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~ 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)

�•

BUCKEY·E BRIEFS ·

...........

S...tuspun
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
head of the city division responSible for millions of dollars in
overruns on city construction
projects is quitting his $74,380 a
year JOb.
. City Engineer Robert Smith,
56, said in a lrtter of resignation
he will be leaving effective Dec.

31.
Smith's boss, Columbus Pubhe Service Director Linda Page,
sa1d the city is not compen!.lung
Smith to leave.
"I have accepted his letter of
resignation. and that is all I'm
prepared to say," Page said.
Page had sairl this summer she
was outraged that Smith's ~ngi­
ll~enllg and construction diviSion had und~r~stimated by
more than S20 million the ~ost
to Install Sidewalk wh~ekha1r
ramps at city street corn~rs.
" I find it appalling and unacccptabl~ that an administrator
does 110t know what's gomg on
in Ius own diviSion;· Page said m
June.
Snuth 's office also was responsible for estimating the cost ·o f
sewer and mad unpmvemenrs
for Nationwide Arena, Improvements that are nm• coming .in at
S13 million more than what was
budgeted,
Smith's division originally
estimated the curb ramps, wh1ch
were needed to fulfill a court
settlement with a disabled-rights
group, at $3.5 million. It later
was discovered that thousands
more ramps were needed.
Adding to the problem, 478
had to be rebuilt a\ a cost of
$800,000 because the slope was
too steep, which can cause
wheelchairs to tip.
In a settlement reached last
year with the Toledo-based
Equal Justice Foundation, the
city agreed to install the ramps
by December. Officials now say
that deadline cannot be met.
: City attorneys have been trying to negotiate an extension of
the deadline. But the foundation's attorney, Mark Finnegan,
s~id Wednesday the talks with
t~e ·city have "broken down."
· The group could ask a judge
I? hold the city in contempt of
court.

Klcl1111ppln1
.suspect soupt
LORAIN (AP) - Police are
still looking for a man suspected
of breaking mto an apartment
and kidnapping his ex-girlfriend
and their child.
Polic~ said Edward Carrion
Jr., 29, was last seen Monday
carrying his form~r girlfriend,
Rachel Medina, to his car. The
co uple's 9-year-old daughter
was with them. Medina's 6year-old niece was left in the
apartment after Carrion kick~d
m the front door, police said.
A loaded handgun was found
m the apartment hallway. Medina 's niece saw the gun in . Carrion's back pocket before he
dropped it when he carried
Medina out of the apartment,
police said.
Police are concerned for the
safety of the mother and daughter, said Lt. Ric hard Resendez
" If he's carried these people
out of the area agamst their will,
he may not be willing to come
back here," he said Wednesday.
Police said Carrion has been
arrested at least five times on
domestic abuse charges: He also
has been arrested on weapons
charges , police said.

Ex-minister faces
indicb11ent
13ATAVIA (AP) - A grand
Jury has mdicted a former nuntster on charges stemming from
the ,,,]e of more than $2 .3 milhun 111 unrcg1stcn:d stock to
so me: ROO In\·c.:.·stors for projcc..·ts
that newr happ&lt;·m·d.
Inves tigators

•

(Oiltltlllt"

to

" 'arch tor hundr,·ds of thou,,Jlld, of dollars collected by
c;er,J!d Lac h dming tht• p.lSt
fom )'l'J rs but un.lL countt.•d fo r
111 ill 'i tin.mci.1 l :-.t.ltl'l114..' 1lts .
r·hc
77 -y,·ar- o ld
fnrmn
M"·thodJ~t nJilllstt..· r IS c.·xpL.'ctC'd
hl (ontcst the c harg(,~s. hts attorm·v. Lou Sirkin. s.1id Wcdiwsdav.
'
The 5,5 coullts of th e Clermont Cu u nty IIH.lictmcnt .tn.·

MARION (AP) - Police arrested Barry
Satta in the slaying of a 7 -year-old girl just
hours after her body was found in a sleeping
bag w1th a "Barry S" tag, authorities reported.
Satta, 38, of Marion, was arrested Monday
night . He was being held in a multicounty jail
o n $500,000 bond on charges of aggravated
murder, kidnapping, rape and aggravated burglary 111 the death of Bobb1e Jo Barry.
A preliminary autopsy report released
Wednesday indicated that she die.: of a broken
neck.
Her body was found Monday, one day after
she was reported nnssmg fmm her farh~r·s
hous~ m Marion, about 40 miles north of
Columbus. She was last seen sleeping with her
9-year-old sister at 4 a.m. Sunday.
Satta broke into the home at about ~ :30
a.m. Sunday, kidnapped Bobb1e, engaged m
sexual conduct with he r and then killed her,

FAIRBORN (AP) -Air safety expertise at Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base is reaching beyond
its military role with federal agencies calling on researchers to help
solw nddles m crash investigations or safety issues.
Military and civilian agencies
have b~en strivmg to do more
joint safety resea rch. That's as they
recogmze that mutual interests
and tight budgets force them to
stretch funding.
Much of the Air Force's air
safety expertiSe resides at WrightPatterson, where the Air Force
Research Laboratory h.t&gt; its headquarters.
"Wright-Pat has particular
expertise in the whole area of
aging aircraft. They also have
expertise m almost anything I
encounter," said Ron Lofaro, a
Federal Aviation Adnunistration
representative amgned to the
base.
In December 1997, WrightPat researchers testified in a
National Transportation Safety
Board hearing on the crash of
TWA Fhght 800. The jet exploded over the Atlantic Ocean on
July 17, 1996, killing all 230 people aboard.
·F~deral investigators pinned

XENIA (AP) - A jury was to
resume deciding Thursday
whether to order former Central State University President
Arthur Thomas to return ·
$127,000 of $325,000 in severance pay.
Thomas received the money
when he resigned from the
financially troubled school in
1995.
The Greene County Common Pleas Court jury heard testimony over three days in the
civil lawsuit filed by the state.
The jury deliberated for two
hours Wednesday and was
excused for the day.
Attorneys for the state said
Thomas is not entitled to
money from accumulated vacation and sick leave because it
was carried over frQm previous

years.
They sa1d Central State's
board of trustees d1d not have
the legal authonty to g1ve
Thomas that mon~y.
"They figured no one would
complain,"
Jonathan
Hollingsworth, attorney for the
st:Ite, said in closing arguments.
"He knew he was getting more
than he was entid~d to und~r
the contract."
Hollingsworth
also
said
Thomas should repay travel and
telephone expenses that were
not properly documented and
reimburse th e stJte for an
$1 ,800 tapestry that Thomas
took from the president's resi dence when he left.
Thomas' attorney, Larry
James, told the JUry that Central
State trustees amended his
chent's contract to allow the
• payments Thomas received .
"It IS pmpe&lt;, it IS legal, and
there IS nothing prohibiting the
umversity from taking the
acnon that it d1d," James sa1d .
James said the state underfunded its only hiStorically black
univer&lt;ity and that Thomas
became a VICtim of that.
"Sometimes pubhc offiCials
get embarrassed. Sometimes
public officials look for scapegoats," lames said.

STEUBE NVILLE tAI')
Jurors 011 w~dn~scby spared the
hfe of a man conviCted of
abductmg and killing two Franciscan U niversny nf Steubenville
students .
The Jefferson Cou nty Co mmon Pleas Court jury could
have recommended that 19year-o ld Nathan Hening be
sentenced to death, but chose to
request that he be given a life
sentence for aggravated murder.
Judge Joseph Bruzzese Jr.
accepted the recommendation
and se ntenced Herring to life
terms without parole in the May
1999 slaying; of Brian Muha, 18.
of the Columbus suburb of
Westerville, and Aaron Land , 20 ,
of Philadelphia.
Bruzzese added another 65
years to the sentence for lesser
charges that included two counts
of k1dnappmg, two counts of
aggravated robbery, one count of
aggravated burglary, one count
of grand theft auto and one
count of receiving stolen property.
The sa me Jury last week
found ,!-!_erring guilty of the
charges.
Herring on Tuesday made a

Education is focus of
Bush campaign· stop
TOLEDO (AP) - Republican
presidential candidate George W.
Bush was wrapping up a two-day
trip to Ohio with a visit today to a
high school near here.
Improving-public edurarion was
the theme planned for the campaign appearance at Springfield
HSgh School, just west of Toledo.
'ft!e Bush visit was to mark his
1OOth vim to a school since hi s
•
presidential campaign began more
tban a year ago.
:" We wanted to be m Toledo
because it represents a broad crosssettion or Amenca. There is a lot
t~re that we want to appeal to,''
said Bob Padu c hik, executive
director of the Bush /C heney
campaign in Ohio.
Cynthia Beckley. school distnct
superintendent, said that the
school was excited about Bush's

8999
~[f~~~·~~Rejuvinator
will do JUit like ils
~
says, it w11l rejuvenate you after

I

-.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
•

paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
l\).embtr: The Associated Pn:u, ~ml Ihe Ohio
~cwspajX:r AssOCiation
POSfMASfER: Send 1u.J drcss Cottcctlons to
f he Dail y Stnlinel, 111 Coll rt St , Pomeroy,
~a!l!l po~t11ge

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N o subscr1pt10n by ma1l permitted 1n areas
..(he re hom e carrier service i~ av.ulahle
Po,u bli shc1 reserves the right w a dJu ~t ra1es
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POMEROY A Pomeroy
man has been arrested on theft

an d other charges, and other
charges arc expected.
According to Me1g; County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bartholemew Boggs, 22, Pom eroy, was
jailed for theft , vandahsm and
breaking and entering, stemnung
from the theft of a stereo from a
car at Key Motors of Pomeroy,
and damage caused to a tow tru ck
at the 33 Auto Clime of Pomeroy.
Boggs is expected to appear m
Meigs County Court today,
Meanwhile, c harges against a
juvenile and another adult may be
filed mon, Soulsby sa1d.

To be extradited
POMEROY - James Gregory
Combee, 30. RaCine, was arrested
on two warrants all egin g probation violations in Wyoming and
Idaho. ·
Acco rding to Shenff James M .
Sou lsby. th e probation violalloll
c harges relate to fra ud artd credit
card theft.
Combee wJll be extradited to
Wyoming thi s weeke nd, and
rema1ns 111 the Meigs County jail.

•

~

Our tn1ln concer n In 111 stories Is lo be

~curatr ..U you know o r an error in a stnry,
Clll lhc newsroom 11 (7 40) 99 2- 2155 . We
¥(111 chefk your informatlnn 11nd make a
cerra:tlun lr 1nmmtrd .
•
Nrw~ Dep11rtmcnh
'ftle maln number is 992-215~ . Bepartmtnt
ej ttnslons art:
Gnef'lll ~tan1111p:e r .......................... Exl. 1101
f"ft&gt;ws ............................................. Ext 1\(ll
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Other Services
Advertblnw ..................................... E'Ct . 1104
O~l•tkln ..... ............................... Ext. II OJ
Ola.!.!IOtd Ads ................................. E:d. 1100

Grange to meet
RACINE - Star Grange 778
Will meet 111 regular sessiOn on
Saturday with a potluck supper at
6:30 p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m.
Fmal plans for the chicken barbecue o n Sept. 24 will be made, and
all members are urged to attend.

Square dance
TUPPERS PLAINS A
square . dance will be held at th e
Tuppers Plains VFW Saturday. 811 .p.m Caller will be Clifford
Logenette and mus iC Will be provided by True Country.

Homecoming
scheduled
CARPENTER- Homecommg will be held at the Mt. Uni on
Baptist C hurch, Sept. I 0. Sunday
school, 9:45 a m.; dmner at 12 .30
p.m. afternoon se rvice at 1·30
p.m with singers, 13oelk Fanuly
and Gabrie l Quartet. Nathan

Boelk will be th e speaker.

Trustees to meet
LETART Letart Township
Trustees will meet o n Monday at
5 p.m. at the office bUI!dmg.

Bake sale set
POMEROY - Peoples Bank
of Pomeroy will ho ld a bake s•le
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m . Friday.
Proceeds will benefit th e American H t&gt;art Association .

Booster meeting
POMEROY Meigs High
Sc hool Band Boosters will meet
on Tuesday at 7 p.m 111 the higli
sc hool bandroom. All member~
are urged to attend.
.'

Meeting slated
ROCK SPR INGS- Salisbury
Townsh ip Trustees will mee t on
Tuesday at 6 p.m . at the township
hall on Rockspnngs Road.

Land _
transfers posted by county recorder
POMEROY- The following
land transfer s were. recently
rep orted by Meigs County
Recorder Judith A. King:
. Mary Jo Buckley, 19 Mary Jo BuCkley Trw!. memorandum of lrust,

Richard P BLCkley, to Richard P Buckley Trust,

memorandurtl of trust;
RiChard P. Bud&lt; ley, Mary Jo Buckley, to Rictwd P
Bucl&lt;ley Trual, Mary Jo Buckley Trust. deed. Orange,
Tanya S. Bun Hess, to Stwen CraJQ , GIOr18 J
Col~. - · M&lt;ldiopo";

Arnold deed, Bedtofd,
HelenE Blackston, to Sheroe L Kane, alfidavlt,
Shene Kane, Helen E. Blackston, to Frances M
Moxley, deed, Salisl:x.Jry,
Philip D. Moxley, Frances M Moxley, Frances M.
Hooper, to Sherie Kane, Hele'n E. Balckston, deed .
SaliSbury,
Jerry Bentley, Donna Bently, to Vlcld J Heley, Col1ney L Haley, Bertamn A. Haley, deed, Pomeroy;
Virg~ Howerton, Jr , to Ph~b L Howerton, deed,
M~dleport;

Glen D. Werry, to Tuppet!l Plains Chester Water
OiS1nc1, right of WQV, Bedford;

Echlnger, deed, OWe,
'
F\.IS!ell E. Howdyshell, Polly A. HCM'dysheU, to
James 0 Gaud1l, Lowell D. Rickards, deed, Bedford.
Fred W CroN Ul, Galh~ Crow. Garson Crow. Bar·

Rosalie Weiman, Floyd Halt, FlOyd D Hart, Bfl19
Sue Hart, to Tl!pp8rs Plains Chester Water DIStnc1,
nght of way, Bedford ,
Martha Chevalier, Gary Chevalier, to Tl4'P6f'S
Pln16 Chester Water District . "Jht otway. Olt.~e :
:James H Starcher, GlOria J. Starctlef', to T~pers
Pl&lt;uns Olester Water DIStrict, right of way, OINe;
Jeny M John5on, Jr , Do~hy Johnson, to Tuppe~ PJaim Chester Water District. rig ht of wmy, &amp;11ton:
Dons DaVIS, Dons M 08\IIS. IO Tuppers Plains
Chester Water 01Str1Ct, nghl of way, Orange,
Enc Tuttle Candace Tuttle, to TuppeB Plains
Chester Water Dntr1ct. ngh1 of way, Chester;
Raymond E. Proffitt, to State of Ohio, deed, Suton,
Maty Dudet\, RIChard M. Dudek, John Robinson.
Gloria C Robinson , to John C Settles, deed ,

bara Crow, Uoda Crow Beegle, Theordore M Beegle,
to A.l~ee Faye Chapman, Alice Fave Gardner, deed,

Marvin Reed Darlene Mildred Reed, to Craig

Robert E

Buck, to Russell Cundlft, deed,

Colurrbia ;

Shelly Co"lHlfl y Inc , to Columbus Southam
Powar, right of way, Lebanon,
Inez Wickline, to Scott A. Wlddll"'ff, deed, Sutton.
Samuel Terzoppl0u8, Narsa Terzoppbus. to Flo)&lt;d
C. H~man , Mary 8 HM::kman, cteed, SaliSbury:
Edna Baumen, to Dennis M. Eichinger, Ga11 M

Pomeroy/Salisbu~

Olester.
Reed, Jamee Reed. Steven Ae9d deed, Olive,
visit.
John Edward ClOnCh, Amanda S. Cklnch, to .hhn
Fbchard L Bearhs, June A. Bearhs, to Ryan N
Edward CKlne:h,Amanda S. Clonch, Deed, F\Jtland,
"It is an opportunity for all the seams, Oeboratl A. Beame. deed, Chester.
Rita Jean Yeauger, deceased, to Kenneth L
Arthur C. Gibson, Jr., to Jan E. Derriosky, Timothy
students to be there, and many of E. Dei'TIO&amp;ky, deed, Sctpio,
Yeauger, altld8\lil , Salisbu~
James A Cunntngha.in, Fredl8 I. Cumingham, to
A. Gasto, Karen U C&amp;to, lo James W Clethem arc gomg to be actually land,John
Stephanie G Cleland , deed, Rutland
Paull carpenter, Shawnette M. Cunningham. deed
Lebanon,
•
Village ci Rutland, to State of Ohio, deed Rutland:
mvol ved in the event ," she said.
OM B l111iS, GIM R ' lillii,l o Randy f! Eiiig, Emily
Trust eee of AIA!and~ to-State ot Ohkl~ aeed . Rut~ "We always encourage our stu M. Bing, deed. F\JI:Iand ,
land,
'
Angela D Hayman. to Randy Mills, Aederilh Mills
Ja6eph W. Davis, .k. to Brian Arnold, Nancy
dents to be involved in civic events
Aimee Mills , deed, Sutton;
and dect10ns," Beckley said. "We
hold our own mock elections This
IS one Situation where they will
COUNT Y COMMISSIONER
j ust be involved earlier than usual."
(1/l / 01), Jim Sheets (R), Janet
In 1996, Jack Kemp the
Howard
(D),
incumbent;
Republican vice presidential canRECORDER: Judy King (R),
AI
didate at the time - campaigned
incu mbent , A. Tom Lowery;
at Springfie ld H1gh School. Fewer
Also validated were .the peti- PROSE CU TING ATTORNEY
students were able to parti cipate m tiOns of Patrick H . O'Brien and John R. Le ntes (D), in cumbent,
that event because it was on a Steven L. Story for the office of Pat Story (R); CLE RK OF
Sunday afternoon. Beekley said.
Meigs County Court Jud ge. COU RTS: Marlene Harrison
Bush was travehng to the Toledo O'Brien is the mcumbe nt .
(R), mc umb ent. Betsy H~rald
area fron1 Cincinnati , where two
In August, the board validated N 1codcmus (D) ; SHERIFF:
of hi s former busmess partners petitions tor Charles H. Knight Ralph E. Tru ssell (R), J effrey
hoped to raise $2 nulhon m cam- and C. Ed. Evans as independent Allen Miller (D),j.m1es M. Soulspaign funds Wedn esd•y
candidates for Me1g; County by,
(Write- in ),
in cu mbent,
commissioner. Both ca ndidates R .o bei t
Beegl e
(Write -in);
filed for the term beginningjan. 2. TREASURER: H owa rd E.
That seat 1s now occ up ied by Jeff Frank (R). incumbent, Ron P.
Thornton, a Democra t. John FISh- CasCI (D).
er Jr. is the Republi can candidate.
Common Pleas Court. Judge
AI
Candidates for oth er office are: Fred W. Crow Ill and Coroner

Ballot

from Page

Vernal Well, to Vernal H Well, LOUIS&amp; Well, deed,
Bedford:
Vernal H. Wei. LCI.Jise Well to J1ll Vvoone Well.
easement, M&amp;IQS:
Dale E. Taytor, to Kemeth SIZer, Angel Sizer. Karl
Sctvnd, Ame Schmid!, MIChael A Sizer, deed,
l ebanon;
Patty Miler. to Michael 1·1111, Mindy Hit, deed, Syracuoe·
Goldie L Gilmore. to state ot otilo, deed,
P~;

Charles 0 W1lson, deceased, to lola M, WilSon,
affidavll:,

Elva Browning, Evelyn Kelly Ehl'a. to Elll88t G.
Skaggs, Chal')10ne Sb.ggs, deed, POIT'Iel'oy;
F~ Herald, Jr, to DiMh M. Stewart, deed, Syra-

cuse,

Jotvl Redovlan, Jr., Rosetta Lee Aedovlan, to Jodi
H George, deed, Chester.
Robert E. Musser, Roberta Musser Paul A. Musser, Deborah MUSS81', to Danny A. TillS, Saundra Ti~is.
deed, Rutland ;
Danny 9 Howan:l, Eva S Howard, to Danny
Jesse Howard, ~isaa L Howard, deed , Scipio;
GeorgeW Long , Helen Long to GeorgeW. Long,
Helen Long Deed, Lebanon:
David Young, Daphne Young. Monongahela
POMK~, easement, 011119,
...lotYl A Jeffers, Bu&lt;*eyv Aural EMctrtc ~rfi,
easement, Rutland,
Douglas K. Gampbel, Chen l. Ca~l to Buck~ F\Jml Electric, ea.sement Col.IITt)IQ,
Ct-urch of Ctftt, to ColumtKJe So.Jthem Power.
ea.&amp;emeJj: ,

Boggeos, deed, Letart.

Chnstine Joyce B;tioy.

Jo~e

Christine Rouse,

Fred BaiOy, to Goldie Gimore, deed , Middleport
Jerry W. Bogard, M81\lyn Bogard, to ChMe8 E.
MansiJekl, Jr.. Stephanie M Mansfield, deed,

Lebanon:
VIOla Moon. deceased. to Angela M. Kerr, deed,
Mlddlepon;
Gary L. MIChael, SharOn MiCtlael, to Spencer T.
Jared, Krnberty A. Spencer, deed, Chester,
Roger Jacob Grueser Trust, IQ Roger Nease,

deed. Sulton.
Kety Klmiaon, 10 MIChael A Knnbon,

deed.

ColurTi)la;
AliCe Faye Chapman, Allee Fa~ Gardner, 10
Thomas Clifford Ill, Michelle Oldaker, deed, Chelter,
Marcus Paul Bratton. deceased. to Chetcie Cormet
stoarre. Chek:le Cofrbs Bratton, affidavit, Rutland. '
DaVId A Murphy, deceaSed, to Malt&lt;: Alen MlMP~
certificate, CINe,
Leota M Massar, deceased, to W. Sta rling M•~
!W, Diana l Ekdley, Charles W1lllalll Massar, certift.
ca2e, Orange
·
Comlee Manuel Cummins, Pl.issell V OJmmlna,
Austell
Cumrnns, deed , Sutton:
Norman 0 . Weber, \fefa A. Wetoer, to Michael A.
Sanders, Rhonda Sanders, deed, Onlnye.

vance

Che8ter;

c..near..

Tormty l.
JoM M Crerneane., to
CokJI'l'i)Ut SOuthern Power, euement, Chester.
John Fishel', .k , Sarah S. Flahe!', to Coluni&gt;us

Southem Power, ea&amp;ement, Chester,
Paul E Kloea Gloria K Kloes. to Columbus
~m

Power, . . .ment.

c~w.

Joseph E Foster, Joseph Edward Foster, Jr , Joe
E Foster, Joann Foster, to Foster Joint Trust, certificate,
Harry J. Douglas, to Hany J Douglas, Desale

Douglas D. Hunter (R) are unoppose4 m their b1ds for reelection ,
and Eugene Triplett (R) is also
unopposed in hiS race for Coun ty Engineer, after defeating
incumbent Robert Eason in the
March primary electiOn.
Write-in ca11didates for office
have until Sept 18 to file th Cir
petitions, and voters who wish to
register to vote have until Oct. l 0
to do so.

Judge

&amp;om Page

f"riday. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Oh10, b y the

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POMEROY - Unm of the
Meigs
Emergency
Services
answered seven calls for assistance
on Wednesday Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :04 a.m., O h10 124, assisted by
Rutland, Zachary Fulk, Holzer
Medical Center;
2:57 p.m., Veterans Memorial
Hospital , Robert DaviS, HMC;
4:18 p.m., OhiO 681, Charles
Ziegler, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
8:31 p.m., South Second
Avenue, Ann Davis, HMC ;
11 :46 p.m., Ohio 684, assist~d
by Rutland, Eddie Marcu m,
HMC.
POMEROY
9:07 a.m ., Flood Road, Mary
Braley, treated;
3:08 p.m. , Gold Ridge Road ,
Rach"e] Lee, HMC.

Pomeroy.

or

~

•

POMEROY - Denise A. Persons Clark, 39, Chester, died Monday,
Aug. 28, 2000 in Elkin , N.C.
.She was the daughter of Denver Persons ofWest Columbia, W.Va .,
and Betty L. Hart of R aCine, and was a homemaker.
She was also a n'e mber of the Full Gospel Li ghthouse Ch urch in
Pomeroy.
She was preceded in death by a brother, C harles Russe ll Persons; a
sister, Marcia Ann Persons; paternal gr-a ndparents, Elchard and Ste lla
Persons; maternal grandfath er, Henry Cutlip.
. Surv1vmg 111 addition to her parents are her husband, Robert L.
Clark of Anderson , S C.; two daughters, Misty and Michelle C lark,
both of Anderson; three sons, Derek, Tyson and Mi chael Clark, all of
Anderson, two brothers and a SISter-in-law, Dcnms a nd Pam Perso ns of
Po meroy, and David Persons of Meigs Cou nty; two sisters·and brothers-m-law, Reva and R1ck Stafford of New Haven ,W.Va.,and Lisa and
Ronnie Bolin of Mason, W.Va.; her maternal grandmother, Reva Cutlip of Parkersburg, W.Va.; and several aunts, uncles , nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Friday in Full Gospel Lighthouse C hurch ,
Pomeroy, under th e direc tiOn of Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va. Officiating will be Pastor Roy Hunte r Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Fnends may call at the church on Friday from 11 a.m. until
the time of se rvices.

tin1e .. .' '
At that pmnt, he stopped
speaking and began crying.
A second man accused m the .
slayings, Terrell Yarbrough, 19, o(
Pittsburgh, IS to go on tnal Sep~
13 HL' could face the doath-penalty if convicted of aggravac... ed murder.

Buckeye Egg was respons1ble for
fly Infestatio ns around Its farms
and must take steps to eliminate
the problem .

t'

Denise A. Persons aark

$1049

9f Its barns and mmt install
compostmg equipment to cut
down on the breedmg of fli es
Lickmg Coun ty Co mmon
.Pleas Judge Gregory Frost ruled
th at the moisture conten t of
manure at Buckeye Egg's Wyandot Cou nty farm was above th e
30 percent level the co urt ha s
detenm ned the com pany must

'

. RUTLAND - Rhea J. "Sis" WilliS, 00, Rutland, d1ed Monday, Aug.
28, 2000 at her reSidence, after an extended illness.
·
She was the daughter of Myrtle L. Hanmg of Pomeroy. and the late
R,ay M. Haning. She was a homemaker and an employee of the Ohio
University Inn .
She was also preceded m death by her husband, Harold Willis; two
brothers, Randy and Keith Haning; and a granddaughte r.
Su rviving In addinon to her mother are two sons and daughters-inlaw, Bnan Keith and Dee Willis of Rutland , and Troy Allen and Kathy
WilliS of Chester; a daughter, Renee Lynn Willis of New York ; five
brothers, Nolan and June Hanmg, Ronnie Haning, Butc h and LOis
H,aning, Thurman Haning and Nancy Clark. all of Pomeroy, and Jerry
Hamng and Peggy Wandling of Albany; two sisters, Wanda and Jerry
Searles of Columbus, Donna Haning and Da le C lonch of Pomeroy;
two grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews .
GraveSide services were held today, Thursday, Aug . 31, 2000 at II
a.m. in White Oak Ce me tery, Harrisonville. Of!ic~atmg was Pastor Paul
Taylor. VisitatiOn was held in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, on Wednesday.

SAlE PRICE

NEWARK (AP) - A judge
ruled Wednesday that a Buckey~
Egg megafarm in northwest
Oh10 has too much moiSture m
chtcke n manure sto red in so me

I'

Rhea J. ·sis' Willis

tearful ple.1 lu the Jllrnrl
He sa1d he had always wanted
biggt•r and better things and
hoped Ius athletiC talents would '
lead hnu that way He WlS a tr.K k
standout at age 11 and was mv1t-'
ed to paruC!patc 111 the Jumor:
.
O lymptcs m Lomstana
HIS family followed hun to
the event and Ius brother, Der-·
nck , drowned m a lake in Mi s- ·
slsSipp!. Hernng sa1d ht• blamed
himself for hiS brother's death
and gwe up trac k.
One of Herrin g's defense
attorneys, David Doughten ;
as ked Herring 1f he felt responsible for the deaths of the student&lt; .
"Yes," Hemng rephed.
Herring then m ade a state;
ment to the JUry. " I know in cer;
tain Situauons. an apology am't
going to get It. I am so sorry f6,.
what happened ,'' he said. "If '
could turn back the hands

Judge rules
that me~afarm
must bu1ld
compost

meet to control flies.
Fros t ruled April

EMS logs 7 calls

Man s ared death
stu ent slayings-

the explosiOn on a c.tvt·r no us,
vapor-filled ft1d tank m the jet's
center wing section. But what
triggered the e&gt;.cplosion bam~d
them . The l3ocmg Cu. sa1d the
fud tank ron tain ~d nothing that
could haw ca use d a spark, includ•
in g some low-voltage clcctncal
fuel -b'&lt;lllge probes.
The safety board turned for
help to CIVIlian Air Force engineers in the Materials and Manufacturing Directorate at WrightPat. The engineers had spec ial
expertiSe m wmng matenals and
dectromcs, and expenence m
investigating Air Force mishaps.
"They said, 'Based on the
expertise we need, you're the
only ones who can do this,"' said
researcher George Slenski.
, The work of Wright- Pat
researcher Steve Gerkin ehminated static electricity as a possible
cause of the explosion. But Slenski and David Johnson showed
that circumstances could combine to make sparks fly on the
low-voltage fuel probes.
Although the probe wires carned only tiny arnounts of current, o utsicte the fuel tank they
were bundled with (ugh-voltage
pown w1res

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

Manon detective Rick Winfield alleged m an prayers and toys is forming to mark the spot
where Bobbie Jo's body was founJ
affidavit.
The girl's parents, Max Barry and his former
A shoe print found at th~ girl's residence
and a tennis shoe found in Satta's garage had a wife, Mary Cathcr111e Barry, conducted 'a
Similar tread desi!;fl. and his car \vas seen at the memorial service at the site Wednesday. Aboui
I 00 people join~d the family.
Barry reSidence at 4:30a.m. Winfield stated.
Max Barry saJd h~ still was troubled by the :
Police have searc hed two houses and three
vehicles smce the discovery by a bicyclist of the arrest of Satt:l , a man· he has known for more-than 20 years and who IS "like a brother."
girl's body along a road.
Barry said he would like Satta to " tell the··
Police m a search-warra nt affidavit indicated
truth"
about what happened to Bobbie Jo, wlio
they sought a handwritten note wllh the
words," Babe I love you. I know I messed up," on Monday would have started first grade. .
Jean Trachsel, a 71-year-old grandmother;
duct tape, sexual devices, condoms, plant burs,
photos of neckties and sleeping bags and sam- left flowers by the road Wednesday.
"I wouldn't know the girl 1f she walked up .
pie&gt; of bodily fluids, dirt and children's clothing, mcluding a white shirt and white sho rts . . to my door, but it JUSt hum me no end," TraAt the ume she was reported missmg. Bob- chsel sa1d of Bobbie Jo's death .
A fu neral for Bobbie Jo was planned for at
bie Jo was wearing a long white T-sh1rt and
II a.m. Friday a&lt; the Wesley Umted MethodiSt
whitt•, knee-length shorts trimmed· in black.
Meanwhile, a shrine of flowers, cards with C hurch in Manon .

Air base lends experts for
civilian aviation problems

Jury eyes
repayment daim

f

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Suspect anrested after discovery of sleeping bag

felonies that call for jail time,
officials said.
The mdictment includes 16
couim of the sale of unregtstered securities, 25 counts of
misrepresentation in the sale of
unregistered securmes,
12
counts of fraudulent activity, one
count of operating a pyramid
sales plan and one count of
engaging in a pattern of corrupt
activity, assistant Clermont
County Prosecutor Tony Brock
said.
For the past four years, Lach
has been pitching investments to
fund a variety of proj~cts,
including an outer-belt highway
around the region, a high-tech
monorail system and a It 0story tower for senior housing
In May, a Clermont Co unty
JUdge signed an order prohibitmg Lach · from selling &lt;rock
thmugh any of his companic,.
Acting after a yearlong investigation by the Ohio DiviSion of
Securities, the judge appoint~d a
receiver to take control of Lach 's
.assets.

•

Thursday,
August
31, 2000
.
'

Thursday, August 31, 2~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

the rules by in c ludmg the term
"endorse d by southern O hio's
top pro secutors and shenftS " m
campaign ads and litl'rature w hen
o nl y 5 of 1he 14 elected shenffs in
the Fourth IJIStn ct had endorsed
hn n .
T he Fourth l)mn ct snves
Adams, Athens, Galha, Highland.
Hocking, Jackson. Lawren ce,
Meigs, l'Ickaway, P1 ke. Ro ss.
SCioto, Vmton and Washington
co unt ies.

Jobs
from Page AI
crcJ tmg thJt C:tl\'li'OillllC..' l1t .md
opport unit y, .uJd 1hat people art•
co mfOrt.lbk WJth the o rgJm za ti o n-.; we work \Vith ."
" I think the qua hty of the work
force 1s very stro ng- h ere. w1th
exrcll cnt nlll1111lll1trJUons sk.J lb
that w tll complement wh:lt we
do." 13rub.lkt•r added.
lnf(JCIS i ffi !l opL'rJt&lt;.'S 15 C.lll C&lt;.' tl tl'f'\ tn scvl' n loc.1 ti ons, inclucimg

Akr&lt;Jll s uburb~ . Austmt own
and Green. and at C larksburg .lJid
Humin gton tn West VIrginia. llie
C\'-'O

tlr m Ius bc(,'!l in busines'\ si nce
I YR".
"We 'rc h.1ppy to h.we the'c
people hcre and wdl do cverythmg we c.m to help thc m ."
Northup so1d "We look for good
t hin ~" to h.1ppen ."

SPACE COWBOYS (PG13)

VALLEY WEATHER

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)

Chance of showers Friday

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)

7:20 SUN· THURS
MATINEES
3:20

FRI &amp; SAT

THE REPLACEMENTS (PG13)
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stuck between two we,nher
systems, the tri- county area will
have partly cloudy ski es an d
wann temperatures on Friday, the
National Weath er Service said.
Highs w ill be in the 80s.
A low pressure ~ystcm to the
south wdl dr;tw mutsturl· into the.:.·
;1rea a nd Lrl':tte .1 possibility of
attcnJoon showers.
Lo\vs tomght wrll be 111 the:
hOs.
Su nset tolllght Will be at H.ll4
.md su lln '\c on Fnd:1y ;lt 7 .1 111.
Weather forecast:
To 111ght.. .Mostly c)Dudy until
midnight . then fog tlt-velop lllf!.

Lows 1n th e upper 60s Li ght
50lltiJL' ,l !it wmd.
Friday.. Mostly cloudy With a
chance of showers. Highs 1n the
nud 80s. C han ce o f rain 30 percem .
Fnday mglll ... Mmtl y cloudy
with a c h ;ltlC l' of showers . Lows m
the upper l&gt;lls.
Extended forecast:
s,,tu rday.. Partly cloudy With a
c han ce of showers . 1-l1g hs in the
nud 8th.
Sunday and Labor Day.. Partly

Lloudy With .1 cham:c of sh owers.
Lows 111 the upper 60s a11d h1 gh'
111 the nnd 80s.

7:00 SUN - THURS

I

THE CELL (fl)

F1rstar -

23~..

Gannett - 56',,
Gen13ral Electric - 60
Harley Davidson - 48 1't
Kmart - 7' .,
Kroger - 22 ~·
Lands End - 24i~
Ltd - 20
Oak Hill Financial - 16:.
OVB - 26\

. BBT -

26'~,.

Peoples - 15
Premter -

6

Rockwell - 39l.

Rocky Boots - S'111
AD Shell - 61 ')•

Sears - 31\
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 48l.
Wendy's - 19:.
Worth1ng1on - 1o
Daily stock reports are lhe
4 p.m clost ng quotes of
lhe previous day's transacttons,
provided by
Advest of Gatlipohs .

110•~

7:30 .

Showing Friday 11 7:30

lilllOW MAN

IRI

..

(Tiviler) EhsaOO!h Shue, ~m Mm;:re:,;, lllcoo

9:45

C8Y0R UllJ

!POUt
9:55
ICMiecly.!lomarce)l'ijierPerabo, M.. llelo.n. Go:xlnoJ
Showing Fridarat 9:55

Ntw SboU's SI#Jrling Frllllly

II8.WIII: fndln

~I
7:45 10:0()
jAclior/ldl!ntu~) MMn PiU, Ovllllljll~ La~

SUN ·THURS 7:00PM
New Fall Ho urs Thro ugh October
Tuesday Evening All Seats $3.00
Certain Features Excluded

WIIPBI

'"'

7:45, 10:00

!Comedy)Arnand! Poet Bnar Van Hill lone lll~r

ALL AGES ALL TIMES $4.00

Beef Bar-B-Que, Small
Fry and Small Drink

Only

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP- 34),
Akzo - 44 '1~
AmTech/SBC - 4J l,
Ashland Inc - 35~.
AT&amp;T - 31),
Bank One - 33 ~ ..
Bob Evans - 17 /e
3
BorgWarner - 34 "
:::hamp1on - 3/.
Charming Shops - 5'1..
City Holding - 7l,
Federal Mogul - 1Ql,

3:30

AllllMUIIIW Yfll

]Dra1111) ~cliartl Gere, Wim R)ller, s.r. ~~

braziet:

2. 99
Dick 5' Ruby Vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
5' After The Game For Their
Friday Night Specials.

MIDDLEPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER

992-3322

�Page A4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 3 I, 1000

ly the Bend

._Th_e_D_a_ily=--Se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _

'EstUBmd {111948

Dear Ann Landers : I recently met a
nice guy -- or so I thought . He is 42
years old, has n ever married, and wo rks as
a . pharmac ist. We have bee n dating for
two m o nths . In that time, he ha&lt; made
several derogatory remarks about various
ethnic groups. He has insulted my biracial nephews and my Latina sister-m- law.
and has made some nasty comments
about my gay fri ends.
I have no intentio n of continuing tlus
relation ship. but I'm not sure whether or
not I should bother to explai n why:
Should l be u pfront and tell him I am
atTended by his bigotry' Or should I just
stop acc eptin g hi s phon e calls. ond let
h11n th ink 1\·...· lost interest ? I do n o t
u nd crs und h0w som eont' wh o is so
~vd l-e du cttt• d could be so ign o rJnt. -Sin u v .,ll cy. Cahf.
Dear Sin1i Valley: Edu c.ltton is nn
guar.tntel.:' :1gam ~ r bigorry. Som t' highly
t•du c ued people arc ral'i St!&gt;. Almost
alw.1ys. t t '~ wlut t h ~;y hJ\'t' lc:.trncd Jt

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

General Manager

Larry Boyer

Advertising Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

LtiUn w tht rdiwr Ol'f we/colftt. Tlrty should H ltss tlUJ" J()() words. All llmm 11n subjuf
tu rditinr and muiil M i·ignrd arul incluJr lllklnss nnd l•l•phurrc na111NT. No Ullrtirnrd knrn •·ill
b. pMblishtJ. tt~tlrn .\ houiJ IJc. in rouJ ltUlr, othlnnins iuuts, n01 p.-rsurwliliu
Tht npinions uprruHI i11thr ~tJum tt
an tht cnnu ru1.u of tltr Ohio Valky Pt~blislrin8
Co.'s rJiwridl boon/, unless orhrn.·iu not«/.

.to. .

OUR VIEW

•

·welcome
New job creation may spur
tri-county development
Bravo'
The announc ement of lnfoCis10n Managemem Corp."s decisio n
to open a call center in Gallipo lis. with the potential of creatin g up
. to 250 jobs, is wekome news not only for Gallia County but its
:neighboring co unties, too.
·: It marks the addition of another tele marketing firm to the area
after Meigs County offi cials announced this summer that a si milar
com pa ny plans to set up operations in Pomeroy.
·.
. - The addition · of a significant number of jobs to a communiry is
great. But with joble~&lt; rates in the tri-county h overing between 5
. and I0 percent- sometim es more - establishment of a perma. n ent employment base is enough to make anyone's day.
· Th at's especially true for people seeking a job of any kind in a
region hit with too many employment losses over the years. The
prospect of 125 jobs to sta rt at lnfoCision , and 125 more to come,
' is a ray of hope we haven't seen in some time.
Richard Northup, G allia County's ·•Community Improvement
Corp. executive director, said Wednesday the addition of lnfoCision
to the local business scene will hopefully serve as a spur to "get the
area started again ."
· . We share in that hope. Creation of a solid job base, no matter
·?;here it starts, is the key to a thriving area.
. : Attracting an employer that usually looks to larger communities
:!'hen expanding sa)'5 something about the area. It tells us there is a
·willingness by local officials to make_ life better for its residents by
getting jobs here. It also tells us that there are a number of people
willing and able to go to work.
·
As Northup pointed out, the commitment to bringing lnfoCision
to the area was demonstrated by the contribution of public fundsfro m welfa re refo rm program m onies - and investment from local
banks. Local o ffici als took the lead when the opportunity arose to
attract an employer.
That tells us our communities are w illing to do what it takes to
put people to work · with local resources.
Those messages will be transmitted to other potential employers.
T here are indications they are listening. When announcements of
business expansio n are made, we 'll know the m essages were heard.

:. TODAY . IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Aug. 3 1, the 244th day of 2000. There are 122
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. O n Aut&gt;. 31, 1Sl80, Poland's Solidarity labor movement was born
with an ag reement signed in Gdansk th at ended a 17-day-old strike.
· On t his date :
r;
: In 11-l kn. an earthquake rocked C harlesto n. S. C. , k ill ing up to 11!1
people.
· In 18 H7, Tho ma.s A. Edison received a patent for his Kinetmrope.
a devi ce whi ch produ ced moving pi ctures.
In 18 H8, Mary Ann Nicholls was found murdered in Lo ndon 's
East End in what is generally regarded as the first &lt;1ay in!1f romnlltted
by Jack th e Ripper. c
•
•·
· In l l)35. President Franklin Roosevelt signed an act prohibiting
th e export o f U.S . arms to belhgerents.
In 194 1. th e radio prog ram "The Great Gildcrsl ccVt'" debuted on
NBC.
In 19 54 . Hurri cane C arol hit th e north eastern Uni ted States,
.,.
resul ting in nearl y 70 death s.
In i 9h&lt;J, boxer R ocky Marcian o died in a li ght airplan e cra sh 1n
low"· a d ay be fore his 46th bmhday.
In I '&gt;H5, R ich ard Ramirez, later convicted o f California's " N ight
Stalker" killinb"· w as captured by res idents o f an East Los Angel es
neighbo rhoocL
·
In I CJHh. 82 peo ple were killed w hen an Aerome xico jetliner and
a small pr iva te plan e co llid ed over Cerritos, C alif.
In 19HH. 14 p eo ple were kill ed w hen a Delta !Joeing 727 crash ed
durin !,( ta keoff from Dall as- Fort Wo rth Ai rport.
Te n years ago: U N Sec retary- General Javier Perez de C u ellar met
tWJCt' \V irh l r;~q1 Fo reign Mi mstc:r Ta riq Aztz m Am man, Jordan. try1ng ro ncgoriatL' J ';oluri on to the Persia n Gulf cri sis.
Fl\·c· vc·Jr&lt; "!'o: At the OJ. Sin! psb n tri al 1n Los Angel es, Judge'
L.mcc Ito ruled th e defense could play on ly rwo exa mple~ of p o li ce
dt:l~l riv~: M:trk Fuh rm an 's rac ist co m ments from t.tped co nvc r'iJttom \\'l t h ,1 o;;;cn·c: nwntcr.
Om.· year ago: D L·t ro it 's teac ht·rs wt·nt on stn ke, w1pmg out the
liN d,,,. of elm for 172,00(1 st!lde nts in o ne o f th e large&lt;! teac her'
'trikc·1 ·,n years. (T he wa lko ut ia&lt;ted nine days.) An LAPA l:loemg
7.17-21111 cra1h cd o n ta keo ff fro m Um·nos Aires, Arge11ti na , killin g 72
pc·opk. 1ncluuin g five o n th e ground .
To,L,y\ Bm bd.1ys: Broadcast jo uni'a list D an iel Sc h or r is 84. Com ed ian Buddy Hackett is 76. Acto r J ames Co burn is 72. !Jaseb all H all of-Famer Fran k Robmson is 65. Actor Warren Ucrl inger is 63. R oc k
llll!Simn Jerry All ison (Bud dy H o lly and th e C ri ckets) is 61. Actor
J.lc k Thompson "(,O.Yiolin ist ltzhak Perl man is 55. Smger Va n M o rmon " SS . Artor R1chard Cere is 51 . R oc k singe r Glenn T ilbrook
(S queeze) "~.&gt;.Rock music 1an G ina Sch ock (The G6-Go\) is 43 .
Sin!(er Tony I kFranco (T h e D e Franco Family) is 41 . Si nger C hri&lt;
Whitley 1\ ~!&gt; .

Thursday, August 31,1000

lf'Oman trying to decide how to best dump bigot boyfriend

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Page AS

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
hutne.
By all means, tell the phJrmac ist preCisel y why you don 't w JSh to continue
the relationship. He !ll'cds to hear from
you that his in tolerance is despicable and
has m ade a friendship impossible. It J USt
mt g ht get him to rcthmk some of his
con c epts . Lt.•t's hopl' so .
Dear Ann Landers: MY moth er has
Alzheimer's J1 ~cas~ .m d is c~rrl'ntly in an
ass istt·d- livin g fanliry. Th e l' ntirc! fJmily
supported my t:1thcr\ dt·u sJo n to place

her

111

the ho tne wh l' l1 IlL· coulci no

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS
boxes that have sections filr "Bills
Paying bills
be paid" and " Pa1d biUs and
with categones for specifcan be easier . icreceipts"
e&gt;:penses. Ha-k necqed items pn
- a
home
than you think! hand
book. fina ncial calenchr. checks,

GORE

BY BECKY BAER
MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Gore plays fost and loose with Bush tax plan
•

more than jmt 'imall change."
But Gore was deliberately di storting and
demagobruing th e vast sweep o f BLPih 's tax-l:ut
plan - usmg an .old cl ass~ wa 1farc tactic th at
th l' IJ e moc rat&lt;o~ h ave b een LISin g ~1 gain st
in comc-tJ x cuts for LkcaJl·s.
T hat tactic m easures the t:l x cuts acco rdin~
to th~.;· amo unt of 111 0 111.)' that th os~: 111 the to p

income levels would save versus th ose at th e to 10 perc em, reducing their in come tax burbottom . Of course, using that comparison, it den by one-third and effectively removing 6
looks as if those at the top are making out like million more people in this group from the tax
bandits while those at the bottom are gettin g rolls.
the sho rt end of the stick.
While most of those in this lower bracket do
At one point in his speech, Gore said th at not pay income taxes, tht•y are taxed at a m uch
"for every S10 that goes to the wealthies t I higher rate for each additional dollar they earn.
percent, middle-class families would get one The purpose of Bush's tax cuts for these ambidime, and lower-illcome fami lies would get tious workers is to lesSt' n the in creased tax bite
one penny."
on additional income fro m overtime or other
This is sheer demagoguery. As Kessler cor, jobs they may perform simply to get ahead .
rectly points o ut, such a compariwn "lacks
As the rates are 1iow structured, the prog resimportant context - that under the progres- liivc incom e tax code acts as a crud disin cen·
sive tax system, most of the taxes arc paid by tive for lower-i ncome working families to
the wealthy."
climb the econom ic ladder into the middle
For example, Internal R evenue Se rvice fig- class. And by ridiCuling Bush's proposed
ures sh ow that th e wealthiest 20 percent of ci)anges in the tax ra tes for those at the lower
in come ea rners pay 80 percent · of all federal income levels , G o re is in effect defending the
income taxes . Thus. if their tax rates are cut by, statlls q uo that keeps poorer workin g-class.
say, 4 percent, they stand to receive a much familie s eco nomically trapped within this
larger tax cut in pure dollar terms than wo uld higher tax box.
.
the bottom 20 percent, whose income is a lot
Gore's ta rgeted tax credits. on the o ther
less.
hand. is only undnst:mdable to tax expertS.:
l3ut this doesn 't mean that an across-the- Worse. th ey wo uld begin phasing out working
board income- ta.' cut can't b e fair as f.1r as th e couples earnin g over $61l,l11JO. " In our plan,:
percentage o f cuts for t•ach m come bracket is you don't have to do anythin g.You get a tax cut
concerned, even th ough people in the higher because yoti wo rk," says Dush economl c adviS:..:
brackets will keep more i11on ey than those m cr Larry Lindsey.
·
the lowest brackets - most of w ho m pay no
Gore \ decepti ons arc even worse w h e n he
inco m e taxes.
chargc·s that Bush \ tax cuts wou ld use up the
[n f:1ct, as Kess ler also pu inrs out in hi s ani- surplus and plunge "' into a deficit . In fact ,
d e abo ut G ore's " truth-stretchin g," Uush 's tax Bush's ta x cuts to ta l $ 1.3 trilhon , leaving an
cuts " would reduce th e tax bill lo r v1rtually estimated $ 1 &lt;rillion over I (I years for other
every income group between 4 percent and 7 pri o riti es.
percc:nt, with some pcopk in the hig:h erGore. o n the ot her hand . wo uld spend all of
inco nll' groups gettin g l e~s of a tax cut in per- the surplus . A new study by the Natio nal Taxrentage term s than poortT Am ericans."
payns Un ion says that his sp ending proposals
Wh;.u Gore Jid no t 'i ay m his convention would cost a w hopping $2 ..1 trilli on. le:wing us
speech was that th e heavi c"t tax c ut~ in Uush 's with a ~!dici t of $1 1&lt;1 billion at th e end of this
plan are aimeJ at middl e- to ]own-in com e decade .
t: unili es. For ex ample , people in the lowest
(Dtlfll1ld Lunbn1, 11 l\lc·II'SjlliJ'Cr l-:'rtrcrpri$l' A ssociinco me ta:x bracke t are t.IXl'd at a marginal t.tx t~ fi(l ll rohmruisr, i:; .filling i11 }'r i\lorttlll K(mdratkc
rate o f 15 percent. Uush wou ld drop th:lt rate rfti.&lt;week .)

HARDBALL

Voters get permission slip to back current
policies:·
,,
.

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS
WA SHIN C T O N - AI Core ts n c·it lwr a
~~:n iu ' n or an or.lto r, nor i ~ h e c~o;pcc i a ll y
lu cky. His leapfrogg•ng of Ceorge B ush in th e
op ini on po li o;; n:q ui n:". dt cn:.·t() JT. an expb natio n .
Hac\ llll ll l':Voter..; arc nor .l 'i u n d ecide d a"
th e polio;; have 'llggc"tt·J . Th t·y cntt· rt.•d thl'i
elt:ctor,tl o;;;cao;;;on . ao;;; th ey h ave "&lt;J m.lny rimeo; ;
hcfore . \Va n tJng ro vote for t he cur rt' llt
;HI n 11 11 1-.rr.n ion\ ,1.:; to u ndi n gl y '\ ll C c t''i'i fu I l'C o nomi c polic i e'\. AI Core g.1vc them p e rmi"'ion
to d o J USt tha t. H e usnl th e I)c mo cratic ( :o n venrion ro dt.·mono;;; tratc..· t hi1 t peop le could
vote to keep tht.• good t'COI~H n 9 wn houl havmg to lin ·nst thl' pt:r~o n a l b~uv i or ,lssocid tl'd
with Uill C li nton.
The dra m atic AI- loves-Tipper k11&lt; was t he
dt'al-m,tkcr. Thar o;;;m.tckcr 111 I Oli. Ang:t:le ~ told
thl' world that hl'ft' i'i cllOUpJL&gt; llllitt•d 1110n.· by
phy"ical JrtractJon th .m polmc.d ,unhmon, .1
couple unlikl'iy to rcphrate th e str,mge .unbi guities of the Uill-a nd-Hi llary &lt;how.
In th ,!t nne blind in!' ·ll'l of ,clf-rcwl ,m on. AI

G o re freed vo tl·r:-. to fo rgl't dw Cl m ro n ~~ ra
voyl' u r ism ;m d ackn owledge th eir IIIOTl' prim itivt' sdf- mtt: rL''\t 111 th t· ~0 1 11 ) ck cti u n . My old
bm1 Tip O' Neill no ted that " all politics is
locJl." No th1 ng i~ 11 10rl· !nu l du n your pocketboo k.
A" hard evidence o f th i,, t· on-.JdlT thl' Con'illlle r C\mfi&lt;k nce Index (CC I) produ ced
t'Vcn· other m ont h b\' T he Con t(:rc nct.' Bo.trd .
'
'
Wtth one except io I\ -- lhl· VIctor y of It. ic harJ
Nixon at the height ofth c Vil't na m W:tr -- the
CC I is ,, perfec t prc·dictor of p resid cnti.d elec-

nono:;.
W he n th e CC I 11 up. the party h o ldm ~ th e
W hnc Ho use m aintain s irs h o ld; w hen it 's
J own , th e p art y in powcr loseo;;; it.
In 1'!72. w1th th t• CC I .tt 11 2, R ic hard
Nixon wa&lt; rl'-ei ectc·d. In 1984. wit h the CC I
,11 IIlii, R ou.1 ld R c,•g.m w,IS re-e lected. In
JlJHH. \VIth the index ;n 111. ( ;cor~e Bu~h \V.IS
t·lec tt•J to \\ h.u m .wy ,,1w ,IIi. ,1 Rt·,lgan rh1rd
tc'rlll. In 1996. wit h tlw index .1t 112. ll ill
Clmton \\·;v; rt·- deu ed .
A low C\. 1 io; ; .111 cqu.11ly -.nlid t() fl' CPitL'r. In

of this. Your input w J!I be greatly appreCJated. -- Aud rey in Mirmesota
Dear Audrey: E xplain to Dad , as
drploma ti ca lly as possible, that the
teen age g randchi'ldrc n would not understand his having a lad y fnend whJ! e th etr
grandm o ther is still living.Yo u might also
discu ss this with h1s lad y friend so she
will understand the situatio n and no t feel
hurt about not being asked to join him
w he n he visits th e famil y up north . lf she
is an A- Number-One . First- Class person .
she will s~ nd h1 m on h1s way wah he r
blessin gs .
Dear Ann Lander s: Ca n you tell me
the propl'f w ay ro address a w idow? Is it
" Mrs ." with hn first nanl t', o r " Mrs."
with th~..· Jt·ce:tsed h us band\ first name ?
I'd apprc ci,ltt' your hdp with this. - C onfused WiJu\\' in Ca lifo r111.1
Dear California: It i ~ ( nrrcct fo r a
woman to contlllll t' to u:-.t' hl'f den\F,l'd
husband 's fi r.. t n.tm c. Th e prop er dcs ignJtion for .t \\·iJ m,· 1~ .. l\1r-.. Jo hn Snmh ." If

I YJ(J, w ith th e C:C I at H7, Ce roi d Ford lost t.;
Jmnny Ca rter. In l l)HO, w ith the CC I at Ho.:
C.u te r lost to R " "f("" · In 1992, w ith th e mde x:
:Jt S7. ll m h was 'beaten hy C lint o n .
~
K! !,!ht now. th e CC I 1t:1 nds at 142. People:
are a ~ l ow With co nfi dm re. T lll'y like th e way:
thin gs ,lrl' and \\\ lilt to kt·ep t h e m this way. :
Go re ha., grabb ed tht• IL':td in till' o p in io n: ,
poli o;; becau"t: hl· has give n vottTs pt·rmissim;
to .K t on thc•ir m nfid ence. In L.A ., he said
voters could f(iVC hnn th e Oval Ofiie e w ith..:
out havin g llill Cli nton loite rin g 111 th at little
b :~e k h.tll he 111ade &lt;o i1ifam o us.
Many started to be li eve him . Pri or to Los
A11gL' k•s, 47 pe rc e n t &lt;;:Jw Gort· as "too c l o~e to
Bill Clinton to prov ide a fre&lt;h start the coun- ·.
try needs.'' Aftnwa rds, th e num be r was down ·
ro JC) percen t.
The belt way to end a political marriage, it :
.tppcar'\, j, to d1'pby ,l re.J! one.

(Cim .&lt; .\l&lt;~ rrlu· 11•.&lt;, rltir( &lt;&gt;( the 5an Frmtcisco.:
Exmllitu·r:.: lf flslmzgTtl/1 Bun'ml, is hMr t!{ "Hard- :
/&gt;,r/1" ''" C.'\'IJC 111td .\ ISI\'llC «11&gt;/r rltntlltcls.)

Paying bills can be a challenge.
Bills seem to come in the mail
every day, and they may be due any
rime throughout the month . What
can be done to simplifY the billpaying process and assure that cl1ey
are paid'
Be organized. Have a " fir.ancial
calendar" to write when bills are
due and their amounts. Note when
they must be mailed in order to
arrive before the due date.
Have one person pay all the bills.
This job may be traded every few
months. Both spouses should be
familiar with the bills and how they
are paid.
Set aside time each week or two
tc:i write and mail checks. H ave a
specific place for check writing
w here bills are kept in a file. Use

G e m of the Day (From C hu rc h Bulletin Bloopers. smt in by L.K. of Park
Fores t. Ill.): Barbara C. re mains in rhe
hospital and needs blood dono rs. She is
also having _ trouble slcepmg, and h&gt;&lt;
requc·stcd tapes of Pa sto r Jac k's sermons.
Lo n esome' Tak e c h arge of your life
and turn it aro und . Write for Ann Land c!rs' new boo kler , .. H o\\J· to M ake
Frien ds and Stop IJ em g Lu ndy." Send a
self- addressed . lo ng. business-s ize envelo pt• a1\d a check o r mo ney order fo r
S4 .25 (this includes p ostage and · handlin g) to: Fri e nds. c/ o A n n Land ers, PO
Box I I :ir.l. C h• c.•go. Ill . 60(&gt;11 -056 2. (In
C:.1nad.1, semi S:i. IS .) To find out more
.1bout Ann Landas a nd read her past
t'o lum ns . vi sit thl' Cr ...·ators Syndi cate
W t'b

p:lgl'

:H WW\\ '_( rt",ltl) rs corn

,.

Five generations

Young cloggers

:u.:count

pens, envelopes, stamps, address
bbels, etc.
Look over the bills before paying.Are all items ~paned cor"'ctly'
If not, contact the creditor inmrediately by phone, then by a lener, to
"'ctifY the problem.
Wnte the chte paid and check
number on the personal copy of the
bill stub. Record information in the
home account book. File ~ceipts
according to appropriate category
for easy access during income tax
rime. Deductible expenses may
include some medical and dental
bills, state and local income taxes,
property taxes, mortgage interest,
charitable contributions and other
allowable items. Keep accurate
records to help determine if the
itemiution. will be larger than the
standard deduction. By filing and
retaining these receipts, proof will
be evident' in tne &lt;:Vent of an audit.

SOCIETY NOTES
Enrolls at ONU

the w o man is divorce d , she uses her own
fir st n ame," Mrs. M ary Smith "

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

to

calculator,

BY DoNALD lAMBRO
WASHINGTON - You can do a lot of
things with figures to d.eceive people .1bout the
taxes they pay, and that is what AI Gore was
doing with George W. Bush 's income tax cut
plan at the Democratic convention.
Gore said of Bush's across-the-board incot'l\e
tax cuts, " If you add it up, the average family
would get enough money to buy one extra
Diet Coke a week .. . about 62 cents in
change."
Well, Gore was not being truthful , because
he made it · appear that he was raking th e average of all the taxes that all workers pay, w h en in
fac t he was excluding millions of taxpayers in
his computation to get th e figure he w anted to
use against Bush. H e wanted to belittle Bush 's
tax cuts. so the numbers h e used were cooked
to come up with 62 cents.
For one thing, he made it sound like the
average family would see its tax bills cut by
only 62 cents a year. In f.Kt . his prep ared text
said 62 cent&lt; "per day."
" But even that's a stretc h, b~.:ca u se it was no t
based on an awr.1ge family 's inc 01i1c bm on tht•
average income fo r the bo tto m 61J percent o f
taxpayers - who already pay wry little in fed- ·
era) in come taxes," writes 'J\lao;; hington Post
ero n01nic ;uulyst G lenn · Kt·sslc r in a p ien:.·
titl ed "G ore Fudged on Hush 's Tax C ut !'ian ."
In tact, " Workers at that level P·'Y $1.67 a day
in federal in come taxes, th ough if Social Sc ctl rity and o ther federal taxes arc add ed in , th e
amoullt r ises to $'1 a day.'' Kc,slrr points out.
.. At those r.tteli, on e m1ghr argut•, 62 cents is

longe r care fo r her properly. Because my
father lives in Florida and the rest of us
live up north , we decided Mom should
be placed in a home near h er children
and g randchlidren . This way, she would
have more vi sitors , and we could keep a
closer eye o n her. Dad comes twice a
year to see Mom 1nd visit the rest of the
family.
R ecently, Dad informed us that he has
a lady friend . We reali ze. how lonely he
has b een , and we try not to JUdge his
need for compani o nship. However, Dad
told us that when he com~s to town for
h1s next two ~wce k v1sit , he plans to bring
his n ew lady fric·nd . How am l supposed
to .:xpbin thi s to my children? They are
tee na ger s.
Dad " 7 9 . We want him to be happy
in his renuinin g yc:1rs. H owevcr, he- ts still
:1 nurri'~ ~i mJn , Jnd is being disloyal to
Motn . Should I insist th:H he leave his
bdy friend 11 1 Flo n d .t ~ I don't wan t to
risk h.1vi ng I).td rdl tst' tn \' i ~ it u s bt· c au s ~..·

New arrival

RACINE
Matt .1nd
Brandon
H eather
Wolf&lt;". son of
Abb c&gt; t t,
of
Dt•nn is and
G ,llli po li s.
Cln dy Wolfe
.l i1110Llll ( L'
o f R ;lC llll ' , Ius
th e bmh of
e nrolled
111
th e ir
fi rst
th e C ollege of
so ll ~
Ph;rma cy at
Nath omel
Ohio NorthR oyce
N•tfl•nhd Royce Abbot
Ab b O ( { . H L'
Wolfe
a n Um vt:rsity fo r the 2000-2001 school
was born ,lt
year. He will be a first-year Holzer Med1c al C ent er. .H
ph arrna cy maj o r.
8: 01
a . m .,
wc ig hiu g
0·
A gr.•duate o f Sou thern Loc.1l po und s, 7. 5 o u nces an d mca High School , W o lfe was ac tive ~ urin g 21 in c h es lo n g. He i ~
in ba seball. golf . p ep d ub. ye ar- t he g ra nd so n of J u ani ta
book staff. S p an iSh C lub, Abb o tt . Point Plea san t, Mar y
N ational Hon o r So ciety and J o Youn g, Ga le sb urg, Ill., a n d
Wh o's Wh o in Am eri can High Gar y and Sa n dy Yo un g,
N ewt o n . N C. H e is als o t he
School.
ONU is a coe du ca ti o nal g rea t- gra ndson of M a ry R
Un ited M etho dist- rclate J m sti - Mo o re , Gale sburg, Ill. , an d
tution , fo unded in 187 1. It 1s D e li a You ng, N ew Wind so r.
IlL
located 111 Ada .

Em alee Glass, daughter ofJodi George of Pomeroy and David Glass

of Am~svillr, ami Am tin King, son of

Posing for a photo during a recent five -ge nerati on f.1mily gathering
.1re. Aretta Montgomery, Crysta l River. Fla ., with Juli a Michele Montgom e ry, Ravenswood, W.Va ., Gcncve IJrown, Gallipo lis. Sean Montgomery. Rawnswood. and Keith Montgomery. Letart Falls.

I

Bri~n

am:J- r:ea Alln KJng of

Pomeroy, were the yo u ngest dagge rs to perfo rm at the O hio State Fair
on Aug. 12. They are members of the Ohi o River C loggers. Several
ar.:a groups, including the Big Bend Cloggers al)d th e O hi o River
Cloggcrs. performed for ."Clogging D.1y. " whic h will be observed
every se cnnd Saturday of Augu st. thrc&gt;u gh a proclamation by Gov. Bob
Taft. (Submitted photo)

Health club meets

R.O C KSI'R INGS - The Ro cksprinh" IJettc·r He.li th C lu b held
their Jn nu al picni c recen tl y .H rltl' l·~ot:ksprings U111tcd Mc!th o dt ~ t
Church·.
Prayer w.1 s given by Susie Mash.
Follo\ving th~ p!Cllll..', Barbara Fr y. prt• sJdent, held a short bu ~ i ll L' I.S
111 L' t't111g.

School ~uppli e s fo r tht' Meigs U nited M cth o th:-.t Coo p n ,ltivt: Pansh
w dl be collected bv Fry.
·
The Septe mber .nw:tin g wi ll be held Jt the home o f Fran ces Gocglt' in, with J program by Nancy Gruese r and co ntl'St by Su sJt.' M .1sh .
who presen ted a reli sh gift to all m embers, w hi ch had be en prepared
by formn m ember Agnes Dixon .
Att e ndin g rh e pic ni c we re Frances Gocgkm. Su sie Mash , Barb an
Fry, Doroth y Jeffers. Phylhs Skinner, N ancy Mor ris and gue&gt;ts Ji m Fry.
An gie, Jason , Tyson , and Daniclle Morri s and Melyla Ma sh.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigs Housing Authority,
E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, OH will be distributing applications for
(Section 8 Vouchers) RENTAL ASSISTANCE on the
following dates:
• Monday, September 11 , 2000
• Wednesday, September 13, 2000
• Monday, September 18, 2000
• Wednesday, September 20, 2000
Applications may be picked up between 9:00 am
and 4:30pm on the dates listed above.
Applications will be reviewed and assistance
provided on first come, first served basis.
For more information please call (7 40) 992-2733

SJ25
S
Pack

1·245

ComPlete Stock

.1/2 Price

Cold PoP
20 oz. Bottle 69¢

1/2 Price

Russell Stover Oran!!e
Marshmalrow PumPkin

Timex Watches

Reg. 59q:

Only

43¢

............
.'

3·0°/o off

Mon. th ru Fr1 . 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m Sat Boo am to e -oo pm

Sunday 8:00a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
PR ESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main
Friendly S ervice
Pomeroy, Oh
Week i
'i9

�-,

ami/p
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Assodate Professor
of Family Medicine

Surgery to cure
rliflux disease has
high success rate
; Question: I've had heartburn
trnublt• tOr ve.us l'v~ taken severdifferent. n1rdicines. and curr00tly l'n~ coq1for uble with
)J,tlos~:t: that 1\·c med t(..lr the last
2; yeant. I '\.lw my J ocwr Llst
,'&lt;t,·k, a11d h,· wants me to go to a
SLtrgt•on . H e [hmks Jn opc:rati011
would b~..· better th;~n co ntinuing
tO takt· lll l'dlC IIlt' . I h~wen 't nudt·
dl...· appo immL'nt Yt't. Wh.n do
yU u thiuk ·.\bo ut hJ\·1ng surgl-·ry
f&lt;.\r heJ rtb ur n ~
: Answer: Th~ hbd " h c.utbQrn " rovt•rs .1 wide range of
s~nptnms . Most of use h,l\'t'
o&lt;easion.d ep1sudes of helrtburn
.lfi:L·r w~ ovl:'re.H or consume
foods tlut do n't agre~ with us.
Thil uncomfortable sensation is
actually the result of stomach acid
le)king out of the stomach and
in~o the esophagus. If we experi&lt;ince this frequently, we may have
what is called reflux esophagitis
&lt;l; g'dstroesophageal reflux disease

.1.:

C:

(, ERD) ·
; : An episode of heartburn is the
n:Sult the . lower esophageal
sjlhincter (LES) a muscular
~nd around the esophagus just
ab:ove the stomach_ opening at
,; ~me other than when you are
s~allowin g food or drink. This
~ happen when the LES relaxes at an mappropnate time or
~ecause the pressure within the
'!omach simply overpowers it.
Dietary indiscretions, medicine
~. alcohol, anatomical defect
~h as ,hiatal hernia, or obesity .
C:m all make this scenario more
~ly.
&gt; The consequence of chronic
t!!liux, regardless of the underly~pg cause, can be significant. The
•!£ong stomach acid that causes
~ heartburn s-ensation over a
~riod of time damages the lining
~f. the esophagus. This damage
~ range from nnld inflari1ma(len to sca rring that blocks the
~phagus. In so me cases it C:l!l
~!'ad to the development of a pre&lt;"incerous co ndition that, if left
t;l)tr('ated . will lead to e~ophage:~l
~lCer.
:: Mc..•dJ cin l's called proton pump
jpbibitors, including the l'rilos,·c
)!~1 'ake,arc dft•ctive at reducing
S!amach acid levels and, thereby.
~aucmg the damage it can causc
wh,·n it " ba cks up" into the
,;r,p hagus. Treatment \vith one of
tll_'tsc medi cines is usually ~uffi-

Thursday, August 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

gus heals. Diet, weight reduction,
elevatmg the head of the bed and
otht•r hfe style changes are then
usually Jll th;lt is necessary to
continue llVing w1thout ~he discomtort of fr('quent heanburn.
Surgery fo r heartburn !)'pic ally
irwolws narrowing the opening
{)[ rht• d1Jphragm through \vhic h
the t'\op.hJgu s p:~.sst~s. In addition.
the Jllll ction l)fth~., esophagus and
stonu ch is narrowed whik simul lJnt·om.ly c h.mgtng: the J.ngle of
it. Thi , IS c.&gt;lied .. fundoplication"
111 ~ urgeon-s p.:ak . Surgical tnt3tmctH for GERD is appropn.1tc
l~Jr tho:\t' who fail to gain relief
\\"lth m~..·di cli trt'.lt lllt'llt . It is also
usL'd t()i" thost' who lun· significult side dl~.·crs tfum mL·dic.:.Jl
tn.'.ltlll t' llt. An Jdd.itionJl gro up
for (Onsidt~rarion is those who
nccJ fo ntin uous US L' of proton
pump inhib itors but other\\'ise
ha,·c no di scomfo rt o r daJnage to
the esoph.1geal lining. You may
fall into this last group.
The surgery for GERD is now
commOJily performed by using
hig h tec h "laparoscopic meth ods." This means that the surgeon
uses speci3l instruments inserted
through several small cuts mto the
abdomen . This is substantially easier on the patient than the previous surgery that required an incision large enough for the surgeon
to get both of his or her hands
intotheabdomen.
The fundophcatwn surgery is
95 to 97 percent effective at climinating GERD with a similar percen t of patie nt 'satisfaction at one
year. At 10 years the success rate
remains an amazingly high 90
percent.
So, I'd suggest you talk to the
surgeon . He or she will probably
want to do so me additional tests
such as looking into your esophagus,a procedure called EGD,a nd
also do 2-+ hour pH monitoring.
These tests will determine the
dfect iv~ness of your .-Current
treatment as well as help predict
your nsk of future prublems.You,.
your doctors and your famil y cu1
the n talk abo ut the benefits and
risks of having su rgery to correct
vuur c hrom,~ GERD. Eu·ntually
YOU WJII decid,· ifYOU want to
pron:cd wnh ~ urgery. Rcmem bL'r. it 1s always your choice. not
\·our doctor 's

"Family Medicine" is a
weekly column_ To submit
questions~ write to John C.
Wolf, D.O., Ohio Un iversity
College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,

Incoming students experience college life during orientatioq..
RIO GRANDE Every
year, anxious college freshmen
across the country spend their
last few weeks before school
starts worrying about what college life will hold for them.
What will the dorms be like?
How will th ey know whi ch
professors to take? When do the
students on campus get together' Wha t will the food be like in
the cafet eria' These are all questions nearly all students have
before they take that big step of
starting co llege.
The pre- registrati on progra m
at The Umversity of R 10
Grande / Rio Grande Com mu nity College answer&gt; all of those
que:stions and mort' for rh t." students :arriving on C:ltnp us. It :~lso
provides .m~wen f(n p.:nt"nt s
\\'Ondering what college life \\'ill
bring for the1r children .
lu ckey doo
""!
C har!,.,
Nicol ...· T. .·munt. borh of G.t lhpoli s. WL'TL' two studt•nts gomg
t hrough pn:-rt'gistr.ltion .1t R1o
Grandt· o n August 24 ' and 2:1.
Both said tht·y \Vl'TL' a littl e nervous :1buut starting college. bu t
t hev felt better because of all the
help th,-y h.1d alrl'Jdy rccel\ni
fro m st.1tf .mel students on the
Rio Grand,· ompm.
Throu gh tht• pre-regi~ trJ.tinn
program, the in co n11 ng fn:s hmen reg istered for d1e classes

and attended a variety of sessio ns where they learned about
the eve nts and activities planned
for Rio Grande students, how
they should set up their schedules , the options they have for
eating on campus, which professors are recommended by other
students, what resources are
available for students on campus
and much more.
"Wt' have a lot of dances,"
sa id Jennifer Lawhorn, president
of the student ambassadors at
Rw Grande. ·
During on e of the session s,
Lawhorn sa id she is happy that
she' and other students have the
opportunity to lc Jd the orienta tio n sess ions, hL'Gtuse th ey know
wh.tt thL· freshmen students are
go1ng through and they c.m tell
them what to expcct. '
The fifth-year senior added
t!ut she was \·L·ry ncr\'ous when
she· started college .md lnd no
idea wlut college life wou ld be
like
"It was really hard," Lawhorn
~u id .1bout start1ng college.
Now she and other s tLH.lcnt~
giw advice o n thing&lt;&gt; like what
to do 1f the caf~:t~.:ri;1 isn 't servin g a meal that you like and
how to meet other studt'llts and
n1.1ke friends .
"Everyo ne says there's not a
lot to do here, but . l tell you

what, we have a lot of fun," said Frater of Jackson, said they hop~
Andrea Casey, a student life to get involved in some activicoo rdinator and the president of ties on campus and are looking
the student programming board. forward to college starting.
In addition to focusing on
Nikki Reed of Wellston said
student life, the orientation ses- she is nervous about starting·
sions also provide information college, but happy that the stuon classes, th.e faculty at Rio dents at pre-registration seemed
Grande and the many programs ·very nice and helpful.
students ca n get involved with .
While the students . ~were in·
"That's one thing that's great
orientation sessions, their p.uabout Rio bein g a small
ents were in sep.1 ratc classes
school," said Lawhorn. "We
where they discussed the paperrea lly offer a lot of individual
work their c hildren need to fill
attention and services for peoout, received ans\Vers to their
ple."
Freshmen students Nicholas questions about tuition payMichael of Pomeroy and Sara ments and learned about the
Fife of Middleport both said opportunities &gt;vailable for theii
' •
they weren't coo nervous about c hildren on campus
J;1ck
an
d
Kathy
Wolfe
of
New
com ing to school, but were glad
they we« able to hear from the Boston . [Ook p.trt 111 du~Ir onen~
n1der students at the orientation tation session s 'vhik their s01l
SC'SS IOJl S.
Chns went to the st•ssJons for
Freshmen student Danielle students. Thev were pk·as&lt;.·d t&lt;.i
Hayes is travding from Dayton get a be ttc..· r l~mk ::tt lhe campus
to study at Rio Grande. She was Jnd k.1rn more ;Jbout what i ~ iti
vc..·ry nervous after one of he r
store fo r their ~o n as he b&lt;.·gin;
orientation st:ss ion ~ J nd is a litcoll ege.
tl e tcntativt: about st;trting colM ;my of tht• ~ tw..i.t:nt' Jre Hill
It~gc..·. H.l )'CS, w ho pbn~ r )il studyn~.~ n·o u s Jbo ut co ll l'gl.' 'i t:trting.
in g veterinary medicine. sa id the
but the pn..·-n.:~ i s t r.It ion St'S!'.H HlS.
oric..·ntat!Uil scss1ons have made
at
Rio Grande allt:.· n .ncd so me
her fed a litt k· better.
"I tlaoughl ll w.ts vt:ry infor- fl·.u~ and nudt· ht'lpt·d m.111)' of
mative," said fre•dnnen Jane ll them fed a ln1 better about t hi s
big step they ,tre taking ,1s they
H eiman o f Jackson.
She and her fnend, Sheena begin college.

Patty· Loveless is back with a "Strong Hearf' album
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) commercialism can go together,
A Nashville music bu siness as they did in the past. Dependexecutive asked Patty Loveless if ing on your point of view,
a song o n her new " Strong "Strong Heart" is either refreshH eart "!b
. ·" too Sh ama
· ."
· Iy d.1ver,e
, or pen·1ous1y scata tnn"
tng
"E xcuse me.I" t h e smger
·
d
·r
. t h at
tere as 1 struggIes to h tt
howled while telling th e talc.
bull 's-eye.
Long before pop-country
"Strong Heart" contains a
diva Shania Twain hit the scene , wide variety of styles, the best of
111 1995, Loveless- who began which is the wonderfully bluesy
singing as a child and later paid "You Don't Get No More,"
her dues si nging in rough rock written by Loveless and her husclubs - had made it as a full- band-producer Emory Gordy Jr.
fledged Nashville star.
Then there is the frothy pop
U,su ally reticent, she scorned of "Yo u're So Cool," the song
the suggestion that she 1s copy- t hat invited th e Twain comp~ringTwain - or anyone else.
ison . It's got what it takes t o
" ! onlv want to be who I am , become a hit single , but there
and that 's Pattv Loveless . And JS an element of desperation in
sometimes I d~n't want to b(' 1ts gi mmi c ky production .
her," she ad ded w1th a laugh.
The so ng evo kes memuries
loveless. ·U. to ld the srorv to of Jam es Dean. flob Dylan and
illuStrate how quickly thin~ ct n ot her ico n:; o f coo l to c1pt urc
chang&lt;'. She hasn't rdeased .1n the feelin ~,; of rom antic infatu :1lbum of on gin ::d nutt'nal sincl.' .1ti on. There is so me w h et.·z y
"Lo ng Stretch of lonesome ' 111 Dyhn -sty k' h;nm o ni ca (p layed
1997. L IS t w.1r. while , he to ok a ,·xpe rtlv
bY Stew brk )
b rt.•:l k , Tw.un rul r.: d ,,·ith .1 "'ol d tltnJ\\"11 in :-\)\a m u s·i cll jo kL· .
n ut rou r ,md .1 multinullion " I'm .dw.l\'' in 'iL' :~rch nf
'il'lling album ... C:ome on ()nT· · so ngs th.H the you ng ad ult \·.111
"Siron g
H,·a n "
(Sony - rcl.u e t&lt;&gt; ... lowk·ss s.1id ... ! put
N :1s hville ) is .1 l't'll1lndL·r to f.1ns mysl'if111 rhc place of this foulthat Lm·eie&lt;&gt; J&gt; one of the best J&gt;h wnma11 that has thi s infat u singe r~ in N a'\IH·ille.
:H i on . . We .1 1l cxper ien cc 1t. A
The .1lbum is also e mbl cma t- lut uf men do. too."
ic of co untry mu sic 111 2000: a
lo\'eless co uld me a fe\\'
time \Vht'n the 1ndustry IS won - Llllghs.

life again,'' she said of her yearlong break in 1999. "A lot of
peopl e didn't realize I'd been
singing since [ .was a kid ."
B orn m
· p 1·k ev1·11 e, K y, Lave1ess1s
· a d JStant
.
· o f co unco usm
try musi c legend Loretta Lynn .
She arrived m Nashville as a
teen-ager, whe re she was
encouraged by su c h Grand
O le Opry stars as Porter Wago n er. She toured with the
Wilburn Brothers at 16 , then
got married and moved to
North Caroli na.
"I lived some rough times,"
Loveless said. "For a reriod of
seve n yea rs there, I was into
th ese rea ll y wild rock 'n' roll
clubs . They wt·re son1e rough
pla ces, th e kind that open at 1 1
p.m and close at 7 a. m
"I lear ned a lot about l1fe. I
experi,•n ct•d a 'lot of los t sou ls
in those d ubs. [ ahnost became
o ne of t h,•m. I feel like I' m
ab le ro b nng t hat to the table
w h t· n it co mt' S to recording.''
Sht· rctur n~·d to N .!s ln·illt' in
1'JH5 , sconng her fir s l Top 10
lnt 111 19HH with an o ld
George Jon&lt;.'S song, " If My
H,·art Had Windows ."
Swit c hing from MCA to
Ep1c Records ~ ~~ 1993. sh e
scored an imm ediate No. I hit
wit h "Blame It on Your

"T here's so much musi c out
there right now that I just didn't think that I'd be missed th at
mu c h . But then I got a !ittk
afraid t hat I'd be forgotten .
"Once th1s album was done,
and I beli eved in it so mu c h , I
dcc1ded it's time for m e to get
my butt back out there .
"T he rest has been good.
I'm rejuvenated ."

N. 2nd Middleport

-~~s~n-t-ly__e_ffo_c_ct-iv_e__t_h_at--tl-'e__e_so_p__h_a-_______A_t_h_e_n_s_,_o__h_io__4_5_7_0_1_._________d_e_r_iJ-1g__'_v_h_e_tl_1_' ·r__e_x_c'_"i_le-·n_c_·e__.,_n_d_____.._•__"_·a_s__tr_)_·i_n_g_t_o__e_r_y_o_y__n'y ~H::c~ar~t~.·-·--------------------~::::::~~~~~======~

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

·..

•
. THURSDAY
&lt; PORTLAND
LebanoA
1\iwnship Trustees, 6 p.m. Thursat the township garage.

¥

; ;POMEROY - Mt' &gt;g&lt;&gt; County
0(1ited MethoclJSt Cooperative
~!Iri s h will be taking applications
fOr summer foo d for senior citil'&amp;~s. Tuesday and Wednesdav. 9
.;~1 to 11 a.m . only. Food will be
g;~en out on Thursday.
'

...RO CKS PRINGS Town
:md Countrv E.xpo meeting, 7:30
P,m .. Gronge Annex, R oc ksp rin gs
F:uirgrounJs
.' P OM ER.OY
Preceptor
~eta Hl't.l, ope nin g dinner, 6 p.m.,
~om e roy (;o!f C,Hir&lt;ie

..

FRIDAY
APPLE (;ROVE s,,,wc
dan ce, Ited ll.m1 nn \ R . 3.1H. X tn
II p.m 1\ll u~;~t by ·1rue Counlry.
.lnd Chtl' I n11gcncttc .1" c1llcr
£t. ow1d ,,,,d '~qu.lrt· d.mnng. l!IIL'
J'.a11t111 g. llogg mg ..1 uh· w.llk .
Jm.H

pn7 L'"

.111d

~.llll n

.1J..u

!)J~nncd .
'•

:. R 1\&lt;:INJ . -

Jv),· Jg' Coumy
~lll HHI.l (;r.HH~t·.
. Fnd.w.. 7.Jjl
!&gt;'01 R .H IIJc (;r,&gt;n ge I 1.!11. lu &lt;t.&gt; l'Qml n! li t'\\ ofli cn'i .llld Jlalg1ng
Q/'·\t.l[ L' .111d l} ,\ 0011.l l lO ll{ ~\(.
~

·c:OOI V II I L - E,·,mf:''illlng
~)r j t''ll"' \N'tnd11J ' ( : t' IHL'r 111

Guysville, ca mp meetmg, through
Mo nday at I p.m. daily. SpeCial
si ngers and num erous preac h ers
will be featured each day Bring
lawn cluir or camper. Inforn1ation
from Do n Jnd Dee Miller, 66 760 ~ 0.T h e meeting will be held on
Athens Coun tv Road 42 off U.S.
'R o ute 50 bet;vcm Coolville and
Guysville.
SATURDAY
HARRISONV ILLE - H arrisonville Lodge No. 411, F&amp;AM .
will nll'L't ,It 7:10 p.m . o n Sawrday. R efrc o; hml'nts .1nd dt:grce
\Vork.
TUI'i'I: RS PLAINS - Square
d.111 Cl' , \Vlt h dngglllg and ~lo\\"
d,lll CIIJ g, !uppers Pl.1in ' VFW
Po'it. K ru 11 p.m . TruL' ( :ountr\',
Chtf Longc nt'Ut' .1~ cdlc r.
.

REEDSVILLE - Reunion of Johnson R eu nion , Su nday at the
de scendants of Abraham and Mason City Park. Dmner at 1
Mary Will Bahr at Forked Run p.m . Take item for the auction .
State Park. Noon m eal, with
C HESHIRE - Fife Reunion ,
ac tivities beginning at "II .Lm .
Plates, napkins, cups and tabl eware Kyger Creek Clubhouse. lunch at
will be prov1d,.;d. Those attending noon.
should bring covered dishes and
MONDAY
dnnks, lawn chairS and flnuly picSYRACUSE - Sutton Towntures.
sh ip Trustees , regular meeting,
RAC INE 33 rd Annu al 7:30p. m ., Syracuse Village Hall.
Samu el Allen Eblin reunion Will
LETART - Letart Township
be held at Star Mill Park at 6 p.m
Trmtces,
5 p.m ., office building.
on Sa wrday. Those attending
should brin g :1 cove red di sh
SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Open Hou se.
S~· racLISt.' Volunteer Fire DL'p :lrtt11L'111 . I (() ) p . lll .. to di~pl.ty Jlt'W
tin.· truck .
MASON . WVA

-

Allllll.d

You were a
t&gt;eau+ifu( Baf&gt;v·

But Baf&gt;v (oolc
at you now·
You fe(( over
the #11U•
•

I

Ha,l'v SO+h

BiUv

Ohio Valley
Check Cashing and Loan
Has a NEW Location,
204 w. 2nd Street
(Next to Powell's Super Value)

992-0461
License cc rooon -006
Llcanao CL 750048-006

Jennifer Shirley
Manager

PROGRAM ASSISTANT
The Meigs Housing Authority/Grants Office will be accepting resumes
for a full time position as program assistant until September 8, 2000 at •·
4:00 PM at the Grants Office located at 117 East Memorial Drive
.
'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
As Program Assistant, applicant will assist with all grant programs,
which entails meeting the public; maintaining files; verifying client
information; answering phone; mailing; maintaining files and financial
records on all grant programs; prepare all pay vouchers for submission·
'
interview clients; and maintain GAAP accounting records.
This position requires the applicant to be proficient in Windows 98
Word
Processing, Access, Excel, Publisher, Internet
Access/Downloading, Scanner, and Quickbooks.
Resumes should detail all training, previous employment, and include
employment references and phone numbers.
Any questions may be directed to Jean Trussell, Housing
Director/Grants Administrator at 740-992-2733.

Thuraday, August 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A

r.

Rain puts damper on some Montana fires, raises hopes
RED LODGE, Mont. (AP) - There 's
a four-letter word circulating in the
Montana fire camps that even makes
chaplains smile: rain.
Scattered shower. that fell on the
state's vast wildfires and a forecast for
even more rain were .. cxpected to put a
dent in the drought contributing to the
nation's worst fire seaso n in a half-centu ty.
. " A couple of days of this and we'djust
about have her surtounded," Forest SerVICe spokesman Jeff Gildehaus said

Feds look to
cut oversight
of rules in
meat plants
WASHINGTON (AI') - The
gove rnment may Ctll as ovt·rsighr
of food processors by rc·du cing
tht• time m eat inspectors spend
doing jobs the plants could dn
thcmsdves, such as che cking
scales or monitoring th e far and
water CO nt l'Jll of f-roductS.
The Agriculture Department,
which has 7.500 inspectors, is
responsible for regulating a number of consumer protection rules
•that officia ls say have httle or
nothing to do with food safety.
They are working on ways to free
l:lp n1ore time for in specto rs to
spend on microbial testing and
other measures to curb food poisorting.
" We're not letting (processors)
police themselves. We may be
going about reshaping how we
police them, but we're not going
to let them police t hemselves,"
said ('hi! Derfler, associate deputy
administrator of USDA's Food
Safety and Inspection Service. .
Among the inspectors' cur rent
"'sponsi bilities:
: - Inspectors enforce a variety
of rules on the content of meat
products: For example, fresh pork
sausage ca n be no more than 50
perce nt f:it, Italian sausage must
contain at least one of two spices
.,- fennel or anise - and barbecued meat mus t be prepared with
dry heat from burning wood or
coals.

Judge
declines to
decide Party
control
: lYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) - A
federal judge ruled Wednesday that
he does not h;we j ur isdiction to
decide who is the Reform Party's
rtal presidential nominee
: Allies of Pat Buclun:m sought
an order barring Jn o ppo~ng fa ct~on from operating undt·r the
party's name . U:S. Distn ct Judge
Ncmnan K. Moon said he lacked
jurisdiction btx~tu se the power
struggle did not raise any constitution:tl issue.
During the party's convention
m long Beach, C alif. earlier th is
month, delegates opposed to
Bu chanan decla red his nomination illegitimJte and walked o ut.
Th at group then held its own conWntiun across tht~ strl!ct and nominated John Ha ge li n, a littleknown physicist fro m Iowa.
Both sides are se,·king $12.6
million in Federol Election Commi ss ion money and have bl'ell
workjng to get on state ballots.
D.1le Cooter. attonlt'Y for the
Buclun.m f.JCtJon. s.1id h,• will take·
th e 1ss ue to .1 st.lte l.'O llrt . poo;sibly
.1&gt;, L'. ulv .1s tl\..'Xt wt•ek. H e w;1sn 't
'&gt;tlre 111. w hKh st.ltc ht· would filt·
" ( )lwtou sly. \\'t' ,Ill' di~.1ppoiiH ­
&lt;.'d.". Cuotn ,,nd . "Wt• felt thi'&gt; \\",1"
rhc .1ppro pn.1tL' pbc ~ to get .1
...pcnly .IIIli fur dt'L'lSI\Hl. ..
Jnn M.111gu ..1 H.&gt;gc•lin u.Jcker
\Yho l l.tilll ' tl) ht• tht· true Rdi.wm
P.trt\' l·h.Hrlll,\IL L,l ikd \)'.it·dnt·sd,lv\
nd111~ ".1 .. nu ll nt"tPry''

"T h1.., di!"!pllll' \\'ill go ou until
P.1t Bud1 ,111.11l go~.·~ b.1c k tn the
P.ut\' w ht'I'L' h c

R ~.:puh h c ,111

bdnng...;· M ;lngu ~.ud,
llndl.lll.lll bolted tlw (;() )' !0
run undn tht' Hxfnrm P.1rty b.mtlL'f

Wednesday as a steady drizzle fell on a
2,500-acre fire near Red Lodge.
Thirty large fires were burning in an
area of 6)6,991 acres m M o ntam ,
according to the National Interage ncy
Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.
The rain in northwestern and ce ntral
Montana on Wednesday raised the hopes
of firefighters trying to build nearly nine
miles of fire line around the Red lodge
blaze and others fighting wildfires across
the state.
The moisture helped firefighters

attack a new fire north of Helena that
had forced five families out of their
homes nea r Wolf Creek late Tuesday The
evac uation order was lifted the next day,
and the ~00-a c re fire was contained
Wednesday night.
An 11 ,000-acre fire at Beaver Creek,
west 'Of Yellowstone National Park, also
was contJined Wt"dncsday, and the rain
was a key f.1etor, forest officials said.
Even better news was that rnore rain
was in the fore cast through Monday.
"Rainy, cooler days, good cloud cover,

all those sorts of thing&lt;&gt;," said meteorologist Marty Whitemore, a weather forecaster at the weather bureau office in
Missou la.
But fire managers cautioned it would
take a lot more to reverse the extreme
conditions.
"The big logo;, the engines that dnve
fires , are still dry," said Allen Rowley, a ·
fire manager on the Flathead National
Forest.
.Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont .. said the
fire - and drought-related aid needed by

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Montana may top $1 billion
President Clinton on Wednesday
signed a request from Gov. Marc Racicot
that the state be declared a federal di~ter area.
•
Rick Weiland, regional director of the
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency, said the financial losses ip the
state warranted the disaster declaration.
He said the agency would send an official
to · Helena to begin coordinating the
pro cess of accepting and processi ng
claims.

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••

. .•
r •'
•.. •
•

Thursday, August 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

: :Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel
••

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page B2
NFL: Is Manning ready? Page B5
Southern volleyball fa lls, Page B8

Page 81,

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Friday's Games
Galiia Academy at Coa l Grove
Roane County at Point Pleasant
River Valley at Fairland
Athens al Meigs
Jackson a l Wa ve rly
Loga n al Nelsonville· York
Marietta at Cambridge
Warren at Parkersburg

0·1
0·1
0-1
Notre

Meip; Belpre tied
1n

TVC goH

ROCK SPR INGS - lk lprt·
has pulk·d into a lirst place tie
with M e· ih"&lt; in the TVC's O h io

Divisio n title hunt aftl'r a Golde n
Eagle win Tue~day l'Vei'ling at The
Elm.
Belpre pmt ed a 16 1 tD win the
match, Mei~ and Wellston n ed
·with 17 1s, but M eib"&lt; was award -

ed second place- due rn rhc fifi: h
tic breaker.
Matt Preston of Belpre carded a
one over par J(, to take mL·dalist
honors. Mclgs scores \Vt.TC Jncmy
llanks 3\J, Carson Midkiff a 41.
Thad Bumgardn e r added a 41,
Josh Napper a 47, Josh Ray a 48
and Ni ck Demviller a 5:!.
'\CO TL'

Meigs netters
spanli Waterford

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0-0
0-0
0-0
0·0

Today 's Matches
Galiia Academy at Logan , 5 :15
Wa rre n at River Valley, 5: 15
Ohio Valley Christian at South
Point, 5:30
Meigs al Wellston, 5:55
Mille r at Eastern , 5:55

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•

RO C K Sl'iUNGS Mei gs
Jefe·atcd Watcrf(ml I 5-'J, 15-6 in
TVC volleyball action Tuesday.
Katie J&lt;'fTm led Meigs ( 1-0)
with I (I points on 14-of-1 4 servmg and eigh t assists . Shannon
l'n ce add e&lt;.l seven points un I 1nf- 12 servi n g, three kill s and two
assists .
M indy C han cey added six
points on 9-for-\J se rving , om· kill
and two assists. Kaytc Davis add ed
.thret: points on 6-of-6 sc-rvmg:.
live kills and one assist.
M eigs also won the junior vJrsity contest 15-0. 15-4 .

q uarterback Kyle H annan . H annan came
off the be n ch early in the second periOd
in relief of injure d senior B. J. Kennedy.
H annan completed 5-of- 11 p asses for 56
yards.
Kenn edy is doubtful fo r t h is week due
ton a con cussion , so once :1gain H anna n
will be under center.
Adam B ullingto n was th e M arauders'
leadi ng rece iver with fou r catches fo r 39
yards. Matt Stewart added two for 30 ami
Bu zzy Fackler one for 18.
O n the ground , sopho more Jerem y
R ou sh carried 1 5 times fo r ·40 yards.
Se nior fullb ack C hris Jeffers added nine

Ple•H- Melp, Pllp IS

Braves hold
off Redlegs

Friday's Games
Ross Southeastern al South Gallia, 7:30
Fe deral Hocking al Wahama, 7:30

·432 Sq. Ft.

15 Lb •

under siding, etc.

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1·0
1·0
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0·1
0·1

Volleyball

2"x1D'.............................

Kraft
Faca
lnaulalion

ALL

0-0
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0·0
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· Today's Gamaa
Hannan a t Clarks burg
Dame, 7:30

er Roll

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Wa hama

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yards.
On the gro und the Bulldogs are led by
Jason Sparhawk, a 5-foot-6, 170-po un d
senior. Sparh awk gained 89 yards on 23
carries.
O n th e defensi ve side, Athens gave up
eight firs t downs and 296 yards to tal yards
to the Bu ckeyes.
T he M arauders dropped an 18-6 dec ision to the Blue Devils last week, in a
h ard - hitting contes t.
T he key play in the contest was a 57
yard punt return fo r a score by Blue Devi l
speedster Tony Moore late in the first h alf
t o o pen up a 12-0 Gallipoli s h alftime lead .
M eigs h ad som e brigh t spots in th e
game, one was the play of sopho more

AlL

90 Lb. MINERAL. SURFACE

Wall

......
____....,.. ____
__ __,.......

o-o

Yo rk, o n a last second 2 1-yard fie ld goal.
. Les C hamp li n is in his second year of h is
current tenure as head coach of the Bulldogs, and his third overall. Athens is con)in g ofT a 1-9 seaso n a year ago.
T he Bulldogs features a veteran tea n1
with 17 se niors, m any of who started. last
season . Leading the g reen and gold is
sen io r q uarterbac k David Ful ks. Fulks last
week was fo ur o f eigh t passing for 79
yards, and scored .both Bulldog touch downs o n o ne yard runs.
At tight end is 6-foot-5, 210 pou nd Les
C h amplin, C hampli n was t he quarterback
for Ath ens agai nst M eigs last seaso n, but
switch ed to en d later in th e year. C h am plin caugh t three p asses last week for 51

Area non-league

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· BY DAVE HARRIS
SE NTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Friday's Games
Athens at Meigs
S outhern at Pottsmoulh Easl
Eastern at Fort Frye
Federal Hocking at Wahama
Alexander at Trimble
Waterford at Belpre
Miller at Millersport
Logan at Nel sonville · York
Rock Hill at Vinton County
Minford at Wellston

Athens
Marietta
River Va lley

0

448389
449350

H 12''li1D........................

Eastern
Miller
Trimble
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Southe rn
Waterford

Warren

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ROCK SPRIN GS - Former SEoAL
rivals M eigs and Ath ens w ill hook~IIP fo r
t he ni ne teenth time th is Fr iday, when the
'M arauders h ost t he Bulldogs ..a( Bob
R oberts Field in Pom eroy.
Both teams have won ni ne game5 each ,
w ith t he M arauders winning the .-last six
contes't. M eigs coach M ike C h ancey w ill
be goin g for his fo urth w in in as many
tries against the,Bulldogs.
Both team s will be trying to w in their
fi rst games of th e year, M eigs dro pped an
18-6 road contest to the Galiia Academy
Blue Devils in th eir opener. While Athens
lost a 14-7 heartbreaker !O N eisonville-

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Maraudeis &amp; Bulldogs renew old SEOAL rivalry
•

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lhunday. Aupst 31. ]000

ROUGH NIGHT IN ATLANTA - Cinc innati pitcher Elme r Desse ns loo ks away as t he Braves Javy Lo pez
rounds the b a ses foll owing a home run We dnesday. The Bra ves wo n, 5-2. (AP )

ATLANTA (AP) - After a
p rivate clubho use m ee ting, th e
Atlan ta Braves sh owed th ey
haven 't fo rgo tten h ow to win. It
didn 't hurt to have Tom G lavine
on th e m ound .
G lavine sto pp ed Atla nta's
longest losing streak of the season, pitc hi ng a three-hitter to
b ecom e th e N L's fir st 18-b'311l e
wiu ncr w ith a 5-2 victory over
R eds on
t he C in cin nati
W ednesday ni ght.
Andres Ga larraga and Javy
Lo pez h omered for th e Braves,
who ended a fo ur-ga me skid
aft er ho lding a closed-door
m eeting before th e gam e 10
d ear th e air. ,
" It feels good to win a game
again ," m anager Bo bby C ox said
after picking up his 1,600th victory, breaking a ti e with T&lt;&gt;nuny
Lasorda for 14rh place o n · the
" career li st . " When we lose a few,
it 's big n ews."
The Braves remained t ied for
first in th e NL East w ith N ew
York. T h e M ets de fea ted H o uston 1-0 .
After ba tt in g practice, th e
cl ubh ou se d oors were closed
and the players h eld a rare private m eeting to talk about th eir
woes, whic h mclu ded five losses
o n the first six games of th e
h omestand and a 13-14 reco rd
in August.
"Som etimes, it does n't hurt to
get in there and clear th e air,"
G lavine said. "There's no probiems. No one is mad at each
other. It's just that tim e of yea r ·
w here you 've got to bea r d ow n.
You 've gut to overco me the fact
th at yo u 're ti red and overcome
t he fact that you 've got inj u nes.
So does everybo dy else."

Glavine (18-6) w on for th e
11th time in 12 starts - includ ing fou r in a row - as he closes in on the fifth 20-win season
of his caree r. Th e lefi- hander
retired the last 11 hitters for his
th ird complete gam e o f t he seaso n and 4 8th overall .
Glavine has becom e Atlanta's
stopper, g o ing 8-1 when h e's
pitched after the team lost. Five
of those w ins h ave come in
August, h e lping to prevent th e
Braves' slide fro m b eing m ore
pro nou nce d.
" It's ni ce kn owi n g I can go
o ut there after a loss an d tu rn
things aro und," G lavin e said.
"But for morale ·purposes, I'd
m u ch rather be pitching in the
m idst of a winning streak rather
th an trying to sto p a losin g
st reak."
Th e Braves po u n ded C incinn ati starte r Elmer Dessens (6-5)
for 12 hits and five runs in five
inn ings.
" He wasn't sharp with h is
l oca~ion. He go t th e ball up,"
R eds ma n ager Jac k McKeo n
said. " If h e gets th e ba ll up, he
gets murde red. But at least he
ke p t us close."
C hipper Jones h ad an RB I
double in the first and Lo pez
led o ff the second w ith his 22n d
h o mer, put ting the Braves ah ead
fo r good . T hey p u t the game
away in the fi fth aft er Dessens
re tired the first two hitters .
B.J. , Surhoff reac h ed o n an
infi eld single and took an extra
base wh e n second basem an
Po k ey R eese threw the ball into
th e dugout. Galarraga followed
w tth his 25th hom e r, a two-ru n ,

Please see Reds, Pap as

EASTERN FOOTBALL

SOUTHERN FOOTBALL

Eagles square off with Fort ·Frye

Tornadoes hope
to bounce back

BY SCOTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

EAST ME IGS - Eastern put
some impressive numbers on the
marquis in po~titlg a 36-U nonleague football victory over
South Gallia last Friday nigh t in
the arc.:a hig h ~chool seaso n
opener at Ea st Shadt• R iver Stadiunl.
Eastern will t~lCe a tough team
11 1 Fort Frye· at Beverl y Fn&lt;.lay
night.
Easrnn ·~ dormnan ce in the
opening minutes Ltst week
flaodt'd the stat sh tet5. with
i111prc.;.sivt.· numbers and brave the
Eagles ,1 .lll-11 halftim e lead.
Overall. the Eastern ofTensiw
machine h ad .164 total yards, 31 ()
o n the ground and 54 in th e air.
Although the scori ng didn't
rdlcct Eastern \ co nsistency, they
compiled nearl y the sa me rushing stars the second half as in the
first -24 carries for 157 yards in
the tirst half compared to 22 carrks for 1S.'\ yard,;; in the 'iecond.
All but 15 of Eastern's passing
yards were in the tlrst h alf.
The Eagles ( 1- 11) were lt·d by

seni or ru nning back Brad Wi llfo rd w ho carried 20 times for
11 3 yards &lt;nd t hree to uchdowns.
R.J. Gibbs carried eight times
for 90 yards and two touc hclowns (one by air). Cacy Faulk
\J-45, Garrett Karr 6-52 and
Brian White 4- 10.
Receivi ng-w ise Holter (or1e
catch , nin e y.mls), Lyon s (two
re cepti o ns, 31 yards) and Gibbs
(one catch, 14 yards) caught
pa~scs .

Travis Batey, Jon Will , C has
VanSickle and R .J. Gibbs recovered .fumbles.
Fort Frye ( 1-11) put together a

simi lar performance in its 64-12
shellacking of Federal Hockmg .
Fort Frye Ju mped out to a JJ- 6
first qu ~rt er score and rolled up
579 y;Irds in total oflense.
Shawn Brooker rushed S&lt;'ven
tim es for 186 yards, while Scott
Witten had 10 carries for I 12
yards, and Brice Ullma11 carTid
fuur times for 55 yards.
Brooker is .1 six- loot, 225 pound senior fullback who is
strong up the· middle and also
very quick on !he outside run

a11&lt;l ofT tac kle.
Witten is a 5- 11, 175-pound
"oph omorc tailback with good
speed, .md Ullma11 IS the triple
th n;at of- the Fort Frye grotl nd
game.
Ullman. at S- 7 a11d 145
pounds, is a tough fre"hm.m with
good all-aro und spc·,·d .md ath letiCJmt.
Fort Fryt• ha~ ,\ 12-nl.m rostn
spcckk-J with I() seniors and six
players going 2311 pou nds or bet ter on the li ne .
Add itiona ll y, Fort Frye h,JS a
good passin!:; g.111lt' \vith &lt;.JU.Irtt:rback M.m 13arton. who ~usst·d
five time~ for 79 y.lrd".
Eastern will h.1 Vt' its work t."Ut
ou t for it alth ouflh he.td coac h
Scott C hristman ft•t· ls hi' te.un
can play with .myun e on the
sche&lt;.lule .
The third- yc·ar cua ch said that
his dub wi ll h ave to put four full
quarters together lik" it dill m
the fiN half of South (;alli.t to
b~ SllCt.:es&lt;ifll\.

Gaml' timt• is 7:]0 p.m. &lt;H
Uevc rl y.

BY SCOTT WoLFE
SE NTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RAC INE La st Friday
night at Laidley Field C lay
County f-:!igh School, the
defending " AA " state- runn er
11 p, posted a 60- 14 seaso n-opening di smantling of Southt:rn
before about 600 fans.
D espite· playi ng on th e road,
head coach Rusty Rich ard s
jousted with a little tongue in
d1L'l.'k expression. that his tt.·am
\Vtmld be "a little m ore ar holllt'
this week."
"Clay County was just overpowering." Ri c hards sa id. "Th ey
were one of rl1 e most :u hleri c
tt'a ms I have eve r lieen . We wen•
just lucky not to get anyone
hurt ."
Richard's club will face
Po rtsmouth East this week at
Portsmouth. Last year. Southern
d ropped ,, ~7 - 15 bout wtth the
Tartam in Ra cine.
Statistics for that game w ere
about l' Ven with Ea st edging
Southern in yardage 258 to 225.

Pommouth returns o nly th ree
senior&lt; to t he line-up, bu t adds
HI juniors w ho either started or
saw a lot' of playing time last
year.
Willburn and Manley combined for mosL of the scoring
last year, and Southern fans. will
be glad to know that this particular duo has graduated .
Returning, however,
are
other shining stars in the backfield . Leadin g th e way is Bryan
Payne, a 165 pound senio r back,
6- 5. 222-po und junior fullback
Bobby Yates, JUnior Rock y
Sparks, and Jon Stapleton .
Last week, Southern's Brice
Hill ca ught two Jonathan Evans
passes, one of 4 0 yards and
anoth er of eight yards, in the
third quarter to lead the Torna does, while Brandon Hill caught
a 40- ya rd pass and had over I 00
ya rd!'~ in receiving.
Southern lineman Tyler Little
blocked a punt that set up one

Pl.... -

Sout..n, ......,

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~ 'Page B 2 • 'Ole Dally Sentinel

pads·wild card lead
5·3 win over Texas ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) The Cleveland Indians, with a 1
112-game lead in the AL wildcard race, know it's way too eady
to think about printing playoff
tickets,
Cleveland padded its advantage
over Boston in the wild-card
chase with Wednesday night's 5-3
victory &lt;:Ner the Texas Rangers,
. "It ain't big enough," Indians
;manager Charlie Manuel said,
·"We want more."
: They'll get more if they stay on
:their cutrent pace, The Indians
:won their third straight -and
;improved to 18-8 since Aug, 2,
;but caution is the bywoni in the
-Cleveland clubhouse.
- "There's too much baseball
left," said starter Dave Burba, who
pitched six strong innings. "I've
'been in this game nine years and
seen a lot of things happen. We've
_got to continue to play quality
baseball,"
Indians center fielder Kenny
:Lofton atoned for a two-run
:error with tluee hits and three
:RBis.
: "The situation just presented
;itself, and I took advantage;• said
·Lofton, who tied the game with
:an RBI single in the seventh and
:added a two-run double in the

eighth. "We're just in a position
where we'wo got to win games.
That's the bottom line,"
Lofton has three straight threehit games.
"He's playing like he's capable
of," Manuel said. "He made the
error. but then he came back with
two big hits."
Burba survived the 99-degree
heat and avoided the blister prob.lems that hampered him earlier in
the sea¥&gt;n- Roberio Alomar
drove in the tiebreaking run with
a seventh-inning double for the
Indians,
Burba (12-6) allowed one run
and six hits, struck out three and
walked three, He said he understood Lofton's desire to make up
for the error,
"When somebody makes a
mistake, you want to pick the
team up;' Burba said. "Guys take
pride in that.You want to let your
teammates know you're behind
them."
Cleveland has received effec9ve
starting pitching in the first three
games of rhe four-game series.
Bartolo Colon, Steve Woodani
and Burba 1ach went at least six
innings and came away with victories.
"When you get pitching like

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Quiet night for BoSox and
D-Rays; Yanks stop Seattle
There was no near no-hitter, no
beanbaUs or bench-clearing
brawls. Albie Lopez helped
restore a bit of older as Boston
~nd Tampa Bay finished up a wild
fhree-game series.
• Lopez aUOwed only four hits in
eight innings_ as th~ Devil Rays
bounced back from a one-hit,
brawl-filled loss to the Red Sox
the night before by winning 3-1
Wednesday night at Tropicana
Field.
· "We just came back and played
baseball," Tampa Bay manager
Larry Rothschild said. "That's
nice to just go through a game
after last night and have a normal

game."
• Boston, which lost two of three
~t Tampa Bay, fell 1 1/2 games
behind Clevelahd in the race for
the AL wild cani.
" If you really want to hurt a
team, you beat them down the
stretch," Rorhschild said.
On Tuesday, Pedro Martinez
took a no-hitter into the ninth
inning against Tampa Bay, and
eight Devil Rays were ejected
following a pair of bench-clearing brawls.
There were no such dramatics
this night The Devil Rays had I I
hits against five Boston pitchers
and won behind Lopez's sharp
pitching.
"For me, it's just good to get a
win," Lopez said. "I really wasn't
concerned about that I couldn't

Yankees 5,

Marin~rs

4

David Cone (4-11) pitched 5
2-3 strong innings and luis Sojo
hit a two-run double· as New
York moved five games ahead of
Boston in the AL East.
Seattle lost for the 14th time in
17 games, but remained 2 1/ 2
games ahead of Oakland in the
ALWest.
Blue Jayl 11, Angels 2
David Wells (19-6) allowed
three singles in five innings at

Randy Johnson, Rick .~R eed
and Russ Ortiz made it a day to
savor for baseball purists.
Pitching ruled the National
League, with Tom Glavine. Jon
Lieber and Darren Dreifort also
turning In top efforts Wednesday.
A total of 43 runs scored in eight
games - then again , they didn 't
play at Coors Field or Enron
Field, either.
"I knew we were in trouble
after he threw the first fastbaU,"
Mont!':al manager Felipe Alou
said after Johnson pitched a fivehitter to give Arizona a 7-0 victory. "Some of the young guys really st•uggled out there."
Not all of the hitters were shut
out, however.
Sanuny Sosa homered twice,
giving him a major league-leading 45, for the Chicago Cubs in a
5-l win over San Diego. Steve
Finley connected twice for Arizona and Barry Bonds hit his
39th as San Francisco beat Pittsburgh 2-0.
Johnson (17-5) struck out 10 in
his third shutout of the season
and 28th of his career.
In his last outing against the
Mets, Johnson did not strike out
anyone for the first time since
1989.
At Olympic Stadium, Johnson
earned his first victory in five
starts against Montreal. the team
he made his big league debut
with in 1988. The Big Unit has
now beaten every team in the
majors except the Diamondbacks, whom he has never faced.
"That's a very good team:·

Edison Field, and Toronto tied a
franchise record for homers in a
season.
The Blue Jays increased their
major league-leading total to 221
homers with two by Brad
Fullmer and one each by Tony
Batista and Darrin Fletcher.
Fullmer -drove in four run~ w~oh -his third career two-homer game.
White Sox 8, Athletics 3
Mike Sirotk~ (13-10) pitched
seven strong innings, Jose Valentin
put visiting Chicago in front with
a two-run single in the seventh.
Orioles S, Tigers 1
Jose Mercedes (10-5) pitched a
two-hitter for his first complete
game since 1997 as host Baltimore sent Detroit back under
.500 .
The Tigers, who started the
season 9-23, have reached .500
three times this month. But
they've failed on each occasion to
rise above the break-even point.
Royals 8, Twins 7
Mike Sweeney hit a three-run
double off Mark Redman (12-7)
to give him 121 RBis, se t ond
most in Royals history.
Minnesota trailed 8-0 after
three innings at Kauffman Stadium, but drew within one on
Denny Hocking's three-run
homer in the ninth off Jerry
Spradlin. Ricky Bottalico came in
and earned his,14rh save.

Johnson said. ''I've watched them
the last two nights.1hey're a team
that kind of lays low. When you
score a few runs on them, they
come right back and string some
hits together."
Finley connected twice, giving
him 33 home runs . luis Gonzalez
hit his career-high 27th.
" Uohnson) had a rough outing
his last start," Finley said. "He
doesn't have too many of those a
year, so he came back tonight and
redeemed himself and pitched a
great ballgame.~·
Mets 1, Astros 0
Reed teamed with two relievers on a three-hitter at Shea Stadium as New York stayed tied
with Adanta for the NL East lead. ·
Reed did not aUow a hit until
the fifth inning. Turk Wendell
pitched a perfect eighth and
Armando Benitez struck out the
side in the ninth for his 36th save.
The only nm scored on a wild
pitch by Chris Holt in the first
inning. It was Houston's first 1-0
loss since Aug. 23, 1996, at St.
louis.
Giants 2, Pirates 0
Ortiz struck out 12, finishing
off a fabulous August, and Bonds
homered as San Francisco won at
Pittsburgh.
Ortiz gave up four hits in seven
innings. He was 6-0 with a 1.31
ERA this month.
Bonds hit his 484th career
home run. He was not expected
to start Thursday at Three Rivers
Stadium, where ~e began his
major league career.
Cubs S, Padres 1
Lieber pitched eight strong

The Mutiny came back and
scored three un answered goals to
beat the Crew for the seventh
straight time in the regular season .
Columbus played witho ut forward Brian McBride and defender Ansi! Elc oc k , Th ey were
preparing lor World Cup qualify ing rna rches.
Tampa Bay (16 -11 -3) has 5 1
points, is in first place in the Central Division and has Wtapped up
a playoff spot.
Columbus (11 - 13- 5) has 38
points and is in fourth place in
the C entral Division, battlirig
Dallas, N ew England, Colorado
and Miami for the finalthre e playoff spots .

J

3 :30p.m. • Saturday • ESPN

• Winston Cup, Pepsi Southern 500
1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN
• Craftaman Truck, Truck Serl11 200
8 p.m. • Sept. 7 • ESPN2

Wl--

1. Bob!)y l aboote. 3.458
2. 08111 J...-.tt, 3,367
3. Oale Earnhardt, ~.263
4 • .lefllk.rton. 3.238
Rusty Waii!IU, 3.168

•· Tony stewart. 3.060
1. Ak:Kv AUOO, 3,0 17

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HOME APPLIANCES

No MINIMUM PURCHASE
September 1st, 2nd &amp; 5th

Jeff Burton

Dale Earnhardt

(5)

(6) Tony Stewart
(7) M~rk Martin
(8) JeiiGO&lt;don
(9) Ward Burton
H Dale Earnhardt Jr.

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FEUDOFTHE WEEK

605 General
Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio
45670
740-992-4443
Fax: 740-992-4442
Ted Dexter
Home: 740·992-5260
Dwight Honaker
Home: 740·985-3709

ont ot .ltte aport'•

oddltl", Dorll"'lton

RactWI)' wa1 the sate of
Terry Labonte'• flrtt

Clf"f ltaft lnd IIH hll
first carw vtctoty.

Lobonto won tho
SOUthlm l!liOO Or1 S•pt. 1,
1180, " p~rtly due to the
tMt tJ\et race leaMr
Dlfld Pe1raon cr11hld
on the ftnal lap becaull
a car dltedlr In front ot
him blew •n enctne.
Attonlatiln&amp;f)', Labonte
has nevtf won apln at
thl track where he flnl
demon1trated hit
proficiency_

VIsit u1

•t: www.lngtla.Hom•Appllarte...com

Second Ave.

··Iii-

llil' Credit Terms

llil' Lay-A-Ways

I TORt WOUIII
Til 110 12
S.l t lo 2 J()

I

•

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR TI'1 1S Week
Robby Gord on hA S a story that
demonst ralu the nat ure nf ardent
NASCAR fans, at Bristo l and elsewhe re.
'The fans a! Bri 5t()l, and I 've only
raced there once, are aWi'SOme. a.ll 7
mill ion of them," qu ipped the ] I ·
ycar·o ld 11 at ivc of Cerrit os. Calif.
" I 've ne ver ~en more people ir1 11
!;lllall~.'r i l l~ cc in my li fe. You can't !lee
tho.: top nf the hl eacllcr:s w1thout
b i i10l"lll :tl'$.

•·Lnst tirnl' we were there, 1 wen!
out of the motor·home ;~rea aftt't nm·
ni 11 g on Frida) . and ~ fan S&lt;lld he
.... ~ nt ~ 1 1. me ll) liign lh e tailga te or lu ~
truck. 1s.~ i d , ·Sure, where is it '! Let's

ee

(7401992·2635

Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.

.

:~;~
~

• Wftat: Pepsi Southern 500
• When: 1 p.m., Sunday .
• Where: Darlington (S .C.)
Raceway ( 1. 36&amp;m ile t rack)
• Format: 3671aps/ 501. 322
miles
• Defendlftl ch1mplon: Jeff
Burton
• Quallfylftl record: ward
Burton. Pontiac. 173 .79 7 mph,
March 22, 1996
• Race record: Oale
Earnh"arctt, C heVf Ql~t. 1 39.958
mph , March 28, 1993

• Notable: Earnhardt is within
one victory of eQUal ing Oavld
Pea rson's record of 10
v1ctofies at the t rack .
BUSCH GRANO NAnON.lL

• What: Oura Lube 200
•When: 3:30p.m ., Saturday
•Where: Darlington (S .C.)
Rciceway (1 .366-mile track)
•Format: 147 laps/ 200.80 2
miles
• Defendlnc champion: Mark
Mar tin
• QuallfylnC record: ward

Burton. 167 .676 mph, Sept _ 3 ,

1999
• Race record: Michael
Waltrip, Pontiac. 138.140 mph ,
Sept. 5 , 1992
• Nobblt: Martin 's victor y
earlier this year was his sixth,
two more than ret ired Harry
Gant at the track . ... Tl'1 fs will
be Martin's final OGN race at
Darlington .

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

• What: Truck Series :200
•When: 8 p.m., Sept. 7

• Wh«e: Rlchmood (Ya .)
International Raceway (0 . 7S.
mile track)
• Formlrt: 200 laps/ 150
miles
• Dlftndlna: champion: Greg
Biffle
• QuJIIIylftC r~ord : Ron
Hornaday. Chevrolet , 1:21.726
mph , Sept . 4 , 1J9?
• A1ce record: Bob
Keselowskt . Dodge. 10 4 .167
mph, Sept. 4, 199 7
• NDbble: Last )'ear' s race
was stt&amp;l'1tly shortened , to 196
laps, by rain.

••••••••••••

+ '§ ,;;t;Hll;J h +

Your Turn
L.t11n "'- O.RIIII1rs

Deat NASCAR This Week ,
I just finished watching the
Brickyard 400. Watching the pit
stops, I was wa nting to know what
the holes in tnt sips that hang out
and mark the boxes are for? Al50,
where does the money go when a
tum or crew chief or driver get~
fined?
Ar1 ie Foreman
Litde Rock, Miu .
The holes in the pit signs reduce
the weight and m11ke them more
movable. Mon ey collected from
fines is added to the genera l point
fund and redisuibuted al the end of

By Monto Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Terry Labonte, e two-time
Wlnaton Cup champion, has

Md a· dlfflcutt year.

On July 1. Labonte

suffered ln,lurles In a crash
at Daytona that were not
lmmedtately evident. He
sUffered a broken bOne In

hiS right leg but reced the
nan week at Loudon. N.H .
Over the next few weeks,
howewr, Labonte had
troiA)Ie with dltzlness. He
soullht reiktt from Rich
Bickle at POcono byt then
had to sit out races at
lndianaPQIIs and Watkins

X

Glen. Labonte's absence at
Indy ended a streak of 655

consecutive races. the
longest suc:n streak In the
sport's hlstOfy.

Eventually. what had been

thOught to be the
an.erenects of a
wa&amp; dlqnosed
as a form or veruao
concussiOn

stemmln&amp; from tiny
ffqments of calcium that
.• had been IOd&amp;ed In
LabOnte's Inner ear. After
receMna theraPY. Labonte
ru~s come back to compete

without f\lrtherll'Obieml at
Mlchlpn and Bristol.

"'"'
43
HOftiOioWft:
Corpus
Christl, TeKM

ww.: Kim

Chlldolln: Justin 1191.
Krtsten (17)

Car: No. 5 Kelloga' s
Chevrolet Monte Carlo,
owned by Rlc::k HendriCk

ClrMr 1tatlstlce: 682
starts, 21 wins, 174 top.
five finisheS, 336 top-10
finishes. 26 poles, nearly
$:23 million In wtnnlna:s

1'1&lt;111: Start (Sept. 4,
1978. at Darllnatonl: pole
(March 13, 1981, at
Atlanta): win (Sept. 1,
1980, at oarllnatonl
. How would rou nil• rour
brother lobll)''o chllnce~
It wlnnlrtl hi• Winston
Cuo IHie tlolt ytor?

-

..... ,......... .,....._. 'llln'r'--•-ll111:1a

INMCI~tza-...
How lt.t'lt tftiMiniiM'III

"They're just kind of taktna

olltcted tilt tum? ·we
realty fert like the second half

it one rac·e at tiM"e and going
out and dolna the best the)'
can . 1tnlnk they're rea lly
approachln&amp; the thing right,
and they're havln;: to run
hard be&lt;:ause It (the points
race) is close .
"They haven 't gotten to a
position where they can ease
back and ta~e It easy and be
cautiOus .•

of tne season would be pretty
gooQ for us. The first time we
went to a track for the

second time Is When l&amp;ot
hurt at Daytona. We really
feel like we've lOt a good
teem. we·ve got a lot of new
guys on our team who are

doln; a ;ood Job.'

••••••••••••

Who'aHot ... .
Who's Not

•HOT: Dale Jarrett has finished
ninth or better In 14 straigl'1t
races. He sits 91 pofnts behind
leader Bobby LaDonte.
•NOT: John Andretti finished
20th at Br1stol. He hasn 't
finiShed In the top 10 since the
first Michigan race June 11.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Where hH alithe racing gone ?
The top lwo in the points stand ings ate making ii hard to watch
racina. Someone asked me wh y
Dale Jarrell hasn ' t won but one
race. It's simple. He doesn 't rae~ to
win .... I hace to sa~ it, but now
Bobby Labonte is doing the same
thing. I know he won the Brickyard
1100, but that was be«:ause his car
was so Sllptrior to the rest of the
field (that pus on Rust)' Wallace
was a safe one).
The only way either of them wi ll
win is if they are dom inant. If liix
cars out there were evenly matched.
neitherof!hem wouiO win because
they would seule for a top six jusl
so thete wouldn't be a chance of an
acc ident. I undefl!ihlnd completely
that they want the championsh ip,
. b~t let) ~ee t~em ntct h11rd for 11. .
That 's why they need to gi'o'e more
pointli for winning a ratt .
You nevH saw Jeff Gordon rid ·
ing around ju~t to get the poin ts; he
always tried to win.
Or better yet, you never saw Dafe
Earnhardt moYc uul of someone's
way en route to his seven champi·
onships.
Chris Hil l
Kill!lton , N.C.

1 . t How many cars started the fi rst Grand
National (now Winston Cup) race at
Darlington Raceway?
2. wnen was the first Southern 500 at Darnna:ton?
3. What brand of fuel is used In all Wi nston Cup cars ?
4 . When Oi d Jerf Green make his Wlnstoo Cup debut ?

9 L '£

•661 .•
0561 ·~ SL

·~

SUlMSNW

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-2196 .

of expe rience and wi nni ng fro m the
drivrr 's sidr of th in gs Ihat not too
ma ny people in mci ng h a ~·e
" In additio11to being a winner, Bi ll
is tile (.'()mplete packa~ yoo wan( in 1
dnver. l-le'.u n exa: llent chassiS·SCtup
guy. lie's ~l· ry much into makiug lhe
car handle, and that 's somcthtng I'm
in10aswcll."

X

)C

TII E PERFEfT GUY : HayEvern ·
ham had SQmt: comp l inu: nt~t )'
r e mlll li.~ I.'Onccrning B1ll Elliull, ...,ho

NOT Til E GUY TO MESS
WITI-1: Kcvm l.cpagt&lt; 's "Jack man··
(on pit stops). Ton)' M:utmci Greerl."i·
bmn, N .C., won the N tlrth Ouu l111 ~
State IJW~· Buildi ng Champ1on!;lu p
on A ug. 19 in his hometown.
Co rnpet 1ng rn th C' j unror mid·
J leweighr d1vrsion rcquirt;d Manin to
lo~ about 2.~ po un 'l~ . lie hrui worked

wi ll J r i~ c nut' of b t" rnh;rm \ Du;tg~
lntrcp1ds next yc:u.
'" l ie '~ the pe rfc(.1 guy t o ~ the {'1\r·
nc ~ l one of oor new team ,'" Evc 111h~rn
n 1d ot El lioll . " Ftr:~ t and foremost.
he·~ il b'l eat (hi,·cr l lr l..l! ing.' ~ lt!,·cl

on weeke nds for Rou ~h Racmg for
nme years.
·

:&lt;

WR ONG OLYMPI CS: Dale l:".arn·
hard! Jr.'s O evrolet wore a specia l
O l ~ m p ics paint sc heme i n the
GoRacin g.co m 500, and the th ird ·
gene ration d ri~ r said he would like
to compet e in the ga me~.
~ tr I could choose ~n y Olymp ic
cvem to cnter, itwould havc to bcthe
bob~ k d ." he said . fa1ling to noce that
such eYents ate held in the Winl cr
Ol~ nlpi cs, which w1ll 1101 be held
until 2(XJ2. '''11tat lcKJk.' l ike a lot of
fu n .. hul I would i nsist that more
than one sled wcu l1t IX! on the ttar k at
one ti me. That would I ~ fun. h11 t you
golla have someone to he.1t.··

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Fan Tips·

• General Mills ' ~Guess
RIChard Petty 's Favorite Paint
Scheme· Sweepstakes will run
through Sept. 29 and can be
accessect online at

Three unique paint schemes
have been cre ated for Petty 's
No. 43 Pontiac . now driven by
John Andrettl.
Choosing "The King 's "
favorite chOice could earn a fan
VIP a weekend at No rth
Caro lina Speedway in
Rockingham for the Oct. 22
Po p Secret 400 race . A visit to
www.webstakes.eom will also
reveal a special t icket offer f or
the race.

AROUND THf GARAGE

go.' He u p;, ' No, no, no, hold on.' A
minule la!etlhe guy (.'()mesover with
this tai lgale in hi s hand.s and a
Sharpie. That 's why I 'm h C~ in Win·
ston Clip. E~ry weekend I leave with
a story about a fan li ke that, and lo
sta n a race at Bristol. with cverylxx.ly
in the lilands pumped up, i~ a great
· feel ing.''

.·••

••••••••••••

www.popHcret.com.

••••••••••••
·

•

the year.

Robby Gordon's tailgate story shows race fans' enthusiasm X CREW Of TH£wml.

MIDDLEPORT. OH 45760

Brand Direct~

and led 241

A Saturday practice crash forced Jerry Nadeau and MIChael
Waltrip, as well as Brett Bodine, to go to backup cars and
Start the GoRacing.com 500 at the rear of the field .
"Nadeau spun out for some reason . ~ Weltrlp iJid. •1 don 't
know what happened .... I know what my agenda Is In
practice, and that's just to .klnd of drive my car under
control. Vou've got to be under control for 500 laps ton iVlt.
so 1wouldn't dream of splnn lre out at this POint In the
game . ... Getting In e wreck In practice Is not a a:ood deal."
NASCAR Tlllt Wtek 'a Monte Dutton alvH hit opinion:
·Nadeau admitted: 'I just went In there end lost it. It's one
of those deals. This pla ce Is so damn rast.' In principle, rm
sure he had the s ame attitude about practice that Waltrip
did. But Bristol is a perilous place , end In practice, driVers
have to go fast enough to learn something that will help
tnem In the race , or else what'S the use of practictna?•

Sotas•Chairs
Bedroom•Bedding
Recliners
Coffee &amp;End Tables
Accent Pieces
106 North

Harvie~ dominated

out of 250 taps while, behind
him, cars bounced off walls ,
BRISTOL, Tenn . - Rusty
clattered against each other,
wallace beCame the first
burst Into flames anct spewed
Winston Cup driver Saturday to
fluids of varying levels of
sweep races at a single track
tnls season , adding a
viscosity.
Fittingly. the race encted
GoRacing .com 500 victory to
shortly after a halt to clea r
the Food Cit~ 500 he won
debris from the ttack. At lap
March :26.
245 . ears driven by Kevin
The Ford driver won for the
· Lepage, Jeff Fuller, Elton
second week in a row arid the
Sawyer and Mike Mclaughlin
third time in five races . It was
his fourth victory of the
crashed on the front straight.
Fast-thinking NASCAR officials
season, making him the
elected to atop tho ecUon, vie
seasool l.iaiest-wtnner todate. Wallace broke a tie with
a reo flag:. to set up one .last
Tony Stewart, the driver he beat chance lor runner·up Jason
Keller to SQueeze his ChevrOlet
to the finish .
past Harvick's .
Wallace 's pit crew
The final two laps were no
consistently got him out of the
different from the first -!248.
pits faster than his close st
Harvlek pulled off lmm"edtately
pursuers , Stewart and th ird·
to a three.car.length edge .
p lace fini sher Mark Martin .
·The guys on pit road did the
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
job tonight," Wallace ' s creYo
chief Robin Pemberton said. "It
CICERO. Ill.- Joe Ruttman ,
was an al~atound good night
who has won eight poles. won
for us . Rusty did a great job
for the third time this year.
· driving the car, and 1 think we
driving nis Dodge t o victory over
did the Job backing h im .·
points leader Gteg Biffle in the
Sears 175, the first NASCAR
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
truCk race at Chicago Motor
Speedway.
BRISTOL, Tenn . -Kevin

••n

HOME FURNITURE

s

nl&amp;htmaro behind him
Picked up 20 points
Alway• 1tron1 at Oarllnaton
Needs one more Darllnlf:on
victory ... still
Has his rhythm back
lf·only thll was a Busch race
Badly needs a victory
Won Darlington spring race
Trying to end a slump

FROM LAST WUK

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ON THE SCHEDULE

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More wins than anybody

WINSTON CUP

iifN &lt;C(

, '&gt; ··:

Rusty Wallace

1. (3)
2. (1)
3. . (2)
4. (4)

I

Sttw. omacm. 2,863
Dennis Setm. 2 ,64-i
BrYin Rtftntr. 2,112

TOP HN

•

~

Greg 811118 . 3,228
Mike w.lllice, 3.028
Andy Houatoo , 2 ,958
Kur1 Butch, 2.891
Jack Spra&amp;ue. 2.811

·· Weekly ran kings by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
last week ·s ran~lng Is In parentheses.

6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

•

6-Months Same-As-Cash

Joe Ruttman . 2.101

•

•
•

Maytag
Frigidaire
Tappan

RMdy Toln•. 2,727

Rll(l~

casey Atwood, V:i31
Jimmie Jannton. 2 .466

wtl/J Bul'ton, 2,984
10. Jtff GordOn, 2,825

r
- !
a
(.)

rerf Green . 3.783
Jason t&lt;ellet, 3,194
~In Hill' .,.~ . 3.181
Todd Bodine, 3.141
Ron Ho1naday. 3.038
Elton ~. 2.901
LaJOie. 2, 748
o.vtcl Grfllft, 2.815

I. Mll'll MWtln, 2,9Q6

(.)

3 DAYS ONLY!!

- -

2000 POINTS STANDINGS

;r. '

...

:~

Timet Efttem

All

""'., ~-·

'

•

/...r.

•

~

r

II Butch Grand National, Durt LUbe 200

t.

.,

'

•

.I:

ONLY

minute to put the Crew up 3-1 at
halftime.

The Brewers stopped a threegame losing streak. Dreifort w:as
sharp for the Dodgers, striking
out a career-high 11 and giving
up four hits in eight innings. ·
Ray King picked up his fitst
major league win by pitching a
perfect ninth inning.
Rockies S, Phillies 4
Rookie Ben Petrick hit a solo
homer in the 11th inning as Colorado won at Philadelphia.
Todd Helton hit a three-run
double for the Rockies. He went
1-for-4 with a walk, dropping his
batting average a point to .395.
Colorado manager Buddy Bell
returned to the dugout after serving a two- game suspension.
Cardinals 4, Marlins 2
Will Clark homered and hit a
go-ahead double in the ninth
inning as St. Louis won at Florida.
Jim Edmonds ended an 0-fo~21 slump with a single in the
sixth. He singled again in the
ninth and scored on Clark's dou·
ble.

Subscribe today • 992-2156

Big Mam~ leads Tampa past Crew Why shop Ingels?
and added an assist m a sixminute span .
DiaUo's 26th goal of the season
came after he beat Crew defender Todd Yeagley to a pass from
Eric QuiU and deflected the ball
past goalkeeper Mark Dougherty
to put the Mutiny .up 4- 3.
Kevin Anderson tied the game
3-3 for the Mutiny. He stole ball
from C rew midfielder Matt
C hulis in the 57th minute md
threaded a 20-yard shot just
inside the far post.
Three minutes earlier. Anderson assisted on Diallo's second
goal along with Carlos Valderrama. Valderrama's assist added to
his MLS record of 25 this season ,
Columbus' Miles Joseph scored
twice in the first half off assists by
R obert Warzyc ha , John Wilmar
Perez added a goal in the 52nd

'1
j
..:..j
r.J
Jj
J
. . ~ ::.J'"
J..J
j

.

Watch for the latest prep football results
in the Sunday Times~Sentinel every weekend!

MLS

C OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) l eague scoring leader Marnadou
Diallo scored three goals, including the game winner. as the
Tampa Bay Mutiny beat Columbus 4- 3 Wednesday to darken the
C rew's playoff hopes.
Diallo, known as "Big Mama"
around the league, scored in the
20th, 53rd and the 81st minute.
With two matches remaining,
Diallo's hat trick puts him just
two goals away from surpassing
Roy Lassiter's league mark of 27
goals set in 1996.
"It's important for me to win
the scoring tide because I want
people to recognize me," said
DiaUo.
T he
Senegalese
forward
enhanced his image by winning
M VP honors at last month's AllStar Game. He scored two goals

innings as Chicago, supported by
Sosa's two homers. beat San
Diego at Wrigley Field.
Lieber aUowed one run and
four hits. He set a career high
with 12 victories.
The Cubs won consecutive
games for the first time since: a
three-game streak July 29-31.
Brewers 3, Dodgers 2 ·
Richie Sexson singled home
the winning run in the bottom of
the ninth inning as Milwaukee
beat Los Angeles at County Sta&lt;lium.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

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

Solid pitching rules Wednesday's action

Burba gave us. those are the ones
we have to win," Manuel said.
"When you lose games like this,
you 'U pay for it somewhere down
the line."
Bob Wickman pitched a perfect
ninth for his eighth save.
Texas has lost five straight and
14 of 18. The Rangers took
advantage of a sixth-inning fielding lapse when Lofton misjudged
Ricky Ledee's drive to center
field, missing the ball for a twobase error. Rookie Pedro Valdes
drove in Ledee with a single.
Cleveland came back in the
seventh against rookie starter
Doug Davis (5-5) when Wil
Cordero singled, took second on
Einar Diaz's sacrifice bunt and
scored on Lofton's single.
, Alomar sent the Indians ahead
2-1 in the seventh with his double to left field.
The Indians had a three-run
eighth against Tim Crabtree.
Travis Fryman doubled, Jim
Thome walked and Coniero singled to drive in Fryman. Lofton
added a two-run double just
inside the third-base line to make
it 5-1.
Texas closed to 5-3 in the
eighth on Royce Clayton's tworun single off Steve Karsay.

allow it to get in my head. It hurts
them a lot more if we get a win."
Bobby Smith snapped an 0-for21 slump wirh an RBI single in
the third inning for Tampa Bay.
Boston's Jeff Fassero (8-8) was
dropped from the rotation after
allowing three run! and eight hits
_in 3 1-3 innings. - He will be
replaced by Pete Schourek.
The Red Sox were held hidess
after Nomar Galciaparra opened
the fourth with a single, Roberto
Hernandez got the final three
outs for his 26th save in 32 ·
chances.
The Devil Rays took two of
three from the playoff-contending Red Sox. Tampa Bay hadn't
won a series against a team over
.500 since June 13-15 against
Anaheim.
"It's been a tough series here,"
Boston's Scott Hatteberg said."It's
been an emotional one. We all
know we can play better. We've
got to get it going, or it's going to
end at the end of September."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thursday, August 31,· 2000

Thursday, August 31; 2000

•It all avens out In the
lone run.
Three time• Rusty
W1IIIC8 h . . lolt fiC81
thll )'I IF In part btctUH .
of pit-road declslonl,
man~ or which he blmtelf

made.
On Saturday ni&amp;M 1t
Brlttol Motor Speedway.
hit ~t crew put him back
on the trick at 1the front
of tfte pac::k, and that
proved Invaluable at
Wallace held oft Tony
Stewart to win for the
fourth time thlt year.
Wallace also won tha
sprlnl rae!? at Brlatol .

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E-Mail jmas@frognet,net
www.pertormanceupgrades.com

SIIHI.:
-..dhluta.COJD
See us for Your Stihl'
Power Tool s &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985,3308

�2000

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday August 31, 2000
MERCHA NDISE

510

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
Goods

Announc.ment
Giveaway Loll &amp; Found
Yard Salea and W.nleel
To Do Ada
Mull lie Plld In A*ance
TA!BUNE DEAQUNE
2 00 p m lhe day Htora
the eel le to 111n
Sunday &amp; Monday eel lion
2 00 p m Frldly
&amp;ENTJNEL DMQI..IIE
1 00 p m the day bttlora
the eel 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday ed"lon
1 00 p m Friday

70

Yard Sale

110

Yard S.le

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ilo40 4-46-9481

Professional
Services

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

P H D-T.O-G-R A P H-Y
Weddings

Pes
Spo sTeams
P o ess o a Ce

ed P o og a

A~aso

abe a es
Ca fo appo n men

AEQ!SUB D§AQUNE.
2 daya bttlora 1he ad 11

304 675 4 2

run by4 30

AI eal estate advert s ng n
th 1 newspape 1 tubject o
he Fede a Fair HO&lt;JS ng Act
of 1968 wh ch makes It egaJ

o adver1 se any pre e ence
mtalono dsc mnaton

phe

based o ace co o ' giOn
se• fam a sta ua o na ona

o gn o any nenon o
make any such prefe ence
mite ion o d sc m net on

3046529

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECURITY SS?
No Fee u essWeWn
888 582 3345

FINANCIAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS

210

Business
Opportunity

REAL ESTATE

Th s newspape wl no
k,_ ngly accept

Tap pan H E c ency 90 ¥. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Concl on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Hea ng &amp; Coo ng
aoo 8 2 596 www or tJ om/ben

advertiSamenta to elll ea ate
whch s nvoa ono he
aw Ou eadesaaheeby
nformed hat a clwe ngs
aclvert sed n h s newspape
a eava abeonanequa
oppor1unity baa a

non

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
2000

S

u

6x80

S

kell

K chen 3 BDAM 2 Ba h The
mopanes 2 6 Wa s 0 s washe
5 Yea Wa a y P e Red uced

$3000 Fe ch C y Homes
40 446 9340 0
304 675
400

Lose 3 o 5 LBS WEEKLY AS
SEEN ON TV FAT TRAPPER
$8 9~ METABOL TE 000 $9 95
BACKED BY THE NAT ONA D
ABETES RESEARCH COU NC L
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630

NFL

Livestock

•

ea

Manning ex eel to
lead Colts to Super Bowl

3 bed oom 2 batn nome o $4 s
a man h Ae e ences equ ed

Ali Pei'80NII

The DallY Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy Middleport Oh1o

INDIANAPOLIS {AP) -Expectations are h gh
among lnd anapol s Colts fans as Peyton Mann ng
starts h s third NFL sea on Sunday at Kansas C ty
N othing less than a Super Bowl appearan e w
please some fans after last year s 13 3 reco rd - and
Mann ng says he s prepared to ry
This IS my JOb I take th s very sen ously The
Colts pay ne a lot of money and I want to nake t
worth the r while Mann ng sa d I w~ nt to be a
really good player every smgle yea I don t want o
be so neone who co 1es n has so e uccess and
then struggles That s not In) style
A starter fro 1 the first day of h s rookie season n
1998 and a Pro Bow star er last year Mann ng
completed 65 7 passes for 7 87 4 yarr± Onl y furure
Hall of Farner Dan Manno threw for nore touch
downs n h s first two seasons (68) than Mann ng
who has passed for 52
M ann ng already 1s among the rranch se s most
productive quarterbacks He s s xth n completwni!'
and yards passmg and th rd m touchdown passes H e
reached those nun bers m JUSt 3? ga 1 es tak ng aU
but 21 snaps on offense the last two years
Coach J n Mora sn t expect ng Mann ng to
n atch the franchise records of 351 completions and
4 135 yards pass ng Nor s he expect ng Edgerr n
James last season NFL offen ve rook e of the yea
to match h1s league lead ng 1 553 ya d ru sh ng or
rhe 2 139 yards he ga ned fro n s r mn ag n 1999
You ge be ter by do ng th ngs repet t ons and

working hard Those guys will be a I tie b t better
It s go 1g to be ha d stat st cally o top what hey d d
la t yea Mora sad Wedne day But hey could not
be as good s a st cally and play bet er th1s year
Mann ng and rhe Col ts " ll go n o rh e seaso
opener w hour one of the potenr weapons that
made the team so successful las season W1de rece v
er and return spec al st Ter ence W lkins has been
declared out uf the game as he con nues to recover
fro 1 a concuss on suffered dunng an exh b t Otl
game at Purdue o Allg 12
W lkins s gned a an undrafi ed free agent last year
became the team hi rd lead ng re e ver w th 42
catches for 665 yards and four tou chdowns He alse
accumulated 388 yards on 41 punt re urns and ave&lt;
aged 22 'J yards on 51 kickoff return
Any nme you don t ha e a sta rter not play ng
you russ h m and Terrence has go b g play ab bty
and he s made t for us n the past Mora sa d
Mann ng will have Pro Bowl starter M arv n Har
r son Jerome Pathon and E G Green at wide
rece ver w th rookie Pay on Will ams returmng
kicks Jnd punts
Were go ng to nuss Ter ence I m d sappo nted
Mann ng sa d I feel good when Terre nce s n
there He 1 akes th ngs happe1 w h tl e ball He s
always crea ng ways to ge h the ball I always 1 ke
wl n hey e punt ng and Terrence back here I
kno v we e go ng o get good field pos t on

n

Reds
from PageB1

;JO Announcements
91Q FooV Sasqualch
Have you seen th s an ma
so ca 888 319-8509

New To You Th ft Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens
4Q-592 842
Oua y o h g and househo d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
Thu sday Monday h Sa day

9 ()().~ 30

oppos te field dr ve to the seats
n r ght
Gala raga 'las stynued on h s
two prevwus at bats Reese made
a d v ng stop on a grounder to

end the first then Surhoff vas
thrown out at the plate to end the
th rd after the B g Cat s ngled to
left fielder Alex Ochoa
C nc nnat1 cored on Ch s
Sex on s RBI ngle n the second
and Dante B chet e s sac nfice fly
n the s xth Otherw e the R eds
hardly touched Glav ne who
ret red the s1de n o der s x t mes

The Braves outh t C mc n att
14 3
Forn er Atlanta closer Mark
Wohlers n ade hts first appearance
at Tu ner F dd sm e he was dealt
o C nc nnat n Apr I 1999 w th
his career n shambles because of
onrrol probl ems H e p tched two
sco reless nn ngs and d dn t walk
anyone

sh ne

80

Meigs

Southem

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

from Page 81

H II s tou hdowns Tornado
Andrew Coffn an boo ed bo h
Southern ext a po nts
Sa
o
Bu
ess Today
P me ~ho pp g Cen e Space
A a abe A A o dab e Ra e
Sp ng Va ey Pa a Ca

40446

0 0

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Help Wanted

110

B g plays and pee a] earn play
d d donunate he West V rgm an
at a k howev
Matt Ash led Southern rush ng
w th 17 carr e for 89 vards and
Joe Cor ell had 9 carr s for 51
ya ds
Jonatha E ans was 5 of 16 fo

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
ee

Es

Ohio Valley Publishing
has an opening In the
Graphics Department for an

Public Motlce

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY
OHO
Case No OOCV035
Judge F ed W Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
LaSa lo National Bank as
T uatoe undo the Poo ng
and Serv clng Ag eement
dated 6 1 99 Ser ea 1999 2
c o Supo lor Bank FSB
p e ntlll va Roy Stove at
al defendants
Roy Stove whose ast
known add esa s 461
Qeo goa
Creak
Rd
Ga polio OH 45631 and

that on the 31st day of
March
2000
LaSalle
Nations Bank as T ustae
undo tho Pooling and
Servicing Agreement dated
6 1 99 So loa 1999 2 c o
Supa lo Bank FSB f ad ta
Complaint n the Common
P oas Court and tho object
and demand for e ef of
wh ch p oad ng
s to
foreclose the
len of
plaint ff s
ll\O rtg ago
reco dad upon the fo owing
descr btid rea estate to wit
Property Address
206
Butternut Avenue Pomeroy
Ohio 45169 end be ng mora
part cular y dose be" n
pantns
mo tgaga

ASPecial
Thank You

Cc1 Ao E a

WE OFFER

Fu I Tlme 40 Hour Work Schedule
Vacations
401 ~
Medical Dental Prescription and Life Insurance

800 53 9528

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

S00.2 3-83&amp;5

www cou rytyme com

RENTALS

We wo k n a Mac n ash env onmen us ng C eato 2
Mu Ad Qua kXp ess Adobe Pho oshop and Types y e
Compu e Expe ence w h th s softwa e s a p us

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Sflld AIIUmtl 0

The Dal y Tribune

Attn Fred Hollman Product on Manager
825 Th rd Avenue
Ohio 45631

www g a

CIJ:ASSQIFQfEDSI

recorded n Mortgage Book
90 page 424 of this County
Recorda s Office
A ol the above named
defendants are required to
answer w th n twenty olght
(28)
days alter last
publica! on which shall be
published once a wsok lor
s x consecut ve waelte or
they may bo don ed a
hea lng n th a case
LERNER
SAMPSON &amp;
ROTHFUSS
Attorneys tor P a ntlff
PO Box 5480
C nclnnat OH 45201 5480
(5 3 241 3 00
(1) 27 (8) 3 10 17 24 31
6TC

Loca

Loca

Gove nment
Fund

Gove nment

Revenue Aaat

40%
30%
30%
100%

$238 263 00
78 697 00
78 69100
$595 657 00

$87 460 00
65 595 00
65 595 00
$218 650 00

3888%
32 23'Y.
1040%
669%
180%
100%

00
57 594 00
8 586 00
1195700
21 085 00
$178 697 00

$25 503 00
21 41 00
6 823 00
4 388 00
7 740 00
$65 595 00

8 81 %
12 28%
7 32%
000%
503%
033%
817%
852%
869%
643%
806%
656%
100%

$1538800
5 648 00
21 944 00
8 055 00
13 08 00
4 802 00
17 870 00
6 559 00
8 988 00
3 299 00
18 459 00
6 776 00
1460000
5 359 00
15 225 00
5 589 00
15529 00
5 700 00
11 490 00
4 218 00
14 403 00
5 287 00
1 722 00
4 303 00
$178 69100
$65 595 00
Nancy Parker Compbel
Me gs County Aud tor

Percent

ET

An hony Lancl Company L d

Public Notice

eXecuta a adm nlst ators
spouses and assigns and
the unknown guard ana of 1----~-------1-----------­
mlnor and or ncompetent
PUBLIC NOT CE
he a of Roy Stove
a
The Me ga County eudgat Comm ss on has comp oleel Ita
whose
es dances are
apport onment of Und v ded Loca Gove nment Revenue
unknown and cannot by and Unhd v dad Loca Gove nment Revenue Ass etance
aa1onab a d gence be Fundstor200
ascertained w taka notice
Theaa evenues a e baaed on p oject one from the Ohio
0!1 ca of Budget and Management and a a on y estimates
Card of Thanks
of the amount of avenue that cou d be ece ved by Meigs
County
Tho lo owing Ia a complete b aakdown of tho projected
evenue

AERA ON MO ORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Reb
So k

AD DESIGNER

11 9 yards pass ng w th B ce Hill
( wo ca ches for 48 yards) and
B andon H ll (five e ep ons for
161 yards) be ng he rna n ta gets
Brando P e ce a o a ugh two
passes for 90 yard
Ga e t n e F day s 7 10 p m

Public Notice

th,a
unknown
heirs
d,ftvlaees
legateaa

•

sen ors Chancey s:ud They lost
a close one to Nelsonv1lle York
and thev a e anx ous to get then
fi t w n and so a e we We need
to play " th the an e ntens1ty as
last week and cut down on our
rustakes
Ki ckoff s set for 7 30 at Bob
Rob e ts F eld n Po neroy

he Marauders
tackles " th
e ght fron h s 1 nebacker spot
Tackle B lly Sou sby added SIX
and Matt Stewart and Ross Stew
from PageB1
art added five each Ros Stewa t
for 34 yards and Bulhngton had had all of h s n the first half as he
left he game at halft me due to a
three carr es for 24 yards
oncuss on he ke Kennedy s
On defense Me1gs gave up ? 8
ya ds to the Bl e Devils 183 yards doubtful his w ek
Athem_ has a gp.Qd group of
conu g on tl e grou d Jeffers led

Auction
and Flea Market

DavdRonkln

Tuppers Plains
8) 31 1 lc

$6947~

�•
'
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 31, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

:..Thursday, August 31, 2000

Pomeroy,

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Ohio'

BRIDGE

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Sept. 4, 2000
Labor Day
B-8 -Q RibS/Chicken Di~ner
· w/Baked Beans &amp; Cole Slaw
PLACE: American legion
Mill St. Middleport, OH
lime: 11 :30 am to ??
'
Take Out · Eat In
$5.00 Adult
$3 .50 12 years &amp; under
Desserts Extra

Racine Fire Dept.
Chicken BBQ and
Homemade Ice Cream
Sunday-Sept. 3rd
Serving begins at 11 :oo am

IJJ/

Public Notice .
Townohlp-6-North, RongoSHERIFF'S SA~
14-Woat, Rutland Townohlp,
REAL ESTATE
Molgo
County, Stato or Ohio
. CASE NUMBER OOCV002
~SA~~ NATIONAL BANK, and mora portlcularly
AS TRUSTEE, Plalntlflve. daocrlbad u rollowo:
Beginning 11 1 point In
VIRGINIA MARSHALL, 11 al,
tho contortlno or 1 omoll
Delendanta
·
baing tho Northwoot
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, creak
comer
ot a 1.00 acre more
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
or
loll
troct recorded In
In purouonco ol an Order Diad Book
313 It Pogo 275:
ol Sale to mo dlrtetad from
Thence
along
Wilt
aold Court In tho above boundory or aald the
1.00 aero
entitled action, I will upoao mora or loaa troct tht
to tilt 11 public auction at following two courMo:
tho lollowlng Courthoua•
1. South 35 dtgrooa, 30
on September 21, 2000 01 minutia, 37 uconda Woat 1
10:15 a.m. ol nld dty, tho
of 60.51 ro11 to a
lollowlng doocrlbtd real dlotanco
point;
oateta:
2. South 02 dagr11a, 25
Situated In tho VIllage of mlnuln, 13 ooconda Waat a
Pomeroy, County ol Molga
or 94.17 1111 to 1
and Sttte ol Ohio, tnd dlotanco
point baing tho Southwest
de..rlbad aa lollowo:
~
al oald 1.00 aero
Bolng o port of lot no 17 corner
more
or
Ito•
trioct; .
oi .BURNAP'S ADDITION to
Thonco
lo8vlng
Wall
Pomeroy, doocrlbod ao .boundory South 37oold
dogrooo
followo: Beginning on the 11 mlnutoo 32 oocondo
south Uno of High Strnt 112 Woat a dlotonco ol 24.91
112 teet weotorly ol tho loot to a rolnt In tho
northoett comer of lot no. contorllno o Stole Route
17 of Burnap'• Addition to 1124;
Pomeroy, to 1 point which Ia Thonco along aald
75 loet wuterly of contertlno
North 50 degreoo,
Blazewlc'a weat corner and 02 mlnut11, 33 aocando
lo marked by 1 lllo oat on Wool a dlotanco al 153.117
the upper aid• ol brick lett to 1 paint btlng tho
rotelnlng wall; thtnct oouth lntereoctlan of tho
8 dog. 50' ooot 10 1/21oot to centerline of State Route
a mark on 1 atone Willi 1124 and the canturllne o1
thonco northwlltwardly Townohlp Road tse;

CONNIE'S
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Stale Route 7,
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openings, all shifts.
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30 Applaud
31 Funnel..hoped 4 Gravel rldgoo
5 Eoklmo
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6 Gomeltoh
38 Poncedo37Buslntlo ....... 7 Small crown
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• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEI!Th\L
FREE ESTIMATES .

740·992·7599

.. ,
Replac~ent . ·
Windows . •

.

~

Certalnteed,. . .
Simington Ufetlme
Local
Reasonable Price&amp;
FREE Estimates : -

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

ADM ....... Tractor Be
Equipment Puts
Factory
. Authorized
.
Case-IH Puts

Dealers.

,....,......

1000 St. Rf. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

....

HANING'S
··~·""'··
FREE ESTIMATES
740-698-6735
Advertise in1
this space for
$25 par

month.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.
· Ml1n St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
perganpt _ ~
$300.00 Cov1rall
$500.00 Starburlt
Progreselve top line.
Lie. I# 00-50 11Mftln

I !ft/1 I I

. l'-HE BORN LOSER

,."-Dfo\IT

"''

Tf\{&gt;,\'5 lo\01 \W:. 1 [
ocN1 Mit-It&gt; Tf\"T ~~

tT-Tf\E~ 'l'OJN--ID
11:-DTfl~ CONi C£T N..0!&gt;1(, t!:&gt; \AA.I
~l'l,':, jlj~T 1-0

HILL'S
JlbWICK'Sdil
SELF STORAGE HfiOLinG an7:
29670 Bashan

Road

Racine, Ohio

45n1

74().949-2217

o·

Sizes 5' x 1
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
1/21100 1 mo. Dd.

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
• 12% tattle feed 16.75 I 100 lbs.
• 21% H111ters Pride Dog food 16.75/50 lbs.
• faD fertilizers

7'11)-985-3831
35537 St Rt 7 North

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I"

IT~ JUS\

n\1\'i f\(~OPII'I\01'1~ · "''
1\R£. NC.V~ ~Gf\T
UKLI'\INE I

'I'OU

f&gt;.U!

EXCAVATinG ·
Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand e Topsoil ~­
Fill Dirt e Mulch • ~ ,
Bulldozer Services . '
(740) 992·3470 :
•••••••••••••••

YOlL8
' •
conCRETE 1

COOOECTIOO .•
Quality Driveways;:,
Patios, Sidewalks !
25 years Experience ·:
FREE ESTIMATES: :

KNOLIJIN6 THE WEATHER
15 VERI{ IMPORTANT
TO A FLIER ...

740-742-BOlSor ·:•

.1-877-353-7022
....... . .. .. .· ~.

I

Thucydides, for the funeral
oration of Pericles in book two of
" The .History of the Peloponne sian War," wrote, "But the
bravest are surely those who have
the clearest vision of what is
before them, glory and danger
alike, and yet notwithstanding go
out to meet it."
That made me wonder yet
again how to get nonexpert players to visualize the locations of the
missing key cards. Take· this deal
as an example. Look only at the
North-South hands. You stop in
three hearts. West leads the club
king: five, seven, two . West continues with the club jack: six, ace,
eight. East returns the club four.
You ruff and cash the heart ace,
but West discards a club. How
would you continue?
Being in the suit under partner's, South's two-heart rebid
g uarant~ed at least a six-bagger.
North's raise invited game, but
South passed becau se of his minimum point-count.
Clearly, you can see eight top
tricks: one spade, fiv e hearts (with
the help of the marked finesse)
and two diamond s. And if eilherpoillleil-suir finesse i.s woll l ~g:
lhal will supply trick nin e. Yet
there is a dange r that both fin esses will fail. However, from the
play of the clups, surely Easl ·
hegan with exactly three. (With
more. he wouldn't have overtaken at tri ck two.) If that is so. you
ca n succeed whatever the localion s of the spade king and diamond queen.
Play a spade 10 dummy' s ace,
finesse the heart jack, cash the
heart king, and ex it with a hean to
East's queen.
Whether East sw itches to a
spade or to a diamond, you
receive the ninth trick .

i-1ATE CLOUDS ..

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

JONES'
OHIO

•ioP

•1rlll\

~oral

sw"'9

, p.efi\O
• rll\4\1'19
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

-

Fn•

Mason, WV
304-773-5300 or 740ReservP a spot for you , your team, or your o a

11 11 u11•
Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots ol Fun

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

43ShoIRIW

Ask for Jim

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

24 Songlike
25 N•tlor
27 Watering

32c.

Pass

All pass

4S SkiiHul .
47 Titled woman
4S Helghta
(obbr.l
49 Joyful
exclamation
50-da"--ro
52Chlpogodo
53 Antlered
onlmal
- ...1.-"--'-...1.-"-..1• 54-Mol-

BY PHILLIP ALDER

740-992-9636
BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

Dennis the Foverloh
Actrtu Dahl

· 23 Uko Unc:atn

Opening lead: • K

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

WANTED

Female ruH

Or01t ogcy.

20 Hypnotic
tteto

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR ClEANING ~" .

DIPOYSIG
PAift

992'2n2

....t

211

• Q 10 9 7
• Q 10 7
• A 7 4

Soulh
.• 6 3

OPtNION{&gt;,\tO ~

Cellular
Jeff Warner- lns...992-5479

23 Slndwlch

• K 10 8

• K Q J 10 3

•'

OB·3t-oo

A Q 54
8 5 3
K J 2
9 6 5
East

Winning position

"Take the pain out
ofpaintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leove Message
Aher 6 pm· 740-985-4180

(Factory Outlet)
AD vertlelll Llludo are
made 10 order al our
loealion
UP TO 70o/o OFF
• Vertieolo • Wood
• Mlnlt • Ete

Bl o~ n

"Thl1 attachment will elide Into the
customer's pocket end suck out $260."

caa aER ••

.,., n. ua

LINDA'S
PAINTING

1•11 1

•c•

•
•
•
..

-••

BlUM LUIIIIR

Advertise·in
this space for
s100 per
month.

lollowlng tho 110uth Uno ol
Thtnco leaving oald State
Ill no. t 7 to tho northwoot Route 1124 and along the
corner of the aame, on the contorllno ol oald Townahlp
aouth line ol High Street; Road 158 tho following
thence easterly following throe cou,...:
the oautllllno of H~th·Stno01 - 1. North 30 dogroao, 58
to the place of beginning
· mlnutoo 01 oocondo Eut 1
Prior
lnotrumont • dlatonc~ of-70.27 loot to s
reloroncu: Volume 85, point·
·
Page 903.
2. 'North 20 degrees, 22
Property addrooa: 100 mlnutea, 28 aoconda Eut a
High Street, Pomeroy, Ohio i dlatanco ol 81 .21 teet to e
45789.
I point·
Stop In And See
Appralaed 1!$15,000.00. .
3. 'North 18 degrees, 38
Torma ol Solo: 10% Caoh 1 mlnutoo, 38 aoconda Eut a
Steve Riffle
day or aalo and balance by dlotonco ol 247.18 loot to a
Conllrmatlon ol Solo.
point·
Sales Representative
Jameo M. Souloby
Th~nco leaving 11ld
~- =~
'
.
SheriH, Melga County
centarllno South 69 dogrooo
·"':
Larry Schey
Craig A. Thomas
25 mlnutea 56 ooconda Eaat
~ornor,
Sompaon
&amp; pooolng through a 5/8" Iron
Rothluoo
pin ott 1 dlotanco of 11.44
120 E. Fourth Slrtot, 8th loot and going o totsl
Floqr
dlotanco ol 175.05 loot to a
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
5/8" Iron pin set;
Phone (740) 593-6671
(513)241·3100
Thence South 28 dogreoa
OH Sup Cti0037M7
53 minute• 38 aeconda
3T 81171(24)(31)
Weal a dlatanco or 279.60
. "A Better
loot to tho principal point
beginning containing 1.3839
Public Notice
ocroa mora or leu aubjoct
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL to oil logsl eaaomtnto and '
Ruttland, Ohio
ESTATE
' rlghta-of-way.
Tho State ol Ohio, Mo~to
Truck seats, car seats, headliners.
Boarlngo were derived
County
from a prevloua survey
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Provlco, Inc., Plaintiff, va
rocordtd In Oood book 313
Donald A. Jelfora, ot al.,
Four
wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
at Pogo 275.
Delendanta
Tho above doacrlptlon
boat covers, carpets, etc .
No. 99-CV-134
wot propared lrom an
In purouanct ol an Order actual survey madt on tht
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
ol Sale In tho above tntltltd 30th doy of Auguot t994 by
Over 40 yrs experience
octlon, l will offer lor tole at ' c. Thomat Smllh, Ohio
public auction, at tht front Profatolonal Surveyor
·(740) 742-8888
11opo or the CourthOUIO In 16844
'
1
Pomeroy, In tht above
Audltor'o Parcel No. 1t·
1-888-521-0916
named County, on tho 21ot 00025 000
day ol September, 2000, ot
Said Pr~mlaoo ~ocatod on
10:30 o'clock A.M., lht State Route 124 and
lollowlng described rtol Romaine Rood.
J&amp;L IIISULITION &amp;
POPLAR LOGS
ol111o, oltuato In the County
Said Prtmltot Approlttd
ol Meigs and State ol Ohio 11 $15,000.00 end cannot bt
CONSYRUCnON
WANTED
to wit:
told lor 1111 than two-thlrdt
Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Btlng a part ol a tract of ol that amount. ·
Replacement Windows,
8" diameter to 27"
land tranalorred to Oouglaa
TERMS OF SA~E : 10%
Seamless Gutters &amp;
I B'lonq - S~ O I Ton
and Sadie M. Chapman 11 down; bilancaln 30 dayo.
Downspout, Garage room
rocordtd In Oood Book 3011 Jamta Soulaby, Shorlll,
ALSO WANTED
additions. Pole Building,
at Page 395, Molgt County Mtlga County, Ohio
CHIPWOOO
Garage
Doors
&amp;
Opener,
Recorder's Olllco, Melga Sttvtn J. Goltt, Anornoy,
~"lo25"
Decks.
Bo&lt;~
Docks.
County, Ohio, oloo bolng 1 10053243
Concrete &amp; Block Work,
12' to 20'1n lcnqth
port ol Fraction 25 , 3T 8(17) (24) (31)

UUS TIWNIIIQ

North

• 98 6 4

7/22/TFN

Public Notice

legal papers, investment records. ph~
albums, cameras, household inventory a~
sentimental items will be sale.
•
'
For more information call

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

1..8¥+-;,-¥.;:*1~

-rt

PRODUCTS
"THE MOST TRUSTEED NAME IN SECURITY"
I Pr·otect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCIION

38 Sunrlao
dlniC!Ion
40 Actual baing
ollphont
41 Average grade
7 Ruulln rullra 42 Foil biOomor
t 2 Unwholeaornt 44 Rullllod rock
vopor
45 AB]fmember
13 Deo -, lowl 4S Club14 Mar
4S Mottled ttone
15
IWIY
51 C h i l l Coollo'o muelc 55 Fol17 , ........ r01uoal sa Mexl08n
18 Bonnet, e.g.
opoclllty
2t Mohommodln 57 ~oafera, e.g.
Bible
58 Sly oneo
ACROSS
1 Keopor ol on

PHILLIP
ALDER

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

_to __ _

NEA Crossword Puzzle

• FRIDAY, Sept. I, 2000
· Several con tacts you've made
~ould be of significance to you in
ihe year ahead. They may be Ihe
'ones who' ll prov ide a base for a
~oupl e of fonuitous opportunities.
: VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Be
graceful winner or a grac ious
loser. whatever lhe case may be
today. if you get involved in a
Co mpetiti ve de velopment . Maktng winnin g all -importan t will
t'dmi sh your image. Get a jump on
life by understandin g the influ ences that' ll govern you in the
year ahead. Send for your AstraGraph prediction s by mailing $2
lo Astro-Graph, c/o thi s newspa·
~er. P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Stat ion, New York, NY I 0 156. Be
l ure to state your Zodiac sign .
: LIBRA (Sept . 23-0c t. 23) It
tvou ld have a negative effect upon
~our tactics or energies today to
~a lk about your intentions prematurel y. Too mu ch talk could take
all the oomp h out of your plans.
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No v. 22)
!lasing your hopes and expcctatlons today on so me form of
mag ical ~nterve nti o n jould cause

a

by Luis Campos
Colobltly Cipher cryptOgfllmo ,,. crulld r,., quototlono by ramouo people, put and
pretenl. Eleh leiter In 1M dpher llandl ror enother.

Today's clu.: L equals W

'OPW
OPW

IEZUPV ·Y E
TO

~VSAM.

WKWSEOPTYF.'
B V Z U ·y I W S

I

ZRIO
ZRIO

-

F R I 0 H K

'il'll\ in g

cocr:\\on~-ltr..~~·
_ _ _ _:...._.;: ldlted loy CU.l I . POLLAN
THAT DliLT
PUll Ill

. . J PI 1 I
2

I

I

liSSIE

3 .,.-,-1--,---j
1--r;-1

t h in ~~

0

L A V--::-:---11
C0
r--:---;-:-:1
~ "I t's easy to save face ," granny
. 1
. .1
.1
.1
.""have ld do ," she inst ructed . "is
'--'---'--'-....1.--' keep the lower half - . - - . - "
~

l--,.....,..,,.....,.--r~';' told the ,e mbarrassed boy . "All you

L
L.Dl S .I~ AI. C.II
Q

IO

'---'---'--'-_..._.__..J

@

PRINT NUMBERED LE7TERS IN
THESE SQUARES

C)

UNSCRA/VoBLF MOVE LEHERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Recite - Ruddy- Kn ife- Manful · FIND the DECK

On top of the can of paint for _the deck. the wtfe f~und
this note. "Went fish ing. couldn t FIND the DECK

AUGUST 31

o ther ' arc

dtml' -vnu r wav- _

:1Jjuq111ell\ -, .

C ANCt-:K I.IUI IC 2 1-.lul y 22 I A
good Wi.IY to cnnn1ragc
clo ~cly

~~.-rutini zt!

u t h~: r ~

to
) ou r limi.l i.l-

tinns l\JJ ay is to . . tart po11ll111g out
the ir

sho rh.:om in g~ .

You' l l rt!grd

C1e r o peni ng your mouth.
LEO (Jul y 23-Au g. 22) You
coul d dcpri"e yourse lf of a \'a lu ablc relalionship today if you
yield to judging others by what
they hav e in stead of by what they
are . Good character is somethin g
money can ' I bu y.

t~e mi~~"lfl

Comp lete the chuckle qu oted

bv fdl ing in
word1
'r' Ou develop f ro m !ote p No J below.

ln ~ t e aLI . ll ..,h.'ll to lh L' Ir in put con-

CL' rllln g ll l'L' d l'l i

WOlD
QAMI

r

, · " I?ELBIF

do uhtm g :ou r dirL'l'li ves today.
don't beco me sill hhnrn about hm·-

in cl1 en:- n-

WZXSHBW

Z H P A W S

such as a promise or commilmcnt.
If you fail 10 do so. it could cos t
your image more 1han you bar·
ga 111ed for.
TAURUS (Apr il 20-May 20)
Keep your ow n coun se l in direc tin g others in fina ncial arrange111cnts today. because there are 'too
man y unkn own raciOrs of which
yo u're unaware th ai could ~c
l'Ost ly.
GFt\I INI (t\b y ~ 1-.lunc 201 If
yo u beg in

ATJW

PREVIOUS SO~UTION : ·so long as men worship the Caesars and
Napoloona, Caesars and Napoleons will duly rise and make1hem miserable."
- A. Huxley

'Birthday

great di sa ppointm~ nt. bc~,;a u sc it\
not likely to be forthco ming. Only
ho nesl effort br ings res ult s.
SAG ITIAR IUS (No v. 2.'-Dec.
2 1l You may haw a great des ire
to dra w att enti on to yo urse lf
today. but bear Ihi s in mi nd : Nol
all who are wal&lt;.: hing will he
blind to your shortcom ings.
CA PRICORN &lt;Dec. 22-.la n.
19) Be ncil l1 cr demand in g nnr
wishy-washy when in the position
of manag ing oth ers touJ y. Especi all y. don't ask uf lh em th at
which yo u wouldn't do yourself.
AQUARlU.S (J an. 20-Fe b. 19)
Indifference on your part today
cou ld tum profit into loss if you :re
not careful. Thi s holds true eve n
when your dealings are conduct·
ed in a professional atmosphere .
Stay on your toes.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Should your tolerance be testeu in
any one-on-one relati onship
today. maintain your self-control.
A coupl e of individua ls may
attempt to weaken your resolve.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
Don ' t make excuses today. Make
good on what is ex pected of you.

XW

(HRIOSTHY

ITHURSDAY

_::_
•------1m 'Your

a

CELEBRITY CIPHER

(CC)
Today ICCI

ICCI

II. Cincimali Reds at Atlanta Braves (livt) (CC)

I

�...'
'.
""•••
'·..,

'

•

' ,,

;·,._
B 8 • The Dally Sentinel
,.

.• .•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

PREP VOLLEYBALL

••
'••
' .

Jfttate~rcl stops Southem
-·
::·

BY ScoTT WOlR

• ..,

S£NTINEl CORRESPONDENT

-·

: , RACINE - Perhaps Tuesday's
: iipset of Alexander was just too
: ~motional or perhaps Waterford
: was just better on this particular
: night.
: At any rate, the Southern vol: :teyball squad fell in three games,
: :t4-16, 15-9, and 9-15.
: : · "We hustled, but we just dug
: :ourself an early hole," said South::ern coach Rorna Sayre. " Water: ·ford go the momentum and it
han:! to overcome."
: :. Waterford took the early lead in
~· the first game, 12-6, but Southern
::,.(Qught back as Waterford pushed
score to 14- 8. The Tornadoes
i:~ied hard amid several Water-

::was

l:ilte

,...

,. ....
..•• •

ford timeouts to tie the score at
14- 14.
Macyn Ervin se rved five
straight for the tie, but Southern
lost the serve and Waterford's
Katie Wainwright scored the last
two points for the win.
Stacey Mills and Kati Cummins
each tallied four points as Southern came back to post a 15-9
win·. Waterford broke a S-5 tie to
claim the finale 15-9 in claiming
the match.
·
·· Ervin was 52-for-63 setting and
13-of-15 on serve with seven
points.
Fallon Roush was 42-of-43 setting with three blocks, and was
32-for-41 spiking with four kills.
She had a 15-for-16 serving night

with 10 points. IUti Cununins
was 13-for-17 spiking with a kill
and 14-of-14 serving with eight
points.
Emily Stivers was 6-for-9 serving and 11 -of-11 sp iking, and
Katie Sayre was 5-for-5 servi ng
and 12-for- 12 spiking with two
kills. Tiffany Williams was 15-for15 spiking with a kill.
Katie Wainwright had 17 points
for W aterford . Kristin Hill had 13
and Rachel Cunningham had I 0.
Southern won the reserve game
15- 12 and 15-6. Leading scorers
were Emily Hill with 1L Amy
Lee had six points and Brandi
Lane added five points.
Southern (1-1) hosts Belpre
Monday.

·

PREP FOOTBALL

.
~

~

~ahama

guns for first win
~gainst
Federal
Hocking
..
..

v

BY DAN POLCYN

...

~ ·

REGISTER SPORTS STAFF

o:, "

MASON - Fourth year head
&lt; ~oach Dave Richards brings his
:: federal Hocking squad across the
:: Ohio River to Wahama looking
-: lor its first victory of the season.
:: 7 The Lancers lost to Fort Frye
:: last Friday 64-12, the first game
:: of what many have characterized
::as a rebuilding year in Stewart,
•Ohio. Last season's edition tallied
:=til 8-2 record, but that club fea:~d 13 seniors. Richards was
·~ced with replacing 10-of-11
·:.drers on both sides of the ball in

:2oOO.

:: : :One plus on the Lancers' side is
jiQmbers. The opening night rosfeatures 43 players.
f.H. will feature an )-formation
:tlised offense, led by senior
Steven .R ichards(No. 7), who is in
!]is first season as the Lancers' signal-caller. "We're gonna keep the
ball on the ground and use up as
much clock as we can," Richards
(old the Athens Messenger.
Richards' play-calling contradicted that statement, however, as
Steven Richards passed for 197
yards against Fort Frye. Clint
Seers (No. 1 4) is the receiver to
w:.tch, as he caught rwo pass.es for
n 9 yards and rwo touchdowns .
Richards was the Lancer:s' leading
~sher last week with 24 yards on
rix carries.
Defensively, the Lancers will
feature a 4-3 attack. They hope to

.ftF

.&lt;

improve on last weeks' effort
where they surrendered 500 yards
on the ground to Fort Frye.
Federal Hocking is classed as a
Division IV school in Ohio's sixtier football system.
The White Falcons are also
looking for their first win of the
season following their 4 7-6 loss
to Class AA Williamstown in
week one.
Wahama featured a wide-open
offense against Williamstown ,
showing four wide receivers and ·
the option while enjoying some
success at both.
Federal Hocking is the first of
three Tri-Valley Conference
opponents on the White Falcon
schedule this season.
Hannan playsat Clarksburg
ASHTON - When Hannan
travels to Clarksburg to ·face
Notre Dame on Thursday, coach
Kent Price has definite notions of
what the home team will attempt
to do against the Wildcats.
"If they saw the film (of Hannan's game with Hamlin last
week), they'll probably come out
throwing the ball and trying to
onside kick," he said. Hannan's
defense surrendered four touchdown ariels and Wildcat special
teams allowed Hamlin to recover
several onsides kicks.
"We'v~ worked on those things
a lot this week," he added.
In their 36-0 victory over
Hundred last week, Notre Dame

(1-0) forced five turnovers. Three
of those mistakes by Hundred
came on its own to-yard line.
"They didn't have to drive the
ball very far," said Price.
The turnover bug also atllicted
Hannan last week, as the Wildcats
turned the ball over six times.
"We want to be a little better prepared mentally this week," Price
said.
Defensively, Notre Dame will
come

after

Hannan 's

ground

attack of Korey Henry, Dustin
Jordan, Shannon Gay and Josh
Long with a 4-3 front . Price
expects to see a great deal of
blitzing from the Notre Dame
linebacking corps, which Price
characterized as "quick and
.
"
aggressive.
Offensively, Notre Dame brings
an l-formation based attack
emphasizing the running game.
The squad rolled up 214 rushing
yards in its season opener.
According to Price, they do "a little passing."
The Notre Dame offensive
player to watch is senior running
back Mark Calzonetti ' (#34). He
rushed 16 times for 125 yards
against Hundred. He also caught a
12-yard touchdown pass.
Senior ta ckle Josh Maxwell
(No. 68) is another player to
watch according to Price. "He is
about (Ryan) Arrowood's size, so
they try to run behind him,"
Price added.

Thursday, August 10, 2000

Meigs society ·news and notes, AS
Marshall takes SEMS to learning tree, B1

Saturday
High: lOs; Low: &amp;Os

· Details, A3

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD.
'

September 1, 2000 ,

.

N.Y.

Jels .........................o o o.ooo o o

Collnl
Soltlmore .......................0 0 0 .000

0

0

0
0
0

0
0
0

0

0

0
0

0
0
0

c - ......................o o o.ooo o o
~ild

Eut

TMm

W

......................0 0 0 .000
...................0 0 0 .000
Pittob&lt;rgh ......................0 0 0 .000
Tomeuee .....................0
.000

fie

L Pet.

AtianiB ............................7V 54 .584
Now York .........................7V 54 .584
Florida ............................IW 88 .485 15 1/2
Philadelphia ....................56 76 .424 22 f/2
MoolrOBI .......................... 5!1 75 .423 22 1/2
Cantnl
St. L.ouis ............ ............... 75 58 .151W
Cincinnati ..... .... ...............66 ee .!100 8 1/2
Chicago ..........................58 74 .439 18 1/2
Mitwaukee .......................57 75 .432 17 1/2
Houston ...... .................... 55 78 .414
:!0
Pillsburgh ........ ...............153 78 ..a6
21

Wool

ester'• OamM

oo

o

NfC

ea.

Arizona ..........................0 0 0 .000
Oollu ................. ...........0
N.Y. Glanls.. ...................O
~ ..................0
W.lflinglon ........ ...........0

0
0
0
0

0 .000
0.000
0 .000
0 .000

Control
Ctllcago ................. ........0 0 0 .000
Deltolt ...........................0 0 0 .000
Cl&lt;Mn Bay ......................o o o.ooo
t

Chicago Cubs 5, Son Diogo 1
Arizona 7, Montreal 0
St Louis 4, Aotlda 2
San Francisco 2, Pittsburgh a
Atlanta 5, Cincinnati 2
N.Y. Mets 1, Houston 0
Colorado 5. Philadelphia 4, 11 lmlngl
Milwaukee 3, Los Ang- 2

o o

o o o.ooo o o

-

wee~~

oo

""'""" ........... ...............0 0 0 .000
- C i t y ....................
OOicland .........................0 0 0 .000
Son Diego ......................0 0 0 .000
Soattle ..... ......................0
.000

San Fmnclseo .................. 75 se .573
Arizona ........................... 73 58 .583 2 112
Los Angeles... .................. 70 83 .528
8
Colorado .................. .. .... .88 as .511
8
San Olego .......•................&amp;c 69 .481
12

-

-

,....................0 0 0 .000

ro....,. Bay .....................o o o.ooo
Allantol ...........................ooo .ooo
Csrollna .........................0 o o.000
New Ol'leono ..................0 0 0 .000
St Loulo... ......................o o o.ooo
san Fnlnciaoo ................o o o.ooo

Bundttr'•-

T-ao.nFrand11&lt;0 (RuOIIf 8-8)

.San
II Pi11obur9h
(Siva 8-8), 1:35 p.m.
Los Ang- (Perez 5-8) at Milwaulcea (Aig·
don t -2), :::!.05 p.m.
San Diego (Witallick 1·1) 81 Chicago Cube
(Tapani 8-1 0), 2:20 p.m.
Cincinnati (Hamlsc:t&gt; 8-e) 11 Allonla (Mil·
wood 8·9), 7:40 p.m .
Frtday'oMontroal (Hormonoon 10.11) al Clnclnnlll
(R.Bell5·7), 7:05p.m.
Allan1a (Burke118-5J at Houston (Uma 5-15) ,

8:05p.m.

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

o
0
o
o
o
0
o
.o

o
0
o
o
o
0
o
o

Artz01111 II Now Yorll Glanll, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at - . g h , 1 p.m.
CArolina II WOihlnglon, 1 p.m.
Chicago II M...,_ 1 p.m.
Oollo~ 111 Now Orlaono, 1 p.m.
lndiMopollo at KanNo City, 1 p.m.
JacbOnJtlle 81 ClwMnd, 1 p.m.
San Francltco at Atlanta, 1 p.m.

II-

17.

7

13
Oeuolt ............................. 85 85 .4lHI
Kansas City ..................... 62 70 .470 181/2
Minne!Ott!l ...................... 59 74 .44'4
20

WOOl

Seanie ........... .. ............... 72
Oakland . .................. 69
Anaheim ......................... 68
Te.11as .............................. 58

61 .541
63 .523 2 112

65 .51 1
4
74 .43913 1/2

Wocl-.y'oiiiiiMa

Kansas City 8, Minnesota 7
ChicagoWhite Sox 8, Oakland 3

Tampa Bay 3, Boston 1
Baltimore 5, Detroll1
Cleveland 5, Texas 3
N.Y. Yankees 5, Seattle 4
Toronto 11. Anaheim 2
Tadoy'I -

(Wilson 0·2), 7J 5 p.m.

Bay

Oeuolt (MoohiOJ11·7) 11 Ballimare (MUIIina
8· 13), 7:35p.m.
Cleveland (Bare4-2) BIT...,. (Sii&lt;Qroki 1·2),
9:05p.m.

Friday'• Gamee
Texas (Helling 14-9) at De1roll (Sparks 5·2).
7 ~ 05

p.m.

Bailimqre {Penson 7-9) at Cleveland (Finley
10·10), 7:05p.m.

Oakland (Mulder 7-10) at Toronto (Hamlhon
1-0}, 7:05p.m.

Minnesota (Aadke t0-13) at N.Y. Yankees
(Hernandez t0-10), 7:05p.m.
Seanle (Halama 11-6) aiBoston (Arraja 3·1),
7:05p.m .

Kansas City (Meadows 2·2) at Tampa BIV
(Aupo 5·5), 7:15p.m.

Anaheim (Schoenewels 8- 7) at Chicago
White Sox (Lowe 3-t). 8:05p.m.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS- Placed

MIAMI

EuWmDIYiolon

NEW

•

!~~~

New Englanc:l.. ...... ..... 12 11 6 42 43 43
Miami ........................10 14 5 35 43 51
D.C.............................7 17 6 27 40 57
Control Dlvlolon
.11-Tampa Bay ............. t8 11 3 51 00 47
X·Ciioaga .................. 14 9 6 4ll 5$ 47
Olillu ........................ t2 14 4 40 51 53
COiumbuS ........ .......... 11 13 5 38 45 49
WMWn Dlvlolan
14 7 8 50 43 27
x-LooAngelos ........... 14 8 8 so 47 35
COlorado ................... 12 14 4 40 41 57
San .Jooe ..................... 18 8 28 31 48
x-clinctlod plovotl opo1
y-cilnchod divllion tilla
NOTE: Throe pain1a toto win .,. cxte point
tor lllo.
Wodnoadoy'ao.nNaw England 1, DC Un~od 0
Tampa Ba~ 4, COlumbus 3
Cllicago 4, DaiiM 0
COio&lt;aOO 3, Miami I
L.oO Angelao 2, San Jooo I '

e

frldoy'a Gomo
CO&amp;umbulat san Jose, 11:30 p.m.
a.tunlay'• Qamee
New Yori&lt;.·Naw Joroey at Miami, 7:30p.m.

Bay at Kansaa City, 8:30 p.m.

COlumbus at San Jose, 10 p.m.
England al DC Unlled, 4:30 p.m.
Chicago 111 COiarBda, 8 p.m.

BASEBALL

AFC
'Eaet
Tum

W L TPio. PF

PA

...... 0 o 0 .000

o

o

indianapolis .......... ......... 0 o o .000
Miami ............................ 0 0 0 .000

0
0

0
0

New Engiand ..................o o o .000

o

o

FB· TE

ENGLAND

PATRIOTS -

Released T Josh Rawlings . Signed T
Sale ls'aia.
NEW ' YORK GIANTS-Released CB
Ramos McDonald . Signed CB Omar
Stoutm lre .
NEW YORK JETS-Waived RB
Vaughn Sanders from the practice
squad . Signed RB Marlion Jackson to
the practice squad.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Signed C·

G John Romero to the practice
SAN

DIEGO

squ~f!d .

CHARGERS - Signed

WR Calvin Schexnayder and WR F'at
Batteaux to rhe pract1ce squad .

SOUTHERN LOCAL

Mora

resigns seat
on board

SEATTLE

SEAHAWKS~Added

08

ORIOLES-Optioned

LHP John Parriah to Roch•ster of the
lnternationll League . Activated RHP
Alan Mills off the 15-day disabled list
, CLEVELAND INDIANS-Sent 28 Mar·
cos Scutaro to Mllwlukee to complete a
July 28 uada . Recalled 38 Rune'll
Branyan lrom Buffalo of the International League. Sent INF John McDonald to

LOADING UPEugene Under·
wood begins
loading his pick·
up truck with
items fo r deliv·
ery to the Moun·
tain Mission
School in
Grundy, Va. The
mission school
provides hous·
ing, food and
education
instruction for
children without
homes . (Char·
lene Hoeflich
photo)

TENNESSEE

TITANS-Signed

HOCKEY

NltlonaLHockey League
CALGARY FLAMES- Agreed to terms
with LW Jason Wiemer.
CAROLINA

HURRICANES-Named

Doug Piper executive vice president of
business operations.
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Named Randy
Sieminski media relations director.
NEW YORK RANGEAS-Agreod to

terms with C Derek Armstrong .
CATAWBA- Named Slephanle Gra~
women 's swimming coach .
~CNY-Announced the resignation of
Oan Nigro, men 's basketball coach .
GEORGETOWN ., Ky. -Named Ben
Oldham athletic director.
ST. FRANCIS, F'A. -Nam.td Martin
Aomerll women·s field hocke~ and
lacrosse coach .
SETON HALL,Nemed Ron Farina
men's and women·s swimming and diving coach -aquatics coordinator.
UC IRVINE-Named Kelly Crawford
women·s golf coach .
WESTERN NEW ENGLAND-Named
Jennifer KoUns men's and women 's ten nis coach.

"if

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

This year~ delivery tffort was under. taken by Eugene Underwood and
fM!'K.Sham~!fn, ministers of area
churches; ·tntlf~ncludeJ a parcel of
more than 2,000 pounds of potatoes
alongside the usual donated items.

OMEROY - How many times
have you rummaged through your
•
pantry and ,::loset space ·removing
things you really didn 't want or
need anymore, and then reflected
.-on , how you would dispose of them'
Th e Meigs County C hurches of C hrist has
cion for children who are without a hom e.
a solu tion.
About 300 children, who range in age from
For more than 35 years, members of these
.
infancy
to 18 years old, currently reside in the
churches have coll ec ted various donated mate rials such as clothes, sc hool supplies, toiletries, lllJSSIOn.
This year's delivery effort was undertaken by
food, and cash for delivery to the Mountain
Mission School in Grundy.Va., which provides Eugene Underwood and Doug Shamblin,
room and board, as wdl as educational instruc- ministers of area churches, and included a par-

P

MUMS
Fall Pansies
Fresh
(Winter Hardy)
From The
Greenhouse «PLANT Now fOI~ Be~UrtfUL ~~~LY SPI~IN&amp; Bws"

MARQUIS G.S.
We Go! This could be just for you! One local owner- Extra
lean. V-8 engine with rear wheel drive. Power everything and only

,
10 880

;::;~ooTo $

JWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
1/4 mile North Pomeroy Mason Brldga

Mason, WV
Phone (304) 713-5323
2400 Ea1tarn Ave. (Across from K·Mart)

Gallipolis, OH
Phone
446-1711

um .

"The school really appreciates all the donations that we brin g to th em," said Underwood.
" And it makes the people back here in Meigs
County fed good that they can hdp those that
are less fortunate."

J.

BY BRIAN
REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Subscribe today • 992-2156

or

eel of more than ,2,0110 pounds of potatoes
alongside the usual donated items.
"Th e trip usually takes all day to complete,"
said Underw.o od. "But since it is for such a
good cause, no one ev~r complains."
According to Underwood, the missio n
school has been active in the lives of orphans
since the Great Depression of the 1930s and
hopes to continue its dedication to helping
orphaned ch ildren way mto the new millenni-

Board of Elections moves into annex

Watch for the latest prep football results
in the Sunday Times-Sentinel every weekend!

Garden

interest of the district, officials
said.
RAC INE - The resignatioti
Joy Nea.l was approved for a
of a school board member was one -year contract as Southt:'rn
accepted and p~rsonnel matters Junior High Science teacher for
were addressed at Monday's reg- the 2000-01 school year .pendular meeting of the Southern ing the approval of her certifi caLocal Board of Education.
tion by the Ohio Department of
The board accepted .t he resig- Education .
nation of board member Marty
A letter from the University
Morarity, who cited business of Rio . Grande was examined
conflicts and health issues as rea- that said Neal had met necc·ssons
for
his
sary
requiredeparture.
ments for c~rtifi­
a11yor1e is ir~ter­ cation .
Southern
Local Superinestl.'d in filling tlu
The
bo ard
tendent James
vaccmt position, they app~oved the
Lawrence indi following special
are encouraged to
cated
that a
contracts for the
ser1d a letter of inter- 21100 - 01 school
search for a new
board member
est to the lligl1 school year:
Patricia
would
b egin
Baer,
reading ·
b)' Sept. 7. "
immediately.
guide for Amy Jo
" If anyone is
James Lawrence,
Davis at Carouperlntendent
interested in fillleton
School;
ing the vacant
Kelly Weddle,
position, they are encouraged to reading guide for Chris Shouldsend a letter of interest to the is at Carleton School; Ralph
high school by Sept. 7 ," said Steinmetz, private transportaLawrence. "We would like to fill tion for Kerry Prunty to Athens
the position before our Sept. 11 City Schools; Mary Zielenski,
meeting."
hearing interpreter for Kelly
In other · matters, the board Prunty at Athens City Schools.
rescinded its earlier acceptance
Supplemental contracts fo r
of the resignation of Kim Romaine Frederick and Jane
Romine in order for her to Ann Hill for the 2000-01 school
withdraw her resignation from year were approved by the
employment, and remain a board. These contract&lt; will he
teacher in the district. The
action was taken in the best
Please see ao.rd, Pllge A:S
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Bv TDNY M. LEACH

CB

Michael Booker. Waived G Aaron Koch .
Canedlen Footb•ll Leagu•
CFL-Announced the resignation of
Jeff Gites, president and chief operating
officer, loilowlng the 2000 season.
ar•n•football2
AO~NOKE EXPRESS-Named Pete
Shaw and Mike Doyle vice presidents .

Bv TDNY M. LEAcH

Church program benefits orphans

Travis Brown, CB Tyrone Bell and LB
Tim Terr~ to the practice squad.

COLLEGE

lundav'allllmoa

BALTIMORE

DOLPHINS - Signed

Ryan Neufeld and T Dan Palmar to the
practice squad .

Am•rlcan Leegue
National Football Leegue

so Cents

to

DE Eric Curry on Injured reserve.
Signed DE David Aichia. Signed DE
Paul Spicer to the practice squad .
Released OT John Blick from the prac tice aquM .
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS -Signed WA
Desmond Kitchens. DT Norris McCiearv,
FB Chris Gall, TE Kirk McMullen, and
WR Andy McCullough to the practice
squad.

Mljorl.eag. . -

Tampa

PADRES - Agreed

GREEN BAY PAC.KERS-Signed WR

··-Ci1y. . . . . .

Kansas City (Suppan 7·7) 81 Tampa

DIEGO

Gerald William• to th• practice squad.

Now Orloano 11 Son Diego, 4:15p.m.
at Arizona. 8:20 p.m.
Open Date: Plnsburgh
Monday, 8epL 11
Now England ot Now Yorll JOio, 9 p.m.

~~-NJ .................. 1~ .~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

FLORIDA MARLI NS-Namod Doug

FOOTBALL

~llu

.

st. Number 10

Strange scouting supervisor tor Georgia
and North Florida .
,
NEW YOAK METS- Purchased the
contract Of OF Timonlal Perez from Nor·
folk of the international League .
Optioned RHP J8rrod Riggan to Bing~
hamton of the Eastern League. Acquired
INF Jorge Veiandia from the Oakland
Athletics tor OF Nelson Cruz. Veiandla
was assigned to Norfolk.

Natlon•l Football Leegue

S1. Louis at Seanla, 4:15p.m.

Conlrll
Chicago .......................... 19 5C .584
Cleveland ........................ 70 59 .543

Hometown Newspaper

chased the contract of RHP Darren
Holmes trom Tucson of the PCL.
Oplloned AHP Geraldo Guzman to Tucson .
CHICAGO CUBS- Sent OF Brant
Brown to Iowa of ~· tt'le PCL. F'urchased
the contract of OF Ross Gtoad from
lowe.

SIOUX FALLS SKYFORC.E -Namod

WUiil1l10" .. Oolrol1, 4:15 p.m.

Tampa Bay ..................... .. 58 74 .439

Volume

DIAMONDBACKS- Pur·

Jim Steeper coach .

Csrolina

Boston ............................. 69 61 .531
5
Toronto ............................ 70 63 .526 5 112
Baltimore ... ····· .............. .. 60 n .455
15

the working agreement with Syracuse of
the international League through 2004.
Na11onal Le•gu•
ARIZONA

Mei1s County's

JAYS- Extended

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS- Trad ·

Bay

GB

BLUE

ed F Brian Grant to Miami and G Gary
Gram to Cleveland . Portland received F
SIU!Iwn Kemp from Cleveland . Cleveland
received F-C Chris Gatling, F Clarence
Weatherspoon , an undisclosed first·
round draft choice and c..h from Miami .
Continental Baak8tball A••ocletlon

Bay,

El11

tho PCL
TORONTO

IIASK!TBALL

11oncf:811•

Toom
W L Pet.
New York ......................... 74 56 .569

KANSAS CITY ROYALS- Released
RHP Jerry Spradlin . Purchased th• con tract of LHP Scolt Mullen from Omaha
ol the PCL
MINNESOTA TWINS - Activated C
Chad Moeller from the 15 -day diaabled
1111. Sent C Danny Ardoin to Salt Lake of

National Baaketbalt Aeitoclatlon

• · Tetfll••• at Buffalo, 8:20p.m.

American Lngue

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Wa ived RHP
Kon HilL

SAN

Tampa Bay
Engloild, I p.m.
Ptillodalphla II O.llu, 4:05 p.m.
Diego 11 OOicland, 4:15 p.m.
Seattle It Miami, • :115 p.m.
.• ~" NIW ~Jets at GrMO Be~, •: t 5 p.m.

san

Klnslon of th• C4rollna League .

terms with OF Mewelde Moore .

N.Y. Melo (B.J.Jones 8·5) at St Loulo ~ OPEN: Cinclmatl
(Sii&gt;honson 15-7), 8:10p.m.
~ .! I
Oiine
• llorMtr II St Louis, 9 p.m.
. Miovaukee (Snyder 3-8) at Colorado ,(Asia·
Sundoy, 84pt. 10
CIO 11 ·5), 9:05p.m.
1 p.m.
Florida (Sanchez 8·91 al Arizona (Attdofoon ~CillcaaO at Tampa
· C+evelind at Clncinrw.ti, 1 p.m.
11).~). 10:05 p.m .
Gr11 Bul!elo, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Serafini 1·3) at' San Diogo
Jackaonvil'- at Bahlmore. 1 p:m.
(Williams B-5), 10:05 p.m.
Kanau Ci!f at T81Yleasee, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia (WoH 1(). 7) at Los Angelos
Miami at Minf'181018, 1 p.m.
(Valdes 2-6), 10: 10 p.m.
New York Giants .t Phlladelph.._, 1 p.m.
Chicago Cube (Woad 8-6) a1 S8n Francisco
Oakland atlndlanapollo, 1 p.m.
(Gardn8f' 9~). 10:35 p.m.
Atlanta at Oonvet, 4:15p.m.
11 Son Ffancloco, 4:15p.m.

Buffak&gt; ....... ...... .

,1351ow miles.

Frld

NEW OFFICES .- Meigs County Board of Elections has settled Into
new office spate in the Meigs County Annex. Barbara Smith , Jane
Frymyer and Rita Smith are pictured with County Commissioners Jeff
Thornton, Janet Howard and Mic~ Davenport as the commissioners
toured the new offices on Thursday. (Brian J. Reed photo)

POMEROY - Renovations are complete
and the Meigs County Board of Elections has
settled into new offices in the Meigs County
Annex.
The Meigs County Commissioners made
space available in the annex building - the
former Meigs County Home - after the
Board of Elections determined that its Mulberry Avenue office was unsafe due to a persistent sewer gas problem.
The county provided four rooms in the
building for th e board's use. Those rooms were
converted into two larger rooms. One room is
used as public o{lice space and the o ther as a
conference room a~d area for ballot tabulation.
Rita Smith, the board director, said that the
large day room on th e ground floor will be
used on election night to accommodate the

Racine's fall festival set Sept. 9
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RAC INE Plans have been co mpl eted for
' Racin e's fa ll festiva l to b~ held at Star Mill Park in
Racine on Sept. 9, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Activiti es will kick of!' with a parade at 10 a. m .
with the lineup to be held at the old fire deparnnent
annex on Fourth St reet at 9:45. First- , second- and
third- place entnes will be given awards of $50, $311
and $211 respectively.
A puppet show frum the Racine First Baptist
C hurch will be on stage at II a.m. foll owed by R oss
Sisters and C lyde .at 11 :311 a.m. Th e winners of th e
parade and th e crowning of the f.dl festival queen
will take place at noon.
·
T he qu een wi ll be selec ted from the " ·ni or class
at Southern High Sc hool.
A pu mpkin growi ng contest w1ll be held with
weigh!.in time between 10 a. m . and noon .
.
Afternoon events will include performances by
th e Johnso n Fami l y~ a gospel group, at 12: IS and 4
p.m. ; the Mc Lain Brothers Uand with Mike Stevens,
at 1 p.m . and 5 p.m. and Get Out aJid l'm h at 2 p.m.

•

't

Sentinel

1 Sections - 12 Paps
Calendar
C!assjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

..

No Senti6el Monday

AS
B2-4
BS

A4
AJ

Bl. 6
AJ

Lotteries

The Daily Sentinel will not be
published Monday so that its
employees can observe the Labor
Day holiday.
Regular publication and business
hours resume Tuesday.

•

all of the offices which have been moved into
the county-owned building formerly occupied
space rented from private individuals.
The county still holds a lease on the Mulberry Avenue space, owned by Robert
Wingett, and Commissioner Janet Howard said
last month that the county will likely continue
to honor the remainder of that three-year
lease, since the new office location will not
cost the county additional money to occupy.
Howard said Thursday that commissioners -plan to make minor cosmetic improvement'\,
suc h as new lighting, to the common areas in
the building, but will do so only as county
finances allow.
The county also plans to install sign age at th ~
building's entrance, and to make imp rovements
to the parking lot behind the building.

Goldwing donation

Toclay's

and 6 p.m .·
There will be craji , food and ga me booth s and to
reserve sp ace resiil~nt are as kt:d to contact Krista Jt
the H ome National Bank, 949-2210.
Larry Wolfe at 949- 2K36 or Ann Zirkle at 949203 1 may be contacted for additional int(Jr mation .
Parking wi ll he on the ball fie lds. and in the evmt of
rain all activ.ities will be moved to th e hioh school.

'

public. It will also be used as a site for poll
worker training later this year.
That space is shared by all offices in the
annex as a meeting room and conference area.
The 50-year-old annex is now home to a
number of county agencies. In addition to the
board of elections, the building houses offices
for the Fair Housing and Grants Administrati on office, Litter Control and R ecycling, Veterans Services and the lice eradication and
dental programs for the Meigs County Health
Department
Ohio State University Cooperative Extension Service, which has occupied space in the
building for many years, is still housed on the
ground floor of the building.
Commissioners, who toured the board's
suite of oflices Thursday, have touted the savings on rent that the annex has allowed, since

OlUO
Pick 3: 4-1 - 5; Pick 4: H-S..I\-Ii
Buckeye 5: ~-24-J 1-J2-.16

W.YA,
Doily 3: H-0-2 Daily 4: 1-4-H-0

~'

Goldwlng Road Riders, Chapter E-3 , Pomeroy, presented a $500 check to
Meigs United Methodist Cooperative Parish on Wednesday. Pictured are,
from left, Kay Graham , Allen Graham, Chapter assistant director, Keith
Rader, director of the parish, Carrie Morarity, Taz's Marathon employee,
Ron Russell, chapter director, Nancy Russell. (Tony M. Leach photo)

•

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>August 31, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>clark</name>
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      <name>haning</name>
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    <tag tagId="3019">
      <name>persons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="899">
      <name>willis</name>
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</item>
