<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7831" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7831?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T22:14:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18244">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ff4c8e7de5727814759d36afd0ffd5af.pdf</src>
      <authentication>028b90bdcc24b6d954f2293f424c8c93</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="25442">
                  <text>Birthday
frwnPipDl
opened, displaying couches and
chairs, throws and pillows, floral
arr:angements, and artwOrk.
" I hope to expand even more in
the fumre;' Reed said. "The need is
there for this service."
In addition to the interior design
business, Custom Design Ltd.
offers a gilt shop with many specialty items.
According to Reed, they have
several lines of candles including
Hearth and Home, Root, Hannah's and Southern, which is a
West Virginia-based company.
Th&lt;y carry Boyd's Bears, Cottage Collectibles, Lang Ornaments,
Lizzie's Bears, Manhall and West
Virginia University Santas and
ornaments, crystal and wedding
decorations.
.Reed said the store is the franc}jised dealer and designer for Cat's
Meow in the area. If anyone has an
idea for a new Cat's Meow, they
can contact Reed.
She also announced Custom
Design Ltd. will be carrying B~r's
Choice Carolers this holiday season.
With the holiday season
approaching, Reed, an avid fan of
ChristmaS, has big plans for the
store.
"We're going to have a lot of
fun decorating a number of trees
for the shop;' she said. "In addition,
we offer decorating services for
residential homes and commeocial
..
0 ffi CtS.
•
"We have so many beautiful
thin~ we're going to have for

~es
frvm Page D1

_thrifty.
The ability to handle and treat
catde is already limiting the marketing options for producers; a
division that is based on the quality of.the cattle. Furthermore, we
will continue to see the gap
widen as the beef industry .continues to make _the slow shift to
quality based marketing and
places .even more emphasis on
beef quality assurance.
For area producers who do not
want to invest in a chute, but still
want to treat their catde, the Gallia County Catdemen's Association offers chute rental through
the OSU Extension offiice.
· For non-members, interested
: producers pay $25 to rent the
chute for three days, and with
that payment, also acquire a
. membe~hip to the association.
: Current members may rent the
· chute for $20. For more informa. non, please call the OSU Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
Tobacco settlement -. I
rece!ved_ several calls regarding
. Phase I money that may be avail-

Sunday, September 10,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea..nt, WV

Page D8 • iiounbap t:imHI-iiomlinel

Christmas this ~ar;· Reed said.
"We plan to be in gear for the holi.Ja.;s by October."
Last year, the store decor:ated six
or seven homes for the holiday season. including a doctor's home for
COLUMBUS - Three local
a home tour in Gallipolis.
"We keep very busy at -Christ- sales representatives for the
mas with home decorating;' Reed Longabetger Co.. were recendy
said. "People are so busy with com- recognized at the company's
pany and different activities that annual convention in Columbus.
Debor:ah Hauber of Long Botofi:en they don't have time to do all
the decor:ating they wish. We can tom, Kathy Dyer of Middleport
either · puochase new things for and Nida Kearns of New Haven,
clients or use items they already W.Va., were recognized as 2000
Sales Achievers, having generated
have:'
According to Reed, word has annual sales of more than $20,000
gotten out about the service they each.
offer at Christmas and she feels the
They received a Bee 2000
demand will be greater this year. commemorative framed award
She urges anyone interested in and on-stage recognition.
The
four-day convention
having their home decorated to
call eady and make a reservation.
attracted more than 13,000
With a business that specializes Longaberger · Independent Sales
on customer service, Reed said Associates fiom acorss the United
there are many, many hours spent States. More
than 63,000
in the evenings and weekends in Longaberger Independent Sales
the store and customer's homes.
Associates across the nation mar- .
"It is really fun to come to ket and sell Longaberger prodwork;' Reed said. "We love to do it ucts.
- when you get a job you really
The company is based in
love - it is not like working."
Newark.
"I am very surprised and thankful for the success the business has
seen thus far," Reed said. "When
we opened, I did not know how
we would be received, but it has
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. been great. People appreciate the
business being here to help them:' Kirby J- Taylor h:iS been named
· Custom Design Ltd. is open president and chief operating
Monday through Friday from 10 officer for Champion Industries
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday fiom, Inc.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with expanded ·
hours during the holiday season.
Evening hours are by appointment. Jts phone number is 304-674-6103.

Recognized
at event

Champion names
new leader

.

BUSINESS

County~ Exttnsion agent for agricul-

the Expo to be identified and/or
exhibited for others to see. Bring
in your dahlias, gladiolus, giant
Boston fern , freak vegetables, sunPageD1
flowers, pumpkins, giant turnip or
, 5; 15 lancelike leaflets were dried whatever item your grandmother
·: ilp, leaving the distinctive large passed onto your fanuly.
. orange-red seed cluster visible to
Set-up is from noon to 7:30
: the world.
p.m. on Sept. 15 and 8-9:30 a.m.
::. The late.spring flower consists of on Sept. 16. Admission is free and
' a' light green spathe (sheath\ike exhibitors receive nothing for their
: covering) surrounding a long pen- exhibits except for the joy of sharcil size spadix 8-10 inches in ing to others what their interests
length. Growing conditions need- are.
ed are very specific - moist rich
Plan on attending Expo 2000,
wooded areas near streams.
we have activities for young and
So if you find this plant, leave old. For information please call
the fruit to reseed itself in the sur- 992-6696.
rounding area. lt takes three to
four years for this plant to develop
into a blooming size plant. It overFarm Science Review is Sept.
winters as a corm (or underground 19-21 at the Molly Caren Agriculroot) in the ground and is protect- tural Center, Ohio 40, London,
ed fiom being eaten by its accu- Ohio.
mulation of plant manufactured
This premier event with its 600
calcium oxalate crystals which exhibitors and 700 acres of field
cause intense burning and irrita- demonstrations is sponsored by
tion.
Ohio State University to bring the
The discovery of this unusual variom aspects of agricultural
plant is one of the reasons to live in industry to the people of Ohio.
Meigs County and the surroundAdvanced tickets are available
ing areas.
for four dollars apiece at Meigs
The Big Bend Town &amp; Country County Extension office, Sugar
Expo, being held this corning Run Mill and Shade River Ag
weekend, Sept. 16 and 17 at the Service until Sept. 16.Tickets purMeigs County Fairgrounds, cele- chased at the gate will be $6.Take
brate\ of the joys of living in this a day and visit what the Ohio
Agriculture industry has to offer
area .
One of our joys is growing and Ohio's citizens.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs' Extension
discovering plants in our area. If
you grow something unusual or agent for agriwltl4re and natural
just something of beauty, bring it reso11rcc.&lt;, Ohio Stare University.)

•••

Details, A3

Monday
September 11, 1000

exe~':'--: )~winner

The four- day national convenTaylor has served as an
for the Longabergtive for several major corpora- . er Co. for generating annual sales tion, known as the Bee, attracted
more than 13,000 Longaberger
lions during his more than 30 ' '6f more than $45,000.
yean in business. He holds an
Go,~in,
from
Gallipolis, independent sales associates from
MBA from the College of receiv2d gilts and on-stage recog- ·around the U.S. Longarberger, an
William &amp; Mary.
, pj,tion as one of 676 independent $850 million direct sales company
He is a graduate of the Univer- {f.},es associates during the compa- based in Newark, was founded in
sity of Richmond (Va.) with . a ' iifs annual convention in 1973.
bachelor's degree in industrial ~~~~bus.
management. After graduation, he .;,
-,.:..----------------------joined General Electric in
'
weeks tracking a hypothetical,
.
I
d
-1lr.ll
Cincinnati and comp ete its
$100,000 investment in the stock
~
financial management training
market, led to the grearest retenprogram at the top of his class. ·
·{
tion
and comprehension.
Pap Dl
Taylor then joined Tenneco
&gt;&amp;·
"It's a skill that students learn
Inc., and spent the next 22 years
~
when
given the opportunity to
in progressive management posi- pe~ent of the questions correcdy.
tions.
Tb'e' average score in the 1997 apply concepts and pr:actices as part .
He later joined Outboard survey was 57.3 peocent.
· of a thoughtfully designed curricuMarine Corp. in Chicago, serving
Both were failing grades, but the lum;' Mandell said.
If you'd like more information
as chief financial officer and pres- downward trend is even more
about
finance education in our
ident of the recreational boat telling. The low number is alarmgroup. He then went to Adding- ing, given that 50 percent of high schools, or for help in educating
ton Resources Inc.,. serVing as sch9ol gr:aduates direcdy enter the your own children about this
president and cltief opc:r:ating wo~ce r:ather than go on to important issue, you can check out
the Jump$tart web site at
·
officer of the Ashland, Ky., com- college.
pany until its sale.
There is a gr:assroots campaign to wwwJumpstart.org.
Founded in 1997 and based in
Champion is a commercial make financial instruction a part of
Washington,
D. C., Jump$tart is a
printer, business forms manufac- the pUblic school curriculum, but
turer, and office products and so far,, only a handful of states, non-profit organization whose 90-office furniture supplier oper:ating including Idaho, Illinois and Penn- plus partners include federal agenthrough companies and divisions sylvania, mandate such instruction cies universities, associations and
spo~rs of education programS.
in their curriculum standard.
in 13 states.
According to experts like Man- The coalition's goal is to ensure
'
dell, personal finances are not that students have skills to be finanSQmethillg Qn~ can understand cially competent upon graduation
fiom high school.
·
simply by memorizing terms.
(Mark
E
Smith
is
an
investmmt
lnter:active classes and simylaGALLIPOLIS - Becky God- tions, such as the Stock Market tX!!&lt;Uiive with Advest !II(. in itJ C..lwin is a 2000 Nation;U Sales Game, ..there youngsters spend six /iptllis o.ffia.)

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 75

Money

Sales associate
recognlzeCI

BIG PUMPKIN CONTEST - Maddison Hill and Jake Dixon display the trophies they won in the big pumpkin contest held at Saturday's festival in Racine. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

The Beauty ofAll· Wheel Drive'
.

SubonJ F-1')1 Manutottuior w'orhnty
3 yr./36,001 Mll&lt;l BIIIIIJIOr 10 Bumper
! yr./61,000 MI ... Powertnlll

2000 lmpreza
l
Sedan
flute, Power Windows 6 locks,

2000 legacy GT Seda

. Keyless Entry, Security System,
IIJlltfm Cassette
r

financing**

2000 legacy l Sedan
2To Choose from!

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

4.9°/o

18,191

Beautiful fall day __ _
greets festival gders

12063

~~.

•Jt,47•*

RAC INE - A beautiful September day contributed Sawrday
to a successful fall fe stival at Star
Mill Park.
A
mid-morning
parade
through town kicked off the fes tiviti es featuring a variety of
entertainment ranging from co n-

.

LEGACY

'11,8

Keyless Entry, Security System

FESTIV!\L QUEEN - Southern High School senior Sarah Ball was
crowned the 2000 Racine Fall Festival Queen by the 1999 Queen
Laraine Lawson in ceremonies held at noon Saturday at Star Mill Park.
First runner-up was Emily Stivers, right.

Toclay's

Sentinel
Sections Paps

l

11

Calendar
C!assjfieds
C6tnics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
B2-4
BS
A4
A3
BL 6
A3

Lotteries
OWQ
Pick 3: 6-2-6; Pick 4: 8-9-3- 7
Supe&lt; Lotto: 12-32-34-35-36-41

Kickllr: 7-8-0-8-0-5
W.VA.
Daily 3: h-5-0 Daily 4: 7-H-9-5
C. 20lM! Oh10 V~lle\ l'ohluhlll!o( Co

COLU MBUS (AP) -Adam
Burkhart and others like him are
hoping a plan under consideration by the Legislature wtll help
keep them alive.
The 17 -year-old boy from
Zanesville has familial ca rdiomyopathy, an inh erited condition that weakens the heart.
H e has spem the past six momhs
in Ohio State University M edica] Center ·waiting for a transplant he needs.
Burkhardt doesn't wish for
someone 's death so thar he can
live, but for more of those who
do die to beco me organ donors.
The pl an under consideration
by the House calls for a registry
of organ donors to be developed
in the next two years and establishes a procedure that allows
organ procurement agen cies to
take legal action when a family
wants to block a donation. T he
registry would be set up
through the Bureau of Motor
Vehicl es.
Organ donation registries
exist in Pennsylvania and four
other states. Pennsylvania has

BY KATIE CROW
TIMES-SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

PERFORMERS- Music is always an important part of the Racine Fall
Festival and among those performing Saturday was The Johnson Family of Middleton. The instrumental trio consisted of a grandfather and
two of his grandchildren .

5 Tt Choose from!

2000 lmpreza
Outback
Sport
Wagon
Power Windows 6 Locks, Till, Cruise,

Cents

had a 59 percent mcrease in
do nations since forming its registry in 1995·.
Supporters of a donor registry
say that about 70,000 Americans
currently await an organ to
eith er save o r improve rheir
lives. About 2,300 of those people are from Ohio.
Lifelin e of Ohio, an organ
procurement agency, said there
were 64 organ donors last year
in th e 41 central Ohio counties
it serves.
Drivers
licenses
already
include information on whether
someone wants to be an organ
donor. But the BMV doesn 't
provide 24-hour access to its list
and the ultimate decision is lcfi
to th e potential donor's family,
If a bill is approved this year,
details of th e registry will be
worked out later. First, a task
force will make recommendations, then the BMV would
have to decide how to keep the
registry and make it available to
organ procurement agencies.

Council
school's future

temporary gospel to bluegrass to
co untry-western all afternoon
and evening.
The park was fill ed With booths
where patrons co uld purchase
everything from hotdogs to tacos,
from scented candles. to': 'handpainted ceramic pieces, frQrn Jive
flowers to T-shirts, or learn from
available li terature about health

alt! !~~P!~~T~~fr~se~!Pt~tO

•t8,887*

so

Legislature
considering
donor plan

from

tu"' and nalllral r&lt;sourcts, Ohio Stalt
Univmity.)

from

RI'EFCASE

Meigs society news and notes, AS
Ax falls on Bobby Knight, _81

'

able for tobacco producers who
are seaoching for other enterprises.
In most cases, callers are referring to the foundation that was
established for community and
· agricultural development in
southern Ohio. Obviously, it is
past time for an update regarding
this issue, however, there is not
much to report as of yet. ·
The board of directors has been
chosen, and Joe Foster, of Gallia
County will represent this area's
interests. The board will meet for
the first time in early October
and begin to design and adopt
bylaws. I suspect that this period
of establishment will take several
· months, therefore, functional pro-grams mar not be in place until
next summer.
We will know more alter the
first meeting in October, and I
will post any updates in this seccion of the paper.
Pepper producers growing
for Southern Produce are advised
to review their contracts and to
bring to the pepper station, only
peppers that meet the terms of
the contract.
a•nniftr L. Byrnes is GQI/ia

Kneen

:_
Tuesd.y
Hlp: 70s; Low: 50s

issu es or political ca ndidates.
Scott Wolfe was emcee for the
festival which took a pause at
noon from entertainme nt already
unde r way to award prizes to the
winners in the parade, and crown
the 2000 Fall Fes tival Queen .
Taking first place in the parade
was the Southern Hi gh Sc hool
marching band directed by
Jeanette Oldaker. Second place
went to David Sayre of the Antiquity Fire Department with miniature fire wagon, and third 10 the
Racine Southern cheerleaders.
Queen ca ndidates in co n vertible~,

fire ripparatus from Racme and
Syracuse, and numerous vehicles
along with a walking unit or two
promoting political cand idates
were also in the parade.
C rowned 2Uil0 Fall Fes tival
Queen by the 1999 Queen
Laraine Lawson was Sarah Ball,
Sout hern High School senior.
Emily Stivers was first runn er- up,
and a special judge's choice went
to Macyn Ervin. Among the gifts
presented to the queen was a $50
savings bond from the Fall Festi-

Please see Radne, Pllp A3

SYRACUSE - Joy Bentley
met with Village Council Thursday ro discuss the fate of the Syracuse Elementary School and
p'roperty surrounding the buildmg.
Bcndey was spokesman for a
group of Syracuse resident' concerned with the future of the
property that will be vacated
when a new K-8 elementary
sc hool buildin g isbuilt near
Southern High Sc hool in
Racin e.
Bendey asked if council has
expressed an interest in the property, noting that residentS w hose
properties adjoin the school
property are very much interested in its disposal.
If council doesn't have any
plans for the school, these reSJ. dents are interested in purchasing
some of the property that adjoins
theirs, Bentley said.
M ayor Larry Lavender said

council was interested in the
property and has been for some
time, but added that theproperty
won 't be released until june 2001.
Robert Wingett, grants administrator, who has do ne some
research on the property, said the;
school was built in 1939 and that
bonds were issued in the amount
of$24,000.
Syracuse residents paid for the
property and .construction of the
building, Wingett said.
Council members plan to meet
with the Southern Local Board
of Education later this month.
One bid for the paVJng of College Road, and Fifth and Sixth
streets, was received by co uncil
and was opened Thursday aliernoon.
At Thursday night's meeting,
the bid from Tom Mayle &amp; Sons
Construction of Bartlett, which
called for 16,019 tons of asphalt
at a cost of$42.05 per ton, a toral

Pluse see Vlllap, Pllp A3

RSVP presents honors to more than 200 volunteers
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY More than
200 senior citizens who volunteer
to help others were recognized at
a celebration held at the Senior
Citizens Center Friday to mark
the 27th amiiversary of the
R etired Senior Volunt ee r Program.
"Give Yourself a H and for GettingThinb" Done" was the theme
of the program chai red by D1ana
Coates, RSVP director.
Special recognition went to
Charles Blakeslee, who has been
active since the program was
organized in 1973 and his wife,
Daisy. who joined her husband in
vol unteer work two years la ter.
Please see RSVP, Paae A3

..

VOLUNTEERS - Charles and Daisy Blakeslee were recognized
for a combined 52 years of volunteer service through the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program at Friday's recognition program . Now both in
their 90s, they hold the record for the couple with the longest continuous service in the RSVP pr&lt;'lgram. Flowers and certificates were presented to them by Diana Coates, RSVP director.

:ZO YEARS OF
- Certificates of recognition were presented to Kathleen Scott, Mary Roush, Nonga Roberts and Golda R~
cliff at Friday's RSVP recognition program. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

"

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A2 • The Dally Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Misbial in fire death case
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Cuyahoga County jury deliberated for
live days but could not agree on a vo\nlict in the case of'a mo ther
accused of killing her daughters in a fire.
Jurors reported Sunday they were Il - l in favor of acquitting Angela
Garcia o n aggravated murder and arson charges that could have resulted in a death sentence for the 24-year-old Cleveland woman.
Prosecutors contend that Garcia killed daughters Nijah Evans, 2, and
Nyeemah Garcia, 3, by burning down her ho use to obtain insutance
· mo ney.
Assistant County Prosecutor R obert Glickman said the state plans
to retry Garcia. He did not say whether prosecutors would continue
to seek a death sentence.
The jury could agree only o n a count of insurance ftaud, finding
that she filed 3 claim for items that were not in the house durmg the
N ov. 20 fire.
A note Sunday told Common Pleas Judge Bridget McCafferty that
"the jurors are emotionally and physically drained. Deliberations have
deteriorated to include personal attacks." Another one complained
that a specific juror was refusing to deliberate.
· Defense attorney Thomas E. Shaughnessy and Mark Rudy said Garna clid not set the fire at all, and said she passed two polygraph tests
supporting that claim.
Prosecutors asked McCafferty to delay sentencing on the 1nsurance
.c harge until after the retrial. which will come no sooner than January.

C LEVElAND (AP) - A woman and her teen-age son were
charged with beatin~; the woman 's 40-year-old live-i n boyfnend to
. death with their fists and a wooden kitchen cu tting board, police s:1id.
. Brenda Straight, 37, and Tierra Straight, 18, will be arraigne.d on
Involuntary manslaughter charges in Cleveland Municipal Court on
Monday.
Police Lt. Sharon MacKay said a Saturday morning argument
bel\veen Brenda Suaight and Racin Johnson, 40, turned physical and
·both rmrtbled down a flight of stairs. Tierro Straight and his mo ther
then beat Johnson to death, MacKay said.

Small plane aashes
CARROLLTON (AP) -A small plane clipped some treetops and
crashed Sunday afternoon, killing the passenger and injuring the pilot,
·the State Highway Patrol said.
Isaac J. Urda, 26, of Painesville, Jied at Mercy Medical Center in
:Canton. The pilot, Barney Schwenzer, 43, of Gates Mills, a Cleveland
·suburb, was being treated at the hospital's emergency room Monclay
·-mormng.The nursing supervisor did not know the extent ofSchwen. zer's i,Yuries.
Patrol Sgt. Don Ryan said the pilot 'vas trying to land at too high a
'speed. He ~ried to pull up, bur the Grumman American single-engine,
four-seat auplane hit the trees and crashed into a wooded area at the
·
end of the Carroll Counry Airport's runway about 4:22 p.m.
Patrol Trooper AJ. Wood said the men had flown to· Put-In-Bay. oil
. ·Lake Erie's South Bass Island, earlier in the clay. They planned to refu.el at the Carroll County Airport before heading back to the Cleveland
area, he said.
Ryan said it was raining heavily at the time, but weather was not the
cause the crash. The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board were planning to begin an investigation
· ·Monday morning.
Carrollton is 70 miles southeast of Cleveland.

Monday, September 11,2000

Nationwide Arena opens with concert
'

COLUMBUS (AP) - A crowd o f people
wearing cowboy hats and leather boots replaced
hordes of construction workers Saturday night
as the N atiomvide Arena opened in the heart of
the city's n ew do\vntown · entertainn1ent district.
Hundreds lined up several hours before Faith
Hill and Tim McGraw~ country m"sic's must
famous couple - took the stage at 8 p.m . in the
arena's first event, while others pa.cied at local
bars and restaurants.
Traffic didn't see1n to be a problem , as somt:
had anticipated, because of the ea rly-arriving
Ct'Jwd. Crowds did have to dodge a few
remaining o range constructio n barrels in front

of the arena .
" Parking was quick, but the price of it ...
ouch ," said Jeff Patrick, 38, of Grove City, w ho
paid$10.
The $150 million glass and brick arena was
built to be the home of the Natio nal Hockey
League expansion Columbus Blue Jackets and
will also play host to concerts and other events.
Planners ho pe the accompanying $500 milbon entertainment district will bring life into
downtown's often quiet streets. In 1999, o nly
3,383 people lived downtown .
Things were lively Saturday.
Nev&lt;:)e Husto n, 16 , of Pittsburgh , drove to
Columbus with a friend earlier in th e day, then

ca mped out at Jillian's, a bar and restaurant with
valet parking that is a sho rt walk from the 3fena.
"There were a lot nf cowboy hats in there; '
said Husto n, who was sporti ng a black cowboy
hat and carrying a McGraw beer advertisement
that she swiped from the bar.
About 200 people Jammed the outdoor
patio and courtyard for games and a best costume contest at Buca di lleppo, an llali.an
restaurant adjacent to the arena where the w;tit
for a table was two hours Saturday night . . ·
A woman who taped pink ball oons on her
body and called hersclf"The Bubble Lady" woh
rwo backstage passes to the concert from a Inca!
countr) •nusic station .

Stop-smoking classes
Veterans cemetery
having hard time finding dedicated in Rittman
people who want to quit
COLUMBUS (AP) -- Local
,1gmcies try111g to help people quit
sm oking are finding bu siness tough
to co me by these days.
The Franklin Co unty unit of
the American Canct&gt; r Society canceled 48 anti-smoking d asses thiS
sununer bec.ause of a lack of interest. T he Ce ntral Ohio · Breathing
Association said it enrolled .250
smokers in classes this year compared with almost I ,600 last year.
" We've knocked our he ads
against the wall trying to figure out
how we cah encourage smokers to
stop," said Candi Rotolo, director
of prevention and detection for the
cancer sooetv.
Rotolo said that wh en she told
some smokers about the cancellations, she " heard them cry over the
telephone because they were p sychologically ready to stop."
''I'm extremely frustrated,' ' said
• Marie Collar! , the breathing association's executive director. "We've
put together the best package we
can and smokers are not reachi ng
for it."
Health care advocates wish they
could attribute the decline to
fewer smokers, but that figure has
hove red around 26 percent for
seven years in Ohio.
Traditional smoking cess.ttion

progra111s rd y o n education,
bchJ\·ior modificatio n , group support and somemnes hypnosis. The}:
typically consist of four to 12 onehour meetings.
Some program o perators think
people who have smoked for years
·ne ed m o re-i nt~:usive therapy than
weekly educa tion and behavio ralmodification meetings.
The Mc Connell H eart H ealth
Ce nter, fOr instan ce, runs a yearlong program with a treatment
team inclucling a social worker, a
nurse~ an exercise physiologist and
a dietitian.
The breathing assoc iation is
mnsidering therapy comparable to
that used for alcoholi cs and drug
adclicts.
For some smokers, ni .:;otine is as
addictive as heroin or coca in e,
according to the U.S. Agency for
Health Care Policy and R esearch .
" We now have highly nicotinedependent smokers who need a
new approach ," CoHan said .
T he breathing association and
Maryhaven, a dmg- and alcohol. treatment center, are di scussing a
partnership that would provide
licensed
chemical - dependen cy
counseling, o utpatient and mpanent treatnu:m t fur tobacc o users.

R ITTMAN (AP) -Veterans
from no r th east Ohio were
hon o red Sunday as hundreds of
th em and their families braved
the rain to dedicate th e Ohio
Wt:stern Re serve National
CemL·t ery.
The area's World War II and
Korean War vctc.~rlns have long
c bmo re d for a ILl ti onJl ce merery. Th e C levd.111d area had
b ee n one of the most populated regiOns of the natio n no t to
be se rved by a veterans burial
ground.
Army Signal Corps veteran
Robert Potollla, 64, of Cleveland , attended the ceremony
with his wife, Virginia . He
already has chosen the grounds
as his final resting place.
"We're all so glad that this is
a reality," Potoma said. "It's a
wonderful tribute to the men
who served their country and a
great place to be able to leave
this Earth ."
The SII million cemetery
sp ans 27 4 acres in Medina
County, about 40 miles south
of C leveland. It is th e !1 9th
national ce tnctcry.
Nearly 300 veterans h ave
been buried there since June.
About I 06,000 burial spaces
will be available when construction is completed .
Keynote speaker Edward A·.

Powe ll Jr., actin g: deputy srcr~:.· ­

ta ry ofVete rans Affairs , reca llt:d
a I '.!91 M emoria l Day cc remo'ny that he .me nded at Fqrt
Loga n National Ce m etery i11
D enver. H e took his th en~~ l ­
year-old son Ill the ho pe that n
wo uld n1ake an imp ressio n , h'L·
said .
As hi s son walked the
grounJs of Fort Logan befo;e
th e ceremony, he said he ca n1e
away with a stunning impresSIOn from all the nea tly set rows
of white headstones.
•
"The imp act of the pri"c.e
paid by the men and women
buried th ere was not lost on
him. N ever again will he have
any doubt about what a veteran is," Powell said.
About 500,000 ve te rans a;\d

their family members who l(ve
within 75 mtles of Rittman are
eligible for burial in the ce metery.
Ohio'&gt; o nly other natioi;j J
cemetery, in Davton
. , has abO~t
36,000 fill ed g ravesites on an
88-acre site. It has e nou gh
gravesites to last until 2012, but
should la st lo nger with a rece nt
10-arre additio n.

.

Funeral held for family
SARAHSVILLE (AP) - Seven family members who died in what
-investigator&gt; say \vas a murder-suicide were remembered Saturday by
a frightened community.
· .. "You .~ee, Noble County is more than just a place - it's people, it's
· f.111tihes, Pastor Loren Dace, of the Fu·st Chmch of Christ in nearby
···Caldwell, told hundreds of mo urners at Shenandoah Elementary
· School.
. " It's a family of families, so that when one is hurt, •ll are hmt.Just
' moments after 3 o'clock Monday morning, our county was rudely,
"violently disrupted."
That, authorities say, is when someone set fire to the Pangle home
·m Ava, a rmy Noble Counry community about 75 ntiles e&gt;st of
·Columbus.
.
Inside, firefighters found the bodies of Richard Pangl e, 37: his wife,
Sheryl, 19; and their children , K.1yla , 11; Brett, 10; Derek, 7; and twins
Trina and Trinda, 5.
. Noble Counry Sheriff Landon T. Snuth SJJd Mrs. Pangle and four of
the five chtldren clied of singl e gunshot wounds. Brett is thought to
have clied of smoke mhalauo n as he slept. Results of the fat her's autop :SY are not expected until next week.
Although pieces of the investib&gt;ation are starting to fit togethe·r,
Snuth S31d warnmgs of the impending violence were not obvious, at
least to those outside the home.
"We feel there were veiled signs,'' the sheriff said. "Th e whole fam.ily went to the ~air together Friday and Saturday, which was highly
· unusual. He didn t often do much with them.
"That was just one week ago today," Snti th said, shaking his head.
"And now we're at thetrfuneral "

'IWo killed in two-car aash
·

ST. MARYS (AP) - A car darted through an intersection and
slamm ed into another vehicle Sunday afternoon, killin g a brother and
sister from this western Ohio town , the State Highway Patrol said.
Passengers Shannon Mteh;)el, 18, and her brother. Josep h Michael,
. '20, died when thei r car drove through the stop s1gn at the mrersecrion
. of s ta-1_~ Route 66 and Deep Cut Road near this city about 55 miles
: no rth of Dayton, sa id Kathy Kneib, a dispatcher at the patrol's
: Wapakoneta post. '
Driver Joshua W inget, 20. of St. Marys, was in crittcal condition at
Sr. Rita's M edical Center 111 Lima, the nursing supervisor said.The dnver of the other car, Kim Wagoner. 45, of Delphos, was in se rious con"dition at the hospital.
_ Kneib said no charges had bee11 ti led Smllhy night, but the acc ident
)'emained under investigation .

Daughter alleges abuse by father
:. AKRON (AP) .- Whether it ""·" spelling bees, 0!-.,o-stKki ng or
...')AT tests. the Ltvery rhdJn.·n w~rl;" .t lw.tys ahr.:ad of the competition .
:And rhetr f:uher wa.o; tht.•re, coac hmg from rht.• mil'lnll'S.
: l~ut prosec utor.; s:ay thmgs wen• f:u from perfect .lt the.' Lt\'c:ry h om~..· .
:1n I.1ct. sonte of the w.1ys Th&lt;&gt;tll.l!l L.n-~o: ry hontL'-'&gt;ChO&lt;}Icd Itt :-. fin: ( lul:Jrl' n con~ citutl'd

,l LTI Il h.'.

: '" He 'd always put n11 .1 ~l1ow wht:n th( n..·portc:rs \\'CfL' .J rolmJ . but it"
ho:td Jny fun . I{ \\"J:O. \\'hL'll he \\';tS gone,'' M .llJOI')' L ll\'L'f)'. J H.
:told th l' Akron lk.Kon j &lt;HJrn.ll filr .1 o.,rory Sun cb y. "A11d \\'c iL•:lrnL'd
:' ·cry c.Hiy th.1t thL'fl' \\'L·r~ con ,L·quL' Il Lc-, fi1r lo~ing if ;myd1ing. wlut
. \ \1.' .H:hu:vc:d was 1n SP, it L' of lum. not bcuusc of lnm··
: Thomas L:l'o.:ery, · 36, h:ls bl'l'll fh.lrgl•d with ninL' cm11lt.., of child
:cnd:mg~...· ring- b:~st:d on Storie' of ph ysi(al .md cn~nuon.ll .1busL' from
:t'vhQory and her 14-y~:~r-old stst~·r. K o1thkc1 1

:'\:'-,' c\'l'f

Professor to receive Olympic
honor for music research
AKRON (AP) - Bill Guegold
won't break a SWt:':t t.to pick up one
of the International Olympic
Committee's high est prizes.
That's bec• use the -17-year-o ld
U mversity of Akron professor
wo n't have to do any athletic feat
to snag the award call ed th e
Olympic Order in Sydney, AliStralia, on M onday.
Guegold will get the JWJrd - a
big, clunky gold chain neckbce for his unusual n:search into t he
history of Olympic mus1c: The
sco"" that accompany the openm g
and closing ceremoniL's and other
Olympic events.
" Its not like finding the cure fo r
a disease or somethin g like that,"
the author of the book, " 100 Years
of Olymp ic Music," told the Akro n
Beacon Journal for a sto ry Sunday.
Guegold , director o f Akron 's
Sc hool of M usic, said music 1s an
incegral part of th e modern
O lympics. Understanding the
mus1c's h1story helps bnng more
attention to the artistic aspects of
the games, he said.
The award is given to support-

o f the gamL's.. Rc: ci pi ~ llt S
includt· athletes such as Steffi Graf
.md othl!'r huninari~:s such .1s former South African Presidem Nelson Mandda .
In addition [() the gold necklace, Guegold will get a bpd pin
.md a diploma.
Guegold stumbled on what
would become an Olympic obsession in 1986. That was when h e
heard a march on publi c radio that
caughr hts ear.
At the time he was band di rector at Crestwood High School in
Portage Counry and was on the
lookout for ·p ieces for students to
play H e learned th e march was an
awa rd- \'lio-n ing orch estral pi ec e
from the 1932 Olympics, "Toward
a New Life;· by Josef Suk .
Guegold was f.1scmared with
the drama of the music and th e
way it adds to the pageantry of the'
ceremonies. The fact th at so little
infonuauon was available inspire d
h1m , he said.
" ] thought, 'Wow, this may be
one thm g that I can do that is fairly uniqut'."'
c:rs

-

\o11\1' Cll!i "ollll('( ]Iilii '

... to the retirement ofyour dreams.
Retirement can be one of the
most active times of your life ... and
one of the most expensive.
Whether you're 3~ or 30
months from retirem t, reviewing
your financial goals
developing a
!IOUnd Investment plan Is always a
good Idea.
Fommately, one ofthe best things
In llfe is fn:c:-;tn Initial consultation
with a R.1ymond James Flnandal
Advisor.

gas mileage by 22% while
meeting all emission standards.
With a simple connection to
a vacuum line, the Gas Saver
adds microscopic quantities of
platinum to the air-fuel mixture
entering the engine.
Platinum has the unique ability
to make non-burning fuel burn.
With platinum in the flame zone,
you increase the percentage of
fuel burning in the engine from
68% of each gallon to 90~.
Smce unbumt fuelts polluuon,

.

RAYMOND JAMES
!)NANC'!' RII!"'!CE8

"'"••·

!NC

~••o • • • • r

Located •t Peopl•s S.nk
Court &amp; Second Streel
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

Flnanr1F't AdvtiOf

·

• ...,.,_ • ..__.. , . , , .,,.,....., • ....,......,.

Seeunt•es Ill oftertd eiiCiusivef)' thrO!Igtl Raymond J1mn F1n1ncial SeNICftS Membtr NASOISIPC
an •ndependent broktri&lt;M.ittr, lOcited 11 PIOplts e.r«.lnWJstments ARE NOT FDIC INSUFIEO AFIE
NOT BANK DEPOSITS, NOR AFIE THEY GUARANTEED BY THE FINANCIAL INSTITUTION .
SUBJECTTO RISUNO MAHOSE VALUE.
.

l-800-LESS-GAS
] -800-5 3 7 . 7 4 2 7

Government Produced
Test Data
The government studied fuel saving
test data on vehicles made by several
auto makers using the Gas Saver.
This 1s the data they produced from
aneetofi5Jdenucal5-htervehJcles.
V•hl&lt;l• Mll•sJaal. Mll•slgai.P•r&lt;•n'•R•
Numbtr wlthor.~t
wllh
lncruse
I
2

!
5
6
7
8

1~
11
12
13

Gus • ..,
12.0
11.3
14 1
·
13 0
1 ·

~:~

13.3
9 .8
14 3
·

:~:~

15.8
14 ·4
1
:~ 13
·
12 9
Average 12.7
"

Gass ....
17.8
16.6"
20 ·7
18 8
·

:j:~

17.9
13. 1
18 4
·

: ~:~

17.5
15.9
14 0
·
l1.3
16.3

48.3%
46.9%
46.s"%
44.6%
40.2%
38.5%
34.6~

33.7%
28.7\t
28 .7%
24.8%
10.8%
10.4%
6.9'Jt
· 12.4%
28.3~

•

•

•

from PapAl

Village
fromPageA1

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
Sets Open Door

Benefit scheduled

Craft show set

Board meeting slated

RSVP

EMS units log 21 calls

from PageA1

The Daily Sentinel

•

17

Gannett - 53,.

VALLEY WEATHER

(USPS ZIJ-960)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

I.Pelrple•ln.....tment5

octane, making premium fuel
unnecessary for most vehicles.
Joel Robinson , the developer,
commented: "We have sold over
400,000 Gas Savers. To our
surprise,asmanypeoplebuythe
Gas Saver because it extends
engine life (by cleaning out the
abrasive carbon deposits) as
buy it to increase gas mileage
or raise octane."
For further information call:

Racine

val committee. Other queen canVINTON -~ Bernard F. Wilson, 84, Vinton, di ed Sunday, Sept. 10, didates in the contest handled by
Julie Randolph, were Brandi
2000, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasa nt,WVa .
Codner, Courtney Hill , and
He was retired from the Dayton Malbul Corp.
Kenda Smith,
He :vas preceded in death by his wife, Myrtle Morrison Wilson .
Winners in the under-19 big
. H e lS survived by 1\vo sons and daughters-i n-law, Bernard A. and
pumpkin
contest were Maddison ·
Lmda WJ!son of Point Pleasa nt , WVa., and Ralph and N ettie Gustin of
H
ill,
first;
Alexis
Hill, second, and
FlatwQods, Ky.; two daughters and so ns-in-law, Linda and Ron Wright
.o(Vmton, Phillts and H arry Parks of South Point; o ne bro ther, Madi- Jake Dixon, third. Winner in the
son Wtlson of Ironton ; two sisters, Vivian Melvin and Olive Fields, adult division was Crestlyn Hill.
Following a tradition of several
Qoth of Ironton ; mne grandcltildren and several great grandchildren.
years,
plaques were presented to
Funeral serv1ces will take place at II a.m . o n Wednesday at the
seven individuals in appreciation TOPS IN PARADE - Taking first place in the Racine Fall Festival
McCoy- Moore Funeral Ho me in Vinton.
of their support of the festival parade Saturday was the Southern High School Band directed by
Burial ~ill follow in the Vinton Memorial Park.
program. Receiving plaques this Jeanette Oldaker. The band receiving a prize of $50.
Friends may call Tuesclay from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
year were Paul Hill, K.:.ren Hill,
Art Hill, Perry Hill, Darrell Nor- ters and Clyde of C harleston , grand kids. playing gos pel music;
ris, Marshall Roush, and John WVa. Afternoon entertainment the M cCain Bros. of Eastern
Ralsto n, additional signs have been
Wayne Stobart.
included the Johnson Fantily of Kentu cky playing bluegrass, and
ordered.
Entertainment got under way Middleton, an instrumental trio another group, Get Out and
Wood said the grounds around
at II :30 a.m. with the Ro.S Sis- of a grandfather and two of his Push .
Carleton School need cleaning up,
and that he has received a number
cost of $68,075 .95, was accepted of complaints about cardboard
by council.
boxes and scraps cf wood piled
Wingett has secured a grant for around the school.
Wood saiod some are leaving the
the project through Ohio Public
treated;
Works in the amount of $49,854, sc hool and driving across private
9:25 p.m., Beech Street, Richard Smith, HMC.
property to reach village streets.
with a village share of$17,516.
POMEROY
POMEROYState
Rep.
John
Carey,
R-WellCouncil will hold a special
He said paving will probably
'Saturday,
5:43
p.m.,
Devenny Road, Elmo Smith,
begin in late Sep!ember.
meeting on Sept. 21 at 7 p.m . to ston , will meet with constituents from 9 to 10 a.m.
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
On a complaint lodged by Deb- discuss an ordimnce regarding Sept. 28 at the Meigs County Courthouse.
9:27p.m., Butternut Avenue, Timothy Jones, HMC;
Carey will meet with constituents on an individual
bie Lowery about barking dogs at garbage.
Sunday, 1:59 a.m., Union Avenue, John Schuler,
council's August meeting, a letter
In other business, the mayor's ·basis to cliscuss concerns about state government.
HMC;
responding to the complaint was report in the amount of$756, rep6:43 a.m., Mulberry Avenue, Dakota Marshall,
resenting fines and fees collected in
read by council.
HMC;
The letter, accompanied by 12 August, was approved. The mayor
9:22 a.m., Overbrook Nur-sing Center, Perry Hill,
RACINE - A cancer benefit for Don Hupp will
signatures, said that residents in also reported that gravel has been
Pleasant Valley H ospital;
be
h~ld Saturday afternoon at the American Legion in
question put up a privacy fen ce placed in Union Alley and that the
I :48 Holzer Medical Center Clinic, !Janie! Lewis,
and that neighbors, when asked , village has hired Rocchi's to close Racine. The event, which takes place at I p.m ., will
HMC ;
include
live
entertainment,
an
auction,
cakewalk,
and
the pool at a cost of $85 and matesaid the dogs were not disruptive.
8:59 p.m., Union Avenue, assisted by Central Disfood .
· Lavender reported that police rials.
Those seeking information should call 304-422- patch, Bonita Conley, HMC.
It was reported that the fundofficers have pagers.
RACINE
People wanting to contact offi- raiser held by Jeff Thornton and 3226.
Saturday, 4:20p.m ., County Road 35 , Shirley Pow-·\
cers may contact Floyd Hickman Meigs County corrunissioners to
ell, PVH;
at (800) 982- 2327, PIN 7583, benefit the London Pool netted
Sunday, 10:45 p.m. , Bashan Road, Mari e Roberts,
Scott Barton at (800) 982-2327, only $130. Council had earlier
.
treated.
MIDDLEPORT - Overbrook Center of MiddlePIN 7429, or the Meigs County asked council for $5,000 to help
REEDSVll.LE
port
will sponsor an arts and craft show, Oct. 7 from
Sheriff's Department for dispatch- pay the pool's payroll, which was
Sunday, 4:26 p.m ., County Road 28, Mary Lee
a.m.
to
4
p.m.
Table
space
will
be
provided
free
.
I
0
denied.
ing.
Attending in addition to Laven- Anyone interested is asked to call Mike Crites, 992- Bryant, Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Helen
. Mony Wood, Katie Crow and
K.:.yor, treated;
Donna Peterson reported on signs der, Wood, Crow and Peterson , 6472. Deadline to participate is Oct. 4.
5:49 p.m., State Route 124, motor vehicle accident,
and said the sign on . Sixth Street w ere Eber Pickens Jr., Bill Roush
Angela
Young, Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
will not · be moved. According to and Tucker Williams, and Clerk
RUTLAND
·Maintenance Supervisor Mike Sharon Cotterill.
Saturday, 6:06 p.m., Holzer Medical Center Clinic,
RACINE - The Racine Board of Public Affairs
will meet Tuesday evening at 7 p.m , in the Racine Dora Hysell, HMC;
Sunday, 1:48 a.m., Old Dexter Road and Bowles
Municipal Building.
Eileen Buck, Clarice Erwin, Ruby
Road, structure fire, Harmon residence, no injuries;
For information, call 949-2296.
Morris and Margaret Murray, and
4:14 a.m., Hysell Run Road, assisted by Pomeroy,
for 10 years service, June Ashley,
Jessie Herrell, HMC;
Lula Circle, Leo Daviclion, Betty
12:41 p.m., Martin Avenue, Patricia Gary, HMC.
Maurer, Donald Maurer, Jean
TUPPERS PLAINS
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency
· " They are the coup le with the Nease, Willogene Ohlinger, Hazel
Sunday,
8:57
a.m., State Route 7, Dale Kautz ,
Services answered 2 I calls for assistance over the
longest
continuous
service Smith, M ary Stobart, Abbie StratHMC;
weekend. Units responded as follows:
through their volunteer work;' ton,m Jan e Walton and Grace
10:34 a.m., East Main, Bette Butcher, HMC;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
commented Coates as she intro- Warner.
3:41
p.m., State Route 681, motor vehicle accident,
Saturday, 2:26 p.m., Crosspoints Apt., Luella Driggs,
Entertainment was provided by
duced the couple. Flowers and gift
Amber Johnston , Deidra Montgomery, CamdenHolzer Medical Center;
certificates were presented to the the Timeline Barbershop Quarter
Clark
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday, 4:26p.m., County Road 28,Jeremy Click,
following the dinner with the
:Couple , now both in th eir 90s.
Volunteers attending w_ere rec- Rev.William Middleswarth giving
:Ognized by ,Coates, who then pre- the invocation .
Recognized were the RSVP
~ented certificates tc these with
:20 years service, including Golda Advisory Council members Linda
:Radcliff, Nonga Roberts, Mary King, chairman ;Tom Dooley, vice AEP- 38'.\
BorgWarner - 34~.
OVB-25~
Sears- 34'·
GE -58'•
BBT - 28 ,~'..
Champion- 2'),.
Horley-49':1
Shoney's -1
-Roush, Kathleen Scott and Fern- chairman, Kristi Eblin, Connie Akzo- 421·
Wai
-Mart- 52~.
Charming
Shops
5
Kmart-7
Peoples
-15
AmTech/SBC
45lo
Cotterill, Betty Spencer, Vicki
&lt;lora Story.
Wendy's- 18,.
Ashland Inc.- 34~.
Kroger- 22~.
Premier-s~
City Holding - 8
· Recognized for 15 years ser- Woods, Carolyn G rueser, Bruce AT&amp;T- 3Q),
Worthington - 10'/l
Rockwell - 391.
Federal M~ul - 1 0~
Lands End - 23 ' ·
These are Friday's 4
FlriiUir- 24/o
Ltd . -221.
Rocky Boots- sl.
.vtce were Margaret Amberger, May, Leah Ord and Joan Corder.
Bank One - 36 ' ·

Published every aft trnoon, Monday through
Friday, Il l Collrt St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Oh io Valley Pu bli shi ng Company. Secoml
class postaae paid at Pomeroy, Ohio,
Membtr: The Assuciated Preu , and the Ohio
Ncwspaptr Associa tiOn.
POSTMASTER: Send addrc§5 correct1onJ to
The Dai ly Sentinel, Ill Court St., PorllerCly,
Ohio 4~ 7 6~

PIOIOI Clll Ul: 1..77-371-7571 or 740..882·2133.

hi 22% f
h
11
·
·
t s
o eac ga on would the Platmum Gas Saver than the
normally bum when it reaches the 22% clmmed by the developer."
platinum of the calalytic converter.
In addition to this study, the
Unfortunately, the converter's Gas Saver has received patents
platinum burns this fuel outside forcleaningoutcarlx&gt;nand ratsmg
· ·

of the engine, where the. heat and
energy produced from burning
this fuel cannol be harnessed
to drive your vehicle .
But when the Gas Saver adds
platinum to engine combustion,
22% more of each gallon
bums inside the engine so that
22% fewer gallons are required
lo drive the same distance .
After studying this process
for five years, the government
concluded: " Independent testing
shows greater fuel savings with

Bemard F. Wilson

Ohio Valley Publlshlna Co.

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22%

N · a! F ue Isaver
- atton
Corp. of Boston has developed
a low cost automotive accessory
called the Platinum Gas Saver
which is guaranteed to increase

5

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

Bob Evans -

retirement you'll enjoy, please caU Dianna Lawson today:

Dianna '•"""'· CFS

'

LOCAL STOCKS

For your frn: consullado.and a plan designed to help you reach the kind of

Federal Consumer Protection has confirmed the accuracy of the fuel saving claims in this advertisement.

BOSTON

Monday, September 11, 2000

By Carrier or Motor Routt
One Week .......................................... $2 .00
One Month ............
...... ..... $~!.70
One Year .............
........... .$ 104 .00
SINGLE COPY PRIC E
Daily.....
......................... 50 Cen ts
Subsctihers not desiri ng to pay the carrict may
re mh 1n a d~·ance di rect to Th e Daily Se ntinel
on a three, six or 12 month basis. Cred it will be
given carrier each week.
No subsc ripti on by mail permi tted 1n areas
where home \:lrrier serv ice IS a11ailahle.
Publisher reserves the rig ht to adjust rales
dud ng the subscri ption per1od . SubscriptiOn
rate chlln&amp;t!i may be Implemented hy cha nging
thc durat1on of the subscription.

MAlL SU BSCRIPTI ONS
Inside Meigs Co unty
13 Weeks.............
......... ~ 27.3 0
· 26 Weeks................ ..
........ $53 82
52 Weeki...... ....
....... S 105 .56
Ratu Outside Mdgs Count y
13 Weeks................. ..... ...................... S29 25
26 Weeks ...... ..................................... S56.68
52 Weeks ............. ..... ................. ...... . $109.72

Reader Services
Our main ~on~ern In all stories Is to be
acc untt. If you know an error In a stu.-y,
call the newsroom at (7 40 ) 992-2 15 5. We
will check rour tnrorm•tiun .nd make a
ron'fttlon llwarranltd .

or

Ntwl Dtp1t1menls
The ma in 11umber 1!1 992·21~5 . 11epart ment
e:d tn slons lrf':
'General Manlgt r ........................... Ext, 1101
News .......... H'"""'"'""""""'"'""'""E"' · 1102
.............. ,,....,............................... or E.~~ t . ll06
Other Scrvlcts
"Adnrtlsln1 ..................................... E111 1. 1104
Cln.: ulatlon ...................................... EIIIt. 110!
Clais lfted Adt ................................. E11t. 1100

Showers, storms on Tuesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms are
expected across th e region Tuesday as a cold front clashes with
the warm, m oist air over the a rea .
Warm and muggy conditions
wiU continu e with highs near 85,
the National Weath er Service
sai d .
M onday ni ght will be mostly ·
cloudy with a chan ce of show ers
and thund ers to rms, fo recas ters
said. Lows will be a warm 65-70.
The rai'n should end by
Wednesday.
Forecast
Today... Showers and thunderstorm s likely. Humid with hi ghs

Donor
from PageA1
T he bill 's success hinges on support from the Senate, in particular,
Sen . Grace L. Drake, R -Solon ,
who leads the Health , Human Services and Aging Conunittee. A
spokeswoman said Friday th at
Drake is reviewing the proposal .
. No one is ·sUre a registry would
increase don ation, but it ~hou ld
help prevent questions when
someone die-s. said Lind• Jones,
Lifeline·~ exec utive director.
"The biggest thing that we see
is familit·&lt; struggling w hen they

in the middle 80s.
Tonight ... Partly to
mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms . Lows 65 to
70.
T~esday... Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs in the tnid
80s.
Extended forecast
Tu esday night ... A chance of
showers and thunderstorms .·Lows
in the lower 60s.
W edn es day... Partly to mostly
sunny. Highs in the 70s.
Thursday... Fair. Lows in the ·
50s. H ighs in the 70s.
Friday .. Fair. Lows in the 50s.
Hi ghs in the lower 70s.

don't know what a person wanted,'' Jones said.
In some cases, the donor wants
to donate org.ms, but the family
goes against his or her wishes.
Jot~es said that happened five
times last year in Cincinnati.
Jones also is encouraging proposed education efforts, such as
getting organ donation information to drivers before they go to
the BMV to renew th eir licenses
and following up with more information sent to those who decline.
Lifeline spokeswoman Marilyn
Po ngonis said many people w ho
aren't in form ed about donating
decline to donate without much
reason .

Oak Hlll -18~

AD Shell - 62' ·

p.m. closing quotes .

Neb. corn
crop weak,
prices low
LINCOLN, N eb. (AP) Drought - stricken
N ebraska
appears to be harvesting a poor
corn crop at poor prices .
"I don't want to call it a disaster,'' g ram broker C lay
Braclley told the Lincoln Jo urnal Star. "But it 's a pretty lo usy
crop."
M aking things worse for
Nebraska fanners, some corngrowing stat es to th e east are
expected to brin g in good
yields. That, co mbined with
unsold portiOns of last year's
crops, prol:&gt;ably will brin g low
prices in the Corn hu sker State.
"The number one thing this
holds for us is that there will be
another huge set of payments to
come from Washington , similar
to last year,'' Bradley said late
last week.
Farmers are looki ng for more
cash from Congress this fall.
The SI 5 billion package of
agricultural assistance President
Clinton signed into law in June
will not cover losses by farmers
hurt by drought m N ebraska,
Texas and parts of the Southeast, farm groups say.
Th ose losses could mount to
$2 billio n to $3 billion, said
Tom Buis of the National
Farmers Union.
.
In Georgia alon e, econmnists
estimate farm losses at S739
million, and damage in Texas
has bee n put at about $600 million. Nebraska officials expect
to make an estimate after the
U.S. Agriculture Department
issues its monthly crop report
Tuesday.
In the Finh area south of
Lincoln and elsewhere in
Nebraska,
drought-plagued
crops have reached shriveled
m aturity two weeks ahead of
normal.
As he waited to unload grain
in Firth, Mark Nieveen said
early corn yields on his family's
farm were running about 70 to
I DO bushels per acre. That compares with ISO bushels in years
when the weather cooperates.
"Considering th e dry year,
we're real happy with yields,"
Nieveen said.
Prices are another matter. "I
think it's just a big crop coming
on (nationally) that 's driving
down pric es," h e said. " All they
talk about is record yi elds."
The drama that goes with
waiting for the results of planting in April and May is largely
gone for Firth farmers Dale
Docter and R odney Tekolste.
They lost much of their corn
and soy,bean potential to a summer hailstorm.

·cats' bids goodbye to Broadway
NEW YORK (AP) - "Cats,"
Broadway's longest running
show, has become as mu ch a
"Memory" as the song that was
its most persistent refrain.
After a nearly 18-year run , the
Andrew Lloyd Webber musical
closed with a roar Sunday at the .
Wimer Garden Theater before an
invited audience of friends and
fans .
They cheered , sc reamed and
even cried during an emotional,
confetti - strewn final performance - number 7,485- that
was interrupted by seve ral standing ovations .
"Tonight is the last night of
'Cats' first life o n Broadway,"
Lloyd Webber said after the
exuberant cast and orchestra
players took their bows. "So I
wouldn 't get too excited. I
don't quite know what the fuss
is abo ut:"
Lloyd Webber, who wrote
the show's music, was applauded as soon as he entered the
theater and before the house
light s dimmed. The most
applavse? For "The Jellicle
Ball," a big dance number near
the end of the first act, which
received th e night 's longest
standing ovation, literally stopping the show.
" It's possibly diffi cult for you
to realize here," Ll oyd Webber
told theatergoers aftet the final
cu rtain . '" Cats' was already a
big hit · in advance before, we

came to New York, but in Lon- a collection of poems by T.S.
don, it was a huge, hu ge risk. Eliot. The St . Louis-born poet
People don't believe th1s but we was pra1se d by Nunn as " the
opened with quire a lot of our greatest English and American
capital ntissing. T he o nly thing I poet of the 20th centu ry and
wi ll say is mu sical thea ter has go t who was my unwittmg collaborator in wnting the wo rds for
to co ntinue to take risks."
Among th e peop le called on 'Memory' - probably unwillstage by Ll oyd Webber were Ingly. if he had known."
The poems by Eliot, w ho died
director Trevor Nu nn, cho reographer Gillian Lynne and pro- 1t1 1965, also provided the lyrics
du cer Ca meron M ackintosh. As for the other numbers in " Ca ts."
they waved goodbye, a shower of
yellow, white and silver confetti
Track the progress
filled the theat er, covering the
of your favorite
cast and still -.1pplauding theatergoers.
team through the
"Cats" was based o n "Old
Possum 's Book of Pra ctical Cats,"

Sentinel

Sports pages!
SPRING VAllEY WUMA
446 •4524

OL {li!OU 'f y, WI ST

7

171! \ J I\ (; KSONI ' IKl

FRI9/8/00 • THURS 9/14/00

BOX OFFICI Will OPIN 'T
6:30PM FOtiiYINJNG SHOWS
1:30 PM FOR MAnNIIS
THE ART OF WAR (R)
7:00 SUN-THUR

BAING IT ON (PG13)
7:00 SUN-THURS

AUTUMN IN NEW YORK (PG13)
7:00 SUN-THURS

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 SUN-THURS

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUMPS (PG13)
7:10 SUN·THUAS

THE CELL
7:00 SUN· THURS

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SUN·THURS

�_Th_e_o_ai..::..Iy_se_n_tm_e_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _0...-..

The Daily Sentinel
'EstUSslid i31.948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·2156 ·Fax: 992-2157

Char'- Hoeflich
Genenll Manager

Mond11J, September 11, 1000

Dear Ann Landers: l agree with
your response to ''Woundt•d in L.A.,"
who had a baby. but was in no hurry to
marry her longnme, hve-in boyfriend.
Her mother was upset, and refused to see
the grandc hild. You said the mother
should not punish the baby, but you
wondered why they didn't get married
for the c hild 's sake. May I expand on
that'
Some pcoplt:' sec no reason to marry,
and they are entitled to their o pmion . In
most state~. however, marriJge can be the
best way to protect yo urself legally if you
buy propnty togethn o r have a child. In
many stJte~. a surviv1ng spouse and c h ildn•n mher it t'\'crytlu n g unless it ts spectfic.llly c.:xdudeJ in a wi ll , trust or prenuptial ,1g n.:ement . Also, if yo ur life partner
dit'S. you arc in :1 bcrrcr position if you
:lrL' lll.\ITied l1L'CJl1Si..' lllOilt.')' p:lSSt'S from
~pause-to-spouse.: frL'L' of federal c~tJtt:

•

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

LdiMJ to tM ldiUN ~n wkHtf. TINJ Mcn.Jd lw Wss tluut JOO words. AU llltln an sllbjtct
to ft1i1i11t •llli Maul&amp;-~ sWtwliUIII int:lwk ed4rnJ atNI tek~
No ~~ifrwd kllln will
H pMbliiW Leltn! slw•ld b. ill JfiOil tiUk, lliUIYnifll USNeJ, 1101 J#«fOMIIII#s.
T/u .,U.iom IXJifVSud ;,. tJu t:DIMIPIII klo., an,lhe cot~set~UIS of Ore Ohio VlllieJ I'IAMi.Jhilfl
Co. '• ftliloritU ~. 11.1dns o1M"is11101ed.

,..wtber.

NATIONAL VIEWS

t.lx .

TODAY IN HISTORY

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
If you are married, you an: yo ur
spou se's nexr of kin and usually havt.• thL'
right to make medi c:~ ! decisions in rh t&gt;
event of a scrious illuess or inca paciurin g:
condition. If you arc not nurricd . your
partn er's nean.·st blood rcbtive will nukL·
thl'se dt.·cisions, ;md you cou ld be.:.· excluded ~:ntircl y. This lS one reason \vhy ma ny
gay couple\ fight so hard fo r the rigbt to
m arry.
A1;vonc w ho thinks It IS l' ,lS it.•r fo r .111
unnnr n cJ couplL' to sp lit up i ~ ki dding

himself. especially if a child is involved.
Once th&lt;rc arc children, yo u r hfc ts legally tied to the other person forever, unless
one of you is willing to give up parental
rights. Some couples sign agree m e nts to
!.:"Stablish nghts stmilar to marrted couples, bur not all States will recognize these
agrccmcnts, and r•:ithcr will som e forL'ign countries, which can create problt·ms if you travel overseas with yo ur
cluld .
·
Anyone .w ho has chosen a life partner
and has a chi ld sh o uld be g rateful o ur
k·gal 'Ystc m has thc: ~e built-i n protections. People 111 mch a reb.tionship who
rcfusL' ro m ar ry should ask themst'lvcs
\Vhy tiiL'Y arc so relu ctant to take tlut
step. ;' Wotmdcd" .m d her Sign ificant
Otbn shuuld nm w the neJn:st cou rth o use .1 nd mah· it legal. -- PruRom.l lll"L' L:J\\'YL'r in New York
Dear N.Y. Lawyer: Tlunk you for
Sl'\"LT.ll thou ~.1 11 J doll.1rS wo rth of tfeL·

Staneart family has reunion

Joe Lieberman tells columnist he's un-American
Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
und e r rhe Const irution in hi s rnajonty decision in West Virg in ia Statt' Board of Education
vs. Barnette:
"O ne's right to li fe. liberty and property, to
free speech, a free press, freedo m of worship
and assembly, and oth er fundamc·ntal ri ghts
may no t be subm itted to vot e. They depmd
on the outcome of no eln:ti onS.' '
Moreover, o ur fundamental righ ts, indud mg freedom from religio n , do nut depend o n
a p oliticia n's attempr ro exclude those Americans who do not fit l11s definition of Anll'ri ca nism and morality. An illustration of the
ignorann.· of American constitutional history
in the m edia was the way Fox-TV's news
"expert" Bill O'Re illy cheered Ltebcrma n
\\l'hile show in g no knowled ge th at God is not
mentioned in the Constitution, and ignoring
Jefferson's and Madison '.; v1ews.
I comme nd rn the l' du c HJon of Sen.
Lichernlall - anJ to AI Gore. w ho ~ay" he
ful1y supports th is 1110v~ to turn Amcri c~1 imo
a theocracy - Justice l~ obcrt Jackso n's defi nition of 0 \1 1" (Oill lllllll \ibt~ rty of l' Oll SC il'lll' L·:
" If then: is anv tlxed st:u in o ur constitu tiona l t.:onstdlati~n . it is th at n o oflicul. high
or petty. can prescribe what shall b,· ort hodox
poli tics, nario nali '\111, reli gion , o r other matters
of opmio n."
Abraham Foxrnan, Jutional din~nor .of rb e

Aurl"ll·rso n, Tony. PJr C: ry.;;u l, and Lisa Eblm , of Middk·pon
Lwr.1 Autherson. Syr:lt.:UsL': John Eblin , Le\vi s, Elv;l Hud son,
. ll.:tcinc; ShJ'"'J I. H eat her. D evon H awley, Alba ny: Ken ~tnd Donru
Eb lin. llrll c"c' :tnd C&gt;&lt;sic· Do viS. Rutland; Denver and Peggy Hudso n .. North: Bcrn:t rd :~nd Linda Hudson , l exi n gton , N. C.; James,
AngdJ and Ryan Eblin. Col umbu s: Margare t Williams , Diane
Sa lvatore , Dtckie Powell. Ea1t Lrverpool; lucy Kayle Goff.
R eeds nll e-; Dcl o n s W1ncbn:uner, Po meroy; and a guests,
C hri st ie Re:l lt· :111d Eri c Montgom e ry.

Dc·sce nd ants of Joel and Lydia St ill Staneart held the ir re11n ion
on August 26 ~t th e Route .33 roadSide· park near Pomeroy.
A potluck lun ch was e njoyed at noon with the blessing being
g tve n by C lara Ma e Zimmerman Hutchm son. After t he m e;tl.
JJau la Pi c kens co ndu ct ed t hl' business meetin g .
Gift; were prest·nted t o Bill Kirke ndall , Wall\eon , Ohio, for
trawling the farthest: Wilbur Colburn , age 89, the oldest; and
Noah Cox, age two, the youngest.
Paula rea d a short d evo tion from Guide posts by R ic k Hamlin
rega rding th e importance of re membering our history and n o t
SALEM CENTER Contests were judged at the recent
being " too busy to h ea r what our loved ones are saying."
m
eet
ing
of
Star
Grange
h
eld
at the hall with members of HemMugs and caps with "Sta nelrt Reunion 2000" donated by
Dal e Col burn were given 10 the those telling a story about the ir la ck Grange as visitors.
Wmners, li sted first through third resp ec tively, were potholdancestors: JoAnne Aburto, Hdward Parker, ll oyd Bl ackwood ,
ers, R ose Barrows: O hio sym bo l, Opal Dyer, Patty Dyer,and
Bet ty Milhoan , and Pi ckens.
Maxine Dyer; de co rated candle, Mtchelle Baird, Ryan Watson ,
M ust from one family was the Chsta Staneart Zimmerman
daughters , Ruth , Betty, Mary and Clara M ae. A prize was won by ~ nd Mike M aco mber ; croc h et ed doily, Maxine Dyer, Rose Barrow; afghan, Rose Barrows, M ax ine· Dyer; three pi ece baby set ,
Rosh awna M ayer s.
R ose Barrow; e mbroidery table cloth, Janet Morris.
Co in s were pla ced on a map of Ohto to indicate where each
Embroidery pillow cases, Janet Morri s; J ani s Macomber;
onl' ca rne from m Oh10. The bi ggest re pre se ntation was from
ne ed lepo int. Rose Barrows, Opal Dyer; la tchhook Opal Dyer:
Mei gs Co unty. A vote was taken to hold the Staneart Reunion
junior holiday cra ft, Stacy M aco mber; JUnior s unc at c her, Justin
t h e sa m e pl ace next year on Augu st 18. Pi c kens and J oyce Sh eMidk tff. Stacy Macomber, and Emily Gibson, all fmts; poste r,
line vo lunteered to sen d out notices and plan next yea r's
Stacy M aco mb e r ; Scen e in a box, Justin Midkiff and Sta cy
reun1on.
Ma com b er, both firsts; c ross ing the Millennium booklet, Stacy
A co ll ectio n was taken for a new tombstone erected for Joel
Ma co mb er; teacher ap pre cia ti o n g ift, Ju stin Mtdkiff and Stacy
and Lydia St ill Stancart at the White Oak Cemetery, King1bury
Mo co mb e r, both first ; Mallo ry Ni codemus , second.
Road. M eigs Co unty. Dale Co lbum was responsible for overseePhotography winners we re Amenca th e Beautiful , Linda
ing the proje ct and was recogn ized for his efforts. Also, lloy d M o ntgome ry, first and J aniS M aco mber, second; grangers proBlackwood was applauded for pr9viding the Staneart lineage of moting grange, Jani s Ma co mbe r, first ; family portrait, J a nis
SIX genera tiO ns.
Ma co mb er , first; linda Montgom ery, second, a.nd Eric MontAfter the busmess me et ing tho se wanting to see the new gomery, third; animals and o th er c reature s, Stacy M aco mber,
[omb ston e went to the ceme te ry. Pictures were taken of the first.
dcscendJnts around the n ew h ea dsto ne. Amazing Grace and
Art winners were oi l Jnd jcrylics, Eric Montgomery, first;
Blest b e t h e• Tie th at Binds were sung by th e ancestors .
Mt c helle Baird , secon d: water color. Stacy Ma co mb e r and
Those attc ndtng t h e Sta ncar t Reunion were lloyd and Anna Mt c he llc Baird, both first : c harcoal. Michel~ Bai rd, first; Eric
Dla ckwood,Vernal an d Betty Bla ckwood, Joh n and Conn ie Stan- Montgomery. seco nd, and Mike Macomber, third . ·
ca rt Largent . Wilbur Col burn. Betty lrwm , Keith and Madeline
Plan s were diScussed fo r a c h tc ken barbe c ue to be held Se pt.
Staneart; Howard E . Parker, Roger, Rose mary, Ross and Ka tte 24, 11 a.m . untll 2 p .m . Thirty"-vie- memb~:r s,j un iors and visitors
Keller, Alb ert and Cla ra Mae Hutchin so n, Fre d Colburn , Dottie enjoyed potlu ck refres hments prec e ding the meeting.
Cox, Tom and M ary R edm an , Wiley Colbum. Betty Russe ll, Btll
R. osa_ll e John so n , le ctu rer p n: scn tcd a program consisting o f
and Phyllis Kirkendall, Stephanie and Noah Cox, Paul a Staneart read tn gs " I Ca n 't RL•member; by R osa lie Story and " lunche o n
Pi ckc· ns , Howard and Ruth Fishe r, JoAnne and R owe n a Aburro . Date"by Hel e n Quivey .md Sarah Cullums: and an Ohto trivta
Dale and Anna Col bum , Betty Dains Milho an , Pe ggy Moore, quiz \v irh P:~tty Dyer a nd Pa uli ne Rife being the wmners.
Brett Milhoan, Joyce Staneart Sheline and Brand on Saunders.
Blatr and Rashawna Mayers , Laura Saunders, l arry R ussell.
Cheste r. Opal, Stepha ni e and C he t Wigal. Maunta and R oy
Miller , Wilma Parker and Ermel Beckley.
C HE STER Purc ha se of two r adi os for the Chester Fire
Dep:ntme n t were r~ported when. th e Ladie s Auxiliary m et
recently at the fire h ouse.
.
Melanie Ridenour. pre si d e nt, con duc t ed the m ee tin g which
RACINE - The annua l Hudso n reunion was held Aug. 26 at included reports on the Meigs Co unty Fair bo o th and l abor
Day activit ies. The Lord's Pra yer. o ffi cer's report\ and pledge to
the Star Mtll Park in Ra c in e.
Sonny Hudso n , pre side nt , conducted t h e meetin g during . th e flag were includ ed 111 th e o pen in g.
Refreshments were se rved by Erma Cle land to Esther Smtth ,
w h ich time 1t as voted to .retain the officers fo r ano th er yea r. It
was decided to have the reunton at the Rut!Jnd Park, Rutl and Vickie Griffin, [nzy Newell, C le o Smith, Opal H o ll o n and
Ridenour.
hext yea r at I p. m . on the the fir st Saturday 111 Augmt .
Gra CL' p recedmg t h e dinner w:~s g1ven by Lewis Hudson. Gifts
\VL'rL' p resented . Attcndi'ng were George Hud son, Lo re tta
Rogers. Don, Chery l Beth, and D. J. Bryant, Kathn Rus se ll ,
Rogn. j;tne. Bill and Co d y Hyse ll, Rebecca Autherson , Angel
Lemley of Pomeroy; Sonny, Con nie Hudson , Steve, Danne te.
In order to vote In the
Ben . and Nick Hudson; Amanda L em ley, Scott, Jason and Jos h

Star Grange judging held

HENTOFF'S VIEW

I am a Jewish atheist who has worked with
C hristian legal gro ups, such as the Bec ket
Fund for R eligio us liberry, in suppo rt of the
First Amendment's guarantee of the "fre e
exe rctse of religion." l was also privileged to
be a friend of the late Cardinal John O'Connor.
But Joseph Lieberman tells me that rhe First
Amendment guarantees freedom of relig ion
- not freedom from religion . This senator is
a graduate ofYale Law School? Justice Robert
Jackson of th e United States Supreme Court
satd it plain:
"The day this country ceases to be tree to r
irreligion, it will cease to b e free for religion
- except fo r the sect that can win political
power."
And, Sen. Lieberman, Article VI o f the very
Co nstitution that you mvoke also says cl ~~ rl y
that "no religious Test 1hall ever be required as
a Qualification to any Office o r publi c Trust
under the United States."
The sena tor approvingly qu otes J o hn
Adams, our second president, as sta ting that
.. our Constitution was made only _for a moral
and religious people." Lieberman then brin!l' .
George Washingto n into his campaign with a
quote from the first preside nt that morality
cannot be maintained "without religion."
According to Li eberman, th erefore, I atil at
best a seco nd- class citizen under th e Consti tution as we ll as being imm o ral, or. at wurst.
un-American.
However, Thomas Jefferson - in his h istoric and seminal Virginia Act for Establishing
R eligio us Freedom - emphasized the separati on of church from state, thereby fr&lt;eing aH
Ameri cans ro support any religwn or none.
Jam es Madison, who wrote t he Frrst Amendment, thoroughly agreed, and persuaded the
Virginia legislature to pass it.
And Supreme Court justice Robert J ackson
gave the classic definitio n of Amt:ri canism

Anti-Defamation League, has performed a
nati onal service by reminding Liebennan that
making political appe·als "a long religious lin es
i11 co ntrarv to the Am~ri ca n ideal." Foxman
has writt~n si milar educational letters to AI
(;ore and George W. Bush ; who have been
campatgning as if God and Jesus were on their
tickets. They keep invok in g t heir particular .
born-again C hnstianity, which i1 no t the faith .
of Jews, Muslims. Buddhists an d ind eed other
adheren ts of Ch ristian ity itsel f. My faith ts the .
Constitution .
As for Lieberma n , col mnmst Lars-Er ick
Nelson makes the ca uti o nary point that ·
.. Lieberman says , of course, th at he will
res pect th e rights o f nonbelievers. But he
makes cl ear th at he regards them as m oral ·
inferio rs, if n ot seco nd-class citizens- just as
som e co untri es o n ct• regarde d Jews ." And just
as a good many Ameri ca n ~ sti ll regard Jews.
Btit Lieberman, oblivio us ro rh e divisiveness
of imposing his cock of Americanism and
morality, insists th at " religion is a sourct' of ·
unity and srre ngth in Ameri ra.' '
As Rabbi Bernhard 1-losenberg wrote 111 a
letter in th e Aug. 30 New York Ttmes: "The
\vearing of o ne's religio n on one's sleeve creates a dangerous · prcccdent and undermines
the separat ion of church and state . O ne relig ion w ill b e turned again st another, w ith candidatl'S t•xp loitin g t heir own personal relig10us COI1V1C tl 0115. "
This is no t wh:H the Framers of the Constituti on lud in mind .
COR RE CT ION: In last week's column I
wrote th at th e PB S dt&gt;c umcntary " A Force
Mnre Powe rful " wtll air on Sun day, Sept. 18,
and Sunday, s,· pt . 25. Th ose dates &lt;tre actually
Mondays. The program w ill air oi1 Monday,
Sept. 18, and Monday, Sep t. 25.

Ladies Auxiliary meets

'

(f'l(/ r Ht·,t&lt;df' is a nationally re1W11!11ed dHtlwrity
''" ''"' Firsr A llwlllhul'llt rmd tltr Bill of R(~llfs.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Technology compounds our economic expansion

Hudson family has reunion

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCAL fOLK~.

nei
[n
In
In
itary

197 1, former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev died at age 77.
1972, the troubled Muni ch Summer Olympi cs ended.
1973, Chi lean President Salvador Allende died in a violent milcoup.

8Y

JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK It's the common dream
today of inventors. software developers, entrepreneurs and struggling and su ccessful businesses alike: Producing more for less.
Now. presto, transmute the dream to reali ty
and multiply it 100,000 times or more fo r a parti al explanation of the greatest economic event
of the times, the great productivity revolution .
It has stabilized or lowered prices, cut waste,
improved health care, raised production ctliciertcy, created more reliable products, redu ced
unemployment. lifted wages ...
You cou ld go on like this for paragraphs and
&lt;rill nor catalng all the benefits. And amont,~ it'
anc iUary effects has been to rewntc tired o ld
econom.1 c texts that said it couldn't be done.
It ha' been done. The expansion is the longest
in U.S. history. The un employment rJ te ha' tallen' far !:ldow the level at whic h inflation once
wa.o; deemed certain, and ~ome pri ces have actuall y f...Jlen on the pa' t decade. Entire industri es
have been alte red .
Although the revoluti on has been swift.
occurring mostly in rhe \49£1". "ociery '~ rapid

adjustm t: nt sometimes disguises whar has happened.
After acting like a Mi,~ouri mule for )h~ars,
the Federal Reserve finally admitted somcthin ~
very unusual had ULTurred, and o nly reluctantly adjusted irs esn mates on what was erom.Hl11cally poS\ible.
Ask most pcopk if tl1c cmt of buying and
operating a car h;1s ri ~en o r t~tllen in th e pa-;r 40
years and they're likely to answer "risen ." But
econom i" Willt.un Dunkdberg points out that
pn ces have declitJ ed abom 15 pcn:cnr in terms
nf work hours required .
Tht• surpri~es conrlnUL'. Atier tirsr reporting
th;lt productivity has o;;oa r~d &lt;lt a pmdig1ous
an nual r.tte of 5.3 per e·c·r lt in the April -June
quartn, thL· Ltbor I kp&lt;lrtlll('J1t b st week revi sed
it tu 5.7 PL' ret.·nt .
'](·dwologKal cn:atiun.;;, whi ch lie at tht.• con;
nf the nnpmvemem'\, are hk.c co mpound intcrl'lit. one c:rl..'::uinn being tilt' ha~l· l"t&gt;r another.
greater aL'I..: ump li ~ hm e m. And the pmCL'IiS may
havt.· a long way to go.
Ala 11 Gn:L'Itsp:lll, Ft.·dcral lt. c.;;ervt.· chainlUJl,
h.t!'! stated th .1t tcchnologir.d improvL·mc ntli have

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

825 Third Ave., Galllpolla, Ot11o
74().448-2342

basically changed the economy, and that It&lt; benetlts ·arc 1\trucwral rather than temporary.
Evidence of this is found in the smti~rics that
the Fed so closely watches. In times past, prod uctivity often sp urted w hen th e economy rose
from rc:cession, the-n faded as inflatio n caught
hold .
The- ~itu&lt;l tion h,1s been nearly oppoo;itc today.
In defiall l'l' of the o ld ru les of t' COI10111\ C behav ior, productiviry h:1s acwally imp rc)'~·cJ with age.
And inflation, the rheumatism of exp:ttlsions, is
soothc·el.
Will it continut:?
It is o nl y rt.'.tsouable to recognize tlut eventually tilt· mw order will be in place and the
econnn1y will tL'tH.i to n.:~t mun·. Still. barring
mi"managenwnt or L'Xrraneous fOrces , such as
war, plea~ant 'i urprisc..:s may he m ore numerous
th an shocks.
Sort of like a s.winh" account Wit h yeAr" of :
compounding pushing: it ,along faster than you '
111ight ever h.tvc.· thought.
(/t•ln 1 Cwm HT is 11 JJ/Isilll'.i'S
ar.·d HI·.&lt;s.)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992· 2156

tmal}!.l·t

J •r 'f11f' .4 .\soci-

200 Main St., Polnl Pleaunt, W.Va. ,
304·675-1333

barely know th e man . Am I betng excessively loyal to my father's memory, or is
my m other being: too donuncering? -Only One Daddy tn Flonda
Dear Only One Daddy: Ignore the
pressure. and call yo ur mother's husband
whatever is comfortable for YOU .You are
f)n adu lt woman, and if your mother
doesn't recognize this, perhaps she n eeds
to be reminded .
Feeling pressured to have sex' How
well-informed are you: Write for Ann
landers· booklet "Sex and the Teenager"
Send a self-addressed, long. bminL·~~-size
envelope and a ch~ck ur mon ey order for
$3.75 (tim incllllk&gt; pmtage .llld h.lndling) to: Teens, c/ o Ann Landc•rs, PO.
Box 11562. C hi cagD. III. 611lol1 -05(,2 . (In
Canada, send S4 55 ) To find om morl'
:tbout Ann L.mders and n. ·.lll h~r p.t ~t
columm, \' ISH tllt' Cre:uor.., SyndJ t.ll l'
\\'Cb pag~ &lt;l t \\"\\"\\".L'" I"L'.ltoTS .l Oill.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
MONDAY
Disabled
CHESHIRE
·Ameri can Veterans 5J . will h t~ve a
picnic Monday, 6 p.m at the
C hesh1re park . Take a covered
diSh.
RACINE - Counry Council
of M eigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish, 7:30 p.m.,
Bethany
United
Methodi st
Church, to discuss becoming ecu menical. Public welcom e.
RAC INE Regular m ee ting. Racine Chapter 1.34, Order
of Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m .
Refreshments to follow.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - M eigs County Board of Electi(!nS, Tuesday, 9
a.m. board offices in M eigs
County Ann ex.
POMEROY - Immunizatio n
Chnic, Meigs County Health
Department, 9 to 11 a.m. l to 3
p.m.
Take
shot
records;
parent/guardian to accompany
child. Donations appreciated, not
required .
·
FRIDAY
MIDDlEPORT Metgs
count Family and C hildren First
Council . Fr iday, 9 :30 a. m . at the
M eigs County Department of J ob

and Family Serva.: es.
GALLI POLIS I l omitt"ic
Marchese , R .Ph .. of Athena RX'
H o m e Pharmacy. will ralk o n
over-the-counter drug inter:JC -'
tion w ith prescriptic.Hl medici- ·
tions at the Parkinson's Support
Group meeting, 2 p .m. Frida~.
library, Grace United Me thodisi'
C hurch , 600 Second Ave., Gat~
lipohs.
SATURDAY
POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigl Chapter, DAR;
Saturday, noo·n lun cheon at
Crows, f&lt;Jllowed by m eet in g at
Pomeroy Ltbrary and grave mark-·
ings , wea th er permitting.
SUNDAY
RACINE - R eumo n , fam ic '
lies of Charles Reed and Oscal
H ysell , dinn er 1 p.m .. Star Mill
Park, R acm e.
The Community Calendar
is published as a free service ·
to non-profit groups wishing

to announce meetings and ·
special events. The calendar ·
is not designed to promote ·
sales or fund raisers of any·
type . Items are printed only :
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days . : ·

BRIEFS
Impressionist painter
BOSTON (AP) - American
Impressioni st p;unter Thomas W.
Dewing was born in Boston 111
185 1. He studied tn Paris ,·18761879) and then settled in New
York . He was known for hi s delicate figure studies and porttaits of
women . In 1897 he jOtneci "Te n
American Artists," a gro up of progresSIVe painters . Hi s works
mclude "The letter" and " Portra it of a Young G trl." Dewmg

died in 1938.
Math and Logic
LIN COLN. Engl.tn d (AP)
Math emat iClan
and
logic1a-n
Geo rge Bool~ . born m Lin coln 111
181 5, \\"rote .1 book ca lled " Tire
MathemJ tiol An aks11i nf logic''
in I R47 It establi shed the· basis of
m o dern
m .lt hL'Ill .lt l c Jl
logiC ..
Boule. \Vho abo \\TOtt.' "Laws
Thought'" 111 I H:i 4. ehed m I 1\64.

or

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?

November 7, 2000 General Election you must be
registered by October 10, 2000.

Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the board on
Election Day by changing your address (if you have moved within the
county) or If you have changed your name, by updating your
registration by October 10, 2000.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Sept. 11, the 255th day of 2000. There are 111
da.'ys left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Htstory:
On Sept. 1!, 1789, Alexander Hamilton was appointed the fi rst
secretary of the treasury.
On this date:
In · 18 14, an American tleet "'' .cored a decisive victory over the
Dcitish in the Battle of Lake C hamplain in the War of 1812.
In 1850,Jenny Lind, the "Swedish Nightingale." gave her first concert in the United States, at Castle Garden in New York .
In 1885, author D. H. Lawrence was born in Eastwood, England .
In 1936, Presidt·nt R ooseve lt dedicated Boulder Dam (now
Hoover Dam) by pressing a key in Washington to signal the startup
oi.the dam's first hydroelectri c ge nerator in Nevada .
In 1941, Charles A. lindbergh sparked charge s of anti-Semttism
wiih a speech in which he "id "the British . the Jewish and the Roosevelt adrrunistration" were try ing to draw the United State~ in to
World War II.
In 1944, President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston
C liurchill met in Canada at the second Quebec Con fere nce.
In 1954, the Miss America p ageant m ade its network TV debut on
ABC; Miss California, Lee Ann Meriwether, was crowned the win-

Monday, September 11, lODq

legal advice. You've educated milhons of
people today, including m e.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a grown
woman and the youngest of four children. M y father died three years ago, and
my mother r&lt;married shortly thereafter.
She has always been very self-centered ,
but we do not begrudge h er the happtncss she has found with smneone new.
l have met my mother's new husband
only one time. He seems very pleasant,
and h e makes Mom happy. The problem
is, she insists that I introduce h im as my
stepfather. I do no t feel comfor table with
suc h familiarity. l ·h ave introduced them
as " m y mother, Jane So- and-So, and her
husband. John." and I believe this respects
their marriage and shou ld be sufficie nt .
My m other 1s upset because I do not
I"L'ft.·r to hun as my step fa th ~:r. Ann , there
\Vas no ''fatherirlg" in\'olved. Perha ps I
\VIll ch:lnge my mind as ume goe~ on,
but I rl'scnt bl'in g fon.:L'd into .it when I

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Current US. support
to Colombia is misguided
• The 1Uisa (Okla.) World, 011 the Colombia aid plarr: The lines
are fuzzy in the Colombia drug war.The administration of Presi dent
Andres Pastrana needs support - financial and political - fium the
United States, but under the cu rrent aid package, that support is
misguided .
Pastrana is fighting a civil war with M arxist guerrillas who are
closely ried to the drug traffickers in Colombia and co ntrol almost
half of the country. It is difficult to fight one without fighting the
other. But the United States should make tt clear to Pastrana and his
security forces that the $1.3 b illio n in aid is for fighting the drug
trade, not the guerrillas.
But, again, the lines are fuzzy. The aid package contains 60 military helicopters and training for an anti-narcotics brigade. It will be
all but impossible to guarantee that those helicopters and those
troops will be used only against drug traffickers . .
·
There are useful parts of the p ackage including mon ey for human
rights training, judicial reform and a program to offer alternatives to
farmers who now cultivate drugs.
But it will be difficult to change the habits of poor Colombian
farmers who can make far more money cultivating coca plants than
they can growing corn . And as many farms as government troops
d~stroy, that many more will pop up elsew here ....
·The United States should o ffer help to any co untry struggling
with democracy and fighting to preserve it. But the aid to Colombia, altlaough well-meaning, seems a bit misdirected.
• The State, Columbia, S.C., Ofl fewer tems smoki11g: It is
encouraging to hear that fewer teens are smoking. The decline is
slight - 34.8 percent of high school students in the most recent
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study said they had
smoked a cigarette in the previous 30 days. That is down from 36.4
percent in the survey rwo years earlier.
But the news is bette r than those figures might imply. This is th e
first decline since the government's initial. survey in 1991. The rate
for black high school students is down to 19.7 percent from 22.7
psrcent. Federal officials attribute the lower rates to teen smoking
prevention programs and the rising cost of cigarettes.
State officials should take note . We're pleased th ey devoted $1.75
million .i n this year's budget to sm oking prevention and cessation .
But that is a mere fraction of the funds available from o ur state's
share of the tobacco se ttlement.
The latest encouraging numbers sho uld provide som e incentive
for our lawmakers to devote more for smo king preve ntion, particularly among our young people.
• The Herald Bulletin, Anderson, Ind. , on religion i11 the campaign: How many references to God are too much in politics'
·[t's an interesting question. Certainly we want o ur leaders to be
reverent, pio us and considerate. Teach in ~ commonly found in many
religions are. th e foundation of good citi zensh ip to which we all
aspire.
·
So where doe s that put Joseph Lieberman'
Many across th e country have responded favo rably. But there are
soine that say Li eberman risks crossing th e line and o ffending voters with repeated references to God .Voters could start believing that
Lieberman is u sing his religion in an insincere manner)ust to capture votes .
. We appreciate the tone of th e campaign thus far- it's ce rtoinly
more digestible than charges, co untercharges and mudslinging that
frequ ently dog pnlrtical campaigm. But It appears that Lieberman
will soon be forced to change his m essage or risk losing the race.

Page AS

Ann says marriage is agood way to protect yourself legally

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Bend

The Daily Sentinel

MUST'3RP
OR
KeTcHUP?

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

P-inion

PageA4 .

Our Promise To You:
Yow Wal*JVIart Pharmacy Department Will Serve You Better By:
•
•
•

Registered Pharmadsts on duty during all Pharmacy hours, ready to
answer your questions.
The low Wai•Mart price on prescriptions and over-the-counter
medications.
Traveling? Your Wai•Mart Pharmadst can forward your
prescription to any Wai•Mart pharmacy department nationwide In case
you run out'(where state law allows).
Store 2849
Pharmacy Hours
9· 7 Mon-Frl
320 Mallard Lane
Mason, WV
25260

Closed~~;:~~~~~: 3~2:00 1•304•773•9186
Closed Sunday

The board of elections will be open the following additional hours for
your convenience:
September 18· September 22:
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.m. ·
September 25· September 29:
October 2· October 6:
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
October 10:
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
You may also register at the following locations: Meigs County
Department of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau of
Motor Vehicles, Board of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport
Public Library, Racine Public Library, Eastern Library, Meigs County
Treasurer's Office and all area high schools.
·
For any additional information, call 992-2697, or stop by our new
location at 117E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio, Meigs County
Courthouse Annex. Offices located behind Holzer Clinic, Meigs Branch.

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Barak. Arafat rewriting agenda
NEW YORK (AP) - At a r.own hall meeting with N ew York
Jewish leaders, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak exuded confidence. If peace talks with the Palestinians fail , he said, he'll si mply
move on and attend to Israel's domesti c probl ems imtead.
Palestiman leader Yasser Arafat has appeared equally u nruffied, saying that if he cannot deliver everything he promised - a Palestin ian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with east Jerusalem as a
ca pital - an eventua l successor would do so.
.
Both leaders have begun rewriLing their agendas and shifting
terms of the debate over Mideast pe'lce. Th e t hanges come as a
peace treaty is slipping out of their grasp following President C linton 's failure last week to resolve the toughest problem: the diSpute
over J eru sa lem holy sites.
·
In part, such a di splay of cool may be a negotiating tactic . With
both men trymg to show that they have o ther options and won't
m J kc peace at any pric~:.
Hu\vever, Barak, and to a lesser cxt..:nt Arafat, have: also begun
pn.•paring publi c opimon for the posstb le collapse of negotianons
Both had sta ked their politi cal prestige on a peace deal Barak was
d ec ted by a landslide in May I &lt;)&lt;)9 Oll a bold pledge to end the confli ct with the Arahs in his first four-year term. while Ar:1fat pronused
his pcoph: J.t ~:very turn that he would ddtver Pakstinian st.lt~.:.·hood
- onl' uf the fruits of peace: - by th~.-· end of the ~·t· a r.
Harak 's shi ft of e mphasis beca me apparent 111 appt·arances before
Amencan J ewi~h leade rs on Sund:ty, thl• la ~ t d:.y of a WL'L' kln ng New
York ,·is1r durin g whic h rhe lsr.tdi prilllL' minister met t\vicl' with
Clinton to trv to bre:tk th.: deadlock in ncgqti.1tio ns.
" ff 1t tllrn~ out that pcact:' h .l drt:.un whosr..· time: Ius not yt.·t
n.)lllt.'. tl1l' ll I J ill pn.:pan:d to transfer my full fun1s and t'llt'I"!:,"')' to
building bridgt's over the deep social divide bL·twccn ou r penpll:."
Bara k told .1 town hall meenng &lt;&gt;f Jewish leaders here.

Astronauts take spacewalli
SPACE CENTER, H o uston (AP) - An Amer ican astromut ,1nd
a Russian cosmonaut drifted o ut of space shuttle AtlantiS early
Monday for a climb up the inrern;u iona l space scatio n rha{ was
more spaet· hike than spacewalk ..
Edward Lu and Yuri Malenc henko made the grueling ascent to
lay cable and install a boom for a navigation unit on the exterior of
the 1:40-foot station. They carried the bundled ca bles on their
backs , along with the boom and their tools .
The spacewalkers ventured an astounding I 05 feet to 110 feet
from Atlantis' cargo bay, where the space station had been anc hored
for the past day. It was the farthest distance any NASA spacewalker
had ventured while rethered.
"Got a great view back at the nose of the shuttle," said Lu , w ho
was on his first spacewalk His partner performed spacewalks while
living aboard Russia's Mir space station.
The spacewalk official inside Mission Control, Mike Hess, li kened
the foray to working on the 11th story of a 13-story building With a much better view, 230 miles above Earth.
To get to the top of the towering station, Lu and Malenchenko
first took a 40-foot ride on the shuttle robot arm. Then they
ascended hand over hand like rock climbers, clipping arid unclipping their tethers hke climbing ropes as they moved up.
It was deliberate travel, slowed by a multitude of obstructions like
antennas and docking targets. Astronaut Daniel Burbank, watching
from inside the coc kpit , guided Lu and Malenchenko up the stack.

Monday, September 11,2000

'West Winf stuffs 1he Sopr~nos~ at Emmys
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Once again, crime
didn't pay.
Weeks before the election of a new U.S.
president, the Emmy Awanls elbowed aside the
m o b-focused 'The Sopranos'' ro shower honors on the White House drama "The West
Wi ng."
NBC's freshman series won a reco rd-setting
nine Em mys on Sunday, including best drama.
Only James Gandolfini's b est actin:; trophy prevented a shutout for "The Sopranos" after 18
nominations.
" l wish we had done a little better," Gandolfini said after the show. It was the second
straight year "The Sopranos" m et mostly with
Emmy disappoin tm e- nt .
He ,suggc:stt'd the su rrt·al drama may be: a little too dark and v10lem for many Emmy vot-

ers. Some of Hollywood's old guard also may
be reluctant to vote for a cable show instead of
one on the broadcast networks, he said.
"Also, 'West Wing' is a very good show, from
w hat I understand;' he said. " I've newr seen it."
The NBC show is an uplifting look at political life not weighed down with cynicism. Its
characters try to do the right thing, even if they
don't always succeed. Real Washington leaders
are constantly thanking producers for their
portrayal.
. "By and large in ntov1es and television
shows, the country's leaders are portrayed as
ei ther dolts or Machiavellian," series creator
Aaron Sorkin said. "Here, they are neither.
They're very bright, committed and energeti c
people ."
Sorkin won an Emmy for hi s writing;

Thomas Schlamme for directing Richard
Schiff, who plays the grim aide Toby Zi~gler,
and Alliso n Janney, who plays the White
House's tough press secretary, won supporting
actor awards.The show \Von four other technical awanls.
Asked whether "The West Wing" educates
viewers about politics, Sorkin replied: "We're
not asking anyone to eat their vegetables." But
he said he was pleased that some people have
credited hi s sh ow with exciting people about
the political system.
Martin Sheen, President Josiah Bartlet in
"The West Wing," was dead-on walking into
the Emmys with his predi ction that Gamlolfini
would b eat him for best actor, but h1&gt; show
would w in best se ries.

AI Gore speaks about Bush heads for Florida,
now a battleground state
protecting children
CH ICAGO (AI' ) - Looking
to so!"idify gains among \\'ome-n
voters. AI Gore spoke .1gainst \'iolent movies J. nd video gam es
nurkct&lt;·d to chiidren and stepped
forsv:~rd to answer Oprah Winfrey 's qu&lt;estion, "Why sh o uld I
vote for you'"
Anti cipating :1 Federal Trac1e
Co mmissio n report on Mon.day
saying L'ntertamment labeled for
111ature audiences is often aimed
at children , the Democratic presidential nominee said h~ would
give industry officials six months
to · "clean up their act" or risk
government sancuons.
" If I'm entrusted with the
presidency, I am going to do
somethin g about this," Gore told
The New York Times in an interview published Monday.
Gore said he would encou rage
th e FTC to use its power to prohibit false and deceptive advertising to crack down on entertain ment companies that undermine
th eir own rating and labelin g
standards by marketing inappropnate material to children . H e
acknowledged care would have to

bl" taken to a\·oid ,·iobting First
Amt'ndnH.:nt
protections
of
spL't.:'C h.

Thl" vice pn.:sident leapt at an
invitation to appear Monday on
TV diva Winfrey's popular talk
sh\)\V.
"Oprah IS o ne of the most
adn11red women 111 tdev1S1o n and
her show is a great forum for Al
Gore to talk about hiS fight for
working fanulies,'' campaign
spokesman Doug Hattaway said.
Winfn:y's daily broadcast from
C hicago has, through her book
club. turned little-known authors
into best sellers. She said she
hoped her interviews around the
theme "Why should I vote for
you ?" would give similarly broad
exposure to Gore and Republican rival George W. Bush, who is
scheduled to appear on Winfrey's
show Sept. 18.
She said she was aiming Jo
allow her 22 million viewers
weekly, most of them women, "to
break the political wall and see
who eac h (candidate) is as a per-

son.''

AUST IN, Texas (AI')
George 'IY'. Bush IS u s111g
appearan ces in Flor i. b , n st:u e
that Republican strategist!\ once
beli eved was firmly in hi s column, to promote Iu s hea lth care
and prescrip tion drug ·p roposals.
Rival AI Gor&lt;''&gt; recent surge
in the polls has made the GOP
presiden tial nominee 's grasp on
Flonda , with 1ts pri ze of 25
dectoral vort:s, le ss ct'rtain .
Bush 's brotl1er Jeb is governor of Fl o rida, but that may not
be enough to offset a spin t ed
challenge by Gore and running
mate Sen . Joseph Lieberman.
" We think Florida is definitely a battleground state," said
Bush spokesman Ari' Fleischer.
Bush will spend two days
campaigning in Florida, traveling to C learwater, West Palm
Beach and Orlando. Then he
heads for several days of campaigning on the We st Coast ,
with a stop in St . Louis on
Tuesday on the way.
First on the Texas governor's
schedule Monday was a se nior
center ih Clearwater, w h ere he
was promo ting his proposal to

provide pre~criptinn drug cm· cragl' to th i.? ddl' rly.
Bush's pbn would allow th e
ddt:r!y· co e ither st;1y with
Mcdi c 1rc. and get a prt·sc rip tion Jmg bl.·ncfit, or opt for :1
private plan that would provide
many of the sa me bcncfHs.
Campaign strategiSts had
hop&lt;'&lt;i Bu sh would not have to
spend mu ch time 111 Florida.
But w1th the 11 ghtenmg of the
polls nati onally, th e state IS once
again in play.
Bush spent the weekend on
his I ,SOO-acre ran c h in cen tral
Texas, near Waco.
"This week he will go on a
poli cy offensive focusing on
health care, conservation and
education," spo kesman Fleischer said.
Bush on Friday dropped his
opposition to participating in
)
more than one presidenti ~
debate with Gore under th ~-­
auspices of a bipartisan commission. He had ca lled for two
others on NB C and C NN.
Negotiators
from
both
can1ps were exp ected to n1cct
this week to work out tenus.

Inside:

•

The Daily Sentinel

.Golf notes, Page BJ
Daily Scoreboard, Page BJ
NFL roundup, Page B6

Page Bl
Mond.y. September II. :zooo

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Tiger takes canada
OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) Tiger Woods completed a great
summc·r in style, winning th e
Canadian Open by one stroke
over Grant Waite.
Woods, who finished at 266 the lowest 72- hole score in the 22
years that the Canadian Open has
been played at G len Abbey Golf
Club - earned his fifth victory
irl seven tournam ents this summ er.
Wo ods won for the third
_ straight time, and for the ninth
time this year, the most PGA Tour
victories in one year si nee Sam
Snead won 11 times in 1950.
Woods also became the only
other player besides Lee Trevino
in 197 1 to win the · U.S. Open,
Briti sh Open and Canadian
Open in th e same year.
Sergio Garcia (6 7) was third.

.Indiana president fires Bobby Knight
BLOOMINGTON, Ind . (AP)- In th e
end, Bob Knight, the old-school disciplinarian with a nOtorious temper, couldn't
control the very person he needed most
to save his job: himself.
The red-sweatered stalwart of the
Hoosiers' ben ch, th e man they once called
"The General," was fired Sunday by Indi ana University for a "pattern of un acceptable behavior."
That pattern included a chan ce m eeting
with a freshman, whose greeti ng offended
the coach and prompted Knight to grab
him by the arm and lecttke him on man1.-~.
ners.
Th at was enou g h fo r,. IU president
M yles Brand, who dismiu'd Knight, sev-

ering his 29-year relationship with . a
school where he was revered and often
reviled - mostly for his temper.
DrJnd called Knight "defiant and hostile' ' and said he had shown a "con tinued
unwillingn ess" to work w ithin the guidelines of the athleti c department. He also
said Knight violated the "zero-tolerance"
conduct policy implemented in May.
"He did not fulfill the promises he gave
.me," Brand said, adding that Kmght had
the option of resigning but refu sed.
Knight had a meeting with his team
Sunday night and afterward addressed a
throng of students out5ide Assembly H all,
site of his encounter with freshman Kent
H arvey last week .

" In the next couple days, I'm going to
get together somewhere with as m any students who want to come out, and then
I'm going to •tell you my side of this
thing," the 59- year-o ld Knight . told the
crowd." And I think you' ll be interested in
hearing it."
Knight may have tried to apologize,
according to the Herald-Times ofBioommgton .
Mark Shaw, stepfath er of the student,
said he was contacted Saturday by Knight's
friend, Larry Rink, a Bloomington physi cian, who sai d the coach wanted to apologize.
Shaw, a Knight critic and former local
talk- radio show host , drafted a statement

Browns win Battle of Ohio

·Gordon wins Chevy 400
R ICH MOND, Va. (AP) -Jeff
Gordon b ea t Dale Earnhardt by
.744 seconds to win the C hevrolet 400 Saturday night, his third
victory of the year.
Gordon's 52nd ca reer win didn 't change hi' !Oth-pl ac ~ standin g
in the Winston C up season points
race, but the chase took o n a n ew
look with Earnhardt, a seve ntime ch ampion, passing Dale Jarrett, the defendi ng series ch ampion, for second pla ce behind
Bobby Labonte , who fini shed
15th . Jarrett went fmm II points
back to 164 behind after finish in g
31st.

Meigs JV linksmen win
GLO U STER - M eib" defeated Trimble and Southern in
ju nior varsity go lf Thursday. The
matc h was h osted by Trimble at
Forest Hills. M eigs h ad a 163,
Trimble fo ll owed by with 185
and Southern had a 195 .
Josh N apper was match medalist with a 37 in leading the Littl e
Marauders to the wm. Jason
Knight added a 40, Thad Bum ga rdner added a 41 , Andy Davi s a
4S,Josh Ray a SO and Jason Peckham a fo3.
For Southern, Curt C rouch led
th e way with a 46, J o rdan Hill
added a 47, Tony Hupp and Adam
Ball added 51 s, Curtis Neigler
and Micha el Ball had 54's.

1438GS Sabn' Lawn ll-aqor
• 145 hp

Huskers still No. 1

GT225 Lawn and Gardm lhtctor

• 38-inch mower deck

• 15 h,._ • Automatic transmission

• 5- speed shift -on -the go transmission

• 42-in&lt;h CanvM/l&gt;le mower deck

NEW YORK -

Despite close

c all~. there was n o movem ent o n

325 Lawn and Garden ll-aetor
• /8-hp V-Twln engine
• Automatk transmission
• 48-inch Cmvcrt/b/c mower deck

LT133 Lawn Tractor
:

~~:Zhmowingdeck

.

()n~ $38per "'IJIQIU\I'IIIth""*

LX255 Lawn lhtctor
• 15 hp • Automatictransmission

th e 1-2 front in Th e Associated
Press To p 25 coll ege football poll
- Nebraska is No. 1 and Florida
State is No. 2 .
Georgia and Miami , howeve r,
became the latest rea m s to tumble.
The Bulldogs , after a sur pr ising
2 1- 10 loss at South C arolina,
plummeted 14 spots to No. 23,
whil e the Hurricanes - 34-2'1
lo5crs at Washington - dropp ed
eight places to No. 12 .
: Th e Cornhuskers needed overtime to beat Notre Dame 27- 24,
~hile th e Seminoles defea ted
Georgia Tech 21\- 21. Even with a
loss, rh e Fightin g Iri sh improved

rwo positions to No. 21 .

• 4Z. inch Convertibff:' mowPT dPrk
TheAPTop 25

THm

• 5-speed shift-on-the-go transmission

(\---

1

2. Florida State ~26) ... ....... 2- 0-0 1,720

2

3. Michigan ( 1) ........ ......... 2-0-0
4.•Wisconsin (1) ..
.. ..... 2·0·0
5. ''rexas (2) ... . .... ......... 1-0-0
6. 'Florida.
2· 0·0
7. l&lt;ansas State
..... 2-0-0
s .~Virg i nia Tech
.... 2-0-o
~- .Washington ................ 2·().{)
tct. Southern Cal .... .. . ..... 2·0-D
to~ : Tennessee ................ ... 1-o-o

The lazy days of summer are here and John Deere has the perfect way to make
•
your summer lawn care easy on you and on your wallet. Visit a John Deere dealer
near you and learn how you can beat the heat this summer.

12. Miarryi

www.deere .com

To Locate A john Deere Dealer Near You, Call:
888-MOW-PROS (Toll Free 888-669-7767)

W·L· T Pts. Pve.

1. Nebraska (41 ) .............. 2-0-0 1,7 40

... H

-o

1·3. Purd ue ..
.. 2-0-0
14. UCLA .
.. .. 2-0-0
15 . Aiabama .
.. ......... 1-1-D
16 . Clemson..
2-o-o
17. Ohio Slate ...
. .., .. 2-o-o
18. OklahOma .. .
.. 2-0-0
19. Illinois
..... 2·0·0
20. TCU .. . .....
... 1·0-0
21 . Notreoame .
.......... 1-1-0
22 . Michigan Stale ..
1·0·0
23. Georgia .. .... ...
.. 1·1·0
24. Auburn .........
..... 2-0-0
25. Southern Miss .......... 0-1·0

1,590
1.437
1.427
1,376
1,368
1.252
1,200
1,040
961

3
5
6
8
7
10
15
11
12

694

4

884
830
BOO
789
588
552
494
430
301

14
16
13
17
18
20
21
22
23

2BO

24

261

9

193
130

25

Othors receiYing 110tes: Colorado St. 122,
South Carolina 72 . MissisSippi 54 . Oregon 52.
Mississippi St. 45, Toledo 34 , LSU 14, Air Force
1-1 , Arkansas 9, Texas A&amp;M 7, Georgia Tech 5,
Texas Tech 4. Arizona St. 3, Colorado' 2. East

qarolina 2. West Vi rginia 2.

YEAH, BABY! - Browns .quarterback Tim Couch (2) celebrates with offensive lineman Steve ~ahursky
following a touchdown pa~s to Mark Campbell Sund ay in Cleveland's win . (AP)

of apology and faxed it to Rink on Sunday morning - one hour after Knight
was fired , the newspaper said. T he statement called for Knight to take responsibility for th e confrontation and to discourage
criticism of Harvey and other wimesses.
Harvey co uld not be reac hed for comment late Sunday. A message on his dorm
room phone said his voice mailbox was
full
Knight, who leaves with a 661-240
record, will be paid for the final two years
of his contrac t. A search for his replacement will begin immediately.
It was Knight's zeal over the years that

Please see Knlchf, Pep 8fi

Brownies
top Bengals
C INC INNATI (AP) - No
chest thumps, no derisive waves
to the stands.T im Co uch simply
shook Akili Sm ith 's hand and
walked off th e field with a smile
on his face.
It was the best way to get
even.
Couch turned his long-awaited rematch with Smith into his
own showcase Sunday, throwmg
for 259 yards and a pair of
to uchdowns as the Cleveland
Browns rolled to a 24-7 victo ry
over the Cincinnati Bengals in
their new ~tadium.
lt was Cleveland's fin est win
as an expansion team and
Couch's best ga m e as a pro one he'd waited a lo ng time to
enJOy.
"Each and every week, yo u
get the feeling that this is it, this
is the day I'm going to start
picking th ese guys . apart,"
Couch said . "Today it just kind
of fell into place for me. I'm
sta rting to feel really comfortable out there."
By the end of the first regu lar-season gam e in Paul Brown
Stad ium, the Browns ( 1- 1) felt
right at hom e.
Most Ben ga ls fa ns left w h en
Smith threw his second int erce ption with 8:52 to play, g iving
th ousands of Cleveland fans the
run of th e place. Dawg Pound
woofs filled th e new stadium as
Paul l:lrown 's first team got the
first win on hi s namesake field.
It was one of the most e mb arrassing losses ever tOr th e Bengals (0- 1), who had talked all
summ er abom ho w things
wou ld be diflc rcnt now that
they had one of the NFL's
gl itziest stadiums.

There were a lot of glitches to
go with th e glitz. The B e ngals
fumbled three times, had a field
goal attempt blocked and gave
up seven sacks.
"That's a real letdown," Smith
said. 'There was the rivalry with
Co uch , the home opener,
65,000 fa ns - everything. I just
didn't get it don e."
From the first play, this day
belonged to Cleveland.
Couch broke th e huddle with
a running play planned, saw
man-to-man coverage and
called an audible. He was
throwing long an d sending a
m essage.
" I wanted to set the tone and
tell th em we're going to be
aggressive all game," said
Couch , w ho did just that with a
65-yard co mpletion to David
Patten .
It was the start of a breakout
day for the Browns, w ho rolled
up 354 ya rds -· their most itt 18
games as an expansion team.
Cou ch com pleted 19-of-3 1 and
co mpleted
passes
to
1,0
rece ivers.
Even Smith had to admire the
way Co uch handled himse lf.
"He was poised. He sat back :
th ere and threw the ball well. It
was his day today,'' Smith said .
. Hardly anything went right
for S mith, who co mpl eted 15of- 43 for 250 yards with two
interc ep tio ns and one touchdown. H e was sacked seven
rimes - Keith McKenzie got
him three times - and was frequ ently off-target.
It didn't help that rookie
Peter Warrick. who had brashly

Please see Browns, Page 86

Buckeyes gun Ochoa leads Reds past Bucs

down Arizona
TUCSON , Ariz. (A P) There won't be any talk about a
defense-offense imbalancl' this
week at O hi o State prac tices.
Steve Bellisari saw to that as
h e passed for two to uchdowns,
including a 1'&gt;0- yardcr to C had
Cacchio, and th e 18th-rauked
Bu ckeyes rallied to bear Arizona
27- 17 o u Saturday night.
N&lt;~te Clem ents set up ;moth er
score with a 47 - yard punt return
late in the third qu arter, aud
Dan Stul tz kic ked two fi! l
goals as the Buckeyes (2-0) \\ . · t
up 3-1 in rh c series in th ei r fi. t
visit to Arizona Stadi um .
· ·'
" An yt im e yo u can Will a
game in (Arizona coach ) Dick
Tomey's backyard, it 's an accomplishment," l:luckc ycs coa ch
J ohn Cooper said . "You have to
be grateful for it, cspeual ly
when you made as many mistakes as we did ."
Ortege Jenkms rau for o ne
TD and passed to Bobby Wade
for an o th er as Arizona ( 1-1)
rook a 17-10 halftime lead .
But O hi o State's defen se,

which scored fou r times in a
rout o f Fresn o State the week
before, was virtually impenetra ble again, sacking J enkins eight
times for 55 yards, holding the
Wildcats to 194 yards and forc ing th em to punt 12 times.
" It 's a gre at feat, and that's the
type of pressure we w::~. nr ro
bring;' defensive end Rodney
Bail ey said about the &lt;acks. "Our
ddCnsive from wem to b:ntle."
The o ut com e S\v un g o n back to-hack possessions by the
Buckeyes in the third 4uarter.
They were having Jifticu lty
moving until Bell isari took to
the air. hitting Ken- Yon R amb o
for 8- and 11-yarJ completmns
to the 4!1, On the next play, he
went downfield to Cacchio,
who ran under the ball at the 8
and cruised into rhe end zone.
tying the &lt;core at 17 midway
th ro ug h the third quarter.
Ohio State held, and Bdlisari,
who had a 1-yard scoring throw
to Tim C heatwood in th e sec-

Pl•se see Buckeyes, Plop 86

PITTSBURG H (AP) - Al ex
Ochoa i's making a strong push
to be a regubr in th t' Ci ncimuti
Reds' lin t·up n ex t season .
Ochoa drove 111 a carecr - IHgh
fi ve runs with a three- run homer
and a tie-breakin~ double in th e
St'Vf nth inning of t~C Reds' 6- 4
victory over rh e PHt o;b urgh
Pirates on Sunday.
Ht s opportunities incre ased
on ce the R eds trad ed Dante
Bich ette to the Boston Red Sox
last month . Enter ing Sunday's
gam e, Oc ho a was on a 0- for-13
streak, but h e changed thin b'S on
Sunday.
" I \Va nt to play cvt:ry day. no
question about it.'' O choa s.1id.
"Every player W&lt;lllts th ,lt . l th 1nk
I have the ta le-nt to do it . It's up
to oth er people ro give m e that
opp o rtunity.
" I try to do the best ). can
wh('n I do get o ut there,'' he
added. " l t ry to l1elp the team
w in so someone will givt' me
that op portuni ty. H opeful ly, it's
hc·rc."
·
On e&lt; one of the most highlyto uted prospects in tllt' minor
leagu es. Ochoa's career has
stalled as he bounced from o nr

organization to anoth er. He may
be a good fit for th e Fleds.
- " It's a good upportuf1iry,''
O choa said. " I'm trying to go
o ut ami do my job and h ave
g:ood ar-b;u s every time."
T he R.eds' first four rum ca me
on homer&lt; . Ken Griffey Jr. hit hi s
3'ith with the bases empty 111 the
third and Ochoa got his seventh
in the fi ft h .
Ochoa then doubled in two
rum in the sevl·nth otr ·reh eve r
Scott Sauerbeck .
Despite the obvious otlensive
co n tributions of O cho a and
Gr iffey, Piratt'S )t;nter Jimmy
And erson 's h i~est regret was
walking pit chin g Elmer Dessens
n v1ce. Ochoa knocked n1
Dessens both tim es.
Entering tht' game, Dessens
h ad collected three si ngles in 31
at- bm - an .fl97 batting awra~e .

"You sho uld never walk the·
pitcher," Anderso n said. "Th ert•'s
no,. ca u&lt;e to ever walk the pi tcher.
The walks had a two-fold
effect o n Anderson and both
parts were bad. He kept ralhes
go in g for the Reds and the frus-

tration over th e walks affe cte d
his concentration.
"You could tell by his body
langu age that it was both eri nl(
him," Pirat es Mana ge r G ene
Lamont sa id .
Red s manager Jack Mc Keon
was happy to find himself on th e
o ther side of the situation.
"Things like that have haunt ed
us all year," M c Keon said . "Every
time you walk a guy in a situation like that, it seems li ke he
scort·s. M ake him earn his way
o n . Don't give it to hm1 ."
Brian G iles drove i11 two runs
for th e Pi rates and John Vander
Wal had a sin gle to exte nd his
hitting streak to 11 games.
l )e~Sens (H-5) won hi s &lt;eco nd
cons ec utive starr after losi ng five
of six decision s in August.
Ander&lt;on (S-9) lost for the
fourth time in five decisions.
Notes: Dessens entered as a
career . 114 hitter (5-for-44) ....
The Reds, who beat th e Pirates
in 'ihe fir st gam e at Three Rivers
Stadium on July I o, 1970, finished with
reco rd of 101 - 82
there. They have the best record
of any visiting team at Three
Rivers.

a

�...
Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Monday September 11 2000

Morgan defends
Comfort Classic aown

Redman wins
LPGAevent

tolll'erHnll

Announcement
G - y Loot l Found
YIRI S.lee end Wented

ToDoAd8
Mull Be Plld In Aclvlnce
UIBUNE DEAQUNE,
2 00 p m the dey belo,.
the ed 11 to run
Sunday &amp; Mondey edition
2 00 p m. Frldey

110

Help Wanted

1125 WEEKLY Make money
He p ng Peop e Rece e Gove n
me Ae nds F ee De a s 24
h
e o ded mes sage
80 0
-449-4625 Ext 5 00

oo p m the dey belo,.
the ld lo to run

Sunday &amp; Mondey edition
1 00 p m Friday
AEQISIEA QIAQL!NE
2 deye belo,. tho od lo

torunby430pm
Soturday &amp; Monday

Help Wanted

210

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! wo k om home Ma o
de
Pa

Business
Opportumty

230

Profesaional
Services

440

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Apartments
for Rent

CREO T PROBlEMS? CA L THE
CRED T EXPERTS L CENSED
BONDED CORRE CT REMOVE
BAD CREO T BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
R AT NG 90 80 DAYS
888

E Comme ce $522 week
me 5 000 $4000/week Fu

Help Waned

8

De IV8ry d e s needed

0902

Apply n person

SENDNEb QfADUNE

1

110

883
TORS

OR NEWER TRAC
G o~o~~; ng egona a e

Vlage P zza no
3004 acttson Ave

KUTZTOWN Pa (AP)
Nhchele R edman shot a 4 under
68 to wm the F rst Un o
Betsy K ng Class c by three
strokes the second v crary of her
LPGA career
Redman fin shed three rounds
.at the Berkle1gh Country Club
course m 14 under ?02 Jean
Bartholomew (70) and Meg Mal
ion (65) t ed for second at ?05

1'••

Romero captures
Euro Masten

CRANS SUR SIERRE
INDIANAPOLI S (AP)
Eduardo
Defend ng champ on G I Morgan Sw ttzerland (AP) Romero
completed
hts
runaway
wa. declared the wmner of the
n the European Maste rs wmmng
Con fort Class c ~he n ra n and
by
I 0 shots and matching the best
I ghtn ng forced he last round of
score 1n tournament history
the sen ors golf event to be can
R omero closed w th a 4 under
eled
6
7
for a ?61 total Thomas BJorn
Morgan fin shed a 13 u der
par for his th rd v ctory of the (b6) was second at 271 and Dar
year H1&gt; two round total ot 131 ren C larke (70) took over the lead
gave h t a one s rake v ctory n the European money lm by
fi shing th rd
over J n Ah ern

seek g Qua y owne ope a o s

OH 0 VA LE Y PUBL SH NG CO

ecommends ha yo

W L Pet.
....... .............. &amp;&lt; 59 587

ness w
peop e you know and
NOT o sen d money h ough he
ma
yo ha e n es ga ed

-2823

he otrenng

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1551?
NoFeeU essWeWn
81!8 582 3345

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandtse

630

Livestock

-Montroa ··:::
... ::: .::.::::::: 68
59
Phladelphoa

4 1

8

7.
8
58 83

0

X CQIOadO

3

5

y· cl nched d VISIOn

25

Hous on
M twalilae
Chic:ago

9

83 80
62 80

...

6

43020/2
45 22/2

-

Pil1sbu'lJh

573

5 0

8

~·

AM-AZ Na METABILISM B eak
l1i ough Lose o 200 t&gt;s Easy
Ou1ck Fas 0 ama c Resu s
00 % Na u a Do c o Re om

mended
F ee
140)44
982

Samp es

550

Solunloy'o Mojo Collogo F - .

II e

AFC

WLTPto PF PA
.20000433
000020
6
0 500 58 52
0500 30
3
0000 6 2

0
0
0
0

Qua y c oth ng and houaeho d
ems S 00 bag sa e evt y
Thu sday Monday h u Sa u day
900530

JET
AERA ON MOTORS

Repa 'td New &amp; Reb
Ca Ron E ens

S ock

800-53 9528

Eoot

TMm

ey o

mon hod emae dog and
krttens 740 42 2502

W L Pel
586
524 8

Boston

52

Ban more
Tarnpe Bay

64 78
e
82
CMltral
...... ...... ............ 85 57

0
0

0 000

0

6

......... .. .........&lt;20000 4737

0 500 18
20 00028
2 0000 33
2 000034

55
44

Q 0
0
0
0

00 54

34

500 48
500 59
500 30
020000 45

!2
47

37

60

32

73

Centr'l
200002920
200004334
2000062
6
020000277
.. ·· ······· ,...0 2 0 000 34 47

Wool
2

78 70
50
55
38
50

70
42
4
74

MIDWEST
Cen M.::h gan
Akron 7
C nc nna 2 Syra use 0
Davton 52 OhiO Nonhe n 3
Dfake 33 S Am b ose 6
E
nos 2 Ken ucky wes eya o
E Ken ucky 34 d ana S 0
owa S 3 UNLV 22
M~am Oh o 34 E M~e h gan 7
Mchgan 38 A e
Mich.gan S 34 Ma sha 24
N
nos 52
nosS 0
NC Stae4
da a38
Nell asl&lt;a 2 No e Dame 24 OT
Northwes e n 38 Cuke 5
OhiO 23 Mi nesota
P nsb gh 34 Bowl ng G een 6
Pu due 45 Ken S 0
SEMssoun34 S
os33
SW Missou S 48 M ssourl Southet'n 3
oedo 5 Webe S 0
va pa a so 20 Hope 7
w nos 24 Ba S 4
W M h gan 27 owa2

12
9

45
427

9
23

599
547 7 /2

76 83

493
5
469 8 /2

70 72

67 76
.................. .. .. 62 6
Woot

43423/2

Oak
66
Seanand
a ••••••••••.•• • .••..••• 75
78 65
Anaheim
72 1

T8k8S

36

34
500 3
500 63 46
500 30 30
0000 7 24

GB

New YorX .•••••••••.•.••.•••..••••• 75
82 58
Toromo
88

73 67

00 55

SOUTH
Alabama 28 V'andBfb h 0
Alabama A&amp;M 39 Henderson S 0
Aabama S 35 A co S 28
Ar\c P neB uff 30 Sou hem U 9
A burn 35 MISs ss PPI 27
smnu e Cookman 24 Norto k S 6
Ca awba 33 Aus n Peay
C emson 62 M ssou 9
Davidson 36 ackso HI
Cella S 35 MVSU 23
Elon 45 De awa e S 6
Flo ida 55 M dd e Ten essee 0
Ao ida A&amp;M 56 Mo gan S 25
Florida s 26 Geo ga ecn 2
Fu man 4-4 Newberry 0
Geotg a Southern 5
ohnson C Sm th 2
Hampton 26 J-iowa d 24
Jackson e St 0 N hOI s S 3
James Mad son 38 Uberty 7
Kentucky 27 South Ao da 9
LSU28 Ho so 3
ellign 34 Woffo d 4
LDus Ue 52 G amb ng S 0
Maryland 1 Tempe 0
Memph s 28 ou sana Mon oe 0
Mo ehead S 46 BU1 er 43
N carol na A&amp; T 6 ennessee s 4
North Ca o na 35 Wake Fo es 4
Presbytena 28 Charles on Southern 3
S Carol na S 42 Sa annah S 26
Soutn ca o na 2 Georgia o
Tennessee Tech 29 Ha d ng 27
exM Sou hem 9 ackson S 5
T oy S 34 Appala han s 28
UCF 9 Northwes e n S 7
Virg n a 34 R hmond 6
w ca o na 53 eno Rhyne o
w Kentucky 7 Ten Mart n o
W .am &amp; Mary 55 VM 5

Wool

San Francisco Gardner o-8 at Hoos on
(Uma7 5) BOSpm
ot Anga es (Va del 2 1) a A zo a
(Reynoso 10 o 9 35 p m
Colo adQ {Tava ez 0 2 a San 0 ego
(W101ams &amp;-! 0 05 p m
Tullday"a GlrnM
Montreal Armaa 4 8) a Ph ade ph a
(Te ernaco 1.0 7 05 p m
S louis Kile 7 g a Pittsbll(gh Serafin 2
3 705pm
ChiCago Cubs (Wood 6 7) at c nonna Bel
67)705pm
Milwaukee Snyder 3-8 a N Y Mats BJ
Jones) 7 o p m
Flori&lt;la Sanchez 8 0) a Allllrta (M wood
9 0)740pm
San Franc sco Estes 4 4) a Hou&amp;on
(ElatiOn 6-5) B 05 p m
Loa Ange es (Prokopec 0 0) a A zona
(S&lt;:hi ng o9 35 p m
Coo ado jYoah 5 4) a San D ego
(Cernent12 4 OOSpm

TRANSPORTATION

9 w.. S moon Alhuns
740-592 842

Fo dnam 34 Fa~rlield
Hartwick 33 s ena a
Hofstra 5 Mane 30
Holy c oss 38 Geo ge own 0 C 22
ona 55 Can Stus 2
New Hampsh e 3 Rhode s and 2
Northeas em 63 Albany N Y 4
Penn S S? LDu sana ech 7
Rutgers 59 Buffa o 0
Sacred Heart 9 Bryan 5
S Joh s NY 23 S F anc s Pa 0
S ony B ook 26 S Connecticut 0
owson 42 La ayene 20
Vilanoas Mes e4
Wagner 4 Monmouth N
7

Eoot

11-4 1 Opm

mecnanK om

EAST
Boston Col ege 55 Army 7
Cent COnnectiCUt S 24 F OS b 9 S 7
Connect ut 34 Co ga e 7
Delaware 38 The Crtade 0
Duquesne 30 La Sa e 7

Looguo

5

St Lou 1 S ophenson 5-8 e1 Pil1sbu gh
(Silva 99) 7 05 p m
ChiCago O..bs (Garibay 2 7) a C ndn ot
(liarmsch H) 7 05 p m
M lwauliee (Rigdon 2 3) at N Y Mets Reed

EARN 590 000 YEARLY repa g
NOT ep ac ng long c acks n
w dsh e ds F ee v deo 800
826 8623 US/Canada www glass

Scor. .

PRO FOOIBAII

o-n

505 pm

59

50

End Aegu • S..aon

1 f2
o 2

::·: .:::: .•:: 73
10

43 43

8 29 35

&gt;.4 am 6 OC Uno1ad 2
ChiCagO 3 CO umbus 2
Da las 2 San Jose 1

9

437 9 /2

59 83

4

No 24 ~htgan Sta e ( .0 bea Matshall
34 24 Next a M ssoun Saturc:tay
No 25 Southern M ss ss PP' 0
did not
play Next a No 3 Alabama Sa day

37

NOTE Th ee pom s for a MO and one po1
ora e
Saturday • G•mM
Kansas Crty 2 Tampa Bay 2 e
New Engla nd 4 New York New Jersey 3

Contnol

5c I"'CCnnati
LOUis ·:::: :·: :::: :::82
73 6
70

8 50 47

Saturday

x-dinched p ayoft spot

Montreal 4 Atlanta o
NY Mels3 PmadelphaO
C nclnna 6 PltlSburgh 4
Houston 7 ChiCagO Cubs 6
Mwaukee4S Lous3 Ooongs
Los Angeles 2 Colorado
San Frana10&gt; 0 San Diego 2
Florida 4 Arizona 3 2 nnmgs
Toellly"e Gamu.
Montrool (Hermanson
2 and Johnson 5
8) a Philadelphia Polltle 2 2 and Wolf
2

Personals

New To Vou Th 1ft Shoppe

6

4

San Jose

570 2 /2
479 5 !2
42 23 /2

NawYork

xl.DsAngees

Sundlyo-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

30 Announcements

GB

69
•
74 5
486
laturdq'a Q..,..
Colorado 7 Los Angeles 6
Hous on 14 Ch~o CubS 4
Sa Diego 7 San F arosco 3
Arizona 4 Aorida
Coo nat 6 Pillsb"'llh 4
Ph odelplua 6 N Y Mels 3
St Lous 1 Mlwe kee6
Montr8al 7 A lanta 5 12 nmngs

REAL ESTATE

o a good home

Eut

Tldl
A laRa

Sanwedo
Diego··:::
.

do tt s

vs Northwestern Sa urday
No 23 No e Dame
10s to No
Nebraska 27-24 OT Next s No 4 Purdue

6.2 4 526250
4 4 &lt;46 54 54
6538 4858
Wntem DM1Ion
xy Kansas C ty
6 7 9 57 47 29

·············· ~~4

~Angeles

edition- 4 30 Thuradly
DHd/1,.. ,,..,, to
cho~ duo to hoii&lt;Mye

005

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Arizona
592
7
San
Fra:-':~· · · · ·:· .: · · · 847674 586569 5539

PT Pleasan WV

85 B CPM A so ompany C1
e s Home Weekends Mos y
ct opnook Ce Today HCX 8C)()o

The Dally Sentinel • Page B3

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

{llonday September 11 2000

532
545

2

6

503
448

64 79
S.turdly a GarMI

4

Wisco s n 2
Youngs own

N Y Yankees 5 Bos on 3
C eveland 9 CHicago Whl1e Sox 3

70

Oak and 0 Tampa Bay 0
Baltmo e 0 Anahem 3
To onto 6 09 oit 5
Texas 6 Kansas City 5
Seatt e 7 M nnesota 2
Sunday • Qamea
Ch cago wtllte Sox a C eveland ppd
To onto 6 Oe oit 2
N Y Yankees 6 Bos on 2
Kansas C ty 3 Texas 8

Yard Sale
Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Oa~

s

0 ego 23
33 Ed noo o 0

SOUTHWEST

CS North dge 9 SW Texas 3 OT
McNeese S 4 Pra e View 0
Ok ahOmo 45 Arx ~tnMs S
Ok ahoma S 36 T lsa 26
s ephen FA s n 48 Texas A&amp;M Commerce

Thl AP Top 25
How h•y fared

2
0

at

and 1 Tampa Bay 0

Sean e 8 M nnesota
Anahetm 2 BBitimo e
Todly a Gamea

MERCHANDISE

Boston A ojo 4-2 a N Y Yankees He
nandez
0
05 p m

e

6

Det oit Moeh er 2 7) a Ch cago W e Sox
Sroka 3 0 805pm
Ka sas C ty Meadows 4 2 a Seatt e Ha a

ma

e

oospm

Tampa Bay (Harper 0
2
005pm
Ba mo e
Ponson

Schoe ewes77)

a Oak and App e

a

A ahem

B

OOSp m

Tualday a Gamaa
Bal more Parr sh 2 3 and Spurgao
o a
Texas He ng 4
and Rog e s
3 5 05
pm
Bos oo A Mar1 ne 9-6 a C &amp;~e and R ey
2 a ospm
To on
(Ham Ito 2 0 a NY Van ees
NeageS-4 705pm
De ro M ck 4a Ch cago White So
(!No s57) 805pm
Kansas C ty Garc a 6-4 a Sean e Ro hert
8-6 OOSpm
M neso a Mu de 8 o a Oak and Radke
4 005 pm
Tampa Bay Aeka 6 9 a A ahem Be he
32 oos pm

RENTALS

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

2

Ca 20

TRANSAaiONS ;I

28 0
Sa

BASEBALL

PRO SOcCER
Malo Ltague Soc::c•

TMm
xy NY NJ

EaaenOvaon
w l T P11 GF

GA

2
3
5

49

7
3
2

X New England
Mam

DC

SERVICES

810
m

Home
Improvements

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

xy Chteago

e

3

e e

54 64

6 45 4
5 4 54
6 30 ••

Centra Dlv • on
7 9 6 57 67

56

56
63

5

110 Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley
H~spital

Help Wanted

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
I MLT
Ptaunt VII tV Hoop
tu
11 hll •

Happy Ad

me opportun ty

f you m11t lht fo ow ng qu1 f cet on•

Auoclatee Degree in Applied Science or re ated
field plut eligibility lor ASCP certification Current
WV ~lcenet
Exes ant
Ho days
Saary
Vacat on
Hosp a za on
Long te m d sab ty
Den a
Re en en
L fa lnsu ancs

520
840

Jon ou lam y of p oless ona s to be the esou ce
commun ty heath serv ce needs
1101 WEIKLY

WORK NO FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
ME NO EXPER ENCE RE

OU REO

FINANCIAL

GUA~ANTIID

100 1•1 !1 I E

~sumas o
P~EASANT VA~LEY HOSPITA~
co PERSONNE~
2520 VA~~EY DRIVE

P ease subm I
210

I CI P no OQ I

X0
AIIO LUT I

GOLD M Nl

!0

D own Nl I S&amp;DK Wo k 7 h •

Cana VENO NG
To Fee

B

1 n 1 tl

4948159" 2o4hl

Buy, S&amp;ll or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

PT PLEASANT WV 25550
OR FAX TO (304) 675 6975
AAJEOE

0

j

Happy
Grandparents [)ay

:r m &amp; Phyll s [)rehel
The greatest
Grandparents everl
Love M tchell

&amp; Mea

Happy Ad

�.,

'.

. Monday, September 11, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 11 , 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

..

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

ALDER

~f"lll&lt;f'l

Charla Burge now accepting
new ·customers at
Shear Illusions in Middleport.
Stop in or call today
992-2550

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent

now PARTinG OUT

Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-~264

1919Tiglla•R2
1919 CatiUac fleetwood
1'1911 fonllhunde!lllnl
19911 fonlllertstar Uan
1!19Z filnl fllplom
1!193 ford TIIUfUS
1994 ftlnl Ralger PIU

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

JJJ

1H6fonlllln

FOR ffiORl InfO. PUASl CAll

740-992-1506

~"eltt~
High 8/. Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland RJ.

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

Protect your ·guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1co,neclionS\' legal papers, investment records, photo
I :;~n~::~:~,t~'l cameras, household inventory and
1:
items will be safe.
For more information call

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

Norib_

BADMLDMBER
1'1'. R'l'. 248
, CBEI'I'II

West

• K 5

9 tO 7 6 2
t tO 8 4 3

•
Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By Ylrtuo of an Order of
lola laouad out of tho
Common Plo11 Court of
llelga County, Ohio, In tho
,... of tho Homo National
Bonk, Plaintiff, va. Allon L.
Papa aka Allen Papa, ot al.,
Datondanto, upon a
Judgmontlhoroln rondorod,
IMI!III CUo No. GO-CV-68 In
uld Court, 1 will offer tor
aalo Ill tho front door of tho
Courthouoo In Pomeroy,
llelga County, Ohio, on tho
13111 day of October, 2000,
ot 10:00 a.m., tho following

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice
.eurvey Ill Solur'a northout
cornar on tho north lint of
the •lo-nllonod Lot2;
Thonco Eaat 16.50 foot
OIO!IIIIho north llno or Lot 2
(bolng alao Sayro'o north
lint) to tho point or
beginning con1lllnlng 0.965

State .Route 7,
Tul'pers Plains has
'openings, all shifts.
Oi&gt;.&lt;n 7 days, 14
hours. Certified In
Meigs at Athens

.......
Subject to all legal
.............
doocrlpllon
Tho abovt

Counties.

Plenty o[ TLC

40-667-D"I.o!:fl

WIO

...- In occordanca with an
actual aurvoy conducttcl by
Jomea Stewart PS742&amp; on
June 3 and 7, 1993. Beari!IIIO
are baaed on tho eurvoy
l8nda end ten•m•nte , recorded In Volume 185,
-.ol a1 2371 Third Stroo~ •Pogo 131, Molgo County
Syracuao, Ohio 45778. A Dead Rocordo and oro
comploto legal doocrlptlon Intended only to •xpr•••
of tho real oatato Ia •• O!IIIUIIr mouumnont.
Roltrence Dotclo: Volume
followa:
Tho following doocrlbod 11, Pogo 709, Molge County
real oatato alluato In Otliclal Rooordo ond Volume
Syracuoo VIllage, Molgo 335, Pogo 725, Molgo County
County, State of Ohio, In Dooil Rooorde.
'Audltor'o Porco! Noo: 20Lola 2 and 3 of tho
Subdlvlalon of Bufflnglon'a 00567.000 and »00563.001
Eotato, and btlng a parcel
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
_.tel out altho Orvlllo B. 2371 Third Stroot, Syncuu,
and Juno A. Sayro property Ohlo45779
«Volume 185, Pogo 131,
REAL
EST ATE
Mol go · County Dood APPRAISED A'r. $70,0QC!.OO.
Recorda) looundod ond Tho rool oatato cannot ba
doacrlbad •• lollowo:
told lor lou than two-thlrda
Commencing at a otane of tho approiHd Y111uo.
with an •x• ahlulod Into II
TERMS OF SALE: 10%
found on tho north Uno of down day oraota, bolanca on
tho atoromontlonod Lot 2; dollvory of doed. Sold
uld etono btlng locatod on oubloct to accrued rool
layro'a north llno at tho -taxOI.
aoutho..t corner of tho JamH M. Souloby
Paul and lrla Blkar property 3T 9(11), 8(18). 1(25)
«Volume 180, Pogo 355,
Molga County Dood
Public Notice
Recorda) and at tho .
aouthwoat corner of tho ELECTION LEGAL NOTICE
VIrgil L. and Mortho L.
Tho Ohio Soli and Wotor
Colllno property (Volume Conurvatlon Commloolon
315, Pogo 3115, Molgo will cauao en olectlon of
County Daad Racorda);
aupervlaara of tho Molgo
Thonco Wool 88.50 loot Soil
and
Wator
a1o1111 tho north llno or Lot 2 Conoorvallon Dlatrlct to bt
(btlng alto Sayre'a north held In accordance with
llno) to on Iron pin oot by Chapter 1515 of the Ohio
thll aurvoy In a drainage Rovlatcl Code at the Molga
ditch ~nd tho point of High School Calotarle on ,
boglnnl!lll of tho real oolite Tl.ooadoy, October 10 117:10 .
doocrlbad ltoreln;
p.m.
Thonco along a now
Nomlnus are Joe Bolin, 1
parcal boundary by tho Howard Caldwell, Marco
following throo courooo:
Jofforo, Patty Monzoy and
. 1. South 311' 09'22" Eaot Tim Thome.
1511.115 felt to an Iron pin 101
nomlnatlona will be
by thlo ourvoy In oald accopltd from tho floor at
dralnago ditch;
tho limo of elocllon. Two
2 South 33' 41 '52" Eaot aupervlaora 1r1 to bt
88.38 ltlt to an Iron pin ott elected. You may vote at
by IIIIo ourvoy In 11ld tho annual mMII!III or on an
drainage ditch;
obaontoe ballot which may
3. South 34' 00'03" Eoot be aecurod from lhe
145.7511ot to on Iron pin ott connNatlon dlatrlct office.
by thlo aurvoy In aold (I) 11, 21. 2tc
drainage ditch on tho south
lint of tho aloromontlonod
Lot 3 (being alao an Sayro'o
Public Notice
oouth Uno);
Thonca Weal 240.30 Itt!
A vlowlng tor vacating
olong tho ooulh llno of Lot 3
(btlng alto Sayre'a aouth Old Routt 7 Road ,
Uno) to an Iron pin aet by TOINnOhlp 22A, localtd In
thla aurvey at the aoutheut Ora1111e Townehlp, will bt
corner of tho Nlal E. and held at 9:30 a.m. on
VIrginia Salaor property Monday, Stplombor 18 with
(Volumo 198, Page 361, tho hearing to be at 10:00
Molga County Deod a.m., September 18 at tho
llocordo), paaolng an Iron comml11lonars' regular
pin ott by thlo aurvey at mooting. Anyone lntoraolod
In IIIIo propooed road
35.751011.;
.
Thonco along Salser's vacation Ia encouraged to
0111 llno North 321.85 Itt! attend.
to an Iron pin all by, thla (9) 11 , 15, 2 tc

TENNIS

Sampras
knocked out
of U.S. Open
NEW YORK (AP) - Marat Safi n beat Pete
Sampras 6~4. 6-3,6-3 to become the fi rst R ussian
to win the U.S. Ope n.
T he youngest cha mpion si nce Sampras won the
first of his four U.S. Open titles a decade ago,
Satin, 20, won his first major title in the most lopsided victory over a former champion in 25 years.
Sampras, holder of 13 Grand Slam titles, had lost
only twice before in a major final - against Stefan Edberg in the 1992 U.S. Open and Andre
Agassi in the 1995 Australian Open.
No one had lost tn the Open final so badly
since Edberg beat J im Couri er in 1991. And no
former champion had gone down so hard since
Jimmy Co nnors lost to Manuel Orantes in 1975.
Safin is only the second Russian to capture a
Grand Slam title. Yevgeny Kafelnikov won the
1996 French and 1999 Australian Opens.
On Saturday, third-seeded Venus Williams beat
No. 2 Lindsay Davenport 6-4, 7-5 for the
women's ·singles championship. W1lltams, who
beat Davenport at Wimbledon to start her current
26-matc h winning streak and win her first Grand
Slam title, captured the U.S. Open title her sister,
Serena, won a year ago.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES

,,,, dMftl79...,.

"'nOM

Bulldo•er &amp; Backhoe
Ser11icBt

Hou!ll' &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Sepr.ic System• &amp;.
l!tilitie•

740-992-1671

(740) 992·3838

7/22/TFN

The CountrY
Candle ShoP

tormelilo'~ treolio~~

Coo1JIIreriud Custan Embroide!y

I

')

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos
Hats

i

Jackets

i

u ...,e •re baclt. to our

replar ltoun "

Tuee-Frl 1D-6

Sat 111-4
• Candle making
supplies
• Wooden crafts
·Baskets

' School Mascots

Carmelita &amp; Kenny Osbome
33869 Blackwood Road . Off St Rt 143

740.992-4559

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740·742-Bt03

9/1100 1 mood

HANING's

.......

t~saTr ....,_

•--

FREE ESnMATES

740-698-6735
LINDA'S
PAINTING

The
BLIND

" Toke the pain out
of painting.Let me do ii fo~ you "
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds are
made to order at our
location
UP TO 70o/o OFF
• Ve r1ical11 • Wood

Before 6 p.m. •
leave M85SOge
Alter 6 pm· 740-985-4180

• Minis • Etc

144 Tlllrd Ave. Galpolls

446-4995

fall Mums 6 for $10
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
S11racuse. OH
740-992 -5776

WANTED
Standing timber large
or small tr acks. Top
prices paid also.

Dozer work.
frl!• Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8 :00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)
"; 1 mo. 4111 0

AG

·.llll\Q'

PAR'rS
An Makes TNctor 8c

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts

Dealers.
1000 Sr. Rl. 7 South
CooMII•, OH 45723

741117-GJII

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"ll'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progressive top line.
Lie. I OG-50 11110111n

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMEROAL and RESIDEHJJAL
FREii ESTIMATES .

740·992-7599
, (NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•llodtkll ' ..
···~

u.,

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

• Plllo &amp; Por.. ilodls

Free Estimates
V.C. YOUNG Ill

1 NT

2.

THEIR •••

992·6215

22 yro. Local

• •\ \ \ I

~OVGHT
ard $0/../) .
. ,,

.,

.

'

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates

P'

::0 \ AA\3 Wt\Y Tl'f.'( C"U. \I'D~

..,

\t\1~~ 'fLIP· f ~::&gt;" 1

30

EX(fiVfiTIHG

(740) 992-347n

1121100 1 mo. Del.

ICf

BIG NATE

Phone (740) 593-6671

74o-gas-3&amp;31

mm

CODCRETE

CODDECTIOD
Qualit y Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks
25 years Experi ence
FREE ES TIM ATES

740·742 -801 5or •
1-877-353-7022 :
•••••••••• • ••••

PEANUTS
~AS THE
SC~OOLBUS

CoME YET'

IF IT ~AD, DO
YOU TI·IINK I'D
STILL 8E
5TANDIN6 ~ERE?

I WASJUST
TR't'IN6 TO MAKE
CONVERSATION ..

MV:ST BE J.IAVIN6 TROUBLE
TOO, J.lliJ.I?
t-r,__FRACTIONS,
_ _,

~ ·(740) 742-888~

!!!1!1!\W 1-888-521-0916
HARTWELL IWUSE
We now offer Gift &amp;
Wedding Registry
We have Village Ca ndles

99.2-7696

1••·11

8" diameter lo 27"
18'1onq - 5~0 I Ton
AlSO WANTED

P/8 &lt;ONTRA&lt;TORS, INC
CONC RETE
MASONRY
BA CK HOE SE RV ICES
BOBCAT SERVICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Brian Marrlson/Radne, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

CHIPWOOD
.f' to 25"

12' to 20' in lcnqlh
•Poplar • Mapl e
• Occch • Syca m ore

$ 19 / Tan
Norlh of Gallipolis on
SR 7, 611 Oof o mole
above Rood sode Rcsl
on riqhl
7~0 - 985 - ~~65

or HO - ~~ 1- 9262

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE

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

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

Pass

2•

4•

JINES'
GALLIIPOI.IS. OHIO 45631 • CHESHIRE, OHIO
•'Tf\11\
i

• oP

'"

al

stu11'1l

• ... 1'\\l
~~\
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Ow ner: Ronnie Jones

oei1\0'&lt;I

•

Mason, WV
304-773·5300 or 740-992-2403
Reserve a spot for you, your team, or your league.
Churches, School s, Organizat ions are WEL.COME.
Food, Snac ks, No Bar, Just lots of Fun
Under New

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

ahlpa
10 Didaardonlng
12 Chlclo
(2 wdo.)
14 Ult or printed 55 Ancmlalakoa
58 Concerning
15 Gollacoroa
(2 wda.)
16 11th mo.
57 Mr. Cllluo
17 "Tho- Squad"
19 Shtclotrooa
DOWN
20 Nolle ocurely
1 Doncor Verdon
23 Entlro N11110
2 "Dynamic" start
26 Agcy.lor
3 Media mogul
J.!,...~"'
11 Down
Grlllln
27 A Gabor
4 Mountain on
30 Do-crooatcl
Crete
32 Style of typo
34 Sodo-lounloln 5 Solno
6 Red or Bilek
INti
12 Torment
7 Prada
35 WOiflah
men:llesoly
36 Ptclro'o uncle I Formal donee
9 Stlllk
13 Curvy letter
37 Fait plane
18 Beoebtll ployer
I 1 Hoover ond
(-.)
G,.nd Coulee
Mol 311 Stair port

Pass
All pass

Booklets only 16 pages long
are relatively expensive. Yet they
allow the reader -- and the writer
-- to concentrate on one topic.
Bridge Plus magazine from England has found this approach popular, having 24 titles in its series
and more babies on the way! This
week, let' s look at the latest halfdozen.
First, " Practise Your Finessing" with Stephen Cashmore. (As
I e xpect you know, in England
"practise" is the verb and " practice" the noun.) Cashmore begins
with four pages of basic information about the various finess es,
and -- which is equally important
-- when not 10 fines se. Then there
are 18 problems on which to test
yourself. These are of variable
co mplex ity, and often feature
bizarre bidding. Ho wever, the
play's the thing. In this one. you
reach four spades after North has
used Stayman. West leads the club
king. What is your approach?
There are one di amond and
two cl ub losers starin g you in the
face. If you can avo id a trump loser, !hough, all will be welL The re
is onl y one legi timate way to do
that : find We!t with kin g-doubleton. So, lead a low spade-- not the
qu een. unless West has never
hea rd about covering an honor
·· with an honor -- and fine sse dummy'.s jack ~Assuming it wins, cash
th e ace . If the king appears, nod
lea rn edly, draw East 's remaining
trump. run the hearts, discarding
a c lub, and claim an overtrick. But
if the spade king doesn' t drop,
play on hearts, hoping West has at
least three, so you can get a club
loser away in time.
One booklet is approximately
$6 postpaid and four are about
$22 from www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

Sentinel

POPLAR LOGS

WANTED

Pass

To get a current weather
report, check the

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
R:.1tland, Ohio
Truck seats, &lt;:ar seats , headliners ,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops .
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon - F~i 8:30 - s:oo
Over 40 yrs experience

8 Undorw-

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Certalnteed,
Simington
UT!1Bme Warranty
Local Contractor

Hours

42 Cortaln
45 Writing ftukl
48 Mo. Sumac
41 Bluet
51 Hollo'• placa
54 Punctuot

Exclusion of others

Windows

7:00AM· 8 PM

40 Ralaxn

Opening lead: • K

MONIY PAID
FER IT !!

Pomeroy, Ohio

Hauling • Umestone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

45n1
740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

ACROSS
1 StNtl urehln

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Soutb West Nortb Eas&amp;

• Rtofloog J, Gottors
• Ylooy( Slillg ' , .....

Hill'S
JbWICK'SCJ.
SELF STORAGE HfiOLIHG and

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet Feed- 15.25/50 lbs.
• 12% Cattle feed '6.751100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food '6.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

.
750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
. 'tA

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

• Q7 6 2
9 K J 5
t K QJ
• A 8 5

.......... , ••••• kg

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION
• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740-696-1176
or 740-696-1233

DE RIUER

...,

• 9 4
t A 9 6 5
.. J 9 6 2

Soulb

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE · ·

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

Stop In And S e e

Steve Riffle
:- Sales Represenlative
i,:;
Larry Schey

• to 7 3
East
• t O9 8

• KQ4

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

IIHHJO

• A J 4 3
• A Q8 3
• 7 2

ROBOTMAN

-

------\1~~~-----Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2000
Several friend s who are in the
position to do so co uld be instru ment al in helping you advance
your personal Interests in th e year
ahead. Be sure to find ways to reciprocate.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) As
al ong as jobs or tasks can be
acco mplished wilh relative ease
today, you' re apt to be in good
spirits. However. when situations
requ ire patience or tenacity, it' ll
be another story. Try ing to patc h
up a broke n romance? The AstraGrap h Matchm aker can help you
understand what to do lo make the
relationship work. Mai l $2. 75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,
· P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hil l Station, New York, NY I 0 !56,
LI BRA (Sep t. 23-0ct. 23) It
might be more than you can resist
today to pass on heursay information that has ye t to be verified.
You ' II have to face the co nseque nces if the story tums out to be
untrue .
SCORPIO (0~:1. 24-Nov. 22J
The possibilities for profit are
there today. but yo u mustn 't let

your extra vaga nce off set any
gains yo u made. Sq uand erin g
your be nefits pu ts yo u in the loss
column .
SAG ITIA RI US (Nov. 2.'-Dec .
2 1) If you lake rhin g.s for grant ed
today. succe" " likely to elud e
you, and two impo nant obje..:tives
you des ire co uld instead be earmarked for 1he trash pil e.
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) You' II have plent y of imagination to play arou nd with today.
but . unfollunately. you coul d get
sold on one of your more illogical concepts. Be realisti c.
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Doing business wi th frie nds isn' t
always the best course of action.
Assess all your alternatives before
risking a friendship should a deal
go sour.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Cohorts who tum oul to be dead
weights must be dropped immedi ately today. Don't fee l obligated to be saddl ed with those who
can 't pull their own load.
ARIES (March 21-A pril 19)
You're a spontaneously generous
person. but today you need to take

care that you season your kindness wit h wisdom. Rewarding
the undeservin g reinforces lack of
r~spo n sib i li ty .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
The t e mp l ~t io n may be out th ere
today to gamble on so methin g on
whi ch a friend was lucky. Unfortlln ate ly, rhe same condi ti o ns
won' t be in place for you.
GE MI NI (May 2 1-June 20)
Disappoim rnenl ca n be mini mized
today if you mak e others realize
1ha1 you can' t he all lhinp to all
people Let fam il y and fi·ie nds
know you' re on ly one person.

CANCfcR (J une 2.1-Ju ly 22)
You mig ht throw a pity party for
yourselftooay and insist others do
lhin p for Yl'U that you ea n do pe rfect ly wel l on your own. Ge l back
in character and be that se lfrei iant person you are.
LEO (Jul y 2J- Aug. 22 ) Have u
good lime today. but be cognizant
of what every thi ng is costing
you. Expe nsive. pleasurable pursuit s might end up far more exorbitant th an you antic iputed.

.._·,
... -·.,

,.
.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

••

'"'..) • 'o~
..... , ~!,.

-In

by Lull Campos

Ctlobrlty ~ CfYPIO!IOIIITlS ore ctttled hom ~lions by tamoua people, pali1and
· Etch
the cipher- lor another.

....,,

,: "\
'

....,..

Today's clue: Z equals P

.. ~.

1

'FW'I
CFW

OGC

H

VFHMVW

0 XWHC WI C

• •J

~

CG

Z B HR WX C G

....

.. ',.... ..

NW

i;,

ZBHR :

1 ' n~ ioC •

CFW

CWS

OHTW . '

GM

NGICGM

XWS

JKBBKHTI ;-

IGD ' I

.......
...
. ,.....
··~·

MGTHX

• t ..

OHXVKHZHXXH .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I couldn't go on forever being Uttle Miss Fixit
burs1 into song." -

(Canadian actress·singer) Deanna Durbin

, .• ,

.. ~· ,•'
who ·" " ·
: ·::~·
•I

':!:~;~' &lt;0©\\cl\~-"t.~s·
- - - - - - 141te4 loy CLAY I. POLLAN

_.,

, • . r:

WOlD
&amp;AMI

,, _..:-

......

ORearrange
lett•n of the
four· KIVmbled words be·

•'

low to form four sirnpl, words.

I I I vI 1uI I
T E

0 D

2

I

,• .

. .. ·'

...,,
,.
.. ..,
.~

.

e

P~INT NUMBERED lETTERS I

0

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
1

I

3

IN THE SE SQUARES

,. Is I'

I I I I

' . .l

,,...

,.~

~-"'· · ·
~ :: · ~

II

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Growl/1 - Gummy · Decoy - Quorum · MY MOTHER
Wl1at woui&lt;J you need to su rvive? · th e teac her asked
lhe lad Water. &lt;m food." he rec1ted proudly ·and of
course' rvtY MOl HER ·

. ,,.

~

,, ,.
• •
J ' -. · '

., .. r

,. ·•-'

.'

"

..,;I

�Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 11,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NATIONAL FOO.TBALL LEAGUE

Ravens na
had four interceptions of Brad
has a bye this week.
Johnson,
including one with 48
Rams 37, Seahawks 34
. The Baltimore Ravens, doorSt. Louis (2-0) drove 61 yards seconds left by Terry Fair.
mats for four years, are finally
Detroit, 2-0 despite not scormaking a move in the AFC in eight plays for Jeff Wilkins'
winning 27 -yard field goal at ing an offensive touchdown,
Central.
Seattle,
with Kurt Warner find- tqok advantage of Deion
The Ravens beat defending
division-champion Jacksonville ing Torry Holt for 41 yards on Sanders, frequently throwing his
way and forcing a key penalty
for the first time Sunday, over- third-and-17 .
late
in the game.
.
Warner completed 35 of 47
coming a 17 -point deficit for a
The win was the second
39-36 victory. At 2-0, the passes for 386 yards and a
straight
in the regular season by
Ravens are in first place for the touchdown, with one interception that was run ·back for a the Lions over the Redskins (1first time in team history.
score
by Jay Belbmy. Marshall 1) after 16 losses dating to 1965.
"It \vas like we won the Super
Raiders 38, Colts 31
Bowl," said Tony Banks. who Faulk has 153 yards overall.
Down 21-0, visiting Oakland
Seattle (0-2), shut out last
threw five touchdown passes,
including the game-winner week, tied it at 34 on a 34-yard (2-0) got three touchdowns
with 41 seconds left, a 29-yarder pass to rookie Darrell Jackson rushing by Rich Gannon, and
Tyrone Wheatley ran for two
with 2;05 left.
to Shannon Sharpe.
more scores.
Buccaneers 41, Bears 0
Down 17-0, the Ravens got a
The Colts (1-1) scored on
Tampa
Bay
(2-0)
forced
four
career day from Banks, who finished 23-for-40 for 262 yards, turnovers to help build a 20- their first three possessions as
despite losing top receiver point halftime lead, and its Peyton Manning completed 14
Qadry Ismail to a knee injury in offense scored on five of its last straight passes. He threw for
three touchdowns, but was
seven possessions.
the opening quarter.
Donnie Abraham intercepted picked off twice. Marvin HarriJimmy Smith was unstoppable
for the Jaguars with 15 catches two of Cade McNown's passes son had 10 'catches for 141 yards
for a career-high 291 yards and to set up I 0 points, then forced and a score.
Titans 17, Chiefs 14, OT
three touchdowns. His 41-yard a fumble that Ronde Barber
Tennessee (1-1) stayed undescore on a deflected pass set up returned 24 yards for a touchthe late heroics by Banks and down. Shaun King threw .for feated in its new home and tied
the NFL record, held by the
two scores and ran for one.
Sharpe.
"You've got to give credit to
The Bears (0-2) were blanked Dallas Cowboys, with nine conTony Banks and his offense," for the first time since Dec. 24, secutive victories to open a new
Brunell said. "It was' two very 1989, a stretch of 164 regular- stadium. AI Del Greco's 36-yard
field goal won it after Neil
good teams going head to head, season games.
O'Donnell, subbing for injured
Lions 15, Redskins 10
and Baltimore was better than
we were."
Jason Hanson kicked five field Steve McNair (bruised chest),
Tonight, New England is at goals at the Silverdome, includ- tied it on an 8-yard toss to
the New York Jets. Pittsburgh ing a 54-yarder, and the defense Yancey Thigpen with 50 secBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bumeyes
h.I;-... 81

second quarter, set up a 1-yard
scoring run by Jonathan Wells
with a 46-yard pass to Reggie
Germany to the Arizona 2.
• "It was going to take some ~ig
plays in the second half for us to
come out on top," Bellisari said.
"We did that, and it feels good."
Bellisari was 12-of-20 for 240
yards, throwing one interception.
Most of the action in the secc
ond quarter revolved around
Wade.
The sophomore hun his left
knee fielding a punt 4:39 into the
p_eriod, and was on the grass for
minutes before finally limping
off.
But he was back to return the
next punt 85 yards for a score that
was wiped out by a holding call
against the Wildcats.
· After two plays gained 3 yards;
Jenkins passed to Wade in the left

flat. Wade stepped upfield to
dodge a tackler, ran across· the
field to evade another six Buckeyes who .were within arm's
length and raced down the right
side to complete a 60-yard scoring play.
Jenkins ran in a 2-point conversion, giving Arizona 10 points in
1 112 minutes and a 17-10 lead
with 6:11 left in the half.
The Buckeyes led 10-7 until
Bellisari 's pitch went past an
unsuspecting Derek Combs, who
had to outrun Arizona defenders
to cover it in the end zone for a
safety with 7:29 to play.
But Jenkins started 0-for-6 and
then completed 11-of-17 for 137
yards. But he was held to 4 yards
on 19 carries and was under continual pressure.
"The blame should be placed
on the offensive line," center
Bruce Wiggins said. "The offensive line could not protect OJ,
could not run the ball, could not
protect the ball, could not get first
downs."

Each team got its first score
after a muffed punt.
Malosi Leonard was waiting
when
Ohio State's Nate
Clements dropped a punt.
Leonard recovered on the 9-yard
line, and Jenkins scored from the
10 on the second snap, rolling left
and splitting a seam with 6:41 left
in the first quarter.
The Buckeyes scored on a 26yard field goal by Stultz 3:32 later
after Wade muffed a punt and
Curtis Crosby recovered, and
went ahead at 10-7 after a 74yard drive late in the quarter.
BelliS.ri capped the drive with
a 1-yard flip to Cheatwood 49
seconds into the second quarter.
But the key plays in the 74-yard
march were his 13-yard pass . to
Rambo and a 44-yard grab by
Vanness Provitt, who reached
behind cornerback David Hinton
to pull in the ball as both
sprawled to the field at the 8.
"Both teams became better, and
the best team won," Tomey said.

practice in 1997, an act caught on time a college basketball team
videotape.
accomplished the feat. He also
But in the 17 weeks since the coached Michael Jordan and the
school put him on notice, Knight U.S. men's basketball team to the
Page 81
bad-mouthed the administration gold medal at the 1984 Los Angeseemed to draw Hoosier fans and alumni, threw a tirade at a les Games.
close to him, and they reveled in female athletic department ofli~
However, the Hoosiers strughis spirit and unpredictability. In cia! in his office and refused to gled recently, failing to advance
normal conversation, Indiana stu- show up at a handful of important past the second round of the
dents and graduates simply called school functions, Brand said.
NCAA tournament since 1994.
him "Bobby," as if he was the high
In reaction to the firing, thouKnight had a 763-290 record
school coach who lived· next sands gathered outside Assembly overall, including six years at
door.
Hall, the arena where Knight Army. But his behavior, which
But Thursday, Harvey addressed won three na.tional cham pi- included verbal and physical
the coach as they crossed paths by onships. The crowd marched abuse of players, has been a probsaying, "Hey, Knight, what's up?" through campus to Brand's home, lem and often an embarrassment
Knight deemed this disrespectful, yelling in unison: "Hey, hey, ho, since he took over the Hoosiers
grabbed the student's arm and ho. Myles Brand has got to go."
in 1971.
lecrured him.
Horns blared across campus,
Knight has one of the game's
Brand, however, stressed that makeshift signs and banners filled most notorious tempers
Knight's run-in with Harvey was- dorm windows and hung from throwing chairs across the court,
n't the sole reason for the coach's fraternity balconies. Some read, stuffing a fan in a garbage can,
dismissal. He did say, however, "Bob Knight is God" or "Mr. scuffling with Puerto Rico police
that Knight initiated physical Knight 4 Prez." Others were and kicking his own son on the
contact and, "The two had an threatening messages to Harvey.
bench .
uncomfortable exchange."
At Brand's news conference, the
Last spring, he faced accusa"The angry contact with the Indiana players stood along the tions he choked Neil Reed in
student violates the spirit" of the wall, their arms folded with practice. in 1997. Following a
sc hool's conduct policy initiated somber expressions on their faces. school investigation, Knight was
in May, Brand said.
Forward Kirk Haston wiped away warned, suspended for three
There were plenty of tears tears as other players glared at games and fined $30,000.
inside Knight's meeting with his reporters.
Still , despite his displays of
team as well as on campus.
"This is really like a loss in the anger, Knight had legions of
"As far as I can remember, back family," Haston said.
defenders across the state. They
before l came to !U and ever
Brand said he stood by his deci- pointed to a cleanly run program
since l graduated, what IU was aU sion not to fire Knight in May. He and high graduation rate at a time
about was buying basketball tick- wanted to give the coach a final of widespread a):&gt;nse in college
ets and seeing Bobby Knight," opportunity, calling it the "ethical sports.
said David Vanrooy, a 23-year-old and moral thing to do."
David Herod. an 18-year- old
graduate back in town for the
"( still believe we had to give st11dent, proudly displayed a Bob
we ekend. "It's really not going to him one last chance," llrand said. Knight picture, pointing out the
be the same hearing another "He failed to live up to that. That autograph scrawled along the
coach's name announced."
was his decision."
bottom . Also. he noted, there's
Knight was warned in May
Besides his three NCAA cham- something about it that's rare.
about his behavior after an inves- pionships. Knight led the
In the picture, Knight is smilti ga ti on into · accusa ti ons he Hoosiers to 11 Big Ten titles and 'ing.
choked one of his players during • was 1 undefeated in 1976, the last

ars
onds remaining.
~rry CoUins hit 21 of 29
Kansas City (0-2) got a 2-yud pa~es and threw for two scores.
interception touchdown from St~ley, who had 201 yards in a
Donnie Edwards.
41 ~14 rout of Dall~s in Week 1,
Vikings 13, Dolphins 7
was held to 11 yards on seven
Daunte Culpepper overc~me c~rries.
three interceptions with his first
The Eagles (1-1) are 0-7
career touchdown pass for Min- against Giants coach Jim Fassel.
nesota (2-0), a 1-yarder to
Saints 28, Chargers 27
Randy Moss with 1:56 to go.
Jeff Blake's third touchdown
Culpepper was 23-for-36 for pass an 8-yarder to Joe Horn
1
355 yards. Cris Carter caught wid\ ' 47 seconds left, capped a
nine passes for a c~reer-high 90-yard drive. The visitors (1-1)
168 yards.
· were ~ided by a pass interferMiami (1-1) went ahead 7-6 ence c~ll against DeRon Jenkins
on Jay Fiedler's 2-yard TD pass and an unnecessary roughness
to Thurman Thomas with 1:02 call against Rodney Harrison,
remaining. The visiting Dol- and the Chargers (0-2) had 12
players on the field on the TD.
phins gained only 209 y~rds.
Bills 27, Packers 18
Ryan Leaf threw his first
Buffalo (2-0) h~d five sacks, touchdown pass since Oct. 25,
and Rob Johnson, playing with 1998, a 20-yarder to Curtis
an injured foot, threw for 259 Conway in the Chargers' 21yards and three touchdowns, point third quarter. He was only
two of them to tight end Jay 12-of-24 for 134 yards, threw
two ':interceptions and was
Riemersma.
Brett Favre, despite tendinitis sacked five times.
in his right elbow and ~
Broncos 42, Falcons 14
sprained right thumb, completRookie Mike Anderson, maked his first 14 passes and fin- ing his first NFL start because of
ished 26-for-36 for 270 yards injuries to Terrell Davis and
and two touchdowns to Anto- Olandis Gary, carried · 31 times
nio Freeman. But the Packers for 131 yards and •two touchfell to 0-2 for the first time in downs.
Brian Griese was 20-of-33 for
eight years.
Giants 33, Eagles 18
268 yards and three touchThe Giants (2-0) went to the . downs, two to Rod Smith for
air at Philadelphia and stopped Denver (1-1), which saw kicker
Duce Staley.
Jason Elam leave with a lower

Browns
from Page 81
predicted a victory over the
Browns, dropped three passes
along with his three catches.
"All I can say is we've got to get
better and learn from this," Warrick said. "Cleveland played a
great game. They just beat us."
Corey Dillon, who rushed for
360 yards in two games against
the Browns !~st. season, managed
only 41 yards on 12 carries as
Cleveland's defense toughened up
front.
"Dillon ran all over 'em last
year and vre took the attitude into

back injury when he was wiped
out by a block on a kickoff
return for a touchdown by Darrick Vaughn .
Dan Reeves coached his first
game in Mile High Stadium as
an opponent; he spent 12 seasons coaching the Broncos.
Atlanta (1-1) was outgained
407-186.
Panthers 38, 49en 22
Steve Beuerlein threw for 364
yards and three touchdowns,
spoiling a day on which the
49ers honored Joe Montana,
Ronnie Lott and Dave Wilcox,
who entered the Hall of Fame
this year.
Carolina (1-1) ended a sevengame home-opener winning
string for the 49ers (0-2).
Cardinals 32, Cowboys 31
Jake Plummer led the Cardinals (1-1) to victory with a late
drive on which he passed to
David Boston for 63 yards, then
hit a 17 -yarder to Frank Sanders
for the touchdown with I :54
remaining.
It was the 12th fourth-quarter
comeback victory Plummer has
directed in his 40-game career.
Cary Blanchard made four field
goals at Tempe, Ariz.
Dallas (0-2) got three TD
passes from backup QB Randall
Cunningham.

this game that Akili would have came in and kind of spoiled the
to beat us," said Orpheus Roye, a pany for them."
newcomer to the line.
Notes: Browns G Jim Pyne
Smith couldn't. Last October in sprained his right knee. WR
Cleveland, he thumped his chest JaJuan Dawson broke his collarand taunted the Dawg Pound bone .... LB Brian Simmons, who
after leading a last-minute touch- led the Bcngals in tackles last seadown drive for an 18-17 win.
son, tore cartilage in his right
Couch, who was angered by knee and will be out for at least
Smith's display, was determined to 10 weeks .... Browns P Chris Garplay better than him in the docki set an NFL record, extendrematch. He did it decisively ing his streak of punts without a
and without theatrics after taking block to 630. ... Browns RB
snaps and kneeling in the closing Travis Prentice, a rookie from
seconds.
nearby Miami (Ohio), scored the
"It's really sweet, I'll tell you first official touchdown in Paul
what," Couch said. "It's great to Brown Stadium on a 16-yard run.
kneel down in any stadium .: .The Bengals are 7-29 in August
especially this one, being the first and September the last 10 years.
game ever in this stadium. We

Help You ...

. \ I

}····~,;

.

-

" :50

t.

T•-•-

URNPIKE ?,:":=:::.,.=·c·~
OF GALLIPOLIS
Quick Lube

Knight
frotn

Multi·Point
Inspection

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

sI I 95

feature all major brards:

Service lnclud. . up to s
quana ol Motorcran oil
and new Motorcran all
filter. Oleael vehlclea
may ba extra.

IFi l!!~one. Gene1al, l.ichein, Bridge~1cn4
UNIROYAL, B.F.
I
extra

·~e...

Wheel Alignment Cooling System

~~

-•Onty.

Fall Maintenance

99

.
·--up~~11o1"""~
ell ond ,.. - e l l nnot or
·Rolllo
It'll
htpocl41irH -llu~ Pom olpoclioo:
npo; lnkt .,..,:_ onc1 nu au lluldl;

2·wheel
·lntpiCI rldlllar fer leab ' Check
Chec« and ad~st camber and toe.
~. clamps and belts -Pressure
Additional parts and labor may belies! SJtstem hl!ltaks •Dnln rld~or
required on some velllcles.
•lnd!Hitt up to t g~llon of coolant

--CO!. . .

Avoid
a Stroke
In just 10 Minutes

Parts&amp;

Htt!

•tCIIIIIMOIIJ'-*

.

ond ...... -··Ill~~

.,

~ll' .t.Jneric:a·s·

_,.uely,

Tire Rotation and
Brake lnsp~ction

s2295

•lnspec1lnkt friction material, caliper
operation, roton, drum~ hoses and
coonections -Inspect.parting lnke fol
dll1llgl and JlOI!II operation •Rolate
andlnspect 4tiresd..-lfiiiiYMII
r.,.•.
operation 'ROialllnd inspect 4tires
-Dual rear wheel velildes extra.

-·"'1"

third leadin~: killer. It is a lso the #1 cause for nursing home admissions.
two out of three people who ~uffer a stroke show no prior symptoms before the attack.

We'll be in Your Neighborhood!
Where: Pomeroy- Meigs County Council on Aging
When: Friday, September 22nd
Pre ..Registration Is A Must: 1..800-407-4557
, l_. ompktdy painlt:s."i SLn'enin~s fi:lr vast·ul:lr di~e:lst' using the most ;ld\·aru'l'd t lltr.tsourH.I and
tbrtol&lt;l~l'. Tlw st'fl't.:nings will quickly d&lt;:tn:l arterial ahnormalitil·s which ctn LHL'l' irregular blood flH\\ .

..,....._,C..O.,.lMdl

~~ C11roti.d Vmeul11r Test
Aulomalic Transmission
Oii Change

sa495

•

Ablklmlntll Aorlie

~Aneurysm Test

This tl'St scans thl' Carotid
art nil's in the lll'L'k ti1r plaquc
build-up . -';",of all strokes arc
linked to Carotid artery hlock:tgl'.

·

'l11is t~c~t~ li 1r the exi~tl:llL'l' of ;m
&lt;Ulcurysm in the alxlominal aorta.'lhc
V&lt;l~t majority 11f people who have :Ul
:meurysm have no S}~llptoms .
See hack for com11le1e details on lests.

•

Ankle BrMhilll

-:limkxTest
This lest SL-rn·ns li1r l'criplu.:ral
Arterial Disl'aSl' ( plaqul· buildup) in the !own l'Xtremities
which is linked to coronary
artLT)' diSl':l'l'.

·Change up to 5quarts of automat~
nsmlssion,lransaxle ftuld ~nspect
nd lubrlclte linkage controls (where
ap~lcable) ·Road test

"""': Cllodt opo!1lloot or Item
'*"'-~
llmpo. unllgilil.n- •IM't
It'*: Cho:l"'"' lllllltolot; Cho:l• opllllioo1t; inlpld IIIII Wfl boo&lt;t
$25 of any intemal automatic
"'UUPPll'): CIIICI and I t - -'1·
·-linii9HindPirtl, -IP]llk:alilo.

Also...

Detect

Osteoporosis ln}ust 60 Seconds

~

.

111110 t- '; C...OIIf,tMitt.
"" lio '""·
.....

transmission repair.
--.,.,
.....

Life Line Screening
Scanning For Life

"... Wbttl tbe .'&gt;crt•t•uing bad
rel'etlletl It 'll.'&gt; till ulcert~timt .
tb111 could luu·t• giren mt• a
stroke. /~J ' takiug tJIIick
ttcliou Ibis .w u•ed my I (fe or
quilt• fm.o;.o;ib~r meulitl or
fJby.o;ical imfmirmt&gt;nl. All

bt•caw;e

r~f l.Ni.•

SCI'('l'llillg!"

Qualitywe
It fO'tl' lfMtf

Visit Our Web Site: www.lifelinescreening.com

Uue

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="443">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9882">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25444">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25443">
              <text>September 11, 2000</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
