hits."
very emotional, and this is
The only one who didn 't
another night of the same rea lize the significan ce of
thing."
. ·
. Larkin's hit was Wolf, who had
Not exactly. This tilne, he got other thing.; on his mind as
upstaged .
Larkin stood at second base and
Larkin 's hit off Randy Wolf waved.
(9-7) was a prelud e to Dmitri
"I had no idea," he said . "For
Young's first career grand slam, a while, I was wondering why
an upper-deck homer that put they were cheering for so long."
the Reds up 7-1 and gave th e
He went from puzzled to
21,558 fans something else 10 frustrated after he hit Ken Grifcelebrate long and loud.
fey Jr. in the arm with a pitch
"Unfortunately, I had to and walked Dante B1chette to
upstage the captain and his load the bases. Young then hit a
2,000 hits, and he to ld me about first-pitch slider into the fir.&lt;t
it in the dugout ," said Young, row of the red seats, the 34th
who hadn't hit a grand slam upper-deck homer in the stadium 's 30-year history.
smce high school.
h was a night of franchise
The only other red-seat slam
moments for the Reds, who by a Reds player was the first
won for only th e second time in ever hit into th e upper deck seven games and remained 7 by Tony Perez on Aug. 1 I, I 970.
1/2 behmd St. Louis in the NL
Young also had a single and a
Central.
Jouble in a free-swmging perFirst cam e Larkm, who's the
Ple1se see Reels, Pip 86
first major leagu e shortstop to

WNBA

Warrick -impressive in debut Liberty to meet
C IN C INNATI
(AP)
Receiwr 1\·ter W.1rrick lined up
to the feft. sw un~ ,\t\mnd, took
a hand o ff ti·o m Akili Smith and
wa~ 0 11 his way to hi s fir st
to uchdown w1th the C in cinnati
Uc11gal s.
He made ;1 111fty movt· to
avoid C hi c.t~o s.1fety Tony Parrish, twisting ou t of a tac kle,
then wcn1 mto th e end zo n e
sta ndin g up for a 14-yard
touchdown rtlll Sa turday ni ght.
It was th e lkngals' first sco re
in the ir 24-20 prese ason win
ov~:.·r th e Be ars Jll th e i naugural
gam e at P.ml Brown St.1dium .
It also was a hint of th e new
dimension he cou ld bring to
their oflense.
The play makl'f from Florida
Statt· c.m bl' ju st .1s dangerous 111
the NFL.
" H e's gifteJ.'' co,ICh Bruce
Cos kt sai d . " The sky's th e lirmt
tOr him ."
The first -rouml drali pick had
IllS best ga me yet. lcadm g the
Uen gals w1th a · gaml'-iHgh six
catches for s:; yards in add itio n
to the tou chdown run .
Warri c k\ most tm prcssJVt'

catc h was a 2.'l-yarder fi·om Aklli
Sm ith that started the Ucngals '
seconJ sco rin g Jnv~ - Slllith
found an opening b etWCl.'ll two
defend ers and ca me dov.rn with
the ball along th e sidel ine.
" You've go t w get that dt!dl'
the ba ll. wheth er it's on a slant
or a reverse or whatever," Sm nh
sa id.
That's exactly svlut Coslet
in te nd s to do. Last seaso n, th e
llcnga]s ran only rwo receiver
reverses - Craig Yeasr carried
t wice and lost I 6 yards.
T hey'll give Warrick a lot
more chanles, making him th e
featurt·d re ce ive r with Darn ay
Scott sici cl nwd by a broken kg.
Worrirk doesn't shy from th e
pressu re. He was the first Uen ~als player on th e field for
prega me introductions in th e
new stadium .
H e also came up with th e
m os t novel to uchd own celebration leap ing towards th e
stands. where fans helped pull
him up.
"They help ed m e om a little
bit," Warrick said .
W.rrick had planned the leap

- a copy of what the Pa ckers
do at Lambeau Fr eid . but
t' I I vi~Iuned it co miug ,1fter a
touchdown ca tc h. As soon as
the reverse started to dcvdop,
he knew his plan s had changed.
"As I was runnin g :lrou nd th e
end. I looked .md saw where th e
saft·ty was and said. 'Sh oot, that's
" touc hd own.'" Wa rri ck satd.
An other indi cation of how
nnKh the Ucng:ah wi ll rely on
Warrick came on fou rth- and - )
at the C:hica~o 16-ya rd line in
the second quarter.
Th e Ben~als wellt fo r rt and
Smith threw to Wamrk. who
drew ~~ p;Hs int l~ r fert..' IKe pe11.1lty when rornerb .1ck J e r ry
Azum ah grabbt·d him at th e .'l yarJ lm e.
Need some yard s? Throw it
to Warri c k.
" It 's n ot all ab ou t l't·ter Warrick," Warrick said . "EveryboJy has t o step up and make
plays Coaches try to put burdens on yo u , but 1 jitst worry
about what Peter Warrick can
do.
" I just t ry to ~o out and let
the game p lan work ."

Comets in finals

NEW YORK (AP) -There
is a famihar foe wJJting for the
New York L1beny in the
WNBA Finals.
Tamika Whitmore scored 19
points and New York nursed a
large lead to beat the C leveland
Roc kers ~1 - 67 Monday night.
The L1berty will meet the
three-time chatnpion Houston
Com ets in the best-of-three
t1nals.
"We were very proud of ourselves because of what we had
to go through the entire season
with nobody believing in us.''
captain Teresa Weath erspoo n
said.
"We're very happy with what
we've accomplished, but we
have n 't accomplished anythmg
yet - our ultim ate goal."
The Comets, th e o nly champion in the league's four-year
hi story, beat New York in the
o ne-ga me fin al in I 997 and
again last year in th e last game
of a three-game series.
H o uston swept Los An ge les

win rh~ Wesr.
" We were read y last yea r. but
we just fell short," sa id Weatherspoon. who hit a half-court
game-wmmng shot at the
buzz er ro force a decisive game
in th e ll)&lt;.Jl) finals. " We have rhat
opportunity this time and I
believe that we can rt·ally take
advancage."
T h e Comets and Liberty split
two regular st... ason gam&lt;.·s. with
each ream winning at home.
Th e best -of- three scTies opens
Thursday ni ght at Madiso n
Square Garden, where 't he Lrb erty have won I 3 straight.
Game 2 and Ga m e 3. if necessary, will be played in Houston.
Tari Phillips and Crystal
R ob m son combined for I 8
points during a 30-2 run as th e
Ltberty took control early.
In Sunday's secon d game of
the Eastern Confere nce finals,
N ew York jumped o ut to a 247 lead after a I 9 - 0 run, but had
to hold on for a five -point victory.
to

�_,

~

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Airport dosed after luggage found

Zoo celebrates panda's birthday
SAN DIEGO (AP) -They hned up e.&gt;rly and stayed late. Hua
111 fore" . to _(..s;kb.r.l.tt'_ the history:::.making bJby gra nt panda's first birthday.
,
Hund"'ds of zoo-goer; lined up before the park's 7:30 a.m . openmg Monday, hopu&gt;g to be among the first to wish the 60-pound bundle of bbck-and- wh1tc joy a happy birthday.
"Wt·'v,;: b~en watching her on the lmernet , Jnd we'\'&lt;.' VtSHL.'d so
many mnes, she tcds a httle like• .1 p.trt of the bnuly no\\'." smi Jim
Hdniak, who showed' up w rth Ius wrfc. Sue, and their 10- war-old
daughter, Kelley.
As th~ first surviving Ailuropocb mt:Luwkuca burn 111 thl:.' Unucd
States. H u.1 Ml'i Ius attracted tht..· attention of .1dnun.-rs .md snt.'ntlsts
.1like.
June B:rker. 7?, and her 3?-year-old daughter Joanna . .&gt;mvcd :rt the
zoo at ~ a. m ., and quickly made their way to the panda enclosurt'.
"Wr 'vl:.' !ieeri the panda before, but we wanted to comt.' today .tnd
cxpenence all the festivines," Joa nna Baker said. " l wish she knew JUSt
how much everyone wants to celebrate her birthday."
Early in the mornmg, keepers presented Hua Mei with a special
cake made of bamboo tiu zen 1n ice and a group of chlldren from
Mexico sang a Spanish birthday so ng.
"She interacted with her birthday cake." said Kathy Hawk , the zoo's
senior giant panda keeper, "even throwmg it o n the ground a few
times. just like a typical chtld."

Mei-nucs wt:n: out

MP3.com reaches settlement
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The onlme music storage company
MP3 .com reached a settlement with Sony Music Entertainment, the
fourth such settlement wrth plainuffs in a ,.lawsuit claiming its business
violates copyright law.
Under terms announced late M onday, San Diego-based MP3 .com
will pay an undisclosed amount to Sony for past violations and enter
into a non-exclusive North American lice nsQ for use of Sony's song.;
in the company's MyMP3 .com listening service.
MP3.com previously reached settlements wrth Warner Music
Group, BMG and EMI. It is still negotiating with Universal Music
Group.
The settlement comes one week before both Stdes m the lawsuit are
due back in court. A federal judge has ruled that a trial IS still necessary to decide whether MP3.com wrllfu lly mfringed on copyrights of
major record companies by lettrug people sto re copied son[;' on its
computers. The case is set to resume Aug. 2R.
"This settlement affirms and upholds the nght of copyright owners
to be paid for the use of their works on the Internet," AI Smith, senior
vice pr~side nt .1t Sony Mu sic Emenammt..'nt, sa id in ;l release.
Earher thi s year. MP3 .com sa1d it has rese rved S I j(imilli on to pav
for !~:gal SL'ttll'mcnts with mus1 c companies .md music pubhshns

Fans pony up extra bucks
PORTLAND. M .&gt; inc (AI') - Steplwn King. who rcle.~&lt;,·d tlw secnnJ mst.lllmcnt of his online SI..TLtl nm·d 011 i\1o nd.ty. 1s com td ~..· rm g
nuking fmurt..• inst;t llmt..•ms longl'i" - .md IliOn.' t..'Xpt..' llSIVt'.
He .tlso is thinking .tbout o ffcnng .1 bonus w futhful n:.1dcrs: gtnng
.1\\",1\" ch~..· fin.tl tnst.tllmt..·m . Tilt..• ftr'lt n\·o 111\t,Jllmt..·nts h.t\ "L' L't..'t..'ll ltl.llk

.t\·.ui.1blc fo r .1 S I \·olum.try t.: ontnbutJon .
Although 7(~ pt..'fl"t..'nt of n: .ldc..~ r~ who dm' n h ud~..·d tl~t..' J I1St.tllm~..·nt'
h,,, ..... p.nd ti.Jr tht.'lll- !!lightly mnn.· tlun tht. · .mwunt l&lt;mg .;,nL_f ,,.,}uld
be lll'l,.' ckJ t~) lO iltltUh..' th~-.· s~..· rJ c ' - h~..· \\nrr: i~..·, th.u mrcrc'r 111 ·· rlw
Pl.tnt' " lll,l\" f.ldL· oYt..'r tllllt..'. Ki11g , l,,.l~tlllt M.1r,h.1 I)~..·Fthppn .;;,nd.
H~..· lll;t"y: llt.lkl.' ~ome of th ~. · J11ko\t,tllmc llt~ .1" long ,J, J:l,()OO wo rd.., .111d
r hJI'ge S2 . ~0 t..'.H.· h. D ~..·F11ippo , ,ud ThL' ti rM 11\ '1 1 dhncnr \\",1\ 5.000
words

•

'

.

'.

' Tuesda~August22,2000

It filed a lawsuit in U.S . IJi strict Co urt in
the resources of Ford Motor Company · are
Washington,
D. C.
directed to resolve thiS situation," Ford CEO ·
A Ford spokesman said M o nday that the
Jac Nasser said in a TV ad that ran during
range of the recall was sufficient and the cotnABC's " Monday Night Football."
Bndgesrone / Firestone has recalled some panies were " m ovin g heaven and earth'' to
6.5 nullron P235/7SRIS ATX and ATX II replace tires.
Martin Ingli s, vice president for Ford
tires as well as · I 5-inch WilderneS! AT tires
made at a plant in Decatur, Ill. The National North America, said the plaut slumlown
Highway Traffic Safety Administration is would cut about 25,000 vchrcles from Ford's
15,000 Range" and I 0,000
mvestigating 62 deaths and more than I 00 production Explorers/ Moun tarneers .
rnjuries that co uld be linked to those tires .
The Center for Auto Safety, which successNot all of those whiclcs would have used
15-i
nch tires the size currently und er
fu lly pushed for recalls of the ForQ Pinto and
14.5 milhon Firestone 500 tires in the I ?70s, scrutiny- but Inglis said the re was no way to
schedule production w it hout them .Th,· 6,000
contends 12 million m o re Firestone tires all ATX, ATX II and Wilderness ATs still on workns at the shu tdown phnts Wlli stil l get
the ro;rd- should be recalled.
paid.

DETROIT (AP) - Ford says it will shut
HOUSTON (AP) - Dow Chemical Co. plans to fire about 40
down truck plants in three states so it can canemployees for allegedly vrolatmg the company's e-mail policy by cirnibalize 70,000 tires mtcndcd for new vehi culating violent or sexually explictt matenal.
cles and usc them as replacements for the
Dow say. the firing:; follow a rei/lew of 6,000 e-mat! accounts conFirestone m odels bemg recalled .
ducted after a worker complained about offenSive e-mail. A similar
The unprece dented move by the nation's
review this year at Dow 's headquartm in Midland, M !Ch., led to 50
No.2 automaker catne even as a safer,.' advofiring:;.
cacy group filed a lawsuir to force BridgeOther employees at the plant in Freeport, south of H ouston, face
ston e/Firestone In c. and Ford Motor Co. to
suspenstons or reprimands, Dow spokeswoman Kanina Blanchard told
widen the recall .
the l;louston C hronicle in Tuesday's editions.
Plants in St. Paul, Minn .; Edison, NJ; and
A uruon official termed the firing:; a "witch hunt."
Hazelwood , Mo., will close from Aug. 2H to
"One perso n was harassed, so they downloaded everybody's e-mail,"
Sept. 8 so that the tires used on Ford Explorsaid Charlie Smgletary, business manager for International Union of
.
er/ Mercury Mountauu:er sport uuh ty ve hi Operating Engineers Local 564. "I think they wamed to make this
cles and Ford Ranger pKkups ca n be sen t to
worse than it is. I think they wanted to terminate people."
He said most of the material was off-color jokes. nude ptcturcs and , Ford and Li ncol n / Mercury dealers.
"Yo u have my person.&gt;I gu arantee that all of
photos of car wrecks. Some of the employees were unaw.ue of Dow's
policies, while others didn't take them scnously, he .1dded.

LAKE CITY, S.C. (AP)- Investigators trying to determine why an
Amtr.lk train derailed on its way to Florida have focused their initial
attention on a str~et sweeper.
Nine cars of the Silver Meteor, tr.lveling from N ew York to Jacksonville, Fla., derailed early Monday, sending more than 40 people to
hospitals.
Highway Patrol 1st Sgt. Jo Nell said about I 5 nunutes before the
train passed, a street sweeper from Southco Sweepmg &amp; Maintenance
had jumped a curb and hit the mcks, damaging the rails.
"We do know there was a sweeper operating," said Jay Kivowrtz,
investigator in charge for the National Transpottation Safety Board.
"We cannot say at this time that was the cause of this accident."
Two sleeping cars, four coach cars, a dining car, a lounge and a crew
dorm jumped the tracks, Amtrak said. A wheel of the engine also left
the rails. Two other cars did not derail .
.
Most of the injuries were "little bumps and bruises," Nell satd.
There were 218 passenger&gt; and 15 crew members on board, Amtrak
said. At least 46 were taken to hospitals for treatment. All those treated
had been released by Monday night, hospital spokeswomen saidc

.

Ford halting production at three plants/

Dow to fire about 40 employees

Investigators probe derailment

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL BRIEFS

WEST TISBURY, Mass . (AI') - A suspicio us piece ofluggagc th.n
prompted officials to evacuate and close M arth.1's Vrneyard Atrpun
cont.unl..'d an imitation bon1b, a state .pohn· spokcsJJMn s;ud
'' It was mock cxplosi\\.'S that lookc..~d ve ry n:al." st.ltc.· poht·t· SY:,rt. T 1111
White &lt;aid Tu~sday.
Whitt..' said thl" mock bo 1nb \vas tht..· typ~ usl"J by Jtrport st..·curity
for trainiqg ;md testing. An invt..'stigation w.ts unda way tn try and
dt:tcrmlnt: why 1t turned up in rhc rerminll Monday nighr.
A st.&gt;te pohce bomb squad was called to the sc ene shortly after the
luggage was discovered in the terminal area about 6 p.m .. Wlute satd.
Officers took an imtial X-ray, then waited for mort: soplustlcated
equipment to arrive from the mainland.
The airport was closed, then reopened about 2 a.m.
Emergency personnel from across the island were on standby at the
a1rport, where only the co nu11Uni c~ tion s center remained staffed The
ct:nter handles emergency communications for the entire island.

'

More improvements
in welfare needed
WASI-JINGTON (A I') - The
nan on\ welfare systt..•m w.ls dr:lmattcally improved by th e congressional ovcrha ul four yt..'&lt;l rs ago.

bu t po or pt·opJc entering th t. ·
work fo rce need hdp with dnld
care, transportation .1nd traini ng,
say top corporate CEOs.
In a report released Tuesd:1y on
the fourth an mversary of the wdfare changes being signed mtn
law by President Clinton , the
bus111ess exec urtves say tlut fo rmer welfare recipients have made
"good. producttve employees."
Job retention rates for those
workers meet and often exceed
those for employees who haven't
been on welfare, accordmg to the
report.
But the CEOs say that government programs are still needed to
help welfare recipients get jobs,
citing child care and transportation as the " biggest obstacles 10
work.''
"Lawmakers should sustam o r,
ideally, increase resou rces for a
range of programs that help for-

Record lows
hit parts of
Nortneasf

tne

mer wdf.1re re cipients stay on the
job," rhe n•pon says. " Partnership
comp;uw.:.'S ca ll for mcrease d
empham on chtld care .md transport.tri on ai d, as they are consistentl y the two brggest challenges
f.K ing new workers."
The report recommends Congress in crease tax credits and
ch ild-care g rants to cover tnore
working parents and also subsidize transportation and housing
costs so welfare recipients can get
ro ' work n1ore eas1ly or Inove
closer to their jobs.
The 1996 welfare law encouraged reciptents to enter the work
force by placing a time limit on
benefits, allowing more recrpients
to work while strll receiving benefits and offering incentives to
employers to hrre welfare recipients.
The corporate executives who
signed the report mclude CEOs
of United Airlines, Sprint, Cttig roup, Tune Warner, Bank of
America, Burger King, Monsanto,
United Parc el Service and IBM.

nukin g 'now

111

Au g u ~t.

lt "s

llt' .trl y l"O[d t..' ll OLJgh .
"" It\ hL't..'ll 111 thL' low -lOs .tn d
Llppn Jl I;, Oil thL• lllOliiH.IIIl.""
s.ud Atm Ph .1lon . .1 'pokL''-

111

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lor K tll111 ~ton

Llln F.trm cr. ~..· o-O\\" llL'I' of
F.lrlllL'I"' (;.trLkn Cl.'tlt . .·r 111
t. ln ltl.l. N .Y. ,.tiJ rhl' rthll
\\ ,;,ldl\.'1" i' h·L'plllg \ 01"11 ,lJld
other , .L·~~~ r.1blc s frnm npc111n g
··corn nct..· d~ hot. mu ggy
nighr&lt;' ,It~..· , .nd . ·· Pcopk gro\\ 1ng tom .lto~..· . . Ill rhc g.lrdt..· n~ .ut..·
h .n·111~ truubl~.· . l:\Tryotll' 1\
_Jo,nbn g up on g reen tom.Hot..''"

PHOENIX (AP) - Se11.John
M cCam was rt'sting .lt lwmL'
after cancer surgery with son11.:
good llL'WS .
Th,·
melanottta
from hJs temple .md upper
arm
didn 't
spread,
his
doctors said
Pathologists completed
th e
final review of the tissues around
the cancers Monday and found
no sign the skm cancer had
spread, satd Todd Harris. a
McCain spokesman.
If the cancer ha~ reached Ol)e
or more of the lymph nodes,
treatment would have been
more complicated and less likely
to cure the cancer, experts had
said.
McCain, 63, was released
from the Mayo Clinic Hospital
and was resting comfortably at
his Phoenix home, a statement
released by his Senate office s:ud .
Doctors found the m elanoma
after M cCam left the Repubhcan National Convention to

h.1\·l:

bHllJ~IL''o

Bc.:tht..· ~d.l

N ..1\·.d

W.1 ~h 111 g ron n11

~1 L' Ifllrlll t'd

.lt

H mpit.l l !li:.'Jr

Aug. -L
Th t. · fonncr (;( 1P pn:..,idcnti.tl
(,UH.i Jd,Hc Ulldt..T\\t..'llt IH t H I.' than
fin:' hours of ~u rg~.·ry on S.1turd.1y
to rcilWVL' the mel.mnm.t. 1-k
also l1.1d ;1 md.mmtu l"l' lllO\ "C d
from his shoulder m 199.\
Mcbnonu is usu:1lly cmst..·d
by expo sure to the sun . People
wit h flir skin h.wt· :1 h1ghe r risk
of sk1n c.HlCL'r. McC.Hn spent
hours in rhe l1.1rsh Art z OI"&amp;l sun
cam p:ugm ng for Congress m
1982 anJ subsc·que11t year&gt;.
Mc Ca m's fn e nds ha\'c sard lw
IS religious abou t wt:aring SPF
45 su nblock when outdoors and
about seei ng his doctor th ree or
four tin1es a year to check for
new le sions.
M cCain ca n celed about a
dozen ca mpaign events w ith
GOP congress10nal ca ndidates
since learning o f the skin cancer
diagnosis. Spokeswoman N ancy
lws said M cC am h ope&gt; to
retu rn to ca mpargmn g by Labor
Day.
Repubhcan preSidential n o minee George W. Bush satd he was
"grateful for the good news."

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page B6
NFL Camp Notebook, Page B6

Page Bl
'IUesd.y, Aupst ll, 1000

TuEsDAY'S

HIGHiJGHTS
Banks paces
Meigs linksmen
PARKERBSURG, WVa.
Me1gs freshman Jeremy Banks led
the scoring fur the Meig.; golf
tea m in the recent Parkersburg
Country Club Invitational.
Danks ' round of eightover par,
80 placed lmn in 25th place in
the 140 player field .
Cabell Midland won the 28
team tournament with a team
score of 3 11. T he Meig.; team
score was 348.
In additio n to Banks' 80, Carson Midkiff shot an 86, Ni ck
Dettwiller an 8Y, Thad l:lutilgardner an 9.1 and Andy Davis an I OS.

Dolphins upend punchless Packers, 17-14
MIAMI (AP) - With one preseason
game remamin g, Mike Sherman is now
co ncerned.
Green Day 's offense struggl ed to move
the ball. The defe nse gave up big plays all
game. And special teams collapsed in the
waning seconds, allowing the Miami Dolphins to come away with a 17 - 14 exhibition win Monday night .
"Anytime we lose a football game, it
concerns me," Sherman said. ''I'm not
worried, but l' m concerned. l' m concerned we didn 't move the football, and
we didn't play exceptionally well ."
There was some good news, though .
The Packers did not add anyone to their
already-long injury li st, and quarterback

Brett Favre's return is imminent.
Favre sat out Monday's gmre with lingering tendinitis in his throwing arm but
expected to practic e Wednesday.
Wtthout Favre - as well as running
ba cks Dorsey Levens (knee) and Ahman
Green (knee) - th e Packers (I -2) struggled to m ove th e ball fo r nnicll Of the
night .
Matt Hasselbeck, subbing for Favre, was
5-of- I 2 for 72 ya rds against Miami's firstteam defense. H erbert Goodman gained
91 yards on 13 carnes - _all in the second
half.
"1 feel sorry for the fans who had to
watch that," receive.r Antonio Freeman
said. "Take away two plays offensively and

we did nothing .... You can call it preseaso n, you can call it whatever you want.
But for a team that 's talking about winning the NFC Central , we lack a lot of
excitement."
Despite giving up 352 yards, fumbling
three times and throwing an interception,
Green Bay still had a chance to win .
Danny Wuerffel led th e Packers to two
fourth-quarter touchdowns- scoring on
an option play to Herbert Goodman and
a long pass to Donald Driver. Green Bay
led I 4- I 0 before Dolphins rookie Ben
Kelly returned a pun.t 73 yards with less
than a minute to play, setting up a 2-yard
scoring pass from Mike Qumn to Deon
Dyer.

}l

NBA: Huge deal
goes south
NEW YORK (AP) - Patri ck.
Ewing and Glen H..ice were
involved in a mammoth fourteam trade discussed by th e
Knicks, Lakers , SuperSonics and
Pistons that appears to have collapsed.
The dea l: wluch would have
been the largest in NBA history,
would have se nt Ewing to Seattle,
Ri ce and Vin Baker to the
Kn icks, and Christian Laettner
and C hris Dudley to the Lakers.
The Piston&lt; would have gotten
several lesser cahber players, draft
picks and cash .
Although
ESPN.com had
reported M onday that th e deal
had been agreed to, by lat e Mon day night it looked dead . The
N ew York T nnes and C BS.Sportslin e both said th e Pistons had
.pulled out.

banned from Olympics

m ilts of coastline

stretching from

Mobil~

to

Gulf Shoru an~ Orange Btach
includt sugirv • whlt~ buchu
C~ogr•phlc

ai some of th.e world's most

beautiful

shorelln~ .

@alL

1.800.745.7263
www . gulfshor~s . com

LONDON (AI') Linford
C hristie, th e 1992 Olympic •100meter champi o n, m ay have run
out of options to go to the Sydney Olympics as a coac h.
,
The IAAF offi ciall y branded
th e Barcelona Olympics sprint
champion a drug cheater and
banne J h1111 fo r two year s.
C hristie. now R'tired, tested poSItive -for the banned steroid nandrulone while running for fun I 8
months ago.
He lm dem ed knowmgly tak ing any bann ed substances and
was cleared by UK Athletics, but
the IAAF arb1tration panel said
the federat1on was wrong to t1 nd
him not gu ilty.
Now 40, Ch rist ie no longer
competes, but tht· b ,Jn cou ld
hamper hi s n~:.·w rol e as a coach in
Sydney. Th e Briti sh Olympic
Association likely w1 ll stick to its
harJ !me on drug cheaters J ud
n.·fus~: him a cn:denti .ll t{Jr rh t·
g311IC~.

Hot action at Little

League World Series
WILLlAMSI'OitT, Pa. (AI')Jay l'onCJano pitc hed a two-h itter
ami DLJStin C:orl hit a two-run
homer :IS V111couve r beat Uella tre,
Texas, 5-11 rn the Ltttle Leag;u e
World Ser it·s.
Earlier in th e day, Julian Van dervelde\ two - run homer keyed
Davt'nport to &lt;~ 5-0 victory over
wi11less Got1Stow n.
•
ltuben M avarez pitc hed a twohittt•r as Maraca 1bo, Venezuela,
eve ned its record at 1- 1 with a .10 will ove r Dhahran. Saudi Arclbia.
And Tokyo improved to 2-0 and all but mathematical ly
cl m chnl a &lt;pot in th e pool final
- by h.mging on tOr a Y-H vJctory over Toront&lt; J.

Fall Sports Preview
out lhursday
MEICS COU NTY - Wa tc h
fo r the IJatly Se ntm t·l's 2111!0 Fall
Sports !'review. wh ich will be
md&lt;ided in the Thursday edrtion!

•

The Packers questioned the rulm~.
arguing that Kelly had stepped out of
bounds near midfield. But officials did not
overturn the call.
"We thought he stepped on the lin e,"
Sherman sai d. " I had one of the officials
tell me that he thought he stepped on the
line and that he thought it would be
reversed."
Eugene M cCaslin knocked Kelly out at
the 2, and Quinn found Dyer in the end
zone on the following play with 25 seconds left.
The Dolphins (2-1) - with as many
questions on offense as the Packers have

PluMseeMNF,PqeB6

Big night
for Redlegs

British track coach

hal ltd by N.trion.tl

BOSTON (AP) - Summ er "
g1ving people th e· col d shouldn
111 the Northeast.
Record or ncAr-record low
rcmp cr:l[ures h .t\'l' bl·cn rt..·ported
tn c iti es .1 cross t h t. • regio n ,
spurri ng some people co di g
into their fall wardrobe~ early
and turn the heat on.
Bruce Avery was surprised to
get nearly a dozen ca ll s from
cus tomers Monday ask ing to
have heattn g system s install ed.
H e got only one ca ll about atr
co nditiomn g.
"Typi ca lly, people don't start
thinkin g abo ut that until they
h ave to, tn September," said
Avery, president of Avery Serv ices Inc. 111 Westbrook, Mame .
"( don't doubt that it was so
cl11lly this mor ning that it got
people th inkin g a month early
about win ter."
The m e rcu ry dropp ed to 43
111 Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on M onday
morning, tying a record low for
the dat~ set in 1908 . At Bradley
lnterllational Airport near H artford, Conn., the temperature ha
45, matchmg a reco rd low set in
1984. Elnma , N.Y. , hit a
Ha tewide low of 37 degrees
t•a rl y Monday. And low temperatures across northern New
England hovered m 40s over the
weekend.
In Vermont. th e early-mornlll g dull had e mpl oyees at
Kill111 gto n Resort JOking aboul

McCain declared cancer-free

Inside:

GOOD JOB, BARRYI- Barry Larkin of Cincinnati salutes the fans after recording his 2,000th hit Monday
at Cinergy Field against Philadelphia. Larkin 's milestone hit was a double . (AP)

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

CINCINNATI (AI') - For have at least 2,000 hits, I 70
the third time in less than a homers and 350 stolen bases.
month, Barry Larkin stood He's the fourth player with
alone and waved to a crowd 2,000 hits for Cincinnati, joinchanting his name.
ing Pete Rose (3,358) , Dave
The Cincinnati R eds got Concepcion (~ .326) and Johnny
extended ovations m late July Bench (2,048) .
when he blocked a tra!ie to the
"That's a lot of hits," Philhes
Mets and again when he agreed manager Terry Francona said.
to a three-year contract exten- " What's so funny though is they
ston.
didn't know who was going to
Ovation No. 3 acknowledged be better, him or Kurt Stillwell.
a milestone. Larkin doubled for It 's amazing how thin[;' work
hi s 2,000th career hit Monday out."
night during a 7- 4 vrctory over
The Reds traded Stillwell and
the Philadelphia Phillies and stuck wrth Larkin in th e I 980s,
stood at second base as the one of their better moves.
crowd chanted his name.
" He's been with the dub a
"The fans have been great this long tim e and he's had a lot oi
year as far as support," Larkin hits," manager Jack McKeon
said, "On different occasions said. ''I'd have to play 40 or 50
here they've been very loud and years to get 2,000 hits."
very emotional, and this is
The only one who didn 't
another night of the same rea lize the significan ce of
thing."
. ·
. Larkin's hit was Wolf, who had
Not exactly. This tilne, he got other thing.; on his mind as
upstaged .
Larkin stood at second base and
Larkin 's hit off Randy Wolf waved.
(9-7) was a prelud e to Dmitri
"I had no idea," he said . "For
Young's first career grand slam, a while, I was wondering why
an upper-deck homer that put they were cheering for so long."
the Reds up 7-1 and gave th e
He went from puzzled to
21,558 fans something else 10 frustrated after he hit Ken Grifcelebrate long and loud.
fey Jr. in the arm with a pitch
"Unfortunately, I had to and walked Dante B1chette to
upstage the captain and his load the bases. Young then hit a
2,000 hits, and he to ld me about first-pitch slider into the fir.&lt;t
it in the dugout ," said Young, row of the red seats, the 34th
who hadn't hit a grand slam upper-deck homer in the stadium 's 30-year history.
smce high school.
h was a night of franchise
The only other red-seat slam
moments for the Reds, who by a Reds player was the first
won for only th e second time in ever hit into th e upper deck seven games and remained 7 by Tony Perez on Aug. 1 I, I 970.
1/2 behmd St. Louis in the NL
Young also had a single and a
Central.
Jouble in a free-swmging perFirst cam e Larkm, who's the
Ple1se see Reels, Pip 86
first major leagu e shortstop to

WNBA

Warrick -impressive in debut Liberty to meet
C IN C INNATI
(AP)
Receiwr 1\·ter W.1rrick lined up
to the feft. sw un~ ,\t\mnd, took
a hand o ff ti·o m Akili Smith and
wa~ 0 11 his way to hi s fir st
to uchdown w1th the C in cinnati
Uc11gal s.
He made ;1 111fty movt· to
avoid C hi c.t~o s.1fety Tony Parrish, twisting ou t of a tac kle,
then wcn1 mto th e end zo n e
sta ndin g up for a 14-yard
touchdown rtlll Sa turday ni ght.
It was th e lkngals' first sco re
in the ir 24-20 prese ason win
ov~:.·r th e Be ars Jll th e i naugural
gam e at P.ml Brown St.1dium .
It also was a hint of th e new
dimension he cou ld bring to
their oflense.
The play makl'f from Florida
Statt· c.m bl' ju st .1s dangerous 111
the NFL.
" H e's gifteJ.'' co,ICh Bruce
Cos kt sai d . " The sky's th e lirmt
tOr him ."
The first -rouml drali pick had
IllS best ga me yet. lcadm g the
Uen gals w1th a · gaml'-iHgh six
catches for s:; yards in add itio n
to the tou chdown run .
Warri c k\ most tm prcssJVt'

catc h was a 2.'l-yarder fi·om Aklli
Sm ith that started the Ucngals '
seconJ sco rin g Jnv~ - Slllith
found an opening b etWCl.'ll two
defend ers and ca me dov.rn with
the ball along th e sidel ine.
" You've go t w get that dt!dl'
the ba ll. wheth er it's on a slant
or a reverse or whatever," Sm nh
sa id.
That's exactly svlut Coslet
in te nd s to do. Last seaso n, th e
llcnga]s ran only rwo receiver
reverses - Craig Yeasr carried
t wice and lost I 6 yards.
T hey'll give Warrick a lot
more chanles, making him th e
featurt·d re ce ive r with Darn ay
Scott sici cl nwd by a broken kg.
Worrirk doesn't shy from th e
pressu re. He was the first Uen ~als player on th e field for
prega me introductions in th e
new stadium .
H e also came up with th e
m os t novel to uchd own celebration leap ing towards th e
stands. where fans helped pull
him up.
"They help ed m e om a little
bit," Warrick said .
W.rrick had planned the leap

- a copy of what the Pa ckers
do at Lambeau Fr eid . but
t' I I vi~Iuned it co miug ,1fter a
touchdown ca tc h. As soon as
the reverse started to dcvdop,
he knew his plan s had changed.
"As I was runnin g :lrou nd th e
end. I looked .md saw where th e
saft·ty was and said. 'Sh oot, that's
" touc hd own.'" Wa rri ck satd.
An other indi cation of how
nnKh the Ucng:ah wi ll rely on
Warrick came on fou rth- and - )
at the C:hica~o 16-ya rd line in
the second quarter.
Th e Ben~als wellt fo r rt and
Smith threw to Wamrk. who
drew ~~ p;Hs int l~ r fert..' IKe pe11.1lty when rornerb .1ck J e r ry
Azum ah grabbt·d him at th e .'l yarJ lm e.
Need some yard s? Throw it
to Warri c k.
" It 's n ot all ab ou t l't·ter Warrick," Warrick said . "EveryboJy has t o step up and make
plays Coaches try to put burdens on yo u , but 1 jitst worry
about what Peter Warrick can
do.
" I just t ry to ~o out and let
the game p lan work ."

Comets in finals

NEW YORK (AP) -There
is a famihar foe wJJting for the
New York L1beny in the
WNBA Finals.
Tamika Whitmore scored 19
points and New York nursed a
large lead to beat the C leveland
Roc kers ~1 - 67 Monday night.
The L1berty will meet the
three-time chatnpion Houston
Com ets in the best-of-three
t1nals.
"We were very proud of ourselves because of what we had
to go through the entire season
with nobody believing in us.''
captain Teresa Weath erspoo n
said.
"We're very happy with what
we've accomplished, but we
have n 't accomplished anythmg
yet - our ultim ate goal."
The Comets, th e o nly champion in the league's four-year
hi story, beat New York in the
o ne-ga me fin al in I 997 and
again last year in th e last game
of a three-game series.
H o uston swept Los An ge les

win rh~ Wesr.
" We were read y last yea r. but
we just fell short," sa id Weatherspoon. who hit a half-court
game-wmmng shot at the
buzz er ro force a decisive game
in th e ll)&lt;.Jl) finals. " We have rhat
opportunity this time and I
believe that we can rt·ally take
advancage."
T h e Comets and Liberty split
two regular st... ason gam&lt;.·s. with
each ream winning at home.
Th e best -of- three scTies opens
Thursday ni ght at Madiso n
Square Garden, where 't he Lrb erty have won I 3 straight.
Game 2 and Ga m e 3. if necessary, will be played in Houston.
Tari Phillips and Crystal
R ob m son combined for I 8
points during a 30-2 run as th e
Ltberty took control early.
In Sunday's secon d game of
the Eastern Confere nce finals,
N ew York jumped o ut to a 247 lead after a I 9 - 0 run, but had
to hold on for a five -point victory.
to

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday August22 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

150

AnnouncerneM

Gtyeaony Loa! I l'aund

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

50 feet from the place of
beginning
thenco
Southweaterly along the
Northwoaterly line of aald
oad to the place of
beginning Ba ng a lot 50
feat wldo fronting on aa d
road and extending bock to
the cometary llno tho aame
width excepting the coal
and other mineral• w th thl
right to mine tho lame and
all wayo and r ghta of ways
a ong any minors! seams Ia
he aby reserved
Also the lollow ng Ianda
ad lenamenta situated In
lhe V I ege County Stole
and F act on atoraaa d
Beginning at tho Southeall
corner of the ot wh ch J J
McCarthy formerly r11ldod
which Is the same prtmloeo
conveyed by J P B adbury
snd wile Ia said J J
McCarrty by deed dated
December 10
1894
recorded In Volume 79 at
Page 195 of the Records of
Deeds Me ga County Ohio
thence Northwooterly along
lhe Eaot I ne of sold Lot to
lhe cemotory line thence
Easterly a ong lho cemetery
ne to a point I om which a
no drawn paralle with the
Eaaterly lne of salcllotoold
lo J J McCarty will be 20
teet from sa d eaeterly llno
thence paralle lhertw th lo
a point In the Nortbweaterly
ne of a rood that extends
past the oa donee of J J
McCarty where 11 lntoraocle
a prolongat on of
the
Southerly lint of said ot
aold to J J McCarty thence
Waater y
along
tho
Northwesterly line of aa d
road to the p aco of
beginning excopllng lhe
coa and other mlnarale
!hereunder with 1111 r ght lo
mine and aame and all waye
and rights of ways along
any mlnera used n mining
coal
Tho above real aslalo s
tubiect lo al leases
easements and rlghta or

way of record Prior
lnetrumont Reference No
Offtclal Record VOlume 43 at
Page 875
Current Owner o Neme
Noncy J
Cllrk 1nd
Tl'lruman R Haning
Property AddriSI 301
Wright St Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Auditor 1 Parcel Number
Parcel No 0 16 01197
Parcel No 2 16.01198
APPRAISED AT
$30 000 00
TERMS OF SALE
$1 000 00 down at I me of
•• e balance duo 30 deyo
altar 1111
Jemea M Soulaby Sheriff
Melga County Ohio
Milton A Puckett
Supreme County No 021690
Attorney lor PlllnUII
155 Woat Main Str11t Sullo
2000
Columbua Ohio 43215
(614) 224-2795
(8) 1 8 15 22 29 (9) 5 BTC

13
Ringe 15
Ohio
Compenyo
Purohne
Beginning II the Boulhllll
corner of I 1118 1cre tnct
now owned by Oren Dovlo
being the Nortllout comer
of the Danville School lot
Thence In a Southerly
direction 1bout 11 rode and
12 fell to the center or the
Danville S1l1m Center
Townahlp Rood Thence In I
NorthWIIIerly d recti on
following tho center line of
oald rold tract Thence In 1
Northoaeterly direction
following Allee Smith a
three acl'l tr1ct Thence In a
Northoaaterly direction
following Alice Smith 1 Eoet
line 12 rode end 12 loll
Tho nco In en Euterly
direction aboutelx rode and
live loot to tho place of
beginning
Permenent Porcel No 1300381.000
LOclltd II 31110 Rt!l Hill
Road Llngevlllo OH 45741
~ld property hea been
1p~1od 11 $15 000 00 and
cannot 1111 lor 1111 th1n
two thlrda of opprelaemant
Thll eppr1loal II boaod
upon 1 vleull lnopoctlon of
th1t port of the premlua to
which ICCIII w11 readily
available The eppralllrl
aoaume no reoponolblllty
for ond giYe no weight to
unknown 11g11 moliere
Including but not limited to
concaelod or 1111nt deliCti
lnd or the preeonco of
hlrmlul or toxic chemlcoll
pollutlntl or g••••
Torm1 of Bill
Ten
Percent (10%) dey of 1111
b1l1nco within 30 deye
J1m11 M Sotuaby Sheriff
of Melge County Ohio
Stephen D Mlllt Attorney
18 W11t Monument Avenue
Dayton Oh o 45402
(B) 15 22 29 3 tc

SHERIPF s SALE
REALESTATE
CASE NUIIIBER OOCV018
LESALLE NATIONAL BANK
A8 TRUSTEE UNDER THE
PQOUNGANDSERVICING
AGREEMENT DATED 2/1/M
SERIES t9K-1
PLAINTIFF

FINANCIAL

SHERIFF S SALE
!lEAL ESTATE
CASE NO 00 CV 013
ASSOCIATES FINANCIAL
SERVICES CORPORATION
(Plaintiff)
VI
NANCY J CLARK et al
(Delendanto)
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHO
n purauance of an Order
of Solo 10 me directed from
•• d CoU'rt In the above
ent t ed adtlon I will expose
to oale at public auction at
the otopa ol the Courl
House 100 East second
Street Pomo oy Oh o on
Tuesday September 19
2000 et 10 00 a m of 11 d
day lhe to owing described
ea estate
LEGAL DESCRIPnON
The lc ow ng real estate
e tuatad In tba V age of
Pomeroy County ol Malga
and State of Ohio and mo e
pa t cula y deecr bod as
fol owa to wit
In F acllon No 25
beginning at a stake n the
No thwulerly line of lhe
road thai una from Suga
Run St eel Northeaate ly
paot tho eoldonce of
Wll om Q W ght and Albert
Haze lon which stake 11 75
teat from the Southeast
corner of lhe lot on which
aa d Haze ton real de a and
wh ch a ake Ia the
Southeast co ne of a ot
sold lo said Haze ton by
J P B adbliry
lhence
Northweatar y a ong the
Easter y no of said leal
named lol lo the cemetery
line thence along the
comalo y
line
Northeastward y to a point
I om wh ch a ne drawn lo
lhe
oed llrst above
ment onad wl be para e to
and 50 leal I om the flret
line of tho p em sao hereby
conveyed lhance from as d
point to sa d Northweater y
ne of sa d road to a stake

Bualness
Opportunity

direction with 1 radlua of
:-:;::==;:==:;=====1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"t:=========t~:::~;:=====:1
ltiO feet, • dlalllnce of 23 40
540 Ml see11 aneous
710
Autos
lor
SaiB
740
Motorcycles
feet
thence with tho line
FARM SUPPLIES

Schools
Instruction

230

Professional
Services

MERCHANDISE

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDED COR RECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY

TAIRUNf DfADUNf

2 00 p m tho dey befon
lhled leto run
Sundoy I
edition
200

LAW SU TS

RAT NG 90
8 0802

UDGMENT S AAA

80 DAYS

888

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals

&amp;d Pho og a

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9Wes sum .... - ·
740-592 842
Qua y co tl ng and hOuatM d
ems S 00 bag 11 e eve y
ThU sday Monday h u Sa u clay
9 QO.S 30

210

Merchandise

OR VERS I 000 S GN NG BO
NUS $40 000 ANNUALLY RE
G ONAL CARR EA EXCELLENT
BENEF TS EMPLOYEE STOCK
OWNERSH P COL A TANK &amp;
HAZ AERO BU K CARR ER
80Q.4S6-60 2

80

Th s newspape w no
know rJ.y accep
ad ert !&amp;men s o ea esta e
whch s nvoa on of he
aw Ou eade s are he eb)'
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad ert sed n h a newspape

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION
2 89 Bale OOyo
Every SO 6 PM
EvoryTuoo 6 PM
Truckloads Of
New &amp; U88d ems
From StweraJ Sta es
Se ng To The PubliC &amp; Dealers
P ece Ooze s &amp; Case l o s
B~ Auction Service
Gory Bow.~ Auct-r

Proctorville Ohkl
FIH Mortcot
J s Acoss
Hun ngton WV
3st81dgo

740-8116-221111
~53-2517

a e a~a ab e on an equa
~eama

opportunity basts

SECURTY
$660HR
The Wadc.enhut Corp s Aec
ngFo 25F TmeOffces
WokS hide OHo rsPe
Day Pe Week Mus Have G E D
0 H S Dtp oma Re ees Home
makers And Others E cou aged
To Apply Please App y A James
M Gav n Power Plan S a e Rou e 0 Ca Capt Evans A
740 925 30 0

Pu bile Notice
SHERIFF s SALE
Bene one Flnonc 11
Service Inc
va
Robert T Lambert Jr ot al
Mega County Common
Pllll Cau
No H-CV.otl2
In pureuence of 1n order
leauod from Common Pllal
court within and lor tho
County of Melga Stolt of
Ohio on 1111 51h doy of July
2000 and to me directed I
will offer for 1111 11 Public
Auct on In tho Melge County
Courthou 11 Socond Strlll,
Pomeroy Ohio on Tutodoy
tho 19th doy of September
2000 at to oo AM of oold
day the following Real
Eatata to-wlt
Situated In the Townehlp
of Selem County of Melge
and State of Ohio
~----------1
Tract One Blllngln Sllam
k w~ 8t M""' i&gt; r,.. &amp;on
Township Melga County
""""'11&gt;u
10"" 8tsr e.,.
Ohio n Section 13 Town
"'""CJmsifittlt

r.,..,

REAL ESTATE

vs

WENDI KRAunER 1111
DEFENDANTS
COURT 01' COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNn OHIO
In purauance of an Order
of Sale to mo dlrlclecl from
Hid Court In the obove
enUtled lotion I wlllexpoee
to 1111 11 public 1uctlon et
the
Courtl'louu
on
September Ill 2000 II 10 30
a m of eold dey the
following doecrlbed real
•The following real eotate
eltullad In the County of
Malaa Slllo of OhiO ond In
the Vlll1g1 of Pomeroy and
bounded ond deecrlbed 11
follow•
All thot certoln troct or
percol of lind altuated
lying ond being In tho
VIllage of Pomeroy County
of llllge and Still of Oh o
ond being known and
deolgnllld on 1 mep or
Lincoln Helghll m1do by
Ire eo o
1
C., p or
Rlllllllrtd Civil Englneore
Huntington W111 Vlrvlnll
d1tad October 11 1842 1
copy of which Wll recorded
on December 17th 11142 In
the Oftloa of the Recorder
of Melgl County Ohio In
Plot look No 3 Peg• 43
ond 44 11 Lot No 28 1nd
baing mora pltlloul~rly
dnorlbed 11 follow I
Bllllnnlng 11 a point In the
eouth line of the Lincoln
ROid at the corner bltween
loll 28 ond 30 ao ehown on
llld mep thence with the
eald Una of L ncoln Ro1d
North 711 dog 51 Waet 25 ee
IHI thence continuing wllh
eold roed llna curving to
the left In 1 wnterly

between Jell 28 1nd 29
South 7 dag 03 Woet
2211 t10 rut thence North 89
deg 08 Wnt 28 2 feet
thence with tho line
b1tw11n 11ld Loll 211 end
30 North 10 deg 09 E11t
223 18 1111 to the point ol
beginning
reaorvlng
however the coal ond all
other mlnoralo In and

&amp; LIVESTOCK

Public Notice
undorlylng
tha IOllllher
above
dHCrlbld ptDperty
with the right to mine the
11mo without encumbrance
ID tho eurloce ond oubject

More Legals on Page B-6

t-------==========~---­
SHOP AT HOME

to en tiHment tor •wage

filter dHch or loochlng ditch
•• oat forth and doocrlbed
In that lnetrument bearing
date November 28th 1943
1nd recorded December 3
1943 In the alorosa d
Rocordere Off ce In Deed
Book 151 Page178
Pr or
natrument
rtleronceo Volume 89 Page

401
Property addrtaa 1678
UNCOLN HILL ROAD
POMEROY OHIO 45769
Apprellld II $15 000 00
Torma of Solo Caoh
Jamee M Solusby
Sheriff Melgo County
Sara M Peteramann
Lerner
Sampaon
&amp;
Rothlueo
120 E Fourth Street
81h Floor
c nclnnatl Ohio 45202
(513) 241 3100
OH Sup Ct 110055402
(8) 15 22 29 3TC

FREE
YIRD SALE

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with ad!
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today .

The Dally
Sentmel

110 Help Wanted

/

Pleasant Vall ey Hospital

CRNA
Pleasant Valle) Hosp1tal currently has
opportumt1es tor CRNA applicants
Applicants must meet the followmg
quahhcat10ns
Mt st be a reg s c c
c
I e 1 e of WV
• Graduate of an Ace cd cd sci oo l of Aneslhesta
Cer tf catton or el g I I t ce 1 ftcat on by the
• Amcncan Assocw o of Nu se Anesthetists

Compehtn

For your smcere

honesty and the
return of my lost
checkbook at Krogers
Your thoughtfuln ess
deeply apprec1ated

IS

~nLitlef~

Jom our famil y of professiOnals to the
best resource for comm umly health
servtce needs
Please Sub nut n csume To
PLEASANl VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PE RSONNE L
2520 VALLEY I)JUVE
PT PLEASAN I WV 25550
OR FAX I 0 (304) 675 6975

New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Mo h F ••
A &amp; Sk
-888 928 342S

2 open

S300 Oo w
F ee De Ivery

e 35
40 24

$245 Pe Mon h
888 928 3426

28 52 Daub eW de $500 Down
Take o e payme n s 800 69
6
New B1nk Repos M!i!lc.9 2 Pay
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No Paymen s
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po s 40}446-3093

760

Auto Parts &amp;
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OUND? Wan A New Home W h
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phy Ad 6 Ac
5Ac T acs W h4Ponds0n
The P ope ty S a ng As l ow As
I 6 5
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GA LA CO H nngPopety
ON Y TWO Trac s eft 23 Ac

V NTDN CO M

E
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Reb
n S ock
Ca Ao E a
800 53 9528

ana 34 Ac

~Ex1ensm36

MEGSCO Ba kOnTheMa
ke B a A dge One Wooded w
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a

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SEfiVICES
Antl"'on~

Land Company L d

80().213 8365

810

www c:oun rytyme c:om

Home
Improvement•

RENTALS
UAGENTL NEEDED p a ma
don
ea $35
$45 o 2
3
hOu s week y Ca Se a Te
0
592 665

No offloe via t neceuary
Up to Ssoo l111llntly Toll free

3 EASY SALES 13 000
Eas 'I ea
$3 000 you
s
.veek Make S K on e e 'I S99
a e We Teach you now CaN
BOO 294 9538

1-(877)-EARLYPAY

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER
PUT T TO WORK 1350 I 500
&amp; week PT F
www mcom

rne ce com

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In the

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•

CASH LOANSI
Bad C ed OK
Easy Qua fy ng
Fas Serv ce
Low Payments
Cant den I a
I 800 332 2411

Sops He
IMPROVE YOUR
96 S cess Rae
WANT ACOMPtlt'ER?
FINANCe.., le e ho o
To f-ee 8 t:VERCLR
at No Cash? No Crecit OK SloN lmmed ate Coni dent a
Ca
o wwwe e c com
Crecit OK oDaMl LaptqJS
P o na Debl Solul ons
a
AVBIIable Reestablish You Cradil! NonP o 0 gan za on To F ee .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
Call N&lt;ml 11-1188-247-3818
888 968 929 Code 1023
.,.,,.....,! No Loans www p of na o g
$$$$ Unsecured LOANS
tor any 1J11P069 Credit Prdllems
Considered. $ 1200 mn mum
rroothly rxxrne mqtJJmd AwiY 24f7

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•

A-\ EOE

SON ESTATES 52 We s woo d
D ve om $289 o $3 o wa k o
shop &amp; moves Ca 74 0 446
2568 Eq a Hous ng Oppo n ty

faslest cash loans
ega dless ol c ed I aula loans
deb conso dal on Knowledge s
powe FA EE CALL
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a

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t:·::av;~;,

e" tgt

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New 3 SA 2 BA Ooutl tw dt

Seams
Spm

The Datly Sentmel Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Public Notice

Yird Salel lnd Wllllecl
ToDoAdl
Mutal Bo Pold In Atlv1nc1

005

Tuesday August 22 2000

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday August22 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

150

AnnouncerneM

Gtyeaony Loa! I l'aund

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

50 feet from the place of
beginning
thenco
Southweaterly along the
Northwoaterly line of aald
oad to the place of
beginning Ba ng a lot 50
feat wldo fronting on aa d
road and extending bock to
the cometary llno tho aame
width excepting the coal
and other mineral• w th thl
right to mine tho lame and
all wayo and r ghta of ways
a ong any minors! seams Ia
he aby reserved
Also the lollow ng Ianda
ad lenamenta situated In
lhe V I ege County Stole
and F act on atoraaa d
Beginning at tho Southeall
corner of the ot wh ch J J
McCarthy formerly r11ldod
which Is the same prtmloeo
conveyed by J P B adbury
snd wile Ia said J J
McCarrty by deed dated
December 10
1894
recorded In Volume 79 at
Page 195 of the Records of
Deeds Me ga County Ohio
thence Northwooterly along
lhe Eaot I ne of sold Lot to
lhe cemotory line thence
Easterly a ong lho cemetery
ne to a point I om which a
no drawn paralle with the
Eaaterly lne of salcllotoold
lo J J McCarty will be 20
teet from sa d eaeterly llno
thence paralle lhertw th lo
a point In the Nortbweaterly
ne of a rood that extends
past the oa donee of J J
McCarty where 11 lntoraocle
a prolongat on of
the
Southerly lint of said ot
aold to J J McCarty thence
Waater y
along
tho
Northwesterly line of aa d
road to the p aco of
beginning excopllng lhe
coa and other mlnarale
!hereunder with 1111 r ght lo
mine and aame and all waye
and rights of ways along
any mlnera used n mining
coal
Tho above real aslalo s
tubiect lo al leases
easements and rlghta or

way of record Prior
lnetrumont Reference No
Offtclal Record VOlume 43 at
Page 875
Current Owner o Neme
Noncy J
Cllrk 1nd
Tl'lruman R Haning
Property AddriSI 301
Wright St Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Auditor 1 Parcel Number
Parcel No 0 16 01197
Parcel No 2 16.01198
APPRAISED AT
$30 000 00
TERMS OF SALE
$1 000 00 down at I me of
•• e balance duo 30 deyo
altar 1111
Jemea M Soulaby Sheriff
Melga County Ohio
Milton A Puckett
Supreme County No 021690
Attorney lor PlllnUII
155 Woat Main Str11t Sullo
2000
Columbua Ohio 43215
(614) 224-2795
(8) 1 8 15 22 29 (9) 5 BTC

13
Ringe 15
Ohio
Compenyo
Purohne
Beginning II the Boulhllll
corner of I 1118 1cre tnct
now owned by Oren Dovlo
being the Nortllout comer
of the Danville School lot
Thence In a Southerly
direction 1bout 11 rode and
12 fell to the center or the
Danville S1l1m Center
Townahlp Rood Thence In I
NorthWIIIerly d recti on
following tho center line of
oald rold tract Thence In 1
Northoaeterly direction
following Allee Smith a
three acl'l tr1ct Thence In a
Northoaaterly direction
following Alice Smith 1 Eoet
line 12 rode end 12 loll
Tho nco In en Euterly
direction aboutelx rode and
live loot to tho place of
beginning
Permenent Porcel No 1300381.000
LOclltd II 31110 Rt!l Hill
Road Llngevlllo OH 45741
~ld property hea been
1p~1od 11 $15 000 00 and
cannot 1111 lor 1111 th1n
two thlrda of opprelaemant
Thll eppr1loal II boaod
upon 1 vleull lnopoctlon of
th1t port of the premlua to
which ICCIII w11 readily
available The eppralllrl
aoaume no reoponolblllty
for ond giYe no weight to
unknown 11g11 moliere
Including but not limited to
concaelod or 1111nt deliCti
lnd or the preeonco of
hlrmlul or toxic chemlcoll
pollutlntl or g••••
Torm1 of Bill
Ten
Percent (10%) dey of 1111
b1l1nco within 30 deye
J1m11 M Sotuaby Sheriff
of Melge County Ohio
Stephen D Mlllt Attorney
18 W11t Monument Avenue
Dayton Oh o 45402
(B) 15 22 29 3 tc

SHERIPF s SALE
REALESTATE
CASE NUIIIBER OOCV018
LESALLE NATIONAL BANK
A8 TRUSTEE UNDER THE
PQOUNGANDSERVICING
AGREEMENT DATED 2/1/M
SERIES t9K-1
PLAINTIFF

FINANCIAL

SHERIFF S SALE
!lEAL ESTATE
CASE NO 00 CV 013
ASSOCIATES FINANCIAL
SERVICES CORPORATION
(Plaintiff)
VI
NANCY J CLARK et al
(Delendanto)
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHO
n purauance of an Order
of Solo 10 me directed from
•• d CoU'rt In the above
ent t ed adtlon I will expose
to oale at public auction at
the otopa ol the Courl
House 100 East second
Street Pomo oy Oh o on
Tuesday September 19
2000 et 10 00 a m of 11 d
day lhe to owing described
ea estate
LEGAL DESCRIPnON
The lc ow ng real estate
e tuatad In tba V age of
Pomeroy County ol Malga
and State of Ohio and mo e
pa t cula y deecr bod as
fol owa to wit
In F acllon No 25
beginning at a stake n the
No thwulerly line of lhe
road thai una from Suga
Run St eel Northeaate ly
paot tho eoldonce of
Wll om Q W ght and Albert
Haze lon which stake 11 75
teat from the Southeast
corner of lhe lot on which
aa d Haze ton real de a and
wh ch a ake Ia the
Southeast co ne of a ot
sold lo said Haze ton by
J P B adbliry
lhence
Northweatar y a ong the
Easter y no of said leal
named lol lo the cemetery
line thence along the
comalo y
line
Northeastward y to a point
I om wh ch a ne drawn lo
lhe
oed llrst above
ment onad wl be para e to
and 50 leal I om the flret
line of tho p em sao hereby
conveyed lhance from as d
point to sa d Northweater y
ne of sa d road to a stake

Bualness
Opportunity

direction with 1 radlua of
:-:;::==;:==:;=====1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"t:=========t~:::~;:=====:1
ltiO feet, • dlalllnce of 23 40
540 Ml see11 aneous
710
Autos
lor
SaiB
740
Motorcycles
feet
thence with tho line
FARM SUPPLIES

Schools
Instruction

230

Professional
Services

MERCHANDISE

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDED COR RECT REMOVE
BAD CRED T BANKRUPTCY

TAIRUNf DfADUNf

2 00 p m tho dey befon
lhled leto run
Sundoy I
edition
200

LAW SU TS

RAT NG 90
8 0802

UDGMENT S AAA

80 DAYS

888

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals

&amp;d Pho og a

GOOD CREDIT
BAOCREOIT
NOCREOITI
Le Us Ass s You n You New
M g Home Ca Fa P e App ova
8811-736 3332

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV /SSI?
No FeeU essWeWn
888 582 3345

30 Announcement•
Now To 'lllu Th ft Shoppe

9Wes sum .... - ·
740-592 842
Qua y co tl ng and hOuatM d
ems S 00 bag 11 e eve y
ThU sday Monday h u Sa u clay
9 QO.S 30

210

Merchandise

OR VERS I 000 S GN NG BO
NUS $40 000 ANNUALLY RE
G ONAL CARR EA EXCELLENT
BENEF TS EMPLOYEE STOCK
OWNERSH P COL A TANK &amp;
HAZ AERO BU K CARR ER
80Q.4S6-60 2

80

Th s newspape w no
know rJ.y accep
ad ert !&amp;men s o ea esta e
whch s nvoa on of he
aw Ou eade s are he eb)'
n o med ha a dwe ngs
ad ert sed n h a newspape

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION
2 89 Bale OOyo
Every SO 6 PM
EvoryTuoo 6 PM
Truckloads Of
New &amp; U88d ems
From StweraJ Sta es
Se ng To The PubliC &amp; Dealers
P ece Ooze s &amp; Case l o s
B~ Auction Service
Gory Bow.~ Auct-r

Proctorville Ohkl
FIH Mortcot
J s Acoss
Hun ngton WV
3st81dgo

740-8116-221111
~53-2517

a e a~a ab e on an equa
~eama

opportunity basts

SECURTY
$660HR
The Wadc.enhut Corp s Aec
ngFo 25F TmeOffces
WokS hide OHo rsPe
Day Pe Week Mus Have G E D
0 H S Dtp oma Re ees Home
makers And Others E cou aged
To Apply Please App y A James
M Gav n Power Plan S a e Rou e 0 Ca Capt Evans A
740 925 30 0

Pu bile Notice
SHERIFF s SALE
Bene one Flnonc 11
Service Inc
va
Robert T Lambert Jr ot al
Mega County Common
Pllll Cau
No H-CV.otl2
In pureuence of 1n order
leauod from Common Pllal
court within and lor tho
County of Melga Stolt of
Ohio on 1111 51h doy of July
2000 and to me directed I
will offer for 1111 11 Public
Auct on In tho Melge County
Courthou 11 Socond Strlll,
Pomeroy Ohio on Tutodoy
tho 19th doy of September
2000 at to oo AM of oold
day the following Real
Eatata to-wlt
Situated In the Townehlp
of Selem County of Melge
and State of Ohio
~----------1
Tract One Blllngln Sllam
k w~ 8t M""' i&gt; r,.. &amp;on
Township Melga County
""""'11&gt;u
10"" 8tsr e.,.
Ohio n Section 13 Town
"'""CJmsifittlt

r.,..,

REAL ESTATE

vs

WENDI KRAunER 1111
DEFENDANTS
COURT 01' COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNn OHIO
In purauance of an Order
of Sale to mo dlrlclecl from
Hid Court In the obove
enUtled lotion I wlllexpoee
to 1111 11 public 1uctlon et
the
Courtl'louu
on
September Ill 2000 II 10 30
a m of eold dey the
following doecrlbed real
•The following real eotate
eltullad In the County of
Malaa Slllo of OhiO ond In
the Vlll1g1 of Pomeroy and
bounded ond deecrlbed 11
follow•
All thot certoln troct or
percol of lind altuated
lying ond being In tho
VIllage of Pomeroy County
of llllge and Still of Oh o
ond being known and
deolgnllld on 1 mep or
Lincoln Helghll m1do by
Ire eo o
1
C., p or
Rlllllllrtd Civil Englneore
Huntington W111 Vlrvlnll
d1tad October 11 1842 1
copy of which Wll recorded
on December 17th 11142 In
the Oftloa of the Recorder
of Melgl County Ohio In
Plot look No 3 Peg• 43
ond 44 11 Lot No 28 1nd
baing mora pltlloul~rly
dnorlbed 11 follow I
Bllllnnlng 11 a point In the
eouth line of the Lincoln
ROid at the corner bltween
loll 28 ond 30 ao ehown on
llld mep thence with the
eald Una of L ncoln Ro1d
North 711 dog 51 Waet 25 ee
IHI thence continuing wllh
eold roed llna curving to
the left In 1 wnterly

between Jell 28 1nd 29
South 7 dag 03 Woet
2211 t10 rut thence North 89
deg 08 Wnt 28 2 feet
thence with tho line
b1tw11n 11ld Loll 211 end
30 North 10 deg 09 E11t
223 18 1111 to the point ol
beginning
reaorvlng
however the coal ond all
other mlnoralo In and

&amp; LIVESTOCK

Public Notice
undorlylng
tha IOllllher
above
dHCrlbld ptDperty
with the right to mine the
11mo without encumbrance
ID tho eurloce ond oubject

More Legals on Page B-6

t-------==========~---­
SHOP AT HOME

to en tiHment tor •wage

filter dHch or loochlng ditch
•• oat forth and doocrlbed
In that lnetrument bearing
date November 28th 1943
1nd recorded December 3
1943 In the alorosa d
Rocordere Off ce In Deed
Book 151 Page178
Pr or
natrument
rtleronceo Volume 89 Page

401
Property addrtaa 1678
UNCOLN HILL ROAD
POMEROY OHIO 45769
Apprellld II $15 000 00
Torma of Solo Caoh
Jamee M Solusby
Sheriff Melgo County
Sara M Peteramann
Lerner
Sampaon
&amp;
Rothlueo
120 E Fourth Street
81h Floor
c nclnnatl Ohio 45202
(513) 241 3100
OH Sup Ct 110055402
(8) 15 22 29 3TC

FREE
YIRD SALE

SIGN
with ad!
Get yours
today .

The Dally
Sentmel

110 Help Wanted

/

Pleasant Vall ey Hospital

CRNA
Pleasant Valle) Hosp1tal currently has
opportumt1es tor CRNA applicants
Applicants must meet the followmg
quahhcat10ns
Mt st be a reg s c c
c
I e 1 e of WV
• Graduate of an Ace cd cd sci oo l of Aneslhesta
Cer tf catton or el g I I t ce 1 ftcat on by the
• Amcncan Assocw o of Nu se Anesthetists

Compehtn

For your smcere

honesty and the
return of my lost
checkbook at Krogers
Your thoughtfuln ess
deeply apprec1ated

IS

~nLitlef~

Jom our famil y of professiOnals to the
best resource for comm umly health
servtce needs
Please Sub nut n csume To
PLEASANl VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PE RSONNE L
2520 VALLEY I)JUVE
PT PLEASAN I WV 25550
OR FAX I 0 (304) 675 6975

New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Down $245 pe Mo h F ••
A &amp; Sk
-888 928 342S

2 open

S300 Oo w
F ee De Ivery

e 35
40 24

$245 Pe Mon h
888 928 3426

28 52 Daub eW de $500 Down
Take o e payme n s 800 69
6
New B1nk Repos M!i!lc.9 2 Pay
men s &amp; Mo e
No Paymen s
A e Fou Yea s Oakwod Ga
po s 40}446-3093

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

FED UP WITH THE RUN AR
OUND? Wan A New Home W h
No Hass e ca Fo P e App o
888 736 3332

NEW PROPERTY
phy Ad 6 Ac
5Ac T acs W h4Ponds0n
The P ope ty S a ng As l ow As
I 6 5
AS GOOD AS NEW
GA LA CO H nngPopety
ON Y TWO Trac s eft 23 Ac

V NTDN CO M

E
AERAT ON MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Reb
n S ock
Ca Ao E a
800 53 9528

ana 34 Ac

~Ex1ensm36

MEGSCO Ba kOnTheMa
ke B a A dge One Wooded w
Meadow 9 9 A

a

NO APPUCATIQ\1 FEE'S
VOidKS OH WI
WWN delrayfurdif!l oom

Perfec Fo

Hun ng Or Home Site

GREAT NCOME OPPORTUN TV
MEDICAL 6 LLEAS Eam Up To Bankruptcy $79+ Stops gam shmenls
D vorce $99+
$451&lt;/y I Ful T a n ng/Home
Computer Req d (888)660 6693 Fqgclosurus $350 Praeclad
nes available $795+ -aes41
EKI 4401

NOB E CO A gh O lf Wo Run
SaePa k 5 A HomeAe

SEfiVICES
Antl"'on~

Land Company L d

80().213 8365

810

www c:oun rytyme c:om

Home
Improvement•

RENTALS
UAGENTL NEEDED p a ma
don
ea $35
$45 o 2
3
hOu s week y Ca Se a Te
0
592 665

No offloe via t neceuary
Up to Ssoo l111llntly Toll free

3 EASY SALES 13 000
Eas 'I ea
$3 000 you
s
.veek Make S K on e e 'I S99
a e We Teach you now CaN
BOO 294 9538

1-(877)-EARLYPAY

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER
PUT T TO WORK 1350 I 500
&amp; week PT F
www mcom

rne ce com

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSJFIEDSI

•

CASH LOANSI
Bad C ed OK
Easy Qua fy ng
Fas Serv ce
Low Payments
Cant den I a
I 800 332 2411

Sops He
IMPROVE YOUR
96 S cess Rae
WANT ACOMPtlt'ER?
FINANCe.., le e ho o
To f-ee 8 t:VERCLR
at No Cash? No Crecit OK SloN lmmed ate Coni dent a
Ca
o wwwe e c com
Crecit OK oDaMl LaptqJS
P o na Debl Solul ons
a
AVBIIable Reestablish You Cradil! NonP o 0 gan za on To F ee .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
Call N&lt;ml 11-1188-247-3818
888 968 929 Code 1023
.,.,,.....,! No Loans www p of na o g
$$$$ Unsecured LOANS
tor any 1J11P069 Credit Prdllems
Considered. $ 1200 mn mum
rroothly rxxrne mqtJJmd AwiY 24f7

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•

A-\ EOE

SON ESTATES 52 We s woo d
D ve om $289 o $3 o wa k o
shop &amp; moves Ca 74 0 446
2568 Eq a Hous ng Oppo n ty

faslest cash loans
ega dless ol c ed I aula loans
deb conso dal on Knowledge s
powe FA EE CALL
888 823
11...-----===--'175 5 Depl A(VOID n NC)

Help Wanted

Excellent

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

a

110

&lt; anrt

Benehts

Card of Thanks

t:·::av;~;,

e" tgt

BUDGET PR CES AT JACK

New 3 SA 2 BA Ooutl tw dt

Seams
Spm

The Datly Sentmel Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Public Notice

Yird Salel lnd Wllllecl
ToDoAdl
Mutal Bo Pold In Atlv1nc1

005

Tuesday August 22 2000

�Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~August22,2000

Tuesday, August 22, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhJO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B

5

OOP
BRIDGE
PHILLIP
ALDER

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

Advertise your
message

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER et-CV·117
N - Blink Mlnneoota,
N.tlonal Alaoclation, ao
TruotH uncr.r 1M Pooling
and Servicing AgrHrnent,
11 of January 1, 11199,
OpUon Ono llortgago I.Gin
Truot I 1189-A Alllt Socked
Cortlflcatoo Sort• 1-A.
without recourwe, Plllntlff
-VI·

Dorin D. R011ch aka Darin
ROIICh, It 11., Oetandanto
Court of Common Pltot,
Melgt County, Ohio
In purauance of an Order
of Sale In tho above entitled
action, I will offer for 1111 at
public auction In 1M obovo
county, on the 20th day of
September, 2000 at 10:00
a.m. at the door of the
oourthoute the lollowlng
~rlbeclrMI-e:

SEE
LEOAL
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT • A".
EXHIBIT ..A"

Sltutted In the Townthlp
. of Sallobury, VIllage of
Pomeror, Ohio, County of
Mtlga, and being part of
Section 25 of the Ohio
Compeny'o Purcha11 ond
bounded and doocrlbld 11
lollowa:

Beginning at a point In
tho northweat Uno of tho
r011d that l11da from Sugar
Run Strait In oald village
part the reltdenco of what
wu formerly W.J. Wright
and Alblrt Hazelton In an
Moterly direction to lando
formerly owned by J.P.
Bradbury, which point Ia
Identical
with the
IOUIMa~ cornar of a lot
50 felt wide conveyed by
J.P. Bradbury and Emma
Br1dbury to Etrl McC1rty
by deed dlled December
11, 1104, 1nd recordH In

Public Notice
11101; thanco northW!IIItrly
along the eutarly line of
aalp daalgnalld lot to tho
cemetery llnli thence
aaatwardly along tho
cemetery line 125 loot 6
lnchee;

thence

In

1

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

l

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE
State Route 7.
Tuppers Plains has
openings. all shifts.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. Certified In
Meigs ~ Athens
Counties.
Plenty of TLC

(9)5 3TC

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671
7/22/TFN

Coolputerlled Custool frnbroldery

Public Notice

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates

·Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER et-ev-115
.N orthwaet
Bank ·
Mlnnnota,
Natlonol
Auoclatlon, 11 Truat11
without racou-, Pltlntllf,
va.. Roger H•rt, et 11., '.
Daltndanta.
Court ol

aouth11sterly corner of Lot

Phone (740) 593-6671

"

6129/mo.

St•ptic Sy.tprns &amp;
Utilities

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740·742-8103

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
'lilt

, I II II II•"

EXPO 2000

Meigs County Fairgrounds
September 16th &amp; 1 7th
Sa(urday 10-8 p.m . &amp; Sunday 10-5 p .m .

Bluegrass Saturday
FeaturlnQ a 6:00p.m. performance by Marvin
Rose &amp; Friends

CarPet. Ulnlll Coverln• /k
floor Tile Mill Direct

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

East

• 10 J
'fJI0972

eQJ985

·C-IIWICIIIJUAI

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

Before 6 p.m. ·
Leove Message
Afi~r 6pm· 740·985-4180

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

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Cali T&amp;R Logging
after 8 :00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
nd 1 mn. 4

Equipment Parl!!l
Factory Authorized

Case-IH P1111s
Dealers.

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1 11nr

Pomaroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Malh St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gall)B
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive lop line.
Lie. 11 oo-so ,,..,.,

, IISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and REsiDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

HILL'S
'. SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740..949-2217
Slzas 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours _
7:00AM· 8 PM
11:!1 mo 1 mo. nd.

AUNT SUKEY'S
GOT SUCH

Replacement
Windows

\1~· ·' ·

~ ' \\

Pomeroy
7/5 3 mo

740-742-3225

'eru10~ f&gt;.ND I

1-\l\VE to.. m:"'
IWL6· WE NEVER. I

! GO \0 ::LEE.P

!

' !
~

(740)

Ui'ITILWE'VE
:£\T(L\) OJR.

01

wH I I..E WEARING THOSE
S.OCKS. YOIJ'IIE BEEN
. f&gt;l£1: ON ACA!;lEI'IIC. f&gt;RG·MTION . RECEIVED Z.37
DETEtniOI&gt;IS. BEEN RE •
jECTED REPEATEOL'( B'(
JE.NNY. AND LED THE
SOCCER TEAM TO AN
O· ANO · I~ SEA ",,N 1•

992-3470

57 Expunged
58 Revoke (a law)
DOWN
1 Jobs lor

musician•

2 --even ktol

• 54

A

hero
40 Entrances

Q7

10

9 Radar-screen
tmage

Like a certain
ranger

11 Without
and
12 Actress
Garr

Pass

Pass

Pass

3NT

Pass

__..

19 "I think,

therefore

21 Throw rocka - - at
22 Church
services
23 Ocaano
24 Hlstortan'a
concern

25 Greek peak
26 Sllgger
28 Petty quarrel
29 Edible

1.
Db I.

seaweed
30 Precipitation

Opening lead: ??

31 Heating apparatua

37 Covarad with
graaa

BY PHILLIP ALDER
Anthony Storr, a British psychiatrist, claims: "Marriages not
infreque ntly break up because the
more compliant partner eventually feel s compelled to reassert his
or her lost, separate identity."
Some bridge pannerships end
"Garfield..
49
Rockflah
for the same reason . Yet o,yhile a
50Saaama
pair is sti ll "married" and trying ·
52 Parla11110n
54 Diminutive
to do its best, usually it should L.....L.......L-L......J.......I.aulllx
work as a si ngle unit, not as two
CELEBRITY CIPHER
individuals. However, there are
by Luis Campos
deal s in which one defender
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quotallons by famous people, past and
knows the winning play, but his
present. Each tetter In the cipher 1tanda for another.
Today's clue: I eqUJJis U
partrier doesn't have sufficient
infonnation to work it out. Then
zc
WCGRZRERJH
'S CD
J
the knowledgeable defender must
assert him self, "compelling" partw 0 up p R P
ECLWGJRH
JOCIZ
ZFU
ner to follow his defense.
There are various ways to do
PFRW'P
EJWZJRH
G R AU
J
that; here is a lead-directing douJOCIZ
ZFU
PUJ. ' E C' L W G J R H R H V
ble you can employ to help your
partne r with his opening salvo.
UHCEF
WCMUGO
You open one spade, yet a few
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "They say.lhat money talks, but lhe only lhing il ever
moments later the opposition is in
said to me was good·bye." ~ Joe Louis
three no-trump. Your partner will
WOlD
be on lead . You double the fin al
GAM I
co ntract. What does your double
te ll partne r0
Man y play that the double
co mpe ls partner to lead a spade .
But I am convinced thi s is wrong.
First. the oppos ition won't norp
M
mall y zoom sfmight into three notrump of a lead of yo ur known
long ..s ui t. wi JLbe-l eth a i. . Second r~
fl U Q S A
and more important to my mind.
what will partner lead without
1
1
your double" Right. a spade-- one
" alway s" leads partner 's suit,
,.~-~N-U~E~S~E:---,[7 Overheard in science lab: "I'm_
especiall y with a very weak hand .
.
. not afraid of what we don't know
5
So. how &lt;:an you direct him to
j
What we already know is what
lead so onethon g el se~ Only by
'---'--'--'---'--' really - - - - - - ..." .
doubling.
CflELAK
He re. West 'should not start
-1
Comoleoe the chuckle quoted
with a spade. He knows ,East has
by Idling in the mining words
_..__,__..__.._..__,_you develop from srep H ~ .3 helow.
a lower-ranking solid suit. And
given West 's diamond shonage.
that is surely hi s perce ntage lead
-- turnin g contract made with an
ovenrick into contract one dow n.

rn-,

rt I

I

~...=---"l
r.
~

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIC£5 ·
BOBCAT SERVIC£5

(740) 985-3948

Friend of Jerry

and Kramer

RIIU tEl

Bulldozer Services

Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlson/laclnt, Ohio

Call 740-985-3831

•

Fill Dirt• Mulch •

CONCRETE

16·8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

'

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel • Sand • Topsoil•

"fth~o.d in .S~r11ie~"
"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

'&gt;

HAOLI"G and
EXCAVATI"G

P/8 (ONTRAOOR~, IN(.

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

.

fRANK &amp; EARNEST

fl

argument

56

38 --fault
(overmuch)
41 Actreaa·
Wlnona42 -dlth
43 Remarkable
peroon
44- ·--club
45 Lingerie buyl
47 Ginger cookie .
48 Dog In

Reasonable Prices· ·
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Vrs E'w.ertence
7 40-37 -6349

~@:,WICK'S

job

51 Accuatomld
53 "Crocodile -"
55 Formal

Pointing correctly

LONG
:EARS

Simington
· Ufetlme Warranty
Local Contractor

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

25·3·3 $3.25/20 ibs

painting Inside and out,
carpen~er work, rooftng,
•ldlng. HaVe own toot•.
Free Estimate•

NOW·· I'LL TELL YOU ALL
ABOUT TH' BODACIOUS
WEDDIN', AUNT SUKEY

Ask for Jim

- · -... •flnllolht

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INT

NOW I SEE WHY

740-992-9636

Anewer to PrevfoUI Puzzte

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: East
South
West North East

BARNEY

•

~m"!ttve

reproductive
body

42 Europ11n
apple
46 24 houro
47 Do a mallroom

27 Uae a ruler
3 "... 'lis of-"
32
Art
stand
4 Anecdote
•AKQJ9
33 Smacking
5 Valle
• 3
nolae
6 Head aupports
34 Thing of value · 7 Flexible
South
35 Juniper bush
undergarment
• A K 6 4
36 Laaat trash
8 •- - Clear
• K 8 3
" - 39 BabylonianDay"
•

•"'

ACROSS
1 Racalved
7 Wlneglas•
13 Taka 1 brallh
14 Romantically
InvolVed
(2 wdo.)
15 Irish language
16 Actre11
Lulae 17 Large knHe
18 Baby gcat
20 Peralan ell
21 Religious
23

West

• 10 4 3

- Pick-up &amp; delivery -Tires &amp;Detail :. ,.

...__...

·--~~~~-

I

I t '

I

f---rl--,:r;---,l--,l,-,.r e

I~UNUTS

l..

~

HAVE A QUESTION . SIR ..
;lF WE'RE LOST IN THE
IWOODS. WH'T' ARE WE FOLLOWING
AN ATTORNE'I' ?

FIRST WE'LL FIND T~E
COURTI40U5E ..TI&lt;EI&gt;I WE'LL LOOK
~OR ROOM 3'fZ ANO T~E I3ACK
STAIRWAY... I KNOW M'l' WAY

DON'T WORR'I', LADIES ..

-u----.-';;;1

I&lt;OME FROM THERE ..

vertise

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

ITUESDAY

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Backer . R1g1d. Hutch-

Prefer- RICHER

"Reme·11ber," the youngster lectured his soon to be
marned sister. "when they ask for rocher or poore r be
sure to pock RICHER '"

AUGUST 221

'Your

'Birthday

'

•

on t 1s ..
or one
mont or as ow as

J&amp;l IIISULATIOII I
COIISTIUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows.
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspouc, Garage worn

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

Decks, BoaoDocks,
Concrete &amp; Rlock Work,

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

Youth and Kids Activities Planned

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES

CHESTER

(740) 992-3831

2 Handyman crew will do

•

992-2n2

I

Carmelila &amp; Kenny O&amp;borne
33869 Blackwood Road . Off Sl R114J

NOTICE

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

lleupgg
Bulldo&gt;er &amp; Back/we
Se"'ice,
Hou!IC &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

' School Mascots

J4CIIIJ..a181

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

,,.,...,..tTo=eU

Hats
Jackets

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 46723

992-5479

For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

'

l
(

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos

AD Makoes Tractor &amp;

Blown Insulation

Classifieds!

~

i

DIPOYSAG
PARTS

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins~

• 7 2
•AQ6
• 8 6 5
•KJI065

• 7 2
.. 9 8 4 2

tarmelila's trealion~

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

ST.RT.248

os.zz-oo

North

BAUMLUMBER

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Mason,
304-773-5300 or 740-

(330) 342-6203
(8)22,28

PRODUCTS

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

aouthaaatarly direction to
thl aakl rotd; thanca In 1
weatarly direction along
aald road 110 IHI to tho
740-667-6329
ptaco of beginning
containing 52/100 ocraa,
more or leu.
Alao NVI and axcapUng
that part of fOld real Illata
sold to H.E. Boney. Alao ,
uve and except a p1rclt of
rMI aatlla now owned by
Manning D. Wabatar
daacrlbed In Daed Book
172, Page 377, Malga
County Dead Recorde,
ralerance to which Ia
haraby made lor definite
description of thlt
rtNrvotlon.
Reserva a spot for you, your team, or
Sold prtmlaaa alao
Churches, Schools, Organizations are
known aa 311 Wright Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun
PPN's: 10·01435' I 16·
01438.
Apprtllld 11: $40,000.00
and ctonnot blaold too • than two-thlrda (213) of that .
amount
Jamu M. Soulsby
Shlrlff of Meigs County
John D. Clunk 10005376
And..w A. Palally 10042515
Attomolfllor Plaintiff
75 II!Hord Drlva
f?ulu'?' W' .9'oflit
Hudoon, OhiO 44238

VOlume 81, P1ge 489, of the
recorGI Ol lloelll for IIIII
county of Melgo; thence
northw11terty along tht
111torly llno of oald laot Common " Pteee. Melg1
d..lgnated lot to tho COunty .Ohio.
oouthorly Uno of Boech
In pursuance of an Order
Orove Cemetery; thence of Sale In 1M obova •UUed
oooterly olong the line of ectlon, I will oflar lor 1111 at
11ld cernetery obaul 10 lt.t public ouctlon. In the above
to a po1t; thane• 1111 54 . county, on tho 20th day of
deg. north 67 lao! al!lng Saptamblr, 2000 at 10:15
aila cemetery line to an elm a.m. at tho door of tho
lrH; tMnct 111132 1/2 deg. courthouaa tho following
north 1long 11ld cemetery daacrlbld rut allele:
SEE .
LEOAL
lint 62 1111 to on. lim trH;
thence north 2 dog. well DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
along oald cemetery line HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A"
EXHIBIT "A"
584 feet to 1 pool In tho
Situate In the VIllage of
oouth llno of Ianda formerly
owned by MI.. Emma Pomtroy In the County of
J1cab1i thence aouth 84 Molgl and tho Stlla of Ohio.
Lol No. 45 aa doolgnated
deg. 1111 2771HI to I poll;
thence about 17 dog. 1111 on a map of Lincoln
332 1111 to a poet; thence Halghta, mada by Breaca I
lOUth 26 I /2 dig. 1111 Carpar, Raglatared Civil
about 148 feat to the Englneera, Huntington,
northwooterly line of uld Weal VIrginia, dated
rood (to 1 g.. plpa atoka); . October 17, 11142, 1 copy of
thence aouth 53 deg. wut which map wu flied In the
5821t.t along Nld rold to a olflca of tho Recorder of
pool; thence along oold Malgo County, Ohio,
road 50 IHI to the place of December 17, 1942, In Pill
beginning containing about Book No. 3, at Pagao 43 and
S.U ICIII of lind, 44, 1nd being mora
excepting the cool ond partlcultrly bounded .and
other mineral• thereunder, deacrlbld •• lollowa:
Beginning 11 a point In
together with the right tom
mine the ume and all wayt tho aouth llna of Lincoln
ond rlghta -of ·Wilf along all Road at tho corner bltwun
mlnertl eeame to tran1port Lola 44 and 45, •• ahown
co11 1nd material ueed In on aald map; thence with
the aald llna of Lincoln
mining coal.
Save and oxcaptlng OJII of Road, South 631 51 • aaat 50
tho 1111 daocrlbad tract of feat; thence with the llna
land, a amoll lot de1crlbocl batwun Lola 45 and 46,
11 follows: Beginning at a South 281 ot' waat 200 lett;
g11 pipe atako In the thanca north 631 51 ' Will 50
northwaeterly Una of a road feat; thence with tht llna
which taada from Sugar bttwaen1 Lota 44 lnd 45,
Run Street In told village; north 28 ot' Wtat 200 feat
thence lOuth 53 dog. watt to the point of beginning;
121 loot; thanca N. 26 1/2 r•••rvlng, however, the coal
deg. weot 1251Ht; thence N and oil other mlharola In
53 deg. E 121 IHI thence S. and underlying tho obove
28 1/2 dog. E. 1251aet to iht deecrlbtd proparty togllhtr
place of beginning being a with the right to mlna the
part of I IIICI Of 5.68 acr01 ••m• without encumbrtnce
purchaaed by W.H. Jobu to tho aurloce, and to an
from J.P. Bradbury and wlla eaaamant lor 1awoga llltar
bye dHd dated Jan. 5, 1810, ditch ol leaching ditch 11
and recorded In Volume 111 forth ond dtacrlbtd In
104, pogo 4, of the recorda that lnatrumant bearing
of d"d' of Mel go County, · date Novambtr 28, 1943,
and racordtd In Uld
Ohio.
Alto , aavlng and recorder'• office December
excepting tho following 3, 1943, In Dead Book 151,
Page178.
deacrlbed real eatate:
Said prtmlua aloo
The following reol atltll known •• 1838 Lincoln Hill
oltuotod In the County of Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
Mtlgo, In tha atoll of Ohio
PPN: 18-01870.000
and In the VIllage of
Appralaed at: $15,000.00
Pomeroy, and being o port and cannot ba aold lor 1111
of Fraction 25 of the Ohio than two-thlrdt (2/3) of that
Company'e Purchaae and 1mount.
·
bounded and doacrlbtd 11 John D. Clunk #0005378
lollowo: Certain Ianda ond Andrew A. Palalty 10042515
tenementa no. 25 In the Attomeya lor Plelntlff
VIllage of Pomtroy, County 75 Milford Drive
of llalgo ond State of Ohio, Hudaon, Ohio 442311
dller1bld 11 followo, to-wit: (330) 342-6203
Beginning at a point In (8)22,28
tho northWIIIIIIy lint of 1 (9)5 3TC
road that Ieoda from Sugor
Run StrHI of uld VIllage
p..t tho raoldtnca of J.J.
McCarty In on eooterly
direction, which point Ia
ldtnllcol
with tKe
2p fall wide conveyed by
Eiorl McCorty and Nenny
McCarty to J.J. McCarty by
dtld dated December 18,

, SECURITY

Box 189

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Buriai
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,,PJ
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~·

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

NEA Crossword Puzzle

one

WEDNESDAY. Aug . 23.2000
Any un solic ited changes that
occur in the vear ahead should not
be lookel o n unfavorably,
be cau se chances arc they're go ing
to work out to your advantage . Let
ev.~~lt s have their way.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-ScpL 22 ) An
unqxpccted way ma y he f ound
tnduy l u ge nerate some kond ol
additi onal ea min gs for you . It
may be a new source or co me
froi11 a change that wo uld produce
more income from your prese nt
~&gt; ull c L Virgo. trcirt yourself to a
birthday gift Send for your Astra~
Graph pred ictions for the year
aheau by mailing $2 and SASE to
As!io-Grap h. c/o thi s newspaper.
P.O: Box 1758. Murray Hill S tatio ll, New York. NY 101 56 . Be
s ur~ to stale yo ur Zod iac sign .
t:, IBR A (Sept. 2.1-0ct 23) A
ne~ co ntact you may mak e today
co rlld turn ou t to be of consod erublt import ance 10 you eit her
,odall y or commerci all y -- or on
ho t~ areas . Be nice 10 e1e ryone
vol(mt:e t.
~CO RPIO (Oc t 24-No,. 221 It

.

\ no~ :-. like thin g~

\v lll work out to
) oqr cxpe..:tution:- today hccause
of ~um c l..ind of propiti uu:-. change

that &lt;Kcur' wit h an associa ti on
yo u ha ve \\'il h another. Be ex pee-

An oppo rtunity cou ld ari se from
out of now here today for getting
togeth er w oth so meone you'd like
I
I an.
Si\CII"ITAKI US 1No1. 2.\- Dcc . to know better. T"ke "dvantage o f
2 1) A cont ract or lega l agreement this prop itious h"ppenin g.
ono uht be offered to you todav.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Yo~ · re in a fa vo rable. per iod.
Be ready 10 pounce on any un exthe odds co uld be 1ilt e u in your pee led sl1if1 today tl1at mig ht pop
fa \'or for makin g a good Ll~al wit h up. bct:au-,e it could produ ce new
mutual h(' n ~ fit s .
ad vantages fo r yo u in your chose n
CA PRICORN 1Dec . 22- Jan . ridd of e ndeavo r. Stay on your
I1)) It looks olay Imlay for you to toes.
GEM INI (M"y 2 1-June 20)
take that calculated risk you need
to make to fulfill an .ambitious Others wil l find vo u ex tre ond y
objec ti·ves. Just be sure to t h.m k a11 att r;u.: tl\'1.~ today' hccau"e of a sub your moves I hroug I1 care f u II y lit' uni verscd "JliJca l _vou rJo"c" al
this time . ThC' oppiJ:-.i tc gendC'r
t..1rst.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) mcoy e1en l' iew you rom,rntical ly.
Frie nds wilh whom you are very
CANCE R (June 2 1-Jui.Y 22l
coz soc ia lly aren' t likely to deny Peop le wol h 11hom vnu II be
vouy any req uests you make of· 1111oh·ed tocla y arc lolcly to do
them today. It 's the hi gh esteem in om·c th,"' g~ t ~ r _You ,pur~ly, ~ "
which ·ou're he ld that make thi s oonpul &gt;e . Be gt,ou ousl) .oppocco,o;
tl\·e and trv to fond "'" '' to rec oso.
procatc
-- if 1101 nn\1'. ohen later
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marc h 20)
LEO {J ul y 21- Aug. 22l OneEnvision pos otiv e re sults and
o
n-one
association s can be
wo rk toward them today, because
things tend to ultim ately work out improved upon today with two
in your favor. This is parti cularly friend s in panicuiar headin g up
true in finan cial or mat erial no at- the li st. Howe ver. eac h and every
association is wonh any cffon you
.
h
ters.
ARIES rMarch 2 1- Aprol 19) can g ov e t f 111.

;o

League Baseball. Atlanta Braves al

•

�Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesda~August22,2000

Tuesday, August 22, 2000 ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhJO

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B

5

OOP
BRIDGE
PHILLIP
ALDER

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

Advertise your
message

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER et-CV·117
N - Blink Mlnneoota,
N.tlonal Alaoclation, ao
TruotH uncr.r 1M Pooling
and Servicing AgrHrnent,
11 of January 1, 11199,
OpUon Ono llortgago I.Gin
Truot I 1189-A Alllt Socked
Cortlflcatoo Sort• 1-A.
without recourwe, Plllntlff
-VI·

Dorin D. R011ch aka Darin
ROIICh, It 11., Oetandanto
Court of Common Pltot,
Melgt County, Ohio
In purauance of an Order
of Sale In tho above entitled
action, I will offer for 1111 at
public auction In 1M obovo
county, on the 20th day of
September, 2000 at 10:00
a.m. at the door of the
oourthoute the lollowlng
~rlbeclrMI-e:

SEE
LEOAL
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT • A".
EXHIBIT ..A"

Sltutted In the Townthlp
. of Sallobury, VIllage of
Pomeror, Ohio, County of
Mtlga, and being part of
Section 25 of the Ohio
Compeny'o Purcha11 ond
bounded and doocrlbld 11
lollowa:

Beginning at a point In
tho northweat Uno of tho
r011d that l11da from Sugar
Run Strait In oald village
part the reltdenco of what
wu formerly W.J. Wright
and Alblrt Hazelton In an
Moterly direction to lando
formerly owned by J.P.
Bradbury, which point Ia
Identical
with the
IOUIMa~ cornar of a lot
50 felt wide conveyed by
J.P. Bradbury and Emma
Br1dbury to Etrl McC1rty
by deed dlled December
11, 1104, 1nd recordH In

Public Notice
11101; thanco northW!IIItrly
along the eutarly line of
aalp daalgnalld lot to tho
cemetery llnli thence
aaatwardly along tho
cemetery line 125 loot 6
lnchee;

thence

In

1

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

l

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE
State Route 7.
Tuppers Plains has
openings. all shifts.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. Certified In
Meigs ~ Athens
Counties.
Plenty of TLC

(9)5 3TC

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671
7/22/TFN

Coolputerlled Custool frnbroldery

Public Notice

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates

·Contractors Welcome
Albany, Ohio

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER et-ev-115
.N orthwaet
Bank ·
Mlnnnota,
Natlonol
Auoclatlon, 11 Truat11
without racou-, Pltlntllf,
va.. Roger H•rt, et 11., '.
Daltndanta.
Court ol

aouth11sterly corner of Lot

Phone (740) 593-6671

"

6129/mo.

St•ptic Sy.tprns &amp;
Utilities

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740·742-8103

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
'lilt

, I II II II•"

EXPO 2000

Meigs County Fairgrounds
September 16th &amp; 1 7th
Sa(urday 10-8 p.m . &amp; Sunday 10-5 p .m .

Bluegrass Saturday
FeaturlnQ a 6:00p.m. performance by Marvin
Rose &amp; Friends

CarPet. Ulnlll Coverln• /k
floor Tile Mill Direct

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

East

• 10 J
'fJI0972

eQJ985

·C-IIWICIIIJUAI

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

Before 6 p.m. ·
Leove Message
Afi~r 6pm· 740·985-4180

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

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Cali T&amp;R Logging
after 8 :00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy )
nd 1 mn. 4

Equipment Parl!!l
Factory Authorized

Case-IH P1111s
Dealers.

Advertise in
this space for
$25 per
month.

1 11nr

Pomaroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Malh St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per gall)B
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive lop line.
Lie. 11 oo-so ,,..,.,

, IISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and REsiDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

HILL'S
'. SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740..949-2217
Slzas 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours _
7:00AM· 8 PM
11:!1 mo 1 mo. nd.

AUNT SUKEY'S
GOT SUCH

Replacement
Windows

\1~· ·' ·

~ ' \\

Pomeroy
7/5 3 mo

740-742-3225

'eru10~ f&gt;.ND I

1-\l\VE to.. m:"'
IWL6· WE NEVER. I

! GO \0 ::LEE.P

!

' !
~

(740)

Ui'ITILWE'VE
:£\T(L\) OJR.

01

wH I I..E WEARING THOSE
S.OCKS. YOIJ'IIE BEEN
. f&gt;l£1: ON ACA!;lEI'IIC. f&gt;RG·MTION . RECEIVED Z.37
DETEtniOI&gt;IS. BEEN RE •
jECTED REPEATEOL'( B'(
JE.NNY. AND LED THE
SOCCER TEAM TO AN
O· ANO · I~ SEA ",,N 1•

992-3470

57 Expunged
58 Revoke (a law)
DOWN
1 Jobs lor

musician•

2 --even ktol

• 54

A

hero
40 Entrances

Q7

10

9 Radar-screen
tmage

Like a certain
ranger

11 Without
and
12 Actress
Garr

Pass

Pass

Pass

3NT

Pass

__..

19 "I think,

therefore

21 Throw rocka - - at
22 Church
services
23 Ocaano
24 Hlstortan'a
concern

25 Greek peak
26 Sllgger
28 Petty quarrel
29 Edible

1.
Db I.

seaweed
30 Precipitation

Opening lead: ??

31 Heating apparatua

37 Covarad with
graaa

BY PHILLIP ALDER
Anthony Storr, a British psychiatrist, claims: "Marriages not
infreque ntly break up because the
more compliant partner eventually feel s compelled to reassert his
or her lost, separate identity."
Some bridge pannerships end
"Garfield..
49
Rockflah
for the same reason . Yet o,yhile a
50Saaama
pair is sti ll "married" and trying ·
52 Parla11110n
54 Diminutive
to do its best, usually it should L.....L.......L-L......J.......I.aulllx
work as a si ngle unit, not as two
CELEBRITY CIPHER
individuals. However, there are
by Luis Campos
deal s in which one defender
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quotallons by famous people, past and
knows the winning play, but his
present. Each tetter In the cipher 1tanda for another.
Today's clue: I eqUJJis U
partrier doesn't have sufficient
infonnation to work it out. Then
zc
WCGRZRERJH
'S CD
J
the knowledgeable defender must
assert him self, "compelling" partw 0 up p R P
ECLWGJRH
JOCIZ
ZFU
ner to follow his defense.
There are various ways to do
PFRW'P
EJWZJRH
G R AU
J
that; here is a lead-directing douJOCIZ
ZFU
PUJ. ' E C' L W G J R H R H V
ble you can employ to help your
partne r with his opening salvo.
UHCEF
WCMUGO
You open one spade, yet a few
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "They say.lhat money talks, but lhe only lhing il ever
moments later the opposition is in
said to me was good·bye." ~ Joe Louis
three no-trump. Your partner will
WOlD
be on lead . You double the fin al
GAM I
co ntract. What does your double
te ll partne r0
Man y play that the double
co mpe ls partner to lead a spade .
But I am convinced thi s is wrong.
First. the oppos ition won't norp
M
mall y zoom sfmight into three notrump of a lead of yo ur known
long ..s ui t. wi JLbe-l eth a i. . Second r~
fl U Q S A
and more important to my mind.
what will partner lead without
1
1
your double" Right. a spade-- one
" alway s" leads partner 's suit,
,.~-~N-U~E~S~E:---,[7 Overheard in science lab: "I'm_
especiall y with a very weak hand .
.
. not afraid of what we don't know
5
So. how &lt;:an you direct him to
j
What we already know is what
lead so onethon g el se~ Only by
'---'--'--'---'--' really - - - - - - ..." .
doubling.
CflELAK
He re. West 'should not start
-1
Comoleoe the chuckle quoted
with a spade. He knows ,East has
by Idling in the mining words
_..__,__..__.._..__,_you develop from srep H ~ .3 helow.
a lower-ranking solid suit. And
given West 's diamond shonage.
that is surely hi s perce ntage lead
-- turnin g contract made with an
ovenrick into contract one dow n.

rn-,

rt I

I

~...=---"l
r.
~

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVIC£5 ·
BOBCAT SERVIC£5

(740) 985-3948

Friend of Jerry

and Kramer

RIIU tEl

Bulldozer Services

Residential, Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlson/laclnt, Ohio

Call 740-985-3831

•

Fill Dirt• Mulch •

CONCRETE

16·8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag

'

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel • Sand • Topsoil•

"fth~o.d in .S~r11ie~"
"Creep" Feed $9.75!100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

'&gt;

HAOLI"G and
EXCAVATI"G

P/8 (ONTRAOOR~, IN(.

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

.

fRANK &amp; EARNEST

fl

argument

56

38 --fault
(overmuch)
41 Actreaa·
Wlnona42 -dlth
43 Remarkable
peroon
44- ·--club
45 Lingerie buyl
47 Ginger cookie .
48 Dog In

Reasonable Prices· ·
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Vrs E'w.ertence
7 40-37 -6349

~@:,WICK'S

job

51 Accuatomld
53 "Crocodile -"
55 Formal

Pointing correctly

LONG
:EARS

Simington
· Ufetlme Warranty
Local Contractor

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

25·3·3 $3.25/20 ibs

painting Inside and out,
carpen~er work, rooftng,
•ldlng. HaVe own toot•.
Free Estimate•

NOW·· I'LL TELL YOU ALL
ABOUT TH' BODACIOUS
WEDDIN', AUNT SUKEY

Ask for Jim

- · -... •flnllolht

LINDA'S
PAINTING

INT

NOW I SEE WHY

740-992-9636

Anewer to PrevfoUI Puzzte

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: East
South
West North East

BARNEY

•

~m"!ttve

reproductive
body

42 Europ11n
apple
46 24 houro
47 Do a mallroom

27 Uae a ruler
3 "... 'lis of-"
32
Art
stand
4 Anecdote
•AKQJ9
33 Smacking
5 Valle
• 3
nolae
6 Head aupports
34 Thing of value · 7 Flexible
South
35 Juniper bush
undergarment
• A K 6 4
36 Laaat trash
8 •- - Clear
• K 8 3
" - 39 BabylonianDay"
•

•"'

ACROSS
1 Racalved
7 Wlneglas•
13 Taka 1 brallh
14 Romantically
InvolVed
(2 wdo.)
15 Irish language
16 Actre11
Lulae 17 Large knHe
18 Baby gcat
20 Peralan ell
21 Religious
23

West

• 10 4 3

- Pick-up &amp; delivery -Tires &amp;Detail :. ,.

...__...

·--~~~~-

I

I t '

I

f---rl--,:r;---,l--,l,-,.r e

I~UNUTS

l..

~

HAVE A QUESTION . SIR ..
;lF WE'RE LOST IN THE
IWOODS. WH'T' ARE WE FOLLOWING
AN ATTORNE'I' ?

FIRST WE'LL FIND T~E
COURTI40U5E ..TI&lt;EI&gt;I WE'LL LOOK
~OR ROOM 3'fZ ANO T~E I3ACK
STAIRWAY... I KNOW M'l' WAY

DON'T WORR'I', LADIES ..

-u----.-';;;1

I&lt;OME FROM THERE ..

vertise

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

ITUESDAY

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Backer . R1g1d. Hutch-

Prefer- RICHER

"Reme·11ber," the youngster lectured his soon to be
marned sister. "when they ask for rocher or poore r be
sure to pock RICHER '"

AUGUST 221

'Your

'Birthday

'

•

on t 1s ..
or one
mont or as ow as

J&amp;l IIISULATIOII I
COIISTIUCTION
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows.
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspouc, Garage worn

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

Decks, BoaoDocks,
Concrete &amp; Rlock Work,

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

Youth and Kids Activities Planned

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month.
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES

CHESTER

(740) 992-3831

2 Handyman crew will do

•

992-2n2

I

Carmelila &amp; Kenny O&amp;borne
33869 Blackwood Road . Off Sl R114J

NOTICE

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

lleupgg
Bulldo&gt;er &amp; Back/we
Se"'ice,
Hou!IC &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

' School Mascots

J4CIIIJ..a181

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

,,.,...,..tTo=eU

Hats
Jackets

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 46723

992-5479

For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

'

l
(

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos

AD Makoes Tractor &amp;

Blown Insulation

Classifieds!

~

i

DIPOYSAG
PARTS

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins~

• 7 2
•AQ6
• 8 6 5
•KJI065

• 7 2
.. 9 8 4 2

tarmelila's trealion~

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

ST.RT.248

os.zz-oo

North

BAUMLUMBER

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Mason,
304-773-5300 or 740-

(330) 342-6203
(8)22,28

PRODUCTS

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

aouthaaatarly direction to
thl aakl rotd; thanca In 1
weatarly direction along
aald road 110 IHI to tho
740-667-6329
ptaco of beginning
containing 52/100 ocraa,
more or leu.
Alao NVI and axcapUng
that part of fOld real Illata
sold to H.E. Boney. Alao ,
uve and except a p1rclt of
rMI aatlla now owned by
Manning D. Wabatar
daacrlbed In Daed Book
172, Page 377, Malga
County Dead Recorde,
ralerance to which Ia
haraby made lor definite
description of thlt
rtNrvotlon.
Reserva a spot for you, your team, or
Sold prtmlaaa alao
Churches, Schools, Organizations are
known aa 311 Wright Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun
PPN's: 10·01435' I 16·
01438.
Apprtllld 11: $40,000.00
and ctonnot blaold too • than two-thlrda (213) of that .
amount
Jamu M. Soulsby
Shlrlff of Meigs County
John D. Clunk 10005376
And..w A. Palally 10042515
Attomolfllor Plaintiff
75 II!Hord Drlva
f?ulu'?' W' .9'oflit
Hudoon, OhiO 44238

VOlume 81, P1ge 489, of the
recorGI Ol lloelll for IIIII
county of Melgo; thence
northw11terty along tht
111torly llno of oald laot Common " Pteee. Melg1
d..lgnated lot to tho COunty .Ohio.
oouthorly Uno of Boech
In pursuance of an Order
Orove Cemetery; thence of Sale In 1M obova •UUed
oooterly olong the line of ectlon, I will oflar lor 1111 at
11ld cernetery obaul 10 lt.t public ouctlon. In the above
to a po1t; thane• 1111 54 . county, on tho 20th day of
deg. north 67 lao! al!lng Saptamblr, 2000 at 10:15
aila cemetery line to an elm a.m. at tho door of tho
lrH; tMnct 111132 1/2 deg. courthouaa tho following
north 1long 11ld cemetery daacrlbld rut allele:
SEE .
LEOAL
lint 62 1111 to on. lim trH;
thence north 2 dog. well DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
along oald cemetery line HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A"
EXHIBIT "A"
584 feet to 1 pool In tho
Situate In the VIllage of
oouth llno of Ianda formerly
owned by MI.. Emma Pomtroy In the County of
J1cab1i thence aouth 84 Molgl and tho Stlla of Ohio.
Lol No. 45 aa doolgnated
deg. 1111 2771HI to I poll;
thence about 17 dog. 1111 on a map of Lincoln
332 1111 to a poet; thence Halghta, mada by Breaca I
lOUth 26 I /2 dig. 1111 Carpar, Raglatared Civil
about 148 feat to the Englneera, Huntington,
northwooterly line of uld Weal VIrginia, dated
rood (to 1 g.. plpa atoka); . October 17, 11142, 1 copy of
thence aouth 53 deg. wut which map wu flied In the
5821t.t along Nld rold to a olflca of tho Recorder of
pool; thence along oold Malgo County, Ohio,
road 50 IHI to the place of December 17, 1942, In Pill
beginning containing about Book No. 3, at Pagao 43 and
S.U ICIII of lind, 44, 1nd being mora
excepting the cool ond partlcultrly bounded .and
other mineral• thereunder, deacrlbld •• lollowa:
Beginning 11 a point In
together with the right tom
mine the ume and all wayt tho aouth llna of Lincoln
ond rlghta -of ·Wilf along all Road at tho corner bltwun
mlnertl eeame to tran1port Lola 44 and 45, •• ahown
co11 1nd material ueed In on aald map; thence with
the aald llna of Lincoln
mining coal.
Save and oxcaptlng OJII of Road, South 631 51 • aaat 50
tho 1111 daocrlbad tract of feat; thence with the llna
land, a amoll lot de1crlbocl batwun Lola 45 and 46,
11 follows: Beginning at a South 281 ot' waat 200 lett;
g11 pipe atako In the thanca north 631 51 ' Will 50
northwaeterly Una of a road feat; thence with tht llna
which taada from Sugar bttwaen1 Lota 44 lnd 45,
Run Street In told village; north 28 ot' Wtat 200 feat
thence lOuth 53 dog. watt to the point of beginning;
121 loot; thanca N. 26 1/2 r•••rvlng, however, the coal
deg. weot 1251Ht; thence N and oil other mlharola In
53 deg. E 121 IHI thence S. and underlying tho obove
28 1/2 dog. E. 1251aet to iht deecrlbtd proparty togllhtr
place of beginning being a with the right to mlna the
part of I IIICI Of 5.68 acr01 ••m• without encumbrtnce
purchaaed by W.H. Jobu to tho aurloce, and to an
from J.P. Bradbury and wlla eaaamant lor 1awoga llltar
bye dHd dated Jan. 5, 1810, ditch ol leaching ditch 11
and recorded In Volume 111 forth ond dtacrlbtd In
104, pogo 4, of the recorda that lnatrumant bearing
of d"d' of Mel go County, · date Novambtr 28, 1943,
and racordtd In Uld
Ohio.
Alto , aavlng and recorder'• office December
excepting tho following 3, 1943, In Dead Book 151,
Page178.
deacrlbed real eatate:
Said prtmlua aloo
The following reol atltll known •• 1838 Lincoln Hill
oltuotod In the County of Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
Mtlgo, In tha atoll of Ohio
PPN: 18-01870.000
and In the VIllage of
Appralaed at: $15,000.00
Pomeroy, and being o port and cannot ba aold lor 1111
of Fraction 25 of the Ohio than two-thlrdt (2/3) of that
Company'e Purchaae and 1mount.
·
bounded and doacrlbtd 11 John D. Clunk #0005378
lollowo: Certain Ianda ond Andrew A. Palalty 10042515
tenementa no. 25 In the Attomeya lor Plelntlff
VIllage of Pomtroy, County 75 Milford Drive
of llalgo ond State of Ohio, Hudaon, Ohio 442311
dller1bld 11 followo, to-wit: (330) 342-6203
Beginning at a point In (8)22,28
tho northWIIIIIIy lint of 1 (9)5 3TC
road that Ieoda from Sugor
Run StrHI of uld VIllage
p..t tho raoldtnca of J.J.
McCarty In on eooterly
direction, which point Ia
ldtnllcol
with tKe
2p fall wide conveyed by
Eiorl McCorty and Nenny
McCarty to J.J. McCarty by
dtld dated December 18,

, SECURITY

Box 189

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Buriai
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,,PJ
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~·

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

NEA Crossword Puzzle

one

WEDNESDAY. Aug . 23.2000
Any un solic ited changes that
occur in the vear ahead should not
be lookel o n unfavorably,
be cau se chances arc they're go ing
to work out to your advantage . Let
ev.~~lt s have their way.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-ScpL 22 ) An
unqxpccted way ma y he f ound
tnduy l u ge nerate some kond ol
additi onal ea min gs for you . It
may be a new source or co me
froi11 a change that wo uld produce
more income from your prese nt
~&gt; ull c L Virgo. trcirt yourself to a
birthday gift Send for your Astra~
Graph pred ictions for the year
aheau by mailing $2 and SASE to
As!io-Grap h. c/o thi s newspaper.
P.O: Box 1758. Murray Hill S tatio ll, New York. NY 101 56 . Be
s ur~ to stale yo ur Zod iac sign .
t:, IBR A (Sept. 2.1-0ct 23) A
ne~ co ntact you may mak e today
co rlld turn ou t to be of consod erublt import ance 10 you eit her
,odall y or commerci all y -- or on
ho t~ areas . Be nice 10 e1e ryone
vol(mt:e t.
~CO RPIO (Oc t 24-No,. 221 It

.

\ no~ :-. like thin g~

\v lll work out to
) oqr cxpe..:tution:- today hccause
of ~um c l..ind of propiti uu:-. change

that &lt;Kcur' wit h an associa ti on
yo u ha ve \\'il h another. Be ex pee-

An oppo rtunity cou ld ari se from
out of now here today for getting
togeth er w oth so meone you'd like
I
I an.
Si\CII"ITAKI US 1No1. 2.\- Dcc . to know better. T"ke "dvantage o f
2 1) A cont ract or lega l agreement this prop itious h"ppenin g.
ono uht be offered to you todav.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Yo~ · re in a fa vo rable. per iod.
Be ready 10 pounce on any un exthe odds co uld be 1ilt e u in your pee led sl1if1 today tl1at mig ht pop
fa \'or for makin g a good Ll~al wit h up. bct:au-,e it could produ ce new
mutual h(' n ~ fit s .
ad vantages fo r yo u in your chose n
CA PRICORN 1Dec . 22- Jan . ridd of e ndeavo r. Stay on your
I1)) It looks olay Imlay for you to toes.
GEM INI (M"y 2 1-June 20)
take that calculated risk you need
to make to fulfill an .ambitious Others wil l find vo u ex tre ond y
objec ti·ves. Just be sure to t h.m k a11 att r;u.: tl\'1.~ today' hccau"e of a sub your moves I hroug I1 care f u II y lit' uni verscd "JliJca l _vou rJo"c" al
this time . ThC' oppiJ:-.i tc gendC'r
t..1rst.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) mcoy e1en l' iew you rom,rntical ly.
Frie nds wilh whom you are very
CANCE R (June 2 1-Jui.Y 22l
coz soc ia lly aren' t likely to deny Peop le wol h 11hom vnu II be
vouy any req uests you make of· 1111oh·ed tocla y arc lolcly to do
them today. It 's the hi gh esteem in om·c th,"' g~ t ~ r _You ,pur~ly, ~ "
which ·ou're he ld that make thi s oonpul &gt;e . Be gt,ou ousl) .oppocco,o;
tl\·e and trv to fond "'" '' to rec oso.
procatc
-- if 1101 nn\1'. ohen later
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marc h 20)
LEO {J ul y 21- Aug. 22l OneEnvision pos otiv e re sults and
o
n-one
association s can be
wo rk toward them today, because
things tend to ultim ately work out improved upon today with two
in your favor. This is parti cularly friend s in panicuiar headin g up
true in finan cial or mat erial no at- the li st. Howe ver. eac h and every
association is wonh any cffon you
.
h
ters.
ARIES rMarch 2 1- Aprol 19) can g ov e t f 111.

;o

League Baseball. Atlanta Braves al

•

�'

Pacae B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
SeenJ~ (Abbott 8-4)

7:05p.m.

at Detroit lNomo 5-1 0),

Oakland (HUdson 13·5) at Cleveland (ColOn

Eul
Teem
w L Pel.
Alllnlo .•...,...................... 76 48 .5t3
Nerw Yon~: ......................... 74 51

11-8). 7:05p.m.
.
Kansas City (Stein 4·3) at Toronto (Loaiza 7·
9). 7:05p.m.
GB

.592 2 1/"l

Florlda ............................. 51 e3 .492

15
Montreat ..................... ..... 53 68 .438 21 1/2
P1lilldolphla .................... 51 72 .4t5241/2
CentrJI

S1. Louis ...........................59 55 .556
Cincinnati .............. .........61 82 . .498
Chicago .•............. ...........54 59 .43&amp;
Mltwaukaa .......................53 11 .427
Plnsburgh ,........•.......... ... 51 72 .4t5
Houston .......................... 51 74 .406
Wool
San Francisco ..................71 52
Arizona ........................... 70 54
Los~ ..................... ~ 51
Colorado ........ .................82 63
San D;ego ..........•............. 60 65
lllondoy'o
Cincinnati 7, Philadelpnia 4

Texas (Rogers 11 -11 ) at N.Y. Yankees
(Clemens 10-6), 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Aa.Ortiz 4-3) at Boston (Ohka 22), 7:05 p.m.
·
Tampa Bay (Aekar 4-B) at Minnesota {Redman 11-8), 8:05p.m.
Baltimore (Parrish 2-1) at Chicago White
Sox (Lowe 3-1), 8:05p.m.

7 112
t4 1/2

.P.RO HOOP$ ,

te

171/"l
t8 t/2

WNBA Playon Glance

.577
.565 1 1/2

ao.-

.504

9

.496
.480

10

Flret Round
CBoo1-ol-3)

blt«n Conferene.

12

Frld1y, Aug. 11
Ortando 62, Cleveland 55
S1turday, Aug. 12
New York 72, Washington 63

H-too 5, Chioogo Cubs 4
St. LOuis 7. Pittsburgh 4

_ Sam!l__-y, ~g. 13

_

Alllf11a·1,-COIOiii!IO • .

Cleveland 63, Ortando 54

San FranciiCO e, Florida 0

-,,Aug.14

- •. 5.Los
Angelos 1
San Diego
N.Y
. Mats 4, 10 inning5
Milwaukee te, AriZona 8

Todoy'o Ga.N.Y. Meta (Mahomes 4-1) a1 . San Diego

CEaton 4·2), 5~05 p.m.
P1111..tolphla CChen 6·2)a1 Cincinnati (Bell 5·
1), 7:311 p.m.

W11tern

--,··-

eont.... nc•

Aug. 11
LOS Angeles 88, Phoenht 71
f~doy,

laturdlly, Aug. 12

HOUlton 72, sacramento 64

11111day,Aug.U
LOI Angelll 101 , Pt\oenbc 78, Los Angeles
wins ltrln 2·0

llo-y, Aug. 14

Houl1on 71, llofemenlo 10, Houston wins
H&lt;ill2-4

Coru , ....,. l'ln~J•
llk.t~..t4)
I!IIIMn Con ..rencl

AIIarWa (MaddLDI 13·7) 81 Colotackl CRose 1.
1), 3:05p.m.
Florida! (C.Smrth 2_.) at San Francisco
(LHemande! 12·Sll), 3:35p.m.
Flhlladelphl• (Person e-4) at C!ncinnati
(WIIIamson 5-7), 7:311 p.m.
Chicago Cubs {Quevedo 1-5) at Houston
lMillef 2-4), 8:05p.m.
PittSburgh (Rttchle 6-6) at St. Louis (Ankiel
1·1), 8:10 ~.m.
Mltwaukee (Ha'fMS 11)..11) at Arizona
(Sclilllng 10.7), tO:Oil p.m.
Montreal (Thurman 3-3) at Los Angeles
(Brown 10.5), t0:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mats (Leiter 13-5) at San Diego
(Ciementl1·11), t0:05 p.m.

.

New York 78, washington 57, New York wins
series 2-0
Tltei&lt;Wf, Aug. 15
Cleveland 72. Orlando 43. Cleveland wins
series 2·1

Ch6cago Cuba (Wood 8-8} at Houston

(B.Powell 1-ll), 8:05 p.m.
- . g h Cs.ton,.; 1: 2) at St Louis (Kilo 14B), 8:10p.m.
- . CButt&lt;tn B-5) a1 ColOrado (YOohll s13), 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee (D'Amico 9 ..) a1 Arizona (GuZ·
man 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
.
Monlraal (Moore 1-3) at Los Angeles CVBid•
2-G), 10:10 p.m.
Florid• (Burnett 1·3) at San Francisco
CEstn 12·3), 10:15 p.m.

Thurscloy, Aug. 17
81111dty, Aug. 20
New York 51 , Cleveland 45
Mo-,, Aug. 21
Clevetand 58, New Yortl 43

New York 81 , Cleveland 67, New York wins
series 2-1

Willetn Conf.,.nce
Thursdlly, Aug. 17
Houston 77, Los Angeles 56

Sundey,Aug.20
HoJJston 74, Los Angeles 69. Houston wins
series 2-0
Chemplonahlp Sert..

(Boot-ol-3)
Thur8dly, Aug. 24
· Houston at New Ytrt 8 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 28
New Vorl&lt; at Houston, 1:30 p.m.

- L . e e g..

Eut

Toom

W L

New'lb&lt;k ................ .........aa 53
Bolton ............ ....•...........65 56

Sundey, Aug. 27
New York at Houston, t :30 p.m., It neces-

TotOntO ............................ 64 61
Bo~lmore

sary

.•............... .... ... 55 59

:::~7:·~:~ ~ :~~

Tampa Bay.......................54 69

=~ :

Dllroit ................. .. .... .. .. 61
Kansas City ..................... 58
Minnesota
............... 56
Seam
WMt
e .................. .... ...... 89
~::.nd
58
m .........................64

... . . . . . .... ... .

62 .496

71/2

t2

66 .468 15 112
70 .444 18 1/2
55

57
f!lt

.556
.537 2 t/2
.512 5 112
.455 12 112

Texas ------ - ---- --~~~- :,.:
N.Y. Yankees 12, texas 3
Detroit 3. Oakland 1
Baltimore 2. Kansas City 1
Bolton 7, Anlhelm e. t 1 innings
, . _ ~ 11 ,...""-'-... Whit Sox 4

o;;yij~ .,;,;;.,;
e
TocMy'a GltmM

Seanle (Garcia 4·3) at Detroit (Weaver 8.
10), 7:05p.m.
Oaldand (Heredia 13-8) at Cleveland (Finley
9·9), 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Reichert 7-6) at Toronto (Trachsel6·11), 7:05 p.ni.

•

Only

games ocloeduled

Wldn.ct.y'e Gemet

BASEBALL

Amerlcen Leag 111
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Extended their
working agreement with Maryland Baseball
Umtted Pannership through the 2002 sea-

son.

BOSTON RED SOX-Signed RHP
Manny Oelcarman.
L dKA1NSAd.S CITY ROYALs-Named Oeric
a n er 1rector of scouting.
MINNESOTA TWINs-Optioned RHP Joe
Mays to Salt Lake of the PCL.

Natlonlil Leeou•

ATLANTA BRAVES-Optioned 2B Steve
Sisco lo Richmond of the International
League. Recalled AHP Gabe Molina from
Richmond .
COLORADO ROCK I ES~Piaced OF
Larry Walker on the 15-day d.isabled list.
Called up OF Adam Melhuse from Colorado
Springs of the PCL.

-

- DA&amp;KE-TBALL;·-·

National 811ketbell Aaaoclttlon
ATLANTA HAWKS~Signed G Anlhony
Johnson.
BOSTON CELTICS~ Signed G Chris
Carr.

CHARLOTTE HORNETS- Signed F-G

Darrin Hancock .

Phillies , who lost for the seventh
time in eight games. After his
eighth-inning double , Danny
Graves relieved and got four outs
hum_PageB1
for his 21st save in 24 chances.
performance, hitting the first
Reds Notes: Wolf lasted only
pitch in each of his three at-bats. three innings, matching the
Young got an intentional walk in shortest start of his career. In his
the ·seventh, when he was deter- last three starts, Wolf has given up
mined to get a triple to complete 21 runs in 15 1-3 innings ... . Scott
the cycle.
R olen singled in the fifth, ending
"The guys told me if I hit the an 0-for-17 slump.. .. Griffey and
hall, they don't care if it's to the Phillies Doug Glanv ille, Mike
first baseman, I've got to go for Lieberrhal and Pat Burrell were
three," he said.
o n the field early to film a segThe six-run inning provided me nt for a movi e tentatively
Pete Harnisch (5-6) with the called "Summer C atch." It's about
cushion he needed on an off- a p1tcher who makes it to the big
leagues and gives up a homer to
night.
He gave up nine hits and four Griffey in his first app earance....
walks in 5 1-3 mnings and was so Harnisc h threw the R eds' 82nd
·'angry at himself for walking two wild pitch of the season, one shy
batters to load the bases in the of the club record. ... Young's
sixth that he slammed his glove upper-dec k horner was the first
by a Red 1his season and the
and cap against the bench.
Tomas Perez had three doubles fourth overall. Mark McGwire,
and drove in three runs fo r the Preston Wilso n and Moises Alou

Reds

MNF
from PageB1
injuries - may have fo und an
answer at runnin g back .
Lamar Smith carried 15 times
for 86 yards, giving Miami a second co nsecutive solid outing. He
gained 72 yards on 17 rushes last
wee k against Tampa Bay's stingy
defense.
Smith co uld be relied on heavily early this season, especially
with J.J. Johnson facin g a fo urgame suspensio n fo r vi o latin g the
NFL's stero id policy.
"We felt like Lamar gave us the
best chance to run the foo tball,"
Do lphins coac h Vave Wannstedt
sa id. "Obviously. after today that
j ust reinforces o ur dec ision . H e
will be th e guy."
Miami still has other areas of
concerns . O li ndo Mare missed

FOOTBALL

L••au•

N8tlonal Football
BUFFALO BI LLS-Aeleated 08 Ph il
Stambaugh, P Jason van Dyke K Jon
Hilbert . DB Askarl Adams , DB Oa~id Byrd .
OS Quincy Coleman. FS Phillip Crosby, WR
Scott Pingel, WA Corey Sullivan, TE John
Jennings, C Spencer Riley, ,G Mike Tosaw,
LB Keith Kelsey, and OT Nathanie! Williams.
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Waived PK
Ooug Pelfrey.
CLEVELAND BROWNS- Released WR
Zola_ Davis, WR Owaune Jones , RB Greg
Robinette and OL Manuia Savea.
DALLAS COWBOYS~ Aeleased WA
Oarran Hall, WA Crew Cone, P Barry
C_antrell , TE Lawrence Han, TE J.J. Hug _g.ns , OL J.R. Conrad, OL Steve Scifres , OL
Chad Slaughter, OL Kendrick Gholston. OL
Keith Jackson and S Jason Kaiser. Placed
LB Brandon Tolbert on waivers -injured
reserve . Reached an injury senlemen1 with
OL Chris Brymer.
DENVER BRONCOS- Released FB
Ryan Christopherson, OL Jerome Davis, OL
Nathan Davis, G Allen DeGraffenreid and
CB William Hamp1on. Placed WR Muneer
Moore on injured reserve
- DETROIT LION~Piocod OB Mike Tomczak on injured reserve . Released WA
Henry Douglas, LB Scott Fields and S Ryan

S1ewan .
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS- Waived OL Joel
Davis, LB Josh Gentry, TE Ibn Green, RB
Mark Kacmarynski, L8 Paul Lacoste, OT
Craig Aobeen , OT Paul Snellings, RB
Tremayne Stephens, DB Scott Ttlomas and
WR Brian Wofford.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS- Waived WR
Scan Cloman. LB Jonathan Jackson, G Eric
King, S Percy King, FB Charles Kirby, WR
Brock McGrew, T Josh Rawlings. OT Kevin
Sluder and WR Germaine Stringer.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS~ Re l eased
TE Rob Tardio, G Brent warren, S Rodney
Rideau, OT Ryan Tujague and OLB Casey
Tisdale.
NEW YORK JET$-Waived TE Blake
Spence .
OAKLAND RAIDERS-Signed WA Andre
Rison .

PHILADELPH IA EAGLES- Waived CB

Tony Francis, WR Michael Lewis , K Rich
Maston , WR R11ki Nel$00, FB Anthony
Soutl'1ern, LB Marc Stockbauer, C Ty Wise.
T Raben Barr, S Lemar Marshall and TE Jed
Weaver.

PITTSBURGH STEELERS--Waived OT

Kris Farris, T Chris Conrad, OL Todd Burger,
WR Shawn McWashington, TE Jason
Gavadza, FB Joey Goodspeed, K Kyle Atteberry, CB Tim Strickland, LB Jonathan Foster and OE Johnny MitchelL Placed WR ,Will
Blackwell on the physically unable to perform list.
ST. LOUIS RAMS-Cut· P Louie Aguiar.
Released DE Vince Arney, OL Andrew Kline
and WR Phil Savoy. Signed WR Chris
Thomas.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS- Released WR
Pat Batt~aux, OE Seneca Knight, OT Glenn
MaHhews, TE Terrance McCaskey, G Reg·
gie Nelson, FB Durrell Price. WR Calvin
Schexnayder, CB Eric Sloan, WA Kevin
Swayne and S Fred White.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS- Aclivated TE

r.aJ~maf!~~:~

- Touo-CHolllng -1441)-at N.Y. Yan,..,. (Neorgle 3-3), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Men:ker0-2) at Boston (Wakefield
8-7), 7:05p.m.
.
Tampa Bay {Aupe 4-4} at Minnesota
{Romero 2-2), 8:05p.m.

Tuesday,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

four field goals (33, 30. 48 and 51
yards) and Damon Huard we nt a
third co nsec utive game without
leading the otfen;e to a touchdown.
Hu ard played three qu arte rs,
going 16-of-23 fo r 138 ya rds. l:lut
he see nun gl_y left ple nty of :oo m
fo r Jay Fiedler to take ow r the
starting j o b before th e seaso n
opener.
Fiedler, w ho had art hroscopic
surgery to repair torn cartilage in '
his right hi p on Aug. 3, re tllrn ed
to pra ctice Saturday and shou ld
play significa ntly in Miami 's ex hibition final e Friday agai nst N ew
O rl eans. H is perfo rmance could
be an impo rtant showi ng in th e
race to replace Dan Marino, the
NFl.'s caree r passin g leader.
''I' m a little fru stra ted, bu t I' m
not going to push the pan ic bt•tto n," Hu ard said. " It's preseaso n .

We'll be fi ne. I know it's goi ng to
turn arou n d .''

Gr eg Clark . Placed RB Paul Smith on
Injured reserve . Waived CB Mikki Allen. WR
Jermaine Arrington , WA Eric Chew, OT
Daniel Greer, DT Tony Plantin, DE Danny
Scott and K James Tuthill.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Waived DT
Brad Culpepper, CB Scott Milanovich , C
Eric DeGroh, WR Tavarus Hogans, WR
Michael Williams, OL Aaron Humphrey, OL
Oamon1e McKenzie, LB Antony Jordan, LB
Kinnon Tatum, CB Terrance Parrish, FB
John Waerig and P John Shay.
WASHINGTON AEDSKINS- Waived OT
Doug Brown , S Quincy Sanders, K Clay
Rush, K Peter Elezovic, LB Anthony Palerson, OL Lamont Bryant. WA Jammie Deese,
WR Tommy Naah, QB Leon Murray, DL Eric
Stevenson, DB Eric Whitfield and OB Clay
Scanlon. Placed OL Derek G. Smith and AS
Gerard Arnold on injured reserve .

HOCKEY

Nttlon•l
Hockey
LeiQUI
CAROLINA
HURR
ICANESSigned F
Jeff Daniels to • one-year contract and D
Mike Rucinski to a two-year contract.
Sognel! G Bul!!f Amid&lt;&gt;.vski, C Reggie Berg.
b Jeremiah McCarthy and D Harlan Pratt .
Named Jerry Peters director of media rela tions and Brian Tatum as team services
manager.

NASHVILLE PREDATORS- Signed D

Marc Moro to a multiyear conlract.
PHOEN IX
COYOTES-Signed
D
Aadoslav Suchy to a three-year contract.

also have reached the red seats....
Griffey went 2-for-4 , extending
his hitting streak to seven games
and raising his average to a season- high .257 .. .. C hris Stynes
had four hits.

NFL CAMP NOTEBOOK

Details, A3

Rison hooks up with Raide
PR6SS
players released Monday, dearing the way fo r
It took just one week for five-time Pro ·Bowl and- year pro Anthony McFarland to move into
selection Andre Rison to find a new team.
starting lineup .
C,ulpepper, entering his sixth season with
Rison, who spent the last three seasons with
Kansas City but was waived Aug. 14.,signed with the Bucs, started 61 games the past four years,
Oakland Raiders on Monday.
1998 led.one of the league's top defenses with
"The day I was released I already knew where I sacks. He's fourth on the dub 's career sack list
was going," Rison said.
33.
The Chiefs said their decision to waive Rison was
McFarland, a No. 1 pick who played sparin g!)'
based on the desire to develop young talent, not the a rookie in 1999, will take over Culpepper's
33-year-old receiver's performance in training
Third-string quarterback Sco tt Milanovich,
spent parts of four seasons with the Bucs, was
camp.
Last season, Rison had just 21 catches and no released. He re-signed late last seas on after T • ••.L-1
touchdowns, but reportedly maintained rigorous Dilfer was injured, and went 3-for-8 for 9 yards
conditioning program during the offseason.·
one interception this preseason.
Rison has !On&gt;e ongoing legal i!Sues, including a
Milanovich's release improved the· chances
scheduled court appearance next morlth for not rookie Joe Hamilton, a seventh-round draft
returning a rented S1,000 tape machine to a music from Georgia Tech, will make the team as the
store.
quarterback behind Shaun King and Eric Z eier.
Rison has played for five teams in 11 NFL seaAlso released were center Eric DeGroh; receivers
sons. In 170 games, he has 702 catches - 12th most Tavarus Hogans and Michael Williams;
in league history - for 9,599 yards and 78 touch- linemen Aaron Humphrey and Damonte
downs.
zie; linebackers Antony Jordan and Kinnon Tatum .
Dolphins
cornerback Terrance Parrish; fullback John Wa,eri.,,
J.J. Johnson , whom Miami was counting on as its and punter John Shay.
starting running back, faces a four-g&gt;me suspension
Lions
for violating the NFL's steroid policy, a football
Quarterback Mike Tomc za k wa s placed
so~ rce familiar with,the case said.
•"
injured reserve, three days after the 16-year vet:era,n\
Johnson appealed the suspension. Th~.- source, who broke his leg in an exhibition loss to Oakland.
did not want to be identified, said unless the ruling
He was subbing for No. 1 quarterback Charlie
is overturned by commissioner Paul Tagliabue,John- Batch, who recently resumed practice after recoverson would miss the first four games this season. A ing from a broken bone in hi s right knee, but is
decision on the appeal is expected bef&lt;,&gt;re Miami's being held out of games.
·
opener against Seatde on Sept. 3.
Tomczak was 6-of-12 for 37 yards before he was
The league declined to comment, but it has a no- knocked down by Oakland linebacker Greg Bickert
tolerance policy regardi1!g steroid use, which means and stayed on the ground, curled up in pain and
Johnson, 26, would be suspended fQ.i his first grasped his shin.
offense.
Cowboys
Johnson, a second-round pick in 1999, s.t arted
Darran Hall. a kick-return specialist who fuinbled
four games as a rookie and led the team with 558 two kickoffs against Denver last weekend, was
yards rushing with four touchdowns. ·
among 13 players released Monday.
Falcons
The release of Barry Cantrell makes it likely that
Pellom McDaniels, a reserve defensive end, will Micah Knorr will open the season as Dallas' punter.
miss this season because of small blood clots on his
By releasing Lawrence Hart and J.J. Huggins, the
lungs.
competition for the' third tight end JOb was narMcDaniels, 32, frrsr experienced shortness of rowed to former Cowboys Tyji Armstrong and
breath Aug. 8 at the Falcons' first practice after Rickey Brady. .
returning (rom an Aug. 5 exhibition In Tokyo.
Linebacker Brandon To.lbert was waived, but will
The 6-foot-3, 295-pound McDaniels did not miss return to Dallas' injured list if not claimed. Offensive
a game or practice, but his breathing problems per- lineman Chris Brymer rec eived an inj ury settlesisted. The clots were discovered Sunday night.
ment.
McDaniels indicated doctors might advise him to
Also released were safety Jason Kaiser; offensive
stop playing football. He is being treated with linemen J.R . Conrad, Steve Snfres and Chad
blood-thinning medication and will remain hospi- Slaughter; defensive lin emen Kendrick Gholston
talized through Wednesday.
and Keith Jackson, and receiver Drew Cone.

a

Dues
Defensive tackle Brad Culpepper was among 12

r==::=::::=:::::=:::===T=::;;::=======T=:::::========-r:==========
Public
1

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE 01' R!AL
ESTATE
CASE NUMBER OO.CV-Q03
Chase Blink or Toae, N.A.

lka TIXII Commerce Bank,
National Aaeoclatlon; 11

C t0 dl
Ul

an,

PI1 C till

·VI•

n

Jerome N. McKenzie, et of.,
Delendanta
Court ol Common Pltaa,
Melga County, Ohio
en purauanco ol an Order
ol Sale en the above entitled
action, I wiiC ollar lor tile 11
public auction In the above
county, on the 20th day ol
September, 2000 at 10:30
a.m. at the door ol the
_courthouae thil following

Public Notice

dHctCbed IIIC . .hilt!

Situated Cn the State of
Ohio, County or Malga and
In the Townahlp ol Oliver:
Bllflg 2.23 acrea, more or
1111, out ol the Northweot
corner ol Lot No. 1185,
Section 9, Town 4, Range 11
and bounded and doacrlbed
oaloiCowa:
SEE
LEGAL
DESCRIPTION ATTACHED
HERETO AS EXHIBIT "A".
EXHIBIT"A"
Beginning 8.00 rode Weot
of the common corner ol

Ianda owned by K. W.
Emrick, T. Kibble, Sar~h M.
Kibble, and Herbert
WIUComo and on the North

Notice

Public Notice

line of Lot No. 1165 (thla
aamo point being 72 rods
Wool ol tho North West
corner ol Lot No. 1165);
thence South 3' Weal a
dlatanco ol 36.5 rode; more
or Cua, along the Weat nne
or Lot owned by Herbert
Williams, to the center of
State Route No. 680; thence
North approxcmatecy 38'

dlatanca ol 12.8 rods to tha
placo ol baglnnlng.
AUDITORS PARCEL NO.
09·00577 .000.
Appraised at: $20,000.00
and cannot be sold for Ieee

than two-thirds (2/3) olthat
amount.

Jamaa M. Souloby
Shorlll of Meigs County
John D. Clunk .t0005376
Weat 18 rods, more or leas, Andrew A. PaCaaCy M0042515
to Southeut comer ol land Attornayslor PlaCntlll
owned by or formerly
75 Milford Drive
owned by Ira Kibble; thence Hudoon, Ohio 44236
North 21.6 rods, more or (330) 342·8203
l11o, to the North line ol Lot
No.1185; thence Eaotalong (8)22,29
North line ol Lot No. 1165, a (9)5 3TC

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Volume 51, Number 6l

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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

placemem o n th ~ salary
sch edule , pay elates, use of perso nal l~a ve, travel rennbui'semcnt and plannin g peri od,.
During th e meetin g the bo"rd
hi red fo ur tL·achers o n one-year

godl o n~ , IJennls Gilmon..o; fo ur

SENTINEL NEW S STAFF

co nt racts. The y we re Su za nn e

ga ll ons, C ha rle ~ Mu grage,
William Cook, Jeanette Rad fiml: one gallo n. Robt•rt W. Barton. Annr Frances Shrimp lin .
Fi rst- tim e donors were: jdr
Nottingham, Arthu r Hess, Maril yn Wilcox, Shari Bobb,
Mi chael
Abl es,
P:nn eh
ll uonphrey. Sprin g "Lightfoot,
Jl,.,. Rn u&lt;h, Lo is Johnson, John
T oylor. M.11 ,. Bailes, Amy H ackney. Bill C:.o r" vell, and R and y

POMEROY - The Mei J;S
Local Board of Edu cation ratified a new tluec:- year contract
Tu esday with th e Meib'S Local
Teachers Association providing
for a 3.45 perc ent salary
mcrease.
Hi ghli ghts of th e co ntract
provide for:
• An increase in base salary
!rom $ 20 ,3110 to $2 1,000 , (a
3. 45 pcr~e nt increase, whi ch
pushes the salary scal e up fo r all
teachers in the district);
• EmplCJyees hirc·d since 1998
to co ntmu e to pay 10 pt&gt;rcen t of
th e co~t o f their medi cal in sur-

C ammarata, GRADS ; jani ce
H ay nes. sc ience ; and Mark

(IlL·

Contract includes
3. 45 salary hike

Senio r C: iti zt'ns C ente r in

Pomeroy.
Multiple- gallo n donors were:
sew n gall ons. Linda Haley; six

J oh n ~on.
IJ o HuP-.

hy

Ll) ll\ ll\ll11i ty \ -Vh t: Tt.'

"' foll nw~:
PO MEROY -

Paul Marr.

Th olll &lt;L\ H Jrt, M.1ry K. SpcnLc r,

anee;

David King, Ger.tld ltmo ,;ht,
Euni ce: Jones. Dcnni ~ ( ;i\mort.•,
j e;111 Durst , Uerry Co ughenou r.

Jac ky
Co ugh enour,
!.lilly
Spencer, Philip Ololinbt·r. David
Ell io tt , R obert Smith. l.l nan
Shank, Susann a Hec k, Anna
Shrimplin. Lloyd Blac kwood,
Patrici(l Barton , Li1u.la Vaniil Wagc·n , Bill Carswell , Barbara
Ro t;h"· Bcmadette And erso n,
Barb;m Matrh cws-Crow, Jacki e
Hilck brand. Donald May.
R oge r Gaul , and Janet Peavley.
RAC IN E
- C harles
Mugrage, Evelyn Mu grage.
Patsy Cornell, Arthur Rou sh,
Larry C ircle. Paula l.ll\l\Vn, Shari
Bobb, Harry Holter, Michael
Ables. Jeanette· Radford, Pamela
Humph rey, Eli z.obeth Ayres
Th oren. Spring Li ghtfoot .
C l:o ren&lt;T Dugan , and Barbara
I )u g.uL
MIDDL EPO RT - Jennifer

Pomeroy Elementary students eagerly exit the school bus Tuesday morning en route to another exciting
year of school. Tuesday was the first day back to school for hund reds of Meigs Local and Eastern Local
children who woke up yesterday realizing summer va cation was all but over. Students in the Southern Local
District will report for classes Monday. (Tony M. Leach photo)

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OME ROY Mt· i ~s
CO ll !l t i;liiS wiJI "Ji ght
th l.·l pa rh nf hope·"
w h en thl.· Alllnicm
C,lll (l.'r SOCil.' ty\ R l'l.ty
!l)r Life t.1 k c~ &lt;aridc Fri cby ni~h t
on till' M l'iL.."
, High Sch on[ p.u-k -

P

2 col. x 3"
$38.70
Sunday 2x3
$57.90

in 11; lot.

T hl' h t· n d ir not on ly r.mn
lllOill'Y t() r G ll l tTr \'l'\t'.lrl." h .llld
Tl'l'.ltll ll'llt.

\\ '.t V

b11t it ~ i VL'" rt' '\tdt'llt'l ,\

to n·t"o~J liLl' . th o"c, who Jrt•

l."Jt~ccr o.; urvivon, .llld
ti HJ\l.'

rill.'

ft'llH.'Ill h lT

w ho lmr their h .Htk· with

d l \l' ,l\1,.' .

Actlv itil''\ will bq!;i n
co mmu e

.It (,

p.m.,

.til nigh t .m d up unnl

noon Saturday. ·
Ar 7 p.m. su rvivor&lt; w11l join
to!!,l'thcr to w;:~ lk .1 vinory l.1p

Cl l'S ,

Swann , so c ial studi es, all

at

Meigs High Sc hool: and Nikki
Whitlat ch, fourth grade, Rutland Elementary.
Th e re sig11atJons of Linda
Smith and C hri s Sto ut from
teachin g posi ti ons were accepted.
Hired as s ub s titut ~ teachers
were Penn y Uurge, Laura Ellis,
Dorothy Sue Faulkner. Catherm e Gros venor- Han, Am y King,
Nico le M. Ko uvaras, Mary Ann
N eal. G inge r Patterson, Delmar
G. Pullins, and ~ h a ron Thompso n ,

• Sevt·ranc(' pay 111 th e thm.i
Al so approve d durin g the
ye ar of the co ntr :t r.: t to be
m c:cting was the.· e mploy m e n t of
incrc·ased by 35 addi tional days D an Flo nnmo at a sa lary of
of pay;
$30,1-\20 as the safe and dru g• C reati o n of a "calami ty lt:aw
fret" sc hools coordin at or for
;:a ssistance program" when:by a
Me igs Local usmg tilnds from
teacher can donate up to fi ve the Safe and Dru g-Free G rant
sick days to anoihcr teac her
Prog;ram .
w hu is un th:rgoi11g a catast ro ph C ontracts at th e• rate of $9.1ll
ic illness.
an hour were J\Varded to six
• A "school calendar ro mmitaides who provide &lt;;t•rvlces to
tt' L'" w h ost' functi o n wi l1 bt" to
han dicapp ed children . Th ey
recomm end a sc hoo l calendar ro
were Sherry Eagl e, Donna Jacks,
th e Board for adoption.
Pe nny Kl ein , C andy O hlin ger
• Clearin g up co ntract lanand Donna Shato, aid es; and
guage issues relat ing to redu cti o n m statT, transfe rs and vacan -

Please see Board, Pace A:S

Native returns to historic Peoples
house ... with a little bit of help
FR OM STAFF REPORTS

POM ERO Y - How do you
gl't c i ~il t to ns ot furlli turc , a
pialh), c.1rto n ;d(c r orr_o n of vin t.lgc b ook ~ ;md oth lT pn sonal
bL·Inng1ngs up ..1 hillsid t' and .'\t l
~ r t.'p~ .111d intn .1 home?
Nnn1 1:1 G ib ~o n M,mc's wao;;
THE EASY WAY - Worke rs with
t he Central Van a nd Storage Co.
used th e platform of a Kanawha
Stone Co. boom truck to move
eigh t ton s of books, furniture and
othe r belongings in to the new
home of Norm a Grbson Maness.
th e granddaughter of Judge C.E.
Pe oples.

fa ced with that ve ry prl'di cam ent
Mon day w hen wo rk ers wi th
Central Van .md Storage arrived
wtt h a truckl oad of boxco; for he r
new ho m e.
Maness soon empl oyed a boo m
Lru ck fi-o m th e.: Kanawha Sto ne
Co., C harlesto n, W.Va ., and the
bclo nl( lll b" we rl" easil y lifted from
tht· strc·ct, th ro ug h ~he air and
rrees, w rhe rambling front porch
o f tlw houst', ,vhcn: workers
bega n th e m oving process.
' Maness is m oving into the C. E.
l't&gt;o pk s homt·. a loomm g Victorian ho m t' o n Buttt&gt;rnut Avenu e.
Maness, . w h o grew up in t h e
h OIIll', p; the grand daughtt.·r of

Relay for Life scheduled Friday at high school lot

.

2 col. x 2"
$25.80
Sunday 2x2
$38.60

teacher deal

FROM STAFF REPORT S

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.,.

-Local
new

POMEROY
M eigs
( :ounr}o residents Jonatcd 9 1
ton its of blood Aug. 16 when tlw
R ed Cross llloo dmobile vi sited

Please see Blood, Page Al

II

50 Cents

Big first step

SYRAC USE
- Ca rol yn
C ~ h .1rl e~. I h rL1 Th on Ja&lt;; 1 Patricia
Elh m. !lobby O rd . Oris Smith.
I )t,.·bor;-ih Lowery, l'erc Sisson,
:&lt;mlllev R oush; LONC; BOTTO M - Sharo n Van noy.
Henry BJhr. Jcfr Nomngham,
Va kn ~ N o tring lu m. and Ml.·r-

;...

~000

Hometown Newspaper

lll an .

, ________ __

r-----------------------,_
...,. . . . -.. Ir-----------,I I

Meigs County's

Wilcox. Donna Davidson, Pam
Manley, Patricia Bun1gardn cr,
Arthur Hess. C harles Cook,
Ch.Jrks Fitchpat ric·k. Anna
lJrowning, Lind a Haley, 1-tolwrt
llartnn, Marilyn Wilcox. Raymo nd W1 lcCJx. Slml cy Fitchp.otrick. Drcma Bdl, Ellis M yers,
Michael Wdi(mg. Sr., Michad
Wilto ng;. Jr.. and Jennifer Hay-

Want to show your appreciation?

August 23,

a1

( ;:m:y, IJo nna Hawley, Norma

ADS

Wednesday

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED

MEI{;S COUNTY FAIR ""TIIANK

2 col. x -4"
$51.60
Sunday 2x4
$77.20

More Meigs County Fair scenes, AS
Phillies top Reds; Tiger's bogus balls, 81

Thursday

High: BOs; Low: 60s

down t h l' rd.1y p.1tlt .md t11 c1 1 wil l
hl' gu l'st&lt;; ,11 .1 n ·u.·prum
A &lt;;pcr i.d lumin.1ry 'cn·H.:l' \\'il l
lw hel d .It t\11\k, ,11 1d .llflT d ~.H
th ere will h.: p LTfnrt ll.lll (t'" hy
Elv1o.; 1111pc r~on.nnr I h\"l~ht [ ~, t' ll howc r. tltt· Big lknd Clo!-!;gt-r'.
.1ml U mln ( : o JJ\ l fllll\011. ,\ barbt·r..;flop qu .lrtt't, t( )ll owcd hy I)_ _I
R ork i11' R q.~~ i l'. whu \Y ill \...n·p
tht· lllll"'ic go in g unn l I .1 11 1.
A pizz.t p.ort\ ll"i ll be· ht·ld Jt
midnig!H .111d rh t' ll k.1r.IOkc \n il
till tht• tillll' till ti l [ I) .1.111. S.lt lll\.iay
wltl.'ll the "hicnd~o .111d F.1it h "
r h o ir Ut lik l thl.· dirl'l't l011 ot"A1 ny
P etTI II " ill . 111g .
Enlpl~o ly ~

t' \

o(

the

r-.ll'llllTS

Ltlnk , undn the dll'l't tiun of Jo
Ann C ri sp, .trc prcp .~ring rhe
lum inar it' s mad e of dl·ror.ncd
w h it e P•lf't' l' b ;1g~ . \( llllt' wi rh

nrhcr&lt;; wit h
trlbtltl.·o.;, p.lrt!.ll!y fi lkd \\'!t i l 'a nd
to ho ld a vo ti Vt' c:mdk.

llll' tllnrul

p l L tl l tT\,

.1 'Pt't'Lll

rcntcrn hr.l lh

A,

ofTIIL""d.l y n non.

l J."\

l'

lud hel'n puilho~,c d f"or $:)
1..' .\t' b .111d lh.-ror.1tcd hy Cri,p.

tltlll'

fnr rlw

pcro;on on till.' track from hc:gm 11111~ rn l'llli (1( llll' Rel.1y fnr 1 itl·.

Sentinel
:z

. AS
B2-~

BS

A4
A3
B1-3 , 6

M

OlllO

,111d. ot' ( our.,c . .1ll rbc
llHlllt'\ will be contnhmcd to rlw

prmr to tlte l'Vl'nt ,md h ave Olll'

Today's

Lotteries

11 1011}

L 1c h rt'Ll y tl' .llll C OII~l' t " of Ill
tv 15 p~opk· who 'L'l"~ donatiom

that

Please see House, Page Al

SIJorts

l l'l"l'-

( : .lll(t· r s~ ,,· lct y.

ll HW t'

We ath~r

lc-rn Fift-. M.ory WuJ(,·. Lorn
R .u1dolph .111d S,lr.lh 1-l oLh l' h ~) ld ­
LT. h.111k ~· mp l ")Yt' t'' · Tlw ,,Ill' will
unril

plans to

Obituari~s

l ll!ll l-

ll.l rl l'\

cntlllllll l'

shl·

Calendar
Classifieds
C otnics
Editorials

"L'r\' \(l'.
1

N ow,

bu 'il nl'&lt;;'i, "T he (; ibson AttiC. 11 into
roo m ~ of tht· Pt·opk s H o u ~e. She
also ph m a rn aju r n.:.· n ovation project tOr t he t(nlr- lwdronl ll h o use,

Sections - 1:z Pages

T h e lu111inarit'" w1ll be used tn
111 .1rk .1 p.1th .1nd ht-': htl'd ;1r du .J
durin~

Jud ge Peoples, who bui lt th e
home in 1905. H er late hm band,
Ray111o nd Maness, was a 1935
g raJu att' of Po meroy
High
School.
Pt'opk s w,1, a Co mm o n Pleas
Co urt Jud ~c· .mtl tli c·d in 1942.
M a n es~. a fo rme r
En gl ish
re acher. IS moving back to
Pomeroy li·01 n Mt. ll ora. Fla.,
w hc.-re " h ~:.· o perakd :1 11 ,mtiquar ian bt,ok -.rnre.

Pick 3:

~- S- .\;

Pick 4: h- 1-4-2

Buckeye S: .\.- 11 -l'-.!+-2fi

CREATIVE LUMINARIES - Some come wit h scanned pictures of
those remembered or honored , othe rs with tributes, or just co lorful
designs, and they'll all be displayed at the American Cancer Society's
Relay for Life Friday night. He re Jo Ann Crisp, Terri .Fife. and Mary
Wolfe of Farmers Bank work on decorating the s acks which wil l hO ld
lighted votive cand les nestled in sand to be used along the rela)' path .

W YA,
Daily 3: 6- .2-2 Daily 4: 0-.l-O- j

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