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\.

Page88•TM

Wednesday, September 6, 2000

Sentinel

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
~ (Mulder 7·10) .. Boston (Anojo ..
1). 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yat*MS (Hernandez 11 -10} at Kansaa
CitY (Mit.dowt 3-2), 8:05 p.m.
~~- (Htlllng 14-10) a1 CNcogo White Sox
(K. Willi ...,. 8:05 p.m .

Eul

TMM
-

W
..................... ...... .81
New~ .........................ao
.......... ........ .. .........117

L Pet.
51 .!5117

Clll

!5I .580

1
70 .4811 13 112
Monlrool " .. """" .... " .... ....!511 711 . 415 23 1/2
Ptliladelphio ....... ............. !511 81 .«JV241/2

c-..

St Louis ............ ........ ....... 80 !Ill .580
10
Cincinnati ................... .... .70 88 .507
~ukee ....................... eo 78 .436
20
Chicago ......................... .!511 80 .420
22
Pi11allutgh ....................... !511 711 .423 21112
HquoiOn .•.••.............•.••...• 58 80 .420
22

-

san Frencieco..................e1 se

111......., . . _
- - (Mordcor 1-2) •• Detroit (!Midll 4-

10), 7:05p.m .

Tarrc&gt;a Boy (Aelrar S.9) ar Clevoland (Colon
12-6). 7:05p.m.
(Ciatcia S-ot) at Toronto (l.oaiza 8-9) ,
7:05p.m.

s..-

Minnesota

(Minon 12·8) at Boston
(RMor1inOZ B"'J, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. ,.,.... (Neagle S..) 81 Kansas Cny
(RiicMr1 M), 6:05 p.m.
Texas (Rogen 11 -13) a1 Chicago 'Nhita Sox
(Parquo 1H1), 8~ p.m.
=~=

~1/2

v

Los Angeles ..................... 73 ee .525
8
Colorado .........................11 er .514 10112
1!5
san 01ego ........ ................e1 n .482
1\1 Till (a GaiMe
N.Y. MeiB 3, Cinclnnoti 2. 10 lmlngs
Atlanta 5, Artzonl2

St. LOuis 7 , - 8
Houston 9, Rorida 5
Colollodo 10, Clllcogo Cuflt 2

San Diego 3, - - 1

san Franclooo B.~ 5

Tum

E-Divlalon

WLTPiaOFGII
XtrNY-NJ ................ :-..17 11 3 54 61 52
New England ..... ........12 12 6 42 43 45
Miami ......................... tt 15 5 38 48 54
D.C . ........ ............. ....... &amp; 17 6 30 42 57
Con1nl DMalon
x-Tampe Bly ......... .... 16 12 3 51 flO 48

--

·~ ..... .......... ... 15

Plttsb&lt;Jtgh 8, Loo Ang- 0

~--

N.Y. MBIS CJones B.S) 10 Cincinnati (Bell&amp;1), :12:35 p.m.

9
OeiiU ...... ...... ..... .. .. 12 141

6 51 81
41 40 51

48
53

COII.rnbul .................. 11 14

5 38 45

52

X·KinMS City ..... . ... 15 7 8 53 44 27
Chicago Cub• ~ood 8·7) at ColoradO
X·LOIAnQelel ........ ... 14. 8 8 SO 47 35
(As1aclo12.S). 3:05p.m .
·Cokndo .... . ......... 12 15 4 40 42 59
Arizona (And111110r1 1Q.S) 111 Al1anlll (Mill·
JoN ........... ......... .7 18 8 29 34 48
wood &amp;-10), 7:40p.m.
·
- dM.iOn titie
Florida (Sanchez &amp;-9) 01 - o n (Umll
-dioched
15), 8:05 p.m.
x,QTE: Three p:»&gt;rJta for a win and one point
Montreal (H81'1T1a010rl 1()-12) •• Sl. L.Nt
for. tie.
(S1ep!lonl0n 15-7). 8:10p.m.
'1\aeMiey'• GlirM
Pillsbuljjh (Sorlflnl H) at LOt AngNaw Yort&lt;-Naw JorHy .2. Mil1ml1
{Valclol2-6), 10:05 p.m.
--.y·aaamoa
MilwaukH (Sn)'der 3-7} M san Diego ·
Kanlu Ci1y al New England, 7:30p.m .
(WIUiomt &amp;-5). 10:05 p.m.
Coh.ITlbus at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Ptllladolphla ff'/olf 10-1) at San Fnordsco
Doilalal Loo Angelft. 10:30 p.m.
(Go- 1&lt;&gt;6). 10:15 p.m.
Frtday'aGamo
Tlluroday'a Gamoa
Loo~ 81 ~ . 8 p.m.
_....,.~~
Monorool (Moort1 ..)'11 51. L.ools (1(ile15-41),
1:10p.m.
Kansas Cily al Tarrc&gt;a Boy. 7 p.m.
· .~(1Jon'C&gt;s10r 12·9) 81 Houaton (E~IIOn
New York-New Jersey at New England, 7:30
1
p.m.
10.1l')81A-(Meddux
tAaml at DC United, 7:30p.m.
15-8), 7~..0 p.m.
Chi&lt;ogo at COlumbus. 7:30p.m.
S8n Diego (Clement 12·13) II San Francis·
San Jose at DallaS, 8:30p.m.
co (Estes 13-4), 10:15 p.m.

s.n

a.

Adanta
St l.Quis ..

pla~«'flol

s.2J!,. ~ling

28
36

San Francisco ................0 1 0 .000 28

36

Carolina ..

.................. 0 1 0 .OQQ 17 20
New Orlaans ..................0 1 0 .000 10 14
Sundoy, Sop!. 10

Oakland at lnc:lianapoiis,. 1 p.m.
Gr..., Boy al,&amp;ffalo. 1 p.m.
Clavaland afCincinnati, 1 p.m .
N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Tampa Bay. t p.m·.
Miami at Mlrmesota. t p.m.
Jactlsonville al: Baltimorrt. 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Denver. 4:15 p .m.

St. Loula at Seattte, 4 : 15p.m.
Cei"OIIna at San Francisco, 4:15p.m.
Washington at Detroit, 4:15 p.m.

AP Top 25 CoUege FOOiblll Sch~ul•
111uraday, Slip!. 7
No. 10 Virginia Tech at East Carolina , 8 p.m.
~atun~or,Sapt.e

No. 1 Nebfaska at No. 23 Notre Dame, 2:30
p.m.

No. 2 Florida Stale a1 Georgia Tech, 8 p.m.
No. 3 Michtgan vs. Rice, Noon
No. 4 Miami al No. 15 WaShington, 3:30
p.m.
No. 5 Wisconsin vs. Oregon, 3:ao p.m.
No. 6 Texas vs. Louisiana-Lafayette . 12:30

p.m.
No. 8 Florida vs. Middle Tennessee, 6 p.m.
No. 9 Georgia a1 Soulh Carolina, 3:30 p.m.
No. 11 Southern Cal va. Colofado, 8 p.m.
No. 13 Alabama v•. vandefbllt, 12:30 p.m.
No. 14 Purctue va. Kent, 2 p.m.
No. 16 UCLA vs. Fresno State, 7:30 p.m.
No. 17 Qemson vs. Missouri, 3:30 p.m.
No. 18 Ohio State at Arizona, 10:15 p.m.
No. 19 Mississippi vs. Aubum, 7 p .m.
No. 20 04c:lahoma vs. Arkams.s State, 7:30

p.m.
No. 21 Illinois at San Diego State, 10 p.m.
No. 22 TCU at Nevada, 4 p.m.
No. 24 Mk1'tigan .State VI. Marshal, Noon

TMm
W L Pet.
New Yonc ......................... 18 57 .578
Bo01011 ............................72 03 .533

08

6

67 .51• 81/2
75 .457 181/2
19 .428 20 112

.sa.

58
Cleveland ........................74 01 .548 61/2
Detroit ............................. 70 67 .511 11 1/2
Kansas City .....................65 73 .471
17
Minnesota .. .............. .. .....eo · 18 .435
22
Woat
Seatue ....•......... ... ........... 75 83 .543
Oaldand .......................... 72 85 .528 2 112
Ananeim .......... ............... 68 70 .493
7
Texas ............................. .62 76 .448
13

TuMdly'e Garnee
Detroit 7. Anaheim 5
C-.nd 7. Tampe Boy 4
Sea11114, Toronto 3
Bo01011 10, Oakland 3
N.Y. Yank- 10, Ka.,... City 5
Texas 2, Clllcago W1ite Sox 1
Baltimofe 6, Mimesota •

TOday'o-

BaltimOJe (Ponson 7·10) at Minnesota
(Radkei0-14), 1:o5p.m.
at Detroit
Anaheim CSci'IOeMweis
(SperOS 6-2), 7:05p.m.

e-n

Tampe Bay IR'4'0 5-6) 11 CleYoland (Fmley
11 -10), 7:05p.m.
Seatlle (Halama 11·7) at Toronto (Hamilton
1~) . 7:05p.m.

IIFC
Eliot

T_,
WLTPIL
Buffalo ........................ ... 1 0 0 1.00
Indianapolis ................. .. 1 0 0 1.00
Miluni ............................ 1 0 01 .00
N.Y. Jitl ............... ....... ...1 0 01 .00
New England .................. o 1 o .ooo
Corrlnl
Baltimore ...... .................1 Q o 1.00
Ja"cklorMIIe .. .. ..... .... ...... 1 0 0 1.00

PF
16
27

PA

23
20

0

Cincinna11 ..... .... .............0
.000
Clevelal'd ............ .... .... ..0 I 0 .000
Plttolugh ......................0 1 0 .000

0

oo

-

10
16
27
7

0

Terw aseee .....................0 1 0 .000 13

o· o1 .oo

08ldond .........................1
DerMN' ..........................0
KanMI City ....................0
san Diogo ......................o
Seame ...........................0
NfC

9
1 0 .000 38
1 0.000 14
1 o.ooo 8
1 o .000 0

13
14
16
21
0
7
0
27
16
18

6
41
27

8
23

PhKBCieiptlia ............ .....1 0 0 1.00 41

.

Wllotlingt.on .................. .1 0 0 1 .00 20

17

Eoat
N.Y, Giants ......... .. ....... ... I 0 01 .00 21

14

Suspended Tempe Bay Devil Rays artier·
aid INiliiams 1of five games, RHP Dave Eiland,
AHP Tony Fiore, AHP Cory Uclle and manager
Lany RottiSChlld for three games, and fined
each an undiSClosed amount few their parts in a

brawl in an Aug. 29 game.
Arnlrican ~LIII
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Ra::alied LHP Juan

Atvarez from Edmonton of the PCL ancl AHP
Ben Weber from Erie of the Eastern League.
BOSTON RED SOX--Rec.oUed INF Morgan
Burkhart from Pawtucket of the International
League. Sent AHP Dan Sri1ith outright to Paw-

1uckot

CHICAGO WHITE

SOX- Recalled

OF

McKay Christensen, INF-OF Jefl Uefer, INF
Greg Norton and RHP Kip Wails from Charlotte
of the lntarnalionai League.
CLEVELAND INOIA.NS--Oplioned RHP
David Riske to Buffalo of the International
Leogue.
DETROIT TIGERS-Activated AHP Dave
Mlie6d and 19 Hal Moois from the 15-dav dis·

abted list. Recalled 18-0F Dusty Allen from
Toledo of the International League. Purchased
, the contract of LHP Kevin Tolar from Toledo.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Recalled OF Dermal Brown and AHP Dan Murra~ from Omaha

Arizona ................ ..... .... 0 1 0 .000 18 21
Do... ................ ............ 0 1 0 .000 14 . 41

of the PCL

Detron .......................... 1 o ol.CIO

contracl of LHP Randy Keisler from Columbus
of lhe lntet'national League. Recalled INF Alton·
so Soriano anc:l RHP Darrell Eirwtrtson from
Columbus and placed Einenson on the 60-dav
disabled list.

ea-

14
Minneaola ..... ................ 1 0 01 .00 30
Bay ..................... 1 0 01.00 21
Chiceoo ..... ..... .... ........... o ' o .ooo 27

Ta,..,.

10
27
16
30

c:cn.

lracls of C Randy ICnorr and OF RI.Cion S1orra
from Oklahoma of the PCL ReeaKac1 AHP 0.wln Cublllan and INF Kelly OrlnafOICI 11Cm
Ok._.... Moved LHP Milia Munoz from 1ho
15-davto the 60-day disabled lilt.
TORONTO BlUE JAY5-Recalled INF
Chfis Woodward from Syracuse of 1he lrtamational League. Purchased the contract of OF
Chad Mottola from SyrBCUsa. Oas6gnaled INF
ARIZONA.
OIA.MONOBACKS--Recalilel
RHP Geraldo Guzman and OF Jason Conti
from Tuscon of the PCL.
ATLANTA BRAVE5-R"""IIed INF Mork
DeRosa and INFWOS Helmo from Rl&lt;:l1mond of
the lmemational League. Pt.n:hu.:l the contracts of INF Tlm Unroe, C t.tke Hubbard and
OF Pedro Swann from Richmond. R.::atled
RHP Kevin McGiinchy from an injury rehabilitation assignment at Aidwnond.
CHICAGO CUBS-Waived AHP Man
Kard'lner. Recalled INF Julio Zuleta, INF Chad
Meyers 1100 INF Augie Ojeda trom towa ollhe
PC L and JUdued lhe oontract of eatchet
Mike Mahoney from lQwa
CINCINNAtt REDS RrcatleO INF Brooka
Kieschnick and RHP Keith. Glauber from
LouisviQe of the International League. MoYtd C
Eddie Taubensee from the 15-da'j10 the 80-day

LAX!
o•

Meics County's

VACATif:!BI

NEW YORK YANKEES-Purchased the

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 73

50 Cents

'

Job site will be done in·Od.
Telemarketing building
located at former
Excelcior Saltworks site

COLORADO ROCKIE5-Tronolarred OF

Larry Wa*or from t11e 15-day to lho IJO.&lt;Ioy dlo·
&amp;bled Wst Recalled AHP Pete walk• from Colorado Springs ol the PCL Activated RHP Glo·
vanni Carrara from the 15-daFfsd~~·

lOS ANGELES OODI3E
SS
Kevin Elster from the 15-day disabled list.
MONTREAL EXPOS-Racallad RHP JerePowell, LHP Stan Spencer IU1d SS Tomu
De La Rosa from onawa ot the International
league.
·
NEW YORK MET$--Racalled INF Joe
McEwing from Norfolk of the International

Bv TONY M. LEACH

mv

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Pl)ME ROY - Constructio n continu es
on Po m eroy's new telecom mumcati o ns
bui ldin g as work t:rt•ws labo r to finish th e
fac ilit y\ interior, whi ch has a projected
October completion date .
Th e I( l.{)illl-sqtme- fuot office facili ty is
!ne tt ed on the property of the fo rmer Exc elsio r Sa ltworks along Ease Main Street.
T h e buslllc ss is expected to provide 200
new jobs for Mc:igs co unti &lt;lll S onn~ up er~t io n
begins.
Accordin g to Jon Burns of Mid-Atlanti c

League,
SAN DIEGO PADRE~ed INF Kevin
Nicholson on the 60-day disabled Ust. Purchased the contract oiiNF Greg LaRocca from
Las Veges of the PCL

FOOTBALL
Na1loniiiFOOibtllliM9UO
JACKSONVIllE JAI3UAR5-Piaced TE
Damon Jones on injured rn«Ve. Signed TE
Greg DeLong.
MINNESOTA VIKING5-Signed LB i3al&gt;e

Northern. Released TE Man Cercon6 from the
practice squad.
NEW YORK GIANTS- Re-signed CB
Ramo• McDonald.
TE-S Brody Holln·
er-Gddiard and slgnecl him to tne practic::e
squad. Released FB Michael Jones from lhe
practice squad.
· SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-S9lecl DE Noll
S mith to a two-year con1ract.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER5-Announced ·
the ret:iremen1 of LT Paul Gruber.
TENNESSEE TITAN5-Releesed CB Ty
Howard. Reinstated CB Denard Walcer from a
one-game suspension. Released WR Cl'lrlS

Construction Co. in Point Pl easant, WVa. ,

the structure 's exterior is basically finished
with various interior work yet to be complete d.
"S ubstanti al co mpl etio n of th e proj ect is
estimated to be around the first week in
October.'' said Uurn s. "As of now, progress· is
st ill ongoing and construction i~ m ovin g
along as scheduled."
M eigs County Co mmunity Improvement
Corporation active in sec uring the busin ess
for M eigs County, report&lt; that the identity of
the telecommuni cations industry e mploye r

will no t be revealed until the building has
be en co mpl eted and is ready for occupancy.
H owever, ECo nomi c Development Direc-

HOCKEY
National Hockey IM!Iuo
ANAHEIM MIGHTY OUCKS-fte-signad C
Matt Cu llen 1o a one-yaar contract
COlORADO AVALANCHE-Signed lW
Bmd Larsen and 0 Stewan Maigunas.
EDMONTON OILER5-Signed F Snawn

Horoofl to a three-year contract

emp loyme nt are in th e nea r future.
"The construc tion of the bu ilding is m oving along at suc h a fast pa.c e," said Varnadoe.

"Plans to begin paving th e p arkmg area, I
believe. will start this week."
The cost of the project will total S3 milli on, w ith $1 milli o n. coming from fin ancing
to th e CIC from Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Co .. according to Bank President Paul Re ed,
who is also president of th e C IC.
The telecommunications firm, once construction is fim shed. will be investin g over $2
million for various com pute r equipmen t an d
other infrastru ctural necessities so as to m ake

th e facility full y operational on o penin g day.
The Oh io Department of Development,

tor Perry Varnadoe said Wednesday afternoon
that an announcement r~vealing w h o the

M e ibrs Co unty Improve ment Corpora tio n ,
Meigs County Comri1issioners, and Farmers

emp loyer is co uld be made publi c in a m atter
of wct·ks.

Ban k have all played significan t rob in landin g the project, whi ch wi ll help boost the

Plans to intervi ew individuals fo r possible

Grand jury
convenes
on Friday

COleman from the practice squad. Signed G
A.arnn KOCh to the practice squad.

local economy and lowe r une mploym ent.

INTERIOR CONSTRUCTION - David Landaker and Ron Bachtel of Southern Heating, Racine , prepare to install heating coils in the new te lecorn.munications building which is located along East Main Street in Pomeroy.
The new firm will bring 200 new jobs to the area. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Construction complete

Gore

outlines
plans for
economy

FROM STAFF REPORTS

PITISBURGH PENGUIN5-Signed G
Sebastien Caron. Named Keith Wehner manager or media relations.

CANUCKS-Signed

September 7, 2000

a1

HIGHPRIQI
HAVI.GOIII

disabled list

VANCOUVER

Thursday

•

Wa-

MLB
--IIM!Iuo

TEXAS RANGERS-Purchased 1ho

Defails, A3

Kevin Win tor assignment.
Nillianal l.elgue

BASEBALL

Eall

.

20

........ ... .•. 1 0 01 .00 36
........ 1 o 01 .00 41

Amo&lt;1Can1M9uo

Toro111o .......................... ..71
Baltimore ....................... 83
Tampa Bay ....... ............. ... 59
Con1nll
Chicago ..........................82

w-

New Orfeens at San Diego. " :15 p.m.
Dalila al Arizona, 8:20p.m.
OPEN: Pinsbuljjh
Monday. &amp;apt. 11
New Eng~ 11 N.Y. Jets, i p.m.

.!181

Arizona ...... .....................74 82 ....

Green Bay ..................... 0 1 0 .000 16

Meigs society news and notes, A&amp;
The OVP 10 poll released, B1

Friday

High: 70s; Low: 60s

POME IZOY - The Meib"
C ounty grand Ju ry w1 ll hkely

LW

consider r w'o murder cases
when it convenes o n Fr iday,

DodyWood.

SOCCER
Major LHgue Soccor .
MLS--Flned Miami Fuston F Roy Lassiter
$500 for failure 10 leave the held in a timely
fashion after a ga~eonAug . 30, Ddas Burn 0
Ricardo Iribarren $500 tor vto1ent ooncluct in a
game on Aug. 30 and Chlelgo Fire F Ante
Aazov $250 for making an obscene g81ture at
the crowd 1n an Aug. 23 game.

CLEVE LAND (A P) - Al
Gore pitched hi s ec o nomic
~l't!po•als before a friendly
audience Wednesday and raised

o ne

of whi ch will likel y
involve the death penalty.
The rases of Mi chael "Tony"
Gi llilan . 32, and M ic hael Jack~ on. :\1 , are ~xpccte d to top th e
duL h·t to bL" cunsid L~red by th e.
lll L' Illbcr~

mon ey for a Democ ratic o rga nization cruciaJ to hi s ho pes of
winnin g in batrldit·IJ O hio.
"Th t·rt•'s
no
state

of tht' St.'ptelll ber-

tcnn gr:IJH..I Jury. w ho will conveJ lc ti.)r the first tim e to mor-

mo re

nnp ortan t

ro w.

Riverside golf
results
MASON - Trent Roush, of
Mason, birdied an eight-foot putt
on the second playoff hole to win
the Riverside Club Championship over the Labor Day weekend.
Four players, Roush , Mitch
Roush, Jay Bostick, and Ryan
Norris finished match play tied at
142. Mter aU four parred the first
playoff hole, Trent Roush won
the tide on his putt.
Joyce Quillen won the Ladies
title for her lOth consecutive
championship. She finished six
strokes ahead of her nearest competltor.
Nine women and 59 men
competed in this year's tourna-

Bobbie I ) o t\OTI (Po \[] t Pleasa nt) .

than

char!';t'd 111 April wa h the Easter Sur11..1.1y death of hi s wi fe,
Victoria, by a drug overdose.
Jackso n has been the subjeC t
of two psychi atri c evalu ations•.
o nt· ti..n th e .;;rare and one for

and

th t• tkft·nse

C IS t',

both of which

haw bc·cn completed an d both
of wl1idl determ ine tha t J ackson is 1ne nta l1 y fi t to stand
tri al.
H i&lt; wit&lt;. a parapl egi c, died at
Veteran s Mt·morial H ospital as
the n:su lt of an ovt'rd o es of
prc ~c ripti o n
mt·di cations.
a cc urdin~ tn ,w rlwr i ti ~s.

At th ~· tim l' uf Jack son's
arrL'S t. ht· ,dl l·gedly t.: o nt't-s.,.ed to
adlllitlJStLTin g till· drugs co his
wi tl-, .md latn called emergen cy mc Lhc;d ptTSUlllll'l fo r

hl'ip. Pn.)st·cm o r j o hn L. .·ntes
S.11d.

( ;11\ il.Jn is . Il~ cm c·J in the
d t•a rh of T h oma s Matt hew
P.ulcr II on Aug:. IX. The cht!d
til ed tfom 111ju r i c ~ susL1ineJ :IS
th e re-.ult ut Shakcn H.lhy Syn d n..l ll ll' , ,lutl w ri ti t·.., -.aid .
Gilli lan was Parker 's carcgiv-

nlent.

Winners ·in the individual
flights:
Championship Flight: (gross)
1. Trenton Roush, 69-73=142; 2.
Ryan Norris, 69-73=142; 3.
Mitch Roush , 71-71 = 142. (net)
1. Jay Bostick; 2. Gary Richards
(New H aven).
Pirst Plight: (gross) 1. York
Ingels (New Haven) 75-82=157;
2. Ga ry Roush (M ason) 8176 = 157; 3. Benny Ewing
(Pomeroy) 80-80=160. (net) 1.
Dave Bodkin (Point Pleasant); 2.
Jeff Goebel (Gallipolis) .
Second Flight: (gross) 1. Larry
Whobrey (:Pomeroy) 77-73= ISO;
2. Tony Dugan (Rutland) 7981= 160; 3. Nathan Fowler
(Mason) 80-8_3=163 . (net) i.
Ronnie QuiUen (Racine); 2. Bob
Oliver (Mason) .
Third flight : (gross) 1. Bryan
C rom ley (Point Pleasant) 877ll = 165 ; 2. Mike
Ralston
(Pomeroy) 88-82 = 168; 3. Jamie
Anderson (Pomeroy) 87-87= 174.
(net) 1. Hank C leland (Pomeroy);
2. Steve Grissett (Athens) .
Ladies Plight: (gross) I . Joyce
Quillen (Racine) 74- 77=151; 2.
Diana Bodkin (Point Pleasant)
78- 79=157; 3. Becky Anderson
(Pomeroy) 86-87 = 173. (net) I.
Darlen e Si&lt;k (New HJvc n); 2 .

Jac kso n . of Pomeroy. was

Please see Jury, Pllge Al

leather

The Ohio Department of Transportation has completed construction
on it s new Meigs County Highway Garage, and crews have begun to
move into the new facility. Office staff has begun to move computer
equipment into the building, and new office furniture is expected to

arrive next week, said ODOT spokesman Nancy Pedigo . An open
house ce lebration will be sc heduled sometime in October to allow the
public to view the new garage, located on Ohio 7 near Five Points.
(Tony M. Leach photo)

Doctor supports late-term abortion procedure
DAYTON (AP) A do ctor testifi ed
Wednesday he cou ld chan ge the way he per.
form s a late-term abortion procedure so as
not to break an Ohio law th at would ban the
te chniyu e, but he said it would be riskier for
the mmh er.

"The benefit to th e mother is none, and
the risks are all hers," said Dr. Martin Haskell .
H e is suing the state in U.S. Di stri ct Court
for a prdiminary inj unction aga inst the law

signed in May by Gov. Bob Taft. The law,
which ha s not taken effect, wou ld make the
procedure a cri m e unle-ss the 1i1oth er's life or
health is threatened by the pregnancy.
T he procedure. ·known medically as dilation
and extraction , involves draining tht• skulJ o f a

Ictus befo re the fetus " fu ll y removed from
th e uterus. Oppon ents refer to th e procedure

Has k~ll said th at if th e law took effect he
could legall y use th e procedure if he cut the

In Iris lawsuit, Haske[{
said tlte law would impose
an undue burden on the
rigltt of women to choose
abortion.

ft' tus' umbili cal cord and waiteJ for the fetw,
w dtc b e fore rcmovmg it from the uterm. H t·
satd th e ri sk to the woman wou ld bl' mcrcase d
be cause
would renuin lo nger under anesthesi a and other dr ugs.

'she.

T he do ctor also acknowledged th at he
co uld legally use the procedure if the fetus
wa'\ killed with an injection of d rugs before

as partial-birth abortio n.
In hi s l aw~uit, H as kdl s~lld tht• law would
impose an undue burden o n th e right of
won u: n to ch oos e abortion .
Under cm ss-examin;ltion by Karl Schedl er,
an ass istant {)hi o att Orney gen eral. H askell
acknowledged that several abortion opti o ns
would remain an.d that his own proc cdure

would be legal if he altered the tcchniqt«.

tht· ab o rtion . But he said th at would cau se
soml: d iscomfOrt to th t• moth er and pose
grc ,ltt.'r ri sk o f intLTnal b\t·cding.

Haskell testified he cou ld :olso lega ll y perforlll d ilation and eva cuati o n, in which the ·
fetus IS dismembered as it is pulled from the
meru s. But he said that procedure poses an

Please see Abortion, Page Al

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Democrati c opera t ion-. 111
C levd anJ ;md ehewh erl' in th t•
co unty, wht' rt' Dtm on~ts run ning stJtcwid c must garn er big
maj n riti t•s to ntl's t't d mvnstatc

Republican strength .
The I lemo crati c prc·siJentt.al
n o m1n c ~
spo ke
tarlln
Wedne-sday at C leveb nd State
Un iversity, wrapping

up ~~ two ~

d:oy trek through O hio that
started ln Col umb m .
L1tcr. afte r ~ p e.1 kin g to p :u ty
f;Iithful at ;1 downtown hotel.
C o re shook hands w ith abom

1011 pc opk gathered o utside
o n two street cor ners. Smne
shouted , "Gore , Gore" and
" Go. AI."
Lc·c l'hill1ps, 411 . of Ckvel.mcl. w:l tched G o re 's . m otor-

w anr him ro \\"l n ."

BY CHARLENE HoEFliCH

•

election ,''
Gore told about 50 Democra tic leaders and donors at a
$ 1,000-a-person fund- rai sing
eve nt for tht" C uyah oga C o un ty Dm1ocrati c Party.
T he money wi ll finan ce

"Oh10 has always been cen tral," said Phillips, J re gist ered
D t' IJJUU ,I( . " W t' in C leveb nd

.

He wa s the son of C harl es Smah Sr. J.nd
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Rebecca Hite of l:hrrysvillc. Va ., ,md was
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. - A m o m11ne nt bo rn o n June 2. 1763 . H e e nli ste d as a pri erected at th e burial sit e of Maj . C harles M. vate in th e 3 1st Rc gtm ent ofVi rgi111a M ili Sm ith , a R evolutionary War soldier, will be tia and re ceived the ran k of m ajor frolll
dedicated m ceremoni es S unday at 3 :30 C t• n . G eorge Washin f!: tOn for "gall rint " L' I'p.lll . at the Dewitt Cem c·tery of Mur- vice in th e fiel d."
·
rysville, W.Va.'
Smith was marri ed to J.m c Mo rton · in
The dedication w ill foll ow a memorial 17H5, and possibl y married to either a
service at th e C olman C hapd , north of Burke or White afta 1792 and the n to Eli zRav~nswood on W.Va. 68 , loca ted near the
abeth England in IHI () in Berkl ey Co un ty,
L"C mete ry.
V:1. H e was th e fa ther of several chi ld ren
Smith , who di ed 0 11 May 12. IH46. is w hose dc o;ccndants live in Kc..·ntucky. We~t
buril' d besid e hi ~ last w ife, El iz,tb eth En g- Vi rgin ia , Ohi o, lndi:1 na and Canada.
lanJ .
Famil y lllt' l11bn-. rLTently o bt ,lin ed th e
Smith was a desce ndant o f Harri t•tte IlL' \\' mo nulllt'IH to rl'pl are ,1 detni o r.tti n ~
Serelda Smi th Moore and Clurles H . o tlt'. Th e land w:1:-. ( ka rcd by f:uni ly ll ll'lllSmi th, Benjami n Franklin , and oth n s of hen in prep ;tratinn fo r th e 11l' W 111 0l1 Ulllt'll t
J a t: k ~;o n County, W.V,l. , and M eigo; Cmmry,
Oh10.
Please see M•rtter, Page Al

·Gore

in1port&lt;1 n t
every
four
years in [he
presidential

o de k :1ve .tnd .... 1id hi-. p rc\ t'llC t' in Cl eveland was mtpo rtant .

Monument dedication honors
Sentinel Revolutionary
War veteran
.

Ca lendar
C las§ificds
Comics

n 's

always

Toclay's

2 Sections - 16 Pages

Oh10

CHARL,f S
SMlTH
MAJ

•'

~

VA.'T! MfUTtA
'
REV ,WAR

DEDICATION SET - A new monument marking the
grave of Revolutionary War soldiet. Major Charles
Smith . in Dewitt Cemetery. Jackson County, W.Va .,
will be dedicated Sunday. (Contributed photo)

.

Starting \Vith I tJ76, w hen
\)emocrat j1111111Y Ca rte r won
Ohio o ver R.erub li t·.m Prt·si dcm Gc·rald Fo rd by I I. 11 6
vo tL·s, Ohi oam h:lVL' \'Otl· d
tlnt't' time .;, tOr 1k m ocrat s ,md
th.ree tim t'" f(Jr R l·p uhli c.t n ~.
N o R t'pubh ra n h as w o n th l'
pn."sld t'lll" Y with o ut O hi o in
tilt' Llst t: entury.

C ure lett Cleveland for st o r &lt;
l.tr cr Wc:d! lcsd,ty in l )ctroit and
Scr.111t on, Pa.
Abo11 t 71111 people ga th nc·d
at the uni ver~i t y to h c.tr G o re's
t' Co no lnt t" o ut l111 t' . m ;"~ n y of
tlwn1 1knl o natiL P.1rty loyr•li ~ t.,
and 1.111\0 JI m e m bers .

·Please see Gore, Page Al

�'

'

•
...

-~

Thursday, September 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Soptombor 7, 2000

Guilty.pleas to lead to Ohio charge

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Slain pt's IIIOIIIIele•sed
MARION (AP) -The mother of a murde"'d 7-year-old girl w..s
released on Wednesday after being jailed for two days on a charge
stemming from an incident at the home of a friend of the man
charged in the killing.
. Police said Mary Barry, 26, and her fiance, Ronald Johnson, 33, were
causing a disturbance Monday ouuide rhe home of a friend of the
man charged with killing her daughter, Bobbie Jo.
A police officer responding to a disturbance call was struck by a car
aDegedly being driven by Johnson.
Johnson was charged with two count&gt; of felonious ' assault and
remains jailed in lieu of $20,000 bond.
Barry, charged with obstruction of justice for allegedly lying to
police about who was driving the car, w..s 'released on her
recognizance, as w..s Johnson's mother,Janice Johnson, 50., .
She faces two counts of obstructing justice. POlice· say she lied to
officers who came to her home looking for Johnson .and Barry. Officers entered the house and arrested the pair.
Barry Satt.i, 38, has been charged with rape, kidnapping and aggravated murder in the slaying of Bobbie Jo. Th~ girl was snatched fiom
l;&gt;er bed early the morning of Aug. 27 and found dead the next day in
a soybean field.
Police say Barry and Johnso n, both of Delawa"', were screaming
obscenities and threats Monday night ouuide the home of John
Daniels, a friend of Satt:l, who has said he was with Satta the morning
of the killing.
Marion police Officer Chad Fogle responded to a disturbance caD
ami was struck while trying to stop a car allegedly &lt;lriwh by Johilson.
Fogle experienced pain in his .pelvic area and was taken to Marion
General Hospital, said Police ChiefTom BeD.
Fogle w•s released fiom the hospiral Wednesclay but 'viD be off duty
for • while, the chief said.

awn

Man gets predator designation
PAINESVILLE (A P) - A man sentenced for seeking sex with little girls on the Internet was labeled a sexual predator even though his
real victim was a deputy sheriff posing as a 13-ycar-old girl.
Lake County Common Pleas Judge Martin Parks sentenced Kenneth R. Purdy, 27, of Chardon, to five years in prison on Wednesday.
Parks ruled that Purdy was both a sexual predator and a habirual sexual offender, meaning once Purdy is released fiom prison he will have
to register with the local sheriff for the rest of his life.
"You were dealing with a 13-year-old as far as the court is concerned;' Parks told a shocked Purdy, whose attorney had sought probation saying there was no child victim in this case.
Purdy pleaded guilty last month ro two counu each of pandering
obscenity involving minors and illegal use of a nlinor in nudity-oriented material.
Assistant Prosecutor Karen Kowall had recommendod a minimum
Jhree-ycar sentence. She said Purdy was convicted previously of corrupting a minor for luring a 14-ycar-old Maryland girl he met on the
Internet to his home for a sexual relationship.
Lake County Sheriff's detective Eugene Lucci, who posed as the
13-year-old girl online, said Purdy deserved the prison sentence for
sending piles oflewd and lecherous picrures of little girls being raped.
Purdy apologized to the court and said he w..s in treatment for his
sexual. deviancy.
.
,
"I am sorry. I was sick," Purdy said. "I don't know what w..s going
through my mind. I have a problem and I am trying to deal with it. It
will uke awhile."

Prosecutors drop sex charges
LEBANON (AP) - Prosecutors dismissed felony sex charges
against hvo 14-ye~r-old boys accused of assaulting th"'e female class-

killed five people, prosecutors s;ud

Wednesday.
The fire's only survivor was
their target, prosecutors said as the

first of four req1aining suspects in
the March 29 fire went on trial.
Martice Boddie, 25, is charged
with five count&gt; of complicity to
aggravated murder, complicitv to
aggravated robbery and complicity
to aggravated arson . He faces life in
pnson if convicted.
Six others already have pleaded
·guilty to taking part in planning

They allowed the boY' to pl,ead guilty to mi1demcanor charp of
contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
.
The boys had been charged with rape, 1exual battery and complic·
ity tu thole o1Ten1e1.
.
Tlw ~onvktio111 Wedn~•day mirrored the wrdicr in a third 14-yvar·
old bny'1 trial in Wm11n Cuunty )\lwnil~ Cnun un Tu~•d~y.
J~rr M~ndnw1, the lawyvr for one uf rhc 14-yvar-nld ~i~l!. ~riticlwd
.Iuthuritiri for running a ihoddy inwnigadon,
lmi1tam P"'il!cutor Andy Slewn •aid rhl! inwitil!'ldon wa1 incom·
plcte becau1e numerolll acquaint•mcc1 of the bC?YS refu1~d to talk to
policl! and pro~ec\llofi .
'
Sl~wr1 ~aid Magi•tratc Joe Kirby'• ru lin11 in Tuesday", trial \Wighed
!wavily in the decision to end the ~ase.
Authorities 1aid the girls were sexually assaulted M:1rch 11 when
they became intoxicated and the boys visited the home of une of the
11irls while her mother was shopping.
AU six teen-ager&gt; were students at_ Mason Middle SchOol in suburban Cincinnati.
The three boys will be sentenced Sept. 13. Prosecutors said they
doubt that the boys will b~ placed in detention.

Deadly mold found in project
AKRON (AP) -Workers renovating a 200-unit public housing
development have found a potentially deadly mold in more than one
building, housing officials said.
The mold, called suchybotcys or black mold, has been found m
now-empty buildings of the Joy Park complex in East Akron. The
exact number of buildings affected is not known, said Tony O'Leary,
executive director of the Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority.
The mold can cause pulmonary · hemosiderosis, a disease that
indu ces bleedi ng in the lungs.The black mold was linked to the deaths
of numero us mfants in the Cleveland a;._a in the mid- 1990s.

the fire. They arc expected to tL'StifY against Boddie.
Allen County Assistant Prosecutor Dan Berry said Boddie acted as
a lookout and ddivt&gt;red money to
the man who started the fire.
Boddie, who hved SIX houses
from the home that burned, wasn't
with the group that st:lrted the fire,
Berry said.
'·'But he fulfilled his function ,"
Berry said. ·
Defense Attorney John Poppe
told jurors Boddie knew nothing
about the fire until it was over.
"This,case is about guilt by association," Poppe said.

sch(,.·dulcs. there an.: " ]uuJdrl'ds (~f
other students th:1t dn nor:· """i~
John Oo\!rnt..~r. a soc i:tl s tudi l.~
year at South High School.
They showed up for the start reacher at South ,md buildin g
of school on Aug. 24 but still · representative for tht· Ckn-Lmd
haven't attended any ,·hsses yet. Teachers Union .
T hat's because adtninistrators
D oerner said tcacht-r;,. snll hq ld

' ST CLAIRSVILLE (AP) Belmont larger zoos recommended that the sheriff euthCounry authorities have been housing more anize the lioness, but that was an option
M cCort didn't want to consider.
than pnsoners lately.
The sheriff's office in this eastern Ohm
So Depury Bart Giesey took over the care
community has served as a repository for and feeding of the lioness and became quite
orphaned animals, including a fox, an Mrican attached to her.
"She never showed any aggression," McCort
lion and a singing, ralking parrot in recent .
months.
said, "but we were aU warned to be very careMost recently, the office came in possession ful. It is a wild animal:' ·
of the 450-pound African lioness after the
Finally; an animal relocation service in Texas
death of iu owner.
put McCort in touch with an Ohio woman.
"The family didn't know what to do with it
She rescues exotic large felines and allows
so they called us," SherriffTom McCort said.
them to live out their days in a habitat that
The sheriff said the office contacted the closely replicates their natural one.
Columbus Zoo, the Cincmnati Zoo and OgleThe woman, who does not want to be
bay's Good Zoo in Wheeling,Va.
named, picked the cat up two weeks ago,
AU advised him that once an animal is han- bringing with her two assistant&gt; and a veteridled by humans, wild animals would kill it.The narian. The cat was placed in quarantine before

•

"""..,.,.

;.-""'.......
"""'
,..J.".._. ry....-...
. Na.

.W

1·

.Ml lfBJ

•

Hot and sticky conditions are
returning to the tri-county area as

classes, althou gh sonu: h.J\'t.' on ly ;}
handti.1l of students.

southerly winds pump warm,
damp air into the region, the
National Weather Service said.
Showers are likely Friday and
Ftiday night, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday will be 75-80.
On Saturday, the mercury is
expected to reach the mid-80s.
Lows tonight wiD be around
60 .
Sunset tonight will be at 7:55
and sunrise on Friday at 7:06a.m.

Dlstrict officials adnm therl' ar('

students wid, empty dass pniods
but deny that there arc brge num-;
bers without classes ro arrl•nd .l11c

district also denied t!JJt studeniS
were told to stay home, although
Mya received an ex1t pl'rnm from
rhe sc hool Tuesd1y.

.

being let loose in the 60cplus acre refu ge tliaf
is not open to the public.
The sheriff said the woman has invi ted
department member&gt; to visit the' cot.
Deputy Gie&lt;ey ended up adopting the talk:-··
ative and talented blue-front Amazon parr'o,"
named Zaccheus.
.. · ~
The parrot-ended up at the shenff's of!lc~
because the owner was moving and co uldn't~
take it along.
' ::'
Zaccheus squawks and talks at randoiJ~,~
Some of his· phrases include " Ahoy, who 's th'e
captain?" He'll also say "Hello" when he hear,;:
the telephone ring.
Most of the deputies arc animal lowrs, th e
sheriff said, and diSplay a liking for orphaned
animals.
" It's just part of the JOb," he said.

Weather forecast:
Tonight... Increasing cloudiness.
Lows in the lower 60s. Light

COLUMilUS (AP) - Judt~e Tim lllack
rai1~d more than SllO,OllU during A\ljl\111, nearly YU\Iblln~ th•· rr~a~\lry of hii campai1111 ru
umeat Ohio Suprem~ Court Juitkc D~bnrah
C(lok, campailln financ~ R'p(lrti filed Wedne&gt;·
day 1howed.
Cnuk itill held •n nwrall ~dll" in mtal contributions heading imo the campaign's final two
month$: 5426,282 to $239,444.
Cook of Akron is in her first term on the
Sup"'me Court. Black of Cincinnati serves on
Hamilton County Mmlicipal
· In Ohio's other Supreme Court race, incumbent Democratic Justice Alice Robie Resnick
had $348,562. That compared with S517,620
for Republican challenger Terrence O'DonneD,
an appeals court judge from Cleveland.
The Resnick-O'DonneD race is expected to
be fought in la rge part by the buSiness and
insurance interests amling for Resmck
because of her votes on school funding and
lawsuit linlits - and the trial lawyers and
unions seeking to protect her.
Only statewide candidates were
required to file the monthly report&gt;
with Secretary of Sure Kenneth
BlackweD. Those parties ouuide the
campaign, who likely will spend

AEP- 37 ~2
Akzo-431,
AmTeohjSBC- 42,,
Ashland Inc.- 35,,
AT&amp;T-31'1,
Bank One-36
Bob Evans - 17\
BorgWarner - 35),
Champion Charming Shops - 4'·
City Holding - 7'r. .
Federal Mogul - 1o ~.
Firstar- 24'11.

2'·

dn not

h~w 111 llle untll

b~fnN the Nov. 7 elwlon.
lltwk rai1cd much ofhilmoney fi·n m uninm
and anorney1. Thole contributini the S5,(](XJ
limit for . political action committee• included
rhe 1aw firm1 of Miraldi &amp; llarR'tt of Lorain,
and T~anga1, Plaku. Manno1, Recupero of
Akron . Unions giving the SS,IlOO limit included the Ohio AFI.-CIO and the Ohio Federation ofTeac hers.
Cleveland-based TRW Inc., a technology
researcher and maker of automotive and
defense systems, gave Cook $2,000. The
National Association of Independent Insurers,
based in Des Plaines, IU., gave her campaign
$2 ,500.
Resnick's campaign took in $57,451 in
August. Unions that gave $2,500 to Resnick's
campaign included the Service Employees
International Union and the O hio Civil Services Employees Association. The lv\iddletown
law firm of Casper &amp; Casper's PAC gave

i• 12 Jays

(USPS UJ.960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Pwblished eve ry afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley -Publishing Company. Second

Ruby Vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
aAfter The Game For Their
Friday Night Specials.

The Daily Semine l, Ill Co urt S1., Pomeroy,

.,r,.;:

Ohio 45769

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unconstitutional and thr~:w out law!&gt;uir limil"'

leg,slation.The same 4-3 majority rul ed in bo:h:

cases.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce lm:
pronlised to lead the fight af,"Jinst Resmck With:
third-party ads that wiD claim the court's ruli111,":
are costing Ohioans Jobs and will lead to tax:

•

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnddt Mrl~ts County

The lawyers and unions want to prote ct:
Resnick ofToledo, one of onlv two Demncm -:
ic state\vide officeholders.The.oth er "Supremt':
Court Justice Francis Sweeney, \\'ho won r-e~ :
elecnon to his six-year ter m in 1998.

WE WILL BEAT ALL
LOCAL COMPETITORS
PRICES

Friday night .. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 60s.

Dinner planned

Extended forecast :

HARRISONVILLE HarrisonviDe Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will
present the Scottish Rite Players
Club at the lodge haD on Saturday. Dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m., followed by the play at 7:30
p.m. The dinner is free to all
Masonic brothers, their wives and

Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s.
Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 60s and highs in the mid
80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

.,I!

Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohiu
Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to

O'Donnell Mwd S~,111111 c.~eh li·o111 tfli
!lACs nfthe Ohio Chamb&lt;r of Cmnmercc a1Hf
Akron~bnsed l'ifiiEnerb'Y Corp. TRW
donated SI.OOO to O'Donn .,ll, wlw · r.II'C&lt;t
S63, 745 during August.
.
Some busine" groups want Rc&gt;nick uusc.]t-:
ed. That is because she wrote the opinions dJa~
found Ohio's school fimding formula l'&lt;'lllained:

me reases.

TUPPERS PLAINS
3:24 p.m ., O hio 7, Tony Jones,
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

cent.

General Elec1ric - 59
Harley Davidson - 49lo
Kmart-6,,
Kroger - 22\
Lands End- 24'•
L1d . - 21lo
Oak Hill Financial- 16\
OVB-26\
BBT - 26~.
Peoples - 15
Premier - 5
Rockwell - 39'),

13 Weeks .. . ............................... .. $2 7. 30

26 Weeks ..................................... ... ,... S5J .82
52 Weeks .......
.. ..... .. .. ........... $105 .56
Rliltn Oulslde Mt:lgs. County
13 Wecks ............................................. $29 . 2~
26 Weeks .. ........................................... $~6 . 68
52 Weeks ............ .. ..... .... .. ...... ........... $109.72

Reader Serv1ces

PHA~o:g

3.29
a

55 ,000 ,

Oct. lb. That

Friday.. ,Co nsiderabl e cloudiness and more humid with a
chance of showers. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain 30 per-

Gannett - 56'"

The Daily Sentinel

.

million~.

southeast wind .

Gore

LOCAL STOCKS

class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

992-3322

: FRF.E assuran.ce on gold rings.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Black campaign raises m~re than S110,000:.·

t--:-M':::'ID~DL'EPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZI~R
Midc in the' UV.

Humidity will post increase

\\'t."~ks ago to start their senior

haven't finished class schedules.
The twin sis~ers and scores of
other snld~nts have spem hours in
a cafeteria or audttorium. Some
aren't going to school at aU.
"I don 't understand why you
would escalate the st:lrt of school
1f you're nor prepared," said Pat
Weeden, the girls' mother. "This is
preposterous."

12:07 p.m., South Fourth
Street, Dorothy Pierce, dead on
arrival;
3:57 p.m ., Fisher Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch , William
Slivers, O ' Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
6:18a.m., Ohio 124, assisted by
Central Dispatch, C hri s Mddan.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

VALLEY WEATHER

Whi lt:: so nlt.' sttHk ru s h.!\"t'

Orphaned animals find home at sheriff's office:

Our main concern In all 11ortes Is to be
: ac~unte. It yo u know or an error In a story,
call the newsroo m at (740) 991·2155. We

.'

·will check your inforn1at1on and make a

correction If warranted.

*At Pharmacists Discretion

- -

Nrw~

Bt&gt;partmt&gt;nU
Tlit n1111in numbrr I~ 992-1155. 11f'partmcnt
e:v:tcn sln n~ &amp;no:

Chicken Strip Basket

Die

Units log 5 calls

'

CLEVELAND {AP) - Leah
and Mya Weeden were ready two

POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court tO Frederick Eugene Werry Jr., 31, and
Carina Lee Wolfe, 27, Pomeroy;
and -to Michael Anthony Legg,
41 ; Gallia County, and Susan
Marie- Page, 23, Meigs Counry

MIDDLEPORT - Dorothy Jones Pierce, 83, Middleport, died
Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2000 at her residence.
She wao born on Jan . 13,1917 in Orbeston,daughterofthe late Carman Eugene and Doris Anna Lewis Jones. Sl)e was employed as the
manager of Duke Dry Cleaners in Middleport for 16 years, and was
rellred as receptionist for Bromley HaD at Ohio Universiry.
She was a member of the Middleport Church Christ and Middleport Evangeline Chapter 172, OES.
Surviving are her daughter, Dixie Pierce Arbu ckle of Middleport;
and several nieces and nephews .
POMEROY Units of the
She was also pre cededjn death by her husband, Millard E. Pierce, in Meigs
Emergency
Services
1968; and two brothers, Lewis Carman Jones and John Robert Jones. answered five calls for assistance
Services Will be 2 p.m . Saturday, Sept. 9, 2000 in Fisher Funeral .)\ln Wednesday. Units responded as
Home , Middleport, with the Rev. Carman Eugene Jones officiating. ~foDows:
Bunal will be m Greenlawn Cemetery, Nelsonville. Friends may caD at
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
1:40 p.m., Holzer Medical
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Asso- Center Clinic, Lauren Harrison ,
ciation, Meigs County Division, attention: Joan Wolfe, P.O. Box 586, Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MIDDLEPORT

School starts, students
waiting for schedule

,.., FRIDAY SPECIAL ""

Only

Dorothy Pierce

.

Trial begins for suspects
in lima firebombing
liMA (AP) - Frit' nds angry
someone had stolen cocaine from
them planned a firebombing that

Ucenses issued

that Swango could be indicted as early as ing patients in Zimbabwe, spt.·nt time ·1n
Monday on an aggravated murder charge in prison for poisoning co-workers in Ilhn oi&lt;;.
the 1984 poisoning of Cynthia Ann McGee
The best-seDing book " Blind Eye : The
at Ohio State's hospital .
Story of a Doctor who Got Away with M ur~
Swango is suspected of inJecting McGee, der'' suggests Swango might have killed .up
a 19-year-old gymnast recuperating fr.o m. a to 35 patients as he moved from hospital to
car accident, with a fatal dose of potassium . hospital. '
Swango- known as "Dr. Death"- also
Swango, 45, fidgeted slightly but showed
is accused of poisoning OSU patient Rena no emotion Wednesday when U.S. District
Cooper, who survived bu·t was paralyzed. Judge Jacob Mishler imposed three consecu:
O'Brien said he won't pursue charges in that rive life terms with no c han ce of parole.
case because too much time has passed
Pro.secutors for the first time rcaJ fr~ni
under Ohio law..
.Swango's handwritten journal, citing them
Swango, who also is suspected of poison- as evidence that Swango killed for pleasu;&lt;:.
.

CENTRAL ISLIP, N .Y. (AP) - Guilty
pleas by a former physician to the fatal poisonings of three patients in a Long Island
hospital in 1993 will lead Ohio authorities
to charge him with aggravated murder in a
1984 poisoning death, a prosecutor said.
Michael Swango, a former Ohio State
University hospital intern linked to killings
on two continents, pleaded guilty Wednesday to five counts of a nine-count federal
indictment, including three co unt~ of murder.
.In Columbus, Ohio, Franklin County
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said Wednesday

mates.

IJmzier,.

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

N ACCIPT OHIO IDICAID

Genera l Man•ger -. .......... :.............. Ext. 1101

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ClautnedAds ............ ..................... Ext. 1100

Our Promise To You:

Rocky Boots- 5),
AD Shell - 621,

Sears- 35~

Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 50),

Wendy's -

19' ~.

Worthington -

1o\

Daily stock reports are the
4. p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Crude
oil
•
pnces soar
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With crude oil prices soaring
and hefty home heating bills anticipated this winter, analysts say the
situation could get worse if oil producing countries do not act soon
to increase supplies.
"We reaDy have the makings of
an energy crisis here, for this win-

from PapAl
including
representatives of
painters, construction workers and
grocery clerks. Former Trea5ury
Secretary Robert Ruben introduced Gore.
Gore speDed out 10 goals to be
reached in his administration,
. including cutting the poverty rate
and increasing the nation's savings
and home ownership rates.
Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, rhe
House Budget Conunittee chair. man who gave up his own presidential quest last year to support
Texas Gov. George W. Bush's campaign, said Wednesclay in a confer&lt;:nee caD that Gore's promises don't
translate into fiscal respon&lt;ibility.
"What is reaDy amazing is that,
I think, somehow Gore thinks he
can buy people's votes with their
own money," Kasich said.
Tanya Mahoney, an organizer for
U nited Food &amp; Commercial
Workers Local 880, remained cautious in her appraisal of Gore after
hearing his speech.
"I think that, to be honest with

ter," said John Kilduff, a sc;nior vice
president at Fimar USA In c. in
New York, citing "bad news for
natural gas, oil and heating oil."
With U.S. crude supplies hovering near 24 -year lows and a world
market thirsty for more oil, prices
climbed 3 percent Wednesday into
record territory.
West Texas Intermediate cn1dc
for October delivery rose $1.07 to
S34. 90 a barrel.
Prices have more than tripled
since hitting a 12-year low ofless
than $11 a barrel in December
1998, 'before OPEC slashed production to force prices higher.
The European Union, wary of '1.:
protests against soaring fuel prices
in several EU nations. on Wednesday urged the Orga niz•tion of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries to
lower prices wh e n it lllt'l't'i Sund ay
in Vit:nna.
OPEC's rdu c tanc~ to raise produ ction subst.mtially has had a ripple effl'ct amon g energy produ cto.;,

and analysts say the 500,000 b arrels
extra OPEC is expected to approve
may not suffice to meet heavy
world demand.

ot

Marker
from PageAl

guests

Hosts meeting
POMEROY - The Women of
the Word of South Bethel New
Testament Church wiD host its
third annual Bride of Christ
Conference Saturday. All women
are welcome to attend the meeting, which begi ns at I 0 a.m . and
concludes at I p.m with a salad
luncheon .
Guest speaker will be Patry
Spaeth from One Heart Ministries, who will talk on Hebrews
12:1, "Stay in the Race, the Prize
is Yours ." There is no charge ofor
the conference .
C hild care will not be available.
The church is locate on Silver
Ridge Road, directly across from
Eastern Schools on Ohio 7. For
more information call Mary Perdas, 985-9807 or Tanmli Barber,
378-9807.

Fund-raiser set
MIDDLEPORT Hobson
Christian Fellowship C hurch will
have a chicken noodle dinner
Friday with se rving from I 0
a.m.-4 p.m. Delivery of meals is
available.

Board meeting
CHESTER - Chester Town ship Board of Trustees will meet
in regular session on Saturday at 8
a.m. in the C hester Town Hall.

Cooperative board
to meet
RACINE Meigs United
M ethodist Cooperative Parish

you, it remains to be seen," she said.
" I do agree with tllis part, that the
nliddle class IS exactly they way he's
saying it is, caught in the rniddle.
There needs to be some type of
plan add ressed directly to us,
because we are carrying the weight
of the world."
Diana Tupa, 34, a Cleveland St:lte
senior majoring in English and history, said she liked much of what
Gore said, but didn't hear much
that would ease her own economic pinch.
"Personally, being a single
mother, I'd like to sec what he
could do to help us out more. I'm
·racking up $30,000 in student
loans just so I can attend college.
I'm going to graduate deep in
debt. HopefuDy, I'll be able get a
job when I get out," she said.
Gore fl ew in Tuesday night from
Columbu s, where his speech at an
Internet
marketing company
fo cused on the importance of
technology to the economy. H e
spent rhe night in Cleveland after
chatting with patrons at a restaurant just a block away from Jacobs
Field as basebaU fans headed to the
st:ldium for a Cleveland Indians
game.

Before the 3:30p.m. dedi ca tion
service, the Moore-Smith farmlies will gather at the Lubeck
Civic C enter at 1 p.m. for a
reumo n.

which was erected through assistance from the Leavitt Funeral

Home of Parkersburg , WVa.
Sc hed ul ed to parti cipate in
Sunday's .service at the cemetery
is the color guard of the Voterans
of Foreign War of Ravenswood.

Jury
from PageA1
er on Aug. 16, whe n the child's
f.1 tal inJllri es were tirst intliCtt'd,
authorities alle ge. .
Both Ja ck son and Gillilan
remain in the M eigs C ounty Jail
in lie u of bo~d - J ac kson on a
$500,000 bo nd, and G illilan on
two $1 milli o n bo nds .

SPR ING VAllEY CINEMA
446 • 4524

1,11 fiOUTE •·,\~t~T
1,'1\1 JActc~.oN rn1l

7

will hold a county council meeting to discuss becoming ecumenical on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Bethany United Methodist
Church.
The meeting is open to the
public.

Church ladies
to meet
HOBSON - Ladies for rhe
Lord wiD meet on Saturday at lD
a.m. at the H obson C hmtian Fellowshit&gt; Church, with spea ker
Patty Wade. Marti e Short and
Sandra Long will sing.

Plan hymn sing
LONG BOTTOM Faith
Full Gospel Church will have services at 7 p.m . on Saturday with
Higher CaDing.

ODOT to discuss
bridge
POMEROY - Ohio Department of Transportati on will condud a public meetin g on Sept.
14 from 6- 8 p.m . at Roy~! Oak
R esort near Pomeroy, to bring
area residents up to date on the
Pomeroy/ Mason Bridge replacem e nt proJeCt.

ODOT representatives will
give a present:ltion at 6 p.m . and
take comments and questions
from the public.
The existing bridge is scheduled for replacement in two to
three years. ODOT has already
earmarked $25 nlillion for the
proj ect for fiscal year 2003, which
starts July I, 2002.
Once comp leted, the new
bridge will be the property of

West Virginia , with ODOT paying a percentage of future maintenance costs.

Mayor's court
MIDDLEPORT
Seven
people were fined and 13 bonds'
were forfeited in the court of
Middl eport
Mayor
Sandy
Iannareli last week.
Fined were Charles M cG rath,
Middl eport, $250 and costs,
aggravated menacing: Gary Rose,
Middleport, $100 and costs, pub~
lie intoxication, S100 and costs,
open co ntainer: Cathy Pauley,
Pomeroy, $16 and costs, speed;
Danny Coleman, Kentucky, $15
and costs , speed; Tammy Owens-'
by, Middleport, $200 and costs,
assault, $100 and .costs, trespassing;
Raquel A. Maddux, Middleport,
$25 and costs, expired operators
license: Tabitha M. Ohler, Middleport, $25 and costs, failure to
yield.
Forfeiting bonds were Jana·
Williams, Pomeroy, $63, speed;
Mary Carpenter, Middleport ,
$61, speed: Timmy R . Hood ,
Po meroy, $65. speed: Adam B.
Tillis, Po meroy, So\1, speed; Barbara R . Pore, Chester, $67, speed ;
Brian K. 13ufllngton , Middleport,
$69, speed; Leslie Whittmgton,Jr.,
Middl eport, S6'1, speed:, Dwayne
R. Fisher, Middleport , $73, speed;
Norman V. Reynolds, Mason,
W.Va., $69, speed; James E ..
McBane, East Liverp ool, $150,.
menacing threats; Adam M . Taylor, MidcUeport, $75, failure to
obey traffic co ntrol device:·
Christina L. Han ing, Middleport,
$150, disorderly by intoxication;
$150, mena cing threats; Dana R.
Williams, Jr., Middleport, $150,
possessio n of marijuana.

Abortion

Distri ct Judge Walter Rice issued.
a temporary restraining order
blocking its enforcement. Rice
on Friday extended his order to
Page
Sept . 19 .
·
increased risk of complications
HaskeD persuaded Rice in 1995
that cou ld result in a ljysterecto• to reject Ohio's first ban as
my.
unconstitutional. The 6th U.S..
He said he prefers dilation and Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
extraction .
that decision, and the U.S.
"I can assure a higher level of Supreme Court declined to hear
safety," he said.
the case.
Haskell, own e r of Women's
Stare officials say the latest ban
Medical Professional Corp., oper- was design ed to satisfY state and
ates clini cs in Cincinnati, Dayton federal courts and to comply with
and Akron. Haskell said he knows criticisms from various federal
of three other doctors in Ohio courts that sinlilar laws were too
who' also use the procedure. ·
vague.
Haskell said he has performed
the procedure more than 2,000
times and never had a major
compli cation.
The law had been schedul ed to
go into effect Aug. 18, but U.S.

from

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NUTT'I PROFESSOR 2:
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520 W. Mnin St. - Pom eroy

7;00 SUN· THURS

Nen r the Mn 8on Br1dge

GODZILLA 2000 (PG)

Phone 740-992 -2588
Vinton 740-388·8603

7:10 SUN·THURS

Gallipolik 740·446·0852

Your Wai•Mart Pharmacy Department Will Serve You Better By:
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Registered Pharmadsts on duty during all Pharmacy hours, ready to
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The low Wiii•Mart price on prescrlpUons and over-the-counter
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9-6 Saturday
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Pomeroy
992-2124

I'IY OF lll Gift

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7:10,9:50

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Thursday, September 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Soptombor 7, 2000

Guilty.pleas to lead to Ohio charge

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Slain pt's IIIOIIIIele•sed
MARION (AP) -The mother of a murde"'d 7-year-old girl w..s
released on Wednesday after being jailed for two days on a charge
stemming from an incident at the home of a friend of the man
charged in the killing.
. Police said Mary Barry, 26, and her fiance, Ronald Johnson, 33, were
causing a disturbance Monday ouuide rhe home of a friend of the
man charged with killing her daughter, Bobbie Jo.
A police officer responding to a disturbance call was struck by a car
aDegedly being driven by Johnson.
Johnson was charged with two count&gt; of felonious ' assault and
remains jailed in lieu of $20,000 bond.
Barry, charged with obstruction of justice for allegedly lying to
police about who was driving the car, w..s 'released on her
recognizance, as w..s Johnson's mother,Janice Johnson, 50., .
She faces two counts of obstructing justice. POlice· say she lied to
officers who came to her home looking for Johnson .and Barry. Officers entered the house and arrested the pair.
Barry Satt.i, 38, has been charged with rape, kidnapping and aggravated murder in the slaying of Bobbie Jo. Th~ girl was snatched fiom
l;&gt;er bed early the morning of Aug. 27 and found dead the next day in
a soybean field.
Police say Barry and Johnso n, both of Delawa"', were screaming
obscenities and threats Monday night ouuide the home of John
Daniels, a friend of Satt:l, who has said he was with Satta the morning
of the killing.
Marion police Officer Chad Fogle responded to a disturbance caD
ami was struck while trying to stop a car allegedly &lt;lriwh by Johilson.
Fogle experienced pain in his .pelvic area and was taken to Marion
General Hospital, said Police ChiefTom BeD.
Fogle w•s released fiom the hospiral Wednesclay but 'viD be off duty
for • while, the chief said.

awn

Man gets predator designation
PAINESVILLE (A P) - A man sentenced for seeking sex with little girls on the Internet was labeled a sexual predator even though his
real victim was a deputy sheriff posing as a 13-ycar-old girl.
Lake County Common Pleas Judge Martin Parks sentenced Kenneth R. Purdy, 27, of Chardon, to five years in prison on Wednesday.
Parks ruled that Purdy was both a sexual predator and a habirual sexual offender, meaning once Purdy is released fiom prison he will have
to register with the local sheriff for the rest of his life.
"You were dealing with a 13-year-old as far as the court is concerned;' Parks told a shocked Purdy, whose attorney had sought probation saying there was no child victim in this case.
Purdy pleaded guilty last month ro two counu each of pandering
obscenity involving minors and illegal use of a nlinor in nudity-oriented material.
Assistant Prosecutor Karen Kowall had recommendod a minimum
Jhree-ycar sentence. She said Purdy was convicted previously of corrupting a minor for luring a 14-ycar-old Maryland girl he met on the
Internet to his home for a sexual relationship.
Lake County Sheriff's detective Eugene Lucci, who posed as the
13-year-old girl online, said Purdy deserved the prison sentence for
sending piles oflewd and lecherous picrures of little girls being raped.
Purdy apologized to the court and said he w..s in treatment for his
sexual. deviancy.
.
,
"I am sorry. I was sick," Purdy said. "I don't know what w..s going
through my mind. I have a problem and I am trying to deal with it. It
will uke awhile."

Prosecutors drop sex charges
LEBANON (AP) - Prosecutors dismissed felony sex charges
against hvo 14-ye~r-old boys accused of assaulting th"'e female class-

killed five people, prosecutors s;ud

Wednesday.
The fire's only survivor was
their target, prosecutors said as the

first of four req1aining suspects in
the March 29 fire went on trial.
Martice Boddie, 25, is charged
with five count&gt; of complicity to
aggravated murder, complicitv to
aggravated robbery and complicity
to aggravated arson . He faces life in
pnson if convicted.
Six others already have pleaded
·guilty to taking part in planning

They allowed the boY' to pl,ead guilty to mi1demcanor charp of
contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
.
The boys had been charged with rape, 1exual battery and complic·
ity tu thole o1Ten1e1.
.
Tlw ~onvktio111 Wedn~•day mirrored the wrdicr in a third 14-yvar·
old bny'1 trial in Wm11n Cuunty )\lwnil~ Cnun un Tu~•d~y.
J~rr M~ndnw1, the lawyvr for one uf rhc 14-yvar-nld ~i~l!. ~riticlwd
.Iuthuritiri for running a ihoddy inwnigadon,
lmi1tam P"'il!cutor Andy Slewn •aid rhl! inwitil!'ldon wa1 incom·
plcte becau1e numerolll acquaint•mcc1 of the bC?YS refu1~d to talk to
policl! and pro~ec\llofi .
'
Sl~wr1 ~aid Magi•tratc Joe Kirby'• ru lin11 in Tuesday", trial \Wighed
!wavily in the decision to end the ~ase.
Authorities 1aid the girls were sexually assaulted M:1rch 11 when
they became intoxicated and the boys visited the home of une of the
11irls while her mother was shopping.
AU six teen-ager&gt; were students at_ Mason Middle SchOol in suburban Cincinnati.
The three boys will be sentenced Sept. 13. Prosecutors said they
doubt that the boys will b~ placed in detention.

Deadly mold found in project
AKRON (AP) -Workers renovating a 200-unit public housing
development have found a potentially deadly mold in more than one
building, housing officials said.
The mold, called suchybotcys or black mold, has been found m
now-empty buildings of the Joy Park complex in East Akron. The
exact number of buildings affected is not known, said Tony O'Leary,
executive director of the Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority.
The mold can cause pulmonary · hemosiderosis, a disease that
indu ces bleedi ng in the lungs.The black mold was linked to the deaths
of numero us mfants in the Cleveland a;._a in the mid- 1990s.

the fire. They arc expected to tL'StifY against Boddie.
Allen County Assistant Prosecutor Dan Berry said Boddie acted as
a lookout and ddivt&gt;red money to
the man who started the fire.
Boddie, who hved SIX houses
from the home that burned, wasn't
with the group that st:lrted the fire,
Berry said.
'·'But he fulfilled his function ,"
Berry said. ·
Defense Attorney John Poppe
told jurors Boddie knew nothing
about the fire until it was over.
"This,case is about guilt by association," Poppe said.

sch(,.·dulcs. there an.: " ]uuJdrl'ds (~f
other students th:1t dn nor:· """i~
John Oo\!rnt..~r. a soc i:tl s tudi l.~
year at South High School.
They showed up for the start reacher at South ,md buildin g
of school on Aug. 24 but still · representative for tht· Ckn-Lmd
haven't attended any ,·hsses yet. Teachers Union .
T hat's because adtninistrators
D oerner said tcacht-r;,. snll hq ld

' ST CLAIRSVILLE (AP) Belmont larger zoos recommended that the sheriff euthCounry authorities have been housing more anize the lioness, but that was an option
M cCort didn't want to consider.
than pnsoners lately.
The sheriff's office in this eastern Ohm
So Depury Bart Giesey took over the care
community has served as a repository for and feeding of the lioness and became quite
orphaned animals, including a fox, an Mrican attached to her.
"She never showed any aggression," McCort
lion and a singing, ralking parrot in recent .
months.
said, "but we were aU warned to be very careMost recently, the office came in possession ful. It is a wild animal:' ·
of the 450-pound African lioness after the
Finally; an animal relocation service in Texas
death of iu owner.
put McCort in touch with an Ohio woman.
"The family didn't know what to do with it
She rescues exotic large felines and allows
so they called us," SherriffTom McCort said.
them to live out their days in a habitat that
The sheriff said the office contacted the closely replicates their natural one.
Columbus Zoo, the Cincmnati Zoo and OgleThe woman, who does not want to be
bay's Good Zoo in Wheeling,Va.
named, picked the cat up two weeks ago,
AU advised him that once an animal is han- bringing with her two assistant&gt; and a veteridled by humans, wild animals would kill it.The narian. The cat was placed in quarantine before

•

"""..,.,.

;.-""'.......
"""'
,..J.".._. ry....-...
. Na.

.W

1·

.Ml lfBJ

•

Hot and sticky conditions are
returning to the tri-county area as

classes, althou gh sonu: h.J\'t.' on ly ;}
handti.1l of students.

southerly winds pump warm,
damp air into the region, the
National Weather Service said.
Showers are likely Friday and
Ftiday night, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday will be 75-80.
On Saturday, the mercury is
expected to reach the mid-80s.
Lows tonight wiD be around
60 .
Sunset tonight will be at 7:55
and sunrise on Friday at 7:06a.m.

Dlstrict officials adnm therl' ar('

students wid, empty dass pniods
but deny that there arc brge num-;
bers without classes ro arrl•nd .l11c

district also denied t!JJt studeniS
were told to stay home, although
Mya received an ex1t pl'rnm from
rhe sc hool Tuesd1y.

.

being let loose in the 60cplus acre refu ge tliaf
is not open to the public.
The sheriff said the woman has invi ted
department member&gt; to visit the' cot.
Deputy Gie&lt;ey ended up adopting the talk:-··
ative and talented blue-front Amazon parr'o,"
named Zaccheus.
.. · ~
The parrot-ended up at the shenff's of!lc~
because the owner was moving and co uldn't~
take it along.
' ::'
Zaccheus squawks and talks at randoiJ~,~
Some of his· phrases include " Ahoy, who 's th'e
captain?" He'll also say "Hello" when he hear,;:
the telephone ring.
Most of the deputies arc animal lowrs, th e
sheriff said, and diSplay a liking for orphaned
animals.
" It's just part of the JOb," he said.

Weather forecast:
Tonight... Increasing cloudiness.
Lows in the lower 60s. Light

COLUMilUS (AP) - Judt~e Tim lllack
rai1~d more than SllO,OllU during A\ljl\111, nearly YU\Iblln~ th•· rr~a~\lry of hii campai1111 ru
umeat Ohio Suprem~ Court Juitkc D~bnrah
C(lok, campailln financ~ R'p(lrti filed Wedne&gt;·
day 1howed.
Cnuk itill held •n nwrall ~dll" in mtal contributions heading imo the campaign's final two
month$: 5426,282 to $239,444.
Cook of Akron is in her first term on the
Sup"'me Court. Black of Cincinnati serves on
Hamilton County Mmlicipal
· In Ohio's other Supreme Court race, incumbent Democratic Justice Alice Robie Resnick
had $348,562. That compared with S517,620
for Republican challenger Terrence O'DonneD,
an appeals court judge from Cleveland.
The Resnick-O'DonneD race is expected to
be fought in la rge part by the buSiness and
insurance interests amling for Resmck
because of her votes on school funding and
lawsuit linlits - and the trial lawyers and
unions seeking to protect her.
Only statewide candidates were
required to file the monthly report&gt;
with Secretary of Sure Kenneth
BlackweD. Those parties ouuide the
campaign, who likely will spend

AEP- 37 ~2
Akzo-431,
AmTeohjSBC- 42,,
Ashland Inc.- 35,,
AT&amp;T-31'1,
Bank One-36
Bob Evans - 17\
BorgWarner - 35),
Champion Charming Shops - 4'·
City Holding - 7'r. .
Federal Mogul - 1o ~.
Firstar- 24'11.

2'·

dn not

h~w 111 llle untll

b~fnN the Nov. 7 elwlon.
lltwk rai1cd much ofhilmoney fi·n m uninm
and anorney1. Thole contributini the S5,(](XJ
limit for . political action committee• included
rhe 1aw firm1 of Miraldi &amp; llarR'tt of Lorain,
and T~anga1, Plaku. Manno1, Recupero of
Akron . Unions giving the SS,IlOO limit included the Ohio AFI.-CIO and the Ohio Federation ofTeac hers.
Cleveland-based TRW Inc., a technology
researcher and maker of automotive and
defense systems, gave Cook $2,000. The
National Association of Independent Insurers,
based in Des Plaines, IU., gave her campaign
$2 ,500.
Resnick's campaign took in $57,451 in
August. Unions that gave $2,500 to Resnick's
campaign included the Service Employees
International Union and the O hio Civil Services Employees Association. The lv\iddletown
law firm of Casper &amp; Casper's PAC gave

i• 12 Jays

(USPS UJ.960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Pwblished eve ry afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley -Publishing Company. Second

Ruby Vaughan Invite
You To Stop In Before
aAfter The Game For Their
Friday Night Specials.

The Daily Semine l, Ill Co urt S1., Pomeroy,

.,r,.;:

Ohio 45769

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Publisher rescrvu .the right to adj ust rates
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unconstitutional and thr~:w out law!&gt;uir limil"'

leg,slation.The same 4-3 majority rul ed in bo:h:

cases.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce lm:
pronlised to lead the fight af,"Jinst Resmck With:
third-party ads that wiD claim the court's ruli111,":
are costing Ohioans Jobs and will lead to tax:

•

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnddt Mrl~ts County

The lawyers and unions want to prote ct:
Resnick ofToledo, one of onlv two Demncm -:
ic state\vide officeholders.The.oth er "Supremt':
Court Justice Francis Sweeney, \\'ho won r-e~ :
elecnon to his six-year ter m in 1998.

WE WILL BEAT ALL
LOCAL COMPETITORS
PRICES

Friday night .. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 60s.

Dinner planned

Extended forecast :

HARRISONVILLE HarrisonviDe Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will
present the Scottish Rite Players
Club at the lodge haD on Saturday. Dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m., followed by the play at 7:30
p.m. The dinner is free to all
Masonic brothers, their wives and

Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s.
Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 60s and highs in the mid
80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.

.,I!

Member: The Associated Press. and the Ohiu
Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to

O'Donnell Mwd S~,111111 c.~eh li·o111 tfli
!lACs nfthe Ohio Chamb&lt;r of Cmnmercc a1Hf
Akron~bnsed l'ifiiEnerb'Y Corp. TRW
donated SI.OOO to O'Donn .,ll, wlw · r.II'C&lt;t
S63, 745 during August.
.
Some busine" groups want Rc&gt;nick uusc.]t-:
ed. That is because she wrote the opinions dJa~
found Ohio's school fimding formula l'&lt;'lllained:

me reases.

TUPPERS PLAINS
3:24 p.m ., O hio 7, Tony Jones,
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

cent.

General Elec1ric - 59
Harley Davidson - 49lo
Kmart-6,,
Kroger - 22\
Lands End- 24'•
L1d . - 21lo
Oak Hill Financial- 16\
OVB-26\
BBT - 26~.
Peoples - 15
Premier - 5
Rockwell - 39'),

13 Weeks .. . ............................... .. $2 7. 30

26 Weeks ..................................... ... ,... S5J .82
52 Weeks .......
.. ..... .. .. ........... $105 .56
Rliltn Oulslde Mt:lgs. County
13 Wecks ............................................. $29 . 2~
26 Weeks .. ........................................... $~6 . 68
52 Weeks ............ .. ..... .... .. ...... ........... $109.72

Reader Serv1ces

PHA~o:g

3.29
a

55 ,000 ,

Oct. lb. That

Friday.. ,Co nsiderabl e cloudiness and more humid with a
chance of showers. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain 30 per-

Gannett - 56'"

The Daily Sentinel

.

million~.

southeast wind .

Gore

LOCAL STOCKS

class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

992-3322

: FRF.E assuran.ce on gold rings.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Black campaign raises m~re than S110,000:.·

t--:-M':::'ID~DL'EPORT DAIRY QUEEN BRAZI~R
Midc in the' UV.

Humidity will post increase

\\'t."~ks ago to start their senior

haven't finished class schedules.
The twin sis~ers and scores of
other snld~nts have spem hours in
a cafeteria or audttorium. Some
aren't going to school at aU.
"I don 't understand why you
would escalate the st:lrt of school
1f you're nor prepared," said Pat
Weeden, the girls' mother. "This is
preposterous."

12:07 p.m., South Fourth
Street, Dorothy Pierce, dead on
arrival;
3:57 p.m ., Fisher Street, assisted
by Central Dispatch , William
Slivers, O ' Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
RUTLAND
6:18a.m., Ohio 124, assisted by
Central Dispatch, C hri s Mddan.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

VALLEY WEATHER

Whi lt:: so nlt.' sttHk ru s h.!\"t'

Orphaned animals find home at sheriff's office:

Our main concern In all 11ortes Is to be
: ac~unte. It yo u know or an error In a story,
call the newsroo m at (740) 991·2155. We

.'

·will check your inforn1at1on and make a

correction If warranted.

*At Pharmacists Discretion

- -

Nrw~

Bt&gt;partmt&gt;nU
Tlit n1111in numbrr I~ 992-1155. 11f'partmcnt
e:v:tcn sln n~ &amp;no:

Chicken Strip Basket

Die

Units log 5 calls

'

CLEVELAND {AP) - Leah
and Mya Weeden were ready two

POMEROY
Marriage
licenses have been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court tO Frederick Eugene Werry Jr., 31, and
Carina Lee Wolfe, 27, Pomeroy;
and -to Michael Anthony Legg,
41 ; Gallia County, and Susan
Marie- Page, 23, Meigs Counry

MIDDLEPORT - Dorothy Jones Pierce, 83, Middleport, died
Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2000 at her residence.
She wao born on Jan . 13,1917 in Orbeston,daughterofthe late Carman Eugene and Doris Anna Lewis Jones. Sl)e was employed as the
manager of Duke Dry Cleaners in Middleport for 16 years, and was
rellred as receptionist for Bromley HaD at Ohio Universiry.
She was a member of the Middleport Church Christ and Middleport Evangeline Chapter 172, OES.
Surviving are her daughter, Dixie Pierce Arbu ckle of Middleport;
and several nieces and nephews .
POMEROY Units of the
She was also pre cededjn death by her husband, Millard E. Pierce, in Meigs
Emergency
Services
1968; and two brothers, Lewis Carman Jones and John Robert Jones. answered five calls for assistance
Services Will be 2 p.m . Saturday, Sept. 9, 2000 in Fisher Funeral .)\ln Wednesday. Units responded as
Home , Middleport, with the Rev. Carman Eugene Jones officiating. ~foDows:
Bunal will be m Greenlawn Cemetery, Nelsonville. Friends may caD at
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Friday.
1:40 p.m., Holzer Medical
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Asso- Center Clinic, Lauren Harrison ,
ciation, Meigs County Division, attention: Joan Wolfe, P.O. Box 586, Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
MIDDLEPORT

School starts, students
waiting for schedule

,.., FRIDAY SPECIAL ""

Only

Dorothy Pierce

.

Trial begins for suspects
in lima firebombing
liMA (AP) - Frit' nds angry
someone had stolen cocaine from
them planned a firebombing that

Ucenses issued

that Swango could be indicted as early as ing patients in Zimbabwe, spt.·nt time ·1n
Monday on an aggravated murder charge in prison for poisoning co-workers in Ilhn oi&lt;;.
the 1984 poisoning of Cynthia Ann McGee
The best-seDing book " Blind Eye : The
at Ohio State's hospital .
Story of a Doctor who Got Away with M ur~
Swango is suspected of inJecting McGee, der'' suggests Swango might have killed .up
a 19-year-old gymnast recuperating fr.o m. a to 35 patients as he moved from hospital to
car accident, with a fatal dose of potassium . hospital. '
Swango- known as "Dr. Death"- also
Swango, 45, fidgeted slightly but showed
is accused of poisoning OSU patient Rena no emotion Wednesday when U.S. District
Cooper, who survived bu·t was paralyzed. Judge Jacob Mishler imposed three consecu:
O'Brien said he won't pursue charges in that rive life terms with no c han ce of parole.
case because too much time has passed
Pro.secutors for the first time rcaJ fr~ni
under Ohio law..
.Swango's handwritten journal, citing them
Swango, who also is suspected of poison- as evidence that Swango killed for pleasu;&lt;:.
.

CENTRAL ISLIP, N .Y. (AP) - Guilty
pleas by a former physician to the fatal poisonings of three patients in a Long Island
hospital in 1993 will lead Ohio authorities
to charge him with aggravated murder in a
1984 poisoning death, a prosecutor said.
Michael Swango, a former Ohio State
University hospital intern linked to killings
on two continents, pleaded guilty Wednesday to five counts of a nine-count federal
indictment, including three co unt~ of murder.
.In Columbus, Ohio, Franklin County
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said Wednesday

mates.

IJmzier,.

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS

N ACCIPT OHIO IDICAID

Genera l Man•ger -. .......... :.............. Ext. 1101

Nt'ws ...... ............................ .............. l-: xt. 1102
.......................... .......................... orExt. l\06

OlhH S rn· lc~s
Advertlslna ..................................... [xl. 1104
Clrculatlo11 ....................... ............... Ext. 110J
ClautnedAds ............ ..................... Ext. 1100

Our Promise To You:

Rocky Boots- 5),
AD Shell - 621,

Sears- 35~

Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 50),

Wendy's -

19' ~.

Worthington -

1o\

Daily stock reports are the
4. p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided
by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Crude
oil
•
pnces soar
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With crude oil prices soaring
and hefty home heating bills anticipated this winter, analysts say the
situation could get worse if oil producing countries do not act soon
to increase supplies.
"We reaDy have the makings of
an energy crisis here, for this win-

from PapAl
including
representatives of
painters, construction workers and
grocery clerks. Former Trea5ury
Secretary Robert Ruben introduced Gore.
Gore speDed out 10 goals to be
reached in his administration,
. including cutting the poverty rate
and increasing the nation's savings
and home ownership rates.
Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, rhe
House Budget Conunittee chair. man who gave up his own presidential quest last year to support
Texas Gov. George W. Bush's campaign, said Wednesclay in a confer&lt;:nee caD that Gore's promises don't
translate into fiscal respon&lt;ibility.
"What is reaDy amazing is that,
I think, somehow Gore thinks he
can buy people's votes with their
own money," Kasich said.
Tanya Mahoney, an organizer for
U nited Food &amp; Commercial
Workers Local 880, remained cautious in her appraisal of Gore after
hearing his speech.
"I think that, to be honest with

ter," said John Kilduff, a sc;nior vice
president at Fimar USA In c. in
New York, citing "bad news for
natural gas, oil and heating oil."
With U.S. crude supplies hovering near 24 -year lows and a world
market thirsty for more oil, prices
climbed 3 percent Wednesday into
record territory.
West Texas Intermediate cn1dc
for October delivery rose $1.07 to
S34. 90 a barrel.
Prices have more than tripled
since hitting a 12-year low ofless
than $11 a barrel in December
1998, 'before OPEC slashed production to force prices higher.
The European Union, wary of '1.:
protests against soaring fuel prices
in several EU nations. on Wednesday urged the Orga niz•tion of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries to
lower prices wh e n it lllt'l't'i Sund ay
in Vit:nna.
OPEC's rdu c tanc~ to raise produ ction subst.mtially has had a ripple effl'ct amon g energy produ cto.;,

and analysts say the 500,000 b arrels
extra OPEC is expected to approve
may not suffice to meet heavy
world demand.

ot

Marker
from PageAl

guests

Hosts meeting
POMEROY - The Women of
the Word of South Bethel New
Testament Church wiD host its
third annual Bride of Christ
Conference Saturday. All women
are welcome to attend the meeting, which begi ns at I 0 a.m . and
concludes at I p.m with a salad
luncheon .
Guest speaker will be Patry
Spaeth from One Heart Ministries, who will talk on Hebrews
12:1, "Stay in the Race, the Prize
is Yours ." There is no charge ofor
the conference .
C hild care will not be available.
The church is locate on Silver
Ridge Road, directly across from
Eastern Schools on Ohio 7. For
more information call Mary Perdas, 985-9807 or Tanmli Barber,
378-9807.

Fund-raiser set
MIDDLEPORT Hobson
Christian Fellowship C hurch will
have a chicken noodle dinner
Friday with se rving from I 0
a.m.-4 p.m. Delivery of meals is
available.

Board meeting
CHESTER - Chester Town ship Board of Trustees will meet
in regular session on Saturday at 8
a.m. in the C hester Town Hall.

Cooperative board
to meet
RACINE Meigs United
M ethodist Cooperative Parish

you, it remains to be seen," she said.
" I do agree with tllis part, that the
nliddle class IS exactly they way he's
saying it is, caught in the rniddle.
There needs to be some type of
plan add ressed directly to us,
because we are carrying the weight
of the world."
Diana Tupa, 34, a Cleveland St:lte
senior majoring in English and history, said she liked much of what
Gore said, but didn't hear much
that would ease her own economic pinch.
"Personally, being a single
mother, I'd like to sec what he
could do to help us out more. I'm
·racking up $30,000 in student
loans just so I can attend college.
I'm going to graduate deep in
debt. HopefuDy, I'll be able get a
job when I get out," she said.
Gore fl ew in Tuesday night from
Columbu s, where his speech at an
Internet
marketing company
fo cused on the importance of
technology to the economy. H e
spent rhe night in Cleveland after
chatting with patrons at a restaurant just a block away from Jacobs
Field as basebaU fans headed to the
st:ldium for a Cleveland Indians
game.

Before the 3:30p.m. dedi ca tion
service, the Moore-Smith farmlies will gather at the Lubeck
Civic C enter at 1 p.m. for a
reumo n.

which was erected through assistance from the Leavitt Funeral

Home of Parkersburg , WVa.
Sc hed ul ed to parti cipate in
Sunday's .service at the cemetery
is the color guard of the Voterans
of Foreign War of Ravenswood.

Jury
from PageA1
er on Aug. 16, whe n the child's
f.1 tal inJllri es were tirst intliCtt'd,
authorities alle ge. .
Both Ja ck son and Gillilan
remain in the M eigs C ounty Jail
in lie u of bo~d - J ac kson on a
$500,000 bo nd, and G illilan on
two $1 milli o n bo nds .

SPR ING VAllEY CINEMA
446 • 4524

1,11 fiOUTE •·,\~t~T
1,'1\1 JActc~.oN rn1l

7

will hold a county council meeting to discuss becoming ecumenical on Monday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Bethany United Methodist
Church.
The meeting is open to the
public.

Church ladies
to meet
HOBSON - Ladies for rhe
Lord wiD meet on Saturday at lD
a.m. at the H obson C hmtian Fellowshit&gt; Church, with spea ker
Patty Wade. Marti e Short and
Sandra Long will sing.

Plan hymn sing
LONG BOTTOM Faith
Full Gospel Church will have services at 7 p.m . on Saturday with
Higher CaDing.

ODOT to discuss
bridge
POMEROY - Ohio Department of Transportati on will condud a public meetin g on Sept.
14 from 6- 8 p.m . at Roy~! Oak
R esort near Pomeroy, to bring
area residents up to date on the
Pomeroy/ Mason Bridge replacem e nt proJeCt.

ODOT representatives will
give a present:ltion at 6 p.m . and
take comments and questions
from the public.
The existing bridge is scheduled for replacement in two to
three years. ODOT has already
earmarked $25 nlillion for the
proj ect for fiscal year 2003, which
starts July I, 2002.
Once comp leted, the new
bridge will be the property of

West Virginia , with ODOT paying a percentage of future maintenance costs.

Mayor's court
MIDDLEPORT
Seven
people were fined and 13 bonds'
were forfeited in the court of
Middl eport
Mayor
Sandy
Iannareli last week.
Fined were Charles M cG rath,
Middl eport, $250 and costs,
aggravated menacing: Gary Rose,
Middleport, $100 and costs, pub~
lie intoxication, S100 and costs,
open co ntainer: Cathy Pauley,
Pomeroy, $16 and costs, speed;
Danny Coleman, Kentucky, $15
and costs , speed; Tammy Owens-'
by, Middleport, $200 and costs,
assault, $100 and .costs, trespassing;
Raquel A. Maddux, Middleport,
$25 and costs, expired operators
license: Tabitha M. Ohler, Middleport, $25 and costs, failure to
yield.
Forfeiting bonds were Jana·
Williams, Pomeroy, $63, speed;
Mary Carpenter, Middleport ,
$61, speed: Timmy R . Hood ,
Po meroy, $65. speed: Adam B.
Tillis, Po meroy, So\1, speed; Barbara R . Pore, Chester, $67, speed ;
Brian K. 13ufllngton , Middleport,
$69, speed; Leslie Whittmgton,Jr.,
Middl eport, S6'1, speed:, Dwayne
R. Fisher, Middleport , $73, speed;
Norman V. Reynolds, Mason,
W.Va., $69, speed; James E ..
McBane, East Liverp ool, $150,.
menacing threats; Adam M . Taylor, MidcUeport, $75, failure to
obey traffic co ntrol device:·
Christina L. Han ing, Middleport,
$150, disorderly by intoxication;
$150, mena cing threats; Dana R.
Williams, Jr., Middleport, $150,
possessio n of marijuana.

Abortion

Distri ct Judge Walter Rice issued.
a temporary restraining order
blocking its enforcement. Rice
on Friday extended his order to
Page
Sept . 19 .
·
increased risk of complications
HaskeD persuaded Rice in 1995
that cou ld result in a ljysterecto• to reject Ohio's first ban as
my.
unconstitutional. The 6th U.S..
He said he prefers dilation and Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
extraction .
that decision, and the U.S.
"I can assure a higher level of Supreme Court declined to hear
safety," he said.
the case.
Haskell, own e r of Women's
Stare officials say the latest ban
Medical Professional Corp., oper- was design ed to satisfY state and
ates clini cs in Cincinnati, Dayton federal courts and to comply with
and Akron. Haskell said he knows criticisms from various federal
of three other doctors in Ohio courts that sinlilar laws were too
who' also use the procedure. ·
vague.
Haskell said he has performed
the procedure more than 2,000
times and never had a major
compli cation.
The law had been schedul ed to
go into effect Aug. 18, but U.S.

from

At

From
Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
We offer the finen granites
in an assortment of colors
ami countless designs. We
can provide the memorial
that's right for you . Come
talk to our counselors . Wt'll
help you select a memorial to be
cherished.

FRI9/1/00 - THURS 917/00

BOX OFFICI WILl OPEN AI
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THE ART OF WAR (R)
7:00 SUN· THUR

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7o20 SUN·THUAS

NUTT'I PROFESSOR 2:
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lll YIICIIR

7:10 SUN·THURS

THE CELL

520 W. Mnin St. - Pom eroy

7;00 SUN· THURS

Nen r the Mn 8on Br1dge

GODZILLA 2000 (PG)

Phone 740-992 -2588
Vinton 740-388·8603

7:10 SUN·THURS

Gallipolik 740·446·0852

Your Wai•Mart Pharmacy Department Will Serve You Better By:
•
•

•

Registered Pharmadsts on duty during all Pharmacy hours, ready to
answer your quesUons,
The low Wiii•Mart price on prescrlpUons and over-the-counter
;
medlcaUons.
•~
Traveling? Your Wai•Mart Pharmadst can forward your
prescrlpUon to any Wai•.Mart pharmacy department naUonwlde In ~
1•
you run out (where state law allows).

Pharmacy Hours
9·7 Mon-Frl
9-6 Saturday
Closed Lunch Hour 1:3D-2:00
Closed Sunday

i

1·304·773·9186
•

Store 2849
320 Mallard Lane
Mason, WV
•
25260

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Domino's Pizza

temberS

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~

7:05,9:40

(lhnl~) J&lt;&gt;as :Jp&lt;def. Mansa Tono. Ernie lllJdsoo

Gallipolis
446-4040
Pomeroy
992-2124

I'IY OF lll Gift

~

7:10,9:50

�·-'

-

.

..

.

Pa'ge A4

I;;;;.Jp1n10n

_Th_e_n_ai..i.Iy_se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-892-2156 · Fax: 992-2157

CLASSeS" ARE Yf1J
CAR~YINS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene HOeflich
General Manager

THISVEAR?

R. Shawn Lewis

Managing Editor

Lllrry Boyer
Advartlalng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Liners to till •dilor ~~n wleo••· 111•1 llaoul.d H ksstluJn JOO worth. AU l•nm tuY subjut
to nAilin• IUid lfttiJI 1H sifnH •nil inciiUW .-.... ,,., uJ.phon• ,..,.a..r. No umiJnftl kn•n wiU
H p~Jbli11h•d. Un.n rllo..U 1M U. footl wu, lllldnuillf ilsu•s, 1t01 JMrroMiililr.
Tl•• upinWM uprns«&lt; in th• colM11111 NlowtuW th• ronr•nsUJ of til• OhW VfllhJ Pablishinr
Co. 'r •dilorilll boGrd, •nlns oth•rwil• nDtbl.

..

AI Gore

buys ad
Domestic violence is
a very real problem here

Cases, our men.
Our hearts and prayers are with the Shoemaker family today.
Godspeed their recovery from this tragedy.
At the same time, we salute the work of a crisis management team
that came to Bidwell-Porter Elementary, and the work of current
and retired staff to help students through a time of loss and grief.
The violence occurred on the school grounds, not in the schooL
But the lo ss of a valued member of its community is difficult for
children and adults alike to absorb. For them, there is no reversing
the loss; but counselors and caring staff show that the grief does not
have to borne alone.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Sept. 7, the 25 1st day of 2000. There are 115
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 7. 1940, Nazi Germany began its initial "blitz" on London during World War II.
On this date :
In 1825 , th e Marquis de Lafayette, the Frenc h hero of the American Revolution , bade farewell to President John Quincy Adams at
the White H ouse.
In 1901 , the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer R ebellion in
China.
In 1931\, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin Holley m Lubboc k, Texas.
In 196.1, the National Professional Fo otball Hall of Fame was dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In I '!69, Senate Repubh can leade r Everett M . Dirksen died in
Washington D.C.
In I 977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the Umted States
to evenwally rurn over control of the waterway to Panama , were

signed in Washington .
In- 1977, convicted Watergate co nspirator G. Gordon Liddy was
released from prison after more than four years.

In 1979, the Entertainment and Sports Programmmg Network
(ESPN) made its cable TV debut.
In 1986, Desmond Tutu was installed as the first black to lead the
Anglican C hurch in south~rn Afri ca.
[n I \19R, St. Louis C ardinal Mark McGwire equaled Roger Mar is'
single-season home run record as he hit No. 61 during a game
against the Chicago Cubs·.
Ten years ago: President Bush left for his one-day Finland summit
with Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Kimberly Bergalis of
Fort Pierce, Fla., came forward to identify herself as the young
· woman who had been infected with AIDS, apparently by her late
dentist. (Bergalis died the following year.)
Five years ago: After 27 years in the Senate, Bob Packwood (R Ore.) announced he would re!ign, heading off a vote by colleagues
to expe l hin\ for allegations o f sexual and. officia l mi1conduct.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

.

mounting concern in the Bu sh camp

television ad and m stump spee ches -

over polls showi ng that the Texas gov-

was also angering some Republicans,
said GOP officials who spoke on the

ernor is lm.in g ur has lost the edge he
once e njoyed in many battleground
sca£es .
The de cisio n to campa1gn an Florida

condition of anonymity.

While Bush's pre-emptive "agreement" last Sunday to participate in one
next week - a state o nce believed to formal debate and rwo on TV talk
be a sure-win for Bush , whose younger shows was initially cheered as bold
brother Jeb is gover nor - was viewed strike by Bush, his subsequent refusal to
by GOP officia ls as y~t another sigu of. negotiate terms on othe r formats wah
the ra te tighte mn g.
Bush's currem taunung of Gore on
pre sidential debates - both in a new

Gore was viewed with increasing co ncern .

The debate on the debates "is 1rrele-

vant. It's nor w hat vme rs ca re about,"
said GOP pollster Fr•nk lunt z.
Still, Luntz SJ!d , "The level pf interest in this ca mpa~gn 11 shockingly low.
Th e p;,tential for comebac k is mcredi bly high . You cou ld easil y see a tidal
wave m the fina l hou rs."

Man y national R epubli dns were
getting in crcasi ngly worried about the
re cen t turn in events.

·

GOP conve nti on, conceded veteran
GOP o perati ve C harles Black , a Bush
campaign adviser.

Now the rea lity of a close race is
si nking in, worrying many Republicans, B lac k sa~d . But he said he thinks
there's still plenty of tune for Bush to
re gain los t ground .
Karen Hug hes, Bu sh 's c ommunicati o n dirccwr. saii:i that in th e co n1ing

"Everybody go t coc ky" after Bush's

days, " We 're going to aggressively mak e

comfortabl e lead uvn Gure throu gh
most of the summ er and a tnumphant

[he cast [h:Jt Governor Bush has real

plans for real people.''

Focusing
on budget,

OUR VIEW

Tuesday's murder of Linda Shoemaker, head cook at Bidwell- .
Porter Elementary School, is a tragedy that has fair Gallia County
reeling.
Authorities say Shoemaker, a mother of four and a grandmother
of seven, was gunned down in the school parking lot by her
estranged husband, Frank Shoemaker. The man was later found dead
at the couple 's Story's Run Road home. the victim of an apparent
suicide.
In so me national studies, this case may show up as a school-related violent incident because it happened on school property. Those
of us who live here know better.
T hi s wasn't a school-related killing. There's no cause for the
national media to flock to Bidwell, looking to dig up memories of
Littleton, Paducah and Pearl.
T hankfull y, o ur schools are no more violent than most are. But
our homes may be.
Domestic violence is a very real problem in the tri-counry region.
You don't have to look any farther than within these pages to find
proof of that. The listing of who's lodged in our county jails is filled
with folks allegedly involved in domestic incidents.
•
Recently, the Gallipolis city . solicitor's office estimated that
d~'-Siolence complaints constituted up to 30 percent of its
court caseload.
There are progranu in place to help domestic violence victims.
and there is a lot of money devoted to preventing violence in the
home. But al l the money and all the programs in the world cannot .
end this plague.
That can only happen when we learn to control our emoti?ns
and resolve matters peacefully.Violence is never the answer to a crisis_at· home.
We need our families to help when·they see things turning for the
worse, likewise for our neighbors.
Some folks may see this as "interference." We see it as "intervention." Intervention that could prevent another tragedy. Ignoring
potential powder kegs is a recipe for disaster.
We believe our schools are as safe as they can be in a free society.
Unfortunately, we cannot say the same for our women or, in some

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor\, Ohio

GOP leaders beginning to worry about Bush's performance
DETROIT (AP) Some leading
national Republicans, alarmed about
George W. Bush's difficulty in stemming
Al Gore's advance, are issuing troubled
warnings to the Bush campaign and
urging a review of tacttcs.
Bush campaign officials liken the ri sing nervousness among party leaders to
fears expressed la st winter after Bush
lost the New H ampshire pnmary to
Sen. J ohn McCain of Arizona. They
suggest this current angst, too, will pass .
But there is no doubt there is

H0Wh1ANY
COLLEGE PREP

'E.stUBslid fiiJMI

Charles w. Govey
Publisher

'111und11J, September 7~ 2000

Thursday, September 7, 200~L

PERKINS' VIEW

Alarmist mentality fuels global warming debate
"The North Pole is melting.''
So began a decidedly alarmist news story
published last week on the front page of the
.venerable New York Times.
The presence of water at the very top of the
w()rld is "more evidence'' of global warming,
said the paper of record, adding that, " The last
time sctentists can be certain the pole was
awash in water was more than 50 million
years ago.
Well, maybe not quite 50 million years ago,
as it turns out Maybe more like last summer.
For as climatologists point out, breaks in the
polar ice occur quite often, particularly in
summer months. "In fact, it happens many,
many times every year,'' said Claire Parkinson
of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in
an interview with Time magazine.
Goddard's satellites have been monitori~g
the polar 1ce caps for years, so the scientists
there would kn ow if a climatological calamity was underway at the North Pole.
So how did the New York Times get its
global warming story so wrong (which it
ac)mowledged this week in a correction that,
of course, didn't get nearly the play as the
original scary news story)?
Because the repo rter relied on politically
. motivated scientists who subscribe to the
global warmmg orrhodoxy th at hum an consumption of fossil fue ls have driven up
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels to the
point that Mother Earth is having hot flashes.
One of those sc ientiSts is Jam es McCarthy,
director of the Museum of Comparative
Zoology at Harvard University. He happens
to be co- lead er of a working group for the
United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on C limate C h ange, whic h has previously concluded that "there has been a disce rnible hun131J influence on globa l climate."
So y.cheti McCarthy, a global warming
adherent, arrived at the North Pole earlier

..

area of climatology.
That's how two scientists could go to the
North Pole, see a patc h of water, and declare
it prima facie eviden ce of global warming .
And it is on the basis of such unsound sci ence that the United States and other industrialized nations are being asked by the United Nations to dramatically reduce carbon
dioxide emissions.
What that means is reducing the u se offossil fuels for driving our cars, heating our
NEA COLUMNIST
homes, and providing electricity for our
offices and factories. And as any freshman
this month (he was a guest lecturer on an economics student can tell us, the way to
arctic tourist cru ise aboard a Russian ice reduce demand for a co mmodity - in this
breaker) he found the confirmation he was case, fossil fuels - is to drive up the price.
looking for: open water at the pole.
What impact would higher energy costs
"It was totally unexpected," he said. have on this country? Well, think about the
11
G loba1 warming was real, and we were see- run up in gas prices in the Midwest this past
ing its effects for the first time that far north ." spring. Think about the escalation in elec· McCarthy was echoed by fellow scientist tricity pri ces in the West (especially h ere in
(and guest lecturer) Malcolm McKenna, a San Diego).
·.
paleontologist at the American Museum of
That is what we can look forward to :if
Natural History, who accompanied him on global warming adherents get their way. If
the arctic tourist cruise.
th ey are able to persuade the White Hous~
"I don't know if anybody in history ever and Congress to agree to the Kyoto Protocd~,
got to 90 degrees north to be greeted by which calls for industrialized nations to
water, not ice," he told the Times. "Some reduce their carbon emissions by 30 percent
folks who pooh-pooh global warming might over the next dozen years .
·
wake up if shown that even the pole is beginNow, if human activity really was the cause
ning to me lt."
of global warming, and if global warminjil
Funny, neither McCarthy or McKenna really was the cause of the North Pole melthave been heard from since the New York ing, then most Americans would probably be
Times essentially retractod its alarmist global- willing to use le ss energy (at higher prices) to
warming sto ry. Maybe they are embarrassed save the planet.
to have revealed to the world how little th ey
Dut the science simply does not show that
really know about climatology.
an environmental calamity is under way and
And that's the problem with the global that the human population caused it.
warming debate. The lP CC, of which
Let Mc Carthy and McKenna return to the
McCarthy is part , _canva~sed a bunch o f sci- North Pole thi s winter. If they see open

Joseph
Perkins

entists and arrived at a conclusion that the

water at the tim e, then there will be some-

human population is causing global warm ing. Yet most of the scien tists that formed the
IPCC "consensus" have no expertise in the

thing to worry about.

(Joseph Perkins is a rollllmti., t{&lt;&gt;r The Smt Diego
Unio"-Trihwlf!. ) ·

'HARDBALL'

Lieberman candidacy highlights religion in politics
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

WASHINGTON - Jesu s of Nazareth
advise d us to "render '.Into Cae&gt;ar the things
that are Caesar\ and to Cod the things that
are Cod's."
Jo t' Lieberman uf Conn ecticut now
advises that we arc wrong to separat e the
t\VO.

"The Co nstituti on.gua r:mtees freedom of
religion ," he prea ched at a Detroit church
last Sunday, " not fret·dom from relig1on ."

Lieberman lame n t~ th~:: "barrier" that has
kept government leaders in the past from
talking about "their faith and th ei r reli gio n."
The nom inati o n of the first Jewi•h Am erican for national office should , he hopes ,
allow that "barrier" to fa ll, to let politicians
like him celebrate "a place for faith in America's public l1fe"
l wonder where

trine

IS

th1 '\

new Li eber man doc-

taking us. The Democratic vice pres-

idential norninec sa1d th at he wants to "reas-

sure" non - believers that he and his fellow
believers of eve ry religi on "share with them
the core val ues of Ameri ca. that our faith is
no t inconsistent with their freedom. and that
ou r miss10n JS nm one of inrolerance but

one of love."
But what about th ose cases when a reli -

gi on's dictates chall enge not j ust the beliefs
but the behavior of the non - believer'
On a whole raft of matters - abortion

If references to religious belief are merely
the pious pleasa ntries that open downtowrl
business luncheons, of course , they carry
rights , homosexuahty, gun ownership, capital real challenge to anyone's vit:wll and conduct
punishment, war Am eri cans hold to whether they be mainstream or not. But' I
sta rkly dlfTerent , equa ll y fundam ental valu es. think Lieberman's ca ll for the mfmion of
Do we really want to elevate the role of religious belief into the nationa l debate is
reli gio n in the debate?
som e th ing more set iou s, more powerful ,
Do we dare pretend, even for a few weeks more deci sive.
in a presidential campaign , that su c h powerSo 1 think we n"ed to ge t our heads
ful questi ons of li fe, death and human digni- around this . When H.. ep ubhca n George W.
ty can be rcsol vCd more eastly by resorti ng Bu sh says that J es us is his most valued "politto each citiz en 's deeply held religious com- ical phil osopher," ht• is taken as a fooL Wh en
mitments?
Democrat J oe Lieberman quotes scnpture
I doubt it.
and demands we bring ou r "faith" into
Ima g ine, if yo u will, the ~eaction at the political debate, he is seen as a prophet.
199f Democratic conventi o n had the late,
"As a people we need to reaffirm our
hugel y popular governor of Pennsylvama , fa ith and renew the.· dedication of our ( I On
Bob Casey, spoken the same words as Jo e and o u rselves to God and God's purpose,"
Lieberman did last Sunday in D etroit.
he tells us.
Would the liberal, pro-choice. party faithIf we knew "God's purpose," Joe, selfful have cheered this pro- life Democrat's ca ll government might not be so diffi cult .
to drop the "barrier" between faith and polWe don't. lt is.
itics? Would Joe Liebe rman himself have
ch eered a Casey argument that de ep reli (Chris Martllf'II'S, rhirf ,~- rile Sa11 Fra11risw
gious commi tment pose'i no threa t to those 1-::x amiflcr's Wa shingttm Rurrau, is hMt of
who reject it, who refu se to observe the "Hardball" "" CNBC rmd 1'v!SNBC cable
Roman Catholi c do ctrine that life begms rhamrels. Tltr I 999 edrrio11 of "Hardball" was
w ith conception?
p11blislrcd by Toll rh.&lt; tolle Bo,ok;.)

no

SCRANTON, Pa . (AP ) Conti nuing his bid for the fiscal
h1gh ground, Al Gore is running a
full-page newspaper advertise 'ment blastmg ri ~a l George W.
Bush and asscrtmg th at the
Republican 's budget numbers
would "all add up " to new
deficits. I
Gore argued that he's the fis cal
conservative in releasing detail ed
budget plans on Wednesday and
he was continuing that theme
with an ad that appeared in
Thursday's editions of The New
York Times.
"Does it matter if the numbers
~]] add up," says the r.ew Gore ad.
He argu es that tax cuts pushed
by Bush would cost the Treasury
S1.3 trillion over 10 years, or $1.6
trilhon includmg lost interest. In
addition, Gore argues, new
spending pushed by Bush would
drain an additional $474 billion .
The missile defense program
pushed b~ Bush alone would cost
"at a mi1.~mum of Sl SO billion,"
Gore argues.
As Gore focused on budget

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issues, his campaign · awaited a

vote later Thursday by leaders of
the Teamsters Union. Some aides
said they expected to get the
unlon 's forma l endorsement.

Regulators
rejed
professor's

CQmplaint
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Sen. Joseph Lieberman ca n run
for both the vice preSidency and
re-election to the- Senate, the sta te
Elections Enforce ment ConJmission contirmcd Wednesday.
. The panel\ gc:nc.·ral coun se l,
Jeffrey Garfield. reJe Cted the complamt of a politics professor who
said Lacberman ·s re - election campaign wa s "frivolous" and "irrespo nsibl y se lf- indul gen t" and
urged that he be elimin ated from
the Senate ballot.
Lieberman
had
already
ap. nounced his intention to run
for re-election when Al Gore
selected him to be his mnnmg
mate. If elec ted to both offices,
Lieberman would have to resign
from the Senate to serve as vice
president.
· Garfield said a 1964 written

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_Th_e_n_ai..i.Iy_se_n_tin_e_I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-892-2156 · Fax: 992-2157

CLASSeS" ARE Yf1J
CAR~YINS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene HOeflich
General Manager

THISVEAR?

R. Shawn Lewis

Managing Editor

Lllrry Boyer
Advartlalng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Liners to till •dilor ~~n wleo••· 111•1 llaoul.d H ksstluJn JOO worth. AU l•nm tuY subjut
to nAilin• IUid lfttiJI 1H sifnH •nil inciiUW .-.... ,,., uJ.phon• ,..,.a..r. No umiJnftl kn•n wiU
H p~Jbli11h•d. Un.n rllo..U 1M U. footl wu, lllldnuillf ilsu•s, 1t01 JMrroMiililr.
Tl•• upinWM uprns«&lt; in th• colM11111 NlowtuW th• ronr•nsUJ of til• OhW VfllhJ Pablishinr
Co. 'r •dilorilll boGrd, •nlns oth•rwil• nDtbl.

..

AI Gore

buys ad
Domestic violence is
a very real problem here

Cases, our men.
Our hearts and prayers are with the Shoemaker family today.
Godspeed their recovery from this tragedy.
At the same time, we salute the work of a crisis management team
that came to Bidwell-Porter Elementary, and the work of current
and retired staff to help students through a time of loss and grief.
The violence occurred on the school grounds, not in the schooL
But the lo ss of a valued member of its community is difficult for
children and adults alike to absorb. For them, there is no reversing
the loss; but counselors and caring staff show that the grief does not
have to borne alone.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Sept. 7, the 25 1st day of 2000. There are 115
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 7. 1940, Nazi Germany began its initial "blitz" on London during World War II.
On this date :
In 1825 , th e Marquis de Lafayette, the Frenc h hero of the American Revolution , bade farewell to President John Quincy Adams at
the White H ouse.
In 1901 , the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer R ebellion in
China.
In 1931\, rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin Holley m Lubboc k, Texas.
In 196.1, the National Professional Fo otball Hall of Fame was dedicated in Canton, Ohio.
In I '!69, Senate Repubh can leade r Everett M . Dirksen died in
Washington D.C.
In I 977, the Panama Canal treaties, calling for the Umted States
to evenwally rurn over control of the waterway to Panama , were

signed in Washington .
In- 1977, convicted Watergate co nspirator G. Gordon Liddy was
released from prison after more than four years.

In 1979, the Entertainment and Sports Programmmg Network
(ESPN) made its cable TV debut.
In 1986, Desmond Tutu was installed as the first black to lead the
Anglican C hurch in south~rn Afri ca.
[n I \19R, St. Louis C ardinal Mark McGwire equaled Roger Mar is'
single-season home run record as he hit No. 61 during a game
against the Chicago Cubs·.
Ten years ago: President Bush left for his one-day Finland summit
with Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Kimberly Bergalis of
Fort Pierce, Fla., came forward to identify herself as the young
· woman who had been infected with AIDS, apparently by her late
dentist. (Bergalis died the following year.)
Five years ago: After 27 years in the Senate, Bob Packwood (R Ore.) announced he would re!ign, heading off a vote by colleagues
to expe l hin\ for allegations o f sexual and. officia l mi1conduct.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

.

mounting concern in the Bu sh camp

television ad and m stump spee ches -

over polls showi ng that the Texas gov-

was also angering some Republicans,
said GOP officials who spoke on the

ernor is lm.in g ur has lost the edge he
once e njoyed in many battleground
sca£es .
The de cisio n to campa1gn an Florida

condition of anonymity.

While Bush's pre-emptive "agreement" last Sunday to participate in one
next week - a state o nce believed to formal debate and rwo on TV talk
be a sure-win for Bush , whose younger shows was initially cheered as bold
brother Jeb is gover nor - was viewed strike by Bush, his subsequent refusal to
by GOP officia ls as y~t another sigu of. negotiate terms on othe r formats wah
the ra te tighte mn g.
Bush's currem taunung of Gore on
pre sidential debates - both in a new

Gore was viewed with increasing co ncern .

The debate on the debates "is 1rrele-

vant. It's nor w hat vme rs ca re about,"
said GOP pollster Fr•nk lunt z.
Still, Luntz SJ!d , "The level pf interest in this ca mpa~gn 11 shockingly low.
Th e p;,tential for comebac k is mcredi bly high . You cou ld easil y see a tidal
wave m the fina l hou rs."

Man y national R epubli dns were
getting in crcasi ngly worried about the
re cen t turn in events.

·

GOP conve nti on, conceded veteran
GOP o perati ve C harles Black , a Bush
campaign adviser.

Now the rea lity of a close race is
si nking in, worrying many Republicans, B lac k sa~d . But he said he thinks
there's still plenty of tune for Bush to
re gain los t ground .
Karen Hug hes, Bu sh 's c ommunicati o n dirccwr. saii:i that in th e co n1ing

"Everybody go t coc ky" after Bush's

days, " We 're going to aggressively mak e

comfortabl e lead uvn Gure throu gh
most of the summ er and a tnumphant

[he cast [h:Jt Governor Bush has real

plans for real people.''

Focusing
on budget,

OUR VIEW

Tuesday's murder of Linda Shoemaker, head cook at Bidwell- .
Porter Elementary School, is a tragedy that has fair Gallia County
reeling.
Authorities say Shoemaker, a mother of four and a grandmother
of seven, was gunned down in the school parking lot by her
estranged husband, Frank Shoemaker. The man was later found dead
at the couple 's Story's Run Road home. the victim of an apparent
suicide.
In so me national studies, this case may show up as a school-related violent incident because it happened on school property. Those
of us who live here know better.
T hi s wasn't a school-related killing. There's no cause for the
national media to flock to Bidwell, looking to dig up memories of
Littleton, Paducah and Pearl.
T hankfull y, o ur schools are no more violent than most are. But
our homes may be.
Domestic violence is a very real problem in the tri-counry region.
You don't have to look any farther than within these pages to find
proof of that. The listing of who's lodged in our county jails is filled
with folks allegedly involved in domestic incidents.
•
Recently, the Gallipolis city . solicitor's office estimated that
d~'-Siolence complaints constituted up to 30 percent of its
court caseload.
There are progranu in place to help domestic violence victims.
and there is a lot of money devoted to preventing violence in the
home. But al l the money and all the programs in the world cannot .
end this plague.
That can only happen when we learn to control our emoti?ns
and resolve matters peacefully.Violence is never the answer to a crisis_at· home.
We need our families to help when·they see things turning for the
worse, likewise for our neighbors.
Some folks may see this as "interference." We see it as "intervention." Intervention that could prevent another tragedy. Ignoring
potential powder kegs is a recipe for disaster.
We believe our schools are as safe as they can be in a free society.
Unfortunately, we cannot say the same for our women or, in some

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor\, Ohio

GOP leaders beginning to worry about Bush's performance
DETROIT (AP) Some leading
national Republicans, alarmed about
George W. Bush's difficulty in stemming
Al Gore's advance, are issuing troubled
warnings to the Bush campaign and
urging a review of tacttcs.
Bush campaign officials liken the ri sing nervousness among party leaders to
fears expressed la st winter after Bush
lost the New H ampshire pnmary to
Sen. J ohn McCain of Arizona. They
suggest this current angst, too, will pass .
But there is no doubt there is

H0Wh1ANY
COLLEGE PREP

'E.stUBslid fiiJMI

Charles w. Govey
Publisher

'111und11J, September 7~ 2000

Thursday, September 7, 200~L

PERKINS' VIEW

Alarmist mentality fuels global warming debate
"The North Pole is melting.''
So began a decidedly alarmist news story
published last week on the front page of the
.venerable New York Times.
The presence of water at the very top of the
w()rld is "more evidence'' of global warming,
said the paper of record, adding that, " The last
time sctentists can be certain the pole was
awash in water was more than 50 million
years ago.
Well, maybe not quite 50 million years ago,
as it turns out Maybe more like last summer.
For as climatologists point out, breaks in the
polar ice occur quite often, particularly in
summer months. "In fact, it happens many,
many times every year,'' said Claire Parkinson
of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in
an interview with Time magazine.
Goddard's satellites have been monitori~g
the polar 1ce caps for years, so the scientists
there would kn ow if a climatological calamity was underway at the North Pole.
So how did the New York Times get its
global warming story so wrong (which it
ac)mowledged this week in a correction that,
of course, didn't get nearly the play as the
original scary news story)?
Because the repo rter relied on politically
. motivated scientists who subscribe to the
global warmmg orrhodoxy th at hum an consumption of fossil fue ls have driven up
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels to the
point that Mother Earth is having hot flashes.
One of those sc ientiSts is Jam es McCarthy,
director of the Museum of Comparative
Zoology at Harvard University. He happens
to be co- lead er of a working group for the
United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on C limate C h ange, whic h has previously concluded that "there has been a disce rnible hun131J influence on globa l climate."
So y.cheti McCarthy, a global warming
adherent, arrived at the North Pole earlier

..

area of climatology.
That's how two scientists could go to the
North Pole, see a patc h of water, and declare
it prima facie eviden ce of global warming .
And it is on the basis of such unsound sci ence that the United States and other industrialized nations are being asked by the United Nations to dramatically reduce carbon
dioxide emissions.
What that means is reducing the u se offossil fuels for driving our cars, heating our
NEA COLUMNIST
homes, and providing electricity for our
offices and factories. And as any freshman
this month (he was a guest lecturer on an economics student can tell us, the way to
arctic tourist cru ise aboard a Russian ice reduce demand for a co mmodity - in this
breaker) he found the confirmation he was case, fossil fuels - is to drive up the price.
looking for: open water at the pole.
What impact would higher energy costs
"It was totally unexpected," he said. have on this country? Well, think about the
11
G loba1 warming was real, and we were see- run up in gas prices in the Midwest this past
ing its effects for the first time that far north ." spring. Think about the escalation in elec· McCarthy was echoed by fellow scientist tricity pri ces in the West (especially h ere in
(and guest lecturer) Malcolm McKenna, a San Diego).
·.
paleontologist at the American Museum of
That is what we can look forward to :if
Natural History, who accompanied him on global warming adherents get their way. If
the arctic tourist cruise.
th ey are able to persuade the White Hous~
"I don't know if anybody in history ever and Congress to agree to the Kyoto Protocd~,
got to 90 degrees north to be greeted by which calls for industrialized nations to
water, not ice," he told the Times. "Some reduce their carbon emissions by 30 percent
folks who pooh-pooh global warming might over the next dozen years .
·
wake up if shown that even the pole is beginNow, if human activity really was the cause
ning to me lt."
of global warming, and if global warminjil
Funny, neither McCarthy or McKenna really was the cause of the North Pole melthave been heard from since the New York ing, then most Americans would probably be
Times essentially retractod its alarmist global- willing to use le ss energy (at higher prices) to
warming sto ry. Maybe they are embarrassed save the planet.
to have revealed to the world how little th ey
Dut the science simply does not show that
really know about climatology.
an environmental calamity is under way and
And that's the problem with the global that the human population caused it.
warming debate. The lP CC, of which
Let Mc Carthy and McKenna return to the
McCarthy is part , _canva~sed a bunch o f sci- North Pole thi s winter. If they see open

Joseph
Perkins

entists and arrived at a conclusion that the

water at the tim e, then there will be some-

human population is causing global warm ing. Yet most of the scien tists that formed the
IPCC "consensus" have no expertise in the

thing to worry about.

(Joseph Perkins is a rollllmti., t{&lt;&gt;r The Smt Diego
Unio"-Trihwlf!. ) ·

'HARDBALL'

Lieberman candidacy highlights religion in politics
BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

WASHINGTON - Jesu s of Nazareth
advise d us to "render '.Into Cae&gt;ar the things
that are Caesar\ and to Cod the things that
are Cod's."
Jo t' Lieberman uf Conn ecticut now
advises that we arc wrong to separat e the
t\VO.

"The Co nstituti on.gua r:mtees freedom of
religion ," he prea ched at a Detroit church
last Sunday, " not fret·dom from relig1on ."

Lieberman lame n t~ th~:: "barrier" that has
kept government leaders in the past from
talking about "their faith and th ei r reli gio n."
The nom inati o n of the first Jewi•h Am erican for national office should , he hopes ,
allow that "barrier" to fa ll, to let politicians
like him celebrate "a place for faith in America's public l1fe"
l wonder where

trine

IS

th1 '\

new Li eber man doc-

taking us. The Democratic vice pres-

idential norninec sa1d th at he wants to "reas-

sure" non - believers that he and his fellow
believers of eve ry religi on "share with them
the core val ues of Ameri ca. that our faith is
no t inconsistent with their freedom. and that
ou r miss10n JS nm one of inrolerance but

one of love."
But what about th ose cases when a reli -

gi on's dictates chall enge not j ust the beliefs
but the behavior of the non - believer'
On a whole raft of matters - abortion

If references to religious belief are merely
the pious pleasa ntries that open downtowrl
business luncheons, of course , they carry
rights , homosexuahty, gun ownership, capital real challenge to anyone's vit:wll and conduct
punishment, war Am eri cans hold to whether they be mainstream or not. But' I
sta rkly dlfTerent , equa ll y fundam ental valu es. think Lieberman's ca ll for the mfmion of
Do we really want to elevate the role of religious belief into the nationa l debate is
reli gio n in the debate?
som e th ing more set iou s, more powerful ,
Do we dare pretend, even for a few weeks more deci sive.
in a presidential campaign , that su c h powerSo 1 think we n"ed to ge t our heads
ful questi ons of li fe, death and human digni- around this . When H.. ep ubhca n George W.
ty can be rcsol vCd more eastly by resorti ng Bu sh says that J es us is his most valued "politto each citiz en 's deeply held religious com- ical phil osopher," ht• is taken as a fooL Wh en
mitments?
Democrat J oe Lieberman quotes scnpture
I doubt it.
and demands we bring ou r "faith" into
Ima g ine, if yo u will, the ~eaction at the political debate, he is seen as a prophet.
199f Democratic conventi o n had the late,
"As a people we need to reaffirm our
hugel y popular governor of Pennsylvama , fa ith and renew the.· dedication of our ( I On
Bob Casey, spoken the same words as Jo e and o u rselves to God and God's purpose,"
Lieberman did last Sunday in D etroit.
he tells us.
Would the liberal, pro-choice. party faithIf we knew "God's purpose," Joe, selfful have cheered this pro- life Democrat's ca ll government might not be so diffi cult .
to drop the "barrier" between faith and polWe don't. lt is.
itics? Would Joe Liebe rman himself have
ch eered a Casey argument that de ep reli (Chris Martllf'II'S, rhirf ,~- rile Sa11 Fra11risw
gious commi tment pose'i no threa t to those 1-::x amiflcr's Wa shingttm Rurrau, is hMt of
who reject it, who refu se to observe the "Hardball" "" CNBC rmd 1'v!SNBC cable
Roman Catholi c do ctrine that life begms rhamrels. Tltr I 999 edrrio11 of "Hardball" was
w ith conception?
p11blislrcd by Toll rh.&lt; tolle Bo,ok;.)

no

SCRANTON, Pa . (AP ) Conti nuing his bid for the fiscal
h1gh ground, Al Gore is running a
full-page newspaper advertise 'ment blastmg ri ~a l George W.
Bush and asscrtmg th at the
Republican 's budget numbers
would "all add up " to new
deficits. I
Gore argued that he's the fis cal
conservative in releasing detail ed
budget plans on Wednesday and
he was continuing that theme
with an ad that appeared in
Thursday's editions of The New
York Times.
"Does it matter if the numbers
~]] add up," says the r.ew Gore ad.
He argu es that tax cuts pushed
by Bush would cost the Treasury
S1.3 trillion over 10 years, or $1.6
trilhon includmg lost interest. In
addition, Gore argues, new
spending pushed by Bush would
drain an additional $474 billion .
The missile defense program
pushed b~ Bush alone would cost
"at a mi1.~mum of Sl SO billion,"
Gore argues.
As Gore focused on budget

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issues, his campaign · awaited a

vote later Thursday by leaders of
the Teamsters Union. Some aides
said they expected to get the
unlon 's forma l endorsement.

Regulators
rejed
professor's

CQmplaint
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Sen. Joseph Lieberman ca n run
for both the vice preSidency and
re-election to the- Senate, the sta te
Elections Enforce ment ConJmission contirmcd Wednesday.
. The panel\ gc:nc.·ral coun se l,
Jeffrey Garfield. reJe Cted the complamt of a politics professor who
said Lacberman ·s re - election campaign wa s "frivolous" and "irrespo nsibl y se lf- indul gen t" and
urged that he be elimin ated from
the Senate ballot.
Lieberman
had
already
ap. nounced his intention to run
for re-election when Al Gore
selected him to be his mnnmg
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Lieberman would have to resign
from the Senate to serve as vice
president.
· Garfield said a 1964 written

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_Th_e_D_a_il.;;..y_Se_n_ti""'!""n_el_ _ _ _ _

lhursd•y. Sept. 7, 1000

..
•

i ·Thursday, September 7, 2000

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

·Mom must hold her ground against in-laws' indulgence
DEAR ABBY: "Angry Arizona
Mom" hates to make waves when her
~~s give her sons sips of alcohol. I.
too, didn't make wav~s when my stepfather taught my younger so n and
nephew to smo ke. I wanted the boys to
have a good relationship with their
g randfather. Today, they both smoke. and
although they ta lk of quitting, they ca n't
because thev are so severely hooked.
I also md nothing when my bf?the r
and sister we re slipping off dunng famrly parties to smoke a joint . As a result, I
sent my own chi ldren the m essage that
smoking JOints was OK My nephew
ended up having hi s sto ma ch pumped
to san:· him fro m an ove rdose of drugs,
and my son w1s di sc hargt.·d from milirary se rv~ec due to his addiction to
d ru gs .

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
I have finally wised- up, Abby. I have
laid down th e law to protect my grandchi ldren . If I had it to do over again, I
would draw the lme sooner. Paren ts
n1ust stand u p for what is right. Huning
th.e feelings of in-laws is a small price to
pay for protecting one's chrldren. -SADDER BUT WISER IN FLORIDA
DEAR WISER : I ' m pleased vo u

finally found the co nviction to spea k so mething in my body. I loved the taste.
out for what you know is right . Ch ilForget the legal issues and the m oraldren ca nno t be expected to know what ity of giving liquor to small children.
they haven't been taught. That's why Consider instead the very real danger of
adults are supposed to make mature alcohol poisoning and a life of p ossible
decisions even if they're not always pop- addiction'
ular. Read on:
That grandfather is doing something
DEAR ABBY: I must respond to detrimental to the welfare of those
" Angry Mom m Arizona," w hose innocent children. The parents should
father-in-law , allows his young gra nd- forget about " hurting his f.elings " and
childre n to take "sips" of his beer.
pm a stop to it.
I am a 37- year- old male wr inn g fro m
I am finishing a court-ordered relapse
the Hillsboro u gh Co,unty Jatl in Tampa, program here in jail. I look forward to a
Fla. I am here because of a fourth DUI cl ean and sober extende d life when I am
(driving under the influence) .rrrest -- released. I have seen th e hell of alcohol
the resu lt of 20 years of .den hoi abuse.
abuse and it's not pretty.
Abby, I was brought up to sip from
Pka sc p rint thi s so others won't have
my dad's and uncles' bn·rs. I v iv~elly · to o;:pt..~ncnrc..· what I have b et·n
remember the first tim e I go t drunk . I thruu g h. -- LOOK ING FORWARD
was 5. I honestly bdie\·t· it tngw:red TO 1:REEDOM

DEAR LOOKING FORWARD : If
your testimonial doesn't get the attention of parents, nothing will. I have been
told that children in families of alcohoiics can have a genetic predtsposition
to the disease themselves, and that many
alcoholi cs report having that same feeling of"completio n" that you described
upon tasting their first drink -- another
reason why it's unwise to allow small
children to devdop a taste for alcohol.
To order "How toW rite Letters for
All Occasions," send a busmcss-sized,
self-add ressed envelope, plus chec k or
m o ney order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Ca nada) to : Dea r Abby, Letter Boo klet, P.O.
Box 447 , Mount Morris, IL 610540 447. (Postage lS mcluderl.)

•

CALENDAR
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT The
.Widow's Fellows l" P Will meet
T hursday noon for J picnic
potlu ck at the C heshire Park .
Take covered dish , table servics·
and wrapped whrte ele phants
for game prizes.
TUPPE;.RS PLAINS
Tuppers Plai ns VFW Auxiliary,
7:30 p.m., VFW Hall.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -Wee k'
~nd revival services through
Sunday, 7 p.m . nightly, Silver
Run Bap tist Church in Middleport. Special speakers and
music are plann ed nightly.
Gabriel Quartet to sing on
Saturday evenin g.
POMEROY Board of
Elections office will be closed
Friday so that employees may
attend a district meting to be
held in Nelsonville.

SUNDAY
H omecoming, Sunday, Orange C hristian
'G hu rc h, Lottridge R oad,
Coolville, Mornrng se rvice,
9:30 a.m. worship, 10:45 a.m .
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m .
afternoon service, 2 p.m Gu est
speaker, Roger Watson; special
~In ge r, Dave Darley.
PO M ER OY R ev ival
: ·s~rvices, Pome roy C hurch of
· t~l!
NazJrcnc,
Saturday
. through Wednesday, Services.
10:30 a.m. and(&gt; p.m. Sunday,
• ·M onday Tuesday and Wednes: clay, 7 p.m. Rev. H arold Mmt·y.
: ~ellc . W.Va .. evangelist, music
and pre ac hing. Pa stor Jan
: Lavender invites public.

.

MONDAY

: . CHES HIR E D rsab led
: A:merican Veterans 53. will
. have a picn ic Monday, 6 p.m . at
: ti)e Cheshire par k. Take· a cov·
ered dish .

BIRTHDAY

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Revival services announced

Receives Chiropractic credentials

MA SON - Th e' Falth BaptiSt Cht(rch of Ma son wi ll be hollltn g
fa ll revival serv ices Sept . 2-1 through Sept. ~H. at 7 p.m. eac h eve mn g
Rev. Earl W. Coch ran of C harl esto n will be the speaker, and thert'
w ill be spec ial sin g in g nightly, sa id Farth BaptiSt Pastur Ro n Bran c h .
Coc h ran started preaching in 196 5 at th e age of 17. Fnr .111 years
h e pastored in the Methodist C hurch Jnd had multi-c harges adding
up to 13 churches. He is the pre se nt pastor of R.oxalana Gospe l
Tabernacle m Dunbar
Coc h ran ho lds a th eology degree from Ga r rett Evangclio l Sem·
inary, a masters of divinity d eg ree from Duke Divinit y, masters in
co unseling from Marshall Unive r•·" v, as well as three ba chelor s
d egrees in business, psychology, and education. H e wrote· a speech,
"The Soul of Man , Mind and Heart," which won the West Virginia
Philosophical Society Award .
An avid spo rts enthu sias t, Coc hran has been the C harle ston
Golden Glove Boxing C hampion in th e heavywe ight d ivision, he ld
a benc h press record at West Virginia Tech, and also pla yed football .
He and wife Carol Sue have be en married for 30 years, and th ey
have a daughter, Peteria Sue.
More infor mation on the se rvices may be obta in ed by contact
the Rev. Branch, 773-5429.

POMEROY - Shannon Lyn
Gilmore. datH.dHer of Inc :~nd
Lind:~ GilmoLr~..· l)f W~dwo'rt h,
W11 ., .llld grandJ .rughtcr of
Gradnt• r .md P;an cu Wehrung of
R aci ne .111d the l.1t e Elza and
Evely n Gi lm ore of Po m ~.: roy,
grad u.1ted 111 Au gu ~ t from rh e
National Co ll ege of C hiropracti c, wlth a Doctor of C hiropractic de g ree.
She is a 1992 gradua te of Big
Foot H ig h Sc hool, and attended
Lakeland Co ll ege in Sh eboyga n ,
Wis ., w h ere she re ceived a B.A .
in human anatomy.
She plans to a·t te nd Marquette
University in Milwaukee, Wi s.
~llmore
n ext May, to ob tain a Maste r's
degre e m Nurse Mid w ife, and h opes to ope n a p rac ti ce as a chi rop rac tor and nurse n1idwife.

Ashleys attend Civil War meetings

Attendance certificates presented

'

RAC IN E Attendance cert ifi cates we re presented and a
POMEROY - Keith and Emma Ashley of Po.meroy attended the
nationa l encampme nts of the Sons of Union Veterans of the C ivil wiener roast was he ld arou nd a ca mp f1re to con clude the vacation
War, the Auxiliary to the Sons of Union Veterans of the Ci~il War, Bible sc h ool held at the Portland-Rac ine Reorgan ized C hurc h of
and the Ladies of the Grand Army Republic at Lansing, Mi ch. Jesus C hri st of LJtter Day Saints.
recently.
·
Theme of the sc h ool was "Son Zone: God's Plan for Yo u" feaKeith was a delegate from the Ohio Depann1en 1: to [h e conven - t urin g M ega-Noggin and his rime machine where children
tio n. Some of the importa nt work done th ere was the all otment of searched for God 1s pl a n , past, p resen t and fu tu re.
Attendrng were· Autumn DeMoss, M ega n M cMillan , Cody
restoration m o ney fo r the Albert Woolson monume nt at Ge ttysburg.
Woolson was th e last surviving Un io n soldi er of th e Civil War. Also, Nea i.J aco b Wells.Just rn Lea ly. Baylee Hu pp. Krista lnhurst, Robert
the delegates voted a $1000 grfi: and a q uarterly pens10n to Bertha ' William s. Jorda n Ta ylur. Jake Z u span , Ryan Ca ru th ers, Tasha Jon es,
Janeway, 9 1, of Tennessee. She is the last known surviving Union Stevie George. Angela Pri demore, l:l riua ny Kersey, Raquel Wolfe.
w idow o f the Civil War. T he federal gov&lt;;rnment gives her no pen- Mea ga n Varney. Ashle y DeMoss, Bradley George, Rrcky Jon es,
sion, and she lives in a hills ofTennessee w here she is bedridd e n due Nicoll- Jon es, Angel l'ndemore, Cy M cMillan .
to an amp utMed leg.
·~
Lkcky T.1ylor WJS dm.:~c tor; Llllda Evan!i, mu sH: chairma n ; Jani cc
ThL' Sons of Union Veterans also announced th e tentative o p L' n - Danner, ll ctty Proffitt , and Ju:~ni tJ Well s, tc&gt;J c lwrs; Joann Proffitt,
ln g of the ir fir st national headquarters in D(!cember m Harrisburg. c raft s r,·,Kher; Mdanie Adam s, Golda Raddiff. Lu cy Tay lor, ll ah
Pa .. and the empluy of its first executive di rector. A nc\v s tate - k\·~,.- J R i&gt;ush. W.1nda Seel hoff. b rlenc Stobarr. Jan Norri s, Step hanie
o rga nization w.ls for m ed m Nebra ska t hts pa st year m aktn g 2S P n d t·more . Anllt'tLl P ndemorc. C h ad T;~y l or. J ann c E\'a ns. and
departments. Th e membersh ip nati o nal ly climbed to 6437 mcmbc..:rs D ~..· nn y E\'.tns, .t SSIS tJlltS .
ill 209 lo cal ca mps.
Sen:ral Iot a! reso lutions from Broob- Grant C amp No.7 of Mid dl·eport \Vcn: pa ssed on th e n;Hiona l h.•ve l. Th ese included su ppo rt fo r
,·xce ptron to the U.S . Flag Code for plaCing wo rding on U.S. fla gs to
rc-creatt• the C ivil War. Thi s was done in anticipatio n of th~ passage
of a U.S . Flag Am e nd m ent to the U.S. Comntu tr on. Also, opposition
to t h ~.: exorbit:lnt increa se in fe es propose d by th e Na tio nal Archives
, was passed.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Lilly Elizabeth Michigan

Tumstwo
J&gt;OMEROY - Lilly Elizabeth Mi c hi gan o f Athens,
who celebrated her second
birthday on Aug. 28, was honored with a family party at
her grandmothers1 house in
Pomeroy.
An "Eln1o" th em e was carned ou t in the d ecoratioqs
and also o n the b~tthday ca ke
baked by h er aunt , Pauline
Mayer. T h ose
att endi ng
besides the ho n o red guest
were her parents, Marc and
l esley M ic higan; godparents,
Jim and Co nnie Wilburn of
Nelsonvill e; local re latives
Teresa and Au stin Ca rr,
H e nry and Dorothy Clatwo rthy. T im, Beth and Raymond
Lawson, Bill Matl ac k , Don
.111d Lrnda M ayer, Mr ke and
Ang1 Ma ya. Paulmc MJyt·r.
M :Hic H auc k J nd Donna
C.1rr. Send i ng gifts were
Co lto n Lrllv and Chu c k,
Na ncy Jo. Sarah and Stephen
S.1 ltz.

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS

H er lll.ltt•rn.tl grt'.l t -g r~nd ­
parenrs ar~..· Vir~IniJ M . Ad.uns

&lt;~&gt;d the btc Ke.nneth Ad.nm of
Bidwell and Mar ~"""' E.
Brewer ;mci rh~ b tc H owa rd
W. Brewer of Pom t Ple :1:unt.
P:tternal grt'.lt-gr;mJpan: n t~ arc
Jerry R obert Byus of Ohm
and Morv Ehz.rbcth Nibert of
Mason . .

mon

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Church holds picnic
M IDDLEPORT - T he Bradfiml C hurch of Christ held a f.unily picme recently at the ( )hto Valley C hr i~tian Asscmblv.
Praye r w.lS given by Douglas Shamblin.
·
Hot dogs ovc..T an open fire \\·Jth a potlu ck p !C ili C were e1~ oycd.
Tht.' .tftl"rlHJOII w;1!&gt; ~pe m ~\YllllliHng. walking , pbying croquer Jnd Cl k-

habit be elimin ated with the
,:saved money being used for paying off loans' Would saving daily
Many people arc over their change to pay off more than the
htads in debt. O nce they begin miniinum on charge cards work?
d)e sptral do~vnward, it may seem Could all new charges be elimi ro esca late with an eve r-decreas- nated?
Cons1der payroll deduction or
mg chan ce of recovery. To prevent
paying
yo urself first to meet savm;1or fin:moal problen1s and pos-.; lhic b:mkruptcy. there arc several in gs and credit ob ligations as
&lt;lcp' that c:u1 be followed to ot her possible solutions for
redu ci ng debt . Sol icit in put from
rcdU ( I.' credit debt .
F1nt ~L't :1 ·rcJiisti c goal to family members t o determine
dimnllsh rhe ;~ nwunt of outsta nd- their fee lin gs, suggestions and
Ing dd'i.. \)t•tt•r mtnc w h1 ch debts
cooperation .
\\' ill he t.trgt'tcd . What it ems .1re
Expert c hallenge&gt; on the road
({)11\1\tt' tHly c h,t rgc J ? When do
to debt reduction. Sac rifices m:~y
th~..·~r.: ~,J..'bt' o cL ur? Undcrst.md n.:ed to be made 111 changmg old
!lw 1nnnt hi\' h o ll "~._· hold l'JSh tlow. ha bits. but the results will bring
If lkht ~~ gt; lll g tl) b e rt·duct•d, the pc-1Ct' of mind . Execute the pbn
nlollt'\' 11 111 '\t ro n1c from other
one wcck .tt a tnne. Ke~..·p tr:tc k of
.1rc. 1 ~ ()( tlll' budgcr. Whl'IT 1 m~ht
.tc hit.."\'t' IHC11ts. R ecord extra- nuk
thl' t':\ [1',\ mn n l.:\' bl· fo und ~ s~.· t .l
t..'!Tort~- doubk· p.lymc.."llt S, newlydt•.JdiiJit' t(n rc,\~· hi 11g thi ~ go.tl nf
'\,1\'t' d money gm ng row.1rd~ lkbb.
ln.1n lt'p,l)'lll t'llt .
cost rt·du c tio n ~ . l'tC All ot-. tht·sc
C( \ll,akr . . ~... ,&gt;cr.Il
dttT~.· r~.·IH
l",\ll help ,I L hl~'\'t' fin .mu.tl st.tbill q p t11 111" n il lhl\\ " t h l ~ gu.t! lll.lY lw
dht.Hil t' d . &lt;:nuld th ~.· pu r( h,bc.." o f t\,·
ha.: u ~ k~..·t Itt' Ill\ he.· tlt-1.1\"cd
R ~..·cnrd nmmhly progre!&gt;.,, nul.m.·htlc:. Al t..' ti ll" n' (t' rt .ll\1 rcc.u r - Ill !!; wh ich str.nq;ic..·s \\'t..Tl.: -.;u cct'\\r111 g ~._· ],, 1 rgo th .H (i.HdJ be ful .md \\'hich w~rt• llllt. it m,1y
dt'(rt'.l~t·d ~ ( :lndd "'tlfth wc~.:k'i t.akc scn· r.tl tries to .tt.."hicve th e
l'tlYtLiy!'- b ~..· used t(H debt n.·p;~y - fin.lllL!rtl go ,Jl nf ckbt reductiOn,
ll lt' tlt ,~ A-lT
double nr ,l \. ' lll t' tH &lt;.; .1 but tht• n.:-sults 1wtll be..· \\'t..•ll worth
J
giVt' up .
pn~ , ihtltn·~ Could ,\ tn,tl y b.td

ing photographs.
,,
A devotion was held later in the day by Shamblin.
Attending were Jim and Jackie Reed, Paula and Larry Pickens, R on and
Charlotte Hanning, Douglas and Sherry Shamblin , Charlotte VanM etc'r,
Kelli and Gerri Lightfoot, Andrea Warner, Ivan and Evelyn Wood . Sean a11d
Kym Grueser, Bill, Becky, Bethany and R ya11 Amberger, Brean, Su7j~,
C hristie and Darren Will, Dave, C herie, Manhew, Curlin and Jared
Williamson, Tracy and Ambe.r Davidson, Bill, Kathy, Megan and Madison
Dyer, Amber Mills, Anthony Bearhs and Nancy Morns.

Health dub meets
ROCKSPRINGS- The Rocksprings Better H ealth Club held tbeir
annual picnic rccencly at the Rockspnngs Umtcd McthuJi,l Church .
Prayer wa.&lt; gLven by Susie Mash .
Following the picnic, Barbara Fry, president, held ' short bu&lt;im·i&lt; meetmg.
School supplies for the Meip Unrted Methodi&gt;t Coupt·r.ltiw l'amh will
be collected by Fry.
The Septembc..·r meeting \viii bt• held Jt th ...· home..· of fr:tncc!&gt; ( :vcglc1n,
with a program by Nancy Gmeser Jnd co n t~S{ by su~lr.! M.bh, whn prese nted a relish gifi to all m~..:mber.;, which h,1d bt't'll prc..-p.1rni by t(mn~..~r
member Agm:s Dixon.
Acrendin g the picmc \\'L're Fr.mcc.., ( :ocgk lll , S t h l e M.l'&gt;h . B.uh1 r.1 Fr\".
l )omthy Jdfers, Phyllis Skinner, N atKy Morn:-. :md b'1lc~t..; Jun Fry. AngiL'.
Jtson, Tyson, Jnd I )amc\1~ Morris .md Mdyl.t M.t~h.
.

CELEBRITY
(AP) Entertamment hrghlights during the week of Sept.
I 0- 16:
. HO years ago The ad . in
Varil.!t)' for the new ti lm "One
Week " call t·dl:l uster Kt·aton "a
new stellar comedian."
55 years ago; "Dad.. to
Baraan," starrin g John Way 1 ~t'
and Anthony Q uinn . opened.
45 yea rs ago: "Gun sm o ke,"
w hic h began o n radio in 1952,
prem iered on CBS. The pro gram ran for nea rl y 20 years.
And L;ttle R ich ard reco rded "Tu tti Frutti."
35 years ago : "The Jack Paar
Show" h ad its final broadcast
Paar's dog was the only member o f the TV stud ro audience.
And "Lost in Space" and
"Green Acre s" premiered on
C BS.
30 years ago: More than
18,000 people att ended a
Woody Gu thrie memorial
conce rt at the Hollywood
Bowl . Joan Baez, Bob Dylan
and Guth rie's son, Arlo, \-Vere
among the performers.
Joan Crawford's last movie
opened. It was " Trog," a horror
film .

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•

MIDDLEPORT - Ladies for the Lord held a fre e school supplies service recencly at General Harnnger Park in Middleport, with 200 people in
•
attendance.
The Christian band, Glich, made up ofJosh Hayman,Andy Kitchen and
Chuck Eggers pertormed, and free hot dogs and drinks were served.
Gideon New l estamcms were disttibuted to 1()()adults and children, and
200 school supply bags were handed out. The remaining 180 will be distributed to Gallia and Mergs schools fbr children in need.The bags will also
be distnbuted to Sere ruty House anJ t he Gallia County C hildren's Home.
lnformanon about th e supplies or other services of Ladies for the Lord
should contact Betty Johnson at ~41-1415 or Jan Swiggcr at 99?...Q667.
Ladies for the Lord is an interdenominational women's minjstry consisting of v.uious churches and denonunatiom in Gallia and Meigs Counties.
All area \vomen ·,Jrt' im'Jtcd co attend the group's monthly services and
ntcetings.

MEIGS COUNTY EXTEN SION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSUMER
SCIENCES / COMMUN ITY DEVELOPMENT

Complete Stock

Motorola•

weekly column . To stlbmit
. qtte,tiom, wr ite .to Juhn C .
Wolf, D .O., Ohio Unive" ity
Coll ege of Osteopathic Medi cine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens.
Ohio 45701.

Group distributes school supplies

MOW

Pound

1(/. *

~· ·

answe r every question ,
sea rched the m ed ica l li tera tu re
to find a scie ntifi c answe r to
the question. Your question,
h o wever, is unique in that I
can't find a,ny se ri ous m e dical
re sea rc h'· thH dea ls w ith it.
I'm dotng so mething a ba Conseq uently, I went to ot her
l_ilfkrenr fo r thi s wee k 's col- experts for an answer. I talked
. lttllll I' m :t n-;wering two unrcto bioc hem ists and physioloI.It c d l)llt' stions from two readgists. All ag n;e that th e major
t'l"!&gt;. Thl..' only co mm on thread s
differen ce betwee n red and
bt'l\\'l'etl tht'lll J rl' that
white wi ne I S th at red w in es
thought the.·\· were bot h interhave che m icals belo n ging to
•.:~ tJng .tnd th;H th e i r answt· r~
the fanu l y ca ll ed tannin s.
\\"l' f l' .,Jtort.
These c h ~ mi ca l s are n ot
r· Qu csr ion :
\\"H jmt rub '' htng my he..· ad the ot h er day un1quc co red wtnc howev e r.
·,\ttd di !&gt; rovc...·rt· d t ha t th t' rt· 1s a Tea, as an exa mple , 1 ~ also ht gh
&gt; pmnr " (lll th l' rop and two 111 ta nntn s. Mor eover, tea,
:. g roovt·s on t he 'idt:&gt;s. T b est· \Vhen cons umed in moderate
don't hurt. Ha s m y h ead quantities, doesn't cause heart: c lun g l'd , or ha:ve I jus t nc\~e r burn o r headache s. Consennti~..· cd thc st' before?
quently, it is unlikel y that the
Answer : Sin ce
haven't
problems you 've noted are a
: c·X.llllll1ed your head , ~ ca n 't be
result o f .these sub stan ces.
~ C t'rtJin
what
causes
the
Al co hol is prese nt in bo th
~·\potnt" and "grooves" you
:ti:tv e found . However, I can t ypes of wine, a nd thi s com riu .l ke an educated gu ess th at mon co mp o nent 1s par tic u]ar t'vh at v..·, u ha ve discovered h as l y prone to caus in g both
.
-actua l ly b ee n th ere all the heartburn and h eadac hes. But
time.
w h y would o n e cause yo u
You see, t he 1kull " actually m ore trouble th an the oth er
forme d fron1 several se parate wou ld when th e alcohol level
lwtte~ . This JS most o bv iou s in
IS th e same ' It wou ldn't , so th e .
a newborn, as l 'vc had the
differen ce isn't du e to alco hol.
PkJ.sun: of noting in n1y
I can offe r no scie ntifi c lit.t;randson who was born July
I . Th e "soft spo t," or an terior era ture to supp o rt my educat/untJnellc. is an areJ where . ed guess , but I thmk th e di f.the bo nes that forn1 th e stdes fe re n ce b e tween the two types
of the h ead (left and r ig ht of w ine in th eir ability to
parietals) JOin the one forming ca use your sy mptoms is proba,th e fo rehea d (frontal bone)'.' bly due to the foods you eat
·These bone s do not grow to
with th em or perhaps th at you
touch one Jnother along th e ir
may drink more of one .than
en tire length - and, thereby,
th e ot h er. The difference
-close the. " soft sp ot" - until
:t.he child is abo u t 18 months between the wines themse lves
o ld . Thi s join1ng of sk ull sh ouldn't make much differbone s make s a subtle "g roove" ence, ass uming you're drinku r ri d ge th at pcnists thro u gh- in g wine of similar qua li ty.
our lrfe and " ca ll ed a sut ure.
I th ink your questio n hi g hT h e two g rooves you describe lights the need for serious
are probably yo ur su tur es. medi cal research. Of course, I
.Al so, the "point" you've found would on ly want to study the
rs n H\St likely the spot where
effect of "fine" wine served
t ill' l l'ft and ri g ht parietal
with meals in four -s tar or
lwues jo111 thl' large b one
l·m mrug dw back of tlw h~ ad five -ot ar restaurants . Identi fy(o•-c rprr.rl ). Extt·nding te&gt;ward . Ill~! willin11 subject fur th h
1,:.1rh ~..· .H from thu~ pmnc arc m o'l in terci tin~ 1tt.1dy ihOitld n 't l&gt;e a pr u bl~m. l&gt;m fimhng
lht.• ~ lltltn: lin ~,.-'~ Go to Y\l~H
lrbr.ny .rnd luuk .\1 an anatomy lllll\enne tu fund n cou ld lw!
houk o r ,r •hle ltllh Ymr pwb·
.1 bly wrll lind yn\lf point and
"Fam ily M edi cine'" is a

ill·.rrtbllnl and heada c he aft er
drr11kiug rL'd wi.n e but not
with white.• win~?
An s\\'l'r 2: As I do before I

I&lt;VSStLL STOVtR (ANDY
1
Reg. s6 99 Now Only s4 99

20°/0
SWI,SHER 'Y LOHSE
PH.ARNIACV.

'

An anatomy
lesson and
a new study?

IJU!l\.111 ,liJ,\lOilly,

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pJt c rn .d
t;r.lnJp.Irt.' I Ib
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Charles M ..md Anm· C. lh·us

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

""''"""' u~ juH part of normal

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John C. Wolf, D.O. @

•·

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Mackt·nzil' I )J,me Bru &lt;.; wa s
born Junt' H w Denni s J. and
Sandra llllyrh of ) ,· r.rrr .'W .Va .
She we1gh~.:d ~t·n·n pounds . ~ . J
oun ces and w.t"&gt; :2 1 1n c h~s

..

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Mackenzie Diane Byus

crmilp
edicine

Qllt'~ tiolll 2: Why do I get

BIRTH

'
Tha Dally Santlnal • Page A L

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Page A&amp;

_Th_e_D_a_il.;;..y_Se_n_ti""'!""n_el_ _ _ _ _

lhursd•y. Sept. 7, 1000

..
•

i ·Thursday, September 7, 2000

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

·Mom must hold her ground against in-laws' indulgence
DEAR ABBY: "Angry Arizona
Mom" hates to make waves when her
~~s give her sons sips of alcohol. I.
too, didn't make wav~s when my stepfather taught my younger so n and
nephew to smo ke. I wanted the boys to
have a good relationship with their
g randfather. Today, they both smoke. and
although they ta lk of quitting, they ca n't
because thev are so severely hooked.
I also md nothing when my bf?the r
and sister we re slipping off dunng famrly parties to smoke a joint . As a result, I
sent my own chi ldren the m essage that
smoking JOints was OK My nephew
ended up having hi s sto ma ch pumped
to san:· him fro m an ove rdose of drugs,
and my son w1s di sc hargt.·d from milirary se rv~ec due to his addiction to
d ru gs .

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
I have finally wised- up, Abby. I have
laid down th e law to protect my grandchi ldren . If I had it to do over again, I
would draw the lme sooner. Paren ts
n1ust stand u p for what is right. Huning
th.e feelings of in-laws is a small price to
pay for protecting one's chrldren. -SADDER BUT WISER IN FLORIDA
DEAR WISER : I ' m pleased vo u

finally found the co nviction to spea k so mething in my body. I loved the taste.
out for what you know is right . Ch ilForget the legal issues and the m oraldren ca nno t be expected to know what ity of giving liquor to small children.
they haven't been taught. That's why Consider instead the very real danger of
adults are supposed to make mature alcohol poisoning and a life of p ossible
decisions even if they're not always pop- addiction'
ular. Read on:
That grandfather is doing something
DEAR ABBY: I must respond to detrimental to the welfare of those
" Angry Mom m Arizona," w hose innocent children. The parents should
father-in-law , allows his young gra nd- forget about " hurting his f.elings " and
childre n to take "sips" of his beer.
pm a stop to it.
I am a 37- year- old male wr inn g fro m
I am finishing a court-ordered relapse
the Hillsboro u gh Co,unty Jatl in Tampa, program here in jail. I look forward to a
Fla. I am here because of a fourth DUI cl ean and sober extende d life when I am
(driving under the influence) .rrrest -- released. I have seen th e hell of alcohol
the resu lt of 20 years of .den hoi abuse.
abuse and it's not pretty.
Abby, I was brought up to sip from
Pka sc p rint thi s so others won't have
my dad's and uncles' bn·rs. I v iv~elly · to o;:pt..~ncnrc..· what I have b et·n
remember the first tim e I go t drunk . I thruu g h. -- LOOK ING FORWARD
was 5. I honestly bdie\·t· it tngw:red TO 1:REEDOM

DEAR LOOKING FORWARD : If
your testimonial doesn't get the attention of parents, nothing will. I have been
told that children in families of alcohoiics can have a genetic predtsposition
to the disease themselves, and that many
alcoholi cs report having that same feeling of"completio n" that you described
upon tasting their first drink -- another
reason why it's unwise to allow small
children to devdop a taste for alcohol.
To order "How toW rite Letters for
All Occasions," send a busmcss-sized,
self-add ressed envelope, plus chec k or
m o ney order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Ca nada) to : Dea r Abby, Letter Boo klet, P.O.
Box 447 , Mount Morris, IL 610540 447. (Postage lS mcluderl.)

•

CALENDAR
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT The
.Widow's Fellows l" P Will meet
T hursday noon for J picnic
potlu ck at the C heshire Park .
Take covered dish , table servics·
and wrapped whrte ele phants
for game prizes.
TUPPE;.RS PLAINS
Tuppers Plai ns VFW Auxiliary,
7:30 p.m., VFW Hall.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -Wee k'
~nd revival services through
Sunday, 7 p.m . nightly, Silver
Run Bap tist Church in Middleport. Special speakers and
music are plann ed nightly.
Gabriel Quartet to sing on
Saturday evenin g.
POMEROY Board of
Elections office will be closed
Friday so that employees may
attend a district meting to be
held in Nelsonville.

SUNDAY
H omecoming, Sunday, Orange C hristian
'G hu rc h, Lottridge R oad,
Coolville, Mornrng se rvice,
9:30 a.m. worship, 10:45 a.m .
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m .
afternoon service, 2 p.m Gu est
speaker, Roger Watson; special
~In ge r, Dave Darley.
PO M ER OY R ev ival
: ·s~rvices, Pome roy C hurch of
· t~l!
NazJrcnc,
Saturday
. through Wednesday, Services.
10:30 a.m. and(&gt; p.m. Sunday,
• ·M onday Tuesday and Wednes: clay, 7 p.m. Rev. H arold Mmt·y.
: ~ellc . W.Va .. evangelist, music
and pre ac hing. Pa stor Jan
: Lavender invites public.

.

MONDAY

: . CHES HIR E D rsab led
: A:merican Veterans 53. will
. have a picn ic Monday, 6 p.m . at
: ti)e Cheshire par k. Take· a cov·
ered dish .

BIRTHDAY

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Revival services announced

Receives Chiropractic credentials

MA SON - Th e' Falth BaptiSt Cht(rch of Ma son wi ll be hollltn g
fa ll revival serv ices Sept . 2-1 through Sept. ~H. at 7 p.m. eac h eve mn g
Rev. Earl W. Coch ran of C harl esto n will be the speaker, and thert'
w ill be spec ial sin g in g nightly, sa id Farth BaptiSt Pastur Ro n Bran c h .
Coc h ran started preaching in 196 5 at th e age of 17. Fnr .111 years
h e pastored in the Methodist C hurch Jnd had multi-c harges adding
up to 13 churches. He is the pre se nt pastor of R.oxalana Gospe l
Tabernacle m Dunbar
Coc h ran ho lds a th eology degree from Ga r rett Evangclio l Sem·
inary, a masters of divinity d eg ree from Duke Divinit y, masters in
co unseling from Marshall Unive r•·" v, as well as three ba chelor s
d egrees in business, psychology, and education. H e wrote· a speech,
"The Soul of Man , Mind and Heart," which won the West Virginia
Philosophical Society Award .
An avid spo rts enthu sias t, Coc hran has been the C harle ston
Golden Glove Boxing C hampion in th e heavywe ight d ivision, he ld
a benc h press record at West Virginia Tech, and also pla yed football .
He and wife Carol Sue have be en married for 30 years, and th ey
have a daughter, Peteria Sue.
More infor mation on the se rvices may be obta in ed by contact
the Rev. Branch, 773-5429.

POMEROY - Shannon Lyn
Gilmore. datH.dHer of Inc :~nd
Lind:~ GilmoLr~..· l)f W~dwo'rt h,
W11 ., .llld grandJ .rughtcr of
Gradnt• r .md P;an cu Wehrung of
R aci ne .111d the l.1t e Elza and
Evely n Gi lm ore of Po m ~.: roy,
grad u.1ted 111 Au gu ~ t from rh e
National Co ll ege of C hiropracti c, wlth a Doctor of C hiropractic de g ree.
She is a 1992 gradua te of Big
Foot H ig h Sc hool, and attended
Lakeland Co ll ege in Sh eboyga n ,
Wis ., w h ere she re ceived a B.A .
in human anatomy.
She plans to a·t te nd Marquette
University in Milwaukee, Wi s.
~llmore
n ext May, to ob tain a Maste r's
degre e m Nurse Mid w ife, and h opes to ope n a p rac ti ce as a chi rop rac tor and nurse n1idwife.

Ashleys attend Civil War meetings

Attendance certificates presented

'

RAC IN E Attendance cert ifi cates we re presented and a
POMEROY - Keith and Emma Ashley of Po.meroy attended the
nationa l encampme nts of the Sons of Union Veterans of the C ivil wiener roast was he ld arou nd a ca mp f1re to con clude the vacation
War, the Auxiliary to the Sons of Union Veterans of the Ci~il War, Bible sc h ool held at the Portland-Rac ine Reorgan ized C hurc h of
and the Ladies of the Grand Army Republic at Lansing, Mi ch. Jesus C hri st of LJtter Day Saints.
recently.
·
Theme of the sc h ool was "Son Zone: God's Plan for Yo u" feaKeith was a delegate from the Ohio Depann1en 1: to [h e conven - t urin g M ega-Noggin and his rime machine where children
tio n. Some of the importa nt work done th ere was the all otment of searched for God 1s pl a n , past, p resen t and fu tu re.
Attendrng were· Autumn DeMoss, M ega n M cMillan , Cody
restoration m o ney fo r the Albert Woolson monume nt at Ge ttysburg.
Woolson was th e last surviving Un io n soldi er of th e Civil War. Also, Nea i.J aco b Wells.Just rn Lea ly. Baylee Hu pp. Krista lnhurst, Robert
the delegates voted a $1000 grfi: and a q uarterly pens10n to Bertha ' William s. Jorda n Ta ylur. Jake Z u span , Ryan Ca ru th ers, Tasha Jon es,
Janeway, 9 1, of Tennessee. She is the last known surviving Union Stevie George. Angela Pri demore, l:l riua ny Kersey, Raquel Wolfe.
w idow o f the Civil War. T he federal gov&lt;;rnment gives her no pen- Mea ga n Varney. Ashle y DeMoss, Bradley George, Rrcky Jon es,
sion, and she lives in a hills ofTennessee w here she is bedridd e n due Nicoll- Jon es, Angel l'ndemore, Cy M cMillan .
to an amp utMed leg.
·~
Lkcky T.1ylor WJS dm.:~c tor; Llllda Evan!i, mu sH: chairma n ; Jani cc
ThL' Sons of Union Veterans also announced th e tentative o p L' n - Danner, ll ctty Proffitt , and Ju:~ni tJ Well s, tc&gt;J c lwrs; Joann Proffitt,
ln g of the ir fir st national headquarters in D(!cember m Harrisburg. c raft s r,·,Kher; Mdanie Adam s, Golda Raddiff. Lu cy Tay lor, ll ah
Pa .. and the empluy of its first executive di rector. A nc\v s tate - k\·~,.- J R i&gt;ush. W.1nda Seel hoff. b rlenc Stobarr. Jan Norri s, Step hanie
o rga nization w.ls for m ed m Nebra ska t hts pa st year m aktn g 2S P n d t·more . Anllt'tLl P ndemorc. C h ad T;~y l or. J ann c E\'a ns. and
departments. Th e membersh ip nati o nal ly climbed to 6437 mcmbc..:rs D ~..· nn y E\'.tns, .t SSIS tJlltS .
ill 209 lo cal ca mps.
Sen:ral Iot a! reso lutions from Broob- Grant C amp No.7 of Mid dl·eport \Vcn: pa ssed on th e n;Hiona l h.•ve l. Th ese included su ppo rt fo r
,·xce ptron to the U.S . Flag Code for plaCing wo rding on U.S. fla gs to
rc-creatt• the C ivil War. Thi s was done in anticipatio n of th~ passage
of a U.S . Flag Am e nd m ent to the U.S. Comntu tr on. Also, opposition
to t h ~.: exorbit:lnt increa se in fe es propose d by th e Na tio nal Archives
, was passed.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Lilly Elizabeth Michigan

Tumstwo
J&gt;OMEROY - Lilly Elizabeth Mi c hi gan o f Athens,
who celebrated her second
birthday on Aug. 28, was honored with a family party at
her grandmothers1 house in
Pomeroy.
An "Eln1o" th em e was carned ou t in the d ecoratioqs
and also o n the b~tthday ca ke
baked by h er aunt , Pauline
Mayer. T h ose
att endi ng
besides the ho n o red guest
were her parents, Marc and
l esley M ic higan; godparents,
Jim and Co nnie Wilburn of
Nelsonvill e; local re latives
Teresa and Au stin Ca rr,
H e nry and Dorothy Clatwo rthy. T im, Beth and Raymond
Lawson, Bill Matl ac k , Don
.111d Lrnda M ayer, Mr ke and
Ang1 Ma ya. Paulmc MJyt·r.
M :Hic H auc k J nd Donna
C.1rr. Send i ng gifts were
Co lto n Lrllv and Chu c k,
Na ncy Jo. Sarah and Stephen
S.1 ltz.

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS

H er lll.ltt•rn.tl grt'.l t -g r~nd ­
parenrs ar~..· Vir~IniJ M . Ad.uns

&lt;~&gt;d the btc Ke.nneth Ad.nm of
Bidwell and Mar ~"""' E.
Brewer ;mci rh~ b tc H owa rd
W. Brewer of Pom t Ple :1:unt.
P:tternal grt'.lt-gr;mJpan: n t~ arc
Jerry R obert Byus of Ohm
and Morv Ehz.rbcth Nibert of
Mason . .

mon

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~to1e'&gt;

Church holds picnic
M IDDLEPORT - T he Bradfiml C hurch of Christ held a f.unily picme recently at the ( )hto Valley C hr i~tian Asscmblv.
Praye r w.lS given by Douglas Shamblin.
·
Hot dogs ovc..T an open fire \\·Jth a potlu ck p !C ili C were e1~ oycd.
Tht.' .tftl"rlHJOII w;1!&gt; ~pe m ~\YllllliHng. walking , pbying croquer Jnd Cl k-

habit be elimin ated with the
,:saved money being used for paying off loans' Would saving daily
Many people arc over their change to pay off more than the
htads in debt. O nce they begin miniinum on charge cards work?
d)e sptral do~vnward, it may seem Could all new charges be elimi ro esca late with an eve r-decreas- nated?
Cons1der payroll deduction or
mg chan ce of recovery. To prevent
paying
yo urself first to meet savm;1or fin:moal problen1s and pos-.; lhic b:mkruptcy. there arc several in gs and credit ob ligations as
&lt;lcp' that c:u1 be followed to ot her possible solutions for
redu ci ng debt . Sol icit in put from
rcdU ( I.' credit debt .
F1nt ~L't :1 ·rcJiisti c goal to family members t o determine
dimnllsh rhe ;~ nwunt of outsta nd- their fee lin gs, suggestions and
Ing dd'i.. \)t•tt•r mtnc w h1 ch debts
cooperation .
\\' ill he t.trgt'tcd . What it ems .1re
Expert c hallenge&gt; on the road
({)11\1\tt' tHly c h,t rgc J ? When do
to debt reduction. Sac rifices m:~y
th~..·~r.: ~,J..'bt' o cL ur? Undcrst.md n.:ed to be made 111 changmg old
!lw 1nnnt hi\' h o ll "~._· hold l'JSh tlow. ha bits. but the results will bring
If lkht ~~ gt; lll g tl) b e rt·duct•d, the pc-1Ct' of mind . Execute the pbn
nlollt'\' 11 111 '\t ro n1c from other
one wcck .tt a tnne. Ke~..·p tr:tc k of
.1rc. 1 ~ ()( tlll' budgcr. Whl'IT 1 m~ht
.tc hit.."\'t' IHC11ts. R ecord extra- nuk
thl' t':\ [1',\ mn n l.:\' bl· fo und ~ s~.· t .l
t..'!Tort~- doubk· p.lymc.."llt S, newlydt•.JdiiJit' t(n rc,\~· hi 11g thi ~ go.tl nf
'\,1\'t' d money gm ng row.1rd~ lkbb.
ln.1n lt'p,l)'lll t'llt .
cost rt·du c tio n ~ . l'tC All ot-. tht·sc
C( \ll,akr . . ~... ,&gt;cr.Il
dttT~.· r~.·IH
l",\ll help ,I L hl~'\'t' fin .mu.tl st.tbill q p t11 111" n il lhl\\ " t h l ~ gu.t! lll.lY lw
dht.Hil t' d . &lt;:nuld th ~.· pu r( h,bc.." o f t\,·
ha.: u ~ k~..·t Itt' Ill\ he.· tlt-1.1\"cd
R ~..·cnrd nmmhly progre!&gt;.,, nul.m.·htlc:. Al t..' ti ll" n' (t' rt .ll\1 rcc.u r - Ill !!; wh ich str.nq;ic..·s \\'t..Tl.: -.;u cct'\\r111 g ~._· ],, 1 rgo th .H (i.HdJ be ful .md \\'hich w~rt• llllt. it m,1y
dt'(rt'.l~t·d ~ ( :lndd "'tlfth wc~.:k'i t.akc scn· r.tl tries to .tt.."hicve th e
l'tlYtLiy!'- b ~..· used t(H debt n.·p;~y - fin.lllL!rtl go ,Jl nf ckbt reductiOn,
ll lt' tlt ,~ A-lT
double nr ,l \. ' lll t' tH &lt;.; .1 but tht• n.:-sults 1wtll be..· \\'t..•ll worth
J
giVt' up .
pn~ , ihtltn·~ Could ,\ tn,tl y b.td

ing photographs.
,,
A devotion was held later in the day by Shamblin.
Attending were Jim and Jackie Reed, Paula and Larry Pickens, R on and
Charlotte Hanning, Douglas and Sherry Shamblin , Charlotte VanM etc'r,
Kelli and Gerri Lightfoot, Andrea Warner, Ivan and Evelyn Wood . Sean a11d
Kym Grueser, Bill, Becky, Bethany and R ya11 Amberger, Brean, Su7j~,
C hristie and Darren Will, Dave, C herie, Manhew, Curlin and Jared
Williamson, Tracy and Ambe.r Davidson, Bill, Kathy, Megan and Madison
Dyer, Amber Mills, Anthony Bearhs and Nancy Morns.

Health dub meets
ROCKSPRINGS- The Rocksprings Better H ealth Club held tbeir
annual picnic rccencly at the Rockspnngs Umtcd McthuJi,l Church .
Prayer wa.&lt; gLven by Susie Mash .
Following the picnic, Barbara Fry, president, held ' short bu&lt;im·i&lt; meetmg.
School supplies for the Meip Unrted Methodi&gt;t Coupt·r.ltiw l'amh will
be collected by Fry.
The Septembc..·r meeting \viii bt• held Jt th ...· home..· of fr:tncc!&gt; ( :vcglc1n,
with a program by Nancy Gmeser Jnd co n t~S{ by su~lr.! M.bh, whn prese nted a relish gifi to all m~..:mber.;, which h,1d bt't'll prc..-p.1rni by t(mn~..~r
member Agm:s Dixon.
Acrendin g the picmc \\'L're Fr.mcc.., ( :ocgk lll , S t h l e M.l'&gt;h . B.uh1 r.1 Fr\".
l )omthy Jdfers, Phyllis Skinner, N atKy Morn:-. :md b'1lc~t..; Jun Fry. AngiL'.
Jtson, Tyson, Jnd I )amc\1~ Morris .md Mdyl.t M.t~h.
.

CELEBRITY
(AP) Entertamment hrghlights during the week of Sept.
I 0- 16:
. HO years ago The ad . in
Varil.!t)' for the new ti lm "One
Week " call t·dl:l uster Kt·aton "a
new stellar comedian."
55 years ago; "Dad.. to
Baraan," starrin g John Way 1 ~t'
and Anthony Q uinn . opened.
45 yea rs ago: "Gun sm o ke,"
w hic h began o n radio in 1952,
prem iered on CBS. The pro gram ran for nea rl y 20 years.
And L;ttle R ich ard reco rded "Tu tti Frutti."
35 years ago : "The Jack Paar
Show" h ad its final broadcast
Paar's dog was the only member o f the TV stud ro audience.
And "Lost in Space" and
"Green Acre s" premiered on
C BS.
30 years ago: More than
18,000 people att ended a
Woody Gu thrie memorial
conce rt at the Hollywood
Bowl . Joan Baez, Bob Dylan
and Guth rie's son, Arlo, \-Vere
among the performers.
Joan Crawford's last movie
opened. It was " Trog," a horror
film .

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•

MIDDLEPORT - Ladies for the Lord held a fre e school supplies service recencly at General Harnnger Park in Middleport, with 200 people in
•
attendance.
The Christian band, Glich, made up ofJosh Hayman,Andy Kitchen and
Chuck Eggers pertormed, and free hot dogs and drinks were served.
Gideon New l estamcms were disttibuted to 1()()adults and children, and
200 school supply bags were handed out. The remaining 180 will be distributed to Gallia and Mergs schools fbr children in need.The bags will also
be distnbuted to Sere ruty House anJ t he Gallia County C hildren's Home.
lnformanon about th e supplies or other services of Ladies for the Lord
should contact Betty Johnson at ~41-1415 or Jan Swiggcr at 99?...Q667.
Ladies for the Lord is an interdenominational women's minjstry consisting of v.uious churches and denonunatiom in Gallia and Meigs Counties.
All area \vomen ·,Jrt' im'Jtcd co attend the group's monthly services and
ntcetings.

MEIGS COUNTY EXTEN SION AGENT
FAMILY AND CONSUMER
SCIENCES / COMMUN ITY DEVELOPMENT

Complete Stock

Motorola•

weekly column . To stlbmit
. qtte,tiom, wr ite .to Juhn C .
Wolf, D .O., Ohio Unive" ity
Coll ege of Osteopathic Medi cine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens.
Ohio 45701.

Group distributes school supplies

MOW

Pound

1(/. *

~· ·

answe r every question ,
sea rched the m ed ica l li tera tu re
to find a scie ntifi c answe r to
the question. Your question,
h o wever, is unique in that I
can't find a,ny se ri ous m e dical
re sea rc h'· thH dea ls w ith it.
I'm dotng so mething a ba Conseq uently, I went to ot her
l_ilfkrenr fo r thi s wee k 's col- experts for an answer. I talked
. lttllll I' m :t n-;wering two unrcto bioc hem ists and physioloI.It c d l)llt' stions from two readgists. All ag n;e that th e major
t'l"!&gt;. Thl..' only co mm on thread s
differen ce betwee n red and
bt'l\\'l'etl tht'lll J rl' that
white wi ne I S th at red w in es
thought the.·\· were bot h interhave che m icals belo n ging to
•.:~ tJng .tnd th;H th e i r answt· r~
the fanu l y ca ll ed tannin s.
\\"l' f l' .,Jtort.
These c h ~ mi ca l s are n ot
r· Qu csr ion :
\\"H jmt rub '' htng my he..· ad the ot h er day un1quc co red wtnc howev e r.
·,\ttd di !&gt; rovc...·rt· d t ha t th t' rt· 1s a Tea, as an exa mple , 1 ~ also ht gh
&gt; pmnr " (lll th l' rop and two 111 ta nntn s. Mor eover, tea,
:. g roovt·s on t he 'idt:&gt;s. T b est· \Vhen cons umed in moderate
don't hurt. Ha s m y h ead quantities, doesn't cause heart: c lun g l'd , or ha:ve I jus t nc\~e r burn o r headache s. Consennti~..· cd thc st' before?
quently, it is unlikel y that the
Answer : Sin ce
haven't
problems you 've noted are a
: c·X.llllll1ed your head , ~ ca n 't be
result o f .these sub stan ces.
~ C t'rtJin
what
causes
the
Al co hol is prese nt in bo th
~·\potnt" and "grooves" you
:ti:tv e found . However, I can t ypes of wine, a nd thi s com riu .l ke an educated gu ess th at mon co mp o nent 1s par tic u]ar t'vh at v..·, u ha ve discovered h as l y prone to caus in g both
.
-actua l ly b ee n th ere all the heartburn and h eadac hes. But
time.
w h y would o n e cause yo u
You see, t he 1kull " actually m ore trouble th an the oth er
forme d fron1 several se parate wou ld when th e alcohol level
lwtte~ . This JS most o bv iou s in
IS th e same ' It wou ldn't , so th e .
a newborn, as l 'vc had the
differen ce isn't du e to alco hol.
PkJ.sun: of noting in n1y
I can offe r no scie ntifi c lit.t;randson who was born July
I . Th e "soft spo t," or an terior era ture to supp o rt my educat/untJnellc. is an areJ where . ed guess , but I thmk th e di f.the bo nes that forn1 th e stdes fe re n ce b e tween the two types
of the h ead (left and r ig ht of w ine in th eir ability to
parietals) JOin the one forming ca use your sy mptoms is proba,th e fo rehea d (frontal bone)'.' bly due to the foods you eat
·These bone s do not grow to
with th em or perhaps th at you
touch one Jnother along th e ir
may drink more of one .than
en tire length - and, thereby,
th e ot h er. The difference
-close the. " soft sp ot" - until
:t.he child is abo u t 18 months between the wines themse lves
o ld . Thi s join1ng of sk ull sh ouldn't make much differbone s make s a subtle "g roove" ence, ass uming you're drinku r ri d ge th at pcnists thro u gh- in g wine of similar qua li ty.
our lrfe and " ca ll ed a sut ure.
I th ink your questio n hi g hT h e two g rooves you describe lights the need for serious
are probably yo ur su tur es. medi cal research. Of course, I
.Al so, the "point" you've found would on ly want to study the
rs n H\St likely the spot where
effect of "fine" wine served
t ill' l l'ft and ri g ht parietal
with meals in four -s tar or
lwues jo111 thl' large b one
l·m mrug dw back of tlw h~ ad five -ot ar restaurants . Identi fy(o•-c rprr.rl ). Extt·nding te&gt;ward . Ill~! willin11 subject fur th h
1,:.1rh ~..· .H from thu~ pmnc arc m o'l in terci tin~ 1tt.1dy ihOitld n 't l&gt;e a pr u bl~m. l&gt;m fimhng
lht.• ~ lltltn: lin ~,.-'~ Go to Y\l~H
lrbr.ny .rnd luuk .\1 an anatomy lllll\enne tu fund n cou ld lw!
houk o r ,r •hle ltllh Ymr pwb·
.1 bly wrll lind yn\lf point and
"Fam ily M edi cine'" is a

ill·.rrtbllnl and heada c he aft er
drr11kiug rL'd wi.n e but not
with white.• win~?
An s\\'l'r 2: As I do before I

I&lt;VSStLL STOVtR (ANDY
1
Reg. s6 99 Now Only s4 99

20°/0
SWI,SHER 'Y LOHSE
PH.ARNIACV.

'

An anatomy
lesson and
a new study?

IJU!l\.111 ,liJ,\lOilly,

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pJt c rn .d
t;r.lnJp.Irt.' I Ib
.u-e
Charles M ..md Anm· C. lh·us

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

""''"""' u~ juH part of normal

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•·

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Mackt·nzil' I )J,me Bru &lt;.; wa s
born Junt' H w Denni s J. and
Sandra llllyrh of ) ,· r.rrr .'W .Va .
She we1gh~.:d ~t·n·n pounds . ~ . J
oun ces and w.t"&gt; :2 1 1n c h~s

..

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Mackenzie Diane Byus

crmilp
edicine

Qllt'~ tiolll 2: Why do I get

BIRTH

'
Tha Dally Santlnal • Page A L

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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'

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96 GEO TRACKER CONY Blotk, 4 cyl, 5sp, air, 4 WD,

Now 17,250
WAS $8995 H .... .............. H............................ HH.H ..........HHH... N0w 17250 WAS SI8900 ...
·96 PONTIAC BONNIVILLE, V6, oulo, air, till, rruise, extra tleon
97 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETIE VAN, FWD, V6, auto, air, till, rruke, WAS
1
WAS S11 ,999................. ...................
.H ... .
. ........ Now 10,400
$16,995 ...... H............. H..HH ....... ........HH....... H.......................Now 115,250
97 CHEVROLET CAVALIER Z24, 4 tyl, auto, air, till, truise. Red.
97 CHEVROLET S-10 BLAZER, 4Door, While, LS Package, V6, oufo, air, till,
WAS SI 0,900 ..................................
Now 58750
ULBe, WAS $16,950 ................ ...................................... ......... NOW 516,950
97 CHEVROLET CAMARO COUPE V6, auto, oir, till, truke,
97 CHEV TAHOE 2Door, sport pkg, Red, VB, auto, air, lill, cru~e. AM/FM CD, 4WD,
WAS S11,900 .........
Now 510,850
1
WAS $14,999 H· H.H. ... .......... H H............. H.............. Now 13,650 99 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 4 door, 4 cyl, oulo, oir
97·GMC YUKON 4Door, LT Pkg, leolher int., VB, auto, air
WAS SII ,9DO . ·······H·H································· H H .... .........Now 19900
1
WAS S27,99S ................ ..........................
Now 24,650 98 OLDSMOBILE ACHEVIA, 4 door, V6, auto, oir, fill, truise, AM/FM coss
97 MERCURY VILLAGER VAN, V6, auto. air, t~t. rruise,
WAS Sll,90D .................................. ............................. ................. Now 110,200
1

H

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

H

H

.. ...... H

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

.....

H

.... . ........ ...........H

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

~

H

..... ....... H

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

WAS $8999 ........................................................................... ............. Now 17200

ours
Monday-Friday 9:00-8:00
Sturday 9:00-4:00 Sunday I :00-5:00
All Rebates To Deater. Dealer Not

98 CHRYSLER CIRRUS V6, outo, oir, till, rruise, sun roof, While,

Ask us About Our Economical
Extended Service Plans

I For Typogro1ph ;c:al

�•
.'1

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Reform hopeful files for funds
WASHINGTON (AP) - Reform Parry presidential hopeful
John Hagelin has ft!ed papers with federal election officials laying
claim to $12.6 million re.erved for the party's nominee.
Hagelin officiJh said the forms, filed Friday with the Feder:!lElection Commission, reflect that he is on the ballot in 11 states as
rhe party 's candidate for president.
Election law requires a "minor parry" candidate seeking federal
funding to certifY they are on the ba llot in at least 10 states.
The FEC has 10 days after the all the necessary papers are filed to
~ssue a ruling.
Pat Buchana n, who also claims the party nomillltion, filed simibr documents a week earlier.
Both Hagelin and Buchanan claimed the Reform mantle last
month at the party's conve ntion, which ended with namin g of separat~ rr\;.·side-ntial nominee}.
Hagelin is on the ballot 111 Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, New
Mex1co. Ohm, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Washinb&gt;ton state and
Wyoming, officials said.

Mean tune, H agelm and h11 all1es filed a claim in a California state
asking: a judge to dec Lire him and running mate Nat CJoldh .tbcr th e sok nominees.
The :l•.:t wn fo llowt.·d by o ne day :1 similar cbim by Buc hanan's
CH: twn sec kll1g h:·gal rt·cogmuon o f Buchanan and running matt'
Ezob Foster J~ the: tru e nomm ecs.
Both sick· ~ .1rgut: th :tt bee.~ use the 1utional co nvention WJS hdd in
Long lk:tdt. tilt' :-. tatt· court tht·re has jurisdi ction over party activ- ·

C{)U rt

J[it.;s !ltltio nwtdc. ~

A ht&gt;.1r ing on th e m&lt;Hter was scht•duled for Thursday.

Buffalo teachers call for strike
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - A teac hers strike was called Thursday
after th,· exewtiw board of the Buffalo Teachers Federation rejected an offer m.1Je by the Board of Education.
The Buffalo teachers executiw comnuttee met Thursday mornmg befo re thl" sta rt of classes and voted unammously to call a citywide stnke .
"This move is so mething that we've been forced into," BTF president Philip Rumore said. " Thi&gt; is not something that we do lightly."
The sc hool boa rd had no immediate comment. A spokesman said
board members were working on contingency plan.
Rumore was served a co urt injunction Wednesday - the first day
of sc hool for the 47,000-student Jistrict - reinfor.:ing a state law
that bars a walkout . Sho rtly after the papers were served, the board
proposed a four-year contract, but union officials rejected the offer.
Ac cording to union officials, the latest contract proposal offered
teachers $30 million over four years but would scale back health
care costs, espeCially for retirees. The clistr·i ct's 3,800 teachers earn an
average of$55 ,000 a year.
With a $5.5 million strike fund in place, the teachers have been
prepared to walk even though they could lose pay and face stiff
fmes.
The teachers' last contract expired in June 1999.

Thursday, September 7, 2000

Pomeroy, MlddJeport, Ohio

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tech stocks tumble 'or second straight day
NEW YORK (AP) - Tech stocks tumbled
for a second straight session Wednesday as analysts c'u t their ratings on several high-profile
compani es, while blue chips moved higher on
news of a major deal rn the financial services
industry
The high-tech driven Nasdaq composite
index was off 129.84 at 4,013.34.
The Dow Jones industrial average closed up
50.03 at I 1 ,310.64, and rhe Smndard &amp; Poor's
500 index was down 14.83 at I ,4S2.25.
Tech stocks feU for a second day, pnmarily
because of more analyst downgrades of prominent companies. On Tuescby, the high-tech
stocks slipped after a prominent analyst lowered

his rating on Intel.
Shares of Mlcron Technology feU $9.50 ro
$68.75 Wednesday after Donaldson, Lufkin &amp;
Jenrette lowered its rating o n the memory chipmaker &amp;om "buy" to "underperform."
And telecom provider WorldCom fell $2.25
to $3 I .50 after analysts from Lehman Brothers
and Wachovia Securities downgraded the stock.
" I thrnk those downgrades are concerning
people about third-quarter earnings, so you're
seeing weakness in those stocks;' said Barry
Berman, managing clirector of equity trading for
Robert W Baird &amp; Co. in Milwaukee.
Shares of MP3 .com fell 69 cents - more
than 8 percent- to $7.88 after a federal judge

ruled Wednesday that the company had willfully violated copyrights of musi c companies and
awarded Uniwrsal Music Group $25,000 per
CD. a penalty tim eould r~ach as mu ch as $250
million.
Yahoo', which has been on a slide in recent
sessions, fell $5.06 to $112.06, and continued to
fall in after-hours trailing after Dow Jon es News
Service reported that the company's CEO told
investors at a conference that ouline advertising
spending was bem~; cut back. D ow Jones later
filed a clarification of the CEO's suremerm,
quoting Jeff Kough: as saying that tightenin g in
the Internet adverrismg markt·t "takt:s 3 Littl e of
the upside away in thl· ncar tL"rm.'~

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page B2
Tiwiessi's excels on &amp; offfield, Page B2
NASCAR Notebook, Page B6 ·
Daily Scoreboard, Page B5

THURSDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

WASHINGTON (Al') - Ford
blame-d Firt:stoth.' Fin._•swnl' hmted at a problem with Ford vehicles. The new N otion al Highwl\'
Traffic Safety Administrauon
chief blamed them both . And
lawmakers rebuked all three fot
dozens of fatal accidents that may
be linked to d eferti w llndgestone/Firesh: l1t'

tires on

Ford

vehicles.
But more than I 3 straight
hours of congressional h,·ar ings
Wednesday didn't determine
what is happening With Bridgestone/ Firestone tires and Ford
trucks, primarily rile Explorer
SUV, that has ca used them to be
linked to 88 deaths and at least
250 injuries.
"Countless Americans are o n
the road today p1cking up their
kid1, driving to work, and th e last
thing that &gt;hould worry th em is
the quality and the soundness o f
their tires," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich
. "It is unconp

scmnabk that so ·many h ave been
pL1 ccd in this kind of situarion .''
.l3ut bwmakL'rS ;lrc:n 't finishe-d.
Sen. John M cCo in . R-Ariz., plans
to hold hearrngs of his own next
week. "T hi s is JUSt the beginning
of this investigative pro cess," said
Rep . llilly Tauzin, R-La ., who led
the H o use hearing Wednesday.
Ford Motor· Co. CEO Jacques
Nasser blam ed the problem on
w hat he called "defec tive " Firestone tirt•s but promised changes
in how Ford ope rates, including
notifying Am e rican officials when
the car company makes any safety changes tn its overseas markets .
Ford has come under fire for
beginning a Firestone tire recall
in 16 foreign countries, including
the Persian Gulf, more than a year
before the U.S. recall started.
"How in th e world can corporate
officllls all ow a danger to go forward in America while protectin g
the Saudis?" said Sen. Arlen
Specter, R - Pa.

tamed enough that loggers on

WyoJmng .111d Tt~X.l S , .1l L' l)rding
tu t hL' Nation.d l nrcragt:tKy Fire

IJ.1ho, Mississippi.

Nt'\';H.I.I .

Smuh

D~tkt)[;l, Mnnt.lll.l , N L' \\' JV 1L'XIL·o.

T hu rsday were bemg allowed
back into forests.
"Those guys got . hit really
hard ," said Patrick H effernan. ,1
spokesman for thL' N1 o ntana
Logging Associatlo11. ''That ·s four
weeks o f lost work."
The JOOS arc still considered
"high risk fire operation s," and
will be prohibited I p.m . to I
a.m. Workers must also patrol
work sites for an h o ur after they
stop.
Firefighting efforts in Montana were scaling back as crews
were leaving by th e planeful
either to return hom e or go to
other fires across the cou ntry. At
least 300 firefighters returned to
their homes in the southeast ern
and southwestern United States

Ccntt'r

11 1

U01sc. ltLlho. N ,ltion-

\\'id~. lirt•s

h:wc bl!l'llcd IIHlrc
than (dJ million .Jeres thi s yc;'l r.

Nearly 111.1100 tirdighters .1 rc
m Montana b.ntling tht· stJtl:''s 24
Lugcst tires 011 (,45.2Hl) .Kn:s.
Mrkc Stearm . .1 lirefighter
from R osco mmon , MH:IL .J&lt;&gt;in cd

nearly 500 other firefi ght ers
waiting for word on their nex t
stop.
"We wen: ho ping I~J r another
assignmcm," he said . "We have
14-day assigmncnts on thcsc
Wes tern tires, and o ur asstgnmt.•nt
won't bt' up until m.-xr Monday.
bu t It look li ke we 're gmng tube
(demobilrzed) beca use th ere's no
fire activity right now. The rains
really help ed."

Marauders and Raiders ready to do battle
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Prep Sports

Firefighters heading home,
Plenty of blame goe,s
loggers
heading
back
around for tire problems
earlier 111 thc wcck .
A-;, ofWt•dnL'~tby. H(l l.1rgt· f1n:~
WL'I'L' burmng on ) _(, mdl!on
.1cn::- 111 Ar k.lllsa.;,_ C .1lifor ni .1.

(

~'

/

-

A weekly look at the region's
top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers . (First-place
votes in parentheses)
Team
1. Ironton (2·0)
2. Logan (2·0)
3. Parkersburg (2 ·0)
4. Point Pleasant (2·0)
5. Gallipolis (2·0)
6. Jackson (2·0)
7. Miller (2·0)
8. Fort Frye (2·0)
9. Trim ble (2·0)
10. Ross SE (2·0)

Votes
38 (2)

36 (1)
34 (1)
26
25
21
14
11

ROCK SPRINGS M eigs will be
looking for their second win of the young
season , and River Valley their first when
th e two neighbors meet o n the gridiron
this Friday evening at C h eshire .
Meigs lost tneir opening game of the
year at Gallipolis 18-6, then bounced back
last week to defeat Athens 19-7 on the
strength of a strung second half.
Coach Larry Carter and the Raiders
dropped their first contest 41-6 to Ross
Southeastern, th en lost a 6-0 contest to
Fairland last Friday.
Coach Mike Chancey's Marauders battled Ath ens to a 7-all ti e in the first half at

Pomeroy. But the second half was alL
Meigs, the Marauders controlled th e line
of scrimmage on both sides of the lin e.
Jeremy Roush broke loose for 1 13 yards
in 22 carries last week, wh ile senior fullback Chris Jeffers added 70 yards in 14
ca rries . Roush was also one for one pass.:.
ing for 33 yards, se tting up the Marauders
second rouchdown.
Soph omore quarterback Kyle Hannan
conti nu ed to play well in relief of injured
starter B. J. Kennedy. Hannan was six of
nine passing for 57 yards. for th e year Kyle
is 11 of 20 for 131 yards. Adam Bullington
is th e M arauders leading receiver with
nine catches for 78 yards .
In th e second half against the Bulldogs

the maroon and gold defense played out- win , but last week the · R ai ders lost a
standing. C hris J effers led the Marauder . heartbreaker to Fairland.
defense in limiting Athens to only one
The Dragons scored o n their first posfirst down , and 12 total yards in 11 plays. session of th e second half for a 6-0 lead.
Jeffers un officially had 1.1 stops for the The Raiders had a Golden opportunity
Meigs defense .
when fullbac.k Nick George broke free
The Marauders outstanding tight end and appeared to have open field to the
and defensive end Matt Stewart, along Dragon goal line, but as he crossed the
with running back Tyson Lee were taken Fairland 30 yard line, tl1e ball slipped from
by the Mei gs County E.M.S. 10 the hos- his hands.
pital due to injnry after last weeks game.
Offen sive lineman Steve Wright fell on
Stewart is good to go this week, while Lee the lose football, bm th e it seenied to take
along with B. J. Kennedy and linebacker the wmd out of the Raiders' sails. River
Ross Stewart are questionable this week Valley also had a tou chdown wiped o ut
with injuri es.
on a penalty.
In th e Raiders two losses, Ross SouthPlease see Meigs, Pa&amp;e B8
eastern jumped out to a 41-0 lead in their

Santiago's Slam Saves the Reds

To eligible for The OVP 10, a
team must either: a.] be from
the Mason-Gallla-Metgs area;
b.) be a local conference member; or c.) play at least one
game against local teams.

Football
TVC

.Ohio

Belpre
Meigs
Well ston
Nelsonville· York
Alexander
Vinton County

TVC

ALL

0·0
0·0
0· 0
0·0
0·0
0·0

1·1

Mi ller
Trimble
Eastern
Federa l Hocking
Southern
Waterford

1-1
1·1
1·1

0·2
0·2

NEW YORK (AP) - Thirty- eight people and 11 companies
have been indicted by a Manhattan grand jury on charges of
siphoning millions of dollars from city construction projects
through bribery, bid-rigging and other crimes.
We dnesday's 57-count indictment claimed the defendants, called
"The Lucchese Construction Group" by investi'g ators, illegally used
nonunion labor on eight public and private projects and paid workers les s than th e legal wage.
AdditiotJal ly, crooked contr!tors in the group billed public agenCies and private developers as if they were paying wages in co mpli:mce with the law, the indictment said.
The d1fference between what the contractors billed the proje ct
spon sors :md their actual labor costs w.e nt to bribes givl'n to cornrpt
union officials who let them use nonunion labor, District Attornc:y
R obert M o rge nthau sa id.
The br ib es constituted a "mob tax " o f at least 5 percent of a contnct's vJ!ue. and the payoff was possible only with thl" cooperation
l&gt;( the co rrupt t:ontractors, he said.
·
" If the contractors didn't go along. the deal couldn't go forward,"
Morgen thau sa id. "These conrracmrs kne\v what they were doing."
Six o f th e 38 people also were named in a six-count federal
indictment, which included charges of conspiracies involving wire
fraud or extortion o r both. They face up to 20 years in prison if

ffi

LINCOLN

Ford Motor Company Authorized Clearance

SEQ

All

0·0

2-0

0·0 . 2·0
0·0 . 2·0

0·0
0·0
0·0

2·0
0·2

0·0

0·2

1·1

o;o o-2

ALL

Wahama
South Gallia
Hannan

1-1

0·2

0-2

Friday's Games
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Wahama , 7 :30
Hannan at Buffalo· Putnam, 7:30

w~~~'!f~~atch

E'lstern at Hannan . no report

~~~-·'­
!'

ov

~\&amp;br'Qf~

1

DOWN*

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
PROGRAM
AVAilABLE..'"'
Repo • Divorce??
-cl__.., , 1 . No Embarrassment . .-You're Treated with Respect!

30

Years

Carl Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1 .. 800-272-5179.
DRIVE HOME IN A CAH OR TRUCK TODAY!!
--'-----

rc nJc.·nng tu FB I agt:nt\, at!thontil'S s;ud .

--

Today 's Matches
Southern at Miller, 5:55
Eastern at Federal Hocking , 5:55
Belpre at Meigs, 5 55
South Gallia at Ohio Valley Christian , 5:00
Gallia Academy at Warren. 5:15
River Valley at Jackson , 5:15

Golf

'SubiO Ct l o progra m

•

Dunn g tht· two- ho ur &lt;;tege. the gunman flrL"d one shot into the
Lc dmg. bm H dtdn 'r .1ppe.ll' .1nynnc \\'JS o;;c nously hurt 1,11 thl..'

.1 Jo7 Cil hu-.. t.l gt.·~ .

0·2
0·2
0·2

0-0
0·0

Area non-league

WESTMINSTER. C,,Ji f (AI') - A glll rman held ·about 20 p.eoplc h '"'"~'· durmg .1 bungbl bank robbery Wedrfesday before sur-

(n.:t·d

0-0

o-o

Friday 's Games
Gall1a Academy at Ironton
Point Pleasant at Man
Meigs at R&gt;ver Valley
Marietta at Hamilton Twp.
Parkersburg South at Warren
Alexander at Athens
Vinlon County at Jackson
Logan at Zanesvi lle

Sandwich brand recalled

r.J keovl' r, poll ct.' ( )tl'i ce r Rnb111 Kapp .;,ltd .•
After rckphon c nc gotutwm. the' gu nm.lll C.llllt' out of the B.mk
~~t"Ailli..'l'IU br.ln l' h w Hh hJ, h.tuds up .md dropped spn.:.Jd-l·.,glc to
rhc .1sph.11t_. Scn·r.1l fBI .lgenh t r.uncd tht..·ir gLtn s o u him .1 ~ otht·n
,lppro,JL heeL ti-l',kL"d .111d h.liHh.ufTcd hun .
1-ldt LOfHL'r llll.l ge' of tht· \lt'gt' .l t the ()r.mg-c County b.mk . _1)
nH i c.., ~om h e.J '&gt;t d( Ln., An ge k· ~. \\'L' rt.' o::. hown narinnall y on rde\'iswn .
Polh t' we re nonfi t..·d of rhe I p.m . holdup ancmpt by ~ stll'llt
.d.J rlll ,llld .1 tdcplwm: c.t ll 1mrdc th L· b.mk, Kapp sa id .
Shor dy .1fte r the t.1kcuva . nL.'gotJJtiOns began :tnd thl· gt.Jnlll&lt;Hl

2·0
2·0
1·1

Friday 's Games
Meigs at River Valley
South Gal lia at Southern
Eastern at Wahama
St. Charles at Nelsonville-York
Green at Trimble
Vinton County at Jackson
Frontier at Watertord
Wellston at Waverly
Alexander at Athens
Fort Frye at Belpre
Federal Hocking at Zane Trace
Ross Southeastern at Miller

Gallia Academy
Jackson
Logan
Po1nt Pleasant
Warren
Athens
Marietta
R1ver Valley

Morge nthau sa id he was unaware of the federa l indictment, btit
sa rd it is not unu sual for state and federal officials to run parallel
investigations.

Gunman surrenders to FBI

ALL

0-0
0·0

SEOAL

convicted.

MUKILTEO, Wash . (AP)- J
bo Foods is recalling its Lunchbox Smoked Turkey Sandwic he s due IQ,.,possible contamination,
though no illnesses have been reported. '
The bacteria Liste ria mo nocytogenes was found in routine sampling by the state Agriculture Department, the company said in a
Wednesday news release.
.
Symptoms of infection in healthy individuals in.clude fever,
headache, nausea, stomac h ache and diarrhea . The bactena can cau se
fa tal illness in the very old and very young, however, and has been
linked to mi sca rriage s and stillbirths.
The recalled san dw ich es were made at a plant in Mukilteo, about
30 miles north of Seattle, and sold in convenience stores in Washington , Oregon, Idah o, Arizona and southern California. They
we rgh (, ou nces each and have a red-a nd-bl ue label with a Sept. 25
expiratJOn date.
The company has stopped productron of the product while it
investigates th e problem wrth the Food and Drug Administration .
Pc·op le who bought the sandwrches can return them to the place
of purc hase fo r .1 fu ll refund . Consumers with questions can call
HIIO- 5 (&gt;2-6507.

TVC

Today'a Matches
Meigs at TVC Ohio , 4:30 (at
Oxbow)
Point Pleasant at Huntington, TBA
(at Riviera)

LONG GONE - Benito Sa ntiago be lted what turned out to be the game-winning home run Wednesday
as the Reels defeated the Mets, 11-8. (AP)

195

RIVER RD.

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

740-446-9800 800-272-5179

[Parts &amp;Service Now Open Saturdays

F ::~ x

Mt.'l!!' ( :nunry ~port news
to rill' I &gt;&lt;~!h \ t· rHinel at 992-

2 15 7. l ~ n! .lll Hem -.. to g.lltn hun d a t.'llrl' k.u1 i..'t.rorn .
( ~o nr.ll t "POrt'i edit or Andrew
( ~:1rt t'r .It lJ'-):! - 52~7. exr. 21.

C INCINNATI (AP) - Ben- Benitez.
ito Santiago was thinking sacri" If you look down ou r roster,
fice fly and hit a grand slam . we didn't have much left, and I
John Franco was second-guess- would rathq stay with Benny:"
ing himself for giving Santiago McKeo n said. " All good relievthe c han ce.
ers have bad days. H e made a
" I was ju st trying to hit a fly mi stake and got one up, and
ball to th e outfield," Santiago Benny took advantage."
said. "I was trying for one and I
13enirez blew a save fo r the
got four."
fift h time in 42 chan ces thi s
Santiago hit a go-a head slam year.
otT Armand o llenitez as the
" Wh en I gave hi1h the ball I
Ci ncinnati Reds ra llied with a sa id , 'Pick me up,"' Franco sai d.
six- run eighth inning Wednes- " The guy's been automatic all
day to beat the New York M ets year. But he's a human hemg,
11 - 8.
and we all make mistakes."
New York, just 1-5 in SepJoh n Riedling (2- 1), the lifth
tember, had a three-run lead of six Cin cin n at i pit c hn s,
wh en wh en C hris Stynes and allowed one hit and walked one
Keh Griffey Jr. hit consecutive in one inning, and Da nny
one-out singles otT Turk Wen- Graves p itched a perfect ni nth
dell, who relieved Dennis Cook for his 25th sa ve rn .)ll c hances.
at th e start of the eighth.
Gri ffey hit his 3Rth hom er of
John Franco (S-4) came in the season , and Casey add ed his
and gave up RBI sin gles to Sea n 12th . Todd Pratt and Matt FranCasey and Dmitn Youn g, then cq homered for th e Mcts, who
walked Alex O choa, loading th e bega n the day one game be hind
bases.
Atl an ta in th e NL East.
"It's a game we shou ld have
Mets starter Bobby J. Jones
won that we let go," Franco allowed five runs and stx hits in
said . " If I would have made my two innings, anJ Bobby M.
pit ches, maybe t hin gs wo uld Jo nes followed w ith four
have turned out different. When inninb'S of shutout relief.
I don't hit my spots, good hitt ers
" I didn 't have good stutf ar all
are going to take advantage of today." Bobby .J. Jone s said .
it ."
" There are times during the
Santiago homered to left on season when yo u don't ; th ere
Benitez' first pitch, his fifth are jmt those kin cis' of days ."
homt:r of the s.eason and sevIt wa s the first time in Mcts
enth ca reer slam - rh e fi rst hi story that pitchers with the
since Aug. 11, 1997, at Detroit.
sa mt' first and last names fol" I got a good, solid swing on lowed each oth er, altho ugh Bob
the ba ll ," said Santiago, who l. Mrll er and Bob G. Miller
went 2-for-5 with five RBis.
pitched in the- sa me g:a ml' tivc
Reds manager Jack M e Keon times in 19(,2.
sa id he never considered using a
Red s startn R ob Bell. who
left-handed pinch hitter for pirchcli J career- h igh e1~h t
Sa nti ago after New York
Please see Reds. Page B5
brought in the nght - handed

Tomadoes, Rebels Eagles, Falcons go head-to-head
look for first win
Scon

WoLFE

good running backs and we
need to get the ba ll in their
EAST MEIGS Coming hands," Cromley said. "We're ju st
imo this seaso n, the Waham a going to turn arou nd and hand it
White Falcons hoped that a to th em. Sometimes weill keep
combination of experien ce and feeding the one with the hot
speed would equal :r lot of wins. hanJ.s. l'ut basi cally they ca n all
At 1- 1 th at has yet to be proven . Jo t he JOb."
Th e Wlmc Falcons posted a 4- " Wah.ama 1s also banking that
6 record last seaso n and have a its overall ream spt"e d wi ll g ive its
nl11l1ber of rl'turning playerli.
Si1Ltad so m e advantages. Wah ama
"We 've got a team that got J
doesn't have ,1 !m of size but
lut of exp~ricnce playmg h~t ac corJi'n g to its' coach is ~ retry
yt'ar," said hr;ld coach Ed Crom - qm ck for a high sch ool oflensive
ley. "We playe d a lot of sop ho- lme . Everybody on the line fa lls
mores and jumors and they betwee n 21tl and 235 .
bring game expericnl!l, back
Defensive sta ndo ut and talent with th e m .''
ed receiver Adam Rickard went
Sen ior ' running back l"tobert down hard with a broken colarBrinker (5- 10 , ISS lbs.) junior bont' one possession after ca tchback ll randon Hankinson (!&gt;-0, lug a 4.1 -yard circm Crlrch for a
165 lbs.) w ill nc·cd to put up \Ouc hdown .
so me big numbers if the White
AJditionally, Tyler R oney
Falcons are goi ng to be succe~­ grabbed two fumble recoveries
ful. Along with th em. runmng in a goo d dcft~nsivt: effort .·
back / lmeba cker Eran Brmch (5Quarte rba ck Bradford Clark
7, 175 lbs. ) will haw to step up also passed for 124 yards. so East big on both sides of the h,1ll.
ern mu st b,· ready to stop both
llranrh , Adam Mitche ll and tht: pass and th e run .
R y.m Mitch ell hatf over 100
At time'i in its SJ- 1J druhbt ng
tot.d yards ru'lhing last week in ' against Fort fr yl', cspcci .illy
Wah.tm.1 's 39-0 win t)n·r Ft·lh:r.ll otlt·nslvt:ly. Eastern looked good
Ho cking.
and put 2'14 yards nfle n&lt;c in t he
' 'Wt· fed lih· we'vt" got three record books. At one point, EastBY

OVP CORRESPONDENT

BY

Scon

WOLFE

OVP CORRESPONDENT

RAC IN E This Friday
night the Southern Tornadoes,
winless at 0-2, gear up for their
home opener at Adams Freid in
Raciue. The Tornadoe s play
an other winless club in South
Ga llia (0-2).
La&lt;t ye ar m Mcrccrv rlle,
Southe rn won 54- 27.

The Portsmourh- East T1rt;1ns
added the Southern Tornadoes
to their list last Friday night
with a 20- 0 win at Allard Park.
- East is now 2-0 .
The ditTerenc.e in this ganie
may have been in th e tn:nchcs
w here East domin ated the line
of sc rimmage and racked up 223
yards rushing. Southern mean wh ile. was limited just 16 positive ya rds led b ~ junior Urice
H1ll \\Ito , arn~d two· tim es for
14 ymJ,
Wh~n
ht• was n lt getting
&lt;i &lt;Jc kt_•d , '&gt;t'n tor quancrba ck
J o n:uhan 1::\'.ltPi .;;q ueaked ou t an
11 -21&gt; passing night for 126
yard' an.d thre e interct:pti ons.
Urandou Pit_·rcc tossed o ne pass
1

•••••

Benny's slam

lifts Redlegs

8
7

Hocking

38 face racketeerin1 charps

81

111urscl•y, September 7, 2000

The OVP

HELENA , Mont . (Al') - For
th t~ first time in weeks., the loggers ore back.
Thanks to cool, damp weather, the wilJf1res that have pbgued
Montana all season hav1..· bL'L'Il

Pag~

for an mtcrception.
"Our defen se was trem endou s
in the first half," said first -year
head coach Ru sty Ri chards.
"We had three goa l line sta nces
wh ere we held th e m , but our
offense just wasn't there.
" Yet, for m ost of the first h alf
we are still in th e game &lt;lt 6-0.
We ne ed to get some- penetration off the· li ne," Ri chards
added . " We got th e ball imid e
the 30 several times, but co uldn't score. When we get to t hat
point we h;w(;" to ti nish if we are
going to be successful."
Richards added, "We passed
well but cou ldn't' sustain a dnve .
Too many interceptio n s :mJ not
being able 10 establish a running
game kill ed us."
The McGraw -En z rnn n ec -·
tion struck 1H seco nd s befOre
the half to give the Tutanas a
score 14- ll lead .
"The touchdown before halt~
' ,time really hurt," said Ri ch.1rds.
.. "We had been stutllng tht:m
reall y !(OOd def&lt;·nsiw ly. then

Pie!!•• see Southern. Paae Bl

ern had made
at21-13 .

a guud ga n il· of lt

"Our defense n ee ds ~otne
work," Eastern hea d coach Scott
C h ristman said aft er the g-J nJ c.
"We came imo th e ga me think ing if we cou ld d ow down their
ru nning ga m e .1 nd cspcct,dly
Brooker, we wo uld h:lvt· ,, good
chance. We d id that , bu t 'their
passing gamt• ju't picked m
apart."
The Eagle" .trt• gotng back to
their old dd't·nst\·c phtfo,.ophy
for wluch Christnl cttl ts "iO well
noted .
After an ea rl y Fort Fryt_• score.
E&lt;1sccrn came n~ht h&lt;lr k \'·:irh .1
Garrett Karr to C h ri .~ Lyom 56yard pas~ play f()r ~l touchdown
with Br.1d Willford ,\Ciding the
cxtr;l point kick, the SL'(Wl' nl'd at·
7- 7.
After two more Fort Frye
scor't)S. Eastern again aired it out
when Karr hrt Lyons for his second -touc hdown JSsault. a 40yard completion for the sco n:
with the kick f.1 ilin !&gt;.
Uut it onlv rook 14 ~ t'l'nnds
for the motn cntum to changl'
and a 77-yanl klck - ofl' return

Please see Eastem. Page Bl

�•
.'1

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Reform hopeful files for funds
WASHINGTON (AP) - Reform Parry presidential hopeful
John Hagelin has ft!ed papers with federal election officials laying
claim to $12.6 million re.erved for the party's nominee.
Hagelin officiJh said the forms, filed Friday with the Feder:!lElection Commission, reflect that he is on the ballot in 11 states as
rhe party 's candidate for president.
Election law requires a "minor parry" candidate seeking federal
funding to certifY they are on the ba llot in at least 10 states.
The FEC has 10 days after the all the necessary papers are filed to
~ssue a ruling.
Pat Buchana n, who also claims the party nomillltion, filed simibr documents a week earlier.
Both Hagelin and Buchanan claimed the Reform mantle last
month at the party's conve ntion, which ended with namin g of separat~ rr\;.·side-ntial nominee}.
Hagelin is on the ballot 111 Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, New
Mex1co. Ohm, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Washinb&gt;ton state and
Wyoming, officials said.

Mean tune, H agelm and h11 all1es filed a claim in a California state
asking: a judge to dec Lire him and running mate Nat CJoldh .tbcr th e sok nominees.
The :l•.:t wn fo llowt.·d by o ne day :1 similar cbim by Buc hanan's
CH: twn sec kll1g h:·gal rt·cogmuon o f Buchanan and running matt'
Ezob Foster J~ the: tru e nomm ecs.
Both sick· ~ .1rgut: th :tt bee.~ use the 1utional co nvention WJS hdd in
Long lk:tdt. tilt' :-. tatt· court tht·re has jurisdi ction over party activ- ·

C{)U rt

J[it.;s !ltltio nwtdc. ~

A ht&gt;.1r ing on th e m&lt;Hter was scht•duled for Thursday.

Buffalo teachers call for strike
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - A teac hers strike was called Thursday
after th,· exewtiw board of the Buffalo Teachers Federation rejected an offer m.1Je by the Board of Education.
The Buffalo teachers executiw comnuttee met Thursday mornmg befo re thl" sta rt of classes and voted unammously to call a citywide stnke .
"This move is so mething that we've been forced into," BTF president Philip Rumore said. " Thi&gt; is not something that we do lightly."
The sc hool boa rd had no immediate comment. A spokesman said
board members were working on contingency plan.
Rumore was served a co urt injunction Wednesday - the first day
of sc hool for the 47,000-student Jistrict - reinfor.:ing a state law
that bars a walkout . Sho rtly after the papers were served, the board
proposed a four-year contract, but union officials rejected the offer.
Ac cording to union officials, the latest contract proposal offered
teachers $30 million over four years but would scale back health
care costs, espeCially for retirees. The clistr·i ct's 3,800 teachers earn an
average of$55 ,000 a year.
With a $5.5 million strike fund in place, the teachers have been
prepared to walk even though they could lose pay and face stiff
fmes.
The teachers' last contract expired in June 1999.

Thursday, September 7, 2000

Pomeroy, MlddJeport, Ohio

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tech stocks tumble 'or second straight day
NEW YORK (AP) - Tech stocks tumbled
for a second straight session Wednesday as analysts c'u t their ratings on several high-profile
compani es, while blue chips moved higher on
news of a major deal rn the financial services
industry
The high-tech driven Nasdaq composite
index was off 129.84 at 4,013.34.
The Dow Jones industrial average closed up
50.03 at I 1 ,310.64, and rhe Smndard &amp; Poor's
500 index was down 14.83 at I ,4S2.25.
Tech stocks feU for a second day, pnmarily
because of more analyst downgrades of prominent companies. On Tuescby, the high-tech
stocks slipped after a prominent analyst lowered

his rating on Intel.
Shares of Mlcron Technology feU $9.50 ro
$68.75 Wednesday after Donaldson, Lufkin &amp;
Jenrette lowered its rating o n the memory chipmaker &amp;om "buy" to "underperform."
And telecom provider WorldCom fell $2.25
to $3 I .50 after analysts from Lehman Brothers
and Wachovia Securities downgraded the stock.
" I thrnk those downgrades are concerning
people about third-quarter earnings, so you're
seeing weakness in those stocks;' said Barry
Berman, managing clirector of equity trading for
Robert W Baird &amp; Co. in Milwaukee.
Shares of MP3 .com fell 69 cents - more
than 8 percent- to $7.88 after a federal judge

ruled Wednesday that the company had willfully violated copyrights of musi c companies and
awarded Uniwrsal Music Group $25,000 per
CD. a penalty tim eould r~ach as mu ch as $250
million.
Yahoo', which has been on a slide in recent
sessions, fell $5.06 to $112.06, and continued to
fall in after-hours trailing after Dow Jon es News
Service reported that the company's CEO told
investors at a conference that ouline advertising
spending was bem~; cut back. D ow Jones later
filed a clarification of the CEO's suremerm,
quoting Jeff Kough: as saying that tightenin g in
the Internet adverrismg markt·t "takt:s 3 Littl e of
the upside away in thl· ncar tL"rm.'~

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball, Page B2
Tiwiessi's excels on &amp; offfield, Page B2
NASCAR Notebook, Page B6 ·
Daily Scoreboard, Page B5

THURSDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

WASHINGTON (Al') - Ford
blame-d Firt:stoth.' Fin._•swnl' hmted at a problem with Ford vehicles. The new N otion al Highwl\'
Traffic Safety Administrauon
chief blamed them both . And
lawmakers rebuked all three fot
dozens of fatal accidents that may
be linked to d eferti w llndgestone/Firesh: l1t'

tires on

Ford

vehicles.
But more than I 3 straight
hours of congressional h,·ar ings
Wednesday didn't determine
what is happening With Bridgestone/ Firestone tires and Ford
trucks, primarily rile Explorer
SUV, that has ca used them to be
linked to 88 deaths and at least
250 injuries.
"Countless Americans are o n
the road today p1cking up their
kid1, driving to work, and th e last
thing that &gt;hould worry th em is
the quality and the soundness o f
their tires," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich
. "It is unconp

scmnabk that so ·many h ave been
pL1 ccd in this kind of situarion .''
.l3ut bwmakL'rS ;lrc:n 't finishe-d.
Sen. John M cCo in . R-Ariz., plans
to hold hearrngs of his own next
week. "T hi s is JUSt the beginning
of this investigative pro cess," said
Rep . llilly Tauzin, R-La ., who led
the H o use hearing Wednesday.
Ford Motor· Co. CEO Jacques
Nasser blam ed the problem on
w hat he called "defec tive " Firestone tirt•s but promised changes
in how Ford ope rates, including
notifying Am e rican officials when
the car company makes any safety changes tn its overseas markets .
Ford has come under fire for
beginning a Firestone tire recall
in 16 foreign countries, including
the Persian Gulf, more than a year
before the U.S. recall started.
"How in th e world can corporate
officllls all ow a danger to go forward in America while protectin g
the Saudis?" said Sen. Arlen
Specter, R - Pa.

tamed enough that loggers on

WyoJmng .111d Tt~X.l S , .1l L' l)rding
tu t hL' Nation.d l nrcragt:tKy Fire

IJ.1ho, Mississippi.

Nt'\';H.I.I .

Smuh

D~tkt)[;l, Mnnt.lll.l , N L' \\' JV 1L'XIL·o.

T hu rsday were bemg allowed
back into forests.
"Those guys got . hit really
hard ," said Patrick H effernan. ,1
spokesman for thL' N1 o ntana
Logging Associatlo11. ''That ·s four
weeks o f lost work."
The JOOS arc still considered
"high risk fire operation s," and
will be prohibited I p.m . to I
a.m. Workers must also patrol
work sites for an h o ur after they
stop.
Firefighting efforts in Montana were scaling back as crews
were leaving by th e planeful
either to return hom e or go to
other fires across the cou ntry. At
least 300 firefighters returned to
their homes in the southeast ern
and southwestern United States

Ccntt'r

11 1

U01sc. ltLlho. N ,ltion-

\\'id~. lirt•s

h:wc bl!l'llcd IIHlrc
than (dJ million .Jeres thi s yc;'l r.

Nearly 111.1100 tirdighters .1 rc
m Montana b.ntling tht· stJtl:''s 24
Lugcst tires 011 (,45.2Hl) .Kn:s.
Mrkc Stearm . .1 lirefighter
from R osco mmon , MH:IL .J&lt;&gt;in cd

nearly 500 other firefi ght ers
waiting for word on their nex t
stop.
"We wen: ho ping I~J r another
assignmcm," he said . "We have
14-day assigmncnts on thcsc
Wes tern tires, and o ur asstgnmt.•nt
won't bt' up until m.-xr Monday.
bu t It look li ke we 're gmng tube
(demobilrzed) beca use th ere's no
fire activity right now. The rains
really help ed."

Marauders and Raiders ready to do battle
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Prep Sports

Firefighters heading home,
Plenty of blame goe,s
loggers
heading
back
around for tire problems
earlier 111 thc wcck .
A-;, ofWt•dnL'~tby. H(l l.1rgt· f1n:~
WL'I'L' burmng on ) _(, mdl!on
.1cn::- 111 Ar k.lllsa.;,_ C .1lifor ni .1.

(

~'

/

-

A weekly look at the region's
top football teams, as voted
by Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers . (First-place
votes in parentheses)
Team
1. Ironton (2·0)
2. Logan (2·0)
3. Parkersburg (2 ·0)
4. Point Pleasant (2·0)
5. Gallipolis (2·0)
6. Jackson (2·0)
7. Miller (2·0)
8. Fort Frye (2·0)
9. Trim ble (2·0)
10. Ross SE (2·0)

Votes
38 (2)

36 (1)
34 (1)
26
25
21
14
11

ROCK SPRINGS M eigs will be
looking for their second win of the young
season , and River Valley their first when
th e two neighbors meet o n the gridiron
this Friday evening at C h eshire .
Meigs lost tneir opening game of the
year at Gallipolis 18-6, then bounced back
last week to defeat Athens 19-7 on the
strength of a strung second half.
Coach Larry Carter and the Raiders
dropped their first contest 41-6 to Ross
Southeastern, th en lost a 6-0 contest to
Fairland last Friday.
Coach Mike Chancey's Marauders battled Ath ens to a 7-all ti e in the first half at

Pomeroy. But the second half was alL
Meigs, the Marauders controlled th e line
of scrimmage on both sides of the lin e.
Jeremy Roush broke loose for 1 13 yards
in 22 carries last week, wh ile senior fullback Chris Jeffers added 70 yards in 14
ca rries . Roush was also one for one pass.:.
ing for 33 yards, se tting up the Marauders
second rouchdown.
Soph omore quarterback Kyle Hannan
conti nu ed to play well in relief of injured
starter B. J. Kennedy. Hannan was six of
nine passing for 57 yards. for th e year Kyle
is 11 of 20 for 131 yards. Adam Bullington
is th e M arauders leading receiver with
nine catches for 78 yards .
In th e second half against the Bulldogs

the maroon and gold defense played out- win , but last week the · R ai ders lost a
standing. C hris J effers led the Marauder . heartbreaker to Fairland.
defense in limiting Athens to only one
The Dragons scored o n their first posfirst down , and 12 total yards in 11 plays. session of th e second half for a 6-0 lead.
Jeffers un officially had 1.1 stops for the The Raiders had a Golden opportunity
Meigs defense .
when fullbac.k Nick George broke free
The Marauders outstanding tight end and appeared to have open field to the
and defensive end Matt Stewart, along Dragon goal line, but as he crossed the
with running back Tyson Lee were taken Fairland 30 yard line, tl1e ball slipped from
by the Mei gs County E.M.S. 10 the hos- his hands.
pital due to injnry after last weeks game.
Offen sive lineman Steve Wright fell on
Stewart is good to go this week, while Lee the lose football, bm th e it seenied to take
along with B. J. Kennedy and linebacker the wmd out of the Raiders' sails. River
Ross Stewart are questionable this week Valley also had a tou chdown wiped o ut
with injuri es.
on a penalty.
In th e Raiders two losses, Ross SouthPlease see Meigs, Pa&amp;e B8
eastern jumped out to a 41-0 lead in their

Santiago's Slam Saves the Reds

To eligible for The OVP 10, a
team must either: a.] be from
the Mason-Gallla-Metgs area;
b.) be a local conference member; or c.) play at least one
game against local teams.

Football
TVC

.Ohio

Belpre
Meigs
Well ston
Nelsonville· York
Alexander
Vinton County

TVC

ALL

0·0
0·0
0· 0
0·0
0·0
0·0

1·1

Mi ller
Trimble
Eastern
Federa l Hocking
Southern
Waterford

1-1
1·1
1·1

0·2
0·2

NEW YORK (AP) - Thirty- eight people and 11 companies
have been indicted by a Manhattan grand jury on charges of
siphoning millions of dollars from city construction projects
through bribery, bid-rigging and other crimes.
We dnesday's 57-count indictment claimed the defendants, called
"The Lucchese Construction Group" by investi'g ators, illegally used
nonunion labor on eight public and private projects and paid workers les s than th e legal wage.
AdditiotJal ly, crooked contr!tors in the group billed public agenCies and private developers as if they were paying wages in co mpli:mce with the law, the indictment said.
The d1fference between what the contractors billed the proje ct
spon sors :md their actual labor costs w.e nt to bribes givl'n to cornrpt
union officials who let them use nonunion labor, District Attornc:y
R obert M o rge nthau sa id.
The br ib es constituted a "mob tax " o f at least 5 percent of a contnct's vJ!ue. and the payoff was possible only with thl" cooperation
l&gt;( the co rrupt t:ontractors, he said.
·
" If the contractors didn't go along. the deal couldn't go forward,"
Morgen thau sa id. "These conrracmrs kne\v what they were doing."
Six o f th e 38 people also were named in a six-count federal
indictment, which included charges of conspiracies involving wire
fraud or extortion o r both. They face up to 20 years in prison if

ffi

LINCOLN

Ford Motor Company Authorized Clearance

SEQ

All

0·0

2-0

0·0 . 2·0
0·0 . 2·0

0·0
0·0
0·0

2·0
0·2

0·0

0·2

1·1

o;o o-2

ALL

Wahama
South Gallia
Hannan

1-1

0·2

0-2

Friday's Games
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30
Eastern at Wahama , 7 :30
Hannan at Buffalo· Putnam, 7:30

w~~~'!f~~atch

E'lstern at Hannan . no report

~~~-·'­
!'

ov

~\&amp;br'Qf~

1

DOWN*

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
PROGRAM
AVAilABLE..'"'
Repo • Divorce??
-cl__.., , 1 . No Embarrassment . .-You're Treated with Respect!

30

Years

Carl Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1 .. 800-272-5179.
DRIVE HOME IN A CAH OR TRUCK TODAY!!
--'-----

rc nJc.·nng tu FB I agt:nt\, at!thontil'S s;ud .

--

Today 's Matches
Southern at Miller, 5:55
Eastern at Federal Hocking , 5:55
Belpre at Meigs, 5 55
South Gallia at Ohio Valley Christian , 5:00
Gallia Academy at Warren. 5:15
River Valley at Jackson , 5:15

Golf

'SubiO Ct l o progra m

•

Dunn g tht· two- ho ur &lt;;tege. the gunman flrL"d one shot into the
Lc dmg. bm H dtdn 'r .1ppe.ll' .1nynnc \\'JS o;;c nously hurt 1,11 thl..'

.1 Jo7 Cil hu-.. t.l gt.·~ .

0·2
0·2
0·2

0-0
0·0

Area non-league

WESTMINSTER. C,,Ji f (AI') - A glll rman held ·about 20 p.eoplc h '"'"~'· durmg .1 bungbl bank robbery Wedrfesday before sur-

(n.:t·d

0-0

o-o

Friday 's Games
Gall1a Academy at Ironton
Point Pleasant at Man
Meigs at R&gt;ver Valley
Marietta at Hamilton Twp.
Parkersburg South at Warren
Alexander at Athens
Vinlon County at Jackson
Logan at Zanesvi lle

Sandwich brand recalled

r.J keovl' r, poll ct.' ( )tl'i ce r Rnb111 Kapp .;,ltd .•
After rckphon c nc gotutwm. the' gu nm.lll C.llllt' out of the B.mk
~~t"Ailli..'l'IU br.ln l' h w Hh hJ, h.tuds up .md dropped spn.:.Jd-l·.,glc to
rhc .1sph.11t_. Scn·r.1l fBI .lgenh t r.uncd tht..·ir gLtn s o u him .1 ~ otht·n
,lppro,JL heeL ti-l',kL"d .111d h.liHh.ufTcd hun .
1-ldt LOfHL'r llll.l ge' of tht· \lt'gt' .l t the ()r.mg-c County b.mk . _1)
nH i c.., ~om h e.J '&gt;t d( Ln., An ge k· ~. \\'L' rt.' o::. hown narinnall y on rde\'iswn .
Polh t' we re nonfi t..·d of rhe I p.m . holdup ancmpt by ~ stll'llt
.d.J rlll ,llld .1 tdcplwm: c.t ll 1mrdc th L· b.mk, Kapp sa id .
Shor dy .1fte r the t.1kcuva . nL.'gotJJtiOns began :tnd thl· gt.Jnlll&lt;Hl

2·0
2·0
1·1

Friday 's Games
Meigs at River Valley
South Gal lia at Southern
Eastern at Wahama
St. Charles at Nelsonville-York
Green at Trimble
Vinton County at Jackson
Frontier at Watertord
Wellston at Waverly
Alexander at Athens
Fort Frye at Belpre
Federal Hocking at Zane Trace
Ross Southeastern at Miller

Gallia Academy
Jackson
Logan
Po1nt Pleasant
Warren
Athens
Marietta
R1ver Valley

Morge nthau sa id he was unaware of the federa l indictment, btit
sa rd it is not unu sual for state and federal officials to run parallel
investigations.

Gunman surrenders to FBI

ALL

0-0
0·0

SEOAL

convicted.

MUKILTEO, Wash . (AP)- J
bo Foods is recalling its Lunchbox Smoked Turkey Sandwic he s due IQ,.,possible contamination,
though no illnesses have been reported. '
The bacteria Liste ria mo nocytogenes was found in routine sampling by the state Agriculture Department, the company said in a
Wednesday news release.
.
Symptoms of infection in healthy individuals in.clude fever,
headache, nausea, stomac h ache and diarrhea . The bactena can cau se
fa tal illness in the very old and very young, however, and has been
linked to mi sca rriage s and stillbirths.
The recalled san dw ich es were made at a plant in Mukilteo, about
30 miles north of Seattle, and sold in convenience stores in Washington , Oregon, Idah o, Arizona and southern California. They
we rgh (, ou nces each and have a red-a nd-bl ue label with a Sept. 25
expiratJOn date.
The company has stopped productron of the product while it
investigates th e problem wrth the Food and Drug Administration .
Pc·op le who bought the sandwrches can return them to the place
of purc hase fo r .1 fu ll refund . Consumers with questions can call
HIIO- 5 (&gt;2-6507.

TVC

Today'a Matches
Meigs at TVC Ohio , 4:30 (at
Oxbow)
Point Pleasant at Huntington, TBA
(at Riviera)

LONG GONE - Benito Sa ntiago be lted what turned out to be the game-winning home run Wednesday
as the Reels defeated the Mets, 11-8. (AP)

195

RIVER RD.

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

740-446-9800 800-272-5179

[Parts &amp;Service Now Open Saturdays

F ::~ x

Mt.'l!!' ( :nunry ~port news
to rill' I &gt;&lt;~!h \ t· rHinel at 992-

2 15 7. l ~ n! .lll Hem -.. to g.lltn hun d a t.'llrl' k.u1 i..'t.rorn .
( ~o nr.ll t "POrt'i edit or Andrew
( ~:1rt t'r .It lJ'-):! - 52~7. exr. 21.

C INCINNATI (AP) - Ben- Benitez.
ito Santiago was thinking sacri" If you look down ou r roster,
fice fly and hit a grand slam . we didn't have much left, and I
John Franco was second-guess- would rathq stay with Benny:"
ing himself for giving Santiago McKeo n said. " All good relievthe c han ce.
ers have bad days. H e made a
" I was ju st trying to hit a fly mi stake and got one up, and
ball to th e outfield," Santiago Benny took advantage."
said. "I was trying for one and I
13enirez blew a save fo r the
got four."
fift h time in 42 chan ces thi s
Santiago hit a go-a head slam year.
otT Armand o llenitez as the
" Wh en I gave hi1h the ball I
Ci ncinnati Reds ra llied with a sa id , 'Pick me up,"' Franco sai d.
six- run eighth inning Wednes- " The guy's been automatic all
day to beat the New York M ets year. But he's a human hemg,
11 - 8.
and we all make mistakes."
New York, just 1-5 in SepJoh n Riedling (2- 1), the lifth
tember, had a three-run lead of six Cin cin n at i pit c hn s,
wh en wh en C hris Stynes and allowed one hit and walked one
Keh Griffey Jr. hit consecutive in one inning, and Da nny
one-out singles otT Turk Wen- Graves p itched a perfect ni nth
dell, who relieved Dennis Cook for his 25th sa ve rn .)ll c hances.
at th e start of the eighth.
Gri ffey hit his 3Rth hom er of
John Franco (S-4) came in the season , and Casey add ed his
and gave up RBI sin gles to Sea n 12th . Todd Pratt and Matt FranCasey and Dmitn Youn g, then cq homered for th e Mcts, who
walked Alex O choa, loading th e bega n the day one game be hind
bases.
Atl an ta in th e NL East.
"It's a game we shou ld have
Mets starter Bobby J. Jones
won that we let go," Franco allowed five runs and stx hits in
said . " If I would have made my two innings, anJ Bobby M.
pit ches, maybe t hin gs wo uld Jo nes followed w ith four
have turned out different. When inninb'S of shutout relief.
I don't hit my spots, good hitt ers
" I didn 't have good stutf ar all
are going to take advantage of today." Bobby .J. Jone s said .
it ."
" There are times during the
Santiago homered to left on season when yo u don't ; th ere
Benitez' first pitch, his fifth are jmt those kin cis' of days ."
homt:r of the s.eason and sevIt wa s the first time in Mcts
enth ca reer slam - rh e fi rst hi story that pitchers with the
since Aug. 11, 1997, at Detroit.
sa mt' first and last names fol" I got a good, solid swing on lowed each oth er, altho ugh Bob
the ba ll ," said Santiago, who l. Mrll er and Bob G. Miller
went 2-for-5 with five RBis.
pitched in the- sa me g:a ml' tivc
Reds manager Jack M e Keon times in 19(,2.
sa id he never considered using a
Red s startn R ob Bell. who
left-handed pinch hitter for pirchcli J career- h igh e1~h t
Sa nti ago after New York
Please see Reds. Page B5
brought in the nght - handed

Tomadoes, Rebels Eagles, Falcons go head-to-head
look for first win
Scon

WoLFE

good running backs and we
need to get the ba ll in their
EAST MEIGS Coming hands," Cromley said. "We're ju st
imo this seaso n, the Waham a going to turn arou nd and hand it
White Falcons hoped that a to th em. Sometimes weill keep
combination of experien ce and feeding the one with the hot
speed would equal :r lot of wins. hanJ.s. l'ut basi cally they ca n all
At 1- 1 th at has yet to be proven . Jo t he JOb."
Th e Wlmc Falcons posted a 4- " Wah.ama 1s also banking that
6 record last seaso n and have a its overall ream spt"e d wi ll g ive its
nl11l1ber of rl'turning playerli.
Si1Ltad so m e advantages. Wah ama
"We 've got a team that got J
doesn't have ,1 !m of size but
lut of exp~ricnce playmg h~t ac corJi'n g to its' coach is ~ retry
yt'ar," said hr;ld coach Ed Crom - qm ck for a high sch ool oflensive
ley. "We playe d a lot of sop ho- lme . Everybody on the line fa lls
mores and jumors and they betwee n 21tl and 235 .
bring game expericnl!l, back
Defensive sta ndo ut and talent with th e m .''
ed receiver Adam Rickard went
Sen ior ' running back l"tobert down hard with a broken colarBrinker (5- 10 , ISS lbs.) junior bont' one possession after ca tchback ll randon Hankinson (!&gt;-0, lug a 4.1 -yard circm Crlrch for a
165 lbs.) w ill nc·cd to put up \Ouc hdown .
so me big numbers if the White
AJditionally, Tyler R oney
Falcons are goi ng to be succe~­ grabbed two fumble recoveries
ful. Along with th em. runmng in a goo d dcft~nsivt: effort .·
back / lmeba cker Eran Brmch (5Quarte rba ck Bradford Clark
7, 175 lbs. ) will haw to step up also passed for 124 yards. so East big on both sides of the h,1ll.
ern mu st b,· ready to stop both
llranrh , Adam Mitche ll and tht: pass and th e run .
R y.m Mitch ell hatf over 100
At time'i in its SJ- 1J druhbt ng
tot.d yards ru'lhing last week in ' against Fort fr yl', cspcci .illy
Wah.tm.1 's 39-0 win t)n·r Ft·lh:r.ll otlt·nslvt:ly. Eastern looked good
Ho cking.
and put 2'14 yards nfle n&lt;c in t he
' 'Wt· fed lih· we'vt" got three record books. At one point, EastBY

OVP CORRESPONDENT

BY

Scon

WOLFE

OVP CORRESPONDENT

RAC IN E This Friday
night the Southern Tornadoes,
winless at 0-2, gear up for their
home opener at Adams Freid in
Raciue. The Tornadoe s play
an other winless club in South
Ga llia (0-2).
La&lt;t ye ar m Mcrccrv rlle,
Southe rn won 54- 27.

The Portsmourh- East T1rt;1ns
added the Southern Tornadoes
to their list last Friday night
with a 20- 0 win at Allard Park.
- East is now 2-0 .
The ditTerenc.e in this ganie
may have been in th e tn:nchcs
w here East domin ated the line
of sc rimmage and racked up 223
yards rushing. Southern mean wh ile. was limited just 16 positive ya rds led b ~ junior Urice
H1ll \\Ito , arn~d two· tim es for
14 ymJ,
Wh~n
ht• was n lt getting
&lt;i &lt;Jc kt_•d , '&gt;t'n tor quancrba ck
J o n:uhan 1::\'.ltPi .;;q ueaked ou t an
11 -21&gt; passing night for 126
yard' an.d thre e interct:pti ons.
Urandou Pit_·rcc tossed o ne pass
1

•••••

Benny's slam

lifts Redlegs

8
7

Hocking

38 face racketeerin1 charps

81

111urscl•y, September 7, 2000

The OVP

HELENA , Mont . (Al') - For
th t~ first time in weeks., the loggers ore back.
Thanks to cool, damp weather, the wilJf1res that have pbgued
Montana all season hav1..· bL'L'Il

Pag~

for an mtcrception.
"Our defen se was trem endou s
in the first half," said first -year
head coach Ru sty Ri chards.
"We had three goa l line sta nces
wh ere we held th e m , but our
offense just wasn't there.
" Yet, for m ost of the first h alf
we are still in th e game &lt;lt 6-0.
We ne ed to get some- penetration off the· li ne," Ri chards
added . " We got th e ball imid e
the 30 several times, but co uldn't score. When we get to t hat
point we h;w(;" to ti nish if we are
going to be successful."
Richards added, "We passed
well but cou ldn't' sustain a dnve .
Too many interceptio n s :mJ not
being able 10 establish a running
game kill ed us."
The McGraw -En z rnn n ec -·
tion struck 1H seco nd s befOre
the half to give the Tutanas a
score 14- ll lead .
"The touchdown before halt~
' ,time really hurt," said Ri ch.1rds.
.. "We had been stutllng tht:m
reall y !(OOd def&lt;·nsiw ly. then

Pie!!•• see Southern. Paae Bl

ern had made
at21-13 .

a guud ga n il· of lt

"Our defense n ee ds ~otne
work," Eastern hea d coach Scott
C h ristman said aft er the g-J nJ c.
"We came imo th e ga me think ing if we cou ld d ow down their
ru nning ga m e .1 nd cspcct,dly
Brooker, we wo uld h:lvt· ,, good
chance. We d id that , bu t 'their
passing gamt• ju't picked m
apart."
The Eagle" .trt• gotng back to
their old dd't·nst\·c phtfo,.ophy
for wluch Christnl cttl ts "iO well
noted .
After an ea rl y Fort Fryt_• score.
E&lt;1sccrn came n~ht h&lt;lr k \'·:irh .1
Garrett Karr to C h ri .~ Lyom 56yard pas~ play f()r ~l touchdown
with Br.1d Willford ,\Ciding the
cxtr;l point kick, the SL'(Wl' nl'd at·
7- 7.
After two more Fort Frye
scor't)S. Eastern again aired it out
when Karr hrt Lyons for his second -touc hdown JSsault. a 40yard completion for the sco n:
with the kick f.1 ilin !&gt;.
Uut it onlv rook 14 ~ t'l'nnds
for the motn cntum to changl'
and a 77-yanl klck - ofl' return

Please see Eastem. Page Bl

�Thursday, September 7, 2000
B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy,

Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7,
',

Th~

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

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE

. AMERICAN LEAGUE

Giants win 8th straight game N.s win, creep up on Marin~rs
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

At this point, no one is stopping the San Francisco Giants.
Ceruinly not the Philadelphia
Phillies.
The Giants won their eighth in
a row Wednesday night, beating
the Phillies 5-4 on Ellis Burks'
. infield single in the eighth inning.
The win gave San Francisco a
: season-high 7 1/2-game lead
· over Arizona m the NL West and
: the best record in the league.
"We're getting a different hero
: every time," Burks said. " That's
' the sign of a good team. This is
· the time of the year you want to
be in there and making the most
of it."
The Phillies lost their eighth
straight game, leaving them with
the wont record in the majors.
. Philadelphia has dropped 11 in a
: row in San Francisco, dating to
· Aug. 30, I 998, at the old Candle. stick Park.
· "They just don·~ make mistakes
:and they take advantage of your
: mistakes," Philadelphia starter
: Randy Wolf said. "They're a darn
: good team. We just couldn't get
:anything going."
. In other NL games, Atlanta
·downed Arizona 7-1, Cincinnati
: rallied past New York 11-8, Pitts: burgh beat Los Angeles 8-3.
:Montreal topped Sr. Louis 7-2.
: Chicago defeated Colorado 8-5
: in 1 I innings, Houston beat
:Florida · 13-5 and San Diego
;edged Milwaukee 7~6.
' The Giants took a 4-0 lead in
:the first. Barry Bonds hit an RBI
:single, Burks singled with two
:outs and Russ Davis hit a three;run homer.

The Phillies eventually tied it
before running into reliever
Adam Fultz, who struck out a
career-high five in two scoreless
innings.
In the Giants eighth, Vicente
Padilla walked the bases loaded.
Burks hit a ball into the hole and
third baseman Scott Rolen fielded it, but could not make a play.
Braves 7. Diamondbacks 1
Chipper Jones hit a pair of RBI
singles and Kevin Millwood shut
down Arizona for eight innings in
a cold drizzle.
The crowd of 25,529 was the
smallest at Turner Field since the
ballpark opened in 1997.
Millwood gave up four hits and
retired I 4 straight hitters in the
middle innings. Diamondbacks
starter Armando Reynoso fell to
0-9 lifetime against Atlanta.
Pirates 8, Dodgers 3
Pittsburgh completed a 6-0 trip
to the West Coast as Brian Giles
got three hits and drove in two
runs.
The Pirates finished off their
first three-game sweep .at Dodger
Stadium since 1988 after a threegame sweep at San Diego.
Dan Serafini pitched Pittsburgh
to its season-high sixth straight
victory, a streak that has come
after a 4-17 slide. Ismae!Valdes fell
to 0-3 since being traded from
the Cubs back to the Dodgers.

Cubs 8, Rockies 5,
11 innings
Sammy Sosa hit his major
league- leading 46th homer and
scored on Mark Grace's tiebreaking triple in the 1I th inning at
Coors Field.
Sosa had three hits and drove in

three runs as Chicago ended a
six-game losing streak
Colorado's Todd Helton went
0-for-5, dropping his · major
league-leading average to .3&amp;4.
Expos 7, Cardinals 2
Vladimir Guerrero hit two
homers and Montreal halted St .
Louis' six-game winning streak.
Guerrero, who had never
homered at Busch Stadium, has
10 multihomer games in his
career, induding six this year.
The Expos stopped a threegame losing streak. The Cardinals'
string of 87 straight innings without an error ended on shortstop
Edgar Renteria's misplay in the
eighth.

Padres 7, Bre"ers 6
· Pitcher Woody Williams got
three hits as San Diego beat Milwaukee before just 13,777 fans,
the Padres' smallest home crowd
this season.
Williams' second three-hit
game of the season raised his
average to .363 (12-for-33) •ince
returning from the disabled list
July 2.

Astroa 13, Marlins S
Chris Truby hit a two-run
homer during a seven-run fifth
inning as Houston beat florida at
Enron Field.
. Winner Jose Lima gave . up
home runs to Preston Wilson and
pinch-hitter Chris Clapinski.
Lima has allowed 42 homers,
eight short of the major league
record Bert Blyleven set with
Minnesota in 1986 and four shy
of Robin Roberrs' NL record.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mark Mulder helped the Oakland Athletics put more pressure
on Seattle.
"I was really pumped up for the
game. I was excited;' Mulder said
after Oakland beat the Boston
Red Sox 6-4 Wednesday night
and moved I 1/2 games behind
the Mariners in the closest race
for a playoff spot.
Mulder (8-10) gave up two
runs and five hits in six innings
for Oakland, which headed home
for a weekend series against
Tampa Bay.
"He did a nice job, battled and
gave us all he could ," Oakland
manager Art Howe said. "The
bullpen did the rest."
At Fenway Park, Matt Stairs
homered as the A's won for the
fourth time in five games. Jim
Mecir pitched two innings for his
fifth save.
Boston dropped three games
back in the AL wild card· race.
Rolando Arrojo (4-2) allowed
four runs and eight hits in three
innings, the shortest of his eight
starts sirice Colorado traded him
July 27.
"He just got hit," Red Sox
manager Jimy Williams said. "It
· happens to all pitchers. They're a
good hitting team over there."
Indians 6, Devil Rays 2
Roberto Alomar homered
twice, and Chuck Finiey (12-10)
combined with Paul Shuey on a
four-hitter at Jacobs Field as
Cleveland won its fourth straight.
The Indians, 23-10 since Aug.
2, increased their lead to three
games in the AL wild card race.
Travis Harper (0-1) was the

1965) and Cesar Tovar (Sept. 22, •
1968) ..
Charles Johnson, Greg Nomm
and Magglio Ordonez •!so
Blue Jays 7, Mariners 3
Carlos Delgado hit a three-run homered for the AL Centroldouble and Joey Hamilton (2-0) leading Whi·te Sox. Chicago
allowed two 'runs and four hits in scored seven runs in the flrst
seven innings at SkyDome as inning off Rick Hell;ng (14-ll),
Toronto stopped a four-game los- who was chased after seven run s
and five hits in rwo-thirds of ;an
ing streak.
Alex Rodriguez hit a two-run inning, the shortest otart sir]ce
homer (or the Mariners, who 1994.
Kip Wells (5-7) gave up .;nc
have lost 17 of their last 23. Seattle had won its previous seven unearned run and four hits
seven innlngs.
games at SkyDome.
Angels 1, Tigers 0
John Halama (11-8) gave up
Scott Schoeneweis (7-7) sl1ut
four runs - three earned - and
out Detroit on two singles for
six hits in 3 1-3 innings.'
Royals 3, Yankees 2
eight innings and visiting Ana Carlos Febles doubled home heim stopped a season-high s;x·
the tying run and scorecl on John- game losing streak.
ny Damon's single as Kansas City
Mo Vaughn drove in the lon e
rallied in the bottom of the ninth run with an RBI grounder in the
off Mike Stanton (2-3), who blew third off Steve Sparks (6-3), who
had won six straight decisions.
his fourth straight save chance.
New York's Chuck Knoblauch Troy Glaus tied an Angels record
went 0-for-4 in his first game · with three doubles.
Schoeneweis and reliever Troy
since going on the disabled list
Aug. 3 with tendinitis in his right Percival combined to hand th e
elbow. The second baseman was Tigers their major leagu e- leading
mistake-free recording two assists. 12th shutout.
'I'wins 4, Orioles 1
Derek Jeter and Paul O'Neill
homered for the Yankees, 7-2
Brad Radke (11 -1 4) pitched a
against Kansas City this year. six-hitter for his third complete
Brian Meadows (4-2) pitched a game of the season and Jacqu e
nine-hitter for his second com- Jones drove in the go-ahead run
plete game of the season.
in the seventh at the Metrodome .
Sidney Ponson (7 - 11 ) had been
White Sox 13, Rangers 1
frank Thomas hit his AL-lead- 5-0 against the Twins, including
ing 4 ht home run on a night 2-0 this season . He gave up aU
when Scott Sheldon of the four runs - three earned - and
Rangers played all nine positions nine hits in 7 2-3 innings, struck
at Comiskey Park.
out a career-high II and walked
He became just the third player one.
to play all nine spots in one game,
joining Bert Campaneris (Sept. 8 ,

loser. Devil Rays starter Ryan
Rupe left after three innings with
stiffness in his right biceps.

&lt; ~..- • •

GnTV
AIITimu-m
Cnofbman Truck, Krotar 200
a p.m. • Thursday • ESPN2
• Buoch S.rl11, Autolltt Pllltlnum 210
7:30p.m. • Frlda1 • ESPN
• WlnotGn Cup, C - o t Manta Cillo 400

:m

7:30p.m. • Saturday • ESPN

-- - ·

1. BoODy LIOOme, 3.538
l. ... 1.-rtU, 3,5:J7

.. WII'G Bil'tOfl, 3,139
1. Man! Martlrl, 3,122

10. Jlff Gotoon, 2,9QO

.......

m
::tl::

.....
ro
0

·-c:Q)
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·-'
"'0

ro
.I:.
0

.....

'

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) -At 6-foot-7, Marshall defe~sive
end Paul Toviessi is a daunting figure, whether it's across the line of
~crinunage or sitting ·at a piano keyboard.
·
: The same finger.; that will grasp Michigan State linemen on Saturl!ay are beginning to fulfill a dream oflearning to read notes and play
l:hords.
; "What made me want to do it? It's just something I wanted to do
for a long time," Toviessi said Tuesday. "That's aU I had left was elec!ives. That's alii got left. I figured I'd take piano."
' It's not just something to pass the time, either. He's serious about
learning. Recently, the normally reserved Toviessi came bouncing up
to defensive ends coach Mark Gale like a child at Christmas.
·
: "He couldn't wait ro tell me that he'd made a 100 on his piano pre~e ntation," Gale said. " It might have been Chopsticks, but he was
J:lappy."
,
. It's only his second week in class, so there's no telling what the future
holds. Toviessi's taking it one note at a time.
· " His fingers are really wide on the keys," said his teacher, graduate
student Sandra Fox. "We really haven't done a lot of playing yet to see
if that will present a problem."
" I think it's relaxing," Toviessi said. "I play for fun . I don't want to
play anywhere, just for my own amusement."
Toviessi could use some relaxation .
His mother died suddenly last month, something Toviessi doesn't
discuss, even with his own coaches. He was at a football function in
C harleston when it happened .
Gale, who lost his own mother three year.; ago, has let Toviessi know
that the coaches are willing to listen.
"I'm here for you," Gale told Toviessi. "I know how difficult it is for

Woody Stines

"Paul i.1a complex iudir~idual. It takes .1omebody
maybe like coach (Bob) Pruett or myself to gL'I to know
Paul. I've told him I've rt.'spected and admired tile
adversity he's lrad to or•ercome in the last w11ple
of weeks. I'1•e been able to relay my experience 111ith
Pa11l and I tlrink by actually living it that it meaut
a little bit to l1im."
Marte Gala, MU dafanalve anda c011ch

you, and there's going to be times when you subconsciously want to
pick up the phone and call her. To this day, I still do it. That's understandable.'
"Paul is a complex individual," Gale said. "It takes somebody maybe
like coach (Bob) Pruett or myself to get to know Paul. I've told him
I've respected and admired the adversity he's had to overcome in the
last couple of weeks.
" I've been able to relay my experience with Paul and I think by
actually living it that it meant a little bit to him."
For now, football and piano are Toviessi's diversions. And - good
thing for the piano - he's pounding opposing linemen harder than
the keyboard .
He made six tackles in last week 's opening 63-7 victory over Southcast Missouri State. He also had an interception - which he promptly fumbled.
"Coach Gale let me know about it when I ca me back to the sideline. He just smiled and then I laughed," Toviessi said.

"We Want To Be Your Friends For Life"

t

Desiree Taylor

•

••• 1

Me u t •r fltD.t.o.

Tupper• Plaine, OH
740-11117-31111

Q

z

'

6. (6) Tony Stewart
l. (7) Mark Martin
8. (8) Jell Gordon
9. (9) Ward Burton
10. (10) Dale Earnhardt Jr.

&lt;

!

~

•

~
w

u

!

oldest superspeedway race.
despite the fact that he never
led e green-flag lap.
With rain and darkness
closing in, a blown engine in
Jerry Nadeau's Chevrolet
brought out a caution flag at
lap 3:21. 4lb0nte, who was
runnlnc fll'th at the time. pitted
a10na with other leaders and
won the race on ptt road.
After he took the leacl, It
began raining, and the race
was stopped after onl ~ 328 of
the scheduled 367 laps.
It was Labonte's first victory
at oarnn~ton and enable&lt;~ him
to boost his JX) int lead by 20
points to 111. Jeff Burton, who

a~

-.
_

.........

BANK

BUSCH GRAND NAnONAL
DARLINGTON, S.C.- Ford
driver Mark Martin continued
his domination of races at
Da.-llngton Raceway, winning
the Duralube 200 to sweep
the 2000 events at the 1.366m ile track,
Martin also won the pole. It
was his seventh victory at the
track. three more than retired
Harry Gent. Six of the top 10
and 10 of the top. 15 finishers
were Winston Cup regulars.

CRAnSMAN TRUCK
The Craftsman Truck Series
was off last week and will
return to action Thursday at
Ri chmond. Va.

N~

. OCt. 1

•·-

Martfli'IIU SJieeOwOV

MBrtlfiSVIIII, \18.

I.Owt'l MOCOf SiletOw_.

Coneorf, N.C.
TOIIacteJI, Ala .
RoeldtWIIm. N.C.

.Talladep SUPif$0eedWI'/
Nofth CII'DIIna SpHdway
Phoer~l.l: lnlemll:lonal Raceway

Od:. 22
Nov. 5
N011. 12

A'iondale, ,t,rll.
Hcltndhll!l, Fla.

Homett~lllml ~~

•

FEUD OfT HE WEEK

Jll!llil}l Spencer va. Brett Bodine 1
The two Ford drfvet's blamed eacn oiher for 1 erash late In
the Southern 500. •
·•a:ueaa Brett BOdine must need llt,ses or somethlnc. •

Spencir said.

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

·

BOdine retorted, •He (Spenc.er) pUt me In the wall, and
that's stupid because he took himself out. He had a &amp;DOd
race ear, afld that was dumb on his part. •
NAICAR Tlllo Wook'o M - Dutton 11- hlo opinion:
•tt •as a frustrath'llllnckient for two drivers ridltllloni dry
spel ls. Whose fault It was ls probably known oril)r by th8 two
drlvera, and t~ obviously disagreed. •

'3f/i.eet4- &amp;
'De4t4605 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

As expected, Winston Cup ar
ow r~er Cal Wells named Andy
Houston to pi lo t his McDonald's .
~ponsored Ford next year, and
Houston will apparent ly al!o drive
four more Cu p races between now
and seuon's end. "'
The 29·yea r~ld Hoo!lorl, a ~nd­
gencration driver from H ickory,
N.C. , and regular in lhe Craftsman
Truck Seri es, will lik ely face off
against C~ey Atwood and ptrhaps
Kurt Busch in the 2001 rookie·of·
the·year race. He will also be a
tea mmate to Scan Pruen, th e ex ·
upcn·whcel !itar oow driving 'Wells'
No. J2 ford .

•

..

• WMt: Kroger 200
.wnen:

a p .m .. Thursday

• Where: Richmond (Va.)
International Racewa~ (. 75-mile
track)
• Fonnllt: 200 laps/150 miles
• Detendln&amp; cllempton: Greg
Biffle
• Quellfyln&amp; record: Ron
Hornaday. Chevrotet, 121.726
mph, Sept. 4 , t997
li RKt record: Bob
Keselowski , Dodge , 104.167
mph, Sept. 4 , 1997
• Notlblt: Last year's race
was slightly shortened to 196
laps due to rain.

••••••••••••

YourTum
Linin Ft. 0. RHrltn

Dear NASCAR This Wee !c.,
Jeff Gordon is fa r from being
washed up! Howe11er, in the unlike·
ly everrlthat he never wins ano1ht:r
race, he is still Me of th e best , if
no1 THE best NASCAR ' has to

Jeff Burtqn brln&amp;&amp; a
breath of fresh elr to the
Winston Cup 5erles.
In addiUon to being a
proven winner. Burton has
an eX~IIent sense of
humor ana Is well lll(ect by

off~r.

He'll be back on top, and I can'l
wail umilthat happens!
Darl~n e Bocskor
Massena, N.Y.

fellow competltooo.

Thit relationshiP between

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I ' ve had a question for some timc
now thai no one has beer~ able l o
answer satisfactori ly.
lnslead of using reslrictor plates at
the big 1racb, why not have every·
one run a lower re11 gear ratio, possibly in ~·ombination with a rev lim·
iter, to keep the motors in one piece?
An out5ide supplier cou ld build
the rear·end center sections, and
NASCAR could supply tile rev
limiter's. Elch unit could be made
tamper proof to k.ec:p every one
honest. The plates have ruined tile
big tracks. There has to be a better
W!IY to k~ e p the speeds dow r1. Why
no1somCt.hing like this?
John Frontera
Wattsburg, Pa.

Burton end teammate Marl&lt;
Martin Ia a prime factor In
the success of Jaek
RouSh's entire raeln&amp;
oraanization.
Both Burtons - Jeff and
older brother ward - have
won races ttl/a season. The

two strike e balance between a fierce competition
on the track and a close-

ness otflt.
BefOre Sunday, the two
h&amp;d combined to win the
prevtous tnree races at
Darllncton Rac:eway, one of
stock ear raclni'S sterner
tests.

-own:
va.

Boston,

South

Aie:33
e.~

No. 99 El&lt;lde
Batteries Forcl Taurus,
owned by Roush Racine
WHI:Kim

,.Clllld:

Klmbe~e

·Paige•

,., ......... -..,;.-.,-.•swr·jit,.._llalipl
................ 1M,....,
JaM~

wonh!eftNtW!rllo
, . .,.~ ........ 12~~

(5)
Crew chief: Ft8nk

..

StOddard

00 you think the loutnem
SOOwooaolllnthlllthlo
~-r II Bobby~···

Cartel' ttltlstiCI: 213
starts. 13 wins, 68 tOP-five
finishes, 97 top-10
finishes, 1 po~ . almost
$17 million in eamlnas

Fldb: Start !July u,
1993. at New Hampshire!;
pole (AUC. 16, 1996, at
Mlchlllln); victory (April 6,
.,._
_,otNow
llolnpohln, will YO!I diM
tlllrt'? ·we'll certainly run

there. My sponsor, my car
owner and everybOdy I worK.
for sweets me to show up
and do my deal, and I'll
ctotalnly sblde by that.'

yur? ·eobby Is .a great racecar driver, and he's Cot a
areat ra~ team.
"What Bobby and hi s team
have done au year long Is
take advantage of tile posJ..
lions they've been put In,
and they did that again tat
Dar\lnaton).
"They've made very few
mistakes. They've been very
consistent. They've run up
front, an&lt;J they'we done tha1
with very few wreckS and
very few mechanical
prOblems , and that's why
he's the points leader.

••••••••••••

WhdaHof:....
Who's Not

• HOI: It takes IUi:!k and skill
to win the champlonshlp; -ancl
Bobby Labonte's got both. He
now leads Qale Jarrett tly 111
points In the standings .
• HOI: John Andrettl has
olaced 27tll or worse In seven
of the past nine races .

., .;

T1llil ._..

'..,, ~-

·certainly, we're rl&amp;ht tnere
with them In the lest three
months. We actual/'{ _
p iped .
.some points on them, but we
didn't do It early In the year.
·They've been able to pyt a
string together for the whOle
)'ear, and tt's very Impressive
what they've been able ,to

do.'
Did y011 have rldar (for
- ) In roar ptto Olufloll
1M Southern 11007 'Yeah.
but the radar Is showing
areen train) the whole time,
and It's not raining. It didn't
help us as far as knowlna
when the rain was going to
come and what to dO about

lt..

'It lobi Ik 'IHvlll
1. Who ran the fastest qualifying lap of all
time?
2. Who topped 200 mph more times than anyone
else?
3. Who had the most career second-place finishes?
'89t l.lliM 'JiUad PJeU~I)j 'E
:sawn s t 'll8nOJOQJSA a1eJ -~ :L86t
Ul e!apeue! ll~ l.IO W 609'llZ: 'UOU13 IHB 't
SH3MSNY

••••••••••••
AROUND THE GARAGE

Wells brings Houston aboard his Winston Cup operation
Br Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

)

Lisa Hysell

CRARSMAN TRUCK

Jeff Burton

•

(740) 992·2196

•

El lis and the late Butch lindley
all won here twice, the most of
any Busch regular.

--PitOFtl+ o-

1997, at Texa~)
Ki1001111Cio-to

oewr OCI¥fnl lmtMwonai soeeawaw

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio
Qalllpolla, OH
740-448-221115

SOUtharn 1100
If It had kopt on rolnlnJ, he
would hllve won
Primed lor Richmond repellt
Good In Cup,1reat In Busch
Flnolly heel a little luck
Final pit otop coot him race
Lad for a while bUt laded

lnternatl0f111 Spee(lway
·==~-~~~:-:'.'

sept, 17

""·
0&lt;:1. 8
15

Pit crtw'a cool move won It

Hn never won at DarllnJlon
Loot 20 polnta on Labonte
A1moat won another

swept the 1999 races at the
tract(, finished second .

OARLINGTON. S.C. - Bobbj
Labonte managed to win the
SOuthern 500. NASCAR 's

&lt;
:::1:

SePt. a. 1995
•Notable: Sam Ard . Tommy

NASCAR ThiO Week

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP

•Witat: Autolite PIM.Inum :250
•When: 7:30p.m .. Frida~
•Wiwrt: Rk:hmond (Va.) Inter·
national Raceway(.75-mile track)
•Format: 250 laps/187.5
miles
• Oefendln&amp; champion: Dale

Earnhardt Jr.
• Qdll~ftC record: Jason
Keller, Che'lfolet. J.24.907
mph, May 14. 1999
• A.c. FKOfd: Kenny
Wallace, Ford , 104.928 mph,

IJMonttoutton

TOP TEN

5. "(5) Dale Earnhardt

BUSCH 8R~NO NAnONAL

TOIIII'Ia. -2,727
JOe Ruttm!l'l, 2,701
BIY., Rtffnli', 2,612 ·

1. (2) Bobby Laf!onlt
(1) Ruaty Wallace
3. (3) Dale Jarr.tt
4• (4) JGff Burton

•Notable: Stewart's first
career victory came in this 1ace
a year ago .... Dale Earnhardt
Jr. won the Pontiac Excitement
400 earlie1 this year.

~

JII'MIII JOMtotl, 2,&amp;48

2.

1997

IVt Butcn. 2.8tl
Jatll SPia&amp;ue. 2,811
S1f'l'l a.tucn. 2.083
Dennis SIUtr, 2,644

Jeftf ~ibbee

Randy Hays

Far111.et·s Bank
· &amp; Savings Company
Pomeroy, OH
740-882-21311

OS
(!)

.

It's good not to take life so seriqusly. Nor Toviessi's life.
In his freshman year, a sister committed suicide. In 1998 he suffereOl
a knee injury in the second game and missed th e rest of th~ season. :
"With the death of his mother and him still trying to get over his
knee, he 's still positive out on the field," sa1d Mmhall lin ebacker Tro~
Buggs. "He's still trying to keep everybody else going and stay motic
vated. He knows what it takes. Just like he told me, he said, ' You con ~
let certain things bring you down and stop you from goi ng You've gof
to keep the train moving."'
•
Toviessi's train ha&lt;n't stopped yet. He has a full schedule of classc~
that will lead to his graduation in December.
'
His teammates are thankful to have him around.
"Paul will cause havoc," said defensive back Danny Derricott. " I !uti·
to be the opposing offensive lineman who has to block him , becaus~
Toviessi's on a mission right now. Whoever's in his way, he's JUit going
·
to destroy him.''
Toviessi has earned an invitation to the Hula Bowl all-star game Ja.;,
21 in. Hawaii.
·
. "He has endured things .hat young people should not have to. Still .
he has not harped on it, and has dealt with it head on," Gale said. " I
am more proud of his academic success than his athletic success. He
cares more about classes than making th e Hula Bowl, Shoot , 1 didn't
even find out about the Hula Bowl from him; coach Pru ett rold Ill&lt;'
about it . Paul JUSt shrugged his shoulders like it was no bi g dea l."
No fuss was made because Toviessi enjoys the simpler things 111 lif¢.
H e knows any football player is an injury away from sitting on the•
sidelines for good.
" I just like to take it one day at a time, one game at a tim e." he sa id .
One note ar a time, too.

Come In And See The Accommodating
Officers At The Farmers Bank in Pomeroyl

Fs

~

~

.'li

• What: Chevrolet Monte
Carto 400
• ~ : 7:30p.m., Saturday
•Wiwo: Richmond (Ya.) Inter·
national Raceway(. 75-mile track)
• FMnat 400. 1aps/300 miles
• DlftncMrw champion: Tony
Stewart
•Ouallfylftc reeord (till•
race): Mike Sk inner. Chew-olet.
125.465 mph, Sept. 9, 1999
•RICe record: Dale Jarrett.
Fore!. 109.047 mph , Sept. 6 ,

2,958

• Weekly ranklnls tly N.ISCAfl This Week writer Monte Dutton .
last week's. ranking Is In parentheses .
•

0

&amp;.

Mt.i1 WIIIICI, 3,028

Mdy Houston,

Randy LaJOie, 2.869
~ Grttn, ;2, 708
Casey Atwooa, 2.153

·
.&lt;:

Qrq Biffle. 3,228

JMGn ~-. 3,344
Kevin Hwvldl, 3,321
TofG BocMne, 3..1M
Ron HOtnldey, 3,m
U:Ofl SIW)tlr, 3.071

I. ftu~ty Wlllli::i, 3,241
•• lofty SU.t. 3,188
J, Ricky Rudd, 3,159

.Q

Green. 3,948

Jeff

J. Dale Etmn8fCII., 3,&lt;133
•· Jtff Burton, 3,413

.I:.
0

Toviessrs a bad dude on the field, at the keyboard

2000 POINTS STANDINUS

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

•

0

. MARSHALL FOOTBALL

•

Houslon's fath er, Tommy Hous·
too, competed in more Uusch Grand
Nati onal events (417) than anyone
in hislory, winning 24 l imes before
retiri ng in 1996.
Houston will appear later th is fall
in races at Charlott e and Rocking·
ham, N.C., Phoenix. and Homestud,
Fla.

enl ered . Dunl~vey's car~ have nol
always ma,de lhe starling fi eld, bul
a1 leasl one or them has ma!.le an
auempl every year .'Iince NASCAR 's
oldest superspeedway race began on
Sept 4, 1950.
Donlavey 's dri ver, ~lut Stricklin of
Calera, Ala ., h&amp;d his caret:r·bcst fin ·
ish, second, in 1996 ~~ D!lrlington.

ALWAYS THERE ; So you
thought Joe DiM!Iggio's :%
. -game
hill ing ~ trtak was impreui.,.e ?
Richmond, Va., car nwner Junie
Donlavey has had a ca r entered in
every Soulhern 5(XJ. Sunda y's race 111
Darlington Racewa}' marksl he 51!1
year in 11 row on( of Oonla11ey ·~ car~
usually a Ford and usuall y No. 90, i~

TI-lE 01.!1 SWITC!-I EKOO: Inn
n1sh of acti\'ilv , K~mw Walla,·!! b
out a~ driver ofllle l'-lo. :-;.'i Chc\'rolet
fie lded by Andy Peue e Kaci ng and
in a~ dri\·er of Eel ~i vc r Ra c in g ·~
No. ~7 Pontiac. Bmh moves will
lak e pla ce at l he em! of the .v:ason
Waltal·e, ~ 7. was grame d hi~
relea ~ e from Petr ee rn what w11s

deM:ribed Man "mmicable par1ing."
In two yemrs w"ith the team, Wallace
had l hrte IOp·five and ~v~n lop · IO
'fin is hes .

FORAJOBWELLDONE: James
I nee has sign ed a new 1wo-year con·
1111o..1 1o remain u crew chieht MBV
Molorspons. wilh driver Johnny
lkll§OII, through the 2002 ~ason . AI
29, lnce is I he Winston Cup Series·
)' Uur tge~ • crew chief.

X
ff'S MAKlNG OOVER RIO-I: The
Ccn~n~l Ddll""'afC Ownl:et of Con1111CKC
has estimal ed thll each NASCAR
wccken!.l al Oo11cr Oow11$ is worlh
S40 mrllmn lo the lawn's c:con o ni~ .

That's quite 11r1 a~ lute ~uggestion.
Perhaps NASCAR officia l ~ wi ll
read you r Jetter and add it to the
Sllggestion box .

Dear NASCAR This 'Week,
Why is it that when drivers ge1
int o the n~ce on points ... I hat cars
that crash during practice go to I he
back of th e field on race day?
Peggy Burkell
Roger.i, Ark. .
The car th!!t wu presenled and
approved, via inspection, for quali·
fyir~g . must be rur1 on race d11y in
orde1 for that car to start in the
apprc.priate order. At .Wi.l kins Glen,
11 Cii rs made runs bet'M qualifying
was cilnceled. Any backup ca r must
go to the rear of the fie ld .

Domino's
Try Our
Pepperoni Feast
For Only $8.99

Pomeroy
·Store Only
811 Wr Main
992·2124
SIIHt;
~.•tlbluaa.CCND

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

• NASCAR team owner Rlct1ard
Childress is act ive In the
Impending relnuodur tlon of elk
to the mountains of western
North Carolina after more than
100 years .
Ch ildress will be the keynote
speaker Sect. 30 at Lhe annua l
banquet of the Pledrr.ont
chapter of the Rocky Mountain
Elk Foundation. In Greensboro,

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

CPU

N.C.
Elk were once prevalent in
the Smoky Mountains . Efforts
are unrler way to reintroduce
tnem within the confines of the
Great Smoky Mountain National
Park on the t:Jorder between
North Carolina and Tennessee .

)( CREWOFTJIEWEIK

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E·Mall jmas@frognel,net
www.partormanceupgrades.com

• Pit stops are IIWIYI
Important, but a 15.9-

HCond ltop by Bobby
UlbOnle, smootflfy
completed by hie Jo1
Gibbs Raclna crew, wu
the decltflnc tutor In
51st SoPJI:hem 500 It
Defllnaton.
When • caution fiiC

t,..

waved .. lap 321, ..1
the ltldefl piHed, end
Labonte moved up from
flfth to flrtt piece. The
race was rained out
shortly •fterward, end

d•rkMII torctd the end
of the rece efttr 328 of •
ICIIeduled 381 laps.

Place Your B·u siness's Ad here
Call
The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Har.ris or Matt Haskins
992-2155

MEIGS
MARINE
Sales&amp;
Service
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•

�Thursday, September 7, 2000
B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy,

Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7,
',

Th~

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

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE

. AMERICAN LEAGUE

Giants win 8th straight game N.s win, creep up on Marin~rs
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

At this point, no one is stopping the San Francisco Giants.
Ceruinly not the Philadelphia
Phillies.
The Giants won their eighth in
a row Wednesday night, beating
the Phillies 5-4 on Ellis Burks'
. infield single in the eighth inning.
The win gave San Francisco a
: season-high 7 1/2-game lead
· over Arizona m the NL West and
: the best record in the league.
"We're getting a different hero
: every time," Burks said. " That's
' the sign of a good team. This is
· the time of the year you want to
be in there and making the most
of it."
The Phillies lost their eighth
straight game, leaving them with
the wont record in the majors.
. Philadelphia has dropped 11 in a
: row in San Francisco, dating to
· Aug. 30, I 998, at the old Candle. stick Park.
· "They just don·~ make mistakes
:and they take advantage of your
: mistakes," Philadelphia starter
: Randy Wolf said. "They're a darn
: good team. We just couldn't get
:anything going."
. In other NL games, Atlanta
·downed Arizona 7-1, Cincinnati
: rallied past New York 11-8, Pitts: burgh beat Los Angeles 8-3.
:Montreal topped Sr. Louis 7-2.
: Chicago defeated Colorado 8-5
: in 1 I innings, Houston beat
:Florida · 13-5 and San Diego
;edged Milwaukee 7~6.
' The Giants took a 4-0 lead in
:the first. Barry Bonds hit an RBI
:single, Burks singled with two
:outs and Russ Davis hit a three;run homer.

The Phillies eventually tied it
before running into reliever
Adam Fultz, who struck out a
career-high five in two scoreless
innings.
In the Giants eighth, Vicente
Padilla walked the bases loaded.
Burks hit a ball into the hole and
third baseman Scott Rolen fielded it, but could not make a play.
Braves 7. Diamondbacks 1
Chipper Jones hit a pair of RBI
singles and Kevin Millwood shut
down Arizona for eight innings in
a cold drizzle.
The crowd of 25,529 was the
smallest at Turner Field since the
ballpark opened in 1997.
Millwood gave up four hits and
retired I 4 straight hitters in the
middle innings. Diamondbacks
starter Armando Reynoso fell to
0-9 lifetime against Atlanta.
Pirates 8, Dodgers 3
Pittsburgh completed a 6-0 trip
to the West Coast as Brian Giles
got three hits and drove in two
runs.
The Pirates finished off their
first three-game sweep .at Dodger
Stadium since 1988 after a threegame sweep at San Diego.
Dan Serafini pitched Pittsburgh
to its season-high sixth straight
victory, a streak that has come
after a 4-17 slide. Ismae!Valdes fell
to 0-3 since being traded from
the Cubs back to the Dodgers.

Cubs 8, Rockies 5,
11 innings
Sammy Sosa hit his major
league- leading 46th homer and
scored on Mark Grace's tiebreaking triple in the 1I th inning at
Coors Field.
Sosa had three hits and drove in

three runs as Chicago ended a
six-game losing streak
Colorado's Todd Helton went
0-for-5, dropping his · major
league-leading average to .3&amp;4.
Expos 7, Cardinals 2
Vladimir Guerrero hit two
homers and Montreal halted St .
Louis' six-game winning streak.
Guerrero, who had never
homered at Busch Stadium, has
10 multihomer games in his
career, induding six this year.
The Expos stopped a threegame losing streak. The Cardinals'
string of 87 straight innings without an error ended on shortstop
Edgar Renteria's misplay in the
eighth.

Padres 7, Bre"ers 6
· Pitcher Woody Williams got
three hits as San Diego beat Milwaukee before just 13,777 fans,
the Padres' smallest home crowd
this season.
Williams' second three-hit
game of the season raised his
average to .363 (12-for-33) •ince
returning from the disabled list
July 2.

Astroa 13, Marlins S
Chris Truby hit a two-run
homer during a seven-run fifth
inning as Houston beat florida at
Enron Field.
. Winner Jose Lima gave . up
home runs to Preston Wilson and
pinch-hitter Chris Clapinski.
Lima has allowed 42 homers,
eight short of the major league
record Bert Blyleven set with
Minnesota in 1986 and four shy
of Robin Roberrs' NL record.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mark Mulder helped the Oakland Athletics put more pressure
on Seattle.
"I was really pumped up for the
game. I was excited;' Mulder said
after Oakland beat the Boston
Red Sox 6-4 Wednesday night
and moved I 1/2 games behind
the Mariners in the closest race
for a playoff spot.
Mulder (8-10) gave up two
runs and five hits in six innings
for Oakland, which headed home
for a weekend series against
Tampa Bay.
"He did a nice job, battled and
gave us all he could ," Oakland
manager Art Howe said. "The
bullpen did the rest."
At Fenway Park, Matt Stairs
homered as the A's won for the
fourth time in five games. Jim
Mecir pitched two innings for his
fifth save.
Boston dropped three games
back in the AL wild card· race.
Rolando Arrojo (4-2) allowed
four runs and eight hits in three
innings, the shortest of his eight
starts sirice Colorado traded him
July 27.
"He just got hit," Red Sox
manager Jimy Williams said. "It
· happens to all pitchers. They're a
good hitting team over there."
Indians 6, Devil Rays 2
Roberto Alomar homered
twice, and Chuck Finiey (12-10)
combined with Paul Shuey on a
four-hitter at Jacobs Field as
Cleveland won its fourth straight.
The Indians, 23-10 since Aug.
2, increased their lead to three
games in the AL wild card race.
Travis Harper (0-1) was the

1965) and Cesar Tovar (Sept. 22, •
1968) ..
Charles Johnson, Greg Nomm
and Magglio Ordonez •!so
Blue Jays 7, Mariners 3
Carlos Delgado hit a three-run homered for the AL Centroldouble and Joey Hamilton (2-0) leading Whi·te Sox. Chicago
allowed two 'runs and four hits in scored seven runs in the flrst
seven innings at SkyDome as inning off Rick Hell;ng (14-ll),
Toronto stopped a four-game los- who was chased after seven run s
and five hits in rwo-thirds of ;an
ing streak.
Alex Rodriguez hit a two-run inning, the shortest otart sir]ce
homer (or the Mariners, who 1994.
Kip Wells (5-7) gave up .;nc
have lost 17 of their last 23. Seattle had won its previous seven unearned run and four hits
seven innlngs.
games at SkyDome.
Angels 1, Tigers 0
John Halama (11-8) gave up
Scott Schoeneweis (7-7) sl1ut
four runs - three earned - and
out Detroit on two singles for
six hits in 3 1-3 innings.'
Royals 3, Yankees 2
eight innings and visiting Ana Carlos Febles doubled home heim stopped a season-high s;x·
the tying run and scorecl on John- game losing streak.
ny Damon's single as Kansas City
Mo Vaughn drove in the lon e
rallied in the bottom of the ninth run with an RBI grounder in the
off Mike Stanton (2-3), who blew third off Steve Sparks (6-3), who
had won six straight decisions.
his fourth straight save chance.
New York's Chuck Knoblauch Troy Glaus tied an Angels record
went 0-for-4 in his first game · with three doubles.
Schoeneweis and reliever Troy
since going on the disabled list
Aug. 3 with tendinitis in his right Percival combined to hand th e
elbow. The second baseman was Tigers their major leagu e- leading
mistake-free recording two assists. 12th shutout.
'I'wins 4, Orioles 1
Derek Jeter and Paul O'Neill
homered for the Yankees, 7-2
Brad Radke (11 -1 4) pitched a
against Kansas City this year. six-hitter for his third complete
Brian Meadows (4-2) pitched a game of the season and Jacqu e
nine-hitter for his second com- Jones drove in the go-ahead run
plete game of the season.
in the seventh at the Metrodome .
Sidney Ponson (7 - 11 ) had been
White Sox 13, Rangers 1
frank Thomas hit his AL-lead- 5-0 against the Twins, including
ing 4 ht home run on a night 2-0 this season . He gave up aU
when Scott Sheldon of the four runs - three earned - and
Rangers played all nine positions nine hits in 7 2-3 innings, struck
at Comiskey Park.
out a career-high II and walked
He became just the third player one.
to play all nine spots in one game,
joining Bert Campaneris (Sept. 8 ,

loser. Devil Rays starter Ryan
Rupe left after three innings with
stiffness in his right biceps.

&lt; ~..- • •

GnTV
AIITimu-m
Cnofbman Truck, Krotar 200
a p.m. • Thursday • ESPN2
• Buoch S.rl11, Autolltt Pllltlnum 210
7:30p.m. • Frlda1 • ESPN
• WlnotGn Cup, C - o t Manta Cillo 400

:m

7:30p.m. • Saturday • ESPN

-- - ·

1. BoODy LIOOme, 3.538
l. ... 1.-rtU, 3,5:J7

.. WII'G Bil'tOfl, 3,139
1. Man! Martlrl, 3,122

10. Jlff Gotoon, 2,9QO

.......

m
::tl::

.....
ro
0

·-c:Q)
-t::

·-'
"'0

ro
.I:.
0

.....

'

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) -At 6-foot-7, Marshall defe~sive
end Paul Toviessi is a daunting figure, whether it's across the line of
~crinunage or sitting ·at a piano keyboard.
·
: The same finger.; that will grasp Michigan State linemen on Saturl!ay are beginning to fulfill a dream oflearning to read notes and play
l:hords.
; "What made me want to do it? It's just something I wanted to do
for a long time," Toviessi said Tuesday. "That's aU I had left was elec!ives. That's alii got left. I figured I'd take piano."
' It's not just something to pass the time, either. He's serious about
learning. Recently, the normally reserved Toviessi came bouncing up
to defensive ends coach Mark Gale like a child at Christmas.
·
: "He couldn't wait ro tell me that he'd made a 100 on his piano pre~e ntation," Gale said. " It might have been Chopsticks, but he was
J:lappy."
,
. It's only his second week in class, so there's no telling what the future
holds. Toviessi's taking it one note at a time.
· " His fingers are really wide on the keys," said his teacher, graduate
student Sandra Fox. "We really haven't done a lot of playing yet to see
if that will present a problem."
" I think it's relaxing," Toviessi said. "I play for fun . I don't want to
play anywhere, just for my own amusement."
Toviessi could use some relaxation .
His mother died suddenly last month, something Toviessi doesn't
discuss, even with his own coaches. He was at a football function in
C harleston when it happened .
Gale, who lost his own mother three year.; ago, has let Toviessi know
that the coaches are willing to listen.
"I'm here for you," Gale told Toviessi. "I know how difficult it is for

Woody Stines

"Paul i.1a complex iudir~idual. It takes .1omebody
maybe like coach (Bob) Pruett or myself to gL'I to know
Paul. I've told him I've rt.'spected and admired tile
adversity he's lrad to or•ercome in the last w11ple
of weeks. I'1•e been able to relay my experience 111ith
Pa11l and I tlrink by actually living it that it meaut
a little bit to l1im."
Marte Gala, MU dafanalve anda c011ch

you, and there's going to be times when you subconsciously want to
pick up the phone and call her. To this day, I still do it. That's understandable.'
"Paul is a complex individual," Gale said. "It takes somebody maybe
like coach (Bob) Pruett or myself to get to know Paul. I've told him
I've respected and admired the adversity he's had to overcome in the
last couple of weeks.
" I've been able to relay my experience with Paul and I think by
actually living it that it meant a little bit to him."
For now, football and piano are Toviessi's diversions. And - good
thing for the piano - he's pounding opposing linemen harder than
the keyboard .
He made six tackles in last week 's opening 63-7 victory over Southcast Missouri State. He also had an interception - which he promptly fumbled.
"Coach Gale let me know about it when I ca me back to the sideline. He just smiled and then I laughed," Toviessi said.

"We Want To Be Your Friends For Life"

t

Desiree Taylor

•

••• 1

Me u t •r fltD.t.o.

Tupper• Plaine, OH
740-11117-31111

Q

z

'

6. (6) Tony Stewart
l. (7) Mark Martin
8. (8) Jell Gordon
9. (9) Ward Burton
10. (10) Dale Earnhardt Jr.

&lt;

!

~

•

~
w

u

!

oldest superspeedway race.
despite the fact that he never
led e green-flag lap.
With rain and darkness
closing in, a blown engine in
Jerry Nadeau's Chevrolet
brought out a caution flag at
lap 3:21. 4lb0nte, who was
runnlnc fll'th at the time. pitted
a10na with other leaders and
won the race on ptt road.
After he took the leacl, It
began raining, and the race
was stopped after onl ~ 328 of
the scheduled 367 laps.
It was Labonte's first victory
at oarnn~ton and enable&lt;~ him
to boost his JX) int lead by 20
points to 111. Jeff Burton, who

a~

-.
_

.........

BANK

BUSCH GRAND NAnONAL
DARLINGTON, S.C.- Ford
driver Mark Martin continued
his domination of races at
Da.-llngton Raceway, winning
the Duralube 200 to sweep
the 2000 events at the 1.366m ile track,
Martin also won the pole. It
was his seventh victory at the
track. three more than retired
Harry Gent. Six of the top 10
and 10 of the top. 15 finishers
were Winston Cup regulars.

CRAnSMAN TRUCK
The Craftsman Truck Series
was off last week and will
return to action Thursday at
Ri chmond. Va.

N~

. OCt. 1

•·-

Martfli'IIU SJieeOwOV

MBrtlfiSVIIII, \18.

I.Owt'l MOCOf SiletOw_.

Coneorf, N.C.
TOIIacteJI, Ala .
RoeldtWIIm. N.C.

.Talladep SUPif$0eedWI'/
Nofth CII'DIIna SpHdway
Phoer~l.l: lnlemll:lonal Raceway

Od:. 22
Nov. 5
N011. 12

A'iondale, ,t,rll.
Hcltndhll!l, Fla.

Homett~lllml ~~

•

FEUD OfT HE WEEK

Jll!llil}l Spencer va. Brett Bodine 1
The two Ford drfvet's blamed eacn oiher for 1 erash late In
the Southern 500. •
·•a:ueaa Brett BOdine must need llt,ses or somethlnc. •

Spencir said.

Used Cars &amp; Trucks

·

BOdine retorted, •He (Spenc.er) pUt me In the wall, and
that's stupid because he took himself out. He had a &amp;DOd
race ear, afld that was dumb on his part. •
NAICAR Tlllo Wook'o M - Dutton 11- hlo opinion:
•tt •as a frustrath'llllnckient for two drivers ridltllloni dry
spel ls. Whose fault It was ls probably known oril)r by th8 two
drlvera, and t~ obviously disagreed. •

'3f/i.eet4- &amp;
'De4t4605 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

As expected, Winston Cup ar
ow r~er Cal Wells named Andy
Houston to pi lo t his McDonald's .
~ponsored Ford next year, and
Houston will apparent ly al!o drive
four more Cu p races between now
and seuon's end. "'
The 29·yea r~ld Hoo!lorl, a ~nd­
gencration driver from H ickory,
N.C. , and regular in lhe Craftsman
Truck Seri es, will lik ely face off
against C~ey Atwood and ptrhaps
Kurt Busch in the 2001 rookie·of·
the·year race. He will also be a
tea mmate to Scan Pruen, th e ex ·
upcn·whcel !itar oow driving 'Wells'
No. J2 ford .

•

..

• WMt: Kroger 200
.wnen:

a p .m .. Thursday

• Where: Richmond (Va.)
International Racewa~ (. 75-mile
track)
• Fonnllt: 200 laps/150 miles
• Detendln&amp; cllempton: Greg
Biffle
• Quellfyln&amp; record: Ron
Hornaday. Chevrotet, 121.726
mph, Sept. 4 , t997
li RKt record: Bob
Keselowski , Dodge , 104.167
mph, Sept. 4 , 1997
• Notlblt: Last year's race
was slightly shortened to 196
laps due to rain.

••••••••••••

YourTum
Linin Ft. 0. RHrltn

Dear NASCAR This Wee !c.,
Jeff Gordon is fa r from being
washed up! Howe11er, in the unlike·
ly everrlthat he never wins ano1ht:r
race, he is still Me of th e best , if
no1 THE best NASCAR ' has to

Jeff Burtqn brln&amp;&amp; a
breath of fresh elr to the
Winston Cup 5erles.
In addiUon to being a
proven winner. Burton has
an eX~IIent sense of
humor ana Is well lll(ect by

off~r.

He'll be back on top, and I can'l
wail umilthat happens!
Darl~n e Bocskor
Massena, N.Y.

fellow competltooo.

Thit relationshiP between

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I ' ve had a question for some timc
now thai no one has beer~ able l o
answer satisfactori ly.
lnslead of using reslrictor plates at
the big 1racb, why not have every·
one run a lower re11 gear ratio, possibly in ~·ombination with a rev lim·
iter, to keep the motors in one piece?
An out5ide supplier cou ld build
the rear·end center sections, and
NASCAR could supply tile rev
limiter's. Elch unit could be made
tamper proof to k.ec:p every one
honest. The plates have ruined tile
big tracks. There has to be a better
W!IY to k~ e p the speeds dow r1. Why
no1somCt.hing like this?
John Frontera
Wattsburg, Pa.

Burton end teammate Marl&lt;
Martin Ia a prime factor In
the success of Jaek
RouSh's entire raeln&amp;
oraanization.
Both Burtons - Jeff and
older brother ward - have
won races ttl/a season. The

two strike e balance between a fierce competition
on the track and a close-

ness otflt.
BefOre Sunday, the two
h&amp;d combined to win the
prevtous tnree races at
Darllncton Rac:eway, one of
stock ear raclni'S sterner
tests.

-own:
va.

Boston,

South

Aie:33
e.~

No. 99 El&lt;lde
Batteries Forcl Taurus,
owned by Roush Racine
WHI:Kim

,.Clllld:

Klmbe~e

·Paige•

,., ......... -..,;.-.,-.•swr·jit,.._llalipl
................ 1M,....,
JaM~

wonh!eftNtW!rllo
, . .,.~ ........ 12~~

(5)
Crew chief: Ft8nk

..

StOddard

00 you think the loutnem
SOOwooaolllnthlllthlo
~-r II Bobby~···

Cartel' ttltlstiCI: 213
starts. 13 wins, 68 tOP-five
finishes, 97 top-10
finishes, 1 po~ . almost
$17 million in eamlnas

Fldb: Start !July u,
1993. at New Hampshire!;
pole (AUC. 16, 1996, at
Mlchlllln); victory (April 6,
.,._
_,otNow
llolnpohln, will YO!I diM
tlllrt'? ·we'll certainly run

there. My sponsor, my car
owner and everybOdy I worK.
for sweets me to show up
and do my deal, and I'll
ctotalnly sblde by that.'

yur? ·eobby Is .a great racecar driver, and he's Cot a
areat ra~ team.
"What Bobby and hi s team
have done au year long Is
take advantage of tile posJ..
lions they've been put In,
and they did that again tat
Dar\lnaton).
"They've made very few
mistakes. They've been very
consistent. They've run up
front, an&lt;J they'we done tha1
with very few wreckS and
very few mechanical
prOblems , and that's why
he's the points leader.

••••••••••••

WhdaHof:....
Who's Not

• HOI: It takes IUi:!k and skill
to win the champlonshlp; -ancl
Bobby Labonte's got both. He
now leads Qale Jarrett tly 111
points In the standings .
• HOI: John Andrettl has
olaced 27tll or worse In seven
of the past nine races .

., .;

T1llil ._..

'..,, ~-

·certainly, we're rl&amp;ht tnere
with them In the lest three
months. We actual/'{ _
p iped .
.some points on them, but we
didn't do It early In the year.
·They've been able to pyt a
string together for the whOle
)'ear, and tt's very Impressive
what they've been able ,to

do.'
Did y011 have rldar (for
- ) In roar ptto Olufloll
1M Southern 11007 'Yeah.
but the radar Is showing
areen train) the whole time,
and It's not raining. It didn't
help us as far as knowlna
when the rain was going to
come and what to dO about

lt..

'It lobi Ik 'IHvlll
1. Who ran the fastest qualifying lap of all
time?
2. Who topped 200 mph more times than anyone
else?
3. Who had the most career second-place finishes?
'89t l.lliM 'JiUad PJeU~I)j 'E
:sawn s t 'll8nOJOQJSA a1eJ -~ :L86t
Ul e!apeue! ll~ l.IO W 609'llZ: 'UOU13 IHB 't
SH3MSNY

••••••••••••
AROUND THE GARAGE

Wells brings Houston aboard his Winston Cup operation
Br Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

)

Lisa Hysell

CRARSMAN TRUCK

Jeff Burton

•

(740) 992·2196

•

El lis and the late Butch lindley
all won here twice, the most of
any Busch regular.

--PitOFtl+ o-

1997, at Texa~)
Ki1001111Cio-to

oewr OCI¥fnl lmtMwonai soeeawaw

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio
Qalllpolla, OH
740-448-221115

SOUtharn 1100
If It had kopt on rolnlnJ, he
would hllve won
Primed lor Richmond repellt
Good In Cup,1reat In Busch
Flnolly heel a little luck
Final pit otop coot him race
Lad for a while bUt laded

lnternatl0f111 Spee(lway
·==~-~~~:-:'.'

sept, 17

""·
0&lt;:1. 8
15

Pit crtw'a cool move won It

Hn never won at DarllnJlon
Loot 20 polnta on Labonte
A1moat won another

swept the 1999 races at the
tract(, finished second .

OARLINGTON. S.C. - Bobbj
Labonte managed to win the
SOuthern 500. NASCAR 's

&lt;
:::1:

SePt. a. 1995
•Notable: Sam Ard . Tommy

NASCAR ThiO Week

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CUP

•Witat: Autolite PIM.Inum :250
•When: 7:30p.m .. Frida~
•Wiwrt: Rk:hmond (Va.) Inter·
national Raceway(.75-mile track)
•Format: 250 laps/187.5
miles
• Oefendln&amp; champion: Dale

Earnhardt Jr.
• Qdll~ftC record: Jason
Keller, Che'lfolet. J.24.907
mph, May 14. 1999
• A.c. FKOfd: Kenny
Wallace, Ford , 104.928 mph,

IJMonttoutton

TOP TEN

5. "(5) Dale Earnhardt

BUSCH 8R~NO NAnONAL

TOIIII'Ia. -2,727
JOe Ruttm!l'l, 2,701
BIY., Rtffnli', 2,612 ·

1. (2) Bobby Laf!onlt
(1) Ruaty Wallace
3. (3) Dale Jarr.tt
4• (4) JGff Burton

•Notable: Stewart's first
career victory came in this 1ace
a year ago .... Dale Earnhardt
Jr. won the Pontiac Excitement
400 earlie1 this year.

~

JII'MIII JOMtotl, 2,&amp;48

2.

1997

IVt Butcn. 2.8tl
Jatll SPia&amp;ue. 2,811
S1f'l'l a.tucn. 2.083
Dennis SIUtr, 2,644

Jeftf ~ibbee

Randy Hays

Far111.et·s Bank
· &amp; Savings Company
Pomeroy, OH
740-882-21311

OS
(!)

.

It's good not to take life so seriqusly. Nor Toviessi's life.
In his freshman year, a sister committed suicide. In 1998 he suffereOl
a knee injury in the second game and missed th e rest of th~ season. :
"With the death of his mother and him still trying to get over his
knee, he 's still positive out on the field," sa1d Mmhall lin ebacker Tro~
Buggs. "He's still trying to keep everybody else going and stay motic
vated. He knows what it takes. Just like he told me, he said, ' You con ~
let certain things bring you down and stop you from goi ng You've gof
to keep the train moving."'
•
Toviessi's train ha&lt;n't stopped yet. He has a full schedule of classc~
that will lead to his graduation in December.
'
His teammates are thankful to have him around.
"Paul will cause havoc," said defensive back Danny Derricott. " I !uti·
to be the opposing offensive lineman who has to block him , becaus~
Toviessi's on a mission right now. Whoever's in his way, he's JUit going
·
to destroy him.''
Toviessi has earned an invitation to the Hula Bowl all-star game Ja.;,
21 in. Hawaii.
·
. "He has endured things .hat young people should not have to. Still .
he has not harped on it, and has dealt with it head on," Gale said. " I
am more proud of his academic success than his athletic success. He
cares more about classes than making th e Hula Bowl, Shoot , 1 didn't
even find out about the Hula Bowl from him; coach Pru ett rold Ill&lt;'
about it . Paul JUSt shrugged his shoulders like it was no bi g dea l."
No fuss was made because Toviessi enjoys the simpler things 111 lif¢.
H e knows any football player is an injury away from sitting on the•
sidelines for good.
" I just like to take it one day at a time, one game at a tim e." he sa id .
One note ar a time, too.

Come In And See The Accommodating
Officers At The Farmers Bank in Pomeroyl

Fs

~

~

.'li

• What: Chevrolet Monte
Carto 400
• ~ : 7:30p.m., Saturday
•Wiwo: Richmond (Ya.) Inter·
national Raceway(. 75-mile track)
• FMnat 400. 1aps/300 miles
• DlftncMrw champion: Tony
Stewart
•Ouallfylftc reeord (till•
race): Mike Sk inner. Chew-olet.
125.465 mph, Sept. 9, 1999
•RICe record: Dale Jarrett.
Fore!. 109.047 mph , Sept. 6 ,

2,958

• Weekly ranklnls tly N.ISCAfl This Week writer Monte Dutton .
last week's. ranking Is In parentheses .
•

0

&amp;.

Mt.i1 WIIIICI, 3,028

Mdy Houston,

Randy LaJOie, 2.869
~ Grttn, ;2, 708
Casey Atwooa, 2.153

·
.&lt;:

Qrq Biffle. 3,228

JMGn ~-. 3,344
Kevin Hwvldl, 3,321
TofG BocMne, 3..1M
Ron HOtnldey, 3,m
U:Ofl SIW)tlr, 3.071

I. ftu~ty Wlllli::i, 3,241
•• lofty SU.t. 3,188
J, Ricky Rudd, 3,159

.Q

Green. 3,948

Jeff

J. Dale Etmn8fCII., 3,&lt;133
•· Jtff Burton, 3,413

.I:.
0

Toviessrs a bad dude on the field, at the keyboard

2000 POINTS STANDINUS

ON THE SCHEDULE

WINSTON CUP

•

0

. MARSHALL FOOTBALL

•

Houslon's fath er, Tommy Hous·
too, competed in more Uusch Grand
Nati onal events (417) than anyone
in hislory, winning 24 l imes before
retiri ng in 1996.
Houston will appear later th is fall
in races at Charlott e and Rocking·
ham, N.C., Phoenix. and Homestud,
Fla.

enl ered . Dunl~vey's car~ have nol
always ma,de lhe starling fi eld, bul
a1 leasl one or them has ma!.le an
auempl every year .'Iince NASCAR 's
oldest superspeedway race began on
Sept 4, 1950.
Donlavey 's dri ver, ~lut Stricklin of
Calera, Ala ., h&amp;d his caret:r·bcst fin ·
ish, second, in 1996 ~~ D!lrlington.

ALWAYS THERE ; So you
thought Joe DiM!Iggio's :%
. -game
hill ing ~ trtak was impreui.,.e ?
Richmond, Va., car nwner Junie
Donlavey has had a ca r entered in
every Soulhern 5(XJ. Sunda y's race 111
Darlington Racewa}' marksl he 51!1
year in 11 row on( of Oonla11ey ·~ car~
usually a Ford and usuall y No. 90, i~

TI-lE 01.!1 SWITC!-I EKOO: Inn
n1sh of acti\'ilv , K~mw Walla,·!! b
out a~ driver ofllle l'-lo. :-;.'i Chc\'rolet
fie lded by Andy Peue e Kaci ng and
in a~ dri\·er of Eel ~i vc r Ra c in g ·~
No. ~7 Pontiac. Bmh moves will
lak e pla ce at l he em! of the .v:ason
Waltal·e, ~ 7. was grame d hi~
relea ~ e from Petr ee rn what w11s

deM:ribed Man "mmicable par1ing."
In two yemrs w"ith the team, Wallace
had l hrte IOp·five and ~v~n lop · IO
'fin is hes .

FORAJOBWELLDONE: James
I nee has sign ed a new 1wo-year con·
1111o..1 1o remain u crew chieht MBV
Molorspons. wilh driver Johnny
lkll§OII, through the 2002 ~ason . AI
29, lnce is I he Winston Cup Series·
)' Uur tge~ • crew chief.

X
ff'S MAKlNG OOVER RIO-I: The
Ccn~n~l Ddll""'afC Ownl:et of Con1111CKC
has estimal ed thll each NASCAR
wccken!.l al Oo11cr Oow11$ is worlh
S40 mrllmn lo the lawn's c:con o ni~ .

That's quite 11r1 a~ lute ~uggestion.
Perhaps NASCAR officia l ~ wi ll
read you r Jetter and add it to the
Sllggestion box .

Dear NASCAR This 'Week,
Why is it that when drivers ge1
int o the n~ce on points ... I hat cars
that crash during practice go to I he
back of th e field on race day?
Peggy Burkell
Roger.i, Ark. .
The car th!!t wu presenled and
approved, via inspection, for quali·
fyir~g . must be rur1 on race d11y in
orde1 for that car to start in the
apprc.priate order. At .Wi.l kins Glen,
11 Cii rs made runs bet'M qualifying
was cilnceled. Any backup ca r must
go to the rear of the fie ld .

Domino's
Try Our
Pepperoni Feast
For Only $8.99

Pomeroy
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811 Wr Main
992·2124
SIIHt;
~.•tlbluaa.CCND

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

••••••••••••

Fan Tips

• NASCAR team owner Rlct1ard
Childress is act ive In the
Impending relnuodur tlon of elk
to the mountains of western
North Carolina after more than
100 years .
Ch ildress will be the keynote
speaker Sect. 30 at Lhe annua l
banquet of the Pledrr.ont
chapter of the Rocky Mountain
Elk Foundation. In Greensboro,

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

CPU

N.C.
Elk were once prevalent in
the Smoky Mountains . Efforts
are unrler way to reintroduce
tnem within the confines of the
Great Smoky Mountain National
Park on the t:Jorder between
North Carolina and Tennessee .

)( CREWOFTJIEWEIK

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992-1135
E·Mall jmas@frognel,net
www.partormanceupgrades.com

• Pit stops are IIWIYI
Important, but a 15.9-

HCond ltop by Bobby
UlbOnle, smootflfy
completed by hie Jo1
Gibbs Raclna crew, wu
the decltflnc tutor In
51st SoPJI:hem 500 It
Defllnaton.
When • caution fiiC

t,..

waved .. lap 321, ..1
the ltldefl piHed, end
Labonte moved up from
flfth to flrtt piece. The
race was rained out
shortly •fterward, end

d•rkMII torctd the end
of the rece efttr 328 of •
ICIIeduled 381 laps.

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�Thursday, September 7 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

c ' Patge B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'Thursday September 7 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Reds

!II Peraon11
Announcement,

70

Yard Sale

G.,..w.y Lott &amp; Found
Pomeroy

Yard Sa'-• ond Wontld
To OoAda
Muat Be Paid In Advance
DIRUNE OfAP~
200pm lhadoy
re
tho ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Moncloy ldltlon

200pm

F~d~

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ATTENT ON DEVELOPERS 32

Behind pos office n LDng Bottom
Hayman I R ggs Cumm ngs
Thu,.oay &amp; Friday 9-

Ac 86 M l "'PP OK ma I y 0
Ac e ake w 1'1 sand Mob e
Home W th Add On 199 500
740 388-8676

IENDNEL R§AQ Nl
1 00 p m tho day bofDro

half but the Mets took a 5 2 lead
m the second on Pratts homer
and Lenny Hams RBI Single
-,. Santiago h t an RBI double n
from Page 81
the botto 1 I a fa d Casey t ed tt
nmngs Fnday agamst Montre
5 all w th a two run hon er n
a) lasted JUSt 41 p tches and 1 1 3 the third
mmngs He gave up five runs and
New Yo k took a 7 4 lead n
two hits m I 1 3 mn ngs
the fourth aga ns Ketth Glauber
New York whtcl. outhtt the on RBI grounders by M k Bor
Reds 13 6 went ahead m the first d ck a d De ek Bell who reach d
on M att Franco s three run on an error by shortstop Chr s
homer h s fi rst home run smce Sexton M kc P azza h nto a
July 16 1999 at Tampa Bay
tl e
run scor g do bl play
Gr treys home run pulled the seventh
Reds w thin a run m the bottom
Reds Notes Tl e Met have

24 homers n the r past 21 games
Scott Williamson s expected to
come off the DL Oower back
stra n) on Fr day and start for the
Reds at P ttsburgh
A wtld
p tch by Bell t the second ra sed
the Reds club record and maJor
league lead ng total to 86
Osvaldo Fernandez made h s first
rei ef appe rane e s nee 1996
when he pttched two th rds of an
1 ng for C nc nnat
He last
p t I ed Ju y ( at St Lou s we
on he DL the next day w th a
sore elbow then was acttvated
Fr day

TODAY'S SCOREBOAR
I ~ ...fJ4iJf I
Nollono Looguo

NewYorl&lt;
F ortda
Montrea
Ph lade ph a

A DEAQYNE.
2 doyo bof"" the ad Ia

to run by 4 30 p m

ldltton- 4 30 Thunday
DMdiiMa IUI&gt;/£1 to
-~due ro hoii&lt;Myo

GB

590

eo 59

575

67 7

486 4 !2
4 9 23 2
406 25 2

.............. 57 79
56 82

Pit1sbu gh-

Tennessee

2

0 000
0 000

5 6

5
68
: ::::·::::::::.·::::'8079
59 79
............. .. ...........59 80
59 80

Q2

9

428 20 12
424
2

424

NY Gants ........... ... .. .
Ph lade ph a
Washingto

2

150

560

Merchandise

QU ed

Days

E en gs

740 446 348
0502
40

40 36

440-0 0

30 Announcement•

Professional
Services
NEED CASH

WE

House 2 84 Ac es 3BR 28A FA
FP 2 Ca Ga age UR 2 M es
F om
Page
e
$89 000

New To YouTh fl Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens

6
4
2
4

0 000

1nn ngs

6

0 0 00 36
0 0 00 4
0 000
0 000 0
28

0
27

6
0
20
28
36

20
4
36

2 9 a Houston E arton

Eool

TMm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE

Giveaway

510

Yo~······: :

Bosto
New
Toronto
Bait moe

Tampa Bay

Au

Household
Goods

40

L Pc1
574
529

72 58
64
::: : :: 78
72 67
63 76
59 80

C eva and
De Oit

··.. ···•::::
.

597 6
55

GB

lld a

apo

Sean e ................ ..... ...... 75 64

540
529
496
446

73 65
69 70

Anahetm
Texas

n

62

Da las at Washing o 9 p m

AnahEim

'10

NASCAR Wlnaton Cup Serlea

Det o~ 0

c acKer Barrel 500 Hamp on
ha d
Ma com 400 Dar1 ngton S C
Food C ty 500 Bns o Tem

D eHard 500 Ta adega Ala (Jeff

NC

Texas Roge s
3 a Ch ca go Wh e So
Paque
6 805pm
Friday I Gamel
ChcagoWh eSox BadWI 4 5 aCe e

De

land (Woodo d 2 9 7 05 p m
o onto Loa za 8

N Y Yankees C emens
Ohka33 7D5pm
B os pm

Wedel ngs

Mn esoa Kn eyO a Sean e Abbott9
0 05 pm
Tampa Bay E and 2 3 a Oak and He ed a

Pes
Spa s Teams
P o ess ona Ce

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN
FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
CU RED
800 748 57 6 E

ed Ph o og a

Reasonable a es

da apo s

304 675 472
30465 29

' 0

M h

FINANCIAL

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY SS ?
AFC

No Fee Un ess We W
888 582 3345

e..t

TRANSPORTATION

WLTPtsPFPA
0 0 00
6
000027
000023

1083 OR NEWER TRAC
TORS GROW NG REG ON A
CAR R ER SEE K NG QUA TV
OWNER OPE RA O RS 85 8
CPM A SO COM PAN Y DR V
ERS HOME WEEKEND S
CALL
MO ST Y OROPHOOK
TODAY HCX llOt).2QOo2823

es

ac~

Samake o a multiyea cont act
UTAH JAZZ--NamiKI Gary B 1995 a h eti
a ne
FOOTBALL

Nat onal Footba Llague
NFL NTERNAT ONAL-Nomed Ka e Boos
d ecto o n ena ona meda
ATLANTA FALCON S--S g eel LB Ch s Bo
dano wa ad OB Toy G azan

CLEVELAN D BROWNS-Named De ick
A exanae p aye dave opmen coo d na o
DETRO T ONS-Ag eed o e ms WI h 08
Cha e Ba ch on a fou yea con act eKtqn
son h ough 2003
GREEN BAY PACKERS--$ g ed WR

p ae1 ce squad Waived WR Gera d W ams
om he p ac ce squad
HOUSTON A noun eel
a he eam s
n ckname w be he TeKans
NO ANA POLS
CO S-Wa ed
AB
l ennox Go don om he p act ce squqd
S g ed B osh Gentry o the pact e squad
JACKSONV LLE JAGUARS--Wa ed CB
M chae Sw ft S gned RB Chad D kes
Released TE Rod Mon oe om he p act ce
squad S gned DB Shad C ss o he p actlca

HOCKEY

Long Pond

005 p m

Ca o appo n men

Ameran Lugu•
BOSTON REO SOX-Go eel up RHP R&lt;:k
Crousho e om Pawtucka of he ntema OnEil
eague
TORON 0 BLUE JAYS--Exended he
work ng ag eeme
WI h ennessee of lhB
Southe n League h ough he 2002 season

squad

49 0 05pm
Batt mo e Rapp 7 a a Anahe m o n 4

phe

9 Chad wn e 365
20 oe Nemechetc 2 373
2 Bi E oll 2 270
22 Je emy Mavf aid 2 262
23 J mmy Spence 2 228
24 eny Nadeau 2 e
25 ohn And ett 2 24
26 l&lt;fMn Lepage 2 2
27 Robert P essley 2 7
28 M chae Wa rt p 2 078
29 Bobby Ham non
954
30 Ken y Wa ace
952
3 E ott Sader 922
32 Da e Blaney 754
33 Wal y Da enbach
889
34 RckMast
5 5
35 Kenny rw n 440
36 Scott P uan 406
37 De e Waltrip 390

squad
NEW YORK. ETS Wa ed T Cone
G een S gned WA KA Damon Dunn Watved
WR Ya G een om he pra ce squad
S gned E ake Mo e and o he p act f:8

6 a Bas on

Texas Gynn43 a KansasC y Sen63

PHO'f.OG-RAPHY

5 Koo Sch ader 2 5 0
ohnny Benson 2 496
7 Sertng Mar n 2444
8 etry Labonte 2 4 8

6

Kenny Bouta n and CB S ason Moo e o he

Rechen86 eo5pm

De o (Weave 9 2 a
0) 705pm

Drtver Stend ng•
Bobby Laban e 3 638
2 Oa e Jarrett 3 527
3 Oa e Ea nhard 3 433
4 Jeff Burton 3 4 3
5 Rusty wa ace 3 24
6 Tony S ewart 3 98
7 Rk:ky Rudel 3 59
8 Ward Burton 3 39
9 MakMartn 3 22
0 ell Go&lt;do 2 990
Matt Kenseth 2 699
2 MkeSkn e 2G99
3 S ave Park 2 589
4 Oae Eamha d1 J 2 545

Nat ona Baaketba I Auoc atlan
NBA--Named Ka h een Behrens vtee pres
dent co mm n ty e a ons
DETRO T P STON S--S gned G Ma een
Cea es
NEW ERSEY NETS--5 g ad C Soumat a

2
6
3

Oak and 6 Bos on 4
Kansas C y 3 N Y Yankees 2
Ch cago White Soli 3 Te11.as
TodayaGamee
M esoa
M on
28
a
Boson
RMan nez a 6)
05 p m
Anahem (Be che 2 2 at De o M eM: 4
0 705pm
Tampa Bay Aekar 5 9 a C e e and Co on
28 705 p m
Sean e Ga c a 5 4 a Toronto (T ac se
2 705pm
N Y Yankees Neag e S 4 a Kansas C tv

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

500k A110nda e Ariz
NOV 2 Pennzo 400 Homestead Fla
Nov 9 - NAPA 500 Hampton Ga

MON REA EXPOS--Reca eel B-OF 1ill
madge Noonan rom Ot1awa o he nternat10n
a eag e
BASKETBAll.

2

Cleveland B Tampa Bay 2
To onto 7 sean e 3

Yard Sale

Rock ngham N C
Checker Auto PartS/DUra Lube
Nov 5

eague

Wednndlly a G1me1
Mmesoa4 Battmoe

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

OCt 115- Wins on 500 Ta adega Ala
Pop' Sec et M erowave «&gt;0
Ocl22

Nat onal League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS--N amed C Big
Ca an to ce p esiden sp ng an ng m nor

Monday SOpt 18

6

70 6850722
68 73 475
7
6 78 439
22
W11t

Oakand

~rd

BASEBAll.

5 8 7 2
453 6 12
424 20 !2

: '83
75 656

UAW GM Quality 1500

I TRANSACfiONS ~ I

Centra
Chcago
Kansas City
M nnesota

NEW BRA ND NAME COMPUT
EAS A MOS EVERYONE AP
PROVED W H $0 DOWN LOW
MONTH Y PA MEN S
800
6 34 6 EXT 330

W

Ocl 8 -

38 S acy Comp on 36
39 Kye Pet1y 3
367
40 B en Bod ne

Amer can Leagua

40 698-3004

740 592 !142
Qua y co h ng and ho seho cf
ems $ 00 bag sae eve y
Tr.u Sday Monday h Sa u day
9 OD-5 30

6
4
27
9
23

co Eses 34) 0 5pm
Fridly a B11m11
Hous on M e 4 5 a Ch ago Cubs
(Tapa 6
320pm
C nc nna fN amson 5 7 and Vi one 9 8
a Pitt1bu gh Aitch e 1 7 and A oyo 2 5 2
505pm
A zona Anderson 2 5 a FlOrida Pen ny 5
7 705 p m
Ph ade ph a (Chen e 2 a N Y Mats Hamp
on 3-6 7 Opm
Mo ea Moo e 4) a A an a (Ashby 8
2 740pm
S Lous(Anke 87 aM wau kee DAm o
5 805pm
Los Age as B own 2 5 a Coo ado
Bohanon 8 9 9 OS p m
San D ego C nnane
a San F anciSco
Henandez 4 0
035pm

(304)675-6679

Pron o Emerge cy Fe gh Needs
C8 go Va ns 2 24 s/ Trucks &amp;
liacoswwoTae
•Fee ns ance 0 Fee Ra s

6

55 405pm
A zona Sch ng 0 0 a A anta Maddux
58) 740pm
San Oego Cemen 2 3 a San Fan s

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spa c ous 2 Bed oo ms 2
FoosCA
2 Ba hFuly Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 M o No Pe s
Lease Pus Secu ty Depos Re

230

6

Opm

F orida (Oemp ste

Avalllble Now
Tw n Towe s now accepting
app ca ons fo BR
HUO subsld zed ap lo e de ly
and hand capped EOH
OWNER/ OPERATORS

NC

TodiY'I Glmu
Mont ea Armas 4 7) a S Lous K e 6
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BR OGE STATE UN VER S TY
800 964 83 6

0 0 00 2
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P ttsbu gh 8 Los Ang e es 3
San Diego 7 M waukee 6
San F anc sco 5 Ph ade phia 4

Schools
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basea pan p o ed ca on and
sho s udy cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e ph one CAM

0 0 00 4
0 0 00 30

Hous on 3 Flof da s
Mon1 ea 7 St Lou s 2

Pets lor Sale

wes

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
au CK LY Ca ch a o s Mas e s
Do o a e by co esponden e

Paraonals

540 Miscellaneous

0
7
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: : : 73
67
7
68

C nc nnat
N Y Mets a
Ch cago Cubs 8 Colorado 5
A anta 7 Anzona

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DJl as

82 56
74 63

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Now

800.2 4 0452
Reg •90-05 274B

ANNOUNCEMENT S

Apartments
lor Rent

440

Gall polo Coreor Collogt
ca eers C ose To Home
Ca Today 740-446-4367

Saturday I Mondoy

40

L Pc1

Centrll
8059

AEQIS

005

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Sunday I Monday ldltlon
1 oo.J m F~day

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Na ona Hockey leaiu•
A LAN A

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w hOPe Buzek
CA GARY FLAMES-Announced he 9t a
me o GG an F h
CAAOUNA HURA CANES-Named Mary
Ann Ba dw n d ec
o corpo a e commun ca

oe M nteCa o 1(}0 R h

3
4

New Hamp h e 300 Loud
MBNA o 400 Do e De

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UN SECURED V SA MC
NO
UPFRONT FEES APPROVAL
GUARANTEED AECE VE 3 5
CARDS IN tO 14 BUS NESS
DAYS 877 278-3485

TION.
TimE g DO am to 5DO pm
LOCHTIOn 39595 Bradbury Rd middleport, Oh
I

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

DIRECTIONS From Galhpohs take Rt 7
North approx 15 m1Ies to Bradbury Rd
(at cautton hght) Thrn Right toward
Middleport go approxtmately 1 tenth of
a mtl e on nght Look for s1gns
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Queen or fu ll bedroom su tc F II s ze a yu
Basse bed oom su te color vh tc exec lc
condll on Coffee and end ab es Book I elf
Zemth consol e TV &amp; VCR Kc mo c
mtc ow ave &amp; cab net Mag c Ch ef a gc ( "
cond) Kenmore washe Auloma chum d f c
Vacuum cleaners D shes P cturcs Clocks
Blankets Rugs Crafls indus a! mop &amp; bucket
set (new) Oak porch chars &amp; MUCH MORE

DECORATION
INSULATION
ORA
VACATION

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Reb
n--s oc
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 7 9528
Sma eggs 25 ~ dozen ca
985 3956

CASH / APPRO VED
1puttha candies on the cake llka you
seld and the box caught flra

�Thursday, September 7 2000

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

c ' Patge B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'Thursday September 7 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Reds

!II Peraon11
Announcement,

70

Yard Sale

G.,..w.y Lott &amp; Found
Pomeroy

Yard Sa'-• ond Wontld
To OoAda
Muat Be Paid In Advance
DIRUNE OfAP~
200pm lhadoy
re
tho ad Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Moncloy ldltlon

200pm

F~d~

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ATTENT ON DEVELOPERS 32

Behind pos office n LDng Bottom
Hayman I R ggs Cumm ngs
Thu,.oay &amp; Friday 9-

Ac 86 M l "'PP OK ma I y 0
Ac e ake w 1'1 sand Mob e
Home W th Add On 199 500
740 388-8676

IENDNEL R§AQ Nl
1 00 p m tho day bofDro

half but the Mets took a 5 2 lead
m the second on Pratts homer
and Lenny Hams RBI Single
-,. Santiago h t an RBI double n
from Page 81
the botto 1 I a fa d Casey t ed tt
nmngs Fnday agamst Montre
5 all w th a two run hon er n
a) lasted JUSt 41 p tches and 1 1 3 the third
mmngs He gave up five runs and
New Yo k took a 7 4 lead n
two hits m I 1 3 mn ngs
the fourth aga ns Ketth Glauber
New York whtcl. outhtt the on RBI grounders by M k Bor
Reds 13 6 went ahead m the first d ck a d De ek Bell who reach d
on M att Franco s three run on an error by shortstop Chr s
homer h s fi rst home run smce Sexton M kc P azza h nto a
July 16 1999 at Tampa Bay
tl e
run scor g do bl play
Gr treys home run pulled the seventh
Reds w thin a run m the bottom
Reds Notes Tl e Met have

24 homers n the r past 21 games
Scott Williamson s expected to
come off the DL Oower back
stra n) on Fr day and start for the
Reds at P ttsburgh
A wtld
p tch by Bell t the second ra sed
the Reds club record and maJor
league lead ng total to 86
Osvaldo Fernandez made h s first
rei ef appe rane e s nee 1996
when he pttched two th rds of an
1 ng for C nc nnat
He last
p t I ed Ju y ( at St Lou s we
on he DL the next day w th a
sore elbow then was acttvated
Fr day

TODAY'S SCOREBOAR
I ~ ...fJ4iJf I
Nollono Looguo

NewYorl&lt;
F ortda
Montrea
Ph lade ph a

A DEAQYNE.
2 doyo bof"" the ad Ia

to run by 4 30 p m

ldltton- 4 30 Thunday
DMdiiMa IUI&gt;/£1 to
-~due ro hoii&lt;Myo

GB

590

eo 59

575

67 7

486 4 !2
4 9 23 2
406 25 2

.............. 57 79
56 82

Pit1sbu gh-

Tennessee

2

0 000
0 000

5 6

5
68
: ::::·::::::::.·::::'8079
59 79
............. .. ...........59 80
59 80

Q2

9

428 20 12
424
2

424

NY Gants ........... ... .. .
Ph lade ph a
Washingto

2

150

560

Merchandise

QU ed

Days

E en gs

740 446 348
0502
40

40 36

440-0 0

30 Announcement•

Professional
Services
NEED CASH

WE

House 2 84 Ac es 3BR 28A FA
FP 2 Ca Ga age UR 2 M es
F om
Page
e
$89 000

New To YouTh fl Shoppe
9 Wes S mson Athens

6
4
2
4

0 000

1nn ngs

6

0 0 00 36
0 0 00 4
0 000
0 000 0
28

0
27

6
0
20
28
36

20
4
36

2 9 a Houston E arton

Eool

TMm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE

Giveaway

510

Yo~······: :

Bosto
New
Toronto
Bait moe

Tampa Bay

Au

Household
Goods

40

L Pc1
574
529

72 58
64
::: : :: 78
72 67
63 76
59 80

C eva and
De Oit

··.. ···•::::
.

597 6
55

GB

lld a

apo

Sean e ................ ..... ...... 75 64

540
529
496
446

73 65
69 70

Anahetm
Texas

n

62

Da las at Washing o 9 p m

AnahEim

'10

NASCAR Wlnaton Cup Serlea

Det o~ 0

c acKer Barrel 500 Hamp on
ha d
Ma com 400 Dar1 ngton S C
Food C ty 500 Bns o Tem

D eHard 500 Ta adega Ala (Jeff

NC

Texas Roge s
3 a Ch ca go Wh e So
Paque
6 805pm
Friday I Gamel
ChcagoWh eSox BadWI 4 5 aCe e

De

land (Woodo d 2 9 7 05 p m
o onto Loa za 8

N Y Yankees C emens
Ohka33 7D5pm
B os pm

Wedel ngs

Mn esoa Kn eyO a Sean e Abbott9
0 05 pm
Tampa Bay E and 2 3 a Oak and He ed a

Pes
Spa s Teams
P o ess ona Ce

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN
FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EXPER ENCE RE
CU RED
800 748 57 6 E

ed Ph o og a

Reasonable a es

da apo s

304 675 472
30465 29

' 0

M h

FINANCIAL

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY SS ?
AFC

No Fee Un ess We W
888 582 3345

e..t

TRANSPORTATION

WLTPtsPFPA
0 0 00
6
000027
000023

1083 OR NEWER TRAC
TORS GROW NG REG ON A
CAR R ER SEE K NG QUA TV
OWNER OPE RA O RS 85 8
CPM A SO COM PAN Y DR V
ERS HOME WEEKEND S
CALL
MO ST Y OROPHOOK
TODAY HCX llOt).2QOo2823

es

ac~

Samake o a multiyea cont act
UTAH JAZZ--NamiKI Gary B 1995 a h eti
a ne
FOOTBALL

Nat onal Footba Llague
NFL NTERNAT ONAL-Nomed Ka e Boos
d ecto o n ena ona meda
ATLANTA FALCON S--S g eel LB Ch s Bo
dano wa ad OB Toy G azan

CLEVELAN D BROWNS-Named De ick
A exanae p aye dave opmen coo d na o
DETRO T ONS-Ag eed o e ms WI h 08
Cha e Ba ch on a fou yea con act eKtqn
son h ough 2003
GREEN BAY PACKERS--$ g ed WR

p ae1 ce squad Waived WR Gera d W ams
om he p ac ce squad
HOUSTON A noun eel
a he eam s
n ckname w be he TeKans
NO ANA POLS
CO S-Wa ed
AB
l ennox Go don om he p act ce squqd
S g ed B osh Gentry o the pact e squad
JACKSONV LLE JAGUARS--Wa ed CB
M chae Sw ft S gned RB Chad D kes
Released TE Rod Mon oe om he p act ce
squad S gned DB Shad C ss o he p actlca

HOCKEY

Long Pond

005 p m

Ca o appo n men

Ameran Lugu•
BOSTON REO SOX-Go eel up RHP R&lt;:k
Crousho e om Pawtucka of he ntema OnEil
eague
TORON 0 BLUE JAYS--Exended he
work ng ag eeme
WI h ennessee of lhB
Southe n League h ough he 2002 season

squad

49 0 05pm
Batt mo e Rapp 7 a a Anahe m o n 4

phe

9 Chad wn e 365
20 oe Nemechetc 2 373
2 Bi E oll 2 270
22 Je emy Mavf aid 2 262
23 J mmy Spence 2 228
24 eny Nadeau 2 e
25 ohn And ett 2 24
26 l&lt;fMn Lepage 2 2
27 Robert P essley 2 7
28 M chae Wa rt p 2 078
29 Bobby Ham non
954
30 Ken y Wa ace
952
3 E ott Sader 922
32 Da e Blaney 754
33 Wal y Da enbach
889
34 RckMast
5 5
35 Kenny rw n 440
36 Scott P uan 406
37 De e Waltrip 390

squad
NEW YORK. ETS Wa ed T Cone
G een S gned WA KA Damon Dunn Watved
WR Ya G een om he pra ce squad
S gned E ake Mo e and o he p act f:8

6 a Bas on

Texas Gynn43 a KansasC y Sen63

PHO'f.OG-RAPHY

5 Koo Sch ader 2 5 0
ohnny Benson 2 496
7 Sertng Mar n 2444
8 etry Labonte 2 4 8

6

Kenny Bouta n and CB S ason Moo e o he

Rechen86 eo5pm

De o (Weave 9 2 a
0) 705pm

Drtver Stend ng•
Bobby Laban e 3 638
2 Oa e Jarrett 3 527
3 Oa e Ea nhard 3 433
4 Jeff Burton 3 4 3
5 Rusty wa ace 3 24
6 Tony S ewart 3 98
7 Rk:ky Rudel 3 59
8 Ward Burton 3 39
9 MakMartn 3 22
0 ell Go&lt;do 2 990
Matt Kenseth 2 699
2 MkeSkn e 2G99
3 S ave Park 2 589
4 Oae Eamha d1 J 2 545

Nat ona Baaketba I Auoc atlan
NBA--Named Ka h een Behrens vtee pres
dent co mm n ty e a ons
DETRO T P STON S--S gned G Ma een
Cea es
NEW ERSEY NETS--5 g ad C Soumat a

2
6
3

Oak and 6 Bos on 4
Kansas C y 3 N Y Yankees 2
Ch cago White Soli 3 Te11.as
TodayaGamee
M esoa
M on
28
a
Boson
RMan nez a 6)
05 p m
Anahem (Be che 2 2 at De o M eM: 4
0 705pm
Tampa Bay Aekar 5 9 a C e e and Co on
28 705 p m
Sean e Ga c a 5 4 a Toronto (T ac se
2 705pm
N Y Yankees Neag e S 4 a Kansas C tv

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

500k A110nda e Ariz
NOV 2 Pennzo 400 Homestead Fla
Nov 9 - NAPA 500 Hampton Ga

MON REA EXPOS--Reca eel B-OF 1ill
madge Noonan rom Ot1awa o he nternat10n
a eag e
BASKETBAll.

2

Cleveland B Tampa Bay 2
To onto 7 sean e 3

Yard Sale

Rock ngham N C
Checker Auto PartS/DUra Lube
Nov 5

eague

Wednndlly a G1me1
Mmesoa4 Battmoe

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

OCt 115- Wins on 500 Ta adega Ala
Pop' Sec et M erowave «&gt;0
Ocl22

Nat onal League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS--N amed C Big
Ca an to ce p esiden sp ng an ng m nor

Monday SOpt 18

6

70 6850722
68 73 475
7
6 78 439
22
W11t

Oakand

~rd

BASEBAll.

5 8 7 2
453 6 12
424 20 !2

: '83
75 656

UAW GM Quality 1500

I TRANSACfiONS ~ I

Centra
Chcago
Kansas City
M nnesota

NEW BRA ND NAME COMPUT
EAS A MOS EVERYONE AP
PROVED W H $0 DOWN LOW
MONTH Y PA MEN S
800
6 34 6 EXT 330

W

Ocl 8 -

38 S acy Comp on 36
39 Kye Pet1y 3
367
40 B en Bod ne

Amer can Leagua

40 698-3004

740 592 !142
Qua y co h ng and ho seho cf
ems $ 00 bag sae eve y
Tr.u Sday Monday h Sa u day
9 OD-5 30

6
4
27
9
23

co Eses 34) 0 5pm
Fridly a B11m11
Hous on M e 4 5 a Ch ago Cubs
(Tapa 6
320pm
C nc nna fN amson 5 7 and Vi one 9 8
a Pitt1bu gh Aitch e 1 7 and A oyo 2 5 2
505pm
A zona Anderson 2 5 a FlOrida Pen ny 5
7 705 p m
Ph ade ph a (Chen e 2 a N Y Mats Hamp
on 3-6 7 Opm
Mo ea Moo e 4) a A an a (Ashby 8
2 740pm
S Lous(Anke 87 aM wau kee DAm o
5 805pm
Los Age as B own 2 5 a Coo ado
Bohanon 8 9 9 OS p m
San D ego C nnane
a San F anciSco
Henandez 4 0
035pm

(304)675-6679

Pron o Emerge cy Fe gh Needs
C8 go Va ns 2 24 s/ Trucks &amp;
liacoswwoTae
•Fee ns ance 0 Fee Ra s

6

55 405pm
A zona Sch ng 0 0 a A anta Maddux
58) 740pm
San Oego Cemen 2 3 a San Fan s

Ta a Townhouse Apa mens
Ve y Spa c ous 2 Bed oo ms 2
FoosCA
2 Ba hFuly Ca
peed Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a $365 M o No Pe s
Lease Pus Secu ty Depos Re

230

6

Opm

F orida (Oemp ste

Avalllble Now
Tw n Towe s now accepting
app ca ons fo BR
HUO subsld zed ap lo e de ly
and hand capped EOH
OWNER/ OPERATORS

NC

TodiY'I Glmu
Mont ea Armas 4 7) a S Lous K e 6
9

BR OGE STATE UN VER S TY
800 964 83 6

0 0 00 2
0 000 27

P ttsbu gh 8 Los Ang e es 3
San Diego 7 M waukee 6
San F anc sco 5 Ph ade phia 4

Schools
Instruction

basea pan p o ed ca on and
sho s udy cou se Fo FREE n
o ma on book e ph one CAM

0 0 00 4
0 0 00 30

Hous on 3 Flof da s
Mon1 ea 7 St Lou s 2

Pets lor Sale

wes

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
au CK LY Ca ch a o s Mas e s
Do o a e by co esponden e

Paraonals

540 Miscellaneous

0
7
0
27

Central

: : : 73
67
7
68

C nc nnat
N Y Mets a
Ch cago Cubs 8 Colorado 5
A anta 7 Anzona

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DJl as

82 56
74 63

''

6

Ool

va

20

Wast

Now

800.2 4 0452
Reg •90-05 274B

ANNOUNCEMENT S

Apartments
lor Rent

440

Gall polo Coreor Collogt
ca eers C ose To Home
Ca Today 740-446-4367

Saturday I Mondoy

40

L Pc1

Centrll
8059

AEQIS

005

W

82 57

0 0 00 8
0 0100 21
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0 0 00 9
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JackSOfMle
C nanna
C e elancl

Eott

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A anta ,........... ..

San D ego

Sunday I Monday ldltlon
1 oo.J m F~day

«&lt;

2

Cent!'I:

Bal moe

~ WedniHdtly I68G1mw
72 48EI

tho ad lolo run

0 0 00 20
0000 8

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500 Da

SC

go

Na ona Hockey leaiu•
A LAN A

HAASHERS-Ag eed o e ms

w hOPe Buzek
CA GARY FLAMES-Announced he 9t a
me o GG an F h
CAAOUNA HURA CANES-Named Mary
Ann Ba dw n d ec
o corpo a e commun ca

oe M nteCa o 1(}0 R h

3
4

New Hamp h e 300 Loud
MBNA o 400 Do e De

0

UN SECURED V SA MC
NO
UPFRONT FEES APPROVAL
GUARANTEED AECE VE 3 5
CARDS IN tO 14 BUS NESS
DAYS 877 278-3485

TION.
TimE g DO am to 5DO pm
LOCHTIOn 39595 Bradbury Rd middleport, Oh
I

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

DIRECTIONS From Galhpohs take Rt 7
North approx 15 m1Ies to Bradbury Rd
(at cautton hght) Thrn Right toward
Middleport go approxtmately 1 tenth of
a mtl e on nght Look for s1gns
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Queen or fu ll bedroom su tc F II s ze a yu
Basse bed oom su te color vh tc exec lc
condll on Coffee and end ab es Book I elf
Zemth consol e TV &amp; VCR Kc mo c
mtc ow ave &amp; cab net Mag c Ch ef a gc ( "
cond) Kenmore washe Auloma chum d f c
Vacuum cleaners D shes P cturcs Clocks
Blankets Rugs Crafls indus a! mop &amp; bucket
set (new) Oak porch chars &amp; MUCH MORE

DECORATION
INSULATION
ORA
VACATION

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ET
AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Reb
n--s oc
Ca Ron E ans 800 53 7 9528
Sma eggs 25 ~ dozen ca
985 3956

CASH / APPRO VED
1puttha candies on the cake llka you
seld and the box caught flra

�v

'

•
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, September 7, 2000

I' lllitl.

hu111day, September 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Pag~ tm:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

LLEYOOP
BRIDGE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

Charla Burge now accepting
new customers at
Shear Illusions in Middleport.
Stop in or call today

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

IJJ ·

992-2550

now PARTinG OUT
1916 ford Uan
1!U Toyota mRZ
1gag Cldlllec fleetwood
1ft~! ford Tbunderlllrd
1990 fortlllerastar Uan
1992 ford fllplorer
1'19lfonl Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

740-992-1506

PHILLIP
ALDER

~ -;;~
PRODUCTS

High 8l Dry

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Self-Storage

l

33795 HilAnd Rd.

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records.. photo
=~~~~~ntal•cameras, household inventory
Items will ba safe.
For more information call

Nortb
• Q 10 8
• A 8 54
t AQ 3
• 10 9 7

BlUM LUMBER

Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR mORt InfO. PURSt CRU

1'1'. R'l'. 148

740-992-5232

CHD'I'ER

I Yard

Lots of household items.
Fri &amp; Sat. Only 9/8, 9/9
Everything must go.
248 Palmer St., Middleport

ROBERT BISSELL·
CONSTRUCTION

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Counties.

PU8UC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
that
on
Saturday,
September I, ot I 0:00 o.m.,
1 public 1111 will be hold ot
211 Well Second Stroot,
Pomaray; Ohio,
Tho
Formor'o S.nk ond Savlngo
Compony extended parking
lot (booldo Powoll'o Super
Vllluo), to ooll for cosh tho
following collotorol:
1996 Hurricane Deck Boat
ODYP3182H &amp;
1996 Force Motor
01!1118341 &amp; l!loat lhlllor
45JA3HW11S1002885
UNI7 Dodge Rom 4x4

Truck

187HW14H8HS351423
1998 Chevrolet Lumina
2GI WL52113WI123859
1998 Sulek Century
104H51WXJT431938

1996 Chevrolet Covollor

101JCI244S711133011

IW5 Polorlo ATV 4X4
2547418

Plenty ofTLC

740-667-6329

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

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

State Route 7,
.Tuppers Plains has
openings. all shifts.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. Certified In
Meigs ~ Athens

,,,..., MUM
-

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•·
II

"""'"'

Bulblo•er &amp; Backhoe
Service,
Houae &amp; Trailer Sitea ,
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sylle""' &amp;
Utilitie•

74(1·992·1671

right to bid atlhlo oalo, and ·
to withdrew tho above
collataral prior to solo.
Further, The Farmer• Bank

and Savlngo Company
reoorvoo tho right to reject
any or all bldo oubmlttld.
Further,

the

above

collotarol wlll be oold In the
condition It Ia In, with no
expreoo or Implied
warranties glvon.
For further Information,

contact Sheila Buchanan at
992-2136.
(I) 8, 7, 8 3tc

NASCAR

lhere's a lot
more to radng
than racing for
Eamhardt ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
Life used to be simpler for Dale Earnhardt.
If he wasn't racing, he could spend his time driving a tractor around his farm or fiddling with a
car in his garage.
It's not like that any more for the 49-year-old
Intimidator, business owner and superstar. But his
gotta-do-it-all approach and his goals remain the
same as his early days.
At an age when others are retired or thinking
the time is near, Earnhardt's still running hard and
deep into corners. There's just a business ledger or
a pending contract on the seat next to him.
"As you get more involved and get more things
going on in your life, things get more busy,' ~ said
Earnhardt, third in the Winston Cup standings,
205 points behind leader Bobby Labonte. "To
focus on a championship and focusing on racing
is a lot different than we used to do it."
There are sponsors to court, crew chief Kevin
Hamlin to plan with, the Dale Earnhardt Inc. race
teams of his son Dale Jr. and Steve Park to manage, and a life to lead.
"I guess that's the price you pay to make $40
million," racing 1-iaU-of-Famer 8Jircfy Baker said,
~
joking.
Earnhardt hasn't slowed any pa,rt of his crowd- ·
ed life.
"I'm the kind of guy, l want to know everything,'' he sa1d. "I want to know if there's ~~~
unhappy employee somewhere. I want to know
what the balance is at the end of the day. lfl know
what's going on, th en I can help in some way or
control it."
After finishing fourth at the goracing.com 500
in Bristol on Aug. 26, Earnhardt flew to Florida
the next morning to tend to the sale of his 7 4foot fishing boat and check on a house he's building in southern Flonda.
He and his wife, Teresa, returned to MooresvJile,
N.C., the next day to get 11 -year-old Taylor ready
for schooL Earnhardt had to check his car dealerships and hold a manager's meeting, discuss his
Darlington race set-up and plans for the No. 3
Richard C hlidress Chevrolet with Hamlin, and
talk to officials with Park 's and Dale Jr.'s teams.
"You may get to bed by ' midnight and then
you're up at 5 a.m. to start the whole thing again.''
Earnhardt said.
And what abom Sundays'
"That's about the most fun you have, the kind
of time you work for," he said.
Earnhardt is a capable boss who can be intimidating but also understanding, Park says.
"Sometimes if you get a half-smile from him,
you know you're doing good,'' Park said. " If yo u
do some thin g wrong, you're out on the farm on a
tractor baling hay in the hot sun.''
Dale J r. and Park have h;rd success for Dale
Earhardt Inc. this year. Earnhardt's son has won at
Texas Motor Speedway, Ri chmond International
Raceway and The Winston all-star race at lowe's
Motor Speedway. Park won his first race in three
years with Earnhardt last month in Watkins Glen.
N.Y They've also comb in ed for three poles this
year.
Tht• elder Earnh.fidt said he expected Park to
win sooner and Dale Jr.'s triumphs to take more
[ime.

tormelilo'~ treolio~~

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

I

regular houn "

i

Auto Upholslely
Company Logos
HatS
'
Jackets
' School Mascots

Tues-Frl 1Q-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

CJrmehta &amp; Kenny Otborne

33869 Blackwood Road · Off St Rt143

740-992-4559

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740-742-81 03

. 911100 1 mo pd

HANING's
•••••~:.:• I r
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-6735
LINDA'S
PAINTING

The CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

"Take the pain out
ofpaintiii{JLet me do it for you"

(Factory Outlet)
AU vertical blind• are
made to order at our
location

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. -

UP TO 70% OFF
• Verticals • Wood
• Minis • Etc

Leave Message

144 Third Ave. Galbpolis

Alter 6 pm-740-985-4180 ·

446·4995

Fall Mums 6 for $1 0
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHDUSE
SYracuse, OH

140-992-5716

WANTED
Standing timber large
or •mall tracks. Top
prices paid also .

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
aft eo· 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy) ·
od

1

'

'

''

I

I
I

'
'
'
'

·. .awa
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

· AD Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Par1s
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Paris
Dealers.
1000 sr. Rt. 7 South

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH'
Paying $80.00
per gartp~
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Slarbural
Prog""aalve top line.
Lie. II Q0-50 """""'

•R~Gonon

• K 7 54
• J 54

• VIII
&amp; Palllllog
• P &amp; Pardo Docb

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

South
t•

West North
Pass 2NT

2 2 yrt. Lo&lt;ol

••

Pass

3.

Pomeroy, Ohio

WHAT
FER?

'•FRANK &amp; EARNEST
wf~~

00 YOOE:VU.

30

45771
74(1.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

.'4j

.,I'

Hauling • Umesto~e •

•

•!WOO~' mo...J!!!,

.

••••••••••••••••

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

EXCAVATinG
Fill Dirt • Mul1h •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992·3470

.

Larry Schey

:

~

CORCRETE

: CODDECTIOD :

74o-gas-3B31

: 740·742·8015or :
: 1-877-353-7022 :

. "A

K.TUN..l-Y, l'r-\

"'

~YNO\Ft\T,

L'fo\. .lUClT ·~IG

7

E'&gt;Qr{E.D !•

YOU f'J&gt;..VE
BO(o.l(.~

"''

11\1 y~

~\OMC.f\?

IG NATE
'f H I!o 15 H iE FIRST
t&gt;AY OF THE REST OF
CuR LIVES, TEDDY'·
THE GDDFI'.EY ERA \5

HELLO.
BOY5 .

OVER ' n·s OVER!

, IT'S

3a

Pass

OVER~

R;.~tland,

'

.

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 , .1,

(740) 367·0266
1·800·950·3359

S\utl\1'

' Grlodll\9
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Mason, WV
304-773-5300 or 740-992-2403
Reserve a spot for you , your team, or your league.
Churches, Schools, Organizations·are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

Free Estimates
HARTWELL HOUSE
We now offer Gift &amp;
Wedding Registry
We have VIllage Cand les

992-7696

CONCRETE

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERV ICES
BQBCAT SERV ICES
Residential , Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

'K 0

K

STEM,

YRYARII
VTE
SNR

DXTP

KX

TU

WANTED
D" diameter lo 27"
I 0' lonq $-10 I Ton

CHIPWOOD
-1" to 25"
12' lo 20' '"t cnqth
•Poplar • Mapl e

• Occch • Sycamore

S 19/Ton
North or Gallipolis on
SR 7, 6 / 1Oor a mil e
above Road side Rest
o n riQht.

740 -9135 - -1465
or 7-10- olol 1- 9 262

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

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

ROFTMSRI

RWRX

NKWR

ST

YKSSRIINTMX

H 0 X' S

K

IT X' S

SEAK.' SRYBZR
UHRZIHXJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You can .keep the things. ol bronze and stone, and
give me one man to remember me JUst once a year. -

Damon Runyon

WOlD
GAM I

I
I

PITMEL

AFYOM

I

ITHURSDAY

~

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS IN
IHE SE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tETI LRS

TO GET ANSY.~R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
En tree- S:JII- Month - Polite- ATTENTION
My allnt gave me some sound adv1ce when 1. f1rst
started daling . ""The best compliment we can pay sl1e
sa 1d. "1s ATTENTION "

SEPTEMBER 7 I

m'Your

------II- CSirthday

POPLAR LOGS

AL SO WANTED

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Todlly'S c/utJ: P equtJis W

A

Call812-2191
' '\'r\11'

- '· Eacll -In tht c:lphor otandl fc&lt; anolher.

e
your door

OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE, OHIO

aro CJHtod 1Iom q.-llont by lamouo peopla, pall ond

: FREE ESTIMATES :

JINES'
·
·

TREE SERVICE

by Lull Cempoa

~Cipher coyptog&gt;omo

·'

Ohio

liALLit'UICil:i,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

' Quality Driveways, :
Patios. Sidewalks •
: 25 years Experience ,

a nawspaper
deUvered directly to
sucket
'\'ruck

..

•

A &amp; D Auto Up o sterr • P ua, Inc

IZl

Pass

••••••••••••••••

Truck seats. car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; VInyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • F;·l B:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yr• experience

11 Stow cargo
12 l)'pe ol bear
19 "I think,
therefore

:

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed - '5.25/50 lbs•
•12% Cattle feed '6.15/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog fOld '6.15/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Phone (740) 593-6671

"'

Gravel• Sand • Topso~1•

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

Steve Riffle

FOC OCIN6 ft\T

~@:,WICK'S.
ttfiOLinQ and

Road
Racine, Ohio

Stop In And See
. ,. Sales Representative

GOitl' viiT!-4 T.. ~ APPLe. tft

$A'(~ ,~OG,OLI'$ I'IOT A GOO£&gt; Te$T
Of ~tfiSTII'IG TeMPTATIOtl.

C£\TOOCD

29670 Bashan

P*l•lln'a
S.nulr brolher'a
7 Chicken
keeper?"
oervlng
46 Aclrlll
13 Weirder
Thurmon
14 Cryotolllne gem 47 Nautical rope
15 Fonnol
46 l)'pe of chelr
argument
51 a.tall
16 Bred
54 Trlllngullr oall
17 Mountoln on
55 Egg dlah
Crate
58 Af 1 reduced
18 Aloia!
price (2 --~
20 Four-pootor
57 Short jacket
21 8111 of fare
23 · - Kopllll"
DOWN
24 Gul""" pig
I Darken
25 Actor
2 Paid lllontlon
Johnny 3 Debonair
27 HouHhold
4 Aunt In Spain
29 DC VIP
5 Southeast
31 Longume·
A1lan holiday 9 Guldo'a high
32 Workers' a11n.
note
33 Accompllohed s Mountain
nymph
10 Auto safety
34 Oecorete
7 Food for robins
device
37 Ectgea
8 Spawn
(2 wds.)
40 Grant
I

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Tough trivia question: In which year
did Alexander lvanovich Herzen ciJIIm
t&amp;at communism is a Russian autocracy turned upside down?
This deal features a declarer-play
technique that is like looking at the
world upside down. How would you try
lo make four spades after West leads
the heart king?
.
Declarer has nine top tricks: love
spades; one heart and three diamonds.
South could draw trumps and hope the
missing diamonds are 3-3. Alternatively,
he could draw two rounds of trumps,
then allack diamonds, getting home if
either the diamonds are 3·3 or the defender with the long diamonds holds the
missing trurnp(s).
Yet the best line requires only that
the trumps split 3-2 and diamonds be
no worse than 4 ·2 (or the same de·
fender be long in both spades and dia·
monds). After winning with the heart
ace cash the spade eight (to check
that trumps aren't 5·0), ruff a heart in
hand, and play a spade to the 10 tor
queen) . Are the trumps 3:2? If not,
switch to diamonds 1mmedtately, getling home if they split 3·3 (you
promptly draw the other trumps) or
the player with the long trumps has at
least four diamonds.
Here though the spades are 3·2.
so ruff' another heart, play a diamond
to 'dummy's queen, ruff the last heart
with your final trump, return to dummy with another diamond, draw the
last trump, and claim. This method of
ruffing several times in hand and US·
ing dummy's strong trumps to remove
the opposition's fangs 1s called a dum·
my reversal.
Hcrzen m;odc lhat•lalrment in t85t
- a forward-thinking lellu .• .

(,

Reasonable Prl•t:es. r
FREE Estimates ······

740·992·7599

Anawer to Pruioua Puzzle

Opening lead: • K

Certalnteed,
Simington
Uletlme Warlr&amp;Dilll:
Local cont1racto1r -r

'

41 MeUII for cone
43 Puta on
45 · - - my

Stand on your head
- figurativelY .

Replacement
Windows

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
!
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMEROAL and RESIDENTIAL
FRE!i ESTIMATES .

ACROSS

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Free Estimates

BISSELL IUIL,ERS
INC.

HILL'S
SElF STORAGE

•AQ832
•AKJ94

'

DEPDYSAG
PAR,.S

• K6
• J

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

mo . 41 H()(

• 7 6 2
• 7 6 '3
• J 2

• llochlall &amp;PI llog

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo per
month.

..w., 're back lo our

Canpulerlzf(j Cuslooi Embroidery

East

• 53
•KQI092
• 10 9 8 6

• NowGonlot

17401 992-3131

7/22/TFN

West

Soutb

Tho Farmoro Bonk and
Sovlngo
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reaervtl the

NEA Crossword Puzzle

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

Friday, Sept 8, 2000

today, not events or circumstances,
forthcoming.
enabling you to reel in a very sizable . GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Any endeavor
in which you personally originate or manreward it you put forth the eHort .
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) Follow your . age has an exceptionally good ct1ance of
inclinations as to how things should be
being extremely successful today. Don't
done today, and you'll be capable of sit on it. If possible . launch your project
making the most of your opportunities . now.
One could turn out to be enormous.
CANCER (June 2t ·July 22) Letting th ings
ARIES (March 21·April 19) A very lortu· develop at their own pace today could be
itous union could be formed today
your ace in the hole, Things that happen
between you and someone who thinks
without provocation are those things that
exactly like you. This special bond will be are ordained by Lady Luck.

Recognition perhaps long overdue may
Hnally material ize in the year ahead. Your
new identification cou ld produce maten~l
prospects far more promising then you
ever dreamed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept . 22) II you lee l
you're entitled to a raise, bOnus or spec1a!
treatment, this is the day to get the boss
ear. Your chances for compensation are
superior. Get a jump on life by under·
standing the influences that'll govern you one that doesn'l happen often.
in the year ahead . Send lor your Astra- TAURUS (April 20·May 20) You may nol
Graph predictions by mailing $2 to Astra· think that what you do for another today
· Graph , c/o th 1s newspaper. P .O. Box is anything out of the ordinary , but the
1758, Murray Hill Station , New ~ork .. NY recipient will be so impressed by your
10156. Be sure to state your Zod1ac s1gn . kind gesture, some kind of reward wiH be
LI BRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Ail communica·
tion with people who are near and dear lo
you, whether they reside in close proxlml·
ty to you or at distance, will have some
kind of memorable impact today.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Aller your cusoom·
ary routine today , and try to cfo something
different with a close fr iend you've been
neglecting a bit late ly . Someth ing very
good could result.

SCO RPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22) Rewards
you didn't anticipate could be forthcoming
today from somethfng you .may not ha~e
even realized was right on track . ThiS
cou ld m8an a rewarding new side project.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Any sit·
ust!an that arises today 'that enables you
10

meet new people should be taken full

advantage ol. A valuable contact could

be established.
CAPRICQRN (Dec . 22·Jan.

19) Make
your tasks or autgnmenta labora of I0'-'1

today lnatead ol merely lhat which mull
be done, and soma kind of l)(tra rawardl

will be In otoro lor you .
AQUA~ IUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) You will bl
the one ·tn control of your own dut lny

"You'll love thll place. Palm treea, 11ndy
be1cha1 and 2,000 ralltlur•ntl."

l

at Atlanta Bravea

�v

'

•
Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, September 7, 2000

I' lllitl.

hu111day, September 7, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Pag~ tm:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

LLEYOOP
BRIDGE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

Charla Burge now accepting
new customers at
Shear Illusions in Middleport.
Stop in or call today

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

IJJ ·

992-2550

now PARTinG OUT
1916 ford Uan
1!U Toyota mRZ
1gag Cldlllec fleetwood
1ft~! ford Tbunderlllrd
1990 fortlllerastar Uan
1992 ford fllplorer
1'19lfonl Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

740-992-1506

PHILLIP
ALDER

~ -;;~
PRODUCTS

High 8l Dry

'THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Self-Storage

l

33795 HilAnd Rd.

Protect your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
collections, legal papers, investment records.. photo
=~~~~~ntal•cameras, household inventory
Items will ba safe.
For more information call

Nortb
• Q 10 8
• A 8 54
t AQ 3
• 10 9 7

BlUM LUMBER

Pomeroy, Ohio

fOR mORt InfO. PURSt CRU

1'1'. R'l'. 148

740-992-5232

CHD'I'ER

I Yard

Lots of household items.
Fri &amp; Sat. Only 9/8, 9/9
Everything must go.
248 Palmer St., Middleport

ROBERT BISSELL·
CONSTRUCTION

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Counties.

PU8UC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
that
on
Saturday,
September I, ot I 0:00 o.m.,
1 public 1111 will be hold ot
211 Well Second Stroot,
Pomaray; Ohio,
Tho
Formor'o S.nk ond Savlngo
Compony extended parking
lot (booldo Powoll'o Super
Vllluo), to ooll for cosh tho
following collotorol:
1996 Hurricane Deck Boat
ODYP3182H &amp;
1996 Force Motor
01!1118341 &amp; l!loat lhlllor
45JA3HW11S1002885
UNI7 Dodge Rom 4x4

Truck

187HW14H8HS351423
1998 Chevrolet Lumina
2GI WL52113WI123859
1998 Sulek Century
104H51WXJT431938

1996 Chevrolet Covollor

101JCI244S711133011

IW5 Polorlo ATV 4X4
2547418

Plenty ofTLC

740-667-6329

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

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

State Route 7,
.Tuppers Plains has
openings. all shifts.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. Certified In
Meigs ~ Athens

,,,..., MUM
-

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•·
II

"""'"'

Bulblo•er &amp; Backhoe
Service,
Houae &amp; Trailer Sitea ,
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sylle""' &amp;
Utilitie•

74(1·992·1671

right to bid atlhlo oalo, and ·
to withdrew tho above
collataral prior to solo.
Further, The Farmer• Bank

and Savlngo Company
reoorvoo tho right to reject
any or all bldo oubmlttld.
Further,

the

above

collotarol wlll be oold In the
condition It Ia In, with no
expreoo or Implied
warranties glvon.
For further Information,

contact Sheila Buchanan at
992-2136.
(I) 8, 7, 8 3tc

NASCAR

lhere's a lot
more to radng
than racing for
Eamhardt ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
Life used to be simpler for Dale Earnhardt.
If he wasn't racing, he could spend his time driving a tractor around his farm or fiddling with a
car in his garage.
It's not like that any more for the 49-year-old
Intimidator, business owner and superstar. But his
gotta-do-it-all approach and his goals remain the
same as his early days.
At an age when others are retired or thinking
the time is near, Earnhardt's still running hard and
deep into corners. There's just a business ledger or
a pending contract on the seat next to him.
"As you get more involved and get more things
going on in your life, things get more busy,' ~ said
Earnhardt, third in the Winston Cup standings,
205 points behind leader Bobby Labonte. "To
focus on a championship and focusing on racing
is a lot different than we used to do it."
There are sponsors to court, crew chief Kevin
Hamlin to plan with, the Dale Earnhardt Inc. race
teams of his son Dale Jr. and Steve Park to manage, and a life to lead.
"I guess that's the price you pay to make $40
million," racing 1-iaU-of-Famer 8Jircfy Baker said,
~
joking.
Earnhardt hasn't slowed any pa,rt of his crowd- ·
ed life.
"I'm the kind of guy, l want to know everything,'' he sa1d. "I want to know if there's ~~~
unhappy employee somewhere. I want to know
what the balance is at the end of the day. lfl know
what's going on, th en I can help in some way or
control it."
After finishing fourth at the goracing.com 500
in Bristol on Aug. 26, Earnhardt flew to Florida
the next morning to tend to the sale of his 7 4foot fishing boat and check on a house he's building in southern Flonda.
He and his wife, Teresa, returned to MooresvJile,
N.C., the next day to get 11 -year-old Taylor ready
for schooL Earnhardt had to check his car dealerships and hold a manager's meeting, discuss his
Darlington race set-up and plans for the No. 3
Richard C hlidress Chevrolet with Hamlin, and
talk to officials with Park 's and Dale Jr.'s teams.
"You may get to bed by ' midnight and then
you're up at 5 a.m. to start the whole thing again.''
Earnhardt said.
And what abom Sundays'
"That's about the most fun you have, the kind
of time you work for," he said.
Earnhardt is a capable boss who can be intimidating but also understanding, Park says.
"Sometimes if you get a half-smile from him,
you know you're doing good,'' Park said. " If yo u
do some thin g wrong, you're out on the farm on a
tractor baling hay in the hot sun.''
Dale J r. and Park have h;rd success for Dale
Earhardt Inc. this year. Earnhardt's son has won at
Texas Motor Speedway, Ri chmond International
Raceway and The Winston all-star race at lowe's
Motor Speedway. Park won his first race in three
years with Earnhardt last month in Watkins Glen.
N.Y They've also comb in ed for three poles this
year.
Tht• elder Earnh.fidt said he expected Park to
win sooner and Dale Jr.'s triumphs to take more
[ime.

tormelilo'~ treolio~~

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

I

regular houn "

i

Auto Upholslely
Company Logos
HatS
'
Jackets
' School Mascots

Tues-Frl 1Q-6
Sat. 10-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets

CJrmehta &amp; Kenny Otborne

33869 Blackwood Road · Off St Rt143

740-992-4559

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740-742-81 03

. 911100 1 mo pd

HANING's
•••••~:.:• I r
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-6735
LINDA'S
PAINTING

The CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

"Take the pain out
ofpaintiii{JLet me do it for you"

(Factory Outlet)
AU vertical blind• are
made to order at our
location

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. -

UP TO 70% OFF
• Verticals • Wood
• Minis • Etc

Leave Message

144 Third Ave. Galbpolis

Alter 6 pm-740-985-4180 ·

446·4995

Fall Mums 6 for $1 0
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHDUSE
SYracuse, OH

140-992-5716

WANTED
Standing timber large
or •mall tracks. Top
prices paid also .

Dozer work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
aft eo· 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Randy) ·
od

1

'

'

''

I

I
I

'
'
'
'

·. .awa
Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

· AD Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Par1s
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Paris
Dealers.
1000 sr. Rt. 7 South

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH'
Paying $80.00
per gartp~
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Slarbural
Prog""aalve top line.
Lie. II Q0-50 """""'

•R~Gonon

• K 7 54
• J 54

• VIII
&amp; Palllllog
• P &amp; Pardo Docb

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

South
t•

West North
Pass 2NT

2 2 yrt. Lo&lt;ol

••

Pass

3.

Pomeroy, Ohio

WHAT
FER?

'•FRANK &amp; EARNEST
wf~~

00 YOOE:VU.

30

45771
74(1.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

.'4j

.,I'

Hauling • Umesto~e •

•

•!WOO~' mo...J!!!,

.

••••••••••••••••

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

EXCAVATinG
Fill Dirt • Mul1h •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992·3470

.

Larry Schey

:

~

CORCRETE

: CODDECTIOD :

74o-gas-3B31

: 740·742·8015or :
: 1-877-353-7022 :

. "A

K.TUN..l-Y, l'r-\

"'

~YNO\Ft\T,

L'fo\. .lUClT ·~IG

7

E'&gt;Qr{E.D !•

YOU f'J&gt;..VE
BO(o.l(.~

"''

11\1 y~

~\OMC.f\?

IG NATE
'f H I!o 15 H iE FIRST
t&gt;AY OF THE REST OF
CuR LIVES, TEDDY'·
THE GDDFI'.EY ERA \5

HELLO.
BOY5 .

OVER ' n·s OVER!

, IT'S

3a

Pass

OVER~

R;.~tland,

'

.

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916 , .1,

(740) 367·0266
1·800·950·3359

S\utl\1'

' Grlodll\9
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Mason, WV
304-773-5300 or 740-992-2403
Reserve a spot for you , your team, or your league.
Churches, Schools, Organizations·are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun

Free Estimates
HARTWELL HOUSE
We now offer Gift &amp;
Wedding Registry
We have VIllage Cand les

992-7696

CONCRETE

MASONRY
BACKHOE SERV ICES
BQBCAT SERV ICES
Residential , Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

(740) 985-3948

'K 0

K

STEM,

YRYARII
VTE
SNR

DXTP

KX

TU

WANTED
D" diameter lo 27"
I 0' lonq $-10 I Ton

CHIPWOOD
-1" to 25"
12' lo 20' '"t cnqth
•Poplar • Mapl e

• Occch • Sycamore

S 19/Ton
North or Gallipolis on
SR 7, 6 / 1Oor a mil e
above Road side Rest
o n riQht.

740 -9135 - -1465
or 7-10- olol 1- 9 262

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

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

ROFTMSRI

RWRX

NKWR

ST

YKSSRIINTMX

H 0 X' S

K

IT X' S

SEAK.' SRYBZR
UHRZIHXJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You can .keep the things. ol bronze and stone, and
give me one man to remember me JUst once a year. -

Damon Runyon

WOlD
GAM I

I
I

PITMEL

AFYOM

I

ITHURSDAY

~

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS IN
IHE SE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tETI LRS

TO GET ANSY.~R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
En tree- S:JII- Month - Polite- ATTENTION
My allnt gave me some sound adv1ce when 1. f1rst
started daling . ""The best compliment we can pay sl1e
sa 1d. "1s ATTENTION "

SEPTEMBER 7 I

m'Your

------II- CSirthday

POPLAR LOGS

AL SO WANTED

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC.

Todlly'S c/utJ: P equtJis W

A

Call812-2191
' '\'r\11'

- '· Eacll -In tht c:lphor otandl fc&lt; anolher.

e
your door

OHIO 45831• CHESHIRE, OHIO

aro CJHtod 1Iom q.-llont by lamouo peopla, pall ond

: FREE ESTIMATES :

JINES'
·
·

TREE SERVICE

by Lull Cempoa

~Cipher coyptog&gt;omo

·'

Ohio

liALLit'UICil:i,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

' Quality Driveways, :
Patios. Sidewalks •
: 25 years Experience ,

a nawspaper
deUvered directly to
sucket
'\'ruck

..

•

A &amp; D Auto Up o sterr • P ua, Inc

IZl

Pass

••••••••••••••••

Truck seats. car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; VInyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • F;·l B:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yr• experience

11 Stow cargo
12 l)'pe ol bear
19 "I think,
therefore

:

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed - '5.25/50 lbs•
•12% Cattle feed '6.15/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog fOld '6.15/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

Phone (740) 593-6671

"'

Gravel• Sand • Topso~1•

Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

Steve Riffle

FOC OCIN6 ft\T

~@:,WICK'S.
ttfiOLinQ and

Road
Racine, Ohio

Stop In And See
. ,. Sales Representative

GOitl' viiT!-4 T.. ~ APPLe. tft

$A'(~ ,~OG,OLI'$ I'IOT A GOO£&gt; Te$T
Of ~tfiSTII'IG TeMPTATIOtl.

C£\TOOCD

29670 Bashan

P*l•lln'a
S.nulr brolher'a
7 Chicken
keeper?"
oervlng
46 Aclrlll
13 Weirder
Thurmon
14 Cryotolllne gem 47 Nautical rope
15 Fonnol
46 l)'pe of chelr
argument
51 a.tall
16 Bred
54 Trlllngullr oall
17 Mountoln on
55 Egg dlah
Crate
58 Af 1 reduced
18 Aloia!
price (2 --~
20 Four-pootor
57 Short jacket
21 8111 of fare
23 · - Kopllll"
DOWN
24 Gul""" pig
I Darken
25 Actor
2 Paid lllontlon
Johnny 3 Debonair
27 HouHhold
4 Aunt In Spain
29 DC VIP
5 Southeast
31 Longume·
A1lan holiday 9 Guldo'a high
32 Workers' a11n.
note
33 Accompllohed s Mountain
nymph
10 Auto safety
34 Oecorete
7 Food for robins
device
37 Ectgea
8 Spawn
(2 wds.)
40 Grant
I

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Tough trivia question: In which year
did Alexander lvanovich Herzen ciJIIm
t&amp;at communism is a Russian autocracy turned upside down?
This deal features a declarer-play
technique that is like looking at the
world upside down. How would you try
lo make four spades after West leads
the heart king?
.
Declarer has nine top tricks: love
spades; one heart and three diamonds.
South could draw trumps and hope the
missing diamonds are 3-3. Alternatively,
he could draw two rounds of trumps,
then allack diamonds, getting home if
either the diamonds are 3·3 or the defender with the long diamonds holds the
missing trurnp(s).
Yet the best line requires only that
the trumps split 3-2 and diamonds be
no worse than 4 ·2 (or the same de·
fender be long in both spades and dia·
monds). After winning with the heart
ace cash the spade eight (to check
that trumps aren't 5·0), ruff a heart in
hand, and play a spade to the 10 tor
queen) . Are the trumps 3:2? If not,
switch to diamonds 1mmedtately, getling home if they split 3·3 (you
promptly draw the other trumps) or
the player with the long trumps has at
least four diamonds.
Here though the spades are 3·2.
so ruff' another heart, play a diamond
to 'dummy's queen, ruff the last heart
with your final trump, return to dummy with another diamond, draw the
last trump, and claim. This method of
ruffing several times in hand and US·
ing dummy's strong trumps to remove
the opposition's fangs 1s called a dum·
my reversal.
Hcrzen m;odc lhat•lalrment in t85t
- a forward-thinking lellu .• .

(,

Reasonable Prl•t:es. r
FREE Estimates ······

740·992·7599

Anawer to Pruioua Puzzle

Opening lead: • K

Certalnteed,
Simington
Uletlme Warlr&amp;Dilll:
Local cont1racto1r -r

'

41 MeUII for cone
43 Puta on
45 · - - my

Stand on your head
- figurativelY .

Replacement
Windows

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
!
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMEROAL and RESIDENTIAL
FRE!i ESTIMATES .

ACROSS

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Free Estimates

BISSELL IUIL,ERS
INC.

HILL'S
SElF STORAGE

•AQ832
•AKJ94

'

DEPDYSAG
PAR,.S

• K6
• J

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

mo . 41 H()(

• 7 6 2
• 7 6 '3
• J 2

• llochlall &amp;PI llog

Advertise in
this space for
s1oo per
month.

..w., 're back lo our

Canpulerlzf(j Cuslooi Embroidery

East

• 53
•KQI092
• 10 9 8 6

• NowGonlot

17401 992-3131

7/22/TFN

West

Soutb

Tho Farmoro Bonk and
Sovlngo
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reaervtl the

NEA Crossword Puzzle

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

Friday, Sept 8, 2000

today, not events or circumstances,
forthcoming.
enabling you to reel in a very sizable . GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Any endeavor
in which you personally originate or manreward it you put forth the eHort .
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) Follow your . age has an exceptionally good ct1ance of
inclinations as to how things should be
being extremely successful today. Don't
done today, and you'll be capable of sit on it. If possible . launch your project
making the most of your opportunities . now.
One could turn out to be enormous.
CANCER (June 2t ·July 22) Letting th ings
ARIES (March 21·April 19) A very lortu· develop at their own pace today could be
itous union could be formed today
your ace in the hole, Things that happen
between you and someone who thinks
without provocation are those things that
exactly like you. This special bond will be are ordained by Lady Luck.

Recognition perhaps long overdue may
Hnally material ize in the year ahead. Your
new identification cou ld produce maten~l
prospects far more promising then you
ever dreamed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept . 22) II you lee l
you're entitled to a raise, bOnus or spec1a!
treatment, this is the day to get the boss
ear. Your chances for compensation are
superior. Get a jump on life by under·
standing the influences that'll govern you one that doesn'l happen often.
in the year ahead . Send lor your Astra- TAURUS (April 20·May 20) You may nol
Graph predictions by mailing $2 to Astra· think that what you do for another today
· Graph , c/o th 1s newspaper. P .O. Box is anything out of the ordinary , but the
1758, Murray Hill Station , New ~ork .. NY recipient will be so impressed by your
10156. Be sure to state your Zod1ac s1gn . kind gesture, some kind of reward wiH be
LI BRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Ail communica·
tion with people who are near and dear lo
you, whether they reside in close proxlml·
ty to you or at distance, will have some
kind of memorable impact today.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Aller your cusoom·
ary routine today , and try to cfo something
different with a close fr iend you've been
neglecting a bit late ly . Someth ing very
good could result.

SCO RPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22) Rewards
you didn't anticipate could be forthcoming
today from somethfng you .may not ha~e
even realized was right on track . ThiS
cou ld m8an a rewarding new side project.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Any sit·
ust!an that arises today 'that enables you
10

meet new people should be taken full

advantage ol. A valuable contact could

be established.
CAPRICQRN (Dec . 22·Jan.

19) Make
your tasks or autgnmenta labora of I0'-'1

today lnatead ol merely lhat which mull
be done, and soma kind of l)(tra rawardl

will be In otoro lor you .
AQUA~ IUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) You will bl
the one ·tn control of your own dut lny

"You'll love thll place. Palm treea, 11ndy
be1cha1 and 2,000 ralltlur•ntl."

l

at Atlanta Bravea

�...
Pomer~iddieport, Ohio

8 • The Dally Sentinel

mances against traditional powen
like Toledo's 24-6 victory at Penn
State last Saturday.
"I really think there is a spot for
our second team in the existing
bowl landscape;' Chryst said.
The MAC's strength in football
and basketball has resulted in an
important television deal, he said.
The conference announced this
spring that it has reached a threeyear agreement with ESPN to
televise the league's football and
men's basketball championship
games.
The agreement, which takes
effect this football season, also
guarantees an ESPN network will
televise a minimum of 6ve regular-season football games and
nine regular-season men's basketball games during the agreement.
In addition, this season's MAC
football championship will be
televised by ESPN partner ABC
on Saturday, Dec. 2, at I p.m. The
game is at Marshall Stadium in
Huntington, W.Va. ·
"This is a real step for our con-

Details, A3

Daily Sentinel

'
ference - the fint time ever in
the MAC's 54-year history that
we've had a national television
agreement, a multiyear deal that
incluJ!es our regular season as weD
as our championship events,"
Chryst said recendy.
As a result, the MAC men's basketball tournament has been
moved to a prime position on the
Saturday night of NC,A,.A tournament selection weekend. Chryst
thinks that will · enhance the
league's chances of getting more
than one team in the tournament.
"One of the big steps we need

MANAGER'S SPECIAL (Brand New!)
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume Sl , Number 74

50 Cenu

Meigs
fntmPapB1
Tailback Jared Taylor led the
Raiders on the ground last week
with 129 yards on 22 carries.
George added 58 on 10 pops. ·
Senior Chad Walker is the

FROM STAFF REPORTS

sistendy get multiple teams into
the tournament, both men's and

RA C: iN E - Vilbge Co un cil discussed rcpamng
Jamag..· to the nnmicipal huilding durin g its regular

2000

women's," he said.

GTSEDAN

meeting o n Tuesday.

Sllvermlst with Graphite cloth .
1-'·" liter V6, CD with equalizer, power seat, overhead consol, remote
lke•vJe!IS entry, leather wrapped steering wheel. $23,085 MSRP.

Reduced To

some men 's-worn en's bastc.etball

doubleheaders this coming season.

Fall Festival
set Saturday

$1 500

Mayor Scott Hill re ported that he and Cle rk Karen
Lyons h ave signed loa n doc unwms in the amount of

S.1.7011, wh ich loan was approwd at cou ncil 's last
111t't't111~, fo r repairs that n eed ro b e made to the

municipal bui ldmg.
Ac co rdin g to Hill, va rio us downspo uts o n th e

FROM STAFF REPORTS

building were leaking and water haJ been damaging
th e walls. Also, the bmlding's wooden soffit was loose
in ~c:veral pbces an,d a. number of starli ngs had begun

RAC INE - Entertamment
highli ghting a natiolla ll y kn ow.n
bluegrass group, the McC lain
Brothers, will be presented at
the Racine Fall Festival to be
hel d Saturday at Star Mill Park .
Performan ces o f th e McLains
w ill be at 1 and 5 p.m. Others
performin g a show in the afternoon and another in th e:
evening will be Ge t Out and
Push ar 2 and 6 p.m. , and T he
Johnson Family, a gospel group,
at 12: 1S and 4 p.m .
Entertainment will begi n at
11 a.m. with a pupp et show
from th e Racine First BaptiS t
C hurch, foll owed by The Ross
Sisters and Clyde at 11 :30 a.m.

Hill saiJ Warren Farmer will perform th e repairs,
and that he expects the work to be completed some-

sure we are physical and mentally
ready for four quarters of foot-

tlllll'

ball."

ll~Xt

Wt·c:k .

Lo u neil heard Dale Hart, representative of th e park
board , request a raist." in t~~es for th e use of the p&lt;:~rk
shdterho use. The bi r; siJt· lter wo uld cost S311 and the
small er shelterhouse would cost $20.

This will be the eighth meeting
between Meigs and River Valley.
Meigs, after losing the 6rst two
games to the Raiders, haS \\On
6ve in a row including last se&gt;son's 42-30 win in Pomeroy.
Game time is 7:30.

Council cons iden:d the requ est and decide d to disems th e matter at a later Ltate.

Hart also repo rted that th e drain lin e from the main
building's bathroom is partially blocked and is causin g
problents . Hart sa id he is expecting to receive an esti-

5oUthem
from Page 11
they score and that hurts you.
Then they come right back out
in the third quarter and score
again and it becomes a game of
momentum."
This week's prescription for a
Southern win in Richards' words ..
is, " Offensively, we have to be able
to sustain a drive and run the ball.
Defensively we have to capitalize
on what we did last week with
· better tackling than in the last
two weeks.
"Also, we have to win the
turnover battk The last two
weeks weive not won that. We
have to at least cut down on our
turnovers.
"It doesn't matter who we are
playing," said Richards. "We need
to control the running game so
we can establish the passing game.
If that doesn't happen it is hard to
6nd success."
"We have to get our running
game going and lid like to get up
to. 50 percent passing (completions) this week," said Richards.
One bright spot defensively last
week was that Matt Ash had 18
tackles wirh a fumble recovery.
The wee k before the junior linebacker had 10 tackles.
Brice Hill ca ught four passes
for 47 yards, Aaron Ohlinger had
two catches for 35 yards and
Brandon Hill made two receptions for 33 yards. ·
Brandon Hill had an interception and. Brice Hill and Matt Ash

Eastem

ma te' on runnin g th e lin e to th e Regional Sewer Syshad fumble recoveries.
South Gallia. has a new coach
for the 2000 season. Former
Rebel assistant Donnie Saunders
took over after coach Jack James
resigned.
Saunden will try to improve a
Rebel squad that struggled
through a 1-9 season last year.
One of the big differences is
experience. The Rebels lost just
two players to graduation, and 15
of their 32 players are seniors.
While some of the seniors are
tint year playen, those who .have
experience must step up. Split
end Ttevor Shafer (5-8, 156
pounds), Josh Staton (6-2, 194
pounds), quarterback Jacob
Sanders (5-9, 145 pounds), Dana
Bickle (6-2, 165 pounds) and tailback Rick Clary (6-1, 170
pounds) have all play key roles.
"We're still trying to build
some continuity on offense,"
Saunders said. "We've been working some 'red zone' stuff lately.
The other night we had 6rst
down on the 15, and first and goal
on the nine. It seems like it's
another facet of the game we
need step up a notch or two here
and start concentrating on that
'red zone' and get the ball in."
South Gallia's numbers are up
and their morale is up despite its
losses. The Rebels are quicker and
a litde stronger than last year after
an off-season of hitting the
weights.
Offensively, the Rebels try to
have an even mix of running and
passing plays.
Offensively, the Rebels are
expected to spr~ad the 6eld more

Karr carried the ball I 0 times
for 88 rushing, Brad Willford had
nine carries for 66 yards and R .J.
Gibbs had six carries for 60 yards.
from Page Bl
Karr's evolution as a quarterflipped the momentum in Fort back is very much evident this
Frye's favor. It was all downhill year. The junior has show much
from there.
poise in his 6rst two outings in
Ga rrett Karr was 6-for- 10 pass- making good decisions off the
ing with one interception, a for- option.
ward lateral o n the option, with
Mainly Brad Willford and Cacy
110 yards and two touchdown Faulk have been the bene6ciaries
passes.
in an elusive Eastern· running
Lyons caught both to uchdowns game.
for 96 ya rds. while R.J. G ibbs ne tEastern's air game is also solid
ted one for 16 yards and Ben with the sure hands of Holter,
H olter caught one for 17.
Gibbs and Lyons.

and use the fullback and tailback
look. The Rebel defense also tries
to mix it up a bit, but will basically use a 5-3 set.
At Eastern two weeks ago in
the season opener, the Eagles
forged a 30-0 halftime lead, and
went on to defeat the Rebels 360. South Gallia exhibited character by rebounding with a credible
second half performance, giving
up just 6 second-half points.
South Gallia was led by Rick
Clary who rushed for 52 yards on
15 carries. Josh Dury had 13 carries fore 38 yards and Jacob
Sanders had four carries for 18
yards. Last week Clary ran for 32
yards rushing against Ross Southeastern.
"These lcids are really close to
busting it open," Saunders said of
his club's running game. "A few
fundamental things we worked
on this week I think is going to
make It better. I've watched the
6Jms and the holes are there.
We've got to adapt a little bit get
some angles in. They've worked
real hard in practice. We're not
giving up and the lcids aren't giv.
mg
up."
Saunders said his dub will have
to make adjustments on the fly to
slow down the Tornadoes this
week.
"They've got a strong quarterback there in Evans, and we've
got to contain what he's doing,"
Saunders said." And we'll have to
stop their run. When you slow the
run down, they're going to go to
the air. That'll be the next big
step, stopping that passing game."

Eastern will have to control
Wahama's ground game to be
successful. nine different runners
contributed to a 302 yard rushing
night last week. Eastern traditionally is ready for the run, and was
again last week, but gave up
numerous .yards in its defensive
bac k6eld.
Scott Christman and staff have
been retooling the defense and
stressing consistency from the
offensive game. Ball co ntrol and
"doing what we do best" are
Eastern's keys to success this week
in Mason.
Game time is 7:30 at Wahama.

tl'lll li lll'.

H:lrt in t(lnncd cou nci l that plans for construction
o n new ro t roo m s at th e e nd of the m ain park building are h l' in g cnnsidt"re d .
A n:soluti o n w:t~o passed by co uncil authorizing th e
tran sfnra l of $ 1,21 Ill to the ct mt tery endowment. A

POMEROY Plans are
under way for the annual chili
cookoff to be held in conjunction w ith th e annual Stern whe el
Riverfest f estival in Po m eroy
Sept. 28-30.
The contest, set for Sept. 30,
wil l lim lt tea m s to a ma ximum
of four members and all team

.

we re losr.
T ill' pun· hast.· of a large ~ra s h container for usc with
the co m pactor truck was approved by counci l so that
t illl L' tl l'l'd l'd to load thl' tru c: k :1t various loca ti ons
co uld be reduct"d.

'

'

m embers involved in. the prepa-

BUILDING REPAIRS- Repair work to Racine 's municipal building began this week to
fix leaky downspouting and a broken soffit. The work is expected to be completed
sometime next week. (Submitted photo)

~Different.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTI NEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Almost two years after
paying ti.1r

fea sib ili ty study, · Me igs
C&lt;HllltY L' Ol llllli SSIOllt'rS an~ st ill faccJ
with hm~' to tre at k:tchate tfom an ab;m d&lt;)l] eJ lan d fil l, ,md most importantly, how
;1

p;1y for the ll L'CC'\' ary repairs.
The M eiJ.-'S County Health Department. wl u c h lu-; direct n:g:ul atory au th(n ity for the 'itl', Ius issued a NOfice ntVmlations to the county, an d the Ohio EnvironlllL'll tcll ]Jn H L'Ltl Oil Agl' IKY ha!&lt;i notified
t h ~o· CPUJJt y tlur it mu st nuke.: rl' pai ro; '\O
th ,u LOn tamill ,ltl'd water from the site
to

dnt''i nor furrh cr c nntamin ,Ht.: tln· art·a.

Tht• t•ngint·cring firm of Burgess &amp;
Nipk Ltd . prl'pared a feasib ility study for
the rommisstoners m Novembe r I998.
ou tli ning options tOr repairs to the land-

fill . but comtm ssio ners havt' n ot acted o n
those recommendations.
While co mmi ssio ners would likely
co n si d ~r the constr u c ti on of a we tland
system to tre::at th e co ntaminated watt:"rs.
the issue o f how those repam will be
ti nancr:J is th e main obstacle preventing
ac tio n at this point.
Co mmi ss ion l'r J eff Thonuon

FAI RBORN George W. Bush
beheves that rebuilding the military
powe r of d1 e Unaed Stares 1s viral to
keep in!( the peace, and he lm turnc·d to
a couplt' of rdirt'd gencrt:tls to hdp h11n
get th at 111L'Ssage
across to voter'i.
B m h was flanked

Thur&lt;d&lt;Jy by rt•med
gL·nn.1ls Colin Powdl

sa id

~~~~ J

those lllt'L'tinbrs have bee n held in part to

No rm an
Se h w.IrZkopf :~ s he
c unp ;ngnt'd in th t
heart
of
Ohio\

ensu re the EPA that

dcfell ~l·

Thursday the board has met with an EPA
rep rese lltativt' on a number of orGlStons
si nce the issue wa~ first raised in 199H, and
SU I!ll'

effort i'i bei ng

made oO addreSS the problem .
The co unty has also sought grant fim dlll ~ for the $HII,000 to $ WO.OOU cost of

Bush

PhoQe: 800-446-0842
Email: superdodge@uoyager.net
...,.;!IIi,.;,--.;_ _

Like Our Quality Way Of Doing Hu~;tne.s$

)

'

( 1/ (1

PVH Executive Director

1 '\

Pleasant Valley Hospital

COilllllll ll lt )"

and plcdl(ed to bc·c·f
up thc U.S. miiltary.

" It's tim e fo r llL'W leadership in

Washington D.C. th.lt will reb uild the

crt'a tin g tht' wetl and.

morale ofrh e U nited Sta tt· ~ m i li ta r y,~' he

sa id.

Please see Landfill, Page Al

I

252 Upper Rluer Road

r:~non

and handhng of th e chili
must have proof of a c urrent
tuberculosis test. This ca n be

brou ght to th t· even t or '\l' nt
along with an advan ced ent ry
form .
No ingre dien ts may be- precooke d or treated in any way
pnnr to rh t' pn.:p,Jration period .
w ith the cxcep rHm of c,llmed or
bottkd ingrcdic.:nr'\. Also. meat
m ay he precut or gro und , but
n o t trcatL·J.

All in gredients, except periShab le prod ucts, mu st be displayed.

Please see Chill, Page Al

County continues funding Bush wants to rebuild military might
search for
repairs
BY JAMES' HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

••
.)

FROM STAFF REPORTS

The old co mputer had "crashed" during a power
surge and some of the .water department 's records

000 Jeep Cherokee ,

Please see Racine, Page Al

Chili cookoff planned

Counc il ,Iiso suspe nded the rules atld adopted an
o rdioan ce auth o ri zin g the board of public affairs to
spend mont' Y to purchase a new computer and soft-

Prt·scnt at Tuesday's meeting, in addition to Hill,
were counc ilm en R obert ll t•egk. Hobbit• R oy, Greg
Taylor and Larry Wolfe.

first, secon d and third places an d
the crowning of th e f:IIJ fe stival
q ueen wiiJ be held at noon.
Also to be an nou nn: d at noo n
wi ll be the winn er in a pumpkin

Winners in the parade with

Co un c il approved anot her rcmlution to adopt the
amounts an d rat es as su bmi rtcd by the Meigs County
llu dget Commi ssio n for 201 ) I.

ware fOr the wa te r department.

McClain Brothers

prizes of $50. $30. and $20 for

C l l at H onw N:~uollal llank was up for renewal and
th~ $ 1.21111 was add ed.

O'Brien seeking .
re-election as judge
FROM STAFF REPORTS

{

RACINE

Racine Council approves building repairs

to nu ke nc..:;ts in side th e opl'nings.

Raider . quarterback this season,
Walker is 6-1 and weighs 205
pounds giving the Raiders a
physical presence behind center.
Both the offensive and defensive
lines suffered big losses to graduation.
"We are anticipating a very
physical game this week,"
Chancey said. "We have to make

September 8, 2000

•

to make as a conferen_ce is to con-

Chryst also said that talk is continuing on expanding the 13team conference to bring its two
divisions to an equal number.
The MAC also intends io give
its members the option of playing

Friday

Meigs society news and notes? AS
Virginia Tech whips East Carolina, B1

High: 80s; Low: 60s

Get the latest in sports news from the

hqpes for more bowl teams
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The
Mid-American Conference commissioner hopes to get more than
one ·league team to a football
bowl game this se&gt;Son.
The MAC champion plays in
the Motor Ciry Bowl in the Pontiac Silverdome, north of Detroit,
but commissioner Rick Chryst
hopes that won't be the only
league team headed to postseason
play.
''To have a horne for your
champion is critical, and a second
guaranteed bowl game for another MAC team - we're commitred to 6nding that option within
the existing 25 bowl games;' he
said.
Marshall h.S represented the
MAC in the 6rst three Motor
Ciry bowl games. Other league
teams with strong records have
not received at-large bids to
bowls, including Miami Universiry 's 1998 team that 6nished 10-1.
But the league is beginning to
gain more national respect,
buoyed by impressive perfor-

Thursday, September 7, 2000

Friday

Todays

Sentinel
1 Sections- 16 Pages

AS
time pnsition , .dlowing: t: 1udgc
to praLtif e law 111 pri v; l' prac{l!:cs:---+-"'~"""'-'""'-----'B"'4"-"'6

i'OMERlW - l'at rick "l'at"
&lt;. )' Brll'n j , \t't'k111g rt·-dection as. O'Bri&lt;' ll has pr.Ict i · d law with
'Bri c· n, ' ince
Me1hr.;; f:ou nry· hi s father. J.in
Court judge.
1'
O' Brien is a 19711 graduate of
Thl' co unt y
co urt
judge Meig; Hi gh Sdmol. and .t 1974
pn:'iidcs oVl'r all graduate of Ohio Wesleya n Uni c rimitul mi'\- versity in Dclawart·. He gr::J(.Iuatt•d
from {)hi o Northern Unive rsity
dt•meanu r
c,1;;cs, civil cases La\v Sc hool in 1977.
ui1ekr $ 15.000,
O' Brien is the f.ll hc·r of two
land lord / tenant children. j oy ond Se.111. Joy is a
C l"C:"'.
small 1999 graduate uf Kentu cky
O'Brien
claim'~
unde r C hri stian C oll e~e. li vi n~ .md
$.1 .11111l ,InJ conducts arra i~n ­ (Cac hing in l3raJemon. Fla .. with
me-nts and prdi111inary h earings her husband, Tony Kidwell. Sean
ts a JUlllur at C irckvilk Bible
o n fclonv co n1p laint Lharges. 1
Coulltl' Cou rt jud~e i' a part- College.

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B7
A4
A3
81 -3 . 8
A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-5- 1; Pick 4: 4"3-1-3
Buckeye 5: 5- 11 -21)..29-.1&lt;1

W,YA,
Daily 3: 6- 2-4 Daily 4 : 2-'1-4- 1

That attracted applause from the invitation - on ly crowd of about 40 0 at
Wright State UniVersity, ncar WrightPattt·rson Air Forcl' Uase.
Bu sh wid till' audience, w hi ch
included m any mditary vctl'Tan s, t h:~ t
better hmi img and pay f(&gt;r soldiers
wou ld hdp reb uild morale.
Ohio Secrc·tory of State Ken lllaekwt'll said the ap peara nn: \Vas plannc"d so
Uush co uld dl'livl'r lw; tiH..''is,Jce of .
building ,\ 'irro ng Lkft·nse \o\' h lk Ill an
area w ith a la rgl' vetnam LOllllllU il ity.
13ush said that as prcsideilt, he wo uld
.tssembl c" a task force of military lcadL• rs

.

cmnt· up w ith a ''strategic plan tOr
w lur the military ought ro look like in

1o

tht· y~..·a r s

to come."
" I he.1rd wlut I wanted to hctr from
hi1n ,'' '\aid H al Miller. h-1. a Vt'tera n from
F.tirborn.
· Joh n Morrisette, an :~ssi stant professo r
of political 1cience at Wright State, said

the stop made a good backdrop for
Bush's appearance.
"The military's been gutted th e los t
eight years. T hey've been asked to d o
more and more with !eM and less," he

sa id .
M or risctt&lt;.' &lt;tc kn uwledged detCn se
issues m ay not b ~· a pri o ri ty with voters.
"A t rh e ti.r~t -;ign of tmubk. Jcft·nse
can be a very "niou-; prH)r iry," lw saJLI.
Gore CJil lJn ign otll cJal '\ "~1 y Bush

wou ld de vore k ss th.111 h.df uf tlw $ Iilii
billion Gore wou ld c';tr nurk fro111 pro j t·ctt:J budgl't surplml''i to \ trcn~thcn
11ational dl'fi.·nsL' ;tnd in ll'nl\'L' 'ol dicTs '

qualiry of li te·.
Mt·anw luk . .t rt·po rt 111 rht·
Daily New'\ ' ';tid Hmh did r1o1
thrt'C of I() quc·~tion~ pn.., L·o. l ro
th e Disabled Amni L.\11 Vt.•tr..:r.t ll\
•
ation in :1 qu estion n:url' will

D,J~· t on

.lli ~ Wl'r

h1111 by
A"'\Olt-

to th L·

Please see Bush. Page A3

Blood drive planned Wednesday
TU PPERS PLAI NS - Despite tremmdous donor
rL·sponsc to ri..'LL'llt ,1ppL'.tb, Anwri c:m R ed Cross
Blood Servit:l''l nH Jtillll l''&gt; to ';el'k blood donors of aU
bloo d ty pt·-; to rq'l~·ni~h lmwrc J iuvemorit•s attcr the
l.Ib ur I ),IS· HolicLiy.
Loctl blood donor' will havt• an oppo rtunity to
donall· blood &lt;~ g&lt;lll1 .Jt .1 bloodlllobik .1t Eastern High
School on W!.:dn~,·,d.ty. ti·m n 1) :.\(l .1 m. until 1:10 p.m.
Th l· 'lt- lmol\ 'tudcnt &lt;·muH·il l'i "pomnrin g the visit.
·· AltlH n1~h (Hir l(K.II "itu.l thm l 1.1~ i1nprovcJ " i~rnit:.
tcmtly in rece nt Wl'(' k'\ . ,HTO\'~ dtt' (Ollntry " uitiral
~&lt;hort&lt;l~t· "till cxi'its for ~cvccd hlnod type'\, c.·;;pcciall y
rypl''i '() pm mvl'· .m d '( ) n cgJm·l' .... '\aid Ted Mazz.1 of
the R ed Cross. ''S\.'\'tTal rq.J; il)\l' ,til\. havt' l ~s~ thJ.n a
tby'" '\upp ly of thr;;t• hlnod type-. .. 111d Wt' try to m aint:lill Jt lca'it .1 tllfet' day,· 'upp ly."
H e cxpLlmcd that a.o; of the L'lhl t)fJu ly. th e national
H..~..·d Cro"~~ blood inventory H ' l\l,lll li..'J bt·low dw critJC.li 'illJl )\v IL'n·l of5U.(HXI l ll llt'L
'' l'·v~· set:n strong dem and combined with
de c.Tl';'l'ed ,waibbility o f do nor grnups, such as high
srho n l ~

.,

and unh·crc.itic'i during the

'U tl l lll l.T.

In our

/Ji
'
,,, . ••t c, 'f •
t•ldt'l, f j ( 1\!il ' I
,,J /1( ill ~~~~~
,!
/Jc•r ). ' J I
'[;I I I '('

(I (

I

'
fll
f~' IIIII r
J

.. ,,

I

100-counrv '\en ·icc

.111.',1.

bloodmoh;k·'\ contriburc

J &lt;I I

II

,I '

I
I'

I '
J

·,,,,d

hi ~h ~c hool' .llld colkgL'

.lppmx illl .ltd y

2n pL· rcl'nt 1)t"

ou r anmt.11 co]kcti on~:."
To give blood. imilvidu.1l 'i mu-.t he .1t k,tq 17 yc.t r"
of ag(• or ol d~tr, wcig:h ,lt k·a\t 1(I) pound' .md bt· 1ll
gl'nt'rall y t:{OOd lwalth . Donor-. L ~lll 1 1~ 1 1.1lly gt\'t' blood

every

sr, d .l)''\ .

" We 've cxpenL'tKed "i tn:m~ culk ltil1ll' \111\.' l' nlldJun c. but the nt'L'J is con,t.lllt , .16_:; t l.i\''\ .1 )'l'.tr. I k\pltl'

the fact that glVIn ~ blood i&lt;e.l.l)' :md sate. .md take" JU&lt;t
about an hour. lutly S p crct·nt of Am n ic:m . . rh l.Jtl·
blond t'.trh )l',lr."

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