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                  <text>Details, A3

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper
so Cents

TRUANCY

Bus safety,
•
senous
concern

Meigs already
in step with

Bv

TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

legislation

P

''"

August 30, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 51 , Number 68

OMEROY- As students begin a new
scho ol
year,
their
minds are likdy more
on ,new clothes and
new teachers than school bus safety, but students and parents should
be aware of some safety issues
relatmg to riding the sc hoo l bus.
Abou t 23.5 million students
ride the school bus daily" Although
this is one of the safest ways to
travel to and from school, injuries
do occur, a,ccording to the O hi o
Division of Public Safc·ty.
Many of these injuries happen
when chi ldren board or exit the
bus. A blind spot extends roughly
10 feet in front of the bus,
obstructing the driver's view. C hildren are not aware of this blind
spot and might mistakenly believe
that if they can see the bus, the bus
driver can see them .
A child's behavior at the bus
stop is a wry important aspect of
school bus safety" C hildren should
remember these safety tips while
waiting and boarding the bus:
• Arrive at the bus stop at least
five minutes before the bus arrives;
• Stay out of the street and avoid
horseplay" Always wait for parents
on the sa me side of the stre,et at
the school bus loading/ unloading
zone;
• Cross the street at least 10 fe et
(or 10 giant steps) in front oft he
bus;
• Enter the bu·s in line with the

W dnesday

Society news and notes, AS
Southern, Eastern spikers .win, Bl

lhunday
Hl1h: lOs; Low: &amp;Os

BY BRIAN J. REEO
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SCHOOL BUS SAFETY- Salisbury Elementary students prepare to board the school bus Tuesday afternoon after completing a hard day of classes. Parents shou ld be aware of Important school bus safety tips
before sending their chi ldren off to school. !Tony M" Leach photo)

POMEROY - New legislation that goes into effect Monday
will change the way the legal system treats truancy, but Meigs
County is already a step ahead of
many counties.
Ohio Senate Bill 181 expands
the definition of a delinquent
child to include any child who is
an "habitual truant" and who has
previously appeared before the
Juvenile Court as an unruly child
for truancy, and any child who is
a "chronic truant."
The legislation also modifies
the definition of"habitual truant"
and expands the court's jurisdiction in handling cases of habitual
truancy. including charges against
parents or guardians who are
responsible for truant students"
Parents who are responsible for
their children's truancy have
appeared in Meigs County Court
on the charges for the past twO
years, and some have been fined,
and sentenced to jail time by
Judge Patrick H "O'Brien"
"We're more advanced in this
regard than a lot of counties," said
Ju venile Officer Nancy Hill.
" Most of what this new legislation addresses has already been
put into place here in Meigs

County."
Hill said Judge Robert Buck
and other juvenile court judges
do not have the ;IUthority to
incarcerate truants because Ohio
law does not allow for the incarceration of"unruly" juveniles only "delinquents""
Prosecutor John Lentes said
those restrictions inspired officials
to consider another alternative:
charging the parents with a

cnme.
" Because of the sentencing
restrictions facing the court, we
decided we would get around
that by making the parents
responsible in county court,"
Lentes said. "By not sending their
children to school, they are contributing to the delinquency of
the child, and that's how they are
charge&amp;"
The fir&gt;t- degree miSdemeanor
charges carry a possible sentence
of six months in jail - and about
20 parents have done some jail
time for not sending their children to schooL
Lentes said the parents' jail sentence is suspended on a first
offense, but imposed ifJ:he child_
has tnore unexcused absem::es.
" This new state legislation is
actually much lighter than what

Please see Truants. Pice AJ

Plans under way for Heart Walk Commissioners OK
township road closings
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Con804ldllted Storn CorpOratiOn Ouanmy ngt"lt!l r8181Vf!d ..,........r ,...,. • - 81
· ·
• ·
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\

FROM STAFF REPORTS

HEART WALK SPONSORS- The sponsors for the Eighth Annual American Heart
Walk are, first row from left, Carolyn Ohlinger, Kroger, Maxine Rose, Home
National Bank: second row from left, Patty Bumgardner, Holzer Meigs Clinic,
Alice Wolfe, event chair, Leah Nutter, Wai"Mart. Cherie Williamson. Farmers
Bank. Individual gifts. like those shown above, will be presented to individual
walkers according to amounts they collect. (Tony M. Leach photo)

I'OMEilOY - Meib'&lt; County commissio ners approved a number of road closinf,'S
Tuesday afternoon.
Co unty Eng:ince r llobert Eason submittt'd r~co lllllh:~ ndarions to vacate Sycamore
StrtTt Ill Sutton Townsh op. Smith Road,
Stearns Road and Old Route 7 (T22A) in
Orange Townshop, as requested by the
tow nsh ip t ru :\tt"l' S, and tht" com missiont"rs
approvcJ those closings.
Eason reported he had viewed Summerlic\d 1\,,,aJ 111 Chester Township ;md recommended no action be take on tht• vacation of a porti on of th e road , or the dcdi ca(iu n of a llt'\\' port ion.
Ea~on ~.tid th e vacating of a proposed
sec toon ofSummertie ld Road wou ld make
it impossible to dt.·d icate a new portion. in
tlut no ho mes or businesses arc located on

1

the portion to be dedicated"
The board appropria ted $843.71 in the
budget of the Meigs County Department
of Litter Control and Recyclin g .
Transfers of funds were approved for the
EMS, $853 .6'!. T B office. 7 H.27, and
MR / DD Board, H68 .57 . .
The commissioners accepted bids for
bituminous materials from Asphalt Materials, Inc, Marietta, and Middleport Terminal, In c, Gallipolis"
The commissione rs approved a requ est
fi"o m the Department of Jobs and Family
·Sc:rvices to enter into a co ntract with
ACC ESS to Human Resource Develop- ·
ment, in the amount of $91,200. for the
operation of the Early Start program for
Fiscal Year 200 1.

Ple11e see Roads, Pqe AJ

Population estimates track graying of Buckeye State
WA~HlNGTON

9'9

4 Pack
Crew Socks

POMEROY - The M eigs Cou nty
Division of the American Heart Association rec ently an nounced its plans for
the eighth annual American H eart
Walk, set Sept. 26 in Pomeroy"
Th e Heart Walk wi ll begin 111
Kroger's parking lot at 5 p.nL and will
proceed along ' a marked - route
throughout the village .of Pomeroy.
Alice Wolfe, event chair, has already
m et with rommtmity kadcrs to hegin
sigmng team s up tor the event.
The Presenting Sponsors for tht·
event arc Wal-Mart of Mason, W"Va.,
Farmers Uank and Savinb" Co" and
H ome National Bank with Ho lzer
Meigs C li nic and Kroger as associate
sponsors.
"We are working to make this walk
our best yet," Wolfe said . "last year our
event raised S12,66Y and tim year we
h ope to have plans in place to raise

(AI') - Ohio's oldt·&lt;t
resident' have grown more numerous across
th e statt', with th t:,_ over-85 age group
increas in~; dunng thJ 1990s .in all 88 coun tll'S, arrording to Ce nsus Bureau figures .
New c~timates being released Wedn esday
Jlso document th e graying o f the cou nties
encompassing C leveland , Cincinnati. Dayton, Tole do and Youngsto\.vn - cou nties
with shrinking populations hlll more elderly,
The o ldest segment of Ohio's population
in c rca~c d in all these coun ties with stati c o r
declining populations: Allen , C lark, Crawford, C uyahoga, H am ilton. H arnson,Jelfcr&lt;:.on. LuGl'\, M3h onin p;, M onrol'. Mont~omery. l'auldin !o(. San dmky. Trumbull arid
Va n Wen .
It 's a trend already l'h)ti ced hy stare govt'Til lll L' Ilt , whi ch expects the H5-and-above
r.mks to rn ntin u~ to swell .

The oldest segmettt ~f Ohio's population incrca,~ed in all these cormties rl'ith static or declinirrg populations: Allen, C/m-k, Crau:fi1rd,
Cuyalloga, Hamilton, Harrisotr,
j~fferson , Lucas, Malroning, Monroe, McmtgollleY)', Paulditr.~. Srttrdusk)', 'D-um/mil and r.ilu Jf'ert.
Th e sttltt.' is antiripatit1g a g rt:.·a tlT drmaml
for serv.i rc..; o;; uch as the Passport progr,un,
which curren tly helps 2~ . 111111 Ohin.1m get
in - home care instead of going: to 11\JP.. ing
homes, said Stc.'ve Pmdor of th t..· (. )hio
Dt"partmcnt of Aging.
'' Thl' ,\Vl'J',tgt.· age of rlut group 1\ 77
n~ht now. We kn ow that in th e no:t tivc
yl'.lr" \Vt' .rL' goi ng m h,we .111 in crease m the
\upt'r Sl'lllllf~ : w}uch will h.tVt.' ol beari ng: Oil

!......,..

progr:-tms like th:n: · ht• "aid.
PnKtor 'Jid .the ~t.J tc has prl'Jicted that
mme th.111 2 12,1 II Ill Ohioans will luve surp.Jssl'd rlll'ir XSth birthday" in :morher tlve
y~a n . Tlur comp,li'L''i wi th rhe CcJJ~ u s
Bu reau 's '''till me th :1t 17&lt;•. 7'JJ Ohinam
wt:rc !ll lht· HS -and- up gro up a~ of midI 'J'N"
In ,l sta t.e wi th 11 . ~ 111illi l)ll people. th(:
"'illper seni ors" 11 1ade up abo ut 1.5 perce nt
of the popu lati on. The HS- plus popu lation
ran~ed as ho ~h ·" 2A percent in Wyaudot
( :o mny anJ atTmmted f~lf more than 2 percent of the population in Belmont, Darke.
I Ltrri"nn. llc:n ry, Monme. Mort-."&lt;111, Scioto.
V:1n \'\k·rt .11 1d \X/illi&lt;_llll' counti l''. thl· Census
Hure.HJ ,,nd .
Thl' mo"t dram:Hi c rise clunL·d by the
new e~rinl.l\l'" \\".lS 111 ( ;eauga Cou nty.
w here til l' govnnllH'IIt ,,ml th e H5-and -ovt.T
populatJOII ~rcw fro m 744 111 llJ\Hl to 1.224
.~

•

.H dl'CJdt..''&lt;i end - an incn:·ast..· of(,4 percent.
ThJt may be becJU'il' Gt·auga County has
made an et1ort to help its elderly cope with
failing h ealth"
Sa lly Bell , director of th e (~eauga Coun r.y
I )epa rmwm on Aging. said voters in 1'1'15
agrl'ct.l tu tax th emsdves extra 111 order to
provide services for people who might othL'rwise go to nursing homes.
The I mill ta.~ levy approved that yea r
pmd uces about $1l&gt; millio n to sub•idize
home-ddiwrt·d meals, transportation to
not·ctical appo111tments. respit e care,
Alzheimer'\\ day ca:rc, homl:' mamtenance
and oth~ r services .
" I think we're Sl'L'ing a trt.~ m cnd o u s number of ~wop le able to stay in their commu nities longer," said BelL "We were able to
bnng back choices about the services th ey
want to Jcress and ma intain their inde prn ~
dt.'IH.T ,Js long as poss1ble."

Today's

Sentinel

1 Settlc,.-u - 11 Pages
Calendar
Cla!isifi~ds

AS

l!H

Comi~;s

B5

Editorials
Obituarie11

Af

S~orts

Weather

A~

Bl, 6
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-2-0; Pick 4: 2-3-9-7
Buckeye 5: 1-2-12-14-35

W:VA,
Daily 3: 9-5-5 Daily 4: 1-3-6-6

�.

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

VVednesda~August30,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ex·CSU chief defends pad

MARION (AP) - A case against a man
accused of abducting and killing a 7 -year-old
girl was headed to a Marion County grand
JUty onWednesday. ·
Prosecutor Jim Slagle said Tuesday that he
had not determined if he would seek the
death penalty against Barry Satta, 38, of Marion, who is accused in the slaying of Bobbie
Jo Barry.
Bond was set at S500,000Tuesday for Satta,
who was charged with aggravated murder,
kid.nappmg, rape and aggravated burglary.
He remained in custody after his arraignment in Marion Municipal Court, where he
wore a bulletproof vest as a preca)Jtion
because of the "highly charged situation,"
police said.

·XENIA (AP) - Former Central State University President
Arthur Thomas has vigorously defended the S325,000,...,verance
agreement that is the centerpiece of his civil trial.
Thomas testifid Tuesday in Greene County · Common Pleas
Court that trustees approved the settlement he got in 1995, when
he wos pressured to quit . The case could go to the eight-member
j ury Wednesday.
Attorneys for the state sued Thomas nearly cwo years ago, trying
to get back mu.;h of the money. A state auditor testified during the
trial that a $125,000 payment for accrued leave was not justified
because Thomas' contract did not permit him to save unused vacation and sick days.
Thomas testified Tuesday that he rarely took time off.
"I worked 18 hours a day. seven days a week," he said. "Everythmg
I did related to work ."
Two former trustees testified that they approved the agreement,
"'hich comisted of $200,000 that Thomas would have been paid
m;er the rest of his contract and the $125,000 in accrued leave.

Police released no motive in the case or
derails about the condition of the body when
it was found· Monday. Authorities were awaiting autopsy results early Wednesday.
A police source told The Plain Dealer of
Cleveland for a story Wednesday that the
body found inside a sleeping bag showed evidence of sexual assault and multiple cigarette
burns.
Rolice also are resting DNA evidence
found inside the sleeping bag and are trying to
identify fingerprints found on the windowsill
of the bedroom where the girl was last seen,
the source said. The newspaper did not identifY the source.
Bobbie Jo's body was found along a road
Monday afternoon, the day after she was

reported missing frop1 her father's house in
Marion, about 40 miles north of Columbus.
She was last seen sleeping with her 9-yeor-old
mter at 4 a.m. Sunday.
Satta 's g~rlfriend, Phyllis M cCoy, said Tuesday that he is being falsely accused.
"At that rime rhero, I can vouch that he
(Satta) was not at that home," McCoy added.
She said Satta- a close friend of the girl's
father - has an alibi, but would not say what
it was.
John Dame is said he was with Satta from 6
p.m. to about 3:30 a.m . the night Bobbie Jo
was kidnapped.
"My mam concern is that the police are
going to qmt lookrng. They've got tht• wrtm~
man," Daniels said.

Group sues Ohio district Woman relieved that
is staying in prison·

Citizens mount mayoral recall

COLUMBUS (AP) The I trust thm1 and the trust was bmArm•riran Civil liberties Union's kt&gt;n ar that puJnt," Connors said at
Ohio chapter sued an eastern a ne-ws conferenn.~ outside the
Ohio school district Tuesday for federal courthouse in Columbus.
proviJing studt·nt · names .1nd " I don't know who works at that
addresses t:o ;l Wesr Virginia bank.
bank. I don 't know who has access
In a lawsuit filed in U.S. Dis- to it. I don't know who they're
trict Court. the ACLU said the going to sell this information to.
Indian Creek School District gave This is my 10-year-old."
the names and addresses of
RaymondVasvari , legal director
fourth-, fifth- and s1xth-graders at for the Ohio ACLU, said the
three elementary schools to school district violated the lederal
Advance Financial Savings Bank Family Educational Right to Priin violation of federal law.
vacy Act of 1974. The act forbids
The lawsuit was filed as a class the release of infornution about
action on behalf of Ed Connors of students to third parties without
Mingo Junction, whose l 0-year- the prior consent of their parents,
old daughter, Gabrie'lle, is a fifth- Vasvari said.
grader at Hills Elementary School
"Congress went out of its way
in the district, and other parents to ensure that students would be
with children in the three schools. ensured certain rights of privacy
Listed as defendants were the against educators and against pubdistrict, its school board and lic school districts. This district has
Superintendent Jene Watkins, · violated that right by effectively
who was not superintendent turning into a commercial comwhen the district gave the bank modity what should be a safethe information in December or guarded secret,"Vasvari said.
January. The bank used the inforThe lawsuit asks for unspecimation for its "Small Savers Pres- fied "•mages and for the court to
tige Accounts," the lawsuit said.
block the school district from giv" I send the kid to school for ing the information to any other
protection . For eight hours a day, third party.

WAYNESVILLE (AP) - The village's mayor must decide
wh~.:th~;~r to rt·sign or face a recall vote after villagl' rl'sidcnts gath~...·r,. .'d enough s1gnatun.•s on petitions to force thC vote.
The Warren County Board of Elections concluded Tuesday that
thl· pl·titions c:1rried enough valid signatures. Charles S;mdt·rs, th ..·
ti rst black mayor in the southwest Ohio village of 1.500, said he
. wnuld fi ght to rcnui:-1 ~n office. · .
If Sanders do« not resign in five days , tht· vrlbge council can
&lt;chcdule the recall vote, most likely for the Nov. 7 gen&lt;ral election.
Sanders )1as acwsed the village 's police department of usmg racial
pro filing and hara~sing residents. Two village council mt&gt;mben and
the police· cl\i ef signed the recall petitions, an organizer said.
Vice Mayor Sandra Stemple, who lost a race against Sanders bst
fall, said she also signed.

Franklin leads in child.gain
COLUMBUS (AP) - Franklin County is the only county
among Ohio's four largest to post significant gains in school-age
children, a Census Bureau report has found.
In 1999, Franklm County had 179,333 school-age children, compared wirh 162,933 in 1990, the report says.
Hatnilton County, home to Cincinnati; Cuyahoga County with
Cleveland; and Montgomery County with Dayton all lost schoolage residents.
Abutting counties gained, particularly in the Cincmnati-Dayton
area, the report found.
Buder County, between Hamilton and Montgomery counties,
was second in increases m children ages 5-17 .
Delaware County, which abuts Franklin County on the north,
was third . Delaware County also had the biggest percentage increase
- 55.2 percent - in school-age children of any county in the

C INCINNATI (AP ) A
man co nvicted 111 1982 of
' killing a 3-year-old buy will
stay locked up for Ill more
years, the Ohio pamle board
decided Tuesday.
It was the fourth time th e
board has denied a request that
Adrian Williams, 35. be
released on parole
Willian1s was cwav'icted in
1982 in Hamilton County on
charges
of
involuntary
manslaughter and kidnapping
in the slaying of Jason Evers.
The victim's sister, Amy
Evers, now 24, said she had
worried that the parole board
r.night release Williams this
time.
" I had doubts . ... I didn't
know what kind of story he
would tell them," she said. "I
was hoping that the paro le
board saw what I saw, that he
wasn't remorseful for what he
did."
Amy Evers was 5 when she
watched Williams, then a
stranger to her, carry her

bmther .rw.ry from a p lay ~
ground . With the su ppon of a
children's advocate, shL' t~..·stlficd
ag:unst W1lliams I H y•.:.lrs .1go.
Willi am:-; w:1.s S.l'ml'n cc d then
to 14 to 50 yea rs 111 prison.
After years of deahng with
memories of !wr brother's,
death , Am y Evcr5 rmr Wilh a m ~
in May at thl' Ross Cur rer ~

tional Insti tutio n. where she is
impnson ed. She sa id Tuesday
th at Wrlliams rnitully refu&lt;ed
to nuke . .·y~ co nta ct with her

and wouldn't answer all her
qu~stion s
about how her
brother di ed .
"He just sard he crouched
down with him and put his
hand over .hrs mouth," she sa1d.
"The n he ran with him and.
when he took hi s hand away.
my brother's hea d fell bac k.
That's when h e kn ew he was
dead.
"He told me when he woke
up that morning he had a plan
to take a c hild fo r ran som, for
money."

st~te.

Births, as well as people moving in, contributed to the increase,
said Steve Kelley, senior economist for the Ohio Department of
Development.
"We've had a natural increase in births, which helps explain some
of that, but a strong, healthy economy is attractive for companies,"
he said.
The Columbus area attracts young profcnio11als who move in,
nmrpnd have children,snid Nancy Rrgcr,ltatistici~n for the Mid~
O)ti&lt;l Regional Planning Commiuion.
flill Lofayctte of th" Greater Columbus Chamber of Commcrco
1:~id the an::~ ha1 a diverse tCOilOmy.
'''fo the cxll'IH we're ctmccntrntcd at all. we're concentrated in
f.ri l'iy r•·c•·ssion- t'C!istant indumics. 111ch a! gowmment and higher
cdLu.::niun," he tnid.
·

Visit by Bush to focus on raising funds, education OPEN HOUSE
CI~CINNAT1

(AP)
Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush was headed
· m Ohio utl Wedneul~y til kick
ofT n two-d,ty vi1it f~nturin11
nppearnnces in the Cind tm 3ti
nnd Tolcdn nrcns.
The trip IVUI ltartinJI in tho
Cindnn~ti ~rea with fund-rniAin[! ownt! Wodncsday •tftor·nnon
and concluding T lnrml:~y with "
r:Jll)' :~t a high ~chtll)l in suburban Toledo.
s~wt•:Jl hours of fund-raising
~l'cnts were pl-anned in th&lt;
Cincinnati suburb of Indian Hill
at the homes of Mercer
Reynolds II I and William 0 .
DeWrtt Jr., two long-time
friends of the Texas governor.
Reynolds and DeWitt have
bee n Bush's business partners in
oil exploration ventures and in
the ownership of the Texas
Rangers baseball tearn.
M~ny of the guests at the pri -

Charae follows drownln·l probe
l: LEVELAND (AI') - The ch~rge5 ~gai11st a 23-year-nld
d ,;1rged in th~ drowning of a college student i11 the Flats h.1s be.•n
tr[lgraded fn.Jm involuntary mamlaughter to murder.
'fr. grand Jury indicted Abimad Zeno of C leveland on the murder
chJJrge Tuesday le" than an hour before he was to appear in CuyalH~ga County Common Pleas Court for a hearing on the lesser
chnrgc.

Zeno's lawyer. Shirley Asale, said the new indictment was "a n
;unb11Sh," designed to pressure her client into a plea :~greement.
" I don't think the facts of this case warrant this," she said. " It's an
ovtrindictnlent.''

Jhe maximum penalty for the original charge is five years m
pri so n. The maximum for murde r ls life.
!'rosccutors sa id a revr ew of the case supported the charge of
mttrder.
Michael Dubrovich, 20, of Sagamore Hills Township, fell into the
Cuyahoga River and drowned dunng a fight Ju ly 21 at a bar in the
Fl.us, a popular ni ghtclub district, police said.
Ze no is accused of berng the one who hrt Dubrovich. The fight
~ t::~rted aftt!r some men accused one of Dubrovich's friends of urinating on their boat.

vate rl.!ception and dinner are
provrding S25,000 to the State
Vr ctory Fund , a political action
committee.
Lost year, Oh10 co ntributors
gave $809,500 to the State Victory Fund , acco rding to federal
campaign finance reports. Of

The money r11iled
Wtdneday i$ ~elng dlt1ided
amon,q-tlre Bu1h
camJiaiJln, tlti! Olllo
R~publicau Htrty. dnd the
Hamiltou Ccmrrt)•
RcJIUIIIImn Party,
that, ;~ll

bm S1115.500 came from

H:~milton County

August 30, 2000

·
., No ;1 rC':1 is 1hon.• l'ommittl•d
to ele ct ing Geot·ge Bmh pr.•sident th:ul this ;trea," said Ohio
Treasmer Joe Deters, also chairman of the Hamilton County
Republican Party.
The money raised Wedneday
is being divided among the Bush
campaign, the Ohio Republican
Party and the Hamilton County
Republican Party.
No public events were scheduled in the Cinci nnati area.
Bush's stop in the Toledo area
was planned for Spnngfield
High School in suburban Lucas
County.
Bush was expected to promote hrs plans to rmprove public
educa tion at a rally.
"We would li ke to think that
(Bush selected Springfield)

oecause we represent a broad
eros• section of society," school
spokeswoman Krittin~ White
•aid. "Our divmity lewl i1 much
more repr~1entative of the COlintry,"
Th~ district has a minority
pop1rlation of l j percent.
In tho final day• of the 199()
pre•idcntial campai~n, thenRepublk;m vice presidential
c:~ nd ida te j.1ck K•·mp was the
keynote speaker at a rally in the
sdwol's gymnasium .

Syracuse Fire Dept.
Refreshments &amp;
Prizes for the kids
SUNDAY
September 3rd.
Come out and see
the new Fire Truck
For more info

call 992-7181

I lonu· and auto discounts.
Whether you're ot homo or on tho rood,
Nltlonwtd.. hoe tote of woye to eevo you money. So can
uo tochly to nnd out mo,. ebout our otr beg dlacount, ·
me driver dlecount, home end car dlecount and more.
Notlonwtdo te On Your Side•

Nationwide"'
lnaurance &amp;
Flnonclol Servlcu

Pomoroy

JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Street
992-5479

N1tlonwldt Mutuallnauranct Company and 1fflllated Companies
Home Office: Ont Natlonwldt Plaza, Columbua, OH 43215-2220
NaUonwld.. la a reglltlrtd ftderiltlaervict mark of
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Comp1ny

.

William 11ilr Stone
COOLVILLE -William "Bill" Stone, 40, Coolville, died Sunday,
Aug. 27 , 2000, in Little Hocking.
· ·
H e was the son of James M. Stone of Coolville and the late Betty
Geraldine Corbitt Stone.
In addition to hi s father, he is survived by three sons, William Jr. ,
Jeremy and Brian, all of Belpre; two brothers and sisters-in-law, James
Jr. and Bertha Stone, and Jack and Rhonda Stone, all of Coolville; two
sisters and brothers-in-law, Debbie and Chester Moody ofVincent and
Peg and Jim Robinson of Coolville; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held at II a.m. Tuesday at White Funeral
Home in Coolville, with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating.
Burial followed at Torch Cemetery.

Rhea J. Willis
RUTLAND- Rhea J. "Sis" Willis, 60, Rutland, died Monday, Aug.
· 28, 2000, at her residence, after an extended illness.
She was the daughter of the late Ray M. Haning and Myrtle L. Hudnall and was a homemaker and a employee of the Ohio University Inn.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in dearh by her husband,
Harold Willis; two brothers, Randy and Keith Haning; and a granddaughter.
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Brian Keith and
Dee Willis of Rutland, Troy Allen and Kathy Willis of Chester; a
daughter, Renee Lynn Willis of New York; five brothers: Nolan and

VALLEY WEATHER

Partly cloudy on Thursday

run, across the street at a corner or
crosswalk and make sure that they
look in all directions before crossing the street.
Children should never enter the
street from bei:Ween parked cars or
from behind bushes or shrubs.
Doing this accounts for the
majoriry of child pedestrian fatalities.
Following important safety
guidelines and reviewing . them
every year with children can help
keep the back-to-school experience a safe and enjoyable one.

Walk

rote bags, sport bags, zippered
pullovers and warm-up suits.
Again, as in past years, Kroger
of Pomeroy will provide food and
drink after the walk -for all participants.
Recruitment leaders contacting
businesses and organizations for
new teams include Diana Coates,
Joan Wolfe , John Redovian, Scott
Dillon, Betsy Herald Nicodemus,
Jean Trussel, Marlene Harrison,
Amy Perrin, Linda King, Linda
Warner, Maxine Rose and Alice
Wolfe.
Anyone interested in forming a
team or walking as an individual
should contact any of the above
recruitment leaders o r Alice

Wolfe at 949-2286.
Individuals or businesses wanting to make a donation can send it
to Joan Wolfe, AHA Treasurer, PO
Box 296, Racine, Ohio 45771.
Checks should be made payable
to Meigs County American
Heart Association.

younger students in front and hold
the handrail while going up and
down the stairs; .
• When entering the bus, go
directly to a seat. Remain seated
and facing forward for the entire

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ-960)
Ohio Volley PubtlshlnK Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Co url S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ohio Valley Publi shing Company. SeconJ
class post~ge p1id at Pomeroy, Ohio .
Membtr: The Associated Presti, and the Ohio
Newspaper Associ~! ion.
POSTMASTER: Send addre.u comet ions to
The Da1ly Sentinel, I l l Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
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will check your lnrorm•l"ion 1nd m1ke 1
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t

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Pomeroy, OH
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•

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News Depanmenta

Tht m1ln numbu Is
ntemlon5 trc:

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Other Strvlces
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BANK

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•

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~l-2155 .

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Gallipolis, OH
740.446-2265

•

from Page At

• Before you reach your stop,
wait for the bus to stop completely before getting up from your
seat. Walk to the front door an.d
exit, using the handrail;
• Do not cross the center line of
the road until the driver has signaled that it is safe for you to
begin walking.
Parents, caregivers and older
peers should set good examples
for younger children. It is important to show them how to be safe
when around or inside a school
bus. Teach children to walk, not

from Page AI

Sunset tonight will be at 8:07
and sunrise on Thursday is at 6:58
a.m.

1104
Clrculallon ...................................... Ext. 1103
C le~t ined Ads ............... .................. Ext. 1100

from Page AI
S14,000.
"We are trying to reach every
business, organization and individual with information on how
to participate. We truly want this
to be a· community event which
will help show people how 'easy it
is to incorporate walking into a
.regular exercise progf:\m as well
as raise funds to fight heart disease, which is Meigs County's
number one killer."
This year's walk will be condu cted in memory of Addie Norris, a victim of heart disease ahd
in honor of Breanna Crisp, a survivor of heart disease.
As in past years all walkers will
be given a Tribute Patch to wear
during the walk to honor their
own loved one, co-worker or
friend . All survivors of a heart
atta ck, stroke or cardiovascular
surgery will be given a choice
red cap or survivor pin to wear so
as to be visibly recognized at the
walk .
A team plaque will be presented to the team collecting the
most donations. Last year'' plaqu&lt;'
was awarded to Middleport
Ch urc h of Christ for raismg
$1 ,917 .50.
In additi on , individrral gifts will
be presented to individual walkers
according to amounts they collect. These prizes include T-shirts,

or

Dissolution
granted
POMEROY - An action for
dissolution · of marriage has been
filed in Meigs County Probate
Court to Tony S. Milhoan and
Pamela G. Milhoan.

Tr11ants in Meigs Co1mty
11re 1!{tm sentenced to mm~
1111mit}' service and probationaiJ' terms, Hill said,
a11d juvenile officers work
closely with school o.fficials
and others to determine ,;,e
cause ~r the tn1ancy.

ride;
• Always sp~ak in a quite whisper on the bus so that the driver
will not be distracted;
• Never throw things on the bus
or out the windows;
• Keep the aisles clear at all
times . Feet should be directly in
front of you on the floor and
bookbags should be kept on your
lap;
'·
• Never play with the emergency exits. If there is an emergency, listen to the driver and follow instructions;

S2 Weeks.

Fo

Truants

1

Safety

LOCAL BRIEFS

RACINE- Dorothy Harden Yates, 82, Racine, died Monday, Aug.
28, 2000, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis after a short illness.
She was the daughter of the late Ralph Frederick and Jessie Roush
Neigler and was a homemaker and a member of Gallia Baptist
Church.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by her first hus~and, Morris N. Harden; her second husband, Earl Yates; a daughter,
Dorothy Jean Harden ; a son, William Morris Harden; two brothers,
Arthur Carroll and Forrest Neigler; a sister, Jan Specher; and two
grandchildren.
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Robert and
Dorothy Harden of Racine, Donald and Angela Harden of Oak Hill;
one brother and four sisters-in-law, Ralph and Edna Neigler, Sara Neigler, Gertrude Neigler, all of Racine, Wanda Neigler of Syracuse; one
sister and brother-in-law, Drucilla House of Baltimore, Md. and Jack
Specher of Oakland, Ca.; seven grandchildren; 14 grear-grandchildren;
one great-grea~-grandchild.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. Thursday at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Pastor Cline Rawlins.
Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may visit from 7-9 p.m. today at the funeral home .

LOCAL STOCKS

13 Wetks .................................... ....... 527 .JO

Fa.r••~ers Bank
· &amp; Savings Company
.

Dorothy Harden Yates

!ems, but an expanded program
would be aimed more at helping
at-risk students (such as the student
who has been held back a number
of years) realize the importance of
getting a high school diploma.
"Sometimes these students are
discouraged, and feel out of place,
and that just makes skipping
school, or dropping out of school,
more tempting," Hill said.
Lentes acknowledged parents
can often do little to force their
children to attend school, and said
parents should notify officials if
their children present problems.
"If a child is simply refusing to
do what their parents say, or if the
child is being violent, or skipping
school, the parents need to notifY
officials and bring the- child before
the judge so rhat problems can be
·addressed," Lentes said.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

26 Weeks.............

Randy Hays

June Haning, Ronnie Haning, Butch and Lois Haning, Thurman Han ing and Nancy Clark, all of Pomeroy; Jerry Haning and Peggy Wandling of Albany; two sisters, Wanda and Jerry Searles_of Columbus,
Donna Haning and Dale Clonch of Pomeroy; two grandchildren; and
several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday in White Oak Cemetery, Harrisonville. Officiating will be Pastor Paul Taylor.
Friends may visit from 7-9 p.m. today at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany.

we already have in place."
Truants in Meigs County are
The tri-county area will have
often sentenced to conununity serpartly sunny skies and warm temvice and probationary terms, Hill
peratures on Thursday, thanks to a
Weather forecast:
said, and juvenile officm work
stationary high pressure system
Tonight...Mostly clear until
closely with school officials and
over the Midwest.
midnight, then partly cloudy with
others to determine the cause of
Highs will be in the 80s. areas of fog developing. Lows in
the truanc}'
Tonight, under clear skies, tem- the mid and upper 60s. Calm
"It's important that we help kids
peratures will drop into the 60s, wind.
learn t~t it is important to develthe National Weather Service
Thursday... Areas of fog until
op good habits early in their school
said.
mid-morning, then Nrdy cloudy.
careers;' he said. "The importance
No rain is in the foreca.t until Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
of attending school regularly really
Friday, when afternoon and
Thursday night ... Mostly clear.
must be developed in the elemenevening thunderstorms are likely.
Lows 65 to 70.
tary years, because responsibility
for attending school really carries
.over into the work ethic later."
Hill said the juvenile court has
been working closely with Lentes,
AEP-34),
Children's Services caseworkers
Gannett - 56
Rocky Boots - 5~..
Akzo- 45l.
General Electric - 60
AD Shall - 62lo
and school officials to formulate
AmTectVSBC- 4Vo
Harley Davidson - 47'•
seers- 31
plans
for a long- term alternative
Kmart-7~
Ashland Inc: -'- 35l.
Shonay's- 1
Wai.Mart - 49~.
AT&amp;T-31 ~~
Kroger- 22
school program for at-risk teenBank One - 33 Y.
Lands End - 25l.
Wendy's- 19 ~
agers, which would likely help
Bob Evans - 17'/,
Ltd. - 20Y.
Worthtng1on - 1Ol.
reduce truancy among high school
BorgWarner - 35 ,,
Oak Hilt Financial - 16
Champion - 3 ),
OVB-26~
Cally s1ock reports are tho
students.
Charming Shops - 5lo
BBT -26lo
4 p.m . closing quotes of
The county operates an alternaCity Holding ..c. 7l,
Peopies -14l.
the previous day's trans·
Federal M~t - 1o'l.
Premier -e:actions,
provided
by
tive school for Mei~ County stuRockwell - 39'o
Ad\18!1[ of Gallipolis.
Flrstar - 23 1•
dents who present discipline probB~

MAlt SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskte Meigs Coun1y

Woody Stines

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

heads for grand jury

Man ~ccus~ in girl's

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Wednesday.

FRI B/25/00. THURS 8/31/00
THE ART OF WAR (R)

Tra9k th• progre~s.
··of your tavorlte'.

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Joseph

Andrew Anderson, 37. and
Donna Sue McDonald, 37, both
of of Langsville; James Anthony
Carnahan, 41. and Sandra Renee
Carnahan, 33, both of Middleport;Timorhy Ray Glaze, 48, and
Cynthia Jo Eads, 42, both of
Pomeroy; Larry Richard Harman, 45, and Edith Louise Hubbard, 47, both of Rutland; Denis
Ray Shuler, 37, and Mary Imboden, 36, both of Pomeroy; and
Rodney Wooten, 27, and Jeanna
Kay Connolly, 35, both of
Racine.

Hispanic, Asian populations
are fastest-growing minorities
tional American experience."
WASHINGTON (AP)
Nationally, the country's white
Those new hotels and casinos
that sprouted up in Nevada's population increased 7.3 percent
C lark County this past decade between 1990 and 1999 to 224.6
attracted more than just gamblers million. Blacks remained the
anxious to try their luck under country's largest minority group,
experiencing a 13.8 percent spike
the bright lights of Las Vegas.
The · boom also brought an during the same period to 34.8
.influx of Asians and Hispanics million, while the American Indieager to fill new construction and an and Alaska Native population
service-industry jobs, a develop- increased 15.5 percent to 2.3 milment th~t helped mllke Nevada lion.
"The white, black and Amerithe fastest-growing srate in the
1990s.
can Indian populations for the
New Census Bureau estimates most part just don't show that
being released Wednesday show dramatic of a change," Sink said.
that increases in the nation's two Overall, the · Hispanic and Asian
fastest-growing minority popula- growth is "largely being fueled by
tions are also relping to spark irrunigration."
gains elsewhere.
Between July I, 1990, and July
1, 1999, the nation's Asian and
PJcific Islander population grew
4'3.0 percent to 10.8 million, and
the Hispanic _population grew
38.8 percent to 31.3 million, the
Census estimates show. These are
the last such estimates to be
released before detailed Census
2000 results come out next year.
California, Texas and New York
Chicago, Ill.- A free offer of
- the three most populous states
special interest to those who
- continue to have the highest
hear but do not understand
numbers of minorities, but Nevawords has been announced
da, Georgia and North Carolina
experienced the biggest percent
by Beltone. A non-operating
increases, Census analyst Larry
model of the most popular
Sink said.
canal hearing aid in America
"It's largely a condition of jobs
today will
be given
and the network of people they
absolutely free to anyone
know there," said John Haaga of
the
Population
Reference · requesting it.
Bureau, a Washington-based
It's yours for the asking, so
research group. "That's the tradisend for it now. It is not a
'
real hearing aid, but it will
show you how tiny hearing
help can be.
These models are free, so
call or write for yours now.
Page AI
Benefits of hearing aids vary
by type and degree of
The board also authorized the
DJFS to apply for funding and to
hearing
loss ,
noise
operate the Medicaid Eligiblity
environment, accuracy of
Outreach program for FY 200!.
hearing evaluation and
DJFS was also authorized to
proper fit.
purchase a new personal computS,end your name, date of
er to be used for client and pubbirth, address and phone
lic access in job searches.
Present at the meeting were
number today to Dept. #705,
commissioners Janet Howard ,JefBelt one Electronics, 420 I
frey Thornton and Mick DavenWest
Victoria Street ,
port, and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
Chicago, Illinois 60646-

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Hearing Loss
Is NotA Sign
Of Old Age.

Roads

from

6772.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

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�.

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

VVednesda~August30,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ex·CSU chief defends pad

MARION (AP) - A case against a man
accused of abducting and killing a 7 -year-old
girl was headed to a Marion County grand
JUty onWednesday. ·
Prosecutor Jim Slagle said Tuesday that he
had not determined if he would seek the
death penalty against Barry Satta, 38, of Marion, who is accused in the slaying of Bobbie
Jo Barry.
Bond was set at S500,000Tuesday for Satta,
who was charged with aggravated murder,
kid.nappmg, rape and aggravated burglary.
He remained in custody after his arraignment in Marion Municipal Court, where he
wore a bulletproof vest as a preca)Jtion
because of the "highly charged situation,"
police said.

·XENIA (AP) - Former Central State University President
Arthur Thomas has vigorously defended the S325,000,...,verance
agreement that is the centerpiece of his civil trial.
Thomas testifid Tuesday in Greene County · Common Pleas
Court that trustees approved the settlement he got in 1995, when
he wos pressured to quit . The case could go to the eight-member
j ury Wednesday.
Attorneys for the state sued Thomas nearly cwo years ago, trying
to get back mu.;h of the money. A state auditor testified during the
trial that a $125,000 payment for accrued leave was not justified
because Thomas' contract did not permit him to save unused vacation and sick days.
Thomas testified Tuesday that he rarely took time off.
"I worked 18 hours a day. seven days a week," he said. "Everythmg
I did related to work ."
Two former trustees testified that they approved the agreement,
"'hich comisted of $200,000 that Thomas would have been paid
m;er the rest of his contract and the $125,000 in accrued leave.

Police released no motive in the case or
derails about the condition of the body when
it was found· Monday. Authorities were awaiting autopsy results early Wednesday.
A police source told The Plain Dealer of
Cleveland for a story Wednesday that the
body found inside a sleeping bag showed evidence of sexual assault and multiple cigarette
burns.
Rolice also are resting DNA evidence
found inside the sleeping bag and are trying to
identify fingerprints found on the windowsill
of the bedroom where the girl was last seen,
the source said. The newspaper did not identifY the source.
Bobbie Jo's body was found along a road
Monday afternoon, the day after she was

reported missing frop1 her father's house in
Marion, about 40 miles north of Columbus.
She was last seen sleeping with her 9-yeor-old
mter at 4 a.m. Sunday.
Satta 's g~rlfriend, Phyllis M cCoy, said Tuesday that he is being falsely accused.
"At that rime rhero, I can vouch that he
(Satta) was not at that home," McCoy added.
She said Satta- a close friend of the girl's
father - has an alibi, but would not say what
it was.
John Dame is said he was with Satta from 6
p.m. to about 3:30 a.m . the night Bobbie Jo
was kidnapped.
"My mam concern is that the police are
going to qmt lookrng. They've got tht• wrtm~
man," Daniels said.

Group sues Ohio district Woman relieved that
is staying in prison·

Citizens mount mayoral recall

COLUMBUS (AP) The I trust thm1 and the trust was bmArm•riran Civil liberties Union's kt&gt;n ar that puJnt," Connors said at
Ohio chapter sued an eastern a ne-ws conferenn.~ outside the
Ohio school district Tuesday for federal courthouse in Columbus.
proviJing studt·nt · names .1nd " I don't know who works at that
addresses t:o ;l Wesr Virginia bank.
bank. I don 't know who has access
In a lawsuit filed in U.S. Dis- to it. I don't know who they're
trict Court. the ACLU said the going to sell this information to.
Indian Creek School District gave This is my 10-year-old."
the names and addresses of
RaymondVasvari , legal director
fourth-, fifth- and s1xth-graders at for the Ohio ACLU, said the
three elementary schools to school district violated the lederal
Advance Financial Savings Bank Family Educational Right to Priin violation of federal law.
vacy Act of 1974. The act forbids
The lawsuit was filed as a class the release of infornution about
action on behalf of Ed Connors of students to third parties without
Mingo Junction, whose l 0-year- the prior consent of their parents,
old daughter, Gabrie'lle, is a fifth- Vasvari said.
grader at Hills Elementary School
"Congress went out of its way
in the district, and other parents to ensure that students would be
with children in the three schools. ensured certain rights of privacy
Listed as defendants were the against educators and against pubdistrict, its school board and lic school districts. This district has
Superintendent Jene Watkins, · violated that right by effectively
who was not superintendent turning into a commercial comwhen the district gave the bank modity what should be a safethe information in December or guarded secret,"Vasvari said.
January. The bank used the inforThe lawsuit asks for unspecimation for its "Small Savers Pres- fied "•mages and for the court to
tige Accounts," the lawsuit said.
block the school district from giv" I send the kid to school for ing the information to any other
protection . For eight hours a day, third party.

WAYNESVILLE (AP) - The village's mayor must decide
wh~.:th~;~r to rt·sign or face a recall vote after villagl' rl'sidcnts gath~...·r,. .'d enough s1gnatun.•s on petitions to force thC vote.
The Warren County Board of Elections concluded Tuesday that
thl· pl·titions c:1rried enough valid signatures. Charles S;mdt·rs, th ..·
ti rst black mayor in the southwest Ohio village of 1.500, said he
. wnuld fi ght to rcnui:-1 ~n office. · .
If Sanders do« not resign in five days , tht· vrlbge council can
&lt;chcdule the recall vote, most likely for the Nov. 7 gen&lt;ral election.
Sanders )1as acwsed the village 's police department of usmg racial
pro filing and hara~sing residents. Two village council mt&gt;mben and
the police· cl\i ef signed the recall petitions, an organizer said.
Vice Mayor Sandra Stemple, who lost a race against Sanders bst
fall, said she also signed.

Franklin leads in child.gain
COLUMBUS (AP) - Franklin County is the only county
among Ohio's four largest to post significant gains in school-age
children, a Census Bureau report has found.
In 1999, Franklm County had 179,333 school-age children, compared wirh 162,933 in 1990, the report says.
Hatnilton County, home to Cincinnati; Cuyahoga County with
Cleveland; and Montgomery County with Dayton all lost schoolage residents.
Abutting counties gained, particularly in the Cincmnati-Dayton
area, the report found.
Buder County, between Hamilton and Montgomery counties,
was second in increases m children ages 5-17 .
Delaware County, which abuts Franklin County on the north,
was third . Delaware County also had the biggest percentage increase
- 55.2 percent - in school-age children of any county in the

C INCINNATI (AP ) A
man co nvicted 111 1982 of
' killing a 3-year-old buy will
stay locked up for Ill more
years, the Ohio pamle board
decided Tuesday.
It was the fourth time th e
board has denied a request that
Adrian Williams, 35. be
released on parole
Willian1s was cwav'icted in
1982 in Hamilton County on
charges
of
involuntary
manslaughter and kidnapping
in the slaying of Jason Evers.
The victim's sister, Amy
Evers, now 24, said she had
worried that the parole board
r.night release Williams this
time.
" I had doubts . ... I didn't
know what kind of story he
would tell them," she said. "I
was hoping that the paro le
board saw what I saw, that he
wasn't remorseful for what he
did."
Amy Evers was 5 when she
watched Williams, then a
stranger to her, carry her

bmther .rw.ry from a p lay ~
ground . With the su ppon of a
children's advocate, shL' t~..·stlficd
ag:unst W1lliams I H y•.:.lrs .1go.
Willi am:-; w:1.s S.l'ml'n cc d then
to 14 to 50 yea rs 111 prison.
After years of deahng with
memories of !wr brother's,
death , Am y Evcr5 rmr Wilh a m ~
in May at thl' Ross Cur rer ~

tional Insti tutio n. where she is
impnson ed. She sa id Tuesday
th at Wrlliams rnitully refu&lt;ed
to nuke . .·y~ co nta ct with her

and wouldn't answer all her
qu~stion s
about how her
brother di ed .
"He just sard he crouched
down with him and put his
hand over .hrs mouth," she sa1d.
"The n he ran with him and.
when he took hi s hand away.
my brother's hea d fell bac k.
That's when h e kn ew he was
dead.
"He told me when he woke
up that morning he had a plan
to take a c hild fo r ran som, for
money."

st~te.

Births, as well as people moving in, contributed to the increase,
said Steve Kelley, senior economist for the Ohio Department of
Development.
"We've had a natural increase in births, which helps explain some
of that, but a strong, healthy economy is attractive for companies,"
he said.
The Columbus area attracts young profcnio11als who move in,
nmrpnd have children,snid Nancy Rrgcr,ltatistici~n for the Mid~
O)ti&lt;l Regional Planning Commiuion.
flill Lofayctte of th" Greater Columbus Chamber of Commcrco
1:~id the an::~ ha1 a diverse tCOilOmy.
'''fo the cxll'IH we're ctmccntrntcd at all. we're concentrated in
f.ri l'iy r•·c•·ssion- t'C!istant indumics. 111ch a! gowmment and higher
cdLu.::niun," he tnid.
·

Visit by Bush to focus on raising funds, education OPEN HOUSE
CI~CINNAT1

(AP)
Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush was headed
· m Ohio utl Wedneul~y til kick
ofT n two-d,ty vi1it f~nturin11
nppearnnces in the Cind tm 3ti
nnd Tolcdn nrcns.
The trip IVUI ltartinJI in tho
Cindnn~ti ~rea with fund-rniAin[! ownt! Wodncsday •tftor·nnon
and concluding T lnrml:~y with "
r:Jll)' :~t a high ~chtll)l in suburban Toledo.
s~wt•:Jl hours of fund-raising
~l'cnts were pl-anned in th&lt;
Cincinnati suburb of Indian Hill
at the homes of Mercer
Reynolds II I and William 0 .
DeWrtt Jr., two long-time
friends of the Texas governor.
Reynolds and DeWitt have
bee n Bush's business partners in
oil exploration ventures and in
the ownership of the Texas
Rangers baseball tearn.
M~ny of the guests at the pri -

Charae follows drownln·l probe
l: LEVELAND (AI') - The ch~rge5 ~gai11st a 23-year-nld
d ,;1rged in th~ drowning of a college student i11 the Flats h.1s be.•n
tr[lgraded fn.Jm involuntary mamlaughter to murder.
'fr. grand Jury indicted Abimad Zeno of C leveland on the murder
chJJrge Tuesday le" than an hour before he was to appear in CuyalH~ga County Common Pleas Court for a hearing on the lesser
chnrgc.

Zeno's lawyer. Shirley Asale, said the new indictment was "a n
;unb11Sh," designed to pressure her client into a plea :~greement.
" I don't think the facts of this case warrant this," she said. " It's an
ovtrindictnlent.''

Jhe maximum penalty for the original charge is five years m
pri so n. The maximum for murde r ls life.
!'rosccutors sa id a revr ew of the case supported the charge of
mttrder.
Michael Dubrovich, 20, of Sagamore Hills Township, fell into the
Cuyahoga River and drowned dunng a fight Ju ly 21 at a bar in the
Fl.us, a popular ni ghtclub district, police said.
Ze no is accused of berng the one who hrt Dubrovich. The fight
~ t::~rted aftt!r some men accused one of Dubrovich's friends of urinating on their boat.

vate rl.!ception and dinner are
provrding S25,000 to the State
Vr ctory Fund , a political action
committee.
Lost year, Oh10 co ntributors
gave $809,500 to the State Victory Fund , acco rding to federal
campaign finance reports. Of

The money r11iled
Wtdneday i$ ~elng dlt1ided
amon,q-tlre Bu1h
camJiaiJln, tlti! Olllo
R~publicau Htrty. dnd the
Hamiltou Ccmrrt)•
RcJIUIIIImn Party,
that, ;~ll

bm S1115.500 came from

H:~milton County

August 30, 2000

·
., No ;1 rC':1 is 1hon.• l'ommittl•d
to ele ct ing Geot·ge Bmh pr.•sident th:ul this ;trea," said Ohio
Treasmer Joe Deters, also chairman of the Hamilton County
Republican Party.
The money raised Wedneday
is being divided among the Bush
campaign, the Ohio Republican
Party and the Hamilton County
Republican Party.
No public events were scheduled in the Cinci nnati area.
Bush's stop in the Toledo area
was planned for Spnngfield
High School in suburban Lucas
County.
Bush was expected to promote hrs plans to rmprove public
educa tion at a rally.
"We would li ke to think that
(Bush selected Springfield)

oecause we represent a broad
eros• section of society," school
spokeswoman Krittin~ White
•aid. "Our divmity lewl i1 much
more repr~1entative of the COlintry,"
Th~ district has a minority
pop1rlation of l j percent.
In tho final day• of the 199()
pre•idcntial campai~n, thenRepublk;m vice presidential
c:~ nd ida te j.1ck K•·mp was the
keynote speaker at a rally in the
sdwol's gymnasium .

Syracuse Fire Dept.
Refreshments &amp;
Prizes for the kids
SUNDAY
September 3rd.
Come out and see
the new Fire Truck
For more info

call 992-7181

I lonu· and auto discounts.
Whether you're ot homo or on tho rood,
Nltlonwtd.. hoe tote of woye to eevo you money. So can
uo tochly to nnd out mo,. ebout our otr beg dlacount, ·
me driver dlecount, home end car dlecount and more.
Notlonwtdo te On Your Side•

Nationwide"'
lnaurance &amp;
Flnonclol Servlcu

Pomoroy

JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Street
992-5479

N1tlonwldt Mutuallnauranct Company and 1fflllated Companies
Home Office: Ont Natlonwldt Plaza, Columbua, OH 43215-2220
NaUonwld.. la a reglltlrtd ftderiltlaervict mark of
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Comp1ny

.

William 11ilr Stone
COOLVILLE -William "Bill" Stone, 40, Coolville, died Sunday,
Aug. 27 , 2000, in Little Hocking.
· ·
H e was the son of James M. Stone of Coolville and the late Betty
Geraldine Corbitt Stone.
In addition to hi s father, he is survived by three sons, William Jr. ,
Jeremy and Brian, all of Belpre; two brothers and sisters-in-law, James
Jr. and Bertha Stone, and Jack and Rhonda Stone, all of Coolville; two
sisters and brothers-in-law, Debbie and Chester Moody ofVincent and
Peg and Jim Robinson of Coolville; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held at II a.m. Tuesday at White Funeral
Home in Coolville, with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating.
Burial followed at Torch Cemetery.

Rhea J. Willis
RUTLAND- Rhea J. "Sis" Willis, 60, Rutland, died Monday, Aug.
· 28, 2000, at her residence, after an extended illness.
She was the daughter of the late Ray M. Haning and Myrtle L. Hudnall and was a homemaker and a employee of the Ohio University Inn.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in dearh by her husband,
Harold Willis; two brothers, Randy and Keith Haning; and a granddaughter.
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Brian Keith and
Dee Willis of Rutland, Troy Allen and Kathy Willis of Chester; a
daughter, Renee Lynn Willis of New York; five brothers: Nolan and

VALLEY WEATHER

Partly cloudy on Thursday

run, across the street at a corner or
crosswalk and make sure that they
look in all directions before crossing the street.
Children should never enter the
street from bei:Ween parked cars or
from behind bushes or shrubs.
Doing this accounts for the
majoriry of child pedestrian fatalities.
Following important safety
guidelines and reviewing . them
every year with children can help
keep the back-to-school experience a safe and enjoyable one.

Walk

rote bags, sport bags, zippered
pullovers and warm-up suits.
Again, as in past years, Kroger
of Pomeroy will provide food and
drink after the walk -for all participants.
Recruitment leaders contacting
businesses and organizations for
new teams include Diana Coates,
Joan Wolfe , John Redovian, Scott
Dillon, Betsy Herald Nicodemus,
Jean Trussel, Marlene Harrison,
Amy Perrin, Linda King, Linda
Warner, Maxine Rose and Alice
Wolfe.
Anyone interested in forming a
team or walking as an individual
should contact any of the above
recruitment leaders o r Alice

Wolfe at 949-2286.
Individuals or businesses wanting to make a donation can send it
to Joan Wolfe, AHA Treasurer, PO
Box 296, Racine, Ohio 45771.
Checks should be made payable
to Meigs County American
Heart Association.

younger students in front and hold
the handrail while going up and
down the stairs; .
• When entering the bus, go
directly to a seat. Remain seated
and facing forward for the entire

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ-960)
Ohio Volley PubtlshlnK Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Co url S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ohio Valley Publi shing Company. SeconJ
class post~ge p1id at Pomeroy, Ohio .
Membtr: The Associated Presti, and the Ohio
Newspaper Associ~! ion.
POSTMASTER: Send addre.u comet ions to
The Da1ly Sentinel, I l l Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
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1r you know nf an error In 1 slory.
call lhe nrwsrooin at (740) 992-11!.5 . We
will check your lnrorm•l"ion 1nd m1ke 1
corre&lt;:llon 1rw11rnnled.

11 c( urale .

Desiree Taylor

t

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Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2136

•

Tuppers Plains, OH
740-667-3161

News Depanmenta

Tht m1ln numbu Is
ntemlon5 trc:

Deplrtmrnl

Other Strvlces
Advertl~in~t ..................................... Etl.

BANK

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•

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~l-2155 .

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Gallipolis, OH
740.446-2265

•

from Page At

• Before you reach your stop,
wait for the bus to stop completely before getting up from your
seat. Walk to the front door an.d
exit, using the handrail;
• Do not cross the center line of
the road until the driver has signaled that it is safe for you to
begin walking.
Parents, caregivers and older
peers should set good examples
for younger children. It is important to show them how to be safe
when around or inside a school
bus. Teach children to walk, not

from Page AI

Sunset tonight will be at 8:07
and sunrise on Thursday is at 6:58
a.m.

1104
Clrculallon ...................................... Ext. 1103
C le~t ined Ads ............... .................. Ext. 1100

from Page AI
S14,000.
"We are trying to reach every
business, organization and individual with information on how
to participate. We truly want this
to be a· community event which
will help show people how 'easy it
is to incorporate walking into a
.regular exercise progf:\m as well
as raise funds to fight heart disease, which is Meigs County's
number one killer."
This year's walk will be condu cted in memory of Addie Norris, a victim of heart disease ahd
in honor of Breanna Crisp, a survivor of heart disease.
As in past years all walkers will
be given a Tribute Patch to wear
during the walk to honor their
own loved one, co-worker or
friend . All survivors of a heart
atta ck, stroke or cardiovascular
surgery will be given a choice
red cap or survivor pin to wear so
as to be visibly recognized at the
walk .
A team plaque will be presented to the team collecting the
most donations. Last year'' plaqu&lt;'
was awarded to Middleport
Ch urc h of Christ for raismg
$1 ,917 .50.
In additi on , individrral gifts will
be presented to individual walkers
according to amounts they collect. These prizes include T-shirts,

or

Dissolution
granted
POMEROY - An action for
dissolution · of marriage has been
filed in Meigs County Probate
Court to Tony S. Milhoan and
Pamela G. Milhoan.

Tr11ants in Meigs Co1mty
11re 1!{tm sentenced to mm~
1111mit}' service and probationaiJ' terms, Hill said,
a11d juvenile officers work
closely with school o.fficials
and others to determine ,;,e
cause ~r the tn1ancy.

ride;
• Always sp~ak in a quite whisper on the bus so that the driver
will not be distracted;
• Never throw things on the bus
or out the windows;
• Keep the aisles clear at all
times . Feet should be directly in
front of you on the floor and
bookbags should be kept on your
lap;
'·
• Never play with the emergency exits. If there is an emergency, listen to the driver and follow instructions;

S2 Weeks.

Fo

Truants

1

Safety

LOCAL BRIEFS

RACINE- Dorothy Harden Yates, 82, Racine, died Monday, Aug.
28, 2000, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis after a short illness.
She was the daughter of the late Ralph Frederick and Jessie Roush
Neigler and was a homemaker and a member of Gallia Baptist
Church.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by her first hus~and, Morris N. Harden; her second husband, Earl Yates; a daughter,
Dorothy Jean Harden ; a son, William Morris Harden; two brothers,
Arthur Carroll and Forrest Neigler; a sister, Jan Specher; and two
grandchildren.
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Robert and
Dorothy Harden of Racine, Donald and Angela Harden of Oak Hill;
one brother and four sisters-in-law, Ralph and Edna Neigler, Sara Neigler, Gertrude Neigler, all of Racine, Wanda Neigler of Syracuse; one
sister and brother-in-law, Drucilla House of Baltimore, Md. and Jack
Specher of Oakland, Ca.; seven grandchildren; 14 grear-grandchildren;
one great-grea~-grandchild.
Funeral services will be at I p.m. Thursday at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Pastor Cline Rawlins.
Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may visit from 7-9 p.m. today at the funeral home .

LOCAL STOCKS

13 Wetks .................................... ....... 527 .JO

Fa.r••~ers Bank
· &amp; Savings Company
.

Dorothy Harden Yates

!ems, but an expanded program
would be aimed more at helping
at-risk students (such as the student
who has been held back a number
of years) realize the importance of
getting a high school diploma.
"Sometimes these students are
discouraged, and feel out of place,
and that just makes skipping
school, or dropping out of school,
more tempting," Hill said.
Lentes acknowledged parents
can often do little to force their
children to attend school, and said
parents should notify officials if
their children present problems.
"If a child is simply refusing to
do what their parents say, or if the
child is being violent, or skipping
school, the parents need to notifY
officials and bring the- child before
the judge so rhat problems can be
·addressed," Lentes said.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

26 Weeks.............

Randy Hays

June Haning, Ronnie Haning, Butch and Lois Haning, Thurman Han ing and Nancy Clark, all of Pomeroy; Jerry Haning and Peggy Wandling of Albany; two sisters, Wanda and Jerry Searles_of Columbus,
Donna Haning and Dale Clonch of Pomeroy; two grandchildren; and
several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday in White Oak Cemetery, Harrisonville. Officiating will be Pastor Paul Taylor.
Friends may visit from 7-9 p.m. today at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany.

we already have in place."
Truants in Meigs County are
The tri-county area will have
often sentenced to conununity serpartly sunny skies and warm temvice and probationary terms, Hill
peratures on Thursday, thanks to a
Weather forecast:
said, and juvenile officm work
stationary high pressure system
Tonight...Mostly clear until
closely with school officials and
over the Midwest.
midnight, then partly cloudy with
others to determine the cause of
Highs will be in the 80s. areas of fog developing. Lows in
the truanc}'
Tonight, under clear skies, tem- the mid and upper 60s. Calm
"It's important that we help kids
peratures will drop into the 60s, wind.
learn t~t it is important to develthe National Weather Service
Thursday... Areas of fog until
op good habits early in their school
said.
mid-morning, then Nrdy cloudy.
careers;' he said. "The importance
No rain is in the foreca.t until Highs in the mid and upper 80s.
of attending school regularly really
Friday, when afternoon and
Thursday night ... Mostly clear.
must be developed in the elemenevening thunderstorms are likely.
Lows 65 to 70.
tary years, because responsibility
for attending school really carries
.over into the work ethic later."
Hill said the juvenile court has
been working closely with Lentes,
AEP-34),
Children's Services caseworkers
Gannett - 56
Rocky Boots - 5~..
Akzo- 45l.
General Electric - 60
AD Shall - 62lo
and school officials to formulate
AmTectVSBC- 4Vo
Harley Davidson - 47'•
seers- 31
plans
for a long- term alternative
Kmart-7~
Ashland Inc: -'- 35l.
Shonay's- 1
Wai.Mart - 49~.
AT&amp;T-31 ~~
Kroger- 22
school program for at-risk teenBank One - 33 Y.
Lands End - 25l.
Wendy's- 19 ~
agers, which would likely help
Bob Evans - 17'/,
Ltd. - 20Y.
Worthtng1on - 1Ol.
reduce truancy among high school
BorgWarner - 35 ,,
Oak Hilt Financial - 16
Champion - 3 ),
OVB-26~
Cally s1ock reports are tho
students.
Charming Shops - 5lo
BBT -26lo
4 p.m . closing quotes of
The county operates an alternaCity Holding ..c. 7l,
Peopies -14l.
the previous day's trans·
Federal M~t - 1o'l.
Premier -e:actions,
provided
by
tive school for Mei~ County stuRockwell - 39'o
Ad\18!1[ of Gallipolis.
Flrstar - 23 1•
dents who present discipline probB~

MAlt SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnskte Meigs Coun1y

Woody Stines

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

heads for grand jury

Man ~ccus~ in girl's

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Wednesday.

FRI B/25/00. THURS 8/31/00
THE ART OF WAR (R)

Tra9k th• progre~s.
··of your tavorlte'.

Licenses issued
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Joseph

Andrew Anderson, 37. and
Donna Sue McDonald, 37, both
of of Langsville; James Anthony
Carnahan, 41. and Sandra Renee
Carnahan, 33, both of Middleport;Timorhy Ray Glaze, 48, and
Cynthia Jo Eads, 42, both of
Pomeroy; Larry Richard Harman, 45, and Edith Louise Hubbard, 47, both of Rutland; Denis
Ray Shuler, 37, and Mary Imboden, 36, both of Pomeroy; and
Rodney Wooten, 27, and Jeanna
Kay Connolly, 35, both of
Racine.

Hispanic, Asian populations
are fastest-growing minorities
tional American experience."
WASHINGTON (AP)
Nationally, the country's white
Those new hotels and casinos
that sprouted up in Nevada's population increased 7.3 percent
C lark County this past decade between 1990 and 1999 to 224.6
attracted more than just gamblers million. Blacks remained the
anxious to try their luck under country's largest minority group,
experiencing a 13.8 percent spike
the bright lights of Las Vegas.
The · boom also brought an during the same period to 34.8
.influx of Asians and Hispanics million, while the American Indieager to fill new construction and an and Alaska Native population
service-industry jobs, a develop- increased 15.5 percent to 2.3 milment th~t helped mllke Nevada lion.
"The white, black and Amerithe fastest-growing srate in the
1990s.
can Indian populations for the
New Census Bureau estimates most part just don't show that
being released Wednesday show dramatic of a change," Sink said.
that increases in the nation's two Overall, the · Hispanic and Asian
fastest-growing minority popula- growth is "largely being fueled by
tions are also relping to spark irrunigration."
gains elsewhere.
Between July I, 1990, and July
1, 1999, the nation's Asian and
PJcific Islander population grew
4'3.0 percent to 10.8 million, and
the Hispanic _population grew
38.8 percent to 31.3 million, the
Census estimates show. These are
the last such estimates to be
released before detailed Census
2000 results come out next year.
California, Texas and New York
Chicago, Ill.- A free offer of
- the three most populous states
special interest to those who
- continue to have the highest
hear but do not understand
numbers of minorities, but Nevawords has been announced
da, Georgia and North Carolina
experienced the biggest percent
by Beltone. A non-operating
increases, Census analyst Larry
model of the most popular
Sink said.
canal hearing aid in America
"It's largely a condition of jobs
today will
be given
and the network of people they
absolutely free to anyone
know there," said John Haaga of
the
Population
Reference · requesting it.
Bureau, a Washington-based
It's yours for the asking, so
research group. "That's the tradisend for it now. It is not a
'
real hearing aid, but it will
show you how tiny hearing
help can be.
These models are free, so
call or write for yours now.
Page AI
Benefits of hearing aids vary
by type and degree of
The board also authorized the
DJFS to apply for funding and to
hearing
loss ,
noise
operate the Medicaid Eligiblity
environment, accuracy of
Outreach program for FY 200!.
hearing evaluation and
DJFS was also authorized to
proper fit.
purchase a new personal computS,end your name, date of
er to be used for client and pubbirth, address and phone
lic access in job searches.
Present at the meeting were
number today to Dept. #705,
commissioners Janet Howard ,JefBelt one Electronics, 420 I
frey Thornton and Mick DavenWest
Victoria Street ,
port, and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
Chicago, Illinois 60646-

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Hearing Loss
Is NotA Sign
Of Old Age.

Roads

from

6772.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.

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The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 30, 2000

Weclnescl.y. August 30. 1000

~:NATIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

•.

•
'' .

'£st#fii1J/id In 1.948

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

w. Govey

Publisher
Charlene Hoelllch
G-ral Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

i

I

Ltlttn IIJ tilt !diwr aTf! ~t·rlcume. Thry~hou/4 &amp;or Ids than JUO ltl(ln/.~. A.lllelltn llrt' .\·ubjur
Itt edilint tJnd murt bt slrrud 11/UJ indudt IJIIdnss and tek1horu number. /'t'u ,,u·lrnf!d ldttrs tf'lll
1H p11/HUMd. Utten fhmdd ~ in good task. addressing in l4t~. not JWn·ontllitiEs.
Tht opifliolfS uprustd in the ('vlllmll bc-Jo~t~ un thr rotUttuus of the Ohi11 \'alle_v Publishing

Co.'s tdilorial boon/, wnltu tllhen•iU? n01ed.

At rill' summit. Ar-Jfat dem~mded Palestini.m soven:i 6r:~uy owr the
c.l\tt· rn P:\rt of Jcrus.tlem. held by lsr:~d smce Jordanian troop~ were ·
"'pdled Ill the· I ')6 7 S1x-Day W:rr. He would make It the c.rpital of a
l'.t!l'stmi;m state.
. B:1nk ofll•rcd the PJk'stmians .ldministrativc: contro l ov~o·r sonte
llL' J g:h~orhoods inside tht.• c i~· .md in suburbs, Js weU JS mmt of till'
West U.mk for a state. Rut the talks co llapsed over Jerusalem :.nd over
l'akstun:m demands that Israel gram hundreds of thousa nds of Palestini.m refugees the right to n.~ettle in Israel .
In ,1move to make headway, C linton's Middle East envoy. Dennis
l~oss . IS draftmg a paper to su mmarize points of near-agrr::t:m~nt at
( .. mrp Dav1d, lsraeh Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben- Am1 sa id Tuesday
111 JcnJsJlem .

Heritage movement offirs
key to regional future

ty development. These terms call for an umbrella effect, bringing in
different groups see king fultl llm ent of their plans. H eritage preservation, as suggested by OHCHA , could lead to most if not all of
these goals being mer.
.
All of this, however, must be initiated locally. Main Street progranls in Gallipohs aod Point lJleasam are working w maintain th e
flavor of their downtowns to again make th em th~ bustling centers
Of commerce and activity th ey wert' onCe. Merc hams and commL1 nity groups in Pomeroy and M iddleport are concentratint\ on the
same concfpl.
·
·· The bolts of the preservation mechanism are in place in our
conununities. By joining together in a regionalm~we, the area stands
to benefit by promoting its own special place in the h1story of the
Northwest Territory, its role in settling the land. recou nting past
accomplishme nts and looking toward th e future.
As Mullen pointed out, th e rime to do this is now. OtherwiSe, our
rapidly disappearing heritage may be gone before we know it.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Aug. 30, the 243rd day of 20()(). There are 123
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 30, 1862, Union forc es were defeated by the Confederates at the Second Battle of Bull Run in Manassas, Va .
On thi&gt; date1
In 30 B.C. (o n Aug. 30, by so m e estimates) , Cleopatra, the seventh
and 111ost fam ous queen of anci e nt Eb'YPt, co mmitted suicide.
In 186 1, Union General John C. Frem o nt in stituted martial law in
Missouri and declared slaves th e re to be free. (Hmwver, Fre mont's
order was co unterm anded a few day' larer by Pre~ idL·nt L1n col n).
In I 'IOS.Ty Cobb mad e h is major league battin g debut. phymg for
th e D etrOi t Tigers .
In 1941 , th e World War II siege of Len u1grad by Na zi forces
began.
In I '145, Gc·n. Do uglas Mac Arthur armed in Japan. and se t up
Allied occupation headquarte rs.
In 1963, the " hot line" communications link bet\\een Washington
and Moscow went Into operation.
In 1967 , th e Senate confirmed th e appoi ntment o f Thurgood
Marshall as the first black justice on th e Su preme Court.
In 1983 , G uion S. Bluford Jr. beca me the first black Amni can
astronaut to travel in space , blastin g off aboml th e Cha llenger.
In 1986 . Sov iet authorities arre, tcd N1cholas DallllotT, rhe
Moscow co rrespondent for U.S. News .111d World l~ e p ort . (H e wa&lt;
later released .)
In 1997 cam e word in th e Unittd States of tht.• c.Jr cra~h in Pa ri~
th at claime·d the lives o f Pn11 ce" Diana, I Jodi Fayc· d and th eir dri ver. H enri Paul. (Because of till· tim L' ditll.: rcncc, it w:t~ Aug ..) I wiH.: r1
th e crash occ urred .)
Tn1 yea r~ ago : U.N. St:cretary-Gt· neraJ jav1cr I'LTt'Z de C uella r
arnveU 111 Jurdtul to tr y to mnliatt· thl' Pers1an Gulf rri'iJ ~. President
13u-.; h rol d J ll l'W'I confe rence th at a "nt'w world ordt•r" could e m erge
from rh e ( ;u]f c r i~k
Five yean ago:Tht· West pounded th e Bosman Serb' with artilkry
and ai r .Hta c k ~ in hopt·-.; o f hludRt:oni n g thl'm into 't' riou \ pc.ll"t'
~;] lks. At a bvi~ h o pt'n ing cen: mon ~ in (ki.Jing. org. tnl 7l'l"~ nf ..1 llt ,tj or
wom en's co nft· rc nct· vowed to flght ll1 r cmpowerrnl'llt ,\lld l'tj u.dJty.
()n e year ago: l.l...es1dent~ o f E.1 . . t lin lor vmeJ t( &gt;r llldqw nd l' rh L'
from lndo ne-.;ia 111 a U. N .-~p o m orl·d ha!lo r (At!-t'rw arcf , pro- lnd n nl' sia militiamt•n reactt·J by going on ,l vio lt•nt ra mpa ge th at l' ndt:d
when internati onal fo rces we re st'nt m.)
TuJay\ llmhd ays: Baseb:ill H :.ll o( Fanw r Te J Wd lianl ' IS H2 .
Cou ntry s m~er Ki tty Well s isH I. Clpn.1 'i11~cr l ~q.:in , J Res nik I' 7H.
Actor Bill D ail y " 72. S 1n~cr Jo hn l'h dJ ,ps "r.'i . A&lt;trc·" IJI £,Jhct h
Ashl ey is 6 1. A.-ror Hen Jones is .S'i. Cmoo n1 st it. Crlllnh 11 ·:;7_ Skic•r
Jean -Clau de Killy is 57 . Actress Peggy Lipton IS 53 . Actor Timothy
Bottoms is 49. Acto r D avid Pay nw r is 46. Actor Michael C hikli s is
37 . ActreS&gt; Mi chael M ic hele is 34 .

••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Wildfires calm, optimism on fire lines
RED LODGE , Mont . (AP) - There was
something unusual on Montana fire lines
early Wedne sday : optimism , brought on by
cooler temperatures, relatively light wind and
forecasts of rain .
· Fire managers said most of the state's fires
made no significa nt advances Tuesday.
Overnight temperatures dipped to near
freezing in some areas .
"This is the tlrst real weatJ.,er pattern
change in the West for three months ," said
Bob Nester, a National Weather Service forecaster assigned to an 80,000-acre blaze
between Helena and Bozeman .
Gov. Marc Rancor on Tuesday asked President Clinton to declare Montana a federal
disaster because of its huge: wildfires.

The state has ~xhausted its fire fighting
resources and a federal diSaster declaration
would free up more federal money, Racicot
said . H e estimated the fires are costing Montana businesses $3 million a day.
There are 31 large fires burning 674,000
acres in Montana, accordmg to the National
Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho. The
biggest accounted for almost 250,000 acres
after two blazes in the Bitterroot Valley
burned together.
Nationally, there are 84 fires on 1.6 milhan acres . Idaho reported 26 large fires on
nearly 745,000 acres; Wyoming, five large
tires on 52,000 ac res; and South Dakota one
(.5,000-acre blaze.
So · far this year, 6 .2 million acres in the

United States have burned, the center said.
Firefighters and equipment were pouring
into Red lodge to begin the ground attack
on a blaze that had forced 150 families from
their homes a few ntiles south of town .
About 100 of them were allowed to return
Tuesday.
The 3,500-acre Willie fire - so named
because Willie Nelson was headlining a
musi c festival in .Red Lodge - was about
four miles from town Tuesday.
The Reartooth Highway route to Yellowstone National Park remained closed south
of Red Lodge but the park remained open.
· The fire is loca ted near Wap1ti Mountain
in steep, rocky and tintbered terrain . No
stru ctures havt" burned.

1

Preserve·

The new push is for region al planning and sustain ed communi-

Clinton seeks Mideast accOrd

·•ll:

OUR VIEW

Fostering a special se use of place is rhe gual uf the Ohio Hill
Country Heritage Area, which has seized upon Gov. Bob Taft's designa tion of a heritage corridor along the Ohio · River as a means of
boosting the regional economy.
That's not the group's only goal. While bringing toumm dollar&lt;
into the area is important, OHCI{A is also looking to preserve the
remaining artifacts. buildings and o ral history that tell us something
of our history.
. M ic hael Mullen , the group 's duector. told the Athens News last
week the region ts at a cro ssroads with many of its h ~n tagc
resources.
" We've got o ld barns that have fallen into disrepair, great old
buildings in some downtowns that are on the edge of the wrecking
ball, and we've got great old stories from o ur grandparents t hat we
are on the edge of losing," he said. " That's why it is important to do
heritage resou rce prest"rvatiOn now.''
Mull en and his group are right. Regional history tends to be one
,of those things that go around o nl y once 1f not properly preserved.
either by .111 hisroriral sorit'ty or vnlunrcers Jedicmed to preserva ti on.

BRIEFS

, WASHINGTON (AP) -With a dc•adline closing in, President
Umton w1ll make a fresh attempt next week to reopen summit talks
w1~h l sra~l and the Palestinians and try to mediate a settlement on
Jerusalem s future and the shape of a Pales'tinian state.
the odds against him appear long. A senior US. official involved in
the dnve told The Associated Press on Tuesday th,at at this point the
rwo ~1des were too far apart on the issues to call another summit.
Clmton plans separate m eetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak and Pales~man leader Vasser Arafat against the backdrop of the
Umted Nauons Millennium Summit, which will bring scores uf
government heads to New York .
·
Israel and the Palestimans have set a Sept. 13 deadline for settlement
of t heir half-century-old dispute. Arafar has said he would declare
Palcsuman sta tehood if thert• IS no accord .
~linto_n 's immediate aim is to set up a three-way session; h1s ov~r­
goal IS the wide~ranging agreement that appea red to be r.1king
r.htpc last month .n Cantp Oavid, m Maryland's Caroctm Mountains.
bu t fizzled mostly ovl'r Jerusalem .
" It's too eorh- to speak of a three- way summit," Saeb Erebt , the top
P.llt:"snman negotiator, said Tuesday.
:~'f ht.·n.· arc instw ctions from President Arafat to us to t'Xerr evt."ry
dl{] rt fur an .lgrct'\11t'nt." he- s.1 id. "Wt: wanr pe-ace. but not at any
prlcl·."

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

Charles

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1
RUSHER'S VIEW

Source: CNN shakeup pending

A closer look at Gores class waifare concept

NEW YORK (AP) - The head of CNN's national operations,
Rick K.Jplan, is departing as the cable news network struggles to turn
around sagging ratings.
A CNN staff meeting in Atlanta was scheduled for Wednesday' to
diScuss the changes, said a network executive speaking on condition
of anonymity. The executive confirmed K.Jplan's departure.
Kaplan did nor return a phone caU placed to his office late Tuesday.
N etwork spokesmen would not comment.
.
K.Jplan , who won 34 Emmy Awards as a longtime producer at
ABC, joined CNN as president of its USA operations in August
1997. given the mission to bolster the network's viewership during
lunes it didn't have breaki ng news to depend upon .
lnsread , C NN has frequepdy found itself eclipsed by C NBC as the
appetite for financial news increased and beset by increased competitiotj from Fox News Channel and MSNBC.
T.he network proclaimed itself "America's Campaign He,adquarters" arrd placed a strong emphasis on political coverage this year. But
its ratings for the GOP convention, for example, were 27 percent
below convention ccveragc four years earlier.
Kaplan survived a major scandal less than a year into his tenure,
when tho network had m retract a story that claimed the U.S. miliwry. tucd nerve ~tal on -defectors during the Vietnam War. Two produc&lt;r! \WI'&lt;' fired "' a result of the May 1998 report and corn:spond~nt l'~tl'r Arn~tt lcfl CN N within a y.:ar.
Kaplan .tim ti.'udcd with longtime CNN financial 11nchur lou
Dubbs, who loft CNN fur an ltucrnct vcntur.:.
Tho network, fimmlrd by Ted Thrner, ctlcbm&lt;d its 20th anniver•ary this s~will!l .

Some Americans no doubt do regard themThe technique of c lass warfare, which AI
selves as(opermanent losers , and arc only toO
Gore e mployed in his :Kccptance speech at
happy to sign up with a politician who
Los Angell"s and has. bee n using with increaspro nllses to sti ck it to thost· more fortunate.
ing boldness eva since. hJs a long if not parBut a great m any America ns, in cluding a lot
ticularly Jistin~;ms hed h1story in American
of poor ones, believe, with impressive justifipolitics.
cation, that they aren 't doomed to permanent
Basically, the 1dea IS to identifY yourself and
poverty by a long shot - that they can and
your p&lt;~rty with the va~r majority of the
will improve the1r situation . and that a day'
Ame•rir:m people, who are supposedly being
will come, and perhaps soon er (han ynu tl11nk ,
neglected and '' not getting their due," whiJc
when AI Gore or som e other demagogue wtll
identifYin!,( th e other party with :1 much
NEA COLUMNIST
cal
l on the envio us poor of his time to rise up
smaller group called "the· powerful" or "th e
vested interests" or " the special interests," who
and stick it to them.
As a matter of fact . it's a good question
are allegedly making ofl· with fa r 111ure than years carher and have had a chance to estabtheir "fair share" of thl· nanonal wealth or lish themselves more securely. The Kennedy whether such people don't already represent a ·
whathaveyou.
dynasty in Massachusetts, for example, was bigger and more politically aware bloc of votThe beamy of the technique, of cou rse, is founded on the. Joyalry of Irish immigrants ers than the ones Gore is trymg to attract. It is
1bar in a democ;racy,.th e party that call puiLoff whom it cha1i1 pioned against ~he Brahmins in estimated that well over a hundred million
this stunt stands to ger the lion 's share of the their "houses on the hill."
Americans f) re already invested in business .
votes.
Is there anything wrong with using the enterprises, either direc tly thro ugh the market
The technique is appeali ng because human technique of class warfare? Only if you think or through 401 (k) plans, pension funds and
nature is easily tempted into thinking of the there is something wrong with deliberately the like. How likely are they to full for Mr.
world as divided between "us" and " them"- setting different groups of Americans at each Gore's cheap appeal to envy of"the rich?"
witness all the children's battles between th e others' throats.
There is lmle point to dwelling for very
Good Guys and the Bad G u ys , or the bloody
M any politicians (and AI Gore seems, long on the sheer cynicism uf the Gore stratbrawls th at enliven EuropL~an soccer matches. increasingly, to be among them) appa rently egy.
So we hear AI Gore bellowing that " I want think that is the whole point of politics, and
If actually elected, you can be sure that a
to tight for YOU," and swearing that he wil l · play it accordingly. But there are still a good Gore administration wouldn't benefit th&lt;'
never consent to a tax r~n that , amo ng other many high-minded people in both parties poor greatly - not only because it couldn't
things, would benetlt " the rich" - that con - who prefer not to score points that way.
afford to, but because it would continue to
veniently small group of Ameri ca ns w hose
To these people, Atnerica isn't a zero-sum need their hatred of" the rich" to fuel its own
income, w hatever it may be. ·is higher than game in which the fact that so mebody pros- perpetuation in office.
yo urs.
By contrast, George W Bush 's declaration
pers means that somebody else must suffer.
Historically it has tended to be the Demo- On the contrary, "the pie" is forever expand- that " I'm a uniter, not a divider" seems like a
cratic party that has played rhe class warfare ing, and (to vary 1he metaphor) it is not only breath of fresh mountain air.
c·ard , because during most of Ameri can histo- poss ible but likely that, as John Kennedy put
ry it has represe nted the more recently arrived it, a rising tide will lift all boats.
(William RriSIJer is 11 Disti11guished Fclloll' .if
immigrant waves, while the ll..epubli cans have
That's why class warfare is, to borrow one of tl1e Claremolll l11stitrrte for the Swd)' of' St,lles·.
representt·d those who arrived Sll or more AI Gore's pet p hrases. a risky technique.
nramhip cmd Political Philosoplry.)
~.

William ·

Rusher .

Missouri executes triple killer
POTOSI. Mu. (A I') - A man was oxecut~d by injection c•nrly
Wc•duc•sd.ry for killmg a woman and her two som dunng a 1991l'Ob·
bery bc•c.ruse he• feared the f.1mily would identifY him .
l'msecutors said Gary lee Roll and two accomplices went to the
Schepn's Cape Gmrdeau home in southeast Missouri early Aug. 9,
1')1)2, with the intent to commit robbery. Sherry Scheper, 47 , was
bea~en to death with a gun; R andy, 17, was shot and killed; and Cur" '· 22, "'a' mbbcd to death . ·
The men then left with 12 plastic sandwich-sized bags full of marijuana and S2 14 in cash.

.•

'BUSINESS MIRROR'

Loss of consumer fear starts to concern the Fed
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - Certain conclusions can be
derived from the rea leaves of economic S(atisti cs , an d one is that the America n consumer is
really not very afraid o f the Fed.
This is in marked contrast lO the fear that
seizes th e business and investm ent cumrnumty
every time the Federal R eserve mt't'to.; to consider whetha or not to raise inten:st rate'
agam.
Consumers, however. j ust go to the mall and
assuage their ;mxieries by buymg more goods
and services. spending no[ j ust th eir paychecks,
which have been risin g, but borrowing: n1 on: as
we ll .
It ha' become a wry bad ll.lbit , persistmg
rnomh :after mo nth in 'ip ite of warnin hrs th .tr
excess ive dem and , such a::. they h ,IVL' bt'L'II
Jn11onstr.1ting, t.·vemually drives up price~ ,tnd
borrowing ratl'\ .
Th ~ l c~~on th e Fed ha ~ bec rt tryt ng to ,dnve
home via 'i ix intt·rest r.uc~ i nnc&lt;~~t''i in dw past
\ ~ mont h ~ is that 'i llt"h hduv10r j, ~~..·lf- d t.· f(:a t ­
ing, M id that fi.)r heaven ''i ~a h· 'i:tvc ~;o m e rhin g.
t:1Ih not so much on JL'.lf c.tr\ a.., 011 ,J cu~ ­
'i llllll.'r "iplri r that seem s to bel it'VL' good riml'"
dl"C L'tl'nl.ll anJ that, be~ ide..;, why ~ ht~uld [ \:IVt-'
\Vhen my \ to cb .lt"t' domg the sav in tt t(Jr lil t'.
Wdl. ,,,ys th e l·eJ. fi&gt; r this rcaMHI. IJJ !,( dc·ep
down into thl' m y~ te nes nf tin.11Kl' .md you'll
find that s.1vi ng; are the f01mdarion of good
economi c times. They are the fuel that fin ances
growth.

It

The lesson tire Ft·d lras b1•en trying
to d1·i1Je home l'ia six interest rates
iucrcaSI's iu the past 14 IIIOIItlls is
that suc/1 l1ehm•io1' is se~{-dt:Jcatin.~,
a11d that Ji1r llear•en 's sake save
sornet/1 i ng.
Th e consumer senses that this couldn't be
rrut· b eca use the economy seems to be doing
pretty well , even if the July savings rates fdl to
it-.; loWest r:1tc ever, a negarive 0.2 percent.
If they think about the problem ·at all, cons umn~ dismJf\s t't.·ars by watching tht~ economy
continue its uninttTrupted growth month after
month , year after Yl\lr, eve n as savings disappear.
Wh.u \ ove rlooked h ere is nothing less than
the rest of th e world, from which the United
State" 1s, in cflen, borrowing to maintain its
v1gnrous econom y.
It goes this way: The American econo my
impo rts far more than it exports, something
li ke· an annual rate of n earl y $400 bi llion a year.
It's called thee (im)balance of payments.
As economist Ui ll Dunkdberg puts it, "this
m ean,.. \Vc must sec un: a billion dollars o f capital a day from the rest of the world ." It worries
Fed govern ors ,ic k. What if th e world a;k, fo r
its mo ney back ?
Th is f~ar is sort of bun ed from consumer
con sciousness, but it is very much on th e minds
o f those who study suc h things . To survive, an
economy needs domestic as well as fo reign sav-

,.
•'·

•'
''

mgs.
Dunkelberg, a Temple University professor. ~
explains that the trade deficit is now at a criti - ~
cal point, exceeding 4 percent of gross dome s- :,
tic production.
:
When countries reach that point , they expe- :
rience unpleasant economic consequences. For :
one. "tOreign investors worry we may not be :
able to pay obligations and that the dollar
might weaken ."
"'r
Worry can ll';~d to action .
" Tryin~,; to be the fir;r o ne o ut of th e dollar,
foreign investors convl'rt dolbr-de no minatcd
assets like stocks :md bond.;; 111tn a,..set." denom inated in other currencies," he 'iay~.
"O nt:c the rush for th L' cxr t ~t,u· t \ things can
get a bit Jisunlerly as our in~t.· rt''it ratt'~ could ,
soar and 'the stock market collapse."
.
This, he concedes, isn't likel y to happen to o
significant degree in prewnt circum , t;UJCL'S but he adds that it could . " It\ a risk th at wor- ,
nt';; Alan Gr~e tlspan at ni ght ," hl· s3ys. ,
.P'
Still. a signifi ca nt l';;cabti or l of JJi tlatJ &lt;lll co nceivably could trigga SlJ ch a ~ trif1g o f events,
which cxplams w hy th e h ed is comm itted to ,
seeing chat it doesn 't happen .
In oth er wnrd&lt;, it i&lt;n't th,Jt people- like Alan ~
Grt'e nspJ n and hi &lt;~ ,t\\ot-i.Jtl'' .11 th l' FL'lkr.ll ..
R eserve .m~ ~po i lsporb . N\ort· !J ke rL-. 1r th.n •
so me: fo lks at the pan-y art' cnmuming .1 h 1t tuu
much.
ljofm Cww~IJ is a lm siiH'SS mwlyst (l)r T!u• :;
A .-;~orit~ rr d Pres()

1

•

,.

North Texas, drought-stricken
BOYD, Tcx.rs (AI') - Gazing
across a field of shrunkL•n vd low
w:Hcrmelons on withen.· d \'ines,
Agriculture: St·nctary Dan G\i(kman on Tut.·sd:ty pronusc-d tCJcral
aid to four more: counties 111
droughr-strickl'n norrh TexJs.
Gli ckman's visit marked the
60th consec'u uve day with()ut
measuTJble rJinf.dl in north Texas,
where crops are parched and
reservoirs arc drying up. The previous record w:1s 58 days. set m
1934 and 1950.
"These folks are really hurt mg," he said. " I don't hke tG be
here on a day setti ng records not these kinds. llf records. any-

way.
Glickman
ha s
previouslv
dccbred 15J T~..· xa s countit·s c:,ithe.r
prim;try or contiguous agricul tural disastl'l" a r~as.
HL' s.1id low-intert:st lo:ms may
provide some short-term relief to
farmrrs facing il bleak situation.
but if the dry weath~r conti nu es.
officials will be forced to find
other ways to help.
"Drought 1s even more Jn
insidious 113tural disaster than , let's
say, a hurric;ml! or floods or tornados , because it happens very
slowly," Glickman said . " Its
tmpact is more: long range, far
reaching."

Relatives watched as F-16
pilot crashed in Texas
TULIA, Texas (AP) Pilot
Steve Simons always let hJS family and friends know when a
flight pattern for the Air Force
reserves would take him over
their tiny Panhandle town.
It didn't happen often, but
before he took a solo flight
Monday night he called them to
say he'd be guiding his f-16
fighter jet across their piece of
sky.
Sn a Cew resirl&lt;ntl of the town
halfway b~tlw~n Lubbock and
Amarillo, indudin11 Simon's
fath~•·-i n - bw, Clctus Dubbs,
gathered to watch .
What they saw \\'as horrific :
The ltlllll"ular fighter jet suddenly sc~mcd to lose power as its
pilot tried to ttlrn nmund for n
second p :m. M&lt;llllCiltS later the
f.](, plummeted to the gruLmd
and bmst into flames.
Simons, 41, the father of two
girls, died in the crash.
"Me and my wife were out in
front of the house and he rode
that plane down to keep from
hitting us or the house," Dobbs
sa id. " H e gave hiS life for us ."

On Tuesday, most of the
debris remained at. the crash site,
spread out over a quarter-mile.
Disaster crews surrou nded the
scene as cattle roamed in a nearby field.
When the jet went down,
Dobbs said he •ouldn't believe
what he'd seen. He rushed to his
truck to· drive closer, hoping to
help his son-in-law. Paramedics
who got tn the scene fim
stopped him nearby.

JonBeners parents
finish questioning
ATLANTA (A I') - Juhn and
l'.ltsy Ramsey wrappc·d up two
d:~ys of questioning from aurhorlries inv~sti garing their daughter's
death, and their attorney called
on police to publicly clear th e
couple as suspect::,
"The: time has c..ome for the
police to come forward and publicly acknowledge that there's
nothing left to do," attorney l.
Lin Wood said as the mterv1ews
e nded aro und noon Tuesday.
"The evidence is not there."
The Ramseys said they had
cooperated fully and gave the
police other leads on who might
have killed JonBenet
Mrs . Ramsey, addr~ssing
Boulder, Colo., Police Chief
Mark Beckner, s~id, "Whatever
obstacles are in your way that
make you think I killed my child,
I want to help you get over that."
Wood said the Ramseys
refused to answer questions from
the Boulder investigators abo ut
forens1c evidence because they
did not have the results of forensic tests performed by police.
The two sides had squabbled
Monday over special prosecutor
M ichael Kane's questions about
fon:nsic evidence, with Wood
s~ying Kane wa~ refusin11 to co n-

sidt'r any suspects orher th:ln thl'
6-ycar-old's parents.
In response, K:1nt~ said earlier
Tuesday that Wood " doesn't want
his client to answer somt: tough
questwns" about JonBt'net's
death in the family's home in
Boulder_
"This case is .. . almost four
years old. Whether it's an intruder or son1ebody in the house
who con1ntiued this homicide 1
there are some difficult, tough
questions that have to be
answered," he said.
The investigators spent seven
hours Mopday questioning Mrs.
Ramsey at Wood's office. They
met with her again Tuesday
morning and then met with her
husband, wrapping up the sessions before noon.
After the Monday session,
Wood said Kane had reduced the
questioning of Mrs. Ramsey to a
"fishing expedition" to pin the
child beauty queen's killing on ·
her parents.
He said K.Jne threatened to
walk out of the interview with
Mrs . Ramsey when the two sides
argued over questioning about
fiber evidence and security precautions for JanBenet'l old~t
bl'llther, Burke.

Invasive Cardiologist Joins

Holzer Clinic
Michael A. Englund, DO

Dr. Michael Englund completed his Fellowship in Cardiology
at Marshall University Huntington', WV. He is Board Certified
by the American Board of Internal Medicine and Board
Eligible in Cardiology. Dr. Englund is now accepting new
patients in the new CardioPulmonary Rehab Center at
Holzer Clinic, to s9hedule an appointment call ·

740-446-5348

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�PageA4. ·•·

Ion

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 30, 2000

Weclnescl.y. August 30. 1000

~:NATIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

•.

•
'' .

'£st#fii1J/id In 1.948

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

w. Govey

Publisher
Charlene Hoelllch
G-ral Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

i

I

Ltlttn IIJ tilt !diwr aTf! ~t·rlcume. Thry~hou/4 &amp;or Ids than JUO ltl(ln/.~. A.lllelltn llrt' .\·ubjur
Itt edilint tJnd murt bt slrrud 11/UJ indudt IJIIdnss and tek1horu number. /'t'u ,,u·lrnf!d ldttrs tf'lll
1H p11/HUMd. Utten fhmdd ~ in good task. addressing in l4t~. not JWn·ontllitiEs.
Tht opifliolfS uprustd in the ('vlllmll bc-Jo~t~ un thr rotUttuus of the Ohi11 \'alle_v Publishing

Co.'s tdilorial boon/, wnltu tllhen•iU? n01ed.

At rill' summit. Ar-Jfat dem~mded Palestini.m soven:i 6r:~uy owr the
c.l\tt· rn P:\rt of Jcrus.tlem. held by lsr:~d smce Jordanian troop~ were ·
"'pdled Ill the· I ')6 7 S1x-Day W:rr. He would make It the c.rpital of a
l'.t!l'stmi;m state.
. B:1nk ofll•rcd the PJk'stmians .ldministrativc: contro l ov~o·r sonte
llL' J g:h~orhoods inside tht.• c i~· .md in suburbs, Js weU JS mmt of till'
West U.mk for a state. Rut the talks co llapsed over Jerusalem :.nd over
l'akstun:m demands that Israel gram hundreds of thousa nds of Palestini.m refugees the right to n.~ettle in Israel .
In ,1move to make headway, C linton's Middle East envoy. Dennis
l~oss . IS draftmg a paper to su mmarize points of near-agrr::t:m~nt at
( .. mrp Dav1d, lsraeh Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben- Am1 sa id Tuesday
111 JcnJsJlem .

Heritage movement offirs
key to regional future

ty development. These terms call for an umbrella effect, bringing in
different groups see king fultl llm ent of their plans. H eritage preservation, as suggested by OHCHA , could lead to most if not all of
these goals being mer.
.
All of this, however, must be initiated locally. Main Street progranls in Gallipohs aod Point lJleasam are working w maintain th e
flavor of their downtowns to again make th em th~ bustling centers
Of commerce and activity th ey wert' onCe. Merc hams and commL1 nity groups in Pomeroy and M iddleport are concentratint\ on the
same concfpl.
·
·· The bolts of the preservation mechanism are in place in our
conununities. By joining together in a regionalm~we, the area stands
to benefit by promoting its own special place in the h1story of the
Northwest Territory, its role in settling the land. recou nting past
accomplishme nts and looking toward th e future.
As Mullen pointed out, th e rime to do this is now. OtherwiSe, our
rapidly disappearing heritage may be gone before we know it.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Aug. 30, the 243rd day of 20()(). There are 123
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 30, 1862, Union forc es were defeated by the Confederates at the Second Battle of Bull Run in Manassas, Va .
On thi&gt; date1
In 30 B.C. (o n Aug. 30, by so m e estimates) , Cleopatra, the seventh
and 111ost fam ous queen of anci e nt Eb'YPt, co mmitted suicide.
In 186 1, Union General John C. Frem o nt in stituted martial law in
Missouri and declared slaves th e re to be free. (Hmwver, Fre mont's
order was co unterm anded a few day' larer by Pre~ idL·nt L1n col n).
In I 'IOS.Ty Cobb mad e h is major league battin g debut. phymg for
th e D etrOi t Tigers .
In 1941 , th e World War II siege of Len u1grad by Na zi forces
began.
In I '145, Gc·n. Do uglas Mac Arthur armed in Japan. and se t up
Allied occupation headquarte rs.
In 1963, the " hot line" communications link bet\\een Washington
and Moscow went Into operation.
In 1967 , th e Senate confirmed th e appoi ntment o f Thurgood
Marshall as the first black justice on th e Su preme Court.
In 1983 , G uion S. Bluford Jr. beca me the first black Amni can
astronaut to travel in space , blastin g off aboml th e Cha llenger.
In 1986 . Sov iet authorities arre, tcd N1cholas DallllotT, rhe
Moscow co rrespondent for U.S. News .111d World l~ e p ort . (H e wa&lt;
later released .)
In 1997 cam e word in th e Unittd States of tht.• c.Jr cra~h in Pa ri~
th at claime·d the lives o f Pn11 ce" Diana, I Jodi Fayc· d and th eir dri ver. H enri Paul. (Because of till· tim L' ditll.: rcncc, it w:t~ Aug ..) I wiH.: r1
th e crash occ urred .)
Tn1 yea r~ ago : U.N. St:cretary-Gt· neraJ jav1cr I'LTt'Z de C uella r
arnveU 111 Jurdtul to tr y to mnliatt· thl' Pers1an Gulf rri'iJ ~. President
13u-.; h rol d J ll l'W'I confe rence th at a "nt'w world ordt•r" could e m erge
from rh e ( ;u]f c r i~k
Five yean ago:Tht· West pounded th e Bosman Serb' with artilkry
and ai r .Hta c k ~ in hopt·-.; o f hludRt:oni n g thl'm into 't' riou \ pc.ll"t'
~;] lks. At a bvi~ h o pt'n ing cen: mon ~ in (ki.Jing. org. tnl 7l'l"~ nf ..1 llt ,tj or
wom en's co nft· rc nct· vowed to flght ll1 r cmpowerrnl'llt ,\lld l'tj u.dJty.
()n e year ago: l.l...es1dent~ o f E.1 . . t lin lor vmeJ t( &gt;r llldqw nd l' rh L'
from lndo ne-.;ia 111 a U. N .-~p o m orl·d ha!lo r (At!-t'rw arcf , pro- lnd n nl' sia militiamt•n reactt·J by going on ,l vio lt•nt ra mpa ge th at l' ndt:d
when internati onal fo rces we re st'nt m.)
TuJay\ llmhd ays: Baseb:ill H :.ll o( Fanw r Te J Wd lianl ' IS H2 .
Cou ntry s m~er Ki tty Well s isH I. Clpn.1 'i11~cr l ~q.:in , J Res nik I' 7H.
Actor Bill D ail y " 72. S 1n~cr Jo hn l'h dJ ,ps "r.'i . A&lt;trc·" IJI £,Jhct h
Ashl ey is 6 1. A.-ror Hen Jones is .S'i. Cmoo n1 st it. Crlllnh 11 ·:;7_ Skic•r
Jean -Clau de Killy is 57 . Actress Peggy Lipton IS 53 . Actor Timothy
Bottoms is 49. Acto r D avid Pay nw r is 46. Actor Michael C hikli s is
37 . ActreS&gt; Mi chael M ic hele is 34 .

••

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Wildfires calm, optimism on fire lines
RED LODGE , Mont . (AP) - There was
something unusual on Montana fire lines
early Wedne sday : optimism , brought on by
cooler temperatures, relatively light wind and
forecasts of rain .
· Fire managers said most of the state's fires
made no significa nt advances Tuesday.
Overnight temperatures dipped to near
freezing in some areas .
"This is the tlrst real weatJ.,er pattern
change in the West for three months ," said
Bob Nester, a National Weather Service forecaster assigned to an 80,000-acre blaze
between Helena and Bozeman .
Gov. Marc Rancor on Tuesday asked President Clinton to declare Montana a federal
disaster because of its huge: wildfires.

The state has ~xhausted its fire fighting
resources and a federal diSaster declaration
would free up more federal money, Racicot
said . H e estimated the fires are costing Montana businesses $3 million a day.
There are 31 large fires burning 674,000
acres in Montana, accordmg to the National
Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho. The
biggest accounted for almost 250,000 acres
after two blazes in the Bitterroot Valley
burned together.
Nationally, there are 84 fires on 1.6 milhan acres . Idaho reported 26 large fires on
nearly 745,000 acres; Wyoming, five large
tires on 52,000 ac res; and South Dakota one
(.5,000-acre blaze.
So · far this year, 6 .2 million acres in the

United States have burned, the center said.
Firefighters and equipment were pouring
into Red lodge to begin the ground attack
on a blaze that had forced 150 families from
their homes a few ntiles south of town .
About 100 of them were allowed to return
Tuesday.
The 3,500-acre Willie fire - so named
because Willie Nelson was headlining a
musi c festival in .Red Lodge - was about
four miles from town Tuesday.
The Reartooth Highway route to Yellowstone National Park remained closed south
of Red Lodge but the park remained open.
· The fire is loca ted near Wap1ti Mountain
in steep, rocky and tintbered terrain . No
stru ctures havt" burned.

1

Preserve·

The new push is for region al planning and sustain ed communi-

Clinton seeks Mideast accOrd

·•ll:

OUR VIEW

Fostering a special se use of place is rhe gual uf the Ohio Hill
Country Heritage Area, which has seized upon Gov. Bob Taft's designa tion of a heritage corridor along the Ohio · River as a means of
boosting the regional economy.
That's not the group's only goal. While bringing toumm dollar&lt;
into the area is important, OHCI{A is also looking to preserve the
remaining artifacts. buildings and o ral history that tell us something
of our history.
. M ic hael Mullen , the group 's duector. told the Athens News last
week the region ts at a cro ssroads with many of its h ~n tagc
resources.
" We've got o ld barns that have fallen into disrepair, great old
buildings in some downtowns that are on the edge of the wrecking
ball, and we've got great old stories from o ur grandparents t hat we
are on the edge of losing," he said. " That's why it is important to do
heritage resou rce prest"rvatiOn now.''
Mull en and his group are right. Regional history tends to be one
,of those things that go around o nl y once 1f not properly preserved.
either by .111 hisroriral sorit'ty or vnlunrcers Jedicmed to preserva ti on.

BRIEFS

, WASHINGTON (AP) -With a dc•adline closing in, President
Umton w1ll make a fresh attempt next week to reopen summit talks
w1~h l sra~l and the Palestinians and try to mediate a settlement on
Jerusalem s future and the shape of a Pales'tinian state.
the odds against him appear long. A senior US. official involved in
the dnve told The Associated Press on Tuesday th,at at this point the
rwo ~1des were too far apart on the issues to call another summit.
Clmton plans separate m eetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak and Pales~man leader Vasser Arafat against the backdrop of the
Umted Nauons Millennium Summit, which will bring scores uf
government heads to New York .
·
Israel and the Palestimans have set a Sept. 13 deadline for settlement
of t heir half-century-old dispute. Arafar has said he would declare
Palcsuman sta tehood if thert• IS no accord .
~linto_n 's immediate aim is to set up a three-way session; h1s ov~r­
goal IS the wide~ranging agreement that appea red to be r.1king
r.htpc last month .n Cantp Oavid, m Maryland's Caroctm Mountains.
bu t fizzled mostly ovl'r Jerusalem .
" It's too eorh- to speak of a three- way summit," Saeb Erebt , the top
P.llt:"snman negotiator, said Tuesday.
:~'f ht.·n.· arc instw ctions from President Arafat to us to t'Xerr evt."ry
dl{] rt fur an .lgrct'\11t'nt." he- s.1 id. "Wt: wanr pe-ace. but not at any
prlcl·."

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

Charles

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1
RUSHER'S VIEW

Source: CNN shakeup pending

A closer look at Gores class waifare concept

NEW YORK (AP) - The head of CNN's national operations,
Rick K.Jplan, is departing as the cable news network struggles to turn
around sagging ratings.
A CNN staff meeting in Atlanta was scheduled for Wednesday' to
diScuss the changes, said a network executive speaking on condition
of anonymity. The executive confirmed K.Jplan's departure.
Kaplan did nor return a phone caU placed to his office late Tuesday.
N etwork spokesmen would not comment.
.
K.Jplan , who won 34 Emmy Awards as a longtime producer at
ABC, joined CNN as president of its USA operations in August
1997. given the mission to bolster the network's viewership during
lunes it didn't have breaki ng news to depend upon .
lnsread , C NN has frequepdy found itself eclipsed by C NBC as the
appetite for financial news increased and beset by increased competitiotj from Fox News Channel and MSNBC.
T.he network proclaimed itself "America's Campaign He,adquarters" arrd placed a strong emphasis on political coverage this year. But
its ratings for the GOP convention, for example, were 27 percent
below convention ccveragc four years earlier.
Kaplan survived a major scandal less than a year into his tenure,
when tho network had m retract a story that claimed the U.S. miliwry. tucd nerve ~tal on -defectors during the Vietnam War. Two produc&lt;r! \WI'&lt;' fired "' a result of the May 1998 report and corn:spond~nt l'~tl'r Arn~tt lcfl CN N within a y.:ar.
Kaplan .tim ti.'udcd with longtime CNN financial 11nchur lou
Dubbs, who loft CNN fur an ltucrnct vcntur.:.
Tho network, fimmlrd by Ted Thrner, ctlcbm&lt;d its 20th anniver•ary this s~will!l .

Some Americans no doubt do regard themThe technique of c lass warfare, which AI
selves as(opermanent losers , and arc only toO
Gore e mployed in his :Kccptance speech at
happy to sign up with a politician who
Los Angell"s and has. bee n using with increaspro nllses to sti ck it to thost· more fortunate.
ing boldness eva since. hJs a long if not parBut a great m any America ns, in cluding a lot
ticularly Jistin~;ms hed h1story in American
of poor ones, believe, with impressive justifipolitics.
cation, that they aren 't doomed to permanent
Basically, the 1dea IS to identifY yourself and
poverty by a long shot - that they can and
your p&lt;~rty with the va~r majority of the
will improve the1r situation . and that a day'
Ame•rir:m people, who are supposedly being
will come, and perhaps soon er (han ynu tl11nk ,
neglected and '' not getting their due," whiJc
when AI Gore or som e other demagogue wtll
identifYin!,( th e other party with :1 much
NEA COLUMNIST
cal
l on the envio us poor of his time to rise up
smaller group called "the· powerful" or "th e
vested interests" or " the special interests," who
and stick it to them.
As a matter of fact . it's a good question
are allegedly making ofl· with fa r 111ure than years carher and have had a chance to estabtheir "fair share" of thl· nanonal wealth or lish themselves more securely. The Kennedy whether such people don't already represent a ·
whathaveyou.
dynasty in Massachusetts, for example, was bigger and more politically aware bloc of votThe beamy of the technique, of cou rse, is founded on the. Joyalry of Irish immigrants ers than the ones Gore is trymg to attract. It is
1bar in a democ;racy,.th e party that call puiLoff whom it cha1i1 pioned against ~he Brahmins in estimated that well over a hundred million
this stunt stands to ger the lion 's share of the their "houses on the hill."
Americans f) re already invested in business .
votes.
Is there anything wrong with using the enterprises, either direc tly thro ugh the market
The technique is appeali ng because human technique of class warfare? Only if you think or through 401 (k) plans, pension funds and
nature is easily tempted into thinking of the there is something wrong with deliberately the like. How likely are they to full for Mr.
world as divided between "us" and " them"- setting different groups of Americans at each Gore's cheap appeal to envy of"the rich?"
witness all the children's battles between th e others' throats.
There is lmle point to dwelling for very
Good Guys and the Bad G u ys , or the bloody
M any politicians (and AI Gore seems, long on the sheer cynicism uf the Gore stratbrawls th at enliven EuropL~an soccer matches. increasingly, to be among them) appa rently egy.
So we hear AI Gore bellowing that " I want think that is the whole point of politics, and
If actually elected, you can be sure that a
to tight for YOU," and swearing that he wil l · play it accordingly. But there are still a good Gore administration wouldn't benefit th&lt;'
never consent to a tax r~n that , amo ng other many high-minded people in both parties poor greatly - not only because it couldn't
things, would benetlt " the rich" - that con - who prefer not to score points that way.
afford to, but because it would continue to
veniently small group of Ameri ca ns w hose
To these people, Atnerica isn't a zero-sum need their hatred of" the rich" to fuel its own
income, w hatever it may be. ·is higher than game in which the fact that so mebody pros- perpetuation in office.
yo urs.
By contrast, George W Bush 's declaration
pers means that somebody else must suffer.
Historically it has tended to be the Demo- On the contrary, "the pie" is forever expand- that " I'm a uniter, not a divider" seems like a
cratic party that has played rhe class warfare ing, and (to vary 1he metaphor) it is not only breath of fresh mountain air.
c·ard , because during most of Ameri can histo- poss ible but likely that, as John Kennedy put
ry it has represe nted the more recently arrived it, a rising tide will lift all boats.
(William RriSIJer is 11 Disti11guished Fclloll' .if
immigrant waves, while the ll..epubli cans have
That's why class warfare is, to borrow one of tl1e Claremolll l11stitrrte for the Swd)' of' St,lles·.
representt·d those who arrived Sll or more AI Gore's pet p hrases. a risky technique.
nramhip cmd Political Philosoplry.)
~.

William ·

Rusher .

Missouri executes triple killer
POTOSI. Mu. (A I') - A man was oxecut~d by injection c•nrly
Wc•duc•sd.ry for killmg a woman and her two som dunng a 1991l'Ob·
bery bc•c.ruse he• feared the f.1mily would identifY him .
l'msecutors said Gary lee Roll and two accomplices went to the
Schepn's Cape Gmrdeau home in southeast Missouri early Aug. 9,
1')1)2, with the intent to commit robbery. Sherry Scheper, 47 , was
bea~en to death with a gun; R andy, 17, was shot and killed; and Cur" '· 22, "'a' mbbcd to death . ·
The men then left with 12 plastic sandwich-sized bags full of marijuana and S2 14 in cash.

.•

'BUSINESS MIRROR'

Loss of consumer fear starts to concern the Fed
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - Certain conclusions can be
derived from the rea leaves of economic S(atisti cs , an d one is that the America n consumer is
really not very afraid o f the Fed.
This is in marked contrast lO the fear that
seizes th e business and investm ent cumrnumty
every time the Federal R eserve mt't'to.; to consider whetha or not to raise inten:st rate'
agam.
Consumers, however. j ust go to the mall and
assuage their ;mxieries by buymg more goods
and services. spending no[ j ust th eir paychecks,
which have been risin g, but borrowing: n1 on: as
we ll .
It ha' become a wry bad ll.lbit , persistmg
rnomh :after mo nth in 'ip ite of warnin hrs th .tr
excess ive dem and , such a::. they h ,IVL' bt'L'II
Jn11onstr.1ting, t.·vemually drives up price~ ,tnd
borrowing ratl'\ .
Th ~ l c~~on th e Fed ha ~ bec rt tryt ng to ,dnve
home via 'i ix intt·rest r.uc~ i nnc&lt;~~t''i in dw past
\ ~ mont h ~ is that 'i llt"h hduv10r j, ~~..·lf- d t.· f(:a t ­
ing, M id that fi.)r heaven ''i ~a h· 'i:tvc ~;o m e rhin g.
t:1Ih not so much on JL'.lf c.tr\ a.., 011 ,J cu~ ­
'i llllll.'r "iplri r that seem s to bel it'VL' good riml'"
dl"C L'tl'nl.ll anJ that, be~ ide..;, why ~ ht~uld [ \:IVt-'
\Vhen my \ to cb .lt"t' domg the sav in tt t(Jr lil t'.
Wdl. ,,,ys th e l·eJ. fi&gt; r this rcaMHI. IJJ !,( dc·ep
down into thl' m y~ te nes nf tin.11Kl' .md you'll
find that s.1vi ng; are the f01mdarion of good
economi c times. They are the fuel that fin ances
growth.

It

The lesson tire Ft·d lras b1•en trying
to d1·i1Je home l'ia six interest rates
iucrcaSI's iu the past 14 IIIOIItlls is
that suc/1 l1ehm•io1' is se~{-dt:Jcatin.~,
a11d that Ji1r llear•en 's sake save
sornet/1 i ng.
Th e consumer senses that this couldn't be
rrut· b eca use the economy seems to be doing
pretty well , even if the July savings rates fdl to
it-.; loWest r:1tc ever, a negarive 0.2 percent.
If they think about the problem ·at all, cons umn~ dismJf\s t't.·ars by watching tht~ economy
continue its uninttTrupted growth month after
month , year after Yl\lr, eve n as savings disappear.
Wh.u \ ove rlooked h ere is nothing less than
the rest of th e world, from which the United
State" 1s, in cflen, borrowing to maintain its
v1gnrous econom y.
It goes this way: The American econo my
impo rts far more than it exports, something
li ke· an annual rate of n earl y $400 bi llion a year.
It's called thee (im)balance of payments.
As economist Ui ll Dunkdberg puts it, "this
m ean,.. \Vc must sec un: a billion dollars o f capital a day from the rest of the world ." It worries
Fed govern ors ,ic k. What if th e world a;k, fo r
its mo ney back ?
Th is f~ar is sort of bun ed from consumer
con sciousness, but it is very much on th e minds
o f those who study suc h things . To survive, an
economy needs domestic as well as fo reign sav-

,.
•'·

•'
''

mgs.
Dunkelberg, a Temple University professor. ~
explains that the trade deficit is now at a criti - ~
cal point, exceeding 4 percent of gross dome s- :,
tic production.
:
When countries reach that point , they expe- :
rience unpleasant economic consequences. For :
one. "tOreign investors worry we may not be :
able to pay obligations and that the dollar
might weaken ."
"'r
Worry can ll';~d to action .
" Tryin~,; to be the fir;r o ne o ut of th e dollar,
foreign investors convl'rt dolbr-de no minatcd
assets like stocks :md bond.;; 111tn a,..set." denom inated in other currencies," he 'iay~.
"O nt:c the rush for th L' cxr t ~t,u· t \ things can
get a bit Jisunlerly as our in~t.· rt''it ratt'~ could ,
soar and 'the stock market collapse."
.
This, he concedes, isn't likel y to happen to o
significant degree in prewnt circum , t;UJCL'S but he adds that it could . " It\ a risk th at wor- ,
nt';; Alan Gr~e tlspan at ni ght ," hl· s3ys. ,
.P'
Still. a signifi ca nt l';;cabti or l of JJi tlatJ &lt;lll co nceivably could trigga SlJ ch a ~ trif1g o f events,
which cxplams w hy th e h ed is comm itted to ,
seeing chat it doesn 't happen .
In oth er wnrd&lt;, it i&lt;n't th,Jt people- like Alan ~
Grt'e nspJ n and hi &lt;~ ,t\\ot-i.Jtl'' .11 th l' FL'lkr.ll ..
R eserve .m~ ~po i lsporb . N\ort· !J ke rL-. 1r th.n •
so me: fo lks at the pan-y art' cnmuming .1 h 1t tuu
much.
ljofm Cww~IJ is a lm siiH'SS mwlyst (l)r T!u• :;
A .-;~orit~ rr d Pres()

1

•

,.

North Texas, drought-stricken
BOYD, Tcx.rs (AI') - Gazing
across a field of shrunkL•n vd low
w:Hcrmelons on withen.· d \'ines,
Agriculture: St·nctary Dan G\i(kman on Tut.·sd:ty pronusc-d tCJcral
aid to four more: counties 111
droughr-strickl'n norrh TexJs.
Gli ckman's visit marked the
60th consec'u uve day with()ut
measuTJble rJinf.dl in north Texas,
where crops are parched and
reservoirs arc drying up. The previous record w:1s 58 days. set m
1934 and 1950.
"These folks are really hurt mg," he said. " I don't hke tG be
here on a day setti ng records not these kinds. llf records. any-

way.
Glickman
ha s
previouslv
dccbred 15J T~..· xa s countit·s c:,ithe.r
prim;try or contiguous agricul tural disastl'l" a r~as.
HL' s.1id low-intert:st lo:ms may
provide some short-term relief to
farmrrs facing il bleak situation.
but if the dry weath~r conti nu es.
officials will be forced to find
other ways to help.
"Drought 1s even more Jn
insidious 113tural disaster than , let's
say, a hurric;ml! or floods or tornados , because it happens very
slowly," Glickman said . " Its
tmpact is more: long range, far
reaching."

Relatives watched as F-16
pilot crashed in Texas
TULIA, Texas (AP) Pilot
Steve Simons always let hJS family and friends know when a
flight pattern for the Air Force
reserves would take him over
their tiny Panhandle town.
It didn't happen often, but
before he took a solo flight
Monday night he called them to
say he'd be guiding his f-16
fighter jet across their piece of
sky.
Sn a Cew resirl&lt;ntl of the town
halfway b~tlw~n Lubbock and
Amarillo, indudin11 Simon's
fath~•·-i n - bw, Clctus Dubbs,
gathered to watch .
What they saw \\'as horrific :
The ltlllll"ular fighter jet suddenly sc~mcd to lose power as its
pilot tried to ttlrn nmund for n
second p :m. M&lt;llllCiltS later the
f.](, plummeted to the gruLmd
and bmst into flames.
Simons, 41, the father of two
girls, died in the crash.
"Me and my wife were out in
front of the house and he rode
that plane down to keep from
hitting us or the house," Dobbs
sa id. " H e gave hiS life for us ."

On Tuesday, most of the
debris remained at. the crash site,
spread out over a quarter-mile.
Disaster crews surrou nded the
scene as cattle roamed in a nearby field.
When the jet went down,
Dobbs said he •ouldn't believe
what he'd seen. He rushed to his
truck to· drive closer, hoping to
help his son-in-law. Paramedics
who got tn the scene fim
stopped him nearby.

JonBeners parents
finish questioning
ATLANTA (A I') - Juhn and
l'.ltsy Ramsey wrappc·d up two
d:~ys of questioning from aurhorlries inv~sti garing their daughter's
death, and their attorney called
on police to publicly clear th e
couple as suspect::,
"The: time has c..ome for the
police to come forward and publicly acknowledge that there's
nothing left to do," attorney l.
Lin Wood said as the mterv1ews
e nded aro und noon Tuesday.
"The evidence is not there."
The Ramseys said they had
cooperated fully and gave the
police other leads on who might
have killed JonBenet
Mrs . Ramsey, addr~ssing
Boulder, Colo., Police Chief
Mark Beckner, s~id, "Whatever
obstacles are in your way that
make you think I killed my child,
I want to help you get over that."
Wood said the Ramseys
refused to answer questions from
the Boulder investigators abo ut
forens1c evidence because they
did not have the results of forensic tests performed by police.
The two sides had squabbled
Monday over special prosecutor
M ichael Kane's questions about
fon:nsic evidence, with Wood
s~ying Kane wa~ refusin11 to co n-

sidt'r any suspects orher th:ln thl'
6-ycar-old's parents.
In response, K:1nt~ said earlier
Tuesday that Wood " doesn't want
his client to answer somt: tough
questwns" about JonBt'net's
death in the family's home in
Boulder_
"This case is .. . almost four
years old. Whether it's an intruder or son1ebody in the house
who con1ntiued this homicide 1
there are some difficult, tough
questions that have to be
answered," he said.
The investigators spent seven
hours Mopday questioning Mrs.
Ramsey at Wood's office. They
met with her again Tuesday
morning and then met with her
husband, wrapping up the sessions before noon.
After the Monday session,
Wood said Kane had reduced the
questioning of Mrs. Ramsey to a
"fishing expedition" to pin the
child beauty queen's killing on ·
her parents.
He said K.Jne threatened to
walk out of the interview with
Mrs . Ramsey when the two sides
argued over questioning about
fiber evidence and security precautions for JanBenet'l old~t
bl'llther, Burke.

Invasive Cardiologist Joins

Holzer Clinic
Michael A. Englund, DO

Dr. Michael Englund completed his Fellowship in Cardiology
at Marshall University Huntington', WV. He is Board Certified
by the American Board of Internal Medicine and Board
Eligible in Cardiology. Dr. Englund is now accepting new
patients in the new CardioPulmonary Rehab Center at
Holzer Clinic, to s9hedule an appointment call ·

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�P.oe A 6 • The Deity Sentinel

'
Pomeroy,
Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 30, 2000'

JM&gt;man sick o relationship disappearing act

..

•

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
AL: Tribe trounces Texas, Page B6
NL: Mets lose, Page B6

Page B1

•

VWednesd.y,Aucust30,lOOO
Dear Ann Landers: My husband of 20
· Y.,ars recently took off for California.
brc:ause he "needed to get away." This is
nnr the first time he has packed up and
-~ft . It's his usual pattern after we have
had an argument. He stops speaking to
.t1te, becomes" depressed and aiJ..x ious, and
then , disappears. Since he left, he has eitlailed me every day -- poetry, love letters, and so on, but never a word about
coming home and working things out.
Last week, I e- mailed to say that I am
sick of his nonsense and want a divorce.
:Now, he says he is sorry. He insists h e
luves me, and says he is getting counseling -- in California. He has tried coun~~ling seve ral times before, but never
&gt;ticks around long enough to make any
pn.lgress. He assures me the counseling
will work this time, and is pleading with
·iue to giw hin1 another chance.
Please tell me, Ann , am I crazy to stay
in this nutty relationship? My therapist
:and all my fnends say I should get out. I

Gem of th e D ay (Sem in by Jerry and
I have told Susan to get out ' of this
dead-er1d relationship and to stop wast- Jean 111 Sacramento, Calif.): According to
ing valuable time on this man . However, rcn:nt stati s ti~at age 70, there are five
she is 36 years old, and feels it is too late women for every m ak·. lsn 't that the
-to find someone else. She wants to start a darndt•st time in life fi)r :1 guy to get
fanuly, and knows that her bmlogical
those odds'
clock will not run forever.
That first kiss, that. fi rst embrace .. .
to th t: wron!:.{ chun. n. and fhought he was
Please don't tell me to mind my own
Reme mb er all those thinb'S that brougl1t
at th ~;.· st·rv ict':\ for his au nt .
busrness. Somebody needs to shake up
It t urm ou t t hat tlus story \~as writte n this girl, and tell her to wake up and you and your love d one together? AnrJ.
by R obm Lee Shope and first appeared smell the coffee. Ann , can you think of Lmde r' new booklet, " How We M&lt;!\," is
in the C hristian R eader in 1999. Several any way I can help her' --A Dear Frie nd now .1vailabk·. This collection o f sentir
lllt''1!al love st('lrt es will nuke a terrific
readen have lt•t tnc know ,1 bout the in Texas
author of th1s piece ..llld I an1 pleased to .
Dear Friend in Texas: Your girlfri end g ift fi·H th.H :-.penal so meone. For a copy,
give hn c rcd1t for a romanti c and was 2 1 years old when she started to date pk·ase Sl' lld .1 :-.df-;tddr~sst'd, long, busi:.
Edvv·in. Her fian ce· has been g ivmg hc:r 11l'Ss-sizt' cm·l·tnpe :1 nd ,1 c heck or money
charming t Jk.
De ;lr Ann Lan ckrs: I h.wc .1 dear friend the "manana" routine for 15 years. and o rde r for S:l .:10 (t hi s indutll'S postage and
I \viii c.dl .. Su~.m." Shl· has been d:1ting she has been buying it . What is wrong
handling) to : l-lnw We: Met, ( / o Ann'
'"Edwin" for I 5 yc:ar~. Every so oft~n. with this picture' I say Susan is afraid to
Lmders. PO Box I I 51&gt;2. Ch ica go. IL
they makt~ pb n ~ to g:t· t marr ied. but say " either -- or:· and now, finds hersdf
(,(JI,J 1-051&gt;2 (111 C.u&gt; ,llLl. 50.50) . To find
svm t·t hln g .1lways ro tm:· ~ up..md the rn a bind. She sho uld give Edwin a
weddi.ng nc\·cr take~ pbce. lm·ariJbly. rimNable. and look around for other pos- out nwr~ .1bout Ann l.1ntkrs .111d read
Edwin 1.; dlt' one who post pones the sibiliti es. A linle competidnn can be .1 her p.tst t"o!umih. \·isi t dw C rt•a tors SynJ.ic.Hl' web pa gt· .n WW\\·.creawr~.t"om.
nuptials.
grc.lt motivator.

and let me know how you're doing.
Dear Readers: I just learned that the
lcn~r sig11L'd "C1nn y lll ·the Midwest" was
actually son1conc else's life sto ry. Ginny's
letter desc- ribed how she met her future
hu sba nd w hen he showed up accrdentally at her 111L&gt;thds funeral. H e had gone

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
can afford to be on my own financially,
and there are no children involved. What
do I owe the man with whom I have a
rocky, off-again , on- again 20-year relationship? -- Grand Junction, Colo.
Dear GrandJ. :You do NOT owe him
your sanity or your peace of mind. Since
you have a therapist, you don 't need any
additional input from m e. Your •therapist
knows a lot mort" :tbout [he sitll:ltion
than I do, so plt&gt;aSt' li~ ten to him or hl•r. I
would ask only that )·o u put yourself first
for ;J change. J&gt;S .: Pkase drop m e a line,

.
WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

1

Southern thumps Alexander in Season opener
Bv Scon WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Prep Sports
Volle~ll
Tuesday • Matches

Gallia Academy de1. River Volley,
15·11, 15-8
Ohio Valley Christian def. Fairland,
15·4, 16-14
Southern def . Alexander, 15-10,
15· 12
Eastern def. Nelsonville-York, 15·
3, 15·5
Meigs del. Waterford, 15·9, 15·6
Today's Matches

ALBANY - It didn't take long for Southern to establish itself as a contender in the Tri-Valley Cuuference as
the Lady Tornadoes whirled up a come-from -behiml win
over the defending Ohio D ivision champio n Al exand er.
Southern won in two sets 15-10 and 15- 12.
Ale xander (0- 1, TVC 0-1) as defending champion was
a favorite to win the Tn- Valley C onference Ohio Divi sion again in 2UOO.
Trailing 6-3 in the first game, Southern came back to
post a 15- 111 win . Senior Emily Stivers took over with
Southern trailing 9-5. The senior se rver notched seven
straight points to give Southern a 12-9 advantage.
Several long volleys fo ll owed, as a full rotati on unfold ed for Stivers to push the score to IJ - 10. Stacey Mills
nai led down the final two po ints for the win.

"TIIis is a xreat n('lht! This ougllt to build
our collfldmce aud he a tremendo11s momentum h11ilder."
Roma Sayre, Soulliern head volleyball coach

In the seco nd game, Sout hern (1-0, TVC 1-0) fell
behi nd '1-1 b ut posted a dmnatic comeback.
Macyn Ervin, Kati C ummi ns, Fallon Roush , Mills and
Kati Sayre kept Southern in th e game with scores, but
like in the first game, Stivers got hot and turned the game
from a 11-7 rout to a 14-7 Southern lead. Her eight
straight points gave her 18 points on the night.
Stivers had great backing behind h er treacherous serves
as the SHS front line and back row offered tremendous
support in keeping the voll eys alive for scores. Ervin had

four pomts, Mills six and Sayre two points. R oush was
19-for-20 setting and 8- for-12 spiking with two blocks.
Cummins was 5-for-6 spiking with one dig, and five
blocks.
Ervin was 21-for-21 setting; M ills· was 7-for-9 serving,
8-for-12 spiking with three blocks; Sayre was 7-for-9
spiking. Tiffany Williams 10-for-ll spiking, and Rachel
C hapman 7-for-9 spiking.
·
"This is a great night! The girls got down , but kept
coming back," Southern head coach Roma Sayre said .
"T his ,ought to build our confidence and be a tremen dous momentum builder."
. Southern lost the reserve match in three sets 15-9, 915 , and 8-15. Deana Pullins had 12 points. Katie Sayre
five, Brandi Lane fi ve, Jeri Hill three, and Rachel Chapman three.
Southern hosts Waterford today.

Miller at Eastern, 5:55
Thursday's Matches

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Inducted into honor society
ATHENS -- Erin L. Krawsczyn of Pomeroy was inducted into the
'Beta Mu Chapter of Lambda Pi Eta at Ohio University during the
'•pring, 2000 induction ceremony. T he natiOnal honor sonety for comnumication , Lambda Pi Eta recognizes academic excellence 111 more
,than 200 chapters throughout the United States.
' Krawsczyn is the daughter of John Krawsczyn and Bette Hobstet·iet, both of Pomeroy. She is a third-year student, majoring in interperwnal communication with a concentration in organizational communication.
. To be eligible for the induction, a student must be an interperson:J communication major and attain a 3.0 overall .CPA with a 3.23 GPA
in his or her major. A student must also have completed 90 hours over~· with at least 18 completed in his or her major.

~ducation and

classroom studk·s J!ld rl'Ct't\·cd ,1 degree of :'!~SO( i ;~. te nf
applied science in t kcupational Ther;~py.
Melissa is the daug hter of Robert and Chnsty R am sburg, Pom eroy.
She is a 1998 graduate of M ergs Hi~h SdJo&lt;&gt;l. She is currently employed
with Holzer M edical Center as an o cc up~t lional thnJpy assistJnt.

New Haven. W.Va.
A potluck dinna \\'a s Sl' rn·d , followed by e,rJ mes. a devotion about
laughter by Brenda Shukor·, am! swrmming.
Those attending were Trina Davi s, Cheryl Jo h nson, Mona Neal ,
Wanda Wolf. Pauline Autherson. Pa,rina Hayman. Kathryn Ru ssell,
Gerri Tate, Andrea 1~1te , Uetty, Mega n, Mrc helle and Davrd Johnson,
Jennifer McKibben and Austrn , Teresa R eyno lds, Jennifer Phillips,
Christine Phillips, Brenda Shuler, Kandi Preston, Rhonda Tabor, Jennifer Nease, and Debbie Call.

Ramsburg graduates

llI

Alfred News

I

ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist C hu rch will hold homecoming on Sept. 17, with regular services in the morning, followed by
~- baske t dinner and an afternoon program.
, Recent visitors ofWarren and C harlotte Van Meter and family were
~ndra and George Wilson of Ala rna gordo, N. M ., and Carol Van
Me ter, Garvin and Sue Bollinger of Bucyrus. They also attended the
iel:eption ofTodd Hawley and Sherry Burke.
·warren and Charlotte VanMeter attended the wedding of their
niece, Jessica Wren and David Harmas in Mansfield.
Thelma Henderson attended a bridal shower for Lia M cfarland,
who is engaged to Aaron Williams, at the Betsey Mtlls House in Marietta.
·.·Victor Bahr_ and Thelma Henderson attended the wedding of
~IIIJnda Coates and Ryan Ash in Pomeroy.
. Mary Jo Barringer recendy visited Nina Robinson two eveni ngs .
Dave and Mary Jo Barringer e nj oyed a boat ride Saturday eve ning
(lllm Parkersburg, WVa. to Marietta on o ne of Ruble's Sternwheclers.
Debbie Barber was bridesmaid in the wedding of her friend, Rachel
lund in Gallipolis.
._' Family &lt;members who visrted Ruth and Lloyd Brooks recently
were: Joni Wills, Ca lifornia; 'fwila Powers, Lloyd's aum. of New Port
Ritrhie, Fla.; family members from Delaware, Ohio, and local family
members.

II'
I

11
I
I

~

Melissa Ramsburg recently !&gt;raduated from Muskingum Area Technical Eollege in Zanesville ,Ohio. She has completed two years of clinical

PORTLAND Leban o n
Township Trustees, 6 p.m. Thursdoly at the township garage.
POMEROY - Meigs· County Un ited Metho dist Cooperative
l'.lrish will be taking applications
fin summer food for senior citiTuesday and Wednesday, 9
i.m. to 1 I a.m . o nly. Food will be
giwu o ut on Thursday.

zens,

ROCKSPRINGS Town
and Cou ntry Expo me~ting, 7:30
r .m., G range Annex, Roc kspnn~
Fairgrounds.
Pre ceptor
. l'OM EROY
lteta Beta , opem ng dinner, 6
p~ m .. Po me roy Golf Course .

REEDSVILLE - R eunion of
descendants of Abraham and
Mary Will Bahr at Forked Run
Sta te Park. Noon meal, with
activities beginning at II a.m.
Plates, napkins , cups .and tableware will be provided. Those
attending should bring covered
dishes and dnnks, lawn chairs and
fam ily pictures.
RACINE 33rd Annual
Samuel Allen Ebli n reunion will
be held at Star Mill Park at 6 p.m.
on Saturday. Those attending
should bring a covered dish .

SYRACUSE -

tlnor

pT!Zl'S

.ltHi

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G1UCK

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RAC INE Mers" Countv
l'nm ona (;r,lllge. FrHL1y. 7 :.10
p.m .. Ra cin e Gr.ln gl' H ;dl I11St.lll;ttitlll ()f nl'W officers and _judging
d( sr.ne .111ll national l'Olltl·~t .

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groups wi&lt;hing 10 announct' ......
'""' special .........The """"'" is 001
desifllOd 10 pumooe U.S or fund .,;..
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Hannan at
Dame. 7:30

Clarksburg

Notre

Friday's Games

Gallia Academy at Coal Grove,
7:30
Roane County at Point Pleasant,
7 :30
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30
Ross Southeastern at South Gal·
lia, 7:30
Athe ns at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at Portsmouth East, 7:30
Eastern at Fort Frye, 7 :30
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30

BUC HTEL - Eastern defeated Ndsonvi ll e-Yqrk 15-.l and
15-5 in its voll eyball season opener Tue~Jay.
" Our g irls dominated from the
sqrt," said Eastern head coach
ljaul Brannon. "T here really wasnit muc h of a gam~ to it .
" Our whole team executed
well and put the game out of
reach earl y."
naniell e Spt•ncer was " perfect
Ill-for- J(J on serw for 111 points
and an ace, while Juli Bailey, th e
Tri - Valley Conference I '-J&lt;.Jl) Player of t he Year ncttl'd seve n points
and Kristm C hevalier had seven

4 0 7 I·~~rl. ~-=r~e;"t:
~1dd.l.~p~r"t:,

c •h1~
(740) 992-3471
•

point."

The stadium lights flickered
and then went out as Andres
Galarraga was about to lead off
th e

ninth against Cincinnati

closer Danny Graves.
"At first, I thought there was
so m eth in g wrong with my

eyes." Galarraga said. "Then I
GOOD JOB, SON - Ken Griffey Sr. (lett) shakes hands with Ken Gnffey Jr . followmg the Reds' 4-2 victory
over Atlanta Tuesday at Turn er Field. Junior's two-r un single in the seventh put the Reds ahead. (AP)

saw "verybody ·else moving
back and I knew it was something with th e lights.''

Team officials blamed a
"power spike'' and quickly corrected the problem, but they
couldn't fix the team's bats.
Atlanta went down meekly on
three straight grounders to give
Graves his 23rd save.
··
Ashby lirnited the Reds to 'six
hits and a run through 'six
innings, then had to leave · the
game because of a blister on the
middle finger of his pitching
hand . Cincinnati immediately
took advantage against · an
Atlanta bullpen that has ' been
shaky on the homestand.
After getting the first out,
Reralinger (5-3) gave up (onsecutive singles by pinch- hitter
Alex Ochoa, Pokey Reese and
Chris Stynes to load the b:l!es.
Griffey worked ahead in the
count before lining a hit to -·
right that brought home two
run s, putting the Reds ah ea d 32.
Dante Bichettc drove in an
insurance run with a blooper
that fell in right and wound up
being a fielder's choice when
Griffey was forced at second. ·
Steve Parris (9- 14) won his
fourth straight start, allowin g
eight hits and both Atlanta runs
in six innint,os He has lowered
his ERA 'from 5.41 at the
beginning of the month to
4.57.
"These games are huge," said
Parris, aware the Reds had
pulled within 7 I / 2 games of St.
LouiS in the NL Central. " We
have to beat Atlanta. If we don't
beat Atlanta, we're not goi n g to

make- a."
Th e Braves' rel ievers have

Please see Reds, Page 86

points.

Baile y was 1-for- 1 setting. 7-

for-7 snving with two aces and
seven pomts. and was I0 - for- 1 I
spiking with five kills. and o ne
blork .
C hevalier was 12-for- 14 setting, lt)-for- 11 snvi ng: with ont·
are. eight points. and five clinks.
Amber Baker was 2- for- 2 setting. 2- tc&gt;r-2 serving and 1- for- 1
spikrng.
Wh itn ey Karr was 1- tor-2
servi n g with om: pomt, and was
.1-tor- 4 spiking with one kilL and
Tammy Bissell was 7-for-7 serving with fl1ur pnims, and was 1for-1 spiking.
Spencer was 111- fo r- ICI with
two aces. 10 points. and was 4lor- n spik ing; w hile · Sar;rh Clifford was 1-for- 1 settin g. had nu
se rves, and was 3- fo r-.1 &lt;~pikin g
with two ki ll s.
ThL· Ea&lt;~tern re~c::rves won 15-H
and I S-2 m two st·ts.
Eastefll ( I -0, TVC 1- 0) hosts
Mill er tonight .

AHention Junior varsity
&amp; junior l'iigl1 coaches

.tlso

.

1

Op,·n H o use,

AI'PL E &lt;;ROVE Square
&lt;fo!IK l', R ed Barn 011 S.R . 11~. H
MA SON. W.VA . A11nu.d
t~ j II p.m . M usic by True Country, .1nd ClitT Lon gl'tll'tte .1s c1lkr. Johmon Rt'll lli Oll . Su nd.1y .l t rlw
l~ut wd .mJ ~lJll ,lrl' Ja nnn g. \me r\..tiSOtl City 1-':uk I )[l}fll'T ,l( I
Ll,mllm g. d og!;mg.. 1 c.t kt• \nlk, p m. T.lkt• item for thl· .ntcti~ll1.
· Jllanl! cd

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SUNDAY
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Departmt"nt. I t o 5 p.m .. to d ispl:1y new
fire truck .

FRIDAY

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THURSDAY THRU MOND,AY
AUGUST 31ST - SEPTEMBER 4TH

SATURDAY

THURSDAY

J1

YO(J~ \Ht.EKE'No 1 o SAllE', s~"E, 8~"t.\

CALENDAR
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge No. 411, F&amp;AM,
wtll meet at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday. Refreshments and degree
work.

r

Football
Thursday's Game

Eagle netters win
season opener

NEW HAVEN,WVA. -TheWomen's Fellowship of the Ash Street
C hurch in Midclleport was held rece ntly at the home of Cern Tate in

POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Elections, meeting,
Wednesday, 9 a.m. to certify the
. validity of petitions.

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Reds double
up Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP) The
lights went out as the Atlanta
Braves came to bat in the final
inning - hardly a good omen
for a team that has short-circuited over the past month .
Ken Griffey Jr.'s two~run single in the seventh put C incinnati ahead, and the R eds shook
off a 12-minute delay in the
ninth to send the Braves to
another loss, 4- 2 Tuesday night.
Atlanta squandered a 2-0 lead
and a chance to break a firstplace tie with the Mets m the
NL East. New York was routed
by the Houston Astros Il-l.
"The bottom line is we're still
tied with the Mets," said Braves
reliever Mike Remlinger, who
gave up three runs in the seventh after Andy Ashby left the
~ game because of a blister. " As
bad as it m ay seem, it 's not that
bad."
The Braves have lost two
straight to C in cinnati and five
of their last six - all at Turner
Fiel d. Overall, they are just 1314 in August.
"We're playing decent baseball right now. But th e ball has
got to fall your way occasronal ly," manager Bobby Cox said. " I
have no complaints about the
guys. They have gotten us to this

Thursday's Matchaa

Gallia Academy at Warren, TBA
Point Pleasant at Warren, TBA
Eastern v. Southern, 4:30
Meigs at TVC Ohio, 4:30 (at Brass
Ring)

NEWS &amp; NOTES

.Women's Fellowship meets

WEDNESDAY

1

Drawing Sat. Aug. 26th.
JEFF MAYNARD of Spruce St. Ext.
in Gallipolis is $$$500.00 Richer.
Congratulations Jeff.
.
Norris Northup Dodge would like
to thank every one that
participated in the Drawing.
And remember when you deal
with the best you can
pass all the'rest.
__
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f
lj
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Today'a Matches

.

Is happy to announce the

I

ALL IN THE FAMILY

South Gallia at Chesapeake, 4 :30
(at Forest Hills)

;•- -I!&amp;··~- -r,!!.•• J!!I- - - ....!!1- - I
1! Norris Northup Dodge Inc.
1

Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:15
Warren at River Valley, 5:15
Ohio Valley Christian at South
Point, 5:30
Waterford at Southern, 5:55
Meigs at Wellston, 5:55

Fax you r team's results to th e

Dail y Se ntin el at 992-2 157.
Email your ga me results to galtri bun e@c ure ka net. C&lt;;l ll1 .
Contact sports editor .Andrew
Carter at lJYl- 5287, ext. 21.

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

Dillon back with Bengals after arrest
CINC INNATI (A I') - Run mng
back
Corey
Dillon
return e d to the Ci n c innati tkn!:Pls o n Tuesday, but stayt·d mum
when n.:.·portt:rs askt'tl .1b ou t hi s

alleged fight with hi s wife that
led to Dillon \ ;rrr&lt;·st Saturday in
a Seattl e suburb.
Dil lon spokt' with rcpo rtcr~ in
a hallway outside rhe IJengals
dressing roo m . While .Ill· rl'tl.!l~cd
to discu~" details of whar happened, he did not flatl y denv t hat
he had struck hi s wife.
"I t's a tragedy that thi s ha ppened;' Dillon said. ·· It\ bad. It \
re;~l bad. I never intended for it
tu happen."
Ben gals players welcomed IJrllon back. Several o i them
declined to discms hi s problem .
" I don't \vant to talk about
somethin g I know r1 othin g
about," offensive lin eman Willie
Anderson said.
" I'm happy to see him hefl·
wo rkin g," u fTe n sivc l1nen1a n
R od Jon es sa~ d.
Dill on .-a uld face disc ipli ne
from till' N FL if he rs charged
with do tll l''tic vioknc:l' and con-

victed . Te.1111 entployet·s said th e

Pro Bo\vl runnin g back i.Vill
h.lVt' to bt·.lr down in ordn to
ke ep th e o rtk al ti·o m ~~trc din g
hi s pntOnnancl' on th l· tldd.
" It's going to lw tough.'. 'aid
Enc B.lll . :1 form er Ben~.1ls run nin g back who now works w1t l1
l} l' ngaJ.., playt·r' ;Is thl· tt·am \
director ot' playn rl'la t Hms. ;, But

I tlunk Corey\ the kind of S"''Y
w l1o C:H J bounce b;lrk tfo m it.''
T hl' NFL and rh c team can
provide ronfide ntial c ounseling

f(&gt;r Di llon and hi&gt; wift- if the
pl.lycr rt'quc..,ts it, lhll s.tid .
Polfcl· 111 tlll' Seattle ~uburb nf
fl'd r.: r.tl Way ll.ti d th .1t I1il\on wa . .
.trrntl·d Satuni.Jy by ot1i'-Tr..,
rc 11pondmg to .1 dn!lll'\tic viok·n rc cm uplamt .
The lkn~;ab gave I lillnn per-

tion hl't\.vc cn · u ~ that got bl own
nut of proportion bt'ClLISt' th l·

police f\Ot c-a lk J .md th ey didn't
havl'

to

bt".

''My \\'ifc wa.., up~ct .111J it
tunll'J uno &lt;111 art;.urncnr. I was
not

thl'

one

th n..&gt;Wl! l ~

thL·

pundrt·s." l&gt;rllo n '''"I 111 the
Ben g;:d~' interview. "I threw my
hands up to protect myself. This
was acc idental ."

l3engals nunagl'llll'llt had no
immediatc co mm en t Tuesday
atin
Dillon
talked
with
r~porter" . In fhe p.l'it \Vhl'!l lkn~ah pl.,yn&gt; han· had problems
w1th l.tw ellfurlT ill t: lll . Brmv n
ha:-. rest·rved commt·nr unril the
issues are resolvt•d in the legal
"Y~ t em .

The Lkngals played their final

mission to miss Monday\ prac-

pn· ~easo n

tic e. alth ough he didn't tell the
team until Lltcr .1bout hi ~ arrest ,

were given off for th e weekend.
Dillon lrws in Seattle in the off-

gent:ral m.mager Mike Brown

..;eason.

said.

In an imcrvicw Wi th tht· Ben gals' Weh me. I)rllon w.1s quoted
as liaying : "\ don 't want to bl•
portrayl'd as a witl•- beatt•r
because it\ ju~r ~om e thing I
would nc.=ver do. It wa~ a ~itua -

gamt' Friday night and

Police said that w hen they
responded to th e call Saturday,
they io und D1llon's wife blt·L·din g ll·mn rhe mmnh in from of a
· house . Dillon, w ho was in the

Please see Ben1als, Pile 86

OU punter on Ray

Guy Watch list
AUGUSTA. Ga. Ohio
punta Dave Zastudil is o ne of
32 Division 1- A punters mcluded on the 21JOll Ray Guy watch
li st announced on Tuesday by
tht· Greater Augusta Sports
Council.

Zastudil, a j unior from Bay
Village, Ohio, has finish ed
among the top I S punters
nationally in each of his fi rst two
se.aso n s.

The National Selection Com lnittce will choose t he I 0 semi -

finali sts who wi ll be an no unced
by November X, 2000.
That same national body will
then vote fur t h e three finali st~

who
will
be
announcrd
November 30, 2000.
The H,ay Guy Award in its
first year has become one of th e
most talked abou t awards in college football , finally recognizing

Zastudil already holds Ohio's

the remaining major postti on on

two best punting seasons and his

the footba ll field that can si nglehandedlyaltar the o utcom e of a
game.

ca reer awrage (44.2) is o n pace
to Sl't a Mid- Am er ican Co n ft'r-

cnce mark.
His accomplishments have not
gon e with o ut not1ce as he was a

Freshman All- America in 19'!8
and the MA C Special Team
Player of the Year in !999 .
The R ay G uy Award will be
awarded to th e nati oh 's best
punter as determined by a com mittee made up of sports writers, coll eg~footba ll coaches, former punters and m embers designated by the Greater Augusta
Sports Council.

Th e award is named afte r the
greatest punter of all time. Ray
Guy w ho attended th e University of Southern Mississippi and
then was drafted in the first
round by the Oakland Raiders.
The Greater Augusta Sports
Council will present the R ay
Guy Award in December at a
combined awards dinner with
the Greater Augusta Medal For
Excellence in Sports Av.'3rds tor
high school students in th e
Augusta metro area .

�P.oe A 6 • The Deity Sentinel

'
Pomeroy,
Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 30, 2000'

JM&gt;man sick o relationship disappearing act

..

•

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
AL: Tribe trounces Texas, Page B6
NL: Mets lose, Page B6

Page B1

•

VWednesd.y,Aucust30,lOOO
Dear Ann Landers: My husband of 20
· Y.,ars recently took off for California.
brc:ause he "needed to get away." This is
nnr the first time he has packed up and
-~ft . It's his usual pattern after we have
had an argument. He stops speaking to
.t1te, becomes" depressed and aiJ..x ious, and
then , disappears. Since he left, he has eitlailed me every day -- poetry, love letters, and so on, but never a word about
coming home and working things out.
Last week, I e- mailed to say that I am
sick of his nonsense and want a divorce.
:Now, he says he is sorry. He insists h e
luves me, and says he is getting counseling -- in California. He has tried coun~~ling seve ral times before, but never
&gt;ticks around long enough to make any
pn.lgress. He assures me the counseling
will work this time, and is pleading with
·iue to giw hin1 another chance.
Please tell me, Ann , am I crazy to stay
in this nutty relationship? My therapist
:and all my fnends say I should get out. I

Gem of th e D ay (Sem in by Jerry and
I have told Susan to get out ' of this
dead-er1d relationship and to stop wast- Jean 111 Sacramento, Calif.): According to
ing valuable time on this man . However, rcn:nt stati s ti~at age 70, there are five
she is 36 years old, and feels it is too late women for every m ak·. lsn 't that the
-to find someone else. She wants to start a darndt•st time in life fi)r :1 guy to get
fanuly, and knows that her bmlogical
those odds'
clock will not run forever.
That first kiss, that. fi rst embrace .. .
to th t: wron!:.{ chun. n. and fhought he was
Please don't tell me to mind my own
Reme mb er all those thinb'S that brougl1t
at th ~;.· st·rv ict':\ for his au nt .
busrness. Somebody needs to shake up
It t urm ou t t hat tlus story \~as writte n this girl, and tell her to wake up and you and your love d one together? AnrJ.
by R obm Lee Shope and first appeared smell the coffee. Ann , can you think of Lmde r' new booklet, " How We M&lt;!\," is
in the C hristian R eader in 1999. Several any way I can help her' --A Dear Frie nd now .1vailabk·. This collection o f sentir
lllt''1!al love st('lrt es will nuke a terrific
readen have lt•t tnc know ,1 bout the in Texas
author of th1s piece ..llld I an1 pleased to .
Dear Friend in Texas: Your girlfri end g ift fi·H th.H :-.penal so meone. For a copy,
give hn c rcd1t for a romanti c and was 2 1 years old when she started to date pk·ase Sl' lld .1 :-.df-;tddr~sst'd, long, busi:.
Edvv·in. Her fian ce· has been g ivmg hc:r 11l'Ss-sizt' cm·l·tnpe :1 nd ,1 c heck or money
charming t Jk.
De ;lr Ann Lan ckrs: I h.wc .1 dear friend the "manana" routine for 15 years. and o rde r for S:l .:10 (t hi s indutll'S postage and
I \viii c.dl .. Su~.m." Shl· has been d:1ting she has been buying it . What is wrong
handling) to : l-lnw We: Met, ( / o Ann'
'"Edwin" for I 5 yc:ar~. Every so oft~n. with this picture' I say Susan is afraid to
Lmders. PO Box I I 51&gt;2. Ch ica go. IL
they makt~ pb n ~ to g:t· t marr ied. but say " either -- or:· and now, finds hersdf
(,(JI,J 1-051&gt;2 (111 C.u&gt; ,llLl. 50.50) . To find
svm t·t hln g .1lways ro tm:· ~ up..md the rn a bind. She sho uld give Edwin a
weddi.ng nc\·cr take~ pbce. lm·ariJbly. rimNable. and look around for other pos- out nwr~ .1bout Ann l.1ntkrs .111d read
Edwin 1.; dlt' one who post pones the sibiliti es. A linle competidnn can be .1 her p.tst t"o!umih. \·isi t dw C rt•a tors SynJ.ic.Hl' web pa gt· .n WW\\·.creawr~.t"om.
nuptials.
grc.lt motivator.

and let me know how you're doing.
Dear Readers: I just learned that the
lcn~r sig11L'd "C1nn y lll ·the Midwest" was
actually son1conc else's life sto ry. Ginny's
letter desc- ribed how she met her future
hu sba nd w hen he showed up accrdentally at her 111L&gt;thds funeral. H e had gone

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
can afford to be on my own financially,
and there are no children involved. What
do I owe the man with whom I have a
rocky, off-again , on- again 20-year relationship? -- Grand Junction, Colo.
Dear GrandJ. :You do NOT owe him
your sanity or your peace of mind. Since
you have a therapist, you don 't need any
additional input from m e. Your •therapist
knows a lot mort" :tbout [he sitll:ltion
than I do, so plt&gt;aSt' li~ ten to him or hl•r. I
would ask only that )·o u put yourself first
for ;J change. J&gt;S .: Pkase drop m e a line,

.
WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

1

Southern thumps Alexander in Season opener
Bv Scon WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Prep Sports
Volle~ll
Tuesday • Matches

Gallia Academy de1. River Volley,
15·11, 15-8
Ohio Valley Christian def. Fairland,
15·4, 16-14
Southern def . Alexander, 15-10,
15· 12
Eastern def. Nelsonville-York, 15·
3, 15·5
Meigs del. Waterford, 15·9, 15·6
Today's Matches

ALBANY - It didn't take long for Southern to establish itself as a contender in the Tri-Valley Cuuference as
the Lady Tornadoes whirled up a come-from -behiml win
over the defending Ohio D ivision champio n Al exand er.
Southern won in two sets 15-10 and 15- 12.
Ale xander (0- 1, TVC 0-1) as defending champion was
a favorite to win the Tn- Valley C onference Ohio Divi sion again in 2UOO.
Trailing 6-3 in the first game, Southern came back to
post a 15- 111 win . Senior Emily Stivers took over with
Southern trailing 9-5. The senior se rver notched seven
straight points to give Southern a 12-9 advantage.
Several long volleys fo ll owed, as a full rotati on unfold ed for Stivers to push the score to IJ - 10. Stacey Mills
nai led down the final two po ints for the win.

"TIIis is a xreat n('lht! This ougllt to build
our collfldmce aud he a tremendo11s momentum h11ilder."
Roma Sayre, Soulliern head volleyball coach

In the seco nd game, Sout hern (1-0, TVC 1-0) fell
behi nd '1-1 b ut posted a dmnatic comeback.
Macyn Ervin, Kati C ummi ns, Fallon Roush , Mills and
Kati Sayre kept Southern in th e game with scores, but
like in the first game, Stivers got hot and turned the game
from a 11-7 rout to a 14-7 Southern lead. Her eight
straight points gave her 18 points on the night.
Stivers had great backing behind h er treacherous serves
as the SHS front line and back row offered tremendous
support in keeping the voll eys alive for scores. Ervin had

four pomts, Mills six and Sayre two points. R oush was
19-for-20 setting and 8- for-12 spiking with two blocks.
Cummins was 5-for-6 spiking with one dig, and five
blocks.
Ervin was 21-for-21 setting; M ills· was 7-for-9 serving,
8-for-12 spiking with three blocks; Sayre was 7-for-9
spiking. Tiffany Williams 10-for-ll spiking, and Rachel
C hapman 7-for-9 spiking.
·
"This is a great night! The girls got down , but kept
coming back," Southern head coach Roma Sayre said .
"T his ,ought to build our confidence and be a tremen dous momentum builder."
. Southern lost the reserve match in three sets 15-9, 915 , and 8-15. Deana Pullins had 12 points. Katie Sayre
five, Brandi Lane fi ve, Jeri Hill three, and Rachel Chapman three.
Southern hosts Waterford today.

Miller at Eastern, 5:55
Thursday's Matches

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Inducted into honor society
ATHENS -- Erin L. Krawsczyn of Pomeroy was inducted into the
'Beta Mu Chapter of Lambda Pi Eta at Ohio University during the
'•pring, 2000 induction ceremony. T he natiOnal honor sonety for comnumication , Lambda Pi Eta recognizes academic excellence 111 more
,than 200 chapters throughout the United States.
' Krawsczyn is the daughter of John Krawsczyn and Bette Hobstet·iet, both of Pomeroy. She is a third-year student, majoring in interperwnal communication with a concentration in organizational communication.
. To be eligible for the induction, a student must be an interperson:J communication major and attain a 3.0 overall .CPA with a 3.23 GPA
in his or her major. A student must also have completed 90 hours over~· with at least 18 completed in his or her major.

~ducation and

classroom studk·s J!ld rl'Ct't\·cd ,1 degree of :'!~SO( i ;~. te nf
applied science in t kcupational Ther;~py.
Melissa is the daug hter of Robert and Chnsty R am sburg, Pom eroy.
She is a 1998 graduate of M ergs Hi~h SdJo&lt;&gt;l. She is currently employed
with Holzer M edical Center as an o cc up~t lional thnJpy assistJnt.

New Haven. W.Va.
A potluck dinna \\'a s Sl' rn·d , followed by e,rJ mes. a devotion about
laughter by Brenda Shukor·, am! swrmming.
Those attending were Trina Davi s, Cheryl Jo h nson, Mona Neal ,
Wanda Wolf. Pauline Autherson. Pa,rina Hayman. Kathryn Ru ssell,
Gerri Tate, Andrea 1~1te , Uetty, Mega n, Mrc helle and Davrd Johnson,
Jennifer McKibben and Austrn , Teresa R eyno lds, Jennifer Phillips,
Christine Phillips, Brenda Shuler, Kandi Preston, Rhonda Tabor, Jennifer Nease, and Debbie Call.

Ramsburg graduates

llI

Alfred News

I

ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist C hu rch will hold homecoming on Sept. 17, with regular services in the morning, followed by
~- baske t dinner and an afternoon program.
, Recent visitors ofWarren and C harlotte Van Meter and family were
~ndra and George Wilson of Ala rna gordo, N. M ., and Carol Van
Me ter, Garvin and Sue Bollinger of Bucyrus. They also attended the
iel:eption ofTodd Hawley and Sherry Burke.
·warren and Charlotte VanMeter attended the wedding of their
niece, Jessica Wren and David Harmas in Mansfield.
Thelma Henderson attended a bridal shower for Lia M cfarland,
who is engaged to Aaron Williams, at the Betsey Mtlls House in Marietta.
·.·Victor Bahr_ and Thelma Henderson attended the wedding of
~IIIJnda Coates and Ryan Ash in Pomeroy.
. Mary Jo Barringer recendy visited Nina Robinson two eveni ngs .
Dave and Mary Jo Barringer e nj oyed a boat ride Saturday eve ning
(lllm Parkersburg, WVa. to Marietta on o ne of Ruble's Sternwheclers.
Debbie Barber was bridesmaid in the wedding of her friend, Rachel
lund in Gallipolis.
._' Family &lt;members who visrted Ruth and Lloyd Brooks recently
were: Joni Wills, Ca lifornia; 'fwila Powers, Lloyd's aum. of New Port
Ritrhie, Fla.; family members from Delaware, Ohio, and local family
members.

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Melissa Ramsburg recently !&gt;raduated from Muskingum Area Technical Eollege in Zanesville ,Ohio. She has completed two years of clinical

PORTLAND Leban o n
Township Trustees, 6 p.m. Thursdoly at the township garage.
POMEROY - Meigs· County Un ited Metho dist Cooperative
l'.lrish will be taking applications
fin summer food for senior citiTuesday and Wednesday, 9
i.m. to 1 I a.m . o nly. Food will be
giwu o ut on Thursday.

zens,

ROCKSPRINGS Town
and Cou ntry Expo me~ting, 7:30
r .m., G range Annex, Roc kspnn~
Fairgrounds.
Pre ceptor
. l'OM EROY
lteta Beta , opem ng dinner, 6
p~ m .. Po me roy Golf Course .

REEDSVILLE - R eunion of
descendants of Abraham and
Mary Will Bahr at Forked Run
Sta te Park. Noon meal, with
activities beginning at II a.m.
Plates, napkins , cups .and tableware will be provided. Those
attending should bring covered
dishes and dnnks, lawn chairs and
fam ily pictures.
RACINE 33rd Annual
Samuel Allen Ebli n reunion will
be held at Star Mill Park at 6 p.m.
on Saturday. Those attending
should bring a covered dish .

SYRACUSE -

tlnor

pT!Zl'S

.ltHi

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Fresh Ground
G1UCK

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RAC INE Mers" Countv
l'nm ona (;r,lllge. FrHL1y. 7 :.10
p.m .. Ra cin e Gr.ln gl' H ;dl I11St.lll;ttitlll ()f nl'W officers and _judging
d( sr.ne .111ll national l'Olltl·~t .

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White

POTATOES
99~0LBBAG

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BRAtwURST
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The Cornn~ Gtimda!' is puhlished "' a 6-ee ~ ro ncn-pto6t

'*'

groups wi&lt;hing 10 announct' ......
'""' special .........The """"'" is 001
desifllOd 10 pumooe U.S or fund .,;..
en of any l)p&lt;.ltftns are pn.d only as
S(li&gt;Ce pti II ils ;nj

a

ar0not be guaaaileed

to be prim&lt;! opecific mmber o f .

Hannan at
Dame. 7:30

Clarksburg

Notre

Friday's Games

Gallia Academy at Coal Grove,
7:30
Roane County at Point Pleasant,
7 :30
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30
Ross Southeastern at South Gal·
lia, 7:30
Athe ns at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at Portsmouth East, 7:30
Eastern at Fort Frye, 7 :30
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30

BUC HTEL - Eastern defeated Ndsonvi ll e-Yqrk 15-.l and
15-5 in its voll eyball season opener Tue~Jay.
" Our g irls dominated from the
sqrt," said Eastern head coach
ljaul Brannon. "T here really wasnit muc h of a gam~ to it .
" Our whole team executed
well and put the game out of
reach earl y."
naniell e Spt•ncer was " perfect
Ill-for- J(J on serw for 111 points
and an ace, while Juli Bailey, th e
Tri - Valley Conference I '-J&lt;.Jl) Player of t he Year ncttl'd seve n points
and Kristm C hevalier had seven

4 0 7 I·~~rl. ~-=r~e;"t:
~1dd.l.~p~r"t:,

c •h1~
(740) 992-3471
•

point."

The stadium lights flickered
and then went out as Andres
Galarraga was about to lead off
th e

ninth against Cincinnati

closer Danny Graves.
"At first, I thought there was
so m eth in g wrong with my

eyes." Galarraga said. "Then I
GOOD JOB, SON - Ken Griffey Sr. (lett) shakes hands with Ken Gnffey Jr . followmg the Reds' 4-2 victory
over Atlanta Tuesday at Turn er Field. Junior's two-r un single in the seventh put the Reds ahead. (AP)

saw "verybody ·else moving
back and I knew it was something with th e lights.''

Team officials blamed a
"power spike'' and quickly corrected the problem, but they
couldn't fix the team's bats.
Atlanta went down meekly on
three straight grounders to give
Graves his 23rd save.
··
Ashby lirnited the Reds to 'six
hits and a run through 'six
innings, then had to leave · the
game because of a blister on the
middle finger of his pitching
hand . Cincinnati immediately
took advantage against · an
Atlanta bullpen that has ' been
shaky on the homestand.
After getting the first out,
Reralinger (5-3) gave up (onsecutive singles by pinch- hitter
Alex Ochoa, Pokey Reese and
Chris Stynes to load the b:l!es.
Griffey worked ahead in the
count before lining a hit to -·
right that brought home two
run s, putting the Reds ah ea d 32.
Dante Bichettc drove in an
insurance run with a blooper
that fell in right and wound up
being a fielder's choice when
Griffey was forced at second. ·
Steve Parris (9- 14) won his
fourth straight start, allowin g
eight hits and both Atlanta runs
in six innint,os He has lowered
his ERA 'from 5.41 at the
beginning of the month to
4.57.
"These games are huge," said
Parris, aware the Reds had
pulled within 7 I / 2 games of St.
LouiS in the NL Central. " We
have to beat Atlanta. If we don't
beat Atlanta, we're not goi n g to

make- a."
Th e Braves' rel ievers have

Please see Reds, Page 86

points.

Baile y was 1-for- 1 setting. 7-

for-7 snving with two aces and
seven pomts. and was I0 - for- 1 I
spiking with five kills. and o ne
blork .
C hevalier was 12-for- 14 setting, lt)-for- 11 snvi ng: with ont·
are. eight points. and five clinks.
Amber Baker was 2- for- 2 setting. 2- tc&gt;r-2 serving and 1- for- 1
spikrng.
Wh itn ey Karr was 1- tor-2
servi n g with om: pomt, and was
.1-tor- 4 spiking with one kilL and
Tammy Bissell was 7-for-7 serving with fl1ur pnims, and was 1for-1 spiking.
Spencer was 111- fo r- ICI with
two aces. 10 points. and was 4lor- n spik ing; w hile · Sar;rh Clifford was 1-for- 1 settin g. had nu
se rves, and was 3- fo r-.1 &lt;~pikin g
with two ki ll s.
ThL· Ea&lt;~tern re~c::rves won 15-H
and I S-2 m two st·ts.
Eastefll ( I -0, TVC 1- 0) hosts
Mill er tonight .

AHention Junior varsity
&amp; junior l'iigl1 coaches

.tlso

.

1

Op,·n H o use,

AI'PL E &lt;;ROVE Square
&lt;fo!IK l', R ed Barn 011 S.R . 11~. H
MA SON. W.VA . A11nu.d
t~ j II p.m . M usic by True Country, .1nd ClitT Lon gl'tll'tte .1s c1lkr. Johmon Rt'll lli Oll . Su nd.1y .l t rlw
l~ut wd .mJ ~lJll ,lrl' Ja nnn g. \me r\..tiSOtl City 1-':uk I )[l}fll'T ,l( I
Ll,mllm g. d og!;mg.. 1 c.t kt• \nlk, p m. T.lkt• item for thl· .ntcti~ll1.
· Jllanl! cd

~
1

SUNDAY
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Departmt"nt. I t o 5 p.m .. to d ispl:1y new
fire truck .

FRIDAY

:
11

THURSDAY THRU MOND,AY
AUGUST 31ST - SEPTEMBER 4TH

SATURDAY

THURSDAY

J1

YO(J~ \Ht.EKE'No 1 o SAllE', s~"E, 8~"t.\

CALENDAR
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge No. 411, F&amp;AM,
wtll meet at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday. Refreshments and degree
work.

r

Football
Thursday's Game

Eagle netters win
season opener

NEW HAVEN,WVA. -TheWomen's Fellowship of the Ash Street
C hurch in Midclleport was held rece ntly at the home of Cern Tate in

POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Elections, meeting,
Wednesday, 9 a.m. to certify the
. validity of petitions.

I
1

._._ ---·

... __

;.

~

Reds double
up Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP) The
lights went out as the Atlanta
Braves came to bat in the final
inning - hardly a good omen
for a team that has short-circuited over the past month .
Ken Griffey Jr.'s two~run single in the seventh put C incinnati ahead, and the R eds shook
off a 12-minute delay in the
ninth to send the Braves to
another loss, 4- 2 Tuesday night.
Atlanta squandered a 2-0 lead
and a chance to break a firstplace tie with the Mets m the
NL East. New York was routed
by the Houston Astros Il-l.
"The bottom line is we're still
tied with the Mets," said Braves
reliever Mike Remlinger, who
gave up three runs in the seventh after Andy Ashby left the
~ game because of a blister. " As
bad as it m ay seem, it 's not that
bad."
The Braves have lost two
straight to C in cinnati and five
of their last six - all at Turner
Fiel d. Overall, they are just 1314 in August.
"We're playing decent baseball right now. But th e ball has
got to fall your way occasronal ly," manager Bobby Cox said. " I
have no complaints about the
guys. They have gotten us to this

Thursday's Matchaa

Gallia Academy at Warren, TBA
Point Pleasant at Warren, TBA
Eastern v. Southern, 4:30
Meigs at TVC Ohio, 4:30 (at Brass
Ring)

NEWS &amp; NOTES

.Women's Fellowship meets

WEDNESDAY

1

Drawing Sat. Aug. 26th.
JEFF MAYNARD of Spruce St. Ext.
in Gallipolis is $$$500.00 Richer.
Congratulations Jeff.
.
Norris Northup Dodge would like
to thank every one that
participated in the Drawing.
And remember when you deal
with the best you can
pass all the'rest.
__
_..:, ~~-._...

f
lj
.,.._
__ .....
I

i

:~~~&amp;.~g'c!t];~

II'

GoH

Today'a Matches

.

Is happy to announce the

I

ALL IN THE FAMILY

South Gallia at Chesapeake, 4 :30
(at Forest Hills)

;•- -I!&amp;··~- -r,!!.•• J!!I- - - ....!!1- - I
1! Norris Northup Dodge Inc.
1

Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:15
Warren at River Valley, 5:15
Ohio Valley Christian at South
Point, 5:30
Waterford at Southern, 5:55
Meigs at Wellston, 5:55

Fax you r team's results to th e

Dail y Se ntin el at 992-2 157.
Email your ga me results to galtri bun e@c ure ka net. C&lt;;l ll1 .
Contact sports editor .Andrew
Carter at lJYl- 5287, ext. 21.

BENGALS NOTEBOOK

Dillon back with Bengals after arrest
CINC INNATI (A I') - Run mng
back
Corey
Dillon
return e d to the Ci n c innati tkn!:Pls o n Tuesday, but stayt·d mum
when n.:.·portt:rs askt'tl .1b ou t hi s

alleged fight with hi s wife that
led to Dillon \ ;rrr&lt;·st Saturday in
a Seattl e suburb.
Dil lon spokt' with rcpo rtcr~ in
a hallway outside rhe IJengals
dressing roo m . While .Ill· rl'tl.!l~cd
to discu~" details of whar happened, he did not flatl y denv t hat
he had struck hi s wife.
"I t's a tragedy that thi s ha ppened;' Dillon said. ·· It\ bad. It \
re;~l bad. I never intended for it
tu happen."
Ben gals players welcomed IJrllon back. Several o i them
declined to discms hi s problem .
" I don't \vant to talk about
somethin g I know r1 othin g
about," offensive lin eman Willie
Anderson said.
" I'm happy to see him hefl·
wo rkin g," u fTe n sivc l1nen1a n
R od Jon es sa~ d.
Dill on .-a uld face disc ipli ne
from till' N FL if he rs charged
with do tll l''tic vioknc:l' and con-

victed . Te.1111 entployet·s said th e

Pro Bo\vl runnin g back i.Vill
h.lVt' to bt·.lr down in ordn to
ke ep th e o rtk al ti·o m ~~trc din g
hi s pntOnnancl' on th l· tldd.
" It's going to lw tough.'. 'aid
Enc B.lll . :1 form er Ben~.1ls run nin g back who now works w1t l1
l} l' ngaJ.., playt·r' ;Is thl· tt·am \
director ot' playn rl'la t Hms. ;, But

I tlunk Corey\ the kind of S"''Y
w l1o C:H J bounce b;lrk tfo m it.''
T hl' NFL and rh c team can
provide ronfide ntial c ounseling

f(&gt;r Di llon and hi&gt; wift- if the
pl.lycr rt'quc..,ts it, lhll s.tid .
Polfcl· 111 tlll' Seattle ~uburb nf
fl'd r.: r.tl Way ll.ti d th .1t I1il\on wa . .
.trrntl·d Satuni.Jy by ot1i'-Tr..,
rc 11pondmg to .1 dn!lll'\tic viok·n rc cm uplamt .
The lkn~;ab gave I lillnn per-

tion hl't\.vc cn · u ~ that got bl own
nut of proportion bt'ClLISt' th l·

police f\Ot c-a lk J .md th ey didn't
havl'

to

bt".

''My \\'ifc wa.., up~ct .111J it
tunll'J uno &lt;111 art;.urncnr. I was
not

thl'

one

th n..&gt;Wl! l ~

thL·

pundrt·s." l&gt;rllo n '''"I 111 the
Ben g;:d~' interview. "I threw my
hands up to protect myself. This
was acc idental ."

l3engals nunagl'llll'llt had no
immediatc co mm en t Tuesday
atin
Dillon
talked
with
r~porter" . In fhe p.l'it \Vhl'!l lkn~ah pl.,yn&gt; han· had problems
w1th l.tw ellfurlT ill t: lll . Brmv n
ha:-. rest·rved commt·nr unril the
issues are resolvt•d in the legal
"Y~ t em .

The Lkngals played their final

mission to miss Monday\ prac-

pn· ~easo n

tic e. alth ough he didn't tell the
team until Lltcr .1bout hi ~ arrest ,

were given off for th e weekend.
Dillon lrws in Seattle in the off-

gent:ral m.mager Mike Brown

..;eason.

said.

In an imcrvicw Wi th tht· Ben gals' Weh me. I)rllon w.1s quoted
as liaying : "\ don 't want to bl•
portrayl'd as a witl•- beatt•r
because it\ ju~r ~om e thing I
would nc.=ver do. It wa~ a ~itua -

gamt' Friday night and

Police said that w hen they
responded to th e call Saturday,
they io und D1llon's wife blt·L·din g ll·mn rhe mmnh in from of a
· house . Dillon, w ho was in the

Please see Ben1als, Pile 86

OU punter on Ray

Guy Watch list
AUGUSTA. Ga. Ohio
punta Dave Zastudil is o ne of
32 Division 1- A punters mcluded on the 21JOll Ray Guy watch
li st announced on Tuesday by
tht· Greater Augusta Sports
Council.

Zastudil, a j unior from Bay
Village, Ohio, has finish ed
among the top I S punters
nationally in each of his fi rst two
se.aso n s.

The National Selection Com lnittce will choose t he I 0 semi -

finali sts who wi ll be an no unced
by November X, 2000.
That same national body will
then vote fur t h e three finali st~

who
will
be
announcrd
November 30, 2000.
The H,ay Guy Award in its
first year has become one of th e
most talked abou t awards in college football , finally recognizing

Zastudil already holds Ohio's

the remaining major postti on on

two best punting seasons and his

the footba ll field that can si nglehandedlyaltar the o utcom e of a
game.

ca reer awrage (44.2) is o n pace
to Sl't a Mid- Am er ican Co n ft'r-

cnce mark.
His accomplishments have not
gon e with o ut not1ce as he was a

Freshman All- America in 19'!8
and the MA C Special Team
Player of the Year in !999 .
The R ay G uy Award will be
awarded to th e nati oh 's best
punter as determined by a com mittee made up of sports writers, coll eg~footba ll coaches, former punters and m embers designated by the Greater Augusta
Sports Council.

Th e award is named afte r the
greatest punter of all time. Ray
Guy w ho attended th e University of Southern Mississippi and
then was drafted in the first
round by the Oakland Raiders.
The Greater Augusta Sports
Council will present the R ay
Guy Award in December at a
combined awards dinner with
the Greater Augusta Medal For
Excellence in Sports Av.'3rds tor
high school students in th e
Augusta metro area .

�Wodnosday August 30 2000
The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

Wednesday August 30 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

550

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TRIBUNE DEAQUNE.
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Sunday 6 Monday ldHion
2 00 p m Friday
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1 00 p m tho day before
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S!!nday 6 Monday ldHion
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REGISTER OfAQLINE,
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San F anc sco OrtiZ 0- o at Pittsburgh
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RECORD OF RESO~UTIONS memba a
concu lng
RESO~UTION NO 9
THAT tho Clo k/Troaouro
BE I RESOLVED by
Counc 1 or lho V ago ol or tho VII ago or Pomo oy
1 onoler
Twontyono
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lhouund F vo hund ad
(2 500 DO)
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In Memory
fo ow ng accounta n the
gone a fund
A 7A211
10 ODD
to
A17A247 A17A212 2 000
to A 7A240 A 70211 8 500
to A 17A24D &amp; A 170234 and
000 to A17A24D

~IF~~~}~~
MURRAY

on h s b rthda;
Augus 30 h
We love you so &amp;
we e no eady o e
you go We had no
cho ce Hope you hea
our vo ces hen we
say ve m ss you mo e
each day We ove you
Happy B rt day
Deep y m ssed you
ov ng " fe ch ld en

~ andch d~

lind AtiUmtl To

Comptny

Traae

Tile 0111~ Trlbun1
Alln Fred
Production M1111g1r

Public Notice

Card of Thanks

The fam1ly of C fford
Jack Murray would I ke
to thank al the peop e
who shared n our t me
of gr1ef and sorrow
We greatly apprec ate
the food flowers 8.
prayers from everyone
Thank you
Brer.da Darst &amp;. Fam ly

Public Notice
Deem thll an emergency
duo lo ack of lunda In lho
account•

PASSED July 7 2000
Kathy Hyaal V logo C o k
John B aottnor Moyo
John Muuo P •• doni ol

n ty

an

ad com

11ervea the

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

n

(8) 23 30 2TC

Public Notice
VACANCY
ANNOUNCEMENT
Rut and
Townoh p
a o
Ilk ng
T uotooo
appl cat ono
fo
an
oqu pmant
opora o
gene a
pa 1on

'rna ntanance

ght o accept

o o)oclany o a I bldo
(6) 23 30 2 TC

Counc

campi anct

g ven
o any or
Towneh p Truttttl

the

Townshp

with

Socl on 5705 27 ollho Oh o
Rev aod Codo lho Mo ga
County Budgtl Comm aolon
w hold a public hoar ng on
tho 2001 budgol or Mo go
County
Tho
Budget
Comm 11

on w

mttt on

Stplambo
1
2000
beginning 81 11 30 o m n
lho Audllo a Olllco or the
Me ga County Courthouoo
Mo go County Budgol
Comm

To oco va o copy or the
(ob due pt on and ollie a
app calion cal 740 742
2805 allor 6 DO p m o w It
Rut and Jownohlp P 0 Box
326 Rut and Oh o 45775
Appllcat ona a a due by 5
p m on Sap ambo 5 They
may bo ma ad lo P 0 Box
326 Rutland Oh o 45775 o

Rut and

wtbl 1 a www 1m1 cancammu

Public Notice

aa on

Nancy Pa ko Campbell
Howa d E Frank
JohnR ~onlaa
(8) 30 1 tc

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

�Wodnosday August 30 2000
The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel Page B 3

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

Wednesday August 30 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

550

25

on 5-4 789 4 58 ROJohnson Arizona 8
5 762 2 4 Es1es San Franctseo 2--' 750
409 G~:~vne AJana
76 739 3n
KBrown lo! AngeiM 2 5 706 2
Alel1er
New Yorl&lt; H
700 3 23 S Ol&gt;honson St
Louil 5 7 682 4 2
SIR KEOUTS-ADJohflson Arizona 278
AstaciO ColOrado BB ALener New Yofk 75
KBfown Los A g~es 72 Demps er Florida
70 Park Los Ange es 66 Ki e St L.ou s
62
SAVE5-Atfonseca F o ida 3 Ben ez
New York 35 Hoffman San 01990 35 Nen
San F anc sco 3 Ag e a Ch eago 28
tlfa es Cinclnna 23 Veres s Lou s 23

Eaat
T•m

All Paroonal
Announcement
Giveaway Loot 6 Found
Yard
and Wanted
To Do Ado
Mull Be Pa d In Advanc.
TRIBUNE DEAQUNE.
2 00 p m tho day before
the ad 1110 run
Sunday 6 Monday ldHion
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL QEADUNE
1 00 p m tho day before
tho ad laiO run
S!!nday 6 Monday ldHion
1 oo p m Friday
REGISTER OfAQLINE,
2 dar- before tho ad •
to run by4 30 p m
Saturday 6 Monday
ed tlon- 4 30 Thuraday

s....

70

Help Wanted

110

Yard Sale

230

78
A ama
New
Von.;.•• ••.••••••••••••.•••78
Flo&lt;ida
64
Phiadelpha
56
Mon ea.
55

Prolesslonal
Services

c;;.....

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

QB
L Pet.
59
54 59
54
67 &lt;89 4 12
75 42 2 12
74 426 2 12

S
L..ous .....••
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.. •••. . ••••

74 58
66
65

56
504 7 12

Cnieago
M waukee

57 74
56 75

435 6 12
427 7 12

Houson

55

4 7

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Pmsbu.rgh

53

408

20

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n

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ORS
RUNS

e

CPM

REG ONA

HOME EVER

569
2595502/2
70 62 530
5
8
...... ...... ............. 67 65 508
64 68 485

Pu ab ed A s a an shepne d
p ppes no pape 1 ed &amp; whte
onemaeaneemae eyne
gen dogs $75 740-742 272e

OWNER OPERA

WEE

KENO MORE NO EAST COAST
00% NO TOUCH MO ST Y
DROP HOOK
1913 NEWER
TRACTORS BOO 200 2823

570

Tueedr, 1 O.mea

ArlzDill 8 Mon ea 7
Flonda 3 S l.DUIS
Pittsbu gh 8 Sa F anc sco 0
Hous on
N Y Met1
Colo ado 2 Pn Bde ph a

Musical
Instruments

CI'\Cinna 4 A anta2

Ch cago Cubs 7 San 0 ego 6 3 mngs
Los Angeles 7 M twaukea 2
TOUr 1 G•mn
Sa D ego (To berg 3 2 at Chago Cubs
Uobe
7) 220pm
Arizona Johnson 8 5 a Mo,., ea U a 3
4 705pm
St ou s Reames 0- a1 Florida Come us

ANNOUNCEMENTS

an.705pm

San F anc sco OrtiZ 0- o at Pittsburgh
Andorson 4 7) 7 05 p m

Personals

C nc nnat Desaena B-4 a A arna (Gtav ne
7--EI 705pm
Houston (Holt B 2 a N Y Mets ~eed 8-4

7 Opm
Coto ado (Ta a ez 9-2 a Ph lade ph a {Bo

JET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Rebu
5 ock
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 9528

enfield 2 7 35 p m
Los Angetea ~e ez 5 6 a M waukee
(Wright 6 7) e 05 p m
Thundey I O.mM
San F anc sea Rue flf 8-9 a Pittsbu gh
Stvaa-8
35pm
Los Angeles Pe ez S-6 a M twa kee R g
don 2l.205pm
San Olego {Vtlitaslck
a ChiCago Cubs
(Topan e 10 220pm
CI'"ICI na Hanschtl6 a A anta(Muho
and99o B r1c:ena-s 7&lt;40pm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ARE YOU CONNECTED? n o

30 Announcement•

ne use 1 wan ad SSOO S 000
pe dek www homtb IWOW cam

B g Fool/ Sasquatch
HaW! you seen rn 1 an ma
so a eee 379-8509

Amerlc•n League

610 Farm Equipment
MERCHANDISE
An hony Lind Company L. d

IIQ0.2 3-8365

740

L Pel

TNm
New
Yor1cnc·········
• ••••• • ••••••
Boson
..

510

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Battmo
To
on e
:
Tampa Bay

www coun rytyme com

:..... :

568

60

535
4
523 5 2
450
5
435
7

54
59
65
70
73

RENTALS

362 MJSwoeney Kansas City 34 S ow1111
o on o
339
Segu
Cia ea d
339
EMar1 nez SeatUe 33e
RUNS-Damon KanY.s Crty,
4 ARodnguez Seattle
0 Durham Chicago 05
COelgado Toron o 05 Thomas ChiC8go 99
Ers 8d A.nahelm 98 eter New Yor11 98
RBI-EMart nez Saatt e 27 COelgado
o on o
20
Thomas Ch cago
20
MJSweeney Kan!AS City
8 SeW tams
New Yo k 09 MO~onez Ch cago
oe
aGamb 08kand 04
H TS-E s ad Anahe m 200 Damo
Kansas Ctty 73 M Sweeney Kansas City
2 COelgado Toronto 70 thomas Cn ca
go 58 t.AOrdonez Chicago 58 Jeter New
YOfl&lt; 58
DOUBLES-COetgado

oronto 49 Garda

parra BoS1on 4 : orenld Seattle 40 OCruz
De oit 39 Lawton M nnesota 39 Stewart
Toronto 36 H)gg neon Oe1d 36
TA PL.E$-CGuzman
M nneaota
9
AKennedy, Anahe m 9 Du ham en cago a
TN xon aos on 7 A ICea exas 7 Damon
Kansas City 8 JA\Ialent n Ch c QO 6 BeW"
ams New Yor1t 6
HOME AUN5-COe gsdo To onto 30
Glau' 1\nahelm 38 Thomas Cnlclgo 38
Ba s a o on o 36 Jus ce New Yol1&lt; 3&lt;4
RPa meero Texas 34 IS a e eel With 32
S OLEN BASE5-0amon Kansas City 38
OeSh O(ds Salt mo e 3 RAioma C evolarid
29 Hende son sean e 29 Etstad Anaheim
26 Ca o ampa Bay 28 M Lemo e Seattle

25
P TCH NG
6 Dec stans -PMart nez
8os on 5 4 789 88 OWe a Toronto 8 5

y

ems
h sda

59
539
500
466 6

44

2
2
9

4 5 737 4 6

H dson Oakland 4-6 700 4 G3 Pettitle
New York 6
696 4
Radman M nneso
a 2-6 667 4 46 Halama Seattle
.e
6&lt;47 5 08 Burba Cleve and
.a 647 &lt;4 9
C emens New York
-6 647 3 65
STR KEOUT5-PMart oz Boo on 239
Muss a Bait mo e 68 Colon c evelancl
64 CF n &amp;; C eveland !50 C emena "New
York
50 Bu ba c eve end
49 Nomo
Do 0 46
SAVES-TBJones De on 36 Kocn Toron
o 32 OLowe Bos o 3 Sasak Seatt e 30
MA!Vera New York 29 wane end Texaa 27
snnghausen Oak a d 26 AMHe andez

Tampo Bay 26

545
52 2 12
4
5 5
443 3 12

New To Yo Th rt Shoppe
9 Wes Stimson A hen1
40-592 842
0 a

QB

56

83
72
74

I ~SAQION$1

BA.TT NG--Ga c apa a
Boa on
370
Ers ad Anahe m 382 COelgado Toronto

83 4 05' BadWin Chcago

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CAED T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG 90 eo DAYS
eae
8 0902

Open Do. p IISburgh
Uondly Sopl. 1
New England a New York ets 9 p m

American LNgue Leu.rt

Woat
74 56

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

DHdllnoo oubfe&lt;:IIO
c/longo duo 10 holldllyo

005

W

St LO 18 a Seattla 4 5 p m
Wash ngton a Oelroct • 5 p m
New Or198ns a San Diego 4 5 p m
Dallas a Arizona B 20 p m

averas Al:lama 25
P TCH NG ( 8 Dedsoonsf-E arton Houo-

Eaat.., DIY • on

WLTP1oGFQA
6 0 3 5 58 47

o h ng a d ouseho d
S 00 bag sa e e e y

Monday h u Sa u day

6394243

com com

900 530

3535424e

141-CH Q.G-R A P H-Y
'Woddngs

.. y
...

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Sports eams
P o ess ona Ce

phe

234405
49
25384245

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Western DIY 1 on
Kansas C ty
4
8 SO 43 2
xLosA gees
3 8 B 47 45 34
Co orado
4 4 37 38 56
Sanose
658263046
x nched p{ayoff sp
y c nched d VIS on e

Reasonable ates

Ca tx appo n me
(304)675 7472
(304 6 5 7279

SERVICES

810
FINANCIAL

TURNEO DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY ISBI?

Home
Improvements

NQ E Ttleepons o awma donepo
o a o

NoFeeU esaWeWn

Today a Glimea

eee S82 3345

210

'

66274056
• DIY 1ton
:5
3 48 56 ...
3 9 6 45 55 &lt;47

DCUn ada NewE ganct 30pm
Tampa Bay a C umbu
30 p m

Business
Opportunity

Oa as a Chteago a 30 p m

Mama Co ado 9pm
San ose a os Angee
0 30 p m

2

F d•Y• Game
Co moos a San ose

30 p m

Sa urday a Gamt•

New Yonc New Jersey a M am
30 p m
ampa Bay a Kansas C ty 8 30 p m
Co mb sa San ose Oprn
Sunday a Garnea
ed 430pm
Ch cag a Coorado 8 p m

NewEnganda OCU

PRO fOQIBALt

Wake

Page

REAL ESTATE

pm

Public Notice

2 40

Ohio Valley Publlshlnc;J
has an openlnc;J In the
Graphics Department for an

AD D

•

1n

IGNER

the

Full Tlm1 40 Hour Work Bchldull

VICitlonl
401 K
Medlcll Dentll Prucrlpdon 1nd Ufelneur~nce

Class•neas!

We wo k n 1 Mac ntoah tnv ronmtn ut ng C 1110 2
Mu

Ad Ouo k)(p 111 Adobe Photoenop and Typtlty 1
Compu o Expo onco w h th uonwa o l l p ue

comp • •

Cl ltd
I

304

he eto
RECORD OF RESO~UTIONS memba a
concu lng
RESO~UTION NO 9
THAT tho Clo k/Troaouro
BE I RESOLVED by
Counc 1 or lho V ago ol or tho VII ago or Pomo oy
1 onoler
Twontyono
Pomeroy Mo go County I
lhouund F vo hund ad
(2 500 DO)
I om
lha
In Memory
fo ow ng accounta n the
gone a fund
A 7A211
10 ODD
to
A17A247 A17A212 2 000
to A 7A240 A 70211 8 500
to A 17A24D &amp; A 170234 and
000 to A17A24D

~IF~~~}~~
MURRAY

on h s b rthda;
Augus 30 h
We love you so &amp;
we e no eady o e
you go We had no
cho ce Hope you hea
our vo ces hen we
say ve m ss you mo e
each day We ove you
Happy B rt day
Deep y m ssed you
ov ng " fe ch ld en

~ andch d~

lind AtiUmtl To

Comptny

Traae

Tile 0111~ Trlbun1
Alln Fred
Production M1111g1r

Public Notice

Card of Thanks

The fam1ly of C fford
Jack Murray would I ke
to thank al the peop e
who shared n our t me
of gr1ef and sorrow
We greatly apprec ate
the food flowers 8.
prayers from everyone
Thank you
Brer.da Darst &amp;. Fam ly

Public Notice
Deem thll an emergency
duo lo ack of lunda In lho
account•

PASSED July 7 2000
Kathy Hyaal V logo C o k
John B aottnor Moyo
John Muuo P •• doni ol

n ty

an

ad com

11ervea the

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

n

(8) 23 30 2TC

Public Notice
VACANCY
ANNOUNCEMENT
Rut and
Townoh p
a o
Ilk ng
T uotooo
appl cat ono
fo
an
oqu pmant
opora o
gene a
pa 1on

'rna ntanance

ght o accept

o o)oclany o a I bldo
(6) 23 30 2 TC

Counc

campi anct

g ven
o any or
Towneh p Truttttl

the

Townshp

with

Socl on 5705 27 ollho Oh o
Rev aod Codo lho Mo ga
County Budgtl Comm aolon
w hold a public hoar ng on
tho 2001 budgol or Mo go
County
Tho
Budget
Comm 11

on w

mttt on

Stplambo
1
2000
beginning 81 11 30 o m n
lho Audllo a Olllco or the
Me ga County Courthouoo
Mo go County Budgol
Comm

To oco va o copy or the
(ob due pt on and ollie a
app calion cal 740 742
2805 allor 6 DO p m o w It
Rut and Jownohlp P 0 Box
326 Rut and Oh o 45775
Appllcat ona a a due by 5
p m on Sap ambo 5 They
may bo ma ad lo P 0 Box
326 Rutland Oh o 45775 o

Rut and

wtbl 1 a www 1m1 cancammu

Public Notice

aa on

Nancy Pa ko Campbell
Howa d E Frank
JohnR ~onlaa
(8) 30 1 tc

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

�Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 30, 2000 •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 30, 2009
~

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
CHIFinanclal, Inc. lka
City Loan Financial
Servtc... Inc.
va.

Roy Eug- P-1. Heir,
ol. ol.
Motga County Common
Pl.. eCourt,
Ceao No. 99-CV-130
In purauance of en order
1..ued from Common Plaaa

release, remise and vacate
above described portion of

the said alley along tho said

openings. all shifts.

as therein·

Open 7 days. 24

balore described, to tho10

hours. Certified in
tteigs &amp; Athens
Counties .

land owners having a free

hold ln'letest In and to the
land surrounding the same.
IT IS SO ORDAINED AND

Plenty of TLC

740-667-6329

ORDINANCE NO. 669
WHEREAS, tho eouncll of
the Village of Pomeroy has
wltnaeaod the need to
restrict parking In certain
areas of the Village, and
WHEREAS, the Council
believes t1 to be In tho best
Interest of tho citizens and
government olthe Village of
Pomeroy, to restrict ouch
parking,
HOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, STATE OF
OHIO:
Beginning with Butternut

Beech

Avenue, between Peacock

between

Public Notice

ls~~~~T

(Factory Outlet)
AD vertical bllrulo are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Verticals .• Wood
• Mlnla • Etc

Locuet and Aeh Street In Avo and Brick Street,
aald Village.
Lincoln Heights, from Point
Reference Ia made to

Lane to the Flood Road, all

ol Condor St., all
Street and all
Stroot, parking
limited to two

from Earl Powell, dated

passenger

September 1987.
Which haa an addroea ol
424 Beech Stroot,
Mlddl•port, Ohio 45760
Parcel No. 15-01109.000

vahlcles,(properly Jlconoed
and In good running
condition), per household.
All commercial Including
but not limited to dump

Located· at 424 Beech

ol Laurel
ol Anne
will be
private

wreckers,

trucks,

144 TWnl AwL G fit ah

446-4995

Torma of Sola: An Initial
dopoelt of 10% of tho
eueceeelul bid Ia duo at the
Sherlll'a Olllce, Civil
Division, by 4:30 p.m. of the
-day at the-ole. THObllance
of the mount bid Is due
upon confirmation of a ale

t

Computerized Custom Embroidery

I

i

--)
i

.I

Service,
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

Jackets
' School Mascots

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy.te,.. &amp;

Carmel1ta &amp; Kenny Osborne
33869 Blackwood Road · Olf Sl Rt 143

UrilitU.a
17401 992·3131

Phone 740-7•2-2377
Fax 740-742-8103

'

violation of this Ordinance

shall be towed at lhe
owners expanse and lines
. up 1o $100.00 per vehicle,
. per lncldan1, shall apply.
· This ordinance shall take
effect and be In force from
and alter tho earliest period

"Take the pain olll
of painting·
Let me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Messoge
After 6 pm· 740-985-4180

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
FactoryAuthorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/villi, OH 46723

· 741

117-1111

allowed by law.

Stop In And See

council

Stev·e Riffle

which shall be paid from the Amendment to fourth
proceed I of the sale of the ' paragraph to read

:!

WANftD
Standing timber large
or small tracks. To,p
prices paid also .

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

I

'

Ask for Jim

' COMMERCIAL and RESIDENml
FREE ESTIMATES

I

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

HILL'S
·· SELF STORACE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
29670 Bashan
AT .6:30 P.M.
Road
Main St.,
' '
Racine, Ohio
Pomeroy, OH
45771
Paying $80.00
740.949-2217
per gaiiJIII
Sizes 5' x 1O'
$300.00 Coverall
to 10' x 30'
$500.00 Starbural
Hours
Progressive top fine.
• • 7 :00 AM _ 8 PM
Uc. 11 00-50 ""..,.,J~I
- ,.. •
&gt;
1121/110 1 nio. od.

·

· Sales Representative

HANING's

......

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 740-985'-3831

Avenue and Brick Street,
Lincoln Helghte, from Point
25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs
Lana to tho Flood Road, all
• ·· NOTICE
61 Condor Street, all ol
r
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag
2 Handyman crew will do
01
Laurel Stroot and all
750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
painting Inside and out,
Anne Street ' parking will be
carpenter work, roofing,
llmllad 10 throe privata ·. Athens, Ohio 45701
siding. Have own tools.
Pomeroy
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
passenger
vehicles
"A Beller
Free Estimates
715 3 mo
(properly licensed and In L____:::!..!!.;.~~~!.li,E:,!!!,t,!~[__;6~fl~W~m:!;o_j
7&lt;1D-7&lt;12-3225
good running condition} per
household. All commercial
A &amp; D AUIO Up 0 slery • P US, Inc ~;;;;;;;~;;::;:=:!...::::;;;::;~::
vehlclaa. lncludlnn but not
•
limited ·lo dump trucks,
Rutland, Ohio
wreckers, and trailers are
T
k
strictly forbidden to ba
rue seats. car seats. headltners.
parked curbalde or on
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
privata property In those
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
areas.
(8) 23, 30, 2TC
boat covers, carpets, etc.

•

Persons may store or

WHEREAS , William T. keep

by

unrestricted

Norton and Anne M. Norton, method any collector's
husband and wife, have vehl.c le as defined in Ohio

petitioned the Pomeroy R.C. 4501 .01 (F} on private
Village Council for lh'e property with
the
abandonment and vacation permission of the person

of a certain alley located hav ing tho right to the
within the confines or the
Village or Pomeroy, and;
WHEREAS , pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code Section
723.05, It Is the opinion of
!he legltlltlve authority that
there Is good ca use for
va&lt;:atlng said ·alley and that
the vacating the same will
not be detrimental to the
general interests of the

possession of tho property;
except that such person
having permission shall
conceal such vehicle In an
enclosed garage.
Any other reference to
storage of collec.t ors
vehicles is hereby deleted.
This amendment to
Section 303 .10 , Pomeroy
Traffic Code shall take

people of the Village of effect and be In force from
Pomeroy, Meigs County,

and after the earliest period

Ohio.
allowed by law.
NOW THEREFORE, the Kathy Hysell ,

Pomeroy Village Council of
the County of Meigs, State
of Ohio, does he.reby redo
and resolve as· follows, with

Pomeroy Village Plat Map, it
Is hereby ordained that
certain described real
estate , parcels 1,2,3,4 and
6,7 ,8 ,9 located in Volume 2,
Page 105 of the plat books
ba vacated and abandoned

to

tho

adjo ining

landowners. The VIllage of
Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio , does hereby forever

j
I
', •

Mon • Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yre experience
(
)
' 740 742-8888

1 • 888·521 -0 g 1 6

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES
. CarPet, Vin~l Couerin~ Br
Floor Tile Mill Direct

CARPET
EXPRESS
Phone {304) 674-6100
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasant, VW
Owner Mile Balch
Pager {304) 540·4443

·
Clerk·

Treasurer
John Blaettnar, Mayor
John Musser, PreSident of
council

regard to the vacation and (B) 23, 30 2TC
abandonment of a certain
alley heretofore known as
Anthony
Gr i mm
Subdivision 401 on the

740-698-6735

FREE
YARD SALE

SIGN

with ad!
Get yours
todav _..

..

"

'

YOU f\~1/f'. N-IY
I~ f\ LIT1U. Fl=*\'t' il\'.i\\N&amp; I

I

BIG NATE

ONE, TWO, TI-IREE,
'('ALL 1-!EAR .. JUST
'TIL NEXf 't'EAR I

(740) 985-3948

J&amp;L INSULATION &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl Sidin !-(. Roo fing.
Repl acement Win do·.• ~ .
sr ~unl css (I utters &amp;
Downspout. Ci ar;1ge roo m

addi1ior1s. Pnk Building,
Gar,tgc Door., &amp; Ope ner,
flecks, Boa! Ducks,
Conc rete"&amp; B lock \\nrk,

Blown Insulation

992·2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

•

304-773-~300

• 10 9 8 3

• 10 9 2

tAQ865

•Q9753

• 4

.

Deciding that slam doubles
had had their time in the daylight,
I hunted out a deal for this column
-- and promptly spotted this one.
Look only at the West hand.
What would you lead against six
hearts?
North's four clubs was Namy·
ats, showing a strong four-heart
opening. Four no-trump was
Roman Key Card Bla~kwood .
Five spades announced the trump
queen and either two aces or one
ace and the trump king. (In
answer to RKCB, the replier
shows how many of the five key
cards •• the four aces and the
trump king -- he holds, and can
also admit to the trump queen,
either directly •• as here •• or after
a further inquiry from partner.
\f\~1~ 1'-10\F\~f\,~ Nowadays all tournament players
\i'~ Q\i(_Kf.NI
use RKCB .)
Against a small slam, it usual·
ly pays to make an aggressive
opening lead. And shon suits
tend to be more aggressive than
long suits. So, I would select
either a spade or a diamond. Yet
as partner didn 't make a leaddirecting\louble of five spades, I
would opt forthe diamond 10. As
y.ou can see, that would have been
my one winning lead thi s year.
! YOU KNOW YOU'RE OllER·
West, though, selected fourthi WEt&amp;HT WHEN THE.
hi
ghesl
from hi s longest and
6 QUARTERI!A,C;K. CAN
·~ t&gt;tAG11"M SUCH AN
strongest: the club five . What a
ELABO~TE PLAY ON
di
saster-- declarer won trick one
YOUR 5TOMACH .
with dummy 's club sixl That
allowed him to draw tmmps and
claim 13 tricks from two spades,
seven heart&lt; and four clubs (via
the marked ruffing tinesse )
Slrangely, due to the bad heart
and club splits, leading any club
higher than the five defeats the
slam (as does a spade). Declarer
will ruff a club to try to get into
the dummy to draw trumps, but
East will overmff.

Sentinel
t ,/,..

or 740-992-24

Reserve a spoiTor you, your team, or your league.
Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

Advertise
your busiaess
on this page for one month
for as low as 25
one

51 Boundary

lng ........

17 TV'I Paeplea

18 Pinch
20 -luc:k
21 Princely lillian
tomlly
23 Ac:lol Mineo
24Worrn-.
25 Chief
27 Ripe
29 Vift

31 ""Pod" atart

32

"~"

lud-ln

330ennon34 11ty-bltty

37 FO&lt;Kiolaarvonl
40 Singer Vlldd -

54 o!lfliOII
55 Relax

58RII-IM
eplrh of
57 MokeslmpuN
DOWN
1 Typeolat.k
2 Boortoh

3 Pontluo4 Hllrper Volley
org.

I Type of
..-on?
8 Gl'aeddress

5 "-mil to
I PllrediHI
7 WoodWorking
pottom

10 Strew user

_ ,·_____,,m~----THURSDAY. Aug . 31, 2000
A fortunate opportunity could
present itself to you in the year
ahe;td through a dynamic person
who: will also participate in th e
inve(lvement. It c'ould lead to big·
ger and better things.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
chan ge for the better could transpire today thai wiliiUm out to be
ex tremel y beneficial for you.
Howeve r, what occurs may not
necessari ly be along the lines
you' ve been anticipating. Know
where to look for romance and
you' II find it. The Astra-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveals
which signs are romantically per·
feet for you. Mail $2.75 to Match·
maker. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY I0156.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A
chance to clear up an old problem
may pre se nt itself today. Interest·
ingly. Ihe person who has caused
the dilemma in the first place may
be the one who now pro vides the
solution .
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22) A
new channel could open up for
you today thai would provide you
wit h a second sour•e of income .

Kind of tube
12 Doee on
uoher'l job
18 "I think,
therefON-

II

22

-·
Spring

holiday

24-28 Actor
Bruc:e28 Baseball'l

·-

30=':11y
3401the
35

Prlnt8d
mleiJIMa

36
36r.::=sby
Deep

To get a current weather
report, check the

Mason. WV

1e&amp;:i!.

47Two~

Opening lead: ??

JONES'

I

tho Laws of the Slota ol follows:
Ohio, and;

Larry Schey

I

PomeroY Is a legally with Permission of Owner,
Incorporated VIllage under Is hereby amended . as

'

HfiOLIHG and
EXCfiVfiTIHG

Residential, Commercia.
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlaoll/lad•e, Ohio

ottho dote altha sale. All
property sold at Sheriff's
sal• Ia sold on an "AS Ia"
boola. Thera 18 no warranty
nor
guarantee .
The
oucceoetul bidder muet
pre• • nt
pro p a r
ldontlllcatlon, altho lime of
tholr bid lo accepted, by the
olllcar In charge altha sale.
Jamal M. Solulsby, SheriN
Mslga County, Ohio
Mark A. Van Dyne
121 w. High Street, 9th
Floor
P.O. Box sea
umo, Ohio 45802.0568
(8) 9, 18, 23,30
'"} 5TC
,. 5

-

48tngood-· .

48 Compoa pt.

Leading to disaster

·'

~WICK"Sfl

"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

Beginning with Sutternu1

~-

13 lledglted
14a.15 Not long ago

horse

38

BY PHILLIP ALDER

7 40-378-6349

CONCRETE.
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICfS
BOBCAT SERVICES

Avenue, between Peacock

RECORD OF
RECORD OF ORDINANCES
RESOLUTIONS
Section 303.10, Pomeroy
RESOLUTION 7.00
Tralllc Coda, Leaving Junk
WHEREAS, the Village of Vehicles on Private Property

YOU STAY HERE A~'
I'LL GO SET IN YORE
I:IOUSE

MYSELF II

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Experience

"fthiZAd in .Ser11ice"

~EJ~oawt;~neaTrenaller

oubject real es!Jite are those

Public Notice

I JEST GOT TIRED OF
s:ETTIN' IN AN EMPTY
HOUSE ALL BY

Uletlme Warranty
Local Contractor

P/B CONfRActORS, INC.

45 Hockey (INit

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
South
Wesl Nortb East
Pass 4 •
Pass
4NT
Pass 5 •
Pass
6•
Pass Pass Pass

BARNEY

"

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

7 _.,k

autttx
Pickling tplce

• 7 4 3

•..

Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

_,tiM

43

Comporlllve

• A K J 10 8 2

1'1~=
\

• 7 4

- ..

Windows

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

• J 7 4

• A K 52

Replacement

BISSELL IUIL~ERS
INC.

• Q 6 3

South

·-

- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires &amp;Detail

740-992-9636

East

West

!

whiCh are due and payable

Public Notice

t K J
• 6

•

caah, or by certified theck. John Musser, President of

II

•AKQJ652

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

..
LINDA'S
PAINTING

'I
•-

llegllps
BulltloHr &amp; Backhoe

Auto UpholsterY
Company Logos
Hats

I

CellUlar
Jeff Warner Ins.
992.•5479·

dMMa'

08-30.00

• 1.0 9 8

Advertise ·
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

41

ACROSS
1 Foll-

vlalon

North

CIII'I'IR

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(ormelilo'~ (reolion~

nu•s
r,

and

and delivery of dead. All Kathy Hysell, Village Clerk
payments are payable In John w. BlaeHnar, Mayor
The only re11 eetate taxea,

S'l'. 11'1'. 148

r.r,:==================tJ 1....,.....,..,...,.....,.,......,...,..,.
D£PDYS AG

Str•ot, Middleport, Ohio uallars are strictly
45S7o601d. prop•rty has. boon . forbidden to be palrked ,
curbside or on pr vate • ,
epprellld at $1o,ooo.oo and property In these areas.
cannot eoll lor looo than
Vehicles parked In
two-thlrdl of apralament.

Advertise
in this
space for
$50 per
month.

·&gt;

IWJIILUMBD

Advertise in
this space for
·s100 per
month.

Council
(a) 23, 30 2TC

Deed recorded In Volume
192 Page 553 Meigs County
DHd Recorda and Affidavit
lor tronaler of Real Eetate

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

John Musser, President of

dlr..:tld, I will ollor lor ..11
at Public Auction at th•
front at•pa of the
Courthouu, 1DO E. Second
Str••t In tho City ot
Pom..ay, Ohio on
Thurldey,
September 21, 2000
It 10:30 o'clock A.M. olllld
day, !ht following Real
~· to-wtt:
SHuated In The Village ol
Mlddloport,'County ol Melga
lncl Stille of Ohio, to-wit:
Blllng Lot No. 25 of Lower
Pomeroy, Now lncorporelld
Into and 1 port altho Village
of Middleport, aa tlle same
II platted and of record In
Volumo 2 Pill•• a and 10 ol
lha Recorde of Ploll In th•
Ollie• of th• Rocord•r Ol
M•lgl County, Ohio, and
1il11ot1 on th• Eaet side of
Street

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

Slate Route 7.
,Tuppers Plains has

any rtghta or Interest in the

RESOLVED THIS 7 DAY OF
AUGUST,
Court, within and lor the. Kathy 2000.
Hyeoll, Clerk·
County of Molga, State of Treasurer
Ohio, mid• at lha May 181m John Btaettnar, Mayor

thereof, 2000, 1nd to me

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PRODUCTS

Box 189

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,JfJl
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Jlt,nmnllii
Major Medical • Nursing Home
- ...... - - ·

Public Notice

parameters

SECURITY

/HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

...

PHILLIP
ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
•
Roc~y R. Hupp, Agent
Beginners Clogging Classes
Sponsored by
Midnight Cloggers 6:00 pm
City Hall Building, Pomeroy
Sept. 11th, all ages welcome

The Dally Sentinel~ Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

11 ' 11 come about for you ihrough chances of producing the results
you desire. Use your head-- eve n
someone who likes you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc when using your back is called
2 1) An admirer who has newr for.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
been bold enough as of yel to
The
re are strong possibililies for
express his or her feelings fur you
may find that courage today . profitable developments today if
Chances are you' II welcome the you conce ntrate in areas near and
dear to your heart where you' ll be
news with great happin ess.
CAPRICORN {Dec . 22-Jan. hi gh ly motivated.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
19) Because of your creativity.
and developed ski lls. a diff1cul1 Those with whom you'll be
task asked of you today may seem in volved today wil l see tl1e besl of
more like child's play. The esteem your chari smatic qualities coming
in which others hold you could be to li ghl today. These appealing
altributes will aid yo u tremenelevated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) dously.
CANCER (J une 21 -Julv 22)
Don't tie yourself down with an
inflexible schedule today that lim- · Knowing when and how 'to do
its your mobility. There's a strong what needs to be done today will
chance that an invitation you'll help you ac hie ve yo ur most diffi consider lucky to receive will be cult objectives . Your excellent
sense of liming is the critical fac·
forthcoming.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) tor for bringing this about.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) It
Several people are looking for
ways at this time to repay past won't be your rabbit's foot that
kindnesses you've shown th em. will bring you a lucky involve·
Today may be the duy when a ment today. It 'II be your past
couple of people find ways to effons that set this happening
thing in motion . Your reward is at
express their gratitude.
ARIES (March 2.1-April 19) hand .
Endeavors to which you devote
your smarts today have excellent

Like o
pollahecl
lpelkor

Two-door car
421Wufe
.y Udles' guyl
49 Colloae
40

sci. cr...

so Toii!JIIee

· - - Ciur
Doy"
53Siseblll

52

olllt

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-lions

by Lute Cempoa

CMCrt1y Cipher coyptogromo .,. crHiad from
by famous people, pullnd
pte10nt. Eldl - i n tho cipher otancll f&lt;&gt;r • -·
Todey's clue: J eqUI/s X

'AV

HVCK

NA

XFC

DVZAWLT

BNFANZA

NCP

CNTVHFVCA,

SNFANZA

NCP

CNTVHFVCA

PIHR

ZLAF

NCP

XNUF

EWF

DLHH

EWFX

XLAFZNOHF.'N.
WIJHFR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Prime mlnlatora era wadded to the truth, but like
other married couplao they aomatlmao live apart."- Saki
THAT DAILY

WOlD

'UlZL,U

IAMI

O Reorrang•

letters of the

four ocramblod wards be·

low to form fovr simple words.

TRICEE

I

DYROU

. ·1 11 I' I
F N I K E ~;. On lop of the can of paint for
theIs I I r , the deck.I fishingthe wife, couldnround't·---lhis note.
D

L...L...L..-L-.1...-J

= "We~

I

ALFMUN
1--.-.:..F..--i,-.:..lr---r--1
C) Complete

I

_ _J,L-...1..-".
L-L-~-L-...L.

the chuckle quoted

by f.lling in the missing words
you de&gt;w"elop from step No. 3 below.

1:'11 PRINr NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
f t UNSCRAMBlE FORI

V

ANSWER

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Remand . River- Thong · Jostle - TO be MORAL

"II you simply follow rules ," the professor lectu red ,
"we could program a comp uter TO be MORAL. "

�Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 30, 2000 •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 30, 2009
~

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
CHIFinanclal, Inc. lka
City Loan Financial
Servtc... Inc.
va.

Roy Eug- P-1. Heir,
ol. ol.
Motga County Common
Pl.. eCourt,
Ceao No. 99-CV-130
In purauance of en order
1..ued from Common Plaaa

release, remise and vacate
above described portion of

the said alley along tho said

openings. all shifts.

as therein·

Open 7 days. 24

balore described, to tho10

hours. Certified in
tteigs &amp; Athens
Counties .

land owners having a free

hold ln'letest In and to the
land surrounding the same.
IT IS SO ORDAINED AND

Plenty of TLC

740-667-6329

ORDINANCE NO. 669
WHEREAS, tho eouncll of
the Village of Pomeroy has
wltnaeaod the need to
restrict parking In certain
areas of the Village, and
WHEREAS, the Council
believes t1 to be In tho best
Interest of tho citizens and
government olthe Village of
Pomeroy, to restrict ouch
parking,
HOW THEREFORE BE IT
ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, STATE OF
OHIO:
Beginning with Butternut

Beech

Avenue, between Peacock

between

Public Notice

ls~~~~T

(Factory Outlet)
AD vertical bllrulo are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Verticals .• Wood
• Mlnla • Etc

Locuet and Aeh Street In Avo and Brick Street,
aald Village.
Lincoln Heights, from Point
Reference Ia made to

Lane to the Flood Road, all

ol Condor St., all
Street and all
Stroot, parking
limited to two

from Earl Powell, dated

passenger

September 1987.
Which haa an addroea ol
424 Beech Stroot,
Mlddl•port, Ohio 45760
Parcel No. 15-01109.000

vahlcles,(properly Jlconoed
and In good running
condition), per household.
All commercial Including
but not limited to dump

Located· at 424 Beech

ol Laurel
ol Anne
will be
private

wreckers,

trucks,

144 TWnl AwL G fit ah

446-4995

Torma of Sola: An Initial
dopoelt of 10% of tho
eueceeelul bid Ia duo at the
Sherlll'a Olllce, Civil
Division, by 4:30 p.m. of the
-day at the-ole. THObllance
of the mount bid Is due
upon confirmation of a ale

t

Computerized Custom Embroidery

I

i

--)
i

.I

Service,
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

Jackets
' School Mascots

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy.te,.. &amp;

Carmel1ta &amp; Kenny Osborne
33869 Blackwood Road · Olf Sl Rt 143

UrilitU.a
17401 992·3131

Phone 740-7•2-2377
Fax 740-742-8103

'

violation of this Ordinance

shall be towed at lhe
owners expanse and lines
. up 1o $100.00 per vehicle,
. per lncldan1, shall apply.
· This ordinance shall take
effect and be In force from
and alter tho earliest period

"Take the pain olll
of painting·
Let me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Messoge
After 6 pm· 740-985-4180

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
FactoryAuthorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/villi, OH 46723

· 741

117-1111

allowed by law.

Stop In And See

council

Stev·e Riffle

which shall be paid from the Amendment to fourth
proceed I of the sale of the ' paragraph to read

:!

WANftD
Standing timber large
or small tracks. To,p
prices paid also .

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

I

'

Ask for Jim

' COMMERCIAL and RESIDENml
FREE ESTIMATES

I

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

HILL'S
·· SELF STORACE

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
29670 Bashan
AT .6:30 P.M.
Road
Main St.,
' '
Racine, Ohio
Pomeroy, OH
45771
Paying $80.00
740.949-2217
per gaiiJIII
Sizes 5' x 1O'
$300.00 Coverall
to 10' x 30'
$500.00 Starbural
Hours
Progressive top fine.
• • 7 :00 AM _ 8 PM
Uc. 11 00-50 ""..,.,J~I
- ,.. •
&gt;
1121/110 1 nio. od.

·

· Sales Representative

HANING's

......

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 740-985'-3831

Avenue and Brick Street,
Lincoln Helghte, from Point
25-3-3 $3.25!20 lbs
Lana to tho Flood Road, all
• ·· NOTICE
61 Condor Street, all ol
r
16-8-8180/ton bulk or $5.25/bag
2 Handyman crew will do
01
Laurel Stroot and all
750 East State Street Phone (740) 593-6671
painting Inside and out,
Anne Street ' parking will be
carpenter work, roofing,
llmllad 10 throe privata ·. Athens, Ohio 45701
siding. Have own tools.
Pomeroy
35537 St. Rt. 7 North
passenger
vehicles
"A Beller
Free Estimates
715 3 mo
(properly licensed and In L____:::!..!!.;.~~~!.li,E:,!!!,t,!~[__;6~fl~W~m:!;o_j
7&lt;1D-7&lt;12-3225
good running condition} per
household. All commercial
A &amp; D AUIO Up 0 slery • P US, Inc ~;;;;;;;~;;::;:=:!...::::;;;::;~::
vehlclaa. lncludlnn but not
•
limited ·lo dump trucks,
Rutland, Ohio
wreckers, and trailers are
T
k
strictly forbidden to ba
rue seats. car seats. headltners.
parked curbalde or on
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
privata property In those
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
areas.
(8) 23, 30, 2TC
boat covers, carpets, etc.

•

Persons may store or

WHEREAS , William T. keep

by

unrestricted

Norton and Anne M. Norton, method any collector's
husband and wife, have vehl.c le as defined in Ohio

petitioned the Pomeroy R.C. 4501 .01 (F} on private
Village Council for lh'e property with
the
abandonment and vacation permission of the person

of a certain alley located hav ing tho right to the
within the confines or the
Village or Pomeroy, and;
WHEREAS , pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code Section
723.05, It Is the opinion of
!he legltlltlve authority that
there Is good ca use for
va&lt;:atlng said ·alley and that
the vacating the same will
not be detrimental to the
general interests of the

possession of tho property;
except that such person
having permission shall
conceal such vehicle In an
enclosed garage.
Any other reference to
storage of collec.t ors
vehicles is hereby deleted.
This amendment to
Section 303 .10 , Pomeroy
Traffic Code shall take

people of the Village of effect and be In force from
Pomeroy, Meigs County,

and after the earliest period

Ohio.
allowed by law.
NOW THEREFORE, the Kathy Hysell ,

Pomeroy Village Council of
the County of Meigs, State
of Ohio, does he.reby redo
and resolve as· follows, with

Pomeroy Village Plat Map, it
Is hereby ordained that
certain described real
estate , parcels 1,2,3,4 and
6,7 ,8 ,9 located in Volume 2,
Page 105 of the plat books
ba vacated and abandoned

to

tho

adjo ining

landowners. The VIllage of
Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio , does hereby forever

j
I
', •

Mon • Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yre experience
(
)
' 740 742-8888

1 • 888·521 -0 g 1 6

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICES
. CarPet, Vin~l Couerin~ Br
Floor Tile Mill Direct

CARPET
EXPRESS
Phone {304) 674-6100
4078 6th Street
Point Pleasant, VW
Owner Mile Balch
Pager {304) 540·4443

·
Clerk·

Treasurer
John Blaettnar, Mayor
John Musser, PreSident of
council

regard to the vacation and (B) 23, 30 2TC
abandonment of a certain
alley heretofore known as
Anthony
Gr i mm
Subdivision 401 on the

740-698-6735

FREE
YARD SALE

SIGN

with ad!
Get yours
todav _..

..

"

'

YOU f\~1/f'. N-IY
I~ f\ LIT1U. Fl=*\'t' il\'.i\\N&amp; I

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.

Deciding that slam doubles
had had their time in the daylight,
I hunted out a deal for this column
-- and promptly spotted this one.
Look only at the West hand.
What would you lead against six
hearts?
North's four clubs was Namy·
ats, showing a strong four-heart
opening. Four no-trump was
Roman Key Card Bla~kwood .
Five spades announced the trump
queen and either two aces or one
ace and the trump king. (In
answer to RKCB, the replier
shows how many of the five key
cards •• the four aces and the
trump king -- he holds, and can
also admit to the trump queen,
either directly •• as here •• or after
a further inquiry from partner.
\f\~1~ 1'-10\F\~f\,~ Nowadays all tournament players
\i'~ Q\i(_Kf.NI
use RKCB .)
Against a small slam, it usual·
ly pays to make an aggressive
opening lead. And shon suits
tend to be more aggressive than
long suits. So, I would select
either a spade or a diamond. Yet
as partner didn 't make a leaddirecting\louble of five spades, I
would opt forthe diamond 10. As
y.ou can see, that would have been
my one winning lead thi s year.
! YOU KNOW YOU'RE OllER·
West, though, selected fourthi WEt&amp;HT WHEN THE.
hi
ghesl
from hi s longest and
6 QUARTERI!A,C;K. CAN
·~ t&gt;tAG11"M SUCH AN
strongest: the club five . What a
ELABO~TE PLAY ON
di
saster-- declarer won trick one
YOUR 5TOMACH .
with dummy 's club sixl That
allowed him to draw tmmps and
claim 13 tricks from two spades,
seven heart&lt; and four clubs (via
the marked ruffing tinesse )
Slrangely, due to the bad heart
and club splits, leading any club
higher than the five defeats the
slam (as does a spade). Declarer
will ruff a club to try to get into
the dummy to draw trumps, but
East will overmff.

Sentinel
t ,/,..

or 740-992-24

Reserve a spoiTor you, your team, or your league.
Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

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on this page for one month
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one

51 Boundary

lng ........

17 TV'I Paeplea

18 Pinch
20 -luc:k
21 Princely lillian
tomlly
23 Ac:lol Mineo
24Worrn-.
25 Chief
27 Ripe
29 Vift

31 ""Pod" atart

32

"~"

lud-ln

330ennon34 11ty-bltty

37 FO&lt;Kiolaarvonl
40 Singer Vlldd -

54 o!lfliOII
55 Relax

58RII-IM
eplrh of
57 MokeslmpuN
DOWN
1 Typeolat.k
2 Boortoh

3 Pontluo4 Hllrper Volley
org.

I Type of
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8 Gl'aeddress

5 "-mil to
I PllrediHI
7 WoodWorking
pottom

10 Strew user

_ ,·_____,,m~----THURSDAY. Aug . 31, 2000
A fortunate opportunity could
present itself to you in the year
ahe;td through a dynamic person
who: will also participate in th e
inve(lvement. It c'ould lead to big·
ger and better things.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
chan ge for the better could transpire today thai wiliiUm out to be
ex tremel y beneficial for you.
Howeve r, what occurs may not
necessari ly be along the lines
you' ve been anticipating. Know
where to look for romance and
you' II find it. The Astra-Graph
Matchmaker instantly reveals
which signs are romantically per·
feet for you. Mail $2.75 to Match·
maker. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY I0156.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A
chance to clear up an old problem
may pre se nt itself today. Interest·
ingly. Ihe person who has caused
the dilemma in the first place may
be the one who now pro vides the
solution .
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22) A
new channel could open up for
you today thai would provide you
wit h a second sour•e of income .

Kind of tube
12 Doee on
uoher'l job
18 "I think,
therefON-

II

22

-·
Spring

holiday

24-28 Actor
Bruc:e28 Baseball'l

·-

30=':11y
3401the
35

Prlnt8d
mleiJIMa

36
36r.::=sby
Deep

To get a current weather
report, check the

Mason. WV

1e&amp;:i!.

47Two~

Opening lead: ??

JONES'

I

tho Laws of the Slota ol follows:
Ohio, and;

Larry Schey

I

PomeroY Is a legally with Permission of Owner,
Incorporated VIllage under Is hereby amended . as

'

HfiOLIHG and
EXCfiVfiTIHG

Residential, Commercia.
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured
Irian Morrlaoll/lad•e, Ohio

ottho dote altha sale. All
property sold at Sheriff's
sal• Ia sold on an "AS Ia"
boola. Thera 18 no warranty
nor
guarantee .
The
oucceoetul bidder muet
pre• • nt
pro p a r
ldontlllcatlon, altho lime of
tholr bid lo accepted, by the
olllcar In charge altha sale.
Jamal M. Solulsby, SheriN
Mslga County, Ohio
Mark A. Van Dyne
121 w. High Street, 9th
Floor
P.O. Box sea
umo, Ohio 45802.0568
(8) 9, 18, 23,30
'"} 5TC
,. 5

-

48tngood-· .

48 Compoa pt.

Leading to disaster

·'

~WICK"Sfl

"Creep" Feed $9.75/100
Green up your yard, pasture or hayfield

Beginning with Sutternu1

~-

13 lledglted
14a.15 Not long ago

horse

38

BY PHILLIP ALDER

7 40-378-6349

CONCRETE.
MASONRY
BACKHOE SERVICfS
BOBCAT SERVICES

Avenue, between Peacock

RECORD OF
RECORD OF ORDINANCES
RESOLUTIONS
Section 303.10, Pomeroy
RESOLUTION 7.00
Tralllc Coda, Leaving Junk
WHEREAS, the Village of Vehicles on Private Property

YOU STAY HERE A~'
I'LL GO SET IN YORE
I:IOUSE

MYSELF II

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Experience

"fthiZAd in .Ser11ice"

~EJ~oawt;~neaTrenaller

oubject real es!Jite are those

Public Notice

I JEST GOT TIRED OF
s:ETTIN' IN AN EMPTY
HOUSE ALL BY

Uletlme Warranty
Local Contractor

P/B CONfRActORS, INC.

45 Hockey (INit

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
South
Wesl Nortb East
Pass 4 •
Pass
4NT
Pass 5 •
Pass
6•
Pass Pass Pass

BARNEY

"

SHADE RIVER AD SERVICE

7 _.,k

autttx
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• 7 4 3

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Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

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43

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INC.

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South

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740-992-9636

East

West

!

whiCh are due and payable

Public Notice

t K J
• 6

•

caah, or by certified theck. John Musser, President of

II

•AKQJ652

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING

..
LINDA'S
PAINTING

'I
•-

llegllps
BulltloHr &amp; Backhoe

Auto UpholsterY
Company Logos
Hats

I

CellUlar
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dMMa'

08-30.00

• 1.0 9 8

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in this
space for
$50 per
month.

41

ACROSS
1 Foll-

vlalon

North

CIII'I'IR

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(ormelilo'~ (reolion~

nu•s
r,

and

and delivery of dead. All Kathy Hysell, Village Clerk
payments are payable In John w. BlaeHnar, Mayor
The only re11 eetate taxea,

S'l'. 11'1'. 148

r.r,:==================tJ 1....,.....,..,...,.....,.,......,...,..,.
D£PDYS AG

Str•ot, Middleport, Ohio uallars are strictly
45S7o601d. prop•rty has. boon . forbidden to be palrked ,
curbside or on pr vate • ,
epprellld at $1o,ooo.oo and property In these areas.
cannot eoll lor looo than
Vehicles parked In
two-thlrdl of apralament.

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in this
space for
$50 per
month.

·&gt;

IWJIILUMBD

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this space for
·s100 per
month.

Council
(a) 23, 30 2TC

Deed recorded In Volume
192 Page 553 Meigs County
DHd Recorda and Affidavit
lor tronaler of Real Eetate

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

John Musser, President of

dlr..:tld, I will ollor lor ..11
at Public Auction at th•
front at•pa of the
Courthouu, 1DO E. Second
Str••t In tho City ot
Pom..ay, Ohio on
Thurldey,
September 21, 2000
It 10:30 o'clock A.M. olllld
day, !ht following Real
~· to-wtt:
SHuated In The Village ol
Mlddloport,'County ol Melga
lncl Stille of Ohio, to-wit:
Blllng Lot No. 25 of Lower
Pomeroy, Now lncorporelld
Into and 1 port altho Village
of Middleport, aa tlle same
II platted and of record In
Volumo 2 Pill•• a and 10 ol
lha Recorde of Ploll In th•
Ollie• of th• Rocord•r Ol
M•lgl County, Ohio, and
1il11ot1 on th• Eaet side of
Street

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

Slate Route 7.
,Tuppers Plains has

any rtghta or Interest in the

RESOLVED THIS 7 DAY OF
AUGUST,
Court, within and lor the. Kathy 2000.
Hyeoll, Clerk·
County of Molga, State of Treasurer
Ohio, mid• at lha May 181m John Btaettnar, Mayor

thereof, 2000, 1nd to me

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PRODUCTS

Box 189

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,JfJl
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Jlt,nmnllii
Major Medical • Nursing Home
- ...... - - ·

Public Notice

parameters

SECURITY

/HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

...

PHILLIP
ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
•
Roc~y R. Hupp, Agent
Beginners Clogging Classes
Sponsored by
Midnight Cloggers 6:00 pm
City Hall Building, Pomeroy
Sept. 11th, all ages welcome

The Dally Sentinel~ Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

11 ' 11 come about for you ihrough chances of producing the results
you desire. Use your head-- eve n
someone who likes you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc when using your back is called
2 1) An admirer who has newr for.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
been bold enough as of yel to
The
re are strong possibililies for
express his or her feelings fur you
may find that courage today . profitable developments today if
Chances are you' II welcome the you conce ntrate in areas near and
dear to your heart where you' ll be
news with great happin ess.
CAPRICORN {Dec . 22-Jan. hi gh ly motivated.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
19) Because of your creativity.
and developed ski lls. a diff1cul1 Those with whom you'll be
task asked of you today may seem in volved today wil l see tl1e besl of
more like child's play. The esteem your chari smatic qualities coming
in which others hold you could be to li ghl today. These appealing
altributes will aid yo u tremenelevated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) dously.
CANCER (J une 21 -Julv 22)
Don't tie yourself down with an
inflexible schedule today that lim- · Knowing when and how 'to do
its your mobility. There's a strong what needs to be done today will
chance that an invitation you'll help you ac hie ve yo ur most diffi consider lucky to receive will be cult objectives . Your excellent
sense of liming is the critical fac·
forthcoming.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) tor for bringing this about.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) It
Several people are looking for
ways at this time to repay past won't be your rabbit's foot that
kindnesses you've shown th em. will bring you a lucky involve·
Today may be the duy when a ment today. It 'II be your past
couple of people find ways to effons that set this happening
thing in motion . Your reward is at
express their gratitude.
ARIES (March 2.1-April 19) hand .
Endeavors to which you devote
your smarts today have excellent

Like o
pollahecl
lpelkor

Two-door car
421Wufe
.y Udles' guyl
49 Colloae
40

sci. cr...

so Toii!JIIee

· - - Ciur
Doy"
53Siseblll

52

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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by Lute Cempoa

CMCrt1y Cipher coyptogromo .,. crHiad from
by famous people, pullnd
pte10nt. Eldl - i n tho cipher otancll f&lt;&gt;r • -·
Todey's clue: J eqUI/s X

'AV

HVCK

NA

XFC

DVZAWLT

BNFANZA

NCP

CNTVHFVCA,

SNFANZA

NCP

CNTVHFVCA

PIHR

ZLAF

NCP

XNUF

EWF

DLHH

EWFX

XLAFZNOHF.'N.
WIJHFR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Prime mlnlatora era wadded to the truth, but like
other married couplao they aomatlmao live apart."- Saki
THAT DAILY

WOlD

'UlZL,U

IAMI

O Reorrang•

letters of the

four ocramblod wards be·

low to form fovr simple words.

TRICEE

I

DYROU

. ·1 11 I' I
F N I K E ~;. On lop of the can of paint for
theIs I I r , the deck.I fishingthe wife, couldnround't·---lhis note.
D

L...L...L..-L-.1...-J

= "We~

I

ALFMUN
1--.-.:..F..--i,-.:..lr---r--1
C) Complete

I

_ _J,L-...1..-".
L-L-~-L-...L.

the chuckle quoted

by f.lling in the missing words
you de&gt;w"elop from step No. 3 below.

1:'11 PRINr NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES
f t UNSCRAMBlE FORI

V

ANSWER

,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Remand . River- Thong · Jostle - TO be MORAL

"II you simply follow rules ," the professor lectu red ,
"we could program a comp uter TO be MORAL. "

�...
~ B 8 • The Dally S.ntlnal
r

Wednesday, August 30, 2000'

Pomaroy, Middleport, Ohio

Meigs society news and notes, AS-&amp;
Local prep grid previews, B1

Frld•y

.. .

' •

Hl1h: lOs; Low: &amp;Os

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.'

Details, A3

Tribe takes bat to Rangers
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) the Cleveland Indians, despite
tl.eir potent lineup, are counting
on their pitching to get them to
the. playoffs.
. "The whole lineup is hitting;•
Indians manager Charlie Manuel
laid after a 12-1 rout of the Texas
t!.:ingers on Tuesday night. "But
I'~ .said all along, we'll only go as
fat as our starting pitching will
take us."
S~eve Woodard gave the lndiall$' rotation a boost, notching his
ftlit win since May II, when he
Wu with Milwaukee. Woodard
dowed one run and four hits in
Mil innings.
• "It's about time,"Woodard said.
"With this team, if you keep 'em
In the game they're going to
kOre. It really helps your confi,lence knowipg you've got an
oll'ense like, this behind you."
Woodard (1-2) won for the first
time in seven appeannces since
die Indians acquired him from
Milwaukee on July 28. He had
hilt&gt; losses and three no-decisions
Ill: five starts, and another no·~ision in a relief outing.
Although Woodard has only
une victory for the Indians,
Cleveland is 4-2 in his starts.
"I think that's a stat that's overlooked;'Woodward said. "Tonight
I !had all three pitches working.
'l'·lil a control pitcher, but since I
came·over (in the mde), I haven't
had my good stuff. Tonight, I
threw strikes and let the defense
~lay. To get mded here to a con~nder is a real confidence boost-

Ricky Ledee, and Manny
Ramirez each hit two-run
homers for the Indians, who have
taken over the AL wild-card lead
by going 17-8 since Aug. 2.
Jim Thome followed Ramirez's
two- run homer in a five-run seventh with a solo shot. It marked
the ninth time this year Cleveland
hit consecutive homers.
Kenny Lofton went 3-for-5 for
the Indians, who outhitTexas 146. Every Cleveland starter got at
least one hit.
"That's the way we need to
play the rest of the way;' Manuel
said.
Rangers rookie Ryan Glynn
(3-3), in his first appearance since
fainting Aug. 11 after leaving a
game, allowed five runs and eight
hiu in five innings.
He was diagnosed with neurocardiogenic syncope, a fainting
condition that can be controlled
with medication and a high salt
diet.
Texas, which made three errors,
has lost four straight, six of seven
and 13 of 17. With each loss,
manager Johnny Oates becomes
more frustrated.
"I am trying to think of everything possible to make this stop,"
Oates said. "What can I do, what
can I say and how can I act?
Everyone is discouraged and frustnted. I've never been in a situation like this for 33 years."
Rafael Palmeiro hit a solo
homer in the sixth, his 34th of the
season was the 395th of his
career. Palmeiro is 35th on the
'Career list, one behind Joe Carter.
Cleveland took a 3-0 lead in
. 'oavid Segui. acquired from
texas on July 28 for outfielder the fourth , with Glynn contribut-

er."

l

gave up just four hits in seven
innings.
Angels 9, Blue Jays 4
Darin Erstad went 3-for-5 at
Anaheim to become the fastest to
reach 200 hits in 65 years.
The Angels trailed 4-0 before
Troy Glaus hit a three-run homer
off Chris Carpenter (9-11) in the
fourth and Mo Vaughn tied it
with a solo shot in the fifth.
0.
Anaheim broke it open with
Roberto Alomar hit an RBI
double in the sixth. In the sev- four runs in the sixth, capped by
enth, Omar Vizquel had a two- Erstad's two-run single. Erstad
run double, Ramirez hit his 27th reached 200 hits in Anaheim's
homer of the season, and Thome 132nd game - the fastest since.
the Cardinals' Ducky Medwick
homered for an 11-1 lead.
RelieVer Francisco Cordero did it in 131 games in 1935.
Mike Holtz (2-2) got one out
allowed five runs and four hits in
for the win.
1 2-3 innings.
Mariners 5, Yankees 3
Tigers 12, Orioles 2
Edgar Martinez hit a comeDean Palmer homered and
from-behind grand slam o ff Jeff drove in four runs to back Jeff
Nelson with two outs in a five- Weaver (9-11 ), who allowed two
run eighth at Seattle.
runs and six hits in 6 1-3 innings
Andy Pettitte (16-7), who had at Camden Yards.
won seven straight starts, took a
Bobby Higginson and Dusty
no-hit bid into the sixth and Allen also homered, and Juan
three-hit shutout into the ·eighth Encarnacion had four hiu for the
before Seattle's comeback !&gt;ega!! Tigm. who had 16 hits in reaching .500 (65- 65) for the third
with Stan Javier's RBI single.
Brett Tomko (7-4) pitched two time this month after starting the
scoreless innings as Seattle won season 9-23.
for just the third time in 16
Rookie John Parrish (2-3) gave
games. Kazuhiro Sasaki pitched a up six runs. six hits and three
1-2-3 ninth for his 30th save.
walks in 2 1-3 innings.
White Sox 3, Athletics 0
Royals 7, '!Wins 3
James Baldwin (14-4) comBlake Stein (5-3) allowed all
bined with two relievers on a three runs five hits in 6 2- 3
five-hitter, and Paul Konerko hit innings at Kansas City.
Mike Sweeney had a rwo-run
a three-run homer at O~kland.
Mark Bue hrle pitched three double in a four-run third inning
innings, and Keith Foulke fin- off J.C. Romero (2-4), and Jerished with a perfect ninth for his maine Dye added a two-run dou25th save.
ble in three-run fifth .
Oakland's Barry Zito (2-3)

ing two walks and a wild pitch.
Travis Fryman and Sandy Alamar Jr. had RBI singles in the
fourth, and Alomar scored the
inning's final run on the wild
pitch.
In the fifth, Thome walked and
Segui hit his 15th homer of the
season, ·his fourth since joining
the Indians, to push the lead to 5-

Mei1s County's
Volume

·to

Reds
from PageBl
been heading in the opposite
direction. Over the past six
pmes, they have surrendered 19
'hits and 15 earned runs in 15 2-3
ihnings.
uDon 't bet against us," Remlinger said.
Atlanta also has been a rather
ordinary team on its home field.
After winning 17 of its first 21
Jj:lme at Turner Field, the Braves

Bengals
ftvmPapBl
; driveway, was arrested for investigation of fourth-degree assault
·:and w.os released a few hours
:. .beer.
Police said the cou ple were in a
· cat when Dillon struck his wife.
. She got out of the C.[lr and walked
one block to the address where
police were summoned.
, . "This has been tough on both
of us," Dillon said Tuesday. " It's

· for everybody," Mets catcher
Mike Piazza said.
Astros 11, Mets 1
Tony Eusebio's 24-game hitting
&amp;treak .cam~ to an -end, but most
everything else went right for the
Asiros.
Bagwell hit a two-run single in
a four- run third and added a solo
homer in the sixth to reach the
40-homer mark for the third time
in his career.
AI Leiter (14-6) left after three

innings to win for the first time in
nine starts since July 8.
Livan Hernandez (13-1 0),
coming off consecutive shutouts,
gave up seven runs-' in two~plus innings - his shortest outing in
107 career s1arts, except for
injuries.
·
Diamondbacks 8, Expos 7
Greg Colbrunn homered and
had three RB!s, including a
tiebreaking RBI single off Scott
Forster (0- 1) in the seventh, as
innings because .of a strained visiting Arizona moved w1thin 2
muscle in his right buttocks. He I /2 games of first-pla ce San Franwas pulled as a precaution with cisco in the NL West.
the Mets trailing 4-0, and the
Dan Plesac (4-0) got one out in
team did not think he would nor the sixth for the win and Matt
miss a start.
Mantei pitched a perfect ninth
"I hurt it at the end of my for his II th save.
warmups. I felt it pull and I was
Rockies 2, PhiUies 1
just uncomfortable," Leiter said.
Jeffrey Hammonds went 3-forMets right fielder Derek Bell 4, including a go-ahead RBI
banged his left knee into a wall double in the sixth as Philadelchasing a foul ball in the eighth, phia's Omar Daal (3-16) lost his
and limped off the field with major league- leading 16th game.
assistance. He has a bruise and is
Colorado's Todd Helton , who
day to day.
came in leading the majors with a
Pirates 8, Giants 0
.397 average, didn't start, but went
At Pittsburgh, Kris Benson (9- 0- for-1 in his lone at-bat atVeter11) allowed one hit in eight ans Stadium, dipping his average

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 69

o;o C. Nth

.
L

won't suspend
judge's license

FROM STAFF REPORTS

ONG BOTTOM Alison
R ose
was
named Miss Parade of
the Hill s at Nelsonville's Parade of the
Hills festival last weekend .
Ros e, 17, is th e daughter of
Arch and D ebbie Rose of Long
Bottom , and the granddaughter
of John and Mary Rose of Long
Bottom and Raymond and Lydia
Smith of Pom eroy.
A 21lOIJ graduate of Eastern
High School. Rose was crowned
by irl't year'&lt; Parade of th e Hills

Panel says Evans'
misconduct was
isolated
CO LUMBUS (AP) A
&lt;outhern Ohio appeals court
judge violated judicial ethics but
won't have hi s law lice nse suspended, the Ohio Supreme
Court ruled Wedn esday.
The court
ruled unanimously that
Judge David
Evans of the
Fourth District Co urt of
Appeals vtolate d
the
court's code
Evans
of
judicial
con duct. This
was for allegedly misleading
voters about his endorsements
and allowing jail inmates and
welfare recipients to work on
his election campaign in 1998.
The court sa id Evans m ade
the situation worse· by suing
judges who fil ed a grievance
over the endorsements despite

queen, Lynn Kin g, w h o was

assisted by Stephanie Meisberger,
Mi« O hio.
R ose sai d sh e was "shocked" to
win the competition. which was
based on an interview and poise

during the festival. Friends at her
summ er job at Ohio University
encouraged h er to entn the competiti on , which is open to young
women from southeastern Ohio.
Sh,· will receive a $2.500 scholarship. sponsored by M&lt;1iden &amp;
Jenkins Construction Co. and
Sunday Creek Coal. and was presented with a specia l charm
bracelet to hold the charms she
will collect du ring her many pubhe appearances during the next
year.

to .396.
Marlins 3, Cardinals 1
Chuck Smith (3-5) allowed
!Pur hits in eight innings and
strock- ournine for host Florida,
and Antonio Alfonseca pitched a
perfect ninth for his major
league-leading 37th save.
Mike Lowell hit a two-run
homer in the first , helping stop
the Cardinals' three-game winning streak.
Dodgers 7, Brewers 2
Chan Ho Park (14-8) allowed
one hit in eight innings - James
Mouton's two-out, two-run
homer in the sixth - and struck
out a career-high 14 for visiting
Los Angeles.
Mark Grudzielanek drove in
four runs as the Dodgers won for
the eighth time in nine games.
Cubs 7, Padres 6, 13
innings
Pinch-hitter Ricky Gutierrez
had a sacrifice fly in the 13th
inning offTrevor Hoffman (4-6)
as Chicago outlasted San Diego at
Wrigley Field. Felix Heredia (73) got the win.

have gone 24-19 since then.
ing. Trainers sliced open the blisJavy Lopez had an RBI single ter in the middle of the sixth. and
in the fourth to pur the Braves Ashby wanted to go back out.
ahead, and R eggie Sanders hit his
But Cox wouldn't risk a more
first homer in 39 days leading off serious injury.
the fifth.
" I feel like I let the team
Cincinnati halved its deficit in down," Ashby said.
the sixth on Dmitri Young's twoReds Notes: Parris' wild pitch
out homer over the center-field in the third inning was the 84th
wall. Otherwise, Ashby was dom- of the year for the Reds, breaking
inating.
· the dub record of 83 set in 1965.
The right-hander struck out At this pace, C incinnati will wind
Bichette swinging three straight up with 104 for the season, which
times, and seemed likely to break would easily eclipse the majo ra personal three-game losing league record of94 set by Texas in
streak until his finger began hurt- 1986. The NL record is 91, estab-

lished by the 1970 Houston
Astros and tied by the 1989
Philadelphia Phillies. ... Ashby
reco rded the t .OOOth strikeout of
his career when Reese fanned in
the fifth inning .... Galarraga had
three of Atlanta's nine hits .... A
fa n was escorted out of Turner
Field in a bit of heavy-handed
sec urity after slipping onto the
field in the seventh inning while
trying to catch a foul ball down
the first-base line. The fan didn't
interfere with Galarraga's attempt
to make the catch, but was
removed from h is seat anyway.

been tough on me."
The NFL has suspended four
players this year for violent
crimes, including Bengals offensive lineman Matt 0 'Dwyer. The
league's conduct policy applies to
players who have been convicted .
O'Dwyer and former Jets
teammate Jumbo Elliott were su&lt;pended for rwo games each for a
fight outside a bar in 19'l9, when
O'Dwyer was with N~w York.
Tennessee Titans cornerback
Denard Walker was suspended for
rwo games after pleading guilty to
assaulting the mother of his son,

charges of negligent driving and
driving with a suspended ticense.
Earlier this month. Dillon
ended a holdout and agreed to a
one-year contract worth S3 million . In his second preseason
game last Friday in Cincinnati,
Dillon rushed six times for 45
yards in a 21-13 loss to Detroit .
The Bengals have a first-week
bye and open the season Sept. I 0
agoinst Cleveland.
Dillon was the leading rusher
for the Bengals the last three
years, going over 1,000 yards each

and Arizona Cardinals running
back Mario Bates got a one-game
suspension for slapping his girlfriend .
Dillon \\aS repeatedly in trouble as ,\ juvenile, prompting him
to slip to the second round in the
19')7 draft . He has been arrested
rwice while wirhl"the Bengals.
both times in Seattle .
He also was arrested in March
1998 and charged with driving
nnder the influence, ne glige nt
driving and driving with a suspended license. Three months
later, he pleaded guilty to lesser

s 1,

Hometown Newspaper

Local girl wins Nelsonville·crown High court

Mets and Braves lose, take their lumps
About the only positive for the
r,lew York Mets and Atlanta
itnves was that they played equaltf !&gt;!d.
One night after the Meu
ntoved into a tie for first place
With the Bnves for the first rime
!ibce April, the two best teams in
the majors played anything like it
'tUesday.
· Ken Griffey Jr.'s two-run single
ill the seventh inning put Cincin·nati ahead and the Reds went on
a 4-2 victory over the Braves.
.. The bottom line is we're still
··lied with the Meu," said Braves
R!liever Mike Remlinger, who
.gave up three runs in the seventh
'•a lter Andy Ashby left the game
·because of a blister. "As bad as it
·may seem, it's not that bad."
, That's because the Mets weren't
:any better than Atlanta.
Wade Miller pitched a five-hit. ter for his fim complete game in
lhe majors, Jeff Bagwell hit his
·40th homer and Houston
10111ped past New York Il-l at
· ~hea Stadium.
"It was a rough night all around

s~a s on .

August 31-, 2000

•

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BY 1HE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thursday

She begin s her bu sy schedule
with the Milkrsport Sweet Corn
Festival this week, and th e Old
Settlers Reunion in Jacksonville
on Labor Day.
A talented singer. Rost plans to
mend Ohio UniverSity this fall ,

admitting

to study reta il merchandising.

th e . endorsements

violated judicial ethics rul es,
Evans of Gallipolis th en tried
to escape responsibility for the
lawsuit by blaming his law firm
for th e decision to file it, the
co urt sai d.
Justice Francis Sweeney noted
that Evans is not a typical legal
client, having been a lawyer fo r
25 years. is an appeals co urt
judge and was a longtime

MISS PARADE OF THE HILLS Alison Rose, right, a 2000 graduate of Eastern High School, was
crowned Miss Parade of the Hills
in Nel sonvi lle last weekend. She
is pictured with Stephanie Meis·
berger, Miss Ohio, who will par·
ticipate in the Miss America
Pagean~month.

Republican Party official.
"He is aware of, or should be
aware of. the rules governing
campaign advertising," Sweeney
said.
Despit• it&lt; ruling, th e court
voted 4-3 against a recommendation to suspend Evans' law
license for six months. The
court's Board of Commissioners
of Grievances &amp; Discipline recommended th e suspension.
Sweeney said Evans lacked a
prior disciplinary record and the
misco nduct was isolated.
Evans could not be reached . A
message seeking comment was
left at his office during business
hours.
In February, the board determined that Evans' campaign
violated judicial campaign rules.
This was by using inmates on
work-release and welfare recipients in a government work pro!&gt;ram to help build wooden billboards for the 1998 Republican
pnmary.
The board also found that
Evans used government property for campaign work, which
also violates campaign rules. The
signs were being built in a
township garage. but Evans had
the work moved to a private
warehouse because of space and
water problems at the garage.
Evans also failed to include
the work and use of the town ship garage as campaign contributions in his finance report, the
board said.
The board also determined
that Evans' campaign violated

Please

set1

Judi•· Pap A3

New jobs will.aid regional welfare refonn ·moves
''
'
Auto,
A/C,
Cru

BY KEVIN KEU.Y
OVP NEWS EDITOR

CONTINENTAL
4uto, V8, A/C, leather, Loaded, tAO&amp; II

GALLIPOLIS A tckmarkcter's
de cision to open a call center in Gallipoli s wi ll help local efforts taking peopl'e oil'
publi c relief rolls, said the directo r of the
Callia County Department of Job and
Family Serv1ce·s.
"The main thing with welfare reform
is to create new jobs," said Jerry Barnes as
he diswssed DJ FS' role in providing
fund s to :lttract I nfoCi sion Manag:cmt'nt
Corp. to the .Jl'ea.
IJIIUCisioJ J announu.·d Wednesday it
w1ll upen a Gallipo lis location on Sept. 5
in the ionner G &amp; J Auto Parts building,
242 Thml AVl'.
Oflicials said 125 people will b e

accordi ng to an ln foC ision press release.

"The main th ing with welfare reform
is to create new jobs." Barnes said.

DJFS was created under Ohio 's initiative to reform the wdf:ue system , gct
peop le otT public assistance an d into jobs.
But due to high unemp loyment, a
DJ FS i, allowed to ute som e of irs Temporary Assistance to Needy Famili es
(TANF) funding to create new j obs.
AJdiuonal'funding to help lnfoCision
com e to Gallipolis was provided by the
county's five banks.
"TANF is one of our main funding

Petitions for local
options rejected
1994 GMC SAFARI XT
Auto, V6, A/C, PW, Pl, Cruise, Tilt, #800172

Racine Village
option will appear
on ballot
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I'O MER.OY - T he Mei !'s
Co unty Board or ElectiOn &lt; validated fo u r petition&lt; Wt•dn esday
filed sin cc it ~ Au gust lll l'L' tin g, and
rcj~..·ct e d .1 pe titi o n fo r ~wn loeal

liqu or

o pti o n"i

in

Rannc

Prec inct .
Those two local op tion questio ns rdating to carryo tn bet·r and

Officials said 125 people t4'ill he
employed at the start, and a 11
additional 125 are to be lrired
wit en a second location opens i 11
tht• '~forseeable fit lure," acmrdi ng
to an InfoCision press release.

em ployed at the start , and an additional
125 arc to be hired when a second location opms in the "forseeable future,"

wine ~ales in lla cinL" PrL·cint:t w ill
not ,lppe·ar on th,· b.\llo t. Th e
b oard n."'Jt'Cied rhe p crit Jons submittL•d by Victor C oum&lt;:., due to
an in !ti utlic il'llt number . of valid
signatufl'S.
Those optio n 4uestions asked

for app roval fm the sa le of carryo ut beer and win e at th&lt;' Old
Lock 24 C ampgrounds.
A local u pno n 111 R acme Viilag&lt;'. tiled by Mik e Hill for the
Racin e Ci tgo "t;Jtion , will appl.' ar
o n th e ballot . Th e pt·ti tio n for
tiut o pt 1on wa&lt; va lidated by the·
buard . s.1id 1Jirec10r Rita Smith .

Please see Ballot, Pa1e Al

sources and throug h 1[. Wt' are able ro
provid e help ro the Co mmu11i ry
Improvement Corporation and chamber
of com nH'rn· in economic dL·vclopnll'nt

efforts," Barnes sa id.
"We'll still be abk to provid,· supportive servi LL'S to clients, such as food
stam ps. so \VL' w ill n.:main involvL"d," he:
added.

Sentinel
1 Sections-

16 Pips

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

work in g together." Northup said . "Th ert"
is no reason why we can't do I 0 of these

projects by pulling togcth,·r."
lnfoC:ision has already hired some
people :md laun ched trn111ing in :mticipation of next week's openin g. It will co nintervinving and training for the
n~ xr tew months. Anyo ne interested 111

tlllll l'

applying can call 1-HHS-2.'7-5764.
Steve Brubaker, lnfoCision 's senior

vice president for te lephone marketing,
said th e Akron-based company's employee rett·ntion record is about 9U percent.
Employees have stayed on because of
th e training. work env ironment and
commitment to helpin g lnfoC isio n
clien ts, wh1 c h mcludc medical , Christian
and politi ca l organizations, Brubaker
said .
Gallipolis will be in ln foCis ion's residential division, where it wi ll con tact
people about volunteenng to work with
~roups like the Ame ri can Heart Association , Brubaker added .
"The training has to be th ere." he
exp lained. "Everything we do is about

Please see Jobs, Page Al

Visits hospital

Today's

Calendar
Classifieds

DJFS wi ll also make referrals ro clients
about applying for work with lnfoCisJon. Barnes sa id.
Cooperation between DJ FS and the
bank s was hail ed by Richard Northup,
exec uti ve director of the Ga llia C IC.
"Th is is a classic case: of a com muni ty

AS
B4-6
B7
A4
A3

Bl-2. 8
• A3

Lotteries
OtuQ
Pick 3: 9-5-2; Pick 4: 5-1-11-2
Super Lotto: 111- 12- 15-22-34-39
Kicker: 2-i&gt;-4-9- 1-7

W.VA.
Daily J: M-6-11 Daily 4: 5-6-5-7

U.S . Rep. Ted Strick·
land. [).Lucasville, and
Philip Johnson, M.D ..
president of the Chi I·
dren's Research lnsti·
tute are pictured dur·
ing a tour of Ch iI·
dren 's Hospital in
Columbus. Strickland
was honored for his
role in authoring legis·
lation for research
and prevention programs for child health,
and his support of
funding of Graduate ·
Medical Education .
The hospital provides
about $25 million in
care a nnually for chil·
dren in Strickland's
Sixth Congressional
District. (Contributed
photo)

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