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                  <text>Meigs .society news and notes, AS
Jets win Tuna Helper bowl, Bl

Wednesday

Hlp: 70s; Low: 50s

Details, A3

Meigs County"s

POM E ROY Th e Rock
Springs Fairgrounds m ay have
been quiet for the past month but
come this weekend things are
really going to "rock': again - in
more ways than one.
Th e grounds will rock with
action as the 2000 Town and
Country EXPO opens Saturday
morning with de mon stratio ns,
displays, live entertainment, con tests and rides, while a n ew feature, a rock climbing wall will
give the more adventuresome an
opportunity to step rock their
way to th e top of a 20-foot tower.
The climbing wall, sponsored
by local merchants, is being
brought in by Solid Ro ck Sports,
Inc. of Mansfield. There's no
charge for taking the challenge to
reach the top, just as· there is no
charge for getting o nto th e fairgrounds to eqjoy the oth er activities.

Described by the committee as
offering "something for everyone," the fifth annual EXPO will
open at I 0 a. m . with a full agenda in prog ress. There will be commercial exhibits of all kinds, contests for the largest pumpkin , sunflower, ear of corn, and stalk of
corn, along with a be creative
sca re crow contest.
As for cars. five area dealers are
bringin g in n ew ca rs and trucks
and recreational vehicles, sportsmen will displ ay th eir race cars,
and coll ectors th e ir classic and
anti qu e cars. Antique fa rm equipment will also be featured al\ 1g
with antique tractor games 1d
kiddi e pedal pulls.
Th ere wi ll be a petting zoo an d
a display of exotic animals for the
youngsters to enj oy an d w ildlife
moun ts will be exhibited. C hain
saw sc ulpturing along with
demonstrations o n weaving and

'
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--------------------------Life Line Screening
-

A Pmjessional, Nott-Referral
Vascular Screetting Sen,ice

Scanning For Life

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endangering .
H e " accused of th e Aug. 18
shaking death of Thomas
Matthew Parker II. Gillilan, w ho
lived w ith the child 's moth er,
Amber Well, was allegedly
babysitti ng Parker at the time his
FROM STAFF REPORTS
fatal injuries were sustained .
·
PO MEROY - A Long I3o tT h e child died at Cab e ll~
ton-1 man charged in the murder Hun tington H ospital, as th e
of a 2-yc:u -old
direc t result of
b oy
pl e aded
Injuries caused
in nocent to the
by Shaken Baby
r harges M o nday.
Syndrome,
Mi ch ael
acco rding to a
" Tony " Gil lil an,
West
Virginia
J2, appeared for
medical exantinan arraignn1ent
er.
before Common
Crow
set
Pl eas
C ourt
G illilan's trial fo r
Ju dge Fred W.
~f
Oct. 23, and
C row I II and
appointed Attorentacd pleas of
ney
David
n or guil ty to
Uod iker to serve
three
fe lony
as "second chair"
counts.
fo r the defens e
T h e pleas were
in the case entered by ·Gill ilan's attorn ey, Meib'l County's first death
WiUiam Eachus of Gallipolis.
penalty murder case &lt;inoe.J 993.
G illilan was indicted Friday by
G illilan remains in c ustody in
the M eigs County Grand Jury lie u of two S1 million bo nds, set
on two ch arges of aggravated · by Judge Patri ck H . O ' Br ien and
murder and a count of child continued by Crow.

Gillilan was
indicted Friday
b)' the Meigs
CoJmty Grand

•

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hc.•a hh ct..hu.: ation nHnpany in lhL· l '.S.A .

all S(.TLT ning rc:sults .

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AT EXPO- This rock climbing wall will be C\t the 2000 Meigs County
Town and Country EXPO to be he ld 'this weekend at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds. (Contributed photo)

REED

as a local m atch for the project.
The village has already received $2'1,000 in
MIDDLEPORT - Actio n allowing the CD BG fu nds for th e paving. w hi ch is sc hedVillage of Middleport to pro ceed with paving uled for co mpletion uex t year.
plans through the Communi ty D evelopnwnt ,
Councilman Stephen Hou chins cast a vo te
Block Grant and State Capital Imp rovement again st suspending the rules and passing the
Progr•ms was taken during Middleport Vil- 1n easu res as an e rne rgency.
lage Council's reg ular meeting Monday.
In o ther bu sin ess, coun cil discu ssed th e purMayor Sandy lannarelli was auth or ized to chase of a used street sweeper at a maximum
execute and submit the necessary paperwork cost o f $3,500 .
to apply for SC IP, or Issue Two fundin g, fo r
Iannarelli said the Board of Publi c AtTairs
the paving of Mill Street from the co rp oration discussed th e purchase at its meeting M o uday,
limit to So uth Third Ave nu e.
and had p roposed that the cmt be divided
The county will be paving Bradbury R oad among th e sewer, water and street b udgets.
to the corporation lip1it.
lannarelli said th e O hi o E nvironmental
Co uncil also passed, on an emergency basis, Protection Age ncy has m andated th at a streeta resolutio n that will allow for the transfer o f sweeping prog ram be put into place in Midup to $50,000 fro m the village's general fund

V'so nograplu·rs are K.I&gt;. M.S.I H.V.T. rq~ish: rc..·d or rq~istry c..·li~ihlt.-.

· l ri.,Oifa r .'1 T i'l 'll 111,1..; Jm

J.

SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

uhra!&gt;l&lt; mnd h ..TIIIHJ(n~y .

Phr~kian co nfinn~

charges aggral'ated murder and
a count of child
euda ngering.

Council finalizes village's paving plans
Bv BRIAN

tiStalc..' uf the.· art cquipmc..·nt is ust.·d wilh sophistic..:atc..·d t.:olurnow

v'A Hoard Cl'rtitinl

Jury on two

MIDDLEPORT

dl.,~·it"'t' 11r , ,.,h1 l J'Hlr! ,., j., ,

Gi

Death penalty
murder trial set
Oct. 23

Please see EXPO, Pase A:S

POMEROY Marvin R ose
Fiddlers Association.
&amp; Co. will be fe atured in concert
. The musicians have performed
from 6 to 8 p.m. at the fifth annu- at th e numerous festivals includal Meigs Co unty Town and ing th e Bo b . Evans Fe stival , S umCountry EXPO.
mersville Blue, Tomah awk and
Th ere is no admission to the
Uncle Barney's l:lluegrass FestiRock Springs Fairgrounds where vals,. T hey h eld the N o. 1 spot for
. the f)( PO is · be ing held no r to seven consecutive weeks in the
the co nc ert by th e bluegrass ·Top 20 Bluegrass H it,;- on Counmusicians . li is suggested those try Heave n 107 Radi o and
attending bring a lawn chair sin ce WKKW Radio Station in C larksseating is limited.
burg, W. Va . The band 's latest
Rose is a member of th e Amer- release is Friends II .
ican Country Music Asso ciation
EXPO will be Saturday, 10 a. m.
and has served as vice president to 8 p.m . and Sunday, 10 a.m . to 5
for West Virgini a Heritage, p.m . with a variety of free ongoMountain Mmic Limited. He is ing displays, .demonstrations and
also a member of the Appalachian entertainment being presented.

:;o cent\

ea
Innocent

Rose &amp; Co. to perform

.

September 12, 2000

Hometown Newspaper

EXPO ready to rock fairgrounds
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 76

BY

Tuesday

dleport so that debris fro m th e streets does not
con tinue to CJ use problems w ith sewer drains.
C o uncil .took no ac ti on o n th e purch ase,
but did agree a vi llage rep resentative should
look at th e m :1chi n e a11d make a recommen datio n to cou ncil at the Sept. 25 mc·eting.
The B. l~A. also recom m ended to coun cil
th at a reso lution be pm ed 1110difyin g th e way
in which the $5 mo nth ly water improve ment
fee is coll ected .
Iann arcl li said that th e IIYA . recomm ends
that th e language in tit,• ordimnce setting th e
fee be dunged to al.low rhe village to collen
$5 per month for each HO USE H OL D, rath er
than eac h m eter, sin ce· som e apartment buildings and other dwd lin e,~ have only one meter

Please see Council, Page Al

Commissioners
solicit business
loan applications
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - M eigs Coo nty entrepreneurs will have access
to $125,000 in business starr- up
cash , th rough a new program for
Ohio's Appala&lt;:hi an coun ties.
Meigs Co unty co mmissio ners
disnmed rhe program Monday
and enco uraged those considering a small busin ess to apply to r
th e timds as soon as possible.
Co mmissioner Jeff T hornton
'aid appl ica nts co ul d quality for
\tp to $25.01 I() eac h through a
p rogram
funded
by
the
Appalacln an R egion al Co mm ission and admimstered by Buckeye
H ills/ H ock ing
Vall ey
R egional Development Distri ct.
"The program is petfect fo r

local people who want to starr
th eir own business or expand a
business already in place,"Thornton said, "but it is impo rtant that
anyo ne interested in th e program
subntit an application as soon as
po&gt;&lt; ihle."
Thornton said th e $ 125,000
set aside for the program is availabl e to people in all counties in
the Buckeye Hills service area.
and will be awarded on a fi rstCOlllL\ fir"t-"erved basis.
Thme who arc able to make a
c t, h march of 20 percent may
borrow th e fund s directly
thro u!(h UH / HVIU)D, w hile
oth ers must borrow through a
local bank , Thornton said .

Please see Loans, Pase A:S

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Pre1mration:

l,rt.' paratinn:

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tilt.' ultra:-.o uml unil. l\one
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$10. Credit ISi~n np foroul l
L_________f(cionm~p~leetteeVVa~S&lt;ciuhlau
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Hospital donates to health foundation in Sellards' name

Toclay's

Sentinel
1 Settio."tS - 11 Paps
Calendar
Classifieds

Comics

A6

B2-4
BS

Editorials.

A4

Obituaries

AJ
Bt. 6
AJ

Sports
Weather

Lotteries
omo
Pick J: 7-2-0; l'ick 4: .l-7-~-0
Buckeye 5: 2- I.J... If&gt;-21-27

W.VA.
Daily J : 8-J-5 Daily 4: 0-S-0-6

'nHrrP!I"' Nute: ,\1 tht present time. Medicart• docs not cm·cr, the cust of these screen in!( sen-ices. l.ifc l.ine docs nut tile
0 2000 Oh i&lt;' Vo~lley Publuhm!( Co.

insur-.uJce claims nnr provide rcr~rrals In an) Jlh)'sician's ~troup or IHISJiital.

(.a /1 for 11wre illformatlon or r1 company prf!{ile.
/.ife /.ine .fcreming

9545 Midwest Awenue , SuiteD, ClevelancJ, Ohio 44125

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . The Pl easan t Va ll ey H os pita l
l:loard o fTrust ees r&lt;'ce ntly made a
co ntr ibution to the PVH Health
Fo undation in the nam e of
Michael G. Sellards, th e former
execu tive d1 rc:c tor of rhc: commu nity-oriented health carc fac ility.
The g ift pla ces Sell.mls among
the PVHHF R oundtable ho non!'cs as a member of th e
Foun ders Cirde.
Th e I'VH Health Founda tion. a
n o n- profit co rporati o n , · t'&gt; tablish ed the Pk·asant Valley Scho lm
Endowment Fund in IYHH with
don ati o ns from loc;t] hu'\inc:,sc:"
and indi v idu als w ho p ledg,·J
more than $300,000 during a
year-long fund raising campaign.
Today, the fund has grown

drasti ca ll y in principal. lntert·st
ti·o m the fun d goes toward scho l.mhips and grant-in - ai d loa ns for
st u de nts m aj oring in a hea lth carerel atcd ti eld at a West Virgi ni a o r
Ohio in stitu tion of higher le• rnmg.
Th e- &lt;c ho i:.r&gt;hi p program was
in sti tutt~J to develop flt:\v .m el
ex isting hca lthca re services 111 tht'
tri -c ou nty area, and assist PVH in
its efforts to mainta\11 and
im p rove upo n the q uality o f
health ca n: "rtTvh·~ ·~ in the:· co m nltmity.
Th e ulrinme obj ecm·e of the.
PVH H e.1lth Fou ndation ts to
c n ro ur~gt· "ic hohr" to return to
the contmunity and utili ze their
skills in the local area.
"The people of the tri-county
commti nity an· indeed fortunatt:.'

to h:n·c tjuality hc ,1lthcarc ~t va il ­
;!hk cl o"it' to honlt'.'' \,lld Mt c h :wl
Li e&lt;·i n~ . c hai r m an o fPVH H,·,1lth

Fnund,tri on .
"A &lt;kill ed workttlfCl' o \· nwn
and wom en d eJi ca tnl to pro,·id mg th ar , ·.1n· t 'i l.''i'lt'lltt.tl to 1\l.ltll tainin g th e htgh kn·l of medi c.tl
~l·rviccr.; \\'t' h.t ~'t' ,;onlt' to rely
upon ," he .Hided .
Si nL:t. 111.1king its llr\t .1\\' ;lrd ' in
I 'JH'I. the I' VH l-k .1lth h&gt;und .ttion has pnwi d ed 1112 studc·t!l'
from i'vl.t~ o n, C .tlli .t and Metg&gt;
CO UIIt il'S With tlll ,lll.(' i,l\ .t\Si"r t .l!lt'l'
towa rd their L·ductti un in he.tlth carc rcl.1t cd ticJd, of 'i tthi y.
Am ong tiH1~l' "itudc tH~. th l'
found ,tti on Iu s award ed .tpprux imatc· ly $2H2.11110 111 1choLtr, hip1

Please see PVH, Pase A:S

800-407-4557

'

•

FOUNDERS' CIRCLE - The Pleasant Valley Hos pital Board of Trustees
recently made a contribution to the PVH Health Foundation in the name of
Michael G. Sellards, the former executive director of the communit)'{lriented healthcare facility. The gift places Sellards among the PVHHF Roundtable honorees as a member of the Founders Circle. From left are Judy
Garrett, ass1stant executive director of patient services; Tom Schauer,
assistant executive director of financial services; Sellards; Bill Barker
assistant executive director o( administrative services and Christin~
Stover, assistant executive director of integrated health services. (Contributed photo)

�BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Neipbon see toddler fall
CLEVELAND (AP) - As stunned ne1ghbors watched, a toddler
SIX days sh_
o rt of his second b~rthJay fell off a mnth-tloo~ balcony to '
his death, and police had his mother in custody pending pomble
charges.
Police suspect the boy's mother, 23, had left the child an_d his 4year- old brother home alone in their apartment while she went to
work .
"I looked out of the window and I couldn 't believe what I was
seeing," a shaken neighbor,Viki M r Gill, said. " He didn't scream or
anything. H" just fell. I'm not going to be able to sleep for a-long
tin1e."~

W1tnesses said a woman sittmg in a car .outsjde ConmlUniry Circle One Apartments saw Charles Knight hanging from the railing
and ran towand him as he fell and tried to catch him.
Anthony Toler, service· manager at the apartment building, said he
heard the thump of the boy hitting the ground as he stood inside
, the building. Toler raced outside, where the boy lay bleeding.
"We che.:ked his pulse and it was faint.'.' Toke said. " I cold the
peopl.e around not to move him."
.
Toler also saw the toddler's broth or leaning through the balco ny's
railing.
"[ yelled up to him to get back from the railing and that someone would be up there soon," Toler said.
The mother was arrested on suspicion of endangering children
but had not been charged as of Monday night . She told poli ce the
children were sleoping when she left them alone at the apartme nt
at about I 0:30 p m . St•nday.

Prosecutor drops death penalty
CLEVELAND (AP) - A woman will ger a second mal in the
death of her daughters, but without the risk of a death sentence.
Angda Garcia was convicted Sunday night on one count of insur.ance fraud, but the jury deacllocked on the ll'maining II counts,
including arson and aggravated murde r charges.
Cuyahoga Counry Prosecutor William D. Mason said Monday he
decided to drop the death penalty specifications niainly to streamline the charges the next.jury will consider.
· The deadlocked jury may have had trouble accepting the idea that
·a mother could have killed her daughters, Mason said. Combined
with the prospect of executing a woman, that may have been too
much for the jury, he said.
Garcia, 24, is accused of intentionally setting a fire Nov. 20 that
destroyed her home and killed h~r daughters, Nijah Evans, 2, and
Nyeemah Garcia, 3.
Prosecutors said she did it to get rid of the children and to profit from the insurance on their lives and on the house.
But jurors said Sunday that they doubted she meant to kill the
children.
Cuyahoga Counry Common Ple&gt;S Judge Bridget McCafferry said
· . she expects the next trial to be in mid-January.
· Defense lawyers Mark Rudy and Thomas E. Shaughnessy said
they will renew their efforts to get Garcia released on bond. She has
been in the county jail, without bond, for seven months.

Man pleads guilty to murder
CINCINNATI (AP) -A man who called Kentucky State Police
in April to confess that he had killed a woman in a suburban
Cincinnati park in 1980 pleaded guilry to a murder charge Monday
Michael Proffitt, 40, of London, Ky., said he wanted to clear his
conscience in the July 7, 1980, shooting of Berry Hoffman .
Hamilton County Common Pleas Courr Judge Fred Cartobno
will sentence him Sept. 26. Proffitt faces 15 years to Life in prison .
"It ends a mystery that started 20 years ago," Hamilton County
· Prosecutor Mike Allen said.
Allen said Hoffman 's killing likely would have gone unsolved 1f
.Proffitt had not confessed to it .
In exchange for Proffitt's plea, the prosecutor dropped a charge of
attempted rape.
.·
Proffitt called poliu to tdl them he followed H offman , 55 1 into
the Wmton Woods park planning to tlpe her. Whm she r« i&gt;ted, he
d10t her in the back and ran .
Margaret Casserly, one of Hoffman's three children . said Mo nday
she had believed for two decades chat a stray buller from children
shootmg in the woods killed H offman .
Casserly said she gri eved again after P roffitt called police to confess .
" It's too bad we had ro wait 10 years to get some fi nality to it and
feel that chore will be JU srice," she &lt;aid. ,

House lawmaker resigns early
COLUMBUS (AP) - Rep. David Robinson, .a Columbus
Republican defeated in the March primary, has resigned hiS seat m
the House 3 112 months early.
Robinson was defeated in the March primary by Franklin County Assistant Prosecutor Jim Hughes and would have had to leave
o ffi ce next January. Hughes will be sworn in as Robmson 's repla cement Wednesday.
Robinso n said it wa. impo rtant for R epubli cans to have their
successful primary can didate m offi ce as the N ov. 7 ge neral electio n
approaches.
He also said he wanted to giVe Hu ghes the chance to serve under
outgoing Hou se Spea ker J o Ann Davidso n. a R eynoldsburg R e publi can . Davidson mu st leave offi ce in D ec ember because of term limIts.

R obinso n will becom e a partn er m t he Columbu s law firm o f
Schotte nstem, Zox and Dunn . H e will di rect the firm's gove rnm ent
affairs departm ent.

Fire forces prison evacuation
LEBANO N (AP) - A cell bloc k fir e at Leba no n Correctional
Jnstiruti on forced the evacuatio n of 195 mmates and sent three
gua rds to th e h ospital for trcJtnie nt o f nu no r InJU ries.
T he fi re began on the south si de of t.he pnson at 6: I S p.m. Su n;day, sa1d Steve Flint, Turtl ec reek Township JS mtan t fire chief It was
-contamed to a smgle cd l but the enti re 148 -cell block was da1m gnl
by smoke
Inm arec. we re t'Va cuated to t he pnson h'Yill ll J.\ l,um .

The nvo p n soners assigned to th e cd l say they \Vc rcu "t t here
whe n thc.• fire startL·d .
" On t&gt; sJys he was out 111 the y;1 rd , Jnd the 1.. Hh e!'r ~.ty s he WJ\ 111 tht.:
d av ro om ." Warden H arry R ussell s.id.
H e said ht.• set•s no indicttio n tlu t thc: fire WJ 'i p .1rt _of .111 t·~c1p c
aHt'Blpt .

An 111\"t'mg.Ho r fmnl rh~..· , t .Hc flr~.,· 1 1U rd1.1r~ otTi c:e \\",1" .H th L'
M o nd.1y.
· TwP p n~ on gu .ml'&gt; \\'(.' f l..' tn: .ltL'd t()r '-ll1n h · Jn lui.Jti o n .md O lH.' fo r

pn ~on

nun o r llljll rl l..'&lt;;, '\UfTcr~..·d .l ft c r h ~..· fdl. All th rl'l· \ \'L'rL' tTL',tr cJ .1nd
I"L'k',lSl' d .H M 1ddll'rown R q; uHl.d ! fn .. p tt.ll.
Until th~ fire 111\"l..'&lt;;.ti g.lt m n ' "' c.:nmp lctcd. t hL· l lllll.ltL'S u t th &lt;.." (t:ll

,,.J.

bloc k will be ho~sed 111 &lt;&gt;thc·r areas of th e pnso n. R ussdl
" Rut t hey Jre all be h ind bJrs a nd the pmon is full \· opt·r.ltlo nal."

Tuesday, September 12,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

State creating_online guide of nursing homes
COLUMBUS (AP) - People searching fo r
a nursing home no longer will have to spend
ho urs trying to gather information from several sources. The state is creating a o ne - stop
shopping guide that will go online withih a
year.
Th e Internet site will in clude qualiry of
care. c ustomc:r sa ti sfa c tion , accepted payntent

methods and available services, for instance. It
will describe the living environment at a nursing ho me, such as whether there IS ' a commu mty room .

ne sa~d .

Tuesday, September 12,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

" Most pe ople don 't think about lo ng- term

care until they are in a c risis situation . Those
arc usually -emotional tlntes, and they need
informatio n qui ckly," said Beverley Laube r!,
the lo ng-te rm care o mbudsm an for the Ohio
Department of Ag ing. " This Will provide

them wi th to ns o f info rntatio n that 's all in o ne

place ."
The department will create se archable pro files of eac h o f Oh10 's more than I ,000 nursing homes, wlth input from the nursin g ho me
industry and co nsumer group s.I:h e guide is to
be online by Se pt. I .
Such gu ides have been deve loped in about
a do zen other states, including California,
Flo nda, Iowa, Texas and Michigan.
Th e federal government in 1998 created a
similar Web site through the H ealth Care
Fina ncin g Administration , providing in fo rm atio n o n each of the 16, 500 facilities participating in Medicare and M edicaid .
C ra1g Palosky, a spo kesman for the H C FA ,
said the site is composed only of data in divid ual states supply and isn 't JS ddailed " st.lte

guides, which cover fewer fa ciliti es.
Th e American Assonation of R etired Persons is workin g with th r- state .. to nu ke it
something that's gum g to add valu e to wh ~t 's
already o ut there o n th e f~d e ra l Site ," sa id R o n
Bndges, AARP Ohio\ gove rnm ent affairs
re presentative .

Some o f the informatio n to be includ ed in
Ohio's guide - such as customer satisfaction
surveys requested by the AARP and other
consumer groups - IS n o t now readily avadable. Independe nt compani es will ask 30,000
pursing home reSidents and the ir families
what they think of their care.
Alsu, for the fir st time, state and fe der&gt;l
m e.lSures o f th e quality o f care provide d in
eac h fau lity. w ill be ·available to the publi c.

LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
Water /
inte1111ption

V. Louise Gilkerson

Alfred

homecoming set

MARLETTE, Mi ch. - V. Lo uise C olem an Gilkerso n, 77, o f M atC HESTER - The Tuppers ,
lette, Mich. , a form er Mei gs Co unty resident, died Au g. 19, 2000 , at Plams- Chester Water District will
the Marlette Extended Care Fa cility.
have a planned water service
· Born in Sebring on Jan. 7, 1923 , co th e late Jo hn and Mary H olland shutdown on Wednesday from 9
Coleman, she lived in Reedsvill e durin g he r childhood years and grad- a.m. to 4 p.m. on the following
uated from Chester Hig h School in 1940 . She was a m ember of St . roads: State Route 7 from the
Elizabeth Catholi c Church in Marlett e.
Baum Addition to 1,000 feet
Besides her parents, sh e was preceded in d eath by her husband, Dar- north o f Baer Road, Baum Addi, win R. Gilkerson; a son , Dennis Gilkerso n; o ne g randdaughter; and a tion, Warehouse · Road, Lake
sister, Norma Jean Coleman.
Wood Road and Pomeroy Pike
Surviving are two sons , Dan iel and Timothy Gilkerson ; two ·broth- frotn Flatwoods Road to Chester.
ers, Eugene and Ronald Col eman , six grandchildren, and seven greatAfter water service is restored, a
grandchildren.
,boil advisory will be in effect.
Fun eral &lt;ervices were held Aug . 21 at St. Elizabe th Catholic C hurch . C ustomers should boil all water
Buri:tl was in St. Elizabeth Cemetery in M arlette.
for human consumption for a
minimum of three minutes until
notified otherwise.

ALFRED Alfred Unit ed
Methodist Church will hold its
home coming on Sunday. Sunday
School and worship service wi ll
be held in the m o rnin g, with a
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m ., and
afternoon service , featurin g
Sound of Praise singers, at 2 p.m.

Bridge meeting
planned
POMEROY The Ohio
Department of Transportation
will hold a public meetmg on
Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at
Royal Oak Resort, to update th e
public on the status of th e
Pomeroy- Mason Bridge replacement project. ODo;r represe ntatives will give a presentation at 6,
and will describe examples of two
possible bridge designs whi ch
could work in this location.
Comments and questions from
the public will be taken following
the ODOT presentation.
The existing Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge is scheduled for replacement in two to three years.
ODOT has already earmarked
$25 million for the project in Fiscal Year 2003.

Rick Hesson

High court hearing
Conjoined twins
debate
over
lawsuits
surgically separated
The

tifi(,.·d by th t.• co unty ht1nun ..,rr-

Ohio Suprt.'lll l' Court as bein g
asked to decide thrl't' r ases cu n C(!rn ing whL·n to ;.Unw exceptions
to th~ statl' bw th:u bars lawsuito.;
.1g:1inst gove rnm ~nu l ('lltities.
The high courr w:ts to hear
thrc-~ cases Tuesd.1y rhar pit indi\·iduals ;lgainst the government
ove r this protec tion , known as
sovereign immunity, which has
bt'en gettin g incrL·ascd attention

dL'pJrtnH."l,lt , x co rd1n g: . to
court records.The day cart.•'o; op~r­
ato r was co nvicted of c hild
encbngcrin g :md pbccd o n p~o­
b,lt ion for covc: ring tht" boy"s nose
and mouth wfth tape.

C OLUMBUS (AI') COLUMBUS (AP) -

In a

meticulo us proc~tdure that took

.1bout 10 1/2 hours, 3-month-old
twin sisters joinc:d at the;:; r lower
backs were surgically separated at
C hildren's Hospital. a hosp•tal
spokeswoman said.
The girls were anesthetized
about 7:30 a.m. Monday and
taken to the hospital's intensi\:e
care unit at o p.m . Thry were in
critical but stable condition Tuesday morning, said spokeswoman
Pam Barber.
"There isn't anything to indicate at this moment that we're
looking at any problems," she said.
"But . they are infants and have
undergone major surgery."
Barber would not release the
children's names, but said they
we~ from outside the United
States. The Columbus DISpatch
reporred on Tuesday that the girls
were from Africa.
Barber also would not release
details of the surgery, in cluding
)"hat, if any, organs are shared by
the girls. A news conference at the
hospital was scheduled for Tuesday
mormng.
"There weren't any anxious
moments, everything went as
punned," she said.
Conjoined twins occur any-

w he n· fwm u nc

111

30.000 to one

in 100 .000 births.
About 75 pern·m are joi ned at
k ast P"·ually in the chest and share
o rgans. About 2:3 percent ar(' conIHx tcd J.t the lo we r torso , sharin g
hips, legs or genitals.
Su ccess rates fo r sepJrJtio n vJry
Jepending on the connectio n.

Dr. Jeff Johnson.
cian/ gynecologist at
University Medical
only about one-third

an obstetn Ohio State
Center, said
of cOnJoined

twins survive.

. "It depends .on how many
o~gans they share, if they share any
organs, and if those o rgans are
vital," he said.
Johnson sa1d doctors are not
sure why conJoined twins, which
come from a smgle fertilized egg,
develop.
One theory lS that the developing embryo starts to split into
twms but stops before the split is
complete.
"We think that what happens is
somewhere during the twining
process when the fertilized egg
splits, it splits late after fertiliza tion." Johnson said
The. is the fourth time doctors
at Children's Hospital have tried to
separate conjoined rwins , said
spokeswoman. Katie Pakel.

from st.1te and feder•l courts in
recent years.
"Fo r co urts it 's a real dilenuna .

On the one hand they want to
recognize thar injuries do occur at
the hands of government employees," said Jeffrey Sutton , former
state soL citor and an e xpert on
state constitutional law. "On the
other hand, the courts don't want
to be responsible fot sparking a
run on the state treasury that ultimately require&lt; a significant tax
increase .''

5utton IS not involved m Tuesday's cases.
In the fi rst case.Venisba Buder
sued the C uyahoga Councy
Dcpartmc:m of Human Services
after her 8- month-old mn Aaron
died m April 1995.
She had found her son unconscious at Guardian Angel Day
C are, which was licensed and cer-

VJCL'S

Butler argu ed the county was
negltgent in licensmg the day
care. The department .1 rgu ed: it
was inmumc from the lawsuit as a
politi cal ent1ty.
In the second case, a couple is
suing the Fairborn city sc hools
because a teacher failed to notifY
authorities after their daughter
told the teacher of sexual abuse by
a fainily friend .
The couple contends a state
law requinng teachers to report
child abuse strips the district uf
immunity. The mal and appeals
court both ruled in favor of the
district.
.
In the third case, a couple is
suing Preble Councy for negligence after their car was m an
acc ident with a county tract~ r

domg road repair.
Dav1d Arens. a lawyer representing the Fa~rborn sc hool distnct, said ntak.ing government
employees liable for failing to perform every JOb requirement
under state law would spawn a
multitude of lawsuits.

Mayor wants
to tear up road
AKRON (AI') Most cit1es
want fc:de ral mo nc:y t u butld fre eways. Mayo r Donal d l'lusqudh c 11
se eking ft... d ~ rJl funds to rear Olll'
d own .
" It's a huge piece o f con crete.
We 're w astin g m o ney o n it."

Mark Willi amson. a spo kesman
for Plu squ clli c, said M o nday
The ciry has apph ed f~ a $1.8
1111llio n fed e ral grant to stu dy
Plusqudh c 's proposal to dem o li sh
.1. (hree-qu :if te r mil e se nio n of
th e innerbelt highway designated
Ohio 59 and Martm Luthe r Kmg
Jr. Freeway.
Under the plan, the htghway
and its n1an y overpasses would be
replaced with a slimmed- d own
boul evard while freein g up as
mu ch as 27 acres of pubhc land
fo r development.
Th e hi ghway is un de ru sed : it
was design ed to hanclle 1 I 0,000
veh1cles datly, but gets o nly about
12 .000, m ostly durin g ru sh ho ur.
It takes up need e d sp"e· and
the ciry mu st maintain and plow
the highway, Wilham son sa1d.
So m e o f th e o ld er br id ges

.1

77 wo ul d L'i t llli Jl ,Hl'
b.1r nc r h d\\"l' l' ll d o w ntown .lll d

I t " \\'t''- 1 'i ~k u ~.· t g h bn rh \Hh.l ...

Dn un Lon.h, w h o \\"Pr k ..

~111

urU.111 '~ p r.Jw l ~ ~~ U L'~ f{,r th ~. .· S H. :rr.l

( :Ju b

11 1 W,i..,h mgton.

1&gt;&lt;: ..... ud

\\',1\o .1 ··f.mt.lS tl ( .. hj L'.l [(l

lll gh \\".IY.., fro111 COfl'
·· u rbJn f rL'L'\\ '.lys.

It

rl'lll0\'1...'

C 1ty ..tlL'.b

\ VL,.r(.. · tin J1 ng

o\11. em n&gt;m m u nHi l'~ ntr from
0 111.' .lll Oth c r ,111d b nn g .1 lot of
p o llm w n downtown ." h l.' s.u d
M o nd.ty. ·· (~c:nt: rall ~·. th ey lll J kl' It

Council
from Page AI

MIDDLEPORT
• .te
Riverbend Arts Council will
sponsor a basic art class on Sept.
26, Oct. 3, 10 and 17 at 6:30 p.m.
Carol Tannehill is the instru ctor.
The cost is $20, and students will
need a sketch pad. Registration
may be made by calling Tannehill
at 992-5336.

Weekend meeting
planned
RACINE
Red Brush
Church of C hrist will hold a
weekend meeting on Saturday at
7 p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. and
6 p.m . Denver Hill w ill be the
guest speaker, and the public is
invited.

Work party
planned
POMEROY

Loans
from PapAl
The program is not related to ·
the county:s own Microenterprise
Loan program, which also provides
start-up and expansion funding for
small businesses.
T hurmon said that those interested in applying for the funds
should co ntact the commissioners
office or PerryVarnadoe, economic development director, as soon as
possible, before the fund is depleted.
In other business, the conunissioners authorized Gene Lyons,
administrator of the Meigs County Emergency Services operation,
to advertise for bids for a new
ambulan ce. According to Lyons,
who presented the board with
proposed specifi catiQns for the
ambulance, it wi ll be used to
replace the current "Medic 4" unit
now on the road .
Lyons and the commissioners
also discussed the re cent award of
$2,500 m state funds to be used
toward completion of a feasibility
study of the 911 system. The comnilssioners last week announced
plans to spend the grant and
$2, 500 in local matching funds to
evaluate the county's ll'adiness and
needs with regard to establishing
th e 91 1 emergen cy system.
Commissioner Mick Davenport
said that meetings will be held
abou t the proposal in the coming
weeks, and that the house num-

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main con cern in all stories is to
be accurate . If you know of an error in
a story, call the ne wsroom at (740)
992·2 156 ..

WJ~ buil r bt.' t\\'t.'t.'n th e 1970s an d

,JJ H .i

police officers and other village
employees for their assistance.
s Cle rk Bryan Swann repo rted
th e fo llowin g fund balances at the
end
of
August:
general,
but a number of households.
$59,585 .53; street, 26,584.27; tree
Council member Rae Gwiaz- planting, 5,659; nuyor's court,
dowsky commented that a hou se 13 ,847 .32; mini golf course,
and properry on South Third are I, 154; cemetery trustees, 4,265;
in need of cleaning up.
clean up escrow, 36.17; pool
Councilman Roger Manley improvement, (10,999); Law
noted that the village should con- Enforcement, 4,438.1 1; fire truck,
sider securing the Park Street 76 ,830.80;
COPS
FAST,
School building, which is now (3,403.28); economic developused for storage by the village, m ent, 0; public transportation,
· ·before winter.
(2()o,250. 76); law block grant,
Manley also commented that I ,968.63; refuse, 24,835.39; disasthe village should begin to con- ter relief grant , 2,503; water
sider' use of the marina in Mid- improvement fund , 122, 101.50;
dlep ort as a means of attractin,.. water system, 47,589.28; sewer
visitors into the vill age.
system, 1 1,96 1.18; recreation,
Manley said that th e site would 10,783.01; cemetery, 3,748.51;
be ideal for primitive camping , merer depo sits, 25,345.57; arld
and Iannarelli said that the village ceme tery endowment, 77,160.86.
planning commission has begun
lannarelli distributed copies of
to consider grant funding and the August fire report from Fire
other funding sources to allow C hi ef David Hoffman, reporting
the village to develop and nine calls .The calls included three
improve the boating facility and calls for mutual aid in Pomeroy, a
. to better use the river to the vehicle fire, a hazardous condition
communiry's advantage.
and a rescue, among others.
"We are neglecting our best
C ouncil also:
·resou rce," Iannarelh said, "that's
• Approved transfers of funds
: the river."
for the police department, in the
[annarelli urged council mem- amount of $4,000, and a transfer
: bers to begin promoting the one- for the Board of Publi c Affairs in
: mill levy for street lights which the amount of $4,000;
. will be on th e November ball ot.
• Approved a res olution estabThe levy was rejected by vote ts in lishing taxation rates fo r the 200 I
March , and lannarelli has said that tax budget;
: the village will have no choi ce
• Approved the Mayor's Report
: but to turn out the street lights if of fines and fees collected 111
:. the levy fails in Novembe r.
Augu st 111 the amo unt of
lannarelli shared with coun cil a $4 , 18 3. 54.
:letter from JR . Cross of
• Approved payment of bills in
; McArthur, who was re cently the amount o f $51,328.12 , w1th
: injured while working in Mid- Councilman Bo b Pooler voting
:dleport. Cross complime nted in opposition .

Art class offered

Plans have

bering and tax map office will be
included in those discussions, sin ce
house numbering is a major issue
in the establishment of911 service.
The commissioners authorized
the vacation of Sycamore Street in
Sutton Township, at the request of
the trustees ansi the reconunendation of Engineer Robert Eason .
Prosecuting Attorney John
Lentes met with the comnussion,ers to discuss possible expenses
involved i.n the prosecution of
Michael Anthony Gillilan , th e
defendant in a Meigs County ca pital murder case.
Lentes said that he had been in
touch With the Ohio Attorney
General's office, and that the state
will assume the cost of investigation, expert witnesses and other
expenses relating to the pros.:cution of the case, and that the co unry will not likely be saddled with
expenses relati ng to the case, since
the Ohio Publi c Defender's o ffice
is providing defense counsel.
The commission ers also:
• Approved the appropriatio n of
$98,794 in public assistance ti.mding for the Department ofJobs and
Family Services, and $36,450 in
state child welfare subsidy fimds .
• Tabl ed a request from Joe Hubble ofTri- C o untyVending to place·
a vending machinr in the courthouSe ;
• Approved payment of bdls 111
the amount of$158,368.92 .
Present, in additi o n to Tho rn ton
and Davenport, were Comnussioner Janet Howard and C lerk
Gloria Kloes.

been mad e tor a work party to l.oe
held Thu rsday o n th e Po m eroy
parkmg lo t. Vol unteers a rc bemg
invited to help wah painting the
gazebos and stage area begi nning
at 5 p.m. John M usse r asks th at
vo lu n teer s romt m pain t d oth es
. an d br ing a br ush o r two.

Dance to be held
APPLE G RO V E - A round
and sq uare dan ce wi ll be h el d Friday at th e R ed Barn in Apple
Gtove, R o ute 338 , 8 to 1 I p.m.
MuSic will be by th e Happy Hollow l:loys and the caller w ill be
Cliff Longe nette.

Wiener roast
planned
SALEM CE NTER A
hayncle and wiene r roast will be
held Sat urday at 6:30 p.m . at the
Grange H all loca ted on C ountry
R oa d 1. near Salem Ce nte r. Studen ts and parents from th e Salem
Center Ele mentar y Sch o ol are
giv~ n

a sp ecial inv ilation . The

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RUTLAND - The Rutl an d
To v·llt~h ip Tr ustees w ill tneet m
speml se ssio n. Tuesday, 5 p.m at
th e Rutland Fire Smio n to handle personnel matt ers.

ABLE schedule
announced

En tc r tamment in addit ion to

th e b p.m. Saturday m ght bluegrass and gos pel co nce rt by M arvin R ose and Company will

$2

lnalda Malga County

$27 30
$53.82
$105 56

Ratts outside Meigs Cou nty
13 Weeks
26 Weeks

$29 25
$56 6B

52 Weeks

$109.72

AEP -

39), '
Akza - 421,
AmTechi SBC- 45'),

Ashland Inc. - 36'1,

AT&amp;T -

..

30~.

Lands End - 25~..
ltd. - 22'1.
.
Oak Hill Financial OVB - 26 \.

BorgWarner - 34" ,.
C hamp1o n -

3 '1

4"1SI

City Holding - 7'l•
Federal Mogul -

Firstar -

•

Kmart - st .
Kroger - 22il

Bank One - 37~.
Bob Eva ns - 17

Charmin g Sh ops -

24'1.

Gannett - 53 ~'
General Electric - 59 ' ~.
Harley Davidson - 49\

10'1,.

8BT - 29'r,.
- 14~
Premier - 5~,
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. Peoples

Rocky Boots RD S hell -

4 ;,
64 ',

Sears - 351.
Shoney's - 1
Wai-Mart - 54),
Wendy's - 19'1
Worthington - 10'J

16),
Da1ly stock reports are the

4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transacti ons , pr ovided
by
Advest of Gallipol is.

Merchants
to meet
POM ER O Y -

T he Pom e roy
Merchan ts Assoc iat ion will meet
We dnesday, 8:30 p.m . at th e
Farnu:rs Bank co nference room .

Dance to be held
TUPPER S PLAINS A
square da nce wi th clogging will
b e held at the Tuppers Plains
VFW hall , Saturday. 8 to 11 p.m
With Tr ue Country playing.

anno unce s its sc h('d uled fo r orie ntation for adu lts w ho are mter-

ested in improvi ng basic ski lls or
in preparing for th e GED test.
Orientation will be held at the

T U PP ER S PLAI NS The
Tuppers Plains R eg ion al Sewer
Distri ct meeting, 7 p.m . Tuesday.

VALLEY WEATHER

Cooler weather on the way .
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

What a differenc e a day m akes,
wh e n it co mes to tri- c ounty

weather.
C oole r and dri e r weather will
replace the warm , muggy and
sto rmy conditions by Wednesday,
forecasters said.

Th e cooling trend wi ll continue int o the weekend , with lugh
tempe ratures by Saturday o nly in
the 60s.
To day's shmvcrs and thund erstorm s wdl tap e r otY in th e
cvt·nin g .1 nd dnc r Jn d coole r air

w ill beg-in to fil te r in to th e
region , the Nationa l Weather Servi ce said . Lo \vs toni g ht will b l· in
the 50s in th e so uth .
Fore cast
To,by... H umid with showers

PVH

and thundersto rms. H eavy downp ou rs likely. High&lt; in the nild 80s.
Tonig hc .. .Cooler e xce pt showers and thunde rstorm s continu-

ing. Lows around 60.
Wedn esday.. . M ostly
sunny
wit h low hunudi ty. H igh&lt; in th e
7 0s.
Extended forecast
Wedn esday
nig ht ... M os tly
clear. Lows in the 50s .
Thursday. .. Fair duri ng the day
wi th a c hance o f sh o we rs and
thunde rsto rm .;, J t nig ht. Hi g hs i n
the 70s.
Friday... A chan ce o f sho wers
a nd t hu n de rsto rm:-, . Lows in t he

50s . Hig hs in the m id 70s.
Saturda y.. .A chJ nce o f showers. Coo l w ith lo ws 45 to SO and
highs nea r 70.

sup por t scholarship s and g rantin- aid !oms fo r loc al residents
stud ying for CJfL'l'rS in hcalthcare.
Fo r m o r t' ~ nfo r m .l tiO n , an

fromPageAl

app li c:ltinn or to ll lJ kc

:m d gr:lll t- in -.tid lo.m s. r ~. .· p rL'SL' n t ­
ing th L· inkrt·st c:tnwd ~) Jl the
pnncipal 111 th e· Schol.1rs En dowmen t Fund.
Opport LHllt l~S .tb ou n·d to p.Irticipat e in the PVH H ea lth Fo undatio n's Sch ubrship Endowm c•Jir
Fu nd fo r la rge corpor.Jliu ns. ~ ma ll
.1h kc·.
A n indiv id u.1l g:lfi,

t og L· t h n

With g il t ~ fro m o t h er buslllL'S~L'"'
.m d in d ividuJh. \n il b e LI Sl' d tu

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
OLD AOUlE 3S WEST

7

12 ~ JACKSONPIII.E
FR1918100 • THURS 9114100

446•4524

BOX OFFICE Will, OPEN AT
6:30 PM FOR EVIIITNG SHOWS
2:30 PM fOR MATINEES
BRING IT ON (PG13)
7:00 SUN-THURS

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

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 SUN-THURS

NUTTY PROFESSOR 2:
THE KLUM PS (PG13)
7:10 SUN-THURS

THE CELL
7:00 SUN- THURS

TH E WATCH ER (R)
7:10 SUN-THUAS

J

d o nat ion

to the I'V IIIl F: co nt,1ct Fed eral
a nd St.t tc P rog. r.IIl l'. Ple.1~;m t Val -

Icy 1-lusp!t.tl. !&gt;7o - 4:1 4U, qten723 . J. or wntc : Plc.tsan t Val Icy 1-kalth Foun datio n. Inc .. 2520
Valley D rive, Poi nt Plus.1nt , W.Va.
~ ion .

~5550 .

Ah.•\:a ndt·r h.:t rdin ( I f Ru !&lt;.~ iu
' ' 1111 l hrL'l' ... tr,nghl go ld

h ;1..,

1:00 SUN ·THUR

LOCAL STOCKS

POMEROY - Area teens are
invited to attend the Friday's Fu n,
food and fell owship p roj ec t at
God's N eighborhood Escape for
Teens . Nutritional foo ds will be
available , free of ch arge for snacking whil e (ee ns are at th e ce nt e r.
Teen s can play no n - vio lent
games, computer program s, and
cards free of charge in the cente r's
game . room, loc ated on Main
· Street in Pom eroy. The ce nter
o pens at 6 p.m . and closes at
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Sa tu rd ay nig hts .

Sewer board
to meet

THE ART OF WAR (R)

$104

Mail subsaiption

lurder to avmd bhght ...

10 a. m . on Sund ay m orni ng.
Acti vities w ill bt·gin at 10 a.m . o n
both days, contlllll e u ntil 8 p.m .
o n Saturd ay an d conc lude at 5
p.m. on Su nday.

God's Net
program

MIODLEPO.RT - Th e M e1gs
Counry Ad ult Basic and Literacy
Edu cat ion
(ABLE) Prog r"'n

An i n te rd eno min arion .1l \VO r ship service will be co nductcrl .It

$8.70

50 cents
Subscnbers not des 1nng to pay the ca m·
er ma y remit 1n advanc e direct to The Daily
Sentinel . Crodil will be given carrier eacn
wee k No su bst npiiOn by mall perm1ne0 in
areas where home earne r servtce IS 8Y81l·
able

13 w eeks
' 26 Week s
52 Weeks

broo m making will b e going o n
both days.

incl ude th e co ul)try and we stern
band R o u te 33 from 2 to 4 p.m ..
Big Bend C logge rs and Dw ight
Icenhow er, Elvis im pl'rsonato r.

Tupp,•rs Plains Cente r on T hursday, and at the M1ddlepo rt C enter
on M o nday, Sept. 25 . Interested
ad ults m ust rL'gJ'iter fo r o rient ation by call m g 7 40- (,(&gt; 7-04 42
(Tuppe rs Pla1ns) o r lJ\12 - 5~08
(Middleport .) New state guide lines require that interested adult
s must attend opientation b efore
enrolling in th e ABL E prog ram .

gron ge w ill prov ide hl!ls, and
th ose atten ding are to take hot
dog; and other fi m·r ma cks and
drin k&lt;.

b usin ess\.: s and pn v.ltl' d o nor&lt;;

W tlhamso n sa1d . T h e mnerbc h

7"(,

Foreclosure
granted

Subscribe today. 992-2156

ro ute n eed t o be
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~ I.H L''I

Dissolution
granted

HARTFORD, W.Va. -- Rick E. Hesson, 44 , Hartford, died on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2000 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born June 19, 1956, in Gallipoli s, Oh1o, son of Eugene and ·
.Shirley L. Danbury Hesson of New Haven. H e wa s a welder with
:century Aluminum Corp., Ravenswood, and attended Father's House • POMEROY - An action for
dissolution of marriage has been
Church in Hartford .
flied
in Meigs County Common
In addition to his parents, he is survived by three sons: Tyler J. Hesson of Hartford , Jermyn A. Queen of Point Pleasant, and Brad Miller Pleas Court to Lee Anna Musick
of Syracuse; rwo daughters, Rikki Lynn H esson of Hartford and Trin- and Jon Frederick Musick.
ity Deneca of Letart; a sister, Regena A. Cottrell of Point Pleasant; his
paternal grandmother, Alma G . Hesson of N ew Haven; hos father- inlaw and mother-in-law, John A . and Carol J. Russe ll Workman of
Mason; and a niece and nephew.
He was preceded in death by his wife, C indy L. Workman H ess on ,
POMEROY - An action for
in 1999; his paternal grandfather, Orland A. H esson; his mate rnal
grandparents, Richard 0. and Evelyn B. D anbury ; his uncle, Jack 0. foreclosure has been granted in
Meigs Counry Common Pleas
Hesson; and his bmther- in - law, John R . Workman.
Funeml services will be held on Wednesday at Fogcl song Funeral ·Court to LaSalle Bank National
Home in Mason , with Rev. Mike Finnic um offi ciatin g. Burial. will fol - Association against Sharon A.
Smith .
low 111 Uruon Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

alo ng th e

1')87
Plmqudb c 'i :uJ the re m ( ,,·.d of
•1 ~l'L tl0 1l ( 1( th e 2- 1n1k h1g h\\".lY
LO il JI L'L"t lll g dowut 0\"\"11 10 l m cr-

The Daily Sentinel • .,age A 3

llll'l Ltl .., 111 1hc ... up~· rht·:l \ ) weight
d i\i '- Hlll
"rc ~t l 111 ~

11f

Grc ~- n- K o man

\ IIK l'" I iJ ~X .

�Tuesday, September 12, 2000

NATIONAL BRIEFS
•

The Daily Sentinel

Study calls for LAPD probe
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Los Angeles Pohce Department
needs ruore aggresstve Independent rev1cw and a permanent special
prosecutor to mvesugate misconduct, ae&lt;.:o rdmg to a report released
Monday
In the 150-page study commissiOned by the police union, law
professor Erwm C hemerinsky of the Umvemry 0 f Southern Caliform.t SJtd th e LA.PD fosters an e nvironment where excessive force
and a code of stlcnce are tolerated and corruption can fester.
" When mnocent people are convicted, all of the mstttutions have
fa tled us and all must be reformed so this doesn't happen agam," said
Chcmcnnsky, w ho was not patd for hts exammatton of the department .
The Los Angeles Poh ce Protective League, whtch represents
9,300 ra nk-and- fil~ ofilcers, had asked C hemennsky to revtew an
mternal Board of In qutry r&lt;·port tnto the department's ongomg corruption scandal.
More than l 00 convic tiOns have been overturned o n c harges that
J.lltl-gJng otii cers hcd under oarh , planted evtdencr:-. wrote false
report s and m some cases shot unarmed suspects.
T he board report, relea sed 111 March , recommended curtatltng
corruptt nn by adopung sc:vc ralme.tstm:s, mdudmg the expansiOn of
th r.. · LAPD's mte1 nal affairs dtv1s1on Ulnmately, however, the board's
n~ port blamed r...·t hl lS su m s on officers and supnvisors for fa thng to
l:\1 ry our t...':X I ~ttn~ dl'p.utment pohclr...'S.
In cnnrr.1~ t . C hemninsky co ndud cd th.\t the dt·partment downpbyr...·d thr...· scandal .md f.11lt:d to acknowledge how u s c ulnirL' pc..'l pctu .Hcd such l.tpst•s. He also norcd that th e Lo~ Angl'it•s Cf lllHn al
JUStlle ~y~ tcm , m c htdmg the county distn ct attorn ey's offic(", s h:~n: s
o;oml' hbnw for not ca tc h ing disc1cp.:tnc1es tn officers' C\St.'S

'Estti6Bsnd in~
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

CC!MIIIIS~IOM

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Larry Boyer
Advertlalng Dlrectqr

COMMiSSIGN

0"

vum~---'""

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

UU.rs 10 lh, tdilor lin nkOift•. rn,, JltOMid be Wn tltfJII JOO worth. All Un.n on subj«l
to utihlf6 •nd must be ritntd arul1ncludr fllldlyss tJnd ttltpltont ltlllfiHr. No Mnsi~tnnl ~nrn wd/J
H

6"

~~~9EMTI~l

l'~-~

,.,wuluil. UtNrs slun.ld li&lt;t •• &amp;oool hUt., tuldnss•~~&amp; 1sutu, no1 i"TSOIUIJdNs.

TM OlfltW1fl tXfHYISfti in lht €ol1411111 HWw 1U? lhr nmsrrmu of tht Ohio VslkJ Pllblishmt
Co. '1 uHian.J board. 1mku Olht,.,ift rwltd.

OUR VIEW

nn

1-\0W AiOUT WAC.t&lt;tE-TALI(teS AT

"0\E ~U~H t.liAAftY ~ o~
HAlf-T1ME AT A M\Pt.ANt:&gt;

FOOT9ALL GAME?

l.._

, COMMit!ION
ON

LJcal celebration brings
community together
The Emanctpation Proclamation celebration being staged this
weekend is the oldest - or at least one of the oldest - observations of a moment in Amencan history that changed the course of
the nation 's destmy.
Abolishment of slavery as directed by the proclamation brought
into the land of the free an entire population unused to liberty.
Sadly, nearly 140 years later these folks sttll struggle to enjoy t he
rights and benefits guar:mteed to all Americans.
Those struggles, as well as the tnumphs and abiding faith of
Afri can- Am erican cttizens, wtll be celebrated agam m Gallia Counry,j ust as they were in 1863 when the first observatio n was held.
The Emancipation celebration is not and never has been limited
to Gallia County. Today, cittzens both black and white from around
the country gather to enjoy mustc, food, culture and inspirational
addresses.
It's an encouragmg stgn that proves umty ts possible through
mutual respect, shared commitment and a belief in a better Ameri-

ca.

~

It's also a pretty good time, so we encourage all tn the tri-county
to partake m the activities.
The celebration's longevtry ts a trtbute to the dedication tts organizers have shown for more than a century
In a time when th e proclamation Itself has become a fool!1ote
between discusswns of the Ctvii War's great battles, the Galli a Cou nry celebration ts uruque m that tt focuses solely on an htsto n c docUJ11en&lt; and tts legacy.
Small wonder that noted acttvtst the Rev. Jesse Jackson chose the
celebration as a stop during his 1998 tour of Appalachia.
In that tour, accomparued by Umted Mine Workers of America
President Cecil Roberts and other labor leaders, Jackson publicized
the plight of the poor.
.But he also knew hts message of umry and soctal JUStice, underliJ;)ed wtth Iu s trademark phrase " I am somebody," would n't be lost
on the audience
:The proclamation allowed a sef,'111en t of the nation to become
"somebody," not just another man's property.
'And once a year, people come to Galha Coun ty to rewgmze that

r.cc.

BAft NSTAI:lLE, Mass. (Al') - Joan B Kennedy, the former wtfe
of Sen. Edw.trd M . Kennedy who has desc nb ed hersel f as a recuvenng alcoholic. hJS been charged wtth dru nken drtvmg on Cape

Cod ove r the weekt· n d
Kennedy, 64, pleaded mnoce nt Monday to c harges of dnvmg

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

So what constitutes an (unreasonable) search?
Of all the rubber-band words in the Constttuu o n, none stretches more remarkably
than the word "unreasonable." In a case now
pendmg for argument before the Supreme
Court, the stretch reaches to the power of
pohce to prevent a man from enterm g his
own hom e.
The facts in Illi nots v. McArthur are not in
dispute . In the spnng of 1997, Tera and
C harles McArthur had a sen ous fallmg-out.
They were livmg 111 a rrat!er at Sulliva n, a
small town about 25 miles southeast of
Decatur. One thmg led to another, and at 3:15
on the afternoon of April 2, Tera went to the
cops. Accompanied by J ohn Love, asmta lll
cht ef of poli ce, she went back to the tratler
and removed he r belongings.
Hell hath no fury, and so forth . Tera then
told Love that her husband had "pot" under a
couch 111 the trailer. Love asked M cArthur for
penmsston to search the pre mtses WJt hout a
warrant. McArthur refmed . The two men
were Outstde th e trailer at the time. Tera
departed with Officer Ri chard Sktd ts to get a
warrant. Meanwhile - and tht s ts the crux of
the case- Love refused to let M cArthur re ~

We salute the organizers of the !37th EmanCipation Proclamatton
observation and hope that the celebration wtll continue for many a
year to come.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ts Tuesday, Sept 12, the 256th day of 2000. There arc 110
days left 111 the year.
Today \ ,Highhght in History:
On Sept. 12, 1960, Democratic prestdenttal candtdate John F
Kennedy addre"ed the tssue of hts Roman Catholic fatth, tellmg a
Protestant group m Houston, " I do not speak for my church o n
public matters, and the ch urch does not speak for me ."
On thts date.
In 1609, Enghsh explorer Henry Hudson sat led mto the nver that
now bears hts name.
In 1880, author and journalist H L. Mencken was bo rn m Baltimore.
In 1938, Ado lf l-I ttler demanded self-deter mination fo r the Sudeten Germans in Czecl10slovakta.
In 1943 . German paratroopers took Benito Mussolim from the
hotel where he was being held by the Italian government.
In 1944, during World War II, U.S Army troops entered Germany
for the first time, near Trier
In 1977, Sou th Afncan black student leader Steven Utko dted
whtle m police custody, tnggerm g an tnternattonal outcry.
In l'JHI'&gt;, Jmeph Ctcippto, the acting comptroller at the American
Umversiry 111 Bctrut, was kidnapped. he was released 111 l{ecember
1991
In 198R, Hum cane G ilbert slammed tnto Jamatca wtth torrential
ram s and "mds ot 145 mph , ktllmg 45 people and cau smg damage
estimated at up to S 1 btl !ton
In 1992. the space shuttle Endeavour blasted off. carrying Mark
Le e and Jan Davts, the first mamed couple m space; Mae Jenmon.
the first blac k woman 111 space; and Mamoru Mahrt , the first Japan ese national to ny on a
spac eshtp.
In 1992 , poh ce 111 Peru captured Slunmg Path founder Abtmacl
Guzman
Ten years ago: R epresentatives of th e World War II a lites .mJ West
and East Germany o;; 1gned a treaty m Mmcow g1v111g tnte rn;monal
sancuon to (; erman un1ry
Ftve years ago· Th e Belarusstan mtlttary shot down a hydrug:cn
balloon durmg an mternattonal race. killin g its two Amcman ptlots .

us

One year ago: Under Jtlt e nst' mt ernatloual pre"mre, InJnn e'iJ a
announc.:cJ 1t would allow an mternarumal peace keepmg force co

restore o rder to th e de.,astated ternto ry of East Ttm o r. Andre Agasst captured lm &lt;eco nd U.S. Open tttl e, do rnm ating Todd Marttn (,_
4, 6- 7 (5-7) . fl -7 (2-7). (,-J. 6- 2 " Th ,· PrK tl(e " and "All y Mc Ueal,''
both created by wrt te r- pruJu ce r Davtd E. Kell ey. were nam ed best
drama senes &gt;nd best comedy se n es at th e 51 st Emmy Awards
Today's Birthdays: Actrns Irene Dadey is HO Acto r Di ckte M oore
("Our Gang") ts 75. Actor Freddie Jo nes ts 73 C ountry stn ger
George Jo nes 11 69 At tnr Jan H o lm 11 6'!

enter the n ailer except co retrieve a pack of
ctgarcttes under lm watchful eye.
Two hours later, Officer Sktdts return ed
w!lh a valid warrant. The search proceeded.
Pultce fou nd a smokmg ptpe and a small
quanttty of mariJUana T hey arrested
McArthur for drug possession , but before the
case could go to trial , M eAt thur moved to
suppress the ev1dence. His mot1on \Vas granted. Th e Appell ate Court of Il hno ts affirm ed,
th e stote appealed, and now the case ts scheduled for argument before the htgh co urt o n
Nov. I .
The case may sou nd t nvtal, but evtdently It
ts nor. T\venry-rhree states h.IVe JOined Illinois

James
Kilpatrick
UPS COLUMNIST
m askmg th e Supn~me Court td appmvt&gt; the

ofilcers' mnduct. They put t he question tillS
way:
"W hen pohce haw probable came to
bcheve certam co ntraband ts locatcd on p:lrtlcu laJ p1 emtses, do they ac t n.•Jsonably under
the Fourth Amendmem tf they sew re the
p re m1st•s from the o uts1 de and prevent anyone
from entering, incl udin g th e owner, during
the time It takes to obtam a scarc h warrant?"

The question goes to the heart of Fourth
A men dm e 11t JU r 1sp ru dl' 11 c l'.
Th e am e ndnll'nt does. not forbtd all seanhes and 1\&lt;..'IZurcs. Jr forbi ds o nly th ost· that .m:
"u nreasonable.''

Tht· state\ argument IS to th1~ etl'Cct.
Because of the tip provided by McArthur's
wtft•, the• Sullt van po li ce officers had abumlant
probable cause to bel ieve a crime had been
comm itted. The governmental mterest was
substantial. E'e n McArthur co nce ded th,tt tf
allowed to rc- t· nte r h1s house, he wo uld
destroy th e con traband T h e 1\tate contends:
"In dett'rtlllll lllg n: &lt;tso nablenc.' s~. we can

JSk, 'W hat else could t he police do here?'Thc
pohLe dtd nothtng more than was requtred
and neu:ss.1ry to .1ft-Cct a se1zu re based on
probable cau&lt;e
Inst ead b f bursttng 111 , on ly

to learn later th at no ex1gcnt Circumstances
justified thetr entry, these officers sctzed the .
restdence from the o utside, prevented
M cArthur from entering and immediately
so ught a se,trch warrant. T his was reasonable."
The shorr answer w rhe state's assertion IS
that a unammous panel of the Appellate
Court of IllinOi s found Love's conduct unreaso nable. At the beart of this rase, satd Justice ·
Robert Cook, 1s tht· preserv.Jttmt of cvt dcncc.
If pohre secure .1 dwelltn g, they prohtbtr the
d estrttctlon of the 'ought-attn evtdcnce. But

tfthcy secure the dwelling un iJ\,fully, the cvidet&gt;ee will be excluded.
At thr: he.trt oftht· (,Jse, m my own VICW,IS
the prl''\e rv.ttton of l1 berry Gr.lnt'ed. non e of
th e llldJvtdual right o; sccurL·d by the Co nstitu tJOn 1s .tn absolu tt· 11gh t. As the .lttorn cys general acknowledge 111 then bt tef, "The Fourth
Amendm ent prme~ples :u suke here present

no stu dy 111 black and white absolutes, but
operate in a gray zone that li es at th e margins
of establi shed doctn ne, and that nece&gt;S ttates
stnkmg a propet balance betwt'en mdtvtdual

bbt·rty .md sot l t'ty\

tnt tTesr 111 bw enforcement."
I would have g r.lllted th1.· m otiOn to sup-

press

Unttl th e moment Officer Sktdts

rt'turncd With

,t

wa1 r.J n t. MLArthur was enti-

tled to all the ptotecttom of th,· Fourth
Amendment. Hi' tratl c·r was lm castle Offi cet
Love had no busmesi\ lll SJd r.. · trs port.tb. Nuth mg m the ll'Cord ~uggt:~t~ tli.lt the J~fend&lt;1m
was a drug lord or ,1 lllCIJOr lkakr 111 manjuana lv1cArthur appe.trs to ha ve been 110 more
than a c,tsu.:d user, unhor:-;nl by .l dJslvlltt'lltcJ
w ife.
'

On balam e, I would l1.1ng ollto lm free do m

01

registra-

tion when she w,ts stopped Su nday mght
Her attorn ey dtd not immedia tely return a telephone call Monday from The Associated Press Her son, Rep. Patnck Kennedy, DR .I. , released a statement noung hts mother has lo ng struggled wtth
alcuh o hsm .
"What my mother dtd was wrong and she will pay a price for 11
through the legal system,'' he sa~ d . "However, my mother has always
been very supportive of me and I mtend to stand by her stde m thts
very dtfficult ttm e"
Sgt. Arthur Catado said police received a call at abo ut 8:30 p.m.
Sunday from a motorist reportmg a car be111g dnven erratically and
swerv tng over the cente r h ne

When police arnvcd, Kennedy was outstde the car, pohce said
She gave her name only as Joan and refused to gtve the officer any
oth er tdenuficatmn , poliCe s::nd.

Catado declm ed to comment on whether she was gtven any alcohol tests. She produced her dnver's license at the police station.
"S he was very pleasant and cooperative," Catado satd.

r~

Hey, baby boomers: Its about time to grow up
My hu sba nd an d I are sttll acceptable
company in our fifth -grader's eyes But our
days are numbered. Soon wt: won't undt'Tsta nd anything. The cut of our slacks and the
style of our shoes wtll be hornfymgly wrong
We'l l be an embarr,tssmcm stmp ly by bcmg
altvc
We know tim, .md yet it st tll wtll come ,Js
a shock. Our parents never exp ected to be
coo l forever. but we dtd We thought W&lt;'
would reconfil'ure the tradttional famtly

mg."
The study flo ored me . bm I guess it
sho uldn 't have. We are the first ge neration
faced with the question . from our duldren,
"Dtd you use dru gs'" We have three chotces

When th ey are handed a jmnt o r a tu mbler of
vodka at a party, we want th em to know we'll
be disappOinted Ill a poor demion, and we
want them to care th at we're disappomted If

111 answenn g We can &lt;;ay no. "J•./c can say yes,

children know wlut's .tccept.tble and what's
not ? What's d .mgerom and w hat 's nut?
I'm mll :tnuzed ar the number of pan.:~nrs
who allow thetr c htldre tl and thetr fnends to
drmk 111 the1r homr.::s. " At lc.t:-;r I kn o"W th ey're
not drivmg." un1.· moth &lt;.' r rold me . I wondered tf she really lwhewd th ,JI by allowmg

and th en descnbe the dangns. Or we can say
yes, and tell them tf they wan t to get !ugh ,
we' ll do It with them.
I know rhc r.ttlonaltzanon &lt;; for tlw; third
optton "Our k1c..h are gotn~ to try drugs Jnyway, so .H ka st Jt home we..· L&lt;lll makt' sure

dynamics and n ever be seen m out te t:n-

they

agers' eyes as the hopebs ktlljuys our parents

t1

y them s.1fcly." parent&gt; s.ty. Or they say

Uut that's the deal If yo u're the parent of

smukmg po t rogl'the r allow.;; d1e.• tlu\d ro see
the parem as,, buddy in whom rhc1r teen can
molT o penly confide

a teen- agl.'r, you're adopt· .md a tyrant for a

One 17- ye.n - o ld reL OVer111g addtct told

few years. So w tth a ttght JaW and sa mtly

re se arc..her~ h e \t,lrtt'd smokmg pot With his
farlwr tn hi ~ L'&lt;lrly tt•c..·n ~ The son thought the

we re ro

U l\

patten ce, you acc ept I t.
No&lt;\.v com e&lt;; a disturbtng \tudy that o;uggests many bab y boom parents d o n't accept
It. In a recent survey of llr...' arl y 60tJ teen - agers
111 drug rehabditatmn c..c..· ntns Hound the

country, 21 I percent sm l tlt t·y had used drU!-,'5
with th e ir pare nt ~!.

" They 'rc bu ying for thetr ktds. ' mokin~
po t ·..v1th thetr kids, mmg hcruw wtth th e 1r
k1ds." Dav1d Jlo\cnker, V I LL' pre ~ ldc..•t Jt of Mlo Jco;ce-nt servi ces at rhc C aro n Fo undati o n , &lt;!-

treatment program in Wern ersville, Pa., to ld
USA Today. "When I started (worktng with
yo uth ') m th e nnd- '711s. thts was not happe n-

father was "soooo cool." Then th e boy moved
on to hardc..·r drug..; on hts own . He has been
ll1 .md 0\lt o f drug relub and groups homes
,md hoot t .nnp&lt;i the h\ st two years.
" Parent" need ro realize it 's more bellcfi clal 111 th e long run for pan: nts to be parents,"
h e told .1 reportt' J. "Th e n· are enough pt.::ople
o tl t\Jdt: tdlmg w; that tlnn g-. th&lt;tt arc.:· nor OK
,He..' ( )K P,l lt' llt'i need ro lw a ~ilft'r y zo ne..·"

Aj I watch my child grow up. I become
rnore aware every day that our job as porcnts
11 to be that safery zone. to wt tlw standards
\O o ur c hddn:' n w11l m ake go od dcc i '\ 1 0 11 ~

we don't set clear c..·xpectatiOm, how wil l our

her son to dnnk ,lt home , shr...' W,\s dtsl ouraging hun from dnnktng ~:: l s ewhere . \Vhat she
d1d, It 'icemcd to llll', was let hun know that
drinktng 1 ~ OK for someone h1 s .tge .
Stcvt· Dmstrian . exec utiVt' v1cc..· president
of the Partn~.:.·rsltip tOr a Drug- Fret• Ameri ca,

' hakes illS head ,It p.1ret1ts who say thetr ktds
.ne .g:otng to ~mukt' .md Jnnk anyway so tht'y
lllay as well do 1r ar h onlt...' " That's ltkl.' ~ettmg:

the standard at C ,' ' he s.tys. " So don 't be surprised if they COI!I&lt;' hol!l e .and tdl you
they' vl' snorted r ucamt• or dropped acid. ·

You 'w op ened the do or."
It 's dtffi cult to help .1 child g.rnw up tf we
ha ve n 't g:row u up o ui -;c,:l vt· ~.

ttl

ljvcm l&lt;.y1m 1s rJ HJ ft1111r11 sr for rite S.111 FramtsChnmirlt•. Sr~~tl ( (11/mJt'lll.l -t o her;, rnre of rhis

w· w~JM}Jt'r

or

.JOall ryrrtl.!&amp;atr. w m )

'

Sl'lld

It a

r-mail -

at

And Albnght. wdconung Sund.1y's deCJ-

one (leader) wtll come to liberate them."
Borak, under fire from opponents of the

Js

succc~sor

ston by the l'alcsunc..• Li ber.mon Org:~mza ­
tlon 's Centra l CounCJl. acknowledged Monday that Amcn ca n mc..·d1 .1£1on L'iTorts .m: 111 a

WASHINCTON (AI') -

Supportl'rs of tli.IJ llf lcgi~Lltlnll to pnm.mc:.·mlv nornnh zt• tr.idc..· \\ Hh
Ch 111.1 g 1rd~.·d. for .I k~.._•\' \'Ott...' 011
lm kmg traJr...· r~.·btt&lt;Hl" tn Chm.1 ·~
obcy i ~lg we .1pom pru lll(:r.ltwn
,J g ret:mcnt~ .

s~m

Fred

Th om~~Oil,

R-

am e ndment to th e trade bill outhmn g san ctions on fon:tgn Cl'lllpames and n.ttioib that dc.:al 111
wcJpons of ma"s d t&gt;s trucnon
Thompson sa1d 1t w.1s wrong- to

do away wtth U.S. trade leverage
over C hma w he n "they aie cng.:tgmg 111 acnvm es th at post a mortal
danger to the welfare of tim coun try."

Hts amendment is opposed by
both the admmtstration and Senate backers of the tra de btll , who
argue that umlatera l sanctio ns
don 't work and that approval of
any amendment could effectivel y
scuttl e chances for passage thts
year.

The H ouse pmed the trade bill
by a 237- 197 margm last M&gt;y, bu t
tt's unclear w hether the House has
the ttme or the votes to approve
any Senate changes before Cong ress adjourns next month.

Sen. Max Baucu s. D-Mont. , a

Jn 1972, Osono was convicted of embezzlmg $64 1,000 from an

CONCORD. N H

(AI')

Colll cullct"tllf" .1round tht'
countr) wou ld IIkt• tn lu\'L' rite
H.. L~v M .1rnn Lurhl.'r K1ng Jr.

FLINT. M1ch (AP) - A !llJn 1ccused oflctttng ,, 6-s·ear -nld bov
get h1 ' h.lt lll ~ 1H l tllc..' gun l11.· ,dlc..·gcdly u~cd cu k1ll.l til,t - g t.ld l.' LJ.l,,nUtL' \\ ',1' 'L'I Ik'lh l'd MlHtd,ly tn f\\ '0 l t l 1 i Vt'.tr~ 111 pr1 ~ 01 1
j,1111 L'l k· 1.llll l''· ::!(1, \ \ ,\' ch .trgL· d \\'Jth lc .l\'lllg .1 .Y:! -c1hbL'r li L'IIlLH l101111\I l p1 ' tol Ill .1 ~ hnd, ox 111 lw;, bc..· Lilno m . Poii L'r. .' s,l\' .1 bo 'v hnn g
111 till· h oml' hold to o k thr...· gun to ~c..l mol .md shut K .1~l.1 Rl ,Jb nd o n

Feb

~ (J

J.l11\t.,.'\ p lL' ,Il l,_·lllll l l Cl l\tt...'\ [ \ ,\,{ lll0Jl [ h [() 111\'tlhlll[.lf\' lll ,lll" l,ll lg h tl' l
" I! ,.lndJ l. ltt'" t h1 . , htt k g 11fs d c .lth," pros~clltorArthm Bu "t h 'd i d
Ar !11 \ \L' I lt c..' ll i. IIt g .J .tnlc ~ .1po logtzcd to Kayb's f.uhc:r '' ( ' 111 ~ orry
1bm1 t Lh L' In'' nf hi' d:n 1ghtc..•r I knmv I've got to do 111) tllll L'"
The..· h()\. \\ ·.1'· II\ 111 g \\'lth j.1mcs m \\'hat pro.-.r.. • c utor'l d ~.· . . r. . nbeJ .h
.1 tlophm;'ll' '' hc..· rr.. · .g Ull S .11_
1d dru gs w e re excln ugt.'d Th e boy\
n1oth r. .• r h.t d hcc p L'n cted frt..Jlll hn hc..HH L' .md lud le ft th t' bon .H
d te hml "t' .1 \\ t...'(" k hcfi , tc..• t11t' o;h oo rm g.

btU , it wtll kill PNTR"
No time had bee n set for a vote

precepts of the Old Testament
H e has satd he would Invit e the ITl lin
opposino n p.:trty, Ltkud, and other cnncs
mto lu s govet nme-nt to try w gam support
for l secubr domesti C :tgenda
That would di!lii!I JSh pc .ICl.' prospL·cts
even f•Ir..thcr ~111 c e Likud oppo ~ t· s r omt's -

sJOns to the Pakstmun s

U.S. residents have degrees
WASHIN&lt;; I ON

(AI')
Forc1gn-bor11 rc . . IJt•nts of rhc
Umteci St.ltt' ~ ar~ .1bout .t s hkd v
.ts othc1 Ament ,\ m to be..· 1. ollegr...·
~raduarc.' bur the one\ who

~ion't h:~\·e dr...~grecs

lL:JJ

to

l1L'

on the .uneudtnent. On Tul'sday

less cduc..ated th.:tn lht.: r~s[ of tht•
pnpubuon

last week

Tlw Untted States l11 d 21, 1

defea ted

sevl!ral

attempts

to

change the btll, vores on an
amendment offen:~d by Sen
R.obert Byrd, D-WVa. , requnin g
C hma to dtsclose how It ts meetmg its co mnlitment to the World

Trade Orgamzation to end subsidies to state e n terprises that export

goods
C hina is making final prepara tions to join the WTO and failure
of Congress to grant permanent
trade srarus would depnve Amenca n busmesses of the lower tanfE
China has agreed to as part of Its
WTO accessiOn.
Business groups that avtdl y support the trade btll say it wtll stgmftcantly mcrease U S. exports to
C hma, whiCh now enjoys a trade
su rplus of near $70 btllion a year.
The bill ts o ppos ed by labor
gro ups and groups c rmca l of
C hma 's human ng:hts record

the rcltg1ou s

nui] IOIJ foie1g11-horn residents
Ltsr year, d1 c ( ·~.· n~u s Bun: au

reported Mond ,ty
The bureau &gt;.ud 25 4 percent
had a bachc•lur's degree or htgh er. T lut compares to :25 2 pcrcent of n at 1v1.~-born Amenca ns
w tth degrees
There are also w1de varianons among th e fi)re1 gn born .

"For exa m ple, th e proportion
wtth a bachelor's degree o r
htgher ranged from 45 percent
among mtgrants from Asta to 11
percc..:nt among those from Laun

th ,lll ;1 1111\th - ~ll d t...' l 'd ll\ , J{j()Jl,
(O!llp.uTd \\lth I tn ~j t t ll rh L·
IL'"t of th r.. · ~=i - 111 d - o\·L'I JHlpul.• tlOII

Th e BurL·.tu \ protilc of toJ t'lgn- bOI 11 Il' "Jdcnts ,,\ ~ o rr...·pot t t•d th.n ·
- l hl.' L1rgr...:.,t ~h.u c. 34 1 pcr(t:llt, tOml.' frnm cl' lltr.l l Alllt...'r JL.I
I l l( ludlllg rv1c..·xtco
Other
.:trr...·:"\S of on gm :If(_' A\ t.l 'l.7 1 ·
perccm Europe. 1( J l PL' rccnt';, _
C.u1bb r...·an, 1(1 . 3 pt'rc em , Soud1
Amcn c:t. h l pL' IU'I lt ,md otht...'t'.
(1.2 pcrccn c
(
- The \X/est 1s h01n e to t h t'
.'
most fore ign-born. 39.3 pcrcc-rlt

of the total, followed by th,f."
South, ~6 5 percent: Northeast,
23 9 percent and the M tdwest,
I 0 .1 percent.
-T he lon ~e r a fnretgn-bor.n
pc..~rsntl ha &lt;;, been hcrl' the mor'e ·

Amenca,'' said An gela ,Bntttng- hk dy h e or slw is to be :t c ttizcn.
Some 7R X perCt' tH nf rhosc'
ham. the report's author.
T h e report satd that abou t 4 who Jrt I\Cd befurc I ()7(1 luv~
obt:tincd CltiZr...'nslup The ntl' ts
111 10 foreign-born adul ts had a
htgh school dtploma only, com- 5~ 8 pl'l le nt fm th mc ,!IT IVlllg
pared wtth more th an (&gt; 111 10 m the 1970s .wd ~:. 7 percent
for other Jdults Nea rly 1 m 4 of fo r tho~c who L.llll t...' h vll' 111 t h L'
th e fore tgn - born adults had less 1980s.

., ·~

~\\I ~,;o.'\\\' i'
·~ \i\ c:Ala.hmn.dL {J,dj
31 milts of coas tline
stretc hing from Mublle to
Gul f Shores an d Orange ou ~:: h
'\·
Incl ude sug arv -whlte buc h e~
' ~ '1. i(,
.~ ha de't by Ndt JOnl,l Geograpltl~::
!t as some of th~ worl d's most
11
buut 1ful shoreline .

.

~11

' .,;f,
'·';)·'

·~ ~

/,/,,

~

1.800.745.7263
wwv.. .g ulf s hor~ s co m

rhL·Jr puLk("t'\
The ~.- 1\ · 1 1 ng!tr... IL'.1dcr .llld
rwo fi.1rmer prc~ 1 Jl'Ilt~ Wl'rl.' the
top VlJtt·-get tl'n Ill .1 ll.lti OltJ l
survey a~kmg colkdors whom
they wou ld hkt• to "l'L' dep icte d
on COi ll S
The co llt:rtors' su gges tion s
ran ged from Jc~us Chii St ro rhc
presidents ,ls \\'l'll ,l , ,1\rron .uHs,
:tc t resscs. artl ,.t'i , ba~L'h.1ll players.
ptOneers a nd .1 k111g Elv1s
Preslcv
"We'rt&gt; hop 1n g 1f we..· ca n get
e nough exposure. we 1111 gh t start
a groundswdl tOr some rt&gt;\·t~lons
to our po c ket clunge." s;ud
D.lVid Sund n"IJII , prr...'sidcnt of

Littleton C()JI1 Co. of Littleton ,
N H . wh1ch conducted th e sur-

l)llL' 'I tJOJlll .III L' '-

Man gets 2·15 years

lllll nul tr.1dc relations, said
.1pprov.1J of th e Thompso n .lmenJl l K'llt \HJuld br...· ·' "gr.l\'l' m1st:tkr...·"
tor the n.ltlon "lt w tll scnnusl)·
d.unage 1m port.m£ Amertc.lll elo nonuc mtL'rests and 1f added to the

the Senate, whtch

ll1

m.ul 111

pnt

L.(\np.:tlgn fin :m cc repornng:. open records and open meeungs .

course desp 1tc lts grounding

Rnn.tld ll.e.1g.Jn .tnd H.m \' Ttu -

l'arltcr tht s year. former Dallas Cowboys star Thomas "Hollywood · HL"ndc..· r~on. who wrec ked h1s football career Wtth drug ll"l'
.uhl bnttnmcd oul 111 p 1 1~on, won a $28 tmllton Texas lottery pt·k -

A former rex as .1ttorney general was also charged .Ill the scand.:tl
bm w,1s not nmvtct~d The ca:-.e led to reforms in laws govn nmg

butldtng bndges m'&lt;'r the ck cp ""tal J11·tck
between our peoplt•," he [Old Jewt ~ h k .tc..kl ~
111 New York
H1 s plan 1s to take Israel on a sec ular

A quarter of foreign-bom

k .1dmg su pporter of perm.ml'n £

' '(~'• '

vey th.tt \va~ u1mpleccd open ended. \\ 1th n o nominees su ggested by th.: nmtp .m )
"En·n thou g h Abc lm nlln
was .1 g rc..• ;l t g uv, rhL' (pe nny)
des1 gn 1s LOilllllg up o n ,1 u·ntu 1y tn .1 few yr...· .:tr s." he :&gt;!.lld.
The t'omp.l11 )' po ~ t ni th e ~ ur­
, .'-'Y on It\ Wch ~ nc .tnd ' l' IH

Bec.ll!se of th e I 971 &gt;Canda l, nearly all ht gh-ranktng DemocratiC
sure offi l :.,Is were voted out of office m 1972

hel d out to Arafa t, mdt cated Sunday he ts
runnmg out of steam, as well

' ' If 1t tllfm out th.1c pc..·.Jc.. c ~ ~ a drc..' ,llll
whose t11ne llJ s not r e t ( Oil h .:, t hen I am prl'parcd to transft·r my full t(H. m and e ncrb')' tD

~-~.0 ' ~~...\\

Three Stou~es .111cl lllcludeJ 33

msurancc ~.- un 1 pany's pension fund . Osono was a bustnessm an at the
tune He se rved 14 months ll1 pnson.
Osono. now a lawyer 111 the Dallas area, was Texas m suran ce commissiOn e r from 19:;5 to 1957.

vast t~rra o n a l and othe-r concessions he ha s

Key votes ahead on China bill

Ex-con wins S&amp;O million
AUSTIN , Texas (AI') - A former Texas msurance commissiOner
w ho went to pnson tn the 1970s for a pensiOn fund scam that
rocked state govet nment stepped forward Monday to claun a $60
milhon lottery pc kput.
·
John OsoriO, w ho IS 111 hts late 70s, ana the woman he is shar.mg
the J.tekpu t wtth presented the ticket at the Texas Lottery Commtsston before bemg wlusked away. The ticket must be validated before

"There ts a difftcult roJd
ahead," she satd a( a nt&gt;ws conferen ce.
The counCil, meettng tn Gaza Ctty,
backed off from a pledge to declare statehood by Wednesday, the deadltne set last year
by .Barak and Arafat for a se ttlement.
The 129-member group then adjourned
for rwo months, deferring tn the dnve for
statehood to Arafat. Now 71, the only leader
th e Pal esumans have known in the Israe l era

yet undestgnat-

dnve for Je rusalem to h1s

ed

tough patch

said that If h e cannot w rest Mu shm shnnes
m J eru salem f1om Israeli _control , "Jnothe r

domestiC needs, Arafat possibly to defer his

King, Reagan,
Truman lead
choices for new
coin designs

the two are declared the \\'mners.
BY JOAN RYAN

ready to turn a page -- Bank w fo cus on

NEW YORK (AP) - Desptte the uncertain legaltry of the Napster online mu sic-sharing servtce, the number of people usmg tt
more than quadrupled m JUSt five months, Media Metnx sa td M onday
That made Napster the fastest-g rowmg software app hcatwn ever
recorded by the Internet research company.
Napster use rocketed to 4.9 million home users 111 th e Umted
States tn July. from 1 1 nullt on 111 February, the first month Medta
Metnx tracked the appli ca tion .
T h at represents 6 percent of US home PC users who have..·
modem~. Mr...·di.l Mctn x s.ud Medta Mernx pay-; people to msull
momtoring soft\\ .m: on tht.·ir compllterS .md esum.Hcs tot.tl ll 'i ,tg1.·
li o m .1 s.lmpk of .&gt;bout 50,000 peop\1' 111 the Umted States .
N.1pster \l',ts .&gt;lso med at \lork by ~87.000 people m July. Medta
Mcrnx &lt;;,u d
N.lp,ter In c l1.1s been StJt•d by t he record1n g m dusrry fi:,r all eged1~ r...'tublmg copynght mfnugcment The fc..·derJI govc rn1neilt
wc tgh cd 111 on the osc: Fnday. saying the se rvice 1s not prott•cted
under .1 key l."opynght 1.1\v, as the San Mateo, CJ!if., co mpany cl:u ms.
The N.:tp stl'r prngn111 .:tllows u sers m copy dlgltJlimi ~K fil e..·\ from
th~· lnrd dnvr...·s of other users over d1e lnte r ner.
N.tpsrer Inc ,,,tJ l.tst week that ~8 nulhon people had down ]o,tdeJ w; prot:;:r.Jm It docs not reveal 1ts own fi gures for how many
people ,Ktu.t ll y US&lt;' the software.

cl ClJ/u mmst fin Ull wt'r!ial
•

RYAN'S VIEW

NEW YORK {AI') - Secretary of State
Madeleme Albrtght sees some pre.Jthtng
room for U S. dtploma cy Ill a deCision by
the Palestimans' leaders to postpone for two
month s the declaration of a sta te.
With an unyteldtng deadlock in negotiations between Israel and the Palesttmans,
however, Prime MiniSter Ehud Barak and
Yasse r Arafat are showm g stgm they are

Use of Napster quadruples

and IN the 111Jfljll,l!1a go

lja111e5 ). Kilpatruk
Pre.&lt;s Sy11df(arc J

Albright sees breathing r~om for U.S. diplomacy.:

Tenn . 111d Rubert Torm c·llt. DN.J., on Monday propr,ed .Ill

Joan Kennedy arrested

under tht~ mfluence and to refusmg to provide a li cense

The Daily Sentinel - Page A 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

lt l

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ly the Bend

PageA6

_Th_e_D_a_il=-y_se_n_tin_e_l_ _ _ _ _

TUesday. September 12. 2000

•.•. • ~

Inside:

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
messages and destroyed his abiliry-to trust
me. As you can see, he is very clever at
twisting thinll' around. I need help to
defend myself. -- lnga in Amsterdam
Dear Inga: Lars is trying to play the
old ga me called " Blame the Victim ."
Don't let him get away with it. The marriage failed became he had an affair.Your
catc hin g him did not break up th e matriage. It was his cheating and lying that
ruined the relJtionship, and you should

not let him forget it.
Dear Ann Landers: You printed a
letter from a woman who overheard her
husband and mother-in-law argumg. The
mother-in-law md the new wife wasn't
•
respectable because she · had tric ked her
son into marriage by getting pregnant.
When the new wife told her husband
how upset she was, he told her to "get
over it." You later printed a sill y response
from "Bedford," who said this woman
will never get over it -- she needs cou nsehng, and so on, and her husband was a
mama 's boy.
I don't see a manu's boy here. I see a
m an who was telhng his wife to grow up
and beconw a woman and a partn e r. My
mother thought the woman I marned
wasn 't good enough for me, and she l&lt;t
everyone know how she felt . When the

childn:n C.lllh' =l.iong, my mother began
to see how dc:vbted :md compete nt my
wife: \\':IS ••md tht:'y bc c\111L' Vl'TY good

friends . In my mother's final years, my
wife was her major source of comfort.
That relationship took time to evolve,
and it did so because my wife and I were
mature enough to realize that marriage
often comes with difficulties that need to
be worked out. Couples must learn to
cope with hurt feelinll', because those
bruises become part of the total experience that will bring you closer together.
Tell those women who "can't get over it"
to grow up. -- Been There in Virginia
Dear Va.: YOU told them -- and I
thank you. Yo»r letter reflects maturity
and insight.
_
Dear Ann Landers: I was extremely
interested in the lett&lt;r from the man who
qmt smolung by chewing mint-flavored
candy canes . He sa1d it was the mint that
did the trick . You told him candy canes
could wreck his teeth, and suggested he
try mint-flavored sugarless gum instead.
Ann , some people cannot use ~ugar

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Quilt show set for EXPO
POMEROY - A quilt show to be judged with pnzes awarded will
be a feature of the 2000 Meigs Counry Town and Country EXPO to
b e sta ged this weekend at the Rock Sprin!l' Fairgrounds.
Again thiS yea r flunny Kuhl is chairman of the show. She a~ked that
anyone mterested in displaying a quilt bring 1t to the senior fair building on the fmgrounds on Friday, 4 to 7 p.m. Quilts of all· sizes will be
jccepted . Anything for sale can be marked, Kuhl said, although she
noted that a percen!Jge of the sale price will go to the EXPO co mmlttee.
There is no entry fee to exhibit a quilt nor is their any admission to
th e EXPO.
The quilts will be judged and prizes of$50 for first, $40 for second,
$30 for third, and $20 for fourth, and $10 for fifth will be awarded.
Se lected will be done by ballot by t~e people visiting the show. The
winners will be announced late Sunday afternoon, before the 5 p.m
closing time.
Those bringing in quilts will be asked to fill out a form with their
name address , phone number and design of the quilt, and each one will
be given a number which will be used in the judging. When quilts are
p1cked up on Sunday night, owners will be required to identifY their
quilts, and sign a receipt that they got their quilts back.
Kuhl said that there will be plenry of security. The senior building
will be lockeat night, as will the gates to the fairgrounds, and a security guard will be on dury. This is the fifth year for a quit show at EXPO.

Englund added to staff
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer C linic announces the addition of Invasive Cardiologist Michael A. Englund, D.O.
Englund co mpleted his Cardiology Fellowship at Marshall Uni-

vc:-rsity 111 Hun tington . His resldenc y was completed at O hio
University, Grandview Hospital,
Dayto n, Ohio, where· he was the
Chief Med1nne Resident .
-Englund was awarded his
d oc to r.ate degree from the
W es t Virginia
School
of
Osteopathic
Medicine
in
Lewisburg, wh e re he graduate d c um la ude . He graduated
.
magna cum laude wah a Bache lor of Science degree in Biology from the University of
C harl eston. ·
Englund r~ ce ived the "Caring Spirit Award" from Cabell
Englund
Huntington Hospital and was
awarded the W est Virginia Academic Scholarship in 1993 and 1994 . He was also on the
Dean's List 8 out of 8 terms while 111 his undergraduate stud-

.

ies.
Englund is a member of the Amencan Osteopathic Association , Ameri ca n College of Osteopathic Internist , American
Medical Association , Am e ri can C ollege of Cardiology and the
Ameri ca n Heart Association .
Englund and his wife, C h e ry l. have two c hildren , Rachael
and Michael.
Englund is now accepting new patients in the new CardioPulmonary Rehab Ce nte r o f the Charles E . Holzer, Jr.,
M .D. Ambulatory Surgery Center at Holzer C linic .
To schedu l e an appointment . ca ll 740-446-5348.

SOCIAL SECURITY COLUMN
Social Securiry. It's really helpfi1l -be p.1id
a family. The limit
Social Security benefits.
Social Security has always in my fin ancial plannin g. Now vam's. but:it is generall y equal to
encouraged wise financial plan- th at I have estimates of what my abou t 150 to 180 percent of your
encourages
ning and savingsli nvesnn ent, rNireme nt , dis;1bi li ty and su r- (the worker's) benefit rate . If the
si nce Soctal Se curity was
benefits \vi ii be,
curi - &lt;cun of the benefits payabl e to
personal savings ever
first conceived. It was deSigned ous w·h nt the aver;lgt' person gets yo ur f:11nily members IS gre.lter
to

Vlvors

BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER IN ATHENS

An o lder ge ntlcman, JUSt about
ready fo r renre men t. stopped by
my office last week to disc uss his
futurt· Social Security benefit.
He was very co ncc: rn!!d that the
amount would be affected by
some vc:-ry lu cra tive 1nvestments
he had mad e over the years. '
H e was quite reheved to learn
that hi s good investment strategies would not affec t h11 rettrem ent

benefit amount.

Althou gh Social Security does
co nside r wages when you work
for someone else or net earnings
if you are self-e mpl oyed, we do
not co u n t non-work income
such as investrnent ea rnings,
interest, pensions, ann uities, ca pital ga ins and other government

to be one part of a " three - legged
stool" that could support a co m fortable retirement . In fact,
Social Security now offers two
tools that should make financ .ial
planning a part of every American worker' s life: a Social Security Statement (which is mailed
out to workers age 25 and older
three months before their birthday) and a Retirement Planner
(which can be found on Social
Security's website, www.ssa.gov),
To help ·yo u plan your financ ial future, chec k out our webSite
or call our toll-free number, 1800-772-1213.
Social Security
Questions and Answers
Q. I recently received my
Social Security Stateme nt from

I'm

benefits. C;t n you tdl me \\' hat
the average benefit amounts arc?

ll1

A. For t he yea r 2000, th e
average m on thly Social Secu nty
be nefits are as fo llow s: re ti re d
wo rker, $804; retired co upl e,
$1 ,348 : disab led worker, $754;
disabled worker With a spouse
and c h ild, $1 ,255; widow (er),
$749;young widow{er) w ith two
childre n, $1,611.
Q. If I d1e, would my survivors
receive Social Security benefits
on my record' How mu c h could
they get'
A. Your surv ivo rs would
receive a pe rce ntage of your
basic Sooal Securiry be nefitusually in a range from 7 5 to 100
pe rcent each. H oweve r, th ere is a
limit to the amount o f monthly
Social Securiry benefits th at can

Red-hot fashions sizzle on Emmy red carpet
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Debra Messing, Stockard
Channing and Molly Shannon shimmered in red satin
dresses on the red carpet at Sunday's Emmy Awards.
Can,ryn Manheim defied the sizzling temperatures in
gray flannel.
N o one color or style dom.inated the pre-Emmy
f.lShJOn parade that runs second o nly to Oscar night as
Hollywoud's biggest excuse to dress up.
M essing, nomin:.tcd for lcadmb U)medy actress 1n
" Will &amp;· Grace," accc·ssorized her strapless red ball
gown with new husband Daniel Zelman. She showed
him off ,IS much ;u, other actrcssc" d1splaycd th1.·1r borrowed 11ullion-doU&lt;1r JCWdry.
M.mhl'llll. st;~r of ''The Pracnr~." \Vorkcd her \\";ty
throu gh "tht.• g; ndlock of u.:k·brHH.'!I .1 ml pub!it·lsts tlllt'i ide tb'-· Shnnl' Auditorium 111 a long gr,ty fl.mnl'i dn:ss
.md m.uching \\'r,tp by R .tlph L:~ur~.·n .
" l lih· to be cu mng L'dgc." IV1an h..:Jill :-..tid. " I put this
on ,tt .2 : ~1 .md I \\",1,., ht'TL' at J:JO.Till\t' m.uug:~..·mcnt ."
. Ne\1'1)~\l'ds Bwt I'm mJ Jenmfer Ani,ton ..1 firstnnw Em111y nonunel· fi1r "Fru..'JHi,:· drl'w snt&gt;.tm~ from
fnns m the coupk\ first m.~1w· Holl ywood .1ppe.ua11CC'
.;;tno: thc1 r Jtdy

\\"1..·dding.
Amsron dw ..,~,..· .1 lnng 'i.t lmon s.ltl n gown ;\nd wore
hn long: h:ur -.,tr.light - .1 dunge frnm lase )'l:.tr's piles

of curl!&lt;. .
Patrici:t He.1to11 hardlv Tl''icmbkd the housewtfe -

mom she plays on " Everybody Loves Raymond."
Heaton 's body- hugging, low-cut dress featured yellow
stitched flowers and silver beading with bla ck bra
straps. A platinum-and-diamond cross hu ng around h er
neck.
" ( .dress this way when I go to rehearsal and I have
to take it off when we tape," she joked.
Jane l ceves of"Frasier;· who is expenmg .1 baby m
Ja~uary, wore a simpl e deep-purp le long dtt·ss held up
by a single spaghetti strap that formed a V
'
Several ca~t mem.bers of "Survivor" un\'t·J scparatdy .md r~ce t ved some of the loudesr dlt.'L'r'i . R.udy
Boesch, Gervase Peterson and tnilhon -doUar wl nm·r
RichJrd H atch strode th e red carpet \\"L',Iflng m orL'
clothe~ r\un rhcy c\·c:r did dunn~ tht.•tr J'il.uH..l .h.h-cnt\ 111.'

" It \n~ .1 madhouse:· s.11d 13uL·~ch. the L'X-N.t\'Y Sc:.1l
who w;\s ,lL"\.' omp:ulic:d by hi~ WlfL' M.wg;t'. " IJ H.:n: r sc~..·n
noth111g likL· n."
PL·tL;r.,.nn wore ,\ black mx~..·do. but p(H!ltc.:d out tlut
h~s '\1 \\'t."r hoop L\lrnng ami ~dvn \\",ttch \\"L'rL' h1~ own
'T m JUSt so;1kmg up tht: fcstiviucs:· h . .· ~.ud. "Who
\\'lltdJ\1: ewr thought I could be hcrt·'"
And..., l3raughcr of " Homicide " lud tlw be&gt;t perspt.'L"tivc: on his fashion role .H th~ E11m1y ...
"Thts is an evening for the ladies." l1e &gt;.ntl. "We men
art the b.tckdrop to the stunning outfit,."

than t his !unit, the benefits to
yo ur fannly will be redu ced pro portionatel y to fall within the
family max unum . To gee an estima te o f your n:cirement, disability or survivors benefits , you ca n
visic o ur web site at \vww.ssa.gov
or ca ll our toll-free numb er, 1R00-7721213, and request a
Social Secunty Statement.

substitutes. May I suggest something that
worked for me? I bought hundreds of
mint-flavored tooth~icks, and pretended
they were cigarettes. It put an end to my
smolung, and I didn't have to worry
about my teeth. -- Larry in Canton ,
Ohio
Dear Larry: Mint-flavored toothpicks' They sound like a great idea, and
should be fairly easy to find . Thanks for
the clue-in.
When planning a wedding, who pays
for what ' Who stands where' " The An n
Landers Guide for Brides' has all the
answers. Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envdopt' and a check or mon ey
order for $3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Landers.
P.O. Box 11562. C h1cago, Ill. (&gt;06110562. (In Ca nada. send $4.55.) To find
out ntore about Ann Landers and read
her pa~t columns, visit the Creators Syndi cate \Vl'b page at www.creah1rs.com.

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR
TUESDAY
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of ElectiOns,
Tuesday, 9 a.m . board offices in
Meigs County Annex.

RACINE -

Benetit for

ca nce r vic tim Don Hupp, SJturday begining adt 1 p.m . adt
the American Legion h all in

RACINE - Ra c in e Board
of Public Affairs, Tuesday, 7
p.m ., Racine Municipal Buildmg.

Ra cin e.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Band Boosters,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . at Eastern
High School band room .

Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter,
DAR, Saturday, noon lun -

POMEROY - Immuniza tion Clinic, Meigs County
Health Department, 9 to 11
a.m . I to 3 p.m. Take shot
records; parent/ guardian to
&gt;.ccompany child. Donations
appr&lt;ci&gt;.ted, not required .

and grave markinll', weather

SATURDAY
POMEROY
R eturn

cheon at Crows, followed by
meeting at Pomeroy Library
permitting.

TuEsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Sports
Volleyball
Monday's Matches
River Valley del. Fairland, 15-4,
15-9
Gallia Academy def. Chesapeake,
15-3, 15-1
Beaver Eastern del . South Gallia,
9-t5. 15-7, 15-12
Minford del . Galli a Academy, 15·8,
15-12
Eastern del. River Valley, 15-7, 915, 15·9
Eastern del. Fairland, 15-9, 15-5
TOday•a Matches
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 5:15
Athens at River Valley, 5:15
Chesapeake at Ohio Valley Christian , 5:30
Southern at Meigs, 5 :55
Eastern at Wellston, 5:55
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia,
6 :00

RACINE

Reunion ,

dar 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 .

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.

992-2156

OVERBROOK
CENTER'S

C HARLOTTE (AP)- Geoftrey Bodine is 44th in the Winston Cup standi nil' ,
has only 12 starts on the year, and doesn't
have a single top- 10 finish.
Now the 191l6 Daytona SUO champion
is out of a job.
Bodin e, who missed the seaso n's first 10
Winston Cup races while «covering from
a fiery crash in a C raftsman Truck race at
Daytona, was let go M onday as a driver for
J oe Bessey Motorspom.
Bessey, an occasional driver on the
Busc h Grand N ational series, called l3 odine and told him he would take over the
car for the remaining nine Winsto n C up
races this season .
" I was flabbergast ed," said Bodin e, who
has 1~ career Winston Cup victories.

Team manager Mark Sti nson said he
preferred to let Bessey discuss the decision . Bessey, who previously suggested he
might drive the ca r h imself next season,
was not available for com ment.
Still , l3odin e th ought he would remain
with the team thro ugh the end of this season ,
" We had an agreement to run the
whole year and h e just not too lo ng ago
asked m e if I was goin g to drive for him
the rest of th e year," Bodin e said. "'So I
though t we had every thing under control."
Bo din e, 51 , is n ot sure what he will do
the rest of th e year.
" I had been talking t o team owners
about next year, but now I am going to

start looking for the rest of this ye ar," he
said. "'But I don't believe there are any
opportunities, so this is not a real good
tim e for this to be happening ."
Bodin e, _w ho was in his second season
dnving for Hessey, was . nearly killed on
Feb. 18 when his truck was 'p inched
against the outside wall at Daytona,
became airborne and burst into flame) as
it rolled.
Bodin e was hospltalized with a concussion and broken wrist , ankle and vertebra,
but he was able to return to racin g 2 I / 2
month s lat er.
He said that accident, and Bessey's failure to land a spo nsor for next year, caused
the team 's stru ggles.
" He h ad been looking for sponsorship

~sSoccer

Monday's Match
Northwest 3, Ohio Valley Christian

3
TOday's Match
Point Pleasant at Jackson, 5 :30

Thursday's Match
Point Pleasant at Huntington St.
Joe , 5:30

7th Annual
October 7, 2000

•

Fun for All Ages... And FREE To the Public
Enterf:Ainm¢nt includes Bill Bend Cloggers, NWA Professional
Wre;itlinl&amp;, Meigs County Biker Association Displaying
Their Bikes.
Arts &amp; Craft Show By Local Cralters ( 10 am - 4 pm)
Delicious Food prepared by staff including Homemade Apple
Butter, Cooked Beans, Fried Potatoes, Cornbread and
all the Fixinsl

DAYV
\

~
"A Celebration of Life"
33 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio

740-992-6472

Football

Friday's Games
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 7:30
River Valley at Point Pleasant,
7 :30
South Gallia at Symmes Valley,
7 :30
Southern at Alexander, 7 :30
Wahama at Ravenswood , 7:30
Marsh Fork at Hannan, 7 :30

·-t.

Saturday's Games
Meigs at Newark Catholic, 3:00
Parkersburg Catholic at Eastern,
7:30

Mei~·Newark

catholic
tickets on sale

ROCK SPRINGS - ,Pre-sale
tickets are now on sale fur thi s
Saturday evenings game between
M eigs and Newark Catholic at
Newark. The tickers are available
in the main office at M eigs High
School from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.
thro ugh Friday afternoon .
Ticket pri ces are $4 for adu lts
and $2 for students. Mclb". retain s
.all proceeds from pre-sa le tickets.

UNDATED The Mei gs
eighth -grade volleyball team has
open ed the season with a 3-1
record.
They started the season w ith a
15- 12. 15-13 w in over Gallia
Academy's eight grade. M egan
Garnes, Samantha Pierce. and Justine D owkr had two aces eac h.
Garnes reco rded two kill s.
In th eir second con test, they
lost to Vinton Hou nry 15-1 1, 1511 . Felicia Stumbo ha d two aces.
They rebo und ed t o defeat Federal H ocki ng 15-9 and 15-6.
In their m os t n:cent contest,
they beat Alexand er 17-15 and
15- Ill. Garnes record ed two aces
and a kill .
The seventh grade squad stan ds
at 2-2. They open ed the seaso n
with a loss to Calha Academy.
They won the first game 15-6,
but Gallia talli ed 16-14 and 15- J 0
wins to take th e match.
l3nttany H yse ll led Meill' with
seven aces.
T h ey lost both games to Vinton
County, 15-9 and 15-12 . Saman tha Co le and Joey Hani ng eac h
recorded two act·s an d a kill .
They evened their record with
wins over Federal H oc king and
Alexander. Against Ho cking,
H ani ng recorded three ace~ and
H yse ll tallied two aces as th ey
won 15- 1 ami 15- l .
Against Alexander. they tallic,t
15- H and 15- 9 wins. Samantha
Gtlbert 'erved three :ices.

and the tea m has been kind of in the dark
about it and we lost some key people
because of that," Bodine said. " Plus, the
Besseys were quite upset th at I drove the
truck and got hurt.
"They blamed all th eir problems on me
not driving and thought things would
have been different if I had been driving,"
he added . " But now they say they are
going to replace me, so that doesn't make
a lot of sense."
Bessey has just one start in 34 Busc h
races this seaso n. Th e 39-year-old car
owner, racing on and off since 1988, has
one Busch victory and two poles in his

career.

Helper Bowl

Golf

high net notes

Tuesday. Septembef 11. 1000

Jets win Tuna

Tuesday's Matches
Eastern at Miller, 4:30
Meigs at TVC Ohio, 4:30 (at
Franklin Valley)
South Gallia v. Fairland, River Valley, 4:30 (at Cliffside)

Meigs junior

Page 81

Joe Bessey Motorsports sacks Geoffrey Bodine

families of Charles R ee d and

announce meetings and
special events. The calen-

.'
•

Girls SoCcer

SUNDAY

Oscar Hysell , dinner I p.m .,
FRIDAY
Star Mill Park, Ra cine.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
taunt Family and Children
The Community CalenFirst Council, Friday, 9:30a .m .
dar is published as a free
at the Meigs County Depart service to non-profit
ment of Job and Fam1ly Ser- ·
vices.
groups wishing to
GALLIPOLIS Dominic
Marchese, R.Ph ., of Athena
RX Home Pharma cy, will talk
on over-the-counter drug
interaction with prescription
medications at the Parkinson's
Support Group meeting, 2
p.m. Friday. ltbrary, , Grace
United M et h odist C hurc h,
&amp;00 Serond Ave., Gallip o li s.

.·.

. 'i

~

Dear Ann Landers: I live in th,·
Netherlands, and read your column on
the Internet. We Euiopeans consider
ourselves very sophisticated and worldly,
but I am now in a situation that makes
me feel naive and inexperienced. I hope
you can help me.
Six months ago, I discovered an e-mail
addressed to my husband. The letter was
of an intimate nature and quite sexually
explicit. When I confronted ''Lar.," he
denied knowmg anything about lt. I
be came suspi ciou&lt; , and began to go
through his e- mail on a regular basis. I
was shoc ked when I d!Scover&lt;d he had
been corresponding With this woman for
16 months, and that they had ac tually
met in perso n .
We Wt:'. re married less th;m a year
when the affair began . I deci ded to leave
Lm because I had lost my tru st in hun .
He now msists that our broken marnage
i; MY fault because I read his private

The Daily Sentinel

Sports Notebook, Page B4
Browns Nlfbook, Page B6
Daily Scorebo'!rd, Page B6

Internet affair ruined Euopean marriage

! •

EYEING THE
- Former Marshall University wideout Troy Brown (80 ) heads upfield last
night against New York iii'&gt;Tuna Helper Bowl t. Brown 's Patriots came out on the short end of the score,
losing 20-19 when the Jets scored on a late drive and then held on defense. (AP)

EAST R.UTHER.FORD, N.J.
(A P) - So mu ch for Keyshawn
Jo hnson.
Wayne C hrebet, who stepped
up from the Jets' No. 2 receiver
to their top gun , caught a 28yard to uchdown pass from
Vinny Testaverde with 1:55 left
as New York scored twice in th e
fi nal 6:25 to beat the New England Patri o ts 20-19 Monday
night.
It was a dramatic ending to a
ga me that had a lot of grinding
around m idfield unul th e final
quarter.
N ew England built up a 12-7
lea d on four Adam Vinatieri
field goals and extended It to
19-7 on Drew Bledsoe's 4-yard
TD pass to Eric l3j ornson . with
just u nder 10 minutes left .
Th at seem ed to e nergize the
Jets, who drove H5 yards in 10
plays to score on Testaverde's 2yard TD pa&lt;&gt; to C hrebet. Full back Ri chie Anderson had fi ve
catc hes for 7H yards on that
drive.
New York got the ball back
with 2:28 left.
On th e tir&gt;r play, Testavcrde
hit D edr ic Ward for 44 yards.
th en threw to C hreb et, who
caught th e ba ll at the .1 an d dow
into tht' end zo ne.
The
2-point
co nversio n
fa iled , hu t New England went
now.here . John Abraham and
Shaun Ellis. two of New York 's
first- round draft choi ces, combined on one sac k of llledsoe.
and Abraham got another.
The Jets are 2-ll whil e the
Patri ots are 0-2.
Thi s ga me had a sp ~c ial significance in New York and New
Eng land, whert' it \~as known Js
th e " Twu Helper l3owl.'' a con-

test between th e Patr iots' BiU
Belichi ck an d N ew York 's Al
Groh ; who spent much of their
careers interning under Bill
'"Tuna " Parcells.
The Jets moved th e ball only
o nce during the first half, going
74 yards on 12 plays o n their
first possession, scoring on Testaverde's 4-yard pass to Fred
Uaxter. Despite his three TD
passes,Testaverde was JUSt 16-of37. although he did throw for
29 1 yards.
Testaverde continu ed to show
signs of rust from last year, when
he tore an Achilles' tendon in
th e first half of the first game
with the Patriot' and missed th e
rest of the season . At one point ,
he threw six strai ght incomplete
passes, hit Chreb et for 28 yards,
th en was sac ked and threw two

more inco mpletions.
M eanwhil e, th e
Patriots
plugged along between the 20s.
They led 12-7 at halftime,
co urte.sy ofVi nati eri's field goals
from 32, 35, 31) and 33 yards.
Two were set up by Troy
Brown 's punt returns of31 and
.1H yard s, a third by an intc·rception that Anto ni o Langh am
rt•mrned 24 ya rds to the New
York 14. But th e l&gt;atriots never
got cl ose to scoring a to uchdown on any of those threats.
N ew England drove trom its
ow n 26 to th e N ew York II
with rhe opening ki ckofl' of the
seco nd half. Uu tVinatieri's fieldgoal att empt appeared to be
ddlccted and we nt wide ldi:.
Bledsoe completed 25 of 43
passes tor 229 yards but ju st the
one rouchdown .
The rest of th e sco ring was
VmatltTI a11d that made the dlfft:""ren ce.

Ohio coaches
LaRue's HR lifts Reds to win
salute lhe General
COLU MI3US, O hio (AP) d ened by the m anner in which
Ohio State basketball coach J im Knight was forced to end his
O'Br ien says Indi ana U niversity career at Ind ia na.
an d the Bi g Ten will suffer f;i:orn
"T his ha s n othi ng ro do wi th
the loss of Bobby Knight.
Indi ana Universiry. They've got
Knight was fired Sunday after to make their own decisions.
th e lat est in a series of alleged
But th e whole idea th at th iS is
incidents invo lvin g his physical
how hi!~ caree r is en din g just
or verbal abuse o f others. I U
sicke ns me." O'Brien sa id.
president Myks l3 rand said
" I ;1111 a~ disappoin ted in thi ~
Knight was dismissed for wnat
happenin
g as I've bee n about
he called a "pattern of unacceptmm:t t hi ngs in ciJllege bas kerable behavtor."
Knig ht's ti ring h it clme to b:111 I JUSt th ink it's a sorry state
ho me to r O'Brien. The twD of aff:t irs in college athl~tics if
have had a mutual respect tOr this is the way tha t thi s guy goes
the bst dL·ca dc, dating to · out."
O'Brien's two NCAA tournaBowling Green coac h D an
m e nt victor ies over Knight Dakich, a former Indiana capw hile O' Brien coach ed ai t.un ( 1983-85) and assistant
l3oston College.
roach (1985-97), sa id he was
" I think lnch ana and the Big "sadde ned" by K night'diring.
Ten 1n general arc going to be
" I will fo rever be gratefu l for
not as hi gh a yuality of cunfathe w isdom, knowledge .md
cnce and school wi th out him
dmng It," O'Brien s;1id. " I th ink insight that I gained from my
expL'rlen rt' while playing and
V/ t' 're all missin g ~o m e t hing here
with him kaving thL' L·o nf~r­ working tOr him,'' IJ &lt;1k ich said .
" Hi s positive intlut.·ncc has and
enct' ."
O'Brien
also told The will continu e to bt.· a trem enColumbm Di ,p.al'll he was S3d- dou s ,l SSi..'t in my Jill: ."

C IN C INNATI
(AP)
Sa mmy Sosa is on~ home run
away front JOining l3Jbe ll..uth
and Mark M cGwirc as the only
pbyers wi th mon: dun two 50homn seasons.
Sosa hi t hi s major k·ague -leaJing 4LJth Monday night, a so lo
~ hot in rht' fo urth . but Jaso n
LaR..u e had a thret·-run homer
and a can:·n-hiu h five H.BJ.., to
lead th t' Cinrir~ nati ll cds O\'lT
th&lt;· C ub s 7-h.
Three tJf l1 i" tl.1ur h o me run'i
rhi 'i yea r h.tn' come JgJIIl"t
Chic.lgo. t\VO of t he111 utF I J.unt·l

( ;&lt;lrihay.
" I don't knn\\" why

1t i~ .

but

L1RUL' jmt kilh u&lt;' Cuh..; lll,Ul agn .1)on U.tyl0r 'i;lid .
"You don't li 'HJ.dly lun..· night&lt;;
lJh· thi'i, l'\'ell In rill' llllliOf
lc.1gue'i.'. LaRue 'i,Jid. " 1'111 nm a
homc- run hittn. Anytime I ha a
homc· run. I \hink it\ .111 ,Kri dcnt. I hit lim· drivL'S, .md ~~...Hnl.' ­
tinH.'S thl'y carry out of the
p:trk ."
\XIt th Eddie Tauhl'ml.'l' om t()r
the vcar
. hccl U "i L' oflMck 'i Ur~erv..
!..tRue lll)pcs the Reds will usc
him ~very d.ty.
" l think irth,·v. do - .~Ltu.tlh·.

.

I know if th ey do - I ewmually wt ll be a good hitter in the b1g
league&lt;; as wdl .1s a ~ood catr ht:r," he \aid.
LaRue, makin~ .1 b1d tor the
starting catcher\ job next yt.·ar, is
co 1Hidered a good defe n 'i ive
catch er and b:1ncller of pitchers
but is hittin g . 1lJ2 sinct: being
ca lled
up
liom
Tripk-A
louisville 011 Aug I .
His career- 111gl;t followed /\lex
O choa's five- lUll g""'' Su nday
ar l'itt'iburgh .
"Wl''ll have ro tlnd o.;on tebudy
tomorrow to giw m live RUJ:..."
&lt;.tid Reds 111JII.lf'&lt;T .f.Kk McK L'Oil .
·· It w.1s nice to ~t'L' him h .w~..· .1
good g;Jmc. H L· rc.1ll y Jll't'ded it.
H e's been stru~lin g with the
bat. That's ~ot to hc·lp his rontiden ce.''
Kc11 (;rifTcy Jr. !eli with a
strainL'd ldt hJnl'ltring .1t"te r collidin~ with Joe Cir.1n.li J[ homt:
plat~..· in tht' seventh, tr ying to
SlO I'l' from ftr&lt;.:t on a L
lo ubk by
I )m itn '(nun g. CritlCy wa'i taken
fi&gt;r ,m MR I .u 1d will lw evaluat ,.d Tue,d.1y.
Pete H.mmch (7- 6) allowed
f1\T 1um .mU ~·1ght hn" 111 li\·e

11111ings with tive strik t·outs.

"l kmd of feel like I was a
nonf:~cto r ,''
H;1rn isc h
said .

'' \A/ hen a team scort'S six runs

:md the star ter gives up five,
that·, not ~ood. T ht• bullpen won
t Ilt' g.lll\e. "

I J:umy Graves p it ched th e
ni11th fur IllS career- lu gh 28th
save Ill .lJ chances, all owing an
lUl l single to pinch-hitter Jetf
Rn·d . then \t rik ing out Jose
Nit'vc~ tn end tht· game with
rtlllllt'f'i on first ;111d st•cond.
1\rrn wolkmg Rt cky GutierrL'Z, Cr:1ves struck n ut Sosa . Mark
CLiet'

:'lin~led

for his fourth hie

oft he night. th e 19th tim e Grace
h ;t~. h.1 d at k a~t t(:nlr hits in a •
game. Eric Youn~ &lt;:. truck out,
Reed su\gled aud Nieves struck
Dl\L

"At least we got some hits,"
Baylor s.ml."WeJll't cou ldn ·t ~et
th.H l.l:'l t ont.·. Wt· were ont· short
a~ain. With Sammv and Mark
tl; ere back -to-bac k.'it could have
heen a bi ~ inning ."
( :.1nh.1y (2-H) g:wc up ~ix runs
.m,j '\I X hits in tl)ur innin~rs as th e
C:ub1 (59-R4) lost for th,· lllth

Please see Reds, Pap 84

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September

12, 2000

Tuesday September

11

12 2000

oHelp Wanted

Reg10nal financ1al msutullon IS now
accepting apphcahons for a Me1gs County
Busmess Development pos111on
Apphcants should possess the followmg quahhes
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0

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Sma Tw o BR House 3 M es
Down Aoute 7S R e Vtew $350
Pe Month Ca 740 446 6 5

ULUM A.pp oved home s udy
A.llo dab e 5 nee 890 FREE

(419 697 0 18

949 203

380

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

c::onsu tan s GREAT PAV FREE
TRIPS A so book ng partes Ca

70

•

TH£ QS).' W.l\Y TO SH

110 Help Wanted

COOLING

y Wo k A o dab e P ce
Rep ac:emen H gh E c ency

CLASSIFIED...

The Daily
Sentinel

2 Ban Fu y Ca

Business
Training
0 vo 372 DR VERS NEEDED

150

550

~Pleasant Valley
~
Hospital

pe ed A.du t Poo &amp; Baby Poo

140

No Exper a nee Necessa y 14
Day COL 1i an ng No cost tu t on
t qua ted s a a $35k S40k
F s Yea Ca today 1 800 958

Ava lable at 94&amp; F fth AYenue

female 30ot-675-32M

Homes for Sale

t You A e lnte ested n Jo n ng

ASSEMBLY AT WOME C ofls

New To 'lOu Tllrift Sllaptle

o

ATTENT ON HOMEOWNERS
0 sp ay homes Wanted o V ny
S d ng Rep ace men W ndows
Enc osu es No Payment Un I
200
Payments Sta 1 ng at
$89 oo pe mon h A. c ed t
Oua tes C8 1 800-25HJ843

Sidwe Ohoo (Sen rid SP&lt; ng Va~
An EOE
MANPOWER
l ROCKWELL
AUTOMATION
AAE LOOKING FOR
ASSEIIIII.ERS

ley Cnema)

pe month www Deealhome com

30 Announcements

Business and
Buildings

advert sements fo real estate
whch s nv10atonof he
aw Ou eaders a e hereby
nlo mecl that a dweP ngs
advertiSed n h s newspape
a e ava abe on an aqua

We Pay You For -rou Pnor Wort
Expe lence? seen c H Is Is Look

Even H ghe Exceptiona Bene t
Pac:Qge nctuding Paid Time Off
401KAvalable Fo AnApplca
100 bed lkl td nu s ng lac ty
seek ng L censad Phys ca The
ap s Excittng oppo un ty o be a
membe of eKCepdonal team dldcated and car ng staff Exce ant
Regu ato y Comp ance h s o y
nte es ed can4:1 dates should ap
ply o Rocksp ngs Rehab at on
Canta 36759 Aocksp ngs Road

NO'W

know ng vaccept

Hoo P lo Nuo; ng EXPER ENCE
PAY 0p ooos Can make 'lOu Pay

Personals

reta1l/ sales expenence
• Considerable tact w1th customers
• Good telephone and PC sk11l s
• Detail and Goal Onented
• fast effic1ent worKer

Th s newspaper w no

TORS

2011-2823

340

• 3 5 Years

orlgm o any ntenhon to
make any SUCh pre e ence
Im tat10n o d sc m na 10n

""' 1300

1tU OR NEWER TRAC
G ow ng eg ona ca e
seek ng Qua ly owne ope a o s
es 87 CPM A so company dr v

Apartments
for Renl

sex4am I a status a natiOn&amp;

$987 85 WEEKlY P oceu ng
HUOIFHA Mo gage Refunds No
E1tpe ence Aequ ad Fo FREE
Info ma 10n Ca 1 800 501 6832

a s Home Weekends Most y
d ophook Call Todty HCX 800-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

AI ea estate advert 8 ng n
th s newspape s sub ect to
the Federe Fa Hous ng Act
of 968 wtllch makes 11 egal
to advert 5e any pre e ence
I mrtatlon or d scnm na 10n
based on ace color e IQIOO

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT

440

New daub e w de 3 b 2 ba
$998 00 down on y S295 pe
man ca I now 1 800-69 6777

889 '449 EXTENS ON 22 24

the ad 11 to run
Sunday a Monday edition
2 00 p.m Frldey

START

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Ma ng Lette s F om Home No
ew.pe ence necessa 'I FT PT
He p Needed lmmed a e y Ca
Sundance D s bu o s 1 800

Mual Be Paid In AdV11nce

805

Help Wanted

Go

110 Help Wanted

Page B 3

The Dally Sentmel

Pomeroy Middleport Ohto

EARN 1800 S 200 Pt Wttk Re
ng Ou nk P Od c 1 Fo F ea
800 9S5 4 73.5 Any

592 665

EARN $90 000 YEARLY IPI ng
NOT tp ac ng long c 8Ckl n
W nct1h e da ,:111 dto BOO
t126 8!523 US Canada www g ass
mechan r com

00

RON EVANS ENTE APR SES

Dt I 1 Ca

U RGEN TLY NEEDED p 11m1
donora ta n $3.5 o $4~ o 2 o 3
hOu s w11k y Ca Sea Tee 740

95 Pe

S37 oo Pe 00 A B ass Com
p essk)n F ngs n 5 ock
800 537 9528

New
mt n
A e
po s

Bank Aep os Make 2 Pay
s &amp; Mo e n No Paymen !I
Fo Vea s Oakwod Ga
740 446 3093

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

�'

Tuesday, September 12,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 12, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5 .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Charla Burge now accepting
new customers.at
Shear Illusions in Middleport.
Stop in or call today
992-2550

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE - REAL
ESTATE
,
CASE NUMBER: 99CV036
BANKERS TRUST
COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA,
N.A- AS CUSTODIAN OR
TRUSTEE, Plaintiff va.
OREOOAV MEDLEY, at al,
Defendant
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
In pureuanca of on Ordor
of Silo to mo directed !rom
..ld Court In tho above
entitled action, I will oxpooe
to oolo at public auction at
tho Court Houao on
Sopts-r 211, 2000 at 10:00
A.M . ol .. td day, the
following doocrlbod real

_,

Situated In tho State of
Ohio, County of Malgs, and
Township of Sutton and
descrtbsd aa lollowo:
Beginning
at
tho
Southwtll corner ol A. T.
Chapman'• lot, In 160 Acre
Lot No. 1223, Township 3,
Renge 13, ol tho Ohio
Compeny'e
Purchuo;
Thtnce North 33 dog. Well
58 feet; Thence North 60

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
Emergeny Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
-~

tJJ

Eall 158 1/ 2 laet;
South 33 deg. Eeel
58 loot; Thence South 60
dag. W111158 1/2 l11t to tho
place ol beginning. And
fronting 58 f11t on tho roed
or 1treet and running back
at that width to tho roar of
aald Lot 158 1/2 feet.
Saving and oxceptlng tho
coal and other mlnerlll
underlying aald lot.
Prior
lnotrumont
Reference:
Volume 77,
Page 271

State Route 7 ,
.Tuppers Plains has
openings, all shills .
Open 7 days. 24
hours . CertlHed in
Meigs ~ Athens
Counties .
Plenty orTLC

I'TI••••'•

Current Owners Name:
G.-gory Medley
Property Addreu: 43270
State Route 124, Racine,
Ohlo4sn1
Appraised At $15,000.00
Terms of Sate • 10% Cash
the day of the Sale- balance
due within 30 dayo.
Jamoa Soulaby, Shariff
Molga County, Ohio
Lorry Rothenberg
323 W. Lakealde Ave Suite
200
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
(216) 685·1000
(8)29, 2000
(9)5, t2, 2000

NOTEBOOK
Bucs give Lynch big deal
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Tampa Bay All-Pro John
lynch became one of the NFL's highest-paid
safeties when he received a five-year, $24 million
contract extension from the Buccaneers. lynch's
deal includes a $5.6 million signing bonus.
Lynch, who would have been an unrestricted
free agent after this season, is a two-time Pro Bowl
selection. He was voted All-Pro for the first time
after leading Tampa Bay's secondary with 128
tackles last season.

Skins' Westbrook out for season
ASHBURN, Va. (AP) - Michael Westbrook,
who led the Washington Redskins in receiving
yards last season, is out for the season after tearing
a ligament in his left knee in Sunday's 15-10 loss
in Detroit. Westbrook had 69 receptions for 1,1 91
yards and nine touchdowns last season.

NA5CAR fines Wallace aew chief

740-66 7 -g,:~,,::r

Reds
hvmPageBl
time in 11 games, dropping a season- worst 25
games under .500. Garibay singled in a run, his
first career RBJ.
LaRu e homered in the second and hit a tworun double in th e fourth to make it 6-3. Juli o
Zuleta hit a two-run double in the fifth as Chicago closed to 6-5 but was thrown o ut trying to
stretch it to a triple.
Harnisch, backi ng up the catc her, fiel ded a
throw to the plate and threw out Zuleta at third.
"I knew I'd out him if I threw the ball . It wasn't that tough a play," Harnisc h &lt;aid. "But that was
a big play becau se I'm in a tough spot nght there.
I'm not looking like I'm going to get anybody out
in the near future, and 1t wou ld have been worse
to have a man on thlfd - or second, fo r that matter.

"I did n't feel li ke I co uld strike anybody out."
O choa, after his big game Sunday, was 1-for-4,
a solo ho mer in th e seve nth off Steve Rain .
Reds Notes: Ri cky Gutierrez twice lost hold
of his ba t in the th ird innit1g, allowing it into the
seats near the Cubs' dugou t. No one was seriously injured .... Scott Sullivan's wild pitch in the fifth
increased the Red s' club-reco rd and major
league-leadi ng total to 89 . ... Ja ck McKeon got h1s
280th win as a Reds manage r, moving into ninth
on the club list. .. .The biggest m•ation of the nigh t
went to the big-screen replay of Pete Rose's hit
No. 4,192. Monday was the 15th anniversary of
Rose's single that moved him past Ty Cobb into
first place on baseball's urcer hits list.

1919Toyota m112
1989 tatllllac fleetwood
1~

ford Tllullderblnl
1990 fonlllerostar Ulltl
1992 fonl Explom'
1993 ford Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

fOR mORE InfO. PlEASE CAll

740-992-1506

High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hi/4ntl Rd.
Pomn:o1, Ohio

740-992-5232

tarmelila'~ (rea lion~

Coo!purer~ed Cllslllm Enix~dery

I

;

i

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos
Hats

i

Jackets

' School Mascots

C;mnelita &amp; Kenny Osborne

33869 Black:wood Ro1d - Off St Rt 143

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 74().742-8103

Septic Sy1tem• &amp;

Utilitie•

(7401 992·3131

HANING's

......

••• u ,

..........

FREE ESTIMATtS

740-698-6735

BLIND SPOT

" Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for you"
Interior
FAEE ESTIMATES
Before 6p.m. ·
Leave Message
Alter 6pm-740·98S-4180

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical bUndo are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• V.. rticals • Wood
• MiniR • Etc

144 Third Ave. Gaapohs

446-4995

Fall Mums 6 fOr $10
Also Gourds a. PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Svracuse. OH
740-992-5176

WANT D
Standing timber large
or small t1·acks . Top
prices paid also.

Dozer work.
frH Estlmatts
Call T &amp; R Logging
aft er 8:00 pm
740-992-5050
(Randy)

-8

(1 1

. &lt;I 11 00

DIPDYS AI
PARTS

~LLLEL

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

AD Mal.es Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Deal&lt;irs.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

992-5479

Coolville, OH 45723

'1'40 817-11313

Stop In And See

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addilions
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTI~L
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"JJI
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progressive top line.
Lie. II 00-50

Larry Schey

Phone (740) 593 -6671

·(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916

1•1

•

• · - a4dltlons &amp; •••••••, .

• Electrical &amp; l'llloiWng

-:

V.C. YOUNG Ill .
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Local

I BEAT DOC PLAYIN'
CHECKERS TODAY,
MAW!!

YOU BEAT

TODAY 1 DIDN'T
CHEAT It

HIM ALL
Til' TlMI II

45n1
74()..949-2217

Sizes 5' x 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
1/21100 1

mo. pd.

ttOSPITAL
AI&gt; MISSIONS r"!--./-...

THE BORN LOSER

"'

My DOC.'IOC ')/&gt;.,1{.)1

1'\('-,'-JE. \0 FI1-&lt;0 N--1

....f\t: Tf\1~ '(~ L.tfE.S\YLE.l~"''
TOO :::f:Ot~T~Y, EX\~ Wf\1'\
N:.IW l\Y fiA.'&lt;f. YOU

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~

JhWICK'S.

"fiULinG and
EXCAVATinG

WANTED
8" d1ometcr to 27"
I8' 1onq - $ ~0 I Ton
CHIPWOOD

""" to 25"
12'1o 20' in length

•Po plar • Maple
• Beech • Sycamore

$19/Ton
North of Gallipo li s o n

Residential, Commercial

SR 7, 6/ 1Oof a mil e

Free Estimates
Fully Insured

above Roads1de Res t

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio

740 - 985 - ~~65

on riqht .
or 7 40 - 441 - 9262

J&amp;C QUICK LUBE
CAR CLEANING
- Pick-up &amp; delivery - Tires &amp; Detail

740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

BIG NATE
CAN "(OU

&amp;EI.II&gt;VE

10.1 Mi'IN'I

l'li$TRESSES
THAT GUY

. HAD ,

...........'iO.UR-........ ..
concRETE

' CODDECTIOD
Qua lity Dri veways,
Pati os, Sidewalks
25 years Ex perience
FREE ESTI:VIAT ES•

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

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

PEANUTS
I-I ERE VOU ARE ..

A NICE BOWL OF
~RES~ W.ol~TER ..

West

6•

2•
Pass

North
4 NT
Pass

East

Pass.
Pass

Opening lead: • A

Thi s week, we are looking at
the latest half-dozen 16-page
booklets from Bridge Plus magazine in England. Today's topic is
"Practise Your Defence against
Pre-empts" with David Bird.
In four pages, Bird gives a
workmanlike description of the
"nonnal" methods for competing
against pre-emptive opening bids
at the two-, three- and four-levels.
Then come 24 pairs of hands for
you and your partner to bid.
Finally, Bird gives his recommended sequences with explanations.
In lhis deal, Bird doesn't discuss the play in six clubs. What
would be your approach after
West cashes the heart ace before
exiting with a diamond?
West's two hearts shows a
decent six-qud sui I and 6-10
high-card points. North's overcall
of four no-trump describes a
respectable minor two-suiter.
South is well worth his jump to
six clubs.
If the missing trumps are splittin g 2- 1, there will be no problems, so assume they are J-0. But
who is more likely to have all
thro:e, Easl o~ West?
If you op~n with a weak twobid. yo ur parlner assumes your
hand is playable in that one suit .
· But if you also have a void, your
hand is p1ayabie in e ither lhree
suits (when 6-4-3-0) or two suits
(when 6-5-2-0) . So, I don 't open
a weak lwo with a void . Again st
me, you should cash the club ace
fir st in case Wesl has the lripleton. Slill, against a Young Turk,
your guess is probably better than
mme.
One booklel is approximately
$6 postpaid and four are about
$22 from www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

To get a current weather
report, check the

JONES'
""1-LI~'VLI::&gt;,

South

OHIO 45631• CHESHIRE, OHIO

• 'fflltl

(740) 367-0266
1-800-9 50-3359

• swmll

Gll!\dl!\9
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and
present. Each tetter in the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: F equals Y

'LMY
R

VXEWBEVRG

C Y K A B X A B F

YOYZRLEAW
AO

LMY

RCZAWLRHV

E 0

EW

A

LMY

VYAVGY.'

-

Wednesday, Sept . 13, 2000
Allh ough you could find yourse lf with a number of new respon sibilities in the year ahead, they
will prove to be ve ry rewarding
for you as lime moves on.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
E.xpec t to arouse a similar
response in oth ers if you are too
insiste nt upon having everything
your way today. Peo ple might
yield a liul e, but only up to a
point. Virgo, treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for your AslroGraph predi cti ons for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro- Graph. c/o thi s newspaper.
P.O . Bo x 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10156. Be.
sure to state your Zodiac sign .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23 )
You' re usually a ve ry con siderale
person when it comes to who does
what in a team wo rk effort. However, today you might want others
to curry most of the load .
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov 22)
No mauer how badly you'd like to
have others gel in vo lved in one of
your favorite ac tiv ities today.
abide by Ihe will of th e majority.

It 's someone else 's turn to be satisfi ed.

&lt;tO

SAGITTARIUS !Nov 23- D ~c
21) Unfortunately. you could have
a tendency today to make tha t
whi ch you' re in vol ved m far more
di ffi cult than it need be . See k out
the lines of least res istan ce .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) Be especially mindful when in
Ihe compan y of those wh ose ideology differs considerabl y from
yours. It's one·of those days when
politics or principles could tum
mto volatile toptcs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Without realizing it al first,
because it could sneak up on you,
you could find yourself assuming
new debts today. Don't box your·
self in with more bill s.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar'h 20)
So long as you're with people
who agree with you, chances nre
that everyone will find you a
pleasant person to be around.
However, those who oppose yo ur
thoughts won't en ~ ounter the
same person .
1
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
Beller arrange your sc hedul e in a

methodical manner before you
start anythin g today. You' re not
apt to work too well should you
find yourself und er press ure or
di sarray.
TAURU S (April 20- May 20)
Should you find yo urself in the
company today of anyone whose
standards do not measure up to
yours, make a fast exit . Wh at they
do could affect you.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
Unforlunal ely. an unreso lve d
issue that has al ways c· aused turmoil within tl1e household could
rea r its ugly head agai n today.
Don't be a cont ributor 10 the hostilities.
CANC ER tJunc 2 1-J uly 22)
You won'1 be in any mood today
for ha ving oth ers tel l you wh at tq
do or think . Cs ing yo ur ow n
standards. don't do the same to
· th em.
LEO (J ul y 2.'- Aug . 22) A
desi re for se lf-grat ification co uld
. be u bit stronge r than usual today.
so in stead ol· co m:o:lllraling on
material thmgs, pay mo re atten tion to soc ml affai rs.

AO

H Y. W Y X R G

BMAXABLYX
UAKYO

OYWEKAXY
BAAVYX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : 'He's got a chance to be the greatest player to play
the game:- Ted Williams, on Boston's Red Sox's Nomar Garciaparra.

THAT DlltT d frlJ 't) ,i\ '\.. { _ ·1) 'C tn, Q. 1&gt; WOlD
PUULU 0~ ~'QU ~J,.
(.b P(/"
GAMI

v

- - - - - - E~ll..t ~y CLAY I. POUAN - - - - - -

Raarronge leners of
0 four
scrambl•d words

the
be·
low to torm four slmpla words.

CI FEF0

LUTAV

III1
3

·U M

vA E

I

-~ :::;

"I have noltced ," an em ployee

]--,.,.........---.--r--1' mused, "that there 's two kinds of

I I" I l

::,jobs. one you shower before work
and the other you s howe r -·---"

~..-.......,.,1--'·-..._....1.___,. .;.

I

I

LIKREL
J---,lr--.,-'
TI-;;.I_;;_TIs:--1 O Complete
.-L...-...JI.-.J_.J-..L---1
by

1

8
I)

the chuckle Quoted

filling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LEITERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Devour - Metal · Abhor - I'Vildfy - WOULD 11 BE

A youngster with little funds asked his favorite teacher,
' If you could hav e anylhing you wanted for under $5,
wha t WOULD 1! BE?"

SEPTEMBER 12 I

'Your
'Birthday

Churches, Schools, Organizations are WELCOME.
Food, Snacks, No Bar, Just Lots of Fun
Under

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

lTUESDAY

Mason, WV
304-773-5300 or 740Resarve a spot for you, your team, or your llea11Ue.

.

11 Opp. of NNW
13 Not
performed
18 Stab
19 Swiss songs
20 Expire
(2 wds.)
22 Lightweight •
woolen fabrlc23 White and
shining
24 Happen (1o)
25 Playground
equipment
27 Undermine
32 Padro's aunt
34Angry
35 Tidier
•
39 "The Oeser! •
Fox''
43 Nerve (comb. ~
form)
45 " So longl"
47 Taj Mahal sit(.
48 Turn the page
(abbr.)
49 " Auction" encf
50 Actor Majors ,
52 Wander
53 French
season
54 "Way outl"

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Uletime Warranty
Local Contractor

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

6

10 Large cask

7 Pals
8 Suggestive
9 Chemlcol
suffix

Booklet for others

l'l ',:::·

Reasonable Prices
FREE Estimates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Experience
740-378-6349
.

Q7

Answer to Previous Puu:te

oulltx

1 AHOy of tin and 42 Dress material
copper
44 EvergrMn tree
7 Worrtae
45 lolotc.e Ilea
12 sesame sauce 46 - culpa
13 Olotant planet 46 Animal's coat
14 Makos amendo 51 Certain
15 - Creed
asaalllnt
16 Uncle
55 Walk
unateedlly
17 Actress
Suaan 56 List of prfnted
18 Heat (pref.)
mlstakea
21 Rlvar In Alaska 57 Mountain
23 Nonprollt TV
nymph
26 Debtors' letters 58 Rolling In
28 Remain
money
undecided
29 Wide shoe size
DOWN
30 Novelist Ferber
1 Harper Valley
31 Declare anew
grp.
33 Unlocko again
2 Sup
36 Eye port
37 Actor Gulager 3 Which person?
4 Forte r,rong
38 - -&lt;lo-well
5 Hostl e ton:e
40 "SomeTime
Next Year" atar 6 Aevott (2 wdo.)

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

Replacement
Windows

~ \ · .

A

41 Superlative

• QJ 5
... ... 9 6 4 2

Free Estimates

POPlAR lOGS

ALSO WANTED

(740) 985-3948

Road
Racine, Ohio

• 9 7 3

Sentinel

· Free Estimates

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC
CONC RETE
MASONRY
BACK HOE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

29870 Bashan .

740-985-3831
35537 St At 7 North

Truck seats, ::ar seats, headliners .
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats ,
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon - F.-I 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

SELF STORACE

''Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25/50 lbs.
•12% Cattle feed 16.75/100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.75/50 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

r·

HAR1WELL HOUSE
We now of(er GlfL&amp;
Wedding Registry
We have VIllage Ca ndl es
992-7696

11n.....,

HILL'S

. . ....

• 5

• Custom Garages •_Boofing
• Concrete Work e Decks
·Additions
740·696-1176
or 740.696·1233

SHHDE RIUER HG SERUICE

Steve Ri.ffle
·- Sales Reprq'entative

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
. "A Better

Main St.,

• K J 10 4 3 2

• J 8 6 3

South

\)E(..IOE.D \0 I'OOf'\ 7

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.

. East

West
• 9 8 5

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

LINDA'S
PAINTING

The CRAFTY,

• Q4
+AK10862
•KJI053

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIC..
• Reaf!og~ Guffin
• VloovJ ~ &amp; Painting
• Patio &amp; Poidi Dodos

09-12.00

·-

• 4
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• New Gcl-ogoo

Land Clearing &amp;
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replar hour" ••

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House &amp; Trailer Sites

· "we •,.e back ,,. our

740-992-4559

North

•AKt0972

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The Country
Candle ShoP

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S,., I,., 248
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74()..992-1671

PRODUCTS

Protecl your guns, family heirlooms, coin and card
1colllecllions. legal papers, investment records. pholo
cameras, household inventory and
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For more information call .

....,

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Sat. 1().4
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supplies
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HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

7/22/TFN

·~

DAYTONA BEACH , Fla. (AP) - Crew chief
Jimmy Elledge was fined $JO,OOO·by NASC AR
for using illegal parts on Kenny Wallace's car.
The trailing arms, part of the suspension, were
lighter than NAS CAR specifications, allowing the
car to have better traction. They were found Friday during a preliminary inspection before Satu rday's Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400.
Wallace fi nished l 4rh in the race, without the
illegal parts.

now PARTinG OUT ~~~
1tl6fert1Uon

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Public Notice

ALDER

ACROSS

Major League Baseba ll. Florida Marlm s a: At lanta Braves { L~e ) {CCr

�,·

.,.~

...·---· ...

'·

•''

P:t~l" l:l

Steelers .out for revenge
against Brownies
respectively, and in 1999 the
numbers fell to 4.0 and 4.4.
This year, after one game - a
16-0 loss to the Baltimore Ravens
o n Sept. 3 - Pittsburgh is last in
the AFC in both categories. The
Steelers gained only 30 yards on
the ground against the Ravens
and allowed 140.
If last year's performance in
C leveland can be used as a gauge,
th" Sreelers will improve. In the
1999 opener, the Steelen gained
213 yards rushing and allowed
only 9.
But Cleveland was a better
team by mid- November. The
Ste..len managed to outrush their
expansion rivals, but by only 16874 - and the Browns avenged a
43-0 blowout loss with a last-second victory.
The Browns could cut the margin even further this Sunday at
Cleveland. They're corning off a
24-7 win over the C incinnati
Bengals in which Cleveland controlled both sides of the line of
scrimmage. They sacked Bengals
quarterback Akili Smith ~even
times - 28 percent of their total
1999 sacks.

Elll ·.

lMm
W L Pet GB
... .. .... ................... 84 59 .587
3
- - .......................81 82 .see
Florida ............................. 58 74 .479 15 t/2
Monlr801 ..........................eo 82 .423 23 1/2
25
l'lllladoiphla .................... 59 84 .413

C.Otnl
St. Loui1 ........................... 83 81 .578
Cindnnati ........................ 74 70 .5 14
9
UifwaukH ... ................... &amp;3 80 .441 191 /2
Houston ......................... 63 81 .438
20
Pil!sbwgh ............ ... ........ 61 82 .427 21 t /2
Chicago .......................... 59 84 .41 3 23 1/2
WOOl
San Francisco ......... .. .......es
Arizona ...........................76
LotAntleleo ..................... 75
Col&gt;.rrado ......................... 73
SIU1 Otogo ........................ 71

58
66
69
70
74

-~ o.-

(Millon 12·10)at Oakland (Haredia 14-10). 3:35 p.m.
Booton (Ohl&lt;a 3~) at Cleveland (CoiOo t2·
8). 7:05 p.m.
,.. 1~~~0 (loaiZ!r·8· 10) at N.Y. YankHI
-·-~12-8} , 7:~p. m.
.
-..,.., (Aopp 7· t11 " T - (GirM 5-3),

.S94
.535 8 1/2

(

.521 tO 1/2
.510
12
.490
15

lloMoy'o a Pt'lladetphia 5, MontrNI 2 , 111 game
Mon!Jeal 7, Phiodojphla e. 2nd game
Cinclnnatl 7, Chicago Culls 6
Milwaukee 8, N.Y. MeiB 2
St . LDu88,~n4

a:O!I

' ~(WeoV11&lt;9- 1 3181 ChlcagoWhl1eSox

(POrquo 1l-6)

8 05
Kansas
~~mQ-8) 01 Seo1tl8 (Stojn a.
•1. 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Lidia 2-5) al Anaheim (Ortiz 5·
" I 1~~ P'm.
• " ' • ·-

cnY

1,...,1.1, _,.., .338.
-AUNs.--oo.-. KAniM Cily, 124: AAodriguo&lt;, - · 118; Dultlom, Chicago, 11 5:
Now 'lbrt&lt;. 108; COolglldo. Toro&lt;liO. 108:.
TbomU, Chicago, 108; ~. Anoheim, 105.
RBI-Thomu, CNcllgo, 1311; MJS~.
. Qly, 131 ; ~f11nu. · 13t ;
o;. """""· 1211, AAodllguol. - ·
Chicago, 115; JeGilllnl&gt;l. Ook·
112: lloffl\li.lml. N"' 'lllrk. 112.
' HIT8-Er-. Anaheim, 2t•; Demon,
- - Cily, 11M!; MJSM«!ey, Kenoos Crty,
117; COIIgldo, Toronto, t81 : Thomat, Chiao·
~78:
Naw Ycrlc, 172: Dye. Kansas
1:
BI,£S-COoiQado, Toronto, 52; Garcia·
porra, l!osiOn, 46: ctruz. Datfolt, 44: Olerud.
Seott1&lt;1, .a: Lawton, Mlnnooota, 42; Damon,
-~~•City, •• : Thomu, Chicago, 41.
·
TRIPU!S-CGuzman, Minnnolll, t9 ;
AKaV!Idy, Anahlim, 9: Damon, Ka,.., City. 8:
Du(ham, Chicago, B: Allcel, Texas, 8: :rNOO)n,,
........, 7· T H · - . , - e · JAVIIJenlln
-~·. •
~· •
• •
•
ChloMo.
e: BeWllliomo.
N"" Ycrlc, e.
HOME .. RUNS--ThOinlll, Clicago, 4• :
Glauo, Anihoim, •t: COolglldo, 'lbronto, 311,
Tllall110, Tbronto, 38; Jut~. Now York, 37:
ARodrlgSTOLENUOZ. ~1ti8Ee' ~~~~~~-~~'!!'; ~:
~ ~·-·· - - -·•· - ·
RAJomor, a..eland, 33:
. 32; H . -, Seatl1e, 211; Mcl.omote, See!·
u,, 28: E-. Anohtlm, 28; Cairo, Tampo Bay,

Son Francisco ................0 2 o .000 50
SundOy'a-

Jot•.

Jet•.

DoSI&gt;-.-

·

San Franciec:o B, HOUIIQn 7, 10 Innings
NM1onol L.ooguo ~
San Diogo 7, Colorado 2
&gt;(' 20
Los Angeles 6, Arizona 3
·
BATTING-Hilton
&lt;:®&lt;ado
3711
AJou
\
PITCHING (t7 Declllono)-PMarlinoz,
Tocloy'o
Houlton 358· 'IGUorroro MDniru1' 3 54 :
l!oslon, t~ •. 782, 1.74; OWoh, Toronto, 1W,
Monti'M1 (Mnal 4-11) al Philadelphia
~; cOlorado 347.' LCUHIIO
4.27; Baiclw1n, Chicago, 14-8, .737, 4.118:
( T - 1.()), 7:o5 p.m.
N.W
Ooldancl, 1u, .m , 4.118: Pottitte,
.341:
334:
St L.oull (Kilo 17-8) 01 Pintburgh (S.afini 2·
YOI1&lt;. .332.
• tl-7, .720, 4.02:
Ba1ti·
3), 7:05 p.m.
RUNS
Bag-.
Houaton,
135;
HtiiOn.
Col·
.708,
3.111;
lk.rbo,
Cl
.....
id.
14-8,
Chicago Cubo (Wood 8- 7) at CincinnaU
oi'IMIO, 127; Edn'londa,, St. Louis, 1U; Bonde,
(1'...-z 2·2). 7:0!5 p.m.
Son Frardtco, 118; A.Joneo, Au.nla, t 08; Kant,
Milwaukee (Snyder 3·8) at N.Y. Mols
San Fronclloo, 102; SSooa, Chicago, t02.
(B~ .Jonea 8 -5), 7:10p.m.
Florida (Sancnoz 6·10) a1 ""•nta ("11wood
Rl!t--SSola, Chicago. t33: · Col·
O&lt;OdO, 123; Kent. San Froncllco, 121: lloQwoll,
9-10), 7:40p.m.
San FfWICIS&lt;O (EIIn 14-4) at HoultOn HOUIIOn, 117: Clritley Jr, Cirdnootl, 117; !llloo,
(EIInon 111-5]. 8:05p.m.
Piltsbu&lt;v~. 115; \!Guonwo, MonlrHI, HO.
HITS--Jillion, COlOradO, t95; SSou,
LDs Angeles (Prokopec 0-0) at Arizona
(SCI1llllng 1b-11), 8 :35p.m.
Chicago, 1110: VGuen'aro, Monlrool, 178; \ltdto,
Colorado (Yoshli !S· 1.a) at San Diego
Monliool, 177; ....,.._, Al1anta, 175; Kant, 8an
(Ciomon112· 14), 10:0!5 p.m.
Franclooo, t73; NPerez. Colonldo, t70. .
wedn••dly'e o.m..
DOUBU!S--litlton, Colonldo, 154; Cirllo,
Milwaukae (D'Amico 11 ·5) al N Y. . MeIS
~o. 411: Vldro,
&lt;111: L - - .
(HM'fiiOO ta-9). 1:10 p.m.
Arizona, 41 ; Groon, l.ol Mg.._, 40; A!&gt;&lt;l\l: ;
Montreal (Moore t ·5) 01 Phi-phia (Choo
Plllladelphll, 39; EYoong, Chicago, 38.
8-2). 7:05p.m.
TRIPLES-Wamaell, Arizona, 12: VGuor·
St. t.oula (Anlclol 1-7) at PII1SI&gt;urgh (R~ct&gt;o rero, Montreal, 11 ; NP«ez, Colorldo, 11 ; Bel·
Me
11-7), 7:05 p.m.
liaftl, Milwaukee. 9: Al&gt;nou; Phlladllphio, 8:
11111
Chicago Culls (Tapani 11-12) at Cincinn.'11l
- n . 1.oo Ang-. e : Clii11, PlltoDurgn, 7: TMm
WLTPta. PF PA
(Williamoon S.S), 7:05p.m.
.................. ........2 0 01.110 03 31
Coaorado. 7.
Florida (Compiler 12-9) at Atlanta {Maddux
N.Y. Jo11 ....................... ..2 0 0 1.110 40 35
HOME RIJNS--SSoll, Chicago, olll; Bondi,
16-8), 7:40 p.m.
San Francisco, ' 4!i; Bagweu. .Houston, 42; 1ndlanopolit .................. . t t 0 .500 58 52
San FranciiCO (Hernandez 1·· 10) &amp;1 HOUS• S -, l.01Angol ... 4t ; EdmondS, St. I.Ouil, Miami ............................ 1 t 0.500 30 13
10n (Miller 5·51. 8:05p.m.
Now England ................. .o 2 0.000 35 41
311; Griffey Jr. ClnciMatl, 311; Hidalgo, Houllon,
l.oo Angoln (Prol&lt;opoc 0.0) at Arizona
C«ooto1
38.
(Scnllllng 10.111. 9:35 p.m.
.2 o o1.00 ss 38
STOLEN BASES--LCUtillo, Florida, !55;
COlOrado {Bohanan 0·9) at San Diego
~ .. .................... 1 1 0 .500 31
34
EYoong, Chicago, !50; Cloodwln, l.ol Angelal,
(Eatoo 5·2), t 0:05 p.m.
JllckiOnYIIO ...... ............. 1 t 0 .500 83 411
48; Womack. Arizona, 42; Furcal, A1\lnt0, 34;
T1m011ea ..................... t t 0 .500 •130 30
PWillon, Flor1da, 31 : GIOfllllllo, Phl..,tlphla,
-...L.ooguo
Cincinnati ......................0 1 0 .000 ' 7 24
28: e-ns. san Diego, 28 . ,
~ ..................... .0 1 0 .000
0 t6
PITCHING
(17
Decioiono)-Eilll,
San
Eliot
Francisco, ,,...., .na, 3.81; Elanon, HGUen,
TWLPci.GB
0 0 t .OO 47 37
18·5. .762, 4.69: RDJollnocn: Arizona, 17-8,
Now Yor1c ......................... 82 59 .582
1 1 0 .500 78 55
.739, 2.41 ; Glavlne, A11anta, 19-7, .731, 3.82;
............................ 74 11 .525
e A,__,
.. ...... ............0 2 0 .000 28 44
New York. tti-7, .e82, 3.17; Stephon·
Toronto ............................ 75 es .s:i!•
s
son, St. L.ouiJ, 18-8, .687, 4.30; KBtown, Lol San0ilg0l ...... , ..............o 2 o.ooo 33 37
Blltimore ........................ 65 78 .-'55
1B
Angeles, 12-8, .687, 2.72 ; GModdW&lt;, Atlanta,
Tampa Bay ....... ........... ..... 81 83 .424
23
16-8 .. 567. 3.2t .
STA1KEOUTS--ADJonnson,. Arizona, 313;
ChiOago .......................... 68 57 .BOt
N.Y. Gla
.................. 2 0 01 .00 54 34
Aslocio, Colorado, 192: ALOitor, NewYor1c, t87:
~ ........................ 78 83 .547
8
.. ~ ................. 1 1 0 .500 411 52
Oempalor, Fi&lt;&gt;ida, Hl5; KBrown. L.oo Angel ...
Oolrol ...... .. .... ................. 70 73 .490
16
t t 0 .500 59 47
183; Pafk, Los Angeles, 179; Kila, St. L.ouil,
Kanaal ~ ................ ..... 68 78 .472 18 1/2
.................. 1 1 0.500 30 32
174.
MinniiOia .................. ..... 82 81 .434
24
{....... .......... 0 2 0 .000 e; 73
SAVEs-A~omreco. Flolida. 311; Hollman,

o.,_

A0-'
Ptaiz..

shoft181d.Loo...,g;.,..:.

.

-real.

'Neers ready to induct
Howley and Huggins
cer Craig Walker and retired
Pennsylvania State University
recreation profe$SOr Fred Coombs
also will be inducted.
The ceremony is Friday at
Lakeview Scanticon Resort and
Conference Center.
The School of Physical Education's hall of fame was created in
1988 to honor alumni who have
distinguished themselves in 'professional sportS, intercollegiate
coaching, recreation and financial
management.

w-. ......................

o.i.s.ncl
...., .......~"";
o..- l. '. ,....................

:J":!''-·.

WH1

-

..... ...... ............ ..... 78 68 .542

Ookland .......................... 75 86 .535

1
Anaheim ......................... 72 72 .600
6
Texu ... :.. ........................ &amp;4 79 .448 13 tf.l
Mondliy'a QIIMI

Boston 4, N.Y. Yankees 0
Chicago Whbe Sox 10. llelrolt 3
Baltimore 3, Anaheim 1
Ooldond 5 , To"'4&gt;8 Bay 1
l&lt;oniU Ci1y 8 , 3

BATIING-Garciaparra,

Boston,

.302;

COtegado, Toronto, .357; Erstad, Anaheim.
.Ill: Damon. KaMa City• •338: MJew-.
City, .337: ThOinllo, Chicago, .337:

~· 00

.: .........
M l - f.................... 2
'Tampa Bay"""""""" .... 2
Cnlclgo ...!~;.............. :... 0
Cl- Bay!m.; ........... ..... 0
Wlot
St. l.Oull .. ....................... 2
.......................... .

0 1.00
01.00
0 01 .00
2 0 .000
2 0 .000

28
43
62
27
34

20
34
18
71
47

0 0 1.00 78
1 ~ . 500 50
eo.- ........................ . 1 o.ISOO 55
Now~ ............. ..... l t 0 .500 38

70
70
42
41

September 13, 2000

74

~t3. ~111mi7

Ba111maro311, Jr.koonvile 38
Denver 42, Atlanta 14
St. t.ou11 37, Seolt1o 34
Carolina 38, San Francisco 22
Delroi11 \Yashlng1on t 0
New Ortoons 28, San Oiego 27
Arizona 32, Dallas 31
Opon: Pittlburgh

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

s.

N.Y. Je!S

20~!..~':
'5~~~.17

Bu11alo a1 N.Y. .Jelo, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Carolina, I p.m.
San Francisco at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Pliladelplia at Green Bey, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Detroit. 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at .Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
PII1SI&gt;urgh ot Cleveland. 1 p.m.
OerMir at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
San Oiego II! - ... City, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Glan1a al Chicago, 4:15p.m.
New 011Mns at Set.me. o!&amp;:15 p.m.
MinnotOto at New England, 4:15 p.m.
Baltimot'e at Miami, 8;20 p.m.
Opan: lnclianapotlo, Arizona, Tomeosee
1101 dlly, 11ept. 1 I
Delao at washington, 9 p.m.

VA urges·vets to reg1ster
Pomeroy fadlity to open
in mid-October

=-=

llojor,___

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

P1oyol1 Glonco
O•rt8111MII Round

POMEROY - As the op ening dace nears
for a new Veterans Affairs medical cli nic in
Po meroy, veterans are being urged to register
for services so th at they can take advantage of
facili ty's services.
In May, th e VA Medical Center in Chillicothe announced its p lans to open a me dical
fiel d ce nter in the Veterans Memoria l Hospital C li nic offi ce b uildi ng.
T he Po meroy fac ility is one of two that the
VA will open in southeastern O hio, with a

(s..dlng tn pat enth t")
(Ba81-ol-411rM)
Coloi'ICIO (I) va. Kanu~ City (1)
s.tun~~~r. Sopt. ••
Colorado at Kansu City, 8:30 p.m.
w-.ndl')', Sept. 20
Kansas City a1 Colorado, 9:30p.m..
Sunday, Sept. :M
Colorado at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m., ~ n..,.
essaty
Loe Angoleo (S) vo. Tompo Bay (4)
Tlnndoy, Sopt. 14
LosAngatas &amp;1 Tampa Bay, 8 p.m.
Wodnoadoy, &amp;opt. 20

Tampa Bay at l.ol Angolos, t 0:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sopt. 23
LOs Angeles a1 Tampa Bay, TBA, ~ noces·

second being located in Jack so n.
T he Jackson clinic is now "up and run ning," according to Keith Sullivan of the VA in
Chill icothe, and the Po meroy faci lity should
be ready for business by mi d-October.
In prepa ration for the open ing of the new
cli nic, the Meig; l.ou nty Vetera ns Services
office has been working closely wi th the VA
to register veterans im o the VA medi cal system .

Registration is required for any veteran
who plans to use th e Pom eroy fi eld clinic or
any other VA medical facil ity.
Last week, a mobile cli nic, staffed by VA
o utreach personnel, registered abou t 20 veterans and offered blood pressure, glucose an d
o ther screen ings.
Th at visit was one of a numb er of recent
stops by the o ut reach stafi~ in an effort to reg-

ister as many eligi ble veter..m s as possible.

. A munber of med ica l services w1ll b e
offe red through the Pomeroy facil ity, in cluding routine examination li and laboratory

work, prescription dispensing and other services ro utinely offered through a physician's
office.
T hat will make trips to Chillico the or
Athens for ro uti ne medical wo rk unnecessary
in so me instances.
Sull iva n said Tuesday that the new Pom eroy
clinic w ill operate on M ondays and Tuesdays.
and the Jackso n clinic on Wednesdays, T hursd :~ys and fr idays.
T he clin ics will operate wi th a shared staff,
and th ose staff members have already been
hired , accordi ng to Sullivan .

Please see-VA. Page Al

REGISTERING VETS- Patty Darth, an LPN for the VA Medical Center
in Ch ill icothe, provides a glucose sc ree ning for local veteran Gaylen
Swanson . The screenings are part of t he enro llment process for veterans seek ing benefits through the VA, which will soon open a field
center in Pomeroy. (Brian J. Reed photo)

aary
England (7) va. Chicago (2)
Frtday, &amp;opt. 15
New England al Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
'IIIMUy, Bapt. 19
Chicago a1 New England, 7:30p.m .
frtdoy, S.pl. 22
Now England at Chicago. 8:30 p.m., ~ nec-

essaty

Yllf1l·- Joruy (3) VL Dolu (I)
Frtday, &amp;opt. 15
Dallas at New Yorii:-New JEK5ey, 8 p.m. ·
Wodnoodoy, S.pl. 20
New Yor1c·New Jersoy al Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, 511'1. 23
Dallas at New York-New Jersey, 3:30p.m.. If
-

Welfare
activists
want limits
extended

Pomero

includ
in ·Jobs Tour'

nee an ary

5emtflnal Round

(lloot-ot-3)
1-8 winner vs. 4·5 winner
2·7 winner vs. 3-6 Winner
Champlonohlp
Sunday, Del. 15
. at wasnington, o .c ., 1:30 p.m.
(Note: Three points for a win and one point
1or a tia. The winner in the quarter and aamlfi·
Mil wil be 1hli finlt tMm to reectl 01' ·8Xeaed
five point!! wttl"rin the three games.)

McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GIZZ5 Lawrr811d Garden ltadur
• 15 hp • Automatic rransmis.sion
• 42-lncn Convertible mower dect

tht' JT lawmakt-rs and u rge th e111

to supp ort the bill.
" We wi ll not turn our back
on you. Three years is j ust not
enough for everybody," l:larrett
said.
H ome Spea ker Jo Ann
D avidson, R - R eynoldsburg,

PO MEROY --'-" Wh il e the rest of the co untry
has been awash in prosperity, southeastern O hio
has sufiered."
Mike Az inger of Marietta. R epub li ca n candida te for the U.S. Sixth District House scat now
occupied by Ted Strickland, 0-Lucasville, di!·,em-.dl.ec....wmie&gt;developm en t 'and jo'li cre;,t\on
during the Meigs Cou nty leg of what he calls a
"j obs To ur' ' th rough th e district's 14 ,·ou nt1es.
Azi nger met \vHh Repubh can supporters at a
rally on the stage of the Pomeroy parking lo t on
·
Tuesday.
'

CO LU MB US C uttin g
off welfare benefics after three
years will bring harm to familit•s. especially children, activists
w ho suppo rt a bi ll that woul d
extend the li1rut said Tuesday.
Abo ut 1sn peop le :ilfffiaed"a ~ + -~~:)
Statehouse rally sponsored by
th e O h io
Empowerment
Coalition, a statewide group of
advocates for low- income families. T hey gathered to supp ort
a bi ll , that would remove the
th ree-year ben efit limit that
affects most fam ilies on welfa re.
In 1997, the Legislature
passed a bill that gave recipi ents
th e three-year limit over five
yem. T he li mits ki ck in on
ROADEO WINNER- Dan Davis of Pomeroy. a load er operator with th e Oh io Department of Transportation 's Meigs County
O ct. l .
garage , will travel t o Columbu s t o compete in a statewide competition after winning t he loader operator co mpetition in the
T he advocacy gro ups believe
ODOT District 10 Roadeo. (C ontributed phot o)
the li mits mu st be lilted and
th ar fa mil ies be allowe d to
receive t he benefits for the full
" If we don't, children will be
sufferi ng o n the streets of
Ohio," said N asira Tulla of
Dayton, a coalition board
m ember. "The OEC is supportive of a safety net for all
O hioans and people of the
U nited States."
R eps. Dale Mill er, D-Cleveland. and Ca therine Barrett, DC incinnati, are co-sponsors of
the legislation. T hey encouraged those gathered to contact

1438GS SaW Lawn lhK:tor

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Bv JoHN

five years.

• 14.5 hp
• 38- inch mower deck
• 5-speed shift-on-rhe-go tran.smJss/on

I

Bullalo 27, Groen Bay 18
Clevoland 24. Cincinnati 7
N.Y. Giants 33, Philadelphia 18
TIJI• 1.1188 17, KanJaa City 14, OT
lWnpa Bay 41, Q1icaQo 0

t..................

san Diego. 39: Benitez, New Yortc, 37: Nen,
San Francl~. ~5; Aguilera, Chi~, 21;
GraY81, Cloonnati, 28; \7.,.., St. Lo1.111, 2S.

Details, A3

Wednesday

Oakland 38 , Indianapolis 31

Moo-.

l..w.lk•.

WVU HALL OF FAME

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va.
(AP) - West Virginia University
is honoring four former students
fo r their success in the fields of
athletics, recreation and finance.
C hu ck H owley, a former WVU
football player Who played with
the Dallas Cowboys, has been
named this year's outstanding ·
alumnu s by the university's
School of Physical Education.
University of Cincinnati men's
basketball coach Bob Huggins,
WVU Fo undation financial offi-

TMoy'o-

Baltimore (Parrilh 2-3 and SJ&gt;ullleon 1.0)at
TOlCIII (Holing 14-11 and ~ 11 ·13), 2,
8 :35 p.m.
Boo1on (R.Mattinoz 9-8) at C1eYelar&lt;l (FonieV
12-10), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Hamilton 2.01 a1 N.Y. Yank,..
(NaogMIB~) . 7:05p.m.
•
Oolroi1 (Miicld 4-11) ol Chicago WMe SOle
(Willi H), 8:05 p.m.
Kansu Ci1y (Reicl1elt H) a t - (Gorda
6~) . 10:05 p.m.
MiM-.o (Radko 11 · t4) at Clakland (Muld•8·t0), 10:05p.m.
Tampa Bay (R - e-8) a1 Anaheim (Belcher
3·2). 10:05 p.m.

Meigs society news and notes, As
Eastern volleyball team rolls on, Bl

Hlp: lOs; Low: 50s

TODAY'S SC·OREBOARD

BR.&lt;.J \V'N S NOTEllOOK

PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
Pittsbu rgh Steelers travel to
Cleveland this weekend with two
clear goals: regain their identity as
an in-your-face team and avenge
last year's 16- 15 loss to the eKpansion Browns.
''I'm not going to s:~y it's the
m ost embarrassing loss," linebacker Levo n Kirkland said at the
time, "because you never know
what's goi ng to come up nel&lt;t."
To that end, the Steelers have to
figure out what kind of football
team they are.
"Steeler football is physical,"
said tight end Mark Bruener.
" Steeler football is attacking.
Steeler football is going to come
at you , right at you ."
Maybe, if it was 1997. At that
time Br11ener was a put of a running game that r:mked fint in the
NFL. T he Steelers also were first
against the run .
But those statistics - and the
notion the Steelers will dominate
both sides of the line of scrimmage - have taken a tumble.
In 1997, the Steelers averaged
4.3 yards per carry, while holding
opponents to just 3..) yards a rush.
The nel&lt;t year it was 4.2 and 3.4,

1hunday

1\.lesday, September 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

6 • 1 ht1 Dnlly Sontlnol

&lt;'

Pomeroy man competes in ODOT contest
FROM STAFF REPORTS

H ock m g, Meigs, Mu nroe, Morg:an,

POMEROY One of th e best
loader operators in Oh io works at the
O h io D~partment of Transportation

Noble, Vinton and Washinh'ton .
In addit io n to pbci11 g first m the•
loader compL'tition, Davis was first run-

garage n ear Ponkroy.

Dan Davis &lt;&gt;f Pomeroy. a highway
worker at OIIOT \ Meigs C ounty
garage, was thL' winner m the loadt:r

operating divi sion of this year's ODOT
D istrict 10 Director's Cu p Tru ck and
Loader R oadco.
Davis wi ll now rcprt'liCilt Di strict 1()
in st3tewiJe- rol n pct ition on Wednesday.

The event, hosted by the Was hillf,'!On
County ODOT t.&gt;arage 111 Marietta,
boasted truck dnvers ~m J loader ope rators from all nine counties in Distnct

Ill, whi ch includ es Athens ,

(;:~ Il ia,

Azmger said he had visited a numbe r o f major

e mployers duri ng his to ur. inGlud ing the
Goodyear plant m Logan, Rocky Boots fac tory in
Nelsonville, Iron ton Iron p lant and the uraniu m
~n n c hm ent plant in Pi keton.
" I \Vanr ro share ideas on why I believe we G lll
bring economic devdopmenr w southeastern
() hto," Azi nge r s:~id. "\Ve h;ivt• the assets needed
to amact indus try: the Oh io R iver, a good wo rk
force, low bnd costs. and the telecommunications
infrastructure th;1r all ows a bminess to lo cate here

as easily as in Cuyahoh"' County."

Please see Azinger, Page A:S

competit ion. both tn1Lk drivt"rs and
lo,JJer operators manl·uvn tht"ir v~: h iclc s

through ;1 series of obstack co ~trscs
de ,igned ro t~ '\t rhcir drivi ng ab ility in ;~
ner- up in thi s year's truck compt.·tition. variety of ·muar ions.
" We're wry prouJ of Dan ." said Br,·tt
In I 995 and again in I 9%, Davis was
th e winner in tht· d istn ct truck (ompc- Jon es, ODOT's Meib" Co unty 111anagn
" Along: 'vi th b eing: an ou tstanding truck
tltlon.
UDOT's truck roaueo started in I')HH dnvn .md lo.tdcr operator. he is an all as a way to boost department morale aruuud good guy and o ne of the coun and to provide a way for 0))0T's truck [y\ omo.;tanding L'mploycl:'s.''
(; L·nr gL' Collirl';, D1 o.; rri cr It! de pury
driwrs to sharpen their skills as th ev
prep;1rcd f()r the state'~ ComJJH.:n:ial

dire ctor. -.aid that hL·, Jon es, and a nu m -

Driver Li cense (CDL) tc·sting, which
bccam t' a job requirem e nt at about the

ber of District

same tim e.

ODOT employees compete in th e
roadeo on a voluntary basis. l )uring th e

e111ployees wi ll be in
Columbus o n SL'pt . 1J, W&lt;ltc hing ;md
c heering from the sidel ines, as Davis
t;1kcs his pi.Ke .m10ng ~o m r: of the best ·
)II

t" quipment operators in the statl' .

VISITS POMEROY - Mike Azi nger, Republican
candidate for COngress. brought his economic
developmen t message to Pomeroy on Tu'esday.
He is pictured at t he Pomeroy parki ng lot st age,
where he spoke to a group of supporters. (Brian
J. Reed photo)

sa id she does not expect any
11lOVl' l llL"I1f 011

the hi ll.

" We.· think welfare rt•form is

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• /8-hp V-Twfn engine
• Automatic transmissJan
• 18-inch Convertible mower deck

LT133 Lawn Tractor
• JJ. hp

• 38·inch mowing deck
• S·speed shift-on·tlie-go transmission

()nlu
1 $38per 11D1dl* ·
J
·

LXZS5 Lawn ltador
• 15 hp • Aulomar/c transmission
• 42·/nch Converrlble mower deck

IHy

sa;p!l' nmh'

(~ '

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

\,JOHN DFfRE 1

near you and learn how you can beat the heat this summer.

www.deere.com

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

Calendar

front 1he threc-yt·ar limit under

S11 orts

the 1'!'!7 law. The rolls have
b ~e n rc·duced from 422,000
recip1 ents in October 1997 to
240,522 in Augu st. sa id Jon
All en , spokesman for 1he Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family Services.
Tht• law is working bl'came
child -care and health lwnetits

:w~~t h!.l[

. now avai lable allow re ci pit·nt.,
• Olfer erd! Od:ober 31. :&lt;'000 ~ tCi liOO'OI«&lt; ete011 on JCt(l Oeel'e Cl'l!dl! ~'WI TPK

fretlt. II!WO .:m dill*~~ CI)JI(I roease n'(J"JUlly p;r,rnen~ ~ S!JI!ICIII ''"es W(l terms m~rr oe Mi!allle.

r.c._.... r'\ltlllt1lf'IC ~ n

linlr'Cq tor ocmnerCial uw ~ • PII'~OMIM. Not 811

j70(k.ctl"''* *' • Mt r:II!IIIEnhops
5000-21

Today"s

\Vat-king thL· way"' it was imended to be." D avi dson said.
Sh&lt;· s.1id reports she h"
recl'ivc:d show that "very fl·w.
peopl e" would be left without
help. She sa id exe mption s
would be available for thme in
n eed.
Count y hum an o;.ervJ ce '\
departments can cxc.:m pt up w
20 percent of their cascloads

to find jobs, sa id Mary Anne
Slurkey. spokeswo man for Gov.
Bob Taft·.

Sentinel
2 Sections - l l Pages
Cla§~ifi~!b

A5
1!2-~

Comics
Editor ia ls

BS

M '

O bitu ari~s

A;!

Bl, 6

A3

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: ~ 4- 5; Pick 4: 5-S- 7-U
Buckey&lt; 5: 1.&gt;-IJ;-2.'\-2;...14

W:VA.
Daily 3: H- 7- 1 Daily 4: 6-7-H-7

Sternwheel Riverfest 2000 plans finalized
(, p.m .. followed with a perto rmall cc bv Dc·r· and Dallas on the

Bv TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Pl ans h ave
been finalized for the Sternwhcel
Riverfest 2000, "Rall y by th e
River," Sept. 28-30m Po meroy.

nvnfront
;lt
the · \)o me roy
A ln p hitllt'J tc r.
On Friday, a fire truck pa rade

L1vc mu sic. co nt es t~. a parad l·.
and th t: dockin g of numt·n ms
~terTJwhn·lt·rs - along with o n ~..·
provtdin g cruist'S- arc JUSt a t~w
of the activities to be offe red .

Stern wh ee l Riverfest 20011, f01'merly known as the Big Bend
Sternwheder festival, is untkr
the supe rvisio n of a IH.' W commith :' l' this year anJ is expectt'd to
d r,1w in la rgl· crow ds again .

STERNWHEELER FUN - A number of sternwheelers. like the P.A. Denny
of Charleston, W.Va .. above. wi ll cruise the Ohio River adjacent to Pomeroy
during the Sternwheel Riverfest 2000 in September. A variety of contests
and entertainment will take place during the three day festival. (Rie photo)

"The m:w t·ommittce is dcdi cat~d to mak ing sure

that the

o.; ternwheel festival c;~ rries on rlw
sa me traditions that ha10 m ade it so
popu lar over the year&lt;," said John

Mu 'i\L' T, ch;u rman o f the nt·w
Sternwheel Rivcrfl'st l·onu nitrec.
"Thi s year's festiva l promisc•s to
be very exciti n ~ :md full nf :lcth·-

itit"' tha t the whole f.muly can

enjoy," he ad &lt;led .
Ofiicial ft•stivitles begin Th ur&lt;Oay wirh an op~ning ce remony at

wi ll w ind it&lt; way throu~h
Po meroy, Middkport and Maso n,
W.Va ., at II a.m .. and tl1&lt;· M eigs
H igh Sc hool Band and flag corp;
will perform for the publi r a t I
p.m .
Various live music incl uding
John Horn, Phil Uhhnf':er and
Cowbny An~ds. will take to th e
sragt.· FnJay even ing to enrerrain .
Sternwhecl boat crui11cs o n che
ste rnwh,·c·ler Jewel C ity wi ll be
o ffered all during the.' lestival
th roughout the duration of the
fe stival and boarding fo r the

Ple•se see Festlv.l, Pllge Al

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