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...·---· ...

'·

•''

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

325 Lawn and Garden 1lac:tur
• /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

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

_Pege A 2 • The Deily Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
ACW ponden students case
LORAIN (AP) -the American Civil Liberties Union may go to
court on behalf of a high school senior threatened with suspension
for refusing to stand up for the Pledge of Allegiance.
ACLU attorney RayVasvari said on Tuesday a rule requiringAdm.iral King High School students to stand during the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional.
School officials sent Vincent Capizzi, 17, home Tuesday and told ·
him he faced a three- day suspension if he continued to defY the rule.
School district spokesman Ed Branham said students aren:t required
to recite the pledge but must stand up "because it's a matter of respect
for the rights of other students."
Capizzi sa.id he was making a political -statement.
"Right now, I don't agree with politics," he said. "Maybe when we
get a new president who can show being an American is something
to be proud of, I'd gladly stand for the Pledge of Allegiance."
The ACLU has offered Capizzi free legal representation, Vasvari
said.
· Vasvari Cited a 1943 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, West Virginia vs.
Barnette, which he said established that forcing students to stand for
the pledge is akin to forcing them to recite it.
"If the school doesn't rescind its poli cy, legal action could w ry easily begin within the week," he said .
Admiral King principal Anthony Cassano said the issue is respec t.
He said &lt;'veryone involved IS hoping for a resolution to the ISsue, but
"if litigation IS required, I'm sur&lt; the sc hool w1ll take the proper posi'tion."
Cassano was to meet Wednc·sday with Capizzi and his mother to
discuss the dispute . "We're going to look at the matter and se e if we
can find an amicable agreement;· the prinCipal said.

CLEVELAND (AP} - City Council is inwstigating a $135,000
city check paid to a computer consultant apparendy without authorization.
Council President Michael Polensek and. Bill Patman, head .o f
council's Finance Committee, are determining wh ether Mayor
Michael R. White's Finance Department violated the city charter.
The California company that received the check, Carrera MaxinniS, helps the city manage its accounting software.
In March, Carrera Maximus threatened to quit unless it was paid
for extta work.
Finance Director Ronald Brooks said Tuesday that Carrera Maximus' leaving would have meant the city would have been unable to
pay its bills. Brooks said he decided to pay the company to keep the
city operating.
"I needed to ha~ that work done," said Brooks, who assumed his
.position in January." And keep in mind: I was a new director 60 days
into the job and still learning the policies and procedures."
The city charter requires the city to execute a contract before it
pays a company.

P;iest to offer opening prayer
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Hindu priest from Parma, Ohio i! to
deliver Thursday's opening prayer in the Howe of Representatives.
Venka_tachalapathi Samuldrala will be the first Hindu priest to _give
: \he Ho\lM inwcalion, said Rep. Slurtod BIOWtl, D-Ohio.
Thunday was chosen to coincide with an address to a joint tenion
of Con1re11 by the prime minister of lndia. Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
Brown 1aid.
Brown lAid he had requc1ted that Samuldrrua be invitQd to mw a1
illiCit chaplain.
Ciuett chaplain!, nonunated by IIWmbvn oi Cungre11, offer upcninll prayert rwo to three times ea~h 1wck when Cungren i1 in lVI·
sion.
On Tue1day, Sister Catherine Mmn1111f New Jmry became th~ tim
Rmnan Catholic 111111 tCJ IJiW th~ op~ni11~ pray~•··

Fint ·Hearing for Chief
Wahoo license plate
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Putting the C hi ef Wahoo logo
on C leveland Indi a ns li cense
plates is a matter of com mumty
pride and loyalty, not an effort to
offend th ose opposed to the
logo, a lawmaker sa id Tuesday on
the first heari ng of his bill to
crea te a new plate.
Se n. R ober t Spada, a Parma
Heights Rep ubli ca n , said th e
C hief Wahoo logo is the most
popular sports sy mbo l in the
neighborhoods of hi s suburban
Cleve land district.
So m e c hurch groups and
Am erican Indians find the g rin mng, red-faced, big-nosed caricature offenSive. Spada said he
was JWJTL' of the corurovers\'.
"W het has bee n described by
a fe,\· .ts a toothy g rin is VJL'wcd
by o the rs as, a beaming sm ik of
pride in Jn o utstanding basebJII
team." Spada s;nJ . ''For must
pe o ple , th e image Df C hi ef

•

Wahoo does not bring to mind
Native Americans - it brings to
mind the Cleveland Indian s
baseball team·...
T he curren t plate depiCts a
baseball overlaid with th e word
Indians in script lettering.
Testifymg before the Senate
tra nsportatio n com mittee, Spada
pointed out that even New York
State issues a C hiefWahoo plate.
"If you lived in New York
State you could get a C hief
Wahoo license plate. If you li ve
in Ohio, whert&gt; th e ream is from,
yo u co ul dn't . That seems a littl e
in const stt' IH to m e," he said.
New York offer s spec ia lty
pbtes for all major league spor ts,
N~w York mm or lea gue sporrs
teams and NA SCA R . Sixteen
pe ople have .t he Wahoo plat&lt;· tn
New York. said Ken Brow n,
spokesm an
for
th e st:ltl·'s
D epartment of M otor Vehicles.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Nuclear Regulatory Commi ssion told lawmakers Tuesday that
it has completed a study of the
U.S. Enrichment. Corp.'s finances
and concluded there is no cause ·
for any action.
USEC has been hurt by
falling prices for the enriched
uranium used by nuclear power
plants.
·
In the last year, it has laid off
workers, seen its credit rating
reduced to junk bond level and
decided to close one of the
nati on ·~ two enrichment facilities: the- Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant in Piketon , Ohio.
The financial problems led the
r~gularors to ex.1mmc whi:ther
U SEC remained .1ble ro fulfill a
rl! qu ir~ me nt that it be a ·· n..·l i :~bll'
and t:conomical dome-stic source
of enrichment scrvi&lt;.:es."
If US£C were fo~md to no

Beware! PROPULSID.
PROPULSID: A drug taken for relief of hmtburn and to relieve
infantile colic. This drug can cause heut rhythm abnormalities such as
fast and irregular heart rates and "thumping" hetrt beats. Symptoms
are fatigue, fainting, dizzinets, shortness of breath and ehestdiscomforL
Advene reaetio1s have occurred when taken with other drugs. The FDA
reports that over 100 duths are associated with PROPULSID. If you
developed cardiac arrhythmia or have had other severe problems-you
need legal consultation now. Strict time limitations apply for claims 1o be
made. It is imperative youcontact us immediatelyfora free consultation.

WASHINGTON (AP}
Death penalty criti cs are
de manding a moratorium on
executions after a Justice Department report showed racial and
geographic disparity in federal
death sentences, but Attorney
General Janet Reno wants more
studies instead.
The wide variations by race
and location found in the report
released Tuesday were not the
produ ct of bias in her department , R eno said, but rather
resulted from social ills like
poverty, drug abuse and lack of
opportunity that affect minorities
more than whites and produce
criminals.
"The federal criminal justice
system is not designed to remedy
these systemic problems by
Itself;' Reno told a news confere nce . She ord e red additional
studies of why some murderers
get charged with federal capital
crimes, as opposed to being
charged by local police.
"At this point we ·are troubled
by the figures, but we have not
found the bias" in her department's procedures , Reno said. ·
And she endorsed legislation
proposed by Sen. Patri ck Leahy,
D-Vt., that would provide postconviction DNA genetic tests for
federal and state inmates.
President Clinton said the data
'
raised questions "since we're supposed to have a uniform law of
the land.'' But he noted there had

Commerce Comm ittee Chairman Tom Bliley, R -Va, the NRC
chi ef said domg tha t would "shu1
down a dome,uc supply altob"'th er and thus would not s~~ve
the ... broader statu tory purpo.se."
"On the basis of thiS recmt
review ofUSEC's financial situatio n , we condudc dut W(! should
not take action m m od1fy1 'illSpen d or rt'\'o ke th l' cc._•rtJfic:ues ('f
rt:rtlfication." ltich;lrd. Mcscr\'c
wrote.
" \Vl_· do not bL·iiL'\.l' dur .lny
furth er N R C: stud\' uf thl' USEC
situation is JUStifiL'Li .·'

USEC lud 111Si,ic·d .1 11 .1 km g
dut It \V;\:0. ,\11J \\'OU Jl j LOIHJ!Hh.'

the rL· h.dok·

bl'

nf

\ll lln.: l'

do!llL'Stic ur.tll!Uill lh .lt tln· bw

requm:s.

nt,DO

ogy that looks at both resources
that go into sch ool systems and at
acco untability measures," saicl
LeeAnne Rogers, a department
spokeswoman. " They recognized
that the department really needed
to move forward to put money
together for a budget request ."
The department's final budget
proposal will go to Gov. Bob Taft
in Nove mber. It received $13.3
billion for 2000-2001.
The board tabled the two
other
resolutions
primarily
because of conc erns about wording, Rogers said.

has returned to the tri-county area
and is currently a staff physician in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
· Emergency Care &lt;:enter

A member ofGenesis Hospital System

THURSDAY. FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

SEPTEMBER 14TH-16TH
•
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Aseorted Pott :•
0-iOPS

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Chuckwagon

BACON

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Old Time

SODA POP
$~~~KCANS

Family

Pack

CINCINNATI (AP) - AI
Gore and Joe Lieberman pushed
their plans for improving educa- tion with campaign stops at three
. southwest Ohio schools.
Their proposals drew some
: enthusiastic response Tuesday and
some questions about how they
plan to ach.ieve those goals.
Gore, the Democratic presidential nominee, touched on
problems that need to be fixed
but didn't tell the crowd where
he would find more money for
education, said lngburg Graf, 59.
She is a Cincinnati hairdresser
who attended a rally at Cincinnati State Technical and Community College.
"I want to know where the
money's coming from and what
has he done for eight years?" said
Gcaf, who is undecided on her
vote.
Xavier University srudent Meg
Wagner, a 19-year-old Democrat
. from . White Oak, was more
enthusiastic in her response to the

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Carmel or Candy

APPLES
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Ballards

WIENERS

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Correction Polley

News\ Departments
The main number is 992 -2 156 .
Department extentlons are:

·~~.-.1. · .:s-a:.-.~~t

~1ddl.~p~rt,

+ In Columbus614-221-4218

c •h1&lt;&gt;

( '7 4 0 ) 9 9 . 2 - 3 4 7 1
•

Rocky Boots - 5),
AD Shell - 63'1,
Sears- 35 ~.
Shoney's -1
Wai-Mart - 54io
Wendy's - 19~.
Worthington - 10~

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

BBT - 29'1,
Peoples - 14 ~
Premier - 5'k
Rockwell - 39 ~J

General manager

Ext. 1l 0 1

New•

Ext 1102

or

Ext1106

Other services

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OVB -

Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. 11 you ~now of an error in
a story. call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156 ..

Advo!11alng

In Ot~tland 2t6-228-7200

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Harley Davidson - 46'·
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LawandHelp.comor call Toll Free 1-888-517-2249.

Cincinnati speech.
"I hoped to hear a strong platform for today's generation. and
promises of tuition btea~r the
middle class and more responsive
health care rules hit home," she
said.
Gore and Lieberman rode yellow school buses through southwest Ohio, stopping also at a
middle school in Miamisburg and ·
a high school in Middletown.
Gore told a selected group of
parents, students and teachers at
Anna . K. Wantz Middle School
that the government can help
fight school violence by raising
the min.imum wage to take financial pressures off of parents.
He said the government also
can encourage companies to give
parents time off to deal with
troubled children .
Eighth- grader Kelsey Shaw,
who said the middle school was
the target of a bomb threat last
year, said she was reassured by
Gore's answers.

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

- 38'~,.

Akzo - 41 ~.
AmTechJSBC- 45~.
Ashland Inc. - 35] ,.
AT&amp;T - 30~,
Bank One - 37'~.
Bob Evans -17).
BorgWarner - 33 ·~.
Champion - 2l•
31
Charming Shops - 4 1:.
c~y Holding - 7'!.
Federal Mogul - 10
Firstar - 23'~,.

Z/$~

t: Chef Boyardee 2/$
3PK: PIZZA KlTS
·I

AEP

TOMATO JUICE

•
•
•

,.

LOCAL STOCKS

Old Time

•

been " no suggestion, as far as 1
know, that any of the cases where
the convictions occurred were
wrongly decided" and said he
would consult R eno before
deciding what to do.
Those responses didn't mollifY
death penalty critics in Congress.
"Additional internal reviews
alone will not satisfY public concern about our system;· said Sen .
Russell Feingold, D-Wis. His
office said he would introduce a
new bill this week providing a
federal execution halt; he already
has proposed one to stop both
federal and state executions.
Feingold renewed a demand
that he and Democratic Sens.
Carl Levin of Michigan , Paul
Wells tone of M.innesota and Tom
Harkin oflowa made in June that
Clinton name a comnnission to
study the issue and postpone any
executions until it reports. "All
Americans agree that whether
you die for wnmutting a federal
crime should not depend arbitrarily on where you live."
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-111.,
also demanded a moratorium
instead of"business as nsual."
" If you're an African American in Texas who commits a
crime that could warrant the federal death penalty, you get it. If
you're white in New York City,
you probably don't. .. . What is
this, some form of natural selection? Death penalty Darwin.ISm.

The Daily Sentinel - Page A 3

-LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
lhree charged
inBH
POMEROY -Two men were
expected to appear in Meig&lt;
County Court today to· answer
charges relating to the breaking
and entering incidents at two
Pomeroy car lots and at a Pomeroy
area construction firm.
Meigs County SheriffJames M.
Soulsby reported this morrting that
Harley McDonald, 19, Middleport,
and Bartholomew S. Boggs, 22,
Rutland, are allegedly responsible
for the theft of a car stereo from
U.S. Route 33 Auto Clinic last
month, as well as the breaking and
entering at Key Motors and at the
Wesam Construction Co. storage
facility near Chester.
A juvenile, 16, has also. been
charged,
Soulsby said felony charges of
breaking and entering and receiving stolen property were filed
against the men.
A number of stolen items from
Wesam and from U.S. Route 33
Auto Clinic have been recovered
and will be rerurned, Soulsby said,
and charges relating to additional
cases of vandalism and theft n~ay be
filed.

Units log·9 calls
POMEROY Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Servic.s
answered n.ine calls for assistance
on Tuesday. Units responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

8:28 a.m., Rockspring&lt; Rehabilitation Center, Allen Ball, Holzer
Medical Center;
10:22 a.m., West Main Stteet,
Melissa Mullins, treated, Juanita
Combs,HMC;
4:18 p.m., Hone Cave Road,
motor vehicle ~ccident, Julian
Scott Hill, treated;
5:17 p.m. , U.S. 33, assisted by
Pomeroy, Lonnie Medley, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
10:12 p.m., Bailey Run Road,
Michelle Roush , treated.

POMEROY
2:06 p.m., U.S. 33, auto fire,
Hilton Hill Sr., owner, no injuries.
RACINE
4 :18 p.m., Horse Cave Road,
motor vehicle accident, Joshua
Whiduck,Jackson General Hospital, Michelle Ours, treated.

RUTLAND
11:t7 a.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Haden Brown,
treated.
SYRACUSE
4:18 p.m., Hone Cave Road,
motor veh.icle accident, Charles
McKinney,JGH.

Revival planned
PAGEVILLE
Pageville
Freewill Baptist Chuoch will host a
revival with Evangelist Sam Anderson Sept. 21-23, with singing each
evening. The public is invited.

Eastem meeting
changed
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Regu-

Jar meeting of the Eastern Local
School Board has been changed to
Sept. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the adm.inistrative office in Tuppers Plains.

Association
to meet

proceeds to b.:nc·fit the Aml'!ICJn
Heart Association H e.ut Walk on
Sept. zr,.
The men u will conc;t..,r of a sluppy joe,clups .111d J d!lnk to r a S2
donation.

Licenses issued

ATI-IENS - Southeast Distri~t
of the Ohio Music Teachers Association will hold its fall conference
Sept. 22 from 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m . at
the Oh.io University Sc hool of
Music.
Professor M artha Hilley, University of Texas, a renowned teacher.
publisher and author, will present a
two-part workshop: " Improvisation Need Not Bring on th e
Prozac" and "Can Technology
Really Help Music Study?"
Hilley has received many teaching awards among them being the
Texas Excellence Teaching Award ,
1983; Outstanding Collegi ate
Teaching Award by the Texas
Music Teachers Associati on, 1997,
and the William Blunk Endowed
professorship in 1998 for undergraduate teachin g.
Her articles have been published
in Clavier, Piano Quarterly and
Keyboard Companion mag;!&lt;ines.
Registration will begi n at 8:30
a.m. and the public is invited to
attend.

POMEROY A uiJrriagc
license has been i«ued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Keith
Day. 43 1and Joyce M . Dov. 5~. both
of Pomeroy.

Benefit set

.-Council discus:.ed rh e pllrch:1se of
large trash coma incrs for usl' wirh

POMEROY - A sloppy joe
luncheon will be served Friday in
the lobby at Peoples Bank in
Pomeroy, 11 a.m.-2 p.m . with the

a compacto r tnick. but did not
vote to purchase them as was
reported in a recent account of t'he
Cou ncil meeting.

Corrections
SYRACUSE It was incorrectly reported lTl a n..·n· ut story on
Syracuse Villag:e Counnl that the
Syracuse Elementary Sc hool was
built lfl 193').
A bond issue to build 1he &gt;ehool
was passed in 1Y21) and the buildin g was built soon after, according
to RoberrWingt•rr , grants arlnUnistrator for th e village.
Bon d~ we re l""llt'd 111
the
amounr of $24,0110
Also in correctly rcportc:d wa s
info rmation on an ospholt bid. The
bid of Tom M.1yk &amp; Som Construction of Bartlett to provide
1.619 tons of JSphalr or a coS! of
$42.05 per to n wa' .~c:c epted.

Iiiii II
RACINE -

Bad week may get wone ·

1(.acinc Vi llage

VALLEY WEATHER

for entertainment industry Autumnal weather coming
Education dominates day of
Ohio campaigning by Gore

(3041 615-4340

Girt pleads in fatality
NORWALK (AP) - A I 5-year-old g•rl has pleaded guil ty in a
traffic accident that killed a friend and injured the defendant, her 14year-old sister and three people in a second vehicle.
Shanin B. Holiday of Sandusky enter&lt; d the plea Monday to
:tttempted vehic ula r homicide in Huron Cou nty Juvenile Court.
She was sentenced to juvenile de tention for a n1immum of six
months and could be held until her 21st birthday.
C harges of car theft and vehicular homi c1de were dismissed in a
plea agreement, said Chris Mushett, court adm.inistrawr.
State troopers said the July 26 crash in Norwalk that killed kari
Szczepanski, 14, ofWakeman, occurred when H o liday tried to pass in
a no-passing zone and hit an o ncoming vehicle.
Norwalk is about 50 nules southwest of Cleveland.

longer meet that requirement ,
the NRC could pull the company's ce rti ficatio n.
But in rhe letter 10 House

ro

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Justice study prompts
new calls for death
penalty moratorium

i,

Drtver tel student crashes
SANDUSKY (A I') -A 16-year-old Samh1Sky boy was late ft&gt;r his
driving 5~hool class because his sport utility vehicle \Wilt through the
window of a storefront offic~ .
Th~ Ford Explllrer j11mped a curb and hit a utility pole Monday
before crashing through the window of Serving Our Seniors Inc. The
boy, whose naine was withheld because of his age, escaped inj ury
The teen left for hiS driving class after talking to police. H e was
cited for failing to keep control of the vehicle.
Pat Davis, who works at the seniors agency, had her bac.k to the
window when the crash occurred.
" I just heard a big noise and I just went like this," Davis said, throwmg her arms over her head. "It happened so fast all I d1d was scream.''

NRC finds no reason_
to further study USEC

Education Deparbnent
to focus on resources
CO LUMBUS (AP) - The
State Board of Education directed
the Department of Educatio n on
Tuesday to focus on sc hoo l
resources and assessn1ent efforts
when crafting a funding plan.
The board passed the resolu tion- one of three up for debate
at the board's meetings Monday
and Tuesday to guide the
department's approach as it builds
its 2002-2003 budget. Votes on
two other resolutions were postponed until October.
"They adopted a concept - a
policy really in asking the
department to design methodol-

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Ext1104

Circulation

Ext 1103

Classified Ads

Ext. 1100

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(USPS 213·1160)
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Publish ed ev.ery afternoon, Monday
thro ugh Friday, 111 Coun St. , Pomeroy.
Ohio Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Mtmber: The Associated Pross and the
Oh io Newspaper As&amp;oc1alion .
Pottm..ter: Send add ress corrections to
The Daily Senlinel. 11 1 Court. St ..
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - It's tent in the media, was to confront
shaping up to be a tough week entertainment executives at a
for the people who produce and Senate hearing. Lieberman and
distribute movies, video games, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who
pop music and television shows.
was chairing the Senate ComFirst, a scath.ing Federal Trade merce Committee hearing,
Comnnission report claimed the backed a measure last year that
entertainment industry was_ped- -~'l'!~•~c.i the fTC study on .
dling adult material to underage ""\rttertaihrru!nt· viOlence. '
audiences. Then federal regulatort
Republicans had their own
announced they would take a representative at the hearing closer look at the amount of sex Lynne Cheney, wife of the
and violence on TV networks.
Republican VIce pmidential
Both presidential campaigns nominee and former head of the
latched onto the issue- one that National Endowment for the
resonates strongly with Ameri- Humartities, who said entertaincans concerned about the expo- ment violo;nce "debases and
sure of young adults to sex and degrades tht culture our children
violence. Al Gore said he was pre- are growing up in."
pared, if elected to the White
The FTC report decried the
House, to crack down on the . industry's "pervasive and aggresindustty if it did not stop market- sive marketing" of adult material
ing violent movies, recording&lt; - such as R-rated movies or
and video games to underage video games intended for mature
audiences - to children.
youth within six months.
His Republican opponent,
The fallout from the study was
George W. Bush, questioned felt Tuesday in Hollywood, as the
Gore's credibilitY on the issue and Walt Disney Co. announced
said the solution should rest with changes in iiS marketing pearparents and political pe~uasion, tires, including a prohibition
not new federal regula 'on.
against theater owners showing
On Wednesda ,
's running trailers for R-rated films before
n\ate, Sen . Jos h Lieberman, a movies released under the Walt
· ·c of explicit con- Disney label.
longtime

Festival
from PageAl
cruises will begin I 5 minutes
before each deparmre .
Saturday's activities will include
a parade, a car show sponsored by
Don Tate Motors, Victorian
Queen contest, sponsored by
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, and a chili cookoff,
sponsored by the VFW of Mason,
W.Va.
A lin e- throwing contest, sponso red by AEP, will begin at I p.m.
and kids games, sponsored by
M eigs Counry Prosec utor John
Lente s, and the Meigs County

Health Department Wellness
Block Grant , will be from 1-7
p.m. at the mini park .
A barbershop quartet will perform at the amphitheater at I
p.m. and the band Loose Thread
will play from 3-4 p.m.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will once again spo nsor
the Rubbe r Ducky Derby, with a
variety of priz es to be given away,
at 4 p.m.
The Captain's Dinner, hosted
each year to hon or various ste rnwheel captains, is sponsored by
the Eagles Club and will be 5:30
p .m . at a lo ca tion to be
announ ced during the festival.
Oh Saturday night , Paul
Doeffinger.
Bli tzk rieg

BY THE ASSOCIArEO PRESS

Tri-county area re sidents will
get a preview of autumn this
weekend, the N ational Weather
Service says.
After one more day of storm
clouds ·and temperatures in the
70s on Thursday, 'cool arid dry
conditions will move into the
state.
Daytime tem ratures generally
will be the 60s riday and into
the weekend. Lo s will be in the
40s.
Sunset tonight \ ill be at 7:1113
and sunrise on Th rsday at 7 :12
a.m.

VA
from PageAl
The VA has already begun renovation work at its new Pome roy
location, w hich formerly house d
Holzer Hospice.
New wall coverings and carpeting, new furniture and minor
renovations for ac cess ibil iry are
now under way. Sullivan said th at

·

446 •45 24

Azinger
from PageAl
'

"Our ongoing high un employment in southen,l Ohio is
conducive to new industry. What
we are lacking is the leadership
and the strength to promote
somhern Ohio," he added.
"Ted Strickland has failed to
br.i ng a vi~i o n for econom.i c
rlevelopment ," Azinger said. "His
lt'gacy will be o ne ofl ost jobs. H e
has been a fa ilu re at bringing econOlrti c deve lopment to this area .''

aU work on th e offices IS sc heduled for co mpleti on by Sept. 27,
and th at the o tli ce will likely
open sometime berween Oct. 15
and 30.
Veterans w ishing: to register for
medi cal services through the \lA
will have anotl1er opportu mry to
do so. The VA out re.1ch tc·am will
bring its mobile unit to rhc 13ig
Ben d Sternwhcd Fc&gt; liva l Jn
Pc,meroy. wh1ch \nll be the last
weeke nd of July.

Unplugged, Dwight Icen howe r, by the Meigs CountY C hamber
and Three Chord C harlie will of Co mm crCt'. lllllll - t~\\'boJt rafprovid e musical entertain men t. A fle. Ding-A-Lin~ R .ulru.Jli. ,llld a
fireworks sh ow, sponsored by the \uncht·on spomi.Ht'd by tht• rrini Ohio Lottery, will co nclude the ty C hu rch .
festivities.
A bontire \vi ii lw hc·ld on the·
A llllJOrity of the mm• cal levee each night. rhur~Jav
entertainment at the fest iva l i~ · through Satun:by, :md .1 \·.nitty o'f
sponsored by Riepe nh off Distrib- concessio ns and ot ht·r \'t' tH.iors
uting.
will bt• sd up Jlong the..· park11lg
Other events plann ed during lot Jrt.'J sL·ll mg thn r " ·.1n:".
the festival are a perform ances by
The Bi g Blend Cloggers, Ohio
Till' Olym1lk~ \\t'rc 111'-l hrn, td River C loggers and Th e S\\'ingin'
~.· ~L"l fl' ! ll11 fkr ftn Il l jq \{1 rh t'
Se niors; facepa1 nting. sponso rl'd
S;.dnc~ g at ll~o' " ·,1 Il l ll~_· ~o' ll\t'r~d
h' JtU IO(I pt l'._·c, ~~r tcll'\h l ll[l : • •
by Rio Gran de Co mmumty Col ~o·quipntl'
l l! .
.•
lege, a balloon hft-otl-. spo111ored

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
In . defense of his attacks aga mst
Strickland, Azinger said th at
Strickland's rating with the
America n Civil Liberties Unio n
is twice than his ratin g with the
National Federation of Indepe ndent Business.
"The Business and Industry
Political Action Conun.ittee gives
Ted Strickland a 9 percent ra ting,
and his rating from the NFIB is
43 perc ent ."
Azinger was also a congressional ca nd idate in ! 998, hut was
defeated in the Republi c'an primary by then-Lt. Gov. Nancy
H ollister.

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... C lear. Lows in the
mid 50s. Li ght and variable wind .
Thu rsday... Part ly cloudy. Hi g hs
in the lower 80s.
Thursday night. .. Cioudy wi th a
chan~ of ~ohow~r&amp;. Lows ln tlle
upper 50s.
·
Extended forecast:
Friday... C lo udy with a chan,ce
of light rain or drizzle. Hig hs 'in
the upper 60s .
Saturday... Partly clou dy. Lows
near 50 and highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows 'in
the mid 40s and highs in the
lower 70s.

•

OlOIIOUTf 1~Wl S T
1?0~ JIICK50N !'lK ~

7

FRI 9/8/00 • THURS 9/ 14/00

BOX OIIICI WILL OPIH AT
6:30PM FOR EVINING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES
THE ART OF WAR (R)
7:00 SUN-THUR

BRING IT ON (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

AUTUMN IN NEW YORK (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 SUN·THURS

NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
,

THi 1~~~~:,.~j:~13)
THE CELL
7:00 SUN· THUAS

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SU N-THURS

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

_Pege A 2 • The Deily Sentinel

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
ACW ponden students case
LORAIN (AP) -the American Civil Liberties Union may go to
court on behalf of a high school senior threatened with suspension
for refusing to stand up for the Pledge of Allegiance.
ACLU attorney RayVasvari said on Tuesday a rule requiringAdm.iral King High School students to stand during the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional.
School officials sent Vincent Capizzi, 17, home Tuesday and told ·
him he faced a three- day suspension if he continued to defY the rule.
School district spokesman Ed Branham said students aren:t required
to recite the pledge but must stand up "because it's a matter of respect
for the rights of other students."
Capizzi sa.id he was making a political -statement.
"Right now, I don't agree with politics," he said. "Maybe when we
get a new president who can show being an American is something
to be proud of, I'd gladly stand for the Pledge of Allegiance."
The ACLU has offered Capizzi free legal representation, Vasvari
said.
· Vasvari Cited a 1943 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, West Virginia vs.
Barnette, which he said established that forcing students to stand for
the pledge is akin to forcing them to recite it.
"If the school doesn't rescind its poli cy, legal action could w ry easily begin within the week," he said .
Admiral King principal Anthony Cassano said the issue is respec t.
He said &lt;'veryone involved IS hoping for a resolution to the ISsue, but
"if litigation IS required, I'm sur&lt; the sc hool w1ll take the proper posi'tion."
Cassano was to meet Wednc·sday with Capizzi and his mother to
discuss the dispute . "We're going to look at the matter and se e if we
can find an amicable agreement;· the prinCipal said.

CLEVELAND (AP} - City Council is inwstigating a $135,000
city check paid to a computer consultant apparendy without authorization.
Council President Michael Polensek and. Bill Patman, head .o f
council's Finance Committee, are determining wh ether Mayor
Michael R. White's Finance Department violated the city charter.
The California company that received the check, Carrera MaxinniS, helps the city manage its accounting software.
In March, Carrera Maximus threatened to quit unless it was paid
for extta work.
Finance Director Ronald Brooks said Tuesday that Carrera Maximus' leaving would have meant the city would have been unable to
pay its bills. Brooks said he decided to pay the company to keep the
city operating.
"I needed to ha~ that work done," said Brooks, who assumed his
.position in January." And keep in mind: I was a new director 60 days
into the job and still learning the policies and procedures."
The city charter requires the city to execute a contract before it
pays a company.

P;iest to offer opening prayer
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Hindu priest from Parma, Ohio i! to
deliver Thursday's opening prayer in the Howe of Representatives.
Venka_tachalapathi Samuldrala will be the first Hindu priest to _give
: \he Ho\lM inwcalion, said Rep. Slurtod BIOWtl, D-Ohio.
Thunday was chosen to coincide with an address to a joint tenion
of Con1re11 by the prime minister of lndia. Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
Brown 1aid.
Brown lAid he had requc1ted that Samuldrrua be invitQd to mw a1
illiCit chaplain.
Ciuett chaplain!, nonunated by IIWmbvn oi Cungre11, offer upcninll prayert rwo to three times ea~h 1wck when Cungren i1 in lVI·
sion.
On Tue1day, Sister Catherine Mmn1111f New Jmry became th~ tim
Rmnan Catholic 111111 tCJ IJiW th~ op~ni11~ pray~•··

Fint ·Hearing for Chief
Wahoo license plate
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Putting the C hi ef Wahoo logo
on C leveland Indi a ns li cense
plates is a matter of com mumty
pride and loyalty, not an effort to
offend th ose opposed to the
logo, a lawmaker sa id Tuesday on
the first heari ng of his bill to
crea te a new plate.
Se n. R ober t Spada, a Parma
Heights Rep ubli ca n , said th e
C hief Wahoo logo is the most
popular sports sy mbo l in the
neighborhoods of hi s suburban
Cleve land district.
So m e c hurch groups and
Am erican Indians find the g rin mng, red-faced, big-nosed caricature offenSive. Spada said he
was JWJTL' of the corurovers\'.
"W het has bee n described by
a fe,\· .ts a toothy g rin is VJL'wcd
by o the rs as, a beaming sm ik of
pride in Jn o utstanding basebJII
team." Spada s;nJ . ''For must
pe o ple , th e image Df C hi ef

•

Wahoo does not bring to mind
Native Americans - it brings to
mind the Cleveland Indian s
baseball team·...
T he curren t plate depiCts a
baseball overlaid with th e word
Indians in script lettering.
Testifymg before the Senate
tra nsportatio n com mittee, Spada
pointed out that even New York
State issues a C hiefWahoo plate.
"If you lived in New York
State you could get a C hief
Wahoo license plate. If you li ve
in Ohio, whert&gt; th e ream is from,
yo u co ul dn't . That seems a littl e
in const stt' IH to m e," he said.
New York offer s spec ia lty
pbtes for all major league spor ts,
N~w York mm or lea gue sporrs
teams and NA SCA R . Sixteen
pe ople have .t he Wahoo plat&lt;· tn
New York. said Ken Brow n,
spokesm an
for
th e st:ltl·'s
D epartment of M otor Vehicles.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Nuclear Regulatory Commi ssion told lawmakers Tuesday that
it has completed a study of the
U.S. Enrichment. Corp.'s finances
and concluded there is no cause ·
for any action.
USEC has been hurt by
falling prices for the enriched
uranium used by nuclear power
plants.
·
In the last year, it has laid off
workers, seen its credit rating
reduced to junk bond level and
decided to close one of the
nati on ·~ two enrichment facilities: the- Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant in Piketon , Ohio.
The financial problems led the
r~gularors to ex.1mmc whi:ther
U SEC remained .1ble ro fulfill a
rl! qu ir~ me nt that it be a ·· n..·l i :~bll'
and t:conomical dome-stic source
of enrichment scrvi&lt;.:es."
If US£C were fo~md to no

Beware! PROPULSID.
PROPULSID: A drug taken for relief of hmtburn and to relieve
infantile colic. This drug can cause heut rhythm abnormalities such as
fast and irregular heart rates and "thumping" hetrt beats. Symptoms
are fatigue, fainting, dizzinets, shortness of breath and ehestdiscomforL
Advene reaetio1s have occurred when taken with other drugs. The FDA
reports that over 100 duths are associated with PROPULSID. If you
developed cardiac arrhythmia or have had other severe problems-you
need legal consultation now. Strict time limitations apply for claims 1o be
made. It is imperative youcontact us immediatelyfora free consultation.

WASHINGTON (AP}
Death penalty criti cs are
de manding a moratorium on
executions after a Justice Department report showed racial and
geographic disparity in federal
death sentences, but Attorney
General Janet Reno wants more
studies instead.
The wide variations by race
and location found in the report
released Tuesday were not the
produ ct of bias in her department , R eno said, but rather
resulted from social ills like
poverty, drug abuse and lack of
opportunity that affect minorities
more than whites and produce
criminals.
"The federal criminal justice
system is not designed to remedy
these systemic problems by
Itself;' Reno told a news confere nce . She ord e red additional
studies of why some murderers
get charged with federal capital
crimes, as opposed to being
charged by local police.
"At this point we ·are troubled
by the figures, but we have not
found the bias" in her department's procedures , Reno said. ·
And she endorsed legislation
proposed by Sen. Patri ck Leahy,
D-Vt., that would provide postconviction DNA genetic tests for
federal and state inmates.
President Clinton said the data
'
raised questions "since we're supposed to have a uniform law of
the land.'' But he noted there had

Commerce Comm ittee Chairman Tom Bliley, R -Va, the NRC
chi ef said domg tha t would "shu1
down a dome,uc supply altob"'th er and thus would not s~~ve
the ... broader statu tory purpo.se."
"On the basis of thiS recmt
review ofUSEC's financial situatio n , we condudc dut W(! should
not take action m m od1fy1 'illSpen d or rt'\'o ke th l' cc._•rtJfic:ues ('f
rt:rtlfication." ltich;lrd. Mcscr\'c
wrote.
" \Vl_· do not bL·iiL'\.l' dur .lny
furth er N R C: stud\' uf thl' USEC
situation is JUStifiL'Li .·'

USEC lud 111Si,ic·d .1 11 .1 km g
dut It \V;\:0. ,\11J \\'OU Jl j LOIHJ!Hh.'

the rL· h.dok·

bl'

nf

\ll lln.: l'

do!llL'Stic ur.tll!Uill lh .lt tln· bw

requm:s.

nt,DO

ogy that looks at both resources
that go into sch ool systems and at
acco untability measures," saicl
LeeAnne Rogers, a department
spokeswoman. " They recognized
that the department really needed
to move forward to put money
together for a budget request ."
The department's final budget
proposal will go to Gov. Bob Taft
in Nove mber. It received $13.3
billion for 2000-2001.
The board tabled the two
other
resolutions
primarily
because of conc erns about wording, Rogers said.

has returned to the tri-county area
and is currently a staff physician in the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
· Emergency Care &lt;:enter

A member ofGenesis Hospital System

THURSDAY. FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

SEPTEMBER 14TH-16TH
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Aseorted Pott :•
0-iOPS

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Chuckwagon

BACON

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Old Time

SODA POP
$~~~KCANS

Family

Pack

CINCINNATI (AP) - AI
Gore and Joe Lieberman pushed
their plans for improving educa- tion with campaign stops at three
. southwest Ohio schools.
Their proposals drew some
: enthusiastic response Tuesday and
some questions about how they
plan to ach.ieve those goals.
Gore, the Democratic presidential nominee, touched on
problems that need to be fixed
but didn't tell the crowd where
he would find more money for
education, said lngburg Graf, 59.
She is a Cincinnati hairdresser
who attended a rally at Cincinnati State Technical and Community College.
"I want to know where the
money's coming from and what
has he done for eight years?" said
Gcaf, who is undecided on her
vote.
Xavier University srudent Meg
Wagner, a 19-year-old Democrat
. from . White Oak, was more
enthusiastic in her response to the

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WIENERS

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Correction Polley

News\ Departments
The main number is 992 -2 156 .
Department extentlons are:

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( '7 4 0 ) 9 9 . 2 - 3 4 7 1
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Rocky Boots - 5),
AD Shell - 63'1,
Sears- 35 ~.
Shoney's -1
Wai-Mart - 54io
Wendy's - 19~.
Worthington - 10~

Daily stock reports are the
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by
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BBT - 29'1,
Peoples - 14 ~
Premier - 5'k
Rockwell - 39 ~J

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Gannen - 53'·
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Cincinnati speech.
"I hoped to hear a strong platform for today's generation. and
promises of tuition btea~r the
middle class and more responsive
health care rules hit home," she
said.
Gore and Lieberman rode yellow school buses through southwest Ohio, stopping also at a
middle school in Miamisburg and ·
a high school in Middletown.
Gore told a selected group of
parents, students and teachers at
Anna . K. Wantz Middle School
that the government can help
fight school violence by raising
the min.imum wage to take financial pressures off of parents.
He said the government also
can encourage companies to give
parents time off to deal with
troubled children .
Eighth- grader Kelsey Shaw,
who said the middle school was
the target of a bomb threat last
year, said she was reassured by
Gore's answers.

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

- 38'~,.

Akzo - 41 ~.
AmTechJSBC- 45~.
Ashland Inc. - 35] ,.
AT&amp;T - 30~,
Bank One - 37'~.
Bob Evans -17).
BorgWarner - 33 ·~.
Champion - 2l•
31
Charming Shops - 4 1:.
c~y Holding - 7'!.
Federal Mogul - 10
Firstar - 23'~,.

Z/$~

t: Chef Boyardee 2/$
3PK: PIZZA KlTS
·I

AEP

TOMATO JUICE

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LOCAL STOCKS

Old Time

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been " no suggestion, as far as 1
know, that any of the cases where
the convictions occurred were
wrongly decided" and said he
would consult R eno before
deciding what to do.
Those responses didn't mollifY
death penalty critics in Congress.
"Additional internal reviews
alone will not satisfY public concern about our system;· said Sen .
Russell Feingold, D-Wis. His
office said he would introduce a
new bill this week providing a
federal execution halt; he already
has proposed one to stop both
federal and state executions.
Feingold renewed a demand
that he and Democratic Sens.
Carl Levin of Michigan , Paul
Wells tone of M.innesota and Tom
Harkin oflowa made in June that
Clinton name a comnnission to
study the issue and postpone any
executions until it reports. "All
Americans agree that whether
you die for wnmutting a federal
crime should not depend arbitrarily on where you live."
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-111.,
also demanded a moratorium
instead of"business as nsual."
" If you're an African American in Texas who commits a
crime that could warrant the federal death penalty, you get it. If
you're white in New York City,
you probably don't. .. . What is
this, some form of natural selection? Death penalty Darwin.ISm.

The Daily Sentinel - Page A 3

-LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS
lhree charged
inBH
POMEROY -Two men were
expected to appear in Meig&lt;
County Court today to· answer
charges relating to the breaking
and entering incidents at two
Pomeroy car lots and at a Pomeroy
area construction firm.
Meigs County SheriffJames M.
Soulsby reported this morrting that
Harley McDonald, 19, Middleport,
and Bartholomew S. Boggs, 22,
Rutland, are allegedly responsible
for the theft of a car stereo from
U.S. Route 33 Auto Clinic last
month, as well as the breaking and
entering at Key Motors and at the
Wesam Construction Co. storage
facility near Chester.
A juvenile, 16, has also. been
charged,
Soulsby said felony charges of
breaking and entering and receiving stolen property were filed
against the men.
A number of stolen items from
Wesam and from U.S. Route 33
Auto Clinic have been recovered
and will be rerurned, Soulsby said,
and charges relating to additional
cases of vandalism and theft n~ay be
filed.

Units log·9 calls
POMEROY Units of the
M eigs
Emergency
Servic.s
answered n.ine calls for assistance
on Tuesday. Units responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

8:28 a.m., Rockspring&lt; Rehabilitation Center, Allen Ball, Holzer
Medical Center;
10:22 a.m., West Main Stteet,
Melissa Mullins, treated, Juanita
Combs,HMC;
4:18 p.m., Hone Cave Road,
motor vehicle ~ccident, Julian
Scott Hill, treated;
5:17 p.m. , U.S. 33, assisted by
Pomeroy, Lonnie Medley, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
10:12 p.m., Bailey Run Road,
Michelle Roush , treated.

POMEROY
2:06 p.m., U.S. 33, auto fire,
Hilton Hill Sr., owner, no injuries.
RACINE
4 :18 p.m., Horse Cave Road,
motor vehicle accident, Joshua
Whiduck,Jackson General Hospital, Michelle Ours, treated.

RUTLAND
11:t7 a.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Haden Brown,
treated.
SYRACUSE
4:18 p.m., Hone Cave Road,
motor veh.icle accident, Charles
McKinney,JGH.

Revival planned
PAGEVILLE
Pageville
Freewill Baptist Chuoch will host a
revival with Evangelist Sam Anderson Sept. 21-23, with singing each
evening. The public is invited.

Eastem meeting
changed
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Regu-

Jar meeting of the Eastern Local
School Board has been changed to
Sept. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the adm.inistrative office in Tuppers Plains.

Association
to meet

proceeds to b.:nc·fit the Aml'!ICJn
Heart Association H e.ut Walk on
Sept. zr,.
The men u will conc;t..,r of a sluppy joe,clups .111d J d!lnk to r a S2
donation.

Licenses issued

ATI-IENS - Southeast Distri~t
of the Ohio Music Teachers Association will hold its fall conference
Sept. 22 from 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m . at
the Oh.io University Sc hool of
Music.
Professor M artha Hilley, University of Texas, a renowned teacher.
publisher and author, will present a
two-part workshop: " Improvisation Need Not Bring on th e
Prozac" and "Can Technology
Really Help Music Study?"
Hilley has received many teaching awards among them being the
Texas Excellence Teaching Award ,
1983; Outstanding Collegi ate
Teaching Award by the Texas
Music Teachers Associati on, 1997,
and the William Blunk Endowed
professorship in 1998 for undergraduate teachin g.
Her articles have been published
in Clavier, Piano Quarterly and
Keyboard Companion mag;!&lt;ines.
Registration will begi n at 8:30
a.m. and the public is invited to
attend.

POMEROY A uiJrriagc
license has been i«ued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Keith
Day. 43 1and Joyce M . Dov. 5~. both
of Pomeroy.

Benefit set

.-Council discus:.ed rh e pllrch:1se of
large trash coma incrs for usl' wirh

POMEROY - A sloppy joe
luncheon will be served Friday in
the lobby at Peoples Bank in
Pomeroy, 11 a.m.-2 p.m . with the

a compacto r tnick. but did not
vote to purchase them as was
reported in a recent account of t'he
Cou ncil meeting.

Corrections
SYRACUSE It was incorrectly reported lTl a n..·n· ut story on
Syracuse Villag:e Counnl that the
Syracuse Elementary Sc hool was
built lfl 193').
A bond issue to build 1he &gt;ehool
was passed in 1Y21) and the buildin g was built soon after, according
to RoberrWingt•rr , grants arlnUnistrator for th e village.
Bon d~ we re l""llt'd 111
the
amounr of $24,0110
Also in correctly rcportc:d wa s
info rmation on an ospholt bid. The
bid of Tom M.1yk &amp; Som Construction of Bartlett to provide
1.619 tons of JSphalr or a coS! of
$42.05 per to n wa' .~c:c epted.

Iiiii II
RACINE -

Bad week may get wone ·

1(.acinc Vi llage

VALLEY WEATHER

for entertainment industry Autumnal weather coming
Education dominates day of
Ohio campaigning by Gore

(3041 615-4340

Girt pleads in fatality
NORWALK (AP) - A I 5-year-old g•rl has pleaded guil ty in a
traffic accident that killed a friend and injured the defendant, her 14year-old sister and three people in a second vehicle.
Shanin B. Holiday of Sandusky enter&lt; d the plea Monday to
:tttempted vehic ula r homicide in Huron Cou nty Juvenile Court.
She was sentenced to juvenile de tention for a n1immum of six
months and could be held until her 21st birthday.
C harges of car theft and vehicular homi c1de were dismissed in a
plea agreement, said Chris Mushett, court adm.inistrawr.
State troopers said the July 26 crash in Norwalk that killed kari
Szczepanski, 14, ofWakeman, occurred when H o liday tried to pass in
a no-passing zone and hit an o ncoming vehicle.
Norwalk is about 50 nules southwest of Cleveland.

longer meet that requirement ,
the NRC could pull the company's ce rti ficatio n.
But in rhe letter 10 House

ro

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Justice study prompts
new calls for death
penalty moratorium

i,

Drtver tel student crashes
SANDUSKY (A I') -A 16-year-old Samh1Sky boy was late ft&gt;r his
driving 5~hool class because his sport utility vehicle \Wilt through the
window of a storefront offic~ .
Th~ Ford Explllrer j11mped a curb and hit a utility pole Monday
before crashing through the window of Serving Our Seniors Inc. The
boy, whose naine was withheld because of his age, escaped inj ury
The teen left for hiS driving class after talking to police. H e was
cited for failing to keep control of the vehicle.
Pat Davis, who works at the seniors agency, had her bac.k to the
window when the crash occurred.
" I just heard a big noise and I just went like this," Davis said, throwmg her arms over her head. "It happened so fast all I d1d was scream.''

NRC finds no reason_
to further study USEC

Education Deparbnent
to focus on resources
CO LUMBUS (AP) - The
State Board of Education directed
the Department of Educatio n on
Tuesday to focus on sc hoo l
resources and assessn1ent efforts
when crafting a funding plan.
The board passed the resolu tion- one of three up for debate
at the board's meetings Monday
and Tuesday to guide the
department's approach as it builds
its 2002-2003 budget. Votes on
two other resolutions were postponed until October.
"They adopted a concept - a
policy really in asking the
department to design methodol-

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Ext1104

Circulation

Ext 1103

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Ext. 1100

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publish ed ev.ery afternoon, Monday
thro ugh Friday, 111 Coun St. , Pomeroy.
Ohio Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Mtmber: The Associated Pross and the
Oh io Newspaper As&amp;oc1alion .
Pottm..ter: Send add ress corrections to
The Daily Senlinel. 11 1 Court. St ..
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - It's tent in the media, was to confront
shaping up to be a tough week entertainment executives at a
for the people who produce and Senate hearing. Lieberman and
distribute movies, video games, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who
pop music and television shows.
was chairing the Senate ComFirst, a scath.ing Federal Trade merce Committee hearing,
Comnnission report claimed the backed a measure last year that
entertainment industry was_ped- -~'l'!~•~c.i the fTC study on .
dling adult material to underage ""\rttertaihrru!nt· viOlence. '
audiences. Then federal regulatort
Republicans had their own
announced they would take a representative at the hearing closer look at the amount of sex Lynne Cheney, wife of the
and violence on TV networks.
Republican VIce pmidential
Both presidential campaigns nominee and former head of the
latched onto the issue- one that National Endowment for the
resonates strongly with Ameri- Humartities, who said entertaincans concerned about the expo- ment violo;nce "debases and
sure of young adults to sex and degrades tht culture our children
violence. Al Gore said he was pre- are growing up in."
pared, if elected to the White
The FTC report decried the
House, to crack down on the . industry's "pervasive and aggresindustty if it did not stop market- sive marketing" of adult material
ing violent movies, recording&lt; - such as R-rated movies or
and video games to underage video games intended for mature
audiences - to children.
youth within six months.
His Republican opponent,
The fallout from the study was
George W. Bush, questioned felt Tuesday in Hollywood, as the
Gore's credibilitY on the issue and Walt Disney Co. announced
said the solution should rest with changes in iiS marketing pearparents and political pe~uasion, tires, including a prohibition
not new federal regula 'on.
against theater owners showing
On Wednesda ,
's running trailers for R-rated films before
n\ate, Sen . Jos h Lieberman, a movies released under the Walt
· ·c of explicit con- Disney label.
longtime

Festival
from PageAl
cruises will begin I 5 minutes
before each deparmre .
Saturday's activities will include
a parade, a car show sponsored by
Don Tate Motors, Victorian
Queen contest, sponsored by
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, and a chili cookoff,
sponsored by the VFW of Mason,
W.Va.
A lin e- throwing contest, sponso red by AEP, will begin at I p.m.
and kids games, sponsored by
M eigs Counry Prosec utor John
Lente s, and the Meigs County

Health Department Wellness
Block Grant , will be from 1-7
p.m. at the mini park .
A barbershop quartet will perform at the amphitheater at I
p.m. and the band Loose Thread
will play from 3-4 p.m.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will once again spo nsor
the Rubbe r Ducky Derby, with a
variety of priz es to be given away,
at 4 p.m.
The Captain's Dinner, hosted
each year to hon or various ste rnwheel captains, is sponsored by
the Eagles Club and will be 5:30
p .m . at a lo ca tion to be
announ ced during the festival.
Oh Saturday night , Paul
Doeffinger.
Bli tzk rieg

BY THE ASSOCIArEO PRESS

Tri-county area re sidents will
get a preview of autumn this
weekend, the N ational Weather
Service says.
After one more day of storm
clouds ·and temperatures in the
70s on Thursday, 'cool arid dry
conditions will move into the
state.
Daytime tem ratures generally
will be the 60s riday and into
the weekend. Lo s will be in the
40s.
Sunset tonight \ ill be at 7:1113
and sunrise on Th rsday at 7 :12
a.m.

VA
from PageAl
The VA has already begun renovation work at its new Pome roy
location, w hich formerly house d
Holzer Hospice.
New wall coverings and carpeting, new furniture and minor
renovations for ac cess ibil iry are
now under way. Sullivan said th at

·

446 •45 24

Azinger
from PageAl
'

"Our ongoing high un employment in southen,l Ohio is
conducive to new industry. What
we are lacking is the leadership
and the strength to promote
somhern Ohio," he added.
"Ted Strickland has failed to
br.i ng a vi~i o n for econom.i c
rlevelopment ," Azinger said. "His
lt'gacy will be o ne ofl ost jobs. H e
has been a fa ilu re at bringing econOlrti c deve lopment to this area .''

aU work on th e offices IS sc heduled for co mpleti on by Sept. 27,
and th at the o tli ce will likely
open sometime berween Oct. 15
and 30.
Veterans w ishing: to register for
medi cal services through the \lA
will have anotl1er opportu mry to
do so. The VA out re.1ch tc·am will
bring its mobile unit to rhc 13ig
Ben d Sternwhcd Fc&gt; liva l Jn
Pc,meroy. wh1ch \nll be the last
weeke nd of July.

Unplugged, Dwight Icen howe r, by the Meigs CountY C hamber
and Three Chord C harlie will of Co mm crCt'. lllllll - t~\\'boJt rafprovid e musical entertain men t. A fle. Ding-A-Lin~ R .ulru.Jli. ,llld a
fireworks sh ow, sponsored by the \uncht·on spomi.Ht'd by tht• rrini Ohio Lottery, will co nclude the ty C hu rch .
festivities.
A bontire \vi ii lw hc·ld on the·
A llllJOrity of the mm• cal levee each night. rhur~Jav
entertainment at the fest iva l i~ · through Satun:by, :md .1 \·.nitty o'f
sponsored by Riepe nh off Distrib- concessio ns and ot ht·r \'t' tH.iors
uting.
will bt• sd up Jlong the..· park11lg
Other events plann ed during lot Jrt.'J sL·ll mg thn r " ·.1n:".
the festival are a perform ances by
The Bi g Blend Cloggers, Ohio
Till' Olym1lk~ \\t'rc 111'-l hrn, td River C loggers and Th e S\\'ingin'
~.· ~L"l fl' ! ll11 fkr ftn Il l jq \{1 rh t'
Se niors; facepa1 nting. sponso rl'd
S;.dnc~ g at ll~o' " ·,1 Il l ll~_· ~o' ll\t'r~d
h' JtU IO(I pt l'._·c, ~~r tcll'\h l ll[l : • •
by Rio Gran de Co mmumty Col ~o·quipntl'
l l! .
.•
lege, a balloon hft-otl-. spo111ored

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
In . defense of his attacks aga mst
Strickland, Azinger said th at
Strickland's rating with the
America n Civil Liberties Unio n
is twice than his ratin g with the
National Federation of Indepe ndent Business.
"The Business and Industry
Political Action Conun.ittee gives
Ted Strickland a 9 percent ra ting,
and his rating from the NFIB is
43 perc ent ."
Azinger was also a congressional ca nd idate in ! 998, hut was
defeated in the Republi c'an primary by then-Lt. Gov. Nancy
H ollister.

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... C lear. Lows in the
mid 50s. Li ght and variable wind .
Thu rsday... Part ly cloudy. Hi g hs
in the lower 80s.
Thursday night. .. Cioudy wi th a
chan~ of ~ohow~r&amp;. Lows ln tlle
upper 50s.
·
Extended forecast:
Friday... C lo udy with a chan,ce
of light rain or drizzle. Hig hs 'in
the upper 60s .
Saturday... Partly clou dy. Lows
near 50 and highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows 'in
the mid 40s and highs in the
lower 70s.

•

OlOIIOUTf 1~Wl S T
1?0~ JIICK50N !'lK ~

7

FRI 9/8/00 • THURS 9/ 14/00

BOX OIIICI WILL OPIH AT
6:30PM FOR EVINING SHOWS
2:30PM FOR MATINEES
THE ART OF WAR (R)
7:00 SUN-THUR

BRING IT ON (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

AUTUMN IN NEW YORK (PG13)
7:00 SUN·THUAS

COYOTE UGLY (PG13)
7:20 SUN·THURS

NUTIY PROFESSOR 2:
,

THi 1~~~~:,.~j:~13)
THE CELL
7:00 SUN· THUAS

THE WATCHER (R)
7:10 SU N-THURS

�· T_h_e_D_a~ily~S_e_nt_in_el__________________I~)~IIICI

Wednesday. September 13,

•

The Daily Sentinel

l.

PageA4
•

~'~l'M~~ fOitJ 'to'Dil'n\ 1N"TUEG••N'·

I

'£st¥Uilslid in ~
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Managing Edl1or

Larry Boyer

Chari- Hoeflich
General Manager
Lttttn 10 rllf

R. Shawn Lewis

Advertising Director

tdilf.W tuY

Diana Kay Hill

Controller

wkwrv. ThtJ :rhould 1H len· dtllll J(J() words. Allldkrs tu? sub}f-ct

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Panel looks at SUVs for safety

.Homeowners worrying about heating costs ·

WASHINGTON (A P) - As investigators continued to look at Firestone tires linked to scores of f~tal
Jccidents, a company official suggested to a Senate
panel that safety inspectors also should look at the
Ford Explorer SUVs the tires were on.
"We take full responsibility, senators, when a tire
fJils because of a defect. We firmly believe, however,
that the tire is only part of the overall safery problem
shown by these tragic accidents," John Lampe,
Bndgestone/ Flresrone executive vice preSl(lem. said
Tuesday.
"Federal data shows there have been over 16 000
rollovers with the Ford Explorer. causing 600 de~ths.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AI') Depot. He said he expects to pay
With high energy pri ces forecast over 50 percent more this winter to
this wmtcr, many homeowners heat his house with natural b""·
around the cou ntry a rt· alreadv
"I think these gas prices are outinsulating, tumng up or replan ng rageous," he said. "We're paying too
hcJters, and lookin g for pnce much as it is."
breaks well before the first frost .
H e converted his home from oil
Usually, 1t takes some ~;ood_sriff 'eight years ago to save money.
&lt;·old to get hom~ow n~:rs ro snap Now, he said, he feels it was all for
mto acnon.
notlung.
But
Damaso Vazqtiez of
In northern Mtnncsot.1, Herb
H olyoke was shopping Tucsd1y for Ucnz, supc-rint(..·n dcnt of thl'
attic insulation on a 70-degrt.'t.' Rose.1u School District, sa1d he will
morning in short sleeves J t a Hom t· haw to raid other parts of the buJ-

The tire failure has been involved in only a very. very
small percentage of these deaths."
The chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co ..
J acques Nasser, quickly struck back, announcing to
the Senate Co1nmercc Conumttct~ that Explorer
custom~rs could choose another tire brand beginning with the 2U02 model, whKh begins production
in January. Firestone has been the standard brand on
Explorers, the top:selling SUV
Nasser also alleged that BnJgestonc / F~rcstonc
withheld in fo rmation regarding ccr t:~in tires that
could have led to a quicker recall .

wtdi/iiiJ Mll ,..., H sifffH IUld i~telude tlddrwu 4tUJ ull,OOM ,,.,J,rr: No '"':ritMd ktt#n 111il/
be pdlisMd. /.Aturs sllould H ill tood 1/Utt, IIIUirYtsilll issues, IWl ptrsOIUJl:ri.::s.
The opiltioru up~ssd i1t lht tolllllrtt ~low· •n tlu tolflftlls•• (}/ llrt Ollio Va&amp;J P11b/UIIi111
Co.'s ~ IHMni. 1111ku odttrwist nomL

-

You can make a difforence
in the tri-county region

•••

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

· Today is Wednesday, Sept. 13, the 257th day of 2000. There are 109
days left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·O n Sept. 13, 1788, th e Congress of the Confederation au thorized
the first national electio n, and decl ared New York Ciry the temporary national capital.
O n this date:
In 1759, during the fin al Fren c h and Indian War. the British
defeated the Fren ch on the Plains of Abraham ove rlo okin g Quebec
Ciry.
In 1803, Commodore John !larry, considered by many the fat her
of the American Navy, died in P hiladelph ia.
In 1943, Chiang K ai-s hek became pres ident of C h 1na .
In 1948, R epubl ican M arga ret C hase Smith of Maine was elected
, to th e Senate, becoming the tirst woman to se rve in both ho uses of
Congress.
In 1949, the Ladies Profess ional Golf A"ociation of Am erica was
form ed in New York C1ty, wJth Patty Berg as its first preside nt.
In 1971, a fo ur-day inmates' rebellion at the Attica Correctional
Facility in upstate New York ended as police and guards stormed the
prison; the orde al and fina l assault claimed 43 lives.
In 1977. co nductor Leopold Stokowski died in Hampsh ire, England, at age 95.
In 1\IH9. Fay V mcent was named commissioner of Major League
Baseba ll , succeeding the late A. Bartle tt Gia.nutt i.
In 19\13, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak R .1bin
and PLO cha irman Vasser 1\rafat signl.·d an accord granting lim ited
Palestinian autonomy.
In 199!l, former Alabdma Gov. George C Wa ll ace died at age 79.
Ten years ago : The Senate Judiciary l.o mrnittce opened its firSt
day of co nfirmation heanngs for Supreme Court nominee David H.
Souter, who firml y refused to di sc uss h is views on abortion. NBC's
cop-courtroom d;ama " Law &amp; Order" premiered on NBC
Five yea rs ago: The FI31 made at lea&lt;t a dozen arrests, capping a
nationwide two- year investigation of pedo philes and pomo~raphers
usm g t he Am erica. l)nhn e computer network.
One year ago: Israelis and Palestinia ns ope ned talks on a final
peace accord. A suspected bomb devastated an eight-sto ry apartment
building in Moscow. killing at least I \8 people.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Eileen Fulton ("As th e World Turns") is
67. TV producer Fred Sil ve rm an is 63. Former White House
spokesman Larry Speakes is 6 1. Actor R ichard K1e l IS 61. R ock
singer Dav1d ClaY.ton - Thomas (Blood , Sweat &amp; Tears) is 59. Actress
Jacquelin e Bisset IS 56. Singer Peter Cetera (C hi cago) is 56. Actress
N ell Carter is ~2 Singer Rand y Jon es (The Village People) is 4H.
R:ecord produ cer Don Was is -!H. Actress Jean Smart is 41. Country
singer Bobbie Cryner is 39. R ock singer- musician Dave Mu scai ne
( ~egadeth ) is JY . R oc k muSICian Zak Starkt·y is 35. O lympir gold
. medal runner Michael Johnson is 3 .1. Rock musician Steve Perkins
(Porno For Pyros;Jane's Addiction ) is 33.

;their

furnan·~

.IJld hm kr"

to

makt•

sure they op~-rJtt' dfinL·n tly. Other~
arc rcpbcing their hL·at111g ~yste rns ,
hoping for futun: ~;win ~ .
" In the last two wet:ks it reJlly
hit p&lt;·uplc." soud RICk i'eierso n ,
~a lt·s manager of l krk~htre A1r
he ;:~ring cumracror Ill \Ve ~t Sprlllgfidd. ''They 're \'cry. \ '\:'t;: .1!JrmeJ."

Clinton named
in lawsuit

Volunteer

:tf you have a Make a D ifference Day project or if yo u 'd like to
vplunteer, give us a call at (740) 446-2342, (740) 992-215&amp; or (304)
675-1333.

.

NATION
BRIEFS

OUR VIEW

National Make a Difference Day (Oct. 28) is fast approachmg.The
annual observance, created by USA Weekend magazine, promotes
volunteerism and good deeds.
So what are you doing to make a difference this year' We hope
you're involved in something, whether it's as simpl e as picki ng up
trash in your neighborhood or as grand as helpi ng provide books for
1·,700 kids.
.
The important thing is that you volunteer and make a difference.
The feeling you get from hdpin g yo ur fellow man is remarkable
and sticks with you a long, lo ng time.T he beneficiaries of your good
deed won't soon forget it, either. In fact, your good deed could be
the very thing that turns their lives around and gets th em back on
track.
Listen to w hat some famous folks say about volun teering and
Make a Differe'fce Day:
.
• "Volunteering is sharing. It 's giving back. It heals hearts. It's
cilled making a difference." Country star R eba M cEntire
• "Nothing I could possibly buy, nothi ng I could possibly receive
feels bette r than knowing yo u have made a difference. in somebody's
life; that because of you being somewhere at some moment doing
sQemthing. contributmg soemth ing, a person is happier, healthier."
Pop star G loria Estefan
· • "To make a difference is not a matter of acc ide nt, a matter of
casual occ urrence of the tides. Peopl e chome to m ake a difference."
~et M aya hnge1ou
: • "Every day of life matters, but Make a D ifference Day is special,
indeed . People all over th e nation and the globe set aside that day to
h:l!lp someone else. It's a powerful day. Please be a part of it." Actor
P;ml Newman
Fine words from fine folks. We h ope tri-cou nry residents heed
t~eir wisdom and lend a helping hand this Oct. 28.

get to cove r increases for natural bra'
tins wmter. "You h.tvL' no c hoi cl.' .
You
. have to heat the bmldmg," he ·
said.
Some homeowners art.' sen ·1c111g

PERKINS' VIEW

'

Are we letting murderers qJ lightly?
It hardly seems that two decades have passed
since John Lennon was shot dead outside his
New York Ciry flat. We are reminded of this
ignominious anniversary by news that his killer
co uld be set free by year's end.
Thaes right. Mark David Chapman has compl eted the minimum 20 years of the "20 years
to life" sentence he received in 1980. And now
the murderer IS eligible for parole.
Goo goo g' joob.
Of course, because of the notoriety of Chapman's crime, New York 's parole board will
probably be dissuaded from releasing him from
his confines at Attica prison. tlut just the idea
that this psychotic killer could be returned to
soc iety deeply offends.

One's heart .goes out to Lennon's widow,
Yoko Ono, who has to make the case to New
York's parole board why the killer sho uld not be
turned loose. Reportedly, sfte planstto tell the
board that she fears for herself and Lennon 's
two sons, Sean and Julian, if C hapman is freed .
B11t it shouldn 't matter whetherYoko submits
a "victim impact" statement . It shouldn:c matter
whether Lennon's widow fem for her life and
the life of his two sons.
C h apman took an innocent ,life. W ith cold
calculation.ln fact, he actually admitted to using
hollow-point bull ets to m aximize the wounds
he inflicted on Lennon- to ensure the former
Beatie's death .
What WdS particularly enraging was C hapman's boast, in the wake of his crime: " I was
nobo.dy until I killed the biggest somebody o n
Earth."
And if this nobody ever gets out of prison, his
treedom will tell other psychotic nobodies out
there that th ey coo can get away w ith ki llin g
somebodies. As long as they are w illing to do a
"deuce''· that's 20 years for you law-abiding
fo lks -behind bars.
It's the same thing with other notorio us assas-

Joseph
Perkins
NEA COLUMNIST

SillS.

Si rhan Sirhar. who shot and killed presidential candidate Itobert Kc1meJy back m I '.168,
has come up for at least I0 hearin~ before California's parole board.
He was originally sentenced to die in the
state's gJS c harnb~.:r. but his death se ntence was
reduced to "life" in priso n in 1972 when the
Supreme Court ruled the death penalry unconstitutional (a ruling later reversed).
O ne wou ld chink that the murderous Sirhan
would be gratdul that h is lite was spared. That
he would accept his " life" sentence as penance
for his heinous crime.
_
Hut like C h apman, he thinks the years he has
spent behind bars so far are sufficient punishment. He thinks he deserves to take his place
among the law-abiding. outside prison walls.
" I'm ready to live as a normal citizen ,'' Sirhan
told the parole board th e last time he appeared
before them. "I've done my time. I've behaved
myself."
C hapman and S irhan must be extremely
envious of John Hinckley, who shot and
wounded President Ronald l&lt;.eagan back in
198 1. He \Vas found "not guil ry" by r.eason of
insanity and was senten ced not to prison, but to
St. Eliz,Jbeth 's hospital in the nation's-cap ital.
For the past year and half, Hihcklcy has been

allowed "supervised" Jay trips away from the
hospitaL And hospital officials had actually reco mmended that he be permitted u nsupervised
weekly visits with his parents until withdrawing
the recOnm1.endation earlier this summer.
It seems tlut the presidential assai lant
deceived hi s shrin ks this past spr ing. They discovered that ht· had "conti nual interest in violently themed books and music."
So Johnny-boy won't be getting to &lt;pend his
weekends with mommy and daddy any time
soon. Now th at's punishmellt for you.
C hapman and Sirh an are lucky to be alive.
Hinckley is lucky to be whili ng away hi&lt; years
on a hospital campus. The two killers should
have paid fi)r their crimes with their lives. And
th e would-be kill &lt;r shou ld have paid for his
crime with a li fe sentence (and no dunn: of
parole.).
The most disturbing aspect of all this is that;
if the victims oi C hapman and Sirhan and
Hinckley were not such prominent figures,
chances are that all three of them would be set
free at some po in t or another. For that is how
leniently murder and attempted murder are
treated in o ur sociery.
Indeed, according to the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, the average sentence for murder is
o nly 15 years. Th e average time actu ally served
for taking an innocem life is a mere ~- I / 2 years.
We can expect lawyers for C hapman to cite ·
suc.h figures, when argui ng that the killer has
spe nt eno ugh rime be hi nd bars. Much as
lawyers tor Sirhan and Hin ckley have made

similar art,ruJ tients.
But th e fact that other ki llers &lt;I re Joing f.1r less

time is hardly an c1rgumenr to set rh e murdero us Chap man fre e. It's an ar~ment for imposmg far stiffer St'!Henccs on less notorious killers.

ljoscph Perkms is a w/1111111isr .f&lt;&gt;r T11e Sa11 Dicce&lt;&gt;
U lliOII· Trli!IIIIC.}

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

H'hat has become of the feminist movement?
WASH INGTON- Many scholars org:mize
the feminist movement into waves, with thl'
first spanning the 19th an d early 20th centuries,
foc usi ng mainly on the issues of the vote · (suffrage) and prohibinon (temperance). The second feminist wave began m earm:st m the
1960s, when women came together and fought
for equaliry with men . Many of these struggles
resulted in relative success; the average female
worker in the United States makes about 7&amp;
cent~ to every dollar earned by a man, w hic h is
an in crease of about 17 cents from the \9711s .
llm the playing fie ld is still f.1r from leve l; there
are c urrently only two women in CEO position s w ith Fortune SOU companies. Jill llarad of
Mattei and Marion Sandler of Golden West

Fin;1n r: ial.

Now many old-guard femimst~ complain
about a counterfL·it currt·nt "Thi rd Wave" of
fen11ni sm . They say it has lost its focus, w ith
body image sometimes becoming mort' impor-

tant than soc ial acrion. Writer and activi"lt Berry
Friedan com mented." AU the sex stuff is .stupid.
The real problems have to do with women's
li vc·s and how you rut together work and f.1m ily."
Susan Brownmiller, author of" Against Our
Will ," noted that the current group of femini sts
"are not movement people. I don't know
whom th ey're speaking for. They &lt;ec m to be
making individual bids for stardom."
Feminists are still fighting tor son.1l change.
however. In the wake of the 1992 Clarence
Thomas/ Anita Hill hemngs on Capitol Hill, a
group of yo ung feminists gathered in New York
and proclaimed chat the members of the Third

Jack
Anderson
and
Douglas
Cohn

to "brin g about equality for .111 \VOlHL'n." Its first
prcstdcut wa-; Uctty Fricdan, :md the curren t
presidt·nt. Patnc1a ln:l,uJd . Ju, \t'rved smce

December \99\ .
The Feminist M.~ urny. fuundcJ in 1997 ,
otr,· n wo rk&lt; alongside NOW to. present
women 's issues and concerns to the publlc. It
recently hosted the F,·mimst Expo in Ualtimore
to disc uss the status of feminism. ·
·Then dlt'rt• j, Emily\ List. .1 p obt i l· ~l anion
group
th,u 'll'Cb n) hdp ch.'l"t pro- dlOICl'
UFS COLUMNI STS
l )t.:llHKr.ttiL \\'l&gt;lllL' Il to ~( )\ 'l'nl lllL'llt po\ition\.
Th1.TL' i:-. .d~o :1 L'OLilll tT trL' Ih:l. On collcgL' .
campuse-,, the number nf te n Lilc .;;tudcnto;; will Wave.:· ·wo uld \eek to makt· th &lt;: movcm L' nt imo · in g tv idt·ntit\: dJl'lll';c lvt•.., ,\, t(•mim.;;r-; has
a "national n~·t\\'ork fi1r young t~ m111i st.'&gt;; to
decrca\t'd. Tl 1i.,· j, dul· 111 p~ln, 'i~1Y tl·mmi&lt;.;ts, to
politi cize a nd oq:,r:mizt.' yo ung wum~n lium
mcJia rqJrt''IL' tlt.lt Jom of tl.·m111i'i l )l and Its
diVL'r".L' cultural .md economiL· backgrounds ; to
adlwrc11r... ,1, lll:lll - IJ.Jtinl!. r;u.lictl and .;;trident .
strengthen thl' rdatiomhips hL·twcen youn-g
UlH it nuy .d,o hl' due~ to th e tl.:di1Jg, .unong
women and oldc.:-r tt: mini . . ts; and to tu!hohdate
"lOll H.', th,H womt'll h.tw rom~.: as far a.;; th t·y eve r
a strong base of membership able to mobilize
for ".pecihc i'\c;Ut"\, political candidates. and will. Tht·~c pmrfernini-,t.;; t~ cl that the femini st
movem ent ha, t .th'll ca re of the oppressive
evcntc;."
institutions !;King \\'omen of rhe l lJ711.;; :md tlur
()nc of the n:.1.'&gt;ons that Thin..l Wave tl·mimsts
th
e 1110\'t' lllL'llt
longer ne ed~ ro fi~lu . Tlw
SL'&lt;..' Ill to be so scattcn.:d is that they tah· 1ntu
co nsideration the probkms of women from all In(kpcndt· nt Wunlt'n\ ~orum . ti.)r cx ampll'.
differenr backgrou nds, cLIIrures, sex ual orienta- aim&lt;~ to '' tl''}W Lt .111J .tpprl'CJa t c the diffncn ces
tions anJ soc1al !-t tandin~. as opposed ro the betWl'l'll , and the complem cnt1ry nature o( th t·
Second Wave;, which comi~tc::d mainly of miJ- two sexc&lt; (an d) .1ffirm the f.nnily as the founda-

;1 0

JIL·-cJa,~

!Jetcrosexual women.

tion

of o;;o ciery."

But pcrh .1p' the grc.lfc-,r cn11tnbmion of th e
t(:nll!mt llHlVl' lll l'nt.., j.., rh.n rhcy put the "Potlight on h1gotry ,md . 111 "J domg. made lit-;,_. lwtter fOr all JWopk who found · thl·m~clVl''i fdnng

Th..:u fracrunn g is Jll,ltli t~·iitl.·d by thL· cxistL'nce
of several organizdtions.
Tht NJtion.d l)rg.lnizatioq t(n WoJIIl'll
(NOW), the country\ largest g;roup of fic·minist
activists, has 31111,1Hlll members and 3511 chap- imolcrant-e Jnd pn.judict· .
(}ctrk /1mJrr~tm (Hid /Jcllt.l!l"s C(l lm an· di.~trilmlrd
ters. Founded in 19(\(,, the group's nbjectiw is .
by l '11ircd l ·'rmure .'iymlicatr, h1r.)

WAS HI NGTON (AP) A
\l'Xtul lur.tssment bwsu it brought
by the White H ome's assista llt ·
p .lstry chef :-~ga·inst h~..· r boss, the
p.t~try che f. accuses Presidl'nt
C linton of f.1 ilin g en make sure
!iUc h complain ts can be rcpo rt t.:d.
FrJnt.:tte M cColl och assc:n~ th at
Rnl.u1d Mesnier ha s subjected
lwr to "scvl'Tc sexual lurassment"
sin ce Jl)C) I, culminating in strcssrcl.ued medical co nditions and
rcta hat1on for repo rting t he
all eged harassment.
C linton IS named in the su n
becal!Se, as presiden t and head of
the White H ome, M cColloch's
attorneys say he ultimately is
responsible for m aking su re that
there is an avenue for report ing
alleged sexual harassment an d
other civil rights violations.
The co mplaint, to be filed
Wednesday 111 U.S. Distric t
Co urt , claims Clinton h as not
done so.
The head of a fed eral agency is
typically named in civil rights
suits made against the agency.
M cColloch is aski ng for a total
o f S2 million - SI million from
C li nton and Sl million from
Mesnic:r.
The: White House said it had
nor yet seen the co m plai nt .
"Tiw Wlme Houle is wmmitrcd m 1'11\llr!lll! &lt;i.Jual uppummi ry em pl oynl&lt; IH lil l' all it1 Cll lf!lny''"~·" Whno Homo !po ke!!ll ri ll
Jak• Si,'IWrt &gt;aid. "W• ~a nrHH
·,., ,1111111'11\ (Ill till' IIWI'ifil' ~~~·~~~­
flllll• 11 1 tht&gt; •' rile, be ~J\111' the
man n '' 111 hn~:.1tin11 .''
M r( :11llorh. who lw wnrked ,Jt
11"· Wlur•· H oll!c' ; inn· I'IHJ. '")'!
111 tii,. compbu rt that Mc;nicr
n·pe.Il&lt;'div
mack
llll\V;l!HI'd
.td~'.ll l l' L'" .tg.unst ht: r ,l!H.f dt:m;mdL'd ro k11ow why sht.• wo uld nor
have• .1 se:s:t!al rclat!lmship with
hun.
In rcuh.Hion for r~-fu sing him,
the eo mpL1in t alleg'cs that Mesnic: r w.1s " hostile a nd r u d~·" to her
at \\'ork. left dozens of messages
on her .1 ilswering machine an d
took dLHies a\va.y from her.

Foodland
•

u.s No. One
10 lb. Baf!

Wisconsin
Russet

POTATOES

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

"Jt

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th .H

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the Ullltnb utJon ~ l1f the~~..· ~Ltvc

i.Jbnrcr,," ,,ud Rep. JC: Worts. R (. )ki.L, .l ' flLm,or nf rilL' lcgJ.;;Lwon
w1th l~ cp ~) •Ihn [ C\1", D-G.I."Let
n-. rc .1l·h h.tck wd.1~· thro ugh thl'
thin \"L'il nf Ulllt' .111d llll\h,Kkk
tiiL'Il' IJ , ti hJ~ ~tl (]),\{ \\'l' l,\ 1\ .:, ]l.l kt·
tilt'lll ,\Jitl ~.ty th ,tnk ynu - l.'\'t,.T
'I I l'L'Litn!h· Ill thL''L' ~ rt',lt
AlllLTll. . 11 1~ \Yho h utlt thh :;.; r~..·.1t
ll ltlllt l l llt'llt tn fr t ' L', lom"

I t'\\ '\' ,h..ltkd. ·· TJ w~c nll'n. till·-.~..·
~ l . l\'t'". J.nd th L' \'cry l~llllld . H\011 uf
nu l Jcnlol r.IL· \·."
R t'l._. l'lHiy. l ·nllblt' " I OII.il ln\t ol l .111' l'l'\'L'.ik d

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track
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Must be 1B yrs or older to enter!

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Slaves who built
capitol honored
WASHINGTON (A P)
More than 200 years after work
bcg:~n on the nation's Capitol, the
H ouse passed legislation Tuesday
to hon or the slaves w ho h elped
bui ld the United Scates' seat of
dl'llHKrJcy.
The kgisla non , approved by a
\'UICL' \ 'Otc:. would auth orize th e
spe aker of the H o use and p residl'llt pro 1empore of the Senate to
est.1bl"h a specia l task fo rce to
study tht.: history and contributions t Jf o;b\·e laborers toward
buildlll!; the C:~plto l. The task
forcl' would then r('commcnd an
:~p p ropr utc 111 t' 111orial ro be dispi.I\'ed 0 11 the Capitol grounds.
A t·omp.tmon lllt'Jsure i!) pendIll!; 11 1 rhL· SL'nJtl' .

Limit One
with
$10 or More
. Additional
Purchase.

SUPERMARKETS

We reserve the right to limit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices effective thru Sat. September 16th

�· T_h_e_D_a~ily~S_e_nt_in_el__________________I~)~IIICI

Wednesday. September 13,

•

The Daily Sentinel

l.

PageA4
•

~'~l'M~~ fOitJ 'to'Dil'n\ 1N"TUEG••N'·

I

'£st¥Uilslid in ~
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Managing Edl1or

Larry Boyer

Chari- Hoeflich
General Manager
Lttttn 10 rllf

R. Shawn Lewis

Advertising Director

tdilf.W tuY

Diana Kay Hill

Controller

wkwrv. ThtJ :rhould 1H len· dtllll J(J() words. Allldkrs tu? sub}f-ct

Wednesday, September 13,2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5

Panel looks at SUVs for safety

.Homeowners worrying about heating costs ·

WASHINGTON (A P) - As investigators continued to look at Firestone tires linked to scores of f~tal
Jccidents, a company official suggested to a Senate
panel that safety inspectors also should look at the
Ford Explorer SUVs the tires were on.
"We take full responsibility, senators, when a tire
fJils because of a defect. We firmly believe, however,
that the tire is only part of the overall safery problem
shown by these tragic accidents," John Lampe,
Bndgestone/ Flresrone executive vice preSl(lem. said
Tuesday.
"Federal data shows there have been over 16 000
rollovers with the Ford Explorer. causing 600 de~ths.

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AI') Depot. He said he expects to pay
With high energy pri ces forecast over 50 percent more this winter to
this wmtcr, many homeowners heat his house with natural b""·
around the cou ntry a rt· alreadv
"I think these gas prices are outinsulating, tumng up or replan ng rageous," he said. "We're paying too
hcJters, and lookin g for pnce much as it is."
breaks well before the first frost .
H e converted his home from oil
Usually, 1t takes some ~;ood_sriff 'eight years ago to save money.
&lt;·old to get hom~ow n~:rs ro snap Now, he said, he feels it was all for
mto acnon.
notlung.
But
Damaso Vazqtiez of
In northern Mtnncsot.1, Herb
H olyoke was shopping Tucsd1y for Ucnz, supc-rint(..·n dcnt of thl'
attic insulation on a 70-degrt.'t.' Rose.1u School District, sa1d he will
morning in short sleeves J t a Hom t· haw to raid other parts of the buJ-

The tire failure has been involved in only a very. very
small percentage of these deaths."
The chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co ..
J acques Nasser, quickly struck back, announcing to
the Senate Co1nmercc Conumttct~ that Explorer
custom~rs could choose another tire brand beginning with the 2U02 model, whKh begins production
in January. Firestone has been the standard brand on
Explorers, the top:selling SUV
Nasser also alleged that BnJgestonc / F~rcstonc
withheld in fo rmation regarding ccr t:~in tires that
could have led to a quicker recall .

wtdi/iiiJ Mll ,..., H sifffH IUld i~telude tlddrwu 4tUJ ull,OOM ,,.,J,rr: No '"':ritMd ktt#n 111il/
be pdlisMd. /.Aturs sllould H ill tood 1/Utt, IIIUirYtsilll issues, IWl ptrsOIUJl:ri.::s.
The opiltioru up~ssd i1t lht tolllllrtt ~low· •n tlu tolflftlls•• (}/ llrt Ollio Va&amp;J P11b/UIIi111
Co.'s ~ IHMni. 1111ku odttrwist nomL

-

You can make a difforence
in the tri-county region

•••

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

· Today is Wednesday, Sept. 13, the 257th day of 2000. There are 109
days left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·O n Sept. 13, 1788, th e Congress of the Confederation au thorized
the first national electio n, and decl ared New York Ciry the temporary national capital.
O n this date:
In 1759, during the fin al Fren c h and Indian War. the British
defeated the Fren ch on the Plains of Abraham ove rlo okin g Quebec
Ciry.
In 1803, Commodore John !larry, considered by many the fat her
of the American Navy, died in P hiladelph ia.
In 1943, Chiang K ai-s hek became pres ident of C h 1na .
In 1948, R epubl ican M arga ret C hase Smith of Maine was elected
, to th e Senate, becoming the tirst woman to se rve in both ho uses of
Congress.
In 1949, the Ladies Profess ional Golf A"ociation of Am erica was
form ed in New York C1ty, wJth Patty Berg as its first preside nt.
In 1971, a fo ur-day inmates' rebellion at the Attica Correctional
Facility in upstate New York ended as police and guards stormed the
prison; the orde al and fina l assault claimed 43 lives.
In 1977. co nductor Leopold Stokowski died in Hampsh ire, England, at age 95.
In 1\IH9. Fay V mcent was named commissioner of Major League
Baseba ll , succeeding the late A. Bartle tt Gia.nutt i.
In 19\13, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak R .1bin
and PLO cha irman Vasser 1\rafat signl.·d an accord granting lim ited
Palestinian autonomy.
In 199!l, former Alabdma Gov. George C Wa ll ace died at age 79.
Ten years ago : The Senate Judiciary l.o mrnittce opened its firSt
day of co nfirmation heanngs for Supreme Court nominee David H.
Souter, who firml y refused to di sc uss h is views on abortion. NBC's
cop-courtroom d;ama " Law &amp; Order" premiered on NBC
Five yea rs ago: The FI31 made at lea&lt;t a dozen arrests, capping a
nationwide two- year investigation of pedo philes and pomo~raphers
usm g t he Am erica. l)nhn e computer network.
One year ago: Israelis and Palestinia ns ope ned talks on a final
peace accord. A suspected bomb devastated an eight-sto ry apartment
building in Moscow. killing at least I \8 people.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Eileen Fulton ("As th e World Turns") is
67. TV producer Fred Sil ve rm an is 63. Former White House
spokesman Larry Speakes is 6 1. Actor R ichard K1e l IS 61. R ock
singer Dav1d ClaY.ton - Thomas (Blood , Sweat &amp; Tears) is 59. Actress
Jacquelin e Bisset IS 56. Singer Peter Cetera (C hi cago) is 56. Actress
N ell Carter is ~2 Singer Rand y Jon es (The Village People) is 4H.
R:ecord produ cer Don Was is -!H. Actress Jean Smart is 41. Country
singer Bobbie Cryner is 39. R ock singer- musician Dave Mu scai ne
( ~egadeth ) is JY . R oc k muSICian Zak Starkt·y is 35. O lympir gold
. medal runner Michael Johnson is 3 .1. Rock musician Steve Perkins
(Porno For Pyros;Jane's Addiction ) is 33.

;their

furnan·~

.IJld hm kr"

to

makt•

sure they op~-rJtt' dfinL·n tly. Other~
arc rcpbcing their hL·at111g ~yste rns ,
hoping for futun: ~;win ~ .
" In the last two wet:ks it reJlly
hit p&lt;·uplc." soud RICk i'eierso n ,
~a lt·s manager of l krk~htre A1r
he ;:~ring cumracror Ill \Ve ~t Sprlllgfidd. ''They 're \'cry. \ '\:'t;: .1!JrmeJ."

Clinton named
in lawsuit

Volunteer

:tf you have a Make a D ifference Day project or if yo u 'd like to
vplunteer, give us a call at (740) 446-2342, (740) 992-215&amp; or (304)
675-1333.

.

NATION
BRIEFS

OUR VIEW

National Make a Difference Day (Oct. 28) is fast approachmg.The
annual observance, created by USA Weekend magazine, promotes
volunteerism and good deeds.
So what are you doing to make a difference this year' We hope
you're involved in something, whether it's as simpl e as picki ng up
trash in your neighborhood or as grand as helpi ng provide books for
1·,700 kids.
.
The important thing is that you volunteer and make a difference.
The feeling you get from hdpin g yo ur fellow man is remarkable
and sticks with you a long, lo ng time.T he beneficiaries of your good
deed won't soon forget it, either. In fact, your good deed could be
the very thing that turns their lives around and gets th em back on
track.
Listen to w hat some famous folks say about volun teering and
Make a Differe'fce Day:
.
• "Volunteering is sharing. It 's giving back. It heals hearts. It's
cilled making a difference." Country star R eba M cEntire
• "Nothing I could possibly buy, nothi ng I could possibly receive
feels bette r than knowing yo u have made a difference. in somebody's
life; that because of you being somewhere at some moment doing
sQemthing. contributmg soemth ing, a person is happier, healthier."
Pop star G loria Estefan
· • "To make a difference is not a matter of acc ide nt, a matter of
casual occ urrence of the tides. Peopl e chome to m ake a difference."
~et M aya hnge1ou
: • "Every day of life matters, but Make a D ifference Day is special,
indeed . People all over th e nation and the globe set aside that day to
h:l!lp someone else. It's a powerful day. Please be a part of it." Actor
P;ml Newman
Fine words from fine folks. We h ope tri-cou nry residents heed
t~eir wisdom and lend a helping hand this Oct. 28.

get to cove r increases for natural bra'
tins wmter. "You h.tvL' no c hoi cl.' .
You
. have to heat the bmldmg," he ·
said.
Some homeowners art.' sen ·1c111g

PERKINS' VIEW

'

Are we letting murderers qJ lightly?
It hardly seems that two decades have passed
since John Lennon was shot dead outside his
New York Ciry flat. We are reminded of this
ignominious anniversary by news that his killer
co uld be set free by year's end.
Thaes right. Mark David Chapman has compl eted the minimum 20 years of the "20 years
to life" sentence he received in 1980. And now
the murderer IS eligible for parole.
Goo goo g' joob.
Of course, because of the notoriety of Chapman's crime, New York 's parole board will
probably be dissuaded from releasing him from
his confines at Attica prison. tlut just the idea
that this psychotic killer could be returned to
soc iety deeply offends.

One's heart .goes out to Lennon's widow,
Yoko Ono, who has to make the case to New
York's parole board why the killer sho uld not be
turned loose. Reportedly, sfte planstto tell the
board that she fears for herself and Lennon 's
two sons, Sean and Julian, if C hapman is freed .
B11t it shouldn 't matter whetherYoko submits
a "victim impact" statement . It shouldn:c matter
whether Lennon's widow fem for her life and
the life of his two sons.
C h apman took an innocent ,life. W ith cold
calculation.ln fact, he actually admitted to using
hollow-point bull ets to m aximize the wounds
he inflicted on Lennon- to ensure the former
Beatie's death .
What WdS particularly enraging was C hapman's boast, in the wake of his crime: " I was
nobo.dy until I killed the biggest somebody o n
Earth."
And if this nobody ever gets out of prison, his
treedom will tell other psychotic nobodies out
there that th ey coo can get away w ith ki llin g
somebodies. As long as they are w illing to do a
"deuce''· that's 20 years for you law-abiding
fo lks -behind bars.
It's the same thing with other notorio us assas-

Joseph
Perkins
NEA COLUMNIST

SillS.

Si rhan Sirhar. who shot and killed presidential candidate Itobert Kc1meJy back m I '.168,
has come up for at least I0 hearin~ before California's parole board.
He was originally sentenced to die in the
state's gJS c harnb~.:r. but his death se ntence was
reduced to "life" in priso n in 1972 when the
Supreme Court ruled the death penalry unconstitutional (a ruling later reversed).
O ne wou ld chink that the murderous Sirhan
would be gratdul that h is lite was spared. That
he would accept his " life" sentence as penance
for his heinous crime.
_
Hut like C h apman, he thinks the years he has
spent behind bars so far are sufficient punishment. He thinks he deserves to take his place
among the law-abiding. outside prison walls.
" I'm ready to live as a normal citizen ,'' Sirhan
told the parole board th e last time he appeared
before them. "I've done my time. I've behaved
myself."
C hapman and S irhan must be extremely
envious of John Hinckley, who shot and
wounded President Ronald l&lt;.eagan back in
198 1. He \Vas found "not guil ry" by r.eason of
insanity and was senten ced not to prison, but to
St. Eliz,Jbeth 's hospital in the nation's-cap ital.
For the past year and half, Hihcklcy has been

allowed "supervised" Jay trips away from the
hospitaL And hospital officials had actually reco mmended that he be permitted u nsupervised
weekly visits with his parents until withdrawing
the recOnm1.endation earlier this summer.
It seems tlut the presidential assai lant
deceived hi s shrin ks this past spr ing. They discovered that ht· had "conti nual interest in violently themed books and music."
So Johnny-boy won't be getting to &lt;pend his
weekends with mommy and daddy any time
soon. Now th at's punishmellt for you.
C hapman and Sirh an are lucky to be alive.
Hinckley is lucky to be whili ng away hi&lt; years
on a hospital campus. The two killers should
have paid fi)r their crimes with their lives. And
th e would-be kill &lt;r shou ld have paid for his
crime with a li fe sentence (and no dunn: of
parole.).
The most disturbing aspect of all this is that;
if the victims oi C hapman and Sirhan and
Hinckley were not such prominent figures,
chances are that all three of them would be set
free at some po in t or another. For that is how
leniently murder and attempted murder are
treated in o ur sociery.
Indeed, according to the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, the average sentence for murder is
o nly 15 years. Th e average time actu ally served
for taking an innocem life is a mere ~- I / 2 years.
We can expect lawyers for C hapman to cite ·
suc.h figures, when argui ng that the killer has
spe nt eno ugh rime be hi nd bars. Much as
lawyers tor Sirhan and Hin ckley have made

similar art,ruJ tients.
But th e fact that other ki llers &lt;I re Joing f.1r less

time is hardly an c1rgumenr to set rh e murdero us Chap man fre e. It's an ar~ment for imposmg far stiffer St'!Henccs on less notorious killers.

ljoscph Perkms is a w/1111111isr .f&lt;&gt;r T11e Sa11 Dicce&lt;&gt;
U lliOII· Trli!IIIIC.}

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

H'hat has become of the feminist movement?
WASH INGTON- Many scholars org:mize
the feminist movement into waves, with thl'
first spanning the 19th an d early 20th centuries,
foc usi ng mainly on the issues of the vote · (suffrage) and prohibinon (temperance). The second feminist wave began m earm:st m the
1960s, when women came together and fought
for equaliry with men . Many of these struggles
resulted in relative success; the average female
worker in the United States makes about 7&amp;
cent~ to every dollar earned by a man, w hic h is
an in crease of about 17 cents from the \9711s .
llm the playing fie ld is still f.1r from leve l; there
are c urrently only two women in CEO position s w ith Fortune SOU companies. Jill llarad of
Mattei and Marion Sandler of Golden West

Fin;1n r: ial.

Now many old-guard femimst~ complain
about a counterfL·it currt·nt "Thi rd Wave" of
fen11ni sm . They say it has lost its focus, w ith
body image sometimes becoming mort' impor-

tant than soc ial acrion. Writer and activi"lt Berry
Friedan com mented." AU the sex stuff is .stupid.
The real problems have to do with women's
li vc·s and how you rut together work and f.1m ily."
Susan Brownmiller, author of" Against Our
Will ," noted that the current group of femini sts
"are not movement people. I don't know
whom th ey're speaking for. They &lt;ec m to be
making individual bids for stardom."
Feminists are still fighting tor son.1l change.
however. In the wake of the 1992 Clarence
Thomas/ Anita Hill hemngs on Capitol Hill, a
group of yo ung feminists gathered in New York
and proclaimed chat the members of the Third

Jack
Anderson
and
Douglas
Cohn

to "brin g about equality for .111 \VOlHL'n." Its first
prcstdcut wa-; Uctty Fricdan, :md the curren t
presidt·nt. Patnc1a ln:l,uJd . Ju, \t'rved smce

December \99\ .
The Feminist M.~ urny. fuundcJ in 1997 ,
otr,· n wo rk&lt; alongside NOW to. present
women 's issues and concerns to the publlc. It
recently hosted the F,·mimst Expo in Ualtimore
to disc uss the status of feminism. ·
·Then dlt'rt• j, Emily\ List. .1 p obt i l· ~l anion
group
th,u 'll'Cb n) hdp ch.'l"t pro- dlOICl'
UFS COLUMNI STS
l )t.:llHKr.ttiL \\'l&gt;lllL' Il to ~( )\ 'l'nl lllL'llt po\ition\.
Th1.TL' i:-. .d~o :1 L'OLilll tT trL' Ih:l. On collcgL' .
campuse-,, the number nf te n Lilc .;;tudcnto;; will Wave.:· ·wo uld \eek to makt· th &lt;: movcm L' nt imo · in g tv idt·ntit\: dJl'lll';c lvt•.., ,\, t(•mim.;;r-; has
a "national n~·t\\'ork fi1r young t~ m111i st.'&gt;; to
decrca\t'd. Tl 1i.,· j, dul· 111 p~ln, 'i~1Y tl·mmi&lt;.;ts, to
politi cize a nd oq:,r:mizt.' yo ung wum~n lium
mcJia rqJrt''IL' tlt.lt Jom of tl.·m111i'i l )l and Its
diVL'r".L' cultural .md economiL· backgrounds ; to
adlwrc11r... ,1, lll:lll - IJ.Jtinl!. r;u.lictl and .;;trident .
strengthen thl' rdatiomhips hL·twcen youn-g
UlH it nuy .d,o hl' due~ to th e tl.:di1Jg, .unong
women and oldc.:-r tt: mini . . ts; and to tu!hohdate
"lOll H.', th,H womt'll h.tw rom~.: as far a.;; th t·y eve r
a strong base of membership able to mobilize
for ".pecihc i'\c;Ut"\, political candidates. and will. Tht·~c pmrfernini-,t.;; t~ cl that the femini st
movem ent ha, t .th'll ca re of the oppressive
evcntc;."
institutions !;King \\'omen of rhe l lJ711.;; :md tlur
()nc of the n:.1.'&gt;ons that Thin..l Wave tl·mimsts
th
e 1110\'t' lllL'llt
longer ne ed~ ro fi~lu . Tlw
SL'&lt;..' Ill to be so scattcn.:d is that they tah· 1ntu
co nsideration the probkms of women from all In(kpcndt· nt Wunlt'n\ ~orum . ti.)r cx ampll'.
differenr backgrou nds, cLIIrures, sex ual orienta- aim&lt;~ to '' tl''}W Lt .111J .tpprl'CJa t c the diffncn ces
tions anJ soc1al !-t tandin~. as opposed ro the betWl'l'll , and the complem cnt1ry nature o( th t·
Second Wave;, which comi~tc::d mainly of miJ- two sexc&lt; (an d) .1ffirm the f.nnily as the founda-

;1 0

JIL·-cJa,~

!Jetcrosexual women.

tion

of o;;o ciery."

But pcrh .1p' the grc.lfc-,r cn11tnbmion of th e
t(:nll!mt llHlVl' lll l'nt.., j.., rh.n rhcy put the "Potlight on h1gotry ,md . 111 "J domg. made lit-;,_. lwtter fOr all JWopk who found · thl·m~clVl''i fdnng

Th..:u fracrunn g is Jll,ltli t~·iitl.·d by thL· cxistL'nce
of several organizdtions.
Tht NJtion.d l)rg.lnizatioq t(n WoJIIl'll
(NOW), the country\ largest g;roup of fic·minist
activists, has 31111,1Hlll members and 3511 chap- imolcrant-e Jnd pn.judict· .
(}ctrk /1mJrr~tm (Hid /Jcllt.l!l"s C(l lm an· di.~trilmlrd
ters. Founded in 19(\(,, the group's nbjectiw is .
by l '11ircd l ·'rmure .'iymlicatr, h1r.)

WAS HI NGTON (AP) A
\l'Xtul lur.tssment bwsu it brought
by the White H ome's assista llt ·
p .lstry chef :-~ga·inst h~..· r boss, the
p.t~try che f. accuses Presidl'nt
C linton of f.1 ilin g en make sure
!iUc h complain ts can be rcpo rt t.:d.
FrJnt.:tte M cColl och assc:n~ th at
Rnl.u1d Mesnier ha s subjected
lwr to "scvl'Tc sexual lurassment"
sin ce Jl)C) I, culminating in strcssrcl.ued medical co nditions and
rcta hat1on for repo rting t he
all eged harassment.
C linton IS named in the su n
becal!Se, as presiden t and head of
the White H ome, M cColloch's
attorneys say he ultimately is
responsible for m aking su re that
there is an avenue for report ing
alleged sexual harassment an d
other civil rights violations.
The co mplaint, to be filed
Wednesday 111 U.S. Distric t
Co urt , claims Clinton h as not
done so.
The head of a fed eral agency is
typically named in civil rights
suits made against the agency.
M cColloch is aski ng for a total
o f S2 million - SI million from
C li nton and Sl million from
Mesnic:r.
The: White House said it had
nor yet seen the co m plai nt .
"Tiw Wlme Houle is wmmitrcd m 1'11\llr!lll! &lt;i.Jual uppummi ry em pl oynl&lt; IH lil l' all it1 Cll lf!lny''"~·" Whno Homo !po ke!!ll ri ll
Jak• Si,'IWrt &gt;aid. "W• ~a nrHH
·,., ,1111111'11\ (Ill till' IIWI'ifil' ~~~·~~~­
flllll• 11 1 tht&gt; •' rile, be ~J\111' the
man n '' 111 hn~:.1tin11 .''
M r( :11llorh. who lw wnrked ,Jt
11"· Wlur•· H oll!c' ; inn· I'IHJ. '")'!
111 tii,. compbu rt that Mc;nicr
n·pe.Il&lt;'div
mack
llll\V;l!HI'd
.td~'.ll l l' L'" .tg.unst ht: r ,l!H.f dt:m;mdL'd ro k11ow why sht.• wo uld nor
have• .1 se:s:t!al rclat!lmship with
hun.
In rcuh.Hion for r~-fu sing him,
the eo mpL1in t alleg'cs that Mesnic: r w.1s " hostile a nd r u d~·" to her
at \\'ork. left dozens of messages
on her .1 ilswering machine an d
took dLHies a\va.y from her.

Foodland
•

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10 lb. Baf!

Wisconsin
Russet

POTATOES

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

"Jt

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th .H

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the Ullltnb utJon ~ l1f the~~..· ~Ltvc

i.Jbnrcr,," ,,ud Rep. JC: Worts. R (. )ki.L, .l ' flLm,or nf rilL' lcgJ.;;Lwon
w1th l~ cp ~) •Ihn [ C\1", D-G.I."Let
n-. rc .1l·h h.tck wd.1~· thro ugh thl'
thin \"L'il nf Ulllt' .111d llll\h,Kkk
tiiL'Il' IJ , ti hJ~ ~tl (]),\{ \\'l' l,\ 1\ .:, ]l.l kt·
tilt'lll ,\Jitl ~.ty th ,tnk ynu - l.'\'t,.T
'I I l'L'Litn!h· Ill thL''L' ~ rt',lt
AlllLTll. . 11 1~ \Yho h utlt thh :;.; r~..·.1t
ll ltlllt l l llt'llt tn fr t ' L', lom"

I t'\\ '\' ,h..ltkd. ·· TJ w~c nll'n. till·-.~..·
~ l . l\'t'". J.nd th L' \'cry l~llllld . H\011 uf
nu l Jcnlol r.IL· \·."
R t'l._. l'lHiy. l ·nllblt' " I OII.il ln\t ol l .111' l'l'\'L'.ik d

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track
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Must be 1B yrs or older to enter!

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sold in 10 lb. BaS.

Slaves who built
capitol honored
WASHINGTON (A P)
More than 200 years after work
bcg:~n on the nation's Capitol, the
H ouse passed legislation Tuesday
to hon or the slaves w ho h elped
bui ld the United Scates' seat of
dl'llHKrJcy.
The kgisla non , approved by a
\'UICL' \ 'Otc:. would auth orize th e
spe aker of the H o use and p residl'llt pro 1empore of the Senate to
est.1bl"h a specia l task fo rce to
study tht.: history and contributions t Jf o;b\·e laborers toward
buildlll!; the C:~plto l. The task
forcl' would then r('commcnd an
:~p p ropr utc 111 t' 111orial ro be dispi.I\'ed 0 11 the Capitol grounds.
A t·omp.tmon lllt'Jsure i!) pendIll!; 11 1 rhL· SL'nJtl' .

Limit One
with
$10 or More
. Additional
Purchase.

SUPERMARKETS

We reserve the right to limit quantities and are not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Prices effective thru Sat. September 16th

�•

•• •

Page A&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

Weclnesd.y, September 1l, JoOo

Ann says grandmother was too harsh with only granddaughter
of tuy 7- yearfor a few a(rer-

a k s ~ o n ,lb \Hlt ltf~.·?
Wh tk dt J\'tll g on tht: haghway to
work. l mon·ll Into thr left lane of traf-

oontb. b ~..· . .:J. u:;c 1 w as unabk to get to

li r . Suud e nl v. I h1·.ml .1 lo ud horn beep-

l k ·;1r An n Lmdc r~ : I rece ntly asked

my m mhcr rn !.l kl'

C ITl'

ll l ~ l Ll. n t ~ lun . " S h :t\\" !l ,,,"

thl.· d .t \ ' - C lr t: ( ~o.' lltL' r before it clost..' d. All
,,·em 'n·ll fo r :1 whik, but the st.'c unJ
wc L· k . Sh J\\"Il:l we nt out to play .mJ
u n mt ~..· n t HmJ !l y kt m y muth c r ·~ ot ~ out
nf rh~..· . hou ~ L· . t\ltom went runnin g .1ftcr
t h ~..· .n .... fell. and n.: 4lllred minor mcdll ,ll c.~re . W li&lt;·u I p ic ked up Sh o\1\'ll a.
\ 1otll 1~ 1LJ m e what had happ t&gt; ned . I
h.l \' L'

tt cvcr

~ ~ ~~· ..1 .1nd
\1

11!
0. \y ll HHh l'r

tl.l . . l ttd

he r so angry. I apolo -

SL' t..' ll

ofll:rcd to pay the mcJ tca l
rc fu c;c~

bl.! ll il"'

to forg i,·c Sh .I w -

me fi. n

no t

Ll l \in g

llL'r

~ l t P J'c t l y \V h.tt h wor ~c , Mt l tn h .t ~ to ld

\h .l '.\ 11.1 (h.H ::.!tc i.:; n o lon g l.'r \\'e lcoml'
111 h n lh Hll t' . i\·1\' d ;lll ght t.' r io; ht•J rrbro f.. t' tl l' h t ~ i ~ fv1o m 's on ly gr:111dchdd , .tnd
I t".lll!Hi r bt'IJ t:\'t' she is bL· tng; so punHJ\'L'.
1, rh L" re ~ ont c thtng nwn:• I C:lll do ? Tht•
l .lt .... trt• pnfL·nk fint• , and
my tllnthcr
\\ .. 1.., n ut "l' rl o u o; (\' hun I bt·li e\·L' , hl' j..,

didn't tip o\·c r.
· I h r.: a rd. a knoc k Jt my window, and
s.1w J po li ce offin·r. H e was kind and
p:ttient , :md trir..· d to get my car out of
th_t· ditc h . A young: man goin g in the
opposit~..· dircdion s.1 w LI S, puHed over,
.HtJ ran to hdp. At tht: s.tmc um~:, a tqw
truck .lpp ..:;uc d, .111d thl' dnvcr ;~ l so
otTerni to pu :-.h m y c u . Within misllltcs ,
lilY car ,,.,1s b ar k on the highway, ~md I

to \\'\Hk
Ann . I .1m nnh· I H. and yet I had
bcco tll t' r,n hn ry nic.1l about people in
gt·un,JI. I h.1d r om e to thL" cond us1011

un comfortable. I'm tempted to exclude
him tht• IH.'Xt tunc I am the hostess. My
mother says tht&gt;rc is no way I can do
that without hurting my sister.

m g. My tm medt.trL' r c.•Jc tion was ro j e rk

Ann
Landers

the wheel to the· n g ht . I lo st control of
the._• Cl r, 'i \\'l' n·el\lu c k :md fOrth, then 1ny
c.u ~ lid ttH o .1 tkep cmb:lllkment . I fdt
to tally helple ss, bc.t th ank Go d, the car

ADVICE

l

me realize most people arc pretty decent
after all . -- Jennifer in Coral Springs,
Fla.
Dear Jennifer: I've learne d that people often react to the high e"pectations
of others .' Expect the best, and more
often than not , you'll get it. You were
the recipient of a lovely act of kmdness.
Now, pass it on.
Dear Ann Landers: My older sister
has a 16-year-old son with major
behavioral problems. He is verbally abusive to his parents, and offensive to
everyone else. Last week, he rutned
another family gathering with his terrible conduct. It's getting so bad that
nobody wants to have him around .
Our extended families get together
often, and his presence makes everyone

bt·mg to o hard o n Sh.J\\'IlJ , but I do n 't

know ho.w to fix tt . \Vhat d0 you suggt~~ t ? -- Crushed D:'ID ear C ru shed : Your moth l.' r IS ovr.: rre ,Jc tmg Ill .1 big w ay. B y tht' tillll' ths ~
lt'ttl'r JPPl',H ~ in prim , hl· r skinneJ
kn ees will h .lvt:.· healed , .mJ lm pc fully,
sht' \\·ill be less ang ry. If she pms Sluwna ou t of her ht'c. I promi se yo u she wi ll
re gret it. Sl·e that your moth er IT;Jd S thiS
column . It could make .1 big J ltTcren cc

111 her ilk
[kar Ann Lmtkr:-. : M.t y I tt'll your
re ,Jd~:: r s .tbout .m i1Kident th .lt t.nt~lit lllL'

\\',_ IS Oil Ill Y \\',l y

th a t n w :t~

.1

m t·- f i ot

tkllHlll Str .ltl U II o ( lllllll ,lll

wo rld . Tlut
kind!H.'SS lll .t-dc

M e 1 ~1

MIDDLEPORT
.

'

obst' r\'L' \~/oml·n \
Ildth Munth Thursd.1y with .1
program, for junior .tnd s(...' nior g1rls
111 the three Me1gs C o11nty hi!;h
CoumY wi ll

schools.

Th e third .111nual celebr.mon
wtth the theme '' A Women's Oming for Wellness" \WOW) wtU be
hdd from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m . at the
Family Life Center in Middleport.
The program will provide a
forum for teenage girls to gain
knowledge and improve their
decision making skills regarding
health and risk - taking behaviors,

enhance personal wellness, discuss
eating disorders, self-esteem and
sexualitv 1ssuc~.

During "WOW", the high
school stud ents will have the
opportunity to explore a variety of
health issues that are important to

young women, especially as tht·y
relate to well ness and health main ~
tenan ce, self- esteem , sl'if-i ma ge,

interpersonal relationships, sexu;tlity and reproductiw health . and

The Daily Sentinel

Kanawha Valley Dragway results, Page B3
Daily Scoreboard, Page B3
Olympic roundup, Page B4
Bobby Knight fallout, Page B6

of this kid ' - - No Name m Ohio
Dear N .N .: That boy needs help. Tell
your sister to get h1m into counseling
before the small problems become serious ones . Do NOT exclude th e child. It
could make him resentful. and he would
learn nothing from the exclusion. It
would also be a kindness to your SISter
not to isolate her son from the fami ly.
An alcohol problem' How can you
help yourself or someon e you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recogmze It,
H&lt; •W to Deal W1th lt. How to C onquer

Tell me, Ann. should I hurt my mtcr.
,,·hich I would hate to do, or mmt

It '' wi11 give you the .m swcrs . Send a
self-addressed, long, businl·ss-s izl" envc ...
lope and a c heck or mont' Y orclt:r for
$3.75 (thiS include's postage· and handling) to : Alcohol, c / o Ann Landers.
P.O. Box I I 'i62. ClmJgo. Ill. 6061 1c
0562 . (In Canada , send S4 .SS .) To fmd
out mort• about Atlll L 111ders Jnd n.•ad
her past l"olumns. , ·is it the Cn.·.1tors Syndicate wc.·b p.1gc .lt \nn\·. ncators.com.

viuk•n ce against women.
Break-out se-ssions will include

(OU-COM ) Arel Health Edu cation Center. Additional funding

Baby Think lr. Over Program,
Woo&amp;md . Centers. Mei6" Local

ht:.tlth c:duration un usteopmusis,

was provided by American Electric

High School nursing assistant stu-

Power-Southern
Ohio
Coal
Company and the M.:ig.; County
lung cancer and smoking, viOlence Job &amp; Family Services .
against women , rape, wellness, secM any lo cal businesses have
ondary education, homdessness donated items that will be used as
relating to unpact of low-income pnzes for the teens. The Middleand poverty, teen ptegnancy and port Church of Christ Women's
the cost of parenting, alcohol and group wiU prep ate and serve
drug abuse prevention, motivation, snacks and lunch for the teens,
deciSions and responsibilities, self planning committee members and
breast examination, date rape presenters.
The teens will be welcomed by
drugs, self esteem and communication skills.
John R. Lentes, prosecuting attorSupport for the program is pro- ney who w1U also giw the opening
vided through a grant from the speech . During the morning and
Ohio Department of Health, lunc h break, displays will be set up
Bureau of H ealth Promotion and around the audito rium whe re
Risk Reduction Division of Pre- teens can browse and interact with
vention. The event is being coordi- presenters.
nated by the M eigs County Health
AgenCies setting up displays
Department (MCHD), Mei gs include H ealth Recovery Services.
County Fanuly and Children First ACCESS, FCFC, 0 !]-COM,
Council (FCI'C), Meigs County Meigs County Extension Office,
Abstinence O nly Education Pro- University of Rio Grande, God's
gran! and Ohio University Col- Neighborhood Escape for Teens,
leg;e of Osteopathic Medicine Mcig.; County Health Departmynt

dents , Holzer Meigs C linir, Meigs
County FCFC and Holzer MedICal Center. Marg1e Blake, nursing

phys1C11 health, body image, exer-

osc, sm:ss reduction. depression,

asststant mstructor fur Metg.; Htgh
School will have her nursmg assistant students assisting with regtstrntion .

' Representatives of local orgamzations servin g on the planning

committee for "WOW" include:
Amy Boster, Meigs County FCFC
lnte rsystems coordinator; Christi
Lynch,Victims Assistance Program;
Becky Baer, Metgs County Extension Offi ce; Teresa Dunfee, OUCOM Area Health Education
Center; Diana Jeffers, Holzer
Metgs Clin ic ; Margie Skidmore,
Metgs County Health Department; Kathi VanMeter and Brenda
Phalin, Meigs County Abstinence
Only Education Program; Brenda
Curfimn and Junie Maynard,
Meig.; County FCFC; Meig.; Local
Schools; Lentes, and Angela Maddox, ACCESS.

Page 81

)

''

everyqne e lse havt&gt; a lousy time bt"c tu se

Women's Health Month observance planned for 111ursday

ANNIVERSARY

Inside:

WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Wednesday, September 13,1000

Eastern netters roll to three wins this week
kills on 12-of- 14 hitting. Gibbs had two

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

aces.

EAST MEIGS After sweeptng
through a tri -match at Riwr Vall ey Monday, the Eastern vo lleyball team kept irs

Meip wins TVC
golf match

winning streak going with another victo-

UNDATED- Mei&amp;" and Belpre continues to battle it out for
the TVC's Ohio Division golf
lead after seven matches. Meigs
won Monday evenings match on
the back nine at Oxbow to pull
to within one pmnt of the front
running Golden Eagles.
Meigs posted a I RO, followed
by Belpre with a 184. Wellston
andVmton County had 195s. But
Wellston was award ed third place
on the fifth score tic hreaker rule.
Alexander had a 205 and Nelsonville- York finished with a 254.
Marauder freshmen Jeremy
Banks and Matt Preston of Belpre
were co-match medalist with 40s.
Other M eig.; scores were Carson
Midkiff and Jason Knight with
46s , Nick Dettwiller carded a 48,
Thad Bumgardner added a 51
and Josh Napper a 57.
Bdpre leads Meigs by one, 3231, after seven matches. Wellston
is third with 21 points and Vinton
County is fourth with 13 points.
Alexander has five points and
Nelsonville-York
has
three
points.

ry Tuesday at Wellston .
The Eagles (8- 2. TVC Ho cking 4 - 1)
rebounded from a 15- 9 loss in the first
gam e to defeat the Golden Rockets, 15- 1
and 15- 13.
·
Tammy Bissell led the Eagl es with 12
points, including two aces. Bissell was pe rfect on serve, going 17 - (or- 17 , an d had
six digs .
Danielle Spencer and Kayla Gibbs had
six points each. Sp encer finished with two

Kri sten C h evali er was 4- for- 4 hittin g
with two kills and had five assists and two
blocks.
Kass Lodwick went 12- for - 14 hitting
with two kill s and two bloc ks. Whitn ey
Karr added two kills on 4- tor-4 hitting
and also had two blocks.
Shauna Elhott had one kill and three
blo cks .
Amber Baker added four assists against
Wellston.
In Monday 's tri-match, Eastern defeated
River Valley, 15-7, 9-15; 15-'}, and swept
Fairland, 15-9 and 15- 5.
Cinda Clifford led Eastern with 13

points. Tammy Bissell and Kristen Chevalier had seven poims each against River
Vall ey. Bisse ll and Kayl a Gibbs each had _
two aces .
Juli 13ailey was 6-of-7 hitting with three
kills. Kass Lo dwi ck was 6- for-9 with three
kills, and Whitney Karr we nt 8-for- 9 with
three kills and three blocks.
Chelsea De Garmo led the Raid ers w ith
five kill s o n 13-of-17 hitting. Cottrell had
four ki lls, conn ecting on 22-of-24
attempts !:lutch er added three kills going
21-of- 24 on the attack .
Watkins was 8-for-1 I hititng.
Celeste Harrington led the Raiders
with eight points. DeGarmo had seven
points, while C ottrell and Watkins had five

Reds fall
to Cubbies
C INC INNATI
(AI')
Kerry Wood 's second complete
game was as big a milestone as
his first.
On May 6, 1998, he struck
out a record-tying 20 against
the Houston Amos. Tuesday
night he struck out eight in
leading the Chi cago Cubs over
the Cincinnati Reds 2- 1.
"Wins right now really don't
mean much to me," Wood said .
"Uut just to have command of
thre e pitches is so m ething to
build on . I'm not trying to do
anything I'm not capable of

Davis named new

.Hoosier hoop boss
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)
- Mike Davis was named interim coach at Indi ana to repla ce
Bob Knight , who was fired two
days earlier for repeated misconduct .
The university pi cked Davis, a
Kni15ht disciple, to head the pro-

doing."
It's been a long journey since
Wood had a ligament in his
.. ~ight elbow rcplocod o~ .(\p&lt;i}.,8·
a year ago and missed alf of th e
1999 season . Until Tuesday, his
longest outi ng had been e ig;ht
inning.; on July 7 in a 4-2 loss to
the Chicago White Sox.
"He was the throwing hard,"
said Alex Ochoa, whose ninthinnin g home run was all that
kept Wood from his seco nd
career shuto ut . "He had a nice

gram for at least on~ sea son and

selected John Treloar, another for-

mer Knight assistant, as interim
asso ciate coach .

The

BIRTH

Ronald and Ella Osborne

LONG
BOTTOM
R onald and Ella O sborne o f

Mr. and Mrs O sborne :m· tht·
piknrs of Janet Do hertY.

Ll) n g B u ttolll \Yill cdebr.ltt'
thtri r (&gt;} td \n: ddiit g anniversary,
Fnd.1y,Th ey \\'L're 111.1rrir..·d at thl·
F lr ~ t l~ JP (I ~t C lnm:h 111 AshLlll d ,

Ronaleen G aptz , Thoma~ and
M.\rtin Osborne. h.lVL' five
g r.wdcluldre n. and thrt:l' g rl' tltg r.l!ldcht!Jn:n .

K\·.

Tin: coupk

Ohi o

D cp.nrnlL' tl t of Tr.tn sportation
w ith tht· pu rp t)'&gt;l' of upJ.atmg
pul""~ il c n 11 th t• prnj t'L L Bridge
.k ~ l ~lh wtll bL• .. le ~t. n bL·d .

SATURDAY
POMEROY
R eturn
Jmuth an Mc ib" C h.1pter, DAJ\.,

b\'

rcp l.l l L'IllL' Ilt

thL·

l'l )!vl[ RUY - Wor k p.1rty o f
q1 !un teLT• ti )r

m Jown r,l\\ 11 Pn n Jl"rO\ '_ ( 'o m c in pamt
d nt h e ~ .111d b nn g .1 brush or tw o.
p .Ul lll ll g

FRIDAY
Mli)DL EPORT M eigs
t.n \tlll F.lltllly and C. htldre n First
( :oiHil

d. IT ttby.

q ~ ( ) .I. Ill .•lt

th t"

fvkl b'\ Coun :y LJcpJrtment o f
Job ,J nd Famil y St•rvJccs .

•

l ;ALLII'OLI S D o min ic
M;1rchei e. R .Ph .. of Athena RX
H ome Ph ar macy, will talk on
ovc r-th e-cnumer dru g tnteractw n wi.t h prr.:~c ription m edicatt o n' .H rhc P.trklltSil! J·s Suppo rt
Gro up mt·c tmg. 1 p.m . Friday,
lJb r.tr\'. c; r,JCC U nttnl M ct hodt ~t

Ch m, h.
lq,olt 'l.

(,II()

See·oml Ave .. ( ;al-

New anival
RAC INE - Till llly I) LolLI\
and Do nald W Shaffer n f Ranne
a nnounce the: b irth of :1 tbu g httT,
Alyssa Dawn ShatTer. Jul y 22 at
the Holzer Medi cal Cemn. She

nurkin gs. weather pcrnlittutg.
POMEROY - Mei gs Coun ty Renred Teachers , Sawrday,
noon , Trinity C hurch . Representative of the Meib" Semor C enter
mU ' peak on safety.

wei ghed five p o und~ . I() oun ces .
Gran d par tllt~ J n :.· Brt·nd.l .1nd

C had Wolfe. ,m d D o nald C:. Slut fer o f R;,nne, :md

RACINE R ed Bru sh
Church of C hri st , weekend
meetin g, Saturday. 7 p.m .; Sunday.
I 0 a.m. and (, p 111. Denver Hill.
speaker.

RL'SS IL'

I ),Jvi ~ of

North Carolin a.

ovc:rpowering. as he ~as when

he was the NL Rooki e of the
Year in 1991'!.
" I thou~ht he threw the ball
harda then . But ht.· w as a bt·tta

Cold weather
is just around
the corner!

SALEM
CENTER
H ay rid e ;md wiL'Il t' r ro,tst, SJturcb y, 6:JIJ p.m . at the G r:lll ge lull
nt:.Jr Salem Center. Gr.lll bt: ·to
provide bum : th ose~ attendin g to
u ke h o t d ogs o r fi nger foods :m d

We have
ventless

Empire

will be given in Meigs/Gallia Counties by

.&amp;Ate· HEARING AID CENTER.

•
•
1

•
•

Call Toll Free 1-800-634-5265 for an Immediate appointment. :

1

The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist 1
: Anyone who has trouble heanng or understanding conversation is invited to 1
have a FREE heanng test to see if th is problem can be helped. Bring th1s
1
I coupon w1th you for your FREE HEARING TEST. a $75.00 value.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

heaters
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.
1-304·773-5583

pitcher tonight ,'' Reds manJgt'r

Ja ck McKeon said. " Ht· kept us
o tr balan n .· and got

LIS

to swing

at pi tches up in th e zone and tl y
SAFE AT FIRST- Reds 'first baseman Sean Casey couldn 't come up with thi s throw to first during last
night's loss to the Cubs. !:hicago's Gary Matth ews was safe on the play. (AP)

o ut."

ninth before allowing Ochoa's
solo homer. The Reds are the
only major league team that
hasn't been blanked this year.
" It's a great lift to go out and
do that," Wood said. " I felt like I
had three pitches working my curveball , slider and fastball.
And I was throwing th em for
strikes."
Wood won for the first time
in five starts since beating San
Francisco on July 29. He was on
th e disabled list from July 30 to
Aug. 2 1 because pf a muscle
strain, and was suspended Sept.
8-10 for his role m an Aug. 27
brawl against Los Angeles .
"I felt terrible when I got
h'!Jc:'·Wood said. "l h~ve ~ li~e
bit of bronchitis, or something."
He ret ired his first II batters
before Scan Casey doubl ed to
ce nter. The Reds' other hits
were singles by Chris Stynes in
the fifth and Juan Castro in the
eighth.
Wood threw on ly 115 pitch-

es, which is m o re economi cal
than usual.
"No rmally I'm around the
I 00-pitc h mark around the fifth
or sixth inning," he said.
Wood said he fdt he turned
the corner last week, when he
pitch ed six innings but got no
decision 111 the C ubs' 8-5 win at
Colorado.
"My last start, I threw more
breaking balls fo r strikes," Wood
said. "Tonight, I was throwing
two breaking balls fo r strikes,
my curve and slider."
Ochoa homered for the third
straight game when he dropped
from a 32-ounce bat to a 31-

..,

Wood took a sh uto ut in the

insurance in their injury - depleted

Please see Reels, Page 86

backtleld .

W\\h More P\ans
and More Minutes\

Reed sips
with Redsklns
WASHINGTON (AI')
R&lt;·ceiver Andre Reed agreed to a
onl·-year contract with th e Wash -

ington lt edskins , two days alicr
M irhad Westbrook was lost fo r

REE HEARING TE

•

easv movement and he had a
sne.aky fastb all."
·
1
" H e was nasty." said Pokey
R e,·sc·. " I wa s. impressed. And I
do n't think he's fully back yet."
Wood (7-7) allowed four hits
and walked two w ithout being

DENVER (AI') - The Denver
Broncos signed kicker Joe Nedn ey and running back Raymont
H,arris , a pair of live - year players
released by NFL team' two weeks
ago.
Nedney, cut by Oakland in

Elam . Harris, who has etght
career IIH I-yard games, was
released by New En gland just
before the season &gt;rarted. H e provides th e Broncos with some

Alyssa Shaffer

•••••••••••••
COUPON

••

Point Pleasant

Broncos sign fanner
Buckeye running back

training camp, is a temporary
replace ment tOr th e injured J asou

S.nu rd.1y, n o on lu ndH:un at
Crows, fi1llowcd by meeting ;J t
Pomeroy Libr:u y and grave

Friday, September 15, 2000
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00 am - Noon

threatened to transfer en ma ~sc

2322Jackson Avenue

drm ks.

••
•

who

after Knight w 0s fired all decided
to stay wit h the Hoosiers.
In a live interview o·n ESPN,
Knight said he would like to

te~mmaarm~~~~~tGrm$
675-8823

l' IlJO) l-,m.h.

RACINE - Bendit f(" · cJ nLL;r \'ictilll D o n Hupp. S.1turd.1 y
bL·ginning at I p.m . .lt tht· Aml·rtc:tn Lt:gion hall in R :H.:im:.

players

coach again.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY
l'll ,'v1EROY -- 1'11 bhc hearmg 011 Po nll·my- M,t:-,o n Bridge

Indiana

points each.
Juli Bailey, who missed the Wellston
match with an inj ury, pounded five kills to
lead th e attack Monday against Fairland.
She was 10-tor-12 hitting and had two
b locks. Bailey recorded II points, including three aces, on an 11 - for-11 serving
performanc e.
C lifford was also perfect on serve, 8 -for8 , with eight points . Chevalier had seven
points on 7 - of-7 serving, and two kills.
Karr had two kills. Spencer and Bissell
had one each.
Baker and Spencer had two points each
and Gibbs had one point.
As a team, Eastern was perfect on serve,
going 37-for- 37.

MONTHLY SERVICE CHARGE

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MINUTES INCLUDED

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UP TO 2000

No domestic wireless long distance
charges or no roaming charges
within the United States.
Subject to Crt:dit Approval
I ye.ar contract rt:quirt:d.
$25 Activation Fee

-

the season with ~' kn l'e injury.

Reeel spent 15 years with the
Uufl:1lo Bills. He has 94 1 recep tio ns to r 13,095 yard s and 86
tou chdow ns trl 221 career gam es.
H e was vo ted to seve n Pro Bowls

ami shares the· NFL reco rd of 13
-;easom with 50 receptio ns.

Gordon's ~m appeals
NASCAR sanctions
' DAY T ONA BEAC H. Fla. (AP)
- JeiH; o rdon and hi s H e ndrick
M o torsp o rts team are app ea ling
N ASCAR 's sa nc tio ns over an
engi ne part used in hi s Saturday
ni ght victory in H.. ichmo nd .Va
R obbi e Loomis, crew chi ef for
th e No . 2 4 C hevrol et. was fined
S25,0U!l fo r usin g a part that has
no t bee n approved by NASC AR .
Th e sanc tio ning body also took
away 100 of the total of 180

Authorla6d

po ints Go rdon earn ed wnh th t•

Ol!aler

vi ctory - both fro m th e drtver
standi ngs an d fro m Ri r k H end rick in the owner standin g&lt;.

MARSHALL FOOTBALL
Meigs;., net crew
still undefeated Herd regroups on off week
BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROC K SPR INGS -

Meigs

kept Jts umlt: fra t~d re cord in

tac k, but not without a scare by
a sptrited So u th e m Tornado
team in TVC vo ll eyball a(tioH
Tu esday evening at M ei!l' High
School.
The Ma raud ers (o - 11) defe&lt;~te d
the Torn adoes (2-3) two g;~mes
to o n e.

At tirst it looked like Meig.;
wo clid nuk e a sh ort nigh t of it .
The Marauders de feated So uthl' rn 15-2 in th e fi r ~t gam e, l.nd
m the seco nd c o nt c~t Meigs

j umped o ut o n top 14-3. Bu t
So uth er n refused to fold ~nd
sto rmed b ack .md won the co n ..

test 1(&gt;- 14.
(n th e t hird game, So uthnn

Mindy Chamey scored l it
points on 12- o f- 15 servin g. She
al so adde d 14 a\S ists.
Nikki Uutcl1cr added li ve
po ints, sh e was 11 - of- 11 serv-

-

mg.

bi g grl ml.' in 11JY7 ac M 1a111i.

Shannon Pric e added th ree
points, she was nin e o f I (I serving with o ne kill and se ven

Ohi o, j eopardtzin g Its chan ct·s

a~s i sts.

C orrie H oover add ed three
po ints, she w as ni ne o f ni nt•
servin g with six . ki11s and o nt"

assist . Marj orie Bratton add ed
nin e kills and three bloc ks.
Fallon R oush led So uthem
w1th I II points. She was 2 1- of23 serving.
Emily Hill and Emily Stivers
add,·d three po ints e ach .
Dean a Pullins scored th ree
po int s and was nine o f 12 ~ r.:rv­

jumped o ut to a early 4- 1 lead .
but M eigs battl ed , bac k and mg.
defeated the pesky To rnadoes . Rachel C h apm an score d three
po ints an d she w as 1-fo r- 2 serv15-9 to w in th e m atch .
M eig.; wa s led by Kayte D avis tng.
Kat i C lunin gs sco rcJ t wu
wi th 12 poi nt s o n 1 9 - o f~ l 9
points. b ut sh e had II bl ocks.
serving, she also had tlve kills.
St acye Mills and Sh auna
Kati e Jeffers alided II po ult ,.
Manuel t'Jc h 5cored o n e poi nt .
serv tn g 17- of- I H.

HUNTIN(;HJN. W.Va. (AI')
D ~mn y Derri co rt IT ill e rnbc:r~
th e )eo.;,o m of losing.

Marshall had JUSt droppe d a

for a Mid- Ameri ca n Cu n f tTL'II Cl'
crown in th e Hl:'rd\ tiro;t yea r in
th t· co nft"re nce.

North C arol ina .
IJl'fr icott views Saturday's .14at Mt c hi).:!;an Stat e as
no thing Ilion: th~ 11 , a blown
chance to overtake a To p 25

24 lo ss

opponent.
"I s.t id to myself. eve n Mt chacl
Jord an lost a co uple o f times,"
IJn ncot t said . " As

J

se nior.

'''l'

As ~l fre shm a n , I ) er ri rot t
re m e mbt• ro; q ua rt e rba c k ( :had
Pe nningto n rt· llin g him nor to
p u t too nlu ch chought into Dnt'
galll t' .

sbuuld tell the guy s, that game's
ovn and now we've got to prepare fo r N orth C aroli na . gt·t
ba ck to JU illping ~\ round and

, "Ch.1d .md thme 6"-' Y' to ld us.

football \ all .!bout hav ing fun .

' i t'~ n ot rh c e nd of the 'i e a~o n .
D o n 't ukc rh i-; loo.;o; as d1e t'IH.i of
th t• se ason ." ' I ) e rr ic orr s.1id Tu l's-

Wl' 'ru J U~t go in g to be

d.w. '' And it 'o.; nor rh e e nd of th t'
:-;c ~son fo r us. We e m lost• on e
~&lt;U lll' and we ~ till can do well."
' M a~"hall wo n its fo u r renuin in g regular season cont ests that
w ar and bea t Toled o in th e
tv!AC cham pi onship ~am c to
.lLivanct' to it s 'fi rst bow l gan 1e in
511 vcan.

M arshall , wh ich is tdle ne."
Saturday, will h aw an extra wee k
to p rcpart' fo r a Sep t. 2.1 ~a m c at

havin g fun o ut thl·n:. B ~:c a u s t.'
l uo~e an d

not be upti ght ."
T ht"y'\ 1 ha\'L' thl' c han ce r'o
"itJrr anotht•r winni ng 'i treak :1fter
watchin g the..• nati o n \ lo n gt'st
strt'.tk e n d at 1H ga m es Satu rd ay.

We've ~otto b r in ~ o ur ' A' game
every time we pl ay. We JUst didn't brmg our ' A' game," h e said .

"For some gu ys. it will take a
w hile. But when you're co mpetitive. you can shake that r115ht

off."
13y ro n Left wi ch said h e d oesn't
k1io w a quartnback who's ever

gon e undefeated over a caree r.
" It happen s to the best of
them ." h e said . "You 're goin g to
lose . Th e good th ing IS w e kn ow
why we lost . We kn ow th e mista kes \.Vt' made and rh;~t 's th e
goo d thing :tho ur ir . Yo u can
nn p ro Vl' n n th e mi'\takes you
madl', j ust rry ro get b~.:· n e r and
(ry no r to m ake th e sa m e mista ke~ th e ll l' Xt grl me."

Coach Bob Pru ett poin ted out

One• t hin g th e Hnd pl,1yns

that Saturd ay was a gam e of sev-

luvc n't lost is con tltkn ce. Th ey
kn ew th ey. had a chance to beat

eral tirsts for Marshall . It was th e
fi rst time Leftwi ch had played an

Michigan State aft r.: r being d own
th ree po int" in tht· fo urt h qu.utcr.

e n tire game an d th :l.t sever al

.

"We k·ar ne J a lot from Saturday. We learn ed th at we ca n play
\\'lth anybod y in tht..• cou nt ry.

ot1C n ~iv~..·

li nenH'n and running

barks got th eir fi rst rt·al tests .
"Th t""t' we re n ew expe ri e n ces

Please see Manhall, Page B&amp;

�•

•• •

Page A&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

Weclnesd.y, September 1l, JoOo

Ann says grandmother was too harsh with only granddaughter
of tuy 7- yearfor a few a(rer-

a k s ~ o n ,lb \Hlt ltf~.·?
Wh tk dt J\'tll g on tht: haghway to
work. l mon·ll Into thr left lane of traf-

oontb. b ~..· . .:J. u:;c 1 w as unabk to get to

li r . Suud e nl v. I h1·.ml .1 lo ud horn beep-

l k ·;1r An n Lmdc r~ : I rece ntly asked

my m mhcr rn !.l kl'

C ITl'

ll l ~ l Ll. n t ~ lun . " S h :t\\" !l ,,,"

thl.· d .t \ ' - C lr t: ( ~o.' lltL' r before it clost..' d. All
,,·em 'n·ll fo r :1 whik, but the st.'c unJ
wc L· k . Sh J\\"Il:l we nt out to play .mJ
u n mt ~..· n t HmJ !l y kt m y muth c r ·~ ot ~ out
nf rh~..· . hou ~ L· . t\ltom went runnin g .1ftcr
t h ~..· .n .... fell. and n.: 4lllred minor mcdll ,ll c.~re . W li&lt;·u I p ic ked up Sh o\1\'ll a.
\ 1otll 1~ 1LJ m e what had happ t&gt; ned . I
h.l \' L'

tt cvcr

~ ~ ~~· ..1 .1nd
\1

11!
0. \y ll HHh l'r

tl.l . . l ttd

he r so angry. I apolo -

SL' t..' ll

ofll:rcd to pay the mcJ tca l
rc fu c;c~

bl.! ll il"'

to forg i,·c Sh .I w -

me fi. n

no t

Ll l \in g

llL'r

~ l t P J'c t l y \V h.tt h wor ~c , Mt l tn h .t ~ to ld

\h .l '.\ 11.1 (h.H ::.!tc i.:; n o lon g l.'r \\'e lcoml'
111 h n lh Hll t' . i\·1\' d ;lll ght t.' r io; ht•J rrbro f.. t' tl l' h t ~ i ~ fv1o m 's on ly gr:111dchdd , .tnd
I t".lll!Hi r bt'IJ t:\'t' she is bL· tng; so punHJ\'L'.
1, rh L" re ~ ont c thtng nwn:• I C:lll do ? Tht•
l .lt .... trt• pnfL·nk fint• , and
my tllnthcr
\\ .. 1.., n ut "l' rl o u o; (\' hun I bt·li e\·L' , hl' j..,

didn't tip o\·c r.
· I h r.: a rd. a knoc k Jt my window, and
s.1w J po li ce offin·r. H e was kind and
p:ttient , :md trir..· d to get my car out of
th_t· ditc h . A young: man goin g in the
opposit~..· dircdion s.1 w LI S, puHed over,
.HtJ ran to hdp. At tht: s.tmc um~:, a tqw
truck .lpp ..:;uc d, .111d thl' dnvcr ;~ l so
otTerni to pu :-.h m y c u . Within misllltcs ,
lilY car ,,.,1s b ar k on the highway, ~md I

to \\'\Hk
Ann . I .1m nnh· I H. and yet I had
bcco tll t' r,n hn ry nic.1l about people in
gt·un,JI. I h.1d r om e to thL" cond us1011

un comfortable. I'm tempted to exclude
him tht• IH.'Xt tunc I am the hostess. My
mother says tht&gt;rc is no way I can do
that without hurting my sister.

m g. My tm medt.trL' r c.•Jc tion was ro j e rk

Ann
Landers

the wheel to the· n g ht . I lo st control of
the._• Cl r, 'i \\'l' n·el\lu c k :md fOrth, then 1ny
c.u ~ lid ttH o .1 tkep cmb:lllkment . I fdt
to tally helple ss, bc.t th ank Go d, the car

ADVICE

l

me realize most people arc pretty decent
after all . -- Jennifer in Coral Springs,
Fla.
Dear Jennifer: I've learne d that people often react to the high e"pectations
of others .' Expect the best, and more
often than not , you'll get it. You were
the recipient of a lovely act of kmdness.
Now, pass it on.
Dear Ann Landers: My older sister
has a 16-year-old son with major
behavioral problems. He is verbally abusive to his parents, and offensive to
everyone else. Last week, he rutned
another family gathering with his terrible conduct. It's getting so bad that
nobody wants to have him around .
Our extended families get together
often, and his presence makes everyone

bt·mg to o hard o n Sh.J\\'IlJ , but I do n 't

know ho.w to fix tt . \Vhat d0 you suggt~~ t ? -- Crushed D:'ID ear C ru shed : Your moth l.' r IS ovr.: rre ,Jc tmg Ill .1 big w ay. B y tht' tillll' ths ~
lt'ttl'r JPPl',H ~ in prim , hl· r skinneJ
kn ees will h .lvt:.· healed , .mJ lm pc fully,
sht' \\·ill be less ang ry. If she pms Sluwna ou t of her ht'c. I promi se yo u she wi ll
re gret it. Sl·e that your moth er IT;Jd S thiS
column . It could make .1 big J ltTcren cc

111 her ilk
[kar Ann Lmtkr:-. : M.t y I tt'll your
re ,Jd~:: r s .tbout .m i1Kident th .lt t.nt~lit lllL'

\\',_ IS Oil Ill Y \\',l y

th a t n w :t~

.1

m t·- f i ot

tkllHlll Str .ltl U II o ( lllllll ,lll

wo rld . Tlut
kind!H.'SS lll .t-dc

M e 1 ~1

MIDDLEPORT
.

'

obst' r\'L' \~/oml·n \
Ildth Munth Thursd.1y with .1
program, for junior .tnd s(...' nior g1rls
111 the three Me1gs C o11nty hi!;h
CoumY wi ll

schools.

Th e third .111nual celebr.mon
wtth the theme '' A Women's Oming for Wellness" \WOW) wtU be
hdd from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m . at the
Family Life Center in Middleport.
The program will provide a
forum for teenage girls to gain
knowledge and improve their
decision making skills regarding
health and risk - taking behaviors,

enhance personal wellness, discuss
eating disorders, self-esteem and
sexualitv 1ssuc~.

During "WOW", the high
school stud ents will have the
opportunity to explore a variety of
health issues that are important to

young women, especially as tht·y
relate to well ness and health main ~
tenan ce, self- esteem , sl'if-i ma ge,

interpersonal relationships, sexu;tlity and reproductiw health . and

The Daily Sentinel

Kanawha Valley Dragway results, Page B3
Daily Scoreboard, Page B3
Olympic roundup, Page B4
Bobby Knight fallout, Page B6

of this kid ' - - No Name m Ohio
Dear N .N .: That boy needs help. Tell
your sister to get h1m into counseling
before the small problems become serious ones . Do NOT exclude th e child. It
could make him resentful. and he would
learn nothing from the exclusion. It
would also be a kindness to your SISter
not to isolate her son from the fami ly.
An alcohol problem' How can you
help yourself or someon e you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recogmze It,
H&lt; •W to Deal W1th lt. How to C onquer

Tell me, Ann. should I hurt my mtcr.
,,·hich I would hate to do, or mmt

It '' wi11 give you the .m swcrs . Send a
self-addressed, long, businl·ss-s izl" envc ...
lope and a c heck or mont' Y orclt:r for
$3.75 (thiS include's postage· and handling) to : Alcohol, c / o Ann Landers.
P.O. Box I I 'i62. ClmJgo. Ill. 6061 1c
0562 . (In Canada , send S4 .SS .) To fmd
out mort• about Atlll L 111ders Jnd n.•ad
her past l"olumns. , ·is it the Cn.·.1tors Syndicate wc.·b p.1gc .lt \nn\·. ncators.com.

viuk•n ce against women.
Break-out se-ssions will include

(OU-COM ) Arel Health Edu cation Center. Additional funding

Baby Think lr. Over Program,
Woo&amp;md . Centers. Mei6" Local

ht:.tlth c:duration un usteopmusis,

was provided by American Electric

High School nursing assistant stu-

Power-Southern
Ohio
Coal
Company and the M.:ig.; County
lung cancer and smoking, viOlence Job &amp; Family Services .
against women , rape, wellness, secM any lo cal businesses have
ondary education, homdessness donated items that will be used as
relating to unpact of low-income pnzes for the teens. The Middleand poverty, teen ptegnancy and port Church of Christ Women's
the cost of parenting, alcohol and group wiU prep ate and serve
drug abuse prevention, motivation, snacks and lunch for the teens,
deciSions and responsibilities, self planning committee members and
breast examination, date rape presenters.
The teens will be welcomed by
drugs, self esteem and communication skills.
John R. Lentes, prosecuting attorSupport for the program is pro- ney who w1U also giw the opening
vided through a grant from the speech . During the morning and
Ohio Department of Health, lunc h break, displays will be set up
Bureau of H ealth Promotion and around the audito rium whe re
Risk Reduction Division of Pre- teens can browse and interact with
vention. The event is being coordi- presenters.
nated by the M eigs County Health
AgenCies setting up displays
Department (MCHD), Mei gs include H ealth Recovery Services.
County Fanuly and Children First ACCESS, FCFC, 0 !]-COM,
Council (FCI'C), Meigs County Meigs County Extension Office,
Abstinence O nly Education Pro- University of Rio Grande, God's
gran! and Ohio University Col- Neighborhood Escape for Teens,
leg;e of Osteopathic Medicine Mcig.; County Health Departmynt

dents , Holzer Meigs C linir, Meigs
County FCFC and Holzer MedICal Center. Marg1e Blake, nursing

phys1C11 health, body image, exer-

osc, sm:ss reduction. depression,

asststant mstructor fur Metg.; Htgh
School will have her nursmg assistant students assisting with regtstrntion .

' Representatives of local orgamzations servin g on the planning

committee for "WOW" include:
Amy Boster, Meigs County FCFC
lnte rsystems coordinator; Christi
Lynch,Victims Assistance Program;
Becky Baer, Metgs County Extension Offi ce; Teresa Dunfee, OUCOM Area Health Education
Center; Diana Jeffers, Holzer
Metgs Clin ic ; Margie Skidmore,
Metgs County Health Department; Kathi VanMeter and Brenda
Phalin, Meigs County Abstinence
Only Education Program; Brenda
Curfimn and Junie Maynard,
Meig.; County FCFC; Meig.; Local
Schools; Lentes, and Angela Maddox, ACCESS.

Page 81

)

''

everyqne e lse havt&gt; a lousy time bt"c tu se

Women's Health Month observance planned for 111ursday

ANNIVERSARY

Inside:

WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Wednesday, September 13,1000

Eastern netters roll to three wins this week
kills on 12-of- 14 hitting. Gibbs had two

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

aces.

EAST MEIGS After sweeptng
through a tri -match at Riwr Vall ey Monday, the Eastern vo lleyball team kept irs

Meip wins TVC
golf match

winning streak going with another victo-

UNDATED- Mei&amp;" and Belpre continues to battle it out for
the TVC's Ohio Division golf
lead after seven matches. Meigs
won Monday evenings match on
the back nine at Oxbow to pull
to within one pmnt of the front
running Golden Eagles.
Meigs posted a I RO, followed
by Belpre with a 184. Wellston
andVmton County had 195s. But
Wellston was award ed third place
on the fifth score tic hreaker rule.
Alexander had a 205 and Nelsonville- York finished with a 254.
Marauder freshmen Jeremy
Banks and Matt Preston of Belpre
were co-match medalist with 40s.
Other M eig.; scores were Carson
Midkiff and Jason Knight with
46s , Nick Dettwiller carded a 48,
Thad Bumgardner added a 51
and Josh Napper a 57.
Bdpre leads Meigs by one, 3231, after seven matches. Wellston
is third with 21 points and Vinton
County is fourth with 13 points.
Alexander has five points and
Nelsonville-York
has
three
points.

ry Tuesday at Wellston .
The Eagles (8- 2. TVC Ho cking 4 - 1)
rebounded from a 15- 9 loss in the first
gam e to defeat the Golden Rockets, 15- 1
and 15- 13.
·
Tammy Bissell led the Eagl es with 12
points, including two aces. Bissell was pe rfect on serve, going 17 - (or- 17 , an d had
six digs .
Danielle Spencer and Kayla Gibbs had
six points each. Sp encer finished with two

Kri sten C h evali er was 4- for- 4 hittin g
with two kills and had five assists and two
blocks.
Kass Lodwick went 12- for - 14 hitting
with two kill s and two bloc ks. Whitn ey
Karr added two kills on 4- tor-4 hitting
and also had two blocks.
Shauna Elhott had one kill and three
blo cks .
Amber Baker added four assists against
Wellston.
In Monday 's tri-match, Eastern defeated
River Valley, 15-7, 9-15; 15-'}, and swept
Fairland, 15-9 and 15- 5.
Cinda Clifford led Eastern with 13

points. Tammy Bissell and Kristen Chevalier had seven poims each against River
Vall ey. Bisse ll and Kayl a Gibbs each had _
two aces .
Juli 13ailey was 6-of-7 hitting with three
kills. Kass Lo dwi ck was 6- for-9 with three
kills, and Whitney Karr we nt 8-for- 9 with
three kills and three blocks.
Chelsea De Garmo led the Raid ers w ith
five kill s o n 13-of-17 hitting. Cottrell had
four ki lls, conn ecting on 22-of-24
attempts !:lutch er added three kills going
21-of- 24 on the attack .
Watkins was 8-for-1 I hititng.
Celeste Harrington led the Raiders
with eight points. DeGarmo had seven
points, while C ottrell and Watkins had five

Reds fall
to Cubbies
C INC INNATI
(AI')
Kerry Wood 's second complete
game was as big a milestone as
his first.
On May 6, 1998, he struck
out a record-tying 20 against
the Houston Amos. Tuesday
night he struck out eight in
leading the Chi cago Cubs over
the Cincinnati Reds 2- 1.
"Wins right now really don't
mean much to me," Wood said .
"Uut just to have command of
thre e pitches is so m ething to
build on . I'm not trying to do
anything I'm not capable of

Davis named new

.Hoosier hoop boss
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)
- Mike Davis was named interim coach at Indi ana to repla ce
Bob Knight , who was fired two
days earlier for repeated misconduct .
The university pi cked Davis, a
Kni15ht disciple, to head the pro-

doing."
It's been a long journey since
Wood had a ligament in his
.. ~ight elbow rcplocod o~ .(\p&lt;i}.,8·
a year ago and missed alf of th e
1999 season . Until Tuesday, his
longest outi ng had been e ig;ht
inning.; on July 7 in a 4-2 loss to
the Chicago White Sox.
"He was the throwing hard,"
said Alex Ochoa, whose ninthinnin g home run was all that
kept Wood from his seco nd
career shuto ut . "He had a nice

gram for at least on~ sea son and

selected John Treloar, another for-

mer Knight assistant, as interim
asso ciate coach .

The

BIRTH

Ronald and Ella Osborne

LONG
BOTTOM
R onald and Ella O sborne o f

Mr. and Mrs O sborne :m· tht·
piknrs of Janet Do hertY.

Ll) n g B u ttolll \Yill cdebr.ltt'
thtri r (&gt;} td \n: ddiit g anniversary,
Fnd.1y,Th ey \\'L're 111.1rrir..·d at thl·
F lr ~ t l~ JP (I ~t C lnm:h 111 AshLlll d ,

Ronaleen G aptz , Thoma~ and
M.\rtin Osborne. h.lVL' five
g r.wdcluldre n. and thrt:l' g rl' tltg r.l!ldcht!Jn:n .

K\·.

Tin: coupk

Ohi o

D cp.nrnlL' tl t of Tr.tn sportation
w ith tht· pu rp t)'&gt;l' of upJ.atmg
pul""~ il c n 11 th t• prnj t'L L Bridge
.k ~ l ~lh wtll bL• .. le ~t. n bL·d .

SATURDAY
POMEROY
R eturn
Jmuth an Mc ib" C h.1pter, DAJ\.,

b\'

rcp l.l l L'IllL' Ilt

thL·

l'l )!vl[ RUY - Wor k p.1rty o f
q1 !un teLT• ti )r

m Jown r,l\\ 11 Pn n Jl"rO\ '_ ( 'o m c in pamt
d nt h e ~ .111d b nn g .1 brush or tw o.
p .Ul lll ll g

FRIDAY
Mli)DL EPORT M eigs
t.n \tlll F.lltllly and C. htldre n First
( :oiHil

d. IT ttby.

q ~ ( ) .I. Ill .•lt

th t"

fvkl b'\ Coun :y LJcpJrtment o f
Job ,J nd Famil y St•rvJccs .

•

l ;ALLII'OLI S D o min ic
M;1rchei e. R .Ph .. of Athena RX
H ome Ph ar macy, will talk on
ovc r-th e-cnumer dru g tnteractw n wi.t h prr.:~c ription m edicatt o n' .H rhc P.trklltSil! J·s Suppo rt
Gro up mt·c tmg. 1 p.m . Friday,
lJb r.tr\'. c; r,JCC U nttnl M ct hodt ~t

Ch m, h.
lq,olt 'l.

(,II()

See·oml Ave .. ( ;al-

New anival
RAC INE - Till llly I) LolLI\
and Do nald W Shaffer n f Ranne
a nnounce the: b irth of :1 tbu g httT,
Alyssa Dawn ShatTer. Jul y 22 at
the Holzer Medi cal Cemn. She

nurkin gs. weather pcrnlittutg.
POMEROY - Mei gs Coun ty Renred Teachers , Sawrday,
noon , Trinity C hurch . Representative of the Meib" Semor C enter
mU ' peak on safety.

wei ghed five p o und~ . I() oun ces .
Gran d par tllt~ J n :.· Brt·nd.l .1nd

C had Wolfe. ,m d D o nald C:. Slut fer o f R;,nne, :md

RACINE R ed Bru sh
Church of C hri st , weekend
meetin g, Saturday. 7 p.m .; Sunday.
I 0 a.m. and (, p 111. Denver Hill.
speaker.

RL'SS IL'

I ),Jvi ~ of

North Carolin a.

ovc:rpowering. as he ~as when

he was the NL Rooki e of the
Year in 1991'!.
" I thou~ht he threw the ball
harda then . But ht.· w as a bt·tta

Cold weather
is just around
the corner!

SALEM
CENTER
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MASON,
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pitcher tonight ,'' Reds manJgt'r

Ja ck McKeon said. " Ht· kept us
o tr balan n .· and got

LIS

to swing

at pi tches up in th e zone and tl y
SAFE AT FIRST- Reds 'first baseman Sean Casey couldn 't come up with thi s throw to first during last
night's loss to the Cubs. !:hicago's Gary Matth ews was safe on the play. (AP)

o ut."

ninth before allowing Ochoa's
solo homer. The Reds are the
only major league team that
hasn't been blanked this year.
" It's a great lift to go out and
do that," Wood said. " I felt like I
had three pitches working my curveball , slider and fastball.
And I was throwing th em for
strikes."
Wood won for the first time
in five starts since beating San
Francisco on July 29. He was on
th e disabled list from July 30 to
Aug. 2 1 because pf a muscle
strain, and was suspended Sept.
8-10 for his role m an Aug. 27
brawl against Los Angeles .
"I felt terrible when I got
h'!Jc:'·Wood said. "l h~ve ~ li~e
bit of bronchitis, or something."
He ret ired his first II batters
before Scan Casey doubl ed to
ce nter. The Reds' other hits
were singles by Chris Stynes in
the fifth and Juan Castro in the
eighth.
Wood threw on ly 115 pitch-

es, which is m o re economi cal
than usual.
"No rmally I'm around the
I 00-pitc h mark around the fifth
or sixth inning," he said.
Wood said he fdt he turned
the corner last week, when he
pitch ed six innings but got no
decision 111 the C ubs' 8-5 win at
Colorado.
"My last start, I threw more
breaking balls fo r strikes," Wood
said. "Tonight, I was throwing
two breaking balls fo r strikes,
my curve and slider."
Ochoa homered for the third
straight game when he dropped
from a 32-ounce bat to a 31-

..,

Wood took a sh uto ut in the

insurance in their injury - depleted

Please see Reels, Page 86

backtleld .

W\\h More P\ans
and More Minutes\

Reed sips
with Redsklns
WASHINGTON (AI')
R&lt;·ceiver Andre Reed agreed to a
onl·-year contract with th e Wash -

ington lt edskins , two days alicr
M irhad Westbrook was lost fo r

REE HEARING TE

•

easv movement and he had a
sne.aky fastb all."
·
1
" H e was nasty." said Pokey
R e,·sc·. " I wa s. impressed. And I
do n't think he's fully back yet."
Wood (7-7) allowed four hits
and walked two w ithout being

DENVER (AI') - The Denver
Broncos signed kicker Joe Nedn ey and running back Raymont
H,arris , a pair of live - year players
released by NFL team' two weeks
ago.
Nedney, cut by Oakland in

Elam . Harris, who has etght
career IIH I-yard games, was
released by New En gland just
before the season &gt;rarted. H e provides th e Broncos with some

Alyssa Shaffer

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Point Pleasant

Broncos sign fanner
Buckeye running back

training camp, is a temporary
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S.nu rd.1y, n o on lu ndH:un at
Crows, fi1llowcd by meeting ;J t
Pomeroy Libr:u y and grave

Friday, September 15, 2000
In Dr. A. Jackson Bailes' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
9:00 am - Noon

threatened to transfer en ma ~sc

2322Jackson Avenue

drm ks.

••
•

who

after Knight w 0s fired all decided
to stay wit h the Hoosiers.
In a live interview o·n ESPN,
Knight said he would like to

te~mmaarm~~~~~tGrm$
675-8823

l' IlJO) l-,m.h.

RACINE - Bendit f(" · cJ nLL;r \'ictilll D o n Hupp. S.1turd.1 y
bL·ginning at I p.m . .lt tht· Aml·rtc:tn Lt:gion hall in R :H.:im:.

players

coach again.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY
l'll ,'v1EROY -- 1'11 bhc hearmg 011 Po nll·my- M,t:-,o n Bridge

Indiana

points each.
Juli Bailey, who missed the Wellston
match with an inj ury, pounded five kills to
lead th e attack Monday against Fairland.
She was 10-tor-12 hitting and had two
b locks. Bailey recorded II points, including three aces, on an 11 - for-11 serving
performanc e.
C lifford was also perfect on serve, 8 -for8 , with eight points . Chevalier had seven
points on 7 - of-7 serving, and two kills.
Karr had two kills. Spencer and Bissell
had one each.
Baker and Spencer had two points each
and Gibbs had one point.
As a team, Eastern was perfect on serve,
going 37-for- 37.

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-

the season with ~' kn l'e injury.

Reeel spent 15 years with the
Uufl:1lo Bills. He has 94 1 recep tio ns to r 13,095 yard s and 86
tou chdow ns trl 221 career gam es.
H e was vo ted to seve n Pro Bowls

ami shares the· NFL reco rd of 13
-;easom with 50 receptio ns.

Gordon's ~m appeals
NASCAR sanctions
' DAY T ONA BEAC H. Fla. (AP)
- JeiH; o rdon and hi s H e ndrick
M o torsp o rts team are app ea ling
N ASCAR 's sa nc tio ns over an
engi ne part used in hi s Saturday
ni ght victory in H.. ichmo nd .Va
R obbi e Loomis, crew chi ef for
th e No . 2 4 C hevrol et. was fined
S25,0U!l fo r usin g a part that has
no t bee n approved by NASC AR .
Th e sanc tio ning body also took
away 100 of the total of 180

Authorla6d

po ints Go rdon earn ed wnh th t•

Ol!aler

vi ctory - both fro m th e drtver
standi ngs an d fro m Ri r k H end rick in the owner standin g&lt;.

MARSHALL FOOTBALL
Meigs;., net crew
still undefeated Herd regroups on off week
BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ROC K SPR INGS -

Meigs

kept Jts umlt: fra t~d re cord in

tac k, but not without a scare by
a sptrited So u th e m Tornado
team in TVC vo ll eyball a(tioH
Tu esday evening at M ei!l' High
School.
The Ma raud ers (o - 11) defe&lt;~te d
the Torn adoes (2-3) two g;~mes
to o n e.

At tirst it looked like Meig.;
wo clid nuk e a sh ort nigh t of it .
The Marauders de feated So uthl' rn 15-2 in th e fi r ~t gam e, l.nd
m the seco nd c o nt c~t Meigs

j umped o ut o n top 14-3. Bu t
So uth er n refused to fold ~nd
sto rmed b ack .md won the co n ..

test 1(&gt;- 14.
(n th e t hird game, So uthnn

Mindy Chamey scored l it
points on 12- o f- 15 servin g. She
al so adde d 14 a\S ists.
Nikki Uutcl1cr added li ve
po ints, sh e was 11 - of- 11 serv-

-

mg.

bi g grl ml.' in 11JY7 ac M 1a111i.

Shannon Pric e added th ree
points, she was nin e o f I (I serving with o ne kill and se ven

Ohi o, j eopardtzin g Its chan ct·s

a~s i sts.

C orrie H oover add ed three
po ints, she w as ni ne o f ni nt•
servin g with six . ki11s and o nt"

assist . Marj orie Bratton add ed
nin e kills and three bloc ks.
Fallon R oush led So uthem
w1th I II points. She was 2 1- of23 serving.
Emily Hill and Emily Stivers
add,·d three po ints e ach .
Dean a Pullins scored th ree
po int s and was nine o f 12 ~ r.:rv­

jumped o ut to a early 4- 1 lead .
but M eigs battl ed , bac k and mg.
defeated the pesky To rnadoes . Rachel C h apm an score d three
po ints an d she w as 1-fo r- 2 serv15-9 to w in th e m atch .
M eig.; wa s led by Kayte D avis tng.
Kat i C lunin gs sco rcJ t wu
wi th 12 poi nt s o n 1 9 - o f~ l 9
points. b ut sh e had II bl ocks.
serving, she also had tlve kills.
St acye Mills and Sh auna
Kati e Jeffers alided II po ult ,.
Manuel t'Jc h 5cored o n e poi nt .
serv tn g 17- of- I H.

HUNTIN(;HJN. W.Va. (AI')
D ~mn y Derri co rt IT ill e rnbc:r~
th e )eo.;,o m of losing.

Marshall had JUSt droppe d a

for a Mid- Ameri ca n Cu n f tTL'II Cl'
crown in th e Hl:'rd\ tiro;t yea r in
th t· co nft"re nce.

North C arol ina .
IJl'fr icott views Saturday's .14at Mt c hi).:!;an Stat e as
no thing Ilion: th~ 11 , a blown
chance to overtake a To p 25

24 lo ss

opponent.
"I s.t id to myself. eve n Mt chacl
Jord an lost a co uple o f times,"
IJn ncot t said . " As

J

se nior.

'''l'

As ~l fre shm a n , I ) er ri rot t
re m e mbt• ro; q ua rt e rba c k ( :had
Pe nningto n rt· llin g him nor to
p u t too nlu ch chought into Dnt'
galll t' .

sbuuld tell the guy s, that game's
ovn and now we've got to prepare fo r N orth C aroli na . gt·t
ba ck to JU illping ~\ round and

, "Ch.1d .md thme 6"-' Y' to ld us.

football \ all .!bout hav ing fun .

' i t'~ n ot rh c e nd of the 'i e a~o n .
D o n 't ukc rh i-; loo.;o; as d1e t'IH.i of
th t• se ason ." ' I ) e rr ic orr s.1id Tu l's-

Wl' 'ru J U~t go in g to be

d.w. '' And it 'o.; nor rh e e nd of th t'
:-;c ~son fo r us. We e m lost• on e
~&lt;U lll' and we ~ till can do well."
' M a~"hall wo n its fo u r renuin in g regular season cont ests that
w ar and bea t Toled o in th e
tv!AC cham pi onship ~am c to
.lLivanct' to it s 'fi rst bow l gan 1e in
511 vcan.

M arshall , wh ich is tdle ne."
Saturday, will h aw an extra wee k
to p rcpart' fo r a Sep t. 2.1 ~a m c at

havin g fun o ut thl·n:. B ~:c a u s t.'
l uo~e an d

not be upti ght ."
T ht"y'\ 1 ha\'L' thl' c han ce r'o
"itJrr anotht•r winni ng 'i treak :1fter
watchin g the..• nati o n \ lo n gt'st
strt'.tk e n d at 1H ga m es Satu rd ay.

We've ~otto b r in ~ o ur ' A' game
every time we pl ay. We JUst didn't brmg our ' A' game," h e said .

"For some gu ys. it will take a
w hile. But when you're co mpetitive. you can shake that r115ht

off."
13y ro n Left wi ch said h e d oesn't
k1io w a quartnback who's ever

gon e undefeated over a caree r.
" It happen s to the best of
them ." h e said . "You 're goin g to
lose . Th e good th ing IS w e kn ow
why we lost . We kn ow th e mista kes \.Vt' made and rh;~t 's th e
goo d thing :tho ur ir . Yo u can
nn p ro Vl' n n th e mi'\takes you
madl', j ust rry ro get b~.:· n e r and
(ry no r to m ake th e sa m e mista ke~ th e ll l' Xt grl me."

Coach Bob Pru ett poin ted out

One• t hin g th e Hnd pl,1yns

that Saturd ay was a gam e of sev-

luvc n't lost is con tltkn ce. Th ey
kn ew th ey. had a chance to beat

eral tirsts for Marshall . It was th e
fi rst time Leftwi ch had played an

Michigan State aft r.: r being d own
th ree po int" in tht· fo urt h qu.utcr.

e n tire game an d th :l.t sever al

.

"We k·ar ne J a lot from Saturday. We learn ed th at we ca n play
\\'lth anybod y in tht..• cou nt ry.

ot1C n ~iv~..·

li nenH'n and running

barks got th eir fi rst rt·al tests .
"Th t""t' we re n ew expe ri e n ces

Please see Manhall, Page B&amp;

�P~ge

Wednesday, September 13 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday September 13 2000

•

DRAG RACING

Glwnay
Ylrd ll8la, lnd WII!Md
To Do Ado
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SOC Al SECURITY /Sst?
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Local dragsters the
money again at Kanawha
Valley Dragway
SOUTHSIDE Wmners were
crowned n four classes Saturday
September 9 at Kanawha Valley
Dragway
In the Pro Class Chuck
Anderson ( 94 R E D) of
Mason WVa won with a 5 12
d1al n nme runmng a 5 134 ET
at 134 74 mph
Mooch Parkins of Hurr cane
WVa fimshed second With his
71 Vega He d1aled m a 6 22 and
ran 6 218 at ItO 56 mph
In the Modified Class Tim

The Da1ly Sentmel Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Casto ( 74 Mustang) of Mason
WVa won wtth a 7 21 dial m
time runnmg a 7 438 ET at
78 10 mph
Steve W1lhams of Rutland
Ohio fimshed second With his 69
Camaro He d1aled m a 6 96 and
ran a 9 496 at 50 54 mph
In the Pure Street Class Marc
French ( 71 Caprtce) of Middle
port Oh10 won With a 9 90 d a!
n runmng a 9 932 ET at 69 II
mph
Bob Potter of South Po nt

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD•
rem Momraal

Pel.
Gil
1583
!588
2
483 1. /2
.27 22 /2
.10

25

5111
510

0

&lt;43820/2
&lt;43&lt;0
2
.2. 22 /2
.17 23 /2

Ohio fimshed second With hiS 94
Escort He dialed m a 12 80 and
ran a 12 827 at 54 61 mph
Fmally m the Jr Dragster
Class Charley Betts II (Spttzer)
of Huntmgton WVa took first
w1th a 7 91 dial m runmng a
7 958 at 76 52 mph
Second went to Jason Clayton
of Peebles Ohio He ran 8 101
(agamst a 8 05 d a! m) at 79 50
mph

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TRANSPORTATION

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Ga po '
WedneSday Thursday &amp; Frklay

646 Th d Ave nue

Pomeroy
Middleport
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Sunday Sept 17

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Bes -o 3)
8wnes4 5wne
2Wine
36wne

AFC

Alou
Hous on 357 VGuerre o Mon ea
354
Hammonds ColOrado 346 Cas o Aorlda
340 Shefllokl Lot Angolos 333 P aua New

MERCHANDISE
510

N~ehon

New York New Jersey (3 vs Oa ea 6
F day Sop
6
Da asaNewYi kNew e eyBpm
Wednesday Sep 20
New York New JSJsey a Da as 8 30 p rTf
sa u day Sep 23
Oa as a NewYok New esey 330pm
necessary

Nation• Football Lngut

Nat ona Laague l.Ndere

3 Fam y ya d sa a Jean Who

80

MOnell)! ll Gamea
N

I'",PRO FOOIBALL

Kan.. s Clty (Stein 8_.) a Seattle Abboft 9

6) tOOipm

s uff F vsa sep

••

Arizona 32 Oa as 3
Open PittsllU gh

Detroit 59

t .. tO) 336pm
8os on (Ohka 3-4 at Clevatand Co on 2
8) 706pm
To onto (LoaiZ' SJ 10) at NY Yankees
C omens 2-e) 7 05 p m
S.h moe (Aapp 7
at Texas G ynn 5 3
806pm
Detroit (Waaver 9-13) at Chicago WMo So•
Parque -8 8 05 p m

b ey by Me gs Ca pe ha e 29
ga
sn ank new e e y h ng
needed o sa up new cab na
sand goa&amp; w t'l ank S 25 m
Bundy c a ne $200 pus s ze
cohng kdcohes oa o nee

•

•

SAVES-TBJones De o
38 Dlowe
Bos on 33 MAtvera New Yo k 33 wane and
exas 33 Sasak Seatt e 32 Koch To on o
32 FoUke Ch ago 29 Pe crva Ana he m 29
RMHernandez Tampa Bay 29

rme

Texaa Q Baltimore
st game
TGdla 8 Ban more 5 2nd

Business
Tratnlng

363

••
•

Baltimore 39 acksonv Ue 36
Denver 42 A ante 4
S Lous37 Seane34
ca o.1 na 38 san F ancesco 22
Det 01 1!5 WaSh ng on 0
New Orteans 28 San Otego 27

6

o lg n o any ntent10n to

ATTENT ON All STUDENTS

Boson

Toran o 356 E sad Anah&amp;~m
354 MJSweeney Kansas City 34 Damon
Kansas City 336 Thomas Ch cago 334
Segul C eveland 333
RUNS-Oamon Kansas City
25 ARodriguaz Seattle 20 Durham Ch cago
5
Jeter New Yor1t
0 CDe gado Toronto 08
Thomas ChiCaQO 08 Ers ad Anahetm os
RB-Thomas Cntcago
39 EMart nez
Seattle 34 MJSwaeney Kansas City 33
COelgado To onto 29 MO donez Ch cago
8 ARCKinguez Seatt e
7 Jat:iaambl Oak
land
5
H TS-E s ad Anahe n 2 4 Damon
Kansa.s City 97 M Swee ey Kansas C y
90 COelgado To onto 82 Thomas Ch ca
go 76 Jeer New Yo k
2 Dye Kansas
City 7
OOUB ES-CDelgado TOf'o o 52 DCruz
Detroit 45 Ga c apa a Boston 45 0 enJd
Sean e 43 lawton M nneso a 42 Damon
Kansas City 4 Thomas en ct~.go 4
TR PLES-CGuzman
M nneso a
9
AKennedy Anahe m 0 Oanp Ka sas C y
8 Ou ham Ch cago a A cea
e)(as 8
TNtxon Bas on 7
Hun er M neso a 6
JAVa en n Chtcago 6 BeW ISms New YorK

baaed on ace co or el glon

800

Flo ida 55
EYoung Chocago 51 GoodWin Los Angeles
48 Womack Anzona 42 Fu ca A anta 34
PWi son Florida 3 Owens San Diogo 29
P TCH NG ( 7 Dec sons) Este.!l San
Fraoosco 5-4 789 3 98 ROJohnson /1.1
zons 17-6 739 2 4 G av ne Attanta 9 7
73 3 82 Elarton Houston 6-tl 727 4 B4
Aleher New Yo k 5 7 682 3 7 s ephan
son St LOuis 6-8 66 7 4 30 Ki e S Lou s
S.9 867 3 8 KB own L.os Angeles 2-6
1167 2 72 GMaddux A .... 6 8 667 3 2
STR KEOUTS-ADJOhnson Anzona 3 3
Altaao Co Of'Bdo 92 Aleitef New Yor1o; 87
Dempster Flor da 85 KBrown Los Ange es
93 Par1t Loa Angeles 79 Kile s L s
79
SAVES-AJtonseca Rorida 40 Hoffman
San Diego 3i Benitez New Yot'k 37 Nen
San F 8J1Cisco 3!5 Agu e a ChiCago 29
G aves C nc nna 28 Veres s ou s 25

BAn NG-Ga c apa a

Uness We Wn

AJ rea aara e actvenll ng n
lh o newspape ~ ooo eel to
the Foderol Fa Houo ng Aot
ot 968 which makes It legal

235 2292

STOLEN BASES Leas to

CO~ado

peop e whO wo d ke o sa
he own bus ness NO NV EST
MENT Gen bonus oppty l m ed
me 800 4
3855 hen 800
683-2002
00 OVERWE GHT PEOPLE
NEEOEO Ea n $$$ los ng 5 400
ba Ca Dan o Ke y a
888

38

Amertc..n LMgu•IAedere

888 582 3345

o

NParez Colorado 1 Bet-

'"" M '-'koe 9 Abreu 1'h !adelphia 9
Good"'" Los Angeles 8 G es Pmst&gt;utgh 7
LWalker COiofaclo 7
HOME RUNS-SSosa Cl-icago 49 Bonds
San F aoci5CO 46 Bagwetl Hous on 43
Shelfteld Los Angeles 4 Edmonds St Louis
39: Grifley Jr Cnctnnati 39 Hidalgo Houstoo

M ke

2 0 0 00
0 500
0 500
0 500
0 2 0 000
Centra
2 0 0 00
2 0 0 00
2 0 0 00
020000
020000
2 0 0 00
0 500
0 500
0500
020000

8
50
55
38
50

Woe

s
San F anc sco

BASKETBAL
Na ona Basketba Assoc a on
DE RO
PS ON S-Wa edGE
M"'
do k
NO ANA PACERS warved F e n s Mu n
S gned G acquay Wn
F Gem dB w an
G Re wa e

54
48
59
30
45

34
52
47
32
3

29
43

20
34

62
2
34

6
4
0
70
42
4

74

B

Sund1y e Gamae
Oak and 38 nd anapo s 3
Buffa o 27 G een Bay 8
C eve and 24 C n nna
NY Gants 33 Ph adepha 8
Te nessee
KasasCy40
Tamp a Bay 4 Ch cage o
M nnesoa 3 Mam

HOCKEY

s

Ha o

eo F

M h8

and

MORE LOCAL NEWS MORE LOCAL FOLKS
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SERVICES

810

EMPLOYMENT

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

SERVICES
740

Reg1onal financial mstttutton s now
accepting appltcat ens for a Me gs County
Bus ness Development posttton
Appltcants should possess the follow tng qual t es

Rog

• 3 5 Years reta I sales exper ence
• Constderab e tact w th cus omers
• Good telephone and PC sk I s
• Detatl and Goal Onented
Fast effie ent worker
• Abtl ty to work under pressure

Sporting
Goods
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

720 Trucks for Sale

840 Electrical and

We otTer a generous benefits packag~ ncludmg
40 I K retirement and career advancement

Refrigeration

UDI WIIKLV OUl~ANTUD
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME P~AT
T ME NO EX PER ENCE AE
OU RED 400 7•1 57 I E
X0

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFIEDSI

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

YOU LL SA~E MDNH
IN tHE ClASSIFIED$
AND I HAl I NO lULU

Ex per ence and qual fied pe sons
should s~nd resume to
PO Box 240
Gall polts Oh o 4563
EOE

110 Help Wanted

~Pleasant Valley
~
Hospital

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST I MLr
P easan Va ey Hcsp a has a u
me oppo un y
fyoumee he o ow gq a
a ons

Assoc ates Deg ee n Appl ed Sc ence o re a ed
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WV License

Exce en
Sa a y

Ho days

Hasp a za on
Dena
L fe nsu ance

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ong e n d sab
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y

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commun ty he a h se ce eeds
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co PERSONNEL
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OR FAX TO (304) 675 6975

ANEOE

�P~ge

Wednesday, September 13 2000

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday September 13 2000

•

DRAG RACING

Glwnay
Ylrd ll8la, lnd WII!Md
To Do Ado
Mull Be P1ld In Adv1nce
TRIBUNE Qf&amp;DUNE.

2 oo p

m. liMo d1y betoro

tho 8d 11 to run
Sundly 1 Monclq ultlon
a oo p m Frkl1y
SENTINEL Qf!QLINE

1 00 p.m liMo doy before

tho 8CIIo to run

Sundly I Mondq 8Cihlon
1 oo.J m Frldaoy
REG(ILA MAPUNE,

2 diYI beforo th• ld II
torun
430pm

110

HelpWant¥

110

FINANCIAL

$125 WEEKLY Ma~e money
He p ng Peop e Rece ve Go e n
men Re unds F ee De a s 24
h
e o ded message
800

210

230

Professional
Services

320 Mobile Homes

440

for Sale

Apartments
for Rent

BuSiness
Opportunity

449-4625 Ext 5700
S987 85 WEEK Y P ocess ng
HUD FHA Mo gage Ae unds NO
Expe ence Requ ed Fo FREE
no ma on Ca
... 300

800 50 6832

1983 OA NEWER TRAC
TORS G ow g eg ona a e
seek ng qua y owne ope a o s

85 8 CPM
so company d
e s Home Weekends Mos y
drophook Ca Today HCX 80D-

PH 0-T-Q-G.R A P H-Y

Wedd ngs

Po s

Z00.2823.

Spons Teams
P

o ess o a

Ce

ed Pho og a

phs

Need We And Sep ? No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Se e

Reasonab e ates
Ca fo appo ntme

on o
5678

304)675 7472
304 675 7279

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Homes Ca

800 948

TURNED DOWN ON

SOC Al SECURITY /Sst?
No

FUL EA BRUSH CO

-pa

Local dragsters the
money again at Kanawha
Valley Dragway
SOUTHSIDE Wmners were
crowned n four classes Saturday
September 9 at Kanawha Valley
Dragway
In the Pro Class Chuck
Anderson ( 94 R E D) of
Mason WVa won with a 5 12
d1al n nme runmng a 5 134 ET
at 134 74 mph
Mooch Parkins of Hurr cane
WVa fimshed second With his
71 Vega He d1aled m a 6 22 and
ran 6 218 at ItO 56 mph
In the Modified Class Tim

The Da1ly Sentmel Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Casto ( 74 Mustang) of Mason
WVa won wtth a 7 21 dial m
time runnmg a 7 438 ET at
78 10 mph
Steve W1lhams of Rutland
Ohio fimshed second With his 69
Camaro He d1aled m a 6 96 and
ran a 9 496 at 50 54 mph
In the Pure Street Class Marc
French ( 71 Caprtce) of Middle
port Oh10 won With a 9 90 d a!
n runmng a 9 932 ET at 69 II
mph
Bob Potter of South Po nt

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD•
rem Momraal

Pel.
Gil
1583
!588
2
483 1. /2
.27 22 /2
.10

25

5111
510

0

&lt;43820/2
&lt;43&lt;0
2
.2. 22 /2
.17 23 /2

Ohio fimshed second With hiS 94
Escort He dialed m a 12 80 and
ran a 12 827 at 54 61 mph
Fmally m the Jr Dragster
Class Charley Betts II (Spttzer)
of Huntmgton WVa took first
w1th a 7 91 dial m runmng a
7 958 at 76 52 mph
Second went to Jason Clayton
of Peebles Ohio He ran 8 101
(agamst a 8 05 d a! m) at 79 50
mph

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
PUT T TO WORK $500 $7500
A88EMeLV

to advertise any pretarence
mltatlon o d sc m na ion

pa monlh www beeatnome com

AT HOME C a s
Toys Jewe y wood Saw ng
Typ ng (l ea Pay CALL
795 0380 Ext 120 241n

sex tam a

111

New Bank Repos Make 2 Pay
men s &amp; Move n No Payma n s
A. e Fou Vea s Oakwod Ga
P&lt;1 • 740)446-3093

ua o nauona.

make any such preference
m atono dac mna10n

We have ove

200 }Obs ava able mmad a ely

Th I newspaper wl not

Fu 1hd part time ava able

30 Announcement•
Now To 'lbu TM~ Slloppe
9 WN Stimson Alhens
7oo-592 842

no

Qua y clo 1'1
and househo d
ems S 1 00 bag 11 e e e y
Thu saay Monday h u Sa u day
9()().530

EARN up tD St6/hou

Eul

Livestock

knowing y accept
advert umanta for ea Hta e
wh4ch a n viO allen of the

pus efe ra bOnuses
you need work gn away
Col11-eoo.l211-1753

TNm

W

L

Pet.

NewYorlc'".::::: :::::::::: :::: 837587528
69 695

Booton ..

Toronto

aw Ou aodera are hereby
nformed ha at dwe ngs
advert sed n th a newapape

ca IIOday atlrl omorrow
Chlk D&lt;Molopmen Group/
M enn um Te ese Ices

75 89

Baltimore
Tampa Bay
Clollelilnd

t4

88

n

42
597
543
483

·.:.: ·::· :: ·:86
71 58
73

Detroit
Kanus Clti
M nnosota

REAL ESTATE

76

82 82

j:· ·:. : ·. n

538
545
503
455

:·111 116
88
73 72
88 111

Anaheim

Tuao

8

9
24

•
5

469 18 2
43
24

Woot
Oakland
SNft e ( :·:·

52

Ge

«&amp; 9 12

85 80
81 8-1
Central

Chlcogo~· ~:.

a a ava able on an equa
opportun ty bass

6
3

lueeOv'eGa-

NY Yankees 10 Toronto
996 Yamaha 350 Banshee ac
g ATV ve y good shape p ced
a $2795 Ca She a a 740 992
2 36 hou s MF 84 Saudaya

2

HOME RUNS- Thomas e n cago 42
Glaus Anahe m 4 ('Delgado To on o 39
TBa sa TOfon o 38 us ce New York 37
JaG amb Oak and 36 ARodng ez Seatt e
36
S OLEN BASES-Dam on Kansas City 42
AAJoma C eveland 33 DeSh e ds Bait mo e
32 Henderson Sean e 29 Me emo e Sea
tie 28 Ers18d Anahetm 26 Ca o Tampa Say

2B
P TCH NG ( 7 Dec sons) PMart nez
Boson 6 5 762 74 OWes Torono 96
7!lll."""' Baldwin Chocago 4 5 737 4 56
Hudson Qakland
s..s 727 4 56 Pen tte
New Yo~ 8-7 720 4 02 M&amp;fCedes Ba
more 2 5 706 3 98 Bu ba C evetand 4-6
700 45
STA KEOUT S-PMart nez 8os on 259
Muss na Bait mo e
96 Colon C eve a d
74 CF n ey C eveland 70 C emens New
Yo lc
65 Bu ba C eve and
6
Noma

Galllpolle
&amp; VIcinity

Bolton 8 C evoland 8
Dot oh 10 Ch cogo Whhe Sox 3
Anaheim 5 Tampa Bay 2
Oakland 5 Minnesota 3

Seatt e 1 Kansas City 3

T-y'e~
M l - , , _ 121) 01 Ool&lt;*ld (H•od •

Tampa Bay "!U&lt;Io 2 5) a Anahatm O~z 5

5) 1005pm

Thur'lday e Gemee
Bolton (PMartinez 8 5) a C eveland Nagy
2_.) 705pm
To on o (Wels
a N Y Yankees Pe
tlttot87) 705pm
Kansas Clty (SuM B 9) ot Texas (Da~• 6
9) 805pm

"-6

TRANSPORTATION

RENTALS

Ga po '
WedneSday Thursday &amp; Frklay

646 Th d Ave nue

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

V. Jets 20 New Eng and 9
Sunday Sept 17

BuffaJoa NY es pm
Aanta aCaona
pm
San F anctsco a S ou s p m
Pfl adelph a a G etKJ Bay
p n
Tampa Bay a De o
pm
C nc nna a acksonv e p m
Prttsbu gh a C ev~ and
pm
Denver a Oak ana 4 05 p m
San Diego a Kansas C y 4 05 p m
NY GansatChcago 4 spm
New0r1ea sa Seane 4 Spm
M nesotaa New E gand 4 5pm
Ba ITIOfea Mam 820pm
Open nd~anapo s Ar zo a ennassee
Monday Sopt 8
DaHas a Washng on 9 p m

!I

PRO SOCCER
Majo League Socce
Pl1yoH G ance
Ouartort na Round
(Sood ng n pa tntheses
Bas -o t'l ee)
Coto ado (8 vs Kana .. C ty 1)
Sa urday Sep
&amp;
Coo ado a KansasCty 830pm
Wadn ..day Sapt 20
Kansas City a Coo ado 9 30 p m
Sund•y Sep 24
Coo ado a Kansa s C y 830 pm
essary

•

A~a

ea (!5 va Tampa Bay (4)
Thursday Sap 14
os Angeles a ampa Bay 8 p m
Wednesday Sep1 20
Tampa Bay a os Ange e
0 30 p m
Sa1u day Sap 2J
os Ange es a am p~ Bay BA
eces
Loa

sac;
New Eng and (7) vs Ch cago 2
F day Sep
!5
New Eng a d a Ch ag 8 30 p m
Tueeday Sop
9
C cagoa NewE gan
JOpm
F day Sep 22
New E gand a Ch ago 830 p m if nee

essac;

BATT

Colo ado

e..

W L

BaHmo e

Auction
and Flea Market

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Mont ea1

79 AJones Atlan a 77 Kent San
F anc aco 75 NPe ez Colo ado 7
DOUB ES---HeHon COo ado 54 C o
Colorado •7 Vldro Mont ea 42 Gonza ez
A zona 42 G een Los Angeles 40 EYou g
Ch cago 40 Ab au Ph ode ph a 38
TA PLES-Womack A zo a
2 VGuer

TPts

PF PI&lt;

00 55
500 3
500 63
500 30
000
000
0

36
34
46
30
24
6

Oak and

2 0 0 00 47

Denve

0 500
8
0 2 0 000 28
0 2 a ooo 33
0 2 0 000 34

3
55
44
3
60

Ceveland
Jacksonv e
Tennessee
C ncnnat
Pittsbu gh

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0

Woe

KansasCtty
San Dago
Seatte

NFC
Eao

38

AUNS--Bagwel Houston 37 Herron co
o ado
27 Bonds San F anc sco
2
Edmonds St Louis 1 6 A.Jones AUanta 08
Ken .:.an F anc sco 03 SSoaa Ch cago
02
AB -SSosa en cago 33 Helton Co
o ado 23 Ken San F anc sco 2 Bagwe
Houston 8 Griffey J C nc nna
7 G es
Pittsburgh
!5 PN son Flo!'lda
0 VGuer
ero Mon tal 0
H TS He on Coo ado
97 SSosa
Ch cago 80 VGuerrero Mont ea 79 V a o

5I 6th

Champ onsh p
Sunday De
5
a Wasnnqo DC
30pm

20000433
200004035
0 500 58 52
0 500 30
3
0000 35 4

Yor1&lt; 332

Household
Goods

Sem r na Round
Bes -o 3)
8wnes4 5wne
2Wine
36wne

AFC

Alou
Hous on 357 VGuerre o Mon ea
354
Hammonds ColOrado 346 Cas o Aorlda
340 Shefllokl Lot Angolos 333 P aua New

MERCHANDISE
510

N~ehon

New York New Jersey (3 vs Oa ea 6
F day Sop
6
Da asaNewYi kNew e eyBpm
Wednesday Sep 20
New York New JSJsey a Da as 8 30 p rTf
sa u day Sep 23
Oa as a NewYok New esey 330pm
necessary

Nation• Football Lngut

Nat ona Laague l.Ndere

3 Fam y ya d sa a Jean Who

80

MOnell)! ll Gamea
N

I'",PRO FOOIBALL

Kan.. s Clty (Stein 8_.) a Seattle Abboft 9

6) tOOipm

s uff F vsa sep

••

Arizona 32 Oa as 3
Open PittsllU gh

Detroit 59

t .. tO) 336pm
8os on (Ohka 3-4 at Clevatand Co on 2
8) 706pm
To onto (LoaiZ' SJ 10) at NY Yankees
C omens 2-e) 7 05 p m
S.h moe (Aapp 7
at Texas G ynn 5 3
806pm
Detroit (Waaver 9-13) at Chicago WMo So•
Parque -8 8 05 p m

b ey by Me gs Ca pe ha e 29
ga
sn ank new e e y h ng
needed o sa up new cab na
sand goa&amp; w t'l ank S 25 m
Bundy c a ne $200 pus s ze
cohng kdcohes oa o nee

•

•

SAVES-TBJones De o
38 Dlowe
Bos on 33 MAtvera New Yo k 33 wane and
exas 33 Sasak Seatt e 32 Koch To on o
32 FoUke Ch ago 29 Pe crva Ana he m 29
RMHernandez Tampa Bay 29

rme

Texaa Q Baltimore
st game
TGdla 8 Ban more 5 2nd

Business
Tratnlng

363

••
•

Baltimore 39 acksonv Ue 36
Denver 42 A ante 4
S Lous37 Seane34
ca o.1 na 38 san F ancesco 22
Det 01 1!5 WaSh ng on 0
New Orteans 28 San Otego 27

6

o lg n o any ntent10n to

ATTENT ON All STUDENTS

Boson

Toran o 356 E sad Anah&amp;~m
354 MJSweeney Kansas City 34 Damon
Kansas City 336 Thomas Ch cago 334
Segul C eveland 333
RUNS-Oamon Kansas City
25 ARodriguaz Seattle 20 Durham Ch cago
5
Jeter New Yor1t
0 CDe gado Toronto 08
Thomas ChiCaQO 08 Ers ad Anahetm os
RB-Thomas Cntcago
39 EMart nez
Seattle 34 MJSwaeney Kansas City 33
COelgado To onto 29 MO donez Ch cago
8 ARCKinguez Seatt e
7 Jat:iaambl Oak
land
5
H TS-E s ad Anahe n 2 4 Damon
Kansa.s City 97 M Swee ey Kansas C y
90 COelgado To onto 82 Thomas Ch ca
go 76 Jeer New Yo k
2 Dye Kansas
City 7
OOUB ES-CDelgado TOf'o o 52 DCruz
Detroit 45 Ga c apa a Boston 45 0 enJd
Sean e 43 lawton M nneso a 42 Damon
Kansas City 4 Thomas en ct~.go 4
TR PLES-CGuzman
M nneso a
9
AKennedy Anahe m 0 Oanp Ka sas C y
8 Ou ham Ch cago a A cea
e)(as 8
TNtxon Bas on 7
Hun er M neso a 6
JAVa en n Chtcago 6 BeW ISms New YorK

baaed on ace co or el glon

800

Flo ida 55
EYoung Chocago 51 GoodWin Los Angeles
48 Womack Anzona 42 Fu ca A anta 34
PWi son Florida 3 Owens San Diogo 29
P TCH NG ( 7 Dec sons) Este.!l San
Fraoosco 5-4 789 3 98 ROJohnson /1.1
zons 17-6 739 2 4 G av ne Attanta 9 7
73 3 82 Elarton Houston 6-tl 727 4 B4
Aleher New Yo k 5 7 682 3 7 s ephan
son St LOuis 6-8 66 7 4 30 Ki e S Lou s
S.9 867 3 8 KB own L.os Angeles 2-6
1167 2 72 GMaddux A .... 6 8 667 3 2
STR KEOUTS-ADJOhnson Anzona 3 3
Altaao Co Of'Bdo 92 Aleitef New Yor1o; 87
Dempster Flor da 85 KBrown Los Ange es
93 Par1t Loa Angeles 79 Kile s L s
79
SAVES-AJtonseca Rorida 40 Hoffman
San Diego 3i Benitez New Yot'k 37 Nen
San F 8J1Cisco 3!5 Agu e a ChiCago 29
G aves C nc nna 28 Veres s ou s 25

BAn NG-Ga c apa a

Uness We Wn

AJ rea aara e actvenll ng n
lh o newspape ~ ooo eel to
the Foderol Fa Houo ng Aot
ot 968 which makes It legal

235 2292

STOLEN BASES Leas to

CO~ado

peop e whO wo d ke o sa
he own bus ness NO NV EST
MENT Gen bonus oppty l m ed
me 800 4
3855 hen 800
683-2002
00 OVERWE GHT PEOPLE
NEEOEO Ea n $$$ los ng 5 400
ba Ca Dan o Ke y a
888

38

Amertc..n LMgu•IAedere

888 582 3345

o

NParez Colorado 1 Bet-

'"" M '-'koe 9 Abreu 1'h !adelphia 9
Good"'" Los Angeles 8 G es Pmst&gt;utgh 7
LWalker COiofaclo 7
HOME RUNS-SSosa Cl-icago 49 Bonds
San F aoci5CO 46 Bagwetl Hous on 43
Shelfteld Los Angeles 4 Edmonds St Louis
39: Grifley Jr Cnctnnati 39 Hidalgo Houstoo

M ke

2 0 0 00
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0 500
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2 0 0 00
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2 0 0 00
020000
020000
2 0 0 00
0 500
0 500
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BASKETBAL
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DE RO
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Sund1y e Gamae
Oak and 38 nd anapo s 3
Buffa o 27 G een Bay 8
C eve and 24 C n nna
NY Gants 33 Ph adepha 8
Te nessee
KasasCy40
Tamp a Bay 4 Ch cage o
M nnesoa 3 Mam

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eo F

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Rog

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

THEON WE HAVE OT~ !OR.

W"'YS OF OBi~NING
F'~

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Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

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Public Notice

Public Notice
·Soptombor tB through
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Orongo Townohlp , S.ptombor 30, 2000 lor tho
Truotooo will bo closing purpooe of roploclng
Eoot Shodo Road (T·278) culvorta.
from tho junc11on of 681, (8) 15,15,11

OLYMPICS

U.S. men's soccer
team ties Czech
Republic
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - Two days before
60()" US. athletes march in the Sydney Games'
. opening ceremony, the American soccer team
took a small step toward advancing in the 2000
Olympics.
In a physical battle with the Czech Republic,
the Americans managed a 2-2 tie Wednesday - a
game in which they twice led and suffered several missed scoring opportunities. Chris Albright
and Josh Wolff scored for the United Sutes.
"I tell people all the time that we have players
in the United States thar can play·very well in any
arena," U.S. coach Clive Charles said. "I just think
the guys proved th•t tonight.
"We . had quite a few chances to score - we
were a little unfortunate not to convert. Overall I
was happy with the way the team played," he said.
Tile soccer players will not join the rest of the
Americans at the Friday opening cermony in
Sydney's Olympic Stadium. Instead, they will
remain in Canberra to prepare for Saturday's game
against Cameroon.
A half-dozen soccer games kicked off the Summer Games, with both men and woman taking
the field for the first glimpse of the competition.
For the host Ausrralian team, a screaming crowd
e£ 93,252 in the Melbourne Cricket Ground
could not help them overcome an Italian team
that posted a 1-0 victory.
In other men's action, defending gold medalist
Nigeria managed a 3-3 tie against Honduras,
while Cameroon defeated Kuwait, 3-2.
- WOMEN 'S SOCCER: When the games
began, it was the women's teams th~t kickep
things off. Host Australia and three others nations
started the competition at the Sydney Games.
It was an inauspicious debut for the Aussie
women, who were thumped 3-0 by Germany. In
the second· game, Brazil was a 2-0 winner over
Sweden.
A vocal 23,000-capacity crowd packed in to
Canberra's Bruce Stadium to see the first Australians in action. Not all of them saw the game's
start, though , as heavy security caused long delays
gening inside.
- GOING, GOING, GONE: There was little
rhyme to the reasons- drugs, mental exhamtion,
a pennant race - but an assortment of athletes
disappeared from the Summer Games.
US. baseball player C.C. Sabath!a was yanked
off the American squad Wednesday (Tuesday night
EDT) by the Cleveland Indians after team officials
discovered their prized prospect would be pitchmg in relief.
The Indians had agreed to let Sabathia pitch
only if he started and was held to a pitch count.
Sabathia, 20, was one of the few top major-league
prospects on the Amen can team.
Rather than pitching in Australia, Sabathia
could start next week in Fen way Park when the
Indians play back-to-hack doubleheaders with the
Boston Red Sox- a key matchup in the American League wild-card rac e.
Swi&lt;S ten ni s star Marc Rosset pulled himself out
of the Games, ci ting "extreme physical and mental exhaustion ." Rosser, 29, the 1992 Olympic
go ld medalist, said his condition made it unlikelv
that he would medal in Sydney.
'
Gone as well, due to a failed drug test, was Taiwanese weightliftcr Chen Po- pu . C hu ang Tsunche, chief ofTaiwan's Olymp1' delegation, saici he
received formal notice from the lmcrn atio nal
Weightliftin g Federation that Chen had tested
posi tive for "prohib ited drugs" on Tuesday, Taiwan's Cen tral News Agtoncy reponed.
And swinuner Yevgeniya Yermakova of Kazakstan was dumped from the Olympics after testing
posi tive for a drug masking agent.Yermakova tested positive for Furosemide, a diuretic, at a meet in
Monte Carlo in May.
. - GYMNASTICS : After missing some prac·
rice time with injunes, a pair of U.S. gymnasts
were back at work Wednesday (Tuesday night
EDT) . Stephen McCain and John Roethlisberger
were expected to compete this weekend when
the games get rolling.
McCain severely sprained hiS nght ankle during
training camp I0 day s ago 111 San Diego. Roctll lisberger strained his left calf at the Olympi c trials
last month, and it flared up again a few days ago.
"Stephen responded today &gt;i•ith brilliance." U.S.
coach Peter Kormann .aid.

t919Toyots mR2
1919 cadillac fleetlllood
1990 Ftrd lltunderlllrd
1990 ford lleroslar Uan
1992 ford EKplorer
1993 ford Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

IIIV'ledicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,IJJ
IEJmeJrget~y Funds; Mortgage;
lllt/nmlr1IBl
Medical •
Home
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fOR ffiORt InfO. PltHSt CAll

740-992-1506

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Counties.

Plenty of TLC

740-667-6329

i

' •.11 1 1'•1 . IV

1

1' ,Iilii ll'l{j .1 I, Q(J

C1rmBIIIa &amp; Kermy Osborne
3386S Blackwood Road- Off St Rtt-43

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740-742-8t03

The

740-992-5232

. HOWARD·
EXCAVATING CO.

I () b I' fl

,\ :-) I IIIII IV 111

iJ

Ill JWtf Oflll .lll( l '

IJv

r-.1.1f'll1

f(uw " lr

SenJice•
Hou.., &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy.rem• &amp;
Utilitie•

......

fall Mums 6 for $10
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

740-698-6735

Syracuse. OH ·
740-992-5776

HANING's

• ......,..aTaaaulu

FREE ESTIMATES

9/1!00 1 mo pd

WANTED

LINDA'S
PAINTING

CRAFTY,

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Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds are
made to order at our
location

UPTO 70% OFF
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Bafore 6p.m. ·

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Laove Messoge
Afiar 6 pm-740-985-4180

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or small tracks. Top
prices paid a lso.

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Dozer work.
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after 8:00pm
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(Ra ndy )
odlm"'. 41100

'

740·992·7599

!

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

'·

DENYSAG

PU,.S

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

' An M.da.s Tractor &amp;
Equip._nt Parts
Fac1ory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
!000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

992-5479

74N87-G383

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Moln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"ll'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 $tarburat
Progressive top line.
Llc.ll 00-50 11110/lfn

.

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'

•.

·

HILL'S
SELF STORACE
29670 Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74().949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1121100 1 nio, J)d.

RIUER HG

.;...

Larry Schey

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

E

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25 I 50 lbs.
• 12% cattle feed 16.75 I 1061bs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.75 150 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

- Sales Representative

740-985-3831
45769

6().9fmo.

!

l'i

seat:'· ~~r"=~~~1.0headllners,

Mon • F~·i 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

•(740) 742-8888
~ 1-888·521-0916

llfi!ip]

HARTWELL HOUSE
We now oFFer Cll't &amp;

1

~::;::

Reasonable Prices
FREE Esllmates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Experience
7 40·378-6349

~@:,WICK'S

Wedding Registry

We ha\'r Village Ca ndlrs

992-7696

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC
COI'\C'RETE
MASO"'RY
BAC'KHOF SERV ICES
BOBCAT SERV ICES
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Fully Insured

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

WANTED
0 " diamete r lo 27"
IS' Ionq - $4 0 /Ton

ALSO WIINT[I)
CHIPWOOI)
-&amp;" to 25 "

12' Ia 20' in lcnqlh
•Popl a r • Maptc
• Occc h • Sycam ore

$ 19 / Ton
North ol Gallipolis on
SR 7, 6/ I Dolo mile
a bove Roadside Rcsl
o n r iqht .

7 40.- 985-446 5
or 740 - 441 - 926l

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

. 740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

• New Homes

Garages
• Siding

J&lt;'RANK &amp; EARNEST
~EATIVE

~&amp;SVME
$8'/tVICE__-...

\
.,..THE BORN LOSER

.., ,...

D\0 1 (1/E.IZ Tf.ll. '(QU [ONCE
.:'li\'W J"-'( LENO l&gt;oi Tfl£ 1&gt;.11(.~[7

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COO~ t\( 1':&gt; 1 ('I(I:'(Ot-1(

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Hauling • Umeslone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
I "l'\ CALLING
THIS PAINTING
'" WHITE DOVE"!

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COnCRETE

:• connECTion

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YEAH. SHUT UP,
LCXJKS HOW 1/ILL YOU ~
r10RE A!Cl!T 'T'OU"RE
LIKE. '" WHITE BR.EJ'.KA
DUCK"&gt; IN6 M'l'
DUCK.
CONCEN -

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Patios, Sidewalks ,
: 25 years Experience :
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: 740-742·8015or :
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~

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"WH ITE
PIG"'

" WHITE

ELEPHANT"'.

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PEANUTS
READ WHAT I'vE WRITTEN HERE,
WILL 'r'OU, MARCIE? 11MAFRAID
:I MAV HAVE 60TTEN A
LITTLE TOO INTELLECTUAL ...

DO 'r'OU 1'141 NK MA'&lt;BE I
~OULD '' DVMB JT DOWN"?

I
I

• 'J

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••

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'~ I

,

-

JONES'

'
•

OHIO 45631 • CHESHIRE, OHIO
• TOP .
(740) 367·0266 • Trllfl
"'w~'~'ll
• p.emo"e'
..
--''1'9
1
1·800·950-3359 • Grll''-'
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnte Jones
uAI.LI•'ULI'"•

Free

Mason, WV

~e~~v-e~~!~~~~9 y~~rre~mu.-o:~ry:o~~u~r~~~~~u~.;;sl

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

Advertise our business
on this page or one month for
· as low as $2S

Phone 992·21 SS

color

10 Copycat
11 Unleao (Lilt)
12 Makes lace

21 Biblical
22 Type ol

19 uncle

23

Pass
Pass
Pass

2A
3•
4

NT

7•

28
29

..,_-----ll~ ~-----: Thursday, Sept. 14, 2000
: A number .of beneficial happ~nings could be in the offing for
Y!JUin the year ahead both esthetically and materially. Things will
not be measured in ordinary tenns
but exceptional ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't be inlimidated today by big
shots or big
numbers. because you're
presently in a cycle where big can
be luck y for you . Take a chance
on that which you ' re unaccustomed. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it. The
Astra-Graph Matchmaker instant·
ly reveals which signs are romantically perfect for you. Mail $2.75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY I 0156.
"LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) If
pr~sented with si ncerity and
enthu siasm, others will be inter·
ested in what you're promoting
for the same reasons you are .
Hone.&lt;ly effec ti vely makes your
ca~e .

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22 l
C han ces are you ' II gel the opportunity you've been hoping for to

lake charge o f an il)lpOrtanl
arrangem~nl th at's being mismanaged by another. Dun"t hesi tate to take the re igns .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec .
2 1) One of the major rea sons why
yo u'll be so popular Wtih your
peers today is your abi lit y to make
everyone fee l that she or he is a
contributor to the good tim e
everyone is having.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) Your luck is focused in on that
which cou ld help you achieve an
important, meaningful objectives
today. Tune into the trend and do
something about it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don't be surprised today as others begin to cluster around you
like moths attracted to a flame.
You're extremely charismatic at
this time with all things social.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
It's not important what 's apparent
to others. It's only imperative you
know what you've achieved.
There will be no greater reward
today than self-esteem from a job
well done.
ARIES (March 21 :April 19)
Any written or verbal agreemenl

contracted at thi s time shou ld
work out for all partie s conc~ rned . This is an excellent day to
push for the finalizi "ng and signlllg .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Something you' vc been co nt~m ­
plating that could make you some
extra money shou ld not be
allowed to gather du st any longer.
Launch it today whik th ~ '" P ~CIS
favor you.
GEM INI &lt;Ma\ 21- Jun ~ 20)
A,·ail yoursel f 1od;y of any opportunities yo u get to go to fres h
places and me el new people .
There's a c hance you .:ould be
acquainted with a person who'll
be important 111 your futu re .
CANCE R (J une 21.-Ju ly 22)
Lady Luck could ha ve a hand in
you reapi ng benefits today from a
situation that 's been IOtall y handled bv ot hers . Your .&lt;hare .:auld
be rno're than you had hoped it
would be .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) Provided your involv~ments aren't
too avant-garde or bazaar, you_
could be luckier thun usual today
in new v~lllures . Seek and steer a
middle course once engaged .

Collectors'
goals
weeding
Spin
Made angry -

30 Location
31 Having loot

Pass
Pass
All pass

IWEDNESDAY

mom?
Fuel

26 Does

Pass

Our third Bridge Plus booklet
of the week is "Practise Your
Cue-Bidding" with Brian Senior.
However, a more apt title would
have been "Practise Your Slam
Control-S idding." (Because the
co mpound noun "cue-bid" is
used in many situations, Jeff
Rubens, editor of The Bridge
World magazine, has recommended that when showing a
control and interest in a slam, you
should be making a control-bid ,
not a cue-bid .)
Afler four pages of explanation, you get 24 pairs of hands on
which to practice_with your panner. Then you receive Senior's
recommended sequences, with
exp lanations.
You bid brilliantly to seven
heans. How would you play after
a diamond lead 0
North should raise to three
heans. the known nine-card or
better fit, not mention his spades.
Then. after South control-bids
four diamonds to show that ace
and simultaneously to deny the
dub ace, North can safel y trot out
'Blackwood.
•
It is reasonab le to try 10 establi sh dummy's spade suit. but there
is a better line: After winning wi th
the diamo nd ace, ruff a club hi gh
in the dummy. Then lead the heart
four 10 your I0. When everyone·
'fo ll ows. ruff anolh~r club. draw
tl1lmps (ovenaking dummy 's last
trump with your ace), and claim
these 13 tri cks: three spades. five
hearts. three diamonds and two
club n1ffs in the dummy.
Because Senior's auctions follow British methods, most of my
readers will find this the least
he lpful pamphlet.
One booklet is approximately
$6 postpaid and four are about
$22 from www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

plant

24 Armbone

25

Sentinel

111

. - -r . .
I'I ·_:-~:-- ;..~ '

Halted
40 Having lttt .

39

To get a current weather
report, check the

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Rooflhg

.

pol
35 Greek Island
38 Roped

37

parts
Brought in, as

salary

Unclaimed
mall dept.
41 Go Inside
42 Tie the43 Abominable

38

Snowman

Reclined
Harrow's
rival
47 Composer
Jerome -

BY PHILLIP ALPER

HfiOLinG and
EXCAVATinG

:

32 Bread spreads
33 Object of art
34 Starts a poker

Misleading title

C.

Fill Dirt~ Mulch •
Bulldozer Servi,es
(740) 992-3470

DOWN

Opening lead: • 10

:

Advertise in SMITH'S COtimtOCTIOti
this space for •
$1 QQ per
Need It done, give a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Jll••l
Creat Prleed on New Homes
month.
992-2753
992-1101

POPLAR LOGS

5•

&amp;••

• •••••••••••••••
r.A~&amp;r.D~A~u~t~o~U"p-ro~.~,.-r~y~·-=Pru-.-,Tin-c~r-------------------------------------------·M
··---~
- r-------------------------------------~
Truck
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler s~ats. motorcycle seats ,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

4•

Ufetime Warranty
~ ' ' 'i!' Local Cqntractor

•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

2•

22 yn. Lotal

'

Anawer to Previous Puzzle

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
South West North East

I FERGOT WHAR MAW
HID HER BUnER AN'
MONEY

Replacement . •·
Windows

Actor
MacLachlan
46 Actor Sliver
47 Ship pert
51 Spruco up
53 Type of fly
55 Ineffective
56 List of printed
mlslllkea
57 Covered with
mellll
58 Fumed
42

.. J 6 3 2

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS

• 5
•K8 754

• 2
•At0 973
t A 8 4

992·6215

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740·696·1176
or 740·696·1233

ACROSS
1 Heavy ohoe
7 TV'o Gumbel
13 Cryollllllne
gem
14 Ideal ploco
15 Did a checkout
chore
16 Drleot
17 Lingerie ltamo
1 8 "Agnus -"
20- Krlngle
21 Sacred songs
23 Like an easy
Job
27 Cancelled
person

• J 10 9 6 5
• 6

South

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

• Conllni'ronl hh1L11&gt; of All K111rh • Chu111 )uw ~{l)lplmg
• Demomllolion'&gt; Sf10l'i~ &amp; Dl'&gt;pluy~ • llt••J '~lllk~l
Ev c nin~ s to
•
10 u m 5unrlny Chur£h Srrv1ce •Antiqur. Trr&lt;!O! Ptrll
Resentc Your
• live [ntmtoinrruml
Space
74(]- f47&lt;lll20

East

• 8 5 2
1109763 2
"' A Q 10 9

V.C. YOUNG Ill

(74019.2·3838

·-·

---

• R- addltlols L Romoololios
• New G.oges
•llectrkal ' PlunoWng
• Rooflng &amp; Gttttrs
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palllllog
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Free Estimates

Bnonr
Bulldooer &amp; Backhoe

H nth

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

''= ,,••,..,.,.,..

I' 1' 1

•AKQ873
• K QJ 4
t K Q J

.

BAUMLUMBER
ST. RT. 248
CHES'I'ER

Country &amp; W ester11 Ba nd · Rout!..! 33"
Sundny 2-4 pm
You th and Kids Activil ws Planned

replGr hu.ur.s"

Jackets
School Mlscots

33795 HilAnd Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Blu egrass Sa turday

Tues-Fri1CHI
Sttt. 10-4
• Candle making
auppllea
• Wooden crafts
• Baskets
740·992-4559

Hats

Self-Storage

County Fairgrouii(IS
Si·ptc mher 1Gt ll &amp; 17th

"u:e 're back to our

Auto Upholstery
Company Logos

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

~,1 c•iqS

The Country
Candle ShOP

Coolputf!f~ed Ul51001 Embroidery

High&amp; Dry

EXPO 2000

7/22/TFN

(ormelila'~ (realion~

PRODUCTS
THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"

~N &amp; COUNt.
A\_ Q
~ Ill I,,,.,/
f? Y

• New Homes
· • Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
•
74().992·1671

Stale Route 7.
,Tuppers Plains has
openings, all shifts.
Open 7 days, 24
hours. Certified In
Meigs a: Athens

VOU!

PHILLIP
ALDER

now PARTinG OUT ~~~
lUi ford U1111

.

--------------------------------------~ :

THE INFO~TIOH.

44

45

48 French

slllte
Ancient
Italian !emily
50 Be In

49

command
52 Compass pt.
54 Malaga Mrs .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ,
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotattone by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher standi lor another.
Today's clue: M equals W

YXJLN

' D W C

w

KWAL

NRXLHYXSXR

AWOZL .

TRRWNXTHN

w

MTZOC

JXNN .'

HTY

VTTC

Y K L N L

W P L

OLWPHLP
-

PWOEK

MWOCT
LJLPNTH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The principal advanlage of a democracy is a general
elevation in the character of 1he people: - James Fenimqre Cooper

WOlD
&amp;AMI

1MA1 DAILY
PUULU

..

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RAYLYE

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H A R A J , ~ "You should wear a cheap sui!
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CompleJo the chuckle quolod
by filling in the mis.stng words
you de velop from step No. 3 below.

PRIN T NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE lETT! RS TO

GET ANSWER

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Office - Vau/1 - Mauve - Killer - AFTER
"I have noticed," an employee mused , "that there s
two kinds of jobs. one you shower before work and Ihe
other you shower AFTER"

SEPTEMBER13I

�(

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

iW~e~d~nie~sd~a~y~,~S~e!p~~~m~be~r~1~3~,~~~------~--~--------------------_2P~o~m~e:r~oy:·~M==~====O~hi~o==~:::--:::::::::::::~::::~T~h~e~D~a~il~y~S~e~n~ti~n;ei~·=P:a:g:e:B~5;

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

THEON WE HAVE OT~ !OR.

W"'YS OF OBi~NING
F'~

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local843-5264

Adve"rtise your
mes~age
$8.00 column inch weekc;lays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

Public Notice

Public Notice
·Soptombor tB through
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Orongo Townohlp , S.ptombor 30, 2000 lor tho
Truotooo will bo closing purpooe of roploclng
Eoot Shodo Road (T·278) culvorta.
from tho junc11on of 681, (8) 15,15,11

OLYMPICS

U.S. men's soccer
team ties Czech
Republic
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - Two days before
60()" US. athletes march in the Sydney Games'
. opening ceremony, the American soccer team
took a small step toward advancing in the 2000
Olympics.
In a physical battle with the Czech Republic,
the Americans managed a 2-2 tie Wednesday - a
game in which they twice led and suffered several missed scoring opportunities. Chris Albright
and Josh Wolff scored for the United Sutes.
"I tell people all the time that we have players
in the United States thar can play·very well in any
arena," U.S. coach Clive Charles said. "I just think
the guys proved th•t tonight.
"We . had quite a few chances to score - we
were a little unfortunate not to convert. Overall I
was happy with the way the team played," he said.
Tile soccer players will not join the rest of the
Americans at the Friday opening cermony in
Sydney's Olympic Stadium. Instead, they will
remain in Canberra to prepare for Saturday's game
against Cameroon.
A half-dozen soccer games kicked off the Summer Games, with both men and woman taking
the field for the first glimpse of the competition.
For the host Ausrralian team, a screaming crowd
e£ 93,252 in the Melbourne Cricket Ground
could not help them overcome an Italian team
that posted a 1-0 victory.
In other men's action, defending gold medalist
Nigeria managed a 3-3 tie against Honduras,
while Cameroon defeated Kuwait, 3-2.
- WOMEN 'S SOCCER: When the games
began, it was the women's teams th~t kickep
things off. Host Australia and three others nations
started the competition at the Sydney Games.
It was an inauspicious debut for the Aussie
women, who were thumped 3-0 by Germany. In
the second· game, Brazil was a 2-0 winner over
Sweden.
A vocal 23,000-capacity crowd packed in to
Canberra's Bruce Stadium to see the first Australians in action. Not all of them saw the game's
start, though , as heavy security caused long delays
gening inside.
- GOING, GOING, GONE: There was little
rhyme to the reasons- drugs, mental exhamtion,
a pennant race - but an assortment of athletes
disappeared from the Summer Games.
US. baseball player C.C. Sabath!a was yanked
off the American squad Wednesday (Tuesday night
EDT) by the Cleveland Indians after team officials
discovered their prized prospect would be pitchmg in relief.
The Indians had agreed to let Sabathia pitch
only if he started and was held to a pitch count.
Sabathia, 20, was one of the few top major-league
prospects on the Amen can team.
Rather than pitching in Australia, Sabathia
could start next week in Fen way Park when the
Indians play back-to-hack doubleheaders with the
Boston Red Sox- a key matchup in the American League wild-card rac e.
Swi&lt;S ten ni s star Marc Rosset pulled himself out
of the Games, ci ting "extreme physical and mental exhaustion ." Rosser, 29, the 1992 Olympic
go ld medalist, said his condition made it unlikelv
that he would medal in Sydney.
'
Gone as well, due to a failed drug test, was Taiwanese weightliftcr Chen Po- pu . C hu ang Tsunche, chief ofTaiwan's Olymp1' delegation, saici he
received formal notice from the lmcrn atio nal
Weightliftin g Federation that Chen had tested
posi tive for "prohib ited drugs" on Tuesday, Taiwan's Cen tral News Agtoncy reponed.
And swinuner Yevgeniya Yermakova of Kazakstan was dumped from the Olympics after testing
posi tive for a drug masking agent.Yermakova tested positive for Furosemide, a diuretic, at a meet in
Monte Carlo in May.
. - GYMNASTICS : After missing some prac·
rice time with injunes, a pair of U.S. gymnasts
were back at work Wednesday (Tuesday night
EDT) . Stephen McCain and John Roethlisberger
were expected to compete this weekend when
the games get rolling.
McCain severely sprained hiS nght ankle during
training camp I0 day s ago 111 San Diego. Roctll lisberger strained his left calf at the Olympi c trials
last month, and it flared up again a few days ago.
"Stephen responded today &gt;i•ith brilliance." U.S.
coach Peter Kormann .aid.

t919Toyots mR2
1919 cadillac fleetlllood
1990 Ftrd lltunderlllrd
1990 ford lleroslar Uan
1992 ford EKplorer
1993 ford Taurus
1994 ford Ranger P/U

IIIV'ledicare Supplement; Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,IJJ
IEJmeJrget~y Funds; Mortgage;
lllt/nmlr1IBl
Medical •
Home
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fOR ffiORt InfO. PltHSt CAll

740-992-1506

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

Counties.

Plenty of TLC

740-667-6329

i

' •.11 1 1'•1 . IV

1

1' ,Iilii ll'l{j .1 I, Q(J

C1rmBIIIa &amp; Kermy Osborne
3386S Blackwood Road- Off St Rtt-43

Phone 740-742-2377
Fax 740-742-8t03

The

740-992-5232

. HOWARD·
EXCAVATING CO.

I () b I' fl

,\ :-) I IIIII IV 111

iJ

Ill JWtf Oflll .lll( l '

IJv

r-.1.1f'll1

f(uw " lr

SenJice•
Hou.., &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy.rem• &amp;
Utilitie•

......

fall Mums 6 for $10
Also Gourds &amp; PumPkins.
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

740-698-6735

Syracuse. OH ·
740-992-5776

HANING's

• ......,..aTaaaulu

FREE ESTIMATES

9/1!00 1 mo pd

WANTED

LINDA'S
PAINTING

CRAFTY,

BLIND SPOT

"Take the pain out
of paintingLet me do it for yo u"
Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinds are
made to order at our
location

UPTO 70% OFF
• Vertical• • Wood

Bafore 6p.m. ·

• Minis • Etc

Laove Messoge
Afiar 6 pm-740-985-4180

144 Third Ave. Gampols

446·499S

INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
' • Replacement Windows
I
• Room Additions
I
• Roofing
''
COMMERCIAL and ABIDENTIAL
!
FREEt ESTIMATES .,

Standing timber large
or small tracks. Top
prices paid a lso.

.

Dozer work.
frH Estimates
Cu ll T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm
740-992-5050
(Ra ndy )
odlm"'. 41100

'

740·992·7599

!

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

'·

DENYSAG

PU,.S

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

' An M.da.s Tractor &amp;
Equip._nt Parts
Fac1ory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
!000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

992-5479

74N87-G383

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Moln St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"ll'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 $tarburat
Progressive top line.
Llc.ll 00-50 11110/lfn

.

! •

~

;

l

'

.
'

•.

·

HILL'S
SELF STORACE
29670 Baahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74().949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1121100 1 nio, J)d.

RIUER HG

.;...

Larry Schey

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671

.

E

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% Sweet feed - 15.25 I 50 lbs.
• 12% cattle feed 16.75 I 1061bs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Dog food 16.75 150 lbs.
• fall fertilizers

- Sales Representative

740-985-3831
45769

6().9fmo.

!

l'i

seat:'· ~~r"=~~~1.0headllners,

Mon • F~·i 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

•(740) 742-8888
~ 1-888·521-0916

llfi!ip]

HARTWELL HOUSE
We now oFFer Cll't &amp;

1

~::;::

Reasonable Prices
FREE Esllmates
D. R. Bissell
30 Yrs Experience
7 40·378-6349

~@:,WICK'S

Wedding Registry

We ha\'r Village Ca ndlrs

992-7696

P/B CONTRACTORS, INC
COI'\C'RETE
MASO"'RY
BAC'KHOF SERV ICES
BOBCAT SERV ICES
Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

WANTED
0 " diamete r lo 27"
IS' Ionq - $4 0 /Ton

ALSO WIINT[I)
CHIPWOOI)
-&amp;" to 25 "

12' Ia 20' in lcnqlh
•Popl a r • Maptc
• Occc h • Sycam ore

$ 19 / Ton
North ol Gallipolis on
SR 7, 6/ I Dolo mile
a bove Roadside Rcsl
o n r iqht .

7 40.- 985-446 5
or 740 - 441 - 926l

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

. 740-992-9636
Ask for Jim

• New Homes

Garages
• Siding

J&lt;'RANK &amp; EARNEST
~EATIVE

~&amp;SVME
$8'/tVICE__-...

\
.,..THE BORN LOSER

.., ,...

D\0 1 (1/E.IZ Tf.ll. '(QU [ONCE
.:'li\'W J"-'( LENO l&gt;oi Tfl£ 1&gt;.11(.~[7

...\o-J(lL, Of

....

1-\(:, MllCt\ TNJ£g, IN f'(~
. TfW-11-\[ 1\W~~ ON Tf1EV61Qlo\l

....

COO~ t\( 1':&gt; 1 ('I(I:'(Ot-1(

I:'I TM.l£R. TfW'\11-\E.'I' LOOii.OI-l. TilE.
Tl/· tT'S Ot{L'I' l'l t~I\E.':&gt; 1.

Hauling • Umeslone •
Grovel• Sand • Topsoil•
I "l'\ CALLING
THIS PAINTING
'" WHITE DOVE"!

...............
'
•
Y.Olll!.
•
COnCRETE

:• connECTion

•

•

IT
YEAH. SHUT UP,
LCXJKS HOW 1/ILL YOU ~
r10RE A!Cl!T 'T'OU"RE
LIKE. '" WHITE BR.EJ'.KA
DUCK"&gt; IN6 M'l'
DUCK.
CONCEN -

. 'I)A~G.!

:

: Quality Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks ,
: 25 years Experience :
: FREE ESTIMATES :

: 740-742·8015or :
: 1-877·353·7022 :

~

~

"WH ITE
PIG"'

" WHITE

ELEPHANT"'.

0

'

!

PEANUTS
READ WHAT I'vE WRITTEN HERE,
WILL 'r'OU, MARCIE? 11MAFRAID
:I MAV HAVE 60TTEN A
LITTLE TOO INTELLECTUAL ...

DO 'r'OU 1'141 NK MA'&lt;BE I
~OULD '' DVMB JT DOWN"?

I
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••

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'~ I

,

-

JONES'

'
•

OHIO 45631 • CHESHIRE, OHIO
• TOP .
(740) 367·0266 • Trllfl
"'w~'~'ll
• p.emo"e'
..
--''1'9
1
1·800·950-3359 • Grll''-'
20 Yrs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnte Jones
uAI.LI•'ULI'"•

Free

Mason, WV

~e~~v-e~~!~~~~9 y~~rre~mu.-o:~ry:o~~u~r~~~~~u~.;;sl

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

Advertise our business
on this page or one month for
· as low as $2S

Phone 992·21 SS

color

10 Copycat
11 Unleao (Lilt)
12 Makes lace

21 Biblical
22 Type ol

19 uncle

23

Pass
Pass
Pass

2A
3•
4

NT

7•

28
29

..,_-----ll~ ~-----: Thursday, Sept. 14, 2000
: A number .of beneficial happ~nings could be in the offing for
Y!JUin the year ahead both esthetically and materially. Things will
not be measured in ordinary tenns
but exceptional ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't be inlimidated today by big
shots or big
numbers. because you're
presently in a cycle where big can
be luck y for you . Take a chance
on that which you ' re unaccustomed. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it. The
Astra-Graph Matchmaker instant·
ly reveals which signs are romantically perfect for you. Mail $2.75
to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY I 0156.
"LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) If
pr~sented with si ncerity and
enthu siasm, others will be inter·
ested in what you're promoting
for the same reasons you are .
Hone.&lt;ly effec ti vely makes your
ca~e .

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22 l
C han ces are you ' II gel the opportunity you've been hoping for to

lake charge o f an il)lpOrtanl
arrangem~nl th at's being mismanaged by another. Dun"t hesi tate to take the re igns .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec .
2 1) One of the major rea sons why
yo u'll be so popular Wtih your
peers today is your abi lit y to make
everyone fee l that she or he is a
contributor to the good tim e
everyone is having.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan.
19) Your luck is focused in on that
which cou ld help you achieve an
important, meaningful objectives
today. Tune into the trend and do
something about it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don't be surprised today as others begin to cluster around you
like moths attracted to a flame.
You're extremely charismatic at
this time with all things social.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
It's not important what 's apparent
to others. It's only imperative you
know what you've achieved.
There will be no greater reward
today than self-esteem from a job
well done.
ARIES (March 21 :April 19)
Any written or verbal agreemenl

contracted at thi s time shou ld
work out for all partie s conc~ rned . This is an excellent day to
push for the finalizi "ng and signlllg .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Something you' vc been co nt~m ­
plating that could make you some
extra money shou ld not be
allowed to gather du st any longer.
Launch it today whik th ~ '" P ~CIS
favor you.
GEM INI &lt;Ma\ 21- Jun ~ 20)
A,·ail yoursel f 1od;y of any opportunities yo u get to go to fres h
places and me el new people .
There's a c hance you .:ould be
acquainted with a person who'll
be important 111 your futu re .
CANCE R (J une 21.-Ju ly 22)
Lady Luck could ha ve a hand in
you reapi ng benefits today from a
situation that 's been IOtall y handled bv ot hers . Your .&lt;hare .:auld
be rno're than you had hoped it
would be .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22 ) Provided your involv~ments aren't
too avant-garde or bazaar, you_
could be luckier thun usual today
in new v~lllures . Seek and steer a
middle course once engaged .

Collectors'
goals
weeding
Spin
Made angry -

30 Location
31 Having loot

Pass
Pass
All pass

IWEDNESDAY

mom?
Fuel

26 Does

Pass

Our third Bridge Plus booklet
of the week is "Practise Your
Cue-Bidding" with Brian Senior.
However, a more apt title would
have been "Practise Your Slam
Control-S idding." (Because the
co mpound noun "cue-bid" is
used in many situations, Jeff
Rubens, editor of The Bridge
World magazine, has recommended that when showing a
control and interest in a slam, you
should be making a control-bid ,
not a cue-bid .)
Afler four pages of explanation, you get 24 pairs of hands on
which to practice_with your panner. Then you receive Senior's
recommended sequences, with
exp lanations.
You bid brilliantly to seven
heans. How would you play after
a diamond lead 0
North should raise to three
heans. the known nine-card or
better fit, not mention his spades.
Then. after South control-bids
four diamonds to show that ace
and simultaneously to deny the
dub ace, North can safel y trot out
'Blackwood.
•
It is reasonab le to try 10 establi sh dummy's spade suit. but there
is a better line: After winning wi th
the diamo nd ace, ruff a club hi gh
in the dummy. Then lead the heart
four 10 your I0. When everyone·
'fo ll ows. ruff anolh~r club. draw
tl1lmps (ovenaking dummy 's last
trump with your ace), and claim
these 13 tri cks: three spades. five
hearts. three diamonds and two
club n1ffs in the dummy.
Because Senior's auctions follow British methods, most of my
readers will find this the least
he lpful pamphlet.
One booklet is approximately
$6 postpaid and four are about
$22 from www.bridge-plus.co.uk.

plant

24 Armbone

25

Sentinel

111

. - -r . .
I'I ·_:-~:-- ;..~ '

Halted
40 Having lttt .

39

To get a current weather
report, check the

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Rooflhg

.

pol
35 Greek Island
38 Roped

37

parts
Brought in, as

salary

Unclaimed
mall dept.
41 Go Inside
42 Tie the43 Abominable

38

Snowman

Reclined
Harrow's
rival
47 Composer
Jerome -

BY PHILLIP ALPER

HfiOLinG and
EXCAVATinG

:

32 Bread spreads
33 Object of art
34 Starts a poker

Misleading title

C.

Fill Dirt~ Mulch •
Bulldozer Servi,es
(740) 992-3470

DOWN

Opening lead: • 10

:

Advertise in SMITH'S COtimtOCTIOti
this space for •
$1 QQ per
Need It done, give a call
FREE ESTIMATES
Jll••l
Creat Prleed on New Homes
month.
992-2753
992-1101

POPLAR LOGS

5•

&amp;••

• •••••••••••••••
r.A~&amp;r.D~A~u~t~o~U"p-ro~.~,.-r~y~·-=Pru-.-,Tin-c~r-------------------------------------------·M
··---~
- r-------------------------------------~
Truck
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler s~ats. motorcycle seats ,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

4•

Ufetime Warranty
~ ' ' 'i!' Local Cqntractor

•

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle

2•

22 yn. Lotal

'

Anawer to Previous Puzzle

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
South West North East

I FERGOT WHAR MAW
HID HER BUnER AN'
MONEY

Replacement . •·
Windows

Actor
MacLachlan
46 Actor Sliver
47 Ship pert
51 Spruco up
53 Type of fly
55 Ineffective
56 List of printed
mlslllkea
57 Covered with
mellll
58 Fumed
42

.. J 6 3 2

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS

• 5
•K8 754

• 2
•At0 973
t A 8 4

992·6215

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740·696·1176
or 740·696·1233

ACROSS
1 Heavy ohoe
7 TV'o Gumbel
13 Cryollllllne
gem
14 Ideal ploco
15 Did a checkout
chore
16 Drleot
17 Lingerie ltamo
1 8 "Agnus -"
20- Krlngle
21 Sacred songs
23 Like an easy
Job
27 Cancelled
person

• J 10 9 6 5
• 6

South

SELLERS CONSTRUCTION

• Conllni'ronl hh1L11&gt; of All K111rh • Chu111 )uw ~{l)lplmg
• Demomllolion'&gt; Sf10l'i~ &amp; Dl'&gt;pluy~ • llt••J '~lllk~l
Ev c nin~ s to
•
10 u m 5unrlny Chur£h Srrv1ce •Antiqur. Trr&lt;!O! Ptrll
Resentc Your
• live [ntmtoinrruml
Space
74(]- f47&lt;lll20

East

• 8 5 2
1109763 2
"' A Q 10 9

V.C. YOUNG Ill

(74019.2·3838

·-·

---

• R- addltlols L Romoololios
• New G.oges
•llectrkal ' PlunoWng
• Rooflng &amp; Gttttrs
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palllllog
• Patio &amp; Porch Dtcls
Free Estimates

Bnonr
Bulldooer &amp; Backhoe

H nth

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

''= ,,••,..,.,.,..

I' 1' 1

•AKQ873
• K QJ 4
t K Q J

.

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--------------------------------------~ :

THE INFO~TIOH.

44

45

48 French

slllte
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50 Be In

49

command
52 Compass pt.
54 Malaga Mrs .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ,
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotattone by famous people, past and
present. Each letter In the cipher standi lor another.
Today's clue: M equals W

YXJLN

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AWOZL .

TRRWNXTHN

w

MTZOC

JXNN .'

HTY

VTTC

Y K L N L

W P L

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The principal advanlage of a democracy is a general
elevation in the character of 1he people: - James Fenimqre Cooper

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CompleJo the chuckle quolod
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PRIN T NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE lETT! RS TO

GET ANSWER

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Office - Vau/1 - Mauve - Killer - AFTER
"I have noticed," an employee mused , "that there s
two kinds of jobs. one you shower before work and Ihe
other you shower AFTER"

SEPTEMBER13I

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 13, 2000

Meigs society news and notes, As-&amp;
Southern-Alexander preview, a1

fltd.y

Hlgh:&amp;os;~:cos

THE BOBBY KNIGHT SAGA

lhe General speaks out on his
firing and last months at In
BlOOMI NG TO N , Ind. (AP) - The Ge neral has no intention of just fading • way.
Bob Kn ight, fi red after 29 years at Indiana,
says he will coach again, and he'll do it the
way he always has - his way.
""I've always felt I've got to be me,[ can't be
so mething that someone's trying to construct,"" he said Tuesday night in a live, sometimes co ntentious interview on ESPN.
" I try to be fa ir, cry to be honest. My philosophy and approach to things is just different than some people and situations," Knight
said .
O usted for a pattern of " unacceptable"
be havior that violated a " ze ro-tolerance"
behavior policy, Knight admitted he was surpmed by the sc hool's decision. But he said
perhaps it was time to move on anyway, and
that he still wants to coach "in the worst way."
"I tho ught I'd stay here till l was done
coachi ng," Knight said. "I haven 't retired. I'm
an unemployed teacher right now, and I'm
loo lung for a place to teach. There are too
m any things that I have yet to explore about
the game o f basketball ."
Knight said he thought about leaving Indiana at times, but his love of the basketball
team was to o strong. He had wanted the
Hoosiers, who haven't advanced past the second round of the NCAA tournament since
1994, to become a powerhouse again.
" I kind of hung on to that thought for seve ral years no w, four or five years, and probably
sho uld"ve gone somewhere else,"' the 59-yearold Hall o f Fame coach said. "And there
would be somebody that was a better fit for
chis administration and these people than I
am . And there'&lt; a place for me where there's a
better fie fo r me as a basketball c.;&gt;ach."
Knight repeated that he did nothing wrong
whe n he grabbed freshman Kent Harvey by

Marshall
frOm PageB1

'

for some of these guys. That's
no t an excuse, that's part of
coaching young guys," Pruett
said. "And we had some young
guys o n defense mall&lt;: mfi'"tam.

!

,

Reds.
from PageB1
o uncer in his final plate appearance.
" H e was throwing his fastball
hard, and he kept it up in the
strike zo ne a nd he was malung us
c h ase his brea king balls after
th rowing t hem fo r strikes ,"
Ochoa said. '"T he fastballs at the
kttcr&gt; were hard co lay off, and
w e were popping them up."
Chicago stopped a four- game
losing strea k, winning for only
the second time in 12 games. The
w in was Don Baylor 's SOOth as a
maj o r league manager. The first
~ ~0 were With Colorado.
" It 's J nice mlieswn e, but I'm
just glad tt"s over," Baylor said.
l.laylor satd he didn 't have anybody warnung up until the mn th
·because :1c was rooting fo r Wood
to go all the way.
"'[ re ally wanted him to fi nish
th e game. Every-bod y o n· th e
be nch was pullmg for him to fi nish the ~:llllt...' ," R1ylor s.J id. " It was
i1np ort.1 11t fo r hi m mentally as
well as physically."
Owa ldo
Fernandez
(2-3)
allowed bot h runs o ne
unearned - and five hns in six

the arm last week to lec tu re him about manners after the student said, "Hey, what's up.
Knight'"
The coach also disputed some of th e other
reasons university president Myles Drand cited
in firing him.
Bran d said Knight vio la.ed a zero-tolerance
po licy that had been in place since May. Bur
Knight said he was never told exactly w hat
.. zero- toleran ce" meant. a d ain1 university
offioals denied.
Knight said one e piso de cited 'by Brand,
verbal abuse of a university lawyer, occurred
during a meeting abo ut the $30,000 fin e
levied agai nst him by Brand in May. But
Knight said he never u sed profanity and didn 't raise his voice.

After the ESPN inte rview, university offi cials said they stood by Brand's earlie r statem ents.
"[ certainly chink he did have a chance. In
fact, his job was saved by this administra ti o n in
May and they gave him another chance, a new
lease on life," school trustee Stephen Backer
said. "It appears, from his own ir:nerview, that
he was angry and resentful, and instead of caking advantage of the opportuniry, he failed to
d o so."
Unive rsity vi ce pres ident C hristopher
Simpson added, "I see nothing productive at
this juncture to get into a he-said, ~he-said .
The decision was made on Sunday for the
right reasons, I believe. The president of the
universiry explained those reasons and it's
time to move on."

In another interview with The Spo rting
News , Knight said he was most so rry to be
leaving Bloomington because of all the golf,
hunting and fishing in the area.
"We're going to move," Knight cold the
wee kly newspape r, referring to his wife,

We really wore down on defense.
We didn 't rotate in enough on
defense."
So ·Pru ett plans to have more
players ready co play o n both sides
of the ball against N o rth Caro lina.
"I've said all along that I think
we will be a much better football
team at the end of the year than
(5 - 8) was sc heduled to pitch
Wedn esday against the Cubs....
An MRI showed Ken Griffey Jr.
has a partial tear of his left hamstring. H e is expected to be out
5-7 games .... C Eddie Taubensee
was on the Reds' benc h for the
first rime since back surgery Friday. H e said the surgery was more
extensive than expected, but chat
his back already feels better. ...
Sammy Sosa, who had a nine game hitting streak with four
home runs in his previous five
games, was 0-for-4 . H e has a
major league- leading 49 ho mers
and needs just one to join only
Babe Ruth and Mark McGwire
as the o nly players with more
than two 50-home r seasons.

Looking for alow mileage car??

Meigs County's

Karen. "And th at' ll be difficult. I've been here
sine~ ! 971 and l really like the area. l can play
golf: I can ca tch 50 bluegill in an hour; I can
go turkey hunting. The place has fit my
lifestyle.
'"Now that's aU wiped out, and I feel wane·
abou t chat chan not having the coaching job."
O n ESPN, he ofte n chastised interviewer
J eremy Schaap for what he considered interrupti ons as he answered questions. At one
po int he to ld Schaap, son of veteran sporUwrirer and broadcaster Dick Schaap : "You got
a long way to go to be as good as your dad,
yo u better keep that in mind."
Knight, replaced Tuesday by Indiana assista nt Mike Davis, said getting another coaching job is a priority, but he's not sure what
wo uld be the best situation.
In July, he was contac ted by Delaware about
recommendations for its head coaching job.
Later, Knight said, he thought he perhaps"
sho uld have asked about the job for himself.
The school hired David Henderson, who had
been a Duke assistant . .
lsiah Tho mas, a former Indiana player and
now coach of the Indiana Pacers, said he
wo uld welcome Knight on the Pacers' bench

try fails
AP TAX WRITER

" I told him, 'All you ·have to do is ask. I
do n't kn ow what kind of comnnitment I want
to make, but if you want me to come to practice, evalu ate players, do some scouting, just
ask,'"' Knight told The Sporting News.
Knight, who addressed a campus protest
after he was fired , planned to meet with stude nts Wednesday night at Dunn Meadow,
which is near the Student Union. The forum
is sponsored by the school newspaper, the
Indiana Daily Student .

about that.
"Right now I chink we're beat
up ourselves;' he said. "This week
is a good week to take off and get
some players back on both
offense and defense and be ready
to roll next week, This is about
fine-tuning."

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cut to he lp Am ericans sen d

their childre n to college: provid e long- term care tor elderly
o r disabled rebnves, make child
care more atlo rdable and provid e taq;eted marriage penalty
tax relief."' the presid ent said .

llli1,111gs.

ChiCJgo went ahead in the first
when Eric Young doubled o n the
first p1tc h of the ga me , took thi rd
o n C:Jry Matthews J r.'s bunt sing le and sco red when Fernandez
thn:w past fir!\t for an er ror.
Augie Oj eda scored on a Fernandez balk in the fifth .
Reds Notes: Cmc innat t R H P
Scott Williamson has two broken
toes on his righ t foot and w ill
miss at lea:-.t one star r. W ilhamson

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

CURT ANDERSON

WA SHI NGTON T he
House voted Wed nesday to sustain President Clinron 's veto of
a bill that wo uld have cut
income ta..xes fo r 1nil1io ns of
married couples, killing a major
piece of R epublicans' tax agenda bur also giving them anununirio n fo r the f.,ll campaigns.
.. Amt'ricans understand it is
wrong w tax m arriage," said
House M;Uority Lt·ade r Dick
Arm ey, R -Texas. " We will have
to put it up on th e floor next
year and have a president who
w iII sign it."
The 270- 158 vote was 16
fewe r than the two-thirds necessary to override the veto of
th e " marriage pe nalty" b ill.
Forty-ni ne D emocrats joined all
?20 R epublicans an d one independent who vo ted to override,
"(i th 157 Democrats and one
independent voting to back the
president.
The bill """ ai med at cutting
taxes for dual- income couples
wh o pay more than they would
if sin gle. But almost all married
couples stood to benefit fro m
the legislatio n, whi ch wo uld
have cut their taxes by $292 billion over I 0 years.
T he bill also would have cut
taxes fo r millions of couples
who already enjoy an income
tax bonus, generally those in
whi ch on e spouse earns significantly more chan the other.
H ouse
Speaker
De nni s
Hastert, R - Ill., said C on gress
would not revisit the marriage
penalty ISsue and wo uld shift
attenti on away fi·o m bruad individual tax cuts toward paying
down the n ational debt. Clinto n
previously vetoed a S1OS billio n
measure char wo uld have abol"ished estate taxes over 10 years.
"If he's going to veto tax
relief - the next choice at the
tabl e is paying dow n the debt,
and that's w hat we're go ing to
&lt;)o," Hastert told reporters.
C li nton said the bill would
"kn of k Ameri ca off th is path of
fi scal Jis&lt;"ipline"' - wh ic h has
prod uced growing budget surpl c~ses and paid down fe deral
debt - as part of an unacceptable GO P tax reli ef plan costing
$2 tr illion over 10 years.
" I urge Congre!\s to work
with me on a middle-class ta.x

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at Marshall
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Eligible in Cardiology. Dr. Englund is now a~ting
patients in the CardioPulmonary Rehab Center at
Holzer Clinic, to schedule an appointment call

e "'net on th.ese cars are
r(ow~r +~•n a.

'w.rM'I t. ··~ ·
!&lt;..·

·~ ~

l_f,etCv·~u~on!~J.,

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POM F. ROY
J&gt;omnoy
arrimll"Y Stevc·n L. Story has fi led
his petition a~ ,l
(a ndi darc t(H"
jud~c of Meigs
C nun ty Court.
Scnry served
as
M e 1 g~
Cou llty prust'c u ting attorney

74Qs446-5348
Story

71te Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-2156

Holzer Clinic •.•.. Keeping the Promise!
www.ltolui'Ciilllc.com ·

fro m 1989 to
1993, and has
practi ced law in
Pomt.•roy si n ce

1979 .
He is a I ':!72 grad uate of M ei!l'
Hig h Sc hool, and a grad uate of
the Ohio State Uni ve rsity with
Jll undt,.' rgrad uatc de~rec in eco-

•

so

Ce nts

Bill to aid
struggling
schools stalls
BY

ltz

SIDOTI

back in rhe operating bu dget fo r
school fund ing chis year and

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMI.lUS - A vote on a co me u p with a pe rman e nt
bill that woul d give llna ncial aid solu tion," R ay said. "It was just
to publi c school d isrncrs hurt bv an at tempt o n my part to address
the gmwth of charter schoois this now and get those districts
was put on hold Wcdnesdav in some help now.'"
the Ohio Senate.
.
Taft spokeswoman Denise l ee
The legislati on has been sa1d the state Oflice of Budget
approved by the Senate Fin ance and Managem ent is reviewing
C:m mmttee. Ho\vever, t he bill 's the legislatio n.
spo nso r, Sen . Roy R ay, R 'These sc hools need help, but
Akron, s:ud Jt will nor go to the we need somethin g that's longfull Senate for a vo te because ter m," she sa id .
Gov. Bob Tatt's office believes it
l awmakers "f'd Tafr are
Robert Beegle of Racine, above , disqualified as a candidate for sheriff in the March Republican primary because
does n't provide a perm anent attempting to ovarhaul th e way
he did not meet the educational requirements set forth by the Secretary of State, has now completed the required
solutio n to transpo rtati o n prob- O hi o gives mon ey. to public
training and passed the test. Beegle completed the training at Hocking College and was awarded a certificate
le ms created by
sc hools.
The
Tuesday by Steve Barron. commander, Ohio Peace Officers Training Academy. Beegle said he will file his petition
charter schoo ls.
Ohi o Supreme
of candidacy as a write-in candidate with the Meigs County Board of Elections later this week. Meigs County Sher·
Th e legislatio n The le.f!islatiotr wou ld Co urt has twice
Iff James Soulsby of Pomeroy, below, has qualified to file as a write-in candidate for re-election as sheriff in the
make S10 rui[/i,m
would make $ 10
decl ared
the
November election. Soulsby, who was disqualified from running in the March Democratic primary due to a Jack of
m illi o n available
rrl'ailab/e
to
sclwol
schoolfunding
.
certain educational requirements mandated by the Secretary of State, completed his training at Hocking College ,
to schoo l dispassed the test last week, and Tuesday was awarded a certificate of completion by Steve Barron, commander,
districts as rt'imlmrsr- syste m unconsti t ricts as re im tu tio nal because
Ohio Peace Officers Training Academy. Tuesday afternoon, he filed his petition of candidacy as a write-in with the
llll'llf for lra11iug to
b ur sem e nt fo r
too
it
reli es
Meigs County Board of Elections.
hav mg to bus
lms st udcrrts to cltm·-· heavily on local
stude nt'i to charter sclrools during tir e pro p erty taxes,
ter schools dur!erst two )'C&lt;Irs. It also creating disparii n~ t he last two
ti es between rich
would gir•e tire disyea rs. It also
and poo r diswould give th e
tricts $5 million for tricts.
districts $5 mil" In the
sclroo l lms pure/rases.
--i,--.!.lDJ!l.. - 101: ·..sc ho o l
lo ng term , w e
bus pu rchases .
know we'll have
C harter schools are publicl y to look at all the issues of school
fu nded, privately run institu- fun ding, including school distio ns that aren 't subject to m ost tricts fa cin g declining enrollstate regulations . Public sc hoo l ments beca use of charter
distri cts are respo m ible for sc hools," l ee sar d.
rran spo ning charter school st uM ore than 9,0 00 students
dt: nts, bu t receive no money in statewi de attended 35 charter
rt'!tu rn .

" I have been advise d by the
governor's offi ce that at this partic ular tim e, they do no t want to
se e chis bill pass ," said R ay, the
fi nance cormnittee's chainna n.
Th e bill has faced no oth er
oppositio n.
" M y concept was th :)t this
wou ld be a bndge. a temp o rary
fix , an d chat we would co me

sc hools last yea r. T he O h io
Department of Educatio n has
projected enrollm ent will nea rly
do uble to ! 7 .0()0 chis year as 19
more charter sc hoo ls o pen .
"Th e natio nal movem ent IS ·
show ing ch at chart er schools
and enrollment nationwid e "

Please see Schools, P11e A:S

Merchants plan for annual Stemwheel Festival
Bv

CHARLEPIE HoEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PO M E RO Y - Stern wheel Festi val parti cip atio n was diScussed when the Po me roy
Merr h ;uits Assoc iation mer Wednesday :11
Farmer' Uan k.
Agai n rh is ye ar, the nu.·rc hants will be
handling th e du cky derby w hich w ill take
place o n Saturday of the festi val weekend ,
Sept. 27- 30. Ce rti ficates of"adoptio n" w ill
be availabl e fo r sale on Munday. l.l obbt
Karr i ~ chai rman.

files as judicial
for election

...,... '"'_ vnnND AM GT

September 14, 2000

Hometown Newspaper

Complete sheriff's training

Tax veto
override
Bv

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 51 , Numbe r 78

as a n assistant.

we are at the beginning," he said.
" We need to keep improvmg and
we've certainly got a chance to
reach all of our goals.'"
Marshall players plan to watch
North Carolina's game at N o. 2
Florida State on Sa turday.
"The Tar Heels will likely
come out of that game wo rn and
weary, but Denicott isll't smiling

Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Street
992-547.9

Details, A3

Thursday

He ,lttendt'd () h io
North ern Unive rsirv\ School of

llOill iCII.

Law.
He i ~ also a fonm.·r vill age
soli citor lo r Middl epmt.
Sto ry is ;m active me mber of
the Meib"' County Clum ber of
Comme rce. now servi ng &lt;l" pn.:'\iJem and as a member of rlw
board of d irecto rs.
He has been a vocal suppor ter
of highway projects in Meigs
County and southeaste rn Ohw,
and now sr;.·rvcs as cha1rman of
the So utheastern Ohi o Reg ional
Coun(ll's Route JJ Commi ttee.
Story has a so n, Nic holas, an d
lives on R.ocksprinb'S R oad in
Oedford Township with his wife.
Eliza beth .

.,

All merchants will be selling the ""adop tio n " fo rms fo r $5 each . T his year, rhne
will be th ree maj o r pnzes awarded to the
winn e rs of the rmmbercd d ucks crossing
the fini sh line tim .
An ni e Chap m an , pres idrnr. S&lt;l id rlur
item s arc still need ed fo r t h L' welcom e ba .. ke rs whi ch are given to th L' •a cr nw h ccl

John M usser. presidcnr of Pomeroy Village Cou ncil, reported that $5.0110 had
bt'e n ~ecu red fro m lmtc ry fu n ds to pay for
the tireworks w l1i ch w ill t;lke place o n the
last 111 ghr of th e fcsti\'al.
Hnlid.1y p l a n ~ were di ~c u sse d and tt was

c.:apram s.

dc,·itkd to hold ;m o th er ho me tour on the:
tirr..;r weekend .in DL·cembcr. Sara h Fish er
\\·ill .1gain heaJ up th t• tour program wit h

Th e du cks w ill be laun ched from a boat
below Kroge r. The fi nish li ne will bL· ll L'ar
th e boat doc ks in downto\vn Pom crov.

ar..;sistan cc ffo m other mem bers.
T his yea r, only wokic ;m d candy CO il tests will be held. A coo kbook c o n sist in~ of

recipes of w innqs in previous years is

being compiled by Anni e C hapman and
will be sold by the merchants.
The C hr istmas pa rade. und er rhe direction u iTo ney Dingess, an d the atmu al open
hou se will rake place o n the Sunday after
Than ksgiving.
Th e 411-doo r sternwheel rep li ca made
and donated by Nichols ML·tals is being
erected 1n ti·o nc of the o ld Pomeroy Juni or

Please see Merchants, Pap A:S

Bluesman
to perfonn

Today's

Sentinel
l Sections - 16 Pages
C~ lendar

Classifieds
Comics
Edit2ri;!ls
Obituaries
S11ort1
W~i!tber

Blues and rag music artist, Roy
Boo k Bi nde r. will be pe rform ing
at the Pome roy Amphith e ater on
Friday evening as pa rt of the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society's '" Rhythm on the Rive r· concert se ries. Book Binder is
known for his uniq ue m us ical
style, maste ry of Piedmo nt finge rstyle guitar playing a nd a wry
sense of humor. His a uthentic
blues guita r and captivating
songs have been ente rta ini ng
audiences around the world
since the 1960s. The perfo rma nce will begin at 7 p. m. a nd
is free to the publ ic. The eve nt
will also feature a craft auctio n
as well as vario us food ~endors
fo r t he public t o enjoy. (Submitted photo)

AS

B&lt;!-6
B7

A4
A3
Bl-6
A3

Lotteries
OffiO
Pick 3: 9-9-4; Pick 4: 6-7-4-7
Super Lotto: 11 -34-37-45-46-47
Kicker: 1-9-9-2-9-7

WYA.

.

Daily 3: 7 ~4-4 Daily 4: 0-2-2- 1
C 21111il Oh 1o v.. n~y l'ubhshm~ Co

•

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----- '·--·-··----·--·· ---.

•

--·---~--- --.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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